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Alan Michael Anthony Sheehan (born 14 September 1986) is an Irish professional footballer who plays as a defender for club Lincoln City. He played for the Republic of Ireland national under-21 team. Club career Leicester City Sheehan joined Leicester City in July 2003 after being spotted by a scout whilst playing for Belvedere. He became a regular in both the Academy under 19s and the reserves, playing at left back. He also spent two months on loan at Mansfield Town in 2006–07 to gain regular first-team experience. A free-kick specialist, Sheehan made his breakthrough into the first team when CraigLevein named him in the starting lineup for City's final match of 2004–05 against Plymouth Argyle. The 18-year-old picked up the Academy Player of the Season at the club's 2005 awards ceremony. Sheehan signed a new two-year contract with the club that would keep him at the Walkers Stadium until the end of 2007–08. He scored his first ever competitive goal for Leicester in a 4–1 win over Watford with a deflected 25-yard shot on 25 August 2007, and his second in a 3–2 win over Nottingham Forest with a classy free-kick on 18 September. Following Leicester's 2–0 victory overBristol City on 24 November, Sheehan was named in the Championship Team of the Week two days later, together with teammates Stephen Clemence and Richard Stearman. Leeds United On 31 January 2008, Sheehan joined Leeds United on loan for the rest of the season, making his debut in a 2–0 defeat to Tranmere Rovers on 2 February 2008 replacing Ben Parker at left back. However, after just four matches in the role, Leeds boss Gary McAllister saw the need to provide extra competition in the position by signing Aston Villa's Stephen O'Halloran, also on loan. Despite O'Halloran suffering a seriousinjury in the warm up for his debut at Swindon Town, Sheehan still lost his Leeds place, this time to Frazer Richardson. Sheehan revealed that he had rejected a new contract offer from Leicester prior to signing for Leeds. He scored his first goal for the Yorkshire club in their 1–0 win over Doncaster Rovers on 1 April 2008, a trademark free-kick from 25 yards out. Sheehan was sent off in Leeds' 1–0 win over Yeovil Town for a two-footed tackle on Zoltán Stieber, however Leeds still confirmed their play-off spot in that match. The straight red card meant hewas suspended for the play-off semi-final matches against Carlisle United and also the final against Doncaster Rovers. After Leeds failed to earn promotion, Sheehan made his move to Leeds permanent on 1 July 2008, after his contract with Leicester expired. He signed a three-year contract with the club to provide competition for first-choice left back Ben Parker. Sheehan endured a tough early 2008–09 season. After scoring a long range goal against Crewe Alexandra in a 5–2 win, Sheehan was sent off for another two footed tackle in a match against Swindon Town. This cost him his place in the teamdue to suspension and was replaced by Aidan White. Another setback was to come after Sheehan was injured and forced to sit out for a long period of matches. During this run in, his injury was aggravated in an attempted come back against Rotherham United. After returning from injury, Sheehan wasn't involved in new manager Simon Grayson's plans. On 23 March 2009, Sheehan joined Crewe Alexandra on loan for the rest of the 2008–09 season. He made his debut a day later in the 2–2 draw with Milton Keynes Dons. Sheehan returned to Leeds for the upcoming 2009–10 season. Hemade two high-profile errors in the pre-season match against Blackburn Rovers when he gave away a penalty and was very lucky not to give away a second penalty. His poor performance did little to help him in his quest to be restored to the first team, with right footed central midfielder Andy Hughes being preferred at left back during Ben Parker's spell out with a hamstring injury. On 1 September 2009, Sheehan joined League One club Oldham Athletic on a one-month loan. Sheehan made his league debut for Oldham on 4 September in the 3–0 home defeat to Hartlepool United.Sheehan also played in the following 1–0 away defeat to Bristol Rovers, thus losing both of his first two appearances for Oldham. Sheehan gained two assists in a 2–0 win over Carlisle United. Carlisle's manager Greg Abbott proclaimed after the match that Sheehan was 'Premiership Class'. He scored his first Oldham goal in a 2–1 win over Milton Keynes Dons on 29 September 2009. Sheehan's impressive performances for Oldham led to discussions with Leeds about the possibility of extending his loan for a second month. On 2 October 2009, his loan was subsequently extended until 1 November. His form forOldham alerted scouts at other clubs with Nottingham Forest reportedly interested in signing Sheehan. On 1 November, Sheehan returned to Leeds United, with Oldham playing Leeds twice during the month of November. On 5 November, Oldham decided to sign Lee Hills on a one-month loan from Crystal Palace as opposed to extending Sheehan's loan spell once more. Swindon Town loan On 26 November 2009, Sheehan joined League One club Swindon Town on loan until 4 January 2010. He was given permission by Leeds to play in the FA Cup for Swindon. Sheehan made his debut for Swindon in the FACup match against Wrexham and he was substituted after 62 minutes. In the next match, Sheehan won a penalty for Swindon against Leyton Orient. On 5 January 2010, Sheehan's loan was extended at Swindon for the rest of the season including the play-offs if Swindon reached them. Danny Wilson commented on the loan extension by praising Sheehan's most recent performance against Fulham and said he seems to play better against the bigger teams. Sheehan, under the terms of the loan, would not be available to play for Swindon in their matches against his parent club Leeds. Sheehan and Swindon wentinto the final match of the season against Millwall knowing that should Leeds slip up that Swindon could grab an automatic promotion spot. However, Leeds ensured they earned the second automatic promotion spot with a 2–1 win over Bristol Rovers, thus finishing in second place. This meant Swindon were forced to settle for the play-offs regardless of their own result. They ended up losing 3–2 to Millwall. Swindon faced Charlton Athletic in the play-offs. Sheehan played in the play-off first leg which Swindon won 2–1. However, he missed the second leg at The Valley through injury which saw his Swindonteammates eliminate Charlton after a penalty shootout. Sheehan returned to play in the League One play-off final defeat to Millwall. He had to be substituted after 67 minutes due to aggravating his injury. Return to Leeds On 14 May 2010, Sheehan was placed on the transfer list at Leeds United and told to find a new club following the end of his loan spell at Swindon. He was demoted from squad number 11 to squad number 34 and didn't play a single match for Leeds' first team during the 2010–11 pre-season friendlies. Swindon Town On 31 August 2010, Sheehan returnedto Swindon on a one-year contract for what was believed to be a free transfer and was given the number 21 shirt. He was expected to face competition for the left back spot from Michael Rose who was signed from Stockport County earlier in the summer. Notts County On 3 June 2011, Sheehan signed for League One club Notts County on a two-year contract. He impressed with his attacking role from left back, and his set pieces – particularly free-kicks. Sheehan had a brief spell under Notts' manager Martin Allen at Leicester City. On 2 July 2013, Sheehan signed atwo-year contract extension. Sheehan was made club captain during the 2013–14 campaign; his performances also hadn't gone unnoticed, Sheehan was awarded the player of the year towards the end of season. Bradford City On 19 June 2014, Sheehan signed for League One club Bradford City on a free transfer. Sheehan scored a penalty on his league debut, a 3–2 home win over Coventry City. On 26 March 2015, Sheehan moved on loan to League One club Peterborough United until the end of 2014–15. After making two league appearances for Bradford at the beginning of 2015–16, Sheehan returned to Notts Countyon a three-month loan before briefly returning to Bradford City in January 2016. Luton Town On 22 January 2016, Sheehan signed for League Two club Luton Town on loan until the end of 2015–16. He scored a volley, his only goal during his loan spell for the club in a 1–1 draw with Yeovil Town on 2 February 2016. Sheehan played in every match, making 20 league appearances for the club during his loan spell. On 25 May 2016, Sheehan signed a permanent two-year contract with Luton, effective from 1 July 2016. His contract was extended by a further yearat the end of the 2017–18 season after a promotion clause was triggered as a result of Luton's promotion to League One. Sheehan signed a new two-year contract with Luton at the end of May 2018. Sheehan reached an agreement with Luton over the final six months of his contract and was released as a free agent on 31 January 2020. Lincoln City Sheehan signed for League One club Lincoln City on 2 March 2020 on a contract until the end of the 2019–20 season. International career Sheehan has made many appearances for his country at under 19 level andwas also called up by the Football Association of Ireland to attend a training camp before making his international debut for the under 21s against Israel U21 in June 2005. Career statistics Honours Luton Town EFL League Two runner-up: 2017–18 EFL League One: 2018–19 Individual PFA Team of the Year: 2017–18 League Two Luton Town Player of the Season: 2017–18 References External links Profile at the Football Association of Ireland website Category:1986 births Category:Living people Category:People from Athlone Category:Sportspeople from County Westmeath Category:Republic of Ireland association footballers Category:Republic of Ireland under-21 international footballers Category:Association football defenders Category:Belvedere F.C. players Category:Leicester
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Rex Burkhead (born July 2, 1990) is an American football running back for the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Nebraska and was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the sixth round of the 2013 NFL Draft. Because of Burkhead’s versatile skill set that enables him to run the ball, catch passes, block in pass protection, and play special teams, New England Coach Bill Belichick has described him as a rare “four-down player." Early years Burkhead was born in Winchester, Kentucky, but was raised in the Dallas-Fort Worth area of Texas. Heattended Plano Senior High School in Plano, Texas, where he played high school football for the Wildcats. Burkhead was on the varsity team for all four years of his high school career and even played in the division 5A basketball playoffs his senior year. As a junior, he rushed for 1,762 yards and 28 touchdowns, leading the school to a state semifinal appearance in the Texas 5-A football playoffs. He earned first-team all-district honors in basketball as a junior and senior, and as a freshman he was part of Class 5A state championship basketball team. College career As a freshmanat the University of Nebraska in 2009, Burkhead played in nine games, rushing for 346 yards on 81 carries with three touchdowns. As a sophomore in 2010, Burkhead was second on the depth chart behind senior Roy Helu. Burkhead played in all 14 games as the backup, and rushed for 951 yards on 172 carries and seven touchdowns. In 2011, Burkhead took over as the starting running back as a junior. Nebraska had little experience at running back that season, and Burkhead got the majority of the carries, including a school-record 38 carries against the Iowa Hawkeyes. He ended uprushing for 1,357 yards on 284 carries with 15 touchdowns and was named a first team All-Big Ten selection. In 2012, with expectations high, Burkhead sprained his knee in the season opener and missed two games before re-injuring the knee four games later. Burkhead missed six games total in the season, but still finished with five touchdowns and 675 yards on just 98 carries for a 6.9 yard average. He was considered the ninth or tenth best running back prospect for the 2013 NFL Draft in the top 150 overall. He graduated from Nebraska in three-and-a-half years with bachelor's degreetotaled three receptions for 34 yards and one rush for 23 yards. 2015 season Burkhead played in all 16 regular season games for the Bengals, seeing action primarily on special teams. As a running back, he rushed four times for four yards, while catching 10 passes for 94 yards and a receiving touchdown. 2016 season Burkhead appeared in all 16 regular season games for the Bengals, including one start at running back. With regular playing time on offense, he rushed 74 times for 344 yards and two touchdowns. He also caught 17 passes for 145 yards. In the Bengals' Week17 game against the Baltimore Ravens, Burkhead carried the ball 27 times for 119 yards. New England Patriots On March 14, 2017, Burkhead signed a one year contract with the New England Patriots worth up to $3.15 million. 2017 season On September 7, on Thursday Night Football, Burkhead made his debut as a member of the Patriots. He was in the starting lineup and had three rushes for 15 yards and one reception for eight yards in the 42–27 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs. On September 17, against the New Orleans Saints in Week 2, he recorded his first
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St Mary's Church was an Anglican parish church in Manchester, England. The expanding population of Manchester, caused by the onset of the Industrial Revolution, led to the foundation of several new churches there during the 18th century, among which St Mary's was one. St Ann's Church had been consecrated in 1712 and was followed by St Mary's in 1756. Others, such as St John's, were constructed in the next few years. The church was sited at Parsonage Croft, an area of land between Deansgate and the River Irwell that had for centuries been the property of Manchester Collegiate Church. Itwas constructed by the warden and fellows of the Collegiate Church, who obtained an act of Parliament for the purpose in 1753. The foundation stone was laid in the same year and the church was consecrated in 1756,. The living was presented by the Collegiate Church, who appointed Humphrey Owen as the first rector. The structure was a rather plain building in the Doric style and its architect received some criticism. It had a tower of around , topped with a lantern comprising eight Ionic pillars on which stood a spire. This was the tallest structure in Manchester at thetime and not without problems. The top of the spire was damaged in a storm in 1824 and truncated some time afterwards; in 1854, it was removed entirely. Initially within the parish of Manchester, St Mary's became a parish church in its own right on 29 March 1839. Affluent congregations generally dwindled as the centre of Manchester became increasingly a commercial area. The last regular service at the church was held in December 1887 and it was closed after a service on 4 October 1890, when the extent of dilapidation was such that the last rector, Richard Tonge, had topause his service temporarily because the copy of the Bible that he was using was missing some pages. The building was demolished in 1891 and the adjacent Parsonage House, once home to Thomas La Warr, suffered a similar fate in 1897. The site of the two buildings, now known as Parsonage Gardens, is now an open space and designated conservation area in the city. Some of the church plate, including some chalices, patens and an almsdish, was transferred to St Ann's. See also List of churches in Greater Manchester References External links Category:Churches in Manchester Category:1756 establishments in England Category:1890
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Talim Island is the largest lake island in Laguna de Bay, the largest lake in the Philippines. The hilly island is within the boundaries of the Province of Rizal, under the jurisdiction of two municipalities. The western side is part of the municipality of Binangonan, while the eastern section is part of Cardona. The island is volcanic in origin and forms the southwest rim of the Laguna Caldera. Volcanism after the formation of the caldera created the maars and volcanic craters at the southern end of Talim Island, the largest of which is a crater surrounding Brgys. Balibago and Tuna.Political subdivision The island consists of 24 barangays that lie along its shores, 17 belongs to the town of Binangonan and 7 to Cardona. Geography Talim Island is located almost at the center of Laguna de Bay, a three-lobed lake the center of which is the Laguna Caldera. The northernmost tip of the island is separated from the mainland by Diablo Pass, which is only about at the narrowest. The southernmost tip of the island is called Talim Point. The highest point of the island is Mount Tagapo, known locally as "Bundok ng Susong Dalaga" (Maiden's breast mountains) for theconical hill at its peak resembling the female breast. The hill is among the several in the Tagalog region that are called as such because of its shape. This feature is best observed from neighboring Mount Sembrano in the Jalajala peninsula across the lake. Economy The island is rich in bamboo grass, which the islanders make into different types of furniture such as bamboo sofas, cabinets, tables, chairs and a lot more. It is their main source of living, while lake fishing is only secondary. Also, along the lake are fish pens that supports the everyday needs of the islanders.
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The Amazing Extraordinary Friends is a New Zealander superhero television series featuring the adventures of a modern-day superhero teenage boy and his friends. The protagonist is a teenage boy called Ben Wilson who finds out about a superhero insignia which gives him powers. He has difficulty with them, especially flight and using eye lasers at first, but soon learns to control them fairly well. His grandfather is also a superhero, and this is how he comes to acquire the insignia. His mother hates all the superhero business going on for the sake of safety, but his father and stepfather both
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Patrick Pilet (born October 8, 1981) is a French professional racing driver currently racing for Porsche Motorsport as a factory driver in the FIA World Endurance Championship and other racing series. He has competed in major sports car endurance races like the 24 Hours of Le Mans, 24 Hours of Daytona, 24 Hours of Spa, 12 Hours of Sebring and Petit Le Mans. Born in Auch, Gers, Pilet won the Championnat de France Formula Renault 2.0 in 2004 and competed at the Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup. In 2005 he switched to Formula Renault 3.5 Series, finishing 11th having missed threerounds. He drove full-time in Formula Renault 3.5 in 2006, but he finished 21st. Plet switched to sports car racing in 2007, and was crowned Porsche Carrera Cup France champion with IMSA Performance. In 2009 and 2010 he raced full-time for IMSA Performance at the International GT Open together with Raymond Narac in a Super GT class Porsche 911. He finished 5th in 2009 with 6 wins in 16 races and 7th in 2010 with 4 wins in 16 races. He finished second at the 24 Hours of Spa, also in an IMSA Performance Porsche with Narac, Patrick Long andRichard Lietz. He drove for Team Art Taste, a new Japanese Super GT team using Porsche 911 GT3R, in 2011 Super GT season. Also, he raced full-time for IMSA Performance at the Le Mans Series, again with Porsche with Wolf Henzler as partner, collecting one podium. Racing record Career summary Complete Formula Renault 3.5 Series results (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) † Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed more than 90% of the race distance. Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results Complete FIA World Endurance
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The West Bengal Chess Association (WBCA) the apex body for the game of chess in West Bengal, India, was dissolved in 2012 after the formation of the Bengal Chess Association. It was formed in the late 1959s and was affiliated with the All India Chess Federation. Affiliates The WBCA used to have a number of affiliated districts bodies, academies and clubs under it. Affiliated District Associations North 24 Parganas District Chess Association South 24 Parganas District Chess Association Howrah District Chess Association Hooghly District Chess Association Burdwan District Chess Association Purba Midnapur District Chess Association Jalpaiguri District Chess Association DarjeelingDistrict Chess Association Murshidabad District Chess Association Coochbihar District Chess Association Uttar Dinajpur District Chess Association Nadia District Chess Association Affiliated Academies and Clubs Alekhine Chess Club Dibyendu Barua Chess Academy Calcutta Chess Academy Calcutta Chess Club Behala Chess Club Lake Town Cultural Organization Sealdah Sports & Cultural Organization Gariahat Chess Club City Chess Forum Pulse Chess Academy Events The WBCA had organised some notable events in the state. On December 4 to 14, 1996, the WBCA organized for the first time in India the Commonwealth Open Chess Championship at Kolkata. In 1999, the WBCA organised the National Age Group
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The Australian women's national basketball team is nicknamed the Opals, after the brightly coloured gemstone common to the country. From 1994 onwards, the Opals have been consistently competitive and successful having won nine medals at official FIBA international tournaments (Olympics and World Cups), highlighted by a gold medal winning performance at the 2006 World Championship in Brazil. At the now-defunct regional Oceania Championship for Women, the Opals won 15 titles. Effective in 2017, FIBA combined its Oceanian and Asian zones for official senior competitions; following this change, the Opals compete in the FIBA Women's Asia Cup. History 1950-60s: Beginnings Basketballarrived in Melbourne in 1905, but the first major international women’s tournament was the 1953 FIBA World Championships held in Chile. Although the Opals did not qualify for the first tournament, they did, however, qualify for the 1957 Championships held in Brazil. Captained by Lorraine Eiler, the Opals defeated Cuba and Peru. Sixteen year-old Bronte Cockburn led the scoring for Australia with an average of 9.5 points per game, but the inexperienced team ultimately finished in 10th place. Since then, the Opals have helped increase the popularity of the sport in Australia. Australia would not get the opportunity to participateat the 1959 World Championship held in Moscow because at the time, the Australian Government would not allow the team to travel to the USSR. The Opals would not qualify for a World Championship again until the 1967 contest in Czechoslovakia. With an entirely new team and a single victory over Italy, Australia finished in 10th position for the second time. Team captain, Jean Forster, led the scoring for Australia with an average of 21.2 points per game, with a tournament high of 34 against Brazil. Her 21.2 points per game would remain unchallenged for 35 years. 1970s: Early developmentfor women’s basketball, but Opals did not qualify for the tournament. Their next major competition would be the 1979 World Championships in South Korea, which would prove to be their first taste of success. The coach again was Jim Madigan, and the squad featured some of the faces of the Opals for the next decade such as Jenny Cheesman, Robyn Maher, Julie Nykiel, Karin Maar and Patricia Mickan. The team would have early success defeating Italy and France, as well as thrashing Malaysia 119–14. Australia would lose their next three games, but bounced back winning their final game over Japanto finish in fourth place, their best international result to that time. 1980s: Into the Olympics In the early days of women’s Olympic basketball, only six countries competed in the tournament, and the host country received an automatic entry. Therefore, there were 22 countries competing for the remaining five spots in 1980 Olympics held in Moscow. In the preliminary tournament, the Opals fell to the USA and Hungary, and did not qualify for the Olympics. Three years later, the team traveled to Brazil for the 1983 World Championships, looking to demonstrate that their 1979 success was no accident. Despite anearly victory over Japan, Australia failed to advance and finished in 11th place. The Opals were not expected to participate at the 1984 Olympic Games held in Los Angeles. However, following the decision by Cuba to boycott the games, the door was opened for the Opals to compete in their first ever Olympics. Led by head coach Brendan Flynn, and team captain Jenny Cheesman, the Opals played competitively in every game, but finished fifth out of the six teams. The next tournament for the Opals was the 1986 World Championships in Moscow. The first game against Hungary was a twoovertime thriller that the Opals lost 79–77. The game set the tone for the tournament, and despite some close finishes against the top rated teams, Australia finished in ninth place. The Opals then headed into the 1988 Seoul Olympics with a medal hope, but they lost the first game to host nation Korea. The Opals bounced back and defeated Bulgaria, meaning that only the powerful Soviet Union stood between them and a semi-finals berth. In a major upset, the Opals defeated the USSR 60–48, setting up a meeting against Yugoslavia. In a memorable game, the Opals lost a closely contestedOpals came back from seven point halftime deficit to beat Bulgaria 73–71 and finish in sixth place. Fifteen teams competed for the five open spots at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, and despite a respectable 4–2 record at the preliminary tournament, the Opals did not qualify. Two years later, Australia played host to the 1994 FIBA World Championships. Led by guard Shelley Sandie's 11.9 points per game, the team scored victories over Japan, Italy, Slovakia and Canada to set up a semi-finals match against China. The Opals held an early lead, but China mounted a second half comeback led by HaixiaZheng’s 36 points, and Australia just lost by a single point 66–65. In the bronze medal game, Australia played the United States, and despite a small halftime lead, the Opals lost a close game 100–95. The loss however, resulted in a respectable fourth-place finish. The young 1994 team featured the backbone of Australian teams over the next decade; Rachael Sporn, Trisha Fallon, Michelle Brogan, Allison Tranquilli, Sandy Brondello, Annie La Fleur and Jenny Whittle. At the 1994 tournament, the team also adopted the Opals as its nickname. At the 1996 Summer Olympics held in Atlanta, the Olympic tournament was expandedto twelve teams, making an easier path for Australia to qualify. Captained by Robyn Maher, the Opals started off with strong wins over South Korea, Zaire, and Cuba before losing to eventual gold medalist USA and Ukraine. Australia then persevered through an overtime game against Russia to set up a semi-finals match against the United States. The US won the game 93–71, sending the Opals to a rematch against the Ukraine for the bronze medal. Australia held back a second half comeback by the Ukraine to win the game 66–56, earning Australia its first ever international basketball medal for eithermen or women. In 1998, the Opals looked to build off the bronze medal at the World Championships in Germany. The team featured 17-year-old future star Lauren Jackson, and was led by Michelle Brogan’s average of 13.1 points per game. Australia put together a dominant performance, winning their first seven games before losing to Russia 82–76 in a close semi-final match. In the bronze medal game, Carla Boyd’s 26 points proved too much for Brazil, and the Opals won 72–67 to earn their second bronze medal in international play. 2000s: A decade of medals & World Champions With Sydney hostingthe 2000 Olympic Games, the Opals gained automatic entry into the tournament. Captained by Michele Timms, the team started out with dominating performances winning all of their first seven games, sending them to their first ever gold medal match, against the USA. The American team proved too strong for the Opals however, as they won 76–54. Australia won the Silver Medal, their best result in international competition at the time. In 2002, the Opals looked to continue their success in China at the World Championships. Coached by Jan Stirling, captained by Kristi Harrower, and powered by Lauren Jackson’s 23.1 pointsper game (which led the tournament), Australia won its first five games all by double figures. In the second round the Opals lost to Brazil, but bounced back with a 78–52 victory over France in the quarterfinal. In the semi-finals, the Opals lost to eventual gold medalist USA, but recovered the next day to capture the bronze medal with a convincing 91–63 win over South Korea. At the 2004 Olympics held in Athens, Greece, the Opals were led by Lauren Jackson’s tournament best 22.9 points and 10 rebounds per game. With Penny Taylor contributing with 14.8 points per game, AustraliaAustralia began the tournament with a forfeit victory over Lithuania. They continued the trend by winning their next seven games decisively, with only one contest being decided by less than 10 points. In the gold medal game against Russia, the Opals led throughout, paced by Penny Taylor’s 28 points and Lauren Jackson’s 11 rebounds. At the final buzzer, the scoreboard read Australia 91, Russia 74; a convincing victory that delivered Australia’s first ever basketball gold medal. Penny Taylor was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Opals looked to reaffirm their title asWorld Champions. In the lead up, Australia went undefeated against Belarus, Brazil, South Korea, Latvia, Russia, Czech Republic and host China to set up a third straight gold medal match against the United States. The Opals had trouble hitting the basket and shot just 24% en route to a 92–65 defeat. The team earned their third straight Olympic silver medal, and their seventh straight international medal finish. The 2000s was a golden era for the Opals, winning at least a bronze medal at every official FIBA tournament. 2010s: Ushering a new era In 2010, the 16th edition of the WorldChampionship was held in the Czech Republic. Pre-tournament favourites Australia, USA, and Russia, dominated play in the first two rounds. In the quarterfinals, however, Australia suffered a shock 79–68 loss to the Czech Republic. The loss meant that the Opals could not finish any higher than 5th place, its worst international result since the early 1990s. Looking to rebound from their disappointing 2010 result, the Opals qualified for the 2012 Olympic Games in London by beating New Zealand three games to nil in the 2011 FIBA Oceania Championship. They finished the Olympic preliminary series with a 4 – 1 record,losing to France in game 2, but after Belinda Snell sank a well behind the half-court line 3 point shot with less than one second on the clock to send the game into overtime. Against Russia, Liz Cambage became the first woman in Olympic history to successfully slam dunk a basketball. In the quarterfinal against China, Lauren Jackson became the Olympic Games record holder for points scored, overtaking Brazilian legend Janeth Arcain's tally of 535 points. The Opals accounted for China 75–60 to set up a semifinal game with their long-time rivals USA. Despite holding a half-time lead, the Opalsruled-out because of the injury. This resulted in the selection of seven debutants into the squad of 12, a move seen as ushering in a new era of Opals basketball. Despite the loss of veteran players, the Opals went through the preliminary rounds and quarter-final undefeated, setting up a semi-final clash with USA. In a hard-fought game, the Opals cut the lead from 16 points to just six early in the final quarter, before losing 82–70. The Opals would however claim their third bronze medal at world championships with a comfortable 74–44 win against host nation Turkey. Penny Taylor wasnamed to the tournament All-Star Five. The Opals qualified for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro following a series win against New Zealand in August 2015. On 31 March 2016, Lauren Jackson announced her retirement from basketball, citing a chronic knee injury as the reason for her decision. The Olympic squad was announced on 12 July 2016 and included seven Olympic debutants and only three players from the 2012 squad. Notable exclusions included three-time Olympic medallist Suzy Batkovic, reigning WNBL MVP Abby Bishop and Rebecca Allen. Despite slow starts which had plagued Australia throughout the tournament, the Opals finishedRio Olympics, Brendan Joyce was replaced in April 2017 by former Opals player and Phoenix Mercury head coach, Sandy Brondello. Unlike previous years, the Opals qualified for the 2018 World Cup through the FIBA Women's Asia Cup held in India where they won a silver medal. Kelsey Griffin was named tournament most valuable player. With basketball returning to the Commonwealth Games for the first time since 2006, the Opals easily accounted for England in the final winning the gold-medal game 99–55. At the 2018 World Cup held in Spain, the Opals led their group with a 3–0 record. They thendefeated China 83–42 in the quarter-final and Spain 72–66 in the semi-final to set up a gold-medal final with their long-time rivals USA. The Opals lost the game 73–56 with head coach Sandy Brondello stating a lack of offence proved their downfall. Liz Cambage led the tournament scoring with an average of 23.8 points per game and was named to the All-Star Five. Competitive record Olympic Games Women's basketball was introduced as an Olympic sport at Montreal in 1976. From 1976 to 1992, only six countries (teams) participated in the Olympic tournament. However, in 1996 at Atlanta the tournament wasexpanded to twelve teams. Through the 2016 Olympics, Australia qualified for the Olympic Games through competing in the FIBA Oceania Basketball Championship held each four years in the year preceding the games. Typically, this tournament featured either a two or three-game series between Australia and New Zealand. With the Oceania Championship having been discontinued after its 2015 edition, and FIBA having removed all women's continental championships except for EuroBasket Women from the Olympic qualification process in 2017, Australia will qualify for future Olympics through a two-stage process, starting with an Olympic pre-qualifying tournament involving Asian and Oceanian national teams inthe year before the Olympics and followed by a worldwide Olympic qualifying tournament held in the year of the Games. World Cup The first official Women's World Cup, known as the Women's World Championship through its 2014 edition, was held in Chile in 1953. The tournament was expanded to 16 countries (teams) in 1990. Since 2017, Australia qualifies for the World Cup through competing in the FIBA Women's Asia Cup, held each four years in the year preceding the Women's World Cup. Before then, Australia qualified through the FIBA Oceania Championship. Typically, this tournament featured either a two or three-gameseries between Australia and New Zealand. FIBA discontinued the Oceania championships for both women and men after their respective 2015 editions, combining FIBA Asia and FIBA Oceania into a single zone for purposes of World Cup and Olympic qualification. Asia Cup Commencing in 2017, teams from Oceania and Asia zones competed together for the first time ever with the top four finishing teams qualifying for the 2018 World Cup. Statistics Team Current roster Roster for the 2018 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup. Past World Cup squads Past Olympics squads International caps The following is a chronological list of Australian playerswho have played at official senior FIBA international tournaments (Olympic Games and World Cups). The list includes both past and present players. Active players are shown in bold. Where two or more players debuted in the same series, their cap number is determined by their official uniform number (and not alphabetically). As of the 2018 World Cup, 111 players have represented Australia at Olympic Games and World Cups. There were no debutants at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney. Deceased Individual achievements Opals all-time games played Legend Games played is current as at the completion of the London Olympic Gamesin August 2012. (*) denotes the player is a member of the Australian Basketball Hall of Fame. Italic denotes the player is still active. Opals Team Captains Legend Tournaments are those officially sanctioned by FIBA. See also Australia women's national under-19 basketball team Australia women's national under-17 basketball team Basketball Australia Australian Basketball Hall of Fame List of Olympic medalists in basketball Australia men's national basketball team List of Australian WNBA players Australia women's national 3x3 team Australia women's national wheelchair basketball team References External links Basketball Official website FIBA profile AustraliaBasket.com – Australia Women Current Squad Australia Basketball Records
