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Yoshiko Mita | Television | Television
Taikōki (NHK Taiga drama, 1965) as Yodo-dono
Kunitori Monogatari (NHK Taiga drama, 1973) as Miyoshino
Kōgen e Irrashai (Tokyo Broadcasting System series, 1976)
Sekigahara (TBS New Year's Special, 1981) as Yodo-Dono
Nyokei Kazoku (Yomiuri, 1984)
Inochi (NHK Taiga drama, 1986) in the leading role
Hana no Ran (NHK Taiga drama, 1994) as Hino Tomiko, the leading role
Gekai Arimori Saeko (Nippon Television, two series, 1990 and 1992) in the leading role
Ryōri no Tetsujin (Iron Chef) (1999) as a judge in the show's final battle between Hiroyuki Sakai and Alain Passard
Hana Moyu (NHK Taiga drama, 2015) as Sei
The Return (2020) |
Yoshiko Mita | Commercials | Commercials
Ajinomoto
Matsushita Electric
Seino Transportation
Lion Corporation
Taisho Pharmaceutical |
Yoshiko Mita | Honours | Honours
Kinuyo Tanaka Award (1987)
Order of the Rising Sun, 4th Class, Gold Rays with Rosette (2014) |
Yoshiko Mita | References | References |
Yoshiko Mita | External links | External links
Category:1941 births
Category:Japanese actresses
Category:Actors from Osaka
Category:Living people
Category:Taiga drama lead actors
Category:Recipients of the Order of the Rising Sun, 4th class |
Yoshiko Mita | Table of Content | short description, Selected filmography, Film, Television, Commercials, Honours, References, External links |
South Hadley High School | More citations needed | South Hadley High School is a secondary school in South Hadley, Massachusetts, United States, for students in grades 9–12. The school has a student population of just over 500. The school's name is frequently referred to as "SHHS". |
South Hadley High School | Phoebe Prince bullying incident | Phoebe Prince bullying incident
Having moved in 2009 to South Hadley from Ireland, Phoebe Prince was taunted and bullied for several weeks by at least two groups of students at South Hadley High School, following disputes with two girls in late December 2009. On January 14, 2010, three students engaged in persistent taunting and harassment of Prince. Prince subsequently died by suicide by hanging herself in the family apartment. After her death, many crude comments about her were posted on her Facebook memorial page, most of which were removed.Nate Walsh, Court documents detail bullying of Phoebe Prince Note: additional information appears in the video posted on this news webpage, with glimpses of the actual court documents. The audio commentary for this video is incorrect about Longe throwing a bottle, as the video shot of the court document clearly shows it saying this was an empty can of "Monster Drink"
Other parents subsequently stated that bullying of their children had been completely ignored by the school administration. Massachusetts state lawmakers sped up efforts to pass anti-bullying legislation as a result.
On March 29, 2010, two male and four female teenagers from South Hadley High School were indicted as adults on felony charges stemming from the incident, ranging from statutory rape, criminal harassment, stalking, juvenile delinquency, to assault with a deadly weapon.Stephanie Reitz, 3 girls in Mass. bullying case plead not guilty http://archive.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/04/08/3_girls_face_arraignment_in_mass_bullying_case/
The district attorney directly contradicted claims by the school superintendent that school officials had been unaware of the bullying:
In May 2011, the case was resolved, after agreements to plead guilty to lesser charges. Five of the defendants were placed on probation, with several also sentenced to community service. The charges against a male student were dropped at the request of the Prince family.The Trials of Phoebe Prince ABC Documentary January 13, 2012 Prince's mother settled with the town of South Hadley in October 2010, in which she agreed not to sue or reveal details of the settlement. |
South Hadley High School | Notable alumni | Notable alumni
Arthur Whittemore, Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court from 1955 to 1969.
Don Abbey, college football player
A. Bartlett Giamatti, president of Yale University and commissioner of Major League Baseball |
South Hadley High School | References | References
Category:High schools in Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Category:Public high schools in Massachusetts
Category:Buildings and structures in South Hadley, Massachusetts
Category:1870 establishments in Massachusetts
Category:Educational institutions established in 1870 |
South Hadley High School | Table of Content | More citations needed, Phoebe Prince bullying incident, Notable alumni, References |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | Infobox military conflict
| The Cité Soleil raid of 2007 began on February 10, 2007, in the Cité Soleil district of Port-au-Prince, capital city of Haiti. It was intended to crack down on a notorious gang leader called "Evans". The raid was part of the United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti. |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | Background | Background
The raid started in the early morning of the 9th of February when 700 UN troops accompanied by 34 Armored personnel carriers assaulted the slums of Cité Soleil, which is controlled by several gangs.
When the UN troops entered the area they were ambushed and a battle was started between the troops and heavily armed gang members.
The raid ensued until the next day, when fierce resistance was still in place.
The raid ended and the gang members surrendered at a school which was also the gang's main center. The UN then started using the school as an outpost, preventing the Haitian children from getting an education there."UN Cracks Down on Gangs, Residents Demand Peace" by Nick Whalen
Later, the gang leader "Evans" surrendered to the UN and HNP troops. |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | Fatalities | Fatalities
In all more than one UN soldier was killed and four other soldiers were wounded.
