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reine Marguerite (1877). Les métiers et corporations de la Ville de Paris (4 volumes, 1879–97). XIIIe siècle: le livre des métiers d'Étienne Boileau (with François Bonnardot, 1879). Une famille noble sous la Terreur (1879). Le Nivernais et les comtes de Nevers (3 volumes, 1909–14). Cartulaire de Saint-Cyr de Nevers (1916). | de l'Île-de-France (from 1874) and served as president of the Société nivernaise des lettres, sciences et arts. Selected works Sacramentarium ad usum Æcclesiæ nivernensis (1873). Vie et vertus de Saint Louis d'après Guillaume de Nangis et le confesseur de la |
what is the difference between a mercedes ml and gle? | Although the GLE-Class is essentially the M-Class, Mercedes-Benz refreshed the midsize SUV for 2016. ... The 2016 Mercedes-Benz GLE features more dramatic hood creases and a few noticeable changes in the front fascia, but the notable C-Pillar and wraparound rear glass remain present in the new model. |
pop art was considered a flat style, lacking perspectival plays of space. However, he argued that despite the receiving lines of roads, the paintings ultimately were flat. In fact, these works are full of contrasts and contradictions: the flat surface has deep linear perspective; though there are recognizable motifs present, they are highly schematized; and, abstract designs are mixed with recognizable objects, such as trees. 1970s Next came a series "Barriers," in which cropped, abstracted imagery of road barriers were superimposed over the one-point perspectival highway vistas. These were a move further towards concern with abstract, two-dimensionality without negating the element culled from seen aspects of the American landscape. The series called "Constellation" (there are 120 in all) further abstracted the view of road barriers into perspectival, jutting patterns thrusting across the canvas against a white ground. The element of the seen is never obliterated and always primary in D'Arcangelo's dialectic, as amply evidenced in his return to highway imagery in the 1970s. Though works from these two series appear abstract, D'Arcangelo still referred to them as landscapes because they generate the same sense of endless space and forces the space of the canvas to move between flatness and depth. Late 1970s and Early 1980s For several years during that decade, D'Arcangelo slowed down his formerly prolific output. He sheds highway motifs completely and turns, instead, to cropped views of buildings and other structures, containers, and views outside of an airplane. In the Spring of 1982, he had his first one-man exhibition in New York in five years. The new pictures were rather scenic landscape vistas, simplified and showing his ongoing concern with jutting perspectival space, now inhabited by flatly painted images of highway overpasses, a jet wing, grain field, electric lines. Indications of the American industrial scene seem more related to the hand-painted, pristine look of Charles Sheeler than to the pop of, say, Roy Lichtenstein In form, there is also a reminiscence of field paintings in the simplicity and emblematic quality of these works. Now, as before, the main element in D'Arcangelo's pictures is the post-abstraction search for, as he put it, "icons that matter," monumental archetypes of the contemporary American expansive landscape highway. Exhibitions Solo Exhibitions 1958 Allan D'Arcangelo: Oleos y Dibujos, Galeria Genova, Mexico City, August 1–19 1961 Allan D'Arcangelo, Long Island University Galleries, Brooklyn, November 8–December 1 1963 Fischbach Gallery, New York, April 30–May 25 1964 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 25–March 21 1965 Ileana Sonnabend Gallery, Paris, January–February Fischbach Gallery, New York, May–June Gallery Müller, Stuttgart, Germany Hans Neuendorf Gallery, Hamburg, Germany 1966 Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, January 18–February 12 1967 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 14–March 4 Galerie Ricke, Kassel, Germany, March 4–April 5 Obelisk Gallery, Boston, November Minami Gallery, Tokyo, November 22–December 9 Württembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germany 1968 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Paintings, Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit, February 13–March 9 Lambert Gallery, Paris 1969 Allan D'Arcangelo, Gegenverkehr, Aachen, Germany, January 16–February 6 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 1–20 Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit 1970 Obelisk Gallery, Boston, March Skylite Gallery, Wisconsin State University, Eauclaire, September 16–October 6 1971 Allan D'Arcangelo, Paintings 1963–1970, Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, March 10–April 16; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, May 16–June 27; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, July 10–September 5 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Work, Marlborough Gallery, November 6–30 1972 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Paintings and Works on Paper, Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit, March 4–31 Elvejen Art Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison 1974 Schacht Fine Art Center, Russell Sage College, Troy, New York Patricia Moore Gallery, Aspen, Colorado Hokin Gallery, Chicago 1975 Recent Paintings by Allan D'Arcangelo, Marlborough Gallery, New York, January 11–February 1 Gallery Kingpitcher, Pittsburgh 1977 Allan D'Arcangelo, Drawings and Graphics, Contemporary Art Forms, Encino, California, October 7–28 Fiterman Gallery, Minneapolis 1978 D'Arcangelo, Paintings of the Early Sixties, Neuberger Museum, State University of New York at Purchase, June 6–September 10 1979 Allan D'Arcangelo, Institute of Contemporary Art of the Virginia Museum, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, May 8–July 1 1979–1980 The American Landscape, Paintings by Allan D'Arcangelo, Burchfield Center, Buffalo, May 6–August 31, 1979; Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art, November 7–25, 1979; University Art Gallery, State University of New York at Albany, January 22–February 29, 1980; Wichita Art Museum, Kansas, March 30–May 11, 1980; Olean Public Library, New York, June 10–July 8, 1980 1982 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings 1978–1982, Grace Borgenicht Gallery, New York, May 11–June 6 1984 Recent Paintings, Elizabeth Galasso Gallery, Ossining, New York 1991 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings, Jaffe Baker Gallery, Boca Raton, February–March 2000 Allan D'Arcangelo: The Pop Years, Beth Urdang Gallery, November 11–December 6 2005 Allan D'Arcangelo, Retrospettiva, Palazzina dei Giardini, Modena, January 23–March 28 2009 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings 1962–1982, Mitchell Innes & Nash, New York, April 2–May 2 2014 Beyond Pop: Allan D'Arcangelo, Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York, May 1–31 2017 Allan D'Arcangelo: Without Sound, 1974–1982, Garth Greenan Gallery, New York, April 18–June 3 2018 Allan D'Arcangelo: Pi in the Sky, Waddington Custot, London, UK, January 12-February 28 Group Exhibitions 1958 Annual Exhibition, Mexican American Institute, Mexico City 1963 Landscape USA, Wilcox Gallery, Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, February 9–March 5 Pop Art USA, Oakland Art Museum, California; California College of Arts and Crafts, September 7–29 The Popular Image, Institute of Contemporary Art, London, October 24–November 23 Mixed Media and Pop Art, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, November 19–December 15 Three Centuries of Popular Imagery, Des Moines Art Center, Iowa; Addison Gallery, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts The Hard Center, Thibaut Gallery, New York New Realism, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts Popular Imagery, Sarah Lawrence College, New York 1963–1964 An American Viewpoint, Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, December, 1963–January 7, 1964 Toys by Artists, Betty Parsons Gallery, New York, December 17, 1963 – January 4, 1964 1964 Sight and Sound, Cordier Ekstrom Gallery, New York, January 3–25 Nieuwe Realisten, Haags Gemeente Museum, The Hague, Netherlands, June 24–August 30; Akademie der Kunst, Berlin, Germany Pop, Etc., Museum des 20 Jahrhunderts, Vienna, Austria, September 19–October 31 West Side Artists: New York City, Riverside Museum, New York, September 27–November 8 Landscapes, Bryon Gallery, New York American Landscape Painting, Museum of Modern Art, New York; Spoleto Festival, Italy Boxes, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles Anti-Sensitivity Art, Ohio University, Athens Salon du Mai, Paris 1965 The Arena of Love, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, January 5–February 1 Pop Art, Nouveau Realisme, Etc. ... , Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, February 5–March 1 The New American Realism, Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts, February 18–April 4 Allan D'Arcangelo: Bilder und John Chamberlain: Plastiken, Galerie Rudolf Zwirner, March Pop Art and the American Tradition, Milwaukee Arts Center, Wisconsin, April 9–May 9 Northeastern Regional Exhibition of Art Across America, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, May 1–June 6 Self-Portraits, School of Visual Arts, New York Pop Art Aus USA, Galerie Neuendorf, Hamburg, Germany New Acquisitions, Larry Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut Figuration in Contemporary Art, Greuze Gallery, Paris Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies, Colorado Love and Kisses, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles 1965–1966 Arakawa, Allan D'Arcangelo, Mark di Suervo, Robert Grosvenor, Anthony Magar, Neil Williams, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, December 21, 1965 – January 15, 1966 1965–1967 Pop and Op, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, 1965; American Federation of Arts Gallery, New York, 1966; Commercial Museum, Philadelphia Civic Center, Philadelphia, 1966; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, 1966; Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, 1966; Flint Institute of Arts, Michigan, 1966; William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, 1966; Isaac Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans, 1966; Columbus Museum of Arts and Crafts, Columbus, Georgia, 1966; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, 1966; Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio, 1966; California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, 1967; Portland Art Museum, Oregon, 1967; Municipal Art Gallery, Los Angeles, 1967; Oklahoma Art Center, Oklahoma City, 1967; Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, Utica, New York, 1967 1966 Contemporary Art USA, Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences, Virginia, March 18–April 10 Conditional Commitment: The Artist's Terms, Upsala College, East Orange, New Jersey, March 25–April 10 Games Without Rules, Fischbach Gallery, New York, March 29–April 16 Critic's Choice, Long Beach Museum of Art, California, April 3–May 1 11 Pop Artists: The New Image, Galerie Friedrich-Dahlem, Munich, Germany; Galerie Neuendorf, Hamburg, Germany, April 24–May 31 The Harry M. Abrams Collection, Jewish Museum, New York, June 29–September 5 Sculpture and Painting Today: Selections from the Collection of Susan Hilles, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, October 7–November 6 A National Small Painting Show, University of Omaha, November 7–30 American Pop Artists, Galleria La Bertesca, Genova, Italy, November 12–December 10 Group Show, Pratt Center for Contemporary Printmaking, New York Current Trends in American Art, Westmoreland County Museum of Art, Greensburg, Virginia Graphics International, Phoenix Gallery, New York Prints, AFA Gallery, New York Landscapes, School of Visual Arts, New York Writer's Conference, Long Island University, Brooklyn 1966–1967 The John G. Powers Collection, Larry Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut, September 25, 1966 – January 15, 1967 The Watershed: Two Decades of American Painting, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, October 15–November 27, 1966; Kyoto, December 10, 1966–January 22, 1967; National Gallery of Victoria, *Australia, 1967; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Australia, 1967; Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi, India, April 1967 5th International Biennial of Prints, National Museum, Tokyo, December 4, 1966 – January 22, 1967 New Forms, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Württembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germany, 1966–1967; Kunsthalle, Bern, Switzerland, 1967 1966–1970 Americans Today, 25 Painters as Printmakers, Museum of Modern Art, New York, November 1–9; Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Africa, 1970 1967 Paintings: Studio 11, Württembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germany, January 17–February 5 Formen der Farbe, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, February 17–March 26 Original Pop Art, Städtische Kunstausstellung, Gelsenkirchen, Germany, March 5–May 20 American Painting Now, Expo 67, American Pavilion, Montreal, Canada, April–October Form, Color, Image, Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan, April 11–May 21 Premio Internacional, Instituto Torcuato di Tella, Buenos Aires, Argentina, September–October Transatlantic Graphics, Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne, September 30–October 21 The 180 Beacon Collection of Contemporary Art, 180 Beacon Street, Boston, October Art on Paper, Weatherspoon Museum, Greensboro, North Carolina, October 15–November 22 Protest and Hope, New School Art Center, New York, October 24–December 2 Prints, Society of American Graphic Artists, New York Environment USA: 