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Christel Schulz | Table of Content | Short description, Career, See also, References |
Template:Orders, decorations, and medals of Oman | Navbox
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Template:Orders, decorations, and medals of Oman | Table of Content | Navbox
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Draft:Detroit Run | AFC submission |
Detroit Run are an English post hardcore band from Liverpool. Formed in 2021, the group consists of lead vocalist Tom Haywood, guitarist Gary White, bassist Nathan Dillon and drummer Wes Cunningham.
They have released two EPs. Room 14 was released in 2022. Detroit Run released their second EP Defiance Part One in May 2025. |
Draft:Detroit Run | History | History |
Draft:Detroit Run | Formation and ''Room 14'' (2021) | Formation and Room 14 (2021)
Detroit Run started in 2021 when drummer Wes and bassist Nathan came together to form a band, this later followed with singer Tom joining and lastly guitarist Gary.
Room 14 was released in 2022 along with a number of prior singles such as Chasing Shadows, Crimson Tears and Circles. |
Draft:Detroit Run | ''Management and Defiance Part One (2025)'' | Management and Defiance Part One (2025)
Detroit Run took on Lou (Immortal Access) as their manager in early 2025. Shortly after this the EP Defiance Part One was announced, tracks include previous single releases Prototype, Sleepwalker and Invincible and also Tightrope and Chained Heart. |
Draft:Detroit Run | Members | Members
Current members
Tom Haywood – lead vocals (2021–present)
Gary White – guitar (2022–present)
Nathan Dillon – bass (2021–present)
Wes Cunningham– drums (2021–present)
Former members
Dan Wade – guitar (2021–2022) |
Draft:Detroit Run | Discography | Discography |
Draft:Detroit Run | EPs | EPs
Title Album detailsRoom 14Released: 30 September 2022
Label: Self Released
Format: music download, streamingDefiance Part OneReleased: 30 May 2025
Label: Self Released
Format: CD, music download, streaming |
Draft:Detroit Run | '''Singles''' | Singles
Title Year/EP"Drowning"2022"Mercy""Maniac"2023"Worst Enemy""Sleepwalker"Defiance Part One"Prototype"2024"Invincible"2025"Tightrope" |
Draft:Detroit Run | Music videos | Music videos
Title Year Director"Maniac" 2023 Clearway Media"Worst Enemy"Diaphony Productions"Crimson Tears"Detroit Run"Prototype"2024"Invincible"2025Vessel Studios"Tightrope"Ben Orrell/Detroit Run |
Draft:Detroit Run | External links | External links
:Category:Rock music groups from Liverpool |
Draft:Detroit Run | Table of Content | AFC submission, History, Formation and ''Room 14'' (2021), ''Management and Defiance Part One (2025)'', Members, Discography, EPs, '''Singles''', Music videos, External links |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | One source | The 2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament is the 19th edition of the UNAF U-17 Tournament. The tournament took place in Algeria, from 16 to 26 April 2024. |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Participants | Participants
|
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Venues | Venues
CitiesVenuesCapacityRouïba, AlgiersSalem Mabrouki Stadium12,000AlgiersOmar Hamadi Stadium17,500Dar El Beïda, AlgiersOmar Benrabah Stadium14,150 |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Squads | Squads |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Match officials | Match officials |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Referees | Referees
Anes Azrin
Mohamed Ibrahim Nasef
Ali Al-Jareh
Abdelmonem Bouslam
Khalil Trabelsi |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Assistant referees | Assistant referees
Akram Sohbi
Mustapha Guessar
Ahmed Mostafa Zidan
Ahmed Adel Ismael
Ali Meftah
Ali Nasr Basheer
Ismail Belmeknassi
Mehdi Mounadhim
Wissam Boughatas
Wassim Hannachi |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Tournament | Tournament
<onlyinclude> |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Matches | Matches
All times are local, WAT/CET (UTC+1). |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Statistics | Statistics |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Goalscorers | Goalscorers |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | References | References |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | External links | External links
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament - faf.dz
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament - unafonline.org
Category:UNAF U-17 Tournament
Category:2024 in African football
UNAF U-17 Tournament |
2024 UNAF U-17 Tournament | Table of Content | One source, Participants, Venues, Squads, Match officials, Referees, Assistant referees, Tournament, Matches, Statistics, Goalscorers, References, External links |
Plon (sculpture) | Short description | Plon is a relief sculpture located on a building at the intersection of Katowicka Street and in the Saska Kępa district of Warsaw, Poland. Created by Jerzy Jarnuszkiewicz in 1947 as part of the post-World War II reconstruction efforts led by the , the artwork was added to the register of historic monuments in 2011 and subsequently restored. |
Plon (sculpture) | Background | Background
