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The Chadwick, later Burton-Chadwick Baronetcy, of Bidston in the County Palatine of Chester, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 3 July 1935 for the businessman and Conservative politician Sir Robert Chadwick. He served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade from 1924 to 1928. In 1936 he assumed by deed poll the additional surname of Burton. As of 2007 the title is held by his grandson, the third Baronet, who succeeded his father in 1983.
Chadwick, later Burton-Chadwick baronets, of Bidston (1935)
Sir Robert Burton-Chadwick, 1st Baronet (1869â1951)
Sir Robert Burton-Chadwick, 2nd Baronet (1911â1983)
Sir Joshua Kenneth Burton-Chadwick, 3rd Baronet (born 1954)
There is no heir to the baronetcy.
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Shusun Tong (died ca 188 BCE) was a Chinese politician and writer who served the Qin and Western Han courts. He is known for organization of the first court worship for the Emperor Gaozu of Han (202 BCE), as well as for the custody over the young crown prince Ying, the future Emperor Hui. His biography is presented in Chapter 99 of Shiji and Chapter 19 of the Book of Han. According to Martin Kern, he is the best-documented among the Qin "erudites" (boshi å士, ritual and canonical specialists). After leaving the Qin court, he joined the services of Xiang Liang, Emperor Yi of Chu and Xiang Yu, before surrendering to Liu Bang when the Han armies took Pengcheng in 205 BC. In 195 BC, before his death, Liu Bang thought of changing his crown prince from Liu Ying to Liu Ruyi, son of Consort Qi; Shusun was one of the officials who advised against the change.
Characterizing his contribution, Shi ji (vol. 23, "Book on Rituals") states: "Shusun Tong roughly made some additions and subtractions, [but] for the most part in everything he imitated the old [practices] of Qin." Thus, Shusun Tong was the linchpin in the continuity of the court ritual from Qin to Han, while the former tradition in its own right stemmed from the Zhou ritual.
Shusun Tong was a native of Xue (:zh:èåœ), only about 30 km from the birthplace of Liu Bang, which made him well acquainted with the Chu musical tradition and thus allowed to accommodate the Qin ritual to the Han imperial taste.
Legacy & Evaluation
His biography serves as an argument against the traditional stereotype about the suppression of classical knowledge under the Qin: he did not just survive, but brought to the Han court his followers, more than 100 disciples. While Sima Qian praised Shusun for adapting according to circumstances and being able to keep the big picture in mind, Sima Guang criticized Shusun's organization of Han court rituals as self-promotion, resulting in the loss of ancient rites.
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The 1984â85 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' sixth season in the NHL, and they were coming off a Stanley Cup championship in 1983â84. Edmonton would win their fourth-straight Smythe Division title, and repeat as Stanley Cup champions, losing only 3 games in the entire playoffs while out scoring their opponents 98-52. On June 5, 2017, this team was voted by fans as the greatest NHL team ever, as part of the NHL's centennial celebrations.
Regular season
For the fifth consecutive (and final) season, the Oilers scored over 400 goals (401) in a season; the Oilers remain the only NHL franchise in history to score 400+ goals in a season. The Oilers also let in 298 goals, their fewest since the 1981â82 season. The Oilers started the season with an NHL record 15-game unbeaten streak (12â0â3).
Wayne Gretzky earned 208 points, breaking the 200 point mark for the third time (of four) in his career; Gretzky remains the only NHL player in history to score 200+ points in a season.Gretzky won his fifth straight Art Ross Trophy, and his sixth consecutive Hart Trophy. Jari Kurri scored a career-high 71 goals and 135 points, and won the Lady Byng Trophy. Paul Coffey had 121 points (37 goals, 84 assists) en route to his first Norris Trophy win, of three in his career. On December 26, 1984, Coffey was the last defenceman in the 20th Century to score four goals in one game. It occurred in a game versus the Calgary Flames.
In goal, Grant Fuhr and Andy Moog split time, with Fuhr leading the Oilers in wins with 26, while Moog led the team with a 3.30 GAA.
Season standings
Schedule and results
Playoffs
In the playoffs, the Oilers swept past the Los Angeles Kings and the Winnipeg Jets in the first 2 rounds. Edmonton ran into a bit of a problem with the Chicago Black Hawks in the Conference Finals, as the teams split the first 4 games, with each team winning two at home, however, the Oilers won the next 2 games and advance to their 3rd straight Stanley Cup Final. After losing the opening game of the Stanley Cup Finals against the Philadelphia Flyers, the Oilers stepped up their play and won the next 4 games to win their 2nd straight Stanley Cup. Wayne Gretzky won the Conn Smythe Trophy for the first time in his career, as he scored an NHL record 47 points (17G-30A) in the playoffs.
Player statistics
Regular season
Scoring leaders
Goaltending
Playoffs
Scoring leaders
Goaltending
Awards and records
Awards
Records
205: An Oilers record for most penalty minutes in a single season by Kevin McClelland.
197: A new Oilers record for most penalty minutes in a single season by Kevin McClelland on March 31, 1985.
135: An NHL record for most assists in a single season by Wayne Gretzky.
126: A new NHL record for most assists in a single season by Wayne Gretzky on March 29, 1985.
47: An NHL record for most points in a playoffs by Wayne Gretzky.
39: A new NHL record for most points in a playoffs by Wayne Gretzky on May 25, 1985.
30: An NHL record for most assists in a playoffs by Wayne Gretzky.
27: A new NHL record for most assists in a playoffs by Wayne Gretzky on May 25, 1985.
19: Tied NHL record for most goals in a single playoffs by Jari Kurri on May 30, 1985.
Milestones
Transactions
Trades
Free agents
Draft picks
Edmonton's draft picks at the 1984 NHL Entry Draft.
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The third season of the Australian Dancing with the Stars TV series premiered on Tuesday 6 September 2005 and concluded on Tuesday 8 November 2005. Home and Away actress Ada Nicodemou and her partner Aric Yegudkin won the series, defeating Seven News presenter Chris Bath and her partner, Trenton Shipley.
Couples
The following celebrities competed.
Scoring chart
Red numbers indicate the couples with the lowest score for each week.
Green numbers indicate the couples with the highest score for each week.
indicates the couple eliminated that week.
indicates the returning couple that finished in the bottom two.
indicates the winning couple.
indicates the runner-up couple.
indicates the third-place couple.
Dance schedule
The celebrities and professional partners will dance one of these routines for each corresponding week.
Week 1 : Cha-cha-cha or Waltz
Week 2 : Quickstep or Rumba
Week 3 : Tango or Jive
Week 4 : Paso doble or Foxtrot
Week 5 : Samba
Week 6 : One unlearned Ballroom or Latin dance from weeks 1-5
Week 7 : One unlearned Ballroom or Latin dance from weeks 1-6
Week 8 : One unlearned Ballroom or Latin dance from weeks 1-7 & Group Viennese Waltz
Week 9 : Final unlearned Ballroom or Latin dance from weeks 1-8 & Favourite Dance of Season
Week 10 : Two Favourite Dances of the Season & Freestyle
Dance chart
Highest Scoring Dance
Lowest Scoring Dance
Average Chart
The average chart is based on the dances performed by the celebrities and not their place in the competition.
Couples' highest and lowest scoring dances
Scores are based upon a 40-point maximum:
Highest and lowest scoring performances
The best and worst performances in each dance according to the judges' 40-point scale are as follows:
Running Order
Individual judges scores in the chart below (given in parentheses) are listed in this order from left to right: Todd McKenney, Helen Richey, Paul Mercurio, Mark Wilson.
Week 1
Running order
Week 2
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 3
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 4
Musical guests: Craig David
Running order
Week 5
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 6
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 7
Musical guests: Jimmy Barnes
Running order
Week 8
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 9
Musical guests:
Running order
Week 10
Musical guests: Human Nature, John Farnham
Running order
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Ray Ries (1894â1977) was an American cinematographer active during the silent era. He was employed by independent studio Action Pictures on a number of westerns, frequently collaborating with director Richard Thorpe.
Selected filmography
Thundering Romance (1924)
Fast Fightin' (1925)
Reckless Courage (1925)
On the Go (1925)
Double Action Daniels (1925)
The Desert Demon (1925)
The Saddle Cyclone (1925)
Galloping On (1925)
The Bonanza Buckaroo (1926)
Ace of Action (1926)
The Ramblin' Galoot (1926)
Twisted Triggers (1926)
The Interferin' Gent (1927)
The Obligin' Buckaroo (1927)
White Pebbles (1927)
The Soda Water Cowboy (1927)
The Meddlin' Stranger (1927)
The Fightin' Comeback (1927)
The Cyclone Cowboy (1927)
The Desert of the Lost (1927)
Ride 'em High (1927)
Code of the Cow Country (1927)
Roarin' Broncs (1927)
Skedaddle Gold (1927)
The Galloping Gobs (1927)
Pals in Peril (1927)
Tearin' Into Trouble (1927)
The Ridin' Rowdy (1927)
Saddle Mates (1928)
Desperate Courage (1928)
The Flyin' Buckaroo (1928)
The Ballyhoo Buster (1928)
The Valley of Hunted Men (1928)
The Cowboy Cavalier (1928)
The King of the Kongo (1929)
Dark Skies (1929)
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Azeroth Choppers was a weekly web series by Blizzard Entertainment that ran from April 17 to June 5, 2014. It featured Paul Teutul, Jr. (American Chopper) and his company Paul Jr. Designs building motorcycles based on Blizzard's long-running MMORPG World of Warcraft.
Two teams of builders chosen by Paul Jr., advised by members of Blizzard's development team, designed and built custom motorcycles that reflected the two factions of World of Warcraft, the Alliance and the Horde. Chris Metzen, Blizzard's Senior Vice President for Creative Development, headed "Team Alliance", and Samwise Didier, Blizzard's senior art director, headed "Team Horde". On May 29, voting opened to choose the winning design, which will be adapted as an in-game mount for World of Warcraft, and players of the winning faction will receive the bike for free. In an interview at PAX East in Boston on April 12, Paul Jr. revealed that Blizzard gave him total control over the design, pointing out the rarity of a large company like Blizzard allowing such freedom: "When it comes right down to it, for them to let that go and let me take control and trust me, it's unheard of; nobody does that."
The votes were tallied on June 5, 2014, with the Horde bike being chosen as the winning design. The bike was mailed to all Horde players who logged in between July 24 and September 30 upon the release of World of Warcraft: Warlords of Draenor in November 2014. The Alliance bike was made available in December 2014 for in-game gold.
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Mûkûrwe'inî was a former district in Nyeri County, Kenya.
Mûkûrwe'inî was elevated from a division to district status in 2008. The old Mûkûrwe'inî Divisional boundaries remained as the new district's boundaries. Before Kenya's Independence in 1963, Mûkûrwe'inî was referred to as South Tetu Division. It was one of the seven new districts that were created out of the old Nyeri District of Central Province of Kenya. The district headquarters were located at Kiahungu Township which is also the commercial hub for Mûkûrwe'inî.
In 2010, the district was merged with others to form Nyeri County.
Overview
Mûkûrwe'inî District bordered Ndia Constituency, (Kirinyaga County) to the south-east, Mathira and Tetu Constituencies to the North, Othaya Constituency to the West and Kiharu and Mathioya Constituencies and (Muranga County) to the south. Mûkûrwe'inî had the smallest surface of the seven new districts. Mûkûrwe'inî's main frontiers were delianated by four important rivers: Gikira to the West, Gura to the north, Mugono to the south and - the biggest River - River Tana to the east (a major tributary of Kenya's largest river, the Tana River). Mukurweini was divided into seven administrative locations namely Gakindu, Giathugu, Gikondi, Githi, Muhito, Rutune and Thanu. The four electoral wards of Mukurwe-ini constituency are Mukurwe-ini West, Gikondi, Mukurwe-ini Central and Rugi.
Kîahûngû Township
In addition to being the former administrative centre, Kîahûngû Township, in Mûhîto location, is also the seat for the following: Mûkûrwe'inî Sub-County Hospital, the Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB), the Nyeri Farmers Sacco, the Wakulima Dairy, Royal milk, Wakulima Farmers Sacco, a branch of Equity Bank and the Divisional offices for the Nyeri County Council.
Kîahûngû township was established in 1945 soon after the second world war. Four aspiring businessmen built three small stores, some still standing. One of those was the late Erastus Kang'aru Wachira. He went on to build and boost the township's commercial stature before expanding business to Nyeri town proper. He went on to become a major business figure in the old Nyeri and surrounding Districts under the business name of E. K. Wachira and Sons.
Electoral constituencies
The district's administrative boundaries also constituted the Parliamentary electoral area known as Mukurweini Constituency. The electoral area was initially known as South Tetu constituency but was renamed Mukurwe-ini in 1971, and ratified in 1974 when Othaya Division was hived off and made an electoral area. The current member of parliament is Hon. Anthony Kiai alias High Flyer of the High Flyer Publishers. Hon. Kabando wa Kabando who was also the Assistant Minister for Youth & Sports in the Government of Kenya represented the constituency in Parliament in the years 2007-2013 and 2013-2017. Past Members of Parliament (MPs) for the area include Henry Wariithi Mutahi(1964â69,1974â79, and 1979â83), Morris Mwai Koigi(1969â74), Ngumbu Njururi Maiyani(1983â88 and 1988â92) and David Muhika Mutahi(1992â97 and 1997-2002), a prominent farmer and businessman who is the leading light behind the Wakulima Dairy Farmers Association. The immediate former Member of Parliament is Hon. Mutahi Kagwe (2002â2007).who is also the former Minister for Information and Communications.
Education & Health
The major educational institutions located in the former division are South Tetu Girls', Mweru and Kaheti High Schools, Mukurweini (former Kiangoma, and the oldest secondary school in the District built in 1951), Giathugu, Ngoru, Gikondi, Mihuti, Wamutitu, Tambaya, Gathungururu, Ndia-ini, Rutune, Kibutio,Karindi, Ichamara, St. Ann Githunguri, Kihuti, Thangathi, ACK Kiuu and Kaharo Secondary Schools and the Reverend Muhoro School for the Deaf. Notable health facilities in the former division include the Mukurwe-ini Sub-District Hospital, a fully fledged hospital with ward and surgical facilities, the Gikondi Mission Hospital(Nyagaitwa), Karaba, Mweru, Giathugu, Gakindu, Thangathi, Kiuu, Ichamara and Gumba Health Centres and Mihuti Dispensary.
Religion
Most citizens of Mukurweini are Christians. The main churches are the Presbyterian Church of East Africa (PCEA), the Catholic Church, the African Independent Pentecostal Church of Africa (AIPCA, the Anglican Church, the Full Gospel Church, Gospel Outreach Church, Orthodox Church and the New Apostolic Church. Presbyterians and Catholic missions established footholds in Mukurweini since 1920's. traditional African religions have declined in importance especially among the young. The early Christian churches were instrumental in the advancement of education in the area. As a consequence, the area is home to many prominent personalities in private, business and public life in Kenya.
Noteworthy Citizens from Mukurweini, Past and Present
The most notable personalities from the area are:
The First Lady of Kenya, The Late H.E. Mrs. Lucy Kibaki
Nyeri senator Hon Mutahi Kagwe who is a former MP of the area and who also served as Minister for Information and Communications in the Kibaki administration. Hon Kagwe has also served a stint as the Chairman of the Multi Media University of Kenya council,in addition to serving in the boards of Renaissance Capital, TNS Research International(EA), Tellem Public Relations among others.
Professor Kamoji Kangaru Wachira, a noted environmentalist, hails from Mukurweini. He was Senior Lecturer, Kenyatta University, when he was detained in 1982 as one of the few early pioneers of Kenya's second liberation.
Reverend Timothy Njoya another leading light in Kenya's struggle for democracy and human rights was born in Mukurweini.
Hon. Kabando Wa Kabando the Former MP is from Rutune location. He is the former CEO of the Kenya Hotel Keepers and Caterers Association and Chairman of Nairobi Water and Sewerage Company
Hon. Nicholas Muraguri PS. Ministry of Lands.
Mr Cyrus Maina (former Provincial Commissioner Nairobi and Coast Province)
Engineer Richard M. Nderitu- Operations Director KenGen
The late Erastus Kang'aru Wachira a prominent businessman
Engineer Anthony Maina Kariuki of NEMA
Francis Wanganju of Co-operative Bank of Kenya
Award-winning Photojournalist turned activist Boniface Mwangi who hails from Maganjo Village a few kilometres from Kiahung'u township.
Austine Mutiga Theiya, a Power Generation Professional together with 'Hardstone' Harrison Ngunjiri Maina, a US-based Hip-hop Musician hail from Gakindu Location. Popular secular musician John Njagi also hails from Gakindu, specifically near Gathungururu Girls' High School. Giathugu location boasts of the late Hon. Ngumbu Njururi, Mr. Ephraim Gathaiya, the CEO Helpage Kenya and former Secretary General of the Kenya Red Cross Society, Mr.Peterson Mwangi Muriithi, National Vice-Chairperson of POSTA Sacco, Capt. Collins Wanderi Munyiri, formerly the Forensic and Litigation Services Manager, KPMG - East Africa and now Deputy Commissioner-Internal Affairs at the Kenya Revenue Authority and Chairman of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE)-Kenya Chapter, Anderson Macharia Gakundi, Finance Manager, Procter & Gamble. Mr. Njagi Gakunju, the CEO, AAR Health Services and Mr. Kihara Muttu, Vice-Chairman of the now defunct Electoral Commission of Kenya.Hon Morris Mwai Koigi Member of Parliament from 1969 to 1974 Githi is home to Mr. Muhika Mutahi, the immediate former MP for Mukurweini , John Mbote Matiri, Bcomm (UoN), CPA(K), a Senior Assistant Manager at ICEA LION Insurance and Francis Maina Ndugire, the Director of Nyeri District co-operatives and former Chairman of the giant, but now defunct Mukurweini Coffee Farmers Co-operative Society. Benedetto Wamutitu was an early member of the nationalist organization - the Kenya African Union (KAU) - alongside Jomo Kenyatta and others in the 1940s. Waruhiu Itote, also known as General China, a Mau Mau leader was from Mukurwe-ini. It is worth noting here that some of the most fierce Mau Mau fighting took place in Mukurweini (especially on the southern borders with Murang'a District between 1953 and 1956). Two clerics are noteworthy for their early religious and educational contributions since the 1930s and 40s in Mukurweni: Reverend James Wanjii Gakunju and Reverend John Kagai (father to Lucy Kibaki). Reverend John Gatu, former Moderator of GA of the PCEA, and the late Archbishop Philip Kiande Wamagu (AIPCA) were born in Mukurweini. Doctor Weston Kariuki is a notable pioneer of Mukurweini District Hospital,he hails from Karundu.Other notable persons are like Jackson Migwi, an alumin of Moi University pioneer in agency banking in Eldoret, he hails from Karaba a sub location in Mukurweini.MK Kiminda is a well seasoned,eloquent and reasonable Lawyer from Kangurwe.
John Kuguchia,MP and immediate former assembly speaker for Nyeri County is also a prominent son of Mukurweini.
Agriculture
The people of Mukurweini are mainly farmers and whereas coffee is the main cash crop in the area, most of them practice subsistence farming due to the small size of family holdings. The north-west tip of the District adjacent to Othaya has a few farmers who grow tea. The area is well endowed and has several permanent rivers and numerous springs and streams. The include Rwarai, Gura, Mugono, Thagana, Gikira, Ndurumo, Thiha, Gathera and Ithanji rivers. There is however very little irrigation activity in spite of the dry spells which are now more frequent. The failure to harness these abundant water resources for irrigated farm production is a draw back to District's economic development and food self security. The Division does not experience extreme weather-related disasters beyond occasional droughts. Wajee Nature Park, a bird conservancy, located in Giathugu Location is a good site for all nature and bird watchers. There are a number of falls along Rwarai river with scenic beauty and area sight to behold. The river valleys in Mukurweini are home to many bird species a number of which are preserved at Wajee Nature Park. The camp has a high class restaurant and Boarding facilities which include pitched luxury tents. The lower parts of the Division particularly Rutune and Thanu Locations have sandy loam soils which are not conducive to subsistence farming. A few people are however involved in the growing of tobacco in the area. There is also an upcoming trade in the clay soil that is being used in Nairobi for manufacture of ceramic products
With the establishment of the milk production has become the major source of income in the area. The dairy formed as a "Self Help " group but now operates as a limited company with over 6,000 farmers who are its shareholders. The dairy provides banking services from its SACCO.
