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Howard Joseph Carroll (August 5, 1902 – March 21, 1960) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Altoona, Pennsylvania from 1958 to 1960. Biography Carroll was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Duquesne University from 1920 to 1921. He then studied at St. Vincent College in Latrobe, from where he obtained Bachelor of Arts and Licentiate of Philosophy degrees. In 1923 he entered the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, earning a Doctor of Sacred Theology in 1928. He was ordained to the priesthood on April 2, 1927. Followinghis return to Pennsylvania in 1928, he served as a curate at Sacred Heart Church in Pittsburgh until 1938, when he became assistant general-secretary of the National Catholic Welfare Council. He was named a Papal Chamberlain in 1942 and a Domestic Prelate in 1945. He served as general-secretary of NCWC from 1944 to 1957. On December 5, 1957, he was appointed Bishop of Altoona by Pope Pius XII. He received his episcopal consecration on January 2, 1958 from Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, assisted by Bishops John Francis Dearden and Coleman Carroll (his brother). He later died at age 57. References
### Assistant:
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Saltriovenator (meaning "Saltrio hunter") is a genus of ceratosaurian dinosaur that lived during the Sinemurian stage of the Early Jurassic in what is now Italy. The type and only species is Saltriovenator zanellai; in the past, the species had been known under the informal name "Saltriosauro". Although a full skeleton has not yet been discovered, Saltriovenator is thought to have been a large, bipedal carnivore similar to Ceratosaurus. Discovery and naming On 4 August 1996, the first remains of Saltriovenator were discovered by amateur paleontologist Angelo Zanella, searching for ammonites in the Salnova marble quarry in Saltrio, northern Italy. Zanellaa reference to Saltrio with Latin, venator, "hunter", a common suffix in the names of theropods. The authors pointed out that a venator is also a type of Roman gladiator. The specific name honours Zanella. Because the article was published in an electronic publication, Life Science Identifiers were necessary to make the name valid. These are 8C9F3B56-F622-4C39-8E8B-C2E890811E74 for the genus and BDD366A7-6A9D-4A32-9841-F7273D8CA00B for the species. Saltriovenator is the third dinosaur named from Italy, the first from the Alps and the second theropod from Italy, after Scipionyx. The holotype, MSNM V3664, was found in a layer of the Saltrio Formation dating
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Saltriovenator", "taxon rank", "Genus"]] |
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CJYM (1330 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a classic hits format. Licensed to Rosetown, Saskatchewan, Canada, it serves west central Saskatchewan. It first began broadcasting in 1966 under the call letters CKKR. CJYM is a Class B AM station which broadcasts with a power of 10,000 watts daytime and nighttime. CJYM is the only full-power station in Canada which broadcasts on 1330 kHz. The station celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2006 with a large party at the Rosetown park. The station is currently owned by Golden West Broadcasting. See also CFYM External links CJYM Category:Rosetown Jym Jym Jym Category:Radio
### Assistant:
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Kan Phai Mahidol is a type of vine named Afgekia mahidoliae Burtt et Chermsir. in the family Leguminosae. It is found in Kanchanaburi province, Thailand. Its leaves are compound with 4-6 pairs of leaflets. The stem has several petiolules. The dorsal side of the leaf has brown colored hairs. The flower is an erect panicle with white and purple color. The pod is flat, short and round. Its scientific name is given in the honor of her Royal Highness Princess Srinagarindra, the Princess Mother. This vine was first scientifically described in Thailand by Kasem Chandraprasong, then Assistant Professor Jirayupin (Chirmsiriwattana)
### Assistant:
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Relations:[["Afgekia mahidolae", "parent taxon", "Afgekia"]] |
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The United States competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. 346 competitors, 267 men and 79 women, took part in 159 events in 19 sports. Athletics Men's Competition Men's 100 meters Bob Hayes Mel Pender Trent Jackson Men's 200 meters Henry Carr Mike Larrabee Dick Stebbins Men's 400 meters Mike Larrabee Ulis Williams Olan Cassell Men's 800 meters Tom Farrell Jerry Siebert Morgan Groth Men's 1.500 meters Dyrol Burleson Tom O'Hara Jim Ryun Men's 5,000 meters Bob Schul Bill Dellinger Oscar Moore Men's 10,000 meters Billy Mills Gerry Lindgren Ron Larrieu Men's Marathon Buddy Edelen Billy Mills PeterWomen's Long Jump Women's High Jump Women's Shot Put Women's Javelin Throw Women's Discus Throw Women's Pentathlon Basketball Boxing Bob Watkins, Fairmont, WV. Silver Medal Canoeing Cycling Sixteen cyclists represented the United States in 1964. Individual road race John Allis Michael Hiltner Raymond Castilloux Thomas Montemage Team time trial Michael Hiltner John Allis Michael Allen Wes Chowen Sprint Alan Grieco Jackie Simes 1000m time trial William Kund Tandem Jack Disney Tim Mountford Individual pursuit Skip Cutting Team pursuit Hans Wolf Oliver Martin Donald Nelsen Arnold Uhrlass Diving Equestrian Fencing 18 fencers represented the United States in 1964. Men's foil AlbieAxelrod Herbert Cohen Ed Richards Men's team foil Larry Anastasi, Eugene Glazer, Herbert Cohen, Albie Axelrod, Ed Richards Men's épée David Micahnik Paul Pesthy Frank Anger Men's team épée Paul Pesthy, Frank Anger, David Micahnik, Larry Anastasi Men's sabre Thomas Orley Gene Hámori Attila Keresztes Men's team sabre Alfonso Morales, Robert Blum, Gene Hámori, Attila Keresztes, Thomas Orley Women's foil Harriet King Jan York-Romary Tommy Angell Women's team foil Anne Drungis, Jan York-Romary, Denise O'Connor, Harriet King, Tommy Angell Gymnastics Judo Modern pentathlon Three pentathletes represented the United States in 1964. They won a silver medal in the team event.Individual James Moore David Kirkwood Paul Pesthy Team James Moore Dave Kirkwood Paul Pesthy Rowing Sailing Shooting Ten shooters represented the United States in 1964. Between them they won two golds, a silver and three bronze medals. 25 m pistol Bill McMillan Edwin Teague 50 m pistol Frank Green Thomas Smith 300 m rifle, three positions Gary Anderson Martin Gunnarsson 50 m rifle, three positions Lones Wigger Tommy Pool 50 m rifle, prone Lones Wigger Tommy Pool Trap Bill Morris Frank Little Swimming Volleyball Men's Team Competition Round Robin Defeated Netherlands (3-0) Defeated South Korea (3-2) Lost to Hungary (0-3)
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Jeffrey Craig Halpern (born May 3, 1976) is an American former professional ice hockey player. He previously played for the Washington Capitals twice, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning, Los Angeles Kings, New York Rangers, Montreal Canadiens and Phoenix Coyotes. He was also captain of the United States national team for the 2008 World Championships. He is currently an assistant coach for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the NHL. In 14 NHL seasons, he had 152 goals and 221 assists (373 points) in 976 regular-season games. He also had seven goals and 14 points in 39 Stanley Cup Playoff games. Earlylife Halpern was born in Potomac, Maryland, to Gloria (née Klein) and Melvin Halpern. As a youth, he played in the 1989 and 1990 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with the Washington Capitals minor ice hockey team. Halpern attended Winston Churchill High School in Potomac, which did not have a hockey team. In order to pursue his dreams as a hockey player, Halpern transferred to and later graduated from St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire where he was roommates with future The Bachelorette winner Ian McKee. He then attended and graduated from Princeton University. There, he played four seasonsof varsity hockey for the Princeton Tigers men's ice hockey team, was named an ECAC second team All-Star in 1998 and 1999, and in 1999 he scored 22 goals to tie for the most goals in the ECAC and was co-winner of Princeton's Roper Trophy for athletic and academic achievement. Playing career Undrafted, Halpern began his NHL career in the 1999–2000 NHL season for the Washington Capitals. He played in 79 games, scoring 18 goals with 11 assists, and was +21. He was the first member of the Capitals to come from the Washington, D.C. area. The 2003–04 NHL seasonwas his highest-scoring season to date as he finished with 19 goals and 27 assists in 79 games. During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Halpern played for the Kloten Flyers and for HC Ajoie in Switzerland, and returned to the Capitals when the lockout ended. On September 23, 2005, the Washington Capitals named Halpern the twelfth team captain in franchise history. In the 2005–06 NHL season, he scored 11 goals, and added a career-high 33 assists. On July 5, 2006, Halpern left the Capitals as a free agent and signed a four-year deal with the Dallas Stars. On February 26, 2008,Halpern was dealt to the Tampa Bay Lightning along with Mike Smith, Jussi Jokinen, and a 2009 4th-round draft pick in exchange for Brad Richards and Johan Holmqvist. Halpern scored a goal in his Lightning debut, and added an assist. After being acquired by the Lightning, Halpern went on a huge hot streak, scoring 10 goals and 18 points in 19 games. He also led the league during the 2007–08 NHL season in games played as one of only two players to appear in 83 games, or one more than a team's full schedule, as a result of his tradeto Tampa Bay. The other was Brian Campbell. Playing in 52 games during the 2008-09 NHL Season, Halpern scored seven goals to go with nine assists. Halpern was named the captain of the United States national team for the 2008 World Championships in Canada. Playing in a 5–4 loss in the opening round against the Canadian team on May 6, 2008, he suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament and was expected to be out of action for 6–8 months. This occurred in the same game where USA goaltender Tim Thomas was injured and had to leave the team. Halpern wastraded from the Lightning to the Los Angeles Kings March 3, 2010, in exchange for Teddy Purcell and a 3rd round draft pick in 2010. On September 7, 2010, Halpern signed a one-year contract with the Montreal Canadiens. He signed a one-year contract worth $825,000 to return to his original team the Washington Capitals on July 1, 2011. On July 9, 2012, once again as a veteran free agent, Halpern was signed to a one-year deal with the New York Rangers. With the 2012–13 season delayed due to the lockout, Halpern made his debut with the Rangers in the shortenedseason opener on the fourth line in a defeat against the Boston Bruins on January 19, 2013. In 30 games with the Rangers as a checking line forward, Halpern produced one assist before he was claimed off waivers to return to the Montreal Canadiens on March 23, 2013. For the season, he had a goal and two assists in 46 games for the Rangers and Canadiens. In 13 NHL seasons at that point he had 147 goals and 214 assists (361 points) in 907 regular-season games. He also had seven goals and 14 points in 39 Stanley Cup Playoff games.On September 16, 2013, Halpern signed a one-year contract with Finnish Elite League team TPS, and was expected to make his SM-liiga debut in October. His contract included an NHL-clause. With the team, he scored four goals in eight games. On October 12, 2013. Halpern left the Finnish team and signed a one-year, two-way contract with the Phoenix Coyotes. It would pay him $600,000 in the NHL, and $75,000 in the AHL. Coaching career On June 27, 2016, the Tampa Bay Lightning announced that Halpern would serve as a full-time assistant coach for the Lightning's AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch.On June 22, 2018, the Tampa Bay Lightning named Halpern as assistant coach after departing with Rick Bowness Personal life Halpern, who is Jewish, is a member of the Greater Washington (D.C.) Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Halpern sat out a game in 2005 to observe Yom Kippur. He has been married to former Redskins cheerleader Kelley Cornwell, a convert to Judaism, since June 2011. The couple have four children. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International See also List of select Jewish ice hockey players Awards and honors References External links Category:1976 births Category:Living people Category:American men's ice hockey
### Assistant:
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Shiloh Orphanage, now the Shiloh Comprehensive Community Center, was an orphanage for black children in Augusta, Georgia, United States. The site includes the Strong Academy building, a girls' dormitory, and a boys' dormitory. The orphanage closed in 1970 and reopened in 1977 as the Shiloh Comprehensive Community Center. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 30, 1996. It is located at 1635 15th Street. The orphanage was established in 1902 by the Shiloh Baptist Association. Land for the orphanage was purchased in 1904 near the historically black community of Bethlehem. Strong Academy, a one-room
### Assistant:
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Horst Blankenburg (born 10 July 1947) is a former German footballer, who played as a sweeper. He is best known for the early 1970s period, during which he played for Ajax Amsterdam and won the European Cup three times (1971, 1972, 1973), the European Super Cup twice (1972, 1973), the Intercontinental Cup once (1972) and the Dutch championship and the KNVB Cup twice. In 1976, he won the German Cup and the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1977 with Hamburger SV. He was never selected for the German national team. Playing career Blankenburg's career began in the youth team ofVfL Heidenheim; his professional career began at 1. FC Nürnberg under Max Merkel in the 1967–68 season. Nürnberg won the Bundesliga in that season, even though his contribution consisted of only 13 games, none of them league matches. He then transferred to Wiener Sportclub in Vienna for 45,000 German marks, where he managed to impress. After the season, he switched to TSV 1860 München for 100,000 German marks. In that season, he had 31 appearances and even scored one goal, but his team was relegated, he moved on to Ajax Amsterdam in the Netherlands. Ajax Golden Era He played togetherwith Johan Cruyff, Johan Neeskens, Ruud Krol, and Arie Haan. His coaches at Ajax were Stefan Kovács and Rinus Michels, who designed the famous Dutch offside trap around him and Velibor Vasović. Blankenburg was Ajax's team sweeper and was widely considered to be one of the best in Europe. In the five seasons at Ajax he won the European Cup three years in a row between 1971 and 1973 and the Intercontinental Cup in 1972. He became Dutch champion in 1972 and 1973 and won the Dutch Cup in 1971 and 1972. Hamburger SV In 1975, he returned to Germanyto play for Hamburger SV. Under Kuno Klötzer, he won the German Cup in 1976 and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1977, although he did not get to play in the final against RSC Anderlecht. In the end, he could not assert himself at the club – during his second season at the club he only played 13 league matches, so he was transferred at the end of that season to Neuchâtel Xamax in Switzerland. In 1978, Blankenburg moved to Chicago Sting in the United States, before being loaned out for a few months to KSC Hasselt in Belgium.He retired from professional football in 1981 at Preußen Münster. However, in 1982 he moved to lower league teams Hummelsbütteler SV and Lüneburger SK, where he finally ended his career in 1985, aged 38. National team He was never selected for the German national team, one of the reasons being that the outstanding Franz Beckenbauer fulfilled the role of libero there at the time. Johan Cruijff asked him to play for the Netherlands in the 1974 World Cup but Blankenburg refused, he was still hoping for selection from his homeland. Honours 1. FC Nürnberg Bundesliga winner: 1967–68 AFC Ajax EredivisieWinner: 1971–72, 1972–73 KNVB Cup Winner: 1970–71, 1971–72 European Cup Winner: 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73 European Super Cup Winner: 1972, 1973 Intercontinental Cup Winner: 1972 Hamburger SV DFB-Pokal Winner: 1975–76 European Cup Winners' Cup Winner: 1976–77 References External links NASL Stats Category:1947 births Category:Living people Category:German footballers Category:Association football sweepers Category:1. FC Nürnberg players Category:TSV 1860 Munich players Category:AFC Ajax players Category:Hamburger SV players Category:Neuchâtel Xamax FCS players Category:SC Preußen Münster players Category:Chicago Sting (NASL) players Category:Bundesliga players Category:2. Bundesliga players Category:Eredivisie players Category:North American Soccer League (1968–1984) players Category:Belgian First Division A players Category:German expatriate footballers Category:German expatriate sportspeople in
### Assistant:
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Alegría-Dulantzi (, ) is a town and municipality located in the province of Álava, in the Basque Country, northern Spain. The municipality is located some 14 km from the provincial capital, Vitoria. It has an area of 19.95 km², and a population (2004) of some 1,919 inhabitants. Alegría-Dulantzi municipality is divided into two sub-areas, or communes (concejos or kontzejuak). By far the larger of the two is the municipal centre and township of Alegría-Dulantzi itself, which accounts for some 95% of the municipality's population. The municipality also controls a small exclave located to the southeast, called Egileta, which is surrounded
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Baborów () is a small town in southern Poland near Głubczyce, in the Opole Voivodeship, Głubczyce County, Gmina Baborów. History The first mention of the town comes from 1296 in which a wójt Jarosław is mentioned. The town was most likely founded by a Bohemian magnate, Bavor (Babor). Later it was part of an independent duchy, Habsburg-ruled Bohemia, the Kingdom of Prussia and from 1871 and 1945 also Germany. After the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II it became part of Poland. It was granted town rights before 1340, although deprived of them from 1575 to 1718. The
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The Top of the World Highway is a highway, beginning at a junction with the Taylor Highway near Jack Wade, Alaska traveling east to its terminus at the ferry terminal in West Dawson, Yukon, on the western banks of the Yukon River. The highway has been in existence since at least 1955 and is only open during the summer months. The entire portion of the highway in Yukon is also known as Yukon Highway 9. The Alaska portion is short and numbered Alaska Highway 5. The Alaska Department of Transportation refers to it as Top of the World Highway. DescriptionAs of August 2016, the U.S. portion of the highway is paved from the Taylor Highway junction almost as far as Chicken, Alaska, and again for the final 10 kilometers from the Eagle turnoff to the Canada–United States border. Most of the Canadian portion is unpaved. The paved Canadian sections are from kilometer 0 (at Dawson) to km 9 (mile 0 to mi 5.4), km 74 to 76 (mi 46.0 to 47.2), km 79 to 82 (mi 49.1 to 51.0), km 83 to 94 (mi 51.6 to 58.4) and km 99 to 104 (mi 61.5 to 64.6) at the Canada–USborder. The highway is so named because, along much of its length, it skirts the crest of the hills, giving looks down on the valleys. It is also one of the most northerly highways in the world at those latitudes. Two nearby, farther north highways are the Dempster Highway (Yukon Route 5) and the Dalton Highway (Alaska Route 11). It is not particularly safe in winter, even for snowmobile use, due to the lack of trees for shelter. A ferry connects West Dawson to Dawson in summer, and residents living in West Dawson and nearby Sunnydale cross on the iceduring the winter. A bridge is planned by the Yukon government, although there is significant division among Dawson area residents as to whether such a bridge should be built. The west-bank residents received improved phone service only in 2004 but do not have a public electricity supply. A branch road off the highway was used to reach the town of Clinton Creek, Yukon, site of a former asbestos mine shut down since 1979. Border ports of entry The Poker Creek - Little Gold Creek Border Crossing features one of the few jointly-built single building customs ports of entry along theCanada–US border. There is a one-hour difference in standard time zones at this border, which is only open in summer during the 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. period (Alaska time). The Border Post has warnings as far south as Whitehorse, Yukon, alerting travelers that the Border is closed between 9pm and 9am (Yukon Time) and there's absolutely no entry between those times. The immense Alaskan Taylor Complex Fire of 2004 burned up to the Canada–US border and was visible from the westernmost portions of the highway. Gallery of images References https://web.archive.org/web/20140202160411/http://www.topoftheworlds.com/the-top-of-the-world-highway/ External links Bering Land Bridge National preserve Yukon Beringia
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Stanislaus Francis Perry (May 7, 1823 – February 24, 1898) was a Canadian farmer and politician in Prince Edward Island. Early life He was born Stanislas-François Poirier in Tignish, Prince Edward Island, the son of Pierre Poirier and Marie-Blanche Gaudet. Poirier was educated in Tignish and then was educated in English at St. Andrew's College in Charlottetown. On his return to Tignish in 1843, he taught school. Poirier anglicized his name around this time. In 1847, he married Margaret Carroll. He was named a justice of the peace in 1851. Political career In 1854, Perry left teaching, began farming towas declared invalid. Perry was a proponent of a tunnel to link the island to the mainland. He represented 1st Prince in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island from 1854 to 1875 and from 1879 to 1887 and, in the House of Commons of Canada, represented Prince County from 1874 to 1878 and from 1887 to 1896 and West Prince from 1897 to 1898 as a Liberal member. Perry (Poirier) was the first Acadian to serve in both the provincial assembly and the House of Commons. Perry helped organize the first and second Acadian national conventions in Memramcook, NewBrunswick (1881) and Miscouche, Prince Edward Island (1884) although he boycotted the second event because he wanted the event to be held in Tignish. Death He died in office in Ottawa in 1898 and was buried in Tignish. Personal life He was the grandfather of Nova Scotia Premier Angus Lewis Macdonald and is a direct ancestor of current PEI MLA Hal Perry. References External links Standardbearers of Acadian Identity, McCord Museum Category:1823 births Category:1898 deaths Category:People from Tignish, Prince Edward Island Category:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Prince Edward Island Category:Liberal Party of Canada MPs Category:Prince Edward
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__NOTOC__ Gmina Biała Rawska is an urban-rural gmina (administrative district) in Rawa County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. Its seat is the town of Biała Rawska, which lies approximately east of Rawa Mazowiecka and east of the regional capital Łódź. The gmina covers an area of , and as of 2006 its total population is 11,546 (out of which the population of Biała Rawska amounts to 3,182, and the population of the rural part of the gmina is 8,364). Villages Apart from the town of Biała Rawska, Gmina Biała Rawska contains the villages and settlements of Aleksandrów, Antoninów, Babsk, BiałaWieś, Białogórne, Błażejewice, Bronisławów, Byki, Chodnów, Chrząszczew, Chrząszczewek, Dańków, Franklin, Franopol, Galiny, Gołyń, Gośliny, Grzymkowice, Janów, Jelitów, Józefów, Konstantynów, Koprzywna, Krukówka, Lesiew, Marchaty, Marianów, Narty, Niemirowice, Orla Góra, Ossa, Pachy, Pągów, Podlesie, Podsędkowice, Porady Górne, Przyłuski, Rokszyce, Rosławowice, Rzeczków, Słupce, Stanisławów, Stara Wieś, Studzianek, Szczuki, Szwejki Małe, Teodozjów, Teresin, Tuniki, Wilcze Piętki, Wola-Chojnata, Wólka Babska, Wólka Lesiewska, Zakrzew, Zofianów, Zofiów, Żurawia and Żurawka. Neighbouring gminas Gmina Biała Rawska is bordered by the town of Rawa Mazowiecka and by the gminas of Błędów, Głuchów, Kowiesy, Mszczonów, Nowy Kawęczyn, Rawa Mazowiecka, Regnów and Sadkowice. References Polish official population figures 2006 Biala Rawska
