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128 Sentences With "courter"

How to use courter in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "courter" and check conjugation/comparative form for "courter". Mastering all the usages of "courter" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"We were less than three feet away," Ms. Courter said.
Two years ago, Gay Courter was sailing on the Diamond Princess.
Some are "panicking, they can't sleep and can't eat," Courter remarked.
Test pilot Robert Courter blasted through the air on a jetpack.
Gay and Phil Courter are now in Texas, their daughter said.
Courter is afraid that if she becomes infected she may not survive.
So, bigger genitalia may just be a bad idea for the courter lifestyle.
"At this point, we are being held illegally against our will," Courter said.
Looking back, Ms. Courter wondered if the coronavirus had already started to spread.
When Megan regains control, she's stunningly conniving and steps ahead of her courter.
" Rhodes-Courter said her parents feel a responsibility to keep "the American people safe.
For most of his career, Thiem was known mostly as a powerful clay courter.
A girl in a yellow dress, swinging around a ballroom with her hairy courter-captor.
Federer has been the third-best clay-courter of this era, behind Nadal and Djokovic.
"Clearing my throat sounds like thunder," Ms. Courter wrote in an email from the bus.
In the green swordtails, which only have courter males, females preferred the males with smaller junk.
"We agreed to the quarantine, we supported the quarantine and did everything required of us," Courter said.
Credit...Philip and Gay Courter Get an informed guide to the global outbreak with our daily Coronavirus
Overall, they favored courter males with short genitalia, but in contrast they liked their sneaker males well hung.
"They are all breathing circulated contaminated air so they could be getting everyone infected," Rhodes-Courter told Reuters.
On Monday, Courter said someone visited their cabin at the beginning of the quarantine to take their temperature.
Pastor Wendy Von Courter of Massachusetts has her collar removed while being arrested in Washington, DC, on Sept. 27.
Courter, who is traveling with her husband, Phil, said the Florida couple are eager to get off the ship.
Gay Courter, a 23-year-old American novelist on board, appealed for the U.S. government to take Americans off.
The Japanese government has said they can leave the ship on February 19, Courter said, but she's not optimistic.
Gay Courter woke up ready with her bags packed Monday after being confined to Lackland for the previous two weeks.
Gay Courter, the woman who was under quarantine at Lackland, expressed her frustration over the last-minute change in protocol.
Gay Courter, a 75-year-old American novelist on board, said he hoped the U.S. government would take the Americans off.
As the passengers boarded, Ms. Courter was standing next to a woman as she was being told she had tested positive.
Gay Courter, who vacationed on the Diamond Princess with her husband, Phil, has no faith that the monitoring process is working.
On one of the buses, Gay Courter, 2603, an American novelist traveling with her husband, Philip, said the passengers were mostly silent.
Gay Courter, a New York Times best-selling author, said that they aren't allowed to leave their quarters for the two-week duration.
Ashley Rhodes-Courter, an American whose parents are on the ship, said she hoped U.S. officials would be able to help her parents leave.
Gay Courter, a 231-year-old American novelist on the ship, said he hoped the U.S. government would send transport to take the Americans off.
A responsibility to keep 'the American people safe' Ashley Rhodes-Courter said her parents, who were aboard the Diamond Princess, tested negative for the virus.
Ashley Rhodes-Courter, an American whose parents are on the boat, said she hoped U.S. officials would be able to help her parents leave the boat.
Ashley Rhodes-Courter, an American whose parents are on the ship, said she hoped U.S. officials would be able to help her parents get off it.
As a salesman, competitor, courter of politicians and controversy and, above all, as a showboating self-promoter, Fred Trump was the Donald Trump of his day.
Gay Courter said many passengers on the ship, including her husband, Phil, and herself, haven't been tested for the deadly virus outside of initial temperature taking.
Ms. Courter thought about the meals, trivia nights and theater performances she had attended, including an opera that was staged the night before the quarantine was imposed.
The Daily Mail even did its diligent journalist duty and reached out to a spokesperson for Next, the greeting-card company that created this sparkly controversy-courter.
Courter told CNN she saw the buses coming to pick her and the others up to take them to the airport, but suddenly the buses turned around.
One of the quarantined passengers, 75-year-old writer Gay Courter, told Reuters that he wants the U.S. to send transportation to retrieve American passengers from the ship.
