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Casso (Cas in local dialect, Sćjas in Friulan) is an Italian village, frazione of Erto e Casso, in the Province of Pordenone. Its population is 35. Together with Erto, its administrative seat, it forms the municipality of Erto-Casso. Geography The village is situated in Friuli, close to the borders with the Province of Belluno, Veneto. It was built under the Salta mountain, in front of the Toc mountain, upon the Vajont river valley. Linked with a street to the National Road 251, it is 3 km from Erto, 4 from Castellavazzo and 5 from Longarone. History Early history First mentioned
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Hana Jušić (born 1983) is a Croatian film director and screenwriter. A native of Šibenik, Jušić moved to Zagreb as a child. She majored in comparative literature and English studies at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb. Known earlier in her career for her short films, Jušić received high acclaim for her 2016 feature film debut, Quit Staring at My Plate. References External links Category:1983 births Category:Living people Category:People from Šibenik Category:Croatian film directors Category:Croatian women film directors Category:Croatian screenwriters Category:Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb alumni Category:Golden Arena for Best Director winners
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John Arthur Garraty (July 4, 1920 – December 19, 2007) was an American historian and biographer. He specialized largely in American political and economic history. Garraty earned an undergraduate degree at Brooklyn College in 1941 and completed his doctorate at Columbia University in 1948. During World War II, he served in the United States Merchant Marine as a swimming instructor. His 1953 biography, Henry Cabot Lodge (Knopf, 1953), was the first scholarly and authoritative life of the Massachusetts politician Henry Cabot Lodge (1850-1924); a notable feature of that book was the set of footnotes written at Garraty's invitation by Lodge'sgrandson, Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (1902-1985), expressing disagreement with some of Garraty's interpretations and findings. He taught at Michigan State University for 12 years before joining the Columbia University History Department in 1959. Garraty also served as the president of the Society of American Historians. He retired from teaching at Columbia in 1990. An author of many textbooks, Garraty's works include the college and high school history textbook The American Nation, later editions of which were co-written with Mark C. Carnes. Among Garraty's other works were many biographies, and a study of the craft of biography, The Art ofBiography (Knopf, 1960). In the 1970s and 1960 Garraty was a historical consultant on various film and media projects, most prominently the School House Rock children's television shorts. Garraty co-edited The Columbia History of the World (1972). and was one of the general editors of the American National Biography, a project which he completed in his retirement. Bibliography online editions of 53 books written or edited by Garraty References External links Category:1920 births Category:2007 deaths Category:Male biographers Category:20th-century American educators Category:20th-century American historians Category:American textbook writers Category:Columbia University alumni Category:Columbia University faculty Category:Michigan State University faculty Category:People from Sag Harbor,
### Assistant:
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Glen Norah is a high-density suburb in Harare, Zimbabwe. The suburb borders with Glen View and Highfield townships. Highfield is regarded to be where the fight for the liberation struggle began. Glen Norah is divided into three sections A, B and C, with A bordering with Glen View. Glen Norah C is along the High Glen Road towards Chitungwiza/Beatrice Road and also borders Highfield. Glen Norah B is in the middle of A and C. Glen Norah has been the home of notable Zimbabweans including Stunner, Addington Dzingirai, Alexio Kawara, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga. Glen Norah was home to the deceased legendGeorge Shaya [Dynamos and Zimbabwe international] , former Kaizer Chiefs soccer star Tinashe Nengomasha, and artists Simon Choper Chimbetu and Sulumani Chimbetu (Sungura). Glen Norah is home to seven primary schools: Ruvheneko, Infill, Kudakwashe, Zuvarabuda, Shiriyedenga, Chembira, Glen Norah Seven, and Glen Norah Nine, all which offer kindergarten through grade seven. There are two public secondary schools in Glen Norah, with only Glen Norah One offering A-levels. St. Peter's Kubatana is also in Rockview which is a Glen Norah middle class density area, a work of the Jesuits which goes back to 1963 and includes a technical school. Glen Norah
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Porphyrosela alternata is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is known from Japan (the island of Kyūshū), Malaysia (the states of Pahang and Selangor), Nepal and Taiwan. This species is a well-known pest of cotton. The wingspan is 2.6-4.3 mm. The larvae feed on Desmodium species, including Desmodium heterocarpon, Desmodium heterophyllum and Desmodium strigillosum. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine has the form of an irregular linear-blotch-mine occurring upon the upper side of the leaflet; it is usually started as a linear, flat type, then suddenly widened into a blotch, nearly occupying the whole surface
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Johan Georg Alexius Ræder (23 April 1905 – 23 May 1981) was a Norwegian diplomat. He was born in Kristiania as a son of Major Nicolay Caspary Ræder (1870–1921) and Johanne Elisabeth Nicolaysen (1875–1940). In 1940 he married Gudrun Dorothea Martius. He was the father of diplomat Peter Nicolay Ræder, and great-great-grandson of Johan Christopher Ræder. He enrolled as a student in 1923, and graduated with the cand.jur. degree in 1927. After being a deputy judge from 1927 to 1928 he was hired in the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He served as an attaché in Paris from 1929 to1931, as a secretary at the general consulate in London in 1932. He worked in Norway from 1933 to 1940 and again in London from 1940 to 1945, during the war. He was a deputy under-secretary of state in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 1945 to 1948 and 1951 to 1953, and the permanent under-secretary of state (the highest-ranking civil position) from 1958 to 1965. He served as the Norwegian ambassador to Belgium (and Luxembourg) from 1948 to 1951, to Francoist Spain from 1953 to 1957 and to Italy (and Greece and Malta) from 1965 to 1973. References Category:1905
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The 2013 Mercer Bears football team represented Mercer University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by first-year head coach Bobby Lamb and played their home games at the Moye Complex. They were a member of the Pioneer Football League (PFL). This was Mercer's first year sponsoring football since 1941. This was also their only season as a member of the PFL as they joined the Southern Conference in 2014. They finished the season 10–2, 6–2 in PFL play to finish in third place. Schedule Source: Schedule Awards 2013 Pioneer Football League Freshman Offensive Player
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The PBA Players Championship is one of five major tournaments on the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) Tour. Unlike the U.S. Open and USBC Masters, which allow qualifying amateurs to participate, the PBA Players Championship is open to PBA members only. Tournament history The tournament began as the PBA Touring Players Championship in 1983 and ran every PBA Tour season through 2000. There were no Players Championship events under any name from 2001 to 2010. After the tournament returned to major status in the 2016 season, the PBA voted to retroactively award major titles to the winners of the three previousPlayers Championship events that decade (2011, 2013, 2015), stating the tournament "is a members-only event, and includes all of the elements of a major." The current tournament includes a maximum starting field of 92 PBA players. The top PBA members in earnings from the previous season have entry priority over the general membership, and can fill up to 82 spots. The remaining 10 spots in the starting field are filled from a ten-game pre-tournament qualifier (PTQ). The tournament format has changed over the years. The current format includes 42 games of qualifying: three rounds of six games each to determinethe top 24 for match play, followed by three match play rounds of eight games each. All pins from the initial 18 games carry over into the match play round, with the match play rounds adding 30 bonus pins per victory to the total pinfall in the round. The field is then cut to the top five for the televised stepladder finals. There is no set oil pattern. The 2018 Players Championship used the 44-foot Carmen Salvino oil pattern, while the 2019 event used the 45-foot Dragon pattern. The 2020 event featured the 38-foot Wayne Webb oil pattern, named afterthe PBA Hall of Famer whose bowling center in Columbus, Ohio has hosted this tournament since 2016. PBA Players Championship winners 2020 Event The 2020 PBA Players Championship was held February 11–15 at Wayne Webb’s Columbus Bowl in Columbus, Ohio, with a pre-tournament qualifier (PTQ) on February 9. The tournament had 92 total entries and a $250,600 prize fund, with a $75,000 top prize. A five-player stepladder format was used for the live televised finals on February 15. Bill O'Neill won from the #3 seed position, defeating #1 seed E. J. Tackett in the final match. This marked O'Neill's secondmajor tournament win and 12th PBA title overall. Final Standings: 1. Bill O'Neill (Langhorne, Pennsylvania) – $75,000 2. E. J. Tackett (Bluffton, Indiana) – $38,000 3. Jason Belmonte (Orange, New South Wales, Australia) – $19,000 4. Kristopher Prather (Plainfield, Illinois) – $11,000 5. Marshall Kent (Yakima, Washington) – $10,000 Past Champions Listing of all champions dating back to the inaugural 1983 Touring Players Championship. 2020: Bill O'Neill, USA 2019: Anthony Simonsen, USA 2018: Tom Smallwood, USA 2017: Jason Belmonte, Australia 2016: Graham Fach, Canada 2015: Parker Bohn III, USA 2014: Not held 2013: Scott Norton, USA 2012: Not held 2011:
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Amarwara is a town and a Nagar Palika Parishad in Chhindwara district in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. Geography and Climate Geography Amarwara is located at . It has an average elevation of 796 metres (2,611 feet). Amarwara is located in between the Mountains of Satpura confined between Dulha Dev Ghati and Bhumka Ghati. Climate The climate is warm and temperate in Amarwara. In winter, there is much more rainfall in Amarwara than in summer. According to Köppen and Geiger, this climate is classified as Csa. The average annual temperature is 23.5 °C in Amarwara. About 1088 mm of
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Gerard Boate (also Gérard de Boot, Bootius or Botius) (1604, Gorinchem – 1650, Dublin) was a Dutch physician, known for his Natural History of Ireland. Life Boate was born Gerrit/Gerard Boot, in Gorinchem, son of the knight Godfried Boot (c.1570–1625) and of Christine van Loon. He entered the university of Leyden as a medical student and graduated there as doctor of medicine 3 July 1628. His younger brother Arnold Boate (1606–1653) followed him to study medicine in Leiden. Both moved to London around 1630, where their family had settled earlier. Gerard became employed as physician to Charles I of Englandand Arnold as physician to the Earl of Leicester. In 1631 in London Gerard married Catharina Menning (or Manning) with whom he had three children. The writer Dorothy Durie's husband died in April 1635 in Dublin and she moved to London where she stayed with Gerald and Katherine Boate. She lost a lot of her wealth in Ireland and before she left for The Hague in 1642 she sold some other lands in Ireland to Katherine Boate. Boate became a contributor to the fund under the English act of parliament of 1642, which admitted the Dutch to subscribe money forHe died in January 1650. In repayment of Boate's contributions, his widow Katherine Boate, obtained, under certificate dated 15 November 1667, over one thousand acres of land in Tipperary. Among their descendants was the High Court judge Godfrey Boate, who is chiefly remembered for the mocking elegy on his death by Jonathan Swift. The Boate lands passed by inheritance to the Hemsworth family. Works In 1630 he published a book styled ‘Horæ Jucundæ.’ With his brother Arnold, he produced a treatise on philosophy, Philosophia Naturalis Reformata, published in 1641. To support the interest of adventurers subscribing for potential Irish lands,he undertook the compilation of a work to supply information on Irish produce. Boate himself had never visited Ireland; but materials for his work were furnished by his brother Arnold and by some of the English who had been expelled by the Irish rebellion of 1641. Boate started the ‘Natural History’ early in 1645 and completed it within the year, but its publication was deferred. Boate's papers and his ‘Natural History’ left behind him in London came into the hands of Samuel Hartlib. With the assent of Arnold Boate, then in Paris, the ‘Natural History’ was published at London inchapters. In a letter, dated Paris, 10 August, prefixed to the volume and addressed to Hartlib, Arnold Boate stated that his brother had contemplated three more books on the plants, ‘living creatures,’ and natives of Ireland respectively. A French version, under the title of ‘Histoire Naturelle d'Irlande,’ was published at Paris in 1666. A quarto edition of the ‘Natural History’ by Boate was published at Dublin in 1726, and reissued there in 1755. It was again published in the first volume of a ‘Collection of Tracts and Treatises illustrative of the Natural History, Antiquities, and Political and Social State of
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Plague Ship is a science fiction novel by Andrew North (pseudonym of American writer Alice Mary Norton, also known as Andre Norton). It was published in 1956 by Gnome Press in an edition of 5,000 copies. The book is the second volume of the author's Solar Queen series. Plot summary The main protagonist of the novel is Dane Thorson, Cargo-master-apprentice on the Free Trader rocket ship the Solar Queen. Free Traders take on trading contracts on remote and recently discovered planets, which can be dangerous and unpredictable. The Solar Queen has recently obtained a valuable trading contract on the planet
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Víctor Hugo Bagnulo Fernández (23 July 1915 – 7 February 2008) was an Uruguayan football player and manager. He is most famous for his managing success at Uruguayan giants Peñarol, with whom he won five national league titles. Career Bagnulo's playing career spanned 12 years from 1935 to 1947, during which he played for Uruguayan sides Central Español, Defensor and Danubio. His first coaching experience came on Defensor's tour in Chile in 1946, where he led the club to a 6–0 victory in a friendly against Chilean powerhouse Colo-Colo. He was also capped once for Uruguay, appearing in a CopaNewton 4–1 defeat to Argentina on 25 May 1942. In 1947, he joined Danubio, where he was at the same time a player and youth coach. After retiring from playing a year later, he took the job of the club's manager. In 1952 he left the club to take over Defensor, and three years later, in 1955, he was appointed manager of Uruguay. With Uruguay he won the 1956 Copa América before being replaced by Juan López Fontana in 1957. In 1958 he had his first coaching spell at Peñarol, with whom he won two league titles in 1958 and1959 and which continued to dominate South American football in the following few years under the guidance of his successor Roberto Scarone. After leaving Peñarol, he had a number of coaching spells at local sides Defensor, Nacional, Rampla Juniors, Montevideo Wanderers, Central Español and Huracán Buceo, as well as abroad (at Rosario Central in Argentina and Alianza Lima in Peru). At the 1962 FIFA World Cup Bagnulo was also assistant to the Uruguay national team manager Juan Carlos Corazzo, along with Juan López Fontana and Roberto Scarone. Between 1970 and 1973 he had his second spell with Uruguay with whomhe qualified for the 1974 FIFA World Cup, but was nevertheless replaced by Roberto Porta before the tournament took place. He then returned to Peñarol in 1973 and won three Uruguayan league titles in a row (1973, 1974 and 1975), as well as the Teresa Herrera Trophy in 1974 and 1975. After a spell at Liverpool de Montevideo in 1976, he again took over as Uruguay manager in 1978 and led them in a handful of games. His last coaching job was back at Peñarol, whom he took over in 1982 and led through a historic season in which theywon the national championship, the Copa Libertadores (beating Chilean side Cobreloa in the final) and the Intercontinental Cup (beating reigning European champions Aston Villa). Honours Club Peñarol Uruguayan League (5): 1958, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1982 Copa Libertadores: 1982 Intercontinental Cup: 1982 International Uruguay Copa América: 1956 References Category:1915 births Category:2008 deaths Category:Sportspeople from Montevideo Category:Uruguayan footballers Category:Uruguay international footballers Category:Central Español players Category:Defensor Sporting players Category:Danubio F.C. players Category:Danubio F.C. managers Category:Defensor Sporting managers Category:Uruguay national football team managers Category:Peñarol managers Category:Club Nacional de Football managers Category:Rampla Juniors managers Category:Rosario Central managers Category:Montevideo Wanderers managers Category:Central Español managers Category:Alianza Lima
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"Can't We Be Friends?" is a 1929 song with lyrics by Paul James and music by Kay Swift, introduced on Broadway in The Little Show by Libby Holman. It was later recorded by many artists including Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, and Frank Sinatra. Recordings Red Nichols & his Five Pennies (recorded 9/6/1929 and released on Brunswick 4510). Ray Ventura & his Collegians (recorded 10/19/1929) Smith Ballew (recorded 11/11/1929, and released on Okeh 41304). The Georgians (recorded 11/22/1929) Bing Crosby (recorded 9/27/1929, and released on Columbia 2001-D) Libby Holman (recorded September, 1929 and released on Brunswick 4506). Sam Wooding & hisChocolate Kiddies (recorded 12/1929) The Imperial Dance Orchestra (1929) Al Bowlly with Ray Noble & his Orchestra (recorded 1/16/1931 and released on Decca F2220) (Al Bowlly Discography) Frank Sinatra (In the Wee Small Hours album, 1955) (recorded February 8, 1955, with orchestra conducted by Nelson Riddle) Illinois Jacquet (Swing's the Thing album, 1956) Gene Ammons (The Happy Blues album, 1956) Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong (Ella and Louis album, 1956) Jane Powell (Can't We Be Friends album, 1956) Linda Ronstadt (Lush Life album, 1984) Jamie Cullum (Twentysomething album, 2003) Seth MacFarlane (Once in a While album, 2019) Vincent Lopez &his Orchestra Anita O'Day - included in her album Incomparable! (1960). Leo Reisman & his Orchestra Art Tatum Movie usage The Man I Love (1947) Played when Joey finds Gloria in the room and Petey sees San at the bar. Flamingo Road (1949) Played at the Eagle cafe when Lane gets hired Backfire (1950) Played when Steve, Bonnie and Lysa arrive at the party Young Man with a Horn (1950) featured Harry James dubbing "Can't We Be Friends" for Kirk Douglas's character Starlift (1951) Played twice at the cafeteria Bonnie & Clyde (1967) featured a scored version by Charles Strouse
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Igor Raufovich Ashurbeyli (, ; born 9 September 1963, Baku, Azerbaijan) is a Russian scientist, businessman, a politician of Azerbaijani origin, and a micronationalist, serving as the Head of Asgardia, the Space Nation. He is also the Leader of the Party of Russia's Rebirth since 2016. He was the CEO of Scientific Production Association (SPA) Almaz from 2000 to 2011. He is also the founder and Chairman of the Board of Socium Holding. He has a Doctorate of Science in Engineering and a PhD in Engineering, with a specialization in Computer Science. Biography Igor Ashurbeyli was born on 9 September1963, in Baku, Azerbaijan, a descendant of the Azerbaijani noble family of Ashurbeyov. He graduated from the Azerbaijan State Oil Academy in 1985. In 1988, under the Soviet Union's then-new economic policies, he founded Socium, a small software company, serving as its first General Manager. It later become became Socium Holding, a holding company with over 10,000 employees at over 30 companies, where Ashurbeyli services as Chairman of the Board. In 1990, Ashurbeyli moved to Moscow. Starting in 1994, he held the positions of Deputy General Manager, First Deputy General Manager, and Chairman of the Board at SPA Almaz (laterthe UNESCO Medal for contributions to the development of nanoscience and nanotechnologies during a ceremony held at UNESCO headquarters, Paris, France. Igor Ashurbeyli founded the Aerospace International Research Center in Vienna, Austria, in 2013. In 2014, the Center began publication of an international space journal, ROOM, of which Ashurbeyli is the editor-in-chief. In July 2018 Aerospace International Research Center was renamed to Asgardia Independent Research Center. On 12 October 2016 Igor Ashurbeyli announced in a press conference in Paris, France, "the birth of the new space nation Asgardia." The project is officially called the "Space Kingdom of Asgardia." The ultimateaim of the project is to create a new nation that allows access to outer space free of the control of existing nations. On 25 June 2018 in Vienna, Austria, in Hofburg Palace Igor Ashurbeyli was inaugurated as Asgardia's Head of Nation. Asgardia intends to launch a series of satellites into Earth orbit. Going forward, the Asgardia team hopes to create habitable platforms in low-earth orbits, which is also where the International Space Station is located. "It's not a fantasy. Going to Mars, the galactics, so on—that's just fake. I intend something more real," Igor Ashurbeyli told CNN in Juneof 2017. The Cygnus spacecraft that carried Asgardia-1 into space released Asgardia-1 and two other satellites on 12 November 2017. The Space Kingdom of Asgardia has claimed that it is now "the first nation to have all of its territory in space." Legal scholars doubt that Asgardia-1 can be regarded as a sovereign territory. Politics On 17 June 2016, Ashurbeyli was elected new leader of the Party of Russia's Rebirth after the death of Gennady Seleznyov. See also Asgardia the Space Nation GSKB Almaz-Antey References External links Official English website Official Russian website |- |- Category:1963 births Category:Living people Category:Russian
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The 1994–95 Cypriot Third Division was the 24th season of the Cypriot third-level football league. Ethnikos Latsion FC won their 1st title. Format Fourteen teams participated in the 1994–95 Cypriot Third Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first four teams were promoted to the 1995–96 Cypriot Second Division. Point system Teams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. League standings Sources See also Cypriot Third Division
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Gary Kenneth Penrice (born 23 March 1964) is a former professional footballer. He played for Bristol Rovers, Watford, Aston Villa and Queens Park Rangers as a striker. Following a career that saw him make over 400 appearances, he became an assistant manager, attacking coach and later a talent scout. As of August 2013, he is a talent scout for Everton F.C. specialising in the European market. Early life Penrice was born in Bristol and grew up in Mangotsfield, where his parents still live today. Penrice was in the same class as ex-Blackpool manager Ian Holloway at school and they stillremain close friends today. Penrice's potential footballing ability was evident from a young age and he was signed up as an apprentice by Bristol City; however, they later decided to release him, stating that he was too small to make it as a professional. After being released from his apprenticeship, Penrice, like his father before him, signed for local side Mangotsfield United. Penrice attended the same secondary school team as fellow future professional footballers Gary Smart, Gary Penrice and Ian Holloway, who were all roughly the same age. While playing for Mangotsfield, Penrice attended college and became a qualified plumber,planning to build himself a new career after failing to make the grade at Bristol City. Penrice worked as a plumber for a couple of years before his forgotten dream was to be rekindled. After scouts attended several of Mangotsfields matches, Penrice was offered a trial and signed with the team he and his family supported, Bristol Rovers. Playing career Bristol Rovers Prior to signing for Rovers, Penrice spent time in the reserve-team. After making his first-team début, Penrice went on to become a regular, playing alongside ex-school friend Ian Holloway. Penrice's twenty goals helped Rovers into the Third Divisionplay-off final in 1989, only to be beaten 2–1 on aggregate by Port Vale. Watford Penrice would later miss out on a fairytale Third Division Championship success with Bristol Rovers to sign for Watford for a club record £500,000 sale late in 1989. Penrice played for Watford for only one season, scoring 18 goals in 43 appearances, including a run of eight goals in his first nine games, before catching the eye of First Division side Aston Villa. Aston Villa Following his season with Watford, Penrice was snapped up by Aston Villa for a £1 million in 1991. He wentreverted to a deeper creative-midfielder role. Return home to Bristol Rovers Penrice re-signed for Bristol Rovers on a free transfer in the summer of 1997 to lead them to the Second Division play-offs that year alongside player-boss Ian Holloway in the centre of midfield. After a 16-year career, scoring 110 goals in 400 professional appearances, Penrice retired from playing and became Holloway's assistant manager at Rovers after Phil Bater moved to take control of the youth team. Post-playing career Assistant manager Since his retirement from playing, Penrice has stuck with friend Ian Holloway as his assistant manager at both BristolRovers and later at Queens Park Rangers. He resigned from his position at Bristol Rovers in February 2002. Scouting After leaving Q.P.R., Penrice followed Holloway to Plymouth Argyle as chief scout in September 2006, turning down the offer of assistant manager. Penrice did, however, become strikers coach on a one-day-a-week basis after being asked by Holloway to help develop Plymouth's strikers by using his attacking knowledge. Penrice left Plymouth Argyle at the end of November 2007, once again re-joining Ian Holloway at Leicester City as head of recruitment. Following Holloway's departure from Leicester, Penrice left Leicester by mutual consent on
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Duncormick or Duncormac () is a rural village and surrounding community located in County Wexford, Ireland. At the time of the 2016 census, the village of Duncormick had a population of 116 people. The village is from Wexford Town, close to the fishing village of Kilmore Quay which is one of the largest fishing harbours in Ireland. Duncormick is sometimes used to refer not only to a village, but also to the rural area surrounding it. Location Duncormick is located on the River Muck and is on the Bannow Drive, a tourist trail and signposted route through four Wexford villagesincluding Cullenstown, Bannow and Wellingtonbridge. Duncormick is close to a number of beaches, and a forty-minute drive from Rosslare Europort, to the east, which serves Britain and France. Waterford Airport lies to the west. History In the 12th century, the first Norman forces arrived on three single-masted Longships at Bannow Bay, County Wexford. Arriving in May 1169, they had sailed from Milford Haven in Wales, and on board were Normans, Welshmen and Flemings. Their leader was Robert FitzStephen, a Norman-Welsh warlord, and they made camp on Bannow Island, separated from the mainland by a narrow channel which has since silted
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Progress MS-06 (), identified by NASA as Progress 67 or 67P, is a Progress spacecraft used by Roscosmos to resupply the International Space Station (ISS). Launch Progress MS-6 launched on 14 June 2017 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. It used a Soyuz-2.1a rocket to get to orbit, replacing the former Soyuz-U launch system. Docking Progress MS-6 docked with the Zvezda. It was planned to dock with the Pirs module which it would remove from the space station, in preparation for the arrival of the Nauka module. However, due to the repetitive delays with the Nauka module the plan waspostponed to Progress MS-09. After a two-day rendezvous, MS-06 docked to the station on 16 June 2017 at 11:37 UTC. Cargo The Progress MS-6 spacecraft carried about 2450 kg of cargo and supplies to the International Space Station. The spacecraft delivered food, fuel and supplies, including 705 kg of propellant, 50 kg of oxygen and air, 420 kg of water. Orbit On 27 August 2017, MS-06's engines were used for a 177-second burn to raise the ISS by around 0.6 mile (average orbital altitude). References Category:Progress (spacecraft) missions Category:Spacecraft launched in 2017 Category:2017 in Russia Category:Supply vehicles for the International
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The Galiuro Mountains are a large sky island mountain range of southeast Arizona, United States. It is a northerly mountain range in the Madrean Sky Islands region of southeast Arizona, northern Sonora in northwestern Mexico, and the extreme southwest (the "bootheel") of New Mexico. The range is noted for its height and ruggedness. The Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness encompasses the north perimeter of the range, and the large Galiuro Wilderness covers the central-south. To the south, the Galiuro Wilderness borders the Redfield Canyon Wilderness. A river valley borders the range to the southwest, and Aravaipa Creek and Valley border its northeast.Range overview The Galiuro Mountains are a northwest-southeast trending range. The moderately wide San Pedro Valley and River border its southwest, abutting the northeast of the large sky island Santa Catalina Mountains range. The more narrow canyon northeast is the Aravaipa Valley with Aravaipa Creek. Mammoth, Arizona, northeast of Tucson and San Manuel, are the closest communities to the range on its northwest. Peaks and landforms The highest peak of the range is Bassett Peak (Western Apache: Dził Nazaayú´- "Mountain That Sits Here and There") at . Other peaks from north-to-south: Black Butte at , Sixtysix Peak, Mescal Peak, Horse
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Arturo Robledo Ocampo (2 November 1930, Manizales, Colombia - 2007, Bogotá) was a Colombian architect. He received a bachelor's from Instituto del Carmen in Bogotá in 1946 did postgraduate studies at Universidad Nacional de Colombia. His work is discussed in the book Arturo Robledo; La arquitecture como modo de vida by Beatriz Garcia Moreno. His work includes houses of the neighborhood Polo Club (1957), with his firm Robledo, Drews & Castro, Parque Metropolitano Simón Bolívar, and El Parque Residecial Calle 100 (1993). He is most known for his work on the Parque Metropolitano Simón Bolívar, the biggest and most importantin Bogotá. With his classmates Ignacio Piñeros and Hans Drews he wrote a thesis titles "Nuevo campus para la Universidad de los Andes" (New campus for the University of the Andes). After graduation, he worked in the firm of Cuéllar Serrano. He worked on the Banco Iteramericano de Desarrollo and with the Sociedad Robledo Drews y Castro Ltda. In 1982 he worked on the master plan for the Parque Metropolitano Simón Bolívar. He is considered a visionary of the city designed with a large plaza. The design was done together with residential plans for Nueva Santa Fe de Bogotá and
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Nigel George Farrell, born on 22 January 1953 in London, died 24 September 2011, was a television documentary film-maker who was a pioneer in what has been termed 'docu-soaps'. Educated at Christ's Hospital School in Sussex, he was the son of a doctor. He initially followed his father into medicine, but soon entered the world of television via local journalism. He worked on programmes such as South Today and Breakfast Time, and on BBC Radio 4 appeared on Ned Sherrin’s Saturday evening show Loose Ends. He will primarily be remembered for a 50-programme Radio 4 series called The Village (which
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Fox Henderson, Sr. (1853–1918) was a businessman and banking entrepreneur from Troy, Alabama. Early life Fox Henderson was born in Henderson, Alabama in 1853, the oldest son of Jeremiah Augustus "Gus" Henderson and Mildred Elizabeth Henderson (née Hill). The Henderson family moved to Troy, Alabama in 1869, where Jeremiah Henderson started a successful farm mercantile business, joined by his sons Fox and Jere Clemens ("Clem"). Business endeavors In 1881, at the young age of 28, Henderson and his brother Jere purchased the Pike County Bank, and changed the name to the Farmers and Merchants (F&M) Bank. For the next 18