Services
An incipient services industry is developing gradually due to the demand created by relative distance to larger centres. Rudimenatary IT and electronics services are now available for general consumption. With encouragement, younger citizens are modernizing rural peoples' access to technical, property and project management, consultancies, and related services.
Roads
The major roads in the area are the Karatina â Mukurwe-ini â Gakindu â Othaya Road which is tarred. The road branches 2 km before reaching Gakindu to connect Mukurwe-ini to [Nyeri] Town through Kanunga, Tambaya, Muthinga, Gichira and Kagumo College and finally joining the Nyeri - Karatina - Nairobi highway (A2) at Gatitu . The Mukurwe-ini â Mihuti â Giathugu â Mweru â Kabuta â Kigetui-ini- Gakonya road is the main road that connects most of the divisions to the district headquarters. It is being upgraded and its tarring has less than 10 km left on Murang'a side to complete (though a new contractor(china) is currentry on site), thereby linking with Murang'a - Sagana Road (C71). The construction of the road was officially launched in September 2007 by Kenya President, His Execellency Hon. Mwai Kibaki. The road also connects the division to Muranga and Kirinyaga Districts. The tarring of this road will transform the economic fortunes of the people of Mukurwe-ini and has been a hot political issue in the Constituency for a long time. Other notable earth roads include the Gakindu-Gikondi-Karaba-Kabuta road, Gakindu-Gaikundo-Tambaya road, Kiahungu â Gikondi â Karaba road and the Thangathi â Ichamara - Thiha road.
Challenges and Opportunities
Youth employment creation, like elsewhere in Kenya, is still a challenge. Environmental decline especially soil erosion, deforestation, and over-reliance on old cash-cropping with inadequate attention to traditional staple crops for a growing population, land fragmentation,drug abuse and a changing climatic regime - these are also emerging issues.
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2016.07.06ã æŸäºçŽæš¹ã¯ã©ã¹ ãŽã¡ã€ãªãªã³çºè¡šäŒããïŒæ18æ¥ïŒæã»ç¥ïŒ | {
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Destructionism, as discussed by Austrian economist Ludwig Von Mises, refers to policies that consume capital but do not accumulate it. It is the title of Part V of his seminal work Socialism. Since accumulation of capital is the basis for economic progress (as the capital stock of society increases, the productivity of labor rises, as well as wages and standards of living), Von Mises warned that pursuing socialist and etatist policies will eventually lead to the consumption and reliance on old capital, borrowed capital, or printed "capital" as these policies cannot create any new capital, instead only consuming the old.
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Elia Fottrell (1893â1974) was an American tennis player. He was from California. He was ambidextrous and could play with the racket in either hand. Fottrell reached the semifinals in the 1914 U.S. Championships singles, beating Nat Niles and Gus Touchard before losing easily to R. Norris Williams.
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Harriet Randolph Hyatt Mayor (1868-1960) was an American artist and sculptor active in the late 19th century. She contributed work to the World's Columbian Exposition, among other exhibitions.
Life and career
Harriet Randolf Hyatt was born in Salem, Massachusetts in 1868, the daughter of Audella Beebe Hyatt and Alpheus Hyatt II, the noted paleontologist.
After traveling abroad with her family at an early age she began to show artistic tendencies. She studied art and sculpture in Boston, Massachusetts under Henry H. Kitson and Dennis Bunker. She encouraged her sister, Anna Hyatt Huntington, to join her in sculpting; Anna would go on to become one of the leading sculptors of her generation.
The 1893 World's Columbian Exposition featured a wide assortment of American sculptors, and Hyatt had one work, Head of Laughing Girl exhibited there. She was awarded a silver medal at the 1895 Cotton States and International Exposition. She also exhibited her work in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Salon, Paris, 1908.
Harriet was married in 1900 to the natural scientist Alfred Goldsborough Mayor, son of physicist Alfred M. Mayor. The couple had four children, A. Hyatt, Katharine, Brantz, and Barbara. Her great-granddaughter is actress Yeardley Smith.
In 1912, Mayor was suffering from a mild case of tuberculosis, and went abroad with her children. She barely escaped Germany before World War I began. After her husband's death in 1922, Mayor spent time traveling in Europe, and became active in the Daughters of the American Revolution, serving as regent of the Princeton, New Jersey chapter. The association contributed to her interest in genealogy, and she made studies of the Hyatt and Mayor family trees. She lived most of her later years in Princeton, only leaving to live with her sister Anna during her last year.
She died at the Huntington estate in Bethel, Connecticut, on January 1, 1960 at the age of 92.
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Brachyglene caenea is a moth of the family Notodontidae first described by Dru Drury in 1782. It is restricted
to south-eastern Brazil, from Rio de Janeiro south to Santa Catarina.
Description
Antennae black and setaceous. Thorax and abdomen nearly black. Wings deep brown, nearly black; the anterior having a yellow band crossing them from the anterior edges to the lower corners; and the posterior having a broad yellow streak on the anterior edges. Margins of the wings entire. Wingspan inches (70 mm).
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JiÅÃna AdamiÄková-Pelcová (born 22 November 1969) is a retired Czechoslovak, later Czech biathlete.
She has participated in three editions of the Winter Olympics (1992, 1994, 1998). Pelcová won the Overall World Cup in 1989â90 World Cup season. Pelcová claimed 2 medals at Biathlon World Championships: one gold and one bronze.
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Orton is a mostly residential area of the city of Peterborough, in the Peterborough district, in the ceremonial county of Cambridgeshire, England. For electoral purposes it comprises Orton Longueville, Orton Waterville and Orton with Hampton wards in North West Cambridgeshire
History
Orton was designated the second township in the new town expansion of Peterborough in 1967. It is composed of the ancient villages of Orton Waterville and Orton Longueville, together with the newer developments of Orton Brimbles, Orton Goldhay, Orton Malborne, Orton Southgate, Orton Winyates, Orton Wistow and most recently Orton Northgate. All lie south of the River Nene and are thus historically in Huntingdonshire, but are not in the current local government district of that name.
In common with many New Towns the Ortons are characterised by extensive landscaping and tree planting. The A605 runs through the Ortons, connecting Peterborough to the A1(M) which runs from London to Edinburgh. There is no church in Orton Wistow or Orton Northgate: these both fall within the parish of St Andrew's, Alwalton.
As the Ortons were established, health centres were constructed, initially in Herlington and then at the Orton Centre. For a short time there was also a small branch surgery in Orton Wistow. Due to the expansion of the area and decay of the premises at Herlington, the Orton Wistow surgery was replaced by a new surgery at Clayton, Orton Goldhay.
In 2001 Anglia Regional Co-operative Society closed its Rainbow supermarket at Orton Centre, the only major supermarket serving the Ortons. This was widely assumed to be due to competition from the Tesco Extra which had opened at nearby Serpentine Green in Hampton and the ongoing degeneration of the centre. In October 2008 the Co-operative returned to the Ortons with a new store in the regenerated Orton Centre, now renamed Ortongate.
Orton Brimbles
This is an area of mixed public and private sector housing dating almost entirely from the 1980s. Orton Brimbles contains the Ortons' first and only purpose-built solar powered houses at Gostwick. There is also Ormiston Meadows Academy, formerly Matley Primary School, a mainstream primary school with Enhanced Resources provision for children with physical disabilities.
There is a row of shops, including a post office, at Matley which also has a community centre where the Salvation Army hold Sunday services. Orton Brimbles falls within Orton Waterville Parish Council area.
Orton Goldhay
Orton Goldhay was laid out from the mid-1970s by Peterborough Development Corporation as part of the city's second township. The area is largely residential but contains the district shopping centre known as Orton Centre, and one of the Ortons' two secondary schools, Ormiston Bushfield Academy. Much of the housing here was built for the public sector and originally housed overspill population from London.
Orton Longueville
Until the 1960s, Orton Longueville was a village separated from Peterborough by open farmland. Orton Longueville is home to Nene Park Academy, formerly Orton Longueville School. The 'village' contains many pre-20th-century buildings including Orton Hall, once used as a prisoner of war camp during the Second World War (now a hotel), several thatched cottages, a cricket field and the 13th-century church of Holy Trinity. The church contains many historic monuments to the families who once owned properties in the village, including the Huntlys and Copes, and has a rare wall painting of St Christopher. There is still a village green and close by is a half-mile long plantation of giant redwood wellingtonia trees known as the 'Long Walk'.
Orton Longueville saw many homes built after the Second World War. It is cut through north-south by the Nene Parkway (A1260) constructed in the 1970s. To the west of this road lies the original 'village', and to the east is a housing estate and some light warehousing laid out on former farmland in the latter half of the 20th century. To the north east is a newer housing area known as Botolph Green. There was a separate parish called Botolphbridge until it was combined with Longueville in 1702.
Orton Malborne
Similar in character to Orton Goldhay, this area was also created from the mid-1970s and lies along the dedicated bus route leading to the city centre. There are local shops at Herlington and Eldern, both of which had pubs, The Dragonfly and The Eldern (formerly The Shire Horse). Only the former remains open, the latter having been sold and converted to homes.
There is a purpose-built community centre at Herlington. A second community centre that looks like a 3-storey end of terrace house with attached hall at 156 Leighton was closed by the City Council and sold for private housing in 2009.
In the period since October 1976, five church congregations have met in the area. Christian Presence was first, established as an Anglican and later Methodist plant in a community house and later at Leighton Community Centre before moving to Herlington Community Centre in 2009. The latter has also been home to the Life Tabernacle Apostolic Church, and the building was also used by another Christian Fellowship in the 1980s. Nearby is the purpose-built St.Luke's Roman Catholic church. The Orton Gospel Hall is at the east end of Malborne Way.
There is a primary school at Leighton and one at nearby Winyates also serves the Malborne area. Herlington has a pre-school. The Lime Academy educational trust has a campus hub for children on Malborne Way built on the site of The Tunnel Adventure Playground.
Orton Northgate
The latest addition to 'the Ortons' and the fastest growing, Orton Northgate previously formed part of the East of England Showground site.
Orton Northgate's local Anglican church is St Andrew's, Alwalton.
Orton Southgate
This is mainly a business area containing offices and factories, including Nokia, NCR, Amazon, XL Displays, Yodal and others. It also contains a housing area centred on Dunblane Drive, which was partly built by Persimmon Homes around 1995, and added to by a small group of David Wilson Homes in around 1997.
The East of England Showground sold off some of its land to developers to expand the housing towards Alwalton, linking Dunblane Drive with Loch Lomond Way. However, there was a moratorium on building in October 2008, and as of February 2010 the site remained dormant.
Orton Waterville
One of the original 'Ortons', Orton Waterville also retains a village atmosphere and contains many thatched and stone built cottages and the 13th-century parish church of St Mary's. It once had its own Orton Waterville railway station, but both the station and the line it stood on have now closed.
Orton Wistow
Orton Wistow was laid out during the 1980s by private developers, with the last developments being completed around 1992. This development lies adjacent to the Country Park known as Ferry Meadows and the Nene Valley Railway. There is a primary school called Orton Wistow Primary School.
Transport
Two bus services serve the Ortons. The Citi 1 runs every 10 minutes from Orton to the city centre and continues to Werrington. Route 60 links Orton Malborne with Serpentine Green, Stanground and the City Centre infrequently. Stagecoach Corby also operate Service 23 between Orton Waterville and Peterborough Queensgate bus station and Service 24 between Thrapston/Oundle and Peterborough Queensgate bus station.
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Patrick Tibertius Maximus Denipitiya (11 August 1934â23 March 2013) was a Sri Lankan musician.
He was part of the movement that brought western music to Sri Lanka in the 1960s, he also introduced the electric Hawaiian guitar into Sri Lankan sinhala music industry and was responsible for the musical composition, arrangements, music direction and performance of many Sinhala songs and films from the early-1950s to 1997.
He had a unique ability whereby he could write music scores without using an instrument in both Eastern and Western notation. He was able to do this for an entire orchestra that utilized both eastern and western instruments. He directed music for a lot of songs written by Karunaratne Abeysekera, George Leslie Ranasinghe and Cyril A Seelawimala (and some of Premakeerthi De Alwis, KDK Darmawardene, Fr. Mercelyn Jayakody, for example).
Patrick was the Music Director for many original songs sung by C.T. Fernando, Milton Mallawarachchi, C.D. Fonseka, Susil Premaratne, Anjalene Gunathileke (née Lanerole), Sydney Atygalle, Mallika Kahawita, Maurice Dahanayake, Christopher Paul, H R Jothipala, Kanthi Wakwella, Henry Caldera, Latha Walpola, Sujatha Attanayake, Indrani Perera, Rupa Indhumathie, M.S. Fernando, Irene de Alwis, Camilus Anton Peiris, Freddie Silva, Ivor Dennis (and others) and for many calypso groups such as The J brothers, Samanalayo, Grain Leornados etc.
He directed music in the movies "Senghawunu Menika" in 1967, "Senakeliya" a box office hit in 1974 and "Loka Horu" 1976. He has co-directed movies including "Saudan Jema", "Akke mata Awasara" and has directed, performed and assisted in many ways in over 5000 commercial songs and movie song recordings.
Early life and career
Patrick Denipitiya was born into a family with ten children in Kotahena. His parents were Coronalis Denipitiya, a railway stationmaster and Mary Simona (née Fernando). His siblings were named Sunny, Benedict, Paul, Andrew, Anne, Edward, Anton, Bertram, and Milton. Denipitiya studied at St Benedict's College, Colombo and finally at St. Aloysius' College (Galle). He had his first music lessons from Sunil Santha who continued to give him free lessons and featured him in his recordings.
He was the music composer in Sinhala films such as 'Senakeliya', 'Sangawuna Menika', 'Loka Horu' and also co-directed the film music in 'Saudan Jema' and a few other films with P.L.A. Somapala. He has contributed his talent to many other film recordings of other music directors such as Muththusamy (he first started to write music scores for Muththusamyâs 'Prema Tharange' song 'Chandraya Paayala â Latha Walpola'), P.L.A Somapala, M.K. Rocksamy, T.K.Latiff, Galagedara M Haq, Mohommed Sally, Sarath Balasooriya, Many Indian music directors such as T.R. Papa and other compatriates, assisting them with his knowledge and ability to play many instruments. Rocksamy, Patrick and Latif were the three Tamil, Sinhala and Muslim icons and genius friends who regularly appeared and assisted in most of the film background music and song recordings for nearly thirty years.
He composed the first Sinhala group song 'Udarata Menike Manahara Kandurata Thilake' by C.D. Fonseka, Razeena Yakim, Angeline Goonethileke and Shelton Mendis as well as many other popular songs including 'Aatha Kandurali Simba Simba', 'Pulun Wage Sudu Raula Digai 1958', 'Vishnu Devinde' and 'Umayanganiyo Surralaliniyo' by Jothi, 'Nelum Male Pethi Kadala' by M.S. Fernando, Angeline Goonethilleke and Nimala Atapattu, 'Hithe Ekak Thiyan' by Angeline Goonetilleke, 'Iwuru Thala', 'Ma Nisa Oba', 'Sayuru Theredi', 'Rayak Upadda' and 'Ma Ha Eda' by Milton Mallawarachchi (as music composer) and 'Shreeni Vibushitha Lanka Babale' by Latha Walpola. Many of C.T. Fernando's songs such as 'Sihina Lowe', 'Hela Jathika Abhimane', 'Aane Dingak Innako', 'Maa Baala Kaale', 'Sandawata Rantharu', 'Mal Loke Rani' and 'Punsanda Hinahenne', among others, became hits under his unique music direction and arrangements.
Denipitiya was the music director for many individual artist shows such as 'Baig Geethika' by Mohideen Baig, C.T. Fernando's 'Wana Bamabru', 'Rukmani Handa' by Rukmani Devi and Helen Daniels, P.L.A. & Chithra Somapalaâs 'Ranwan Gee' and 'Sundar Geeth' Hindi by Tudor Jayashantha. In addition to playing, he had also sung in some recordings of songs such as 'Sihina Lowe' with C.T. Fernando (original SLBC recording), 'Ganga Yamuna Hawuna' with Mallika Kahawita and 'Ho Mata Ethi Sampatha' with Christoper Paul.
He was the first to introduce the electric lap slide guitar to Sri Lanka's Sinhala Music industry while also being a pioneer in introducing pop music to the Sri Lankan oriental music industry in the early 1960s. He worked in harmony with all orchestras of Sri Lanka including the Radio Ceylon Orchestra for many decades.
Patrick Denipitiya toured Europe with C.T. Fernando in 1969 (as the first Sri Lankan music director to travel to Europe on tour) and had a meeting with the internationally famous George Harrison of the Beatles, impressing him with his musical knowledge. He also toured Canada and the United States with H.R. Jothipala. Denipitiya has also visited cities such as: London, UK; ZÃŒrich, Switzerland and Paris, France with Chitra Somapala and P.L.A. Somapala and with M.S. Fernando to many other countries.
He formed his own band 'Patrick Denipitiya Combo in the 60s in addition to being the Band Leader for the original SIAC, the band had performed at Sweep Ticket Lottery shows, 'Maliban Guwan Totilla', the 'Elasto Show', the Kandy Lake Club, Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium shows, Akase Kade and Tropicana Club to name a few. He also performed on many Television programmes , being the first musician to appear on BBC Sandeshaya Programme with CT. Later on with the advent of TV in Sri Lanka, the Denipitiya Combo frequently appeared in TV shows like ITN's 'Madhu Rasangha', ITN's 'Ambhals Ghee dham Mala' (which was the first amateur song contest on Sri Lankan television), Rupavahini Anniversary and 'Musically Yours', although there are other television programmes on which the Combo has appeared.
Personal life
In 1961, Patrick married Celcie Fernando, with whom he had three children: Primus; Mahesh Denipitiya and Shyami. Shyami currently resides in Canada and is married to Greg Jayasundera who is an Applications Consultant at a leading bank in Canada. Primus is employed as a senior airport services officer in a leading airline and was one of the pioneers of the one-man show industry in Sri Lanka in the early 1980s.
Though he was involved in his music, Patrick also worked to support his family, being employed at the Census Department in the early Fifties, then at Lake House and subsequently to Lake House bookshop lately. He also took up teaching, teaching music theory, guitar (Hawaiian and Spanish), piano and keyboard to many students purely for his love for music and sharing knowledge and not for economic gain. He was fondly remembered by eminent people like Pandith Ameradeva, former SLBC chairman Late Mr Eamon Kariyakaravana for giving their children music lessons free of charge and also to many other students until his 1990 migration to Canada. He continued to teach, and was actively involved in music while living in Canada. He directed music for the first ever Sri Lankan teledrama in Canada "Ratakin ratakata" and also performed at events and functions, for concerts of Sri Lankan artists touring Canada.
Stroke and death
While in Sri Lanka attending his elder son's wedding in 1997, he suffered a stroke and was partially paralysed and was then taken back to Canada. Partick was lucky enough to have his wife Celcie who looked after him during the 16-year period between his stroke and his death.
He died on 23 March 2013 in Brampton, Ontario, Canada.
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## ãã³ã°ãžã ãã·ã³ããªãŒãºãDãªã³ã°ïŒéæïŒãéã652TSPã¢ãªã3åã(çŽéå)
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ãã³ã°ãžã ãã·ã³ããªãŒãºãDãªã³ã°ïŒéæïŒãéã652TSPã¢ãªã3åã(çŽéå)ã¯ç»é²ã§ããŸããã§ãã | {
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Hassum (also given as Khashshum, ឪaššum, Hassu, Hassuwa or Hazuwan) was a Hurrian city-state, located in southern Turkey most probably on the Euphrates river north of Carchemish.
History
Early Bronze
The city was a vassal to Ebla, it was mentioned in the Tablets of Ebla as Hazuwan, and was governed by its own king. It came under the influence of Mari for a short period of time in the 24th century BC, before Irkab-Damu of Ebla regained influence over the area, the city survived the Akkadians conquests in 2240 BC and flourished as a trade center in the first half of the 2nd millennia BC.
Middle Bronze
In the beginning of 18th century BC, Hassum allied with Yamhad against Yahdun-Lim of Mari, it later helped Yamhad against a kingdom in Zalmakum (a marshy region between the Euphrates and lower Balikh),, but then shifted alliance to Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria after he annexed Mari. The city sent him 1,000 troops to attack Sumu-Epuh of Yamhad. Later, Yarim-Lim I of Yamhad brought Hassum under his hegemony and the city remained subjugated to Yamhad until the Hittite conquest.
