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Completed and Posted

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Bloch Publishing

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User:Arxiloxos/Bloch draft (done)

Mildred Grosberg Bellin

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User:Arxiloxos/MGB draft (done) Mildred Bellin redirect page

Faison

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Faison passed away in 2004 while playing basketball at the age of 36 from an undetected heart condition, Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM); the Derrick Faison Foundation was later established to combat HCM and sudden cardiac death and to provide scholarships for underprivileged students. [1]

HCM noted athletes

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Noted athletes believed or suspected to have died from HCM include NFL players Thomas Herrion, Mitch Frerotte, Damien Nash, and Derrick Faison; NBA players Reggie Lewis and Jason Collier; NHL player Sergei Zholtok; baseball pitcher Joe Kennedy; long distance runner Ryan Shay, Loyola Marymount star Hank Gathers; and Kansas State football player Anthony Bates.

Princeton Architectural Press

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Princeton Architectural Press is a leading publisher of architecture and design books, with over 500 titles on its backlist. It was founded in 1981 in New York. (It is not related to the Princeton University Press.) Since 1996, Princeton Architectural Press has been distributed in the Americas by Chronicle Books. In 1997, it became part of the German publishing group Springer Science+Business Media.

External Links Princeton Architectural Press website

Princeton Architectural Press page at Springer Science+Business Media Parent company website

"Building Books: PAPress" (interview with PAPress Publisher Kevin Lippert), Archinect, December 3, 2004.

Category:Book publishing companies]] publish-company-stub}}

Stuart Margolin

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Stuart Margolin updates and corrections (add DGA awards, etc.)

[1] re leaving Salt Spring and move to Natchez

Jeff Smith (cartoonist)

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Jeff Smith (cartoonist)
repair article to provide sources and restore text after deletions of accurate materialhere


(born 1960)[2]

He lives in Columbus, Ohio. [3] [4]

Jeff Smith was born in 1960 in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania.[2]

Smith has cited Charles M. Schultz's Peanuts as a very early influence on his understanding of comics[5] He has also named Walt Kelly's Pogo, which he discovered at the age of nine when a classmate brought a collection of the comics to school,[6] as his "biggest influence in writing comics."[5] Smith began to create comics with the "Bone" characters as early as 1970, when he was about 10 years old.[7]

He graduated in 1978 from Thomas Worthington High School in Worthington, Ohio, a suburb of Columbus, where he was a classmate of Jim Kammerud; in 1986 Smith and Kammerud would co-found Character Builders, an animation studio in Columbus where Smith worked for 6 years before leaving to devote himself to comics.[3][8]

Smith attended The Ohio State University, and while there he created a comic strip called "Thorn" for the student newspaper, The Lantern, which included some of the characters who later featured in the Bone series.[9][10]

Working with collaborators, Smith has also written prequel comics related to Bone, which have been collected in the volumes Stupid, Stupid Rat-Tails and Rose

  • Lucy Shelton Caswell and David Filipi, Jeff Smith: Bone and Beyond (columbus, O.: The Ohio State University, Wexner Center for the Arts, 2008), ISBN 978-1-881390-46-6
  • Jeff Smith, The Art of Bone (Milwaukie, Oregon: Dark Horse Books, 2007), ISBN 978-1-59307-441-8

Books about Warren Buffett

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Numerous books have been written about Warren Buffett and his investment strategies. In October 2008, USA Today reported that there were at least 47 books in print with Buffett's name in the title. The article quoted the CEO of Borders Books, George Jones, as saying that the only other living persons named in as many book titles were U.S. presidents, major world political figures, and the Dalai Lama.[11] Buffett said that his own personal favorite is a collection of his essays called The Essays of Warren Buffett,[12] which he described as "a coherent rearrangement of ideas from my annual report letters" as edited by Larry Cunningham.[11]

Best-selling or otherwise notable books about Buffett include the following:

