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"swink" Definitions
  1. to work under difficult conditions or for long hours : TOIL
  2. LABOR, DRUDGERY
"swink" Antonyms

98 Sentences With "swink"

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

Decker is awaiting a status hearing in January, Swink says.
"There was a quite a bit of relief yesterday," Swink says.
Kristie Swink Benson was appointed director of communications at the High Museum of Art.
"This wasn't the only time he [Peterson] made threats like this to a girl," Swink says.
"There's some really raw feelings that people have towards the defendants in this case," Swink tells PEOPLE.
Cache County Attorney James Swink told reporters the crime's violence was unusual, according to the Associated Press.
"You could feel the support from her family, law enforcement and the community that was present [Tuesday]," Swink tells PEOPLE.
The game's official website still has a spot to process pre-order payments, but includes a trailer from 2013, and Swink hasn't tweeted since September 2016.
Peterson was charged as an adult and Cache County, Utah, Attorney James Swink tells PEOPLE he is seeking the highest sentencing for the crime: 15 years to life.
YouTube wasn't a help during that time period, either; there were a few videos after the Kickstarter, archives of Swink playing Towerfall with his buddies, and two podcasts.
It's not hard to imagine building a set of clever puzzles out of such a concept, which explains why designer Steve Swink and his team managed to raise $22017,22018 in October 2013.
The weird part is that Swink and everyone else working on Scale were, in fact, providing regular updates to people, it's just that it was only happening back on the Kickstarter page.
In a March 19 letter, signed by another San Francisco immigration justice, Arwen Swink, NAIJ's local representative for San Francisco and addressed to California's top political, legal, and health officials, the group notes that despite a March 16 order to stay home, the federal government "continues to require all Judges and Court staff — at both the detained and non-detained courts — to report to work as usual," effectively requiring them to defy local law enforcement.
Swink is a Statutory Town in Otero County, Colorado, United States. The population was 617 at the 2010 census. A post office called Swink has been in operation since 1906. The community was named after George W. Swink, a Colorado politician.
Fahlgren & Ferris and Swink Advertising merged to form Fahlgren & Swink on July 1, 1984. The merged companies together acquired Atlanta-based Nucifora & Associates. In October 1988, Fahlgren & Swink was acquired by Lintas New York Inc., a subsidiary of The Interpublic Group of Companies.
Captain Swink also fought hard > for us, and though he had little in the field to work with, just his > presence was comforting to us and especially to the medics. With James Swink > around there was someone to go to when a for them. Ross Phillips said Swink > was accessible and didn't play the rank game. He said Swink was a fun guy > who was always a dedicated doctor.
A post office was established at Swink, Indian Territory on August 14, 1902. It was named for D.R. Swink, a local merchant.Shirk, George H. Oklahoma Place Names (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1965), p. 201. At the time of its founding, Swink was located in Kiamitia County, a part of the Apukshunnubbee District of the Choctaw Nation.
Swink, Simone. "Kwaito: Much More Than Music". South Africa. 7 January 2003.
Film poster/lobby card for the 1956 film Friendly Persuasion. Robert Swink (June 3, 1918 – August 15, 2000) was an American film editor who edited nearly 60 feature films during a career that spanned 46 years. Obituary for Swink. Born in Rocky Ford, Colorado, Swink and his family moved to Hollywood in 1927. After graduating from North Hollywood High School in 1936, he joined RKO Pictures as an editing apprentice.
Kitty Swink (born October 22, 1954) is an American film, stage, and television actress.
The three survivors realize that once the game has begun, it can play by itself. Swink stays in a van and plays the game on his laptop to distract Bathory, while Hutch and Abigail search Gerouge Plantation. The Countess begins cheating, arriving in her carriage to kill Swink in real life, even though his character is still alive. Swink decides to run for it until he falls over into a bush of roses and is seemingly killed by the Countess with her shears.
Swink came out of retirement to edit the 1989 film Welcome Home when Schaffner died right after completing principal photography on the project. Swink worked as a second unit director on The Big Country (1958), The Collector (1965), How to Steal a Million (1968), The Only Game in Town (1970), and The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970). Swink was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for Roman Holiday (1953), Funny Girl (1968), and The Boys from Brazil (1978).
Swink has been incorporated in Colorado's Bustang network. It is part of the Lamar-Pueblo- Colorado Springs line.
Swink is located in eastern Choctaw County at (34.018441, -95.202851). U.S. Route 70 passes along the northern edge of the community, leading west to Hugo, the county seat, and east to Valliant. According to the United States Census Bureau, the Swink CDP has an area of , all of it land.