Hittite Conquest
In the course of his war against Yamhad, Hattusili I of the Hittites, having destroyed Alalakh and Urshu, headed toward Hassum in his sixth year (around 1644 BC, middle chronology). Yarim-Lim III of Yamhad sent his army under General Zukrassi, leader of the heavy-armed troops, accompanied by General Zaludis the commander of the Manda troops. They united with the army of Hashshum, then the battle of Atalur mountain ensued (Atalur is located north of Aleppo not very far from the Amanus, it can be identified with the Kurd-Dagh Mountains). Hattusili destroyed his enemies and moved on to burn and loot Hassum. The citizens rallied their forces three times against the Hittites, but Hattusili sacked the city and seized the statues of the god Teshub, his wife Hebat and a pair of silver bulls that were the bulls of Teshub, and carried them to Hattusa, where they were kept in the temple of Arinna. The king of Hassum was captured and humiliated, he was harnessed to one of the wagons used to transport the loot of his city and taken to the Hittite capital.
Late Bronze
A century later, Hittite king Telipinu (fl. c. 1500 BC) mentions Hassum as his chief enemy and his destruction of the city.
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The Lost is a 2014 novel by Sarah Beth Durst. It tells the story of Lauren Chase, a woman who decides to go for a long drive rather than face the results of tests her mother has had, and who ends up in the fictional town of Lost.
Actress Selma Blair bought the rights to the novel in 2018 intending to adapt it to film.
Plans for a sequel called The Missing were already in development by the time the novel was published.
Plot
Lauren Chase is a young woman from California who has allowed her mother to move in with her after her struggles with cancer. After realizing that her mother's cancer might have returned Lauren gets into her car and drives all day. Caught up in a dust storm Lauren hallucinates a mysterious man with feather tattoos on his chest and winds up in the town of Lost where she is given free food and lodging. Preparing to go home the following morning she is once again caught up in the dust storm. After driving in and out of it several times she is eventually rescued by the tattooed man who turns out not to be a hallucination. Returning to Lost looking for help, Lauren is told that she will receive aid from the Missing Man. However when Lauren meets the Missing Man and tells him her name he refuses to help her or the other residents of Lost and walks away. As none of the residents can leave Lost until the Missing Man helps them, they are terrified of Lauren and shun her. After an angry mob sets upon her, Lauren is rescued by a six year old child named Claire who rescues Lauren as she is the only person she has ever seen independently walk in and out of the dust storm. Lauren is taken to the apartment of Peter, who turns out to be the man with the tattoos. Peter tells Lauren that only lost things and people end up in Lost and no one can leave without the Missing Man. Peter, who is a "finder" of the lost, decides to help Lauren as she is the only other person, aside from himself, who the Missing Man has ever refused to help.
Lauren and Claire, and eventually Peter, decide to seek shelter in one of the many abandoned houses around Lost. Claire and Peter teach her to survive by scavenging. Lauren holds out hope that she will one day be able to leave even without the Missing Man and eventually spends an entire day biking around the outskirts of Lost, looking for a weakness in the perpetual dust storm that surrounds the town. Instead she realizes there are no weaknesses, and witnesses the void toss up cars, lost objects, and a house. Returning, Peter shows Lauren some of the things that the void has left them, including the lost paintings The Storm on the Sea of Galilee and Chez Tortoni, in order to comfort her.
As the Missing Man continues to stay away from Lost, the void that borders the town begins to move closer. Lauren goes to investigate and finds Veronica, a waitress who has become crazed after her lover, Sean, was taken by the expanding void. Veronica threatens to shoot Lauren and Lauren offers to go into the void looking for Sean, knowing that Peter will try to rescue her. Lauren does not find Sean but she does find a ring. She and Sean are rescued by Peter and when Lauren shows them the ring Sean recognizes it and uses it to propose to Veronica. The two develop the glow that Lost residents obtain when they are ready for the Missing Man to send them away from Lost.
Sean and Veronica spread the news about Lauren and more Lost residents begin to show up at her door looking for help. Lauren manages to help several of them, including one resident who trades information about her own death for the location of Claire's parents, who did not in fact abandon her as she believed, but who moved to Scottsdale, Arizona after being devastated over her disappearance. Despite the fact that she is able to help people, Lauren continues to want to return to her mother. To help her Peter goes finds the Missing Man. The Missing Man eventually returns and tells Lauren that her mother is dying but she cannot yet return to her as she has yet to discover the reason she came to Lost. He also teaches Lauren to help people with the glow move on by placing her hands on them and saying "You were lost; you are found." Lauren accidentally uses this technique to send Claire back to the real world. Devastated she creates a found object art piece which gives her the glow, since what sent her to Lost was the fact that she had abandoned her creativity and desire to make art. Peter begs Lauren to stay as the town of Lost needs her to continue sending people back to the real world. He also confesses he loves Lauren, but she sends herself back to the real world.
Lauren wakes up in a hospital where she learns that she has been in a coma for three months and was found in a car accident on the very day she left home. Her mother is also in the hospital having been diagnosed with stage 4 ovarian cancer. Lauren is convinced that Lost was a hallucination, but she continues to find objects from Lost in the real world, objects she could not have known about before. Beginning to believe Lost was real, Lauren decides to take her mother there since the people of Lost never leave and even if dead their souls remain in the town. Before she can leave with her mother however her mother's condition worsens forcing her to remain in the hospital. Lauren tells her mother about her plan to leave and Lauren's mother told her they would have never found Lost together since Lauren's mother was never lost as long as she had Lauren.
After her mother's death Lauren gets in her car and prepares to return to Lost. She first seeks out Claire. Unexpectedly, when she arrives in Scottsdale she sees that Claire has integrated happily back in real life. Lauren drives on until her car runs out of gas looking for Lost. She is about to give up hope that she will find it when she finally walks straight into the dust storm.
Characters
Lauren Chase - a young woman who can't cope with her mother's possible cancer diagnosis
Claire - a six year old child who was abandoned by her parents
Peter - a "finder" who helps guide lost souls from the void into Lost
Missing Man - the only person capable of helping the residents of Lost leave
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Battle of Britain is a 1941 oil painting by the British war artist Paul Nash, depicting an aerial battle as part of the Battle of Britain in the Second World War. It measures . The large work was painted for the War Artists' Advisory Committee, and is now held by the Imperial War Museums.
Nash served on the Western Front in the First World War, and became a war artist. He was engaged by the War Artists' Advisory Committee after the outbreak of the Second World War to paint for the Royal Air Force and the Air Ministry, but his works were not well received by either and his full-time engagement was ended in December 1940. Nonetheless, the Committee earmarked funds to buy further works from Nash, the first of which was Totes Meer, completed in March 1941, and the second was Battle of Britain. Two further works were completed under this arrangement, Defence of Albion (1942) and Battle of Germany (1944).
In his own description of the painting, Nash says it is "an attempt to give the sense of an aerial battle in operation over a wide area and thus summarises England's great aerial victory over Germany". It is not based on a single incident, but rather is an abstracted attempt to symbolically depict the entire conflict between Britain and Nazi Germany, with free-flying British fighters battling ordered ranks of German aircraft. Nash included several landscape elements present throughout the Battle of Britain: white cumulus clouds above; below, a river meandering through yellowed fields and past a town to the coast; and in the distance, a view across the English Channel to occupied France. White vapour trails across the sky show the paths of dogfighting aircraft, amid dark smoke from several that have been damaged or crashed down in flames, while ranks of new Luftwaffe aircraft are approaching.
Nash worked on the painting at his studio in Oxford. He based the sky on a 19th-century lithograph of a storm over Paris and the Seine, which his wife Margaret gave to his pupil, Richard Seddon. Seddon suggested Nash should include more dark trails of smoke in addition to the white vapour trails, adding one as an example which remains in Nash's finished work.
Nash delivered the painting was delivered to the War Artists' Advisory Committee in October 1941, and it was exhibited at the National Gallery, London in January 1942. It is now held by the Imperial War Museums.
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"id": "64068664",
"title": "Battle of Britain (painting)",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle%20of%20Britain%20%28painting%29",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
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çææ°ãªåйãäœãšããããïŒ | {
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The People's Consultative Assembly of the Republic of Indonesia (MPR-RI) is the legislative branch in Indonesia's political system. It is composed of the members of the People's Representative Council (DPR) and the Regional Representative Council (DPD). Before 2004, and the amendments to the 1945 Constitution, the MPR was the highest governing body in Indonesia.
In accordance with Law No. 16/1960, the assembly was formed after the general election in 1971. It was decided at that time that the membership of the Assembly would be twice that of the House.
The 920 membership of MPR continued for the terms of 1977â1982 and 1982â1987. For the terms 1987â1992, 1992â1997, and 1997â1999 the MPR's membership became 1000. One hundred members were appointed representing delegations from groups as addition to the faction delegates of Karya Pembangunan (FKP), Partai Demokrasi Indonesia (FPDI), Persatuan Pembangunan (FPP), and military (Fraksi ABRI, later renamed Fraksi TNI/POLRI). For the term of 1999â2004 the membership of MPR was 700 (462 civilians and 38 from military and police which formed the DPR, 135 from each of the 27 provinces which formed the Regional Delegations Faction (Fraksi Utusan Daerah), and 65 to form the Groups Delegations Faction (Fraksi Utusan Golongan)). It was reduced to 688 in 2004 due to the removal of active military and police officers and the dissolution of the GDF, as well as the reassignment of Regional Delegations Faction to the newly formed DPD and restructuring the senatorial seats at 128 from each of the 32 provinces. Due to addition of West Papua since the 2009 election, the number of DPD senators became 132. Since the 2019â2024 term there are 575 DPR members and 136 senators, resulting in 711 members of the MPR.
History
Origins
On 18 August, the day after Sukarno proclaimed the Independence of Indonesia the Preparatory Committee for Indonesian Independence (PPKI) approved a new constitution for Indonesia. Under its transitional provisions, for a six-month transition period, the new republic would be governed according to the constitution by a president, assisted by a National Committee, which would establish the two chamber legislature mandated by the constitution. On 29 August, Sukarno dissolved the PPKI and on its basis established the Central Indonesian National Committee ((KNIP)), with 135 appointed deputies. Majority of the PPKI membership joined the new parliament.
A number of KNIP members became concerned that the Indonesian government was too authoritarian, and pressed for a more parliamentary system. Sukarno and Vice President Hatta agreed to these demands, and on 16 October 1945, Hatta issued Vice-Presidential Edict No.X that gave the KNIP full legislative powers alongside Sukarno, meaning it had to approve all legislation, including those which determine the current national policies. These powers were delegated to a Working Committee. Wartime underground leaders Sutan Sjahrir and Amir Sjarifuddin were subsequently elected chairman and vice-chairman of this committee, which exercised the legislative work of the KNIP when the full committee did not meet.
Federal Era and Parliamentary Democracy Era
On 27 December 1949, the Dutch government transferred sovereignty to a federal United States of Indonesia (USI), which comprised 16 states and territories, including the Republic of Indonesia. Under the constitution of the USI, the highest chamber of government was the Senate, which comprised 32 members, two from each of the 16 components of the USI. However, one by one, the individual regions and territories of the USI began to dissolve themselves into the Republic, and on 17 August 1950, Indonesia became a unitary state.
In discussions starting in May 1950, the Committee for the Preparation of the Constitution of a Unitary State, had was agreed that there would be a unicameral legislature comprising the membership of the lower chamber and Senate from the USI and the KNIP working Committee and the Supreme Advisory Council from the Republic. The provisional constitution also called for the establishment of a Constitutional Assembly to draw up a permanent constitution. This assembly was elected in 1955 but failed to agree on a new constitution, and with the support of the army, on 5 July 1959, Sukarno issued decree to abolish the provisional constitution and reimpose the 1945 Constitution, with the role of the MPR being restored.
Guided Democracy Era/Old Order
Formation
In 1960, Sukarno dissolved the lower house, the People's Representative Council, after it refused to pass the state budget. He then appointed a Mutual Cooperation People's Representative Council (DPR-GR) and reestablished the MPR in the form of a Provisional People's Consultative Assembly (MPRS). The 610 members, comprising the DPR-GR together with 94 appointed regional representatives and 232 appointed representatives of functional sectors, including service personnel of the Armed Forces and the National Police, took their oaths of office on 15 September.
It was during this time that the MPRS first passed a series of Resolutions, a power not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution but hierarchically accepted as legislation directly under the Constitution, but higher than an Act. MPRS and MPR would pass Resolutions until 2003, when MPR was definitively stripped of any law-making power.
1960 General Session
The MPRS held its first General Session in Bandung, West Java from 10 November to 3 December. It passed two resolutions:
Resolution No. I/MPRS/1960 on the Republic of Indonesia Political Manifesto as the Guidelines of State Policy; and
Resolution No. II/MPRS/1960 on the Major Guidelines of the National Overall Planned Development Phase One 1961â1969.
1963 General Session
The second General Session was held in Bandung from 15 May to 22 May 1963. It was at this General Session that Sukarno was elected 'President for Life' through Resolution No. III/MPRS/1963, which was a violation of Article 7 of the Constitution. The resolution was supported by the armed forces deputies to the Assembly, while it dealt a serious blow to the increasing influence of the Communist Party of Indonesia and its representatives, who hoped for a pro-communist, democratically elected president as Sukarno's successor.
1965 General Session
The MPRS held its third General Session in Bandung from 11 to 16 April 1965. This General Session further entrenched Sukarno's ideological approaches in the running of Indonesia. Many of Sukarno's Independence Day speeches were adopted as the guideline for policies in politics and economics. The MPRS also decided on the principals of Guided Democracy, which would involve consultations and consensus.
Transition to the New Order
1966 General Session
Perhaps the most significant of the MPR's General Sessions was that in 1966. Meeting in Jakarta from 20 June to 5 July 1966 under a new leadership, and with a membership purged of 180 individuals either pro-Sukarno or linked to organizations implicated in the alleged coup attempt of 30 September 1965, the General Session marked the beginning of the official transfer of power from Sukarno to Suharto. Although the de facto transfer of power had been made on 11 March by virtue of the Supersemar document, Suharto wanted to maintain the appearance of legality.
During the 1966 session, the MPRS passed 24 resolutions; they included revoking Sukarno's appointment to the life presidency, banning ; explicitly defined in the resolution's corresponding explanatory memorandum to include "the struggle fundaments and the tactics taught by ... Stalin, Mao Zedong, etc.", elevating the Supersemar into a resolution irrevocable by Sukarno, the holding of legislative elections, commissioning Suharto to create a new Cabinet, and a constitutional amendment in which a president who might be unable to perform his duty would be replaced by the holder of the Supersemar instead of the vice-president.
Also during the General Session, Sukarno delivered a speech called Nawaksara ("The Nine Points"), in which he was expected to give account for the 1965 30 September Movement, in which six generals and a first lieutenant were kidnapped and killed by alleged communists. The speech was rejected, and the MPRS asked Sukarno to give a supplementary speech at the next MPRS General Session.
1967 Special Session
The 1967 MPRS Special Session, from 7 to 12 March, marked the end of Sukarno's presidency and the beginning of Suharto's. Much like the 1966 General Session, the official transfer of power was done before the General Session in March, with Sukarno stepping down from his position in February. Suharto's appointment as acting president and the withdrawal of power from Sukarno during this General Session was just a formality.
The MPRS also passed a resolution to re-examine the adoption of the Political Manifesto as the primary GSP of the Assembly and the Republic at large.
The Special Session assembled after Sukarno's Nawaksara Supplementary Letter was deemed to be unworthy because it had not included a full account of the 30 September Movement. He did not deliver a speech. On 9 February 1967, the DPR declared that the President was endangering the nation through his leadership and ideological stance. It then asked for an MPRS Special Session to be held in March.
1968 Special Session
The 1968 MPRS Special Session, 21 to 30 March, officially consolidated Suharto's position by appointing him to the presidency. The MPRS commissioned Suharto to continue stabilizing Indonesia's politics and to formulate a Five Year Plan for the economy.
The Special Session was assembled when it became obvious that Suharto was not going to be able to hold legislative elections in July 1968 as had been ordered by the 1966 MPRS General Session. During this Special Session, the MPRS also commissioned Suharto to hold elections by 5 July 1971.
New Order
1973 General Session
The 1973 General Session, held from 12 to 24 March was of the first MPR to be elected. Its membership was increased to 920. Until 1999 it included members from Golkar, the United Development Party (PPP), the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI), ABRI members (Indonesian National Armed Forces, which included the police force at the time), as well as regional representatives.
For the first time the president was required to deliver an Accountability Speech. Suharto was expected to outline the achievements which had been accomplished during his five-year term and the way in which they fulfilled the national policies proposed by the Assembly to him at the beginning of his term.
In this General Session, the MPR passed resolutions that outlined the method of the election of the president and vice president and decided on the relationship between the governing bodies in Indonesia such as the MPR, DPR, the Supreme Advisory Council (DPA), etc. Suharto was elected to a second term as president, with Hamengkubuwono IX, the sultan of Yogyakarta as vice president.
1978 General Session
The 1978 General Session, held on 11 to 23 March, passed resolutions that included the integration of East Timor as a province of Indonesia and commissioning Suharto to establish Pancasila as the national ideology via an indoctrination process.
The session was noted for the mass walkout of PPP deputies when Suharto referred to religions as "streams of beliefs".
During this General Session, Suharto was elected to a third term as president, with Adam Malik, then chairman of the MPR, as his vice president.
1983 General Session
The 1983 General Session passed resolutions on the holding of a referendum, as well giving Suharto the title of "Father of Development". He was elected to a fourth term, with Umar Wirahadikusumah as vice president.
1988 General Session
The 1988 General Session was marked by a reorganization of the MPR and the return of the sectoral representatives which formed the Groups Faction. Members of this faction, drawn from all walks of life and integrated into the factions of Golkar, PPP, and PDI deputies in the assembly, as well as the regional deputies, were presidential appointees from civil society organizations and representatives of industries.
This General Session was also noted for the furor over the nomination of Sudharmono as vice president, which resulted in Brigadier General Ibrahim Saleh interrupting the General Session and PPP's Jailani Naro nominating himself as vice president before he was convinced to withdraw by Suharto. The latter was elected to a fifth term as president with Sudharmono elected as vice president.
1993 General Session
The 1993 General Session was marked by another reorganization of the MPR, with membership being increased to 1,000 deputies. This General Session was noted for the ABRI's preemptive nomination of Try Sutrisno as vice president. Although displeased, Suharto did not want an open conflict with the military deputies and accepted Try as his vice president. Suharto was elected to a sixth term.
1998 General Session
The 1998 General Session was held during the height of the Asian Financial Crisis and the peak of pro-democratic movements in Suharto's regime. In an effort to restore security and stability, the MPR passed a resolution to give special powers to the president to ensure the success and security of development.
Suharto was elected to a seventh term, with B.J. Habibie as vice president.
To date, this is the New Order's last ever General Session, marked with Suharto's downfall before the Special Session in May, marking the starting the new Reform era.
Reform Era
1998 Special Session
The 1998 Special Session (Sidang Istimewa) was the first MPR assembly held after Suharto's resignation from the Presidency and fall from power in May 1998. Although it still consisted of politicians who had flourished during Suharto's regime, these MPR members were keen to distance themselves from Suharto and appeal to the reformist sentiments that were prevalent in Indonesia at the time.
During this Special Session, MPR revoked the special powers given to the president in the 1998 General Session and limited the number of terms of the president. The MPR also resolved to hold legislative elections in 1999, ordered a crackdown on corruption, collusion, and nepotism and revoked the resolution which had ordered the indoctrination of Pancasila to establish it as a national ideology.
This Special Session, and Suharto's resignation, marked the downfall of the New Order, which transitioned to the Reformasi era.
1999 General Session
The 1999 General Session was the first MPR with "real" reform credentials. In another reorganization process, the membership was reduced to 700, with 500 DPR members, 135 Regional Representatives, and 65 Group Representatives.
During the General Session, the MPR recognized the referendum in East Timor and set a task force to amend the 1945 constitution. It also stipulated that it would thenceforth hold annual sessions to receive reports from the president, DPR, the Audit Board of Indonesia (BPK), the Supreme Advisory Council (DPA), and the Supreme Court. After receiving these annual reports, the MPR would then work to give recommendations on the course of action that the president could take.
For the first time, the MPR rejected an accountability speech (Habibie's), and following it Presidential and Vice-Presidential elections were held with more than one person competing.
During the General Session, Abdurrahman Wahid was elected president, with Megawati Sukarnoputri as vice-president.
