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how to evolve eevee into leafeon in pokemon shield? | Leafeon is a Grass-type Eevee evolution introduced in Pokemon Diamond and Pearl. You no longer have to bring Eevee to a certain location with a Moss Rock to evolve it into Leafeon in Pokemon Sword and Shield. Simply give it a Leaf Stone so it will evolve! |
will the government shutdown affect my snap benefits? | The government shutdown is in its 32nd day and there is no end in sight. The US Department of Agriculture will still send out Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), also known as food stamps, benefits for January and February despite the shutdown. |
band King's X, appearing on their album Faith Hope Love. It was released in 1990 on Megaforce Records. It is the band's highest charting single, peaking at #6 on Mainstream Rock Tracks in 1990. The song is much noted for its Beatles-like sound. The picture seen on the front | the band's highest charting single, peaking at #6 on Mainstream Rock Tracks in 1990. The song is much noted for its Beatles-like sound. The picture seen on the front can also be |
Modern systems, such as the APG and APG II systems refer to this group by the name monocots (a name for a clade). | Các hệ thống mới hơn, như hệ thống APG và hệ thống APG II nhắc đến nhóm này theo tên gọi monocots (tên gọi cho một nhánh đơn ngành). |
It was her last federal campaign as a candidate. | این آخرین کمپین فدرال او به عنوان کاندید انتخاباتی بود. |
what does a metered connection mean | Metered Connection is a way of setting a connection as limited in Windows so that itâs not used as a leisure resource. You can set a connection as Metered Connection using the right-click menu after the connection is established. |
Charles Hapgood | Хэпгуд, Чарльз Хатчинс |
Silver, L.T., and E.W. James, "Lithologic Column of the Arkoma Drillhole and its Relation to the Cajon Pass Deep Drillhole," Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 15, No. 9, Supplement S, pp. 945–948. (August 1988). Silver, L.T., E.W. James, and B.W. Chappell. "Petrological and Geochemical Investigations at the Cajon Pass Deep Drillhole," Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 15, No. 9, Supplement S, pp. 961–964. (August 1988). Silver, L. T. "Daughter-parent Isotope Systematics in U-Th-bearing Igneous Accessory Mineral Assemblages as Potential Indices of Metamorphic History: A Discussion of the Concept." The Geochemical Society, Special Publication 3 (1991): 391-407. Woodhead, J. A., G. R. Rossman, and L. T. Silver. "The Metamictization of Zircon: Radiation Dose-Dependent Structural Characteristics." Mineralogical Society of America 76 (1991): 74-82. Li, Y.-G., T. L. Henyey, and L. T. Silver. "Aspects of the Crustal Structure of the Western Mojave Desert, California, From Seismic Reflection and Gravity Data." Journal of Geologic Research, 97, B6 (1992): 8805-8816. Pratson, E.L., R.N. Anderson, R.E. Dove, M.Lyle, L.T. Silver, E.W. James and B.W. Chappell. "Geochemical Logging in the Cajon Pass Drillhole and its Application to a New Oxide, Igneous Rock Classification Scheme." Journal of Geologic Research, 97 B4 (1992): 5167-5180. Manduca, C.A., L.T. Silver, and H.P. Taylor. "87Sr/86Sr and 18O/16O Isotopic Systematics and Geochemistry of Granitoid Plutons Across a Steeply Dipping Boundary Between Contrasting Lithologic Blocks in Western Idaho." Contributions in Mineralogical Petrology, 109 (1992): 355-372. Kanamori, H. (Hiroo), Robert W. Clayton, and Leon T. Silver. Earthquake and Seismicity Research Using SCARLET And CEDAR: Final Technical Report, 1 December 1990 - 30 November 1992. Pasadena, CA: Seismological Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 1993. Manduca, C.A., M.A. Kunz, and L.T. Silver, "Emplacement and deformation history of the western margin of the Idaho batholith, Geol. Soc. Amer. Bull., 105 (1993), 749-765. Silver, L.T. "Observations on the Extended Tectonic History of the Southern Sierra Nevada." Geological Society of America Joint Cordilleran and Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Reno, Nevada. Geological Society of America. (1993). Nourse, Jonathan A., Thomas H. Anderson, and Leon T. Silver, "Tertiary metamorphic core complexes in Sonora, northwestern Mexico," Tectonics, Vol. 13, No. 5 (Oct. 1994), pp. 1161–1182. Huang, W.S., L.T. Silver, and H. Kanamori. "Evidence for possible horizontal faulting in southern California from earthquake mechanisms, Geology, Vol. 24, No. 2 (February 1996), pp. 123-126. Farley, K.A., R.A. Wolf, and L.T. Silver. "The effects of long alpha-stopping distances on (U-Th)/He ages," Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 60, No. 21 (November 1996), pp. 4223–4229. Wolf, R.A, K.A. Farley, and L.T. Silver. "Helium diffusion and low-temperature thermochronometry of apatite," Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 60, No. 21 (November 1996), pp. 4231–4240. Wolf, R.A., Farley, K.A., and Silver, L.T. "Assessment of (U-Th)/He thermochronometry: The low-temperature history of the San Jacinto mountains, California," Geology, Vol. 25, No. 1 (January 1997), pp. 65–68. Anderson, Thomas H., José Luis Rodríguez-Castañeda, and Leon T. Silver, "Jurassic rocks in Sonora, Mexico: Relations to the Mojave-Sonora megashear and its inferred northwestward extension," Geological Society of America Special Papers, 2005, 393, pp. 51–95. Anderson, T.H., and L.T. Silver, 2005, "The Mojave-Sonora megashear—field and analytical studies leading to the conception and evolution of the hypothesis," in Anderson, T.H., Ed., The Mojave-Sonora Megashear Hypothesis: Development, Assessment, and Alternatives: Geological Society of America Special Paper, 393, pp. 1–50. External links Interview with Leon Silver for NOVA series: To the Moon WGBH Educational Foundation, raw footage, 1998 Edited Oral History Transcript, NASA Johnson Space Center Oral History Project, Leon T. Silver interviewed by Carol Butler, Houston, Texas – 5 May 2002: full text and PDF. CaltechOralHistories, "Interview with Leon T. Silver," deposited 27 May 2008 (last updated 26 December 2012). Persistent URL: http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Silver_L. Lee Dye, "Nature Moved Mountains to Carve California : Geology: Twisting and tearing of Earth's crust over millions of years created a land of extraordinary beauty," Los Angeles Times, January 6, 1993. (Extended discussion of Silver's research) [http://www.worldcat.org/title/leon-t-silver-70th-birthday-symposium-and-celebration-april-9-10-and-11-1995/oclc/32634294 Leon T. Silver 70th Birthday Symposium and Celebration: April 9, 10, and 11, 1995.] Permalink: http://classify.oclc.org/classify2/ClassifyDemo?swid=32634294 OCLC Work Id: 36942615. "Leon T. "Lee" Silver (1925-2022). Obituary on Caltech Website, February 2, 2022. References Bibliography Scott, David, and Alexei Leonov. Two Sides of the Moon: The | Analysis of Zircons for Isotopic Age Dating," Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 64, No. 8, pp. 1124–1124. (1959). Allen, Clarence R., Leon T. Silver, and Francis Greenough Stehli. Agua Blanca Fault: A Major Transverse Structure Of Northern Baja California, Mexico. New York: The Society, 1960. Silver, L.T., C.R. McKinney, and S. Deutsch et al. "Precambrian Age Determinations of Some Crystalline Rocks of the San Gabriel Mountains of Southern California," Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 65, No. 8, pp. 2522–2523. (1960). Silver, L.T., "Major Magmatic Events and Geochronology," Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 66, No. 8, pp. 2560–2560. (1961). Silver, L.T. "Older Precambrian Geochronology in Cochise County, Southeastern Arizona," Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 67, No. 4, pp. 1657–1657. (1962). Leon T. Silver and Sarah Deutsch. "Uranium-Lead Isotopic Variations in Zircons: A Case Study," The Journal of Geology, Vol. 71, No. 6 (Nov., 1963), pp. 721–758. Silver, L.T., C.R. McKinney, and S. Deutsch et al. "Precambrian Age Determinations in the Western San Gabriel Mountains, California," Journal of Geology, Vol. 71, No. 2, pp. 196ff. (1963). Cooper, John Roberts, and Leon T. Silver. Geology And Ore Deposits Of The Dragoon Quadrangle, Cochise County, Arizona. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1964. R. T. Pidgeon, James R. O'Neil, Leon T. Silver. "Uranium and Lead Isotopic Stability in a Metamict Zircon under Experimental Hydrothermal Conditions, Science, New Series, Vol. 154, No. 3756, pp. 1538-1540. (Dec. 23, 1966). Duke, Michael B., and Leon T. Silver. 1967. "Petrology of eucrites, howardites and mesosiderites," Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Volume 31, Issue 10, October 1967, pp. 1637-1665. Silver, Leon T., "Uranium-Thorium-Lead Isotope Relations in Lunar Materials," Science, New Series, Vol. 167, No. 3918, The Moon Issue, pp. 468–471. (Jan. 30, 1970). Silver, L.T., "Lead Isotopic Heterogeneity in Lunar Soil 10084,35 and Its Age Implications," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 51, No. 4, pp. 348ff. (1970). Silver, L.T., and M. B. Duke, "U-Th-Pb Isotope Relations in Some Basaltic Achondrites," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 52, No. 4, pp. 269ff. (1971). Silver, L.T. "U-Th-Pb Isotope Systems in Apollo-11 and Apollo-12 Regolithic Materials and a Possible Age for Copernicus Impact Event," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 52, No. 7, pp. 534ff. (1971). Silver, L.T., "Regional Provinciality in the U-Th-Pb Isotope Systems in lunar Soils," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 54, No. 4, pp. 349–349. (1973). Silver, L.T., and Anderson, T.H., 1974, "Possible left-lateral early to middle Mesozoic disruption of the south-western North American craton margin," Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 6, No. 7, pp. 955–956. Silver, L.T., "Implications of Volatile Leads in Orange, Grey and Green Lunar Soils for an Earth-Like Moon," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 55, No. 7, pp. 681–681. (1974). Silver, L.T., "Thorium-Uranium Fractionation as an Indicator of Petrogenetic Processes," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vo. 57, No. 4, pp. 353–351. (1976). Anderson, T.H., and Silver, L.T., "U-Pb isotope ages of granitic plutons near Cananea, Sonora," Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists, Vol. 72, pp. 827–836. (1977). Silver, L.T., and T.O. Early. "Rubidium-Strontium Fractionation Domains in Peninsular Ranges Batholith and their Implications for Magmatic Arc Evolution," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 58, No. 6, pp. 532–532. (1977). Silver, L.T. "Regional Uranium Anomaly in Precambrian Basement of Colorado Plateau," Economic Geology, Vol. 72, No. 4, pp. 740–741. (1977). Anderson, T.H. and L.T. Silver, "The role of the Mojave-Sonora megashear in the tectonic evolution of northern Sonora," The role of the Mojave-Sonora megashear in the tectonic evolution of northern Sonora. Silver, Leon T. "Problems of Pre-Mesozoic Continental Evolution," in B. Clark Burchfiel, Jack E. Oliver, and Leon T. Silver, Eds., Continental Tectonics, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, 1980, Chapter 2: 26-30. Silver, Leon T., and Peter H. Schultz, eds. Geological Implications Of Impacts Of Large Asteroids and Comets On The Earth: Conference On Large Body Impacts And Terrestrial Evolution: Geological, Climatological, And Biological Implications. Boulder, CO: |
how long does it take your body to digest tea? | Different tea's take different times to digest. For example, Genmaicha from Japan is a nutrition tea, therefore takes longer to digest. White tea, Green Tea and Rooibos is very fast to digest, some within 5 minutes. Other tea's like black tea and nutrition teas like Matcha , takes a little longer, at around 15 minutes. |
Since 1995, the Azerbaijani population's demand for non-food products has been increasing in Azerbaijan, State Statistics Committee Chairman Arif Veliyev said in his speech at a scientific symposium on Thursday. | Azerbaijani population's demand for non-food products increases in Azerbaijan |
Melbourne universities have campuses all over Australia and some internationally. | Melbournes universiteter har afdelinger over hele Australien og også nogle uden for landet. |
He was the official Chairman of the Czechoslovak Writer's Union for several years (1968–70). | Ia merupakan ketua resmi Persatuan Penulis Cekoslowakia selama beberapa tahun (1968-70). |
Peter Giles (musician) | Peter Giles |
Union Berlin players VfB Oldenburg players FC Gütersloh 2000 players Rot Weiss Ahlen players BV Cloppenburg players Croatian football managers SV Wilhelmshaven managers Croatian expatriate footballers Croatian expatriate football managers Croatian expatriate sportspeople in | NK Zagreb players HNK Rijeka players Grazer AK players 1. FC Union Berlin players VfB Oldenburg players FC Gütersloh 2000 players Rot Weiss Ahlen players BV Cloppenburg players Croatian football managers SV Wilhelmshaven managers Croatian expatriate footballers Croatian expatriate football managers |
her work at various venues in New York City, such as Nublu, Rockwood Music Hall, The Knitting Factory, Paper Box, Red Door, Arlene's Grocery, Mercury Lounge, The Bitter End, La Bodega Studios, Platos Cave/Eidia House, Lesley Heller Gallery, Pianos and many more. Internationally she has presented her music at Spikersuppa Sound Gallery in Oslo, The Artist House (Museum) in Oslo, Basso in Berlin, Litteraturhaus in Copenhagen and more. Among other public rewards she received a "work grant" from the Danish Arts Foundation in 2017. In 2017, she was also put on the Danish ambassador’s "Super Danish" list along with other acclaimed artists and culture contributors abroad. Personal life Beck has lived in five different countries - Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Indonesia, | Door, Arlene's Grocery, Mercury Lounge, The Bitter End, La Bodega Studios, Platos Cave/Eidia House, Lesley Heller Gallery, Pianos and many more. Internationally she has presented her music at Spikersuppa Sound Gallery in Oslo, The Artist House (Museum) in Oslo, Basso in Berlin, Litteraturhaus in Copenhagen and more. Among other public rewards she received a "work grant" from the Danish Arts Foundation in 2017. In 2017, she was also put on the Danish ambassador’s "Super Danish" list along with other acclaimed artists and culture contributors abroad. Personal life Beck has lived in five different countries - Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Indonesia, the United States. She now lives and works as an artist in New York (since 2012). Collaborations Fran Cathcart (Double Grammy Award winning producer) Razors Productions DjCherishTheLuv Charles Burnham (violinist) Jackson Whalan (electronic musician and rapper) Prince Harvey (hip hop artist) Brandon Ross (guitarist, producer, songwriter, composer) Dynasty Electric (band) Annika Lundgren (visual artist) Nora Stephens (visual artist/dancer) Grounded View (dancers) Malene Korsgaard Lauritsen Twsai (photographer) Mikkel Jørgensen (videographer) Rebekka Elisabeth Anker-Møller (curator) |
Secret Diary of Steve Jobs under the pseudonym "Fake Steve Jobs", was scheduled to speak at C4 but was unable due to an illness. C4[2] The third C4 conference was held at the Chicago City Centre Hotel on September 5–September 7, 2008. Like the previous conferences, C4[2] was organized by Jonathan Rentzsch. He announced the conference via Twitter feed on April 23, 2008. Presenters Alex Payne, developer for Twitter Brent Simmons, creator of NetNewsWire Buzz Andersen, creator of PodWorks Craig Hockenberry, creator of Twitterrific Mike Lee, former developer for Delicious Monster and Tapulous Rich Siegel, founder of Bare Bones Software D. Richard Hipp, architect and primary author of SQLite Wil Shipley, founder of Delicious Monster C4[3] The fourth C4 conference was held at the DoubleTree Chicago from September 25 to September 27, 2009. It sold out within eight hours of the initial announcement. This year's version featured Blitz talks, talks held between the conference's standard presentations. In these talks, speakers were held to 5 minutes per presentation, with each slide having a maximum of 20 seconds on screen. Presenters Augie Fackler, Google engineer Christopher Lloyd, creator of Cocotron Dave Dribin, founder of BitMaki John C. Welch | Sun Microsystems engineer, creator of Tomcat and Ant C4[1] The second C4 conference was held at the Chicago City Centre Hotel on August 10–August 12, 2007. Like the first conference, C4[1] was organized by Jonathan Rentzsch. Presenters Tim Burks, RubyObjC developer Drunkenbatman Adam Engst, publisher of TidBITS Bob Ippolito, PyObjC developer Daniel Jalkut, developer of MarsEdit (acquired from Brent Simmons) Jonathan Rentzch Cabel Sasser, co-founder of Panic Inc. Wil Shipley, creator of Delicious Library Shawn Morel, VMware developer working on Fusion Daniel Lyons, senior editor at Forbes magazine and writer of The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs under the pseudonym "Fake Steve Jobs", was scheduled to speak at C4 but was unable due to an illness. C4[2] The third C4 conference was held at the Chicago City Centre Hotel on September 5–September 7, 2008. Like the previous conferences, C4[2] was organized by Jonathan Rentzsch. He announced the conference via Twitter feed on April 23, 2008. Presenters Alex Payne, developer for Twitter Brent Simmons, creator of NetNewsWire Buzz Andersen, creator of PodWorks Craig Hockenberry, |
is md necessary after mbbs? | In India students begin with a MBBS degree. It's completion denotes the kind of training required to be approved as a licensed physician. A MD degree represents a higher post-graduate degree for specialty training. Only medical graduates with MBBS degrees are only eligible to pursue a MD degree. |
