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Topolewski and the space STARDUST spacecraft Microchip #1 During October-November, 1997, we had our first name collection effort. Over 136,000 names were collected, and the names were etched on the microchip in December 1997. The chip was then delivered to Denver, Colorado where the spacecraft was being assembled. The microchip was inserted inside the Sample Return Capsule where it current resides. http://www.lpi.usra.edu/bf/stardust/microchip/ ... PATRICK THOMAS TOPOLEWSK LANA MARIE GRACE TOPOLEWSKI PETER MICHAEL STARK TOPOLEWSKI ... Webdesign and foto from Topolewski MediaDialog: Webdesign, Fotodesign, Druck, Fotografie, Grafik, Bielefeld, fьr Apotheken, Fotos, Bilder-Pool, Apotheker, Preise, Bielefeld MediaDialog K.Topolewski Bahnhofstr. 48 33602 Bielefeld Tel.: 0521 / 17 27 15 e-Mail: MediaDialog@topolewski.de Composers: Topolewski Topolewski Sheet Music Chorale In D Minor Composers: Topolewski srch . Band Kjos. Sheet Music Book. $50.00 Some books of Marta Topolevsky Bleger Topolevsky books from Amazon Title: Para Empezar B: Student Book Author: Bleger Topolevsky Publisher: Edelsa Grupo Didascalia, S.A. Released: Used Price: $15.87 Title: Para Empezar A & B: Teacher''s Book: Libro Del Profesor 1A/B Author: M T Topolevsky Bleger Publisher: Edelsa Grupo Didascalia, S.A. Released: Used Price: $26.46 Title: Procesos y Recursos, Libro del alumno Author: Marta Topolevsky Bleger Publisher: Max Hueber Verlag Released: 01 January, 2001 Title: Para Empezar B: Workbook Author: Topolevsky Publisher: Edelsa Grupo Didascalia, S.A. Released: Title: Esto Funciona: A Libro de Ejercicios Author: Marta Topolevsky Bleger Publisher: Released: 1986 Used Price: $8.43 Richard Topolewski Bell Technology Group Ltd. Names Richard Topolewski and Tim Flaherty to lead sales and marketing campaign David Topolewski, Student plans early for financial freedom "My Experiences" by Tanya Topolewski Doc Gilbert Memorial Potomac Cup Regatta May 3-4 2003 John L. Topolewski Which Way EJ?: In Search of a New Creation Timothy Topolewski i- Professor of Music Timothy Topolewski is Professor of Music at the Crane School of Music in Potsdam, New York where he conducts the Wind Ensemble, Opera Orchestra and teaches conducting. A native of Michigan, Timothy Topolewski received his undergraduate degree from Michigan State University, a Master''s Degree from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and a Doctorate of Music Arts from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. After serving three years with distinction as soloist and enlisted conductor with The United States Army Band and Orchestra in Washington, D.C., he performed as principal clarinetist with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Dubuque Symphony Orchestra, and the Cedar Rapids Symphony where he also served as principal on-call conductor. Topolewski has served as soloist, conductor or lecturer throughout the United States, the major cities of Mexico, Australia, and Germany including Berlin, Dresden, Potsdam and Leipzig. He is an active and published arranger, clinician and author and maintains an active schedule as guest conductor of both wind ensembles and orchestras. Topolewski has works published with Carl Fischer Music, Warner Brothers, Kjos, Piansano Press, and de Haske Music. In May of 2001, he was presented with the "President''s Award for Excellence in Research and Creative Endeavors" at SUNY Potsdam. His five-volume work titled "Errata Studies for the Wind Band Conductor" and two CDs with the Crane Wind Ensemble have won the praise and recognition of the nation''s finest conductors, educators, and composers. He is a Past-president of NYSBDA and a member of the American Bandmaster''s Association, MENC, CBDNA, and Phi Mu Alpha. TOPOLEWSKI, JOHN: Remarks in House -FRANCE''S KNIGHT''S CROSS OF THE FRENCH LEGION OF HONOR TOPOLEWSKI, JOHN Remarks in House Knight Cross of the French Legion of Honor: award recipient, E1504 [1JY]- MR. JOHN TOPOLEWSKI AWARDED FRANCE''S KNIGHT''S CROSS OF THE FRENCH LEGION OF HONOR -- HON. MARCY KAPTUR OF OHIO IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1999 Mr. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, I rise with great pride to honor a 104 year old veteran in my district. John Topolewski was awarded France''s Knight Cross of the French Legion of Honor on Wednesday, June 16, 1999 in Toledo, Ohio. The Knight''s Cross is the highest award given by France to citizens of other countries. The award was presented to Mr. Topolewski by France''s Consul General Alain de Keghel, the second ranking French official in the U.S., in front of a replica of the troop train which transported U.S. troops to France in World War I. Mr. Topolewski was one of those ``Doughboys` and a member of the 82nd Infantry Division. The nation of France has bestowed the Knight''s Cross upon John Topolewski for uncommon valor