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Percivall Willughby (1596 – 1685) was an English physician and writer on obstetrics.
Life
Percivall Willughby was sixth son of Sir Percivall Willughby, of Wollaton Hall, Nottinghamshire, where he was born in 1596. Francis Willughby was his nephew. Percivall was educated at Trowbridge, Rugby, Eton, and Oxford, where he matriculated from Magdalen College on 23 March 1620–1, his age being given as twenty-two, and graduated BA on 6 July 1621.
In 1619 he was, at the suggestion of his uncle Robert Willughby, himself a medical man, articled for seven years to Feamer van Otten, after which he was to have joined his uncle; but Van Otten dying in 1624, Willughby soon after commenced practice for himself, and in 1631 he settled in Derby, where he married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Francis Coke of Trusley, by whom he had two or three sons and two daughters.
On 20 February 1640–1 he was admitted an extra licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians. In 1655 he removed to London "for the better education of his children", but in 1660 he returned to Derby, where he resumed his practice as a physician, enjoying a high reputation throughout the neighbouring counties for his skill in obstetric operations. He deprecated the use of the crotchet, and, Chamberlen's secret of the forceps not having been as yet divulged, he endeavoured to overcome all difficulties by turning. At one period he was to some extent assisted by a daughter, whom he had trained as a midwife to ladies of the higher classes. He was a man of high culture, powerful intellect, and great modesty, scorning the secrecy which some of his contemporaries maintained as to their procedures; and though he committed to writing the conclusions at which he arrived after long years of study and observation, revising and transcribing the manuscripts in English and in Latin, he seems to have hesitated to the last at their publication, as if sensible of the want of some really scientific instrument (the forceps) for the perfection of his art. The earliest copy of his work is a closely written quarto, entitled Dni Willougbaei, Derbiensis, De Puerperio Tractatus, in the British Library Sloane MS. 529. The second, an amplification of this, and referred to by Dr. Denman in his Practice of Midwifery, was then in the possession of his friend Dr. Kirkland; while the third and greatly enlarged edition consisted of two exquisitely written copies in Latin and in English, which were afterwards the property of Dr. J. H. Aveling, the English version being in two parts, with the titles Observations in Midwifery and The Countrey Midwife's Opusculum or Vade-mecum, by Percivall Willughby, Gentleman. It was privately printed in 1863 by Henry Blenkinsopp, but a Dutch translation had been printed as an octavo at Leyden in 1764, though no copy is now to be had in Holland. He was the intimate friend of Harvey and of most of the scientific men of the century, and died on 2 October 1685, in the ninetieth year of his age, being buried in St Peter's Church, Derby, where within the rails of the chancel is a tablet to his memory.
References
Bibliography
Dunn, Peter M. (1997). "Dr Percivall Willughby, MD (1596–1685): pioneer "man" midwife of Derby". Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition 76(3): 212–213.
1596 births
1685 deaths
English obstetricians |
Terrence Everett Anthony (born January 17, 1965) is a former American football defensive back who played one season with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1987. He played college football at Iowa State.
Anthony was drafted in the ninth round of the 1987 NFL Draft by the Atlanta Falcons. He was traded to the Cardinals and played one game with them, a 24–19 home win against the New Orleans Saints.
References
1965 births
Living people
American football defensive backs
Iowa State Cyclones football players
St. Louis Cardinals (football) players
Players of American football from Illinois
People from East St. Louis, Illinois |
Manuela Fundación () is a Spanish UCI Continental cycling team established in 2022.
Team roster
References
UCI Continental Teams (Europe)
Cycling teams based in Spain
Cycling teams established in 2022 |
Miron or Mirón is a surname of several origins. Spanish surname Mirón: a variant of Catalan Miró or a nickname derived from the verb "mirar", "to look", in the sense 'nosy', 'curious'. French: a diminutive of "Mire". Also a Romanian surname derived from the name Miron.
Notable people with the surname include:
People of , noble French family of Catalan origin
Andrei Miron, Romanian professional footballer
Ami Miron, American Israeli entrepreneur and technology developer specializing in consumer electronics, the Internet, and television
Bogdan Miron, several meanings
Bogdan Ionuț Miron (born 1982), Romanian association football goalkeeper
Bogdan Florin Miron (born 1990), Romanian association football goalkeeper
Brock Miron (born 1980), Canadian speed skater
Dan Miron (born 1934)< Israeli-born American literary critic and author
Issachar Miron (1920-2015), Israeli composer
Jay Miron
Javier Mirón (born 1999), Spanish middle-distance runner
Jeffrey Miron
Eugenia Miron (born 1992), Russian-born Moldovan footballer
François Miron (born 1962), French-Canadian experimental filmmaker
Gaston Miron (1952 – 2020), Soviet-born American chess player
Leonard Miron
Marcel-Ioan Miron (born 1982), Romanian tennis player.
Mike Miron
Oleg Miron (born 1956) is a sailor from Hrodna, Belarus, Soviet Union
Paul Miron (1926 - 2008) was a Romanian linguist and philologist
Rami Miron (born 1957), Israeli Olympic wrestler
Ray Miron
Salvador Díaz Mirón (1853 – 1928), Mexican poet
Uriel Miron (born 1968), Israeli artist and sculptor
See also
Miron (name)
References
French-language surnames
Romanian-language surnames
Spanish-language surnames |
Harry Conway (1829 – 2 April 1905) was an Australian politician.
Conway was born in Ashby-de-la-Zouch in Leicestershire in 1829. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of George Town. He served until his defeat in 1893. He died in 1905 in Launceston.
References
1829 births
1905 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Lasiopetalum glabratum is a species of flowering plant in the family Malvaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect shrub with densely hairy young stems, egg-shaped leaves and pale mauve-pink reddish-purple flowers.
Description
Lasiopetalum glabratum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of up to , its young stems covered with tan or dark red, star-shaped hairs. The leaves are mostly glabrous, egg-shaped, mostly long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are borne in loose groups of three to six long, each group on a peduncle long, each flower on a pedicel long with linear to narrowly egg-shaped bracts long at the base and similar bracteoles long near the base of the sepals. The sepals are pale mauve-pink with a dark red base, the lobes narrowly egg-shaped long and there are no petals. The anthers are reddish-purple and long. Flowering usually occurs from August to December.
Taxonomy
Lasiopetalum glabratum was first formally described in 1974 by Susan Paust in the journal Nuytsia from specimens she collected near Mount Cooke in 1971. The specific epithet (glabratum) means "without hair".
Distribution and habitat
This lasiopetalum grows in forest or woodland, in areas east of Perth in the Avon Wheatbelt, Geraldton Sandplains, Jarrah Forest and Swan Coastal Plain biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Conservation status
Lasiopetalum glabratum is listed as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
References
glabratum
Malvales of Australia
Rosids of Western Australia
Plants described in 1974 |
James A. Merriman (October 10, 1869December 14, 1946) was an American physician and newspaper publisher. Merriman was the first African American physician to practice medicine in Portland, and perhaps the first in the state of Oregon; he was recruited to care for Black workers of the Union Pacific Railroad in 1903. He was a cofounder of Portland's second Black newspaper, The Advocate, and edited The Portland Times from 1913 until 1926. Merriman was also active in civil rights and community leadership, serving as the first president of the Portland chapter of the NAACP.
Early life and education
J. A. Merriman was born October 10, 1869, in Camden, Alabama. His parents were John Merriman, a farmer from Alabama, and Georgia Burke, from South Carolina.
He attended Talladega College, graduating in 1891. Merriman received his M.D. from Rush Medical College in Chicago in 1902. He was the only Black graduate from Rush Medical College that year.
Career as a physician
Merriman came to Portland in 1903 where he passed the Oregon medical examination in June and started practicing medicine in Portland that August, becoming the first African American physician in the city. Merriman may have been the first African American physician in Oregon. He was recruited to Portland by the Union Pacific Railroad which required a Black physician to care for its Black workers, who were employed as porters, stewards, cooks, and barbers.
By 1910, he had joined his practice with Dr. Stanley Lucas. Merriman recruited Black physician DeNorval Unthank to Portland to take his place caring for Black workers of the Union Pacific.
Merriman moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1931, leaving Unthank as the only Black physician remaining in Portland. He practiced as a physician in Phoenix for fourteen years.
Newspaper work
Along with other local Black entrepreneurs, Merriam cofounded Portland's second Black newspaper, The Advocate, in 1903. Merriman was also the editor of The Portland Times, an African American newspaper, and served as Vice President of the Times Publishing Company. He would work in the role of editor from the founding of the Times in 1913 until 1926.
Civil rights and community leadership
Merriman was the first president of the Portland branch of the NAACP, which was founded in 1914. With Merriman in a leadership role, in 1915 the Portland NAACP convinced the Portland City Council to ban the showing of any film promoting racial hatred (after the council members watched The Birth of a Nation).
During World War I, he was appointed as a Four Minute Man and was enrolled as a member of the Volunteer Medical Service Corps.
While living in Portland he was heavily involved in the community, moderating local forums, directing church plays, and serving as the president of a literary society. He was a member of the Mystic Shriners, Knights of Pythias, and a thirty-second degree Mason. He was also chairman of the trustee board of William H. Patterson Elks Lodge in Phoenix, and helped plan the building of the Elks lodge building at 1007 South Seventh Avenue, which was finished a few months before his death.
Personal life and death
Merriman was married to Mabel Jones; they had two children together, Robert E. and Louise (Coles).
Merriman was ill the last year of his life, and in September 1946 he was moved from his home in Phoenix to his daughter's home in Chicago. He died at the Provident Hospital in Chicago on December 14, 1946.
References
External links
"J.A. Merriman" 5-minute audio episode of The Register, from National Public Radio station KMUN (August 6, 2021)
1869 births
1946 deaths
20th-century African-American people
20th-century American newspaper editors
20th-century American newspaper publishers (people)
African-American history of Oregon
African-American physicians
Editors of Oregon newspapers
NAACP activists
People from Camden, Alabama
Physicians from Portland, Oregon
Rush Medical College alumni
Talladega College alumni |
The New Hampshire Department of State is a government agency of the U.S. state of New Hampshire, based at the State House in Concord. The department is led by the Secretary of State, who is chartered to oversee all state elections and keep the official records of the state per the Constitution of New Hampshire as adopted in 1784. The Secretary is elected biannually by the New Hampshire General Court (state legislature).
Organization
The department is organized into six divisions:
Administration
Archives and Records Management
Corporation and Uniform Commercial Code
Elections
Securities Regulation
Vital Records
Administratively attached to the department are:
New Hampshire Board of Auctioneers
New Hampshire–Canadian Trade Council
New Hampshire Ballot Law Commission
The department also commissions notaries public within the state.
References
External links
State
Government agencies established in 1784
1784 establishments in New Hampshire |
Thomas Dillon (died 12 January 1908) was an Australian politician.
In May 1891, Dillon was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, defeating Henry Mugliston to become the member for Brighton. Mugliston challenged the result, claiming Dillon had engaged in corruption and bribery. Dillon's election was declared void and his term came to an end in July 1891.
Dillon served as an alderman on Hobart Council. He died in Hobart on 12 January 1908 aged 61 and was buried at Cornelian Bay Cemetery.
References
Year of birth missing
1908 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Plakortis microrhabdifera is a species of marine sponge in the order Homosclerophorida, first described in 2003 by Moraes and Guilherme Muricy, from specimens collected from oceanic islands off north-eastern Brazil.
References
Homoscleromorpha
Animals described in 2003
Taxa named by Guilherme Muricy |
The Valley of Hate is a 1924 American silent action film directed by Russell Allen and starring Raymond McKee, Helen Ferguson and Earl Metcalfe.
Synopsis
A young man in South Carolina inherits property in a valley he has never visited before. On arriving he is mistaken by the locals for a revenue officer intent on enforcing the Volstead Act on Prohibition. As the whole area lives off the moonshining trade, this prevents problems - particularly when he falls in love with the daughter of the head of the local producers.
Cast
Raymond McKee as Harvey Swope
Helen Ferguson as Milly Hendricks
Earl Metcalfe as Lem Darley
Wilfred Lucas as Old Jim Darley
Ralph Yearsley as Bob Darley
Helen Lynch as Maurine Foster
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1924 films
1920s action films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American action films
American black-and-white films
Films set in South Carolina |
Charles Edwin Featherstone (born 18 December 1852, date of death unknown) was an Australian politician.
Featherstone was born in Hobart in Tasmania in 1852. In 1889 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Sorell. He served until his disqualification due to bankruptcy in 1893. His date of death is unknown.
References
1852 births
Year of death unknown
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
The 2022 Delaware House of Representatives elections will take place on November 8, 2022, as part of the 2022 United States elections. Delaware voters will elect state senators in all 41 of the state's Senate districts. 41 State Representatives serve four-year terms in the Delaware House of Representatives.
A primary election on September 13, 2022, will determine which candidates appear on the November 8 general election ballot. Primary election results can be obtained from the Delaware Secretary of State's website.
Following the 2020 state House of Representatives elections, Democrats maintained effective control of the House with Democrats have a majority with 26 members. Republicansl hold 15 seats following the 2020 elections.
Background
Retirements
Republicans
Democrats
Incumbents defeated
In primary elections
Republicans
Democrats
Predictions
Results
† - Incumbent not seeking re-election
Closest races
Seats where the margin of victory was under 10%:
Detailed results
District 1
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Nnamdi Chukwuocha has represented Delaware House of Representatives 1st District since November 2018.
District 2
6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Stephanie Bolden has represented Delaware House of Representatives 2nd District since November 2010.
District 3
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Sherry Dorsey Walker has represented Delaware House of Representatives 3rd District since November 2018.
District 4
8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Gerald Brady has represented Delaware House of Representatives 4th District since November 2006. He resigned in February 2022
District 5
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Kendra Johnson has represented Delaware House of Representatives 5th District since November 2018.
District 6
6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Debra Heffernan has represented Delaware House of Representatives 6th District since November 2018.
District 7
1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Larry Lambert has represented Delaware House of Representatives 7th District since November 2020.
District 8
1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Sherae'a Moore has represented Delaware House of Representatives 8th District since November 2020.
District 9
4th term incumbent Republican Representative Kevin Hensley has represented Delaware House of Representatives 9th District since November 2014.
District 10
4th term incumbent Democratic Representative Sean Matthews has represented Delaware House of Representatives 10th District since November 2014.
District 11
5th term incumbent Republican Representative Jeffrey Spiegelman has represented Delaware House of Representatives 11th District since November 2012.
District 12
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Krista Griffith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 12th District since November 2018.
District 13
8th term incumbent Democratic Representative John Mitchell Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 13th District since November 2006.
District 14
10th term incumbent Democratic Representative Peter Schwartzkopf has represented Delaware House of Representatives 14th District since November 2002.
District 15
9th term incumbent Democratic Representative Valerie Longhurst has represented Delaware House of Representatives 15th District since November 2004. He represented House majority Leader since 2013.
District 16
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Franklin Cooke Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 16th District since November 2018.
District 17
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since November 2018.
District 18
4th term incumbent Democratic Representative David Bentz has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since 2015.
District 19
5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 19th District since November 2012.
District 20
5th term incumbent Republican Representative Stephen Smyk has represented Delaware House of Representatives 20th District since November 2012.
District 21
7th term incumbent Republican Representative Michael Ramone has represented Delaware House of Representatives 21st District since November 2008.