Swink is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Choctaw County, Oklahoma, United States. As of the 2010 census the population was 66."DP-1 Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics: 2010 - 2010 Demographic Profile Data: Swink CDP, Oklahoma," American Fact Finder, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 28, 2015.
Jon Haque serves as Managing Director, and Michelle Swink as PR/Marketing Associate. In 2007, it relocated to downtown Oklahoma City.
He received the American Cinema Editors Career Achievement Award in 1993. Swink died of a heart attack in Santa Maria, California.
Dr. Floyd Allen Swink (1921-2000) was an American botanist, teacher of natural history, and author of several floras of the Chicago region.
In numerous > interviews, Swink stated he had been inspired by a physician in Rusk, Texas > to pursue a medical career. It must have been a difficult decision because > Swink had proven himself a formidable football player. He had led the nation > in scoring and placed second in rushing in 1955. He got to play against Jim > Brown, and Swink's team won.
The photograph > appears to have been taken at a makeshift triage area. The medics liked > Captain Swink and he had great respect for them.
In addition to his political career, McLaurin has also worked as the general manager of TOTAL Lubricants and the president of Swink-Quality Oil Company.
Swink was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1995 by Western Illinois University for the vast botanical and ornithological knowledge he had acquired by individual study, as well as his generosity in sharing that knowledge with others. Swink, Robert Betz, and Ray Schulenberg—the "Prairie Triad"—were awarded the George B. Fell Award in 1996 for their work in the pioneering of prairie restoration in northern Illinois.
He later practiced medicine in Fort Worth as an orthopedic surgeon. In 1980, Swink was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame, and in 1982 he was presented with a Silver Anniversary Award by the NCAA for career achievements outside of football. In 2005, he was awarded the Doak Walker Legends Award. Swink died on December 3, 2014, at his home in Rusk, Texas, due to complications of lymphoma.
Hypericum swinkianum, known as Swink's St. John's wort, is a shrub in the St. John's wort family. It was named after Chicago Region botanist Floyd Swink (1921-2000).
Jim Swink (March 14, 1936 – December 3, 2014) was an All-American halfback at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. Swink grew up in Rusk, Texas, which inspired his nickname: "The Rusk Rambler". He is remembered as one of the greatest running backs in Southwest Conference history and led the Horned Frogs to win consecutive conference championships in 1955 and 1956. These victories resulted in trips to the Cotton Bowl Classic.
Jim Swink was from Rusk, Texas. He had been a famed player in his > early years, earning him the moniker "the Rusk Rambler" as he led TCU to > consecutive conference championships and Cotton Bowl appearances. In fact, > Captain Swink was a two time "All American" halfback who finished second in > the Heisman Trophy voting in 1955. After graduating from TCU, he rejected an > NFL career even though drafted by the [Chicago] Bears.
D'Angelo, Joe (2001) "Slipknot's Maggot Label Signs First Act; Members Moonlight With Others", MTV, December 7, 2001, retrieved 2011-12-10 After recording the guitar tracks for their self-titled debut, Godfrey left the band to join first Motograter, and then Lo-Pro with former Ultraspank singer Pete Murray. The band then recruited Bruce Swink to handle the guitar for the band's live shows. Although listed on the album liner notes, Swink did not play on the album.
Swink made her film debut in a minor role in the 1987 comedy Like Father Like Son, followed by a supporting part in Paul Schrader's biopic Patty Hearst (1988). She has worked primarily in television, including guest appearances on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1999), Judging Amy (2005), and Without a Trace (2006). In addition to film and television, Swink has appeared in theater, including productions of Ladyhouse Blues in 2013 for the Andak Stage Company in Los Angeles, California.
Board members serve three-year terms. They are elected at the annual meeting; there are no term limits. Board of Directors: James C. Horne, Jr., Chairman of the Board; William D. Thomson, Vice Chairman of the Board; Julian L. White, Treasurer; Nancy L. Ross, Secretary; Michael Swink, Director; William E. Poorbaugh, Director; Mark Matthews, Director; Lauren Napolitano, Director; Jeffrey Edwards, Director; Sam Brumberg, Associate Director. Supervisory Committee: Anita C. Dunn, Chairperson; Michael Swink; Willie M. Jefferson; Dolly Snead; Harrison Bonner III.