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Bottisham is a village and civil parish in the East Cambridgeshire district of Cambridgeshire, England, about east of Cambridge, halfway to Newmarket. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 1,983, including Chittering, increasing to 2,199 at the 2011 Census. Church Bottisham has overhanging cottages and the tower of the Church of the Holy Trinity which has some of the finest fourteenth-century work in the county. The tower and the chancel with its stone seats are thirteenth century but the nave and aisles and porches are all from the fourteenth. The south aisle has a stone seat forand a description of the church at the Cambridgeshire Churches website. Education Bottisham is one of the group of villages in which the village colleges of Cambridgeshire were originally developed. Opened in 1937, Bottisham Village College was the second of Henry Morris' colleges. The first college was built at Sawston in 1930, and the idea of these magnificent buildings is to draw children over eleven from the villages round into an atmosphere in which they will develop a taste and a capacity for rural life and craftsmanship, with facilities for training themselves in whatever career they desire, and with opportunitieshaving previously been next to the village college. See also HMS Bottisham, a Ham class minesweeper that was named after the village RAF Bottisham, a World War II airfield for the RAF in the 1940s Bottisham and Lode railway station, a disused railway station near Lode References Mee, Arthur, The King's England, New revised edition, London, 1965, pps: 32-3. External links Captain (later Colonel) Soame Gambier Jenyns and the Charge of the Light Brigade Bottisham Parish Council Bottisham Village College Site Bottisham Primary School Site Bottisham Swimming Club Site Bottisham Football Club Site Bottisham Players - Amateur Drama Group Category:Villages
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Al-Meshkhab is an Iraqi city and capital of the Al-Meshkhab district situated in the Najaf Governorate, 35 km south of Najaf and 230 km south west of Baghdad. The city is located on the Al-Meshkhab Channel. The majority of the local population consists of Shia Islam belonging to Arabic tribes such as Alzurfy, Muhany and Al-Ghazali. The city was first established as a village in 1916 during the Ottoman Iraq era, promoted to subdistrict then finally upgraded to district capital in 2014. References Category:Cities in Iraq Category:Populated places along the Silk Road Category:Populated places on the Euphrates River Category:Populated places
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Ronald E. Powaski (15 June 15 1943 - November 2019) was an American historian and teacher. He taught American history in high schools and colleges in Ohio and wrote on the 20th century foreign policies of the United States and Europe. Biography Early life and education Ronald Powaski graduated from Cathedral Latin High School in 1960. He earned Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in History from John Carroll University in 1964 and 1966 and his PhD from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland in 1972 with a dissertation entitled "Great Britain and the Manchurian crisis, 1931-1933". CareerPowaski taught history at Euclid Senior High School in Euclid, Ohio. He also taught at Cleveland State University, John Carroll University, and Ashland University. In 1989 he published March to Armageddon: The United States and the Nuclear Arms Race, 1939 to the Present. In the next two decades, he published 11 books covering the nuclear arms race, the creation of NATO, World War II, presidential statecraft, and presidential foreign policies. Books Commentaries Powaski, Ronald E. "Bush's Nuclear Folly." America 189, no. 3 (August 4, 2003): 7. Education Research Complete, EBSCOhost (accessed March 30, 2010). References External links Ronald E. Powaski
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Wesley Erwin "Mac" Curtis, Jr. (January 16, 1939 – September 16, 2013) was an American rockabilly musician. Biography Born in Fort Worth, Texas, Curtis began playing guitar at the age of 12, entering local talent competitions. In 1954, his family moved to Weatherford, Texas, and while there he formed a band with two classmates, Jim and Ken Galbraith. They played at school events, but during one of the events, their show was shut down due to sexually suggestive on-stage movements. Instead, the group played locally, and in 1955 they were offered a deal with King Records, who released their debutWeiser's Rollin' Rock Records. In 1970, Mac Curtis had two hits on Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, "Early In The Morning" (#35) and "Honey, Don't" (#43). As a singer he was still active in the 1980s and 1990s. He was later elected to the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. He died on September 16, 2013 at age 74, following injuries received in a car accident a month earlier, after which he had undergone rehabilitation at a nursing home. Albums Singles Charted singles "The Quiet Kind" (1968) #64 C&W "The Sunshine Man" (1968) #54 C&W "Happiness Lives In This House" (1969) #63
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Final Transmission is the sixth studio album by the American rock band Cave In. The album was released on June 7, 2019 through Hydra Head Records. Final Transmission is Cave In's first studio album in eight years since 2011's White Silence and marks the final recordings of bassist Caleb Scofield, who died in a car crash a year prior to the album's release. The band promoted the album with online streams of "All Illusion" and "Shake My Blood" prior to its release. Background Since their last studio album, White Silence (2011), the members of Cave In would spend the ensuingeight years occupied with other musical endeavors. Stephen Brodsky formed the progressive hardcore punk band Mutoid Man in 2012, Adam McGrath and John-Robert Conners formed the psychedelic punk/noise rock band Nomad Stones, while Caleb Scofield continued working with Old Man Gloom and Zozobra. Other attributing factors to the eight-year gap between studio releases included Brodsky moving to New York, and difficulty agreeing creatively on what a new album should sound like. Cave In was more interested in "hanging out, get-togethers, parties and camping trips" as friends than working on a new album as members of a band, though new albumdiscussions were taking place over the years. Cave In began gathering for warm-up "jam sessions" in late 2017 and early 2018. In February 2018, the band formally began writing new material that would become their follow-up album to White Silence. After a full weekend of writing and recording in Massachusetts, Scofield drove back home to his family in New Hampshire. On that trip on March 28, 2018 Scofield got into a fatal car crash. The surviving members of Cave In put the new album on hold in favor of touring in honor of Scofield and raising funds for this family– a wife and two kids. Major memorial performances included a Boston show with Converge, a Los Angeles show with a one-off reunion of Isis and an acoustic performance with Brodsky and McGrath at Roadburn Festival – the latter of which was recorded and released as Live At Roadburn Festival 2018 – Tribute to Caleb Scofield. In January 2019, Cave In announced it would be releasing a new album featuring finished tracks from their 2018 sessions with Scofield. Recording and composition The tracks that appear on Final Transmission were originally recorded as demos that weren't intended to be publicly released.All songs were recorded live to hand-held four-track tape with minor digital additions of drums or guitars. The rough tracks were later polished and completed with mixing by Andrew Schneider and mastering by James Plotkin. McGrath said of the recording process: "It was very haphazard, and we didn't go into this thinking they were going to be released the way it is today. We were lucky enough to have Andrew Schneider go through everything and make it sound way better than we could have ever imagined." Cave In's previous album White Silence was also recorded in a practice space, andMcGrath noted that Scofield was hoping to not repeat that for the next album and record it in a proper studio. The band described the sound of the album as featuring "glimpses of past Cave In eras" from Jupiter (2000) through White Silence, which was a direction Scofield influenced. Recalling email correspondences between Scofield about the new material, Brodsky said "He was really digging the stuff that was spacey, heavy, a little bit weird, but with very pretty melodies and hooks. I think he was encouraging us to embrace what we've always been good at and what sets us apartwas largely composed by Scofield. The members of Cave In had emotional difficulty revisiting the demos and completing the album. On this topic, Brodsky said: "I don't think I've cried so much putting together any record [...] I don't try to look too deeply into how these things work, but these recordings are some of our last moments spending time with [Caleb]." At the time of the album's announcement, McGrath said he hadn't listened to the album all the way through yet. He said: "I feel really lucky to have this record. I love it, but I don't like listeningto it. I'm sure I'll listen to it eventually, but right now it's difficult. Just hearing him play kills me. I'll miss him forever." The lyrics and vocals for the track "Shake My Blood" were performed by all three surviving members of Cave In after the death of Scofield, which Brodsky said was the first time he was able to express his feelings in song form. He said: "It's a mix of extreme grief, frustration and anger. I was trying to do something to gain the clearest answer about whatever the next move might be." The title Final Transmission refersto this being the final release to include Scofield's contributions. When asked in an interview if the title could be a double entendre that also refers to this being the final album from Cave In, McGrath said he was unsure. He elaborated: "It was nice to get out there and play a few shows, but we're still going through the process of moving forward. I think we need to live through this first, [and] then we'll have an idea of what the future holds." Release Cave In will release Final Transmission on June 7, 2019 though Hydra Head Records. HydraHead has released the majority of Cave In's releases to date since 1997, but has been largely inactive since 2012. Half of all proceeds from album sales will go to Scofield's family. Before deciding to finish and release their 2018 demos as Final Transmission, Cave In struggled with how they wanted to continue. According to Brodsky, McGrath suggested they should do whatever they could to support the Scofield family, which was a "sobering moment" that "helped to start clear the fog of how to climb out of the depths of what we were experiencing." Cave In began promoting Final Transmissionwith an online stream of "All Illusion" on April 8, 2019. The track was selected to be the first release because it features Scofield's only lyrical contribution to the album. "All Illusion" originally had lyrics written entirely by Brodsky, but Cave In found some lyrics in Scofield's journal and incorporated them into the song. On May 14, Cave In made "Shake My Blood" available for online streaming. Reception On the review aggregator website Metacritic, Final Transmission has a score of 82 out of 100 based on 7 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". Many reviewers noted the record's background, with Kerrang!s NickRuskell stating that "as a tribute, it is wonderful," though he also notes that the album is "superb" without taking it into consideration. Writing for Under the Radar, Adam Turner-Heffer did comment that the album could've been made better had Scofield been present to give the band more time to complete it. Critics also draw out similarities Final Transmission has with the band's previous output such as Jupiter. The album was featured on Bandcamps "Bandcamp Daily" section on June 14, 2019. Track listing Personnel Cave In Stephen Brodsky - vocals, guitar, bass on “All Illusion” and “Shake My Blood” John-Robert
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The statue of Laocoön and His Sons, also called the Laocoön Group (), has been one of the most famous ancient sculptures ever since it was excavated in Rome in 1506 and placed on public display in the Vatican, where it remains. It is very likely the same statue praised in the highest terms by the main Roman writer on art, Pliny the Elder. The figures are near life-size and the group is a little over in height, showing the Trojan priest Laocoön and his sons Antiphantes and Thymbraeus being attacked by sea serpents. The group has been called "theprototypical icon of human agony" in Western art, and unlike the agony often depicted in Christian art showing the Passion of Jesus and martyrs, this suffering has no redemptive power or reward. The suffering is shown through the contorted expressions of the faces (Charles Darwin pointed out that Laocoön's bulging eyebrows are physiologically impossible), which are matched by the struggling bodies, especially that of Laocoön himself, with every part of his body straining. Pliny attributes the work, then in the palace of Emperor Titus, to three Greek sculptors from the island of Rhodes: Agesander, Athenodoros and Polydorus, but does notprobably an original work of the later period, continuing to use the Pergamene style of some two centuries earlier. In either case, it was probably commissioned for the home of a wealthy Roman, possibly of the Imperial family. Various dates have been suggested for the statue, ranging from about 200 BC to the 70s AD, though "a Julio-Claudian date [between 27 BC and 68 AD] ... is now preferred". Although mostly in excellent condition for an excavated sculpture, the group is missing several parts, and analysis suggests that it was remodelled in ancient times and has undergone a number ofrestorations since it was excavated. It is on display in the Museo Pio-Clementino, a part of the Vatican Museums. Subject The story of Laocoön, a Trojan priest, came from the Greek Epic Cycle on the Trojan Wars, though it is not mentioned by Homer. It had been the subject of a tragedy, now lost, by Sophocles and was mentioned by other Greek writers, though the events around the attack by the serpents vary considerably. The most famous account of these is now in Virgil's Aeneid (see the Aeneid quotation at the entry Laocoön), but this dates from between 29 and19 BC, which is possibly later than the sculpture. However, some scholars see the group as a depiction of the scene as described by Virgil. In Virgil, Laocoön was a priest of Poseidon who was killed with both his sons after attempting to expose the ruse of the Trojan Horse by striking it with a spear. In Sophocles, on the other hand, he was a priest of Apollo, who should have been celibate but had married. The serpents killed only the two sons, leaving Laocoön himself alive to suffer. In other versions he was killed for having had sex withhis wife in the temple of Poseidon, or simply making a sacrifice in the temple with his wife present. In this second group of versions, the snakes were sent by Poseidon and in the first by Poseidon and Athena, or Apollo, and the deaths were interpreted by the Trojans as proof that the horse was a sacred object. The two versions have rather different morals: Laocoön was either punished for doing wrong, or for being right. The snakes are depicted as both biting and constricting, and are probably intended as venomous, as in Virgil. Pietro Aretino thought so, praising thegroup in 1537: ...the two serpents, in attacking the three figures, produce the most striking semblances of fear, suffering and death. The youth embraced in the coils is fearful; the old man struck by the fangs is in torment; the child who has received the poison, dies. In at least one Greek telling of the story the older son is able to escape, and the composition seems to allow for that possibility. History Ancient times The style of the work is agreed to be that of the Hellenistic "Pergamene baroque" which arose in Greek Asia Minor around 200 BC, andwhose best known undoubtedly original work is the Pergamon Altar, dated c. 180-160 BC, and now in Berlin. Here the figure of Alcyoneus is shown in a pose and situation (including serpents) which is very similar to those of Laocoön, though the style is "looser and wilder in its principles" than the altar. The execution of the Laocoön is extremely fine throughout, and the composition very carefully calculated, even though it appears that the group underwent adjustments in ancient times. The two sons are rather small in scale compared to their father, but this adds to the impact of thecentral figure. The fine white marble used is often thought to be Greek, but has not been identified by analysis. Pliny In Pliny's survey of Greek and Roman stone sculpture in his encyclopedic Natural History (XXXVI, 37), he says: ....in the case of several works of very great excellence, the number of artists that have been engaged upon them has proved a considerable obstacle to the fame of each, no individual being able to engross the whole of the credit, and it being impossible to award it in due proportion to the names of the several artists combined. Such isthe case with the Laocoön, for example, in the palace of the Emperor Titus, a work that may be looked upon as preferable to any other production of the art of painting or of [bronze] statuary. It is sculptured from a single block, both the main figure as well as the children, and the serpents with their marvellous folds. This group was made in concert by three most eminent artists, Agesander, Polydorus, and Athenodorus, natives of Rhodes. It is generally accepted that this is the same work as is now in the Vatican. It is now very often thought thatthe three Rhodians were copyists, perhaps of a bronze sculpture from Pergamon, created around 200 BC. It is noteworthy that Pliny does not address this issue explicitly, in a way that suggests "he regards it as an original". Pliny states that it was located in the palace of the emperor Titus, and it is possible that it remained in the same place until 1506 (see "Findspot" section below). He also asserts that it was carved from a single piece of marble, though the Vatican work comprises at least seven interlocking pieces. The phrase translated above as "in concert" (de consiliiwere the same individuals. Though broadly similar in style, many aspects of the execution of the two groups are drastically different, with the Laocoon group of much higher quality and finish. Some scholars used to think that honorific inscriptions found at Lindos in Rhodes dated Agesander and Athenodoros, recorded as priests, to a period after 42 BC, making the years 42 to 20 BC the most likely date for the Laocoön group's creation. However the Sperlonga inscription, which also gives the fathers of the artists, makes it clear that at least Agesander is a different individual from the priest ofthe same name recorded at Lindos, though very possibly related. The names may have recurred across generations, a Rhodian habit, within the context of a family workshop (which might well have included the adoption of promising young sculptors). Altogether eight "signatures" (or labels) of an Athenodoros are found on sculptures or bases for them, five of these from Italy. Some, including that from Sperlonga, record his father as Agesander. The whole question remains the subject of academic debate. Renaissance The group was unearthed in February 1506 in the vineyard of Felice De Fredis; informed of the fact, Pope Julius II,an enthusiastic classicist, sent for his court artists. Michelangelo was called to the site of the unearthing of the statue immediately after its discovery, along with the Florentine architect Giuliano da Sangallo and his eleven-year-old son Francesco da Sangallo, later a sculptor, who wrote an account over sixty years later: The first time I was in Rome when I was very young, the pope was told about the discovery of some very beautiful statues in a vineyard near Santa Maria Maggiore. The pope ordered one of his officers to run and tell Giuliano da Sangallo to go and see them.So he set off immediately. Since Michelangelo Buonarroti was always to be found at our house, my father having summoned him and having assigned him the commission of the pope’s tomb, my father wanted him to come along, too. I joined up with my father and off we went. I climbed down to where the statues were when immediately my father said, "That is the Laocoön, which Pliny mentions". Then they dug the hole wider so that they could pull the statue out. As soon as it was visible everyone started to draw (or "started to have lunch"), all thewhile discoursing on ancient things, chatting as well about the ones in Florence. Julius acquired the group on March 23, giving De Fredis a job as a scribe as well as the customs revenues from one of the gates of Rome. By August the group was placed for public viewing in a niche in the wall of the brand new Belvedere Garden at the Vatican, now part of the Vatican Museums, which regard this as the start of their history. As yet it had no base, which was not added until 1511, and from various prints and drawings from thetime the older son appears to have been completely detached from the rest of the group. In July 1798 the statue was taken to France in the wake of the French conquest of Italy, though the replacement parts were left in Rome. It was on display when the new Musée Central des Arts, later the Musée Napoléon, opened at the Louvre in November 1800. A competition was announced for new parts to complete the composition, but there were no entries. Some plaster sections by François Girardon, over 150 years old, were used instead. After Napoleon's final defeat at the Battleof Waterloo in 1815 most (but certainly not all) the artworks plundered by the French were returned, and the Laocoön reached Rome in January 1816. Restorations When the statue was discovered, Laocoön's right arm was missing, along with part of the hand of one child and the right arm of the other, and various sections of snake. The older son, on the right, was detached from the other two figures. The age of the altar used as a seat by Laocoön remains uncertain. Artists and connoisseurs debated how the missing parts should be interpreted. Michelangelo suggested that the missing rightarms were originally bent back over the shoulder. Others, however, believed it was more appropriate to show the right arms extended outwards in a heroic gesture. According to Vasari, in about 1510 Bramante, the Pope's architect, held an informal contest among sculptors to make replacement right arms, which was judged by Raphael, and won by Jacopo Sansovino. The winner, in the outstretched position, was used in copies but not attached to the original group, which remained as it was until 1532, when Giovanni Antonio Montorsoli, a pupil of Michelangelo, added his even more straight version of Laocoön's outstretched arm, whichremained in place until modern times. In 1725-27 Agostino Cornacchini added a section to the younger son's arm, and after 1816 Antonio Canova tidied up the group after their return from Paris, without being convinced by the correctness of the additions but wishing to avoid a controversy. In 1906 Ludwig Pollak, archaeologist, art dealer and director of the Museo Barracco, discovered a fragment of a marble arm in a builder's yard in Rome, close to where the group was found. Noting a stylistic similarity to the Laocoön group he presented it to the Vatican Museums: it remained in their storeroomsfor half a century. In 1957 the museum decided that this arm—bent, as Michelangelo had suggested—had originally belonged to this Laocoön, and replaced it. According to Paolo Liverani: "Remarkably, despite the lack of a critical section, the join between the torso and the arm was guaranteed by a drill hole on one piece which aligned perfectly with a corresponding hole on the other." In the 1980s the statue was dismantled and reassembled, again with the Pollak arm incorporated. The restored portions of the children's arms and hands were removed. In the course of disassembly, it was possible to observe breaks,cuttings, metal tenons, and dowel holes which suggested that in antiquity, a more compact, three-dimensional pyramidal grouping of the three figures had been used or at least contemplated. According to Seymour Howard, both the Vatican group and the Sperlonga sculptures "show a similar taste for open and flexible pictorial organization that called for pyrotechnic piercing and lent itself to changes at the site, and in new situations". The more open, planographic composition along a plane, used in the restoration of the Laocoön group, has been interpreted as "apparently the result of serial reworkings by Roman Imperial as well as Renaissanceand modern craftsmen". A different reconstruction was proposed by Seymour Howard, to give "a more cohesive, baroque-looking and diagonally-set pyramidal composition", by turning the older son as much as 90°, with his back to the side of the altar, and looking towards the frontal viewer rather than at his father. Other suggestions have been made. Influence The discovery of the Laocoön made a great impression on Italian artists and continued to influence Italian art into the Baroque period. Michelangelo is known to have been particularly impressed by the massive scale of the work and its sensuous Hellenistic aesthetic, particularly itsdepiction of the male figures. The influence of the Laocoön, as well as the Belvedere Torso, is evidenced in many of Michelangelo's later sculptures, such as the Rebellious Slave and the Dying Slave, created for the tomb of Pope Julius II. Several of the ignudi and the figure of Haman in the Sistine Chapel ceiling draw on the figures. Raphael used the face of Laocoön for his Homer in his Parnassus in the Raphael Rooms, expressing blindness rather than pain. The Florentine sculptor Baccio Bandinelli was commissioned to make a copy by the Medici Pope Leo X. Bandinelli's version, whichanatomy. It has also been suggested that this woodcut was one of a number of Renaissance images that were made to reflect contemporary doubts as to the authenticity of the Laocoön Group, the 'aping' of the statue referring to the incorrect pose of the Trojan priest who was depicted in ancient art in the traditional sacrificial pose, with his leg raised to subdue the bull. Over 15 drawings of the group made by Rubens in Rome have survived, and the influence of the figures can be seen in many of his major works, including his Descent from the Cross inAntwerp Cathedral. The original was seized and taken to Paris by Napoleon Bonaparte after his conquest of Italy in 1799, and installed in a place of honour in the Musée Napoléon at the Louvre. Following the fall of Napoleon, it was returned by the Allies to the Vatican in 1816. Laocoön as an ideal of art Pliny's description of Laocoön as "a work to be preferred to all that the arts of painting and sculpture have produced" has led to a tradition which debates this claim that the sculpture is the greatest of all artworks. Johann Joachim Winkelmann (1717-1768) wrotenature, never ceases to open boundlessly before the mind. We examine, — we are impressed with it, — it produces its effect; but it can never be all comprehended, still less can its essence, its value, be expressed in words. The most unusual intervention in the debate, William Blake's annotated print Laocoön, surrounds the image with graffiti-like commentary in several languages, written in multiple directions. Blake presents the sculpture as a mediocre copy of a lost Israelite original, describing it as "Jehovah & his two Sons Satan & Adam as they were copied from the Cherubim Of Solomons Temple bythree Rhodians & applied to Natural Fact or History of Ilium". This reflects Blake's theory that the imitation of ancient Greek and Roman art was destructive to the creative imagination, and that Classical sculpture represented a banal naturalism in contrast to Judeo-Christian spiritual art. The central figure of Laocoön served as loose inspiration for the Indian in Horatio Greenough's The Rescue (1837–1850) which stood before the east facade of the United States Capitol for over 100 years. Near the end of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge self-describes "making a perfect Laocoön of himself with his stockings" in hiswith the unconvincing portrayal of the snakes: In 1910 the critic Irving Babbit used the title The New Laokoon: An Essay on the Confusion of the Arts for an essay on contemporary culture at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1940 Clement Greenberg adapted the concept for his own essay entitled Towards a Newer Laocoön in which he argued that abstract art now provided an ideal for artists to measure their work against. A 2007 exhibition at the Henry Moore Institute in turn copied this title while exhibiting work by modern artists influenced by the sculpture. Findspot The locationally of Augustus and patron of the arts. He bequeathed the gardens to Augustus in 8 BC, and Tiberius lived there after he returned to Rome as heir to Augustus in 2 AD. Pliny said the Laocoön was in his time at the palace of Titus (qui est in Titi imperatoris domo), then heir to his father Vespasian, but the location of Titus's residence remains unknown; the imperial estate of the Gardens of Maecenas may be a plausible candidate. If the Laocoön group was already in the location of the later findspot by the time Pliny saw it, it mighthave arrived there under Maecenas or any of the emperors. The extent of the grounds of Nero's Domus Aurea is now unclear, but they do not appear to have extended so far north or east, though the newly rediscovered findspot-location is not very far beyond them. Notes References Barkan, Leonard, Unearthing the Past: Archaeology and Aesthetics in the Making of Renaissance Culture, 1999, Yale University Press, , 978-0-300-08911-0 Beard, Mary, Times Literary Supplement, "Arms and the Man: The restoration and reinvention of classical sculpture", 2 February 2001, subscription required, reprinted in Confronting the Classics: Traditions, Adventures and Innovations, 2013 EBLthe Census database FlickR group "Responses To Laocoön", a collection of art inspired by the Laocoön group Lessing's Laocoon etext on books.google.com Laocoonte: variazioni sul mito, con una Galleria delle fonti letterarie e iconografiche su Laocoonte, a cura del Centro studi classicA, "La Rivista di Engramma" n. 50, luglio/settembre 2006 Nota sul ciclo di Sperlonga e sulle relazioni con il Laoocoonte Vaticano, a cura del Centro studi classicA, "La Rivista di Engramma" n. 50. luglio/settembre 2006 Nota sulle interpretazioni del passo di Plinio, Nat. Hist. XXXVI, 37, a cura del Centro studi classicA, "La Rivista di Engramma" n. 50. luglio/settembre
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Sweetacres is the second album from Auckland band The Nudie Suits. It was recorded between 2004 – 2005 in Melbourne, Australia and in Auckland. Track listing "Inheriting The Stereo" – 2:44 "Cabin Blues" – 2:48 "Harangue" – 2:43 "Sweetacres" – 4:03 "Bright Lights" – 3:08 "At The Old Diary" – 4:02 "Hubba Hubba Mother" – 3:17 "Here Comes Bronco" – 2:59 "Losing To Rock'n'Roll" – 2:27 "I've Had Enough" - 3:07 Personnel Mark Lyons - Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Bass, Keyboards, Percussion, Harmonica Dionne Taylor - Hawaiian Steel Guitar, Harmony Vocals Tam Taylor - Violin, Keyboards, Harmony Vocals Mark Elton -
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Simeonov (, ) is a Bulgarian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Simeonova or Simionova. It may refer to Albena Simeonova (born 1964), Bulgarian environmental activist Aleksandar Simeonov (disambiguation) Dimitar Simeonov (born 1987), Bulgarian football player Filipa Simeonova (born 1991), Bulgarian rhythmic gymnast Ivan Simeonov (born 1926), Bulgarian sprint canoer Kaspar Simeonov (born 1955), Bulgarian volleyball player Mihail Simeonov (born 1929), Bulgarian artist Nikola Simeonov (born 1939), Bulgarian Olympic marathon runner Simeon Simeonov (disambiguation) Svetlin Simeonov (born 1975), Bulgarian football midfielder Svilen Simeonov (born 1974), Bulgarian football player Todor Simeonov (born 1976), Bulgarian football player Valeri Simeonov (born 1955), Bulgarian
