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"The 1976 Cal Poly Pomona Broncos football team represented California State Polytechnic University, Pomona during the 1976 NCAA Division II football season. Cal Poly Pomona competed in the California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA). Cal Poly Pomona was led by third-year head coach Andy Vinci. They played home games at Kellogg Field in Pomona, California. The Broncos finished the season with a record of three wins, six losses and one tie (3–6–1, 1–1 CCAA). However, Mississippi State was later required to forfeit all nine of their victories in the 1976 season, including their victory over Cal Poly Pomona on October 2. That leaves Cal Poly Pomona with an adjusted final record of four wins, five losses and one tie (4–5–1, 1–1 CCAA). Overall, the team was outscored by its opponents 135–199 for the season. Schedule Team players in the NFL No Cal Poly Pomona players were selected in the 1977 NFL Draft. Notes References Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona Broncos football seasons Cal Poly Pomona Broncos football "
"Saliagos () is an islet in the Greek island group of Cyclades. It is the first early farming site and one of the oldest settlements of the Cycladic culture.E. H. Cline (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean, , Jan. 2012. J. Hilditch, Saliagos, in The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, John Wiley & Sons, , 2013. Saliagos is only 110 to 70 meters in size and is situated between Antiparos (ancient Oliaros) and Paros, along with several other uninhabited islands. In the past and up to the Byzantine times, Saliagos was a promontory connected with Antiparos. However, at later times, this has been flooded due to the rise in the sea level. The fat lady of Saliagos. The settlement is dated to the middle to late Neolithic period. Radiocarbon dating has indicated a period from 5000 to 4500 BC. The site was excavated during the years 1964-65 by John Davies Evans and Colin Renfrew from the British School at Athens.J.D. Evans and C. Renfrew, Excavations at Saliagos near Antiparos, British School of Archaeology at Athens, 1968. References External links Cycladic civilization Bronze Age sites in Greece Archaeological sites on the Aegean Islands "
"Maria Kipp (1900-1988) was a textile designer and engineer active in the United States from the 1920s until her death. Her commissions ranged from the Salt Lake Temple in Salt Lake City, UT to Air Force One. Life Born in Germany, Kipp was the first woman to study at the Staatliche Fachschule für Texitilindustrie (State Academy for the Textile Industry), from where she graduated in 1923 as a textile engineer. In 1924, Kipp and her husband emigrated to the United States without sponsorship. They settled in Los Angeles where Kipp opened a successful studio, Maria Kipp Handweaves, specializing in handwoven furnishing fabrics for 60 years. Modernist architects such as Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra sought out her designs for their interiors. Neutra used Kipp's designs in his own home, as did other prominent Southern California architects such as Welton Becket, who commissioned her to create interiors for the Bullock's chain of department stores, and Paul Revere Williams, who partnered with her to create interiors for celebrity homes and the Beverly Hills Polo Lounge. Her list of celebrity clients also included Walt Disney and Claudette Colbert. Although she was lesser known than her contemporaries Anni Albers and Dorothy Liebes, Kipp received an inaugural award for woven fabrics from the American Institute of Decorators in 1948. References External links * Maria Kipp Showroom and Building, Los Angeles, CA (1951). Photographs by Julius Shulman. 1900 births 1988 deaths 20th-century American women artists American people of German descent American textile artists American weavers American women in business People from Los Angeles Women textile artists "