In 2010, Ortiz was defeated by Republican challenger Blake Farenthold.
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On November 2, election night, Ortiz appeared to have lost to the Republican challenger, Blake Farenthold, but Ortiz requested a recount.
Solomon Islands | Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum | Solomon | Solomon Burke | Tito Ortiz | King Solomon | Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation | Solomon Feferman | David Ortiz | Solomon Islands campaign | Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz | In Search of King Solomon's Mines | Gizo, Solomon Islands | Solomon River | Key of Solomon | Judgment of Solomon | Vila, Solomon Islands | Solomon's Temple | Solomon R. Guggenheim | Solomon Juneau | Solomon Joachim Halberstam | Solomon ibn Gabirol | Robert C. Solomon | Prabhu Solomon | Stacey Solomon | Solomon Schechter High School of New York | Solomon Schechter | Solomon River (Alaska) | Solomon Northup | Solomon Nason |
Barnes' first original play was the blank verse drama Octavia Bragaldi, or, The Confession, which took the Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy (the 1825 murder of Kentucky legislator Solomon P. Sharp by Jereboam O. Beauchamp) and set it in 15th century Milan, a popular trope of the day.
She obtained her Juris Doctor Magna Cum Laude from Interamerican University of Puerto Rico School of Law in 1999, after spending a summer at the International Studies Center at the José Ortega y Gasset Foundation in Toledo, Spain studying European Community Law and Comparative Spanish Family Law.
In August 7, 2013 Douglas Elliman announced that Luis D. Ortiz joined the firm which also employs Ortiz's television co-star, Fredrik Eklund.
Simon J. Ortiz (born May 27, 1941) is a Native American writer of the Acoma Pueblo tribe, and one of the key figures in the second wave of what has been called the Native American Renaissance.
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He was raised in the Acoma village of McCartys (the Keresan name is "Deetzeyaamah"), and spoke only Keresan at home.
Sharp was re-elected to the Fourteenth Congress, during which he served as chairman of the Committee on Private Land Claims.
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Sharp's murder inspired fictional works, most notably Edgar Allan Poe's unfinished play Politian and Robert Penn Warren's novel World Enough and Time (1950).
Among the activists and scholars who participated were Simon J. Ortiz, Vine Deloria, Jr., Alvin M. Josephy, Jr., Leonard Crow Dog, Russell Means, William S. Laughlin, Raymond J. DeMallie, Beatrice Medicine, Gladys Bissonette, Dennis Banks, and Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz.
:Not to be confused with a 19th century decision concerning Aboriginal title in New Mexico.