District 22
2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Michael F. Smith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 22nd District since November 2018.
District 23
5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Paul Baumbach has represented Delaware House of Representatives 23rd District since November 2012.
District 24
6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 24th District since November 2010.
District 25
8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 25th District since November 2006.
District 26
1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Madinah Wilson-Anton has represented Delaware House of Representatives 26th District since November 2020.
District 27
1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Eric Morrison has represented Delaware House of Representatives 27th District since November 2020. He is running for reelection.
District 28
7th term incumbent Democratic Representative William Carson Jr has represented Delaware House of Representatives 28th District since November 2008.
District 29
2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative William Bush IV has represented Delaware House of Representatives 29th District since November 2018.
District 30
2nd term incumbent Republican Representative W. Shannon Morris has represented Delaware House of Representatives 30th District since November 2018.
District 31
4th term incumbent Democratic Representative Sean Lynn has represented Delaware House of Representatives 31st District since November 2014.
District 32
5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Andria Bennett has represented Delaware House of Representatives 32nd District since November 2012.
District 33
3rd term incumbent Republican Representative Charles Postles Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 33rd District since November 2016.
District 34
4th term incumbent Republican Representative Lyndon Yearick has represented Delaware House of Representatives 34th District since November 2014.
District 35
2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Jesse Vanderwende has represented Delaware House of Representatives 35th District since November 2018.
District 36
2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Bryan Shupe has represented Delaware House of Representatives 36th District since November 2018.
District 37
6th term incumbent Republican Representative Ruth Briggs King has represented Delaware House of Representatives 37th District since January 2010.
District 38
5th term incumbent Republican Representative Ronald E. Gray has represented Delaware House of Representatives 38th District since November 2012.
District 39
8th term incumbent Republican Representative Daniel Short has represented Delaware House of Representatives 39th District since November 2006. He represented as House Minority Leader sine 2013.
District 40
5th term incumbent Republican Representative Timothy Dukes has represented Delaware House of Representatives 40th District since November 2012.
District 41
4th term incumbent Republican Representative Richard G. Collins has represented Delaware House of Representatives 41st District since November 2014.
References
External links
House of Representatives
Delaware House of Representatives elections
Delaware House of Representatives |
Lata Desai (Dr Lataben Anilbhai Desai, born 8 August 1941) is a medical doctor from the Indian State of Gujarat who in 1980 along with her husband Dr Anil Desai and a few friends founded the Society for Education welfare and Action - Rural (SEWA Rural), a voluntary organization devoted to health and development activities in the tribal area of South Gujarat. After completing basic medical education at B J Medical College, Gandhinagar, Gujarat in the early 60's and getting maarried 1n 1968, Lata Desai and her husband moved to the US in 1972 for higher studies. In the US, Lata Desai specialized in pediatrics and Anil Desai in surgery. After completing their studies they started their careers in the US. However, after a few years, inspired by the lives and works of Mahatma Gandhi and Swami Vivekananda, they along with a few friends returned to India and established the non-profit SEWA Rural in Jhagadia, Bharuch district, Gujarat.
The services rendered by SEWA Rural include:
Ksaturba Hospital which offers round the clock emergency services, special care for women and children and people with eye diseases, separate clinics for Tuberculosis, Diabetes and Infertility and Sickle Cell Disease
Sharda Mahila Vikas Society established in 2002 working towards the development of women, youth and children in villages of tribal, areas of Jhagadia, Gujarat
Training Centre for Community Health
Vocational Training Centre for Women
Adolescent Awareness Programme which is aimed at reducing anemia, improving menstrual hygiene management, creating reproductive health awareness
Community Health Project
Comprehensive Eye Care Project
Vivekananda Gramin Tekniki Kendra which is a vocational training center started in 1987
Recognition: Padma Shri
In the year 2022, Govt of India conferred the Padma Shri award, the third highest award in the Padma series of awards, on Lata Desai for her distinguished service in the field of medicine. The award is in recognition of her service as a "Doctor and Social Worker providing health services to tribal communities in Gujarat for over five decades".
External links
SEWA Rural: Websitel
Sharada Mahila Vikas Society: Website
See also
Padma Shri Award recipients in the year 2022
References
Additional reading
Recipients of the Padma Shri in medicine
20th-century Indian medical doctors
Medical doctors from Gujarat |
Edward Owen Giblin (23 November 1849 – 27 December 1895) was an Australian politician.
Giblin was born in Claremont in Tasmania in 1849. He was a doctor before entering politics. In 1891 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of South Hobart. He served until his defeat in 1893. He died in 1895 in Launceston.
References
1849 births
1895 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Department of State commonly refers to the United States Department of State. Other uses include:
Department of State (Ireland)
New Hampshire Department of State
New York State Department of State
Pennsylvania Department of State
Puerto Rico Department of State
See also
Secretary of state (U.S. state government) |
Kudaka Island (久高島, Japanese: くだかじま, Ryukyuan: Kudaka-shima) is an island in Ryukyu Islands, located in Nanjō, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan and 5.3 kilometers away from Cape Chinen, Nanjō. From Nanjō, Kudaka Island can be reached by high-speed boat in 15 minutes and by ferry in 20 minutes.
Kudaka Island is a slender island running from the northeast to the southwest, with an area of 1.38 square kilometers and a coastline of 7.8 kilometers. The terrain is flat and the highest point is 17.4 meters. The soil of Kudaka Island is terracotta, with poor water retention. In addition, coral reefs are constantly being formed along the coast, resulting in lagoons.
According to the Chūzan Seikan, the Emperor of Heaven ordered Amamikyu, the god of Ryukyu development, to descend on Cape Kapur on Kudaka Island and founded the Ryukyu Islands. Therefore, Kudaka Island is worshipped as a holy place by the Ryukyu people.
References
Ryukyu Islands |
John Hart (1829 – 8 September 1896) was an Australian politician.
Hart was born in London in 1826. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Deloraine. He served until his defeat in 1893. He died in 1896 in Deloraine.
References
1829 births
1896 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
My Lady Friends is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Carter DeHaven, Flora Parker DeHaven and Thomas G. Lingham. It was based on the 1919 Broadway play of the same title by Frank Mandel and Emil Nyitray.
Cast
Carter DeHaven as James Smith
Flora Parker DeHaven as Catherine Smith
Thomas G. Lingham as Edward Early
Helen Raymond as Lucille Early
Helen Lynch as Eva Johns
Lincoln Stedman as Tom Trainer
May Wallace as Hilda
Hazel Howell as Nora
Clara Morris as Gwen
Ruth Ashby as Julia
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Lloyd Ingraham
First National Pictures films
American films based on plays |
Samuel Hawkes (27 September 1845 – 16 February 1937) was an Australian politician.
Hawkes was born in Witham in Essex in 1845. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Ringarooma. He served until 1893. He died in 1937 in Scottsdale.
References
1845 births
1937 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
The Baoquansi Caves is a Buddhist site located on the western bank of Pingdingchuan, Taibai Township, Heshui County, Gansu in Northwest China. Built during the Northern Wei dynasty (386AD–534AD) and excavated on an 8-meter tall cliff, Baoquansi consists of 25 horseshoe-shaped niches and 153 stone statues. The grottoes mainly consist of statues depicting Śākyamuni, Prabhūtaratna, Maitreya, and their assistants. Some of these niches are still intact and many have been damaged by erosion, looting, or vandalism.
Niches description
The Baoquansi Caves were carved into a cliff wall and are 40 meters long and eight meters high, with the grottoes running east to west. Among the niches, three, four, five, and six are the largest. Some of these niches are square-shaped while others are horseshoe-shaped or domed. The largest of all is niche four. The width, height, and depth are all three meters. The main wall consists of the buddhas Śākyamuni and Prabhūtaratna sitting side by side with Maitreya. The north and south walls are each composed of two Buddhas. There are also two Bodhisattvas standing at the entrance.
Murals
During the mid to late Northern Wei dynasty, murals, utilizing many colors, were used to emphasize different characters. These murals mainly included images of the Asparas, the Bodhisattva, the thousand buddhas, Buddha, and donors. These characters were often portrayed as tall and thin figures with a clear composition outline. Various shades of green were also used heavily during the Northern Wei Dynasty. Complementary and supplementary colors were used to create a total sense of harmony.
Relic destruction, protection, and relocation
Across Chinese history, there has been looting and destruction of buddha statues, however, this was exacerbated in the late 19th and 20th centuries. During the Cultural Revolution, there was an increased belief in destroying ancient Chinese culture. For instance, the "Destroy the Four Olds" motto led to the mass destruction of antique items. After the Cultural Revolution, the Gansu government listed these caves in the Provincial Cultural Relics Protection Unit and sent caretakers to look after the caves. However, despite this protection, looting still continued to plague the area. As a result, the government decided to move three buddha statues in the best condition to the Longdong Ancient Stone Carving Art Museum, where they are now preserved.
References
Buddhist sites in China |
Jean Margaret Martin Pinder (September 2, 1916 – September 7, 2014) was an American nurse and public health official who worked for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Africa in the 1960s and 1970s.
Early life and education
Jean Margaret Martin was born in Oakland, California, the daughter of George Martin and Mercedes Simms Martin. She attended San Francisco State University, and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in 1940, with a bachelor's degree in nursing and as a registered nurse. In 1947, she became one of the first Black women to graduate from the Yale School of Public Health.
Career
Martin taught nursing courses at Dillard University before she joined the United States Public Health Service in 1953. She was appointed Health Education Advisor to the Government of Liberia. She held a similar position in Ghana in 1957, and also worked as a health policy advisor in Sierra Leone. She worked for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Africa and Washington, D.C., mostly on family planning policies, nutrition, and maternal and child health. In 1968, the United States ambassador to Ghana, Franklin Williams, praised her and her husband as "unusually efficient ambassadors for America to millions of Africans and others." While she was based in Washington, she was membership chair of the Women's Action Organization (WAO), a group for women employees of the United States Department of State.
Pinder retired from public health work in 1982. In retirement, she lived in Tucson, Arizona, where she started a free clinic in a Yaqui community, and played violin in the Community Orchestra of Tucson.
Personal life and legacy
Jean Martin married Frank Pinder, an agricultural economist who also worked in Africa. Frank Pinder died in 1992. She lived with her friend Elouise Duncan in Tucson in retirement, then with Elouise's son and his family in Gaithersburg, Maryland. She died in 2014, aged 98 years. The Oakland Public Library has a small collection of her papers. The University of Washington created the Jean M. Pinder Endowment to support advanced education in healthcare fields among minority students.
References
1916 births
2014 deaths
People from Oakland, California
University of California, Berkeley alumni
Dillard University faculty
American nurses
Yale School of Public Health alumni |
The 2022 Columbus Crew 2 season will be the club's inaugural season, and their 1st season competing in MLS Next Pro, a professional developmental league in the third tier of the United States Soccer pyramid.
Players and staff
Current roster
Staff
Corey Wray – General Manager
Laurent Courtois – Head Coach
Phil Boerger – Assistant Coach
Kobie Johnson – Assistant Coach
Ahmad Salamah – Performance Coach
Sara Kusner – Head Athletic Therapist
Nathaniel Horton – Manager of Team Operations
Mike Peters – Equipment Manager
Competitions
MLS Next Pro
Standings
Eastern Conference
Overall table
Results summary
Results
See also
2022 Columbus Crew season
References
Columbus Crew 2
Columbus Crew 2
Columbus Crew 2
Columbus Crew 2 |
Matilde Noemí Lalín is an Argentine-Canadian mathematician specializing in number theory and known for her work on L-functions, Mahler measure, and their connections. She is a professor of mathematics at the Université de Montréal.
Education and career
Lalín is originally from Buenos Aires, and is a double citizen of Argentina and Canada. As a high school student, she represented Argentina twice in the International Mathematical Olympiad, in 1993 and 1995, earning a silver medal in 1995.
She earned a licenciatura in 1999 from the University of Buenos Aires. After starting graduate study at Princeton University and spending a term as a visiting student at Harvard University, she completed her doctorate in 2005 at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, Some Relations of Mahler Measure with Hyperbolic Volumes and Special Values of L-Functions, was supervised there by Fernando Rodriguez-Villegas.
She became a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences, before obtaining a tenure-track faculty position in 2007 as an assistant professor of mathematics at the University of Alberta. She moved to the Université de Montréal in 2010, earned tenure as an associate professor there in 2012, and was promoted to full professor in 2018.
Recognition
Lalín is the 2022 winner of the Krieger–Nelson Prize of the Canadian Mathematical Society, "for her outstanding contributions to research in Number Theory and related areas".
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Argentine mathematicians
Argentine women mathematicians
Canadian mathematicians
Canadian women mathematicians
University of Buenos Aires alumni
University of Texas at Austin alumni
University of Alberta faculty
Université de Montréal faculty |
Kirill Strelnikov (born 29 May 1992) is a Russian competitive swimmer. He won a gold medal in the 4×50 metre medley relay at the 2021 World Short Course Championships and the 4×100 metre medley relay at the 2013 World University Games, swimming the breaststroke leg of both relays in the final. At the 2021 European Short Course Championships he won a bronze medal in the 4×50 metre mixed medley relay, swimming the breaststroke leg of the relay in the prelims heats.
Background
Strelnikov was born 29 May 1992 in Volgograd, Russia and started competitive swimming in 1999. To complement his in-the-pool regimen, he has worked at the Laboratory of Sports Adaptology, in Moscow, as a specialist.
Career
2012 European Aquatics Championships
At the 2012 European Aquatics Championships in Debrecen, Hungary in May, Strelnikov placed fifth in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke with a time of 1:01.12, finishing 0.19 seconds behind the bronze medalist in the event Mattia Pesce of Italy. In the semifinals of the 50 metre breaststroke three days later, he placed 14th with a time of 28.25 seconds. Two days later, he split a 1:00.17 in the final of the 4×100 metre medley relay to place fifth with finals relay teammates Vitaly Borisov (backstroke), Nikita Konovalov (butterfly), and Vitaly Syrnikov (freestyle).
2013
2013 World University Games
On the second day of the 2013 World University Games, held at the Palace of Water Sports in Kazan in mid-July, Strelnikov placed fourth in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke, finishing with a time of 1:00.48 that was 0.12 seconds slower than the bronze medalist Edoardo Giorgetti of Italy. Five days later, he won a gold medal as part of the 4×100 metre medley relay, swimming a 1:00.06 for the breaststroke leg of the relay to contribute to the winning time of 3:34.27 with finals relay teammates Vladimir Morozov (backstroke), Evgenii Koptelov (butterfly), and Andrey Grechin (freestyle).
2013 World Aquatics Championships
For his first event of the 2013 World Aquatics Championships in Barcelona, Spain in late July, Strelnikov swam a personal best time of 59.80 seconds in the preliminary heats of the 100 metre breaststroke, advancing to the semifinals ranking second behind Christian Sprenger of Australia. In the semifinals later in the day, he ranked ninth with a time of 59.94 seconds, which was just 0.02 seconds behind the slowest qualifier for the final and eighth-ranked swimmer, Kosuke Kitajima of Japan. Two days later, he qualified for the semifinals of the 50 metre breaststroke ranking fifth with a 27.36 in the prelims heats. He posted a time of 27.75 seconds in the semifinals, ranking 13th and not advancing to the final of the event. On the final day of competition five days later, Strelnikov split a 59.84 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×100 metre medley relay in the prelims heats, helping qualify the relay to the final tied in rank for second with prelims relay teammates Vladimir Morozov (backstroke), Nikolay Skvortsov (butterfly), and Nikita Lobintsev (freestyle). For the final, Yevgeny Korotyshkin substituted in for Nikolay Skvortsov, Andrey Grechin substituted in for Nikita Lobintsev, Strelnikov split a 59.24 for the 100 metre breaststroke portion, and the relay placed fourth in a time of 3:32.74.