In the raid no Haitian National Police policemen were killed and no were wounded.
During the crossfire four civilians were killed and more than 30 civilians wounded. |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | Raids | Raids
Since the assault of Cité Soleil the UN troops raided other slums but they were never confronted like they were during the raid to get "Evans".
This was a second assault of Cité Soleil, but this was an assault/raid to capture a drug lord/gang leader.
The first assault was an attack in which the "civilian perspectives" attacked the whole town killing civilians and assaulting homes. |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | References | References
Category:2007 in Haiti
Category:Human rights abuses in Haiti
Category:Organized crime conflicts |
Cité Soleil raid of 2007 | Table of Content | Infobox military conflict
, Background, Fatalities, Raids, References |
Terrance Hobbs | Short description | Terrance Hobbs (born April 6, 1970) is an American musician best known as the lead guitarist of the death metal band Suffocation. He has been a constant member in the band since their first released title Reincremated along with bandmates Frank Mullen and Mike Smith, who all met in high school. Hobbs also played in the deathgrind project Criminal Element, which featured fellow Suffocation member, Derek Boyer. |
Terrance Hobbs | Artistry and style | Artistry and style
Hobbs is renowned in the death metal scene for combining fast and repetitive barred riffing closely accompanied by other swept and often technical unexpected patterns: laying down the basics of technical/brutal death metal of today. He said, "as bands started to get progressively faster, our ears really liked that, and I think we thought it was fucking stupendous".
thumb|left|Hobbs performing in 2014
Typically, his shred-heavy, bizarre sounding, "mocking" solos, are famously accompanied with signature tremolo use, usually in the form of divebombs, trills and other unusual techniques. Pierced from Within contains many examples of this, with an array of atmospheric, palm-muted breakdowns and complex riffs, along with Effigy of the Forgotten and Souls to Deny, the latter of which features a great deal of layered riffing and melodies. |
Terrance Hobbs | Equipment | Equipment
Hobbs mainly uses a custom B.C. Rich Warlock installed with a Floyd Rose locking tremolo, a DiMarzio Super Distortion bridge pickup, Gotoh tuners, and fitted with D'Addario strings. His pedals include a Maxon OD-9 overdrive pedal, and a Boss NS-2 Noise Suppressor. His amplification consists of a Peavey 6505+ played through Vader cabinets. |
Terrance Hobbs | References | References
Category:1970 births
Category:African-American guitarists
Category:African-American rock musicians
Category:American heavy metal guitarists
Category:American male guitarists
Category:American death metal musicians
Category:Guitarists from New York (state)
Category:American lead guitarists
Category:Living people
Category:People from Long Island
Category:Suffocation (band) members
Category:21st-century American guitarists
Category:21st-century American male musicians
Category:21st-century African-American musicians
Category:20th-century African-American musicians |
Terrance Hobbs | Table of Content | Short description, Artistry and style, Equipment, References |
Jerry Greenspan | Short description | Gerald Greenspan (November 22, 1941 – September 11, 2019) was an American basketball player. Greenspan, who was 6' 7", 275 lbs. played shooting guard. |
Jerry Greenspan | College | College
Born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, he played at the University of Maryland. Greenspan led the team in scoring and rebounds in 1962 and 1963. He received an honorable mention for the 1963 All-American team, and was named to the second team for the All-Atlantic Coast Conference. He had 501 rebounds during his college career. |
Jerry Greenspan | NBA | NBA
He was drafted by the Syracuse Nationals in the third round of the 1963 NBA draft. Greenspan remained with the team until his retirement at the end of the 1964–65 NBA season. |
Jerry Greenspan | Hall of Fame | Hall of Fame
Greenspan, who was Jewish, was inducted into the MetroWest Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2005. |
Jerry Greenspan | Career statistics | Career statistics |
Jerry Greenspan | NBA | NBA
Source |
Jerry Greenspan | Regular season | Regular season
Year Team GP MPG FG% FT% RPG APG PPG Philadelphia 20 14.0 .356 .680 3.6 .6 4.9 Philadelphia 5 9.8 .615 1.000 2.2 .0 4.8Career 25 13.2 .388 .724 3.3 .4 4.9 |
Jerry Greenspan | See also | See also
List of select Jewish basketball players |
Jerry Greenspan | References | References |
Jerry Greenspan | External links | External links
Basketball Reference stats
Category:1941 births
Category:2019 deaths
Category:American men's basketball players
Category:Basketball players from Newark, New Jersey
Category:Maryland Terrapins men's basketball players
Category:Philadelphia 76ers players
Category:Shooting guards
Category:Small forwards
Category:Syracuse Nationals draft picks
Category:Weequahic High School alumni
Category:Jewish American basketball players
Category:Jews from New Jersey
Category:20th-century American sportsmen |
Jerry Greenspan | Table of Content | Short description, College, NBA, Hall of Fame, Career statistics, NBA, Regular season, See also, References, External links |
Wilhelm Bladin | Multiple issues | Wilhelm Bladin (November 24, 1884 – September 16, 1968) was a noted progressive teacher and author born in Gävle, Sweden. He compiled grammars, manuals, and dictionaries in English, German, French, and Interlingua. He was the second Secretary General of the Union Mundial pro Interlingua for Sweden.