The creation and placement of Plon are closely tied to the initiatives of the , which was headquartered at 7 Katowicka Street. The office selected this street as the site for a model residential street project, aiming to transform the character of Saska Kępa after the war. The project envisioned Katowicka Street adorned with small-scale architectural elements and artistic features, including sculptures, benches, a fountain, and a relief. The initiative was led by a team of architects under Bohdan Lachert and a group of sculptors who contributed their work without compensation. Jerzy Jarnuszkiewicz's Plon remains the best-preserved element of this decorative scheme. Despite positive reception from local residents, the artwork faced criticism, notably from Jerzy Baurski, who wrote in the 1948 issue of Architektura: |
Plon (sculpture) | Themes and materials | Themes and materials
The relief, crafted from cement and affixed to a clinker brick wall at the building's corner, depicts two women carrying the titular "harvest" (Plon). They are accompanied by a young boy holding two fish and a lamb, with a tree in the background. In 2011, damaged sections were temporarily filled with drawings, and after restoration, missing parts were reconstructed using artificial stone. |
Plon (sculpture) | Restoration history | Restoration history
thumb|180px|Fundraising event, May 2011
thumb|180px|Plon just before unveiling, November 2011
thumb|180px|Revitalized square with restored benches, April 2016
Over time, the decorative elements along Katowicka Street, including Plon, deteriorated. By July 2011, the relief was incomplete, with parts of the boy holding fish and the lamb missing, and it had been vandalized with graffiti. The building section hosting the artwork was excluded from facade renovations due to the high costs that the housing community would have incurred. At the time, Plon was not listed in the register of historic monuments, which prevented funding from the Warsaw Heritage Conservation Office.
The initiative to preserve Plon was spearheaded by Saska Kępa residents, led by Ewa Brykowska-Liniecka. In 2005, she began efforts to locate documentation for the relief, but Professor informed her that Jarnuszkiewicz worked from general sketches only, meaning the 1940s artwork itself was the primary reference for restoration. The initiative gained support from the Saska Kępa residents' association and the ŁADna Kępa organization, sparking further actions. The Kępa Cafe Foundation for Cultural and Social Activities also contributed.
On 10 November 2010, a happening was organized under Plon, featuring actress . In January 2011, following a request from the residents' community, the regional conservator, Barbara Jezierska, approved the inclusion of Plon in the register of historic monuments. During the Saska Kępa Festival in May 2011, residents organized a "Meeting at Plon" event, featuring exhibitions about architects and sculptors associated with the district. Volunteers informed visitors about the restoration campaign and encouraged contributions to a public fundraiser. The effort raised 2,547.88 PLN, though the total restoration cost was estimated at 49,000 PLN. The mayor of Praga-Południe and the Warsaw Heritage Conservation Office pledged 30,000 PLN in funding.
The Warsaw City Council and the Teresa Sahakian Foundation provided additional funding, and in July 2011, the relief was removed from the building for conservation by Bartosz Markowski in a workshop near Warsaw. The restoration, completed in October 2011, involved cleaning old paint, filling cracks with resin, adding stainless steel reinforcements, and reconstructing missing parts with artificial stone. The relief was repainted white, and the entire building corner was renovated at a total cost of approximately 50,000 PLN.
The unveiling ceremony on 23 November 2011 drew nearly 200 attendees, including Praga-Południe mayor Tomasz Kucharski, who remarked:
Art historians spoke at the event, and the project initiator announced further efforts under the "Around Plon" initiative to restore other historical decorative elements of Katowicka Street. In 2013, during the Saska Kępa Festival, residents temporarily revitalized the square in front of Plon to highlight the former concrete benches and greenery, raising 1,855.89 PLN for their reconstruction. The restored benches were unveiled during the 2014 Saska Kępa Festival. That year, the square revitalization project was submitted to the participatory budget for 2015. Bench reconstruction began in September 2014, followed by greenery planting. In 2016, the relief and its square received the Bohdan Lachert and Józef Szanajca Award for "Best Architecture of Saska Kępa" in the "Public Space and Greenery" category. |
Plon (sculpture) | Gallery | Gallery |
Plon (sculpture) | References | References |
Plon (sculpture) | Bibliography | Bibliography
Category:Sculptures of women in Poland
Category:Outdoor sculptures in Warsaw
Category:Sculptures of children in Poland
Category:1947 sculptures |
Plon (sculpture) | Table of Content | Short description, Background, Themes and materials, Restoration history, Gallery, References, Bibliography |
Draft:Robert Landy | AfC submission | Robert J. Landy (born 1944) is Professor Emeritus at New York University where he pioneered the profession of Drama Therapy. He is an author, theatre artist, songwriter, psychotherapist and photographer.
