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  1. Jan 9, 2023 · Belinda Carlisle, says The Guardian, moved from Thousand Oaks to Los Angeles when she was 18. She immediately fell into the city's thriving punk scene, and for several years, lived in a punk commune that had been set up in an abandoned building. "It was all bands and music," she recalled. "And drugs, of course."

    • What happened to Carlisle?1
    • What happened to Carlisle?2
    • What happened to Carlisle?3
    • What happened to Carlisle?4
    • What happened to Carlisle?5
  2. Jan 30, 2024 · Carlisle Companies Incorporated (NYSE: CSL), a leading supplier of innovative building products and solutions, today announced the signing of a definitive agreement to sell Carlisle Interconnect Technologies (“CIT”) to Amphenol Corporation (NYSE: APH) in a transaction valued at $2.025 billion. The transaction, which follows Carlisle’s previously announced process to sell CIT, is subject ...

  3. Belinda Jo Carlisle (/ ˈ k ɑːr l aɪ l / KAR-lyle; born August 17, 1958) is an American singer and songwriter. She gained fame as the lead vocalist of the Go-Go's , the most successful all-female rock band of all time, [ 1 ] and went on to have a prolific career as a solo artist.

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    • HISTORY Vault: Native American History

    Native American tribes are still seeking the return of their children.

    “Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.”

    That was the mindset under which the U.S. government forced tens of thousands of Native American children to attend “assimilation” boarding schools in the late 19th century. Decades later, those words—delivered in a speech by U.S. cavalry captain Richard Henry Pratt, who opened the first such school in Carlisle, Pennsylvania—have come to symbolize the brutality of the boarding school system.

    The history of this forced assimilation is far from settled. On August 7, 2017, the U.S. Army began exhuming the graves of three children from the Northern Arapaho tribe who had died at Pratt’s Carlisle Indian Industrial School in the 1880s. The children’s names were Little Chief, Horse and Little Plume—names they were forbidden to use at the school.

    Students at Carlisle and the roughly 150 other such schools that the government opened were susceptible to deadly infections like tuberculosis and the flu. During Carlisle’s operation between 1879 and 1918, nearly 200 other children were buried in the same cemetery as the Northern Arapaho boys, according to The Washington Post.

    Carlisle and other boarding schools were part of a long history of U.S. attempts to either kill, remove, or assimilate Native Americans. In 1830, the U.S. forced Native Americans to move west of the Mississippi to make room for U.S. expansion with the the Indian Removal Act. But a few decades later, the U.S. worried it was running out of places to relocate the country’s original inhabitants.

    From Comanche warriors to Navajo code talkers, learn more about Indigenous history.

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    • Becky Little
  4. Dec 12, 2021 · Belinda Carlisle Ray Tamarra/GC Images. This town is falling head over heels for The Go-Go’s all over again. The pop-punk quintet was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on Oct. 30, and ...

  5. 73 - Winter: a Roman timber fort is constructed in what is now the site of Carlisle Castle. [3] 83 - the Roman fort at Carlisle is reconstructed. [4] 685 - Saint Cuthbert visits Carlisle. [5] 1092 - William II invades the area surrounding Carlisle and reincorporates Carlisle into England after it had been taken by the Scots.

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  7. Jun 23, 2021 · The Carlisle Barracks Post Cemetery will be closed while the Office of Army Cemeteries will conduct the disinterment from mid-June until an expected end date of July 18. The Army will pay for the ...

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