Comment: 1. Ratings are not the issue here, notability is. Per WP:Notability_(media)#Programming, a purely local radio show is less likely to be notable than a regional or national one, but the question (as it is for all notability debates) is still "the presence or absence of reliable sources." I'm currently on the fence about whether there is enough such independent coverage of Ron & Don to justify notability. I don't live in Seattle and I have no independent interest in or knowledge about this show. However, these guys seem to have been around a long time and to have worked together in a lot of markets. In addition to the usual routine mentions you'd expect in the Seattle press, Google turns up some newspaper mentions of them getting hired and fired in those other markets. Some of this is at pay sites, so I didn't read those in detail, and it's not a huge number of hits, but there certainly are some. There is a substantial blog post by the TV columnist for the New Orleans Times Picayune, about a remote broadcast these guys did in NOLA last year in connection with some Hurricane Katrina fundraising. It's not clear if they were in the print T-P or not. ("Live from New Orleans: It's Seattle talk radio!" Times-Picayune blog post, April 10, 2008.) Is this enough? I'm not sure.
2. However, the comment above by User:Notabilitypatrol may raise concern that this particular article is an exercise in WP:POINT. User:Notabilitypatrol created this article, but now he/she readily agrees it should be deleted? Is the purpose to tell us about The Ron & Don Show, or to wage a battle against the much more notable (if lower rated) Luke Burbank?
3. By the way, the Google search also turned up a number of uses of "Ron & Don Show" as a nickname for CBC's famous Hockey Night in Canada and its Coach's Corner segment, hosted by Don Cherry and Ron MacLean. But I imagine User:Emarsee knows more about this than I do, eh?
--Arxiloxos (talk) 04:25, 20 February 2009 (UTC)
  • Getting fired in Texas:
Ron and Don: gone and gone (Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Oct 15, 2001) (pay site)
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=62269&pt=archive


  • In New Orleans for Katrina stories:

The show received attention after Hurricane Katrina for its fundraising efforts, in conjunction with the Seattle Seahawks and the Preservation Resource Center, including a live show from the front porch of a rebuilt New Orleans home.[20][21]

[22]


In 1987 the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) selected McDonald for the Jefferson Lecture, the U.S. federal government's highest honor for achievement in the humanities. His lecture was entitled "The Intellectual World of the Founding Fathers."[23] In a New York Times article after his selection, McDonald was quoted as saying that the federal government has "lost its capacity to protect people in life, liberty and property, to provide for the common defense, or to promote the general welfare."[24] However, in interviews and in his Jefferson Lecture, McDonald opposed the idea of a new constitutional convention: in part because he felt that such a convention would become a "runaway" and a "catastrophe";[25] in part because he thought the inefficiency of the American government was a saving virtue limiting its capacity for oppression;[26] and in part because he felt that in modern America it would be impossible to assemble a group as capable as the 55 delegates who attended the Constitutional Convention of 1787, which took place in an era McDonald called "America's Golden Age, the likes of which we shall not see again." [25]

McDonald's lecture was later described by the noted conservative historian George H. Nash as "a luminous introduction to the intellectual world of the Founding Fathers."[27] However, McDonald faced criticism for not acknowledging the imperfection of slavery in the original constitutional framework. The New York Times pointedly noted that on the same day as McDonald's Jefferson Lecture, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall gave a speech criticizing "complacent belief" in the perfection of the Constitution, given the stain of slavery. The Times quoted McDonald's answer that at the time of the Constitutional Convention, "Slavery was a fact. It had simply not crossed many people's intellectual or moral horizons to question it," and his further comment, "The condition of the French peasants was far worse than that of the American slaves, and that was heaven compared to the Russian serf."[25]

"The Intellectual World of the Founding Fathers" was republished in the essay collection, Requiem: Variations on Eighteenth-Century Themes[28] In a 1994 interview, McDonald noted that at the time he was selected for the Jefferson Lecture, he was on record in favor of abolishing the NEH, so he had refused to accept the $10,000 award that went with the honor. (In the same interview, asked about his political views, McDonald described himself simply as a "conservative"; when the interviewer followed up by asking, "How conservative?" McDonald responded, "Paleo.")[29]

additional for Jesse Thorn article

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Thorn is cited as a podcasting expert in various books on the subject.[30] [31]