Robert Landy was born in Hoboken, New Jersey. He grew up in Jersey City and the New York City suburbs. He attended Lafayette College, Brandeis University and the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he received an interdisciplinary doctorate in Psychology, Theatre, Education and English.
Landy’s academic career spanned more than 40 years. He began as a lecturer in theatre at California State University, Northridge. He then became Professor of Educational Theatre and Applied Psychology at NYU. While at NYU, he developed the the first MA Program in Drama Therapy in the United States. Within the field of drama therapy, he served multiple roles of researcher, writer educator and clinician. He is a prolific author of articles, essays and books. His 1986 book, Drama Therapy: Concepts and Practices, was the first published text in the new field of drama therapy. He published 11 books about drama therapy and educational theatre as well as 2 books about children’s perception of God. While at NYU, Landy was the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Medal and two awards for outstanding research. He has been featured in the media in the educational CBS-TV series Drama in Education, the award-winning documentary film, Standing Tall, and his own production, Three Approaches to Drama Therapy. Through a partnership with the NYU Bobst Library, Landy's numerous contributions are available through the Robert Landy Archive.
Alongside his academic career, Landy is a multidisciplinary artist in the fields of theatre, music and photography. In New York City, he played the role of Edgar in King Lear directed by Gene Feist at the Roundabout Theatre. A.D. Coleman, in his review in the Village Voice (April 25, 1968) wrote this: ‘the performance is beautiful...The ensemble, to a man, is dedicated to the play., with a quiet but obvious love almost as moving as the work itself.’ Landy also worked in New York City experimental theatre. acting in Dracula: Sabbat at The Westbeth Theatre, directed by Lawrence Kornfeld, and his own co-creation at Franklin Furnace, Men Are Circles, Men Are Spears, which was a performance art piece exploring the origins of masculinity and patriarchy. In addition, he wrote the book and lyrics for the musical, God Lives in Glass, which has had multiple performances in the United States. More recently he created and directed the play, Art, Hope, Redemption, performed at the Stella Adler Theatre about the life of an artist who spent 25 years in prison.
His music can be heard on the compact disk, The Vulture and the Lamb (https://thevultureandthelamb.bandcamp.com). Landy’s most recent photography exhibition is available on the website, Art Without Boundaries (https://www.artwithoutboundaries.art/robert-landy).
Published works
Books:
The Padrone (1982)
Handbook of Educational Drama and Theatre (1982)
Drama Therapy: Concepts and Practices (1986)
Reach for Speech: a Guide to Teaching Oral Communication Skills through Sociodrama (with Deborah Borisoff) (1988)
Persona and Performance-The Meaning of Role in Drama, Therapy, and Everyday Life (1993)
Drama Therapy: Concepts, Theories and Practices, 2nd edition (1994)
Essays on Drama Therapy: The Double Life (1996)
Drama Therapy Workshops in Taiwan--A Collection of Lectures and Workshops of Robert J. Landy (with Chang, Hsiao-hua) (1997)
New Essays in Drama Therapy: Unfinished Business (2001)
God Lives in Glass (2001)
How We See God and Why It Matters (2001)
The Couch and the Stage: Integrating Words and Action in Psychotherapy (2008)
Theatre for Change: Education, Social Action, Therapy (with David Montgomery) (2012)
Films:
Drama in Education, 48 half-hour programs, broadcast nationally on CBS-TV. New York City: WCBS-TV, 1979-80.
Drama Therapy: the Extended Dramatization. New York University: 1984.
Reach for Speech: the Use of Sociodrama to Teach Oral Communication Skills. New York City: TransVideo, Inc.: 1987.
Play Therapy and Sandplay with Children, two 50 minute videos of drama therapy sessions. Arbutus Society for Children, Victoria, British Columbia: 1992.
Drama Therapy in Taiwan, 30 minute video, Taipei, Taiwan, Chinese Theatre Association: 1996.Standing Tall, 24 minute video of 9/11 therapeutic performance project. Boston: Fanlight Productions. Peggy Stern, Director: 2004.
