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25 Sentences With "penmen"

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

NCAA Record Book Butler graduated in 1994 with a bachelor's degree in sociology and a minor in computer information. In 2001, he was inducted in the SNHU Penmen Hall of Fame.
Louis Madarasz Louis Madarasz (January 20, 1859 - December 23, 1910) was an American calligrapher, born in San Antonio, Texas, regarded as one of the most highly skilled ornamental penmen of all time.
Retrieved 2010-12-13. He was "one of the best penmen of his time, as attested by the town and colony records." Kimberly was married three times and had five children. He built the Kimberly Mansion in the early 18th century.
Ahmed III and Mahmud II were skilled penmen and their hatt-ı hümayuns are notable for their long and elaborate annotations on official documents. In contrast, Sultans who accessed the throne at an early age, such as Murad V and Mehmed IV display poor spelling and calligraphy.
In retirement, he joined the boards of several companies, including Edwin Dank (Oldbury) Ltd., Westland Aircraft,Aviation Ancestry and Penmen and Company, Ltd. He was president of the Army Rugby Union from 1948–1953. In 1921, he married Doris Margaret Parker, daughter of Joseph Parker of the Indian Civil Service, with whom he had two sons and a daughter.
The writers of the Bible were God's penmen, not His pen. Look at the different writers. :It is not the words of the Bible that are inspired, but the men that were inspired. Inspiration acts not on the man's words or his expressions but on the man himself, who, under the influence of the Holy Ghost, is imbued with thoughts.
In 1998, he published the prison memoirs of his father who had spent time in Soviet POW camps. Baghiu now lives and works as a psychologist in Piatra Neamt. He is a member of the Romanian branch of PEN. His work has appeared in English translation in different magazines and anthologies abroad such as Banipal, Cordite Poetry Review,Poems Magma Poetry,Two Poems Penmen Review.
His teams have averaged 22 wins per season and also have 14 NCAA tournament appearances, four NCAA regional titles, and six NECC tournament championships. In 1989, when it was known as New Hampshire College, the Penmen won their first NCAA Men's Soccer Championship, against UNC Greensboro. In 2002, the men's soccer team returned to the NCAA Division II championship game, but lost to Sonoma State.
He also manufactures period style oblique dip pen equipment for use by penmen today. In Geneva, Ohio (Platt R. Spencer's home town) Sull previously organized annual week-long seminars dedicated to Spencerian script known as the Spencerian Saga since 1987, wholly devoted to Spencerian Script and Ornamental Penmanship. The Spencerian Saga is now organized by Harvest Crittenden of Acorn Arts Studio. Sull's career, however, didn't begin in the penmanship industry.
On December 7, 2013, the Penmen won their second NCAA men's soccer national title, defeating Carson- Newman, 2-1. SNHU is a recipient of the NCAA Foundation Academic Achievement Award, which recognizes high graduation rates among student athletes. SNHU took home the award for the highest graduation rate among all Division II institutions. SNHU also earned the Northeast-10 Conference Academic Achievement Award after the 2001–02 school year.
Southern New Hampshire University participates in NCAA Division II athletics. It is a member of the Eastern College Athletic Conference and the Northeast-10 Conference. The teams' nickname, the Penmen, is an homage to the university's history as an accounting school. The university's mascot is named "Petey Penmen". Lou D'Allesandro was appointed the first athletic director and head coach of the men's basketball team in 1963. Future NBA head coach P.J. Carlesimo coached the men's basketball team during the 1975–1976 season, compiling a 14–13 record and winning the Mayflower Conference championship. The Stan Spirou Field House is named after longtime men's basketball coach Stan Spirou, whose career spanned from 1985 to 2018. He is considered one of the most successful NCAA Division II basketball coaches, compiling a career winning percentage of .652 (522–279), four New England Collegiate Conference Coach of the Year awards (1993, 1994, 1995, 1999), and was named National Coach of the Year in 1994 by Division II Bulletin.
The 1989 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship was the 18th annual tournament held by the NCAA to determine the top men's Division II college soccer program in the United States. New Hampshire College defeated UNC Greensboro in the final, 3–1, to win their first Division II national title. The Penmen (22-1-2) were coached by John Rootes. The final match was played on December 3 in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Carlesimo is a 1971 graduate of Fordham University, where he played basketball under coach Digger Phelps. He began his coaching career as an assistant at the school after he graduated. He received his first head coaching job when he took over New Hampshire College (now Southern New Hampshire University) for one year, beginning in 1975. The New Hampshire Penmen ended the 1975–1976 season with a 14–13 record and won the Mayflower Conference championship.
During Paternosto's senior year New Hampshire College had a 27–6 record and went all the way to the NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship Elite Eight. Having won through the Northeastern Regional in Manchester, New Hampshire, the Penmen qualified for the Elite Eight in Louisville, Kentucky. They were beaten 108-93 by Southern Indiana in the quarter-final. Paternostro netted 44 points in New Hampshire's 113–110 overtime win against St Rose in the regional semi-final.
Paternostro attended New Hampshire College, now known as Southern New Hampshire University, where he played for the men's basketball team between 1991 and 1995. As point guard for the Penmen, Paternostro helped the team to the Division II Elite Eight three times, including twice reaching the tournament semi-final. During that span the team also became the first in conference history to capture three-straight NECC league tournament titles. In 2001, Paternostro was inducted into the SNHU Hall of Fame.
During Paternosto's junior year New Hampshire College had a 28-5 record and went all the way to the NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship Elite Eight semi-final. Having won through the Northeastern Regional in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the Penmen qualified for the Elite Eight in Springfield, Massachusetts. They beat Alabama A&M; 100–90 in the quarter-final, before losing 111–89 to Southern Indiana in the semi-final. Paternostro scored 25 points and had 10 assists in the semi- final defeat.
The International Association of Master Penmen, Engrossers and Teachers of Handwriting (IAMPETH) (pronounced "I am Peth") is an international association for practicing and preserving the arts of calligraphy, engrossing and penmanship. IAMPETH was founded in 1949. IAMPETH maintains an archive of works of past masters (viewable, in person, only to members during the Annual Conference) in addition to online instruction guides on lettering styles such as Copperplate, Spencerian script, Illuminated manuscript production (engrossing) and others. A portion of the organization's collection has been digitally preserved and is available on their Internet Archive profile.
Though usually composed at monasteries, they are contrasted with monastic annals which emphasise ecclesiastical and especially local happenings over those of the larger Reich. Some historians, such as Ranke (Zur Kritik fränkisch-deutscher Reichsannalisten. Berlin, 1854) have seen a sheen of officiality in the various annals for the kings whose reigns they cover. The authors of the Reichsannalen show a greater awareness of external affairs, military manœuvres, and court politics than the cloistered penmen of the monastic annals. The earliest of the annals is the Royal Frankish Annals, dating from 741.
In 1963, D'Allesandro became the first athletic director and men's basketball coach at Southern New Hampshire University (known then as New Hampshire College), where he was instrumental in helping the school achieve NCAA status. As head coach, the men's basketball team won three consecutive conference titles from 1964–65 to 1966–67. He was inducted into the SNHU Penmen Hall of Fame in 1970. A biography of D'Allesandro, Lou D'Allesandro: Lion of the New Hampshire Senate and Thoughts for Presidential Hopefuls, by Mark C. Bodanza, was published in 2018.
The Stan Spirou Field House (formerly known as the SNHU Fieldhouse) is a 2,000 seat facility on the campus of Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, New Hampshire, United States. A part of their Athletics and Recreation Complex, it is home to the SNHU Penmen basketball & volleyball teams, numerous New Hampshire high school basketball tournaments, and was the home of the Manchester Millrats of the Premier Basketball League until their move to Saint John, New Brunswick. In May 2018, the facility was renamed to honor Stan Spirou. Spirou had coached the men's basketball team for 33 seasons.
Blair is past president of the Washington Calligraphers Guild, and was co-director of Letterforum, at the 26th International Calligraphy Conference. In 2005, Pat Blair was awarded the honor "Master Penman" by the International Association of Master Penmen, Engrossers and Teachers of Handwriting for her Spencerian round hand style of script used in White House invitations. In March 2013, Blair's over $96,000 annual salary, and the salary of her two deputy calligraphers, became a source of debate when published by the White House and reported online."Why the White House Spends $277,000 on Calligraphers" By Peter Weber, The Week March 7, 2013.
Donald H. Stewart, The Opposition Press of the Federalist Period (1969) The Federalists, with twice as many newspapers at their command, slashed back with equal vituperation. John Fenno and "Peter Porcupine" (William Cobbett) were their nastiest penmen and Noah Webster their most learned. Hamilton subsidized the Federalist editors, wrote for their papers and in 1801 established his own paper, the New York Evening Post. Though his reputation waned considerably following his death, Joseph Dennie ran three of the most popular and influential newspapers of the period, The Farmer's Weekly Museum, the Gazette of the United States and The Port Folio.
Lord Chief Justice Jeffreys (whose conduct of the trial caused much criticism, then and later) ruled: "Scribere est agere" ("to write is to act"). Heneage Finch, the Solicitor General, described the Discourses as "An argument for the people to rise up in arms against the King". In response, Sidney said that it was easy to condemn him by quoting his words out of context: "If you take the scripture to pieces you will make all the penmen of the scripture blasphemous; you may accuse David of saying there is no God and of the Apostles that they were drunk." He argued that he was entitled to write what he chose, as long as he did not publish it.
Sense words (words added by the > translator to make a sentence more intelligible) are kept to an absolute > minimum without sacrificing readability, and when used are always bracketed > so that you know which words are God's and which are the translator's. You > won't find a more literal rendition of the very words of God in any other > version (not even in the NASB)! There are mysterious things, things hard to > understand (2 Peter 3:15,16) in the Scriptures, but it is not the literal > meanings of the Hebrew or Greek words that cause this to be so. The > "different gospel" preached by those "troubling you and desiring to pervert > the gospel of Christ," cannot be justly derived from the literal words > written by the Divine penmen, for these holy men were "borne along by the > Holy Spirit," (1 Peter 1:21).
Their co-authored works, and those of Keith alone, often tackle controversial topics such as the demise of local radio programming (2005); the legal intricacies of indecent or even obscene programming (2003); the use of radio by extreme hate groups (1999), a title on President Clinton's summer reading list one year; and the use of radio by Native Americans (1995), the first monograph to appear on that topic. Keith has been a Stanton Fellow of the International Radio & Television Society and received the Distinguished Scholar Award given by the Broadcast Education Association and the Achievement Award in the Humanities by the University of Rhode Island. In addition to his many media books and academic articles, Keith has written a well-reviewed memoir of his unconventional childhood years — The Next Better Place (Algonquin Books, 2003) — as well as a coming of age novel, Life is Falling Sideways (Parlance, 2009). He has written an ever-expanding list of short stories, which have appeared in numerous online and print journals, such as The Literati Quarterly, The Penmen Review, Lowestoft Chronicle, "Grey Sparrow Journal," and several annual anthologies.

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