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Marshall notable people

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Natasha Watley (born November 27, 1981) is an American professional softball player currently with the USA Softball team. She holds the position as shortstop, which helped her team to win the gold medal for Softball at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. She is the first African-American female to play in the Softball Olympics.

Early life

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Watley was born in Canoga Park, California to parents Edwin and Carolyn Watley. They knew their daughter, Natasha Watley had a great talent at the tender age of 5, which is when she began to first play softball. Watley attended Woodbridge High School where she was named second team Louisville Slugger All-American in her junior and senior year. At the plate, she hit over .445 in her last three seasons in addition to stealing 20+ bases each season.

College career

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Watley's accolades as a collegiate athlete are exceptional. As a four-time first team All-American shortstop from UCLA she led her team to the NCAA National Championship title in 2003. In her senior year, she was awarded the Honda-Broderick Cup for top collegiate female athlete, as well as the PAC-10 Player of the Year award. Four years as a starter for the Bruins, she finished top three in career hits (395), top five in career runs (252), top ten in career batting average (.450) and top ten in career stolen bases (158). Watley holds the single season record for hits (112) and is currently ranked fourth in Pac-10 history. In 2001, she managed a 32 game hit streak which is the fifth longest in NCAA history. Watley is also listed seventh on the all-time NCAA record books with 121 hits in a single season. As a junior, she over achieved the UCLA career records for runs scored finishing her season with 188.

International

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Watley, no stranger to championship play, was named All-tournament at the Canada Cup and the World Championship tournaments in 2002 where she also earned Most Valuable Player. In 2003, she was also awarded a gold medal for her performance at the Pan American Games. In the summer of 2001, Watley played for the USA Red Team helping them win the US Cup and place third at the Canada Cup. She was named Most Inspirational Player at the Canada Cup in addition to being named to the All-Tournament Team.

2004 Olympics

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In 2004 Watley assisted Team USA to their third straight Olympic Gold Medal at the Olympic Games in Athens. En route to their undefeated world championship, Watley was third on the team with a .400 batting average, with 9 hits and 10 RBI.

Honors

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  • Signed with the New York/New Jersey Juggernaut
  • Won the Honda-Broderick Cup, which is given to top collegiate female athlete of the year
  • Two-time top-three finalist for USA Softball National Player of the Year award (2002,2003)
  • Set UCLA's single-season records in hits with 112 (2002) and stolen bases with 52
  • First UCLA Bruin to have two 100+ hit seasons, led UCLA to three straight College World Series and to the title in 2003
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Category:1981 births Category:Living people Category:American softball players Category:Olympic softball players of the United States Category:UCLA Bruins athletics Category:University of California, Los Angeles alumni Category:Softball players at the 2004 Summer Olympics Category:Olympic gold medalists for the United States


This is a List of business law topics within the field of commercial law (annotations are mine).

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==External link== *{{imdb name|id=0314253|name=Peter Gerety}}

See List of school districts in Clark County

List of Columbia University people


Illinois

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List of wikis List of websites with articles in Wikipedia List of websites with a high PageRank

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Official Web Sites

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J. K. Rowling's official site, with news and bits of info about the books and characters from the author herself.

Warner Bros. official Harry Potter site, with games and movie news.

Scholastic’s take on the Harry Potter craze.

Bloomsbury’s site on Harry Potter

Unofficial sites

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News/ Fan

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Immensely popular Web site focusing on fan interactivity, featuring news, forums, polls, competitions, and editorials. The site won the J. K. Rowling Fan Site Award in 2004, and interviewed J.K. Rowling (along with The Leaky Cauldron) in July, 2005, as part of a special book-six release event.

One of the most popular fan sites. Tends to attract an older audience than MuggleNet, and features news, forums, polls, chat, competitions, many interviews with the movie cast and crew and other important Potter figures, and other "extras". The latest winner of the J. K. Rowling Fan Site Award (May 2005), it also interviewed J.K. Rowling (along with MuggleNet) in July, 2005, as part of a special book-six release event.

Or the Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator, collects news from other sites and feeds. Winner of the J. K. Rowling Fan Site Award in 2004.

Popular fan site featuring news, forums, editorials, polls, chat, galleries, and videos.

A popular fan site featuring up-to-the-minute news and media about the world of Harry Potter. Filled with information, images, forums, competitions, movie and book content and user interactivity. With updates around the clock, there is always something new to see and do!