"This is an incredibly stressful situation, that is being handled as best as it can," said Rhodes-Courter, who kept in touch with her mother through text messages.
In an attempt to escape the infection, Courter said she had contacted her insurance company, Medjet, which is willing to send a crisis extraction team from the boat to evacuate her.
"[Japanese government officials] are letting some people who they claim are the most elderly and vulnerable off the ship," said Gay Courter, who's being held on the Diamond Princess with her husband, Phil.
Winning the French Open would have to wait until 2009, when Nadal, the most successful clay-courter in history, was for once out of the frame after a fourth-round loss to Robin Soderling.
All passengers were given N95 respirators — a heavy-duty mask fitted to the face that filters out 95 percent of smaller air particles — to wear on board the repurposed cargo planes, Ms. Courter said.
On a recent Monday, the drag queen Cacophony Daniels, who is actually the Broadway actor Courter Simmons from "Jersey Boys," sang "Be Our Guest" from "Beauty and the Beast," while spinning, belting and high kicking.
He is the greatest men's clay-courter in history, and he will play a majority of the next four months on the surface, beginning — if he sticks to his schedule — with Rio de Janeiro next month.
This is especially true of courter males, which are already conspicuous as hell, attracting attention from predators—long genitalia may actually cause enough drag in the water to make them less able to dart away from danger.
"I can't wrap my head around the fact that I could die from this cruise," Gay Courter, a 75-year-old novelist confined to a cabin on the ship with her husband, told The Wall Street Journal.
And though Diana, played by the Chicago actress Keely Vasquez, is still the harrowing center of the show, the story spreads out more evenly to encompass its effects on her husband (David Schlumpf) and daughter (Kyrie Courter).
"I can't wrap my head around the fact that I could die from this cruise," Gay Courter, a 75-year-old novelist confined to a cabin on the ship with her husband, told The Wall Street Journal.
Yet Lonzo might not even be close to the swaggiest member of the Ball family, judging by this footage of younger brother LaMelo—a high school sophomore—pointing at the half-court line before casually pulling up and nailing a half-courter.
Mr Querrey also rates much higher on grass courts than he does across all surfaces, and has reached his first major semi-final by upsetting another strong grass-courter, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, and taking advantage of Andy Murray's hip injury in the quarter-final round.
All the while, the Kremlin has played the courted rather than courter of far-right extremists, having naturally attracted them through a well-advertised suspicion of homosexuality, Muslim immigration, Arab revolutions, NATO, the European Union and, above all, the American-led postwar international order.
Officials on the ship have arranged for short periods of time that passengers can go on the ship's deck to get fresh air and exercise, though Phil Courter said the pair haven't "taken advantage of that" since they have a balcony in their room.
There were some exceptions—notably, the historical fiction writer Gay Courter, who wrote her best-selling novel The Midwife on an IBM System 6 in the late 1970s—but, generally speaking, the writers whose eyes were most firmly trained on the future were the easiest to lure way from their Olivetti Letteras.
But foragers Ryan Courter and Jonathan Neu of the No Morels Mushroom Club—a self-described "small gang of fungis and fungirls from Portland Oregon who love foraging for choice edibles"—said they knew where to find some, as long as we promised never to tell anyone where their spot was. Deal.
Her non-fiction book, I Speak For This Child: True Stories of a Child Advocate led to many television appearances including the Today Show, Good Morning America, and 20/20. Courter currently lives in Crystal River, Florida, with her husband, Philip Courter. They are the parents of Blake Courter, an engineer and specialist in 3-D printing; Joshua Courter, a filmmaker and furniture designer; and Ashley Rhodes-Courter, MSW, a motivational speaker, social worker, and author of the New York Times bestseller, Three Little Words (Simon & Schuster, 2008) and its sequel Three More Words (Simon & Schuster 2015). Courter is also a travel writer for Creators Syndicate and other outlets.
Courter was platted in 1869 by R. F. Donaldson. The community was named after the Courter family of settlers. Courter had a depot on the Lake Erie and Western Railroad. At one time, the town contained a general store, a blacksmith shop, and a public school.
She co-founded Courter Films and Associates with husband Philip Courter in 1972. Since then, they have produced more than 300 documentary, educational, and corporate films. Courter has been a vocal supporter of children's rights. She was a Guardian ad Litem in the Florida Courts for 25 years.