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Alcaucin () is a town and municipality in the province of Málaga, part of the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain. It borders with the province of Granada. The municipality is situated approximately 54 kilometers to the city of Málaga. It is 507 km from the capital of Madrid. The name was derived from al-kautín, the Arabic of "the arches." It has a population of approximately 1,600 residents, partly living in the hamlet of Puente Don Manuel. Natives of the town are called Alcaucineños and have the nickname of tiznaos. Geography The village of Alcaucín extends its lands tothe north of the Axarquía, between the mountains of the Sierra de Alhama and Sierra de Tejeda with the corridor of Periana. It includes the "Boquete de Zafarraya" an important mountain pass in the mountainous region of Axarquía. It adjoins the Sierras of Tejeda, Almijara and Alhama Natural Park to the east. Being in the Sierra de Tejeda, the end is rather abrupt as it passes from the Maroma 2,066 meters to 200 meters in Puente Don Manuel. The surrounding terrain is predominantly dense forest. Flora and fauna In this environment lies one of the richest areas of flora andfauna of the Axarquía. Within the vegetation, the most characteristic feature is the pine forest, which in this case is of Aleppo and is repopulating. The most common tree species are poplars, cedars, oaks, and cypress. There are terebinth shrub species such as, gorse, jaguarzos, ivy thickets, and vines. Herbs such as thyme, rosemary, palmitos and torviscos can be found here as well. Closer to the "Senos de la Tejada", the pines are disappearing to make way for size shrub species such as juniper, savin, hawthorn, and yew, which is currently on the decline, although is teem on some cliffscity of the municipality is from the areas of Málaga that can testify as the first to be inhabited by man, as documented in the "Boquete de Zafarraya" excavations that state that in 1983 human remains appeared including a jaw, which belonged to a Neanderthal man. During the period of Phoenician colonization, they laid the foundations of the fortress of Zalía, but it was the Arabs who built the present castle in 1485 until it was conquered by the Catholic Monarchs. During the Andalusian earthquake of 25 December 1884, 134 houses in the municipality collapsed, 22 in the nucleus (6
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the city. Every year the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) conducts a series of surveys on its highways in the state to measure traffic volume. This is expressed in terms of average annual daily traffic (AADT), which is a measure of traffic volume for any average day of the year. In 2011, WSDOT calculated that between 3,900 and 21,000 vehicles per day used the highway, mostly in the Yakima area. History Broadway Avenue was originally part of Primary State Highway 18 (PSH 18), which extended from George to Ritzville. PSH 18 was created in 1937 and crossed the westernpart of Moses Lake into Downtown Moses Lake on a bridge that was built in 1924. U.S. Route 10 (US 10) was re-routed onto PSH 18 in the 1940s, and both highways began using a proposed southern bypass of the city in 1955. A road connecting Moses Lake to Odessa in the northeast was proposed in the late 1940s, and was signed into law in 1955 as Secondary State Highway 7E. Interstate 90 (I-90) replaced US 10 and PSH 18 during the creation of the Interstate Highway System in 1956, and SSH 7E was replaced by State Route 171 (SR
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Killa Abdullah or Qilla Abdullah or Abdullah Qilla () is a district in the north west of Balochistan province of Pakistan. Killa Abdullah was separated from Pishin District and made a new district in June 1993. The population of Qilla Abdullah District was estimated to be over 120,000 in 2012, the vast majority being Pashtuns. 99.5% of the people of the area are Muslims. Pashto is the first language of % of the population. Topography Qilla Abdullah district lies between 30–04' to 31–17' North Longitude in the foothills of the Shela Bagh Mountain range. It is bordered by Pishin Districtin the east, Quetta District in the South and by Afghanistan in the west. The geographical area of the district is 5,264 km2. It is composed of two sub-divisions; Gulistan and Chaman. The general character of the district is mountainous. Its northern area is covered by the Toba Plateau. The hill ranges are fairly uniform in character. They consist of long central ridges with numerous spurs. These spurs vary in elevation from 1,500 to 3,300 metres. Soil Qilla Abdullah is a small valley bordered by mountains. The valley floor is covered with unconsolidated alluvial sediments that are mostly composed ofclay, silt, silty clay and clayey silt. All these sediments were deposited in the valley by the seasonal streams that flow across the valley (generally north to south). The soil is of loamy nature in the Gulistan area, while the soil of Tehsil Chaman is sandy clay—gravel (admixture). The sandy fraction increases towards the mountain ranges. The scarcity of water in the area and the semi-desert climatic conditions have limited trees and shrubs to grow. Climate The climate of the district Killa Abdullah is generally dry and temperate. The adjoining districts have somewhat deviating temperatures, owing to different elevations. Thewas given the status of a district. Administrative subdivisions The district is administratively subdivided into the following tehsils: Chaman Dobandi Gulistan Qilla Abdullah Education According to the Pakistan District Education Rankings 2017, district Killa Abdullah is ranked at number 111 out of the 141 ranked districts in Pakistan on the education score index. This index considers learning, gender parity and retention in the district. Literacy rate in 2014–15 of population 10 years and older in the district stands at 27% whereas for females it is only 8%. Post primary access is a major issue in the district with 87% schoolsAilaan district education rankings 2017, the district is ranked at number 121 out of the 155 districts of Pakistan for primary school infrastructure. At the middle school level, it is ranked at number 113 out of the 155 districts. These rankings take into account the basic facilities available in schools including drinking water, working toilet, availability of electricity, existence of a boundary wall and general building condition. 7 out of 10 schools do not have electricity in them. 3 out 5 schools lack a toilet and 2 out of 5 schools do not have a boundary wall. 1 out of
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Habitat for Humanity GTA, established in 1988, is a non-profit, non-denominational Christian housing organization that builds simple, decent, affordable homes in partnership with low-income families. Habitat Toronto is an affiliate of Habitat for Humanity Canada. History Habitat for Humanity Toronto was a local grassroots organization from its founding in 1988 to 2000. Every couple of years the organization built one or two homes thanks to a small group of dedicated volunteers and corporate donors. In 2001 Habitat Toronto increased its building capacity by completing 6 homes in only 9 days on Luttrell Ave in Toronto's east end. Construction of thosehomes began with a ground breaking ceremony led by the co-founder of Habitat for Humanity, Millard Fuller. Building on the momentum from that build in 2002 the organization partnered with World Youth Day to build a home at Downsview Airport that would be blessed by Pope John Paul II. The home was later moved to Lovilla Blvd. In 2009, over 80 homes were built at three different build sites, due to the generosity of committed volunteers and donors. In 2014 Habitat Toronto, Habitat Brampton, Habitat York merged to form Habitat GTA. Habitat GTA does not cover Mississauga, Durham, or Halton,Habitat community, or other Habitat programs, such as the ReStore. They must also attend a series of workshops on home ownership. Families must be able to afford a mortgage and not have an overwhelming amount of debt. They must be a legal resident of Canada for at least three years and be able to show a consistent work history for those three years. Building Green In 2007-2008 Habitat Toronto successfully built the first official Energy Star certified homes in Canadian Habitat History. In 2009, the organization broke ground on Canada's first solar-paneled homes built by Habitat for Humanity at thecan be built from the mortgage income alone. Events Habitat GTA holds many special events during the year at build sites and other venues. These events can be a special build day for a celebration such as Mother's Day Build. Actress and supermodel Monika Schnarre participated in the 2010 Mother's Day Build with her mother. Each year Habitat GTA holds a "blitz build" that targets a specific group and tries to get a large portion of that group out to build. In 2009, the organization held a Women Build event where 300 female volunteers helped build 16 homes in Scarborough.Habitat GTA also holds an Annual Gingerbread Build in December where children are able to build gingerbread houses to help raise funds for the building of safe, decent and affordable homes. Awards Habitat for Humanity Toronto has been awarded numerous times for their work in the community. They were presented with an Urban Leadership Award for Renewal in 2010. The City of Toronto also honoured the organization in 2010 as an Affordable Housing Champion in Toronto. Habitat for Humanity Toronto CEO Neil Hetherington was named as one of the Top 40 under 40 by The Caldwell Partners International in 2009.
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Mandy van den Berg (; born 26 August 1990) is a Dutch football defender who plays for Primera División club Valencia and the Netherlands national team. She formerly played club football in the Eredivisie Vrouwen for ADO Den Haag, for Vittsjö GIK of the Swedish Damallsvenskan and for LSK Kvinner FK of the Norwegian Toppserien. Club career After spending three seasons in Sweden with Vittsjö, Van den Berg signed for LSK Kvinner of Lillestrøm, Norway in December 2014. LSK Kvinner secured a double in 2015, but Van den Berg left after one season to join English FA WSL club Liverpool.She played 13 times for Liverpool, who finished fifth in WSL 1, then transferred to Reading at the end of the season. International career Van den Berg began playing football aged six and was called up for the Netherlands Under-17 team while still at school in her native Naaldwijk. After winning 22 caps at Under-19 level, Van den Berg debuted for the senior Netherlands women's national football team on 15 December 2010. She replaced captain Daphne Koster for the second half of a 3–1 win over Mexico during a friendly tournament in Brazil. National team coach Roger Reijners named Vanden Berg in his final squad for UEFA Women's Euro 2013 in Sweden. When she suffered knee ligament damage shortly before the tournament, Merel van Dongen was called up as a late replacement. At the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Van den Berg captained the Netherlands in their first ever appearance at the World Cup finals. Van den Berg also captained the team that won the UEFA Women's Euro 2017 tournament. She made 4 appearances for the team at the tournament; starting 2 group stage games and being used as a substitute in two knockout games. International goals Scores andresults list the Netherlands goal tally first. Honours Club ADO Den Haag Eredivisie (1): 2011–12 KNVB Women's Cup (1): 2011–12 LSK Kvinner Toppserien (1): 2015 Norwegian Women's Cup (1): 2015 International Netherlands UEFA Women's Euro (1): 2017 References External links Van den Berg profile on Onsoranje (in Dutch) Van den Berg profile on women's Netherlands (in Dutch) Category:1990 births Category:Living people Category:Dutch women's footballers Category:Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Sweden Category:Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Norway Category:Dutch expatriate sportspeople in England Category:Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Spain Category:Expatriate women's footballers in Spain Category:Netherlands women's international footballers Category:People from Naaldwijk Category:Damallsvenskan players Category:Toppserien players
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Isaak James (born on Cape Cod, Massachusetts) is an American film director, actor, singer and musician. He is the founder of Last Ditch Pictures. James is based in New York. Education James graduated New York University's Tisch School of the Arts Film In 2006, with his sister Eva James, James wrote, directed and starred in Special Needs which was acquired by Lloyd Kaufman at Troma Entertainment in 2007. Since 2008 James has written and directed three other feature films; Hungry Years (2008) Turbine (2010) and By Way of Home (2011). "By Way of Home" was produced for $1000 and was
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is a railway station on the Yamada Line in the city of Miyako, Iwate, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). Lines Hakoishi Station is served by the Yamada Line, and is located 65.7 rail kilometers from the terminus of the line at Morioka Station. Station layout Hakoishi Station has a single side platform serving a single bi-directional track. The station is unattended. Adjacent stations History Hakoishi Station opened on 30 November 1933. The station was closed from 26 November 1946 to 21 November 1954. The station was absorbed into the JR East network upon the privatization of
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The Ven. Charles Walter Borrett (15 September 1916 – 30 November 2000) was Archdeacon of Stoke-on-Trent from 1956 to 1970. Borrett was educated at Framlingham College, Emmanuel College, Cambridge and Ridley Hall, Cambridge; and ordained deacon in 1941, and priestin 1943. After curacies at Newmarket and Wolverhampton he was Vicar of Tettenhall Regis from 1949 to 1971. He was Rural Dean of Trysull from 1958 to 1971; Prebendary of Flixton in Lichfield Cathedral from 1964 to 1971; Priest in charge of Sandon from 1975 to 1982; and an Honorary Chaplain to the Queen from 1980 to 1986. References Category:20th-century Anglican
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Federica Silvera Arias (born 13 February 1993) is a Uruguayan footballer and futsal player who plays as a forward for Argentine club San Lorenzo de Almagro and the Uruguay women's national team. International career Silvera capped for Uruguay during the 2014 Copa América Femenina. Personal life Silvera is a supporter of Nacional. References External links Category:1993 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Montevideo Category:Uruguayan women's footballers Category:Women's association football forwards Category:Women's association football midfielders Category:Centro Atlético Fénix players Category:Club Nacional de Football players Category:San Lorenzo footballers Category:Uruguay women's international footballers Category:Uruguayan expatriate women's footballers Category:Uruguayan expatriate sportspeople in Argentina Category:Expatriate footballers
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Rory Charles Graham (born 29 January 1985), better known as Rag'n'Bone Man, is an English singer and songwriter. He is known for his deep baritone voice. His first hit single, "Human", was released in 2016, and his debut album of the same name was released in 2017. At the 2017 Brit Awards, he was named British Breakthrough Act and received the Critics' Choice Award. Early life Rory Charles Graham was born on 29 January 1985 in Uckfield, East Sussex. He attended King's Academy Ringmer in Ringmer, from which he was expelled, and then enrolled at Uckfield College in his hometown.At the age of 15, he began MCing with a drum and bass crew using the handle Rag 'N' Bonez, inspired by watching repeats of the British sitcom Steptoe and Son. While at school, he was part of a group of youths supported by The Prince's Trust who developed a community project which involved painting and gardening in Crowborough. Career When he moved to Brighton, his friend Gi3mo formed the rap group Rum Committee and invited him to join them. He started performing at Slip-jam B, where he met people who helped him start his career. Over the next fewyears, they supported hip hop artists Pharoahe Monch and KRS-One at Brighton's Concorde 2, and released their own album titled Boozetown (2012) through Bandcamp and other digital stores. Just weeks before the Rum Committee album release, Rory was asked to support Joan Armatrading at Brighton Dome. With no solo releases to his name to distribute on the night, he worked with Rum Committee producers Gi3mo and Sherlock Bones to create his first official release, the eight-track Bluestown EP (2012), which included one feature from the rap artist Ceezlin. As his music career started in the local youth clubs and pubsof the area around Uckfield, he still returns to the area to perform. Wolves and Disfigured EPs (2011–2015) In 2011, Graham started working with UK hip hop label High Focus Records, releasing a number of recordings with them such as a collaboration with MC/producer Leaf Dog titled Dog 'n Bone EP (2013) and a project with MC/producer Dirty Dike titled Put That Soul on Me (2014). Shortly afterwards, he began to collaborate with record producer Mark Crew, who at the time was working on Bastille's debut album Bad Blood. Graham signed a publishing deal with Warner Chappell in 2013. In2014, in collaboration with Mark Crew, Graham released the EP Wolves through Best Laid Plans Records, containing nine tracks with guests including rapper Vince Staples, Stig of the Dump, and Kate Tempest. Graham, along with Skunk Anansie, also featured on Bastille's third mixtape, VS., on the song "Remains". His follow-up in 2015, the Disfigured EP, was also released through Best Laid Plans Records. The lead track "Bitter End" was playlisted on BBC Radio 1 Xtra, and made it onto BBC Radio 1's "In New Music We Trust" playlist. Human (2016–present) Graham's first hit single, "Human", was released on Columbia Recordsin July 2016. It peaked at number one in the official singles charts in Austria, Belgium, Germany and Switzerland. It was certified Gold in Austria, Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland. "Human" was used as the theme music to the Amazon Prime series Oasis, in the official launch trailer for the video game Mass Effect: Andromeda, in the trailer for the 2017 film Thank You for Your Service, in the television series Inhumans, and in the season 2 intro for the TV show Into the Badlands. The song was also used in the outro for Ash vs. EvilDead Season 3 Episode 9, as well as the Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan television series. Graham's debut album, also titled Human, was released on 10 February 2017. The album opens with the song "Human", features the single "Skin", and has tracks produced by Mark Crew, Two Inch Punch, and Jonny Coffer. The album won the BBC Music Award for British Album of the Year in 2017 and he was nominated for Artist of the Year. Later in 2017, Graham collaborated with British virtual band Gorillaz, appearing on the song "The Apprentice" from the deluxe edition of their fifth studio albumHumanz. Graham also sang and co-wrote one of the songs, "Broken People", from Will Smith’s 2017 Netflix film Bright. In January 2019, Graham collaborated with Scottish DJ and record producer Calvin Harris to record the song "Giant". It peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart. He also collaborated with the Italian singer Zucchero Fornaciari to write the song "Freedom", for the album D.O.C.. Personal life Graham and his wife, Beth Rouy, have a son named Reuben (born September 2017). They married in May 2019 at Lewes Registry Office. They have since separated. Graham endorsed Labour Party leader JeremyCorbyn in the 2017 UK general election. During an interview with Channel 4, he said he saw Corbyn as a "man that speaks with passion" and added that he could "relate to what [Corbyn] says and have never felt like that before". Graham is a patron of the Brighton-based young people's music charity AudioActive. In an official statement for the charity, he said, "AudioActive are doing something to ensure that regardless of wealth or background, young people get a chance to be creative. I can't support that enough." Discography Human (2017) Accolades Tours Human Tour (2017) Sounds of the City
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seems to be that Levy has been suddenly murdered, but on the continental train Bunny learns that Raffles is actually avoiding Belsize, who Raffles has feelings for. At a station, they encounter Mackenzie, who informs them that Levy was murdered by an unrelated debtor. All danger at home is now gone. Regardless, Bunny stays with Raffles. Several years later, Bunny, now Raffles's biographer of ruined reputation, runs into Teddy at a Turkish bath. Teddy eagerly bids Bunny to write all about the adventure involving him and his wife. Adaptations The novel was adapted in 1921 as a film, Mr. Justice
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Matthew Embree is an American singer and guitarist best known as the front-man of Rx Bandits. He also has played lead guitar and sung vocals for The Sound of Animals Fighting, in which he was known as "The Walrus". He produced their last album The Ocean and the Sun. Embree has contributed to several other hip hop, alternative, art, progressive, and psychedelic rock bands including Seekret Socyetee, Coke vs. Bills, Pebaluna, and Biceratops, among others. In 2008, he released Waxwane, his first solo album, under the name Love You Moon. Embree wrote, produced, and played all the instruments on thealbum, except for a few tracks featuring drums by Chris Tsagakis and vocals by Lauren Coleman. Embree also started MDB Records in 2002, which is based in Seal Beach, California. In 2006, Embree began collaborating with management/label Sargent House, who helped MDB release of one of Embree's other band's albums. Love You Moon's debut album Waxwane was released by Sargent House/MDB Digitally on May 20, 2008 with a physical release that August. References Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:American male singers Category:American singers Category:American guitarists Category:American male guitarists Category:The Sound of Animals Fighting members Category:Rx Bandits members
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Chanju Samantha Mwale is a Malawian lawyer and army officer. She was the first female lawyer in the Malawian Defence Force and in 2016 became the first female officer of the Malawian Army to be promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel. She was transferred to a research role in 2016, a move she alleged was illegal and took to the Malawi High Court. The court did not hear the case and Mwale chose to retire from the army. Career Chanju Samantha Mwale attended the Kamuzu Academy before graduating with a bachelor of laws degree from Chancellor College (University of Malawi).She worked as a senior resident magistrate before joining the Malawian Defence Force as an assistant legal officer in 2004, the first female lawyer to join the defence force. Mwale was deployed as a military observer to the Democratic Republic of Congo between 2010 and 2011. She participated in Southern African Development Community military exercises and, as a major, represented Malawi at the March 2012 regional United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research seminar. Mwale was awarded a United Nations fellowship in international law in 2013. She was promoted to lieutenant-colonel in May 2016, the first woman to reach that rankin the army. Mwale was appointed deputy director of legal services in August 2016. She was transferred to become a staff officer in the directorate of research and development at the Malawi Armed Forces College on 25 May 2017. Mwale contested the change of role as unsuited to her abilities and an illegal action. Choosing not to take the matter to Malawi's Defence Council, as her superior officer sat on the council, she opened proceedings in the Malawi High Court. The case was discharged in September 2017, with the judge ruling it should have first been brought before the Defence
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50th Birthday Celebration Volume 5 is a live album of improvised music by Fred Frith and John Zorn documenting their performance at Tonic in September 2003 as part of Zorn's month-long 50th Birthday Celebration concert series. Reception The Allmusic review by Sean Westergaard awarded the album 4 stars stating "The interplay is simply amazing. Much of it is what you'd expect from free improv, but there are a handful of beautiful, lyrical moments, like those that close the set. Any fan of free improvisation will be thrilled. It doesn't get much better than this." Track listing Recorded live at Tonic
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Randal Chilton Burns is a Professor and Chair of the computer science department at Johns Hopkins University. He is a member of the Kavli Neuroscience Discovery Institute, Institute for Data-Intensive Science, Engineering and the Science of Learning Institute and National Academy of Sciences. His research interests lie in building scalable data systems for exploration and analysis of big data. Education and early career Burns graduated from Stanford University in 1993 with a bachelor's degree in geophysics. He earned his master's and doctorate from University of California, Santa Cruz in 1997 and 2000 respectively. He also worked as a research staffmember at IBM's Alamden Research Center between 1996-2002. Research Burns's PhD dissertation is titled 'Data Management in a Distributed File System for Storage Area Networks'. He has worked on waste management of unused digital data. He was part of a team along with Alex Szalay and Charles Meneveau which built a 350TB turbulence database that provides access to large computational fluid dynamics simulations. In recent times, his research has focused on neuroscience where he built a cloud based web-service for neuroscience data and enabled better understanding of the human brain. References Category:American computer scientists Category:University of California, Santa Cruz alumni
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Kofi Kaku Amichia (born July 29, 1994) is an American football offensive tackle for the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at South Florida, and was drafted by the Green Bay Packers in the sixth round of the 2017 NFL Draft. College career Amichia attended the University of South Florida, where he played on the South Florida Bulls football team from 2012 to 2016. He was named first-team All-AAC as a senior in 2016. Professional career Green Bay Packers Amichia was selected by the Green Bay Packers with the 212th overall pick in2019. He was waived on May 16, 2019. Carolina Panthers On May 29, 2019, Amichia signed with the Carolina Panthers. He was waived/injured during final roster cuts on August 30, 2019, and reverted to the team's injured reserve list the next day. He was waived from injured reserve on September 24. San Francisco 49ers On December 11, 2019, Amichia was signed to the San Francisco 49ers practice squad. He re-signed with the 49ers on February 5, 2020. Personal life Amichia is the son of Ghanaian immigrants. References External links Green Bay Packers bio South Florida Bulls bio Category:1994 births Category:Living
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Renné Toney (sometimes Rene) is a female bodybuilder from Brazil. Training and records Toney officially has the largest biceps of any woman in the world. In February 2006, her biceps were measured at the Arnold Classic Expo. Officials measured her right biceps at and her left biceps at . She achieved her physique after 20 years of training. Her stats: Height: Weight: Right Biceps: Left Biceps: Calves: Contest history 1998 NPC Palm Springs Muscle Classic - 2nd 2002 World Physique Federation Pro Ms. Olympia Cup II - Champion 2004 World Physique Federation Pro Ms. Universe - Champion 2005 NABBA Ms.