He became a fil.cand. in English, German, and French in 1905, a fil.lic. in 1908, a fil.dr. in English in 1911, and later a fil.lic. in French. He was a lector in Härnösand beginning in 1912 and in Malmö beginning in 1916. He taught the first French course on Swedish radio from 1928 to 1933, at a time when radio was a recent invention. He was founder of a secondary superior school, Privata Elementarläroverket, which now, under the name Bladins Skola, comprises a fundamental school and a gymnasium. The school, which began at the end of the 19th century, is one of the oldest in Sweden. Bladin remained its Rector until the 1950s.
Bladin was initially a proponent of Latino sine Flexione. He later became the Swedish representative for Interlingua. He joined John Nordin (1887–1983) and fil.mag. Erik Berggren in compiling a 14,000-word Swedish-Interlingua dictionary, published in 1964. Bladin also published the books "Svensk-engelsk grammatisk ordbok" in 1914, "Nyckel till student- och realskoleskrivningar i tyska och engelska" and "Student- och realskoleskrivningar i tyska och engelska" in 1916, "Tysk läsebok" con Axel Wahlgren in 1922, "Lärobok i engelska" and "Privatlektioner i engelska" also in 1922, and "Rätt grund i engelska" in 1951. |
Wilhelm Bladin | See also | See also
Interlingua dictionaries |
Wilhelm Bladin | External links | External links
Union Mundial pro Interlingua
Biographias: Wilhelm Bladin, Historia de Interlingua: Communication Sin Frontieras, 2001, Revised 2006.
Category:1884 births
Category:1968 deaths
Category:People from Gävle
Category:20th-century Swedish educators
Category:Swedish schoolteachers
Category:20th-century Swedish non-fiction writers
Category:Interlingua speakers |
Wilhelm Bladin | Table of Content | Multiple issues, See also, External links |
William Bladin | # | redirect Wilhelm Bladin |
William Bladin | Table of Content | # |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Short description | Owen Brown (February 16, 1771 – May 8, 1856), father of abolitionist John Brown, was a wealthy cattle breeder and land speculator who operated a successful tannery in Hudson, Ohio. He was also a civil servant and a fervent, outspoken abolitionist. Brown was a founder of multiple institutions including the Western Reserve Anti-Slavery Society, Western Reserve College, and the Free Congressional Church. Brown gave speeches advocating the immediate abolition of slavery, and organized the Underground Railroad (and served as Stationmaster) in the town of Hudson, Ohio.
His brother Frederick was the father of Rev. Edward Brown who married Laura Ingalls and Almanzo Wilder and adopted Laura's good friend Ida Brown (birth name Wright).
In 1793, he married Ruth Mills, a minister's daughter.
Someone whose father was an intimate friend of Owen remembered him as "a very kind, genial, whole-souled sort of person. He stuttered badly."
Owen wrote two brief autobiographic statements that have survived to the present.
"No one mistook Owen's speech impediment for weakness, or his lack of schooling for ignorance." |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Early life and education | Early life and education
One of 10 children, Owen Brown was born on February 16, 1771, to Revolutionary War Capt. John Brown (1728–1776) and Hanna Owen Brown, in Torrington, Connecticut. A lifetime admirer of the Founding Fathers, Owen's first memory was of the departure of his father's militia company to engage the British in New York during the summer of 1776. |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Career | Career
A wealthy tanner, cattle breeder, and land speculator, Brown was a dedicated civil servant and was integral to the early growth of Hudson, Ohio. Famed for his resourcefulness and energy, he was known locally as Squire Brown. He was the third wealthiest man in Hudson in the 1830s. Brown served in a multitude of positions in the community including County Commissioner and Justice of the Peace. Brown was deeply rooted in the abolitionist movement. He was personal friends with leaders such as Frederick Douglass, who often stayed with the Brown family when he was lecturing in the area. Owen, in collaboration with David Hudson, was integral in establishing one of the earliest way stations along the Underground Railroad, and personally arranged passage into Canada for many escaped slaves.
Brown left the only church in Hudson over racial issues to form the Free Congregational Church or “Oberlin Church.” An oath against slavery was required for admission to this church. |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Colleges | Colleges
Owen was a never a trustee of Western Reserve College, but he was involved in it since its founding. He is credited for securing its location in Hudson as well as overseeing the construction of its first building, a venture on which he made money. During Brown's tenure (1825-1835), Western Reserve College became known as a hotbed of abolitionist ideals. After the death of the institution's first president, Charles Backus Storrs, in 1833 the university elected a more conservative president, George E. Pierce, in an attempt to distance itself from the politics of slavery.