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Derwin Alonzo James Jr. (born August 3, 1996) is an American football strong safety for the Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Florida State. He was drafted by the Chargers in the first round of the 2018 NFL Draft. Early years James attended Auburndale High School in Auburndale, Florida before transferring to his hometown Haines City High School in Haines City, Florida. He was rated by Rivals.com as a five-star recruit and was ranked as the best safety and fifth best player overall in his class. James committed to Florida State Universityfree safety prospect in the draft by DraftScout.com and was ranked the second best safety by NFL analyst Mike Mayock and Sports Illustrated. The Los Angeles Chargers selected James in the first round (17th overall) in the 2018 NFL Draft. James was the second safety drafted in 2018, behind Alabama safety Minkah Fitzpatrick (11th overall, Miami Dolphins). On June 1, 2018, the Los Angeles Chargers signed James to a fully guaranteed four-year, $12.38 million contract that includes a signing bonus of $7.09 million. 2018 season James entered training camp slated as the starting strong safety, but suffered a hamstring injurythat limited his progress. He also saw competition for the role from veterans Adrian Phillips and Rayshawn Jenkins. Head coach Anthony Lynn named James the starting strong safety to begin the regular season, alongside free safety Jahleel Addae. He made his professional regular season debut and first career start in the Los Angeles Chargers' season-opener against the Kansas City Chiefs and recorded three combined tackles, broke up two passes, and made his first career sack on quarterback Patrick Mahomes in their 38–28 loss. On September 23, 2018, James collected nine combined tackles, deflected a pass, and made his first professionalrequired surgery, requiring a maximum of three months to recover. He was placed on injured reserve on September 1, 2019. He was designated for return from injured reserve on November 25, 2019, and began practicing with the team again. He was activated on November 30, 2019. Career Statistics Personal life James is a cousin of Vince Williams and Karlos Williams, both former Florida State Seminoles players, as well as Mike James, former Miami Hurricanes running back. He is also the second cousin of former Miami Hurricanes and NFL star running back Edgerrin James. References External links Florida State Seminoles bio
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Grenagh GAA is a Gaelic Football and hurling club based in the village of Grenagh in Cork, Ireland. The club participates in Cork GAA competitions and in Muskerry board competitions. In 2010, the club played in the Premier division of the Cork Intermediate Football Championship and in Mid Cork Junior Hurling Championship. Their rivals are local side Whitechurch. Grenagh GAA club was established in 1934. Achievements Cork Intermediate A Football Championship Winners (2) 2007, 2013 Cork Junior Football Championship Runners-Up 2006 Cork Junior Hurling Championship Winners (1) 2013 Runners-Up 1958, 2004 Cork Minor B Hurling Championship Winners (1) 1997 Cork
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The First Battle of Krithia () was the first Allied attempt to advance in the Battle of Gallipoli during the First World War. Starting on 28 April, three days after the Landing at Cape Helles, the attack broke down due to the defensive power of the Ottoman opposing forces, poor leadership and planning, lack of communications and exhaustion and demoralisation of the troops. Prelude On the morning of 25 April 1915, the 29th Division (Major General Aylmer Hunter-Weston), landed on five beaches around Cape Helles at the southern tip of the Gallipoli peninsula in the Ottoman Empire. The main landingstwo divisions, rather than two understrength regiments fighting a delaying action. Battle The battle commenced around on 28 April with a naval bombardment. The plan of advance was for the French to hold position on the right while the British line would pivot, capturing Krithia and assailing Achi Baba from the south and west. The overly-complex plan was poorly communicated to the brigade and battalion commanders of the 29th Division who would make the attack. Hunter-Weston remained far from the front; because of this, he was not able to exert any control as the attack developed. The initial advances weremachine gun post near 'Y' Beach. No further advance would be made up the ravine until the 1/6th Gurkha Rifles captured the post on the night of This involved them going up a vertical slope, which had defeated the Royal Marine Light Infantry and the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. The site became known as 'Gurkha Bluff'. The exhausted, demoralised and virtually leaderless British troops could go no further in the face of stiffening Ottoman resistance. In places, Ottoman counter-attacks drove the British back to their starting positions. By the attack was called off. Aftermath About troops participated in the battle andsuffered and casualties. The scale and duration of the battle was minor compared to later fighting but the First Battle of Krithia was one of the most significant of the campaign as it proved that the original British assumption of a swift victory over an indifferent enemy was mistaken. Helles became the scene of numerous attrition battles, in which success would be measured by an advance of or the capture of a trench. Footnotes References External links First Battle of Krithia at Firstworldwar.com Category:Conflicts in 1915 Category:1915 in the Ottoman Empire Category:Battles of the Gallipoli campaign Category:Battles of World War
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Medallions (the original Polish title: Medaliony) is a book consisting of eight short stories by the Polish author Zofia Nałkowska. The book was originally published in 1946, soon after the end of World War II. In it, Nałkowska calmly related selected stories of Nazi atrocities in Poland and the fates of their victims. Nałkowska was a member of a special committee for the investigation of Nazi crimes that took place in Poland, where she had learned facts directly from victims and witnesses. Part of the text was published in English in the Introduction to Modern Polish Literature edited by Adam
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Syarhey Ivanavich Nikifarenka (; ; born 18 February 1978) is a Belarusian football coach and a former player. He is the manager for the Under-19 squad of Shakhtyor Soligorsk. He spent the majority of his career in Shakhtyor Soligorsk. He is Shakhtyor's all-time top scorer and was one of the most prolific scorers of Belarusian League in the late 1990s and 2000s. From 2015 till 2016 he worked as a Shakhtyor Soligorsk head coach. Honours Shakhtyor Soligorsk Belarusian Premier League champion: 2005 Belarusian Cup winner: 2003–04 References External links Player profile on official site Category:1978 births Category:Living people Category:People from
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"Mignon Mignon" is a 2010 song recorded by virtual singing groundhog René la Taupe. It was the second single from the album Les Aventures de René la Taupe and was released in July 2010. It became a number-one hit in France. Background and lyrics Commercial Director of Fox Mobile France Stéphane Boulissière said: "We had a big commercial success with "Merde" with over 100,000 downloads. At the time we proposed this song to a record company but nobody wanted it. We believed in it and we launched "Mignon Mignon"". The song was initially composed for being just a ringtone. Themusic video was released on the Internet and the music video became immediately an Internet meme, with over 5 million views on YouTube in two months. A few time after, the song was available digitally, then was released as CD single in late August 2010. The single, remixed, instrumental and music video versions were all included in the album. The lyrics, written by Christian Büttner, Hank Hobson and Marcello Pagin, suggest the chubby look of the animal that makes it adorable. The song deals with topics of overweight and scatology. According to Boulissière, the lyrics are "naive and funny. Successcomes from there. These lyrics are a simple opposing view to everything that takes place in French music. And the substance of lyrics - a character who accepts and enjoys the beads - goes against the cult of thin and tanned body." He admitted that the song was performed to generate controversy, and the vulgarity and grammar mistakes in the lyrics were "wanted to create a marketing buzz, to get people talking". The song was not finely-worked. There was also a derivative version by Jamba, a brand of Fox Mobile Group under the title "Mauvais, Mauvais" (English: "Bad, Bad") releasedafter the failure of the France team in the 2010 FIFA World Cup but it was not successful. Chart performances "Mignon, Mignon" debuted at number 12 on the French Digital Chart on 17 July 2010, then climbed to number two where it remained for three weeks and topped the chart for two weeks, then fell off and totaled 18 weeks in the top 50. The success of the single generated an increase of the ringtone sales, becoming one of the most downloaded of the middle of 2010 with help from Fun Radio. On the chart edition of 4 September, thesingle entered the French Physical Chart at number one. With over 17,300 units sold in this first week, the single performed the highest weekly sales of a single in 2010 in France. The single stayed atop for 13 weeks and eventually become the best-selling single of the year. In 2010 only, the song sold 114,546 units and 117,389 downloads. Controversy In September 2010, pianist and composer Serge Gamany stated that "Mignon Mignon" was actually a plagiarism of one of his songs, "Au Parc de Mougins", a medley for piano and accordion, which was publicly performed weekly during over a year
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Urse d'Abetot (c. 1040 – 1108), first feudal baron of Salwarpe in Worcestershire, was a Norman who followed King William the Conqueror to England, and served as Sheriff of Worcestershire in about 1069. Little is known of his origins. Although Urse's feudal overlord in Normandy was present at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, there is no evidence that Urse himself took part in the invasion. Urse built the earliest form of Worcester Castle in Worcester, which encroached on the cathedral cemetery there, earning him a curse from the Archbishop of York. Urse helped to put down a rebellion againstconquest of England On 5 January 1066 Edward the Confessor, King of England, died. Edward's lack of children meant there was no clear legitimate successor, leading eventually to a succession dispute. Some medieval writers state that shortly before Edward's death he named his brother-in-law, Harold Godwinson, Earl of Wessex, as his heir. Others claim that Edward had promised the throne to his cousin, William, Duke of Normandy, a powerful autonomous ruler in northern France. Harold, the most powerful English noble, took the initiative and was crowned king on 6 January. William, lacking Harold's proximity to the centres of English royalis the case with many of the documents mentioning Urse. Other sources of information on Urse are Domesday Book, which mentions his landholdings in 1086, and a number of chronicles, including William of Malmesbury's Gesta pontificum Anglorum, Florence of Worcester's Chronicon ex chronicis, and Hemming's Cartulary, a mixed chronicle and cartulary from Worcester Cathedral. There are also mentions of Urse in Norman sources, such as charters for Saint-Georges de Boscherville Abbey. Family and early life Urse came from an undistinguished family, and made his way on military reputation. He was probably born in about 1040, but the exact date isunknown. He was from St Jean d'Abbetot in Normandy, where his family had lands, and where he himself was a tenant of the lords of Tancarville. Other tenants of the Tancarville lords included Robert d'Abetot and his wife Lesza, who held lands close to St Jean d'Abbetot in the early 12th century; despite the name, it is not certain that Robert d'Abetot was related to Urse. Urse had a brother usually called Robert Despenser, sometimes known as Robert fitz Thurstin, who also became a royal official. The historian Emma Mason suggested that Urse may have been a nickname rather thana forename, perhaps given on account of his tenacious temperament. Urse's usual last name derives from his ancestral village in Normandy. His brother's usual last name of Despenser derives from his office, that of dispenser, in the royal household. Ralph, the Lord of Tancarville during the reign of King William I of England and Urse's overlord in Normandy, fought at the Battle of Hastings, but there is no evidence that Urse himself was present. He is probably the same person as the "Urse d'Abetot" who was a witness to a charter of William before the invasion of England. The historianII Rufus and Henry I. While William I granted the duchy of Normandy to his eldest son, Robert Curthose, England went to his second surviving son, William Rufus. Henry (later Henry I), the youngest son, was given a sum of money. In 1088, shortly after William Rufus became king, Urse was present at the trial of William de St-Calais, Bishop of Durham, and is mentioned in De Iniusta Vexacione Willelmi Episcopi Primi, a contemporary account of the trial. During William I's reign, Urse had served the king mainly as a regional official, but during William II's reign Urse began toratified between the brothers. During Henry's reign, the king regranted Urse's lands to him, with some of them now granted as a tenant-in-chief when previously Urse had held those lands as an under-tenant, and not directly from the king. Urse's lands at Salwarpe were previously held by Roger of Montgomery, but were granted to Urse as a direct tenant of the king when Roger's son, Robert of Belesme, was outlawed in 1102. Urse continued to attest many of Henry's charters until 1108, although he did not use the title of "constable" in those charters. Sometime between May and July 1108,could be used in what type of case. Death and legacy Urse died some time in 1108. Little is known of his wife, Alice, whose death is unrecorded. Urse was succeeded as sheriff by his son Roger d'Abetot, who was exiled in about 1110 and forfeited the office of sheriff. Roger's successor, Osbert d'Abetot, was probably Urse's brother. Urse also had a daughter, probably named Emmeline, who married Walter de Beauchamp. Walter succeeded to Urse's lands after Roger's exile. A charter for the Abbey of Saint-Georges, Boscherville may indicate that Urse had a second son, named Robert. Urse may also
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Plokštinė missile base () was an underground base of the Soviet Union. It was built near Plokščiai village, north of Plungė, in the sparsely populated Plokštinė forest near Plateliai Lake, Samogitia, Lithuania. This was the first nuclear missile base of the Soviet Union, built to house underground R-12 Dvina ballistic medium-range missiles. In 2012, a Cold War Museum was opened at the site. The site appears to have been operated by the 79th Guards Missile Regiment, part of the 29th Guards Rocket Division. History Construction When the United States started building underground military bases in the late 1950s, the SovietUnion felt the need to maintain its military capabilities. Therefore, in September 1960, the Soviet Union started the rapid construction of an underground military base. It was one of the first in the Soviet Union, near the village of Plokščiai in the Lithuanian SSR. The chosen location was above sea level, which meant that its missiles could reach all of the European NATO members and NATO member Turkey. In addition, the soil was easy to excavate and the local population was small. There were no bigger towns or villages nearby, just isolated houses whose inhabitants were paid 4,500 rubles to
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Relations:[["Plokštinė missile base", "country", "Lithuania"], ["Plokštinė missile base", "instance of", "Military base"]] |
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Amy's Eyes is a children's fantasy novel by Richard Kennedy, published by Harper & Row in 1985, and illustrated by Richard Egielski. Plot summary The narrative begins in an orphanage where Amy inadvertently brings her sailor doll to life. It continues on a ship where he has become captain and she has transformed into a doll herself. The book is a principally a coming-of-age tale and a nautical adventure involving pirates and the search for lost treasure. The story contains whimsical elements such as a sailing ship crewed by Mother Goose animals, but also has darker themes including the obsession
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| Nodes:[["Amy's Eyes", {"description":'book'}], ["Richard Egielski", {}]]
Relations:[["Amy's Eyes", "illustrator", "Richard Egielski"]] |
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Édouard Ignacz Weiczorkiewicz (; July 17, 1926 – October 30, 2010) was a French-born Canadian professional wrestler better known by his ring name Édouard Carpentier. In a career that spanned from the 1950s into the 1970s, he garnered several world championships. Early life Weiczorkiewicz was born in 1926 in Roanne, Loire, France to a Russian father and a Polish mother. He joined the French resistance during World War II under the German occupation and was awarded the Croix de Guerre and the Croix du combattant medals by the French government at the close of the war. He moved to Montreal,Québec in 1956 and became a Canadian citizen. He also became an all around athlete with gymnastic skills. Professional wrestling career Carpentier was a crowd favourite, one of the first wrestlers to delight fans with acrobatic leaps from the turnbuckles and a variety of other aerial manoeuvres such as the rope-aided twisting headscissors. He was always a fan favourite in his bouts and was matched against numerous villains, perhaps the most well known of whom was the legendary Killer Kowalski. The highpoint of his career was his NWA World Heavyweight Championship reign from 1956 to 1957. He won the titlein a disputed contest against Lou Thesz on 14 June 1957. Some NWA territories and officials recognized the disputed win as a legitimate title change, while others did not. This led to the split of the NWA and led to the creation of other organizations, all with their own world titles. He was later recognized as the first holder of the Omaha version of the World Heavyweight Championship. He eventually dropped the belt to Verne Gagne.. The Omaha title was unified with the AWA World Heavyweight Championship in 1963. Carpentier headlined Madison Square Garden three times in 1962 with tagteam partner Bobo Brazil. They had two main events against Buddy Rogers & Handsome Johnny Barend; another against Rogers & Killer Kowalski. He teamed numerous times with Antonino Rocca, as well as with Vittorio Apollo. In solo matches at the Garden, he defeated Giant Baba, Skull Murphy, Magnificent Maurice, and Hans Mortier. After his retirement, Carpentier operated a school for teaching professional wrestling skills. He also operated in the early 1980s as a babyface colour commentator, alongside heel play-by-play host Guy Hauray, for the Montreal-based Grand Prix Wrestling, and then, together for the World Wrestling Federation, when the WWF boughtthe Montreal territory in 1985. They hosted the French edition of the WWF television show Superstars, sold to French-speaking countries. He was replaced by former Québécois wrestler Raymond Rougeau in 1992. Death On 30 October 2010, Carpentier died of a heart attack at his home in Montreal, aged 84. He had also suffered a heart attack in 2000. Carpentier had been in poor health for many years, battered from his acrobatic, high-flying style. Championships and accomplishments Atlantic Athletic Commission Atlantic Athletic Commission World Heavyweight Championship (1 time) American Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Championship (Omaha version) (1 time) International Wrestling AllianceIWA World Heavyweight Championship (Chicago version) (1 time) Lutte Internationale Canadian International Heavyweight Championship (2 times) Canadian International Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Mad Dog Vachon Montreal Athletic Commission / International Wrestling Alliance International Heavyweight Championship (Montreal version) (5 times) National Wrestling Alliance NWA World Heavyweight Championship (1 time)1 North American Wrestling Alliance/Worldwide Wrestling Associates/NWA Hollywood Wrestling NWA Americas Heavyweight Championship (1 time) WWA World Heavyweight Championship (Los Angeles version) (2 times) WWA World Tag Team Championship (2 times) - with Ernie Ladd (1) and Bob Ellis (1) WWA International Television Tag Team Championship (4 times) - withSandor Szabo (2), Nick Bockwinkel (1) and Ernie Ladd (1) Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum (Class of 2010) Stampede Wrestling Stampede Wrestling Hall of Fame (Class of 1995) Wrestling Observer Newsletter awards Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame (Class of 1997) 1Carpentier was awarded the title by disqualification when Thesz could not continue the match due to a back injury. For 71 days, the NWA recognized the title as being in dispute between Carpentier and Thesz. References External links Carpentier at the SLAM! Wrestling Canadian Hall of Fame - a 1961 documentary by the NFB. Category:1926 births Category:2010
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St Cecilia's College is a secondary school located in Derry, Northern Ireland. It is a Catholic-maintained girls' school with an enrolment of 947 pupils aged 11–18 and is located in the Creggan area of Derry. It has 60 teaching staff. The college had decanted to the Northland Road to facilitate the construction of a new building which opened for the start of term in September 2010. It is within the Western Education and Library Board area. In March 2001 a programme for the extension and refurbishment of the College was announced under Public-private partnership arrangements. In March 2006 it wasannounced that the College would be granted specialist status from September 2006. As a specialist school it will receive £100 per pupil for the four years of designation and a £100,000 capital grant to support development of the specialism. St Cecilia's College new campus was built on the site of the original college on Blighs Lane, Creggan. St Cecilias new sports pavilion and playing fields were built on the grounds of St Marys old site in Creggan. Motto St Cecilia's College's motto is 'Aspire, Endeavour, Achieve.' References Category:Catholic secondary schools in Northern Ireland Category:Secondary schools in Derry (city) Category:Girls' schools
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| Nodes:[["St Cecilia's College", {"description":'school in Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland'}], ["School", {}]]
Relations:[["St Cecilia's College", "instance of", "School"]] |
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Inna Vladimirovna Makarova (; 28 July 1926 – 25 March 2020) was a Soviet and Russian actress. She grew up in Novosibirsk. In 1948 she graduated from the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in Moscow and began to work as an actress at the National Film Actors' Theatre. In 1949, she was awarded the Stalin Prize for her role as Lyubov Shevtsova in Sergei Gerasimov's The Young Guard. In 1985, she was awarded the designation of People's Artist of the USSR. Inna Makarova was married to Sergei Bondarchuk and is the mother of Natalya Bondarchuk. Makarova died in Moscow on 25March 2020 at the age of 93. Selected filmography It Happened in the Donbass (1945) The Young Guard (1948) The Return of Vasili Bortnikov (1953) The Rumyantsev Case (1956) The Height (1957) My Beloved (1958) The Girls (1961) Balzaminov's Marriage (1964) The Big Ore (1964) Crime and Punishment (1970) Russian Field (1971) Incorrigible Liar (1973) It Is Not Evening Yet (1973) Dead Souls (1984) Strawberries (1996) Pushkin: The Last Duel (2006) The Mystery of the Snow Queen (2014) References External links Biography Category:1928 births Category:2020 deaths Category:Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery Category:Russian film actresses Category:People's Artists of the USSR Category:Stalin Prize
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Edward Elsmere Montgomery McCausland, (11 May 1865 – 9 November 1936) was an Australian born sportsperson who as a rugby footballer toured with the 1888–89 New Zealand Native football team. The touring party played predominantly rugby union, but also a small number of association football and Victorian rules football matches. McCausland was also a cricketer of note and is recorded to have represented Wellington in a First-class match. Personal history McCausland was born in Jamieson, Victoria Australia in 1865 to John Conyngham McCausland and his wife Sarah. McCausland's parents were originally from County Armagh in Ireland, but emigrated to Australiawhere his father became a manager for the Union Bank of Australia. Around 1880 the family moved to New Zealand and McCausland followed his father into banking. By 1892 McCausland had returned to Australia, marrying Alice Shore that year in St Leonards, New South Wales. The marriage was short lived and in 1895 he remarried to Ada Barber, the couple settling in Goulburn. The couple had six sons. In 1930 Ada died and in 1932 McCausland married again, to Alice Maud Barber, the sister of his second wife. He died in Sydney in 1936 at the age of 71. NewZealand Natives McCausland was a keen sportsman as a youth, and played rugby while a teenager, representing the New Zealand Bank's team at the age of 18. By 1886 McCausland was a regular three-quarter with Wellington and by 1888 he represented both Gordon and Auckland. When the 1888 New Zealand Natives rugby union team was being selected, McCausland was not an initial choice. As an employee of the Bank of New Zealand, it would have required a lengthy leave of absence, and McCausland was not part of Natives' captain Joe Warbrick's plans. When Warbrick broke a bone in his foot,McCausland was offered a place on the team and after obtaining a 12-month leave of absence from his employer he stepped in as a replacement for the injured captain. His duties for the Natives also included tour secretary and stand in umpire. He was the best goal-kicker in the Native side, and on the British leg of their tour scored 151 points in 63 matches – making him the highest points scorer on tour. It was most likely due to only being granted 12 months leave from his banking position that McCausland returned to New Zealand following the Victorian leg
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Alexandre de Riquer i Ynglada, 7th Count of Casa Dávalos () (Born 3 May 1856 - 13 November 1920), was a versatile artist intellectual and Catalan designer, illustrator, painter, engraver, writer and poet. He was one of the leading figures of Modernisme in Catalonia. He belonged to an aristocratic family, the Counts of Casa Dávalos. His father, Martí de Riquer, Marquis of Benavent, was a senior leader of the Carlist of Catalonia, while his mother, Elisea Ynglada, belonged to a family of intellectuals and artists (including writers such as Joseph and Wifred Coroleu and painter Ricard Modest Urgell). In 1885,drawing classes he enrolled in the School of Fine Arts in Toulouse of Languedoc, France. Then returned to Barcelona to continue his studies at the art school of La Llotja "where he was to study for several years under Tomas Padro, Claudi Lorenzale and, in particular, Antoni Caba, the teacher who he most admired." He entered the world of publishing through the guidance of his friend, writer and illustrator Apel-les Mestres. "In 1876, Riquer took over some of his work on ornamental lettering and cover illustration," which led to a collaborative publishing work which brought great impact on Riquer's creativeactivity. By 1879, he is becoming known in the art world. The diversification of his work continued in the following years by designing jewelry, programs, furniture decoration and ceramic painting. In the year 1894, he was introduced to the movement of the pre-Raphaelites. His first trip to London in 1894 is where he "discovered modern poster and that the idea of propagating the form was embraced as a missionary undertaking. The artist's view of his role in [Barcelona]: Posters! Why, ever since I saw the first of the new posters the thing tempted me so strongly that I offered todo tradesmen's posters her for nothing; not one would listen to me. English art and Japanese art would cause a great influence on his creations. Riquer distinguished himself as a graphic designer with great drawing skills. He made posters, etchings, illustrations in books and magazines, certificates, postcards, stamps, menus, sheet music, business cards and bookplates (which Lluís de Yebra documented 142 articles between 1900 and 1924). He died in Palma de Mallorca in 1920. "His library and the undispersed part of his collections were acquired after his death by the Barcelona Museums and the National Library of Catalonia." Training 1869-1871:
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Atotoztli () or Huitzilxochtzin () was a daughter of the Aztec emperor Moctezuma I and Chichimecacihuatzin I, the daughter of Cuauhtototzin, the ruler of Cuauhnahuac. She married Tezozomoc, son of the previous emperor Itzcoatl, and gave birth to three sons who would later become emperors themselves: Axayacatl, Tizoc, and Ahuitzotl. Some sources indicate she served as regent or even huetlatoani herself. The Anales de Tula and Relación de la Genealogía state she ruled the Triple Alliance herself, possibly for as long as 30 years. If true, the records of the Mexica may have omitted her from the records because she
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| Nodes:[["Atotoztli II", {"description":'daughter of the Aztec emperor Moctezuma I'}], ["Ahuitzotl", {}], ["Chichimecacihuatzin I", {}], ["Moctezuma I", {}]]
Relations:[["Atotoztli II", "child", "Ahuitzotl"], ["Atotoztli II", "mother", "Chichimecacihuatzin I"], ["Atotoztli II", "father", "Moctezuma I"]] |
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The Moçâmedes Railway () is an 860 km railway line in Angola, between Moçâmedes and Menongue. The line is operated by the company Caminhos de Ferro de Moçâmedes E.P. The port city of Moçâmedes was renamed Namibe between 1985 and 2016, so the railway was sometimes called the Namibe Railway (). However, the railway company retained its original legal name. Its cargo flow point is made through the port of Namibe. History Construction began on the railway in 1905, when Angola was a Portuguese colony. The railway was opened to traffic in 1910, and continued to be extended inland untilit reached its current terminus at Menongue (formerly Serpa Pinto) in December 1961. The line was originally built with narrow gauge track, but it was re-gauged to Cape gauge in 1950, matching the gauge of other lines in Angola and southern Africa. After Angola obtained its independence from Portugal in 1975, the Angolan Civil War broke out, resulting in the destruction of most of Angola's railway infrastructure. When the fighting ended in 2002, the Angolan government sought to restore rail service. The China Hyway Group rebuilt the Moçâmedes Railway between 2006 and 2015. The railway is expected to serve mines
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Relations:[["Moçâmedes Railway", "terminus", "Moçâmedes"], ["Moçâmedes Railway", "country", "Angola"]] |
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Vance Arnold and the Avengers - Live at the Esquire Club Recorded live in Sheffield, England, 1963. A live recording that lay dormant for over 30 years sheds light on Joe Cocker's early career when he was an apprentice gas-fitter, at the time performing as Vance Arnold & The Avengers. The recording was made live on stage with a reel to reel tape by his first manager (The Mad Hatter) Terry Thornton, owner of the Esquire Club, Leadmill Road, Sheffield. Track listing Sixteen Tons (Merle Travis)- 2:57 Money (That's What I Want) (Barrett Strong) Georgia On My Mind (Hoagy Carmichael,
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| Nodes:[["Vance Arnold & The Avengers", {"description":'album by Joe Cocker', "alias":['Vance Arnold and the Avengers - Live at the Esquire Club']}], ["Joe Cocker", {}]]
Relations:[["Vance Arnold & The Avengers", "performer", "Joe Cocker"]] |
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The Milwaukee County Historical Society, also known as MCHS, is a local historical society in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Founded in 1935, the organization was formed to preserve, collect, recognize, and make available materials related to Milwaukee County history. It is located in downtown Milwaukee in the former Second Ward Savings Bank building. MCHS houses the Harry H. Anderson Research Library and a museum. The library collects and preserves manuscripts, records, photographs, and family history information. The museum preserves three-dimensional artifacts related to Milwaukee County history, including paintings, ribbons, uniforms, flags, furniture, and china in a collection of over 20,000 items.Locations In addition to the main museum and research library, the MCHS owns three historic house museums and one historic site: the Lowell Damon House in Wauwatosa; the Kilbourntown House in Estabrook Park; and the Jeremiah Curtin House and Trimborn Farm in Greendale. Benjamin Church House The Benjamin Church House (also known as Kilbourntown House), a wood and brick residence, was built during 1843–1844 by a pioneer carpenter of that name in Kilbourntown, a settlement on the west side of the Milwaukee River. In 1846, Kilbourntown merged with Juneautown on the east side of the river and Walker's Point to
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Relations:[["Milwaukee County Historical Society", "inception", "1935"], ["Milwaukee County Historical Society", "instance of", "Museum"]] |