extra text for New sincerity

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"In the Russian context, the term new sincerity (novaia iskrennost) was originally used in the early 1990s by poet Dmitry Prigov and literary critic [[Mikhail Epstein, members of the unofficial Soviet artistic community. According to them, new sincerity in this context first appeared in literary and poetic texts around 1990, and was a backlash against the postmodern absurdity and ridicule that dominated the informal culture of the late Soviet and post-Soviet periods marked by the crisis of the Soviet state. Although the aesthetics of new sincerity implies avoidance of cynicism in relation to the subject matter, this does not mean that new sincerity lacks irony. Quite the contrary, as a post-postmodern phenomenon it is acutely self-aware and self-ironic. However, this is a particular brand of irony, which is sympathetic and warm, and allows its authors to remain committed to the ideals that they discuss, while also being somewhat ironic about this commitment." (and in 259n.6 references Susan Sontag's comment that a good writer should "Be serious. By which I meant: never be cynical. And which doesn't preclude being funny." [Citing Sontag as quoted in Jenny Diski, "Seriously Uncool," London Review of Books 29, no.6 (March 22, 2007).][32] "Postconceptualism, or the New Sincerity, is an experiment in resuscitating "fallen," dead languages with a renewed pathos of love, sentimentalitym and enthusiasm. (p.146) [33]

"As early as the second half of the 1980s, Dmitry Prigov, the leader of the Moscow conceptualists, called for a change of direction toward a "new sincerity."[34]

Yurchak connects "aesthetics of new sincerity" to art forms such "as reality television, Internet blogs, diary style chicklit literature, personal videos on You-Tube, neorealist cinema (for example, Danish Dogma, Aki Kaurismaki, Lars von Trier, Pedro Almadovar."[32]

  • Yet another Barry Wood!
  • Best known as the singer who preceded Sinatra on Your Hit Parade --see footnote her for more details about his career [20]
  • I'm Always Chasing Rainbows
  • Barney Rapp
  • The Happy Gang
  • [21] and [22] (birth/death dates, but perhaps not WP:RS)
  • played with Buddy Rogers[23]
  • http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1P2-8269041.html (Boston Globe column mentions him, birth name Louis Rapp, younger brother of bandleader Barney Rapp, attended Yale, and then played sax in 1931 with the Buddy Rogers band, etc.)
  • [24] brief Time 1941 profile--says he was born in New Haven, Louis Rapaport (not Rapp), he was first to record "Any Bonds Today?"
  • Encyclopedia of old time radio [25] and other pages; after Your Hit Parade, in 1943-44 Hosted The Million Dollar Band on NBC with Patsy Kelly; 1945-46 Johnny Presents (Philip Morris) on NBC.
  • see Snooky Lanson for a model singer stub: Categories: American male singers | Big band singers | American television personalities | American pop singers | Bell Records artists | Starday Records artists | 1909 births | 1970 deaths | United States pop singer stubs, people from New Haven?
  • We did it before (and we can do it again) [26] {redir to Charles Tobias)
  • Became a TV producer: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0939563/

(her father)

Friars Club of Beverly Hills

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Friars Club of Beverly Hills nonprofit company assets were sold to profit company in 2004, which continued to operate as Friars Club of Beverly Hills for several years before losing trademark lawsuit with Friars Club of New York in 2007 http://www.pryorcashman.com/assets/attachments/151.pdf New York Times article: http://www.pryorcashman.com/assets/attachments/163.pdf Club changed its name to 9900 Club but evidently closed as of June 2008, and the landmark building designed by Sidney Eisenshtat was on the market: http://community.myfoxla.com/blogs/mitch_waldow/2008/06/27/Farewell_to_the_Friars http://www.kathleensilver.com/upload/silver/9900SantaMonicaBlvd_57/materials/Brochure_9900_Santa_Monica_Blvd_One_Page%5B1%5D.pdf

This documentary about Juliet (Yuliet) Ortega has won a slew of awards,

  • has been reviewed in significant places,
  • and is even mentioned in a Frommer's travel guide as a notable film about the dynamics between Cubans and Cuban-Americans[27].

