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Margaret Maria Verney (née Hay-Williams or Williams-Hay) (3 December 1844 – 7 October 1930), was an English-born Welsh educationist. Verney was the daughter of Lady Sarah Elizabeth Amherst and her husband John Hay-Williams, 2nd Baronet Williams of Bodelwyddan. She married Sir Edmund Hope Verney, MP. In 1894 she became a member of the Statutory Council of the University of Wales, holding the position until 1922. In 1904 she produced an edition of the Memoirs of the Verney Family during the Seventeenth Century. She also contributed to the Dictionary of National Biography. Sources R. F. Verney et al. - In Memory
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Margaret Verney", "given name", "Margaret"], ["Margaret Verney", "contributed to creative work", "Dictionary of National Biography"], ["Margaret Verney", "father", "John Hay-Williams"]] |
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Elijah Eugene Pitts (February 3, 1938 – July 10, 1998) was an American football player, a halfback in the National Football League for 11 seasons, ten with the Green Bay Packers. Late in his career, he briefly played for the Los Angeles Rams and New Orleans Saints. Pitts was an assistant coach in the league for over two decades, most notably as the assistant head coach of the Buffalo Bills. Early years Born in Mayflower, Arkansas, Pitts' father was a sharecropper. He played high school football at segregated Pine Street High School in Conway, and also in the marching bandNFL championship teams under head coach Vince Lombardi, including wins in the first two Super Bowls. He was inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame in 1979. Coaching career After his playing career ended, Pitts was a scout for two seasons in Green Bay under Devine. He became an assistant coach for the Rams under head coach Chuck Knox in 1974, filling a running backs vacancy left by Dick Vermeil's departure to UCLA. Pitts went with Knox to the Buffalo Bills in 1978, then left for the Houston Oilers in 1981, on first-year head coach Ed Biles' staff,coaching hall of fame back Earl Campbell. After Biles was fired in 1983, Pitts spent a season in Canada with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 1984 with head coach Al Bruno. Pitts returned to the Bills in 1985 under head coach Kay Stephenson and was retained by new coaches Hank Bullough and Marv Levy in 1986. He became assistant head coach in 1992, coached in all four of the Bills' Super Bowl appearances in the early 1990s, and substituted as head coach for Levy for three games in the 1995 season. Death In October 1997, Pitts was diagnosed with stomach cancerwhile he was still the Bills' assistant head coach. The disease claimed his life nine months later; he was 60 years old. Pitts was survived by his wife, two sons, and a daughter. Pitts' elder son Ron (b. 1962) was an NFL defensive back in the late 1980s with the Bills and Packers, and is currently a sportscaster for CBS Sports Network. See also Elijah Pitts Award Ron Pitts (son) Kimberly Pitts (daughter) References External links Category:1938 births Category:1998 deaths Category:American football halfbacks Category:Buffalo Bills coaches Category:Green Bay Packers players Category:Houston Oilers coaches Category:Los Angeles Rams coaches Category:Los Angeles Rams
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| Nodes:[["Elijah Pitts", {"description":'American football player (1938-1998)'}], ["New Orleans Saints", {}], ["Green Bay Packers", {}], ["Los Angeles Rams", {}], ["Mayflower, Arkansas", {}], ["American football", {}], ["Stomach cancer", {}]]
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Emanuil G. Gavriliță (11 August 1847 in Nicorești – 10 June 1910 in Băxani) was a lawyer, journalist and activist from Bessarabia. He was the director of Basarabia, a newspaper from Chișinău. References Honours Căminul Cultural județean „Emanuil Gavriliță”, Soroca Bibliography Poștarencu, Dinu. Emanuil Gavriliță: 90 de ani de la moarte (Contribuții biografice) (Emanuil Gavriliță - 90 ans deppuis sa mort). In: D Rom., 2000, 7, nr. 1, p. 49-54. Ştefan Ciobanu, Cultura românească în Basarabia sub stăpânirea rusă, Chişinău, 1923. Vocea Basarabiei, (AUDIO) Avocatul Emanuil Gavriliţă - ostaş al cetăţii dreptăţii Capitala, Avocatul Emanuil Gavriliță - ostaş al cetăţii
### Assistant:
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CKRA-FM (96.3 FM, "96.3 The Breeze") is a radio station in Edmonton, Alberta. Owned by Stingray Group, it broadcasts a soft adult contemporary format. CKRA's studios are located inside the West Edmonton Mall, while its transmitter is located at Ellerslie Road and Provincial Highway 21, just southeast of Edmonton's city limits. History On April 17, 1979, CFCW Limited, owner of CFCW in Camrose, received approval to operate a new FM station in Edmonton. There were ten other applicants for the new license, including CHUM Limited, Radio Station CHED Ltd., CHQT Broadcasting Ltd., The Voice of the Prairies Ltd. (owners ofa satellite "weekend" location on Edmonton's trendy Whyte Avenue. Local (former) A-Channel entertainment host, Shannon Tyler, was hired to co-host the morning radio show with B.J. Wilson. In February 2003, CKRA once again re-branded as 96X, "the hit music alternative" and retained its hot AC format, leaving R&B and hip-hop out of its playlist. Ryan Waters joined the new morning show, working with Wilson and Tyler then hosting solo for 90 minutes of commercial free music. Mike Anderson (middays), Tim Riess (drive time) and Carly Kincaid (evenings) rounded out the air staff. Several on-air changes followed, including Anderson leaving Middaysand focusing on M.D. duties. Riess hosted several dayparts, Waters returned to his former position as "Swing Announcer" and Chris Kuchar held down "Afternoon Drive" before returning to sister station 97.3 K-Rock. Following the transition of Power 92 to the hot AC formatted Power 92.5 in June 2003, the station shifted to CHR and adopted the slogan "Edmonton's Only Hit Music Station", which (after Power 92 changed to adult hits) changed to "Edmonton's #1 Hit Music Station". During this time, 96X moved its Whyte Avenue studio to a booth in Hudson's Canadian Tap House from where it began broadcasting duringthe evenings and on weekends. The station also began weekly broadcasts on Saturday nights from The Standard nightclub. 96X hoped to duplicate the success of Power 92, who targeted the younger demographics through "Power Parties" and would regularly broadcast from different clubs around Edmonton. Long term success was not to be as 96X enjoyed one average and one top 6 rating result, the latter being the highest market share reached to date. At the time, Wilson and Tyler hosted the morning show, Carley Kincaid entertained middays, Tim Riess sat in the chair for PM drive, and Adam McKale was theevening DJ. 96X's popularity among younger listeners was bolstered by Power 92.5's flip to 92.5 Joe FM, which aired a variety hits format. In the fall of 2005, 96X's main studio moved from its old location in a 99th Street strip mall to a new facility in Phase 4 of the West Edmonton Mall along with Newcap Broadcasting's other stations. However, the entry of CHBN in March 2005 and CHDI in April 2005 spelled disaster for 96X, whose market quickly dispersed over the upcoming months. In response, the 96X format was relaunched with a return to hot AC, but left
### Assistant:
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Baba Dayal Singh (1783-1855) was a Sahajdhari Sikh whose main mission was to bring Sikhs back to the Adi Granth and simran. His successor Baba Darbara Singh established many centres beyond Rawalpindi and wrote about the essential teachings of Baba Dayal. The sect had grown considerably and the third successor, Sahib Rattaji (1870-1909) kept the Nirankaris in order via strict adherence to their rahit (Khalsa code of conduct). At this time they numbered in the thousands and some had taken interest in the Singh Sabha movements (see entries on Singh Sabhas), under the fourth successor Baba Gurdit Singh. The Nirankaris
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Relations:[["Baba Dyal Singh", "date of birth", "1783"], ["Baba Dyal Singh", "date of death", "1855"]] |
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Dafydd Ddu o Hiraddug (died 1371), also known as Dafydd Ddu Athro o Hiraddug, was a Welsh language poet, grammarian, and cleric in the diocese of Llanelwy (St Asaph). He was once believed to be the son of a certain Hywel ap Madog of Tremeirchion, but this has now been disproven. Dafydd composed poems on religious themes; his surviving work includes poems on the Ten Commandments, Salvation, and on the ephemeracy of human life and of God’s judgement to come after death. Dafydd is also thought to be the composer of the (Mary's Service), a poetical translation of the Latin
### Assistant:
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Fellhanera is a genus of lichens in the family Pilocarpaceae. The genus was described by lichenologist Antonín Vězda in 1986. Species Fellhanera africana Fellhanera albidocincta Fellhanera antennophora Fellhanera atrofuscatula Fellhanera aurantiaca Fellhanera avilezii Fellhanera badimioides Fellhanera borbonica Fellhanera bouteillei Fellhanera carnea Fellhanera cenii Fellhanera dictyospora Fellhanera dispersa Fellhanera duplex Fellhanera ekmanii Fellhanera elliottii Fellhanera emarginata Fellhanera flavostanhopeae Fellhanera follmannii Fellhanera fragilis Fellhanera fuscatula Fellhanera gyrophorica Fellhanera lambinonii Fellhanera lisowskii Fellhanera longispora Fellhanera mastothallina Fellhanera misionensis Fellhanera montana Fellhanera muhlei Fellhanera naevia Fellhanera nashii Fellhanera obscurata Fellhanera ochracea Fellhanera paradoxa Fellhanera parvula Fellhanera pauciseptata Fellhanera perpusilla Fellhanera pilomarginata Fellhanera punctata Fellhanera
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Fellhanera", "taxon rank", "Genus"], ["Fellhanera", "parent taxon", "Pilocarpaceae"]] |
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Zielonka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Murowana Goślina, within Poznań County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately east of Murowana Goślina and north-east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has an approximate population of 60. Zielonka was first mentioned in written records in 1397. It is situated in the middle of the Puszcza Zielonka forest and landscape park. It has a small lake, from which the Trojanka stream flows northward towards Głęboczek. The University of Life Sciences in Poznań has a research centre in the village. There is also an Arboretum covering
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| Nodes:[["Zielonka, Poznań County", {"description":'village in Greater Poland, Poland'}], ["Poland", {}], ["Gmina Murowana Goślina", {}]]
Relations:[["Zielonka, Poznań County", "country", "Poland"], ["Zielonka, Poznań County", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Gmina Murowana Goślina"]] |
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John Tillinger (born June 28, 1938) is a theatre director and actor. Life and career Joachim F. Tillinger was born in Tabriz, Iran. His father was German Jewish and his mother was Protestant. Tillinger was raised in England, where he was first exposed to the theatre. He spent his early years on Broadway as an actor, appearing in A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (standby "Freddie", 1968), Othello ("Roderigo", 1970), Hay Fever ("Sandy Tyrell", 1970), and The Changing Room ("Colin Jagger", 1973). Tillinger's first Broadway directing credit was Solomon's Child in 1982. Since then he has directed: LoveLisbon Traviata (1989), Lips Together, Teeth Apart (1991), Sylvia (1995), and Jewtopia (2004). He has directed numerous regional theatre productions. He directed The Wedding Banquet at the Village Theatre, Seattle, Washington, in 2003. He was the literary consultant for the Long Wharf Theatre, New Haven, Connecticut from 1975 to 1997. Additionally, he was the associate artistic director at Long Wharf Theatre. He directed many plays at the Long Wharf Theatre, including This Story of Yours and Solomon's Child (1980), Another Country (1982), and most recently Paddywhack and Broken Glass (1994). Personal Tillinger was married to actress/director Dorothy Lyman from 1971to 1978. They have two children, actor Sebastian Tillinger and producer Emma Tillinger. Filmography Awards and nominations 2001 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Director of a Play (Judgment at Nuremberg, nominee) 1991 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Director (The Lisbon Traviata, winner) 1989 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Director (Love Letters, winner) 1986 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play (Loot, nominee) 1986 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director of a Play (It's Only a Play nominee) and (Loot, nominee) 1986 Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Direction of a Play (Loot, winner) 1982 Drama Desk Award for
### Assistant:
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Oxon Creek is a stream on the Potomac River which feeds a cove that straddles the border between Washington, D.C. and Prince George's County, Maryland just north of Interstate 495 (Capital Beltway) at Woodrow Wilson Bridge. Oxon Creek heads at the confluence of Oxon Run and Barnaby Run, sometimes referred to as Winkle Doodle Run. It starts just inside the boundary of D.C. and then runs to the south and west into Maryland to empty into the Potomac at Goose Island (a sand bar often under water) across from the city of Alexandria, Virginia. Before reaching the Potomac, the creekwidens to form Oxon Cove which is partially in Maryland and partially in Washington, D.C.. The creek is almost entirely within Oxon Cove National Park, except for the first few feet in D.C. and a portion of the cove on the southside of the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant. Two bridges cross the creek. The Anacostia Freeway crosses it on a bridge where it becomes a tidal stream and the Oxon Hill Farm Trail crosses it where it is still narrow. The unusual spelling is either historical or a reference to Oxfordshire, England, though it was usually labelled as
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Relations:[["Oxon Creek", "instance of", "Stream"], ["Oxon Creek", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Prince George's County, Maryland"]] |
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Pandhari Juker (died February 17, 2020), popularly known as Pandhari Dada was an Indian make-up artist, who worked in Hindi film industry. Filmography 2009, Rita 2007, Kadachit 2002, Hum Pyar Tumhi Se Kar Baithe 1997, Gupt: The Hidden Truth 1995, Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge 1994, Tehkikaat 1994, Jealousy Turns Blood 1994, Mohra 1994, Yeh Dillagi 1993, Raunaq 1993, Darr 1993, Aaina 1993, Parampara 1991, Lamhe 1991, Gunehgar Kaun 1990, Lekin 1990, Izzatdaar 1989, Jaaydaad 1989, Parinda 1989, Chandni 1989, Prem Pratigyaa 1989, Clerk 1988, Khatron Ke Khiladi 1987, Thikana 1987, Hifazat 1986, Shatru 1986, Kala Dhanda Goray Log 1986, Dharm
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| Nodes:[["Pandhari Juker", {"description":'Indian make-up artist'}], ["Artist", {}]]
Relations:[["Pandhari Juker", "occupation", "Artist"]] |
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Giuseppina Huguet (1871–1951) was a Catalan operatic soprano with a lyrical voice who sang throughout Europe prior to World War I. Huguet was born in 1871 and registered on official documents as "Josefina" Huguet. Her first music teacher was Francisco Bonet in Barcelona, where she soon made her operatic debut as Lakmé at the Teatro Liceu of Barcelona. She subsequently toured several countries, including some South American nations. She performed, too, with success in Italy, appearing for the first time at Milan's La Scala in 1896, where she sang the role of Ophélie in Ambroise Thomas's Hamlet. Huguet proved popular
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Relations:[["Giuseppina Huguet", "voice type", "Soprano"], ["Giuseppina Huguet", "place of birth", "Barcelona"], ["Giuseppina Huguet", "place of death", "Barcelona"]] |
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"Santa Claus and His Old Lady" is a bit by Cheech and Chong, one of their best-known comedy routines. It was the duo's first single. "Santa Claus and His Old Lady" did not appear on the duo's eponymous debut album, although the B-side, "Dave," did. It has since received continued airplay on radio stations during the Christmas season, particularly those that switch to temporary all-Christmas music formats. It peaked at number 4 on the Billboard Christmas Singles chart upon its release in 1971, then peaked again at number 3 on the same chart in 1972 and 1973. (Entries on anygiven week's Christmas Singles chart were ineligible for the corresponding edition of the Hot 100 at the time.) Synopsis The sketch begins with Cheech at the piano attempting to write a parody of "¿Dónde Está Santa Claus?" (Spanish for "Where is Santa Claus?"), a Christmas song by Augie Rios from 1958, to little success. Chong enters, at which point he reveals that he has never heard of Santa Claus (Chong repeatedly mistakes Santa Claus for a musician). Cheech then explains the story of Santa Claus, but from an unusual perspective. Santa and his wife began in the projects in an
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Santa Claus and His Old Lady", {"description":'1971 single by Cheech & Chong'}], ["Christmas", {}]]
Relations:[["Santa Claus and His Old Lady", "set during recurring event", "Christmas"]] |
### User:
Victoria Public Hall, or the Town Hall, is a historical building in Chennai, named after Victoria, Empress of India. It is one of the finest examples of British architecture in Chennai and was built to commemorate the golden jubilee of Queen Victoria. It served as a theatre and public assembly room in the late 19th century and the early 20th century. It now houses the South Indian Athletic Association Club. History In a meeting held in March 1882 at the Pachaiyappa's Hall in George Town by some leading citizens, the decision to construct a town hall for Madras was taken.donors for the construction work with a contribution of 10,000. The list included the Travancore Maharajah ( 8,000), Mysore Maharajah, Pudukottai Rajah and former Madras High Court Judge Muthuswamy Iyer (all 1,000 each) and P.Orr and Sons, a city-based watch company ( 1,400). Other contributors included Ramnad Raja Bhaskara Setupati, Zamindar of Ettiapuram and Hadji Abdul Batcha Sahib. It took about five years to complete the construction. The hall, an example of the Indo-Saracenic architecture, was designed by Robert Fellowes Chisholm (1840-1915) in the Romanesque style and was built by Namperumal Chetty between 1888 and 1890. It was opened toremoved as part of the renovation. The building The building is located on EVR Periyar Salai near Moore Market and between Ripon Building and Chennai Central Railway Station. Constructed with red brick and painted with lime mortar, the rectangular building has an Italianate tower capped by a Travancore-style roof. The ground floor of the building has a built-up area of 13,342 sq ft and the first floor has a built-up area of 12,541 sq ft. The two large halls in the ground and the first floors were built to accommodate 600 persons each, while a wooden gallery in the eastern
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Relations:[["Victoria Public Hall", "country", "India"], ["Victoria Public Hall", "architectural style", "Indo-Saracenic architecture"], ["Victoria Public Hall", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "EVR Periyar Salai"]] |
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he chose the tanci form because it would be easy for the common people including women and children to understand the song and make them remember the incident it was named after. It is an example of a tanci for a political and social purpose. The work portrays the Boxers as being foolish and fraudulent, and it portrays the officials who supported the Boxers as being crooked. That viewpoint is considered politically incorrect in China as of 2010. Wilt L. Idema wrote in the article "Prosimetric and verse narrative" within The Cambridge History of Chinese Literature: From 1375, that because
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| Nodes:[["Gengzi Guobian Tanci", {"description":'song'}], ["Song", {}]]
Relations:[["Gengzi Guobian Tanci", "instance of", "Song"]] |
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Governor Stirling Senior High School (abbreviated as GSSHS) is a public co-educational partially selective high day school, located in Woodbridge, a north-eastern suburb of Perth, Western Australia. The school provides both a vocational and tertiary entrance education for students from Year 7 to Year 12. Opened in 1959, the school replaced the former Midland Junction High School (founded in 1901), at a new site in West Midland. GSSHS adopted the motto of the old school: "Honour Before Honours". The school campus was used as a primary filming location for the short film, Ronan's Escape. History The school was officially openednew school campus, and construction began in February, 2011. In the interim years 8, 9, 10 attended the old Midland Primary School site and years 11 and 12 attended Cyril Jackson Senior Campus. The new school was completed for Term 1 in the 2013 school year. Specialist programs Governor Stirling Senior High School is one of the flagship schools providing approved specialist programs in Western Australia. Governor Stirling offers three specialist programs; Artsmedia, Engineering and Football. All three programs are selective, and of these programs Artsmedia and Engineering are academically selective. As well as the specialist programs, Governor Stirling alsowish to partake in the program must pass a strict academic exam as well as a practical test. The program is delivered in partnership with Murdoch University, providing opportunities for direct university entry. The program operates from years 7-10 and students have classes for four hours each week. Students can continue studying aspects of the program in years 11 and 12 in the form of VET subjects. Engineering Governor Stirling is Western Australia's specialist engineering school. The program offers a diverse range of engineering studies including electrical, mechanical, chemical, environmental and civil engineering. The program is academically selective, and studentsmust pass a rigorous testing process in order to gain entry. The program is delivered in partnership with the University of Western Australia. The program operates from years 7-10 and students have classes for four hours each week. Football The specialist football program is a proud contributor to the school's history of sporting. The football program is renowned for achieving unequivocal success in developing rising stars in the AFL and WAFL. Transport Governor Stirling Senior High School is readily accessible by public transport. The most popular mean of transport to and from school is by train, and the school isHistorical Society, Which stands on the river bank adjacent to the school gymnasium and it reads:- "Captain James Stirling, R.N., First Governor, Commander-in-Chief, and Vice Admiral of Western Australia from 1829-1839 erected a 'Cottage Orne' here prior to 21 July 1831". Café The school cafe operates for the benefit of students and staff. The cafe is organised by a manager under the direction of the P & C Association Cafe Committee. Varied food items, drinks and ice creams are available at prices consistent with making a small profit used for the purchase of amenities to benefit all students. Notable alumni
### Assistant:
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Begun in 2007, Christian Academy of Madison is a private, non-denominational Christian school educating students enrolled in three-year-old kindergarten through 12th grade. The mission of the Christian Academy of Madison is "to work cooperatively with the students home and church to provide a biblically-based, Christ-center learning environment which promotes spiritual maturity, academic excellence and personal growth, ministering to the whole child". CAM is located in Madison, Indiana, serving students from the Northern Kentucky and Southern Indiana area. Academic Standards Students study from the challenging A Beka curriculum, which encourages academic excellence and character-building. beyond strong reading, and science, highlights ofclass room; the back wing of the building was added for five classrooms and additional restrooms. An addition to the classroom wing in 2009 added seven new classrooms, allowing grades to be split up into their individual levels to meet enrollment growth and to begin to add high school grades. As the school has grown one grade has been added each year and they are now able to serve 3 year old kindergarten through 12th grade. In September 2011, the school began accepting "Indiana Choice Scholarship Program" vouchers. School Sponsorship and Affiliation Christian Academy of Madison is independent in its
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| Nodes:[["Christian Academy of Madison", {"description":'private school in Madison, Indiana, IN, United States'}], ["Indiana", {}]]
Relations:[["Christian Academy of Madison", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Indiana"]] |
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Annamanum is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae, containing the following species: Annamanum albisparsum (Gahan, 1888) Annamanum albomaculatum (Breuning, 1935) Annamanum alboplagiatum Breuning, 1966 Annamanum annamanum Breuning, 1960 Annamanum annulicorne (Pic, 1934) Annamanum basigranulatum Breuning, 1970 Annamanum cardoni Breuning, 1953 Annamanum chebanum (Gahan, 1895) Annamanum fuscomaculatum Breuning, 1979 Annamanum griseolum (Bates, 1884) Annamanum griseomaculatum Breuning, 1936 Annamanum guerryi (Pic, 1903) Annamanum humerale (Pic, 1934) Annamanum indicum Breuning, 1938 Annamanum irregulare (Pic, 1925) Annamanum lunulatum (Pic, 1934) Annamanum mediomaculatum Breuning, 1962 Annamanum ochreopictum Breuning, 1969 Annamanum plagiatum (Aurivillius, 1913) Annamanum rondoni Breuning, 1962 Annamanum sikkimense Breuning, 1942 Annamanum