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Foxboro Stadium, originally Schaefer Stadium and later Sullivan Stadium, was an outdoor stadium located in Foxborough, Massachusetts, United States. It opened in 1971 and served as the home of the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL) until 2002 and also as the home venue for the New England Revolution of Major League Soccer (MLS) from 1996 to 2002. The stadium was the site of several games in both the 1994 FIFA World Cup and the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup. Foxboro Stadium was demolished in 2002 and replaced by Gillette Stadium and the Patriot Place shopping center.History The stadium opened in August 1971 as Schaefer primarily as the home venue for the renamed New England Patriots of the National Football League. The team was known as the Boston Patriots for its first eleven seasons 1960–70, and had played in various stadiums in the Boston area. seasons, 1963–1968, the Patriots played in Fenway Park, home of baseball's Boston Red Sox. Like most baseball stadiums, Fenway was poorly suited as a football venue. Its seating capacity was inadequate—only about 40,000 for football—and many seats had obstructed views. The Boston Patriots played the 1969 season at Alumni Stadium atBoston College in Chestnut Hill, and the 1970 season, their first in the NFL, at Harvard Stadium in Boston's Allston neighborhood. The site was selected when the owners of Bay State Raceway donated the land, midway between Boston and Providence, Rhode Island. The general contractor who built the stadium was a Massachusetts-based company named J.F White Contracting Co. Ground was broken in September 1970. It cost $7.1 million,only $200,000 over budget. Even allowing for this modest cost overrun, it was still a bargain price for a major sports stadium even by 1970s standards. This was because the Patriots received nofunding from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the town of Foxborough; indeed, it was one of the few major league stadiums of that era that was entirely privately funded. Seating capacity Playing surface Like the majority of outdoor sports venues built in North America in the 1970s, Foxboro Stadium was designed for the use of an artificial turf playing surface. The original field was Poly-Turf, succeeded by AstroTurf. A natural grass field was installed before the start of the 1991 season. Naming rights The original name in 1971 was Schaefer Stadium for the brewery of that name in an earlyexample of the sale of naming rights. When this agreement expired after the 1982 season, Anheuser-Busch took over the rights. Instead of putting the name of one of its brands of beer on the stadium, Anheuser-Busch agreed to name it in honor of the Sullivan family, then the majority owners of the Patriots. The name Sullivan Stadium took effect on May 23, 1983. After Sullivan went bankrupt and Robert Kraft purchased the stadium, Kraft stripped Sullivan's name and renamed the venue "Foxboro Stadium". Although the official spelling of the town's name is "Foxborough", the shorter spelling was used for thestadium. Notable events Soccer The venue hosted numerous significant soccer matches, including six games in the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Foxboro Stadium was the last stadium where Diego Maradona scored a World Cup goal in a game against Greece, and where he last played in an official FIFA World Cup match against Nigeria on June 25, 1994. The stadium hosted five games in the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, the 1996 and 1999 MLS Cups, and the inaugural Women's United Soccer Association Founders Cup. 1994 FIFA World Cup 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup Major League Soccer finals Women's United SoccerAssociation finals Other events The stadium was also the venue at times for the home football games of Boston College and hosted numerous other outdoor events, primarily concerts, along with music festivals, including The Monsters of Rock Festival Tour and The Vans Warped Tour, as well as the WWF King of the Ring tournament on July 8th, 1985 and July 14th, 1986. U2 played on The Joshua Tree Tour on September 22, 1987, and later performed three nights of their Zoo TV Tour on August 20, 22, and 23, 1992. Schaefer Stadium hosted Elton John on July 4, 1976, aswell as Boz Scaggs, The Eagles, and Fleetwood Mac on July 25, 1976. Sullivan Stadium hosted The Who's 25th anniversary tour on July 12 and 14, 1989. Paul McCartney brought the Flowers In the Dirt Tour to the stadium on July 24 and 26, 1990. New Kids on The Block brought The Magic Summer Tour to the stadium on July 29 and July 31, 1990. An audience of 53,000 people attended one of two concert dates. Genesis brought the We Can't Dance Tour to the stadium on May 28, 1992. Metallica and Guns N' Roses brought the Guns N' Roses/MetallicaStadium Tour to the stadium on September 11, 1992, with Faith No More as their opening act. Elton John performed at the venue in front of 62,000 on US Bicentennial on July 4, 1976. John again appeared in a Face to Face concert with Billy Joel on July 18, 1994. Madonna performed her "Who's That Girl" tour there on July 9, 1987, to a sell-out crowd. Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead recorded a portion of their collaborative live album, entitled Dylan & the Dead, there on July 4, 1987. Pink Floyd played a two-night stand in May 1988 (onone of the nights their inflatable pig was torn to shreds). They also played a three-night sold-out stand in May 1994 on their The Division Bell Tour which was recorded and readily available on bootleg. (The second night was filmed by MTV for promotional purposes.) The Dave Matthews Band played seven shows at the stadium from 1998 to 2001. The Rolling Stones played three nights on September 27 and 29 and October 1, 1989, then two more nights on September 4 and 5, 1994 and lastly October 20 and 21, 1997. Additionally, in 1994, the Drum Corps International World Championshipswere held in the stadium. Closing By the late 1990s, Foxboro Stadium had become functionally obsolete by modern NFL standards. Despite excellent sight lines to view game action or concerts and having fewer of the issues that multi-sport multi-purpose stadiums in other cities had, the stadium was otherwise outmoded. The facility was built in a low-cost 'bare bones' manner with unexceptional architectural elements, and had very few modern amenities. The stadium's plumbing was not planned with large crowds in mind, and was completely inadequate for a professional venue. After a sewage issue overflowed the restroom facilities during its first game,stadium officials were forced to augment the permanent toilets with rented portable toilets for the rest of the stadium's existence. It also lacked luxury boxes, an increasingly important source of revenue for other teams in the league. Most patrons had to sit on backless aluminum benches (or bring in their own stadium cushions, especially in cold weather when the benches were ice cold), as only a small fraction of the seats had chairbacks (painted blue, red and white near the 50-yard line). During heavy rains, the numerous unpaved spots in the parking lot turned to mud. It frequently took anoutside of beneath the stands. Additionally, the Sullivan family had lost millions promoting the Jackson Victory Tour in 1984. Due to their relatively modest wealth compared to other NFL owners, they pledged the stadium as collateral for the tour. Knowing that the revenue from the Patriots would not be nearly enough to service the debt, the Sullivans quietly put the team and the stadium on the market. The Sullivans' financial picture did not improve even when the Patriots made Super Bowl XX. With most of their money tied up in the team, they sold the Patriots to Victor Kiam in1989. The stadium, however, lapsed into bankruptcy and was bought by paper magnate Robert Kraft. When Kiam and Sullivan tried to sell the team to interests in Jacksonville, Kraft effectively stymied the deal by refusing to let the team out of an ironclad commitment to serve as the stadium's main tenant until 2001. As a result, when Kiam himself was crippled by financial troubles, he sold the Patriots to James Orthwein in 1992. After only two years, Orthwein tried to move the Patriots to his hometown of St. Louis. However, Kraft refused to let the Patriots out of their lease.Orthwein then put the team on the market, but the wording of the operating covenant required any potential buyer to negotiate with Kraft. With this in mind, Kraft swooped in and bought the team himself. With the 1996 purchase of the land containing the Bay State Raceway, Kraft had the ability to place a new and privately-financed stadium on the adjacent property after proposals to build a new stadium in Hartford, Connecticut and South Boston failed. After 31 NFL seasons, Foxboro Stadium was scheduled to be demolished on December 23, 2001, the day after the Patriots' final home game. However,the stadium would instead play host to the first season of the Tom Brady and Bill Belichick era, with the team making a run to get into the playoffs and going on to win their first Super Bowl. As a result, the stadium was not demolished until late January 2002, after the conclusion of the 2001 postseason. The last game played in the stadium, "The Tuck Rule Game", was played in a snow storm; a Patriots win against the Oakland Raiders, which famously featured an overturned fumble call based on the then-applicable tuck rule in the final minutes. The stadium'sformer site became parking lots for its successor, Gillette Stadium, before being developed into the open-air shopping center Patriot Place. References Category:1971 establishments in Massachusetts Category:1994 FIFA World Cup stadiums Category:2002 disestablishments in Massachusetts Category:American football venues in Massachusetts Category:Boston College Eagles football venues Category:Boston Minutemen Category:Buildings and structures in Norfolk County, Massachusetts Category:Defunct college football venues Category:Former Major League Soccer stadiums Category:Defunct National Football League venues Category:Defunct soccer venues in the United States Category:Demolished sports venues in Massachusetts Category:FIFA Women's World Cup stadiums Category:Foxborough, Massachusetts Category:New England Patriots stadiums Category:New England Revolution Category:North American Soccer League (1968–1984) stadiums Category:Soccer
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David Vincent Stratton (October 14, 1884 – February 25, 1968) was an industrial engineer. He was vice president of the Great Lakes Aircraft Company in 1930 and in 1931 was president of the Johnson Motor Company. He made important contributions to shipbuilding in the United States by the development of time and motion study. Biography He was born on October 14, 1884 in Altoona, South Dakota, now part of Hitchcock, South Dakota. In 1908 he was the chief clerk to the division engineer in charge of La Boca Dredging Division of the Panama Canal. By 1924 he was president of
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Julio Prieto Martín (born 21 November 1960) is a Spanish former footballer who played as a midfielder. During a 14-year professional career he played 305 La Liga matches over 11 seasons (32 goals), mainly in representation of Atlético Madrid. Club career Born in Madrid, Prieto played mainly for hometown club Atlético Madrid during his professional career. After spending one season with the reserves in Segunda División and another on loan to CD Castellón, in La Liga (with relegation), he returned to the Colchoneros, being a starter for much of his five-year spell. In the 1982–83 campaign, Prieto had his bestyear at Atlético with seven goals in 32 games in an eventual third-place finish. After helping them to two major titles he was part of the team that reached the final of the 1986 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, appearing in the decisive match against FC Dynamo Kyiv (0–3 loss). Prieto signed for RC Celta de Vigo in summer 1987, playing (104 of his 107 appearances were starts) and scoring regularly for the Galicians but suffering top-flight relegation in his third and final year. He returned to Atlético Madrid for 1990–91, but was only a fringe player in his third spell.
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Viviane Jacques (born 1977) is a Brazilian handball player. She was born in Rio de Janeiro. She competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, where the Brazilian team placed 8th, and also at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. References External links Category:1977 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Rio de Janeiro (city) Category:Brazilian female handball players Category:Brazilian expatriates in Spain Category:Olympic handball players of Brazil Category:Handball players at the 2000 Summer Olympics Category:Handball players at the 2004 Summer Olympics Category:Handball players at the 2008 Summer Olympics Category:Pan American Games competitors for
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Kristaps Sotnieks (born January 29, 1987) is a Latvian professional ice-hockey defenseman. He currently plays for Dinamo Riga in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). Playing career In his first season in senior hockey in 2004/05 Sotnieks mostly played for the reserves squad of HK Riga 2000 which played in the Latvian hockey league, however he also played 5 matches in the main team of Riga 2000 in Belarusian Extraliga. Due to the 2004–05 NHL lockout the squad of Riga 2000 was quite impressive that year, including NHLers Kārlis Skrastiņš, Sergejs Žoltoks and Darby Hendrickson, thus it was especially tough foryoungsters like Sotnieks to get through on the main team. In 2005 Sotnieks played in five matches for Latvia at the U18 World Championships. The next season Sotnieks was already a regular player in the main team of Riga 2000 which won bronze medals in the Belarusian Extraliga. In 42 matches he scored one goal, gave 4 assists and got 10 penalty minutes. In 2006 Sotnieks represented Latvia at the 2006 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Canada, earning 2 points for assists as Latvia was relegated to Division I. The next two years Riga 2000 played only in theLatvian hockey league with Sotnieks as one of the most reliable defenders on the team. In 2005, 2006 and 2007 as a member of Riga 2000 Sotnieks won Latvian league titles. When Dinamo Riga was formed in 2008 Sotnieks wasn't among the players who were expected to be playing regularly for the side which included former NHLers like Duvie Westcott and Filip Novák, as well as a whole selection of players who had played for Latvia national ice hockey team at several world championships - Atvars Tribuncovs, Rodrigo Laviņš, Guntis Galviņš, Krišjānis Rēdlihs, Oļegs Sorokins and Agris Saviels. Thus Sotniekswas expected to be a leading defender for HK Riga 2000 (the farm club of Dinamo) playing in the Belarusian league. However, Sotnieks became a regular for Dinamo. As of 17 February 2009, he has played 43 matches for Dinamo in the KHL, scoring two goals. In February 2009 Sotnieks played for Latvia national ice hockey team in the Qualification to 2010 Winter Olympics, scoring two assists in three games and earning Latvia a qualification spot at the Olympics. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International References External links Category:1987 births Category:Living people Category:Dinamo Riga players Category:Ice hockey players at
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Mount Evans is the highest peak in the namesake Mount Evans Wilderness in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The prominent 14,271-foot (4,350 m) fourteener is located southwest by south (bearing 214°) of Idaho Springs in Clear Creek County, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide between Arapaho National Forest and Pike National Forest. The peak is one of the characteristic Front Range peaks, dominating the western skyline of the Great Plains along with Pikes Peak, Longs Peak, and nearby Mount Bierstadt. Mount Evans can be seen from over to the east, and many miles inother directions. Mount Evans dominates the Denver metropolitan area skyline, rising over above the area. Mount Evans can be seen from points south of Castle Rock, up to ( south) and as far north as Fort Collins ( north), and from areas near Limon ( east). In the early days of Colorado tourism, Mount Evans and Denver were often in competition with Pikes Peak and Colorado Springs. Mount Evans, along with Echo Lake, was designated as a historic site by the American Physical Society in 2017, commemorating the many cosmic-ray physics experiments conducted on the mountain between 1935 and 1960.Geography Mount Evans is the highest peak in a massif. The peak is west of Denver, "as the crow flies", and approximately by road, via Idaho Springs. Other peaks in the massif are: Mount Spalding (), northwest Gray Wolf Mountain (), north-northwest The Sawtooth (), west Mount Bierstadt (), west-southwest Mount Warren (), north-northeast Rogers Peak (), northeast. At least 7 deep glacial cirques cut into the massif. The cirques around Mount Evans are the deepest cirques in the Colorado Rockies. The bottoms of many of these contain tarns, the most notable being: Summit Lake at the head of BearCreek, 0.5 miles north the Chicago Lakes at the head of Chicago Creek, 2 miles north Abyss Lake at the head of Lake Fork, 1 mile west-southwest The Mount Evans Scenic Byway consists of State Highway 103 from Idaho Springs, Colorado on I-70 about to Echo Lake, and Colorado 5 from Echo Lake , ending at a parking area and turnaround just below the summit. The latter has long been the highest paved road in North America (5th highest in the world) and is only open in the summer. Colorado 103 continues east from Echo Lake to Squaw Pass, fromwhich it connects, via Clear Creek County Road 103 and Jefferson County Road 66, to Bergen Park from which Colorado 74 leads to Evergreen Colorado. The Guanella Pass Scenic Byway passes within west of Mount Evans, linking Georgetown and I-70 with Grant and US 285, to the south. A marked hiking trail roughly parallels the highway from Echo Lake to the summit, and a second marked trail links Guanella Pass to Mount Bierstadt. A difficult side route of the latter climbs to the northeastern peak of The Sawtooth, from which an easy ridge leads to the summit of Mount Evans.Most of the Mount Evans massif is now part of the Mount Evans Wilderness area in Arapaho National Forest and Pike National Forest. The exception is a narrow corridor along the highway from Echo Lake that is excluded from the wilderness. Summit Lake Park and Echo Lake Park, are part of the historic Denver Mountain Parks system. History Mount Evans was originally known as Mount Rosa or Mount Rosalie. Albert Bierstadt named it for the wife of Fitz Hugh Ludlow, whom he later married. The name is also a reference to Monte Rosa, the highest peak in Switzerland. Bierstadt andhis guide, William Newton Byers, approached the mountain along Chicago Creek from Idaho Springs in 1863, and spent several days painting sketches of the mountain from the Chicago Lakes before climbing to Summit Lake and onward to the summit. Bierstadt's sketch, Mountain Lake, accurately portrays the view of Mount Spalding over the Chicago Lakes. His painting, A Storm in the Rocky Mountains, Mt. Rosalie, is based on that and other sketches. A second claim to be the first to ascend is attributed to Judge Lunt and a friend in 1872. William Henry Jackson, attached to the Hayden Survey, visited theChicago Lakes in 1873, where he took numerous photographs; the summit of Mount Evans is barely visible in several of these, peeking over the col between upper Chicago Lake and Summit Lake. The Hayden survey reported that Mount Rosalie was 14,330 feet above sea level, measured by triangulation. In 1895, 30 years after he was forced to resign as governor because of his part in the infamous Sand Creek Massacre and its subsequent cover-up, Colorado's legislature officially renamed the peak in honor of John Evans, second governor of the Colorado Territory from 1862 to 1865. The history of the MountEvans Scenic Byway is part of a larger story of the Denver Mountain Parks system. It ultimately began when the City and County of Denver initiated the construction of a series of automobile "scenic loops" to allow Denverites to explore the mountains. One road circuit, Circle G, was to traverse the ridge to Squaw Pass on to Echo Lake, culminate in a climb up Mt. Evans, and loop down to Idaho Springs. In order to achieve this goal, Denver Mountain Parks acquired a series of land parcels, including the acquisition of Bergen Park in 1915. The Bear Creek segment fromthe Genesee saddle to Bergen Park was finished in 1915, while the Denver Mountain Parks committee worked to make Mt. Evans a National Park, going as far as getting support in Congress for the construction of a "cement road" to the mountain. The first mile was paid for by Denver with the understanding that the State Highway Commission would do the rest. The Denver Mountain Parks committee was not without disagreement and setbacks, however. $30,000 was acquired early in 1916 to construct the Bergen Park to Squaw Pass segment and all seemed to be flowing towards the goal of MountService, who currently held claim to the mountain. Already in bitter struggle to prevent the formation of a National Park Service, Chief Forester Graves adamantly blocked the relinquishment of this area of National Forest, in exchange for Forest Service development of the area including the immediate construction of a road between Squaw Pass and Echo Lake (Colorado). This joint exercise between the City and County of Denver, the U.S. Congress, the State Highway System, and now the Forest Service would be completed with help of a newly formed Federal Agency, the Bureau of Public Roads. In 1918, the Bureau ofPublic Roads provided the plan to construct 9.41 miles of road from Soda Pass (now called Squaw Pass) to Echo Lake beginning in 1919. By 1920, the road had only managed to be constructed to Chief Mountain. By October 1 of 1921, the Bureau of Public Roads had completed construction to Echo Lake. The first survey for the road from Echo Lake to the peak of Mount Evans was made in 1923, finishing the layout by January 1924 despite a flu outbreak in the camp, damaging windstorms, and nearly insurmountable environmental hardships. Battling the unusual problems that come with high-altitudeconstruction (steam shovels performing only half as effective at high altitude, difficulty of hauling coal and water, horse suicide, etc.) the last 600 feet were finally built by hand, being completed in 1930. The ruins of the Crest House (1941–1942) sit nearby. Once containing both a restaurant and a gift shop, it burned down on September 1, 1979 and was not rebuilt, but remains as a place of contemplation today. The rock foundation and walls remain as a windbreak for mountain travelers, and the viewing platform is one of Colorado's premier scenic overlooks. Mt. Evans also hosts the annual Mt.highest recorded in the United States but did not cause any damage because it was above tree line. Flora The slopes of Mount Evans include several distinct environments. Below Echo Lake, the montane forest is dominated by lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) and in some areas, blue spruce (Picea pungens), with patches of quaking aspen. Echo Lake is high enough to be in the subalpine forest, where Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii), subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) and bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata) dominate. At tree line, the trees are reduced to krummholz, battered and twisted by wind and frost. The bristlecone pine groveon the east slope of Mount Goliath () contains at least one tree that sprouted in the year 403 AD. For many years, these were the oldest known trees in Colorado, but in 1992, trees dating to 442 BC were found in the southern Front Range and South Park. The Mount Goliath Natural Area, jointly managed by the United States Forest Service and the Denver Botanic Gardens protects this grove of old trees. Above tree line, the landscape is mostly alpine tundra. In the lower tundra, dwarf willow (Salix herbacea) is common, along with a wide variety of flowering plantssuch as Rocky Mountain Columbine (Aquilegia saximontana) and various species of dwarf alpine sunflowers. Toward the summit, the vegetation shrinks until the largest plants are little more than compact green cushions in the cracks between the rocks. Here, Alpine Forget-me-not (Myosotis alpestris) plants with hundreds of blossoms occupy areas of only a few square centimeters and rise only centimeters above the soil surface. The tundra around Summit Lake, particularly in Summit Lake Flats, the gently sloping area east of the lake, is frequently described as the southernmost area of arctic tundra in the world because it is water saturated andunderlain by an extensive area of permafrost. Fauna The top predators found in the area are mountain lions (Puma concolor), anywhere on the mountain, and black bears (Ursus americanus), generally below tree line. These prey on bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) and mountain goats (Oreamnos americanus), as well as one of the highest densities of yellow-bellied marmot (Marmota flaviventris) in the region. Above tree-line, pikas (Ochotona princeps) are common. Below tree line, elk (Cervus canadensis) and mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) are common. Among birds, the white-tailed ptarmigan (Lagopus leucurus) are present on the mountain, but so well camouflaged that they arethe Chicago Lakes, Lincoln Lake and Abyss Lake are tarns located in cirques or glacial canyons surrounding Mount Evans. Echo Lake was dammed by a lateral moraine of the glacier that formed Chicago Canyon. Prior to glaciation, Mount Evans, Long's Peak and several other summits were monadnocks in an upland Peneplain. Glaciation has not entirely destroyed the ancient Flattop Peneplain, named for Flattop Mountain in Grand County. The peaks of these mountains are all remnant features of this peneplain. Scientific research The easy access to the summit provided by the Mount Evans Highway has made it a popular location forscientific research. Arthur H. Compton conducted pioneering research on cosmic rays on the mountain in 1931, shortly after the road to the summit was completed. The University of Denver built a pair of A-frame buildings on the summit to house cosmic-ray researchers. By the 1950s, Mount Evans, the Aiguille du Midi, the Pic du Midi and the Jungfrau were considered the premier locations for high-altitude physics experiments. The first accurate measurement of the lifetime of the muon (originally called the mesotron) by Bruno Rossi in 1939, used sites at Mount Evans, Echo Lake, Denver and Chicago. This experiment verified thereality of time dilation, one of the key predictions of Einstein's theory of relativity. In the summer of 1948, MIT, Cornell, Princeton, NYU and the universities of Michigan and Chicago and Denver conducted an intensive experimental program on the mountain and at Echo Lake. Bruno Rossi and Giuseppe Cocconi were among those involved. In 1965, the Midwestern Universities Research Association began doing high-energy physics experiments on the summit using cosmic rays to explore energies above those accessible with the most powerful particle accelerators of the day. The first experiments were conducted in a semi-trailer, and then in 1966, a temporaryin the life sciences. In 1940, for example, it was the site of a significant study of high-altitude physiology. Pioneering studies on the effects of altitude training on track athletes were conducted on Mount Evans in 1966. Mount Evans Road is also noteworthy as a high-altitude vehicle testing venue for auto manufacturers. With full visibility on a public road, most manufacturers' road test teams tend to conceal their designs with various creative styles of camouflage, e.g. wild zebra paint motif, possibly paired with other temporary body coverings. See also List of mountain peaks of North America List of mountain peaks
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Harriett Sarah Gilbert (born 25 August 1948) is an English writer, academic and broadcaster, particularly of arts and book programmes on the BBC World Service. She is the daughter of the writer Michael Gilbert. Besides World Book Club on the World Service, she also presents A Good Read on BBC Radio 4. Before the programme was cancelled, she also presented the BBC World Service programme The Strand. Biography Born in Hornsey, London, Gilbert was educated at the French Lycée in London and at a succession of boarding schools. "Growing Pains" was her contribution to Truth, Dare or Promise (1985), acollection of autobiographical writing. After graduating from drama school, her first acting role was as Mother Elephant in a production of Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories for primary schools. The other peak of her success was playing a secretary murdered on page five of a BBC radio drama. She also worked as a nanny, a waitress, an artist's model and a clerk-typist. She began to write in her twenties. She nominated A High Wind in Jamaica by Richard Hughes, first read to her by her father when she was eight, as a life-changing book. The one piece of advice herfather, the writer Michael Gilbert, gave her about writing was: "For God's sake, don't use adverbs." Her brother is the journalist Gerard Gilbert of The Independent. Career From 1983 to 1988 she was literary editor of the New Statesman and, before that, of City Limits (1981–83). She has also contributed to Time Out, The Guardian, and The Washington Post. She was a judge of the 2011 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. From 1992 she lectured in the Department of Journalism at the City University, London, where until 2008 she was also the programme director of the MA Creative writing (novels) course.Gilbert presents one programme on BBC World Service radio: World Book Club, broadcast on the first Saturday in each month. Guests on the latter have included the Nobel laureates Doris Lessing, Toni Morrison, V. S. Naipaul, Orhan Pamuk, Wole Soyinka and Derek Walcott. About presenting for the World Service, Gilbert has said: "I think I'm doing the dream job, I just love it, and I can't think of anywhere else I'd like to be." In 2011 she was chosen to replace Sue MacGregor as presenter of the Radio 4 book programme A Good Read. Gilbert has introduced the World Servicearts documentary series Close Up. In 2008 she stood in as presenter of the arts programme The Ticket. She previously presented the World Service's dedicated book programme The Word. Besides this she has presented arts programmes for BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3 and BBC Four television. Writer and broadcaster Michael Rosen called her "one of the very best presenters of arts programmes on radio or TV". The Financial Times said of her, "the splendid Harriett Gilbert [...] painfully shows up certain would-be arty Radio 4 colleagues". She is the author of six novels, including Hotels With Empty Rooms andThe Riding Mistress. Her non-fiction books include A Women's History of Sex and The Sexual Imagination from Acker to Zola. She scripted the short animated film The Stain (1991) viewable at the Internet Archive. Although she has not published a novel since 1983 she hopes to return to writing, possibly using her time at City University as inspiration. At the 2009 Bath Literature Festival, she and the novelist Michèle Roberts discussed "Guilty Pleasures" (Dorothy L. Sayers and Georgette Heyer) as well as the enduring appeal of cross-dressing, duelling, and driving Daimlers. She was a judge of the 2011 Independent ForeignVirago (1985). – autobiographical essay A Women's History of Sex – Pandora (1987) (illustrated by Christine Roche). The Sexual Imagination: From Acker to Zola – A Feminist Companion – Jonathan Cape (1993). (published in the US as Fetishes, Florentine Girdles, and Other Explorations into the Sexual Imagination – Harpercollins (1994). ) Writing for Journalists – Routledge (1999) (with Wynford Hicks and Sally Adams). External links World Book Club homepage Biography on the BBC website BBC World Service – Meet the Presenter – Video profile Interview from 2003 Category:1948 births Category:Living people Category:BBC people Category:BBC World Service Category:English women journalists Category:English