versatile structure as walls drinking wine, smoking cigarettes and writing. What I write will be spontaneous and in response – directly, indirectly, or entirely tenuously – to the work, the environment and the situation, and will obviously also be tempered by the increasing consumption of alcohol. Whatever writing I do produce at the end of the day will also be available in exchange for wine." The diversity of the Curator of the Day and how they interacted with the work can be exemplified by Hüttner's endnote in the catalogue: ” The data that I Am a Curator generated is in itself something that would suffice for a research project. I was pleased on the last day of the exhibition that the two anthropologists Lisa Maddigan and Fuyubi Nakamura did a project that looked at the accumulated information. I think that they were slightly awestruck by the sheer bulk of information and work that could be hosted within the project. It is like the number of possibilities of arranging 57 artworks that Maki from å.b.ä.k.e. had calculated – 144,115,188,075,856,000. Considering that our solar system is roughly 2,400,000,000,000,000 minutes old the number of possibilities is quite mind-boggling. ” Critique At the time of the realization of the project there was some rather loud critique towards the project. It was suggested that it offered a very traditional approach to the idea of how an exhibition might be made. In an interview with Barnaby Drabble the artist says.: "I do agree, when you are faced with the possibility of just selecting existing art work that is a very traditional take on what a curator is. But then again, I think that I Am A Curator tried to do something that goes beyond that. By using a very traditional approach it enabled us to do something that was extremely creative and which opened new ideas about how to put together exhibitions. In terms of selecting the works, It wasn't as if they had only five pieces to choose from. To consider the work of fifty-seven artists in one afternoon is a major task. Also, a lot of the work was not finished, it was up to the curator of the day to complete it, a lot was interactive, and a lot had different elements that needed to be put together. So there were many different approaches on offer, reflecting the working methods of the original selectors." Another criticism of the project was that the individual artwork never got the attention it deserved. Hannah Rickards who was leading the gallery crew writes: "Even the 57 official ‘artworks,’ depending on their treatment by the Curator of the Day, sometimes barely managed to retain their “artwork” status. There were times when they did slip into being things in cupboards or things on the wall. That slippage between artworks and objects, or between people’s roles in the process, is something I see as having been central to the project, so I don’t know if I necessarily see the need for a posthumous proliferation of the term “artwork.” It feels like laminating a piece of paper you are still making notes on. In the context of this project a wipe-clean definition seems to jar." In a review for C: International Contemporary Art Magazine, Fergal Stapleton described the exhibition as "a game, mutative and feudal, with several tiers of collusion" and "a bid for curatorial practice as art, and for curatorial supremacy over its subject arts disciplines." In his PhD thesis Barnaby Drabble uses I am a Curator as one of three case studies. He quotes Stapleton and builds a severe critique to the project which he perceives as being elitist and self-promotional under the guise of being democratic. On a more positive note British sociologist and media theorist, David Gauntlett suggests that projects like I am a Curator expands art into being a visual sociology; "We should note that, in some cases, the work of socially engaged visual artists and the work of visual sociologists can look very similar. Many artists have used art to explore identity, memory and the construction of selfhood [...]. Other contemporary artists have engaged in a more externally oriented art practice which involves ‘ordinary’ people in the making of work. Just as visual sociology sometimes blurs into something like art, in these projects, art expands into being a kind of visual sociology. There are many instances of such projects; here I will give just a few examples. A project by the artist Per Hüttner, at Chisenhale Gallery, London, entitled I Am a Curator, gave 30 individuals or groups the opportunity to be ‘Curator of the Day’, over a period of six weeks (5 November–14 December 2003). Each day a | or investigated the curatorial process in the late 1990s and in the early years of the new millennium. Many of these were collaborative and took place at the Gallery Konstakuten in Stockholm, The Hood Gallery in Los Angeles but also in galleries and public spaces in London, New York City and Vancouver and involved artists from different generations and included Geoffrey Farmer, Brian Jungen, Lenke Rothman, Neil Goldstein and curators like Reid Shier and Tone O Nielsen. In 2001 he created the curatorial framework for an exhibition at Nylon in collaboration with Goshka Macuga and Gavin Wade. and in 2002 at Curatorial Market at Cuchifritos and various public venues including Essex Street Market in New York. In these projects he developed ideas and practices that pointed towards a new way of relating to the art object and exhibition making that eventually became manifest in I am a Curator.: "Despite its populist ideals, the Curatorial Market raises complex, insider issues about the relationship between artist and curator. ‘These two disciplines are beginning to mix and merge in ways that some people find appalling and others see as a powerful new development in the history of art making,’ Paul Clay explains. However, abandoning the idea of the autonomous piece of art can be problematic. ‘Having art that relates very strongly to the market context can fuck up the commodification process in an interesting way. It both points it up as an object to consume, and at the same time makes it harder to effectively remove from its context in order to be sold.’ Furthermore, ‘There is a danger that when curators have too strong an vision, the artists' works can end up simply as building blocks used to construct the curator's point. On the other hand if the curator's point is weak then the works can get stranded totally out of context’." Hüttner has since developed these strategies both in projects like Repetitive Time, Democracy and Desire, (In)Visible Dialogues and in the international research network Vision Forum. Basic structure During six weeks people or groups of people with no prior experience in exhibition making undertook 36 investigative exercises into the process of putting together an exhibition. From the outset, the idea was to create an exhibition each day, but quickly the focus moved to investigate the 57 artworks as a resource. In order to realize this strategy the artist developed some basic concepts: Curator of the Day: The daily slots were administered through an application process through which we tried to give as many different people as possible, in relation to occupation, age, sex, social and ethnic background. More often than not, the Curator of Day was a small group. Meaning that in the end roughly 70 people were curators. The Gallery Crew: The Gallery Crew was the Curators of the Day's aid in developing their ideas and the project that they wanted to realize during the day. The Curator of the Day was not allowed to touch the artwork, except in those cases when this was an integral part of the piece. All the handling and mounting of the work was carried out by the Gallery Crew. The crew was also responsible for informing the visitors to the gallery about the project and answering questions. Support Structure: Support Structure hosted all the artwork. It was mobile and it was also used to display work, as well as change the size and appearance of the space. It incorporated two tables and half a dozen chairs that could also be used as plinths to present work on. But Celine Condorelli and Gavin Wade took their brief further and allowed Support Structure be a questioning and critical tool and an important aspect of the process of the project. The structure took the centre stage, but in an unexpected way the Curators of the Day remained strangely blind to the eleven meter long monster object on wheels and few, if any, references were made to it in their reports. The two also offered objects and lists of what to do if the Curator of the Day gets stuck and included phone numbers to well-known contemporary curators. The Selectors: To provide a dynamic collection for the Curator of the Day to choose from, six people were asked to select artwork for I Am a Curator. Each devised a different approach for his or her selection. They were Patrick Bernier, Melanie Keen, Lisa Le Feuvre, Tone O. Nielsen, Reid Shier and Per Hüttner. The Interface Cards: A5-sized plastic cards were designed and realized by American artist Scott Rigby. For each artwork available for selection there was one corresponding Interface Card. The Interface Cards along with the website (which used the same design) were the main tools for the Curator of the Day to select artwork and devise their exhibition. The Website: All the artwork available for selection could be browsed on Chisenhale Gallery's website. There was also continually updated photographic documentation of the exhibitions created by the Curators of the Day. The exhibitions and the audience Each of the 36 exhibitions realized within the framework of I am a Curator took on very different forms and used the artwork and the space in very different ways. Artist Hannah Rickards who was leading the gallery crew describes an exhibition that had great impact on the development of the project: "Embassy of Work With Me (å.b.ä.k.e /RCA), emptied Support |
Correspondence to a military commander could have a lengthy and ornate salutation or just address him by his title. | Письма армейским командирам могли могли содержать продолжительное и витиеватое приветствие или просто обращение к такому человеку по его должности. |
Big Island (Hudson Strait, Nunavut) | Big Island (ö i Kanada, Nunavut, lat 62,72, long -70,71) |
Democracy and Freedom (Catalan: Democràcia i Llibertat, DiL) was an electoral alliance in Catalonia formed to contest the 2015 Spanish general election. | Democracia e Liberdade (em catalão: Democràcia i Llibertat, DiL) foi uma coligação eleitoral da Catalunha, formada para concorrer às Eleições gerais na Espanha em 2015. |
Each function is shown with respect to its logical relationship to the execution and completion of other functions. | Cada función se muestra con respecto a su relación lógica con la realización de otras funciones. |
She has a weird habit of taking off her clothes when she's angry. | Bà có thói quen kì lạ là cởi bớt trang phục của mình khi bà ấy tức giận. |
What were other ecosystems during the ice ages? | During climate variation we find that the ecosystem belts (which are strongly controlled by latitude) simply migrate; so when we're in ice-house conditions they migrate toward the equator, and during greenhouse they migrate toward the poles. Here is an illustration of key ecosystem coverage during the last glacial maximum: _URL_0_ |
born on June 10, 1857 in Cincinnati, Ohio to Henry Ignatz Potthast and Bernadine Scheiffers. Starting in 1870 he studied art at the McMicken School in Cincinnati and in 1873 he started working at the Strobridge Lithography Company. From June 10, 1879 to March 9, 1881, Potthast studied under Thomas Satterwhite Noble, a retired Confederate Army captain who had studied with Thomas Couture in Paris. Potthast later studied at the Royal Academy in Munich with the American-born instructor Carl Marr. After returning to Cincinnati in 1885 he resumed his studies with Noble. In 1886, he departed for Paris, where he studied with Fernand Cormon. In 1895 he relocated to New York City and remained there until his death in 1927. Until the age of thirty-nine Potthast earned a living as a lithographer. The purchase of one of his paintings by the Cincinnati Museum of | 1886, he departed for Paris, where he studied with Fernand Cormon. In 1895 he relocated to New York City and remained there until his death in 1927. Until the age of thirty-nine Potthast earned a living as a lithographer. The purchase of one of his paintings by the Cincinnati Museum of Art may have encouraged him to abandon lithography for a career as a fine artist. His paintings retained the subdued colors and strong contrasts of the Munich school until he adopted the Impressionist palette late in his career. After his arrival in New York Potthast worked as a magazine illustrator, and exhibited regularly at the National Academy of Design, the Society of American Artists and the Salmagundi Club, winning numerous prizes. By 1908 he was installed in a studio in the Gainsborough Building. |
who is david's dad in the bible | David David is an important figure in Rabbinic Judaism. Many legends have grown around the figure of David. According to one Rabbinic tradition, David was raised as the son of his father Jesse and spent his early years herding his father's sheep in the wilderness while his brothers were in school. |
how to transfer photos from iphone to laptop via usb? | Connect your iPhone to PC using USB cable. Step 2: After connecting if you see an AutoPlay Window, click on import pictures and videos or click on Start button > Computer and go to portable device section. Now, click on your iPhone icon and choose the "Import pictures and videos". |
Living people German footballers East German footballers East Germany under-21 international footballers | footballers East Germany under-21 international footballers 1. FC Magdeburg players Dynamo Dresden players FC Hansa Rostock players Eisenhüttenstädter FC Stahl |
how long does it take for a wire transfer from one bank to another? | Domestic wires. Because of EFAA regulations, most bank-to-bank wire transfers between accounts in the U.S. are completed within 24 hours. Some banks make wired funds available to recipients immediately, especially on transfers between accounts at the same institution. |
what happens when both joint tenants die? | As joint tenants, each person owns the whole of the property with the other. If one co-owner dies, their interest in the property automatically passes to the surviving co-owner(s), whether or not they have a will. ... If a co-owner no longer wishes to hold the property as joint tenants, they can sever the joint tenancy. |
Sarrah shares a photograph of the gathering outside the court and comments: | Sarrah compartió una fotografía de la reunión a las afueras de la corte y comentó: |
Prehistory of Transylvania Prehistoric Romania Rotbav, Archaeological Site Notes References Wietenberg ohne Mykene?Gedanken zu Herkunft und Bedeutung der Keramikverzierung der Wietenberg-Kultur von Laura Dietrich, Berlin, und Oliver Dietrich, Berlin External links Культура витенберг Бронзовый век Archaeological cultures in | Bronze Age in Romania Coţofeni culture Basarabi culture Otomani culture Pecica culture Prehistory of Transylvania Prehistoric Romania Rotbav, Archaeological Site Notes References Wietenberg ohne Mykene?Gedanken zu Herkunft und Bedeutung der Keramikverzierung der Wietenberg-Kultur von Laura Dietrich, Berlin, und Oliver Dietrich, Berlin External links Культура витенберг Бронзовый век Archaeological cultures in Romania Bronze Age cultures of Europe Archaeological |
May 2016, a song titled "Odekake Summer" was released in a form of music video to promote a Japanese mosquito repellent brand. In December 2016, it was announced that Mito will be contributing a song for an anime for the first time. The song was revealed to be "Puzzle", which became the ending theme to the animation series Puzzle & Dragons X. The song was officially released as a double A-side single, "Puzzle/Hanabira", on February 22, 2017. The latter was used as a tie-up commercial song to Oyatsu Company's Ramen Noodle Snack product. Few days after the release of the single, Mito's agency, Asobisystem and record label Sony Music Japan, has announced that she will finally be releasing her debut studio album on April 26. The cover and tracklist were revealed later that month. The album debuted at the 64th spot of the Oricon Weekly Albums, selling 1,261 copies on its first week of release. Discography Albums Natsumelo (2017) Singles DVDs Filmography Movies 2015: Koisuru Vampire as Natsu 2019: Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler as Runa Yomozuki 2021: Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler Part 2 as Runa Yomozuki 2021: Shinonome-iro no Shūmatsu as Masami Andō | debut studio album on April 26. The cover and tracklist were revealed later that month. The album debuted at the 64th spot of the Oricon Weekly Albums, selling 1,261 copies on its first week of release. Discography Albums Natsumelo (2017) Singles DVDs Filmography Movies 2015: Koisuru Vampire as Natsu 2019: Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler as Runa Yomozuki 2021: Kakegurui – Compulsive Gambler Part 2 as Runa Yomozuki 2021: Shinonome-iro no Shūmatsu as Masami Andō Dramas 2016: Times "Arau" and "Shimizu" as Mino 2016: Seisei Suru Hodo, Aishiteru as cake store's clerk 2018–2019: Kakegurui as Yomozuki Runa 2019: Setsuyaku Locke as Natsume Mito Dubbing Paddington as Judy Brown (Japanese version) Paddington 2 as Judy Brown (Japanese version) TV Shows 2015–2018: MBS Song Town 2016–2018: Mito Natsume's Songstreet 2016–2019: Chi-chin Puipui Getsuyoubi 2017: Kyōnoryōri Beginners Batsue no Sparta Natsu Men Juku 2017: Himitsu no Kenmin SHOW 2018–present: + music 2019–present: Mint! 2019–present: Go go Nama Oishī Kin'yōbiTheatre 2018: Eg Woman as member of Team Mehyō 2018: TOP's & BOTTOM's ~ Futatsu no Kokoro to Hitotsu no Mirai ~ as performer 2018: Tekkonkinkreet as Shiro Concert tours Natsumelo Live Tour "Mito Natsume wa Chou-Omedetai"'' (2017) Bibliography Nonfiction book Photo-book Picture book References External links Official Website (Japanese) 1990 births Living people Japanese women rock singers Models from Nara Prefecture Yasutaka Nakata Musicians from Nara Prefecture Japanese television presenters Japanese women |
it was released as the second single from the guitarist's third solo album (the second with Kennedy and The Conspirators), World on Fire. The song was used as the theme song for the 2014 National Rugby League Finals series, and Slash performed the song live at ANZ Stadium as pre-show entertainment for | the second single from the guitarist's third solo album (the second with Kennedy and The Conspirators), World on Fire. The song was used as the theme song for the 2014 National Rugby League Finals series, and Slash performed the song live at ANZ Stadium as pre-show entertainment for the league's grand final |
Does ANYONE feel like helping me out and reading a song I wrote? | sure I'll read [email protected] =] |
The bright material appeared as a result of rocks slamming into the surface .
