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❤️ Hakan Utangaç 🕊️

"Hakan Utangaç (born 1965 in Istanbul) is the guitarist of heavy metal band Mezarkabul (known as Pentagram in Turkey). He is a founding member of the band. References 1965 births Living people People from Istanbul Turkish heavy metal guitarists Turkish heavy metal singers Turkish rock guitarists "

❤️ Curbridge, Oxfordshire 🕊️

"Curbridge is a village and civil parish immediately southwest of Witney, in the West Oxfordshire district, in the county of Oxfordshire, England. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 529. Since 2012 it has been part of the Curbridge and Lew joint parish council area, sharing a parish council with the adjacent civil parish of Lew. Romano-British settlement When the Witney Bypass was being built in the 1970s, the remains of a Romano-British settlement were found a short distance northeast of Manor Farm. Foundations were found of rectangular timber-framed buildings, some with limestone rubble foundations. A cemetery was found, containing 18 burials. There may have been more, but if so they are now beneath the bypass. Most of the bodies lay with their heads pointing east or north. Three of the adults had been beheaded, and were laid with their heads between their legs. This was a burial practice in the late Roman and early Anglo-Saxon eras. It is not known whether beheading was the cause of death or was done posthumously. In a later phase of settlement, a midden covered the cemetery. Artefacts found included a whetstone made from local limestone, a copper alloy brooch, a copper finger ring, a bronze Roman coin from the reign of the Roman usurper Magnentius (AD 350–353), fragments of Romano-British pottery, and clusters of hobnails showing where leather footwear had rotted away in the ground. History Caswell Farm, southwest of the village, is a moated farmstead that includes remnants of a 15th-century house. It is a Grade II* listed building. In the mid-1970s the Witney Bypass was built to allow the A40 trunk road to pass south of Witney. It was built through Curbridge parish only north of the village. The bypass was made the new civil parish boundary, and that part of the parish north of it was transferred to Witney. Parish church A Church of England chapel was built in Curbridge in 1838 and the Gothic Revival architect CC Rolfe added an apse in 1874. In 1906 the chapel was demolished and replaced with the present Church of England parish church of Saint John the Baptist. Its parish is part of the Benefice of Witney, which also includes Hailey. References Curbridge Farm Cottages Sources and further reading External links *Curbridge Village Website Villages in Oxfordshire Civil parishes in Oxfordshire West Oxfordshire District "

❤️ Storefront Lawyers 🕊️

"Storefront Lawyers (also known as Men at Law) is an American legal drama that ran from September 1970 to January 1971 and February 1971 to March 1971 on CBS. The series starred Robert Foxworth, Sheila Larken, David Arkin, and A Martinez. Plot David Hansen (Foxworth) is a big-shot lawyer who grew tired of his important and expensive Los Angeles law firm Horton, Troy, McNeil, & Caroll. Hansen left his job to start a non-profit firm called Neighborhood Legal Services based in Century City, California. His associates were Deborah Sullivan (Larken) and Gabriel Kay (Arkin). Roberto (Martinez) is a law student who worked for them as a clerk. After 13 weeks, CBS decided to take the series in a different direction so that the lawyers could take on rich clients as well. The network retitled the series as Men at Law as the three protagonists went back to work for their former law firm. Cast =Main= * Robert Foxworth as David Hansen * Sheila Larken as Deborah Sullivan * David Arkin as Gabriel Kaye * A Martinez as Roberto Alvarez =Recurring= * Gerald S. O'Loughlin as Devlin McNeil Episodes { style="width:100%;" - style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000; width:7%;" No. in season style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000;" Title style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000;" Directed by style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000;" Written by style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000; width:20%;" Original air date style="background:#FF29FF; color:#000; width:20%;" Production code } Reception =Critical response= In the book, The Cultural Lives of Cause Lawyers edited by Austin Sarat and Stuart Scheingold, "The Storefront Lawyers featured two men and one woman, all WASPS, but the presence of a woman was a departure at the time when women still constituted less than five percent of the profession." "The Storefront Lawyers emphasizes that passivity, suggesting lawyers do nothing unless called upon. Given anxiety over lawyers trolling for clients, this portrayal suggests there is nothing to worry about. From the viewer's perspective such things simply do not happen." In his Time magazine interview, critic Richard Burgheim lumped the new CBS legal series together with another of the network's bids at "revelvance," noting "The Storefront Lawyers (CBS) and The Interns (CBS) both exploit Mod Squads multihero angle, but neither one is genuinely mod or engrossing." References =Citations= =Sources= External links 1970 American television series debuts 1971 American television series endings 1970s American television series American legal drama television series CBS original programming English-language television shows Television series by CBS Television Studios Television shows set in Los Angeles "

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