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Vicente Rojas Lizcano (October 26, 1879, in Chinácota, Colombia â March 1, 1943, in Pamplona, Colombia), known as Biófilo Panclasta, was a political activist, writer, and Colombian individualist anarchist. In 1904 he began to use the pseudonym by which he was later known: Biófilo, lover of life, and Panclasta, enemy of all. He traveled to more than fifty countries, agitating for anarchist ideas and taking part in worker and union demonstrations, in the course of which he befriended such people as Kropotkin, Maxim Gorky, and Lenin.
Biography
Early life
The son of Bernardo Rojas and Simona Lizcano, a working-class woman, Biófilo began his studies in Pamplona, a city close to Chinácota. From 1897 to 1898 he was in the Escuela Normal of Bucaramanga, from which he was expelled for publishing a small periodical in which he denounced the re-election of president Miguel Antonio Caro. Here is a popular quote of his: "Being ruled over is just as repulsive a thought to me as being ruler. Each man must be his own road, I donŽt follow and IŽll never ask to be followed"
Participation in the Venezuelan Revolution
In 1899 he left school and traveled to Venezuela, where, with Eleazar López Contreras, he founded the first Public School in the town of Capacho Nuevo, the capital of the Independencia municipality (State of Táchira). That same year he signs up for the army of the Venezuelan Cipriano Castro, which had as its goal the downfall of president Ignacio Andrade. He soon left this group behind and wandered around Venezuela with other revolutionary groups that prowled through Trujillo, Portuguesa, Cojedes and Carabobo. He arrived at the city of Valencia in January 1900. In November 1904 he traveled to the Colombian city of Baranquilla, now as a coronel in the army of Cipriano Castro; he offered his support as a fighter to the Colombian forces against the Panamanian separatists supported by the United States.
First contacts with Anarchism
In 1906 he traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina. There his contact with anarchist and socialist thought began as he attended meetings and wrote for partisan newspapers. That same year, he left for Europe as a delegate of the Federación Obrera Regional Argentina to the Workers' Congress in Amsterdam. In the Netherlands he was invited by the Social Studies group to give the opposing opinion to a talk by Bestraud called "Anarchy Against Life."
Revolutionary Activity in Colombia
In 1908 he was exiled from Spain at the request of the Colombian president, Rafael Reyes. He arrived in Puerto Colombia with the plan of continuing to Bogotá; however, he chose to travel again and take refugue in Panama, from which he was once again exiled by order of Rafael Reyes. He was imprisoned and turned over to Colombian authorities. From then on Biófilo Panclasta would only leave one prison to enter another: he was jailed in Cartagena (1909), Barranquilla (1910) and Bogotá (1911). Certain national newspapers such as Maquetas demanded the death sentence for him, stating that he was a danger to public order.
Return to Venezuela: Valencia Prison
"The prisoners who had seen me enter into the cell were careful, in their entrance, not to trip over my cold, weak body. One of them felt with his hand my flesh, which did not shudder because I had already suffered all pain, and observing that I neither moved nor spoke, exclaimed sadly and softly, 'They hung this one in the Police Station and brought him to die here.'"
Biófilo returned to the Venezuelan city of Valencia in 1914. There he was imprisoned giving a speech in praise of the French nation in a public square, days after the beginning of the First World War. The real reason he was imprisoned was the orders given by the underlings of president Juan Vicente Gómez, who had succeeded Cipriano Castro, Panclasta's friend, in a coup d'état. During the seven years he remained in prison, Biófilo was subjected to forced labor, deprivation, and hunger, according to each successive warden's wishes. He spent his prison years with various Venezuelan political prisoners, many of whom died in that jail. In 1921, thanks to a warden assigned by the recently named governor of the state of Carabobo, José Antonio Baldó, Biófilo was transferred to Castillo Libertador, where he was treated more humanely and set free in a few months.