In 1835 Brown resigned his position and along with several faculty, staff, and students of Western Reserve College, and a trustee, a professor, and a large number of students from Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, moved to Oberlin Collegiate Institute (since 1850, Oberlin College) in Oberlin, Ohio. Owen served as trustee there from 1835 to 1844. Brown and others were successful in making Oberlin the first institution of higher learning to admit women and one of the first to admit black students. Owen's daughter, Florella Brown, studied at Oberlin from 1835 to 1839, where she met her husband, Samuel Lyle Adair. |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Death and burial | Death and burial
Brown died in Hudson, Ohio, on May 8, 1856, and was buried at Old Hudson Township Burying Ground. His death in Hudson was a "public event": "there was never so large a funeral procession." |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | See also | See also
Abolitionism
Underground Railroad |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | References | References |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | External links | External links
Owen and Ruth Brown, from the West Virginia Archives and History
Category:1771 births
Category:1856 deaths
Category:University and college founders
Category:Case Western Reserve University people
Category:People from Torrington, Connecticut
Category:Family of John Brown (abolitionist)
Category:People from Hudson, Ohio
Category:Underground Railroad people
Category:People from colonial Connecticut |
Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1771) | Table of Content | Short description, Early life and education, Career, Colleges, Death and burial, See also, References, External links |
Nalconagar, Angul | Use dmy dates | Nalconagar is a census town in Angul district in the Indian state of Odisha. Nalconagar, Angul is a suburb of Angul, Odisha. |
Nalconagar, Angul | Geography | Geography
Nalconagar is located at 20.849°N 85.154°E and 8 km from district headquarter, Angul. |
Nalconagar, Angul | Demographics | Demographics
India census, Nalconagar had a population of 18,038. Males constitute 53% of the population and females 47%. NALCO has an average literacy rate of 73%, higher than the national average of 59.5%. In NALCO, 14% of the population is under 6 years of age.
B R Ambedkar statue at B. R. Ambedkar Park|center|377x377px|thumb |
Nalconagar, Angul | Education | Education
Saraswati Vidya Mandir Nalco Nagar, Angul was established on 21 September 1984. This school was earlier known by the name of Chinmaya Vidyalaya. Academic process of this school managed by Sikshya Vikash Samiti, Bhubaneswar. It is recognized by the Govt. of Odisha and affiliated to Board of Secondary Education, Odisha, Cuttack and Council of Higher Secondary Education, Bhubaneswar. School offers education to students of LKG to those of +2 Arts & Science.
DPS Nalconagar established in 1984 and sponsored by National Aluminium Company affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) in New Delhi. The school lies in of greenery with multi purpose hall, auditorium, library, laboratories and play fields and boasts of being only the third satellite school to be set up under the aegis of Delhi Public School Society.
thumb|
'Saint Sai Montessori Play School' is situated near Junior DPS runs inside The Club. This school has 28 years of excellence in Playgroup & Pre-nursery education. This is one of the best caring play school with unique teaching methods. The Play School works on the philosophy of advancing the idea of 'learning with joy' with extracurricular activities. |
Nalconagar, Angul | Transportation | Transportation
thumb|Angul railway station
thumb|Street view, Nalconagar Angul
Nalconagar is well connected by roads (National Highway 55 (India) passes through it and rails. The nearest railway station to Nalconagar township is Angul railway station, which is 9 km away from the township. This place is directly connected by road and the nearest cities are:
Cuttack, 107 km
Bhubaneswar, 133 km
Sambalpur, 168 km
Rourkela, 214 km |
Nalconagar, Angul | Recreation | Recreation
thumb|left|Flowers in B. R. Ambedkar Park, January 2017
Nalconagar has a few recreation parks: Dr. B. R. Ambedkar Park, Veer Birsa Munda Park, Gopabandhu Park, Madhusudan Park. A wonderful and most entertaining Musical Fountain in nalconagar can be seen in evening at Gopabandhu Park. Musical fountain is operative from 7.30 pm to 08.00 pm in evening. All these parks are maintained by Nalconagar township welfare committee.
thumb|Boating Park, Nalconagar Angul
Other recreation center includes The Officer's Club and The club. The community center which hosts many cultural programs is one of the recreation centers,
thumb|22 steps or Baisi Pahacha of Nalconagar Jagannath Mandir |
Nalconagar, Angul | Health | Health
Free health services is extended to all the employees of NALCO and their dependents through a 64-bedded hospital, also an OPD center present in Nalco nagar for peripheral people. |
Nalconagar, Angul | Sports | Sports
Biju Patnaik Sports Complex is situated at the center of the township. This sports complex is about 35 acres and includes one cricket stadium, one football stadium, one hockey stadium and two volleyball court. |
Nalconagar, Angul | Design of quarters at Nalconagar | Design of quarters at Nalconagar
thumb| A view of a quarter house in Nalconagar
Nalconagar has quarters for NALCO's employees which is categorized into A block, B block, C block, and D block. |
Nalconagar, Angul | References | References
Category:Cities and towns in Angul district |
Nalconagar, Angul | Table of Content | Use dmy dates, Geography, Demographics, Education, Transportation, Recreation, Health, Sports, Design of quarters at Nalconagar, References |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | Short description | The 2nd Emmy Awards, retroactively known as the 2nd Primetime Emmy Awards after the debut of the Daytime Emmy Awards, were presented at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California on January 27, 1950. Like the 1st Primetime Emmy Awards, Emmys were primarily given out to Los Angeles–based TV shows and stations. The Awards Committee was chaired by Martha Gaston Bigelow of KFOX radio.