Vesta is one of the brightest objects in the solar system . | By . Ted Thornhill . PUBLISHED: . 07:12 EST, 22 March 2012 . | . UPDATED: . 07:32 EST, 22 March 2012 . Scientists analysing the surface of a giant asteroid are puzzling over bright spots that represent some of the purest materials seen so far by a Nasa spacecraft. Nasa released new images of the asteroid Vesta taken by the orbiting Dawn spacecraft that show some places on the surface twice as bright as others. Vesta is one of the brightest objects in the solar system and the only asteroid in the so-called main belt between Mars and Jupiter visible to the naked eye from Earth. Sparkling: Bright material extends up to 19 miles out from the crater Canuleia on Vesta, which measures six miles across . This shows a perspective view of a layered young crater in the Rheasilvia basin at Vesta created from laying images from the mission's low-altitude mapping orbit - an average of 130 miles above the surface - atop a digital terrain model . The bright material, found mostly around craters, appeared as a result of rocks slamming into the surface and exposing it. Researchers are still trying to determine what it is made of but believe it is pristine and unchanged from the asteroid's formation some four billion years ago. ‘Our analysis finds this bright material originates from Vesta and has undergone little change since the formation of Vesta over four billion years ago,’ said Jian-Yang Li, a Dawn participating scientist at the University of Maryland, College Park. ‘We're eager to learn more about what minerals make up this material and how the present Vesta surface came to be.’ The bright areas vary from several hundred feet to around 10 miles across. The interplay of bright and dark material at the rim of Marcia crater on Vesta is visible in this image mosaic . Rock on: A young crater on Vesta that is nine miles in diameter with layering visible in the crater walls, along with large boulders that were thrown out in the material ejected from the impact . There are also a wide variety of distinct dark deposits across its surface. The dark materials on Vesta can appear dark grey, brown and red. They sometimes appear as small, well-defined deposits around impact craters. They also can appear as larger regional deposits, like those surrounding the impact craters scientists have nicknamed the ‘snowman.’ ‘One of the surprises was the dark material is not randomly distributed,’ said David Williams, a Dawn participating scientist at Arizona State University. ‘This suggests underlying geology determines where it occurs.’ The dark materials seem to be related to impacts and their aftermath. Scientists theorise carbon-rich asteroids could have hit Vesta at speeds low enough to produce some of the smaller deposits without blasting away the surface. Dawn has been studying Vesta since it entered orbit last year. The spacecraft is set to depart Vesta this summer and cruise to another asteroid, Ceres, arriving in 2015. This artist's concept shows Nasa's Dawn spacecraft orbiting the giant asteroid Vesta with the depiction of Vesta based on images obtained by the craft's framing cameras . |
Rahvard | رهورد |
Nerds replaced the bonus track Too Many Drunk Girls. The album peaked at number 10 on the UK Indie Albums chart. Following the finale of season two of their series, the band released their second album Shtick Heads in June 2016. The album peaked at number 74 on the UK Albums Top 100 chart. In 2018, the band released a new 'Claws' logo, that would serve as the artwork for their third album, "The Album Nobody Asked For." which was released on 24 August 2018, and the artwork for the | twenty-five singles. In 2012, following the release of the first season of their self-titled television series, the band released their debut self-titled album on their own label, Sounds Like Good. The album consisted of 13 tracks from the television series, as well as two bonus tracks. On the CD release of the album, the bonus track Nerds replaced the bonus track Too Many Drunk Girls. The album peaked at number 10 on the UK Indie Albums chart. Following the finale of season two of their series, the band released their second album |
putney | пътни |
starring Nicole Berger, Maximilian Schell, and Viktor de Kowa. It portrays the relationship between a Belgian woman and a German soldier during the First World War. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin | Kowa. It portrays the relationship between a Belgian woman and a German soldier during the First World War. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin with location filming around the town of Damme in Flanders. The film's |
That the crazy idea is just that, it is crazy, and with the Earth full, it's game over. | Da je luda ideja upravo to -- luda je, a budući da je Zemlja puna, ne možemo dalje. |
when was the song don't worry be happy made | Don't Worry, Be Happy "Don't Worry, Be Happy" is a popular worldwide hit song by musician Bobby McFerrin. Released in September 1988, it became the first a cappella song to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, a position it held for two weeks. The song's title is taken from a famous quotation by Meher Baba. The "instruments" in the a cappella song are entirely overdubbed voice parts and other sounds made by McFerrin, using no instruments at all; McFerrin also sings with an affected accent.[3] The comedic original music video for the song stars McFerrin, Robin Williams, and Bill Irwin,[4] and is somewhat shorter than the album version. |
Blue Jeans", which appears as the third track on the album, was also released early on the iTunes Store ahead of the full release of Bulletproof Picasso when pre orders for the album started on the store. A music video to accompany the release of "Angel in Blue Jeans" was also released on July 15, coinciding with the commencement of preorders for Bulletproof Picasso. The video, which featured American actor Danny Trejo as his Robert Rodriguez character Machete and Canadian television hostess and actor Hannah Simone, was shot in the Mojave Desert and is staged as a Tarantino-style Spaghetti Western. It also stars lead singer Pat Monahan as the antagonist taking hostage of a woman, played by Simone, who acts as the love interest of Machete, played by Trejo. The video had fetched over a million views by August 1, 2014. The title track was released to iTunes on July 29, along with the announcement of a sauvignon blanc wine of the same name to be available when the album is released. A promotional single, "Wonder What You're Doing for the Rest of Your Life", was released on August 25, 2014, preceding the release of Bulletproof Picasso. "Cadillac Cadillac" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on September 29, 2014, as the second single off of the album. "Bulletproof Picasso" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on January 26, 2015, as the third single off of the album. "Give It All" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on May 19, 2015, as the fourth single off of the album. Tour Train had made numerous performances and appearances on television and radio in the three-month lead up to the release of Bulletproof Picasso. The band had expressed their intent to let fans hear new material on tour before Bulletproof Picasso was released in September, with Jimmy Stafford stating that they were "too excited to not play any other songs off the record", with Stafford being motivated by his opinion that Bulletproof Picasso was the best album the band had ever made. Set lists staged for the band's pre-album performances included "Cadillac, Cadillac", "Bulletproof Picasso", "Angel in Blue Jeans" and "The Bridge"; the most new material the band had played on a single tour. The band, however, while keen to perform new songs, felt uncomfortable at the possibility of throwing off long-time fans during the "limbo period" between the releases of "Angel and Blue Jeans" and Bulletproof Picasso, where fans have not heard the new material. Stafford further explained, "You don't want to put a song no one has heard between "Hey, | Western. It also stars lead singer Pat Monahan as the antagonist taking hostage of a woman, played by Simone, who acts as the love interest of Machete, played by Trejo. The video had fetched over a million views by August 1, 2014. The title track was released to iTunes on July 29, along with the announcement of a sauvignon blanc wine of the same name to be available when the album is released. A promotional single, "Wonder What You're Doing for the Rest of Your Life", was released on August 25, 2014, preceding the release of Bulletproof Picasso. "Cadillac Cadillac" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on September 29, 2014, as the second single off of the album. "Bulletproof Picasso" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on January 26, 2015, as the third single off of the album. "Give It All" was sent to US Hot AC radio stations on May 19, 2015, as the fourth single off of the album. Tour Train had made numerous performances and appearances on television and radio in the three-month lead up to the release of Bulletproof Picasso. The band had expressed their intent to let fans hear new material on tour before Bulletproof Picasso was released in September, with Jimmy Stafford stating that they were "too excited to not play any other songs off the record", with Stafford being motivated by his opinion that Bulletproof Picasso was the best album the band had ever made. Set lists staged for the band's pre-album performances included "Cadillac, Cadillac", "Bulletproof Picasso", "Angel in Blue Jeans" and "The Bridge"; the most new material the band had played on a single tour. The band, however, while keen to perform new songs, felt uncomfortable at the possibility of throwing off long-time fans during the "limbo period" between the releases of "Angel and Blue Jeans" and Bulletproof Picasso, where fans have not heard the new material. Stafford further explained, "You don't want to put a song no one has heard between "Hey, Soul Sister" and "Meet Virginia" because it feels like a lull in the show. So it's tricky". The band's promotional media tour started with an appearance on Sirius XM Radio show The Howard Stern Show on June 9, 2014, coinciding with the album's unveiling. The band also premiered "Angel in Blue Jeans" on the show before the track was released as a single the same day. The band also appeared on 94.3 FM The Point on June 11 as part of a radio special entitled "Breakfast with Train", where the band invited fans to ask questions and spend breakfast with them. They performed on the Today Show on June 13, as part of the show's Toyota Summer Concert Series held at Rockefeller Center in New York City. On August 27, they performed at the MLB Fan Cave in New York City. The Picasso at the Wheel Tour was announced in January 2015, and began on May 21, 2015, in Wheatland, California. Opening acts The Magic Numbers and Natasha North The Fray and Matt Nathanson Tour dates Reception Critical Writing for USA Today, Elysa Gardner says "The best tracks on Train's latest album are the driving and high-spirited ones, where Pat Monahan's sweet, keening tenor... evocative here of a Wings-era Paul McCartney... rides meaty but crisply percussive arrangements." Richard Bienstock for Billboard writes how "the Bay Area rock band buffed out the rootsier and rockier aspects of its sound for a more pop-centric approach" that's another "extension of its bid for mainstream glory." Commercial The album debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 albums chart on its first week of release, selling 50,000 copies in the United States in its first week. As of June 2016, the album has sold 145,000 copies in the US. The album also debuted at No. 7 on the Canadian Albums chart. Artwork The album art features a burning Cadillac (in reference to the album's single "Cadillac, Cadillac") with a licence plate that reads "PICASSO". This album art was cited among Billboards worst album covers of 2014. Track listing Notes "Just a Memory" contains excerpts from "Pain in My Heart", as performed by Otis Redding and written by Naomi Neville. signifies an additional producer signifies a vocal producer Personnel Pat Monahan – lead vocals, acoustic guitar Jimmy Stafford – |
September 2015 Greek legislative election | Kreikan parlamenttivaalit 2015 (syyskuu) |
Tom held the knife between his teeth as he untied the knot. | תום אחז את הסכין בין שיניו כשהוא פרם את הקשר. |
He was a member of the organizing committee of the conference held in Baku and Odessa (2004-2007 biennium) on Information and electronic technologies. | Являлся членом оргкомитета конференций проводимых в Баку и Одессе (2004-2007 гг.) по информационным и электронным технологиям. |
Notable operatic pop solo singers include: Adam Lopez Aled Jones Alenka Gotar Alessandro Safina Alfie Boe Amaury Vassili Andrea Bocelli Ayanga Becky Jane Taylor Cai Chengyu Camilla Kerslake Cezar Charlotte Church Chloë Agnew Chris Mann Darius Campbell David D'Or Dimash Kudaibergen Elina Nechayeva Elizaveta Khripounova Emma Shapplin Erkan Aki Faryl Smith Fernando Lima Fernando Varela Filippa Giordano Garðar Thór Cortes Giorgia Fumanti Grace Bawden Harrison Craig Hayley Westenra Hollie Steel Isabel Suckling Izzy Jackie Evancho Jeanette MacDonald Joe McElderry John McDermott Jonathan Ansell Jonathan Antoine Josh Groban Julie Andrews Kate Miller-Heidke Katherine Jenkins Keedie Kimera Klaus Nomi Krassimir Avramov Kristin Chenoweth Lara Fabian Lesley Garrett Lim Hyung-joo Luciano Pavarotti Malena Ernman Marcello Giordani Margaret Keys Mario Frangoulis Mark Masri Mark Vincent Mary-Jess Leaverland Natasha Marsh Neal E. Boyd Nikolay Baskov Patrizia Paul Potts Rebecca Newman Rhydian Roberts Romina Arena Rufus Wainwright Russell Watson Sarah Brightman Sasha Lazard Sergio Franchi | include: Adam Lopez Aled Jones Alenka Gotar Alessandro Safina Alfie Boe Amaury Vassili Andrea Bocelli Ayanga Becky Jane Taylor Cai Chengyu Camilla Kerslake Cezar Charlotte Church Chloë Agnew Chris Mann Darius Campbell David D'Or Dimash Kudaibergen Elina Nechayeva Elizaveta Khripounova Emma Shapplin Erkan Aki Faryl Smith Fernando Lima Fernando Varela Filippa Giordano Garðar Thór Cortes Giorgia Fumanti Grace Bawden Harrison Craig Hayley Westenra Hollie Steel Isabel Suckling Izzy Jackie Evancho Jeanette MacDonald Joe McElderry John McDermott Jonathan Ansell Jonathan Antoine Josh Groban Julie Andrews Kate Miller-Heidke Katherine Jenkins Keedie Kimera Klaus Nomi Krassimir Avramov Kristin Chenoweth Lara Fabian Lesley Garrett Lim Hyung-joo Luciano Pavarotti Malena Ernman Marcello Giordani Margaret Keys Mario Frangoulis Mark Masri Mark Vincent Mary-Jess Leaverland Natasha Marsh Neal E. Boyd Nikolay Baskov Patrizia Paul Potts Rebecca Newman Rhydian Roberts Romina Arena Rufus Wainwright Russell Watson Sarah |
Child carrying a bouquet of balloons. | There are more than one balloons. |
If you asked to write asucessful essay about \ascool to give the students the skillsand knowwledges needed | Well first, you need to be sure your grammar and spelling are impeccable so people will take you seriously. Second your question is a fragment and does not make much sense. I think you are asking what skills and knowledge should be included in a school to make it successful? If that is the case there are hundreds of possible answers. My opinion on this matter is not always liked but it would be effective. Here is what I think (you best be careful with stealing ideas though as much of this is written in a paper I did). First, you need a sound building in which to house your school so the kids will be safe, secure, and have an environment conducive to learning. You also need to be sure the building is located in an area that will serve the students you wish to serve.\nSecond, you need a well developed curricular objective. What is the purpose of your school? Vision statement? Goals? Objectives? among other questions. You also need to define what your school is. Is it a private school or a public school or something in the middle? \nSkills wise I believe we need to concentrate on the basics FIRST. Reading, Writing, Math, Science, and Social Studies are the most important subjects. Depending on the focus of your school will depend on which are the most important. The federal government would argue with you that Reading and Math are most important but I do not believe you place one core subject above another. I also believe schools do not do enough with teaching students to WRITE a good sentence, paragraph, essay, or paper. \nOther than those basic assumptions of a school it comes down to the focus of your educational mission. If your school is a high school geared toward technology then you should be providing students with skills in the fields of technology. If your school is a middle school that is to prepare students to get into a particular high school then you should tailor your program towards the requirements of that school. If you are a college prep school then you need to immerse your students in college prep classes to build the skills necessary for college study. This could go on forever!\n\nStart with a mission plan, goal, and objectives to establish your educational mission. Then the rest will flow off of that thought.\n\nhope that helps.... |
Crosby and Leo Reisman. "Just a Gigolo" appeared in a 1931 film, a 1932 Betty Boop cartoon and a 1993 TV series, all titled after the song. The song was recorded by many musicians of the time, including Louis Armstrong and (in German) Richard Tauber. The film Schöner Gigolo, armer Gigolo, directed by David Hemmings in 1979, was titled after the first verse of the original lyrics, but the Just a Gigolo title was used for US distribution. In this film, the song was performed by Marlene Dietrich, in her last film appearance. "Just a Gigolo"/"I Ain't Got Nobody" medley Origin "Just a Gigolo" is best known in a form recorded by Louis Prima in 1956, where it was paired in a medley with another old standard, "I Ain't Got Nobody" (words by Roger A. Graham and music by Spencer Williams, 1915). This pairing links the life of a gigolo ("people know the part I'm playing, paid for every dance.."), to the outcome for singer ending up alone ("I ain't got nobody"). The popularity of Prima's combination, and of Village People's 1978 and David Lee Roth's 1985 cover versions of the medley, has led to the mistaken perception by some that the songs are two parts of a single original composition. The coupling of the two songs had its genesis in an earlier Louis Prima recording from 1945 (V Disc 554, side A), which was then adapted by Sam Butera for Prima's 1950s Las Vegas stage show, during which Prima would revisit his old hits in a new, jive-and-jumping style. The success of that act gained Prima a recording deal with Capitol Records, which aimed to capture on record the atmosphere of his shows. The first album, titled The Wildest! and released in November 1956, opened with "Just a Gigolo"/"I Ain't Got Nobody", which then became Prima's signature number and helped relaunch his career. Louis Prima's recording The recording session took place in April 1956 at Capitol Studios in Los Angeles, and was produced by Voyle Gilmore. Prima was backed by his Las Vegas group, Sam Butera & the Witnesses, in its original line-up: Sam Butera (tenor sax), James "Red" Blount (trombone), William "Willie" McCumber (piano), Jack Marshall (guitar), Amado Rodriques (bass) and Robert "Bobby" Morris (drums). Keely Smith, who was Prima's wife and an important part of his act, joined the Witnesses for the characteristic backing vocals. Prima sang the lead but didn't play the trumpet on this track. List of versions The following artists have released or performed versions of the song: Fats Waller Sol Hoʻopiʻi (1928) Louis Armstrong March 9 (1931) Ben Bernie and His Orchestra (Brunswick 6023) (1931) Bing Crosby with The Gus Arnheim Orchestra (recorded March 2, 1931) – includes Paris verse. Damia (1931) as "C'est mon Gigolo" (French version adapted from L. Casucci by A. Mauprey, J. Lenoir) | as "C'est mon Gigolo" (French version adapted from L. Casucci by A. Mauprey, J. Lenoir) Ted Lewis and His Band (Columbia 2378 D) (1931) Leo Reisman and His Orchestra (Victor 22606) (1931) Art Tatum Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli in Rome (1949) Harry James (1952) Jaye P. Morgan (1953) - a minor hit, reaching No. 22 in the Billboard charts. Thelonious Monk (1954, 1958, 1962) Louis Prima (1956) Sarah Vaughan - included in the album At Mister Kelly's (1957) Eino Virtanen, a Finnish version called "Kaunis Gigolo" (1958) Carmen McRae - included in her album Song Time (1960). Gus Backus Jean Shepherd (1965) opened the July 29, 1965 episode of his show with the song Erroll Garner (1965) Connie Francis - for the album Connie & Clyde – Hit Songs of the 30s (1968) Oscar Peterson (1970) Peter Allen (1974) Chris DeMarco as Michel Delon (1976) Prima's version was covered by Alex Harvey in 1979 on his The Mafia Stole My Guitar album. Village People (1978) recorded a cover of Prima's version. Marlene Dietrich title song of film Just a Gigolo (1978) Barbie and the Kens (1980) Javier Gurruchaga during the film Besame Tonta (1981) David Lee Roth (1985) (reached No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100). The music video for his recording parodies a number of well-known pop-music performers Michael Jackson, Cyndi Lauper, Billy Idol, Willie Nelson, Culture Club, cameos appearances and cultural trends of the first half of the 1980s. Bob (Rivers) & Zip (1985), with alternate lyrics "Just a Big Ego" Tony Martin (1985) Swedish dansband Ingmar Nordströms recorded a Swedish-language version of the song, called "Gösta Gigolo", on the 1985 album Saxparty 12. The title is pronounced the same as in English, but refers to a man named Gösta and is hanging around the dance floor in the hotel of a small town. Tiny Tim (1987) on the record "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" Tapani Kansa, a Finnish version called "Vastustamaton" on his album Anna mulle aikaa (1990) Marty Grosz (1992, 2005) Leningrad Cowboys (1993) Tony Slattery (1993) as the closing song for the TV show "Just a Gigolo" in which he also stars. Amanda Lear utilizes the song in her live repertoire and a 1998 recording can found on the compilation Made of Blood and Honey (reportedly a #1 hit in Hungary, Romania, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Andorra). Dick Hyman Group and Howard Alden (1999) in Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown Lou Bega (2001) In 2003 Israeli singer and TV star, Gidi Gov, released a Hebrew version of Prima's medley, called "Gigolo" on his album Moondance (Hebrew: ריקוד ירח). Sergio Pángaro & |
Sivert Samuelson | சிவெர்ட் சாமுவெல்சன் |
52k salary how much per week? | Assuming 52 weeks in a year, you would make $1,000.00 per week. |