Revolutionary activity around the world
In 1923, two years after leaving the Valencia prison, Biófilo was selected as delegate of the Mexican Anarchist Association to a congress in Barcelona. There he proposed a project named Operation Europe, which had as its goal:
The following year he traveled to São Paulo to help organize a coffee-growers' strike, but was once more jailed and transferred to the city of Cayena, from which he escaped. The League of the Rights of Man sent him to Martinique; having secretly visited fifty-two countries, he returned to Colombia. There he was imprisoned together with the syndicalist Raúl Mahecha, in the city of San Gil. The following year, in Bogotá, he founded the Centro de Unión y Acción Revolucionaria [Center for Revolutionary Unity and Action], whose lemma was: "Revolutionaries of all ideals, unite!"
Last years
In 1934, Biófilo Panclasta began cohabiting with Julia Ruiz, a well-known fortune teller who worked in Bogotá. He dedicated his time to writing for newspapers and granting interviews, also sending letters to some Latin American presidents. His companion died in January 1939. One year later, Biófilo attempted suicide in Barranquilla, electrocuting himself and cutting his throat with a straight razor. In December of that year, the Bucaramanga police banned him from the city for being a derelict and an alcoholic. He died on March 1, 1943, in the old folk's home of Pamplona, from a tremendous heart attack.
Anarchist Thought
Biófilo Panclasta's ideas on anarchism were quite idiosyncratic. He oscillated between individualist anarchism and social anarchism, which can be seen in a series of letters he wrote from Barranquilla prison in 1910. At first, Biófilo presented himself as an extreme and radical individualist, echoing the ideas of his favorite philosopher, Nietzsche. Biófilo hated the herd:
For Panclasta, the social struggle he carried out was not for others, but for himself, to feel alive. Fighting for others allowed him, he said, to unfold all his capacities for action, for love or hate.
But Biófilo was just as capable of identifying with social anarchism. Biófilo's opinions on both currents of anarchism are of a piece with his overall way of thinking, that of someone who hated absolutes and extremes, who thought that people are neither completely social nor entirely individual. He tried to distance himself from any form of political militancy, even anarchist organizations. He wrote of a conversation with Kropotkin where he told him:
Biófilo Panclasta's way of thinking shows that, more than a man of ideas, he was a man of action. Biófilo used the need that people have to free themselves from oppression to act from; for him, organizations are effective only in practice, not in a programmatic sense. They work based on human interests, which he called situational interests.
Works
Books in English translation
Seven Years Buried Alive. Seattle: Ritmomaquia, 2013.
Books in Spanish
PANCLASTA, Biófilo (1932): "Siete años enterrado vivo en una de las mazmorras de Gomezuela". TipografÃa la Libertad, Bogotá.
VILLANUEVA, Orlando; VEGA, Renán; GAMBOA, Juan, CLAVIJO, Amadeo; FAJARDO, Luis (1992): "Biófilo Panclasta, el eterno prisionero". Ediciones Alas de Xue.
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Kye Jin-gyo is a North Korean former footballer. He represented North Korea on at least four occasions between 1980 and 1981.
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Dimitrovgrad Municipality may refer to:
Dimitrovgrad Municipality, Bulgaria
Dimitrovgrad, Serbia
Municipality name disambiguation pages | {
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Kyushu Mountains is a mountain range that runs from northeast to southwest in central Kyushu.
The highest peak of the mountain range is Mount Sobo.
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Gleb Aleksander Ilyin (1889â1968) was a Russian-American painter known for his portraiture and landscape paintings.
Early life
Ilyin was born on June 1, 1889, into an aristocratic family in Kazan, Russian Empire. His father was a judge, while his mother Eudoxie Kriganovsky, took care of the household. Gleb was encouraged in his art studies at an early age. He graduated in 1911 with highest honors from the Kazan Art School after four years of training under Nicolai Fechin (Russian: ÐОкПлай ÐÐ²Ð°ÐœÐŸÐ²ÐžÑ Ð€ÐµÑОМ; 1881â1955).
Russia
He completed his formal art studies at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg (1911â1917) under Ilya Yefimovich Repin (Russian: ÐлÑÑÌ ÐÑОÌÐŒÐŸÐ²ÐžÑ Ð ÐµÌпОМ, 1844â1930) and Konstantin Yegorovich Makovsky (Russian: ÐПМÑÑаМÑОМ ÐгПÑÐŸÐ²ÐžÑ ÐакПвÑкОй, 1839â1915).