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Relations:[["Annamanum", "taxon rank", "Genus"]] |
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Eugenius Vulgarius (Italian Eugenio Vulgario; fl. c. 887–928) was an Italian priest and poet. Eugenius' epithet may allude to a Bulgar heritage, and he may have been a descendant of the horde of Alzec that settled in the Molise in the seventh century and were still distinguishable by their language in the late eighth century. The ethnonym was sometimes rendered as Vulgares in Latin. Knowledgeable of Latin and Greek, he was also deeply learned in the Classics and displays familiarity with Virgil, Horace, and the tragedies of Seneca. Around 907, when he was a presbyter and teacher of rhetoric and
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Thomas Barbour Lathrop (1847 – May 17, 1927) was an American philanthropist and world traveler. He was born in Alexandria, Virginia. Lathrop was a grandson of Governor James Barbour of Virginia. He studied at the University of Bonn and Harvard University. Around 1890, he inherited a sizable fortune from his father. As a young man, he had been a reporter for the newspaper San Francisco Morning Call. Although he spent much of his time traveling, Lathrop considered the Bohemian Club in San Francisco his home for the rest of his life. After he became wealthy, Lathrop traveled around the worldmany times. In the 1890s, Lathrop met a young biologist named David Fairchild who he persuaded to become a plant explorer. He financed Fairchild and accompanied him on some of his early travels. Lathrop's travels with Fairchild are described in detail the Fairchild and Douglas books. Lathrop died on May 17, 1927 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. See related Marjory Stoneman Douglas. Adventures in a Green World: the Story of David Fairchild and Barbour Lathrop. (Coconut Grove, FL: Field Research Projects, 1973) [That book contains an introduction by his nephew, Henry Field.] David Fairchild. The World Was my Garden: Travels of a
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Yuri Nikolaevich Stoyanov (; born July 10, 1957 in Odessa) is a Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, musician. People's Artist of the Russian Federation (2001). Most famous comedian duo with Ilya Oleynikov. Biography Yuri was born July 10, 1957 in Odessa, as a child he moved under Odessa to the village of Borodino. Mother is Russian, Yevgenia Leonidovna Stoyanova (born June 21, 1935), worked as deputy director for educational work, director of a pedagogical college and taught Ukrainian language and literature, honored worker of education of Ukraine. He lives in Odessa. Father — Bulgarian, Nikolai Georgievich Stoyanov workedas a gynecologist, died in 1993. In 1974 he entered the GITIS. After graduation in 1978, he played at the Tovstonogov Bolshoi Drama Theater, where he worked as an actor until 1995. Yury Stoyanov received nationwide fame after the release of the sketch show Gorodok, which he created and led together with Ilya Oleynikov from 1993 to 2012. October 30, 2018 Stoyanov joined the Council on Public Television by decree of the President of the Russian Federation. Selected filmography Girl and Grand (1981) as Journalist Hare Over the Abyss (2006) as Semion Grossu 12 (2007) as 6th Juror Kingdom ofCrooked Mirrors (2007) as producer Yeralash (2007) as robber Hitler Goes Kaput! (2008) as Martin Bormann Cinderella (2012) as Viktor Pavlovich Chugainov, oil magnat The White Guard (2012) as Blokhin The Snow Queen (2012) as King (voice) The Crimean Bridge. Made with Love! (2018) as boss Personal life Stoyanov married three times. Stoyanov has three daughters and two stepdaughters. References External links Official site Category:1957 births Category:People from Odessa Category:Living people Category:Soviet male film actors Category:Soviet male stage actors Category:Russian male film actors Category:Russian male stage actors Category:Russian male voice actors Category:Russian television presenters Category:Recipients of the Order of Honour
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Synodontis camelopardalis, known as the giraffe synodontis, is a species of upside-down catfish that is endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is only known to occur in the Tshuapa River. It was first described by Max Poll in 1971. The original specimens were obtained in Eala, on the Ruki River in the central Congo River Basin. The species name camelopardalis refers to the giraffe, Giraffa camelopardalis, in reference to the coloration of the fish. Description Like all members of the genus Synodontis, S. camelopardalis has a strong, bony head capsule that extends back as far aslock the spines into place comes from several small bones attached to the spine, and once raised, the spines cannot be folded down by exerting pressure on the tip. The fish has a structure called a premaxillary toothpad, which is located on the very front of the upper jaw of the mouth. This structure contains several rows of short, chisel-shaped teeth. On the lower jaw, or mandible, the teeth are attached to flexible, stalk-like structures and described as "s-shaped" or "hooked". The maximum total length of the species is . Generally, females in the genus Synodontis tend to be slightlylarger than males of the same age. Habitat and behavior In the wild, the species occurs in the Congo River basin. It is harvested for human consumption. As a whole, species of Synodontis are omnivores, consuming insect larvae, algae, gastropods, bivalves, sponges, crustaceans, and the eggs of other fishes. The reproductive habits of most of the species of Synodontis are not known, beyond some instances of obtaining egg counts from gravid females. Spawning likely occurs during the flooding season between July and October, and pairs swim in unison during spawning. The growth rate is rapid in the first year, then
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Eutaeniichthys gilli is a species of goby native to brackish waters of the northwestern Pacific Ocean from around Japan, the Korean Peninsula and the Yellow Sea. It is an inhabitant of estuarine tide pools where it can be found under rocks. This species grows to a length of SL. This species is the only known member of its genus. The generic name is a compound of eu meaning "good", taenia meaning "ribbon" or "tape", Eutaenia being a synonym of the garter snake genus Thamnophis, and ichthys, "fish". The specific name honours the American ichthyologist Theodore Gill (1837-1914) for his work
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Philip Traherne, or Traheron (; 9 August 1635 in Lugwardine – 1686 in St. Nicholas, Hereford) was an English diplomat, author of books. He was son of Thomas Traherne (1603–1644) and Mary. He was English Chaplain at Smyrna in 1669-1674. He possessed minuscule 71, a Greek manuscript of the four Gospels, and brought it to England. Traherne collated text of the manuscript, and in 1679, presented it to Lambeth Palace along with its collation. Works The soul's communion with her saviour. Or, The history of our Lord Jesus Christ, written by the four evangelists digested into devotional meditations (1685) References
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Harry Tisch (March 28, 1927, Heinrichswalde – June 18, 1995) was an East German politician and trade unionist who served as Chairman of the Free German Trade Union Federation between 1975 and 1989. He was also a member of the State Council from 1976 until he was forced to resign in November 1989. He was a recipient of the Patriotic Order of Merit in Gold in 1969 and the Order of Karl Marx in 1977. After German reunification Tisch was not tried in court due to his declining health. He died of heart failure in 1995. Category:1927 births Category:1995 deathsCategory:People from Vorpommern-Greifswald Category:People from the Province of Pomerania Category:Members of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany Category:Members of the State Council of the German Democratic Republic Category:Members of the 4th Volkskammer Category:Members of the 5th Volkskammer Category:Members of the 6th Volkskammer Category:Members of the 7th Volkskammer Category:Members of the 8th Volkskammer Category:Members of the 9th Volkskammer Category:Free German Trade Union Federation members Category:Members of the Landtag of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Category:German politicians convicted of crimes Category:Recipients of the Order of Karl Marx Category:Recipients of the Patriotic Order of Merit in gold Category:Recipients of the
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Felicidad y Perpetua (Happiness and Everlasting) is the third album by Colombian singer-songwriter Fanny Lu, released by Universal Music Latino on November 21, 2011. As executive producer of the album, Fanny Lu enlisted a variety of producers to collaborate like Andrés Munera, José Gaviria, Steve Greenberg, Mario Balducci, Jesús Miranda and Manuela Mejía. Sonically, the album is rooted in Latin pop, electropop and Ranchera, but also incorporates a variety of other genres such as Vallenato. One single was released before the album's release: "Fanfarrón". This song topped the all the Venezuelan charts and had different entries to the Latin charts.Recently was released her second single "Ni Loca" featuring the Puerto Rican artist featuring Dalmata on December 1, 2011, and she confirmed to the Spain newspaper "El País" that her third single is "Don Juan". In March 2012, during an interview, Fanny Lu revealed that "Don Juan" would be the third single. In October 2, 2012 this song was released. The video has not yet been recorded, but this could be recorded in late December and premiered in either February or March 2013 before Fanny Lu started her first world tour "Voz y Éxitos World Tour". Track listing Charts References
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Nurkurniati Aisyah Dewi (born 4 March 1970 in Jakarta, Indonesia), better known as Nia Dinata, is an award-winning Indonesian film director. Her movies are known for tackling subjects controversial or "risky" in Indonesia such as homosexuality, migrant workers, and polygamy. Dinata began her film career directing video clips and commercials in the mid-1990s until directing the made-for-television Mencari Pelangi in 1998. Three years later, she directed her first feature film, Ca-bau-kan, after founding her own production house. The next film she directed, 2003's Arisan!, was critically acclaimed and one of her most successful works. Her third directorial effort, 2006's BerbagiSuami, was controversial yet successful. Dinata has faced heavy censorship and controversy in Indonesia because of the subjects she covers. However, she has also won critical acclaim internationally, being called Indonesia's "most talented new filmmaker" in 2006. Two of the films she direct have been submitted to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Biography Dinata was born Nurkurniati Aisyah Dewi in Jakarta on 4 March 1970. As a child, Dinata watched movies weekly. After finishing high school, she received a bachelor's degree in mass communications from Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, where she became interested in cinematography. Shethen took a filmmaking course at New York University. After returning to Indonesia, she took her first job as an apprentice reporter for Seputar Indonesia. She later began directing video clips and commercials with Iguana Productions in the mid-1990s, studying the techniques on her own. Dinata made her directorial debut with the 1998 made-for-television film Mencari Pelangi (Looking for the Rainbow), which won two national awards. She then started her own production company, Kalyana Shira Film, around 1999. Her first feature film, Ca-bau-kan, was produced by Kalyana Shira and dealt with the trials and tribulations of Chinese Indonesians in pre-independenceIndonesia. After being trimmed from its original running time of 160 minutes to 124 minutes for commercial viability, the film—adapted from the novel by Remy Sylado—was critically panned; Dinata herself was satisfied, saying it was "as good as it could be for that short running time". She produced Sekar Ayu Asmara's debut, Biola Tak Berdawai, the following year. The next film she directed, 2003's Arisan! (The Gathering), had gay themes and was produced on a small budget. It is considered one of her more commercially successful films, being seen by over 500,000 people, and the first Indonesian film dealing withhomosexuality. Its success surprised her, as most of the commercially successful films at the time were horrors and children's films. After the success of Arisan!, Dinata was able to find more sponsors for her movies. In 2004, she was invited to join the Cannes Young Directors Program, and the following year she produced Joko Anwar's directorial debut Janji Joni (Joni's Promise). Another film she directed, 2006's Berbagi Suami (Love for Share), about polygamy in Indonesia, was based on her personal experiences when her father took a second wife. In 2007, Dinata produced Quickie Express, described in the press as ain May, with the release scheduled for 1 December 2011, eight years after the first instalment. In 2011 Dinata also collaborated with Ucu Agustin on Batik: Our Love Story, a documentary on the traditional textile batik. Dinata directed, while Ucu served as screenwriter. Controversy Dinata's works, dealing with issues that are often at odds with the social values of the Muslim-majority Indonesia, have been controversial. After the success of Arisan!, she began receiving hate mail that accused her of promoting homosexuality and said that she was going to hell. During the promotional tour for Berbagi Suami, she was accosted bysince the beginning of her career and fighting against it in the Constitutional Court of Indonesia in 2007, Dinata continues to argue against laws permitting film censorship. Style Dinata focuses on the "little people" and her films are often social commentaries. She also includes a female perspective of gender issues in her works. She considers herself an independent filmmaker, and values feature-length films over television shows and commercials. Jane Perlez, writing for The New York Times, has noted that Dinata is "more art house than Hollywood", showing fearlessness in addressing pressing Indonesian social issues. Although she enjoys watching teen movieslike Clueless and Cruel Intentions, she does not intend to direct any as "wouldn't have the passion". Awards and recognition Perlez described Dinata as Indonesia's "most talented new filmmaker" in 2006. Two of the films she directed (Ca-bau-kan and Berbagi Suami) and one she produced (Biola Tak Berdawai) were submitted for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. 2004 Citra Award for Best Film for Arisan! 2004 MTV Indonesia Movie Awards for "Best Director" for Arisan! 2006 Hawaii International Film Festival for Best Feature Love for Share Personal life Dinata is of small physical stature. She is married to
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only to the number of students to fill a single orchestra and opera company. Accordingly, enrollment is in the range of 150 to 175 students. According to statistics compiled by U.S. News & World Report, the institute has the lowest acceptance rate of any college or university (4 percent), making it among the most selective institutions of higher education in the United States. Administration Past directors Past directors of the institute have included: Josef Hofmann (1926–38) – pianist Randall Thompson (1938–40) – composer Efrem Zimbalist (1941–68) – violinist Rudolf Serkin (1968–76) – pianist John de Lancie (1977–85) – principal oboist
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Timothy P. Galvin (August 7, 1894 – January 27, 1993) was a lawyer and Deputy Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus. Personal life Galvin was born in Pierceton, Indiana on August 7, 1894. He later settled in Hammond, Indiana after beginning his law career. During World War I, after serving as a Knights of Columbus secretary at Camp Greene in North Carolina, he joined the American Expeditionary Forces in July 1918, and returned a year later. Galvin married Mary Graziella Chevigny, who predeceased him in 1947, and together they had a daughter and two sons, Mary Anne, Timothy P.,Jr., and Patrick Joseph. Both sons attended Notre Dame. He had a brother, Francis Joseph Galvin, Sr., with whom he had a law practice, another brother, Edward, and two sisters, Nell and Catherine. Early career Notre Dame Galvin was a member of the Class of 1916 at the University of Notre Dame. As a student, he was an editor of the Notre Dame Dome and was on the debate team. In the 1930s, Galvin was president of the Notre Dame Alumni Association. Beginning in 1946, he served as a University lay trustee. Career Galvin began his law career in the
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The 2009 NFL season was the 90th season in the history of the National Football League (NFL). The 50th anniversary of the original eight charter members of the American Football League was celebrated during this season. The preseason started with the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game on August 9, 2009, and the regular season began September 10, with the reigning Super Bowl XLIII champion Pittsburgh Steelers defeating the Tennessee Titans 13-10 in overtime. The season ended with Super Bowl XLIV, the league's championship game, on February 7, 2010 at Sun Life Stadium with the New Orleans Saints defeating thethe first pre-season game was played at the new Cowboys Stadium, with the Tennessee Titans' A. J. Trapasso's punt hitting the center-hung video display boards during the game, the league temporarily modified the rule regarding balls in play that strike an object such as a video board or a guy wire: in addition for the down being replayed, the game clock will also be reset to the time when the original play was snapped. In November the United States Congress held hearings regarding NFL players on the field receiving concussions and other major injuries. Strong recommendations were made to thewas held February 7 at Miami Gardens, Florida's Sun Life Stadium (home of host team Miami Dolphins, who were also eliminated from post-season contention). The 2010 Pro Bowl was held on January 31, one week before Super Bowl XLIV, at the same site of the league championship game, Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. This was the first time since 1979 (held for the season) that the Pro Bowl was held in the Continental United States as opposed to Hawaii. The NFL also announced that the site and date of Pro Bowl games after 2010 will include playing thegame on a rotating basis in Honolulu. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said the move was made after looking at alternatives to strengthen the Pro Bowl and to make the end of the season more climactic. As a result of the move, players will not be allowed to play in both the Super Bowl and the Pro Bowl in the same year. In addition, ESPN replaced CBS as broadcaster for that game only. Playoffs bracket Fiftieth anniversary of the American Football League The 2009 season marked the fiftieth season of nine of the league's 32 teams: the Dallas Cowboys, and theOriginal Eight charter members of the American Football League, whose owners became collectively known as "The Foolish Club." The fifth league to use the AFL moniker (previous leagues in 1926, 1934, 1936–37, and 1940–41, all had failed) began play in 1960 and would form the major portion of the American Football Conference (AFC) when the NFL completed its merger with the AFL in : Boston Patriots, now the New England Patriots Buffalo Bills Dallas Texans, now the Kansas City Chiefs Denver Broncos Houston Oilers, now the Tennessee Titans Los Angeles Chargers, Titans of New York, now the New York Jetscontract was extended through that same season on August 19 of the same year. CBS celebrated their 50th season of NFL coverage; CBS has covered NFL games from 1956 to 1993 and again from 1998 to the present. Ironically, CBS which was ordered by the NFL not to give American Football League scores during its NFL broadcasts of the 1960s, now covers the AFC, while Fox covers the NFC. This season was also the fortieth consecutive season that Monday Night Football has been a permanent part of the NFL schedule, though the league had played games on Monday night sporadicallybefore this. Monday Night Football originally aired on ABC before switching to ESPN in 2006, when the two networks' sports operations were merged. The first Monday night of the regular season featured two AFL Original Eight games, a doubleheader with the Bills at the Patriots and the Chargers at the Raiders. NFL Network continued to have coverage disputes with major cable providers. In particular, Comcast, the largest cable provider in the United States, was considering removing the network from its lineups on April 30, 2009, shortly after the draft but before the start of the preseason. Comcast was carrying theFootball Special Edition." This was also the first NFL season after the DTV transition in the United States, which had originally been scheduled to take place on February 17, 2009 but was delayed until June 12, 2009. Hawaii made the digital switchover on January 15, 2009. (Low-power translators will still be allowed to broadcast in analog until at least 2012, and cable providers will continue to distribute analog signals for the foreseeable future.) After fifty seasons as a player, coach, broadcaster and video game maven, John Madden retired on April 16 from his position on Sunday Night Football. Cris CollinsworthWestwood One in March 2009 earned a two-year extension for all of the night games, paying US$33,000,000 for the two-year deal. In addition to the official feature game package, three networks will carry nationwide radio broadcasts of Sunday afternoon games. The newest such network is Compass Media Networks, which has signed deals with eight teams. Sports USA and Westwood One will carry games from the other 24 teams. Dial Global, which previously backed Sports USA's coverage in 2008, will instead handle Compass's package for 2009. References External links Schedule of American Football League Legacy Games ESPN.com article on AFL Legacy
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Christel Goltz (8 July 1912 – 14 November 2008) was a German operatic soprano. One of the leading dramatic sopranos of her generation, she possessed a rich voice with a brilliant range and intensity. She was particularly associated with the operas of Richard Strauss, especially Salome and Elektra, and with contemporary operas. Born in Dortmund, she studied in Munich with Ornelli-Leeb and with Theodor Schenk, whom she later married. After singing small roles, she made her official debut in Fürth, as Agathe, in 1935. She sang one season in Plauen, before joining the roster of principal sopranos at the StaatsoperShe created the title role in Carl Orff's Antigone and Rolf Liebermann's Penelope. An intense singing-actress with a clear and powerful voice of great range, she also tackled a few Italian roles, notably Turandot. She died in Baden, Austria, aged 96. Recordings Salome – Christel Goltz, Inger Karen, Bernd Aldenhoff, Josef Herrmann – Saxon State Orchestra, Joseph Keilberth – Oceana (1950) Turandot – Christel Goltz, Hans Hopf, Teresa Stich-Randall, Wilhelm Schirp – Cologne Radio Chorus and Orchestra, Georg Solti – Cantus Classics (1956) sung in German References External links Operissimo.com Category:1912 births Category:2008 deaths Category:People from Dortmund Category:People from the
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Pozzi Olga Escot (born 1 October 1933) is a Peru-born American composer, music theorist, and faculty member at the New England Conservatory in Boston, Massachusetts. Life Escot was born in Lima, Peru, her father was a French diplomat. She lived in Peru for five years, then returned to France. Back in Peru, between 1949 and 1953 she studied at the Academy of Music Sas-Rosay (Lima). At the end of 1953, she emigrated to the United States to attend Reed College in Portland, Oregon, becoming a citizen three years later. Between 1954 and 1957 she studied at the Juilliard School (in
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Saint Menas (, pr. Ágios Minás; ) is a Greek Orthodox Church in Istanbul. The edifice was built in 1833 near an early Christian Martyrion of the fourth or fifth century, possibly dedicated to the saints Carpus and Papylus (Greek: Μονὴ τῶν ἁγίων Κάρπου καὶ Παπὺλου, Monì ton Agíon Kárpou kai Papýlou ), and on the site of an ancient church dedicated to Hagios Polykarpos. The modern church has the same dedication as a nearby water source (, ). Location The church is located in Istanbul, in the district of Fatih, in the neighbourhood of Kocamustafapaşa (historically Samatya), on Bestekarof and a diameter of . This room is partially encompassed by a deambulatorium wide and high, which has a horseshoe shape. The room gives access towards the east to a rectangular bema. This has at its right the remains of a spiral stairs, possibly used in the past to reach the upper church, and at its left a cell with an apse. The Hagiasma still exists and lies opposite to the Martyrion. References Sources External links Byzantium 1200 – Saints Karpos and Papylos Menas, Church of Saint Category:Byzantine sacred architecture Category:Fatih Category:4th-century churches Category:Holy springs of Turkey Category:Greek Orthodox
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The Alameda-Depot Historic District, in Las Cruces, New Mexico, is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. The listing included 271 contributing buildings and a contributing site, on . It has also been known as the Las Cruces Depot-Alameda Historic District. It includes properties centered around Pioneer Park and extending up Alameda Boulevard, in an area of about 42 blocks. Year of construction: 1881 Architecture: Late 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Late Victorian, Mission/Spanish Revival Other names: Historic function: Domestic; Commerce/trade Historic subfunction: Single Dwelling; Secondary Structure; Business Criteria: event, architecture/engineering It