2013 Swimming World Cup
At the 2013 Swimming World Cup stop in Moscow, and conducted in short course metres, Strelnikov swam a 27.62 in the prelims heats of the 50 metre breaststroke, qualifying for the final ranking eighth. In the evening final, he won the bronze medal with a time of 27.20 seconds, finishing 1.37 seconds behind gold medalist in the event Roland Schoeman of South Africa. The following day, he placed 20th in the prelims heats of the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:01.35 and did not advance to the final.
2021
In the 50 metre breaststroke at the 2021 Russia National Championships in April, also serving as the Russian Olympic Trials for the 2020 Summer Olympics, Strelnikov won the gold medal with a personal best time of 26.78 seconds, however he did not qualify to compete at the Olympic Games as the event was not offered as part of the Olympic program for the year. The time of 26.78 seconds ranked him as the fourth-fastest performer in the event for the entire 2021 year, 0.57 seconds behind first-ranked Adam Peaty of Great Britain, 0.39 seconds behind second-ranked Nicolò Martinenghi of Italy, 0.32 behind third-ranked Ilya Shymanovich of Belarus, and 0.02 seconds ahead of fifth-ranked Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands.
2021 International Swimming League
For the 2021 International Swimming League regular season, conducted in short course metres in August and September, Strelnikov was a part of the roster for Team Iron. In the seventh match of the regular season, he took second-place in the 50 metre breaststroke with a time of 26.31 seconds, finishing 0.17 seconds behind first-place finisher Nic Fink of the Cali Condors. On the second day of the match, he placed fifth in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 58.40. In the eleventh match, he tied Alessandro Pinzuti of Tokyo Frog Kings with a 26.20 in the 50 metre breaststroke for second-place, both finished 0.19 seconds behind Yasuhiro Koseki of the Tokyo Frog Kings.
2021 Swimming World Cup
At the Kazan stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup in October, Strelnikov started competition on day one with a ninth-place finish in the 100 metre breaststroke, swimming a 58.43 in the preliminary heats. For his second and final event he competed in the 50 metre breaststroke, ranking fifth in the prelims heats with a 26.37 and qualifying for the final later in the day. In the final he won the bronze medal with a time of 26.12 seconds, finishing within three-tenths of a second of gold medalist Fabian Schwingenschlögl of Germany and silver medalist Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands.
2021 European Short Course Championships
On the second day of the 2021 European Short Course Championships in Kazan in November, Strelnikov swam a personal best time of 57.68 seconds, ranked eleventh overall, third amongst the Russian swimmers in the event, and did not qualify for the final as he was not one of the two fastest swimmers representing Russia. For his other individual event, the 50 metre breaststroke, he placed fifth in the final on the sixth and final day of competition with a personal best time of 26.03 seconds. Also on the final day of competition, he split a 25.83 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre mixed medley relay in the prelims heats, helping qualify the relay to the final ranking first. On the finals relay, Oleg Kostin substituted in for him and the relay finished third in 1:36.42 with all relay members, prelims and finals, meaning a bronze medal for their efforts.
2021 World Short Course Championships
In December 2021, at the 2021 World Short Course Championships held at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Strelnikov swam the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre mixed medley relay in the final, splitting a 26.02 to help achieve a fourth-place finish in 1:37.44. For his other relay, the 4×50 metre medley relay two days later, he split a 25.62 for the breaststroke leg of the relay to help win the gold medal in a new time Championships record time of 1:30.51 with finals relay teammates Kliment Kolesnikov (backstroke), Andrey Minakov (butterfly), and Vladimir Morozov (freestyle). Concluding racing at the Championships with the 50 metre breaststroke, he placed tenth in the semifinals with a time of 26.33 seconds.
International championships
Strelnikov swam only in the prelims heats.
Personal best times
Long course metres (50 m pool)
Legend: h – heat
Short course metres (25 m pool)
Legend: h – heat
Honours and awards
Master of Sport of International Class, recipient from Russian Federation: 2012
Certificate of Honour, received from Russian Federation president: 2013
See also
List of World Swimming Championships (25 m) medalists (men)
References
External links
1992 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Volgograd
Russian male breaststroke swimmers
Medalists at the 2013 Summer Universiade
Universiade gold medalists for Russia
Universiade medalists in swimming
Medalists at the FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) |
John Lyne (7 December 1810 – 14 September 1900) was an Australian politician.
Lyne was born in London in 1810. In 1880 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Glamorgan. He served until 1893. He died in 1900 in Launceston.
References
1810 births
1900 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
William Sidebottom (5 February 1836 – 28 June 1932) was an Australian politician.
Sidebottom was born in Evandale in Tasmania in 1836. In 1885 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Selby. He served until 1893. He died in 1932 in Launceston.
References
1836 births
1932 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Marry the Poor Girl is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Carter DeHaven and Flora Parker DeHaven. It was based on the 1920 Broadway play of the same name by Owen Davis.The Exhibitor's Trade Review noted that the "excellent" supporting cast were not credited onscreen "possibly because it was intended to keep only the two principals in the limelight".
Cast
Carter DeHaven as Jack Tanner
Flora Parker DeHaven as Julia Paddington
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Lloyd Ingraham
Associated Exhibitors films
American films based on plays |
Lalín is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Allan Lalín (born 1981), Honduran footballer
Daniel Lalín, Argentine businessman
Matilde Lalín, Argentine-Canadian mathematician
Wilson Lalín (born 1985), Guatemalan footballer
See also
Lars Lalin (1729–1785), Swedish musician, playwright and opera singer
Lalín, a municipality in Spain
Lalin (disambiguation) |
Baccaurea tetrandra, also known as mata kunau in Malay and more locally as kunau-kunau or enkuni, is a species of flowering plant, a tropical forest fruit-tree in the tampoi family, that is native to Southeast Asia.
Description
The species grows as a dioecious tree to 4–20 m in height, with a short, occasionally fluted, 1–1.5 m bole. The smooth, oval leaves are 5–21 cm long by 2–12 cm wide. The inflorescences of white or green to yellow (sometimes red) flowers occur in the leaf axils and along the branches. The fruits are pink to red berries, with the seeds contained in an edible, blue to purple arillode.
Distribution and habitat
The species is found in Borneo, the Philippines, Sulawesi and the Maluku Islands, where it occurs in lowland and hill mixed dipterocarp, swamp and secondary forests, up to an elevation of 1,500 m. It is sometimes cultivated in villages.
References
tetrandra
Flora of Malesia
Fruits originating in Asia
Plants described in 1858
Taxa named by Henri Ernest Baillon |
Eighteenth-century Gothic novels are works of Gothic fiction published between 1764 and roughly 1820, with their greatest period of popularity in the 1790s. These works originated the term "Gothic" to refer to stories which evoked the sentimental and supernatural qualities of medieval romance with the new genre of the novel. After 1820, the eighteenth-century Gothic novel receded in popularity, largely overtaken by the related genre of historical fiction as pioneered by Walter Scott. The eighteenth-century Gothic was also followed by new genres of Gothic fiction like the Victorian penny dreadful.
Historical development
The rise of the Gothic
The first work to call itself "Gothic" was Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto (1764). Walpole's declared aim was to combine elements of the medieval romance, which he deemed too fanciful, and the modern novel, which he considered to be too confined to strict realism.
Walpole's novel was popular but did not initially prompt many imitators. Beginning with Clara Reeve's The Old English Baron (1778), the 1780s saw more writers attempting the Gothic combination of supernatural plots with emotionally realistic characters.
1790s Gothic boom
At the height of the Gothic's popularity in the 1790s, in England the genre was almost synonymous with Ann Radcliffe, whose works were highly anticipated and widely imitated. She has been called both "the Great Enchantress" and "Mother Radcliffe" due to her influence. She combined aspects of Walpole's Gothic romance with the traditions of the earlier sentimental novel. Radcliffe's defining narrative technique was the "explained supernatural," or, seemingly-magical events which turn out to have mundane explanations. Radcliffe's success attracted many imitators, and the 1790s were characterized by a boom in Gothic publications, especially through the Minerva Press publishing house. Radcliffe's works were often seen as the feminine and rational opposite of a more violently horrifying male Gothic associated with Matthew Lewis. Lewis's The Monk (1796) contrasted strongly with Radcliffe's bestselling The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794), and Radcliffe responded to Lewis in her final novel The Italian (1797). Lewis's The Monk was also seen as bringing the continental horror mode to England, drawing on the German Schauerroman.
German Schauerroman
The term Schauerroman is sometimes equated with the term "Gothic novel", but this is only partially true. Both genres are based on the terrifying side of the Middle Ages, and both frequently feature the same elements (castles, ghost, monster, etc.). However, Schauerroman's key elements are necromancy and secret societies and it is remarkably more pessimistic than the British Gothic novel. All those elements are the basis for Friedrich von Schiller's unfinished novel The Ghost-Seer (1786–1789). The motive of secret societies is also present in Karl Grosse's Horrid Mysteries (1791–1794) and Christian August Vulpius's Rinaldo Rinaldini, the Robber Captain (1797). Genres of Gespensterroman/Geisterroman ("ghost novel"), Räuberroman ("robber novel"), and Ritterroman ("chivalry novel") also frequently share plot and motifs with the British "gothic novel". As its name suggests, the Räuberroman focuses on the life and deeds of outlaws, influenced by Friedrich von Schiller's drama The Robbers (1781). Heinrich Zschokke's Abällino, der grosse Bandit (1793) was translated into English by M.G. Lewis as The Bravo of Venice in 1804. The Ritterroman focuses on the life and deeds of the knights and soldiers, but features many elements found in the gothic novel, such as magic, secret tribunals, and medieval setting. Benedikte Naubert's novel Hermann of Unna (1788) is seen as being very close to the Schauerroman genre.
Other early authors and works included Christian Heinrich Spiess, with his works Das Petermännchen (1793), Der alte Überall und Nirgends (1792), Die Löwenritter (1794), and Hans Heiling, vierter und letzter Regent der Erd- Luft- Feuer- und Wasser-Geister (1798); Heinrich von Kleist's short story "Das Bettelweib von Locarno" (1797); and Ludwig Tieck's Der blonde Eckbert (1797) and Der Runenberg (1804). Early examples of female-authored Gothic include Sophie Albrecht's Das höfliche Gespenst (1797) and Graumännchen oder die Burg Rabenbühl: eine Geistergeschichte altteutschen Ursprungs (1799).
French roman noir
The roman noir ("black novel") appeared in France, by such writers as François Guillaume Ducray-Duminil, Baculard d'Arnaud and Madame de Genlis. The Marquis de Sade used a subgothic framework for some of his fiction, notably The Misfortunes of Virtue (1791) and Eugenie de Franval, though the Marquis himself never thought of his work like this. Sade critiqued the genre in the preface of his Reflections on the novel (1800) stating that the Gothic is "the inevitable product of the revolutionary shock with which the whole of Europe resounded". Contemporary critics of the genre also noted the correlation between the French Revolutionary Terror and the "terrorist school" of writing represented by Radcliffe and Lewis.
Gothic and Romanticism
In 1799 the philosopher William Godwin wrote St. Leon: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century, which influenced St. Irvyne; or, The Rosicrucian (1811) by Godwin's future son-in-law Percy Bysshe Shelley and Frankenstein (1818), which was dedicated to Godwin, and written by his daughter Mary Shelley. Female Anglo-Irish authors also wrote Gothic fiction in the 19th-century, including Regina Maria Roche, whose novel Clermont (1798) went through several editions, and Sydney Owenson, most famous for The Wild Irish Girl (1806). Gothic tales started to appear also in women's magazines like The Lady's Monthly Museum (1798-1832). Further contributions to the Gothic genre were seen in the work of the first generation of Romantic poets: Samuel Taylor Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798) and Christabel (1816).
References
Literary genres
Horror genres
18th-century British literature |
Lecanora loekoesii is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae. Found in South Korea, it was formally described as a new species in 2011 by Lei Lü, Yogesh Joshi, and Jae-Seoun Hur. The type specimen was collected on Mount Taebaek (Taebaek, Gangwon Province) at an altitude of ; here it was found growing on oak bark. It is only known to occur at the type locality. The specific epithet loekoesii honours Hungarian lichenologist László Lőkös, who collected the type specimen.
Description
The lichen forms a thin, grey, crust-like thallus that lacks soredia, pruina, and a prothallus. Its asci contains from 12 to 16 ascospores, each of which are ellipsoid, hyaline, and typically measure 12.6–15.3 by 7.5–8.5 μm. It contains several secondary chemicals, including atranorin, usnic acid, zeorin, and norstictic acid.
See also
List of Lecanora species
References
loekoesii
Lichens described in 2011
Lichens of Asia |
The 2022 Loyola Ramblers men's volleyball team represents Loyola University Chicago in the 2022 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season. The Ramblers, led by 7th year head coach Mark Hulse, play their home games at Joseph J. Gentile Arena. The Cardinals are members of the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association and were picked to win the conference title in the MIVA in the preseason poll.
Roster
Schedule
*-Indicates conference match.
Times listed are Central Time Zone.
Broadcasters
Hawai'i: Kanoa Leahey & Ryan Tsuki
Hawai'i: Kanoa Leahey & James Anastassiades
St. Francis: Sam Levitt & Ray Gooden
NJIT: Scott Sudikoff & Ray Gooden
Belmont Abbey: Tyler Aki & Lauren Withrow
Long Beach State: Tyler Aki & Kris Berzins
Lincoln Memorial: Adam Haley
King: Brittney Ramsey & Julie Ward
Grand Canyon: Ray Gooden & Kris Berzins
Quincy: Sam Levitt & Ray Gooden
Lindenwood: Sam Levitt & Kris Berzins
Ohio State: Keith Kokinda & Hanna Williford
Ball State: No commentary
McKendree: Colin Suhre
Lewis: Scott Sudikoff & Lauren Withrow
Purdue Fort Wayne:
Emmanuel:
Daemen:
Purdue Fort Wayne:
McKendree:
Lewis:
Lindenwood:
Quincy:
Ball State:
Ohio State:
Rankings
^The Media did not release a Pre-season poll.
Honors
To be filled in upon completition of the season.
References
2022 in sports in Illinois
2022 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season
2022 team
Loyola Chicago |
Speed Wild is a 1925 American silent action film directed by Harry Garson and starring Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn, Ethel Shannon and Frank Elliott.
Synopsis
Racing enthusiast joins the police as a motorcycle officer. He battles a gang of people smugglers, who have kidnapped the woman he is in love with.
Cast
Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as Jack Ames
Ethel Shannon as Mary Bryant
Frank Elliott as Wendell Martin
Ralph McCullough as Charles Bryant
Ray Turner as Ulysses
Fred Burns as Red Dugan
Charles Clary as Herbert Barron
Billy Butts as Child
Doreen Turner as Child
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1925 films
1920s action films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American action films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Harry Garson
Film Booking Offices of America films |
The 1940 Southwest Texas State Bobcats football team was an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now known as Texas State University) during the 1940 college football season as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC). In their sixth year under head coach Joe Bailey Cheaney, the team compiled an overall record of 3–5–1 with a mark of 0–4 in conference play.
Schedule
References
Southwest Texas State
Texas State Bobcats football seasons
Southwest Texas State Bobcats football |
Edmund Henry Sutton (27 July 1838 – 24 April 1893) was an Australian politician.
Sutton was born in Launceston in Tasmania in 1838. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Cressy. He served until his death in Launceston in 1893.
References
1838 births
1893 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
75 Wall Street is a 42-story mixed-use building in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. It contains Hyatt Centric Wall Street New York, a hotel with 253 rooms managed by Blue Sky Hospitality.
Designed by Welton Becket & Associates and developed by London & Leeds as an office building, 75 Wall Street was announced in 1984 as the North American headquarters of British bank Barclays. After the building opened in 1987, several firms leased space in the building. JPMorgan Chase acquired 75 Wall Street from Barclays in 2005, and the Hakimian Organization and Peykar Brothers Realty purchased the building later that year. The upper floors were converted to 346 residential condominiums in 2009, while the lower floors opened as the Andaz Wall Street hotel in January 2010. Navika Capital acquired the hotel in 2022 and rebranded it as Hyatt Centric Wall Street New York.
Use as office building
In April 1984, British bank Barclays announced it would construct a 36-story headquarters at the southwest corner of Wall Street and Water Street. The building, developed by British firm London & Leeds, was the first to be erected directly on Wall Street in fifteen years. Welton Becket Associates was hired as architect for the building, which was variously cited as containing a floor area of or . Barclays would occupy as part of its headquarters and sublet the remainder of the space, consolidating employees from several other locations in Manhattan. As designed, each of the first 28 office floors was planned with of floor area, while the top floors were set back and were slightly smaller. Manufacturers Hanover Corporation financed the development, which was projected to cost $200 million. There was high demand for office space in the Financial District at the time, and 75 Wall Street was one of eight new office buildings in the area with available space. 75 Wall Street's development involved a three-month-long archeological study of the site, though construction proceeded as scheduled. Items excavated from the site included a crock containing the name of Clarkson Crolius, who established the Tammany Hall political ring. London & Leeds donated over 250,000 historical artifacts to the South Street Seaport Museum, many of which came from the 75 Wall Street excavation.
Barclays had opened its headquarters by early 1987. At the time, Barclays was planning to expand its operations within the United States. The Christian Science Monitor wrote that the lobby was filled with scaffolding, and "a vacant elevator shaft and artless walls further attest that Barclays Bank's new granite-and-brass North American headquarters is not nearly complete." London & Leeds was still fitting out the building in mid-1988. The building's completion coincided with a decline in New York City's office market. Additionally, Barclays decided to involve itself in wholesale business and capital markets rather than expand its American operations, as had been the bank's intention when 75 Wall Street was completed. By 1989, Barclays was looking to relocate 1,000 employees from 75 Wall Street to MetroTech Center in Brooklyn.
News service Knight Ridder occupied up to in the building before moving to the World Financial Center in 1996. Dresdner Bank leased of space in 1994 and opened a fixed-income trading floor at 75 Wall Street the next year. J.P. Morgan & Co. also leased space there during the late 1990s. Barclays itself only occupied at 75 Wall Street by 1997. A bomb detonated outside the building in 2000, breaking some windows, though nobody was hurt. Following the nearby collapse of the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks in 2001, Dresdner Bank's successor Dresdner Kleinwort moved out of 75 Wall Street, and Barclay also contemplated moving its offices. Despite vacating the building, Dresdner continued to lease 12 stories, and the Fireman's Fund Insurance Company held a lease on three stories. JPMorgan Chase purchased the building from Barclays in 2005 and subsequently bought out these two leases.
Hotel and condominium use
Conversion and 2010s operation
The Hakimian Organization and Peykar Brothers Realty purchased 75 Wall Street from JPMorgan Chase for $185 million in December 2005. By then, many office buildings in the Financial District were being turned into residential condominiums, and several hotels were also being built in the neighborhood. Rex Hakimian said that while the average office rent in the area was per month, condominium apartments often sold for more than . Hakimian said 75 Wall Street's small floor plates and tall ceilings made the building seem "as if it was built to be converted".
The building was rezoned for residential and commercial use. Over three years, the Hakimian Organization converted 75 Wall Street into a mixed-use structure with condominiums on its upper floors and a hotel below. SLCE Architects designed the conversion, and Hyatt agreed to operate the hotel as one of the first hotels in its Andaz chain. The project was to contain about 250 hotel rooms and 350 apartments. A tenant amenity area was placed on the rooftop, with a lounge, hot tub, small beach, solarium, and hammocks. Condo residents could also pay a la carte for service from the hotel's housekeeping staff. Interior designer David Rockwell, one of the architects involved in the project, included a private screening room in the condo section of the building. Rockwell designed four model apartments for prospective buyers, which the Hakimian Group presented at a party in September 2007. Rockwell also designed the hotel, with rooms averaging .
The condominium portion of the building opened in 2009 with 346 residential units. Hakimian allowed residents to sublease their condos for periods of as little as three months, which made the building appealing to buyers from around the world. The hotel portion opened as Andaz Wall Street in January 2010, and a restaurant named Wall & Water also opened within the ground floor. Condo sales at 75 Wall Street lagged in the wake of the late-2000s financial crisis, and only 137 of the units were in contract or had been sold by July 2010. As a result, Bayerische Landesbank, which had given the developers a $263 million loan for the building's renovation, extended the term of the loan by two years. Hakimian refinanced existing debt on the hotel with Annaly Capital Management in 2017. The hotel renovated its rooms in 2019.
COVID-19 pandemic
The hotel suspended operations in 2020 amid citywide shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2020, Hakimian listed the hotel portion for sale for $125 million, but failed to make a sale; a new owner could convert the hotel back to office space, which before the pandemic had seen more steady demand than hotel rooms in New York City. According to court papers, only $20,000 remained in the hotel's operating account by April 2020. Hakimian entered into a forbearance agreement with Annaly in June 2020, extending the due date of its loan to December. According to court documents, Hakimian failed to pay off the loan or make interest payments.
In January 2022, Hakimian sold the hotel portion of the building to Navika Capital for $84.7 million after Annaly attempted to foreclose on the building after nonpayment of a $55 million loan. Hakimian retains ownership of the condo section of the building. The hotel rebranded and reopened as Hyatt Centric Wall Street New York on January 26. Vishal Kotahwala, Executive Partner of Navika, said that "Centric is a better brand for the current market."
References
1987 establishments in New York City
2010 establishments in New York City
2022 establishments in the United States
Barclays
Financial District, Manhattan
Hotels established in 2010
Hotels established in 2022
Hotels in Manhattan
Office buildings completed in 1987
Wall Street |
Lecanora hafelliana is a species of corticolous (bark-dwelling), crustose lichen in the family Lecanoraceae. It is found in South Korea and in China, where it is fairly common on the bark of deciduous trees such as maple, birch, dogwood, and oak. The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2011 by Lei Lü, Yogesh Joshi, and Jae-Seoun Hur. The type specimen was collected by Hur on Mount Baekwoon (Gangwon Province) at an elevation of . In China, it was recorded growing on the bark of Korean pine. The lichen has a dull whitish to ash-grey crust-like thallus with a definite margin, but lacking a prothallus. Lecanora hafelliana contains several secondary compounds, including atranorin, zeorin, usnic acid, a complex of compounds related to stictic acid, and hafellic acid. Its specific epithet alludes to the presence of this latter compound.
See also
List of Lecanora species
References
hafelliana
Lichens described in 2011
Lichens of Asia |
Cultural genocide in the United States comprises the dismantling of a culture and the de-socializing of a people. Physical and cultural disintegration of the indigenous people by forcing them to attend boarding schools along with the discrimination against them due to the instrumental use of the law are the two manifestations of cultural genocide in the United States.
Against the indigenous people
In reference to colonialism in the United States, Raphael Lemkin stated that the "colonial enslavement of American Indians was a cultural genocide." He also stated that colonialism in the United States comprised an "effective and thorough method of destroying a culture and de-socializing human beings." Lemkin drew a distinction between "cultural change and cultural genocide." He defined the former as a slow and gradual process of transition to new situations, and he saw the latter as the result of a radical and violent change that necessitated "the pre-meditated goal of those committing cultural genocide." Lemkin believed that cultural genocide occurs only when there are "surgical operations on cultures and deliberate assassinations of civilizations."
According to Vincent Schilling, who spoke to BBC Trending, many people are aware of historical atrocities that were committed against his people, but there is an "extensive amount of misunderstanding about Native American and First Nations people's history." He added that Native Americans have also suffered a "cultural genocide” because of colonization's residual effects.
Law and cultural genocide
The American-Indian experience in North America is defined as comprising physical and cultural disintegration. That fact becomes clear when one examines how law and colonialism were used as tools of genocide, both physically and culturally. According to Luana Ross the assumption that law (a Euro-American construct) and its administration are prejudiced against particular groups of individuals is critical for understanding Native American criminality and the experiences of Natives imprisoned. For instance, in Georgia, the 1789 act permitted indiscriminate massacre of Creek Indians by proclaiming them to be outside the state's protection. Apart from physical annihilation, the State promoted acculturation by introducing legislation limiting land entitlements to Indians who had abandoned tribal citizenship.
Boarding schools
According to Schilling, there are still a large number of adult Native people who have been forcibly removed from their families and shipped off to Native residential schools, where they were beaten for speaking their native languages, were sexually assaulted by school officials, or were left to die in the cases they contracted diseases. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the United States had approximately 350 government-funded and frequently church-run Indigenous boarding schools.
According to the U.S. Interior Department, the Indian boarding schools was meant “to culturally assimilate Indigenous children” through forcible removal from their families and communities and placement in remote "residential facilities where their American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian identities, languages, and beliefs" would be suppressed. Hundreds of thousands of Indigenous children have been removed from their communities for over 150 years. Between 1869 and the 1970s, hundreds of thousands of Indigenous children "passed through or died" at these schools until the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 gave Native American parents the legal ability to object to their children's enrollment in these institutions.
Separation of children from their families with the goal "to destroy the identity of a group," partially or completely, is specifically included in the 1948 Genocide Convention's definition of genocide. The boarding schools' assimilationist goals were explicitly genocidal to the extent that these schools were intentionally designed to "kill the Indian, save the man."
References
Cultural genocide
History of the United States |
The Battle of Pantoja and Rocafuerte, known also simply as the Battle of Rocafuerte, was a military confrontation between Peru and Ecuador that took place on August 11, 1941, during the Ecuadorian–Peruvian War.
Background
Hostilities between Peru and Ecuador began on July 5, 1941, when fire was exchanged between both parties. By late July, a full-on offensive was being carried out by Peru in the coastal region of southern Ecuador, and fire was being exchanged in the disputed Amazon as well. A ceasefire had been declared by Ecuador, effective on July 31, but skirmishes between both parties continued nevertheless.
Battle
Both parties started exchanging fire at 4 a.m. according to Peru. Who started the attack, however, is disputed by both parties as well. The Ecuadorian outpost was well supplied and in a good position, and the Peruvian outpost was on a small island with trees blocking the view located in the Napo–Aguarico confluence. At the time, both outposts were located in what was known as the Status quo line, agreed upon by both countries in 1936 to serve as a provisional border, and were separated by an eponymous bridge. During the battle, Major Arias attempted to negotiate a ceasefire but was unsuccessful in doing so as the Peruvians demanded an unconditional surrender, something he was not allowed to approve. According to Peru, Arias also unsuccessfully attempted to communicate with Major Escalante, who had fled the scene. According to Ecuador, Peru used air support in addition to its frigate to heavily bombard the outpost.
The battle went on for hours, and the Ecuadorian forces were eventually forced to retreat, with Peru eventually overrunning the outpost and capturing several men, including Arias, and by 12 p.m. the Flag of Peru had been risen on the Ecuadorian outpost, ending the battle. Ecuadorian accounts claim that the men had to leave almost naked and extremely unprepared, and that due to the harsh nature of the local environment, six children drowned.
Aftermath
The government of Ecuador, led by Dr. Carlos Alberto Arroyo del Río, signed the Rio de Janeiro Protocol on January 29, 1942, with which Ecuador officially renounced its claim to a sovereign outlet to the Amazon River.
Rosa Panduro District was created in 2014, named after a housewife who participated in the battle along with her husband.
References
Ecuadorian–Peruvian War
1941 in Ecuador
1941 in Peru
Wars involving Peru
Wars involving Ecuador
Pantoja and Rocafuerte
Pantoja and Rocafuerte
Pantoja and Rocafuerte |
William Belbin (7 February 1825 – 26 June 1892) was an Australian politician.
Belbin was born in Tasmania in 1825. In 1871 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of South Hobart. He served until 1891. He died in 1892 in Sydney.
References
1825 births
1892 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Dr Sun Yat Sen is an bronze outdoor memorial sculpture depicting the Chinese physician, writer, and philosopher of the same name, installed outside the Chinese Museum in Melbourne's Chinatown, in the Australian state of Victoria.
The statue commemorates Dr Sun Yat-sen, a Chinese revolutionary and the first president and founding father of the Nationalist Republic of China, who played a significant role in the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty in the early 20th century, becoming the first provisional president when the Republic of China was formed in 1912.
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Republic of China, the statute was installed in late 2011 by the Chinese community in Melbourne in memory of Dr Sun's huge contributions to the establishment of Republic of China. The statute was unveiled by the Chinese Youth Society of Melbourne in a Lion Dance Blessing ceremony, with the statue located outside the Chinese Museum's entrance on the spot where their traditional Chinese New Year Lion Dance always ends.
The statue's front inscription reads "Dr. Sun Yat Sen The Founder of Modern China 1866–1925", the back inscription reads "Respectfully erected by the Founding Committee of Dr. Sun Yat Sen Memorial Statue Inc and the Chinese Community of Australia 10 October 2011 Melbourne", the inscription on the left reads "The World is for All" and the inscription on the right reads "Love is for All".
References
External links
2011 sculptures
Cultural depictions of Sun Yat-sen
Monuments and memorials in Melbourne
Outdoor sculptures in Australia
Sculptures of men in Australia
Statues in Australia
Statues of presidents
Chinatowns in Australia |
The Last Trail is a 1921 American silent western film directed by Emmett J. Flynn and starring Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn, Eva Novak and Wallace Beery. It is based on the 1909 novel The Last Trail by Zane Grey.
Cast
Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as The Stranger
Eva Novak as Winifred Samson
Wallace Beery as William Kirk
Rosemary Theby as Chiquita
Charles K. French as Sheriff Nelson
Harry Spingler as Campbell
Harry Dunkinson as Kenworth Samson
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 Western (genre) films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American Western (genre) films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Emmett J. Flynn
Fox Film films |
The 2022 Omloop Het Nieuwsblad is a road cycling one-day race that took place on 26 February 2022 in Belgium, starting in Gent and finishing in Ninove. It was the 77th edition of the Omloop Het Nieuwsblad and the second event of the 2022 UCI World Tour.
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad is a race that is usually won by a solo rider or is decided by a sprint from a small group of several riders. This year was no exception, winner Wout van Aert attacked with 13 km to go from the group of favorites. Victor Campenaerts was the first to try chase Van Aert down from the group of 20 riders. van Aert held his lead to the line extending the gap to 22 seconds. The group of 20 sprint out for the rest of the places of the podium with Sonny Colbrelli beating Greg Van Avermaet.