Courter was the first female member of CAP to attain the rank of Brigadier General and Major General. In 2007, Courter became the Civil Air Patrol's Acting National Commander. She was elected to a regular three-year term as National Commander in 2008. On August 7, 2008, during the 2008 Civil Air Patrol National Board and Annual Conference, Courter was elected to remain as Civil Air Patrol's National Commander.
The township contains these five cemeteries: Courter, Eel River Chapel, Green Lawn, Koontz and Westlawn.
Courter is an unincorporated community in Jefferson Township, Miami County, in the U.S. state of Indiana.
Courter went on to lose the General Election by a massive 541,384 against Democratic U.S. Rep. Jim Florio.
Major General Amy S. Courter, CAP, is the former National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol. She was elected by a unanimous decision of CAP's National Board on August 7, 2008.PDF of "Courter in Session: First Female Vice Commander Ready to Serve," Civil Air Patrol Volunteer, November–December 2006.
A post office was established at Courter in 1869, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1896.
Gay Courter sits alongside Charles Gibson at ABC's Good Morning America in February 1995 with several youth Courter helped get adopted Since becoming a Guardian ad Litem in Florida, Gay Courter has been advocating for children on a local and national level. Her book, I Speak For This Child brought worldwide attention to the issues of children languishing in foster care. She and her husband Philip Courter turned the focus of their film company into documenting the plight of these children and offering solutions and best practices. They have produced over 75 films for public television, legislators, judges, child welfare workers, adoptive and foster parents, including ones specifically for state supreme court justices, state attorneys general, children's rights lobbyists, juvenile justice stakeholders, abuse prevention, and permanency planning.
Amy Courter graduated from Kalamazoo College in 1983 with a bachelor's degree in psychology and education, minoring in computer science and mathematics. She also earned secondary school teaching certifications in psychology, computer science and mathematics. Courter played basketball and field hockey as a Kalamazoo Hornet, and studied abroad in France at the Université de Strasbourg.
He was born October 14, 1941, in Montclair, New Jersey. A lifelong resident of New Jersey, Courter graduated from Montclair Academy in 1959, received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963 from Colgate University and a Juris Doctor degree from Duke University School of Law in 1966. After law school, Courter became a Peace Corps volunteer in Venezuela.
An investigation led to a $1.3 million fine for James Courter, president of IDT. Despite calls for Aristide's prosecution, nothing was done by Haitian authorities.
In 1995, Courter received special recognition from the Florida Chapter of American Women in Radio and Television, Inc. for her work on Where’s My Chance? The Case for Our Children, which also won an Emmy award. Courter accepted her second Emmy from the National Academy of Arts and Television Sciences, Suncoast Chapter, for a series of public service announcements called Solutions for America’s Children.
Courter joined Civil Air Patrol as a senior in High School. She served as Michigan Wing Commander from 1999 to 2002. She also served as the female senior advisor to CAP's National Cadet Advisory Council. Courter has received the Garber, Loening, Yeager and Wilson awards; as well as the Distinguished Service Medal with two clusters, National Commander’s Commendations and Exceptional Service, Meritorious Service and Commanders Commendation awards.
She is a member of the North American Travel Journalists Association, The Authors Guild, and Writers Guild of America. In February 2020, Courter was one of 3700 passengers and crew quarantined on the Diamond Princess Cruise Ship, which was held in port at Yokohama, Japan during the coronavirus outbreak. In an interview with The New York Times, Courter questioned the efficacy of keeping passengers quarantined on board the ship, where the virus was rapidly spreading. The Atlantic published a piece by Courter, detailing her trip in Asia, her time on the Diamond Princess Cruise Ship, and her experience in quarantine once back in the United States.
Hardwick won some early victories, including a win at a non-binding Middlesex County Republican Convention, where he took 51% of the delegates in a county Courter represented in Congress. A WCAU-TV poll conducted May 29–31 showed a very close race, with the top four candidates—Courter, Edwards, Hardwick and Gormley—separated by just six points, a statistical dead heat in a poll that had a margin of error of +/-5%. The poll showed that 16% of likely Republican primary voters remained undecided just a week before the election. Courter won the primary by 27,013 votes over Edwards, 112,326 (29.02%) to 85,313 (22.04%), with Hardwick finishing third with 85,313 votes (22.04%).