Known outside of the academy for the quality of his work, Ilyin received invitations to do portraits of the imperial family (portrait of Grand Duke Constantine Constantinovich) and Saint Petersburgâs high society (portrait of Feodor Chaliapin). His work displayed at the Fall Exhibit of the Imperial Academy of Art in 1916 won a major prize.
Gleb left Saint Petersburg in 1917 after the outbreak of the October Revolution and moved to Kazan for a short period until the Red Army captured the city. He escaped over the Ural Mountains to Omsk, along with other family members. On their way East, Ilyin met Natalie Melnikoff. After a short courtship they married in Chita, a city north of Mongolia.
The artist supported himself by painting portraits of Japanese officers stationed in Chita. After receiving letters of introduction and recommendations to prominent figures in Tokyo, Ilyin joined other White Russian refugees on their way to Japan in 1918.
Japan
In Tokyo, the artist received commissions for portraits of government officials and members of the imperial court. After a series of successful and profitable exhibits, Ilyin moved to San Francisco with other family members in 1923.
United States
His first exhibit in 1924 gained him a reputation as one of the most popular portrait painters in California. His aristocratic background opened doors to American high society and the homes of wealthy families. The artist commanded the highest prices for his work, frequently asking twice the average annual salary in California in the 1920s, for his commissioned pieces.
In 1928, The San Francisco Chronicle called him one of the cityâs most skilled painters. In January 1930, the artist was invited to The White House to paint the portrait of Lou Henry Hoover, the wife of the U.S. president, her first portrait as the First Lady.
The Berkeley Gazette of November 16, 1933, in its assessment of Gleb Ilyin' s
exhibit held at the Mills College Art Gallery wrote: "Ilyin's fusion of the academic and the modern in his work is indicated by his emphasis on the beauty of line, and his feeling for form, as well as by his use of color. While some of his portraits are in the modern style, others resemble the old masters. He is said to have been unusually successful in catching the spirit and manner of such great classic painters as Lawrence, Van Dyck, and Velasquezâ.
In 1936, a Los Angeles Times journalist reviewing Ilyin's exhibit at the Stendhal Gallery described a most unusual incident when Ilyin walked into the Gallery and saw there his first art teacher from Kazan, Nicolai Fechin who had moved to Hollywood as one of the best established artists in the Western United States.
Later life
Gleb Ilyin shared his studio with his older brother Peter Ilyin at 2977 Clay Street in San Franciscoâs Pacific Heights district. Both frequently displayed their works in the same galleries and museums.
In the mid-1940s, he was briefly a resident of Colorado. The artist spent his later years in Northern California on the Russian River where he died in Sebastopol on October 14, 1968.
Artistic associations
San Francisco Bohemian Club, Carmel Art Association, Beaux Art Club of San Francisco, Russian Club of San Francisco (President).
Major exhibits
Imperial Academy of Art, St. Petersburg (1916â1917), Imperial Art Exhibition (Tokyo), 1921â1922; City of Paris -San Francisco, 1924; San Francisco Art Association, 1924â1968; Bohemian Club, 1927â1968; California State Fairs, 1927â1956; De Young Museum; Oakland Art Gallery; Crocker Museum; Society of Western Artists, California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Santa Barbara Museum of Art.
Works of art on permanent display
The White House
Denver Art Museum
Oakland Museum of California
San Francisco War Memorial
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State Route 97 (SR 97) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Arizona. It runs from U.S. Route 93 (US 93) northwest of Congress northeast to SR 96 southeast of Bagdad. The road was built by the late 1930s and improved during the late 1940s. Established as a state route in 1962, SR 97 was paved in the early 1970s. In 2000, the highway was officially added to the State Highway system.
Route description
The route begins at an intersection with US 93 northwest of Congress and southeast of Nothing. Beginning at US 93 southbound, SR 97 crosses US 93 northbound after several feet. It crosses through a desert region in a northeasterly direction, meeting a dirt road that connects back to US 93. SR 97 curves northward before heading eastward at an intersection with Burro Creek Road. Again turning northeastward, the roadway meets various local roads, most of them dirt. The highway meets its northern terminus at SR 96, which continues northwestward toward Bagdad.
