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King Animal is the sixth and final studio album by American rock band Soundgarden. It was released on November 13, 2012, by Seven Four Entertainment and Republic Records in the United States, and by Vertigo Records in the rest of the world. Produced by both the band and Adam Kasper, the album is the band's first in sixteen years, and the first not to be released on A&M Records since 1988's Ultramega OK. However, Republic, Vertigo and A&M are all owned by Universal Music Group. It is also Soundgarden's final studio album to be released before the death of frontmanChris Cornell in 2017 and the subsequent dissolution of the band in 2019. Background and recording In January 2010, Chris Cornell announced Soundgarden had reunited, 13 years following their break-up. At first the band was just interested in relearning the old songs and playing them live, but Cornell declared that "It would be exciting to record one song, to hear how Soundgarden-ish that might be this much time later." The first studio work for the band was finishing the song "Black Rain" for the compilation Telephantasm, which guitarist Kim Thayil said "showed our evolvement creatively", and late in 2010, drummerMatt Cameron booked studio time to show some song ideas and have the band compose some more through jam sessions. In February 2011 it was announced on Soundgarden's homepage that they had started writing new songs. One month later, the recording sessions began at Seattle's Studio X, under producer Adam Kasper. Sessions would be interrupted by the end of the month so Cornell could move onto his solo "Songbook" tour, which would be interspersed with Soundgarden concerts. Given the band's contract with A&M Records was fulfilled by releasing compilation Telephantasm and live album Live on I-5, Soundgarden produced the albumindependently. Although Cameron claimed the album would be released in 2011, the recording was prolonged as Thayil said that "the more we enjoy it, the more our fans should end up enjoying it." On October, Cornell stated the band would return to the studio in December, as the album was "mostly done, we just need to finish a couple of songs and mix it, so that will be happening probably over the holidays." In May 2012, the band reported that they were eyeing a release that October. On September 17, 2012, it was announced that the album would be titledKing Animal and would be released on November 13, 2012. Explaining the title King Animal, Cornell declared that it relates to how the band "were a big fish in a small pond, and we sort of graduated. There was a sense of us feeling like it was us four against the world. We clearly had that from the very beginning. In some weird way after all this time, we persevered. The album kind of stands out as a symbol and an indication of that." Composition and style Thayil reported that some songs sound "similar in a sense to Down onthe Upside" and that the album would be "picking up where we left off. There are some heavy moments, and there are some fast songs." The band members stated the new album would consist of material that was "90 percent new" and the rest consisting of updated versions of older ideas. They also noted that they had 12 to 14 songs that were "kind of ready to go". One of said early ideas was "Taree", which bassist Ben Shepherd wrote in the late 1990s, and had recorded a demo for his solo album In Deep Owl before the band's reunion,where he decided the song deserved a full-band treatment. The sound of King Animal was influenced by the musicians' respective maturation during the hiatus and inspiration from other long-running acts. Release and promotion For the release of King Animal, Soundgarden signed a deal with Loma Vista Recordings, as CEO Tom Whalley preferred self-contained acts that write their own songs, play their own instruments and sing their own songs. Distribution was handled by Loma Vista's partner Republic Records. Cornell compared the experience of only seeking a label once the album was done to "almost like it was in the beginning ofthe band." The album's cover and subsequent art direction is based on a sculpture by Josh Graham, who Kim Thayil invited after seeing the artwork he did for his band A Storm of Light. Featuring animal skulls above a field of flowers in a snowy forest, the sculpture "Night of the Last Equinox" features a recurring motif of Graham's art, the juxtaposition of life and death and how "everything between there is such a massive part of the human condition." Chris Cornell stated that the art deals with Graham's interpretation of the songs, which somehow fit the band's frequent moodylyrics with an outdoor theme. Kim Thayil revealed that the band asked for art priorizing white and other lighter colors, to change from how "most of our album covers have had a darker pallet". Graham also did the animated backdrops for Soundgarden's tour, and directed the music video for the album's first single, "Been Away Too Long". Band photography was done by the band manager Don VanCleave. To promote the album, Whalley decided to focus on how Soundgarden exploited "an emotional connection from a musician and songwriter to an audience", doing a track-by-track narrative for King Animal at Seattle's MooreTheatre, and performing three intimate concerts at New York's Irving Plaza, Toronto's Phoenix Concert Theatre and Los Angeles' Fonda Theatre. "Been Away Too Long" was the first single to be released from King Animal on September 27, 2012. "Been Away Too Long" and "By Crooked Steps" were used in promotional spots on ESPN for Monday Night Football, and the former was heard in an episode of Sons of Anarchy. On October 31, 2012,"Non-State Actor" was released through the official Soundgarden YouTube channel. The video for the song features an American flag waving back and forth with the King Animal logoreplacing the stars. The week before its release, the album was streamed in its entirety for free on iTunes. On January 29, 2013, the band released a music video for "By Crooked Steps", which was directed by Dave Grohl. On September 4, 2013, the band released a music video for "Halfway There". Versions Along with CD, LP and digital download releases, King Animal was also issued on a deluxe box set featuring the CD with three demos as bonus tracks, the double vinyl, a DVD of the band's 2012 performance at Hyde Park, and five lithographs. Best Buy carried aspecial edition CD featuring five demos. For Record Store Day 2013, Soundgarden issued King Animal Demos as a limited edition pink vinyl featuring the early takes on six songs from the album. Later in 2013, King Animal Plus was released, featuring 5 live tracks recorded for Live from the Artists Den at The Wiltern, Los Angeles and an acoustic cut by Cornell and Shepherd recorded for CIMX-FM in Detroit. Critical reception King Animal received positive reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 70, which indicates"generally favorable reviews", based on 32 reviews. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic gave it a positive review by saying, "King Animal is a big, bright album, executed with precision and professionalism. The band members sound older, not quite as loud, and possess a keener sense of good taste, and it sounds as if they've aged together, which is a testament to their innate chemistry. Simply put, Soundgarden sound like they belong together; Cornell sounds richer, fuller when anchored by drummer Matt Cameron, bassist Ben Shepherd, and the deceptively sinewy and brainy guitarist Kim Thayil, whose presence has sorely been missedover the past decade." Stuart Berman of Pitchfork Media gave the album a 5.9 out of 10, saying "The best hope for King Animal was that Soundgarden would be inspired enough by their spiritual successors to want to outdo them, and set a new benchmark for ambitious aggression. Instead, the group's first album since 1996 just sounds like the one they would've churned out in 1998." Hilary Saunders of Paste gave the album 7.0 out of 10, saying "Comeback albums are notoriously difficult to conceptualize and actualize and King Animal took more than a year to create after the bandspent a decade and a half on hiatus. While this record lacks the canonizing tracks like "Jesus Christ Pose", "Black Hole Sun", "Spoonman" and "Burden in My Hand", Soundgarden deserves to be commended for recapturing the feeling of grunge and reintroducing it today." Luke Turner of BBC Music gave the album a positive review, saying "King Animal undeniably draws its strength from the band's accessible Superunknown era, but also takes Soundgarden somewhere fresh." Chris DeVille of The A.V. Club gave the album a B-, saying "More often, though, King Animal affirms what a potent formula this band established. It's neithera trainwreck nor a masterpiece, but it stirs the senses in all the right ways." Matt Melis of Consequence of Sound gave the album a C-, saying "Production issues aside, this record proves that Soundgarden still have their muscle but also hints that they are in the process of figuring out how to flex it again. For every realized track like "Worse Dreams", with its circular vocal phrasings and slippery riffing, there's a jam like "Eyelid's Mouth" that completely loses its identity — in this case, via an almost painful chorus that asks, "Who let the river run dry?" Still,there's more than enough merit found in King Animal to ensure that any future tweets by Chris Cornell about new Soundgarden music will confidently be filed under #reallygoodnews." Michael Christopher of The Phoenix gave the album three out of four stars, saying "On the whole, King Animal is a welcome return, and though it doesn't reinvent the wheel, it reminds us why these guys were considered the architects of the Seattle scene." Richard Trapunski of Now gave the album four out of five stars, saying "King Animal doesn’t sound like a nostalgia-fed cash grab, nor is it poisoned by thedesperate commercialism of Cornell's post-Soundgarden projects. Instead, it picks up where 1996's Down On The Upside left off, layering Cornell's distinct howl over psychedelic textures, off-kilter time signatures and heavy, chugging riffs courtesy of way-underrated guitarist Kim Thayil." Scott McLennan of The Boston Globe gave the album a mixed review, saying "There's nothing bad about these 13 tracks, but nothing truly remarkable either. It's been 16 years since singer Chris Cornell, guitarist Kim Thayil, bassist Ben Shepherd, and drummer Matt Cameron applied their combined talents to new songs, and while the old chemistry sounds intact (though can we get morefrom the drummer, please?) the material is not particularly combustible." Tim Karan of the Alternative Press gave the album three and a half stars out of five, saying "It's difficult to imagine a new Soundgarden album that would sound startlingly different from King Animal. It's right in line with the band's natural progression; so much so that it's almost difficult to believe it didn’t come out a decade ago. Is it as evocative and emotive as their earlier albums? Not quite. But it's new Soundgarden songs that sound like old Soundgarden songs—and if you’re of a certain generation or disposition,that's been a long time coming." Jonathan Keefe of Slant Magazine gave the album three out of five stars, saying "King Animal doesn't contain any standout tracks that justify Soundgarden's comeback or which rank as essential additions to the band's very strong catalogue. The album is less a triumphant return than an example of what happens to most middle-aged rock bands: They've returned as a slightly more conservative version of what made them famous in the first place." Commercial performance King Animal sold 83,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release to land at position No.5 on the Billboard 200 chart, making it the third highest position of Soundgarden's career behind their previous two studio albums, Superunknown (1994) and Down on the Upside (1996), which landed at position Nos. 1 and 2, respectively. It has sold 235,000 copies in the United States as of November 2016. The album reached the top ten on the Australian and German Albums Chart, the top fifteen on the albums charts of Ireland and Norway, and the top thirty on the albums charts of the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Track listing Personnel Soundgarden Chris Cornell – lead vocals,rhythm guitar Kim Thayil – lead guitar, mandolin (4) Ben Shepherd – bass, rhythm guitar (7), backing vocals (8) Matt Cameron – drums, keyboards (5 and 12), backing vocals (8) Additional musicians Adam Kasper – piano (6), tambura (4) Jeff McGrath – trumpet (4 and 9) Greg Powers – tenor and bass trombone (4 and 9) Brad Stevens – tenor and baritone saxophone (9) Bubba Dupree – stun guitar (8) Bullet – additional vocals (9) Mike McCready – additional guitar (12) Technical personnel Adam Kasper – producer Soundgarden – producer Joe Barresi – mixing, additional production Nate Yaccino – engineer
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Ellington a la Carte is a live album by guitarist Kenny Burrell recorded in New York in 1983 but not released on the Muse label until 1993. Reception The Allmusic review said "The playing is excellent and the interplay creative in a subtle way, but nothing out of the ordinary or particularly memorable occurs. However Kenny Burrell fans will enjoy this". Track listing "Take the "A" Train" (Billy Strayhorn) – 4:20 "Sultry Serenade" (Tyree Glenn) – 6:49 "Flamingo" (Ted Grouya, Edmund Anderson) – 4:27 "In a Mellow Tone" (Duke Ellington, Milt Gabler) – 5:28 "Don't Worry 'Bout Me" (Rube Bloom,
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Francesco Renda (Cattolica Eraclea, 18 February 1922 - Palermo, 12 May 2013) was an Italian Marxist historian, Communist politician and a university professor. Renda was born in Cattolica Eraclea in Sicily. He graduated in philosophy. At a young age he enrolled in the Italian Communist Party (Partito Comunista Italiano – PCI). He became Secretary in charge of Camera Confederale del Lavoro in Agrigento. Portella della Ginestra Massacre He was an eye-witness of the Portella della Ginestra massacre, when 11 people were killed and 27 wounded during May Day celebrations in Sicily on May 1, 1947, by the bandit and separatistthe Italian Socialist Party (Partito Socialista Italiano, PSI) for the district of Agrigento, and was reelected in PCI for five consecutive legislatures. He resigned in November 1967 to run for the Italian Senate. Elected senator in the 5th legislature (1968–1972), he was a member of the Committee on regional issues. Academic career He did not run again in 1972 and returned to the University. He became Professor of Modern History at the Faculty of Political Science of University of Palermo and subsequently president of the Gramsci Institute in Sicily. As a Marxist historian, he is one of the most importantscholars of the peasant movement in Sicily. Renda described himself in his autobiography (2007) as a historian of the peasant movement who was born and raised in that world, and then become a witness and leader of its revival. His most important works are a history of the Fasci Siciliani, the Sicilian Mafia, and a 1493-page history of Sicily in three volumes (Storia della Sicilia dal 1860 al 1970) published in 2003. Since 1997, he was a professor emeritus at the University of Palermo. He died on 12 May 2013 in Palermo. References Category:1922 births Category:2013 deaths Category:People from Cattolica
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Teseo ("Theseus", HWV 9; ) is an opera seria with music by George Frideric Handel, the only Handel opera that is in five acts. The Italian-language libretto was by Nicola Francesco Haym, after Philippe Quinault's Thésée. It was Handel's third London opera, intended to follow the success of Rinaldo after the unpopular Il pastor fido. First performed on 10 January 1713,Teseo featured "magical" effects such as flying dragons, transformation scenes and apparitions and had a cast of notable Italian opera singers. It was a success with London audiences, receiving thirteen performances even though the stage machinery for the "magical" effectsbroke down, and would have received more performances had not one of the theatre's managers run away with the box office receipts. Performance history The opera was premiered at the Queen's Theatre in the Haymarket on 10 January 1713. It received an additional 12 performances through 16 May 1713. The singers included the castratos Valeriano Pellegrini and Valentino Urbani. Between 1713 and 1984, there were only two revivals, the first being the revival under Fritz Lehmann in Göttingen on 29 June 1947. As with all Baroque opera seria, Teseo went unperformed for many years, but with the revival of interestin Baroque music and historically informed musical performance since the 1960s,Teseo, like all Handel operas, receives performances at festivals and opera houses today. Among other productions, the Handel Festival, Halle performed the work in 2003,, the Frankfurt Opera mounted a production in 2013, and the work received a staging at the Theater an der Wien in 2018. Roles Synopsis Scene:Athens, in legendary antiquity King Egeo of Athens, years before the action begins, had sent away his baby son to a far-off land. Now a grown man, the hero Teseo is fighting on behalf of Athens, his identity as the king'sson unknown to himself or others. Act 1 Teseo is engaged in battle against Athens' foes as the opera begins. Princess Agilea, the ward of King Egeo, is concerned for Teseo's safety, as she confides to her companion the young maiden Clizia, for Agilea has fallen hopelessly in love with Teseo. Clizia has a boyfriend, Arcane, whom she promises to love always, but when she asks him to find out what he can about Teseo's safety, he becomes jealous. The Athenians have been victorious in battle, and King Egeo declares that his announced marriage to Medea, a sorceress, is nowthe King, the two pairs of lovers, and Athens. Context and analysis The German-born Handel, after spending some of his early career composing operas and other pieces in Italy, settled in London, where in 1711 he had brought Italian opera for the first time with his opera Rinaldo. A tremendous success, Rinaldo created a craze in London for Italian opera seria, a form focused overwhelmingly on solo arias for the star virtuoso singers. Rinaldo, a "magic" opera featuring enchantments, sorceresses and scenic ingenuity, had been followed by Il Pastor Fido, a shorter and simpler opera, which was not a successwith London audiences at its first performances. Therefore, Handel returned to the "magic" form with Teseo, for the first and only time in his many operas using a five-act structure instead of the usual three, and deviating from the convention in Italian opera seria that singers performed their arias and then left the stage. These differences are due to the fact that Teseo uses an adaptation of a French libretto written by Philippe Quinault for Jean-Baptiste Lully,Thésée, presented in Paris in 1675. After the second performance theatre manager Owen Swiny stole the box office receipts and disappeared, leaving the musiciansunpaid. The singers decided to continue the run however, splitting the costs and profits between themselves. Handel does not seem to have held a grudge against Swiny, as he later acted as an agent for Italian opera singers in Handel's London operas. The stage machinery for the special "magic" effects did not always function smoothly, as can be seen by a notice put into a London newspaper on 24 January: 'This present Saturday...the Opera of Theseus by Mr. Hendel will be represented in its Perfection, that is to say with all the Scenes, Decorations, Flights, and Machines. The Performers aremuch concerned that they did not give the Nobility and Gentry all the satisfaction they could have wished, when they represented it on Wednesday, having been hindered by some unforeseen Accidents at that time insurmountable. Teseo has a rich orchestration, with the usual strings, oboes, bassoon and continuo instruments of Handel's opera orchestra augmented by flutes and trumpets. The singer Elisabetta Pilotti-Schiavonetti in the role of Medea, who specialised in playing sorceresses, and for whom Handel had written the similar part of Armida in Rinaldo and later the role of Melissa in Amadigi di Gaula was the star of theshow, and Handel's music distinguishes between her vengeful character and that of the other leading female part, the sweet Princess Agilea. 18th century musicologist Charles Burney wrote of the accompanied recitatives for Medea:in which the wild and savage fury of the enraged sorceress, Medea, and her incantations, are admirably painted by the instruments. Recordings Audio recordings Video Recording References Notes Sources The first of the two volume definitive reference on the operas of Handel Hicks, Anthony (1998), "Teseo", in 'The New Grove Dictionary of Opera', ed. Stanley Sadie. London: Macmillan. External links Italian libretto. Score of Teseo (ed. Friedrich Chrysander,
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Stanley Osher (born April 24, 1942) is an American mathematician, known for his many contributions in shock capturing, level-set methods, and PDE-based methods in computer vision and image processing. Osher is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Director of Special Projects in the Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM) and member of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA. He has a daughter, Kathryn, and a son, Joel. Education B.S., Brooklyn College, 1962 M.S., New York University, 1964 Ph.D., New York University, 1966 Research interests Level-set methods for computing moving fronts Approximation methods for hyperbolicare involved in applying mathematical and computational tools to industrial or scientific application areas. Honors National Academy of Engineering (NAE), 2018 William Benter Prize in Applied Mathematics, 2016. Carl Friedrich Gauss Prize, 2014. John von Neumann Lecture prize from SIAM, 2013. Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, 2013. Plenary speaker, International Congress of Mathematicians, 2010 American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2009 Fellow, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), 2009 Honorary Doctoral Degree, Hong Kong Baptist University, 2009 International Cooperation Award, International Congress of Chinese Mathematicians, 2007 Computational and Applied Sciences Award, United States Association for Computational Mechanics, 2007Docteur Honoris Causa, ENS Cachan, France 2006 National Academy of Sciences (NAS), 2005 SIAM Kleinman Prize, 2005 ICIAM Pioneer Prize, 2003 Computational Mechanics Award, Japan Society of Mechanical Engineering, 2002 NASA Public Service Group Achievement Award, 1992 US-Israel BSF Fellow, 1986 SERC Fellowship (England), 1982 Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, 1972–1974 Fulbright Fellow, 1971 Books authored S. Osher and R. Fedkiw, Level Set Methods and Dynamic Implicit Surfaces, Springer-Verlag, New York (2002). S. Osher and N. Paragios, Geometric Level Set Methods in Imaging, Vision and Graphics, Springer-Verlag, New York (2003). R. Glowinski, S. Osher and W. Yin, Splitting Methods in Communication,
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Witton Castle is a much-altered 15th-century castle, which is the centrepiece of a holiday and caravan country park at Witton le Wear, near Bishop Auckland, County Durham. It is a Grade II* listed building. Details Sir Ralph Eure obtained a licence to crenellate his manor house in 1410 and created the castle. The castle was held by Royalist Sir William Darcy during the English Civil War. He compounded for the return of his confiscated estate which was sold by his descendant Henry Darcy to William Cuthbert in 1743. The castle then shortly passed to the Hopper family but was severelydamaged in a fire which in 1796 destroyed most of the castle interior. In 1816 William Chaytor of Croft Hall, Yorkshire purchased the castle estate from the then owner, John Robert Hopper, for £78,000 and restored the fabric and rebuilt the interior in modern style. The estate was rich in coal and Witton Park Colliery was sunk in 1825. Sir William Chaytor served as High Sheriff of Durham in 1839. Members of the Chaytor family lived at Witton until the mid 20th century. See also Castles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in England References A Genealogical and
