Historical URLs

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Principals of Mount Vernon High School

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(Gilbert?) G. Claude Cox - 1940 - 1945 http://search.proquest.com/docview/151818990?accountid=34227

Melvin Bowman Landes 1945 - 1973 2

Thomas J. Hyer 1973 - 1987 14 years 3rd

Paula Johnson 1987 - 1990 4th

Calanthia R. Tucker 1993?- 1999 http://search.proquest.com/docview/1620257738?accountid=34227

Cathy Crocker 1999 - 2004

Eric V. Brent 2004 - 2006 http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/news/2004/may/19/brent-returns-to-mount-vernon-high-school/

Nardos E. King 2006 - 2015

In 1978 Coach Don McCool came to Mount Vernon after three years at Hayfield High School. The following year, Mount Vernon became the first high school in Fairfax County to start five black players.[1]

The school's athletic department did suffer some setbacks in the early 1980s. After their 1979 championship season, the school's basketball team was forced to forfeit 14 of their season victories when two transfer students were found to be ineligible, lacking bonafide addresses in the school's district.[2] The school's basketball team was placed on strict probation by the Virginia High School League for the 1982-83 school year for illegally recruiting athletes from Alexandria and T. C. Williams High School, rendering them ineligible for any championship games.[3]

The problems were not limited to the school's basketball program. In 1984, the school was forced to forfeit four football games when senior Woody Wright was found in violation of the VHSL's eight semester rule.[4]

RTKL Infobox

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RTKL Associates
Predecessor
  • RTKL Associates, Inc.
Founded1946 (1946) in Annapolis, Maryland, USA
FounderArchibald C. Rogers
FateAcquired by Arcadis NV
Key people
Lance Josal, CEO and President
ParentArcadis NV
Websitertkl.com

Virginia Superintendents of Public Instruction

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Name Start End Notes
William Henry Ruffner 5 March 1870 15 March 1882
Richard Ratcliffe Farr 15 March 1882 15 March 1886
John L. Buchanan 15 March 1886 1 January 1890
John E. Massey 1 January 1890 15 March 1898
James W. Southall 15 March 1898 1 February 1906
Joseph Dupuy Eggleston, Jr. 1 February 1906 1 January 1913
Reaumur Coleman Stearnes 1 January 1913 1 February 1918
Harris Hart 1 February 1918 1 January 1931
Sidney Bartlett Hall 1 January 1931 31 August 1941
Dabney Stewart Lancaster 1 September 1941 15 June 1946
George Tyler Miller 15 June 1946 31 August 1949
Dowell J. Howard 1 September 1949 23 February 1957
Davis Y. Paschall 13 March 1957 15 August 1960
Woodrow W. Wilkerson 1960 1975
Walter Eugene Campbell 1975 1979
Spear John Davis 1979 1990
Joseph A. Spagnolo 1990 1994
William C. Bosher, Jr. 1994 1996
Richard T. LaPointe 1996 1998
Paul D. Stapleton 1998 1999
Jo Lynne DeMary 2000 2006
Billy K. Cannaday, Jr. 2006 2008
Patricia I. Wright 1 October 2008 1 May 2014
Steven R. Staples 31 March 2014 1 January 2018 Announced retirement, 23 October 2017.[5]
James F. Lane 1 June 2018 [6]

Fairfax County Hospital Commission

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Also called the Fairfax County Hospital and Health Center Commission.

Fairfax County first created a Health Center Commission in 1947, following the passage of the Hill-Burton Act the previous year and the passage of the enabling legislation, the "Hospital and Health Center Commission Act" by the Virginia General Assembly.[7][8]

In 1951 the Board of Supervisors purchased a 14-acre tract near Kamp Washington that had formerly been the site of the county almshouse for the location of the health center.[9]

By 1955, the Commission had become moribund, but discussion by county residents over the need for a hospital in Fairfax County prompted the BoS to reactivate the commission and appoint five members.

Named in 1955, Maurice E. Odoroff one of five members.[10]

Three sites were considered for the proposed hospital, the Chiles tract, the Caton tract and the Bristow tract. The Hospital Commission recommended the 37.7 acre Bristow tract near Avondale, but were overuled by the BoS, who decided on the Caton tract near Fairfax Circle.[11] The BoS later reversed itself, deciding on the Chiles tract, which was located near the intersection of Gallows Road and Arlington Boulevard, as part of a 19-hour meeting in December 1956.[12]

"Hospital and Health Center Commission's Presentation of the Master Plan Concept Toward the Orderly Development of Health Care Facilities for the County of Fairfax to the Board of Supervisors in Session" Title of 1966 report outlining need for 2 additional 250 bed hospitals in county.