Several new award categories were introduced, including "Best Sports Coverage". However, it would be a few decades later until that category would become a permanent fixture in the Sports Emmys. |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | Winners and nominees | Winners and nominees
Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡). |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | Programs | Programs
right|thumb|150px|Milton Berle, Most Outstanding Kinescoped Personality winner
right|thumb|150px|Ed Wynn, Most Outstanding Live Personality winner
{| class="wikitable"
|+
|-
| style="vertical-align:top;" width="50%" |
Texaco Star Theatre (KNBH)Studio One (KTTV)
The Fred Waring Show (KTTV)
The Goldbergs (KTTV)
| style="vertical-align:top;" width="50%" | Time for Beany (KTLA)Cyclone Malone (KNBH)
Kukla, Fran and Ollie (KNBH)
|-
| style="vertical-align:top;" width="50%" | The Ed Wynn Show (KTTV)Pantomime Quiz (KTTV)
Your Witness (KECA)
| style="vertical-align:top;" width="50%" | Crusade in Europe (KTTV)Ford News and Weather (KNBH)
Kathy Fiscus Rescue (KTLA)
Man's Best Friend (KTLA)
Nuremberg Trials (KTSL)
Teleforum (KTLA)
|}
Hosting
+
Milton Berle (KNBH)
Fran Allison (KNBH)
Arthur Godfrey (KTTV)
Ed Wynn (KTTV)
Tom Harmon (KECA and KFI)
Mike Stokey (KTTV and KTLA)
Bill Welsh (KFI and KTLA)
Sports
{| class="wikitable"
|+
|-
| style="vertical-align:top;" | Wrestling (KTLA)Amateur Boxing (KTLA)
Baseball (KLAC)
College Basketball (KTTV)
Ice Hockey (KTLA)
USC-UCLA Football (KECA)
|}
Best CommercialLucky Strike |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | References | References |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | External links | External links
Emmys.com list of 1950 Nominees & Winners
002
Emmy Awards
Category:1950 in American television
Category:January 1950 in the United States
Category:1950 in Los Angeles |
2nd Primetime Emmy Awards | Table of Content | Short description, Winners and nominees, Programs, References, External links |
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkSearch/petitiononline.com | Table of Content | * |
The Castle (volcano) | Short description | The Castle is a lava spine located west of Squamish in southwestern British Columbia, Canada. Volcanism at The Castle is controlled by north–south structures and there are no hot springs known in the area. It forms part of the Monmouth Creek complex and is part of the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt which is a segment of the Cascade Volcanic Arc. |
The Castle (volcano) | See also | See also
Cascade Volcanoes
Garibaldi Volcanic Belt
Mount Garibaldi
List of volcanoes in Canada
Volcanism of Canada
Volcanism of Western Canada |
The Castle (volcano) | References | References
Category:Mountains of British Columbia under 1000 metres
Category:Garibaldi Volcanic Belt
Category:Volcanoes of British Columbia
Category:Subduction volcanoes
Category:Pleistocene volcanoes
Category:New Westminster Land District
Category:Pleistocene British Columbia |
The Castle (volcano) | Table of Content | Short description, See also, References |
Category:Converts to Sikhism | [[Category:Religious converts | Sikhism
Category:Sikhs
Category:Sikhism and other religions |
Category:Converts to Sikhism | Table of Content | [[Category:Religious converts |
Sean Hickey | Short description | Sean Hickey is an American composer and record label executive, born in 1970 in Detroit, Michigan, and based in Brooklyn, New York for decades. In 2022, he was appointed Managing Director of Pentatone. |
Sean Hickey | Career | Career
From age 12 he took lessons in electric guitar. At Wayne State University, Hickey's composition teachers included James Hartway and James Lentini. He has been commissioned by a number of musicians and organizations including the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the Saint Petersburg Symphony, Michala Petri, Avi Avital, Lara Downes, the Fine Arts Quartet, and the Whatcom Symphony Orchestra."About", accessed April 4, 2016
His first commercial recording, Left at the Fork in the Road, was released in November 2005 on Naxos American Classics. Featuring a selection of his chamber and orchestral works, the album broke the Billboard Top 100 Classical Chart"Press", accessed April 4, 2016 and was praised as "substantive and savvy" by the magazine Gramophone."American Classics – Hickey: Left at the Fork In The Road", accessed April 4, 2016
In May 2013, an album of Hickey's clarinet and cello concertos was released on Delos."Sean Hickey – Concertos", accessed April 4, 2016 The album features cellist Dmitry Kouzov and clarinetist Alexander Fiterstein, along with the Saint Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Lande. The record was subsequently reviewed by NewMusicBox, which called the clarinet concerto "a formidable work".Oteri, Frank J., "Sounds Heard: Sean Hickey – Concertos", accessed April 4, 2016
Hickey's album Cursive was released in May 2014 on Delos,"Sean Hickey Cursive", accessed April 4, 2016 and is a retrospective of much of the composer's work for piano and chamber music combinations. Performing on the album are pianist Philip Edward Fisher, violinist Julia Sakharova, flutist Brandon Patrick George, violist Anne Lanzilotti, and harpist Meredith Clark. A further recording, by Greek guitarist Smaro Gregoriadou, was released on Delos in 2016, and features the second recording of his "Tango Grotesco", for solo guitar. Guitarist Matthew Cochran also recorded the extended solo work, Arroyo Seco.