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Ekaphan Inthasen (, born September 23, 1983) is a Thai retired professional footballer who plays as a Winger. He previously played for two other clubsides in Thailand and Vietnam. He won the Thailand Premier League title with Chonburi in 2007, followed by the Kor Royal Cup in 2008 in which has earned himself a call up to the Thailand National football team. Club career Ekaphan born in Surat Thani. Ekaphan began his career in the youth team of his home club Surat Thani F.C. at the age of 16 years. In 2002, he joined the youth team of the BangkokBank and played from 2004 for the seniors section of the club. In 2006, he went to Vietnam for a season to Nam Dinh F.C. in the V.League. But even there he could win a title with the club, finishing in ninth place at the end of the table. He then returned to Thailand to Bangkok Bank. At the start of the 2008 season, he joined the then reigning champions Chonburi F.C., for whom he played until today. With him he previously won two Super Cups, and was runner-2008. In the 2008 AFC Champions League, he came here five timesfor use. In 2009, he plays with his current club in the AFC Cup. International career for the national team, he was in the 2005 U-21 squad and the U-23 squad for the Southeast Asian Games. [1] [2] In the Southeast Asian Games in 2005 he won the gold medal with the U-23rd. In 2004 Ekaphan had his first missions for the seniors team. But could still not been established in the national team squad. International goals Under-19 Thailand Honours Club Chonburi Thai Premier League Champions (1) : 2007 Thai FA Cup Winners (1) : 2010 Kor Royal Cup Winners(3) : 2008, 2009, 2011 International Thailand U-19 AFF U-20 Youth Championship Winners (1) : 2002 Thailand U-23 Sea Games Gold Medal (1) ; 2005 References External links Profile at Goal Category:1981 births Category:Living people Category:People from Surat Thani Province Category:Thai footballers Category:Association football wingers Category:Bangkok Bank F.C. players Category:Chonburi F.C. players Category:Police Tero F.C. players Category:BG Pathum United F.C. players Category:Port F.C. players Category:Super Power Samut Prakan F.C. players Category:Thai League 1 players Category:V.League 1 players Category:Thai expatriate footballers Category:Thai expatriate sportspeople in Vietnam Category:Expatriate footballers in Vietnam Category:Thailand international footballers Category:Footballers at the 2006 Asian Games Category:Southeast Asian
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Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Faqih al-Hamadani () (fl. 902) was a 10th-century Persian historian and geographer, famous for his Mukhtasar Kitab al-Buldan ("Concise Book of Lands") written in Arabic. In the 1870s the dutch orientalist Michael Jan de Goeje edited a selection of geography works of Arab geographers in an 8-volume series titled Bibliotheca geographorum Arabicorum published by Lugduni-Batavae (Leiden) Brill publishers. Al-Hamadhānī's Mukhtasar Kitab al-Buldan was published in volume 5 of this series. In 1967 second editions were printed by Dar Sadir (Beirut) and E.J. Brill (Lugduni Batavorum). See also Manuscript 5229. References Category:Persian explorers Category:Medieval Persian geographers Category:Iranian
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Laura Abbot is an American writer of over a dozen romance novels in the Harlequin Superromance and Love Inspired Historical series. Early life Laura Abbot was born in Kansas City, Missouri, the eldest of three children. Abbot, a tomboy, spent a great deal of time with her grandmothers, who encouraged her love of reading and writing. Career Abbot found college liberating and worked hard to graduate in only three years. She became a teacher, and, for over twenty-five years taught secondary English. After Abbot retired from teaching, she began to write. She sold her first romance novel to Harlequin Enterprises
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Diego Alessi (born 3 November 1971 in Rome) is an Italian race car driver. He competed in the Italian Touring Car Championship from 1996–1999 and 2001–2002 - obtaining 12 poles and 12 wins - then moved to the Trofeo Maserati Europe - with 19 poles and 3 wins between 2003 and 2006 - as well as making 3 starts in FIA GT for Autorlando Porsche. From 2006 to 2010 Diego Alessi competed in FIA GT3 Championship at the wheel of Maserati Grand Sport, Aston Martin DBRS9, Corvette Z06 and Ferrari 430 Scuderia, obtaining 1 pole, 2 wins and the 3rd final overall place on 2007 championship. In 2008, Diego participated in the Rolex Sports Car Series, driving a Pontiac GTO.R with young Californian Ryan Phinny, for Matt Connolly Motorsports P1 Groupe. Team drove in the 24 Hours of Daytona with Hal Prewitt, Karl Reindler, Vic Rice and Spencer Trenery. On this season Alessi gets three podium finish (Mid-Ohio, Montreal and New Jersey). From 2011 to 2015 Diego Alessi contest the ADAC GT Masters Series on the Callaway Corvette Z06, gaining 5 poles, 8 wins, one 2 nd final championship place (2012) and the overall Championship 2013 win. During his
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Gustavo Salgueiro de Almeida Correia also known as Gustavo (born July 7, 1984 in Maceió, Brazil) is a Brazilian footballer who most recently played for FC Edmonton of the North American Soccer League. References External links Category:1984 births Category:Living people Category:Brazilian footballers Category:Brazilian expatriate footballers Category:Sport Club do Recife players Category:Grêmio Barueri Futebol players Category:Agremiação Sportiva Arapiraquense players Category:Montedio Yamagata players Category:Widzew Łódź players Category:Expatriate footballers in Japan Category:Expatriate footballers in Poland Category:Expatriate footballers in Ukraine Category:FC Volyn Lutsk players Category:Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Ukraine Category:Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Poland Category:Expatriate soccer players in Canada Category:FC Edmonton players Category:J2 League
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Ujwal Ghimire () is a Nepalese film director, actor, producer, story writer, ad/documentary maker and film educator. He is considered one of the most well-known and leading movie directors of the Nepalese film industry. He is a three times National Film Award (Nepal) winner,two times Nefta Film Award winner and earned number of other prestigious awards for his outstanding works. He also contributed in making the first television film in the history of television industry of Nepal in 1985. Career Ghimire acted in various dramas and standup comedies at many Nepalese theaters since 1980. He earned number of awards inhis stage days including best award in Gaijatra (Annual traditional function: Gaijatra festival of Nepal) for his one-act stand-up comedy presentation. He then moved to the television industry as television came in Nepal. He was an actor and director of the first television drama of Nepal, Yestai Huchha which was made by him was telecast-ed from Nepal Television on the very first day of its regular broadcast on 29 December 1985. He got his first big break as a movie actor in the super hit feature film Santan in 1986/1987 where he performed a negative character role. That gave himthe Best Negative Character Actor Award in 1987. He then worked as an actor in couple of joint venture international films such as Lady Commando and Swarth. Ghimire made number of documentaries and advertisement films for television before he got a break as a director of a feature film. He has been continuing his other career till now but he focuses more into feature film direction. Today he is considered one of the outstanding film directors of Nepalese cinema. His first feature film was Gothalo as a director in 1996. He made his second film Jindagani in 2000 from hisown company Ayush Film Pvt Ltd as a capacity of producer and director. Among his movies Suvakamana was average in business. Bishwas and Chhodi Gaye Pap Lagla were hit and Gothalo, Kismat,Jindagani, Andaj and Wada No 6 were super hit. Jindagani and Wada No 6 are considered to be one of the top grossing and the biggest blockbusters of Nepalese cinema. Nowadays he has been preparing for his next feature film which is untitled yet. Filmography Awards Best Film Dabar Anmol Film Award 2004 for the film Bishwas awarded by 'Nepal One' Channel. Best Director National Film Award (Nepal) 2008for the film Kismat given by Film Development Board, Government of Nepal. Best Director National Film Award (Nepal) 2010 for the film Chodi gaye pap lagla given by Film Development Board, Government of Nepal. Best Director NEFTA Film Awards 2010 for the film Chodi gaye pap lagla given by Nepal Film Technician Association. http://xnepali.net/the-president-distributed-national-film-awards-winners-list/ Best Director National Film Award (Nepal) 2011 for the film Andaj organized by Film Development Board, Government of Nepal. Best director D-Cine Award in 2011 from the film Andaj Best Director CG Kamana Jury Award 2016 in direction for the film 'Wada No 6' given byKamana Publication associated with CG Entertainment Best Director NEFTA Film Awards 2016 for the film Wada No 6 given by Nepal Film Technician Association. Honors Ghimire was honored in 2015 by Nepal Television for his contribution of making first Nepalese television drama in the history of Nepal's television industry. He was also honored by Nepal motion picture association for his contribution in bringing Nepalese feature film in this stage. Other activities Ghimire played a leading role for the development of film industry in Nepal through different professional organizations. He was founder vice president of Film Artist Association of Nepal. Healso was elected as a vice president of Film Producers Association in 2006. He also played an important role to establish Film Directors Guild of Nepal and became first vice president. Now he is an active member of Directors Guild of Nepal and Nepal Film society. Ghimire also teaches Film Making in Everest Film Academy, Kathmandu. He has played a leading and an important role to establish and run this organization as a capacity of a director. Ghimire also became jury member in different award ceremonies along with first National Film Award in 2005, organized by Film Development Board, Government
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Hank Nelken is an American screenwriter. Biography Nelken was born in Greenville, Mississippi and went to high school in Dallas, Texas. He started a video business as a teenager, shooting weddings and Bar Mitzvahs. He studied at USC School of Cinema-Television. While at USC, Nelken directed numerous short films, including Lets Do Love, a satire set in the future about two people who fall in love but never meet. Career Nelken wrote and directed Fifteen Minutes, a short film that premiered at the USC First Look Festival. Afterwards, he partnered with Greg DePaul. From 1998 to 2001, Nelken and DePaul
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Leah Applebaum is an American voice actress and Broadway actress. She is best known as the voice of Nanami Kiryu from Revolutionary Girl Utena and Erika, the Grass type Gym Leader from the internationally acclaimed Pokémon series. Career Applebaum first got into voice acting while working for a Broadway sketch comedy called My Thoughts Here in New York when she got a call from a casting director who was casting for the Hugo Award winning Think Like a Dinosaur, a Sci-Fi Channel program. Applebaum got the lead role of Kamala Shastri, which led her to be cast as a reporterin The Signal Man, which was adapted from the original story by Charles Dickens. The attention Applebaum received from her work on the Sci-Fi Channel eventually got her the major role of Nanami Kiryu from Revolutionary Girl Utena and Erika from the highly popular Pokémon series. According to the Dogasu's Backpack interview, Applebaum revealed that her Nanami voice was inspired from Buffy, a main character from the Family Affair TV series. Voice roles Anime Erika and Suzie in Pokémon Nanami Kiryu in Revolutionary Girl Utena Nanami the Cow in Utena: The Movie Internet Radio Sci Fi Channel's Seeing Ear Theatre
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Ann Karindi Mwangi (born 8 December 1988) is a Kenyan middle- and long-distance runner. She was a team gold medallist at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships in 2009 and represented her country at the 2011 All-Africa Games. From Nyahururu in Kenya's Laikipia County, She moved to Japan and ran for the Toyota Industries corporate team. She set a stage record at the 2010 All-Japan Women's Corporate Ekiden Championships. Running for Kenya, she won her first major medal at the 2009 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. In seventh place, she took the women's team title with the help of Florence
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Yarra Bend Park is a 260 hectare (642 acre) park in the Melbourne suburb of Kew. Located 4 km northeast of Melbourne's CBD, it is the largest area of natural bushland left in inner Melbourne. The most notable feature of the park is the Yarra River which flows for 12 km through it. The park hosts two golf courses, two historic boathouses, sheds and a number of cycle and walking trails. It receives approximately 1.5 million visitors per year. History The park's location at the joining of the Yarra River and Merri Creek has been an important site for theWurundjeri Aboriginal people for a long time prior to the arrival of Europeans in Melbourne, which is commemorated by the Koori Garden on the western edge of the park, near Dights Falls. Yarra Bend Park was officially reserved in 1877, and in 1929 it joined with Studley Park to the south to cover the whole of the area today. From 1848 until 1925 the park was home to Yarra Bend Lunatic Asylum, which took up most of the area of the park with buildings, vegetable gardens and a cemetery. In 1904, the Queen's Memorial Infectious Diseases Hospital was established alongby the adjacent Fairfield Hospital as staff quarters and storerooms. In 1953, the former "Fairhaven" site was acquired by the Prisons Division for conversion into a female prison. HM Prison Fairlea was officially opened in 1956 and closed in August 1996. In 1972 the Eastern Freeway was constructed through the middle of the park, crossing both the Merri Creek and the Yarra River. Parts of the Yarra were relocated and the Deep Rock Basin was completely demolished. This was highly controversial at the time, heightened by the destruction of rich history of not only Wurundjeri origin but European as well.Things to do There are a number of shared use tracks for cyclists and pedestrians. The Capital City Trail and Yarra River Trail both pass through the park. Organised bushwalking and birdwatching tours are available and there is even a tour to the flying fox colony. Some areas of the park are designated dog exclusion zones but dogs can be walked in on-Lead and off-lead zones. Canoes and boats can be hired from the Studley Park Boathouse. There are a number of sports grounds including the Corben Oval, W.T. Long Oval, Sir Herbert Olney Oval, Westfield South Oval and WestfieldNorth Oval. The Fairlea West Oval, Fairlea East Oval and W.J. Cox Oval synthetic pitches can be hired for social matches. There are several picnic areas with electric barbecues and toilets. Westfield, North Rotunda and South Rotunda shelters close to picnic facilities can be hired, as can the grassed picnic areas at Deep Rock and Loop Road. Studley Park and Bellbird picnic areas are also available for public use. Fishing is excluded within the flying fox colony zone at Bellbird picnic area. A world class fly-casting pool is located (since 1978) beside the Fairlea East Oval. Regular fly casting tournaments,local and intrastate take place here particularly during the winter months. Wildlife The park is home to many species of birds, bats and other mammals, reptiles (tiger snakes and blue tongued lizards are common) insects and fish (esp. carp and eels) also regularly found are rainbow lorikeets, red-rumped parrots and yellow-tailed black cockatoos, water rats and brush-tail and ringtail possums. Yarra Bend Park is also home to a colony of federally and state listed vulnerable grey-headed flying foxes. The colony took up residence in the Royal Botanic Gardens in 1986 but were relocated to the more natural setting of YarraBend Park in 2003. The population is nomadic and migratory and varies in size from 3000 (winter) to 30,000 (summer). The protected bats pollinate and disperse the seeds of native trees. The colony roosts in native hardwoods and can easily be seen from the lookout at Bellbird Picnic Reserve. The evening flyout is a fascinating wildlife event. Visitor information Opening hours The park is open to pedestrians 24 hours a day (access for vehicles is 8 am until late) every day of the year. Transport Vehicle entrances are at Studley Park Road and Yarra Boulevard, Kew, or Yarra Bend Road,
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Alessandro Plizzari (born 12 March 2000) is an Italian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Serie B club Livorno, on loan from Milan. Club career Plizzari is a product of Milan's youth academy. In July 2016, he was promoted to the first team as a backup goalkeeper and received his first-ever call up to the senior team ahead of a home Serie A game against Udinese played on 11 September 2016, remaining on the bench as a substitute. Despite his involvement with the first team, he continued to play for Primavera as a starting goalkeeper throughout the season. Inthe end of June 2023. On 1 August 2019, he was loaned out to Serie B club Livorno. He made his debut with Livorno on 5 October, playing as a starter in the league match against Chievo. International career He was the first-choice goalkeeper for the Italy U17 squad at the 2016 UEFA European Under-17 Championship, where Italy was eliminated at the group stage. He was on the roster for Italy U20 team at the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup, where he was the second-choice goalkeeper behind Andrea Zaccagno. He played one game at the tournament, the 3rd place gamein which Italy beat Uruguay in a penalty shootout after Plizzari saved two kicks by Uruguay players Rodrigo Amaral and Juan Manuel Boselli. He was the starting goalkeeper for Italy U19 at the 2018 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, as Italy finished as runners-up to Portugal. The following year he took part in the 2019 FIFA U-20 World Cup with the Italy U20 squad, reaching the fourth place. He made his debut with the Italy U21 on 10 September 2019, in the UEFA Euro 2021 qualifying match won 5–0 against Luxembourg. Career statistics Club Updated as of 19 February 2020. Honours
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James Michael Nugent Reyne OAM (born 19 May 1957) is an Australian rock musician and singer-songwriter both in solo work and, until 1986, with the band Australian Crawl. Biography Early years Reyne was born in Lagos, Nigeria. His father Rodney Michael Reyne was an English-born former Royal Marine, who served as aide-de-camp to Governor of the state of Victoria, Sir Dallas Brooks, and subsequently worked for British Petroleum. His paternal grandfather, Cecil Nugent Reyne, was an English rear admiral. His mother, Judith Graham, née Leask, was a teacher. His younger brother, David Reyne, was also born in Nigeria. The familymoved to Victoria in late 1959, where a younger sister Elisabeth was born. Reyne lived in Mount Eliza, Victoria, was educated at The Peninsula School and studied drama at the Victorian College of Arts. He formed a band called Spiff Rouch containing fellow locals Bill McDonough, Guy McDonough, Brad Robinson, Paul Williams, Robert Walker, Mark Hudson and Simon Binks. By early 1978 Spiff Rouch had split, and Reyne formed Clutch Cargo, with Binks, Robinson, Williams and his younger brother David Reyne. Australian Crawl In late 1978, Clutch Cargo was renamed Australian Crawl and started to gain popularity on the pubcircuit. David Reyne left to continue an acting course and was replaced by Bill McDonough. Australian Crawl made a memorable debut on the Countdown TV show. Reyne performed with both arms in plaster casts, a result of injuries sustained after being hit by a car. The band went on to sell more than one million albums in Australia in the 1980s. Their most popular songs are "Reckless", "Beautiful People", "Errol", "The Boys Light Up", "Things Don't Seem", "Oh No Not You Again" and "Downhearted". They were voted Countdown 1981 Most Popular Group, and Reyne was 1980 and 1981 Most PopularMale Performer. After the band split up in 1986, Reyne went on to a successful solo career. Solo career 1985–1999 Whilst still with Australian Crawl, Reyne formed a duet with Lin Buckfield of Electric Pandas to release a 1985 single "R.O.C.K." / "Under My Thumb". In 1987, Reyne released his self titled debut solo album and commenced the "Rip it Up" tour. The first two singles released from the album, "Fall of Rome" and "Hammerhead", were top 10 hits in Australia, followed by the less-successful "Rip It Up" and "Heaven On a Stick". The album was re-packaged in 1988 toinclude a further top 10 single, "Motor's Too Fast" (peaking at #6 on the ARIA chart), replacing "Coin in a Plate" which had appeared on the original 1987 release. "Always The Way" was released as the sixth and final single from the album, but peaked outside the top 50. His debut was followed in May 1989 by his next solo release Hard Reyne, which featured the hits "House of Cards" (#17 ARIA Charts) and "One More River" (#22 ARIA Charts). The album was produced By Simon Hussey. The project was launched with a live televised performance on Australia's MTV programon the Nine Network and an Australian tour in late 1989. A further two singles—"Trouble in Paradise" (Oct 1989) and "Harvest Moon" (Jan 1990)—completed the album. In 1991, Electric Digger Dandy was released. Mindful of the American market (where the album was released under the title of Any Day Above Ground), Electric Digger Dandy included a revamped version of the Australian Crawl hit "Reckless" as well as a cover of John Hiatt's "Stood Up", a duet with American singer-songwriter Tony Joe White. Single releases from the album included "Slave" (#10 ARIA Charts), "Any Day Above Ground" and "Some People". Itremains Reyne's highest charting album in Australia, reaching No. 3 on the ARIA albums chart. In 1992, he recorded a duet with country singer James Blundell (a cover of The Dingoes' song, Way Out West). It hit No. 2 on the Australian charts; Reyne's highest charting solo single. Later that year he joined former Sherbet frontman Daryl Braithwaite, Jef Scott and Simon Hussey to create the album Company of Strangers, which spawned three Australian top 50 singles: "Motor City (I Get Lost)", "Sweet Love", "Daddy's Gonna Make You a Star". A fourth single released from the album, "Baby, You're aRich Man", failed to enter the top 100. October 1994 saw the release of his fourth album on the RooArt label—The Whiff of Bedlam, recorded in Los Angeles with Stewart Levine. The singles released from the album were "Red Light Avenue", "Day in the Sun" (Dec 1994) and "It's Only Natural" (April 1995). Reyne and his band continued overseas to Europe, UK and South America. Recorded live in South America, the double-album "Live in Rio" was released in April 1996. A single edit of "Oh No, Not You Again (live)" was released to coincide with the album. In September 1996,Reyne took to the Enmore Theatre stage in a David Atkins production of the musical Little Shop of Horrors. Reyne returned to the studio in 1997 to work with producer Ashley Caddell. Now signed to Village Roadshow Music, the first release was "Brand New Emperor's Clothes" in October 1997. Reyne continued to write and record new material throughout 1998/1999. In 1999, the Design For Living album was released. In 1999, he was a guest performer on John Farnham's "I Can't Believe He's 50 Tour". His duet with Farnham, "Don't You Know It's Magic", is included in John Farnham's album Liveat the Regent Theatre. 