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Susan Pia Graber (born July 5, 1949) is an American attorney and jurist. She is a senior United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit . A native of Oklahoma , she was the 90th justice of the Oregon Supreme Court from 1990 to 1998.
Graver's 2013 novel, The End of the Point, was long-listed for the 2013 National Book Award and has met with praise since its release. The novel, featured by The New York Times Book Review editor Alida Becker, [ 2 ] is set in a summer community on the coast of Massachusetts from 1942 through 1999 and is a layered meditation on place and family ...
Graver may refer to: Burin (engraving) (French burin, "cold chisel"), a tool used in the art of engraving; Graver (surname), an older English name, still common;
Susan Lucci was born in Scarsdale, New York, to parents Jeanette (1917–2021) and Victor Lucci (1919–2002). [1] Her father was of Italian ancestry, and her mother was of Swedish descent. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] She lived in Yonkers, New York , before moving with her family at age 2 to Elmont, New York , and then at age 5 to another Long Island town ...
Suze Da Blooz (Susan Allport) & Ano Wombat (Ano Graver) - dancing/vocals; Gilli Smyth - vocals; Dingbat Alien (Daevid Allen) - guitar/vocals; Kif Kif, Suze and Ano left the band by January 1979; Graver to join Alternative TV, Allport sang with The Androids of Mu, while Dobson fronted the cult 1980s post-punk bands The 012 and World Domination ...
Kathy Garver (born Kathleen Marie Garver; December 13, 1945) [1] is an American actress most remembered for having portrayed the teenaged orphan, Catherine "Cissy" Davis, on the popular 1960s CBS sitcom, Family Affair.
QVC was founded on June 13, 1986, by Joseph Segel and investors including Ralph Roberts, the founder and chairperson of Comcast.Roberts was able to arrange deals in which cable companies received investment stakes in QVC in exchange for carrying the channel. [1]
Glasser interned, and later worked for eight years, at Roll Call. [10] In 1998, Glasser started at The Washington Post, [10] where she spent a decade. She edited the Post's Sunday Outlook and national news sections, helped oversee coverage of Bill Clinton's impeachment, covered the wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan, and served as Moscow bureau co-chief with her husband, Peter Baker.