2017 saw the release of A Pacifying Weapon, a concerto for recorder and orchestra commissioned by recorder virtuoso Michala Petri, and premiered by the Royal Danish Conservatory Orchestra led by Jean Thorel. The premiere and recording took place in September 2016 in Copenhagen, released in 2017 on Our Recordings, and again in 2019, also on Our, as "American Recorder Concertos". He has seen three other recordings of his works in 2019. 2024 has seen the recording of his most ambitious work inspired by the Yuval Noah Harari book of the same name: Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, for piano, released in 2025 on Sono Luminus. Two of Hickey's compositions are featured on Carolyn Enger's release, Resonating Earth, released in 2024 on Metier. The composer's work Fluid, features on the award-winning album from Lara Downes.
Hickey is also a published poet and writer of music reviews and travelogues. He is an ASCAP member and is published by Cantabile Press. In addition, he was the Senior Vice-president, Sales and Business development, for Naxos of America, and speaks regularly at colleges, conservatories and universities throughout the world on his compositional and creative work, as well new media and musician entrepreneurship. In April 2022 Pentatone appointed Hickey as managing director. |
Sean Hickey | Works | Works |
Sean Hickey | Chamber | Chamber
Ampersand (2006) violin, piano
Avatar (2005) violin, clarinet, piano
Barri Gotic (2013) flute, guitar
Concerto for Clarinet and String Quartet (2006) B-flat clarint, 2 violins, viola, cello
Flute Sonata (1994) flute, piano
Fool's Errand (2004) B-flat clarinet, piano
Foolscap (2011) cello, piano
Funny Papers (2003) accordion, piano
Granfalloon (2004) bassoon, piano
Grecian Bend (2014) 2 vlns, vla, vcl
Horse's Mouth (2006) B-flat trumpet, horn, trombone
Le Visage de Vence (2011) flute, piano
Left at the Fork in the Road (2003) flute, B-flat clarinet, bassoon
Longitude (2013) viola, piano
Lunula (2016) flute, English horn
Mala Strana (2017) violin, horn in F
Mandolin Canons (2005) mandolin, guitar
Mock Tudor (2016) recorder, guitar
Pair of Pants (2003) flute, B-flat clarinet
Paradise Out of Focus (1992) flute, oboe, B-flat clarinet, horn, bassoon
Pied a Terre (2007) flute, viola, harp
Portage of Paz (1997) viola, guitar
Rumble Strip (2004) randomized ensemble
Runes and Alphabets (1998) flute, B-flat trumpet, harp, marimba, xylophone, percussion
Second String Quartet – Common Knowledge (2018) 2 violins, viola, cello
Second String Trio (1996) violin, viola, cello
Sonata for Viola and Piano – Jefferson Chalmers (2016) viola, piano
String Quartet (1996) 2 violins, viola, cello
String Trio (1994) violin, viola, cello
Terroir (2014) 2 violins, viola, cello and piano
Third String Quartet
Tiergarten (2019) B-flat clarinet, violin, piano
Unintended Consequences (2010) flute, violin, cello, piano
Viola Sonata "Jefferson Chalmers" (2017) viola, piano
Yurodivi (2012) B-flat clarinet, piano |
Sean Hickey | Choral | Choral
A Mind of Winter (2003) SATB chorus
Agnus Dei (2007) flute, 2 ob, 2 bsns, 2 tpts, 2 trb, SATB chorus, cello, bass
Magnificat (1993) SATB chorus, organ
One Song, America, Before I Go (2017) SATB a cappella chorus |
Sean Hickey | Orchestral | Orchestral
A Pacifying Weapon – Concerto for Recorder and Orchestra (2016)
Atahualpa (2015)
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra (2008) solo cello, orchestra
Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra (2006) clarinet, string orchestra (string quintet in chamber version)
Dalliance (2003) 2fl, 2 ob, 2 Bb cl, 2 bsn, 3 hn, 2 Bb tr, 2 trb, tuba, timp.,triangle, b.d, cymbals, tamb, harp, str.
Hitherto (2015) full orchestra
Mandolin Concerto (2010) solo mandolin, 10 winds, percussion, double bass
Sagesse (2003) fl, ob, 2 Bb cl, bsn, 2 hn, perc Str, ms, tenor
Sinfonietta (2010) flute, oboe, B-flat clarinet, bassoon, horn, 2 violins, viola, cello, bass
Single Malt (2015) vlns I, vlns II, vlas, vcls, db.