Teams
Twenty-five teams participated in the race, including all eighteen UCI WorldTour teams and seven UCI ProTeams. Each team entered seven riders, except for who entered five, and who entered six each, for a total of 171 riders.
Result
References
External links
2022 UCI World Tour
2022
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad
Omloop Het Nieuwsblad |
John William Falkiner (16 May 1848 – 14 November 1927) was an Australian politician.
Falkiner was born in Epping Forest in Tasmania in 1848. In 1882 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Morven. In 1886 his seat was replaced by Evandale, which he represented until his defeat in 1891. He died in 1927 in Longford.
References
1848 births
1927 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Bailey Sarian is a YouTuber known for her video series Murder, Mystery & Makeup and podcast Dark History. She has been considered to be the founder of the true crime makeup genre of YouTube videos.
Career
Prior to creating her YouTube content, Sarian worked as a social media creator with cosmetics subscription service IPSY, and as an employee for the brands Sephora and Urban Decay. She began her YouTube channel in 2013 as a traditional makeup channel, producing makeup tutorials and reviews. In January 2019, she released the first episode of Murder, Mystery & Makeup, in which she discussed the Watts family murders whilst applying makeup. In June 2021, she debuted her AudioBoom original podcast Dark History with an episode on the DuPont chemical scandal. Video versions of the podcast filmed in Los Angeles are produced by Wheelhouse DNA and released on her YouTube channel the day following their AudioBoom release.
Reception
In 2020, YouTube ranked Sarian amongst the top breakout creators of the year. She was also presented with a Creator Honor Award by NikkieTutorials at the 10th Streamy Awards, as well as being nominated for the Beauty subject award. At the 11th Streamy Awards, Sarian won the Beauty subject award. She was also nominated for Makeup Influencer of the Year at the 2021 USA Today American Influencer Awards.
The Guardian included Murder, Mystery & Makeup in a list of the best podcasts of the week, describing the series as reaching an "innovative new niche". Dark History was listed as one of the best new podcasts of 2021 by publications such as the Las Vegas Weekly, Elle Australia, and Variety, and was the ninth top new show of the year on Apple Podcasts. It was also nominated for Show of the Year and won Podcast of the Year at the 11th Streamy Awards.
Personal life
Sarian lives in Los Angeles. Her mother is a 911 dispatcher.
References
English-language YouTube channels
Beauty and makeup YouTubers
Living people
Female YouTubers
YouTube channels launched in 2013 |
Bucking the Line is a 1921 American silent drama film directed by Carl Harbaugh and starring Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn, Molly Malone and Kathryn McGuire.
Cast
Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as John Montague Smith
Molly Malone as Corona Baldwin
Norman Selby as Jerry
Edwin B. Tilton as Colonel Dexter Baldwin
Kathryn McGuire as Vera Richlander
J. Farrell MacDonald as Dave Kinsey
Jim Farley as Watrous Dunham
Leslie Casey as Tucker Jibbey
George Kerby as Rand Barlow
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Carl Harbaugh
Fox Film films |
James Gray (1820 – 21 January 1889) was an Australian politician.
Gray was born in Ballybay in County Monaghan in 1820. In 1843 he was found guilty of subornation to perjury and transported to Tasmania, where he arrived in 1844. He received his ticket of leave in 1847 and became a free man in 1853. In 1872 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of West Hobart. He served until 1877. He later represented Sorell from 1882 until his death in 1889.
References
1820 births
1889 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly
Convicts transported to Australia |
Sun Won't Shine may refer to:
"Sun Won't Shine", a song by Sentenced from the album Down
"Sun Won't Shine", a song by Skyy from the album Skyyport
"The Sun Won't Shine", a song by Angelfish from their self-titled album
"The Sun Won't Shine", a song by Katrina and the Waves from their self-titled album |
Admiral Black may refer to:
Barry Black (born 1948), U.S. Navy rear admiral
Eugene H. Black III (born c. 1964), U.S. Navy vice admiral
Jeremy Black (Royal Navy officer) (1932–2015), Royal Navy admiral
Admiral Black, a fictional admiral in the TV series Star Trek |
George Francis Huston (1812 – 18 December 1890) was an Australian politician.
Huston was born in 1812. He was a doctor before entering politics. In 1887 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of New Norfolk. He served until his death in 1890.
References
1812 births
1890 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Blaze Away is a 1922 American silent western film directed by William Hughes Curran and starring Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams, Molly Malone and Hal Wilson.
Cast
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams as Big Boy
Molly Malone as Molly Melody
Hal Wilson as Pop Melody
Edward Burns as Bill Lang
Edward W. Borman as Tuck Martin
William Hughes Curran as Pablo
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1922 films
1922 Western (genre) films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American Western (genre) films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by William Hughes Curran |
Sieyic, also spelled Sieyik, is the capital of the Panamanian comarca (indigenous territory) of Naso Tjër Di. It was founded on 4 December 2020, having been separated from the Changuinola District. It is located on the banks of the Teribe River.
References
External links
Populated places in Naso Tjër Di Comarca |
Canelo Álvarez vs. Dmitry Bivol, billed as Legacy is Earned, is an upcoming professional boxing match between 4-division world champion, Canelo Álvarez, and defending WBA (Super) light heavyweight champion, Dmitry Bivol. The fight will take place on May 7, 2022.
Background
After Canelo Álvarez unified all four major world titles to become undisputed super middleweight champion with an eleventh-round technical knockout victory over Caleb Plant on 6 November 2021, it appeared likely that Álvarez would move up to challenge for a world title in a fifth division, when his trainer Eddy Reynoso successfully petitioned the WBC on November 15, 2021, to allow Álvarez to challenge WBC cruiserweight champion Ilunga Makabu. The fight ultimately did not happen, as Makabu was forced into a mandatory defense of his title in a rematch against Thabiso Mchunu on 29 January 2022, which the former won via split decision.
Instead, it was announced on 25 February 2022 that Álvarez had signed a two-fight deal with Matchroom Boxing; the first fight would see him returning to the light heavyweight division to challenge long-reigning undefeated WBA (Super) champion Dmitry Bivol on May 7 in a bout that would be televised as sports streaming service DAZN's first pay-per-view offering in the United States and Canada.
Bivol first won the WBA interim light heavyweight title in only his seventh professional bout in May 2016, making his first defense of the full WBA world title in 2017, before being designated as Super champion in 2019. Against Álvarez, Bivol will be making his fourth defense of the WBA (Super) title, and his ninth world title defense overall.
Fight card
Broadcasting
The bout will be broadcast live by sports streaming service DAZN to existing subscribers worldwide excluding Latin America. The bout will be broadcast on pay-per-view in the United States and Canada.
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References
Boxing matches
Boxing matches involving Canelo Álvarez
2022 in boxing
May 2022 sports events in the United States
2022 in sports in Nevada
Boxing in Las Vegas
Events in Paradise, Nevada |
Since May 2021, at least 31 cockfight enthusiasts or players (locally sabungeros) went missing without a trace in the different areas of Luzon, Philippines, after they supposedly went to the cockfight arena.
Events
The first reported disappearance of a sabungero was recorded on May 10, 2021 in Santa Cruz, Laguna. As of February 24, 2022, a total of 31 cockfight players are still missing.
On August 30, 2021, a CCTV footage showing armed men stormed the house of 48-year-old Ricardo Lasco in San Pablo, Laguna. Several
minutes later, armed men were shown bringing Lasco out of the house and the box allegedly containing jewelries, watches, and money, before they drive away. Lasco has since not been found. According to his relatives, Lasco was a chicken breeder and a "master agent" of online sabong.
On January 5, 2022, two residents named Jeffrey and Nomer Depano from Hagonoy, Bulacan, did not return home after they went to Lipa, Batangas. The Depano brothers were driven in a separate van, which was later found abandoned two days later near a bridge. The police found the clothes still inside the van. Their mother said that Jeffrey had no knowledge about the cockfight. On January 6, also in Hagonoy, other three residents were reportedly missing after they told to their respective families that they were going to Lipa to supposedly attend an online sabong. On January 7, a man and a his pregnant girlfriend also went missing after they went to the cockfight area. On January 13, 2022, four cockfighting players went missing from the Manila Arena. It was followed by six more players at the same area. A January 13 CCTV footage showing a convoy of vehicles driving away from the Manila Arena in Santa Ana, Manila; one of them is Toyota Tamaraw FX ridden by the neighbors of a cockfight player who went missing in Rizal. The FX was shown stopping at the Osmeña Highway where a man was seen getting out of the car and transferred to the tailing car. A man was not known by the relatives of the missing sabungeros in Rizal.
On January 31, 2022, relatives of 18 enthusiasts held a protests in Mendiola to call the government to speed up the investigation. On February 4, 2022, a luxury car used to transport the cockfight enthusiasts was found abandoned in a restaurant in Malate, Manila with its engine still running. The police looked for the possible kidnapping case but there is no evidence that the missing cockfight enthusiasts were kidnapped in Manila and stated that the enthusiasts were seen getting out alive.
Investigations and reactions
On February 8, 2022, the Philipine National Police said that they identified the persons of interest in connection to the missing cockfight enthusiasts. The police said that the investigators reportedly talked to the cockfight arena managers and the security guards before the disappearance took place. The investigators eyed for "game fixing" and a so-called "double-cross" in fights as the cause of the disappearances. On February 12, 2022, Senator Leila de Lima expressed concern over the missing cockfight players, and also lamented for "seemingly slow pace of investigation".
On February 15, the relatives of missing cockfight enthusiasts held a prayer vigil in front of the Commission of Human Rights (CHR). On February 17, 2022, Department of Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra ordered the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) to investigate the disappearance of over 20 sabungeros.
On February 24, the Senators called for the suspension of operations and licenses of online sabong in the country. Senator Panfilo Lacson, former PNP chief (1999–2001), warned that the PNP would be a "slap" if they do not solve the missing sabungeros while Senator Ronald dela Rosa, also a former PNP chief (2016–2018), urged the police to double-time the investigation. On February 25, a social media post claiming that the bodies of alleged missing cockfight enthusiasts were found in Tanay, Rizal; however, the police debunked the claim, proving that the images were taken on February 12, 2022, when the police investigated the ambush in Guindulungan, Maguindanao where 12 people killed and three others injured. The police condemned the post, stating that the misinformation was an attempt to derail their investigation. In the hearing of Senate Committee on Public Order and Dangerous Drugs, the sibling of one of the missing enthusiasts, Ricardo Lasco Jr., said that, on August 30, 2021, the armed men identified themselves as the NBI stormed their house where they presented the warrant of arrest but refused to identified themselves and explaining that Lasco was charged for "large scale estafa". They also confiscated his mobile phone. According to San Pablo City Chief of Police Lt. Col. Gary Alegre, he denied that the NBI conducted the legitimate operation on that day. When lawmakers questioned the relatives of the victims, it appears that possible e-sabong website cloning was one of the reasons why Lasco was abducted.
References
2021 crimes in the Philippines
2022 crimes in the Philippines
Missing person cases in the Philippines |
Henry Boyes Mugliston (1848/1849 – 24 June 1914) was an Australian politician.
Mugliston was elected in 1886 to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Brighton. He served until his defeat in 1891. He died in 1914 in London.
References
1840s births
1914 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
Admiral Pringle may refer to:
Cedric E. Pringle (born c. 1964), U.S. Navy rear admiral
Joel R. P. Pringle (1873–1932), U.S. Navy vice admiral
Thomas Pringle (Royal Navy officer) (died 1803), Royal Navy vice admiral |
Admiral Purvis may refer to:
John Purvis (Royal Navy officer) (1787–1857), Royal Navy vice admiral
John Child Purvis (died 1825), Royal Navy admiral
Neville Purvis (born 1936), Royal Navy vice admiral |
Klondike is a 2022 Ukrainian drama film written, directed, and edited by Maryna Er Gorbach. The film stars Oxana Cherkashyna as a pregnant woman living near the Ukrainian-Russian border during the War in Donbas and the shooting of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. Klondike premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2022, where it won the World Cinema Dramatic Competition for directing. At the Berlin International Film Festival, it won the second place in Panorama Audience Award category.
Cast
Oksana Cherkashina as Ira
Serhiy Shadrin as Tolik
Oleg Shcherbina as Yurik, Ira's younger brother
Awards and nominations
References
External links
2022 films
Ukrainian drama films
Ukrainian films
Sundance Film Festival award winners
2022 drama films |
Arthur Young (1816 – 27 March 1906) was an Australian politician.
Young was born in Aberdeenshire in 1816. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of East Devon. He served until 1891. He died in 1906 in Devonport.
References
1816 births
1906 deaths
Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
School City of Mishawaka is a public school district, headquartered in Mishawaka, Indiana.
The district includes the central part of the city.
History
In 1991 the district began educating children under the care of the Family & Children's Center (FCC), an organization serving disabled children. The FCC sued the school district in 1993 because the district did not want to pay certain fees.
In 2019 Wayne Barker became the superintendent.
Schools
As of February 2022, the district holds jurisdiction over 2 secondary and 7 primary schools. Listed below, they are:
Secondary
Mishawaka High School
John Young Middle School
Elementary
Battell Elementary School
Beiger Elementary School
Emmons Elementary School
Hums Elementary School
LaSalle Elementary School
Liberty Elementary School
Twin Branch Elementary School
Demographics
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, School City of Mishawaka served 5,149 students during the 2020–21 academic year. The district employed 370.15 full time equivalent classroom teachers, resulting in a student–teacher ratio of
References
External links
School City of Mishawaka
Education in St. Joseph County, Indiana
School districts in Indiana
Mishawaka, Indiana |
Heads Up is a 1925 American silent comedy adventure film directed by Harry Garson and starring Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn, Kathleen Myers and Kalla Pasha.
Cast
Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as Breckenridge Gamble
Kathleen Myers as Angela
Kalla Pasha as Malofich
Jean Perry as Cortez
Milton Ross as Losada
Harry McCoy as Biff
Hazel Rogers as Anita
Ray Ripley as Comandante
Robert Cauterio as Spy
Ray Turner as Zeke
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1925 films
1925 adventure films
1925 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American adventure films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Harry Garson
Film Booking Offices of America films |
Corticium is a genus of sponges in the order Homosclerophorida.
first described by Eduard Oscar Schmidt in 1862.
Species
Accepted species as given by WoRMS:
Corticium acanthastrum
Corticium bargibanti
Corticium candelabrum
Corticium diamantense
Corticium furcatum
Corticium monolophum
Corticium niger
Corticium quadripartitum
Corticium simplex
Corticium vaceleti
Corticium verticillatum
Reference
Homoscleromorpha
Animals described in 1862
Taxa named by Eduard Oscar Schmidt |
Lechenaultia magnifica, commonly known as magnificent leschenaultia, is a species of flowering plant in the family Goodeniaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect, perennial herb or subshrub with crowded, linear to narrowly lance-shaped leaves, and pink to mauve or purple flowers.
Description
Lechenaultia magnifica is an erect, perennial herb or subshrub that typically grows to a height of up to and has pimply foliage. The leaves are crowded, linear to narrowly lance-shaped, long and wide, but longer near the flowers. The flowers are arranged in compact groups, the sepals more or less linear, long and the petals long, pink to mauve or purple with long, soft hairs inside the petal tube. The petal lobes are long, the upper lobes erect with wings wide, the lower lobes long and wide. Flowering has been observed in November, and the fruit is long.
