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"Szirtes Ádám, Hungarian actor Ádám Szirtes (February 10, 1925 – July 27, 1989) was a Hungarian actor. Selected filmography * Treasured Earth (1948) * Kiskrajcár (1953) * The Sea Has Risen (1953) * Merry-Go-Round (1956) * I'll Go to the Minister (1962) * Tales of a Long Journey (1963) * Háry János (1965) * Twenty Hours (1965) * The Testament of Aga Koppanyi (1967) * Irány Mexikó! (1968) * Nobody's Daughter (1976) External links * Category:1925 births Category:1989 deaths Category:Hungarian male film actors Category:Hungarian male television actors Category:20th-century Hungarian male actors "
"Willis Eugene Robison (March 1, 1854 – June 28, 1937) was a member of the Utah Territorial Legislature. Robison was born in Crete, Will County, Illinois and raised in Fillmore, Utah from a very young age. He married Sarah A. Ellett. From 1882 to 1884 he served as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in the Southern States Mission. In 1888 he moved to Piute, Utah and the following year to Loa, Utah when he was called to serve as bishop of the LDS Church ward in that place. In the 1890s, Robison was elected to the Utah Territorial Legislature from the district that covered what was then Piute and Beaver counties. When Piute County was split, Robison was put in charge of organizing the new county, which he named Wayne County supposedly after one of his sons or after Wayne County, Tennessee. In 1893, when the Wayne Stake of the LDS Church was organized, Robison was made the first president of that stake. Robison was a member of the 1895 Utah Constitutional Convention. References *Andrew Jenson. LDS Biographical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1, p. 342-343. Category:1854 births Category:1937 deaths Category:People from Fillmore, Utah Category:Members of the Utah Territorial Legislature Category:19th-century American politicians Category:American leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Category:People from Crete, Illinois Category:American Mormon missionaries in the United States Category:19th-century Mormon missionaries Category:Latter Day Saints from Illinois Category:Latter Day Saints from Utah Category:People from Wayne County, Utah "
"The Willapa Bay Light, originally the Shoalwater Bay Light, was a lighthouse at the north side of the entrance to Willapa Bay in the U.S. state of Washington. It was demolished when shore erosion threatened to topple it. History This was one of the earliest lights in Washington, and was constructed along the same pattern as the Smith Island Light. At the time the bay was still called Shoalwater Bay, and the lighthouse took the same name. Supplying the site was problematic, and the light was extinguished from 1859 to 1861. Eventually a lifesaving station was built immediately to the east. In 1889 the area was renamed Willapa Bay after a local tribe. The entrance to the bay is extremely unstable, and the sandy cape on which the lighthouse stood was steadily eroded away. By the late 1930s, the foundations of the building were affected, and it was abandoned in 1938. By the 1940, it threatened to fall over the cliff on which it was perched, and the coast guard dynamited it, viewing it as a threat to the many bystanders come to see the precariously perched building. It was succeeded by various towers, but relentless erosion caused discontinuance of the light between 1991 and 1993. The same erosion also claimed some four square miles of North Cove, Washington, on the coast adjacent to the lighthouse, as well as the lifesaving station. References Category:Lighthouses completed in 1858 Category:Lighthouses in Washington (state) Category:Transportation buildings and structures in Pacific County, Washington "