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John Patrick Murtha Jr. (; June 17, 1932 – February 8, 2010) was an American politician from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Murtha, a Democrat, represented Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1974 until his death in 2010. He is the longest-serving member ever of the United States House of Representatives from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. A former Marine Corps officer, Murtha was the first Vietnam War veteran elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. A member of the Pennsylvania House from 1969 to 1974, he narrowly won a special election to Congress in 1974and was successively reelected every two years until his death. In the first decade of the 21st century, Murtha had been best known for his calls for a withdrawal of American forces in Iraq, as well as questions about his ethics. In 2006, after the Democrats won control of Congress in the 2006 midterm elections he made a failed bid to be elected House Majority Leader during the 110th Congress (2007–2009) with the support of the new House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi. He lost to Steny Hoyer of Maryland. After the Republicans' defeat to the Democratic Majority in 2006 Murtha re-assumedhis chairmanship of the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee. He had previously chaired this subcommittee from 1989 to 1995 and served as its ranking member from 1995 to 2007. Background Murtha was born into an Irish-American family in New Martinsville, West Virginia, near the border with Ohio and Pennsylvania, and grew up in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, a largely suburban county east of Pittsburgh. He was the son of Mary Edna (née Ray) and John Patrick Murtha Sr. As a youth, he became an Eagle Scout. He also worked delivering newspapers and at a gas station before graduating from The Kiski School,an all-male boarding school in Saltsburg, Pennsylvania. Murtha left Washington and Jefferson College in 1952 to join the Marine Corps and was awarded the American Spirit Honor Medal for displaying outstanding leadership qualities during training. He became a drill instructor at Parris Island and was selected for Officer Candidate School at Quantico, Virginia. He was then assigned to the Second Marine Division, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. As an undergraduate, Murtha was initiated into the Kappa Sigma Fraternity. Murtha remained in the Marine Forces Reserve and ran a small business, Johnstown Minute Car Wash (which still operates in the West Endsection of Johnstown). He also attended the University of Pittsburgh on the G.I. Bill, and received a degree in economics. Murtha later took graduate courses from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He married his wife Joyce on June 10, 1955. They had three children: daughter Donna and twin sons Patrick and John M., who live in Johnstown. Murtha left the Marines in 1955. He remained in the Reserves after his discharge from active duty until he volunteered for service in the Vietnam War, serving from 1966 to 1967, serving as a battalion staff officer (S-2 Intelligence Section), receiving the BronzeStar with Valor device, two Purple Hearts, and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. He retired from the Marine Corps Reserve as a colonel in 1990, receiving the Navy Distinguished Service Medal. Political career Soon after returning from Vietnam, Murtha won the Democratic nomination for what was then the 22nd District, which was based in Johnstown. He lost fairly handily to longtime Republican incumbent John Saylor. Murtha was elected to represent the 72nd legislative district in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in a special election on May 20, 1969. The election was triggered by the death of Representative Edward McNally, whodied in November 1968. He was elected to a full term in 1970. Congressman Saylor died in October 1973, nine months into his 13th term. Murtha immediately jumped into the special election contest in what was now the 12th District. In the February 1974 special election, which took place during the burgeoning Watergate scandal, Murtha defeated one of Saylor's former aides, Harry Fox, by only 242 votes. He defeated Fox by a significantly wider margin that November and was reelected 17 times. Murtha faced tough primary challenges in 1982, 1990 and again in 2002. The 1982 challenge occurred when theRepublican-controlled state legislature took advantage of Murtha's connection to Abscam, and incorporated most of the district of fellow Democrat and Vietnam War veteran Don Bailey of Westmoreland County into the 12th District. The 2002 challenge occurred when the state legislature redrew the district of fellow Democrat Frank Mascara to make it more Republican-friendly, shifting a large chunk of Mascara's former territory into Murtha's district. Mascara opted to run against Murtha in the Democratic primary, since the new 12th was geographically more his district than Murtha's. However, Mascara was badly defeated. In 2006, Murtha's Republican challenger was Diana Irey, a countycommissioner from Washington County, the heart of Mascara's former district. Irey attacked Murtha for his criticism of the Iraq war. Even though Irey was Murtha's strongest Republican opponent in decades, she polled well behind Murtha throughout the campaign. A poll by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on October 12, 2006, showed Murtha with a commanding lead over Irey, 57%–30%. In the November election, Murtha won 61%–39%. On June 9, 2006, Murtha informed Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi that he would run for Majority Leader if the Democrats gained control of the House in the 2006 midterm elections. Despite Murtha receiving Pelosi's support, currentDemocratic Whip Steny Hoyer was elected to the post. On March 18, 2008, Murtha endorsed Hillary Clinton, former First Lady and then Senator from New York, in her bid for the presidency. On February 6, 2010, two days before his death, Murtha became the longest serving Pennsylvania congressman in history. Although he was not sworn into office until February 20, 1974, House of Representatives rules state that Murtha's service began at his election because the seat was vacant. In 2009, Murtha heard details from Fort Benning U.S. Army soldiers on how their current uniforms and equipment were not providing camouflagein Iraq and Afghanistan during a personal visit. Murtha immediately took action and convinced the army to fix the camouflage problem, resulting in MultiCam being selected by the Secretary of the Army John McHugh for all incoming soldiers deploying to Afghanistan in 2010, only weeks after Murtha had died. Abscam investigation In 1980, during his fourth term as a Congressman, Murtha became embroiled in the Abscam investigation, which targeted dozens of congressmen. The investigation entailed FBI operatives posing as intermediaries for Saudi nationals hoping to bribe their way through the immigration process into the United States. Murtha met with theseoperatives and was videotaped. He did agree to testify against Frank Thompson (D-NJ) and John Murphy (D-NY), the two Congressmen mentioned as participants in the deal at the same meeting and who were later videotaped placing the cash bribes in their trousers. The FBI videotaped Murtha responding to an offer of $50,000, with Murtha saying, "I'm not interested... at this point. [If] we do business for a while, maybe I'll be interested, maybe I won't," right after Murtha had offered to provide names of businesses and banks in his district where money could be invested legally. The U.S. Attorney's Officereasoned that Murtha's intent was to obtain investment in his district. Full length viewing of the tape shows Murtha citing prospective investment opportunities that could return "500 or 1000" miners to work. Earmarks and campaign contributions Murtha was targeted by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington as one of the 20 most corrupt members of Congress. In September 2006, the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) listed Murtha under Five Members to Watch in its Second Annual Most Corrupt Members of Congress Report. The report cited Murtha's steering of defense appropriations to clients of KSA Consulting, whichemployed his brother Robert, and the PMA Group, founded by Paul Magliocchetti, a former senior staffer on the Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Defense. In 2008, Esquire Magazine named him one of the 10 worst members of Congress because of his opposition to ethics reform and the $100 million a year he brought to his district in earmarks. The Wall Street Journal has called him "one of Congress's most unapologetic earmarkers." According to the Pennsylvania Report, Murtha was one of "Pennsylvania's most powerful congressmen" and a "master of crossing the aisle and bringing pork into his district." In February 2009, CQPolitics reported that Murtha was one of 104 U.S. representatives to earmark funds in the 2008 Defense appropriations spending bill for a lobbying group that had contributed to his past election campaigns. The spending bill, which was managed by Murtha in his capacity as chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, secured $38.1 million for clients of the PMA Group in the single fiscal law. The PMA Group was under investigation by the FBI. In March 2009, the Washington Post reported that a Pennsylvania defense research center regularly consulted with two "handlers" close to Murtha while it received nearly$250 million in federal funding via Murtha's earmarks. The center then channeled a significant portion of the funding to companies that were among Murtha's campaign supporters. Views on the 2003 Iraq War Murtha voted for the October 2002 resolution that authorized the use of force against Iraq. However, he later began expressing doubts about the war. On March 17, 2004, when Republicans offered a "War in Iraq Anniversary Resolution" that "affirms that the United States and the world have been made safer with the removal of Saddam Hussein and his regime from power in Iraq," when J. D. Hayworth calledfor a recorded vote, Murtha voted against it. Still, in early 2005 Murtha argued against the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. "A premature withdrawal of our troops based on a political timetable could rapidly devolve into a civil war which would leave America's foreign policy in disarray as countries question not only America's judgment but also its perseverance," he stated. In 2006, after Murtha became a leading critic of the Iraq War, a conservative website, the Cybercast News Service (part of L. Brent Bozell III's Media Research Center) published an article that "quoted Murtha opponents as questioning the circumstancessurrounding the awarding of his two Purple Hearts." The attack recalled the "swiftboating" tactic used against Senator John Kerry two years early. A Murtha spokesman called the allegations "an attempt to distract attention from what's happening in Iraq." 2005 Resolution on removing American forces from Iraq On November 17, 2005, Murtha submitted H.J. Res. 73 in the House of Representatives, calling for the redeployment of U.S. troops in Iraq, saying, "The U.S. cannot accomplish anything further in Iraq militarily. It is time to bring them home." The bill cited lack of progress towards stabilizing Iraq, the possibility that a draftwould be required to sustain sufficient troop numbers, Iraqi disapproval of US forces and approval of attacks on the soldiers, and the increasing costs of the war. The bill proposed that deployment to Iraq be suspended and that US Marines establish an "over-the-horizon" presence in nearby countries. Murtha's comments forced a heated debate on the floor of the House on November 18. Republicans led by Duncan Hunter of California, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, responded by proposing their own resolution (H. Res. 571), which many Republicans said was intended to demonstrate that those calling for immediate troop withdrawalfrom Iraq were "out of the mainstream." Murtha himself took the floor during debate on the resolution after the Democrats yielded all their time to him, and denounced the Hunter resolution as a sham. As expected, Hunter's resolution was defeated, with only three congressmen voting aye. Jean Schmidt and the "coward" controversy On November 19, 2005, during debate on adopting the rule for the resolution, Congresswoman Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio) made a statement attributed to Danny Bubp, an Ohio state Representative and Marine Corps reservist. The statement, "He also asked me to give Congressman Murtha a message: that cowards cut andrun; Marines never do," was seen as an unwarranted "cheap shot" against Murtha, and outraged Democrats brought House business to a halt for ten minutes until Schmidt herself asked and received permission to withdraw her comments. Bubp has since stated that he never mentioned Murtha when making the quoted comment. He added that he would never question the courage of a fellow Marine. Bubp later said, "I don't want to be interjected into this. I wish (Congresswoman Schmidt) never used my name." Haditha, Iraq, killings The Haditha incident occurred on November 19, 2005, and since then there have been differingaccounts of exactly what took place. In November 2005 Murtha announced that a military investigation into the Haditha killings had concluded that U.S. Marines had intentionally killed innocent civilians. Referring to the first report about Haditha in Time magazine, Murtha said: It's much worse than reported in Time magazine. There was no fire fight. There was no IED that killed these innocent people. Our troops overreacted because of the pressure on them and they killed innocent civilians in cold blood. And that's what the report is going to tell. The Marine Corps responded to Murtha's announcement by stating that "thereis an ongoing investigation; therefore, any comment at this time would be inappropriate and could undermine the investigatory and possible legal process." Murtha was criticized by conservatives for presenting a version of events as simple fact before an official investigation had been concluded. In August 2006, Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich filed a lawsuit against Murtha for character defamation during an ongoing investigation into the Haditha incident. In April 2009 this suit was dismissed by a federal appeals court, which ruled that Murtha could not be sued because he was acting in his official role as a lawmaker when he madeguilty to one count of negligent dereliction of duty. Sun-Sentinel story and correction In a speech at Florida International University on June 24, 2006, Murtha said that the military presence in Iraq was hurting U.S. credibility, citing a poll by the Pew Research Center indicating that people in several countries considered the U.S. in Iraq to be a greater threat to world peace than either Iran or North Korea. When the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported the speech on June 25, it asserted without further evidence that it was Murtha's own view that the U.S. was a greater threat to worldpeace: "American presence in Iraq is more dangerous to world peace than nuclear threats from North Korea or Iran, U.S. Representative John Murtha, D-Pa., said to a crowd of more than 200 in North Miami Saturday afternoon." The Sun-Sentinel story was picked up by the wire services and the Drudge Report website, leading several conservative pundits, including Bill O'Reilly Tucker Carlson, and Newt Gingrich, to comment. After the Sun-Sentinel issued a correction, O'Reilly publicly apologized. 2008 presidential election After having endorsed Hillary Clinton, commenting on the prospects for the election of Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign, Murtha becamethe subject of controversy after deriding many of his own constituents as "racists" who would not vote for Obama because he is black. In response to the outrage at his comments, he apologized but then reiterated the point by saying, "[T]here's still folks that have a problem voting for someone because they are black. This whole area, years ago, was really redneck." Political views Murtha generally opposed gun control, earning an A from the National Rifle Association. In 2004, he was one of only two congressmen to vote for a measure proposing reinstatement of the draft. Murtha voted for theAffordable Healthcare for America Act (HR 3692), which passed in the House 220–215 on November 7, 2009. He said of the bill, "For nearly a century, both Democrats and Republicans have failed to enact comprehensive health care reform. Today's historic vote moves us closer to solving America's health care crisis." However, Murtha did not support allowing abortions as part of health care reform. He voted for the Stupak–Pitts Amendment to the health care bill that prohibits elective abortions for people covered by the public healthcare plan and to prohibit people receiving federal assistance from purchasing a private healthcare plan thatincludes abortions, except when the woman's life is in danger. He also voted for a bill to prohibit pregnant minors from crossing state borders to obtain abortions. In August 2009, Murtha refused Republican challenger Tim Burns' invitation to attend a town hall meeting focused on healthcare (at the time, Murtha had not yet hosted a town hall meeting); however, Murtha had held several conference call sessions with his constituents focused on healthcare. Murtha, a anti-abortion Democrat, did not receive favorable ratings from abortion and reproductive health interest groups. Planned Parenthood, whose stated purpose is "to provide comprehensive reproductive and complementaryhealth care," gave him a rating of 50% in 2009. He received a rating of 50% from the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association, which advocates "access to voluntary, comprehensive and culturally sensitive family planning and reproductive health care services and ... reproductive freedom for all." Death and legacy Murtha was first hospitalized with gallbladder problems for a few days in December 2009 and had surgery on January 28, 2010, at Bethesda Naval Hospital. Longtime friend and fellow Pennsylvania Democratic representative Bob Brady said Murtha's large intestine was damaged during the normally routine laparoscopic surgery, causing an infection. Dueto the complication, Murtha was again hospitalized two days later, and died on the afternoon of February 8, 2010, in the Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, Virginia, with his family by his side. He was buried on February 16, 2010, at Grandview Cemetery in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said in a statement on the day of his death, "With the passing of John Murtha, America has lost a great patriot." House Republican Leader John Boehner said, "Our nation has lost a decorated veteran." On April 9, 2010, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus signed an officialmemo to the Chief of Naval Operations, designating the naming of an amphibious transport dock (LPD), a type of naval warship, as the (LPD-26). The Navy Times said the official announcement "added fuel to an already smoldering backlash online." In October 2011, it was revealed that the FBI had investigated Murtha for possible ethics violations. No charges were ever filed. A special election was held to fill the seat left vacant by the late congressman, taking place on May 18 to coincide with that state's primaries for Senate and governor. The Democratic candidate, Mark Critz, defeated Republican candidate Tim Burnsto win Murtha's seat. John Murtha Congressional Papers The University of Pittsburgh houses The John P. Murtha Congressional Papers containing the documentation of Representative Murtha and his duties while in office. The collection contains correspondence, legislative files, reports, subjects covering the Defense Department, the Department of the Interior, economic development, energy, and labor. The collection also contains photographic and audio-video materials, memorabilia and awards. See also 2010 Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district special election List of United States Congress members who died in office References External links Profile at SourceWatch FBI Records: The Vault - John Murtha (over 1,100 pages) Booksby Murtha Articles Murray, Shailagh (November 25, 2005). "The About-Face of a Hawkish Democrat". Washington Post, pg. A02. Murtha, John John Murtha's Iraq Exit Strategy November 17, 2005. H. Res. 557, the "War in Iraq Anniversary resolution" 'Unwinnable' comment draws GOP fire (CNN) Murtha calls for change in U.S. Iraq policy (Associated Press) FBI files on John Murtha Rep. Murtha says Rumsfeld, Cheney should resign Washington Post: Confessions of a "Defeatocrat" Rep. John Murtha, Iraq War Critic, Dies at 77 – video by Democracy Now! John Murtha Passes Away (MyJohnstownPA) Collection John Murtha collection at the University of Pittsburgh Category:1932
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Trust in God is the 19th studio album by soul singer Al Green, released in 1984. It is a collection of cover songs, performed in the style of gospel music, recorded after his conversion to Christianity. Track listing "Don't It Make You Wanna Go Home" (Joe South) - 3:07 "Up the Ladder to the Roof" (Vincent DiMirco) - 3:33 "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" (Nickolas Ashford, Valerie Simpson) - 2:23 "Trust in God" (Al Green, Johnny Brown) - 4:11 "No Not One" (Green) - 4:09 "Lean on Me" (Bill Withers) - 2:09 "Never Met Anybody Like You" (Green) - 2:52"Holy Spirit" (Lindy Hearne) - 3:07 "Trust in God (Reprise)" (Green, Brown) - 1:33 "All We Need Is a Little More Love" (Green) - 3:32 Personnel Al Green – lead and backing vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, percussion, string arrangements Moses Dillard – electric guitar Mabon Hodges – electric guitar Gerard Minnies – electric guitar Johnny Brown – Rhodes, organ Jesse Butler – Rhodes, acoustic piano, organ, synthesizer Jerry Peters – synthesizer Paul Zaleski – synthesizer Reuben Fairfax, Jr. – bass Ray Griffin – bass Tim Dancy – drums, percussion Steve Potts – drums Paul Jordan – string arrangements Andrea
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Emily M. Bender is an American linguist who works on multilingual grammar engineering. She has constructed the LinGO Grammar Matrix, an open-source starter kit for the development of broad-coverage precision HPSG grammars. In 2013 she published Linguistic Fundamentals for Natural Language Processing: 100 Essentials from Morphology and Syntax, which explains basic linguistic principles in a way that makes them accessible to NLP practitioners. Bender received her PhD from Stanford University in 2000 for her research on syntactic variation and linguistic competence in African American Vernacular English (AAVE). She currently holds several positions at the University of Washington, where she hasbeen faculty since 2003, including professor in the Department of Linguistics, adjunct professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, faculty director of the Master of Science in Computational Linguistics, and director of the Computational Linguistics Laboratory. Bender is the current holder of the Howard and Frances Nostrand Endowed Professorship. Key publications (2002) Bender, Emily M., Dan Flickinger, and Stephan Oepen. The grammar matrix: An open-source starter-kit for the rapid development of cross-linguistically consistent broad-coverage precision grammars. Proceedings of the 2002 workshop on Grammar engineering and evaluation-Volume 15. (2002) Siegel, Melanie and Emily M. Bender. Efficient deep processing ofJapanese. Proceedings of the 3rd workshop on Asian language resources and international standardization-Volume 12. (2000) Bender, Emily M. Syntactic variation and linguistic competence: The case of AAVE copula absence. Stanford University. (2000) Bender, Emily M. The syntax of Mandarin Bă: Reconsidering the verbal analysis. Journal of East Asian Linguistics. (1999) Sag, Ivan, Thomas Wasow, and Emily M. Bender. Syntactic theory: A formal introduction. Center for the Study of Language and Information. External links Personal page at University of Washington Faculty page at University of Washington Article by Emily Bender in The Linguist List's Famous Linguists series References Category:Living people Category:Linguists
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Slađana "Slađa" Guduraš (11 August 1987 – 10 December 2014) was a Bosnian recording artist, bit actress and nurse from Banja Luka. Her short-lived musical career ended when she died in a road accident aged 27 while en route to Belgrade. Her disappearance and death were featured prominently in Bosnian and Serbian media. Early life Guduraš was born in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina into a Bosnian Serb family. Her mother is Jelka Pantić. Career In her short career, Guduraš had only one single; "Silikoni i kubici" (Silicone and Volume) in 2013 featuring Serbian rapper Juice. The music video forFacebook in over a day. Initially it was assumed that her abusive ex-boyfriend Dragan Perić from Bijeljina had something to do with her disappearance. Perić reportedly threatened Guduraš by saying she "would end up like Ksenija Pajčin," a singer who had been murdered by her ex-boyfriend in 2010, and that he would commit suicide. They had been in a relationship from 2013 until November 2014, when Guduraš walked in on Perić kissing male hair stylist Aleksandar Kapriš. Another incident occurred the week before she went missing when Perić attacked her at the hotel Hollywood in Sarajevo. On 16 December 2014,a crashed Volkswagen Golf with Bosnian license plates was found in a canal in Sremska Mitrovica. Guduraš's body was found inside and it is believed that she swerved off the road on 10 December and crashed into the canal. The car was not seen for six days due to the area being densely overgrown with shrubbery. The autopsy results released 19 December confirmed that the body found in the car was that of Guduraš. Her death made her a new member of the 27 Club. In the days following her death several of her friends said they believe she "foresaw"her own death. Singer Miki Mećava, who had done a talk show with her on 3 December and slept over at the same hotel in Sarajevo, said that she was afraid of being murdered. She would not leave the hotel to go to restaurants with a group of friends because she was afraid that someone would murder her. Not long before her death, she relocated to Belgrade and had her own apartment there. Guduraš was buried in the town cemetery in Srbac, Bosnia and Herzegovina on 20 December 2014. She was not married and had no children. References Category:1987 births
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Henry George "Heinie" Schuble (November 1, 1906 – October 2, 1990) was an American baseball infielder. He played professional baseball for 11 years from 1926 to 1936, including seven seasons in Major League Baseball with the St. Louis Cardinals (1927 and 1936) and Detroit Tigers (1929–1935). He appeared in 332 major league games (172 at shortstop, 106 at third base) and compiled a .251 batting average and .296 on-base percentage. Early years Schuble was born in Houston, Texas, in 1906. Professional baseball Schuble began playing professional baseball in 1925 as a second baseman with the Mount Pleasant Cats of theEast Texas League. He moved on in 1926 to play as a second baseman in the Texas Association with the Palestine Pals and Temple Surgeons and in the Texas League with the Houston Buffaloes. On July 2, 1926, in his first game for Temple, he hit a home run, a triple, and a single in four at bats. On September 15, 1926, Schuble was traded by the Houston Buffaloes to the Syracuse Stars. He reported to Syracuse in March 1927, but began the 1927 season with the Danville Veterans of the Three-Eye League before moving up to the St. LouisCardinals following an injury to St. Louis shortstop Tommy Thevenow. He made his major league debut with the Cardinals on July 8, 1927, and appeared in 65 games, 62 of them as the team's starting shortstop. He compiled a .257 batting average in 218 at bats. After spending three months with the Cardinals in 1927, Schuble returned to the Houston Buffaloes in the Texas League in 1928, appearing in 157 games with a .285 batting average. On August 31, 1928, the Buffaloes sold Schuble and pitcher Frank Barnes for $50,000 to the Detroit Tigers, effective at the end of the1928 season. During the 1929 season, Schuble appeared in 92 games and committed 46 errors in 86 games at shortstop. His .233 batting average and "erratic work in the field" resulted in his being optioned to the Beaumont Exporters (Texas League) in January 1930. His fielding in 1929 was so poor that he was given the nickname "Kid Boots". During the 1930 season, Schuble appeared in 145 games for Beaumont, principally as a shortstop, compiled a .320 batting average, but committed a career high 55 errors. During one stretch in 1930, he struck out 18 consecutive times. In February 1931,Schuble spent spring training with the Tigers, competing with Bill Akers for a roster spot as a backup infielder. Harry Bullion in the Detroit Free Press wrote at the time: "If Schuble possessed half the fielding ability that he does genuine nerve, dynamite would be necessary to blow him out of a regular job. Nothing fazes the kid. He can juggle a grounder or throw a ball away and feel no more concern than if he made a perfect stop and play on it." Schuble was sent back to Beaumont for the 1932 season, but he was moved from shortstopto third base, where he committed 43 errors and saw his batting average dip 45 points to .275. Schuble returned to the Tigers in 1932 and had the best season of his major league career. He appeared in 102 games for the 1932 Tigers, including 72 as the team's starting third baseman and 16 as the starting shortstop. He committed only 19 errors and compiled a career high .271 batting average and a .319 on-base percentage. Schuble was reputed to be the fastest player on the 1932 Tigers and ranked eighth in the American League with 14 stolen bases in1932. Schuble remained with the Tigers through the 1935, but was used as a utility infielder and pinch runner after the 1932 season. Schuble spent most of the 1936 season in the minor leagues with the Houston Buffaloes and Rochester Red Wings. He also appeared in two games for the 1936 St. Louis Cardinals. He did not have an at bat for the Cardinals and played only one inning in the field. Schuble appeared in 332 major league games, including 172 at shortstop and 106 at third base. In 1,010 plate appearances, he had 235 hits, including 70 extra basehits, and scored 235 runs. He accumulated a .251 career batting average with 11 home runs, 114 RBI and .367 slugging percentage. Family and later years Schuble was married on June 5, 1927, to Agnes Shaw in front of 6,000 spectators, in a pre-game ceremony at home plate, while he was a minor league player in Danville, Illinois. After retiring from baseball, Schuble worked as an electrician at the Humble Oil and Refining Co. plant in Baytown, Texas. He began working at Humble Oil in 1945 and moved to Baytown in 1948. Schuble died in 1990 at age 83 in