2004–2007 After a few years' break between studio albums, Reyne signed with Liberation Music in Australia. In 2004 he released Speedboats for Breakfast, which included the singles "Bug" and "The Rainbow's Dead End". Of "Bug" James said: "I wanted to create a song out of playing the same four chords going round and round, building and growing all the time, with things coming in and dropping out. The listener knows there's transition but there's no real point where the change is obvious". This was followed in March 2005 by the album ...And The Horse You RodeIn On, which contained acoustic reworkings of some of his best-known solo and Australian Crawl compositions. In February 2005, Australian dance producers Smash 'n' Grab remixed Australian Crawl's "Reckless", which peaked at #42 in Australia. Reyne hosted Dig, a music show on ABC2 (2006–2007), and made an appearance on The AFL Footy Show in Melbourne in 2006. In May 2007, he released a new studio album, Every Man a King, which features the singles "Light in the Tunnel" and "Little Man You've Had a Busy Day". A second acoustic album, Ghost Ships, was released in September 2007. 2010–present In April2010 Reyne released, TCB (Taking Care of Business), a collection of Elvis Presley covers. The album debuted at number 32 on the ARIA Albums chart. In November 2011, he released a single, "English Girls", followed by his most autobiographical song, "Capsize", in January 2012. Both songs feature on Reyne's album Thirteen (March 2012). Two more singles were released; "Whatcha Gonna Do About It?" and "Good Clean Fun". In the Australia Day Honours of 2014, Reyne was recognised with a Medal of the Order of Australia in the General Division "for service to the performing arts as a singer/songwriter, and throughsupport for a range of charitable organisations". Universal Records released a two-CD set, The Anthology, on 1 August 2014. The double album featured all of Reyne's earlier hits on Disc 1 and a collection of his more recent material and radio singles on the Disc 2. In late 2014, Reyne launched a "James Reyne Plays Australian Crawl" series of shows across Australia. Performing only songs from the Australian Crawl catalogue, Reyne stated it was the closest thing to a reunion as fans were ever to get. In July 2019, Reyne released an original song titled "Fearless" for the Australian filmPalm Beach soundtrack. In April 2020, Reyne announced the release of his twelfth studio album Toon Town Lullaby, alongside the album's lead single of the same name. Toon Town Lullaby is set for release in July 2020. Acting career Reyne appeared in the 1983 TV drama miniseries Return to Eden as Greg Marsden. He also played Tina Turner's manager in the 1993 bio-movie about Turner's life What's Love Got to Do with It. In 2005 Reyne appeared as a guest actor in the telemovie The Postcard Bandit, which used music by Australian Crawl in its soundtrack. Personal life Reyne isthe older brother of drummer and TV presenter David Reyne. Their younger sister Elisabeth was married to Simon Hussey. They co-produced Daryl Braithwaite's 1991 album Higher Than Hope. Hussey produced and engineered Reyne's early albums and both were band mates in Company of Strangers, with Braithwaite, for the 1992 album of the same name and related singles. James Reyne is the father of Neighbours actor Jaime-Robbie Reyne. He lives on the Mornington Peninsula and has a daughter. On 13 May 2017, he married Leanne Woolrich. Discography Albums (solo) Studio James Reyne (1987) Hard Reyne(1989) Electric Digger Dandy (1991) The Whiffof Bedlam (1994) Design for Living(1999) Speedboats for Breakfast (2004) ...And the Horse You Rode In On (2005) Every Man a King (2007) Ghost Ships (2007) TCB (2010) Thirteen (2012) Toon Town Lullaby (2020) EP James Reyne and the Magnificent Few (2015) Live albums Live in Rio (1996) One Night in Melbourne (2007) Live '99 (2015) All the Hits Live (2015) Compilations The Best (1992) Reckless: 1979–1995 (2000) The Definitive Collection (2002) The Essential James Reyne (2008) The Anthology(2014) Albums (Australian Crawl) Albums (Company of Strangers) Company of Strangers (1993) References External links James Reyne's Official Website James Reyne Fan
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The 2009–10 Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team represented Kent State University in the 2009–10 college basketball season. The team was coached by Geno Ford and played their home games in the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center. They are members of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 24–10, 13–3 in MAC play to win the east division and overall regular season championship. As the 1 seed they were upset by 9 seed and eventual champion Ohio in the quarterfinals of the 2010 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament. As regular season champions they received an automatic bid to the 2010National Invitation Tournament where they advanced to the second round before falling to Illinois. Before the season Roster changes The Golden Flashes lost four seniors from their 2008–09 roster. These seniors include the starters Al Fisher, Jordan Mincy, and Julian Sullinger. Fisher was the team's leading scorer, averaging 14.4 points per game. The team also lost Rashad Woods, who was suspended last year due to a violation of team rules. To compensate for the team's losses, four new players joined the Flashes for the 2009–10 basketball season. Only one of these four players is a freshman, while one sophomore andtwo juniors are recruits from junior colleges. Recruiting Roster Roster current as of June 25, when their summer prospectus was published. Coaching staff Schedule |- !colspan=9| Exhibition |- !colspan=9| Regular Season |- !colspan=9| 2010 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament |- !colspan=9| 2010 National Invitation Tournament |- style="background:#f9f9f9;" | colspan=9 | *Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll. All times are in Eastern Time Zone. |} After the season Awards On March 8, 2010, head coach Geno Ford was named the Mid-American Conference Coach of the Year, the seventh time a KSU coach has won the award (Jim McDonald, 1990; Gary Waters, 1999
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Denmark sent one competitor to the 2018 Winter Paralympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Team The table below contains the list of members of people (called "Team Denmark") that will be participating in the 2018 Games. Background In the autumn of 2017, responsibility for sending a team to the Paralympics was changed from Parasport Denmark, the National Paralympic Committee of Denmark, to the National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark (DIF). The decision was made because people wanted to make Olympic and Paralympic sport more equal. Niels Christiansen, secretary general of Parasport Denmark, said, "We are very happy with themove, and we look forward to working together with DIF. The Paralympics and the development and preparation of world class Para-athletes is still very much a focal point of our work in Parasport Denmark, but allowing DIF to take the reigns [sic] sends an important message and hopefully it will lead to even more Paralympic success for Denmark." Despite this change, Parasport Denmark was still in charge of preparing to send a team to the Winter Paralympic Games. History Denmark first went to the Winter Paralympics in 1980 in Geilo. Before South Korea, they had won a total of twogold medals, one silver medal and three bronze medals at the Winter Games. Both of their gold medals and all of their bronze medals were won by para-Nordic blind skier Anne-Mette Bredahl. Her gold medals were in the biathlon 7.5 kilometres free technique B 1-3 race.The last time the country won a medal was at the 1994 Winter Paralympics. Denmark sends few people to the Winter Paralympics. They sent six people to the 2006 Winter Paralympics, and two to the 2010 and 2014 Games. Snowboarding Banked slalom Snowboard cross References 2018 Category:Nations at the 2018 Winter Paralympics Category:2018 in Danish
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Irving Kaplan was an official of the United States government, accused of involvement in Soviet espionage. Career Kaplan worked with David Weintraub in the Works Progress Administration's National Research Project, later moving to the Department of the Treasury, the War Production Board (WPB), and the Foreign Economic Administration. Accusations In 1945, former NKVD courier Elizabeth Bentley told investigators of the Federal Bureau of Investigation that Kaplan was "a dues-paying Communist Party member" who had formerly been associated with the Perlo group of Soviet spies, later moving to the Silvermaster group. She said she learned from Nathan Gregory Silvermaster that Kaplan
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Elsbethen is a municipality in the district of Salzburg-Umgebung in the Austrian state of Salzburg. Geography The town lies directly south of the federal state capital, Salzburg, and borders Flachgau. Parts of the town have become infrastructurally connected with Salzburg. The highest points in the Elsbethen area are the Schwarzenberg, the Gurlspitze and the Mühlstein. History Elsbethen was first mentioned in 930 as Campanuaua. After the Second World War Glasenbach was home to an Allied POW camp, where members of Nazi organizations and war criminals were held. Politics The mayor of Elsbethen is the graduate engineer Franz Tiefenbacher (ÖVP), the
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Relations:[["Elsbethen", "shares border with", "Salzburg"]] |
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Terence John Pitt (2 March 1937 – 3 October 1986) was a British political researcher and adviser. He became well known behind the scenes as the long-serving head of the Labour Party's research department, and worked for other bodies. In 1984 he made the move into elected politics as a Member of the European Parliament but died only two years later at the age of 49. Education Pitt was born in Willenhall, an urban part of Staffordshire near to Walsall; he attended Queen Mary's School in Walsall and then went on to Birmingham College of Advanced Technology where he studiedhis constituency party called on him to resign; Pitt was said to be the frontrunner for the selection in Walsall North. However Stonehouse refused to resign, and the delayed selection eventually chose David Winnick instead. In 1978 Pitt contributed to John Mackintosh's book "People and Parliament". Later career In 1978 Pitt became a founding director of the Institute of National Affairs of Papua New Guinea, a public policy think tank addressing economic and social issues in that then newly independent nation, working overseas for three years. He returned to the United Kingdom in 1981 to be Senior Adviser on Economicthe Delegation for relations with Australia and New Zealand. Death On 3 October 1986 Pitt collapsed in a taxi in Birmingham, and was taken to East Birmingham hospital. He died there later that day at the age of 49. The circumstances required an inquest which found that death was caused by Pitt choking on chewing gum. He had taken up using nicotine-replacement gum after giving up smoking. The inquest also found that Pitt had a heart condition which could have killed him at any time and returned a verdict of accidental death. References An extensive discussion of Pitt's role in
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Relations:[["Terry Pitt", "place of birth", "Willenhall"], ["Terry Pitt", "place of death", "Birmingham"], ["Terry Pitt", "position held", "Member of the European Parliament"], ["Terry Pitt", "country of citizenship", "United Kingdom"]] |
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The Government of Western Australia, formally referred to as Her Majesty's Government of Western Australia, is the Australian state democratic administrative authority of Western Australia. It is also commonly referred to as the WA Government or the Western Australian Government. The Government of Western Australia, a parliamentary constitutional monarchy, was formed in 1890 as prescribed in its Constitution, as amended from time to time. Since the Federation of Australia in 1901, Western Australia has been a state of the Commonwealth of Australia, and the Constitution of Australia regulates its relationship with the Commonwealth. Under the Australian Constitution, Western Australia cededlegislative and judicial supremacy to the Commonwealth, but retained powers in all matters not in conflict with the Commonwealth. Executive and judicial powers Western Australia is governed according to the principles of the Westminster system, a form of parliamentary government based on the model of the United Kingdom. Legislative power rests with the Parliament of Western Australia, which consists of The Queen, represented by the Governor of Western Australia, and the two Houses, the Western Australian Legislative Council (the upper house) and the Western Australian Legislative Assembly (the lower house). Executive power rests formally with the Executive Council, which consistsof the Governor and senior ministers. The Governor, as representative of the Crown, is the formal repository of power, which is exercised by him or her on the advice of the Premier of Western Australia and the Cabinet. The Premier and Ministers are appointed by the Governor, and hold office by virtue of their ability to command the support of a majority of members of the Legislative Assembly. Judicial power is exercised by the Supreme Court of Western Australia and a system of subordinate courts, but the High Court of Australia and other federal courts have overriding jurisdiction on matters
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The Right Reverend Joseph Scott Barker (born 1963) is an American Episcopal clergyman and the eleventh and current Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Nebraska. Barker was consecrated on October 8, 2011 in La Vista, Nebraska, and is the 1,060th bishop in the American succession. Barker was born in Omaha, Nebraska. He graduated from Yale College in 1985 with a B.A. in Religious Studies, and from Berkeley Divinity School at Yale in 1992 with an M.Div. in Anglican Studies. At Berkeley, he was awarded the Mersick prize for effective public address and preaching, and the Tweedy Prize for exceptional promise
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Dennis is a populated place in Forsyth County, North Carolina, United States. History Thomas Dennis Waddill built a depot in 1889 about halfway between Walkertown and Walnut Cove on the Roanoke & Southern Railroad. Waddill, who owned 1700 acres in the area, also built a mansion nearby which was demolished in the 1990s. Waddill became known as The Earl of Dennis. The depot burned in the 1930s. A post office and store were once located in the community. Geography Dennis is located at latitude 36.2251371 and longitude -80.1700459. The elevation is 846 feet. References External links Category:Unincorporated communities in Forsyth
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| Nodes:[["Dennis, North Carolina", {"description":'populated place in North Carolina, United States'}], ["North Carolina", {}]]
Relations:[["Dennis, North Carolina", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "North Carolina"]] |
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Major Lionel Guy d'Artois (9 April 1917 – 15 March 1999) was a Canadian Army officer and SOE agent. Biography Lionel Guy (generally known by his second name) d'Artois was born in Richmond, Quebec in 1917. He joined the Militia (part-time army reserves) in 1934, at the age of 16. In 1936, he became a student at the Université de Montréal, but dropped his studies in 1939, to enlist as private. He later joined the First Special Service Force and in 1942 he was commissioned. He served as an instructor in savate, and in August 1943 took part in "OperationCottage", the reoccupation of the island of Kiska in the Aleutians. In 1943 he volunteered for SOE, one of several French-Canadians attached to F section. In April 1944 was parachuted into the department of the Saone et Loire, France, and under the codename "Dieudonné" organized, armed and operated with units of the Free French Forces. His service in France during the invasion period were recognised by the award of the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) from Britain and the Croix de Guerre from France. After the war, he was promoted to major and made commanding officer of the new Canadian SpecialAir Service Company. In 1947 there was an unusual episode in which he was tasked with the rescue of a severely injured missionary from a remote district in the Far North. The mission took seven weeks altogether (which suggests that Canon J.B. Turner was himself a pretty tough character!), and resulted in d'Artois being decorated with the George Medal (GM) alongside flying officer Robert Race. He served with the Commonwealth occupation forces in Japan, and then did an operational tour with 1st Bn., Royal 22e Régiment, the "Van Doos", during the Korean War. War time romance One of the fellow
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Beilschmiedia miersii (Northern acorn tree, Belloto del norte: in Spanish), an evergreen tree in the Lauraceae native to central Chile from 30 to 35°S., up to 1200 meters (4000 ft) above sea level and lives under very dry conditions. A type locality for B. miersii is the La Campana National Park and Cerro La Campana, where it is associated with the endangered Chilean Wine Palm. Description Reaches 25 meters (82 ft) height and 80 cm (31 in) diameter. Straight and cylindrical trunk. Gray-brownish bark. Leaves are simple, opposite and subopposite, aovate to aovate-elliptical, entire margin, wavy, above they are darkand glossy, below they are glaucous, obtuse to emarginate apex, obtuse to slightly subcordate base, the leaves are about 4–11 cm long and 1,5–5 cm wide, petioles very pubescent about 5–10 mm long. Flowers are hermaphrodite, in inflorescences about 3–10 cm; pedicellate about 2–5 mm, yellow greenish, pubescent and fleshy tepals, the style ends in a papillose and obtuse stigma. Cultivation and uses In central Chile this species is used as an ornamental. Its fruit is a brown drupe when ripe and is sometimes used for feeding pigs. It has also been planted and acclimatized in Spain. References P. Hechenleitner,
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Relations:[["Beilschmiedia miersii", "parent taxon", "Beilschmiedia"], ["Beilschmiedia miersii", "taxon rank", "Species"]] |
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is a common masculine Japanese given name. Possible writings Ryūji can be written using different kanji characters and can mean: 竜二, "dragon, second" 竜次, "dragon, next" 竜司, "dragon, rule" 竜児, "dragon, child" 竜治, "dragon, govern" 龍二, "dragon, second" 龍次, "dragon, next" 龍司, "dragon, rule" 龍治, "dragon, govern" 龍児, "dragon, child" 隆二, "elevate, second" 隆次, "elevate, next" 隆司, "elevate, rule" 隆児, "elevate, child" The name can also be written in hiragana or katakana. People with the name Aminishiki Ryūji (竜児, born 1978), Japanese sumo wrestler Chiyotaikai Ryūji (龍二, born 1976), Japanese sumo wrestler Ryūji Bando (竜二, born 1979), Japanese football player
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Relations:[["Ryūji", "writing system", "Kanji"]] |
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The EuroHockey Club Champions Cup is a defunct men's field hockey competition for clubs in Europe. It was first played for in 1974. It was replaced by the Euro Hockey League in 2007. Unofficial tournaments were played in 1969 and then in 1970, in 1971, in 1972 and in 1973). Summaries Medal tables See also EuroHockey Club Champions Cup (women) Euro Hockey League Men's EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup Notes External links EuroHockey Club Champions Cup Women's EuroHockey Outdoor Regulations Category:International club field hockey competitions in Europe Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1974 Category:1974 establishments in Europe Category:Recurring sporting events disestablished
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| Nodes:[["EuroHockey Club Champions Cup", {"description":'field hockey competition for clubs in Europe'}], ["Field hockey", {}]]
Relations:[["EuroHockey Club Champions Cup", "sport", "Field hockey"]] |
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Nagole is a residential and commercial locality in Ranga Reddy, Telangana, India Locality The locality is contiguous with the arterial Inner Ring Road of Hyderabad. The locality witnessed growth in the early nineties as a housing destination for the middle class. By the late 2000s, this locality's real estate grew further in value with the announcement of Hyderabad Metro in its proximity and growing infrastructure. Transport Nagole is connected to several parts of the city through Telangana State Road Transport Corporation City Buses. An elevated Metro Rail station for Nagole opened on 28 November 2017. The Metro Rail corridor terminates
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Relations:[["Nagole", "country", "India"], ["Nagole", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Hyderabad"]] |
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Antiochus III Epiphanes (, flourished 1st century BC and 1st century AD) was the ruler of the Kingdom of Commagene from 12 BC to 17 AD. He was the son and successor of King Mithridates III of Commagene and Iotapa, and of mixed Iranian, Greek and Median descent--the last through his mother. His parents were first cousins. When Antiochus died in 17 AD, his death created major issues for the kingdom, which was in political turmoil at the time. The reasons for this situation are unclear, but it may have been the consequence of his children, Antiochus and Iotapa, beingtoo young to succeed their father. This may have meant that there was no effective authority to prevent civil unrest and unite the citizens of Commagene. Very little is known on his life and his reign as King. After Antiochus' death, two factions appeared: one led by noblemen who wanted Commagene to be placed under the rule of the Roman Empire and the other led by citizens who wanted Commagene's independence to be retained under the rule of their own king. Both factions sent embassies to Rome, seeking the advice and assistance of Emperor Tiberius to decide the future ofCommagene. Tiberius decided to make Commagene a part of the Roman province of Syria. That decision was welcomed by many of the citizens by Commagene, which remained under Roman rule until Caligula restored the kingdom to Antiochus’ children in 38 AD. Antiochus III and his son are honoured on the Philopappos Monument in Athens, Greece, dedicated to his great-grandson, Prince Gaius Julius Antiochus Epiphanes Philopappos, who was a prominent and respected citizen in Athens. In the left figure of the monument is a statue of Antiochus III's son, Antiochus IV. Below Antiochus IV is an inscription that states King Antiochus
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Relations:[["Antiochus III of Commagene", "father", "Mithridates III of Commagene"], ["Antiochus III of Commagene", "position held", "King"]] |
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South Ascrib is an island in Loch Snizort between the Waternish and Trotternish peninsulas on the northern coasts of the island of Skye in Scotland. South Ascrib is about in extent at low tide and the maximum height is above sea level. At high tide the island becomes several smaller portions cut off from one another, the northern section of which is Eilean Garave. At such times South Ascrib is about in size. The skerry of Scalp Rock lies just west of South Ascrib. Other islands in the group are Eilean Creagach, Eilean Iosal, Sgeir à Chapuill and Sgeir àChuin. In 1703 Martin Martin wrote: "About 5 leagues to the south-west from Tulm lies the island Ascrib, which is divided into several parts by the sea; it is about two miles in compass, and affords very good pasturage; all kinds of fish abound in the neighbouring sea. On the south-west side of the isle Ascrib, at the distance of two leagues, lie the two small isles of Timan, directly in the mouth of Loch Arnizort; they are only fit for pasturage." There are indications of an underground monk's cell on the island dating from the 18th century. South Ascrib
