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Collum Calling Canberra
Collum may refer to: * , the Latin term for neck * Collum (millipedes), the first segment behind the head of millipedes Surnames * Herbert Collum (1914-1982), German organist, harpsichordist, composer, and conductor * Hugh Collum (1940–2005), British businessman * Jackie Collum (born 1927), American Major League Baseball pitcher * Jason Paul Collum (born 1973), American film maker * John Collum (1926–1962), American actor * Vera Collum (1883–1957), British journalist, suffragist, anthropologist, photographer, radiographer and writer * Willie Collum (born 1979), Scottish football referee See also * Columella (other) * Column (other) * Cervix (other) A cervix or collum is a neck, that is, a narrowed region of an object (such as a body or a body part). In anatomy, various body parts are called necks, with the neck (of the body) and the neck of the uterus (the uterine cervix) being major examples ... * Neck (other) {{disambiguatio ...
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Collum (anatomy)
The neck is the part of the body on many vertebrates that connects the head with the torso. The neck supports the weight of the head and protects the nerves that carry sensory and motor information from the brain down to the rest of the body. In addition, the neck is highly flexible and allows the head to turn and flex in all directions. The structures of the human neck are anatomically grouped into four compartments; vertebral, visceral and two vascular compartments. Within these compartments, the neck houses the cervical vertebrae and cervical part of the spinal cord, upper parts of the respiratory and digestive tracts, endocrine glands, nerves, arteries and veins. Muscles of the neck are described separately from the compartments. They bound the neck triangles. In anatomy, the neck is also called by its Latin names, or , although when used alone, in context, the word ''cervix'' more often refers to the uterine cervix, the neck of the uterus. Thus the adjective ''cerv ...
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Collum (millipedes)
Millipedes are a group of arthropods that are characterised by having two pairs of jointed legs on most body segments; they are known scientifically as the class Diplopoda, the name derived from this feature. Each double-legged segment is a result of two single segments fused together. Most millipedes have very elongated cylindrical or flattened bodies with more than 20 segments, while pill millipedes are shorter and can roll into a tight ball. Although the name "millipede" derives from the Latin for "thousand feet", no species was known to have 1,000 or more until the discovery of ''Eumillipes persephone'', which can have over 1,300 legs. There are approximately 12,000 named species classified into 16 orders and around 140 families, making Diplopoda the largest class of myriapods, an arthropod group which also includes centipedes and other multi-legged creatures. Most millipedes are slow-moving detritivores, eating decaying leaves and other dead plant matter. Some eat fungi or d ...
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Herbert Collum
Herbert Collum (18 July 1914 − 29 April 1982) was a German organist, harpsichordist, composer and Conducting, conductor. Life Born in Leipzig, Collum received high school education between 1921 and 1929. He continued from 1930 to 1934 at the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig, Church Music Institute in Leipzig, where he studied Organ (music), organ with Karl Straube and Günther Ramin, piano with Carl Adolf Martienssen, choral conducting with Kurt Thomas (composer), Kurt Thomas, and musical composition with Johann Nepomuk David and Fritz Reuter (composer), Fritz Reuter. Already by 1927 he had become deputy organist at the St. Matthew, Leipzig, St. Matthäikirche Leipzig. From 1932 to 1935 he served as assistant to Ramin, Thomaskantor at the Thomaskirche. His appointment in 1935 as principal organist, "Kreuzorganist", at the Kreuzkirche in Dresden signalled the beginning of his creative period; he remained in that post until his death in April 1982 at the age of 67. His suc ...
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Hugh Collum
Sir Hugh Robert Collum (29 June 1940 – 29 August 2005) was a British businessman, best known for his time as chairman of British Nuclear Fuels Ltd (BNFL). Sir Hugh was a financial director for Courage Breweries and chief financial officer at SmithKline Beecham before becoming chairman of BNFL in 1999. He led the company through a partial privatisation and a series of crises at Sellafield before his retirement in June 2004. He was knighted in the 2004 Birthday Honours The Birthday Honours 2004 for the Commonwealth realms were announced on 11 June 2004 for the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the Cook IslandsCook Islands list: and elsewhere to celebrate the Queen's Birthday of 2004. The recipients of honours are d .... ReferencesObituary theguardian.com. Accessed 28 January 2023. 20th-century British businesspeople 1940 births 2005 deaths Chief financial officers Knights Bachelor {{UK-business-bio-1940s-stub ...
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Jackie Collum
John Dean Collum (June 21, 1927 – August 29, 2009) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball (MLB) who played for eight different teams between the 1951 and 1962 seasons. Listed at , , Collum batted and threw left-handed. He was born in Victor, Iowa. Collum was one of four children of John Edward Collum and Sophia Louise Lohman and the youngest of three brothers. He was raised in Newburg, Iowa, near Grinnell, and graduated from Newburg High School, where he played in the Iowa State Baseball Tournament. Collum served in World War II with the United States Army Air Forces in the Pacific Theatre of Operations, where he was stationed in the Philippines. Following the war he returned home and married Betty Belles on February 28, 1948. He pursued his major league dreams after going 24–2 in 1948 for Class-A St. Joseph team of the Western League. Basically a reliever, Collum also served in starting roles. He entered the major leagues in 1951 with the St. Louis Cardinals, playing ...
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Jason Paul Collum
Jason Paul Collum (born July 15, 1973, in Brookfield, Wisconsin) is an American film maker. Biography Raised in Racine, Wisconsin. He worked at '' Femme Fatales'' and ''Cinefantastique'' magazines as a writer, editor and graphic designer. Collum is the author of the non-fiction book ''Assault of the Killer Bs: Interviews with 20 Cult Film Actresses'' (McFarland, 2004) and the fiction novella ''Basements'' (2016). He wrote and directed the horror starlets documentary ''Something to Scream About'' (2003) which aired on Showtime from 2004 to 2007. Collum worked as a publicity director for Rapid Heart Pictures from 1999 - 2002 and for Tempe Entertainment from 2002 - 2004. He is director/writer of the ''October Moon'' franchise. He directed the documentaries '' Screaming in High Heels: The Rise & Fall of the Scream Queen Era'' (licensed to NBCUniversal) focusing on the careers of Linnea Quigley, Brinke Stevens and Michelle Bauer, & also ''Sleepless Nights: Revisiting the Slumber Party ...
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John Collum
John K. Collum (June 29, 1926 — August 28, 1962) was an American child actor. He appeared in many ''Our Gang'' films of the 1930s as the character Uh-Huh. Career Born in Chicago, Illinois, Collum was the son of Hal Roach's casting director, Joseph Collum. He first appeared in the 1932 short, ''A Lad an' a Lamp''. He was never a regular cast member and portrayed a character named Uh-Huh. Uh-Huh answered most of his questions with a drawn-out "Uh-huuuuuh". After 1933, Collum was used as an extra whenever a large group children was needed. He appeared in many films from 1934 to 1938. His final appearance in the Our Gang series is in the 1938 short ''Three Men in a Tub''. Death Two months past his 36th birthday, Collum died of a heart attack in Los Angeles. He is interred in the Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood. He was married to Lois Rae Collum, and was the father of James, Sharon and John Collum. Our Gang Filmography *''A Lad 'an a Lamp'' (1932) *''Fish Ho ...
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Vera Collum
Vera Christina Chute Collum (4 April 1883 – 25 February 1957), was a British journalist, suffragist, anthropologist, photographer, radiographer and writer. Biography Vera Christina Chute Collum was born in Umballa, India in 1883 to Betty Chute Ellis and Lucius Joseph Collum. She came to England as a child after her father died. Her mother remarried but Collum never got on with her step-father, John Prosser Adams. Her grandfather was the South Australian John Ellis World War I Collum ran the press office of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies in London in 1914. There she was strongly involved in the suffrage movement. When World War I started she volunteered to help with the Scottish Women's Hospitals, serving from February 1915 to November 1917. Her initial deployment was to Royaumont Abbey, the military hospital also called Hôpital Auxiliare which was set up to treat wounded French soldiers. She worked with Ruth Nicholson there. Collum started as an ord ...
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Willie Collum
William Sean Collum (born 18 January 1979) is a Scottish football referee. Career Collum officiated his first Scottish Football League match in November 2004, and his first SPL match in April 2006. He took charge of his first UEFA Champions League match in September 2010, overseeing FC Copenhagen's 2–0 win away at Panathinaikos, and has also officiated several high profile international matches and UEFA Europa League matches. On 11 June 2012 it was announced that Collum had been elevated to FIFA Elite Referee level joining Craig Thomson on the 24-strong list of the world’s leading referees. His major domestic appointments include the Scottish Cup finals of 2013, 2015 and 2019, and the 2012 Scottish League Cup Final. Teaching career Collum was previously the principal teacher of the Religious Education department at Uddingston grammar, He then taught R.E. at St Aidan's High School in Wishaw, eventually returning to Cardinal Newman High School as an R.E. teacher in August 2 ...
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Columella (other)
Columella (4–) was a Roman writer. Columella, meaning ''little column'', may also refer to: Biology * Columella (auditory system), a part of the auditory system of amphibians, reptiles and birds * Columella (botany), an axis of sterile tissue which passes through the center of the spore-case of mosses and a cellular layer near the tip of a plant's root cap * Columella (gastropod), an anatomical feature of a coiled snail or gastropod shell * ''Columella'' (genus), a genus of land gastropods in the family Vertiginidae * Columella (plant), a cultivar of Dutch elm * '' Columella nasi'', the fleshy external end of the nasal septum * In corals, the central axis structure of a corallite formed by the inner ends of the septa Other uses * Columella (wine), a wine label by South African producer The Sadie Family * ''Columella; or, The Distressed Anchoret'', a 1779 novel by Richard Graves See also * Collum (other) * Column (other) A column is a vertical structura ...
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Column (other)
A column is a vertical structural element in architecture. Column or columns may also refer to: Art and entertainment * Column (periodical), a recurring piece or article in a newspaper or magazine * "Columns" (''How I Met Your Mother''), a 2007 episode of ''How I Met Your Mother'' * ''Columns'' (video game), a puzzle video game Computing and mathematics * Column (data store), a NoSQL object * Column (database), a set of data values of a particular type in a relational database * Column vector, an ''m'' × 1 matrix in linear algebra * Miller Columns, the data tree structure visualization technique Military * Column (formation), a military formation * Flying column, a combined arms independent military formation of a temporary nature Science * Column (botany) or gynostemium, a part of an orchid * Column chromatography, a method used to purify individual chemical compounds from mixtures of compounds * Column-based nucleic acid purification * Cortical column, a group of neurons i ...
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Cervix (other)
A cervix or collum is a neck, that is, a narrowed region of an object (such as a body or a body part). In anatomy, various body parts are called necks, with the neck (of the body) and the neck of the uterus (the uterine cervix) being major examples. A list of examples includes: * Neck, the narrowed region of the body between the torso and the head * Uterine cervix, usually just called the cervix when the context is implicit * Cervix vesicae urinariae, the neck of the urinary bladder * Cervix cornus dorsalis medullae spinalis or cervix cornus posterioris medullae spinalis, the neck of the posterior grey column (the posterior horn of the spinal cord) * Cervix dentis, the neck of a tooth (a slightly narrowed area where the crown meets the root, such as on a molar tooth) * Cervix (insect anatomy), a membrane that separates the head from the thorax in insects See also * Neck (other) * Collum (other) Collum may refer to: * , the Latin term for neck * Collum (milli ...
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