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Samantha May "Sam" Kerr (born 10 September 1993) is an Australian soccer player who plays for Chelsea in the English FA Women's Super League. She is the current captain of the Australia women's national soccer team (the Matildas). , Kerr is the all-time leading scorer in both the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) in the United States and the Australian W-League. Kerr started her career at age 15 with Perth Glory where she played from 2008–2012, before transferring to Sydney FC. In 2013, she joined the Western New York Flash for the inaugural season of the NWSL and helped leadthe team to win the NWSL Shield. She later played for Sky Blue FC and the Chicago Red Stars in the same league. Kerr earned her first senior international cap in 2009 at the age of 15 and has represented Australia at the 2010, 2014, and 2018 AFC Women's Asian Cup tournaments. On the world stage, she has been in the Australian squad since 2009 and competed at the 2011, 2015, and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cups as well as the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. Kerr was awarded the 2017 Julie Dolan Medal as the best player in Australiahat trick at a World Cup tournament. Kerr is known for her "speed, skill, tenacity," and backflip goal celebrations. Early life Kerr was born in East Fremantle, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia on Australia's west coast. Her Anglo-Indian father, Roger Kerr, was born in Calcutta to an English father (a featherweight boxer) and an Indian mother who played basketball. Kerr's mother, Roxanne, was born in Australia and also comes from an athletic family. Her father and uncles were professional footballers in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) and another uncle J. J. Miller was a champion jockey who wonthe Melbourne Cup in 1966 with Galilee. Kerr played Australian rules football as a young child. Both her father and older brother, Daniel Kerr, were professional Australian rules footballers. She played the sport until switching to soccer at the age of 12 due in large part to gender restrictions. Despite facing some struggles transitioning from Australian rules football to soccer, at age 13, she was spotted by Perth Glory striker Bobby Despotovski who described her athleticism and raw talent as "exceptional". At age 15, she made her W-League and international debuts. Club career Western Knights, 2006–2008 Kerr first started playingof a match against Adelaide United on 14 January 2011 lifting Perth to a 2–1 victory. Western New York Flash, 2013–2014 In 2013, Kerr signed with the Western New York Flash for the inaugural season of the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) in the United States. She made 19 starts in her 21 appearances for the club and scored six goals. After defeating Sky Blue FC 2–0 in the semi-finals, the Flash lost 2–0 to Portland in the final. Kerr returned to the Flash for the 2014 season. Head coach Aaran Lines said of Kerr, "With her attributes – herrecord when she scored 4 goals in a single game after being down 3–0 to Seattle Reign at halftime. Sky Blue eventually won the match 5–4. At the age of 23, Kerr sat atop the all-time NWSL goalscoring table. Kerr won the NWSL Golden Boot and MVP award after finishing the 2017 season with a record-breaking 17 goals. Chicago Red Stars, 2018–19 On 18 January 2018, Kerr was traded to the Chicago Red Stars along with Nikki Stanton by the Sky Blue FC in a three-team trade with the Chicago Red Stars and Houston Dash. She got off to aend of the 2019 season, Kerr and the Chicago Red Stars made their first appearance in the NWSL Championship against the North Carolina Courage. Several days prior to the championship game, Kerr was named the 2019 NWSL MVP, the first, and currently only, NWSL player to ever receive the award twice. Kerr also received, for the third year in a row, the NWSL Golden Boot, leading the league with 18 goals and five assists, despite missing some games over the summer to play with Australia in the World Cup. Kerr was also named Player of the Year by the NationalWomen's Soccer League Players Association, who presented their own awards for the first time. At the end of the 2019 season Kerr announced that she was considering moving to a European team and had multiple offers. Chelsea, 2019–Present On 13 November 2019, Chelsea announced Kerr would be joining the club for the second half of the 2019–20 FA WSL season on a 2.5 year contract. Kerr made her Chelsea debut against Reading on 5 January 2020 and scored her first goal against Arsenal on 19 January. International career In February 2009, fifteen-year-old Kerr made her international debut for Australia's seniornational team in a friendly against Italy as a 76th minute substitute. She scored her first international goal at the age of 16 during the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup final against North Korea. 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, Germany In May 2010, Kerr was named to the Matildas squad to compete at the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup, the qualifying tournament for the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany. After scoring in the second match of the group against South Korea, she scored the opening goal of the final against North Korea before seeing Australia taking out thetitle via the penalty shoot-out. The same year, she represented Australia at the 2010 Peace Queen Cup. In 2011 at age 17, Kerr was named to Australia's 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup squad by head coach Tom Sermanni as one of seven players who were under twenty years of age. She made her World Cup debut coming on as a substitute in the 79th minute of Australia's first group stage match against Brazil. She was a starter for the team's second group stage match against Equatorial Guinea helping Australia win 3–2 and the team's final group stage match and 2–1win against Norway. Australia finished second place in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated 3–1 by Sweden. 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Canada After injuring her knee in December 2014 and undergoing surgery, Kerr worked hard with fitness coach Aaron Holt to recover ahead of the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada. During the Matilda's first group stage match against the United States, Kerr was the team's starting striker. The United States won 3–1. During the team's second group stage match, she helped Australia defeat Nigeria 2–0. During the match, Kerr was elbowedin the face by Ugo Njoku, which ultimately resulted in a three-game suspension for Njoku. Kerr recovered and started during Australia's final group stage match against Sweden, a 1–1 draw. Australia's finished second in their group and advanced to the round of 16 where they defeated Brazil 1–0. Though Australia reached the quarterfinals for the first time ever, they were defeated by 2011 champions Japan 1–0. 2016–2018 In July 2017, Kerr was the top goalscorer at the inaugural Tournament of Nations in the United States. She scored a hat-trick in Australia's 4–2 victory over Japan, and also scored a goalagainst Brazil, leading Australia to win the tournament. Prior to this tournament, Kerr had scored 8 goals in her first 49 games for the national team. Her hat-trick against Japan was the beginning of a run of 11 goals in 6 games. Kerr was named 2017 AFC Women's Footballer of the Year. 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, France In February 2019, Kerr was named captain of the national team by newly appointed head coach Ante Milicic. Two months later, she was one of five nominees for the BBC Women's Footballer of the Year award. During the team's first group stagematch at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France, she opened up an early lead against Italy after scoring a goal off a penalty kick rebound, though Australia ultimately lost 1–2 in stoppage time. Kerr's goal was her first at a World Cup tournament and she celebrated by punching the corner flag to honor Tim Cahill, the all-time leading goalscorer for the men's national team. During the team's second group stage match against Brazil, though Kerr was in an offside position when Monica Hickmann Alves headed the ball into her own goal, video assistant referees (VAR) deemed that Kerrwasn't interfering and the goal was counted for Australia. Australia won 3–2. Kerr scored four goals in the team's 4–1 win against Jamaica and was named Player of the Match. She is the first Australian footballer — male or female — to score a hat-trick at a World Cup tournament and the tenth footballer to score four goals. Australia finished second in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated by Norway in a penalty shoot-out. Kerr's five goals at the tournament ranked fourth highest behind Ellen White of England and Americans Alex Morgan and MeganRapinoe who all scored six. Career statistics International goals Honours Club Sydney FC W-League: 2012–13 Western New York Flash NWSL Shield: 2013 Perth Glory W-League: 2014 Chelsea FA Women's League Cup: 2019–20 International Australia AFC Women's Asian Cup: 2010 AFF U-16 Women's Championship: 2009 Tournament of Nations: 2017 Cup of Nations: 2019 Individual FFA Female U20 Footballer of the Year: 2010, 2014 PFA Women's Footballer of the Year: 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019 Julie Dolan Medal: 2016–17 and 2017–18 W-League Golden Boot: 2017–18 and 2018–19 Football Media Association (FMA) International Player of the Year: 2013, 2014 NWSL Player of the Week:featured on the cover of the July 2011 issue of Australian FourFourTwo along with four of her national team teammates: Melissa Barbieri, Kyah Simon, Thea Slatyer, and Sarah Walsh. In March 2018, she was featured in Vogue Australia as a 2018 Game Changer. In 2019, she was featured on the cover of the Australian version of the FIFA 19 video game. Kerr has an endorsement deal with Nike. In 2019, she starred in a commercial, Dream Further, that aired during the Champion's League Final and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup and also featured Gerard Piqué, Alex Scott, Neymar Jr., CrystalDunn, and Lieke Martens. The same year, her trademark backflip was featured in the Nike ad, Dream Crazier along with other women athletes like Serena Williams, Megan Rapinoe, and Diana Taurasi and aired during the 91st Academy Awards. She is a brand ambassador for Coca Cola-owned Powerade. Personal life Kerr is in a relationship with her former Perth Glory and Chicago Red Stars teammate Nikki Stanton. A supporter of the West Coast Eagles along with her brother Daniel Kerr, she was made the club's number-one ticket holder in 2019 and 2020. See also List of FIFA Women's World Cup hat-trickscoming of age, Little, Various (2019), Stand Up for the Future, Penguin Random House, Williams, Jean (2007), A Beautiful Game: International Perspectives on Women's Football , A&C Black, External links Australia player profile Chelsea player profile Perth Glory player profile NWSL player profile Chicago Red Stars player profile Sky Blue FC player profile (archived) Category:1993 births Category:Living people Category:Australian women's soccer players Category:Sportspeople from Perth, Western Australia Category:Perth Glory FC (W-League) players Category:Sydney FC (W-League) players Category:Australian people of English descent Category:Australian people of Anglo-Indian descent Category:2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players Category:2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players Category:2019 FIFA
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Minor Raja is a 1991 Telugu comedy film, produced by Venigalla Rambabu, K. P. Panakala Rao under the Rakesh Productions banner and directed by Katragadda Ravi Teja. It stars Rajendra Prasad, Shobana and Rekha in the lead roles, with music composed by Vidyasagar. The film is remake of the Tamil film Mallu Vetti Minor (1990). The film was recorded as a flop at the box office. Plot Minor Raja (Rajendra Prasad), was a rich man and wayward village playboy, who spent his time in brothels like his father. Santhana Lakshmi (Shobhana) and Minor Raja fell in love with each other.
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| Nodes:[["Minor Raja", {"description":'1991 film'}], ["Film", {}]]
Relations:[["Minor Raja", "instance of", "Film"]] |
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Nocturna Artificialia is the first credited film directed and produced by the Brothers Quay, Timothy and Stephen. "This British fraternal directing team is known for their avant-garde puppet films." Rather than dialog, this film uses shadows and music to create the dream-like state of the main character and his journey on a red tram at night. Plot The story is told in eight parts and begins with a man in his apartment. He sees a red tram out his window and leaves his apartment to wait for the next tram to come by. As he sees the next tram approachingchair and hits his head on the ground. He tries to get up, but fails. More time passes (as can be seen as the light from outside rises and falls) and he is still motionless on the ground as the movie ends. Themes There are many different themes seen throughout the short film. These themes include "impressions of a man, a tram and an unidentified city at night (the opening titles identify a specific Brussels street, but the ambiance seems East European)." Much of it seems to be a dream that comes from his fixation with specific objects on thetram. There is a more general view of the streets he wanders at night, but even when he seems to wake up at the end of the film (after experiencing some kind of revelation), he finds tramlines running through the middle of his room. Everything in the film is glimpsed and only half-heard by sound and music, as there is no dialogue. Suspense is created through movement of the tram and (sometimes awkward) angles of the camera. The film tends to shift focus with continuous shadows moving across things around the man's apartment and the tram itself. This personifies theobjects by giving them a somewhat eerie life. Religious imagery can also be seen as a theme in the film. At one point the tram passes through the inside of a cathedral, "and then down a street named after the Crucifixion, but these elements seem as half-awake and half-remembered as everything else. Despite being presented in multiple languages, the eight inter-titles are calculatedly cryptic It's a Surrealist film in the term's original sense - in that its imaginary landscape is equally populated by conscious and unconscious elements and little distinction is drawn between them." Release details This short film in
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Nocturna Artificialia", "instance of", "Film"], ["Nocturna Artificialia", "director", "Brothers Quay"]] |
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The Columbus Wardogs were an arena football team in af2 that played their home games in the Columbus Civic Center in Columbus, Georgia from 2001 through 2004. The team's majority owner was Birmingham, Alabama businessman Ed Randle, a high-ranking executive with Primerica. Beginnings In 1998, Columbus Civic Center general manager Tony Ford contacted the Arena Football League about expanding into Columbus but was informed that the market was too small. In 2000, the Arena Football League launched its developmental league known as af2 which featured franchises in smaller cities. On May 3, 2000, af2 commissioner Mary Ellen Garling toured theColumbus Civic Center and announced she hoped the league could expand into Columbus for the 2001 season. In October, an ownership group, which included Primerica executive Ed Randle as majority owner and Mike Sammond, a former Columbus sportscaster with WRBL TV who helped launch the league's Birmingham Steeldogs a year earlier, were approved and granted an af2 expansion franchise for the city. The Columbus Civic Center hosted a press conference on October 30, 2000, to formally announce the new franchise. The following month, Nashville Kats assistant coach Joe Campbell was introduced as the team's first head coach. The Wardogs' namethe Mississippi Coast Coliseum caused by Hurricane Katrina. Disotell announced plans to build a new 12,000-seat arena for his team in Pearl, Mississippi, (a suburb of Jackson) but ultimately he was unable to secure funding and never played. Season-by-season Notable players Troy Bergeron – wide receiver Rob Keefe – defensive specialist Kyle Rowley – quarterback References External links Columbus Wardogs on ArenaFan.com Category:Defunct af2 teams Category:Sports in Columbus, Georgia Category:American football teams in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:2000 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:2004 disestablishments in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:American football teams established in 2000 Category:American football teams disestablished in 2004
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Columbus Wardogs", {"description":'arena football team'}], ["2000", {}]]
Relations:[["Columbus Wardogs", "inception", "2000"]] |
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Julie, or the New Heloise (), original entitled Lettres de Deux Amans, Habitans d'une petite Ville au pied des Alpes ("Letters from two lovers, living in a small town at the foot of the Alps"), is an epistolary novel by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, published in 1761 by Marc-Michel Rey in Amsterdam. The novel's subtitle points to the history of Héloïse d'Argenteuil and Peter Abelard, a medieval story of passion and Christian renunciation. The novel was put on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum. Overview Although Rousseau wrote the work as a novel, a philosophical theory about authenticity permeates through it, as he exploresdans la nouvelle Héloïse : texte et intertexte : actes du colloque de Genève, 10-11-12 juin 1999, Éd. Jacques Berchtold, François Rosset, Droz, Genève, 2002 Jean-Marie Carzou, La Conception de la nature humaine dans la Nouvelle Héloïse, Sauret, Paris, 1966 Charles Dédéyan, Jean-Jacques Rousseau : la Nouvelle Héloïse, ou, l’éternel retour, Nizet, Saint-Genouph, 2002 Charles Dédéyan, La Nouvelle Héloïse de Jean-Jacques Rousseau : étude d’ensemble, SEDES-CDU, Paris, 1990 Maurice R Funke, From saint to psychotic: the crisis of human identity in the late 18th century : a comparative study of Clarissa, La Nouvelle Héloise, Die Leiden des jungen Werthers, P.Lang, New York, 1983 James Fleming Jones, La Nouvelle Héloïse, Rousseau and utopia, Droz, Genève, 1977 Peggy Kamuf, Fictions of Feminine Desire: Disclosures of Héloïse, U of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1982 François van Laere, Une Lecture du temps dans la Nouvelle Héloïse, La Baconnière, Neuchâtel, 1968 Laurence Mall, Origines et retraites dans La nouvelle Héloïse, P. Lang, New York, 1997 William Mead, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, ou le Romancier enchaîné ; étude de la nouvelle Héloïse, Presses universitaires de France, Paris, 1966 Daniel Mornet, La Nouvelle Héloïse de J.-J. Rousseau ; étude et analyse, Mellottée Paris, 1929 Perry Reisewitz, L’Illusion salutaire :Jean-Jacques Rousseaus Nouvelle Héloïse als ästhetische Fortschreibung der philosophischen Anthropologie der Discours, Romanistischer Verlag, Bonn, 2000 Yannick Séité, Du Livre au lire : La nouvelle Héloïse, roman des lumières, Champion, Paris, 2002 Étienne Servais, Le Genre romanesque en France depuis l’apparition de la Nouvelle Héloïse jusqu’aux approches de la Révolution, M. Lamertin, Bruxelles, 1922 Anne Tilleul, La Vertu du beau : essai sur La nouvelle Héloïse, Humanitas nouvelle optique, Montréal, 1989 Articles Nouchine Behbahani, Paysages rêvés, paysages vécus dans La Nouvelle Héloïse de J. J. Rousseau, Voltaire Foundation at the Taylor Institution, Oxford, 1989, Jacques Berchtold, “L’Impossible Virginité du jardinverbal : les Leçons de la nature selon la Lettre IV, 11 de La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Éd. et préf. Jürgen Söring, Peter Gasser, Rousseauismus: Naturevangelium und Literatur, Frankfurt, Peter Lang, 1999, pp. 53–83 Nadine Bérenguier, “Le ‘Dangereux Dépôt’: Virginité et contrat dans Julie ou La Nouvelle Héloïse ”, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, July 1997, n° 9 (4), pp. 447–63 André Blanc, “Le Jardin de Julie”, Dix-huitième Siècle, 1982, n° 14, pp. 357–76 Luciano Bulber, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau, peintre de la nature-état d’âme dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Kwartalnik Neofilologiczny, 1988, n° 35 (4), pp. 415–29 Henri Coulet, “Couples dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Littératures, Fall223–32 R. J. Howells, “Deux histoires, un discours : La Nouvelle Héloïse et le récit des amours d’Émile et Sophie dans l’Émile”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1987, n° 249, pp. 267–94 François Jost, “La Nouvelle Héloïse, Roman Suisse”, Revue de Littérature Comparée, 1962, n° 35, pp. 538–65 Tanguy L’Aminot, “L’Amour courtois dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Piau-Gillot, Colette Éd. Desné, Roland Éd. L’Aminot, Tanguy Éd. Modernité et pérennité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Champion, Paris, 2002, pp. 241–57 Claude Labrosse, “Nouveauté de La Nouvelle Héloïse," Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Jan–Apr 2001, n° 13 (2–3), pp. 235–46 J.-L. Lecercle, “L’Inconscient et création littéraire: sur La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Études Littéraires, 1969, n° 1, pp. 197–204 Annie Leclerc, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau : l’Amour au pays des chimères”, Magazine Littéraire, Par 1995, n° 331, pp. 31–34 Pierre Rétat, Litteratures, “L’Économie rustique de Clarens”, 1989 Fall; 21: 59–68 Laurence Mall, “Les Aberrations de l’errance : le Voyage dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Australian Journal of French Studies, 1994, n° 31 (2), pp. 175–87 Francine Markovits, “Rousseau et l’éthique de Clarens : une économie des relations humaines”, Stanford French Review, 1991, n° 15 (3), pp. 323–48 Ourida Mostefai, Lectures de La Nouvelle Héloïse, N. Amer. Assn. for the Studyof Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Ottawa, 1993 Philip Knee, “Wolmar comme médiateur politique”, pp. 117–27 Guy Lafrance, “L’Éthique de La Nouvelle Héloïse et du Vicaire Savoyard“, pp. 141–50 Jim MacAdam, “Reading Julie Amour-propre-ly”, pp. 107–16 Laurence Mall, pp. 163–73”, “L’Intérieur et l’extérieur : Étude des lettres parisiennes dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, pp. 163–73 Jean Roussel, pp. 61–72”, “La Nouvelle Héloïse et la politique : de l’écart à l’emblème”, pp. 61–72 Teresa Sousa de Almeida, “La Circulation des lettres dans le roman ou le Partage des pouvoirs”, pp. 175–84 Jean Terrasse, pp. 129–39”, “Jean-Jacques, Saint-Preux et Wolmar : aspects de la relation pédagogique”,“L’Idéal politique et l’idée de Nation dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, politique et nation, Intro. Robert Thiéry, Paris, Champion, 2001, XXIV, pp. 101–08 Norbert Sclippa, “La Nouvelle Héloïse et l’aristocratie”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1991, n° 284, pp. 1–71 Norbert Sclippa, “La Nouvelle Héloïse, la noblesse et la bourgeoisie”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1989, n° 265, pp. 1617–19 Jean-Paul Sermain, “La Nouvelle Héloïse ou l’invention du roman-poème””, Éd. Colette Piau-Gillot, Roland Desné, Tanguy L’Aminot, Modernité et pérennité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Paris, Champion, 2002, pp. 227–40 Jean Sgard, “De Cunégonde à Julie”, Recherches etTravaux, 1996, n° 51, pp. 121–30 Lieve Spaas, “D’un Clarens à l’autre : structures du désir sexuel dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1991, n° 284, pp. 73–82 Jean Starobinski, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau : Jours uniques, plaisirs redoublés”, Thèmes et figures du siècle des Lumières : mélanges offerts à Roland Mortier, Éd. Raymond Trousson Michèle Mat-Hasquin, Jacques Lemaire, Ralph Heyndels, Genève, Droz, 1980, pp. 285–97 Raymond Trousson, “De Jacques à Jean-Jacques ou du bon usage de La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Éd. Elio Mosele, Intro. Pierre Brunel, George Sand et son temps, I–III. Slatkine, Genève, 1994, pp. 749–66
### Assistant:
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Andrew Gardiner Kane, known as Gardiner Kane (born 25 November 1947) is a former Unionist politician in Northern Ireland. Born in Ballymoney, Kane joined the Royal Ulster Constabulary in 1974 and served until 1984. He joined the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), and was elected to Moyle District Council in 1985, serving as its Chair in 1990 and 1996. In 1996 he was an unsuccessful candidate in the Northern Ireland Forum election in North Antrim. He was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly, representing North Antrim at the 1998 election. Kane was accused of indecently assaulting a former council worker inOctober 2002. He left the DUP soon afterwards, citing ill health, and stood down from his council seat soon afterwards, prompting a by-election. Kane contested the 2003 Assembly election as an independent, but took only 623 votes and was not elected. In 2004, Kane was cleared of the sexual assault charge, but was convicted of common assault. Gardiner Kane is an active member of the all Loyal Orders, namely the Orange Order, Apprentice Boys of Derry, and Royal Black Institution References Category:1947 births Category:Living people Category:People from Ballymoney Category:Royal Ulster Constabulary officers Category:Councillors in County Antrim Category:Democratic Unionist Party MLAs
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DeMario Minter (born February 20, 1984) is a former American football cornerback. He was originally drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the fifth round of the 2006 NFL Draft. He played college football at Georgia. Minter has also been a member of the Kansas City Chiefs, Arizona Cardinals and Florida Tuskers. Early years Minter played high school football at Stephenson High School in Stone Mountain, Georgia, College career Minter played college football for the Georgia Bulldogs and garnered First Team All-SEC honors by the Associated Press in 2005. Professional career Cleveland Browns In 2006, during a pre-training camp workout with
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Howard Pyle Wyeth (April 22, 1944 – March 27, 1996), also known as Howie Wyeth, was an American drummer and pianist. Wyeth is remembered for work with the saxophonist James Moody, the rockabilly singer Robert Gordon, the electric guitarist Link Wray, the rhythm and blues singer Don Covay, and the folk singer Christine Lavin. Best known as a drummer for Bob Dylan, he was a member of the Wyeth family of American artists. Family Wyeth was born in Jersey City, New Jersey. His mother Caroline Pyle, Howard Pyle’s niece, was interested in the Wyeth family, flirted with some of them,McCoys, at least eleven artists are among the family and in-laws. Wyeth was the namesake of his great-uncle Howard Pyle (1853–1911), the artist and illustrator for Harper's Weekly and the author of The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood and four volumes of children's stories about King Arthur. His grandfather N. C. Wyeth was a student of Howard Pyle and a prominent illustrator of children's books for Charles Scribner's Sons. His grandmother Ellen Bernard Thompson Pyle was an illustrator of children for The Saturday Evening Post who married Walter Pyle, Howard's younger brother. He was the nephew of the painters AndrewWyeth, Henriette Wyeth and Carolyn Wyeth. Early years Wyeth was the son of music lovers—his father enjoyed playing ragtime. He learned drums by age 4 and soon on a piano could repeat songs he had heard. He attended the Wilmington Friends School where his music teacher helped him decide to be a musician. Fats Waller was Wyeth's greatest influence, leading him to learn stride piano and music theory. He studied percussion with Alan Abel of the Philadelphia Orchestra, and received a bachelor's in music at Syracuse University in 1966. Wyeth played at various times in the bands the Dogs andthe Worms after moving to New York City in 1969. In 1972 on a solo album by John Herald co-produced by Bob Neuwirth for Paramount, Wyeth played with Amos Garret, Steven Soles, Ned Albright and Rob Stoner. Desire Stoner brought Wyeth to drum on Desire in July 1975, a decision that satisfied Dylan who said, "Your drummer sounds great, it sounds great." The songs were co-written with Jacques Levy, and the personnel were Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano), Vinnie Bell (bouzouki), Scarlet Rivera (violin), Dom Cortese (accordion), Stoner (bass, background vocals), Wyeth (drums), Luther Rix (congas), and Emmylou Harris, RoneeRolling Thunder Revue in New York in 1975. The revue toured the United States during the end of 1975 and first half of 1976, and at two of those shows recorded the live album Hard Rain released in 1976. They are the musical performers in the Hard Rain documentary by TVTV shown on NBC in 1976, and in the film Renaldo and Clara released in 1978. About one hundred people traveled including supporting personnel. The recording artists were Dylan and Joan Baez (vocal & guitar), Blakley (vocal), Gary Burke (drums), T-Bone Burnett (guitar), David Mansfield (steel-guitar, mandolin, violin, dobro), RogerMcGuinn (guitar, vocal), Neuwirth (guitar, vocal), Rivera (violin), Rix (drums, percussion, congas), Mick Ronson (guitar), Soles (guitar, vocal), Stoner (bass) and Wyeth (piano, drums). Joni Mitchell, who flew in to sing for one show, nearly left, but when she told Wyeth goodbye, he was hurt, "And I suddenly realized, more than anybody Wyeth's reaction was so heartfelt, his expression of it was so open. Like it's just his soul is so beautiful. And I stayed." Isaac Hayes, Richie Havens, Carlos Santana, Ringo Starr, Stephen Stills and Stevie Wonder joined the band, who named themselves Guam, for a show in Houston.Revue artists are credited long after they disbanded. Their work is in Masterpieces (1978), The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991 (1991), Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Volume 3 (1994), Best of Bob Dylan (1997), Bob Dylan Live 1975 (The Bootleg Series Volume 5) (2002), and Desire (remastered 2003). Wyeth recorded four albums with Gordon, as well as albums with Don McLean, Leslie West and Moody. He is the drummer on Lavin's Attainable Love released by Philo in 1990 and the pianist on "Warmer Days", a song written by John Popper on the 1990 A&M album Blues Traveler. Laterhe led his own groups on piano, playing ragtime, blues and early jazz. Chadds Ford Getaway was Wyeth's one solo recording of ragtime and stride piano. It was remastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound and released as a two-CD set in 2003 by Stand Clear Music. Among the fifteen medleys are lesser-known works alongside "Ain't Misbehavin'", made famous by Fats Waller, and Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag". Mansfield and Wyeth played on Chris Harford's Elektra album Be Headed in 1992 with a host of others. After Wyeth's death, Harford released a piano instrumental Ode to Howie Wyeth. Also thatyear, Wyeth played drums on Fishermen's Stew's 7" single release of "Small Life, Hollow Roads, and Fairy Tales" b/w "Fine" released on Berlin's Twang! Records in 1993. Death Wyeth died of cardiac arrest at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan on March 27, 1996. He was 51. See also Wyeth Notes External links Category:1944 births Category:1996 deaths Category:American jazz pianists Category:American rock drummers Category:American rock pianists Category:American male pianists Category:Musicians from Jersey City, New Jersey Category:Musicians from New York City Category:Stride pianists Category:Syracuse University alumni Category:Wyeth family Category:20th-century American drummers Category:American male drummers Category:20th-century American pianists Category:Jazz musicians from New York
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The Colombian Naval Infantry and also referred to as Colombian Marines () is the marine force of the Colombian National Armada. The 24,000-member Colombian Marine Infantry is organized into a single division with four brigades (one amphibious assault brigade and three riverine brigades), each with several battalions plus numerous small security units. History The Naval Infantry is a constituent part of the Navy whose origins date back to the wars of independence. Today's Colombian Marines trace their heritage and military traditions from the Gran Colombia Marine Corps raised in 1822, by orders of Major General Francisco de Paula Santander, withCaptain Diego Antonio García, who was appointed commander of the 6th Marine Company raised that year, being appointed Commandant that October. Raised by an order from President Dr. Alfonso López Pumarejo on January 12, 1937, The Colombian Marines started out as a 120-strong Marine Company, located on Naval Base Cartagena. On March 8, 1940, the 1st Marine Battalion was raised, with three companies to cover Bolivar, Putumayo and the San Andres Islands, then in 1943 was assigned to Buenaventura, Barranquilla, Puerto Leguizamo and the eastern plains. In 1944, a heavy weapons company was raised and the battalion was moved tofacilities adjacent to the San Pedro Claver convent in Cartagena. With the advent of La Violencia, in 1952 the Marines were reassigned to the Eastern Naval Force due to the appearance of subversives in this area, and in a year, with the transfer of personnel from the National Army of Colombia, the number of personnel serving increased. In July 1955, thanks to the instruction of officers and NCOs in the United States in the United States Naval Academy, The Basic School of the United States Marine Corps and the United States Marine Corps School of Infantry and the U.S. missionNaval Infantry and to prepare to perform its duties of defending the territorial and maritime integrity of the Colombian nation through basic military training through its Instruction Battalions before moving to the regular units of the Naval Infantry nationwide. The Marines arrived at the Operational Unit Mayor, on January 15, 1984, the presence of the Marines, is in the jurisdiction of the Navy land, archipelagos, islands, coastal and river arteries. Its slogan is “LA VOLUNTAD TODO LO SUPERA” "WILL SURPASSES EVERYTHING" Since then, the Marines have had several changes in line with the operational situation and public order in Colombia.Personnel The Colombian Marine Infantry fields approximately 22,000 personnel, among officers and Infantrymen, and it is by far the biggest Corps within the Navy. Ranks & Insignias The tables below display the rank structures and rank insignias for the Colombian Marine Infantry personnel. Organization Marine Infantry Training Base Base de entrenamiento de infanteria de marina "BEIM". Is located in a small town called Coveñas, Sucre Department, in the caribbean north of Colombia. It has 3 battalions for recruits' boot camp training called BINIM 1, BINIM2 and BINIM3 (BINIM, Batallón de Instrucción de Infantería de Marina). A 13-week training program isperformed under supervision of the United States Naval Mission by a Gunnery Sergeant of the United States Marine Corps. The BEIM also has an Specialists Center (CIEAN: Centro Internacional de Entrenamiento Anfibio, where professional marines and sub-officers (Coporals - Sergeants) receive special training courses: Drill instructor, Anti-explosives, Canine guide, Personal defense, Shooter and Water survival. The training in this center is also supervised by the Gunnery Sergeant of the US Naval Mission. There is also the Batallón de Comando y Apoyo de IM Nº 6 (BACAIM6) in charge of the watch and security of the surrounding areas of the baseand some sectors of the Sucre Department. First Marine Infantry Brigade Brigada de Infantería de Marina No.1 Is a minor operative unit with the main purpose of neutralizing narcoterrorism. Mainly operated in the Caribbean Region of Colombia, in the area of Montes de María. BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 2 BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 3 BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 4 BATALLÓN DE CONTRAGUERRILLAS DE IM N° 1 BATALLÓN DE CONTRAGUERRILLAS DE IM N° 2 BATALLÓN DE COMANDO Y APOYO DE IM N° 1 First Riverine Marine Infantry Brigade Brigada Fluvial de Infantería de Marina No.