(Posted by other editors)

Stephen S. Wise Temple was started in 1964 by Rabbi Isaiah Zeldin and 35 families. In the years since, it has grown to what you see today, a progressive Synagogue that blends Jewish values, ethics, and traditions into a house of worship and community. We are a Reform congregation and are members of the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ), the umbrella organization for the Reform movement. Now with over 3,000 member families, six rabbis, two cantors, four Schools on three campuses, we are among the largest Reform synagogues in the country."The Road to Today" at

We had to 'daylight' the area [lower the mountain's height] so we took down the mountain 50 feet. We had no place for the dirt. So I invited the University of Judaism, which then was on Sunset Boulevard, to buy the property next door. And we pushed a million cubic yards of dirt onto their hole to make theirs a level piece of property.

Tulsa

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add architect info (Blaine Imel & Frank Wallace) to Oral Roberts University

work from these sources:

Temple Israel Tulsa, Oklahoma (DONE) Temple Israel is the only Reform Jewish temple in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Founded in 1914, it was originally located in a now-abandoned but still-standing building at 14th & Cheyenne [39] and now occupies a distinctive building designed by famed synagogue architect Percival Goodman. The building's front is dominated by massive twin pillars containing the Ten Commandments. Located on 22nd Place just south of the Utica Square Shopping Center, Temple Israel has a membership of approximately 500 family units and is affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism.

User:Arxiloxos/Central High School (Tulsa, Oklahoma) (draft)


*She is the subject of a story in a book by former Tulsa news reporter, Larry Thomlinson. Larry Thomlinson, Life, Death and Other Dysfunctions, ISBN 9781430308928. Reviewed here: http://tulsatvmemories.com/chewldod.html)


Cats: Unitarian Universalist churches, Churches in Tulsa, Oklahoma

As of February 2009, appears to be the largest single physical UU congregation in the world (behind only Church of the Larger Fellowship, which is a virtual online/remote congregation, and the 25 churches of the Unitarian Universalist Church of the Philippines[43], and 3rd largest in the world overall.[44]

1,590 Unitarian-Universalists,[39] which includes the largest Unitarian Universalist congregation in the world.[40]

born 1887 in Kingskettle, Fife, Scotland
"studied briefly" at L’Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris
born in 1886 in Florence, Italy
educated at Edinburgh College in Edinburgh, Scotland, and at the Sorbonne, in Paris, France
died in 1963 (in Tulsa?)
John Duncan Forsyth Room at E. W. Marland Mansion official website:
QUOTE: Located in the southwest corner of the artist studio, this room is a tribute to the Master Architect of the Marland Estate, John Duncan Forsyth. In 1925, Forsyth learned that E. W. Marland was going to build a mansion that would reflect his status as an oil baron, so he pursued Marland and convinced the oilman to hire him. Thus began a rich architectural legacy left by Forsyth in Ponca City.
Although he designed many buildings during his career, Forsyth was the most proud of his design of the mansion. Marland gave him carte blanche to create the plans for the "Palace on the Prairie." Forsyth felt very fortunate to hire talented artists to hand paint the ceilings, and he loved being afforded the luxury of using decorative wrought iron and original stone carvings.
In addition to the mansion, Forsyth designed the Artist Studio, the gatehouse, the chauffeur's cottage, the stables, and the administrative building on the Marland Estate. Marland also commissioned him to build a group of Southwest adobe buildings in downtown Ponca City and the boardroom at Marland Oil Company. In the mid-1930's, when Marland was governor, Forsyth designed the state office building in Oklahoma City.
A very popular architect throughout northern Oklahoma, he designed many homes and business buildings in Tulsa and Ponca City, and is also known for the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore, Oklahoma.ENDQUOTE
Pensacola Dam at at Oklahoma National Register Properties, Oklahoma Historical Society, State Historic Preservation Office website
world's longest multiple arch dam
http://www.lcra.org/newsletter/currents/may07/ask_lcra.html (vs. Buchanan Dam in Texas
Donald C. Jackson, Great American Bridges and Dams: A National Trust Guide (John Wiley and Sons, 1988) ISBN 0471143855, ISBN 9780471143857, p.254 excerpt available at Google Books
Historical Atlas of Oklahomaexcerpt available at Google Books
Also mentions: Pensacola Dam, Marland Mansion, Lamerton House in Enid
Lamerton House at Oklahoma National Register Properties, Oklahoma Historical Society, State Historic Preservation Office website
moved to US in 1908, trained with various architects including John Russell Pope, fought in WW1 with Royal British Flying Corps, moved to Tulsa 1921; left to fight in WW2 with US Navy Seabees, went to California, returned to Tulsa in 1950s, remained in Tulsa til death in 1963
he was one of the large team of architects who worked on Central Union Station (now the Government Conference Centre in Ottawa