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Major General Sir William John Victor Windeyer, (28 July 1900 – 23 November 1987) was an Australian judge, soldier, educator, and a Justice of the High Court of Australia. Early life and career Windeyer was born in Sydney, into a legal family: his father, William Archibald Windeyer, was a Sydney solicitor, his uncle, Richard Windeyer, was a King's Counsel, his grandfather, William Charles Windeyer, was twice Attorney-General of New South Wales and Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, and his great-grandfather, Sir Richard Windeyer, was a barrister and member of the first elected Parliament of New SouthWales, sitting in the New South Wales Legislative Council. Windeyer studied at Sydney Grammar School and later at the University of Sydney, from where he graduated with a Master of Arts and a Bachelor of Laws in 1922. He also won the University Medal in History. In 1925, Windeyer was admitted to the New South Wales Bar Association. From 1929 to 1940, he lectured at the University of Sydney, teaching equity and commercial law, and until 1936, legal history. His book Essays in Legal History published in 1938 was for many years a standard textbook on the subject. Windeyer marriedMargaret and they had four children Margaret, Bill, Jim and Frank. In 1938 he built a home called Peroomba in Warrawee which only passed out of family ownership in 2008. Military career Windeyer's military career began in 1918, although he did not see active service during the First World War. In 1922 he was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Militia and attached to the Sydney University Scouts, being promoted to the rank of captain two years later. In 1929 he was promoted to major and in 1937, upon being promoted to lieutenant colonel, he took command of the Sydneyin the Middle East". Following the war, Windeyer was discharged from the 2nd AIF in early 1946, and returned to the Citizens Military Force, which was re-raised in 1948. In 1944 he had been created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, From 1950 to 1952 he commanded the 2nd Division after being promoted to major general. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in 1953 for his military services. Justice of the High Court and Privy Council After returning to Australia, Windeyer continued to practise as a barrister. He was also Deputy-Chancellor ofof the 6th, 7th, 8th & 9th Floors of Mena House at 225 Macquarie Street, Sydney Chambers by Counsel's Chambers Limited in 1983 the new chambers were named Windeyer Chambers in his honour. He opened the new chambers on 15 June 1984. Windeyer died in 1987. One of his sons, William Victor Windeyer, followed him into the legal profession and as of 2005 was a Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales; he also served in the military, receiving the Reserve Force Decoration. See also Henry George Fryberg, an associate to Windeyer at the High Court of Australia
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České dráhy (English: Czech Railways), often shortened to ČD, is the major railway operator in the Czech Republic providing regional and long-distance services. Overview The company was established in 1993, after the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, as a successor of the Czechoslovak State Railways. It is a member of the International Railway Union (UIC Country Code for the Czech Republic is 54), Community of European Railways and the Organization for Railway Cooperation (Asia and Europe). With twenty-four thousand employees ČD Group is the fifth largest Czech company by the number of employees. Until 1 July 2008, České dráhy was the biggestemployer in the Czech Republic. After experiencing regular losses and requiring government subsidy, the railway reported its first ever profit in 2007 while still receiving government subsidy. Attempts to make it more efficient are currently ongoing and a recent plan to move passenger transport to an independent subsidiary was approved by the Czech government in January 2008. ČD operates trains; fixed infrastructure (such as tracks) is managed by SŽDC. In December 2010, the Czech government proposed bringing SŽDC and ČD together in a single holding company. The government has also changed the subsidy available to ČD and SŽDC. In 2014Pavel Krtek was elected Chairman of the Board of Directors. In 2019 the Supervisory Board of Czech Railways dismissed Miroslav Kupec, Chairman of the Board of Directors, who has been in office since September 2018. Statistics 2015 In 2015 its consolidated revenues reached CZK 33 billion. Revenues from passenger transport amounted to CZK 21 billion (64% transfer payments from the government, 24% intrastate transport, 12% international transport), revenues from freight transport operated by subsidiary ČD Cargo amounted to CZK 11 billion. 2009 of railway lines operated by ČD, of which was electrified track and is double- and multiple-track, all ofthem transferred to the infrastructure operator SŽDC since. 168.8 million passengers carried 6,907 million passenger-kilometres 76.723 million tonnes of goods carried 13,592 million tonne-kilometres History České dráhy is the result of more than 160 years of railway history in the Czech lands. Historic milestones include: 1828: first horse-drawn railway in continental Europe: České Budějovice - Linz 1839: first steam-hauled railway: Vienna - Břeclav 1903: first standard gauge electrified railway track 1918: foundation of Československé státní dráhy (ČSD or CSD) (English: Czechoslovak state railways) 1991: first EuroCity (EC) trains run on ČSD railways 1993: foundation of České dráhy (ČD or CD)after breakup of Czechoslovakia 1993: started renovation of Pan-European railway corridors 1994: started truck transportation ("RoLa") on ČD railways from Lovosice to Dresden (stopped in 2004) 2003: founding of České dráhy (Czech Railways), joint-stock company 2005: Pendolino tilting trains enter regular service 2006: The liabilities of ČD Group increased from CZK 19 billion at the end of 2006 to CZK 53 billion at the end of 2015. 2007: freight transport moved into subsidiary company ČD Cargo 2008: creation of ČD Sky, an alliance between České dráhy and the airline SkyEurope. SkyEurope, which was heavily indebted, went bust in August 2009.2014: first "ČD Railjet" with passengers runs in the Czech Republic Freight services ČD Cargo, the cargo subsidiary, mainly transports raw materials, intermediate goods and containers. As of 2009, it is ranked in the top five largest railway cargo operators in Europe. Rolling stock 2,726 tractive vehicles, of which 856 are electric locomotives and train-sets 27,416 freight cars 3,605 passenger cars See also Rail transport in the Czech Republic Transport in the Czech Republic List of ČD Classes References External links Passenger services ČD Cargo division Actual train position Category:Railway companies of the Czech Republic Category:Companies based in Prague Category:Companies
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, also known as or , is a lake on the border between Norway and Sweden. The Norwegian side lies in Hattfjelldal Municipality in Nordland county (and it is inside Børgefjell National Park). The Swedish side of the lake is called Bije-Ransaren, which means "the upper Ransaren" and this part lies in Vilhelmina Municipality in Västerbotten County. South of the Swedish side of the lake, about from the border, is a small Sami house that was used as home for the Samis during reindeer marking season. To access the lake, you have to walk about from the village of Stekenjokk
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| Nodes:[["Ranseren", {"description":'lake on the border of Norway-Sweden', "alias":['Bijjie Raentsere', 'Bije-Ransarn']}], ["Lake", {}], ["Sweden", {}], ["Norway", {}], ["Hattfjelldal", {}], ["Vilhelmina Municipality", {}]]
Relations:[["Ranseren", "instance of", "Lake"], ["Ranseren", "country", "Sweden"], ["Ranseren", "country", "Norway"], ["Ranseren", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hattfjelldal"], ["Ranseren", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Vilhelmina Municipality"], ["Ranseren", "basin country", "Norway"]] |
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Balod is a town in banks of river Tandula and a nagar palika in Balod district in the state of Chhattisgarh, India. Balod is 44 km from Dhamtari and 58 km from Durg. Balod has one college, one court, one CHC ( Community Health Center ), and a jail. Medical facilities are good in Balod. There are two Dams nearby Tandula and Aadmabaad built on rivers sukha and tandula in 1912. On 1 January 2012 it was notified as Civil District though revenue district was declared from 10 January 2012. Balod became the 27th district of Chhattishgarh.There are several religioustemples nearby town, particularly Ganga Maiyya temple and Siyadevi temple hold great religious value for the townsfolk. the district collector of Balod is Shri Saransh Mittar. Geography Balod is located at . It has an average elevation of 324 metres (1063 feet). Demographics India census, Balod had a population of 21,044. Males constitute 51% of the population and females 49%. Balod has an average literacy rate of 73%, higher than the national average of 59.5%; with 56% of the males and 44% of females literate. 13% of the population is under 6 years of age. References Category:Cities and towns in
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| Nodes:[["Balod", {"description":'human settlement'}], ["India", {}], ["Balod district", {}]]
Relations:[["Balod", "country", "India"], ["Balod", "capital of", "Balod district"]] |
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Carlos Luis de Ribera y Fieve (1815 – April 14, 1891) was a Spanish painter, son of Juan Antonio Ribera. Early life and education Baptismal godparents were the former king King Charles IV and Maria Luisa of Parma. Carlos Luis studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando. His talent was recognized at the age of fifteen in 1830, when he won first prize in the Academy's contest for his portrait painting Vasco Núñez de Balboa. He also received a pension, which allowed him to pursue his higher studies in Rome and Paris. There, he studied underthe French painter Paul Delaroche. Luis de Ribera's time at the Academy of San Fernando was an influential period in his life as a painter. During that time he was regular at the gatherings of Romantic thinkers in Madrid. He was one of the most active people in the foundation of the review El artista and contributed a large number of lithographs to it. He also studied art in Paris, which was something all aspiring artists did in those days. He spent nine years in Paris, working for a majority of that period in the studio of Paul Delaroche. Itwas Delaroche who motivated de Ribera to work on historical paintings. Royal Academy In 1845, on March 23 he was appointed lecturer at the Royal Academy. Based on their merits he was granted with the Cross of the Order of Charles III on December 15, 1860. He was awarded with the Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic on August 27, 1870. For years, since 1878, Ribera participated as a jury member of the Royal Academy. He served as court painter to Queen Isabella II of Spain, and was later appointed to Minister of Public Instruction and Directorand the Artistic and Literary Liceo. Designs and Illustrations Luis de Ribera also had a successful, albeit minor, career as a designer and illustrator. His designed and provided illustrations for several of the periodicals of the time, such as The Artist and Journal of Home Culture and that of the Spanish Museum of Antiquities. References Further reading LAFUENTE FERRARI, Enrique: Brief history of Spanish painting. Madrid: Akal, 1987, p. 439. VOX, "Ribera y Fernández de Velasco, Juan Antonio", Encyclopedia of the Prado Museum Category:1815 births Category:1891 deaths Category:19th-century Spanish painters Category:Spanish male painters Category:Spanish Baroque painters Category:Artists from Rome Category:Knights
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Park Young-geun (1958~2006) was a South Korean poet. He was in the front lines of many labor and democratization movements, and he portrays the lives and emotions of these protestors using vivid language in his writing. Park is well-known as the original author of the widely popular protest song from the 1990s, "Pine Tree, Green Pine Tree" (솔아 푸르른 솔아). Life Pre-debut Park was born in 1958, in Buan County, North Jeolla Province. Because of his parent’s enthusiasm for education, Park spent years away from his hometown, graduating from Iksan Middle School and Jeonju Highschool. As a high school student,he was an avid reader of Changbi Magazine, Sasanggye Magazine, and explored the works of Go Un, Hwang Seok-young, Kim Ji Ha and many others. His statements at school on the October Restoration and the made him a person put under surveillance by his school. Deciding that the repressive school life would no longer be necessary, Park eventually withdrew himself from high school. The next year, he joined the high school literary circle and published a passionate poem in the style of Soviet Revolutionary poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. He subsequently faced hardships as he had his home searched and was takeninto custody at the police station for 20 days. After this, he went to Seoul to participate in the labor movements and Christian Young Adult movements while continuing to write poems. He officially made his debut as a poet with the publication of poems such as "Suyurieso" (수유리에서 In Suyuri) After his debut In 1982, while working at a book-binding factory in the Guro Industrial Complex, Park actively engaged with activists in labor movements, student movements, culture movements of the masses, and Christian democracy movements. He participated as one of the leaders for various cultural activities and meetings, and foundedor as an editor for literary magazines. In 1987, Park’s poem "Baekje #6 Pine Tree, Green Pine Tree" - from the collection Chwieopgonggopan apeseo was adapted by An Chi-hwan for the song "Pine Tree, Green Pine Tree". "Pine Tree, Green Pine Tree" became a favorite song on college campuses and at labor strikes. Park won the Shin Dongyup Prize in 1994 and the Baeksok Literature Award in 2003. He died of a long-term illness in 2006. The Park Young-geun Award was established in 2015, and his entire collected work was published in 2016 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of hispity for family in their hometown. This aspect of Park’s poems can be seen as a result of the poet’s own past, as he was made to leave his hometown and make his own living in another city. Daeyeol (대열 Workers Queue)(1987) in comparison, discusses the worker becoming clearly aware of their own class identity, and foregrounds the conflict between worker unity and the fight against capitalism. The poet’s struggle is finding effective methods while experimenting with various poetic forms. This includes adding poetic verses to a prose poem, or copying a whole wall of graffiti from factories onto thepage, for example. What the poet wants most importantly out of these experiments is to establish a junction between poetry and reality. The opening lines from Pojang senteo (포장 센터 Packing Station), "The break bell rang and as I went to the bathroom I glanced at the shipping area lounge, and I stared at those dirty truck drivers and loading dock workers start to gamble", this passage reflects how the poet clearly understands the realities of the workers and their struggles. Through works such as "Nongseongjangui bam" (농성장의 밤 Strike Site Night), "Jabonga" (자본가 The Capitalist), "Amerika" (아메리카 America), "Ssaumpresented with painful emotion. These changes reflect the rapid decline and stagnation of Korea’s labor movements in the 1990s. Park’s last poetry collection published during his lifetime was Jeo kkochi bulpyeonhada (저 꽃이 불편하다That Flower is Uncomfortable) (2002); Park gazes upon the path that he has walked. "Gil" (길 Road) describes the road he has taken until this point, describing it as desolate winter scenery. Although, the poet arrives at home at the end of his difficult journey, he is unable to find any vestige of those that he tenderly remembers. Ultimately, the poet finds himself wandering endlessly without ahome. The self-awareness of the poet that he is standing on the road, in spite of all that, enables him to endure the weight of life’s futility and maintain the tension of existence in reality. Works Anthology <솔아 푸른 솔아>, 강 , 2009. / Sora pureun sora (Pine Tree, Green Pine Tree), Gang, 2009 <박영근 전집> 1·2 ,실천문학사, 2016. / Bagyeonggeun jeonjip (Park Young-geun Collection), Silcheonmunhaksa, 2016 Collected works <취업공고판 앞에서>, 청사, 1984 / Chwieopgonggopan apeseo (In Front of the Job Search Board), Cheongsa, 1984 <대열>, 풀빛 , 1987. / Daeyeol (Workers Queue), Pulbit, 1987 <김미순전(傳)>, 실천문학사 , 1993. /
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El Café Chorale belongs to the Costa Rican Choral Institute and was founded in 1994, established as one of the most distinguished and worthy Choral Ensembles in all the Country. The Choir has defined and archived a proud career based in its versatility and excellence in Choral performances delighting audiences in Costa Rica, Europe and The United States. Composed of selected professionals and students from several Universities and Academies in the Central Valley of Costa Rica, El Café Chorale is dedicated to the development, study and diffusion of the vocal repertoire, performing music from the Renaissance to Contemporary style and2011 Harmonie Festival, Germany (Bronze Medal, First Place, Folk accompanied) 2011 Langenselbolder Chorfestival, Germany (First Place, Sacred Music) 2011 Internationale Chortage Mainhausen, Germany (Third Place, Men's Choir) El Café Chorale has traveled internationally given an amount of great successful performances in Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Belgium, Switzerland, England and The United States. Three times, in the years 1999, 2003 and 2007 the Choir received “The National Prize of Music”, the highest honor in the Arts in Costa Rica. In the year 2000 The American Choral Directors Association invited El Café Chorale to participate in the Western Division Convention LosAngeles 2000, where the Choir was presented both formal and concert workshop. El Café Chorale has internationally shared stage with very famous groups such as Gesangverein Liederkranz and Accelerando form Germany, Voca Lisa from Belgium, Pro-Musica from Hungary, San Jose Choral Project, Albert Mc Neil Chamber Singers and Cardinal Singers from United States, Krynitchka from Greece, Psalmus and Azuoliukas Male Choir of the Philippines Concert Chorus, the Krasnoyarsk Female Chamber Choir of Teachers from Russia, and St George’s Singer from Manchester. See also Music of Costa Rica External links Cafe Chorale web page Förderkreis Internationale Chortage Mainhausen Harmonie Festival Festival
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is a song by Japanese entertainer Takako Matsu from her debut album, Sora no Kagami (1997). It was released on March 21, 1997, through BMG Japan as her debut single. The song was written by Yūji Sakamoto and Daisuke Hinata, while Hinata produced the song. Following the wrap-up of the drama Long Vacation, she decided to give singing a try upon the suggestion of one of its directors. The track was recorded in Santa Monica, California, and is a mid-tempo J-pop song composed in the key of B minor. Its lyrics recite a young girl's memories of her love forrelease, Matsu released a new version of the song titled "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara 97–07" in March 2007. The re-release contains updated lyrics reflecting changes in the artist's mind. By intermixing her vocals with her vocals from 10 years before, new version contrasts the two. The new version was featured on her album Cherish You (2007) and also on her compilation album Footsteps: 10th Anniversary Complete Best (2008). As of 2014, Matsu has performed the song on all of her concert tours as well as other events, including NHK's Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 1997. Background and release Growing up, Takakowas written by Yūji Sakamoto and Daisuke Hinata, both of whom had worked with Matsu. Sakamoto had been Tokyo Love Storys screenwriter and Hinata had been in charge of the music of Long Vacation. Hinata provided the music and arrangement to "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara". The track was recorded at the Hyper Image Studio in Santa Monica, California, in January 1997. Hinata himself mixed the audio while Steve Hall mastered it. Cagnet provided instrumentation to the song. The record was produced by Kozo Nagayama, who had also produced Long Vacation. Initially, another song was selected to be released as Matsu'sdebut single. However, it was scrapped for unknown reasons and "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" was selected instead. Matsu debuted the song on radio on February 14, 1997, and the single was physically released on March 21, 1997 through BMG Japan as an 8 cm CD single. Composition "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" is a mid-tempo J-pop track with a "gentle melody", that lasts for 4 minutes and 13 seconds. According to the original score published by Doremi Music Publishing, it is composed in the key of B minor and in the common verse-chorus song structure with a tempo of 110 beatsper minute. The track opens with an instrumental introduction with a chord progression of Gmaj7–Fm7–Bm. As it reaches the chorus, the progression shifts to G–A–Fm–Bm7. The same pattern is repeated throughout the song. The lyrics of the song, written from the perspective of a girl, sees her recollect the memories of her love with a member of her high school baseball team and how she hopes to meet him again "tomorrow, if spring comes". Upon the album's release, Yoshitake Maeda, writing for BMG Japan, commented that Sakamoto probably reminisced on his teenage years through the song. The b-side of thesingle "Zutto... Iyō yo" was written by Matsu and produced by Hinata. Matsu decided to give it the theme of three girls going out for a drive. However, she commented that no matter how others looked at it, it seemed as if the song is about two girls. The song opens with an "electro" introduction and utilizes a warped guitar throughout. In addition to the two songs, the single also featured the original karaoke track to "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara". An LP titled Remix Hyper Bug containing remixes of "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" by DJ Craig William—"Ashita, Haru ga Kitara"(Hyper Bug Mix) and "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" (Techno Dub Mix) was released on August 21, 1997 through BMG Victor. It also features a remix of the album track "Love Sick", titled "Love Sick (Deep Sick Mix)". Reception A reviewer for CD Journal commended "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" for being "pure" and noted that Matsu's "unobtrusive [and] naked voice" is like "sitting in a sunny spot on early spring day". Similarly, Rolling Stone Japan wrote that the song has a "heartwarming" production, which they noted has become synonymous with Takako Matsu. Another reviewer for CD Journal said that the b-side,"Zutto... Iyō yo"s arrangement makes it an "impressive pop song". Since its release, "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara" has often been associated with the onset of spring in Japan. The song also entered the top requests list of many FM radio stations around the same time. Since the introduction of Billboard Japan in 2010, the song has spiked on its airplay charts during the time of spring. It was also included on the compilation True Love: Spring Memorial Songs in 2003. In a web poll conducted in 2013 by MyNavi news asking people about their favorite spring song, "Ashita, Haru gashipments of over 400,000 copies. Live performances and covers In 1997, Matsu performed the song at the 48th Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 1997, representing the "Red" team in the event. The previous year, before her debut as a singer, she had hosted the "Red" team. This made Matsu, who was 19 at that time, the youngest person to reach that position in the event. In June of the same year, she appeared on the show Love Love Aishiteru, her first music talk show appearance, and performed the song along with a cover of Seiko Matsuda's "Hitomi wa Diamond" (1983). Shehas performed the song on all of her concert tours—from the Piece of Life (2001) through Time for Music (2010). On the Cherish You (2007) and Time for Music concert tours, she performed the 97–07 version of the song. A footage of performance from the Piece of Life tour was used to promote the DVD release of the concert. Apart from the tours, she has also performed the song on various televised appearances. In 2003, she appeared on the talk show hosted by Japanese singer Ayumi Hamasaki and performed the song and "Ashita ni Kuchizuke o" (2003) alongside Hamasaki. Threeyears later, Matsu sang the song on Music Fair, alongside Sukima Switch. In 2009, Matsu performed the song on the FM802 sponsored event Radio Magic, with Yoshiyuki Sahashi directing the backing band to a crowd of about 12,000 people. A writer for Barks wrote that Matsu's vocals sounded "transparent" and the whole performance had a "refreshing feeling". Oricon magazine commented that Matsu sang "cheerfully" while "running around the stage". The same year, she performed it on the show organized by TBS. In 2014, she performed the song again for NHK, at the event. The song was covered by Hiromi Hirataas Makoto Kikuchi of The Idolmaster series as a "Special Request" song. It was later included in the album, The Idolmaster Special Spring (2010), released through Nippon Columbia. The album peaked at number 18 on the Oricon Albums Chart. It was also covered for the spring compilation Cafe de Nagareru Sweet Jazz 20 the Best Sakura Songs, which peaked at number 39 on the Oricon albums chart. The song has also been covered by many mainstream pop artists like Namie Amuro in 1997, for the show , in 1998 by Masaharu Fukuyama for All Night Nippon, and in 2008 byAyumi Shibata for . Track listing Credits and personnel Adapted from Sora no Kagami liner notes. Takako Matsu – vocals Daisuke Hinata – keyboards, programming, mixing Bud Rizzo – guitars, bass, programming Shinnosuke Soramachi – acoustic guitar Steve Hall – mastering Re-release A re-recorded version of the song was released as a single to commemorate Matsu's tenth anniversary in music industry, to digital outlets like iTunes, mora, and also in Chaku-Uta format, both as ringtone and the full song on March 21, 2007. The new version titled, was recorded at the Mouri Art Works Studio in Tokyo. Its modified lyricspenned by Yūji Sakamoto, the writer of the original song, are meant to convey the emotions of the singer ten years into her debut. In addition, Matsu's vocals from the original version are intermixed with the new vocals to contrast the difference between the current Matsu and the Matsu of ten years ago. While talking to NHK at the time of the single's release, Matsu commented that the new lyrics not only reflect the changes she had made over the past 10 years, but also of Yūji Sakamoto. The new version, running 4 minutes and 54 seconds, was arranged bymusician and future husband Yoshiyuki Sahashi. The song was included in her eighth studio album, Cherish You (2007). and also on Matsu's compilation album, Footsteps: 10th Anniversary Complete Best (2008). A TV commercial for the new track was also directed by Hiroyuki Itaya. The song was used as the ending theme to the Fuji TV drama, . Reception While reviewing Cherish You, Takayuki Saito of HotExpress magazine noted that the track has a "novel" arrangement and Matsu's current voice "calls out" to her "innocent" self of ten years ago. He further commented that Matsu's voice, "full of strength", helps the