1957–1967, IX Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil Group Show, Vanderlip Gallery, Philadelphia Highlights of the 1966–1967 Art Season, Larry Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut American Painting Now, ACA Gallery, Boston Contemporary Drawings, New York University Director's Choice, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota Pop Art Americana: D'Arcangelo, Dine, Kelly, Lichtenstein, Oldenburg, Phillips, Ramos, Rosenquist, Segal, Warhol, Wesley, Wesselman, Galleria De' Foscherari, Bologna, Italy 1967–1968 Frank O'Hara / In Memory of My Feelings, Museum of Modern Art, New York, December 5, 1967 – January 28, 1968 Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, December 13, 1967 – February 4, 1968 American Painting Now, Horticultural Hall, Boston, December 15, 1967 – January 10, 1968 1968 American Paintings on the Market Today, Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio, April 9–May 12 L'Art Vivant 1965–1968, Fondation Maeght à St. Paul de Vence, France, April 13–June 30 Five Museums Come to Fordham University, Fordham University, New York, April 28–May 19 Social Comment in America, Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Art, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, June 13–July 7 Beyond Literalism: An Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture by Allan D'Arcangelo, Charles Fahlen, Jack Krueger, Naoto Nakagawa, Frank Roth, William Schwedler, William Wiley, Moore College of Art, *Philadelphia, October 4–November 2 Environment U.S.A.: 1957–1967, Rose Art Museum, Waltham, Massachusetts 1 Print, 1 Painting, School of Visual Art, New York Exposicion International de Dibujo, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Recent Directions in American Art, University of California at Riverside Last Ten Years of Contemporary Art, Fordham University, New York 1968–1969 Querschnitt, Galerie Rickie, Lindenstraße, Germany, November 27, 1968 – January 7, 1969 1969 Toledo Collectors of Modern Art, Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, March 9–April 6 American Sculpture of the Sixties, Grand Rapids Art Museum, Michigan, March 22–May 24 Superlimited: Boxes, Books and Things, Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Jewish Museum, New York, April 16–June 29 New Acquisitions, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, May 15–June 22 Contemporary Art – Acquisitions, 1966–1969, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, June 17–September 1 Painting for City Walls, Museum of Modern Art, New York, July 14–November 5 Ikonen der Verkehrskuitur, Kunstzentrum Gegenverkegr, Aachen, Germany Critic's Choice 1968–69, New York State Council on the Arts and the State University of New York 1969-1970 American Drawings of the Sixties, A Selection, New School Art Center, New York, November 11, 1969 – January 10, 1970 1970 The Highway, University of Pennsylvania, Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, January 14–February 25; Houston Texas Institute for the Arts, Rice University, March 12–May 18; Akron Art Institute, Ohio, June 5–July 26 American Prints Today, Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, Utica, New York, January 18–February 22 Painting and Sculpture Today, Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana, April 21–June 1 Using Walls (Indoors), Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Jewish Museum, New York, May 13–June 21 Pop Art, Galerie de Gestlo, Hamburg, Germany, June 25–August 22 Internationale der Zeichnung, Zeitgenossische Kunst, Darmstadt, Germany, August 15–November 11 IV Bienal Americana de Grabado, Museo National de Bellas Artes, Santiago, Chile Kunst der Sechziger Jahre, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne, Germany XI Bienal De Arte Coltejer de Medellin, Colombia, South America Exhibition of Paintings Eligible for the Childe Hassam Fund Purchase, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York American Painting: the 1960s, American Federation of Arts, New York 1971 20th-Century Painting & Sculpture from the New York University Art Collection, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York, October 2–November 14 Collage of Indignation, Hundred Acres/Lower Gallery, New York, October 13–November 6 Inner Spaces/Outer Limits: Myths and Mythmakers, Lerner-Misrachi Gallery, New York, November 25–December 25 1971–1972 The Artist and the American Landscape, AM Sachs Gallery, New York, November 30, 1971 – January 5, 1972 1972 Art in Process, Finch College Museum of Art, New York, February Painting and Sculpture Today 1972, Indianapolis Museum of Art, April 26–June 4 Bienal Americana des Artes Graficas, La Terulia Museum, Cali, Colombia Group Show, Elvehjem Art Museum, Madison, Wisconsin 1973 Exhibition of Paintings Eligible for Childe Hassam Fund Purchase, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, November 9–December 16 Contemporary Artists: Early and Late Paintings, Hamilton College, Root Art Center, Clinton, New York List Art Posters, New School Art Center, New York Group Show, National Academy of Design, New York 1973–1974 Hommage à Picasso, Kestner-Gessellschaft, Hannover, Germany, November 23, 1973 – January 13, 1974 1974 American Pop Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, April 6–June 16 Contemporary American Painting from the Lewis Collection, Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Delaware, September 13–October 27 II Bienal Americana de Artes Graficas, Museo La Tertulia, Cali, Colombia 1974-1975 Inaugural Exhibition, Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, D.C., October 4, 1974 – September 15, 1975 1975 Six Corporate Collectors: Western New York's New Art Patrons, Burchfield Center, Buffalo Group Show, Dorsky Gallery, New York Group Show, Marlborough-Goddard Gallery, Toronto 1975–1976 Images of an Era: The American Poster 1945–75, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., November 21, 1975 – January 4, 1976; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, February | the GI Bill to study painting at Mexico City College from 1957–59, driving there over 12 days in an old bakery truck retrofitted as a camper. However, he returned to New York in 1959, in search of the unique American experience. It was at this time that his painting took on a cool sensibility reminiscent of Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol. However, throughout his life, D'Arcangelo remained politically active-and this is evident in his painting, though not necessarily in an overt way. His interests engaged with the environment, anti-Vietnam War protests, and the commodification and objectification of female sexuality. Through his painting and writings, it is clear that D'Arcangelo had a palpable discomfort with the social mores of his time, which can be read in the detached treatment with which he treated his subjects. D'Arcangelo first achieved recognition in 1962, when he was invited to contribute an etching to The International Anthology of Contemporary Engraving: America Discovered; his first solo exhibition came the next year, at the Thibaud Gallery in New York City. In 1965 he contributed three screenprints to Original Edition's 11 Pop Artists portfolio. By the 1970s, D'Arcangelo had received significant recognition in the art world. He was well known for his paintings of quintessentially American highways and infrastructure, and in 1971 was commissioned by the Department of the Interior to paint the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state. However, his sense of morality always trumped his interest in art world fame. In 1975, he decided to quit the gallery that had been representing him for years, Marlborough Gallery, because of the way they handled Mark Rothko's legacy. This ultimately sealed his fate of exclusion in the art establishment. He retired to a farm in Kenoza Lake with his family, where he continued to paint and even make earth works. Because of this move, D'Arcangelo's legacy is perhaps less well known than it could have been. He was considered a figure who straddled the lines between many styles of art and was hard to categorize. His cool, pop-like sensibility also met with the usual crisis concerning art movements in the contemporary art world; usually, art movements only last a decade and are then replaced with a new style. However, he did return to the city to continue teaching at Brooklyn College from 1973–1992 and the School of Visual Arts from 1982–1992, where he had also previously taught from 1963–1968. Finally, he died in 1998 in New York City due to complications with leukemia. Artistic Style D'Arcangelo rejected Abstract Expressionism, though his early work has a painterly and somewhat expressive feel. He quickly turned to a style of art that seemed to border on Pop Art and Minimalism, Precisionism and Hard-Edge painting. Evidently, he didn't fit neatly in the category of Pop Art, though he shared subjects (women, signs, Superman) and techniques (stencil, assemblage) with these artists. To D'Arcangelo, his style was less important than the subject matter he depicted and he believed that a culture of protest and resistance was more meaningful than any aesthetic concerns. And the subject he chose to explore first and foremost was the American experience. At first he touched on specific motifs in the contemporary American consciousness, such as President Kennedy's tragic death in Place of Assassination (1965) and environmental concerns in Can Our National Bird Survive? (1962). However, he quickly turned to expansive, if detached scenes of the American highway. These paintings are reminiscent of Chirico-though perhaps not as interested in isolation-and Dali-though there is a stronger interest in the present and disinterest in the past. These paintings also have a sharp quality that is reminiscent of the precisionist style, or more specifically, Charles Sheeler. These paintings also show a deep interest in the contradictions of flatness and perspective as represented on a canvas-ideas that, likewise, artists of the Middle Ages and early Renaissance pondered often. Overall, D'Arcangelo makes an effort at distilling his subject matter into its most honest, intelligible, and synoptic descriptions; his paintings are interpretations of the American experience, not just his own memories. 1950s Before D'Arcangelo returned to New York, his style was roughly figurative and reminiscent of folk art. Early 1960s During the early 1960s, Allan D'Arcangelo was linked with Pop Art. "Marilyn" (1962) depicts an illustrative head and shoulders on which the facial features are marked by lettered slits to be "fitted" with the eyebrows, eyes, nose and mouth which appear off to the right in the composition. In "Madonna and Child," (1963) the featureless faces of Jackie Kennedy and Caroline are ringed with haloes, enough to make their status as contemporary icons perfectly clear. Aside from film stars and icons from pop culture, D'Arcangelo also turned to political matters. His well known painting, Can Our National Bird Survive (1962) was painted the same year Rachel Carson published her seminal Silent Spring; its ambiguity also allows the viewer to interpret it as a statement about the Vietnam War. Late 1960s By the mid 1960s, D'Arcangelo had abandoned figurative elements and turned to the American landscape, or, more specifically, the highway. D'Arcangelo is better known for his pictures of highways and roadblocks, which pictured deep perspectival vistas in a simplified, flat plane, the view as seen from the driver's seat as one zooms along the seemingly never-ending American highway in most any state. He was initially interested in painting these scenes in a series, like a film strip, as the view changes outside your car window. In these paintings, the artist treats every single object with the same quality-both the same flatness and lack of extreme detail. This reads as detached; D'Arcangelo sought to investigate our separation from the natural world, which become more of a symbol than a description in these paintings. He was actually critiqued for these paintings as much as he was celebrated; pop art was considered a flat style, lacking perspectival plays of space. However, he argued that despite the receiving lines of roads, the paintings ultimately were flat. In fact, these works are full of contrasts and contradictions: the flat surface has deep linear perspective; though there are recognizable motifs present, they are highly schematized; and, abstract designs are mixed with recognizable objects, such as trees. 