2000 Annual Session
The 2000 Annual Session continued the reform process. The MPR separated the TNI from the National Police and defined their roles. It also passed resolutions on the consolidation of national unity and recommendations regarding the execution of regional autonomy.
2001 Special Session
The 2001 Special Session assembled after President Wahid was allegedly involved in a corruption case and after the DPR began claiming that Wahid's leadership had become incompetent. Originally scheduled for August 2001, the Special Session was brought forward to July 2001. It then removed Wahid from the presidency and elected Megawati Sukarnoputri as president and Hamzah Haz as vice-president.
2002 Annual Session
The 2002 Annual Session continued the constitutional amendment process, most notably changing the system of presidential elections, abolishing the DPA and requiring that 20 percent of the national budget be allocated for education, It also order the formulation of the Constitutional Court by 17 August 2003.
2003 Annual Session
The 2003 Annual Session focused on the legal status of the previous resolutions that the MPR and the MPRS had passed, as well as deciding on the composition of a Constitutional Commission.
The 2003 Annual Session also outlined the MPR's new status, which would come into effect with the inauguration of the new president in 2004. With the president and vice-president thenceforth elected directly by the people and with the constitutional amendments which the MPR had worked on from 1999 to 2002, the MPR's power was reduced. It would no longer be the highest governing body but would stand on equal terms with the DPR, BPK, the Supreme Court, and the Constitutional Court. In dealing with the president and vice-president, the MPR would be responsible for the inauguration ceremony and, should the occasion call for it, the impeachment of the president or vice-president, or both. The MPR would elect a president and vice-president only if both positions were vacant.
2004 Annual Session
During this session, the MPR heard its last accountability speech by a president.
Duties and power
Constitutional duties
As provided by the 1945 Constitution, the MPR is responsible for the amendment or deletion of certain articles and/or provisions of the Constitution. A two-thirds majority vote in a general session of the Assembly can approve any proposed changes to the constitution including scrapping or adding additional articles, sections and provisions, as well as in the introduction of certain amendments.
Presidential and vice-presidential inauguration
The 1945 Constitution empowers the MPR to hold a general inauguration session for the president and vice president of the Republic within weeks or months after their election.
Should the office of the presidency be vacant the MPR can be ordered to hold a general plenary for the vice president to render his/her oath taking as acting president.
On the impeachment of the president and vice-president
The Assembly, through the 2003 Rules, has the authority to impeach both the president and vice-president of Indonesia or either one of the two if probable violations of the 1945 constitution and the laws of the Republic have been committed during the performance of their mandate.
On the election of the vice president in case of a presidential vacancy
As provided by the 2003 amendments to the 1945 Constitution the MPR, should the Presidential post be vacant and the vice president assumes the office in an acting capacity, can be advised to hold a general plenary to appoint an acting vice president of the Republic to fill the vacancy created by it.
On the election of the president and vice-president in cases of vacancies of both offices
As per the 2003 Assembly rules, only in a case when both the Presidential and Vice-Presidential positions are vacant can the MPR be advised to hold a general session to elect office holders within a month after the announcement of the vacancy. Such cases are sudden resignation, impeachment, and death in office.
Members' right and duties
Rights of MPR members
Members of the MPR are vested with several rights in order to execute their duties. These include:
Right to propose amendment(s) to the Constitution;
Right to express opinions and make a choice;
Right to elect and be elected into parliamentary duties;
Right to defend oneself on alleged violations of parliamentary code of ethics;
Right of immunity from prosecution due to any statements, questions, and opinions made for the purpose of parliamentary duties, except in violation of parliamentary code of ethics and code of conducts;
Right to be assigned certain stately protocols; and
Right to financial and administrative benefits.
Duties
Along with rights, members of the MPR are expected to perform their duties, These include:
Uphold and promote Pancasila;
Uphold and execute the 1945 Constitution and the Laws of Indonesia;
Defend and preserve national harmony and unity of Indonesia;
Put ahead the national interests over individual or group interests; and
Act as a proper representatives of the people and their constituent regions.
List of speakers
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Saint-Sauveur-Camprieu is a commune in the Gard department in southern France.
Geography
Climate
Saint-Sauveur-Camprieu has a oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification Cfb) closely bordering on a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Csb). The average annual temperature in Saint-Sauveur-Camprieu is . The average annual rainfall is with November as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in July, at around , and lowest in January, at around . The highest temperature ever recorded in Saint-Sauveur-Camprieu was on 28 June 2019; the coldest temperature ever recorded was on 1 March 2005.
Population
Sights
Bramabiau Gorge
Arboretum de Saint-Sauveur-des-Pourcils
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Timothy's World Coffee (a.k.a. Timothy's) is a large Canadian coffee roasting company and chain of coffeeshops.
Origin and background
Timothy's was founded in 1975 as a retailer of premium roasted coffee beans by Timothy Snelgrove and his wife Teresa Snelgrove. The company was originated as a business-school project Snelgrove undertook while studying at the University of Western Ontario. As the company expanded, it evolved its retail offering to include brewed coffee. The first Timothy's was opened in a mall in London, Ontario.
Timothy's was purchased by Ian and Becky McKinnon in 1986 who further expanded retail locations and created a wholesale coffee division. Timothy's also became a roaster partner of Keurig and began producing single serve K-Cups for use in Keurig's line of single serve brewers.
In 2008, Timothy's became an affiliated portfolio company of Sun Capital Partners.
On November 13, 2009, it was announced that Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. would acquire Timothy's wholesale business, while Bruegger's Enterprises, Inc. would purchase and continue to operate the retail business. Bruegger's would also acquire Timothy's partner restaurants, mmmuffins and Michel's Baguette, through a wholly owned subsidiary called ThreeCaf Brands Canada Inc.
Timothy's produces its own coffee beans, roasting and producing multiple formats of coffee in its own plant. For this reason, the company offers a freshness guarantee and other supporting company policies. Since 2015 the Toronto roasting plant was closed and consolidated into the Van Houtte roasting plant in Quebec.
Expansion into the United States
In the mid-1990s, Timothy's expanded into the United States, concentrating in New York City. Other stores were located in Boston, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia. At one point, it was New York City's second-largest coffeehouse chain, after Starbucks. After the September 11 attacks in 2001, the company closed its US operations and the company re-focused on the Canadian market and wholesale business operation.
Expansion into South Korea
Timothy's opened its first overseas store in Seoul, Republic of Korea (South Korea) on May 19, 2007.
Current business
Timothy's has since purchased the existing stores in Canada. It later acquired the mmmuffins and Michel's Baguette retail businesses. Today, the company operates some 40 Canadian stores under the Timothy's name. Timothy's also operates a wholesale coffee business, supplies office coffee service companies, packages coffee in K-Cups for Keurig home and office brewers, and has a distribution program in large chain hotels, grocery stores, sports clubs and similar venues.
In February 2009, it named a brand of coffee the "Presidential No. 44" blend to celebrate a visit to Canada by U.S. President Barack Obama.
Bruegger's/Green Mountain acquisition
On November 13, 2009 Green Mountain Coffee Roasters acquired Timothy's wholesale business from Sun Capital Partners, Inc. for a cash purchase price of approximately $157 million, in U.S. dollars, subject to adjustment. Concurrently, Bruegger's Enterprises, Inc. acquired Timothy's retail operations for an undisclosed sum.
Green Mountain acquired the Timothy's World Coffee wholesale business, but not their retail operations. Timothy's wholesale business will be maintained as a Canadian subsidiary, with operations integrated into Green Mountain's Specialty Coffee Business Unit.
Bruegger's Enterprises, Inc., through a wholly owned subsidiary called ThreeCaf Brands Canada Inc., assumed control of Timothy's three restaurant brands: Timothy's World Coffee, mmmuffins and Michel's Baguette. Bruegger's intends to continue operations of all three brands.
MTY Food Group acquisition
In 2018, MTY Food Group acquired Timothy's World Coffee and Mmmuffins retail operations from Le Duff America.
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Music of Scotland in the eighteenth century includes all forms of music made in Scotland, by Scottish people, or in forms associated with Scotland, in the eighteenth century. Growing divisions in the Scottish kirk between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party resulted in attempt to expand psalmondy to include hymns the singing of other scriptural paraphrases.
From the late seventeenth century Church music in the Church of Scotland consisted of the singing of psalms to a limited number of common tunes. Differences between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party resulted in a movement to reform church music. Common practice was lining out, by which the precentor sang or read out each line and it was then repeated by the congregation. New practices were introduced and the repertory was expanded. In the second half of the eighteenth century these innovations became linked to a choir movement that included the setting up of schools to teach new tunes and singing in four parts. Published paraphrases of passages of the Bible were adopted in many parishes.
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the bagpipes had replaced the harp as the most popular instrument in the Scottish Highlands. There is also evidence of adoption of the European-style fiddle. There were numerous publications of traditional tunes in the period, particularly when the oppression of secular music and dancing by the kirk began to ease, between about 1715 and 1725. In the late eighteenth century the music of the Highland bagpipes began a revival, particularly the ceòl mór (the great music), which had developed for ceremonial purposes for the Gaelic aristocracy from the seventeenth century.
The Italian style of classical music was probably first brought to Scotland by the cellist and composer Lorenzo Bocchi, who travelled to Scotland in the 1720s. By the mid-eighteenth century there were several Italians resident in Scotland, acting as composers and performers. By 1775 Edinburgh was a minor, but functioning European musical centre, with foreign and native resident composers and professional musicians. In the mid-eighteenth century a group of Scottish composers began to attempt to create their own musical tradition, creating the "Scots drawing room style". A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs helped make Scottish songs part of the European cannon of classical music, but this championing of Scottish music associated with Robert Burns may have prevented the establishment of a tradition of European concert music in Scotland, which faltered towards the end of the century.
Church music
In the eighteenth century there were growing divisions in the Scottish kirk between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party. While Evangelicals emphasised the authority of the Bible and the traditions and historical documents of the kirk, the Moderates tended to stress intellectualism in theology, the established hierarchy of the kirk an attempted to raise the social status of the clergy. In music the evangelicals tended to believe only the Psalms of the 1650 Psalter should be used in the services in the church. In contrast the Moderates believed that Psalmody was in need of reform and expansion. This movement had its origins in the influence of English psalmondist and hymnodist Isaac Watts (1674â1748) and became an attempt to expand psalmondy in the Church of Scotland to include hymns the singing of other scriptural paraphrases.
From the late seventeenth century the common practice had been lining out, by which the precentor sang or read out each line and it was then repeated by the congregation. From the second quarter of the eighteenth century it was argued that this should be abandoned in favour of the practice of singing stanza by stanza. This necessitated the use of practice verses and the pioneering work was Thomas Bruce's The Common Tunes, or, Scotland's Church Musick Made Plane (1726), which contained seven practice verses. The 30 tunes in this book marked the beginning of a renewal movement in Scottish Psalmody. New practices were introduced and the repertory was expanded, including both neglected sixteenth-century settings and new ones. In the second half of the eighteenth century these innovations became linked to a choir movement that included the setting up of schools to teach new tunes and singing in four parts. More tune books appeared and the repertory further expanded, although there were still fewer than in counterpart churches in England and the US. More congregations abandoned lining out.
In the period 1742â45 a committee of the General Assembly worked on a series of paraphrases, borrowing from Watts, Philip Doddridge (1702â51) and other Scottish and English writers, which were published as Translations and Paraphrases, in verse, of several passages of Sacred Scripture (1725). These were never formally adopted, as the Moderates, then dominant in the church, thought they were too evangelical. A corrected version was licensed for private use in 1751 and some individual congregations petitioned successful for their use in public worship and they were revised again and published 1781. These were formally adopted by the assembly, but there was considerable resistance to their introduction in some parishes.
After the Glorious Revolution episcopalianism retrained supporters, but they were divided between the "non-jurors", not subscribing to the right of William III and Mary II, and later the Hanoverians, to be monarchs, and Qualified Chapels, where congregations, led by priests ordained by bishops of the Church of England or the Church of Ireland, were willing to pray for the Hanoverians. Such chapels drew their congregations from English people living in Scotland and from Scottish Episcopalians who were not bound to the Jacobite cause and used the English Book of Common Prayer. They could worship openly and installed organs and hired musicians, following practice in English parish churches, singing in the liturgy as well as metrical psalms, while the non-jurors had to worship covertly and less elaborately. The two branches united in the 1790s after the death of the last Stuart heir in the main line and the repeal of the penal laws in 1792. The non-juring branch soon absorbed the musical and liturgical traditions of the qualified churches.
Traditional music
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the bagpipes had replaced the harp as the most popular instrument in the Highlands. There is also evidence of adoption of the European style fiddle in the Highlands with Martin Martin noting in his A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland (1703) that he knew of eighteen players in Lewis alone. Well-known fiddlers included Pattie Birnie (c. 1635â1721), and later Neil (1727â1807) and his son Nathaniel Gow (1763â1831), who, along with a large number of anonymous musicians, composed hundreds of fiddle tunes and variations.
Publications early in the century included Playford's Collection of original Scotch-tunes, (full of the highland humours) for the violin (1700), Margaret Sinkler's Music Book (1710), James Watson's Choice Collection of Comic and Serious Scots Poems both Ancient and Modern 1711. The oppression of secular music and dancing by the kirk began to ease between about 1715 and 1725 and the level of musical activity was reflected in a flood musical publications in broadsheets and compendiums of music such as the makar Allan Ramsay's verse compendium The Tea Table Miscellany (1723), William Thomson's Orpheus Caledonius: or, A collection of Scots songs (1733), James Oswald's The Caledonian Pocket Companion (1751), and David Herd's Ancient and modern Scottish songs, heroic ballads, etc.: collected from memory, tradition and ancient authors (1776). These were drawn on for the most influential collection, The Scots Musical Museum published in six volumes from 1787 to 1803 by James Johnson and Robert Burns, which also included new words by Burns. A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs collected by George Thomson and published between 1799 and 1818 included contributions from Burns and Walter Scott and contributed to the combining of Scottish traditional music with European classical forms.
In the late eighteenth century, partly as a reaction to the social upheavals of the Agricultural revolution and Highland Clearances that were seen as destroying the traditions and culture of the Highlands, the music of the Highland bagpipes began a revival. The Highland Society of London, formed in 1778, put an emphasis on bagpiping, particularly the ceòl mór (the great music), which had developed for ceremonial purposes for the Gaelic aristocracy from the seventeenth century. From 1781 the society organised ceòl mór competitions that became the basis for later gatherings in Scotland.
Classical music
The Italian style of classical music was probably first brought to Scotland by the cellist and composer Lorenzo Bocchi, who travelled to Scotland in the 1720s, introducing the cello to the country and then developing settings for Lowland Scots songs. He possibly had a hand in the first Scottish Opera, the pastoral The Gentle Shepherd (1725), with libretto by Allan Ramsay (1686â1758). The growth of a musical culture in the capital was marked by the incorporation of the Musical Society of Edinburgh in 1728 as the successor to the St. Cecilia's Society. By the mid-eighteenth century there were several Italians resident in Scotland, acting as composers and performers. These included Nicolò Pasquali, Giusto Tenducci and Fransesco Barsanti. Scottish composers known to be active in this period include Alexander Munro (fl. c. 1732), James Foulis (1710â73) and Charles McLean (fl. c. 1737). Thomas Erskine, 6th Earl of Kellie (1732â81) was one of the most important British composers of his era, and the first Scot known to have produced a symphony. The Edinburgh Musical Society was so successful in this period that it was able to build its own oval concert hall, St Cecilia's, in 1762. According to James Baxter, by 1775 Edinburgh was a minor, but functioning European musical centre, with foreign and native resident composers and professional musicians.
In the mid-eighteenth century a group of Scottish composers began to respond to Allan Ramsey's call to "own and refine" their own musical tradition, creating what James Johnson has characterised as the "Scots drawing room style", taking primarily Lowland Scottish tunes and adding simple figured basslines and other features from Italian music that made them acceptable to a middle class audience. It gained momentum when major Scottish composers like James Oswald and William McGibbon (1690â1756) became involved around 1740. Oswald's Curious Collection of Scottish Songs (1740) was one of the first to include Gaelic tunes alongside Lowland ones, setting a fashion common by the middle of the century and helping to create a unified Scottish musical identity. However, with changing fashions there was a decline in the publication of collections of specifically Scottish collections of tunes, in favour of their incorporation into British collections.
A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs helped make Scottish songs part of the European cannon of classical music, while Thompson's work brought elements of Romanticism, such as harmonies based on those of Beethoven, into Scottish classical music. However, J. A. Baxter has suggested that Burns' championing of Scottish music may have prevented the establishment of a tradition of European concert music in Scotland, which faltered towards the end of the century. The Edinburgh Musical Society gave its last concert in 1798 and was wound up in 1801, with its concert hall sold off to become a Baptist church.
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The Serbian men's national under-17 basketball team is the boys' basketball team, administered by the Basketball Federation of Serbia, that represents Serbia in international under-17 (under age 17) men's basketball competitions, consisting mainly of the FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup.
Individual awards
World Cup All-Tournament Team
Nikola RakiÄeviÄ â 2014
Statistical leaders: Assists
Ognjen StankoviÄ â 2022
World Cup record
Updated on 16 July 2022
Coaches
Rosters
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The 61 Football Club (Luton) is a football club based in Luton, Bedfordshire, England. The club is affiliated to the Bedfordshire County Football Association. They have reached the Second Round of the FA Vase twice in their history. Currently they are members of the . They also have a reserve team that plays in the Spartan South Midlands League Reserve Group Two, and a third team who play in the Luton District and South Beds League Division One.
History
The club was formed in 1961 and was named after the year of its foundation. The team joined the Hellenic League Division Two in 1972 switching to the South Midlands League Division One a year later. They won the league in 1980â81 and gained promotion to the Premier Division in which they finished runners-up in 1982â83. The club was relegated to Division One in 1998 and further relegated to Division Two in 2004 due to ground grading issues. They won the league in 2008â09 but were not promoted, again due to ground grading.
Ground
The Kingsway Recreational Ground is a very basic council-run sports ground situated just off the A505 between Luton and Dunstable, hemmed in by housing. It has a small, basic but functional clubhouse. There are no floodlights at the venue.
Honours
South Midlands League Premier Division
Runners-up 1982â83
South Midlands League Division One
Champions 1980â81
Spartan South Midlands League Division Two
Champions 2008â09
Records
Best league performance: 2nd in South Midlands League Premier Division, 1982â83
Best FA Cup performance: never entered
Best FA Vase performance: 2nd round, 1983â84 and 1988â89
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The French brig Nisus was a Palinure-class brig of the French Navy, launched in 1805. The Royal Navy captured Nisus at Guadeloupe in 1809. The British took her into service as HMS Guadaloupe (or Guadeloupe), and sold her in November 1814.
French service
Nisus, under the command of lieutenant de vaisseau Le Nétrel, sailed from Granville, Manche, to Saint-Servan. Then on 11 April 1806 she sailed from saint-Malo to Brest. From 18 July 1808 she carried provisions, munitions, and stores from Brest to Basse-Terre, and then returned to Brest. By this time Le Nétrel had been promoted to the rank of capitaine de frégate. Still under his command, between 24 February and December 1809 she first sailed from Brest to Lorient. There she picked up troops and provisions for Guadeloupe before sailing there.
Nisus left Lorient on 30 October and arrived at Deshaies on 1 December. She was about to leave with a cargo of coffee when a British squadron under Captain George Miller in arrived on 12 December to reconnoiter the harbour.
Capture
Miller sent in boats with the marines from Thetis, , , and , and 78 sailors. The landing party first captured the fort at Deshaies, whereupon Nisus surrendered when its guns were turned on her. During the operation, kept up a six-hour cannonade on Nisus and the battery. Many of the 300 men in the battery fled, as did most of the crew of Nisus before the British could take possession. The British destroyed the battery before withdrawing. British casualties amounted to two men from Thetis being wounded on shore, and two men being wounded on Attentive.
British service
The British took Nisus into service as HMS Guadaloupe and commissioned her at Antigua under Commander Michael Head.
Guadaloupe immediately participated in the capture of Guadeloupe in January and February 1810. In 1847 the Admiralty awarded the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Guadaloupe" to all surviving participants of the campaign.
Head then sailed Gaudaloupe to Deptford where she underwent fitting-out from 23 August to 23 January 1811. In December 1810 Commander Joseph Swabey Tetley, late of , took command; he later sailed to the Mediterranean.