The highway is maintained by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) who is responsible for constructing and maintaining highways in the state. As part of this role, ADOT surveys volumes of traffic on their highways. These surveys are most often presented in the form of annual average daily traffic (AADT), which is the number of vehicles that travel a road during an average day during the year. In 2009, ADOT calculated that an average of only 550 vehicles used the road daily. No part of the highway has been listed in the National Highway System, a system of roads in the United States important to the nation's economy, defense, and mobility.
History
The section of the SR 97 northeast of Burro Creek Road had been built by 1939. Between 1946 and 1951, the section north of Burro Creek Road was improved and the section south built as a graded road. The road was logged as a state route in 1962 along its current routing, connecting SR 96 to the rest of the state highway system. The highway was then paved throughout its entirety in 1973. In 2000, the route was slightly realigned because of a widening project on US 93 from a two-lane highway to a four-lane divided highway. That same year, SR 97 officially became a State Highway.
Junction list
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â²HOMEãžæ»ã | {
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"title": "Yak-130 (èªç©ºæ©)",
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Nickerson Ice Shelf, is an ice shelf about 35 miles wide, lying north of Siemiatkowski Glacier and the western part of Ruppert Coast, Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. First observed and roughly mapped by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition (ByrdAE) (1928-30). Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Commander H.J. Nickerson, U.S. Navy (USN), administrative officer on the staff of the Commander, Task Force 43, during Operation Deep Freeze 1966.
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The 2015 Fylde Borough Council election took place on 7 May 2015 to elect members of Fylde Borough Council in England. It was held on the same day as other local elections.
| {
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"title": "2015 Fylde Borough Council election",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015%20Fylde%20Borough%20Council%20election",
"docId": null,
"date": null
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æºåž¯é»è©±ã¢ããªã²ãŒã | {
"id": null,
"title": null,
"url": "https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E3%82%A2%E3%83%89%E3%83%99%E3%83%B3%E3%83%81%E3%83%A3%E3%83%BC%E3%82%AF%E3%82%A4%E3%82%BA_%E3%82%AB%E3%83%97%E3%82%B3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%AF%E3%83%BC%E3%83%AB%E3%83%89",
"docId": "5de39721-87f9-4310-9b4e-7cc221aedbba",
"date": "2016-11-17T13:20:26"
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Ghiath Matar was a Syrian activist who became known for giving flowers to soldiers in his home town of Darayya.
Death
Ghiath was arrested on 6 September 2011 by the security forces of the Syrian government. Four days later, his body was returned to his family with scars and sores resulting from severe torture. His funeral was attended by the ambassadors of the United States, Japan, Germany, France and Denmark. When Ghiath died, his wife was expecting their first baby. The baby was named after his father.
Ghiath Matar became a symbol of peaceful resistance of the Syrian revolution.
A documentary on Matar, by the filmmaker Sam Kadi, Little Gandhi, was a winner at the Independent European Film Festival in April 2016, winning the Ahmed Khedr Award for Excellence in Arab Filmmaking.
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"id": "36828328",
"title": "Ghiath Matar",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghiath%20Matar",
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John Francis "Jack" Quinn III is a former Republican New York State Assembly Member, representing Erie County.
Background
A resident of Hamburg, New York, Quinn is the son of former U.S. Congress Representative Jack Quinn. Quinn was elected as his father was retiring from Congress.
Education
Quinn graduated from Saint Francis High School, Siena College, and the University at Buffalo Law School with honors. As a law school student, Quinn also interned in the Washington, DC office of Congressman James T. Walsh. In this capacity, he had a focus on constituent, citizen action, and lobbyist relations.
Early career
While in law school, Quinn worked at law firms in the Buffalo, New York and Washington, DC areas. He also worked at the New York State Office of Science, Technology, and Academic Research.
Political career
As Assistant District Attorney in Erie County, New York
Quinn is a former Assistant District Attorney in Erie County, New York.