Courter served as Vice President of Information Technology and Telecom at Valassis, a marketing company in Michigan. Courter began as a mid-level manager at Valassis, accepting increasingly more strategic roles, overseeing all IT efforts globally for the last 14 of her 20 years there. Valassis is a publicly traded $2.3 billion company (NYSE:VCI). In 2005, she planned her departure from Valassis to enable her to work in other industries - notably health care and manufacturing.
Retrieved October 24, 2012 which was soon joined by Richard Coulter's Chevrolet dealership.Richard C. Courter, auto dealer and marina operator ; Nov. 4, 1917 -- Nov. 15, 2007 - The Buffalo News Highbeam Research.
Courter attended schools in Taiwan and Japan, and was homeschooled by her mother during their travels. When in the United States, she attended public schools in Mt. Vernon, New York, and graduated from AB Davis High School. Following graduation, Courter attended Antioch College and received a B.A. in Drama/Film in 1966. She worked in the documentary and educational film business in New York with Harvest Productions, ACI Films, and Concord Productions from 1967 to 1970.
Courter currently serves as Chairman of the Board of Advisors for the Graduate School of Management at Rutgers University, he is a member of the Board of Trustees for Berkeley College, and is a member of the Drew University Board of Visitors. Courter is on the Board of Trustees of the Newark Museum, is a member of the New Jersey Network Foundation Board of Trustees, and was named an adjunct professor at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Courter also serves on the Board of Trustees of the Liberty Science Center, the Board of Trustees of the Newark Alliance, and is a member of the Board of Trustees for the New Jersey Performing Arts Center. He was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Centenary College of New Jersey.
While serving as wing commander, Courter played a pivotal role in creating a new National Cadet Special Activity, the Civic Leadership Academy. This gives cadets an in depth view of the United States Government.
Center Township covers an area of and contains one incorporated settlement, Troy (the county seat). According to the USGS, it contains four cemeteries: Charleston, Courter-Ritchey, Mount Olive and Saint Charles. The stream of Mosquito Creek runs through this township.
He later ran Fenwick's District Office. In 1978, Bodman managed the successful campaign of Jim Courter for Congress against two-term Democratic Rep. Helen Meyner, the wife of former New Jersey Governor Robert Meyner. Bodman later became Courter's Chief of Staff.
BC's athletic teams compete in the Northwest Athletic Conference, also known as the NWAC, in the following sports: baseball, softball, volleyball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's soccer, men's and women's golf, and women's tennis. Campus athletic facilities include a 1,000-seat baseball field (Courter Field), a soccer field, and the Courter Family Athletic Pavilion, which contains a 2,500-seat gymnasium. Notable former athletes include Major League Baseball all-star pitcher Evan Meek, who currently plays for the Lancaster Barnstormers, pitcher Blake Hawksworth, formerly of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and actor Jim Caviezel, who played basketball at BC.
Beginning in 1971, Courter was a senior partner in the New Jersey law firm of Courter, Kobert, Laufer & Cohen. He was a partner in the Washington, D.C. law firm of Verner, Liipfert, Bernhard, McPherson and Hand from January 1994 to September 1996. His career in public service included representing New Jersey as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 12 years, from 1979 until 1991. He was nominated as the Republican Party's nominee for Governor of New Jersey in 1989, but lost in a landslide defeat to Democrat Jim Florio and decided not to run for reelection to congress in 1990.
In the hotly contested race, Meyner defeated Schluter by a narrow margin. In 1978 Schluter ran for the House seat again but lost in the Republican primary to Jim Courter, who went on to defeat Meyner in the general election. Schluter returned to the New Jersey Legislature in 1987, when Dick Zimmer moved from the Assembly to the Senate following the death of Senator Walter E. Foran. Schluter won a special election Zimmer's Assembly seat in the 23rd district, and then was appointed to the State Senate after Zimmer succeeded Courter in the House of Representatives in 1991.
Turning professional in 1987, Davín's best slam performance was reaching the quarterfinals of the 1991 French Open, where he defeated experienced clay- courter Martín Jaite as well as Christian Bergström, Marián Vajda and Arnaud Boetsch en route before losing to Michael Stich.