1970s Next came a series "Barriers," in which cropped, abstracted imagery of road barriers were superimposed over the one-point perspectival highway vistas. These were a move further towards concern with abstract, two-dimensionality without negating the element culled from seen aspects of the American landscape. The series called "Constellation" (there are 120 in all) further abstracted the view of road barriers into perspectival, jutting patterns thrusting across the canvas against a white ground. The element of the seen is never obliterated and always primary in D'Arcangelo's dialectic, as amply evidenced in his return to highway imagery in the 1970s. Though works from these two series appear abstract, D'Arcangelo still referred to them as landscapes because they generate the same sense of endless space and forces the space of the canvas to move between flatness and depth. Late 1970s and Early 1980s For several years during that decade, D'Arcangelo slowed down his formerly prolific output. He sheds highway motifs completely and turns, instead, to cropped views of buildings and other structures, containers, and views outside of an airplane. In the Spring of 1982, he had his first one-man exhibition in New York in five years. The new pictures were rather scenic landscape vistas, simplified and showing his ongoing concern with jutting perspectival space, now inhabited by flatly painted images of highway overpasses, a jet wing, grain field, electric lines. Indications of the American industrial scene seem more related to the hand-painted, pristine look of Charles Sheeler than to the pop of, say, Roy Lichtenstein In form, there is also a reminiscence of field paintings in the simplicity and emblematic quality of these works. Now, as before, the main element in D'Arcangelo's pictures is the post-abstraction search for, as he put it, "icons that matter," monumental archetypes of the contemporary American expansive landscape highway. Exhibitions Solo Exhibitions 1958 Allan D'Arcangelo: Oleos y Dibujos, Galeria Genova, Mexico City, August 1–19 1961 Allan D'Arcangelo, Long Island University Galleries, Brooklyn, November 8–December 1 1963 Fischbach Gallery, New York, April 30–May 25 1964 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 25–March 21 1965 Ileana Sonnabend Gallery, Paris, January–February Fischbach Gallery, New York, May–June Gallery Müller, Stuttgart, Germany Hans Neuendorf Gallery, Hamburg, Germany 1966 Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, January 18–February 12 1967 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 14–March 4 Galerie Ricke, Kassel, Germany, March 4–April 5 Obelisk Gallery, Boston, November Minami Gallery, Tokyo, November 22–December 9 Württembergischer Kunstverein, Stuttgart, Germany 1968 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Paintings, Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit, February 13–March 9 Lambert Gallery, Paris 1969 Allan D'Arcangelo, Gegenverkehr, Aachen, Germany, January 16–February 6 Fischbach Gallery, New York, February 1–20 Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit 1970 Obelisk Gallery, Boston, March Skylite Gallery, Wisconsin State University, Eauclaire, September 16–October 6 1971 Allan D'Arcangelo, Paintings 1963–1970, Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, March 10–April 16; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, May 16–June 27; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, July 10–September 5 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Work, Marlborough Gallery, November 6–30 1972 Allan D'Arcangelo: Recent Paintings and Works on Paper, Franklin Siden Gallery, Detroit, March 4–31 Elvejen Art Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison 1974 Schacht Fine Art Center, Russell Sage College, Troy, New York Patricia Moore Gallery, Aspen, Colorado Hokin Gallery, Chicago 1975 Recent Paintings by Allan D'Arcangelo, Marlborough Gallery, New York, January 11–February 1 Gallery Kingpitcher, Pittsburgh 1977 Allan D'Arcangelo, Drawings and Graphics, Contemporary Art Forms, Encino, California, October 7–28 Fiterman Gallery, Minneapolis 1978 D'Arcangelo, Paintings of the Early Sixties, Neuberger Museum, State University of New York at Purchase, June 6–September 10 1979 Allan D'Arcangelo, Institute of Contemporary Art of the Virginia Museum, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, May 8–July 1 1979–1980 The American Landscape, Paintings by Allan D'Arcangelo, Burchfield Center, Buffalo, May 6–August 31, 1979; Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art, November 7–25, 1979; University Art Gallery, State University of New York at Albany, January 22–February 29, 1980; Wichita Art Museum, Kansas, March 30–May 11, 1980; Olean Public Library, New York, June 10–July 8, 1980 1982 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings 1978–1982, Grace Borgenicht Gallery, New York, May 11–June 6 1984 Recent Paintings, Elizabeth Galasso Gallery, Ossining, New York 1991 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings, Jaffe Baker Gallery, Boca Raton, February–March 2000 Allan D'Arcangelo: The Pop Years, Beth Urdang Gallery, November 11–December 6 2005 Allan D'Arcangelo, Retrospettiva, Palazzina dei Giardini, Modena, January 23–March 28 2009 Allan D'Arcangelo: Paintings 1962–1982, Mitchell Innes & Nash, New York, April 2–May 2 2014 Beyond Pop: Allan D'Arcangelo, Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York, May 1–31 2017 Allan D'Arcangelo: Without Sound, 1974–1982, Garth Greenan Gallery, New York, April 18–June 3 2018 Allan D'Arcangelo: Pi in the Sky, Waddington Custot, London, UK, January 12-February 28 Group Exhibitions 1958 Annual Exhibition, Mexican American Institute, Mexico City 1963 Landscape USA, Wilcox Gallery, Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, February 9–March 5 Pop Art USA, Oakland Art Museum, California; California College of Arts and Crafts, September 7–29 The Popular Image, Institute of Contemporary Art, London, October 24–November 23 Mixed Media and Pop Art, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, November 19–December 15 Three Centuries of Popular Imagery, Des Moines Art Center, Iowa; Addison Gallery, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts The Hard Center, Thibaut Gallery, New York New Realism, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts Popular Imagery, Sarah Lawrence College, New York 1963–1964 An American Viewpoint, Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, December, 1963–January 7, 1964 Toys by Artists, Betty Parsons Gallery, New York, December 17, 1963 – January 4, 1964 1964 Sight and Sound, Cordier Ekstrom Gallery, New York, January 3–25 Nieuwe Realisten, Haags Gemeente Museum, The Hague, Netherlands, June 24–August 30; Akademie der Kunst, Berlin, Germany Pop, Etc., Museum des 20 Jahrhunderts, Vienna, Austria, September 19–October 31 West Side Artists: New York City, Riverside Museum, New York, September 27–November 8 Landscapes, Bryon Gallery, New York American Landscape Painting, Museum of Modern Art, New York; Spoleto Festival, Italy Boxes, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles Anti-Sensitivity Art, Ohio University, Athens Salon du Mai, Paris 1965 The Arena of Love, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, January 5–February 1 Pop Art, Nouveau Realisme, Etc. ... , Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, February 5–March 1 The New American Realism, Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts, February 18–April 4 Allan D'Arcangelo: Bilder und John Chamberlain: Plastiken, Galerie Rudolf Zwirner, March Pop Art and the American Tradition, Milwaukee Arts Center, Wisconsin, April 9–May 9 Northeastern Regional Exhibition of Art Across America, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, May 1–June 6 Self-Portraits, School of Visual Arts, New York Pop Art Aus USA, Galerie Neuendorf, Hamburg, Germany New Acquisitions, Larry Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut Figuration in Contemporary Art, Greuze Gallery, Paris Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies, Colorado Love and Kisses, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles 1965–1966 Arakawa, Allan D'Arcangelo, Mark di Suervo, Robert Grosvenor, Anthony Magar, Neil Williams, Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles, December 21, 1965 – January 15, 1966 1965–1967 Pop and Op, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, 1965; American Federation of Arts Gallery, New York, 1966; Commercial Museum, Philadelphia Civic Center, Philadelphia, 1966; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, 1966; Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, 1966; Flint Institute of Arts, Michigan, 1966; William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, 1966; Isaac Delgado Museum of Art, New Orleans, 1966; Columbus Museum of Arts and Crafts, Columbus, Georgia, 1966; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, 1966; Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio, 1966; California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, 1967; Portland Art Museum, Oregon, 1967; Municipal Art Gallery, Los Angeles, 1967; Oklahoma Art Center, Oklahoma City, 1967; Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, Utica, New York, 1967 1966 Contemporary Art USA, Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences, Virginia, March 18–April 10 Conditional Commitment: The Artist's Terms, Upsala College, East Orange, New Jersey, March 25–April 10 Games Without Rules, Fischbach Gallery, New York, March 29–April 16 Critic's Choice, Long Beach Museum of Art, California, April 3–May 1 11 Pop Artists: The New Image, Galerie Friedrich-Dahlem, Munich, Germany; Galerie Neuendorf, Hamburg, Germany, April 24–May 31 The Harry M. Abrams Collection, Jewish Museum, New York, June 29–September 5 Sculpture and Painting |
Also, if a large area of the body is suddenly exposed the person may be subject to an anaphylactic reaction. | Inoltre, se una grande area del corpo viene improvvisamente esposta, la persona può essere soggetta ad una reazione anafilattica. |
field of 25 swimmers: 10: the top-10 finishers in the 10 km races at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships (maximum of 2 per NOC) 9: the top-9 finishers at the 2020 Olympic Marathon Swim Qualifier, open only to NOCs with no qualified swimmers (maximum of 1 per NOC) 5: one representative from each FINA continent (Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania), based on the finishes at the 2020 Olympic Qualifier | men's marathon 10 kilometre event at the 2020 Summer Olympics was held on 5 August 2021 at the Odaiba Marine Park. It was the fourth appearance of the event, having first been held in 2008. Florian Wellbrock won the gold medal for Germany, with a final time of 1:48:33.7. This was over 25 seconds ahead of silver medalist Kristóf Rasovszky of Hungary; Gregorio Paltrinieri of Italy took the bronze. 2016 gold medalist Ferry Weertman of the Netherlands came seventh. Qualification The men's 10 km open water marathon at the 2020 Olympics featured a field of 25 swimmers: 10: the top-10 |
Lancaster. At , the Lancaster Minyard featured new technology such as mercury vapor lighting, a 200-car parking lot, automatic air-opened doors, background music, and air-conditioning. By 1960, the 11 Minyard Food Stores generated sales of $15 million. Additional sites were purchased for future expansion and in 1961, a complex on Cedar Springs Street in Dallas became the site of Minyard's central office and distribution operations. By the end of the 1960s, the company had a total of 16 stores. Rapid Expansion An additional 21 stores opened during the 1970s. By 1978, nine shopping centers were also owned by Minyard Properties, Inc. In 1979, a store opened in Mesquite that introduced bar codes and scanning to the chain. Plans for a new corporate headquarters were spearheaded by Bob and H.C. "Henry" Minyard. Henry, however, suffered a fatal heart attack on December 25, 1979 and didn't live to see the ground broken on the new complex. Bob Minyard was named president of the company. In August 1981, the corporate headquarters and distribution center moved to a facility in Coppell, between the cities of Dallas and Fort Worth. By its 50th anniversary in 1982, the company operated 53 stores. That same year, a new concept store, the Sack 'n Save Warehouse Food Store, was introduced. The store, located in Haltom City, offered products in bulk at reduced prices. This new concept was considered necessary to remain competitive in the grocery industry, which faced slow growth during the mid-1980s. In 1987, Minyard purchased 24 stores from Safeway Stores, Inc., which exited the Dallas-Fort Worth market. This boosted the company's presences in the area. A total of 12 stores were bought in Dallas County, nine in neighboring Tarrant County, and three in other counties. Minyard was able to reopen all 24 stores within a record five days. By the end of 1987, the company owned and operated 62 Minyard Food Stores and 10 Sack 'n Save stores. Less than a year after the major acquisition, Chairman and CEO M.T. "Buddy" Minyard died of a heart attack. Leadership of the company passed to his two daughters, Lisbeth "Liz" Minyard and Gretchen Minyard Williams and CEO J. L. "Sonny" Williams Increased competition In 1990, the company announced that it would open a new store format dedicated to the growing, mostly under-served minority population in ethnic neighborhoods. Operating under the name Carnival Food Stores, ethnic merchandise was offered in addition to traditional grocery products depending on the neighborhood it served. Three Carnival Food Stores opened in Fort Worth in the summer of 1990. Two catered to African Americans and one focused on Hispanic shoppers. The concept proved to be successful and Minyard announced plans to open four additional Carnival Food Stores by late 1991. A total of 21 Carnival stores were operating by the end of the decade. The 1990s were a period of increased competition in the Dallas-Fort Worth area grocery market. In addition to longtime competitors such as Kroger and Tom Thumb, new chains were also entering the market. The most notable entrant was North Carolina-based Food Lion, which planned on opening 50 stores in the area. Minyard focused on improving customer service to deal with the growing competition. Store expansion slowed, although new stores were opened in strategic locations. By the mid-1990s, the company had | and CEO M.T. "Buddy" Minyard died of a heart attack. Leadership of the company passed to his two daughters, Lisbeth "Liz" Minyard and Gretchen Minyard Williams and CEO J. L. "Sonny" Williams Increased competition In 1990, the company announced that it would open a new store format dedicated to the growing, mostly under-served minority population in ethnic neighborhoods. Operating under the name Carnival Food Stores, ethnic merchandise was offered in addition to traditional grocery products depending on the neighborhood it served. Three Carnival Food Stores opened in Fort Worth in the summer of 1990. Two catered to African Americans and one focused on Hispanic shoppers. The concept proved to be successful and Minyard announced plans to open four additional Carnival Food Stores by late 1991. A total of 21 Carnival stores were operating by the end of the decade. The 1990s were a period of increased competition in