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Relations:[["South Ascrib", "instance of", "Island"]] |
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Martin Samuel James (7 July 1920 – 11 October 2011) was an English-American art historian known primarily for his translations, with Harry Holtzman, of the writings of Piet Mondrian into English. James was born in London, but attended Columbia University for both his undergraduate and graduate degrees, where he studied under Meyer Schapiro. He taught at Brooklyn College in Brooklyn, NY Professor James also took a keen interest in urban planning and urban design, both inside and outside the classroom, and was active in historical preservation movements in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood in which he lived. He died in Ann
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Giuseppe "Pino" Puglisi (, ; 15 September 1937 – 15 September 1993) was a Roman Catholic priest in the rough Palermo neighbourhood of Brancaccio. He openly challenged the Mafia who controlled the neighbourhood, and was killed by them on his 56th birthday. His life story has been retold in a book, Pino Puglisi, il prete che fece tremare la mafia con un sorriso (2013), and portrayed in a film, Come Into the Light ("Alla luce del sole" original Italian title) (2005). He was the first one killed by the Mafia to be declared Blessed by the Catholic Church. Ordained aspriest Puglisi was born in Brancaccio, a working-class neighbourhood in Palermo (Sicily), into a family of modest means. His father was a shoemaker and his mother a dressmaker. He entered the seminary at age sixteen. Following ordination, he worked in various parishes, including a country parish afflicted by a bloody vendetta. Puglisi was ordained as a priest on 2 July 1960 by Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini from Palermo. Ruffini regarded Communism as a greater threat than the Mafia. He once questioned the Mafia's very existence. To a journalist's question of "What is the Mafia?" he responded: "So far as I know,it could be a brand of detergent." This denial persuaded Puglisi of the need to challenge church authorities. "We can, we must criticize the church when we feel it doesn't respond to our expectations, because it's absolutely right to seek to improve it," he said. With his trademark humour, Puglisi added: "But we should always criticize it like a mother, never a mother-in-law!" Antimafia priest In 1990, Puglisi returned to his old quarter Brancaccio and became the priest of San Gaetano's Parish. He spoke out against the Mafia who controlled the area and opened a shelter for underprivileged children. Puglisihad been offered other parishes by the local curia, in less troublesome Palermo neighborhoods, but he opted for San Gaetano. With little support from the Palermo archdiocese, Puglisi tried to change his parishioners' mentality, which was conditioned by fear, passivity and word omertà – imposed silence. In his sermons, he pleaded to give leads to authorities about the Mafia's illicit activities in Brancaccio, even if they could not actually name names. He refused their monies when offered for the traditional feast day celebrations, and would not allow the Mafia "men of honour" to march at the head of religious processions.September 1993 – Puglisi's 56th birthday – he was killed outside his home by a single bullet shot at point-blank range. He was taken unconscious to a local hospital, where surgeons could not revive him. The murder was ordered by the local Mafia bosses, the brothers Filippo and Giuseppe Graviano. One of the hitmen who killed Puglisi, Salvatore Grigoli, later confessed and revealed the priest’s last words as his killers approached: "I've been expecting you." Puglisi's murder shocked Italy. There was an immediate call by eight priests in Palermo for the pope to travel to Palermo to be present athis funeral. Pope John Paul II, however, was scheduled to be in Tuscany on that date and did not attend the memorial service. At the funeral Mass the archbishop of Palermo, Cardinal Salvatore Pappalardo, spoke out very strongly against the Mafia, echoing the Pope's words on a visit to Agrigento, Sicily, just months earlier. On 14 April 1998, the Mafiosi Gaspare Spatuzza, Nino Mangano, Cosimo Lo Nigro and Luigi Giacalone received life sentences for the killing of Puglisi. The Graviano brothers also received life sentences for ordering the killing. Legacy During his visit to Sicily in November 1994, Pope JohnPaul II praised Puglisi as a "courageous exponent of the Gospel." He urged Sicilians not to allow the priest’s death to have been in vain and warned that silence and passivity about the Mafia was tantamount to complicity. Puglisi's favorite rhetorical stance – "Se ognuno fa qualcosa, allora si può fare molto" (If everyone does something, then we can do a lot) – is scrawled on walls in Brancaccio. In 1999, the Cardinal of Palermo started his beatification process, proclaiming Puglisi a Servant of God. To underscore this anti-Mafia conviction, he composed a parody of the Our Father in theSicilian language: On 28 June 2012, Pope Benedict XVI allowed the Vatican Congregation for the Causes of Saints to designate Puglisi a martyr in a first step to beatify the slain priest. The Pope signed a decree acknowledging that Father Puglisi had been killed "in hatred of the faith", meaning that he can be beatified – the last step before sainthood – without a miracle being attributed to his intercession with God. Beatification The Beatification of Pino Puglisi took place on 25 May 2013. The open-air Mass took place at the Foro Italico 'Umberto I', a large green area thatforms one of the promenades of Palermo. The Mass was presided over by Paolo Cardinal Romeo, Metropolitan Archbishop of Palermo, with Salvatore Cardinal de Giorgi, Metropolitan Archbishop Emeritus of Palermo, as the Papal Legate who performed the Rite of Beatification. Estimates state that 50,000 people attended the Mass. During his Angelus address, the following Sunday, 26 May, Pope Francis stated that the newly beatified Puglisi was first and foremost "an exemplary priest and a martyr", as well as condemning mafia groups. Biography and film Deliziosi, Francesco (2001). Don Puglisi: Vita del prete palermitano ucciso dalla mafia, Milan: Mondadori, Deliziosi, Francesco(2013). Pino Puglisi, il prete che fece tremare la mafia con un sorriso, Milan: Rizzoli, Alla luce del sole, also known as In the Sunlight, is a film about the life of Puglisi, by Roberto Faenza and starring Luca Zingaretti, was released in Italy in 2005. See also List of victims of the Sicilian Mafia Streetwise priest References External links Official Site Category:1937 births Category:1993 deaths Category:20th-century venerated Christians Category:20th-century Christian martyrs Category:People from Palermo Category:Italian Roman Catholic priests Category:Italian beatified people Category:Antimafia Category:History of the Sicilian Mafia Category:People murdered by the Sicilian Mafia Category:Beatifications by Pope Francis Category:20th-century Roman
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Mesalina olivieri, also known commonly as Olivier's sand lizard, is a species of sand-dwelling lizard in the family Lacertidae. The species is endemic to North Africa and the Middle East. Etymology The specific name, olivieri, is in honor of French entomologist Guillaume-Antoine Olivier. Geographic range M. olivieri occurs in Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Western Sahara. Habitat The preferred habitats of M. olivieri are desert, grassland, and shrubland at altitudes of . Reproduction M. olivieri is oviparous. References Further reading Audouin, "Victor [sic]" (1829). "Explication sommaire des Planches de Reptiles (supplément), Publiées par Jules-CésarSavigny, Membre de l'Institut; offrant un exposé des caractères naturels des genres avec la distinction des espèces ". pp. 97-140. In: [Commission des sciences et arts de l'Égypte ] (1829). Description de l'Égypte, ou Recueil des observations et des recherches qui ont été faites en Égypt pendant l'expédition de l'armée française. Second édition dédiée au Roi. Tome vingt-quatrieme [Volume 24] Histoire naturelle, Zoologie. Paris: C.L.F. Panckoucke. 579 pp. (Lacerta olivieri, new species, pp. 122-125). (in French). Sindaco, Roberto; Jeremčenko, Valery K. (2008). The Reptiles of the Western Palearctic: 1. Annotated Checklist and Distributional Atlas of the Turtles, Crocodiles, Amphisbaenians and
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Relations:[["Mesalina olivieri", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Mesalina olivieri", "parent taxon", "Mesalina"]] |
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Lupinus grayi is a species of lupine known by the common name Sierra lupine. It is endemic to California, where its distribution extends the length of the Sierra Nevada and its foothills and includes the Tehachapi Mountains. It is a common plant of the mountain forests, where it sometimes carpets meadows with its woolly green herbage and purple flower spikes. This is a low, prostrate perennial herb forming spreading mats 20 or 30 centimeters high. Each palmate leaf is made up of 5 to 11 leaflets up to 3.5 centimeters long. The inflorescence bears dense whorls of flowers each just
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Gehenu Lamai () is a 1978 Sri Lankan Sinhala teenage drama film directed by Sumitra Peries and produced by her husband Lester James Peries for Lster Films. The film introduced Vasanthi Chathurani into Sinhala cinema. Along with her, film stars Ajith Jinadasa and Jenita Samaraweera in lead roles along with Shyama Anandan and Cyril Kothalawala. Music composed by Nimal Mendis. It is the 390th Sri Lankan film in the Sinhala cinema. The film received positive reviews from critics and earned box office success. Plot Kusum witnesses Nimal leading a procession into their village. Kusum then recalls her childhood spent withcomes to her rescue. Kusum then rejects Nimal's help. The story then returns to the present with Nimal arriving at the village. Kusum reveals she failed to get into college and is now unemployed. She questions if this is her fate. Cast Vasanthi Chathurani as Kusum Liyanage A girl from a lower-class family who falls in love with Nimal, a member of a family she works for and had known since she was a kid. She's extremely obedient not willing to go against the wishes of her parents and other elders. Two more characters as Danthala Weerasinghe and Achala Weerasinghe.Wakishta as Kamalawathie Satharasinghe haughty contradictory woman who praises her servant Kusum while viewing her as an unsuitable suitor to her son. Senaka Perera as Mr. Liyanage sick father of Kusum and Soma. Nimal Dayaratne as Gunapala friend of Podmini. Dayamanthi Pattiarachchi as Maduri cousin of Nimal who is westernized and looks down on Kusum. Joe Abeywickrema as Doctor Cameo role by Abeywickrema of a doctor who supplies the Liyanage family with medicine free of charge. Songs References External links Sri Lanka Cinema Database Category:Sri Lankan films Category:1978 films Category:Films set in Sri Lanka (1948–present) Category:1970s drama films Category:Sri Lankan
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Slieve Beagh or Sliabh Beagh () is a mountainous area straddling the border between County Monaghan in the Republic of Ireland and County Fermanagh and County Tyrone in Northern Ireland. A point just east of its summit is the highest point in Monaghan; however the true summit is on the Fermanagh-Tyrone border. The point where the three counties meet, is referred to as the "Three County Hollow". Name The original Irish name for the area, Sliabh Beatha, has been anglicized as Slieve Beagh or half-anglicized Sliabh Beagh. According to Irish mythology, the name refers to the mythological figure Bith, whowas buried in a cairn on top of the mountain. Although the summit is in fact marked by a cairn, called Doocarn, it is likely that the name's original meaning is "mountain of birch". In County Monaghan, the locals typically refer to the Slieve Beagh as the "Bragan Mountains", taking the name from a townland within the Slieve Beagh. Geography Slieve Beagh has many low, smooth summits. The highest is at and lies just inside County Fermanagh. The area is mainly blanket bog, with many small lakes and streams throughout. In Northern Ireland, much of Slieve Beagh has been designatedboundary coincides entirely with that of the Slieve Beagh Area of Special Scientific Interest and the Slieve Beagh Special Area of Conservation. The site qualified under Criterion 1 of the Ramsar Convention because it is a large and relatively intact example of a blanket bog and one of the best examples of this habitat in the United Kingdom. It also contains nationally important examples of transitional and alkaline fen and oligotrophic/mesotrophic lakes. The peatland features include occasional well developed hummock and lawn complexes, a few small pool complexes, as well as soakaways and flushes. Vegetation is characterized by sphagnum mosseswollastoni) are common in the lakes and pools and the concentration of both species is the greatest recorded in Northern Ireland. The most notable species are found in the highest lake, Lough Sallagh, where the rare upland beetle Potamonectes griseostriatus and corixid Glaenocorisa propinqua are found. See also Cuilcagh Lists of mountains in Ireland List of Irish counties by highest point List of mountains of the British Isles by height List of Marilyns in the British Isles References External links Sliabh Beagh Hotel and Tourism Centre Category:Mountains and hills of County Fermanagh Category:Mountains and hills of County Tyrone Category:Mountains and
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Relations:[["Sliabh Beagh", "historic county", "County Fermanagh"], ["Sliabh Beagh", "instance of", "Mountain"], ["Sliabh Beagh", "country", "United Kingdom"]] |
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Amelia Lewsham or Amelia Harlequin or Amelia Newsham (c. 1748 – after 1797) was a Jamaican known as the "White Negress". Life Lewsham was born circa 1748, in Jamaica, probably Spanish Town where her mother worked as her owner's house servant. Both of her parents were black and she was born an albino. Lewsham was the property of Sir Simon Clarke 6th baronet who was so intrigued with her that he sent Lewshem, then about five years old, to England in 1753 as a present to his second son Kingsmill Clarke, a barrister of the Inner Temple. Clarke agreed to
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Relations:[["Amelia Lewsham", "place of birth", "Jamaica"], ["Amelia Lewsham", "country of citizenship", "Jamaica"]] |
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Brodiaea kinkiensis is a species of Brodiaea also with the common name San Clemente Island brodiaea. This flower is endemic to San Clemente Island, one of the Channel Islands of California. It has one cylindrical leaf alongside a tall stem which bears an inflorescence of one to several bell-shaped blooms. Each flower has six petallike tepals in shades of light purple with darker purple longitudinal stripes or streaks. The fruit is a capsule containing black seeds. This flower is not considered endangered, but it is of some concern since its entire wild distribution is limited to the clay mesas of
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Relations:[["Brodiaea kinkiensis", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Brodiaea kinkiensis", "parent taxon", "Brodiaea"]] |
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Enoch Walter Sikes (May 19, 1868 – January 8, 1941) was an American football player and coach, professor, state senator, and college president. He served as the head football coach at Wake Forest University from 1891 to 1893, compiling a record of 6–2–1. Sikes taught history and political economics at Wake Forest from 1897 to 1916. He served one term in the North Carolina Senate, representing Wake County in 1911. Sikes was the president of Coker College from 1916 to 1925 and the president of Clemson University from 1925 until his retirement in 1940. He died of a heart attack
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Relations:[["E. Walter Sikes", "employer", "Wake Forest University"]] |
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"Does My Ring Burn Your Finger" is a song written by Julie Miller and Buddy Miller, and recorded by American country music artist Lee Ann Womack. It was released in October 2001 as the fourth and final single from her third studio album, I Hope You Dance. The song peaked at number 23 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks. Critical reception Chuck Taylor of Billboard called the song "A haunting hillbilly treatise on the pain of betrayal and loss" They also wrote, "From the opening Appalachian twang of a mournful-sounding fiddle to Womack's achingly beautiful delivery, this is
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| Nodes:[["Does My Ring Burn Your Finger", {"description":'2001 single by Lee Ann Womack'}], ["Lee Ann Womack", {}], ["Country music", {}]]
Relations:[["Does My Ring Burn Your Finger", "performer", "Lee Ann Womack"], ["Does My Ring Burn Your Finger", "genre", "Country music"]] |
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Ko Hyeong-ryeol (The romanization preferred by the author according to LTI Korea) born 1954 is a modern Korean poet. Life Ko Hyeong-ryeol was born in the town of Haenam at the southern tip of Korean Peninsula and grew up in Sokcho, Gangwon-do. After high school, Go passed an exam to become a government employee and worked as a clerk in his township. He made his literary debut in 1979 with "The Firstborn," which was published in Contemporary Literature. Work Ko is a poet of “peculiar” voice. Calm even as it discusses the history of Korean national division or the author'swish for Korean reunification, his poetic language carries the halting tone of a soliloquy muttered or a conversation initiated with difficulty. Though never exertive, Ko’s poetry exudes the strength of compassion and warmth grounded in the poet’s own perspective toward the world, which is not that of a distant observer but rather that of a close neighbor who meditates on things as though they are an immediate part of his life. As Ko has aged his work has become even more humble and pure in tone. Ko as often describes the world as full of sorrow and suffering, but his
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Relations:[["Ko Hyeong-ryeol", "occupation", "Poet"], ["Ko Hyeong-ryeol", "place of birth", "Sokcho"]] |
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Petitcodiac is a Canadian village in Westmorland County, New Brunswick. History It is named after the Petitcodiac River, which begins in the village at the junction of the North River and Anagance River. The name is believed to be derived either from a Mi'kmaq word meaning "bends like a bow" or from a Maliseet word meaning "sound of thunder". Present day The Community Centres around Route 890, Route 885, Route 905, Route 106 and Route 1. The village features a regional school, an outdoor swimming pool, an arena, a bowling alley, as well as several family-owned shops and churches servicing
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Relations:[["Petitcodiac, New Brunswick", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Westmorland County, New Brunswick"], ["Petitcodiac, New Brunswick", "instance of", "Village"]] |
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DuMont Royal Theater (also known as Royal Playhouse) was an American dramatic anthology television series which ran on the now-defunct DuMont Television Network from April 12, 1951, to June 26, 1952. The half-hour series ran during the summers, and in 1952 it ran on alternate weeks with Gruen Playhouse. The series helped launch the career of Hugh O'Brian, who later appeared in the popular series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. Others who appeared on the program included Mary Sinclair and Edgar Barrier. Some sources say the sponsor was Royal Gelatin when it was part of Standard Brands. BingCrosby Enterprises produced the program, which was also broadcast with the title Crown Theater. DuMont sponsored the series on 18 TV stations, with a variety of sponsors putting it on the air in other markets. United Television Programs was in charge of rights to reruns. See also List of programs broadcast by the DuMont Television Network List of surviving DuMont Television Network broadcasts References Bibliography David Weinstein, The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2004) Alex McNeil, Total Television, Fourth edition (New York: Penguin Books, 1980) Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, The Complete
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| Nodes:[["DuMont Royal Theater", {"description":'US television program'}], ["DuMont Television Network", {}]]
Relations:[["DuMont Royal Theater", "original broadcaster", "DuMont Television Network"]] |
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"Love at First Light" is a song by Singaporean artiste, Olivia Ong and child actress, Natanya Tan. Written by Paul Tan and composed by Iskandar Ismail, it was officially commissioned as the official theme song to the 2012 national day parade of Singapore, together with the 1995 National Day Parade song, My People, My Home which was reused for National Day in 2012. On the 9 August, the song was performed twice. Once by the combined school-choir and later by the duo themselves in a techno pop version. The techno pop version was incorporated into a medley, which includes songlike "Stand Up For Singapore", "One People, One Nation, One Singapore", "Count On Me Singapore", "Home" and "We Are Singapore". The song's title is a play on the phrase, "Love at first sight". Background Alongside Paul Tan, local composer, Iskandar Ismail teamed up with him to write, produce and compose the song in early 2012. In an interview with Paul Tan on The Straits Times section, "Digital Life", Paul stated that Iskandar wanted a child to sing for the first verse of the song. 7 year old, Natanya Tan was picked along with Olivia as a duet, making Natanya todate the 2nd youngest NDP theme song singer after Shanice Nathan (who was then 7 when she sang the 2004 theme song, "Home"). On the 12 July 2012, it was officially announced and released in a press conference at Gardens by the Bay. Olivia gave her comment on the song, stating that "Love At First Light is about the determination of Singaporeans in a young nation, (and how they) are trying to build their dreams and goals.". Music video The video, which was sponsored by the Defence Science and Technology Agency, is directed by Aaron Tan. It takes viewers through
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Ase Boas (born 26 December 1988) is a Papua New Guinean rugby league footballer who plays for the PNG Hunters in the Queensland Cup. A Papua New Guinean representative , Boas previously played for the Featherstone Rovers in the Championship. He was a member of PNG's squads at the 2013 and 2017 World Cup tournaments. Playing career Boas was the captain for the PNG Hunters in the 2017 Queensland Cup season where they won the title. He previously played for the Rabaul Gurias in the PNG domestic competition, which he captained to premiership victory in 2012 before joining the Huntersin 2015. He is the elder brother of fellow PNG representative Watson Boas. Boas comes from a mixed parentage of East New Britain, Oro and Simbu in Papua New Guinea. Boas represented Papua New Guinea in rugby league nines at the 2015 Pacific Games. Boas signed with the Featherstone Rovers for the 2019 season, alongside his brother Watson. He was released for personal reasons after making five appearances for the club. References External links RLWC 2017 profile Category:Featherstone Rovers players Category:Papua New Guinean rugby league players Category:Rabaul Gurias players Category:Papua New Guinea Hunters players Category:Papua New Guinea national rugby league
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| Nodes:[["Ase Boas", {"description":'Papua New Guinean rugby league footballer'}], ["Rugby league", {}], ["Papua New Guinea", {}]]
Relations:[["Ase Boas", "sport", "Rugby league"], ["Ase Boas", "place of birth", "Papua New Guinea"]] |
