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In 1991, Perkins became a trainee for a clerk on the New York Mercantile Exchange.In 1995, during the deregulation of the electricity market in Texas, Perkins moved to Houston to run a trade derivatives and options desk as a trader and risk manager for El Paso Energy, Statoil, AIG Energy Trading, and Zahr Securities.
Val Belcher (July 6, 1954 – September 12, 2010) was an American professional football offensive guard in the Canadian Football League (CFL) for the Ottawa Rough Riders and Winnipeg Blue Bombers. He was selected in the third round of the 1977 NFL draft by the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL).
Robert Leslie Roberson III was born on November 10, 1966, in Wood County, Texas.Official records showed that between 1991 and 1999, Roberson was convicted of burglary, theft and parole violations; he was released from prison in 2000.
Jul 4, 2024; Frisco, Texas, USA; Portland Timbers midfielder Evander (10) celebrates after scoring a goal during the game between FC Dallas and the Portland Timbers at Toyota Stadium.
Paul Bettencourt (born 1958), Republican member of Texas State Senate from Houston; Teel Bivins (1947–2009), state senator from Amarillo and U.S. Ambassador to Sweden; Bill Blythe (born 1935), Houston realtor and Republican state representative from Harris County, 1971–1983
Val Ffrench Blake, 98, British army officer and author. [121] Alfred Genovese, 79, American oboist, complications from cardiac arrest. [122] Jack Hardy, 63, American singer-songwriter. [123] Nancy Kominsky, 95, American art teacher and broadcaster. [124]
Cornell University, an Ivy League university founded in 1865 in Ithaca, New York. This list of Cornell University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Cornell University, an Ivy League university whose main campus is in Ithaca, New York.
The Houston Press was a Scripps Howard daily afternoon newspaper, founded in 1911, in Houston, Texas. [2] Under the leadership of founding editor Paul C. Edwards (1911–16), Marcellus E. Foster, known as "Mefo" (1927–37), and George Carmack (1946–64), the newspaper developed a reputation for flashy stories about violence and sex and for exposés of political malfeasance.