James Andrew Courter (born October 14, 1941) is an American Republican Party politician, lawyer and businessman. He represented parts of northwestern New Jersey in the United States House of Representatives from 1979 to 1991. In 1989, he unsuccessfully ran for Governor of New Jersey.
From 1991 to 1994, Courter held the position of chairman of the Base Closure and Realignment Commission, having been appointed by both President George Herbert Walker Bush and President Bill Clinton; the Commission oversaw the restructuring of the United States' domestic military base infrastructure.
With Kean term- limited, Hardwick set his sights on the Republican nomination for governor. He announced on February 9, 1989. Eight Republicans entered the primary, with U.S. Rep. Jim Courter, who had represented parts of seven New Jersey counties in Congress, was the early front runner.
Jim Courter was chairman of the Committee for the Common Defense at the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, which was in 1995 responsible for writing a letter in support of the Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit bomber that seven former Secretaries of Defense (representing every Democratic and Republican Administration since Richard Nixon) signed. He is Chairman of the Lexington Institute, a think tank dedicated to resolving issues of foreign policy, national security, and international trade. He is also CEO and Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the IDT Corporation, based in Newark, New Jersey. Courter also serves as a member of the Board of Directors for the company's subsidiaries IDT Telecom, IDT Media, and IDT Winstar.
Richard E. Beale Jr. became the new director. Beale retired from the military Sept. 30, 1996, but stayed on the job as the first civilian director of the agency. He was succeeded by Air Force Maj. Gen. Robert J. Courter Jr. (November 1999 to August 2002) and Air Force Maj. Gen.
"The Seven Sisters" ( or ) is located on the northern side of Geirangerfjorden, and directly across the fjord lies a single waterfall called "The Suitor" (). The legend of the seven sisters is that they dance playfully down the mountain. Meanwhile, across the fjord, the suitor (or courter) flirts playfully with them from afar.
It was called the WR19, had a rated thrust of and weighed . The Jet Belt first flew free on 7 April 1969 at the Niagara Falls Municipal Airport. Pilot Robert Courter flew about in a circle at an altitude of , reaching a speed of . The following flights were longer, up to 5 minutes.
In September 2005, Mike Payne, Danny Dean, David Taylor, and Blake Courter founded SpaceClaim Corporation. Mike Payne was previously a founder of PTC and SolidWorks. On April 1, 2007, SpaceClaim released SpaceClaim 2007 Professional, its first commercial release. On September 30, 2008, Chris Randles become CEO and Mike Payne become Chairman of the Board.
In the second round, he defeated second seed Feliciano López in a rain-delayed match that spanned two days. Hours later on the same day, he beat Andreas Seppi in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, he defeated qualifier João Souza. In the final, he came out on top against experienced clay-courter Albert Montañés.
The Princess angrily decides to marry the first courter and announces the Administrator to be her fiance. The King decides to play a wedding. Desperate, his love taken away from him, the Bear decides to tell all about the princess kiss that would turn him into a beast, but the Princess rejects him. The wedding procession leaves.
Courter, 2005, p. 73 On November 21, 1853 Independences career was abruptly ended when her boiler exploded on the lake near Sault Ste. Marie. Captain John McKay, left the dock at the Superior-Huron Portage around 12 o'clock, with approximately three dozen passengers, and a heavy freight of winter supplies for Ontonagon and La Point. Departing from Sault Ste.
Kirkland, May 9, 2015 in Houston, Texas at Minute Maid Park. El Tigre earned a 2nd-round KO victory over Cuban slugger Lester Gonzalez. After almost 2 years off due to another injury, El Tigre returned to the ring March 24, 2017 against Colby Courter at the Humble Civic Center. The bout was stopped in round 3, giving Lopez a TKO victory.
He lost to four-term Republican incumbent Jim Courter, 72,966 (63.5%) to 41,967 (36.4%). Crabiel was defeated for re-election to a sixth term as Freeholder in the Republican landslide of 1991. He was again elected in 1994, and re-elected in 1997, 2000, 2003 and 2006. He died in office, after winning his biggest election victory in November, 2008.
Courter, Robert; "What It's Like to Fly the Jet Belt," Popular Science, Nov. 1969, pp. 55–59, 190 Even as the Bendix and Boeing studies were underway, Marshall was examining a less ambitious surface exploration activity, the LSSM. This would be composed of a fixed, habitable shelter–laboratory with a small lunar-traversing vehicle that could either carry one man or be remotely controlled.