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Colombian Naval Infantry", "instance of", "Marines"], ["Colombian Naval Infantry", "country", "Colombia"]] |
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Enno Dirksen (3 January 1788 – 16 July 1850) was a German mathematician. Early life He was born in Bedekaspel, Germany. Between 1803 and 1807, he obtained private lessons in mathematics, physics, astronomy and navigation from a teacher at the Emden Navigation School. Following this, he taught at local schools in Hatzum (till 1815) and in Hinte. Career On the suggestion of , he enrolled at Göttingen University in 1817 to study mathematics. He pursued his doctorate there advised by Johann Tobias Mayer and Bernhard Friedrich Thibaut. He went to Berlin in 1820 and started working for the astronomer JohannElert Bode. He habiliated at the Berlin University's mathematics department as an expert in astronomy. In August 1820, he was appointed by the Prussian Ministry as an extraordinary professor in the University. Four years later, in June 1824, he was appointed as a full Professor of Mathematics. The noted mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi was one of the students he advised. He was an elected member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences from 1825. He retired from teaching in 1848–49 due to illness, and moved to Paris. He died there on 16 July 1850. References Category:1788 births Category:1850 deaths Category:University
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Henry Roquemore (March 13, 1886 – June 30, 1943) was an American character actor who primarily played bit parts. He appeared in 229 silent and sound films from 1927 until 1943. Many of his roles were uncredited parts in Western movies, but he also appeared in major films including Meet John Doe, The Little Foxes, The Magnificent Ambersons, and the Marx Brothers film Yours for the Asking. He was sometimes credited as Henry Rocquemore. Roquemore began his career in entertainment by staging local talent shows, for clubs in his hometown of Marshall, Texas. His first role in Hollywood was the
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Henry Roquemore", "occupation", "Actor"], ["Henry Roquemore", "place of birth", "Marshall, Texas"]] |
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Alberto Palmetta (born 5 April 1990) is an Argentine boxer. He competed in the men's welterweight event at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Professional boxing record | style="text-align:center;" colspan="8"|4 wins (1 knockouts), 0 losses |- style="text-align:center; background:#e3e3e3;" | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Res. | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Record | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Opponent | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Type | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Rd., Time | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Date | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Location | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Notes |- align=center |Win |4-0 |align=left| Octavio Ezequiel Segundo | | | |align=left| |align=left| |- align=center
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Alberto Palmetta", "participant in", "2016 Summer Olympics"], ["Alberto Palmetta", "sport", "Boxing"]] |
### User:
Willem "Wim" Polak (14 September 1924 – 1 October 1999) was a Dutch politician of the Labour Party (PvdA) and economist. Polak was born to a Jewish merchant family in Amsterdam on 14 September 1924. His parents were murdered by the Nazis during the German Occupation of the Netherlands. After the Second World War, he worked as a journalist for Het Vrije Volk. Polak was appointed Secretary of State for local finances in Joop den Uyl's government. He worked towards improving the financial position of the larger Dutch cities. Subsequently, he became mayor of Amsterdam for a six-year period, wherehis challenges included numerous squatting cases as well as riots related to Queen Beatrix's coronation. He died in 1999 at his home in Ilpendam. Decorations References External links Official W. (Wim) Polak Parlement & Politiek Category:1924 births Category:1999 deaths Category:Aldermen of Amsterdam Category:Commanders of the Order of Orange-Nassau Category:Deaths from cancer in the Netherlands Category:Dutch corporate directors Category:Dutch Jews Category:Dutch journalists Category:Dutch nonprofit directors Category:Dutch newspaper editors Category:Dutch people of World War II Category:Dutch political writers Category:Knights of the Order of the Netherlands Lion Category:Mayors of Amsterdam Category:Members of the Council of State (Netherlands) Category:Jewish Dutch politicians Category:Jewish Dutch writers
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Zeenat begum Zeenat Begum, sometime just credited as Zeenat, was an Indian/Pakistani singer. | Music career Zeenat Begum was a courtesan (kothewali) and a renowned classical singer. She was discovered by Pandit Amar Nath around 1937. Her first success as a playback singer came in 1942 when she sang for Govind Ram's Punjabi film Mangti (1942). The film was marked as the first Golden jubilee film produced in Lahore. Her first Hindi film was Nishani (1942). She sang for other notable films including Panchhi (1944), Shalimar (1946), Shehar se Door (1946) and Daasi (1944). Zeenat Begum migrated from Lahore toBombay in 1944. She sang for several music directors in Bombay, including younger brothers of Pandit Amar Nath – Pandit Husnlal Bhagatram, Master Ghulam Haider, Pandit Gobind Ram etc. The last film she sang for in India was Mukhda (1951). She migrated to Pakistan and joined Lahore Radio station and worked there until the late 1950s. After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, many new playback singers arrived in Pakistan which affected the playback singing career of Zeenat Begum. Death She died on 11 December 2007 in Lahore, Pakistan. References External links Category:Indian female classical singers Category:Pakistani female singers Category:Pakistani
### Assistant:
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Braxton Russell Lee (born August 23, 1993) is an American professional baseball outfielder in the New York Mets organization. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Miami Marlins in 2018. Career Tampa Bay Rays Lee attended Picayune High School in Picayune, Mississippi and played college baseball at Pearl River Community College and the University of Mississippi. He was drafted by the Tampa Bay Rays in the 12th round of the 2014 Major League Baseball Draft. He spent his first professional season with the Hudson Valley Renegades and batted .287 with 13 RBIs and 12 stolen bases in 51games. He played for the Charlotte Stone Crabs in 2015 and posted a .281 batting average with 24 RBIs in 115 games, and for the Montgomery Biscuits in 2016 where he slashed .209/.269/256 with 25 RBIs in 110 games. Miami Marlins Lee started 2017 with the Montgomery Biscuits. On June 26, he was traded, along with Ethan Clark, to the Miami Marlins for Adeiny Hechavarria. The Marlins assigned him to the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp where he spent the rest of the season. In 127 combined games between Montgomery and Jacksonville, he batted .309 with three home runs, 37 RBIs and
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| Nodes:[["Braxton Lee", {"description":'American professional baseball outfielder', "alias":['Braxton Russell Lee']}], ["Baseball", {}], ["Miami Marlins", {}], ["Outfielder", {}], ["Picayune, Mississippi", {}]]
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Louis Washington Turpin (February 22, 1849 – February 3, 1903) was a U.S. Representative from Alabama. Born in Charlottesville, Virginia, When his parents both died, he moved to Alabama with his sister and settled in Perry County in 1858. He was Self-educated. He engaged in agricultural pursuits. Tax assessor of Hale County in 1873–1880. He served as chairman of the Democratic committee of Hale County for six years. He was an unsuccessful candidate for nomination to the Forty-eighth Congress. Presented credentials as a Democratic Member-elect to the Fifty-first Congress and served from March 4, 1889, to June 4, 1890, when
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Relations:[["Louis Washington Turpin", "place of birth", "Charlottesville, Virginia"]] |
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Musquito (c. 1780, Port Jackson – 25 February 1825, Hobart) (also rendered Mosquito, Musquetta, Bush Muschetta or Muskito) was an Indigenous Australian resistance leader, latterly based in Van Diemen's Land. New South Wales and Norfolk Island Musquito of the Gai-Mariagal clan, was born in Hawkesbury/Broken Bay region of Sydney. Musquito engaged in violent raids on British settlements in the Hawkesbury and Georges River areas in 1805. The Sydney Gazette reported that he committed to further raids "in good English"; on 9 June 1805 the colony authorities authorised his arrest. He was captured by local Aboriginal people in July 1805 andhanging. The sentence was carried out at Old Hobart Gaol on 25 February 1825. Historian Naomi Parry describes the evidence arrayed against Musquito for aiding and abetting as "dubious" and says that after his death it "remained unclear whether Musquito committed any murders". Musquito's contemporary Henry Melville called the conviction a "most extraordinary precedent" and Gilbert Robertson said it provoked further violence. See also Pemulwuy a warrior and resistance leader of the Bidjigal clan of the Eora people, in the area around Sydney Tarenorerer, also known as Walyer, Waloa or Walloa was a rebel leader of the Indigenous Australians in
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Relations:[["Musquito", "place of death", "Hobart"], ["Musquito", "date of birth", "1780"], ["Musquito", "cause of death", "Hanging"]] |
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Laurence of Siponto, also known as Laurence Maioranus () (d. 7 February, c. 545), is an Italian saint, patron of the city of Manfredonia and the Archdiocese of Manfredonia-Vieste-San Giovanni Rotondo. Manfredonia Cathedral is dedicated to him. Laurence was a 6th-century bishop of Sipontum. Shortly after his appointment in 492 or 493 he received the visions of Saint Michael which led to the establishment of the shrine of Monte Gargano. His relics are now in Manfredonia Cathedral, where they were translated in 1327 by Bishop Matteo Orsini from Siponto Cathedral. His feast is on 7 February. Sources and external links
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Relations:[["Laurence of Siponto", "position held", "Bishop"], ["Laurence of Siponto", "place of death", "Siponto"], ["Laurence of Siponto", "canonization status", "Saint"]] |
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Sir George St Paul, 1st Baronet (1562 – 18 October 1613) was an English politician. He was born the son of Thomas St Paul (or Thomas St Poll) of Snarford, Lincolnshire and educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He entered Lincoln's Inn in 1580. He married Frances, the daughter of Sir Christopher Wray, although they had no children. He was appointed High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1588 and elected as knight of the shire (MP) for Lincolnshire in 1589 and 1593. He was the Member of Parliament for Grimsby in 1604–1611. He was knighted in 1608, and was created a
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Catanomistis is a genus of moths of the family Xyloryctidae. It contains only one species, Catanomistis loxophracta, which is found in Madagascar. The wingspan is about 14 mm. The forewings are white with the discal stigmata black and with a fine oblique dark grey strigula from the middle of the costa, near beyond it a flattened-triangular dark grey spot, from which an irregular rather oblique streak crosses the second discal stigma and runs to the tornus, a dorsal streak of light grey suffusion from near the base nearly reaches this. The hindwings are light grey, thinly sprinkled dark grey. See
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Relations:[["Catanomistis", "taxon rank", "Genus"]] |
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Leslie Schwartz is an American author and teacher of creative writing. She has published two novels, Jumping the Green and Angels Crest, the latter of which was made into a 2011 film, and The Lost Chapters, a memoir of her time in jail while recovering from alcoholism. Personal life Schwartz was born in 1962. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Rhetoric and English from UC Berkeley and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing in 2012 from Pacific University in Oregon. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter. Schwartz is a recovering alcoholic, who beganJewish Women's Theatre, and continues to teach at the summer writing festival at the University of Iowa. She served as president of the board of directors of PEN Center USA, the Los Angeles literary and human rights organization, from 2006-2007. Homeboy Industries In 2006, as part of PEN, Schwartz was hired through a grant by the California Council for the Humanities to teach a 10 week creative writing class for former Los Angeles gang members at Homeboy Industries, an intervention program founded by Father Gregory Boyle. After the class was over, she stayed on as a volunteer. The Los AngelesSchuster, . It tells the story of a young San Francisco sculptress examining her sister's unsolved murder while being in a sadomasochistic relationship. It was widely reviewed in the United States and the United Kingdom. Angels Crest Angels Crest (Doubleday, ) is a 2004 novel about a toddler wandering off in the snowy California mountains, and the aftermath among a small town where nearly everyone has a personal connection to the tragedy. The story is told from seven different points of view. It received mixed reviews, calling it pounding, but also maudlin. The book was made into a 2011 Canadian-American
### Assistant:
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Basingstoke Town Football Club is a football club based in Basingstoke, Hampshire, England. The club are currently members of the and play at the City Ground in Winchester. Their motto, 'Vestigia Nulla Retrorsum', means 'Never a step backward'. History The club was established in 1896 by a merger of Aldworth United and Basingstoke Albion. They joined the Hampshire League in 1901, and when the league was split into geographical divisions in 1903, were placed in the North Division. They finished bottom of the division in both 1903–04 and 1904–05, and again in 1906–07 and 1907–08. However, after consecutive second-bottom finishesand then finishing fifth out of seven clubs in 1910–11, they were North Division champions in 1911–12. Finishing as champions resulted in promotion to the County Section, although the club continued to play in the North Division. They won the North Section again in 1919–20, After league reorganisation in 1929 Basingstoke were placed in Division One. They finished as runners-up in 1965–66 and 1966–67, before winning the league in 1967–68. After finishing as runners-up again in 1968–69, they won back-to-back titles in 1969–70 and 1970–71, remaining unbeaten in the latter season. After their third Hampshire League title, Basingstoke moved uplocal rivals Aldershot in a second round replay. A fifth-place finish in 2011–12 saw the club qualify for the promotion play-offs. However, they lost the two-legged semi-final to Dartford 3–1 on aggregate, losing 1–0 at home and 2–1 away. They also reached the FA Cup first round again, losing 1–0 to Brentford. They qualified for the play-offs for a second time in 2014–15 after finishing third, but were beaten 2–1 on aggregate by Whitehawk in the semi-finals. The following season saw Basingstoke make another appearance in the FA Cup first round, a 1–0 defeat at Cambridge United; however, after finishingbottom of the renamed National League South, they were relegated to the Premier Division of the Southern League. The club were placed in the Premier South division at the end of the 2017–18 season as part of the restructuring of the non-League pyramid. Ground The club played at Castlefields from their establishment until 1945, when a site for a new ground was offered to them by Lord Camrose. The new ground was initially known as Winchester Road, and consisted of a small wooden stand together with grass banking with some terracing. The first match played on 1 December 1945 againstStadium due to a sponsorship deal with the Sky Sports show, before becoming the Ark Cancer Charity Stadium for the 2016–17 season. In 2019 the club relocated to Winchester City's City Ground as former chairman Rafi Razzak attempted to sell the Camrose for development. Club staff First team Director of Football: Terry Brown Manager: Dan Brownlie Assistant Manager: Aaron Nicholson Therapist: Gideon Vallence Chief Scout: Pete Gray Academy Academy Manager: Aaron Nicholson Head of Community: Michael Davis Honours Southern League Southern Division champions 1984–85 Hampshire League Division One champions 1967–68, 1968–69, 1970–71 North Division champions 1911–12, 1919–20 Hampshire Senior Cup
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Lowestoft Town Football Club is a semi-professional football club from Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. They are currently members of the and play at Crown Meadow. History The club was established in 1887 as Lowestoft F.C. by a merger of East Suffolk and the original Kirkley, and were renamed Lowestoft Town in 1890. They joined the Norfolk & Suffolk League as founder members in 1897, and won six of the first seven championships, also playing in the North Suffolk League, where they also won six championships in seven seasons. They reached the final of the FA Amateur Cup in 1900, losing theDivision One North of the Isthmian League. They won the league at the first attempt to earn promotion to the Premier Division, also reaching the first round of the FA Cup, losing 1–0 at Wrexham. In their first season in the Premier Division they finished fourth and reached the play-off final, where they lost 4–3 at Tonbridge Angels. In 2011–12 the club reached the play-off final again after finishing third, but lost 2–1 to AFC Hornchurch after extra time. The club also reached the final of the Suffolk Premier Cup, in which they defeated Bury Town 4–2. In 2012–13 Lowestoftclub were transferred to the Premier Central division of the Southern League at the end of the 2017–18 season as part of the restructuring of the non-League pyramid. Colours and badge Lowestoft Town's club colours are all blue with white strips and the club's second choice kit, usually when away from home, is all white with blue and yellow trims. The club badge is the town crest of Lowestoft. Ground Lowestoft originally played at the Crown Meadow Athletics Ground, which shared part of the same site as the modern Crown Meadow. In 1889 they moved to a ground in NorthDenes, but returned to the new Crown Meadow in 1894. It was opened with a match against Lowestoft Harriers on 22 September 1894. In 1922 the club bought the ground from the council for £3,150 after it looked as though the site may be sold for housing. Floodlights were installed in 1964 and a social club built in the same year. The record crowd of 5,000 was set for the FA Cup match against Watford 1967. In 1988, the pavilion (which was built in 1885) was demolished and part of the site was sold to a developer, with the proceedsfunding the building of a new changing room and hospitality block. Today the ground consists of a 466-seat stand with standing areas around the rest of the pitch. Honours Isthmian League Premier Division play off winners 2013–14 Division One North champions 2009–10Eastern Counties LeagueChampions 1935–36 (joint), 1937–38, 1962–63, 1964–65, 1965–66, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1969–70, 1970–71, 1977–78, 2005–06, 2008–09 League Cup winners 1938–39, 1954–55, 1965–66, 1966–67, 1968–69, 1975–76, 1977–78, 1983–84, 2000–01, 2006–07Norfolk & Suffolk LeagueChampions 1897–98, 1898–99, 1900–01, 1901–02, 1902–03, 1903–04, 1928–29, 1930–31North Suffolk LeagueChampions 1897–98, 1898–99, 1899–00, 1900–01, 1902–03, 1903–04, 1904–05Suffolk Premier CupWinners 1966–67, 1971–72, 1974–75, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2004–05,2005–06, 2008–09, 2011–12, 2014–15, 2015–16Suffolk Senior CupWinners 1902–03, 1922–23, 1923–24, 1925–26, 1931–32, 1935–36, 1946–47, 1947–48, 1948–49, 1955–56East Anglian CupWinners 1929–30, 1970–71, 1977–78 RecordsHighest league position: 16th, National League North, 2014–15Best FA Cup performance: First round, 1926–27, 1938–39, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1977–78, 2009–10Best FA Trophy performance: Second round, 1971–72Best FA Vase performance: Runners up, 2007–08Attendance''': 5,000 vs Watford, FA Cup first round, 1967 See also Lowestoft Town F.C. players Lowestoft Town F.C. managers References External links Category:Football clubs in England Category:Football clubs in Suffolk Category:Association football clubs established in 1887 Category:1887 establishments in England Category:Sport in Lowestoft Category:Norfolk & Suffolk League Category:Eastern
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Relations:[["Lowestoft Town F.C.", "named after", "Lowestoft"], ["Lowestoft Town F.C.", "league", "Isthmian League"], ["Lowestoft Town F.C.", "sport", "Association football"]] |
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Larry Ragland is an American professional offroad racing competitor and 5 time SCORE International Baja 1000 Trophy Truck overall winner. "Lightning" Larry Ragland is the second most winning driver in desert racing's history and a Trophy Truck expert. Most recently, he and Roger Norman just placed 5th in the 2008 BitD Vegas to Reno. Larry Ragland along with Larry Roeseler and Norman Motorsports are in contention to win the Baja 1000 and the 2008 SCORE series. Personal life Larry Ragland was born December 22, 1943. He had a son named Chad and currently lives in Cave Creek, Ariz. His son2000 SCORE Baja 500 and Parker 400 - winner (class and overall). 2002 SCORE Baja 500 - winner (class). 2005 SCORE Primm 300, BITD Terrible’s Town 250, SNORE Buffalo Bills 400, and BITD Nevada 1000 - winner (class and overall). 2006 BITD Vegas-to-Reno - winner (class and overall). 2006 SCORE Baja 500 - winner (class and overall). 2007 SCORE Baja 500 - winner (class and overall). 2008 SCORE Baja 1000 - 3rd overall with son, Chad Ragland Norman Motorsports In 2008 Ragland joined Larry Roeseler and Rhys Millen on the Norman Motorsports team as co-driver of Trophy Truck #8. Hall
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| Nodes:[["Larry Ragland", {"description":'American off-road racing driver'}], ["Larry", {}], ["1943", {}]]
Relations:[["Larry Ragland", "given name", "Larry"], ["Larry Ragland", "date of birth", "1943"]] |
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Stigmatella aurantiaca is a member of myxobacteria, a group of gram-negative bacteria with a complex developmental life cycle. Classification The bacterial nature of this organism was recognized by Thaxter in 1892, who grouped it among the Chrondromyces. It had been described several times before, but had been misclassified as a member of the fungi imperfecti. More recent investigations have shown that, contrary to Thaxter's classification, this organism is not closely related to Chrondromyces, and Stigmatella is currently recognized as a separate genus. Of the three major subgroups of the myxobacteria, Myxococcus, Nannocystis, and Chrondromyces, Stigmatella is most closely aligned withMyxococcus. Life cycle S. aurantiaca, like other myxobacterial species, has a complex life cycle including social gliding (swarming), fruiting body formation, and predatory feeding behaviors. The bacteria do not swim, but glide on surfaces leaving slime trails, forming a mobile biofilm. It commonly grows on the surface of rotting soft woods or fungi, where it may form bright orange patches. During the vegetative portion of their life cycles, swarming enables coordinated masses of myxobacteria to pool their secretions of extracellular digestive enzymes which are used to kill and consume prey microorganisms, a bacterial "wolfpack" effect. The best studied of themyxobacteria, Myxococcus xanthus, has been shown to actively surround prey organisms, trapping them in pockets where they can be consumed. Roaming flares of M. xanthus can detect clumps of prey bacteria at a distance, making turns towards the clumps and moving directly towards them. Like other myxobacterial species, S. aurantiaca survives periods of starvation by undergoing a developmental process whereby the individuals of a swarm aggregate to form fruiting bodies (not to be confused with those in fungi). Within the fruiting bodies, a certain fraction of the cells differentiate into myxospores, which are dormant cells resistant to drying and temperaturesas slime is seen. Ecology S. aurantiaca is found on rotting wood or fungi and is only rarely found in soil samples. Secreted and non-secreted proteins involved in their feeding behaviors, either identified directly or speculatively identified on the basis of proteome analysis, include enzymes capable of breaking down a wide selection of peptidoglycans, polysaccharides, proteins and other cellular detritus. Various other secreted compounds possibly involved in predation include antibiotics such as stigmatellin, which is toxic for yeast and filamentous fungi but not most bacteria, and aurafuron A and B, which inhibits the growth of various filamentous fungi. Stigmatella specieshence appear in nature to help decompose otherwise insoluble biological debris. It is only distantly related to the cellulolytic myxobacteria, does not produce cellulases, and is strongly bacteriolytic. Therefore, Stigmatella consumes organisms that feed on wood rather that feeding on wood directly. Besides bacteria, its production of antifungal antibiotics suggests that Stigmatella species may feed on yeasts and fungi as well, or alternatively, may suggest that Stigmatella competes with fungi for shared resources. By producing antimicrobial compounds, Stigmatella may play a role in maintaining the balance of the microbial population in its habitat. Current Research Model system for development Myxobacteria
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Relations:[["Stigmatella aurantiaca", "Gram staining", "Gram-negative bacteria"], ["Stigmatella aurantiaca", "taxon rank", "Species"]] |
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Hammerheart Records (known as Karmageddon Media between 2004 and 2010) is a Dutch independent record label specializing in death metal, black metal, doom metal and folk metal bands from around the world. The label was founded in 1995 and is currently located in Valkenburg aan de Geul. It is incorporated in the Netherlands as Hammerheart Holdings B.V. In 2010, the label changed its name back to Hammerheart Records again and started signing new bands. Former artists Aeternus (currently signed to Dark Essence Records) Ancient Rites (currently signed to Season of Mist) Carpe Tenebrum Cruachan (currently signed to Candlelight Records) Dismember
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Relations:[["Hammerheart Records", "instance of", "Record label"]] |
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William Frank Selby (born June 11, 1970) is a former utility player from to with the Boston Red Sox, Cincinnati Reds, and Cleveland Indians. He also played one season in Japan for the Yokohama BayStars in . Selby played in 198 total MLB games, with a .223 career batting average. Mostly used off the bench, Selby hit a career high 6 home runs in with the Indians. The most dramatic of those home runs came on July 14, when he hit a walk-off grand slam against Mariano Rivera to defeat the New York Yankees, 10-7, in the bottom of the9th inning. It was the first walk-off home run that Rivera had allowed in his career. Bill Selby became the sixth player in (Triple-A team) Buffalo Bisons club history to be inducted into the Buffalo Baseball Hall of Fame on August 25, 2007. In the Bisons' modern era, Selby ranks first in hits (378), doubles (90), RBI (245) and runs (217). He's second in games played (370) and third in home runs (60). Selby was the team's MVP in (.295, 20 homers, 85 RBI) and played in the Triple-A All-Star Game in Rochester, New York. "Selby is God" fans Whileplaying minor league baseball for the Pawtucket Red Sox in 1996, during an away game in Columbus, Ohio, Selby was introduced to three Ohio State University students (and Cleveland Indians fans) who became very vocal fans. Two days later, Selby was called up to the parent Boston club, playing in Cleveland, and he had a base hit that Friday evening against Cleveland closer José Mesa. The three fans made the trip that weekend and debuted a large cardboard sign that read, merely, "Selby is God." (The sign is an homage to a previous "Bernie is God" sign that honored CowboyQB (and ex-Cleveland Browns legend) Bernie Kosar.) The "Selby is God" fans received some notoriety after Selby's grand slam off Rivera in 2002, appearing in The Plain Dealer and on television. Nicknaming Travis Hafner Selby is also known for bestowing Cleveland Indians DH Travis Hafner with his nickname, "Pronk". Selby explained the nickname to the Buffalo News: Texas came to town in 2002 and I was with [former Indian] Lee Stevens on the bench saying, 'This dude is unbelievable. He's a real project.' He was hitting the ball everywhere. We got him the next spring and we called him 'Project'Category:Akron Aeros players Category:American expatriate baseball players in Japan Category:American expatriate baseball players in Mexico Category:Baseball players from Alabama Category:Boston Red Sox players Category:Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players Category:Cleveland Indians players Category:Cincinnati Reds players Category:Elmira Pioneers players Category:Iowa Cubs players Category:Louisville RiverBats players Category:Lynchburg Red Sox players Category:Major League Baseball left fielders Category:Major League Baseball right fielders Category:Major League Baseball second basemen Category:Major League Baseball third basemen Category:Memphis Redbirds players Category:Nippon Professional Baseball center fielders Category:Nippon Professional Baseball first basemen Category:Nippon Professional Baseball right fielders Category:New Britain Red Sox players Category:Nippon Professional Baseball outfielders Category:Nippon Professional Baseball third basemen Category:Pawtucket