Three Approaches to Drama Therapy—Long Version, 3 hour, 47 minute film, NY: New York University, Robert Landy, producer and director: 2005.
Three Approaches to Drama Therapy—Short Version, 65 minute film, NY: New York University, Robert Landy, producer and director: 2006. |
Draft:Robert Landy | References | References
Landy, Robert J. & D. Montgomery (2012). Theatre for Change: Education, Social Action, Therapy. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Landy, Robert J. (2008). The Couch and the Stage: Integrating Words and Action in Psychotherapy. Lanham, MD: Jason Aronson. Translated into Chinese, Korean.
Landy, Robert J. (2001). How We See God and Why It Matters: Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Landy, Robert J. (2001). God Lives in Glass. Boston: SkyLight Paths.
Landy, Robert J. (2001). New Essays in Drama Therapy: Unfinished Business. Springfield, Il: Charles C. Thomas.
Landy, Robert J. (1996). Essays on Drama Therapy: The Double Life. London: Jessica Kingsley.
Landy, Robert J. (1994). Drama Therapy: Concepts, Theories and Practices, 2nd edition. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas. Translated into Chinese, Italian and Korean.
Landy, Robert J. (1993). Persona and Performance-The Meaning of Role in Drama, Therapy, and Everyday Life. N.Y.: Guilford Press, co-published in London by Jessica Kingsley, 1993. Translated into Greek, Russian, Korean, Chinese.
Landy, Robert J. (1986). Drama Therapy: Concepts and Practices. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Landy, Robert J. (1982). Handbook of Educational Drama and Theatre. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
Landy, Robert J. (1982). The Padrone (playscript). Rowayton, CT: New Plays.
Chang, Hsiao-hua, Ed. (1997). Drama Therapy Workshops in Taiwan--A Collection of Lectures and Workshops of Robert J. Landy. Taipei: Chinese Theatre Association. |
Draft:Robert Landy | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | AfC submission/draft | Colleen B. Kelly is an Australian academic, disability advocate, and equestrian specialist recognized for her multidisciplinary work spanning labor economics, sports biomechanics, and social justice. With a career extending over three decades, she has served as an adjunct professor at multiple institutions including the University of Queensland and University of Kentucky, while maintaining parallel careers in worker advocacy and high-performance equestrian training. Her signature achievement remains the Pacific Islands and Timor-Leste Transnational Seasonal Employment Study (2015-2020), the largest empirical analysis of labor mobility programs in Oceania, which informed policy changes in Australia's Pacific Australia Labor Mobility scheme and Canada's Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program.
Kelly's groundbreaking work in adaptive equestrian sports has transformed opportunities for athletes with disabilities, developing training protocols adopted by 17 national Paralympic committees. Her biomechanics research with mounted police units, particularly the London Metropolitan Police and Royal Canadian Mounted Police, revolutionized equine officer safety standards. This dual expertise in human and equine movement science led to her unique distinction as the only researcher to have work published in both the Journal of Labor Economics and Comparative Exercise Physiology.
Before entering academia, Kelly served as the elected Spokeswoman for the WorkCover Authority of New South Wales (2008-2012), where she spearheaded workplace safety reforms for high-risk industries. Her advocacy extended to seasonal workers through her appointment to the Australian government's Pacific Labor Mobility Advisory Group. These policy achievements complement her practical experience developing worker protection frameworks for transnational programs involving over 15,000 participants annually across Pacific Island nations.
The founder of Black Pearl Farm in Kentucky and Thendara Equestrian Academy in Queensland, Kelly has trained multiple Paralympic gold medalists and coached at five World Equestrian Games. Her honors include the FEI's Distinguished Service Medal (2018) and induction into the Queensland Sports Hall of Fame (2022). Since retiring from active coaching in 2025, she continues advisory roles with the International Paralympic Committee and Anti-Slavery Australia, while maintaining her research on labor equity through the University of Queensland's Centre for Employment and Labor Relations Law. |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | Education mobility proposal | Education mobility proposal
Kelly's "education mobility" framework represents a significant innovation in labor migration policy, proposing that temporary worker programs incorporate accredited education components. Developed during her doctoral research at Australian National University, this model suggests seasonal workers could earn formal qualifications in fields like digital literacy, business management, or agricultural science alongside their employment contracts. The approach aims to transform temporary migration from purely remittance-based outcomes to sustainable human capital development for Pacific Island nations.
