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"The John M. Pfau Library is the library on the campus of California State University, San Bernardino in San Bernardino, California, United States. It is named after the founding president of the university, Dr. John Martin Pfau. It has two sections totaling 294,000 square feet.About the Library: Library Historic Data The first library director, Arthur E. Nelson, was appointed by Dr. Pfau in 1963. Nelson began accumulating materials in a local warehouse and by 1965 had 50,000 books to move into Sierra Hall, one of the first (multipurpose) buildings on the campus. In 1968, construction began on the current library building which was occupied in 1971. Later on, a new wing was added which was completed in 1994. References Category:University and college academic libraries in the United States Category:California State depository libraries Category:California State University, San Bernardino Category:Library buildings completed in 1971 "
"Efenechtyd () is a hamlet and community in a deep valley in Denbighshire, Wales which contains the Church of St Michael and All Angels. Efenechtyd is also the name of an electoral ward. the community includes the village of Pwllglas. Governance The Efenechtyd electoral ward elects a county councillor to site on Denbighshire County Council.Gareth Joy (5 May 2017) Election 2017: Denbighshire Council results, Point FM. Retrieved 29 March 2018. This ward stretches to the south-west of Efenechtyd with a total population taken at the 2011 census of 1,686, the community population being 655. Church of St Michael and All Angels St Michael’s is the tiny church of Efenechtyd. At twenty feet wide, St Michael’s is the second smallest church in the diocese of St Asaph.Site 4 - Efenechtyd - Church of St Michael and All Angels, Medieval-Wales.com. Retrieved 29 March 2018. The circular churchyard suggests Celtic origins. The church may have been founded by monks from St Saeran’s at Llanynys and probably dates from the 13th century. The east window probably dates from c. 1400. The church's most notable feature is its rare medieval wooden font, probably of 15th or 16th-century origin, similar to the stone fonts fashionable at that time. It is made from a single circular oak block with fourteen facets over a ring of beading. Similarly the battlemented rail near the altar is also late medieval and part of a rood screen. Another notable feature includes a fragment of a Welsh wall-painted Ten Commandments, probably Elizabethan or Jacobean. Monuments include a painted timber memorial to Catherine Lloyd (1810) and a Georgian monument to Joseph Conway of Plas-yn- Llan, near the churchyard gate. The church was extensively restored in 1873. The rounded stone by the font is the ‘Maen Camp’, formerly used at the local ‘campau’ (‘Sports’) on St. Michael’s Day, 29 September. Village Samsons strove to hurl it backwards over their heads. The custom of throwing the Feat Stone has been revived in recent years and takes place at the Harvest Festival celebrations.accessdate=2013-11-31], Maen Camp 2013 Sant Mihangel a'r Holl Angylion, Efenechtyd, Sir Ddinbych 02.JPGFont, carved from one piece of wood Sant Mihangel a'r Holl Angylion, Efenechtyd, Sir Ddinbych 06.JPG Sant Mihangel a'r Holl Angylion, Efenechtyd, Sir Ddinbych 14.JPGCarved roode and pulpit Sant Mihangel a'r Holl Angylion, Efenechtyd, Sir Ddinbych 24.JPGRoof beams Sant Mihangel a'r Holl Angylion, Efenechtyd, Sir Ddinbych 30.JPGBack of church References Living Paths Category:Populated places in Denbighshire Category:Wards of Denbighshire "
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