Acronym Definition
DEEO Datenendeinrichtung Online
DEEO Departamento de Engenharia Elétrica Online
DEEO Dexterous End Effector Online
DEEO Diplomate Environmental Engineer Online
DEEO Diplôme d'Etudes À l'Etranger Online
DEEO Disjoint Eager Execution Online
DEEO Department Equal Employment Office
DEEO Department Equal Employment Opportunity
DEEO Direct Exotic Electro-Optics
DEEO Direct Extremely Elliptical Orbit
DEEO Dee Online
Dee might refer to:
a name of the letter "D"
a familiar form of the name Mandy, Deanna, Dianne, Diane, Douglas, Denise,
Dolores, Deidre, Cordelia, Jody
an abbreviation for the dead-end elimination algorithm (DEE)
Dee (singer), Canadian electro-pop singer, songwriter and DJ
Dee (Actress), Indian bollywood actress Dia Mirza, Ref: diamirza.bravehost.com
D! or Dee!, referring to Detlef Soost, German dancer and choreographer
Dee Dee Ramone, punk musician (The Ramones)
Dee Snider, singer (Twisted Sister)
Dee Bradley Baker, an American voice actor
Dee Brown (novelist), USA
Anastasia Dualla, a fictional character from the television series Battlestar
Galactica
Nickname of Former United States Senator of Kentucky, Walter Huddleston
several rivers:
River Dee, Aberdeenshire, in Scotland
River Dee, Galloway, also in Scotland
River Dee, Wales, called Afon Dyfrdwy in Welsh
In chemistry, an abbreviation for Diethyl ether
Dee (song) by Randy Rhoads
Dee= a familiar form of the name Mandy, Deanna, Dianne, Diane, Douglas, Denise,
Dolores, Deidre, Cordelia, Jody
Arthur Dee, son of John Dee
Billy Dee
Bob Dee
Daisy Dee
Ed Dee
Eddie Dee
Frances Dee, actress
Francine Dee
Gandra Dee
Gerry Dee, Canadian comedian
Jack Dee, British comedian
Jeff Dee
Jessica Dee
John Dee, sixteenth-century mathematician and alchemist
John Dee (basketball coach)
Judge Dee
Kiki Dee
Kool Moe Dee
Mikkey Dee, heavy-metal drummer
Papa Dee
Roger Dee
Ruby Dee, African-American actress and activist
Sandra Dee, American actress
Simon Dee
Waddle Dee
Dee Dee Ramone
Dee Dee Ramone (Douglas Glenn Colvin) (September 18, 1952 - June 5, 2002) was a
German American songwriter and bassist, best remembered as a founding member of
punk rock band The Ramones.
Though nearly all of the Ramones' songs were credited equally to all the band
members, Dee Dee was the group's primary lyricist, penning songs such as "53rd &
3rd", "Commando", "Rockaway Beach" and "Poison Heart". He was the bass guitarist
for the group from their formation in 1974 through 1989, although at first he
wanted to play the guitar. He then left to pursue a short-lived career in rap
music under the name Dee Dee King. Afterwards, Dee Dee returned to his punk
roots and released three little-known solo albums featuring brand new songs
(many were used later on Ramones records). Dee Dee also got married to
Argentinian teenager Barbara Zampini, toured the world playing his songs,
Ramones songs and some old favorites in small clubs and continued to write songs
for the Ramones until 1996, when the band retired.
Dee Dee struggled with drug addiction for much of his life, especially heroin;
he began using drugs as a teenager, and continued to use for the majority of his
adult life. He seemed to clean up his act in the early 90's and to remain clean
for most of that decade until 2002, when he was found dead from a heroin
overdose.
Biography
Childhood
Colvin was born in Fort Lee, Virginia and raised in Berlin, Germany, the son of
an American soldier stationed there and a German woman. His parents separated
around his late childhood/early teens, and he lived in Berlin until the age of
15, when he and his mother moved to the Forest Hills section of New York City's
borough of Queens. There he met John Cummings and Thomas Erdelyi (later dubbed
Johnny and Tommy "Ramone"), then playing in a band called The Tangerine Puppets,
named after a Donovan song of the same name.
