A Cursive Memory (or ACM) is a 4-member band signed to Vagrant Records.
They are going to release their debut full-length album "Changes" in 02/19/08.
ACM is the twin guitar and vocal attack of Profeta and Colin Baylen, with Mark Borst Smith and Dillan Wheeler on the drums.
They have had two minor releases: and Lights Camera Action.
History
They used to be a high school band called "The Vagrants" (sans Dillan Wheeler). Recently they've been on stage with bands such as Jimmy Eat World, HelloGoodbye, and Boys Like Girls, in addition to their tours with New Found Glory and Senses Fail.
Their song was also featured on the Season Finale of Simple Life.
They are going to release their debut full-length album "Changes" in 02/19/08.
ACM is the twin guitar and vocal attack of Profeta and Colin Baylen, with Mark Borst Smith and Dillan Wheeler on the drums.
They have had two minor releases: and Lights Camera Action.
History
They used to be a high school band called "The Vagrants" (sans Dillan Wheeler). Recently they've been on stage with bands such as Jimmy Eat World, HelloGoodbye, and Boys Like Girls, in addition to their tours with New Found Glory and Senses Fail.
Their song was also featured on the Season Finale of Simple Life.
WaveStreaming is a Shoutcast Server Provider, as well as a Windows Media streaming host for Internet Radio stations. They are headquarted out of Huddersfield. The company was founded and opened in April, 2004 by an internet radio enthusiast and a web server administrator. According to RadioToolBox and stats monitoring service SiteUptime WaveStreaming has a cumalative uptime for the past 4 years of over 99.5%.. The servers operated by WaveStreaming are all connected to Teir-1 networks. The company has pioneered their custom built Auto DJ system allowing users to broadcast 24/7 with remote capabilities.
WaveStreaming have grown since their launch, making them one of the most active audio stream hosts on the internet. Currently they offer mp3, aacplus,wma and wmvservers in USA and United Kingdom.
WaveStreaming have grown since their launch, making them one of the most active audio stream hosts on the internet. Currently they offer mp3, aacplus,wma and wmvservers in USA and United Kingdom.
IFX Markets is a financial services provider of currency conversion and trading. It was founded in August 1995 as a primary market maker in spot and forward foreign exchange. The company now makes competitive prices in over 100 currency pairs, 24 hours a day, from the Wellington, New Zealand opening on Sunday evening London time until the New York close the following Friday.
IFX Markets is a trading name of City Index Ltd. City Index Ltd, authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. FRN 113942. Registered in England.
IFX is one of the largest non-bank Futures Commission Merchants that specializes solely in spot foreign exchange. The IFX Markets trading platform was created to serve as an internet trading platform to automate techniques. trading.
IFX Markets, much like other Forex Trdaing Platforms (Oanda, DBfx, Bloomberg tradebook and more) also offers free currency conversion tools, tables of historical data, and news and analysis through a multilingual interface, as well as non-financial conversion tables likely to be of use to international travellers.
In 2007 IFX signed a cooperation agreement that introduced the eToro trading platform as a means of trading through IFX markets.
Regulation
IFX markets is registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a Futures Commission Merchant and is a member of the National Futures Association, ID# 0327627.
IFX Markets is a trading name of City Index Ltd. City Index Ltd, authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. FRN 113942. Registered in England.
IFX is one of the largest non-bank Futures Commission Merchants that specializes solely in spot foreign exchange. The IFX Markets trading platform was created to serve as an internet trading platform to automate techniques. trading.
IFX Markets, much like other Forex Trdaing Platforms (Oanda, DBfx, Bloomberg tradebook and more) also offers free currency conversion tools, tables of historical data, and news and analysis through a multilingual interface, as well as non-financial conversion tables likely to be of use to international travellers.
In 2007 IFX signed a cooperation agreement that introduced the eToro trading platform as a means of trading through IFX markets.
Regulation
IFX markets is registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a Futures Commission Merchant and is a member of the National Futures Association, ID# 0327627.