the Dallas-Fort Worth area grocery market. In addition to longtime competitors such as Kroger and Tom Thumb, new chains were also entering the market. The most notable entrant was North Carolina-based Food Lion, which planned on opening 50 stores in the area. Minyard focused on improving customer service to deal with the growing competition. Store expansion slowed, although new stores were opened in strategic locations. By the mid-1990s, the company had managed to survive the stiff challenges from other chains. Food Lion began closing stores in 1994 and exited Texas in 1997. In 1996, Minyard was the third-largest grocery chain in Dallas-Fort Worth, behind Tom Thumb and Albertsons. In January 1997, the company entered into the gasoline business by opening two gas stations adjacent to two Minyard supermarkets in Dallas. By the end of 1999, the number of Minyard-owned gas stations had risen to twelve. Throughout Minyard's Food Store existence Minyard's would sponsor all local sports team in fact former CEO Sonny Williams and Gretchen Minyard Williams was longtime owner of the Dallas Sidekicks (1984-2004) from 1996-2004. On October 29, 2004, after 72 years in business, the Minyard family sold Minyard Food Stores, Inc. to Acquisition Vehicle Texas II, LLC, an investment company conducting business under name Minyard Group. Q Investments, the ultimate owner of Minyard, began selling off the stores slowly. With its market share declining due to pressure from larger chains (such as Walmart putting full grocery stores in their Walmart Super Centers, and Target and Kmart doing the same), Minyard sold its 37 Carnival stores to a group including Houston-based Fiesta Mart, Inc. in 2008. Minyard also closed or sold its Sack N Save stores to independent operators: the last one (in Denton) would close and the property sold to the University of North Texas. In May 2011, 10 Minyard locations were acquired by RLS Supermarkets of Carrollton. RLS kept the Minyard name on all of them; the locations included Dallas, Duncanville, Balch Springs, Fort Worth, Irving, Lancaster, and Mesquite. In late 2014, Minyard purchased stores |
LGA 1150, also known as Socket H3, is a microprocessor socket used by Intel's central processing units (CPUs) built on the Haswell microarchitecture. This socket is also used by the Haswell's successor, Broadwell microarchitecture. It is the successor of LGA 1155 and was itself succeeded by LGA 1151 in 2015. Most motherboards with the LGA 1150 socket support varying video outputs (VGA, DVI or HDMI depending on the model) and Intel Clear Video Technology. Full support of Windows on LGA 1150 platform starts on Windows 7 - official Windows XP support is limited to selected CPUs, chipsets and only for embedded and industrial systems. Intel's Platform Controller Hub (PCH) for the LGA 1150 CPUs is codenamed Lynx Point. Intel Xeon processors for socket LGA 1150 use the Intel C222, C224, and C226 chipsets. Heatsink The 4 holes for fastening the heatsink to the motherboard are placed in a square with a lateral length | lateral length of 75 mm for Intel's sockets LGA 1156, LGA 1155, LGA 1150, LGA 1151 and LGA 1200. Cooling solutions should therefore be interchangeable. Haswell chipsets First generation Second generation On May 12, 2014, Intel announced the release of two 9-series chipsets, H97 and Z97. Differences and new features of these two chipsets, compared to their H87 and Z87 counterparts, are the following: Support for Haswell Refresh CPUs out of the box Support for the fifth generation of Intel Core CPUs, built around the Broadwell microarchitecture Support for SATA Express, M.2 and Thunderbolt, though only if implemented by the motherboard's manufacturer Two of the six SATA ports can be converted to two PCIe lanes and used to provide M.2 or SATA Express connectivity. Intel refers to this variable configuration |
Rock's backstory was fleshed out in different comics over the years; generally he is considered to have come from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he worked in a steel mill. | La historia de fondo de Rock se enriqueció de diferentes historietas en los últimos años; en general, se considera que su procedencia es de Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, donde trabajó en una fábrica de acero. |
average temperature evergreen co | 12. 8. Climate data for evergreen, Longitude: -105.315, Latitude: 39.6381. Average weather Evergreen, CO - 80437 - 1981-2010 normals. Jan: January, Feb: February, Mar: March, Apr: April, May: May, Jun: June, Jul: July, Aug: August, Sep: September, Oct: October, Nov: November, Dec: December.2. 8. Climate data for evergreen, Longitude: -105.315, Latitude: 39.6381. Average weather Evergreen, CO - 80437 - 1981-2010 normals. Jan: January, Feb: February, Mar: March, Apr: April, May: May, Jun: June, Jul: July, Aug: August, Sep: September, Oct: October, Nov: November, Dec: December. |
many of the leading theories in physics; from Newtonian physics to Relativity to Quantum Physics to String theory and even into the newest version of string theory, called M-theory. He makes available to the reader a comprehensive description of many of the more compelling theories in physics, including many interesting predictions each theory makes, what physicists, astronomers, and cosmologists are looking for now and what technology they are using in their search. Reception Scarlett Thomas writing for The Independent calls Parallel Worlds "absolutely impossible to put down." Mark Mortimer for Universe Today felt the book maintains a nice balance between detail and corollary while sometimes drifting to the philosophical side of things. Gerry Gilmore for The Guardian, however, mocks the notion of trying to escape the far off heat death of the universe, and Gilmore also inaccurately describes the background radiation of the Big Bang as "sound waves." The book was a finalist for the Samuel Johnson Prize for non-fiction in the UK. See also Many-worlds interpretation The | Contents The book has twelve chapters arranged in three parts. Part I (Chapters 1-4) covers the Big Bang, the early development of the Universe, and how these topics relate to the Eternal Inflation Multiverse (Level II in the Tegmark hierarchy of Multiverses). Part II (Chapters 5-9) covers M-Theory and the Everett interpretation of Quantum Mechanics (Level III Multiverse). It also discusses how future technology will enable the creation of wormholes. Part III discusses the Big Freeze and how a Hyperspace wormhole (one in 11-dimensional Hyperspace rather than 3-dimensional normal space) will enable civilization and life to escape to a younger Universe. Theme In Parallel Worlds, Kaku presents many of the leading theories in physics; from Newtonian physics to Relativity to Quantum Physics to String theory and even into the newest version of string theory, called M-theory. He makes available to the reader a comprehensive description of many of the more compelling theories in physics, including many interesting predictions each theory makes, what physicists, astronomers, and cosmologists are looking for now and what technology they are using in their search. |
Within that identity, the historian Sarah Richardson sees that one of Beeton's achievements was the integration of different threads of domestic science into one volume, which "elevat the middle-class female housekeeper's role ... placing it in a broader and more public context". | All'interno di quella identità, la storica Sarah Richardson pensa che una delle conquiste della Beeton fu l'integrazione di diversi filoni della scienza domestica in un unico volume, che "elevò il ruolo della donna di casa della classe media ... ponendolo in un contesto più ampio e pubblico". |
Mysterious Island (Tokyo DisneySea) | ミステリアスアイランド |
the two Hyenas. The Six then infiltrate a Society installation in Brazil. After fighting their way through a legion of H.I.V.E. troopers, apparently led by the Queen Bee, they discover the Society's plans for the "Vindication Scenario": erasing the memories of all of Earth's superheroes. The facility is a giant battery, powered by kidnapped heroes Firestorm and Gehenna. The Six release Firestorm just as Black Adam arrives with a response team, and the facility is destroyed. Betrayal Once the Six return to their base, Cheshire and Catman are in bed together when Cheshire accuses Catman of being a spy and wanting to be a hero. However, she reveals that she has slept with him in order to conceive a child. A short time later, most of the Society's founding council votes to mount a final strike on the Secret Six — Lex Luthor disagrees with a preemptive attack, but the remaining four members (Black Adam is absent for unknown reasons) decide the action is necessary. Simultaneously, the Six agree to a last stand, but only under the condition that any survivors be set free from Mockingbird's control with no strings attached. The Six hunted Prior to the battle between the Society and the Six, Deadshot visits Scandal's room to talk about the team's future. A framed picture on the woman's desk reveals that her father is the immortal Vandal Savage. Before the conversation can progress past basic greetings, Catman ambushes Deadshot and admits knowing that he (Deadshot) masqueraded as the villainous Deathstroke and murdered the lions in his pride. The two scuffle before finding the real Deathstroke leading a small band of villains to the front door of the House of Secrets. As the crew debates how the Society found them, Cheshire confesses to several traitorous deeds, including giving Luthor the coordinates of the Six's base and covertly joining the Society. When asked why she would do such a thing, considering Mockingbird's threat to kill her daughter if she does not comply, Cheshire points out that the baby she is having with Catman would make a fine replacement for a lost child. Mockingbird revealed The Society storms through the castle, and Cheshire is shot by Deathstroke, who comments that "The Society doesn't need traitors". The Secret Six, however, fights back successfully. Talia and Scandal, daughters of immortals Ra's al Ghul and Vandal Savage, respectively, fight each other. Just when Talia has the upper hand, Scandal's mole in the Society, Knockout, knocks her out (it is also revealed that Knockout is Scandal's lover). Ragdoll convinces Solomon Grundy, a fellow "ugly monster", to switch sides. Ragdoll fights his father until Parademon beats the elder Rag Doll. Catman and Ragdoll Jr. escape from Black Adam's group while Parademon blows up himself, Rag Doll and the battleground. Deathstroke and Deadshot duel, ultimately shooting each other at the same time. To save his daughter Scandal, Vandal Savage infiltrates the Society's headquarters and threatens to kill Luthor if he does not disengage the attack against the Six. Reluctantly, and over Black Adam's objections, Luthor ends the battle. Deadshot is led to medical help by the surviving members of the Secret Six. The | she does not comply, Cheshire points out that the baby she is having with Catman would make a fine replacement for a lost child. Mockingbird revealed The Society storms through the castle, and Cheshire is shot by Deathstroke, who comments that "The Society doesn't need traitors". The Secret Six, however, fights back successfully. Talia and Scandal, daughters of immortals Ra's al Ghul and Vandal Savage, respectively, fight each other. Just when Talia has the upper hand, Scandal's mole in the Society, Knockout, knocks her out (it is also revealed that Knockout is Scandal's lover). Ragdoll convinces Solomon Grundy, a fellow "ugly monster", to switch sides. Ragdoll fights his father until Parademon beats the elder Rag Doll. Catman and Ragdoll Jr. escape from Black Adam's group while Parademon blows up himself, Rag Doll and the battleground. Deathstroke and Deadshot duel, ultimately shooting each other at the same time. To save his daughter Scandal, Vandal Savage infiltrates the Society's headquarters and threatens to kill Luthor if he does not disengage the attack against the Six. Reluctantly, and over Black Adam's objections, Luthor ends the battle. Deadshot is led to medical help by the surviving members of the Secret Six. The central revelation of the book is that Mockingbird is actually Lex Luthor and that the Luthor who organized the Secret Society is an "imposter" (in reality, Alexander Luthor, Jr.). Mockingbird/Luthor reveals that he chose those six individuals because each had different knowledge and experience that could be used to oppose the Society: Catman, for his knowledge of Batman's villains; Deadshot, for his knowledge of the remaining Suicide Squad members; Parademon, for his experience living on Apokolips; Ragdoll, because he grew up as a "nephew" to the members of the Injustice Society; Scandal, because she grew up with Vandal Savage and his associates; and Cheshire, for her knowledge of the Teen Titans villains. Mockingbird/Luthor reveals to Scandal that he never placed the families of the Six in danger and disbands the team. Also notable is the Society Luthor's apparent murder of Pariah, a character from the original Crisis. Villains United: Infinite Crisis Special #1 - "A Hero Dies but One" In Villains United: Infinite Crisis Special #1, the Secret Six meet to discuss their future as a team, with Deadshot recommending they be a mercenary team for good or evil, "as long as we get paid". In phase one of a master plan, the |
In contrast to fantasy, magic in this sort of writing rarely offers a way out of a problem. | برخلاف فانتزی، جادو در این نوع از نوشتن به ندرت راه گریز از مشکل را ارائه میدهد. |
in Stuttgart Bolków (formerly German Bolkenhain), a town in south-west Poland Bolków, Łódź | manufacturer based in Stuttgart Bolków (formerly German Bolkenhain), a |