The framework is currently being piloted through a partnership between University of Queensland, the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, and Tongan seasonal workers in Queensland's horticulture sector. Participants in the two-year pilot receive vocational training through TAFE Queensland during evenings and weekends, with courses adapted to workers' existing skills and home country employment needs. Early results show 78% of participants in the first cohort gained nationally recognized certifications while maintaining full work hours.
Kelly's research identifies three key benefits of the model: (1) workers gain portable qualifications beyond agricultural experience, (2) employers benefit from upskilled staff, and (3) Pacific nations receive workers with enhanced professional capabilities. The program structure includes cultural support mechanisms, with Tongan language materials and mentors from Pacific Islander communities in Australia. This aspect addresses previous challenges where worker education initiatives failed to account for linguistic and cultural barriers.
The model has attracted attention from international organizations, with the World Bank incorporating elements into its Pacific Labor Mobility recommendations. Kelly has presented the framework to the International Labor Organization and several Pacific Island governments, with Samoa and Vanuatu expressing interest in developing similar programs. The Australian government is considering expanding the pilot to other Pacific nations under the PALM scheme's skills development stream. |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | Career and research | Career and research
Kelly began her academic career focusing on labor economics before specializing in Pacific migration studies at Australian National University (ANU). Her doctoral research, supervised by Professor Stephen Howes of the ANU Crawford School of Public Policy, represents the most comprehensive study to date of working conditions in Australia's seasonal worker programs. The seven-year longitudinal study tracked cohorts of workers from multiple Pacific nations across different agricultural sectors in Australia.
Kelly's innovative methodology combines quantitative surveys with in-depth ethnographic fieldwork, including over 200 interviews conducted in workers' native languages. Her research team included bilingual research assistants from Pacific Islander communities, enabling nuanced understanding of cultural factors affecting worker welfare. The study's mixed-methods approach has been recognized as establishing new best practices for migration research by the International Organization for Migration.
Key findings from Kelly's research revealed systemic challenges including accommodation quality issues, wage discrepancies, and limited access to healthcare services. Her 2023 report documenting these findings directly informed policy changes by the Australian Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, including strengthened accommodation standards and mandatory cultural competency training for employers.
Kelly's research continues through her role as Lead Researcher at ANU's Pacific Labor Mobility Research Hub, where she oversees comparative studies of seasonal worker programs in New Zealand and Canada. Her current projects examine gender dimensions in labor mobility and the long-term impacts of seasonal work on Pacific Island communities, with funding from the Australian Research Council and Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | World Lecture Tour | World Lecture Tour
Colleen Kelly has presented work on rider biomechanics at a variety of international venues. Her lecture series, clinics, and workshops have been conducted at academic institutions and equestrian centers in multiple countries.Global Lecture Tour Summary
Her programs have been recognized by the United States Dressage Federation, making them eligible for sign-off hours toward university accreditation.USDF Accreditation Details She has given multiple lectures at the University of Kentucky, including at the Gluck Equine Research Center.Gluck Institute Lecture Series
Clinics under the title "Rider Biomechanics" have taken place in locations such as Melbourne (Australia), Springfield (Missouri), and Somerville (Alabama).International Clinic Listing Additionally, Kelly has participated in internationally sponsored events, including a Canadian tour sponsored by Air Canada.Air Canada Sponsored Tour Her lectures have also been held at state equestrian centers in Tasmania, Washington State, Tennessee, and Virginia.State Lecture Calendar
These presentations typically address topics related to rider seat, position, and balance, with a focus on biomechanics and equine welfare. The aim of these sessions is to support improved performance and safety through evidence-based techniques.Rider Biomechanics Overview |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | Policy engagement | Policy engagement
Kelly has presented research to the Pacific Islands Forum and United Nations agencies. Since 2023, she has served on the Australian government's PALM Scheme Stakeholder Advisory Group. |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | References | References |
Draft:Colleen B. Kelly | Table of Content | AfC submission/draft, Education mobility proposal, Career and research, World Lecture Tour, Policy engagement, References |
Draft:Airstrikes on Riad Roumi | AfC submission | Riad Roumi, A Prominent figure in the Mujahideen was bombed by the IDF in 2022, he was 5’3 |
Draft:Airstrikes on Riad Roumi | References | References |
Draft:Airstrikes on Riad Roumi | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
Zakho ambush | Short description | The Zakho ambush was an attack that occurred on 4 April 1919 near the town of Zakho in the former Mosul Vilayet during the early period of British administration in Mesopotamia.https://www.bbc.com/remembrance/wall/record/12557https://ciaotest.cc.columbia.edu/journals/tjir/v10i2/f_0024595_20092.pdf
Captain Alfred Christopher Pearson, British Political Officer, was traveling to meet with the Kurds of the Goyan tribe on what was described as a conciliatory mission. His aim was to negotiate their inclusion in the British-controlled tribal system and reduce regional unrest by offering grain and seed.