Ramones
Colvin and Cummings quickly became friends, as they were both outcasts in their
heavily middle class neighborhood. After an unsuccessful guitar audition for
Television, Cummings and Colvin formed the Ramones with then-drummer Jeffry
Hyman (soon to be Joey Ramone) in 1974. Hyman took over vocal duties after
Colvin decided that he could not sing lead vocals for longer than a few songs as
his voice shredded. Joey Ramone also suggested that Dee Dee could not sing and
play bass well at the same time. Around this time Dee Dee started to hang out
with Kc Harrison (A.K.A. Kc Ramone), who would later play guitar on some of the
songs on their 1st album.
Dee Dee was the one who thought to name the band the Ramones; he read that Paul
McCartney often signed into hotels under the alias "Paul Ramon". He added an 'e'
to the end of that surname and the band members all adopted the name Ramone.
Colvin wrote or co-wrote most of the Ramones' repertoire, such as "53rd and 3rd"
(a song about male prostitution at 53rd Street and 3rd Avenue in Manhattan,
allegedly based on personal experience), "Glad to See You Go" (written about his
then-girlfriend, Connie, a stripper and fellow drug user with a volatile
personality), "It's a Long Way Back to Germany", "Chinese Rock" (originally
recorded by Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers, as guitarist Johnny Ramone was
not enthusiastic about the Ramones doing songs about drugs) and "Wart Hog" (a
song Colvin wrote in rehab). After he quit the Ramones, Dee Dee continued to
write songs for them, contributing at least three songs to each of their albums.
According to Mondo Bizarro, for example, the Ramones bailed him out of jail in
exchange for the rights to "Main Man", "Strength to Endure" and "Poison Heart",
a minor hit for the Ramones. The Adios Amigos album is molded around the
strength of several of Dee Dee's solo songs, for example "I'm Makin' Monsters
for My Friends" and "It's Not for Me to Know" from the album I Hate Freaks Like
You.
Post-Ramones
In 1989, after leaving the Ramones, Colvin started a brief career as rapper "Dee
Dee King" with the album Standing in the Spotlight. (Colvin had recorded "Funky
Man" as Dee Dee King in 1987, before leaving the Ramones.) Critic Matt Carlson
writes that the album "will go down in the annals of pop culture as one of the
worst recordings of all time. Which, of course, makes it one hell of a great
collector's item."[1] After the album failed, he returned to punk rock with
various bands like Sprokkett and The Spikey Tops.
In 1991, Colvin was briefly involved with transgressive punk rock performance
artist GG Allin, playing second guitar with Allin's backup band The Murder
Junkies. Colvin's involvement lasted a week, enough for him to be briefly
interviewed during the filming of the Allin documentary Hated: GG Allin And The
Murder Junkies; rehearsal recordings of him with Allin appear on the Hated
soundtrack, and on the posthumous live Allin compilation Res-Erected; while
video footage of rehearsals is available on DVD through Allin's estate's website
[2].
In 1992, Colvin formed new band called The Chinese Dragons, which was followed
by the group ICLC from 1994 to 1996. With ICLC, he also did an EP and a
full-length album, I Hate Freaks Like You.
In November 1994, Dee Dee was searching for his stolen guitar on the street
outside a venue in Argentina when he met 16 year old Barbara Zampini. She was a
Ramones fanatic and had been playing bass for 2 years. [3] Together they moved
to Holland, where Dee Dee and Nina Hagen presided over the Inter-Celestial Light
Commune (ICLC) farm, harvesting marijuana fields by day and recording music by
night. Immigration problems with the Dutch authorities forced Colvin to return
to America. [4] Dee Dee and Barbara were married in a simple ceremony in New
York City in September 1996.
Older Dee Dee RamoneDee Dee was a special guest at the final Ramones show at The
Palace in Los Angeles on August 6th, 1996, performing the lead vocals for "Love
Kills". (C. J. Ramone was by then the group's bassist.) He missed two verses
(even though he wrote the song), sang out of tune, started earlier and resorted
to talking cheerfully.