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is the debut studio album by Japanese rock band Tokyo Jihen, led by musician Ringo Sheena. It was released on November 25, 2004, more than a year after Sheena's third solo studio album Kalk Samen Kuri no Hana (2003). Kyōiku is the only album to feature the band's original line-up, featuring guitarist Mikio Hirama and pianist Masayuki Hiizumi, known as H Zetto M. Background and development While vocalist Ringo Sheena has been a member of several rock bands, she parted with her bandmates when she debuted as a solo musician in 1998. She had always wanted to be a memberof a band, however, and used her first three solo albums, Muzai Moratorium (1999), Shōso Strip (2000) and Kalk Samen Kuri no Hana (2003) as a presentation for musicians who wanted to work with her. After the release of Sheena's third album, Kalk Samen Kuri no Hana in 2003, Sheena embarked on a nationwide tour entitled Sugoroku Ecstasy. Sheena asked the backing members well in advance to perform for the tour, so that her first choices would not be double-booked. These members were dubbed Tokyo Jihen, a name that was publicised during the tour. Tokyo Jihen was officially announced asSheena's main musical unit on May 31, 2004, and first performed at a series of summer music festivals in July and August 2004. Writing and production The album is composed of nine songs composed by Sheena, as well as three songs composed by pianist H Zetto M, "Gunjō Biyori", "Genjitsu ni Oite" and "Service". The album features 10 songs sung in Japanese, plus "Genjitsu ni Oite", an instrumental, and "Genjitsu ni Warau", a song sung in English. For her first three solo albums, Sheena worked as the sole songwriter on all of the songs. Sheena stated that it had been"a dream of sorts" to release music that collaborated with different songwriters, and she wanted Tokyo Jihen to be different from her solo project, in which her opinion was final on all matters. Later Tokyo Jihen albums featured much more song-writing from other members, most notably Variety (2007), however Sheena still had the feeling that it was "taboo" for other people to write songs for her during Kyōiku. All 17 of the songs for the Kyōiku era were recorded over a period of four days. Sheena wanted to create a fun album, after noting that critics had not reviewed manyalbums that were "like an overturned toy-box" in recent years. Being a fan of all four members, wrote the songs as "love letters" to each members' techniques, writing songs that would show off techniques she wanted to see each member performing. Sheena's songs were inspired by the image of the Sugoroku Tour that Tokyo Jihen performed with her during her solo era. "Sōnan" was the first song she wrote for the album in 2003, shortly after the tour finished. The theme of each Tokyo Jihen album is based around a television channel, and Kyōiku was themed around NHK Educational TV.Sheena recorded the demos of her compositions songs with guitarist Ryosuke Nagaoka, who would later join Tokyo Jihen as their second guitarist in 2005. During the pre-production stages of the album, H Zetto M also gave Sheena a collection of demos he had composed for her. "Gunjō Biyori" was the first song present, and after listening Sheena felt as if he had written the song specifically for Sheena, and everything she was experiencing. The first song on the album, "Ringo no Uta", is a self-cover of a song Sheena released as a single in 2003. Sheena decided to add thesong to the album to make it easier for fans of her solo work to accept her transition into becoming a member of Tokyo Jihen. Album symmetry and palindromes Kyōiku, much like Sheena's solo albums Shōso Strip (2000) and Kalk Samen Kuri no Hana (2003) features titles with mirroring styles in the two halves of the album. Each Japanese title and its matching pair are same number of characters, and match in terms of where kanji, hiragana or katakana scripts were used. The English titles published at Sheena and Tokyo Jihen's personal production agency website, Kronekodow, also follow a similarstyle. The titles from each half mirror prepositions, articles and nouns, as well as the number of words used. Much like Sheena's Kalk Samen Kuri no Hana, all of the track lengths on Kyōiku are palindromic numbers. Promotion and release In July and September 2004, Tokyo Jihen performed at four festivals across Japan: 0724 Yamabikari at Kobe Chicken George on July 24, Meet the World Beat on July 25, 2004 in Suita, Osaka, the Fuji Rock Festival in Niigata Prefecture on July 30 and the SunSet Live 2004 festival in Fukuoka Prefecture on September 3. In September 2004 the bandannounced a national tour entitled Live Tour 2005 "Dynamite!". Held in January and February 2005, the 14-date tour featured dates in Matsuyama, Ehime, Hiroshima, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Kyoto, Sapporo, Saitama and two performances each in Osaka, Fukuoka, Nagoya and Tokyo. The album was preceded by two singles, "Gunjō Biyori" in September and "Sōnan" in October. "Gunjō Biyori" was used in a commercial campaign for the Sanyo-manufactured au W21SA range of cellphones. The band first performed on television on October 29, when they performed "Sōnan" at Music Station. They performed two more times on the program, on November 26 where they performed"Ringo no Uta" and the B-side for "Sōnan", "Dynamite", and on the new year's special on December 24, where "Gunjō Biyori" was performed. "Gunjō Biyori" was also performed on the program Count Down TV on November 27, 2004. On the date of release, a limited edition vinyl record compiling the six songs found on the "Gunjō Biyori" and "Sōnan" singles was released. Two weeks later, the band released Tokyo Incidents Vol. 1, a DVD featuring the music videos associated with the album and its singles. Live performances At the band's early festival performances in July and September 2004, Tokyo Jihenperformed the singles "Gunjō Biyori", "Sōnan" as well as Sheena's single "Ringo no Uta". The songs "Ekimae", "Omatsuri Sawagi" and "Service" exclusive to the album were debuted at these concerts. The band toured the album in January 2005, with a tour entitled Dynamite!. The entire album was performed during these concerts (thought the song "Crawl" was performed in a medley with Sheena's song "Σ" from her 2000 single "Gips"). At the Dai Ikkai Ringohan Taikai: Adults Only fan-club concerts in December 2005, the band performed the songs "Jusui Negai", "Crawl" and "Sōnan", however their performances were not featured on theDVD release of the concert. After guitarist Mikio Hirama and pianist H Zetto M left the band in 2005 and were replaced by Ukigumo and Ichiyo Izawa respectively, the band released their second album Adult (2006). The album was first toured the album with the Domestic! Virgin Line concerts in February 2006, where the songs "Bokoku Jocho", "Service", and "Yume no Ato" were performed. The band's national tour for Adult, Domestic! Just Can't Help It. in April and May 2006, featured the songs "Genjitsu ni Oite" (in a medley with "Kao"), "Genjitsu ni Oite", "Jusui Negai", "Service" and "Gunjō Biyori".At the Tokyo Jihen organised Society of the Citizens event on July 2, the band performed "Service" and "Omatsuri Sawagi", and at their appearance at Countdown Japan in December 2006, they performed "Yume no Ato" and "Ringo no Uta" a final time. Since 2007, only three songs on the album were performed by the band. "Gunjō Biyori" was performed for three tours, Spa & Treatment (2007), Discovery (2011) and Bon Voyage (2012). "Sōnan" was performed at the band's Ultra C (2010) tour, and "Omatsuri Sawagi" at Bon Voyage. Ringo Sheena self-covers At Sheena's Dai Ikkai Ringohan Taikai: Adults Only eventsin November 2005, Sheena performed "Omatsuri Sawagi" in collaboration with folk musician Kiyoshi Hasegawa and his granddaughter Maki. For Sheena's soundtrack album Heisei Fūzoku (2007) to the film Sakuran, she included a re-arranged version of the song "Yume no Ato". She performed the song at her 10th anniversary Ringo-haku '08 concerts at Saitama Super Arena in November 2008, along with "Omatsuri Sawagi". For Sheena's self-cover album Gyakuyunyū: Kōwankyoku (2014), Sheena promoted with the release with a short tour, Chotto Shita Recohatsu in May and June 2014. At the tour, she performed the songs "Bokoku Jōcho" and "Sōnan". Critical reception ReviewerTomoyuki Mori felt Kyōiku was the first time in Sheena's career where she was free to have fun with music, and likened the release to junior high school students having fun by forming a band. Mori felt that Sheena began expressing her humanity in Kyoiku, unlike in her solo works. Vibe reviewer Chikako Hayashi felt "Ringo no Uta" was representative of Sheena's change from solo artist to band member, in that the version found on K was from a completely different perspective to Sheena's original solo version. Hayashi also noted the "fresh feeling" to "newcomer" act Tokyo Jihen that couldbe felt in the album. CDJournal reviewers noted the "bossa-like melody turning into rock" in "Jusui Negai" as leaving a strong impression on them, and praised Sheena's "provocative and stimulating vocals" in "Crawl", likening the song's guitar riff to The Kinks' "You Really Got Me". They described "Service as "avant-garde", and felt "Yume no Ato" was worthy of being a signature song of the band. For the single track "Gunjō Biyori", Listenmusic reviewer Kiyohiko Koike felt Hiizumi's melody was unlike something Sheena would create herself, however also noted the "profound lyrics based on old timey vocabulary" was a highlight, andstill managed to convey Sheena's worldview. He further noted that Sheena felt at ease in the role of a vocalist. CDJournal reviewers felt the song had a slightly different image to what Sheena had in her solo career, noting that listeners could hear the enjoyment Sheena had at being able to play in a band. What's In? reviewers also noted the sense of freedom in the song present in the sound work not seen in Sheena's solo career. Reviewer Yū Onoda called the single "vivid" and the band's sound "thrilling". Reviewers also praised the album's second single "Sōnan", with Koikefeeling the melody had a "good old sepia Shōwa Kayō taste", likening it to her earlier songs "Kabukichō no Joō" and "Marunouchi Sadistic". He noted that Sheena's lyric style was much like her previous songs, written in an old, literary style. CDJournal reviewers felt the song was as if the solo era image of Sheena had been taken and bulked up by the band in the song. Reviewer Kyosuke Tsuchiya noted the song's "jazz-style approach", and was impressed by the "wild power" of Sheena's vocals and the "suspicious melody" created by the guitar. Commercial performance The album debuted at numbertwo on Oricon's weekly albums chart, selling 205,000 copies. This was underneath Ken Hirai's Sentimentalovers, which featured the songs "Hitomi o Tojite" and "Omoi ga Kasanaru Sono Mae ni...", produced by band member Seiji Kameda. After the album spent a total of 35 weeks in the top 300 albums, it sold a total of 391,000 copies. Kyōiku is the most commercially successful of Tokyo Jihen's albums. Similarly, the "Gunjō Biyori" and "Sōnan" singles were commercially successful, both peaking at two on Oricon's single chart, and certified gold by the RIAJ. They band's two most successful singles, in terms of physicalcopies sold. Track listing All lyrics by Ringo Sheena; all music by Sheena, except where noted. Personnel Personnel details were sourced from Kyōiku's liner notes booklet. Ichiko Furukawa – mastering Toshiki Hata – drums, claps Mikio Hirama – guitar, claps H Zetto M – piano, claps Daisuke Iga – styling Uni Inoue – recording, editing Seiji Kameda – bass, claps Yuji Kamijō – recording assistant Yutaka Kimura – photography, design Shinji Konishi – hair, make-up Ringo Sheena – vocals, claps Makoto Tonosu – additional mastering Charts Sales and certifications Release history References Category:Tokyo Jihen albums Category:2004 debut albums Category:Japanese-language albums
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Dustin Shuler (August 17, 1948 – May 4, 2010) was an American pop art sculptor and mixed-media artist, best known for a 1989 piece called Spindle, a 50-foot steel spike with eight cars impaled on it that became emblematic of the city of Berwyn, Illinois, where it was installed for two decades in the parking lot of a popular shopping mall. Most of Shuler's major works consisted of outdoor art installations, and the majority of his sculptures used elements of consumer-goods detritus. Early life Shuler was born in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, on August 17, 1948. He worked at the Westinghouse ElectricCorp factory during the day while taking night classes in art at Carnegie Institute of Technology, now known as Carnegie Mellon University. Shuler left Westinghouse in 1971 to devote more time to his art career. In 1973 at the age of 25, he moved to southern California, where he worked for a while as a welder in an aircraft engine factory before becoming an artist full-time. In 1979, he married Karen Zindler. Career and works Shuler's fascination with using car bodies in large artworks began in Santa Ana in 1978 with the installation Tutankhamun Disguised as a Volkswagen Bus, which
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Sweet Woman () is a 1977 Soviet drama film directed by Vladimir Fetin after the novel by Irina Velembovskaya. Plot Anna Dobrokhotova was born and raised in a village. Life in the village is constant, hard and exhausting work, but unlike other hard-working villagers, Anna is lazy and disorganized. Sunbathing, lying on a feather bed, and eating something delicious – this is the farthest her girlish aspirations transpire. A random affair with a young student leads into Anna's pregnancy and birth of a child, but these relations do not develop further because Anna does not wish to get married presently.home and out of his life. And so again, the "sweet woman" Anna, beautiful and wealthy, is in the state of tragic loneliness that she herself has been creating all these years. Cast Natalya Gundareva as Anna Aleksandrovna Dobrokhotova Svetlana Karpinskaya as Lidiya Nikolaevna Dyadkina, Anna's friend Pyotr Velyaminov as Nikolai Egorovich Kushakov, Anna's husband Oleg Yankovsky as Tikhon Dmitrievich Sokolov, Anna's boyfriend Rimma Markova as Anna's mother Georgy Korolchuk as Larik Shubkin, Anna's first boyfriend, the father of her son Nina Alisova as Raisa Ivanovna Shubkina, Larik's mother Fyodor Nikitin as Shubkin, Larik's father Filming The producer Vladimir Fetin
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Eco-Agents () is a member-based environmental organization for children. A subsidiary of the Norwegian Society for the Conservation of Nature, it has 3000 members. The three focus issues are conservation of nature, global warming and consumption. The organization was founded in 1992 as Blekkulfs venner, later Blekkulfts miljødetektiver. In 2006 it changed to the current name, and discontinued its cooperation with the mascot Blekkulf, a fictional octopus. The reason was in part to communicate better with older children, and in part because the organization had problems funding the license fees to the creators of the fictional characters. References External links
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is a very small asteroid, classified as near-Earth object of the Apollo group, that passed between Earth and the Moon on 8 September 2010, at 21:12 UTC, approaching Earth within above Antarctica. It is listed on the Sentry Risk Table as the asteroid with the greatest known probability (5%) of impacting Earth. The asteroid was discovered by the Mount Lemmon Survey near Tucson, Arizona on 5 September 2010 along with 2010 RX30. Description NASA's Near Earth Program estimates its size to be in diameter with a mass of around 500 tonnes. will make many more close approaches to Earth, withthe approach of 5–6 September 2095 having a 5% chance (1 in 20) of colliding with Earth. The nominal JPL Earth approach in 2095 is with Earth having a radius of approximately . The nominal NEODyS orbit has the asteroid passing from Earth on 6 September 2095, with an apparent magnitude of ~12. Due to the asteroid's relatively small size, there is very little danger of harm arising from such an impact; rather there would be an impressive fireball as the rock air bursts in the upper atmosphere. The power of the airburst would be somewhere between the 2–4 m2022 position will verify or rule out possible future impacts for the next century or so. See also , a similar-sized asteroid that passed Earth the same day , another near-Earth asteroid (may be Saturn V stage IV rocket booster) Asteroid impact prediction List of asteroid close approaches to Earth, for other close approaches Notes References External links 2010 RF12: A second asteroid will buzz the Earth today, csmonitor.com, September 8, 2010 Early warning for close approaches of two house-sized asteroids, The Planetary Society, September 8, 2010 Tracker: Asteroid– 2010 RF12, theskylive.com # Category:Minor planet object articles (unnumbered) Category:Potential impact
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I Should Be with You is an album by American country music artist Steve Wariner. It was released on March 7, 1988 by MCA Records. It includes the singles "Baby I'm Yours", "I Should Be With You" and "Hold On (A Little Longer)", which reached #2, #2, and #6, respectively, on the Billboard country charts. The album peaked at #20 on Top Country Albums. "More Than Enough" was recorded the same year by Glen Campbell on Light Years, also produced by Jimmy Bowen for MCA. Track listing "Runnin'" (Steve Wariner, Wendy Waldman) "More Than Enough" (Jimmy Webb) "Hold On (A
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Diancistrus is a genus of viviparous brotulas. Species There are currently 28 recognized species in this genus: Diancistrus alatus Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Winged coralbrotula) Diancistrus alleni Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Allen's coralbrotula) Diancistrus altidorsalis Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Humpbacked coralbrotula) Diancistrus atollorum Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Atoll coralbrotula) Diancistrus beateae Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Beate's coralbrotula) Diancistrus brevirostris Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Shortnosed coralbrotula) Diancistrus eremitus Schwarzhans, Møller & J. G. Nielsen, 2005 (Lonely coralbrotula) Diancistrus erythraeus (Fowler, 1946) Diancistrus fijiensis
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Trevor Thurling (born 26 April 1984) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s and 2010s. He played as a and for the Canberra Raiders and Canterbury Bankstown in the NRL. Playing career Thurling was born in Queanbeyan, New South Wales and played his junior football with the Queanbeyan United Blues. While attending Dickson College in the Australian Capital Territory in 2001, Thurling was selected to play for the Australian Schoolboys team. As 2004 NRL premiers, Canterbury faced Super League IX champions, Leeds in the 2005 World Club Challenge. Thurling played from the interchange bench
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The Draco Tavern is a 2006 collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Larry Niven concerning the activities of Rick Schumann, the bartender of the Draco Tavern. Fictional background story The Draco tavern is located in Siberia, near the Mount Forel spaceport. The tavern was created after a race of sentient aliens called Chirpsithra landed on Earth. The Chirpsithra stand 11 feet tall with salmon pink exoskeletons. All of them appear to be female. They enjoy mild electric currents, whose effect on them is similar to that of alcohol on humans. They originated on tidally locked planets aroundstories include "Limits", in which Schumann overhears some traders talking about humans' limited lifespan giving them a unique approach to mathematics, thus justifying withholding the secret of immortality, and "The Green Marauder", in which a new "alien" species turns out to be from the early development of Earth's ecosystem before photosynthesis poisoned the atmosphere with oxygen. Publication information Several of the Rick Schumann/Draco Tavern short stories which have appeared in other short story collections by Larry Niven were not reprinted in this book, thus it is not a Draco Tavern omnibus; there have also been further stories in the series
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George Brouse (1790 – February 12, 1860) was a farmer, businessperson, and political figure in Upper Canada. He was born in Matilda Township, Dundas County, Upper Canada, in 1790, the son of Peter Brouse, a United Empire Loyalist from Stone Arabia, Montgomery County, New York. He opened a general store on his property some time after 1814. A small community originally known as Matilda and later Iroquois, Ontario, developed in the area. In 1810 Peter Brouse had converted George and his brother Peter to Methodism but he did not continue in this faith until the great revival in 1822, whenhe was restored, and became a lifelong steward of the church. During the 1820s, he built a gristmill, sawmill, shingle factory, and woollen mill. From 1828–1876, he was postmaster in the area. In 1829 he was elected to the 10th Parliament of Upper Canada, Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada for Dundas. In 1839, he became a captain in the 2nd Regiment of Dundas. In 1857, Iroquois was incorporated as a village and Brouse became its first reeve. He died in Iroquois in 1860. He was the uncle of William Henry Brouse, a Canadian MP. External links Biography at the Dictionary
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Dudley Seers CMG (1920–1983) was a British economist who specialised in development economics. After his military service with the Royal Navy he taught at Oxford and then worked for various UN institutions. He was the director of the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex from 1967 till 1972. Seers is famous for replacing the "growth fetishism" of the early post war period with a greater concern with social development. He stressed the relativistic nature of judgements about development and questioned the value of the neoclassical approach to economics. Writing on the Criteria for Development Nixson reports Seersargument that "Surely the values we need are staring us in the face, as soon as we ask ourselves: what are the necessary conditions for a universally accepted aim, the realisation of the potential of human personality?"(Seers in Baster). Assuming that the aim and yardstick of development is implied by this Seers goes on to identify a number of objectives for development for developing countries: That family incomes should be adequate to provide a subsistence package of food, shelter, clothing and footwear. That jobs should be available to all family heads, not only because this will ensure that distribution of
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Martin "Rook" O'Prey was an Irish republican and a Volunteer in both the Irish republican & Revolutionary socialist paramilitaries, first the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) and later the Irish People's Liberation Organisation (IPLO). He was killed by Ulster Loyalist paramilitaries from the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) in August 1991. INLA & IPLO Paramilitary actions In September 1981, when he was a part of the Irish National Liberation Army Belfast Brigade, O'Prey and the INLA Belfast Brigade O/C Gerard Steenson killed a British UDR soldier Mark Stockman in a west Belfast factory on the Springfield Road. As O/C of theIPLO's Belfast Brigade O'Prey is believed to have been part of the hit team that killed outspoken Loyalist and UVF member George Seawright in November 1987. He was also alleged to have been involved in the killing of Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) member William Quee, when he was shot and killed by the IPLO at his shop in Oldpark Road, Belfast. Probably the most infamous act he was involved in, was the Orange Cross Social Club shooting, in which a member of the Loyalist paramilitary the Red Hand Commando was killed and several others were injured. O'Prey led the attackon the Orange Cross himself. After these actions he became a prime target for Loyalists, as one UVF man put it: "When the Catholic kids rioted with kids from the Shankill along the peace line they used to shout at the Prods 'We'll get Rook for ya'. O'Prey was an enemy celebrity on the Shankill." Death On 16 August 1991 a Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) team burst into his home in Ardmoulin Terrace on the Lower Falls in west Belfast. Two UVF men broke into the back of O'Prey's home and found him on the sofa in his living room
