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"Alexander Elliott (born April 24, 1987) is a Canadian born and raised soccer player who most recently played for the German Club Sportfreunde Siegen. Elliott retired from playing in 2012 and entered the coaching world of soccer. Currently, Elliott is the Co-Founder and CEO at Urban Soccer Centre. Elliott is a UEFA A licensed coach. Career =Youth= Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Elliott attended Summerland Secondary School and Magee Secondary School in Vancouver, and played for Columbus FC of the Vancouver Men's league (VMSL) in 2004 Elliott earned the league's golden boot with 12 goals in 16 matches at the age of 16. In 2006 Elliott played in the Pacific Coast Soccer League for Whitecaps FC Reserves with whom he won the championship. Elliott then went on to play three years of college NCAA soccer at the University of Portland. He was named to the WCC All-Freshman Team and started all 19 matches in his first season with the Pilots in 2005, earned All-West Coast Conference Team honors as a sophomore in 2006, and went on to earn All-West Coast Conference First Team honors in 2007, adding WCC points, assist, and game- winning goals leader. Elliott Finished a 3 year NCAA Career with 21 goals and 10 Assists, a point per game average over 52 matches. Elliott occasionally captioned the U15, U17 and U20 Team Canada squads throughout his youth. =Professional= Elliott opted out of the MLS draft and turned professional in 2008 when he signed with Sportfreunde Siegen of the German Bundesliga 3, making seven appearances, With 3 assists. At the summer break of 2008 Elliott was sold to FSV Mainz 05 of the German Bundesliga 1. He played extensively for Mainz's reserves, making 23 appearances and scoring two goals while adding 6 assists. Elliott returned to Canada in the summer of 2010 when he joined the Vancouver Whitecaps Appearing in 14 of the final 16 matches in the 2010 season.Newest Whitecap has roots with club Elliott then returned to the German Bundesligas to play for former club SportFreunde Siegen Sportfreunde Siegen from 2010 to 2012 scoring 7 goals in 34 matches. Elliott retired from playing in 2012. =International= Elliott has represented Canada at U-15, U-17, U-20 and Men's futsal team levels. He scored two goals in eight matches with the U-17 squad, and was a member of the U-17 group that competed in the 2003 CONCACAF Qualifying Tournament. Later he was a member of the U-20 squad that competed in the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Scoring 13 goals in 27 Friendly matches over his two years with the U-20 team, Acting as team Co-Capitan. In 2008 Elliott was not released by SF Siegen to join the U23 Canadian Team at Olympic Qualifying. In 2012 Elliott joined the Canadian national futsal team at the 2012 CONCACAF futsal worldcup qualifiers in Guatemala. Elliott was the team's top goal scorer with 4 goals in the CONCACAF futsal worldcup qualifiers. Elliott retired from playing directly after the tournament. References soccerblogs topten Alex Elliott * Ex-Canada U20 Elliott signs with Vancouver Whitecaps External links playing career * Act-Sports Groups: Alex Elliott * Elliott's Caps debut will be a friends family affair DFB Alex Elliott * Mainz05 Interview With Alex Elliott * Vancouver Whitecaps bio * Footballread Alex Elliott 2007 highlights * Alex Elliott BC Head of the class 2005 * Alex Elliott 2003-2004 VMSL Golden Boot winner * 2007 University of Portland Soccer Stats * All-Time university of Portland Men's Soccer Stats Canadian Soccer Asso. Alex Elliott profile External links coaching career * Alex Elliott named head coach of CapU Blues men's soccer * Family, Trust, Responsibility, Faith, and Pride * Kermodes head to gold medal match * Meet Coach Elliott * Quest Men's Soccer Makes History * Kermodes find silver lining in PACWEST champs * Turnaround Season Ends With A Medal * Elliott Named Quest University Head Coach * Quest Men Snap Streak * Quest Kermodes ready for provincial debut * Quest Kermodes capture first ever men's soccer medal * Fusion FC Staff * The 2016-17 Quest Men's Soccer team ended their season on a high note * Elliott is optimistic about many of the recent developments at Quest. 1987 births Living people Canadian soccer players Canadian expatriate soccer players 1. FSV Mainz 05 players Soccer people from British Columbia Sportspeople from Vancouver Sportfreunde Siegen players Vancouver Whitecaps (1986–2010) players Association football forwards Portland Pilots men's soccer players University of Portland alumni USSF Division 2 Professional League players Canada men's youth international soccer players 1. FSV Mainz 05 II players Canadian men's futsal players "
"Leonard Case Jr. (January 27, 1820 – January 6, 1880) was a philanthropist from Cleveland, Ohio, who endowed the Case School of Applied Science (later Case Institute of Technology, merging with Western Reserve University to become Case Western Reserve University). Biography Case was born in Cleveland on January 27, 1820, in a house located on the corner of Superior Avenue and E. 6th Street (known then as Bank Street).https://newspapers.case.edu/?a=d&d;=CT19040511-01.2.8&srpos;=4&e;=-------en-20 --1-byDA-txt-txIN-%22Leonard+Case%22------ In his youth, he was educated locally in Cleveland at Rev. Colley Foster's private school, located at St. Clair Avenue and Ontario Street, followed by preparatory study at Franklin T. Backus's classics school. Case entered Yale University in 1838, graduating in 1842 with honors in mathematics and languages, and notably helped found the secret society of the Scroll and Key. He graduated from the University of Cincinnati Law School in 1844,https://archive.org/details/listofgraduateso00univ and opened a law office in Cleveland in 1845 after passing the Ohio bar exam.https://www.anb.org/view/10.1093/anb/9780198606697.001.0001/anb-9780198606697-e-0900160 He limited his practice to working with his