Even before the Ramones retired, Colvin formed a Ramones tribute band called The
Ramains (later The Ramainz) with his wife Barbara ("Barbara Ramone", bass) and
former Ramones bandmates CJ (guitar) and Marky (drums). He also recorded several
solo albums under his old name Dee Dee Ramone: Zonked/Ain't It Fun (1996), Do
the Bikini Dance (2002), Hop Around (1999) and Greatest & Latest (2000). Dee Dee
Ramone's voice is audible on the Nina Hagen album Freud Euch (1995) and on the
Furious George EP Goes Ape! (1996).
In new millennium, Colvin teamed up with Paul Kostabi, leader of the hardcore
punk band Youth Gone Mad and former guitarist for White Zombie. An established
artist, Kostabi was instrumental in getting Dee Dee's new career as a painter
off the ground. Together with Barbara, the trio collaborated on several hundred
works that sold quickly for a few hundred dollars each.
In 2000, he formed the Dee Dee Ramone band with guitarist Christian Martucci
(Christian Black), who is now the singer for Black President. This lineup
consisted of Colvin (vocals and guitar/bass), Christian Black (vocals and
guitar), Anthony Smedile (drums), Chase Manhattan (drums), and Stefan Adika
(bass). With the exception of one show at the Spa Club in NYC and a club Makeup
performance, this was Dee Dee's last touring band. Black appeared as "Chris the
Creep" in Colvin's last book, Legend of a Rock Star, A Memoir: The Last
Testament of Dee Dee Ramone.
Colvin moved to the West Coast partly to pursue an acting career. He landed a
major role as The Pope in Bikini Bandits (2002) [5] and contributed the song "In
A Movie" to the soundtrack which features wife Barbara on lead vocal.
His next album was supposed to be a live album produced by Gilby Clarke (ex-Guns
N' Roses), taking place on June 12, 2002, at Hollywood’s Key Club Hollywood.
There are several bootlegs of this line-up (Dee Dee Ramone Band), including Live
in Milan, Italy. Dee Dee's final studio recordings were released on the album
Youth Gone Mad featuring Dee Dee Ramone (trend is dead! records in USA 2002) and
Wanker Records in Germany (www.wanker-records.de) 2002).
Death
Colvin was found dead on the evening of June 5, 2002, by his wife Barbara at his
Hollywood, California apartment. An autopsy established heroin overdose as the
official cause of death and is available for viewing at The Smoking Gun [6].
Dee Dee was buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.
His headstone features the Ramones seal surrounded by the line "I feel so safe
flying on a ray on the highest trails above" taken from his song "Highest Trails
Above", from the Ramones album Subterranean Jungle (1983). At its base is the
quote "Ok...I gotta go now".
Writings
Under the name Dee Dee Ramone, Colvin wrote two books: Poison Heart: Surviving
the Ramones (aka Lobotomy) and Legend of a Rock Star, a daily journal of
commentary on his last, hectic European tour in the spring of 2001. Both were
released as "non-fiction" autobiographies, despite the fact that "Legend of A
Rock Star" features a sequence in which Dee Dee murders a border guard.
Dee Dee also penned a novel, titled Chelsea Horror Hotel, in which he and his
wife move into New York City's famous Chelsea Hotel and believe they are staying
in the same room where Sid Vicious killed his girlfriend Nancy Spungen. In the
book, Dee Dee is visited by Sid, as well as other dead punk rock friends such as
Johnny Thunders, Stiv Bators, and Jerry Nolan.
River Dee
The River Dee (Welsh: Afon Dyfrdwy) is a 70 mile (110 km) long river. It travels
through Wales and England and also forms part of the border between them.
The river rises in Snowdonia, Wales, flows north via Chester, England, and
discharges to the sea into an estuary between Wales and The Wirral Peninsula
(England).
Statistics
The total catchment area of the River Dee up to Chester Weir is approximately
1800 km². The average rainfall over the catchment is estimated to be 640 mm
yielding an average flow of 37 m³/s. The larger reservoirs in the catchment are:
Bala Lake (Llyn Tegid) - 400 acres (1.6 km²)
Llyn Brenig - 370 acres (1.5 km²)
Llyn Celyn - 325 acres (1.3 km²)
Catchment
Natural Course
The River Dee has its source on the slopes of Dduallt above Llanuwchllyn in the
mountains of Snowdonia in Merioneth, Gwynedd, Wales, and then passes through
Bala Lake. The path of the river trends generally east-south-east as it descends
off the Ordovician Denbigh moors, over the man-made Horseshoe Falls and through
Llangollen, generally skirting the outcropping Karstic limestone exposures north
of Llangollen. East of Llangollen, Thomas Telford's Pontcysyllte Aqueduct, of
1805, carries the Shropshire Union Canal 120 feet (37 m) overhead.