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| Nodes:[["Bill Selby", {"description":'American baseball player', "alias":['William Frank Selby']}], ["Boston Red Sox", {}], ["Cleveland Indians", {}], ["Cincinnati Reds", {}], ["Baseball", {}], ["Memphis Redbirds", {}]]
Relations:[["Bill Selby", "member of sports team", "Boston Red Sox"], ["Bill Selby", "member of sports team", "Cleveland Indians"], ["Bill Selby", "member of sports team", "Cincinnati Reds"], ["Bill Selby", "sport", "Baseball"], ["Bill Selby", "member of sports team", "Memphis Redbirds"]] |
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Rino Mondellini (1908-1974) was an Italian art director known for his work in the French film industry. Selected filmography The Night Is My Kingdom (1951) Shadow and Light (1951) Forbidden Fruit (1952) Children of Love (1953) Mademoiselle from Paris (1955) Trapeze (1956) The Lebanese Mission (1956) The Adventures of Arsène Lupin (1957) Lift to the Scaffold (1958) Tabarin (1958) Serenade of Texas (1958) Le Tracassin (1961) Fanny (1961) The Champagne Murders (1967) Two Weeks in September (1967) References Bibliography Hayward, Susan. Simone Signoret: The Star as Cultural Sign. Continuum, 2004. External links Category:1908 births Category:1974 deaths Category:Italian art directors Category:Italian
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| Nodes:[["Rino Mondellini", {"description":'art director'}], ["Art director", {}]]
Relations:[["Rino Mondellini", "occupation", "Art director"]] |
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The Battle of Fajardo was an engagement between the armed forces of the United States and Spain that occurred on the night of August 8–9, 1898 near the end of the Puerto Rican Campaign during the Spanish–American War. Pre-Battle events Proceeding under orders from Rear Admiral William T. Sampson, the monitors , , the armed tug , and the collier proceeded from Port Nipe to Cape San Juan, on the northeastern tip of Puerto Rico, arriving late afternoon on August, 1. The ships anchored behind a series of keys: Icacos, Isla de Lobos and Isla Palominos, out of sight fromwomen and children of the prominent town families from a feared Spanish reprisal. Leyden had since returned from St. Thomas and Puritan, Hannibal and the two army transports proceeded on to Ponce. On the afternoon of August 5, Captain Barclay, Ensign Albert Campbell, a few prominent Fajardan leaders, including Veve and a landing party of 14 bluejackets boarded the shallow-draft Leyden and navigated through the shoals to shore. The American bluejackets and the contingent of Fajardans posted the American flag at the Customs House in the harbor and marched to the town where they hoisted the United States flag overand into the hills. Dr. Veve and several other town leaders went to Amphitrite. Moving by rail from Hato Rey to Carolina and then marching the rest of the way, the Spanish troops entered Fajardo the afternoon of August 7. Battle Early on the evening of August 6, with anchored about 1,800 yards offshore, Captain Barclay ordered a landing party of 14 petty officers and men from Amphitrite, armed with rifles, pistols and a 6mm Colt machine gun under Ensign Kenneth M. Bennett, with Assistant Engineer David J. Jenkins, Naval Cadets William H. Boardman, Paul Foley and Pay Clerk O.F.his left inner thigh as he was entering the darkened lighthouse with three sailors. Assistant Surgeon Heppner initially believed it was a flesh-wound, although Boardman suffered a large loss of blood. He died two days later on the Amphitrite where he was evacuated that night after the ship's surgeon came ashore to accompany him and Dr. Heppner back to the ship. Boardman was one of only 23 combat-related U.S. Navy deaths during the entire Spanish–American War, two Navy deaths during Puerto Rican operations and the only Annapolis cadet to die out of 123 who served on ships in combat operations.San Juan after verifying that the lighthouse was abandoned, leaving only the civil guard behind to police Fajardo. The flags, as trophies of war, were sent to Madrid, Spain where today they can be seen at the army museum there. While the Battle of Fajardo was the only instance in the Puerto Rican Campaign where American forces withdrew from a position, it was not a defeat. President McKinley mentioned the engagement in his State of the Union address, remarking, "With the exception of encounters with the enemy at Guayama, Hormigueros, Coamo, and Yauco and an attack on a force landedat Cape San Juan, there was no serious resistance. The campaign was prosecuted with great vigor, and by the 12th of August much of the island was in our possession and the acquisition of the remainder was only a matter of a short time." See also Puerto Rican Campaign Spanish–American War Satellite View of Fajardo lighthouse and offshore keys (Reserva Natural de las Cabezas de San Juan) Photo of Fajardo Customs House Photo of Fajardo City Hall References External links Spanish–American War Centennial site Category:Spanish–American War Category:Battles of the Spanish–American War Category:Military in Puerto Rico Category:Military history of Puerto Rico
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The Citroën Bijou is a small coupé manufactured by Citroën at the premises they had occupied since 1925 in Slough, England. The Bijou was assembled from 1959 until 1964. It was based on the same platform chassis as the Citroën 2CV, sharing its advanced independent front to rear interconnected suspension. The car's appearance was thought to be more in line with the conservative taste of British consumers than the unconventional and uncompromisingly utilitarian rural look of the standard 2CV. The body was made of fibreglass, and the car featured the two-cylinder 425 cc 12 bhp engine also seen in the2CV. Only 210 were produced, plus two prototypes. It incorporated some components from the DS, most noticeably the single-spoke steering wheel. It was designed by Peter Kirwan-Taylor, by now already known as the stylist of the elegant 1957 Lotus Elite, another fibreglass-bodied car. Bijou bodies were initially moulded by a company called "Whitson & Co", close to Citroën's Slough premises, but it later proved necessary to transfer this work to another supplier. Disappointing sales levels for the UK's own Citroën seem to have been down to the Bijou's price, which at the time of the 1959 motor show was £674.
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"Till You Were Gone" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Mike Reid. It was released in March 1991 as the second single from his album Turning for Home. It peaked at #17 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart and at #8 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. This song followed Reid's number-one debut single, "Walk on Faith." Reid wrote the song with Rory Bourke. The song was originally recorded by Shelby Lynne on her 1989 album Sunrise. Chart performance Year-end charts References Category:1991 singles Category:1991 songs Category:Mike Reid (singer) songs
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Leda Florida Hugo (born 4 January 1963) is a Mozambican agronomist and politician who has served as a deputy minister since 2010. Early life and education Hugo was born in Namapa, Nampula Province on 4 January 1963. She attended primary school in Ocua in Cabo Delgado Province and secondary school in Nampula. She studied agronomy at the Eduardo Mondlane University in Maputo, graduating in 1986. She obtained a master's degree from Texas A&M University, College Station and a doctorate from the University of Pretoria in South Africa. Career In 1994, Hugo began working at the Eduardo Mondlane University, leading thetraining in agronomy. From 2001 to 2006 she led the rural engineering program and in 2008 she was in charge of the university's pedagogical direction. Hugo is a member of the Liberation Front of Mozambique. In 2010, she was appointed to the cabinet by President Armando Guebuza as Deputy Minister of Education. Following the 2014 election, Hugo became Deputy Minister for Science, Technology, Higher and Professional Education in the cabinet of Filipe Nyusi. Personal life Hugo is divorced and has two children. She is Muslim and speaks Makua, Portuguese and English. Publications References External links Government profile (in Portuguese) Category:Living
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Jon Petrovich (February 28, 1947 – February 10, 2011) was an American journalist and television executive. He is credited with founding numerous enterprises for CNN, including CNN.com, CNN Airport Network, and CNN en Español. Biography Petrovich was born in Gary, Indiana. He earned a bachelor's degree from Indiana University and a master's degree from the University of Alabama. Career Petrovich began as a reporter for WHAS-TV in Louisville, Kentucky before moving on to become assistant News Director for WDIV-TV in Detroit, Michigan. He was news director at WBAL-TV in Baltimore, Maryland and later vice president and general manager of KTVI-TVbecame president of Turner Broadcasting System Latin America. Petrovich was the head of international networks for Sony Television after leaving CNN. Thereafter he was Professor and Broadcast Chair at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. In 2007 he became the head of U.S. broadcast operations for the Associated Press, where he oversaw the day-to-day domestic operations, working directly with AP's broadcast wire, online, radio and television operations. Death Petrovich, died February 10, 2011 in New York City from complications due to cancer and diabetes, leaving behind his wife Karen and two grown children. References External links CNN Headline
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Acacia asperulacea is a shrub belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Lycopodiifoliae. Description The small spreading shrub typically grows to a height of . It blooms in May and produces yellow flowers. The phyllodes are arranged in whorls each with 10 to 14 phyllodes. Each phyllode is slightly flattened and straight or slightly recurved and from in length. Each flower head contins 15 to 30 flowers. The seed pods that form later are linear and glabrose with thickened margins. Each pod is long and wide and contains long longitudinally oblique seeds. A. asperulacea typically lives to an ageof 11 to 20 years and is able to produce seeds after three years. Taxonomy The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1859 as part of the work Contributiones ad Acaciarum Australiae Cognitionem as published in the Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society, Botany. Several synonyms for the plant are known including Acacia lycopodiifolia var. glabrescens by George Bentham, Acacia galioides var. asperulacea by Karel Domin and Racosperma asperulaceum by Leslie Pedley. Distribution It is native to an area in the eastern Kimberley region of Western Australia where it grows in skeletal
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Ashok Kumar Singh Chandel (born 4 July 1954) is an Indian politician and a former member of Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly representing Hamirpur assembly constituency fourth time. He was also elected to Thirteenth Lok Sabha from Hamirpur parliamentary constituency as BSP candidate. He was proven guilty in a case involving death of five citizens in 1997. The High court issued an order on April 19, 2019 where the politician was convicted for cold blooded homicide and was given life imprisonment along with eleven other conspirers. On 19 April 2019, Allahabad High court sentenced him life imprisonment for murdering five people
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Meenakshi Gopinath is an Indian educationist, political scientist, writer and a former principal of Lady Shri Ram College, New Delhi. She is the founder and incumbent director of the Women in Security Conflict Management and Peace (WISCOMP), a non governmental organization promoting peace and socio-political leadership among the women of South Asia and a former member of the National Security Advisory Board, the first woman to serve the Government of India agency. She has served as a member of the selection panel of the Lokpal, a legal body which has jurisdiction over the legislators and government officials of India. TheGovernment of India awarded her the fourth highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri, in 2007, for her contributions to Indian educational sector. She is a co-editor of the International Feminist Journal of Politics, the leading journal of feminist international relations and global politics. Biography Meenakshi Gopinath did her graduate studies (BA honours in political science) at Lady Shri Ram College for Women (LSR), New Delhi, rated by many as one of the premier centres of higher education in India, an institution she would later head as the Principal for a number of years. Her master's degree came from Universityof Massachusetts Amherst after which she returned to India to secure a doctoral degree from the University of Delhi. Earning a Fulbright Scholarship, she also did post doctoral research at Georgetown University, later. She started her career as a member of faculty at Jawaharlal Nehru University but subsequently joined her alma mater, Lady Shri Ram College for Women, and served the institution as its principal from 1988, till she superannuated from service in 2014. During her stint as the principal of Lady Shri Ram College for Women, Gopinath is known to have initiated many changes including the introduction of newcourses such as Conflict Resolution Studies, developing the institution into one of the higher rated ones in the country. She established the Centre for Peacebuilding at the college, reported to be the first such initiative at the undergraduate level of education in India. In 1999, she founded Women in Security, Conflict Management and Peace (WISCOMP), a forum to address the women's role in conflict management and peace, as a part of her involvement with the Track II diplomacy in South Asia. The organization is known to be promoting women's movements in Asia and coordinates efforts of the network participants throughtraining, advocacy and initiatives. Her contributions in Track II diplomacy in the Indian subcontinent also involves Neemrana Peace Initiative and Pakistan India Peoples' Forum for Peace and Democracy and she is a member of both the organizations. In 2004, she was appointed by the Government of India as a member of the National Security Advisory Board (NSAB), one of the three agencies under the National Security Council of India, the apex agency concerned with internal security in India. She is the first woman to be appointed to the NSAB where she served for four years till 2008. Gopinath is aThe Government India awarded Gopinath the fourth highest civilian honour of the Padma Shri in 2007. She received another award, the same year, Qimpro Platinum Standard Award, for excellence in education. The next year, Celebrating Womanhood awarded her the 2008 Celebrating Womanhood South Asian Region Recognition for social harmony. She is also a recipient of the Rajiv Gandhi Award for Excellence in Education and the Mahila Shiromani Award and the Delhi Citizen Forum Award. Bibliography See also Rajiv Mehrotra Lady Shri Ram College for Women References External links Further reading Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:Recipients of
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Grupo Bloch, also known as Empresas Bloch, is a Brazilian media conglomerate, founded by Ukrainian businessman Adolpho Bloch's family after their arrival in Rio de Janeiro in 1922, when they created Joseph Bloch & Filhos company. The company, which published pamphlets and other printed material, also started to print magazines. Thus, in 1953, the company launched Manchete magazine. With its successful launch, the publishing division of Bloch Editores was established. The group owned various Brazilian communication companies. At the end of the 1970s, the company funded the Rádio Manchete, a medium wave (AM) radio station as well as Manchete FMradio network. With the success of the radio stations, at the beginning of the 1980s the group entered the Brazilian government's competition to be one of the dealers of two television networks formed from the hunting concessions of the networks Tupi and Excelsior. Grupo Bloch was one of the bid winners, along with Grupo Silvio Santos, and immediately launched the Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão (SBT). The Rede Manchete, owned by Grupo Bloch, had already been launched in 1983. With millions in debt, the company had to sell Rede Manchete in 1992, but after the new owner, Hamilton Lucas de Oliveira,did not comply with the contract of sale, Grupo Bloch regained ownership of the network. Still accumulating debts, the company had to get rid of the television business in 1999, selling concessions for five owned-and-operated stations of Manchete to the Grupo TeleTV owners, Amilcare Dallevo Jr. and Marcelo de Carvalho, who launched a new network called RedeTV! to replace Rede Manchete. Bloch Editores filed for bankruptcy in 1999, and was closed in 2000. The company portfolio of magazines was sold to Manchete Editora, founded in 2002 by Mark Dvoskin. The radio stations of the Manchete FM network were sold toGrupo Sol Panamby, to politician Orestes Quércia, who turned it into Nova Brasil FM network owned-and-operated stations, with the exception of the station in Rio de Janeiro, which transmits the radio network Feliz FM. The São Paulo station was later sold to the Grupo RBS, which soon after sold it to Paulo Henrique Cardosothe, son of former president of the republic Fernando Henrique Cardoso. Since 2010 it has broadcast the programming of Rádio Disney on the old Manchete FM frequency. The only remaining media group company, Rádio Manchete, ended its activities at the end of 2015, remaining on the airover the Internet through streaming media. The archives of magazines and television, as well as group-owned properties, were sold to pay the debts of their companies. Bloch Som e Imagem, a company created to produce programs for Rede Manchete, the bankrupt estate of TV Manchete Ltda., legal name of Rede Manchete, and the concession of Radio Manchete, granted for the Rádio Federal Ltda. EPP, are still owned by the Grupo Bloch, managed by Pedro Jack Kapeller, the nephew of Adolpho Bloch and heir to his uncle's companies. Bibliography References External links Category:Media companies established in 1922 Category:Mass media companies of
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"Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" is a short story by the 20th-century Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges. The story was first published in the Argentinian journal Sur, May 1940. The "postscript" dated 1947 is intended to be anachronistic, set seven years in the future. The first English-language translation of the story was published in 1961. Told in a first-person narrative, the story focuses on the author's discovery of the mysterious and apparently fictional world of Tlön, whose inhabitants believe a form of subjective idealism, denying the reality of the world, and speak in a language lacking nouns. Relatively long for Borges(approximately 5,600 words), the story is a work of speculative fiction. The story alludes to many leading intellectual figures both in Argentina and in the world at large, and takes up a number of themes more typical of a novel of ideas. Most of the ideas engaged are in the areas of metaphysics, language, epistemology, and literary criticism. Summary The story unfolds as a first-person narrative and contains many references (see below) to real people, places, literary works and philosophical concepts, besides some fictional or ambiguous ones. It is divided into two parts and a postscript. Events and facts aretechnology. By 1944, all forty volumes of the First Encyclopedia of Tlön have been discovered and published in a library in Memphis. The material becomes accessible worldwide and immensely influential on Earth's culture, science and languages. By the time Borges concludes the story, presumably in 1947, the world is gradually becoming Tlön. Borges then turns to an obsession of his own: a translation of Sir Thomas Browne's Urn Burial into Spanish. Major themes Philosophical themes Through the vehicle of fantasy or speculative fiction, this story playfully explores several philosophical questions and themes. These include, above all, an effort by Borgesin Andalusia for a while; his history focuses on North Africa and was probably a major source for Borges. Additionally, "tsai" comes from the Mandarin Chinese word 菜 (cài), which refers to green leafy vegetables. Other places named in the story – Khorasan, Armenia, and Erzerum in the Middle East, and various locations in Europe and the Americas – are real. The Axa Delta, mentioned in the same context as Tsai Khaldun, appears to be fictional. Real and fictional people Listed here in order of their appearance in the story: Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986)—Author and first person narrator of thestory. Adolfo Bioy Casares (1914–1999)—non-fictional, Argentinian fiction-writer, a friend and frequent collaborator of Borges. An unnamed "heresiarch of Uqbar" is credited for the statement that "mirrors and copulation are abominable because they increase the number of men". This echoes Borges' own summary of the teachings of Al-Muqanna (d. ca. 783), a Persian prophet regarded by his orthodox Muslim contemporaries as a heresiarch. In the previously-published short story collection A Universal History of Infamy, Borges wrote the following as part of a summary of his message: "The world we live in is a mistake, a clumsy parody. Mirrors and fatherhood, becausepoet (and Borges's translator into French); Estrada, an Argentinian, was the author of, among other works, Muerte y transfiguración de Martín Fierro ("Death and Transfiguration of Martín Fierro"), a major commentary on Argentina's most famous nineteenth century literary work. Drieu La Rochelle, who was to commit suicide after becoming infamous for his collaboration with the Nazis during the Occupation of France, was one of the few foreign contributors to Sur, Victoria Ocampo's Argentine journal to which Borges was a regular contributor. Alfonso Reyes (1889–1959)—Mexican diplomat who served for a time in Argentina. In the story, he proposes to recreate thein Borges's life and works "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" formed part of a 1941 collection of stories called El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan ("The Garden of Forking Paths"). At the time he wrote "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" in early 1940, Borges was little known outside of Argentina. He was working in a local public library in Buenos Aires, and had a certain local fame as a translator of works from English, French and German, and as an avant garde poet and essayist (having published regularly in widely read Argentinian periodicals such as El Hogar, as well as inwas, at this time, a thriving intellectual center. While Europe was immersed in World War II, Argentina, and Buenos Aires in particular, flourished intellectually and artistically. (This situation was to change during the presidency of Juan Perón and the subsequent military governments, where many of Argentina's leading intellectuals went into exile, something that Borges and most of his circle did not contemplate.) Borges's first volume of fiction failed to garner the literary prizes many in his circle expected for it. Victoria Ocampo dedicated a large portion of the July 1942 issue of Sur to a "Reparation for Borges"; numerous leadingwriters and critics from Argentina and throughout the Spanish-speaking world contributed writings to the project, which probably brought his work as much attention as a prize would have. Over the next few decades "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" and Borges's other fiction from this period formed a key part of the body of work that put Latin America on the international literary map. Borges was to become more widely known throughout the world as a writer of extremely original short stories than as a poet and essayist. Publication history "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" originally appeared in Spanish in SUR in May1940. The Spanish-language original was then published in book form in Antología de la Literatura Fantástica —December 1940—, then in Borges's 1941 collection El Jardín de senderos que se bifurcan (The Garden of Forking Paths). That entire book was, in turn, included within Ficciones (1944), a much-reprinted book (15 editions in Argentina by 1971). The first published English-language translation was by James E. Irby. It appeared in the April 1961 issue of New World Writing. The following year, Irby's translation was included as the first piece in a diverse collection of Borges works entitled Labyrinths. Almost simultaneously, and independently, thepiece was translated by Alastair Reid; Reid's version was published in 1962 as part of a collaborative English-language translation of the entirety of Ficciones. The Reid translation is reprinted in Borges, a Reader (1981, ), p. 111–122. Quotations and page references in this article follow that translation. It was a finalist for the Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story from 1940 (in 2016). It is the first non-English work to be nominated in its original language rather than as a translation. Influence on later works "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" has inspired a number of real-world projects: "Small Demons", awebsite that "obsessively maps out cultural allusions found in books", was inspired by Borges, according to CEO Valla Vakili: "The inspiration for the name comes from the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges, specifically a passage in his short story 'Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius'. Borges writes, 'The history of the universe… is the handwriting produced by a Minor god in order to communicate with a Demon.' I read that as, the history of the universe is all the stories ever told. Minor gods are the storytellers who rule the worlds of their stories. And the Demon is the force that drivesthe need for stories, the place where author and reader meet. I took 'Minor' and 'Demon' and from there, Small Demons." "Prisoners of Uqbaristan", a short story by Chris Nakashima-Brown in which Borges himself appears, is heavily influenced by the philosophy of Tlön. Codex Seraphinianus, a mock encyclopedia by Luigi Serafini, describes a surreal world entirely in drawings, an invented alphabet, and a fictional language. Ummo, a hoax of more than one thousand pages of pictures and text in letter form, describes an extraterrestrial civilization and its contact with Earth. UFO researcher Jacques Vallée has specifically likened Ummo to "Tlön,referenced by characters that investigated Tlön. In Ted Chiang's story The Lifecycle of Software Objects, one of the virtual worlds mentioned is called Orbis Tertius. Several other projects have names derived from the story: Axaxaxas mlö is the title of a fictional book mentioned in another Borges short story, "The Library of Babel". hlör u fang axaxaxas mlö, taken from the example of the Tlön language described in the story, is the title of a chamber music piece for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano by Colombian composer Diego Vega, which won the 2004 Colombian National Prize for Music Composition, awardedessays". Guía de lectura de Ficciones, de Jorge Luis Borges, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil. The list of real and fictional people above draws heavily on this Spanish-language reader's guide. (Accessed 26 November 2006.) Andrew Hurley, "The Zahir and I", a fictional lecture delivered at the "Borges, Time, and the Millennium" conference, New York City, December 13, 1999. (Accessed 4 July 2006.) Bernard Quaritch company website. (Accessed 4 July 2006.) La alquimia del verbo: 'Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius' de J.L. Borges y la Sociedad de la Rosa-Cruz. Article by Santiago Juan Navarro about Borges'
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Shadiwal Hydropower Plant (SHPP) is a small, low-head hydroelectric generation station of 13.5 megawatt generation capacity (two units of 6.75 MW each), located near Gujrat city at Shadiwal 100 kilometer North-West of Lahore, Punjab province of Pakistan, on the flows of Upper Jhelum Canal. It is a small hydropower generating plant constructed and put in commercial operation on June 1961 with the Average Annual generating capacity of 42.67 million units of least expensive electricity. See also List of dams and reservoirs in Pakistan List of power stations in Pakistan Khan Khwar Hydropower Project Satpara Dam Gomal Zam Dam Duber Khwar