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The 1918 Stanley Cup Finals was contested by the National Hockey League (NHL) champion Toronto and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) champion Vancouver Millionaires. In a series held entirely in Toronto, the Toronto team won the series by three games to two in the best-of-five game series to win the Stanley Cup. It was the first series contested by the new NHL and subsequently the first Stanley Cup win by the Toronto NHL franchise team. Paths to the Finals Prior to the 1917–18 season, the National Hockey Association (NHA) had suspended operations as the result of a power playto oust Toronto Blueshirts owner Eddie Livingstone. The remaining clubs then met in November 1918 to form the NHL, using the same constitution and playing rules of the NHA. The NHL took the NHA's place in competing for the Cup in a playoff series with the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. The Toronto NHL players were assigned from the Toronto NHA franchise, and played for a 'temporary' Toronto NHL franchise, operated by the Toronto Arena owners. This is why it is often called the 'Arenas' although no hockey club with the official name "Arenas" existed until after the 1917–18 season. Theteam at the time used no nickname; and it was often referred to at the time as the "Blueshirts', the nickname of the NHA franchise, as it was announced by the NHA that the franchise had been sold, although this had not been agreed to by Eddie Livingstone, who wanted to resume his franchise, or be compensated under his terms. Despite this black cloud over it, Toronto won the second half of the split regular season, while the Montreal Canadiens won the first half. Toronto then won the NHL title by defeating the Canadiens in a two-game, total-goals series, 10–7.Meanwhile, Vancouver finished the 1917–18 PCHA regular season in second place with a 9–9 record behind the 11–7 Seattle Metropolitans. However, Vancouver beat Seattle in that league's two-game, total-goals finals, 3–1, with a 1–0 game two victory. Game summaries As with the three previous NHA-PCHA Cup Final series, the series alternated between the NHL champion and the PCHA champion each year, while the differing rules for the leagues alternated each game. This meant that all of the games for the 1918 championship series were played at Toronto's Arena Gardens. Two of the major differences between the two leagues' rules provedto be a major factor in the series. The PCHA allowed forward passing (adopted in the 1913–14 season) and played with seven players per side; the NHL did not adopt forward passing until the following season, and only played with six players. In every game, the winner was the one playing under its league's rules. The Torontos won Games 1 and 3 with victories of 5–3 and 6–3, and the Millionaires recorded 6–4 and 8–1 wins in Games 2 and 4. Because game five was played under NHL rules, it helped Toronto's Corbett Denneny to score the series winning goalin a 2–1 victory. The Torontos outscored the Millionaires by a combined total of 13–7 in the three games played under NHL rules. Conversely, Vancouver recorded a 14–5 margin in the games under PCHA rules. Toronto goaltender Hap Holmes recorded a 4.20 goals-against average during the series, while Alf Skinner led Toronto with eight goals. Cyclone Taylor scored nine goals for Vancouver. Player stats Torontos – 1918 Stanley Cup champions See also 1917–18 NHL season 1917–18 PCHA season References Category:Stanley Cup Finals Stanley Cup Stan St 1918 Category:March 1918 sports events Category:Sports competitions in Toronto Category:1910s in Toronto Category:1918 in
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Alberto Mabungulane Chissano (25 January 1935 – 19 February 1994) was a Mozambican sculptor best known for his work using indigenous woods, and sculptures in rock, stone and iron. He is considered to be one of Mozambique's most important and influential artists, together with the painter Malangatana Ngwenya. Life and art Alberto Chissano was born in Manjacaze, Gaza, in the south of Portuguese Mozambique. Like other boys in the countryside, Chissano spent his early life looking after goats. He had limited schooling; his studies were hindered by his expulsion from his mission school for dancing the traditional dance Ngalanga. Hewas strongly influenced by his maternal grandmother, who taught him rites and traditions such as how to divine through the use of ossicles and snail shells, as well as traditional herbal medicine. At the age of 12, he felt that Manjacaze was too limited an area for his aspirations, so he left for the capital, Lourenço Marques. In the capital, he found being a domestic worker unsatisfactory. He left to work in the gold mines of South Africa at the age of 18. When he returned to Mozambique in 1956, he had to do his mandatory military service in theand Africa. Chissano was a pioneer for a generation of sculptors in the 1970s, a decade that spanned the last years of the colonial period and the beginning of Mozambican independence. He became the most famous and influential sculptor in Mozambique. His sculptures tell a lot about the history of Mozambique, the people, struggle, starvation, and suffering, but also joy and pride. Chissano turned his family home in Matola into a museum and gallery, Museu Galeria Chissano. The museum exhibits many of Alberto Chissano's own sculptures as well as many paintings by Malangatana and other artists. In addition to beinga museum, it is a centre for exhibitions, concerts, and other cultural events. In 1982, he was awarded the Nachingwea Medal, a medal presented by the government of Mozambique in recognition of '’extraordinary merit'’. (The medal is named after FRELIMO's main camp in Tanzania during the Mozambican War of Independence). Alberto Chissano died at 59, on 19 February 1994, in Matola. Selected exhibitions 1964 First solo exhibition, Maputo 1966 Town Hall, Lorenço Marques, 1st Prize 1967 International exhibition in Washington, 2nd Prize in the African art category 1968 Group exhibition, London 1971 Munich, Germany 1971 Town hall of the Machopes,Chibuto, Gaza, Mozambique 1972 Sociedade Nacional de Belas Artes (National Society of Fine Arts), Lisbon 1975 Several group exhibitions in Mozambique and Nigeria 1980 Inauguration of Museu Nacional de Arte (the National Art Museum), Maputo 1981 International Symposium of Sculptures, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1st and 2nd prizes 1981 Group exhibitions in Berlin (Germany), Sofia (Bulgaria), Moscow (Soviet Union), Luanda (Angola) 1981 Exhibition of marble sculpture at Ar.Co – Centro de Arte e Comunicação Visual (Center for Art and Visual Communication), Lisbon 1983 Group exhibitions in Portugal (Lisbon and Porto) and Zimbabwe (Harare) 1984 Malangatana & Chissano Indian Council for Cultural Relations,New Delhi, India 1985 Palazzo Barberini, Rome and the Teatro Municipal, Reggio Emilia, Italy 1986 Havana Biennial, Cuba, 1st Prize 1987 Solidarity week with Mozambique, Zimbabwe 1987 Malangatana & Chissano, Ankara, Turkey 1991 Le Temps Et Le Sang'’ (The Time and the Blood), Réunion 1992 Represents, among others, Mozambique in EXPO'92 in Seville, Spain 1999 Two artists. Two generations, with Titos Mabota, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo, Norway 2000 Two artists. Two generations'', with Titos Mabota, Bergen Museum, Bergen, Norway 2006 The Africa Centre, London See also Culture of Mozambique References "Chissano Escultura", Cooperativa de Actividades Artísticas CRL,
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James Henderson Berry (May 15, 1841 – January 30, 1913) was a United States Senator and served as the 14th Governor of Arkansas. Early life James Henderson Berry was born in Jackson County, Alabama, to Isabella Jane (née Orr) and James McFerrin Berry. The family moved to Arkansas in 1848. Berry attended Berryville Academy in Berryville, Arkansas, for one year. The academy was named after his family. Berry studied law and in 1866 was admitted to the Arkansas bar. American Civil War At the outbreak of the American Civil War, Berry joined the Confederate Army and was commissioned as a1882 when he was elected Governor of Arkansas. The Berry administration focused on reducing the state debt and creating a state mental hospital. Berry did not run for reelection. In March 1885, Berry was selected by the legislature to fill the unexpired term of Senator Augustus H. Garland. Berry remained in the U.S. Senate for the next 22 years. Later life In 1910, Berry accepted a position with the Arkansas History Commission to mark the graves of all Arkansas Confederate soldiers who had died in northern prisons. Berry died in Bentonville, Arkansas, and is buried at the Knights of PythiasCemetery (present-day Bentonville Cemetery), Bentonville, Arkansas. Personal life In 1865, Berry married E.Q. "Lizzie" Quaile. They had six children. References External links Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture entry: James Henderson Berry 1905 Full Portrait National Governors Association Category:1841 births Category:1913 deaths Category:19th-century American politicians Category:American amputees Category:Arkansas Democrats Category:Arkansas lawyers Category:American politicians with physical disabilities Category:Arkansas state court judges Category:Confederate States Army officers Category:Deaths in Arkansas Category:Democratic Party state governors of the United States Category:Democratic Party United States senators Category:Governors of Arkansas Category:Members of the Arkansas House of Representatives Category:People from Jackson County, Alabama Category:Speakers of the Arkansas House
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Dana L. Redd (born March 7, 1968) is an American Democratic politician who served as the Mayor of Camden, New Jersey, from 2010 to 2018. Redd served in the New Jersey Senate from January 8, 2008, to January 5, 2010, representing the 5th Legislative District. Education Redd graduated from Bishop Eustace Preparatory School in 1986 and began full-time employment while attending college at night. She received a B.S. degree in Business from Rutgers University-Camden and attended the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy (Principles of Redevelopment). She went on to earn a Master of Arts degree inHuman Services Administration (MHSA) from Lincoln University (Pennsylvania). Elected office Redd served on the Senate's Community and Urban Affairs Committee (as vice-chair), the Budget and Appropriations Committee and the Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee. She also served on the Joint Committee on Public Schools. Redd has served on the New Jersey Democratic State Committee as its vice chair since 2006 and on the Democratic National Committee from 2006, and was a delegate to the 2004 Democratic National Convention. She has served on the New Jersey Redistricting Commission since 2001. Redd has served on the Camden City Council asin June 2009 with 86% of the vote, and was the general favorite in the November election. She won the general election on November 3, 2009, and was re-elected in 2013 for another four-year term. References External links New Jersey Legislature financial disclosure forms 2007 2008 |- |- Category:1968 births Category:Living people Category:African-American mayors Category:African-American state legislators in New Jersey Category:African-American women in politics Category:Bishop Eustace Preparatory School alumni Category:Mayors of Camden, New Jersey Category:New Jersey city council members Category:New Jersey Democrats Category:New Jersey state senators Category:Rutgers University–Camden alumni Category:Women mayors of places in New Jersey Category:Women state legislators in
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John N. Dolinsek (born January 3, 1948 in Santa Rosa, CA) was an outfielder who is most notable for winning the 1969 College World Series Most Outstanding Player award while a junior at Arizona State University. He is one of five players from Arizona State University to win that award. The others are Sal Bando, Ron Davini, Bob Horner and Stan Holmes. Drafted by the Houston Astros in the eighth round of the 1969 draft, Dolinsek played five years in the minors, never reaching the big leagues. He played for the Covington Astros in 1969, hitting .301 with seven home
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The Druid of Shannara is a fantasy novel by American writer Terry Brooks. The second book of his tetralogy of The Heritage of Shannara, it was first published in 1991. Plot summary The Druid of Shannara takes off where The Scions of Shannara left off, focusing on the story of Walker Boh as he attempts to fulfill the task given to him by the shade of Allanon, to return the Druid castle of Paranor to the Four Lands. Left in the Hall of Kings with the Asphinx attacking, Walker fends off the poison with his magic for days whereas thethe state of the Four Lands and makes a beautiful woman out of the elements surrounding him in his garden including a dove for a heart. The King tells his daughter, Quickening, of the task that she must carry out, for there is trouble in a lost city to the north, and the people to take with her. Morgan Leah returns to Culhaven to carry out a final request from his old friend Steff who met his demise in The Scions of Shannara and quickly becomes imprisoned. Rimmer Dall hears about Quickening and the rumors surrounding her appearances: that she's
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For the Director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, see William Morton Meredith. William Morris Meredith (June 8, 1799 – August 17, 1873) was an American lawyer and politician from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He served as the United States Secretary of the Treasury, during President Zachary Taylor's Administration. Early and family life Born on June 8, 1799 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, William Morris Meredith was the eldest son of William Tuckey Meredith (d. 1844), a successful attorney and after 1814 president of Schuylkill Bank, and who narrowly lost to Nicholas Biddle the presidency of the Bank of the United States. Duringthe year he was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar, 1795, William Tuckey Meredith married the writer and poet Gertrude Gouverneur Meredith (née Ogden) (d.1828). Gertrude was the niece of Lewis Morris, as well as of Gouverneur Morris, and highly educated and respected in her own right, as well as published in Dennie's Port Folio. The couple ultimately had eleven children. William Tuckey Meredith served on the Philadelphia Common and Select Councils, and on the Vestry of Christ Episcopal Church, among other leadership positions in the city. His brother Jonathan Meredith (d. 1872) was a leader of the Bar in Baltimore,Maryland. William M. Meredith graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1812 (graduation at age 13 not being unusual at the time). After assisting his father in the family's saddlery business, he read law, and was himself admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar. After his mother's death in 1828, William Morris Meredith helped raise his younger siblings. On June 17, 1834, at the age of 35 and after a ten-year engagement, Meredith married the former Catherine Keppele (d. 1854). They had one son (William, b. 1838, later a published essayist and poet) and four daughters: Gertrude Gouverneur Meredith, Euphemia Ogden Meredith,The judge allowed counsel to question jurors as to whether they read the article, and when the judge refused to dismiss a juror who said he was offended by Meredith's questioning, complained such that the judge held both lawyers in contempt of court and ordered them jailed for 30 days, despite considerable public sympathy. Upon their release, they secured release of two of the prisoners in an appeal on double jeopardy grounds. This gained Meredith a reputation for fearlessness and inflexible honesty, and he was elected President of the Philadelphia Bar Association the following year. A Federalist, Meredith was thenelected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly, where he served in the minority for five years, from 1824 to 1828, the year of his mother's death (during which his father was grief-stricken and never fully recovered). One of his accomplishments was establishment of a House of Refuge for juvenile offenders, and he served as that institution's manager, and also on the board of the Pennsylvania Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, in which capacity he continued to serve for many years until his death. Meredith was president of the Philadelphia City Council from 1834 until 1849, and was a delegate tothe Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention in 1837. Meredith also served as United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1841 to 1845. During that time, he prosecuted Alexander Holmes for manslaughter in the William Brown case. A successful attorney, particularly after he secured termination of the German Lutheran Church's interment rights in Franklin Square in Commonwealth v. Allmyer, Meredith owned the Wheatland Estate in Lancaster, Pennsylvania from May 1845 until December 1848 before selling it to future President James Buchanan. President Zachary Taylor, wanting a Pennsylvania Whig for his cabinet, appointed William M. Meredith to be the 19th Secretarydelegate to a Peace Conference, he worked unsuccessfully to prevent the southern states from seceding from the Union. His brother Sullivan Amory Meredith had served in the Mexican War, and became a Brigadier General of Union Volunteers, commissioned in 1862, and the brothers helped assure Pennsylvania met its quota of troops. His son William served for a brief period as secretary to Major General George A. McCall, but his stutter and problems with cataracts caused him to resign that position. William Meredith later served as a member of a commission working out the settlement of the Alabama claims, in 1870.The following year, President Ulysses Grant asked Meredith to travel to Geneva as senior counsel for the United States in an international arbitration proceeding, but he declined the position due to ill health. His last political post was as President of the 1872 Republican National Convention. Death and legacy Meredith died in Philadelphia in August 1873, at the age of 74. His wife, Catherine had died in 1854. Both are interred at the Christ Church Burial Ground in Philadelphia. The Historical Society of Pennsylvania holds the Meredith family papers. A Philadelphia school was named in his honor in 1931, andremains active today. Meredith received one of only two 1849 Double Eagles while serving as Treasury Secretary. That 1849 Double Eagle is a pattern coin. The other coin is on display at the Smithsonian Institution. The coin was auctioned as part of his estate but its subsequent whereabouts are unknown. References External links Biographical sketch of William M Meredith, The American Law Register, Vol. 55, No. 4, Apr 1907 The Meredith Family Papers, including William M. Meredith's political correspondence, civic papers and legal case files, are available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Category:1799 births Category:1873 deaths
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Jönköping University (JU), formerly Högskolan i Jönköping is a non-governmental Swedish university college located in the city Jönköping in Småland, Sweden. JU is a member of the European University Association (EUA) and The Association of Swedish Higher Education, SUHF. Organization JU is one of three Swedish private institutions of higher education with the right to award doctoral degrees in certain areas such as social sciences. JU operates on the basis of an agreement with the Government of Sweden and conforms to national degree regulations and quality requirements. The university is organized as a corporate group with non-profit JU Foundation asthe parent organization and five wholly owned subsidiaries. Name The university college titles itself as 'Jönköping University' in official Swedish texts, a decision which met criticism in Sweden, in part as it was perceived as an attempt to profile the college as having full university status. The name change was reported in 2016 by the Swedish Language Council ('Språkrådet') to the Parliamentary Ombudsman ('Justitieombudsman'), which chose not to set the matter to trial. The college responded with a statement that it was not out of the ordinary in an international context to profile itself as 'University'. Schools JU conducts researchand offers undergraduate studies, graduate studies, doctoral studies and contract education through four schools: Jönköping International Business School (JIBS) School of Education and Communication Jönköping School of Engineering School of Health and Welfare Campus The JU Campus is situated in the city centre of Jönköping, on the western shore of the lake Munksjön and not far from the south shore of the lake Vättern, about five minutes walk from the Central Station. History 1897: The first nursing students received their degree qualifications in Jönköping by Jönköping County. 1947: An elementary-school teacher's training college was established in Jönköping. 1963: A pre-schoolteacher's training college started in Jönköping. 1968: The elementary-school teacher's training college becomes "Jönköping Teacher School" and moves house to Västra Torget. The county's central school for the caring profession moves to new premises on Munksjö beach and in 1971 changes its name to "Munksjö School". 1970: The Institute for Gerontology and the "Ortos" Laboratory were started by Jönköping County, they later became part of the School of Health Sciences. 1975: Higher Vocational Education started in Jönköping. 1977: Reform of Swedish higher education. Jönköping University College is set up as a state university college. The "Jönköping Teacher School" and thepre-school teacher's training college merged into the university. A two-year economic education started, become three-year in 1978. The Communication Officer (Informatör) programme started this year, it later became the Media and Communication programme. Some of the caring programmes at the Munksjö School become university programmes. 1979: First international student exchange; teacher training in Liverpool. 1981: Single subject courses relocated to the municipalities in the county. 1983: The Munksjö School starts a Prosthetics and Orthotics programme, focus: orthopedic technician, which is still now the only in its kind in Sweden. 1987: The Munksjö School's university educations within the health sector arerenamed the School of Health Sciences. 1988: First engineering programme starts at Jönköping University College. 1994: Jönköping University Foundation was founded, with three schools; the School of Education and Communication, the School of Engineering and Jönköping International Business School as well as University Services. A joint faculty for the three schools is founded and the first right to award master's degrees are given to Jönköping University. Host company activities start at Jönköping International Business School and the School of Engineering. 1995: Jönköping University is given the right to award doctorates in four business school subjects. Research education is started atJönköping International Business School. 1996: The first professors' inauguration at Jönköping University. Organized support for student business ventures is started by two students. 1997: The new campus is opened (Stage I) which includes the President's Office, Jönköping International Business School and University Services. In 1998 the School of Engineering moves to campus. First doctoral thesis defence. 1999: First conferment of doctoral degree at Jönköping University. The School of Health Sciences is given the right to award degrees in Social Science. 2000: The School of Education and Communication's new building stands ready (Stage II). 2001: Education in vocational education is startedat the School of Education and Communication. Science Park Jönköping opens near the university and takes over, among other things, the support of student enterprises. 2002: The School of Health Sciences becomes the fourth school within Jönköping University. The Students' House is opened. 2004: The university is given the right to award doctorates within the Humanities and Social Sciences. First international scientific magazine published in Jönköping, the Journal of Media Business Studies. 2005: The University Library is named Library of the Year in Sweden. 2007: 1 January 2007 Ingenjörshögskolan (the School of Engineering) is reorganized as Tekniska Högskolan i Jönköping(JTH). The name is not changed in English. A long term collaboration with Chalmers and KTH (The Royal Institute of Technology) is set up. 2010: The university is given the right to award Licentiate and Doctoral Degrees in Engineering, research area: Industrial Production, Machine design, Material and manufacturing processes, and Production systems. 2011: The first fee-paying international students from countries outside the EU/EEA are welcomed to Jönköping University. 2013: The university’s sports centre, Campus Arena, is inaugurated. 2015: As the first business faculty in Sweden, Jönköping International Business School received both AACSB and EQUIS accreditation. Education Jönköping University offers coursesand study programmes taught in Swedish and in English. Education is within the fields of health, nursing, social work, education, media and communication studies, technology, science and engineering as well as economics, law and informatics. Jönköping University offers courses and study programmes taught in English on all three levels: Bachelor, Master and Doctoral. Accreditations Jönköping International Business School is accredited by EQUIS (European Quality Improvement System) and AACSB since 2015. It is the only institution in Sweden that holds both accreditations. Doctoral programmes Jönköping University is entitled to award licentiate and doctoral degrees within the humanities and social sciences. Theuniversity is also entitled to award licentiate and doctoral degrees in engineering, research area: industrial production. Research The university is entitled to issue licentiate and doctoral degrees in the disciplinary research domain of humanities and social sciences. Within technology, the university can issue licentiate and doctoral degrees in the field of industrial product development. Focus for research is entrepreneurship, ownership and business renewal, technical expertise and know-how to small- and medium-sized enterprises, the conditions for education and communication, and health, care and social work from a unique holistic perspective. Jönköping University's first full professors were inaugurated in 1996, and thefirst PhDs were conferred in 2000. Research centres and institutes Jönköping International Business School: Centre for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) Centre for Entrepreneurship and Spatial Economics (CEnSE) Media Management and Transformation Centre (MMT Centre) School of Education and Communication: Encell - National Centre for Lifelong Learning School of Engineering: CIC - Casting Innovation Centre Ceebel - Centrum för Energieffektiv Belysning School of Health Sciences: Centre for Oral Health The Jönköping Academy for Improvement of Health and Welfare Honorary doctors Science Park Jönköping JU is partner of and strongly engaged in the development of Science Park Jönköping which provides support
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The 1924 United States presidential election in Georgia took place on November 4, 1924, as part of the wider United States Presidential election. Voters chose 14 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Background With the exception of a handful of historically Unionist North Georgia counties – chiefly Fannin but also to a lesser extent Pickens, Gilmer and Towns – Georgia since the 1880s had been a one-party state dominated by the Democratic Party. Disfranchisement of almost all African-Americans and most poor whites had made the Republican Party virtually nonexistent outside of local
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Relations:[["1924 United States presidential election in Georgia", "instance of", "Presidential election"], ["1924 United States presidential election in Georgia", "country", "United States"], ["1924 United States presidential election in Georgia", "part of", "1924 United States presidential election"]] |
