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Mark Venus (born 6 April 1967) is an English football coach and former player. He currently works as assistant head coach of Blackburn Rovers. As a player, he spent the majority of his career with Wolverhampton Wanderers and Ipswich Town. As a coach, he has served as an assistant manager to Tony Mowbray at Hibernian, West Bromwich Albion, Celtic and Middlesbrough. Playing career His career started with his hometown team of Hartlepool United where he signed as a youngster in 1985. After a stay at Leicester City, he signed in 1987 for Wolverhampton Wanderers. Over nearly a decade at Molineux,
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The Sky Walker is the third pulp magazine story to feature The Avenger. Written by Paul Ernst, it was published in the November 1, 1939 issue of "The Avenger” magazine. Publishing history This novel was re-published under its original title by Paperback Library on August 1, 1972. Summary The Sky Walker seems to be a man walking in the air over Chicago, pushing a barrel-sized object. His appearance is associated with shattering glass, vanishing railroad tracks that cause a train to derail, the collapse of an office building and a pavilion. People panic, fearing foreign invasion. Inventors Max and Robert
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James Edward Henry Gordon (26 June 1852 – 3 February 1893) was a British electrical engineer, the son of James Alexander Gordon (1793-1872). He took his B.A. at Caius College, Cambridge in 1876. Gordon designed large electrical machines, such as an early 350 kilowatt alternator, and wrote extensively on practical electrical problems such as lighting. In 1875, he published results of experiments on electrical constants done at the Cavendish Laboratory under the supervision of James Clerk Maxwell. In 1878 he was assistant secretary to the British Association. In 1879, he published "Electrostatic Induction" based on lectures and in 1880 released"Physical Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism." After 1882 he turned to consulting engineering and construction of central station power plants. He was manager of the electric lighting department at the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company in 1883. In 1884 he released "Practical Treatise on Electric Lighting." He was engineer for the Metropolitan Electric Supply Company in 1888-9, then in 1889 he started practice with W. J. Rivington, forming "J. E. H. Gordon and Company". His wife Alice wrote a popular book on application of electricity to household lighting in 1891. Their son James Geoffrey Gordon (1881-1938) became Bishop of Jarrow.
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Egor Leonidovich Mekhontsev (Егор Леонидович Мехонцев, transliteration Egor Leonidovich Mechoncev; born on 14 November 1984 in Asbest, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSR) is an Russian professional boxer, who among other achievements won gold at 2012 London Olympics at light heavyweight division. Career Light-Heavyweight Southpaw Mekhontsev won a silver medal in the 2004 Light-heavyweight Russian senior national championships losing to Mikhail Gala in the final and won another silver in 2005 again losing to Gala in the semi-final by 39:26. The following year in 2006 he won bronze losing to Artur Beterbiyev 41:30 in the semi-final and in 2007 another bronzelosing to Evgeni Makarenko. Change to Heavyweight Mekhontsev then moved up to the heavyweight 201 lbs limit division and won the 2008 Russian national championships beating Evgeniy Romanov in the final by a score of 19-5. At the 2008 European Amateur Boxing Championships in Liverpool he defeated Nasi Hani (Macedonia) INJ RND 4, Stephen Simmons (boxer) (Scotland) 14-1, Petrisor Gananau (Romania) 5-2 and won Gold after defeating Armenia's Tsolak Ananikyan 9-2 in the final. At the 2009 World Amateur Boxing Championships – Heavyweight he upset Clemente Russo and beat fellow southpaws Oleksandr Usyk in the semifinal and Osmay Acosta inthe final. Mekhontsev successfully defended his title at the 2010 European Amateur Boxing Championships against Denis Poyatsika and Tervel Pulev. Change to Light-Heavyweight For the 2011 World Amateur Boxing Championships he traded weightclasses with Beterbiyev and dropped to light heavy. He beat Marcus Browne and Oleksandr Hvozdyk but was upset by young Cuban Julio César la Cruz and won Bronze. At the 2012 Olympics, being 28 years of age, he beat Damien Hooper, Elshod Rasulov, Yamaguchi Falcao in the semifinals and won Gold by defeating Adilbek Niyazymbetov. Turning professional Mekhontsev turned professional in October 2013, signing with boxing promotion companyTop Rank, which has also signed up a number of other 2012 olympic medallists. Mekhontsev made his professional debut on December 7, 2013, dominating and knocking down opponent PJ Cajagas three times before the referee stopped the contest in the third round. Professional boxing record |- style="text-align:center; background:#e3e3e3;" | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Res. | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Record | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Opponent | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Type | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Round | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Date | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Location | style="border-style:none none solid solid; "|Notes |- align=center |Win |13-0-1|- align=center |Win |5-0-0 |align=left| Samuel Miller ||| | |align=left| |align=left| |- align=center |Win |4-0-0 |align=left| Mike Mirafuente ||| | |align=left| |align=left| |- align=center |Win |3-0-0 |align=left| Dwayne Williams ||| | |align=left| |align=left| |- align=center |Win |2-0-0 |align=left| Atthaporn Jaritram ||| | |align=left| |align=left| |- align=center |Win |1–0-0 |align=left| PJ Cajigas ||| | |align=left| |align=left| References Category:1984 births Category:Living people Category:Light-heavyweight boxers Category:Heavyweight boxers Category:Boxers at the 2012 Summer Olympics Category:Olympic boxers of Russia Category:Olympic gold medalists for Russia Category:Olympic medalists in boxing Category:Medalists at the 2012 Summer Olympics Category:Russian male boxers Category:AIBA World Boxing Championships medalists Category:People from Asbest
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George Washington Logan (February 22, 1815 – October 18, 1889) was a prominent North Carolina politician who served in the Confederate States Congress during the American Civil War as a peace and Unionist candidate. Logan was born in Rutherford County, North Carolina. He served as Clerk of County Court (1841-1849), County Solicitor (1855-1856), member of the Confederate Congress (1863-1865), delegate from Rutherford County to the State Convention (1865) and Brigadier General of the Division of North Carolina Troops. Elected to serve in the Second Confederate Congress from 1864 to 1865 "for the two-fold purpose of opposing tyranny and keeping outof the rebel army," Logan was a Unionist and opponent of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. He was thought to be involved in the Red Strings, a Unionist movement within the Confederacy. After the Civil War he served in the North Carolina State Legislature from 1866 to 1868 as a member of the Republican Party and served as a Superior Court Judge (1868-1874). As a Judge, he was a foe of the Ku Klux Klan and in 1874 Judge Logan was defeated by one of his enemies David Schenck, a member of the Klan. As a native white member of theReconstruction Republican Party, Logan was known as a "scalawag", but was strongly opposed to the policies (and possible corruption) enacted by Governor William Woods Holden. In State v. Reinhardt and Love (1869), Judge Logan ordered a verdict of "not guilty" for a case involving Alexander Reinhardt, a "person of color" and Alice Love, a white woman, despite North Carolina's Marriage Act of 1838 banning interracial marriage. The George W. Logan House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. In 1866, he purchased the property now known as Pine Gables and listed on the National Register of
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Francisco Antolínez de Sarabia (1645–1700) was a historical and landscape painter who studied in the school of Murillo, whose style and manner of colouring he followed. He was born at Seville, and was a nephew of Joseph Antolinez. He went to his uncle at Madrid in 1672; but notwithstanding his having already distinguished himself as a painter, he left the profession for literary pursuits, and for the purpose of obtaining a lucrative situation at the bar, having been originally educated at Seville for the law. Being unsuccessful, he was compelled again to have recourse to painting, as a means ofsubsistence. It was then that he produced those small pictures from the Bible and the life of the Virgin, which are so much admired by amateurs for their invention, colour, and facility of execution. He died in 1700, regretted by the true friends of art, who lamented the misapplication of those talents with which he was endowed. Works His paintings included: Flight into Egypt (undated), oil on panel, 45 by 73 cm, now in the Prado, Madrid Jacob and Rachel at the Well (1670), now at the El Paso Museum of Art The Adoration of the Pastors (1678), Seville CathedralDesposorios de la Virgen The Annunciation, Prado, Madrid The Adoration of the Kings (La Adoración de los Reyes), Prado, Madrid Other paintings by Antolínez are now at the Budapest Castle and the Art Institute of Chicago being a few listed. References Agüera Ros, José Carlos, Cuadros del pintor sevillano Francisco Antolínez Saravia (c. 1645-1700) en el monasterio de Santa Cruz de Sahagún (León), Boletín del Seminario de Estudios de Arte y Arqueología, no. 61, 1995, p. 405-412. Lozano López, Juan Carlos, Una serie inédita del pintor Francisco Antolínez en la iglesia parroquial de Brea de Aragón (Zaragoza), Artigrama, no. 17,2002, p. 329-340 Palomino, Antonio (1988). El museo pictórico y escala óptica III. El parnaso español pintoresco laureado. Madrid, Aguilar S.A. de Ediciones, p. 46. . Rivera de las Heras, José Ángel, Una serie inédita del pintor Francisco Antolínez en la iglesia de Nuestra Señora de los Remedios de Zamora, BSAA arte, LXXI, 2005, p. 357-366. Signos. Arts and Culture in Huesca (Arte y cultura en Huesca. De Forment a Lastanosa.) Siglos XVI-XVII, exposition catalog, Huesca, 1994, p. 296, Valdivieso, Enrique, Historia de la pintura sevillana (History of Paintings from Seville), 1992. Guadalquivir S.L., Publishers. . Attribution: Category:1645 births Category:1700
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The Bishop of Sodor and Man is the Ordinary of the Diocese of Sodor and Man (Manx Gaelic: Sodor as Mannin) in the Province of York in the Church of England. The diocese only covers the Isle of Man. The Cathedral Church of St German where the bishop's seat is located, is in the town of Peel. St German's was elevated to cathedral status on 1 November 1980. The bishop is an ex officio member of the Legislative Council of the Isle of Man (the upper house of Tynwald, the parliament of the Isle of Man) and of Tynwald Court.
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Douglass Rupert Dumbrille (October 13, 1889 – April 2, 1974) was a Canadian actor and one of the Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood. Life and career The son of Richard and Elizabeth Dumbrille, Douglass Rupert Dumbrille was born in Hamilton, Ontario. As a young man, he was employed as a bank clerk in Hamilton while pursuing an interest in acting. He eventually left banking for the theatere, finding work with a stock company that led him to Chicago, Illinois, another another that toured the United States. In 1913, the East Coast film industry was flourishing and that year he appeared
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Charles Coffin Jewett (August 12, 1816 – January 9, 1868) was an American librarian, in 1848 becoming the Librarian and Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution before being appointed Superintendent of the Boston Public Library in 1858. He was born in Lebanon, Maine. Early life Charles Coffin Jewett graduated from Salem Latin School in 1831. He enrolled at Dartmouth College in Rhode Island, but then shortly thereafter he transferred to Brown University where he studied a classical course load of Greek, Latin, logic mathematics, and moral philosophy; however, Jewett showed the greatest interest in languages. Jewett had a tremendous lovelong career of library cataloging. Career His first cataloging experience took place as a Brown student while helping to catalog the library of the Philermenian Literary Society. In 1837, he entered Andover Theological Seminary, where he helped catalog the Andover Theological Seminary Library. In 1841, he became the librarian of Brown University. He extensively rearranged that library, and created a catalog in two parts; an alphabetical descriptive catalog of the items in the library, and an alphabetical Index of Subjects. After its completion in 1843, he embarked on a two-year campaign of book purchasing and study in Europe. He becameLibrarian and Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution in 1848, and began the task of building the Smithsonian's library by soliciting catalogs from prominent libraries and publishing a survey of U.S. libraries. He also started mechanical duplication of individual catalog entries for the re-publication of book catalogs using the technique of stereotyping. He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1851. Jewett was unanimously elected president at the first Librarian's Convention in 1853. Jewett left the Smithsonian after being relieved of his position due to conflicts with his supervisor and the Board of Regents over how theInstitution's funds were being allocated. He went on to become Superintendent of the Boston Public Library in 1858, where he remained until his death. National library Jewett had a vision for a national library, which would hold a union catalog of all the public libraries in the United States. This catalog would give scholars access to important books, point out differences in intellectual fields, and generally act as an aid to the evolution of knowledge while making the Smithsonian Institution the pre-eminent center for research. He spent the greater part of his life developing guidelines toward this end. Views onfor users. Death Charles Jewett died after suffering an attack of apoplexy while working at his desk in the Boston Public Library. Jewett's brother was Boston book publisher John P. Jewett. References Sources Charles C. Jewett. Notices of public libraries in the United States of America. Printed by order of Congress, as an appendix to the Fourth annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution. Washington, Printed for the House of Representatives, 1851. Historical Development of Ideas Concerning Library Catalogues: Their Purpose and Organization, by Moya K. Mason Charles Coffin Jewett, by the Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th
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Times Boo!, InterFM, Tokyo, December 2013 Television DRESS tv. (May 2013 – March 2014, MBS) TOKYO BRANDNEW DAYS〜Ashita no Watashi〜 (November 2013, BS Japan) Tokyo Jōkyū Date (Tokyo Precious Dating), 25 September 2013, TV Asahi (episode 71, Takadanobaba) Chikyū TV El Mundo, April 2011 – March 2012, NHK BS1 (presenter on Tuesdays) 3D★3D "Miryoku Saihakken! 3D de Toru Hawaii", October 2011, BS Fuji Sasuke Rising and Sasuke Rising Chokuzen Nabi, TBS Sekai Baribari Value (MBS) Aloha girl(April – September 2007, TV Tokyo) Personal life Born to an American father and a Japanese mother, Vogue grew up in Manoa, Honolulu, where
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Patrik Schumacher (born 1961) is an architect and architectural theorist based in London. He is the principal of the architecture practice Zaha Hadid Architects. Education and early career After high school in Gerlingen, Germany, Schumacher studied Philosophy and Mathematics at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Bonn in the early 1980s. In the mid-eighties Schumacher studied architecture in Stuttgart and in 1987 continued his studies at London Southbank University. In 1988 – still a student – he joined the design studio of Zaha Hadid, engaged in the design of the Vitra Firestation, the first built project of Hadid. In 1990 hereturned to University of Stuttgart to complete his Diploma in Architecture and then re-joined Hadid. In 1999 he completed his PhD at the Institute of Cultural Science, Klagenfurt University. Teaching Schumacher started his teaching career in 1993, teaching a post-graduate diploma course in architecture at Kingston University. He has collaborated with Zaha Hadid to teach advanced architecture studios in the United States, including Columbia University, Harvard Graduate School of Design, University of Illinois at Chicago, and between 2002 and 2016 five times at Yale School of Architecture. From 1994 to 1996 Schumacher was assistant professor at the Technical University ofBerlin (TU). In 1996 he founded (with Brett Steele) the Design Research Laboratory (AADRL) at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London where he continues to teach. From 2000 to 2015 he joined Zaha Hadid to lead one of the master classes at the University of Applied Arts Vienna, and currently remains an honorary professor there. From 2004 to 2014 he was also Professor at the Institute for Experimental Design at the University of Innsbruck. In 2013 Schumacher taught a design studio (with Marc Fornes) as the John Portman Chair in Architecture at Harvard's Graduate School of Design. Professionalcareer Since its incorporation in the late 1990s, Schumacher served as a director of Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) and is credited as partner and co-author of the practice's output. Since Hadid's death in April 2016, he has been leading the firm as its sole remaining partner. Theory and research Schumacher has been publishing theoretical articles in architectural magazines and anthologies since 1996, arguing for an expanded formal and spatial design repertoire as architecture's response to the new level of societal complexity and dynamism brought on by the socio-economic transition from Fordism to Post-Fordism. Schumacher has also prompted controversy by promotingpro-free market ideas against social housing, housing regulations and a centralised urban planning system. Schumacher's viewpoints are aligned with anarcho-capitalism, in favour of complete decentralisation and radical privatisation of all aspects of architecture, planning and development. Schumacher uses the term "parametricism" to denote the use in architecture of advanced computational design techniques. In 2008 he launched a manifesto for "parametricism" at the Venice Biennale of Architecture and a year later published the article "Parametricism: A New Global Style for Architecture and Urban Design" in the journal Architectural Design. This article was widely and controversially discussed and remains the most-downloaded articlein the online archive of this theory-focused architectural journal. In 2011, Schumacher published the first volume of The Autopoiesis of Architecture, which he called his "opus magnum", claiming to offer a "New Framework for Architecture", followed by the second volume, subtitled A New Agenda for Architecture in 2012. In writings and lectures, Schumacher has announced and advocated his research project of an "agent-based parametric semiology", positing the idea that the social functionality of the built environment depends on its communicative capacity as a semiologically encoded field that informs and instructs social actors and thereby coordinates social processes. Schumacher refers to
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Paul Duddridge (born 30 November 1966) is a writer, comedy agent, producer and director. Biography Born in Cardiff, Wales Duddridge attended Radyr Comprehensive School. Duddridge started his career at the BBC as writer on the children's game show Run the Risk. As an agent Duddridge represented Phill Jupitus, Rob Brydon, Alistair Mcgowan, Paul McKenna and Michael McIntyre. Duddridge founded the London-based production company "Jones The Film" in 2003. He directed, produced and wrote critically acclaimed television shows "Annually Retentive" for the BBC and "Director's Commentary" for ITV1. Other credit includes "The Keith Barret Show." He is the author of EverDated a Psycho? (2006) Retiring from representation in 2007 he moved to the US to write and produce TV and film. Duddridge wrote and fronted award-winning documentary "A Film About Races." He made his feature directing debut in 2016 with Mothers and Daughters. In 2018, Duddridge's second feature film Together starring Peter Bowles and Sylvia Syms was released. It premiered in the UK and is an official Selection for the 2018 British Film Festival in Australia. Currently he is Head of Entertainment at digital network TV4 in Los Angeles. Notes References Category:Living people Category:British television producers Category:1966 births Category:People educated
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The Novísimos - translated as the "Newest Ones" - were a poetic group in Spain who took their name from an anthology in which the Catalan critic Josep Maria Castellet gathered the work of the majority of the youngest and most experimental poets in the decade of the 1970s: Nueve novísimos poetas españoles (Nine Very New Spanish Poets), Barcelona, 1970. Nevertheless, they were often referred to as the "venecianos" (Venetians), in allusion to one of the poems in the anthology, Oda a Venecia ante el mar de los teatros ("Ode to Venice in front of the theatre sea") by Pereby the aesthetics of Andy Warhol.) Their literary formation was fundamentally foreign and cosmopolitan, which meant: Rejection of the immediate Spanish tradition, with the exceptions of Vicente Aleixandre, Luis Cernuda and Jaime Gil de Biedma. Discovery of the "damned" writers in the Spanish language: Octavio Paz, José Lezama Lima and the Baroque writers such as Francisco de Quevedo and Luis de Góngora among many others. Studying of the culturalists T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, of Kavafis, Saint-John Perse, Wallace Stevens and the French surrealists. Restoration of Rubén Darío's modernismo (not to be confused with modernism). The poetics included inthe anthology declare, above all, the primacy of language and style, and express an enormous scepticism in the value of poetry and in the occupation of the poet. "Poetry is useless" would be the slogan that better defines the attitude of this group in 1970. Basically, two tendencies coexisted inside the group: the culturalist (Guillermo Carnero, José María Álvarez, Pere Gimferrer), and the tendency connected to pop aesthetic, counterculture or pop culture (Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, Leopoldo María Panero). Other uses of the term A generation of Puerto Rican artists coming of age in the 1990s have been referred to as
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Arturo Carmona (born Arturo Aram Carmona Rodriguez on July 9, 1976 in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico) is a Mexican actor and former footballer. Biography Carmona was born on July 9, 1976 in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico. He is son of Arturo Carmona and Guadalupe Rodriguez. He has two siblings Judith and Daniel. He started his career as a footballer, but later he graduated to a sports program, his first steps in acting, were in some plays, and as a driver started in a magazine program called Club 34. Debuted in the telenovela Duelo de Pasiones. Next played in La verdad
