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Erik Jorgensen is an American politician from Maine. Jorgensen, a Democrat from Portland, Maine, served in the Maine House of Representatives from 2012 to 2020. [1]
Erik Jørgensen (athlete) (1920–2005), Danish middle-distance runner; Erik Jørgensen (gunsmith) (1848–1896), Norwegian gunsmith; Erik B. Jørgensen, Danish author and adventurer; Erik M. Jorgensen, American biologist; Erik Jorgensen (forester), Danish-Canadian forester and professor, pioneer in the field of urban forestry
Erik B. Jørgensen is a Danish author, adventurer and television personality. He is known as being an instructor on the Danish television show Korpset , a programme based on the British SAS: Who Dares Wins format.
Erik Edwin Wilkerson, 46, of Kennewick, died Nov. 13 in Kennewick. He was born in Kennewick and was a lifelong Tri-Cities resident. He was a maintenance manager for Navarro-ATL of Richland.
Erik Jørgensen was born in the parish of Asker in Akershus on 17 May 1848 in Norway, and grew up on the farm Solstad. [2] He educated himself to be a gunsmith and started working at Kongsberg Våpenfabrikk (the most important Norwegian weapon factory) in 1870.
The Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office has identified the two drivers who died early Monday morning after a head-on collision on Interstate 20 as Erik Esquivel, 27, and Geri Lynn Russell, 62.
In 1975 he founded a journal, Ecological Modelling, and in 1978 he founded ISEM, the International Society of Ecological Modelling. [4]He published 366 papers of which 275 were in peer-reviewed international journals, and edited or authored 76 books, of which several have been translated into other languages (Chinese, Russian, Spanish, and Portuguese).
The Rochester Post-Bulletin was created when The Post and Record and The Rochester Daily Bulletin merged in 1925 with Withers as owner and Clarence Blakely as business manager. The Withers family ran the paper from 1925 until Bill Boyne took over in 1979. As of 2013, the Post-Bulletin employs 150 people. [2] [3]