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New England Stars The New England Stars are a NEHL team based in Danbury, Connecticut who started play at the end of 2006. The team was formed to occupy the Danbury Trashers place in the Danbury Ice Arena, after the Trashers folded due to involvement in illegal business, see Danbury Trasher Controversy.
New England Synod The New England Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is a jurisdictional synod, or diocese, consisting of all of the New England states (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), as well as the Lake Champlain area of eastern New York state.
New England Tamil Church New England Tamil Church is a church called by God to proclaim the good news of peace to the people around New England region. God had laid it in our hearts to share Christ's Love with the Tamil speaking communities who are living around the Greater Boston area.
New England Telephone and Telegraph Company The New England Telephone and Telegraph Company was the first company set up to develop the then-new telephone. It lasted just a year, from 1878 to 1879, and had no direct relationship to the later New England Telephone, which after the breakup of Ma Bell in 1984 was part of NYNEX, now part of Verizon.
New England Transcendentalists New England Transcendentalists are the core group of writers from whom the phenomenon of American Transcendentalism radiated. The primary examples are Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Bronson Alcott among others from Concord, Massachusetts.
New England Triptych New England Triptych is a symphonic composition by William Schuman. The work lasts about 16 minutes, and is written for an orchestra of 3 flutes (3rd = piccolo), 2 oboes, English horn, E-flat clarinet, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (bass drum, cymbals, snare drum, tenor drum), and strings.
New England Wild Flower Society The New England Wild Flower Society is the nation's oldest conservation organization. Dedicated to the preservation of native plants, the Society operates Garden in the Woods, a native plant botanical garden, at its headquarters in Framingham, Massachusetts.
New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference The New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference (or NEWMAC) is an intercollegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA’s Division III. Member institutions are located in the northeastern United States in the States of Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
New England Yearly Meeting New England Yearly Meeting (officially the New England Yearly Meeting of Friends) is a body of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) headquartered in Worcester, Massachusetts that includes Friends from the New England region of the United States.
New England's Dark Day May 19, 1780 was dubbed New England's Dark Day, when an abnormal darkening of the day sky was observed over the New England states and parts of Canada. There is speculation that this was due to a combination of smoke from forest fires and a thick fog.
New English Art Club The New English Art Club (NEAC) was founded in London in 1885 as an alternate venue to the Royal Academy. Scores of young English artists returning from studying art in Paris mounted the first exhibition in April 1886.
New English Bible The New English Bible (NEB) was a fresh translation of the Bible into modern English directly from the original Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic texts (with some Latin in the Apocrypha); with the New Testament being published in 1961, and the Old Testament, along with the Apocrypha, being published in 1970.
New Englishes According to Tom McArthur (1992), New Englishes is a term for "recently emerging and increasingly autonomous variet[ies] of English, especially in a non-western setting, such as India, Nigeria, or Singapore."
New Era The term was initially used as a tag line in news announcements covering the post–September 11 reaction. As its use became ubiquitous, it was adopted by academia, journalists, and the US Government when discussing the implications of the War on Terror.
New Era (magazine) The New Era is an official magazine of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. First published in January 1971 along with the Ensign and the Friend, the New Era's intended audience has always been the youth of the Church.
New Era Cap Company The New Era Cap Company, based in Buffalo, is the largest sports-licensed headwear company in the United States. The company is the premier cap provider for MLB, as well as a number of NBA and NHL franchises, plus a handful of major collegiate athletic programs.
New Era High School The New Era High School is located in Panchgani, a modern hill station town well-known as an educational centre containing well-established schools, in the state of Maharashtra, India. It was founded in August 1945, and was one of the first Bahá'à education projects in India.
New Era University New Era University (NEU) is an educational institution in the Philippines, run by the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). Its main campus is in # 9 Central Avenue, New Era, Quezon City, in the Central Office Complex of the INC.
New Europe New Europe is a rhetorical term used by conservative political analysts in the United States to describe European post-Communist countries. The term implies that there is no single Pan-European identity in the European Union, but that it is divided (and that part of it is 'better').
New European Driving Cycle The New European Driving Cycle is a driving cycle consisting of four repeated ECE-15 driving cycles and an Extra-Urban driving cycle, or EUDC. The NEDC represents the typical usage of a car in Europe, and is used, among other things, to assess the emission levels of car engines.
New Faces of 1952 New Faces of 1952 is a musical revue with music and lyrics by various hands, including Ronny Graham and June Carroll, who also appeared in the Broadway production; and sketches by Ronny Graham and Melvin Brooks.
New Farm Park, Brisbane New Farm Park is a significant historic park in the suburb of New Farm, Brisbane, Australia, located at the southern end of the New Farm Peninsula on the Brisbane River. It covers thirty-seven acres, and it originally included football grounds, tennis courts, and basketball courtsOur Brisbane - History of New Farm, retrieved November 26, 2006.
New Farmers of America The New Farmers of America (NFA) was an organization of African-American farm boys studying agriculture in public schools throughout 18 states in the eastern and southern United States. The NFA started in 1927 with a few chapters and members, and terminated in 1965 upon its integration into the Future Farmers of America organization.
New Favorite New Favorite is the ninth album by bluegrass music group Alison Krauss & Union Station, released August 14 2001. The album peaked in the top 50 of the Billboard 200 and within the top 5 of the Billboard charts for both Country and Bluegrass and was certified gold.
New FAU Stadium New FAU Stadium is a stadium in Boca Raton, Florida, that is currently in the planning stages for the Florida Atlantic University Owls football team. With their current football stadium, Lockhart Stadium, set to be demolished soon, the need arose for a new stadium.
New Fist of Fury New Fist of Fury is a martial arts film made in Hong Kong in 1976, directed by Lo Wei and starring Jackie Chan. It is the first of a series of films that Lo Wei directed Chan in, and the first using Chan's stage name Seng Long () - meaning "Already a Dragon" - by which he's still known today in Asia.
New Forest The New Forest is an area of southern England which includes the largest remaining tracts of unenclosed pasture land, heathland and old-growth forest in the heavily-populated south east of England. The contiguous New Forest habitat covers south west Hampshire and some of south Wiltshire.