On 27 June 1811 Guadaloupe was off the Cap de Creux when she sighted two strange vessels to leeward, one a brig of 16 guns and the other a xebec of ten guns. An action ensued during which the French brig attempted to board Guadaloupe. Eventually the two French vessels retreated some two miles to the protection of two shore batteries at Port-Vendres. The French brig turned out to be Tactique, of sixteen 24-pounder carronades and 150 men; the xebec was Guêpe, of two long 8-pounder guns and six small carronades, and some 70 men. French losses were reported to have been 11 men killed and 48 wounded. Casualties aboard Guadaloupe consisted of one man killed, ten severely wounded, and two or three slightly wounded.{{efn|Tactique was a Révolutionnaire-class corvette launched in 1793 as Tigre and renamed to Tactique in 1795. She had been rearmed in 1806 with eighteen 24-pounder carronades and two 6-pounder guns. She was broken up in 1815. Tactique had been on the Catalonia station under the command of capitaine de frégate Hurtel.<ref>Fonds Maritime, p.435.</ref> There is no record of French naval xebec named Guêpe. Furthermore, the mention of Tactique and the engagement in the Fonds Marine also makes no mention of Guêpe. This, and her large crew, suggests she may have been a privateer operating in concert with the French Navy.}}
On 24 October 1811, Guadaloupe encountered the French privateer schooner Syrene. After a 13-hour chase, Guadaloupe captured Syrene off Cape Blanco. She was pierced for 12 guns but carried only six. She had a crew of 61 men and was eight days out of Leghorn, but had made no captures.
In 1812 Commander Arthur Stow (or Stowe), promoted from lieutenant, replaced Tetley. On 9 November 1813 and Guadaloupe attacked Port-la-Nouvelle, with the marines storming the batteries while men from the ships captured two vessels and destroyed five. Captain Thomas Ussher of Undaunted noted in his report that this brought the total number of vessels taken or destroyed in the 10 months he had been in command of Undaunted up to seventy.
Commander Charles Hole replaced Stow.
In April 1814, Lieutenant Charles Pengelly, who was First-Lieutenant of Guadeloupe, was made acting Commander of her for leading the Sicilian flotilla that participated in the capture of Genoa on 18 April. He was confirmed in the rank in September. Reportedly, Hole transferred to . The same account stated that Lieutenant Pengelly had transferred from "the gun-boat service in the Faro" to Guadaloupe.
He returned Guadaloupe'' to Britain where she was paid-off in August 1814.
Fate
The Principal Officers and Commissioners of His Majesty's Navy offered the "Guadaloupe sloop, of 325 tons" lying at Plymouth for sale on 3 November 1815. She sold on that day for £930.
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Antonio José González Zumárraga (March 18, 1925 â October 13, 2008) was an Ecuadorian Cardinal of the Catholic Church.
González Zumárraga was born in Pujili, Ecuador. He was ordained priest on July 29, 1951, following studies at the San José seminary in Quito and the Pontifical University of Salamanca, Spain, where he obtained a doctorate in canon law.
He was made auxiliary bishop of Quito on May 17, 1969 (with the titular diocese of Tagarata) and was consecrated as bishop in Quito on June 15, 1969, by Cardinal Pablo Muñoz Vega, SJ, Archbishop of Quito.
He was made Bishop of Machala on June 30, 1978, and then Coadjutor Archbishop of Quito on June 28, 1980. He succeeded to full governance of the Archdiocese on June 1, 1985.
He was created as a Cardinal Priest (Cardinal Priest of Santa Maria in Via) in 2001 by Pope John Paul II.
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Death of a Ladies' Man is the third novel by Scottish writer Alan Bissett, released on 23 July 2009. Set within the city of Glasgow, the novel follows divorcee teacher Charlie Bain's journey into hedonism and sex addiction. Bissett describes Death of a Ladies' Man as "a cautionary tale for women written by a man who is trying to say: 'Look, this is why we are the way we are. Understand but do not forgive."
The novel shares its title with Leonard Cohen's 1977 album, Death of a Ladies' Man, and often includes quotes from Cohen preceding its chapters.
Themes
Death of a Ladies' Man largely focuses upon hedonism, ageing, lust, compromise and feminism.
Regarding the recurring theme of feminism, Bissett noted, "You never write with a specific 'audience' in mind, but it does seem that women have reacted to the book more enthusiastically than men. I worried, when I was writing it, that women would accuse me of peddling adolescent, sexist fantasies. Actually, all of the flak has come from men. I think they feel a bit accused by it. I know a guy who said it 'traumatised' him! Women, on the other hand, totally get it, and feel itâs a book which is generally on their side. Iâm happy at that result." Bissett also noted, "Modern man is fucked up, modern men really are in a terrible state. I realised that to an even greater degree during the course of the book. I actually wonder whether feminism has had any impact on men at all in the last 30 or 40 years."
Writing and influences
According to Bissett, "the whole story of Death of a Ladiesâ Man appeared in a blinding flash. But this turned out to be deceptive, as the first draft took about five months, while the redraft took three years!"
Regarding its typography, Bissett noted, "I like the prose to have rhythm, style and energy. Boyracers was supposed to feel like pop music. Adam Spark was supposed to feel like the speech of a hyperactive child. Death of a Ladiesâ Man was supposed to feel like being on cocaine. In all three I was going for flash and kinetics. Iâve never really been capable of writing prose that just sits there on the page, functionally telling the story."
Charlie Bain
Regarding the construction of the novel's protagonist, Charlie Bain, Bissett noted, "I had to really look at the darkness. That was difficult. I stripped away far more layers of him than I initially thought were there (the absent father, the painful early divorce). I couldn't afford to write about this guy as if he was some moustache-twirling cad. I had to find the pain. [...] That's the tragic thing about him, the nobility is there, there are certain feminine values that should have led him in the right direction, but his cock takes over. We say that glibly all the time about men â their brains are in their trousers â that's what he needs to defeat and can't. He's trapped, sex becomes a numbers game to him, it becomes about engorging himself on women."
Bissett has listed Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho as an influence on his writing, acknowledging the similarities between principal characters, Charlie Bain and Patrick Bateman: "American Psycho was an enormous influence on me. I think itâs a brave, visionary masterpiece that absolutely blew open the doors on what it was possible for fiction to do. And I can see the thematic connections: Charlie Bain and Patrick Bateman, to a certain extent, inhabit similar worlds on either side of the Atlantic."
Seduction community
Whilst researching the novel, Bissett attended a party alongside Neil Strauss, author of The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists (2005), and other members of Glasgow's seduction community. Regarding this event, Bissett noted, "That idea that sincerity becomes impossible, that all you have is a series of masks and you say whatever needs to be said, you use whatever tactic is required in order to get the target relaxed. That was a really depressing thing for me to see. Male sexuality taken to its logical conclusion. If I was in any doubt that the book I was writing was worthwhile, its value was confirmed that night."
Setting
The novel is set within the city of Glasgow, making references to a number of locations including, Ashton Lane, The 13th Note Café, ABC, Byres Road, Nice N' Sleazy's, and many others. Regarding the overall setting, Bissett noted, "Ladiesâ Man is a Glasgow book. I did feel I had a big Glaswegian beast seething around in there that wanted to come out in the strange, alien, beautiful, fucked-up way it did in [Death of a Ladies' Man]."
Pop culture references
Death of a Ladies' Man refers to many Scottish indie rock artists, including: Idlewild, Malcolm Middleton, Frightened Rabbit, Zoey Van Goey, The Twilight Sad, Sons and Daughters and Y'all Is Fantasy Island. In 2010, Bissett noted, "I must admit, things are so busy now Iâm not going out to gigs much, but I certainly was when I was writing that book. I usually try and catch up with what the following bands of muckers and comrades are doing: Burnt Island, Maple Leaves, Zoey Van Goey and Yâall is Fantasy Island."
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Between 1925 and 1945, the German Schutzstaffel (SS) grew from eight members to over a quarter of a million Waffen-SS and over a million Allgemeine-SS members. Other members included the SS-TotenkopfverbÀnde (SS-TV), which ran the Nazi concentration and extermination camps. The following list of SS personnel gives the names of notable persons who are counted among the organization's most famous, influential or notorious members. Women were not allowed to join the SS but were allowed into the SS-Gefolge and many served within the concentration camps.
FÃŒhrer (Adolf Hitler)
Prior to 1934 the SS were nominally under the command of the Sturmabteilung and so it could be said that both Adolf Hitler as Oberster SA-FÌhrer and Ernst Röhm as Stabschef SA outranked the most senior SS position of ReichsfÌhrer-SS. Following the Night of the Long Knives Hitler "raised the SS, hitherto subordinate to the SA, to the rank of an independent organisation". Hitler also was considered SS Member No. 1, Emil Maurice (considered the founder of the SS) was member No. 2, although leadership was assumed by Julius Schreck who was member No. 5. Himmler was SS member No. 168. Based on the seniority system of SS membership number, this made Hitler senior in the SS to all other members even if not by rank.
After the Night of the Long Knives, when the SS became independent from the SA, Hitler was listed on SS officer rolls as member No. 1 and considered supreme commander of the entire SS (Oberster FÃŒhrer der Schutzstaffel: Literally, "Supreme Leader of the SS") by virtue of his position as the FÃŒhrer of Germany. There is no photographic record of Hitler ever wearing an actual SS uniform nor was there a special SS insignia for Hitler above that worn by Himmler.
Oberster FÃŒhrer der Schutzstaffel
SS Generals
Following is the list of persons holding the title positions as well as actual highest ranks of the Schutzstaffel (SS) since the earliest inception of the armed SS units in Nazi Germany. The ranks include distinctive insignia designs worn on the collar at one points by all officers.
ReichsfÃŒhrer
Oberst-GruppenfÃŒhrer (colonel general)
ObergruppenfÃŒhrer (general)
GruppenfÃŒhrer (lieutenant general)
BrigadefÃŒhrer (major general)
SS Officers
OberfÃŒhrer (senior colonel)
StandartenfÃŒhrer (colonel)
ObersturmbannfÃŒhrer (lieutenant colonel)
SturmbannfÃŒhrer (major)
HauptsturmfÃŒhrer (captain)
ObersturmfÃŒhrer (first lieutenant)
UntersturmfÃŒhrer (second lieutenant)
SS Non-Commissioned Officers
SturmscharfÃŒhrer (Regimental sergeant major)
HauptscharfÃŒhrer (sergeant major)
OberscharfÃŒhrer (staff sergeant)
ScharfÃŒhrer (sergeant)
UnterscharfÃŒhrer (corporal)
SS-StabsscharfÃŒhrer
SS biologist
SS-Kapellmeister
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Christoph Franz von Buseck (28 December 1724 - 28 September 1805) was the Roman Catholic bishop of Bamberg and the last Prince-Bishop of Bamberg.
Early life
Von Buseck was born in Jagstberg to Ernst Johann Philipp Hartmann von Buseck and Mary Ann. Almost nothing is known of his early life.
Tenure as Bishop
On 7 April 1794, von Buseck was elected Prince-Bishop of Bamberg and ordained to the priesthood. His nephew, Georg Karl von Fechenbach, the Prince-Bishop of WÃŒrzburg, consecrated him as a bishop on 16 August 1795 and he took office. Von Buseck proved to be a very weak ruler. In 1796, when Bamberg was invaded by the French, von Buseck fled to Prague and when the French invaded Prague in 1799, he fled to Saalfeld. He returned to Bamburg in 1800 and appointed his nephew as his coadjutor bishop and successor.
In the course of the German mediatization of 1802â1803, which saw the suppression of all the Holy Roman Empire ecclesiastical principalities, Bavaria occupied the former prince-bishopric on 29 September 1802 and annexed its territories. However, until his death on 28 September 1805, von Buseck remained bishop of Bamberg, but bereft of any temporal power. He was then succeeded by his nephew. After his nephew's death in 1808, the See remained vacant until 1818, by which time Bamberg had been elevated to an archbishopric following the Bavarian Concordat of June 1817.
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Zesto is a licensed trademark owned by TJ Group Investments, LLC and currently used by a significant amount of independently owned restaurants and independent franchise chains who sublicense the trademark to franchise owners. Until 1955, Zesto Drive-In was a chain of drive-in restaurants franchised by Taylor Freezer Corp. (now the Taylor Company), featuring ice cream and frozen custard. They are recognized for their ice cream favorites such as avalanches, milkshakes, sundaes and ice cream sodas, to name a few. Several of the original restaurants operated under the chain continue to operate independently today using the trademark, but many of the original and newer restaurants are not drive-ins.
History
Zesto was started by entrepreneur and inventor L.A.M. Phelan as a national franchise chain. Phelan was head of the Taylor Freezer Corp., which in 1945 had developed the "Zest-O-Mat" frozen custard machine, and franchise agreements granted exclusive use of the Zest-O-Mat machines in a given territory under the Zesto name. The first known Zesto Drive-In was opened in Jefferson City, Missouri, in 1948 at the foot of St. Maryâs Hospital on Missouri Boulevard by its original franchise owner, Lottie Traubtz; dozens more opened in the late 1940s and early 1950s, mostly in the U.S. South and Midwest.
Taylor Freezer, reportedly growing frustrated with managing a retail business and dealing with unhappy franchisees, abandoned the Zesto concept in 1955 and left the remaining franchisees to fend for themselves.
While some former franchisees continued to operate under different names, others retained the Zesto name, operating independently of each other and without support from a governing franchise structure.
The Zesto trademark was first registered in 1985 by Zesto Inc., a Missouri corporation owned by Harold Brown, who purchased and operated the first known Zesto in Jefferson City, Missouri in 1973. The trademark currently belongs to Todd B. Jansa of TJ Group Investments LLC located in Wahoo, Nebraska, who grants exclusive rights to use the Zesto name by territory.
Current Territorial Locations
Atlanta, Georgia
Angola, Indiana
Bluffton, Indiana
Clarksville, Indiana
Evansville, Indiana
Fort Wayne, Indiana
Huntington, Indiana
New Albany, Indiana
New Haven, Indiana
Bogalusa, Louisiana
Alliance, Nebraska
Fremont, Nebraska
Lincoln, Nebraska
Omaha, Nebraska
Wahoo, Nebraska
Columbia, South Carolina
Chapin, South Carolina
Newberry, South Carolina
Brookings, South Dakota
Mitchell, South Dakota
Pierre, South Dakota
Watertown, South Dakota
West Columbia, South Carolina
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Prince Karl or Karel or Carl may refer to:
People
Karl I, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (1534â1561)
Charles IX of Sweden (1550â1611)
Karl I, Prince of Liechtenstein (1569â1627)
Karl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein (1611â1684)
Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine (1617â1680)
Karl, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (1652â1718)
Karl Frederick, Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg (1668â1721)
Karl August, Prince of Waldeck and Pyrmont (1704â1763)
Charles Louis, Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym (1723â1806)
Karl Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Leiningen (1724â1807)
Prince Karl Anton August of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck (1727â1759)
Prince Karl BorromÀus of Liechtenstein (1730â1789)
Karl George Lebrecht, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen (1730â1789)
Charles of Saxony, Duke of Courland (1733â1796)
Karl Anselm, 4th Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1733â1805)
Charles Christian, Prince of Nassau-Weilburg (1735â1788)
Charles-Joseph, 7th Prince of Ligne (1735â1814)
Charles XIII of Sweden (1748â1818)
Karl August von Hardenberg (1750â1822)
Charles Eugene, Prince of Lambesc (1751â1825)
Charles Louis, Hereditary Prince of Baden (1755â1801)
Karl Alois, Prince Lichnowsky (1761â1814)
Charles XIV John of Sweden (1763â1844)
Karl Philipp von Wrede (1767â1838)
Karl Alexander, 5th Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1770â1827)
Karl Philipp, Prince of Schwarzenberg (1771â1820)
Karl, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (1785â1853)
Charles, Grand Duke of Baden (1786â1818)
Prince Karl Theodor of Bavaria (1795â1875)
Prince Charles of Prussia (1801â1883)
Prince Karl Johann of Liechtenstein (1803â1871)
Karl, Prince of Leiningen (1804â1856) (1804â1856)
Prince Charles of Hesse and by Rhine (1809â1877)
Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern (1811â1885)
Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels (1812â1875)
Prince Karl of Auersperg (1814â1890)
Charles XV of Sweden (1826â1872)
Carl Ludwig II, Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (1829â1907)
Charles Gonthier, Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (1830â1909)
Archduke Karl Salvator of Austria (1839â1892)
Carol I of Romania (1839â1914)
Prince Carl Oscar, Duke of Södermanland (1852â1854)
Karl, 8th Prince Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau (1858â1919)
Karl Max, Prince Lichnowsky (1860â1928)
Prince Carl, Duke of VÀstergötland (1861â1951)
Prince Karl Anton of Hohenzollern (1868â1919)
Haakon VII of Norway (1872â1957)
Prince Karl of Bavaria (1874â1927)
Charles Edward, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1884â1954)
Charles I of Austria (1887â1922)
Karl, Prince of Leiningen (1898â1946) (1898â1946)
Karl August, 10th Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1898â1982)
Karl Gero, Duke of Urach (1899â1981)
Prince Charles, Count of Flanders (1903â1983)
Archduke Karl Pius of Austria, Prince of Tuscany (1909â1953)
Prince Carl Bernadotte (1911â2003)
Carol Victor, Hereditary Prince of Albania (1913â1973)
Prince Karl Franz of Prussia (1916â1975)
Count Carl Johan Bernadotte of Wisborg (1916â2012)
Prince Karl of Leiningen (1928â1990)
Karel Schwarzenberg (born 1937)
Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden (born 1946)
Prince Karl Emich of Leiningen (born 1952)
Karl Friedrich, Prince of Hohenzollern (born 1952)
Karl Anselm, Duke of Urach (born 1955)
Archduke Karl of Austria (born 1961)
Karl, 12th Prince Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau (born 1967)
Prince Carl Philip, Duke of VÀrmland (born 1979)
Other
Prince Karl (play), an 1886 play by A. C. Gunter
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Baqerlu (also Romanized as BÄqerlÅ«) is a village in Azadlu Rural District, Muran District, Germi County, Ardabil Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 78, in 12 families.
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http://www.odevay.com/ | {
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A fixed-base operator (FBO) is an organization granted the right by an airport to operate at the airport and provide aeronautical services such as fueling, hangaring, tie-down and parking, aircraft rental, aircraft maintenance, flight instruction, and similar services. In common practice, an FBO is the primary provider of support services to general aviation operators at a public-use airport and is on land leased from the airport, or, in rare cases, adjacent property as a "through the fence operation". In many smaller airports serving general aviation in remote or modest communities, the town itself may provide fuel services and operate a basic FBO facility. Most FBOs doing business at airports of high to moderate traffic volume are non-governmental organizations, either privately or publicly held companies.
Though the term fixed-base operator originated in the United States, the term has become more common in the international aviation industry as business and corporate aviation has grown. The term has not been officially defined as an international standard, but there have been recent uses of the term in International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) publications such as Implementing the Global Aviation Safety Roadmap.
History of the term
After the end of World War I in November 1918, civil aviation in the United States was primarily unregulated and was primarily made up of "barnstormers," transient pilots flying inexpensive military surplus aircraft from city to city and often landing in farm fields on the outskirts of a town because airports were scarce at that time. The traveling aviators offered airplane rides and aerobatic flight demonstrations, and they frequently collaborated as "flying circuses" by performed impromptu airshows for the townsfolk and charging whatever the local economic conditions would allow. As a result, mechanics and early flight instructors moved around with the aircraft and had no established business in any location.
With passage of the Air Commerce Act of 1926 and its resulting requirements for the licensing of pilots, aircraft maintenance requirements, and regulations in training standards, the transient nature of civil aviation was curtailed. The pilots and mechanics who made their living on the road began establishing permanent businesses, termed fixed-base operations, at the growing number of airports appearing throughout the United States as a way to distinguish permanent businesses from the transient businesses that had been common prior to 1926.
Services offered
Fixed-base operators support a wide range of aeronautical activities which may include one or more of the following:
Sale of aviation fuel â piston aircraft fuel (avgas) and/or turbine aircraft fuel (Jet-A or Jet A-1)
Line services for general aviation aircraft
Air taxi and air charter operations
Scheduled or nonscheduled air carrier services and support services
Pilot training
Aircraft rental and sightseeing
Aircraft sales and service
Aircraft storage (tie-down or hangar)
Repair and aircraft maintenance
Sale of aircraft parts
Aerial photography
Crop dusting and aerial applications
Aerial advertising and aerial survey
Though not required, fixed-base operators generally also provide at least basic auxiliary services to pilots, flight crew, and passengers such as restroom facilities, telecommunication services, and waiting areas. General aviation FBOs (commonly in the U.S.) sometimes provide courtesy cars that can be used for free or little cost by flight crews mostly for short trip from the airport and the surrounding city area. Larger and better equipped FBOs may additionally offer food vending and restaurant facilities, ground transportation arrangements by taxi/limousine, shuttle van, flight planning and weather information areas (computer- or telephone-based), rest lounges and showers, aviation supplies shop (selling navigation charts, manuals, or in-flight comfort items), access to in-flight catering, and accommodations reservations or concierge services for both crew and passengers through a customer service representative (CSR).