In 1904 Swink set up and directed Colorado's agricultural and horticultural display at the World's Fair in St. Louis, Missouri. Swink, appointed postmaster of Rocky Ford in 1876, was the first mayor of the town after it was incorporated in 1887, and he was a state senator for two terms. He was one of the original three county commissioners when Otero County was formed. In October 1855 he was married to Mary J. Cool, and they had eleven children—six boys and five girls.
During the game, Swink rushed 15 times for 235 yards and scored 26 points in a 47–20 rout of the Longhorns. In the same year, he finished second to Howard Cassady of Ohio State in the voting for the Heisman Trophy. The Longhorns' slogan and famous hand gesture, known as the "Hook 'em Horns," was created in reference to the need to mitigate Swink's prowess as a player. After finishing his degree at TCU, Swink chose to give up playing in the National Football League and attended medical school instead.
It was the first of 11 projects on which the two men collaborated. Swink left RKO to join Wyler at Paramount in 1952, and his credits at the studio include Carrie (1952), Roman Holiday (1953), and The Desperate Hours (1955). Among his assistants in this era was Hal Ashby, who became a distinguished editor and director. In 1964, Swink edited The Best Man for Franklin J. Schaffner. They worked together on four additional films, including Papillon (1973), Islands in the Stream (1977), The Boys from Brazil (1978), and Sphinx (1981).
In May 1990, Fahlgren & Swink bought Hawley & Martin and became known as Fahlgren & Martin, with David N. Martin serving as chairman. In 1993, Fahlgren Martin sold Hawley Martin to Arnold Fortuna Lawner & Cabot, again becoming known as Fahlgren.
At the time, Fahlgren had offices in Parkersburg, W. Va.; Atlanta; Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus and Toledo, Ohio; Greensboro, N.C., and Tampa. When Interpublic acquired another company, Ammirati & Puris, which was the lead national creative agency for Burger King, the conflict with Fahlgren client McDonald’s presented the opportunity for the company to buy itself back from the holding company, again becoming an independent company. In 1989, Fahlgren & Swink acquired Florida-based Benito Advertising, which had offices in Tampa, Orlando and Jacksonville and handled multiple Florida co-ops of McDonald’s. The resulting company was named Fahlgren & Swink/Benito.
According to the book June 17, 1967: Battle of Xom Bo II by David Hearne: > The presence of 31 years old Captain James E. Swink, our battalion surgeon, > was an additional blessing for our wounded men as they were pulled out of > the wood line. During battalion-size operations, operations, Swink would > often travel with us to the field. He had been assigned to the Black Lions > after a 5 months stint at the 12th Evacuation Hospital in Cu-Chi, Vietnam. > He was there in the aftermath of the battle helping the medics with the > wounded.
He is also remembered for being the object of > the University of Texas expression, "Hook em Horns." Prior to November 12, > 1955, game Texas students had come up with the oft-heard phrase in the hopes > of unsettling Swink and his team, the Horned Frogs, but it didn't work. Even > with thousands of Texas students screaming "Hook em Horns horns" Swink still > played one of his best games, rushing for 235 yards on 15 carries for a > 15.7-yard average and scored a school-record of 26 points. The Frogs > trounced the Longhorns, 47–20 that afternoon.
Floyd Swink spent most of his career teaching plant and animal identification and creating works that allowed others to teach themselves with the help of a book. He studied plants largely on his own throughout his early 20s, but in 1946 he began to study intently under Julian Steyermark, a researcher and botanical curator at the Field Museum of Natural History. The two spent weekends collecting plants in Missouri as part of Steyermark's research there, culminating in his publishing of Flora of Missouri in 1963. Swink struck up a correspondence with noted Indiana botanist Charles Deam, author of Flora of Indiana, in 1947.
Mr. Kelly Guempel is the current principal of Spotsylvania High School. Assistant principals include Mr. Robert Marchetti, Mrs. Veronica Jackson, and Mr. Reitha Abed. Other administration staff include Ms. Michelle Hart, Instructional Coordinator, Mr. William Swink, Activities Director, and Ms. Rachel Bentley-Goode, School Counseling Director.
How shal the world be served? :Lat Austin have his swink to him reserved! These rhetorical questions may be regarded as the monk's own casual way of waving off criticism of his aristocratic lifestyle. Similar examples can be found in the narrator's portrait of the friar.
Leelila grew up in Brooklyn, New York through her early teens. Later, she spent much of her time living and studying abroad, in Switzerland, England, Israel and Guatemala. As a hobby, Leelila is also a writer and editor. In 2004 she launched the non-profit literary magazine, Swink.
