X-Nico

unusual facts about State of New York



Bull Hill

Bull Hill, also known as Mount Taurus, is a mountain north of the village of Cold Spring on the Hudson River in Putnam County in the State of New York.

John Mohawk

A Seneca Indian, he was born into a clan of the Seneca Turtle Reserve, Cattaraugus in the State of New York.

Passive electioneering

The State of New York has a rarely enforced law that prohibits wearing campaign buttons or T-shirt at a polling place.

Sagamore Camp

Mrs. Emerson transferred the property to Syracuse University, which operated a conference center here until the State of New York offered to buy it.

The Levin Institute

The Neil D. Levin Graduate Institute of International Relations and Commerce (The Levin Institute) was established by Governor George Pataki and the State of New York, under the auspices of the State University of New York, in memory of Neil D. Levin, Executive Director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, who perished in the attack upon the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.

Western Connecticut Health Network

Western Connecticut Health Network is a patient-centered system of care formed in 2010 by Danbury Hospital, New Milford Hospital and their affiliated organizations to serve communities in Connecticut and nearby New York State.


see also

12th New York State Legislature

On January 27, 1789, the Legislature divided the State of New York into six congressional districts, and the first congressional elections in New York were held on March 3 and 4, 1789.

Aldona Wos

Wos is a member of the American College of Physicians, the American Women's Medical Association, the American College of Chest Physicians, the Medical Society of the State of New York, the North Carolina Medical Society, and the Greater Greensboro Society of Medicine.

Charles Caldwell

C. Pope Caldwell (1875–1940), American politician from the state of New York

Clarkoceras

In North America Clarkoceras is found in early Lower Ordovician, Gasconadian age shallow marine sediments near Smith Basin, State of New York, the Llano Uplift of Central Texas, and the El Paso Group of the eastern Rocky Mountains of Trans-Pecos Texas and Southern New Mexico.

Dale Cemetery

Edwin A. McAlpin (1848-1917), president of the D.H. McAlpin & Co tobacco company, builder of the Hotel McAlpin, the largest hotel in the world, and Adjutant General of the State of New York

Daniel Reed

Daniel A. Reed (1875–1959), American football coach and congressman who represented the state of New York

Deborah VanAmerongen

Additionally, VanAmerongen served as chair of the Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation, and was a member of the Board of Directors of the NYS Housing Finance Agency; the State of New York Mortgage Agency; the Homeless Housing Assistance Corporation, the Harlem Community Development Corporation and the New York State Affordable Housing Corporation

Denise McCluggage

In the mid-1950s, after a failed lobbying attempt to get the State of New York to develop a new ski area on Hunter Mountain, the original investor group contacted McCluggage, then a sports reporter at the New York Herald Tribune.

Diedrich

Diedrich Willers, Jr. (1833–1908), Democratic politician who served as Secretary of State of New York

Edward Flynn

Edward J. Flynn (1891–1953), American politician, Secretary of State of New York 1929–1939

Father Millet Cross

On September 7, 1949, Congress abolished the national monument and transferred the memorial to the state of New York for public use as part of Fort Niagara State Park.

George W. Kirchwey

He edited Historical Manuscripts, State of New York (1887–89), was professor of law at Union College, and dean of the Albany Law School (1889–91), professor of law at Columbia University (1891–1901), dean of Columbia Law School from 1901 to 1910 and was a pioneer in the introduction of the case method of studying law.

Geri Palast

The CFE is a not-for-profit advocacy organization seeking to protect and promote the constitutional right to a sound basic education for all public school students in the State of New York.

Governors Island National Monument

At the time of the closure announcement in October 1995, President Bill Clinton and New York Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan reached an informal agreement to convey the island to the city and state of New York for 1 dollar if a plan for public benefit could be developed.

Home inspection

In the State of New York, only a Licensed Professional Engineer or a Registered Architect can render professional opinions as to the sufficiency structural elements of a home or building.

John McDonough

John T. McDonough (1843–?), Secretary of State of New York 1899–1902, and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines 1903–1904

Joseph A. Suozzi

After attending Harvard Law School, Suozzi was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York, where he joined with Glen Cove Mayor Luke Mercadante as a law partner, with an office in Glen Cove.

Joyce F. Brown

She is the wife of H. Carl McCall, who served as Comptroller of the State of New York from 1993 to 2002 and ran as the Democratic candidate for Governor of New York in 2002.

Lowey

Nita Lowey (born 1937), politician from the U.S. state of New York

New York Provincial Congress

On July 10, 1776, the Fourth Provincial Congress changed its name to the Convention of Representatives of the State of New York, and "acts as legislature without an executive." While adjourned it left a Committee of Safety in charge.

Operation Dreamseed

Major Schmidt worked with the law firm of Shearman & Sterling, LLP, to incorporate Operation Dreamseed in the State of New York.

Pennsylvania Route 199

Before entering the state of New York, the eastbound entrance/exit ramp for NY 17 (future Interstate 86) intersects at the route.

Roberto Clemente State Park

Roberto Clemente State Park is one of the parks in the State of New York which benefited from the partnership of nonprofit New York Restoration Project and New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.

Secretary Daniels

Randy Daniels (born 1950), American Secretary of State of New York from 2001 to 2005

Senate House

Senate House State Historic Site, in Kingston, New York, where the state of New York was established in 1777.

Simon Newton Dexter

He was also largely interested in manufactures elsewhere in the State of New York and in Elgin, Illinois.

Stuart L. Deutsch

He also has been a visiting faculty member at the University of Illinois College of Law; an associate professor at the University of Santa Clara School of Law, where he began his teaching career; and practiced law in New York City even though he never received his law license from the State of New York.

Thomas Curran

Thomas J. Curran (1898–1958), Secretary of State of New York, 1943–1955

Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb

Simultaneously, the Northern law reformer David Dudley Field II was independently working in the same ambitious direction of trying to codify all of the common law into a coherent civil code, but Field's proposed civil code was not actually enacted until 1866 in Dakota Territory, was belatedly enacted in 1872 in California, and was repeatedly rejected several times by his home state of New York and never enacted in that state.

United States House of Representatives elections in New York, 1789

The 1st United States Congress had convened at Federal Hall in New York City on March 4, 1789, without any members from the State of New York, and without a quorum in either Senate or House.

Yeshiva University Medical Ethics Society

Fred Rosner, M.D. - Assistant Dean and professor of medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Professor of Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and Director of the Department of Medicine at Queens Hospital Center. He is the Chairman of the Medical Ethics Committee of the state of New York.