Symphony ("Olympus Mons") (2012) large orchestra
Symphony for Strings (1995) string orchestra |
Sean Hickey | Solo | Solo
Archipelago (2002) piano
B-flat (2011) B-flat clarinet
Beara (2001) violoncello
Cursive (2011) piano
Dance Apotheosis (2017) violin
Dolmen (1999) piano
Fallows (2012) piano
Feeling Gravity's Pull (2010) oboe
Fluff (2004) flute
Hill Music: A Breton Ramble (2002) piano
I'm About to do to You (What's Been Done to Me) (2013) Piano
In Memoriam Kurt Vonnegut (2007) piano
Insufficient Means (2019) oboe
Ipso Facto (2019) piano
Let the Sea Make a Noise (2018) cello, or any solo instrument
Night Café (1993) piano
Ostinato Grosso (2002) piano
Portage II (2000) B-flat clarinet
Portage III – Sarabande for Piano (2000) piano
Portage IV (2000) clarinet in A
Reckoning (2011) piano
Saying Makes It So (2016) piano
Scree (2000) piano
Song (1992) piano
Suite After Milhaud (1994) piano
Tango Grotesco (2001) guitar
The Birds of Barclay Street (2001) piano
Two Epigrams (1995) bassoon
Under the Trees The River Laughing (1991) piano
What the Fisherwoman Saw (2004) piano |
Sean Hickey | Voice | Voice
Nocturne (2001) mezzo-soprano, piano
To the Wars (2004) soprano, clarinet, cello |
Sean Hickey | References | References |
Sean Hickey | External links | External links
Category:1970 births
Category:Living people
Category:American composers
Category:American male composers
Category:21st-century American composers
Category:21st-century American male musicians
Category:Musicians from Detroit
Category:Wayne State University alumni |
Sean Hickey | Table of Content | Short description, Career, Works, Chamber, Choral, Orchestral, Solo, Voice, References, External links |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkSearch/fantasybookspot.com | * | has 58 links on wikipedia
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Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkSearch/fantasybookspot.com | Table of Content | * |
Alice Di Micele | short description | Alice Di Micele is a folk musician and environmental singer and songwriter from Ashland, Oregon. |
Alice Di Micele | Early life | Early life
Alice Di Micele grew up in New Jersey to a pianist mother and a school teacher father, and received her initial formal musical training in voice and on the recorder, flute, and guitar in Linden Public Schools and SUNY New Paltz. Throughout these early years she was active in several popular, short-lived, local bands; but began seriously focusing on acoustic guitar as an accomplished musician and cultural activist while moving to Southern Oregon. |
Alice Di Micele | Career | Career
In Oregon, Di Micele founded her own Independent record label, Alice Otter Music, to promote not only her own music but also that of other marginalized folk artists. The label released her first album in 1988, which included a song she wrote when she was 11 years old called "Celebrate the Rain". Di Micele has received rave reviewsDeseret News Artist Interview and has performed at many festivals, benefits, and venues. She has released 16 albums on her own label and is a part of 5 compilations.https://walkinjim.com/m-u-s-e/%3C/ref%3E
Many of the themes of her recordings reflect her environmental, LGBT, and anti-war interests.Lojovsky, M. 2000 Thirty Years Later: What are we fighting for ? The Humanist 60(4):13
Her work has been analyzed to advance music therapy, outdoor education,[https://www.pdfdrive.com/ostara-rituals-recipes-lore-for-the-spring-equinox-e195025020.html Connor, K. 2015
Ostara: Rituals, Recipes & Lore for the Spring Equinox Llewellyn Worldwide] and ethnomusicology.
Di Micele also released a children's album If I Were an Otter: Songs for Kids of All Ages to critical acclaim. Called "a pure delight" by the roots music journal No Depression, the recording features 13 original and classic folk songs including "City Mouse/Country Mouse", a duet with Vince Herman.
Her song "Chinook Blues" on her Alice Live album provided the backdrop to the video Source to Sea: the Columbia River Swim about the declining native salmon population in the Pacific Northwest ecosystem.
Her fundraising activities throughout her career have involved Open Source and Copyleft underground access to her digitized audio concerts and other works. She remains a composer and activist using the arts to inform audiences of issues related to climate change, including the wild fires devastating the Anglo and Latinx residents on the west coast. She has been involved in fundraising efforts for some of the hardest hit communities. Before the fires, she worked for decades to organize local, national, and international concerts and other community efforts NPR Local Public Radio Jefferson Artist Interview bringing together artistic, cultural, financial, and other resources to help those in need. |
Alice Di Micele | Discography | Discography |
Alice Di Micele | Solo recordings | Solo recordings
Make a Change (1988)
It's a Miracle (1989)
Too Controversial (1990) Goldenrod Album Review
Searching (1992)
Naked (1994)
Demons & Angels (1998)
Alice Live (2000)
Live at the Strawberry Music Festival (2001)
RAW, UNFILTERED, ORGANIC (2006)
by ebb & by flow (2007)
Lucky Dogs (2011) Wolf Music Album Review
If I Were an Otter: Songs for Kids of All Ages (2013)
Swim (2015) Grateful Web Album Review
One With the Tide (2018) Vortex Music Magazine Album Review
Live at Studio E (2019) Oregon Shakespeare Festival Artist Review
Every Seed We Plant (2022) At the Barrier April Issue Album Review |
Alice Di Micele | Compilations | Compilations
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse: Songs for Leonard Peltier (1989)
If A Tree Falls (1994, EarthBeat!)