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Dan Petrașincu (; born Angelo Moretta; ; , 2 June 1910 – 1997) was an Italian-Romanian anthropologist, writer and translator. He was born in Odessa from an Italian father and a Romanian mother. In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, when he was ten years old, the family fled to Romania, where he went to high school in Râmnicu Sărat and Bucharest. He worked as a copy-editor for "Rampa”, "Adevărul”, "Reporter”, "Lumea românească”, "România literară”. Together with Mihai Șerban and Ieronim Sârbu he published the magazine "Discobolul" (1932-1933). He translated from Victor Hugo, Gaston Baty, Wanda Wasilewska, etc. After 1950he lived in Italy, and died in Rome in 1997. Works Sângele, Bucharest, 1935 (for which he was given the "Dimineața” newspaper's Prose Award) Omul gol, Bucharest, 1936 (re-written as Omul și fiara, Bucharest, 1941) Monstrul, București, 1937; (re-written as Copilăria cu umbre), Bucharest, 1944; Bucharest, 1994 Miracolul, Bucharest, 1939 Junglă, Bucharest, 1940 Edgar Poe, iluminatul, Bucharest, 1942 Cora și dragostea, Bucharest, 1943 Timpuri împlinite, Bucharest, 1947 Un mare poet al libertății: Alexandru Sergheevici Pușkin, Bucharest, 1949 La resa dei conti, Rome, 1957 Lo spirito dell'India, Rome, 1960 Romanian edition: Spiritul Indiei (București, 1993) Gli dei dell'India, Milan, 1966; Imiti indiani edition, Milano, 1982; Romanian edition: Mituri indiene (Bucharest, 1998) Il pensiero Vedanta, Rome, 1968; Romanian edition: Gândirea Vedanta, (Bucharest, 1996) La parola e il silenzio, Rome, 1970; Romanian edition: Cuvântul și tăcerea. O posibilă reconstituire a Logosului cu ajutorul conceptului de Sabda-Sphoța din lingvistica indiană (Bucharest, 1994) Il Daimon e il superuomo, Rome, 1972; Romanian edition: Daimon și supraom (Bucharest, 1994) Aurobindo e il futuro dell'uomo, Rome, 1974 Il Quinto millennio, Milan, 1979 I miti delle antiche civilta messicane, Milan, 1984; Romanian edition: Miturile vechilor civilizații mexicane (Bucharest, 1998) Miti antichi e mito del progresso. Antropologia del sacrodal paleolitico al nucleare, Genoa, 1990; Romanian edition: Mituri antice și mitul progresului. Antropologia sacrului din paleolitic până în era nucleară (Bucharest, 1994) 7 miti maya e aztechi e delle antiche civilta messicane, Milan, 1996 References Aurel Sasu, Dicționarul biografic al literaturii române, M-Z, Ed. Paralela 45, Pitești, 2006, pp. 340–341 Category:1910 births Category:1997 deaths Category:Romanian novelists Category:Romanian male writers Category:Italian male novelists Category:Romanian essayists Category:Romanian translators Category:Italian essayists Category:Italian orientalists Category:Italian anthropologists Category:Imperial Russian emigrants to Italy Category:Imperial Russian emigrants to Romania Category:People from Odessa Category:20th-century translators Category:20th-century Italian novelists Category:20th-century Italian male writers Category:Male essayists Category:20th-century essayists Category:Italian
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Muhammad Aslam Khan (6 April 1923 – 22 January 1994; Urdu: محمد اسلم خان) was a two-star General (Major General) of Pakistan Army who served in the health sectors of both military and civil service. He has received various national awards, including Sitara-e-Imtiaz and Hilal-e-Imtiaz for his meritorious services to Pakistan. Background and education Known as 'General Sahib', he was born in Peshawar NWFP into a family of Pathans belonging to the sub caste of Akbar Khels (Khalil Mohmand) settled in Peshawar. He obtained his education from Islamia High School Peshawar, Government College Lahore and then completed MBBS from KingEdward's Medical College, Lahore Punjab at the age of 21. M. Aslam Khan was commissioned before independence of Pakistan in Army Medical Corps of the British Indian Army (14 July 1944) and soon after his commission he was sent to Italy where he served in various medical units and military hospitals during World War II. References Footnotes Sources History of Army Medical Corps, 2015; pp. 175 (Table: DMS Air),pp. 512 (Group Photograph) and pp. 827 (Chapter: 33) History of Pakistan Air Force (1947-1982). Syed Shabbir Hussain and M. Tariq Qureshi. 1st Edition, May 1982; pp. 64 (sub heading: PAF Base
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Hirschau is a municipality in the Amberg-Sulzbach district, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany. Geography Hirschau lies directly on the Bundesstraße 14 (Nuremberg - Rozvadov), 13 km northeast of Amberg and about 65 km east of Nuremberg. Apart from the main village Hirschau, the municipality consists of the following villages: Burgstall Dienhof Ehenfeld Krickelsdorf Kricklhof Krondorf Massenricht Obersteinbach Steiningloh Untersteinbach Weiher Economy Kaolin, used for the production of porcelain, has been mined at Hirschau since 1901. Interesting is the Monte Kaolino, a 120 meter high mound made from 32,000,000 tons of quartz sand from excess sand in years of operation. It is
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Lake Euramoo (a.k.a. Ngimun & Nuta) is a shallow dumbbell-shaped volcanic crater lake (a maar) in Danbulla, Tablelands Region, Far North Queensland, Australia. It was formed about 23,000 years ago by two massive explosions from groundwater superheating. The crater lake is known to Yidinji, within their oral history and mythology as Ngimun, and known to neighbouring Ngdjon-jii as Nuta; though formally gazetted by the Queensland Government as 'Lake Euramoo', Euramo being the Dyirbal word for river (yuramu) The lake (Ngimun) falls within the current Danbulla National Park and State Forest, on the Tertiary uplifted highlands of the Atherton Tableland, withinthe Wet Tropics of Queensland World Heritage Area, Australia. Origins Yidinji and Ngadjon-jii mythology explaining the origin of Ngimun plus two other companion crater lakes, Yidyam (Lake Eacham) and Barany (Lake Barrine), has been described as a plausible and surprisingly accurate oral account of volcanic eruptions or explosions in the area around 10,000 years ago. It is said that two newly-initiated men broke a taboo and angered the rainbow serpent Yamany, major spirit of the area ... As a result 'the camping-place began to change, the earth under the camp roaring like thunder. The wind started to blow down, asif a cyclone were coming. The camping-place began to twist and crack. While this was happening there was in the sky a red cloud, of a hue never seen before. The people tried to run from side to side but were swallowed by a crack which opened in the ground'.... .. After telling the myth, in 1964, the storyteller remarked that when this happened the country round the lakes was 'not jungle - just open scrub'. In 1968, a dated pollen diagram from the organic sediments of Lake Euramoo [Ngimun] by Peter Kershaw (1970) showed, rather surprisingly, that the rainforest in that area is only about 7,600 years old. Vegetation The vegetation surrounding Lake Euramoo (Ngimun) is a remnant of moist sub montane rainforest, surrounded by previously cleared land that, within the last 50 years, has been planted with endemic Hoop Pine (Araucaria cunninghamii) and exotic conifers, or recolonised by the remnant rainforest species. Typical moist submontane rainforest species found near Lake Euramoo (Ngimun), within 100 m, include: Araliaceae (e.g. Polyscias australiana, Schefflera actinophylla) Araucariaceae (e.g. Agathis robusta) Moraceae (e.g. Ficus sp.), Elaeocarpaceae (e.g. Elaeocarpus grandis) Euphorbiaceae (e.g. Aleurites moluccana, Macaranga spp.) Myrtaceae (e.g. Austromyrtus spp., Eugenia cormiflora) andRubiaceae (e.g. Flindersia brayleyana,Euodia bonwickii ) Around the margin of Ngimun are identifiable 'zones' of aquatic plants which fluctuate with water depth and the seasons: at Lake Euramoo (Ngimun)'s edge, rainforest lianas (e.g. Parsonsia spp.) intertwine with tall swamp grasses (Phragmites australis); away from the canopy's shade and the liana growth, up to 1 m water depth, the Hibiscus spp. and Ludwigia spp. become more common. further out there are rooted aquatic plants, floating vegetation mats, and, finally, up to 30 m from the edge are the floating aquatic plants (mainly Nymphoides spp.) Notes and references Notes References External links
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Issam El Adoua (born 9 december 1986) is a Moroccan footballer who plays for Al Dhafra as a central defender. Club career Born in Casablanca, El Adoua made his senior debuts for his hometown's Wydad Casablanca, and formed a solid partnership with Hicham Louissi during his spell at the club. On 25 May 2009 El Adoua moved abroad, signing a four-year deal with Ligue 1 side RC Lens. He made his debut for the side on 23 September, starting in a 4–3 away win over Montpellier HSC, for the campaign's Coupe de la Ligue; however he failed to appear inthe league, and was subsequently loaned to FC Nantes on 16 January of the following year. He appeared eight times in Ligue 2 before returning to his parent club. In June 2010 El Adoua moved to Kuwait, joining Al Qadsia SC. In his one-year spell he won the Premier League and the Federation Cup. On 4 June 2011 he moved teams and countries again, signing a two-year deal with Primeira Liga side Vitória S.C.. On 18 June 2013 the free agent El Adoua joined Levante UD, signing a two-year deal. He made his La Liga debut on 17 August, comingon as a second-half substitute in a 0–7 away loss at FC Barcelona. On 15 February 2015, El Adoua transferred to Chinese Super League side Chongqing Lifan. International career After appearing for the Morocco under-23's, El Adoua made a full international debut for Morocco on August 12, 2009 in a friendly against Congo. Position Usually a central defender, El Adoua can also play as a defensive midfielder. Honours Wydad Casablanca GNF 1: 2005–06 Al Qadsia Kuwaiti Premier League: 2010–11 Kuwait Federation Cup: 2010–11 Vitória Guimarães Portuguese Cup: 2012–13 References External links Category:1986 births Category:Living people Category:Moroccan footballers Category:Morocco international footballers
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Natalie Radina Holland is a Russian-born contemporary artist, formerly based in Norway and now working in England. Early life and training Born in St. Petersburg to Russian parents, Holland grew up near the Black Sea before commencing music studies at the age of 12. She studied both art and music at the School of Fine Arts in Novorossijsk, Russia, and eventually graduated from the Russian Academy of Arts with a degree in art. In 1981 Holland moved to Norway with her mother, who had married a Norwegian. She studied at the Norwegian College of Marketing and worked for an advertisingagency. Holland met Norwegian art’s enfant terrible Odd Nerdrum, who viewed some of her figurative works and asked her to come to his studio. Her visit resulted in a two-year apprenticeship from 1990 to 1992. She had her first solo show in 1994 in Oslo and has since exhibited in several countries. Recent work In 2009 her portrait Agnes was selected for exhibition at the BP Portrait Award at The National Portrait Gallery in London. in 2012, Holland painted several portraits of South African Olympian Oscar Pistorius prior to the start of the 2012 Summer Olympics. One of the paintings
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Aaron C. Jeffery is a Logie Award-winning New Zealand-Australian actor. He is best known for his roles as Terry Watson in Water Rats, as Alex Ryan in McLeod's Daughters, and as Matt "Fletch" Fletcher in Wentworth. Early and personal life Born in Howick, Auckland, Jeffery moved to Australia at the age of 17 and studied acting at NIDA. Jeffery has been in a relationship with his former McLeod's Daughters co-star Zoe Naylor since 2010. The couple had their first child together, a daughter, in 2012. Jeffery also has another daughter from a previous relationship. Career After graduation in 1993 fromNIDA he began his television career on the children's programme Ship to Shore. Jeffery is best known for his role as Alex Ryan in the drama McLeod's Daughters, which he left in 2008. He also appeared in the third season of the New Zealand drama series Outrageous Fortune. Jeffery appeared in the series Underbelly: Badness as Frank. He wrapped filming on 22 June. Three days later, it was announced Jeffery had joined the cast of Neighbours as Bradley Fox for two months. In October, it was revealed that Jeffery had been cast as a corrections officer in the series Wentworth.
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Calvin Ross Barnes (born January 14, 1988) is an American actor, director, screenwriter, film producer, novelist, and playwright. Barnes moved to Los Angeles in 2009, where he began his career by starring in short films, appearing in television commercials, and writing screenplays. His stage play Rise. won ‘Best World Premiere’ at the 2012 Hollywood Fringe Festival in Hollywood, California. Barnes has since appeared in the Universal Studios horror film, Unfriended (2014), which was executive produced by Jason Blum, and penned the original screenplay for the independent drama, AdolescenceCook, Michael. Adolescence Review. Thoroughly Modern Reviewer. Retrieved July 2, 2019. (2018). Hehas one published novel, True Grandeur (2017), and stars in the upcoming feature film, The Astrid Experience, which marks his directorial debut. Early life and education Barnes was born in Salem, Oregon. He studied writing, journalism, and theatre at Portland State University in Portland before moving to Los Angeles. Career Barnes started his acting career in 2010 when he began booking numerous short films he self-submitted for that filmed in and around Los Angeles. He began acting professionally in 2011 when he landed his first agent and began booking theatrical and commercial work. In late 2011, he moved to the
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I Was a Rat is a British-Canadian children's drama television series broadcast on BBC One from 9 to 23 December 2001, based on the popular children's novel I Was a Rat! or The Scarlet Slippers by Philip Pullman. It was aired in the Sunday tea-time slot which traditionally accommodates a children's drama series in the run-up to Christmas. The series was produced by Andy Rowley and starred Calum Worthy in the leading role, alongside Tom Conti and Brenda Fricker. It was adapted by Richard Carpenter, who won a BAFTA award for the work. Synopsis The series is set in the
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Lou Goodwin is an Australian rugby league footballer who was signed to the Canberra Raiders in the National Rugby League. He plays as a Second-Rower and can also play as a lock. Background Goodwin was born in West Wyalong, New South Wales, Australia. Playing career Between 2010 and 2011 Goodwin was captain of the Sydney Roosters under 20’s team. The NRL Rookie Goodwin won Nine Networks reality TV show, The NRL Rookie, on 2 August 2016. As a result, he was offered contracts from the Canberra Raiders & the Gold Coast Titans, he signed the deal to play for theCanberra Raiders. Personal life Goodwin is the son of former first grade player, Matt Goodwin. Lou grew up in the small town of west Wyalong in central west NSW playing rugby league from a young age. Playing for the West Wyalong Malleemen and winning a junior premiership. Goodwin went to boarding school in the small town of Forbes representing the school of Red Bend Catholic college. After a stint at the Sydney Roosters in the under 20s competition, Goodwin made his way to the town of Albury where he played Rugby league for the Albury Thunder in the Group 9
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Power Glen is a hamlet located in the St. Andrew's Ward of the city of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. It can trace its history back to 1786 when Robert Hamilton acquired from a Mr. Duncan Murray, a mill site on the waters of Twelve Mile Creek. This mill operated until 1800 as a sawmill. In 1811, a grist mill was added by a Mr. Peter Thomas. The community came to be known as Crown Mills. In 1854, a Mr. Benjamin Reynolds bought the site and added a wagon and buggy factory, 12 workers' homes, and a boarding house. Fossing andSecond operated a wood pulp mill, and Thomas Moffat and William Reynolds manufactured wagons. The village name changed to Reynoldsville at this time. As electricity began to be introduced, the Cataract Power Company of Hamilton constructed a power plant not far downstream from the mills. They changed the name of the community to Power Glen, which it retains today. Until 1970, the hamlet was located in Louth Township. It was during that year that the City of St. Catharines amalgamated with the eastern half of Louth Township. For many years, the hamlet remained isolated in the south west corner of
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Erik Lars-Olov Zetterström (born November 6, 1953 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a retired Swedish professional ice hockey player who spent many years with Färjestads BK of the Elitserien, and also played briefly in the National Hockey League with the Vancouver Canucks. Playing career A smooth, mobile defender, Zetterström came up through the junior ranks at Färjestads and became a regular in 1972. He would become one of the club's top defenders, and represented Sweden at the 1977 and 1978 World Championships, winning a Silver medal in 1977. In 1978, Zetterström signed as a free agent with the NHL's Vancouver Canucks.Joining the team along with fellow Swedes Thomas Gradin and Lars Lindgren, the trio were the first Europeans to suit up for the club in their history. While Gradin and Lindgren were successful and went on to solid NHL careers, Zetterström struggled. He played in only 14 games for the Canucks, recording one assist and a -10 rating, and spent most of the season in the Central Hockey League with the Dallas Black Hawks. Zetterström was claimed by the Quebec Nordiques in the 1979 NHL Expansion Draft, but returned to Sweden to once again suit up for Färjestads. He would
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David Luke Custer (born October 14, 1980) is a journalist and television anchor and reporter. He currently works as the anchor of the 5pm, 6pm and 11pm news with Collette Boyd on Mid-Michigan's CBS affiliate channel WNEM. David Custer was born in Flint, Michigan, and lived in Goodrich, Michigan for most of his childhood and young adult life. He attended Goodrich High School, home of the Martians, and the University of Michigan's Flint campus, graduating with a degree in Communications in 2001. Custer's journey into television started as an anchor and a reporter in Alpena, Michigan, in 2002. The station,
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Michel Émile Kfoury (; born September 14, 1974), known by his stage name Wael Kfoury (), is a Lebanese singer, musician, and songwriter. He is considered one of the most popular figures in Arabic music and is often called The King of Romance or simply The King. In a career spanning over 25 years, he has become a Lebanese icon through his romantic songs. Career Wael studied solfège at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik. Commercial deals Kfoury signed a publicity campaign deal for PepsiCo's PepsiArabia affiliate. Kfoury was a star of PepsiCo sponsored "Bahr el Noujoum" (meaning of Sea
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and Steven Bedford were discharged, Chris Danns and Matthew Rawlings were drafted in, as replacement recruits. Robert Page initially was selected for officer training but quit before training began and was forced to return to unit. Simon Pietkewitz was awarded Most Improved Recruit. It was never specified who won Best Recruit, as well which section won Best Section award. At the end of the final episode, the narrator stated that 11 of 23 who passed out had subsequently applied to join the British Army. Series 4 References External links Category:2002 British television series debuts Category:2006 British television series endings Category:2000s
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The 1903 Clemson Tigers football team represented the Clemson Tigers of Clemson Agricultural College during the 1903 college football season. The team was a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) and played all its games on the road, compiling a 4–1–1 record and 2–0–1 in the SIAA. Most notably, the team competed in an early conference championship game, tying Cumberland 11–11 in the contest. This is John Heisman's last season coaching Clemson. The Tigers thrashed Georgia Tech 73–0, leading to Heisman's later job-offer at Tech. Before the season For the 1903 season, point values were different from thoseDerrick (left guard), Garrison (center), Forsythe (right guard), McKeown (right tackle), Sadler (right end), Maxwell (quarterback), Wood (left halfback), Furtick (right halfback), Hanvey (fullback). Postseason "SIAA championship game" Clemson tied Cumberland 11–11 in a game billed as the "SIAA Championship Game." Cumberland rushed out to an early 11–0 lead. Wiley Lee Umphlett in Creating the Big Game: John W. Heisman and the Invention of American Football writes, "During the first half, Clemson was never really in the game due mainly to formidable line play of the Bridges brothers–giants in their day at 6 feet 4 inches–and a big center named
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Emily Warn is an American poet. She was born in San Francisco, grew up in Michigan, and was educated at Kalamazoo College, the University of Washington, and Stanford University. She moved to the Pacific Northwest 1978 to work for North Cascades National Park, and a year later moved to Seattle where she has lived, more or less ever since. Her essays and poems have appeared in Poetry, Parabola, The Seattle Times, The Kenyon Review, Blackbird, BookForum, The Bloomsbury Review, and The Writer's Almanac. She has taught creative writing or served as writer-in-residence at many schools and arts centers, including Lynchburg
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Joey Mathijs Pelupessy (born 15 May 1993) is an Indonesian professional footballer of Dutch descent who plays as a defensive midfielder for EFL Championship team Sheffield Wednesday. Career Twente Pelupessy formerly played for FC Twente between 2004 and 2014, having progressed through to the club's senior team after playing in the club's U19 and U21 teams. In the 2013–14 season, Pelupessy was selected for three match squads for the senior team, but he didn't make an appearance for the club before the transferred to fellow Eredivisie side Heracles Almelo. Heracles Almelo Pelupessy joined Heracles Almelo in July 2014 on afree transfer, where he was assigned the number 14 shirt. He scored his first goal for his new club on 4 October 2014, which was also his team's fourth goal in their Eredivisie game against NAC Breda. The match ultimately ended 6–1. At the start of the 2017–18 season, his final season at the club, Pelupessy was made team captain. After 117 appearances and five goals for Heracles Almelo, Pelupessy left the club to sign for EFL Championship team Sheffield Wednesday. Sheffield Wednesday On 18 January 2018, Pelupessy signed for EFL Championship team Sheffield Wednesday, becoming new manager Jos Luhukay's
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Roscoea is a genus of perennial plants of the family Zingiberaceae (the ginger family). Most members of the family are tropical, whereas Roscoea species are native to mountainous regions of the Himalayas, China and its southern neighbours. Roscoea flowers superficially resemble orchids, although they are not related. The flowers of Roscoea have a complicated structure, in which some of the showy coloured parts are not formed by petals, but by staminodes, sterile stamens which have evolved to become like petals. Some species are grown as ornamental plants in gardens. Description Roscoea is found from Kashmir through the Himalayas to Vietnam,of its leaves ("sheaths"). The leaves are without a stalk (petiole). Lower leaves may consist solely of a sheath; upper leaves have a blade which is free from the pseudostem, and is oblong or lanceolate (i.e. considerably longer than it is wide). The relative number of bladeless versus complete leaves is one distinguishing feature of the two clades into which the genus is divided. The flowers are borne in a spike at the end of the pseudostems. The stalk (peduncle) bearing the flowers may be long, so that the flowers appear well above the leaves, or short, so that theyappear between the upper leaf sheaths. Like other members of the ginger family (Zingiberaceae), Roscoea flowers have a complex structure (superficially resembling that of an orchid, although they are not related). Each flower has a tube-shaped outer calyx, which is split on one side and ends in two or three teeth. The petals are joined together at the base, and then divide into three lobes. The central lobe is upright and usually forms a hood; the two side lobes are narrower than the central one. The flower then has what appear to be three inner petals, which are actually formedwere short-tongued pollen-collecting bees. In at least one species, R. schneideriana, it has been shown that if cross-pollination does not occur, the stigma bends over towards the anthers, thus effecting self-pollination. One suggestion is that although the original pollinators may have been long-tongued insects, these are now absent from at least some of the areas where Roscoea occurs, so that the genus has been able to survive in its alpine habitats through the presence of generalist pollinators and self-compatibility. Taxonomy Roscoea was named by the English botanist James Edward Smith in 1806. The type species is R. purpurea. The namehonours Smith's friend William Roscoe, the founder of the Liverpool Botanic Garden (remnants of which can now be found at Croxteth Hall). Roscoe is known to have been interested in "gingers" (Zingiberales) and to have grown a number of collections of this group of plants. Evolution and phylogeny A 2002 classification of the family Zingiberaceae, based on molecular phylogenetic analysis, placed Roscoea in the tribe Zingibereae, subfamily Zingiberoideae. It was most closely related to the genus Cautleya, and then to Rhynchanthus, Pommereschea and Hedychium. The family is mainly tropical in distribution. The unusual mountainous distribution of Roscoea and the closelyrelated Cautleya may have evolved relatively recently as a response to the uplift taking place in the region in the last 50 million years or so due to the collision of the Indian and Asian tectonic plates. A molecular phylogenetic analysis of 15 species of Roscoea, based on nuclear ribosomal DNA, showed that the genus was monophyletic, and distinct from the closely related genus Cautleya. The 15 species fell into two clear groups, a Himalayan clade and a Chinese clade (which includes one species from Burma, R. australis). The two clades correspond to a geographical separation, the main distributions beingdivided by the section of the Brahmaputra River which flows south at the end of the Himalayan mountain chain. Historical biogeography study revealed that evolutionary split between Cautleya and Roscoea occurred during the middle and late Eocene to the early Oligocene, corresponding well to the proposed early uplift of the Himalayas and Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. Roscoea species were then divided into two distinct clades, simultaneous with the rapid extrusion of Indochina and accompanied by the another Himalayan uplift around the Oligocene/Miocene boundary. It has been suggested that the genus may have originated in this area and then spread westwards along the