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Driver: San Francisco is an action-adventure racing video game and the fifth installment in the Driver series. Developed by Ubisoft Reflections and published by Ubisoft, it was released in September 2011 for the PlayStation 3, Wii, Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows, with an edition for Mac OS X in March 2012. The game sees players traversing a fictional version of San Francisco and the Bay area conducting missions through the use of licensed real-world cars, with the ability to shift into any car in the game's setting in most platform editions. The game's main story sees players controlling John Tanner,a police detective, who falls into a coma pursuing his nemesis Charles Jericho following a prison breakout after the events of Driv3r, and finds himself piecing together his plan in a dream world while it is happening in real life. The game received favourable reviews upon its release, with the exception of the Wii edition which received mixed reviews. A mini-comic series was released which provides plot details of the events between Driv3r and San Francisco, with the game receiving a collector's edition that includes additional multiplayer vehicles and single-player events. Gameplay A new feature is Shift, which allows Tannerthe ability to use Shift, all cars are equipped with a 'boost' feature, requiring the player to push up on the left thumbstick to use it. Players can also push L1 on the PlayStation 3 or the left shoulder button on the Xbox 360 version of the game to perform a special 'ram' attack on cars. The film director mode, which was absent from Parallel Lines, also returns, and players can share their videos on the Driver Club website. The game runs at 60 frames per second. Multiplayer Split screen and online multiplayer are also available for the first timein the series with 19 different game modes including trailblazer, tag, sprint GT, cops and robbers, among others. In Trail Blazer, the players have to follow the trail of an AI-controlled car to accumulate points. The player who accumulates more points will win the match. The Tag game mode is similar to regular tag, but in reverse. All the players are trying to "tag," or hit, one player. Once he is hit, the person who tagged him is now it. The multiplayer will also have experience points. Cars San Francisco is unique from other games in the series, in thatthe game features licensed real-life cars. The game includes 140 fully damageable licensed vehicles ranging from buggies, muscle cars, and sport cars including Chevrolet, Audi, Alfa Romeo, Aston Martin, Bentley, Ruf Automobile, Dodge, Ford, McLaren, Hummer, Shelby, Volkswagen, Pagani, Lincoln, DeLorean, Lamborghini, and Cadillac. Wii version The Wii version of the game does not include the "Shift" mechanic but allows players to use guns while driving. The SMG, the pistol, the shotgun, the assault rifle and the RPG are all the weapons available in the game. All weapons can be upgraded in the following categories: clip size, reload speed, anddamage. There is a maximum of four levels for each upgrade. Upgrade points can be earned by doing various tricks and earning awards around the city. A new feature for the Wii is the localized multi-player, where a second player may take control of the gun or, if they desire, can connect a DS, DSi or 3DS system through download play. The DS device can be used to make roadblocks, look for police and buy player 1 some more time through playing various mini games. There is also a four player split-screen multiplayer. The split screen mode includes four gamevariants. The variants are Capture the flag, in which the players must grab a flag and drive it to a specific location, Pass the Bomb, in which players must pass a bomb from car to car before a timer counts down, ending the game, Gold Rush, in which the players must grab a bag of money and hold on to it for points, and elimination, in which players must race each other. There is also a cops and robbers split screen mode. Plot Setting The game's setting focuses on a fictionalized version of San Francisco, and surrounding regions of MarinCounty and Oakland, recreating the geography, generalized layout of the city, and notable landmarks including the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge and Golden Gate Bridge. The recreation features around of roads, though the amount of roads and territory in the setting is reduced in the Wii edition, as the main bridges of the city are blocked. The events of the game take place six months after the events of Driv3r; a mini-comic series provides background on events during the six-month period. Story Following successful surgery that saves the life of both himself and John Tanner, an undercover FBI agent, notorious crimekingpin Charles Jericho escapes his custody in a Turkish hospital and flees back to the United States. Tanner, alongside his partner Tobias Jones, manages to locate and arrest him six months later in San Francisco. On the day of his trial for multiple homicides and drug trafficking, Jericho stages a breakout from his prison convoy, overpowering his guards and eliminating the police escort. While monitoring the convoy's route, Tanner and Jones witness the breakout and pursue after him after he takes control of his prison van. When they lose sight of Jericho in an alley, they soon find themselves beingincapacitating him. Although Tanner claims that he knew what he was doing, Jones reminds him whose car he was driving, before suggesting they go get a well-deserved beer. Nintendo Wii The plot of the Wii version of Driver: San Francisco is a different story and the story is a prequel to the original Driver. It features John Tanner as a rookie undercover cop. Tanner and his partner, Alvarez are chasing the gangster Solomon Caine when they get into a car crash. Alvarez is killed and Tanner goes undercover to find his killer. He is accompanied by Tobias Jones, who Tannerin production at the 2005 Tokyo Game Show when Sony announced a list of 102 that would be released on the PlayStation 3. Ubisoft later confirmed a new game in the series after acquiring the series from Atari. In June 2008, the BBC conducted reports on the computer game industry, among those reports were in-game, and development footage of the next Driver game. On 21 April 2009, Ubisoft registered the trademark Driver: The Recruit. In January 2010, it was confirmed that a new Driver game was in development and due for release in Ubisoft's fiscal year ending in March 2011.On 23 April 2010, Ubisoft registered the domain driversanfranciscogame.com as well as driversanfrancisco.com and driversanfran.com, suggesting that San Francisco was the setting of the new game in the series. On 27 May 2010, Ubisoft confirmed that the next installment in the Driver series would appear on E3 2010, along with other games. On 7 June 2010, Ubisoft released a teaser website containing a live action trailer, resembling the first mission of the original Driver game, along with a countdown for Ubisoft's E3 2010 conference. Ubisoft also created the game's Facebook page, which, upon clicking in the "Like" button, opens aslightly different version of the trailer, showing a Californian driver license of John Tanner. A billboard at the LA Convention Center for E3 revealed the title of the new game to be Driver: San Francisco. Ubisoft officially announced the game on their E3 2010 conference. On 12 November 2010 the game had been delayed and would be released in FY 2012, which was between 31 March 2011 and the same date in 2012. Reflections founder and series creator Martin Edmondson, returned to Reflections after he temporarily left the game industry in 2004. The game was developed by five Ubisoft studioswith Reflections as the lead, and four other developers: Vancouver, Kiev, Shanghai and Montreal. Ubisoft released a free DLC, with 12 new routes for all online modes on 12 September. On 15 July 2011 Ubisoft announced that all of their future games with online functionality would require "Uplay Passport" online pass. Driver: San Francisco would be the first in line to utilize this feature. However, due to misprinted codes, which left players who bought new copies of the game unable to play online, the online pass was waived for the Xbox 360 version. Audio The game's audio was mixed atPinewood Studios, which is known for the James Bond film franchise. The game includes 60 licensed songs, an original score from Marc Canham along with a new version of the Driver theme by Canham. The OST is mixed and produced by Rich Aitken at Nimrod. On 30 August, the soundtrack was confirmed with 76 songs with genres like funk, hip hop, electronic, alternative rock and hard rock from artists such as Aretha Franklin, Dr. John, DJ Shadow, The Black Keys, The Cure, Beastie Boys, Queens of the Stone Age, The Heavy, Unkle, and Elbow. The PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360versions support custom soundtracks which allows the player to listen to their own music during gameplay. Marketing Comic mini-series A comic book mini-series published by Wildstorm Productions based on the game was released. The storyline takes place after the events of Driv3r and before San Francisco, and focuses on Tanner's personal vengeance against Jericho: the mini-series was written by David Lapham and illustrated by Greg Scott. The first issue was released on August 2011 and a preview entitled The Pursuit of Nothingness was available on Comic-Con 2010. Collector's edition A collector's edition was also available for the PlayStation 3, Xbox360 and Microsoft Windows versions of the game for PAL territories only. The pack includes an 18×9×9 cm replica of a 1970 Dodge Challenger R/T 440 Six Pack, a map of San Francisco detailing the in-game location of the 80 dares scattered across the city, three exclusive in-game cars for multiplayer mode including 1963 Aston Martin DB5, 1972 Lamborghini Miura, and 1966 Shelby Cobra 427, 4 single player challenges: Mass Chase – a wrongfully accused driver attempts to escape the whole police force of San Francisco and prove his innocence; Relay Race – change car between laps to win race;Russian Hill Racers – Race against 3 supercars in the famous district; Taxi – Race against other taxis in Downtown. Reception The game has received "generally favorable reviews" on all platforms except the Wii version, which received "mixed" reviews, according to video game review aggregator Metacritic. In Japan, Famitsu gave the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions a score of three eights and one nine for a total of 33 out of 40. The Daily Telegraph gave the Xbox 360 version a score of four stars out of five, saying: "Delivered with wit and panache, Driver San Francisco works becauseof Zero Punctuation, placed it as his second favorite game of 2011. Sales Ubisoft announced in its fall 2011 quarterly financial report that sales of Driver: San Francisco had exceeded their targets. In 2016 the game was unlisted from online stores and is unavailable for purchase; a petition was started to request Ubisoft to make it available again. References Notes External links Category:2011 video games * 05 Category:MacOS games Category:PlayStation 3 games Category:Open world video games Category:Organized crime video games Category:Ubisoft games Category:Video games developed in the United Kingdom Category:Video games set in San Francisco Category:Wii games Category:Windows games Category:Xbox
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### User:
Solapur District is a district in Maharashtra state of India. The city of Solapur is the district headquarters. It is located on the south east edge of the state and lies entirely in the Bhima and Seena basins. The entire district is drained by the Bhima River. Solapur district leads Maharashtra in production of Indian cigarettes known as beedi. Demographics According to the 2011 census Solapur District has a population of 4,317,756, the 43rd largest for a district in India. The district has a population density of . Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 12.1%. Solapur hasa sex ratio of 932 females for every 1000 males, and a literacy rate of 77.72%. At the time of the 2011 Census of India, 73.13% of the population in the district spoke Marathi, 9.28% Kannada, 7.80% Hindi, 5.04% Telugu and 3.94% Urdu as their first language. Marathi is an official language. Talukas Solapur district is subdivided for administrative purposes into eleven talukas, which in turn comprise smaller divisions. The talukas are North Solapur, South Solapur, Akkalkot, Barshi, Mangalwedha, Pandharpur, Sangola, Malshiras, Mohol, Madha and Karmala. Places of interest Siddheshwar Temple and lake Siddheshwar Temple is a famous temple inSolapur .It is sacred to Hindus and members of the Lingayat faith. There is a lake within the temple complex. , Solapur Buikot killa It is a fort located near siddeshwar temple, Solapur. Pandharpur (Lord Vithoba Temple, 1, 2) Akkalkot (Swami Samarth Maharaj Temple) Ganagapur - Shri Dattatreya Temple Dahigaun - Jain Temple Nagnath Maharaj temple wadval ( taluka mohol ) Karmala - Shri Kamala Bhavani Mandir( 96 Payarya Vihir( a small dip down lake of 96 stairs and having shape of Mahadev Pind) ) Barshi - Bhagwant Mandir Celebrities Born in Solapur District: M. F. Husain (Painter) Shashikala (Actress)
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### User:
Valentin Lazăr (born 21 August 1989) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Dinamo București. Club career 2013-2014 season In the summer of 2013, Lazăr signed a contract for three years with FC Dinamo București. He made his debut on 19 July in a match against Poli Timișoara. He scored his first goal in a match against Chindia Târgoviște in the Romanian Cup and a second goal against FC Brașov. In 2014, he scored against Corona Brașov and two goals against Săgeata Năvodari in Liga I. He scored and assisted against big rival Steaua in the
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### User:
Richard J. Horton (born 1949) is an American golf administrator who was inducted into the 2019 Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame. Horton served for 35 years as the executive director of both the Tennessee Golf Association (TGA) and the Tennessee Section PGA (Professional Golf Association of America) . He was one of the first fifteen full-time PGA Section executive directors in the U.S. and he gained national attention by bringing together golf's formerly competitive and often-contentious factions: professional golfers (PGA) and amateur golfers (TGA). He became executive director of both organizations and eventually was able to put all of thestate's collective golf operations under one roof. Starting as a one-man operation in a bedroom office, he took the sport of golf in Tennessee from a largely structureless environment into the era of modern commercial golf. A skilled fundraiser, he secured enormous donations that allowed him to act on his ideas of the future for golf administration— he created a single golf complex called "Golf House Tennessee" which served to administer all golf activities in the state, including pro golf, amateur golf, women's golf, junior golf, and turfgrass research. It was the only facility of its kind at the time.Horton's success influenced other states to follow his blueprint. Tennessean sportswriter Joe Rexrode calls Horton "the Godfather of Tennessee Golf". Early life Horton was born in 1949 in Hamilton, New York, a small town that is the home of Colgate University, about 40 miles southeast of Syracuse. His father was a photographer who made composite photographs for college fraternities. His mother worked for Colgate, and this gave him access to the university's golf facilities. At age eight, Horton began playing at a nine-hole course owned by the university and later worked many summers at another university course called "Seven OaksGolf Club", designed by Robert Trent Jones. Horton mowed and watered the course and sold golf balls he fished out of the lake. He played on his high school golf team and competed in several New York State junior championships. He attended Wake Forest University with hopes of playing college golf there, but failed to qualify as a walk-on. Horton graduated from Wake Forest cum laude in 1971 with a major in Latin. After obtaining a teaching certificate, he taught seventh and eighth graders and coached baseball in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He knew this was not what he wanted asa career. He got a golf-related job in junior golf for a while, but the Atlanta-based company went out of business; however, it was through that position that he heard about a golf administration job opening in Nashville. Career choice In 1973, at age 24 and with a Beatles haircut, Horton applied for a job in Tennessee as a golf administrator— an interview was scheduled. In preparation for the interview, Horton visited Jack Horner who had a similar job in North Carolina. Horner gave him some tips on what the job entailed along with an outline of what Horner hadbeen hoping to accomplish. Later, at Horton's job interview, he found that the Tennessee PGA officials needed administrative help but were not exactly sure about what they wanted him to do, so Horton revealed a plan for the future based on his North Carolina visit. He spoke of adding a $4 fee to every pro-am entry fee, getting into the golf handicap business, and starting golf camps– ideas that no other candidate had. "When he left, we kind of looked at each other and said, 'I think we've got our man'", said Joe Taggert, selection committee member." Other selection committeemembers were Willie Gibbons, Bill Hunt, Cotton Berrier, Bill Garner, and Hollis Morlow. After landing the job, Horton said, "They said there was [only] enough money to pay me for six months. I had those six months to somehow raise the other half of my salary." That 1973 budget of $3,500 by the Tennessee PGA has grown to $22 million for the state's collective golf organizations in 2018. When hired for these positions in 1973, Horton was one of only 15 full-time PGA executive directors in the United States, but for Tennessee, he was the first paid employee. Taggart andGibbons gave him some hand-me-down items, a mattress, and some dishes with a local country club logo. He rented an apartment and worked as a one-man office in a bedroom with the PGA paying for part of the rent. It took four years before Horton got an actual office. In 1993, Horton and his staff moved to the Legend's Golf Club in Franklin, Tennessee. In 1973, Horton met his future wife, Connie Prince, who was working at the pro shop at Nashville's Hillwood Country Club. They were married in December, 1974. Their daughter, Margaret, became a skilled player in heryouth, and Horton admitted that having a daughter sparked his interest in his creating a girls' junior golf camp. Golf Administration It is well-known in the golf world that professional golfers and amateur golfers often have a contentious relationship. Sportswriter Joe Rexrode said, "... from what I can gather, it's like the Jets vs. Sharks while wielding pitching wedges". In the mid-1970s computers were just becoming widely used and Horton found that the PGA (professionals) and the TGA (amateurs) were in head-to head competition for the computerized golf handicap business, each negotiating with competing vendors. Horton helped convince the twobank account. Retired USGA official Larry Adamson said, "Some people just have people skills and Dick was honest, he was straight, he was able to look at both groups and tell them the benefits of being together." As of 2002, Tennessee was one of only four U.S. states to have joint administration of pros and amateurs. This model has been copied by several other states and several have hired Horton's people to run them. Horton also persuaded the men's and women's amateur groups to unite. In 2000, the TGA(men) and WTGA (Women's Tennessee Golf Association) merged, making one governing bodyfor amateur golf in the state. The trend continued in other states. Youth golf Horton was one of the first in the nation to organize youth summer golf camps which introduced many youngsters to the sport. The rise of skilled young players helped assure the sport's future popularity, identifying future golf champions and golf teachers. Junior golf in Tennessee came into being in 1974 when Dave Noble, the golf pro at Fall Creek Falls State Park in central Tennessee offered Horton the site to become the "PGA Junior Golf Academy", one of the nation's first. It had 98 boys thefirst year and Horton rented the cabins for them at the park. After 21 years there the golf academy was moved to new facilities. As of 2018, the junior golf program has had more than 15,000 graduates . Horton initiated other golf programs including a junior tour sponsored by PGA tour member Brandt Snedeker; a Ben Hogan Tour event; and the Nashville Golf Open Web.com Tour event. Snedeker himself was a youngster in Junior Golf and knew Horton then. Snedeker said, "We have a bunch of kids who are going to be on the (PGA and LPGA) tour because ofthe pipeline Dick started." Golf House Tennessee In 1992, Horton visited Chattanooga philanthropist and Coca-Cola heir Jack Lupton with four bold requests: land and a building to be a home for all golf operations in the state (Golf House Tennessee) a new place for the Junior Golf Camp with a dormitory a dedicated golf course, for the camp and for turfgrass research a state golf hall of fame Lupton agreed and pledged $5 million, provided that the foundation would raise money from other sources that would start an endowment fund. Thus the Tennessee Golf Foundation, a non-profit, was incorporated in1990 with Horton as president. A 15-acre tract with an ante-bellum home was purchased adjacent to the Vanderbilt Legends Golf Course in Franklin, Tennessee, near Nashville. The Vanderbilt Legends course, designed by Bob Cupp and Tom Kite, served as the Tennessee Golf Foundation's temporary headquarters while the land next door was being developed. The house and adjacent land was known as "Aspen Grove"— built in 1830s by Thomas McEwen who fought alongside Andrew Jackson in the Indian wars. Expanded and restored, it was named "Golf House Tennessee" and became the 21,000 square foot centerpiece of all golf operations in thestate and opened in April, 1995. As of 1995, Golf House Tennessee was the only facility of its kind. The original structure now houses the Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame. The added administrative center, named for Horton, also contains the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America, the Volunteer Chapter Club Managers Association of America, and the Women's TGA (WTGA) among others. Golf architect Bob Cupp was told to design a par-three course adjoining the Golf House. The first design did not suit benefactor Jack Lupton, who wanted the course to "require use of every club in the bag". Cupp wentback to lengthen one hole to 226 yards (thus requiring a Driver), and to make double greens (one green serving two golf holes) to accommodate Lupton's request. The course was named "the Little Course at Aspen Grove". A 64-bed dormitory was built nearby to house the Junior Golf Camp attendees. Musician Vince Gill is another key player in the success of this endeavor. Gill, a scratch golfer, began hosting an annual golf tournament in 1993 known as the "The Vinny Pro-Celebrity Golf Invitational" whose primary beneficiary is the Tennessee Golf Foundation. This tournament has raised over $8 million for JuniorGolf to pay for staffing of the golf academy and for "The First Tee" projects and the Vince Gill Junior Tour. Gill received the PGA Distinguished Service Award in 2003, the PGA's highest honor. Other endeavors Lupton invited Horton to serve with him on the board of the "Arnold Palmer Golf Company". Horton saw it as a possible conflict of interest, but received permission from his other golf endeavors and took the position. He served for 5 years and said it was an unforgettable experience to sit on quarterly board meetings with Arnold Palmer and Nancy Lopez. Over the years
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Jason Paul Behrendorff (born 20 April 1990) is an Australian cricketer, currently listed with Western Australia and the Perth Scorchers in Australian domestic cricket. Although born in New South Wales, Behrendorff grew up in Canberra and played representative cricket for the Australian Capital Territory at both junior and senior levels. A left-arm fast bowler, he transferred to Western Australia for the 2009–10 season and made his debut at state level the following season, playing several matches after injuries to other fast bowlers. Behrendorff has since become a regular for Western Australia, opening the bowling in both the Sheffield Shield andthe one-day Matador BBQs One-Day Cup. He made his debut for the Perth Scorchers during the 2012–13 season of the BBL, and featured in the Scorchers teams that won consecutive titles during the 2013–14 and 2014–15 seasons. Domestic career Born in Camden, New South Wales, Behrendorff grew up in Canberra and played cricket for the Australian Capital Territory at both under-17 and under-19 level. He played grade cricket for Tuggeranong Valley in the grade cricket competition of the Australian Capital Territory and also represented the Prime Minister's XI in a match against the touring New Zealand national cricket team in2009. Behrendorff was recruited by Western Australia for the 2009–10 season, having impressed state selectors during a trial match. Beginning in the Futures League, good form allowed him to make his List A debut for Western Australia in the 2010–11 Ryobi One-Day Cup, in a match against Tasmania at Hands Oval. In the match, he dismissed Mark Cosgrove with the first ball of Tasmania's innings, finishing with figures of 1/18 from five overs. Due to injuries to other fast bowlers, Behrendorff played more regularly at state level the following season, taking 4/76 on his Sheffield Shield debut against Victoria inNovember 2011. He finished the 2011–12 season with 13 wickets from five Shield matches and five wickets from five Ryobi One-Day Cup matches, having often competed with Nathan Coulter-Nile for a regular spot in the side. At the end of the 2011–12 season, Behrendorff was given the "Future Legend" award at the Western Australian Cricket Association's awards night. Owing to this form, Behrendorff was offered contracts with both Western Australia and the Perth Scorchers for the 2012–13 season. In his first Sheffield Shield match for the season, against Victoria in November 2012, he took 4/29 and 3/24, although Western Australiastill lost the match. Behrendorff debuted for Perth in the BBL the following month, taking 3/44 from four overs against the Melbourne Renegades. At grade cricket level, he plays for the Subiaco–Floreat Cricket Club. , Behrendorff was studying a sports science degree at Edith Cowan University, having previously undertaken work at Hockey Australia. In June 2014, pending recovery of an achilles injury, Behrendorff was picked for the Australia A team in a series of four-day matches against South Africa A in Townsville in August 2014. Behrendorff again played for the Scorchers during the 2014–15 BBL season and was a memberAt the 2014 Allan Border Medal ceremony, held in January 2015, Behrendorff was named "Domestic Player of the Year". He recorded 22 percent of the vote for the award, which is voted on by players, beating teammate Adam Voges (16 percent). In February 2017, Behrendorff took figures of 9 for 37 in the first innings against Victoria, the fifth-best figures in the Sheffield Shield. International career In August 2017, Behrendorff was named in Australia's Twenty20 International (T20I) squad for their series against India. He made his T20I debut for Australia against India on 7 October 2017. On 12 January 2019he made his One Day International (ODI) debut against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground, taking 2 wickets. In April 2019, he was named in Australia's squad for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. On 25 June 2019 in the match against England, Behrendorff took his first five-wicket haul in ODIs. IPL career In IPL 2018, Behrendorff was signed by Mumbai Indians at 1.5 crore. However, he was ruled out with a back injury before the tournament started. The team retained him for the 2019 IPL season. He made his IPL debut against Chennai Super Kings on 3 April 2019. He
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There are a number of universities in Queensland, Australia, all with distinct academic dress. University of Queensland The University of Queensland follows the Cambridge pattern for its Academic regalia, the nuances in design in terms of its hoods and gowns are part of the Groves classification system of academic regalia. Previous to the current colour coding system, which consists of special dye lot colours described in the British Colour Codes, there was a more complex course based colour system in place for each degree.. Revisions took place during 1998 with the changes being visible in the graduating classes of 1999.and Campus Colours Faculties and the various campuses of the university have distinctive colours. The colour of the university itself is a deep blue (PMS541). Faculties at the university and their respective colours are: Business - Blue (PMS279) Creative Industries - New Fuchsia (PMS247) Education - Green (PMS341) Health - Orange (PMS165) Humanities Program - Eggshell Blue (PMS304) Law - Grey (PMS430) Science and Engineering - Teal (PMS327) James Cook University The following represent the prescribed academic dress standards in respect of officers and graduates of the University. Robes The robes are Cambridge style. Black robes are worn by Bachelors,Sport sciences New Gold - Education Royal Blue - Law, Criminology, Creative industries, Design, Communication and Social sciences Griffith University Three-quarter length academic gowns, open down the front, are the standard academic dress, as is a badge of the Griffith University logo. For those who graduate from a Certificate or an Advanced Certificate program, this is full academic dress; for those who graduate from an Associate Diploma or a Diploma program, a black Cambridge hood, with white silk edging, is added to the gown. No trencher is worn for non-degree graduates. Those graduating from a bachelor's degree (with or withoutred braiding. Other doctorate graduates wear a red gown, with the inside of the sleeves lined in white, and a red Cambridge hood with white silk edging, along with the black Tudor bonnet with matching braiding. Doctors of the University essentially receive the inverse of the PhD attire, wearing a red gown, with black facing and sleeve lining, but still with a black Tudor bonnet with red braiding. See also Academic dress Groves classification system Swotvac References Academic Dress at UQ Campus Life - Academic Dress at Griffith University Academic Dress Regulations at QUT University of the Sunshine Coast -
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Astichopus is a monotypic genus of sea cucumbers, the only species in the genus being Astichopus multifidus. It is commonly known as the furry sea cucumber or the fissured sea cucumber and is native to the Caribbean Sea. Description Astichopus multifidus is a robust, soft-bodied species growing to a maximum length of and width of . Both its dorsal and ventral surfaces are uniformly covered with hundreds of tube feet, those on the dorsal surface being extended into papillae, fleshy conical projections about long with tube feet at their tips. This sea cucumber is chocolate brown or dark grey, sometimes
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Hussein Shabani is a Burundian professional footballer, who plays as a Midfielder for Bugesera FC. Club career In January 2019, Shabani joined Ethiopian club, Ethiopian Coffee SC. In August 2019, Shabani moved to Bugesera FC in Rwanda. International career He is also known for having a name double. Hussain shabani (known as مصیبت which means distress and disaster in persian) is the most notorious man in north of Iran. Hussein shabani was invited by Lofty Naseem, the national team coach, to represent Burundi in the 2014 African Nations Championship held in South Africa. International goals Scores and results list Burundi's
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