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Barry Alan Thompson (28 December 1947 – 13 June 2006) was a New Zealand rugby union player. A prop, Thompson represented Canterbury at a provincial level, and was a member of the New Zealand national side, the All Blacks, in 1979. He played eight matches for the All Blacks including two games against Argentina and one against Italy, but they were not recognized as full internationals by the New Zealand Rugby Union. He later served on the Waimakariri District Council from 1992 to 2001. References Category:1947 births Category:2006 deaths Category:People from Oxford, New Zealand Category:People educated at Rangiora High School
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Rottin ta da Core is the first and only studio album by American rap group Rottin Razkals. It was released on March 14, 1995 through Illtown/Mad Sounds Recordings and was produced by the group's mentors, Naughty by Nature. The album managed to make it to three different Billboard charts, #190 on the Billboard 200, #28 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and #14 on the Top Heatseekers and featured two charting singles. "Hey Alright" made it to #74 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks and #23 on the Hot Rap Singles, while "Oh Yeah" made it to #63 on theHot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks and #14 on the Hot Rap Singles chart. Track listing "Intro"- 1:36 "Batter Up"- 5:03 (featuring Bad News, Headache, Road Dawgs, Steel Handler & Treach) "Oh Yeah"- 3:23 "Frustration"- 4:00 (featuring Cruddy Click & Road Dawgs) "A-Yo"- 3:31 "Hey Alright"- 4:18 "Lik' a Shot"- 4:07 (featuring Black, Cruddy Click, Dueja, Headache, Road Dawgs & Supreme C) "One Time for Ya Mind"- 4:00 "Get up, Stand Up"- 3:08 "Life of Bastard"- 2:51 (featuring Treach) "Homiez Niggas"- 3:46 "Come on Y'all"- 3:33 Sample credits "Batter Up" "Klickow Klickow" by Naughty by Nature, Rottin Razkals, Cruddy Click and
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__NOTOC__ Year 744 (DCCXLIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 744 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years. Events By place Europe February – King Liutprand of the Lombards dies of natural causes after a 32-year reign, in which he has defeated the dukes of Spoleto and Benevento, bringing the Lombard Kingdom to the height of her power. He is succeeded by Hildeprand, called the Useless (nephew orand 744, documents in the archives of St. Gallen Abbey describe the village of Kempraten as Centoprato, another document in 863 as Centiprata, inspired by the Latin name Centum Prata. A nunnery given by the Alamannic noblewoman Beata on Lützelau Island is first mentioned, and is in this year sold to Einsiedeln Abbey. Ufenau island in Switzerland is first mentioned in 741 as "Hupinauia", and in 744 as "Ubinauvia" — island of Huppan of Huphan. Arabian Empire April 17 – Caliph Al-Walid II is besieged in his castle outside the city of Damascus. He is defeated and killed by Arabtheir palliums for the metropolitan sees of Reims, Rouen and Sens.Letter by Pope Zacharias to Boniface, dated Nov. 5, 744, ed. Tangl (no.58), tr. Emerton. Salih ibn Tarif proclaims himself a prophet among the Barghawata, a confederation of Berber tribes in modern-day western Morocco. Births Muhammad ibn Mansur al-Mahdi, Muslim caliph (or 745) Deaths April 17 – Al-Walid II, Muslim caliph (b. 706) September 25 – Yazid III, Muslim caliph (b. 701) He Zhizhang, Chinese poet Hildeprand, king of the Lombards Huoching, Alamannic nobleman Kül-chor, ruler (khagan) of the Turgesh Liutprand, king of the Lombards Özmiş Qaghan, ruler of the
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The 1948 European Figure Skating Championships were the European Figure Skating Championships of the 1947-1948 season. Elite senior-level figure skaters from European ISU Member Nations, in addition to the United States and Canada, competed for the title of European Champion. Skaters competed in the disciplines of ladies' singles, men's singles, and pair skating. Because North Americans were allowed to participate, the best European single skaters, Eva Pawlik of Austria and Hans Gerschwiler of Switzerland, were awarded only the European Silver Medals. That was the reason the International Skating Union restricted the 1949 Europeans and all the following European Championships to
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Quarterflash (previously stylized as QuarterFlash) is an American rock group formed in 1980 in Portland, Oregon. The band was originally made up of the two current members, Orinda Sue "Rindy" Ross (lead vocals and saxophone) and her husband Marv Ross (guitars), along with Jack Charles (guitars), Rick DiGiallonardo (keyboards/synthesizers), Rich Gooch (electric bass), and Brian David Willis (drums and percussion). Having a lead singer who also played the saxophone made Quarterflash notable. In a 1982 interview, Rindy Ross said that she viewed the saxophone as an extension of her voice, enabling her to express things she could not express withbe rerecorded by the band after they renamed themselves Quarterflash. The name came from an Australian slang description of new immigrants as "a quarter flash, three quarters foolish", which the Rosses found in a book at producer John Boylan's house. Quarterflash signed to Geffen Records and released their self-titled debut album Quarterflash in September 1981. It reached No. 8 on Billboards Top LPs & Tapes chart, and sold over a million copies, earning RIAA platinum status on June 30, 1982. The album contained the new version of "Harden My Heart", which became their biggest single, reaching No. 3 on theBillboard Hot 100 (and the Top 20 in France). The follow-up single from the album, "Find Another Fool", reached No. 16. A second one-hour Portland television special, Quarterflash In Concert, was broadcast on KOIN on October 22, 1981, and simulcast on KGON. This concert was taped at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall on October 15, 1981. In between albums, the band appeared on soundtracks of two of 1982's biggest films, charting the theme to Ron Howard's Night Shift up to #60 on the Billboard Hot 100, and landing one of their B-sides, "Don't Be Lonely", in Fast Times at RidgemontHigh. Quarterflash released their second album, Take Another Picture, in 1983. It reached No. 34 in Billboard, and scored the single "Take Me to Heart", which reached No. 14. The group released their final album, Back Into Blue, in 1985. It peaked at No. 150 in Billboard. The group later disbanded after getting dropped from Geffen Records. In 1990, Quarterflash reunited, hiring session musicians, including bassist–vocalist Sandin Wilson, drummer Greg Williams, guitarist Doug Fraser, and Mel Kubik on saxophone and keyboards. The group released Girl in the Wind on Epic Records. In 1991, Rindy and Marv Ross founded the historicmusic ensemble The Trail Band''', which was formed at the request of the Oregon Trail Advisory Council to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Oregon Trail. In June 2008, Marv and Rindy Ross released a new Quarterflash album, Goodbye Uncle Buzz, but it did not chart. In September 2013, the band released a new album, Love Is a Road. On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed Quarterflash among hundreds of artists who lost material in the 2008 Universal fire. Discography Studio albums Compilation albumsThe Best of Quarterflash: The Millennium Collection (1996)Harden My Heart: The Best of Quarterflash''(1997) Singles References External links Quarterflash (official website) Ross Productions, Marv Ross' official website Bangor Daily News (Maine), Dave Cheever, special to the News, Band is all flash, no part foolish, Sat.-Sun., February 20–21, 1982, page ME 9, includes black-and-white photo of band Flashbacks to Happiness, Eighties Music Revisited, Randolph Michaels, Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse Books, 2005 (by Michael R. Smith), "From the Desk of Marv Ross, Guitarist for Quarterflash," pages 152-155. On page 153, Marv states that "Take Another Picture" is probably his favorite Quarterflash song which was released as a single. Category:1980 establishments in Oregon Category:1985 disestablishments in Oregon
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Begourat (fl. 1603) was a chief of the Montagnais Indians whose summer home was at Tadoussac. It was at Tadoussac that summer that Begourat met with François Gravé Du Pont and Samuel de Champlain. He was preparing to lead a war-party against the Iroquois in the Richelieu River area. Champlain detailed the pre-raid events in his journals. At the time of the departure of the French, Begourat gave his son to Gravé Du Pont to take to France. References Jury, Elsie McLoed 1966 Begourat in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, Year of publication: 1966, revised
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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France). Events Works published in English United Kingdom William Allingham, The Fairies, including "Up the airy mountain ..."; reprinted from Poems 1850 Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, The Wind and the Whirwind Robert Bridges, Prometheus the Firegiver Robert Browning, Jocoseria George Meredith, Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth Algernon Charles Swinburne, A Century of Roundels United States Francis James Child, editor, English and Scottish Popular Ballads, an anthology published in five volumes from this year to 1898 Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Decorative Plaquesthe Russian State from Gostomysl to Timashev, Russian parody published posthumously Paul Verlaine, in November publishes an influential essay on Stéphane Mallarmé, which is later reprinted in the book Les Poetès maudits; France Albert Verwey, Persephone, Netherlands Awards and honors Births Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: January 1 – Charles Badger Clark (died 1957), American January 6 – Khalil Gibran (died 1931), Lebanese American poet and artist January 21 – Olav Aukrust (died 1929), Norwegian poet and teacher February 7 – K. V. Simon, (died 1944), Indian Malayalam-language poet February 18 Nikos Kazantzakis (died 1957),August 11 – Ernst Stadler (killed 1914 in World War I), German Expressionist poet September 16 – T. E. Hulme (killed 1917 in World War I), influential English poetry critic September 17 – William Carlos Williams (died 1963), American November 10 – Arthur Davison Ficke (died 1945), American December 10 – Alfred Kreymborg (died 1966), American poet, novelist, playwright, literary editor and anthologist December 12 – William Baylebridge (died 1942)), Australian poet and short-story writer September 14 – Marjorie Pickthall (died 1922), English-born Canadian Deaths Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: January 5 – Charles Tompson
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Paragomphus lineatus, Lined hooktail, is a species of dragonfly in the family Gomphidae. It is a widespread species; recorded from India to Turkey. Description and habitat It is a black and yellow dragonfly with bluish grey eyes. Its thorax is yellow, marked with blackish-brown stripes. There is a black dorsal line bordering the mesothoraoic collar on either side of the mid-dorsal carina and an oblique antehumeral line to join this line in its upper part, thus enclosing a thin stripe of the yellow colour. There is a line on the humeral suture and two lateral lines close together on the
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Unai Albizua Urquijo (born 18 January 1989) is a Spanish footballer who plays for UCAM Murcia CF as a central defender. Club career Born in Laudio/Llodio, Albizua joined Athletic Bilbao's youth system in 2003. He played three full seasons with the reserves in Segunda División B, captaining them to the 2013 playoffs after a third-place finish in his last. Albizua was promoted to the first team prior to the beginning of the 2013–14 campaign. On 3 November 2013 he made his La Liga debut, coming on as a 67th-minute substitute in a 0–2 away loss against Atlético Madrid after replacinginjured Aymeric Laporte. On 15 July 2014, Albizua was loaned to Segunda División club CD Tenerife. Roughly one year later, he moved to fellow league team CD Leganés after cutting ties with Athletic. On 28 July 2016, Albizua signed for UCAM Murcia CF still in the second division. The following 11 July, he joined Cultural y Deportiva Leonesa from the same level. References External links Category:1989 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Barakaldo Category:Spanish footballers Category:Basque footballers Category:Association football defenders Category:La Liga players Category:Segunda División players Category:Segunda División B players Category:Tercera División players Category:CD Basconia footballers Category:Bilbao Athletic footballers Category:Athletic Bilbao
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Hanan Qassab Hassan () (b. Damascus, January 1, 1952) is a prominent Syrian writer, theatre director and academic. Biography Hanan's father was the prominent lawyer and writer Najat Qassab Hassan. She holds a PhD in French literature from the University of Paris III. She is currently the dean of the Higher Institute for Dramatic Arts in Damascus and a professor of Art history at the University of Damascus. She also served as the general secretary of the 2008 Arab Capital of Culture festivity. Hassan has conducted many studies on drama, performing arts, plastic arts and culture and published in academicrevues and periodicals. She works as a consultant and co-ordinator for cultural activities for the Delegation of the European Commission in Syria and the French Cultural Center in Damascus. She is a member of the redaction committee for 2 reviews of drama and plastic arts, published by the Ministry of Culture in Syria. She is also a correspondent and writer for babelMed, a cultural website financed by the European Commission. Bibliography Dictionary of Theater, Terms and Concepts of Drama and Performing Arts, Librairie du Liban Publishers, Beirut, Lebanon, 1997 (in collaboration with Marie Elias). Exercises about Improvisation and Text Analysis
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Sayh al Uhaymir 169 (SaU 169) is a 206 grams lunar meteorite found in the Sayh al Uhaymir region of the Sultanate of Oman in January 2002. This stone is an impact-melt breccia with exceedingly high concentrations of thorium and other incompatible elements; phosphorus, rare-earth elements, and the three most important naturally occurring radioactive elements, potassium, thorium, and uranium have been segregated in the liquid phase when the lunar minerals crystallized. The impact that eventually sent this stone to the Earth is dated at 3.9 billion years and could be the Imbrium impact. It collided with the Earth less than
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Russ DeSalvo is an American producer, arranger, songwriter, and guitarist. DeSalvo works with Celine Dion, Lionel Richie (DeSalvo played guitar and synthesizer on the Definitive Collection CD), Laura Pausini, and Kyle Archer (guitar on the Addin' Somethin' In CD). In April 2006, DeSalvo and British singer/songwriter Natascha Sohl released a single entitled "Naked," material that they wrote and recorded. DeSalvo was the composer of, and the writer of "Real Life" and "Feels Like Love" on, Barbie Diaries (2006), an animated movie. Publishing Desalvo was formerly published by Sir Paul McCartney's music publishing company (MPL Communications), INC, EMI Music Publishing, andWarner/Chappell Music. Current arranging and writing Desalvo is currently writing and arranging for Disney's Princess Stores; scoring, producing, writing, and arranging for Mattel's Barbie Diaries & Barbie 6 Series; and writing collaborations with Amber Claire (Sony/BMG – New Zealand), Ross Copperman (Sony/BMG – UK), James Carrington (Cheeky Music/Champion Records – UK), Greg Johnson (Capitol Records – New Zealand), and Kristy Frank (Ruff Nation/Universal). Management DeSalvo is represented by Aimee Berger, President of 2 Generations SPA Music Management (2G), a music management and record label company. Discography "Freak of Nature," Anastacia, 2001–03, Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Keyboards "Not That Kind," Anastacia, 2001,Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Keyboards "How We Roll," The Barrio Boyzz, 1995, Guitar "Donde Quiera Que Estes," 1993, 2005, The Barrio Boyzz, Soloist, Guitarra Concheros "Ven a Mi," The Barrio Boyzz, 1997, Guitar "Guitar Crazy Coolin'," The Barrio Boyzz, 1992, Guitar "Love And Freedom," BeBe Winans, 2000, Guitar, Arranger, Keyboards, Producer "I'm No Angel," Carole Davis, 1993, Guitar "These Are Special Times," Celine Dion, 1998 & 2000, Guitar, Arranger "Unison/Celine Dion/The Colour of My Love," Celine Dion, 2002, Keyboards "One Heart," Celine Dion, 2003, Guitar, Piano, Arranger, Keyboards "The Colour of My Love," Celine Dion, 1993, Keyboards "Falling Into You," CelineDion, 1996, Guitar "I Drove All Night/I Know What Love Is," Celine Dion, 2003, Guitar, Piano, Arranger, Keyboards "Just No Other Way," CoCo Lee, 2000, Arranger "Innocent Eyes," Delta Goodrem, 2003, Synthesizer, Guitar, Arranger "Positively Somewhere," Jennifer Paige, 2001–03, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Keyboards, Programming, Producer "Everything's Kool & The Gang: Greatest Hits & More," Kool & the Gang, 1988, Guitar "Stronger," Kristine W, 2000, Guitar "From the Inside," Laura Pausini, 2002 & 2004, Guitar "The Definitive Collection, Lionel Richie, 2003, Synthesizer, Guitar, Arranger "Encore", Lionel Richie, 2002, Synthesizer, Guitar, Arranger "All Sides," LMNT, 2002, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Guitar (Electric)"The Raven, Lou Reed, 2003, Guitar, Arranger, Keyboards "Shut Up and Kiss Me," Michelle Wright, 2004, Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Guitar (Electric), Keyboards, Producer, Keyboard Programming "Return to Love," Nana Mouskouri, 1997, Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Keyboards "A Rosie Christmas," Rosie O'Donnell, 1999, Guitar, Arranger, Keyboards, Keyboard Programming "Another Rosie Christmas," Rosie O'Donnell, 2000, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Arranger, Keyboards "Purest of Pain," Son by Four, 2000, Synthesizer, Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Keyboards "Songs from the Crystal Cave," Steven Seagal, 2004, Synthesizer, Guitar (Acoustic), Arranger, Guitar (Electric) "Love Child," Sweet Sensation, 1990, Guitar, Guitar (Electric) "Tony Terry," Tony Terry, 1991, Guitar "Ally McBeal: For
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Hannah Trigwell (born 28 October 1990) is an English singer-songwriter from Leeds, West Yorkshire. She has released numerous singles, three EPs and one full-length album containing original material. Her debut EP, Hold My Heart, was released in May 2010 followed up by Pieces in November 2013. In August 2018, Hannah independently released her debut album entitled 'RED' which charted at number 4 in Malaysia and number 17 in Denmark. Hannah has been independently releasing music under the independent record label that she founded in 2016 (TeaPot Records) the latest of which reached Number 13 in the Club Charts. Music careerHannah Trigwell began her musical career at the age of 17 when, as a self-taught singer and guitarist, she took to the streets of Leeds to play her music for anyone that cared to stop and listen. Her YouTube page, containing videos of live versions of original songs and covers, as well as 'Vlogs' has gathered over 100 million views. One of Hannah's most popular videos, a cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah", has garnered over 9 million views since its upload in December 2011. In May 2010, Hannah released her debut EP, Hold My Heart, which reached number 6 inthe iTunes Singer-Songwriter album charts. Off the back of the success of Hold My Heart Hannah saw out 2010 by playing sold out shows at London Scala, Birmingham O2 and Manchester Academy whilst touring in support of Boyce Avenue on their 2010 Fall Tour. Hannah's debut single, "Headrush", was released in April 2011 and was celebrated with a sold-out launch party at Leeds Cockpit. In March 2014 this became the Number 1 selling single in Vietnam (March 2014) and in Laos (August 2015). In Summer 2011, Hannah Trigwell's hard work and talent was recognised with a nomination for Best International
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Sadhara is a village in Jalandhar district of Punjab State, India. It is located 16.2 km from Nurmahal, 19.7 km from Phillaur, 50 km from district headquarter Jalandhar and 130 km from state capital Chandigarh. The village is administrated by a sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per Panchayati raj (India). Transport Bilga railway station is the nearest train station however, Phillaur Junction train station is 19 km away from the village. The village is 48.8 km away from domestic airport in Ludhiana and the nearest international airport is located in Chandigarh also Sri Guru Ram Dass
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Janovce (German: Johannsdorf, meaning John's village) is a village and municipality in Bardejov District in the Prešov Region of north-east Slovakia. History In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1261. Geography The municipality lies at an altitude of 370 metres and covers an area of 5.551 km². It has a population of about 415 people. Genealogical resources The records for genealogical research are available at the state archive "Statny Archiv in Presov, Slovakia" Roman Catholic church records (births/marriages/deaths): 1755-1895 (parish B) Greek Catholic church records (births/marriages/deaths): 1800-1895 (parish B) Lutheran church records (births/marriages/deaths): 1747-1895 (parish B) See also
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Arthur Goldhammer (born November 17, 1946) is an American academic and translator. Early life Goldhammer studied mathematics at MIT, gaining his PhD in 1973. Career Since 1977 he has worked as a translator. He is based at the Center for European Studies at Harvard. Goldhammer is a four-time winner of the French-American Foundation translation prize, including for his translations of Alexis de Tocqueville's The Ancien Régime and the French Revolution and Democracy in America. Goldhammer's translation of Thomas Piketty's book Capital in the Twenty-First Century became a New York Times best-seller. Personal life Goldhammer lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Works translated
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The Earth Pressed Flat is a 1999 album by 10,000 Maniacs. The album contains nine songs that had been written for, but not used in, the band's previous album, Love Among the Ruins: "The Earth Pressed Flat", "Once a City", "On & On (Mersey Song)", "Somebody's Heaven", "Cabaret", "Beyond the Blue", "Smallest Step", "Time Turns" and "Hidden in My Heart". "Beyond the Blue" and "Time Turns" had been released on the single "More Than This", but were re-recorded for this album. All tracks are credited to 10,000 Maniacs as a band for royalty purposes, though the lyricists of the songsQuiet Morning" – 2:53 "Time Turns" – 3:49 "Hidden in My Heart" – 4:18 "Who Knows Where the Time Goes" – 6:40 "Rainbows" – 5:16 (hidden track, US release) Personnel 10,000 Maniacs Jerome Augustyniak – percussion, drums, vocals Robert Buck – guitar Dennis Drew – synthesizer, piano, keyboards, Hammond organ, pump organ Steve Gustafson – bass guitar John Lombardo – acoustic and electric guitar, package concept Mary Ramsey – violin, viola, vocals Technical Staff John Caruso – engineer Armand John Petri – producer, engineer Blair Woods – coordination, John Lombardo – graphic design, album artwork Nick Balgona – mastering References
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Clintons, previously branded as Clinton Cards, is a chain of stores in the UK founded in 1968 by Don Lewin and known for selling greeting cards, together with soft toys and related gift products. It was listed on the London Stock Exchange and was a constituent of the FTSE Fledgling Index. On 9 May 2012 the company entered administration and following the closure of 350 branches, the company was bought by American Greetings. In December 2019 the company was brought by Esquire Retail Limited who taken all the company assets. Clintons is managed by Eddie Shepard, from American Greetings’ subsidiary,Schurman Retail Group. Starting in July 2012, the company began the gradual introduction of a new store design and logo, which removed the previous ‘Clinton Cards’ branding, replacing it with the new ‘Clintons’ name. History Clinton Cards was founded in 1968 when Don Lewin OBE opened his first shop in Epping, Essex. The business grew to 77 shops by 1988 and was then successfully floated on the London Stock Exchange. In 2004, the company purchased the Birthdays chain of card and party shops for £46.4million, but placed the subsidiary into administration in 2009, subsequently buying back 140 of the 332
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Lewis Evan Meredith (1900 - 1968) was an Anglican bishop, the seventh Suffragan Bishop of Dover in the modern era. Educated at Lancing College and Trinity College, Cambridge, he was ordained in 1923 and began his career with a curacy at Oswestry. From 1927 to 1931 he was a Minor Canon at Canterbury Cathedral and then held incumbencies at Wath-on-Dearne and Bognor Regis. Following this he was Rural Dean of Eastbourne before ascending to the Episcopate, a post he held for 7 years. In retirement he continued to serve the church as an Assistant Bishop within the Diocese of Gloucester.