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Hypnotize Minds is an American record label started by DJ Paul and Juicy J of Memphis, Tennessee's Three 6 Mafia in 1997. As a group act, Hypnotize Minds goes by the stage name Hypnotize Camp Posse. As of 2012, the label is assumed defunct, with most of the roster moving onto new labels. Artists (partial list, dates approximate) DJ Paul (1997-2012) co-owner Juicy J (1997–2012) co-owner Lord Infamous (1997-2005)(Deceased) Koopsta Knicca (1997-2000)(Deceased) Crunchy Black (1997-2006) Gangsta Boo (1997-2001) La Chat (1997-2002) Project Pat (1997-2012) T-Rock (1998-2001) Frayser Boy (2002-2009) Lil Wyte (2002-2012) Chrome Korleone (2005-2008) Boogiemane (2004-2006) Granddaddy Souf (2006)Yung D (2008-2009) M.C. Mack (1997-2000) Scan Man (1997-2000) M-Child (1997-2000) K-Rock (1996-1998) Indo G (1997-1998) Mr. Del (1998-2000) Droopy Drew Dog (1997-1998) List of Past Lineups Three 6 Mafia DJ Paul Juicy J Lord Infamous Koopsta Knicca Crunchy Black Gangsta Boo Tear Da Club Up Thugs DJ Paul Juicy J Lord Infamous The Kaze (Killa Klan Kaze) M.C. Mack Scan Man K-Rock Project Pat Da Headbussaz DJ Paul Juicy J Fiend Discography References External links Hypnotize Minds on Myspace Category:1994 establishments in Tennessee Category:American record labels Category:Hip hop collectives Category:Hip hop record labels Category:Gangsta rap record labels Category:Horrorcore record
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''for the American football player, see Walker Gillette Walker & Gillette was an architectural firm based in New York City, the partnership of Alexander Stewart Walker (1876–1952) and Leon Narcisse Gillette (1878–1945), active from 1906 through 1945. Biographies Walker was a native of Jersey City, New Jersey, and graduated from Harvard University in 1898. Leon Gillette, born in Malden, Massachusetts, had attended the University of Pennsylvania and worked in several New York firms, such as Howells & Stokes and Warren & Wetmore, and had also attended the École des Beaux-Arts from 1901 through 1903. The two joined forces in 1906.Walker's wife, Sybil Kane Walker, was a decorator who worked with her husband on at least one commission. Her father was Grenville Kane, banker and longtime presence in the exclusive enclave of Tuxedo Park, New York, where Walker & Gillette received important early commissions. Her sister, Edith Brevoort Kane, married the son of George Fisher Baker. On the death of Gillette in 1945, Walker continued in business as 'Walker & Poor' with Alfred Easton Poor (the son of one of their Long Island clients). Their notable commissions include the 1950 Parke-Bernet Galleries Building in New York City. After Walker's 1952death, that firm would eventually become known as 'Swanke Hayden Connell'. Company history The firm was prolific and stylistically versatile. Their commissions are not clearly attributable to one partner or the other, apart from one source identifying Gillette as solely responsible for the Grasslands Hospital in East View (Valhalla), New York, several buildings in White Plains, New York, multiple buildings in the planned city of Venice, Florida, and a housing project in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Until about 1920, most of Walker & Gillette's work amounted to two kinds of society residences: New York City townhouses, and suburban mansions. The latterand William R. Coe. As to the townhouses in the city, the firm is credited with some fine examples and "the last great mansion to be built in New York", the 1932 Regency-style Loew house on East 93rd. Walker & Gillette ventured into commercial architecture in 1921 with great success. Their New York Trust Company Bank at 100 Broadway, a conservative and modest skyscraper apart from its adventuresome marble color scheme inside, began a series of about a dozen neo-classical branch banks in the New York area through the late 1920s. Their 1927 National City Bank branch on Canal Streetis likely the most significant. Then came a number of major skyscrapers, notably the Industrial Trust Tower in Providence, which remains the tallest building in Rhode Island, and the Fuller Building in New York, among others. One prominent civic commission was the seamless extension, to north and south, of the New-York Historical Society building on Central Park West between 76th and 77th Streets, carried out in 1938. York and Sawyer's central block dating from 1908 was extended and sympathetically completed by pavilions on either end. This project stands among the last examples of Beaux-Arts architecture completed in the city andin the entire country. In sharp contrast the firm's most theatrical modernist building came the same year. That was the Electrical Products Building for the 1939 New York World's Fair, where an arch-headed blue slab tower intersected with a stepped curved structure, housing demonstrations of radical new uses of electricity: shaving, mixing cake batter, and home sewing. Notable works St. George's-by-the-River Episcopal Church, Rumson, New Jersey, for Mrs. Alice C. Strong as an English Gothic memorial to her late husband, 1907-1908. A cloister was added in 1945. residence at 35 East 69th Street, New York City, 1910. The current occupant,The Episcopal School, a nursery school, subsequently added two additional stories. Manor house for the 2000-acre (8.1 km2) Aknusti Estate, in Delaware County, New York, for banker and horseman Robert Livingston Gerry, Sr., with landscape design by Olmsted Brothers, 1912 (damaged by fire in 1953; now known as "Broadlands") The Warren M. Salisbury estate, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, with murals by American realist painter Everett Shinn, circa 1914 The 35-room Bingham-Hanna House, with landscape work by the Olmsted Brothers, Cleveland, Ohio, 1916–1919, now part of the Western Reserve Historical Society residence at 52 East 69th Street, New York City, 1917 the Neo-Georgianwas "the last great mansion" in New York City, with "the manners of John Soane". Soanian details include the three great arch-headed windows in very shallow reveals of the main floor and the windows cut out of the frieze below the cornice. Now the Spence School. United States Post Office, Garden City, New York, 1936 the rear-projection Trans-Lux newsreel theater, Lexington Avenue and East 52nd Street, NYC, with Thomas W. Lamb, 1938 street-level renovations in stainless steel for the Empire Building, New York City, 1938 Electrical Products Building, 1939 New York World's Fair (razed) Jacob Riis Houses public housing project,
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Boss Sounds! (subtitled Shelly Manne & His Men at Shelly's Manne-Hole) is a live album by drummer Shelly Manne recorded in 1966 and released on the Atlantic label. Reception The Allmusic review called it "Fine hard bop music". Track listing "Margie" (Con Conrad, J. Russel Robinson, Benny Davis) - 7:31 "Idle One" (Frank Strozier) - 7:20 "The Breeze and I" (Ernesto Lecuona, Al Stillman) - 6:51 "Frank's Tune" (Strozier) - 9:25 "Wandering" (Don Specht) - 6:17 "You Name It" (Russ Freeman) - 6:19 Personnel Shelly Manne - drums Conte Candoli - trumpet, flugelhorn Frank Strozier - alto saxophone Russ Freeman
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Roshaun Omar Stuart Williams (born 3 September 1998), known as Ro-Shaun Williams, is an English professional footballer who plays as a defender for Shrewsbury Town. Early and personal life Williams was born in Manchester, and grew up in Whalley Range. In 2014 he said that Ryan Giggs was his hero. At the age of 15 he broke Darren Campbell's 100-metre schoolboy sprinting record. Club career Manchester United Williams began his career with Manchester United at the age of nine, joining the club at his mother's insistence so that he stopped kicking a football around inside the house. He was linkedwith a loan move away from the club at the start of the 2018–19 season, but joined the club's pre-season tour of the United States. Later that season he spent time training with the first-team whilst still playing for their youth team. Shrewsbury Town He signed for Shrewsbury Town in January 2019. He made his professional debut on 9 February 2019 in a 1–1 EFL League One draw away to Bristol Rovers. International career He has represented England at under-17, under-18, and under-19 youth international levels. He is eligible for Grenada through his mother who was born on the island
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Norma Crane (born Norma Anna Bella Zuckerman; November 10, 1928 — September 28, 1973) was an actress of stage, film and television. Among her best-known roles was that of Golde in the 1971 film adaptation of Fiddler on the Roof. She starred in They Call Me Mister Tibbs! and Penelope. She was born in New York City but raised in El Paso, Texas. Biography Born to a Jewish family in New York City and raised in El Paso, Crane studied drama at Texas State College for Women in Denton, and was a member of Elia Kazan's Actors Studio. She madean episode of The Asphalt Jungle. In 1965, Crane guest-starred as Mrs. Mavis Hull in The Fugitive episode "Masquerade" as well as a 1968 episode of The Flying Nun. Personal life In 1961, she married writer-producer Herb Sargent; the marriage ended in divorce. Death Crane died of breast cancer, aged 44, in Los Angeles, California, two years after the release of Fiddler on the Roof (1971), her last film. She is interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles. Filmography References External links Category:1928 births Category:1973 deaths Category:Actresses from El Paso, Texas Category:American stage actresses Category:American film actresses
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César Vezzani (8 August 1888 – 11 November 1951) was a French/Corsican operatic tenor who became a leading exponent of French grand opera through several decades. (Some sources give his date of birth as 1886.) Career César Vezzani was born in Bastia in Corsica; his father died shortly before his birth. Soon after 1900 his family moved to Toulon on the French mainland, but little is known about his early musical training. In 1908 he went to Paris to study singing and was taught by the Corsican soprano Agnès Borgo (1879 - 1958). He then made his operatic début atcareer during the later years of the war, but most of his subsequent engagements were in provincial opera houses, especially in the south of France, though he also sang in Brussels. He returned to the Opéra-Comique in Paris in 1921/1922 and probably appeared there again during the 1920s, but he never sang at the Paris Opéra. The ringing and heroic quality of his voice made him an ideal choice for certain heavy and dramatic tenor parts, but he never abandoned some of the more lyrical roles of the French repertoire. During World War II Vezzani spent time in North Africa,singing frequently in Algiers. He continued as principal tenor in Toulon until 1948 when he suffered a stroke which left him paralyzed. He returned to Bastia, but now without an income he spent the last three years of his life in some poverty and assisted by the generosity of friends. He died in hospital in Marseille and was buried in Bastia, where a street is named after him. Recordings The potential of Vezzani's outstanding voice for recording was quickly recognised, and from 1912 to 1914 he made a series of recordings for French Odéon, including excerpts from Pagliacci. Tosca, andWerther. Then from 1923 until the early 1930s he recorded for French HMV in arias from many of his favourite roles, including Reyer's Sigurd, Halévy's La Juive, and Meyerbeer's L'Africaine. There was also a complete recording of Gounod's Faust in 1930 with Mireille Berthon and Marcel Journet. It is unclear whether and when Vezzani sang Wagner on stage, but he recorded a number of pieces from Lohengrin and The Ring. In total he recorded over 170 sides. Most of these were originally released only in France, but there have been several selections transferred to CD, and a systematic reissue ofhis recordings has been launched by Marston Records. Reputation Critics have shown universal recognition of the exceptional quality of Vezzani's voice, though they have sometimes expressed reservations about the subtlety of his approach, which was generally robust. His recording of Faust has occasioned the following comments: "Vezzani is a noble representative of that vanished breed, the French spinto tenor... Unforced lyricism was not Vezzani's greatest strength... [but] where ringing excitement is called for, his only equals are Caruso and, more recently, Franco Corelli." Referring to his recording of excerpts from Roméo et Juliette, another critic has said: "He was areal ténor de force and still singing well at sixty. There is little nuance here, but the voice is healthy and brilliant, somehow typically Corsican." Reflecting on the fact that Vezzani's career did not take him to the world's major opera houses, another has said: "He seems to be one of those whose gifts exceeded his attainments." The generous attention that he received from recording companies allows later generations to form their own judgments. References External links Marston CD notes (by Tom Kaufman and Vincent Giroud) History of the Tenor - Sound Clips and Narration Category:1886 births Category:1951 deaths Category:French
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, better known by her stage name , is a Japanese actress, voice actress and singer from Nishi-ku, Hiroshima. She is currently attached to Tokyo Actor's Consumer's Cooperative Society. Tominaga is best known for her roles in Sazae-san (as Katsuo Isono), Persia, the Magic Fairy (as Persia Hayami), Patlabor (as Noa Izumi), Maison Ikkoku (as Kozue Nanao), Rurouni Kenshin (as Myōjin Yahiko), Hell Teacher Nūbē (as Miki Hosokawa), DNA² (as Karin Aoi) and Bikkuriman 2000 (as Takeru). Relationships Tominaga married voice actor Kazuki Yao on June 29, 1990, though they later divorced. On August 2001 she married Yoshimoto Kogyo tarento
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Carlton Michael George Cole (born 12 October 1983) is an English football coach and former professional footballer who played as a striker. He scored 51 goals in 289 Premier League appearances for four clubs. Cole began his career at Chelsea in 2001, spending spells out on loan at Wolverhampton Wanderers, Charlton Athletic and Aston Villa before being transferred to West Ham United in 2006. He was released by West Ham in 2013 only to be re-signed several months later, and the club released him for a second time in May 2015. He later had brief spells at Celtic in Scotland,Sacramento Republic in the United States and Persib Bandung in Indonesia. He made 19 England under-21 appearances (scoring six goals), and made his debut for the England national team on 11 February 2009 in a friendly match against Spain. Club career Chelsea 2001–02 season Cole was born in Croydon, London to a Sierra Leonean mother. He began his career as a trainee with Chelsea, before signing his first professional contract with the club in October 2000. He made his first-team debut in April 2002 as a substitute for Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink in a 3–0 victory against Everton. He made hissix-year contract with Chelsea in the summer of 2003, but faced competition from Adrian Mutu, Gudjohnsen, Hasselbaink and Mikael Forssell for a place in the starting line-up for Chelsea. He joined Charlton Athletic on a season-long loan in August 2003, where he scored five goals in 22 league and cup appearances, helping Charlton to finish the 2003–04 season in seventh place in the Premier League. 2004–05 season Despite Charlton being keen to retain Cole's services for the 2004–05 season, he joined Aston Villa on a season-long loan in July 2004. This move sparked off a dispute, as Charlton were expectingCole to return to the club as part of the deal that took Scott Parker from Charlton to Chelsea. The dispute was later resolved when the two clubs reached a settlement. Cole scored three goals in 30 league and cup appearances for Villa, including a goal on his debut in a 2–0 win over Southampton in August 2004, in a season which was interrupted by a knee injury picked up in an England under-21 match against the Netherlands in February 2005. 2005–06 season He returned to Chelsea in the summer of 2005 where he appeared in pre-season friendlies. However, firstin injury time to seal a 3–1 home win against Charlton in August 2006. However, in a season of turmoil at West Ham. in which the club only secured their place in the Premier League on the final day of the season, Cole was unable to establish himself in the first team, making 23 league and cup appearances, 15 of which were as substitute, and scoring three goals. 2007–08 season Into 2007–08 and Cole began to repay the faith shown in him by the Hammers, scoring six goals and making an important contribution in the absence of the injured DeanLeague appearances, starting 26 of them. He scored ten Premier League goals, including one penalty in the 5–3 home win over Burnley on 28 November. He was then linked with a £20 million January 2010 transfer to Manchester United. After netting six goals in his first ten Premier League matches, he missed the period between 28 November and 26 February with a knee injury. He also made two League Cup appearances, starting the home second-round win over Millwall. He was booked four times over the course of the season. 2010–11 season He was linked with a transfer to Liverpool inAugust 2010 for a fee reported to be £20m which consisted of £15m including £5m in performance related add-ons. On 26 December 2010, he scored two goals in one match in the Premier League, for a first time in his career, in a 3–1 away win against Fulham at Craven Cottage. He also got a brace in the 4–0 League Cup quarter-final victory over Manchester United on 30 November 2010. On 12 February 2011, Cole scored in a 3–3 draw against West Bromwich Albion at The Hawthorns On 27 February 2011, Cole scored the final goal in West Ham's 3–1victory against Liverpool within two minutes of coming on as a substitute at Upton Park. 2011–12 season After failed bids from both Turkish club Galatasaray and Premier League club Stoke City, West Ham confirmed that Cole was committed to the club and that he would be staying. Cole came on as a 75th-minute and 62nd-minute substitute for Frédéric Piquionne in the two opening matches of the Championship season, against Cardiff City and Doncaster Rovers without scoring. He started the next four matches, scoring four goals; a crucial goal coming in the match at home against Portsmouth on 10 September whenin the 76th minute he scored the winner in a 4–3 thriller, latching onto a Matthew Taylor cross before heading into the top corner. On 19 November 2011, Cole scored West Ham's 2000th away League goal in a 2–1 away win against Coventry City. He scored his 50th goal for West Ham in the 1–1 draw with Birmingham City on 26 December 2011. On 19 May 2012, Cole scored the first goal, his fifteenth of the season, in West Ham's 2–1 win over Blackpool in the play-off final, ensuring an immediate return to the Premier League. 2012–13 season Cole's first61st-minute substitute for Tom Rogic, Cole provided the assist for Celtic's third goal, an own goal by Danny Devine. On 10 January 2016, he scored his only goal for Celtic in a 3–0 win over Stranraer at Stair Park, in the fourth round of the Scottish Cup. On 16 June 2016, Celtic confirmed that Cole had been released by the club after just eight months. On 9 August 2016, Cole signed for United Soccer League club Sacramento Republic. After four appearances, he left the club to return to the United Kingdom. On 30 March 2017, Cole signed for Indonesian clubPersib Bandung in the Liga 1. Signing a ten-month contract, he was reunited with former Chelsea teammate Michael Essien. Cole only played twice as a starter from his five appearances without scoring a goal. On 4 August 2017, Persib officially terminated his contract. Cole was handed a trial by AFC Wimbledon in the beginning of January 2018 and immediately played for their development squad, where he scored a goal in his first game. According to the club's manager, Neal Ardley Carlton’s agent spoke to Simon Bassey [first-team coach] and asked about him coming in. This was back in November andwe said yeah. However, he was never handed a contract and despite interest from Hull City and Birmingham City, Cole announced his official retirement on 29 March 2018. International career Cole represented England at youth levels, making five under-19 appearances, two under-20 appearances and 19 under-21 appearances (scoring six goals). He made his debut for the England national team on 11 February 2009 in a friendly match against Spain. Coming on as a 75th-minute substitute, he saw a late effort cleared off the line by Carlos Marchena, after latching onto a David Beckham pass. He made seven appearances for England,all from the substitutes' bench. Coaching career In December 2018, Cole rejoined West Ham United to work with the club's academy players, providing support to under-18 coaches Jack Collison and Mark Phillips. Controversies In April 2011, Cole was fined £20,000 by The Football Association for comments he made on Twitter regarding England's friendly against Ghana, at Wembley Stadium the previous month, joking that the match was being used as a sting operation by immigration authorities. He requested that the fine be donated to a Ghanaian charity of his choice. Cole was again charged by The Football Association in March 2015,Ham United Football League Championship play-offs: 2011–12 References External links Carlton Cole profile at the Football Association website Category:1983 births Category:Living people Category:Footballers from Croydon Category:English footballers Category:English expatriate footballers Category:England youth international footballers Category:England under-21 international footballers Category:England international footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Chelsea F.C. players Category:Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. players Category:Charlton Athletic F.C. players Category:Aston Villa F.C. players Category:West Ham United F.C. players Category:Celtic F.C. players Category:Sacramento Republic FC players Category:Persib Bandung players Category:Premier League players Category:English Football League players Category:Scottish Professional Football League players Category:Liga 1 (Indonesia) players Category:Expatriate footballers in Indonesia Category:Expatriate soccer players in the United
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Feodor Mikhailovich Rtishchev (; April 16, 1625, Chekalinsky uyezd – July 1, 1673, Moscow) was a boyar and an intimate friend of Alexis I of Russia who was renowned for his piety and alms-deeds. As Rtischev eschewed publicity, the true extent of his influence on the Tsar's policies has been disputed by historians. It is thought that it was Rtischev who instigated the revision of service-books which led to the Great Schism of the Russian Orthodox Church. Some scholars also hold him responsible for the eventual downfall of Patriarch Nikon. During the great famine in Vologda (1650), Rtischev sold muchof his property, including clothes and house utensils, in order to raise funds for the famine-stricken city. He took care for all the wounded in the Russo-Polish wars, notwithstanding their nationality, and established several alms-houses in Moscow. Remembered as the earliest patron of Russian education, Rtischev founded one of the first schools in Moscow, where he invited Yepifany Slavinetsky to instruct the students in Greek language. Rtischev's school would later be transformed into the Slavic Greek Latin Academy. It is known that Rtischev survived several assassination attempts, and wrote a treatise on falconry. His biography was written by Vasily Klyuchevsky.