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The Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse team represents Bucknell University in the Patriot League of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's lacrosse. Bucknell has played lacrosse at the varsity level since 1968. History The Bucknell lacrosse team was founded in 1968, as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). They went 6-3 that year and undefeated in conference. They won the MAC title the next year. In 1975, they joined the East Coast Conference, which they won twice, in 1978 and 1985. In 1991, they joined the Patriot League. They have won the Patriot League regular season titlenine times, in 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2009, 2011, and 2018. In 2001, they played in their first NCAA tournament game, which Notre Dame won 12-7. In 2005, the only coach they had ever had, Sid Jamieson, retired. He was replaced with Frank Fedorjaka, who has been their coach ever since. They won their only Patriot League championship in 2011, defeating Colgate University 10-3. They reached their second ever NCAA lacrosse tournament game that year, which they lost to the University of Virginia 13-12 in overtime. They currently compete as a member of the Patriot League and playtheir home games in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania at Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium. Season Results The following is a list of Bucknell’s results by season since the institution of NCAA Division I in 1971: {| class="wikitable" |- align="center" †NCAA canceled 2020 collegiate activities due to the COVID-19 virus. Bucknell Lacrosse Hall Of Fame James W. McKee, M C. Edwin Farver, M Louis L. Kissling, Jr., A Ralph Turri, M Thomas H. Sanders, G Peter W. von Hoffman, A Rodney Brown, M/D Thomas E. Cusick, A Justin W. Zackey, A Hugh Donovan, D Chris Cara, A Sid Jamieson, Coach See also Bucknell Bison Lacrosse
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| Nodes:[["Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse", {"description":'men's lacrosse team of Buckell University'}], ["Lacrosse", {}]]
Relations:[["Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse", "sport", "Lacrosse"]] |
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Christopher Philip James Elmore (born 23 December 1983) is a Welsh Labour Party politician. He has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ogmore since 2016. Early life and career Elmore was born in Newport, Wales. Living in Brynmawr until he was seven, he now lives with his partner in Pencoed. He started his working life as a trainee butcher and later attended Cardiff Metropolitan University completing a degree in History and Culture in 2005. Elmore then worked in a number of professions including Further education. In 2008, Elmore was elected as a Councillor for Casteland in the Vale ofGlamorgan Council. Later he was appointed as a cabinet member for children's services and schools. Parliamentary career Elmore unsuccessfully contested the seat of Vale of Glamorgan in the 2015 United Kingdom general election before being selected as the Labour candidate in the 2016 Ogmore by-election, which was held on 5 May 2016. In June 2016, Elmore was joined the Justice Select Committee before also joining the Welsh Affairs Select Committee in July. In October 2016, he was appointed to the frontbench position of Opposition whip. He supported Owen Smith in the failed attempt to replace Jeremy Corbyn in the 2016Labour Party (UK) leadership election. In April 2020, Elmore was made Shadow Minister for Scotland by new leader Keir Starmer. Youth affairs Since his election, Chris has particularly focused on issues that impact young people, often speaking in parliament and elsewhere on the subject. Youth engagement is an issue on which Elmore previously campaigned as a councillor. Rail Policy In 2017, Chris was elected as Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Rail in Wales. Chris has been a vocal opponent of the Government's decision to cancel the planned electrification of the Great Western Mainline. In addition, he has also
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Bettini is a surname of Italian origin and it may refer to: Alessandro Bettini (1821-1898), Italian tenor involved in the UK legal case of Bettini v Gye Antonio Bettini (1396–1487), Italian clergyman and writer Carlos Bettini (born 1951), Argentinian businessman, politician, and diplomat Domenico Bettini (1644-1705), Italian painter of the Baroque era Gianni Bettini (1860–1938), Italian-American builder of phonographs Gonzalo Bettini (born 1992), Argentine footballer Lorenzo Bettini (1931–2008), Italian professional football player Mariano Bettini (born 1996), Argentine professional footballer Mario Bettini (1582–1657), Italian Jesuit philosopher, mathematician and astronomer Paolo Bettini (born 1974), Italian road-racing bicyclist Pietro Bettini (fl. 17th century),
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| Nodes:[["Bettini", {"description":'family name'}], ["Surname", {}]]
Relations:[["Bettini", "instance of", "Surname"]] |
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Føyno is an island in Stord municipality in Vestland county, Norway. The island lies southwest of the island of Stord at the southern end of the Stokksundet sound. The Digernessundet strait runs between Stord and this island. Føyno had a central place in the district of Sunnhordland during the Middle Ages, and gave its name to the skipreide of Føyen. Transportation The island had no road connections to anywhere prior to December 2000 when the Triangle Link was opened. Føyno became a central piece of the bridge-tunnel connection connecting the municipalities of Stord and Bømlo to the mainland of Sveio
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| Nodes:[["Føyno", {"description":'island in Norway'}], ["Norway", {}], ["Island", {}], ["Stord", {}]]
Relations:[["Føyno", "country", "Norway"], ["Føyno", "instance of", "Island"], ["Føyno", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Stord"]] |
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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Bafang is a Latin suffragan bishopric in the ecclesiastical province of the Metropolitan Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Douala, also in Cameroon. Yet it depends on the missionary Roman Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples. Its cathedral episcopal see is the Cathédrale du Cœur-Immaculé de Marie, dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, in Bafang, in the Haut-Nkam department of the West Province, Cameroon. Statistics As per 2014, it pastorally serves 124,193 Catholics (42.5% of 292,387 total) on 7,229 km² in 25 parishes and 91 missions. It had 34 priests (diocesan), 11 lay religious (sisters) and
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| Nodes:[["Roman Catholic Diocese of Bafang", {"description":'diocese'}], ["Cameroon", {}]]
Relations:[["Roman Catholic Diocese of Bafang", "country", "Cameroon"]] |
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Judith Ann Clements is an Australian academic and educator, specializing in Kallikrein proteases in prostate and ovarian cancers. Clements is the Scientific Director at the Australian Prostate Cancer Research Centre – Queensland and was head of the Cancer Research Program at the Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation (IHBI) of Queensland University of Technology at the Translational Research Institute (Australia) from 1997–2014. Biography Clements is a Principal Research Fellow of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia and lead the Cancer Program from 1997–2014 at the Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, QUT, based at the Translationaland is co-leader of the Queensland node of the international genome wide association study consortium for prostate cancer, PRACTICAL. She is Chair of the Queensland Board of the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (PCFA) and a member of the PCFA National Board. She has been a member of the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute Council since 2002. She was recently elected as a member of the International Proteolysis Society Council for 2014–2017. She was awarded the Queensland Women in Technology Biotech Outstanding Achievement Award for 2012, and the prestigious title of Distinguished Professor at QUT in 2013. Her research specialisesin ovarian and prostate cancers, particularly focusing on the Kallikrein proteases and their utility as biomarkers and therapeutic targets for cancer progression. Clements has publications in over 190 publications scientific journals. Clements organised the two International Meetings: the 6th annual International Symposium on Kallikreins and Kallikrein-Related Peptidases (ISK 2015), held in Brisbane, Australia from 28 September–1 October 2015, and the 9th General Meeting of the International Proteolysis Society, held in Penang, Malaysia from 4–5 October 2015. In June 2015 in the Queens Birthday Honors, Clements received an Companion of the Order of Australia (AC), awarded for eminent achievement and meritof the highest degree in service to Australia or to humanity at large. In 2017 she was elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences. Research The Cancer Research Program led by Clements at QUT-IHBI, aims to more clearly understand the molecular and cellular basis for the development, progression, and metastasis of solid tumours. Clements has commented on her research, stating: "The primary interest of my group within the Hormone Dependent Cancer Program is the tissue kallikrein family of serine proteases. Our group was one of three worldwide that identified and characterised the expanded human tissue kallikreinstructure/function of the kallikreins, their substrate specificity and in vivo interacting proteins and genomic regulation. Other protease research interests are the type 2 trans membrane serine proteases (with Dr John Hooper) and the ADAMs (with Prof Adrian Herington and Dr Dimitri Odorico). Education Clements completed her PhD in Endocrinology at Monash University in 1989, her Master of Applied Science in 1983, after completing her Bachelor of Applied Science in 1982 and Diploma of Laboratory Technology in 1969 at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. Awards 2012 Women in Technology (WiT) Biotech Outstanding Achievement Award 2011 Queensland University of Technology ViceChancellor's Award for Research Excellence 2007 Gold Medal, E.K.Frey–E.Werle Foundation for pioneering work in the Kallikrein field 2006 Research featured in "Ten Of The Best" National Health and Medical Research Council funded health and medical research successes 2005 Alban Gee Prize, Urological Society of Australasia Annual Scientific Meeting 2001 Queensland University of Technology Faculty of Science Distinguished Award for Excellence in Research 2000 National Health and Medical Research Council Principal Research Fellowship 2000 Silver Medal and Honorary Membership of the E.K.Frey–E.Werle Foundation (awarded at the International Conference, Kinin 2000, Munich) 1998 Alban Gee Prize, Urological Society of Australasia Annual Scientific
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Roy Kuhlman (July 9, 1923–February 2007) was an American graphic designer. Biography Roy Kuhlman was born on July 9, 1923 in Fort Worth, Texas, and raised in Glendale, California. He received a scholarship to the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles and in 1946 obtained another scholarship to the Art Students League of New York, and also attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. In 1951, at age 28, he showed his portfolio to Barney Rosset, publisher of the avant-garde Grove Press, after trying to make it as an abstract artist. Rosset was not impressed. However, as
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| Nodes:[["Roy Kuhlman", {"description":'American graphic designer'}], ["Roy", {}], ["Graphic designer", {}]]
Relations:[["Roy Kuhlman", "given name", "Roy"], ["Roy Kuhlman", "occupation", "Graphic designer"]] |
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The Samuel Chamberlain House is a historic house at 3 Winthrop Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. Built c. 1864, it is one of three well preserved Italianate side-hall style houses in Stoneham. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Description and history The Samuel Chamberlain House stands in a residential area southwest of Stoneham's Central Square, on the north side of Winthrop Street between Wright and Lincoln Streets. It is a 2-1/2 story wood frame house, set on a small lot lined at the sidewalk with granite, including original posts at the sidewalk and driveway. It
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| Nodes:[["Samuel Chamberlain House", {"description":'building in Massachusetts, United States'}], ["Massachusetts", {}]]
Relations:[["Samuel Chamberlain House", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Massachusetts"]] |
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The Labourers of Herakles is a 1995 play created by English poet and playwright Tony Harrison. It is partially based on remaining fragments of tragedies by ancient Greek dramatist Phrynichos, one of the earliest tragedians. Harrison's play deals with genocide and ethnic cleansing and uses Heracles filicide as a metaphor for the unspeakable horrors of war and man's inhumanity to man. Immediately after the 23 August performance of his play at Delphi Harrison left for a frontline assignment to witness the Bosnian War and write poems for the atrocities in an assignment commissioned by The Guardian. The proximity of the
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| Nodes:[["The Labourers of Herakles", {"description":'play'}], ["Tony Harrison", {}]]
Relations:[["The Labourers of Herakles", "author", "Tony Harrison"]] |
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Motty Steinmetz () is a prominent contemporary Israeli Hasidic singer. Biography Steinmetz was born in 1992 to a Vizhnitz family in Bnei Barak. When Steinmetz was fourteen his grandfather moved from Antwerp to Israel and taught him many traditional Vizhnitz tunes which have later impacted his musical style.In his early teens, he was spotted by producer and composer Ruvi Banet, who later became his manager. Steinmetz sings Jewish religious songs, with the lyrics often being taken directly from scripture or prayers, and is well known for the great emotion he puts into his music. In accordance with Jewish laws ofmodesty, he never performs to mixed audiences of men and women, unless there is a mechitza (separation); an example of this is his refusal to sing at the Hebrew Academy for Special Children's annual benefit concert. He has visited hospitals in Israel to sing to accident victims. In 2017, he released his debut album Haneshama Bekirbi, with Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Israel David Lau and the mayors of Bnei Barak and El'ad present at the launch of the album. The album reportedly took four years of work to finish, and achieved platinum certification in Israel. In 2018, the Israeli nationalbroadcaster Kan 11 produced an episode documenting Steinmetz's life and music. Personal life In 2015, Steinmetz married Malka Weisel, with the Hasidic singer Mordechai Ben David a guest at the wedding. As of November 2017, the couple have one daughter. Discography Studio albums Haneshama Bekirbi (2017) Singles Rachmaneh (2015) basel(2018) Vesorev (2015) Shifchi Kamayim (2015) El Hana'ar Hazeh (2015) Elokim Al Domi Lach (2015) K'ayal Ta'arog (2015) B'sheim Hashem (2015) Tzeinah Uraeinah (2015) V'hi Rachamecha (2015) Ilan (2015) Nafshi (2018) (with Ishay Ribo) Nigun Vizhnitz (2020) Veomar Bayom Hahu (2020) References External links Compilation of videos and performances (In Hebrew)
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Relations:[["Motty Steinmetz", "occupation", "Singer"], ["Motty Steinmetz", "country of citizenship", "Israel"]] |
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Hernani Manuel Conceição Brôco (born 13 June 1981 in Torres Vedras) is a Portuguese former road cyclist. Major results 2001 1st Stage 1 GP CTT Correios de Portugal 2002 3rd Time trial, National Under-23 Road Championships 2003 1st Time trial, National Under-23 Road Championships 2004 5th Overall Volta ao Alentejo 2005 3rd Time trial, National Road Championships 2010 3rd Time trial, National Road Championships 5th Overall Volta a Portugal 6th Overall Troféu Joaquim Agostinho 2011 3rd Time trial, National Road Championships 4th Overall Vuelta a Asturias 5th Overall Volta a Portugal 1st Stage 3 9th Overall Troféu Joaquim Agostinho 2013
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| Nodes:[["Hernâni Brôco", {"description":'Portuguese cyclist', "alias":['Hernani Broco']}], ["Portugal", {}], ["Torres Vedras", {}]]
Relations:[["Hernâni Brôco", "country of citizenship", "Portugal"], ["Hernâni Brôco", "place of birth", "Torres Vedras"]] |
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Kevin Witkos is a Republican member of the Connecticut Senate, representing the 8th District since 2009. He has served as Deputy Senate Republican President Pro Tempore since January 2017 and previously served as Minority Leader Pro Tempore from 2014-2016 and Caucus Chairman for Outreach since 2013. Witkos served as the State Representative from the 17th district which includes Canton and part of Avon from 2003–2008. Political career Witkos is the State Senator for the 8th Senate District since 2009, representing the northwest suburbs of Hartford in the Farmington Valley and Litchfield County in the Connecticut Senate, including the towns ofseek to work on particular fields. Professional career Kevin Witkos is a Community Relations & Economic Development Specialist for Eversource, a Connecticut Electric Utility. He is also a former Canton Police Department sergeant who had a 28-year career in law enforcement. Witkos and his wife Esther own Wilson's Pub in Canton, CT. Fireworks proposal Kevin and others sponsored a controversial bill that would legalize fireworks considered to be consumer-level by the federal government in an effort to boost revenue. However, the bill failed in the face of steep opposition by the state's police and fire-fighting forces. Personal Witkos was born
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Relations:[["Kevin Witkos", "given name", "Kevin"]] |
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Hotel Paper is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Michelle Branch which was released on June 24, 2003. Some of the major themes on Hotel Paper are leaving things behind, constantly being on the move, independence, the mysteries of bus stations and spirituality. The album's cover is a photograph of Branch by Sheryl Nields. Hotel Paper debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200, selling 157,000 copies in its first week—it was Branch's highest sales week and surpassed the peak position of her previous major label album, The Spirit Room (2001). By December 2003, Hotel Paper was certifiedplatinum by the RIAA. The album had sold 1,116,000 copies in the US as of March 2009. Hotel Paper was certified gold in Canada for shipment of 50,000 copies. "Are You Happy Now?", the album's first single, peaked at number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100. It was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance, Branch's third nomination. The second single was "Breathe", which reached number 36 on the Hot 100 and became a top five club hit. A third single, "'Til I Get over You", was released with no music video and failed tochart. The album received mixed reviews. Track listing Singles "Are You Happy Now?" (May 20, 2003) "Breathe" (September 23, 2003) "'Til I Get Over You" (2004) Personnel Michelle Branch – acoustic guitar, guitar, percussion, vocals Josh Abraham – keyboards Kenny Aronoff – drums Paul Bushnell – bass Chris Chaney – bass Luis Conte – percussion Sheryl Crow – vocals on "Love Me like That" Rick DePofi – percussion Mike Elizondo – bass John Leventhal – bass, guitar, keyboards Brian MacLeod – drums Jamie Muhoberac – keyboards Dave Navarro – guitar Shawn Pelton – drums Dan Rothchild – bass John Shanks– bass, guitar Stuart Smith – mandolin Patrick Warren – keyboards Greg Wells – Hammond B3, bass, guitar, piano, Wurlitzer Jessica Harp – backing vocals on "Desperately" Production Producers: Josh Abraham, Rick DePofi, John Leventhal, John Shanks, Greg Wells Engineers: Daniel Chase, Greg Collins, Rick DePofi, Marc DeSisto, Lars Fox, Chris Reynolds, Jeff Rothschild, Brian Scheuble, Ryan Williams Assistant engineers: Chris Holmes, Brian Humphrey, Eric Reichers, Mark Valentine Mixing: Josh Abraham, assistant: Jesse Gorman, Chris Lord-Alge, Roger Moutenot, Jim Scott Mastering: Brian Gardner A&R: Danny Strick Assistant: Jorge Velez Production coordination: Jill Dell'Abate Programming: Josh Abraham String arrangements: David Campbell
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Crooks Mound () (16 LA 3) is a large Marksville culture archaeological site located in La Salle Parish in south central Louisiana. It is a large, conical burial mound that was part of at least six episodes of burials. It measured about and . It contained roughly 1,150 sets of remains that were placed. However, they were able to be fit into the structure of the mound. Sometimes body parts were removed in order to achieve that goal. Archaeologists think it was a holding house for the area that was emptied periodically in order to achieve this type of setup.
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The Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food () was a ministerial position in the Hong Kong Government, who headed the former Health, Welfare and Food Bureau (HWFB). It was replaced by Secretary for Food and Health on July 1, 2007. The position was politically appointed, and its term expired when the Chief Executive left office. The secretary was also a member of the Executive Council (ExCo). Centre for Health Protection The CHP was created in 2003 in response to the SARS outbreak and copies the function of the CDC in the United States. Before the introduction CHP reports to theDirector of Health. List of office holders After POAS was introduced Dr York Chow (2003-2007) Dr Yeoh Eng Kiong (2002-2003) (retired) Before POAS was introduced (as Secretary for Health and Welfare) Dr Yeoh Eng Kiong (1999-2002) (retired) Katherine Fok Lo Shiu Ching (1994-1999) (retired) Elizabeth Wong Chien Chi Lien (1991-1994) (retired) Chow Tak Hay (1989-1991) John Walter Chambers (湛保熹)(198x-1989) See also Hong Kong Government Government departments and agencies in Hong Kong External links Official website of the HWFB Organisation chart of Hong Kong Government |width=25% align=center|Preceded by:''Food and Health Bureau and Environment and Food Bureau |width=25% align=center|Secretary for Health, Welfare
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| Nodes:[["Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food", {"description":'position in the Hong Kong Government'}], ["Hong Kong", {}]]
Relations:[["Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food", "applies to jurisdiction", "Hong Kong"]] |
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Cyprian Bridge Island is a small island located among the Solomon Islands. The island lies at a latitude of -6.85 and a longitude of 156.18333. It is an uninhabited volcanic island that lies between the islands of Fauro (30 km to the southwest) and Choiseul (much larger island about 100 km to the northeast). The island lies within Choiseul Province. Naming The island is named after Major Cyprian Bridge (1807-1885) who was a British army officer, particularly famed for his activities in the Flagstaff War, which was fought against the Māori in New Zealand in 1845. He was the uncle
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Relations:[["Cyprian Bridge Island", "instance of", "Island"], ["Cyprian Bridge Island", "country", "Solomon Islands"]] |
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¿Para qué sirve un oso? () is a 2011 Spanish eco-comedy film written and directed by Tom Fernández. The film stars Javier Cámara, Gonzalo de Castro and Emma Suárez. It also stars Geraldine Chaplin and her real-life daughter, Oona. The film premiered on 26 March 2011 at the Málaga Film Festival, this was soon followed by a theatrical release in Spain on 1 April. Plot A biologist, Guillermo (Camara) returns to his native Spain after discovering a plant growing in the Antarctic ice. The signs are that he is ready to give up his planet-saving cause. He contacts his wildlife-photographerbrother, Alejandro (Castro), who lives in a woodland hut with an enthusiastic young Californian, Vincent (Jesse Johnson), both hoping that the bears that once inhabited this area of Spain will eventually return. Nearby to the woodland hut is Natalia (Emma Suarez), a widow and mother of Daniela (Garcia). Vincent also meets the schoolteacher, Rosa (Oona Chaplin), who he quickly falls for . Guillermo is forced to move into the woodland hut after he is kicked out of the home he shared with his foster mother, Josephine (Geraldine Chaplin). Tensions between the two brothers reach boiling point, as Alejandro's idealistic perspective
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Natalie Nicole Hemby Wrucke (born March 24, 1977) is an American country music songwriter and singer. She has written songs for Lee Ann Womack, Eli Young Band, Toby Keith, Miranda Lambert, Sunny Sweeney, Little Big Town, Jon Pardi, and Lady Gaga. In 2019, she joined an all-female quartet called The Highwomen alongside Brandi Carlile, Amanda Shires and Maren Morris. Early life Hemby was born in Normal, Illinois. She is the daughter of Nashville studio guitarist Tom Hemby and Deanna Hemby. Career Songwriting Hemby has accumulated five #1 Billboard singles during her career. Hemby's cuts include "White Liar" and "Only Prettier"by Miranda Lambert, "Pontoon" and "Tornado" by Little Big Town, "Drinks After Work" by Toby Keith and "Automatic" by Miranda Lambert. She is currently a writer at Universal Music Group Nashville (UMPG), and has formerly been affiliated with EMI Publishing and Carnival Music. Solo album On January 13, 2017, Hemby released her first studio album, Puxico, named after her birthplace, via her own label, GetWrucke Productions. The Highwomen Hemby was revealed as the final member of The Highwomen, a country music group that already featured Brandi Carlile, Maren Morris and Amanda Shires, on April 1, 2019 when the group performedlive for the first time at the Bridgestone Arena as part of an 87th birthday tribute concert for Loretta Lynn. "Redesigning Women" was released on July 19, 2019 as the first single from their self-titled debut album set for release on September 6, 2019. Personal life Hemby is married to record producer Mike Wrucke. Discography Studio albums Puxico (2017) Songwriting Awards and nominations References Category:American female country singers Category:American country songwriters Category:Living people Category:People from Nashville, Tennessee Category:Grammy Award winners Category:1977 births Category:Songwriters from Tennessee Category:People from Stoddard County, Missouri Category:21st-century American singers Category:21st-century American women singers Category:Country musicians from
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Burçin Erseçal (born March 11, 1990) is a Turkish women's football midfielder currently playing in the Turkish Women's Third Football League for Dörtyol Belediyespor in Adana with jersey number 10. She was a member of the Turkey women's national under-19 football team. Playing career Club Burçin Erseçal began football playing at her early age with the men's team of Bursaspor. She then obtained her license for the newly established women's football club Bursa Sağlıkgücü Gençlikgücü on February 2, 2007. In the 2008–09 season, she played in the Turkish Women's First Football League for Sakarya Yenikent Güneşspor. The next season, she