Despite appearing cooperative, members of the tribe ambushed and killed Pearson on his way to the meeting. He was accompanied by a Kurdish orderly and a small escort at the time of the attack. The assailants escaped across the border out of reach of immediate British reprisal.
The incident heightened tensions in the region, with British officials debating whether to accept a Turkish offer of assistance to punish those responsible. The offer was ultimately rejected. |
Zakho ambush | See also | See also
Zakho
Mahmud Barzanji revolts
Mahmud Barzanji |
Zakho ambush | References | References
Category:1919 in the British Empire
Category:1919 in Iraq
Category:Conflicts in 1919
Category:Military history of the United Kingdom
Category:History of Iraqi Kurdistan
Category:Zakho
Category:Kurdish nationalism |
Zakho ambush | Table of Content | Short description, See also, References |
Draft:Precision Vaccines Program, Boston Children's Hospital | Multiple issues | The Precision Vaccines Program (PVP) is an academic research program at Boston Children's Hospital, affiliated with Harvard Medical School (HMS), Harvard University. The program focuses on researching and developing next-generation vaccines designed for vulnerable populations. It brings together experts in vaccinology, clinical trials, immunology, molecular biology, data management, biostatistics, bioinformatics, and systems biology. PVP promotes international collaboration among academia, government, and industry to advance its mission and technologies through the Precision Vaccines Network. |
Draft:Precision Vaccines Program, Boston Children's Hospital | References | References |
Draft:Precision Vaccines Program, Boston Children's Hospital | External links | External links
Official website
:Category:Vaccination in the United States |
Draft:Precision Vaccines Program, Boston Children's Hospital | Table of Content | Multiple issues, References, External links |
Category:Works by Dean DeBlois | cat more | DeBlois, Dean
DeBlois, Dean |
Category:Works by Dean DeBlois | Table of Content | cat more |
File:Live 2022 movie.jpeg | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:Live 2022 movie.jpeg | Summary | Summary |
File:Live 2022 movie.jpeg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Live 2022 movie.jpeg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
Category:Peninsulas of County Sligo | Commons category | Sligo
Category:Landforms of County Sligo |
Category:Peninsulas of County Sligo | Table of Content | Commons category |
Beneteau First 36.7 | Multiple issues | thumb|Beneteau First 36.7 at Anchor
Beneteau First 36.7https://www.beneteaufirst367.net/ is a sailboat designed by Farr Yacht Design in the year 2001, and first built by Beneteau in 2002. The boat was built as a high-performance, cruising platform. Allowing for competitive one-design racing and comfortable cruising on one boat. The design continues to see great success worldwide, where several one design Fleets foster competitive and fair racing. The design has also seen success racing under handicap platforms such as PHRF, and ORC.
The design is a World Sailing International Class Keel Boat. |
Beneteau First 36.7 | Production | Production
The design was built by Beneteau between their two shipyards. A majority of the boats were built in Marion South Carolina. These boats have generally remained in North America. The remainder of the boats were built in France. There are slight differences in the designs between the two factories.
Production began for the 2002 model year and continued through 2012. Approximately 800 hulls were produced, with 500 of them emerging from the South Carolina factory. |
Beneteau First 36.7 | Design | Design
The Beneteau First 36.7 is a keelboat, with a hull built from fiberglass. The hull is reinforced through a grid structure bonded to the interior of the hull. The main components of the boat are attached to this grid. The keel, water tanks, mast base, and engine are all fixed to the main structural grid.
The boat has a fractional sloop rig, with a keel-stepped aluminum mast. Swept aluminum spreaders and an adjustable backstay purchase makes sailing fast ,safe and easy, without the need for running backstays. The standing rigging is made of stainless steel rod, with the exception of the backstay, which is dyneema or stainless cable. The boom is aluminum, with a solid style, adjustable vang.
thumb|Beneteau First 36.7 North American Championships - Photo by Chris Lamb
The spinnaker is symmetric and flown from a 13-foot-long pole. The spinnaker pole is made of carbon fiber, or aluminum.
