Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Edwin "Ned" Snelgrove (born Edwin Fales Snelgrove, Jr.; August 9, 1960) is an American double-murderer who is currently serving a 60-year sentence for the murder of a Hartford, Connecticut woman, Carmen Rodriguez. He was also previously convicted of the 1983 killing of his former girlfriend Karen Osmun and the 1987 attack on Mary Ellen Renard.
Carmen Rodríguez (born 15 July 1972) is a Guatemalan fencer. She competed in the women's individual foil event at the 1996 Summer Olympics. [1] References
Carmen Rodriguez. A Mexican engineer. Carmen Enedina Rodríguez Armenta (born October 26th, 1970) is the General Director of Higher Education (DGESUI) in Mexico and a specialist in innovation and implementation of information and communication technologies in higher education and social equality programs.
Carmen Rodríguez (born June 19, 1948) is a Chilean-Canadian author, poet, educator, political social activist, and a founding member of Aquelarre Magazine. Along with her husband and daughters, she fled to Canada after the Chilean Coup of 1973 and where she now resides as a political refugee . [ 3 ]
Carmen Rodríguez (born 1948) is a Chilean-Canadian political and social activist. Carmen Rodríguez may also refer to: Carmen Rodríguez (politician) (born 1949), Bolivian politician
When Rodriguez intervened while Andy was interrogating a suspect, Andy reminded him that being a boss was different than being a detective, which Rodriguez accepted as fair criticism. Andy's disputes with Rodriguez were generally addressed quickly and it was clear there was a lot of mutual respect between the two men.
Carmen Rodríguez was born on 15 July 1949 to Carlos Rodríguez and Elena Bolaños. [1] Although born in La Paz, Rodríguez spent the majority of her childhood residing in the mining community of Quechisla, Potosí, where her father was employed as a mineworker in the service of the Quechisla Mining Company, a subsidiary of the Bolivian Mining Corporation [].
This new badge makes obsolete the unofficial branch-specific combat badges. Example of a Combat Artillery Badge being created by pinning the artillery branch insignia over a Combat Infantryman Badge. Recorded instances of the unofficial combat badges actually being worn are rare, but the following comes from the memoir of a Korean War veteran: