Lamoureux
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Lamoureux
Lamoureux is a surname of French origin. People with the name include: *Abraham-César Lamoureux (c. 1640–1692), sculptor who worked in Sweden and Denmark * Claude Lamoureux (c. 1650–after 1699), sculptor in Sweden and Denmark; younger brother of Abraham-César Lamoureux * Charles Lamoureux (1834–1899), founder of the Orchestre Lamoureux *Cindy Lamoureux (born 1991), Canadian politician from Manitoba, MLA for Tyndall Park. * Denis Lamoureux (contemporary), Canadian professor of science and religion *Diane Lamoureux (born 1954), Canadian professor and writer *François Lamoureux (1946–2006), French and European civil servant *Gisèle Lamoureux (born 1942), ''Québécoise'' photographer, botanist, and ecologist * Jean-Philippe Lamoureux (born 1984), American professional ice hockey player; brother of Jocelyne and Monique * Jocelyne Lamoureux (born 1989), American Olympic ice hockey player; twin sister of Monique, sister of Jean-Philippe * Justin Lamoureux (born 1976), Canadian ...
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Kevin Lamoureux
Kevin Lamoureux (born January 22, 1962) is a politician in Manitoba, Canada. On November 29, 2010, he was elected to the House of Commons of Canada for the constituency of Winnipeg North in a by-election. He was re-elected during the 2011 election by a margin of just 44 votes. Lamoureux previously served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1988 to 1999 and from 2003 to 2010, and he twice sought the leadership of the Manitoba Liberal Party. He serves in the House of Commons as a member of the Liberal Party of Canada. Background Lamoureux was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and was educated at the University of Winnipeg. He worked as a store manager and air traffic control assistant, also serving in the armed forces for three years. His younger brother Darrin Lamoureux was the leader of the Saskatchewan Liberal Party from 2013 to 2017. His daughter, Cindy Lamoureux, is an MLA in northwest Winnipeg; she represented Burrows from 2016 until 2019 and has represented Tyndall P ...
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Monique Lamoureux-Kolls
Monique Edith Lamoureux-Morando (born July 3, 1989), previously known as Monique Lamoureux-Kolls, is a former American ice hockey player, author, gender equity advocate, and co-founder of the Lamoureux Foundation. She scored the game-tying goal in the final of the 2018 Winter Olympics before her twin sister Jocelyne scored the last shootout goal of the game to clinch the gold medal. She also captured silver medals for Team USA at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics. She competed for a year with the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association, a worker's union pushing for equality in the sport, and retired from playing in 2021. After her retirement, Monique and her twin sister published their first book ''Dare to Make History''. The sisters also founded the Lamoureux Foundation, which funds educational and extracurricular programs for children in need, primarily in their home state of North Dakota. Playing career Lamoureux and her twin sister were from a family deeply dedicat ...
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Jocelyne Lamoureux
Jocelyne Nicole Lamoureux-Davidson (born July 3, 1989) is a former American ice hockey player, author, gender equity advocate, and co-founder of the Lamoureux Foundation. She scored the game-winning shootout goal to win the gold medal for Team USA at the 2018 Winter Olympics against Canada after her twin sister Monique tied the game near the end of regulation. Lamoureux-Davidson also won silver medals for the United States women's national ice hockey team at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics. Lamoureux played one season of NCAA hockey for the University of Minnesota and three for the University of North Dakota. She competed for a year with the Professional Women's Hockey Players Association, a worker's union pushing for equality in the sport, and retired from playing in 2021. After her retirement, Monique and her twin sister published their first book ''Dare to Make History''. The sisters also founded the Lamoureux Foundation, which funds educational and extracurricular programs fo ...
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Denis Lamoureux
Denis O. Lamoureux (born May 27, 1954) holds a professorial chair of science and religion at St. Joseph's College at the University of Alberta, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He has doctoral degrees in dentistry, theology, and biology. The author of ''Evolutionary Creation'' and of ''I Love Jesus and I Accept Evolution'', he has also written (along with Phillip E. Johnson) ''Darwinism Defeated? The Johnson-Lamoureux Debate on Biological Origins'', on the creation–evolution controversy (Regent College, 1999). Lamoureux, an evangelical Christian and a former Young-Earth creationist, calls himself an evolutionary creationist, and lectures and writes widely on the topic. Lamoureux has been involved in several public debates with prominent creationists and atheists. He has also been involved in a televised debate moderated by Steve Paikin of TV Ontario. In an important new contribution, ''Evolution: Scripture and Nature say Yes''Lamoureux, D. (2016). ''Evolution: Scripture and Na ...
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Abraham-César Lamoureux
Abraham C̩sar Lamoureux (c. 1640, Metz Рc. April 1692, Copenhagen) was a French sculptor and stonemason who worked in Sweden and in Copenhagen, Denmark. He is best known for creating the first equestrian statue in northern Europe. Life and work Little is known about Lamoureux's early years. He was born in Metz in the Lorraine region of France, and he had a younger brother Claude, also a sculptor, as well as a younger sister Magdalena, who was born in Hamburg (Germany) around 1660. Their father, whose first name is unknown, was a sculptor who had worked in the Netherlands, in England and in Hamburg, and might have been an assistant of the sculptor Fran̤ois Dieussart. Lamoureux first appears around 1664 in Stockholm with his stepfather, the sculptor Jean Baptiste Dieussart, when the latter entered service with count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, the Lord High Chancellor of Sweden, who was his stepfather's main employer and patron until around 1668. In the same year Lamou ...
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Jean-Philippe Lamoureux
Jean-Philippe Lamoureux (born August 10, 1984) is an American professional ice hockey goaltender currently playing for the EC VSV VILLACH of the Austrian Hockey League (EBEL). Playing career Amateur Lamoureux started his career playing three seasons with the Lincoln Stars, in the United States Hockey League, a junior ice hockey league. He then played four years of college hockey at the University of North Dakota (2004–08), including a senior season that saw him earn a Hobey Baker Award nomination while leading the Fighting Sioux to the NCAA Frozen Four. Lamoureux is second all-time in school history with a 2.14 GAA, .920 save percentage and ten shutouts. Professional Lamoureux spent one season with the Alaska Aces of the ECHL, where he was named the league's goaltender of the year. He also set an ECHL record with eight shutouts. That year, the Aces advanced to the Kelly Cup Championship where they were later defeated in 7 games by the South Carolina Stingrays. On July 30, ...
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Mario Lamoureux
Mario Lamoureux (born June 18, 1988) is an American professional ice hockey forward. He is currently under contract with Dresdner Eislöwen of the DEL2 Playing career He spent four years with the Tri-City Storm of the USHL until 2008 and left as their all-time leading scorer (129 points in 236 games). Lamoureux enrolled at the University of North Dakota in 2008. In his four-year college career, he helped UND win three WCHA Championships and served as team captain in his senior year. Along with his teammate Evan Trupp, he received the Cliff "Fido" Purpur Award for "hard work, determination and being a creator of excitement on the ice" in his sophomore year. He was named Team Captain his senior year during the 2011-2012 season. Upon graduation in 2012, he logged his first minutes as a professional player in the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL), playing for the Gwinnett Gladiators. In his first full ECHL season (2012–13) with the Ontario Reign, Lamoureux was named to the All ...
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Maurice Lamoureux
Maurice Lamoureux (6 October 1933 – 5 July 2022) was politician in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. He was an alderman for several years, and served as mayor of Sudbury from 1981 to 1982. Lamoureux was an office supervisor at Falconbridge Ltd. in private life. He retired in 1992, and later worked as a real estate representative with Coldwell Banker Marsh Real Estate."Lamoureux quits transition board to run in City of Greater Sudbury", ''Sudbury Star'', 13 October 2000, A3. He was first elected as an alderman in the municipal election of 1964. He was twice defeated for the provincial New Democratic Party nomination, and later joined the Progressive Conservative Party. He was chosen as deputy mayor by council in 1978, and became acting mayor in 1981 when Jim Gordon suspended his duties to run for the provincial legislature. Gordon was elected to the legislature in the 1981 provincial election, and members of Sudbury City Council chose Lamoureux as his replacement on 30 March 19 ...