The highway continues east, serving unincorporated Swink, before leaves Choctaw County. The easternmost county US-70 serves in Oklahoma is McCurtain County. The road heads southeast, passing through Valliant, before intersecting SH-98 west of Millerton. East of SH-98, US-70 bisects Millerton, then continues southeast through Garvin.
Tackle Hugh Swink and guard Sonny Liles were selected by the conference coaches as first-team players on the 1941 All- Missouri Valley Conference football team. Three other Oklahoma A&M; player were named to the second team: halfback Lonnie Jones; fullback Jack Faubion; and end George Darrow.
Erin Robinson Swink is a Canadian indie game designer and developer. In 2011, Fast Company named her one of the most influential women in technology. In 2015, University of California, Santa Cruz appointed her creative director of the Jack Baskin School of Engineering's master's programme in games and playable media.
The Office has partnered with St. George's Church of England Primary School in Birmingham, England in order to share Spanish classes between British and Arkansas elementary students, as well as the East Central Board of Cooperative Education and Swink High School in Eastern Colorado providing Spanish, French, and German instruction.
Morris, John W. Historical Atlas of Oklahoma (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1986), plate 38. Swink is the location of the historic District Choctaw Chief's House, which was the home of District Choctaw Chief Thomas LeFlore."District Choctaw Chief's House," TravelOK, Oklahoma Tourism and Recreation Department. Accessed May 28, 2015.
Oy Vey! My Son Is Gay!! is a 2009 comedy film directed, written, and produced by Evgeny Afineevsky and starring Lainie Kazan, Saul Rubinek, Vincent Pastore, John Lloyd Young, Jai Rodriguez, Bruce Vilanch, Fred Swink and Carmen Electra. The theme song, "The Word Is Love" was written by Desmond Child and performed by Lulu.
In 2015, the Nordic Game Jam hosted Steve Swink as the Keynote Speaker. The jam grew to more than 700 people, and centered around the theme: Obvious. The winning game was called "The Wuuuuuuu" - as it was controlled only by shouting into a microphone, all the jammers played it together during the final presentations.
Evinston Community Store and Post Office, a/k/a the Wood & Swink Location of Evinston, Florida Evinston is an unincorporated community in Alachua and Marion counties, Florida, United States. The Alachua County portion of Evinston is part of the Gainesville Metropolitan Statistical Area, while the Marion County portion is part of the Ocala Metropolitan Statistical Area.
The Horned Frogs have won two national championships, one in 1935 and the other in 1938.NCAA Division I FBS national football championship Additionally, the team has captured fourteen conference championships. Many notable football players have played for TCU, including Sammy Baugh, Davey O'Brien, Jim Swink, Bob Lilly, LaDainian Tomlinson, and Andy Dalton. Many other Horned Frogs also currently play in the NFL.
Near Swink was the discovery of Oklahoma’s only steamboat wreck. The steamboat Heroine sank in the Red River on May 7, 1838, after hitting a submerged snag. The Red River changed course in the early 1840s, leaving the Heroine buried in what became a pasture. In the 1990s during a period of flood, the river moved again and Heroine reappeared in a riverbank.
Between 1949 and 1955, Swink was a professor of botany, zoology, pharmacognosy, and entomology as well as a part-time student at the College of Pharmacy of the University of Illinois at Chicago. He was nationally- recognized as an authority on poisonous plants, serving as an expert consultant to hospitals around the country in cases of poisoning and potentially poisonous plant identification.
Charles Swink was a multi-record holder in track and field. His record at the Drake Relays stood for twenty years. An overgrown concrete eyesore on Ashworth Road soon became the musical mecca for the surrounding area on June 6, 1939, when Tom Archer opened the Val Air Ballroom. The site was originally the location of the stillborn Wilson Rubber company factory.
TCU have achieved success under numerous coaches including Matty Bell, Dutch Meyer, Abe Martin, Dennis Franchione, and current coach Gary Patterson. Gary Patterson received nine National Coach of the Year honors in 2009. Coaches Matthews, Baugh, O'Brien, Aldrich, Lester, Swink, Lilly, and Dutch Meyer are all members of the College Football Hall of Fame. Baugh and Lilly are also members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
During World War II, he edited training films for the Army Special Services. His first screen credit was the 1943 comedy short Double Up. For the next five years, Swink edited mostly B movies until George Stevens hired him for I Remember Mama (1948). He edited several Westerns in 1950, and the following year was hired by William Wyler to work on Detective Story.