Another fan/news site

A weekly comedy podcast with fictional news from the wizard world of Harry Potter, a highlight of the week's most notable news from the muggle world, plus sketches and humorous comentary

Brazil's most popular website about Harry Potter, with fresh news, daily updates, the biggest Fan-Forum (GrimmauldPlace) for Harry Potter and general discussion topics and a large Fan-Fiction system caled Floreios e Borroes.

Fan fiction

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Popular Harry Potter fanfiction site focusing largely on the canonically correct relationships, such as Ron/Hermione and Harry/Ginny.

The largest Harry Potter fan fiction archive on the Internet.

A repository of Harry Potter fan fiction.

Another HP fan fiction site

Harry Potter section containing over 150,000 fics.

Dedicated to the ships of Harry/Hermione, Ron/Luna, Draco/Ginny, and James/Lily.

Dedicated to the ships of Harry/Ginny, Ron/Hermione, and Lupin/Tonks.

Fan-fiction - part of Potterish.com website. language: portuguese.

Fan Art (Fanart)

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Harry Potter Fanartist who specializes in a woodcut, art nouveau style.

A very popular fandom artist who specializes in canon scenes.

Harry Potter fanart by Lara Hill.

Famed fandom artist, named by J.K. Rowling as one of her personal favorites.

Discussion

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Popular Harry Potter Forum with 27,000+ forum members.

A Harry Potter community.

The Leaky Cauldron HP community.

A large Harry Potter message board.

A Harry Potter discussion group for older fans.

Discussion of the Harry Potter World.

A Harry Potter Community.

A deeply hip discussion forum and community for fans of all ages.

A new, irreverent Harry Potter discussion forum

Other Sites

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The most complete HP encyclopedia on the web. Offers a catalog of magical creatures, people, spells, books, and more. The third winner of the J. K. Rowling Fan Site Award.

Fansite featuring news, databases, discussion forums, image galleries, recipes and other information.

Also see

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Harvard University Buildings

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Canaday Hall is one of the newest buildings in Harvard Yard. Built in 1974, it is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College.

Past residents include Paul Wylie, Mira Sorvino, Sean Gullette, and Charles Lane. (Source: Dorm History Search at http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/)

Grays Hall, Harvard Yard.

Grays Hall opened in Harvard Yard in 1863 and became Harvard College's first building with water taps in the basement. Residents of other buildings in Harvard Yard had to haul water from pumps in the Yard.

Grays Hall is currently used as a dormitory housing freshmen. Its rooms are so spacious that the building has earned the nickname "Harvard Hilton."

Past residents include Norman Mailer, Natalie Portman, Frank Rich, Jeff Bingaman, Mo Rocca and John Weidman. (Source: Dorm History Search at http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/)

Greenough Hall is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. It is located just outside Harvard Yard.

Past residents include Elliott Abrams, Wallace Shawn, Bill Kristol and Laurence Tribe. (Source: Dorm History Search at http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/)

Hollis Hall, Harvard Yard. March, 1934. Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress. (Arthur C. Haskell, photographer)

Hollis Hall, built in 1763, is one of the oldest buildings at Harvard College. It is located in Harvard Yard and faces the statue of John Harvard across the Old Yard.

The building was erected at the expenses of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1763. It was named in honor of Thomas Hollis of London, a merchant, and other members of the same family, who were generous benefactors of Harvard College from 1719 to 1804.

Hollis Hall was used as barracks by Colonial troops in 1775-76. Occupants of Hollis Hall have included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Wendell Phillips, Charles Francis Adams, Henry David Thoreau, John Updike, Charles Sumner, William Weld, Edward Everett, Joseph P. Kennedy, Horatio Alger and Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr..

Hollis Hall is currently used to house freshmen at the College.

Holworthy Hall is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. It is located in Harvard Yard.

Past residents include Howard Hughes, Henry Adams, Horatio Alger, James Murdoch, Jeffrey Zucker, Steve Roberts, Christian Herter, Conan O'Brien, Al Jean, Adam Clymer, David Halberstam, Mike Reiss, Charles Sumner and Robert Benchley. (Source: Dorm History Search at http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/)

Hurlbut Hall is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. It is located just outside Harvard Yard.

Lionel Hall is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. It is located in Harvard Yard.

Past residents include Peter Benchley, Erich Segal, Lou Dobbs, Grover Norquist and Endicott Peabody. (Source: Dorm History Search at http://hcs.harvard.edu/~dorms/)

Massachusetts Hall is the oldest surviving building at Harvard College, the first institution of higher learning in the English colonies in America, and the second oldest academic building in the United States. As such, it possesses great significance not only in the history of American education but also in the story of the developing E