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Hogan & Hartson LLP
Headquarters
Washington, D.C.
No. of Offices
27
No. of Attorneys
1,100
Major Practice Areas
General practice
Key People
J. Warren Gorrell, Jr., Chairman
Date Founded
1904
Founder
Frank J. Hogan
Company Type
Limited liability partnership
Website
www.hhlaw.com
Founded in 1904, Hogan & Hartson is the oldest major law firm headquartered in Washington, D.C., USA. It is a global firm with more than 1,100 lawyers in 27 offices worldwide, including offices in North America, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia.
Contents
1Practice areas
2History
3Notable mandates
4Pro bono
5Offices
6Awards and recognition
7Notable people
7.1Former partners and associates
8External links
Practice areas
Hogan & Hartson offers a variety of legal services in areas including corporate, regulatory and litigation. According to Chambers & Partners Global 2008: The World’s Leading Lawyers for Business, the firm is recognized globally for its excellence in the following areas: data protection, international trade, real estate investment trusts, life sciences and technology, media and telecommunications. In Chambers & Partner USA 2008, Hogan & Hartson is lauded in numerous categories, including antitrust, energy, food and beverages, international trade, investment funds, data security, and transportation regulation and litigation.
History
Hogan & Hartson was founded by Frank J. Hogan in 1904. In 1925, Hogan was joined by Nelson T. Hartson, a former Internal Revenue Service attorney, and John William Guider. Hogan & Hartson then went into partnership in 1938.
In 2000, the firm expanded to Tokyo and Berlin (after approaching a team from the former German ally of UK firm Linklaters).
The firm expanded its presence in New York and Los Angeles in 2002 when it acquired mid-sized law firm Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Sheinfeld, a storied New York City-based practice with strengths in media, litigation and First Amendment law.
Hogan & Hartson now has offices in North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East and has gained cooperative working relationships with other law firms elsewhere.
Notable mandates
Represented MMC Norilsk Nickel, the Russian mining and metallurgy corporation in its $6 billion acquisition of LionOre Mining International Ltd.
Counseled Ford Motor Company in its $2.3 billion disposal of Jaguar Cars Limited and Land Rover to the automotive subsidiary of the Indian manufacturing conglomerate Tata Group.
Advised Jet Airways on its $435 million initial public offering.
Successfully defended DaimlerChrysler Corporation in numerous products liability class actions.
Retained by former WorldCom CEO Bernard J. Ebbers to defend against securities and ERISA class actions.
Pro bono
The Community Services Department (CSD) department deals with civil rights, environmental, homeless and other public interest groups. In 1970, Hogan & Hartson became the first major firm to establish a separate practice group devoted exclusively to providing pro bono legal services.
The American Lawyer named Hogan & Hartson to the magazine’s A-List — the top 20 firms in the United States (June 2006).
Chambers USA ranks some Hogan offices and practices No. 1 in their markets (June 2008).
The Lawyer Global 100 lists Hogan & Hartson as a “Top 30″ global law firm by revenue (October 2006).
The American Lawyer has twice mentioned Hogan’s litigation department in its biennial survey of the best litigation departments among the top 200 U.S. law firms.
Hogan & Hartson’s Community Services Department (CSD) has gained the American Bar Association “Pro Bono Publico Award” and the District of Columbia Bar’s “Pro Bono Law Firm of the Year Award”.
Hogan & Hartson is recognized as a 2008 Working Mother and Flex-Time Lawyers Best Law Firms for Women.
Notable people
Former partners and associates
Former tennis player Donald Dell
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was a litigator for this firm for several years during two periods: 1986-1989, and 1993-2003. In this capacity, Roberts argued before the United States Supreme Court and the lower federal courts, participating in a wide variety of matters on behalf of corporate clients, trade associations, governments, and individuals. Roberts left Hogan & Hartson in 1989 to accept appointment as Principal Deputy Solicitor General of the United States, and returned in 1993 to head their Appellate Practice Group.
