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"Tommy Thomas was the head coach of the Valdosta State University baseball team from 1967 to 2007,https://www.valdostadailytimes.com/sports/tommy-thomas- announces-retirement-plans/article_63937646-0a7b-515d-a766-0bcbed4f6fd4.html leading the team to 34 winning seasons. He had a managerial record of 1,328-825-6, and headed the team to the national tournament eight times, Gulf South Conference titles in 1995 and 2002, division titles in 1983, 2001 and 2003 and a Division II national title in 1979. The 1979 national title was the school's first of any kind.Valdosta.edu He was the first and only Division II coach to reach 1,200 wins. Major league baseball players Sam Bowen, Jason Bulger and Scott MacRae all played under his tutelage.Baseball Reference See also *List of college baseball coaches with 1,100 wins References Category:Valdosta State Blazers baseball coaches Category:Valdosta State Blazers baseball players Category:Georgia Southern University alumni Category:National College Baseball Hall of Fame inductees "
"Tristan Perich (2007) Tristan Perich (born 1982)https://www.laphil.com/search/?modal=4165 is a contemporary composer and sound artist from New York City who focuses on electronic one bit sound. Perich composed a series of compositions as well as sound art installations with 1 bit electronics, which Perich describes as being music that never has more than one bit of information being played at any given time. In Denmark he was an artist in residence, where he built a series of sculptures called Interval Studies consisting of large numbers of small speakers all sending out their own frequency. The blending of all of these independent frequencies caused a white noise, or other forms of colored noise. Other works by him include Machine Drawings and 1-bit Video. Together with Kunal Gupta and Katie Shima he forms the group Loud Objects. This group performs electronic music by soldering. Perich has performed on Blip Festival and SxSW. Works by Perich have been commissioned for Bang on a Can festival held at Lincoln Center in New York City. In February 2010 he won, with his Loud Objects collective, third prize in the Guthman Instrument Competition at Georgia Tech with a circuit bent electronic system. Works of Perich have been performed by the Bang on a Can-ensemble, Calder Quartet and Meehan/Perkins. His work has been reviewed by The Wire. He received the Prix Ars Electronica in 2009 and was a featured artist at Sónar 2010 in Barcelona. Perich was the Edward E. Elson Artist-in-Residence of the Addison Gallery of American Art at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, serving as a composer, musician and visual artist., Andover.edu. Accessed 24 January 2011. In 2013, Perich was artist-in-residence at MIT's Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST), presenting public performances and lectures. His work is included in "Soundings: A Contemporary Score", which was at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City from August 10 until November 3, 2013.http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1379 Perich is of Croatian descent. Discography * 1-bit music, Cantaloupe Music, 2005, CD box with built-in electronics * 1-bit symphony, Cantaloupe Music, 2010, CD box with built-in electronics * Surface Image for solo piano and 40-channel 1- bit electronics New Amsterdam Records NWAM060, 2014 References External links * www.tristanperich.com * www.loudobjects.com * www.1bitmusic.com Category:American male composers Category:21st-century American composers Category:Living people Category:1982 births Category:21st-century American male musicians "
"Kenneth Grayston (8 July 1914 - 10 June 2005) was a British theologian. He is the author of Dying, We Live. A New Inquiry into the Death of Christ in the New Testament (1990)."Professor Kenneth Grayston", The Times, 12 July 2005. Grayston was born in Sheffield, and was raised and educated in south London. He studied chemistry at St John's College, Oxford, then theology at Wesley House, Cambridge. He was ordained as a Methodist minister in 1942. In 1944, he was appointed assistant director of broadcasting at the BBC, moving from there to become a tutor in New Testament at Didsbury Theological College, then a lecturer at the University of Bristol. He held the post of professor of theology there from 1965 until 1979. He also served as dean of the Faculty of Arts from 1972 until 1974, and as the university's pro-vice chancellor from 1976 until 1979. Notes Category:British theologians Category:1914 births Category:2005 deaths Category:Alumni of St John's College, Oxford Category:English Methodist ministers Category:Academics of the University of Bristol Category:Alumni of Wesley House "