arts as an actor. Joseph Carrozzi – For significant service to business, and to the community through multicultural and not-for-profit organisations. Dr Annette Elizabeth Carruthers – For significant service to community health, and to people with Multiple Sclerosis. Emeritus Professor David John Carter – For significant service to tertiary education, and to cultural and literary studies. Gregory Thomas Chamberlin – For significant service to the print media through editorial roles. Professor Judith Lynne Charlton – For significant service to road safety and injury prevention research. Kerry Anne Chikarovski – For significant service to the Parliament of New South Wales, and to the community. Roland Desmond Chin – For significant service to the community of the Northern Territory. Lee Christofis – For significant service to the performing arts, particularly to dance. Clinical Professor Flavia Cicuttini – For significant service to medicine, and to musculoskeletal disease research. Dr Leon Wakefield Clark – For significant service to medical administration, and to healthcare delivery. Elizabeth Ann Clarke – For significant service to harness racing in Victoria, and to the community. Emeritus Professor Deborah Joy Clayton – For significant service to tertiary education, and to international study programs. Associate Professor Lynette Elsie Clearihan – For significant service to medicine, and to medical education. Anthony John Cochrane – For significant service to sports administration, and to entertainment production. Joanna Collins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Richard Thomas Collins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Professor John Connell – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to the geosciences. Dr John Edward Coolican – For significant service to dentistry in the field of orthodontics, and to rugby union. Kate Copeland – For significant service to health infrastructure planning and management. Stephanie Copus-Campbell – For significant service to aid and development initiatives in Papua New Guinea. Colin Cornish – For significant service to the performing arts, to music, and to youth. Philip John Cornish – For significant service to the telecommunications sector, and to the community. Elizabeth Ann Cousins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Ian Scott Cox – For significant service to people who are homeless, and to the community. Professor Lawrence Edward Cram – For significant service to tertiary education, and to astronomy and astrophysics. Julian Hillary Cribb – For significant service to science communication. Dr Elizabeth Anne Crock – For significant service to nursing, particularly to people living with HIV/AIDS. John Roger Crosby – For significant service to agribusiness, and to the farming sector. Emeritus Professor Ann Curthoys – For significant service to tertiary education, to social history, and to research. Dr Allan Lindsay Curtis – For significant service to environmental management education and research. Dr John Christopher Daley – For significant service to public policy development, and to the community. The Honourable Cheryl May Davenport – For significant service to the Parliament of Western Australia, and to the community. Professor Christopher Bernard Del Mar – For significant service to tertiary education, to health and medical research, and to professional bodies. Professor Amalia Di Iorio – For significant service to tertiary education, to skills development, and to women. Ronald Frank Donnellan – For significant service to children, to cycling, and to the community of Townsville. Roger Thomas Dooley – For significant service to community health, to psychology, and to professional societies. Dr Trevor Dowdell – For significant service to artistic gymnastics through a range of roles. Rose Downer – For significant service to the visual and performing arts as a patron and supporter. Dr David Durrheim – For significant service to public health medicine, and to international health. Katherine Louise Eastman – For significant service to the law, to human rights, and to professional organisations. Harriet Claire Elvin – For significant service to arts administration in the Australian Capital Territory and to the community. Angela Emslie – For significant service to the finance and superannuation sectors, and to suicide prevention. Robert Henry Estcourt – For significant service to the financial management sector. Dr Bronwyn Joy Evans – For significant service to engineering, to standards, and to medical technology. Dr Kenneth William Evans – For significant service to education, to independent schools, and to public administration. Judi Farr – For significant service to the performing arts as an actor. Matthew James Fehon – For significant service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Jennifer Fitzgerald – For significant service to people with disability through leadership and advocacy roles. Rodney Milton Fitzroy – For significant service to healthcare, to racing, and to the commercial real estate sector. Rodney Thomas Forrester – For significant service to the community of the Sunshine Coast. Nancy Suzanne Fox – For significant service to the financial and banking sector, and to women in business. Emeritus Professor Susan Evelyn Fraser – For significant service to tertiary education, and to health and medical organisations. Marion Fulker – For significant service to urban planning and infrastructure development. Anne Maree Gardiner – For significant service to lifesaving organisations through a range of roles. Michael Arthur Gay – For significant service to industrial relations, and to international labour organisations. William Gibbins – For significant service to horse racing, and to people with disability. David Ian Gibbs – For significant service to the community, and to the chartered accounting profession. Brian John Gilbertson – For significant service to festivals and events in South Australia, to opera, and to voice education. Dr Peter Nicholas Gilchrist – For significant service to psychiatry, particularly to people with weight disorders. Rabbi Yaakov Glasman – For significant service to Judaism and interfaith dialogue, to rabbinical bodies, and to the community. Louise Mary Gourlay, – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Ian Leslie Gray – For significant service to the law, and to Indigenous justice. Robert John Gregory – For significant service to the community of South Australia. Professor Gilles Guillemin – For significant service to science education, to Motor Neurone Disease research, and to sport. Professor Narelle Lorraine Haines – For significant service to the road transport industry, and to accident research. Dr Jane Lavinia Halliday – For significant service to medicine, and to reproductive epidemiology. Robert James Hamilton – For significant service to the property development sector, and to urban renewal. Judge Felicity Pia Hampel – For significant service to the judiciary, to legal organisations, and to women. Helen Hardcastle – For significant service to corporate governance and leadership organisations. John Robert Hardie – For significant service to science education, and to professional societies. Dr Elizabeth Harris – For significant service to equity in healthcare, to research, and to social work. Jill Margaret Healey – For significant service to education through leadership and advisory roles. Brendan Matthew Heenan – For significant service to the tourism industry in central Australia. Christopher Hemsworth – For significant service to the performing arts, and to charitable organisations. Emeritus Professor Beryl Lilian Hesketh – For significant service to STEM education, and to organisational psychology. James Hewish – For significant service to short track speed skating through a range of roles. George Maurice Hoad – For significant service to the residential horticulture industry, and to the community. Kevin John Holtom – For significant service to open water swimming, and to professional organisations. Robert Malcolm Hook – For significant service to the community of Ballarat. Professor Rosemary Sylvia Horne – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to infant mortality prevention. Rob Justin Hulls – For significant service to the people and Parliament of Victoria, and to the law. Peter George Irwin – For significant service to tertiary education, to geography, and to the community of Newcastle. Professor Claire Louise Jackson – For significant service to primary health reform, and to general practice medicine. Dr John Samuel Jell – For significant service to environmental science education, and to geological societies. Wendy Johnson – For significant service to secondary education in South Australia. Dr Belinda (Bidda) Sumner Jones – For significant service to animal welfare science and advocacy. David Fletcher Jones – For significant service to the museums and galleries sector, and to the community. Dr Nigel Ronald Jones – For significant service to neurosurgical medicine, and to medical societies. Charles Justin – For significant service to the museums sector, to arts administration, and to architecture. Epaminondas Katsalidis – For significant service to architecture, and to sustainable construction innovations. Timothy John Keeler – For significant service to the community through a range of roles, and to education. Charlie King, – For significant service to the Indigenous community of the Northern Territory. Dr Geoffrey Macdonald Knight – For significant service to professional dental associations, and to the community. Professor Sabina Margaret Knight – For significant service to rural and remote health, nursing and education. John George Kotzas – For significant service to the performing arts as an administrator and artistic director. Wayne Noel Kratzmann – For significant service to the visual and performing arts, and to education. Letitia Lancaster – For significant service to oncology nursing, and to professional societies. The Reverend Dr Cecilie Marion Lander – For significant service to neurological medicine, and to the Anglican Church of Australia. The Reverend Dr Mervyn Meredith Lander – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to the Anglican Church of Australia. Anna Oi Chan Lao – For significant service to badminton, and to the multicultural community. Harvey Douglas Lister – For significant service to the arts, tourism, sport, and to the venue management and events industries. Dr Andrew Brantley Lu, – For significant service to the visual and performing arts, to the law, and to legal education. Dr Heather Gwen Mack – For significant service to ophthalmology, particularly to professional colleges. Professor Alan Mackay-Sim – For significant service to tertiary education, and to biomedical science. The Reverend John Warrenne Maddern, – For significant service to the Uniting Church in Australia, and to the community. Emeritus Professor Toni Magdalena Makkai – For significant service to tertiary education, and to public administration. Professor Neil Bressay Manson – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to physics. The late Loisette Matilda Marsh – For significant service to marine science and zoology. Professor Frank Louis Mastaglia – For significant service to neuromuscular disease, and to professional associations. Helen Maxwell-Wright – For significant service to child welfare, to diabetes research, and to the community. Maree Anne McCabe – For significant service to people living with Alzheimer's and Dementia, and to the aged care sector. Fiona McCormack – For significant service to victims of crime, and to the prevention of family violence. Christine Frances McLoughlin – For significant service to business, to the not-for-profit sector, and to women. Associate Professor Faye Beverley McMillan – For significant service to Indigenous mental health, and to tertiary education. Peter Godfrey McMullin – For significant service to business, to the law, and to the community. Dr Timothy Francis McNamara – For significant service to tertiary education, and to applied linguistics. Peter Andrea McPhee – For significant service to the community through a range of organisations. Dr Erica McWilliam – For significant service to education, and to pedagogy and gender equity. Anthony Peter Melville – For significant service to corporate and government communications. Dr Jane Melville – For significant service to herpetological research, and to the museums sector. Dr Bryan Christopher Mendelson – For significant service to aesthetic plastic surgery, and to medical societies. Ann Elizabeth Miller – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Mark Justin Miller – For significant service to visual and performing arts administration. Kathryn Ann Mitchell – For significant service to urban planning, and to professional associations. Lolita Veronica Mohyla – For significant service to architecture, and to construction law. Scott Norman Monaghan – For significant service to Indigenous health, and to medical research. The Honourable Murray Scott Montgomery – For significant service to the Parliament of Western Australia, and to the community. Robyn Barbara Moore – For significant service to charitable organisations, and to the performing arts. Danny William Murphy – For significant service to urban development, and to the community. Dr Keith Louis Mutimer – For significant service to plastic surgery, and to the international community. Professor Debra Faye Nestel – For significant service to medical education through simulated teaching methods. Dr Patrice Newell – For significant service to the environment, and to sustainable farming practices. Thuat Van Nguyen, – For significant service to the multicultural community of New South Wales, and to youth. Vivienne Nguyen – For significant service to the multicultural community of Victoria. His Honour Kerry John O'Brien – For significant service to the law, and to the judiciary in Queensland. Dr Barry Stephen O'Loughlin – For significant service to medicine, and to medical administration. Julie Oberin – For significant service to women and children experiencing family violence. Janette Mary Owen – For significant service to the Indigenous community through dental health initiatives. Andrew Papadopoulos – For significant service to motorsport, and to driver safety and education. Shelley Jane Penn – For significant service to architecture and design in the public realm, and to professional institutes. Larry Clifton Perkins – For significant service to motorsport as a touring car driver and team owner. Anthony John Phillips – For significant service to optometry, and to professional optical societies. Craig Phillips – For significant service to high profile sporting organisations through executive roles. The Honourable David James Porter – For significant service to the law, and to the judiciary, in Tasmania. Leah Maree Purcell – For significant service to the performing arts, to First Nations youth and culture, and to women. Mavis Randle – For significant service to hockey, and to the community. Jan Rice – For significant service to nursing, to wound care, and to education. Professor Robyn Lesley Richmond – For significant service to tertiary medical education, and to public health. Christopher Michael Rigby – For significant service to health and aged care organisations. Emeritus Professor Ian Douglas Riley – For significant service to tertiary medical education, notably to tropical health. John Charles Risby – For significant service to the steelmaking industry, and to the community of Newcastle. Vivienne Ritchie – For significant service to the Anglican Church of Australia, and to the community. Vicki Joan Roach – For significant service to neuroscience nursing, and to professional federations. Pamela Jean Robinson, – For significant service to conservation and the environment, and to the community. Professor Ute Roessner – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to the biosciences. Glenyys Dorothy Romanes – For significant service to the Parliament of Victoria, and to the community. Coral Ross – For significant service to local government, and to gender equality. Elana Rubin – For significant service to corporate governance, and to the community. Dr Elizabeth Anne Rushen – For significant service to community history and heritage preservation. Dr Sarah Anne Ryan – For significant service to the environment, to education, and to the community. Colin Saltmere – For significant service to the Indigenous communities of North West Queensland. Emeritus Professor Barbara Jean Santich – For significant service to tertiary education, to gastronomy, food culture and history. Elizabeth Anne Scarce – For significant service to the community of South Australia through a range of roles. Clive Ian Scott – For significant service to the hotel accommodation industry, and to the arts. The late Raymond Walter Scott – For significant service to the road transport industry, and to the community. Dr Helen Scott-Orr, – For significant service to public administration, to biosecurity, and to veterinary science. Gregory Peter Shand – For significant service to the Jewish community, and to charitable initiatives. Clinical Associate Professor Gary Fred Sholler – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to tertiary medical education. Julie Shuttleworth – For significant service to the minerals and mining sector. Vallence Gary Simonds – For significant service to the building and construction industry, and to charitable initiatives. Graeme William Sinclair – For significant service to accountancy, to business, and to the not-for-profit sector. Craig John Smith-Gander – For significant service to surf lifesaving, to transport logistics, and to the community. Trent John Smyth – For significant service to international relations, to motorsport, and to business. Dr Gillian Ann Sparkes – For significant service to environmental sustainability, and to public administration. Dr Victor Roy Squires – For significant service to the environment, notably to the ecology of rangelands. Dr Charles John Steadman – For significant service to tertiary medical education, and to gastroenterology. The Honourable Sydney James Stirling – For significant service to the Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory, and to the community. Thomas Bernard Stodulka – For significant service to the law, and to mediation and dispute resolution. Dr Julie Claudia Stone – For significant service to child mental health, and to psychiatry. Ricky Stuart – For significant service to rugby league, and to the community. Karim Sumar – For significant service to the Ismaili community, and to the convenience retail industry. Ricci Edith Swart – For significant service to the media and film industries, and to the community. Robert William Talbott, – For significant service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Albert Ee San Tan – For significant service to tertiary dental education, and to periodontics. Professor Tele Tan – For significant service to information and communication technology, and to people on the autism spectrum. Colin Tate – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Professor Helena Teede – For significant service to medical education and research, to endocrinology, and to women’s health. James Frederick Thane – For significant service to the performing arts as a theatrical producer and advisor. Anthony Charles Thomas – For significant service to education, particularly to children with special needs. Professor Emeritus Doreen Anne Thomas – For significant service to tertiary engineering education and research, and to women. Dr Geoffrey Laughton Thompson – For significant service to sports medicine, and to Paralympic athletes. Emeritus Professor James Toouli – For significant service to tertiary medical education, notably to gastroenterology. Dr Neil Clifford Turner – For significant service to agricultural and environmental science, and to education. Dr Linette Veitch – For significant service to nurse education, and to international health programs. Charlotte Vidor – For significant service to the multicultural community, to tourism, and to urban planning. Professor Beverley Janine Vollenhoven – For significant service to tertiary medical education, to obstetrics and gynaecology. Amanda (Mandy) Joy Walker – For significant service to film as a cinematographer, and to professional societies. Joan Warhurst – For significant service to education, and to research and curriculum development. Barry John Watchorn – For significant service to the superannuation sector through a range of roles. Maxine Joy Weber – For significant service to children, particularly to infant mortality prevention. Dr Tracy Gillian Westerman – For significant service to the Indigenous community in mental health and suicide prevention. Rhonda Joyce Weston – For significant service to aged persons' education, and to the community of Toowoomba. Dr Betsy Williams – For significant service to international health, and to medicine as a general practitioner. Gina Williams – For significant service to the performing arts, to Indigenous music, and to media. Dr George Wilson – For significant service to wildlife conservation, to veterinary science, and to the community. Susan Dorothy Woodward – For significant service to the not-for-profit sector, to fundraising, and to the law. Associate Professor Edwina Jane Wright – For significant service to medicine and research, notably for people living with HIV/AIDS. Jeremy Maughan Wright – For significant service to the not-for-profit sector, and to the performing arts. Robert David Yallop – For significant service to international humanitarian aid organisations. Dr Judith Nancy Yates – For significant service to housing and economic research, and to education. Keith Robert Yates – For significant service to the minerals and mining sector, and to the community. Professor Peter Shane Yu – For significant service to the community, particularly to Indigenous cultural and political organisations. Leanne Zalapa – For significant service to the Prince of Wales Hospital Foundation, and to health education. Dr Richard Maxwell Zuber – For significant service to veterinary science, to professional colleges, and to education. Military Division Navy Commodore Timothy Alan Brown, – For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy, principally in leading submarine capability development. Rear Admiral Jennifer Ruth Firman, – For exceptional performance of duty in the field of military medicine. Rear Admiral Mark Davenport Hill, – For exceptional service as the Commander Joint Task Force 633 on Operation Accordion from June 2019 to January 2020. Army Brigadier Douglas Watson Laidlaw, – For exceptional service as the Commander 4th Brigade and Commander Joint Task Force 646 during Operation BUSHFIRE ASSIST 2019-2020. Lieutenant Colonel Peta Mantel – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the fields of medical intelligence, health leadership, and epidemiology and disease surveillance. Brigadier David John Thomae – For exceptional service as Adjutant General - Army, Commander 11 Brigade and Commander Joint Task Group 629.3. Air Force Air Vice-Marshal Alan Gregory Clements, – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in delivering the 2013 Force Structure Review, and in international engagement as Head of the Australian Defence Staff, Washington. Warrant Officer Scott Anthony Doring – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in air surveillance operations and personnel capability development. Group Captain Edward Allan Eather – For exceptional performance of duty to the Australian Defence Force in legal services. Air Commodore Damien Raymond Keddie – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in combat aircraft acquisition and sustainment, and organisational capability development. Warrant Officer Ricki Paul Kiely – For exceptional service in combat aircraft sustainment, Defence Aviation Safety Regulations development and implementation, and maintenance management in the Royal Australian Air Force. Group Captain Martin Norman Nussio – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in capability acquisition and sustainment. Air Commodore Dianne Marie Turton – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the field of intelligence. Group Captain Paul James Willmot, – For exceptional service in aviation workforce sustainment for the Australian Defence Force. Honorary Carol Berg – For significant service to mental health, to social justice, and to the arts. Karen Lorraine Lindley – For significant service to social welfare initiatives, and to the jewellery industry. Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) General Division Barry Lewis Abley – For service to the community of Geelong. Margaret Adams – For service to the community of Boroondara. The late Nicholas Andrew Agocs – For service to the multicultural community of Western Australia. Maria Alexiadis – For service to karate. Dr Frank Peter Alford – For service to endocrinology. Associate Professor Kevin Patrick Alford – For service to medicine as a cardiologist. Roger Blair Allan – For service to primary education, and to disability sports. Dr Susie Janet Allanson – For service to community health as a psychologist. Adele Marion Allen – For service to the community through the church. Belinda Helen Allen – For service to youth through Girl Guides. George Amarandos – For service to the Greek community of Queensland. Dr Antoinette Catherine Anazodo – For service to medical research. Julia Jane Armstrong – For service to the performing arts through theatre support roles. Prudence Margaret Armstrong – For service to the community of Moss Vale. Janice Edyth Armstrong-Conn – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Carmel Arthur – For service to the law. Clinical Professor Eugene Athan – For service to infectious diseases medicine. Wendy Anne Baarda – For service to the Indigenous community of Yuendumu. Cornelia Babbage – For service to the multicultural community of the Gold Coast. Hadyn Dennis Bailey – For service to the community of North West Victoria. Ian Humprey Bailey – For service to people with disability through sport. Dr Louise Baker – For service to rural and remote medicine. Associate Professor Ramesh Balasubramaniam – For service to dentistry. Dr Peter John Baquie – For service to sports medicine. Les Barclay – For service to swimming. Shirley Lillian Bare – For service to community health. Marie Margaret Barns – For service to music. Wendy Joan Barrett – For service to music. Jennifer Wendy Barry – For service to the community of Gladstone. Adrian Robert Bartak – For service to music. Lorraine Helen Bartel – For service to the community of Moree. Christopher William Bastian – For service to youth. Barbara Bates – For service to children. The Reverend Colin Richard Baxter – For service to the Uniting Church in Australia, and to the community. The late Ethel Emily Baxter – For service to the Indigenous community of Queanbeyan. Kevin George Beeck – For service to local government, and to the community of Albany. Emeritus Professor Diane Robin Bell – For service to literature. Jean Isabel Bennett – For service to the community of Canberra. Wing Commander Peter John Bennetts (Retd) – For service to veterans and their families. Manyang Berberi – For service to the South Sudanese community of Victoria. Mark Beretta – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Thelma May Bevilaqua – For service to the community through a range of roles. Petras Bielskis – For service to the Lithuanian community of South Australia. Monika Biernacki – For service to animal welfare. Jonathan Biggins – For service to the performing arts through theatre. Sarnia Ann Birch – For service to veterans and their families. Catherine Anne Birkett – For service to the community of the Goulburn Valley. Kenneth John Birkett – For service to the community of the Goulburn Valley. Angela Jane Bishop – For service to entertainment journalism. Regula Christine Black – For service to veterans and their families. Jill Blackman – For service to the community of Gilgandra. The Reverend Dr Merryl Lois Blair – For service to ecumenical and interfaith organisations. Ruth Ann Blanch – For service to the community of Armidale. Richard Kent Bligh – For service to the community of the Darling Downs. Beny Aterdit Bol – For service to youth. Carol Bonamy – For service to the community of the Lismore region. Lawrence Frederick Bond – For service to surf lifesaving. Stephanie Bortkevitch – For service to netball. Henry Granger Boston – For service to the arts. Nancy Clare Boyling – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dawson Stanley Bradford – For service to the livestock industry. Dr James Bradley – For service to literature as a writer. Ann Brett – For service to the Royal Life Saving Society. Lily Brett – For service to literature as a writer. Nada Brissenden – For service to music. Dr Rosemary Helen Brooks – For service to tertiary education. Ken Broomhead – For service to the aviation industry. Jacki Joantares Brown – For service to people with disability. Michael Brown – For service to rugby union. Sr Deirdre Patrice Browne – For service to the community as a religious sister, and through music, education and the liturgical arts. Greg Allan Bruce – For service to local government, and to the community of Townsville. Jennifer Florence Brukner – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dr Betsy Buchanan – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Yen Bui – For service to the Vietnamese community of Victoria. Donald Raymond Burge – For service to the community through a range of roles. Tony William Burns – For service to people with disability. Margaret Bush – For service to the community through animal clubs. Mark Anthony Byatt – For service to local government, to regional development, and to the community of Hume. Dr Geoffrey Charles Byrne – For service to paediatric endocrinology. Colin Anthony Cala – For service to local government, and to the community of South Perth. The late John Robert Caldon – For service to business through media content distribution. Barbara Mary Callaghan – For service to music. Prudence Marilyn Campbell – For service to the community of Birregurra. Susan Campbell – For service to youth through Guides. Alan Jack Carter – For service to children with disability, and to the community. Felicity Jane Carter – For service to the community of the Great Lakes region. Stephen Michael Cartwright – For service to business administration. Derrick Casey – For service to tertiary education. Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Garnet Chamarette (Retd) – For service to veterans. The late Mary Julie Chandler – For service to the community of Red Cliffs. Kaye Noelene Chapman – For service to the community of Cowra. Roberta Mary Chapman – For service to primary education. Reginald James Chard – For service to military history, and to veterans. Heather Rose Chester – For service to environmental conservation. Dr Anthony Chun Ming Cheung – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Colin Chirgwin – For service to youth. Heather Christensen – For service to the community of Beenleigh. Karen Christensen – For service to the community of Wandong. William Ewart Church – For service to the community of Yarrawonga. Giuseppe Rocco Cinanni – For service to the community through a range of roles. Kenneth Gary Clark – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Arthur Coghlan – For service to the performing arts as a magician and escapologist. Dean Joel Cohen – For service to people with disability, and to the Jewish community. The Reverend Dr James Anthony Collins – For service to the Anglican Church of Australia. Charles Graham Colman – For service to music. Thomas Robin Conboy – For service to the community of Mount Gambier. The late Allan Stuart Connolly – For service to cricket. Judith Mary Connors – For service to the creative arts, particularly as a tatter and lace maker. Geoff Coombes – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Anne Martin Cooper – For service to osteopathy. Jan Elizabeth Cooper – For service to Australian rules football. Stephen Julian Cordell – For service to the Jewish community. Dr Craig Cormick – For service to science, and to the community. Dr Hugh James Cornell – For service to biochemical research, and to tertiary education. Graham George Corney – For service to education governance. Barry David Costa – For service to rugby league. Dr Costas Costa – For service to medicine as a general practitioner. Lindsay Charles Cox – For service to community history. Peter John Cox – For service to rugby league. Richard John Cox – For service to the community of the Mornington Peninsula. Virginia Hunter Cox – For service to librarianship. The late Judith Lorraine Crabtree – For service to primary education. Andrew Hugh Craig – For service to veterans and their families. Jeffrey James Cree AFSM – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Elizabeth Ann Creek – For service to the beef cattle industry. Jeanette Lydia Crew – For service to Indigenous culture, and to conservation. Trevor James Cross – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Wendy Cross – For service to the community through charitable organisations. The late Vera Crvenkovic – For service to the Croatian community. Nerida Cullen – For service to the community of Goulburn. Alan Erskine Cummins – For service to caving. Pamela Elizabeth Cupper – For service to education, and to the preservation of military history. Jennifer Margaret Curnow – For service to the community through a range of roles. Kevin John Curran – For service to Australian rules football. John Handel Cutler – For service to the fashion industry. David Joseph Czerkies – For service to the community through St John Ambulance. Denise Marilyn Davies – For service to youth through Scouts. Patricia Margaret Daw – For service to badminton. Gary Francis Dawson – For service to Balkan and Hungarian folk arts. Dr Teresa De Fazio – For service to tertiary education. Peter Charles De Rauch – For service to community health, and to Australian rules football. Fouad Deiri – For service to the Lebanese community of Australia. Dr Stephen Anthony Della-Fiorentina – For service to oncology. Christopher Stanley Dempsey – For service to cricket. Julie Ann Dempsey – For service to community mental health. Betty Merle Denning – For service to the community of Pittsworth. The late Matthew William Deveson – For service to the community of Narooma. Kenneth Richard Dickson – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Dr Amanda Jane Dines – For service to medicine. Margaret Lynne Docking – For service to the international community through health programs. Reginald Dodd – For service to the Indigenous community of Marree. William Joseph Doherty – For service to Australian rules football. Leonie Jane Donovan – For service to community history. John De Cruz Douglas – For service to veterans. Sandra Rose Doumany – For service to the community of the Gold Coast. Pastor Dale Dowler – For service to the community of the Sunshine Coast. Ian Francis Doyle – For service to journalism, and to the community. Steven Michael Drinkwater – For service to dog agility sports. Dr Jan Dudley – For service to obstetrics and gynaecology. Evan Duke – For service to the community of Bundaberg. Trevor Harold Duniam – For service to the community of Wynyard. Mark Wayne Durdin – For service to people who are deaf or hard of hearing. Katherine Susan Eccles – For service to conservation and the environment. Ian Roland Eckersley – For service to primary industry. Brian Stewart Edward, – For service to the community of Geelong. The late Pierce David Edwards – For service to the communities of Quilpie and South West Queensland. Gary Edwin – For service to golf. Adrian Francis Elder – For service to the community of Bridgetown. Colin James Elliott – For service to the community of Campbelltown. William Edwin Ellis – For service to harness racing. The late Donald Phillip Ellison – For service to horticulture. Belal Elmowy – For service to taekwondo, and to the community. Philip Leslie Emery – For service to the community of Greater Geelong. Mx Misty Farquhar – For service to the LGBTQI community. Denis William Farrar – For service to the law. Lieutenant Commander Leo Francis Farrelly (Retd) – For service to youth, and to the community. Joseph Vincent Farrugia – For service to the superannuation sector. Philip Morris Feinstein – For service to refugees. The late Ronald Douglas Fenton – For service to the community through mental health advocacy roles. Kevin Fergusson – For service to triathlon. Robert John Finn – For service to the community of Goolwa. John Andrew Ford – For service to the community of Port Adelaide. Kerrie Ann Ford – For service to community history. Lynda Ford – For service to the multicultural community of Victoria. William Munro Ford – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Abigail Margaret Forsyth – For service to sustainable design. Dr Scott Comber Fortey – For service to medicine as an anaesthetist. Vincenzo Foti – For service to the pyrotechnic industry, and to the community. Vanessa A Fowler – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Rodney Alleric Fraser – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Susan Joy Fraser – For service to financial planning and counselling. Dr Clifford Brodie Frith – For service to conservation and the environment. Dr Dawn Whyatt Frith – For service to conservation and the environment. Malaemie Patricia Fruean – For service to the Pacific communities of New South Wales. Lyn Fuller – For service to music. Fiona Gardner – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Clinical Professor Peter Colin Gates – For service to neurology. Edgar James Gaunt – For service to the communities of Camden and Cobbitty. Brian Kevin Gee – For service to surf lifesaving, and to junior rugby league. John Gibson – For service to the community of North West Tasmania. Emma Harriet Gierschick – For service to the community, and to reflexology. Neville James Gilbertson – For service to the community of Mount Gambier. Francoise Andree Gilroy – For service to the community of North Sydney. Joan Elizabeth Glen – For service to music. Katrina Gliddon – For service to the international community of Cambodia. Richard Roy Gloede – For service to Australian rules football. Rebecca Anne Goddard – For service to Australian rules football, and to women in sport. Dr Stacy Kellan Goergen – For service to radiology. Christine Joan Goodfellow – For service to veterans and their families. David Goodrich – For service to the community, and to the defence sector. Dr Brian Richard Gordon – For service to the community through a range of roles. Penelope Ruth Gordon – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Dr Peter Rob Gordon – For service to disaster recovery as a psychologist. Elizabeth Ann Gosper – For service to people with disability through sport. Clare Grant – For service to the performing arts through administrative roles. Norma Helen Grant – For service to education. Dr Peter Treacy Grant – For service to gynaecological oncology. Associate Professor Kathleen Mary Gray – For service to medicine through digital health education. Oriel Green – For service to the Indigenous community of Western Australia. Professor Brin Felix Grenyer – For service to psychology. Dick Martin Guit – For service to the building and construction industry. Allan John Guthrie – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Andrew Frank Guy – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Russell Martin Haines – For service to community history. The Reverend Pam Halbert – For service to the Anglican Church of Australia, and to the community of Western Australia. Allen Thomas Hall – For service to the community of Wandong. Graeme Lloyd Hall – For service to the community of Marion. Deborah Halpern – For service to the arts. Pieternella Wilhelmina Haly – For service to the community of Rosewood. Paul William Hammat – For service to the community through pastoral care. Brian Edward Hanley – For service to secondary education. Bashar Hanna – For service to multiculturalism and refugee support in Western Sydney. Dr David Linley Hare – For service to cardiology. Margaret Edwina Hargans – For service to the community of Bathurst. Sandra May Haring – For service to the community of Broken Hill. David Russell Harris – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Deborah Mary Harrison – For service to the community through charitable initiatives. John Richard Harry – For service to the community, to rowing, and to the legal profession. Lincoln John Hart – For service to the tourism industry. Dr Anthony S Hasham – For service to business, and to the Australian-Lebanese community. Medy Hassan – For service to the building and construction industry. Elizabeth Mary Hawthorne – For service to the international community of East Zambia. Patricia Mary Hawthorne – For service to the community of St Lucia. Bryan Kenneth Hearn – For service to the community of South Australia, and to football. Diane Claire Heaton – For service to dance. Owen Leigh Hegarty – For service to the minerals and mining sector. Leanne Heywood – For service to business through a range of organisations. Matthew Thomas Hickey – For service to music, and to the law. Joplin Higgins – For service to the law. Rita Hillier – For service to the community through the Anglican Church of Australia. Betty Pamela Hislop – For service to darts. Michael Macpherson Hocking – For service to sailing. John Clelland Hocknull – For service to the community through a range of roles. Rosavilla Hoffmann – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dr David Hobson Hooke – For service to nephrology, and to aviation medicine. Alistair Geoffrey Horne – For service to youth through Scouts. Ngatuaine Hosking – For service to the multicultural community of Victoria. Sister Adele Howard – For service to the Catholic Church of Australia, and to the community. Christine Anne Howe – For service to secondary education. Keran Elizabeth Howe – For service to people with disability. Robert Howe – For service to the community through a range of roles. George Hurley – For service to the community of the Sutherland Shire, and to football. Graeme Norval Hyde – For service to conservation, particularly through aviculture. Anthony John Irvine – For service to local government, and to the communities of the Eyre Peninsula. Barry Leonard Irving – For service to the community of Rosebud-Rye. Phillip Isaacs – For service to the community through a range of roles. Professor Felice Jacka – For service to nutritional psychiatry research. Ronald Edwin Jackson – For service to the community of Cessnock. John Jesse James – For service to rowing. Alexander Robert Johnson – For service to golf, and to the community. Barbara Joyce Johnson – For service to the community of Naracoorte. Sam Craig Johnson – For service to local government, and to the community. Susan Dianne Johnson – For service to the community, and to tenpin bowling. Nathan Johnston – For service to people with disability through sport. Pete Leslie Johnston – For service to veterans. Janet Lesley Jones – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Oscar Edwin Joppich – For service to the Lutheran church, and to the community. Alan William Joyce – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Janet Jukes – For service to the community through LGBTIQ advocacy and social welfare organisations. Associate Professor Sarah Jane Kelly – For service to tertiary education, and to sports administration. Richard Edward Kenny – For service to rifle and pistol shooting, and to veterans. Graham Barry Kent – For service to the community of Devonport, and to yachting. Edward Kerr – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Richard Ian Kew – For service to business, and the community. Dr Edith Khangure – For service to community history. Lynne Killeen – For service to the Indigenous community, and to women. Peter John Kilmurray – For service to surf lifesaving. Alison Kincaid – For service to nursing. Hazel Monica King – For service to horticulture, and to community history. Jeffrey Langdon King – For service to conservation. Rosanne Phyllis (Rosie) King – For service to sports administration. Roy Kirkby – For service to korfball. Kevin John Kleemann – For service to the community of the Adelaide Hills. Cornelis Gerardus Klep – For service to youth through Scouts. Nevil Parish Knell – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Victor Gregory Knowles – For service to music, and to the community of Mudgeeraba. Dr Igor Konstantinov – For service to medicine as a cardiothoracic surgeon. Harold George Kratz – For service to rowing. The late Ricardo Erwin Krauskopf – For service to the community through a range of roles. Eduvard Krncevic – For service to football. Dr Santosh Kumar – For service to the Indian community of Victoria. Brian John Ladd – For service to the public art galleries sector. Janet Patricia Lambert – For service to the community of Vacy. Sandra Dawn Lambkin – For service to veterans and their families. Dr John Scott Langrehr – For service to tertiary education. Lawrence O'Hara Larmer – For service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Andrew Denis Lawrence – For service to the chiropractic profession. Glenn Lazarus – For service to rugby league. Jennifer Duggan Leaper – For service to aged welfare. Dr Richard John Leaper – For service to aged welfare. John William Elliott Leddy – For service to the community, and to engineering. John Albert Lee – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Alexander McGown Lennox – For service to veterans and their families. Dr Alexander Douglas Levendel – For service to cardiology and nuclear medicine. Dr Susan Patricia Lever – For service to literature. Dr Felicity-Ann Lewis – For service to local government, and to the community of Marion. Jacqueline Vanessa Liddiard – For service to veterans and their families. Ronald Keith Lindenberg – For service to rugby league. Dr Rimas Liubinas – For service to medicine as a general practitioner. Dr Robert Hugh Llewellyn-Jones – For service to psychiatry, and to children with developmental disability. Adam Ka-Ho Lo – For service to mental health, and to the multicultural community of Queensland. Judith Ann Loffel – For service to country music. Michael Long – For service to Australian rules football, and to the Indigenous community. The late William Rainsford Loughnan – For service to agriculture, and to the law. Ronald Louis – For service to the financial sector, and to the community. Richard Geoffrey Love – For service to the community through a range of roles. Graham Frederick Lovell – For service to the community of Epping. Keith Mayfield Lovelock – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Martin Stephen Lowe – For service to veterans. Paul Francis Lucas – For service to primary education. Harry Lynas – For service | service to tertiary education administration, and to youth. Associate Professor Lennie Barblett – For significant service to tertiary education, and to early childhood teaching. Narelle Joyce Barker – For significant service to education, and to the community. Dr Gavin John Becker – For significant service to medicine, to nephrology, and to professional societies. Dr John Leslie Bennett – For significant service to education, to mathematics, and to curriculum standards. Professor Michael Heywood Bennett – For significant service to medical education, and to hyperbaric medicine. Noel Anthony Beven – For significant service to horticulture, to agriculture, and to rural youth. The Honourable Mark Alexander Birrell – For significant service to the infrastructure sector, and to business. Howard Michael Blake – For significant service to accounting, and to the public sector. Dr Soren Blau – For significant service to forensic medicine, and to scientific organisations. Andrew Wayne Blode – For significant service to children as an advocate for protection policy standards. Dr Lissant Mary Bolton – For significant service to the museums sector, and to anthropology. Simon George Bouda – For significant service to the television and print media, and to the community. Brian James Boulton – For significant service to the law, and to the judiciary, particularly to District Courts. John Bowe – For significant service to motorsport as a touring car driver. Mieke Brandon – For significant service to dispute resolution and mediation. Anne Bremner – For significant service to people who are deaf or hard of hearing through sporting associations. Emeritus Professor John Barnard Bremner – For significant service to tertiary education, and to biomolecular science. Michael Ronald Brennan – For significant service to the law, and to community organisations. Professor Margaret Susan Brock – For significant service to tertiary education, and to Indigenous history. Professor Kevin John Brophy – For significant service to tertiary education, and to creative writing. Shayne Ann Brown – For significant service to medicine through orthoptic associations. Rosalind Elaine Butler – For significant service to women, to vocational education, and to gender equity. Marcus Canning – For significant service to the arts, and to the community of Perth. Susan Gail Carr – For significant service to interior design, to education, and to women in business. Elizabeth Jane Carrigan – For significant service to community health, notably to pain management. Loretta Carroll – For significant service to the livestock industry, and to the community. Peter Carroll – For significant service to the performing arts as an actor. Joseph Carrozzi – For significant service to business, and to the community through multicultural and not-for-profit organisations. Dr Annette Elizabeth Carruthers – For significant service to community health, and to people with Multiple Sclerosis. Emeritus Professor David John Carter – For significant service to tertiary education, and to cultural and literary studies. Gregory Thomas Chamberlin – For significant service to the print media through editorial roles. Professor Judith Lynne Charlton – For significant service to road safety and injury prevention research. Kerry Anne Chikarovski – For significant service to the Parliament of New South Wales, and to the community. Roland Desmond Chin – For significant service to the community of the Northern Territory. Lee Christofis – For significant service to the performing arts, particularly to dance. Clinical Professor Flavia Cicuttini – For significant service to medicine, and to musculoskeletal disease research. Dr Leon Wakefield Clark – For significant service to medical administration, and to healthcare delivery. Elizabeth Ann Clarke – For significant service to harness racing in Victoria, and to the community. Emeritus Professor Deborah Joy Clayton – For significant service to tertiary education, and to international study programs. Associate Professor Lynette Elsie Clearihan – For significant service to medicine, and to medical education. Anthony John Cochrane – For significant service to sports administration, and to entertainment production. Joanna Collins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Richard Thomas Collins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Professor John Connell – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to the geosciences. Dr John Edward Coolican – For significant service to dentistry in the field of orthodontics, and to rugby union. Kate Copeland – For significant service to health infrastructure planning and management. Stephanie Copus-Campbell – For significant service to aid and development initiatives in Papua New Guinea. Colin Cornish – For significant service to the performing arts, to music, and to youth. Philip John Cornish – For significant service to the telecommunications sector, and to the community. Elizabeth Ann Cousins – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Ian Scott Cox – For significant service to people who are homeless, and to the community. Professor Lawrence Edward Cram – For significant service to tertiary education, and to astronomy and astrophysics. Julian Hillary Cribb – For significant service to science communication. Dr Elizabeth Anne Crock – For significant service to nursing, particularly to people living with HIV/AIDS. John Roger Crosby – For significant service to agribusiness, and to the farming sector. Emeritus Professor Ann Curthoys – For significant service to tertiary education, to social history, and to research. Dr Allan Lindsay Curtis – For significant service to environmental management education and research. Dr John Christopher Daley – For significant service to public policy development, and to the community. The Honourable Cheryl May Davenport – For significant service to the Parliament of Western Australia, and to the community. Professor Christopher Bernard Del Mar – For significant service to tertiary education, to health and medical research, and to professional bodies. Professor Amalia Di Iorio – For significant service to tertiary education, to skills development, and to women. Ronald Frank Donnellan – For significant service to children, to cycling, and to the community of Townsville. Roger Thomas Dooley – For significant service to community health, to psychology, and to professional societies. Dr Trevor Dowdell – For significant service to artistic gymnastics through a range of roles. Rose Downer – For significant service to the visual and performing arts as a patron and supporter. Dr David Durrheim – For significant service to public health medicine, and to international health. Katherine Louise Eastman – For significant service to the law, to human rights, and to professional organisations. Harriet Claire Elvin – For significant service to arts administration in the Australian Capital Territory and to the community. Angela Emslie – For significant service to the finance and superannuation sectors, and to suicide prevention. Robert Henry Estcourt – For significant service to the financial management sector. Dr Bronwyn Joy Evans – For significant service to engineering, to standards, and to medical technology. Dr Kenneth William Evans – For significant service to