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"Keegan Smith (born 13 May 1999) is a New Zealand footballer who currently plays as a goalkeeper for ISPS Handa Premiership club Team Wellington. Club career Wellington Phoenix Smith joined Wellington Phoenix to be part of their reserves team playing in the ISPS Handa Premiership. Smith played one game for the reserves, starting in a game against Canterbury United before he was sent off in the 65th minute for a second yellow. He made his senior debut for Wellington Phoenix in the A-League on 8 October 2017, in a 1–1 draw with Adelaide United. On 9 November 2017, Smith signed a three-year scholarship contract with the Wellington Phoenix. As the Phoenix had already reached their limit of 23 professional players, Smith's first two years were as a youth before his third as a professional. Lower Hutt Smith was released by the Wellington Phoenix on 4 May 2018 so he could play winter football for Lower Hutt in the Central League with the plan for him to then see out the second and third year of his contract back with the club. On 11 October 2018, it was announced that Smith and the Phoenix had agreed to a mutual termination that allowed Smith to sign with Tasman United to play in the ISPS Handa Premiership. References External links *Keegan Smith profile on Wellington Phoenix website. * 1999 births Living people Association footballers from Auckland Association football goalkeepers New Zealand association footballers Wellington Phoenix FC players A-League players People educated at Scots College, Wellington "
"Howling Trains and Barking Dogs is the ninth and final album by Cindy Bullens, released in 2010 on Blue Rose Records. It was produced by Bullens herself. This is her last album before the surgery and transition. Track listing #"Love Gone Good" (Cindy Bullens/Bill Lloyd) #"Can't Stop This Train" (Matraca Berg/Cindy Bullens) #"In a Perfect World" (Cindy Bullens/Bill Lloyd) #"Labor of Love" (Cindy Bullens/Radney Foster) #"All My Angels" (Cindy Bullens/Wendy Waldman) #"Whistles and Bells" (Cindy Bullens/Radney Foster) #"I Didn't Know" (Al Anderson/Cindy Bullens) #"Everywhere and Nowhere" (Cindy Bullens/Jimmy Tittle) #"Let Jesus Do the Talking" (Cindy Bullens/Kye Fleming/Mary Ann Kennedy) #"The Misty Hills of Tennessee" (Cindy Bullens) #"Good at Being Gone" (Cindy Bullens) Personnel *Cindy Bullens - vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, mandolin, harmonica, percussion *David Mansfield - fiddle *Bob Colwell - accordion, keyboards, bass, organ, piano, Wurlitzer piano *Stephan B. Jones - bass, dobro, guitar, electric guitar *Justin Maxwell - bass, electric upright bass *Ginger Coté - drums, percussion *Reid Bullens- Crewe, Matraca Berg, Deborah Holland, Wendy Waldman, The Ordinaires, Bob Colwell - backing vocals External links *https://www.discogs.com/Cindy- Bullens-Howling-Trains-And-Barking-Dogs/release/7000370 *https://musicbrainz.org/release-group/8fde326a-4318-4ec4-bfd6-f204f2b17347 *http://www.allmusic.com/album/howling-trains-and-barking-dogs-mw0001994069 *https://www.washingtonpost.com/express/wp/2010/06/28/cindy-bullens-howling- trains-and-barking-dogs-review/ *https://www.slantmagazine.com/music/review/cindy-bullens-howling-trains-and- barking-dogs 2010 albums "
"Florence Trail (September 1, 1854 - April 21, 1944) was an American educator and author. Though she belonged to one of the wealthiest families of Maryland, she believed in the doctrine of self-support and left home to engage in teaching, first in Kentucky and North Carolina, and afterward in New York and Connecticut. On returning from an extended tour of Europe, she published My Journal in Foreign Lands (New York, 1885). This was followed by other volumes, among them: Studies in Criticism (New York, 1888), Under the Second Renaissance (Buffalo, 1894), and A History of Italian Literature. Early life and education Florence Trail was born in Frederick, Maryland, September 1, 1854. She was the second daughter of Charles Edward Trail and Ariana McElfresh. Her siblings included, Anna M. Harding, Henry Trail, Bertha Trail, and Charles Bayard Trail. A severe illness at 10 years of age left her with impaired hearing. Her quickness of perception and efforts to divine what others meant to say caused them to forget, or not to realize, that her hearing was not equal to their own. She graduated first in her class in the Frederick Female Seminary, in 1872, having studied mental and moral philosophy, evidences of Christianity, modern history, mythology, rhetoric and composition. The following year, she graduated with highest honors from Mt. Vernon Institute, Baltimore. Career After teaching for four years at the Frederick Female Seminary, she left home for a position in Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Kentucky, where she afterwards taught Latin, French, art and music. In Harrodsburg, as well as in Tarboro, North Carolina, where she taught music in 1887 and 1888, and in Miss Hogarth's school, Goshen, New York, where she acted as substitute for some weeks in January, 1890, she made many devoted friends and did superior work as a teacher. In 1883, she visited Europe, and afterwards published an account of her travels under the title My Journal in Foreign Lands (New York, 1885), which passed through two editions and served as a guide-book. Trail has been a member of the Society to Encourage Studies at Home for 14 years, five as a student of modern history, French literature, Shakespeare and art, and nine as a teacher of ancient history. Her essay on "Prehistoric Greece as we find it in the Poems of Homer " was read before that society at the annual reunion at Miss Ticknor's, in Boston, Massachusetts, in June, 1883. Trail was an accomplished musician, having studied music in the seminary in Frederick, in the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, and in Chickering Hall, New York. She often appeared in concerts with success. Though gifted in many ways, she was best known as a writer. Her best work was, "Studies in Criticism" (New York, 1888). She published over 100 articles in prose and verse, many without signature, in newspapers and magazines. Inheriting a taste for the languages, she was a fine translator and read German, Italian, Latin and French. She died April 21, 1944. Selected works * My journal in foreign lands, 1884 * Studies in criticism, 1888 * Under the second renaissance : a novel, 1894 * A history of Italian literature, Vol. I., 1903 * A history of Italian literature, Vol. II., 1904 * History and democracy; essays in interpretation, 1916 * Meanings of music, 1918 * The scholar's Italy, 1923 * An Italian anthology, 1926 * A memorial of Ariana McElfresh Trail, 1929 * Modern Italian culture, 1931 * Diary of Florence Trail, 1892 * Foreign family life in France in 1891, 1944 References Attribution Bibliography * External links * 1854 births 1944 deaths 19th-century American writers 19th-century American women writers Writers from Maryland Educators from Maryland 19th-century American educators American women educators People from Frederick, Maryland American non-fiction writers American travel writers American women travel writers American women non-fiction writers Wikipedia articles incorporating text from A Woman of the Century 19th-century women educators "