now retired and owns Amedo Center, which is an apartment complex that comprises a restaurant, pool place and an electronics shop. in Eldoret, Kenya, as well as many other properties in Kenya. He also runs a training camp for young Kenyan athletes who are given a chance to race alongside elite athletes. He was the chairman of Athletics Kenya North Rift branch. He now holds one of only nine offices in the world at the Regional Development Center in Nairobi, after John Velzian's retirement. He works as a representative of English-speaking countries in Africa, holding one of the important offices associated with International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF), which is an athletic federation governing the sport of athletics. His 1988 win in Boston was a photo finish with Juma Ikangaa. Hussein held off Ikangaa by a mere second. This was the closest Boston Marathon finish ever up until that point. There would be a closer finish in 2000 when Elijah Lagat won. Ikangaa would go on to finish second again in the next two Boston Marathons but would never win it. He is the older brother of Mbarak Hussein, a naturalized U.S. citizen who | is an athletic federation governing the sport of athletics. His 1988 win in Boston was a photo finish with Juma Ikangaa. Hussein held off Ikangaa by a mere second. This was the closest Boston Marathon finish ever up until that point. There would be a closer finish in 2000 when Elijah Lagat won. Ikangaa would go on to finish second again in the next two Boston Marathons but would never win it. He is the older brother of Mbarak Hussein, a naturalized U.S. citizen who is an elite Master's marathoner in his own right and who has two top five finishes himself in Boston (fifth in 2001 and fourth in 2002.) Hussein is a graduate of St. Patrick's High School (Iten, Kenya) and the University of New Mexico (Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA). Achievements See also List of winners of the Boston Marathon References 1958 births Living people Kenyan male long-distance runners Kenyan male marathon runners Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer Olympics Athletes (track and field) at the 1992 Summer Olympics Athletes (track and field) at the 1990 Commonwealth Games Olympic athletes of Kenya Commonwealth Games competitors for Kenya New York City |
how long does it take to see tetanus symptoms? | Signs and symptoms of tetanus appear anytime from a few days to several weeks after tetanus bacteria enter your body through a wound. The average incubation period is seven to 10 days. Common signs and symptoms of tetanus include: Spasms and stiffness in your jaw muscles (trismus) |
Some predators also use aggressive mimicry as a hunting technique. | Alcuni predatori usano il mimetismo aggressivo anche come tecnica di caccia. |
How does Tucson rank among US cities? | Tucson is located 118 mi (190 km) southeast of Phoenix and 60 mi (97 km) north of the United States - Mexico border. The 2010 United States Census puts the city's population at 520,116 with a metropolitan area population at 980,263. In 2009, Tucson ranked as the 32nd largest city and 52nd largest metropolitan area in the United States. A major city in the Arizona Sun Corridor, Tucson is the largest city in southern Arizona, the second largest in the state after Phoenix. It is also the largest city in the area of the Gadsden Purchase. As of 2015, The Greater Tucson Metro area has exceeded a population of 1 million. |
Africa is home to over 1,000 languages -- 2,000 is another estimate that's out there -- with over 2,000 languages and dialects. | 非洲是一个有超过1000种语言的家庭-- 也有人估计 有超过2000种语言和方言 |
Thirty of them were detained and later released. | Trenta di loro vennero arrestati e in seguito rilasciati. |
The Sugar Act of 1764 and the Stamp Act of 1765 limited trade in the colonies . | The Sugar Act of 1764 and the Stamp Act of 1765 severely curtailed mercantile trade in the colonies . |
join UCLA. Upon doing so, he became one of four directors of UCLA's Depression Grand Challenge, which aims to conduct a study of 100,000 people to search for genetic risk factors for depression. This study is intended to be the largest genetic study of a disorder ever conducted in humans. He serves on the editorial board for the journal Current Biology. Awards and honours Flint received The Genetics Society's Medal in 2014. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2019. References External links British geneticists Living people David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA faculty Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellows Population geneticists Academics | and Human Behavior. Career and research Flint is known for his research on the genetics of complex traits in mice and major depressive disorder in humans. In 2015, he and his colleagues published a study that was the first to link two genetic variants to this disorder. In 2016, he left his post as director of the Psychiatric Genetics Group at the University of Oxford's Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics to join UCLA. Upon doing so, he |
how old are nick and lijana? | Nik Wallenda was born in Sarasota, Florida in 1979 and is 40 years old. His older sister Lijana Adina Martha Wallenda is registered in whitepages.com as a Las Vegas resident aged 42. |
Need a name for a islamic culture show.? | I'll say:\nthe light of Islam\nthe holy light\nglories of Islam\nthe foot steps of Islam.......\nand you pick any combination you like. |
The artillery was placed between the casemates themselves. | Артилерія була розміщена між самими каземами. |
how long are you contagious with flu nz? | An infected person can spread the flu for five to seven days after becoming infected. The infectious period can begin 24 hours before the onset of symptoms. This means you can spread the flu without even knowing you're sick. |
Has Tom arrived? | Har Tom kommit? |
how long should you fast before a cholesterol test? | Generally you're required to fast, consuming no food or liquids other than water, for nine to 12 hours before the test. Some cholesterol tests don't require fasting, so follow your doctor's instructions. |
What kind of things do you like doing with your friends? | Arkadaşlarınla ne tarz şeyler yapmayı seversin ? |
What happened to the little boy who cried wolf too many time? | The wolf ate his ass up!!! |
spiny rat species from South America. It | South America. It is found in Brazil. References Phyllomys Mammals described in |
X. Brady (1857–1911), American Jesuit priest Francis Brady, fictional character in The | Francis X. Brady (1857–1911), American Jesuit priest Francis Brady, fictional character in The Butcher Boy (novel) See |
for the Dons; he was part of the squad that came close to winning the League title on the last day of the Scottish Premier League in the 1990–91 season, and achieved further league runners-up finishes in 1992–93 and 1993–94, as well as reaching the 1992 Scottish League Cup Final and 1993 Scottish Cup Final, losing out to Rangers on every occasion. In 1994–95 the club's results were unexpectedly poor and they escaped relegation only via a play-off; these turned out to be Wright's last matches for the club, and the situation also meant his wedding took place in the short time between the regular season and the matches against Dunfermline Athletic rather than in a more relaxed atmosphere after its conclusion, as he had planned. In the summer of 1995, he joined his boyhood heroes (and Aberdeen's main rivals) Rangers for £1.5m. Much of his time at Ibrox was spent injured, following a rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee during a UEFA Champions League match against Juventus in his first season. After just seven league appearances in three years (his spell with the Gers coincided almost exactly with that of Paul Gascoigne who in | these turned out to be Wright's last matches for the club, and the situation also meant his wedding took place in the short time between the regular season and the matches against Dunfermline Athletic rather than in a more relaxed atmosphere after its conclusion, as he had planned. In the summer of 1995, he joined his boyhood heroes (and Aberdeen's main rivals) Rangers for £1.5m. Much of his time at Ibrox was spent injured, following a rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee during a UEFA Champions League match against Juventus in his first season. After just seven league appearances in three years (his spell with the Gers coincided almost exactly with that of Paul Gascoigne who in contrast played over 100 times), Wright had a loan spell with Wolverhampton Wanderers before joining Bradford City in 1998, where he reunited with former Rangers teammate Stuart McCall and helped the club gain promotion to the Premier League in his first season, although he did not make a league appearance in his second. Those two years with the Bantams preceded another two back in Scotland with Dundee United, where he took an interest in the coaching aspect of the game, before he finished his playing career in 2002 with a short spell at Scunthorpe United. International Wright won two international caps while playing for Aberdeen, in March and May 1993. Coaching career Wright joined Dunfermline Athletic as first-team coach in January 2008, moving from a youth coaching role at |
Sciences department at MIT, and an associate member of MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research, as well as an associate researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital. She was an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School (2014–2019). Her specialty is the human language system. Her goal is to try to provide a representation of our brain regions and to study individuals who have healthy brain regions and who have brain disorders. She is also trying to understand the calculations that we perform in our everyday life. During her research she uses different kinds of methods including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), ERPs and intracranial recordings. One of her areas | our everyday life. During her research she uses different kinds of methods including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), ERPs and intracranial recordings. One of her areas of research is the brains of polyglots, who speak multiple languages. This research has been featured in The New Yorker magazine and the BBC World Service documentary, The Polyglots. Awards In 2007, she received the Pathway to Independence Award (K99/R00 career development award) from Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). Personal life She is married to Ted Gibson, a cognitive scientist. References External links Ev |
Conversely, the "tend-and-befriend" reaction refers to the tendency of women to protect their offspring and relatives. | En canvi, la reacció "cuidar i ser amiga" mostra la tendència de les dones a protegir els seus fills i familiars. |
The WBG contributed to the privatization of several state and socially-owned companies, assisted in the modernization of frontier passages, reformation of the judiciary system, road reconstruction, addressed improvement environment, health, and employment services. The current Serbia's World Bank Portfolio includes 13 projects in the areas of transport, real estate management/business environment, competitiveness and jobs, health, flood recovery and flood protection, disaster risk management, financial sector reform, public sector modernization (including the digitalization of selected public services and the modernization of tax administration), and early childhood education. Projects Corridor X Highway With a total cost of $448 million, the Corridor X is the largest World bank project in Serbia, which commitment to the project is $60 million, while the rest is provided by IBRD. The purpose of the Corridor X Highway Project is to enhance the capability of traffic transit, increase safety on each part of three sections of corridor X. The highway lies between Nis and Dimitrovgrad and Leskovac (Grabovnica) and Donji Neradovac. Corridor X includes both railroad and motor highway. It is a portion of the Pan-European network to | World Bank provided funds for 32 projects in Serbia with the combined cost of over $1 billion aimed to improve Serbia’s banking, education, energy, public finance, and social sectors. The WBG contributed to the privatization of several state and socially-owned companies, assisted in the modernization of frontier passages, reformation of the judiciary system, road reconstruction, addressed improvement environment, health, and employment services. The current Serbia's World Bank Portfolio includes 13 projects in the areas of transport, real estate management/business environment, competitiveness and jobs, health, flood recovery and flood protection, disaster risk management, financial sector reform, public sector modernization (including the digitalization of selected public services and the modernization of tax administration), and early childhood education. Projects Corridor X Highway With a total cost of $448 million, the Corridor X is the largest World bank project in Serbia, which commitment to the project is $60 million, while the rest is provided by IBRD. The purpose of the Corridor X Highway Project is to enhance the capability of traffic transit, increase safety on each part of three sections of corridor X. The highway lies between Nis and Dimitrovgrad and Leskovac (Grabovnica) and Donji Neradovac. Corridor X includes both railroad and motor highway. It is a portion of the Pan-European network to expedite the connectivity with other parts of Serbia and other European countries. It is vital for Serbia’s competitiveness and allows conjunction with the center of Europe, Greece, and Asia. By the year 2020, the railway part of the corridor will allow trains to |
Masks have become so popular that some manufacturers make them purely for fashionable use, with no protective function. | Le maschere sono diventate così popolari che alcuni produttori le producono puramente per un uso alla moda, senza funzione protettiva. |
Beyonce released a self-titled album as a surprise .
Fellow artists expressed excitement over the project .