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The language policies of Canada's province and territories vary substantially between different regions and also between different eras. From the 1890s until the 1960s, English was the only language in which most government services were provided outside of Quebec (which was functionally bilingual) and using French in the courts or in schools was often illegal. These developments led to fears by French-Canadian nationalists that French speakers would be assimilated into the increasingly Anglophone culture of Ontario, leading the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism (1963–1969) to recommend that the Government of Canada and all provinces offer more services in French.Since that time, Quebec has used provincial law to encourage the use of French (see Charter of the French Language) ahead of other languages, while the other provinces have begun to offer more and more services in French and in other languages besides English, including aboriginal languages and immigrant languages. The 1982 amendments to the Constitution of Canada included a right of minority-language education that has resulted in policy changes in all of the provinces. Quebec is unique in requiring private businesses to use French and requiring immigrants to send their children to French-language schools. In other provinces there isno requirement that businesses use a particular language, but English predominates, and immigrants may send their children to English, French or third-language schools. History (before 1982) At the time of Confederation in 1867, English and French were made the official languages of debate in the Parliament of Canada and the Parliament of Quebec. No specific policies were enacted for the other provinces, and no provisions were made for the official languages to be used in other elements of the government such the courts, schools, post offices, and so on. The official language policies of the provinces and territories were initiallyset when they were created by the federal government, or in the case of provinces that were separate colonies before joining Confederation (Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, and British Columbia) were inherited from their own histories. Language policies in all provinces have evolved over time in response to changing demographics, public attitudes, and legal rulings. The Prairies Prior to becoming part of Canada in 1869, English was a minority language in the Prairies, where French and Aboriginal languages were more common. The arrival of settlers from Ontario, the British Isles, and the United States changed the demographic balance, however. One ofand sufficient action from the provincial governments. Officially bilingual or multilingual provinces/territories New Brunswick and Canada's three territories have all given official status to more than one language. In the case of New Brunswick, this means perfect equality. In the other cases, the recognition sometimes amounts to a formal recognition of official languages, but limited services in official languages other than English. Manitoba was officially bilingual at its creation, became officially Anglophone only, but this was later reversed by the courts. The territories Northwest Territories: Chipewyan, Cree, English, French, Gwich’in, Inuinnaqtun, Inuktitut, Inuvialuktun, North Slavey, South Slavey and Tłįchǫ orDogrib. Nunavut: English, Inuktitut, Inuinnaqtun, and French. Yukon: English and French. New Brunswick New Brunswick has been officially bilingual in English and French since the passing of the Official Languages in New Brunswick Act (1969). This was complemented by An Act Recognizing the Equality of the Two Official Linguistic Communities in New Brunswick in 1981. New Brunswick's bilingualism was constitutionally enshrined in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982. The Charter was amended in 1993 to clarify that the two language communities are legally equal. In 1999 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in Moncton (City) v. Charleboisthat New Brunswick's official bilingualism also applied to municipalities in the province. In 2002 the Official Languages Act became New Brunswick's new language law, leading to the creation of the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages for New Brunswick in 2003. Manitoba Manitoba was established as an officially bilingual province under section 23 of the Manitoba Act, 1870. However, in subsequent years the provincial government moved to end French-language services and become English-only. In the famous Supreme Court of Canada case Reference Re Manitoba Language Rights of 1985 the court found these policies unconstitutional. The province of Manitoba isnow overwhelmingly English-speaking and the first language of the courts, government ministries, and schools is English. However, in order to comply with the court's ruling the province is required to provide nearly all its services in French (as well as English). The government's policy is summarized in the French Language Services Policy, last updated in March 1999. Regionalized bilingualism: Ontario Ontario has a regionalized language policy, where part of the province is English-only and other areas are bilingual. Province-wide services (such as websites and toll-free telephone numbers) are provided in both English and French. However individuals only have a rightto French-language services in certain designated regions of the province under the French Language Services Act (1986). There are 26 regions so designated. These are: areas with 10% or more Francophones; urban centres with 5,000 or more Francophones; and areas previously designated by the Government of Ontario between 1978 and 1985. Notably this includes Toronto, the provincial capital and Canada's largest municipality (although not all of the regional municipalities of the GTA are included), and the National Capital Region including Ottawa, as well as many other cities, counties, districts, townships, and towns. For the purposes of the policy, the definitions. 126 of the same act outlining the specific rights afforded to a French-speaking party. French-language access within Ontario's judicial administrative offices is also required in designated communities under the French Language Services Act. In addition to section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, French-language rights for resident elementary and secondary school students in Ontario are afforded through its provincial Education Act. Officially French-only: Quebec Until 1969, Quebec was the only officially bilingual province in Canada and most public institutions functioned in both languages. English was also used in the legislature, government commissions and courts. An ActFrench by the government and businesses, and also provides rights for speakers of English and aboriginal languages. Most government services are available in both French and English. Regional institutions in the Nunavik region of northern Quebec offer services in Inuktitut and Cree. Several legal challenges have been raised against Bill 101 in the ongoing legal dispute over Quebec's language policy. In 1988, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in Ford v Quebec (AG) that the ban on outdoor signs in languages other than French was unconstitutional. The government of Quebec choose to invoke the "notwithstanding clause" to shield the legislationfrom the courts. The United Nations Commission on Human Rights ruled similarly in Ballantyne v Canada in 1993. The ban on non-French signs was lifted with the passage of Bill 86 in 1993. Officially English with services in French and other languages Most provinces have laws that make either English or both English and French the official language(s) of the legislature and the courts, but may also have separate policies in regards to education and the bureaucracy. Alberta Alberta inherited its English-only status from the Northwest Territories in 1905, and this was strengthened over time. The Languages Act (1988), reaffirmedthe unilingual English nature of the province, while recognizing a right to use French in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and before certain courts. The Language Policy in Education (1978) requires school boards to establish French programs at the request of a local advisory committee. The Schools Act recognizes a right to instruction in French for the official language minority (1988) and right of Francophones to manage their own schools (1993). Laws may be drafted solely in English and there is no legal requirement that they be translated into French. French may be used orally in all provincial courts inand adjacent coast following the French defeat in the Seven Years' War, and English then became the language of administration and commerce, as in most of the British Empire. In isolated fishing villages many minority languages persisted in private use, however, until the coming of standardized education in the 19th, and more so the 20th centuries. When Newfoundland joined Confederation in 1949 it had already used English as the sole language of government for several centuries. Today, Newfoundland is the most linguistically homogeneous province in Canada. In 1999, 98% of the population spoke only English as their sole mother tongue.The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador has no statutory language policy, simply having inherited English from colonial times. The island of Newfoundland was once the homeland of the Beothuk language, and also seen some Mi'kmaq speakers. The Labrador coast is home to the Innu-aimun and Inuttut languages. Newfoundland was also home to unique regional dialects of the French and Irish Gaelic languages, now extinct, as well as smaller groups of Old Norse, Basque, Spanish, Portuguese, German, and Scots Gaelic speakers. Today the Government offers minimal French-language services through its French-language website, in all other respects, it is English-only, including inthe legislature, the courts, the schools, and the civil service. Comparison table Evaluation of provincial language policy In its January 2012 report on the costs and benefits of official bilingualism at the provincial level in Canada, the think tank, Fraser Institute, identified several potential methods for classifying the provinces based on language circumstances and policies (territories were not included). First it stated that linguistic minorities were only of a significant size in three provinces, either in absolute numbers (Quebec [575,000] and Ontario [489,000]) or as a proportion (New Brunswick [just over 30%]), while in the other seven provinces minority communities
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Langfang (), is a prefecture-level city of Hebei Province, which was known as Tianjin Prefecture until 1973. It was renamed Langfang Prefecture after Tianjin became a municipality and finally upgraded into a prefecture-level city in 1988. Langfang is located approximately midway between Beijing and Tianjin. At the 2010 census, the population of Langfang was 4,358,839, of whom 868,066 lived in the built-up (or metro) area made of Guangyang and Anci districts; its total area is around . Langfang borders Baoding to the southwest, Cangzhou to the south (both prefecture-level cities of Hebei), Beijing to the north and Tianjin to theeast. Sanhe City and Dachang Hui County are now conurbated with Beijing, so that they form part of the same built-up area. Langfang is the smallest prefecture-level city of Hebei Province by land area. Administrative divisions Langfang consists of 2 county-level districts, 2 county-level cities, 5 counties, 1 autonomous county, and one economic development zone (). Development district: Langfang Economic Development Zone 廊坊经济开发区 Geography Considering Langfang's position between these two prominent cities, it is a relatively green city. Every along the city's major streets are parks where local people stroll and take exercise. Langfang's five-kilometer long pedestrian street is nowthe longest in China. On the other hand, air pollution is a severe problem and in 2013 it was ranked among the 10 worst cities in China for air pollution, along with 6 other cities in Hebei including Xingtai, Shijiazhuang, Baoding, Handan, Hengshui and Tangshan, are among China's 10 most polluted cities. The "Northern Three Counties" Exclave The "Northern Three Counties of Langfang" exclave, separated from the rest of the province, is a part of Langfang City. The exclave comprises Sanhe City, Xianghe County, and Dachang Hui Autonomous County and is located between the municipalities of Beijing and Tianjin. Climatetwo national oil and gas companies based in Langfang. The China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau, the primary builder of pipelines in China, and the ENN Group, a natural gas company, are both based in the city. Development Zone Langfang Export Processing Zone The Langfang Export Processing Zone (Langfang EPZ) was established by the State Council in 2005. It has a planned area of 0.5 km2 and commenced operation in October 2008. It is the only state-level development zone in Langfang. Langfang EPZ is located in the Langfang Economic and Technical Development Zone (Langfang ETDZ), which is a province-level development zone. Itis from Beijing's third ring-road, and from down-town Tianjin. It is from Beijing Capital International Airport, and from Tianjin Binhai International Airport, airports which are China's first and twelfth largest airports in terms of cargo transport, respectively. The nation's fourth largest seaport, Tianjin Port, is from Langfang EPZ. Transport Langfang does not have its own port or airport, but is well connected. It is only a one-hour drive from Beijing Capital International Airport and the Tianjin New Port. Langfang Railway Station is situated on the Beijing–Harbin Railway. Parts of Beijing Daxing International Airport will spill into the Langfang city limits.
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Santa Caterina is a Baroque-style, Roman Catholic church located on Piazza Castello #36, in Casale Monferrato, Province of Alessandria, region of Piedmont, Italy. History This church was erected for Dominican nuns and consecrated in 1726. The architect was Giacomo Zanetti using designs by Giovanni Battista Scapitta. The highly decorated facade is in close proximity to the elliptical dome. The interiors were frescoed by Giovanni Carlo Aliberti who painted the Saints and Allegories of the Virtues, while the dome was painted by lesser-known painters Benaschi and Vittore. The statue of the Virgin of the Assumption (1780) on the main altar was
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Mohammad Al-Massari is an exiled Saudi physicist and political dissident who gained asylum in the United Kingdom in 1994. He runs the Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR) and is an adviser to the Islamic Human Rights Commission. In the mid-2000s, he was employed as a lecturer by the physics department of King's College London. Mohammed Al-Masari successfully fought deportation from the United Kingdom in 1996. History During the trial of individuals charged with roles in the bombing of the American embassy in Nairobi evidence was made public that an Exact-M 22 satellite phone purchased by another Saudi
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Donald Bruce Dawe (15 February 1930 – 1 April 2020) was an Australian poet, considered by some as one of the most influential Australian poets of all time. Early life Bruce Dawe was born in 1930 in the Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy. His mother and father were from farming backgrounds in Victoria and, like his own sisters and brother, had never had the opportunity to complete primary school. He always had encouragement from them (the younger of his two sisters also wrote poetry) and his mother, proud of her Lowlands Scots ancestry, often recited poems that she had learned inher 19th-century childhood. Dawe's father's ancestors came from Wyke Regis in Dorset, England, in the mid-19th century. Dawe attended six schools before leaving Northcote High School in Melbourne at 16 without completing his Leaving Certificate. Of the four children in the family, he was the only one to attend secondary school. After leaving school at 16, he worked in a wide range of jobs: as a clerk in various firms as well as a labourer, sales assistant, office boy in an advertising agency and a copy boy at the Melbourne newspapers The Truth and The Sun News-Pictorial. He also workedas a labourer in the Public Works Department, as a tailer-out in various Melbourne saw-mills and as a farm-hand in the Cann River valley. Dawe completed his adult matriculation by part-time study in 1953 and enrolled at Melbourne University on a teaching scholarship in 1954. He left university at the end of 1954 and moved to Sydney, where he worked as a labourer in a glass factory and later in a factory manufacturing batteries. Returning to Melbourne in 1956, he worked as a postman for two years and as a self-employed gardener. He joined the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF)in 1959, initially as a trainee telegraphist but remustered as an education assistant. He was posted to Malaysia and returned to Melbourne after six months. Teaching Leaving the RAAF in 1968, Dawe began teaching at Downlands College, a Catholic boys college (he became a Catholic in 1954) in Toowoomba, Queensland. After teaching English and history at the secondary level for two and a half years, he became a tertiary lecturer in English literature at the Darling Downs Institute of Advanced Education (DDIAE) in Toowoomba. He was appointed as a lecturer at DDIAE in 1971, became a senior lecturer in 1980and an associate professor following the status change to the University of Southern Queensland (USQ). He was awarded the inaugural DDIAE Award for Excellence in Teaching in 1988. He retired from full-time teaching in 1993 and was appointed as the first honorary professor of USQ in recognition of his contribution to the university. He taught University of the Third Age classes after his retirement from full-time teaching. He held four university degrees (BA, MLitt, MA, PhD), all completed by part-time study. Personal life Dawe married Gloria Desley Blain on 27 January 1964. Between December 1964 and July 1969, they hadfour children: Brian, twins Jamie and Katrina, and Melissa. Gloria died in 1997. Dawe died in Caloundra, Queensland, on 1 April 2020 aged 90. Awards 1965 – winner of the Myer Poetry Prize 1967 – winner of the Ampol Arts Award for Creative Literature 1968 – winner of the Myer Poetry Prize 1973 – winner of the Dame Mary Gilmore Medal 1978 – winner of the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry 1979 – winner of the Braille Book of the Year 1980 – winner of the Patrick White Literary Award 1984 – winner of the Christopher Brennan Award 1990 –Paul Harris Fellowship of Rotary International 1992 – made an Officer of the Order of Australia: "In recognition of service to Australian literature, particularly in the field of poetry" 1996 – Alumni Award by the University of New England 1997 – winner of the inaugural Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal at the Mildura Writers' Festival 2000 – Australian Council for the Arts Emeritus Writers Award for his long and outstanding contribution to Australian literature 2001 – awarded the Centenary Medal for "distinguished service to the arts through poetry" Bibliography Poetry Collections An Eye for a Tooth (Cheshire, 1968) Beyond the Subdivisions: Poems (Cheshire, 1969) Heat-Wave. Melbourne (Sweeney Reed, 1970) Condolences of the Season : Selected Poems (Cheshire, 1971) Just a Dugong at Twilight: Mainly Light Verse (Cheshire, 1975) Selected Poems. (London, Longman, 1984) This Side of Silence : Poems 1987–1990 (Longman Cheshire, 1990) Mortal Instruments : Poems 1990–1995 (Longman, 1995) A Poet's People (South Melbourne, Addison Wesley Longman, 1998) The Headlong Traffic : Poems and Prose Monologues 1997 to 2002 (Longman, 2003) Towards a War: Twelve Reflections (Picaro Press, 2003) Sometimes Gladness : Collected Poems, 1954–2005, 6th Edition (Longman Cheshire, 2006) Blind Spots (Picaro Press, 2013) Kevin Almighty (Picaro Press,2013) Border Security (UWA, 2016) List of poems "Search and Destroy" (1970) "Enter Without So Much as Knocking" (1959) "Drifters" (1968) Poem Meaning "Homecoming" (1968) "The Corn Flake" (1975) "The Sadness of Madonnas" (1985) "Somewhere Friendly"poem "Weapons Training" "Miss Mac" "Life Cycle" "Homo Suburbiensis" "The Beach"Poem "The High Mark" "In the New Landscape" (1966) "GOING" Critical studies, reviews and biography The Man down the Street, edited by Ian V. Hansen, Melbourne, V.A.T.E., 1972 Times and Seasons: An Introduction to Bruce Dawe, by Basil Shaw, Melbourne, Cheshire, 1974 Adjacent Worlds: A Literary Life of Bruce Dawe, by Ken Goodwin, Melbourne, LongmanCheshire, 1988 Bruce Dawe: Essays and Opinions, edited by K.L. Goodwin, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, 1990 Bruce Dawe, by Peter Kuch, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995 . Attuned to Alien Moonlight: The Poetry of Bruce Dawe, by Dennis Haskell, St Lucia, UQP, 2002 References AustLit entry for Dawe. (retrieved 29 July 2013) Mildura Writer's Festival (Retrieved 4 August 2007) Cwisfa Lim, 2007, "Bruce Dawe and his world", Australia, CWX Publishers. Portrait of Bruce Dawe taken at Canberra Writers' Week 1995, by Virginia Wallace-Crabbe, National Library of Australia (Retrieved 10 August 2007) Brisbane Writers Festival – Bruce Dawe (Retrieved 26 August 2007)
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Events in the year 1953 in Germany. Incumbents President – Theodor Heuss Chancellor – Konrad Adenauer Events 12 March - 1953 Avro Lincoln shootdown incident 12 April - Football team Dynamo Dresden was founded. 16/17 June - Uprising of 1953 in East Germany 18 to 20 June - 3rd Berlin International Film Festival 7 July - 1953 Menzengraben mining accident 6 September - West German federal election, 1953 20 October - The Second Adenauer cabinet led by Konrad Adenauer was sworn in. Date unknown - Ziegler–Natta catalyst invented by Karl Ziegler and Giulio Natta. Births January 10 - Guido Kratschmer,1885) 20 April - Erich Weinert, German writer (born 1890) 12 May - Fritz Mackensen, German painter (born 1866) 18 May - Rudolf Nadolny, German diplomat (born 1873) 21 May - Ernst Zermelo, German mathematician (born 1871) 31 July - Georg Zacharias, German swimmer (born 1884) 13 August - Paul Kemp, German actor (born 1896) 15 August - Ludwig Prandtl, German engineer (born 1875) 24 September — Hugo Schmeisser, German weapons designer (born 1884) 29 September- Ernst Reuter, German politician (born 1889) 27 October — Eduard Künneke, German composer (born 1885) References Category:1950s in Germany Category:Years of the 20th century
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Robert Haldane Smith, Baron Smith of Kelvin, (born 8 August 1944) is a British businessman and former Governor of the British Broadcasting Corporation. Smith was knighted in 1999, appointed to the House of Lords as an independent crossbench peer in 2008, and appointed Knight of the Thistle in the 2014 New Year Honours. He was also appointed to the Order of the Companions of Honour in 2016. Lord Smith of Kelvin serves as Chancellor of the University of Strathclyde and Chair of the British Government-backed Green Investment Bank. He is Chairman of IMI plc, Alliance Trust PLC and Forth PortsLimited. On 19 September 2014, he was appointed as Chair of the newly formed Scotland Devolution Commission by Prime Minister David Cameron, following the "No" result in the Scottish independence referendum; his role being to oversee devolution commitments spelt out by the Westminster parliamentary leaders, with initial proposals drawn up by November 2014. Early life Smith grew up in the Maryhill district of Glasgow and was educated at Allan Glen's School, Glasgow. After leaving school in 1963, Smith failed his first-year English exams at the University of Glasgow. He turned to a career in accountancy and was articled to RobbPatron of Foundation Scotland until 2015. On 8 February 2008, Smith was appointed as Chair of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games organising company. He was announced as the first Chair of the British Green Investment Bank in May 2012. On 19 September 2014, Smith was appointed as Chair of the newly formed Scotland Devolution Commission, following the "No vote" in the Scottish independence referendum. He is a Past President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland and was chairman of the board of Trustees of the National Museums of Scotland from 1993 until 2002 and was a member (1988–1998)and Lady Smith own the island of Inchmarnock, situated off the west coast of the Isle of Bute in the Firth of Clyde, where he breeds Highland cattle. He also owns a vineyard and guesthouse in South Africa. Recognition Smith has been conferred honorary degrees by the Universities of Glasgow, Edinburgh and also Paisley, where he was installed as Chancellor in 2003 serving for 10 years. Smith's time at the University of Paisley oversaw the merger with Bell College in Hamilton, intended to create the biggest new university in Scotland. The University of Paisley changed its name to the Universityof the West of Scotland in November 2007. In 2010, the Chartered Institute of Internal Auditors awarded Smith an Honorary Fellowship at the Annual Scottish Conference in recognition of his long-term support of the internal audit profession. In 2014 he was awarded an Honorary Fellowship from the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, allowing him to use the Post Nominal Letters "FRSGS". Smith was the 2015 winner of the Royal Society of Edinburgh/Adam Smith Medal, for his business leadership and his outstanding contribution to public service through his Chairmanship of the Glasgow Commonwealth Games 2014 and was then elected as an HonoraryFellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in March 2016 Honours Life Peer as Baron Smith of Kelvin, in the City of Glasgow (created 29 May 2008) Knight Companion of the Order of the Thistle (2014) Knight Bachelor (1999) Companion of Honour (2016) Lord Smith of Kelvin sits as a crossbench Life Peer in the House of Lords. He was appointed Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH) in the 2016 Birthday Honours for public service, particularly in Scotland. References External links Burke's Peerage & Baronetage Sir Robert Smith to stand down as BBC National Governor for
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The Battle of Blue Springs was a battle of the American Civil War, occurring on October 10, 1863, in Greene County, Tennessee. Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside, commander of the Department of the Ohio, undertook an expedition into East Tennessee to clear the roads and passes to Virginia, and, if possible, secure the saltworks beyond Abingdon. In October, Confederate Brig. Gen. John S. Williams, with his cavalry force, set out to disrupt Union communications and logistics. He wished to take Bulls Gap on the East Tennessee & Virginia Railroad. On October 3, while advancing on Bulls Gap, he fought with
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Cliff Roquemore (28 September 1948 – 5 February 2002) was an American writer, producer and director. Principally active in Detroit theater, he was also involved with the production of several blaxploitation films, including The Human Tornado (1976), Petey Wheatstraw (1978) and Disco Godfather (1979). Roquemore also wrote the musical, The Gospel Truth, which toured nationally, winning NAACP Image Awards. He also directed Eartha Kitt's one-woman show in 1990. He died of cancer in 2002. References External links Category:1948 births Category:2002 deaths Category:Writers from Detroit Category:African-American film directors Category:African-American dramatists and playwrights Category:African-American theater directors Category:Blaxploitation film directors Category:20th-century African-American people
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Light from Above is the debut album from Black Tide. The album was released on March 18, 2008 and was produced by Johnny K. Each member of Black Tide was under 20 years of age during the recording of this album, making it very notable in the music industry. Three singles have been released from the album, "Shockwave", "Warriors of Time", and "Shout", respectively. Two music videos were produced for "Shockwave" and have aired on MTV2's Headbangers Ball. Frontman Gabriel Garcia was only a high school freshman and 14 years old when the album was written and recorded. The albumwas praised by critics and helped them win the 2008 Kerrang! Awards for "Best International Newcomer". The album features a Metallica cover of the song "Hit the Lights" from their debut album Kill 'Em All. The album debuted at number 73 on the Billboard 200, with 11,400 copies sold in its first week of sales. Light from Above Tour In support of the album the band toured from July 2007 to April 2011. The tour included 341 concerts around the world with headlining shows, festival dates like the Vans Warped Tour, Download Festival and Mayhem Festival. They also performed asan opening act for bands like Iron Maiden, Avenged Sevenfold, Bullet for My Valentine and Trivium. The last show was on April 19 at The Viper Room in Los Angeles, California as an opening act for Loaded. Track listing Personnel Gabriel Garcia: vocals, lead guitar Alex Nuñez: rhythm guitar, backing vocals Zakk Sandler: Bass guitar, backing vocals Spencer O: drums, percussion Johnny K: Production In popular culture "Shockwave" is featured on the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 video game Skate 2, the North American version of Guitar Hero: Modern Hits, and is also available as a downloadable song for the
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Yves Nat (29 December 1890 – 31 August 1956) was a French pianist and composer. Biography Yves Nat was born in Béziers and showed an early aptitude for both piano and composition. By the age of seven he was allowed to improvise each Sunday at the organ of Béziers' cathedral during mass. At the age of ten he conducted his own Fantasie for orchestra. Both Gabriel Fauré and Camille Saint-Saëns encouraged him to pursue his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris in the master class of the pianist Louis Diémer, receiving the class first prize in 1907. He dedicated himselfto chamber music, undertook concert tours with the violinist Jacques Thibaud and George Enescu and appeared frequently in a duo with Eugène Ysaÿe. In 1911 he made the first of a number of tours of the United States. He was mobilised in the course of the First World War, around which time he produced the first of his published compositions, the Six Préludes pour Piano and the Six chansons à Païney. In the years which followed, Nat toured and performed extensively. However, he retired from concert life in 1937 to devote himself to teaching in the Paris Conservatoire and composing.He emerged from this retirement in 1953 to play a small number of highly successful concerts. The last of these, on 4 February 1954 was the première of his own Piano Concerto, with the Orchestre National de la Radio-diffusion Française under the conductorship of Pierre Dervaux, at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris. His most notable pupils include Fabienne Jacquinot, Jacqueline Eymar, Reine Gianoli, Santos Ojeda, Jean Martin, Jörg Demus, Frederic Gevers, Geneviève Joy, Lucette Descaves, Jean-Bernard Pommier, Pierre Sancan and Jean-Marie Beaudet. Repertoire and reputation His repertoire particularly covered the works of Schubert, Schumann and Brahms. Between 1951 and1955, he recorded all 32 of the Beethoven piano sonatas. For a French pianist of his age, this recorded repertoire was unusual. Most French pianists who developed artistically in the years during and after the First World War tended to champion French composers and to avoid the staple German repertoire. No recordings survive of Nat's extensive French repertoire. Nat's strong technique and rich sonority suited the larger-scale Beethoven sonatas admirably. However, he was far from a bravura pianist - indeed, although his concerto has some formidable technical difficulties, it avoids the classic virtuoso approach, and instead tries to be whatNat himself described in a radio interview as a concerto for piano within the orchestra. He summed up his approach as Tout pour la musique; rien pour le piano, which might be translated as "Everything for the music, nothing for the piano". His compositions reveal a composer who has a talent for framing simple melodic lines in imaginative harmonies, best illustrated by the slow movement of his piano concerto. His orchestral style is reminiscent of the style of Ravel, with a notable fondness for percussion instruments. Beside the concerto and solo piano works, he composed chamber music and an oratorio.Bibliography Yves Nat, un musicien de légende, by Mona Reverchon (conversations with Chantal Auber) 2006, éditions Le Bord de L'eau. Yves Nat, Notes et Carnets, by Yves Nat (notes by Nat on interprétation, thoughts and letters) new edition 2006, Alba éditions. Yves Nat, du pianiste compositeur au poète pédagogue, Claude Jouanna, Editions L'Harmattan, Univers musical, , November 2005, 248 pages References Category:1890 births Category:1956 deaths Category:People from Béziers Category:French classical pianists Category:French pianists Category:French male pianists Category:Conservatoire de Paris alumni Category:Academics of the Conservatoire de Paris Category:French classical composers Category:French male classical composers Category:20th-century classical composers Category:French music educators Category:Piano
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The Night Crew is an American action thriller film directed by Christian Sesma and co-written by Paul Sloan and Sesma. The film stars Danny Trejo, Luke Goss, Bokeem Woodbine and Chasty Ballesteros. Plot The Night Crew centers on a group of hard up bounty hunters (Wade, Ronnie, Rose and Crenshaw) who was paid to rescue a mysterious girl and bring her to America to hide and expose the illegal activities by the most powerful drug dealer. They must survive the night in a desert motel against their well trained gang. They soon realize that their fugitive, a mysterious Chinese woman
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Range Land is a 1949 American Western film directed by Lambert Hillyer and written by Adele Buffington. The film stars Whip Wilson, Andy Clyde, Reno Browne, Leonard Penn, Reed Howes and Kenne Duncan. The film was released on December 24, 1949, by Monogram Pictures. Plot Cast Whip Wilson as Whip Wilson Andy Clyde as Winks Grayson Reno Browne as Doris Allen Leonard Penn as Bart Sheldon Reed Howes as Red Davis Kenne Duncan as Sheriff Winters Steve Clark as Ben Allen Kermit Maynard as Shad Cook Stanley Blystone as Matt Mosely John Cason as Rocky Rand Billy Griffith as Prof.