education, to independent schools, and to public administration. Judi Farr – For significant service to the performing arts as an actor. Matthew James Fehon – For significant service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Jennifer Fitzgerald – For significant service to people with disability through leadership and advocacy roles. Rodney Milton Fitzroy – For significant service to healthcare, to racing, and to the commercial real estate sector. Rodney Thomas Forrester – For significant service to the community of the Sunshine Coast. Nancy Suzanne Fox – For significant service to the financial and banking sector, and to women in business. Emeritus Professor Susan Evelyn Fraser – For significant service to tertiary education, and to health and medical organisations. Marion Fulker – For significant service to urban planning and infrastructure development. Anne Maree Gardiner – For significant service to lifesaving organisations through a range of roles. Michael Arthur Gay – For significant service to industrial relations, and to international labour organisations. William Gibbins – For significant service to horse racing, and to people with disability. David Ian Gibbs – For significant service to the community, and to the chartered accounting profession. Brian John Gilbertson – For significant service to festivals and events in South Australia, to opera, and to voice education. Dr Peter Nicholas Gilchrist – For significant service to psychiatry, particularly to people with weight disorders. Rabbi Yaakov Glasman – For significant service to Judaism and interfaith dialogue, to rabbinical bodies, and to the community. Louise Mary Gourlay, – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Ian Leslie Gray – For significant service to the law, and to Indigenous justice. Robert John Gregory – For significant service to the community of South Australia. Professor Gilles Guillemin – For significant service to science education, to Motor Neurone Disease research, and to sport. Professor Narelle Lorraine Haines – For significant service to the road transport industry, and to accident research. Dr Jane Lavinia Halliday – For significant service to medicine, and to reproductive epidemiology. Robert James Hamilton – For significant service to the property development sector, and to urban renewal. Judge Felicity Pia Hampel – For significant service to the judiciary, to legal organisations, and to women. Helen Hardcastle – For significant service to corporate governance and leadership organisations. John Robert Hardie – For significant service to science education, and to professional societies. Dr Elizabeth Harris – For significant service to equity in healthcare, to research, and to social work. Jill Margaret Healey – For significant service to education through leadership and advisory roles. Brendan Matthew Heenan – For significant service to the tourism industry in central Australia. Christopher Hemsworth – For significant service to the performing arts, and to charitable organisations. Emeritus Professor Beryl Lilian Hesketh – For significant service to STEM education, and to organisational psychology. James Hewish – For significant service to short track speed skating through a range of roles. George Maurice Hoad – For significant service to the residential horticulture industry, and to the community. Kevin John Holtom – For significant service to open water swimming, and to professional organisations. Robert Malcolm Hook – For significant service to the community of Ballarat. Professor Rosemary Sylvia Horne – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to infant mortality prevention. Rob Justin Hulls – For significant service to the people and Parliament of Victoria, and to the law. Peter George Irwin – For significant service to tertiary education, to geography, and to the community of Newcastle. Professor Claire Louise Jackson – For significant service to primary health reform, and to general practice medicine. Dr John Samuel Jell – For significant service to environmental science education, and to geological societies. Wendy Johnson – For significant service to secondary education in South Australia. Dr Belinda (Bidda) Sumner Jones – For significant service to animal welfare science and advocacy. David Fletcher Jones – For significant service to the museums and galleries sector, and to the community. Dr Nigel Ronald Jones – For significant service to neurosurgical medicine, and to medical societies. Charles Justin – For significant service to the museums sector, to arts administration, and to architecture. Epaminondas Katsalidis – For significant service to architecture, and to sustainable construction innovations. Timothy John Keeler – For significant service to the community through a range of roles, and to education. Charlie King, – For significant service to the Indigenous community of the Northern Territory. Dr Geoffrey Macdonald Knight – For significant service to professional dental associations, and to the community. Professor Sabina Margaret Knight – For significant service to rural and remote health, nursing and education. John George Kotzas – For significant service to the performing arts as an administrator and artistic director. Wayne Noel Kratzmann – For significant service to the visual and performing arts, and to education. Letitia Lancaster – For significant service to oncology nursing, and to professional societies. The Reverend Dr Cecilie Marion Lander – For significant service to neurological medicine, and to the Anglican Church of Australia. The Reverend Dr Mervyn Meredith Lander – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to the Anglican Church of Australia. Anna Oi Chan Lao – For significant service to badminton, and to the multicultural community. Harvey Douglas Lister – For significant service to the arts, tourism, sport, and to the venue management and events industries. Dr Andrew Brantley Lu, – For significant service to the visual and performing arts, to the law, and to legal education. Dr Heather Gwen Mack – For significant service to ophthalmology, particularly to professional colleges. Professor Alan Mackay-Sim – For significant service to tertiary education, and to biomedical science. The Reverend John Warrenne Maddern, – For significant service to the Uniting Church in Australia, and to the community. Emeritus Professor Toni Magdalena Makkai – For significant service to tertiary education, and to public administration. Professor Neil Bressay Manson – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to physics. The late Loisette Matilda Marsh – For significant service to marine science and zoology. Professor Frank Louis Mastaglia – For significant service to neuromuscular disease, and to professional associations. Helen Maxwell-Wright – For significant service to child welfare, to diabetes research, and to the community. Maree Anne McCabe – For significant service to people living with Alzheimer's and Dementia, and to the aged care sector. Fiona McCormack – For significant service to victims of crime, and to the prevention of family violence. Christine Frances McLoughlin – For significant service to business, to the not-for-profit sector, and to women. Associate Professor Faye Beverley McMillan – For significant service to Indigenous mental health, and to tertiary education. Peter Godfrey McMullin – For significant service to business, to the law, and to the community. Dr Timothy Francis McNamara – For significant service to tertiary education, and to applied linguistics. Peter Andrea McPhee – For significant service to the community through a range of organisations. Dr Erica McWilliam – For significant service to education, and to pedagogy and gender equity. Anthony Peter Melville – For significant service to corporate and government communications. Dr Jane Melville – For significant service to herpetological research, and to the museums sector. Dr Bryan Christopher Mendelson – For significant service to aesthetic plastic surgery, and to medical societies. Ann Elizabeth Miller – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Mark Justin Miller – For significant service to visual and performing arts administration. Kathryn Ann Mitchell – For significant service to urban planning, and to professional associations. Lolita Veronica Mohyla – For significant service to architecture, and to construction law. Scott Norman Monaghan – For significant service to Indigenous health, and to medical research. The Honourable Murray Scott Montgomery – For significant service to the Parliament of Western Australia, and to the community. Robyn Barbara Moore – For significant service to charitable organisations, and to the performing arts. Danny William Murphy – For significant service to urban development, and to the community. Dr Keith Louis Mutimer – For significant service to plastic surgery, and to the international community. Professor Debra Faye Nestel – For significant service to medical education through simulated teaching methods. Dr Patrice Newell – For significant service to the environment, and to sustainable farming practices. Thuat Van Nguyen, – For significant service to the multicultural community of New South Wales, and to youth. Vivienne Nguyen – For significant service to the multicultural community of Victoria. His Honour Kerry John O'Brien – For significant service to the law, and to the judiciary in Queensland. Dr Barry Stephen O'Loughlin – For significant service to medicine, and to medical administration. Julie Oberin – For significant service to women and children experiencing family violence. Janette Mary Owen – For significant service to the Indigenous community through dental health initiatives. Andrew Papadopoulos – For significant service to motorsport, and to driver safety and education. Shelley Jane Penn – For significant service to architecture and design in the public realm, and to professional institutes. Larry Clifton Perkins – For significant service to motorsport as a touring car driver and team owner. Anthony John Phillips – For significant service to optometry, and to professional optical societies. Craig Phillips – For significant service to high profile sporting organisations through executive roles. The Honourable David James Porter – For significant service to the law, and to the judiciary, in Tasmania. Leah Maree Purcell – For significant service to the performing arts, to First Nations youth and culture, and to women. Mavis Randle – For significant service to hockey, and to the community. Jan Rice – For significant service to nursing, to wound care, and to education. Professor Robyn Lesley Richmond – For significant service to tertiary medical education, and to public health. Christopher Michael Rigby – For significant service to health and aged care organisations. Emeritus Professor Ian Douglas Riley – For significant service to tertiary medical education, notably to tropical health. John Charles Risby – For significant service to the steelmaking industry, and to the community of Newcastle. Vivienne Ritchie – For significant service to the Anglican Church of Australia, and to the community. Vicki Joan Roach – For significant service to neuroscience nursing, and to professional federations. Pamela Jean Robinson, – For significant service to conservation and the environment, and to the community. Professor Ute Roessner – For significant service to tertiary education, particularly to the biosciences. Glenyys Dorothy Romanes – For significant service to the Parliament of Victoria, and to the community. Coral Ross – For significant service to local government, and to gender equality. Elana Rubin – For significant service to corporate governance, and to the community. Dr Elizabeth Anne Rushen – For significant service to community history and heritage preservation. Dr Sarah Anne Ryan – For significant service to the environment, to education, and to the community. Colin Saltmere – For significant service to the Indigenous communities of North West Queensland. Emeritus Professor Barbara Jean Santich – For significant service to tertiary education, to gastronomy, food culture and history. Elizabeth Anne Scarce – For significant service to the community of South Australia through a range of roles. Clive Ian Scott – For significant service to the hotel accommodation industry, and to the arts. The late Raymond Walter Scott – For significant service to the road transport industry, and to the community. Dr Helen Scott-Orr, – For significant service to public administration, to biosecurity, and to veterinary science. Gregory Peter Shand – For significant service to the Jewish community, and to charitable initiatives. Clinical Associate Professor Gary Fred Sholler – For significant service to paediatric medicine, and to tertiary medical education. Julie Shuttleworth – For significant service to the minerals and mining sector. Vallence Gary Simonds – For significant service to the building and construction industry, and to charitable initiatives. Graeme William Sinclair – For significant service to accountancy, to business, and to the not-for-profit sector. Craig John Smith-Gander – For significant service to surf lifesaving, to transport logistics, and to the community. Trent John Smyth – For significant service to international relations, to motorsport, and to business. Dr Gillian Ann Sparkes – For significant service to environmental sustainability, and to public administration. Dr Victor Roy Squires – For significant service to the environment, notably to the ecology of rangelands. Dr Charles John Steadman – For significant service to tertiary medical education, and to gastroenterology. The Honourable Sydney James Stirling – For significant service to the Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory, and to the community. Thomas Bernard Stodulka – For significant service to the law, and to mediation and dispute resolution. Dr Julie Claudia Stone – For significant service to child mental health, and to psychiatry. Ricky Stuart – For significant service to rugby league, and to the community. Karim Sumar – For significant service to the Ismaili community, and to the convenience retail industry. Ricci Edith Swart – For significant service to the media and film industries, and to the community. Robert William Talbott, – For significant service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Albert Ee San Tan – For significant service to tertiary dental education, and to periodontics. Professor Tele Tan – For significant service to information and communication technology, and to people on the autism spectrum. Colin Tate – For significant service to the community through charitable initiatives. Professor Helena Teede – For significant service to medical education and research, to endocrinology, and to women’s health. James Frederick Thane – For significant service to the performing arts as a theatrical producer and advisor. Anthony Charles Thomas – For significant service to education, particularly to children with special needs. Professor Emeritus Doreen Anne Thomas – For significant service to tertiary engineering education and research, and to women. Dr Geoffrey Laughton Thompson – For significant service to sports medicine, and to Paralympic athletes. Emeritus Professor James Toouli – For significant service to tertiary medical education, notably to gastroenterology. Dr Neil Clifford Turner – For significant service to agricultural and environmental science, and to education. Dr Linette Veitch – For significant service to nurse education, and to international health programs. Charlotte Vidor – For significant service to the multicultural community, to tourism, and to urban planning. Professor Beverley Janine Vollenhoven – For significant service to tertiary medical education, to obstetrics and gynaecology. Amanda (Mandy) Joy Walker – For significant service to film as a cinematographer, and to professional societies. Joan Warhurst – For significant service to education, and to research and curriculum development. Barry John Watchorn – For significant service to the superannuation sector through a range of roles. Maxine Joy Weber – For significant service to children, particularly to infant mortality prevention. Dr Tracy Gillian Westerman – For significant service to the Indigenous community in mental health and suicide prevention. Rhonda Joyce Weston – For significant service to aged persons' education, and to the community of Toowoomba. Dr Betsy Williams – For significant service to international health, and to medicine as a general practitioner. Gina Williams – For significant service to the performing arts, to Indigenous music, and to media. Dr George Wilson – For significant service to wildlife conservation, to veterinary science, and to the community. Susan Dorothy Woodward – For significant service to the not-for-profit sector, to fundraising, and to the law. Associate Professor Edwina Jane Wright – For significant service to medicine and research, notably for people living with HIV/AIDS. Jeremy Maughan Wright – For significant service to the not-for-profit sector, and to the performing arts. Robert David Yallop – For significant service to international humanitarian aid organisations. Dr Judith Nancy Yates – For significant service to housing and economic research, and to education. Keith Robert Yates – For significant service to the minerals and mining sector, and to the community. Professor Peter Shane Yu – For significant service to the community, particularly to Indigenous cultural and political organisations. Leanne Zalapa – For significant service to the Prince of Wales Hospital Foundation, and to health education. Dr Richard Maxwell Zuber – For significant service to veterinary science, to professional colleges, and to education. Military Division Navy Commodore Timothy Alan Brown, – For exceptional service to the Royal Australian Navy, principally in leading submarine capability development. Rear Admiral Jennifer Ruth Firman, – For exceptional performance of duty in the field of military medicine. Rear Admiral Mark Davenport Hill, – For exceptional service as the Commander Joint Task Force 633 on Operation Accordion from June 2019 to January 2020. Army Brigadier Douglas Watson Laidlaw, – For exceptional service as the Commander 4th Brigade and Commander Joint Task Force 646 during Operation BUSHFIRE ASSIST 2019-2020. Lieutenant Colonel Peta Mantel – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the fields of medical intelligence, health leadership, and epidemiology and disease surveillance. Brigadier David John Thomae – For exceptional service as Adjutant General - Army, Commander 11 Brigade and Commander Joint Task Group 629.3. Air Force Air Vice-Marshal Alan Gregory Clements, – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in delivering the 2013 Force Structure Review, and in international engagement as Head of the Australian Defence Staff, Washington. Warrant Officer Scott Anthony Doring – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in air surveillance operations and personnel capability development. Group Captain Edward Allan Eather – For exceptional performance of duty to the Australian Defence Force in legal services. Air Commodore Damien Raymond Keddie – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in combat aircraft acquisition and sustainment, and organisational capability development. Warrant Officer Ricki Paul Kiely – For exceptional service in combat aircraft sustainment, Defence Aviation Safety Regulations development and implementation, and maintenance management in the Royal Australian Air Force. Group Captain Martin Norman Nussio – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in capability acquisition and sustainment. Air Commodore Dianne Marie Turton – For exceptional service to the Australian Defence Force in the field of intelligence. Group Captain Paul James Willmot, – For exceptional service in aviation workforce sustainment for the Australian Defence Force. Honorary Carol Berg – For significant service to mental health, to social justice, and to the arts. Karen Lorraine Lindley – For significant service to social welfare initiatives, and to the jewellery industry. Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) General Division Barry Lewis Abley – For service to the community of Geelong. Margaret Adams – For service to the community of Boroondara. The late Nicholas Andrew Agocs – For service to the multicultural community of Western Australia. Maria Alexiadis – For service to karate. Dr Frank Peter Alford – For service to endocrinology. Associate Professor Kevin Patrick Alford – For service to medicine as a cardiologist. Roger Blair Allan – For service to primary education, and to disability sports. Dr Susie Janet Allanson – For service to community health as a psychologist. Adele Marion Allen – For service to the community through the church. Belinda Helen Allen – For service to youth through Girl Guides. George Amarandos – For service to the Greek community of Queensland. Dr Antoinette Catherine Anazodo – For service to medical research. Julia Jane Armstrong – For service to the performing arts through theatre support roles. Prudence Margaret Armstrong – For service to the community of Moss Vale. Janice Edyth Armstrong-Conn – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Carmel Arthur – For service to the law. Clinical Professor Eugene Athan – For service to infectious diseases medicine. Wendy Anne Baarda – For service to the Indigenous community of Yuendumu. Cornelia Babbage – For service to the multicultural community of the Gold Coast. Hadyn Dennis Bailey – For service to the community of North West Victoria. Ian Humprey Bailey – For service to people with disability through sport. Dr Louise Baker – For service to rural and remote medicine. Associate Professor Ramesh Balasubramaniam – For service to dentistry. Dr Peter John Baquie – For service to sports medicine. Les Barclay – For service to swimming. Shirley Lillian Bare – For service to community health. Marie Margaret Barns – For service to music. Wendy Joan Barrett – For service to music. Jennifer Wendy Barry – For service to the community of Gladstone. Adrian Robert Bartak – For service to music. Lorraine Helen Bartel – For service to the community of Moree. Christopher William Bastian – For service to youth. Barbara Bates – For service to children. The Reverend Colin Richard Baxter – For service to the Uniting Church in Australia, and to the community. The late Ethel Emily Baxter – For service to the Indigenous community of Queanbeyan. Kevin George Beeck – For service to local government, and to the community of Albany. Emeritus Professor Diane Robin Bell – For service to literature. Jean Isabel Bennett – For service to the community of Canberra. Wing Commander Peter John Bennetts (Retd) – For service to veterans and their families. Manyang Berberi – For service to the South Sudanese community of Victoria. Mark Beretta – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Thelma May Bevilaqua – For service to the community through a range of roles. Petras Bielskis – For service to the Lithuanian community of South Australia. Monika Biernacki – For service to animal welfare. Jonathan Biggins – For service to the performing arts through theatre. Sarnia Ann Birch – For service to veterans and their families. Catherine Anne Birkett – For service to the community of the Goulburn Valley. Kenneth John Birkett – For service to the community of the Goulburn Valley. Angela Jane Bishop – For service to entertainment journalism. Regula Christine Black – For service to veterans and their families. Jill Blackman – For service to the community of Gilgandra. The Reverend Dr Merryl Lois Blair – For service to ecumenical and interfaith organisations. Ruth Ann Blanch – For service to the community of Armidale. Richard Kent Bligh – For service to the community of the Darling Downs. Beny Aterdit Bol – For service to youth. Carol Bonamy – For service to the community of the Lismore region. Lawrence Frederick Bond – For service to surf lifesaving. Stephanie Bortkevitch – For service to netball. Henry Granger Boston – For service to the arts. Nancy Clare Boyling – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dawson Stanley Bradford – For service to the livestock industry. Dr James Bradley – For service to literature as a writer. Ann Brett – For service to the Royal Life Saving Society. Lily Brett – For service to literature as a writer. Nada Brissenden – For service to music. Dr Rosemary Helen Brooks – For service to tertiary education. Ken Broomhead – For service to the aviation industry. Jacki Joantares Brown – For service to people with disability. Michael Brown – For service to rugby union. Sr Deirdre Patrice Browne – For service to the community as a religious sister, and through music, education and the liturgical arts. Greg Allan Bruce – For service to local government, and to the community of Townsville. Jennifer Florence Brukner – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dr Betsy Buchanan – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Yen Bui – For service to the Vietnamese community of Victoria. Donald Raymond Burge – For service to the community through a range of roles. Tony William Burns – For service to people with disability. Margaret Bush – For service to the community through animal clubs. Mark Anthony Byatt – For service to local government, to regional development, and to the community of Hume. Dr Geoffrey Charles Byrne – For service to paediatric endocrinology. Colin Anthony Cala – For service to local government, and to the community of South Perth. The late John Robert Caldon – For service to business through media content distribution. Barbara Mary Callaghan – For service to music. Prudence Marilyn Campbell – For service to the community of Birregurra. Susan Campbell – For service to youth through Guides. Alan Jack Carter – For service to children with disability, and to the community. Felicity Jane Carter – For service to the community of the Great Lakes region. Stephen Michael Cartwright – For service to business administration. Derrick Casey – For service to tertiary education. Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Garnet Chamarette (Retd) – For service to veterans. The late Mary Julie Chandler – For service to the community of Red Cliffs. Kaye Noelene Chapman – For service to the community of Cowra. Roberta Mary Chapman – For service to primary education. Reginald James Chard – For service to military history, and to veterans. Heather Rose Chester – For service to environmental conservation. Dr Anthony Chun Ming Cheung – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Colin Chirgwin – For service to youth. Heather Christensen – For service to the community of Beenleigh. Karen Christensen – For service to the community of Wandong. William Ewart Church – For service to the community of Yarrawonga. Giuseppe Rocco Cinanni – For service to the community through a range of roles. Kenneth Gary Clark – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Arthur Coghlan – For service to the performing arts as a magician and escapologist. Dean Joel Cohen – For service to people with disability, and to the Jewish community. The Reverend Dr James Anthony Collins – For service to the Anglican Church of Australia. Charles Graham Colman – For service to music. Thomas Robin Conboy – For service to the community of Mount Gambier. The late Allan Stuart Connolly – For service to cricket. Judith Mary Connors – For service to the creative arts, particularly as a tatter and lace maker. Geoff Coombes – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Anne Martin Cooper – For service to osteopathy. Jan Elizabeth Cooper – For service to Australian rules football. Stephen Julian Cordell – For service to the Jewish community. Dr Craig Cormick – For service to science, and to the community. Dr Hugh James Cornell – For service to biochemical research, and to tertiary education. Graham George Corney – For service to education governance. Barry David Costa – For service to rugby league. Dr Costas Costa – For service to medicine as a general practitioner. Lindsay Charles Cox – For service to community history. Peter John Cox – For service to rugby league. Richard John Cox – For service to the community of the Mornington Peninsula. Virginia Hunter Cox – For service to librarianship. The late Judith Lorraine Crabtree – For service to primary education. Andrew Hugh Craig – For service to veterans and their families. Jeffrey James Cree AFSM – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Elizabeth Ann Creek – For service to the beef cattle industry. Jeanette Lydia Crew – For service to Indigenous culture, and to conservation. Trevor James Cross – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Wendy Cross – For service to the community through charitable organisations. The late Vera Crvenkovic – For service to the Croatian community. Nerida Cullen – For service to the community of Goulburn. Alan Erskine Cummins – For service to caving. Pamela Elizabeth Cupper – For service to education, and to the preservation of military history. Jennifer Margaret Curnow – For service to the community through a range of roles. Kevin John Curran – For service to Australian rules football. John Handel Cutler – For service to the fashion industry. David Joseph Czerkies – For service to the community through St John Ambulance. Denise Marilyn Davies – For service to youth through Scouts. Patricia Margaret Daw – For service to badminton. Gary Francis Dawson – For service to Balkan and Hungarian folk arts. Dr Teresa De Fazio – For service to tertiary education. Peter Charles De Rauch – For service to community health, and to Australian rules football. Fouad Deiri – For service to the Lebanese community of Australia. Dr Stephen Anthony Della-Fiorentina – For service to oncology. Christopher Stanley Dempsey – For service to cricket. Julie Ann Dempsey – For service to community mental health. Betty Merle Denning – For service to the community of Pittsworth. The late Matthew William Deveson – For service to the community of Narooma. Kenneth Richard Dickson – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Dr Amanda Jane Dines – For service to medicine. Margaret Lynne Docking – For service to the international community through health programs. Reginald Dodd – For service to the Indigenous community of Marree. William Joseph Doherty – For service to Australian rules football. Leonie Jane Donovan – For service to community history. John De Cruz Douglas – For service to veterans. Sandra Rose Doumany – For service to the community of the Gold Coast. Pastor Dale Dowler – For service to the community of the Sunshine Coast. Ian Francis Doyle – For service to journalism, and to the community. Steven Michael Drinkwater – For service to dog agility sports. Dr Jan Dudley – For service to obstetrics and gynaecology. Evan Duke – For service to the community of Bundaberg. Trevor Harold Duniam – For service to the community of Wynyard. Mark Wayne Durdin – For service to people who are deaf or hard of hearing. Katherine Susan Eccles – For service to conservation and the environment. Ian Roland Eckersley – For service to primary industry. Brian Stewart Edward, – For service to the community of Geelong. The late Pierce David Edwards – For service to the communities of Quilpie and South West Queensland. Gary Edwin – For service to golf. Adrian Francis Elder – For service to the community of Bridgetown. Colin James Elliott – For service to the community of Campbelltown. William Edwin Ellis – For service to harness racing. The late Donald Phillip Ellison – For service to horticulture. Belal Elmowy – For service to taekwondo, and to the community. Philip Leslie Emery – For service to the community of Greater Geelong. Mx Misty Farquhar – For service to the LGBTQI community. Denis William Farrar – For service to the law. Lieutenant Commander Leo Francis Farrelly (Retd) – For service to youth, and to the community. Joseph Vincent Farrugia – For service to the superannuation sector. Philip Morris Feinstein – For service to refugees. The late Ronald Douglas Fenton – For service to the community through mental health advocacy roles. Kevin Fergusson – For service to triathlon. Robert John Finn – For service to the community of Goolwa. John Andrew Ford – For service to the community of Port Adelaide. Kerrie Ann Ford – For service to community history. Lynda Ford – For service to the multicultural community of Victoria. William Munro Ford – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Abigail Margaret Forsyth – For service to sustainable design. Dr Scott Comber Fortey – For service to medicine as an anaesthetist. Vincenzo Foti – For service to the pyrotechnic industry, and to the community. Vanessa A Fowler – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Rodney Alleric Fraser – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Susan Joy Fraser – For service to financial planning and counselling. Dr Clifford Brodie Frith – For service to conservation and the environment. Dr Dawn Whyatt Frith – For service to conservation and the environment. Malaemie Patricia Fruean – For service to the Pacific communities of New South Wales. Lyn Fuller – For service to music. Fiona Gardner – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Clinical Professor Peter Colin Gates – For service to neurology. Edgar James Gaunt – For service to the communities of Camden and Cobbitty. Brian Kevin Gee – For service to surf lifesaving, and to junior rugby league. John Gibson – For service to the community of North West Tasmania. Emma Harriet Gierschick – For service to the community, and to reflexology. Neville James Gilbertson – For service to the community of Mount Gambier. Francoise Andree Gilroy – For service to the community of North Sydney. Joan Elizabeth Glen – For service to music. Katrina Gliddon – For service to the international community of Cambodia. Richard Roy Gloede – For service to Australian rules football. Rebecca Anne Goddard – For service to Australian rules football, and to women in sport. Dr Stacy Kellan Goergen – For service to radiology. Christine Joan Goodfellow – For service to veterans and their families. David Goodrich – For service to the community, and to the defence sector. Dr Brian Richard Gordon – For service to the community through a range of roles. Penelope Ruth Gordon – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Dr Peter Rob Gordon – For service to disaster recovery as a psychologist. Elizabeth Ann Gosper – For service to people with disability through sport. Clare Grant – For service to the performing arts through administrative roles. Norma Helen Grant – For service to education. Dr Peter Treacy Grant – For service to gynaecological oncology. Associate Professor Kathleen Mary Gray – For service to medicine through digital health education. Oriel Green – For service to the Indigenous community of Western Australia. Professor Brin Felix Grenyer – For service to psychology. Dick Martin Guit – For service to the building and construction industry. Allan John Guthrie – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Andrew Frank Guy – For service to the community through a range of organisations. Russell Martin Haines – For service to community history. The Reverend Pam Halbert – For service to the Anglican Church of Australia, and to the community of Western Australia. Allen Thomas Hall – For service to the community of Wandong. Graeme Lloyd Hall – For service to the community of Marion. Deborah Halpern – For service to the arts. Pieternella Wilhelmina Haly – For service to the community of Rosewood. Paul William Hammat – For service to the community through pastoral care. Brian Edward Hanley – For service to secondary education. Bashar Hanna – For service to multiculturalism and refugee support in Western Sydney. Dr David Linley Hare – For service to cardiology. Margaret Edwina Hargans – For service to the community of Bathurst. Sandra May Haring – For service to the community of Broken Hill. David Russell Harris – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Deborah Mary Harrison – For service to the community through charitable initiatives. John Richard Harry – For service to the community, to rowing, and to the legal profession. Lincoln John Hart – For service to the tourism industry. Dr Anthony S Hasham – For service to business, and to the Australian-Lebanese community. Medy Hassan – For service to the building and construction industry. Elizabeth Mary Hawthorne – For service to the international community of East Zambia. Patricia Mary Hawthorne – For service to the community of St Lucia. Bryan Kenneth Hearn – For service to the community of South Australia, and to football. Diane Claire Heaton – For service to dance. Owen Leigh Hegarty – For service to the minerals and mining sector. Leanne Heywood – For service to business through a range of organisations. Matthew Thomas Hickey – For service to music, and to the law. Joplin Higgins – For service to the law. Rita Hillier – For service to the community through the Anglican Church of Australia. Betty Pamela Hislop – For service to darts. Michael Macpherson Hocking – For service to sailing. John Clelland Hocknull – For service to the community through a range of roles. Rosavilla Hoffmann – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Dr David Hobson Hooke – For service to nephrology, and to aviation medicine. Alistair Geoffrey Horne – For service to youth through Scouts. Ngatuaine Hosking – For service to the multicultural community of Victoria. Sister Adele Howard – For service to the Catholic Church of Australia, and to the community. Christine Anne Howe – For service to secondary education. Keran Elizabeth Howe – For service to people with disability. Robert Howe – For service to the community through a range of roles. George Hurley – For service to the community of the Sutherland Shire, and to football. Graeme Norval Hyde – For service to conservation, particularly through aviculture. Anthony John Irvine – For service to local government, and to the communities of the Eyre Peninsula. Barry Leonard Irving – For service to the community of Rosebud-Rye. Phillip Isaacs – For service to the community through a range of roles. Professor Felice Jacka – For service to nutritional psychiatry research. Ronald Edwin Jackson – For service to the community of Cessnock. John Jesse James – For service to rowing. Alexander Robert Johnson – For service to golf, and to the community. Barbara Joyce Johnson – For service to the community of Naracoorte. Sam Craig Johnson – For service to local government, and to the community. Susan Dianne Johnson – For service to the community, and to tenpin bowling. Nathan Johnston – For service to people with disability through sport. Pete Leslie Johnston – For service to veterans. Janet Lesley Jones – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Oscar Edwin Joppich – For service to the Lutheran church, and to the community. Alan William Joyce – For service to surf lifesaving, and to the community. Janet Jukes – For service to the community through LGBTIQ advocacy and social welfare organisations. Associate Professor Sarah Jane Kelly – For service to tertiary education, and to sports administration. Richard Edward Kenny – For service to rifle and pistol shooting, and to veterans. Graham Barry Kent – For service to the community of Devonport, and to yachting. Edward Kerr – For service to the community through charitable organisations. Richard Ian Kew – For service to business, and the community. Dr Edith Khangure – For service to community history. Lynne Killeen – For service to the Indigenous community, and to women. Peter John Kilmurray – For service to surf lifesaving. Alison Kincaid – For service to nursing. Hazel Monica King – For service to horticulture, and to community history. Jeffrey Langdon King – For service to conservation. Rosanne Phyllis (Rosie) King – For service to sports administration. Roy Kirkby – For service to korfball. Kevin John Kleemann – For service to the community of the Adelaide Hills. Cornelis Gerardus Klep – For service to youth through Scouts. Nevil Parish Knell – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Victor Gregory Knowles – For service to music, and to the community of Mudgeeraba. Dr Igor Konstantinov – For service to medicine as a cardiothoracic surgeon. Harold George Kratz – For service to rowing. The late Ricardo Erwin Krauskopf – For service to the community through a range of roles. Eduvard Krncevic – For service to football. Dr Santosh Kumar – For service to the Indian community of Victoria. Brian John Ladd – For service to the public art galleries sector. Janet Patricia Lambert – For service to the community of Vacy. Sandra Dawn Lambkin – For service to veterans and their families. Dr John Scott Langrehr – For service to tertiary education. Lawrence O'Hara Larmer – For service to the community through a range of roles. Dr Andrew Denis Lawrence – For service to the chiropractic profession. Glenn Lazarus – For service to rugby league. Jennifer Duggan Leaper – For service to aged welfare. Dr Richard John Leaper – For service to aged welfare. John William Elliott Leddy – For service to the community, and to engineering. John Albert Lee – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Alexander McGown Lennox – For service to veterans and their families. Dr Alexander Douglas Levendel – For service to cardiology and nuclear medicine. Dr Susan Patricia Lever – For service to literature. Dr Felicity-Ann Lewis – For service to local government, and to the community of Marion. Jacqueline Vanessa Liddiard – For service to veterans and their families. Ronald Keith Lindenberg – For service to rugby league. Dr Rimas Liubinas – For service to medicine as a general practitioner. Dr Robert Hugh Llewellyn-Jones – For service to psychiatry, and to children with developmental disability. Adam Ka-Ho Lo – For service to mental health, and to the multicultural community of Queensland. Judith Ann Loffel – For service to country music. Michael Long – For service to Australian rules football, and to the Indigenous community. The late William Rainsford Loughnan – For service to agriculture, and to the law. Ronald Louis – For service to the financial sector, and to the community. Richard Geoffrey Love – For service to the community through a range of roles. Graham Frederick Lovell – For service to the community of Epping. Keith Mayfield Lovelock – For service to the community through emergency response organisations. Martin Stephen Lowe – For service to veterans. Paul Francis Lucas – For service to primary education. Harry Lynas – For service to community history. Kevin John Lynch – For service to the community of Newcastle. Robyn Margaret MacIntosh – For service to the community of Sydney. Gordon Donald Mackenzie – For service to tertiary education. Helen Madden – For service to the performing arts as an artistic director and creative producer. Professor Dianna Josephine Magliano – For service to epidemiology, and to tertiary education. Frances Ann Maguire – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Patrick Joseph Maher – For service to people with disability. Marie Theresa Mahon – For service to dance as a teacher. Christopher Gerard Mahony – For service to rugby league. Graham Maifredi – For service to white water rafting. Estelle Flora Malseed – For service to community health. Alan Philip James Manly – For service to tertiary education. Felicity Marlowe – For service to the community through social welfare organisations. Izydor Marmur – For service to the Jewish community. Charles Henry Martin – For service to community history. Marko Peter Martinovich – For service to public administration. Dr Anthony Linton Marxsen – For service to engineering. Thomas Bernard Massam – For service to the real estate industry. Leslie George Mather – For service to community health. Bruno Francois Maurel – For service to the community through charitable initiatives. John Frederick McCaffrey – For service to people with disability. Dorothy Kate McConkey – For service to youth, particularly to road safety and drug awareness education. Julia McConnel – |
Joseph Waligore, in his article "The Piety of the English Deists" has shown that Herbert was one of the most pious of the deists, as he fervently prayed to God and believed God gave signs in answer to our prayers. | Joseph Waligore, em seu artigo "a piedade dos deístas Inglês" mostrou que Herbert de Cherbury foi um dos mais piedoso dos deístas, como Herbert fervorosamente orou a Deus e acreditava que Deus deu sinais, em resposta às nossas orações. |
officer See also Francis Elliot (1851–1940), British diplomat Francis Elliott (disambiguation) Frances Reed Elliot | (1781–1855), military officer See also Francis Elliot (1851–1940), British diplomat Francis Elliott (disambiguation) Frances |
the IAU. The southern end of the ridge is located near Crozier M crater and southeast of ibn Battuta crater. It trends roughly northeast towards some unnamed craters | 143 km long and was named after Antarctic explorer Douglas Mawson in 1979 by the IAU. The southern end of the ridge is located near Crozier M crater and southeast of ibn Battuta crater. It trends |
why aren't gas planets with a rocky core (like Neptune is believed to be) considered rocky planets with a giant atmosphere? | The astronomical definition of a "planet" does not specify whether the body must be only rocky, only gaseous, or some combination of the two. Neptune's core is much smaller than its atmosphere by volume, so discussions of Neptune tend to focus on its more dominant characteristics, the gas atmosphere and very large ice mantle. |
"The Walking Dead's" fourth-season finale airs Sunday night .
As Carol, Melissa McBride has been at the center of some brutal scenes this season .
The actress promises a "crazy" finale . | (CNN) -- Season four of "The Walking Dead" has featured some of the most brutal scenes in the popular series' history. (Yes, that's a warning for those behind on the show. Spoilers ahead!) There was the gut-wrenching death of Hershel in the midseason finale, but there was also the burning death of David and Karen early on. It was a mystery who killed them, but it soon came out that Carol (Melissa McBride) did it to stop them from spreading a deadly disease through the prison. When Rick learned what happened, he banished Carol from the prison, but she reappeared in the second half of the season. Young sisters Lizzie and Mika were left under Carol's care after their father died, but it became clear that Lizzie had a skewed sense of right and wrong, and she killed her younger sister to bring her back as a walker. Then Carol decided yet again that another survivor was too dangerous to live and shot Lizzie in the back of the head. The reaction to this episode was huge. With McBride at the center of some of this season's more memorable scenes, CNN spoke to her about Carol's evolution and the finale Sunday night. CNN: What was your initial reaction when you learned what Carol was going to have to do this season? McBride: It was surprising to me that Carol was going in this direction, absolutely. But it also made a great deal of sense to me that they would take her in this direction. First of all it's a very interesting arc for this character, considering that she's lost her daughter; she carries so much responsibility for that, and also (she's) trying to navigate this world. CNN: Is this the most challenging acting role you've ever had? McBride: By far. This has been by far the most difficult, and certainly the longest-running. The most challenging and rewarding, for all the same reasons. CNN: There was a powerful response online to the deaths of Lizzie and Mika; did you follow that reaction at all? McBride: Yeah, I was really happy about the responses that came from that episode. Shooting that episode was remarkable and such a great experience. It all just came together in such a wonderful way. People talk about how "it needs to be earned." I felt what was necessary in this episode was absolutely earned. The emotional and critical response has been wonderful. The fans have just been phenomenal in their appreciation for that episode. What ultimately happened in that episode was controversial, but I feel like it was handled with such a sensitive approach. The build-up to it was just handled so well. CNN: Have you seen the memes that have cropped up about the scene? The line "Look at the flowers" has taken on a life of its own. McBride: People are pasting people's faces over Lizzie's in the flower bed! (Laughs) That's another thing I love about the fanbase: They have a great sense of humor. ... I'm a spoofy kind of person. I appreciate the humor, and it's a great way to offset the devastation that people on the show (are) going through -- it's sometimes very refreshing to see that stuff. CNN: There's a segment of fans who like the idea of Daryl and Carol together. They haven't had too many scenes together this season, but is that something you might be pulling for? McBride: I know that Carol and Daryl have a tremendous bond. Personally, I am living vicariously through the fans, I guess. I enjoy their passion. For some people, watching the show, it's a fun element for them. They're very passionate about their 'ships! CNN: How do you react to the show's massive popularity? McBride: I'm constantly amazed by the amount of different types of people that are aware of the show. After the episode with the girls, a gentleman who is 73 years old -- he said, "I've never written a piece of fan mail ever, but I had to write how much I enjoyed that episode." It touched me so much. When I think of how far-reaching this show is, and how big it is, it's like trying to fathom the beginning of time, and I have to stop. CNN: What's your favorite thing coming out of the show? McBride: It certainly has to be the relationships within the cast and crew, and getting to work with the people I do. It's so tremendously fulfilling, and personally getting to play this character has been a dream. CNN: What can fans expect from the season finale? McBride: There's nothing I can say that hasn't already been said! Like every finale, (whispers) it's gonna be crazy! |
He took a specially commissioned train to Jakarta, departing on 20 October. | 彼はジャカルタへの特別列車に乗り、10月20日に出発した。 |
what do i need to renew my drivers license in dc? | ['Proof of Identity.', 'Proof of DC Residency (2 documents required)', 'Proof of Social Security Number.'] |
Our language is Berber. | La nostra lingua è il berbero. |
Yamaha XV920R | Yamaha TR 1 |
pedestrianised | gågade |
Guddu, Sindh, Pakistan. Built in 1980s, the power plant was built with joint technical cooperation and financial assistance from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). In April 2014, the then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif inaugurated commissioning of two gas turbines of 243 MW | Central Power Generation Company Limited, and GENCO-II, is a thermal power station located in Guddu, Sindh, Pakistan. Built in 1980s, the power plant was built with joint technical cooperation and financial assistance from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). In April 2014, the then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif |
Heaven's vengeance is slow but sure. | La vendetta del Paradiso è lenta ma sicura. |
Study: High-flying women are missing out on promotion .
Discrepancy in female promotions may have been magnified by recession .
Elsewhere, male and female MBAs proving resistant to the economic crisis .