Tulsa Foundation for Architecture website

Webster High School (J. D. Forsyth, W. Wolaver, and R. Kerr, Associated Architects; M. Atkinson, Supervising Architect)
designed in "European country house style" per Charles Faudree, Jenifer Jordan, M. J. Van Deventer, Charles Faudree Interiors (Gibbs Smith, 2008), ISBN 1423602099, ISBN 9781423602095

excerpt available at Google Books

Streamline Moderne, built 1937, restored 1985 per Michael Wallis, Way Down Yonder in the Indian Nation: Writings from America's Heartland, (University of Oklahoma Press, 2007), ISBN 0806138246, ISBN 9780806138244 (excerpt available at Google Books).
another picture [here http://www.tulsalibrary.org/research/artdeco/forsyth.php]
He designed a number of notable buildings in Ponca City per above source,
also Hutchins Memorial Auditorium

New Sincerity

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For New Sincerity

User:Arxiloxos/New sincerity (draft)

Re critical "new sincerity"--see Collins, Jim. “Genericity in the 90s: Eclectic Irony and the New Sincerity.” Film Theory Goes to the Movies Eds. Jim Collins, Hilary Radner and Ava Preacher Collins. New York: Routledge, 1993. 242-63. ISBN 0415905761, ISBN 9780415905763 in which contrasts films that treat genre conventions with "eclectic irony" and those that treat them seriously, with "new sincerity"; he describes (p. 245)

the 'new sincerity' of films like Field of Dreams (1989), Dances With Wolves (1990), and Hook (1991), all of which depend not on hybridization, but on an "ethnographic" rewriting of the classic genre film that serves as their inspiration, all attempting, using one strategy or another, to recover a lost "purity," which apparently pre-existed even the Golden Age of film genre.

Katy Henriksen, " Drunk Bunnies, The New Sincerity, Flarf: How Blogs are Transforming Poetry," EconoCulture, January 23, 2007 -- describes Anthony Robinson, Andrew Mister, Reb Livingston, Joseph Massey as participants in poetry movement described by Massey as "a ‘new sincerity’ brewing in American poetry -- a contrast to the cold, irony-laden poetry dominating the journals and magazines and new books of poetry."

Sidney Eisenshtat

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User:Arxiloxos/Sidney Eisenshtat (draft)

Sidney Eisenshtat: Samuel D. Gruber, "Sidney Eisenshtat, 90, Leading Synagogue Architect", Forward, Apr 01, 2005 US-architect-stub

Aller Retour New York

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User:Arxiloxos/Aller Retour New York by Henry Miller use Black Spring (novel) as model for stub)

Angie Debo

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User:Arxiloxos/Angie Debo (draft)

Willard Stone

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Willard Stone

User:Arxiloxos/Willard Stone (draft)

Sam Cohn

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{{[add template]] | article=Sam Cohn | hook=... that New York talent agent Sam Cohn, who TIME called "the first superagent of the modern age", liked to eat paper? | status=new | author=Bongomatic | nominator=Arxiloxos}} ALT1: ... that New York talent agent Sam Cohn was called both "the first superagent of the modern age" and "the most difficult man in the business to get on the phone"?