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Rami Mehmed Pasha (1645–1706) was an Ottoman statesman and poet who served as Grand Vizier (1703) and governor of Cyprus and of Egypt (1704–06). He was known as a poet of divan literature (the epithet Rami, meaning "Obedient", is his nom de plume in his poems). Early years He was born in 1645 in Constantinople to Terazici Hasan Aga. After completing his education, he started his career as a bureaucrat. In 1690, he was appointed as a clerk in the office of the reis ül-küttab. In 1696, he was promoted to be the reis ül-küttab (a post roughly equivalent toforeign minister) and three years later he represented the Ottoman Empire in the peace talks of the Treaty of Karlowitz which ended the War of the Holy League. The Ottoman Empire was defeated in the war, but Mehmed Rami tried his best to minimize the losses. As a grand vizier On January 25, 1703, he was promoted to the post of Grand Vizier, the highest post of the Ottoman Empire other than that of the Sultan. However he soon realized that the Sheikh ul-Islam Feyzullah, who wielded great influence on the sultan Mustafa II, was the de facto ruler ofAt the end of this revolt known as Edirne event, Rami Mehmed as well as the Sultan were deposed on August 22, 1703. Death Rami Mehmed was then appointed as the governor of Cyprus and then Egypt, but in 1706 he was exiled to Rhodes island (now a part of Greece), where he died. As a man of letters He was poet and a friend of the famous Ottoman poet of Nabi. He also wrote about his diplomatic career. His book named Karlofça Sulhnamesi is about the talks during the Treaty of Karlowitz. Legacy A suburb of modern Istanbul, which
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is a Japanese four-panel manga by Cherry-Arai. The strip has been running in Ichijinsha's Manga 4-Koma Palette magazine since April 2009. An anime television series adaptation by Doga Kobo aired in Japan between January and March 2014. Plot Kobeni Yonomori is a high school girl who lives with her mother and older sister Benio. Upon turning sixteen, Kobeni is shocked to learn that, due to an arrangement by her late grandfather, she is engaged to a boy named Hakuya Mitsumine who, along with his little sister Mashiro, come to live with Kobeni. As Kobeni spends time adjusting to this newThe series has been collected in eight tankōbon volumes since July 22, 2010, the latest of which was published on late May-2017. The fourth volume was released simultaneously with a limited edition on December 28, 2013. Bundled with it was a DVD with an animated music clip of the song performed by Haruka Terui, Eriko Matsui and Yuri Yoshida. An original video animation was released with the limited edition of the fifth volume. Anime An anime television series aired in Japan on ABC channel from January 8, 2014 to March 26, 2014. The series was directed by Yoshiyuki Fujiwara atstudio Doga Kobo with script by Fumihiko Shimo and character design by Ai Kikuchi, who was also the chief animation director. Besides ABC, the anime also aired on AT-X, Tokyo MX and BS11 and was simulcast with English subtitles by Crunchyroll and through select digital outlets by Sentai Filmworks. The series was released in Japan in 6 DVD and Blu-ray Disc volumes between March 19 and August 20, 2014. The first volume contains a 12-minute-long original video animation episode. A 10-minute-long OVA episode was released on March 28, 2014, bundled with the limited edition of the fifth tankōbon volume of
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Arthur Kampf (28 September 1864 in Aachen – 8 February 1950 in Castrop-Rauxel) was a German history painter. He is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting. Life He studied under Peter Janssen, among others, at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf from 1879 to 1881. After completing his education he became a professor at the Kunstakademie and taught there until 1889, when he moved to Berlin. There he continued to teach at the local Kunstakademie. From 1915 to 1924 he was president of the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Berlin. He also became a member of the Prussian Academy of Arts, andgave drawing lessons, notably to Prince August Wilhelm, son of Wilhelm II. Kampf joined the Nazi Party soon after the Nazis seized power. In 1939's "Great German Art Exhibition" (Große Deutsche Kunstausstellung) at the Haus der Kunst in Munich, he was represented by numerous works. In 1939 he received the Adlerschild des Deutschen Reiches with the inscription "To the German painter" (Dem deutschen Maler). In 1944, Kampf was one of 24 artists, architects, authors, composers, actors, and singers added to the "Special list" of the Gottbegnadeten list, meaning he was considered absolutely indispensable. His older brother, Eugen, was also a
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Centennial College of Applied Arts and Technology is a diploma- and degree-granting college located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is the oldest publicly funded college in Ontario. Its campuses are primarily situated in the east side of the city, particularly in Scarborough, although its new aerospace centre is located at Downsview Park in North York. The enabling legislation is the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities Act. Centennial College is recognized as one of the most culturally diverse post-secondary institutions in Ontario. Almost 100 ethno-cultural groups are represented and 80 languages are spoken on campus. In 2016, Centennial was rankedas one of Canada's Top 10 Research Colleges for the first time in its history. Its main research facilities are its Wearable, Interactive and Mobile Technologies Access Centre in Healthcare (WIMTACH), established in 2015 through a $1.75 million federal grant. and its new aerospace innovation hub, currently under construction at the former de Havilland plant in west-end Toronto. Programs Centennial offers more than 260 programs including: bachelor's degree, diploma, certificate, post-graduate certificate and apprenticeship programs, across many diverse fields of study. Centennial offers the following four-year undergraduate degrees: Bachelor of Information Technology (Computer and Communication Networks) Bachelor of Science inNursing (BScN) Collaborative Nursing Degree Bachelor of Public Relations Management Founded in 1966, the college offers programs in business, communication arts, community and consumer services, applied computing, engineering technology, health sciences, animation, music, theatre, film and design. Centennial College supports enrolments of 22,000 full-time students and 19,000 part-time students. History Centennial College was the first to be opened in Ontario during the formation of the province's public college system in the 1960s. Ontario Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology were established on May 21, 1965 under the direction of the Hon. William Davis, Minister of Education. The system has grownto encompass 24 public colleges serving 200 communities in the province. As Centennial College's first site, Warden Woods Campus (651 Warden Avenue) opened its doors on October 17, 1966, with 514 students enrolled in 16 career-oriented programs including journalism, secretarial science and early childhood education. The campus made use of a decommissioned federal building that had been renovated to serve as a teaching institution. It evolved over the years to include the health/nutrition, hospitality, child studies and community services programs. In 1973, the Ontario government transferred responsibility for nursing education from the province's hospitals to its colleges. Locally, the ScarboroughRegional and the Toronto East General schools of nursing joined Centennial College to form the School of Health Sciences, based at Warden Woods Campus. In 1992 the Scarborough Board of Education and the college made a deal to establish an adult education centre, the Scarborough Career Planning Centre, at the Centennial College. In 1994 the entities agreed to establish the centre there beginning in the fall of that year. Centennial College grew rapidly, necessitating the establishment of additional campuses in the east end of Toronto to accommodate new programs and students. Warden Woods Campus closed in autumn of 2004 andwas demolished thereafter to make way for a housing development. Most programs were relocated to the new Centennial Science and Technology Centre (now Morningside Campus), which began operations the same year. Campuses Existing campuses are located at: Morningside Campus Located at 755 Morningside Avenue in Scarborough, this campus is commonly known as Morningside Campus (previously Centennial College Science Technology Centre). Morningside Campus opened in the summer of 2004 to house joint programs with the nearby University of Toronto Scarborough. The campus is home to health science and environmental science programs. Programs include: architectural technology, biotechnology, personal support worker, paramedics, pharmacyto the Centennial Event Centre, a multi-use venue for special events, corporate meetings and social functions. It is located on the top floor of the new Centennial student residence, which opened in August 2016, and replaced an older facility. The "A Block" (located on 939 Progress Avenue) of the campus was built in 1994 by the Scarborough Board of Education to house the students from Scarborough Centre for Alternative Studies adult secondary school. Ashtonbee Campus Located at 75 Ashtonbee Road in Scarborough, this campus houses the automotive services technician, career and college transition, motive power technician, auto body repair technician,communication programs such as advertising and public relations, as well as professionally oriented programs in the arts, such as digital animation and game design. The School of Communications, Media, Arts and Design also offers four programs in performance, which include Theatre Arts and Performance, Music Industry Arts and Performance, Dance Performance and Performing Arts Fundamentals. The performance programs are housed in leased space at the Daniels Spectrum in downtown Toronto. The building housing the Story Arts Centre was built to house the Toronto Teachers' College in 1955, and television buffs may know it as the location of the Canadian TVteen drama Degrassi High in the early 1990s. Since the closure of Toronto's francophone Collège des Grands-Lacs in 2002, Collège Boréal, a francophone college based primarily in Sudbury, also offered some French-language college programs at this facility until moving to its own new campus at One Yonge Street in 2012. Downsview Aerospace Hub In November 2016, work on the $72 million Downsview Park Aerospace Campus officially got underway with a ground breaking ceremony attended by Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne and federal Hon. Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan. With joint funding from the provincial and the federal government, the aerospace campusis being built on the site of the former de Havilland Aircraft Company Ltd. assembly plant in Downsview Park, Toronto. Centennial College is a partner in the Downsview aerospace consortium, DAIR, along with the University of Toronto, York University, Ryerson University, and eight companies including Pratt and Whitney Canada, FlightSafety, Canadensys, UTC Aerospace, MDA, Safran Landing Systems, Honeywell and Bombardier Aerospace. In May 2017, Centennial College received $2.3 million in funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) to research electric landing gear for energy-efficient aircraft. Suzhou Centennial College In 2016, Suzhou Centennial College (SCC) officiallylaunched. It is the first Canadian college approved by the Chinese government to deliver Canadian education in China. Suzhou Centennial College offers 18 programs, including four Centennial programs providing Canadian credentials in accounting, finance, software engineering and business foundations. Residence, School of Hospitality, Tourism and Culinary Arts, and Event Centre Responding to a critical shortage of affordable rental accommodations in Toronto at the time, Centennial College purchased the Howard Johnson Plaza Hotel Toronto East in June 2001 across the street from the Progress Campus and converted the hotel building into a college residence in time for the fall semester. Theamenities and level of finish in the hotel building were considerably higher than that of many purpose-built college residences. Amenities included an indoor pool, glass elevator, four-storey atrium and warmly decorated rooms. The Centennial College Residence and Conference Centre was originally configured to accommodate 380 student residents, based on two students sharing a room, though later configurations allowed the creation of some single-occupancy rooms. Rapid enrolment growth, fuelled by international students, compelled the college to examine building a new residence on the Progress Campus property. The resulting eight-storey quadrangle building was designed to house 740 students in two- and four-bedpartners include Diamond Schmitt Architects, Canadian Campus Communities and FRAM Building Group. Academics Centennial College offers full-time programs in more than 100 fields of study. These programs emphasize experiential learning with laboratory instruction, paid co-operative education opportunities, and industry and agency field placements. All Centennial programs are developed and kept current with the assistance of program advisory committees (PACs), made up of academic advisors and employer representatives. Their participation ensures the education and skills students receive at Centennial are up-to-date and relevant to the industry they are preparing to enter. Centennial offers a variety of innovative degree programs. Five joint-degreeprograms in paramedicine, journalism, new media studies, environmental science & technology and applied microbiology are taught in conjunction with the University of Toronto Scarborough, and the Bachelor of Science Nursing program is delivered jointly with Ryerson University. Centennial was among the first colleges in Ontario to receive approval for applied-degree programs in computer and communication networking, and software systems: design, development and management. Centennial College Schools School of Advancement The Business School School of Communications, Media, Arts and Design School of Community and Health Studies School of Engineering Technology and Applied Science School of Hospitality, Tourism and Culinary Arts Schoolof Transportation School of Dumisa Mndzebele Community and special events In July 2010, the students in the School of Hospitality, Tourism and Culture participated and partnered for the very first time with North America's Largest Cultural Festival – Scotiabank Caribana (now formally called Scotiabank Caribbean Carnival Toronto (SBCCT)- Festival Management Committee and Tribal Knights with Dexter Senshuai created a Queen costume worn by Salome Odney a hospitality student under the theme "Tropical Amazon" which was presented at the Annual King and Queen Competition and then at the Annual Parade. This marked the 1st time an Ontario College took part inrest of the college staff, faculty, administration to participate with the Centennial College Student Association CCSAI. This year costume was worn by Annakay McCalla who wore the costume for the first time the Centennial College – School of Hospitality, Tourism and Culture to enter the competition at the Grand Parade and it will be judged with the mas band Tribal nights and made history that our costume was judged and received 4th place with Tribal Knights. The costume was interviewed by Rogers Cable, Global TV, Sway magazine, CTV, WOW TV and others. There was large media coverage of the collegeparticipation this year by CTV/ CP24 on Parade Day on July 30 there was several pictures taken which are on Facebook, YouTube, Flicker, In May 2012 – As a part of the partnership with Festival Management Committee management of Scotiabank Caribbean Carnival Toronto (SCCT) involved for the very 1st time took Centennial College students as part of their Internship/Co-OP from the hospitality, tourism and Culture program – Post Grad Festival Management Program students such as Fabia Morgan (Assistant Gala Coordinator/ Administrative Assistant), plus the Business Administration program Shemmie Bayne (Administrative Assistant to Festival Administrator) and from Festival and Events ManagementClass/Hotel and Resort Management Program, Steven McKinnon (Office Assistant & Marketplace Coordinator) In April, 2017, Centennial College's "Paint the Town Green" celebration won the "Best Event Produced for a Corporation by an In-house Team" award at the Canadian Event Industry Awards Gala, held in Vaughan, Ontario. Thousands of volunteers went to 11 major City of Toronto and planted trees, spread mulch, and removed trash from waterways and nature trails. Notable alumni and faculty John Candy, Comedy actor John Cooper, Author and corporate communication specialist Gary Archibald, Journalist John Child, Olympic athlete Robert Fisher, Journalist Ashley Diana Morris, Model and actress
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The Triplets of Belleville () is a 2003 animated comedy film written and directed by Sylvain Chomet. It was released as Belleville Rendez-vous in the United Kingdom. The film is Chomet's first feature film and was an international co-production among companies in France, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and Canada. The film features the voices of Michèle Caucheteux, Jean-Claude Donda, Michel Robin, and Monica Viegas. There is little dialogue; much of the narrative is conveyed through song and pantomime. It tells the story of Madame Souza, an elderly woman who goes on a quest to rescue her grandson Champion, a Tourde France cyclist, who has been kidnapped by the French mafia for gambling purposes and taken to the city of Belleville (an amalgam of New York City, Montreal and Quebec City). She is accompanied by Champion's loyal but obese hound, Bruno, and joined by the Triplets of Belleville, music hall singers from the 1930s, whom she meets in the city. The film was highly praised by audiences and critics for its unique style of animation. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards—Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "Belleville Rendez-vous". It was also screened out of competition (horsconcours) at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. Plot The film begins with a flashback showing The Triplets of Belleville: a trio of singers performing on stage in the 1920s (dancing alongside other celebrities including Josephine Baker and Django Reinhardt). The story focuses on Madame Souza, an elderly woman raising her young charge, her grandson, Champion. Souza notices his listlessness that is attributed to hints of his being orphaned. When she notices his (brief) interest in music, she tries to get him to play the piano. When this fails to inspire, she buys him Bruno, a dog. After a time hebecomes melancholic once more. She discovers Champion's keen interest in road bicycle racing (a photo on his wall shows his deceased parents with a cycle), she buys him a tricycle. We see them years later, as Champion the cyclist and Souza, his coach. Champion competes the Tour de France but during the race, he and two other riders are kidnapped by two French mafia henchmen and brought to the bustling metropolis of Belleville. Souza and Bruno follow the men, but lose their trail. Lost and with no way to find Champion, Souza has a chance encounter with the renowned Bellevilletriplets, music hall singers from the 1920s, now elderly women turned improvisational musicians. The sisters take Souza to their home and she soon becomes a part of their group. We then see the wine mafia boss using the kidnapped cyclists as horses in a stationary cycling machine. They are raced in a simulated Tour de France race for gambling. At a fancy restaurant, the Triplets and Souza perform a jam session using newspaper, refrigerator, vacuum cleaner and bicycle wheel as instruments. The wine mafia boss happens to be in the restaurant and, with the help of Bruno, Souza realizes heOriginal Song (Benoît Charest and Sylvain Chomet for the song "Belleville Rendez-vous", sung by Matthieu Chedid in the original version). The film lost the Best Animated Feature award to Finding Nemo. It also has won the César for Best Film Music, and as a co-production with Canada it won the Genie Award for Best Motion Picture and the BBC Four World Cinema Award in 2004. See also List of animated feature films References External links Category:2003 films Category:2003 animated films Category:2000s comedy films Category:French films Category:French animated films Category:French comedy films Category:2000s French animated films Category:Belgian films Category:Belgian animated films
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Fred Hemke, DMA (né Frederick Leroy Hemke Jr.; July 11, 1935 – April 17, 2019) was an American virtuoso classical saxophonist and influential professor of saxophone at Northwestern University. Hemke helped raise the popularity of classical saxophone, particularly among leading American composers and helped raise the recognition of classical saxophone in solo, chamber, and major orchestral repertoire. For a half century, from 1962 to 2012, Hemke was a full-time faculty music educator at Northwestern University's Bienen School of Music. In 2002, Hemke was named Associate Dean Emeritus of the School of Music. Hemke retired from Northwestern University in 2012. Fromthe start of his career in the early 1960s, building on the achievements of earlier influential American teachers of classical saxophone — including those of Larry Teal, Joseph Allard, Cecil Leeson, Sigurd Raschèr, and Vincent Abato — Hemke, and a handful of peer American saxophonists — including Eugene Rousseau and Donald Sinta — helped build American saxophone repertoire through composers that included Muczynski, Creston, Stein, Heiden, and Karlins. Journalist and author Michael Segell, in his 2005 book, The Devil's Horn, called Hemke "The Dean of Saxophone Education in America." Hemke died on April 17, 2019. Formal education From 1955 to1956, Hemke studied saxophone with Marcel Mule at the Paris Conservatoire National de Musique et de Declamation, earning in 1956 the Premier Prix diploma. Hemke holds the distinction of being the first American saxophonist to earn a Premier Prix diploma from the Paris Conservatory. In 1958, Hemke earned a Bachelor of Science degree in music education from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. In 1962, he earned a Master of Music degree from the Eastman School of Music. In 1975, Hemke earned an A.Mus.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. In primary and secondary school, until the start of college, Hemke studied saxophonewith Eddie Schmidt, a jobbing teacher, band director in Milwaukee, and a close friend of Ralph Joseph Hermann (1914–1994) — musician, composer, songwriter, and music publisher. Hemke was highly influenced by Schmidt's recording of Marcel Mule — and also of his recordings of Al Gallodoro, and Freddy Gardner. At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Hemke studied with Jay Morton, teacher of woodwinds. Hemke did not have a formal saxophone teacher at Eastman, but while there, studied reeds with clarinetist Stanley Hasty (1920–2011), flute repertoire with Joseph Mariano (1911–2007), and oboe repertoire with Robert Sprenkle (1914–1988). Teaching career Hemke taught saxophone atNorthwestern's School of Music for fifty years. He began in 1962 as a teaching associate. In 1964 he became an assistant professor and was appointed chairman of the newly formed Winds and Percussion Instruments Department. In 1967 Hemke was elevated to associate professor; on September 1, 1975, Full Professor; and on September 1, 1991, chairman of the Department of Music Performance Studies at the School of Music. Hemke served as senior associate dean for administration in the School of Music from 1995 to 2001. In 2002, Hemke was named the Louis and Elsie Snydacker Eckstein Professor of Music and alsonamed associate dean emeritus of the School of Music. He retired from full-time teaching in 2012. As a music educator in higher education, Hemke has taught hundreds of saxophonists, many of whom have flourished as performing artists and music educators of international rank. Selected former students: Jan Berry BakerAssociate Professor of SaxophoneGeorgia State University Roger BirkelandProfessor of SaxophoneElmhurst College James BishopDirector of Instrumental MusicEastern Florida State College, Cocoa, FL Ron BlakeProfessor of Jazz SaxophoneJuilliardJazz performer andrecording artist Dave Bomberg Paul BroProfessor of SaxophoneIndiana State University Steve ColeInternational jazz performer andrecording artist David DeesProfessor of SaxophoneTexas Tech University Geoffrey Deibel, DMAAssistantProfessor of Saxophone andDirector of Jazz StudiesFlorida State University Mark EngebretsonAssociate Professor of Composition andElectronic Music University of North Carolina at Greensboro Susan FancherSaxophone InstructorDuke University Dan FerriTeacher & ownerDRF StudiosMaitland, FloridaSaxophone InstructorStetson UniversityDeland, Florida Chico FreemanJazz saxophonist Jason FrittsTeacher and Performer Bunky GreenDirector of Jazz StudiesUniversity of North Florida Jeffrey Loeffert, DMA Assistant Professor of Saxophone and TheoryOklahoma State University Jonathan HeltonProfessor of Saxophone University of Florida Frederic J.B. Hemke Professor of SaxophoneNorthern State University James S. HillProfessor of SaxophoneOhio State University William HochkeppelProfessor of SaxophoneUniversity of Louisiana at Lafayette Eric HonourProfessor of MusicDirector of Music TechnologyUniversity of CentralStreetProfessor of SaxophoneUniversity of Alberta Masahito SugiharaProfessor of SaxophoneSam Houston State University Matthew YoungloveProfessor of SaxophoneTennessee Tech University Naomi SullivanProfessor of SaxophoneBirmingham Conservatoire Shawn TracyProfessor of Jazz SaxophoneMerit School of Music Jeremy WilliamsonTeacherSeminole State College andSeminole County Public Schools Kathleen MitchellProfessor of SaxophoneThe College of New Jersey Steven JordheimProfessor of SaxophoneLawrence University Other positions Hemke was well known as the designer of a line of reeds which bear the trademark "Frederick L. Hemke Reeds." Rico Reeds began making the brand in 1982. Hemke was an artist-clinician for The Selmer Company, the North American distributor of saxophones made in France bythe Paris firm, Henri Selmer Paris. In 1979 Hemke was host for the Sixth World Saxophone Congress held at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Performing career Hemke was an internationally acclaimed saxophone artist. Hemke has appeared extensively as a solo artist and has given master classes and lectures in the United States, Canada, Scandinavia, and the Far East. He performed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and many other orchestras. He premiered several works for saxophone, including Allan Pettersson's Symphony No. 16 (February 24, 1983) and James Di Pasquale's Sonata for tenor saxophone. Di Pasquale, a prolific composer, had studied saxophone withHemke and Sigurd Rascher. Selected performances Hemke made his New York debut on April 16, 1962, at the Town Hall, a storied concert venue that had its first-ever classical saxophone performance on February 5, 1937 — by Cecil Leeson. Hemke performed compositions by Pascal, Lantier, Rueff, Hartley, and Stein and arrangements by Mule of Bach and Leclair. Premier, February 27, 2014, Augusta Read Thomas, Hemke Concerto, Prisms of Light, for solo alto saxophone and orchestra "Illuminations" () "Sunrise Ballad" "Chasing Radiance" "Solar Rings" Hemke, saxophone, with the New Haven Symphony Orchestra, William Boughton conducting Recorded at Woolsey Hall, New Haven,Connecticut, February 27, 2014 Commissioned as a retirement gift to Fred Hemke by current and former students; the composer, Thomas, had been Hemke's colleague at Northwestern From the album, A Portrait of Augusta Read Thomas, Nimbus Records (CD) (2014); Advocacy for B tenor saxophone In a traditional modern saxophone quartet — B soprano, E alto, B tenor, and E baritone saxophone — repertoire and popularity for solo classical was, and still is, dominated by B soprano and E alto saxophone. Bucking the trend, Hemke spent time focusing on the B tenor as a classical solo instrument, as evidenced by therelease of his 1971 solo album, Music for Tenor Saxophone. In orchestral music, the tenor is known as one of the three saxophone voices in Ravel's Boléro — originally performed by two saxophonists, one on E sopranino and one on tenor doubling on B soprano. Recordings by tenor saxophone virtuoso James Houlik and others notwithstanding, classical tenor saxophone recordings make up a small portion of the classical saxophone repertoire and discography universe. Selected discography Solo recordings Contest Music for Saxophone, Lapider Records M 249-04, distributed by H. & A. Selmer, Elkhart (LP) (1962) (stereo) (LP) (mono) (cassette) (mono) (LP) (mono)(LP) (LP) (LP) James Jacobs Edmonds (1931–2002), piano Hemke performed on a Selmer Mark VI Side 1 Matrix N° XCTV-87627 (mono) Matrix N° RG 576A (stereo) Side 2 Matrix