The boat has two keel options. Both keels are fixed, fin / bulb style, and made of lead. The standard draft variant (7.22 feet, 2.20m) is most common, though some 'shoal draft' variants were built with a draft of (5.9 feet, 1.8m) The standard draft variant performs better upwind, and is preferred by racers. The rudder is of the spade style, and is constructed from fiberglass. Most all of the boats are helmed by a wheel, though a tiller option was available in Europe. |
Beneteau First 36.7 | Cabin / Accommodations | Cabin / Accommodations
The Beneteau First 36.7 features three separate sleeping cabins and 6 feet, 4 inches of standing headroom throughout the boat. The galley features a deep top-loading refrigerator, a two-burner gimbaled stove, and a double basin stainless steel sink. The Navigation Station is forward-facing and houses the 12-volt and 120-volt electrical panels.
thumb|Beneteau First 36.7 Cabin - Looking forward
The main salon features two settees, and a removable table. With the table removed, a stainless steel brace is left in place to secure unused sails.
The head is a 'wet head' with a floor drain for the shower, and a manual pump marine toilet. The head is compact, but features standing headroom.
The interior wood is cherry-stained mahogany on the first 200 hulls, and the remainder were built with a lighter pear colored stain on the wood.
The auxiliary engine is built by Volvo Penta. The earlier hulls feature the Volvo Penta MD-2030 engine, while the later hulls received D1-30 engines. Both output 29 horsepower and are water cooled diesel engines. The sound insulation is adequate and the boat remains quiet under motor. |
Beneteau First 36.7 | References | References |
Beneteau First 36.7 | Table of Content | Multiple issues, Production, Design, Cabin / Accommodations, References |
Huw Aaron | Short description | Huw Aaron is a cartoonist, illustrator and children's author. He was born in 1980 in Swansea, but subsequently settled in Cardiff. |
Huw Aaron | Career | Career
After a short period as a chartered accountant, Aaron began working as a freelance cartoonist in 2009. He has regularly contributed cartoons to Private Eye, Reader's Digest, The Oldie, Prospect, The New Statesman, The Spectator and The Rugby Paper, for whose cartoon, North Stand, Aaron was highly commended in the 2012 British Sports Journalism Awards.
Aaron has written and illustrated a number of children's books, predominantly in Welsh. He was chosen by the Books Council of Wales to write the £1 Welsh language book for World Book Day in 2021. Together with his wife, , he won both the Tir na n-Og Award (Welsh language primary category) and the Wales Book of the Year (Children & Young People Award) in 2023 for Dwi Eisiau bod yn Ddeinosor. In 2024, Aaron signed an alleged six-figure contract with Puffin Books for seven books, the first of which, Sleep Tight, Disgusting Blob, was published in March 2025. |
Huw Aaron | Selected works | Selected works
Ha Ha Cnec (2021)
I Want To Be A Dinosaur () (with Luned Aaron) (2022)
Sleep Tight, Disgusting Blob (2025) |
Huw Aaron | References | References |
Huw Aaron | External links | External links
Category:Welsh children's writers
Category:1980 births
Category:Writers from Swansea |
Huw Aaron | Table of Content | Short description, Career, Selected works, References, External links |
Draft:Faips | AFC submission |
Im too lazy to fill this now, will do later... |
Draft:Faips | References | References |
Draft:Faips | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
Category:Video games based on works by Dean DeBlois | [[Category:Video games based on works by American writers | DeBlois, Dean
Category:Works by Dean DeBlois |
Category:Video games based on works by Dean DeBlois | Table of Content | [[Category:Video games based on works by American writers |
Category:Peninsulas of County Dublin | Commons category | Dublin
Category:Landforms of County Dublin |
Category:Peninsulas of County Dublin | Table of Content | Commons category |
File:Hindustan Shipyard.svg | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:Hindustan Shipyard.svg | Summary | Summary |
File:Hindustan Shipyard.svg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Hindustan Shipyard.svg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