Swink published his first book in 1953: A guide to the wild flowering plants of the Chicago region. Between 1957 and 1960, he was employed as a naturalist with the Forest Preserve District of Cook County. In 1960, he joined The Morton Arboretum in Lisle, Illinois as the director of education, teaching botany and natural history. He became the arboretum’s plant taxonomist in 1963.
Muñoz's early writing appeared in various publications, notably Rush Hour, Swink, Epoch, Glimmer Train, Edinburgh Review, and Boston Review. His first collection of short stories, Zigzagger, was published in 2003. Most of the stories in this first tome are set in the rural towns of the Central Valley of California, which resemble his hometown of Dinuba. Muñoz has noted that the Central Valley has functioned as "reservoir of creativity" for him.
Swink was named an All-American player in 1955 and 1956. His best season was in 1955, when he rushed for 1,283 yards (which was second-best in the nation) and led the country with 125 points scored. In just the first four games of that season he gained 484 yards and scored 10 touchdowns. His best performance that year was during the rival match with Texas in Austin.
The venerable Lincoln School was razed in 1938 to make way for the new building. Longfellow was retired in 1939 and then sold in 1940 for $1000. In 1955, West Des Moines Elementary School at Walnut and 6th was renamed "Nellie Phenix Elementary" in honor of the former principal. The late 1930s were very good years in the school's athletic teams, producing memorable names: True, Gavin, Swink, and Sherbo.
Historic marker for the post office The Evinston Community Store and Post Office (also known as the Fred Wood Store or Wood & Swink) is a historic combined store and post office in Evinston, Florida, United States. It is located on CR 225, north of the Alachua/Marion county border. The address is 18320 Southeast County Road 225. On May 5, 1989, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
Swink invented the cantaloupe crate, which replaced the barrels formerly used for shipping the fruit, and he began the Arkansas Valley Fair. The entire town of Rocky Ford was moved from its prior location in 1884 when railroad tracks were laid through the townsite. Ford owned most of the new land where the new town was built. In 1899 he helped to found the American Crystal Sugar Factory, which remained in operation until 1979.
Game feel (sometimes referred to as "game juice") is the intangible, tactile sensation experienced when interacting with video games. The term was popularized by the book Game Feel: A Game Designer's Guide to Virtual Sensation written by Steve Swink. The term has no formal definition, but there are many defined ways to improve game feel. The different areas of a game that can be manipulated to improve game feel are: input, response, context, aesthetic, metaphor, and rules.
Rusk has been home to three former governors, James Stephen Hogg, Thomas M. Campbell, and John B. Kendrick (Governor of Wyoming). Rusk has also been the home to Jim Swink Adrian Burk and Johnny Horton. Anthony Denman former Notre Dame All American, Most Valuable Player and former NFL player is from Rusk. He was the first to hail from Rusk to play in the NFL Cody Glenn a former Nebraska standout and former NFL player is from Rusk.
38.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 22.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 1.83 and the average family size was 2.30. In the town the population was spread out, with 7.6% under the age of 18, 4.5% from 18 to 24, 16.5% from 25 to 44, 31.8% from 45 to 64, and 39.4% who were 65 years of age or older."QT-P1 Age Groups and Sex: 2010 - 2010 Census Summary File 1: Swink CDP, Oklahoma," American Fact Finder, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 28, 2015. The median age was 54.5 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 96.8 males. According to the 2013 American Community Survey, The median income for a household in the town was $21,875, and the median income for a family was $21,042."DP03 Selected Economic Characteristics - 2009-2013 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates: Swink CDP, Oklahoma," American Fact Finder, United States Census Bureau. Accessed May 28, 2015.
It was "the first community irrigation system in the valley, forever transforming Rocky Ford [Colorado] into a top crop-producing landscape."Colorado.com Swink storeSwink moved his stock of goods to Rocky Ford in 1876, partnering with Isaiah Denness, and eventually he had a thousand acres of land, which he obtained by homestead, pre-emption and purchase. He developed the watermelon and cantaloupe industry in Rocky Ford, and In 1878 he introduced honey bees. In 1879 he grew his first crop of alfalfa.
In January 2007, the band signed a management deal with Damon Moreno at the Inner Light Agency (iLA). Bruce Swink would later step down as a guitarist in the band and join Moreno at iLA to aid in managing Destrophy and other promising artists. In February 2007, Ari an avid weight-lifter, suffered an umbilical hernia while weight training, forcing the band to go on hiatus for the first part of the year. Ari continued to write and record new music throughout the year.