Courter was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Leonard M. Weisman, an international businessman, and Elsie Spector Weisman, a social worker who studied at Carnegie Tech. She is the elder of two daughters. Her sister, Robin Madden, M.D., is a pediatrician. Her foster sister, Jennifer Chang Su, began living with the family while they were in Taiwan in 1952, and she has remained a close family member.
Parker grew up in Cincinnati near Crosley Field, where he learned to play baseball on the stadium's parking lots. His father, Dick Parker, was a shipping clerk in a foundry. Dave Parker attended Courter Tech High School. He has said his favorite sport was football, and he starred at tailback but injured a knee in a game during his senior year and gave up the game.
In 1990, McConkey ran for the United States House of Representatives for the 12th Congressional District of New Jersey, encompassing parts of Hunterdon, Mercer, Somerset, Morris and Warren counties. The seat was a heavily Republican district and was being vacated by incumbent Republican Rep. Jim Courter. In the Republican primary, McConkey was defeated by Dick Zimmer, who won the recently vacated seat in the November General Election.
Elodie (Courter) Osborn (1911–January 20, 1994) professionalized traveling exhibitions through her work at the Museum of Modern Art (1933–1947) as well as her involvement with UNESCO (1954) and the American Federation of Arts (1940s–50s). Osborn was born in Brooklyn in 1911. She received a B.A. in art history from Wellesley College in 1933. In 1933 Osborn joined MoMA's newly founded Department of Circulating Exhibitions as a volunteer.
From 1947 until his death, Osborn lived in Salisbury, Conn. with his wife, Elodie (maiden name Courter), an artist and curator with the Museum of Modern Art."Elodie Osborn, 82, First Director Of the Modern's Traveling Shows" (obituary), New York Times, February 4, 1994 He died of bone cancer, and was survived by two sons, Nic, a naturalist and photographer, and Eliot, a musician and teacher, both of Taconic, Conn.
She ultimately decided against running in the Republican primary, which was won by Jim Courter."A Long Shot Quits Governor's Race", The Record (Bergen County), January 26, 1989. In 1993, Brown resigned from the State Senate when she was appointed to the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, initially to serve out the unexpired term of Charles J. Irwin. Assemblymember Robert Martin was chosen to fill Brown's vacancy in the Senate.
Florio, who had run in the Democratic primary for Governor in 1977 and lost in an extremely close general election in 1981 to outgoing Governor Thomas Kean, stressed in this campaign that he would govern closer to Kean than the conservative Congressman Courter and that despite the economic growth under Kean and the Reagan administrations, he would lead an active government to combat potential overdevelopment and pollution. Following a Supreme Court ruling that would allow states to impose regulations on abortions, the pro-choice Florio won the votes of those in favor of abortion rights while Courter who comprised an anti-abortion voting record in Congress sought to moderate his views which led to distrust among voters. To moderate his positions, Florio promised a wider use of the state death penalty for drug crimes and not to raise taxes (the latter promise would be broken in 1990 when he signed a $2.8-billion tax increase which would lead to his 1993 defeat).
While studying at Georgetown University, Herson served as an intern for Representative Jim Courter. He was then chosen as a White House intern during the Reagan administration. During his internship, Herson worked in the executive office of the President, and spent time in other offices including the National Security Council, the Office of Public Liaison, and the Office of the First Lady. Herson then joined the speech writing office of Vice President George H. W. Bush as an intern.
He had been involved in Republican politics while growing up, including the races of Senator Charles H. Percy. As a teenager, he returned to his home state. While in Summit, New Jersey, he became involved with the Young Republicans and the Kean for Assembly races. Franks helped to found the Union County Young Republicans Franks then served as an aide, consultant and campaign manager to several congressman including Jim Courter and Dean Gallo as well as Governor Thomas Kean.
Roger A. Bodman (born 1952) is an American Republican Party politician and political strategist who served in the cabinet of New Jersey Governor Thomas Kean. Early in his career, Bodman served as district office manager for the late New Jersey Congresswoman Millicent Fenwick and as chief of staff for former New Jersey Congressman James Courter. In 1981, he was selected as manager of Tom Kean's campaign for governor. Following Governor Kean's victory, Bodman was named to two cabinet posts.