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Charles Lamoureux
Charles Lamoureux (; 28 September 1834 Р21 December 1899) was a French conductor and violinist. Life He was born in Bordeaux, where his father owned a caf̩. He studied the violin with Narcisse Girard at the Paris Conservatoire, taking a ''premier prix'' in 1854. He was subsequently engaged as a violinist at the Op̩ra de Paris and later joined the Soci̩t̩ des Concerts du Conservatoire. In 1860, he was a co-founder of the S̩ances Populaires de Musique de Chambre and in 1872 he founded a quartet which eventually took on the proportions of a chamber orchestra. Having journeyed to England and assisted at a Handel festival, he thought he would attempt something similar in Paris. Having come into a fortune through marriage, he put on the performances himself, leading to the foundation of the Soci̩t̩ Fran̤aise de l'Harmonie Sacr̩e. In 1873, Lamoureux conducted the first performance in Paris of Handel's ''Messiah''. He also gave performances of Bach's ''St Matthew Pas ...
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Lucien Lamoureux
Lucien Lamoureux, (August 3, 1920 – July 16, 1998) was a Canadian politician and Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada from 1966 to 1974. He is the second longest-serving occupant of that office. After graduating with a law degree from Osgoode Hall in 1945, Lamoureux worked as a political aide to Lionel Chevrier, a Canadian Cabinet minister in the government of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. In 1954, he left Chevrier's office to establish a law practice in Cornwall, Ontario. Lamoureux was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1962 election as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP). In 1963, he became Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons and decided to stop attending meetings of the Liberal caucus in order to maintain impartiality. Following the 1965 election, Prime Minister Lester Pearson nominated him to the position of Speaker of the House of Commons. Lamoureux served as speaker during two minority governments, 1965–1968 and 1972†...
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Claude Lamoureux (sculptor)
Claude Lamoureux (c. 1650 Рafter 1699) was a French sculptor who worked in Sweden and in Copenhagen, Denmark. He is best known for assisting his brother with the creation of the first equestrian statue in northern Europe. Life and work The date and place of the birth of Claude Lamoureux are unknown. He was the younger brother of the sculptor Abraham-C̩sar Lamoureux, and he had a younger sister Magdalena, who was born in Hamburg (Germany) around 1660. He probably came to Sweden with his stepfather Jean Baptiste Dieussart, who in 1664 entered service with count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, the Lord High Chancellor of Sweden. Lamoureux, like his brother, was probably an apprentice or assistant of his stepfather. In 1681, Lamoureux as well as his siblings and their families (his brother's family and his sister's husband, the Swedish sculptor and stonemason Johann Gustav Stockenberg) moved to Copenhagen in Denmark, where his brother Abraham-C̩sar was employed as court sc ...
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Gisèle Lamoureux
Gisèle Lamoureux, (October 5, 1942 – June 23, 2018) was a Canadian photographer, botanist and ecologist. Biography Born in Montreal, Quebec, Lamoureux studied at the Université de Montréal and the Université Laval. She is the founder of Guides Fleurbec which made their debut in the 1970s. She is an activist for the protection of wild garlic since 1979, an initiative taken up when the Quebec law for the protection of endangered species was enacted. Awards and honours *1989 - Prix Georges-Préfontaine from the Association des biologistes du Québec *1996 - Knight of the Ordre national du Québec *1997 - Mérite de la conservation de la flore from the Quebec Ministry of Environment *1998 - Honoris causa Doctor of Sciences of the Université Laval *1999 - Made a Member of the Order of Canada for having "contributed to the protection of Canada's exceptional environment". *2015 - Prix Georges-Émile-Lapalme The Prix Georges-Émile-Lapalme is an award by the Government of ...
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