Christine Varney, formerly a partner with the firm’s antitrust and privacy practice groups, was nominated and confirmed to be head of the US Justice Department’s antitrust division under President Barack Obama in April 2009. Before joining Hogan & Hartson, Varney served as Commissioner at the Federal Trade Commission from 1994 to 1997.
Gregory G. Garre who was later Solicitor General.
External links
Hogan & Hartson
LawPeriscope Profile
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogan_%26_Hartson”
Categories: Law firms established in 1904 | Law firms based in Washington, D.C.Hidden categories: Articles lacking sources from January 2010 | All articles lacking sources
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Holgate Brewhouse is a small, independent, family-owned microbrewery in Woodend, Victoria, Australia. The brewery operations began in 1999 and were moved to the Keatings Hotel in 2005, where the Brewhouse also operates a restaurant and hotel. Holgate beers are available in bottles and on tap throughout the Melbourne area.
Their beers have consistently won accolades at the Australian International Beer Awards, including gold medals for the Mt Macedon Ale and Pilsner, as well as the 2008 Premier’s Trophy for Best Victorian Beer for the Big Reg Lager.
See also
List of breweries in Australia
References
^ Victoria Minister for Regional and Rural Development (2008). Woodend’s Holgate Brewhouse takes Premier’s Award at Australian International Beer Awards. Retrieved October 29, 2008.
External links
Official website - includes profiles of each beer
Tourism Victoria profile
This beer or brewery-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v•d•e
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holgate_Brewhouse”
Categories: Beer and brewery stubs | Beer and breweries in AustraliaHidden categories: Australia articles missing geocoordinate data | All articles needing coordinates
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Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2010)
Centerburg High School is a public high school in Centerburg, Ohio, USA. It is the only high school in the Centerburg Local Schools district. Its nickname is the Trojans.
Contents
1Ohio High School Athletic Association State Championships
2Other notable sports accomplishments
3External links
4Notes and references
Ohio High School Athletic Association State Championships
Girls Volleyball – 2003
Girls Cross Country- 2003, 2009
Other notable sports accomplishments
2003 American football - Ohio High School Athletic Association Playoffs
2005 American football - Mid Buckeye Conference Champions, Division 5 Region 19 Champions, State Final Four
External links
School Website
Notes and references
^OHSAA. “Ohio High School Athletic Association Web site”. http://www.ohsaa.org/. Retrieved 2006-12-31.
This Knox County, Ohio school-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v•d•e
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centerburg_High_School”
Categories: High schools in Knox County, Ohio | Columbus-Marion-Chillicothe school stubsHidden categories: Articles needing additional references from February 2010 | All articles needing additional references | Ohio articles missing geocoordinate data | All articles needing coordinates
December 31, 1959 (1959-12-31)(age 50)
Kansas City, Kansas
Political party
Republican
Spouse(s)
Deborah Kline
Profession
Attorney
Phillip D. “Phill” Kline (born December 31, 1959) is the former district attorney of Johnson County, Kansas, USA. From January 2003 to January 2007, he was the Attorney General of Kansas. Kline, a member of the Republican Party, lost re-election as attorney general to Democratic challenger Paul Morrison on November 7, 2006, 58%-41%. Kline became the district attorney of Johnson County on the day he left office as attorney general, effectively switching jobs with Morrison. Kline then ran for a full term as district attorney, but Steve Howe defeated Kline in the August 5, 2008, Republican primary.
Contents
1Early life and political career
2Attorney General of Kansas
2.1Kansas v. Marsh
2.2Abortion controversy
2.3Limon v. Kansas
2.42006 and 2008 re-election campaigns
2.4.1Church memorandum controversy
3Work Attendance and Residency Controversy
4Post-electoral career
5References
6External links
Early life and political career
Born in Kansas City, Kansas, Kline grew up in Shawnee, a community on the Kansas side of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area. He was the third of five children; his father abandoned the family when Kline was five years old, leaving his mother to be a single parent.