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Glenn Franklin Howerton III (born April 13, 1976) is an American actor, producer, screenwriter, and director. He is known for his roles as Dennis Reynolds in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, for which he is also a writer and executive producer, and Jack Griffin in A.P. Bio, as well as the lead role in the short-lived sitcom That '80s Show. Early life Glenn Franklin Howerton III was born in Japan, the son of American parents Janice and Glenn Franklin Howerton Jr. His father was a fighter pilot. He spent his childhood moving back and forth between foreign countries and differentparts of the United States; almost immediately after his birth, his family moved to Arizona and then New Mexico for a short while. When he was three years old, they moved to the English town of Felixstowe, Suffolk. They subsequently moved to Virginia, followed by South Korea, where they settled in Seoul. When he was 10 years old, his family moved to Alabama. After graduating from Jefferson Davis High School in Montgomery, Alabama, he spent two years at New World School of the Arts of Miami Dade College. He was part of Group 29 of the Juilliard School's Drama Division(19962000), where he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts. Career In 2002, Howerton starred as Corey Howard in the ill-fated That '80s Show. He went on to guest star on ER as Dr. Nick Cooper in 2003. He had small roles in the films Must Love Dogs (2005), Serenity (2005), Two Weeks (2006), and The Strangers (2008). He also appeared as a nurse in Crank (2006), and reprised the role in its 2009 sequel, Crank: High Voltage. Howerton is most notably involved in It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2005-) as one of the main cast, producer and director, healso has written numerous episodes. He planned to be executive producing on the comedy show Boldly Going Nowhere with his It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia co-creators, before the show was delayed. Howerton had a recurring voice role on The Cleveland Show as Ernie Krinklesac, as well as recurring roles on the Fox comedy series The Mindy Project and the FX dark comedy series Fargo. He starred in the 2013 comedy film Coffee Town. He also had a bit part as the gun running Dominic, in the 2016 Netflix Original Officer Downe, starring Kim Coates. Personal life On September 8, 2009,Howerton married actress Jill Latiano, who guest starred on the It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia episode "The D.E.N.N.I.S. System" two months later. Their first son, Miles Robert, was born in 2011. The couple had a second son, Isley Ray, in August 2014. Howerton has said that he follows a vegan diet "about 95% of the time". Filmography Film Television References External links Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:21st-century American male actors Category:American male film actors Category:American male television actors Category:American television producers Category:American television writers Category:Male television writers Category:Juilliard School alumni Category:Living people Category:Male actors from Montgomery, Alabama Category:Military
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Joseph Ferriola (March 16, 1927 – March 11, 1989), also known as, "Joe Nagall," "Mr. Clean" and "Oscar," was an American mobster who helped run the Chicago Outfit, from 1985 to 1988, after Joseph Aiuppa and John Cerone went to prison for skimming Las Vegas casino profits. Early life Joseph Anthony Ferriola was a product of Chicago's Near West Side. He is the father of one son, Nicholas Ferriola who followed his father into organized crime. Chicago Outfit career Ferriola began his career as a protégé of the late mobster Leonard "Fat Lennie" Caifano. Fat Lennie was Marshall Joseph Caifano'sbrother. In 1970, Ferriola and four other mobsters were convicted for conspiring to operate an interstate gambling ring. He was sentenced to five years in federal prison, but only served about three years. He later became one of the Outfit's top enforcers, working in particular as an enforcer for Sam Giancana. A 1989 article in the Chicago Tribune reported that federal agents had described Ferriola as a "cold-blooded terrorist" and as one of the most feared men in the mob. During his mob career, Ferriola was the boss of his own street crew, the Cicero Crew, based in Cicero, Illinoiswith Ernest 'Rocco' Infelise serving as his underboss. This crew was involved in activities such as extortion, loan sharking, and bookmaking. To protect these enterprises, they resorted to bribery, corruption, and the occasional murder of someone who was a threat to their operation. In 1985, Ferriola became operations chief for the Chicago Outfit. After suffering health problems and dealing with legal inquiries by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service, Ferriola was replaced in late 1988 by Sam "Wings" Carlisi. At the time of Ferriola's death, federal prosecutors were in the process of seeking an indictment ofFerriola on racketeering charges. Death On March 11, 1989, Ferriola died at The Methodist Hospital, in Houston, Texas, after receiving a second heart transplant. He was 61 years old and had been a patient of Dr. Michael E. DeBakey, one of the world's foremost heart specialists. Ferriola was believed to have been the first gangster ever to have received a heart transplant. Personal Ferriola attracted significant attention shortly after taking over as head of the Chicago Outfit because he constructed a $500,000, 14-room home on Forest Glen Lane in Oak Brook, Illinois, about a mile from the home of mobsterJoseph Aiuppa. Ferriola also owned a home in Florida and a tri-level log home in Green Lake, Wisconsin. Ferriola's son, Chicago Outfit mobster Nicholas Ferriola, was sentenced by United States District Judge James Zagel on September 9, 2008, to three years in prison for taking part in a broad, Outfit conspiracy trial that later led to life prison sentences for Joseph Lombardo, James Marcello and Frank Calabrese, Sr. Nicholas Ferriola, who was the godson of Calabrese, had been convicted of running a gambling operation and attempting to extort the owner of the Connie's Pizza chain. Ferriola's nephew, Harry Aleman, was
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Kevin Martin may refer to: Sports Kevin Martin (basketball, born 1983), American former professional basketball player in NBA Kevin Martin (basketball, born 1975), American former professional basketball player in Finland Kevin Martin (boxer) (1925–?), Irish Olympic boxer Kevin Martin (curler) (born 1966), Canadian curler Kevin Martin (hurler) (born 1973), Irish hurler, plays for Tullamore and Offaly Kevin Martin (footballer) (born 1995), Swiss footballer for Lausanne Others Kevin Martin (American musician) (born 1969), singer of Candlebox and The Gracious Few Kevin Martin (British musician), of God, Techno Animal, and The Bug Kevin Martin (FCC) (born 1966), former chair of the U.S.
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1947. Events January – The English actor-manager Geoffrey Kendal arrives in British India with his touring repertory theatre company "Shakespeareana." It will perform Shakespeare in towns and villages there for several decades. January 29 – Arthur Miller's play All My Sons opens at the Coronet Theater in New York, directed by Elia Kazan and starring Ed Begley, as the writer's first Broadway success. February 17 – On the death of Montserrat-born British fantasy fiction writer M. P. Shiel aged 81 in Chichester, his supposed title to the Kingdom ofand writer (born 1864) Sidney Webb, English political economist (born 1859) November 12 – Baroness Orczy (Emma Orczy), Hungarian novelist writing in English (born 1865) November 14 – Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes, Anglo-French novelist and biographer writing in English (born 1868) December 7 – Tristan Bernard, French playwright and novelist (born 1866) December 15 – Arthur Machen, Welsh journalist, novelist and short-story writer (born 1863) December 30 – Alfred North Whitehead, English mathematician and philosopher (born 1861) Awards Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Walter de la Mare, Collected Stories for Children Frost Medal: Gustav Davidson James Tait Black Memorial Prizefor fiction: L. P. Hartley, Eustace and Hilda James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Rev. C. C. E. Raven, English Naturalists from Neckham to Ray Knight Bachelor: Ralph Richardson Newbery Medal for children's literature: Carolyn Sherwin Bailey, Miss Hickory Nobel Prize for literature: André Gide Premio Nadal: Miguel Delibes, La sombra del ciprés es alargada Pulitzer Prize for Drama: no award given Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Robert Lowell: Lord Weary's Castle Pulitzer Prize for the Novel: Robert Penn Warren – All the King's Men In literature August 14/15 – Partition of India, the background to a number of novels
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Kinoosao is an isolated community in northern Saskatchewan, Canada on the east side of Reindeer Lake. It is accessible by road only over Manitoba Provincial Road 394 and Saskatchewan Highway 994, coming from the closest town, over 95 km away, Lynn Lake, Manitoba. Kinoosao is one of two communities in Saskatchewan accessible by road solely by first entering a neighbouring province (Manitoba) (the other being Sturgeon Landing). It is 6.5 km wide in size and is located in Division 18 in Saskatchewan. It is at . A total of 60 people lived there in May 2006, within 16 dwellings. Thename "Kinoosao" is the Cree language term for "fish". Two other towns in Canada have names derived from the Cree word: Kinuso, Alberta, and Kinistino, Saskatchewan. Kinoosao is one of eight communities of the Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation. History The community of Kinoosao began in November 1952, when a fisherman's co-operative wanted to build a fish-filleting plant to help serve the communities along Reindeer Lake. Mail service to the community began in 1954, when they received it twice-monthly from La Ronge. Services No restaurants, hotels or campgrounds exist in the community off the coast off Reindeer Lake. External links Map
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Eastern European Hockey League (EEHL) was a regional ice hockey league which existed from 1995 to 2004. History The league was formed in 1995 by Belarus, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine, to provide a higher-level competition for teams from those countries. In some years, the league also included teams from Poland and Russia. Besides the main tournament for professional ice hockey teams, the league also had junior championships in several age groups. By its end, the league was increasingly dominated by Belarusian teams. In 2004, it was dissolved. Instead, two teams from Latvia (Metalurgs Liepāja and Rīga 2000) and one teamfrom Ukraine (Sokil Kyiv) joined the Belarusian Extraliga. There was temporarily a period where the Belarusian Extraliga was closed to foreign teams, but that has since changed as Metalurgs Liepāja, Dinamo/Juniors Rīga, and Sokil Kyiv became members of the league. Teams of the last season (2003–04) Division A HK Rīga 2000 HK Metalurgs Liepāja ASK/Ogre Sokil Kyiv HK Neman Grodno Keramin Minsk HK Gomel Khimvolokno Titan Klin Division B HK Vitebsk HK Kiev Junior Minsk HK Gomel Riga 85 Khimvolokno Mogilev EEHL champions 1995–96: HK Neman Grodno 1996–97: Juniors Rīga 1997–98: Sokil Kyiv 1998–99: Sokil Kyiv 1999–00: Berkut Kyiv 2000–01:
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Maggie Gripenberg (11 June 1881 – 28 July 1976) was a pioneer of modern dance in Finland. She was the first to introduce Dalcroze Eurhythmics to Finland and modeled her early works on the improvisational style of Isadora Duncan. As a dancer, choreographer and teacher, she laid the educational foundations for the study of movement and dance. She was recognized by numerous awards for her choreographic work as well as being honored with the Pro Finlandia Medal and as a knight of the Order of the White Rose of Finland. Early life Margarita Maria Gripenberg was born on 11 June1881 in Helsinki, Finland to Hilma Johanna Elisabet Lindfors and . Her father was an architect, who would become the Chief Executive Officer of General Government Buildings. He also served in the Senate and at the end of his career at the Helsinki Savings Bank. Gripenberg was the oldest child of the three siblings. Her brother Hans Henrik Sebastian (born 1882) would become a marine engineer and her sister was Aili Johanna Elisabet (born 1885). Her aunt, Alexandra Gripenberg was a leader in the Finnish women's rights movement. From a young age, Gripenberg wanted to become a dancer and oftenperformed for family gatherings. Because of the family social position, her aspirations were viewed as unacceptable, though her parents did encourage her to study the arts, such as singing, piano and painting. After completing her undergraduate studies at the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts, Gripenberg enrolled in painting courses, studying in Helsinki from 1903 to 1904. She then continued her education in Dresden, where in 1905, she saw a performance of Isadora Duncan, which became an inspiration. Between 1906 and 1909, Gripenberg continued her art courses in Paris, though she was increasingly unsatisfied with the direction her education. In 1909,at the Dalcroze Institute in Dresden by the fall. Gripenberg quickly progressed and in June 1911, received her diploma. Career Gripenberg debuted at the National Theater on 13 November 1911, dancing barefoot to music by Chopin, Gluck, Rachmaninoff, Sibelius and others. Critics were unanimous in their acclaim for her performance, though her aunt Alexandra urged her if she were to continue to perform, to adopt a pseudonym. In flowing costumes, and dancing in rhythmic free style, she pioneered modern dance in Finland. Refusing to take her aunt's suggestion, Gripenberg's choice soon led to other upper-class women such as Irja Hagfors,composition at the 1939 Brussels Concours International de Danse, with a 5-women ensemble performing Gossip, Percussion Instrument Étude and Slavery. In 1945 she received third place for her Life Continues at the Stockholm Les Archives Internationales de la Danse competition and in 1947, repeated the third prize for Misguided, in the same competition held in Copenhagen. As a teacher, while continuing throughout her career at the National Theater and at Sibelius Academy until 1952, Gripenberg maintained a private studio. She also taught from 1934 to 1951 at the Swedish Theatre, from 1938 to 1949 at the University of Helsinki andat numerous summer camps and festivals. During summers, she taught abroad at venues in Denmark and Sweden. As a writer, she published critiques and articles on dance for newspapers and magazines, as well as her autobiography, Rytmin lumoissa (Spellbound by Rhythm, 1950). Gripenberg's work was recognized by three medals from Finland. She received the participation medal for the War for Freedom, 1939/40 and was awarded the Pro Finlandia Medal of the Order of the Lion of Finland in 1951. She was honored as a knight in the Order of the White Rose in 1961. Having never married, Gripenberg retired witha friend to the Åland Islands. Death and legacy Gripenberg died on 28 July 1976 in Mariehamn and was one of the first women to be buried at Helsinki's Artists Knoll in the Old Cemetery. She is recognized as a pioneer in movement and for bringing the rhythmic style of Dalcroze to Finland. Her ideas laid the foundation for Eurhythmy as an educational study in Finland. References Citations Bibliography Category:1881 births Category:1976 deaths Category:People from Helsinki Category:Finnish female dancers Category:Finnish choreographers Category:Dance teachers Category:Modern dancers Category:Recipients of the Order of the Lion of Finland Category:Order of the White Rose of
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Bedford Hills Correctional Facility for Women is a prison in Bedford Hills in the Town of Bedford, Westchester County, New York, United States, at 247 Harris Road. Bedford Hills, the only New York State Department of Correctional Services women's maximum security prison, is the largest women's prison in New York state and has hosted many infamous prisoners. The prison previously opened under the name Westfield State Farm in 1901. Bedford Hills is one of several New York facilities exclusively for women, the others being Albion Correctional Facility, and Taconic Correctional Facility (the latter being a medium-security prison directly across thestreet from Bedford Hills). Its family-centered program, founded by Sister Elaine Roulet, has served as a model for other prison programs in the United States and is considered the standard for innovative family-centered programs. In August 1974, the prisoners briefly took over parts of the prison in reaction to a prison organizer's assault at the hands of guards in what came to be called the August Rebellion. In the post–Furman v. Georgia period and prior to the 2008 repeal of the death penalty, this prison was designated as having the state death row for women. Facilities The prison nursery, located
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The Booty Tape is the commercial debut mixtape by American rapper Ugly God. It was released on August 4, 2017, by Asylum Records. Recording sessions took place from 2015 to 2017, with all the writing, recording and its executive production credited to Ugly God himself, alongside the additional production from Danny Wolf and Nikko Bunkin, among others. The mixtape features a solo guest appearance from American rapper Wiz Khalifa. Singles On March 16, 2016, Ugly God premiered a song, called "Water" through his account on SoundCloud. It was re-released for digital download as the official lead single for his upcomingcommercial debut project on November 19, 2016, by Asylum Records. The song peaked at number 80 on the US Billboard Hot 100. "Fuck Ugly God" was released as the album's second single on June 27, 2017. "No Lies" was released as the album's third and final single on July 31, 2017. The song features a guest appearance from American rapper Wiz Khalifa. Promotional singles The album's first promotional single, "Bitch!", was released on February 1, 2017. The album's second promotional single, "Stop Smoking Black & Milds", was released on August 3, 2017. Commercial Performance In the United States, The Booty
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Clarke Canfield is a former longtime New England journalist and reporter for The Associated Press, and the author of Those Damned Yankees, The Not-So-Great History of Baseball's Evil Empire. He now works for Southern Maine Community College. Biography Canfield is a native of Boston, and now lives in South Portland, Maine with his wife and son. He was a journalist for more than 30 years and is now the communications director for Southern Maine Community College. He previously worked for The Associated Press, and at daily newspapers in Arkansas, Nashville, and Maine. He has also been the editor of three
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The year 1615 in science and technology involved some significant events. Astronomy Manuel Dias (Yang MaNuo), a Portuguese Jesuit missionary introduces for the first time in China the telescope in his book Tian Wen Lüe (Explicatio Sphaerae Coelestis). Chemistry Jean Beguin publishes an edition of his chemistry textbook Tyrocinium Chymicum including the first-ever chemical equation. Mathematics Summer – Henry Briggs meets John Napier for the first time in Edinburgh. Kepler publishes Nova Stereometria (the first book printed in Linz), a significant work in pre-calculus integration. Natural history Posthumous publication in Mexico of Plantas y Animales de la Nueva Espana, yVenice depicting around 50 machines and devices. Births Nicasius le Febure, French chemist (died 1669) Frans van Schooten, Dutch mathematician who popularizes the analytic geometry of Descartes (died 1660) Deaths February 4 – Giambattista della Porta, Italian physician (born c. 1535) May 4 – Adriaan van Roomen, Flemish mathematician (born 1561) October 9 − Heo Jun, Korean physician (born 1546) November – Edward Wright, English mathematician (born 1561) November 24 – Sethus Calvisius, German musician and astronomer (born 1556) Timothy Bright, English physician (born c. 1551) Giovanni Tommaso Minadoi, Italian historian and physician References Category:1615 in science Category:17th century in
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Mathias Spahlinger (b. 15 October 1944) in Frankfurt is a German composer. His work takes place in a field of tension between the most diverse musical influences and styles: between Renaissance music and Jazz, between musique concrète and Anton Webern minimalism, between noise, improvisation and notation, between aesthetic autonomy and political consciousness, Spahlinger's works carry out conflicts for which there are no fixed models. Life His father was a cellist. He taught him fiddle, viola da gamba, recorder, and later cello from 1951. In 1952 he got piano lessons. In 1959 he began to study jazz intensively, took saxophone lessons1984 professor for composition and music theory at the University of Music Karlsruhe. From 1990 he was professor of composition and director of the Institute for New Music at the Freiburg University of Music. Since 1996 he is a member of the Academy of Arts, Berlin. In 2012 he declined the grant for his commissioned composition "off"(1993/2011) for the Swiss festival "usinesonore". Prizes and awards 2014: Großer Berliner Kunstpreis Work Orchestra 1975 morendo - for orchestra 1981 Rou a GH i FF (strange?) - for 5 jazz soloists and orchestra 1986 inter-mezzo, concertato non concertabile tra pianoforte e orchestra 1988-1990„gegen unendlich“, in MusikTexte 137, May 2013, 19–25. Secondary literature Chronological Claus Henning Bachmann: Ins Offene. Der Impuls zur Freiheit bei Mathias Spahlinger, in MusikTexte 39, April 1991, 22. Jean-Noel von der Weid: Die Musik des 20. Jahrhunderts. Frankfurt & Leipzig 2001, 408f. Werner Klüppelholz: Obduktion der Ordnung. Zu Mathias Spahlingers „extension“, in MusikTexte 95, November 2002, 69–72. Rainer Nonnenmann: Bestimmte Negation. Anspruch und Wirklichkeit einer umstrittenen Strategie anhand von Spahlingers „furioso“, in MusikTexte 95, November 2002, 57–69. Reinhard Oehlschlägel: Radikalität und Widersprüchlichkeit. Variationen über Mathias Spahlinger , in MusikTexte 95, November 2002, 33–35. Dorothea Schüle: „... dann wird offenbar,
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Titchwell is a village and civil parish in Norfolk, England. It is situated on the north Norfolk coast some west of the village of Brancaster, north-east of the seaside resort of Hunstanton, north of the town of King's Lynn and north-west of the city of Norwich. The civil parish has an area of and in the 2001 census had a population of 91 in 47 households. At the 2011 Census the population remained less than 100 and is included in the civil parish of Thornham. For the purposes of local government, the parish falls within the district of King's Lynnand West Norfolk. The village is renowned for its RSPB reserve at Titchwell Marsh, an area of salt and freshwater marsh that extends along the coast towards Brancaster. It also has an Anglo Saxon church with an unusual spire. There is a small nature reserve on the site of a former chalk pit, which is believed to have first been used in Roman times. In 1786, under the Inclosure Act of 1773, the land came into ownership of Titchwell Parish. After all the chalk had been removed, the land became a rubbish dump, which was soon closed following public outcry.Local farmers and Norfolk County Council then tidied the pit and planted trees and shrubs, creating a mini-reserve. Titchwell used to have two pubs, but one of them, "The Three Horseshoes" has now been converted into apartments for the use of holidaymakers and investors. The village also has a 15th village cross at its centre, which would have been a marker point and meeting place for travellers and pilgrims. The parish church, dedicated to St. Mary, is one of the 124 round-tower churches in Norfolk. It also has two hotels, Briarfields and Titchwell Manor. Notes External links Information from Genuki
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Brunei national under-23 football team (also known as Brunei Under-23, Brunei U-23 or Brunei Olympic Team) represents Brunei in international football competitions in Olympic Games, Asian Games and SEA Games, as well as any other under-23 international football tournaments. Kit The traditional color of Brunei's home kit is (Yellow shirts, Black shorts and Black socks) and the away kit is either (Red shirt, Black shorts and Red Socks) or Green with a White sash. From 2000 to 2002, their away kits were green at 2001 SEA Games. From 2010 to 2012, their away kits were red shirt, black shorts and