Taxonomy
Lechenaultia magnifica was first formally described in 2006 by Leigh William Sage in the journal Nuytsia from material collected by Fred Hort near Bindoon in 2002. The specific epithet (magnifica) means "splendid" or "magnificent", referring to the floral display of this species.
Distribution and habitat
Magnificent lechenaultia is only known from the Bindoon area in south-western Western Australia where it grows in open woodland.
Conservation status
This lechenaultia is listed as "Priority One" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, meaning that it is known from only one or a few locations that are potentially at risk.
References
Asterales of Australia
magnifica
Eudicots of Western Australia
Plants described in 2006 |
Wesam Keesh is an American actor currently playing Malachi Mintock on season two of Law & Order: Organized Crime. He previously appeared in Awkward, For the People, Good Girls, NCIS: Los Angeles, and Zoobiquity and has been cast in Echo as of 2020 where he will play FBI agent Riley Burnside.
He is a native of Tulsa, Oklahoma where he attended Union High School and the University of Tulsa.
References
External links
American actors
Law & Order (franchise)
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
People from Tulsa, Oklahoma |
Gabriele Gibilterra (born 1 January 2000) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a winger for club Lucchese.
Club career
Born in Syracuse, Gibilterra started his career in Genoa youth system. For the 2018–19 season, he was loaned to Serie C club Albissola. He made his professional debut on 14 October 2018 against Piacenza.
On 5 October 2019, he signed with Serie D club Foggia as a free agent.
After one season, on 29 October 2020 he joined Serie D club Robur Siena.
On 12 August 2021, he returned to Serie C and signed with Lucchese.
References
External links
2000 births
Living people
People from Syracuse, Sicily
Footballers from Sicily
Italian footballers
Association football wingers
Serie C players
Serie D players
Genoa C.F.C. players
S.P.A.L. players
Albissola 2010 players
Calcio Foggia 1920 S.S.D. players
A.C.N. Siena 1904 players
Lucchese 1905 players |
The Freshie is a 1922 American silent western comedy film directed by William Hughes Curran and starring Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams, Molly Malone and Lincoln Stedman.
Synopsis
A vacationing professor convinces cowboy Charles Taylor that he should go to college to get an education. However he finds it takes him a while to settle down to university life.
Cast
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams as Charles Taylor
Molly Malone as Violet Blakely
Lincoln Stedman as Tubby Tarpley
James McElhern as Professor Noyes
Edward Burns as Ranch Foreman
Lee Phelps as Tom
Sam Armstrong as Jack
Buck Russell as Society Sam
Jules Hanft as Mr. Blakely
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1922 films
1922 Western (genre) films
1922 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American Western (genre) films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by William Hughes Curran |
Paduan Sepakbola Limapuluh Kota Dan Payakumbuh Football Club (simply known as Dualipa FC) is an Indonesian football club based in Lima Puluh Kota Regency, West Sumatra. They currently compete in the Liga 3.
History
Dualipa FC was established in April 2021, started as an amateur football club which was founded in early April. In fact, they have tiered age teams from U13, U15, U17, U18 to the senior team and women's team. In the senior team, they have played in various amateur tournaments in West Sumatra. The results were quite satisfactory, they won the Amphibi Cup and GMR Cup in Tanah Datar Regency.
Dualipa FC was founded on the thoughts of former local players who wanted to advance Lima Puluh Kota Regency and Payakumbuh. They then volunteered to Association Province of PSSI (Asprov PSSI) West Sumatra to become members as well as compete in Liga 3 and Soeratin Cup. They also have a unique story behind choosing a club name that resembles English singer and songwriter, Dua Lipa. Because this club is a combination of two regions, they thought of an abbreviated name that was appropriate and easy to understand. They are known to have been to make two name choices, namely Duapali FC and Dualipa FC, and they finally decided to use the name DUALIPA FC as the club name.
References
External links
Football clubs in Indonesia
Football clubs in West Sumatra
Association football clubs established in 2021
2021 establishments in Indonesia |
The Peshawar Zalmi is a franchise cricket team that competed in the Pakistan Super League. The team is based in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. They were one of the six teams that competed in the 2020 season. The team was coached by Daren Sammy and captained by Wahab Riaz.
Management and Coaching Staff
Season standings
Ladder
League matches
Playoffs
Eliminator 1
References
External Links
Team records in 2020 at ESPNcricinfo
2020 Pakistan Super League
2020 in Pakistani cricket
2020 |
The Peshawar Zalmi (often abbreviated as PZ) is a franchise cricket team that represents Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan in the Pakistan Super League (PSL). The franchise won the tournament in 2017. The team was coached by Daren Sammy, and captained by Wahab Riaz.
Season standings
Points table
League fixtures
Playoffs
Eliminator 1
Eliminator 2
Final
References
External links
Team records in 2021 at ESPNcricinfo
2022 Pakistan Super League
2021 in Pakistani cricket
2021 |
Zindeeq is the fifth novel by Rahman Abbas, the winner of the Sahitya Akademi Award for his novel Rohzin in 2018. Zindeeq was published in November 2021 by Arshia Publication, New Delhi (). Rahman has received an international grant to study Nazism in Germany and find out how the politics in Pakistan and India will affect its minorities. The novel research grant was awarded by 'Crossing Borders' programme, jointly held by the Robert Bosch Foundation and the Literarisches Colloquium, Berlin as reported by LCB & TOI.
Critic Dr Shahid Iqbal Kamran analyzed the novel and writes in his article that "Zindeeq begins with the most important day of Sanaullah’s life, when he passed the compulsory examination to become an officer in the army and ends with the phrase, "And the war has begun'. It points to a fear that if both the countries will remain victims of their history, unless people here come out of the ideas and thoughts spread during the British rule, and the light of Taxila is not spread the region will continue to plunge in the darkness. As long as solidarity, freedom and equality are not embraced as a common principle, the fear of war will continue to haunt and destroy minds. And that is what this novel marks on the minds of readers." It is a dystopian novel about the future of the subcontinent, challenges faced by minorities and about various aspects of the queer movement and alternative sexual freedom. Although it is a novel about wars in future, it also analyses the past of mankind through the use of mythological tales.
References
Indian books by writer
Literature
LGBT literature in India |
Mauro Semprini (born 15 April 1998) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a forward for club Lucchese.
Club career
Born in Rome, Semprini finished his formation in Virtus Entella youth sector.
On 3 August 2018, he joined Serie D club Ponsacco.
On 13 July 2019, he signed with Serie C club Pontedera. Semprini made his professional debut on 24 August 2019 against Carrrarese.
On 16 August 2020, he was loaned to Südtirol. His loan ended on 16 January 2021.
He left Pontedera for the 2021–22 season. On 9 August 2021 he joined Serie C club Lucchese.
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Footballers from Rome
Italian footballers
Association football forwards
Serie C players
Serie D players
Lupa Roma F.C. players
Virtus Entella players
F.C. Ponsacco 1920 S.S.D. players
U.S. Città di Pontedera players
F.C. Südtirol players
Lucchese 1905 players |
The Heroine is a novel by Eaton Stannard Barrett, first published in 1813.
Cherry Wilkinson, a fatuous female protagonist with a history of novel-reading, fancies herself as the heroine of a Gothic romance. She perceives and models reality according to the stereotypes and typical plot structures of the Gothic novel, leading to a series of absurd events culminating in catastrophe. After her downfall, her affectations and excessive imaginations become eventually subdued by the voice of reason in the form of Stuart, a paternal figure, under whose guidance the protagonist receives a sound education and correction of her misguided taste.
References
19th-century British novels
Gothic novels
Parody novels
1813 novels |
The Lambda Literary Award for Gay Mystery is an annual literary award, presented by the Lambda Literary Foundation, to a mystery novel by or about gay men. The award was established in 1990 and ran until 2020 when the Foundation combined all mystery awards into a single Lambda Literary Award for Mystery.
Recipients
References
Lambda Literary Awards
Awards established in the 1990s
LGBT literary awards
Awards established in 1990
English-language literary awards
Lists of LGBT-related award winners and nominees
International literary awards |
Wang Xiqin (; born June 1968) is a Chinese educator and the current president of Tsinghua University, in office since 25 February 2022.
Biography
Wang was born in Tai County (Taizhou), Jiangsu, in June 1968. He secondary studied at Jiangyan High School. In 1986, he was accepted to Tsinghua University, where he earned his doctor's degree in 1991. Wang joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in November 1990. After graduation, he stayed at the university and worked successively as deputy director and director of Electronic Engineering Department, vice dean of the School of Information Science and Technology, director of Personnel Department and director of Human Resources Development Office, and deputy director of Supervision Committee. He became assistant president in February 2016. In December 2016, he was appointed vice president. After this office was terminated in October 2018, he became executive vice president. On 25 February 2022, he was promoted to be president, a position at vice-ministerial level.
References
1968 births
Living people
People from Taizhou, Jiangsu
Tsinghua University alumni
Tsinghua University faculty
Presidents of Tsinghua University |
A Long Way to Nowhere may refer to:
A Long Way to Nowhere, an album by the Parkinsons
"A Long Way to Nowhere", a song by Sentenced from The Funeral Album
"Long Way to Nowhere", an episode of the drama series Movin' On |
Drain Me may refer to:
"Drain Me", a song by Sentenced from The Funeral Album
"Drain Me", a song by Slaves on Dope from Metafour
"Drain Me", a song recorded by Model Child and written by Danny Parker |
Route 11 Potato Chips is an American brand and manufacturer of kettle-cooked potato chips based in Mount Jackson, Virginia, United States, located in the Shenandoah Valley. The company competes with other Mid-Atlantic potato chip companies such as Martin's Potato Chips and Utz Brands.
History
Route 11 Potato Chips was founded in 1992 by Sarah Cohen and originally based in Middletown, Virginia, named after U.S. Route 11, which runs north–south nearby. The company moved its production facility to Mount Jackson in 2008 where the chips are produced currently.
In 2013, Route 11 partnered with Ben & Jerry's to produce a promotional ice cream flavor Capitol Chill, garnished with the company's Sweet Potato chips.
Factory and production
The Route 11 Potato Chips manufacturing facility is located on 11 Edwards Way next to Interstate 81 and U.S 11 near Shenandoah Caverns. The factory building has a lobby open to the public where visitors can purchase chips and merchandise, get free samples, and view the factory itself.
The company typically uses potatoes locally-grown in Virginia or ones grown in North Carolina. Seasonally, Yukon Gold and sweet potatoes are used for other chip flavors. The factory produces 600 pounds of potato chips each hour.
Flavors
Route 11 sells eleven different chip flavors:
Lightly Salted, the company's standard flavor
Barbeque, seasoned with barbecue spices
Chesapeake Crab, seasoned with spiced traditionally used to season crabs in the Mid-Atlantic region
Dill Pickle, vinegar added for a dill pickle flavor
Salt & Pepper, seasoned with both Appalachian salt and cracked pepper
Salt & Vinegar, flavored with both salt and vinegar
Sour Cream & Chive, flavored similarly to French onion dip
Sweet Potato, produced seasonally; made from sweet potatoes
Yukon Gold, produced seasonally; made from Yukon Gold potatoes
No Salt, unsalted kettle chips; not sold individually-packaged
Mama Zuma's Revenge, a brand of habanero-flavored chips
References
Snack food manufacturers
Brand name potato chips and crisps
Companies based in Virginia
American companies established in 1992
Privately held companies based in Virginia |
The 2022 Swiss Open (officially known as Yonex Swiss Open 2022, for sponsorship reasons) is a badminton tournament that will take place in St. Jakobshalle at Basel, Switzerland. It will take place from 22 to 27 March, with a total prize pool of $180,000.
Tournament
The 2022 Swiss Open will be the sixth tournament of the 2022 BWF World Tour and is part of the Swiss Open championships which has been held since 1955. It is organized by the Swiss Badminton with sanction from the Badminton World Federation.
Venue
This tournament will be held at St. Jakobshalle in Basel, Switzerland.
Point distribution
Below is the point distribution table for each phase of the tournament based on the BWF point system for the BWF World Tour Super 300 event.
Prize pool
The total prize money is US$180,000 with the distribution of the prize money in accordance with BWF regulations.
Men's singles
Seeds
Viktor Axelsen
Anders Antonsen
Anthony Sinisuka Ginting
Jonatan Christie
Loh Kean Yew
Ng Ka Long
Srikanth Kidambi
Lakshya Sen
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Women's singles
Seeds
Chen Yufei
P. V. Sindhu
He Bingjiao
Busanan Ongbamrungphan
Michelle Li
Mia Blichfeldt
Wang Zhiyi
Kirsty Gilmour
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Men's doubles
Seeds
Mohammad Ahsan / Hendra Setiawan
Aaron Chia / Soh Wooi Yik
Satwiksairaj Rankireddy / Chirag Shetty
Fajar Alfian / Muhammad Rian Ardianto
Kim Astrup / Anders Skaarup Rasmussen
Ong Yew Sin / Teo Ee Yi
Mark Lamsfuß / Marvin Seidel
Goh Sze Fei / Nur Izzuddin
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Women's doubles
Seeds
Chen Qingchen / Jia Yifan
Jongkolphan Kititharakul / Rawinda Prajongjai
Gabriela Stoeva / Stefani Stoeva
Maiken Fruergaard / Sara Thygesen
Apriyani Rahayu / Siti Fadia Silva Ramadhanti
Ashwini Ponnappa / N. Sikki Reddy
Liu Xuanxuan / Xia Yuting
Amalie Magelund / Freja Ravn
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Mixed doubles
Seeds
Wang Yilyu / Huang Dongping
Praveen Jordan / Melati Daeva Oktavianti
Marcus Ellis / Lauren Smith
Tan Kian Meng / Lai Pei Jing
Thom Gicquel / Delphine Delrue
Goh Soon Huat / Shevon Jemie Lai
Mathias Christiansen / Alexandra Bøje
Mark Lamsfuß / Isabel Lohau
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
References
External links
Tournament Link
Official Website
Swiss Open (badminton)
Swiss Open
Swiss Open
Swiss Open |
Parancistrocerus perennis is a species of stinging wasp in the family Vespidae.
Subspecies
These two subspecies belong to the species Parancistrocerus perennis:
Parancistrocerus perennis anacardivora (Rohwer, 1915)
Parancistrocerus perennis perennis
References
External links
Potter wasps
Insects described in 1857 |
Jacob Bullock (born c. 1994) is an American basketball head coach who is currently an assistant coach of Western Michigan Broncos under head coach, Clayton Bates.
He played college basketball at Aquinas College wherein he ranked sixth all-time in points in school history.
Coaching career
On June 29, 2020, it has been reported that Bullock, after spending a few years being the director of basketball operations of Western Michigan Broncos, he would be promoted to being an assistant coach.
Bates, in an interview, stated: "Jake is passionate about the teaching the game of basketball and his ability to communicate with our student-athletes makes him perfect for this role."
References
External links
Jacob Bullock Coaching profile
1994 births
Living people
American men's basketball coaches
American men's basketball players
Guards (basketball)
Western Michigan Broncos men's basketball coaches |
De ukjentes marked (The Market of the Outcasts) is a Norwegian film from 1968. It was directed by Nils R. Müller, who also wrote the screenplay and edited the film. The film is based on Åge Rønning's 1966 novel De ukjentes marked. The film premiered on November 7, 1968, at cinemas in Oslo, Kristiansand, Tønsberg, Drammen, and Ski.