N° XCTV-87628 (mono) Matrix N° RG 576A (stereo) Music for Tenor Saxophone, Brewster Records BR 1204 (LP) (1971); Milton Lewis Granger (born 1947), piano Album cover art: Fred Hemke Notes by Charles (Chuck) Brewster Hawes, PhD (born 1945) Sonata, for tenor saxophone and piano, by James Di Pasquale A Ballad in Time and Space, by William Duckworth Poem, for tenor saxophone and piano, by Walter Hartley Music for Tenor Saxophone andPiano, by Martin William Karlins The American Saxophone, Brewster Records BR 1203 (LP) (1971); Milton Lewis Granger (born 1947), piano Album cover art: Fred Hemke Notes by Alan Burrage Stout (born 1932) Concerto, for alto saxophone, by Ingolf Dahl Farewell, by Warren Benson Concerto, for alto saxophone, Karel Husa Aeolian Song, by Warren Benson Music for Tenor Saxophone (1971) and The American Saxophone (1971) was Re-issued as a compilation under the title: The American Saxophone, EnF Records 1203-2 (CD) (2006); Simple Gifts, EnF Records (CD) (2006); Douglas Cleveland, organ Recorded at Alice Miller Chapel, Northwestern University on the Æolian-Skinner Organand at Trinity United Methodist Church, Wilmette, Illinois, on the 2001 Reuter Organ Fascinating Rhythm, Sins Of My Old Age, EnF Records (CD) (2010); The Music of George Gershwin Hemke, Alto Saxophone Figard String Quintet: Tracy Figard, violin; Catherine Price, violin; Kristin Figard, viola; Sam Norlund, cello; Douglas Nestler, double bass Notes by Jonah L. Blum (born 1976) (in English) and Hemke Cover art by Hemke Premier, February 27, 2014, Augusta Read Thomas, Hemke Concerto, Prisms of Light, for solo alto saxophone and orchestra "Illuminations" () "Sunrise Ballad" "Chasing Radiance" "Solar Rings" Hemke, saxophone, with the New Haven Symphony Orchestra,William Boughton, conducting Recorded at Woolsey Hall, New Haven, Connecticut, February 27, 2014 Commissioned as a retirement gift to Fred Hemke by current and former students; the composer, Thomas, had been Hemke's colleague at Northwestern From the album, A Portrait of Augusta Read Thomas, Nimbus Records (CD) (2014); Ensemble recordings Hemke has recorded with the Eastman Wind Ensemble, and The University of Chicago Contemporary Chamber Players. Symphony No. 16, by Allan Pettersson, Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Ahronovitch conducting, Swedish Society Discofil (LP) (1985); and (CD) (1994) Recorded at the Stockholm Concert Hall, October 17 & 18, 1984 Winds of Change– American Music for Wind Ensemble From the 1950s to the 1970s, New World Records NW-211 (LP) (1977); , Northwestern University Wind Ensemble, John Philip Paynter (1928–1996) (nl) conducting Recorded November 1976 4th work: Concerto for Saxophone and Orchestra of Wind Instruments, by Ross Lee Finney, Hemke, alto saxophone Music by Warren Benson, CRI Records SD-433 & SD 418 (LP) (1981); Hemke, E alto saxophone With the Kronos Quartet: David Harrington, violin; John Sherba, violin; Hank Dutt, viola; Joan Jeanrenaud, cello Recorded November 27, 1978, Kresge Recording Studios, Eastman School of Music First work: The Dream Net, quintet for saxophoneand string quartet, commissioned by Hemke "Slow" (audio) "Quick" (audio) "Flexing" (audio) Incantations (in four movements), by Ralph Shapey, CRI Records 232 (LP) (1969); , Notes by Carter Harman For soprano, violoncello, trumpet, E alto saxophone, French horn, piano, tympani, cymbals, tomtoms, irons, and gongs Bethany Beardslee, soprano, Contemporary Chamber Players of the University of Chicago Ralph Shapey conducting Re-released CRI Records (CD) (1995); Re-released CRI Records (CD) (2007); Concerto for Saxophone and Winds by Paul Creston, Interlochen Arts Academy Records (1978) Interlochen Arts Academy Wind Ensemble, Dennis L. Johnson (born 1946) conducting 33rd Annual Midwestern Conference on School Vocaland Instrumental Music Performed live, January 21, 1978, Hill Auditorium, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Concerto for Saxophone and Wind Orchestra by Ingolf Dahl, University of Wisconsin–Madison Records (1972); University of Wisconsin–Madison Wind Ensemble, (H. Robert Reynolds) conducting Chicago Symphony Orchestra Pictures at an Exhibition, by Mussorgsky, orchestrated by Ravel, Ozawa conducting (1968); L'Arlésienne Suites Nos. 1 and 2, by Bizet, RCA Red Seal LSC-2939 (LP) (1967); Jean Martinon conducting Re-released RCA Camden Classics Victrola CCV 5011 (LP) (1971) Re-released RCA VICS 1593 (LP) (1971); Re-released RCA (LP) (1977); Re-released RCA LPS 9845 (LP) Age of Gold (ballet suite), byby Del Tredici, Decca, London (LP) (1981); Barbara Hendricks, soprano; Fred Hemke, Robert Black, soprano saxophones; Fred Spector, mandolin; Frederic Chrislip, tenor banjo; Herman Troppe, accordion; Solti conducting Recorded January 1980, Medinah Temple, Chicago Re-released on Decca Eloquence 442 995, Australia (CD) (2008); Selected publications Educational publications The Early History of the Saxophone (DMA dissertation), by Hemke, University of Wisconsin (1975); The dissertation explores in depth the saxophone's history and gradual acceptance in the realm of symphonic music On Reading Music: An Information Processing Analysis, by Gilbert Koreb Krulee (born 1924) & Hemke (1980); The Selmer Series, Elkhart, Indiana "Teacher'sGuide to the Saxophone," by Hemke, Elkhart, Indiana: Selmer (1977); The Orchestral Saxophone, by Hemke & Walker L Smith, Elkhart, Indiana: Selmer (1975); A Comprehensive Listing of Saxophone Literature, by Hemke, Elkhart, Indiana: Selmer (1975); Commissions and dedications "Music for Tenor Saxophone and Piano," by M. William Karlins (1969, ©1972); Symphony No. 16, for orchestra with bravura alto saxophone, by Allan Pettersson, commissioned by Hemke (1979, ©1989); The Dream Net, 1974, revised 1978, by Warren Benson, commissioned by Hemke, dedicated to Alec Wilder, premiered by Hemke May 23, 1975, with the Eckstein Quartet, Lutken Hall, Northwestern University; "Wind Rose", byWarren Benson (1966), commissioned by Hemke and the Northwestern University Saxophone, dedicated to Hemke and the Northwestern University Saxophone Quartet on their tour of Asia, Spring, 1966; Little Suite, by Walter Hartley, for Hemke, for baritone saxophone and piano (1974); 5 Etudes for Alto Saxophone, by Robert Lemay (fr), Courlay: Éditions Fuzeau 2000; Revised 2006; , , Commissioned by Jean-François Guay Homage to Marcel Mule, Jean-Marie Londeix, Eugene Rousseau, Fred Hemke, Daniel Deffayet Funded in part by the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec Episode, for saxophone quartet, by Jared Tozier Spears (born 1936), commissioned by Hemke (1969);Symphony for Saxophone and Wind Band, by Gerald Eugene Kemner (1932–2006) (composed around 1962 for Hemke) Music editions Hemke has edited works for saxophone solos and saxophone ensembles, twenty-five of which are part of the Frederick Hemke Saxophone Series published by the Southern Music Company. Awards and honors Hemke's saxophone and accessories Hemke had been a primary design consultant for the S-80 mouthpiece manufactured by Henri Selmer Paris. For alto saxophone, Hemke uses a custom version of the S-80. The mouthpiece is metal with a square chamber. The Selmer Mark VII E alto and B tenor saxophones, introduced in 1974,were designed in consultation with Hemke. Miscellaneous For research, while in grad school at Eastman, Hemke had borrowed from H. & A. Selmer one of the world's original saxophones made by Adolphe Sax around 1860. On September 17, 1960, a custodian unwittingly stuffed a cardboard box containing the instrument into an incinerator and completely destroyed it. The only other one in existence was in a Paris museum. Hemke has been a lifelong visual artist. His works are in the Regenstein Hall of Music at Northwestern University and on the covers of his albums. Audio samples and videography , by AllanPettersson Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Ahronovitch conducting, Swedish Society Discofil (1994); , by Claudio Gabriele (composed 2005) For 12 saxophones North American premier Northwestern University Saxophone Ensemble, Hemke conducting , by Claudio Gabriele (composed 2011) For 9 saxophones World premiere, 2008, Pick-Steiger Concert Hall, Evanston, Illinois Northwestern University Saxophone Ensemble, Hemke conducting Hemke Legacy Tribute: May 29 – June 3, 1912, Northwestern University 7:30 , May 31, 2012, Pick-Staiger Concert Hall, Northwestern University Songs by Gershwin, arranged by Jonah L. Blum (born 1976) Northwestern University Chamber Orchestra, Robert Hasty conducting Scenes from Porgy and Bess "Summertime" () "Bess, You IsMy Woman Now" () "I Got Plenty o' Nuttin' " () "Gone, Gone, Gone" () "I Loves You, Porgy" () "Summertime" () (Brahms's Variations on the St. Anthony Chorale by Haydn) Arranged by Gary S. Bricault (born 1952) at the request of Fred Hemke Northwestern University Alumni Saxo Orchestra, Stephen Alltop conducting Performed June 3, 2012, at Northwestern University 105 saxophones: 3 E sopraninos, 23 B sopranos, 35 E altos, 25 B tenors, 12 E baritones, 6 B basses, and 1 E contra bass tubax , Eric Howell Music (DVD) (2012); Notes References Category:American classical saxophonists Category:American male saxophonists Category:Musicians
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Dennis M. Hanno (born 1956) is the current president of Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. He was appointed on February 22, 2014 as the college's eighth president, succeeding Ronald Crutcher, who retired in June 2014. Education Hanno grew up in a small town in upstate New York and attended the University of Notre Dame where he studied accountancy. He graduated from Notre Dame in 1977 with a Bachelor of Business Administration. He attended graduate school at Western New England University where he earned a Master of Science in Accounting in 1981. He then attended the Isenberg School of Management atUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst where he studied accounting and psychology and obtained a PhD in Management in 1990. Career Before beginning his career in higher education, Hanno worked as a certified public accountant in New York and Massachusetts, founding and running his own firm in Lowville, New York from 1982 to 1985. In 1990, he became an assistant professor of accounting at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College, where he worked until 1992. From 1992-2006, Hanno worked at the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Isenberg School of Management where he taught as an associate and assistant professor of accountinghave been made possible with the support of the Diana Davis Spencer Foundation and include the establishment of an endowed professorship in social entrepreneurship. The focus on social innovation reflects Hanno's work as an educator and entrepreneur. He is the founder and head of IDEA4Africa, a non-profit that seeks to inspire and equip youth entrepreneurs to develop social and economic value for their communities and for the world. The organization grew from Hanno's work leading leadership and innovation seminars in East Africa, work that he began during his tenure at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is an occasional contributorto The Washington Post. He also serves as a commissioner of the New England Commission on Higher Education, a three-year term that began in 2019. Family and personal life Hanno is married to his wife, Susan. They have two children, Ted and Emily. References 1. Wheaton Names Dennis Hanno as New President. Wheaton College: Presidential Transition, wheatoncollege.edu. Retrieved 12 March 2014. 2. Wheaton Welcomes President-Elect Hanno. Wheaton College: Presidential Transition, wheatoncollege.edu. Retrieved 12 March 2014. 3. Dennis M. Hanno CV. Wheaton College: Presidential Transition, wheatoncollege.edu. Retrieved 12 March 2014. 4. Accounting Alumnus of the Year 2013: Dennis Hannon PhD ’90.
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Jerome Klein was an American art historian and art critic and a founding member of the American Artists' Congress (AAC). Career Klein began his career as an instructor in art history at Columbia University in the late 1920s, the only member of the department interested in modern art. In 1933 Klein signed a letter protesting the decision of the university to invite Hans Luther, the Ambassador from Nazi Germany, to speak at Columbia. Although other professors also signed the letter, Klein’s return address left on one of the letters by a careless student opponent of fascism identified Klein as theringleader. According to Stephen H. Norwood, Columbia University President Nicholas Murray Butler, an admirer of Italian and German fascism, fired Klein for signing the letter. Klein became the art critic for the New York Post, writing also for other publications. He was a champion of the socialist artists of the 1930s, calling for a “broad, unified social-artistic engineering which would transform man’s environment for the benefit of man.” In 1935 Klein was a founding member of the American Artists' Congress, organized in response to the call of the Popular Front and the American Communist Party for formations of literary and
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is a 143 m (469 ft) tall office skyscraper in Tokyo, Japan. At 38 stories the building is the 86th tallest building in Tokyo. It contains 1.4 million sq ft (134,974 m²) of office space, 100% of which is now occupied by Mizuho Bank, the consumer banking arm of the second-largest Japanese financial conglomerate Mizuho Financial Group, while still called the DKB Head Office from time to time. The building was built in Chiyoda at 1 Uchisaiwaichō in 1981, when it was called the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank Head Office Building. It was designed by architects Yoshinobu Ashihara & Partners and
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Navalram Laxmiram Pandya (Gujarati: નવલરામ) (9 March 1836 – 7 August 1888) was a Gujarati critic, playwright, poet, essayist, editor, educationist and a social reformer. He is considered to be a most important figure in modern Gujarati literature. The first humourist, the first historical dramatist, the first critic and a leading scholar of his age, Navalram was the first to herald the new generation of writers like Manilal Dwivedi, Govardhanram Tripathi and Narsinhrao Divetia. His writings covered numerous areas, including philosophy, patriotism, reformation, education, journalism, grammar and literature. Life Navalram was born on 9 March 1836 in Surat (now inGujarat) to Nandkor and Lakshmiram Pandya. Physically weak as a child, he didn't take much interest in games and was introvert in nature. At the age of eleven, he passed the final vernacular exam and got admission in an English school as a free merit scholar. He passed his matriculation exam in 1853. Though he was a prodigy in mathematics he didn't go to college and joined as an Additional Teacher at the English High School in Surat in 1854. From there he went to Deesa and joined the Anglo Vernacular School. Then he became the assistant principal of AhmedabadTraining College and worked there from 1870 to 1876. In 1876, he became the Principal of Rajkot Training College and lived there until his death on 7 August 1888. In 1847, at the age of 11, he married Shivagauri, who died after 10 months of marriage. His second marriage was with Manigauri in 1850. His son, Dhimatram, was born in 1867, while his daughter, Kamla, in 1871. Govardhanram Tripathi and Vijayray Vaidya published his biography as Navalram Lakshmiram Ni Jivankatha (1940) and Shukra Tarak (1944) respectively. Works In addition to writing literary essays and book reviews, Navalram was a criticof distinction. He started his writing career with a report on the Maharaj Libel Case (1863). Plays In 1867, he penned the Gujarati Bhatnu Bhopalu, based on Henry Fielding's The Mock Doctor, a play which in its turn had been adapted from French playwright Molière's Le Médecin malgré lui. He wrote the historical play Veermati in 1869, based on the story of Jagdev Parmar, published in Alexander Kinloch Forbes' Ras Mala. Criticism He reviewed the first Gujarati novel, Karan Ghelo in Gujarat Mitra daily in 1867, pioneering the criticism of Gujarati literature. Prose Navalram was an editor of Gujarat ShalaPatra, a periodical on education. He wrote serial commentary on poetry with humour titled Akbarshah ane Birbal Nimitte Hindi Hasyatarang in the periodical from 1860 to 1870. His other serialized writing in periodical Engrej Lok no Sankshipt Itihas (Concise History of Englishmen, 1880–1887) was later edited and published by Balwantray Thakore in 1924. He translated Kalidasa's Meghadūta (1870) in Gujarati and also discussed the methodology of translation in it. Kavijivan (1888) is a biographical work on Gujarati poet and social reformer Narmad based on his autobiography, Mari Hakikat. Others His poetry collections Balalagnabatrisi (1876) criticized child marriage while Balagarbavali (1877)
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"Red Sleeping Beauty" was the second single by McCarthy released in October 1986. The B-sides were "From the Damned", "God the Father" and "For the Fat Lady". The latter two were only available on the 12" vinyl release. The single is not on any of the band's three studio albums. It can be found on the releases A La Guillotine and That's All Very Well But.... The song is believed to have been written as a protest to the Margaret Thatcher government. The song has been covered by Manic Street Preachers frontman James Dean Bradfield and features as a B-side
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Paul Bird (13 February 1923 – 5 May 1993) was an English artist and teacher who had a long and varied career. Biography Bird was born in London and studied at the Bath School of Art under Clifford Ellis. In Bath, Bird met the elderly Walter Sickert who became a major influence on him. During World War Two, Bird served in the Royal Navy and was deployed to the Far East and India. While on active service, Bird continued to paint and submitted a number of works to the War Artists' Advisory Committee, WAAC. WAAC eventually purchased a small numberof these pictures and they are now held in the Imperial War Museum and the British Government Art Collection. After the war, Bird studied at the Institute of Education in London, where his lecturers included Nikolaus Pevsner, before returning to Bath to teach art at the Bath Art Secondary School. In the early 1950s, Bird taught for a time as Head of Painting at the Bretton Hall Training College. In 1953 he joined the Community of the Resurrection at Mirfield in Yorkshire. Bird lived as a lay member of the Anglo-Catholic community there for eight years. When he left Mirfield,Bird joined the teaching staff at the Royal College of Art under Robin Darwin. There he taught drawing in the Film and Television School on a part-time basis before taking a full-time role as the vice-principal of the Central School of Art and Design. Bird worked at the Central from 1961 until 1983. From 1983 until the last year of his life, Bird presented an influential series of summer school lectures on The Art of Seeing. References External links Category:1923 births Category:1993 deaths Category:20th-century British painters Category:Academics of the Central School of Art and Design Category:Academics of the Royal College
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Miss Universe 1964, the 13th Miss Universe pageant, was held on 1 August 1964 at the Miami Beach Convention Hall in Miami Beach, Florida, United States. Corinna Tsopei of Greece was crowned by the outgoing titleholder, Ieda Maria Vargas of Brazil, making her the first and so far only Miss Universe from Greece. Results Placements Contestants - María Amalia Ramírez - Lidia Lidwina Henriquez - Ria Lubyen - Gloria Mackh - Catherine Cartwright - Danièle Defrere - Olga Mónica del Carpio Oropeza - Ângela Vasconcelos - Mary Rande Holl - Mary Lou Farrell - Annette Dona Kulatunga - Patricia HerreraCigna - Alba Ramírez Plaza - Dora Marcela Sola - Iris Anette de Windt - Yvonne Mortensen - Clara Chapuseaux Soñé - Tanya Yela Klein Loffredo - Brenda Blackler - Sirpa Wallenius - Edith Noël - Marina Kettler - Corinna Tsopei - Christine Hughes - Henny Deul - Mary Bai - Thelma Ingvarsdóttir - Meher Castelino Mistri - Maurine Elizabeth Lecky - Ronit Rinat - Emanuela Stramana - Beverly Rerrie - Chizuko Matsumoto - Shin Jung-hyun - Mariette Sophie - Angela Filmer - Lyndal Ursula Cruickshank - Edna Park - Jorunn Nystedt Barun Okinawa - Toyoko Uehara - Maritza Montilla
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The Ice Cube Curling Center () is a 3,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Sochi, Russia, that opened in 2012. It is a component of the Sochi Olympic Park. It hosted all the curling events at the 2014 Winter Olympics and the wheelchair curling events at the 2014 Winter Paralympics. It cost $14.0 million to build the venue, including the temporary works for the Olympics and Paralympics. It opened in 2012. After the 2014 games, it will remain a sports arena. The venue is a portable venue, designed so that it could possibly be re-located after the end of the games. References
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Năvodari (, historical names: Carachioi; Caracoium, ) is a town in Constanța County, region of Northern Dobruja, Romania, with a population of 32,400. The town formally includes a territorially distinct community, Social Group Peninsula, and administers the neighbouring village of Mamaia-Sat. Etymology The name of the town means "trawlers" in Romanian. History The settlement was mentioned for the first time in 1421 under the name Kara Koyun ("Black Sheep"), to be renamed later on Karaköy or Carachioi ("The Black Village"). In 1927, the locality was again renamed to Năvodari and after five years, on 15 August 1932, it was grantedcamp (the largest one in Romania), built under the communist regime for school children. Due to its interesting programmes, good accommodation and affordable prices, it was extremely popular among teachers and parents. In the early 2000s, it was opened for the public at large as a cheap seaside resort. Demographics At the 2011 census, Năvodari had 29,873 Romanians (94.67%), 283 Hungarians (0.90%), 309 Roma (0.98%), 10 Germans (0.03%), 297 Turks (0.94%), 115 Tatars (0.36%), 545 Lipovans (1.73%), 27 Aromanians (0.09%), 77 others (0.24%), 18 with undeclared ethnicity (0.06%) . Gallery Notable natives Adrian Lungu, Romania's most capped rugby union player,
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In probability theory and statistics, the Poisson distribution (; in English often rendered ), named after French mathematician Siméon Denis Poisson, is a discrete probability distribution that expresses the probability of a given number of events occurring in a fixed interval of time or space if these events occur with a known constant mean rate and independently of the time since the last event. The Poisson distribution can also be used for the number of events in other specified intervals such as distance, area or volume. For instance, an individual keeping track of the amount of mail they receive eachconditions are true, then is a Poisson random variable, and the distribution of is a Poisson distribution. The Poisson distribution is also the limit of a binomial distribution, for which the probability of success for each trial equals divided by the number of trials, as the number of trials approaches infinity (see Related distributions). Probability of events for a Poisson distribution An event can occur 0, 1, 2, ... times in an interval. The average number of events in an interval is designated (lambda). is the event rate, also called the rate parameter. The probability of observing events in annoting that , and computing a lower bound on the unconditional probability gives the result. More details can be found in the appendix of Kamath et al.. Related distributions General If and are independent, then the difference follows a Skellam distribution. If and are independent, then the distribution of conditional on is a binomial distribution. Specifically, if , then . More generally, if X1, X2,..., Xn are independent Poisson random variables with parameters λ1, λ2,..., λn then given . In fact, . If and the distribution of , conditional on X = k, is a binomial distribution, , then thedistribution of Y follows a Poisson distribution . In fact, if , conditional on X = k, follows a multinomial distribution, , then each follows an independent Poisson distribution . The Poisson distribution can be derived as a limiting case to the binomial distribution as the number of trials goes to infinity and the expected number of successes remains fixed — see law of rare events below. Therefore, it can be used as an approximation of the binomial distribution if n is sufficiently large and p is sufficiently small. There is a rule of thumb stating that the Poisson distributionis a good approximation of the binomial distribution if n is at least 20 and p is smaller than or equal to 0.05, and an excellent approximation if n ≥ 100 and np ≤ 10. The Poisson distribution is a special case of the discrete compound Poisson distribution (or stuttering Poisson distribution) with only a parameter. The discrete compound Poisson distribution can be deduced from the limiting distribution of univariate multinomial distribution. It is also a special case of a compound Poisson distribution. For sufficiently large values of λ, (say λ>1000), the normal distribution with mean λ and variance λwhole interval. Hence for each subdivision of the interval we have approximated the occurrence of the event as a Bernoulli process of the form . As we have noted before we want to consider only very small subintervals. Therefore, we take the limit as goes to infinity. In this case the binomial distribution converges to what is known as the Poisson distribution by the Poisson limit theorem. In several of the above examples—such as, the number of mutations in a given sequence of DNA—the events being counted are actually the outcomes of discrete trials, and would more precisely be modelledusing the binomial distribution, that is In such cases n is very large and p is very small (and so the expectation np is of intermediate magnitude). Then the distribution may be approximated by the less cumbersome Poisson distribution This approximation is sometimes known as the law of rare events,since each of the n individual Bernoulli events rarely occurs. The name may be misleading because the total count of success events in a Poisson process need not be rare if the parameter np is not small. For example, the number of telephone calls to a busy switchboard in one hourgenerator based upon the inversion by sequential search: init: Let x ← 0, p ← e−λ, s ← p. Generate uniform random number u in [0,1]. while u > s do: x ← x + 1. p ← p × λ / x. s ← s + p. return x. History The distribution was first introduced by Siméon Denis Poisson (1781–1840) and published together with his probability theory in his work Recherches sur la probabilité des jugements en matière criminelle et en matière civile(1837). The work theorized about the number of wrongful convictions in a given country by focusing onspace. A further practical application of this distribution was made by Ladislaus Bortkiewicz in 1898 when he was given the task of investigating the number of soldiers in the Prussian army killed accidentally by horse kicks; this experiment introduced the Poisson distribution to the field of reliability engineering. See also Compound Poisson distribution Conway–Maxwell–Poisson distribution Erlang distribution Hermite distribution Index of dispersion Negative binomial distribution Poisson clumping Poisson point process Poisson regression Poisson sampling Poisson wavelet Queueing theory Renewal theory Robbins lemma Skellam distribution Tweedie distribution Zero-inflated model Zero-truncated Poisson distribution References Citations Sources Further reading Category:Articles with example pseudocode
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Squamanita paradoxa, commonly known as powdercap strangler, is a species of fungus in the family Tricholomataceae. It is a parasitic fungus that grows as a gall on another fungus, Cystoderma amianthinum. The species was first described as Cystoderma paradoxum by American mycologists Alexander H. Smith and Rolf Singer in 1948, based on specimens collected in Mount Hood National Forest in Oregon. Cornelis Bas transferred the species to the genus Squamanita in 1965. In 2011, it was reported from Worcestershire, UK. References External links Category:Fungi described in 1948 Category:Fungi of Europe Category:Fungi of North America Category:Tricholomataceae Category:Taxa named by Alexander H.