As New York State Assembly Member
Quinn was first elected to the 146th District of the New York State Assembly in 2004; and simultaneously worked for the law firm, Shaw & Shaw, P.C. At the start of 2006, he was appointed as the Ranking Minority Member of the Assembly Judiciary Committee. He is a former Ranking Minority Member of the Assembly Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Committee, and a former Ranking Minority Member of the Assembly Tourism Committee.
Political interests
Quinn's interests are in the areas of labor, the environment, crime, and the military. As Assembly Member, one of his aims was to obtain increased resources for New York's law enforcement officers to combat violent crime.
New York State Senate election
In 2010, Quinn ran for a seat in the New York State Senate, 58th District. His campaign was helped when longtime incumbent William Stachowski was defeated in the Democratic primary, but remained on the ballot for two minor parties. In the general election, Quinn was narrowly defeated in this closely watched race by Erie County Legislator Timothy Kennedy.
Prior to the election, Quinn announced his plan to reduce the State budget by more than $8 billion.
Selected electoral history
Quinn's electoral history can be found, online, at Our Campaigns, and a portion of it is reflected here.
|-
Quinn also ran on the Taxpayers Party line in this election.
|-
Quinn also ran on the Sportsman's Rights ticket in this election.
Community involvement
Quinn has been active in several community groups, including the University of Buffalo Law School Alumni Association, the Erie County Bar Association and New York State Bar Association, the St. Francis High School Alumni Association, St. Mary of the Lake Church, and Ducks Unlimited.
| {
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"title": "Jack Quinn III",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack%20Quinn%20III",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
Jung Ho-jung (born 11 May 1976) is a South Korean women's international footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. She is a member of the South Korea women's national football team. She was part of the team at the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup. On club level she plays for INI Steel in South Korea.
| {
"id": "52057022",
"title": "Jung Ho-jung",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jung%20Ho-jung",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
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æåž³äº€ä»ïŒå亀ä»ïŒ | {
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"title": null,
"url": "http://www.crayon-box.jp/seido/tetyou/sinsei.htm",
"docId": "71e0eb04-7b5f-490b-83be-3a9acfe20b79",
"date": "2011-10-22T03:28:34"
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Thorfinn Sigurdsson (1009?â 1065), also known as Thorfinn the Mighty (Old Norse: Ãorfinnr inn riki), was an 11th-century Jarl of Orkney. He was the youngest of five sons of Jarl Sigurd Hlodvirsson and the only one resulting from Sigurd's marriage to a daughter of Malcolm II of Scotland. He ruled alone as jarl for about a third of the time that he held the title and jointly with one or more of his brothers or with his nephew Rögnvald Brusason for the remainder. Thorfinn married Ingibiorg Finnsdottir, daughter of Finn Arnesson, Jarl of Halland.
The Heimskringla of Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson, and the anonymous compiler of the Orkneyinga Saga wrote that Thorfinn was the most powerful of all the jarls of Orkney and that he ruled substantial territories beyond the Northern Isles. A sizeable part of the latter saga's account concerns his wars with a "King of Scots" named Karl Hundason whose identity is uncertain. In his later years he went on a pilgrimage to Rome and he was instrumental in making Orkney and Shetland part of mainstream Christendom. On his death in the latter half of the 11th century he was followed as earl by his sons Paul and Erlend.
There are numerous problems associated with the chronology of Thorfinn's life and in identifying his relationships to the southern polities of the Kingdom of Alba (the precursor to modern Scotland) and the Kingdom of Moray. His diplomacy with the Norwegian court has also been interpreted in various ways. His life has been the subject of various works of historical fiction.
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Trevor Hirth (born 29 February 1984) is an Australian Paralympic table tennis player. He represented Australia at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics.
Personal
Hirth was born on 29 February 1984. He has lived with a neuro-muscular disability since birth. His right leg is two centimeters shorter than his left, and his disability affects his power and strength and weakens his grip on the bat. In 2021, he lives in Avondale Heights, Victoria. He works as a Disability Awareness Educator and Smash Down Barriers Technical Expert.