Plot
Star journalist William Klement's career is struggling, and he needs a scoop to make a comeback. One day he comes across an elderly asthmatic outcast called Glassblåser'n (the Glassblower). He is an eternal outcast that has lost his name on the path of life, but who still has his imagination, disrespectful irony, and heart intact, despite his atherosclerosis and asthma. The life of an outcast is not the subject matter for this tough journalist, who has seen most of this world's hypocrisy and ugliness, but he feels sorry for Glassblåser'n and wants to help him. But then he meets Glassblåser's friends. They are outcasts too, a number of different types, and among them is also Ganard. He is an idealist, from countries further south, where he was inspired by Abbé Pierre, a leading figure in working with the outcasts of society. He has teamed up with them to help them help each other. Ganard has come to Oslo to make the same effort there, to gather outcasts and set them in motion by setting up a flea market to raise money for those that are even worse off: the very poorest of the helpless in Lima, Peru. It is in this environment that Klement has now ended up, while the outcasts are in the middle of setting things up. Klement is a man with life experience, and he no longer believes in the beautiful tale of the lame helping the blind. But this is material to work with. And then Klement is captured by the idea. The market itself was a great success. The amount that came in and was to be sent in full to the stranger's unknown comrades in Lima was astonishingly large. However, a few hours after the market ended and the money was counted, it disappeared. Someone had stuffed it into his own pocket. The editorial secretary dismissively said to Klement: "I didn't believe it! A dingy little scam!" But Abbé Pierre had also said to Ganard: "There will sooner or later come a day when everything is destroyed, stained, betrayed, shattered. If you're there the next day, you're in it. Then you are accepted. That's the secret." But this strange episode had another twist in store, to the surprise of Klement, the editorial secretary, and perhaps the outcasts as well.
References
External links
De ukjentes marked at the National Library of Norway
1968 films
Norwegian films
Norwegian-language films
Films directed by Nils R. Müller |
The Lahore Qalandars (often abbreviated as LQ) is a franchise cricket team based in Lahore, Punjab in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) that competed in 2020 Pakistan Super League. They are one of the six team that competed in Pakistan Super League. The team was coached by Aaqib Javed and captained by Sohail Akhtar.
Season standings
Points table
League stage
References
External Links
Team records in 2021 at ESPNcricinfo
2021 in Punjab, Pakistan
2021 Pakistan Super League
Qalandars in 2021
2021 |
Enrico da Settala (died 16 September 1230), sometimes anglicized Henry of Settala, was the archbishop of Milan from 1213 until his death.
Enrico studied canon law. A subdeacon of the papal clergy from 1197, he remained close to the papacy throughout his career. His election as archbishop came via papal appointment. As the city of Milan was under interdict, he remained only an archbishop-elect until 1219. He attended the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 and held his own provincial synod in 1226. He was absent from Milan for many years. He participated in the Fifth Crusade (1220–1221) and his conflicts with the municipal government led him into exile twice (1221–1222, 1224–1225). He supported several new religious movements, such as the friars.
Subdeacon
Enrico belonged to a family of rank that had relocated from the town of Settala, from which they took their name, to the city of Milan in the course of the 12th century. They resided near the church of San Giovanni in Conca and the Porta Romana. Prominent among Henry's relatives was Lanfranco da Settala, consul in 1145 and consul of justice in 1156. The names of Henry's parents, however, are unknown.
Enrico was probably born around 1175. He is first mentioned in a document of 22 October 1197 as testifying in a suit involving the church of . He was at the time a papal subdeacon and a canon of the cathedral of Milan. In April 1198, Pope Innocent III referred to him in a letter as capable and knowledgeable in ecclesiastical affairs. Innocent tried to secure Enrico's appointment to the vacant Milanese chancellorship, but Archbishop refused.
Enrico was not particularly active in the cathedral chapter of Milan, but did undertake certain missions for the papacy in Lombardy. In 1203, Innocent sent Enrico to induce the chapter of Novara into accepting Ariprando Visconti, another papal subdeacon from Milan, as a member. In 1205, he sent him with the archdeacon Guglielmo da Rizolio to settle a lawsuit involving the priest of .
Filippo da Lampugnano's successor, Uberto da Pirovano, appointed Enrico treasurer (cimiliarca) of Milan sometime between the end of 1206 and 12 January 1210. On 23 January 1210, Enrico and the archpriest Guglielmo Balbo were charged by Uberto with resolving a lawsuit between the commune of Milan and the abbey of Chiaravalle. Ultimately, the case went to arbitration, with Enrico, the vicar Guidotto and Raniero Butraffio serving as arbitrators. The case was resolved on 23 December.
Archbishop
Election to consecration
The death of Uberto in 1211 sparked a prolonged crisis in the Milanese church. The chapter first elected Gerardo da Sesso, but he died before the end of the year without ever having acknowledged his election. The next leading candidate, Ariprando Visconti, died in September 1213, prompting the chapter to request that Innocent III appoint an archbishop. On 4 November, Innocent appointed Enrico, who was succeeded as treasurer by a relative, Ugo da Settala. At the time of his appointment, Enrico was said to be "in the school of Bologna" (Bononie in scolis), although it is unclear if he was a student or a teacher. He certainly studied canon law at some point.
Although Enrico had first to be consecrated a deacon and priest before he could be consecrated as a bishop, this was impossible because Milan had been placed under interdict for supporting the excommunicated Emperor Otto IV. He thus remained an archbishop-elect for over five years. In November 1215, he attended the Fourth Lateran Council. In February 1218, he was invited to Rome to receive consecration and the pallium. The immediate cause of the change was the decision of the Milanese podestà Amizone Sacco to renounce the city's support for Otto IV and adhere to Frederick II. His consecration was postponed a second time after a war broke out between the Lombard cities and Milan was again placed under interdict. He was finally consecrated at Rieti in August 1219 by Pope Honorius III.
Crusade
His own status and that of Milan finally resolved, Enrico chose to join the Fifth Crusade in Egypt. He led a contingent that included the archbishop of Crete and the bishops of Faenza, Reggio and Brescia with many Italian knights and representatives of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor. They sailed on a Venetian fleet, arriving in occupied Damietta sometime after 24 June 1220. The chief source for this episode is Oliver of Paderborn's Historia Damiatina.
During Enrico's absence on crusade, Ugo da Settala acted as vicar of the archdiocese. With Enrico's permission, he ceded the basilica of Sant'Eustorgio to the Order of Preachers on 24 October 1220. Enrico was still in Egypt when Honorius in June 1221 authorized him to mortgage some property.
Conflict with the commune
Upon his return from Egypt, Enrico got into a dispute with the city of Monza and excommunicated its podestà and its citizens. This put him at odds with Amizone Sacco and forced him to leave Milan. Cardinal Ugolino dei Conti tried at first to mediate before excommunicating Sacco and the two populist factions of Milanese politics, the Motta and the . Enrico became the effective leader of the aristocratic faction, the Credenza dei Nobili, while the poplists were led by Ardigotto Marcellino.
Enrico passed his exile in various castles around Lago Maggiore, such as those of Angera and Brebbia. The conflict between his supporters, mostly of the nobility, and the Motta and Credenza almost came to open warfare. A battle was only barely averted on 13 August 1222 by an agreement that lifted the excommunication and allowed Enrico back into the city. The accord broke down in February 1224 and Enrico again left the city. Threatening excommunication, Honorius called all parties to Rome for mediation. A new accord was reached and Enrico reentered Milan in 1225.
Support for new movements
As a papal appointee, Enrico took a pro-papal stance and closely aligned himself with the papal legates in Lombardy, Ugolino dei Conti and Goffredo Castiglioni. He supported the Franciscans, the Preachers and the anti-heretical movement.
In November 1224, Enrico gave the to the Poor Sisters of Milan, the future Poor Clares. In February 1225, he exempted the order from episcopal jurisdiction as a sign of his devotion. In November 1226, he held a provincial synod, the acts of which are lost. In July 1227, Pope Gregory IX, the former Cardinal Ugolino, ordered Enrico to exempt the Humiliati from swearing oaths except as witnesses in court and a in a few other circumstances. In December, he ordered Enrico to induce all those "who call themselves Humiliati" in Lombardy to either abide by Innocent III's rule for their order or else transfer to a different order. On 9 October 1229, Gregory requested that Enrico lead an armed force to the assistance of the papal army fighting the emperor in southern Italy. In return, Gregory promised a crusade-like "remission of sins".
On 2 December 1229 in the and in the presence of the papal legate Guala de Roniis, Enrico and the commune renewed the accord of five years earlier. In 1230, Enrico consecrated an alpine chapel to Saint Gotthard of Hildesheim, which is associated with the opening of the Gotthard Pass. He died in the archiepiscopal castle of Brebbia on 16 September 1230. His body was first brought to the Franciscan church of San Vittore all'Olmo and then entombed in the Franciscan in Milan.
Notes
Bibliography
1170s births
1230 deaths
People from Milan
Archbishops of Milan
Christians of the Fifth Crusade |
Black Tambourine was an American pop band.
Black Tambourine may also refer to:
Black Tambourine (album), a 2010 compilation album by Black Tambourine
"Black Tambourine", a song by Withered Hand from New Gods
"Black Tambourine", a song by Beck from Guero |
New Gods are a fictional extraterrestrial race featured in the DC Comics series The New Gods.
New Gods may also refer to:
New Gods (album), an album and its title track by Withered Hand
New Gods: Nezha Reborn, a 2021 Chinese film by Zhao Ji
Ascend: Hand of Kul, formerly titled Ascend: New Gods, a 2013 video game
"New Gods", a song by Grimes from the album Miss Anthropocene |
Chinard is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Gazo Chinard (1230–1294), Italian noble lord
Joseph Chinard (1756–1813), French sculptor
Philippe Chinard (1205–1266), French nobleman, admiral and governor |
Tjong Yong Hian (1850–1911) was a Hakka Chinese businessman and kapitan who had a great contribution to the development of society in the city of Medan around the early 1900s, he is also brother of Tjong A Fie, the successor kapitan after him.
He began to enter Indonesia in 1867 or when he was about 17 years old, Tjong Yong Hian also known as Zhang Yu Nan or Zhang Rong Xuan, descended from a Hakka family, was born in Guangdong, Songkou city, Meixian District, South China, in 1850. He migrated from China to Indonesia, departed through the port of Shantou and sailed across the South China Sea, after sailing for 21 days, he landed in Jakarta (formerly Batavia), in 1867 at the age of 17 years. Three years later, having had sufficient savings, Tjong Yong Hian left Batavia for Medan, Sumatra, with the intention of starting his own business. Tjong Yong Hian is fluent in Malay which is a respectable language in North Sumatra.
Early life
Tjong was born under the name Tjong Yu Nam (spelled in Hakka Chinese, ) from the Hakka lineage in Guangdong (formerly known as Canton) at year 1850. He was also known as Tjong Rong Xuan, and later in his life finally known as Tjong Yong Hian (spelled in Hakka Chinese)
He migrated from China to Indonesia, departed through the port of Shantou and sailed across the South China Sea, after sailing for 21 days, he landed in Batavia (present Jakarta), in 1867 at the age of 17 years.
Prominence in Medan
In 1870 started his own business
Established N.V. Wan Yun Chong. His business grew rapidly to invest in sugarcane, tobacco, rubber and other agriculture plantations. He worked closely with his former employer in Batavia, namely Cheong Fatt Tze to start a plantation company in Yogyakarta. growing rubber, coconut, coffee and tea. They own hundreds of square kilometers of land, include 8 rubber plantations and a tea processing factory, thus providing employment for thousands of people. Then opened a Jogja bank in collaboration with Cheong Fatt Tze. With the help of his younger brother Tjong A Fie, Tjong business is growing more and more, trying again in the field of real estate development, in Medan, which is known as the Kesawan area. In 1907 he founded the Deli bank with his brother Tjong A Fie, where Bank Deli tried to eliminate the monopoly of the Dutch East Indies Bank, where the Dutch East Indies Bank had a complicated procedure for sending money to China by overseas Chinese in Sumatra. His business spread to various parts of the world, with the largest capital capitalization in Southeast Asia at that time. The Tjong brothers again collaborated with Tjong Fatt Tze to establish two shipping companies, in Batavia and Medan named Yi Chong and Fuk Guang.
Tjong Yong Hian was appointed by the Dutch as major and his younger brother Tjong A Fie was appointed as lieutenant. Major is the rank of middle officer, the lowest rank in the army, one level below lieutenant colonel and one level above captain.
Tjong Yong Hian was highly respected by the Chinese community and highly respected by the Dutch government.
In 1904, Tjong Yong Hian received the highest award from the Netherlands, for his dedication to the sacrifice of energy, thought and time, for the success of a noble cause: dedication to carrying out noble ideals for humanity.
His contribution in the construction of the Great Mosque of Medan, the Hospital in Belawan, the Tian Hou Temple, and the Old Mosque in Gang Bengkok. With the presence of Tjong Yong Hian, we can see how the harmony between religious communities in ancient times was. Helping each other in building houses of worship for every people, even if they differ in religion, race, and ethnicity.*
Tjong Yong Hian owns two banks
The first is the Jogja bank, which is a joint venture with his former employer, Tjong Bi Shi, and the second is the Deli bank, which is jointly owned by his younger brother Tjong A Fie and his friends.
One form of appreciation and appreciation given by the Medan City Government to Tjong Yong Hian (the brother of Tjong A Fie) is to change the name of Jalan Bogor to Jalan Tjong Yong Hian and inaugurate Tjong Yong Hian Park at Jalan Attorney Medan. The closing and inauguration of the park was witnessed directly by the heir and descendant of Tjong Yong Hian, namely Budihardjo Chandra (Chang Hung Kuin). The award given by the Medan City Government to the family of the late. Tjong Yong Hian is also a form of gratitude for the contribution of Tjong Yong Hian who has participated in building the city of Medan in the past. Tjong Yong Hian Park, located on Jalan Prosecutor's Office, Medan, is the final resting place of Tjong Yong Hian and his wife. At the entrance gate to this area is written Flower Garden Garden (Mao Rong Yuan), after entering a few meters inside, above the green gated entrance there is written Tjong Yong Hian Park.
Later life
Tjong Yong Hian's contribution to Medan, Penang and China has received attention and appreciation with a title from the Qing Government for his social contribution in China. He also had the honor of being received twice in Beijing by Empress Ci Xi and Emperor Guang Xu. In 1904, for his contribution to the development of Medan Tjong Yong Hian was given an award by naming a busy street Jalan Tjong Yong Hian, later changed to Jalan Bogor. In conjunction with the 2013 Heroes' Day, Jalan Bogor was re-paved to become Jalan Tjong Yong Hian by the Acting Mayor of Medan Dzulmi Eldin.
Tjong Yong Hian has many houses in Medan as well as several houses in his hometown of China. The address in China is: Guangdong City, Meizhou province, Meizhou state, South Songnan village. He and his wife (Nee Xu) have three sons Pu Ching, Cen Ching and Min Ching and four daughters. The Tjong family's house in Medan was located on Jalan Kesawan (now Jalan A. Yani). While in China, Tjong and his ancestors have a home in Meixian, China. Tjong Yong Hian died at the age of 61 years (11 September 1911), thousands of mourners from all ethnicities and nationalities. Tjong Yong Hian's final resting place is at Mao Rong Park, a park he owns in the Medan Prosecutors' Street area. While in Tjong Yong Hian Park, the area is not like the original anymore. The fiery red tomb of Tjong Yong Hian and his wife overlooks the lotus pond. This park is maintained because it is cared for by the great-grandson of Tjong Yong Hian, Budihardjo Chandra (Chang Hung Kuin), the fourth generation, and his family.