Recreation Centers in Fairfax County

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Name Location Year Notes
Audrey Moore RECenter Annandale 1977 Opened as Wakefield Recreation Center in 1977.[13]
Cub Run RECenter Chantilly 2005
George Washington RECenter Alexandria 1988
Lee District RECenter Franconia
Mount Vernon RECCenter Alexandria
Oak Marr RECCenter Oakton 1988
Providence RECCenter Falls Church
South Run RECCenter Burke
Spring Hill RECCenter McLean

Directors of the Fairfax County Park Authority

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Name Start End Notes
Fred M. Packard 1959 1961
Joseph Brown 1962 1965
James D. Bell 1965 1973
Joseph P. Downs 1973 1989
William C. Beckner 1989 1993
James A. Heberlein 1994 1997
Paul L. Baldino 1998 2002
Michael A. Kane 2002 2007 Acting September - December 2002
Tim White Acting
John W. Dargle Jr. 2008 2013
Cynthia E. Messinger 2013 2014 Acting
Kirk W. Kincannon 2014 Appointed 19 November 2013.

KLM 867

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On Thursday, December 14, the Redoubt volcano began erupting after nearly 21 years of silence, having last been active in 1968.[14]

The aircraft left Amsterdam at 8:30 a.m., and was going to stop in Anchorage and debark passengers at around noon.[15] The flight crew was led by 51-year old Captain Karl Van Der Elst and included First Officers Imme Visscher and Walter Vuurboom.[16]

  1. ^ Berlanger, Josh (18 August 2015). "Mt. Vernon: McCool To Be Inducted in VHSL Hall of Fame". The Connection. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  2. ^ Huff, Donald (21 February 1980). "Mount Vernon Forfeits 14". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 September 2015 – via Proquest.
  3. ^ Huff, Donald (3 December 1982). "Mount Vernon: Probation Draws Team Together". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 September 2015 – via Proquest.
  4. ^ Huff, Donald (10 October 1984). "Ineligible Player Says He Took Semester Off". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 September 2015 – via Proquest.
  5. ^ "Superintendent of Public Instruction Steven R. Staples Announces Retirement". Virginia Department of Education. 23 October 2017. Retrieved 21 October 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ Mattingly, Justin (24 May 2018). "Chesterfield superintendent James F. Lane named state's public schools chief". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved 21 October 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ City of Fairfax v. Fairfax Hospital Association, 562 F.2d 280, 12 (United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit. 22 August 1977) ("That Board in 1947 established as a public body a Health Center Commission as authorized by the 1946 "Hospital and Health Center Commission Act", codified at Va.Code Ann. §§ 32-276, et seq., as amended (1976 Cum.Supp.).").
  8. ^ Gage, Larry S. (2012). Transformational Governance:Best Practices for Public and Nonprofit Hospitals and Health Systems (PDF) (Report). Chicago, Illinois: Center for Healthcare Governance. p. 28.
  9. ^ "Fairfax to Buy 14 Acres for Health Center". The Washington Post. 8 March 1951 – via Proquest. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "Maurice Odoroff, Head Of Fairfax Hospital Unit". The Washington Post. 26 May 1972. pp. C10. Retrieved 6 October 2015 – via Proquest. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ "Caton Tract Is Approved For Hospital". The Washington Post. 1 November 1956. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via Proquest. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ Guinn, Muriel (7 December 1956). "Fairfax Supervisors Hold 19-Hour Session". The Washington Post. Retrieved 13 October 2015 – via Proquest. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "Anne's Reader Exchange". The Washington Post. 18 April 1977. Retrieved 23 October 2015 – via Proquest. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |subscription= ignored (|url-access= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ McClelland, Lindsey, ed. (1989). "Report on Redoubt (United States)". Scientific Event Alert Network Bulletin. 14 (11). doi:10.5479/si.GVP.SEAN198911-313030.
  15. ^ McClatchy News Service (16 Dec 1989). "12 minutes of terror above Alaska". The Sacremento Bee. pp. A1, A9. Retrieved 2 Nov 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Bird, Elso (Jul 8, 2022). "Gliding to Safety". Medium. Retrieved Nov 2, 2023.