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Name | Lifetime | Comments | Reference(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Deng Ai | 197–264 | Three Kingdoms period general, Grand Commandant | [1] |
Prince Albert II | 1958–present | Prince of Monaco | [2][3] |
Walter Annenberg | 1908–2002 | Publisher, philanthropist, and diplomat | [4] |
Terry Allen | 1888–1969 | United States Army Major General during World War II | [5] |
Aristotle | 384 BC – 322 BC | Greek philosopher and writer | [6][7] |
Homer Bigart | 1907–1991 | American newspaper reporter who won two Pulitzer Prizes for combat reporting—one each during World War II and the Korean War | [8] |
Howard Bingham | 1939–2016 | American photographer and biographer of Muhammad Ali | [2] |
Arthur Blank | 1942–present | American businessman, co-founder of The Home Depot and owner of the National Football League's Atlanta Falcons | [2] |
Patrick Campbell | 1913–1980 | 3rd Baron Glenavy, Irish-born British journalist, humorist and television personality | [2] |
Lord Carver | 1915–2001 | British Field Marshal, tank commander in World War II; Chief of the Defence Staff | [9] |
Lord David Cecil | 1902–1986 | British biographer, historian and professor | [2] |
King Charles I | 1600–1649 | King of England (1625–1649) | [10] |
Charles Darwin | 1809–1882 | English naturalist | [11] |
Harley Earl | 1893–1969 | American car designer, first vice president of design at General Motors | [2] |
Jake Eberts | 1941–2012 | Canadian movie producer, director, and financier | [12] |
King Francis I | 1494–1547 | King of France (1515–1547) | [13] |
Malcolm Fraser | 1903–1994 | American philanthropist and businessman | [14][15] |
Philip French | 1933–2015 | Film critic and BBC radio producer | [16] |
King George VI | 1895–1952 | King of the United Kingdom | [6] |
Annie Glenn | 1920–2020 | Wife of astronaut and United States Senator John Glenn; She was inducted into the National Stuttering Association Hall of Fame. | [17][18] |
Sidney Gottlieb | 1918–1999 | American chemist who worked with the Central Intelligence Agency | [2] |
Vernon Hill | 1945–present | American banker | [2] |
King James II | 1633–1701 | King of England (1685–1688) | [19] |
Wendell Johnson | 1906–1965 | American psychologist, stutter research | [20] |
King Louis the Stammerer | 846–879 | King of Aquitaine and West Francia | [21] |
Emperor Michael II | 770–829 | Byzantine emperor, founder of the Amorian (Phrygian) dynasty | [22] |
Adam Michnik | 1946–present | Polish editor, historian, essayist, and political commentator | [2] |
Isaac Newton | 1642–1727 | English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, natural philosopher, alchemist, and theologian | [6] |
Bruce Oldfield | 1950–present | British fashion designer | [2] |
Jerzy Owsiak | 1953–present | Polish journalist, social campaigner | [23] |
King Peter I | 1320–1367 | King of Portugal (1357–1367) | [24] |
Alan Rabinowitz | 1953–2018 | American zoologist, conservationist, field biologist, and President and CEO of Panthera | [2][25] |
Alfred Rehder | 1863–1949 | German-American botanist, Harvard professor | [6] |
John Stossel | 1947–present | American consumer reporter, investigative journalist, author, and libertarian columnist | [26] |
Niccolò Fontana Tartaglia | 1499–1557 | Italian mathematician, engineer, and surveyor | [2] |
Alan Turing | 1912–1954 | British mathematician | [27] |
Jack Welch | 1935–2020 | American chemical engineer, businessman, and author | [2] |
Ludwig Wittgenstein | 1889–1951 | Austrian philosopher | [6] |
Charles Van Riper | 1905–1994 | speech pathologist | [20] |
Charles Sidney Bluemel | 1884–1960 | British-American psychiatrist; researcher on stuttering | [28] |
//Using sandbox to test comment.