in the trenches as he fought in the United States Army during World War I. The Greek historian Thucydides wrote ``remember that this greatness was won by men with courage, with knowledge of their duty, and with a sense of honor in action ..... but the bravest are surely those who have the clearest vision of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and yet notwithstanding go out to meet it.'''' As a young man at the dawn of his adulthood, John Topolewski embodied these words. He acted because he thought it his duty to his comrades, his country, and the world, not out of a desire for recognition, glory or awards. Consul General Keghel told him as he gave him the medal ``More than two million American soldiers were sent across the Atlantic Ocean. The French have not forgot their bravery more than eighty years later. Today it is your turn, Mr. John Topolewski, to be honored. You served in dangerous conditions. You belong for sure among the veterans here.'''' John Topolewski stands today as a symbol of thousands of nameless heroes of that first great world wide conflict, and the ones which followed. He is a reminder of the humanness in war, of sacrifices made to preserve liberty and regain freedoms withheld. Although I was unable to personally be with him as he received this belated honor, I salute John Topolewski, and thank him on behalf of the people of our nation and freedom lovers world-wide. http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?r106:3:./temp/~r1067EhGh0:: Rick Topolewski, 45 and his orange 1964 Chevrolet II Nova Chrome at last Classic car night launched in Bolingbrook When Ken Lopatka was in high school, his father, Greg, didn''t have the same worries other parents did. He always knew where his son was, what he was doing and who he was with. The car fanatic could typically be found in his dad''s two-car garage, fixing, painting and rebuilding classic autos. Lopatka and his high school friends spent many nights and weekends working on projects. "We always stayed out of trouble until the cars were done," said Lopatka, 39, of Bolingbrook. "My dad never had to worry about me getting into drugs because I put all my money into cars." For 10 years after high school, Lopatka and his friends stuck around the area and worked on cars together, eventually calling themselves the Eliminators Classic Car Club. The club died off around 1990, when the guys started getting married and having children. They bought houses and started acting like responsible adults, which led some to sell their toys — namely their classic cars, Lopatka said Now that their children are older, the Eliminators have gotten back together to buy cars and talk shop. This time they have the cash flow and the contacts to do everything on a larger scale, Lopatka said. The group''s biggest venture is the new Bono''s Classic Car Cruise Night at Bono''s restaurant, on Route 53 just south of Interstate 55 in Bolingbrook. The weekly event, held at about 4:30 p.m. Saturdays, is a chance for the members to show off their vehicles and gab about their hobby. "The automotive enthusiast is a different breed," Lopatka said. "You get to talk to people who understand what you''re into," said Rick Topolewski, 45, while standing near his orange 1964 Chevrolet II Nova. "I''d rather do this than chase a little white ball around in the grass." The Eliminators, about eight guys in their 30s and 40s living in Bolingbrook and surrounding towns, also make the trek to two or three other cruise nights a week in other towns in the area. Group members also help each other with their automotive projects. Lopatka helped Topolewski cut down a fence in an overgrown Chicago yard to drag out the Nova eight years ago. Since then the two have replaced just about everything on the car. "What we didn''t have to take off fell off itself," Topolewski said. Conversations at cruise nights usually focus on ways to fix up a car, as well as how fast the cars can go, Lopatka said. He gets quite a few questions about the light blue 1957 Chevrolet wagon he brings to the shows. You get "101 questions because the car''s so unique. It''s a one and only because of the way I customized it," Lopatka said. He said a lot people are interested in learning about classic cars, and that has helped make the new Bolingbrook cruise night a success. "Every week we get a bigger crowd of cars," said Bono''s owner Ron Towner. Sometimes 50 vehicles will be on display, he said. And it is not just grown-ups who enjoy coming to the event, Towner said. "We''ve got kids running all over." That youthful atmosphere is perfect for the Eliminators, whose love of classic cars keeps them young at heart, Lopatka said. "You grow old, but you don''t have to grow up," Lopatka said. Contact STAFF WRITER Lauren B. Kraft at lkraft@scn1.com or (815) 439-4348. 07/12/02 See the next page -page2 | |||
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