He graduated from Shawnee Mission Northwest High School and subsequently attended the University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg, Missouri, on a partial wrestling scholarship, earning a B.S. in business communications in 1982. During college, he was a news broadcaster for Kansas City, Missouri, AM radio station WHB. Afterward, in order to save money for law school, he worked in public relations for the Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun amusement parks in Kansas City. He received his J.D. from the University of Kansas School of Law in 1987, and was an Associate Editor for the Kansas Law Review. He entered private practice as an associate with Blackwell Sanders, a large law firm in Kansas City, Missouri, specializing in corporate law. He married his wife, Deborah, in 1989, and settled back in Shawnee, close to where he grew up. The Klines have one daughter, Hillary, born in 1992. They are members of the Central Church of the Nazarene in Lenexa, Kansas.
After leaving Blackwell Sanders, Kline hosted two radio programs: The Phill and Mary Show on Kansas City AM station KMBZ, and Face Off With Phill Kline on Topeka AM station WIBW. He also served as the finance director of the Johnson County Republican Committee.
While still a law student, Kline ran for U.S. Congress in 1986. Kline won the Republican primary election but was defeated in the general election by the incumbent, Democrat Jim Slattery. In 1992, Kline won election to the Kansas House of Representatives, where he represented the 18th District. which included Shawnee. There, he chaired the House Appropriations Committee and was a member of several oversight committees. He was a member of the advisory committee for Kansas Senator Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential campaign. Kline remained in the Kansas House until 2000, when he ran for election to the United States House of Representatives, seeking the Third District seat held by Democratic Congressman Dennis Moore. Although Kline won the Republican primary, he ultimately was unsuccessful in the general election.
Attorney General of Kansas
In 2002, Kline won election as attorney general of Kansas, defeating fellow Republican David Adkins of Leawood in the primary and Democrat Chris Biggs of Junction City in the general election. On becoming attorney general, Kline and his family moved to Topeka.
Kansas v. Marsh
In December 2005 and April 2006, he successfully argued before the Supreme Court of the United States in Kansas v. Marsh, wherein the Court reversed a ruling made by the Kansas Supreme Court that the state’s death penalty was unconstitutional.
Abortion controversy
In 2003, Kline began investigating possible cases of child rape and illegal partial-birth and late-term abortions. In doing so, Kline requested the redacted medical records (without names) of 90 women and girls who either gave birth to a child or had an abortion. His office was ultimately granted these redacted records by the Kansas Supreme Court.
On December 21, 2006, Kline charged abortion provider Dr. George Tiller with more than 30 misdemeanors, most involving abortions Tiller allegedly performed on minors. But just hours after the charges were unsealed, a Sedgwick County judge threw them out “at the request of Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston, who said her office had not been consulted by Kline.” However, on June 28, 2007, a 19-count indictment was unexpectedly filed against Tiller by Kline’s successor, Paul Morrison. On March 27, 2009 Dr. George Tiller was found not guilty of all 19 misdemeanor charges stemming from some abortions he performed at his Wichita clinic in 2003. On May 31, 2009, George Tiller was shot and killed while serving at his church’s Sunday morning services.
In a related matter, Kline was named a defendant in a suit brought in the United States District Court for the District of Kansas challenging a state law requiring “doctors and other professionals” to report “all consensual underage sexual activity as sexual abuse.” On April 18, 2006, Judge J. Thomas Marten agreed and issued a permanent injunction, ruling that such a policy was contrary to state law.
In 2006, Operation Rescue and Phil Kline claimed that an alleged rapist was captured with the help of abortion clinic medical records subpoenaed as a result of Kline’s investigation. The District Attorney who prosecuted Estrada challenged Operation Rescue’s claims, stating that Kline and the records had no involvement in the prosecution.