"High-potential employees" willing to change roles, despite harsh job market . | LONDON, England (CNN) -- During the current economic crisis, high-flying women have been overlooked for promotion, according to a study out Tuesday. At the upper level of management, business is still dominated by men. The study, by U.S. nonprofit research group Catalyst, surveyed 873 MBA alumni who graduated between 1996 and 2007, asking how their careers had fared between November 2007 and June 2009. The results showed that overall, male and female MBAs have proved resilient to the recession and have fared equally well in the U.S., Canada and Asia, with 31 percent of surveyed women reporting that they had been promoted during that time period, compared to 36 percent of men. However in Europe, just 26 per cent of women were promoted, compared with 44 percent of men, according to the study published in the Harvard Business Review. According to the Harvard Business Review, of the U.S. Fortune 500 companies only two per cent of the CEOs are women, and only 15 per cent of the seats on their boards of directors are held by women. Professor Susan Vinnicombe is the director of the Center for International Women Business Leaders at Cranfield University School of Management in England. She told CNN that while it isn't clear why the figures for Europe in particular show such a gender discrepancy, it reflects discrimination faced by women business leaders in general. Read more business related features . "There is a whole stream of research of male and female MBAs that systematically shows the more senior they get the bigger the disparities in salaries and promotion," she said. "Immediately after the MBA -- at the mid level -- women do quite well, but as they progress upwards the disparities emerge and get wider. That's not just for MBAs, it's the function of men and women in the workforce in general." When it comes to the top tier, women worldwide were much more likely than men to lose their jobs, with 19 percent of female senior executives losing their jobs, compared with six per cent of men. Eleanor Tabi Haller-Jorden, General Manager of Catalyst Europe told CNN that the discrepancy is probably not the result of the current economic malaise. "These figures reflect what has been a challenge in Europe for a number years," she said. "The talent pipeline in Europe is clearly not as robust for women. This study indicates that by and large this is not directly related to the economic crisis, but it may have magnified the discrepancy." Haller-Jorden cites European corporate culture, perpetuation of gender-based stereotypes, exclusion of women from informal networks and a lack of role models as reasons behind the discrepancy. Cranfield University produces what it calls the "Female FTSE Index," showing the percentage of female directors in Britain's top 100 companies. Vinnicombe says that in the last 10 years the number of female directors has hardly improved, increasing from seven per cent to just 11 percent. Vinnicombe adds that she has found anecdotal evidence that a number of senior women in the British banking sector have chosen to leave their jobs, rather than work in a "high pressure, highly controlling" work environment brought about by the economic crisis. The Catalyst study also shows that many MBAs aren't letting the economic crisis get in the way of career advancement. Overall, 34 percent of respondents had received a promotion and 35 percent made a lateral move. "The data almost indicates business as usual, in highly unusual times for business," Haller-Jorden told CNN. The common perception might be that given the current economic uncertainty, employees would choose to play it safe rather than chance their luck in a volatile job market, but the study found that MBAs have been willing to risk career moves, with 20 percent of respondents changing jobs, 14 percent relocating and four percent starting their own business. Haller-Jorden said that MBAs represent "high-potential employees" who tend to be entrepreneurial and show a high level of initiative. She added that these individuals tend to be opportunistic when it comes to their careers, seeking out new developmental opportunities, exploring lateral moves, looking at options around relocating, and choosing other employment opportunities to make sure they aren't negatively impacted by recession. "The results are sobering for a corporate sector which may have assumed that people would be grateful to have a job and wouldn't necessarily be exploring other options," she said. "For companies to rest on their laurels and assume they don't need to worry about retention is a mistake." |
Punch (singer) | Punch (韓國歌手) |
Anton LaVey specifically denounced "devil worshippers" and the idea of praying to Satan. | アントン・ラヴェイは「悪魔崇拝者」や悪魔に祈るという考えを公然と非難した。 |
are all sausages gluten free? | Most sausage brands don't include gluten ingredients (in other words, ingredients made from the gluten grains wheat, barley, or rye), but only a few manufacturers say their products meet U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) standards for "gluten-free." |
This success led to him becoming world #1 for a brief period. | Dit succes zorgde ervoor dat hij nummer 1 van de wereld werd voor een korte periode. |
In children there are several potential disabilities which may result from damage to the nervous system, including sensorineural hearing loss, epilepsy, learning and behavioral difficulties, as well as decreased intelligence. | Hos barn finns det flera potentiella handikapp som kan orsakas av skador på nervsystemet, bl.a. sensorineural hörselnedsättning, epilepsi, studieteknik och beteendesvårigheter, såväl som minskad intelligens. |
How to remove warning "mysql_num_rows() expects parameter 1 to be resource" in php | Reference - What does this error mean in PHP? |
Top 15 semifinalists. Gallardo competed in the national beauty pageant Miss Venezuela 1986 and obtained the title of 1st runner up. She represented Portuguesa state. References External links Miss Venezuela Official Website Miss International | 15 semifinalists. Gallardo competed in the national beauty pageant Miss Venezuela 1986 and obtained the title of 1st runner up. She represented Portuguesa state. References External links Miss Venezuela Official Website Miss |
Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. The village | of Gmina Wronki, within Szamotuły County, Greater Poland |
manage to kidnap him. A group in the demilitarized zone calling itself "The Maquis" claims responsibility. Sisko, Major Kira, and Dr. Bashir track the kidnappers to a planet in an area known as the Badlands, where they are captured by armed Maquis members, with Hudson revealing himself as their leader. Part II Sisko demands to see Dukat. Hudson accuses Sisko of siding with the Cardassians over him. Hudson claims the Maquis want only peace, while Sisko characterizes their desire to retaliate simply as revenge. After Sisko declines an offer to join, Hudson and the Maquis stun the group and depart. Admiral Nechayev is waiting for Sisko when he returns to Deep Space Nine. She refers to the Maquis as "a bunch of irresponsible hotheads" and instructs Sisko to reason with them, seemingly unaware of the true nature of the situation. Legate Parn of the Cardassian Central Command then arrives, and as Sisko prepares to meet him, Odo reports that he has caught "one of the Vulcan's accomplices". Sisko arrives to find Quark in a holding cell. Quark eventually reveals that he arranged for Sakonna to acquire weapons, unaware of the Maquis at the time, and believes Sakonna is planning an attack within the next few days. Parn then admits that weapons have been smuggled into the demilitarized zone, informing Sisko and Kira that the Cardassian Central Command blames Dukat, claiming he is acting as a renegade, though Sisko and Kira consider it clear they are merely setting him up as a scapegoat. At a Maquis base, Sakonna attempts to establish a Vulcan mind meld with Dukat, which he easily resists. Sisko, Bashir, and Odo arrive and interrupt the interrogation, and try to resolve the situation peacefully, but Dukat grows impatient, triggering a firefight. The Maquis are captured, but Sisko lets one of their leaders go to deliver a message to Hudson imploring him to settle things peacefully. They bring Dukat back to Deep Space Nine, where they inform him of Parn's accusations. With Dukat's help, they catch a Xepolite trader transporting weapons on behalf of Central Command. Quark talks Sakonna into revealing to Sisko that the Maquis are planning to blow up a Cardassian weapons depot in the next 52 hours, but she does not know where it is. Dukat promises to find out the depot's location, and in the meantime, Sisko visits Hudson one final time, imploring him to reconsider abandoning his career. Hudson resolutely declines, symbolically vaporizing his Starfleet uniform with a phaser. The DS9 crew is waiting in runabouts when the Maquis arrive at the depot, and as neither Hudson nor Sisko wants to hurt the other, they attempt to disable one another. Finally, only Sisko's runabout and Hudson's raider remain, with Sisko's engines and Hudson's weapons inoperable. Over Dukat's objections, Sisko allows Hudson to escape. Ultimately, Sisko wonders if he has prevented a war or merely delayed the inevitable. Production and impact The episodes follow plot elements introduced in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Journey's End", broadcast one month earlier on March 28, 1994, while the two series were running concurrently. In "Journey's End", it was established that the Federation settlers would not be required to leave their colonies that had been annexed into Cardassian territory in the newly created demilitarized zone, despite the potential mistreatment under Cardassian occupation. The introduction of the Maquis came from a desire by the writers to introduce people that were different from Starfleet, while also creating an opportunity to do cross-overs and enhance franchise continuity. A director of the episode was happy with enhancements to continuity, such as actors reprising their roles as characters with whom the audience was already familiar. The Maquis, and their dissatisfaction with the Federation, would recur in future Deep Space Nine episodes such as "For the Cause", "For the Uniform", and "Blaze of Glory", as well as one appearance in The Next Generation episode "Preemptive Strike". The Maquis faction became a key component in the launch the upcoming series Star Trek: Voyager, which used the Federation response to the group in its initial episodes leading to the Voyager and a Maquis' ship getting stranded in the Delta Quadrant. The two crews then had to work together to return to | Dukat grows impatient, triggering a firefight. The Maquis are captured, but Sisko lets one of their leaders go to deliver a message to Hudson imploring him to settle things peacefully. They bring Dukat back to Deep Space Nine, where they inform him of Parn's accusations. With Dukat's help, they catch a Xepolite trader transporting weapons on behalf of Central Command. Quark talks Sakonna into revealing to Sisko that the Maquis are planning to blow up a Cardassian weapons depot in the next 52 hours, but she does not know where it is. Dukat promises to find out the depot's location, and in the meantime, Sisko visits Hudson one final time, imploring him to reconsider abandoning his career. Hudson resolutely declines, symbolically vaporizing his Starfleet uniform with a phaser. The DS9 crew is waiting in runabouts when the Maquis arrive at the depot, and as neither Hudson nor Sisko wants to hurt the other, they attempt to disable one another. Finally, only Sisko's runabout and Hudson's raider remain, with Sisko's engines and Hudson's weapons inoperable. Over Dukat's objections, Sisko allows Hudson to escape. Ultimately, Sisko wonders if he has prevented a war or merely delayed the inevitable. Production and impact The episodes follow plot elements introduced in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Journey's End", broadcast one month earlier on March 28, 1994, while the two series were running concurrently. In "Journey's End", it was established that the Federation settlers would not be required to leave their colonies that had been annexed into Cardassian territory in the newly created demilitarized zone, despite the potential mistreatment under Cardassian occupation. The introduction of the Maquis came from a desire by the writers to introduce people that were different from Starfleet, while also creating an opportunity to do cross-overs and enhance franchise continuity. A director of the episode was happy with enhancements to continuity, such as actors reprising their roles as characters with whom the audience was already familiar. The Maquis, and their dissatisfaction with the Federation, would recur in future Deep Space Nine episodes such as "For the Cause", "For the Uniform", and "Blaze of Glory", as well as one appearance in The Next Generation episode "Preemptive Strike". The Maquis faction became a key component in the launch the upcoming series Star Trek: Voyager, which used the Federation response to the group in its initial episodes leading to the Voyager and a Maquis' ship getting stranded in the Delta Quadrant. The two crews then had to work together to return to the Alpha Quadrant. This episode contains numerous special effect sequences including various space battles. It also shows a Cardassian spacecraft, the Bok'Nor, docked at the Deep Space Nine space station, and another unnamed Federation spacecraft. The episode was directed by David Livingston. Livingston directed many Star Trek episodes in this era, including for Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994), Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999), Star Trek: Voyager, and Enterprise. Overall he directed 62 episodes of Star Trek, including 17 for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Reception Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club wrote: "as is so often the case with two part episodes, it’s hard to judge exactly how well this one works on its own" and while he enjoyed the adventures of Sisko and Dukat he felt there was no real tension in the cliffhanger ending. In his review of the second part, Handlen wrote: "As two-parters go, this serves |
can rheumatoid arthritis affect the chest? | When you have rheumatoid arthritis (RA), you may be used to bouts of pain in the joints of your arms and legs. Chest pain is another matter, but it, too, can happen as a result of rheumatoid arthritis. The condition is called costochondritis, and people can easily mistake it for a heart attack. |
In 1953 an International Spar office opened in Amsterdam to control and further develop the organisation throughout Europe and other continents. | Το 1953 άνοιξε ένα γραφείο International Spar στο Άμστερνταμ για τον έλεγχο και την περαιτέρω ανάπτυξη της οργάνωσης σε όλη την Ευρώπη και σε άλλες ηπείρους. |
i have been in my relationship for 5 yrs. and our views are changing should i go or work on it.? | you should never have to give up anything for somebody you love. and if he really wants a house, think about like this, you're going back to school to better your education to recieve higher pay, so he should either be patient, or settle for nothing. |
Elongatosybra | Elongatosybra flava |
how soon after implantation will i get a positive pregnancy test? | With most current pregnancy test kits, hCG can be detected in the urine as early as 3-4 days after implantation, though it often takes longer. If you are pregnant, on the day you miss your period about 74% of HPTs will be positive. |
I need to know what to do next. | Sonra ne yapacağımı bilmem gerek. |
Sami wants to marry a Muslim woman. | Sami Müslüman bir kadınla evlenmek istiyor. |
My German friend is called Hans. | माझ्या जर्मन मित्राला हान्स म्हणतात. |
Rajko Ljubič | Rajko Ljubić |
In 2010, the league size was increased to 21 teams divided into four divisions. | Το 2010, ο αριθμός των ομάδων του πρωταθλήματος αυξήθηκε σε 21, οι οποίες χωρίστηκαν σε τέσσερις κατηγορίες. |
Chris Tucker reached a resolution with the IRS on Friday, his rep says .
The tax bill was from "poor accounting and business management," rep says .
A report Tucker owes $14 million to the IRS was inaccurate, his rep says . | Comedian Chris Tucker's multimillion dollar tax bill isn't very funny, but he's reached a deal with the IRS to settle it, his representative said Monday. The federal tax collector placed a $2.5 million lien against Tucker in Georgia last week, but it was just a "technical requirement" before a settlement could become official, Tucker's representative said. "Chris Tucker has not incurred any new tax years," the representative said. "The current lien filing by the IRS was the result of an audit that lasted for four years which stemmed from poor accounting and business management." "Representatives for Mr. Tucker reached a resolution with the IRS on Friday, and his case has been settled," the representative said. A TMZ report that Tucker owed $14 million to the IRS was inaccurate, the rep said. |
In addition, the booklet contains an ID code that allows the owner to download the entire album and three extra tracks from the Internet for a limited time. | 此外,一个包含ID代码的小册子允许所有者在有限的时间内从互联网下载整个专辑和三个附加曲目。 |
Monitors do not directly prevent electoral fraud, but rather record and report such instances. | Monitores que no evitan directamente el fraude electoral, pero sí asientan y reportan tales circunstancias. |
the Universiade clean-up reminds us that yes a hukou matters, not by its presence, but in its absence. | η εκκαθάριση της Πανεπιστημιάδας μας θυμίζει ότι το hukou λάμπει, δια της απουσίας κι όχι της παρουσίας του. |
coveted Filmfare award for best playback singer had only one category (either male or female) until 1966. "Titli Udi" song, however, was tied as best song with Mohd Rafi's song "Baharo Phool Barsao" which had never happened before. Sharda didn't win the award but from then on Filmfare started giving two awards for best playback singer: one for male singer and the other for female singer. Thus Sharda made history. Thereafter Sharda was nominated four years in a row (1968–71) for best female playback singer and won another Filmfare award. In a short span Sharda won two Filmfare awards, when the Mangeshkar Sisters were dominating. Thereafter she continued singing for Shankar in nearly all of his films until his death. Her voice was last heard in Kaanch Ki Deewar (1986). She sang with most of the top singers like Mohd Rafi, Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar, Yesudas, Mukesh and Suman Kalyanpur. She lent her voice to leading ladies of the time like Vyjayanthimala, Sadhana, Saira Banu, Hema Malini, Sharmila Tagore, Mumtaz, Rekha and Helen. Besides Shankar she recorded songs with Usha Khanna, Ravi, Dattaram, Iqbal Qureshi and a few others. She was the first Indian female singer to cut her own pop album in India, called Sizzlers in 1971 which was launched by HMV. She performed on stage on several occasions like Filmfare Awards functions, charity shows, naval functions, and many others. Sharda was never able to reach the top bracket of singers but she did manage to create a certain section of the music listeners as her fans and well wishers. She conducts music lessons for children and aspiring singers. Besides Hindi she also sang in Telugu, Marathi, English, and Gujrathi. Original music On 21 July 2007 Sharda released her Ghazal album Andaaz-e-Bayan Aur, a compilation of Mirza Ghalib's ghazals. The album was released at Juhu Jagriti Mumbai at the hands of actress Shabana Azmi. Music Director Khayyam was present at the release party, where Sharda thrilled the audience by singing a few songs from the album in her well-preserved voice. Shankar composed a song "Ek Chehra jo Dil Ke Kareeb" for a film called Garam Khoon (1980), sung by Lata Mangeshkar which was penned by Sharda under name Singaar and picturised on Sulakshana Pandit. She turned Music Director in the mid-1970s and gave music for films like Maa Behen Aur Biwi, Tu Meri Main Tera, Kshitij, Mandir Masjid and Maila | her own compositions based on Mirza Ghalib's ghazals. Early life Sharda was from an Iyengar family from Tamil Nadu, India and was inclined towards music from childhood. She has the distinction of being a BA graduate. Career Early in her career Sharda was offered a voice test by Raj Kapoor when he first heard her singing in a function at Shrichand Ahuja's residence in Tehran. She got her first big break in Bollywood with the song "Titli Udi" in Suraj (1966). She was promoted by Shankar of the Shankar Jaikishan duo. "Titli udi" turned out to be a top chartbuster in 1966. It so happens that the coveted Filmfare award for best playback singer had only one category (either male or female) until 1966. "Titli Udi" song, however, was tied as best song with Mohd Rafi's song "Baharo Phool Barsao" which had never happened before. Sharda didn't win the award but from then on Filmfare started giving two awards for best playback singer: one for male singer and the other for female singer. Thus Sharda made history. Thereafter Sharda was nominated four years in a row (1968–71) for best female playback singer and won another Filmfare award. In a short span Sharda won two Filmfare awards, when the Mangeshkar Sisters were dominating. Thereafter she continued singing for Shankar in nearly all of his films until his death. Her voice was last heard in Kaanch Ki Deewar (1986). She sang with most of the top singers like Mohd Rafi, Asha Bhosle, Kishore Kumar, Yesudas, Mukesh and Suman Kalyanpur. She lent her voice to leading ladies of the time like Vyjayanthimala, Sadhana, Saira Banu, Hema Malini, Sharmila Tagore, Mumtaz, Rekha and Helen. Besides Shankar she recorded songs with Usha Khanna, |
in Poland: Chomiąża, Lower Silesian Voivodeship | Poland: Chomiąża, Lower Silesian Voivodeship Chomiąża, |
Linn–Benton Community College | リン・ベントン・コミュニティ・カレッジ |
what is lab c trachomatis | Chlamydia trachomatis. Chlamydia trachomatis (/klÉËmɪdiÉ/ /trÉËkoÊmÉtáµ»s/), commonly known as chlamydia, is one of four bacterial species in the genus Chlamydia. Chlamydia is a genus of pathogenic bacteria that are obligate intracellular parasites. C. trachomatis is a Gram-negative bacterium. It is ovoid in shape and nonmotile. |
brighton township phone number | The Township Solicitor is Joseph M. Budicak who is located at 401 â 13th Street, New Brighton, PA. Phone number is 724-847-7299. Animal Control Officer: Beaver County Humane Society, 3394 Brodhead Road, Aliquippa, PA 15010 â 724-775-5801. Pulaski Township Police: The police services are contracted with the Borough of New Brighton. |
Yandobinskoye Rural Settlement | Яндобинське сільське поселення |
Protein tag | 표지단백질 |
"South Sudan's army advances on rebels in Bentiu and Bor". | 29 de dezembro de 2013 «South Sudan's army advances on rebels in Bentiu and Bor». |
what are main and rod bearings? | A main bearing has a hole for passing oil to the feed holes in the crankshaft. ... Connecting rod bearings provide rotating motion of the crank pin within the connecting rod, which transmits cycling loads applied to the piston. Connecting rod bearings are mounted in the Big end of the connecting rod. |
is bitter gourd good for uric acid patient? | Bitter gourd is commonly recommended in Ayurveda for the treatment of vata ailments. As such, it's often prescribed for the treatment of gout. However, there is no real scientific evidence that suggests that bitter gourd can reduce uric acid levels or treat gout. |
when to send out invitations baby shower? | Think about it this way: The typical baby shower should take place around your sixth or seventh month, and shower invitations should be sent out about four weeks beforehand. So you're looking at about your five- or six-month mark. Earlier than that, guests might forget. |
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