New Forest pony The New Forest Pony is one of the recognised nine Mountain and Moorland or Native pony breeds of the British Isles, valued for its hardiness, strength and sureness of foot. Many of them can be seen running loose on the New Forest in southern England; although the ponies may appear wild, they are privately owned by Commoners of the New Forest.
New Forum New Forum (German: Neues Forum) was a political movement in East Germany formed in the wake of the collapse of the East German state. It was founded in September 1989 and was the first non-Marxist political movement to be recognised by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany on 8 November 1989.
New Foundations In mathematical logic, New Foundations (NF) is an axiomatic set theory, conceived by Willard Van Orman Quine as a simplification of the theory of types of Principia Mathematica. Quine first proposed NF in a 1937 article titled "New Foundations for Mathematical Logic"; hence the name.
New Fourth Army The New Fourth Army () was a unit of the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China. In contrast to most of the National Revolutionary Army, it was controlled by the Communist Party of China and not by the ruling Kuomintang.
New Fourth Army Incident The New Fourth Army Incident (新四軍事件), also known as the Wannan Incident (皖南事ĺŹ), occurred during the Second Sino-Japanese War, during which the Chinese Civil War was in theory suspended, uniting the Communists and Nationalists against the Japanese. It is significant as the end of real cooperation between the Nationalists and Communists.
New France New France () was the area colonized by France in North America during a period extending from the exploration of the Saint Lawrence River, by Jacques Cartier in 1534, to the cession of New France to the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1763. At its peak in 1712 (before the Treaty of Utrecht), the territory of New France extended from Newfoundland to Lake Superior and from the Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico.
New Frontier The term New Frontier was used by John F. Kennedy in his acceptance speech in 1960 to the Democratic National Convention at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as the Democratic nominee and was used as a label for his administration's domestic and foreign programs.
New Frontier Hotel and Casino The New Frontier is a hotel and casino located on the famed Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada that has been operating continually since October 30, 1942. It was the second resort that opened on the Las Vegas Strip.
New Frontier Party The Shinshinto (新進党, "New Frontier Party") was a former Japanese political party. As a merger of several small parties, the party was ideologically diverse, with its membership ranging from moderate socialists to neoliberals and conservatives.
New generation of African leaders Although now a largely discredited idea, the term "new generation" or "new breed" of African leaders was a buzzword widely used in the mid-late 1990s to express optimism in a new generation of African leadership.
New Game Plus New Game Plus (usually written as "New Game +") is a video game mode that allows the player to start a new game after they finish the game at least once, where certain aspects of the finished game affect the newly started game. The term was first coined by the 1995 role-playing game Chrono Trigger.
New Games Book The New Games Book and its companion, the More New Games book, were resources developed for the "New Games" movement to encourage people to play non-competitive or friendlier games. Many of the "New Games" may now be seen played, in their modern variants, by church youth groups, summer campers, and even [in some cases] gym students.
New Gate (Jerusalem) The New Gate (Arabic: Bab al-Jedid; Hebrew" HaSha'ar HaChadash) is the most recently built gate in Jerusalem's Old City Walls built in 1887 to provide easier access to the Christian Quarter. It is also called the Gate of Hammid after the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II.
New Generation – Christian Democratic Party The New Generation – Christian Democratic Party (Partidul Noua Generaţie - Creştin Democrat, PNGCD; formerly Partidul Noua Generaţie, PNG) is a nationalist, Christian democratic political party in Romania. In the last legislative elections, on November 28, 2004, it won 2.
New Generation Network The New Generation Network is a group and manifesto set up to challenge the current discourse of race relations in the UK. The group's manifesto, Race and faith: a new agenda was published on November 20, 2006 on The Guardian] newspaper's [[Comment is Free website.
New Generation Pictures New Generation Pictures is a visual media production company based in Beverly Hills, California."New Generation Pictures is a visual media production company based in Beverly Hills, California"The Anime Encyclopedia It provides production services for:
New Generation Software New Generation Software was a firm famous for the computer games with innovative graphics it produced for the Sinclair ZX81 and ZX Spectrum computers. It was conceived in the spring of 1982 shortly after the lead developer, Malcolm Evans created 3D Monster Maze (initially released by J.
New Geneva Theological Seminary The New Geneva Theological Seminary is a Presbyterian theological school located in Colorado Springs, Colorado affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA). It was originally established in 1993 as the western campus of Florida-based Knox Theological Seminary to provide theological education from a Reformed and Presbyterian perspective.
New Georgia languages The family of New Georgia languages is a subgroup of the South New Ireland-Northwest Solomonic languages. It consists of ten languages spoken on or near New Georgia Island in the Western Province of Solomon Islands.
New Georgia Sound New Georgia Sound is the body of water that runs approximately through the middle of the Solomon Islands. The Sound is bounded by Choiseul Island, Santa Isabel Island, and Florida Island to the north, and by Vella Lavella, Kolombangara, New Georgia, and the Russell Islands to the south.
New Gold Dream (81,82,83,84)(album) Simple Minds' fifth studio album, New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84), released in 1982, was a significant turning point for the band, when critical and popular success in the UK and Europe finally intersected. With a slick, sophisticated sound thanks to producer Peter Walsh, Simple Minds was soon categorized as part of the "New Romantic" outgrowth of New Wave (along with Duran Duran and others), and the record generated a handful of charting singles including "Promised You a Miracle" and "Glittering Prize", both of which became concert favorites over the years.
New Goodison New Goodison is the unofficial name given by some fans for the proposed new Everton stadium. After the possibility of regenerating Goodison Park proved too costly and an agreement couldn't be reached with neighbours Liverpool for a ground move it was decided that Everton would move to a new ground.
New Grass Revival (1972 album) New Grass Revival is the most commonly used title of an album recorded and released in 1972 by the progressive bluegrass band New Grass Revival on the Starday label. This album was also released under the titles, The Arrival of the New Grass Revival and Today's Bluegrass.