Michael Keppler was a fictional character on the show CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. Hailing from Trenton, New Jersey, he worked with the CSI team of Las Vegas on the graveyard shift, filling in for Gil Grissom who was on a four week sabbatical. In real life, actor William Petersen (Gil Grissom) took a four-week vacation to Connecticut to perform for a theatre group. Michael Keppler was portrayed by acclaimed actor Liev Schreiber.
Fictional character biography
Childhood
Michael Keppler was born in Trenton, New Jersey, in either 1966 or 1967 (his age was cited as 40 in an on-screen database capture). He is an only child to his parents Herb and Roberta. His mother was a homemaker, while his father was a plumber. When Keppler was three years old, his father was killed in a car accident. This forced his mother to take her young son and move in with her "hippie" sister. After this, she never remarried.
As a child, Michael wasn't allowed to watch television; his mother forbade it. Instead, he would read and play sports out in the neighborhood. He was forced to grow up fast, becoming the tough Jewish kid in an all-Irish neighborhood at school and emerging as the "man" around the house.
His high school career was relatively average. He played sports and was even the tight end on the football team. He wasn't one for alternative lifestyles or the drug scene, but he did enjoy a night out in the woods drinking with his boys. Whenever he would listen to music, however, he didn't exactly go mainstream and kosher with bands such as Pink Floyd, R.E.M., Squeeze, or Metallica. In his sophomore year, he got a job at a local garage to help out with the bills after his aunt moved to New Mexico; it was in this garage that he learned all about cars.
In Michael's junior year, he met a freshman girl named Amy McCarty, with whom he fell in love. During his senior year, he and Amy planned to get married after she was finished with high school. He wanted them to move to Manhattan, where he would become a fireman and she could raise a family. Their dreams of a happy life were ended when Amy allegedly committed suicide on January 22, 1985. Keppler was nearly destroyed by this, but he was eventually able to cope with the help of Amy's father Frank, who became Keppler's surrogate father. Frank had lost his wife a year before losing Amy, his only daughter. The two men forged a bond in grief and love. Frank used the money he'd saved for Amy to help put Keppler through college.
Education
Keppler received his undergraduate degree from SUNY Binghamton, and a Master's Degree in Chemistry from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. At college he was anti-social but soared academically even though he was functioning on little sleep. He became plagued with nightmares. While he was well-liked by everyone, he didn't let anyone get too close.
Early career
Shortly after his graduation, Keppler's mother was diagnosed with bone cancer. He returned home to care for her and began his life's work as a criminalist. After his mother died, he accepted a job in Philadelphia and left to start a new life. While there, he met and married a pretty, if less than challenging, woman. Keppler settled into a suburban life for five years. The problems of his past came back to haunt him, causing his marriage to disintegrate. Keppler began suffering from chronic insomnia. Despite a successful career in Philadelphia, Keppler took a new job in Baltimore. Shortly afterwards he transferred to Las Vegas, where he hoped the miles would put enough distance between himself and his troubled past.
Death
The anniversary of Amy's death brought back memories that he just couldn't shake. 22 years after her death, it still haunted him. Keppler had been receiving numerous voicemail messages from Frank McCarty. The messages were brief and to the point: Frank wanted to see Keppler. Believing that Frank has gotten himself into "another fix", Keppler had been avoiding Frank, but Frank appeared in Vegas on a "vacation" to Vegas with his good friend.
Frank wanted Keppler to help him cover up his murder of a retired police officer. The officer was going to testify against McCarty. McCarty was a dirty cop who helped Keppler kill the man who he thought raped Amy. While investigating the retired cop's murder, Keppler realized that it was Frank who raped his own daughter. He confronted McCarty while McCarty was trying to kill a prostitute who could identify him. Though Frank fatally shot Keppler through the lower chest (in an attempt to hit the witness), Keppler returned fire when Frank pointed the gun at Catherine, who had arrived seconds after Keppler was shot. He put six rounds into McCarty's torso.
Despite the efforts of CSI Catherine Willows and the paramedics, Michael Keppler died in the ambulance. Not counting Detective Cyrus Lockwood who was killed during the bank robbery (episode S03E23, "Inside The Box"), Keppler was the second graveyard-shift CSI (after Holly Gribbs in episode S01E01, "Pilot") in seven years to be murdered (episode S07E15, "Law of Gravity").