Table tennis
He is classified as a C6 Para-table tennis player. Hirth was introduced to table tennis as a child, playing on a makeshift table his grandfather had built and set up in the carport of his family home. He was 29-years-old when he was spotted by an ex-Paralympic table tennis player at his local club and was told that he should try out for the Australian team.
He has won the Australian Championships in his class six times.
Hirth has won ten international medals, including gold at the 2013 and 2017 Oceania Para Table Tennis Championships. He has competed at three World Championships - 2014, 2017 and 2018.
Since 2018 he has been an International Table Tennis Federation Athletes' Commission Member.
At the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics, he lost two matches in the Men's Individual C6 and with Jake Ballestrino lost in the quarter-finals of Men's Team C6-7.
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Dola is a department of Ngounié Province in southern Gabon. The capital lies at Ndendé. It had a population of 6,979 in 2013.
Towns and villages
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Bayard Thayer (1862-1916) was a yachtsman and horticulturalist, and member of the Thayer Family of Lancaster, Massachusetts.
Early life
Born in Boston, Massachusetts on April 3, 1862, he was the grandson of Thayer, and also was the grandson of Rev. Dr. Nathaniel Thayer, Unitarian minister of the First Church of Christ in Lancaster and son of Nathaniel Thayer, a banker. He was named after his maternal grandmother Harriet Elizabeth (Bayard) Van Rensselaer. His twin brother was John Eliot Thayer the ornithologist.
Boston townhouses
Bayard city homes were a part of the Thayer Family land. He lived at both 305 Commonwealth Ave, designed by Peabody & Stearns, and later at 32 Hereford, designed by McKim, Mead, & White, with his wife Ruth Thayer.
Thayer estate
He built the Thayer estate in Lancaster, Massachusetts, in 1901 and designed by architect Guy Lowell and landscape by Herbert W.C. Browne.
It was built as a summer home to Thayer who was a horticulturalist, the mansion then passed through the hands of the Greek Orthodox and Catholic churches, was briefly a school for the blind, and ultimately became the famed Maharishi Ayurveda Health Center used by celebrities such as Elizabeth Taylor.It still stands today in Lancaster, and is presently unoccupied and up for sale.
Yachting
Bayard Thayer was also a yachtsman. He would compete in many races after purchasing E.D. Morgan's steel hull schooner Constellation in 1892, and having the George Stewart designed the yacht Pilgrim built for him.
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Kevin D. Bratcher (born April 17, 1961, in Louisville, Kentucky) is an American politician and a Republican member of the Kentucky House of Representatives representing District 29 since January 1997. He was the first Republican House Majority Whip in Kentucky history (the position wasn't created until 1933). Currently, Bratcher is the Chairman of the House Elections, Constitutional Amendments and Intergovernmental Affairs Committee.
Kevin's cousin, Steve Bratcher, is also a member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from District 25.
Education
Bratcher earned his BS from EmbryâRiddle Aeronautical University, his MA in media communications from Webster University and his AAS in Mechanical Engineering Technology from the Louisville Technical Institute.
Elections
1996 Bratcher won the November 5, 1996 General election against Democratic nominee John Flood.
1998 Bratcher won the November 3, 1998 General election against Democratic nominee Joyce McClain.
2000 Bratcher and returning 1998 Democratic challenger Joyce McClain, setting up a rematch; Bratcher won the November 7, 2000 General election with 8,915 votes (57.3%) against McClain.
2002 Bratcher won both the 2002 Republican Primary and the November 5, 2002 General election, winning with 12,008 votes.
2004 Bratcher was challenged in the 2004 Republican Primary, winning with (74.1%) and won the November 2, 2004 General election with 15,407 votes (62.8%) against Democratic nominee Bruce Roberts.
2006 Bratcher won the 2006 Republican Primary and the November 7, 2006 General election, winning with 13,411 votes.
2008 Bratcher ran for the 2008 Republican Primary and won the November 4, 2008 General election with 16,630 votes (58.8%) against Democratic nominee James Sexton, who had been his Republican Primary challenger in 2004. Bratcher also won the November 2, 2010 General election with 15,019 votes (68.3%) against Democratic nominee Dustin Wilcher.