Beyonce says she was inspired by Michael Jackson's "Thriller" | (CNN) -- On a single she previewed as part of a Pepsi ad earlier this year, Beyonce sang, "I'm a grown woman / I can do whatever I want." The singer proved that on Friday when she released a surprise album with no fanfare. Fans promptly lost it and the Internet was on the verge of exploding. Even fellow celebs seemed to have been left breathless. Singer Katy Perry tweeted, "Don't talk to me today unless it's about @Beyonce THANX." Added actress Abigail Breslin, "The new Beyonce album is so perfect wow." The 14-track self-titled album was released exclusively on iTunes at midnight and had to be purchased in its totality. Singles will not be available for purchase until December 20. In addition to the songs, there are also 17 music videos. Speaking to fans via a video on her official Facebook page, Beyonce called the project a "visual album" and said "I see music." "It's more than just what I hear," she said. "When I'm connected to something, I immediately see a visual or a series of images that are tied to a feeling or an emotion, a memory from my childhood, thoughts about life, my dreams or my fantasies. And they're all connected to the music." Her fifth studio album has been eagerly awaited since the success of "4," which was released in 2011. Over the past year she has hinted that something new was in the works and previewed singles including "Grown Woman," "Bow Down/I Been On" and "Standing on the Sun," which served as the soundtrack for her H&M fashion campaign. The new album - which quickly shot to No. 1 on iTunes Friday - features collaborations with rapper Drake, singer Frank Ocean and author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and, of course, her husband, rapper Jay Z. Daughter Blue Ivy also makes a cameo. The bold and innovative move was hailed by critics and fans. USA Today 's Korina Lopez wrote "It's a fully baked album, no filler remixes and re-released greatest hits. By sidestepping promotional blitz and gimmicks, this album could be her most personal yet." According to Gerrick D. Kennedy of the Los Angeles Times, Beyonce, her producers and writers began work on the project last summer while they were all together in the Hamptons. The end result, Kennedy said, "is a striking collection of work that shows her torching the veil of her carefully crafted image." "Songs on the album jump and dive between genres and are woven together with everything from spoken word and trap raps to the coos of her daughter Blue Ivy and vintage Destiny's Child footage," Kennedy wrote. "It's a lot to consume, but a revelatory look at the singer who has tirelessly calculated what she chooses to share (and it's not always much)." Miles Marshall Lewis, the Arts & Culture editor for Ebony.com, writes that Beyonce has overshadowed some other big-name singers who have recently released new projects. "Where pop stars are concerned, Beyoncé easily bests the latest from both Lady Gaga and Britney Spears, rivaling Justin Timberlake with a fraction of the media blitz (so far)," Lewis said. "Now that's a superpower." For her part, Beyonce said in her video to fans that she was inspired by the legendary Michael Jackson. "I remember watching 'Thriller' on TV with my family. It was an event, we all sat around the TV and now looking back, I am so happy I was born around that time," she said. "I miss that immersive experience." |
is currently a producer on the show. Each episode typically includes an interview with an author or other media personality followed by a moderated panel segment featuring a group of "guest geeks." Season 1 (2010) was produced for Tor.com, the website of Tor Books, a science fiction book publisher. Season 2 (2011) was produced for io9, a science | Season 1 (2010) was produced for Tor.com, the website of Tor Books, a science fiction book publisher. Season 2 (2011) was produced for io9, a science fiction and futurism website owned by Gawker Media. Seasons 3–9 (2012–2018) were produced for the |
North Battleford, Saskatchewan. It is one of three high schools in the city. It is part of the Light of Christ Roman Catholic School Division. John Paul II Collegiate was designed by Folstad & Friggstad Architects of Saskatoon. John Paul II Collegiate is the only high school in the Battlefords to offer the French Immersion Program. As well, it | Paul II Collegiate was designed by Folstad & Friggstad Architects of Saskatoon. John Paul II Collegiate is the only high school in the Battlefords to offer the French Immersion Program. As well, it is the only school to teach Advanced Placement courses. Notable alumni Andrew Albers, former MLB |
what is arithmetic progression | In mathematics, an arithmetic progression (AP) or arithmetic sequence is a sequence of numbers such that the difference between the consecutive terms is constant.For instance, the sequence 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15 ⦠is an arithmetic progression with common difference of 2.If the initial term of an arithmetic progression is and the common difference of successive members is d, then the n th term of the sequence () is given by: and in general.A finite portion of an arithmetic progression is called a finite arithmetic progression and sometimes just called an arithmetic progression.he behavior of the arithmetic progression depends on the common difference d. If the common difference is: 1 Positive, the members (terms) will grow towards positive infinity. 2 Negative, the members (terms) will grow towards negative infinity. |
Since August 2017, there are two functional prototypes built by Roding Automobile, whose form and function are already to be largely similar to the end product. | Dall'agosto 2017, ci sono due prototipi funzionali costruiti da Roding Automobile, la cui forma e funzionalità sono molto simili al prodotto finale. |
Paul Henry (broadcaster) | باول هنري (صحفي) |
is a 1948 Argentine film. Cast External links 1948 films Argentine films | a 1948 Argentine film. Cast External |
(Kyōjū Luger P08, Goku Tsubushi) Best Actress: Sawa Suzuki (Ai no Shinsekai) Best Actor: Etsushi Toyokawa (Undo, Angel Dust) Best New Director: Shunji Iwai (Undo) Special: Hiroshi Abe (Kyōjū Luger P08, Ōsaka Gokudō Sensō Shinoidare) Special: Eriko Watanabe (Crest of Betrayal, Kowagaru Hitobito) Best New Encouragement: Isao Ishii (For filming Tokarev.) 10 best films Kyōjū Luger P08 | the best of 1994 in film. The ceremony took place on April 15, 1995, at Theatre Shinjuku in Tokyo. Awards Best Film: Kyōjū Luger P08 Best Director: Takeshi Watanabe (Kyōjū Luger P08, Goku Tsubushi) Best Actress: Sawa Suzuki (Ai no Shinsekai) Best Actor: Etsushi Toyokawa (Undo, Angel Dust) Best New Director: Shunji Iwai (Undo) Special: |
So what if before my Mexican trip, I had followed the immigration debate from both sides, the U.S. and the Mexican? | Què hauria passat si abans del meu viatge a Mèxic hagués fet un seguiment del debat sobre immigració des de les dues vessants, la dels EUA i la mexicana? |
Sandoz (disambiguation) | Sandoz (disambigua) |
Katniss Everdeen finds herself in District 13 after she destroys the games forever. | Katniss Everdeen trafia do Dystryktu 13 po tym jak raz na zawsze położyła kres Głodowym Igrzyskom. |
Sir Gilbert Elliot, 3rd Baronet, of Minto | Gilbert Elliot, 3:e baronet av Minto |
In 1995, at age 53, Larkin became a worldwide star. | In 1995, toen Larkin 53 was, werd hij een wereldwijde ster. |
Günther Wilke | Вильке, Гюнтер |
The single was released through Le Grand's label Darklight Recordings, which was established in January 2015. | El single fue lanzado a través de la etiqueta de Le Grand Darklight Recordings, que se estableció en enero de 2015. |
Theron Smith | ثيرون سميث |
established in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1961. The Hells Angels are often depicted in semi-mythical romantic fashion like the 19th-century James–Younger Gang: free-spirited, iconic, bound by brotherhood and loyalty. At other times, such as in the 1966 Roger Corman film The Wild Angels, they are depicted as violent and nihilistic, little more than a violent criminal gang and a scourge on society. The club became prominent within, and established its notoriety as part of the 1960s counterculture movement in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury District, playing a part at many of the movement's seminal events. Members were directly connected to many of the counterculture's primary leaders, such as Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters, Allen Ginsberg, Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead, Timothy Leary, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Mick Farren, and Tom Wolfe. Writing a book about the club launched the career of "Gonzo" journalist Hunter S. Thompson. From 1968-69 the Hells Angels of San Francisco headquarters was at 715 Ashbury (across from the Grateful Dead house at 710 Ashbury). In 1973, members from several branches of the organization protested at an Environmental Protection Agency hearing about a proposed transportation plan that included restrictions on motorcycle use and sales to get California to meet the new Clean Air Act standards. Insignia The Hells Angels' official website attributes the official "death's head" insignia design to Frank Sadilek, past president of the San Francisco charter. The colors and shape of the early-style jacket emblem (prior to 1953) were copied from the insignias of the 85th Fighter Squadron and the 552nd Medium Bomber Squadron. The Hells Angels utilize a system of patches similar to military medals. Although the specific meaning of each patch is not publicly known, the patches identify specific or significant actions or beliefs of each biker. The official colors of the Hells Angels are red lettering displayed on a white background—hence the club's nickname "The Red and White". These patches are worn on leather or denim jackets and vests. Red and white are also used to display the number 81 on many patches, as in "Support 81, Route 81". The 8 and 1 stand for the respective positions in the alphabet of H and A. These are used by friends and supporters of the club in deference to club rules, which purport to restrict the wearing of Hells Angels imagery to club members. The diamond-shaped one-percenter patch is also used, displaying '1%' in red on a white background with a red merrowed border. The term one-percenter is said to be a response to the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) comment on the Hollister incident, to the effect that 99% of motorcyclists were law-abiding citizens and the last 1% were outlaws. The AMA has no record of such a statement to the press, and calls this story apocryphal. Most members wear a rectangular patch (again, white background with red letters and a red merrowed border) identifying their respective charter locations. Another similarly designed patch reads "Hells Angels". When applicable, members of the club wear a patch denoting their position or rank within the organization. The patch is rectangular and, similar to the patches described above, displays a white background with red letters and a red merrowed border. Some examples of the titles used are President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Sergeant at Arms. This patch is usually worn above the 'club location' patch. Some members also wear a patch with the initials "AFFA", which stands for "Angels Forever; Forever Angels", referring to their lifelong membership in the biker club (i.e., "once a member, always a member"). The book Gangs, written by Tony Thompson (a crime correspondent for The Observer), states that Stephen Cunningham, a member of the Angels, sported a new patch after he recovered from attempting to set a bomb, consisting of two Nazi-style SS lightning bolts below the words 'Filthy Few'. Some law enforcement officials claim that the patch is only awarded to those who have committed or are prepared to commit murder on behalf of the club. According to a report from the R. v. Bonner and Lindsay case in 2005 (see related section below), another patch, similar to the 'Filthy Few' patch is the 'Dequiallo' patch. This patch "signifies that the wearer has fought law enforcement on arrest." There is no common convention as to where the patches are located on the members' jacket/vest. Intellectual property rights According to The Globe and Mail the Hells Angels considered seeking an injunction to block the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation from broadcasting the miniseries The Last Chapter, because of how closely the biker gang at the center of the series resembled the Hells Angels. In March 2007 the Hells Angels filed suit against the Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group alleging that the film entitled Wild Hogs used both the name and distinctive logo of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Corporation without permission. The suit was eventually voluntarily dismissed, after the Angels received assurances from Disney that the references would not appear in the film. On October 7, 2009, Fritz Clapp, attorney at law for the Hells Angels Motorcycle Corporation, contacted online games community FOCO, demanding the removal of all membership marks and club trademarks from the Los Santos Roleplay Forum. While the members of the community were skeptical at first, Fritz Clapp posted a tweet confirming his identity. In October 2010 the Hells Angels filed a lawsuit against Alexander McQueen for "misusing its trademark winged death heads symbol" in several items from its Autumn/Winter 2010 collection. The lawsuit is also aimed at Saks Fifth Avenue and Zappos.com, which stock the jacquard box dress and knuckle duster ring that bear the symbol, which has been used since at least 1948 and is protected by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. A handbag and scarf was also named in lawsuit. The lawyer representing Hells Angels claimed: "This isn't just about money, it's about membership. If you've got one of these rings on, a member might get really upset that you're an impostor." Saks refused to comment, Zappos had no immediate comment and the company's parent company, PPR, could not be reached for comment. The company settled the case with the Hells Angels after agreeing to remove all of the merchandise featuring the logo from sale on their website, stores and concessions and recalling any of the goods that have already been sold and destroying them. In fall 2012 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, Hells Angels sued Toys "R" Us for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and