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The Miami RedHawks men's basketball team intercollegiate men's basketball program representing Miami University. The school competes in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The RedHawks play home basketball games at Millett Hall in Oxford, Ohio on the university campus. Miami has reached the NCAA Championship's Sweet Sixteen four times and has been the MAC regular season champions 20 times. The team is currently coached by Jack Owens. In May 2013, the Ohio Basketball Hall of Fame inducted 11 players and coaches who starred in the state including Miami's Wayne Embry, Randy Ayers,
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Pourtalesia is a genus of the family Pourtalesiidae which belongs to the irregular (bilaterally symmetrical) sea urchins. The animals measure 5–6 cm in length and live in the abyssal zone of the Atlantic, Pacific, Indopacific and Antarctic Oceans where they have been found in more than 3,000 m depth. The mouth opening of these animals is located anteriorly and the lantern of Aristotle is missing as typically for holasteroid sea urchins. Species Currently, 11 species of Pourtalesia are recognized. Pourtalesia alcocki Koehler, 1914 Pourtalesia aurorae Koehler, 1926 Pourtalesia debilis Koehler, 1926 Pourtalesia heptneri Mironov, 1978 Pourtalesia hispida A. Agassiz, 1897
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Guatemala competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, Mexico. It had been 16 years since the previous time that the nation competed at the Olympic Games. 48 competitors, 47 men and 1 woman, took part in 37 events in 8 sports. Athletics Men Track & road events Field events Boxing Men Cycling Four cyclists represented Guatemala in 1968. Road Football First round Group D Quarter-finals Shooting Nine shooters, all men, represented Guatemala in 1968. Open Swimming Men Women Weightlifting Men Wrestling Men's freestyle Men's Greco-Roman References External links Official Olympic Reports Category:Nations at the 1968 Summer Olympics 1968
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Pepin Island is a privately owned tied island in New Zealand connected by a causeway to the settlement of Cable Bay north-east of Nelson. Geography Pepin Island is long, and up to wide. It measures in area. The highest point is Stuart Hill, which rises to . The island is located on the northeast coast of Tasman Bay, with the smaller indentation of Delaware Bay to the east. It is joined to the mainland by a naturally formed pathway made from boulders that have tumbled down nearby hillsides then been shaped into a causeway by the sea. History Historian JohnMitchell said the Ngāti Tama and other iwi came into the area from the 1820s, and that part of the island was once the pā of the paramount chief of Tama, Te Pūoho-o-te-rangi, but that it left Ngāti Tama control around 1880. The island was named by the French explorer Jules Dumont d'Urville after his wife, Adèle Pépin. In 1996, the island was bought by the German businesswoman Dr Viola von Hohenzollern (née Hallman) for NZ$2 million. When von Hohenzollern bought the island, it was overgrazed, run down, and had many wild goats that prevent the growth of native bush.Her farm manager improved the situation by planting trees, fencing and pest control. Von Hohenzollern and farm manager Andrew Newton won a top Nelson Tasman Environmental award in 2011 for their custodianship. In December 2012, von Hohenzollern died and Pepin Island was inherited by her daughter, Olivia Hallman. The new owner has introduced public open days, and the second one was run in May 2015, which attracted over 1,000 people and was again a fundraiser for the Hira Volunteer Fire Force. Proposed sale In late 2018, the island went on sale, with an asking price of $NZ16 million. Nelson mayor
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Sarah Jane Rees (9 January 1839 – 27 June 1916), also known by her bardic name of "Cranogwen", was a Welsh teacher, poet, editor and temperance campaigner. Early life Sarah Jane Rees was born at Llangrannog in Cardiganshire, the daughter of a mariner John Rees, and received her early education at the village school. She was a precocious child and insisted that she accompany her father to sea rather than undertake sewing and cooking chores, which she hated. However, this was not particularly unusual, as many wives and daughters accompanied men in local ships trading up and down the coastson family business. She was initially educated in her local village by an old schoolmaster called Hugh Davies, who taught her both Latin and astronomy. She later attended school in Cardigan and New Quay, and for a time studied at a navigation school in London, where she gained her master's certificate, a qualification allowing her to command a ship in any part of the world. In 1859 Sarah Jane set up her own navigation school in her home village of Llangrannog. Career In 1865, competing at Aberystwyth against men such as William Thomas (Islwyn), she won her first major Eisteddfodprize, for "Y Fodrwy Briodasal (The Wedding Ring)", in the "song" category. A book of poems, Caniadau Cranogwen, followed this victory, in 1870. In addition to teaching navigation and other subjects, she became editor of the Welsh-language women's periodical Y Frythones (1878–1889), a "platform for Welsh bluestockings and proto-suffragettes." Rees had two significant same-sex relationships, previously described as a romantic friendship. Her first was with Fanny Rees, a milliner's daughter from Troedyraur, near LLangrannog. Fanny contracted tuberculosis and returned to Wales around 1874 to die. She moved into Rees' home rather than that of her family, and died in herarms. So affected was Rees that for 12 years she was unable to put flowers on Fanny's grave, and she commemorated Fanny in one of her best-known poems, Fy Ffrynd (My Friend). Her second relationship was with Jane Thomas, with whom she spent most of her life. Open about her unconventional domestic arrangement, Rees was nonetheless a committed Methodist, and toured giving lectures on education, temperance and other subjects. In 1869–1870, she toured the United States, addressing mainly Welsh immigrant communities as far west as California. She was one of the founders of the South Wales Women's Temperance Union (UDMD),when it formed in 1901. Legacy Rees died at Cilfynydd and was buried in the churchyard at St. Crannogs, her grave marked by a large and elaborate obelisk. A shelter for homeless women and girls named "Lletty Cranogwen" was founded in the Rhondda valley in 1922, by the South Wales Women's Temperance Union, and named in memory of Rees' work to improve Welsh women's lives. In 2019 she was among the five women short-listed as the subject for an artwork to be installed in Cardiff. References Bibliography Category:1839 births Category:1916 deaths Category:Welsh women poets Category:Welsh activists Category:Welsh women activists Category:British
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South Pointe Park, known locally as South Pointe, is a county urban park in metropolitan Miami, in the South Beach neighborhood of Miami Beach, Florida. History The Federal Government donated the land to Miami Beach in 1979, which used it as a home to police horse stables, a police intelligence unit and the Port of Miami's harbor pilots until all buildings remaining at the site were razed in 1984 to begin conversion a park. The federal government paid half the construction cost. Opening on October 25, 1985, it became the nineteenth public park in Miami Beach, built at a costof $3.6 million (1984). Initial features included an amphitheater, two wooden observation towers, picnic pavilions, fitness courses and a wooden boardwalk over Miami Beach's last natural sand dune. During planning phases, city officials worried it would become a home to vagrants, and to discourage that they planned the park to be a home to frequent festivals and other events. The park became part of a larger plan in the 1980s to renovate the city's run down South Pointe area. Renovation plans were first drawn up in the city's 1995 master plan, but the 20-month, $22.5 million renovation wasn't completed untilMarch 2009. Features added in the renovation included -wide walkways lined with Florida limestone and an ocean-themed children's playground. The park underwent a major renovation effort, completed in 2009. The Hargreaves Associates, of New York City, were hired to redesign the park at a cost of around $22 million (2008). Amenities The park offers various features, including a restaurant, frozen yogurt concession, kids area, a dog park, and outdoor showers. South Pointe is the southernmost point of South Beach, bordering Government Cut to the south and the Port of Miami east-northeast. The area offers panoramic views of Biscayne Bay, Fisher
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1 season, before being hired by Toulouse. In March 2018, Dupraz worked as a pundit for TF1 to analyze 2018 FIFA World Cup matches. He was a commentator in a friendly on 26 March 2018, which saw the Netherlands meet Portugal. The game was shown on TFX and was seen by approximately 751,000 viewers. References External links Pascal Dupraz at Afterfoot.fr Category:1962 births Category:Living people Category:French footballers Category:French football managers Category:FC Sochaux-Montbéliard players Category:Stade Brestois 29 players Category:FC Mulhouse players Category:Sporting Club Toulon players Category:FC Gueugnon players Category:Ligue 1 players Category:Ligue 2 players Category:Thonon Évian F.C. managers Category:Ligue 1 managers
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and drilled bayonet proficiency. These new efforts to train and discipline the army also improved morale among the soldiers more generally. French alliance Initially, France remained reluctant to directly involve themselves in the war against Great Britain. In part, they worried that revolutionary fervor might spread into their own empire (which it did by 1789), but they also did not think the American colonists could win. However, the October 1777 surrender of British General John Burgoyne's army at Saratoga won for Americans the assistance they needed from other foreign powers. France and the United States subsequently signed a treaty on
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Alain Deneault (born 1970) is a French Canadian author from Quebec. He is known for his book Noir Canada: Pillage, corruption et criminalité en Afrique and the legal proceedings that followed its publishing. Biography Deneault was born in Outaouais, Quebec. He has a research doctorate from Centre Marc Bloch, Berlin, and a PhD in philosophy from Paris 8 University under the supervision of Jacques Rancière. His studies focused on philosophy from nineteenth-century Germany and twentieth-century France, particularly the work of Georg Simmel. He lives in Montreal, where he is an instructor in sociology at the Université du Quebec, affiliated withthe department of political science. He has written several books on topics related to international finance, globalization, transnational corporations, and corporate tax havens. In 1999, Deneault was a speaker on globalization at the Millennium Round of the World Trade Organization Conference in Seattle. The book Noir Canada: Pillage, corruption et criminalité en Afrique, written by Deneault, Delphine Abadie, and William Sacher, published in 2008 by Les Éditions Écosociété Inc., concerns the activities of Canadian mining companies in Africa. Lawsuits Following the publication of Noir Canada, mining company Barrick Gold sent Écosociété a threatening letter regarding alleged inaccuracies in the book's"An Act to amend the Code of Civil Procedure to prevent improper use of the courts and promote freedom of expression and citizen participation in public debate". In June 2008 another mining company, Banro Corporation, sued the authors and publisher for allegedly defamatory content in Noir Canada, for $5 million. The prosecution took place in Ontario courts, despite the fact that less than 100 copies of the book were distributed in the province. The publisher appealed to the Supreme Court to repatriate the suit to Quebec, partly because of its newly adopted anti-SLAPP legislation, but was denied. In 2013, theproceedings ended with an out-of-court settlement that involved Écosociété paying compensation to Banro. In February 2010 Barrick Gold sent a letter threatening legal action to everyone involved in the book Imperial Canada Inc.: Legal Haven of Choice for the World's Mining Industries, an English translation of a book by Deneault and William Sacher, also about the Canadian mining industry. Bibliography English translations References External links Website Silence is Gold, a 2012 documentary by the National Film Board of Canada about the legal fight surrounding Noir Canada Category:Writers from Quebec Category:Living people Category:Paris VIII University alumni Category:People from Outaouais Category:1970 births
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Sir Edward North Buxton, 2nd Baronet (16 September 1812 – 11 June 1858) was a British Liberal Party politician. He was the son of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton and his wife, Hannah Gurney (1783–1872). He married Catherine Gurney (1814–1911), daughter of Samuel Gurney (1786–1856) of the Norwich Gurney family, on 12 April 1836. He became 2nd Baronet Buxton of Bellfield and Runton on 19 February 1845, on the death of his father. He served as Member of Parliament for Essex South from 1847 to 1852 and for East Norfolk from 1857 until his death in 1858. He died on 11June 1858, leaving 7 sons and 5 daughters. He was succeeded as 3rd Baronet by his eldest son, Thomas Fowell Buxton, (26 January 1837 – 28 October 1915). Another of his sons, with the same name as himself, lived 1 September 1840 – 9 January 1924 and was elected MP for Walthamstow in 1885. References Peerage.com Elizabeth Baigent, ‘Buxton, Edward North (1840–1924)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 , accessed 27 Oct 2006 External links Category:1812 births Category:1858 deaths Category:Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies Category:UK MPs 1847–1852 Category:UK MPs 1857–1859 Category:Baronets in the Baronetage of
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John McEntire (born April 9, 1970 in Portland, Oregon) is an American recording engineer, producer, drummer and multi-instrumentalist based in Chicago. He is a member of both Tortoise and the Sea and Cake. McEntire started playing drums at age 10. Throughout high school, he performed in marching bands and studied privately for seven years. He went on to attend Oberlin Conservatory initially as a percussion major, but eventually switched to study in the school's then newly created program for Technology in Music and Related Arts. Musical career McEntire is currently a member of Tortoise, The Sea and Cake, and TheTheir debut album, The Serpentine Similar, was released in 1993. McEntire and Brown left to play in Tortoise in 1994, yet McEntire continued to make contributions to Gastr Del Sol's later recordings and performances. McEntire had also played in Seam, The Stokastikats, Stereolab, and The Oily Bloodmen. He was a principal musician on Jim O'Rourke's Terminal Pharmacy and has appeared on many other solo O'Rourke projects. Production/engineering work As a producer and engineer, McEntire has mixed and remixed recordings by many artists. He also owns and operates Soma Electronic Music Studios in Nevada City, California, to which he relocated inRuben, Blur, Pivot, The Fiery Furnaces, The Car Is on Fire, Small Sins, Broken Social Scene, Coldcut, Spoon, Jaga Jazzist, Great 3, Yo La Tengo, and Pia Fraus. McEntire is a pioneering user of modern digital audio workstation software, first employing Pro Tools on the 1997 The Sea and Cake album The Fawn and then on Stereolab's Dots and Loops, released later the same year. References External links John McEntire, Pushing Tortoise, interview John McEntire, Rock Reaching, interview John McEntire on Spookey Ruben's Dizzy Playground Category:1970 births Category:Musicians from Portland, Oregon Category:Living people Category:Oberlin College alumni Category:American indie rock musicians
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Eros|Anteros is the second studio album by Belgian band Oathbreaker. It was released on 16 July 2013 by Deathwish Inc. The album has been praised for successfully mixing diverse genres including black metal, hardcore punk and shoegazing. The title references Eros and Anteros, gods of love in Greek mythology. Track listing Personnel Oathbreaker Caro Tanghe Lennart Bossu Gilles Demolder Ivo Debrabandere Other Maurice Maeterlinck – poem on (Beeltenis) and Clair Obscur Kurt Ballou – additional guitars on (Beeltenis) and Clair Obscur Production Kurt Ballou – engineering and production Brad Boatright – mastering Jeroen Mylle – photography Valentijn Goethals & Tomas
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"The Lightning Strike" is a song from alternative rock band Snow Patrol's fifth album A Hundred Million Suns, and appears as the last track on the album. The lyrics to the song were written by lead singer Gary Lightbody and the music was composed by Snow Patrol. The song is composed of three smaller songs and, at sixteen minutes and eighteen seconds, is the longest the band has released yet. The song has an elaborate live performance where a specially made animation is played simultaneously as the band performs the song. Most of the video features origami, which is themain artwork for the album and its singles. The song received a mixed reaction when the album was released, and though the band were praised for playing it live, the general feeling was that it wasn't a right choice, with one critic calling it "self-indulgent" but forgivable. Conception and composition In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, lyricist Gary Lightbody revealed the song was conceived after he was caught in a heavy storm one night in Glasgow: "I was pretty terrified – 150-mile-an-hour winds, trees falling down. But we went outside the house, and it was also just thrilling. Therewas this howling wind, but it felt like silence, as if our senses were being too bombarded to cope with what was going on. So the record was born out of that feeling, of two people having a protective shell around each other. I'm not saying there's not darkness in there still, but it's happening from outward factors more than inward. Maybe things are terrifying, but they're beautiful, too. The world is extremely surprising". In August 2008, Lightbody joked about the song in a press release on the band's website, which revealed the track-listing for the then unreleased album: "Thelast song is sixteen-minutes long and by far the longest we've ever done. Don't be frightened though, it's great. Although, for now, you'll have to take my word for that and I'm pretty biased I have to say". At the time of the release of the album, SP.com posted a section featuring Gary Lightbody discussing the new songs, which was initially a Lightbody interview to RTÉ. The interview revealed that the song was initially three different songs. However, the band felt that they "worked so well together it was obvious they belonged in one place".m Recording and production The threesongs are "What If This Storm Ends?", "The Sunlight Through the Flags", and "Daybreak". "What If This Storm Ends?" was recorded at Olympic Studios in London and features brass choir. The second part, "The Sunlight Through the Flags", is set on the west coast of Ireland and was recorded at Grouse Lodge, Co. Westmeath, Ireland. According to the wishes of producer Jacknife Lee, the third and last part, "Daybreak", was recorded at Hansa Tonstudios in Berlin, where David Bowie recorded "Heroes" in the '70s and U2 recorded Achtung Baby in the '90s. Lightbody commented that "Daybreak" "was really affected byHansa" and "has that Krautrock hypnotic sway to it, and "Heroes"-type guitars swooning over the top", and it made a fitting end to the album. The band specifically chose to keep the song the last track on the album. In an interview, Lightbody said "We felt like it hopefully leaves you wondering "what's next?", making you want more". In an interview to Glide Magazine, Nathan Connolly spoke of the band's desire to not sound like their earlier work, but still maintain their "melody and honesty". The song grew out of the band trying to progress musically. Connolly also felt thatthe song requires repeated listening to grow on a person, like acquired taste. Release history The song initially appeared on the album versions of A Hundred Million Suns. On various online music stores including the iTunes Store, the song is labeled "album-only", making it inaccessible for individual purchase. A live MP3, recorded during the UK & Ireland Arena Tour of February–March 2009 was gifted to fans as a free download on every ticket purchase for the Reworked Tour of November–December 2009. Each ticket came with a special code that enabled the download. In light of its usage in the Epictrailer, on 25 February 2013, "The Lightning Strike (What If This Storm Ends?)" was released as a stand-alone single. Furthermore, on 9 March 2013, the band announced on social media websites such as Facebook that they had released the accompanying channel. The stand-alone "What If This Storm Ends" is to be released on the 2013 Snow Patrol compilation, entitled Greatest Hits. Track listing "What If This Storm Ends?" – 5:10 "The Sunlight Through the Flags" – 4:17 "Daybreak" – 6:51 2013 "What If This Storm Ends?" download single "What If This Storm Ends?" – 4:10 2013 "What If This StormEnds?" US Promo CD-single "What If This Storm Ends?" – 4:10 "What If This Storm Ends? (Edit)" – 3:34 Music video Live-performance version "The Lightning Strike" has an elaborate live performance, with the band playing the song in the backdrop of a projection screen, on which a specially made video is played simultaneously; , at the Pinkpop Festival at Megaland, Landgraaf, the Netherlands, is available via the band's VEVO YouTube channel. The idea for the video was conceived by Gary Lightbody. Snow Patrol's tour video director Blue Leach collaborated with production company Atticus Finch to create the video, which representsLightbody's idea to represent the world as origami. Finch brought Undabo Studios into the project to "help develop an origami style of modeling and texturing" that appears on the album artwork for A Hundred Million Suns. The video's theme uses a colorful visual language; the birth and development of a star, a spiralling galaxy, and its millions of pieces, which flow smoothly into each other; the formation of space, birds, animated rockets, satellites, fishes, havens, oceans, boats, cities, landscapes, rainbows, cars, and planets and many other visual impressions. The "CGI origami" gig features the band members themselves performing as origamifigures. The video was made using Autodesk Softimage and took about three months to make. It consists of 24,000 frames of animation and is played of a 60×40 ft. projection screen in live performances for the first 6 minutes, which then moves to LED screens suspended behind the band. Director Blue Leach later won the "TPi Award" in 2009 for his work with Snow Patrol, amongst others. Full animated version The full sixteen-minute animated video for "The Lightning Strike", which was previously unavailable saw its official release as a part of Up to Now, the band's third compilation album. Thevideo can be found on the bonus DVDs of the Digipak and box-set releases of the album. "What If This Storm Ends?" animated version A for the "What If This Storm Ends?" was uploaded by the band onto YouTube. Like videos for live performances, the video features an elaborate animation involving origami. Reception The song received a generally mixed reception at the time of album release. Spin called it "dramatic". Rolling Stone was quite positive about the song, saying "the band distinguishes itself from the post-Coldplay pack with a flair for arrangements that almost justifies the grandiosity of 16-minute epicslike "The Lightning Strike"". PopMatters' response was very positive. Reviewer Ross Langager called the song "a 16-minute, three-movement celestial metaphor of operatic grandeur and overwhelming beauty". He further praised the song, saying: "Linked together by alike synthesizer bedrocks of gradually increasing warmth and brightness, the song-cycle progresses from silver-lined dark clouds to hints of dawn before finally settling on a lovely, sun-drenched morning. But even when faced by such an inexorable process of hopefulness, Lightbody has to temper the surge of light: "Slowly the day breaks/Apart in our hands"". The Independent'''s Andy Gill, however, had mixed feelings about the song.He said that the song was an attempt to "broaden the band's style". He called it ambitious and felt that "its incorporation of minimalist techniques, glockenspiel, brass colouration and shoegazey guitar textures" made the song "lengthy". He made comparisons with Coldplay, calling the band "self-absorbed" but said Snow Patrol were "more bearable". On the other hand, Pitchfork Media's Joshua Love reviewed the song negatively, writing that it seemed as if the band was "striving to be taken more seriously", by "stringing together three ponderous, already-overlong songs and calling the impenetrable result a 16-minute stand-alone epic "The Lightning Strike"". He furtherwrote that the band's wasn't talented enough to do justice to "these newer, more artful ambitions". Live-performance reception Critical reception of the live performance has been generally mixed as well, though the band has been praised for playing it. Contactmusic.com reviewed a Snow Patrol concert at the M.E.N. Arena on 7 March 2009. Though it called the song "ambitious by anyone's standards" and praised the animation calling it "impressive", it felt the song wasn't the best choice for an encore. WalesOnline's Paul Rowland wrote a review of the gig at Cardiff International Arena the next day. He praised the song,calling it a "three-movement epic". He reported that, though the song was a welcome change in the encore, some fans did not appreciate it and headed home: "After all, they'd already heard "Run", and the traffic's awful this time of night". The same happened at a free gig at iTunes Festival 2009 at The Roundhouse in London. In The News, Chris Jefferies reported that the band had to play the song to a "half-empty crowd", but had praise for the band saying "there is much, much more to this band". Durham21's Ian Church covered the next gig on 10 Marchat the Metro Radio Arena. He reported that for the encore, a large semi-transparent sheet was dropped in front of the stage, to project the animation. He said that it was "surprising" the band chose to play the "practically unknown" song, but reported that "it somehow managed to capture those watching" but a few fans were left complaining about the song choice. Journal Live also covered the concert, with Helen Dalby writing that it was "interesting" and "different" for the band to play the song, but she wasn't "entirely sure it quite worked". She felt the song might have workedif it was played earlier in the set.Evening Standard's Amira Hashish covered the last concert at The O2 and wrote a positive review about the performance of the song, though she felt to song(s) was "lesser known"; but, she felt the band brought them to life and, though it was "a little self-indulgent", the band could be forgiven. James Cabooter of Daily Star, who covered the show at Bloomsbury Theatre wrote that the newer material (including "The Lightning Strike") was deeper and more mature sonically. Chart performance "What If This Storm Ends?" reached the top 400 on iTunes shortly followingits release. Live performances The Taking Back the Cities Tour has generally featured "What If This Storm Ends?" as an encore. The full song has usually not been played, but it has been known to make appearances; it finally made its live debut during the UK & Ireland Arena Tour, where it was played regularly. It also made appearances during the following European leg, though it was not played on all dates. The song was not played during the shows with the band supporting Coldplay on the Viva la Vida Tour and U2 on the U2 360° Tour. Personnel SnowPatrol Gary Lightbody – vocals, guitar, backing vocals Nathan Connolly – guitar, backing vocals Paul Wilson – bass guitar, backing vocals Jonny Quinn – drums Tom Simpson – keyboards Other personnel Jacknife Lee – producer, mixing Cenzo Townshend – mixing John Davis – mastering Avshalom Caspi – brass arrangement Mo Hausler – brass, choir recorder Phil Rose – brass, choir recorder Exmoor Singers of London – choir James Jarvis – choir director Evgeny Chubykin – horns Jocelyn Lightfoot – horns Kira Doherty – horns Philip Eastop – horns Richard Bayliss – horns Timothy Brown – horns Colin Sheen – tromboneFilms Blue Leach – director Emer Patten – producer In popular culture The full song was used in "Don't Cry for Me, Albuquerque", an episode of In Plain Sight, in 2009, while the first part of the song, "What If This Storm Ends?", appeared in a 2011 trailer for the war movie Act of Valor, starring real-life Navy SEALs, and in the trailers to the 2013 animated film Epic. It was also used in season 8 of One Tree Hill''. References Category:2008 songs Category:Snow Patrol songs Category:Song recordings produced by Jacknife Lee Category:Songs written by Gary Lightbody Category:Songs written by
