User:TigerPaw2154/Sandbox
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[edit] Sanbox
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
[edit] Donna (Howsley) Hancock
1974 Miss Rodeo America (Texas)
HOWSLEY, KAY M. longtime resident of El Paso, passed away Wednesday, March 27, 2002 at the age of 68. She was preceded in death by her husband James Howsley and son Robert Howsley. Survived by her daughter Donna Bullard, sister Mary Lynn Chester and her husband Leon, grandchildren James Robert Bullard and Ashley Cress Bullard, niece Brenda Chester Bingham and grandniece Kyndal Bingham. Visitation will be held Sunday, March 31, 2002 from 2:00 p.m. until 6 p.m. at Martin Funeral Home West. Funeral Service will be held Monday, April 1, 2002 at 1:00 p.m. at Martin Funeral Home West. Her family and friends will serve as pallbearers. Interment will follow at Ft. Bliss National Cemetery.
[1] Spicewood
[edit] Blood Run
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/5579/bloodrun.html http://www.state.ia.us/government/dca/shsi/sites/blood_run/br_background.html http://www.amazon.com/Blood-Earthworks-Allison-Adelle-Hedge/dp/1844712664
North American Archaeology By Diana DiPaolo Loren, Timothy R. Pauketat
The Plains Village Tradition
Blood Run National Historic Landmark Located on the Big Sioux River in western Lyon County Rock Rapids, Iowa Occupied from 900 to 1720 A.D. by the Oneota and later the Prairie Sioux, Blood Run was a major inter-tribal and ceremonial center. Surveys have identified burial mounds and village sites. The main portion of the site, which shows evidence of continuous occupation, extends at least 650 acres. Evidence of occupation can be found immediately south of Gitchie Manitou State Park to approximately one-quarter mile south of county blacktop A18. The site is located in the northwestern corner of Iowa along the Big Sioux River and Blood Run Creek, and can be reached on the east from county blacktop K10. Contact Craig Van Otterloo of the Lyon County Conservation Board in Rock Rapids, Iowa at 712-472-2217 or www.iowahistory.org for more information.
http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?lon=-96.585&lat=43.4647
The Blood Run site is teh largest recoreded Oneota site and is documented as the principal Omaha village from the 1690s to 1714. Accounts suggest that the Ioway, Oto, Arikara, and Cheyenne were periodic residents or regular visitors at Blood Run.
[edit] Kristin Herold
Kristin Herold |
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http://www.campuspinups.com/pinup-calendar/worthington-ohio-students-appear-in-pinup-calendars.html
Kristin Herold, a 1988 graduate of Worthington High School, is currently an OSU Junior majoring in fashion merchandizing. She was discovered at Worthington Square Shopping Center where she works part-time. Her photo along with most of the shots that appear in the calendars were taken during a week-long trip to St. Petersburg, Florida, last summer
(Article by Kristen) http://www.campusmen.com/calendar-men/hot-college-guys.html