Limon v. Kansas
During his tenure, in the case of Limon v. State, Kline defended a Kansas law which provided substantially higher sentencing guidelines for acts of homosexual statutory rape compared to equivalent heterosexual acts. A Kansas trial court upheld the law, the Kansas Court of Appeals affirmed that decision, and the Supreme Court of Kansas declined to hear the case. The party challenging the law, 18 at the time of the offense, was the mentally disabled Matthew Limon. His counsel applied to the Supreme Court of the United States for a writ of certiorari. In June 2003, the Supreme Court issued a GVR Order, remanding the case for reconsideration in light of the Supreme Court’s then-recent decision in Lawrence v. Texas, which held that a similar Texas law violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. The Attorney General’s office continued to pursue the matter, seeking to distinguish the Kansas law from the Texas law. The Kansas Court of Appeals upheld the earlier decision 2-1, but the Kansas Supreme Court ruled unanimously in favor of Limon and overturned his conviction in 2005. By the time of his release he had served 5 1/2 years.
2006 and 2008 re-election campaigns
Kline ran for re-election as attorney general in 2006. On November 7, 2006, he lost to Democratic challenger and Johnson County District Attorney Paul J. Morrison, who had received more than $1.5 million in campaign support from pro-choice groups; Kline received 41 percent of the vote. In order to oppose Kline in the general election, Morrison had changed his political affiliation from Republican to Democratic in the fall of 2005.
On December 11, 2006, Johnson County Republican Precinct Committeepersons narrowly selected Kline over fellow Republican Steve Howe to serve the remaining two years of Morrison’s term as county district attorney, a move causing controversy. With 60% of the vote, Howe defeated Kline in the August 5, 2008, Republican primary for a full term as district attorney.
Church memorandum controversy
In late September 2006, an internal election campaign memo from Kline to his campaign staff was leaked to the The Interfaith Alliance and quickly was picked up by bloggers, resulting in much discussion and controversy. In the memo, Kline tells his staff how to form a campaign committee for him at each church that will educate and register voters, “encourage people to contribute and volunteer,” and network with their own email lists. Kline has defended the memo and the mobilization of churches it calls for, as it does not violate IRS regulations governing the tax-exempt status of churches, under which a church stands to lose its tax-exempt status for officially supporting a political candidate, if the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determines so.
Work Attendance and Residency Controversy
KCTV, a Kansas City CBS affiliate, aired an investigative report that addressed accusations that Kline did not reside within Johnson County as required by state law, and that he spent an inadequate amount of time at the district attorney’s office. Kline rents a small apartment in Stilwell, and is registered to vote from that location. The KCTV reporters said in their report they were unable to observe Kline or his family at the address. On two occasions, Kline was tailed by reporters from Johnson County back to Topeka, the location of his primary residence.
The Johnson County Sheriff’s Office initially refused KCTV-5 access to records that log ID card passes at the Johnson County Courthouse garage, citing security concerns. Through exercise of the Freedom of Information Act, KCTV initially received redacted and incomplete records via the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office. According to the report, the security system only saves 90 days worth of data and purged much of the electronic records in question. The KCTV report, based entirely on the incomplete records, also suggested that Kline spent an inadequate amount of time in the Johnson Country District Attorney’s Office, often only spending a couple of hours a day in the office, averaging only 29 hours per week. KCTV5 went to the unprecedented length of devoting an entire 10pm newscast to deal with criticisms leveled at KCTV5’s handling of the investigation the following day.
Post-electoral career
In January, 2009, Kline left Kansas to become a visiting professor at Liberty University School of Law, in Lynchburg, Va.
References
^ The Kansas City Star, Kline, Morrison sworn in, January 8, 2007.
^ The Lawrence Journal-World, Race for Attorney General. Retrieved January 8, 2007.