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The Ghost Who Walks is the debut album from British singer-songwriter Karen Elson. Elson told DJ Steve Lamacq: "The title was a nickname that I had at school. It was one of the nicer nicknames I had for being tall, pale and a little bit haunted." The lead single from the album is title song, "The Ghost Who Walks". Tracks "The Ghost Who Walks" (Elson) "The Truth Is in the Dirt" (Elson) "Pretty Babies" (Elson, Garniez) "Lunasa" (Garniez) "100 Years from Now" (Elson, Garniez, Bojadziev) "Stolen Roses" (Elson) "Cruel Summer" (Elson) "Garden" (Elson) "The Birds They Circle" (Elson) "A Thief
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Relations:[["The Ghost Who Walks", "instance of", "Album"], ["The Ghost Who Walks", "performer", "Karen Elson"]] |
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Calystegia peirsonii is a species of morning glory known by the common name Peirson's false bindweed. It is endemic to Los Angeles County, California, occurring at the junction of the San Gabriel Mountains and the Mojave Desert in the vicinity of the Antelope Valley. Description Calystegia peirsonii is a rhizomatous perennial herb producing low-lying or climbing stems up to 40 centimeters long, and hairless and waxy in texture. The small leaves are up to 2 centimeters long, lobed, and generally triangular in shape. The inflorescence produces flowers at the end of peduncles a few centimeters long. The white funnel-shaped floweris typical of morning glories and reaches up to 4 centimeters wide. The bracts form at the base of the peduncle and are short and rounded with an indented tip, usually only partially obscuring the calyx. The species is most similar to Calystegia occidentalis which can occur in the same region occasionally. However that species differs in longer, more strongly pointed bracts, and the fact that those bracts form several millimeters below the peduncle on the stem. Additionally C. occidentalis generally has more triangular leaves with less distinct lobing. External links Jepson Manual Treatment: Calystegia peirsonii Calystegia peirsonii Photo gallery
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Relations:[["Calystegia peirsonii", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Calystegia peirsonii", "parent taxon", "Calystegia"]] |
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Tianma Circuit () is a permanent racing circuit located at (the junction of A30 motorway and Shenzhuan road) 3000 Shenzhuan road in the Sheshan Songjiang district of Shanghai, People's Republic of China. Inaugurated in 2004, the circuit is part of a resort which includes a 10,000 metre square proving ground, a 4X4 course, media center and grandstand, a cinema showing motoring-related films, a multifunctional hall, VIP rooms, a clubhouse that provide Chinese and western meals, a gym, a mini-supermarket and a shop for motor racing supplies. It holds a round of China Superbike Championship (CSBK). On September 30, 2011 was
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Relations:[["Shanghai Tianma Circuit", "country", "China"]] |
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First Parish Church in Plymouth is a historic Unitarian Universalist church at the base of Burial Hill on the town square off Leyden Street in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The congregation was founded in 1620 by the Pilgrims in Plymouth. The current building was constructed in 1899. History Congregation The congregation was founded in the English community of Scrooby in 1606 by the Pilgrims, a group of Protestant Christians. After they emigrated to North America in 1620, the Separatist congregation established a church in Plymouth which became a parish church of Massachusetts' state church, the Congregational church. Eventually, a schism developed infour church buildings on the town square was constructed. Later churches were built in 1684, 1744, and 1831. Hartwell, Richardson & Driver designed the current Romanesque-style building, completed 1899, which replaced the 1831 wooden Gothic structure. The 1899 building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014. It has Tiffany stained glass windows illustrating the Pilgrim story. The sanctuary features carved quarter-sawn oak and is one of the finest examples of hammer beam construction in the United States. Gallery See also First Parish Church (Duxbury, Massachusetts) Oldest churches in the United States National Register of Historic Places
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Liam Cunningham (born 2 June 1961) is an Irish stage and screen actor. He is known for playing Davos Seaworth in the HBO epic-fantasy series Game of Thrones. Cunningham has been nominated for the London Film Critics' Circle Award, the British Independent Film Award, has won two Irish Film & Television Awards, and shared a BAFTA with Michael Fassbender, for their crime-drama short film Pitch Black Heist. His film roles include A Little Princess (1995), Jude (1996), Dog Soldiers (2002), The Crooked Man (2003), The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006), Hunger (2008), The Escapist (2008), Good Vibrations (2013), LetUs Prey (2014) and The Childhood of a Leader (2015). Early life Cunningham was born in East Wall, which is an inner city area of the Northside of Dublin. He grew up in Kilmore West with his three sisters and a brother. Cunningham left secondary school at 15 and pursued a career as an electrician. In the 1980s, Cunningham moved to Zimbabwe for three years where he maintained electrical equipment at a safari park and trained Zimbabwean electricians. After returning to Ireland, Cunningham became dissatisfied with his work as an electrician and decided to pursue his interest in acting. Heattended acting classes and began to work in local theatre, including Royal Shakespeare Company. He appeared in a production of Studs at The Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London. Career Cunningham's debut film role came in Into the West (1992), where he played a police officer. His on-screen acting continued with roles in War of the Buttons (1994), and A Little Princess (1995), before making his role as Phillotson in Jude (1996). He continued with character roles in Falling for a Dancer (TV, 1998), RKO 281 (1999), Shooting the Past (TV, 1999), When the Sky Falls (2000) and Stranded (2002). Cunninghamcame to international prominence with his role as Captain Ryan in the critically acclaimed, independent horror film, Dog Soldiers (2002). Cunningham starred in well-received films such as The Wind That Shakes the Barley (2006) which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival; Hunger; The Escapist (both 2008); The Guard ; and Black Butterflies (both 2011). He also had roles in many high budget British and American films including The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse (2005), The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor (2008), Harry Brown (2009), Clash of the Titans , Centurion (both 2010). On television, he appeared asPresident Richard Tate in the BBC programme Outcasts. Cunningham was producer Philip Segal’s first choice to portray the Eighth Doctor in the TV movie of Doctor Who (1996), but was vetoed by Fox executives. In 2012, Cunningham joined the main cast for the second season of HBO's Game of Thrones portraying former smuggler Davos Seaworth, and in 2013 he starred in The Numbers Station alongside John Cusack. He was also cast in season 5 of the BBC series Merlin as a sorcerer. He featured in the music video for "High Hopes" by Irish alternative rock band Kodaline from their EPThe High Hopes. In April 2013, he appeared in the seventh series of the BBC One series Doctor Who in the episode "Cold War", where he played Captain Zhukov, the commander of a Russian submarine in 1983 facing one of the Ice Warriors. He guest starred in the second season of the VH1 television series Stay Closer, with Sandra Bullock and Jessica Chastain. In 2015, he played the father in Brady Corbet's directorial debut film, The Childhood of a Leader. Personal life Cunningham currently resides in Dublin with his wife Colette, with whom he has three children, daughter Ellen and
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Juanita García Peraza, also known as "Mita" (June 24, 1897 – February 21, 1970) was the founder of the "Mita congregation", a spin-off of the Pentecostal church with Puerto Rican origins which is described in Melton's Encyclopedia of Protestantism. Erik Camayd-Freixas, a sociologist considers this group to be a cult. The group had and still has a large following. When Peraza died the Senate of Puerto Rico closed their offices for three days in her honor. Early years García Peraza was born in Hatillo, Puerto Rico, and raised by her parents, both belonging to wealthy Catholic families that had immigratedthe other reference book by Jesus Santos Medina, PhD, Veredas Que Confunden, Un Análisis Histórico y Teológico de Sectas Religiosas (2010), pages 14–16.] Under García Perazas' leadership, the church founded many small businesses which provided work, orientation, and help for its members. The first branch of the church outside of Puerto Rico was established in New York City. The church has expanded to Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Panama, El Salvador, Canada, Curaçao, Ecuador and Spain. Legacy Juanita "Mita" García Peraza died on February 21, 1970, in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Teófilo Vargas Sein ("Aarón"), was appointed Prophet
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Pedro Cebrián y Agustín, 5th Count of Fuenclara, Grandee of Spain, (April 30, 1687 in Luceni, Spain – August 22, 1752 in Madrid) was a Spanish diplomat and viceroy of New Spain, from November 3, 1742 to July 8, 1746. Early life He was Spanish ambassador extraordinary to the courts of Vienna, Dresden and Naples. He was majordomo and equerry to the Infante Don Felipe. He was honored with membership in the orders of the Golden Fleece, 1738, and San Gennaro. On January 31, 1742, King Philip V of Spain personally named Cebrián viceroy of New Spain. As Viceroy ofNew Spain He arrived in Veracruz on October 5, 1742. He made his solemn entry into the capital on November 3, 1742 and took up his office. He replaced Pedro Malo de Villavicencio, president of the royal Audiencia, who had been filling in since the death of the previous viceroy, Pedro de Castro y Figueroa, Duke of la Conquista. As viceroy, he repaired the aqueduct from Chapultepec to Salta del Agua and paved many streets in Mexico City. He repaired and widened the Calzada de San Antonio Abad. He also established the estancos (government monopolies) in gunpowder, salt mines, iceand juego de gallos (cockfighting). He banned cards and dice. In accordance with instructions from Spain, Cebrián y Agustín gathered ethnological, historical and statistical information about the colony. He directed the geographer José Antonio Villaseñor y Sánchez to prepare an official estimate of the population of New Spain, to be transmitted to the Court. The estimate was completed in April 1744, and the population was found to be 3,865,000. Another result of this information-gathering was Villaseñor's book, Theatro Americano, descripción general de los reinos y provincias de la Nueva España (2 vols., 1746–48). The work is a very valuable sourcefor colonial historians. On June 2, 1743, after an investigation, he imprisoned the Italian knight Lorenzo Boturini Bernaducci (1702–53). Boturini had been soliciting public donations to crown the Virgin of Guadalupe with a gold crown, and also of introducing papal documents without a royal permit. At the time of his arrest, various valuable documents, codices, and writings about antique cultures that Boturini had collected were confiscated, and never returned to him. In 1744 Boturini was sent to Spain, where he established his good intentions and was freed. The king named him historian of the Indies. He even received permission toreturn to New Spain. In Madrid he wrote a history of ancient Mexico, unpublished at the time of his death in 1753. On July 1, 1743, the British Admiral George Anson captured the China treasure galleon Nuestra Señora de Covadonga off the Philippines, en route from Manila for New Spain. The merchandise and the 1,318,843 pesos of silver ingots it was carrying were taken. Anson sold his prize for £400,000 in China. The viceroy was accused of perfidy in the affair, but of course nothing came of that. In 1744 there was a riot in Puebla over a minor religiouspoint. The viceroy, in order to dignify his visit to the bishop, had ordered the bells rung. The population interpreted this as a sign of the canonization of a previous bishop, Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, which many people had been campaigning for. When that turned out not to be the case, they rioted. The viceroy ordered the troops of the garrison to suppress the riot, and there were injuries. The viceroy was criticized for this decision. Escandón expedition In the 1740s Spain, because of encroachments of the French from Louisiana and the English along the Gulf coast, decided thatthey would have to complete the conquest of the Seno Mexicano (the Gulf coast, especially Tamaulipas and Texas). A council of war meeting was held to consider this project from May 8 to 13, 1743. Various officers presented plans, and that of José de Escandón was chosen as the most comprehensive. The viceroy sent this expedition to explore and colonize Nuevo Santander (Tamaulipas), which left Mexico City on March 5, 1744. He became sick. He asked to be relieved his position and returned to Spain in July 1746. He died in Madrid August 6, 1752. See also José de Escandón
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SS Chief Osceola was a Liberty ship built in the United States during World War II. She was named after Chief Osceola, resistance leader of the Seminole, during the Second Seminole War. Construction Chief Osceola was laid down on 28 August 1944, under a Maritime Commission (MARCOM) contract, MC hull 2322, by J.A. Jones Construction, Panama City, Florida; sponsored by Mrs. W. T. Flythe , wife of director of public relation JAJCC, and launched on 4 October 1944. History She was allocated to United States Navigation Company, 19 October 1944. She was sold, on 30 January 1947, to George D.
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Cyaniris bellis, the Greek mazarine blue, is a butterfly found in the Palearctic (Asia Minor, South Europe, North Africa, Transcaucasia, Iran) that belongs to the blues family. Taxonomy The subspecies C. b. antiochena (Lederer, 1861) is found in Caucasus Minor, Armenia (highlands) and the Talysh Mountains. Description from Seitz bellis Frr. (82 e, f) is above like montana . [preceding text — montana M.-Dur (82 e) is an alpine form [of semiargus] which occurs in the higher Alps and the mountains of South-East Europe; smaller, the male bright blue above, with broader black distal border] but the hindwing beneath bears
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Relations:[["Cyaniris bellis", "parent taxon", "Cyaniris"]] |
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Eliot Antonietti (born January 27, 1993) is a Swiss professional ice hockey defenceman who is currently a free agent. He last played with the SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers and Genève-Servette HC of the National League (NL). Playing career Antonietti made his National League A debut playing with Genève-Servette HC during the 2010–11 NLA season. Antonietti began the 2017–18 season with HC Ajoie of the Swiss League (SL) as he failed to make the National League team, he scored 1 goal in 10 games before joining Geneva for 2 games. He sustained a lower-body injury in November 2017 and was put on
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Ralph Waldo Emerson Barton (August 14, 1891 – May 19, 1931) was an American artist best known for his cartoons and caricatures of actors and other celebrities. Though his work was heavily in demand through the 1920s and is often considered to epitomize the era, his personal life was troubled by mental illness, and he was nearly forgotten soon after his suicide, shortly before his fortieth birthday. Early life Ralph Barton was the youngest of four children born to Abraham Pool and Catherine Josephine (Wigginton) Barton. His father was an attorney by profession, but around the time of Ralph's birthmade a career change to publish journals on metaphysics. His mother, an accomplished portrait painter, ran an art studio. The young Barton showed his mother's aptitude for art, and by the time he was in his mid-teens he had already seen several of his cartoons and illustrations published in The Kansas City Star and the Kansas City Journal-Post. Buoyed by this success, in 1908 Ralph Barton dropped out of Kansas City's Westport High School before graduating. He moved to Chicago in 1909 to attend the Art Institute of Chicago, but soon found he didn't "like Chicago or Chicago people andworst of all the art institute. I could learn twice as much at work" he confided in a letter to his mother. Returning to Kansas City within a matter of months, he married his first of four wives, Marie Jennings. Career While back in Kansas City Barton resumed his work for the Star and Journal-Post to support his wife and daughter, born in 1910. His first break, or national exposure, came in 1912 when Barton sold an illustration to the humor magazine Puck. Encouraged, the Bartons moved to New York City, where Ralph found steady work with Puck, McCall's andother publications. His wife was not happy with life in the Big Apple however, and returned to Kansas City within a few months. Barton rented studio space, which he shared with another famous Missouri artist, Thomas Hart Benton, and the two became fast friends. It was Benton in fact who served as the subject of Barton's first caricature. In 1915 Puck magazine sent Barton to France to sketch scenes of World War I. It was then that Barton developed a great love of all things French, and throughout his life he would return to Paris to live for periods oftime. In 1927 the French government awarded Barton the Legion of Honour Barton's first caricature was of Thomas Hart Benton; his last, of Charlie Chaplin. In between he knew everyone and drew everyone in the social and cultural scene of New York. Some of his most famous works were group drawings, and perhaps the most noted was a stage curtain created for a 1922 revue, depicting an "audience" of 139 faces looking back at the real theater-goers. "The effect was electrifying, and the applause was great," said another caricaturist of the era, Aline Fruhauf. Much of Ralph Barton's work fromthe mid-1920s onward was for The New Yorker magazine, which he joined as an advisory editor from its very beginning in 1924. He would also be a stockholder in the publication. Other prominent magazines of the era to feature his work were Collier's, Vanity Fair, Judge, and Harper's Bazaar. While many would be published unsigned, there was no mistaking Barton's unique style. Ralph Barton would illustrate one of the 1920s most popular books, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. With the urging of friend Charlie Chaplin, Barton also made one movie, Camille. The short film featured such notables as Paul Robeson, Ethel Barrymore,and Sinclair Lewis. At the height of his popularity, Barton enjoyed not only the acquaintance of the famous, but a solid and impressive income. All of this concealed a terribly unhappy life. He was beset by manic-depressive disorder, and each of his four marriages ended in divorce. (One of his wives was the French composer Germaine Tailleferre (1892–1983) who was a member of Les Six.) A self-portrait, painted around 1925 and modeled on an El Greco, shows a drawn and unhappy figure. A year later he wrote, "The human soul would be a hideous object if it were possible tolay it bare." Death On May 19, 1931, in his East Midtown Manhattan penthouse apartment, Barton shot himself through the right temple. He was 39 years old. His suicide note said he had irrevocably "lost the only woman I ever loved" (the actress Carlotta Monterey had divorced Barton in 1926 and married Eugene O'Neill in 1929), and that he feared his worsening manic-depression was approaching insanity. He wrote: "I have had few difficulties, many friends, great successes; I have gone from wife to wife and house to house, visited great countries of the world—but I am fed up with inventingdevices to fill up twenty-four hours of the day." Almost immediately, his reputation dropped from sight; several years after his death, a caricature of George Gershwin sold for a mere $5. Ralph Barton's ashes were returned to his native Kansas City and interred in Mount Moriah Cemetery. Legacy Toward the end of the century, his work was included in several exhibitions at the National Portrait Gallery. A 1998 conference on cartooning at the Library of Congress also considered his work. Bibliography Books Exhibition catalog. Essays and reporting Critical studies and reviews of Barton's work Bruce Kellner. The Last Dandy: Ralph
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Altay or Altai is a mountain range (the Altai Mountains) in East-Central Asia, where Russia, China, Mongolia and Kazakhstan come together. Altay or Altai may also refer to: Places In China Altay Prefecture (阿勒泰地区), prefecture in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China Altay City (阿勒泰市), also spelled "Aletai", a city of Altay Prefecture In Kazakhstan Altai Town, a town of regional significance in East Kazakhstan Region of Kazakhstan, until 2019 known as Zyryan or Zyryanovsk In Mongolia Govi-Altai Province, an Aimag (province) Altai City, the capital of the Govi-Altai Aimag Several Sums (districts) of different Aimags: Altai, Govi-Altai Altai, Bayan-Ölgii Altai,Khovd In Russia Altai Republic, a federal subject of Russia Altai Krai, a federal subject of Russia Language and ethnic group Altaic languages, a controversial, hypothetical language macro-family Altai people, an ethnic group Altai language, the language spoken by these people People Altay Sarsenuly Amanzholov, Kazakh Turkologist Altay Özurgancı, Turkish basketball player Fahrettin Altay, Turkish general Other uses Altai, a historical novel by Wu Ming Altay sheep, a sheep breed Altay S.K., a football club from İzmir, Turkey Altay (tank), a Turkish main battle tank (2012) named after Fahrettin Altay Altai gas pipeline, a proposed natural gas pipeline between Russia
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The Lonely Biscuits are an American indie band. The band currently consists of Grady Wenrich (vocals, guitar), Sam Gidley (drums) and Nick Byrd (bass). The Lonely Biscuits formed in September 2011 at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, where Grady Wenrich and Sam Gidley were roommates. John Paterini, former singer/guitarist, came into the picture later in the month after hearing some of their music from his dorm room across the hall. Two months later, Nick Byrd joined the band as an official "biscuit" playing bass guitar. History Gravy and the Biscuits The Lonely Biscuits was formed in September 2011 by GradyChart Come Around (EP, 2015) The Universe in You (Album, 2018) Awards and nominations MTVu Woodie Awards The MTVu Woodie Awards, is an annual music award show which recognizes "the music voted best by college students." |- ||2013 || The Lonely Biscuits |College Artist of the Year (First Year Award) | |} Band members Grady "Gravy" Wenrich - vocals, guitar Sam Gidley - drums Nick Byrd - Bass Former Band Members John Paterini - vocals, guitar References External links Official website Category:Rock music groups from Tennessee Category:Musical groups from Nashville, Tennessee Category:Musical groups established in 2011 Category:Musical quartets Category:Belmont University
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The Port of Bandon is the port authority for Bandon Harbor in the city of Bandon, Oregon, United States. The port has full marina facilities for boat launching and sport fishing. It also serves as a waypoint stopover for commercial fishing and recreation vessels, and has a scenic boardwalk with a nature pathway and observation areas. The United States Coast Guard operates Search and Rescue Detachment Coquille River in Bandon Harbor in the summer and on halibut season weekend openers in the spring, and is equipped with a 47-foot motor life boat and crew. See also Coquille River References External