dilution in relation to the sale of yo-yos manufactured by Yomega Corporation, a co-defendant, which allegedly bear the "Death Head" logo. In its complaint, Hells Angels asserted that the mark used on the yo-yos is likely to confuse the public into mistakenly believing that the toys originate with Hells Angels and Yomega filed counterclaims against Hells Angels for cancellation of the "Death Head" registrations on grounds of alleged fraud in the procurement of the registrations. The case settled and the lawsuit was dismissed with prejudice. , the Hells Angels sells its branded merchandise at a | of their forebears. The "Frisco" Hells Angels were reorganized in 1955 with thirteen charter members, Frank Sadilek serving as president, and using the smaller, original logo. The Oakland charter, at the time headed by Barger, used a larger version of the "Death's Head" patch nicknamed the "Barger Larger", which was first used in 1959. It later became the club standard. The first chapter to open outside California was established in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1961. The Hells Angels are often depicted in semi-mythical romantic fashion like the 19th-century James–Younger Gang: free-spirited, iconic, bound by brotherhood and loyalty. At other times, such as in the 1966 Roger Corman film The Wild Angels, they are depicted as violent and nihilistic, little more than a violent criminal gang and a scourge on society. The club became prominent within, and established its notoriety as part of the 1960s counterculture movement in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury District, playing a part at many of the movement's seminal events. Members were directly connected to many of the counterculture's primary leaders, such as Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters, Allen Ginsberg, Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead, Timothy Leary, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Mick Farren, and Tom Wolfe. Writing a book about the club launched the career of "Gonzo" journalist Hunter S. Thompson. From 1968-69 the Hells Angels of San Francisco headquarters was at 715 Ashbury (across from the Grateful Dead house at 710 Ashbury). In 1973, members from several branches of the organization protested at an Environmental Protection Agency hearing about a proposed transportation plan that included restrictions on motorcycle use and sales to get California to meet the new Clean Air Act standards. Insignia The Hells Angels' official website attributes the official "death's head" insignia design to Frank Sadilek, past president of the San Francisco charter. The colors and shape of the early-style jacket emblem (prior to 1953) were copied from the insignias of the 85th Fighter Squadron and the 552nd Medium Bomber Squadron. The Hells Angels utilize a system of patches similar to military medals. Although the specific meaning of each patch is not publicly known, the patches identify specific or significant actions or beliefs of each biker. The official colors of the Hells Angels are red lettering displayed on a white background—hence the club's nickname "The Red and White". These patches are worn on leather or denim jackets and vests. Red and white are also used to display the number 81 on many patches, as in "Support 81, Route 81". The 8 and 1 stand for the respective positions in the alphabet of H and A. These are used by friends and supporters of the club in deference to club rules, which purport to restrict the wearing of Hells Angels imagery to club members. The diamond-shaped one-percenter patch is also used, displaying '1%' in red on a white background with a red merrowed border. The term one-percenter is said to be a response to the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) comment on the Hollister incident, to the effect that 99% of motorcyclists were law-abiding citizens and the last 1% were outlaws. The AMA has no record of such a statement to the press, and calls this story apocryphal. Most members wear a rectangular patch (again, white background with red letters and a red merrowed border) identifying their respective charter locations. Another similarly designed patch reads "Hells Angels". When applicable, members of the club wear a patch denoting their position or rank within the organization. The patch is rectangular and, similar to the patches described above, displays a white background with red letters and a red merrowed border. Some examples of the titles used are President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Sergeant at Arms. This patch is usually worn above the 'club location' patch. Some members also wear a patch with the initials "AFFA", which stands for "Angels Forever; Forever Angels", referring to their lifelong membership in the biker club (i.e., "once a member, always a member"). The book Gangs, written by Tony Thompson (a crime correspondent for The Observer), states that Stephen Cunningham, a member of the Angels, sported a new patch after he recovered from attempting to set a bomb, consisting of two Nazi-style SS lightning bolts below the words 'Filthy Few'. Some law enforcement officials claim that the patch is only awarded to those who have committed or are prepared to commit murder on behalf of the club. According to a report from the R. v. Bonner and Lindsay case in 2005 (see related section below), another patch, similar to the 'Filthy Few' patch is the 'Dequiallo' patch. This patch "signifies that the wearer has fought law enforcement on arrest." There is no common convention as to where the patches are located on the members' jacket/vest. Intellectual property rights According to The Globe and Mail the Hells Angels considered seeking an injunction to block the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation from broadcasting the miniseries The Last Chapter, because of how closely the biker gang at the center of the series resembled the Hells Angels. In March 2007 the Hells Angels filed suit against the Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group alleging that the film entitled Wild Hogs used both the name and distinctive logo of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Corporation without permission. The suit was eventually voluntarily dismissed, after the Angels received assurances from Disney that the references would not appear in the film. On October 7, 2009, Fritz Clapp, attorney at law for the Hells Angels Motorcycle Corporation, contacted online games community FOCO, demanding the removal of all membership marks and club trademarks from the Los Santos Roleplay Forum. While the members of the community were skeptical at first, Fritz Clapp posted a tweet confirming his identity. In October 2010 the Hells Angels filed a lawsuit against Alexander McQueen for "misusing its trademark winged death heads symbol" in several items from its Autumn/Winter 2010 collection. The lawsuit is also aimed at Saks Fifth Avenue and Zappos.com, which stock the jacquard box dress and knuckle duster ring that bear the symbol, which has been used since at least 1948 and is protected by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. A handbag and scarf was also named in lawsuit. The lawyer representing Hells Angels claimed: "This isn't just about money, it's about membership. If you've got one of these rings on, a member might get really upset that you're an impostor." Saks refused to comment, Zappos had no immediate comment and the company's parent company, PPR, could not be reached for comment. The company settled the case with the Hells Angels after agreeing to remove all of the merchandise featuring the logo from sale on their website, stores and concessions and recalling any of the goods that have already been sold and destroying them. In fall 2012 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, Hells Angels sued Toys "R" Us for trademark infringement, unfair competition, and dilution in relation to the sale of yo-yos manufactured by Yomega Corporation, a co-defendant, which allegedly bear the "Death Head" logo. In its complaint, Hells Angels asserted that the mark used on the yo-yos is likely to confuse the public into mistakenly believing that the toys originate with Hells Angels and Yomega filed counterclaims against Hells Angels for cancellation of the "Death Head" registrations on grounds of alleged fraud in the procurement of the registrations. The case settled and the lawsuit was dismissed with prejudice. , the Hells Angels sells its branded merchandise at a retail store in Toronto, Ontario. In 2019, the Hells Angels sued Redbubble in the Federal Court of Australia for infringing on its trademark, launching another suit in 2021 after providing evidence that Redbubble had continued to breach the trademark. Membership In order to become a Hells Angels prospect, candidates must have a valid driver's license, a motorcycle over 750cc, and have the right combination of personal qualities. It is said the club excludes child molesters and individuals who have applied to become police or prison officers. After a lengthy, phased process, a prospective member is first deemed to be a "hang-around", indicating that the individual is invited to some club events or to meet club members at known gathering places. If the hang-around is interested, he may be asked to become an "associate", a status that usually lasts a year or two. At the end of that stage, he is |
Android image file naming Why not use uppercase | Capital letters not allowed in android res |
During the 18 day uprising, a young woman journalist appeared on TV “confessing” she was trained by the Mossad to foment those “riots” in Tahrir. | Во время восстания, длящегося 18 дней, молодая журналистка выступила по телевидению с «признанием" в том, что она прошла подготовку в ведомстве Моссад, чтобы поднять "бунты" на площади Тахрир. |
what are the side effects of the mirena birth control? | ['Headache.', 'Acne.', 'Breast tenderness.', 'Irregular bleeding, which can improve after six months of use.', 'Mood changes.', 'Cramping or pelvic pain.'] |
A further advance in military naval technology was the design of the submarine, and its weapon, the torpedo. | پیشرفت بعدی در فناوری نظامی دریایی، طراحی زیردریایی و سلاح آن یعنی اژدر بود. |
Let's get the work over with so we can relax. | Finissons-en avec ce travail afin de pouvoir nous détendre. |
Gadlys (also known as No. 2 Ward), Llwydcoed (also known as No. 1 Ward), and the Town Ward (also known as No. 3 Ward). At this time, one member was elected from each ward on an annual basis. An election was held in April 1901. It was preceded by the 1900 election and followed by the 1902 election. | Gadlys (also known as No. 2 Ward), Llwydcoed (also known as No. 1 Ward), and the Town Ward (also known as No. 3 Ward). At this time, one member was elected from each ward on an annual basis. An election was held in April 1901. It was preceded by the 1900 election and followed by the 1902 election. The term of office of members elected at the 1898 election came to an end and those elected were to serve until 1904. Labour candidates fought this election but, following the |
As a result, he executed three leaders of the provincial government, accusing them of plotting his overthrow with Huang. | Di conseguenza, giustiziò tre capi del governo provinciale, accusandoli di complottare con Huang per il suo rovesciamento. |
On Western forums, the classic way to show a member's own details (such as name and avatar) has been on the left side of the post, in a narrow column of fixed width, with the post controls located on the right, at the bottom of the main body, above the signature block. | На западните форуми, на класичен начин да се покажат лични детали за членот (како што се името и аватар) е на левата страна на постот, во тесна колона од одредена ширина, пост контроли се наоѓаат на десната страна, на дното е главното тело, пред потписот се наоѓа блокот. |
are lawyers mandated reporters in colorado? | 19-3-304 is by law a mandatory reporter in Colorado. ... State law C.R.S. 19-3-304 outlines the persons required by law to report child abuse and/or neglect. |
Why do two almost neutral components (salt and ice) suddenly start being corrosive when the salt touches the ice? | I think you're referring to people putting both salt and ice on their body, leaving a scar behind. Basically, the salt lowers the melting point of the ice substantially. When the ice starts to melt, it withdraws heat from its surroundings (also from the skin), thus lowering the temperature of the skin and leaving a frostbite scar behind. It's not corrosive though. |
"O Lar e As Ruas: A Dicotomia das Personagens Femininas na Dramaturgia de Nelson Rodrigues" (PDF). | «O Lar e As Ruas: A Dicotomia das Personagens Femininas na Dramaturgia de Nelson Rodrigues» (PDF). |
Stay home, we will fill out ourselves! | Останете дома, ние ќе ги пополниме самите! |
Kill Yellow Jackets | Yellow jackets are the wasps which most often come into conflict with humans. Unlike bees and paper wasps, yellow jackets are socially active, aggressive food gatherers who can become quite pugnacious when disturbed. |
Her first screen experience began with the American Company. | Su primera experiencia en la pantalla tuvo lugar con American Company. |
Großdeutschland (disambiguation) | Großdeutschland |
what are doors used for? | Doors are generally used to separate interior spaces (closets, rooms, etc.) for convenience, privacy, safety, and security reasons. Doors are also used to secure passages into a building from the exterior, for reasons of climate control and safety. |
The central one of the three aisles thereby created was often emphasised as the main one. | Osrednji od treh prehodov, ki so se s tem ustvarili, je bil pogosto poudarjen kot glavni. |
is furla made in italy? | Furla owns its factories and can stitch that all-important “Made in Italy” label on to 80 per cent of its merchandise in its Asia-Pacific stores, the brand's Asia-Pacific chief executive Alessandro Bartoli says. |
Botha contributed significantly to the Springboks 1980 series win over the Lions, and also played for the World XV in the IRB Centenary Match at Twickenham. | Botha contribuì significativamente alla vittoria degli Springboks nella serie contro i Lions nel 1980, e giocò anche per il World XV nell'incontro per il centenario della IRB al Twickenham Stadium. |
HD 86226 | اچدی ۸۶۲۲۶ |
NEW: "The worst scene I've ever seen," FBI agent testifies .
Agent recounts the "chaotic" scene of the 2009 killings at Fort Hood .
Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan is charged with killing 13 people, wounding 32 .