78 It reacts (to varying degrees) with nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids to give compounds such as the sulfoxide TeSO3 or tellurous acid H2TeO3,Bagnall 1966, pp. 32–3, 59, 137 the basic nitrate (Te2O4H)+(NO3)−,Swink et al. 1966; Anderson et al. 1980 or the oxide sulfate Te2O3(SO4).Ahmed, Fjellvåg & Kjekshus 2000 It dissolves in boiling alkalis, to give the tellurite and telluride: 3 Te + 6 KOH = K2TeO3 \+ 2 K2Te + 3 H2O, a reaction that proceeds or is reversible with increasing or decreasing temperature.
A state historical marker in Rocky Ford says this about the early town: > Its main asset, though, was Swink himself. He developed Rocky Ford's two > main cash crops, melons and sugar beets; courted the town's largest > corporation, the American Beet Sugar Company; and helped build the Rocky > Ford Ditch, the spine of an extensive irrigation network. Swink's > formula—land, transportation, industry, and water—represented prairie town- > building at its best. He died in 1910, but his many gifts to this town still > live on.ColoradoHistory.
After playing a video game titled Stay Alive, Loomis Crowley, his roommate Rex, and Rex's girlfriend Sarah are killed in the same way as their characters were killed in the game. At Loomis' funeral, his friend Hutch meets Abigail – a friend of Sarah – and receives some of Loomis' possessions, including Stay Alive. Hutch, his girlfriend October, and her brother Phineus decide to play the game as a group. They are joined by Abigail and another friend, Swink, while Hutch's boss Miller plays online from his office.
At the top of the tower, Hutch finds the preserved, inert body of Elizabeth Bathory and hammers three nails into it, after which the spirit stops attacking Abigail. When Bathory's body reanimates, Hutch retreats and knocks over an oil lamp, spilling oil across the floor. Recalling that the Countess hates mirrors, Hutch uses the reflective laptop to repel her before setting the room ablaze. Swink, still alive due to being surrounded by roses earlier and carrying more roses, bursts in with Abigail and rescues Hutch.
Lulu Press, 2012. p. 12. Wynn's compilation of interviews with actors and other professionals associated with the various incarnations of Star Trek entitled Conversations at Warp Speed was published in 2012. Interviewees included in the book are: George Takei, Nick Tate, Grace Lee Whitney, Robin Curtis, Eric A. Stillwell, Armin Shimerman, Kitty Swink, Paul Carr, James Doohan, Bibi Besch, Gene Roddenberry, and Star Trek fans Marlene Daab and Carol Jennings. The book includes three bonus interviews with Corinne Orr, Gretchen Corbett, and Barry Morse.
On the game's first play, TCU quarterback and returner Chuck Curtis injured his shoulder and broke two ribs. He sat out the rest of the game and was replaced by Dick Finney, who went one for three passing for thirteen yards and rushed for five yards. Halfback Jim Swink helped carry TCU to with two rushing touchdowns and finished with 107 yards. On the second extra point attempt by TCU, Harold Pollard missed after having to try again due to a penalty on TCU.
Jim Swink on a Fleer football card of 1960 For the Texans' inaugural season, team owner Lamar Hunt pursued both legendary University of Oklahoma coach Bud Wilkinson and New York Giants defensive assistant Tom Landry to lead his Texans franchise. Wilkinson opted to stay at Oklahoma, while Landry was destined to coach the NFL's franchise in Dallas. In mid-December 1959 Hunt settled on a relatively unknown assistant coach from the University of Miami, Hank Stram. "One of the biggest reasons I hired Hank was that he really wanted the job", Hunt explained.
James Francis "Buck" Burshears (1909 in Swink, Colorado – 1987 in La Junta, Colorado) was the founder of the Koshare Indian Dancers and the troop's Scoutmaster for over half a century. His poem "The Scoutmaster's Prayer" has been an inspiration to thousands of Scouters throughout the world. The Koshare Indians were formed as a senior project while Burshears was a student at Colorado College. Burshears spearheaded the Koshare Indian Museum, regarded as one of the finest collections of Native American artifacts in the world, housed on the campus of Otero Junior College.
After another Brown fumble early in the fourth quarter, Jim Swink ran it in from three yards out to give TCU a 28–14 lead with under twelve minutes to go. Syracuse went 49 yards in 13 plays and scored on a Brown run, who lined up for his third PAT attempt of the day to narrow the lead to seven. TCU's Chico Mendoza blocked the extra point to keep the lead at eight points. Syracuse had one last drive in them, going 43 yards in three plays.