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Richard D. Allen (March 7, 1939 – June 20, 2009) was a Republican member of the Michigan House of Representatives from 1983-1994 representing the Thumb. Prior to his election to the House, Allen was a newspaper editor and reporter for nearly 20 years. He was also a charter member of the Help Line crisis intervention program and worked with the Tuscola County Community Mental Health Services Board. References Category:1938 births Category:2009 deaths Category:Members of the Michigan House of Representatives Category:University of Illinois alumni Category:University of Maryland, College Park alumni Category:Michigan Republicans Category:20th-century American newspaper editors Category:Journalists from Michigan Category:People from
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Jackie Landry Jackson (May 22, 1941 – December 23, 1997) was a member of the Chantels, the second nationally successful black female pop music group. She died of breast cancer in 1997. Jacqulyn Jackson was born in the Bronx. She and Arlene Smith, Lois Harris, Sonia Goring, and Rene Minus, who had been friends since they were children, performed in the local church choir at the Saint Anthony Padua School, and eventually formed the Chantels, one of the earliest successful black girl groups. After her initial singing career ended, she became a Court Reporter for Bronx Criminal Court. She rarely
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The Governor's Museum (Malay: Muzium Yang di-Pertua Negeri Melaka) is a museum in St. Paul's Hill, Malacca City, Malacca, Malaysia. History The museum building was formerly used as the official residence and office of the Dutch Governor of Malacca. The building was then used as the official residence of the Yang di-Pertua Negeri of Melaka until September 1996. The museum was officially opened to the public in 2002. Exhibitions The museum exhibits the personal belongings of various governors of Melaka since the independence of Malaya. See also List of museums in Malaysia List of tourist attractions in Malacca Similar British
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The Norfolk Record Society (NRS) is a text publication society in the county of Norfolk, England. The Society was founded to encourage the study and preservation of historical records relating to Norfolk, and to publish editions of these documents. The society has offices in Norwich and is registered as a charity. Its membership is drawn mainly from East Anglia; however, individuals and institutions from around the world are also members. History The Society was founded in 1930. It has published annually a transcript of a significant and sometimes unusual manuscript or collection of manuscripts. The series now covers a time-span
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Philip V (c. 1293 – 3 January 1322), known as the Tall (), was King of France and Navarre (as Philip II). He reigned from 1316 to 1322. As the second son of king Philip IV, he was granted an appanage, the County of Poitiers, while his elder brother, Louis X, inherited the throne in 1314. When Louis died in 1316, he left a daughter and a pregnant wife, Clementia of Hungary. Philip the Tall successfully claimed the regency. Queen Clementia gave birth to a boy, who was proclaimed king as John I, but the infant king lived only forof an independent Court of Finances, the standardization of weights and measures, and the establishment of a single currency. Philip V died from dysentery in 1322 without a male heir and was succeeded by his younger brother Charles IV. Personality and marriage Philip was born in Lyon, the second son of King Philip IV of France and Queen Joan I of Navarre. His father granted to him the county of Poitiers in appanage. Modern historians have described Philip V as a man of "considerable intelligence and sensitivity", and the "wisest and politically most apt" of Philip IV's three sons. PhilipBurgundy, but Philip successfully outmanoeuvred them, being appointed regent himself. Philip remained as regent for the remainder of the pregnancy and for a few days after the birth of his nephew John I, who lived for only five days. The death of John I was unprecedented in the history of the Capetian Kings of France. For the first time, the king of France died without a male heir. The heir to the throne was now a subject of some dispute. Joan, the remaining daughter of Louis X by Margaret of Burgundy, was one obvious candidate, but suspicion still hung overthere were demonstrations in Champagne, Artois, and Burgundy, and Philip called a rapid assembly of the nobility on 2 February in Paris. Philip laid down the principle that Joan, as a woman, could not inherit the throne of France, played heavily upon the fact that he was now the anointed king, and consolidated what some authors have described as his effective "usurpation" of power. The exclusion of women, and later of their male descendants, was later popularized as the Salic law by the Valois monarchy. Joan, however, did accede in 1328 to the throne of Navarre, which did not holdthe French state. The French king was generally regarded as having suzerainty over Flanders, but in recent years the relationship had become strained. Philip IV had been defeated at Courtrai in 1302 attempting to reassert French control, and despite the later French victory at the Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle the relationship remained tense. Robert III of Flanders had continued to resist France militarily, but by Philip's accession to the throne had found himself increasingly isolated politically in Flanders itself. Meanwhile, the French position had become strained by the need to maintain a wartime footing. Louis X had prohibited exports of grainas his designated heir, in return for Louis being pledged in marriage to Philip's second daughter, Margaret. This would provide Robert, and then Louis, with strong French support within Flanders. Louis was, to a great extent, already under Philip's influence. Louis had been brought up in Nevers in central France, and at Philip's court. and was culturally effectively a French prince. This arrangement was a considerable success for Philip's policy, although over time Louis' clear French loyalties and lack of political links within Flanders itself would lead to political upheaval and peasant revolt. Philip also faced difficulties with Edward IIof England. Like the Count of Flanders, Edward in his role as the ruler of Gascony owed homage to the king of France, but as a king in his own right, and as the head of a largely autonomous Gascon province, was disinclined to do so. Edward had not given homage to Louis X, and initially declined to do so to Philip, who had a reputation as being more favourable to the English than Louis X. In 1319 Philip allowed Edward to give homage by proxy, an honour by the standards of the day, but expected him to do sothem. An attempt to send a naval vanguard from the south of France under Louis I of Clermont failed, however, with the forces being destroyed in a battle off Genoa in 1319. Over the winter of 1319–20 Philip convened a number of meetings with French military leaders in preparation for a potential second expedition, that in turn informed Bishop William Durand's famous treatise on crusading. By the end of Philip's reign, however, he and John had fallen out over the issue of new monies and commitments to how they were spent, and the attentions of both were focused on managingthe challenge of the Shepherds' Crusade. The Shepherds' Crusade, or the Pastoreaux, emerged from Normandy in 1320. One argument for the timing of this event has been that the repeated calls for popular crusades by Philip and his predecessors, combined with the absence of any actual large scale expeditions, ultimately boiled over into this popular, but uncontrolled, crusade. Philip's intent for a new crusade had certainly become widely known by the spring of 1320, and the emerging peace in Flanders and the north of France had left a large number of displaced peasants and soldiers. The result was a largeand violent anti-Semitic movement threatening local Jews, royal castles, the wealthier clergy, and Paris itself. The movement was ultimately condemned by Pope John, who doubted whether the movement had any real intent to carry out a crusade. Philip was forced to move against it, crushing the movement militarily and driving the remnants south across the Pyrenees into Aragon. Final year "Leper scare" In 1321 an alleged conspiracy – the "leper scare" – was discovered in France. The accusation, apparently unfounded, was that lepers had been poisoning the wells of various towns, and that this activity had been orchestrated by thewhich in practice added further to the dislike of this minority in France. Rumours and allegations about lepers themselves had been circulated in 1320 as well, and some had been arrested during the Crusade. Philip was in Poitiers in June, involved in a tour of the south aimed at reform of the southern fiscal system, when word arrived of the scare. Philip issued an early edict demanding that any leper found guilty was to be burnt and their goods would be forfeit to the crown. The King's southern tour and reform plans, although administratively sound by modern standards, had createdmuch local opposition, and modern historians have linked the King's role in Poitiers with the sudden outbreak of violence. This all put Philip in a difficult position: He could not openly side with those claiming wrongdoing by the lepers, Jews, and Muslims without encouraging further unnecessary violence; on the other hand, if he did not ally himself to the cause, he encouraged further unsanctioned violence, weakening his royal position. Some Jews did leave France as a result of the leper scare, but Philip had successfully resisted signing any formal edict, which limited the impact to some degree. Death and successionYears War (1337–1453). Family In January 1307 Philip V married Joan II, Countess of Burgundy (daughter and heiress of Otto IV, count of Burgundy), and they had five children: Joan (1/2 May 1308 – 10/15 August 1349), Countess of Burgundy and Artois in her own right and wife of Odo IV, Duke of Burgundy Margaret (1309 – 9 May 1382), wife of Louis I of Flanders. Countess of Burgundy and Artois in her own right. Isabelle (1310 – April 1348), wife of Guigues VIII de La Tour du Pin, Dauphin de Viennois. Blanche (1313 – 26 April 1358), a nun.Servants, Ensuring Salvation, and Protecting the Patrimony in Fourteenth-Century France, in Burrow and Wei (eds) 2000. Burrow, John Anthony and Ian P. Wei (eds). (2000) Medieval Futures: Attitudes to the Future in the Middle Ages. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. Drees, Clayton J. (2001) The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal, 1300–1500: a Biographical Dictionary. Westport: Greenwood Press. Duby, George. (1993) France in the Middle Ages 987–1460: from Hugh Capet to Joan of Arc. Oxford: Blackwell. Fryde, Natalie. (2003) The Tyranny and Fall of Edward II 1321–1326. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Holmes, George. (2000) Europe, Hierarchy and Revolt, 1320–1450, 2ndHistory. London: Continuum. Rose, Hugh James. (1857) A New General Biographical Dictionary, Volume 11. London: Fellows. TeBrake, William Henry. (1994) A Plague of Insurrection: Popular Politics and Peasant Revolt in Flanders, 1323–1328. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. Wagner, John. A. (2006) Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War. Westport: Greenwood Press. External links The original wax seal of King Philip V the Tall in the Estonian Historical Archives. |- |- Category:1293 births Category:1322 deaths Category:14th-century kings of France Category:People from Lyon France, Philip V of Category:Navarrese monarchs Category:House of Capet Category:Heirs presumptive to the French throne Category:13th-century French people Category:14th-century French
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Racketeers in Exile is a 1937 American crime film directed by Erle C. Kenton and starring George Bancroft, Evelyn Venable and Wynne Gibson. Cast George Bancroft as William Waldo Evelyn Venable as Myrtle Thornton Wynne Gibson as 'Babe' DeVoe Marc Lawrence as 'Blackie' White John Gallaudet as 'Happy' George McKay as 'Horseface' William Burress as Thornton Helen Lowell as Mrs. Abigail Thornton Jack Clifford as Thyrus Jamison Garry Owen as Sy Jonathan Hale as Alden Parker Richard Carle as Regan Langdon aka 'Porky' Ray Bennett as 1st Killer Edward Cecil as Parker's Butler Georgie Cooper as Purity League Member RobertDudley as Purity League Member Betty Farrington as Sadie's Mother Harry Fleischmann as 2nd Killer Sam Flint as Finance Man Mary Gordon as Irish Woman Alfred P. James as Purity League Member Gladden James as G-Man Edward LeSaint as Physician Wilfred Lucas as Finance Man James T. Mack as Minister Ralph Malone as G-Man Walter Merrill as G-Man Wedgwood Nowell as Finance Man Jessie Perry as Purity League Member Kathryn Sheldon as Purity League Member Tommy Tucker as Little Boy Lois Verner as Sadie Pierre Watkin as Chief G-Man Crawford Weaver as G-Man References Bibliography Hardy, Phil. The BFI Companion
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The Man from Dakota is a 1940 film directed by Leslie Fenton and starring Wallace Beery and Dolores del Río. The film was adapted by Laurence Stallings from the novel by MacKinlay Kantor. Cast Wallace Beery as Bar Barstow John Howard as Oliver Clark Dolores del Río as Jenny Sanford Donald Meek as Mr. Vestry Robert Barrat as Parson Summers Addison Richards as Confederate Provost Marshal External links Category:1940 films Category:American films Category:American black-and-white films Category:English-language films Category:Films set in the 19th century Category:Films directed by Leslie Fenton Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films Category:Films based on American novels Category:1940s Western (genre) films Category:1940s
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Bertrand R. Brinley (19 June 1917 in Hudson, New York – 20 October 1994 in Luray, Virginia) was an American writer of short stories and children's tales. He was best known for his Mad Scientists' Club stories. The stories in The Mad Scientists' Club originally appeared over several years in Boys' Life magazine, starting in 1961, and were later collected into book form. The Mad Scientists' Club, The New Adventures of The Mad Scientists' Club and The Big Kerplop! were first published by the now-defunct MacRae Smith Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Much of the character of Mammoth Falls, the fictional
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The Tik-Tok Man of Oz is a musical play with book and lyrics by L. Frank Baum and music by Louis F. Gottschalk that opened at the Majestic Theatre in Los Angeles, California on March 31, 1913. It is loosely inspired by Baum's book Ozma of Oz (1907), incorporates much of the material from Baum's book Tik-Tok and the Nome King (1913), and was the basis for his 1914 novel, Tik-Tok of Oz. It was promoted as "A Companion Play to The Wizard of Oz" and directed by Frank M. Stammers. The play is known from its advertising and publishedwhen Oliver Morosco agreed to produce it. Adaptation The musical play The Tik-Tok Man of Oz was based on L. Frank Baum's 1907 Oz book Ozma of Oz, which in turn had incorporated material from Baum's unpublished manuscript King Rinkitink. The play incorporated material that Baum also used in his 1908 Oz book Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz. Baum used his characters of the Shaggy Man and Polychrome in both the play and his 1909 Oz book The Road to Oz, which he was working on at the same time. Newspaper accounts indicate that Baum began work on theplay in late 1906 or early 1907, but it would take until March 1913 to be produced on stage. L. Frank Baum based two of his Oz stories, the novel Tik-Tok of Oz and the short story Tiktok and the Nome King, on this play. In the play, Ozma is a princess in the Rose Kingdom and is analogous to Ozga in the novel, who is Private Files's love interest, as is Ozga in the novel, there described as Ozma's cousin. Michael Patrick Hearn speculates that both names are in honor of Baum's wife, Maud Gage (MAud GAge). The playintroduces several characters that will be familiar with readers of the novel, Tik-Tok of Oz, such as Private Jo Files, who was portrayed by Charles Ruggles during the beginning of his career, and Queen Ann Soforth of Oogaboo, who was ultimately played by Charlotte Greenwood near the end of the run. Production The musical was directed by Frank Stammers, with scenery designed by Robert Brunton.<ref>Hector Alliot, "Tik Tok Man Quaint Whimsical Diversion," Los Angeles Times (Apr. 1, 1913), p. III1.</ref> It was produced by Oliver Morosco. The production opened at the Majestic Theatre in Los Angeles on April 2, 1913.The Shaggy Man, and Robin Olderman as Betsy, Polychrome, Ozma, and Queen Ann. For the 1984 performances, Jeryl Metz joined the cast to play Polychrome and Dick Martin provided the promotional artwork. A fully staged revival prepared by Eric Shanower from the surviving portions of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz script supplemented by the earlier Ozma of Oz draft was performed on August 9, 2014, at Winkie Con 50 in San Diego, California. All nineteen of the surviving musical pieces were heard, along with commercially released "Selections" and music provided by Louis F. Gottschalk's daughter Gloria Gottschalk Morgan. Chrissy BurnsGardener Sydney Kerl as Moss Rose Taylor Schwartz as Jacque Rose Eric Shanower as The Ugly Man Dance Ensemble - Taylor Hamilton, Caley Hernandez, Sydney Kerl, Sydney Rei, Taylor Schwartz, Alyson Stein, and Carmina Vasquez Pas de Deux - Alex Flores and Caley Hernandez The orchestra was as follows: Joseph Grienenberger: Keyboard Michael Fowler: Trumpet Fred Allee: Drums and Percussion Rafael Estrada: Double Bass Plot The plot, similar to the novel Tik-Tok of Oz, but lacking Quox and the journey to the kingdom of Tititi-Hoochoo, deals with the Shaggy Man's attempt to rescue his brother, Wiggy (unnamed in the novel),the introduction of Tik-Tok of Oz, "There is a play called The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, but it is not like this story of Tik-Tok of Oz, although some of the adventures recorded in this book, as well as those in several other Oz books, are included in the play. Those who have seen the play and those who have read the other Oz books will find in this story a lot of strange characters and adventures that they have never heard of before." Cast Tik-Tok—James C. Morton Shaggy Man—Frank Moore Betsy Bobbin—Lenora Novasio Hank the Mule—Fred Woodward Queen Ann
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Anampses is a genus of wrasses native to the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Species The currently recognized species in this genus are: Anampses caeruleopunctatus Rüppell, 1829 (blue-spotted wrasse) Anampses chrysocephalus J. E. Randall, 1958 (red-tail wrasse) Anampses cuvier Quoy & Gaimard, 1824 (pearl wrasse) Anampses elegans J. D. Ogilby, 1889 (elegant wrasse) Anampses femininus J. E. Randall, 1972 (blue-striped orange tamarin) Anampses geographicus Valenciennes, 1840 (geographic wrasse) Anampses lennardi T. D. Scott, 1959 (blue and yellow wrasse) Anampses lineatus J. E. Randall, 1972 (lined wrasse) Anampses melanurus Bleeker, 1857 (white-spotted wrasse) Anampses meleagrides Valenciennes, 1840 (spotted wrasse) Anampses neoguinaicus Bleeker,
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Thomas and the Magic Railroad is a 2000 British-American fantasy comedy film written, produced and directed by Britt Allcroft. The film stars Alec Baldwin as Mr. Conductor, Peter Fonda, Mara Wilson, Didi Conn, Russell Means, Cody McMains, Michael E. Rodgers, and Eddie Glen as the voice of Thomas. The film is based on the British children's book series The Railway Series by The Rev. W. Awdry, its televised adaptation Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends, and the American television series Shining Time Station by Britt Allcroft and Rick Siggelkow. The film was co-produced by Gullane Pictures and the Isle ofMan Film Commission. It was distributed by Destination Films in the United States, Icon Film Distribution in the United Kingdom, and ABC Films in Australia. The film tells the story of Lily Stone, the granddaughter of the caretaker of an enchanted steam engine who is lacking an appropriate supply of coal, and Mr. Conductor of Shining Time Station, whose provisions of magical gold dust are at a critical low. To ameliorate these problems, Lily and Mr. Conductor enlist the help of Thomas, who confronts the ruthless and devious Diesel 10 who plans to get rid of the railway's steam enginesalong the way. Plans for an original Thomas & Friends film started with Paramount Pictures, but did not pull through. Shortly afterward, Destination Films began funding for the film and started production in 1998. Filming took place at the Strasburg Railroad, Toronto, Canada, and the Isle of Man. It held its world premiere at the Odeon Leicester Square in the United Kingdom on July 9, 2000. The film was reviewed negatively by critics, mainly from the US upon release, with criticism directed towards the acting, plot, special effects, and lack of fidelity towards the source material. It grossed $19.7 millionworldwide against a production budget of $19 million. Due to the film's performance, Allcroft was forced to resign from her company in September 2000. HiT Entertainment acquired the company two years later, including the television rights to Thomas. Plot Sir Topham Hatt and his family have left the Island of Sodor on holiday, leaving Mr. Conductor, the owner of Shining Time Station, in charge of the engines. Gordon complains to Thomas, when Diesel 10 races by, scaring both engines. Meanwhile, in Shining Time, Mr. Conductor is suffering a crisis; his supply of magic gold dust is alarmingly low and notto Shining Time, and Lady returns to the Magic Railroad while Thomas travels home into the sunset. Cast Live-action Alec Baldwin as Mr. Conductor Peter Fonda as Burnett Stone: Lily's grandfather and Lady's driver. Jared Wall as young Burnett Mara Wilson as Lily Stone: Burnett's granddaughter. Michael E. Rodgers as Junior: Mr. Conductor's lazy cousin. Cody McMains as Patch Robert Tinkler as older Patch (scenes deleted) Didi Conn as Stacy Jones: Matt and Dan's aunt, and the manager of Shining Time. Russell Means as Billy Twofeathers: William's grandson, Kit's uncle and Tucker's cousin. He was previously played by Tom Jacksonon Shining Time Station. Lori Hallier as Mrs. Stone: Lily's mother and Mr. Stone's wife. Laura Bower as Tasha Stone: Burnett's late wife and Lily's deceased grandmother. Doug Lennox as P.T. Boomer: Burnett's rival and an emotionally muddy biker man. (Uncredited; cameo and some scenes deleted.) Voice cast Eddie Glen as Thomas: a friendly, blue tank engine who runs his own branch line. Britt Allcroft as Lady: a beautiful lost magical tank engine, owned by Burnett Stone who runs the Magic Railroad. Neil Crone as Diesel 10: an evil Diesel locomotive which a hydraulic claw, who hates steam engines andRoman as James: a boastful red splendid mixed-traffic engine. Colm Feore as Toby: a brown tram engine who sometimes takes Henrietta. Shelley-Elizabeth Skinner as Annie and Clarabel: Thomas' branch line coaches. Production Development In the early 1990s, the character of Thomas the Tank Engine – adapted from the Rev. W. Awdry's Railway Series into the TV series Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends, created by Britt Allcroft – was at the height of his popularity following three successful series. At the same time, Shining Time Station – an American series that combined episodes from the previous series with original live-actioncharacters and scenarios, also created by Allcroft along with Rick Siggelkow – was made, and also successful. As early as 1994, prior to the launch of Thomass fourth series, Britt Allcroft had plans to make a feature film based on both of these series, and would make use of the model trains from Thomas and the live-action aesthetic of Shining Time Station. In February 1996, Britt Allcroft was approached by Barry London, then vice-chairman of Paramount Pictures, with an idea for the Thomas film. Britt signed a contract to write the script for the film with the working title Thomasand the Magic Railroad. London's interest is thought to have stemmed from his three-year-old daughter, who was enthralled by Thomas. According to a press release, filming was to take place at Shepperton Studios, in the United Kingdom and the United States, with the theatrical release date set for 1997. However, later that year, after London left the company, Paramount shelved the plans