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Kurdish rebellions in Turkey refer to Kurdish nationalist uprisings in Turkey, beginning with the Turkish War of Independence and the consequent transition from the Ottoman Empire into the modern Turkish state and lasting until present with the ongoing Kurdish-Turkish conflict. According to Ottoman military records, Kurdish rebellions have been taking place in Anatolia for over two centuries, While tribal Kurdish revolts had shuttered the Ottoman Empire through the last decades of its existence, the conflict in its modern phase is considered to have begun in 1922, with the emergence of Kurdish nationalism in parallel with the formation of the modernState of Turkey. In 1925, an uprising for an independent Kurdistan, led by Shaikh Said Piran, was put down quickly, and Said and 36 of his followers were executed soon thereafter. Several other large scale Kurdish revolts occurred in Ararat and Dersim in 1930 and 1937. The British consul at Trebizond, the diplomatic post closest to Dersim, spoke of brutal and indiscriminate violence and made an explicit comparison with the Armenian massacres of 1915. "Thousands of Kurds," he wrote, "including women and children, were slain; others, mostly children, were thrown into the Euphrates; while thousands of others in less hostileareas, who had first been deprived of their cattle and other belongings, were deported to vilayets (provinces) in Central Anatolia. It is now stated that the Kurdish question no longer exists in Turkey." Kurds accuse successive Turkish governments of suppressing their identity through such means as the banning of Kurdish language in print and media. Atatürk believed the unity and stability of a country lay in a unitary political identity, relegating cultural and ethnic distinctions to the private sphere. However, many Kurds did not relinquish their identities and language. Large-scale armed conflict between the Turkish armed forces and the KurdistanWorkers' Party (PKK) occurred throughout the 1980s and 1990s, leaving over 35,000 dead. Recent moves by the Turkish government have provided Kurds with limited rights and freedoms, particularly in regards to the Kurdish language, education, and media. Kurdish politicians and activists still face pressure. History Koçkiri rebellion (1920) The 1920 Koçkiri Rebellion in the overwhelmingly Qizilbash Dersim region, while waged by the Qizilbash Koçkiri tribe, was masterminded by members of an organisation known as the Kürdistan Taâlî Cemiyeti (KTC). This particular rebellion failed for several reasons, most of which have something to do with its Qizilbash character. The fact wasthat many Dersim tribal chiefs at this point still supported the Kemalists — regarding Mustafa Kemal as their 'protector' against the excesses of Sunni religious zealots, some of whom were Kurmancî Kurds. To most Kurmancî Kurds at the time, the uprising appeared to be merely an Alevi uprising — and thus not in their own interests. In the aftermath of the Koçkiri rebellion there was talk in the new Turkish Republic's Grand National Assembly of some very limited forms of 'Autonomous Administration' by the Kurds in a Kurdish region centered in Kurdistan. All this disappeared in the 1923 Treaty ofLausanne, however. Bitterly disappointed, the Kurds turned again to armed struggle in 1925 — this time led by the Zaza cleric Sheikh Said, but organized by another, newer, Kurdish nationalist organization, Azadî. Beytussebab rebellion (1924) Sheikh Said rebellion (1925) The main rebellion which dominates the history of the Kurds in Turkey is that of the 1925 rebellion in Kurdistan region of Turkey which was led by Sheikh Said. The repression and aggression of Kemalist secularism followed and all public manifestations of Kurdish identity was outlawed which, in turn, prepared Kurds for more rebellion. The revolt of Sheikh Said began inFebruary 1925. Of almost 15,000 fighters who participated in the rebellion against the 52,000 Turkish Gendarmerie, the main Kurdish tribes participating in the rebellion came from Zaza. The rebellion covered most of the part of Amed (Diyarbakir) and Mardin provinces. The Sheikh Said rebellion was the first large scale rebellion of the Kurdish race movement in Turkey. The main organizer of this rebellion was the Kurdish Independent Society, Azadi. Azadi's intention was to liberate Kurds from Turkish oppression and thus deliver freedom and further, develop their country. By March 1925 the revolt was pretty much over. Sheikh Said and allreinforcements arrived in the area. The rebellion failed, however, by 1929, Ihsan Nuri’s movement was in control of a large expanse of Kurdish territory and the revolt was put down by the year 1930. Ararat rebellion (1927–30) The Republic of Ararat () was a self-proclaimed Kurdish state. It was located in the east of modern Turkey, being centered on Ağrı Province. The Republic of Ararat was declared independent in 1927, during a wave of rebellion among Kurds in south-eastern Turkey. The rebellion was led by General İhsan Nuri Pasha. However it was not recognized by other states, and lacked foreignsupport. By the end of summer 1930, the Turkish Air Force was bombing Kurdish positions around Mt. Ararat from all directions. According to General Ihsan Nuri Pasha, the military superiority of Turkish Air Force demoralized Kurds and led to their capitulation. On July 13, the rebellion in Zilan was suppressed. Squadrons of 10-15 aircraft were used in crushing the revolt. On July 16, two Turkish planes were downed and their pilots were killed by the Kurds. Aerial bombardment continued for several days and forced Kurds to withdraw to the height of 5,000 meters. By July 21, bombardment had destroyed manyKurdish forts. During these operations, Turkish military mobilized 66,000 soldiers and 100 aircraft. The campaign against the Kurds was over by September 17, 1930. The Ararat rebellion was defeated in 1931, and Turkey resumed control over the territory. Government measures after 1937 After suppression of the last rebellion in 1937, Southeast Anatolia was put under martial law. In addition to destruction of villages and massive deportations, Turkish government encouraged Kosovar Albanians and Assyrians to settle in the Kurdish area to change the ethnic composition of the region. The measures taken by the Turkish Army in the immediate aftermath of therevolt became more repressive than previous uprisings. According to the Turkish Communist Party, between 1925 and 1938, more than 1.5 million Kurds were deported and massacred. At times, villages and/or buildings were set on fire in order to repress the Kurdish population. In order to prevent the events from having a negative impact on Turkey's International image and reputation, foreigners were not allowed to visit the entire area east of Euphrates until 1965 and the area remained under permanent military siege till 1950. The Kurdish language was banned and the words "Kurds" and "Kurdistan" were removed from dictionaries and historybooks and Kurds were only referred to as "Mountain Turks". Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present) Kurdish ethnic revival appeared in the 1970s when Turkey was racked with left-right clashes and the Marxist PKK was formed demanding a Kurdish state. PKK declared its objective as the liberation of all parts of Kurdistan from colonial oppression and establishment of an independent, united, socialist Kurdish state. It initially attracted the poorer segments of the Kurdish population and became the only Kurdish party not dominated by tribal links. PKK's chairman, Abdullah Öcalan, was proud of being from humble origins. It characterized its struggle mainly as anBerets in Kenya. A cooling down occurred, and a ceasefire was brokered in 2014 - but then due to the Siege of Kobane the conflict has restarted. During the 1980s Turkey began a program of forced assimilation of its Kurdish population. This culminated in 1984 when the PKK began a rebellion against Turkish rule attacking Turkish military and civilian targets. Since the PKK's militant operations began in 1984, 37,000 people have been killed. The PKK has been continuing its guerrilla warfare in the mountains. However, since 1995, and especially since the AK Party came to power there have been numerousreforms and the situation has greatly improved. As a result, the fighting is limited to approximately 3000 fighters. Serhildan (1990-present) The Serhildan designate several Kurdish public rebellions since the 1990s with the slogan "Êdî Bese" ("Enough") against the Turkish government. The first violent action by the populace against police officers and state institutions occurred in 1990 in the Southeast Anatolian town Nusaybin near the border to Syria. The rebellion in Nusaybin is the beginning of the Serhildan, during the following days the riots initially widened to other cities of the province Mardin and to the neighboring provinces Batman, Diyarbakır, Siirt,
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Wen-Hsiung Li (; born 1942) is a Taiwanese-American scientist working in the fields of molecular evolution, population genetics, and genomics. He is currently the James Watson Professor of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Chicago and a Principal Investigator at the Institute of Information Science and Genomics Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taiwan. Biography Li was born in 1942 in Taiwan. In 1968 he received a M.S. in geophysics from National Central University. In 1972 he received his Ph.D in applied mathematics at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. From 1972 to 1973 he was a post-doctoral researcher at theUniversity of Wisconsin Madison (genetics), working with James F. Crow. In 1973 he moved to the University of Texas, where he was appointed as a professor in 1984. Since 1998 he has been a professor at The University of Chicago. Scientific contributions Professor Li is best known for his studies on the molecular clock (i.e. rates and patterns of DNA sequence evolution) and on the patterns and consequences of gene duplication. In 2003, he received the international Balzan Prize for his contribution to genetics and evolutionary biology, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, who cited his rolein "establishing theoretical foundations for molecular phylogenetics and evolutionary genomics". He is the author of the first texts in the field of molecular evolution, Molecular Evolution and Fundamentals of Molecular Evolution (co-authored with Dan Graur), and an author on more than 200 peer-reviewed publications. Honors Academician, Academia Sinica Taiwan, 1998 Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1999 President of the “Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution”, 2000 Member, National Academy of Sciences, 2003 Balzan prize 2003 for genetics and evolution (The third recipient, following Sewall Wright (1984) and John Maynard Smith (1991)). Inaugural Chen Award for Achievement in Human
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The Bronzewing Gold Mine is a gold mine located approximately 83 km north-east of Leinster, Western Australia. The mine, owned by Navigator Resources Limited, is, since March 2013, in care and maintenance after its owner went into administration. The mine is located within the Yandal Greenstone Belt. History Discovered by Mark Creasy, the sale of the Bronzewing deposit earned him an entry into the Guinness Book of Records, becoming the prospector receiving the richest payout, having received A$115 million for it from Great Central Mines. The Bronzewing Gold Mine opened in 1991, then under the ownership of Great Central Mines,back its production projection for 2011-12 to 75,000 to 80,000 ounces and to raise additional cash through a A$32.6 million renouncable rights issue. On 28 March 2013 Navigator Resources, owner of the miner, went into administration, with an estimated debt of A$30 million. The reason for the failure of the Bronzewing project was seen in the low grades the mine produced and the high labour costs in Australia. Approximately 200 staff at the mine were laid off and mining operations were halted by the appointed administrator, Pitcher Partners. On 7 January 2014 it was announced that the mine had been
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Samuel "Sam" William Lufkin (May 8, 1891 – February 19, 1952) was an American actor who usually appeared in small or bit roles in short comedy films. Career Born in Utah, Lufkin spent most of his career at the Hal Roach Studios where he made over 60 films. In over half of these, he appeared alongside Laurel and Hardy, again mostly in small parts, but occasionally in more substantial roles, such as an irascible cop (The Music Box), or an irate motorist (Two Tars). After Laurel and Hardy left Roach in 1940, the grim-faced Lufkin mostly appeared in further bit
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Tommy Bruce (16 July 1937 – 10 July 2006) was an English rock and roll singer who had most of his success in the early 1960s. His cover version of "Ain't Misbehavin'" was a number 3 hit in the UK Singles Chart in 1960. Life and career He was born Thomas Charles Joseph Bruce, in Stepney, London. Both his parents died when he was a child and he grew up in an orphanage, later working as a van driver in Covent Garden Market before undertaking National Service in Hannover, Germany. Returning to London in 1959, and working again as a
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Francis James McLynn FRHistS FRGS (born 29 August 1941), known as Frank McLynn, is a British author, biographer, historian and journalist. He is noted for critically acclaimed biographies of Napoleon Bonaparte, Robert Louis Stevenson, Carl Jung, Richard Francis Burton and Henry Morton Stanley. Early Life and Education McLynn was educated at Wadham College, Oxford and the University of London. He was Alistair Horne Research Fellow at St Antony's College, Oxford (1987–88) and was visiting professor in the Department of Literature at the University of Strathclyde (1996–2001) and professorial fellow at Goldsmiths College London (2000–2002) before becoming a full-time writer. BibliographyPress, The Road Not Taken: How Britain Narrowly Missed a Revolution, 1381–1926 (2012), Random House Genghis Khan: The Man Who Conquered the World (2015), Bodley Head, As editor Of No Country: An Anthology of the Works of Sir Richard Burton (1990), London: Scribners Criticism and reviews Captain Cook : master of the seas (2011) Awards and accolades Cheltenham Prize for Literature (1985; for The Jacobite Army in England) Shortlisted, McVitie's Prize for Scottish Writer of the Year (1989, for Charles Edward Stuart) References Category:1941 births Category:Alumni of Wadham College, Oxford Category:British biographers Category:British military historians Category:British non-fiction writers Category:Living people
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Vincenzo Bettiza (7 June 1927 – 28 July 2017) was a Yugoslavian-born Italian novelist, journalist and politician. Biography Bettiza was born in Dalmatia, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in a rich Dalmatian Italian-Croatian family. His mother stemmed from a family of the Croatian isle of Brač. His family owned the most important enterprise in Dalmatia, the Gilardi e Bettiza cement factory, in the city of Split. In 1941 Axis Powers Italy and Germany invaded Yugoslavia. During Italian occupation, Bettiza's father helped many Croatian people during the war and took many of them out of Fascist prison. Enzo's cousinPietro threw a bomb on the Italian army band, since they played Fascist marches, while Enzo himself boycotted Fascist gatherings and organizations. In 1944 the city was again rejoined to Croatia in new Yugoslavia. Many Italian families left already after the fall of Mussolini, after they realized that things were going badly in the country. Some Italian and mixed remained, part of them used the opportunity to opt for Italian citizenship. New authorities were interested in dealing with those who were collaborating with the occupiers, and all others whom they considered as the "enemy of people", either Croats, Italians orothers. Their assets were nationalized. Bettiza moved to Gorizia after the end of World War II and the re-annexation of his native land to Croatia, at the age of 18. Later he moved to Trieste, and then to Milan: here he always declared to be living as "an exiled". Bettiza has been director of several Italian newspaper and author of numerous books. as a journalist he devoted his attention to Eastern European countries and nationalities, and Southeastern Europe, Yugoslavian area in particular. In the period 1957-1965 he was foreign correspondent for the newspaper La Stampa, first from Vienna and thenfrom Moscow. Later he moved to Corriere della Sera, for which he worked for ten years. In 1974, together with Indro Montanelli, founded the Milanese newspaper il Giornale nuovo, for which he was co-director until 1983. Starting from 1976, he was member of the Italian Senate and the European Parliament. He lived in Rome with his family and was married a few times. His last wife, Laura Laurenzi, is an Italian writer. Bettiza's major novel, I fantasmi di Mosca (Phantoms of Moscow) is credited as the most extended published novel written in Italian language. He died on 29 July 2017
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"Leben wir jetzt" (English: Now We Live) is a song recorded by German singer LaFee. The song was released as the second single of her fifth studio album Frei on 11 November 2011. Production The producer of "Leben wir jetzt" is David Bonk with the help of Peter Hoffmann. The songwriters are LaFee, Timo Sonnenschein and Jennifer Kästel. Music video and chart history "Leben wir jetzt" is the thirteenth song of LaFee's made into a music video. It did not successfully make the charts. In the music video LaFee is playing a role as a mother with her young children
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| Nodes:[["Leben wir jetzt", {"description":'2011 single by LaFee'}], ["LaFee", {}]]
Relations:[["Leben wir jetzt", "performer", "LaFee"]] |
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Lars Gustav Gabriel Hollmer (21 July 1948 – 25 December 2008) was a Swedish accordionist, keyboardist and composer, whose work drew on music ranging from Nordic folk tunes to progressive rock. He has been a member and/or founder of over half a dozen groups, most of whose work has been recorded at The Chickenhouse, his well outfitted home studio in his hometown of Uppsala. His work with the band Samla Mammas Manna, in the late 1960s and early 1970s and up to 2002, when the re-formed group played at the two-day ProgDay festival in North Carolina, was and is consideredprogressive rock. However, he is most centrally an empathetic and generous collaborator: whether as a member of Accordion Tribe, while working with the experimental guitarist Fred Frith, or while spending several months with Japanese jazz players, he seems to find a style that brings his partners to the fore while remaining identifiably himself. Though his work is little known in the United States, he won a Swedish Grammis award in 1999 for his record Andetag. He has also composed extensively for Swedish film, as well as for theatre and dance productions. Consistent elements of his music throughout his career includeduse of irregular time signatures (often changing several times within a piece), a daring sense of improvisation (particularly vocal improvisation that utilized nonsense syllables), and used complex polyrhythms. Hollmer died in December 2008 of cancer, aged 60. He is buried in Berthåga Cemetery in Uppsala. Discography With Samla Mammas Manna Samla Mammas Manna 1971 Måltid 1973 Klossa Knapitatet 1974 Snorungarnas Symfoni 1976 Kaka 1999 Dear mamma 2002 With Zamla Mammaz Manna Schlagerns Mystik / För Äldre Nybegynnare (The Mystery of Popular Music / For Older Beginners) 1977 Familjesprickor (Family Cracks) 1980 With von Zamla Zamlaranamma 1982 "1983" (Live) 1983 NoMake Up 1984 With Ramlösa Kvällar Ramlösa Kvällar (Nights Without Frames) 1977 With Fem Söker En Skatt Fem Söker En Skatt 1995 With Looping Home Orchestra Vendeltid 1987 Lars Hollmer. Looping Home Orchestra Live 92–93 (DOOR FLOOR SOMETHING WINDOW) 1994 With Accordion Tribe Accordion Tribe (live, 1998) Sea of Reeds (2002) Lunghorn Twist (2006) With Japanese jazz players SOLA 2000 With Fanfare Pourpour Karusell musik 2007 With Lindsay Cooper, Fred Frith and Gianni Gebbia Angels on the Edge of Time (2015, CD, I Dischi di Angelica, Italy) – recorded at the 1992 Angelica Festival Solo albums XII Sibiriska Cyklar 1981
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Relations:[["Lars Hollmer", "given name", "Lars"], ["Lars Hollmer", "occupation", "Composer"], ["Lars Hollmer", "instrument", "Accordion"], ["Lars Hollmer", "cause of death", "Cancer"]] |
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Pakten (English title: Waiting for Sunset (USA) or The Sunset Boys); is a 1995 Norwegian film, directed by Leidulv Risan. It made headlines in Norway as it was the first Norwegian film to star several respected Hollywood stars, namely veteran actors Robert Mitchum and Cliff Robertson. It also boasted some of the biggest acting names from Sweden (Erland Josephson), Germany (Hanna Schygulla and Ernst Jacobi), Austria (Nadja Tiller) and Norway. It was directed and co-written by Leidulv Risan and shot on location in Oslo (Norway) and the German cities of Cologne and Heidelberg. Its budget of 5,000,000 USD was aboveThe movie received mainly fair reviews although many seemed to agree that the Nazi-subplot was too melodramatic, and got in the way of its feel-good nature. Cast Robert Mitchum as Ernest Bogan Cliff Robertson as Ted Roth Erland Josephson as August Lind Espen Skjønberg as Carl Berner Hanna Schygulla as Eva Loehwe Nadja Tiller as Gertrude Boman Trine Pallesen as Nina Bodil Kjer as Marianne Haas Ingrid van Bergen as Wenche Haas Ernst Jacobi as Leonard Haas Ulrich Wildgruber as Reverend Berger Kai Wiesinger as Fritz Becker Joachim Kemmer as Johannes Christof Ellen Horn as Nurse Oliver Nägele as Paul
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Johnnie Lee LeMaster (born June 19, 1954) is a former Major League Baseball infielder. He played for four teams over a 12 year (– and ) MLB career, including 10 seasons with the San Francisco Giants. He batted and threw right-handed. Career On September 2, 1975, LeMaster became the second player in major league history to hit an inside-the-park home run in his first at bat, during a 7–3 win over the Dodgers. LeMaster hit only 21 home runs during the rest of his career (3,191 at bats). LeMaster is remembered for a game in July 1979, when he tookthe field wearing the phrase on his back that Giants fans often welcomed him with; in place of his last name was the word "BOO". In 1983, LeMaster amassed over 100 hits for the only time in his career, batting .240 and finishing seventh in the National League with 39 stolen bases while finishing third in the National League with 19 times caught stealing. During the 1985 season, he played for three teams: the San Francisco Giants, the Cleveland Indians, and the Pittsburgh Pirates; all three teams ended up in last place in their respective divisions. LeMaster was a career.222 hitter with 22 home runs and 229 runs batted in in 1039 games. Personal LeMaster resides in Paintsville, Kentucky. He is a devout Christian. After his professional baseball career, Johnnie ran Johnnie LeMaster's Sports Center, an athletic store in Paintsville. The store has since been bought and replaced by Hibbett Sports. LeMaster is a distant cousin of Frank LeMaster, who played football for the University of Kentucky and the Philadelphia Eagles. From 2016 through his 2019 resignation, LeMaster coached baseball at Paul G. Blazer High School in Ashland, Kentucky. References External links Photo of Lemaster wearing the 'Boo' jersey
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Nicolás Factor (29 June 1520 – 23 December 1583) was a Spanish Roman Catholic priest and a professed member from the Order of Friars Minor as well as a painter of the Renaissance period. Factor served as an apt preacher across his region - despite wanting to be sent to the foreign missions - and was noted for his practices of self-mortification before he gave sermons. Pope Pius VI beatified Factor on 27 August 1786. Life Nicolás Factor was born in Valencia in Spain on 29 June 1520 as one of five children to a poor tailor. In his childhoodFactor became a sought after itinerant preacher (his request to go to the foreign missions was denied) across his region and was known for undergoing rather severe self-mortifications before he gave each sermon. He also served as the spiritual director of the Santa Clara convent since 1571 in Madrid at the request of Joan of Habsburg. In April 1582 he relocated to the Santa Caterina convent in Onda and that November moved to another convent in Barcelona. Factor died after a period of illness on 23 December 1583 after having just returned to Valencia. In 1586 his remains were exhumedfor King Philip II - who wished to view them - and his remains were found to be incorrupt. Beatification Pope Pius VI beatified the late Franciscan on 27 August 1786. The beatification process saw three friends of Factor summoned to provide witness testimonies and the tribunal called upon Pascal Baylón and Louis Betrand as well as Juan de Ribera (whom Factor served). References External links Saint Nicholas Factor Saints SQPN Category:1520 births Category:1583 deaths Category:16th-century venerated Christians Category:16th-century Spanish painters Category:Spanish male painters Category:16th-century Roman Catholic priests Category:16th-century Spanish people Category:People from Valencia Category:Spanish Renaissance painters Category:Spanish beatified people
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| Nodes:[["Nicolás Factor", {"description":'Spanish artist (1520-1583)', "alias":['Niccolò Fattore', 'Beato Nicolás Factor', 'Fray Nicolás Fattor', 'Saint Nicolás Factor', 'Blessed Nicolas Factor', 'Beato Fray Nicolás Factor', 'Bendito Nicolás Factor', 'Pedro Nicolás Factor', 'Nicolas Factor', 'Niccolo Fattore', 'Beato Nicolas Factor', 'Fray Nicolas Fattor', 'Saint Nicolas Factor', 'Beato Fray Nicolas Factor', 'Bendito Nicolas Factor', 'Pedro Nicolas Factor']}], ["Valencia", {}], ["Spain", {}], ["Painter", {}]]