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The Forman School is a co-educational boarding and day school in Litchfield, Connecticut, USA offering a college preparatory program in grades 9 to 12 and a postgraduate program (PG) exclusively for students with learning differences such as ADD/ADHD and dyslexia. Forman School offers a 4-week summer program in July for students with learning differences. History The school was founded in 1930 by John and Julie Ripley Forman, with three students who hadn't had a history of academic success in a traditional setting. The school grew over the years into an alternative high school for disabled students, and in recent years,with so many new programs for disabled students, has seen 100% college acceptance. All accepted students present with language-based disabilities, most notably dyslexia, asd, attention deficit disorders (ADHD), and executive function disorders. The Formans were committed to utilizing the best resources to address the specific learning differences of their students, a tradition that has continued throughout the school’s history. They turned to Dr. Samuel Orton, a pioneer in reading methodologies to determine how to teach the fundamentals of reading. The Formans established the Remedial English Department and employed the Orton-Gillingham method of teaching reading phonics. They were also awarded agrant from the Rockefeller Foundation to conduct research in teaching reading. As a graduate of Princeton University, one of John Forman’s contacts was Professor Albert Einstein who had signicficat learning disabilities. This relationship led to Dr. Einstein joining the Forman School’s Academic Board of Advisors in the early years. In the 1980s, Forman was the subject of a Time magazine profile highlighting its success with dyslectics. Additionally, Forman was featured in The New York Times for its curriculum in the 1980s and its Costa Rican Rainforest Project in the 1990s. Mark B. Perkins, a former dean of students and assistanthead of school at Holderness School, was head of Forman from 1995 to 2008. At that tumultuous time, he steadied the school and contributed mightily to building a strong student culture and competitive athletic program. In November 2007, Adam K. Man, academic dean at St. Timothy's School was appointed the next head of school and assumed the position on July 1, 2008. Athletics Athletics at Forman are an integral part of community life. All students have the option to participate in either a competitive interscholastic league or recreational sport. Forman competes with schools in the Housatonic Valley Athletic League and
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Lansing Stone School is a historic building located in Lansing, Iowa, United States. The two story structure was constructed in 1864 using locally quarried limestone. The cupola on the center front of the building is original. The building was enlarged in 1867 when the wings on the north and south sides were added. It served as a school building for 108 years. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. References Category:School buildings completed in 1864 Category:Buildings and structures in Allamakee County, Iowa Category:National Register of Historic Places in Allamakee County, Iowa Category:School buildings on the
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The Journal of Heredity is a peer-reviewed scientific journal concerned with heredity in a biological sense, covering all aspects of genetics. It is published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Genetic Association. History The trends in topics that have been published in the journal reflect the history of the discipline of genetics. Early issues included many papers on eugenics, particularly under the editorial leadership of the journal's first two editors-in-chief, Paul Popenoe and R. C. Cook. Emphasis on eugenics in the journal declined throughout the 1940s and 1950s as support for the topic waned in the scientificcommunity and the general public; when Cook's daughter, Barbara Kuhn, took over as editor in 1962 after her father's 40-year service, "...the subject of eugenics was essentially dropped." Early topics of interest included comparative color inheritance in mammals (as explored in a series of articles that served as precursors to work applying enzyme kinetics to developmental genetics), determination of the number of human chromosomes, genetic histories of a number of types of livestock (including hybridization of cattle with American bison, the discovery of salivary chromosomes in Drosophila, and "A remarkable paper by Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya, pointing out a difference between mother and
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Thadeus Ferdinand Ludwig von Sivers (, tr. ; ?), always falsely referred to as Thadeus von Sievers, was a Baltic German general who served in the Imperial Russian Army. Sievers was most notable for his role in the Invasion of East Prussia during the initial stage of World War I, in which he commanded the 10th Army against the Germans and succeeded in taking the East Prussian towns of Stallupönen (now Nesterov, Russia) and Goldap (now Poland) in October 1914. Further major successes for the Russian Army in East Prussia failed to materialize. In the Second Battle of the Masurian
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Hossein Jafarian (, born 25 March 1944 in Tehran) is an Iranian cinematographer. Career Hossein Jafarian is a graduate of the Iran Broadcasting University. He began his career working for Iranian state-run television where he shot over 40 documentaries and TV shows before retiring early soon after the 1979 Islamic Revolution. His feature film debut was with 1984's Tatooreh. But it wasn't until 1992's Nargess that he established himself as a leading cinematographer in Iran. It was with Nargess that he for the first time captured "real nights" on the Iranian film screen. Jafarian has a distinctive style of hisown. His work draws comparisons with the American cinematographer Gordon Willis for his use of darkness and low-key lighting. Many of his films have gone on to win awards at international film festival, including; Abbas Kiarostami's Through the Olive Trees, Jafar Panahi's Crimson Gold and Asghar Farhadi's Fireworks Wednesday and About Elly. He was a guest at 2004's Camerimage with Crimson Gold and was nominated for the 'Golden Frog' in 2009 for About Elly. Hossein Jafarian was voted the best cinematographer of the Iranian decade of the 1380s (2001-2011) by over 130 film critics in the 100th issue of theIranian magazine Sanaat Cinama (Cinema Industry). In 2018 Mr. Jafarian was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in the United States - the first Iranian cinematographer to have been invited. Selected filmography (as a director of photography) Nargess (1992) Through the Olive Trees (1994) The May Lady (1998) Two Women (1999) Under the Skin of the City (2001) Afflicted Generation (2001) Yalda's Night (2002) Crimson Gold (2003) One Night (2005) Fireworks Wednesday (2007) About Elly (2009) Gold and Copper (2010) Che (2014 film) (2014) Salesman (2016) Books and publications Lens: In Photography and Cinematography by
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"In the Pines", this version appears on compilations such as Where Did You Sleep Last Night – Lead Belly Legacy Vol. 1 (1996), and The Definitive Lead Belly (2008). Lead Belly is often said to be the author of the song, e.g. by Nirvana on their MTV Unplugged album in 1994. However, Lead Belly didn't write the song, but reinterpreted it, as did other musicians before and after him. According to the American folklorist Alan Lomax, Lead Belly learned the song from someone's interpretation of the 1917 version compiled by Cecil Sharp, and by the 1925 phonograph recording. Cajun versionsversion on Lanegan's 1990 album, The Winding Sheet. Like Lanegan, Cobain usually screamed its final verse. It is likely that Cobain drew from Lead Belly's 1944 Musicraft version for his interpretation of the song; Lanegan owned an original 78 rpm record of this version, and it is the one that Cobain's version most closely resembles in terms of lyrics, form, and title—even repeating Leadbelly's interjection "Shiver for me" before the instrumental bridge. In a 2009 MTV article, Kurt Loder remembers discussing the song's title with Cobain, with Cobain insisting, "But the Leadbelly version is called 'Where Did You Sleep LastNight,'" and Loder preferring the "In the Pines" title used by Bill Monroe (as well as Lead Belly). Cobain earned critical acclaim for his acoustic performance of the song during Nirvana's MTV Unplugged appearance in 1993. Canadian musician Neil Young described Cobain's vocals during the final screamed verse as "Unearthly, like a werewolf, unbelievable." This version was originally sanctioned to be released as a b-side to the band's "Pennyroyal Tea" single in 1994, but the single was cancelled following Cobain's death in April 1994. It was posthumously released on the band's MTV Unplugged in New York album in November 1994,and as a promotional single from the album. In 2002 the song featured as a bonus track on Nirvana's "best of" compilation album Nirvana. In 2003 the Nirvana version reached number 29 on WYSP's Top 30 most played songs, and in 2004 reached number 20. A solo Cobain home demo, recorded in 1990, appears on the band's 2004 rarities box set, With the Lights Out. Other versions Dock Walsh recorded as an A-side on his 1926 single In The Pines / Going Back To Jericho The Louvin Brothers version appears on their 1956 album Tragic Songs of Life in 1959folksinger Dave Van Ronk interpreted the composition on his Ballads, Blues, and a Spiritual Jackson C. Frank recorded a version for his self titled 1965 album. The Grateful Dead played a version in 1965, released later in 2001 as part of The Golden Road (1965–1973) box set and in 2003 on the stand alone Birth of the Dead. Norma Tanega recorded a version for her 1966 album, Walkin' My Cat Named Dog The Oak Ridge Boys recorded this song for their 1983 album Deliver. Dolly Parton's version appears on her 1994 album Heartsongs: Live from Home. Carl Rutherford recorded aversion on his 2001 album, Turn Off the Fear Laura Gibson's version appears as a b-side on her single La Grande Dutch folk duo The Lasses recorded a version on their album Daughters (2015). Loretta Lynn's version appears on her 2016 album Full Circle. Sleigh Bells has a version in the 2020 movie, "The Rhythm Section". Kid Cudi & Dot Da Genius produced a folk/grunge version of the song. French singer Madjo recorded a version on her self titled 2009 album. 070 Shake recorded a hip hop version on Modus Vivendi (070 Shake album) released in 2020. In popular culture
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Ulrike Jureit (born in 1964) is a German historian. Career Jureit studied history, theology and social pedagogy from 1983 until 1989 at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität in Münster. From 1991 to 1995 she was a research assistant at the Neuengamme concentration camp. In 1998 she received her doctorate at the University of Hamburg. The topic of her work was Memory Patterns. On the Methodology of Life History Interviews with Survivors of the Concentration and Extermination Camps. Jureit then worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Bielefeld University and then supervised a research project within the framework of the University of Hamburg's specialhistorischer Forschung. In Susanne Düwell, Nicolas Pethes (edit.): Fall – Fallgeschichte – Fallstudie. Theorie und Geschichte einer Wissensform. Frankfurt am Main u. a. 2014, . Das Ordnen von Räumen. Territorium und Lebensraum im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. Hamburg 2012. with Margrit Frölich and Christian Schneider (edit.): Das Unbehagen an der Erinnerung – Wandlungsprozesse im Gedenken an den Holocaust. Frankfurt 2012. with the Hamburg Institute for Social Research (edit.): Verbrechen der Wehrmacht. Dimensionen des Vernichtungskrieges 1941–1944. Ausstellungskatalog, conception Jan Philipp Reemtsma, Ulrike Jureit; Gesamtredaktion: Ulrike Jureit. Hamburg 2002. Konstruktion und Sinn. Methodische Überlegungen zu biographischen Sinnkonstruktionen. Oldenburg 1998 (PDF-Datei). In dubiocontra reum? Über den Wunsch nach historischer Eindeutigkeit. In Musik & Ästhetik. 17th year, No. 67, 2013, . Autobiographien: Rückfragen an ein gelebtes Leben. In (edit.): Autobiographische Aufarbeitung. Diktatur und Lebensgeschichte im 20. Jahrhundert. Leipzig 2012, . Generation, Generationalität, Generationenforschung, Version 1.0. In , published on 11 February 2010. as editor with Nikola Tietze: Postsouveräne Territorialität. Die Europäische Union und ihr Raum. Hamburger Edition, Hamburg 2015, . Hoffnung auf Erfolg. Akteurszentrierte Handlungskonzepte in der Migrations- und Flüchtlingsforschung, in 15 (2018), . External links Bereich zu Ulrike Jureit auf der Internetpräsenz des Hamburg Institute for Social Research. Conversation with Jureit on
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J. W. Lockett (February 23, 1937 – December 14, 1999) was an American football fullback in the National Football League (NFL) for the San Francisco 49ers, Dallas Cowboys, Baltimore Colts and the Washington Redskins. He also was a member of the Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football at the University of Central Oklahoma. Early years Lockett attended Booker T. Washington High School, where he received all-state honors in football, baseball and basketball. After graduating, he played one season of minor league baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers farm system, before moving on to theUniversity of Central Oklahoma. He became a four-year starter in football, playing guard and center as a freshman and as a two-way player at tight end and defensive end in his last three years. He also lettered in baseball, basketball and track. In 2005, he was inducted into the University of Central Oklahoma Athletics Hall of Fame. Professional career San Francisco 49ers Lockett was signed as an undrafted free agent by the San Francisco 49ers after the 1961 NFL Draft. He was tried at defensive end, before being moved to fullback, even though he had never play that position. OnSeptember 25, after two games, he was traded to the Dallas Cowboys in exchange for a draft choice. Dallas Cowboys In 1961, he started 7 games at fullback and was named to the NFL All-rookie team at the end of the year. On June 29, 1963, he was traded to the Baltimore Colts in exchange for a third round draft choice (#36-Ode Burrell). Baltimore Colts Lockett began the 1963 season as the starter at fullback, until being passed on the depth chart by Jerry Hill. He finished as the team's third leading runner (273 yards). On February 1, 1964, he
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Lydia María Cacho Ribeiro (born 12 April 1963) is a Mexican leftist journalist, feminist, and human rights activist. Described by Amnesty International as "perhaps Mexico's most famous investigative journalist and women's rights advocate", Cacho's reporting focuses on violence against and sexual abuse of women and children. Her book Los Demonios del Edén (in English: The Demons of Eden) (2004) created a nationwide scandal by alleging that several prominent businessmen had conspired to protect a pedophilia ring. In 2006, a tape emerged of a conversation between businessman Kamel Nacif Borge and Mario Plutarco Marín Torres, governor of Puebla, in which theyconspired to have Cacho beaten and raped for her reporting. Cacho is the winner of numerous international awards for her journalism, including the Civil Courage Prize, the Wallenberg Medal, and the Olof Palme Prize. In 2010, she was named a World Press Freedom Hero of the International Press Institute. Background Lydia Cacho Ribeiro was born in Mexico City to a mother of French-Portuguese origin who moved from France to Mexico during World War II and a Mexican engineer father. Cacho attributed her refusal to compromise to her mother, who was shocked by what she called Mexicans' willingness to "negotiate theirrape her. She was then imprisoned for a short time on defamation charges before being released on bail. On 14 February 2006, several telephone conversations between Nacif Borge and Mario Marín, governor of the state of Puebla, were revealed by the Mexico City daily La Jornada. In these conversations, before Cacho's arrest, Marín and Nacif Borge discussed putting Cacho in jail as a favour, and having her beaten and abused while in jail to silence her. The recording sparked widespread calls for Marín to be impeached. Cacho took the case of her arrest to the Supreme Court, becoming the firstwoman in Mexico's history to testify there. On 29 November 2007, the Court ruled 6 to 4 that Marín had no case to answer in Cacho's arrest, jailing and harassment, a case that The New York Times described as "a setback for journalistic freedom in Mexico". The United Nations Human Rights Council advised her to leave the country, recommended that she seek political asylum in another country, and offered her legal assistance and assistance in gaining access to international courts. While being held, Cacho was granted the Premio Francisco Ojeda al Valor Periodístico (Francisco Ojeda Award for Journalistic Courage). InMay 2008, a few days before she was scheduled to testify at Kuri's trial, Cacho was almost killed when the lug nuts on one of her car's wheels were loosened. Other reporting In 2006, Cacho reported on the hundreds of female homicides in Ciudad Juárez. Awards and honors In 2007, Lydia Cacho received the Amnesty International Ginetta Sagan Award for Women and Children's Rights, the IWMF (International Women's Media Foundation) Courage in Journalism Award, and the Oxfam Novib/PEN Award. The following year, she received the UNESCO/Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize. In 2009, Cacho was awarded the Wallenberg Medal fromthe University of Michigan for her work to bring to public attention to the corruption that shields criminals who exploit women and children. Cacho was a recipient of the PEN/Pinter Prize as an International Writer of Courage in 2010, which goes to writers persecuted for their beliefs. She was also named a World Press Freedom Hero of the International Press Institute. A year later, Cacho received The International Hrant Dink Award, presented to people who work for a world free of discrimination, racism and violence, take personal risks for their ideals, use the language of peace and by doing so,inspire and encourage others. She also won the Civil Courage Prize of The Train Foundation, which she shared with Triveni Acharya for efforts against "sex trafficking, domestic violence and child pornography", and the Olof Palme Prize together with Roberto Saviano. In 2017, Cacho was awarded the Distinguished Leadership Award for the Defense of Human Rights by the Inter-American Dialogue. See also Censorship in Mexico#Attacks and threats against journalists Human rights in Mexico List of journalists and media workers killed in Mexico Publications As of 2018, Lydia Cacho has written twelve books, ranging from poetry to fiction, and including a Manualto prevent child abuse, essays on gender issues and love, and her international best sellers about Sex trafficking, Human Slavery and the relationship between child pornography and child sexual abuse like Slavery Inc.: The Untold Story of International Sex Trafficking , published in the U.K. Her books have been translated into French, English, Dutch, Portuguese, Italian, German, Croatian, Swedish, and Turkish. 2003, Muérdele al corazón / Bite the heart , DEMAC, Spanish, 2007, Esta boca es mía…y tuya también / This mouth is mine… and Yours too , Planeta Mexicana, Spanish, 2009, Con mi hij@ NO / With my childNO , Debolsillo , Spanish, 2010, Esclavas del Poder: Trata sexual / Slaves Of Power , Grijalbo Mondadori, Spanish, 2010, Los demonios del Edén / The Demons of Eden , Debolsillo, Spanish, 2013, El silencio es nuestro / The silence is ours , Artes de México y del Mundo, Spanish, 2014, Slavery Inc.: The Untold Story of International Sex Trafficking , Soft Skull Press, English, 2015, En busca de Kayla / In search of Kayla , Lydia Cacho y Patricio Betteo, Editorial Sexto Piso, ilustrado, Spanish, 2016, Infamy , Soft Skull Press, English, 2016, La ira de México / The
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University of the Humanities (also known as Humanities University) is a private university in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, offering undergraduate and graduate programs in fields including foreign languages, translation, education, journalism, computer science, economics business. The Mongolian name: Хүмүүнлэгийн ухааны их сургууль The university is accredited by the Mongolian National Council for Education Accreditation In 2014 it ranked fifteenth in Mongolia and 18367th in the world on the Webometrics Ranking of World Universities. It was ranked 7454th in the world in web rankings according to another source. Address: Sukhhbaatar Square – 20/4, Baga Toiruu, Sukhbaatar District, P.O. Box – 210646/53. References External
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Finaçon was a Cape Verdean band active from the 1980s and 1990s. The band was formed after the split from Bulimundo. They performed several songs of the funaná genre. This style would be brought to an international level and made contracts with foreign labels. They have also been trying to make a new dance craze to rival soca and lambada, but have had little success outside of their native country. Three albums and three singles were recorded, including one single that was originally sang by Codé di Dona, a fellow Cape Verdean. History In early 1988, arrangements were made forthe revival of the band. The drummer, Zé Augusto, who was Maintenance Technician at Cape Verde National Radio at the time, contacted Palo, (who was Soundman at the same radio station) wondering if this was an opportunity for him to join the band. There were two: Bass player or guitarist. Palo took guitarist, and Augusto got the drummer position. Soon after, Angelo Barbosa joined the band, sharing the title of Keyboardist with Toni di Cando. After that, the band rehearsed for about a year, only playing one show on July 5 for the opening of National Youth Week. Unfortunately, becauseof health issues, Augusto (drums) was forced to temporarily leave the band for what ended up to be about three years. During this time, di Cando emigrated to the United States, bringing the band down to five members, excluding the Audio engineer, Vava di Santinha. Eventually in November 1989, the band traveled to Lisbon to record their third vinyl record under the name dotorado. Discography Albums Rabecindadi (1987) (Lisbon) Funaná (1990) (ed. Mélodie, Paris) Farol (Lighthouse) Singles "Puêra na odju", originally by Zezé di Nha Reinalda "Fomi 47" (Portuguese: Fome de 47, English: '47 Famine) , 1987, originally by Codé