He defeated Pinellas County School Board member Nina Hayden in the general election. After the 2012 decennial redistricting, Latvala ran in the 20th District, which was based exclusively in northern Pinellas County. Latvala defeated business owner Zahid Roy in the Republican primary, and deaf child welfare advocate Ashley Rhodes-Courter in the general election. The Tampa Bay Times endorsed Latvala for reelection, calling him "the most powerful independent voice among the Republicans," citing several instances in which he vocally opposed his own party.
Chartered by the Ohio Board of Regents in 1969, Cincinnati State was originally Cincinnati Technical College (CTC). Its campus was once the home of Central Vocational High School and Courter Technical High School, which both belonged to the Cincinnati Public School District. Cincinnati State was the first technical/community college in Ohio to completely ban smoking from campus buildings. In 2006, Cincinnati State created a new division named the Center for Innovative Technologies (CIT), which combined the Engineering Technology and Information Technology divisions.
In 1990, Zimmer ran for the United States House of Representatives for the 12th District, then encompassing parts of Hunterdon, Mercer, Somerset, Morris and Warren counties. The seat was open after Jim Courter decided not seek another term after unsuccessfully running for Governor of New Jersey the previous year. In the Republican primary, Zimmer defeated Rodney Frelinghuysen, the early favorite, and Phil McConkey, former wide receiver for the New York Giants."The 1990 Elections", The New York Times, June 7, 1990.
The 1989 New Jersey gubernatorial election was a race for Governor of New Jersey held on November 7, 1989. Incumbent Republican Governor Thomas Kean was term-limited having been elected to served two consecutive terms. Democrat James Florio, a U.S. Representative from the 1st district and a two-time unsuccessful candidate for Governor, defeated 12th district Republican Representative Jim Courter in a 24-point landslide. This was the only gubernatorial election from 1977 to 2013 where Somerset County voted for a Democratic candidate.
Her most significant title came in 1993 at Strasbourg, when she defeated clay-courter Judith Wiesner in the final. Sawamatsu had much success at Strasbourg reaching the semifinals in 1991, final in 1992 losing to Judith Wiesner. She retired from professional tennis after losing in the second round of the 1998 Japan Open to Monica Seles in a three-set match. Sawamatsu had wins over the following players during her career: Martina Hingis, Lindsay Davenport, Kimiko Date, Mary Joe Fernandez, Amanda Coetzer, and Conchita Martínez.
He then took out clay-courter Eduardo Schwank in two tie breaks. He qualified with a solid 6–1, 6–3 win over journeyman Victor Crivoi. Despite a favourable draw for the first round Dancevic advanced no further however, falling to lucky loser entrant Simone Bolelli in four sets. Perhaps buoyed by his French Open success, Dancevic opted to enter directly into the main draw of the smaller clay court Rijeka Open rather than go through qualifying for the year's first grass court tourney, the Aegon Trophy.
In the Croatia Open, Fabio lost to defending champion Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine in the second round. Fognini began his grass season by reaching the quarterfinals of Eastbourne, defeating fourth seed Bernard Tomic along the way, and falling to eventual tournament winner Andy Roddick in a tight three-set match. At Wimbledon, he defeated experienced grass-courter Michaël Llodra in the first round and again lost to the eventual tournament winner, Roger Federer, in the second round. In the London 2012 Olympics, Fognini was drawn against Novak Djokovic in the first round.
Harana itself uses mainly Hispanic protocols in music, although its origins lie in the old pre-colonial Philippine musical styles which still practised around the country (See also Kapanirong style of the Maguindanao people of Mindanao). The main instrument used for Harana is the guitar, played by the courter, although other string instruments such as the Ukulele and less frequently, the violin and trumpets are also used. The word harana has derived from the Spanish string instrument of the same name. It resembles a guitar, but is smaller in nature.
1988-1989: Joined CAP 1989-1996: Group commander, South Florida 1996-1998: Florida Wing vice commander 1998-2001: Florida Wing commander 2001-2004: Southeast Region commander 2004-2005; National Vice commander 2005-2007: National Commander of the Civil Air Patrol — Removed by the Board of Governors for misconduct and stripped of his rank.On 6 August 2007, the Civil Air Patrol Board of Governors suspended the CAP national commander, Maj Gen Antonio J. Pineda, for a period of up to 180 days. Brig Gen Amy S. Courter, CAP national vice commander, assumed the duties of the National Commander during this period.