River Dee Weir, Handbridge, Chester, England (2002)
View of the Dee from the famous Grosvenor Bridge in Chester, looking down-river
towards Curzon Park. Taken in Spring at high tide
Same view of the Dee in Chester, taken in Summer at low tide.
Railway bridge in Chester, spanning the river between Curzon Park and the Roodee.
Photo taken at high tide.One of the major tributaries of the Dee, the Afon Alyn
crosses the carboniferous limestone from Halkyn Mountain and down through the
Loggerheads area before making its confluence near Mold. Throughout the length
of the Alyn there are numerous sinkholes and caverns and during the summer
months long stretches of the river bed run dry. These caves include Ogof Hesp
Alyn and Ogof Hen Ffynhonau. A significant part of this lost flow re-emerges in
the Milwr Tunnel, a man-made tunnel, entering the west bank of the Dee estuary
carrying some 12 million imperial gallons per day (600 L/s). This tunnel was
originally constructed to drain metal mines in Halkyn Mountain. Once the main
river Dee approaches the Cheshire border and the carboniferous coal measures, it
turns sharply northwards before meandering up to Chester. This long stretch of
the river drops in height by only a few feet and can be regarded as a highly
linear lake. The rich adjoining farmland has many remnants of abandoned coal
workings and deep clay-pits used to make bricks and tiles. A number of these
pits are now being used as landfill sites for domestic and commercial waste.
At Holt and Farndon, the river crosses into England under a medieval bridge and
then passes under the A55 and northwards to Chester. At Chester the river passes
and around the Earl's Eye(s) meadow. In the Chester region the river side is
used as a recreation area with a bandstand, benches and boat cruises, by two
bridges. The first is the Queen's Park Suspension Bridge, which forms the only
exclusively pedestrian footway across the river in Chester. The second is the
Old Dee Bridge, a road bridge and by far the oldest bridge in Chester, being
built in about 1387 on the site of a series of wooden predecessors which dated
originally from the Roman period.
Above the Old Dee Bridge, the river has a weir, which was built by Hugh Lupus to
supply power to his corn mills. Throughout the centuries the weir has been used
to power corn, fulling, needle, snuff and flint mills. The same weir was used as
part of a hydro-elecrtic scheme in 1911 with the help of a small generator
building which is still visible today, used as a pumping station for water since
1951. However the first water pumping station here was set up in 1600 by John
Tyrer who pumped water to a square tower built on the city's Bridgegate. It was
destroyed in the Civil War but an octagonal tower built in 1690 for the same
purpose lasted until the gate was replaced with an arch in the mid-18th century.
On this weir is a fish pass and fish counting station to monitor the numbers of
salmon ascending the river. A little further downstream stands the Grosvenor
Bridge (designed by architect Thomas Harrison of Chester), which was opened in
1833 to ease congestion on the Old Dee Bridge. This bridge was opened by
Princess Victoria five years before she became Queen. The other side of the
Grosvenor Bridge is the Roodee, Chester's race course and the oldest course in
the country. This used to be the site of Chester's Roman harbour until, aided by
the building of the weir, the River Dee silted up to become the size it is
today. The only curiously remaining reminder of this site's maritime past is a
stone cross which stands in the middle of the Roodee which exhibits the marks of
water ripples. To the end of the Roodee the river is crossed again by a second
bridge, now carrying the Chester–Holyhead railway line, before leaving Chester.
It was the scene of one of the first serious railway accidents in the country,
the Dee bridge disaster.