for the film. This left Allcroft to seek other sources of funding. Discussions with PolyGram about the film were held, but not for long, because of the company being in the middle of a corporate restructuring and sale.In the Summer of 1998, during Series 5 of Thomass production, Allcroft saw an Isle of Man Film Commission advert. They were offering tax incentives to companies wanting to film on the Island. Allcroft visited, and felt that the location was perfect. During that year, Barry London became Chairman of the newly founded Destination Films (owned by Sony Pictures). He renewed his interest in the project, and Destination Films became the main financial backer and studio for the film. Casting John Bellis was originally attached to voice Thomas, but was replaced by Canadian actor Edward Glen. Ewan McGregor and BobHoskins had also expressed interest for the role. Michael Angelis was original cast to voice James and Percy, but was later replaced by voice actresses Susan Roman and Linda Ballantyne. Keith Scott was originally planned to voice Diesel 10, but was later replaced by Neil Crone in the final film. Patrick Breen was originally set to voice both Splatter and Dodge, but was eventually replaced by both Kevin Frank and Neil Crone. Filming Principal photography began on August 2, 1999, and wrapped on October 15 of that same year. The movie was filmed at the Strasburg Rail Road in Strasburg,Pennsylvania (United States), as well as in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and on the Isle of Man. Castletown railway station on the Isle of Man Railway formed part of Shining Time Station and the goods shed at Port St Mary railway station became Burnett Stone's workshop. Running shots of the "Indian Valley" train were filmed at the Strasburg Rail Road location. The large passenger station where Lily boards the train is the Harrisburg Transportation Center. Norfolk & Western 4-8-0 475 was repainted as the Indian Valley locomotive. Sodor was realised using models and chroma key. The models were animated using liveaction remote control, as on the television series. The model sequences were filmed in Toronto instead of Shepperton Studios, the "home" of the original TV show; however, several of the show's key staff were flown over to participate. The Magic Railway was created using models, CGI, and water-coloured matte paintings. Original version In a 2007 interview, director Britt Allcroft revealed that the theatrical release was drastically changed from what it was originally going to be the way she had written it, with original antagonist P.T. Boomer (played by Doug Lennox) being removed from the film because audiences at the LosAngeles preview screenings considered the character too scary for young children. Lily Stone (played by Mara Wilson) was intended to be the narrator of the story. Before filming, Thomas's voice was provided by John Bellis, a fireman and part-time taxi driver who worked on the film as the Isle of Man transportation co-ordinator and facilities manager. Bellis received the role when he happened to pick up Britt Allcroft and her crew from the airport. According to Allcroft, after hearing him speak for the first time, she told her colleagues, "I have just heard the voice of Thomas. That man isexactly how Thomas would sound!" Bellis accepted the role. However, after audiences did not react positively to his voice for Thomas, Bellis was replaced by Edward Glen. Bellis received a credit for his work on the Isle of Man, and his voice can still be heard extensively in one or two of the trailers. Bellis said he was "gutted", but wished the film-makers well. "It was supposed to be my big break, but it hasn't put me off and I am hoping something else will come along." Michael Angelis, the UK narrator for the Thomas the Tank Engine & Friendstelevision series for 21 years (1991–2012), was originally cast as the voices of both James and Percy, but the audiences considered his voice too old for the characters, who were subsequently recast with Susan Roman and Linda Ballantyne respectively. Keith Scott originally voiced Diesel 10, but believes he was replaced because his portrayal was too scary for young children. Music and soundtrack Thomas and the Magic Railroad is a soundtrack released on both CD and cassette on August 1, 2000. It features twelve music tracks from the feature film composed by Hummie Mann. Release Thomas and the Magic Railroad wasreleased theatrically on July 14, 2000 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and July 26, 2000 in the United States and Canada. The film was also released in Australia on December 14, 2000, and in New Zealand on April 7, 2001. The film premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square; for the purpose, a steam locomotive, no. 47298 painted to resemble Thomas, was brought to the cinema by low loader on July 9, 2000. National press coverage was low, as many journalists were concentrating on the launch of the Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire book, for which a specialtrain called "Hogwarts Express" would run on July 8–11. Home media Thomas and the Magic Railroad was released onto VHS and DVD on October 19, 2000 in the United Kingdom by Warner Home Video, and on October 31, 2000 in the United States by Columbia TriStar Home Video. On June 9, 2020, Shout! Factory will re-release the film on DVD and Blu-ray as a 20th anniversary edition. Reception Critical response On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 21% based on 68 reviews and an average rating of 3.97/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Kids these days demandcutting edge special effects or at least a clever plot with cute characters. This movie has neither, having lost in its Americanization what the British original did so right." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 19 out of 100 based on 23 critics, indicating "overwhelming dislike". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale. Nell Minow of Common Sense Media gave the film three out of five stars and writing that it "will please [Thomas fans]" but that the plot "might confuse kids". Roger Ebert of the ChicagoSun-Times gave the film one star out of four, and wrote "(the fact) That Thomas and the Magic Railroad made it into theaters at all is something of a mystery. This is a production with 'straight to video' written all over it. Kids who like the Thomas books might kinda like it. Especially younger kids. Real younger kids. Otherwise, no." While he admired the models and art direction, he criticized how the engines's mouths did not move when they spoke, the overly depressed performance of Peter Fonda, as well as the overall lack of consistency in the plot. William Thomasmany tots who make up the majority of Thomas audience. Switching back and forth between Shining Time and Sodor, interweaving two relatively complex story lines, may confuse more than it challenges. Parents may well find that their children are squirming in their seats long before Thomas rides his magic rails into the sunset. That said, and the magic notwithstanding, tikes who do manage to grasp the complex story lines, and can sit still for an hour and a half, will learn good lessons about friendship, courage, hard work and being kind." Box office The film grossed $19.7 million worldwide. Duringits second weekend of screening in Britain, it took in £170,000. In other media Video game A video game based on the film, titled Thomas and the Magic Railroad: Print Studio, was released in the United Kingdom. It was published by Hasbro Interactive and released for PC on August 25, 2000. Future Cancelled sequel and spin-off film On July 1, 2000, it was reported that Destination Films began development on a sequel, but was quietly cancelled. Calling All Engines!, a 2005 direct-to-video special and a spin off of the TV series, was produced by HIT Entertainment and released in 2005.Possible reboot HiT said that its theatrical division would be piloted by a Thomas film. Originally targeted for a late 2010 release, in September 2009 this was revised to Spring 2011. As of January 2011, the release date had been pushed back further, to 2012. The initial draft of the script was written by Josh Klausner, who has also said that the film would be set around the times of World War II; Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi also helped write the script. On June 8, 2011, Deadline announced that 9 director Shane Acker would direct the live-action adaptation ofThe Adventures of Thomas, with Weta Digital designing the film's visual effects. Notes References External links Official website archived from the original on August 15, 2000 Cinema.com: Thomas and the Magic Railroad Britt Allcroft Engineers Magic - Frazier Moore, AP Category:2000 films Category:2000s fantasy films Category:2000s fantasy adventure films Category:2000s children's fantasy films Category:2000s children's adventure films Category:American films Category:American children's fantasy films Category:American children's adventure films Category:American fantasy adventure films Category:Animated films about trains Category:British films Category:British children's adventure films Category:British children's fantasy films Category:British fantasy adventure films Category:Crossover films Category:Destination Films films Category:English-language films Category:Films scored by Hummie
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Great Cranberry Island is an island located in Maine. It is the largest of the five islands of the Town of Cranberry Isles, Maine. It is roughly long and wide. Great Cranberry Island is a favorite vacation spot for many. Access to the island is provided by ferry from either Northeast Harbor or Southwest Harbor, both located on Mount Desert Island. Many islanders also have their own boats and dock at Spurling Cove. The population of the island is over 300 in the summertime, but the year-round population is only around 40. The year-round population is mostly fishermen who fishthe shores for the ever-popular seafood, lobster. Notable locations on the island are the History Museum, which includes a public trail to the shore, the General Store, the school and library, Post Office, Whale's Rib Gift Shop and Crow Island, which is accessible only at low tide. The Ladies' Aid Fair, held each year since 1900 in August, is a highlight of the annual calendar. The island is home to award-winning artist, Wini Smart, who has painted hundreds of oil and watercolor paintings around Great Cranberry Island and the surrounding Mount Desert Island area. It is the setting of the
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Nicholaus Contreraz (January 1982 – March 2, 1998) was an American 16-year-old from Sacramento, California, who was murdered while attending the Arizona Boys Ranch in 1998. Contreraz had been incarcerated at the residential school's branch in Oracle, Arizona, where he was subject to severe physical abuse and wilful neglect at the hands of staff members until dying from cardiac arrest. Contreraz's death made national news in the United States, and despite no serious legal punishment against the staff due to technicalities, it highlighted systemic abuse at the Arizona Boys Ranch, and increased the criticism of private prisons. Background Contreraz had
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Leticia Callejas Bautista more known as Buda Bautista is a former Philippine international footballer and is the head coach of the Philippine women's national football team. Career As a player Bautista was part of the national squad that participated at the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup qualifiers As coach Bautista was appointed as the head coach of the Philippine women's national football team in April 2015 becoming the first woman to lead the women's senior national team of the Philippines. Bautista mentored the national squad which secured qualification for the 2018 AFC Women's Asian Cup. She was succeeded by MarnelliDimzon who took over her position by July 2017. She was shortlisted for the 2017 AFC Women's Coach Of The Year Award along with Gao Hong of China and Asako Takakura of Japan. Bautista returns as the head coach of the Philippine women's national team by June 2018 and guided the team in the 2018 AFF Women's Championship. Like in her first national team stint, she was again succeeded by Marnelli Dimzon in August 2018. Statistics Managerial References Category:1973 births Category:Living people Category:Filipino women's footballers Category:Philippines women's international footballers Category:Female association football managers Category:Philippines women's national football team managers Category:Filipino
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Carol Wax (born June 17, 1953) is an American artist and author whom the New York Times called "a virtuoso printmaker and art historian" for her work in mezzotint and her writings on the history and technique of that medium. She has described her work: My images of commonplace objects reflect my personal experience of the ordinary as extraordinary. Most people rarely think about the "stuff" in our lives but, to me, even the most ordinary items seem magical. I often depict old instruments, mechanical devices, and fabric because their repetitive patterns create rhythms of light, shadow, and forms thatcan be manipulated to convey my phantasmagorical perceptions. The ability to achieve dramatic lighting effects through the mezzotint engraving process makes it the ideal medium for rendering my imagery. Although my style may be categorized as representational in the nature morte tradition, to me, still-life does not mean dead weight. By portraying my subjects transcending their status as lifeless objects I strive to depict the anima in the inanimate. Early years Carol Wax was born in New York City on June 17, 1953. She graduated from Mount Vernon High School in 1971. After a year at the Manhattan School ofMusic, she participated in flute master classes with Jean-Pierre Rampal at the International Summer School, Nice, France. She earned a Bachelor of Music Degree in 1975 from the Manhattan School of Music where she majored in flute performance. She continued to work as a professional musician until 1980. In the summers of 1975 and 1976, she took printmaking courses at the Lake Placid School of Art and then studied from 1976 to 1982 at the Pratt Graphics Center in New York City where she made lithographs and was introduced to mezzotint engraving. She had her first solo museum exhibition atthe Wichita Art Museum in 1986–1987. Research Beginning in the mid-1980s, Wax responded to the limitations of current technical knowledge of mezzotint engraving and printing by conducting her own research into historical techniques while continuing to work as a printmaker. Though mezzotint was developed mainly as a method for copying oil paintings, her research uncovered techniques long out of use that had promising applications for use in contemporary art. She held a residency at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire, in 1986 and received an Artist's Fellowship Grant from the New York Foundation for the Arts in 1987. Waxwith many state proofs, color separation proofs, plates, preparatory sketches, and related drawings and pastels. The Herakleidon also published Carol Wax, Catalogue Raisonné/Prints, 1975-2005 in 2006 to document her first thirty years as a printmaker. One reviewer noted that "The reader will readily be captivated by Wax's onomatomania and obsession with man-powered mechanical objects that click, clatter or ring like her signature typewriters and sewing machines." The Herakleidon mounted another exhibition of her work, "Dance of Shadows," in 2011. Since January 2007, Wax has taught printmaking as an adjunct professor at New Jersey's Montclair State University. She also presents mezzotintworkshops and lectures on her own work and on the history of mezzotint at arts organizations, universities, and museums. She has held visiting artist positions on numerous occasions and has presented dozens of mezzotint demonstrations and workshops, as well as slide lectures at universities, colleges, arts organizations, and museums throughout the United States. In 2009, she received an Individual Support Grant from the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation. In 2011, she served as Head Juror for awarding prizes at the First International Mezzotint Festival, Ekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts, Ekaterinburg, Russia. Wax's prints are held by many museum collections, includingEkaterinburg, Russia, "Erasing to Remember", essay for a catalogue of mezzotints by Eduardo Fausti, 2011 Notes External links "Carol Wax on the 'Black Manner': An Interview with the Person Who Wrote the Book on Mezzotint", World Printmakers, includes images "Carol Wax Explains: What Is a Mezzotint Print?", World Printmakers Photo Gallery, Herakleidon Museum, 2011 "'Creative Joy' – An Interview with Artist Carol Wax", Metropolitan Museum of Art Magazine, October 28, 2016 Carol Wax mezzotints at Conrad R. Graeber Fine Art Category:1953 births Category:Living people Category:Artists from New York City Category:MacDowell Colony fellows Category:Manhattan School of Music alumni Category:American women printmakers
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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 Scotland Anonymous, Golagros and Gawain, a Middle Scots romance written in the late 15th century in alliterative metre; based on two episodes from the First Continuation of Chretien de Troyes' Perceval, ou le Conte du Graal Andrew Cadiou, Porteous of Nobleness, a Scots version of Alain Chartier's Le Breviaire des Nobles William Dunbar: The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy, and Other Poems, a fragmentary text of The Flyting, to which is added two short poems, attributed to Henryson, andby an anonymous author The Golden Targe Henry the Minstrel, also known as Blind Harry, The Actes and Deidis of the Illustre and Vallyeant Campioun Schir William Wallace, publication year uncertain; written c. 1478 in Scots verse, supposedly derived from a Latin original; one of the most popular works of Scottish poetry of this era Robert Henryson, Orpheus and Eurydice, published anonymously, publication year uncertain Richard Holland, Buke of the Howlat, publication year uncertain; written c. 1450, in the poem an assembly of birds hears the Owl bitterly complaining against Dame Nature for making him ugly John Lydgate, The Complaintof the Black Knight Other William Hendred, The Pylgrymage of Man, London, Great Britain Jean Lemaire de Belges, La Concorde du genre humain, Walloon poet published in France Births Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: April 3 – Jean Daurat also spelled "Jean Dorat"; Latin name: "Auratus" (died 1588), French poet and scholar, member of La Pléiade Marin Držić, also known as "Marino Darza" and "Marino Darsa" (died 1567), Croatian dramatist, author and poet Deaths Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article: February 4 – Conrad Celtes (born 1459), German and Latin-language poet
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Brig. Gen. James Appleton (February 14, 1785 – August 25, 1862) was an American abolitionist, early supporter of temperance, and politician from Maine. Early life Appleton was born on February 14, 1785 in Ipswich, Massachusetts on a family farm that had been granted to his ancestor, Samuel Appleton, in 1636. His parents were Samuel Appleton (1738–1819) and Mary (nee White) Appleton (d. 1834), daughter of Rev. Timothy White, and his younger brothers were Timothy Appleton (1778–1857) and Samuel Appleton (1771–1852). His paternal grandparents were Elizabeth Sawyer (1709–1785) and Isaac Appleton (1704–1794), the son of Isaac Appleton (1664–1747) and Priscilla Baker,granddaughter of Lt. Gov. Samuel Symonds. Appleton was also the cousin of U.S. Rep.William Appleton (1786–1862), merchant Samuel Appleton (1766–1853), and U.S. Rep. Nathan Appleton (1779–1861). Career Appleton fought in the War of 1812, commissioned July 3, 1813, and earned the rank of Lieutenant colonel with the Massachusetts Militia and was later promoted to the rank of Brigadier general. He commanded actions at Sandy Bay in September 1814 and Gallop's Folly in October 1814. Appleton lived much of his life in Ipswich, Massachusetts and nearby Marblehead, Massachusetts prior to moving to Maine. Massachusetts General Court In 1813 and 1814, at
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Chet Baker in New York is an album by trumpeter Chet Baker recorded in 1958 and released on the Riverside label early the following year. Reception Allmusic awarded the album with 4 stars stating "Chet Baker in New York is a highly recommended entry into Baker's catalog". Track listing "Fair Weather" (Kenny Dorham, Benny Golson) - 6:58 "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" (Johnny Burke, Jimmy Van Heusen) - 7:56 "Hotel 49" (Owen Marshall) - 9:48 "Solar" (Miles Davis) - 5:52 "Blue Thoughts" (Golson) - 7:33 "When Lights Are Low" (Benny Carter, Spencer Williams) - 6:52 "Soft Winds" (Benny Goodman, Fletcher Henderson)
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Getting Nowhere Faster is a 2004 American documentary about female skateboarders. The documentary features skateboarding footage of the world's best female skateboarders, as well as a fiction film called The Skatepark Hauntings of Debbie Escalante. The skateboarding footage is interwoven with scenes from the film. The DVD features an option to watch only the skateboarding footage, or the storyline sections of the feature. Plot Debbie Escalante and her partner, the Cowboy, haunt a skate park, until a group of female skaters leave their dance class to combat Debbie. Featured skaters Amy Caron Vanessa Torres Lyn-Z Adams Hawkins Alex White Kenna
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New Hampshire Route 115A (abbreviated NH 115A) is a north–south state highway in Coos County, New Hampshire. The southern terminus of the road is at New Hampshire Route 115 south of Jefferson at Old Cherry Mountain Road. The northern terminus of NH 115A is at U.S. Route 2 in Jefferson at the Old Corner Store. Route description NH 115A intersects Whipple Road and Israel's River Road, designated New Hampshire Route 115B but sparsely signed as such, a continuation of the Turnpike Road, built by Colonel Whipple for access from the village of Riverton (Jefferson Mills) to Portland, Maine in thelate 18th century. It also crosses the old railroad grade once used by the Boston and Maine Railroad for access to Gorham and the private siding that once serviced the Waumbek Hotel complex. The Portland-Montreal Pipe Line also crosses NH 115A, just below the old Waumbek site. The pipeline right-of-way also serves as "Corridor 5" of the local snowmobile trail system. The local name of NH 115A is Meadows Road, as it once served the Jefferson Meadows train station and post office. The road passes the Forest Vale Cemetery, where lies the only victim of the Stanley Slide of 1885,
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"Playing in the Band" is a Grateful Dead song. The lyrics were written by Robert Hunter and rhythm guitarist Bob Weir composed the music, with some assistance from percussionist Mickey Hart. The song first emerged in embryonic form on the self-titled 1971 live album Grateful Dead. It then appeared in a more polished form on Ace, Bob Weir's first solo album (which included every Grateful Dead member except Ron "Pigpen" McKernan). It has since become one of the best-known Grateful Dead numbers and a standard part of their repertoire. According to Deadbase X, it ranks fourth on the list ofsongs played most often in concert by the band with 581 performances. Origins The instrumental break of "Playing in the Band" was introduced as early as the February 19, 1969 "Celestial Synapse" show at the Fillmore West, in which it appears somewhat indistinct from the preceding and following jams. The completed song debuted (along with five others) on February 18, 1971 at the Capitol Theatre. It was also included on Mickey Hart's 1972 solo album Rolling Thunder within "The Main Ten", making reference to the song's time signature of . "The Main Ten" appears on Dick's Picks Vol. 16, from
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Dreaming Days () is a 1951 French-West German drama film directed by Emil-Edwin Reinert and starring Aglaja Schmid, O.W. Fischer and Axel von Ambesser. It was based on a short story by Vicki Baum. A separate French version The Red Needle was also made, with different actors. Cast Aglaja Schmid as Maja Berger O.W. Fischer as Florian Faber Axel von Ambesser as Herr Berger Josef Sieber as Heinrich Langkofler Claude Maritz as Bergführer Margo Lion as Fanni Langkofler Hildegard Kleinkemm as Trude Langkofler References Bibliography Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise CineGraph. Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.