Afraflacilla albopunctata | Short description | Afraflacilla albopunctata is a species of jumping spiders in the genus Afraflacilla that lives in Ivory Coast. It was first identified in 2022. |
Afraflacilla albopunctata | References | References
Category:Salticidae
Category:Fauna of Ivory Coast
Category:Spiders of Africa
Category:Spiders described in 2022
Category:Taxa named by Wanda Wesołowska |
Afraflacilla albopunctata | Table of Content | Short description, References |
Lashany, Minsk district rural council | [[File:Мінскі раён - Лашанскі сельсавет.png | thumb|right|Map of Minsk District
Lashany rural council (; ) is a lower-level subdivision (selsoviet) of Minsk district, Minsk region, Belarus. Its administrative center is the agrotown of Lashany. |
Lashany, Minsk district rural council | Rural localities | Rural localities
The populations are from the 2009 Belarusian census (1,854 total) and 2019 Belarusian census (2,172 total)Populated places of Minsk region
<tr><th>Russianname<th>Belarusianname<th class=n>Pop.2009<th class=n>Pop.2019
<tr><td>д Агарки<td>в Агаркі<td class=n>14<td class=n>19
<tr><td>д Биньковцы<td>в Бінькаўцы<td class=n>-<td class=n>6
<tr><td>д Бовбли<td>в Боўблі<td class=n>3<td class=n>11
<tr><td>д Бровки<td>в Браўкі<td class=n>455<td class=n>603
<tr><td>д Вышково<td>в Вышкава<td class=n>10<td class=n>1
<tr><td>д Горошки<td>в Гарошкі<td class=n>25<td class=n>22
<tr><td>д Гуя<td>в Гуя<td class=n>52<td class=n>52
<tr><td>д Динаровичи<td>в Дзінаравічы<td class=n>33<td class=n>33
<tr><td>д Кальзберг<td>в Кальзберг<td class=n>38<td class=n>26
<tr><td>д Криницы<td>в Крыніцы<td class=n>6<td class=n>4
<tr><td>д Куты<td>в Куты<td class=n>15<td class=n>17
<tr><td>д Лабенщина<td>в Лабэншчына<td class=n>17<td class=n>36
<tr><td>п Ленина<td>п Леніна<td class=n>8<td class=n>-
<tr><td>д Лисицы<td>в Лісіцы<td class=n>14<td class=n>14
<tr><td>аг Лошаны (Loshany)<td>аг Лашаны (Lashany)<td class=n>621<td class=n>720
<tr><td>д Ломшино<td>в Ломшына<td class=n>25<td class=n>36
<tr><td>д Мацки<td>в Мацкі<td class=n>14<td class=n>11
<tr><td>п Новинка<td>п Навінка<td class=n>125<td class=n>172
<tr><td>д Прудище<td>в Прудзішча<td class=n>30<td class=n>62
<tr><td>д Путники<td>в Путнікі<td class=n>99<td class=n>87
<tr><td>д Рабушки<td>в Рабушкі<td class=n>14<td class=n>9
<tr><td>д Саёвщина<td>в Саёўшчына<td class=n>20<td class=n>20
<tr><td>п Селец<td>п Сялец<td class=n>27<td class=n>28
<tr><td>д Селец<td>в Сялец<td class=n>34<td class=n>21
<tr><td>д Селище<td>в Селішча<td class=n>15<td class=n>12
<tr><td>д Селявщина<td>в Сяляўшчына<td class=n>5<td class=n>9
<tr><td>д Слобода<td>в Слабада<td class=n>50<td class=n>62
<tr><td>д Суковичи<td>в Сукавічы<td class=n>21<td class=n>35
<tr><td>д Шимково<td>в Шымкава<td class=n>8<td class=n>12
<tr><td>д Щербины<td>в Шчарбіны<td class=n>56<td class=n>32
|
Lashany, Minsk district rural council | References | References
Category:Minsk district |
Lashany, Minsk district rural council | Table of Content | [[File:Мінскі раён - Лашанскі сельсавет.png, Rural localities, References |
Lashany rural council | '''Lashany rural council''' | Lashany rural council () may refer to:
Lashany, Minsk district rural council
:be:Лашанскі сельсавет (Смаргонскі раён)
:be:Лашанскі сельсавет (Уздзенскі раён) |
Lashany rural council | Table of Content | '''Lashany rural council''' |
Draft:Intentional Change Theory | Short description | Intentional Change Theory (ICT) is a multi level theory and framework in psychology and organizational development that explains how individuals and groups achieve sustained, desired change. Developed by Richard Boyatzis, a professor at Case Western Reserve University, the theory integrates concepts from emotional intelligence, neuroscience, and complexity theory. |
Draft:Intentional Change Theory | History | History |
Draft:Intentional Change Theory | Background | Background
Boyatzis first introduced early versions of the theory in the 1970s, with refinements appearing in later works, including Primal Leadership (2002), co-authored with Daniel Goleman and Annie McKee. The theory builds on research in behavioral change, leadership development, and emotional intelligence, examining how people transition from their current state to a desired future state. |
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