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Consubstantiation is a Christian theological doctrine that (like transubstantiation) describes the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist. It holds that during the sacrament, the substance of the body and blood of Christ are present alongside the substance of the bread and wine, which remain present. It was part of the doctrines of Lollardy, and considered a heresy by the Roman Catholic Church. It was later championed by Edward Pusey of the Oxford Movement, and is therefore held by many high church Anglicans. Early examples In the early church it was common for the bread to be regarded as breadearthly and heavenly…” Growth In England in the late 14th century, there was a political and religious movement known as Lollardy. Among much broader goals, the Lollards affirmed a form of consubstantiation—that the Eucharist remained physically bread and wine, while becoming spiritually the body and blood of Christ. Lollardy survived up until the time of the English Reformation. Literary critic Kenneth Burke's dramatism takes this concept and utilizes it in secular rhetorical theory to look at the dialectic of unity and difference within the context of logology. The doctrine of consubstantiation is often held in contrast to the doctrine oftransubstantiation. To explain the manner of Christ's presence in Holy Communion, many high church Anglicans teach the philosophical explanation of consubstantiation. A major leader in the Anglo-Catholic Oxford Movement, Edward Pusey, championed the view of consubstantiation. Pusey's view is that: The term "consubstantiation" has been erroneously used to describe Martin Luther's Eucharistic doctrine, the sacramental union. Lutherans reject the concept of consubstantiation because it replaces what they believe to be the biblical doctrine of the sacramental union with a philosophical construct, denotes a mixing of substances (bread and wine with body and blood), and denotes a "gross, Capernaitic, carnal" presence
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Anna Hannevik (born 9 August 1925) is a Norwegian Salvation Army Commissioner. She was born in Datong, China, to missionaries Ingvald Andreas Hannevik and May Thompson. She held various positions in the Army in Norway, England and Ireland. She chaired the social work in Norway ("slumsøstrene") from 1968 to 1975, and the social work in Britain and Ireland from 1975. From 1982 she served as international secretary for the Salvation Army in Europe, and she served as Territorial Commander for the Sweden chapter of The Salvation Army from 1986 to 1990. She has been a board member of the Norwegian
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Wyoming Highway 135 (WYO 135) is a north–south Wyoming State Road in Fremont County. Route description Wyoming Highway 135 begins its southern end at US Route 287/Wyoming Highway 789 at Sweetwater Station northwest of Jeffrey City. Highway 135, named Sand Draw Road, travels north from Sweetwater Station towards the small oil community of Sand Draw. At 17 miles, approximately half-way through its route, Wyoming Highway 139 is intersected which acts as a spur into the community of Sand Draw. Past Sand Draw, WYO 135 heads now more north-northwest toward Riverton as it passes through the Wind River Basin. Nearing 34.5miles, the western terminus of Wyoming Highway 136 (Gas Hills Road) is intersected which travels east towards the Gas Hills Mining District. Just after meeting WYO 136, Highway 135 crosses the Little Wind River and reaches its northern terminus at Wyoming Highway 789 just south of Riverton. Wyoming Highway 135 provides an alternate to Wyoming Highway 789 through Lander. Major intersections References External links Wyoming State Routes 100-199 WYO 135 - US-287/WYO 789 to WYO 139 WYO 135 - WYO 139 to WYO 136 WYO 135 - WYO 136 to WYO 789 Wyoming Highway 135 - Sand Draw Road Category:Transportation
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Radek Dvořák (born March 9, 1977) is a Czech former professional ice hockey right winger. Dvořák was drafted in the first round of the 1995 NHL Entry Draft, tenth overall, by the Florida Panthers. A veteran of 1,260 NHL games, Radek has played for the Panthers, New York Rangers, Edmonton Oilers, St. Louis Blues, Atlanta Thrashers, Dallas Stars, Anaheim Ducks and the Carolina Hurricanes. Playing career Florida Panthers Dvořák began his NHL career as an 18-year-old with the Florida Panthers in the 1995–96 season. In 77 games, Dvořák scored 13 goals and 27 points, as the Panthers reached the playoffsDvořák scored 7 goals and 17 points in 35 games before being traded. On December 30, 1999, the Panthers traded him to the San Jose Sharks in exchange for Mike Vernon and the Sharks' third-round pick in the 2000 NHL Entry Draft, after which the Sharks traded Dvořák to the New York Rangers for Todd Harvey and the Rangers' fourth-round pick in the 2001 NHL Entry Draft. New York Rangers Dvořák finished the 1999–2000 season with the Rangers, scoring 11 goals and 33 points in 46 games. In 2000–01, Dvořák was placed on a line with fellow Czechs Petr Nedvědand Jan Hlavac and he would have a breakout season. In 79 games, Dvořák scored 31 goals and 36 assists for 67 points to finish fourth in team scoring. However, the Rangers would once again miss the playoffs. Dvořák saw his production fall during the 2001–02 season, scoring 17 goals and 37 points in 65 games. His production continued to fall during the 2002–03 season, as Dvořák had six goals and 27 points in 63 games with the Rangers. On March 11, 2003, the Rangers traded Dvořák and Cory Cross to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for Anson Carter andAleš Píša. Edmonton Oilers Dvořák appeared in 12 games with the Oilers in 2002–03, scoring four goals and eight points, as Edmonton qualified for the playoffs. In his first playoff action since 1997, Dvorak scored a highlight reel goal in which he skated from end to end, scoring a game-winning goal. It would be his only point in four playoff games. Dvořák returned to the Oilers in 2003–04, where he scored 15 goals and 50 points in 78 games, however, Edmonton failed to make the playoffs. During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Dvorak played with HC České Budějovice. He returned tothe Oilers in 2005–06, where he had only eight goals and 28 points in 64 games. In the playoffs, Dvořák had two assists in 16 games, as the Oilers lost to the Carolina Hurricanes in the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals. He left the Oilers during the off-season, as he signed a one-year contract with the St. Louis Blues on September 14, 2006. St. Louis Blues Dvořák spent the 2006–07 season with the Blues, where in 82 games, he scored 10 goals and recorded 27 assists for 37 points. The Blues failed to qualify for the playoffs, and Dvořák left asa free agent after the season, returning to the Florida Panthers on July 1, 2007. Florida Panthers Dvořák returned to his original NHL team in the 2007–08 season. In 67 games with the Panthers, Dvořák had only 8 goals and 17 points. He saw his numbers rebound in the 2008–09 season, with 15 goals and 36 points in 81 games. On July 1, 2009, Dvořák signed a two-year, $3.4 million contract extension with Florida. In the 2009–10 season, he had 14 goals and 32 points in 76 games. On December 7, 2009, he played in his 1,000th NHL game againsthis former club, the Edmonton Oilers, at the BankAtlantic Center. During the 2010–11 season, the Panthers honoured Dvořák for playing more career games as a Panther than anyone in franchise history on November 23 before a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins. In 53 games that year, Dvořák had 7 goals and 14 assists for 21 points. Atlanta Thrashers On February 28, 2011, the Panthers traded Dvořák (along with a fifth-round pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft) to the Atlanta Thrashers in exchange for Patrick Rissmiller and Niclas Bergfors. Dallas Stars On July 1, 2011, Dvořák signed a one-year, $1.5million contract with the Dallas Stars. On December 1, 2011, Radek Dvořák recorded his 350th career assist. Anaheim Ducks During the 2012–13 NHL lockout, and as a free agent, Dvořák signed a contract with HC Davos of the Swiss National League A. He played in the final seven regular season games with Davos and contributed in their post-season campaign before he signed for the remainder of the shortened 2012–13 NHL season with the Anaheim Ducks on March 24, 2013. Carolina Hurricanes On September 3, 2013, it was announced by Carolina Hurricanes general manager Jim Rutherford that Dvořák would be invitedto attend the Carolina Hurricanes' training camp. He subsequently signed a two-way contract with Carolina on October 2, 2013. He scored his first goal for the Hurricanes in the second period of a game against the Philadelphia Flyers. Retirement Dvořák retired from professional hockey on January 27, 2015, after 18 seasons and 1,260 games played in the NHL. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International Transactions July 8, 1995 — Florida Panthers 1st round draft choice, 10th overall in the 1995 NHL Entry Draft. December 30, 1999 – Traded by the Florida Panthers to the San Jose Sharks in exchangefor Mike Vernon. December 30, 1999 – Traded by the San Jose Sharks to the New York Rangers in exchange for Todd Harvey. March 11, 2003 – Traded by the New York Rangers, along with Cory Cross, to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for Anson Carter and Aleš Píša. September 14, 2006 – Signed as a free agent with the St. Louis Blues. July 1, 2007 – Signed as a free agent with the Florida Panthers. July 1, 2009 – Signed a two-year, $3.4 million contract extension with Florida. February 28, 2011 – Traded by the Florida Panthers to theAtlanta Thrashers along with a fifth-round draft pick in exchange for Patrick Rissmiller and Niclas Bergfors. July 1, 2011 – Signed a one-year contract worth $1.5 million with the Dallas Stars. March 24, 2013 - Signed a one-year contract worth $675K with the Anaheim Ducks October 2, 2013 - Signed a one-year contract worth $600K with the Carolina Hurricanes January 27, 2015 - Retired from the NHL References External links Category:1977 births Category:Living people Category:Anaheim Ducks players Category:Atlanta Thrashers players Category:Carolina Hurricanes players Category:Czech ice hockey right wingers Category:Dallas Stars players Category:Edmonton Oilers players Category:Florida Panthers draft picks Category:Florida Panthers
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Husbands of Lagos is a Nigerian television series produced by ROK Studios and directed by Kabat E. Egbon. The series, which debuted on December 1, 2015, tells the story of seven men living in Lagos and the women in their lives. The second season of the series was released on November 2, 2016, and the third season premiered on April 12, 2017. Synopsis In Lagos; a melting pot of business, politics, power and love, the city that never sleeps, a playground for both rich and poor, a place where dreams become real and the delicate mix of the good, thealso comes from a wealthy family.Owen is also Adas boyfriend back in the U.S. Owen and Wale become friends through Akinlolu and are both unknowingly, dating Ada. Desmond Elliot as Saheed, a bartender who works at the men’s favorite hang-out spot. Bisola Aiyeola as Sikira, Saheed's baby mama. Rukky Sanda as Remi, Akin's evil sister. Jimmy Odukoya as Fred, the new husband on the block. Fred doesn’t really know how to appreciate his wife, but she doesn’t know how to allow him to be a man. Location All scenes from seasons 1-3 were shot in Lagos, Nigeria. Nightclub scenes were
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Guðrún Helgadóttir is a prominent writer of children's literature in Iceland. She was born in Hafnarfjörður on 7 September 1935. Her first book, Jón Oddur og Jón Bjarni, appeared in 1974 when she worked at the National Health and Insurance Office. It concerned scheming twins and several more books in this series came out. In 1981 they became the basis for a film. By the late 1980s she won several awards and in 1988 she was nominated for the Hans Christian Andersen Award. She has written a small amount of drama for adults, but most of her work is for
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Garin d'Apchier was an Auvergnat castellan and troubadour from Apcher in the Diocese of Mende in the Gévaudan. His life cannot be dated with precision. According to his vida he was "a valiant and good warrior ... and a handsome knight. And he knew all there was to know about love and gallantry." Garin left behind three sirventes. According to his vida, he invented the descort genre of lyric poetry when he wrote the piece that begins Quan foill'e flors reverdezis / et aug lo chan del rossignol ("When the leaf and the flower bud / and I hear the
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Roland Armontel (7 December 1904 – 9 March 1983) was a French actor. Born Auguste Louis Magnin in Vimoutiers, Orne, France, he died in Paris. Selected filmography Fun in the Barracks (1932) Let's Touch Wood (1933) Les Misérables (1934) Miss Bonaparte (1942) The Idiot (1946) Jericho (1946) The Royalists (1947) The Revenge of Baccarat (1948) Eternal Conflict (1948) Emile the African (1949) The Lovers of Verona (1949) The Martyr of Bougival (1949) The Dancer of Marrakesh (1949) Clara de Montargis (1951) The Beautiful Image (1951) The Fighting Drummer (1953) The Blonde Gypsy (1953) Don Juan (1956) Miss Catastrophe (1957) His
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Castleside is a village in County Durham, England. It is situated a short distance to the south-west of Consett. The village centre is located on the main A68 road which runs between Edinburgh and Darlington and the village crossroads allow easy access to Consett, the North Pennines and Stanhope. To the northeast lies another small village called Moorside. The parish church, dedicated to St John, was designed by Ewan Christian and is a reproduction of a church he had seen and admired while on holiday in Switzerland. The church was consecrated on 7 March 1867. Castleside is covered by the
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Bangkok Gay and Lesbian Film Festival (BGLFF) was established by the staff of 'Attitude Magazine', an LGBT weekly publication from Bangkok in Thailand, in 2015. The magazine, which began publishing in 2011, is the first in Thailand to specifically address the interests of the country's LGBT community, and to seek to represent LGBT views in wider Thai society. The magazine decided therefore to launch Thailand's first-ever LGBT Festival, as LGBT people and issues have already gained acceptance in Thai society for many years, and several other countries in the East Asian region, which sometimes record less legal acceptance of LGBTissues than Thailand, such as Indonesia (which has held Asia's largest LGBT film festival, Q! Film Festival, every year since 2002), The Philippines (which holds the annual Pride International Film Festival), Cambodia and Myanmar, already have well-established LGBT film festivals. The magazine argues that, with Thailand's enactment of the 2015 Gender Equality Act, discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation is no longer tolerated in Thai society. Despite the advances made over many years, the magazine believes that the LGBT community is not always portrayed in a positive light in Thai films and other forms of media, with certain stereotypes stillprevalent whenever movies, in particular, address gender diversity. The magazine believes that the Festival will therefore help to provide a more realistic and varied view of the LGBT community. The first film to open the first Festival in 2015 was "How To Win At Checkers (Every Time)", a film about two brothers, one gay, set around a military draft day in Thailand. The 2015 Festival lasted for 10 days, with 15 films from 12 countries, including Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, China, South Korea, the United States and Europe. Sanchai Chotirosseranee, deputy director of Film Archive and partner of the BGLFF2015, claims that it has been "a long journey" for the LGBT community in Thailand. In the 1955 Thai film, Chua Fah Din Salai, the Thai male comedian, Lor Tok, was shown dressing up as a woman and dancing with another male character. From then until now, the portrayal of what were dismissively referred to as 'katoey' meant that LGBT characters were presented as comic relief in films and soap operas, and had become the norm in Thai society. The magazine is keen to ensure that such portrayals are brought to an end, and that members of the LGBT community
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Qaanaaq (), formerly and still popularly known as Thule or New Thule, is the main town in the northern part of the Avannaata municipality in northwestern Greenland. It is one of the northernmost towns in the world. The inhabitants of Qaanaaq speak Kalaallisut and Danish, and many also speak the Inuktun language. The town has a population of 656 as of 2013. Geography Qaanaaq is located in the northern entrance of the Inglefield Fjord (Kangerlussuaq). The village of Qeqertat is located in the Harvard Islands, near the head of the fjord. History The Qaanaaq area in northern Greenland was firstGreenland operates fixed-wing aircraft services between Qaanaaq Airport and Upernavik Airport, with further connections to Ilulissat Airport and Qaarsut Airport. Settlement flights operate to Siorapaluk, sporadically to Moriusaq, and to Savissivik via Thule Air Base. There are a few unpaved dirt roads in Qaanaaq. Only one road leaves the town - it connects to Qaanaaq Airport. Pickup trucks and SUVs are found in Qaanaaq, but skis, dogsleds and walking are better alternatives for getting around. Medical and emergency services There is a small hospital (built in the 1950s and rebuilt 1996) in Qaanaaq with basic health care offered. More advancedcare requires transfer to other medical centers in Greenland by air. Dental care is offered in the form of a dentist who visits the town twice a year. Qaanaaq Hospital falls under the Avannaa health region. A small local fire brigade is assisted by firefighters from the Thule Air Base. Government The town is part of the region of Avannaata, which is represented by a 17-member council and mayor. CTBTO Station Qaanaaq is home to a remote CTBTO infrasound listening station called IS-18, which uses an array of barometric sensors to detect possible nuclear tests around the world. The stationis maintained by the Danish Meteorological Institute, and as of 2016 the current operator is Svend Erik Ascanius. Population With 656 inhabitants as of 2013, Qaanaaq is the largest settlement in the far north of the country. Its population has been relatively stable with only minor fluctuations since the mid-1990s. The city, with its relatively low population and tradition of hunting, currently has more huskies than human residents. Climate Qaanaaq has a cold tundra climate (Köppen climate classification ET), and hence it has long, cold winters. Peak temperatures occur in July and seldom exceed References Further reading Murray, Louise. 2006."On Thin Ice – Louise Murray Travels to Qaanaaq in Northern Greenland to See the Effect That Climate Change Is Having on Subsistence Hunters and Their Prey". Geographical : the Royal Geographical Society Magazine. 32. Remie, C. H. W. Facing the Future Inughuit Youth of Qaanaaq : Report of the 1998 University of Nijmegen Student Expedition to Qaanaaq, Thule District, Northern Greenland. Nijmegen: Nijmegen University Press, 1999. External links http://qaasuitsup-kp.cowi.webhouse.dk/en/plans_for_towns_and_settlements/qaanaaq/ Page with information on Qaanaaq and surroundings The Most Northern Place - A transmedia webdoc about the untold story of Thule Category:Populated places in Greenland Category:Populated places established in the
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Isha Foundation is a non-profit, spiritual organization founded in 1992 near Coimbatore, India, by Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev. It hosts the Isha Yoga Center, which offers yoga programs under the name of Isha Yoga. The foundation is run entirely by volunteers and it has over 9 million volunteers. The word isha means "the formless divine". Isha Yoga The Yoga Centre, founded at Isha Foundation in 1994, offers yoga programmes under the name Isha Yoga. This customised system of yoga combines postural yoga with chanting, breathing (prāṇāyāma), and meditation. Isha Yoga does not belong to a lineage (paramparā), and its practitioners believeRivers Rally for Rivers is a campaign launched by Isha Foundation in 2017 to tackle the scarcity of water across rivers in India and instill awareness about protecting rivers. Sadhguru launched the campaign on 3 September from Isha Yoga Center, Coimbatore. The campaign included a month-long, nationwide campaign. On 3 October, a river revitalization draft proposal was presented by Sadhguru to Narendra Modi. Six states signed Memorandums of Understanding (MoU) with Isha Foundation to plant trees along river banks. These states are Karnataka, Assam, Chhattisgarh, Punjab, Maharashtra and Gujarat. The Niti Aayog and the Ministry of Water Resources have constitutedfor a private purpose without supporting study. In January 2020, the High Court ruled that the Foundation needed to disclose details of its fundraising practices relating to the initiative. Ashram Isha Foundation's headquarters are located in an ashram built on the foothills of the Velliangiri Mountains, adjacent to the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, some forty kilometres from the city of Coimbatore in the state of Tamil Nadu, South India. Adiyogi Shiva statue Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev designed the 112-foot Adiyogi Shiva statue, which is located at the Isha Yoga Center. It was inaugurated on Mahashivaratri, 24 February 2017, by the Prime MinisterCoimbatore are alleged to have violated rules and regulations on several occasions. In 2016, allegations were made that Isha Yoga Center was holding people captive. A couple claimed that their two adult daughters were being held captive at the center. The Foundation denied the allegation and released a statement by the two women asserting that it was their free will to stay at Isha. The case was dismissed in court. Another woman alleged that her adult son was being held captive at Isha Yoga Center. References Bibliography External links Category:Yoga organizations Category:Spiritual retreats Category:Non-profit organisations based in India Category:Community-building organizations
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Devon Malcolm Endersby (born 12 May 1992) is a South African-born English former first-class cricketer. Endersby was born in East London, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Upon moving to England he was educated in Horsham at Tanbridge House School and The College of Richard Collyer. From there he went up to Loughborough University. While studying at Loughborough, Endersby played first-class cricket for Loughborough MCCU, making his debut against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 2012. He played first-class cricket for Loughborough MCCU in from 2012–2014, making a total of six appearances. He scored 107 runs across his six matches, at an averageof 11.88, with a high score of 53. He struggled to take wickets with his right-arm medium-fast bowling, claiming 4 wickets from 69 overs bowled. In 2013, Endersby was called up to the Unicorns squad for the 2013 Yorkshire Bank 40, making his List A one-day debut in the tournament against Gloucestershire at Bristol. He made five further List A appearances during the tournament. He again struggled to take wickets in the one-day game, claiming a single wicket from 26 overs bowled. His only wicket in one-day cricket was the Ireland international Paul Stirling, who was playing for Middlesex. Endersby
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Emarginula crassa, the thick slit limpet, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Fissurellidae, the keyhole limpets. Description The thick slit limpet is a large keyhole limpet with a length of 30 mm and about 15 mm high. The white shell is cap-like with a reticulate sculpture. The apex is curved backwards. The radial ribs number about 50 and are less pronounced than in other species of this genus. There is an exhalant slit in the anterior margin. Distribution This species is found on hard surfaces, usually under stones, from low water levels to