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phill_Kline”
Categories: 1959 births | Living people | People from Kansas City, Kansas | Kansas lawyers | Members of the Kansas House of Representatives | University of Central Missouri alumni | University of Kansas alumni | Kansas Attorneys General | District attorneys | Americans associated with the Church of the Nazarene | Kansas RepublicansHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from August 2007 | Articles needing more detailed references
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(Redirected from John Booty (defensive back))
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John Booty
Date of birth:
October 9, 1965 (1965-10-09)(age 44)
Place of birth:
Deberry, TX
Career information
Position(s):
Defensive back
College:
Texas Christian
NFL Draft:
1988 / Round: 10 / Pick: 257
Organizations
As player:
1988-1990
1991-1992
1993
1994
1995
New York Jets
Philadelphia Eagles
Phoenix Cardinals
New York Giants
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Playing stats at NFL.com
John Fitzgerald Booty (born October 9, 1965 in Deberry, Texas) is a former American football defensive back in the National Football League for the New York Jets, the Philadelphia Eagles, the Phoenix Cardinals, the New York Giants, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He played college football at Texas Christian University and was drafted in the tenth round of the 1988 NFL Draft.
This biographical article relating to an American football defensive back born in the 1960s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v•d•e
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Booty”
Categories: 1965 births | Living people | People from Panola County, Texas | American football defensive backs | TCU Horned Frogs football players | New York Jets players | Philadelphia Eagles players | Phoenix Cardinals players | New York Giants players | Tampa Bay Buccaneers players | Defensive back, 1960s birth stubs
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Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girls%27_Night_Out_(film)”
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This page was last modified on 16 February 2010 at 02:00.
Hooray for Hollywood was the name of a two-album set recorded by Doris Day, released by Columbia Records. The two-album set was released by Columbia under the catalog number AC2L-5, but each individual LP was also released in both monaural and stereophonic versions as indicated below.
Contents
1Volume 1
1.1Track listing
2Volume 2
2.1Track listing
3Historical note
Volume 1
Volume 1 was released by Columbia on October 20, 1958. The catalog number of the mono version was CL-1128, and of the stereo version, CS-8066. On April 23, 2007 it was released, together with You’ll Never Walk Alone, as a compact disc by Sony BMG Music Entertainment.
Track listing
“Hooray for Hollywood” (Richard A. Whiting, Johnny Mercer)
“Cheek to Cheek” (Irving Berlin)
“It’s Easy to Remember” (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
“The Way You Look Tonight” (Jerome Kern, Dorothy Fields)
“I’ll Remember April” (Gene DePaul, Patricia Johnston, Don Raye)
“Blues in the Night” (Harold Arlen, Mercer)
“Over the Rainbow” (Arlen, E.Y. Harburg)
“Our Love Is Here to Stay” (George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin)
“In the Still of the Night” (Cole Porter)
“Night and Day” (Porter)
“You’d Be So Easy to Love” (Porter)
“I Had the Craziest Dream” (Harry Warren, Mack Gordon)
Volume 2
Volume 2 was released by Columbia on January 19, 1959. The catalog number of the mono version was CL-1129, and of the stereo version, CS-8067.
Track listing
“I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm” (Irving Berlin)
“Soon” (George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin)
“That Old Black Magic” (Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
“You’ll Never Know” (Harry Warren, Mack Gordon)
“A Foggy Day” (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
“It’s Magic” (Jule Styne, Sammy Cahn) (1952 Re-recording) (with Percy Faith and his Orchestra)
“It Might As Well Be Spring” (Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II)
“Nice Work if You Can Get It” (G. Gershwin, I. Gershwin)
“Pennies from Heaven” (Arthur Johnston, Johnny Burke)
“Oh, But I Do” (Arthur Schwartz, Leo Robin)
It should be noted that the version of “It’s Magic” on this album was recorded a number of years previous to this project and only appears on the mono version of this release.