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KRZD (1550 AM) is a radio station targeting the multitude of tourists traveling along Missouri highways to the entertainment town of Branson, Missouri. The station cycles through numerous advertisements for Branson shows and other attractions in the area. In between blocks of ads, it cycles through comedy performances by Milton Crabapple. KRZD has historically been run by the Branson Ticket Outlet and Welcome Center and most ads are directed at bringing tourists into the Ticket Center location. Many of the Ticket Outlet's radio spots advertise free soft drinks and email access for tourists as well as a Milton Crabapple compact
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Carmel Napier, QPM was Chief Constable of Gwent Police in South Wales. Early life Napier holds a BA Honours (BA Hons) degree in English and Music; a Licentiate of Trinity College London, and a Diploma in Applied Criminology from the Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge. Police career Napier joined Hertfordshire Constabulary in 1983. She was then promoted to Superintendent with North Yorkshire Police, the head of the Complaints and Professional Standards Department. In 2002, she was promoted to Detective Chief Superintendent as Head of Specialist Support. After completion of the Strategic Command Course, she was appointed Temporary Assistant ChiefConstable. In October 2006 she joined Essex Police as Assistant Chief Constable responsible for the Territorial Policing and Partnerships. On 4 September 2008, she joined Gwent Police as Deputy Chief Constable, appointed Chief Constable-designate in January 2011, a position she fulfilled from April 2011. Napier resigned from Gwent Police in June 2013 following a threat from the then Police and Crime Commissioner, Ian Johnston, that if she did not leave he would dismiss her. Johnston disagreed with Napier’s management style and claimed crime figures had been manipulated. During a review of the role of PCC’s both Napier and Johnston appeared
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A Healthy Distrust is the second solo studio album by American rapper Sage Francis. It was released on Epitaph Records in 2005. It peaked at number 12 on Billboards Heatseekers Albums chart, as well as number 17 on the Independent Albums chart. Critical reception At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 78, based on 26 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Brian Howe of Pitchfork gave the album an 8.0 out of 10, saying, "On A Healthy Distrust, Francis continues to refine his contradictory blendof trash talk and activism, political polemic and introspection, pedantic bluster and profound insecurity." Stefan Braidwood of PopMatters gave the album 8 stars out of 10, saying, "A Healthy Distrust bears up effortlessly to the demands of both casual entertainment and prolonged, thoughtful analysis." Ron Hart of Billboard called it "[Sage Francis'] most impressive album yet." Michael Bennett of Stylus Magazine gave the album a grade of B, saying, "A Healthy Distrusts production and wordplay have improved to such a large degree that it's hard to believe that it could happen again on the next outing." Track listing Personnel Creditsadapted from liner notes. Sage Francis – vocals, recording, executive production Reanimator – production (1, 8, 12, 14) Alias – production (2, 4, 5), guitar (10), drums (10) Danger Mouse – production (3) Joe Beats – production (6) Daddy Kev – production (7) Controller 7 – production (9) Sixtoo – production (10, 11) Varick Pyr – production (13) Will Oldham – vocals (2), guitar (2) Tom Inhaler – guitar (15) Nathan H. – harmonica (15) Chris Warren – engineering, mixing Gene Grimaldi – mastering Charts References External links Category:2005 albums Category:Sage Francis albums Category:Epitaph Records albums Category:Albums produced by Alias
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Richard Gwinnett (1675-1717) was an English dramatist. Gwinnett was the son of George Gwinnett of Shurdington, Gloucestershire. He was a pupil of Francis Gastrell at Christ Church, Oxford. He remained there some seven years, when he proceeded to London, and took rooms in the Temple, although he was in no way connected with the legal profession. While in London he became engaged to Elizabeth Thomas, well known as Dryden's 'Corinna,' but owing to his consumptive tendencies the marriage was postponed, and he withdrew to his father's residence in Gloucestershire. During the next sixteen years (1700–16) much correspondence passed between thedeferred owing to the illness of the lady's mother. Early in the following spring Gwinnett suffered a relapse, and died on 16 April 1717. He was the author of a play entitled 'The Country Squire, or a Christmas Gambol,' first published in the second volume of 'Pylades and Corinna,' the collected correspondence of Gwinnett and Elizabeth Thomas, London, 1732. Another edition of the play appeared in 1734. Portraits of Gwinnett were engraved by Van der Gucht and G. King for the 'Pylades and Corinna' volumes. References Category:1675 births Category:1717 deaths Category:People from Tewkesbury (district) Category:Alumni of Christ Church, Oxford Category:18th-century
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The 1843 New South Wales colonial election, the first in the colony, was held between 15 June and 3 July 1843, to elect 24 members from 18 electoral districts. Each district returned 1 member except for Port Phillip which returned 5 members while County of Cumberland, and Town of Sydney returned 2 each. Results by district County of Argyle County of Bathurst County of Camden Counties of Cook and Westmoreland County of Cumberland Two members to be elected Cumberland Boroughs County of Durham Counties of Gloucester, Macquarie, and Stanley Counties of Hunter, Brisbane and Bligh Town of Melbourne Counties of
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Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso is a health sciences university in El Paso, Texas founded on May 20, 2013. Previously, the university had operated as a branch campus of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center since 1969. History TTUHSC El Paso opened in 1969 as the Regional Academic Health Center and became affiliated with R.E. Thomason Hospital in 1973 as part of TTUHSC in Lubbock, Texas. The university now has approximately 1,675 faculty and staff members. For its first 35 years, only third- and fourth-year medical students, along with residents, could train in the campus' eightaccredited programs. However, in February 2008, the school received full accreditation, allowing it to accept first- and second-year medical students into its postgraduate medical training. It was renamed the Paul L. Foster School of Medicine in 2009. Upon approval by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board and the Texas Board of Nursing, the Gayle Greve Hunt School of Nursing officially opened as a free-standing school of nursing in September 2011. A feasibility study conducted in 2012 by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board determined that a proposed dental school, that would have been a college within TTUHSC El Paso, wastoo costly and at that time not necessary but may be necessitated in the future. On May 20, 2013 Gov. Rick Perry signed a bill establishing the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso as its own independent school within the Texas Tech University System. The signing of Senate Bill 120 gave the El Paso campus its own administration and took effect in 2015. Schools Biomedical Sciences In 2012, the Lubbock campus expanded its Biomedical Sciences program to El Paso. The inaugural class in El Paso was admitted in the Spring of 2013. TTUHSC El Paso operates eleven communityclinics throughout the city and County of El Paso. In addition to its partnership with Thomason Hospital, it has partnerships with William Beaumont Army Medical Center located on Fort Bliss and Providence Hospital. Programs of Study Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences Post-baccalaureate Certificate in Biomedical Sciences Dental Woody L. Hunt School of Dental Medicine Medicine In 1998, TTUHSC El Paso celebrated 25 years serving the El Paso community. The following year, then-Texas Tech System Chancellor John T. Montford shared with the Board of Regents a vision for a full-fledged four-year medical school in El Paso to help alleviate asevere shortage of physicians in the area. Currently, there are less than 110 physicians for every 100,000 people in El Paso. The national average is 198 physicians per 100,000 patients. The Texas average is only 150 per 100,000. Studies have shown that most medical students remain in the region in which they received their education to establish their practices. The addition of the first two years of the medical school would allow students from El Paso and nearby regions to complete their education near home, in hopes of retaining doctors in the area. In 2001, longtime community philanthropists J.O. andMarlene Stewart donated 10.2 acres of land near the HSC for the new medical campus. The Paso del Norte Foundation approved a $1.25 million scholarship grant program for local students contingent on the approval of the four-year medical school. During the 2001 Texas Legislative Session (77th), the El Paso legislative delegation successfully spearheaded an effort to secure $40 million in tuition revenue bonds for the research facility, one of three buildings on the new campus, just a short walk from the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center—as well as an $11 million clinic expansion project that took about two years,and added a third floor on the present TTUHSC El Paso Medical Center building. In 2002, the Paso del Norte Health Foundation announced a $1.25 million scholarship/grant loan program for TTUHSC El Paso students choosing to practice in El Paso. By working together with TTUHSC, the Foundation would help meet the demand for physicians and provide the perfect environment for area students to improve their medical education, while contributing to the health of our region. In 2003, Texas Governor Rick Perry visited the El Paso campus for a ceremonial signing of House Bill 28, article 10, which authorized Texas Techto issue $45 million in tuition revenue bonds for the construction of a classroom/office building for a four-year medical school at the El Paso campus. The governor also announced an additional $2 million in funding to finance start-up costs and faculty salaries. TTUHSC El Paso Regional Dean Jose Manuel de la Rosa, M.D., was also appointed by President George W. Bush to the United States-Mexico Border Health Commission, recognizing TTUHSC as a national leader in border health issues. The bi-national commission developed and coordinated actions to improve the health and quality of life along the United States-Mexico border and studiedon September 1, 2011. The School was launched through the generous donation of $10 million by the Hunt Family Foundation, and in April 2011, received initial approval from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board and the Texas Board of Nursing. The Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education's Board of Commissioners acted at its meeting in April, 2013 to grant accreditation to the baccalaureate degree program in nursing for five years, extending to June, 2018. The accreditation action was effective as of September 12, 2012. The program met all four accreditation standards and determined that there were no compliance concerns with respectto the key elements. The GGHSON is on the U.S./Mexico border, and is positioned to become the gold standard for undergraduate and graduate nursing education. The current enrollment is 85% Hispanic, with a total of 103 students. Undergraduate programs: BSN programs are for traditional and second degree students (individuals with a non-nursing baccalaureate degree). The following undergraduate degree programs are offered, and Graduate programs are in the planning stages: Programs of Study Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Accelerated B.S.N. Bachelor of Science in Nursing: R.N. to B.S.N. Master of Science Nursing in Leadership Campus The university is currently building three$25-million of private funds towards the building of the four-year medical school in El Paso. On August 4, 2007, Paul Foster, President and CEO of Western Refining, made a $50-million donation to the school. This is the largest donation in the history of the Texas Tech University System. The Infinity Campaign concluded on May 27, 2008. Including the Foster contribution, it netted $83-million, $58-million above its goal. When the medical school opened at the Health Sciences Center in 2009, it was the first health school to open in the U.S. in 30 years. Presidents Tedd Mitchell, M.D. (Interim): May 20,
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Alain Lestié is a French painter and writer, born in Hossegor in 1944, who lives and works in Cannes and in Paris. Since the end of the 1960s, Alain Lestié's work has been a reflection on the critical dimension of painting. Exhibitions 2019 Galerie Qvadrige, Nice: autour de Saint-Augustin 2017 Galerie Depardieu, Nice: "a parte" -Cercle des sources, Antibes (exposition privée) -"le Musée se met au vert? Paysages en représentation(s)" :Musée de Bordeaux 2016 Galerie Depardieu, Nice: a contrario Galerie Guyenne Art Gascogne, Bordeaux: dessins Jardin Public Galerie, Saint-Tropez Galerie Guyenne Art Gascogne, Bordeaux: un séjour en Aquitaine Biennale de
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Relations:[["Alain Lestié", "occupation", "Painter"], ["Alain Lestié", "work location", "Cannes"]] |
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Loshavn is a small port village in Farsund municipality in Vest-Agder county, Norway. The village is located at the mouth of the Lyngdalsfjorden, about south of the town of Farsund. In 1865, there were over 200 residents, but today there are only a handful, with most of the buildings used as hotels and vacation rentals. The village has perhaps the best-preserved wooden buildings along the southern coast of Norway. The place has a history of character, especially from the years of the Gunboat War (1807-1814), the so-called "privateer era" (). During these years, Loshavn was militarized to protect the mainland
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John Sutherland Whitewright (, September 5, 1858 in Edinburgh – January 10, 1926 in Tianjin) was a British Baptist missionary to China in the late 19th and early 20th century. He arrived in the city of Qingzhou, Shandong province in 1880 or in 1881. In 1886, he started a theological college in Qingzhou that would later develop into Gotch-Robinson Theological College. He directed the college with the assistance of Alfred G. Jones and J. Percy Bruce. In 1887, he established the Yidu Museum (named after the former Yidu County) in Qingzhou. In 1904, he moved with the museum to Jinan,
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"Gotta Make It" is the debut single by singer Trey Songz from his debut album I Gotta Make It. The song features rapper Twista and reached number 87 on the US Billboard Hot 100. The song samples from "It's Forever" by The Ebonys. The music video features a guest appearance by R&B singer Gerald Levert and was shot in Trey Songz's hometown of Petersburg, Virginia. Charts External links Category:2005 singles Category:Trey Songz songs Category:Twista songs Category:Debut singles Category:Music videos directed by Marc Webb Category:2005 songs Category:Atlantic Records singles Category:Song recordings produced by Troy Taylor (record producer) Category:Songs written by Trey
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Buddleja blattaria is a small shrub endemic to the regions of Piura and Cajamarca in northern Peru. The species was first described and named by J. F. Macbride in 1934. Description Buddleja blattaria is a dioecious shrub, < 1 m tall, with brown fissured bark. The young branches are quadrangular and covered with thick tomentum. The leaves are sessile elliptic or oblong-elliptic, 4–10 cm long by 1.5–3 cm wide, lanose on both surfaces. The white or cream inflorescence is 3–8 cm long, comprising sessile flowers borne on one terminal and 1–3 pairs of globose heads below, in the axils of
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The Des Plaines River () is a river that flows southward for through southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois in the United States Midwest, eventually meeting the Kankakee River west of Channahon to form the Illinois River, a tributary of the Mississippi River. Native Americans used the river as transportation route and portage. When French explorers and missionaries arrived in the 1600s, in what was then the Illinois Country of New France, they named the waterway La Rivière des Plaines (River of the Plane Tree) as they felt that trees on the river resembled the European plane tree. The local NativeAmericans showed these early European explorers how to traverse waterways of the Des Plaines watershed to travel from Lake Michigan to the Mississippi River and its valley. Parts of the river are now part of the Illinois Waterway and the Chicago Area Waterway System. Course and character The slow-moving Des Plaines River rises in southern Wisconsin just west of Kenosha adjacent to the Great Lakes Dragway and flows southward primarily through marshland as it crosses into Illinois. The river turns to the east and flows through woodland forest preserve districts in Lake and Cook counties (through Forest Park and thecity of Des Plaines), northwest of Chicago. Numerous small fixed dams have been built on the river starting in central Lake County and continuing through Cook County. Eventually, the river turns to the southwest and joins with the Sanitary and Ship Canal in Lockport before flowing through the city of Joliet. Here it becomes part of the Chicago Area Waterway System and the longer Illinois Waterway. In the heavily industrialized area around Joliet, dams control the river. Just west of Joliet, the Des Plaines converges with the Kankakee River to form the Illinois River. () Those parts of the DesPlaines River preserved in a mostly natural state are used for conservation and recreation, while substantially altered sections serve as an important industrial waterway and drainage channel. The original course of the riverbed was moved to the west at the town of Lockport during the construction of the Sanitary and Ship Canal in 1905. According to Chicago Wilderness Magazine, as the Des Plaines River runs through four Illinois counties, it "changes from prairie creek to a suburban stream, to a large urbanized river, to a major industrial waterway." Sections of the river in the Lake County and Cook County ForestPreserve districts in Illinois create "a nearly continuous greenway though all of Lake County and the northern section of Cook County." While canoe launching ramps are available, "The lack of ramps for trailered boats makes this long river a quiet, family-friendly river." This greenway also supports the Des Plaines River Trail, a multi-use trail that roughly follows the course of the Des Plaines River through Lake County and into Cook County. History Etymology The Des Plaines River was named by early French coureurs de bois sometime between the 17th and 18th centuries, after the trees lining the banks of theriver. The word la plaine, in the 18th-century Mississippi Valley dialect of French spoken at the time, referred to either the American sycamore or the red maple, both of which resembled the European plane tree either in their palmate leaves or similar bark. This meaning of plaine survives in Canadian French: Plaine or Plaine rouge refers to an Acer rubrum and Acer saccharinum is sometimes named a plaine blanche. The English word for the plane tree came from the 14th century Old French word la plane. Since the later 18th century, the French word for the plane tree has evolvedinto le platane. As the Latin name for the plane tree is platanus, this transformation was likely done as a part of the attempts by late 18th-century French academics to change the spelling of many French words to what was perceived as their Latin origins. A side effect of such action was that the original French meaning of the name applied to the Des Plaines River was obscured. Today, des Plaines in modern Parisian French literally means "of the plains" or "of the prairie". This has led to confusion about the meaning of the original French name for the DesPlaines River. Many people today believe that the river was named after the plains and prairies through which the river flows. But, in the 18th-century French dialect, it was more common to use the word "prairie" to indicate a plain, such as Prairie du Rocher in Illinois and Prairie du Chien in Wisconsin. Also, as noted above, it is more likely that the river was named in reference to the trees rather than the land. The French, like the Native Americans, traveled primarily by waterways rather than overland. The view of the prairie was nearly always blocked by trees. Tothis day a large number of both maples and sycamores grow along the Des Plaines River. Although the original French name for the river has survived, its pronunciation has been altered. Today, locals pronounce it in an anglicized way (roughly "dess plains"), rather than according to the French pronunciation. Des Plaines River Bridge The Des Plaines River Bridge in Joliet is a cantilever bridge that is six lanes wide—three lanes traveling eastbound and westbound. The bridge is signed as part of Interstate 80. The bridge is located on the south side of Joliet. Flood control projects A Tunnel and ReservoirPlan (the Chicago Deep Tunnel) to reduce the harmful effects of floods and the flushing of raw sewage into Lake Michigan is semi-operational. It diverts storm water and sewage into temporary holding reservoirs. The megaproject is one of the largest civil engineering projects ever undertaken in terms of scope, cost and timeframe. Commissioned in the mid-1970s, the project is managed by the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago. Completion of the system is not anticipated until 2029, but substantial portions of the system have opened. A modern flood control study stated that flooding on the Des Plaines River hascaused significant damage and adverse economic impacts. The greatest recorded flood, in September 1986, caused an estimated $35 million in damage to 10,000 dwellings and 263 business and industrial sites. A Phase I flood control Project was authorized under the Water Resources Development Act of 1999. Project features include levee, dam, and reservoir expansion at a total cost of $50.5 million (in 2002). On August 24, 2007, the river flooded by over . On September 14, 2008, the river flooded after the area received more than of rainfall over two days. Crime In the six months prior to his December1978 arrest, serial killer John Wayne Gacy discarded the remains of at least four of his thirty-three known victims into the river, after finding no other suitable locations to dispose of them, due to the further twenty-nine known victims being buried in the crawlspace or other locations upon the grounds of his home. Recreation The Des Plaines River is the site of the Des Plaines River Canoe & Kayak Marathon. The race was founded in 1957 by Ralph Frese, and is the second oldest continual canoe race in the United States. Fishing is a common practice along the Des Plaines
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Finland–North Korea relations are bilateral relations between Finland and North Korea. In the 1970s, Finland made a decision to have diplomatic relations with both North and South Korea. This mirrored the contemporary policy of relations with both East and West Germany. Finland extended formal diplomatic recognition to North Korea on 13 April 1973. The countries have had formal diplomatic relations since 1 June 1973. Relations were sometimes close until the 1990s, after which correspondences have significantly diminished. North Korea had an embassy in Finland from 1978 until it closed it down in 1998, "for economic reasons". North Korea maintained afair amount of its relations with the European Union through the embassy, which made Finland one of its priorities. Kim Pyong-il, a son of the country's president, Kim Il-sung, was chosen as the last resident ambassador. This was either to highlight the relations with Finland or to move him out of Pyongyang in order to prevent a power struggle with his half-brother Kim Jong-il, who succeeded Kim Il-sung. Nowadays, North Korea is represented by a non-resident ambassador in the , Sweden, who is currently Kang Yong-dok. His Finnish counterpart is Eero Suominen, although he is yet to be accredited. Variousdiplomatic incidents have taken place over the years. In the 1970s, North Korean diplomats were found to run a smuggling ring in Finland and the other Nordic countries as part of North Korea's illicit activities to obtain foreign currencies. In 1983 the North Korean ambassador tried to bribe the Finnish prime minister Johannes Virolainen. In 2007, Finnish Customs used teargas on two North Korean diplomats who refused to cooperate. In the 1970s, North Korea purchased two paper machines from Finland for 30 million euros. The debt has never been paid back. Trade between the two countries has been "virtually non-existent"since the 2000s. There is a friendship association to promote Finnish–North Korean relations in Finland called . Likewise, North Korea has its Korea–Finland Association. Pentecostal charity and the Finnish Red Cross operate in the country. History North Korea pursued relations with Finland already in the late-1950s. Finland, however, could not agree to the establishment of formal relations with a divided state of the Cold War. Formation of relations culminated in Finnish diplomatic recognition of North Korea on 13 April 1973, and the establishment of formal diplomatic relations on 1 June 1973. Until the 1990s, the two had sometimes close relations.In recent times, the two countries have not had important relations. The last time that political consultations were held was in 2005. Nowadays, the two countries maintain normal diplomatic relations, but they are not particularly close. Finland has often condemned those actions of North Korea that it perceives as threats to international peace and security. Establishment of trade relations, recognition, and diplomatic relations A bilateral trade agreement was signed on 9 October 1969, and a North Korean trade office was established in Helsinki in January 1971. In the 1970s, Finland maintained a prudent foreign policy toward any divided states. LikeEast and West Germany, North and South Korea fell under this policy. Consequentially, Finland had to let South Korea establish a trade office in the capital as well. It also entailed that Finland would have to establish formal diplomatic relations with both states. The impetus came in November 1972, when Finland recognized both German states. The following month, North Korean diplomats petitioned the Finnish government to pursue recognition of North Korea as well. Finland simultaneously recognized the two Korean states on 13 April 1973. Diplomatic relations with North Korea were established two months later, on 1 June and with SouthKorea slightly later on 24 August. Finland became the second Western European country, after Sweden, to establish relations with the North. Because of the policy, however, Finland recognized South Korea later than the other Nordic countries. The Korean question continued to be addressed at the United Nations in the 1970s. Kim Il-sung apparently considered Finland to have a role to play and petitioned him twice by personal letters in 1973. In the 1970s, Finland maintained closer ties with North than South Korea. The tide began to turn in the late 1970s because of unpaid debts and diplomatic incidents. By themid-1980s, Finland was favoring South Korea over the North, although Kim still described the ties as "cordial" in 1985. Finland was establishing an embassy in Seoul, and let North Korea know that there would be no Finnish embassy in Pyongyang