New Great Game The New Great Game is the competition between China, Germany, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea, the United Kingdom, and the United States to secure reliable long-term sources of petroleum and natural gas through the construction of oil pipelines in the post-Soviet nations of Central Asia.Central Asia's other 'Turkmenbashis' The Japan Times
New Grey Whistle Test The New Grey Whistle Test is a new internet version of the BBC show the Old Grey Whistle Test, created in 2004 it is currently in its third season. The show acts as a visual platform for unsigned bands and singer/songwriters and tries to convey the spirit and ethos of the original programme.
New Group of World Servers In the writings of Alice Bailey, the New Group of World Servers is a group of individuals who are spiritually advanced or evolved. It is not necessarily specifically an organized group but people who follow a spiritual path in line with the works of Alice Bailey often form exoteric groups for meditation and service.
New Guangxi Clique After the founding of the Republic of China, Guangxi served as the base for one of the most powerful warlord cliques of China: the Old Guangxi Clique. Led by Lu Rongting (陆荣廷) and others, the clique was able to take control of neighbouring Hunan and Guangdong provinces as well.
New Guard The New Guard was a paramilitary Fascist organisation that existed in Australia in the 1930sThough it had some members from other parts of Australia], its membership and support base was predominantly confined to the State of [[New South Wales and its capital city, Sydney.
New Guardians New Guardians is the name of a series published by DC Comics coming out of the Millennium event, it ran from 1988 through 1989 and only lasted twelve issues before being cancelled. It is also the name of the group of characters who appeared in the series.
New Guildford Line The New Guildford Line, operated by South West Trains, is a commuter line between London and Guildford. It branches off the South Western Main Line just south of Surbiton, at the same point as the short branch line to Hampton Court.
New Guinea campaign The New Guinea campaign (1942-45) was one of the major military campaigns of World War II. Fighting in the Australian mandated Territory of New Guinea (the north-eastern part of the island of New Guinea and surrounding islands) and Dutch New Guinea, between Allied and Japanese forces, commenced with the Japanese assault on Rabaul on January 23, 1942.
New Guinea Harpy Eagle The New Guinea Harpy Eagle, Harpyopsis novaeguineae also known as Kapul Eagle is a huge, up to 90cm long, greyish brown raptor with a short full crest, broad three-banded wings, powerful beak, large iris, long rounded tail and white below. It has long and powerful unfeathered legs with sharp claws.
New Guinea Waterside Rat The New Guinea Waterside Rat, Parahydromys asper, is the only member of the genus Parahydromys. It is considered part of the New Guinea Old Endemics, meaning it was part of the first wave of murine rodents to colonize the island.
New Guntur New Guntur is the newer Region of Guntur, a City located in the East Coast region of India. As the City developed to its North, East it has formed into three different regions: Old Guntur, Guntur and New Guntur.
New history The term new history was indebted to the French term nouvelle histoire, itself associated particularly with the historian Jacques Le Goff and Pierre Nora, members of the third generation of the Annales School, which appeared in the 1970s. The movement can be associated with cultural history, history of representations and histoire des mentalités.
New Halfa Scheme The New Halfa Scheme in Sudan is a 164,000 feddan site constructed in 1964 to house 50,000 Nubians displaced from Wadi Halfa, a town situated on the Nile near the border with Egypt, which was drowned when Lake Nasser formed behind the Aswan Dam. The site draws its water from the Atbara River, where the Khashm el Girba Dam provides a reliable source for the irrigation scheme intended to convert the nomads of the area to farmers of cotton and sugar.
New Hall Valley Country Park New Hall Valley Country Park is a country park located in New Hall Valley between Walmley and Wylde Green in the Sutton Coldfield area to the north of Birmingham. It is the first new country park in the UK for over a decade.
New Hall, Cambridge New Hall is a women-only college in the University of Cambridge. It was founded in 1954, at a time when Cambridge had the lowest proportion of women undergraduates of any university in the UK and when only two other colleges (Girton and Newnham) could admit women students.
New Hamburg, New York New Hamburg, New York is a small hamlet along the Hudson River, best known as home of a popular marina and a busy Metro-North Railroad Hudson Line station. It is located in the southern corner of the Town of Poughkeepsie.
New Hamburg, Ontario New Hamburg is a community of 7,000 in Wilmot Township, a rural township of the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario. It is bordered by Baden to the east and Perth County to the west, and is within easy driving distance of the cities of Kitchener, Waterloo and Stratford.
New Hampshire Attorney General The New Hampshire Attorney General is a constitutional officer of the state, under [II, Article 46] of the New Hampshire Constitution and is appointed by the Governor with approval of the Council to serve a four year term. The New Hampshire Attorney General is the head of the New Hampshire Department of Justice.
New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts (NHC) was founded and incorporated in 1866, as a land grant college in Hanover in connection with Dartmouth College. In 1893, NHC moved to Durham, where it became the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in 1923, by an act of the New Hampshire General Court.
New Hampshire Confession of Faith The New Hampshire Confession of Faith was drawn up by the Rev. John Newton Brown of New Hampshire in 1833, and was adopted by the New Hampshire Convention, and widely accepted by Baptists, especially in the Northern and Western States, as a clear and concise statement of their faith, in harmony with, but in a milder form than, the doctrines of older confessions which expressed the Calvinistic Baptist beliefs that existed at the time.
New Hampshire Fisher Cats The New Hampshire Fisher Cats are a minor league baseball team based in Manchester, New Hampshire. The team, which plays in the Eastern League, is the Double-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays major-league club.
New Hampshire gubernatorial election, 2004 In the 2004 New Hampshire gubernatorial race, businessman John Lynch, a Hopkinton Democrat, defeated Republican incumbent Governor Craig Benson of Rye, winning a two-year term. Lynch was the first challenger to defeat a one-term incumbent governor in New Hampshire in 78 years.
New Hampshire Grants The New Hampshire Grants or Benning Wentworth Grants were land grants made between 1749 and 1764 by the provincial governor of New Hampshire, Benning Wentworth. The land grants, totaling about 135 (including 131 towns), were made on land claimed by New Hampshire west of the Connecticut River, but which were also claimed by the Province of New York.
New Hampshire Historical Markers The State of New Hampshire has, since 1958, placed Historical Markers at locations that are deemed significant to New Hamsphire history. The New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (DHR) and the Department of Transportation (DOT) are jointly responsible for the historical marker program.
