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Mr. William Howard Wilkinson, Jr., 75, of Washington, died December 26, 2009.
He was a native of Wilkes County, the son of the late W. H. and Gold House Wilkinson. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Howard Wilkinson, III, his identical twin brother, Joe Wilkinson and a sister, Anne W. McClearen. Mr. Wilkinson was a circulation district manager for the Atlanta Journal Constitution for 30 years and was currently a U-Haul dealer in Washington. He served in the Army National Guard for 34 years and was a founder and attendee at Grace Tabernacle.
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Howard Preston Wilkinson Sr., 82, of Petersburg, passed away Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2007. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Petersburg Chapel...
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- F. C. Gaines, Jr., Et Al., Appellees, v. Sunray Oil Company, Appellant. Amtel, Inc., Appellant, v. E. Paul Wilkinson and J. Howard Marshall, as Individuals and as the Executive Associates, Appellees., 539 F.2d 1136 (8th Cir. 1976)
Robert McHenry, Little Rock, Ark., for appellant Sunray Oil Co.; McHenry, Bryant & Polk, Michael A. Skipper, Little Rock, Ark., on the brief.
David ...
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Today's Obituaries Atha, Glenna H. Beard, Melvin Clagg, Robert Cobb, James R. Sr. Cooper, Kevin L. Daniels, Gary N. Davis, Vanessa R. Farrar, Estel L. Franke, Oretha F. Harper, John P. Hartley, Mabel R. Howell, Terry L. Johnson, Bradley L. Moore, Harold Murray, William W. Parsons, Mary Petry, Virginia K. Smith, Elsie A. Wheeler, Ruth M. Wilkinson, Dreama M. Wilson, Edna P. Wolfe, Howard W.
Glenna Holsten Atha
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- Tyrone, Inc., a Virginia Corporation, Trading as Lee Art Theatre, and Howard William Burtnett, Appellees, v. James B. Wilkinson, Commonwealth'S Attorney for the City of Richmond, Virginia, and Frank S. Duling, Chief of Police for the City of Richmond, Virginia, Appellants. Tyrone, Inc., a Virginia Corporation, Trading as Lee Art Theatre, and Howard William Burtnett, Appellants, v. James B. Wilkinson, Commonwealth'S Attorney for the City of Richmond, Virginia, and Frank S. Duling, Chief of Police for the City of Richmond, Virginia, Appellees., 410 F.2d 639 (4th Cir. 1969)
James B. Wilkinson, Commonwealth Atty. for the City, Richmond, Va., for appellants and appellees Wilkinson and Duling.
T. Wilson Hotze, Jr., and Jos...
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In this role, [Jim Carrey] is as far as ever from Fire Marshal Bill's gummy hijinks. He is Joel Barish, a reserved, mild-mannered 9-to-5er wearing a tuque. The film begins when Joel decides to skip work and hop a train to Montauk, Long Island. He meets Clementine (Kate Winslet), a tenacious weirdo who eventually gets Joel into her pad for a drink. All of a sudden it's 30 minutes into the film, there's a dude pounding on Joel's car window (it's Frodo, aka Elijah Wood) and we're just getting the opening credits.
A cast of notables round out the real-time goings on and the extras in Joel's memories. Dr. Howard Mierzwaik (Tom Wilkinson) is the wonderfully creepy and controlled psychiatrist spearheading this erasure process. Kirsten Dunst, Mark Ruffalo and Wood are his typical we-can-to...
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CASSANDRA'S DREAM. In writerdirector Woody Allen's third Londonbased film, a pair of brothers - Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell - need cash, and fast. One, disguised as a prosperous entrepreneur, is keeping a romance afloat; the other's got huge gambling debts. As the consequences creep closer, benevolent Uncle Howard (Tom Wilkinson) arrives from abroad and offers a bailout in trade for a murder. Even if you're not a scholar of Greek myths (Cassandra = unheeded warnings), you'll likely guess where the story is headed. And like similar stories, the set-up is more intriguing than the play-out. Additionally, the British working class and its frustrations are not Allen's métier; the dialogue feels especially lacking in naturalism. Thus, I never really tasted the brothers' growing desperatio...
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... field theory significantly advanced by Wilkinson (1991) and the concept of social capital as the th... though participation has been voluntary (Howard, 2002). Whereas in many Western societies citizen ...
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COLUMBUS -- An Ohio Poll released Monday shows 40 percent of Ohioans approve of John Kasich's performance as governor two months into his term, 47 percent disapprove and 13 percent neither approve nor disapprove.
What it shows is that Ohio continues to be deeply divided along party lines," said Eric Rademacher, co-director of University of Cincinnati's Institute for Policy Research, which conducted the poll. "The wounds of last fall's campaign have not fully healed.
...Cincinnati Enquirer writer Howard Wilkinson contributed to this story. Contact this ...
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Richard D. Cooper, pro se.
David L. Wilkinson, Atty. Gen., Paul M. Warner, Asst. Atty. Gen., Chief, Litigation Division, and Stephen J. Sorenson, Ass...