River Dee in snow at Llangollen (February 2007)
View down-river from the bridge in the centre of Llangollen (March 2007)
Canalized Section
North of Chester, the river flows along an artificial channel excavated between
1732-36. The work was planned and undertaken by engineers from the Netherlands
and paid for by local merchants and Chester Corporation. It was an attempt to
improve navigation for shipping and reduce silting. Chester's trade had declined
steadily since the end of the 17th century as sediment had prevented larger
craft reaching the city.
After four year's work, the river was diverted from its natural meandering
course. This route passed Blacon, Saughall, Shotwick Castle, Burton and Parkgate
and up the west shore of Wirral. Instead the new canalised section followed the
coast along North East Wales. During this time, Sealand and Shotton were
reclaimed from the estuary. Land reclamation in this area continued until 1916.
The river's natural course can be still seen by following the bank and low
bluffs that mark the edge of the Wirral Peninsula.
The man-made channel, which runs in a straight line for five miles (8 km),
passes beneath three road bridges the first two are at Queensferry a fairly
modern fixed arch bridge and second the New Jubilee Bridge, which is of the
rolling bascule type and the third at Connah's Quay, the Flintshire Bridge is a
modern fixed cable-stayed bridge connecting Wales with England which opened in
1999.
Between the second and third road bridges is the Shotton railway bridge,
originally constructed as a swing bridge but now never opened. It carries the
Birkenhead–Wrexham Borderlands Line line over the river.
The river then opens out into the Dee Estuary, forming the north eastern tip of
the North Wales coast and the western coast of the Wirral. Towns along the coast
include Flint, Holywell and Mostyn on the Welsh side and Neston, Parkgate, West
Kirby and Hoylake on the Wirral side.
Uses
River Dee
Taken from Chainbridge, Llangollen
Industry
Large parts of the catchment are devoted to agriculture and there a number of
abstractions made from the river for summer irrigation. The volumes involved are
not however significant.
From Chirk downstream, the river valley has supported a wide range of industries
that were initially drawn to the area by the presence of coal mines and later by
the deep deposits of carboniferous clays used to make bricks and tiles.
The coal industry in particular gave rise to a number of chemical industries
some of which survive to this day and which both take water from the river and
discharge their cleaned up effluent back into the river. Industries in the
valley include commercial chemicals manufacturer, wood chip and MDF fabrication,
cocoa milling, fibreglass manufacture, waste disposal (in old clay pits) and a
great variety of smaller industries concentrated around Wrexham. The main impact
on the river of these industries is their thirst for a dependable good quality
water supply.
Abstractions
There are a number of direct water abstractions upstream of Chester by three
water companies and by the canal. The size of the abstraction is very large
compared to the summer flow and the flow in the river is very highly regulated
through the use of reservoirs to store water in the winter and release it in the
summer. The whole system is managed as the River Dee regulation system. Below
Chester water is also abstracted as cooling water by the gas-fired power station
at Connah's Quay. Process and cooling water is also abstracted for the paper
mill and power station at Shotton.
Canoeing
The Dee used to be a popular whitewater kayaking and touring river (particular
the grade III/IV whitewater section upstream of Llangollen). It stays high after
rain for longer than most British rivers and is paddleable year-round (thanks to
the River Dee Regulation System). Canoeing used to be allowed on about twelve
weekends per year, and tens of thousands of canoeists descended on Llangollen
for recreational paddling (several Dee tours were held every winter), slalom
competitions, and wild water races.
Public access to the river is arranged by the Welsh Canoe Association. In 2003,
negotiations with the angling associations owning fishing rights on the Dee
broke down. The anglers wanted to restrict the numbers of paddlers on the river
when paddling was allowed but the Welsh Canoe Association wanted to renew the
previous agreement. As a result, all canoeing on the river was banned. In
November 2004, a protest about the lack of access on the Dee, and to rivers
across England and Wales, was held in Llangollen. More protests are likely in
the future. Following the failure of the access agreement, many canoeists use
the river at will from the numerous access points along its banks.
Canoeing is permitted on one 100 m long rapid 1 km upstream of Llangollen, and
on some flat sections far downstream in England.
Fishing
The river has been famed as a mixed fishery with Salmon and trout fishing,
mostly in the upper waters and a good coarse fishery in the lower reaches. A
major pollution in the middle reaches in the late 1990s did extensive damage to
the fishery from which it is now largely recovered.

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