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Noel Preston is an ethicist, theologian and social commentator and is Adjunct Professor in the Key Centre for Ethics, Law Justice and Governance, Griffith University. Career Preston’s undergraduate studies included a major in Political Science (University of Queensland). His thesis for doctoral studies (Boston University, USA) was: "A Christian ethical analysis of Australia’s policies of Immigration Restriction and Development Partnership." In various roles his focus has continued to be on ethics, politics and spirituality. From 1987-2001 he held senior academic positions at Queensland University of Technology in Applied and Professional ethics. From 2002-2017 he was an adjunct Professor at GriffithCommittee (2004-11). Academic qualifications Cert. Teach (KGCAE) (1961) Bachelor of Arts (1964), Bachelor of Divinity (1967), University of Queensland. Doctor of Theology (1972) Boston University School of Theology, USA Master of Education (Hons.) (1988) University of New England. Personal life Noel Preston was born in Mareeba, Australia on 15 December 1941. He is father of Lisa, Kim and Christopher, and grandfather of three grand-daughters and three grand-sons. He is married to Olga Harris. Major publications Preston N (2014) Ethics with or without God Morning Star Publishing Preston N (2014) Understanding Ethics (4th edition) Sydney: Federation Press Preston N (2006) BeyondCo-editor (1998) Public Sector Ethics: Finding and Implementing Values, Federation Press and Routledge Preston N (ed) (1994) Ethics for the Public Sector: Education and Training, Sydney: Federation Press Miller S and Preston N (1996) (eds) Ethics in Practice: Proceedings of the Second National Conference of the Australian Association for Professional and Applied Ethics, Charles Sturt University: Keon Press Preston N and Symes C (2000) (2nd ed) Schools and Classrooms: a cultural analysis of education, Longmans References External links www.noelpreston.info http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/author.asp?id=361 http://earthcharter.org/ http://aapae.org.au/about/ http://ucforum.unitingchurch.org.au/ http://www.progressivechristians.org.au/ Category:Living people Category:University of Queensland alumni Category:Boston University School of Theology alumni Category:Members of the Order
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Osman Nuri Tekeli (born 1893, date of death unknown) was a Turkish bureaucrat, who served as the governor of several provinces. Early life and education Tekeli was born in Isparta in 1893. He was the son of Ömer Faik and Sıdıka Tekeli. Tekeli received his primary education in his hometown, Isparta. He then attended Vefa Lycee in Istanbul. He graduated from Mekteb-i Mülkiye-i Şahane (Mülkiye; now, Faculty of Political Science, Ankara University) in 1914. Career Following his graduation Tekeli began to serve as district director of Ağırus-Atabey (Isparta) in 1914 until his military service. He served in the Ottoman armyhuge natural disaster, the 1939 Erzincan earthquake. The earthquake with an intensity of 8.2 MS hit the province at 1:57 am (GMT 11:57 pm) on 27 December 1939. The death toll was around 32,962. Tekeli informed the government officials about the disaster as soon as possible. Then, the province began to receive medical, food and other related assistance. Later, he served as the governor of various provinces including Denizli, Diyarbakır, Kahramanmaraş and Bilecik. His last governorship was in Afyonkarahisar from 1946 to 1948. He then was appointed head of the Inspection Directorate at the Ministry of Interior in Ankara, and
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Emmanuel Nnadozie is an educator, economist, professor of economics and author. His scholarly works are in the area of economics and development in Africa. This includes African Economic Development. He has also contributed to research journals such as the "Journal of African Finance and Economic Development", Journal of College Student Development. He has been a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford and a visiting professor at the University of Carolina - Charlotte. He is currently Executive Secretary of the African Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF). He was previously Chief Economist and director of the Economic Development and NEPAD Division ofthe United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA). As such, he edits the annual publication African Economic Outlook. United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) He led and managed the development agenda of ECA and served as the spokesperson for the ECA on economic development in Africa. He served as Adviser to the Executive Secretary of ECA on Africa's Development, representing the Commission intergovernmental and continental bodies and meetings and advises African Governments on development issues. He coordinated UN System-wide Support to Africa's Development and supported the UN relations with the African Union (AU) Commission, the NEPAD Agency, the APRMin African Business -1998 Chad: A Nation in Search of Its Future (co-authored with Mario Azevedo), 1997 Oil and Socioeconomic Crisis in Nigeria: A Regional Perspective to the Nigerian Disease and the Rural Sector - 1995 Journal of African Finance and Economic Development - 2001 (co-authored Sa-Aadu; Diery Seck) Nigeria politics challenges Christian unity: Ecumenical response to Nigeria politics - 1992) Oil & Socioeconomic Crisis in Nigeria - 1980 Affiliations and awards Awards Outstanding Black Missourian award - for contributions towards Black education. Affiliations Pi Delta Phi Phi Kappa Phi Omicron Delta Kappa References Category:Nigerian officials of the United Nations
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Ogcodes zonatus is a species of insect in the family Acroceridae, the small-headed flies. Distribution This species is present in Europe, Russia, Turkey, Iran, Algeria and Mongolia. Description Ogcodes zonatus can reach a body length of approximately . These flies are characterized by a globular body, very small and dark heads and by translucent wings. The contiguous eyes occupy in both sexes the entire head. A long ventral proboscis is present only in the feeding imagos. The domed thorax is black, with partly brown hairs, where as the abdomen has black and white transversal bands. The rear pair of legs
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The Quinta Vergara Amphitheater is an open-air amphitheater within the Parque Quinta Vergara in Viña del Mar, Chile. The amphitheater is the site of the Viña del Mar International Song Festival held yearly in February. The venue is owned by the Viña del Mar Municipality. History After the success of the first Viña del Mar International Song Festival in 1960, it was decided to replace the stage with a more stable one. In 1963 the architect Hernando López began the construction of the venue, which would be a wood structure that was like an "acoustic shell" that helped the artist
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USS Lunga Point (CVE-94), originally named Alazon Bay, was a of the United States Navy. It was named for Lunga Point on the northern coast of Guadalcanal, the site of a naval battle during World War II. The ship notably participated in support of the landings on Iwo Jima and Okinawa. Post war, the ship was decommissioned in 1946, before becoming part of the Pacific Reserve Fleet. In 1960, the ship was struck from the Navy list and broken up. Design and description Lunga Point was a Casablanca-class escort carrier, the most numerous type of aircraft carriers ever built, andthe name Alazon Bay, as part of a tradition which named escort carriers after bays or sounds in Alaska. She was laid down on 19 January 1944 under a Maritime Commission contract, MC hull 1131, by Kaiser Shipbuilding Company of Vancouver, Washington. She was launched on 11 April 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Mary Elizabeth McKay. She was renamed Lunga Point, and was transferred to the United States Navy and commissioned on 14 May 1944, Captain G. A. T. Washburn in command. Service history World War II Following a period of brief training in the months following her commissioning, Lunga Pointsailed for the Pacific to ferry United States Army bombers to New Guinea and to bring damaged P-47 Thunderbolts back to the United States. Upon return, she became a unit of Carrier Division 29 (CarDiv 29), a component of Admiral Thomas C. Kinkaid's 7th Fleet, alongside her fellow sister ships , , , and . She departed San Diego, California on 16 October to participate in the Leyte Gulf operations, touching Pearl Harbor, Eniwetok, and Kossol Roads en route. From 13 to 22 November, she provided air cover for transports and surface units engaged in the campaign. Relieved on the23rd, she sailed to Manus Island, Admiralty Islands, to prepare for the Luzon campaign. Philippine Sea Lunga Point sailed on 27 December from Manus to supply air support for 6th Army landing operations at Lingayen Gulf. En route, on 4 January 1945, at 17:00, approximately 15 Japanese planes were picked up on radar, west of the task group, and approaching quickly. These planes split into two groups, one group heading towards the rear of the task group, whilst the other continued on its course towards the center. Albeit fighters from the carrier group was scrambled, false radar signals hampered theirefforts to intercept, and the only successful interception was when P-47 fighters intercepted two enemy planes, shooting down one. The other plane escaped, and is believed to be the kamikaze which would attack . A lack of radar contacts led the task group to believe that the enemy planes had called off their attack. At 17:12, a Yokosuka P1Y dove onto Ommaney Bay, rupturing the fire mains and sparking a fire which quickly became untenable. She quickly sank, with the loss of 95 crewmen. Minutes after Ommaney Bay was hit, a second kamikaze dove towards Lunga Point. Gunners on thebattleship and cruiser , joined with anti-aircraft fire on Lunga Point, tore the kamikaze apart. The flaming wreckage passed over her, about a hundred feet above her stern, showering her deck with metal fragments, which slightly wounded two men. For the next few days, her task group fought their way through 14 enemy attacks, the majority of them kamikazes, most of which were repelled through excellent fighter cover and anti-aircraft fire. During this running engagement, , , and were all damaged by kamikazes. She arrived off Lingayen Gulf on 6 January, commencing 11 days of intensive air support during whichtime her aircraft flew an average of 41 sorties a day. On 17 January, the support carriers were withdrawn and returned to Ulithi. Iwo Jima From 23 January 1945 to 10 February, Lunga Point prepared for the invasion of Iwo Jima, and stood off the beaches with the amphibious forces, acting as target coordinators and striking enemy positions during the landings on 19 February. On 16 February 1945, Vice-Admiral Kimpei Teroaka authorized the formation of a kamikaze special attack unit to counter the imminent landings on Iwo Jima. The kamikaze force consisted of twelve fighters, twelve carrier bombers, and eighttorpedo bombers, divided into five groups, thirty-two aircraft in total. On the early morning of 21 February, they departed from Katori Naval Air Base, in Asahi, Chiba. They refueled at Hachijō-jima, and then proceeded towards the U.S. naval contingent surrounding Iwo Jima, arriving near sunset. On the evening of 21 February, Lunga Point was performing routine close air support with the rest of Task Group 77.4. At the time, the escort carrier task group consisted of Lunga Point, her sister ships Bismarck Sea, Makin Island, , , and , along with a destroyer contingent. The task group was steaming approximatelyeast of Iwo Jima. At 18:45, the task group spotted the Japanese planes headed for them, when a Mitsubishi G4M made a dive towards Lunga Point. Gunners from Bismarck Sea shot it down. At 18:46, five Nakajima B6Ns dove towards Lunga Point. The first plane, approaching from the starboard missed with its torpedo, passing harmlessly in front of Lunga Point. It subsequently crashed into the ocean at a high velocity. The second plane also missed with its torpedo, but managed to disengage and fly away. The third plane also missed with its torpedo, which proceeded behind the stern, and, setaflame and damaged heavily, attempted to crash into the carrier, approaching from the starboard side. The kamikaze exploded before it could hit the ship, and the wreckage of the plane skidded across the deck, and off the side of the carrier, sparking a brief gasoline fire. The fourth plane detonated in mid-air, due to a direct hit from a anti-aircraft shell. The fifth plane switched targets to Bismarck Sea, sinking it with the loss of 318 lives. Damage to Lunga Point was minimal, and eleven of her crew was wounded. There were no fatalities. She was able to continue operatingin support of troops on Iwo Jima. The special attack unit, in addition to sinking Bismarck Sea, also heavily damaged , , and slightly damaged Lunga Point, , and . Bismarck Sea was the only ship to sink as a result of the attacks. The kamikaze attacks killed 43 Japanese in total. She supported operations on Iwo Jima until 8 March, when land-based planes were present in sufficient strength to allow the ship to return to Ulithi to get ready for the Okinawa campaign. When Lunga Point returned to Ulithi, she only had six bombs left in her magazine, havingdropped 596 in support of operations on Iwo Jima. Okinawa The ship re-provisioned, and on 21 March sortied from Ulithi with Rear Admiral Clifton Sprague's Task Unit. Three days later, on 24 March, she, along with her task group, arrived south of Kerama Retto, providing air cover and bombing targets throughout Okinawa. On 2 April, several kamikazes attempted to strike Lunga Point, all of them being shot down before they came close. However, several transports were damaged and the destroyer was heavily damaged in the attack, subsequently being scuttled on 4 April. On 3 April, whilst making a turn, LungaPoint rolled 23 degrees, flinging an FM-2 Wildcat and a lookout off the deck. The lookout was quickly recovered. Lunga Point remained in support of the operation providing air cover, pounding enemy ground targets in the Ryukyu Islands and fighting off constant kamikaze attacks. She completed this duty without mishap, and returned to Leyte on 27 June. This was followed by a minesweeping operation west of Okinawa in early July, and on 1 August, she departed on an anti-shipping sweep along the Chinese coast from Shanghai northward. On 5 August, Wildcats from Lunga Point downed a Yokosuka P1Y, the lastarrived, steered through Japanese minefields, in the port of Wakayama. On 19 September she transported 760 men of various nationalities to Okinawa. The captain was obliged to assign two men to a bunk to accommodate the ex-POWs. She then unloaded her cargo in Manila harbor. She was ordered to Tokyo Bay in early October, and en route took part in the unsuccessful search for Rear Admiral W. D. Sample missing in a PBM Mariner on a patrol flight. Lunga Point stood out of Tokyo Bay 28 October, and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 7 November. She sailed to San Diegoarriving on 15 November, and made voyages to the Pacific before returning to the west coast early in 1946. On 24 October 1946, the ship was decommissioned and became part of the Tacoma Group, Pacific Reserve Fleet. She was reclassified CVU-94 on 12 June 1955 and AKV-32 on 7 May 1959. She was struck from the Navy list on 1 April 1960, and sold at San Diego to Hyman Michaels Co. on 25 July 1960. Later in the year, she was broken up in Japan. References Sources Online sources Bibliography External links Category:Casablanca-class escort carriers Category:World War II escort aircraft
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Peter Schousboe, more fully Peter (or Peder) Kofod Ancher (or Anker) Schousboe (1766–1832) was a Danish botanist. He was born in 1766 in Rønne, Denmark, and died in 1832 in Tangier, Morocco, having served as Danish consul general in Tangier from 1800 onwards. He conducted a botanical expedition in Spain and Morocco during the years 1791-93. Among the plants that he was the first to describe was the popular garden flower Salvia interrupta; the bushwillow genus Schousboea (now considered a synonym of Combretum) was named in his honour. Notes External links Biographical information about Schousboe on the website of the
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Heilberscheid is an Ortsgemeinde – a community belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde – in the Westerwaldkreis in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. Geography Location The community lies in the Westerwald between Koblenz and Limburg an der Lahn in the Nassau Nature Park. The community belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Montabaur, a kind of collective municipality. History In 1362, Heilberscheid had its first documentary mention. Politics Community council The council is made up of 12 council members who were elected in a majority vote in a municipal election on 7 June 2009. Coat of arms The community's arms show a Madonna in the middle in
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Caira Moreira-Brown (born June 11, 1996) is a US epee fencer who was a member of the United States fencing team for the junior Pan American Games where she took home a bronze in individuals and gold in teams in 2015 in Toronto, Canada. Moreira Brown was born and raised in New York City. She began fencing at the age of 15 after being introduced to it by her cousins, Keeth and Erinn Smart, both Olympic Silver medalist, in different weapons. Before taking up fencing, she had taken ballet, ice skating, tennis and track. Similar to both of her cousins
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Fox Magazine is an American weekly news magazine that aired on the Fox News Channel. Hosted by Laurie Dhue, the program was a weekly in-depth look into some of the previous week's stories, in addition to special series produced by the program itself, such as its constant series about Nashville. Included in the programming were a recap of the previous week's commentaries from a number of the network's commentators, including Bill O'Reilly, Neil Cavuto, John Gibson, and others. The program would come to an end on September 11, 2005, with Laurie Dhue leaving the network to work on Geraldo at
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Victor Love (born August 4, 1957) is an American actor, best known for the role of Bigger Thomas in the 1986 movie adaptation of the Richard Wright novel Native Son, for which he was nominated the Independent Spirit Award for Best Male Lead. Filmography Film Native Son (1986, as Bigger Thomas) Heaven Is a Playground (1991, as Truth Harrison) It's My Party (1996, as Matt Paulson) A Gun, a Car, a Blonde (1997, as Bobby/The Black Chinaman) Gang Related (1997, as Hooper) Shadow of Doubt (1998, as Detective Baker) Time to Pay (1999, as Del Farborough) Velocity Trap (1999, as
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Bill Osco (born William Osco in 1947) is an American film producer and director. Career Osco's first production job (in an uncredited capacity) was the 1970 film Mona, one of the first erotic art films, after Andy Warhol's 1969 film Blue Movie, to receive a national theatrical release in the United States. The release of Mona is considered to be one of the watershed events that helped inaugurate the Golden Age of erotic art films in the United States, and the film is known as one of the paradigms for theatrically released erotic art films. That same year, Osco directedthe documentary Hollywood Blue with Michael Benveniste (as Mike Lite) and Howard Ziehm. In 1971, Osco produced another erotic art film, Harlot, followed by the 1974 sci-fi spoof of Flash Gordon, Flesh Gordon, and the 1976 erotic musical comedy film, Alice in Wonderland. The film grossed over $90 million globally. Produced as a softcore film, Osco later re-edited it into a hardcore pornographic version, utilizing footage not filmed during the original production. Osco produced three films by writer/director Jackie Kong in the 1980s, starting with 1983's The Being, which also starred Osco in the lead role under the pseudonym Rexx
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Download: The True Story of the Internet is a documentary television series about Internet history. It is aired on Science Channel in the US and Discovery Channel for other countries. It originally aired on March 3, 2008. The show was hosted by John Heilemann. Parts There are four parts to the documentary: Part 1: Browser Wars – The rise and fall of Netscape and its battle against Microsoft Part 2: Search – The rise of Google and Yahoo Part 3: Bubble – The dot.com crash of 2000 and the mainstays of the Internet: Amazon.com and eBay Part 4: People Power
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"Far Gone and Out" is a song by the Scottish alternative rock group The Jesus and Mary Chain, released as the second single from their album Honey's Dead. It was released by Blanco y Negro Records in March 1992 and reached #23 in the UK single charts. "Far Gone and Out" peaked at #88 on the Australian ARIA singles chart in May 1992. Track listing All tracks written by Jim Reid and William Reid. 7" (NEG56) "Far Gone and Out" - 2:48 "Why'd You Want Me?" - 3:12 12" (NEG56T) "Far Gone and Out" - 2:48 "Sometimes" - 2:50 "Why'dYou Want Me?" - 3:12 12" (NEG56TB) box with insert & postcards "Far Gone and Out" - 2:48 "Reverence (Al Jourgensen Mix)" - 6:09 "Sometimes" - 2:50 "Why'd You Want Me?" - 3:12 CDS (NEG56CD) holographic disc "Far Gone and Out" - 2:52 "Far Gone and Out (Arc Weld Mix)" - 5:04 "Why'd You Want Me?" - 3:13 "Sometimes" - 2:51 Personnel The Jesus and Mary Chain Jim Reid – vocals, guitar, producer William Reid – guitar, producer Additional personnel Alan Moulder – engineering ("Far Gone and Out") Dick Meaney – engineering ("Sometimes", "Why'd You Want Me") Al Jourgensen -
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Hey, I'm Just Like You is the ninth studio album by Canadian indie pop duo Tegan and Sara, released via Sire Records on September 27, 2019. The album contains re-recordings of unreleased demo songs that the duo recorded as teenagers, and marks a partial return to their original rock-influenced sound. The lead single, "I'll Be Back Someday", was released on July 25, 2019. The second single "Don't Believe the Things They Tell You (They Lie)" was released on September 20, 2019. It was released three days after the publication of their memoir, High School. Background While working on their memoirHigh School, the duo found dozens of cassette recordings of songs they wrote between the ages of 15 and 17. From April 2019, they began rewriting parts of the lyrics but kept the "essence" of each song, and said: "This is the record we never could have made as teenagers, full of songs we never could have written as adults." With the announcement, the duo said the album would contain elements of their "rock and punk roots, with a punch of pop production", and that it is the first "Tegan and Sara album produced, performed, engineered, mixed, and mastered bya team of all women". Promotion Tegan and Sara announced the album on July 9, with a trailer showing home videos of themselves as teenagers playing guitar mixed with new footage of them working on the new versions of the songs. On July 22, the first single from the album, "I'll Be Back Someday", was announced. It was released on July 25. The second single released was the title track, on September 6th, along with a lyric video consisting of footage of the two as teenagers. A tour in support of the album and their memoir High School was announcedon July 24. It will consist of largely acoustic renditions of songs from the album, as well as older songs and clips of the two in high school. Track listing Adapted from Apple Music. All tracks produced by Alex Hope. All tracks written by Tegan Quin and Sara Quin, except where noted. Personnel Adapted from Instagram. Musicians Tegan Quin – vocals, guitar Sara Quin – vocals, guitar, glockenspiel Alex Hope – guitar, keyboards, piano, synths, programming, backing vocals Carla Azar – drums Catherine Hiltz – bass Production Alex Hope – producer Rachael Findlen – engineer Beatriz Artola – mixing Emily
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Through the Barricades is the fifth studio album by Spandau Ballet. It was released in November 1986 by Epic Records. The album reached number seven and remained on the UK album chart for 19 weeks. It produced three UK hit singles: "Fight For Ourselves" (#15), "How Many Lies" (#34) and the band's final top ten hit, "Through the Barricades" (#6). The song lyrics were inspired by love prevailing over the Troubles in Northern Ireland and the death of a member of the crew in the Troubles. Reception In a mainly critical retrospective review for AllMusic, Dan LeRoy claimed: "Rocking up