Circle of Life (1997)
One Land One Heart (1998) |
Alice Di Micele | Collaborations | Collaborations
Petty Thieveryhttps://www.prettythievery.com
Circle of Women (1997, Rhino Records) |
Alice Di Micele | References | References |
Alice Di Micele | External links | External links
Category:1965 births
Category:Living people
Category:American environmentalists
Category:American women environmentalists
Category:American women singer-songwriters
Category:American folk singers
Category:American feminist musicians
Category:American lesbian musicians
Category:Musicians from Ashland, Oregon
Category:Musicians from Elizabeth, New Jersey
Category:Writers from Ashland, Oregon
Category:Singer-songwriters from New Jersey
Category:Singer-songwriters from Oregon
Category:Guitarists from Oregon
Category:Guitarists from New Jersey
Category:20th-century American guitarists
Category:20th-century American women guitarists
Category:20th-century American LGBTQ people
Category:21st-century American LGBTQ people
Category:21st-century American women guitarists |
Alice Di Micele | Table of Content | short description, Early life, Career, Discography, Solo recordings, Compilations, Collaborations, References, External links |
George William Rusden | Use dmy dates | thumb|right|George William Rusden in 1885
George William Rusden (9 July 1819 – 23 December 1903) was an English-born historian, active in Australia. |
George William Rusden | Early life | Early life
Rusden was born in Leith Hill Place (near Dorking), Surrey, England, son of the Rev. George Keylock Rusden, M.A. (1784-1859) and his wife Anne, née Townsend. G.K. Rusden was a polyglot and mathematician who kept a private school for 23 years in Surrey before migrating with his family to New South Wales where he was appointed a chaplain at Maitland from 1 January 1835.Ann Blainey, Mary Lazarus, 'Rusden, George William (1819 - 1903)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 6, MUP, 1976, pp 72-73. Retrieved 23 November 2009 |
George William Rusden | Australia | Australia
George William Rusden travelled with his family to Australia and befriended Charles Nicholson on the voyage. Rusden was at first employed on the land, and was soon managing properties. At 28 years of age Rusden travelled to China and worked for a time at brother-in-law Ellis Gilman's Canton factory. Rusden visited his brother Alfred who was a tea-taster in Shanghai before returning to Sydney in early 1849.
In 1849 Rusden became an agent for the establishment of national schools in the Port Phillip district and later at Moreton Bay. He was appointed under-secretary in the colonial secretary's office at Melbourne in 1851, clerk of the executive council in 1852, and clerk of the Victorian Legislative Council in 1856. He retained his interest in education as a member of the council of the University of Melbourne from its inception, and was largely responsible for the foundation of the Shakespeare scholarship. In 1871 he published The Discovery, Survey and Settlement of Port Phillip, an interesting pamphlet of some 60 pages. Three years later his Curiosities of Colonization appeared. This consists largely of accounts of Maurice Margarot, one of the "Scottish Martyrs", and Joseph Holt, the Irish rebel general. Both of these pamphlets are very scarce. |
George William Rusden | Return to England | Return to England
In 1882 Rusden retired to England on a pension of £500 a year. He had for some time been working on his History of Australia and his History of New Zealand, which were published in 1883, each in three volumes. Rusden made great use of the library of Edward Petherick even staying for weeks at the latter's home in Brixton Hill, London, where the book collection was stored. Unfortunately for Rusden he had accepted statements, made by a bishop in New Zealand and forwarded by a governor of the colony, without verifying them. These reflected on the conduct of John Bryce, a well-known politician in New Zealand, who brought an action for damages and obtained a verdict for £5000. On an appeal for reduction of damages in which Rusden conducted his own case with great ability (see his Tragedies in New Zealand, privately printed 1888), the parties to the suit came to an agreement, that Bryce should be paid £3675 in satisfaction of all claims. In 1888 Rusden published his Aureretanga; Groans of the Maoris, and a new edition of his History of New Zealand appeared in 1895. The second edition of the History of Australia was published in 1897 and his last work, William Shakespeare, was in the press at the time of his death. It is largely a collection of extracts from the plays with a running commentary. In addition to the works already mentioned, Rusden published some verse, Moyarra: An Australian Legend, 1851, second edition 1891, and Translations and Fragments, published c. 1876. He also published several pamphlets. Rusden returned to Australia on medical advice in January 1893 and lived in South Yarra. Rusden died in Melbourne on 23 December 1903. |
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