New Hampshire Charitable Foundation The New Hampshire Charitable Foundation was established in 1962 as a community foundation and tax-exempt 501(c)(3) public charity. It is one of the United States' largest community foundations and was formed to build social capital by making grants that advance charitable activities.
New Hampshire Institute of Art The New Hampshire Institute of Art is a bachelor's degree-granting college that provides an undergraduate education in the fine arts, complemented by majors in the professional arts. It is the first and only independent college of art in the state of New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Line The New Hampshire Line was a formation of the Continental Army. It comprised the New Hampshire quota of infantry regiments raised for general service which, together with similar contingents from other states, formed the Continental Line.
New Hampshire Marine Memorial The New Hampshire Marine Memorial is a mid-sized statue of New England granite on a tiered granite base, executed in Classical style by Concord, New Hampshire sculptress Alice Ericson Cosgrove. The memorial, dedicated to all New Hampshire servicemen lost at sea due to warfare.
New Hampshire Militia The New Hampshire Militia was first organized in March 1680, by New Hampshire Colonial "President" John Cutt. The King of England authorized the Provincial President to give commissions to persons who shall be best qualified for regulating and discipline of the militia.
New Hampshire Provincial Regiment The New Hampshire Provincial Regiment was a composite regiment made up of units of the New Hampshire Militia during the French and Indian War for service with the British Army in North America. It was first formed in 1754 with the start of hostilities with France.
New Hampshire Public Television New Hampshire Public Television is a television company and public broadcasting mini-network in New Hampshire, licensed to the University of New Hampshire and is part of the Public Broadcasting Service network. Established in 1959, its head office is located in on the University of New Hampshire campus in Durham, New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (NHPUC) is a New Hampshire state government regulatory agency that regulates and approves some of the charges of electric, telecommunications, natural gas, water and sewer utilities in the state.
New Hampshire Regiment the New Hampshire Regiment was formed when the 1st New Hampshire Regiment was redesignated on 1 March 1783 of nine companies of volunteers. The regiment was consolidated with the New Hampshire Battalion (2nd New Hampshire Regiment) on 22 June 1783 as five companies and re-designated as the New Hampshire Battalion.
New Hampshire Retirement System The New Hampshire Retirement System is the pension system of that United States state for its public employees. It consists of 51,000 state employees, divided into Group I or "Non-Emergency Personnel" such as teachers and clerks and Group II or "Emergency Personnel" such as firefighters and police.
New Hampshire Route 101B New Hampshire Route 101B was a designation once held by two separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although the two segments did not directly connect, they were linked at the time by their parent route, New Hampshire Route 101.
New Hampshire Route 111A New Hampshire Route 111A is a designation held by three separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although none of the segments directly connect, all three roadways are linked by their parent, New Hampshire Route 111.
New Hampshire Route 123A New Hampshire Route 123A (abbreviated NH 123A) is a designation held by two separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although the two segments are not directly connected, they are linked by their parent route, New Hampshire Route 123.
New Hampshire Superior Court The New Hampshire Superior Court is the statewide court of general jurisdiction which provides jury trials in civil and criminal cases. There are 11 locations of the Superior Court, one for each county and two in Hillsborough County.
New Hampshire Union Leader The New Hampshire Union Leader is the daily newspaper of Manchester, the largest city in the state of New Hampshire. As of 2003 it has a daily circulation of 61,548, and a circulation of 82,429 for its Sunday paper, the New Hampshire Sunday News.
New Hampshire United States House elections, 2006 The New Hampshire congressional elections of 2006 took place on November 7, 2006, in which New Hampshire's two congressional districts each elected a representative. New Hampshire has historically been a stronghold of the Republican Party, although the common political tradition has been likened to that of the Libertarian Party.
New Hampton School New Hampton School is a private college preparatory boarding school located in New Hampton in central New Hampshire, with 325 students, 190 of them boys, 135 girls. 225 students board on campus, 100 commute on a daily basis.
New Hanover County Extension Service Arboretum New Hanover County Extension Service Arboretum (7 acres) is a new arboretum being established on the grounds of the New Hanover County Cooperative Extension Service, 6206 Oleander Drive, Wilmington, North Carolina. It is open daily without charge.
New Hanover Island New Hanover Island, (), also called Lavongai, is a large volcanic island in New Ireland Province, part of the Bismarck Archipelago of the New Guinea Islands region of Papua New Guinea, at . Measuring some 460 square miles (1,190 km²), it had a population of 5,000 in 1960.
New Hanover Township School The New Hanover Township School is an elementary school in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. The school serves students in pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade from New Hanover Township and Wrightstown with a total of approximately 160 students, as part of the New Hanover Township School District.
New Hanover Township School District The New Hanover Township School District is a consolidated school district in Burlington County, New Jersey. The district serves students in pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade from New Hanover Township and Wrightstown with a total of approximately 160 students at the New Hanover Township School.
New Hanover, KwaZulu-Natal New Hanover is a small town in the midlands of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa which was established in the 1950s by German cotton planter families. Today this area's principal economy is the sugarcane industry, while the farming of fruits, grains and timber also feature prominently.
New Harvest - First Gathering New Harvest - First Gathering was a 1977 Dolly Parton album, significant for being Parton's first self-produced album, as well as her first effort aimed specifically at the pop charts. Recorded partially in Los Angeles, it was also her first album to be recorded outside of Nashville.
New Haven Black Panther trials On May 20, 1969, Black Panther Party founder and national chairman Bobby Seale spoke at Yale University. He, Ericka Huggins, and nine New Haven area Black Panthers (in addition to two juveniles) were subsequently tried for the May 21 murder and kidnapping of Alex Rackley, a New York Black Panther who had allegedly come under suspicion of being an informer, tortured, and killed in the wetlands of Middlefield, Connecticut, his body dumped into the Coginchaug River.
New Haven County Cutters The New Haven County Cutters are a Can-Am League team based in West Haven, Connecticut. Since the 2005 season, they have played in the Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball, which is not affilitated with Major League Baseball.
New Haven Green The New Haven Green is a 16-acre public park and recreation area located in the downtown district of the city of New Haven, Connecticut. It comprises the central square of the nine square settlement plan of the original Puritan colonists, and was designed and surveyed by colonist John Brockett.