Around the world
Canada
At medium and large airports, FBOs are typically affiliated with one of the major aviation fuel suppliers and display the fuel supplier's sign prominently. At smaller airports, the FBO is often the airport operator, such as Alpha Aviation at Boundary bay Airport (CZBB) or a flying club.
United States
Within the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulates some activities that may comprise an FBO such as the authorization or repair stations, flight training, and air taxi/air carrier services, but there are no federal regulatory standards covering all FBOs. The FAA has defined an FBO as "a commercial entity providing aeronautical services such as fueling, maintenance, storage, ground and flight instruction, etc., to the public."
The United States Department of Transportation, in cooperation with the FAA, has the duty of establishing minimum standards for commercial aeronautical activities and recommends implementation of these standards by the airport operator or agency, commonly referred to as the airport sponsor. The United States FBO Industry is represented nationally by the National Air Transportation Association or NATA, but is also partly represented by both the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) and the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA).
The number of U.S. businesses meeting the minimum criteria as an FBO is 3,138 as of April 2009 according to a survey conducted by Aviation Resource Group International (ARGI). The number has decreased since the 2006 survey, which counted 3,346 FBOs.
Asia (continent)
FBOs are taking some time to grow in the Asian continent, but they have appeared most notably in Indonesia, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Shanghai, Thailand and the Philippines. This is mainly due to the immaturity of the private and corporate aviation sector in Asia where there still exist very few of these aircraft when compared to the United States and Europe. However several companies do offer "FBO services" at airports throughout the region, making use of existing facilities, the main point being the provision of credit for overseas operators.
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The bulbuls are members of a family, Pycnonotidae, of medium-sized passerine songbirds, which also includes greenbuls, brownbuls, leafloves, and bristlebills. The family is distributed across most of Africa and into the Middle East, tropical Asia to Indonesia, and north as far as Japan. A few insular species occur on the tropical islands of the Indian Ocean. There are 160 species in 32 genera. While different species are found in a wide range of habitats, the African species are predominantly found in rainforest, whereas Asian bulbuls are predominantly found in more open areas.
Taxonomy
The family Pycnonotidae was introduced by the English zoologist George Robert Gray in 1840 as a subfamily Pycnonotinae of the thrush family Turdidae.
The Arabic word bulbul (ØšÙØšÙ) is sometimes used to refer to the "nightingale" as well as the bulbul, but the English word bulbul refers to the birds discussed in this article.
A few species that were previously considered to be members of the Pycnonotidae have been moved to other families. Several Malagasy species that were formerly placed in the genus Phyllastrephus are now placed in the family Bernieridae. In addition, the genus Nicator containing three African species is now placed in a separate family Nicatoridae.
A study published in 2007 by Ulf Johansson and colleagues using three nuclear markers found that the genus Andropadus was non-monophyletic. In the subsequent revision, species were moved to three resurrected genera: Arizelocichla, Stelgidillas and Eurillas. Only the sombre greenbul (Andropadus importunus), was retained in Andropadus. A study by Subir Shakya and Frederick Shelden published in 2017 found that species in the large genus â¯Pycnonotus formed several deeply divergent clades. The genus was split and six genera were resurrected to accommodate these clades.
The family forms two main clades. One clade contains species that are only found in Africa; many of these have greenbul in the common name. The second clade contains mostly Asian species but includes a few species that are found in Africa.
List of genera
Currently, there are 160 recognized species in 32 genera:
Genus Andropadus â sombre greenbul (formerly contained many species)
Genus Stelgidillas â slender-billed greenbul (formerly in Andropadus)
Genus Calyptocichla â golden greenbul
Genus Neolestes â black-collared bulbul
Genus Bleda â bristlebills (5 species)
Genus Atimastillas â yellow-throated leaflove
Genus Ixonotus â spotted greenbul
Genus Thescelocichla â swamp palm bulbul
Genus Chlorocichla â greenbuls (5 species)
Genus Baeopogon â greenbuls (2 species)
Genus Arizelocichla â greenbuls (12 species) (formerly in Andropadus)
Genus Criniger â greenbuls (5 species)
Genus Eurillas â greenbuls (5 species) (formerly in Andropadus)
Genus Phyllastrephus â greenbuls and brownbuls (20 species)
Genus Tricholestes â hairy-backed bulbul
Genus Setornis â hook-billed bulbul
Genus Alophoixus â 8 species (formerly in Criniger)
Genus Alcurus â 2 species (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Iole â 7 species
Genus Hemixos â 4 species
Genus Acritillas â yellow-browed bulbul
Genus Ixos â 5 species
Genus Hypsipetes â 19 species (includes 3 species formerly in Thapsinillas, one formerly in Cerasophila and one formerly in Microscelis)
Genus Euptilotus â puff-backed bulbul (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Microtarsus â black-and-white bulbul (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Poliolophus â yellow-wattled bulbul (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Brachypodius â 4 species (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Ixodia â 3 species (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Rubigula â 5 species (formerly in Pycnonotus)
Genus Nok â bare-faced bulbul (genus introduced in 2017)
Genus Spizixos â finchbills (2 species)
Genus Pycnonotus â 32 species (substantially reduced from earlier classification)
Cladogram
Description
Bulbuls are short-necked slender passerines. The tails are long and the wings short and rounded. In almost all species the bill is slightly elongated and slightly hooked at the end. They vary in length from 13 cm and for the tiny greenbul to 29 cm and in the straw-headed bulbul. Overall the sexes are alike, although the females tend to be slightly smaller. In a few species the differences are so great that they have been described as functionally different species. The soft plumage of some species is colorful with yellow, red or orange vents, cheeks, throat or supercilia, but most are drab, with uniform olive-brown to black plumage. Species with dull coloured eyes often sport contrasting eyerings. Some have very distinct crests. Bulbuls are highly vocal, with the calls of most species being described as nasal or gravelly. One author described the song of the brown-eared bulbul as "one of the most unattractive noises made by any bird".
Behaviour and ecology
Breeding
The bulbuls are generally monogamous. One unusual exception is the yellow-whiskered greenbul which at least over part of its range appears to be polygamous and engage in a lekking system. Some species also have alloparenting arrangements, where non-breeders, usually the young from earlier clutches, help raise the young of a dominant breeding pair. Up to five speckled eggs are laid in open tree nests and incubated by the female. Incubation usually lasts between 11 and 14 days, and chicks fledge after 12â16 days.
Feeding
Bulbuls eat a wide range of foods, ranging from fruit to seeds, nectar, small insects and other arthropods and even small vertebrates. The majority of species are frugivorous and supplement their diet with some insects, although there is a significant minority of specialists, particularly in Africa. Open country species in particular are generalists. Bulbuls in the genus Criniger and bristlebills in the genus Bleda will join mixed-species feeding flocks.
Relationship to humans
The red-whiskered bulbuls and red-vented bulbuls have been captured for the pet trade in great numbers and have been widely introduced to tropical and subtropical areas, for example, southern Florida, Fiji, Australia and Hawaii. Some species are regarded as crop pests, particularly in orchards.
In general, bulbuls and greenbuls are resistant to human pressures on the environment and are tolerant of disturbed habitat. Around 13 species are considered threatened by human activities, mostly specialised forest species that are threatened by habitat loss.
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The Silesian Voivodeship Sejmik is the regional legislature of the Voivodeship of Silesia in Poland. It is a unicameral parliamentary body consisting of forty-five councillors elected for a five-year term. The current chairperson of the assembly is Marek Gzik of PO.
The assembly elects the executive board that acts as the collective executive for the regional government, headed by the voivodeship marshal. After the 2018 election, the Executive Board of Silesia was formed by Law and Justice and Wojciech KaÅuÅŒa, independent councilor elected from the KO. But on November 21, 2022, four PiS councillors, including the incumbent Marshal, left the party and joined the opposition, giving them a majority. The board's current chief executive is Marshal Jakub CheÅstowski of local movement "Tak! dla Polski" (until 21 November 2022 he was a member of PiS).
The Silesian Assembly convenes within the Silesian Parliament building in Katowice.
Districts
Members of the assembly are elected from seven districts, serve five-year terms. Districts does not have the constituencies formal names. Instead, each constituency has a number and territorial description.
Composition
1998
2002
2006
2010
2014
2018
| {
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"title": "Silesian Voivodeship Sejmik",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesian%20Voivodeship%20Sejmik",
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CPI Group may refer to:
China Power Investment Corporation, a Chinese utility company
CPI International, a US electronics company
, a Czech real estate company
CPI Property Group, real estate developer based in Luxembourg
CPI SAS, Europes largest book manufacturer, a subsidiary of Impala SAS | {
"id": "29471668",
"title": "CPI Group",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPI%20Group",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
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2016ã6ã(æ)ã¢ãã©ã¹ | {
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Apocordulia is a genus of dragonflies in the family Austrocorduliidae,
endemic to the Murray-Darling Basin in eastern Australia.
Apocordulia is a monotypic genus with only one species, Apocordulia macrops,
commonly known as a nighthawk.
Apocordulia macrops is a medium-sized, dull coloured dragonfly with large eyes. It inhabits inland rivers
and flies at dawn and dusk.
Etymology
The word Apocordulia is derived from two words: apo from the Greek áŒÏÏ meaning from or away, and Cordulia the genus of dragonfly. Tony Watson described the dragonfly genus Apocordulia as appearing different to the normal appearance of a Cordulia dragonfly.
The species name macrops is derived from two Greek words makros (ΌακÏÏÏ) meaning long, and ops (ᜀÏ) meaning eye, describing the long eye seam.
Gallery
Note about family
There are differing views as to the family that Apocordulia best belongs to:
It is considered to be part of the family Austrocorduliidae at the Australian Faunal Directory
It is considered to be part of the family Synthemistidae in the World Odonata List at the Slater Museum of Natural History
It is considered to be part of the family Corduliidae at Wikispecies
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Henryk Franciszek Górski (born 4 April 1938) is a Polish former sport shooter who competed in the 1960 Summer Olympics and in the 1964 Summer Olympics.
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The Hutchinson Blue Dragons are the sports teams of Hutchinson Community College located in Hutchinson, Kansas, United States. They participate in the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) and in the Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference.
Sports
Men's sports
Baseball
Basketball
Cross country
Football
Track & field
Golf
Women's sports
Basketball
Cross country
Soccer
Softball
Track & field
Volleyball
Facilities
Hutchinson Community College has five facilities.
Fun Valley Softball Complex â home of the Blue Dragons softball team
Gowans Stadium â home of the Blue Dragons football team
HobartâDetter Field â home of the Blue Dragons baseball team
Hutchinson Sports Arena â home of the Blue Dragons men's and women's basketball teams, and volleyball team
USD 308 Salthawk Sports Complex â home of the Blue Dragons soccer team; also shared with USD 308 Hutchinson Public Schools
Coaches
Men's Sports
Baseball â Ryan Schmidt
Basketball â Tommy DeSalme
Cross Country â Justin Riggs
Football â Drew Dallas
Track and Field â Robert Spies
Golf - Chris Young
Women's Sports
Basketball â John Ontjes
Cross Country â Justin Riggs
Soccer â Sammy Lane
Softball â Jaime Rose
Track and Field â Robert Spies
Volleyball â Delice Downing
Notable athletes
Andy Dirks, outfielder for the Detroit Tigers (retired)
Darius Johnson-Odom, professional basketball player for the Springfield Armor
Cordarrelle Patterson, professional football player for the Atlanta Falcons
Mike Zagurski, former reliever for the Philadelphia Phillies, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Yankees
Alvin Kamara, professional football player for the New Orleans Saints
Markus Golden, professional football player for the Arizona Cardinals
De'Vondre Campbell, professional football player for the Green Bay Packers
Shaun Hill, former professional football player for the Minnesota Vikings, San Francisco 49ers, Detroit Lions, and St. Louis Rams
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Fairest is an American monthly comic series created by Bill Willingham, published by DC's Vertigo. A spin-off of Fables, Fairest detailed the adventures and stories of Fabletown's female citizens and heroines. Fairest was described by Willingham as a series of miniseries, with each arc telling self-contained stories.
The series ended in January 2015.
Story arcs
Wide Awake (issues #1 to 6): Follows the misadventures of Briar Rose and the Snow Queen after the events of Fables #107, in which Briar was stolen away by the goblin army.
Lamia (issue #7): Beauty and Beast star in their own mid-century modern detective story set in the smoky clubs and dive bars of 1940s Los Angeles.
The Hidden Kingdom (issues #8 to 13): A prequel to the Fables story arc Legends in Exile. Rapunzel must travel from Fabletown to Tokyo and resolve a mystery from her troubled past.
Aldered States (issue #14): Princess Alder tells her tales of woe to Reynard the Fox.
The Return of the Maharaja (issue #15 to 20): When Nalayani's village is attacked, she is sent on a quest that will transform all of Fables forever.
Fairest in All the Land (graphic novel): Someone is killing the women of Fabletown, and Cinderella has only seven days to discover the identity of the murderer.
Of Men and Mice (issue #21 to 26): After an assassination attempt on Snow White, Cinderella is called back into service to unravel an age-old conspiracy that dates back to that fateful midnight ball.
Clamour for Glamour (issue #27 to 32): Refugees from Fabletown have returned to New York's Castle Dark, and Reynard, now able to shapeshift from fox to man, travels the mundane world to regale the animals with tales of his exploits.
Goldilocks and the Three (or More) Bears (issue #33): Final issue, but leads into the original graphic novel, Fairest: In All the Land.
Collected editions
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Copyright (C) 2004-2014 maidodiy. All rights reserved. | {
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SamartÃn de Podes is one of thirteen parishes (administrative divisions) in the Gozón municipality, within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain.
Population entities
El Campo
La Xenra
La Granda
Lloreda
Montoril
Other minor locations:
Armayor, La Cai, El Caleyón, La Campa, Carbayal, El Carbeyu, El Cellero, Cirvión, La Corona, La Cuesta, Fresno, La Furcada, La Guarida, GÃŒÃa, L'Otero, La Pasada, El Puirtu, La Raba, El RegarÃn, La Reguera, El Teleférico, La Torre, Los Valles, Valpire, La Varota and Xagón.
| {
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"title": "SamartÃn de Podes",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samart%C3%ADn%20de%20Podes",
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The King's Ginger is an English liqueur by Berry Bros. & Rudd. The liqueur was originally created for King Edward VII. After his death in 1910, it was commissioned exclusively for the royal family. In 2011, it was standardized and made available to the public in select countries.
History
The King's Ginger was created in 1903 when King Edward VII's doctor commissioned Berry Bros. & Rudd to create a "fortifying beverage" to be served in King Edward's flask. King Edward's doctor was concerned about the King's constitution: the King was obese, suffered from various ailments, elderly and tended to travel the countryside in his convertible and go hunting regardless of the weather conditions. The doctor hoped this beverage would help "stimulate and revivify His Majesty during morning rides."
King Edward enjoyed the beverage and drank it regularly, sharing it with his friends, particularly during hunting trips. It also became popular with the royal family, and when King Edward died in 1910 the family continued to commission hundreds of cases annually.
The King's Ginger was only sold to the royal family and aristocracy in bottles without labels by Berry Bros. & Rudd. The recipe changed frequently and sales averaged 250 cases annually. In the late 2000s, a British bartender acquired a bottle of King's Ginger and visited Berry Bros. & Rudd to purchase a bottle. He complained that the recipe was inconsistent and asked that the company produce a public facing version. Working on behalf of Berry Bros. & Rudd, a Dutch distiller created the King's Ginger, in 2011, to be sold in the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. It was made available in the United States in 2012.
Production
Today's distributed, 82 proof, King's Ginger comprises a neutral based grain spirit, ginger, lemon oil, Glenrothes single malt scotch, and sugar.
Food & Wine describes the King's Ginger as full of ginger notes and "earthy and spicy and unlike anything else."
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Festy Oseiwe Ebosele (born 2 August 2002) is an Irish professional footballer who plays as a right-back or winger for Serie A club Udinese.
Early years
Ebosele was born in the town of Enniscorthy in County Wexford, Ireland to Nigerian parents. He began playing football for Moyne Rangers in 2010 before joining the academy of League of Ireland side Bray Wanderers when he was 14-years-old. Two years later in 2018, he signed for English Championship side Derby County.
Club career
Derby County
Ebosele made his debut for Derby County as a substitute in a 2â0 FA Cup loss to Chorley on 9 January 2021. He was one of fourteen players from Derby County's academy to make their debut in the game, after the entirety of Derby's first team squad and coaching team were forced to isolate due to a COVID-19 outbreak. He made his league debut as a substitute in a 1â0 loss to Norwich City on 10 April 2021. On 6 November 2021, Ebosele scored a first senior goal in a 1â1 draw at Millwall. In January 2022, Ebosele was linked to a move to Derby County's rivals Nottingham Forest, however Ebosele was said to have rejected the prospect of a move.
In March 2022, with Derby being unable to offer Ebosele new contract terms due to the restrictions put on the club by the EFL whilst in administration, it was confirmed that Ebosele would join Udinese at the end of his Derby contract in summer 2022, signing a five year deal with the Serie A club. In the weeks following the transfer, Derby manager Wayne Rooney questioned Ebosele's attitude and had him training with the Under-23 squad. Ebosele later got back into the team and finished the season with 37 appearances in all competitions, scoring two goals.
Udinese
On 21 March 2022, it was announced that Ebosele would join Italian Serie A club Udinese on a five-year contract starting in the summer of 2022. The transfer was confirmed by Derby County on 4 July, as the club was also entitled to compensation due to Ebosele's homegrown status.
International career
Born in Ireland, Ebosele is of Nigerian descent, so he could choose to represent either of the respective countries at international level. He has represented the Republic of Ireland at U16, U17, U19 and U21 levels ever since.
He then received his first call-up to the Irish senior national team on 25 May 2022, ahead of their UEFA Nations League games against Armenia, Ukraine and Scotland.
Career statistics
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The D'Bari are a fictional alien race appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They are famous as the people whose star system was destroyed by Phoenix during the Dark Phoenix Saga (1980).
The D'Bari appeared in the 2019 film Dark Phoenix with their leader Vuk portrayed by Jessica Chastain.
Publication history
The D'Bari first appeared in Avengers #4 (March 1964), the same issue in which Captain America was formally introduced to the Marvel Universe, and were created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. The race suffered an Extinction Event in The Uncanny X-Men #135 (July 1980).
Since that time, the D'Bari have been shown in flashback in Classic X-Men #43 (January 1990), and later writers have asserted that a small number of D'Bari, not on their homeworld at the time of its destruction, survived, including stories in She-Hulk #43-46 (SeptemberâDecember 1992), Nova (vol. 2) #1 (November 1994) and #15 (March 1995), Wolverine (vol. 2) #136-138 (MarchâMay 1999), Wolverine (vol. 2) Annual 2000, and The Uncanny X-Men #387 (December 2000).
Fictional race biography
The D'Bari were a humanoid plant species that lived on the fourth planet of the D'Bari system, located within the sphere of influence of the Shi'ar Empire. One D'Bari originally appeared using a device that turned the Avengers into stone. His name was later revealed to be Vuk, and he did this at the behest of Namor who had a vendetta against the Avengers at the time and promised to free the D'Bari's spaceship (which had become trapped under the sea), if he incapacitated the Avengers. The newly revived Captain America promised to free the alien's ship in return for restoring the Avengers. This done, he helped them defeat the Sub-Mariner and his army, and freed the D'Bari's spaceship. After repairing the ship, Vuk left the planet.
The D'Bari are perhaps most well known for the last moment of their existence, as the Dark Phoenix replenished itself by destroying their sun. Approximately five billion D'Bari died when their star went nova.
After killing herself on the moon, Phoenix found herself with Death, who made her relive the life of a D'Bari woman named Gvyn just before the planet was destroyed. As Gvyn, Phoenix found herself walking with two other D'Bari women who were trying to fix her up with a boy Gvyn had met at school, and she protested that she didn't need a matchmaker. A moment later, they all see the sun go nova, surrounded by the Phoenix effect.