The Pray five-song EP was recorded and produced by Ari and released in 2005 on Inner Light Records. The EP featured a cover of The Rolling Stones song "Paint It, Black".Destrophy - Paint It, Black (Rolling Stones Cover) Destrophy released a video for the title track Pray (directed by Ben Hill) that same year. Ari and Tschechaniuk were soon joined by Joe Fox on drums, and guitarist Bruce Swink (ex-Downthesun and Stone Sour) for live shows and touring in support of the Pray release, as well as introducing new songs that would be featured on their next album.
In the early 1990s, Rouda began her career as a reporter for Business First newspaper, a member of the ACBJ chain. She switched to a marketing career beginning as an account executive for Fahlgren & Swink, a regional advertising agency, before assuming the role of vice president of marketing at Stanley Steemer International in 1995. In 2002, she created the Columbus, Ohio-based franchise company, Real Living Real Estate. Built as the first female-focused residential real estate brand, Rouda grew the brand to more than 22 states before its sale to Brookfield Residential Property Services, a Toronto based firm.
Mayano Top Gun was a chestnut horse with a white blaze and a long white stocking on his left foreleg bred in Japan by Etsuo Kawakami. He was sired by the American stallion Brian's Time, who finished second in the Preakness Stakes in 1988 before becoming a highly successful breeding stallion in Japan. His dam Alp Me Please was sired by Blushing Groom and was a half-sister of the Grand Prix de Paris winner Swink: as a descendant of the broodmare Sonrisa, she was also a distant relative of the Belmont Stakes winner Ruler on Ice.
Plants of the Chicago Region was also distinctive in providing lists of "associated" plant species for each entry, and with later editions rendering non-native species in italics while leaving native species non-italicized. These unique features of the flora reflected the nascent community of ecological restoration practitioners that grew out of the Chicago region in the mid-20th century. The lists of associate species have been widely referenced by regional restoration projects, including Stephen Packard's efforts to restore savannas along the North Branch of the Chicago River. Swink continued work on this regional flora for several decades.
George W. Swink was born June 30, 1836, in Breckinridge County, Kentucky, and moved with his parents to Schuyler County, Illinois, when he was four. When a young man, he worked in a sawmill and then was a farmer and a "general merchandiser" in Bardolph, Illinois.Charles W. Bowman, The History of Bent County, quoted at Otero County Genealogy & History He moved into Bent County, Colorado, in 1871 and established a retail store and a cattle business with Asahel Russell. In 1873 he began the canal system in the area with the Rocky Ford Ditch, and he also helped develop the Catlin and Highlind canals.
Reverend Murphy selected as his claim an area to the south that was later known as Carter Spring, now McIlvane Street, and Joseph Murphy located on a plot to the northwest, later known as the Swink farm situated on old Highway 67, all just south of the present site of Farmington in 1798. After securing their claims, these men returned to Tennessee for their families. But sickness overtook them, and both the Reverend Murphy and Silas George died before reaching home. In 1801, David Murphy, a son of Reverend Murphy, cut the first tree that was felled in what was long known as Murphy Settlement.
He then entered a local talent show and sang "You Are My Sunshine" in his newly discovered falsetto. He started performing at dance club amateur nights under different names, such as Texarkana Tex, Judas K. Foxglove, Vernon Castle, and Emmett Swink. To stand out from the crowd of performers he wore wild clothing and, after seeing an old poster of a long- haired Rudolph Valentino, grew his own hair out to shoulder length and wore pasty white facial makeup. His mother did not understand Herbert's change in appearance and was intending to take her son, now in his twenties, to see a psychiatrist at Bellevue Hospital, until his father stepped in.
Floyd Swink was born in Villa Park, Illinois in 1921. While attending York High School, he picked up an interest in local botany and explored natural areas in the Chicago region with his brother. As a young man, he worked as a professional and competitive speed typist, achieving speeds of 190 words per minute and demonstrating typewriters for L.C. Smith and Corona Typewriter Company in downtown Chicago. His speed was impressive, but his showmanship and eidetic memory more so, such as keeping nickels perched on his knuckles, typing the capitals of the states in alphabetical order while he was reading a book upside down.