New England Synod The New England Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is a jurisdictional synod, or diocese, consisting of all of the New England states (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), as well as the Lake Champlain area of eastern New York state.
New England Tamil Church New England Tamil Church is a church called by God to proclaim the good news of peace to the people around New England region. God had laid it in our hearts to share Christ's Love with the Tamil speaking communities who are living around the Greater Boston area.
New England Telephone and Telegraph Company The New England Telephone and Telegraph Company was the first company set up to develop the then-new telephone. It lasted just a year, from 1878 to 1879, and had no direct relationship to the later New England Telephone, which after the breakup of Ma Bell in 1984 was part of NYNEX, now part of Verizon.
New England Transcendentalists New England Transcendentalists are the core group of writers from whom the phenomenon of American Transcendentalism radiated. The primary examples are Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Bronson Alcott among others from Concord, Massachusetts.
New England Triptych New England Triptych is a symphonic composition by William Schuman. The work lasts about 16 minutes, and is written for an orchestra of 3 flutes (3rd = piccolo), 2 oboes, English horn, E-flat clarinet, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (bass drum, cymbals, snare drum, tenor drum), and strings.
New England Wild Flower Society The New England Wild Flower Society is the nation's oldest conservation organization. Dedicated to the preservation of native plants, the Society operates Garden in the Woods, a native plant botanical garden, at its headquarters in Framingham, Massachusetts.
New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference The New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference (or NEWMAC) is an intercollegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA’s Division III. Member institutions are located in the northeastern United States in the States of Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
New England Yearly Meeting New England Yearly Meeting (officially the New England Yearly Meeting of Friends) is a body of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) headquartered in Worcester, Massachusetts that includes Friends from the New England region of the United States.
New England's Dark Day May 19, 1780 was dubbed New England's Dark Day, when an abnormal darkening of the day sky was observed over the New England states and parts of Canada. There is speculation that this was due to a combination of smoke from forest fires and a thick fog.
New English Art Club The New English Art Club (NEAC) was founded in London in 1885 as an alternate venue to the Royal Academy. Scores of young English artists returning from studying art in Paris mounted the first exhibition in April 1886.
New English Bible The New English Bible (NEB) was a fresh translation of the Bible into modern English directly from the original Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic texts (with some Latin in the Apocrypha); with the New Testament being published in 1961, and the Old Testament, along with the Apocrypha, being published in 1970.
New Englishes According to Tom McArthur (1992), New Englishes is a term for "recently emerging and increasingly autonomous variet[ies] of English, especially in a non-western setting, such as India, Nigeria, or Singapore."
New Era The term was initially used as a tag line in news announcements covering the post–September 11 reaction. As its use became ubiquitous, it was adopted by academia, journalists, and the US Government when discussing the implications of the War on Terror.
New Era (magazine) The New Era is an official magazine of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. First published in January 1971 along with the Ensign and the Friend, the New Era's intended audience has always been the youth of the Church.
New Era Cap Company The New Era Cap Company, based in Buffalo, is the largest sports-licensed headwear company in the United States. The company is the premier cap provider for MLB, as well as a number of NBA and NHL franchises, plus a handful of major collegiate athletic programs.
New Era High School The New Era High School is located in Panchgani, a modern hill station town well-known as an educational centre containing well-established schools, in the state of Maharashtra, India. It was founded in August 1945, and was one of the first Bahá'à education projects in India.
New Era University New Era University (NEU) is an educational institution in the Philippines, run by the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). Its main campus is in # 9 Central Avenue, New Era, Quezon City, in the Central Office Complex of the INC.
New Europe New Europe is a rhetorical term used by conservative political analysts in the United States to describe European post-Communist countries. The term implies that there is no single Pan-European identity in the European Union, but that it is divided (and that part of it is 'better').
New European Driving Cycle The New European Driving Cycle is a driving cycle consisting of four repeated ECE-15 driving cycles and an Extra-Urban driving cycle, or EUDC. The NEDC represents the typical usage of a car in Europe, and is used, among other things, to assess the emission levels of car engines.
New Faces of 1952 New Faces of 1952 is a musical revue with music and lyrics by various hands, including Ronny Graham and June Carroll, who also appeared in the Broadway production; and sketches by Ronny Graham and Melvin Brooks.
New Farm Park, Brisbane New Farm Park is a significant historic park in the suburb of New Farm, Brisbane, Australia, located at the southern end of the New Farm Peninsula on the Brisbane River. It covers thirty-seven acres, and it originally included football grounds, tennis courts, and basketball courtsOur Brisbane - History of New Farm, retrieved November 26, 2006.
New Farmers of America The New Farmers of America (NFA) was an organization of African-American farm boys studying agriculture in public schools throughout 18 states in the eastern and southern United States. The NFA started in 1927 with a few chapters and members, and terminated in 1965 upon its integration into the Future Farmers of America organization.
New Favorite New Favorite is the ninth album by bluegrass music group Alison Krauss & Union Station, released August 14 2001. The album peaked in the top 50 of the Billboard 200 and within the top 5 of the Billboard charts for both Country and Bluegrass and was certified gold.
New FAU Stadium New FAU Stadium is a stadium in Boca Raton, Florida, that is currently in the planning stages for the Florida Atlantic University Owls football team. With their current football stadium, Lockhart Stadium, set to be demolished soon, the need arose for a new stadium.
New Fist of Fury New Fist of Fury is a martial arts film made in Hong Kong in 1976, directed by Lo Wei and starring Jackie Chan. It is the first of a series of films that Lo Wei directed Chan in, and the first using Chan's stage name Seng Long () - meaning "Already a Dragon" - by which he's still known today in Asia.
New Forest The New Forest is an area of southern England which includes the largest remaining tracts of unenclosed pasture land, heathland and old-growth forest in the heavily-populated south east of England. The contiguous New Forest habitat covers south west Hampshire and some of south Wiltshire.
New Forest pony The New Forest Pony is one of the recognised nine Mountain and Moorland or Native pony breeds of the British Isles, valued for its hardiness, strength and sureness of foot. Many of them can be seen running loose on the New Forest in southern England; although the ponies may appear wild, they are privately owned by Commoners of the New Forest.