Not all D'Bari were on their homeworld at the time of its destruction, and one survivor was Vuk because he had not reached D'Bari IV when the Phoenix consumed their sun. Instead he encountered a group of Xartans on the way, and they invited him into their midst on Dandesh IV, in the outer regions of the Coal Sack nebula. However, news about the destruction of his planet reached him. The Xartans eventually adopted Vuk's form, pretending to be a D'Bari outpost, hoping to elude the wrath of the Skrulls, who sought vengeance on them for infringing on their "franchise" (the ability to shape-shift). Meanwhile, Rocket Raccoon had landed on the outpost, and after he saw one of the false "D'Bari" relax his form for a second, Vuk and the Xartans knew they had to stop him.
Following a distress signal to the outpost, Razorback and Taryn O'Connell arrive just in time to see Rocket Raccoon get petrified. Razorback and Taryn tried to rescue Rocket but they were captured. She-Hulk allowed herself to be captured by the "D'Bari", and as intended, she was brought to the same cell as Razorback and Taryn. As She-Hulk and Razorback compared notes, Razorback was about to reveal that the "D'Bari" were imposters, but the real D'Bari turned him to stone before he could get words out. Vuk intended to intimidate She-Hulk and Taryn into explaining why they were there, but She-Hulk tried to use an Ovoid mind-transfer technique to contact her ally Weezi Mason aboard an orbiting Skrull ship. This, however, backfired, swapping instead the build and powers of the two women. Eventually, the Skrulls recognized the Xartans' ruse and beamed down to the outpost, where Weezi freed She-Hulk and her allies. Unwilling to see his replacement family destroyed again, Vuk overloaded his petrifactor which turned the whole planet and everything within 100,000 miles to stone for 100 hours; however, She-Hulk and her allies were able to escape the petrifaction effect, only returning after it had subsided to recover Razorback and Rocket Raccoon, who were restored by the petrifaction wave as they were already petrified. The Skrulls, the Xartans and Vuk were all petrified.
Another D'Bari to escape the destruction of the D'Bari planet was Tas'wzta, who become a Centurion in the Nova Corps. However, he was one of the Nova Corps members to be slaughtered by the Luphomoid Kraa.
After being cured of the petrifaction, Vuk found the Collector's "Prisonworld" which served as a hideout, cloaked from Galactus. Noticing Vuk's presence and due to his species' destruction, the Collector took him to "Prisonworld" to add to his collection. As time passed, Vuk sought companionship and eventually budded off a "son" whom he named Bzztl. Vuk recognized Wolverine, who had just arrived on "Prisonworld", as one of the X-Men, and in his rage over Phoenix destroying their planet, attacked him, but Wolverine easily threw him to the side and explained that he was there to help them break out. The cell where Vuk and Bzztl were residing was eventually inspected by some of the Collector's agents while searching for Wolverine. The planet was eventually found and consumed by Galactus due to the interference of Wolverine, and while Bzztl was among the escapees, Vuk went missing during Galactus' consumption of "Prisonworld".
During the events of "Maximum Security", Vuk, now wearing a suit of armor and calling himself Starhammer, arrived on Earth and joined a few expatriate Imperial Guardsmen and Borderers in ambushing the X-Men. Vuk personally assaulted Jean Grey to avenge the D'Bari population. He recognized that she was different from the one that destroyed his planet, though he blamed her nonetheless as she had summoned the Phoenix Force and her personality had shaped its form as Phoenix. In desperation, Jean was able to telepathically convince Vuk he had actually slain her, at which point he went into an inert state after being overwhelmed by his apparent success.
It was later revealed that the few D'Bari survivors had since settled down on a new planet with Starhammer as their hero. However, his heroic status is eventually torn down when Jean's tampering eventually faded away and the truth is revealed. Exiled and shunned by his own family, a disgraced Starhammer could only think of one thing...revenge. So he travels to Earth, but strangely enough, he fiercely believes that the humiliation he suffered was caused by Rachel Grey, who was used to be a psychic, living host for the Phoenix Force. He arrives at the moment where Rachel (who didn't known him), Kitty Pryde and Nightcrawler were with Captain Britain and Meggan, to celebrate the birth of their baby daughter, Maggie, a healthy 3-month-old baby, whose mental faculties have developed so fast that she is capable of fluent speech and intelligent enough to carry a philosophical debate about the illusion of choice. Maggie is the one who actually manages to stop Starhammer's ambush without resorting to violent means and leads to a solution that helps Starhammer abandon his quest for revenge. She reveals at least one dimension where the D'Bari didn't suffer an extinction event and to where Starhammer and his society can travel and have a chance to rebuild their lost civilization.
Known D'Bari
Bzztl â A D'Bari and the "son" of Vuk.
Gvyn A female D'Bari. She was killed when the Phoenix Force consumed D'Bari IV.
Starhammer/Vuk â A D'Bari who once fought the Avengers and later developed a personal vendetta against Jean Grey for what happened to the D'Bari's planet. He later takes on the name of Starhammer after obtaining a suit of armor.
Tas'wtza â A D'Bari that joined the Nova Corps. Killed by Kraa.
In other media
Television
The D'Bari are featured in the Avengers Assemble episode "Guardians and Space Knights." To prevent Galactus from consuming Earth, Iron Man takes Galactus to another location. The planet that Iron Man (who was empowered by the Power Cosmic) led Galactus to turns out to be the D'Bari's planet which Galactus starts consuming. While the D'Bari evacuate the planet as part of the "Galactus Contingency Plan," the Avengers and the Guardians of the Galaxy work to prevent Galactus from consuming the planet. It later turns out that the D'Bari's planet was becoming unstable before Galactus' arrival and its explosion knocked out Galactus. Star-Lord mentioned that the D'Bari settled on another planet.
Film
The D'Bari appear as the main antagonists in the 2019 film Dark Phoenix. The featured D'Bari are Vuk (under the alias "Margaret Smith" and portrayed by Jessica Chastain) and "Jones" (portrayed by Ato Essandoh). In this version, the D'Bari are a race of shape-shifting aliens whose planet was destroyed by the cosmic entity known as the Phoenix Force. Vuk is the leader of the D'Bari and attempts to manipulate Jean Grey, who is possessed by the Phoenix Force following an X-Men mission to rescue the crew of the space shuttle Endeavour. Vuk and her followers assume human forms and infiltrate Earth, intending to take it over. She tracks down and befriends Jean, intending to drain the Phoenix Force from her. However, she is stopped by Professor X and Cyclops. After the X-Men and Magneto's followers are captured by the U.S. government, Vuk and her D'Bari forces attack the train transporting the mutants, with the soldiers mistaking the aliens for mutants. During the battle where most of the D'Bari are either dead or incarcerated by the X-Men, Magneto and the surviving government soldiers, Vuk makes a second attempt to drain Jean of the Phoenix Force. Jean unleashes her full powers and Vuk is consumed by the Phoenix Force then Jean herself becomes pure energy and disappears in a brilliant release of energy.
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| {
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Ann Sanders (born 15 March 1960), is an Australian television journalist and news presenter.
Sanders currently presents Seven Morning News and Seven Afternoon News Sydney.
Career
Sanders began her broadcasting career with SAS-7 in Adelaide, South Australia as a weather presenter before moving to Seven Perth. During this time she won two consecutive (1981/1982) Logie Awards for Most Popular Female Personality in Western Australia. She moved to Sydney in 1983 to join Network Ten as a consumer reporter and news presenter before returning to the Seven Network as a news presenter in 1988.
Sanders joined the national morning news program 11AM in 1990 and travelled to Chernobyl, reporting on the radiation fall-out disaster. Sanders started presenting the weeknight edition of Seven News Sydney in 1995, before being joined by Ross Symonds in 1998 until she moved to weekends in 2004. She stayed until May 2006 when she swapped roles with Chris Bath to present Seven Morning News.
Sanders was in Thredbo at the scene of the landslide disaster in 1997 and collected a Logie Award on behalf of the Seven News team for coverage of the event. Other major stories she has covered include the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales in London; the Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania and the Waterfall train disaster. She was also involved in Federal and State election coverages and the Sydney Olympics in 2000 for Seven News.
Sanders previously presented hourly news updates on The Morning Show with Kylie Gillies and Larry Emdur from 2007 until 2015. Ryan Phelan replaced her due to her taking on Seven Afternoon News.
Sanders has filled in for Natalie Barr on Sunrise. She is also a fill-in presenter for Seven News Sydney. She previously hosted the national Seven Afternoon News bulletin at 4pm, before it was replaced by state-based bulletins in 2017. Sanders continues to host the local Sydney edition of this bulletin on Mondays to Thursdays, with Sally Bowrey presenting on Fridays.
Personal life
Sanders is patron of The Children's Music Foundation, is on the women's advisory committee for the National Breast Cancer Centre, and is an ambassador for Osteoporosis Australia.
| {
"id": "4270606",
"title": "Ann Sanders",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Sanders",
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æããšããã§ã¯ã⊠| {
"id": null,
"title": null,
"url": "http://coordisnap.com/mode/list/index/%E7%B4%BA+%EF%BD%B6%EF%BD%B0%EF%BE%83%EF%BE%9E",
"docId": "47fafbf1-875d-4d85-b3d5-eef712c1d142",
"date": "2015-05-28T17:44:43"
} |
François Bonnet (born 11 November 1947) is a French retired slalom canoeist who competed in the 1960s and the 1970s. He won a bronze medal in the C-1 team event at the 1969 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in Bourg St.-Maurice. Bonnet also finished 18th in the C-1 event at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich.
| {
"id": "24352188",
"title": "François Bonnet (canoeist)",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois%20Bonnet%20%28canoeist%29",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
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"id": null,
"title": null,
"url": "http://www.veggieschoollunches.com/",
"docId": "228c7b21-6a4e-41bb-9aaf-0042df410378",
"date": "2014-10-17T03:56:26"
} |
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EUã»å ã®FTAãç· çµå»¶æãæ¿åã« | {
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Kappa Theta Pi (also known as KTP) is a co-ed professional fraternity specializing in the field of information technology. Kappa Theta Pi was founded on January 10, 2012, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and is the University of Michigan's first and only professional technology fraternity. The goals of the fraternity are to create bonds between students of Informatics, computer science, business, design, computer engineering, Information, and any others who are interested in technology, to develop networks through facilitation of professional and social growth, and to expose members to career options in the technology field.
History
Foundation
In December 2011, two students, Louise Vongphrachanh and Jing Guo, founded a professional fraternity aimed towards informatics students. As many of these students were often in multiple classes together, a fraternity was organized to foster both professional and social relationships. After gaining support and conducting interviews, a group of seven Informatics students became the founding class and first executive board. These seven individuals are:
Nisha Dwivedi
Jacqueline Fontaine
Jing Guo
Brian Mansfield
Denny Tsai
Julie Varghese
Louise Vongphrachanh
Vongphrachanh and Guo signed the charter and became co-presidents of the fraternity. Later, the fraternity's focus was broadened to include all students interested in information technology. Although the fraternity is aimed towards information technology, Kappa Theta Pi has made continuous efforts to connect with students regardless of their technical and academic backgrounds.
In Spring 2014, University of Michigan School of Information formally sponsored the fraternity.
Colors
The Colors of this professional fraternity are blue (#458FFF) and green (#19FF19). The hexadecimal color values represent the technical roots of the fraternity.
Purpose
According to Kappa Theta Pi's constitution, the purpose of the fraternity can be detailed in six statements: Kappa Theta Pi works to build an active community of students with a shared interest in technology; it sponsors events and activities aimed toward intellectual, social, and professional development; it provides academic and professional resources to members; it fosters relationships among the local community, and with corporations; it provides service and philanthropy to the local community; and it works to maintain lifelong cooperation and friendship among its members.
Structure
The executive board of Kappa Theta Pi currently consists of the President, Vice President of External Affairs, Vice President of Internal Affairs, Vice President of Finance, Vice President of Engagement, Vice President of Membership, Vice President of Marketing, Vice President of Professional Development, and Vice President of Technical Development. Elections for each Executive Board position occurs at the beginning of every calendar year. Each active member of the fraternity is required to complete community service hours as well as attend professional development events. There are committees dedicated to fostering the growth and development of the fraternity. Each member must be part of a committee to actively contribute to the fraternity as a whole.
Philanthropy
Currently, Kappa Theta Pi co-hosts the Computer Science Bootcamp & Tutoring Program at Pioneer High School with Michigan CSE Scholars. Fraternity members volunteer their time to tutor high school computer science students. The primary goal of the Computer Science Bootcamp program is to successfully get all students in the class to pass the AP Computer Science exam. Furthermore, the Computer Science & Tutoring Program aims to raise diversity and appreciation for the field of computer science. Members are required to complete 10 hours of service a semester, many of which are completed with Computer Science Bootcamp. Members are also required to participate in multiple professional development events each semester; ranging from resume critiques, company presentations, and mock interviews.
Chapters
The fraternity lists eleven current chapters formed since it emerged in 2012. Active chapters noted in bold, inactive chapters noted in italics.
Rush and Pledging
Kappa Theta Pi's process for membership follows standard Greek rush and pledge guidelines. The fraternity's rush process occurs in both Fall and Winter semesters.
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The Patient Access Network Foundation (PAN Foundation) is a US-based non-profit 501(c)(3) organization that works to help Americans pay for medical procedures. The organization was ranked #34 in Forbes' 2019 list of "top 100 US Charities", with private donations in 2019 totaling $434 million. PAN Foundation reports it has given over $4 billion to almost one million people since its inception in 2004.
Programs
The PAN Foundation has contributed to the establishment of a fund for research on Parkinson's disease. PANF also has partnerships with the Heart Failure Society of America and Allscripts Health Solutions. The Foundation also names advocacy as one of its program focuses, including encouraging patients to contact their elected representatives and support programs for greater medical coverage. It is a member of the Medicare Access for Patients Rx, a collection of organizations advocating for patients with chronic disease and disability who are on Medicare.
In 2020 PANF launched a new program to support those diagnosed with or quarantining because of COVID-19.
Leadership
In 2021 the Foundation appointed a new president and CEO, Kevin Hagan.
Controversy
In 2019 PANF agreed to pay $4 million to settle a allegations with the US Attourney's Office that they violated the False Claims Act by "enabling pharmaceutical companies to pay kickbacks to Medicare patients taking the companiesâ drugs."
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Comet Tuttle may mean:
8P/Tuttle (a.k.a. 8P/1790 A2, 1790 II, 8P/1858 A1, 1858 I, 8P/1871 T1, 1871 III, 1871d, 1885 IV, 1885b, 1899 III, 1899b, 1912 IV, 1912b, 1926 IV, 1926a, 1939 X, 1939k, 1967 V, 1967a, 1980 XIII, 1980h, 1994 XV, 1992r)
Either of these long-period comets:
C/1858 R1 (a.k.a. 1858 VII)
C/1861 Y1 (a.k.a. 1861 III)
A partial reference to these other comets:
109P/Swift-Tuttle (a.k.a. 109P/-68 Q1, 109P/188 O1, 109P/1737 N1, 1737 II, 109P/1862 O1, 1862 III, 109P/1992 S2, 1992 XXVIII, 1992t)
55P/Tempel-Tuttle (a.k.a. 55P/1366 U1, 55P/1699 U1, 1699 II, 55P/1865 Y1, 1866 I, 55P/1965 M2, 1965 IV, 1965i, 55P/1997 E1)
41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresák (a.k.a. 41P/1858 J1, 1858 III, 41P/1907 L1, 1907 III, 1907c, 41P/1951 H1, 1951 IV, 1951f, 1962 V, 1962b, 1973 VI, 1973b, 1978 XXV, 1978r, 1990 II, 1989b1) | {
"id": "9274070",
"title": "Comet Tuttle",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet%20Tuttle",
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Copyrights © 2015 & All Rights Reserved by Trans Orbit Pty Ltd. | {
"id": null,
"title": null,
"url": "http://www.traveldonkey.jp/hawaii/oahu/opht/",
"docId": "cbdeb62c-ec49-4234-839b-b936a331873e",
"date": "2015-03-30T18:04:04"
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UHC may refer to:
Companies
Union Hand-Roasted Coffee, a British coffee roasting company in East London
United Healthcare, brand of U.S. health insurer UnitedHealth Group
University HealthSystem Consortium, one of the predecessor companies for Vizient, Inc.
Computing
Unified Hangul Code, Windows character encoding for Korean
UDP Host Cache, technique used by file sharing networks such as Gnutella
Utrecht Haskell Compiler, an implementation of the Haskell programming language
Hospitals
University Hospital Coventry, hospital in Coventry, West Midlands
University Hospital Crosshouse, hospital in Kilmarnock, Scotland
University Hospitals of Cleveland, a major not-for-profit medical complex in Cleveland, Ohio
Places
Upper Hat Creek, rural locality in British Columbia, Canada
Upper Hopkins Cascade, a waterfall found in the Borerâs Falls Conservation Area in Flamborough, Hamilton, Ontario
Sports
UHC Stockerau, a womenâs handball club from Stockerau in Austria
UHC Waldkirch-St. Gallen, a Swiss floorball team
UHC Zugerland, a Swiss floorball club from the canton of Zug
UNC Health Care, a not-for-profit medical system owned by the State of North Carolina and based in Chapel Hill
UCW-Zero Heavyweight Championship, a professional wrestling championship
UWF Heavyweight Championship, a professional wrestling championship
UniKL Hockey Club, a field hockey League from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
United Hospitals Cup, rugby cup contested by the six medical schools in London
Other
Universal health care, a social-benefit program
Unburned hydrocarbon, a category of toxic engine emission
Ultimate Holding Company, a British arts collective known for «This is Camp X-Ray» and «Ext-inked»
Upper Hutt College, a secondary school in Upper Hutt, New Zealand
Uttarakhand High Court, a superior court in the state of Uttarakhand, India
Ultra Hardcore, a type of Minecraft server gamemode
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Hylinae is a large subfamily of "tree frogs", family Hylidae.
Classification
The contents of this subfamily vary substantially according to the source. The Amphibian Species of the World follows the revision by Duellman and colleagues from 2016 based on molecular data and delimits the subfamily more narrowly than before, treating parts of former Hylinae as their own subfamilies. Following this classification, there were 18 genera totaling 174 species in the end of 2020. They are found North, Central, and the northmost South America, much of temperate Eurasia, Japan, and extreme northern Africa, however, only Hyla is found outside the Americas. The Wikipedia is following this classification.
The AmphibiaWeb follows an older classification defining Hylinae more broadly, with several hundred species. At the end of 2020, the AmphibiaWeb lists 42 genera totaling 737 species.
Amphibian Species of the World
At the end of 2020, the Amphibian Species of the World includes the following 18 genera:
AmphibiaWeb
At the end of 2020, the AmphibiaWeb includes the following 42 genera:
Characteristics
Hylinae are largely arboreal frogs, although Smilisca and Triprion are burrowers. Eggs are deposited in water and the tadpoles are aquatic.
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Bianca Sánchez (born on August 6, 1996) is a Uruguayan model and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss Uruguay 2015 and represented her country at the Miss Universe 2015 pageant.
Personal life
Bianca lives in Montevideo and works as a model.
Miss Uruguay 2015
On April 26, 2015 Bianca was crowned Miss Uruguay 2015 at Hotel Sofitel Montevideo. Fifteen contestants from across Uruguay competed for the crown. Sánchez was crowned by Miss Uruguay 2014, Johana Riva, while the 1st runner-up, or Miss World Uruguay 2015, Sherika De Armas was crowned by Romina Fernández, First Runner-up 2014. The pageant was broadcast live on VTV Uruguay.
Miss Universe 2015
As Miss Uruguay 2015, Bianca competed at the Miss Universe 2015 pageant but Unplaced.
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OndÅej KoláŠis a Czech name that may refer to persons:
OndÅej KoláŠ(footballer) (born 1994), Czech footballer
OndÅej KoláŠ(politician) (born 1984), Czech politician
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Kevin Vance Hernández Kirkconnell (born 21 December 1985) is a Honduran football goalkeeper who currently plays for Platense in the Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Honduras.
Club career
He began his career in 2003 with Club Victoria before moving abroad to join Uruguayan side Bella Vista. He moved to fellow Uruguayan outfit Central Español before the 2009 Clausura.
International career
He is also part of the U-23 squad that are the Pre-Olympic champions of CONCACAF 2008 where he was voted best goalkeeper of the competition. He made his debut for the national side on 22 May 2008 in a friendly against Belize and earned his second and so far last cap in the same year against Haiti. He has represented his country at the 2008 Summer Olympics.
