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Robert Quincy Lee (January 12, 1869 – April 18, 1930) was a businessman and politician from Texas. He is most notable for serving as a U.S. representative from Texas's 17th congressional district , an office he held from March 1929 until his death 13 months later.
The brothers are sons of Myrtle and Gwyn Voy Wilks (went by his middle name) of Cisco in Eastland County, east of Abilene, Texas.When the brothers were born, their father worked as a bricklayer and the family was destitute; the brothers once slept in a goat shed.
KCER-LP (105.9 FM) was a radio station licensed to Cisco, Texas, United States. The station was owned by Aliyat Communications. [2] Aliyat Communications surrendered KCER-LP's license to the Federal Communications Commission on April 26, 2021, and the license was cancelled the same day.
Eastland County is part of the Abilene/Sweetwater/Brownwood television viewing area in west-central Texas. Local news media outlets include KRBC-TV , KTXS-TV , KXVA , and KTAB-TV . In the cities of Eastland, Ranger, and Cisco on Suddenlink Communications Cable Television service, residents can view the Dallas / Fort Worth market stations WFAA ...
The Hall of Honor was established by the Texas Military Department in 1980 to "recognize outstanding service and leadership" of Texas Military Forces service members operating under state or federal command. [1] As of 2018, it has 120 inductees. [2] The Hall of Honor is hosted by the Texas Military Forces Museum at Camp Mabry. It is both an ...
Gray's New Map of Cisco, Eastland Co., Texas, 1885. Cisco, at the intersection of U.S. Highway 183 and Interstate 20 in northwestern Eastland County, traces its history back to 1878 or 1879, when Rev. C. G. Stevens arrived in the area, established a post office and a church, and called the frontier settlement "Red Gap". About six families were ...
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In 1996 he joined Cisco Systems as Chief Science Officer. [2] He died on September 19, 1999, due to complications from an aortic dissection, while on a business trip to Tel Aviv, Israel. [2] In 2007 the Birrell and Nelson paper won an operating system hall of fame award from the ACM. [3]