Minot's poems and stories have been published in The New Yorker, Grand Street, The Paris Review, GQ, Kenyon Review, River City, New England Review, Swink, Mississippi Review, H.O.W., British Marie Claire, Fiction, Northwest Humanities Review and Atlantic Monthly. Her non-fiction and travel writing have appeared in The Best American Travel Writing 2001 and McSweeney's, New York Times, Paris Review, Vogue, Travel and Leisure, Esquire, American Scholar, House & Garden, Condé Nast Traveller, Victoria, and Porter Magazine. Minot has taught creative writing at New York University, Stony Brook Southampton, and Columbia University. Minot wrote the screenplay for Stealing Beauty (1996) with Bernardo Bertolucci, and co-authored Evening (based on her novel of the same name, 2007), with Michael Cunningham.
The record of TCU in bowl games as of 2006 is 9–13–1. TCU also claims two national championships from 1935 and 1938.NCAA Division I-A national football championship Upper Deck of Amon G. Carter Stadium TCU has 41 1st team All-Americans, listed at TCU Horned Frogs football. The school's most famous past players include Rags Matthews, Sammy Baugh, Davey O'Brien (a Heisman Trophy winner, and namesake of the Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award), Johnny Vaught (later one of the most celebrated coaches of the University of Mississippi), Ki Aldrich, Darrell Lester, Jim Swink, Sonny Gibbs, Norm Bulaich, Bob Lilly, Kenneth Davis, 2006–07 NFL MVP LaDainian Tomlinson and two-time consensus All-American Jerry Gaither.
SH 202 begins at the intersection with County Road 16 and County Road FF. It heads east, crossing two waterways, the Catlin and Otero canals, The road then passes through a mix of rural housing and farmland before entering the city limits of Rocky Ford and turning north toward the intersection of South Second Street and Walnut Avenue. The route then travels north along Second Street for two blocks, crossing a line of the BNSF Railway before intersecting Elm Street, a one-way street which carries eastbound US 50 and southbound SH 71\. SH 202 heads to the northeast for two blocks along Second Street and intersects Swink Avenue, the opposite one-way direction of US 50 and SH 71, where the state highway ends.
Largely self-taught since a young age, Rericha began as a naturalist with the Forest Preserves of Cook County, Illinois in 1997 and was mentored by Floyd Swink. She currently works as a Wildlife Biologist for the Forest Preserves of Cook County and as a Research Associate with Conservation Research Institute. Rericha was recognized by the Board of Commissioners of Cook County in May 2017 for her significant contribution to science through the publishing of Flora of the Chicago Region, "enabling both the professional and amateur botanist to better understand our region’s plants and insects". In addition to detailing the over 3,100 vascular plant species found in the region, the book documented hundreds of new ecological associations between specific plants and their associated insects and other fauna.
Hypericum swinkianum Floyd Swink is known for his lasting contributions to botany through his several published works on the flora of the Chicago region. He was instrumental in securing the protection of numerous natural areas. He worked with Robert Betz to preserve Santa Fe Prairie in Hodgkins, Illinois, Sagawau Canyon, a unique natural feature near Lemont, IL, and also advocated for the restoration of the Indiana Dunes. Swink's legacy of botanical study in the Chicago Region continues in those that he mentored, including the publishing of Flora of the Chicago Region: A Floristic and Ecological Synthesis by Gerould Wilhelm and Laura Rericha in 2017. In 2016, Wilhelm and Rericha named the plant Hypericum swinkianum (Swink’s St. Johns wort) in his honor.
MidSouthCon 6 was held March 27–29, 1987, at the (former) Wilson World Hotel in Memphis, TN. The Guests of Honor included include author Hal Clement, toastmaster Julius Schwartz, artist Lucy Swink, toastmaster Wilson "Bob" Tucker, and fan Ricky Sheppard. MidSouthCon 7 was held March 18–20, 1988, at the (former) Memphis Marriott Hotel in Memphis, TN. The Guests of Honor included include authors Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, toastmaster Julius Schwartz, artist Mitch Foust, filker Margaret Middleton, fan Darrell C. Richardson, and actors Paul Darrow (had to cancel) and Michael Keating. MidSouthCon 8 was held in conjunction with DeepSouthCon 27, a Southern U.S. regional convention, was held June 9–11, 1989, at the (former) Memphis Marriott Hotel in Memphis, TN. The Guests of Honor included include author Orson Scott Card, toastmaster C. J. Cherryh, artist Mary hanson Roberts, filker Bill Sutton, fan G. Patrick Malloy, and special guest Wilson "Bob" Tucker.

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