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Irmgard Schneeberger, also known by her pen name Sandra Paretti (Regensburg, 5 February 1935 - Zurich, 13 March 1994) was a German writer. Works Rose und Schwert (1967) Lerche und Löwe (1969) Purpur und Diamant (1971) Marlott 1970 (wieder als Clubausgabe in Anthologie von 1982: Das Beste von Konsalik… u.a.) Der Winter, der ein Sommer war (1972), filmed in 1976 als Heyne Taschenbuch; Wilhelm Heyne Verlag, München 1977, . Die Pächter der Erde (1975) Der Wunschbaum (1975), filmed in 2004 Das Zauberschiff (1977) Maria Canossa (1979) Das Echo deiner Stimme (1980) Paradiesmann (1983) Märchen aus einer Nacht (1985) Südseefieber (1986)
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Family & Friends Party is a video game developed by Spanish studio Gammick Entertainment for WiiWare. It was released in North America on March 2, 2009 and in the PAL regions on April 10, 2009. Overview Family & Friends Party is a minigame compilation for multiple players, with individuals or teams competing to complete all six games within a certain number of turns. The six minigames include variations and clones of hangman, charades, Simon and Pictionary. Reception IGN gave it 5.9/10, believing that players will only get the most enjoyment out of it with many players gathered together. WiiWare World
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Palmetto Leaves is a memoir and travel guide written by Harriet Beecher Stowe about her winters in the town of Mandarin, Florida, published in 1873. Already famous for having written Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), Stowe came to Florida after the U.S. Civil War (1861–1865). She purchased a plantation near Jacksonville as a place for her son to recover from the injuries he had received as a Union soldier and to make a new start in life. After visiting him, she became so enamored with the region she purchased a cottage and orange grove for herself and wintered there until 1884,charm of the region and its generally moderate climate but warned readers of "excessive" heat in the summer months and occasional cold snaps in winter. Her audience comprises relatives, friends, and strangers in New England who ask her advice about whether or not to move to Florida, which at the time was still mostly wilderness. Although it is a minor work in Stowe's oeuvre, Palmetto Leaves was one of the first travel guides written about Florida and stimulated Florida's first boom of tourism and residential development in the 1880s. Background Stowe buys an estate By the time Harriet Beecher Stowe(1811–1896) moved to Florida in 1867, she was already internationally famous for authoring Uncle Tom's Cabin, published as a serial between 1851 and 1852. The novel expounded upon her abolitionist views and was extraordinarily influential in condemning slavery in the United States. Stowe's opposition to slavery sprang from a moral passion based on her Christian faith. She had grown up the daughter of a Presbyterian minister, Lyman Beecher; seven of her brothers became ministers in Calvinist or Congregational denominations, and she married a minister. In 1860, Stowe's son Frederick "Fred" William Stowe enlisted in the First Massachusetts Infantry Regiment whenDescription of text and publication Stowe remained active, attending speaking engagements, writing, traveling frequently and publishing several novels while she was wintering in Mandarin. Though she promised her publishers, J. R. Osgood, another novel, she instead compiled a series of articles about Florida and letters to relatives in New England about her daily life. Some of them were first published in Christian Union, a local New England newspaper established by her brother Henry Ward Beecher. In all, twenty chapters make up Palmetto Leaves that vary in tone depending upon Stowe's audience. "Buying land in Florida", "Florida for Invalids", and "Ourauthor of Harriet Beecher Stowe in Florida, recognizes Stowe's tendency to spin everything she saw into something selectively positive. Stowe addressed this in the foreword to Sunny Memoirs of Foreign Lands, writing: If the criticism be made that every thing is given couleur de rose, the answer is, Why not? If there be characters and scenes that seem drawn with too bright a pencil, the reader will consider that, after all, there are many worse sins than disposition to think and speak well of one's neighbors. The object of publishing these letters is, therefore, to give to those who area riverboat passing through a swamp. Notes Citations Bibliography Robbins, Sarah (2007). The Cambridge Introduction to Harriet Beecher Stowe, Cambridge University Press. Stowe, Charles E. (1911). Harriet Beecher Stowe: The Story of Her Life, Houghton Mifflin Company. Stowe, Harriet B. (1873). Palmetto Leaves, J. R. Osgood and Company. (Hosted by the Florida Heritage Collection) Thulesius, Olav (2001). Harriet Beecher Stowe in Florida: 1867 to 1884, McFarland. Wilson, Forrest (1941). Crusader in Crinoline: The Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe, J. B. Lippincott Company. Further reading John T. Foster Jr. and Sarah Whitmer Foster, Beechers, Stowes, and Yankee Strangers: The Transformation of
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Hardy Wallace is an American winemaker living in Napa, California. Moving to California from Atlanta, Georgia, Wallace was a writer publishing the Dirty South Wine blog. In July, 2009, Wallace won in a field of 2,000 applicants in the "A Really Goode Job" promotion by Murphy-Goode, a winery in Healdsburg, California, to earn a position as the winery's "lifestyle correspondent". After fulfilling his contract with Murphy-Goode, Hardy began producing his own wines in 2010 under the Dirty and Rowdy Wine label. History Wallace is a former IT worker, who lost his job at Kodak in January, 2009. He was planning"web hits", as well as news coverage in the New York Times, Today Show, and other national media. As part of winning the promotion, Wallace earned a six-month contract as a wine writer and promoter for Murphy-Goode, as well as housing in Healdsburg. The winery stated that it had also offered jobs to several of the other finalists in the contest. Murphy-Goode considered the campaign a success. Total Sales increased 72%, Direct to Consumer sales increased 133%, Distribution presence increase 60%, CPM went from $7 to $.24 At the end of the six month position, Wallace was offered a role
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Withrow High School (originally East Side High School) is a public high school located on the east side of Cincinnati, Ohio. It is part of the Cincinnati Public Schools. History The school opened in 1919 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. Frederick W. Garber's firm was involved in the school's design, known for its arching entry bridge, clock tower, plantings and trees, campus, and large sports complex. Academics Withrow High School students have received national recognition for their academic achievements. While Withrow has received the highest rating ("Excellent") on the Ohio standardized tests threehave been improved due to gifts provided by alumni and the NFL team, the Cincinnati Bengals. School traditions Withrow has maintained many traditions over the years. The Withrow Band has been recognized nationally many times and was chosen to march in the Independence Day Parade in Washington, D.C. in 2008. Withrow students and teachers put on two variety shows for many years: The Withrow Minstrels and the Sounds of Withrow. Artifacts from Withrow's 100-year history are maintained in The Withrow Museum. Graduates have placed hundreds of testimonials on engraved bricks all around the entrance to the school. Ohio High School
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Raphael Kühner (22 March 1802 – 16 April 1878) was a German classical scholar. He was born in Gotha, educated at the University of Göttingen, and from 1824 to 1863, taught classes at the lyceum in Hanover. He published an edition of the Tusculanae Disputationes of Cicero (1829; fifth edition, 1874). His large Greek grammar, Ausführliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache (two volumes, 1834–35), was translated by William Edward Jelf (1842–45). An enlarged third edition in four volumes was produced by Friedrich Wilhelm Blass and Bernhard Gerth (1890–1904). His large Latin grammar, Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache (two volumes, 1877–79), has
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Björn Axel Åke Malcolm Hamilton (born March 28, 1945) is a Swedish count, engineer and politician. He has been a member of the Swedish parliament for the Moderate Party since 2002, serving as a member of the Riksdag for Stockholm County from 2002 to 2010. Early life and career Hamilton was born in Gothenburg on March 28, 1945, the son of Björn Hamilton and Barbro Pauli. Hamilton's paternal grandfather is physician Axel Hamilton. Hamilton graduated from Lund University in 1970, before gaining a Master of Science degree from the University of California, Berkeley in 1973. He subsequently worked as aconsultant at Kjessler & Mannerstråle and Scandiaconsult, and was a business area manager for Statens Järnväger from 1984 until 1992. Political career Between 1992 and 2002, Hamilton was chairman of the municipal council of Danderyd, Stockholm County. In 2002 he was elected as a member of the Riksdag for Stockholm County. During his tenure, he served as a member of the committees for transport (2003-2006), foreign affairs (2006-2007), the EU (2006–10) and nutrition (2007-2010). For several months in 2006 and 2007 he served as chairman of the EU committee following Göran Lennmarker's promotion to chairman of the foreign affairs committee.
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"Popscene" is a song by English alternative rock band Blur, released as a non-album single on 30 March 1992. Despite its relatively low chart placing, it has since become critically praised and regarded as one of the pioneering songs of the Britpop genre. Recording The song was first played live in Autumn 1991, and recorded at Matrix Studios in Holborn with producer Steve Lovell. The lyrics showed frontman Damon Albarn's distaste for the music business, complaining that there were too many insignificant indie bands. Musically, it was different to the style seen on the group's first album Leisure and featured... we thought it was a brilliant single." The band have since complained that the popularity of American grunge music contributed to the single's failure, as they felt the song had a very British feel. Guitarist Graham Coxon said "It was Nirvana that really fucked "Popscene" up." The experience of recording "Popscene" led the band to believe they should simply play music in their own style and not worry about trends. The "Britishness" of "Popscene" carried over to the group's second album, Modern Life Is Rubbish. The song was not released on the British version of the album, though itBritpop songs, and a starting point for the movement. The song had never been included on a UK Blur album, until 2009 when it was released on the compilation Midlife: A Beginner's Guide to Blur. Track listings All songs written by Albarn, Coxon, James and Rowntree. 7" and cassette "Popscene" – 3:12 "Mace" – 3:24 12" "Popscene" – 3:12 "I'm Fine" – 3:01 "Mace" – 3:24 "Garden Central" – 5:58 CD "Popscene" – 3:12 "Mace" – 3:24 "Badgeman Brown" – 4:47 Production credits "Popscene" produced by Steve Lovell "Mace", "Badgeman Brown", and "Garden Central" produced by Blur and John Smith
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Vickramasingapuram or V.K.Puram is a Municipal town in Tirunelveli District in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It falls under the Ambasamudram Taluk. As of 2011, the town had a population of 47,241. It is a small town located in Ambasamudram taluk and on the banks of river Thaamirabarani, 46 km from Tirunelveli, the capital of the District. This place is at the southernmost end of the Western Ghats which is called as "Podhigai Hill". Various religions' and castes' people are residing peacefully here. It is close to the Agasthiyar Falls, on the banks of the Thamirabarani river. The fallsFalls (35 km) Located between elevations ranging from 1000 to 1500 Metres, the Manjolai area is set deep within the Western Ghats within the Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve in the Tirunelveli District. Located on top of the Manimuthar Dam & the Manimuthar Water Falls, the Manjolai area comprises Tea Plantations, Small settlements around the tea plantations; Upper Kodaiyar Dam and a windy view point called Kuthiravetti The Tea Plantations and the whole of Manjolai Estates are tea operated by The Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation Ltd on Forest Lands leased by the Government of Tamil Nadu. There are 3 Tea Estates
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The Jewish Student Union, or JSU is an organization run by the Orthodox Union's youth group, NCSY. Created in 2002, JSU attempts to create Jewish culture clubs in public schools across the United States. JSU was created to serve a broad spectrum of Jewish teens from all different backgrounds and affiliations. Clubs bearing the "JSU" or "Jewish Student Union" name are run by the Orthodox Union. JSU clubs are aimed at educating Jewish youth in public schools about Jewish culture, heritage, and religion. The mission of Jewish Student Union is to encourage more Jewish teens attending public high schools "to
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Neal Shusterman (born November 12, 1962) is an American writer of young-adult fiction. He won the National Book Award for Young People's Literature for his book Challenger Deep. Early life Shusterman was born on November 12, 1962, and raised in Brooklyn, New York. From a young age, Shusterman was an avid reader. At age 16, Shusterman and his family moved to Mexico City. He finished high school there at the American School Foundation and is quoted as saying that "Having an international experience changed my life, giving me a fresh perspective on the world, and a sense of confidence Imight not have otherwise." He attended the University of California, Irvine, where he double-majored in psychology and theater, and he was also on the varsity swim team. Career After college, Shusterman worked as an assistant at Irvin Arthur Associates, a talent agency in Los Angeles, where Lloyd Segan became his agent. Within a year, Shusterman had his first book deal, and a screenwriting job. He currently lives in Florida. Shusterman has received numerous honors for his books, including the National Book Award in 2015 for his novel Challenger Deep, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and the 2008 California Young ReaderMedal for The Schwa Was Here. He served as a judge for the PEN/Phyllis Naylor Working Writer Fellowship in 2012. His novels Downsiders and Full Tilt have each won over 20 awards. Unwind has won more than 30 awards, and is now in development with Constantin Films as a feature film series. His novel Scythe is in development with Universal as a feature film. His book Skinjacker was a National Book Award winner and has comments from Orson Scott Card, BCCB, VOYA, and School Library Journal. Shusterman has also written for TV, including the Original Disney Channel movie Pixel Perfect,as well as episodes of Goosebumps and Animorphs. He is also adapting his novel Challenger Deep for 20th Century Fox. Fellow author Orson Scott Card invited Shusterman to write novels parallel to Ender's Game about other characters from the series, but schedules didn't permit it, and Card wrote Ender's Shadow and the subsequent series himself. Awards 2005 Boston Globe–Horn Book Award. 2008 California Young Reader Medal for The Schwa Was Here. 2015 National Book Award for Young People's Literature for Challenger Deep. Bibliography Fiction series The Accelerati trilogy (with Eric Elfman) Tesla's Attic (2014) Edison's Alley (2015) Hawking's Hallway (2017)[writing as Easton Royce] 10) Dark Matter (1999) [writing as Easton Royce] The X-Files Young Readers Series 8) Voltage (1996) [writing as Easton Royce] Novels Dissidents (1989) Speeding Bullet (1991) What Daddy Did (1991) The Eyes of Kid Midas (1992) The Aliens Approach (1996) [writing as Easton Royce] Mutiny (1996) [writing as Easton Royce] The Dark Side of Nowhere (1997) Downsiders (1999) Full Tilt (2003) Bruiser (2010) Challenger Deep (2015) Dry (2018) co-authored with Jarrod Shusterman, Simon & Schuster Picture books Piggyback Ninja (1994) Short stories Resurrection Bay (2013) [published only as an ebook] Short story collections Darkness Creeping: TalesTour (1999) How to Host a Teen Mystery: Barbecue with the Vampire (1999) How to Host a Murder: Saturday Night Cleaver (2000) How to Host a Murder: Maiming of the Shrew (2001) How to Host a Teen Mystery: Roswell That Ends Well (2002) How to Host a Murder: An Affair to Dismember (2003) Nonfiction Guy Talk (1987) It's Ok to Say No to Cigarettes and Alcohol (1988) Neon Angel: The Cherie Currie Story (1989) with Cherie Currie Kid Heroes: True Stories of Rescuers, Survivors, and Achievers (1991) Poems "Shadows of Doubt" (1993) References External links Shusterman at Facebook Shusterman at
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Nanjing Tech University (NJTech; ), colloquially known as Nan Gong Da (or Nangongda, 南工大), is a university located in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China. The university specializes in engineering. English language courses are compulsory. History Nanjing Tech University has a history of more than one hundred years as a cradle of education. It is a key institution of higher learning to be constructed in Jiangsu Province, and one of the first group of institutions of higher learning approved by the Chinese Ministry of Education for the training of "Excellent Engineers". Nanjing University of Technology was established by merging the former NanjingUniversity of Chemical Technology and the former Nanjing Institute of Architecture and Civil Engineering in May 2001. The origin of Nanjing University of Chemical Technology can be traced back to Sanjiang Normal School established in 1902, which later changed to be National Central University in 1928 and Nanjing University in 1949, whose engineering departments formed Nanjing Institute of Technology by merging related engineering departments of several other universities in 1952 and then the chemical engineering department became Nanjing College of Chemical Technology in 1958 and renamed Nanjing University of Chemical Technology in 1995, and the origin of Nanjing Institute ofArchitecture and Civil Engineering was formerly the Department of Mechanics of Tongji Medical and Engineering School established in 1915. Nanjing University of Technology became a comprehensive university with engineering as its focus. At the beginning of 2014, Nanjing University of Technology was renamed Nanjing Tech University. Programs and facts Today, Nanjing University of Technology consists of two campuses, one in Mofan Road, and the other one in Jiangpu, covering a total area of 4000 mu (or 267 hectares). The University has 26 colleges, and close to 30,000 students including over-seas students, undergraduates, and master's degree and PhD candidates. It has5 post-PhD stations, 35 PhD programs, 107 master's degree programs, 19 programs for Master of Engineering, and 80 undergraduate programs. And it has also become a university comprising eight branches of learning, namely, engineering, science, management, economics, liberal arts, law, philosophy, and medicine. Staffs and research With a long history and a good tradition in education, Nanjing University of Technology boasts a good number of prominent and learned scholars. Of the 2,800 employees with the University's faculty and staffs, there are more than 900 full professors and associate professors, including 1 academician of the Chinese Academy of Science, 3 academiciansof the Chinese Academy of Engineering, 2 outstanding professional technical talents, 2 chair professors of Chang Jiang Scholars Program of the Ministry of Education, 7 scientists-in-chief for the "National Key Development Program in Fundamental Research" (973 Program), 7 chair professors of the “Thousand Talents Plan”, 1 member of the expert committee for 863 Program, 7 winners of National Outstanding Youth Fund and 4 national distinguished teachers. Nanjing University of Technology has a strong contingent engaging in scientific research. In recent years, the University has undertaken 5,000 scientific research projects, including those of the 973 Program, the 863 Program, and theArchitecture College of Industrial and Artistic Design College of Energy Engineering College of Transportation Science and Engineering College of Geomatics Engineering College of Politics and Education College of Civil Engineering College of Urban Construction and Safety Engineering College of Environment College of Computer Sciences College of Economics and Management College of Law and Administrative Management College of Foreign Languages College of International Education Department of Mechanics Department of Physical Education College of Continued Education Pujiang College College of 2011 College of Safety Science And Engineering Campus Today, Nanjing Tech University consists of two campuses, one in Mofan Road, and theother one in Jiangpu, covering a total area of 4000 mu (or 267 hectares). The main campus, Jiangpu, is located in Jiangpu District, north of Nanjing City and east of ZhuJiang Town. The University has 26 colleges, 70 disciplines and close to 30,000 students including over-seas students, undergraduates, and master's degree and PhD candidates. The university offers undergraduate, Masters, and Doctoral degrees. It has 5 post-PhD stations, 35 disciplines for PhD programs, 107 master's degree programs, 19 programs for Master of Engineering, and 80 undergraduate programs. And it has also become a university comprising eight branches of learning, namely, engineering,
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Janina Borońska-Łągwa (born 16 June 1943, Łódź) is a Polish film and theatre actress, and the mother of the composer and vocalist Jacek Łągwa. Borońska debuted in theater in 1966. In 1967, she graduated from the National Film School in Łódź. She obtained a master's degree in 1969. In 1985 and 2000, she was awarded the Cross of Merit (in silver and gold, respectively). Selected filmography 1965: Return of doctor von Kniprode – girl at Klausen's (episode 2) 1967: More Than Life at Stake – radio-telegraphist Irena (episode 1) 1969: How I Unleashed World War II – Elżbieta 1970: Doctor
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Relations:[["Janina Borońska", "place of birth", "Łódź"]] |
### User:
The River Medina is the main river of the Isle of Wight, England, rising at St Catherine's Down near Chale, and flowing northwards through the county town Newport, towards the Solent at Cowes. The river is a navigable tidal estuary from Newport northwards, where it takes the form of a ria (a drowned valley). This occurred because the Medina used to be a tributary of what was once the "River Solent", with a larger catchment area. As the Solent valley flooded, the river received less water and more sediment, causing it to become more tidal. The river is bridged atNewport. Cowes is connected to East Cowes by a chain ferry known as the Cowes Floating Bridge. The river also has several small ferries which cater mainly for sailors. The name Medina comes from the Old English meaning "the middle one", and the current pronunciation was first recorded as 'Medine' in 1196. The river's only named tributary is Lukely Brook. The river is used by yachtsmen as a safe harbour. Along its banks there are old warehouses and wharves, where in the past flying boats, hovercraft and steam ships were developed and built. The Classic Boat Museum displays much of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["River Medina", {"description":'main river of the Isle of Wight'}], ["The Solent", {}], ["River", {}], ["Isle of Wight", {}]]