New Forum New Forum (German: Neues Forum) was a political movement in East Germany formed in the wake of the collapse of the East German state. It was founded in September 1989 and was the first non-Marxist political movement to be recognised by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany on 8 November 1989.
New Foundations In mathematical logic, New Foundations (NF) is an axiomatic set theory, conceived by Willard Van Orman Quine as a simplification of the theory of types of Principia Mathematica. Quine first proposed NF in a 1937 article titled "New Foundations for Mathematical Logic"; hence the name.
New Fourth Army The New Fourth Army () was a unit of the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China. In contrast to most of the National Revolutionary Army, it was controlled by the Communist Party of China and not by the ruling Kuomintang.
New Fourth Army Incident The New Fourth Army Incident (新四軍事件), also known as the Wannan Incident (皖南事ĺŹ), occurred during the Second Sino-Japanese War, during which the Chinese Civil War was in theory suspended, uniting the Communists and Nationalists against the Japanese. It is significant as the end of real cooperation between the Nationalists and Communists.
New France New France () was the area colonized by France in North America during a period extending from the exploration of the Saint Lawrence River, by Jacques Cartier in 1534, to the cession of New France to the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1763. At its peak in 1712 (before the Treaty of Utrecht), the territory of New France extended from Newfoundland to Lake Superior and from the Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico.
New Frontier The term New Frontier was used by John F. Kennedy in his acceptance speech in 1960 to the Democratic National Convention at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as the Democratic nominee and was used as a label for his administration's domestic and foreign programs.
New Frontier Hotel and Casino The New Frontier is a hotel and casino located on the famed Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada that has been operating continually since October 30, 1942. It was the second resort that opened on the Las Vegas Strip.
New Frontier Party The Shinshinto (新進党, "New Frontier Party") was a former Japanese political party. As a merger of several small parties, the party was ideologically diverse, with its membership ranging from moderate socialists to neoliberals and conservatives.
New generation of African leaders Although now a largely discredited idea, the term "new generation" or "new breed" of African leaders was a buzzword widely used in the mid-late 1990s to express optimism in a new generation of African leadership.
New Game Plus New Game Plus (usually written as "New Game +") is a video game mode that allows the player to start a new game after they finish the game at least once, where certain aspects of the finished game affect the newly started game. The term was first coined by the 1995 role-playing game Chrono Trigger.
New Games Book The New Games Book and its companion, the More New Games book, were resources developed for the "New Games" movement to encourage people to play non-competitive or friendlier games. Many of the "New Games" may now be seen played, in their modern variants, by church youth groups, summer campers, and even [in some cases] gym students.
New Gate (Jerusalem) The New Gate (Arabic: Bab al-Jedid; Hebrew" HaSha'ar HaChadash) is the most recently built gate in Jerusalem's Old City Walls built in 1887 to provide easier access to the Christian Quarter. It is also called the Gate of Hammid after the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II.
New Generation – Christian Democratic Party The New Generation – Christian Democratic Party (Partidul Noua Generaţie - Creştin Democrat, PNGCD; formerly Partidul Noua Generaţie, PNG) is a nationalist, Christian democratic political party in Romania. In the last legislative elections, on November 28, 2004, it won 2.
New Generation Network The New Generation Network is a group and manifesto set up to challenge the current discourse of race relations in the UK. The group's manifesto, Race and faith: a new agenda was published on November 20, 2006 on The Guardian] newspaper's [[Comment is Free website.
New Generation Pictures New Generation Pictures is a visual media production company based in Beverly Hills, California."New Generation Pictures is a visual media production company based in Beverly Hills, California"The Anime Encyclopedia It provides production services for:
New Generation Software New Generation Software was a firm famous for the computer games with innovative graphics it produced for the Sinclair ZX81 and ZX Spectrum computers. It was conceived in the spring of 1982 shortly after the lead developer, Malcolm Evans created 3D Monster Maze (initially released by J.
New Geneva Theological Seminary The New Geneva Theological Seminary is a Presbyterian theological school located in Colorado Springs, Colorado affiliated with the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA). It was originally established in 1993 as the western campus of Florida-based Knox Theological Seminary to provide theological education from a Reformed and Presbyterian perspective.
New Georgia languages The family of New Georgia languages is a subgroup of the South New Ireland-Northwest Solomonic languages. It consists of ten languages spoken on or near New Georgia Island in the Western Province of Solomon Islands.
New Georgia Sound New Georgia Sound is the body of water that runs approximately through the middle of the Solomon Islands. The Sound is bounded by Choiseul Island, Santa Isabel Island, and Florida Island to the north, and by Vella Lavella, Kolombangara, New Georgia, and the Russell Islands to the south.
New Gold Dream (81,82,83,84)(album) Simple Minds' fifth studio album, New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84), released in 1982, was a significant turning point for the band, when critical and popular success in the UK and Europe finally intersected. With a slick, sophisticated sound thanks to producer Peter Walsh, Simple Minds was soon categorized as part of the "New Romantic" outgrowth of New Wave (along with Duran Duran and others), and the record generated a handful of charting singles including "Promised You a Miracle" and "Glittering Prize", both of which became concert favorites over the years.
New Goodison New Goodison is the unofficial name given by some fans for the proposed new Everton stadium. After the possibility of regenerating Goodison Park proved too costly and an agreement couldn't be reached with neighbours Liverpool for a ground move it was decided that Everton would move to a new ground.
New Grass Revival (1972 album) New Grass Revival is the most commonly used title of an album recorded and released in 1972 by the progressive bluegrass band New Grass Revival on the Starday label. This album was also released under the titles, The Arrival of the New Grass Revival and Today's Bluegrass.
New Great Game The New Great Game is the competition between China, Germany, India, Japan, Russia, South Korea, the United Kingdom, and the United States to secure reliable long-term sources of petroleum and natural gas through the construction of oil pipelines in the post-Soviet nations of Central Asia.Central Asia's other 'Turkmenbashis' The Japan Times
New Grey Whistle Test The New Grey Whistle Test is a new internet version of the BBC show the Old Grey Whistle Test, created in 2004 it is currently in its third season. The show acts as a visual platform for unsigned bands and singer/songwriters and tries to convey the spirit and ethos of the original programme.