Look at me using my sandbox
– Kekki1978 (talk ✉ | contribs ✎) 08:37, 27 September 2022 (UTC)
Testing template Welcomeg
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Kekki1978/sandbox | |
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Coordinates: 38°34′50″N 90°24′51″W / 38.58056°N 90.41417°W |
sup't + 3 asst. sup'ts (Ulrich, Bailey, Fields, Painter) 2 people in communications (Cayce, Wade) 1 HR (non-cabinet, Nelson) 1 substitute coordinator (Testa) interventionists: 1 psychologist (Lock), 1 SSD liaison (Lawson), 2 people in special ed (Crooks, Spencer) 1 student services person (Philips) The business folks: 1 CFO (Romay) 1 director of accounting (Haarmann) 1 payroll coordinator (Brusca) 1 accounts payable coordinator (Kirkman) 1 accounts receivabe and purchasing (Krafft) 1 business assistant (Orelup) 9 secretaries (Bullmer, Conley, Huwer, Jaeger, Kittles, Knapp, Melton, Mueller, Suchanek) 4 people in the copy center department (Diehl, Fox, Sargent, Totty) 1 custodian (Black) 1 intern (Herr)
Playing with citations:
The Missouri land I view to be my own was prevously used by six indigenous nations, according to the website Native-land.ca, developed by Victor Temprano. These nations are: Kiikaapoi (Anglicized to Kickapoo); Kaskaskia; Osage; Myaamia; O-ga-xpa Ma-zhoⁿ (Anglicized to O-ga-xpa); and Očhéthi Šakówiŋ.
The Kickapoo migrated to my area in the midwestern USA after Europeans obtained their land further east by the Greenville Treaty of 1795. About forty years later, and then again about twenty years after that, the group again ceded their land by treaty and were moved further west and south. Today there are three recognized Kickapoo tribes in the United States: the Kickapoo Tribe of Indians of the Kickapoo Reservation in Kansas, the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma, and the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas.(1) My area also was the original ancestral homeland of the Kaskaskia, who supported the British against the Americans during the Revolutionary War. 1832 saw an escalation in federal removal policies, and the tribe was forced to move west. The tribe's descendants are found among the Peoria tribe of Oklahoma.(2) The third group in my area was the Osage, which was the largest subsection of the Southern Sioux and had a sophisticated society in which they lived in permanent villages, hunted, and raised crops. Europeans forced them off their lands twice, in 1810 and 1872, and they ended up on Osage County Oklahoma, where they inhabit land which has large reserves of oil and natural gas, making them the wealthiest tribe in North America.(3) The Myaamia, which means "downstream people," numbered in the tens of thousands of people at one point. Numerous treaties, including the Greenville Treaty of 1795, forced them off their land. In 1846, 500 people remained, and they were corralled at gunpoint and made to migrate by boat, horseback, and wagon to a reservation in Oklahoma. 100 adults survived the journey. They are now recognized as the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma.(4) Evidence suggests that the O-ga-xpa Ma-zhoⁿ people migrated west before the Europeans arrived. At one time, they inhabited the Cahokia, Illinois area, which at the time was the largest metropolitan area north of the Mesoamerican settlements of Mexico. Like the Myaamia, their name also means "downstream people," and it derives from when they got separated from the rest of their group while migrating across the Mississippi river. They settled along the Mississippi River in Arkansas, but half the population succumbed to smallpox, which they had contracted from nearby French settlers. Years of war and disease decimated the population, so starting in 1818, the group succumbed to various land treaties presented by European settlers and migrated elsewhere. They now constitute the Quapaw nation in northeastern Oklahoma.(5) Očhéthi Šakówiŋ translates to "Seven Council Fires" and refers to a united group of seven bands that is more commonly known as the Sioux. They periodically journeyed into Missouri to hunt, but those lands were ceded to Europeans in 1836.(6) It is clear from the history of these groups that the indigenous people of the United States were not a homogenous group of "Indians" but instead had their own distinct cultures and languages and societies that are now corralled into space that their conquerors allocated for them after taking their lands.
In response to the discussion of the word "authochthonous" in the Zoom call, the Collins Cobuild Dictionary defines the word as "inhabiting a place...from the earliest known times." The use dates from the 1640s. Etymonline.com says that the word derives from the Greek word "autokhthon", which means "sprung from the land itself," with "auto-" meaning "self" and "khthon" meaning "earth," from the root "dhghem" meaning "earth."
(1) https://www.legendsofamerica.com/kickapoo-indians/ (2) https://ohiohistorycentral.org/w/Kaskaskia_Indians (3) https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/osage-indians-cede-missouri-and-arkansas-lands (4) https://www.miamination.com/about (5) http://www.quapawtribe.com/DocumentCenter/View/9804/Quapaw-Country (6) https://libraryguides.missouri.edu/nativeamericanstudies/motribes
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[According to Dr. Renee Bradley, Deputy Division Director at the U.S. Department of Education,] we are expanding what we expect IEP teams to do.