Relations:[["River Medina", "mouth of the watercourse", "The Solent"], ["River Medina", "instance of", "River"], ["River Medina", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Isle of Wight"]] |
### User:
Daryl Green is an American former professional soccer player. He played four seasons in the Western Soccer Alliance, one in the American Professional Soccer League and two in Major Indoor Soccer League. He later became a youth soccer coach. Youth Green was born in Seattle, Washington, and began playing soccer when he was seven. Two years later, his family moved to Montana, where there were no organized teams. When he was eleven, his family returned to Washington, settling in Kent, where he played youth soccer with the Bellevue, Washington Eastside Select and high school soccer at Tahoma Senior High School.He was All State in soccer in 1983 and 1984. Green did not excel only at soccer, but was an excellent high school basketball player, earning All State honors in that sport in 1984. After graduating from high school in 1984, Green attended the University of Washington, where he played as a defender on the men’s soccer team from 1984 to 1988 and is tied at sixth place on the school’s career assists list with 23. Amateur In 1986, Green began playing for a semi-pro team, F.C. Seattle, which played in the Western Soccer Alliance (WSA). While the team hadseveral collegiate players, such as Green, it also boasted the presence of national team and professional, ex-NASL, players. Green continued to play with F.C. Seattle, which changed its name to the Seattle Storm, not to be confused with the current women’s basketball team of the same name, through the 1989 season. National team In 1988, Green was called into the national team camp as it prepared for the upcoming Summer Olympics. Professional That year he was also drafted in the second round of the Major Indoor Soccer League college draft by the Wichita Wings. He played the 1988-1989 MISL seasonwith the Wings, then returned to Seattle for the 1989 outdoor season. The Wings traded Green to the Kansas City Comets with whom he played the 1989-1990 season. In 1990, he did not play for Seattle, but moved to the Portland Timbers of the American Professional Soccer League which had superseded the WSA that year. Coaching He became a youth soccer coach in Washington state. External links Wichita Wings: Darryl Green Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Seattle Category:American soccer players Category:Washington Huskies men's soccer players Category:Association football defenders Category:Western Soccer Alliance players Category:F.C. Seattle Storm players Category:Portland Timbers (1985–1990) players Category:Major
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Daryl Green", {"description":'American soccer player-coach'}], ["Seattle", {}], ["Wichita Wings", {}], ["Association football", {}]]
Relations:[["Daryl Green", "place of birth", "Seattle"], ["Daryl Green", "member of sports team", "Wichita Wings"], ["Daryl Green", "sport", "Association football"]] |
### User:
Alfredo Costanzo (born 3 January 1943, in Calabria, Italy) is a retired Italian born Australian racing driver. From 1980–1983 Costanzo won a record four Australian Drivers' Championship in a row, equalling the record set by Bib Stillwell from 1962–1965. Career Formula racing Born in Soveria Mannelli, Calabria, Italy, Costanzo was Australia's foremost domestic open wheeler driver in the late 70s and early 80s, proving equally adapt at winning races in the powerful Formula 5000 class as much as the nimble Formula Pacific cars that replaced them. Under the patronage of Porsche Cars Australia distributor Alan Hamilton, Costanzo won four AustralianDrivers' Championships, the CAMS Gold Star. His titles straddling the transition from F5000 to Formula Atlantic based Pacific cars. Costanzo commenced his Formula 5000 career racing a Lola T332 which he purchased in partnership with his brother in law and team mechanic, Marino Ciuffetelli. Marino was responsible for preparing Costanzo's race car and they shared three years competing in the Rothmans series from 1977 to 1979. They were able to secure sponsorship from Stock 84 Brandy and competed in all of the scheduled races for the 1979/80 F5000 race series. In 1981 Costanzo made the switch to race under AlanHamilton in the same Lola T430 as part of the Porsche Racing team. The first of Costanzo's four Gold Stars was won utilising a conventional Lola T430, but the following 1981 title, the last Formula 5000 national level title ever held globally, utilised a McLaren M26, modified for the task by Tiga Race Cars. Costanzo won the 1982 and 1983 Australian Drivers' Championships driving a Tiga FA81 powered by a 1.6-litre, 4 cyl Ford BDA engine. Driving the FA81, Costanzo also finished second to longtime rival John Bowe in his similarly powered Ralt RT4/85 in the 1984 championship, before AlanHamilton pulled out of open wheel racing following Costanzo's 4th place at the 1984 Australian Grand Prix leaving Costanzo without a drive and into semi-retirement. Despite winning numerous races and championships in various classes of open wheel racing, Alfie Costanzo never achieved his goal of winning the Australian Grand Prix. He competed in 11 AGP's between 1969 and 1984, with a best finish of 4th in 1980 and again in 1984. On both occasions he was the first resident Australian driver to finish behind international Formula One drivers. Alf led from the start of the 1983 Australian Grand Prix, andbuilt up a small lead over eventual winner Roberto Moreno of Brazil, before the diff in his Tiga FA81 failed on lap 25. Moreno later admitted that Costanzo would have been very hard to catch or pass. Although formula cars have evolved and have generally gotten faster over time, Costanzo still holds an outright lap record for a still active Australian race circuit. His time of 50.16 seconds set in the F5000 Lola T430-Chevrolet for the 2.41 km (1.5 mi) Symmons Plains Raceway has stood unchallenged since 23 March 1980. Touring Cars While a more than capable touring car driver,finishing second in the 1979 Hardie-Ferodo 1000 alongside Allan Grice he was generally overlooked for drives by the top teams and was never able to establish himself full-time in the category, and the popular Italian-Australian faded from the racing scene when he left Formula Pacific in at the end of the 1984 after finishing 4th in the Australian Grand Prix held at Melbourne's Calder Park Raceway. Costanzo was the leading local driver at the end, finishing behind winner Roberto Moreno (Brazil), World Champion Keke Rosberg (Finland), and Italian driver Andrea de Cesaris, though he did make a couple of shirt-livedcomebacks. At the insistence of his long-time open wheel rival turned touring car racer John Bowe, who to this day rates him as the best Australian driver he raced against, Costanzo was drafted into the Volvo Dealer Team in 1986 for the Castrol 500 at Sandown and the James Hardie 1000 at Bathurst. Driving a Volvo 240T, he failed to finish in both events. Again at Bowe's insistence, Alfie was the drafted into the Dick Johnson Racing Team for Sandown and Bathurst in 1988 to drive a Ford Sierra RS500. He finished 6th at the Sandown 500 with another formeropen wheel racer John Smith. The car he was to drive at the 1988 Tooheys 1000 at Bathurst finished 2nd overall but unfortunately Costanzo didn't get to drive. Team leader Dick Johnson's car expired on lap 22 and Bowe's car on lap 28. Both then moved to drive the Smith/Costanzo car. Smith had driven the opening stint which left Aflie a spectator on the day. The late 1990s saw a brief comeback as the lead driver for Marino Ciuffetelli's factory supported Maserati team of production specification Maserati Ghiblis in the Australian GT Production Car Championship. The comeback proved to beshort-lived however as the cars were uncompetitive against the Porsche, Ferrari and Mazda teams. Costanzo finished 10th in the championship in 1997, and 8th in 1998. Sports Cars In December 1984 Costanzo accepted an offer from that year's Australian Sports Car Champion Bap Romano to co-drive the Romano WE84 Cosworth in the 1984 Sandown 1000 as part of the 1984 World Endurance Championship, the first FIA World Championship event held in Australia. Despite never having driven the car previously (a prior commitment with Porsche Cars Australia saw him miss testing the car at Calder prior to the event), Alfie showcasedhis skill by qualifying the 3.9L V8 powered Romano in 13th (fastest in the special AC or Australian Cars class), almost two seconds faster than car owner Romano, and only 0.4 seconds slower than the Group C2 pole winning time. After brake and gearbox troubles in the race the pair finished 109 laps, 100 laps behind the winning Porsche 956, although, despite still running at the end, the car had not completed enough laps to be classified as a finisher. Costanzo was famously beaten by amateur driver Greg Dodd while racing Porsche coupes in Tasmania. Costanzo had three attempts atbeating Dodd’s lap time, but proved unsuccessful each time. Costanzo was gracious in defeat, querying Dodd on his reasons for not having been a professional driver, as his talent was “a rarity”. Prior to Sandown, Romano wanted Costanzo as his co-driver for the race, but both Wayne Eckersley and team manager Bruce Ayers tried to persuade him to go with either the 1984 Australian Drivers' Champion John Bowe or 1983 Sports Car champion Peter Hopwood for the event, reasoning that both would be easier on the car than Costanzo who although fast, had a reputation for being hard on equipment.Unfortunately their fears were to prove correct as over the course of the race meeting Costanzo broke no less than 4 gearboxes, 2 of them in the race itself. JPS Team BMW team manager Frank Gardner told Romano after the race that while standing at the back straight entry to Sandown's new infield section, he noted that Costanzo had been changing from 5th gear straight down to 2nd gear for the hairpin, missing 4th and 3rd gears completely. This was causing the rear tyres to lock up, the Cosworth engine to over-rev and had seen the gearbox twice stripped of2nd gear. Gardner, a championship winning driver in his own right during the 1960s and 1970s including having raced a number of WEC races in Europe at tracks such as Le Mans, Spa-Francorchamps and the Nürburgring, commented that it was an endurance race and that Alfie had 'butchered' the car by not respecting the equipment. Career results Complete World Sportscar Championship results (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) Complete Bathurst 1000 results * 1988 - Car #18 finished 2nd but Costanzo never got to drive. References Further reading Grant Nicolas, Alfredo Costanzo –
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Alfredo Costanzo", {"description":'Australian racing driver'}], ["Alfredo", {}], ["Calabria", {}], ["Costanzo", {}]]
Relations:[["Alfredo Costanzo", "given name", "Alfredo"], ["Alfredo Costanzo", "place of birth", "Calabria"], ["Alfredo Costanzo", "family name", "Costanzo"]] |
### User:
Doto sabuli is a species of sea slug, a Dendronotid nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Dotidae. Distribution This species was described from Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo, Mexico. It has also been reported from Lake Surprise, Florida and the Bahamas. Description The body is translucent with dense surface speckling of red-brown pigment on the back and sides. The areas at the base of the cerata are clear of pigment. There are no dark spots on the ceratal tubercles, just lots of small white glands below the skin. The maximum recorded body length is 5 mm. Ecology Minimum recorded
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Doto sabuli", {"description":'species of mollusc'}], ["Species", {}]]
Relations:[["Doto sabuli", "taxon rank", "Species"]] |
### User:
Stephanie Bond (born 16 May 1981 in Dargaville, New Zealand) is a New Zealand netball player. She played two years in the ANZ Championship for the Northern Mystics from 2008–09, but was not signed for the 2010 season, due to time restraints with her law career. Prior to the ANZ Championship, Bond spent time with both the Auckland Diamonds (2006-2007) and Otago Rebels (2001-2005) in the National Bank Cup. In 2012, she was called up into the Southern Steel for a game as cover for the injured Sheryl Scanlan. References Category:New Zealand netball players Category:Northern Mystics players Category:ANZ Championship players
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Stephanie Bond", {"description":'American novelist', "alias":['Stephanie Bancroft']}], ["Stephanie", {}]]
Relations:[["Stephanie Bond", "given name", "Stephanie"]] |
### User:
Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev (Russian: Дмитрий Сергеевич Гусев; February 15, 1915 – 1987) was a Red Army senior lieutenant and Hero of the Soviet Union. Gusev was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union and the Order of Lenin for his actions during the Lublin–Brest Offensive. At the time of the action, he was a platoon commander in the 134th Rifle Division. Early life Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev was born on 15 February 1915 in the village of Tyukovka in Novochopersk Uyezd of Voronezh Governorate to a peasant family. He graduated from five grades. He moved to Krasnoyarsk and became anSeptember. In November, Gusev was sent to take courses for 69th Army junior lieutenants. After the completion of the course in March 1944, he received a promotion to junior lieutenant and became a machine gun platoon commander of the 629th Rifle Regiment of the 134th Rifle Division. He also joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union around this time. The division fought in the Lublin-Brest Offensive. On 20 July, Gusev advanced two machine guns to the banks of the Bug River under heavy artillery fire and made possible the crossing of the river with his platoon's fire. After crossing29 July. Despite heavy German artillery fire, Gusev led his platoon across the Vistula. He then led his platoon into the battle for the expansion of what became known as the Puławy bridgehead. In conjunction with two rifle companies, Gusev's platoon captured the village of Lyutsimya from German troops. Gusev then prepared his platoon in positions to repulse counterattacks. The platoon reportedly repulsed 15 German counterattacks, reportedly killing more than 100 German soldiers and destroying up to 15 firing points. For his actions, Gusev was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union and the Order of Lenin on 24lake, machine gun fire was used to facilitate the 629th Rifle Regiment's advance, allowing the reduction of German defences on the lake's western shore. For his actions during the offensive, Gusev was awarded the Order of the Red Banner on 8 June. The division then fought in the Berlin Offensive. It advanced from the Kustrin bridgehead and fought in the destruction of German units surrounded southeast of Berlin. On 22 April, Gusev led his platoon in repulsing two German counterattacks near the village of Wilmersdorf. His platoon reportedly killed 70 German soldiers. Gusev was seriously wounded in this battle butreportedly did not leave the battlefield. For his leadership, Gusev was awarded a second Order of the Red Banner on 18 June. Postwar In 1946, Gusev was discharged as a senior lieutenant. He lived in Volgograd and was awarded the Order of the Patriotic War 2nd class for the 40th anniversary of the end of World War II on 11 March 1985. Gusev died in 1987 at the age of 72. References Category:1915 births Category:1987 deaths Category:People from Voronezh Governorate Category:Soviet Army officers Category:Soviet military personnel of World War II Category:Heroes of the Soviet Union Category:Recipients of the Order of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", {"description":'Soviet military personnel'}], ["Order of Lenin", {}], ["Hero of the Soviet Union", {}], ["Soviet Union", {}], ["Senior lieutenant", {}], ["Dmitry", {}], ["Order of the Red Banner", {}], ["Volgograd", {}], ["Military personnel", {}]]
Relations:[["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "award received", "Order of Lenin"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "award received", "Hero of the Soviet Union"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "country of citizenship", "Soviet Union"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "military rank", "Senior lieutenant"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "given name", "Dmitry"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "allegiance", "Soviet Union"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "award received", "Order of the Red Banner"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "place of death", "Volgograd"], ["Dmitry Sergeyevich Gusev", "occupation", "Military personnel"]] |
### User:
Pálinka is a traditional fruit brandy in Central Europe with origins in Hungary, known under several names, and invented in the Middle Ages. Protected as a geographical indication of the European Union, only fruit spirits mashed, distilled, matured and bottled in Hungary, and similar apricot spirits from four provinces of Austria can be called "pálinka", while "Tótpálinka" refers to wheat derived beverages. Törkölypálinka, a different product in the legal sense, is a similarly protected pomace brandy that is commonly included with pálinka. While pálinka may be made of any locally grown fruit, the most common ones are plums, apricots, apples,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Pálinka", {"description":'Central European alcohol', "alias":['Palinka']}], ["Fruit brandy", {}]]
Relations:[["Pálinka", "subclass of", "Fruit brandy"]] |
### User:
Kids when it aired locally on Slice in Canada. The series was cancelled after one season. Host World's Worst Mom is hosted by columnist and Free Range Kids advocate, Lenore Skenazy. She was nicknamed "World's Worst Mom" by the media for letting her nine-year-old son ride the New York Subway alone. She uses her knowledge as a parent to help parents give their children some independence to allow them to learn and grow as a person. Episodes View full episodes at the Slice TV website Episode 1 "Ten Year Old or Toddler?" Episode 2 "Five Kids on Lockdown" Episode 3
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["World's Worst Mom", {"description":'television series'}], ["Canada", {}]]
Relations:[["World's Worst Mom", "country of origin", "Canada"]] |
### User:
Actinomyces viscosus is a human and animal pathogen/pathobiont which colonises the mouths of 70% of adult humans. A. viscosus has a low level of virulence and is often mistaken with other actinomycetes. Morphology A. viscosus is Gram-positive, facultatively anaerobic, rod-shaped, and filamentous. It grows slowly on nonselective media, forming gray and white colonies. Pathogenesis A. viscosus causes periodontal disease in animals and has been isolated from human dental calculus and root surface caries, as well as the oral cavity of hamsters and actinomycotic lesions in swine, cats, and dogs. Furthermore, it has been shown to cause endocarditis in humans. A.viscosus has also been known to cause lung infections, but only in very few cases. Infections are treatable with penicillin for three-week therapies. Diagnosis A. viscosus infection symptoms are indistinguishable from Actinomyces israelii infection symptoms or Actinomyces bovis infection symptoms. A. israelii and A. bovis infections usually cause actinomycotic infections, but sometimes and very rarely will the pathogen be A. viscosus. A. viscosus colonies test positive for catalase and negative for indole. Treatment Multiple-week antibiotic therapies have cured actinomycotic infections caused by A. viscosus in every recorded case. Therapies include treatment with penicillin, sulfadimethoxine, flucloxacillin, clindamycin, tetracycline, and ticarcillin. A.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Actinomyces viscosus", {"description":'species of bacterium'}], ["Actinomyces", {}]]
Relations:[["Actinomyces viscosus", "parent taxon", "Actinomyces"]] |
### User:
Maria Bertram is a fictional character in Jane Austen's 1814 novel, Mansfield Park. Character Maria Bertram is the eldest daughter and third child in a wealthy family that owns the large country estate, Mansfield Park. Her father, Sir Thomas Bertram, is a baronet. She has two older brothers and one sister a year younger than herself. She grows up treated with stern distance by her father, kindly ignored by her indolent, self-centred mother, but spoiled and indulged by her Aunt Norris. When she is thirteen, her family brings a poor ten year-old cousin, Fanny Price, to live with them. Shehas little interest in Fanny and treats her with condescension, giving Fanny the toys of the least value to herself. She mocks Fanny for her ignorance and reports on Fanny's apparent deficiencies to her Aunt Norris. When she grows to adulthood, she is considered in the county to be a great beauty. Her attitude towards Fanny is little improved. Maria and Mr. Rushworth When Sir Thomas goes to Antigua to attend to problems on his plantations, Maria, being at the age to marry, is introduced by Aunt Norris to a young man named Mr. Rushworth. Although Mr. Rushworth is neitherintelligent nor handsome, he does have a large estate of 700 acres and is worth about 12,000 pounds per annum, Maria, eager to escape her parental home, agrees to his proposal. Maria and Mr. Crawford Immediately after Maria's engagement to Mr. Rushworth, a young man named Henry Crawford comes to the neighbourhood with his sister, Mary. Because Maria has no real affection for Mr. Rushworth, she does not scruple to flirt with Henry, and she also befriends Mary. Henry also favours her over her unattached younger sister, Julia, even though (or perhaps because) her engagement makes her unavailable, Julia, too,is attracted to Crawford. This puts Maria and her sister in competition with one another. When Henry leaves without proposing to her, she insists on going through with her marriage to Mr. Rushworth, partly out of disappointment and partly to escape her stifling home life. She goes to Brighton on her honeymoon, taking Julia with her, and from there the party proceeds to Mr. Rushworth's new London home. Maria's disgrace In London, Maria encounters Henry and their flirtation begins anew. It proceeds to an affair, which becomes publicly known. The two elope, bringing shame to her family and disgrace onher. In fear, Julia also elopes and marries Mr. Yates. Henry, predictably, refuses to marry Maria, and Mr. Rushworth divorces her for adultery. She moves to "another country" (another rural area of England) with her Aunt Norris and they live together financially supported by Sir Edmund. Notable portrayals Samantha Bond portrayed the adult Maria in the 1983 British television serial (Mansfield Park (1983 TV serial)) Elizabeth Eaton as the young Maria, and Victoria Hamilton as the teenage Maria in the 1999 film adaptation Tara Berwin as the younger Maria, and Michelle Ryan in the 2007 BBC television serial, aired on
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Maria Bertram", {"description":'fictional character in Jane Austen's 1814 novel, Mansfield Park'}], ["Jane Austen", {}], ["Mansfield Park", {}], ["Thomas Bertram", {}], ["Mr. Rushworth", {}]]
Relations:[["Maria Bertram", "creator", "Jane Austen"], ["Maria Bertram", "present in work", "Mansfield Park"], ["Maria Bertram", "sibling", "Thomas Bertram"], ["Maria Bertram", "spouse", "Mr. Rushworth"]] |
### User:
. The engine has a bore and stroke of and a bore spacing of . McLaren and Ricardo redeveloped the M838T engine for use in the McLaren P1. The engine has been upgraded to optimise cooling and durability under higher loads. The engine block has also been modified to incorporate an integrated electric motor as part of a hybrid drive train. The petrol engine produces at 7,200 rpm with an additional from the electric motor. At 4,000 rpm the engine is said to produce of torque while the electric motor can produce a maximum of from 0 rpm upwards. References
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["McLaren M838T engine", {"description":'V8 engine used in McLaren cars.', "alias":['M838T E']}], ["Petrol engine", {}]]
Relations:[["McLaren M838T engine", "instance of", "Petrol engine"]] |
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