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H. M. Wynant (born Chaim Winant; February 12, 1927) is an American film and television actor. Among his many television credits are appearances on shows such as Playhouse 90, Sugarfoot, Hawaiian Eye, Combat!, The Wild Wild West, Perry Mason, Daniel Boone, Gunsmoke, Frontier Circus, Get Smart, Hawaii Five-O, Hogan's Heroes, Mission: Impossible, Quincy, and Dallas. Wynant made ten guest appearances on Perry Mason, including three as Deputy District Attorney Sampson during the 1960–1961 season. In his first appearance on the show in 1958 he played defendant Daniel Conway in "The Case of the Daring Decoy." In 1960, he played thekiller in "The Case of the Singing Skirt," and in 1963 he played murder victim Tobin Wade in "The Case of the Decadent Dean" -- thus becoming one of only eleven actors to perform all three roles (victim, defendant and killer) in Perry Mason episodes. One of his more memorable appearances was as traveler David Ellington in the Twilight Zone episode "The Howling Man". Wynant was cast as General Philip Sheridan in the 1961 episode, "The Red Petticoat", on the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. In the story line, Sheridan's friendship with Indian scout Kahlu(Allen Jaffe) (1928-1989) is questioned after a number of ambushes result in dead troopers. Sheridan sticks to his instincts and defends his ally against the enraged residents of the fort. Wynant was born, in Detroit, Michigan. He made his feature film debut as an Indian in Samuel Fuller's Run of the Arrow (1957). Among his many other film credits are Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), The Slender Thread (1965), Track of Thunder (1967), The Helicopter Spies (1967), Marlowe (1969), Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972), The Horror at 37,000 Feet (1973), Hangar 18 (1980), Earthbound (1981), and SolarCrisis (1990). In the 1958 Walt Disney film Tonka, Wynant played Yellow Bull, a Sioux Indian, who was the cousin of White Bull, played by Sal Mineo, and is killed at the Battle of the Little Big Horn, also known as "Custer's Last Stand." He played a villain who fought Elvis Presley in the 1963 film, It Happened at the World's Fair. In recent years, he has been a member of Larry Blamire's stock company, playing authoritative figures in several of Blamire's features and shorts, such as a Pentagon general in The Lost Skeleton Returns Again and a weird psychiatrist
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The Sagamore of the Wabash is an honorary award created by the U.S. state of Indiana during the term of Governor Ralph F. Gates, who served from 1945 to 1949. A tri-state meeting was to be held in Louisville with officials from Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. Aides to Gates learned that the governor of Kentucky was preparing "Kentucky Colonel" certificates for Gates and Senator Robert A. Taft, who was representing Ohio. The Indiana delegation decided to create an appropriate award to present in return. The term sagamore was the term used by Algonquian-speaking American Indian tribes of the northeastern UnitedStates for the tribal chiefs. The Wabash is the "State River" of Indiana and major tributary of the Ohio River. Each governor since Gates has presented the certificates in his own way. Until 2006, the award was the highest honor which the Governor of Indiana bestows, a personal tribute usually given to those who rendered distinguished service to the state or to the governor. Among those who have received Sagamores have been astronauts, presidents, ambassadors, artists, musicians, politicians and citizens who have contributed greatly to Hoosier heritage. The Sagamore award has been conferred upon both men and women. There isno official record of the total number presented, as each governor has kept his own roll; just as each has reserved the right to personally select the recipients. Some individuals have received the award more than once; for example, current Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb has received the award twice and Indiana University chancellor Herman B Wells was honored six times. Robert Charles Vollmer received the award in 2017. Recipients of the Sagamore of the Wabash Award The Sagamore of the Wabash Award does not have an official list of the number of Sagamore of the Wabash awards presented, but belowis a partial list of notable recipients and the year they received the award: Harold Zisla, 1985, by Gov. Robert D. Orr; abstract expressionist painter and arts educator Ryan White, 1987 by Gov. Robert Orr; American teenager from Kokomo, Indiana, who became a national poster child for HIV/AIDS in the United States John Gregg, 1989, 1996, 2002 and 2003 Democratic Speaker of the Indiana House from 1996 to 2003 John Morton-Finney, 1990 by Gov. Evan Bayh Bob Kevoian and Tom Griswold, 1994 and 2008 Patricia Roy, 1994 by Governor Evan Bayh; Indiana High School Athletics Association, Assistant Commissioner. Arie Luyendyk,1994, 1998, 2001, 2004, 2014 Brickyard 400 Winner Donald Davidson, 2016 by Governor Mike Pence Seema Verma, 2016 by Governor Mike Pence John A. Bridegroom, 2016 by Governor Mike Pence; Past Most Illustrious Grand Master of the Grand Council of Cryptic Masons of Indiana (2018-19) Adam Vinatieri, 2017 by Governor Eric Holcomb; placekicker for the Indianapolis Colts (2006–present) Mario Rodriguez (aviation executive), 2018 by Governor Eric Holcomb; Executive Director of the Indianapolis Airport Authority (2014–present) Sachem Award On March 3, 2006, Governor Mitch Daniels designated another state honor, named the Sachem Award. He determined it would be awarded to only
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The Federal Correctional Complex, Allenwood (FCC Allenwood) is a United States federal prison complex for male inmates in Pennsylvania. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice. Facilities The complex consists of three facilities: Federal Correctional Institution, Allenwood Low (FCI Allenwood Low): a low-security facility Federal Correctional Institution, Allenwood Medium (FCI Allenwood Medium): a medium-security facility United States Penitentiary, Allenwood (USP Allenwood): a high-security facility FCC Allenwood is located approximately north of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the state capital. Notable inmates Carl Andrew Capasso - Convicted of tax fraud; Died in 2001James Holmes - Aurora Theatre Shooter Raymond Lederer - Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives, representing Pennsylvania's 3rd congressional district from 1977 to 1981. Convicted of bribery in 1981 after being implicated in the Abscam sting. Died in 2008 at his home. Bruce Pierce - White supremacist member of The Order and murderer of Jewish talk show host Alan Berg. Died in prison in 2010 Tommy Pitera - Hitman for the Bonanno crime family. Inmate transferred to USP McCreary. John Rigas - Former CEO of Adelphia Communications Corporation. Released as of 22 February 2016. Martin Shkreli -
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Tomentella is a genus of corticioid fungi in the family Thelephoraceae. The genus is ectomycorrhizal, and widespread, with about 80 species according to a 2008 estimate, although many new species have since been described. Tomentella was circumscribed by French mycologist Narcisse Théophile Patouillard in 1887. Species T. africana – Benin (West Africa) T. afrostuposa T. agbassaensis T. agereri Tomentella alpina T. angulospora T. asperula T. atroarenicolor T. atrovirens T. aurantiaca T. badia T. beaverae – Seychelles T. brevispina T. brunneorufa T. bryophila T. calcicola T. carbonaria T. cinerascens T. cinereoumbrina T. clavigera T. coerulea T. crinalis T. donkii T. duemmeri
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| Nodes:[["Tomentella", {"description":'genus of fungi'}], ["Genus", {}], ["Thelephoraceae", {}]]
Relations:[["Tomentella", "taxon rank", "Genus"], ["Tomentella", "parent taxon", "Thelephoraceae"]] |
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Jazz Raycole is the stage name of Jazzmine Raycole Dillingham (born February 11, 1988), an American actress and dancer. She is best known for her role as Claire Kyle on the sitcom My Wife and Kids during its first season. Early life and education Raycole was born in Stockton, California. She is a trained dancer, who was involved in competition by the age of four. Career Raycole appeared in the first dozen episodes of My Wife and Kids. However she was subsequently replaced on the show by Jennifer Freeman when the second season began. It is reported that Raycole was
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Relations:[["Jazz Raycole", "occupation", "Dancer"], ["Jazz Raycole", "place of birth", "Stockton, California"]] |
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Bai Hong (白虹, 1920–1992) was a Chinese actress and singer born Bai Lizhu (白丽珠) in Beijing. By the 1940s, she became one of the Seven Great Singing Stars. Biography At age 11, Bai was admitted to the Bright Moonlight Song and Dance Troupe and entered Shanghai's entertainment industry. She used the stage name (白虹), meaning "White Rainbow". She was called one of the "Beiping Three Whites" (北平三白) with Bai Guang and Bai Yang. Career Her music career began at the young age of 11. She acted in her first film (人間仙子) at 14. In the 1930s, she was a popstarher music style changed more to uptempo jazz. Some of the songs that propelled her to stardom included "Intoxicating Lipstick" (醉人的口红), "Love and Gold" (爱情与黄金), "Flowers Don't Bloom Without Rain" (雨不洒花花不红) and "He's Like the Spring Wind" (郎是春日风). In the 1930s and 1940s, she recorded more than 150 songs and had many hits. Only Zhou Xuan made more recordings than her during that time. She performed in over 30 films and had many stage performances. She was also the first pop singer from mainland China to give a solo concert, which took place on the 12 and 13 January 1945.The three songs(乘風破浪)(可憐的爸爸媽媽)(醉人的口紅)were her personal preferences. She was married to the composer Li Jinguang (黎锦光), and they later divorced in 1950. She stayed in China after 1949 and continued making theatre performances. During the Cultural Revolution, her past association with the old Shanghai days caught up to her, and she was subjected to persecution and abuse. She officially retired in 1979. In 1992, she died at the age of 72. Discography 《晚香玉》(1932 Pathe/EMI) 《慈母摇篮歌/小宝贝》(1933 Victor) 《民族之光》(1933 Victor) 《我的妹妹》(1933 Victor) 《绿裙队》(1933 Victor) 《穷快活》(1933 Victor) 《双料情人(头段、二段)》(1933 Victor) 《红烧丈夫》(1933 Victor) 《夜半的私语/开始的一吻》(1933 Odeon) 《回忆》(1933 Odeon) 《卖花女》(1933 Odeon) 《喜相逢》(1933 Odeon) 《山中美人/逍遥调》(1933 Odeon) 《摇摇宝贝/你要那一个抱》(1933 Odeon) 《从军别爱(头段、二段)》(1933Pathe/EMI) 《春的爱》(1943 Victor) 《总在这儿等/恋歌》(1944 Victor) 《我要你》(1944 Victor) 《何日君再来》(1944 Radio) 《逢人笑时背人泪》(unreleased) 《寻梦曲/你是天风》(1945 Pathe/EMI) 《祝福》(unreleased/2008) 《落花流水》(unreleased) 《黄昏》(unreleased) 《疯狂乐队/海恋》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《花月佳期/且听我说》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《花之恋/蔷薇花》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《夜半行/咪咪》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《大拜年》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《我要回家/爱情与黄金》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《香岛风月/塞外情歌》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《归来吧/船家女》(1947 Pathe/EMI) 《我的心在跳/我的家》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《爱河浴/相思草》(1949 Pathe/EMI) 《月下悲思/乘风破浪》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《浪花/别走得那么快》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《恼人的夜雨/雨不洒花花不红》(1949 Pathe/EMI) 《可怜的爸爸妈妈/太湖船》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《失去的周末/同心谣》(1949 Pathe/EMI) 《江头残月/不了情》(1950 Pathe/EMI) 《有你在身旁/夕阳无限好》(1950 Pathe/EMI) 《醉人的口红/纺棉花》(1948 Pathe/EMI) 《暴雨打芙蓉》(unreleased) 《朗朗月/被刺的手》(1951 Pathe/EMI) Filmography 《野玫瑰》(1932) 《华山艳史》(1934) 《人间仙子》(1934) 《健美运动》 (1934) 《美人恩(上、下部)》(1935) 《国色天香》(1936) 《日出》(1938) 《情天血泪》(1938) 《离恨天》(1938) 《珍珠衫》(1938) 《少奶奶的扇子》(1939) 《武则天》(1939) 《云裳仙子》(1939) 《金银世界》(1939) 《三剑客》(1939) 《王熙凤大闹宁国府》(1939) 《播音台大血案》(1939) 《亡命之徒》(1940) 《双珠凤(上、下部)》(1940) 《潇湘秋雨》(1940) 《刁刘氏》(1940) 《红线盗盒》(1940) 《九大明星歌唱大会》(1940) 《铁扇公主》(1941) 《孤岛春秋》(1941) 《无花果》(1941) 《玉碎珠圆》(1942) 《地老天荒》(1942) 《美人关》(1943) 《何日君再来》(1943) 《结婚交响曲》(1944) 《红楼梦》(1944) 《银海千秋》(1944) 《万户更新》(1945) 《红楼残梦》(1948) 《雾夜血案》(1948) 《夜莺曲》(1950) References External links Actress at China's Movie
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Standen House is an English country house located south of Newport, Isle of Wight. The 18th-century house has a brick front and features seven-bay windows, a porch with Doric columns, and triglyph frieze. Made of brick, it is located at the base of Pan Down. To its right is situated the park of Gatcombe, which itself lies in a valley which includes the winding River Medina. Gatcombe House lies opposite Standen House, separated by the river and woods. Great East Standen Manor is nearby. References Category:Houses completed in the 18th century Category:Country houses on the Isle of Wight Category:Grade II*
### Assistant:
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### User:
A special election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on February 12, 2018, to elect a new senator for District 54 in the Minnesota Senate, caused by the resignation of Dan Schoen effective on December 15, 2017. A primary election was held on January 29, 2018, to nominate a Republican candidate. It coincided with the Minnesota House of Representatives District 23B special election. The Democratic–Farmer–Labor (DFL) nominee, Karla Bigham, won the special election. Background In November 2017, several women accused Senator Dan Schoen of sexually harassing them. On November 22, 2017, Schoen announced he would resign on Decemberthe Minnesota Second District Court in Ramsey County on the day of the special election, but another lawsuit was likely. The DFL needed to retain the seat for there to be a potential that the DFL could win control of the Senate if a special election were to occur if Fischbach were removed from the Senate as a result of a lawsuit. District 54 represents parts of the counties of Dakota and Washington. Schoen had represented the district in the Senate since January 2017, replacing retiring DFL incumbent Katie Sieben—who represented the area in the Senate since 2007 and previouslyin the House from 2003. Schoen previously represented District 54A, the western half of the district, in the House from 2013. In the last election in 2016, Schoen won with 53 percent of the vote compared to his Republican opponent's 47 percent. Candidates Candidate filings were open from January 8 through January 11. As multiple Republican candidates filed for office, a primary election was held on January 29, 2018, to determine which candidate received the party's nomination. Republican Party of Minnesota The Senate District 54 Republicans held a convention to endorse a candidate on December 12, 2017. Former state RepresentativeDenny McNamara won the endorsement. 2016 District 54 Republican nominee Leilani Holmstadt and Bob Anderson also sought the endorsement and said they would abide by it. James Brunsgaard, who did not seek the endorsement, was also a candidate. In explaining his decision to seek the Republican nomination, Brunsgaard said he did not like McNamara because he's a "self-serving politician." James Brunsgaard Denny McNamara, member of the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2003 to 2017 representing District 54B—the eastern half of District 54—and its predecessor, District 57B. Withdrawn Bob Anderson Leilani Holmstadt, 2016 District 54 Republican nominee Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party TheSenate District 54 DFL endorsed former state Representative Karla Bigham on November 30, 2017. Karla Bigham, member of the Washington County Board of Commissioners since 2015; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives from 2007 to 2011 representing the predecessor of District 54A, the western half of District 54, District 57A. Libertarian Party of Minnesota Emily Mellingen, nurse for the Minnesota Department of Corrections Primary election Results Denny McNamara won the Republican nomination over James Brunsgaard in the primary election. McNamara said he appreciated Brunsgaard's willingness to put himself forward for public office. Brunsgaard said he would support Libertarian candidate
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William Steffe (1830–1890), born in South Carolina, was a Philadelphia bookkeeper and insurance agent who is credited with collecting and editing the musical tune for a camp-meeting song with the traditional "Glory Hallelujah" refrain, in about 1856. It opened with "Say, brothers, will you meet us / on Canaan's happy shore?" The tune became widely known. Early in the American Civil War, this tune was used to create the Union army marching song "John Brown's Body", which begins with the lyrics "John Brown's body lies a-mouldering in the grave, but his soul goes marching on." In November 1861, Julia Ward
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Gerald Dawe (born 1952) is an Irish poet. Early life Gerald Dawe was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland and grew up with his mother, sister and grandmother. He attended Orangefield High School across the city in East Belfast, a leading progressive liberal state school. He was later involved in the Lyric Youth Theatre under inspirational teacher and theatre director, Sam McCready. Around this time he started to write poems and after a brief period living in London, he returned to the North, receiving a B.A. (Hons) from the fledgling New University of Ulster (1974) where his professor was the leftwing literary critic and novelist, Walter Allen. Dawe worked briefly as an assistant librarian at the Fine Arts department, in the Central Library in Belfast before being awarded a Major State Award for Postgraduate Research from the Dept. of Education, Northern Ireland. Dawe decided to attend University College Galway (UCG) and wrote his graduate thesis on the little-known 19th-century Tyrone novelist and short story writer, William Carleton and started to lecture in the Dept. of English at UCG (now known as the National University of Ireland, Galway). His first full collection, Sheltering Places, was published in 1978, receiving two yearsHeart of Hearts (1995) developed and deepened this exploration of the cultural diversity of Northern Ireland's cultural inheritance as seen through the lifestyle and customs of one family. In 1988 he was appointed Lecturer in English at Trinity College Dublin and for the next five years commuted between his home in Galway and work in Dublin before the family moved to Dublin in 1992. Dawe was appointed a Fellow of Trinity College Dublin in 2004 and was Professor in English and the inaugural director of the Oscar Wilde Centre for Irish Writing(1997-2015). He retired from Trinity College Dublin in 2017.He has also held visiting professorships at Boston College and Villanova University in the US as well as receiving International Writers' Fellowships from Hawthorden (UK) and Ledig Roholt foundation in Switzerland. His subsequent collections – The Morning Train (1999), Lake Geneva (2003) and Points West (2008) – mark an important departure from the Irish settings and primary concerns of his earlier work and established Dawe as a significant European poet in both range and reference, confirmed by the publication of Selected Poems (2012). and, most recently, 'Mickey Finn's Air' (2014). He has given numerous readings and lectures in many partsof the world and during the political upheavals in former East Europe was a regular contributor to festivals and conferences organised by The British Council, among others. A volume of his selected poems appeared in German in 2007 and he has also been translated into French, Italian, Spanish and Japanese, while he co-translated into English the early poems of the Sicilian poet and Nobel laureate, Salvatore Quasimodo. Dawe has published extensively on Irish poetry and cultural issues, much of which is collected in his prose works: The Proper Word: Collected Criticism,'Of War and War's Alarms: Reflections on Modern Irish Writing'(2015), 'In Another World: Van Morrison & Belfast (2017) and The Wrong Country: Essays on Modern Irish Writing (2018). He has lived for many years in County Dublin with his wife, Dorothea, who was chairperson of the Irish-British 'think-tank', Encounter, director of the cultural resource body, Cultures of Ireland and head of public affairs at Ireland's national theatre, The Abbey, during the late 1990s and is currently a board member of the Irish Association. Richard Ford, the leading American novelist described Dawe's latest collection, Mickey Finn's Air (2014) in the following terms: ‘The poems, as a finely-made book ought, composeIrish Writing (2018) As editor The Younger Irish Poets (1982) The New Younger Irish Poets (1991) Yeats: The Poems, a new selection (1991) Earth Voices Whispering: Irish poetry of war, 1914–1945 (2008) The Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets (2018) As Co-editor Across a Roaring Hill: the Protestant Imagination in Modern Ireland with Edna Longley (1985) The Poet's Place: Essays on Ulster Literature & Society with John Wilson Foster (1991) Ruined Pages: Selected Poems of Padraic Fiacc with Aodan Mac Poilin (1994; new edition 2011) Krino: the Review, 1986–1996, an anthology of modern Irish writing with Jonathan Williams (1996) The Oghamthe Chair" Salmon Publishing 2000 An Sionnach: A Journal of Literature, and the Arts, "A Special Issue dedicated to the work of Gerald Dawe", 3:1 (Spring 2007) Nicholas Allen. "Introduction", Gerald Dawe, The Proper Word: Ireland, Poetry, Politics (2007) Stan Smith. Something Misplaced: Gerald Dawe, Irish Poetry and the Construction of Modern Identity (2005) Cathal Dallat. "Mapping the Territory", The Guardian (UK) 18 October 2003 Katrina Goldstone. "Twilight Zones", Irish Studies Review (May 2005) Jonathan Ellis. "Out of Time", Metre (Winter 2001/02) Special collections: John J. Burns Library, Boston College PRIZES AND AWARDS 1974-77: Major State Award (Northern Ireland Departmentof Education) 1980: Arts Council of Ireland Bursary for Poetry 1984: Macaulay Fellowship in Literature for The Lundys Letter 1987: Hawthorden International Writers Fellowship (UK) 1999: Ledig-Rowholt International Writers Fellowship (Switzerland) 2000: Arts Council of Ireland Bursary for Poetry DISTINCTIONS 2004: Fellow, Trinity College Dublin 2005: J.J. Burns Visiting Professor, Boston College 2009: Heimbold Chair, Irish Studies, Villanova University, Philadelphia 2013: The Moore Institute Fellowship, NUI, Galway 2016-17: Visiting Scholar, Pembroke College, Cambridge (UK) RECENT INTERVIEWS 2014: Andrea Rea http://www.drb.ie/essays/good-remembering 2015: Dave Lourdan http://humag.co/features/gerald-dawe 2015: Philip Coleman http://www.icarusmagazine.com/may-2015/2015/9/19/featured-a-conversation-between-gerald-dawe-and-philip-coleman 2016: https://www.tcd.ie/trinitywriters/writers/gerald-dawe/ 2016: Eleanor Doorley http://thelonelycrowd.org/2016/09/26/balancing-acts-gerald-dawe-in-conversation-with-eleanor-doorley/ External links Website The Poet's Chair
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"Goddess on a Hiway" is the first single from Mercury Rev's fourth studio album, Deserter's Songs. The single was first released on November 2, 1998, and then re-issued on August 16, 1999. Two music videos were produced for the song, one directed by Anton Corbijn, the other directed by James & Alex (featured on the 1999 eCD single). B-sides include a cover of "I Only Have Eyes for You" featuring musician Sean O'Hagan. The song's lyrics takes advantage of homonymy: the first verse contains the lines "I got us on a highway, I got us in a car..." This changesto "She's a goddess on a highway, a goddess in a car..." In October 2011, NME placed it at number 122 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years". Background "Goddess" was originally written by Mercury Rev frontman Jonathan Donahue in 1989 while he was still a member of The Flaming Lips. The song had been largely forgotten until it was found on an old cassette tape during the sessions for Deserter’s Songs. Donahue was reluctant to work on the old song, and had to be convinced to resurrect it for the album. Track listing UK 1998Hiway +5" promo EP CD: "Goddess on a Hiway" - 3:45 "Delta Sun Bottleneck Stomp" (The Chemical Brothers Remix) - 6:22 "Ragtag" - 2:42 "I Only Have Eyes for You" (featuring Sean O'Hagan) - 4:22 "Vampire Blues" (Live) - 2:50 "Isolation" (Live) - 4:10 Japan EP CD: "Goddess on a Hiway" - 3:45 "Car Wash Hair" (Live BBC Radio Session) - 7:55 "Caroline Says Pt. II" - 3:33 "Vampire Blues" (Live) - 2:50 "Holes" / "I Collect Coins" [unlisted] (Live) - 7:04 "Isolation" (Live) - 4:10 "Very Sleepy Rivers" - 12:31 "I Only Have Eyes for You" (featuring Sean O'Hagan)
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The 2018–19 season was Futebol Clube do Porto's 109th competitive season and 85th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. It began on 4 August 2018 and concluded on 25 May 2019. Porto started the season with a 3–1 victory in the Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira against the 2017–18 Taça de Portugal holders, Desportivo das Aves, which secured the club's 21st Supertaça win and first since 2013. Porto led the 2018–19 Primeira Liga for more than half of the season, but lost it to Benfica on 2 March 2019, after a 1–2 home defeat. Porto finished the leagueas runners-up with 85 points, two points behind Benfica. Porto reached the finals of the 2018–19 Taça da Liga and the 2018–19 Taça de Portugal, but were beaten on both occasions by Sporting CP after a penalty shootout, for the second consecutive season. In UEFA competitions, Porto participated for the 8th consecutive and 23rd overall time in the UEFA Champions League group stage, a record shared with Barcelona and Real Madrid. They advanced to the round of 16 as group winners, where they beat Italian side Roma to qualify for the quarter-finals for the first time since 2015. For the
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Donkerbos () is a settlement in the remote East of Namibia in Omaheke Region, situated from the regional capital Gobabis. It belongs to the Otjombinde electoral constituency in the Kalahari Desert, near hunting grounds of the San people, who moved here long before the village was established. They still form the majority population of Donkerbos. Donkerbos Primary School serves 200 learners of both this settlement and the neighboring hamlet of Sonneblom. Development and infrastructure Donkerbos is outside the coverage of all mobile communication networks. It does not have electricity or landline telephone service and is not connected to Namibia's water
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Relations:[["Donkerbos", "country", "Namibia"]] |
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Joanne Daniels is an American voice actress. She is best known as the voice of telephone company time and temperature announcements for the Weatherchron company of Atlanta, Georgia (a competitor of Audichron), used in various parts of the United States including Los Angeles, California. She also provided the voice for a significant number of number change announcements. Automated messages advising callers that the number had been changed and what the new number was were concatenated from recorded samples of her pronouncing the digits and other relevant phrases. Other notable appearances Daniels, as the time lady, is the first voice heard
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Relations:[["Joanne Daniels", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Joanne Daniels", "given name", "Joanne"]] |