New Group of World Servers In the writings of Alice Bailey, the New Group of World Servers is a group of individuals who are spiritually advanced or evolved. It is not necessarily specifically an organized group but people who follow a spiritual path in line with the works of Alice Bailey often form exoteric groups for meditation and service.
New Guangxi Clique After the founding of the Republic of China, Guangxi served as the base for one of the most powerful warlord cliques of China: the Old Guangxi Clique. Led by Lu Rongting (陆荣廷) and others, the clique was able to take control of neighbouring Hunan and Guangdong provinces as well.
New Guard The New Guard was a paramilitary Fascist organisation that existed in Australia in the 1930sThough it had some members from other parts of Australia], its membership and support base was predominantly confined to the State of [[New South Wales and its capital city, Sydney.
New Guardians New Guardians is the name of a series published by DC Comics coming out of the Millennium event, it ran from 1988 through 1989 and only lasted twelve issues before being cancelled. It is also the name of the group of characters who appeared in the series.
New Guildford Line The New Guildford Line, operated by South West Trains, is a commuter line between London and Guildford. It branches off the South Western Main Line just south of Surbiton, at the same point as the short branch line to Hampton Court.
New Guinea campaign The New Guinea campaign (1942-45) was one of the major military campaigns of World War II. Fighting in the Australian mandated Territory of New Guinea (the north-eastern part of the island of New Guinea and surrounding islands) and Dutch New Guinea, between Allied and Japanese forces, commenced with the Japanese assault on Rabaul on January 23, 1942.
New Guinea Harpy Eagle The New Guinea Harpy Eagle, Harpyopsis novaeguineae also known as Kapul Eagle is a huge, up to 90cm long, greyish brown raptor with a short full crest, broad three-banded wings, powerful beak, large iris, long rounded tail and white below. It has long and powerful unfeathered legs with sharp claws.
New Guinea Waterside Rat The New Guinea Waterside Rat, Parahydromys asper, is the only member of the genus Parahydromys. It is considered part of the New Guinea Old Endemics, meaning it was part of the first wave of murine rodents to colonize the island.
New Guntur New Guntur is the newer Region of Guntur, a City located in the East Coast region of India. As the City developed to its North, East it has formed into three different regions: Old Guntur, Guntur and New Guntur.
New history The term new history was indebted to the French term nouvelle histoire, itself associated particularly with the historian Jacques Le Goff and Pierre Nora, members of the third generation of the Annales School, which appeared in the 1970s. The movement can be associated with cultural history, history of representations and histoire des mentalités.
New Halfa Scheme The New Halfa Scheme in Sudan is a 164,000 feddan site constructed in 1964 to house 50,000 Nubians displaced from Wadi Halfa, a town situated on the Nile near the border with Egypt, which was drowned when Lake Nasser formed behind the Aswan Dam. The site draws its water from the Atbara River, where the Khashm el Girba Dam provides a reliable source for the irrigation scheme intended to convert the nomads of the area to farmers of cotton and sugar.
New Hall Valley Country Park New Hall Valley Country Park is a country park located in New Hall Valley between Walmley and Wylde Green in the Sutton Coldfield area to the north of Birmingham. It is the first new country park in the UK for over a decade.
New Hall, Cambridge New Hall is a women-only college in the University of Cambridge. It was founded in 1954, at a time when Cambridge had the lowest proportion of women undergraduates of any university in the UK and when only two other colleges (Girton and Newnham) could admit women students.
New Hamburg, New York New Hamburg, New York is a small hamlet along the Hudson River, best known as home of a popular marina and a busy Metro-North Railroad Hudson Line station. It is located in the southern corner of the Town of Poughkeepsie.
New Hamburg, Ontario New Hamburg is a community of 7,000 in Wilmot Township, a rural township of the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario. It is bordered by Baden to the east and Perth County to the west, and is within easy driving distance of the cities of Kitchener, Waterloo and Stratford.
New Hampshire Attorney General The New Hampshire Attorney General is a constitutional officer of the state, under [II, Article 46] of the New Hampshire Constitution and is appointed by the Governor with approval of the Council to serve a four year term. The New Hampshire Attorney General is the head of the New Hampshire Department of Justice.
New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts New Hampshire College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts (NHC) was founded and incorporated in 1866, as a land grant college in Hanover in connection with Dartmouth College. In 1893, NHC moved to Durham, where it became the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in 1923, by an act of the New Hampshire General Court.
New Hampshire Confession of Faith The New Hampshire Confession of Faith was drawn up by the Rev. John Newton Brown of New Hampshire in 1833, and was adopted by the New Hampshire Convention, and widely accepted by Baptists, especially in the Northern and Western States, as a clear and concise statement of their faith, in harmony with, but in a milder form than, the doctrines of older confessions which expressed the Calvinistic Baptist beliefs that existed at the time.
New Hampshire Fisher Cats The New Hampshire Fisher Cats are a minor league baseball team based in Manchester, New Hampshire. The team, which plays in the Eastern League, is the Double-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays major-league club.
New Hampshire gubernatorial election, 2004 In the 2004 New Hampshire gubernatorial race, businessman John Lynch, a Hopkinton Democrat, defeated Republican incumbent Governor Craig Benson of Rye, winning a two-year term. Lynch was the first challenger to defeat a one-term incumbent governor in New Hampshire in 78 years.
New Hampshire Grants The New Hampshire Grants or Benning Wentworth Grants were land grants made between 1749 and 1764 by the provincial governor of New Hampshire, Benning Wentworth. The land grants, totaling about 135 (including 131 towns), were made on land claimed by New Hampshire west of the Connecticut River, but which were also claimed by the Province of New York.
New Hampshire Historical Markers The State of New Hampshire has, since 1958, placed Historical Markers at locations that are deemed significant to New Hamsphire history. The New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (DHR) and the Department of Transportation (DOT) are jointly responsible for the historical marker program.