Historical note
Doris Day’s 1958 recording of “Hooray For Hollywood” is part of radio broadcast history. On November 22, 1963, the ABC Radio Network was feeding Day’s “Hooray For Hollywood” song to its affiliated stations across the United States when the radio network interrupted the song at 1:36:50 PM EST to broadcast its first bulletin concerning the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
v•d•e
Doris Day albums
You’re My Thrill (1949) · Young Man with a Horn (1950) · Tea for Two (1950) · Lullaby of Broadway (1951) · On Moonlight Bay (1951) · I’ll See You in My Dreams (1951) · By the Light of the Silvery Moon (1953) ·Calamity Jane (1953) ·Young at Heart (1954) ·Love Me or Leave Me (1955) ·Day Dreams (1955) ·Day by Day (1956) ·The Pajama Game (1957) ·Day by Night (1957) ·Hooray for Hollywood (1958; 1959) ·Cuttin’ Capers (1959) ·What Every Girl Should Know (1960) ·Show Time (1960) ·Bright and Shiny (1961) ·I Have Dreamed (1961) ·Duet (1962) ·You’ll Never Walk Alone (1962) ·Billy Rose’s Jumbo (1962) ·Annie Get Your Gun (1963) ·Love Him (1963) ·The Doris Day Christmas Album (1964) ·With a Smile and a Song (1964) ·Latin for Lovers (1965) ·Doris Day’s Sentimental Journey (1965) ·The Love Album (1994)
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hooray_for_Hollywood_(album)”
Categories: 1958 albums | 1959 albums | Columbia Records albums | Doris Day albums
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This page was last modified on 4 December 2009 at 17:57.
Marriage Rows is a 1931 comedy film directed by Fatty Arbuckle.
Cast
Lloyd Hamilton
Al St. John
Addie McPhail
Doris Deane
Edna Marion
See also
Fatty Arbuckle filmography
External links
Marriage Rows at the Internet Movie Database
This 1930s comedy film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. v•d•e
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage_Rows”
Categories: American films | English-language films | 1931 films | Films directed by Roscoe Arbuckle | 1930s comedy films | Short films | Black and white films | 1930s comedy film stubsHidden categories: Film articles using deprecated parameters
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This page was last modified on 29 November 2009 at 19:05.
Live in Texas is a live album by American country music artist Lyle Lovett recorded from July 1995 to September 1995 and released on June 29, 1999.
Track listing
All songs composed by Lyle Lovett except as indicated.
“Penguins” – 2:35
“I’ve Been to Memphis” – 4:35
“That’s Right (You’re Not from Texas)” (Lovett, Ramsey, Rogers) – 5:06
“Nobody Knows Me” – 3:07
“If I Had a Boat” – 3:19
“North Dakota” (Lovett, Ramsey) – 6:28
“She’s No Lady” – 3:43
“Here I Am” – 4:16
“What Do You Do?” – 2:57
“Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues” (Cox) – 4:54
“M-O-N-E-Y” (Cox) – 3:29
“You Can’t Resist It” – 5:36
“Church” – 5:40
“Closing Time” – 4:34
Personnel
Lyle Lovett – vocals, acoustic guitar
James Gilmer – percussion
John Hagen – cello
Ray Herndon – electric guitar
Viktor Krauss – bass
Arnold McCuller – background vocals
Francine Reed – background vocals
Sweet Pea Atkinson – background vocals
Sir Harry Bowens – background vocals
Willie Green, Jr. – background vocals
Buck Reid – pedal steel guitar
Matt Rollings – piano, keyboards
Charles Rose – trombone
Harvey Thompson – saxophone
Steve Marsh – saxophone
Vinnie Ciesielski – trumpet
Dan Tomlinson – drums
Andrea Zonn – fiddle
Production notes
Produced by Lyle Lovett and Billy Williams
John Richards – engineer
Nathaniel Kunkel – engineer, mixing
John Nelson – assistant engineer, mixing assistant
Mark Wilshire – assistant engineer, mixing, mixing assistant
Tony Flores – assistant engineer, mixing, mixing assistant
Doug Sax – mastering
Ron Lewter – mastering
Robert Hadley – mastering
Michael Wilson – photography
Tim Stedman – design
Keith Tamashiro – design assistant
Gary Speakman – tour manager
Scooter DeLong – backline technician
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_in_Texas_(Lyle_Lovett_album)”
Categories: 1999 albums | Lyle Lovett albums | Live albums | MCA Records albums
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This page was last modified on 28 December 2009 at 03:10.