After his death in 1911, his eldest son Chang Pu Ching and his brother continued his father's social activities by building the Tjong Yong Hian bridge across the Babura River (Jalan KH. Zainul Arifin). Now the bridge is named the Benevolent Bridge and has been used as one of the historical and cultural heritages of the city of Medan, and was awarded the 2003 Unesco Award Of Merit.
Family and personal life
The second generation, Chang Pu Ching/Tjong Hau Lung, Chan Cen Ching/Tjong Hian Lung and Chang Min Ching/Tjong Seng Lung, are still in the Indonesian environment during the Dutch colonial period. The Ministry of Commerce of the Qing Kingdom, China appointed Chang Pu Ching as inspector to oversee the railway construction project between the city of Chao Chow and the city of Chow Shan Tou, this is because the previous owners of the railway construction company were Tjong Yong Hian and his younger brother Tjong A Fie. In 1904 Tjong A Fie's children were still in school.
The third generation at that time faced a political situation that was vulnerable, where Indonesia at that time was bearing a large foreign debt as a result of the vacancy of the State treasury because it had just become independent, then post-independence. The chaotic and unstable political conditions made the descendants of the third generation scatter to save themselves abroad, some to China, Malaysia, Europe, etc. This makes the Family Company also neglected without the control of its leadership.
Another fourth generation, Budiharjo, in 1972, opened the Indonesian Packaging Industry (IPI) factory in a joint venture with his sister who currently resides in Singapore and with another good friend of his, William Tiopan. IPI's business was developed again. Budiharjo opened a paper factory to supply paper raw materials to IPI, namely PT. Evergreen International Paper. Budiharjo's business was also developed by Budiharjo's son into the palm oil sector and housing construction as well as warehousing development, as well as a palm oil factory (PKS).
References
Tjong Yong Hian Abang Kandung Tjong A Fie. semedan.com. Agustus 2015.
Jembatan Kebajikan. semedan.com. Agustus 2018
Masjid bengkok Medan. semedan.com. Agustus 2018
Taman kebun bunga, Makam Tjong Yong Hian . benerada.com.
Sejarah kontribusi dari suku Tong Hoa .
http://repositori.usu.ac.id/bitstream/handle/123456789/11261/138122003.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed= https://id.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tjong_A_Fie
1850 births
1911 deaths
Chinese philanthropists
Indonesian people of Chinese descent
Indonesian philanthropists
Indonesian businesspeople
People from Medan
People from Meixian District
Kapitan Cina
Businesspeople from Meizhou |
Heliciopsis artocarpoides, also known as kurunggu or putat, is a species of flowering plant, a tropical forest fruit-tree in the macadamia family, that is native to Southeast Asia.
Description
The species grows as a small tree to 5–15 m in height, with a short, often crooked, bole and low branches. The smooth, deeply lobed leaves are 40–90 cm long by 30–40 cm wide. The inflorescences, comprising racemes of fragrant, white to yellowish flowers occur on the trunk and along the branches. The fruits appear as clusters of cylindrical or oval drupes, 3–4 cm long by 2–3 cm in diameter, purple when immature and ripening green to yellow, with an edible mesocarp.
Distribution and habitat
The species is found in Borneo and the Philippines, where it occurs in lowland and hill mixed dipterocarp forest, as well as in lower montane forest up to an elevation of 1,600 m. It is not known to be cultivated; the fruits are collected wild from the forest.
References
artocarpoides
Flora of Borneo
Flora of the Philippines
Fruits originating in Asia
Plants described in 1913
Taxa named by Adolph Daniel Edward Elmer |
Cao Guangjing (; born March 1964) is a Chinese business executive and politician. He was investigated by China's top anti-graft agency in February 2022. Previously he served as vice governor of Hubei. He was an alternate member of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.
Biography
Cao was born in the town of Zouping County, Shandong, in March 1964. He received his bachelor's degree and master's degree from Hohai University in 1985 and 1990, respectively.
After university, he served in various posts in the Preparation Office of China Three Gorges Corporation before serving as chairman in January 2010.
In May 2014, he was promoted to become vice governor of Hubei, a position he held until February 2022.
Downfall
On 24 February 2022, he has been placed under investigation for "serious violations of discipline and laws" by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), the party's internal disciplinary body, and the National Supervisory Commission, the highest anti-corruption agency of China.
References
1964 births
Living people
People from Zouping
Hohai University alumni
Tianjin University alumni
Chinese chief executives
21st-century Chinese businesspeople
People's Republic of China politicians from Jiangsu
Chinese Communist Party politicians from Jiangsu
Alternate members of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
Alumni of Durham University |
Events in 1912 in animation.
Films released
January - How a Mosquito Operates (United States)
27 October - The Cameraman's Revenge (Russia)
Births
January
January 12: Sara Berner, American actress (original voice of Andy Panda, Chilly Willy, Red in Tex Avery's Red Hot Riding Hood and Swing Shift Cinderella, the canary in King-Size Canary and the mother of WB's Beaky Buzzard, Nancy in the Tom & Jerry cartoon Baby Puss, Toots in the Tom & Jerry cartoons The Zoot Cat and The Mouse Comes to Dinner, did celebrity voice impressions in several Disney and Warner Bros. Cartoons), (d. 1969).
February
February 24: Jiří Trnka, Czech puppeteer, illustrator, animator and film director (The Czech Year, The Emperor's Nightingale, Prince Bayaya, Old Czech Legends, The Good Soldier Schweik, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Cybernetic Grandma), (d. 1969).
April
April 5: John Le Mesurier, British actor (narrator of Bod), (d. 1983).
April 12: Lillian Friedman Astor, American animator (Fleischer Brothers), (d. 1989).
April 15: Libico Maraja, Italian illustrator, animator and comics artist (worked for the animation studio IMA Film), (d. 1983).
April 16: John Halas, Hungarian-British animator, film producer and director (Halas & Batchelor, Animal Farm, the animated music video of Love Is All by Roger Glover), (d. 1995).
April 17: Arthur Humberstone, British animator and film director (Halas & Batchelor, worked on Animal Farm, Yellow Submarine, Watership Down, The Plague Dogs and The BFG), (d. 1999).
April 30: Emery Hawkins, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Screen Gems, Walter Lantz, Warner Bros. Cartoons, MGM, UPA), (d. 1989).
May
May 2: Marten Toonder, Dutch comics author and animator (Toonder Animation, Als Je Begrijpt WatIk Bedeol (The Dragon That Wasn't Or Was He?)), (d. 2005).
May 11: Don Towsley, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Hanna-Barbera, Chuck Jones, Filmation), (d. 1986).
June
June 11: James Algar, American film director, screenwriter, and producer (The Walt Disney Company), (d. 1998).
June 15: Ernie Nordli, American animator, animation designer and lay-out artist (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 1968).
June 23: Gerry Chiniquy, American animator and animated film director (Warner Bros. Cartoons, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises), (d. 1989).
June 24: Brad Case, American animator (Walt Disney Animation, Walter Lantz, Warner Bros. Animation, Hanna-Barbera, DePatie-Freleng, Marvel Productions,...), (d. 2006).
July
July 5:
Bob Matz, American animator (Warner Bros. Cartoons, DePatie-Freleng, Peanuts specials), (d. 2003).
Mack David, American lyricist and songwriter (co-writer of songs for Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland and the theme song to The Bugs Bunny Show), (d. 1993).
July 15: Al Bertino, American animator (Charles Mintz, Walt Disney Company, UPA, Grantray-Lawrence Animation, Walter Lantz), (d. 1996).
July 23: Jackson Beck, American actor (voice of Perry White in The New Adventures of Superman, the fox in Baby Huey cartoons, the father in Little Lulu, Buzzy the Crow in Herman and Katnip, continued voice of Bluto in the Popeye cartoons produced by Famous Studios, Brutus the Cat in Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown, narrator in G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero), (d. 2004).
July 26: Buddy Clark, American singer (singer and narrator in Melody Time), (d. 1949).
August
August 23:
Ed Benedict, American animator, character designer and lay-out artist (Walt Disney Studios, Walter Lantz, Tex Avery, Hanna-Barbera, designer of The Flintstones, Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Quick Draw McGraw,...), (d. 2006).
Gene Kelly, American actor, singer, dancer, film director, producer and choreographer (danced with Jerry the Mouse in Anchors Aweigh, choreographer consultant for Cats Don't Dance), (d. 1996).
August 25: Ted Key, American animator/screenwriter (Peabody's Improbable History in Rocky & Bullwinkle) and comics artist, (d. 2008).
August 27: Sam Singer, American animated film director and producer (The Adventures of Pow Wow, The Adventures of Paddy the Pelican, Bucky and Pepito), (d. 2001).
September
September 1: Michael Lah, American animator and animated film director (Walt Disney Company, worked for Tex Avery), (d. 1995).
September 5: Frank Thomas, American animator (Walt Disney Animation Studios), (d. 2004).
September 12: Henry Wilson Allen, aka Heck Allen, American novelist and animation writer (Barney Bear, worked for Tex Avery), (d. 1991).
September 21: Chuck Jones, American animator, film director and comics artist (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, Marvin the Martian, Pepe LePew, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!), (d. 2002).
October
October 5: Riley Thomson, American comics artist and animator (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walt Disney Company), (d. 1960).
October 11: Betty Noyes, American actress and singer (sang Baby Mine in Dumbo, voice of Lady Fish in The Incredible Mr. Limpet), (d. 1987).
October 15: Bonnie Poe, American voice actress (continued the voice of Betty Boop), (d. 1993).
October 31: Ollie Johnston, American animator (Walt Disney Company), (d. 2008).
November
November 11: Grant Simmons, American animator (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons, MGM, Hanna-Barbera, UPA) and director (Mr. Magoo), (d. 1970).
November 17: Jack Lescoulie, American actor (voice of Casper Caveman in Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur, Jack Bunny in Slap-Happy Pappy and Goofy Groceries), (d. 1987).
Specific date unknown
Lenn Redman, American caricaturist, animator, novelist, poet, illustrator, comics artist, cartoonist and activist (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walt Disney Company, Filmation, Hanna-Barbera), (d. 1987).
Storm de Hirsch, American poet, film director and animator (Peyote Queen), (d. 2000).
References
External links
Animated works of the year, listed in the IMDb |
Garments of Truth is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by George D. Baker and starring Gareth Hughes, Ethel Grandin and John Steppling.
Cast
Gareth Hughes as Lester Crope
Ethel Grandin as Catherine Willis
John Steppling as Deacon Ballantine
Frances Raymond as Mrs. Ballantine
Margaret McWade as Mrs. Crope
Graham Pettie as Mr. Crope
Frank Norcross as James H. Barnes
Harry Lorraine as Alex Hawley
Walter Perry as Nat Sears
Herbert Fortier as Dr. G. B. Palmer
Herbert Prior as Dr. W.H. Palmer
Ilean Hume as Tilly Snooks
Sylvia Ashton as Widow Jones
Eric Mayne as Dr. Mills
Effie Conley as Millie Thomas
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by George D. Baker
Metro Pictures films |
Visfot () is an upcoming Indian Hindi-language horror film written by Abbas Dalal and Hussain Dalal and directed by Kookie Gulati and produced by Bhushan Kumar and Sanjay Gupta under the banner of White Feather Films and T-Series. The film stars Riteish Deshmukh and Fardeen Khan with Priya Bapat and Krystle D'Souza in supporting roles.
Cast
Riteish Deshmukh
Fardeen Khan
Priya Bapat
Krystle D'Souza
Production
The film was announced in September 2021, an remake of the 2012 Venezuelan film Rock, Paper, Scissors, starring Fardeen Khan and Riteish Deshmukh.
The principal photography of the film started in mid-October 2021 in Mumbai. Actor Fardeen Khan and Riteish Deshmukh announced the wrap up of the film on 23 February 2022.
References
External links
Indian films
Upcoming films
Hindi-language films |
Andanallur is a state assembly constituency in Tiruchirappalli district in Tamil Nadu, India.
Madras State
Election Results
1962
1957
References
Tiruchirappalli district
Defunct assembly constituencies of Tamil Nadu |
The Hunch is a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by George D. Baker and starring Gareth Hughes, Ethel Grandin and John Steppling.
Cast
Gareth Hughes as J. Preston Humphrey
Ethel Grandin as Barbara Thorndyke
John Steppling as John C. Thorndyke
Edward Flanagan as George Taylor
Harry Lorraine as Sheriff Henry Clay Greene
Gale Henry as Minnie Stubbs
William H. Brown as Hodges
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 comedy films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American comedy films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by George D. Baker
Metro Pictures films |
The 2022 South Korean by-elections will be held in 2 different sessions:
March 2022 South Korean by-elections - 9 March 2022; along with the presidential election
June 2022 South Korean by-elections - 1 June 2022; along with the
References
2022 South Korean by-elections |
Marlon Stewart (born 16 March 1985) is an American basketball coach who is currently an assistant coach of Oregon State Beavers under current head coach, Wayne Tinkle.
Coaching career
In 2008, he started his professional coaching duties with California Golden Bears. He also became the video coordinator for head coach Mike Montgomery.
In July 2017, it has been announced that Stewart would be part of the coaching staff of the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors , he as an assistant coach.
In 2018, Stewart has been named as the director of basketball operations of Oregon State Beavers. And then, the following year, it has been announced that he would become a part of the coaching staff of Wayne Tinkle, wherein he would become an assistant.
In 2021, he was awarded as a recipient of the Rising Coach Lifetime Award by the organization named Rising Coaches.
References
External links
Marlon Stewart Coaching profile
1985 births
Living people
American men's basketball coaches
American men's basketball players
Basketball coaches from Washington (state)
California Golden Bears men's basketball coaches
Guards (basketball)
Oregon State Beavers men's basketball coaches |
Clara Tauson is the defending champion, but chose not to participate.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
Qualifying
Seeds
Qualifiers
Qualifying draw
First qualifier
Second qualifier
Third qualifier
Fourth qualifier
Fifth qualifier
Sixth qualifier
References
External links
Main draw
Qualifying draw
2022 Lyon Open
Lyon Open |
John Glenn School Corporation is a school district headquartered in Walkerton, Indiana. It is named after John Glenn.
It includes Walkerton and North Liberty in St. Joseph County. It also includes territory in Marshall County.
History
In August 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Indiana, the district chose to enact a mask mandate.
In 2018 a movement started where residents of Greene Township advocated for leaving the South Bend Community School Corporation and joining the John Glenn School Corporation. By 2022 the John Glenn District was working to come to an agreement with the South Bend district so a voluntary district change would occur.
Schools
John Glenn High School (Walkerton)
Urey Middle School (Walkerton)
North Liberty Elementary School
Walkerton Elementary School
References
External links
John Glenn School Corporation
Education in St. Joseph County, Indiana
Education in Marshall County, Indiana
School districts in Indiana |
This article contains a list of the cost of rent by state and county in the United States.
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
See also
Housing insecurity in the United States
List of U.S. states by median home price
References
https://www.rentdata.org/states/2021#map
Housing in the United States |
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