Fictional character biography
Childhood
Michael Keppler was born in Trenton, New Jersey, in either 1966 or 1967 (his age was cited as 40 in an on-screen database capture). He is an only child to his parents Herb and Roberta. His mother was a homemaker, while his father was a plumber. When Keppler was three years old, his father was killed in a car accident. This forced his mother to take her young son and move in with her "hippie" sister. After this, she never remarried.
As a child, Michael wasn't allowed to watch television; his mother forbade it. Instead, he would read and play sports out in the neighborhood. He was forced to grow up fast, becoming the tough Jewish kid in an all-Irish neighborhood at school and emerging as the "man" around the house.
His high school career was relatively average. He played sports and was even the tight end on the football team. He wasn't one for alternative lifestyles or the drug scene, but he did enjoy a night out in the woods drinking with his boys. Whenever he would listen to music, however, he didn't exactly go mainstream and kosher with bands such as Pink Floyd, R.E.M., Squeeze, or Metallica. In his sophomore year, he got a job at a local garage to help out with the bills after his aunt moved to New Mexico; it was in this garage that he learned all about cars.
In Michael's junior year, he met a freshman girl named Amy McCarty, with whom he fell in love. During his senior year, he and Amy planned to get married after she was finished with high school. He wanted them to move to Manhattan, where he would become a fireman and she could raise a family. Their dreams of a happy life were ended when Amy allegedly committed suicide on January 22, 1985. Keppler was nearly destroyed by this, but he was eventually able to cope with the help of Amy's father Frank, who became Keppler's surrogate father. Frank had lost his wife a year before losing Amy, his only daughter. The two men forged a bond in grief and love. Frank used the money he'd saved for Amy to help put Keppler through college.
Education
Keppler received his undergraduate degree from SUNY Binghamton, and a Master's Degree in Chemistry from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. At college he was anti-social but soared academically even though he was functioning on little sleep. He became plagued with nightmares. While he was well-liked by everyone, he didn't let anyone get too close.
Early career
Shortly after his graduation, Keppler's mother was diagnosed with bone cancer. He returned home to care for her and began his life's work as a criminalist. After his mother died, he accepted a job in Philadelphia and left to start a new life. While there, he met and married a pretty, if less than challenging, woman. Keppler settled into a suburban life for five years. The problems of his past came back to haunt him, causing his marriage to disintegrate. Keppler began suffering from chronic insomnia. Despite a successful career in Philadelphia, Keppler took a new job in Baltimore. Shortly afterwards he transferred to Las Vegas, where he hoped the miles would put enough distance between himself and his troubled past.
Death
The anniversary of Amy's death brought back memories that he just couldn't shake. 22 years after her death, it still haunted him. Keppler had been receiving numerous voicemail messages from Frank McCarty. The messages were brief and to the point: Frank wanted to see Keppler. Believing that Frank has gotten himself into "another fix", Keppler had been avoiding Frank, but Frank appeared in Vegas on a "vacation" to Vegas with his good friend.
Frank wanted Keppler to help him cover up his murder of a retired police officer. The officer was going to testify against McCarty. McCarty was a dirty cop who helped Keppler kill the man who he thought raped Amy. While investigating the retired cop's murder, Keppler realized that it was Frank who raped his own daughter. He confronted McCarty while McCarty was trying to kill a prostitute who could identify him. Though Frank fatally shot Keppler through the lower chest (in an attempt to hit the witness), Keppler returned fire when Frank pointed the gun at Catherine, who had arrived seconds after Keppler was shot. He put six rounds into McCarty's torso.
Despite the efforts of CSI Catherine Willows and the paramedics, Michael Keppler died in the ambulance. Not counting Detective Cyrus Lockwood who was killed during the bank robbery (episode S03E23, "Inside The Box"), Keppler was the second graveyard-shift CSI (after Holly Gribbs in episode S01E01, "Pilot") in seven years to be murdered (episode S07E15, "Law of Gravity").