Courter has written novels in both the first person and third person narrative styles. Her literary landscape is varied, but she often writes about places and situations with which she is familiar. Many of her stories are based in places where she has lived, such as central Brazil and Israel; people she has known including her paternal grandmother, who was a Russian midwife; and Israeli spies, who were family friends. Her father notoriously helped the Israeli cause by procuring munitions“‘Legal’ Buying of Munitions Admitted by Jewish Agency.” New York Times, January 11, 1948, front page.
The Lexington Institute was founded in 1998 by former U.S. Representative James Courter (R-NJ), former congressional aide Merrick Carey, and former Georgetown University professor Loren Thompson. As of July 2018, they are respectively the chairman, chief executive officer and chief operating officer of the Institute. The institute's political philosophy is center-right, peace through strength, defense of U.S. economic interests, energy independence, and market-driven solutions to social needs. Although the organization's mission statement does not describe it as "conservative" or "libertarian," it opposes tax increases, the creation of entitlements, and federal intervention in the daily lives of citizens.
19 February 2019 In addition to his own album, musicians he has recorded with include Eric Gales, Buddy Guy and Keb Mo. He has shared the stage with well-known blues artists and younger blues musicians such as the Tedeschi Trucks Band, Samantha Fish, Bob Margolin, Eric Gales, Rick Derringer, Guitar Shorty and Buddy Guy.Goldsmith, Margie. Forbes.com, " Twenty-Year-Old Blues Prodigy Christone "Kingfish" Ingram Releases Album Today ". 17 May 2019, Retrieved 18 June 2019Chattanooga Times Free Press, June 11th, 2018 - More music, more vendors and more activities coming to the Bessie Smith Strut by Barry Courter One of his earliest influences is Muddy Waters.
It didn't matter, as long as they owned it." In a Chattanooga Times Free Press article, Barry Courter mentions, "Since moving here (Chattanooga), he has devoted himself to creative endeavors, many in his studio at the Fancy Rhino offices in the Loveman's Building downtown. Soundcorp Executive Director Stratton Tingle attended one of Genesis' seminars 'on a whim because I had heard about them' and was inspired enough to attend several more. 'I had no idea what I was getting into, and pretty quickly he had me writing and reciting a poem in front of people, which is not something I'm comfortable with,' Tingle says.
As Attorney General, Edwards sought to increase the size of the Department of Law and Public Safety; initiated a new anti-drug program; instituted a task force to combat organized crime; planned a virtual overhaul of the Division of Motor Vehicles; and confronted problems such as insurance fraud and state land use planning. Edwards ran for Governor of New Jersey in 1989, losing to Jim Courter in the Republican primary. He ran again in 1993, losing out to Christine Todd Whitman, who went on to victory in the general election. In 1995, Edwards opened his own private practice law firm, Edwards & Caldwell, where he worked until 2008.
In 1972, Meyner ran as the Democratic nominee for Representative from New Jersey's newly redistricted 13th Congressional District that included her home in Phillipsburg and included Hunterdon, Sussex and Warren Counties and portions of Mercer and Morris Counties. She lost in the Republican-leaning district, to the Republican candidate, Joseph J. Maraziti. In 1974, with the Watergate scandal leading to Democratic congressional gains throughout the country, Meyner ran for the seat again, this time beating Maraziti. She won a second term in the 1976 elections in a close race against William E. Schluter, but lost her bid for a third term in 1978 to Republican James A. Courter.
He declined to run against Kean in 1985, and in the 1989 New Jersey gubernatorial election he finally won both the nomination and the election. During his campaign, Florio said "You can write this statement down: 'Florio feels there is no need for new taxes.'" Florio won the election over Republican Jim Courter with 61% of the vote. The Florio administration started during the late 1980s recession and thus faced a budget deficit, and Florio had his own desires to increase education aid to New Jersey's low-wealth school districts. Faced with a projected 1991 deficit of $3 billion, Florio asked for a $2.8 billion tax increase, most in the way of a sales tax increase and an increase in the state excise taxes on various goods.

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