until the country cleaned up its diplomatic act and paid its debts. Illicit activities In 1976, North Korean diplomats were discovered to run extensive smuggling of cigarettes, liquor, and illegal drugs in Finland, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark as part of North Korea's illicit activities to earn currency. In Finland, this included trafficking drugs and alcohol, unauthorized selling of alcohol warespurchased at diplomatic rates and attempts to sell illegal drugs. The case culminated in a major police operation and a car chase in Helsinki. Chargé d'affaires Chang Dae-hi and three other diplomats were declared persona non grata. The incident proved not only damaging to the reputation of North Korea but also put the Finnish authorities in a difficult position because North Korea still remained a diplomatic priority. The biggest blow to diplomatic relations took place in 1983, when the North Korean ambassador, Yu Jae-han tried to bribe the Finnish prime minister Johannes Virolainen with $5,000. The incident resulted in thediplomat being announced persona non grata. North Korean diplomats have also reportedly tried to sell pornography in Finland. In 2007, North Korea issued a diplomatic note of dissatisfaction with Finland after an incident concerning two North Korean diplomats. The diplomats headed to Stockholm were aboard the train from Moscow to Helsinki when Finnish Customs officials had to use tear gas after they refused to cooperate. The men had refused to show their train tickets and their diplomatic passports lacked the appropriate annex for passing through Finland, where they had not been accredited. Only after the Finnish police had determined thatthere was North Korean diplomatic personnel in Finland to meet the men and escort them to Sweden was it determined that they were entitled to diplomatic immunity as passing by diplomats. The North Korean note accused Finland of human rights violations and the diplomats being bitten by canine police. North Korea has attempted to import dual-use technology suitable for weapons of mass destruction from Finland. Diplomatic representation North Korea maintained an embassy in Finland from 1978 until it closed it down in 1998. In addition to the embassy, located at Kulosaaren puistotie 32 in the Kulosaari district of Helsinki, NorthKorea maintained an official residence for the ambassador, in the Tammisalo district of the capital since spring 1994. The embassy was closed down "for economic reasons". The properties were sold and the embassy subsequently demolished. The last ambassador before a temporary diplomat was Kim Il-sung's son Kim Pyong-il, who had been accredited on 18 March 1994. Kim's predecessor, Choe Sang-bom, had served for about six months, until he reportedly fell ill and left the country in December 1993. Before the shutdown, North Korea used to run much of its relations with the European Union through its embassy in Finland, andthe Finnish Foreign Ministry assessed that North Korea had "invested a lot" in its relations with Finland. Kim Pyong-il, in particular, was thought to have been chosen as ambassador in order to raise the profile of Finnish relations. On the other hand, Kim was speculated to have been placed in Finland to be out of the way of a potential power struggle following the anticipated succession of his half-brother Kim Jong-il to the country's leadership. Finland was also a strategic partner due to its traditional role in-between Western and Eastern countries, following North Korea's soured relations with major powers followingits nuclear weapons program. At the time, it was reported that North Korea had also made a set of "unrealistic" commercial proposals to Finland. Since then, North Korea has maintained relations with Finland through the , Sweden. North Korea's ambassador to Sweden then acts as the non-resident ambassador to Finland and other Nordic countries. Pak Kwang-cho was accredited as the ambassador to Finland on 22 January 2013. Pak, however, was called back to Pyongyang in December 2013 following the execution of his ally Jang Song-thaek. It is likely that Pak was imprisoned or executed. The current non-resident ambassador to Finlandis Kang Yong-dok. In the North Korean Foreign Ministry, the person responsible for relations with Finland is the head of the Department of Northern Europe, with four staff members. , the person is Pak Yun-sik. Finland is dealt with by the ministry's European Affairs Department 2. Eero Suominen was appointed the ambassador to both Koreas in September 2016, but , he is yet to leave his letter of accreditation to the North Korean government. The ambassador is a non-resident one in the Embassy of Finland in Seoul, South Korea. Finnish nationals in North Korea may seek urgent assistance from the. In the Finnish Foreign Ministry, relations with North Korea are handled by the Unit for Eastern Asia and Oceania, which is under the Department for the Americas and Asia. Former representatives Finnish Ambassador Veli Helenius 1973–1974 Ambassador Martti Salomies 1974–1976 Ambassador Pentti Suomela 1976–1984 Ambassador Risto Hyvärinen 1984–1999 Ambassador Arto Mansala 1989–1992 Ambassador Ilkka Ristimäki 1992– Source: North Korean Chargé d'affaires by announcement Chog Sung-kyn 1973 Chargé d'affaires by announcement Chang Dae-hi 1973 Ambassador Han Jong-cho 1978–1979 Ambassador Yu Jae-han 1979–1983 Ambassador Li Nam-kyu 1984–1989 Ambassador Ryo Sung-chol 1990–1993 Ambassador Choe Sang-bom 1993–1994 Ambassador Kim Pyong-il 1994– Source: Inter-parliamentaryrelations The first parliamentary visit to North Korea took place in 1972. The delegation that was led by (SKDL) and also included Lasse Lehtinen (SDP) and Pertti Salolainen (NCP) met with President Kim Il-sung. In 1982 MP (SDP) and minister (SKDL) along with former Yleisradio director-general Eino S. Repo organized a conference for the "reunification" of Korea in Espoo, Finland prompted by North Korea. A North Korean delegation arrived to the conference but since there was no South Korean representation the conference was nothing short of a North Korean propaganda event. In the past, a Finnish parliamentary committee, the Finnish-Koreafriendship group () was tasked with relations. The committee visited the country in 1997 to attend Day of the Sun celebrations and was heavily criticized for supporting the regime. The vice president of the committee, (SDP), alluded that reports of the North Korean famine were exaggerated. The trip also exceeded its budget. Kim Il-sung was awarded the 75-year Anniversary Parliamentary Medal of Finland in 1981. In 1982, Kim's 70th birthday was attended by MP and Minister of Education (both SKDL) despite the government's intention to mark the occasion in a low-key fashion. Finns have gifted Kim Il-sung a reindeer peltand a ryijy. A double cloth was gifted for Kim's 80th birthday in 1992. Kim's 80th birthday was attended by chairman of the Communist Workers' Party – For Peace and Socialism Timo Lahdenmäki and member of parliament of the Left Alliance party. Gifts from Finland amount to more than the combined total of all other Northern European countries. After the death of Kim Il-sung, within a week some 40 people had visited the North Korean embassy in Helsinki to express their condolences, including high-ranking government officials. Likewise, after the death of Kim Jong-il in 2011, Finnish member of parliament KajTurunen of the Finns Party motioned the parliament to observe a minute of silence "in remembrance of the Dear Leader Kim Jong-il", while his fellow party member Juho Eerola wished Kim Jong-un the providence of God. Both members of parliament were invited to a meeting with appreciative North Korean diplomats in Helsinki and were also invited to visit North Korea. In the past, North Korea sought to influence Finnish politicians a lot, but recent years have lacked enthusiasm. Trade relations Bilateral trade between the countries is "virtually non-existent", especially since the 2000s, with occasional spikes. For instance, Finnish imports fromNorth Korea increased 14,000 percent from 2010 to 2011 when trade included some 3,000 North Korean television sets assembled in the Kaesong Industrial Region along with other artifacts. In 2016 products worth of just 1,500 euros were exported from Finland to North Korea, while North Korean exports to Finland were valued at a little over 6,000 euros. Finland's main exports to North Korea have been cranes and dentistry equipment. A relatively high-value trade of 8,5 million euros worth of cranes to North Korea took place in 2013. In the 1970s, Finland imported mostly rice from North Korea. Finland established atrade office in Pyongyang on 1 April 1974. At that time, relations were lobbied by , an organization representing the interest of Finnish metal industries. It was thought that Finnish industries would get a boost from having a presence in North Korea early before Western European or other capitalist countries. The office was fully functioning in 1975. Finnish staff actively took part in social events in the capital because failure to show up could have been interpreted as protest. At the office, the staff was concerned about possible listening devices as it was known that North Koreans had personnel whoknew Finnish. In 1972, North Korea had ordered paper machines and other machinery from Finland for over 30 million dollars. Providers included Rauma-Repola, Ahlström, Tampella, and Strömberg. At that time, the investment was deemed safe. The equipment was delivered but the payment, however, was never made. Kim Il-sung also identified mining technology as a potential import. In the 1970s, Finland sought actively for the debt to be paid and a court of arbitration in Moscow ruled in favor of the Finnish claims. North Korea still has a debt of more than 26 million dollars to the Finnish state and 6million to Finnish enterprises. The Finnish state has for a long time expected no repayment, but in 2017 North Korea hinted that it was willing to fulfill its obligations. The trade office remains closed. Finland enacts sanctions against North Korea because of the latter's nuclear weapons program. Non-governmental relations Kim Il-sung became known in Finland by the end of the Korean War. By 1952 the Communist Party of Finland published a short biography of him in its yearbook and in 1958 Kim gave an interview to Kansan Uutiset. A new interview was given when a delegation of the Democratic YouthLeague of Finland visited North Korea in 1969. A committee of solidarity with North Korea was established in 1968. In 1970, the committee evolved into the Finnish-Korea Association. The Finnish delegation to the 13th World Festival of Youth and Students in 1989 in Pyongyang was greatly reduced when the National Union of University Students in Finland canceled their planned visit, citing official remarks of North Korea that supported the violent Chinese reaction to the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. There is a friendship association to promote Finnish–North Korean relations in Finland called . Likewise, North Korea has its Korea–Finland Association. SeveralFinnish organizations have been set up since the 1960s and 1970s to study Juche. In addition to the it has been studied by the Communist Party of Finland. There are plaques from Finnish Juche associations from Vaasa, Jyväskylä, Joensuu, and Tampere at the Juche Tower. In the 1970s, as much as 71 propaganda works were translated to Finnish, a language spoken by relatively few people worldwide, at great expense. These were distributed to anyone having contacts with the embassy, various leftist organizations, and even Sámi people. Some books penned by Finnish authors are prominently distributed in North Korea. The FinnishPentecostal charity has worked with healthcare and potato production in North Korea since 1998. The organization is what North Koreans are most likely to know about Finland. One Finnish family of expatriates working for Fida lives in North Korea. The Finnish Red Cross also operates in the country, in the field of preventing flood and drought damage. A Finnish poll found that North Korea is the second least desirable foreign country that Finns would move to, after Russia. Three Finnish travel agencies – Olympia, Mandala Travel, and Travel Oy – arrange tourist trips to North Korea, although the Finnish Ministryfor Foreign Affairs cautions against unnecessary travel to the country. North Korean exchange students have sought to study in Finland, but the Finnish Foreign Ministry has refused their entry, although a small group of dentistry students has been on a study trip. See also Foreign relations of Finland Foreign relations of North Korea North Korea–Sweden relations References Works cited Further reading External links North Korean embassy in Stockholm Sanctions on North Korea at Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland Travel documents when entering Finland from North Korea at Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland Swedish embassy in Pyongyang Finland–Korea Association
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Relations:[["Finland–North Korea relations", "country", "Finland"], ["Finland–North Korea relations", "country", "North Korea"]] |
### User:
G17 Plus (G17+), was a liberal-conservative political party in Serbia that existed from 2002 until 2013 when it merged into the United Regions of Serbia (URS). Founded as a non-governmental organization dealing with economic issues, in 2002 it transformed into a political party that became part of several ruling coalition governments in Serbia throughout the 2000s and early 2010s. Foundation G17 Plus was founded in 1997 as a non-governmental organization (NGO) in Serbia, then a federal unit within FR Yugoslavia. The organization consisting of economic experts enjoyed financial support of the United States through the National Endowment for Democracy (NED).It was registered as a political party on 15 December 2002, with Miroljub Labus as its first president. At its first electoral showing at the 2003 parliamentary elections, G17 Plus received 11.5% of the popular vote and 34 seats in the National Assembly. In March 2004, G17+ formed a coalition government with the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS), the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO) and New Serbia (NS). In May 2006 Miroljub Labus resigned as party leader and was replaced by Mlađan Dinkić. On October 1, 2006, the party quit the governing coalition over its failure to find and extradite ICTYfugitive Ratko Mladić. In the 2007 elections, the party received 6.82% of the popular vote and 19 seats in the parliament. G17+ received a single seat in the Community Assembly of Kosovo and Metohija. In 2010, G17 Plus founded the United Regions of Serbia (URS), a coalition of political parties and groups emphasizing decentralization and regional development of Serbia. After a few years functioning as the centerpiece of the coalition, in April 2013 G17 Plus fully merged with URS, transforming it into a political party. Presidents of the G17 Plus (2002–2013) Electoral results Presidential elections Positions held Major positions held
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["G17 Plus", {"description":'Serbian political party', "alias":['G17+']}], ["Political party", {}], ["Serbia", {}], ["United Regions of Serbia", {}], ["Miroljub Labus", {}], ["Mlađan Dinkić", {}]]
Relations:[["G17 Plus", "instance of", "Political party"], ["G17 Plus", "country", "Serbia"], ["G17 Plus", "followed by", "United Regions of Serbia"], ["G17 Plus", "founded by", "Miroljub Labus"], ["G17 Plus", "chairperson", "Mlađan Dinkić"]] |
### User:
architecture was developed for the Macintosh Network Computer, an unrealized project that eventually contributed several key technologies to the first-generation iMac. All PowerPC Macs from the iMac, the iBook, the Blue and White Power Mac G3 and the Bronze Keyboard (Lombard) PowerBook G3 forward are New World ROM machines, while all previous models (including the Beige Power Mac G3 and all other beige and platinum Macs) are Old World ROM machines. Intel based Macs are incapable of running Mac OS 9 (or, indeed, any version of Mac OS X prior to Tiger), and on these machines EFI is used insteadsupported direct access to the Open Firmware command prompt from the console (by setting the auto-boot? variable to false from Mac OS, or by holding down Command-Option-O-F at boot). One major difference between Old World ROM Macs and New World ROM Macs, at least in classic Mac OS, is that the Gestalt selector for the machine type is no longer usable; all New World ROM Macs use the same mach ID, 406 decimal, and the actual machine ID is encoded in the "model" and "compatible" properties of the root node of the Open Firmware device tree. The New World ROMalso sets the "compatible" property of the root node to "MacRISC2" (machines that can boot classic Mac OS using "Mac OS ROM") or "MacRISC3" (machines that can only boot Mac OS X or another Unix-like system). It is somewhat easier to boot a non-Mac-OS operating system on a New World system, and indeed OpenBSD's bootloader only works on a New World system. The simplest way to distinguish a New World ROM Mac is that it will have a factory built-in USB port. No Old World ROM Mac had a USB port as factory equipment; instead, they used ADB for keyboard
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["New World ROM", {"description":'Macintosh models that do not use a Macintosh Toolbox ROM on the logic board'}], ["Old World ROM", {}]]
Relations:[["New World ROM", "replaces", "Old World ROM"]] |
### User:
Earl Richard Stewart Jr. (October 15, 1921 – July 11, 1990) was an American professional golfer who played on the PGA Tour in the 1950s and 1960s; and was a college head golf coach in the 1970s and 1980s. Stewart was born in Dallas, Texas. He graduated from Dallas' Sunset High School in 1938. He attended Louisiana State University and was a member of the golf team. In 1941, he won the NCAA Championship, and led the Bayou Bengals to a share of the NCAA team title in 1942. Stewart had three wins in PGA Tour events during his career.His first win came in 1953 at the Greater Greensboro Open. He would win the Ardmore Open later that year. His best finishes in major championships were T10 at the 1952 U.S. Open and T16 at The Masters in 1953. Like many professional golfers of his generation, Stewart earned his living primarily as a club pro. His third and final win on the PGA Tour, the 1961 Dallas Open Invitational, came on his own course at the Oak Cliff Country Club. Stewart was the head golf coach at Southern Methodist University from 1975–1987. He coached both the men's and women'steams. Men's golf was dropped by the university in 1980. He won a national championship with the women's team in 1979. One of his students was future two-time U.S. Open and PGA Champion Payne Stewart (no relation). In 1987, he was inducted into the National Golf Coaches Association Coaches Hall of Fame for his role as a women's collegiate golf coach at SMU. Stewart died after a long illness at the age of 68 at his home in Quitman, Texas. Amateur wins 1941 NCAA Championship (individual medalist) Professional wins PGA Tour wins PGA Tour playoff record (1–2) Other wins 1950
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Earl Stewart", {"description":'professional golfer'}], ["Dallas", {}], ["Golfer", {}], ["Golf", {}], ["Quitman, Texas", {}]]
Relations:[["Earl Stewart", "place of birth", "Dallas"], ["Earl Stewart", "occupation", "Golfer"], ["Earl Stewart", "sport", "Golf"], ["Earl Stewart", "place of death", "Quitman, Texas"]] |
### User:
Kensington Central Library is a Grade II* listed building on Hornton Street and Phillimore Walk, Kensington, London. It was built in 1958–60 by the architect E. Vincent Harris on the site of The Abbey, a Gothic house which had been constructed for a Mr Abbot in 1880 and destroyed by bombing in 1944. It was opened by the Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother on 13 July 1960. Its construction was met with demonstrations because of opposition to its architectural design. The public library is within the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and is managed as part of a tri-borough
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Kensington Central Library", {"description":'public library in London'}], ["Public library", {}], ["Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea", {}]]
Relations:[["Kensington Central Library", "instance of", "Public library"], ["Kensington Central Library", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea"]] |
### User:
Natalia Streignard (born Septembar 9, 1970) is a Spanish-born Venezuelan actress. Natalia is best known for her work in successful telenovelas such as El Juramento with Osvaldo Rios, La mujer de mi vida, with ex-spouse Mario Cimarro, Mi destino eres tu with Lucero and Jorge Salinas, and La Tormenta with Christian Meier, in the most famous telenovelas productions of Televisa, Venevision and Telemundo. Personal life On June 10, 1999, Streignard married Cuban actor Mario Cimarro, whom she met in 1998 on the set of "La mujer de mi vida". In 2006, Streignard and Cimarro separated and then filed for divorce.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Natalia Streignard", {"description":'Venezuelan actress', "alias":['Anduvo con Billy Aguilar']}], ["Actor", {}], ["Mario Cimarro", {}], ["La Tormenta", {}]]
Relations:[["Natalia Streignard", "occupation", "Actor"], ["Natalia Streignard", "spouse", "Mario Cimarro"], ["Natalia Streignard", "notable work", "La Tormenta"]] |
### User:
The Clergy Act (1640), also known as the Bishops Exclusion Act, or the Clerical Disabilities Act, was an Act of Parliament, effective 13 February 1642. Prior to the Act, bishops of the Church of England sat in the House of Lords, where they comprised 22 out of a total membership of 60-70 peers. This allowed them to block legislation proposed by the Commons, which was increasingly dominated by Puritans. "Puritan" was a term for anyone who wanted to reform, or 'purify', the Church of England, and contained many different sects, including Presbyterians, and Congregationalists. Despite differences in doctrine, they opposedEnglish Church". Attempts to impose similar reforms on the Church of Scotland, or kirk, led to the 1639 and 1640 Bishops' Wars. Charles refused to call Parliament, crippling his army due to lack of funds; defeat resulted in a Covenanter government, which expelled bishops from the kirk. Shortly after the Long Parliament assembled in November 1640, it was presented with the Root and Branch petition; signed by 15,000 Londoners, this demanded the removal of bishops from the Church of England, evidence of popular opposition to Episcopacy. At this stage, it was not adopted by the Commons, although Laud was impeached,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Clergy Act 1640", {"description":'United Kingdom legislation'}], ["1640", {}]]
Relations:[["Clergy Act 1640", "publication date", "1640"]] |
### User:
Joel "Jack" Nagle (1917 – 1991) was the head coach of the Marquette University men's basketball team from 1953 to 1958. Born in Chicago, Illinois, Nagle was educated at Marquette and lettered in both the 1938–39 and 1939-40 seasons, as a reserve guard on the team. Following graduation, Nagle served in the United States Army Air Corps (USAAC) from 1940-44. After leaving the military, Nagle was named an assistant coach at Marquette under his former coach, William "Bill" Chandler, and later under Fred "Tex" Winter. Nagle was named head coach of the Warriors in 1953 after Winter left to returnto Kansas State as that school's head coach. Nagle was also instrumental in the renaming of the team from the Marquette Hilltoppers to the Warriors. The first Marquette men's basketball team to earn a trip to the NCAA Tournament was the 1954-55 team, in Nagle's second year as head coach. The team had its first ever 20-win season, compiling a 24-3 record. The team reached as high as No. 4 in the AP Poll before finishing the season ranked No. 8. Marquette beat Miami (Ohio) University in the first round of the tournament 90-79 and then beat No. 2 Kentucky,79-71 in the second round. Marquette then lost to No. 5 Iowa in the Elite Eight, 86-81. Nagle's record over five seasons at Marquette was 69-55 (55.6%). In 1958, Nagle left the college coaching ranks and took a position at Whitefish Bay High School in suburban Milwaukee, Wisconsin, teaching freshman English grammar, composition and literature, and coaching the boys’ varsity basketball team from 1958–1973 and the girls’ varsity team from 1973-1988. Both his boys and girls teams made appearances in the Wisconsin state high school basketball tournament. Nagle is the only coach in American basketball history to coach teams inthe NCAA tournament and both a boys and girls state high school tournament. In the 1980s, Nagle was a scout for the Cleveland Cavaliers and later the Dallas Mavericks. He was a charter member of the Wisconsin High School Basketball Association Hall of Fame and was voted Wisconsin High School Coach of the Year 10 times. Nagle also served as commissioner of the Continental Basketball Association. Nagle was one of the early proponents of summer basketball camps to teach skills, beginning day camps in the mid-1960s. In 1986, he authored a popular coaching book called Power Pattern Offenses for Winning
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Jack Nagle", {"description":'American basketball player-coach'}], ["1917", {}], ["1991", {}], ["United States", {}], ["Nagle", {}], ["Basketball", {}]]
Relations:[["Jack Nagle", "date of birth", "1917"], ["Jack Nagle", "date of death", "1991"], ["Jack Nagle", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Jack Nagle", "family name", "Nagle"], ["Jack Nagle", "sport", "Basketball"]] |
### User:
Paul Ginisty (4 April 1855 – 5 March 1932) was a French writer, columnist and journalist. A regular columnist at Gil Blas, he met Guy de Maupassant who would dedicate him his short story . From 1896 to 1906, he was theatre manager for the Théâtre de l'Odéon, then became an inspector of monuments historiques. Selected bibliography 1881: Les Idylles parisiennes, (text online at Gallica). 1883: Les Rastaquouères : études parisiennes, (text online at Gallica). 1884: L'Amour à trois, foreword by Guy de Maupassant. 1884: La Seconde Nuit, roman bouffe, (text online at Gallica). 1888: Le Dieu bibelot, publisher A-Dupret1901: La Marquise de Sade 1903: Vers la bonté, frontispice et fleurons by , hors-texte de Paul Steck, Paris, Joanin & Cie 1907: Mémoires d'un danseuse de corde : Mme Saqui (1786-1866), (text online at Gallica). 1914: Mémoires et souvenirs de comédiennes XVIIIe 1922: Anthologie du journalisme du XVIIe siècle à nos jours1923: Les Nids d'aigles1925: Les Anciens Boulevards1929: Eugène Sue1930: Souvenirs de journalisme et de théâtre'', (text online at Gallica). References External links Notice d'autorité sur le site de la BnF Category:Writers from Paris Category:1855 births Category:1932 deaths Category:20th-century French writers Category:19th-century French journalists Category:French male journalists Category:20th-century French
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Paul Ginisty", {"description":'French journalist'}], ["Journalist", {}], ["Paris", {}]]
Relations:[["Paul Ginisty", "occupation", "Journalist"], ["Paul Ginisty", "place of birth", "Paris"], ["Paul Ginisty", "place of death", "Paris"]] |
### User:
John Freckleton Burrowes (23 April 1787 – 31 March 1852) was an English organist and composer. Biography He was born in London. His teacher was William Horsley. His first published work was a set of six English ballads; in 1812 he published an overture (Op.8) which had been performed at the Vocal Concerts at Hanover Square. This was followed in 1817 by a similar work (Op.13) produced by the Philharmonic Society, of which Burrowes was one of the original members. In 1818 the first edition of his Pianoforte Primer appeared, a little work which was very successful. In 1819, Burrowes
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["John Freckleton Burrowes", {"description":'British musician'}], ["Composer", {}]]
Relations:[["John Freckleton Burrowes", "occupation", "Composer"]] |
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