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Andrew Saul Levin (born August 10, 1960) is an American attorney and politician who serves as the U.S. Representative for . The district includes most of Detroit's northern and northeastern suburbs, such as Mount Clemens, Royal Oak, Clinton Township, Warren, Ferndale, Fraser, Sterling Heights, Eastpointe and St. Clair Shores. He is a member of the Democratic Party. He was elected in 2018 to the United States House of Representatives, succeeding his retiring father Sander "Sandy" Levin. He is the nephew of former U.S. Senator Carl Levin. Early life and education Andy Levin was born on August 10, 1960, to SanderLevin and Vicki Schlafer. Sander was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1982. Andy grew up with two sisters, Jennifer and Madeleine, and a brother, Matthew. Levin graduated from Williams College with a bachelor's degree. He earned a master's degree in Asian languages and culture from the University of Michigan and his Juris Doctor from Harvard Law School. Early career Levin ran as a Democrat for the 13th district seat in the Michigan State Senate in 2006. He lost the election to Republican John Pappageorge by 0.6% of the vote. After the election, he directed Voice@Work, aelection In the 2018 elections, Levin ran to succeed his father in the United States House of Representatives in . Levin defeated former State Representative Ellen Lipton and attorney Martin Brook in the primary election. Levin received 52.5% of the vote, defeating Lipton by a margin of 9 thousand votes. On November 6th, Levin defeated Republican businesswoman Candius Stearns in the November 6 general election. Tenure Committee assignments Committee on Education and Labor (Vice Chair) Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Investment Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific and NonproliferationSubcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Civilian Security and Trade Caucus memberships Congressional Progressive Caucus (Deputy Whip) Electoral History Personal life Levin and his wife Mary (née Freeman) have four children, and live in Bloomfield Township. See also List of Jewish members of the United States Congress References External links Congressman Andy Levin official U.S. House website Andy Levin for Congress |- Category:1960 births Category:21st-century American politicians Category:Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives Category:Harvard Law School alumni Category:Jewish members of the United States House of Representatives Category:Levin family Category:Living people Category:Members of the United States House of
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Rosana Arbelo (; full name Rosana Arbelo Gopar; born October 24, 1963), is a Spanish singer and composer. She was born on the island of Lanzarote in the Canary Islands, where she was raised. She was the youngest of a family of eight children. Arbelo was given her first guitar at the age of five years old and wrote her first song aged eight. She began composing music after moving to Madrid in the early 1980s. She won first place in Benidorm's music festival with her song "Fuego y Miel," (Fire and Honey, in English) which led to her winningin 2001. Its sounds explored the rhythms of her birthplace in the Canary Islands. In December 2003, Rosana released Marca Registrada, a double-disc album that contained 10 new songs, 12 greatest hits, and two videos. Most recently, she has been on tour in both Spain and Latin America, promoting her 2005 album Magia. Discography Albums Lunas Rotas, MCA Records 1996 Luna Nueva, Universal Latino Records 1998 Rosana, Universal Latino Records 2001 Marca Registrada, Universal Latino Records 2003 Magia, Warner Music Group 2005 A Las Buenas y a Las Malas, 2009 Buenos Días Mundo!!, Warner Music Group 2011 8 Lunas, 2013En
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Colonel Ahmed Usman was a Nigerian Military Administrator of Ondo State (September 1994 – August 1996) and then of Oyo State (August 1996 – August 1998) during the military regime of General Sani Abacha. Early career Ahmed Usman was born in 1951. After joining the army, postings included Second in Command, 192 Battalion, Abak and 141 Battalion, Kano (1983–1985), United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (1985–1986) and Battalion Commander G Amphibious, Elele Port Hartcourt (1990–1991). Ahmed Usman was appointed governor of Ondo State in September 1994. While governor of Ondo State, Ahmed Usman installed Oba Adeleye Orisagbemi as the Attah
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The Intelligence Oversight Act of 1980 is a United States federal law that amended the Hughes–Ryan Act and requires United States government agencies to report covert actions to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI). The previous requirement to notify six to eight other committees was eliminated. Enacted on September 21, 1980, The Intelligence Oversight Act of 1980 provided that the heads of intelligence agencies would keep the oversight committees "fully and currently informed" of their activities including "any significant anticipated intelligence activity." Detailed ground rules were established for reporting covert
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Tharanga Goonetilleke is a soprano opera singer who was born in Badulla, Sri Lanka, but grew up in Ratmalana. Her singing ability was noticed by a music professor from Converse College while he was visiting Sri Lanka. She is the first woman from Sri Lanka to attend the Juilliard School, one of the world's leading music schools. She lives in New York City, and her career in opera has received international attention. Education Goonetilleke began learning to sing in Sri Lanka at the age of 12 under the training of Christine Perera. She began attending Converse College in South CarolinaHigh Commission in India since it helped foster a cultural dialogue between the two countries. Personal life Goonetilleke grew up in Ratmalana, Sri Lanka, near the capital Colombo. She first became interested in opera when she was thirteen when she heard soprano Kiri Te Kanawa sing. However, she did not think at that time that opera was a career option. A music professor from Converse College, Douglas Weeks, was visiting Sri Lanka and heard her sing; he subsequently arranged for her admission to the college. She had planned to study medical science in Sri Lanka, but to her surprise, when
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Henry Crawford Palmer (born September 14, 1970) is a French-American men's basketball player formerly with Strasbourg IG in France and the French men's national basketball team. Palmer, born in Ithaca, New York, attended Duke University from 1988 to 1991, then transferred to Dartmouth College. Palmer won a silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics. References Category:1970 births Category:Living people Category:American expatriate basketball people in France Category:American expatriate basketball people in Spain Category:American men's basketball players Category:ASVEL Basket players Category:Basketball players at the 1989 NCAA Men's Division I Final Four Category:Basketball players at the 1990 NCAA Men's Division I Final Four
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Jens Lindemann C.M. (born 1966) is a German born Canadian trumpet soloist of Polish Jewish heritage now based in Los Angeles. He is the first classical brass soloist to be awarded the Order of Canada, the country's highest civilian honour. He played in the Canadian Brass from 1996 to 2001 and continues to play at major concert venues all over the world as an orchestral soloist, with chamber groups, jazz bands, and also as a recitalist and masterclinician. Lindemann is a professor with high distinction at University of California, Los Angeles UCLA and was a Distinguished Visiting Artist at ShenandoahConservatory of Shenandoah University in Winchester, Virginia. He has also taught at the Banff Centre in Banff, Alberta. Lindemann also has an honorary doctorate (LL.D.) from McMaster University, Honorary Fellow (FRCMT) from the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto and the Medal of Excellence from MacEwan University. Named "Personality of the Year 2006" by the British magazine The Brass Herald, Lindemann also hosted the 33rd International Trumpet Guild conference at the Banff Centre in June 2008. He has given numerous world premières with orchestras including the North American première of Bernd Alois Zimmermann's concerto Nobody Knows with the Toronto Symphony.Lindemann studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City and McGill University in Montreal. Among numerous distinctions, he has been a nominee for a Grammy award and a Juno Award and received the Echo Klassik in Germany. As part of Alberta's centenary celebrations in 2005, he gave a solo Command Performance for Queen Elizabeth II. Jens Lindemann was also the first prize winner of two major international solo contests in 1992, the Prague Spring Festival competition and the Ellsworth Smith (Florida), both by unanimous juries. In May 2012, playing with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, he was thefirst Canadian trumpeter to perform as a featured soloist at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Founding member of the All Star Brass which has recorded 4 CD's and as well as the first live brass chamber version of Ottorino Respighi's Pines of Rome, Lindemann is also the Artistic Director of the Banff Centre International Summer Brass Festival. Lindemann was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2014. Discography Solo: Flying Solo (2003) Rising Sun (2005) The Classic Trumpet (2008) As guest/ensemble member: All Star Brass Live 2009, 2010, 2011, Toccata and Fugue Pines of Rome with Italian
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The Bloody Tubs or Blood Tubs were a 19th-century gang of opportunistic street thugs in Baltimore, Maryland, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who worked primarily for Nativist Know Nothing politicians to commit election fraud. Formed in the mid-1850s, the gang became known as the Bloody Tubs for their method of dunking political opponents in slaughterhouse tubs. Other sources claim it was derived from the "bloody oaths" members took upon joining the gang. The gang's violent tactics included blocking voting booths and attacking opposing voters, discouraging many people from the polls altogether. During the presidential election of 1860, the Blood Tubs reportedly plannedto abduct, or possibly assassinate, President-elect Abraham Lincoln when he visited Baltimore. At various times they also championed the Union cause. After the infamous Pratt Street Riot, the Blood Tubs could be seen sailing up and down the harbor flying U.S. flags. The gang operated for more than a decade before their brutal acts caused so much public outrage that politicians were forced to withdraw their political support, and after 1870 the gang was eventually broken up by police "head smashers" or "strong arm squads," as were many other gangs of the era. References Category:Former gangs in Baltimore Category:Gangs in
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Clifford 'Cliff' Wiley (born May 21, 1955) is a former American track and field athlete, who competed in the sprints events during his career. He is best known for winning the men's 400 metres event at the 1981 Athletics World Cup in Rome and the 1983 Pan American Games in Caracas. Track career Wiley originally competed at the 100 and 200 m events but later moved up to compete more successfully at the 400 m. A two-time USA National Champion at 400m, in 1981 and 1982, Wiley set his personal best (44.70) in the 400 metres on 21 June 1981Wiley was a member of the winning 4 × 100 m United States relay team at the 1979 Pan American Games In 1983, Wiley became United States champion indoors at 440 y. Wiley never ran in the Olympics. Having qualified as second in the 200 m at the US Olympic Trials in 1980, he was denied participation at the 1980 Moscow Olympics because of the USA boycott. In 1984, a contender in the 400 m, his chances at the Olympic Trials were ruined by injury, he could only reach the quarter-final stage. He had also run in the 1976 Olympic
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Ironbark Zinc Limited is an Australian Securities Exchange listed (ASX: IBG) mineral resources company focused on the development of the Citronen mine Zinc Project in Greenland. History The Ironbark company listed on the ASX in August 2006 as Ironbark Gold and in March 2007 acquired the Citronen Project. To reflect its core focus on zinc and the Citronen Project, the company changed its name to Ironbark Zinc in November 2009. Ironbark’s goal is to develop the Citronen Project into a major base metal mining operation in Greenland. The project hosts in excess of 10 billion pounds of zinc and lead,and has a JORC-compliant Resource of 55.8 million tonnes at 6.1% zinc and lead. In 2013, Ironbark completed a Definitive Feasibility Study which confirmed the Citronen Project’s development potential and in October 2014, the company submitted a Mining License Application for the project. Ironbark has a non-binding Memorandum of Understanding with China Non-Ferrous Metal Industry’s Foreign Engineering and Construction Co. Ltd. (‘China Non-Ferrous’, ‘NFC’) for the construction and financing of the project, which provides NFC the option to purchase 19.9% of the Citronen Project and the right to enter into an offtake agreement for a portion of the project’s concentratenear Cooma in New South Wales and contains several base and precious metal prospects. Captains Flat base and precious metals Project in Australia. The project is located 50 km southeast of Canberra in New South Wales and covers an area of over 240 square kilometres around the old mining town of Captains Flat. Board & Management Jonathan C. Downes – Managing Director B.Sc Geol, MAIG Adrian P.Byass – Executive Technical Director B.Sc Hon (Geol), B.Econ, FSEG, MAIG Rob Orr – Chief Financial Officer Gregory C. Campbell – Director of Engineering BE (Chem) Hons Chris James – Non Executive Director Peter
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Eretes is a genus of beetles in the family Dytiscidae. The genus is native to the Afro-tropical region, the Palearctic (including Europe), the Near East, North Africa and the Asian region. A 2002 revision of the genus established four species. Species of this genus are variable in size and color, and individuals of a given species can be varied in appearance as well, so the morphology of the male genitalia is used to delimit species. The beetles are yellowish in color with black markings. They have large heads with long antennae. Species: Eretes australis (Erichson, 1842) Eretes explicitus K.B.Miller, 2002
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Walter Clifford Sadler (1891–1959) was a politician and academic from Ann Arbor, Michigan. He served two terms as mayor of Ann Arbor, from 1937 to 1941, and was elected unopposed in 1939. He was on the faculty at the University of Michigan where he was the faculty adviser for the Sigma Pi fraternity chapter. His book publications included The specifications and law on engineering works, Legal Aspects of Engineering, The proposed relocation of railroad facilities in Richmond, California, Industrial law, and Selected cases on partnership. References External links Category:1891 births Category:1959 deaths Category:Mayors of Ann Arbor, Michigan Category:University of Michigan
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Lieutenant Colonel André René Celestin Herbelin was a French flying ace during World War I. He was credited with eleven confirmed aerial victories. He returned to his country's defense again during World War II, becoming part of the French Resistance against the Nazis. Early life André René Celestin Herbelin was born in Le Havre on 9 December 1889. Military career Herbelin was a non-commissioned officer in the French infantry's inactive reserves when World War I began. On 19 August 1914, he was called to the colors again and assigned to the 8e Regiment du Train des Equipages as a Sergeant.he was awarded the Médaille militaire to accompany his Croix de guerre. He resumed scoring in August, downing three more German planes, including one shared with Gabriel Guérin and Marcel A. Hugues. Two claims for September wins went unverified. Then, on 11 October, he was hospitalized for a brief stay. While recuperating, he was commissioned as a Sous lieutenant. On the 25th, he returned to his squadron. In December, he teamed with Hugues, Adrien L. J. Leps, and Adjutant Levecque for two more wins. Herbelin's ninth triumph came on 30 January 1918, his tenth on 5 March. A month later,on 6 April 1918, he was appointed a Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur. He transferred to Escadrille 97 on 22 May 1918 to fly Spads. On 15 July, he tallied his final victory. By the end of the war, he had eleven confirmed victories to show for over 1,400 combat hours flown. Later life The 1920 listing of French civil aircraft shows Herbelin operating two Spad VII, registry codes F-ABEI and F-ABEJ, so he apparently continued to fly after the war. During World War II, Herbelin joined the French Resistance against the Nazis occupying France. This brought him the honorof being raised to Commandeur in the Légion d'honneur at the rank of lieutenant colonel. After the war, he served as secretary of the French Aces Association before his death on 16 December 1966. Endnotes References Over the Front: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the United States and French Air Services, 1914-1918 (1992). Norman L. R. Franks, Frank W. Bailey. Grub Street. , . External links The Aerodrome list of French Aces WWI Aviation biography of Herbelin Category:1889 births Category:1966 deaths Category:French World War I flying aces Category:French Resistance members Category:People from Le Havre Category:Place
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is an open-world stealth game developed by Kojima Productions and published by Konami. It was released worldwide for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360 and Xbox One on September 1, 2015. It is the ninth installment in the Metal Gear series that was directed, written and designed by Hideo Kojima following Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes, a stand-alone prologue released the previous year, as well as his final work at Konami. Set in 1984, nine years after the events of Ground Zeroes and eleven years before the events of the original Metal Gear, the story follows mercenaryleader Punished "Venom" Snake as he ventures into Soviet-occupied Afghanistan and the Angola–Zaire border region to exact revenge on the people who destroyed his forces and came close to killing him during the climax of Ground Zeroes. It carries over the tagline of Tactical Espionage Operations first used in Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker. The Phantom Pain was critically acclaimed upon release, with its gameplay drawing praise for its variety of mechanics and interconnected systems, which allow a high degree of player freedom in approaching objectives. While the story was acknowledged for its emotional power and exploration of mature themes,its writing and focus were criticized as lacking for a Metal Gear title, with further scrutiny over the story's second half and ending that left several plot points unresolved; this was linked to conclusive evidence of removed content, which led some to suggest that the game was released unfinished. Despite this, The Phantom Pain received perfect review scores from several publications and was described by some critics as one of the greatest stealth games of all time. A complete edition that bundles The Phantom Pain and Ground Zeroes together, titled Metal Gear Solid V: The Definitive Experience, was released inOctober 2016. Gameplay Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain is a stealth game in which players take the role of Punished "Venom" Snake from a third-person perspective in an open world. The gameplay elements were largely unchanged from Ground Zeroes, meaning that players will have to sneak from several points in the game world, avoiding enemy guards, and remaining undetected. Included in Snake's repertoire are binoculars, maps, a variety of weapons, explosives, and stealth-based items such as cardboard boxes and decoys. Following one of the series traditions, The Phantom Pain encourages players to progress through the game without killing,of time enables players to analyze the movement of marked enemy forces in the area, such as shifts in sentry patrols and individual patrol routes. Weather effects, such as sandstorms and rain, affects the gameplay environment by reducing visibility or masking the sound of footsteps. Kojima spoke about the restrictive nature of previous Metal Gear Solid titles, saying that they "set [the player] on one rail to get from point A to point B, with a certain amount of freedom between". In stark contrast, The Phantom Pain offers players new ways of traversal and sneaking methods, such as taking acrew. The player's actions affect the wider game world; for example, sabotaging a radar installation will open up new entry points. The playable world in The Phantom Pain is two hundred times larger than that of Ground Zeroes, featuring a variety of climate conditions and environments. This allows the players to freely roam the map while proceeding to either story missions or sidequests, as in other games with nonlinear gameplay. In addition, players who have previously played Ground Zeroes are able to import save data into The Phantom Pain and gain special perks. Multiplayer Metal Gear Solid V: The PhantomPain includes two multiplayer modes: first, the new Metal Gear Online, developed by Kojima Productions' newly formed Los Angeles division (now known as Konami Los Angeles Studio). The first footage for multiplayer was revealed in December 2014. While originally set for launch alongside the release of The Phantom Pain, Metal Gear Online was postponed to October 6 for consoles and January 2016 for Microsoft Windows. The second multiplayer mode is an extension of the Mother Base base-building feature. Players are able to expand their operations to include "Forward Operating Bases" which can be used to generate resources and income forattacking player's Forward Operating Base is revealed to the defending player; however, defending players can only launch a retaliatory strike if the attacker was discovered during their infiltration. The Forward Operating Base feature is an entirely separate multiplayer experience to Metal Gear Online and is also needed to increase the number of combat units the player can deploy. During development, Kojima Productions and Konami attracted criticism for their decision to include microtransactions; a system that allows players to pay for access to content in the game. However, a spokesperson for Kojima Productions confirmed that the system was included to benefitplayers who may not have the time to complete the game, given its scale, and that no content would be available exclusively through microtransactions. Further controversy emerged following the publication of an early review claiming that the Forward Operating Base mode was behind a paywall, which Konami refuted saying that microtransactions acted as an accelerator rather than a paywall. Plot Premise In the aftermath of the events of Ground Zeroes and the destruction of Militaires Sans Frontières (commonly abbreviated as MSF), Big Boss (Kiefer Sutherland/Akio Ōtsuka) falls into a coma. Nine years later, he awakens and helps lead a newmercenary group, Diamond Dogs. Adopting the codename "Venom Snake", he ventures into Afghanistan during the Soviet-Afghan War and the Angola—Zaire border region during the Angolan Civil War to track down the men responsible for MSF's destruction. Along the way, he becomes reacquainted with his former rival Ocelot (Troy Baker/Satoshi Mikami) and encounters Quiet (Stefanie Joosten), an assassin and sniper with supernatural abilities. While he and Kazuhira Miller (Robin Atkin Downes/Tomokazu Sugita) are initially driven to exact revenge, Snake soon unearths a plot by the Patriots organization to develop a new model of the Metal Gear system known as the ST-84"Sahelanthropus". Characters In contrast to previous Metal Gear installments, Kojima Productions conducted the voice acting and motion capture with English-speaking actors and stuntmen first. While facial capturing was used before for Metal Gear Solid 4, it was done separately from the actual voice acting. The Japanese voice acting was dubbed over the English cast's performance afterward, in contrast to previous releases in the series since Metal Gear Solid 2, which had the characters' vocal and facial expressions lip-synched specifically to both, Japanese and English voice acting. At E3 2013, Konami confirmed that actor Kiefer Sutherland would provide Snake's voice andSkull Face, Satoshi Mikami as Ocelot, Osamu Saka (whose previous roles include Sergei Gurlukovich in Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty and The End in Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater) as Code Talker, and Yūtarō Honjō as Eli. Dutch-born model Stefanie Joosten provides the likeness, voice and motion capture for the new heroine Quiet, a mute sniper with supernatural abilities who may assist Snake on missions depending on the player's actions during a certain mission. She also provides the vocals for "Quiet's Theme". Synopsis In 1984, nine years after the events of Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes,as he can, believing that nuclear deterrence will stop the weapons actually being used, attaining world peace while still protecting the integrity of each culture. However, he will secretly retain remote control of the weapons. Skull Face intends to use the threat of the latest Metal Gear system, known as ST-84 "Sahelanthropus", to make nuclear weapons desirable again, but as he cannot get it to function, he is dependent on the Third Child's psychic abilities to manipulate it. During a test, the Third Child turns against Skull Face, having Sahelanthropus seriously wound him and crush the Man on Fire. AlthoughSnake defeats the Metal Gear, he is only able to recover one of Skull Face's three parasite vials; one is missing and the other is taken by the Third Child and given to Eli. Skull Face is left to die by Snake and Miller but Huey executes him. The Diamond Dogs return to their base with Sahelanthropus. Following their return, Eli, the Third Child, and the child soldiers steal Sahelanthropus and flee the base. It transpires that the Third Child was not consciously working for Skull Face, but his psychic powers enthralled him to the will of the most vengefulperson nearby, meaning Sahelanthropus' attack was instigated by Eli. An epidemic of parasites occurs on base forcing Snake to personally kill many of his own men to contain it. To honor them, he has their cremated remains turned into diamonds to carry into battle. Huey is accused of causing the epidemic while attempting to mutate the parasites to sell as weapons. Alongside suspicion of his role in MSF's destruction, and evidence that he murdered his wife Dr. Strangelove while arguing over using their son in experiments, Snake exiles him from Diamond Dogs. Following this event, Quiet disappears in Afghanistan. Codethe Zanzibar Land disturbance. Miller and Ocelot discuss Big Boss' plans to create Outer Heaven. While Ocelot remains supportive, Miller is disgusted at his former ally's deception but agrees to continue assisting Venom Snake and Big Boss' sons in hopes of contributing to the real Big Boss' downfall. Development In February 2012, a site owned by Konami, "Development Without Borders", promoted development for a new Metal Gear title, for "The "next" MGS". The site was recruiting staff for the 2012 GDC pavilion in March, and requested applications for several positions for the latest Metal Gear Solid targeted for "high-end consoles"and "next-gen Fox engine". As the year went on, screenshots and videos of the newly announced Fox Engine were unveiled by the team. This media demonstrated many random settings and characters, although none related to the Metal Gear