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Saeed Farajpouri, was born on February 20, 1961 in Sanadaj, Iran. He is a composer, performer and an instructor of a classical Iranian instrument called Kamancheh or Spike Fiddle. He started learning music at age 9 under Maestro Hassan Kamkar, and thenlearned the Iranian music repertoire (Radif) under Maestro Mohammad Reza Lotfi and the ensemble performance under the instruction of maestro Hossein Alizadeh He has performed at several ensembles such as: Shayda, Aref, Aava, Paivar and Dastan. He has instructed Kamancheh at Chavosh Music Center, Music Conservatory of Tehran, and several universities and art institutes inside and outside Iran. Saeedcollaborated with Maestro Mohammad Reza Shajarian for more than three decades performing at many concerts inside and outside Iran and in albums such as Shab e Vasl, Ahang e Vafa, Rosvai e Del, Dastan, Aaram e jaan, Aaseman e Eshgh, and Del Shodegan. He also has several solo recordings such as: Kamancheh Album, Segah Homayoon, and Kurdish folklore music. In Kurdish music, he has produced the following albums such as: Awaat, Zamaneh, in memory of S. Ali Asghar Kurdestani. In the genre of the Iranian Classical music, Saeed has made the following albums: ▪ Qoqaye Eshghbazan , with Iranian instrumentalist
### Assistant:
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Nashoba Regional High School (NRHS) is a high school (grades 9-12) that is part of the Nashoba Regional School District. It is located in Bolton, Massachusetts, United States and also serves the towns of Lancaster and Stow. As of the 2018-2019 school year, it had a student population of just over 1300. History The high school was built in 1961, originally only being one-story high. It has since had large renovations, including many more classrooms, a new auditorium, administrative offices, and a second gymnasium. Additionally, Nashoba Regional High School is a filming site of notable alumni Chris Fleming, used as
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Gabriel Fragnière (4 March 1934 – 9 September 2015) was a Swiss university professor, philosopher and scientific researcher. Biography Fragnière was born in Lausanne. He graduated in Philosophy at the University of Lausanne. He continued with a postgraduate at the College of Europe in Bruges (1959–1960) and became assistant to the rector and director of studies at the College (1961–1966). He then went to the United States and studied during two years the history of religions (1966–1968). In 1993 he obtained his doctorate in philosophy at the University of Maastricht. Fragnière's career has been entirely devoted to European matters, including
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{{Infobox video game | title = Farming Simulator | image = Farming Simulator Logo.png | caption = Logo used on the Farming Simulator 15, 17 and 19 releases | developer = *Giants Software (2008–present) | publisher = *Astragon (2008-2011) Focus Home Interactive (2013-present) Excalibur Publishing (2008-2012) | platforms = iOS, Android, Kindle, Microsoft Windows, Mac OS, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita, Xbox 360, Nintendo 3DS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Commodore 64, Stadia | released = {{collapsible list|title=Farming Simulator|titlestyle=font-weight:normal;font-size:15px;background:transparent;text-align:left| 13 14 15 PC, MAC15 X360, PS3, XONE, PS416 17 All platforms18 PlayStation Vita, Android, iOS, Nintendo 3DS19 All platforms}} |genre = Simulation | modes = Single-player, multiplayer | designer = | artist = | writer = | composer = }}Farming Simulator is a farming simulation video game series developed by Giants Software. The locations are based on American and European environments. Players are able to farm, breed livestock, grow crops and sell assets created from farming. The games have sold over four million copies combined. Gameplay Farming Simulator is a series of farming simulation games set in an open world environment and played from a third-person perspective and also a first-person perspective. Career In career mode, the player takessuch as mowing grass or delivering cargo. If the player successfully completes the task, they are rewarded with a sum of money, plus a bonus based on how quickly the task was completed. Multiplayer Farming Simulator 2014 is the first mobile Farming Simulator to have multiplayer mode. Farming Simulator 16 has Bluetooth functionality. Current generation consoles have multiplayer (Farming Simulator on the last generation consoles was the first console port of the game, with all features of 2013 Titanium). Farming Simulator 15 for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One also has a multiplayer mode. Games PC and console Farming Simulator 2008series to feature a multiplayer mode. It was greatly expanded with the introduction of a new map. Machinery from Deutz-Fahr, Pöttinger, and Horsch were added (also featured in the FS 2009 Gold edition). Cows were also an addition to this title. Farming Simulator 2013 The initial release for Farming Simulator 2013 was on October 26, 2012. A version was released for the PlayStation Vita on July 2, 2013, known as Farming Simulator. Almost a year after its PC release, it received a large update and re-release under the title Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition, on October 10, 2013. It containsis the Claas DLC including a combine and new tractors which was released on October 22, 2019. Farming Simulator 20 Farming Simulator 20 was released on December 3, 2019 on Nintendo Switch in North America and Europe, and will be released in Japan on May 28, 2020. It looks to be based on Farming Simulator 19's rendering engine, and also includes many features from said title. Mobile Farming Simulator 2012 Farming Simulator 2012 was released for the Nintendo 3DS, iOS, Android, and Windows Phone devices in 2011. The 3DS version also supported new 3D graphics. Farming Simulator 14 Farming Simulator14 was released for iOS, Android, Nintendo 3DS, Windows Phone and PlayStation Vita on November 18, 2013, and gives a more polished and more casual gaming experience on mobile platforms than its predecessors. There are 10-20 brands in the game. Farming Simulator 16 Farming Simulator 16 was released for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, and PlayStation Vita on May 8, 2015. Farming Simulator 18 The game was announced for release on the Nintendo 3DS, iOS, Android, and PlayStation Vita. It was released on June 6, 2017. It was based on Farming Simulator 17 and included all new features of that gamewith some new features of Farming Simulator 19. Farming Simulator 20 The game was announced for release on iOS and Android. It was released on December 3, 2019. Reception References External links Category:Android (operating system) games Category:Farming video games Category:IOS games Category:MacOS games Category:Open world video games Category:PlayStation 3 games Category:PlayStation Vita games Category:Simulation video games Category:Windows games Category:Nintendo Switch games Category:Video games developed in Switzerland Category:Xbox 360 games Category:Multiplayer and single-player video games Category:Xbox One games Category:PlayStation 4 games Category:Lua-scripted video games Category:2008 video games Category:2009 video games Category:2010 video games Category:2012 video games Category:2013 video games Category:2014 video
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The National Museum of American Illustration (NMAI), founded in 1998, is the first national museum to be devoted exclusively to American illustration artwork. The NMAI is located on Newport, Rhode Island's historic Bellevue Avenue in the mansion Vernon Court, designed by the noted Gilded Age architecture firm Carrère and Hastings. The museum's collection contains over 2,000 original works by noted American illustrators such as Norman Rockwell, Maxfield Parrish, J. C. Leyendecker, N.C. Wyeth, and others. History The NMAI was founded in 1998 by husband and wife team Laurence S. Cutler and Judy Goffman Cutler, with the National Arts Club asits founding institution. The museum opened its doors to the public on July 4, 2000 at the Carrère and Hastings designed Vernon Court estate in Newport, Rhode Island. In addition to Vernon Court, the adjacent property on Bellevue Avenue, Stoneacre, is owned by the museum. The property is named for the demolished mansion designed by architect William Appleton Potter for John W. Ellis that once occupied the site. The grounds for the site were designed by the noted landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, and following the purchase of the site by the NMAI founders, it has been restored as anmanners. In that atmosphere, Vernon Court was constructed in 1898 by Carrère and Hastings to be used as a summer cottage for a young widow, Anna Van Nest Gambrill (1865–1927). The property remained in the Gambrill family until 1956, when it was auctioned. In 1963, Vernon Court Junior College, a small all girls college, was founded with Vernon Court serving as the school's administrative building until its closing in 1972. Over the next two and a half decades it passed through several different owners. In 1998, Vernon Court was acquired by the Museum founders: Judy Goffman Cutler and Laurence S.
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Christof Koch (; born November 13, 1956) is a German-American neuroscientist best known for his work on the neural bases of consciousness. He is the president and chief scientist of the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle. From 1986 until 2013, he was a professor at the California Institute of Technology. Early life and education Koch was born in the Midwestern United States, and subsequently was raised in the Netherlands, Germany, Canada, and Morocco. Koch is the son of German parents; his father was a diplomat, as is his older brother Michael. He was raised as a Roman Catholicand attended a Jesuit high school in Morocco. He received a PhD in sciences for his works in the field of nonlinear information processing from the Max Planck Institute in Tübingen, Germany, in 1982. Koch worked for four years at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at MIT before joining, in 1986, the newly started Computation and Neural Systems PhD program at the California Institute of Technology. Career Koch has authored more than 300 scientific papers and five books about how computers and neurons process information . In 1986, Koch and Shimon Ullman proposed the idea of a visual saliency map inthat consciousness can be approached using the modern tools of neurobiology. He and his student Nao Tsuchiya invented continuous flash suppression, an efficient psychophysical masking technique for rendering images invisible for many seconds. They have used this technique to argue that selective attention and consciousness are distinct phenomena, with distinct biological functions and mechanisms. Koch's primary collaborator in the endeavor of locating the neural correlates of consciousness was the molecular biologist turned neuroscientist, Francis Crick, starting with their first paper in 1990 and their last one, that Crick edited on the day of his death, July 24, 2004, on therelationship between the claustrum, a mysterious anatomical structure situated underneath the insular cortex, and consciousness. Over the last decade, Koch has worked closely with the psychiatrist and neuroscientist Giulio Tononi. Koch advocates for a modern variant of panpsychism, the ancient philosophical belief that some form of consciousness can be found in all things. Tononi's Integrated Information Theory (IIT) of consciousness differs from classical panpsychism in that it only ascribes consciousness to things with some degree of irreducible cause-effect power, which does not include "a bunch of disconnected neurons in a dish, a heap of sand, a galaxy of stars orthe Neuromorphic Engineering summer school in Telluride, Colorado in 1994 and the Dynamic Brain summer course at the Friday Harbor Laboratories on San Juan Island in 2014. All three summer schools continue to be taught. In early 2011, Koch became the chief scientist and the President of the Allen Institute for Brain Science, leading their ten-year project concerning high-throughput large-scale cortical coding. The mission is to understand the computations that lead from photons to behavior by observing and modeling the physical transformations of signals in the visual brain of behaving mice. The project seeks to catalogue all the building blocks(ca. 100 distinct cell types) of the then visual cortical regions and associated structures (thalamus, colliculus) and their dynamics. The scientists seek to know what the animal sees, how it thinks, and how it decides. They seek to map out the murine mind in a quantitative manner. The Allen Institute for Brain Science currently employs about 300 scientists, engineers, technologists and supporting personnel. The first eight years of this ten-year endeavor to build brain observatories were funded by a donation more than $500 million by Microsoft founder and philanthropist Paul G. Allen. Koch is a proponent of the idea ofRoberts and Co., (2004), Consciousness: Confessions of a Romantic Reductionist, The MIT Press, (2012), The Feeling of Life Itself - Why Consciousness is Widespread but Can't be Computed, The MIT Press, (2019), References External links at the California Institute of Technology Neural Correlates of Consciousness, Scholarpedia article by Koch. Koch's Current Book Blog Multimedia Online lecture videos from an undergraduate course taught by Koch on the neurobiological basis of consciousness. Moth talk about Koch's relationship to God, death and Francis Crick. Interview with historian Harry Kreissler at UC Berkeley, 2006 Interview on the Brain Science Podcast, 2011 Interview on the
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Rebecca Treston (born February 3, 1982) better known by her ring name Rebecca "Becky" Bayless, is an American professional wrestler, currently working for independent promotions such as Women's Extreme Wrestling, Wrestling Superstars Unleashed, Wrestlicious, and Women Superstars Uncensored. In the past she has worked for a number of major independent promotions, primarily Ring of Honor (ROH), Full Impact Pro, and Shimmer Women Athletes. She is also known for working for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) under the ring name Cookie and for ROH and Shimmer as a backstage/in-ring interviewer. Career Prior to her 2004 accident, Bayless was initially known asa valet for wrestlers, particularly Jimmy Jacobs, and mostly in Combat Zone Wrestling and IWA-Mid South, but occasionally wrestled for promotions. This includes during one 3-way tag team match in Mid South where during a point when many wrestlers performed 'Dives' off an announce position, Bayless herself leaped on top of the participating wrestlers, including the ones she was managing, shortly followed by commentator Dave Prazak and the referee of the match. Ring of Honor (2003–2004; 2007) Bayless made her debut in Ring of Honor (ROH) in 2003, as part of the Special K stable as a valet. During hertime she wrestled occasionally, including losses to Alexis Laree. The high point during this time was Bayless' involvement in the break-up of the stable in the later part of 2004. After a series of losses suffered by her teammates, she began arguing with fellow stablemate Lacey. This ultimately leading to cat fights after matches, and eventually the break-up on ROH's show on December 4 when after a six-man tag team loss to three ROH wrestling school students, the team of Izzy, Deranged and Lacey turned on Dixie, Angel Dust and Bayless. Later in the month, December 26, the two sideswould meet in a mixed tag tam match, where Bayless would be pinned by Lacey. Following a severe automobile accident, this would be the last Bayless would be seen anywhere in wrestling for a number of years, and subsequently was written out of the storyline. In 2007, Bayless returned to ROH and to pro wrestling at ROH's January 26 event, conducting an in-ring interview with the then new ROH World Champion Homicide. Bayless remained in the role as backstage and in-ring interviewer for the duration of her time with Ring of Honor, regularly being seen on DVD releases in promosWomen Superstars Uncensored (2007–present) Since her return, Bayless has had a long-standing feud with Alicia in Wrestling Superstars Unleashed, and in their sister all-women's promotion Women Superstars Uncensored. This cumulated on September 22, 2007, with a loss in a No-DQ grudge match for the WSU Women's Title which was billed as Alicia's retirement match. The next night Bayless and Alicia revealed that their feud had been a plan between the two to make the other look good in the ring. Alicia attempted to hand her title to Bayless, but they were interrupted by Tammy Lynn Sytch who stopped their plan,resume her feud with Rick Cataldo, defeating him on WSU iPPV. Bayless quickly got a shot at the WSU Spirit Championship, but was defeated by Jessicka Havok. At the WSU's 5th Anniversary Show pay-per-view, Bayless lost to Jennifer Cruz after Cruz used the ropes. Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2010–2011) On the June 5, 2008, episode of TNA Impact!, Bayless made a one-off appearance as a candidate for Awesome Kong's $25,000 Fan Challenge along with fellow wrestlers Amber O'Neal, and Daffney who was picked for the challenge. At the August 10, 2010, tapings of Impact! Treston, working under the name CookieX Division Champion Kazarian and his wife Traci Brooks. On the edition of March 3 of Impact!, Cookie and Robbie aligned themselves with former Jersey Shore cast member Angelina Pivarnick, with whom they bonded through their mutual dislike of Jenni "JWoww" Farley, whom Pivarnick proceeded to challenge to a match. The following week, Cookie teamed with Pivarnick and Sarita in a six knockout tag team match, where they were defeated by Angelina Love, Velvet Sky and Winter. On the edition of August 11 of Impact Wrestling, Robbie broke up with Cookie, after she inadvertently cost him his match against Xwritten out of it. Personal life On December 31, 2004 Bayless was involved in a severe automobile accident. Bayless suffered internal bruising, a sprained ankle, nerve damage to her neck and also injured her rotator cuff as a result. Prior to this Bayless was planning to study overseas in Europe and as a result these plans were cancelled. Championships and accomplishments Pro Wrestling Illustrated PWI ranked her 37 of the best 50 female singles wrestlers in the PWI Female 50 in 2008. Texas Wrestling Entertainment TWE Texas Ladies Championship (1 time) USA Pro Wrestling Miss USA Pro Beauty Contest Winner
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List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Ontario County, New York This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Ontario County, New York. The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below) may be seen in a map by clicking on "Map of all coordinates". One property, Boughton Hill, is further designated a National Historic Landmark. __NOTOC__ County-wide listings |} See also National Register of Historic Places listings in New York References Ontario County *
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Salawas railway station is a main railway station in Jodhpur district, Rajasthan. Its code is SZ. It serves Salawas city. The station consists of a single platform. It lacks many facilities including water and sanitation. It is located approximately 8 km from Jodhpur railway station. The railway station is under the administrative control of North Western Railway of Indian Railways. Major Trains Some of the important trains that runs from Salawas are : Ahmedabad Jodhpur Passenger (UnReserved) Ajmer - Jodhpur Fast Passenger Barmer - Jodhpur DMU Barmer Jodhpur Passenger (UnReserved) Bhildi Jodhpur Demu Jodhpur - Palanpur DMU References Category:Railway stations
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Politics) University of Cambridge, UK, 1967. M.A. (Political Science) University of Karachi, 1962. Career 2000–2001 Cabinet Secretary, Government of Pakistan, Islamabad 1997–1999 Director, National Institute of Public Administration, Karachi Chairperson, The Pakistan Institute of International Affairs, Karachi 1994–1997 Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the United Nations Office in Vienna, IAEA, United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) and other international organizations in Vienna, and Ambassador of Pakistan to Austria with accreditation to Slovenia and Slovakia Chairperson, Group of 77 at the UN in Vienna 1996 and Pakistan's Permanent Representative 1991–1994 Director, National Institute of Public Administration, Karachi 1984–1990 Director General, Management
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Roger Bambuck (born 22 November 1945 in Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe) is a French former sprinter and politician. Athletic career Bambuck took part in his first Olympic Games in Tokyo in 1964. At the 1966 European Championships in Budapest, he won the gold medal in the 200 m and in the 4 × 100 m relay, as well as the silver medal in the 100 m. He competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics held in Mexico City in the 100 metres (finalist) and in the 4 x 100 metre relay where he won the bronze medal with his team mates Gérard Fenouil,dropped out. He then worked a time for the automobile manufacturer Renault, before his athletic career. Bambuck has been married to former track and field athlete Ghislaine Barnay since 1974. He had the honour of starting the 24-hour Le Mans race. References Category:1945 births Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1964 Summer Olympics Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1968 Summer Olympics Category:Guadeloupean male sprinters Category:French male sprinters Category:Olympic athletes of France Category:Olympic bronze medalists for France Category:Living people Category:French people of Guadeloupean descent Category:European Athletics Championships medalists Category:French Freemasons Category:Medalists at the 1968 Summer Olympics Category:Olympic bronze medalists in
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Shannon Smyth (born 22 June 1987) is an Irish American soccer coach and former player. During her career she represented the Republic of Ireland women's national football team and the Norwegian Toppserien clubs Donn Toppfotball and Amazon Grimstad. College career Smyth played varsity soccer during four years at the University of Louisville. She represented Ireland in the 2007 Summer Universiade in Bangkok. Club career After graduation Smyth featured in the 2009 W-League for FC Indiana. In January 2010 Smyth agreed a one–year professional contract with newly promoted Toppserien club Donn Toppfotball. When Donn went bankrupt in November 2010, Smyth joinedfive teammates in signing for nearby Amazon Grimstad for the 2011 season. International career Smyth has dual Irish–American citizenship as her father Brendan was born and raised in Dún Laoghaire. She attended the Republic of Ireland national team's American summer training camps in 2008 and 2009. In August 2010 Smyth was called into the Republic of Ireland squad for their final World Cup qualifiers. She then won her first cap for Ireland in a 2–0 friendly defeat in the Netherlands. Smyth started the game wearing number ten and playing in central midfield. Further appearances followed in the qualifiers against Russiaand Israel. She announced her retirement from soccer in November 2014 and confirmed her decision in August 2015. She won 33 caps for Ireland. Her only goal was scored against Northern Ireland at the 2013 Cyprus Cup. International goals Scores and results list Ireland's goal tally first. References External links Shannon Smyth at UEFA Shannon Smyth at Donn Toppfotball Shannon Smyth at Louisville Cardinals Category:1987 births Category:Living people Category:Republic of Ireland women's association footballers Category:Republic of Ireland women's international footballers Category:Expatriate women's footballers in Norway Category:American people of Irish descent Category:Toppserien players Category:Women's association football midfielders Category:Women's association football forwards
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KDE Telepathy is an instant messaging (IM) and voice over IP (VoIP) client which supports text, voice, video, file transfers, and inter-application communication over various IM protocols. It uses the Telepathy framework as its back-end. It is the slated replacement for Kopete, and its main focus is the integration between different components of the KDE Software Compilation that may benefit from real-time communication and collaboration features. See also Comparison of instant messaging clients Comparison of Internet Relay Chat clients References External links Category:2011 software Category:Applications using D-Bus Category:Extragear Category:Free instant messaging clients Category:Free Internet Relay Chat clients Category:Free software programmed
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The Little Lulu Show is a Canadian-American-German animated television series based on the Marjorie Henderson Buell comic book character Little Lulu. History The show was produced by CINAR and aired on HBO Family in the United States and CTV in Canada from 1995 to 1999 – after Marge's death in 1993. The series continued to air on Family Channel and Teletoon Retro. The main character was voiced first by Tracey Ullman and then by Jane Woods. The series was produced by Micheline Charest, Ronald A. Weinberg and Cassandra Schafhausen and directed by Greg Bailey, Louis Piché and Nick Rijgersberg. Theseries centers on the life and adventures of Lulu Moppet and Tubby Tompkins. Between stories – dubbed as LuluToon – stand-up comedy sketches are hosted by Lulu and a series of mini-musical episodes called Lulu-Bite is also shown. Each episode contains three sketches with different stories, interspersed with a "stand up-comedy" presented by Lulu and two small 30-second introductions without speech, based on the final comic stories (with only three scenes). A lot of the storylines featured in the LuluToons are used from comic book releases (including John Stanley ones), with minor alterations. This show is different from Little Luluand Her Little Friends, an anime television series featuring the same characters made in 1976 and aired in the United States in 1978. Characters Episodes Voice actors References External links Category:HBO original programming Category:HBO Family Category:1990s American animated television series Category:1990s American children's comedy television series Category:1995 American television series debuts Category:1999 American television series endings Category:1990s Canadian comedy television series Category:Television programs based on comic strips Category:Animated television series about children Category:Animated television series about families Category:Television series set in the 1950s Category:Television series by Cookie Jar Entertainment Category:Television series by Universal Television Category:English-language television programs Category:Little Lulu Category:Family
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Olga Rodriguez is a Chicano activist and a leading member of the Socialist Workers Party of the United States. Life Rodriguez first became active in the fight for Chicano rights in her home state of Texas, supporting the struggle to organize farmworkers in the Rio Grande Valley in the 1960s while a high school student in Brownsville. At the University of Houston, she joined the League of Mexican-American students, which was part of the fight for Chicano studies, bilingual-bicultural education, affirmative action, and U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam that swept the Southwest in the late 1960s and early 1970s. While a
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Joseph Saul Gruss (March 19, 1903 – July 3, 1993) was a Jewish Ukrainian-born American financier, businessman, and philanthropist who supported Jewish education. Early life Joseph Saul Gruss was born on March 19, 1903 to a Jewish family in Lviv, one of seven children. His father, Isaac, was a Talmudic scholar and banker; his mother belonged to a family involved in the export grain business. Career In 1939, Gruss founded a travel agency in New York City. While he and his wife were in the United States, the Nazis invaded eastern Europe, and they were unable to return home. Theirfirst born child and many of their relatives perished in the Holocaust. In 1942, he founded the Wall Street firm, Gruss & Company, which focused on mergers and arbitrage primarily in the oil and gas industries. Thereafter, he engaged in oil and gas exploration and development primarily in Texas, Oklahoma, Wyoming, and West Virginia. Philanthropy In the 1970s, Gruss focused on philanthropy particularly for Jewish education. He supported hundreds of Jewish schools and thousands of students and educators. He funded Yeshiva University's Caroline and Joseph S. Gruss Institute in Jerusalem; the Caroline Zelaznik Gruss and Joseph S. Gruss Visiting Professorshipin Talmudic Civil Law; and the Fund for Jewish Education in association with the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies and the United Jewish Appeal of New York. In 1989, he funded the expansion of the White Plains campus of the Solomon Schechter School of Westchester to help accommodate the demands of Westchester's largest Jewish day school. The Gruss Life Monument Fund was founded in 1991 to continue his charitable activities after his death. The Joseph S Gruss Yeshiva High School in Brooklyn, New York bears his name. Personal life In 1934, he married Caroline Zelaznik (died 1987), a lawyer. They had
