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On June 25th, 2009, the world was rocked by the tragic, shocking news that Michael Jackson - the biggest and most influential music icon since Elvis Presley - was pronounced dead on arrival at a Los Angeles hospital. He was 50 years old. As the news reverberated around the world, it was accompanied by even more shocking and controversial information - a sickening revelation to Jackson's millions of fans: that Jackson had died in the care of his personal physician, Dr Conrad Murray - a whole 83 minutes before Murray put a 911 call in to emergency services. In this, a comprehensive and truly horrifying account of those crucial minutes - Murray's frantic attempts to cover his tracks and revive ...
This two-volume handbook provides readers with a comprehensive interpretation of globality through the multifaceted prism of the humanities and social sciences. Key concepts and symbolizations rooted in and shaped by European academic traditions are discussed and reinterpreted under the conditions of the global turn. Highlighting consistent anthropological features and socio-cultural realities, the handbook gathers coherently structured articles written by 110 professors in the humanities and social sciences at Bonn University, Germany, who initiate a global dialogue on meaningful and sustainable notions of human life in the age of globality. Volume 1 introduces readers to various interpretations of globality, and discusses notions of human development, communication and aesthetics. Volume 2 covers notions of technical meaning, of political and moral order, and reflections on the shaping of globality.
Martin Werbelow married Christine Krause in about 1786 in Hanseberg, Brandenburg, Prussia. They had ten children. Traces descendants of three of their sons, Christian Friedrich, Wilhelm Friedrich and Carl Freidrich. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Nebraska, California and Washington.
Pioneers of Texas, of white and Cherokee Indian descent.
Johann Andreas Ernst Wernicke (1788-1867) married Friederike Maria Regina Sachse in 1819, and immigrated from Germany to Newton, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin. Descendants lived in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, Missouri and elsewhere. Includes ancestry in to the early 1600s.
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