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  1. Communications Technology High School was originally known as the George Wolf School, named for the 19th century Pennsylvania governor nicknamed the "father" of the state's public schools. Construction began on the school building, designed by noted Philadelphia schools architect Irwin T. Catharine , in 1926, and the project was completed the following year.

  2. Jordan Ross Belfort ( / ˈbɛlfərt /; born July 9, 1962) is an American former stockbroker, financial criminal, and businessman who pleaded guilty to fraud and related crimes in connection with stock-market manipulation and running a boiler room as part of a penny-stock scam in 1999. [4]

  3. Because George refuses to dance, Martha dances with Nick, taunting George by making the dance very sensual while she tells another embarrassing story about George: his efforts to publish a novel about a boy who accidentally killed both of his parents (with the insinuation that the deaths were actually murder), but Martha's father would not let it be published.

  4. June 21, 2007. George John Wolf House, also known as the Wolf-Knapp House, is a historic home located at Hammond, Lake County, Indiana. The house was built in 1929–1930, and is a two-story, roughly "L"-shaped, Tudor Revival style limestone dwelling with a slate roof. It features a two-story round tower with a conical roof enclosing a winding ...

  5. Built sometime after July 8, 1863, [5] it opened on July 22, [6] and was named Camp Letterman in honor of Jonathan Letterman, M.D., the "Father of Battlefield Medicine" who created medical management procedures which transformed not only Civil War-era medicine, but the medical care for thousands of soldiers in subsequent wars, the tents of the ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Georg_WulffGeorg Wulff - Wikipedia

    Wulff was born in Nizhyn, Chernigov province where his mother Lydia was daughter of teacher E. V. Gudim. His father Viktor Konstantinovich Vulf was a literature teacher at the 6th Warsaw Gymnasium. He grew up in Warsaw and graduated from the 6th Warsaw Gymnasium in 1880. He then went to the Imperial Warsaw University to study natural sciences.

  7. Leonard G. Wolf. From 1959's Pocket Congressional Directory of the Eighty-Sixth Congress. Leonard George Wolf (October 29, 1925 – March 28, 1970) was a one-term Democratic U.S. Representative from Iowa's 2nd congressional district. He was elected in 1958 and defeated in 1960 when seeking re-election. [1]