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  2. Neil Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Armstrong

    Neil Alden Armstrong (August 5, 1930 – August 25, 2012) was an American astronaut and aeronautical engineer who, in 1969, became the first person to walk on the Moon.He was also a naval aviator, test pilot, and university professor.

  3. World Trade Center (1973–2001) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Trade_Center_(1973...

    There were 2,192 civilians who died in and around the World Trade Center, including 658 employees of Cantor Fitzgerald L.P. (an investment bank on the 101st to 105th floors of One World Trade Center), [201] 295 employees of Marsh & McLennan Companies (located immediately below Cantor Fitzgerald on floors 93 to 101, the location of Flight 11's ...

  4. Presidency of Bill Clinton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidency_of_Bill_Clinton

    The bipartisan bill granted people the right to keep their insurance plan if they changed jobs, and also contained several other health care reforms. [56] In October 1996, Senator Ted Kennedy introduced a bill to provide health care coverage for children of the working poor, to be financed via a 75 cents a pack cigarette tax increase. [57]

  5. Trap (2024 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_(2024_film)

    Trap is a 2024 American psychological thriller film written, directed, and produced by M. Night Shyamalan.Starring Josh Hartnett, Ariel Donoghue, Saleka Night Shyamalan, Hayley Mills, and Alison Pill, it follows a serial killer evading a police blockade while attending a concert with his daughter.

  6. Bill Murray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Murray

    Murray was born on September 21, 1950, in Evanston, Illinois, to Lucille, a mail room clerk, and Edward J. Murray, a lumber salesman.He attended an all-boys Jesuit school in Wilmette, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago.

  7. Bill Richardson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Richardson

    During his testimony, Doug Goldberg stated that he had been given an envelope containing a check for $25,000 payable to Moving America Forward, Bill Richardson's political action committee, by his boss Stewart Wolmark and told to deliver it to Bill Richardson at a fund raiser. When Goldberg handed the envelope to Richardson, he allegedly told ...

  8. Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Employees_Pay...

    The Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990 or FEPCA (H.R. 5241, Pub. L. Tooltip Public Law (United States) 101–509) is a United States federal law relating to the salaries for employees of the United States Government. In the 1980s, salaries for civil servants in the executive branch had fallen behind private sector pay. FEPCA was ...

  9. Extranet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extranet

    During the late 1990s and early 2000s, several industries started to use the term 'extranet' to describe centralized repositories of shared data (and supporting applications) made accessible via the web only to authorized members of particular work groups - for example, geographically dispersed, multi-company project teams.