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Fabrizio Verospi (1571 - 27 January 1639) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and a curial judicial official. Early life Verospi was born in 1571 in Rome, the son of Girolamo Verospi and his wife Penelope Gabrielli and the uncle of Girolamo Verospi who was later also elevated to Cardinal. He studied law in Rome and Perugia and then at the University of Bologna where he earned a doctorate in utroque iure. He was subsequently employed as a domestic prelate, auditor of Fermo and, in 1595, referendary of the Tribunals of the Apostolic Signature of Justice and of Grace. In 1597witness to the marriage of Emperor Ferdinand II and Princess Eleonora Gonzaga. At the same time, he oversaw the transfer of Cardinal Klesl to Rome. From 1623 to 1627 Verospi served as Governor of Perugia and Umbria. Verospi grew close to Carlo Barberini, brother of the new Pope Urban VIII (elected in 1623). The family later entrusted Verospi to negotiate the October 1627 marriage of Carlo's son Taddeo Barberini to Anna Colonna which he concluded to the satisfaction of all involved. Cardinalate In the midst of productive marriage negotiations, Verospi was elevated to cardinal on 30 August 1627 and was
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in 1975, with Colchester taking on Norwich City in a promotion celebration friendly for the player, and Bury facing an all-star XI containing footballing greats from the north-west of England. Death Aimson died at the age of 64 of a heart attack in hospital near his home in Christchurch on 9 January 2008. References External links Category:1943 births Category:2008 deaths Category:People from Prestbury, Cheshire Category:English footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Manchester City F.C. players Category:York City F.C. players Category:Bury F.C. players Category:Bradford City A.F.C. players Category:Huddersfield Town A.F.C. players Category:A.F.C. Bournemouth players Category:Colchester United F.C. players Category:English Football League players Category:Sportspeople
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| Nodes:[["Paul Aimson", {"description":'English association footballer (1943-2008)'}], ["Christchurch", {}], ["Prestbury, Cheshire", {}], ["Association football", {}]]
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Pyrops is a genus of planthoppers that occur primarily in southeast Asia, containing about 70 species. They are fairly large insects, with much of the length due to an elongated, upcurving, snout-like projection of the head. The wings are generally brightly patterned in contrasting colors, and they are popular among collectors. Species Pyrops aeruginosus (Stål, 1870) Pyrops agusanensis (Baker, 1925) Pyrops alboroseus Liang, 1998 Pyrops andamanensis (Distant, 1880) Pyrops astarte (Distant, 1914) Pyrops atroalbus (Distant, 1918) Pyrops azureus Constant & Mohan, 2017[5] Pyrops candelaria (Linnaeus, 1758) - type species Pyrops clavatus (Westwood, 1839) Pyrops coelestinus (Stål, 1863) Pyrops connectens (Atkinson,2016 Pyrops pyrorhynchus (Donovan, 1800) Pyrops pythicus (Distant, 1891) Pyrops rogersi (Distant, 1906) Pyrops ruehli Schmidt, 1926 Pyrops samaranus (Baker, 1925) Pyrops sapphirinus (Schmidt, 1908) Pyrops shiinaorum Nagai & Porion, 2002 Pyrops sidereus (Distant, 1905) Pyrops silighinii Porion & Audibert, 2017 Pyrops spinolae (Westwood, 1842) Pyrops sultana (Adams, 1847) Pyrops synavei Constant, 2015 Pyrops valerian Nagai & Porion, 2002 Pyrops viridirostris (Westwood, 1848) Pyrops vitalisius (Distant, 1918) Pyrops watanabei (Matsumura, 1913) Pyrops whiteheadii (Distant, 1889) Pyrops zephyrius (Schmidt, 1907) Taxonomy The genus name of Laternaria has been used by some authors, but this name was published in a work thatwas suppressed in 1955 by an official declaration of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN): Opinion 322. The type species is Pyrops candelaria. In the genus Pyrops the names of the species follow the rules of the ICZN; that is, since the name of the genus is masculine in gender, the adjectival species epithets in the genus would be given in their masculine form (e.g., ochracea would become ochraceus; candelaria is a noun, however, and does not change to candelarius), though numerous authors have consistently (and incorrectly) treated them as feminine. Under the present rules, generic names ending in-ops must be treated as masculine regardless of the original usage (ICZN Chapter 7, Article 30.1.4.3). A molecular phylogenetic study suggests that Pyrops is a sister of the genus Saiva and together form tribe Pyropsini. Ecology Like many other plant-sap sucking insects, Pyrops species exude honeydew. This honeydew is sometimes gathered by other animals in trophobiotic associations. Pyrops whiteheadi and P. intricatus are known to be attended by Dorylaea sp. cockroaches in Southeast Asia. Pyrops whiteheadi has also been seen tended by a gecko, Gehyra mutilata. References External links Fulgoromorpha Lists on the Web (FLOW): Pyrops Spinola, 1839 (retrieved 27
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John Watchorn (1826 – 4 March 1905) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1882 until his death in 1905 and was Mayor of Hobart in 1890 and from 1894 to 1896. Watchorn was born in Nottingham, England in 1826. He migrated to Tasmania with his family in 1837. He was a publican and wine merchant outside of politics. He was a City of Hobart councillor from 1876 to 1896 and mayor in 1890 and from 1894 to 1896. He also served as a magistrate and as a member of the Metropolitan DrainageBoard. Watchorn was declared elected unopposed to the Legislative Council in June 1881, filling a vacancy in the Huon electorate caused by the invalidation of Joseph Solomon's 1880 election. However, his election was challenged by petition, and in August 1881 the Elections and Qualifications Committee of the Legislative Council unseated Watchorn and declared William Fisher, Solomon's 1880 challenger, to have been elected. Fisher died on 3 April 1882, and Watchorn won the resulting May 1882 by-election comfortably. He was re-elected numerous times and served in the Legislative Council until his death in 1905. He died in office in March 1905
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TrackMania 2 (stylized as TrackMania²) is a racing video game developed by Nadeo and published by Ubisoft as part of the TrackMania series. Gameplay TrackMania2 features gameplay similar to that of previous games in the series. The player can race on various tracks, with the ability to do stunts in various modes, including a championship and a cooperative mode. The track editor from previous games also returned. A new "ManiaScript" is being created to help players add new features in the game. As the game's popularity grew, players began uploading complicated custom built courses onto YouTube showcasing their creativity. Episodes
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Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing is the debut album by Canadian extreme metal band Strapping Young Lad. It was released on April 4, 1995. Century Media Europe released a remastered version of Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing on June 12, 2006, which includes the video for "S.Y.L.", several bonus tracks, and a 12-page booklet containing extended liner notes. Background Strapping Young Lad began in 1994 as a solo project of Canadian musician Devin Townsend. Following his work as vocalist on Steve Vai's 1993 album Sex & Religion and its 1994 tour, Townsend believed he had been a "musicalwhore", spending "the first five years of [his] career working at the behest of other people". During a brief stint as touring guitarist for The Wildhearts, Townsend received a phone call from an A&R representative for Roadrunner Records, expressing an interest in his demos and an intention to sign him. The offer was ultimately rescinded by the head of Roadrunner, who regarded Townsend's recordings as "just noise". He faced further rejection by Relativity Records, the label behind Vai's Sex & Religion, who saw no commercial appeal in his music. Century Media Records subsequently contacted the musician, offering him a contractto "make us some extreme albums". Townsend agreed to a five-album deal with the record label. Following his tour with The Wildhearts, Townsend began recording and producing his debut album, Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing, under the moniker Strapping Young Lad. According to Townsend, the recording process took "about a week". Embracing The Wildhearts' anarchist approach, "while focusing on dissonance and just being as over-the-top as [he] could", Townsend sang on the record and performed the majority of its instrumental tracks (with the assistance of a drum machine). A few songs, however, featured local session musicians, including guitarist JedSimon, Townsend's future bandmate. Release and reception Released on April 4, 1995, Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing was not widely recognized in the metal community. The album sold 143 copies in its first six months, but received favourable reviews from the heavy metal press. Its unusual musical ideas—a synthesis of death, thrash, and industrial metal influences—prompted Andy Stout from Metal Hammer to call it "one of the most disturbing albums you'll hear for a very long time". Nevertheless, Townsend has repeatedly expressed his distaste for the recording. He dismissed the album in the liner notes of the record's 2006reissue, contending that it contained only two great songs. He also deemed its production poor in interviews, referring to the album as "basically a collection of demos that were remixed". When Century Media advertised the reissue of Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing as the "rebirth of a genre-defying classic", Townsend called it "record company bullshit". The album was remastered and re-released on June 12, 2006, by Century Media Europe. The re-release contains several bonus tracks taken from international versions of the album, an unreleased track, and the video for "S.Y.L.". Track listing Personnel Devin Townsend – guitar, vocals, keyboards,
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Michael Agyakwa Bossman is a Ghanaian clergyman and the current Administrative Bishop of the Methodist Church Ghana, in effect the chief administrator or the secretary-general of the national church organisation. Early life and education Michael Agyakwa Bossman, a native of Larteh Akuapem, is the son of the Rev. Matthew Agyakwa Bossman and Matilda Oye Bossman. Bossman was a pupil at the Radiant Way Preparatory School in Accra and Chapel Hill Preparatory in Takoradi. After graduating from the Aburi Presbyterian Middle Boys’ Boarding School, Amanfo, he enrolled at the Mfantsipim School where he obtained his G. C. E. ‘O Level’ in1978 and ‘A’ Level in 1980. After his secondary education, Bossman was employed as a technical officer at the University of Ghana Agricultural Research Station, Okumanin, Kade after his protégé, Joseph Atto Brown, a Methodist minister was transferred from Okuapeman Secondary School to Kade. Between 1985 and 1988, he studied at the Trinity Theological Seminary, Legon, upon the recommendation of a Methodist minister, J. M. Donkor. In 1988, he was a commissioned as a probationer and ordained in 1990 at the Wesley Cathedral, Koforidua by Kwesi Dickson who served as the President of Methodist Church Ghana from 1990 to 1997.In 1989, he earned a bachelor's degree in the study of religions and psychology from the University of Ghana, Legon and in 1993, he received an MPhil in New Testament Studies from the same institution. Pastoral career In the Christian ministry, he has been the minister at several parishes, including Accra Ridge Church from 2003–2008. During his career he has served in several church administrative roles including Bishop of Koforidua from 2012-2018. In 2018, during the 10th Biennial and 48th Delegates Conference, Michael Agyakwa Bossman was elected as the new Administrative Bishop of the Methodist Church Ghana to succeed Paul
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Jarrod Penright is a former college, NFL, and AFL football player. He played college football for Texas A&M and had a short career in the NFL prior to joining the AFL. He played for both the Indiana Firebirds and the Tampa Bay Storm in the AFL. Early life Penright attended Eisenhower High School where he was selected as the Defensive Player of the Year by the Houston Chronicle after accumulating 66 solo tackles and 12 quarterback sacks. College During his time at Texas A&M, he was part of the Wrecking Crew defensive team. He started his first game with theDraft. In August 2003, the Minnesota Vikings signed him as a free agent on the same day that they waived Jeff Kostrewa. He was later released during roster cuts on August 25, 2003. AFL Penright joined the AFL in 2004 and played with the Indiana Firebirds. During the 2004 season, he had 114 yards on 25 carries and scored 3 touchdowns. He also had 13.5 tackles, 8 solo tackles, 1 forced fumble, and 1 fumble recovery. In 2005, he signed a multi-year contract with the team to play linebacker and fullback. In 2005, he appeared in 6 games and had
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Hussainpur is a census town in Jalandhar district in the Indian state of Punjab. It is situated in Jalandhar II Tehsil . The village code is 030405 . Demographics According to Census 2011 information the location code or village code of Hussainpur village is 030406. Hussainpur village is located in Jalandhar Ii Tehsil of Jalandhar district in Punjab, India. It is situated 15km away from sub-district headquarter Jalandhar - Ii and 15km away from district headquarter Jalandhar. As per 2009 stats, Hussainpur village is also a gram panchayat. The total geographical area of village is 119 hectares. Hussainpur has a
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| Nodes:[["Hussainpur", {"description":'human settlement'}], ["India", {}]]
Relations:[["Hussainpur", "country", "India"]] |
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Uslapur Railway Station is a railway station of Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh, India. It is one of important railway station of Bilaspur city. Uslapur is the fourth biggest railway station of Bilaspur District. Uslapur is situated at West of Bilaspur city. There are three well furnished railway platforms. Connectivity To Other Major Cities Uslapur Railway Station is Direct connections are available for Durg, Bhilai, Raipur, Bilaspur, Anuppur, Shehdol, Umaria, Katni, Satna, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mirzapur, Balia, Chappra, Baikunthpur, Surajpur, Ambikapur, Chirmiri, Damoh, Sagar, Jhansi, Gwalior, Delhi, Jammu tawi, Gorakhpur, Nautanwa, Ashoknagar, Guns, Kota, Ajmer, Jaipur, Jabalpur, Narsinghpur, Hoshngabad, Sehore, Bhopal, Dewas, Maksi, Ujjain,
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| Nodes:[["Uslapur railway station", {"description":'railway station in Chattisgarh, India'}], ["India", {}]]
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Henri Perreyve (born at Paris, 11 April 1831; died there 18 June 1865) was a French Oratorian priest. He was one of the small group who restored the Oratory in France. Life His father was professor at the Faculté de Droit. He received his classical education at the Collège Saint-Louis. According to his father's wish he studied law, but having finished his legal course he studied philosophy and theology. He then became closely united with Charles and Adolphe Perraud. With Auguste Joseph Alphonse Gratry, and under the guidance of Father Pététol, they began the restoration of the Oratory. He wasordained priest in 1858, appointed chaplain to the Lycée Saint-Louis in 1860, and one year later was called to the professorship of ecclesiastical history at the Sorbonne. For some time he was forced by illness to abandon his lectures. He was an influential figure, and linked by friendship with the Catholic leaders of the time in France: Ozanam, Montalembert, Cochin, and especially Jean-Baptiste-Henri Lacordaire. Works Among his works were: "De la critique des Evangiles" (Paris, 1859); "Entretiens sur l'Eglise catholique" (2 vols., Paris, 1901); "La Journée des malades" (Paris, 1908); "Biographies et panégyriques" (Paris, 1907); "Souvenirs de première communion" (Paris,
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Hillsong Young & Free (also known as Hillsong Y&F or simply Young & Free or Y&F) is an Australian contemporary worship music group from Sydney, Australia, where they started making Christian music in 2012 at Hillsong Church. They have released three live albums, We Are Young & Free (2013), Youth Revival (2016) and III Live (2018) as well as four studio albums, Youth Revival Acoustic (2017), III (2018), III (Studio Sessions) (2019), and III (Reimagined) (2019). Additionally, the group have released two extended plays, This Is Living (2015) and We Are Young & Free (The Remixes) - EP (2015). BackgroundThe group formed in 2012 out of Sydney, Australia, where they were located at Hillsong Church. Their members are worship leaders, Aodhan King, Alexander Pappas, Tyler Douglass, Renee Sieff, Ben Tan, and Melodie Wagner. Hillsong United [launched in 1998], the original group, began when the members were all relatively young, because it was started as part of the youth ministry at Hillsong Church. As they evolved and started to mature, have families of their own, and take on adulthood, many people at the church felt that there was a need for a new group that would aim its message atyounger people with a stimulating new sound. History Hillsong Young & Free released their first live album, We Are Young & Free, on 1 October 2013. The album debuted and peaked at No. 6 on the ARIA Albums Chart in Australia, also charting on several Billboard magazine charts in the United States, peaking at No. 22 on the Billboard 200 and No. 1 on the Christian Albums chart. Their subsequent release an extended play, This Is Living, was released on 11 January 2015. The release charted on the Billboard 200 at No. 38 and No. 1 on the Christian Albums
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Murray Chatlain (born January 19, 1963) is a Canadian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who (as of 2013) serves as Archbishop of Keewatin-Le Pas. Biography Murray Chatlain was born on January 19, 1963 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He completed baccalaureate studies at the University of Saskatchewan and earned the M.Div. degree at St. Peter's Seminary in London, Ontario. In 1987 Chatlain was ordained a priest for Diocese of Saskatoon; in subsequent years he served parishes in that diocese and within the Diocese of Mackenzie-Fort Smith. Pope Benedict XVI appointed Chatlain as coadjutor bishop of Mackenzie-Fort Smith in June 2007. Chatlain
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"Rhythm Is Gonna Get You" is a song written by Enrique "Kiki" Garcia and Gloria Estefan, and released by Gloria Estefan and Miami Sound Machine in 1987 as the lead single from the album Let It Loose (and the European version of the album Anything for You). It was their fourth top 10 (and second top five) single on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number five. In the UK, it took a year and a half for the single to become a chart hit. First released in June 1987 as the first single from Let It Loose, the
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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Wheeler County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Wheeler County, Texas. There are three properties listed on the National Register in the county. One property is also a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark. Current listings The locations of National Register properties may be seen in a mapping service provided. |} See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Texas Recorded Texas Historic Landmarks in Wheeler County References External links Category:Wheeler County,
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Jemma Mi Mi (born 4 March 1996) is an Australian netball player in the Suncorp Super Netball league, playing for the Queensland Firebirds. Mi Mi made her debut for the Firebirds in 2017, signing with the Brisbane-based franchise in late 2016. As a young sportswoman, Mi Mi played high-level touch rugby and represented the Australian under-15 and Queensland under-21 netball teams, before going on to represent Australia once more at the Netball World Youth Cup. She has played 11 of 29 matches in her first two seasons at the Firebirds. References External links Queensland Firebirds profile Suncorp Super Netball profile
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| Nodes:[["Jemma Mi Mi", {"description":'Australian netball player'}], ["Netball", {}]]
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Justus Carl Hasskarl (6 December 1811 – 5 January 1894) was a German explorer and botanist specializing in Pteridophytes, Bryophytes and Spermatophytes. He was co-founder of the Society of Natural Curiosities of India, in Bavaria and spent his time researching flora of Indonesia for years. Biography Justus Carl Hasskarl was born in Kassel in the Kingdom of Westphalia. In his earlier life he studied at a plant nursery in Poppelsdorf in 1827. And later in 1834 he studied Natural History while at the same time, prepared himself for an expedition to the tropics. In 1836, he traveled to Java andAugust Schweinfurth's Abyssinian plant collections and also worked on several plant families, such as Cyathea junghuhniana in Leiden. In 1855 he became correspondent of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, he resigned in 1859. Some publications 1856 . Filice javanicae . Batavia 1856 . Retzia observation of PLANTIS botanicae Botanici Bogoriensis horticulture . Leiden 1859 . Hortus Bogoriensis descr. Retziae seu nova editio (1. Teil, Amsterdam 1858, 2. Teil in Bonplandia 1866 . Neuer Rumphs Herbarium amboinense Schlüssel zu . Halle 1867 . Horti malabarici Rheedeani clavis locupletissima . Dresden 1870 . Commelinaceae indicae . Vienna 1847 .
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Gerd Ludwig (birth name Gerhard Erich Ludwig, born March 17, 1947 in Alsfeld, Hesse, Germany) is a German-American documentary photographer and photojournalist. Biography Gerd Ludwig initially studied German literature, political science, and physical education at the University of Marburg, before leaving prematurely to travel in Scandinavia and North America, supporting himself with jobs as a bricklayer, sailor, and dishwasher. Upon his return to Germany, he studied photography with Professor Otto Steinert at the Folkwang Hochschule (Folkwang Academy, now Folkwang University of the Arts) in Essen, graduating with a degree in Photo Design from the University of Essen in 1974. Heco-founded Visum, Germany's first photographer-owned photo agency in the same year. In 1978, he moved to Hamburg and began working for major international publications and advertising agencies. He re-located to New York City in 1984. In the early 1990s, he signed on as a contract photographer for National Geographic Magazine, focusing on environmental issues and the changes following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. His work in the region resulted in his exhibition and book, Broken Empire: After the Fall of the USSR, a ten-year retrospective published by National Geographic in 2001 His ongoing coverage of post-Soviet Russia has garneredhis distinction as being the western world's foremost color photographer documenting the region. Gerd Ludwig is a veteran of the renowned A Day in the Life book series created by David Elliot Cohen and Rick Smolan. His work has been shown in museums such as the Natural History Museum in Vienna, Austria; at festivals such as the Visa pour L'Image Perpignan; and galleries. Major awards include the 2006 Lucie Award for International Photographer of the Year, the 2014 Dr. Erich Salomon Award (Dr. Erich Salomon Preis), dedicated to Erich Salomon, a lifetime achievement award for photojournalists given by the GermanSociety for Photography (DGPh), and the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism from the Missouri School of Journalism in 2015. Based in Los Angeles, California, Gerd Ludwig continues to photograph primarily for National Geographic Magazine while working on personal projects such as Sleeping Cars and bringing back into light work from his archive, such as early color portraiture of Joseph Beuys and Friedensreich Hundertwasser. Chernobyl Coverage and Crowdfunding Gerd Ludwig first photographed the aftermath of the Chernobyl disaster for National Geographic Magazine in 1993, and again in 2005. In 2011, he created a kickstarter campaign that supported hisShadow of Chernobyl (essay by Mikhail Gorbachev, quotes by Svetlana Alexievich). The book received international acclaim and was awarded the Photobook of the Year award by POYi in 2015. Sleeping Cars Sleeping Cars is the result of Gerd Ludwig's ongoing personal project documenting where cars in Los Angeles reside at night— tucked into driveways, proudly displayed in front of homes, glowing under street lamps, covered with tarps or simply left bare. The vehicles rest against backgrounds of varying ambient light on the winding streets of the Hollywood Hills to the flat gridded suburbs of the Valley. Nestled in the low-lyingfog of these distinctly Los Angeles neighborhoods, the vehicles begin to take on personalities of their own. The project was published as a monograph by Edition Lammerhuber in 2016, with new images posted to the Sleeping Cars Instagram. Quote "A great photograph touches the soul and broadens the mind." "Technique and composition in photography are equivalent to grammar and syntax in prose." Bibliography AO TEA ROA: Island of Lost Desire. Hundertwasser in New Zealand (Albrecht Knaus Verlag, 1979) BROKEN EMPIRE: After the Fall of the USSR (National Geographic Society, 2001) RUSSLAND — Eine Weltmacht im Wandel (National Geographic Society, 2001)Artists in Residence (Edition Lammerhuber, 2019) National Geographic Stories "The Putin Generation" National Geographic: December 2016 "Museums-Magie" National Geographic Germany: December 2015 "On a Roll" National Geographic: July 2015 "Two Cities" National Geographic: March 2015 "Die Stadt, die immer wird" National Geographic Germany: November 2014 "The Nuclear Tourist" National Geographic: October 2014 "Searching for King Arthur" National Geographic Germany: January 2014 "Tomorrowland" National Geographic Magazine: February 2012 "Crimea: A Jewel in Two Crowns" National Geographic Magazine: April 2011 "Soul of Russia" National Geographic Magazine: April 2009 "Jakob der Reiche" National Geographic Germany: March 2009 "Moscow Never Sleeps" National Geographic Magazine:August 2008 "Send Me to Siberia" National Geographic Magazine: June 2008 "Vitus Bering" National Geographic Scandinavia: October 2007 "Vitus Bering" National Geographic Germany: February 2007 "Marktl" National Geographic Germany: May 2006 "The Long Shadow Of Chernobyl" National Geographic: April 2006 "Napoleon In Germany" National Geographic Germany: November 2005 "The Salton Sea" National Geographic: February 2005 "Nibelungen" National Geographic Germany: December 2004 "Russia Rising" National Geographic: November 2001 "Russlands Seele" National Geographic Germany: November 2001 "The Brothers Grimm – Guardians of the Fairy Tale" National Geographic: December 1999 "A Comeback for the Cossacks" National Geographic: November 1998 "Russia's Iron Road (Trans-SiberianRailroad)" National Geographic: June 1998 "Moscow. The New Revolution" National Geographic: April 1997 "Reinventing Berlin" National Geographic: December 1996 "Toronto" National Geographic: June 1996 "Soviet Pollution," National Geographic: August 1994 "Lethal Legacy: Pollution in the Former U.S.S.R." "Chernobyl: Living With the Monster" "A Broken Empire" National Geographic: March 1993 "Russia: Playing by New Rules" "Kazakhstan: Facing the Nightmare" "Ukraine: Running on Empty" "Main-Danube Canal Links Europe's Waterways," National Geographic: August 1992. "The Morning After: Germany Reunited" National Geographic: September 1991. External links Gerd Ludwig website Gerd Ludwig Instagram Russian Destiny, presentation on YouTube The Long Shadow of Chernobyl Kickstarter The
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### User:
1815 in sports describes the year's events in world sport. Boxing Events Tom Cribb retains his English championship but no fights involving him are recorded in 1815. Cricket Events After being severely impacted by loss of both revenue and manpower during the Napoleonic Wars, a reasonable number of matches takes place in 1815 as a discernible recovery can begin in the aftermath of Napoleon Bonaparte's defeat. The earliest known first-class centuries at the new Lord's Cricket Ground are scored in the Middlesex v Epsom match on 24 & 25 August by Felix Ladbroke and Frederick Woodbridge who score 116 and
### Assistant:
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