New Hampshire Charitable Foundation The New Hampshire Charitable Foundation was established in 1962 as a community foundation and tax-exempt 501(c)(3) public charity. It is one of the United States' largest community foundations and was formed to build social capital by making grants that advance charitable activities.
New Hampshire Institute of Art The New Hampshire Institute of Art is a bachelor's degree-granting college that provides an undergraduate education in the fine arts, complemented by majors in the professional arts. It is the first and only independent college of art in the state of New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Line The New Hampshire Line was a formation of the Continental Army. It comprised the New Hampshire quota of infantry regiments raised for general service which, together with similar contingents from other states, formed the Continental Line.
New Hampshire Marine Memorial The New Hampshire Marine Memorial is a mid-sized statue of New England granite on a tiered granite base, executed in Classical style by Concord, New Hampshire sculptress Alice Ericson Cosgrove. The memorial, dedicated to all New Hampshire servicemen lost at sea due to warfare.
New Hampshire Militia The New Hampshire Militia was first organized in March 1680, by New Hampshire Colonial "President" John Cutt. The King of England authorized the Provincial President to give commissions to persons who shall be best qualified for regulating and discipline of the militia.
New Hampshire Provincial Regiment The New Hampshire Provincial Regiment was a composite regiment made up of units of the New Hampshire Militia during the French and Indian War for service with the British Army in North America. It was first formed in 1754 with the start of hostilities with France.
New Hampshire Public Television New Hampshire Public Television is a television company and public broadcasting mini-network in New Hampshire, licensed to the University of New Hampshire and is part of the Public Broadcasting Service network. Established in 1959, its head office is located in on the University of New Hampshire campus in Durham, New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (NHPUC) is a New Hampshire state government regulatory agency that regulates and approves some of the charges of electric, telecommunications, natural gas, water and sewer utilities in the state.
New Hampshire Regiment the New Hampshire Regiment was formed when the 1st New Hampshire Regiment was redesignated on 1 March 1783 of nine companies of volunteers. The regiment was consolidated with the New Hampshire Battalion (2nd New Hampshire Regiment) on 22 June 1783 as five companies and re-designated as the New Hampshire Battalion.
New Hampshire Retirement System The New Hampshire Retirement System is the pension system of that United States state for its public employees. It consists of 51,000 state employees, divided into Group I or "Non-Emergency Personnel" such as teachers and clerks and Group II or "Emergency Personnel" such as firefighters and police.
New Hampshire Route 101B New Hampshire Route 101B was a designation once held by two separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although the two segments did not directly connect, they were linked at the time by their parent route, New Hampshire Route 101.
New Hampshire Route 111A New Hampshire Route 111A is a designation held by three separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although none of the segments directly connect, all three roadways are linked by their parent, New Hampshire Route 111.
New Hampshire Route 123A New Hampshire Route 123A (abbreviated NH 123A) is a designation held by two separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although the two segments are not directly connected, they are linked by their parent route, New Hampshire Route 123.
New Hampshire Superior Court The New Hampshire Superior Court is the statewide court of general jurisdiction which provides jury trials in civil and criminal cases. There are 11 locations of the Superior Court, one for each county and two in Hillsborough County.
New Hampshire Union Leader The New Hampshire Union Leader is the daily newspaper of Manchester, the largest city in the state of New Hampshire. As of 2003 it has a daily circulation of 61,548, and a circulation of 82,429 for its Sunday paper, the New Hampshire Sunday News.
New Hampshire United States House elections, 2006 The New Hampshire congressional elections of 2006 took place on November 7, 2006, in which New Hampshire's two congressional districts each elected a representative. New Hampshire has historically been a stronghold of the Republican Party, although the common political tradition has been likened to that of the Libertarian Party.
New Hampton School New Hampton School is a private college preparatory boarding school located in New Hampton in central New Hampshire, with 325 students, 190 of them boys, 135 girls. 225 students board on campus, 100 commute on a daily basis.
New Hanover County Extension Service Arboretum New Hanover County Extension Service Arboretum (7 acres) is a new arboretum being established on the grounds of the New Hanover County Cooperative Extension Service, 6206 Oleander Drive, Wilmington, North Carolina. It is open daily without charge.
New Hanover Island New Hanover Island, (), also called Lavongai, is a large volcanic island in New Ireland Province, part of the Bismarck Archipelago of the New Guinea Islands region of Papua New Guinea, at . Measuring some 460 square miles (1,190 km²), it had a population of 5,000 in 1960.
New Hanover Township School The New Hanover Township School is an elementary school in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. The school serves students in pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade from New Hanover Township and Wrightstown with a total of approximately 160 students, as part of the New Hanover Township School District.
New Hanover Township School District The New Hanover Township School District is a consolidated school district in Burlington County, New Jersey. The district serves students in pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade from New Hanover Township and Wrightstown with a total of approximately 160 students at the New Hanover Township School.
New Hanover, KwaZulu-Natal New Hanover is a small town in the midlands of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa which was established in the 1950s by German cotton planter families. Today this area's principal economy is the sugarcane industry, while the farming of fruits, grains and timber also feature prominently.
New Harvest - First Gathering New Harvest - First Gathering was a 1977 Dolly Parton album, significant for being Parton's first self-produced album, as well as her first effort aimed specifically at the pop charts. Recorded partially in Los Angeles, it was also her first album to be recorded outside of Nashville.
New Haven Black Panther trials On May 20, 1969, Black Panther Party founder and national chairman Bobby Seale spoke at Yale University. He, Ericka Huggins, and nine New Haven area Black Panthers (in addition to two juveniles) were subsequently tried for the May 21 murder and kidnapping of Alex Rackley, a New York Black Panther who had allegedly come under suspicion of being an informer, tortured, and killed in the wetlands of Middlefield, Connecticut, his body dumped into the Coginchaug River.
New Haven County Cutters The New Haven County Cutters are a Can-Am League team based in West Haven, Connecticut. Since the 2005 season, they have played in the Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball, which is not affilitated with Major League Baseball.
New Haven Green The New Haven Green is a 16-acre public park and recreation area located in the downtown district of the city of New Haven, Connecticut. It comprises the central square of the nine square settlement plan of the original Puritan colonists, and was designed and surveyed by colonist John Brockett.
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