A lengthy 1982 profile by Mark Singer in The New Yorker described Cohn's career and personality in detail.[41] Cohn was known for lunching at New York's Russian Tea Room almost every day;[42] his habit of eating paper;[41] and his strong preference for New York over Los Angeles, unusual among major motion picture agents.[43] Cohn was also famously difficult to reach on the phone: his obituaries in the major entertainment trade papers both mentioned that he was "the most difficult man in the business to get on the phone"[43][44], and in his New Yorker profile, Singer repeated an industry joke that Cohn's tombstone would read, "Here lies Sam Cohn. He'll get back to you."[45]

The character Arnold Moss, a paper-eating agent based on Cohn, was created by Nora Ephron and portrayed by Dan Aykroyd in Ephron's 1992 film This Is My Life[46]

Cohn's client list and influence waned in later years,[47] and in 1999 he left his position as the head of ICM's New York office."[48] He remained a member of ICM's board of directors in 2005, and continued to work at ICM until retiring in early 2009.[48] (The Variety article reporting his retirement drily noted, "Hanging onto his trademark ways to the very end, Cohn did not return a call from Daily Variety for comment."[48])

The Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award is a literary award given by the Tulsa Library Trust in Tulsa, Oklahoma. It is awarded annually to an "internationally acclaimed" author who has "written a distinguished body of work and made a major contribution to the field of literature and letters." [49][50]

History of the award

[edit]

First awarded in 1985 with a cash prize of US$5,000 in 1985, the award now consists of a $40,000 cash prize and an engraved crystal book.[51] To date, all of the award recipients have been English-language writers.[52]

The award is named after Peggy V. Helmerich, a prominent Tulsa philanthropist and library activist,[53] and the wife of Tulsa oilman Walter Helmerich III.[54] Before her marriage, under the stage name Peggy Dow, she had been a motion picture actress,[55] best known for playing the role of "Nurse Kelly" in the 1950 film Harvey opposite James Stewart,[56]; she also starred in the 1951 film Bright Victory.

The first honoree, in 1985, was writer and longtime Saturday Review of Literature editor Norman Cousins, and the theme of the evening was “The Salutary Aspects of Laughter.”[51]

In 1997, historian John Hope Franklin became the first (and so far only) native Oklahoman to receive the award. While in Tulsa to accept the award, Franklin made several appearances to speak about his childhood experiences with racial segregation as well as his father's experiences as a lawyer in the aftermath of the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot.[57][58][59]

In 2004 Arthur Miller was initially announced as the honoree[60], but he subsequently declined the award when illness prevented him from attending the award ceremony. David McCullough, the 1995 winner, replaced Miller as the featured speaker at the December 2004 award dinner.[61] McCullough subsequently returned his honorarium to the library.[62] Miller died in February 2005,[63] In 2005, the initial honoree was again unable to accept due to illness: Oklahoma native Tony Hillerman was the initial selection, but was later replaced by John Grisham.[64][65] Reporting on Grisham's selection as Hillerman's replacement, a Virginia newspaper called the Helmerich Award the "[b]est literary award you've never heard of."[66]

The 2009 honoree is Australian journalist and author Geraldine Brooks.[67]

List of Helmerich Award winners

[edit]

A complete list of Helmerich Award winners follows.[52]

1985 Norman Cousins
1986 Larry McMurtry
1987 John Updike
1988 Toni Morrison
1989 Saul Bellow
1990 John le Carré
1991 Eudora Welty
1992 Norman Mailer
1993 Peter Matthiessen
1994 Ray Bradbury
1995 David McCullough
1996 Neil Simon
1997 John Hope Franklin
1998 E. L. Doctorow
1999 Margaret Atwood
2000 William Manchester
2001 William Kennedy
2002 Joyce Carol Oates
2003 Shelby Foote
2004 not awarded
2005 John Grisham
2006 Mark Helprin
2007 Thomas Keneally
2008 Michael Chabon
2009 Geraldine Brooks

See also

[edit]

Tulsa City-County Library

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=============
[edit]

Helmerich Award aka Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award

Literary awards

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The Tulsa Library Trust, a privately-funded public foundation, supports the Tulsa City-County Library. Among other activities it gives out two notable literary awards.

Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award

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The Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award has been awarded annually since 1985 to an "internationally acclaimed" author who has "written a distinguished body of work and made a major contribution to the field of literature and letters." The Helmerich Award consists of a US$40,000 cash prize and an engraved crystal book.[49][68]

Anne V. Zarrow Award for Young Readers' Literature

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The Anne V. Zarrow Award for Young Readers' Literature has been awarded since 1991 to "nationally acclaimed authors who have made a significant contribution to the field of literature for children and young adults." The award consists of a $7,500 cash prize and an an engraved crystal book.[69]

Past winners of the Zarrow award have been: Christopher Paul Curtis (2009), Louis Sachar (2008), Kate DiCamillo (2007), Sharon Creech (2006), Avi (2005), Susan Cooper (2004), Russell Freedman (2003), Richard Peck (2002), E.L. Konigsburg (2001), Jerry Spinelli (2000), Jane Yolen (1999), Cynthia Voigt (1998), Gary Paulsen (1997), Walter Dean Myers (1996), Lois Lowry (1994), Katherine Paterson (1993), Madeleine L’Engle (1992) and S.E. Hinton (1991).[69]

[edit]

Category:Defunct newspapers of the United States Category:Newspapers published in Oklahoma Category:History of Tulsa, Oklahoma Category:Publications established in 1919 Category:Publications disestablished in 1992

reprinted as Who's tops in Beatles trivia? Bruce Spizer, AP at USA Today, August 17, 2009.
'The White Album' 40 Years Later, audio interview with Spizer on All Things Considered (November 24, 2008)
The Beatles in America audio interview with Spizer on All Things Considered (April 13, 2006).
"The Lost Beatles Tapes, audio interview with Spizer on All Things Considered (March 14, 2003).

Category:People associated with The Beatles Category:People from New Orleans, Louisiana

References

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  1. ^ Derrick Faison Foundation official website
  2. ^ a b Jeff Smith biography at [www.scholastic.com Scholastic.com].
  3. ^ a b Candy Brooks, "Two cartoonists from Class of '78 are named distinguished alumni", ThisWeek Worthington, August 27, 2008 (retrieved January 27, 2009).
  4. ^ Jeff Smith, Philip Crawford, and Stephen Weiner, Using Graphic Novels in the Classroom: A Guide for Teachers and Librarians (Scholastic/Grafix, n.d.), ISBN 0-439-82769-8, p.6.
  5. ^ a b Lucy Shelton Caswell and David Filipi, Jeff Smith: Bone and Beyond (Columbus, O.: The Ohio State University, Wexner Center for the Arts, 2008), ISBN 978-1-881390-46-6, pp. 7, 17.
  6. ^ "Jeff Smith's 'Bone' Goes From Comic Book to Gallery Wall", Interview from The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, original airdate July 21, 2008 (retrieved January 27, 2009).
  7. ^ Jeff Smith, The Art of Bone (Milwaukie, Oregon: Dark Horse Books, 2007), ISBN 978-1-59307-441-8, p.19.
  8. ^ Worthington City Schools, "Distinguished Alumni of Worthington Schools - 2008 Honorees" (retrieved January 27, 2009).
  9. ^ Kristin M. French, "Comic man returns to roots", The Lantern, October 2, 2001 (retrieved January 27, 2009).
  10. ^ "Bone and beyond...Award-winning cartoonist Jeff Smith given his due with talks, exhibits at OSU,", Columbus Dispatch, May 4, 2008.
  11. ^ a b c d e Del Jones, "Book titles like to play the Warren Buffett name game," USA Today, October 22, 2008.
  12. ^ Buffett, Warren; Cunningham, Lawrence. The Essays of Warren Buffett: Lessons for Corporate America, Second Edition. The Cunningham Group. ISBN 978-0-9664461-2-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Hagstrom, Robert G.; Miller, Bill R.; Fisher, Ken (2005). The Warren Buffett Way. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley. ISBN 0-471-74367-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Schroeder, Alice. The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life. Bantam Dell Pub Group 2008. ISBN 978-0-553-80509-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  15. ^ Janet Maslin, "Books of The Times: The Richest Man and How He Grew (and Grew His Company, Too)," New York Times, September 28, 2008.
  16. ^ Buffett, Mary. Buffettology: The Previously Unexplained Techniques That Have Made Warren Buffett The World's Most Famous Investor. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-84821-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ Lowe, Janet. Warren Buffett Speaks: Wit and Wisdom from the World's Greatest Investor. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-15262-1. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  18. ^ Train, John (1987). The midas touch: the strategies that have made Warren Buffet America's pre-eminent investor. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-015643-5. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
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