Hasan has admitted he was the gunman; he's representing himself . | Fort Hood, Texas (CNN) -- Crime-scene testimony dominated Tuesday's proceedings in the court-martial of admitted Fort Hood gunman Nidal Hasan, with an FBI agent describing the "chaotic" scene of the 2009 massacre. Special Agent Susan Martin, a member of the team that collected evidence from the processing center where Hasan is accused of killing 13 people and wounding 32, said seven bodies were visible from the moment she walked in the door. The yellow folding cards, known as "tents," that agents carried to mark evidence numbered only up to 100 -- a figure far short of the number of shell casings and bullet holes investigators had to catalog, she said. "It was very chaotic," Martin said. "There were several bodies in Area Four. There was medical equipment all over the floor. It was a pretty gruesome scene." Army social worker thought shooting was an exercise . Investigators had to use adhesive-backed pieces of note paper to identify the evidence scattered across the floor, she said. The FBI ultimately entered 146 shell casings and six magazines into evidence from the scene. FBI Special Agent Brett Mills analyzed the trajectory of 58 of the bullets from five separate shooting locations, calling it "the worst scene I've ever seen." Agents analyzed the trajectory analysis of more than 270 bullet holes in the building, but could not re-create all of the paths of the bullets because furniture and other evidence was moved in the process of trying to treat victims, they said. Hasan, an Army psychiatrist who was paralyzed by a police bullet during the rampage, admitted at the start of the trial August 6 that he opened fire in the processing center where soldiers were being prepared for deployment to Afghanistan and Iraq. Fort Hood victims feel betrayed . A U.S.-born citizen of Palestinian descent, Hasan had been scheduled to deploy to Afghanistan before the killings. Prosecutors allege the devout Muslim had undergone a "progressive radicalization," giving presentations in defense of suicide bombings and about soldiers conflicted between military service and their religion when such conflicts result in crime. If convicted, he could face the death penalty. In a military capital trial, a guilty plea is not an option. Hasan is representing himself, but with attorneys assigned as stand-by counsel to assist him. Those lawyers requested to be removed last week, saying they believed Hasan was trying to help prosecutors win a death sentence. The presiding judge, Col. Tara Osborn, refused their request Thursday, calling their complaints "nothing more than their disagreement with Hasan's strategy in conducting his defense." CNN's Matt Smith contributed to this report. |
how many 16 ounce bottles of water equal 1 gallon? | Water bottles can vary in size, but the total number of bottles making up 128 ounces can fit in a gallon. For example, if the water bottle is 16 ounces in size, then 8 of these make up a gallon. |
Being a small village, the news quickly spreads. | Como era uma cidade pequena, a noticia se espalhou rapidamente. |
maintained. After being established as the tlatoani, he would be the tlatoani of his region for life. The tlatoani was chosen by a council of elders, nobles, and priests, which would select from a pool of four candidates. Commanding hierarchy The cihuacōātl was the second in command after the tlatoani, was a member of the nobility, served as the supreme judge for the court system, appointed all lower court judges, and handled the financial affairs of the altepetl. Tlatoani during times of war During times of war, the tlatoani would be in charge of creating battle plans, and making strategies for his army. He would draft these plans after receiving information from various scouts, messengers, and spies who were sent out to an enemy altepetl (city-state). Detailed information was presented to him from those reports to be able to construct a layout of the enemy. This was essential because this ensured the safety and success of each battle. These layouts would be heavily detailed from city structures to surrounding area. The Tlatoani would be the most informed about any conflict and would be the primary decision maker during war. In modern terms, in the US, the Tlatoani would be the commander-in-chief, which is the president of the United States. The commander-in-chief is responsible for the armed forces or a military branch by exercising commands that must be followed. He would also be in charge of gaining support from allied rulers by sending gifts and emissaries from his city-state. During warfare the tlatoani would be informed immediately of deaths and captures of his warriors. He would also be in charge of informing his citizens about fallen or captive warriors, and would present gifts to the successful ones. Tlatoque of the Aztec Empire There were eleven tlatoque during the 145-year Aztec Empire. Acamapichtli: 1376–1395 Huitzilihuitl: | candidates. Commanding hierarchy The cihuacōātl was the second in command after the tlatoani, was a member of the nobility, served as the supreme judge for the court system, appointed all lower court judges, and handled the financial affairs of the altepetl. Tlatoani during times of war During times of war, the tlatoani would be in charge of creating battle plans, and making strategies for his army. He would draft these plans after receiving information from various scouts, messengers, and spies who were sent out to an enemy altepetl (city-state). Detailed information was presented to him from those reports to be able to construct a layout of the enemy. This was essential because this ensured the safety and success of each battle. These layouts would be heavily detailed from city structures to surrounding area. The Tlatoani would be the most informed about any conflict and would be the primary decision maker during war. In modern terms, in the US, the Tlatoani would be the commander-in-chief, which is the president of the United States. The commander-in-chief is responsible for the armed forces or a military branch by exercising commands that must be followed. He would also be in charge of gaining support from allied rulers by sending gifts and emissaries from his city-state. During warfare the tlatoani would be informed immediately of deaths and captures of his warriors. He would also be in charge of informing his citizens about fallen or captive warriors, and would present gifts to the successful ones. Tlatoque of the Aztec Empire There were eleven tlatoque during the 145-year Aztec Empire. Acamapichtli: 1376–1395 Huitzilihuitl: 1395–1417 Chimalpopoca: 1417–1427 Itzcoatl: 1427–1440 Moctezuma I: 1440–1469 Axayacatl: 1469–1481 Tizoc: 1481–1486 Ahuitzotl: 1486–1502 Moctezuma II: 1502–1520 Cuitláhuac: 1520 |
Suram Ali | سورمعلی |
The administration and government of the Kingdom of Hungary (until 1848) remained largely untouched by the government structure of the overarching Austrian Empire. | Ungari kuningriigi valitsus (aastani 1848) jäi üleüldise Austria keisririigi valitsusstruktuuri poolt suuresti puutumata. |
Surrounding area Nagasaki Electric Tramway Nagasaki-Ekimae tram stop Nagasaki Ken-ei Bus Terminal JR Kyushu Nagasaki Railway Division Nagasaki transportation center National Route 202 Amu Plaza Nagasaki JR Kyushu Hotel Nagasaki Hotel New Nagasaki Nishi Kyushu Daiichi Hotel Twenty-six Martyrs of Japan NHK Nagasaki Broadcasting Station Nagasaki Chūō Post Office Passenger statistics In fiscal 2016, the station was used by an average of 10,650 passengers daily (boarding passengers only), and it ranked 13th among the busiest stations of JR Kyushu. References Railway stations in Nagasaki Prefecture Buildings and | elevated island platforms serving five tracks. Platforms Adjacent stations History The station was opened on 5 April 1905 when the railway was extended from the former Nagasaki Station to the present station. The former station, opened in 1897, was renamed Urakami Station. 5 April 1905 - Opened by Kyushu Railway. 1 July 1907 - The railways are nationalized and the station becomes part of Japanese Government Railways. 12 October 1909 – Japanese National Railways (JNR) renames the line the Nagasaki Main Line (長崎本線). 9 August 1945 – Station damaged in |
The two chains formed after the cleavage at Arg320, termed the A and B chains, are linked by a disulfide bond in active thrombin. | As dúas cadeas formadas despois da clivaxe na Arg320, denominadas cadeas A e B, están enlazadas por unha ponte disulfuro na trombina activa. |
However, fever and weight loss had a pronounced negative impact on cure and survival rates, regardless of treatment modality. | No entanto, a febre e perda de peso tiveram um impacto negativo pronunciado sobre as taxas de cura e de sobrevivência, independentemente da modalidade de tratamento. |
A regiment of the ROK 3rd Division captured the hill on September 11. | Un régiment de la 3e division sud-coréenne capture la colline le 11 septembre. |
There are 43 four-car units, all allocated to South Western Railway at Wimbledon depot. | Il y a 43 unités de quatre voitures, toutes attribuées à South Western Railway au dépôt de Wimbledon. |
I women's ice hockey season. This was the inaugural year at the Division I level. The Tigers had been the Division III National Champions in 2011-12, with a 28-1-1 record. In their move to Division I, and the College Hockey America conference, RIT had a modestly successful season, and reached the Semifinal level of the CHA Tournament. Recruiting Roster | National Champions in 2011-12, with a 28-1-1 record. In their move to Division I, and the College Hockey America conference, RIT had a modestly successful season, and reached the Semifinal level of the CHA Tournament. Recruiting Roster 2012–13 Tigers Schedule |- !colspan=12 style=""| Regular Season |- !colspan=12 style=""| CHA Tournament |- Awards |
The plains near Triton's eastern limb are dotted with black spots, the maculae. | As planícies próximas à borda oriental de Tritão são pontilhadas com manchas negras, as maculae. |
Most fossil records of Tetralophodon are of four-ridged teeth. | A maioria dos registros fósseis de Tetralophodon é de dentes com quatro nervuras. |
Woyciechowski acted as a confidant during Chopin's passion for the singer Konstancja Gładkowska. | Woyciechowski fungierte auch als Vertrauter während Chopins Liebesbeziehung zu der Sängerin Konstancja Gładkowska. |
Typhonian Order | Orden Tifoniana |
Bodlim | Sayanim |
He co-hosted the top-rated comic variety programme Infinite Challenge and also hosted the Date at 2 o'clock radio show. He has released several music singles, including "Prince of the Sea", which was covered by LPG in 2007. Personal life Marriage and children On April 8, 2008, Park Myung-soo married his long-time girlfriend, 31-year-old doctor Han Su-min. This was the first time a member of Infinite Challenge has married since the show's inception. Their first child, Park Min-seo, was born in August 2008. As of December 2009, with the joint co-operation of its enterprise company, he began his tenure as a CEO of a business called "Mohani" (모하니), which sells wigs in shopping malls. Career Infinite Challenge On Infinite Challenge, Park is "the second-in-command" (2인자), putting him below the host-in-chief Yoo Jae-suk, who is "the first-in-command" (1인자). This spawned a running gag in which he often jokes about overthrowing Yoo Jae-suk as leader and becoming "first-in-command" himself. He also called "Rice Insect" (벼멸구), a rival nickname for Yoo Jae-suk's famous "Grasshopper". He also claimed that his nickname should be "Big Star" (거성/巨星 Geoseong). He sometimes tries to make use of his seniority by lecturing the other members on various matters, such as becoming a star; however, they rarely take him seriously. Another nickname is "Chicken CEO," in reference to the Kyochon chicken shop which he formerly operated. He is currently a Seoul metropolitan manager of Imsil Cheese Pizza restaurant. In October 2007, Park acquired another nickname, "worthless elder brother" (하찮은 형) after co-host Noh Hong-chul referred to him as a "worthless person with a worthless body" (하찮은 박명수님, 하찮은 몸) in comparison to world-class Figure skater Kim Yuna. Another related nickname is "Father" (아버지) since he is the oldest among another | chicken shop which he formerly operated. He is currently a Seoul metropolitan manager of Imsil Cheese Pizza restaurant. In October 2007, Park acquired another nickname, "worthless elder brother" (하찮은 형) after co-host Noh Hong-chul referred to him as a "worthless person with a worthless body" (하찮은 박명수님, 하찮은 몸) in comparison to world-class Figure skater Kim Yuna. Another related nickname is "Father" (아버지) since he is the oldest among another Infinite Challenge members and due to his weak stamina and slowly balding forehead. Park is famous for his "scolding" repertoire (호통개그), in which he angrily and aggressively scolds his colleagues for usually trivial matters. This led to another nickname, "the Son of Devil" (악마의 아들). A related nickname is "Old Devil" from the "Money Bag" special episode, after co-host Noh Hong-chul was nicknamed the "Young Devil". (The two had stolen a briefcase full of money from Jeong Hyeong-don and subsequently conspired to take it from each other). Another aspect of his character is his tendency to flub words and to misspeak when scolding, leading other members to take him even less seriously. He is also known for arguing and quarreling over petty issues with co-host Jeong Jun-ha. Park's hot-tempered on-screen persona is highly opposite with Jeong Jun-ha's tactless, simple-minded character that occasionally made the former lose his patience. The unique relationship between Jeong and Park has become an occasional segment called "Ha & Soo". "Ha & Soo" also can be called "Peter & Jonathan" with Park as "Peter" and Jeong as "Jonathan". Another similar nickname is "Red Pepper" |
Michael John "Mick" Gordon (born 9 July 1985) is an Australian composer and sound designer, composing music primarily for video games. | Michael John "Mick" Gordon (nacido el 9 de julio de 1985) es un compositor y diseñador de sonido australiano que compone principalmente música para videojuegos. |
Exxon makes 36,000,000,000 in profits , gas $3.00 a gallon, What's wrong with this picture? | WELL, the global market demand for oil, our lack of exploration and new refineries, very little competition with\njust six major oil co's, letting the envormentalists influence the drilling of oil in a negative way, and finally the oil companies past history of putting the smaller producers out of business. |
state of Rondônia. Its population was 10,641 (2020) and its area is 4,081 km². | was 10,641 (2020) and its area is 4,081 km². The municipality |
how many pieces is in a large pizza hut pizza? | On average there are: 6 slices per small (8-10") pizza, 8 slices per 12 inch pizza (medium), 10 slices on a large (14-16") pizza and 12 slices on an extra-large pizza. You should confirm the number of slices before ordering because this will vary between pizza providers. |
The argument was fundamentally flawed. | Argüman temelde kusurluydu. |
In his resignation letter, Elazar wrote: It is not the job of the chief of staff to oversee all tactical details. | I sin afskedsansøgning skrev han: "Det er ikke stabschefens opgave at kontrollere alle taktiske detaljer. |
The Swedish Royal Chapel was one of Europe's best orchestras at the time, and Du Puy is mentioned as one of its best Kapellmeisters. | Svenska hofkapellet var ubetinget et af Europas bedste orkestre på den tid, og Du Puy nævnes som den bedste af dets kapelmestre. |
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