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The European Economic Area (EEA), which was established via the EEA Agreement in 1992, is an international agreement which enables the extension of the European Union's single market to non-EU member parties. The EEA links the EU member states and three European Free Trade Association (EFTA) states (Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway) into an internal market governed by the same basic rules. These rules aim to enable free movement of labour, goods, services, and capital within the European Single Market, including the freedom to choose residence in any country within this area. The EEA was established on 1 January 1994 uponEU. The right and rules applicable in all EEA member states, including those which are not members of the EU, are specified in Directive 2004/38/EC and in the EEA Agreement. The EEA Agreement specifies that membership is open to member states either of the EU or of the EFTA. EFTA states that are party to the EEA Agreement participate in the EU's internal market without being members of the EU or the European Union Customs Union. They adopt most EU legislation concerning the single market, with notable exclusions including laws regarding the Common Agricultural Policy and Common Fisheries Policy. TheEEA's "decision-shaping" processes enable EEA EFTA member states to influence and contribute to new EEA policy and legislation from an early stage. Third country goods are excluded for these states on rules of origin. When entering into force in 1994, the EEA parties were 17 states and two European Communities: the European Community, which was later absorbed into the EU's wider framework, and the now defunct European Coal and Steel Community. Membership has grown to 30 states as of 2020: 27 EU member states, as well as three of the four member states of the EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway).a set of bilateral agreements with the EU which allow it also to participate in the internal market. Origins In the late 1980s, the EFTA member states, led by Sweden, began looking at options to join the then-existing European Economic Community (EEC), the precursor of the European Union (EU). The reasons identified for this are manifold. Many authors cite the economic downturn at the beginning of the 1980s, and the subsequent adoption by the EEC of the "Europe 1992 agenda", as a primary reason. Arguing from a liberal intergovernmentalist perspective, these authors argue that large multinational corporations in EFTA countries,it is known today. By the time the EEA was established in 1992, however, several developments hampered its credibility. First of all, Switzerland rejected the EEA agreement in a national referendum on 6 December 1992, obstructing full EU-EFTA integration within the EEA. Furthermore, Austria had applied for full EEC membership in 1989, and was followed by Finland, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland between 1991 and 1992 (Norway's EU accession was rejected in a referendum, Switzerland froze its EU application after the EEA agreement was rejected in a referendum). The fall of the Iron Curtain had made the EU less hesitant toa series of bilateral agreements. On 1 January 1995, three erstwhile members of the EFTA—Austria, Finland and Sweden—acceded to the European Union, which had superseded the European Community upon the entry into force of the Maastricht Treaty on 1 November 1993. Liechtenstein's participation in the EEA was delayed until 1 May 1995. , the contracting parties to the EEA are three of the four EFTA member states and the 27 EU member states. The newest EU member, Croatia, finished negotiating their accession to the EEA in November 2013, and since 12 April 2014 has provisionally applied the agreement pending itsratification by all EEA member states. On the question of the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union (commonly known as Brexit), the EEA Agreement will continue to apply with regards to the UK during the transition period, in pursuance of Article 126 of the Withdrawal Agreement. Until (by default) 31 December 2020, the UK and the EU will seek to enter into negotiations on future relationship. The EEA EFTA States (Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein) signed a Separation Agreement with the UK on 28 January 2020, which is understood to mirror the EEA-relevant parts of the EU-UK Withdrawal Agreement.Treaties Besides the 1992 Treaty, 1 amending treaty was signed, as well as 3 treaties to allow for accession of new members of the European Union. Ratification of the EEA Agreement Notes Future enlargement Recent EU member states When a state joins the EU, they do not necessarily immediately become part of the EEA but are obliged to apply. Following the 2007 enlargement of the EU, which saw Bulgaria and Romania acceding to the EU on 1 January 2007, an EEA Enlargement Agreement was not signed until 25 July 2007 and only provisionally entered into force on 1 August 2007.On 20 November 2013, it was announced that an enlargement agreement was reached. The text was initialled on 20 December 2013, and following its signature in April 2014 the agreement is being provisionally applied pending ratification by Croatia, all EEA states, and the European Union. , the agreement has been ratified by 18 out of 32 parties. Future EU member states There are five recognised candidates for EU membership that are not already EEA members: Albania (applied 2009), North Macedonia (applied 2004), Montenegro (applied 2008, negotiating since June 2012), Serbia (applied 2009, negotiating since January 2014) and Turkey (applied 1987,it is possible that the "Kingdom of Denmark in respect of the Faroes" could join the EFTA. The Danish Government has stated that the Faroes cannot become an independent member of the EEA as Denmark is already a party to the EEA Agreement. The Faroes already have an extensive bilateral free trade agreement with Iceland, known as the Hoyvík Agreement. European microstates In November 2012, after the Council of the European Union had called for an evaluation of the EU's relations with the sovereign European microstates of Andorra, Monaco and San Marino, which they described as "fragmented", the European Commissionpublished a report outlining options for their further integration into the EU. Unlike Liechtenstein, which is a member of the EEA via the EFTA and the Schengen Agreement, relations with these three states are based on a collection of agreements covering specific issues. The report examined four alternatives to the current situation: 1) a Sectoral Approach with separate agreements with each state covering an entire policy area, 2) a comprehensive, multilateral Framework Association Agreement (FAA) with the three states, 3) EEA membership, and 4) EU membership. The Commission argued that the sectoral approach did not address the major issues andwas still needlessly complicated, while EU membership was dismissed in the near future because "the EU institutions are currently not adapted to the accession of such small-sized countries". The remaining options, EEA membership and a FAA with the states, were found to be viable and were recommended by the Commission. As EEA membership is currently only open to EFTA or EU members, the consent of existing EFTA member states is required for the microstates to join the EEA without becoming members of the EU. In 2011, Jonas Gahr Støre, the then Foreign Minister of Norway which is an EFTA memberstate, said that EFTA/EEA membership for the microstates was not the appropriate mechanism for their integration into the internal market because their requirements differed from those of larger countries such as Norway, and suggested that a simplified association would be better suited for them. Espen Barth Eide, Støre's successor, responded to the Commission's report in late 2012 by questioning whether the microstates have sufficient administrative capabilities to meet the obligations of EEA membership. However, he stated that Norway was open to the possibility of EFTA membership for the microstates if they decide to submit an application, and that the countryhad not made a final decision on the matter. Pascal Schafhauser, the Counsellor of the Liechtenstein Mission to the EU, said that Liechtenstein, another EFTA member state, was willing to discuss EEA membership for the microstates provided their joining did not impede the functioning of the organisation. However, he suggested that the option of direct membership in the EEA for the microstates, outside both the EFTA and the EU, should be given consideration. On 18 November 2013, the EU Commission concluded that "the participation of the small-sized countries in the EEA is not judged to be a viable option atpresent due to the political and institutional reasons", and that Association Agreements were a more feasible mechanism to integrate the microstates into the internal market. Withdrawal of the United Kingdom The UK, in a 2016 referendum, voted to withdraw from the European Union. Staying in the EEA, possibly eventually as an EFTA member, was one of the suggested options. A 2013 research paper presented to the Parliament of the United Kingdom proposed a number of alternatives to EU membership which would continue to allow it access to the EU's internal market, including continuing EEA membership as an EFTA member state,continued permanent membership in the single market. The UK could be allowed by other member states to join the EEA or EFTA but existing EEA members such as Norway would have concerns about taking the risk of opening a difficult negotiation with the EU that could lead them to lose their current advantages. The Scottish Government has looked into membership of the EFTA to retain access to the EEA. However, other EFTA states have stated that only sovereign states are eligible for membership, so it could only join if it became independent from the UK. During the transition period, boththe UK and remaining EEA members remain bound by the existing obligations stemming from international agreements concluded by the EU, including the EEA Agreement. In January and February 2020, the UK government ruled out a future alignment of the UK to the rules of the internal market, effectively ruling out EEA membership after the end of the transition period. Rights and obligations The EEA relies on the same "four freedoms" underpinning the European Single Market as does the European Union: the free movement of goods, persons, services, and capital among the EEA countries. Thus, the EEA countries that are notpart of the EU enjoy free trade with the European Union. Also, the 'free movement of persons is one of the core rights guaranteed in the European Economic Area (EEA) [...] [it] is perhaps the most important right for individuals, as it gives citizens of the 31 EEA countries the opportunity to live, work, establish business and study in any of these countries'. As a counterpart, these countries have to adopt part of the Law of the European Union. However they also contribute to and influence the formation of new EEA relevant policies and legislation at an early stage aspart of a formal decision-shaping process. Agriculture and fisheries are not covered by the EEA. Not being bound by the Common Fisheries Policy is perceived as very important by Norway and Iceland, and a major reason not to join the EU. The Common Fisheries Policy would mean giving away fishing quotas in their waters. The EEA countries that are not part of the EU do not contribute financially to Union objectives to the same extent as do its members, although they contribute to the EEA Grants scheme to “reduce social and economic disparities in the EEA”. Additionally, some choose totake part in EU programmes such as Trans-European Networks and the European Regional Development Fund. Norway also has its own Norway Grants scheme. After the EU/EEA enlargement of 2004, there was a tenfold increase in the financial contribution of the EEA States, in particular Norway, to social and economic cohesion in the Internal Market (€1167 million over five years). Legislation The non-EU members of the EEA (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) have agreed to enact legislation similar to that passed in the EU in the areas of social policy, consumer protection, environment, company law and statistics. These are some of theareas covered by the former European Community (the "first pillar" of the European Union). The non-EU members of the EEA are not represented in Institutions of the European Union such as the European Parliament or European Commission. This situation has been described as “fax democracy”, with Norway waiting for their latest legislation to be faxed from the Commission. However, EEA countries are consulted about new EU legislative proposals and participate in shaping legislation at an early stage. The EEA Agreement contains provisions for input from the EEA/EFTA countries at various stages before legislation is adopted, including consent at the EEAJoint Committee. Once approved at the EEA Joint Committee, it is part of the EEA Agreement, and the EFTA states within the EEA must implement it in their national law. Institutions The EEA Joint Committee consists of the EEA-EFTA States plus the European Commission (representing the EU) and has the function of amending the EEA Agreement to include relevant EU legislation. An EEA Council meets twice yearly to govern the overall relationship between the EEA members. Rather than setting up pan-EEA institutions, the activities of the EEA are regulated by the European Union institutions, as well as the EFTA Surveillance(in all other cases). The original plan for the EEA lacked the EFTA Court or the EFTA Surveillance Authority, as the "EEA court" (which would be composed of five European Court of Justice members and three members from EFTA countries and which would be functionally integrated with the ECJ) and the European Commission were to exercise those roles. However, during the negotiations for the EEA agreement, the European Court of Justice informed the Council of the European Union (Opinion 1/91) that they considered that giving the EEA court jurisdiction with respect to EU law that would be part of theEEA law, would be a violation of the treaties, and therefore the current arrangement was developed instead. After having negotiated the Surveillance Authority, the ECJ confirmed its legality in Opinion 1/92. The EFTA Secretariat is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland. The EFTA Surveillance Authority has its headquarters in Brussels, Belgium (the same location as the headquarters of the European Commission), while the EFTA Court has its headquarters in Luxembourg (the same location as the headquarters of the European Court of Justice). EEA and Norway Grants The EEA and Norway Grants are the financial contributions of Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway to reducesocial and economic disparities in Europe. In the period from 2004 to 2009, €1.3 billion of project funding is made available for project funding in the 15 beneficiary states in Central and Southern Europe. Established in conjunction with the 2004 enlargement of the European Economic Area (EEA), which brings together the EU, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway in the Internal Market, the EEA and Norway Grants were administered by the Financial Mechanism Office, which is affiliated to the EFTA Secretariat in Brussels. See also Rules of Origin Market access Free-trade area Tariffs EudraVigilance European integration Free trade areas in Europe CentralEuropean Free Trade Agreement EFTA EU enlargement to EFTA states Iceland–European Union relations Liechtenstein–European Union relations Norway–European Union relations Switzerland–European Union relations National identity cards in the European Economic Area Parallel importation Passports of the European Union Schengen Agreement Societas cooperativa Europaea European Customs Union Trade bloc Van Der Elst visa Eurasian Economic Union References External links Text of the EEA Agreement Information about the EEA on the website of the Mission of Norway to the EU EEA Grants and Norway Grants The EU and the European Economic Area Europa (web portal): External Relations Category:1993 in Belgium Category:1993 in the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["European Economic Area", {"description":'area of the European Union's internal market and some of EFTA states established in 1994', "alias":['EEA']}], ["1994", {}], ["European Union", {}], ["Norway", {}], ["Iceland", {}], ["Liechtenstein", {}], ["Economic union", {}]]
Relations:[["European Economic Area", "inception", "1994"], ["European Economic Area", "has part", "European Union"], ["European Economic Area", "has part", "Norway"], ["European Economic Area", "has part", "Iceland"], ["European Economic Area", "has part", "Liechtenstein"], ["European Economic Area", "instance of", "Economic union"]] |
### User:
is a Japanese footballer who currently plays for Chattanooga FC. Career Genki Miyachi joined Nagoya Grampus for 2017 season, but he switched mid-season to Matsumoto Yamaga. After his rookie season, he opted to go on loan to Azul Claro Numazu for 2018. Club statistics Updated to 22 February 2018. References External links Profile at Nagoya Grampus Profile at Matsumoto Yamaga FC Profile at Azul Claro Numazu Category:1994 births Category:Living people Category:Keio University alumni Category:Association football people from Shizuoka Prefecture Category:Japanese footballers Category:J2 League players Category:J3 League players Category:Nagoya Grampus players Category:Matsumoto Yamaga FC players Category:Azul Claro Numazu players Category:Association football
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Genki Miyachi", {"description":'Japanese association football player'}], ["Keio University", {}], ["Nagoya Grampus", {}], ["Association football", {}]]
Relations:[["Genki Miyachi", "educated at", "Keio University"], ["Genki Miyachi", "member of sports team", "Nagoya Grampus"], ["Genki Miyachi", "sport", "Association football"]] |
### User:
following ingestion are due to grapes only. Clinical findings suggest raisin and grape ingestion can be fatal, but the mechanism of toxicity is still considered unknown. Cause and pathology The reason some dogs develop kidney failure following ingestion of grapes and raisins is not known. Types of grapes involved include both seedless and seeded, store-bought and homegrown, and grape pressings from wineries. A mycotoxin is suspected to be involved, but none has been found in grapes or raisins ingested by affected dogs. The dose-response relationship has not been determined, but one study estimated ≥3 g/kg for grapes or raisins. Themost common pathological finding is proximal renal tubular necrosis. In some cases, an accumulation of an unidentified golden-brown pigment was found within renal epithelial cells. Clinical signs and diagnosis Vomiting and diarrhea are often the first clinical signs of grape or raisin toxicity. They often develop within a few hours of ingestion. Pieces of grapes or raisins may be present in the vomitus or stool. Further symptoms include weakness, not eating, increased drinking, and abdominal pain. Acute kidney failure develops within 48 hours of ingestion. A blood test may reveal increases in blood urea nitrogen (BUN), creatinine, phosphorus, and calcium.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Grape and raisin toxicity in dogs", {"description":'what is the population of Japan'}], ["Grape", {}]]
Relations:[["Grape and raisin toxicity in dogs", "has cause", "Grape"]] |
### User:
The FPS Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation (, , ), more commonly known as the FPS Foreign Affairs, is a Federal Public Service of Belgium. The FPS Foreign Affairs is responsible for foreign policy and diplomacy and is occupied with the external relations of Belgium, including European cooperation and development cooperation. It maintains 117 embassies, consulates and other diplomatic missions. Mission The Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation is in charge of implementing Belgium's foreign policy. Its mission is to "serve, defend and promote the interests of Belgium and Belgians abroad, to stimulate thecoherence of the country's actions on the international scene and to coordinate Belgium's European policy as a federal country. The FPS works towards a secure, just and prosperous world'. The FPS' work is set out in a contract between the central administration and the political authorities, represented by the Minister of Foreign Affairs. This "administrative contract" identifies the mission, the vision and the objectives carried out by the administration. The main priorities outlined in this contract are as follows: "defending of our fundamental values, such as democracy, human dignity, human rights and gender equality; contributing to peace and security inthe world, by strengthening the multilateral system and the international legal order; contributing to the fight against poverty and to international social solidarity by, among others, having a sustainable and targeted development cooperation defending the political, economic and legal interests of our country; helping Belgians abroad and protecting them and members of the diplomatic corps established in Belgium; preparing, coordinating and following Belgian's European policy in all its aspects." The FPS Foreign Affairs is in charge of coordinating Belgium's foreign policy and overseeing its international relations with other countries. Ministers responsible Minister of Foreign Affairs: Philippe Goffin (took office onthe FPS produces regularly updated travel advisories about every country in the world. Further, the Ministry has developed an online tool called Travellers Online for citizens to register their trips, so they can be more easily reached in case of a problem in the country they are visiting. This allows the FPS to inform and provide support in case of an emergency. History The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Belgium was established by the first government of the independent country, on 26 February 1831. At the time, the Foreign Affairs administration existed next to the ministries ofWar, Finances, Interior and Justice. Over the years, the competences of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will evolve in keeping with the constitutional changes that Belgium underwent. Alongside the development of the central administration, Belgium's first diplomatic missions are opened in London and Paris, in 1831. Egmont Palace The Palace of Egmont was the main residence of the Egmont family (1532-1729) then of the Arenberg family (1729-1918). In October 1918, the Palace became the property of the City of Brussels, before being purchased by the Belgian state in 1964. Since the early 1970s it is used by the Belgian Ministryof the diplomatic missions abroad, expatriated from Belgium 1129 members of the diplomatic missions abroad, recruited locally Diplomatic missions The central administration of the FPS Foreign Affairs works by relying on the activity of a large network of diplomatic missions located around the world. In 2018, Belgium had 117 diplomatic missions: 82 embassies 17 consulates-general 5 consulates 4 diplomatic offices 1 representative office (in Taipei) 8 permanent missions to international organizations In addition to these missions, Belgium also maintains 338 honorary consulates around the world. Public diplomacy The Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation is veryactive on social media: Facebook: Diplomatie.Belgium Flickr: Belgium Foreign Affairs Instagram: BelgiumMFA LinkedIn: Ministry of Foreign Affairs Belgium Twitter: BelgiumMFA In 2016, a new website was launched: Focus on Belgium. It serves to highlight Belgium's assets and achievements. It is a part of push towards better and more diverse public diplomacy in order to promote Belgium in all its facets. See also Foreign relations of Belgium Belgian diplomatic missions Minister of the Colonies (Belgium) Bibliothèque Africaine, part of the Bibliothèque des Affaires Etrangères, overseen by FPS Foreign Affairs Archives Africaines, overseen by FPS Foreign Affairs References External links Foreign Affairs
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs", {"description":'Federal Public Service of Belgium', "alias":['FPS Foreign Affairs']}], ["Belgium", {}], ["Ministry of Foreign Affairs", {}]]
Relations:[["Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs", "country", "Belgium"], ["Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs", "instance of", "Ministry of Foreign Affairs"]] |
### User:
The 2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships was an international figure skating competition in the 2016–17 figure skating season. It was held at the Gangneung Ice Arena in Gangneung, South Korea on February 16–19. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The competition served as the figure skating test event for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang. Qualification The competition was open to skaters from non-European member nations of the International Skating Union who reached the age of 15 before July 1, 2016. The corresponding competition for European skaters was the2017 European Figure Skating Championships. Each National Federation from the four represented regions were permitted to send up to three skaters/couples for each discipline. National Federations could select their entries based on their own criteria, as long as the selected skater/couples attained a minimum technical elements score (TES) at an international senior event prior to the Four Continents. Minimum TES Entries A total of 111 athletes (26 men, 23 ladies, 15 pair teams, and 16 ice dancing teams) competed at the championship. The ISU published a list of entries on 27 January: Changes to initial assignments Competition schedule All times
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", {"description":'figure skating competition'}], ["Figure skating", {}], ["Figure skating competition", {}], ["Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", {}], ["South Korea", {}], ["Gangneung Ice Arena", {}], ["2016–17 figure skating season", {}], ["International Skating Union", {}]]
Relations:[["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "sport", "Figure skating"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "instance of", "Figure skating competition"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "sports season of league or competition", "Four Continents Figure Skating Championships"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "country", "South Korea"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "location", "Gangneung Ice Arena"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "time period", "2016–17 figure skating season"], ["2017 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships", "organizer", "International Skating Union"]] |
### User:
Trifolium macrocephalum is a species of clover known by the common name largehead clover. It is native to the Great Basin region of the western United States, from Washington to northern California, and Nevada to Idaho. It occurs in several types of habitat, including sagebrush scrub, juniper woodland, yellow pine forest, and mountain woodlands. Description Trifolium macrocephalum is a rhizomatous perennial herb taking an upright form. The herbage is hairy. The leaves are made up of 5 to 9 thick oval leaflets each measuring up to 2.5 centimeters in length. The inflorescence is crowded, egg-shaped and up to 5 or
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Trifolium macrocephalum", {"description":'species of plant'}], ["Species", {}], ["Clover", {}]]
Relations:[["Trifolium macrocephalum", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Trifolium macrocephalum", "parent taxon", "Clover"]] |
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