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Ingram Tom Moore High School is a small public high school in Ingram, Texas, USA serving grades 9â12. It is the only high school in the Ingram Independent School District, and is attended by students from West Kerr County. Built in 1976, ITMHS opened in 1980 as the first school in west Kerr County and was named at the request of Tom Moore, who donated the land it rests on today.
As of the 2015 school year, the school has an enrollment of 451 students, which places Ingram in the 3A class when competing in University Interscholastic League (UIL). Ingram has been classified as a 3A school for the 2014 school year, and years following. The mascot is the Warrior and the colors are red, black, and white.
History
Although the main building (including the office and 16 classrooms) was constructed in 1976, it wasn't until 1980 that the first classes were held. When the school opened, the following words were etched in the foyer: "Ingram Moore High School , established 1980, a student centered school in a student centered community where the standard of quality education will not be compromised." The school was named in honor of Tom Moore after the large land grant he provided.
Academics and curriculum
In 2019, the Texas Education Agency awarded Ingram ISD an âAâ rating for academic performance, the only one in the area. This, in large part, is due to the strong academic performance of Ingram Tom Moore High School.
The school is notable for offering a large number of AP classes for its size, with courses in English Language and Composition, English Literature and Composition, Government, Macroeconomics, U. S. History, Calculus AB, Physics B, Environmental Science, Biology, Art, Music and Chemistry among others. Ingram Tom Moore High School is transitioning into an Early College High School beginning with the 2020-2021 school year. Currently Ingram Tom Moore High School Students are offered 42+ college hours, all free of charge.
Extracurricular activities
Agricultural Science Department
Ingram Tom Moore High School is well-known for its AG department and FFA. The various teams that compete for the Ingram FFA have placed well in all levels of competition. Unlike other school competitions, FFA teams do not compete only against other 3-A teams; they compete against teams from schools of all sizes.
Band
The Warrior band is part of the musical program offered at Ingram ISD. The band currently has two year sweepstakes at UIL Region marching, multiple Area appearances, and one finalist title at Area. The band advanced to their first UIL Area competition in 40 years and earning their very first sweepstakes in school history with the show entitled "Eye of the Storm" during the 2019-2020 season. This year, the band advanced to the UIL Area D competition and made finals the first time in school history, placing 5th out of the 17 bands there. The 2020-2021 show was entitled "If I only". The band is currently under the direction of Mr. Samuel Bigott and the current Drum Major of the 2022-2023 season is Makayne White. The Warrior Band competes in Concert and Marching UIL Region 29 competition and ATSSB All-Region and State auditions for concert and jazz. The Warrior band also fields a Jazz Band called the Jazz Chieftains which performs a number of gigs every year.
Theatre
The Tom Moore Warrior Thespian troupe, under the direction of Jacqueline Kana, is housed in a 700 seat performing arts center. The Theatre Department has competed in UIL One Act Play over the years, earning awards over time:
2004-2005 â 1st in District, 1st in Area
2012-2013 â 3rd in District
2013-2014 â 2nd in District, 2nd in Area, 1st in Regional
2015-2016 â 2nd in District, 3rd in Bi-District, 2nd in Area
2016-2017 â 1st in District, 4th in Bi-District
2017-2018 â 2nd in District, 4th in Bi-District
2018-2019 â 2nd in District, 4th in Bi-District
2019-2020 â District (Advanced)
2020-2021 â 2nd in District, 3rd in Bi-District
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Elder Mill, Romiley was a cotton spinning mill in Romiley, Stockport, Greater Manchester. It was taken over by the Lancashire Cotton Corporation in the 1930s and passed to Courtaulds in 1964.
Location
Romiley, or Chadkirk is a village within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, in Greater Manchester, England, located south east of Manchester, east of Stockport and south of Hyde. It comprises ; the surface is undulated, the soil clay, with a little sand. Coal is found at a great depth, but is not wrought; and there is a stone-quarry. Several large cotton-mills are in operation. The River Etherow here took the name of the River Mersey though today it is considered that the Etherow is a tributary of the River Goyt. The Peak Forest Canal and the Sheffield and Heybridge tramway, passed through the area.
Elder mill was situated by the Peak Forest Canal near the Hatherlow Mills.
History
This stretch of the Goyt, shares much of it history with Stockport whose textile tradition started with the silk industry in the late 17th Century. By the 18th century the manufacture of silk was dominating the economic life of the town. Large silk mills, such as Carrs Mill, Park Mill and Adlington Square Mill, became the major employers of the town. By 1769 nearly 2,000 people were employed in the town's silk trade. In 1772 the silk industry was in depression and the town turned to cotton. Chadkirk was known for bleaching, where finished cloth was left stretched over tenter frames over the landscape. It was bleached by the sun. Clues to this activity can be found in the place names; place names such as whitehill or whitefield. Though an important early milltown Stockport was very late in embracing the joint stock limited liability company boom. The first mill to be financed by that method was Vernon Mill. Elder Mill was such a late nineteenth century mill.
The industry peaked in 1912 when it produced 8 billion yards of cloth. The Great War of 1914â1918 halted the supply of raw cotton, and the British government encouraged its colonies to build mills to spin and weave cotton. The war over, Lancashire never regained its markets. The independent mills were struggling. The Bank of England set up the Lancashire Cotton Corporation in 1929 to attempt to rationalise and save the industry. Elder Mill, Romiley was one of 104 mills bought by the LCC, and one of the 53 mills that survived through to 1950.
Architecture
Power
Elder Mill was powered by a vertical cross compound engine by Daniel Adamson, installed in 1937. It had a stroke. It ran at 106 rpm. The flywheel was .
Owners
Lancashire Cotton Corporation (1930s-1964)
Courtaulds (1964-)
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The Burlington Boys' Choir was founded in 1959 in Burlington, North Carolina and serves as a performing choir and a training group for boys in the Burlington area. The choir was founded by Eva A. Wiseman (1897-1994) who was at the time director of music for the Burlington City Schools. Wiseman modeled the choir after the Vienna Boys Choir. Since the choir's founding, hundreds of boys have been educated in sacred and classical music. Choir members range in age from nine to fourteen years, and are chosen not only for musical ability, but also for maturity, discipline, and high academic standing.
The choir has traveled extensively both in the US and outside the US, has toured seven times in Europe, and performed three times in the White House. In the 2001-2002 season, the choir participated in the Canterbury Children's Choir Festival, in England, and sang Carmina Burana with the Greensboro Symphony Orchestra.
The choir is currently directed by William Allred, who has previously served as an Assistant Director of the Winston-Salem Youth Symphony from 1995-96. Accompanist for the choir is Woodson E. Faulkner, II.
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Alternating electric field therapy, sometimes called tumor treating fields (TTFields), is a type of electromagnetic field therapy using low-intensity, intermediate frequency electrical fields to treat cancer. A TTField-generating device manufactured by the Israeli company Novocure is approved in the United States and Europe for the treatment of newly diagnosed and recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), and is undergoing clinical trials for several other tumor types. Despite earning regulatory approval, the efficacy of this technology remains controversial among medical experts.
Medical uses
Recurrent glioblastoma
The American National Comprehensive Cancer Network's official guidelines list TTFields as an option for the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma, but note substantial disagreement among the members of the expert panel making this recommendation. High-quality evidence for the efficacy of TTFields in oncology is limited. The first randomized clinical trial evaluating TTFields was published in November, 2014, and evaluated efficacy of this approach in patients with recurrent glioblastoma. This trial was the primary basis for regulatory approval of NovoTTF-100A / Optune in the United States and Europe. In this study, patients with glioblastoma that had recurred after initial conventional therapy were randomized to treatment either with a TTFields device (NovoTTF-100A / Optune) or with their treating physician's choice of standard chemotherapy. Survival or response rate in this trial was approximately 6 months, and was not significantly better in the TTFields group than in the conventional therapy group. The results suggested that TTFields and standard chemotherapy might be equally beneficial to patients in this setting, but with different side-effect profiles. Two earlier clinical studies had suggested a benefit of TTFields treatment in recurrent glioblastoma, but definitive conclusions could not be drawn due to their lack of randomized control-groups.
Newly diagnosed glioblastoma
Initial results of a Novocure-sponsored, phase-3, randomized clinical trial of TTFields in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma were reported in November, 2014, and published in December 2015. Interim analysis showed a statistically significant benefit in median survival for patients treated with TTFields plus conventional therapy (temozolomide, radiation, and surgery) versus patients treated with conventional therapy alone, a result which led the trial's independent data monitoring committee to recommended early study-termination. This was the first large-scale trial in a decade to show a survival benefit for patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma. On the basis of these results, the FDA approved a modification of the trial protocol, allowing all patients on the trial to be offered TTFields. Potential methodological concerns in this trial included the lack of a "sham" control group, raising the possibility of a placebo effect, and the fact that patients receiving TTFields received more cycles of chemotherapy than control patients. This discrepancy might have been a result of improved health and survival in TTFields-treated patients, allowing for more cycles of chemotherapy, but also could have been due to conscious or unconscious bias on the part of clinical investigators. An expert clinical review called the preliminary results "encouraging".
Recurrent ovarian carcinoma
Novocure sponsored a phase-2 trial called INNOVATE (EF-22), in which TTFields were administered in conjunction with weekly paclitaxel chemotherapy treatment. The trial included patients with recurrent, platinum-resistant ovarian carcinoma. Results of the trial include that no adverse side effects were reported in relation to the TTField device, except for dermatitis.
Side effects
The adverse effects of TTFields in published trials to date have included topical skin rashes caused by prolonged electrode use.
Mechanism
Alternating electric field therapy / TTFields was initially described in 2004 as the use of insulated electrodes to apply very-low-intensity, intermediate-frequency alternating electrical fields to a target area containing proliferating cells. In preclinical cancer models, TTFields appeared to show selective toxicity to proliferating cells through an antimitotic mechanism. Proteins and protein complexes that are critical for mitosis and could be affected by electric fields include α/β-tubulin and the mitotic septin heterotrimer. These molecules possess an uneven distribution of charged amino acid residues (a dipole), that could prevent their normal orientation and function when exposed to alternating electric fields. In principle, this approach could be selective for cancer cells in regions of the body, such as the brain, where the majority of normal cells are non-proliferating.
During cell division, a structure called a spindle self-assembles from proteins. The spindle attaches to the 23 chromosomes and pulls the DNA into two new cells. The proteins in the spindle have a positive charge on one end and negative charge on the other end. This division is uncontrolled in cancer cells. The TTFields electric charge prevents the cancer cell from dividing, thereby preventing the cancer from growing and spreading. TFF prevents division and destroys cancers cells with electric fields while sparing healthy tissue.
Additionally, emerging evidence suggests alternating electric fields therapy may disrupt a multitude of biological processes, including DNA repair, cell permeability and immunological responses, to elicit therapeutic effects. Greater mechanistic understanding of TTFields may pave the way for new, more effective TTFields-based therapeutic combinations in the future.
Medical device
A clinical TTFields device is manufactured by Novocure under the trade name Optune (formerly NovoTTF-100A), and is approved in the United States, Japan, Israel and multiple countries in Europe for the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma. These devices generate electromagnetic waves between 100 and 300 kHz. The devices can be used in conjunction with regular patterns of care for patients, but are only available in certain treatment centers, and require specific training and certification on the part of the prescribing physician. When a TTFields device is used, electrodes resembling a kind of "electric hat" are placed onto a patient's shaved scalp. When not in use, the device`s batteries are plugged into a power outlet to be re-charged.
Society and culture
Regulatory approval
The NovoTTF-100A / Optune device was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in April 2011 for the treatment of patients with recurrent glioblastoma, based on clinical trial evidence suggesting a benefit in this population. Because the evidence for therapeutic efficacy was not deemed conclusive, the device manufacturer was required to conduct additional clinical trials as a condition of device approval. Critics suggested that pleas of cancer patients in the room of the FDA hearing swayed the opinions of many during the related FDA panel, and that approval was granted despite "huge misgivings on several points".
Optune was approved by the FDA for newly diagnosed glioblastoma on Oct. 5, 2015, as a result of randomized phase 3 trial results that reported a 3-month advantage in overall survival and progression-free survival when added to chemotherapy with temozolomide. In the US, Medicare covers treatment, as of February 2020.
Company
Novocure Ltd. (Nasdaq: NVCR) was founded in 2000. As of December 2020, Novocure Ltd. has over 1000 employees and makes hundreds of millions of dollars in annual sales. Israeli Professor Yoram Palti, professor of physiology and biophysics at the Israel Institute of Technology, is the company's founder and chief technology officer. Novocure Ltd. owns 145 patents.
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Harqin Banner (Mongolian: QaraÄin qosiÉ£u) is a banner of southeastern Inner Mongolia, People's Republic of China. It is under the administration of Chifeng City, the downtown of which is to the north-northeast.
History
Climate
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Mickeys can mean:
Mickey's, a malt liquor from the Miller Brewing Company
The unit of measurement for how far a mouse has moved since it was last polled. | {
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Thomas Stothard (17 August 1755 â 27 April 1834) was a British painter, illustrator and engraver.
His son, Robert T. Stothard was a painter (fl. 1810): he painted the proclamation outside York Minster of Queen Victoria's accession to the throne in June 1837.
Early life
Stothard was born in London, the son of a well-to-do innkeeper in Long Acre. A delicate child, he was sent at the age of five to a relative in Yorkshire, and attended school at Acomb, and afterwards at Tadcaster and at Ilford, Essex. Showing talent for drawing, he was apprenticed to a draughtsman of patterns for brocaded silks in Spitalfields. In his spare time, he attempted illustrations for the works of his favourite poets. Some of these drawings were praised by James Harrison, the editor of the Novelist's Magazine. Stothard's master having died, he resolved to devote himself to art.
Career
In 1778 Stothard became a student of the Royal Academy, of which he was elected associate in 1792 and full academician in 1794. In 1812 he was appointed librarian to the Academy after serving as assistant for two years. Among his earliest book illustrations are plates engraved for Ossian and for Bell's Poets. In 1780, he became a regular contributor to the Novelist's Magazine, for which he produced 148 designs, including his eleven illustrations to The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (by Tobias Smollett) and his graceful subjects from Clarissa and The History of Sir Charles Grandison (both by Samuel Richardson).
From 1786, Thomas Fielding, a friend of Stothard's and engraver, produced engravings using designs by Stothard, Angelika Kauffmann, and of his own. Arcadian scenes were especially esteemed. Fielding realised these in colour, using copper engraving, and achieved excellent quality. Stothard's designs had an exceptional aesthetic appeal.
He designed plates for pocket-books, tickets for concerts, illustrations to almanacs, and portraits of popular actors. These are popular with collectors for their grace and distinction. His more important works include illustrations for:
Two sets for Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, one for the New Magazine and one for Stockdale's edition
John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress (1788)
Harding's edition of Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield (1792)
Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock (1798)
The works of the Swiss poet Salomon Gessner (1802)
William Cowper's Poems (1825)
Giovanni Boccaccio's The Decameron
His figure-subjects in Samuel Rogers's Italy (1830) and Poems (1834) demonstrate that even in old age, his imagination remained fertile and his hand firm.
Art historian Ralph Nicholson Wornum estimated that Stothard's designs number five thousand and, of these, about three thousand were engraved. His oil pictures are usually small. His colouring is often rich and glowing in the style of Rubens, whom Stothard admired. The Vintage, perhaps his most important oil painting, is in the National Gallery. He contributed to John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, but his best-known painting is the Procession of the Canterbury Pilgrims, in Tate Britain, the engraving from which, begun by Luigi and continued by Niccolo Schiavonetti and finished by James Heath, was immensely popular. The commission for this picture was given to Stothard by Robert Hartley Cromek, and was the cause of a quarrel with his friend William Blake. It was followed by a companion work, the Flitch of Bacon, which was drawn in sepia for the engraver but was never carried out in colour.
In addition to his easel pictures, Stothard decorated the grand staircase of Burghley House, near Stamford in Lincolnshire, with subjects of War, Intemperance, and the Descent of Orpheus in Hell (1799â1803); the library of Colonel Johnes' mansion of Hafod, in North Wales, with a series of scenes from Froissart and Monstrelet painted in imitation of relief (1810); and the cupola of the upper hall of the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh (later occupied by the Signet Library), with Apollo and the Muses, and figures of poets, orators, etc. (1822). He prepared designs for a frieze and other sculptural decorations for Buckingham Palace, which were not executed, owing to the death of George IV. He also designed a shield presented to the Duke of Wellington by the merchants of London, and executed a series of eight etchings from the various subjects that adorned it.
Personal life
Stothard married Rebecca Watkins (d. 1825) in 1783. They had eleven children, of whom six â five sons and one daughter â survived infancy. They lived in Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, until 1794, when they moved to a house at 28 Newman Street, Fitzrovia of which Stothard had bought the freehold. His wife died in 1825. His sons included Thomas, accidentally shot dead in about 1801; the antiquarian illustrator Charles Alfred Stothard, who also predeceased his father; and Alfred Joseph Stothard, medallist to George IV.
Stothard died on 27 April 1834, and was buried in Bunhill Fields burial ground in north London.
In literature
Stothard's painting of Erato (one of the Muses) is given a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon in her "Poetical Catalogue of Pictures", in the Literary Gazette (1823). Another of his paintings, The Fairy Queen Sleeping, is poetically examined in a similar fashion in her "Poetical Sketches of Modern Pictures" in The Troubadour (1826).
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This is a list of sports anime, manga, OVAs, ONAs, and films.
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ãã·ãã£ã¿ã¯ãŒé«èŒª[TELïŒ0120-688-355]ïœäŸ¡å€ããé«çŽè³è²žæ¢ãã¯ã±ã³ã»ã³ãŒãã¬ãŒã·ã§ã³ãã¬ã¬ãŒãžãèçãªã©ãšãŠãéœå¿ãšã¯æããªããããªå¿«é©ç©ºé溢ããäœãŸããæ·å°å
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"url": "http://www.hana-alice.com/",
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St John the Baptist's Church, Ault Hucknall, is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England in Ault Hucknall, Derbyshire.
History
The church dates from the 11th century with 14th- and 15th-century features. It was restored between 1885 and 1888 by William Butterfield.
Parish status
The church is in a joint parish with
St Andrew's Church, Glapwell
St Leonard's Church, Scarcliffe
St Luke's Church, Palterton
Memorials
Anne Keighley, wife of William Cavendish, 1st Earl of Devonshire
Thomas Hobbes (d. 1679)
Organ
The pipe organ was installed by Brindley & Foster around 1905. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.
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"docId": null,
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Gehrenberg Tower is a 30 metres tall observation tower of lattice steel on Gehrenberg, a 754 m high mountain north of Markdorf, standing at an elevation of 704 m. Gehrenberg Tower has some similarities to Eiffel Tower as it also has a bow between its feet.
From the observation deck of Gehrenberg Tower, one can see at clear weather the Alps and the Höchsten mountain.
Gehrenberg Tower, which carries also antennas, belongs to the town of Markdorf, although it stands on the area of Deggenhausertal.
| {
"id": "12640778",
"title": "Gehrenberg Tower",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gehrenberg%20Tower",
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Joseph Palacci (also "Palaggi", "Palagi", and many variations) (1815â1896) was a rabbi and author in Ladino and Hebrew in Izmir and was a descendant of the Pallache family.
Life
Palacci was born in Izmir in 1815, the third and youngest son of grand rabbi Haim Palachi and younger brother of grand rabbis Abraham Palacci and Rahamim Nissim Palacci.
He was to succeed his brothers as grand rabbi but proved too young (under seventy-five) under current law. Instead, Solomon, one of Abraham's sons, was nominated to succeed. Due to Solomon's credentials (weak in scholarship, discordant in community), tension arose, and Joseph Eli (died 1906) was nominated. To end the dispute, Solomon received another position in the rabbinate and Joseph Eli succeeded briefly (1899â1900). Finally, Joseph ben Samuel Bensenior (1837â1913) succeeded as grand rabbi in December 1900.
His grandfather mentions how he helped print his grandfather's books. Palacci himself also wrote books.
Personal and death
Palacci died in Izmir in 1896.
Works
And Joseph Abraham with brother Abraham Palacci, in Ladino and Hebrew (Izmir)
Brother Joseph (Izmir)
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"id": "51607579",
"title": "Joseph Palacci",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph%20Palacci",
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George Henry Horler (10 February 1895 â March 1967) was an English professional footballer who played as a full back in the Football League for Reading, West Ham United and Fulham.
Personal life
Horler served as a sergeant in the Army Medical Corps during the First World War.
Career statistics
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