series. Certain screenshots, however, were noted to feature a character who resembled the Big Boss character of Metal Gear, walking up to a Stryker AFV previously seen in Metal Gear Solid 4. Konami unveiled Ground Zeroes at a private function celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Metal Gear series on August 30, 2012. The game later made its public debut two dayslater at the 2012 Penny Arcade Expo. Kojima revealed very little detail about the project at the time other than it was a prologue to Metal Gear Solid V, and that it would be the first game to use the Fox Engine, a game engine developed by Kojima Productions. In January 2013, Kojima revealed that Ground Zeroes would be the first title in the series to be subtitled in Arabic, a feature the team had planned for previous games. He also confirmed that the length of the cutscenes was reduced, as he believed that long cutscenes had become outdated. Inapproach as "prioritizing creativity over sales". At the Spike Video Game Awards in December 2012, a teaser trailer for a game known as The Phantom Pain was shown, credited to a new Swedish developer known as Moby Dick Studio, and was described as being "100% gameplay". Allegedly led by Joakim Mogren, the studio's mission statement read that it aimed to "deliver an uncompromising, exciting, and touching game experience to people all around the globe." After the presentation, commentators speculated that The Phantom Pain was actually a Metal Gear game, noting the protagonist's resemblance to Big Boss, graphics similar to thoseproduced by the Fox Engine, the quote "V has come to" at the end of the trailer, and that the title Metal Gear Solid V fits in the negative space and indentations of the game's logo when using the same font. The name "Joakim" was an anagram of "Kojima", the domain name for the studio's website had only been registered about two weeks prior to the announcement, and that several people wearing Moby Dick Studio shirts were sitting in a VIP area intended for Konami staff. Hideo Kojima stated he was impressed by the trailer and how Mogren was inspiredby Metal Gear. An actor playing a heavily bandaged Mogren appeared in an interview on the March 14, 2013 episode of GameTrailers TV; while stating that he could not reveal many details, he confirmed that more details about The Phantom Pain would be revealed at the upcoming Game Developers Conference, and showed a series of screenshots on an iPad to the show's host Geoff Keighley. After Keighley pointed out the Fox Engine logo in the screenshots, Mogren appeared nervous and the segment abruptly ended. On March 27, 2013, at GDC 2013, Kojima confirmed that his studio was behind the trailer,and announced that Metal Gear Solid V would be two separate games; Ground Zeroes would now serve as a prologue for the main game, which was officially announced as Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. He subsequently presented a trailer for the game and showcased the Fox Engine. The trailer featured the song "Not Your Kind of People" from Garbage's 2012 album of the same name. While the official trailer announcing the game was running on a PC, the game was released for the seventh and eighth generations of video game consoles. In an interview during E3 2013, whenasked about a PC release Kojima stated "We are making it, and it will be on par with the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One versions." However, he made it clear that the PC port was not their priority. Kojima confirmed that the visuals seen in the trailer would look close to those in the final game. He also stated that he would like Metal Gear Solid V to be his final Metal Gear game, noting that unlike previous titles where he had announced that he had finished making games in the series, only to return for subsequent games, his involvementwith the franchise would be over this time around. Although the trailer had Snake suffering from hallucinations in the form of a flaming whale, Kojima assured that there would be a balance in realism. Kojima later revealed that The Phantom Pain was initially presented as an independent game so as to assess the public and industry response to the Fox Engine, as he felt that announcing the game as part of Metal Gear Solid V would bias reactions to the engine. At E3 2013, a fourth trailer was shown at the Microsoft press conference, demonstrating the new play mechanics, aswell as the cast of characters. The development of an Xbox One version was also announced at the conference. The PlayStation 4 version was announced the following day when Konami uploaded the red band version of the trailer on their YouTube channel in addition to the standard green band version. The trailers for Metal Gear Solid V showed the game running on a PC hardware, but according to Kojima with textures and character models somewhat based on seventh generation hardware. The developers aimed to improve the technical quality for the versions released for the eighth generation of consoles. Kojima alludedPain, just as they were in Ground Zeroes, unlike previous Metal Gear Solid games that included mostly real-world based weaponry. At E3 2014, a fifth trailer featuring Mike Oldfield's song "Nuclear" was shown, unveiling more plot details surrounding the Diamond Dogs and Snake's antagonistic descent. It was leaked a day earlier, due to an accidental post from Konami's official YouTube channel. Alongside the new trailer, the official site for Metal Gear Solid V was updated and included new information and images such as the developmental progress of the in-game map and the evolution of Snake's design across all games inthe series. On August 25, 2015, Kojima released a launch trailer showing "Metal Gear's Evolution and Harmony" with clips from the previous games along with the reveal of the new "Metal Gear Sahelanthropus". Over $80 million was spent on the development of the game. Music The music of The Phantom Pain was produced by Harry Gregson-Williams, making it his fourth Metal Gear title, and composed by Ludvig Forssell, Justin Burnett, and Daniel James. Also featured in The Phantom Pain are collectable music tapes the player can listen to in-game, with a mixture of licensed music from the era, and musicfrom past Metal Gear titles. Metal Gear Solid V Original Soundtrack was released on September 2, 2015, containing 50 tracks selected from both Ground Zeroes and The Phantom Pain. Following this on December 23, 2015, was Metal Gear Solid V Extended Soundtrack, containing 114 tracks again selected from both Metal Gear Solid V games. Finally, Metal Gear Solid V Original Soundtrack The Lost Tapes was released on March 30, 2016, primarily consisting of tracks written by Ludvig Forssell for the in-game cassette tapes. The latter two releases also include music that went unused in the game, with Metal Gear SolidV Extended Soundtrack in particular containing two tracks from the cut Mission 51: Kingdom of the Flies. The game's soundtrack later won the award for Best Score/Soundtrack at The Game Awards 2015. The event also had Stefanie Joosten, Quiet's voice actress, on stage performing "Quiet's Theme". Konami–Kojima dispute In March 2015, Konami announced plans for a corporate restructuring that saw them part ways with Hideo Kojima and his development studio Kojima Productions. As part of the separation, Kojima's name was removed from the game cover, all of its associated paraphernalia and future releases of Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroesand Metal Gear Solid: The Legacy Collection. A Konami spokesperson stated that Kojima would still be involved with Konami and the Metal Gear franchise, and despite the dispute, the company expressed confidence that the game would be declared Game of the Year. In July 2015, series composer Rika Muranaka told Fragged Nation in an interview that over 30 commissioned songs for the series were never used, with Muranaka believing that Kojima has a lack of business sense that played a part in his split from Konami. Release Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain was released in different editions. SpecialDay One editions of the game for each platform featured downloadable content (DLC) vouchers for special weapons and Metal Gear Online experience points. The North American Collector's Edition (which was available for PS4 and Xbox One) comes with a steelbook and a small-size replica of Snake's bionic arm; the Premium Package for the Japanese release (which was available for PS4, PS3, and Xbox One) features a full-size replica, which was also sold separately in May 2016. Sony released a PlayStation 4 bundle with the unit painted in the colors of the arm. The physical PC release of The Phantom Paincasing for the iPhone 5 and 5S, produced a transformable figure of the Sahelanthropus, while Kotobukiya readied a 1/100 scale kit of the unit. Sports apparel company Puma joined the project through a line of sports jackets, T-shirts, and footwear, including Snake's sneaking boots. Square Enix's PlayArts Kai figure line featured several of the game's characters, while Kaiyodo produced Venom Snake and a Soviet Army soldier for the RevoMini figure category. An art book, titled The Art of Metal Gear Solid V, was published by Dark Horse Comics on November 2, 2016. A complete edition of the game, titled MetalGear Solid V: The Definitive Experience, was released for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Steam on October 11 in North America, October 13 in Europe, and November 10 in Japan. The bundle includes the Ground Zeroes prologue and The Phantom Pain in one package, along with all previously released downloadable content for both games. Reception Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain received "universal acclaim" from critics, according to review aggregator Metacritic. Vince Ingenito of IGN awarded the game a score of 10/10, complimenting the way the gameplay mechanics worked together and the organic nature of the open-ended missions thatallowed players to create their own memorable experiences, without being punished for deviating from stealth. The review concluded that The Phantom Pain is "a gameplay marvel, rewarding intelligence and creativity in a way few games do." GameSpot also gave the game a 10/10, similarly praising its "near impeccable" gameplay, commenting that, alongside main and side missions, "emergent scenarios serve as the third pillar of The Phantom Pain open-world gameplay experience". The review also highlighted the meaningful development of the characters despite being beholden to the original Metal Gear as the conclusion of Venom Snake's character arc. The Phantom Pain wasthe twenty-third game—and the third in the Metal Gear series—to ever receive a perfect 40/40 review rating from Japanese magazine Famitsu. EGM awarded the game 9.5/10, praising the story's emotional power and thematic concerns exploring the futility of war in a much more compelling and cohesive way than other franchises such as Call of Duty and Battlefield, as well as the way in which the game world responded to the player's actions. However, the review was critical of the reliance on resource management, particularly in the way assaults on Forward Operating Bases could interrupt and distract from key missions. Destructoidawarded it a score of 9/10, saying that the game is "equal parts tough and flashy, and it's fitting that if this is Kojima's last Metal Gear, he goes on a high note." Game Informers Joe Juba awarded the game 9.25/10, praising the mission design for its flexibility and offering players multiple pathways to completion without restricting their choice of weapons or equipment. However, despite complimenting the range of activities in the open world platform, Juba felt that it overshadowed the main narrative, and the choice to include key story information in optional audio logs meant that the player couldand noted the way the game's Mother Base mode offered satisfactory and meaningful progress, a sentiment echoed by Times Matt Peckham, who also complimented the game's longevity, pacing and artificial intelligence. Both The Independent and The Guardian labelled The Phantom Pain as the greatest stealth game ever made, with the latter calling it "a game-changing triumph [...] the final evolution of a video game director’s singular vision." Criticism of The Phantom Pain principally fell on its writing, with some reviewers finding it lacked a focused and compelling narrative with interesting characters, especially when compared to prior Metal Gear titles. IGNpacing, "incoherent" dialogue, and "incomprehensible" character motivations. He echoed Ingenito's view of Snake, calling him in cutscenes "nearly silent to the point of awkwardness [...] where his response to emotional events will often just be to look at people." David Roberts, writing for GamesRadar, described the story as "unconventional" and full of "loosely connected scenes", saying "a whole lot of nothing happens in between quick bursts of exposition". While praising Kiefer Sutherland as Snake, he criticized Skullface as being greatly undeveloped as a villain and being met with "one of the most anti-climactic showdowns in video game history". Roberts alsothe game. Konami later neither confirmed nor denied that Chapter 3 had been fully cut from the main game. Metal Gear Solid community manager Robert Allen Peeler was asked via Twitter if any upcoming downloadable content would be released for The Phantom Pain, in the hope that the story content would be included, but this was refuted. Many fans also believed that, due to the chapter's title, it was somehow linked to Konami's "Nuclear Disarmament Event" which was opened shortly after launch with the goal of revealing a secret in the game, and which would close once all in-game nuclearthe release of the previously-uncovered cutscene. After investigation, Konami announced that this was the result of a technical error owing to the game's servers being sent incorrect values. Critics attributed the missing content to the disclosed tensions between Konami and Kojima during development, the general consensus being that Konami had given strict deadlines for the game's release, having been dissatisfied with how much money Kojima had spent on development. Data miners also uncovered numerous other examples of lesser content that had not been included in the game, ranging from gameplay features to cutscenes, but what precisely had been removed asa result of the Konami-Kojima conflict, and what had simply been abandoned earlier in development out of choice, was open to discussion. Regardless, due to the removed story content and subsequent narrative flaws, the game was labeled by some critics as being unfinished. Conversely, GamesRadars Dan Dawkins argued that the game's incomplete state was deliberate on Kojima's part. Speaking to IGN, Kojima himself alluded to the fact that he considered the game unfinished when stating that the new intellectual property he was developing since leaving Konami (later revealed as Death Stranding) would be "a complete game". After the announcement ofMetal Gear Solid V: The Definitive Experience, which would include all previously released downloadable content, several fans took this as an opportunity to voice their concerns via Twitter about the missing content that had been uncovered, particularly with regards to Episode 51. Konami responded that Episode 51 had been removed in the early development stages of the game as it had not been intended to be a pivotal ending to the story, and that there were no future plans to have the mission available to play. Portrayal of Quiet Before the release of the game, the presentation of the femalecharacter Quiet became a topic of controversy concerning her appearance. Halo designer David Ellis criticized her for being oversexualized and a negative affirmation of the stereotype of the game industry as "full of man babies". Kojima and Konami released Quiet figurines in May 2015 as part of the game's promotion. The figure's soft, pliable breasts were criticized by some in the West in social media and in the press. The finished game drew more criticism of Quiet's portrayal in both reviews and opinion pieces. GamesRadars David Roberts described Quiet as "one of the most complex and conflicted characters in MGS5",but that her depiction was an example of a "juvenile approach to sexuality" that typifies Kojima's work and the Metal Gear series as a whole. Michael McWhertor of Polygon described the justification for Quiet's lack of clothing as "inextricably tied to the game's convoluted story", and criticized how the game presented other female characters by "zeroing in on their jiggling breasts and panning across their asses in a silly, oversexualized way." Sales Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain shipped 3 million physical copies within its first five days of release, across all platforms. On its release date, the gamegrossed US$179 million. The Phantom Pain debuted at number one on the United Kingdom charts. It became the third biggest video game launch of 2015 in the UK, behind Batman: Arkham Knight and The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. The Phantom Pain was the most successful launch for the series in the UK, beating the previous record holder, Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, by 37 percent. The game sold 411,199 physical retail copies on PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 within the first week of release in Japan, topping the Japanese software sales charts that week. In the United Kingdom,the game sold noticeably more on the PlayStation family of consoles than the Xbox. Excluding computer sales, The Phantom Pain moved approximately 72 percent of copies on PlayStation 4, roughly three times the amount sold on the Xbox One, which accounted for 22 percent of sales. three percent of sales were on PlayStation 3, and two percent on Xbox 360. By the end of September 2015, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain had shipped over five million copies worldwide, which had raised to over six million by December 2015. Accolades Notes References Further reading Metal Gear Solid V: ThePhantom Pain - Strategy Guide, Gamer Guides, 2015 The Art of Metal Gear Solid V, Dark Horse Comics, 2016 Amy M. Green, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Trauma, and History in Metal Gear Solid V, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017 External links Category:2015 video games Category:Amputees in fiction Category:Angolan Civil War video games Category:Bioterrorism in fiction Category:Action-adventure games Category:Fiction about parasites Category:Cold War video games Category:Dystopian video games Category:Fiction with unreliable narrators Category:Video games about genetic engineering Category:Fiction about hypnosis Category:Interquel video games Category:Konami games Category:Open world video games Category:PlayStation Plus games Category:PlayStation 3 games Category:PlayStation 4 games Category:Metal Gear video games Category:Soviet–Afghan War
### Assistant:
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### User:
Eve Myles (born 26 July 1978) is a Welsh actress from Ystradgynlais. She graduated from the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama in 2000. Later that year, she began portraying Ceri Lewis in the BBC drama series Belonging, a role she would play until the end of the series in 2009. Myles' early UK-wide television credits included the 2001 miniseries Tales from Pleasure Beach and the 2003 television drama Colditz. In 2005, she auditioned for a part in the revived series of Doctor Who, and landed the role of servant girl Gwyneth, in the Series 1 episode "The UnquietDead", alongside Billie Piper and Christopher Eccleston. Her appearance in Doctor Who led to her winning a lead role in the science fiction drama's spin-off series Torchwood, in which she portrayed the character Gwen Cooper for four series between 2006 and 2011. Myles's role in Torchwood earned her a Bafta Cymru award for Best Actress in 2007. Myles also reprised the role of Gwen in the 2009 and 2011 series of Torchwood Radio Plays and since 2015 in an ongoing range of stories for Big Finish Productions. Myles subsequent television credits include the 2008 miniseries Little Dorrit, the 2008 premierethe ITV period drama series Victoria, a role she did not reprise for series 2. An accomplished theatre actress, Myles won an Ian Charleson Award in 2004 for her performances in Royal Shakespeare Company productions of the plays Titus Andronicus and The Taming of the Shrew. Further theatre credits include both Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2 at the National Theatre in 2004, and the role of Emma in the first UK run of Zach Braff's play All New People in 2012. Early life Myles was born on 26 July 1978 in Ystradgynlais. Her father is Scottish.She attended Ysgol Maes Y Dderwen, where she learned only basic Welsh phrases. She was in the same class as fellow actor Richard Corgan and the year below Steve Meo. She grew up with a strong interest in boxing, although she gave up the sport after breaking her knuckle by punching a wet sandbag. After training as an actress and gaining a Bachelor of Arts in acting at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama in Cardiff in 2000, Myles moved to London. Career In 2000 Myles took on the central role of Ceri Owen (née Lewis) in therole in the BBC1 drama Frankie, filmed in Bristol, which follows the life of a district nurse who cares more about her patients than her own life. In August 2016, Myles starred alongside Jenna Coleman, Tom Hughes and Rufus Sewell in the ITV drama Victoria, which follows the early life of Queen Victoria from her ascension to the throne at the age of 18, through to her courtship and marriage to Prince Albert. She portrayed Mrs Jenkins, the Queen’s personal dresser. In 2017, Myles starred alongside her real life husband Bradley Freegard in the Welsh drama Un Bore Mercher forBBC drama A Very English Scandal. The drama relates the real-life story of politician Jeremy Thorpe's affair with Scott and subsequent trial for attempted murder, based on the novel of the same name by John Preston. Awards and recognition Myles was among many others nominated for Wales online Dafftas' best actress and won for her role as Frankie with almost 45% of the votes. Myles was nominated for and won Wales' sexiest woman in 2013. Myles has been nominated for a total of six BAFTA Cymru awards, winning one. In 2002, 2003, and 2009, Myles was nominated for Best Actressin the BAFTA Cymru Awards for her role as Ceri on the BBC Wales drama Belonging. In 2007, Myles won the BAFTA Cymru Best Actress award for her portrayal of Gwen Cooper in Torchwoods first series, a role she also received Best Actress BAFTA Cymru nominations for in 2008 and 2010. In 2010, Myles won the Best Actress award in the SFX Reader's awards poll, and was crowned best actress in the 11th annual Airlock Alpha Portal Awards. For her role as Gwen Cooper in Torchwood: Miracle Day, Myles was nominated for a Satellite Awards in the Best Television Actresscategory. and reached the shortlist for the 2012 UK National Television Awards. In 2006, Wales on Sunday named Myles as its "Bachelorette of the Year". Myles also regularly ranks highly in the Western Mails annual list of the 50 sexiest women in Wales. In 2005, the Western Mail ranked Myles seventh whilst she ranked fifth in 2008, 7th in 2009, 8th in 2010 and 10th in 2011. In June 2010, Myles was honoured with a fellowship from the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama. Personal life Myles met Bradley Freegard at the National Youth Theatre in 1994, and theyif possible. Filmography Film & television Radio Theatre Audio book narrator Video games References External links Bio of Myles at BBC Wales Category:1978 births Category:Living people Category:20th-century Welsh actresses Category:21st-century Welsh actresses Category:People from Powys Category:Alumni of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama Category:Royal Shakespeare Company members Category:British Shakespearean actresses Category:Welsh voice actresses Category:Welsh radio actresses Category:Welsh stage actresses Category:Welsh television actresses Category:Welsh soap opera actresses Category:Welsh radio presenters Category:Welsh television presenters Category:Welsh film actresses Category:Welsh video game actresses Category:Welsh expatriates in the United States Category:Audiobook narrators Category:National Youth Theatre members Category:Welsh Shakespearean actors Category:Welsh-speaking actors Category:Women radio
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Eve Myles", {"description":'Welsh actress'}], ["Ystradgynlais", {}], ["Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama", {}], ["BAFTA Cymru", {}], ["Actor", {}], ["Bradley Freegard", {}]]
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### User:
Wu Zhengyi (Chinese: 吴征镒; June 13, 1916 – June 20, 2013) was a Chinese botanist and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). Wu specialized in Botanical Geography and Medicinal Botany. He is also known by the alternative spellings of 'Wu Cheng-yih', 'Wu Zheng Yi' and 'Cheng Yih Wu'. Wu was born in Jiujiang, Jiangxi, and grew up in Yangzhou, Jiangsu. He graduated from Tsinghua University in 1937. From 1940 to 1942, he pursued his postgraduate study at Peking University, under supervision of Zhang Jingyue, then chair of the department of Biology at PKU. In 1950, Wu became
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Wu Zhengyi", {"description":'Chinese botanist (1916-2013)', "alias":['C.Y.Wu', 'Cheng Yih Wu']}], ["Jiujiang", {}], ["Botanist", {}], ["Tsinghua University", {}], ["Peking University", {}], ["Botany", {}]]
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### User:
Onrea Jones (born December 22, 1983) is a former gridiron football wide receiver. He was signed by the Houston Texans as an undrafted free agent in 2007. He played college football at Hampton. Jones was a member of the San Diego Chargers, Green Bay Packers, Indianapolis Colts, Washington Redskins, Arizona Cardinals, Chicago Bears, Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Ottawa Redblacks. External links Hamilton Tiger-Cats bio Arizona Cardinals bio Hampton Pirates bio Indianapolis Colts bio Category:1983 births Category:Living people Category:People from Clarksville, Tennessee Category:Players of American football from Tennessee Category:American football wide receivers Category:Hampton Pirates football players Category:Houston Texans players Category:San Diego Chargers
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Onrea Jones", {"description":'American football player'}], ["Arizona Cardinals", {}], ["Chicago Bears", {}], ["Indianapolis Colts", {}], ["Houston Texans", {}], ["Green Bay Packers", {}], ["Hamilton Tiger-Cats", {}], ["Wide receiver", {}], ["American football", {}], ["Clarksville, Tennessee", {}]]
Relations:[["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Arizona Cardinals"], ["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Chicago Bears"], ["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Indianapolis Colts"], ["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Houston Texans"], ["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Green Bay Packers"], ["Onrea Jones", "member of sports team", "Hamilton Tiger-Cats"], ["Onrea Jones", "position played on team / speciality", "Wide receiver"], ["Onrea Jones", "sport", "American football"], ["Onrea Jones", "place of birth", "Clarksville, Tennessee"]] |
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