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The End of Watch Call or Last Radio Call is a ceremony in which, after a police officer's death (usually in the line of duty but sometimes from illness), the officers from his or her unit or department gather around a police radio, over which the police dispatcher issues one call to the officer, followed by a silence, then a second call, followed by silence.
John Francis Connor was an American politician from Arizona. He served a single full term in the Arizona State Senate, in the 10th, after having been appointed to fill the unexpired term of J. R. McFarland, who resigned in January 1931. He held one of the two seats from Yavapai County.
One section of Connor's 2006 anthology Things Unsaid is dedicated to de Larrabeiti; de Larrabeiti's 1992 book Journal of a Sad Hermaphrodite is dedicated to Connor, and includes one of his poems. Connor has published nine volumes of poetry. His work is anthologized in British Poetry since 1945.
u.s. supreme court chief justice john roberts "A daughter of the American Southwest, Sandra Day O'Connor blazed an historic trail as our Nation's first female Justice.
"I told u I was hardcore" was one of the last things Vedas typed, a phrase often quoted sarcastically on Internet message boards and discussion sites. [31] "Help me, help me." [32] — Stephen Oake, QGM, Greater Manchester Police counter-terrorism detective (14 January 2003), while being stabbed in the chest by Algerian illegal immigrant Kamel ...
Etheridge Knight (April 19, 1931 – March 10, 1991) was an African-American poet who made his name in 1968 with his debut volume, Poems from Prison.The book recalls in verse his eight-year-long sentence after his arrest for robbery in 1960.
The love story between John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jackie, was far from perfect and was tragically cut short in 1963 by a sniper’s bullet. The last thing JFK said to Jackie before he died Skip ...
Connor also appears as an antagonist in the 2014 episode "Freedom Ride or Die" in the animated TV series based on the strip. Connor is framed as an antagonist in John Lewis's graphic novel memoir series March, appearing in the 2015 second novel of the trilogy as an opposition to the Freedom Riders and general racial equality.