father, Leonard Case Sr., in settling claims arising from Moses Cleaveland's Connecticut Land Company. His elder brother, William Case, served as Mayor of Cleveland from 1850–1851. Leonard stayed away from the Cleveland political life, although he did build and finance the Cleveland City Hall in the form of the "Case Block" located at Superior Avenue and East 3rd Street, leasing it to the city beginning in 1875. Later when asked why he continued to own the building, he was quoted by the Cleveland Plain Dealer as saying, "how to dispose of the property so that it shall most benefit the city has given me much concern, but on one thing I am determined. Not a dollar of it shall, so far as I can help, go into the hands of politicians to be mismanaged and wasted." Leonard never married. Though he was ill for all his life, he was devoted to academic affairs. His most famous poem Treasure Trove, appeared in the Atlantic Monthly in 1860, whose literary standard remained high during the period. To the surprise of the publication, Leonard mailed back a substantial check he had received for his submission, requesting the money go to another author whose poem was featured in the same edition. The Editor of the Atlantic Monthly, wrote back saying: "Dear Sir:- Your note, returning the check for "Treasure Trove," reached me; and I can only now mingle surprise for so unexpected courtesy with acknowledgements for it. It may, perhaps, be something of a return for the pecuniary abnegation to learn that both Holmes and Saxe spoke highly of the poem...https://newspapers.case.edu/?a=d&d;=CT19060207-01.2.1&e;=-------en-20-- 1-byDA-txt-txIN-%22Leonard+Case%22------" The work was later published in 1873 by James R. Osgood and Company. Leonard concealed his involvement in a work published in 1876 known as Vocabulary of English Rhymes: Arranged on a New Plan, paying and supporting fellow Yale alumnus, Samuel Weed Barnum, to devote two and half years to its creation.https://newspapers.case.edu/?a=d&d;=CT19060307-01.2.1&srpos;=12&e;=-------en-20 --1-byDA-txt-txIN-%22Leonard+Case%22------ In a preface in the second addition dated January 10, 1896, the authors son, Thomas R. Barnum wrote: "it is proper to make a brief statement...in regard to the origin of the book. The late Leonard Case, Jr., of Cleveland, Ohio, Founder of the Case School of Applied Science...undertook to make for his friend, Dr. Alleyne Maynard of Cleveland, a rhyming dictionary arranged without regard to spelling, but according to the vowel sounds in the accented syllables of the rhymes. The result of Mr. Case's labor was embodied in a beautiful manuscript volume containing perhaps half of the words in this present Vocabulary...insisting that his own connection with the matter should be carefully concealed. This wish was scrupulously respected while Mr. Case lived, but now it is right to take this opportunity not only to acknowledge his share in the conception and execution of this work, but also to make grateful mention of one of those generous acts with which he quietly filled his life.https://archive.org/stream/vocabularyofengl00barnrich/vocabularyofengl00barnrich_djvu.txt" Case died at age 59 on January 6, 1880, after a coughing spell in his home on Rockwell Ave in Downtown Cleveland. His funeral was held three days later on January 9, 1880, inside his home, and he was buried in Erie Street Cemetery in Downtown Cleveland. In 1919, his body and those of his family were transferred to Lake View Cemetery in University Circle. The family monument still stands in Erie Street Cemetery. Endowment Upon his death in 1880, $1.25 million was set aside for the founding of "The Case School of Applied Science," carried out by his confidential agent, Henry G. Abbey. Case specified the school teach the subjects of mathematics, physics, mechanical engineering, civil engineering, economic geology, mining and metallurgy, natural history, drawing, and modern languages. For any unforeseen needs in the future, Case wrote he would grant permission for adding "other kindred branches of learning." On March 29, 1880, articles of incorporation were filed for the founding of the Case School of Applied Science. Classes began on September 15, 1881, first being held in the Case homestead on Rockwell Ave in Downtown Cleveland, before relocating to University Circle in 1885. With the merger with Western Reserve University in 1967, the Case surname remained, honored in the combined institutional naming of Case Western Reserve University. Writings Treasure Trove (1873), illustrations by Sol Eytinge Jr. and engraved by Andrew Varick Stout Anthonyhttps://play.google.com/books/reader?id=RoMaAAAAYAAJ&printsec;=frontcover&output;=reader&hl;=en&pg;=GBS.PP1 References External links * Strangers to Us All * 1820 births 1880 deaths American philanthropists Burials at Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland Case Western Reserve University people Patrons of schools University of Cincinnati College of Law alumni Yale University alumni 19th-century philanthropists "
"Peprilus is a genus of fish in the family Stromateidae found in Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Species There are currently 9 recognized species in this genus: * Peprilus burti Fowler, 1944 (Gulf butterfish) * Peprilus crenulatus G. Cuvier, 1829 Marceniuk, A.P., Caires, R., Siccha-Ramirez, R. & Oliveira, C. (2016): Review of the harvestfishes, genus Peprilus (Perciformes: Stromateidae), of the Atlantic coast of South America. Zootaxa, 4098 (2): 311–332. * Peprilus medius (W. K. H. Peters, 1869) (Pacific harvestfish) * Peprilus ovatus Horn, 1970 (Shining butterfish) * Peprilus paru (Linnaeus, 1758) (American harvestfish) * Peprilus simillimus (Ayres, 1860) (Pacific pompano) * Peprilus snyderi C. H. Gilbert & Starks, 1904 (Salema butterfish) * Peprilus triacanthus (W. Peck, 1804) (Atlantic butterfish) * Peprilus xanthurus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1825) References Stromateidae "