2012 Bratcher won the May 22, 2012 Republican Primary and the November 6, 2012 General election with 21,143 votes.
2014 Bratcher defeated Democratic challenger Dave Stengel for the November 4, 2014 General election.
2018 Bratcher defeated Democratic challenger Ronel Brown for the November 6, 2018 General election. Bratcher 10,570 Brown 9,251.
2020 Bratcher defeated Democratic challenger Suzanne Kugler in the November 3, 2020 General election. Bratcher 15,298 (55.6%) Kugler 12,201 (44.4%)
Committee Assignments
General Government
Elections, Const. Amendments & Intergovernmental Affairs (Chair)
Judiciary
Licensing, Occupations, & Administrative Regulations
State Government
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Surrey Downs is a northeastern suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. It is located in the City of Tea Tree Gully local government area, and is adjacent to Wynn Vale, Golden Grove, Fairview Park and Redwood Park.
History
The area was originally used for agriculture and viticulture, but was redeveloped as outer suburban housing during the 1970s.
Surrey Downs Post Office opened on 13 October 2000 replacing the Fairview Park office (open since 1965).
Geography
The boundary of Surrey Downs forms a triangle defined by Golden Grove Road to the west and north, Hancock Road to the east and Grenfell Road to the south.
Facilities
Surrey Downs has a local shopping centre with a chemist, supermarket and several smaller speciality shops; the newly rebuilt Fairview Park shopping centre is also nearby. The Surrey Downs Primary School and Kindergarten are also located within the suburb â the nearest high school (depending on location within the suburb) is either The Heights School, Golden Grove High School or Banksia Park International High School.
Surrey Downs also has a community oval, known as Illyarrie Reserve, which is home to the Golden Grove Central Districts Baseball Club in the South Australian Baseball League.
Transport
The 541, 543 and 547 and J3 bus routes service Surrey Downs. Since October 2006 the 541G makes extended stops to the bus interchange at the Golden Grove Village, which is operated by Adelaide Metro. Proposals exist to extend the Adelaide O-Bahn to Golden Grove, but the route it might take from Tea Tree Plaza Interchange is unknown. This is however unlikely, now the proposal for a new interchange for the Golden Grove hub is underway and there are now buses which take street routes to get there.
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Akron Ice House was established in 1879 (Incorporated 1888) The Klages Coal & Ice Company Akron, Ohio. was co-founded by German immigrants Henry Klages and August Blessman. The business was passed on to their sons, Louis Klages and Water Blessman. The building was also a Royal Crown Bottling Co. plant.
History
In the late 1880s Henry Klages won the right to all of the ice on Akron, Ohio's Blue Pond.
Klages Coal & Ice Company was built in 1888 on N. Summit street, Akron, Ohio. Klages Coal & Ice was established in 1888 by two German immigrants Henry Klages and August Blessman. Henry Klages died in 1899 and the business was passed to his son Louis Klages and to August Blesman's son, Water Blessman. From 1947 through the 1980s, the building was a Royal Crown Bottling Co. plant.
Acquisitions
In January of 1929 Klages Coal & Ice Company acquired two addition al companies: Falls Ice Company and Ewart Coal and Ice Company. By 1929 Klages Coal & Ice Company had 100 ice stations and 50 trucks and horse drawn vehicles.
Fire
On January 29, 1892 three of the Klages Coal & Ice - ice houses by Summit Lake burned down. A neighbor (Joe Sutters) had started fires nearby which caused the buildings to burn. Klages Coal & Ice had no insurance and damages were estimated at $1500.
Royal Crown Bottling Company
In 1947 the building was used as a Royal Crown Bottling Company plant, owned by the Klages family.
Hodgson v. Klages Coal & Ice Co. (6th Cir. 1970)
United States Secretary of Labor James Day Hodgson brought a suit against the bottling company on its claim that routemen were also outside salesmen, and therefore entitled to overtime in addition to the flat fee pay for their route. In 1971 the courts determined that "workers were entitled to overtime pay even though the employer paid routemen a flat fee." They ruled that the company must pay â... its routemen a flat fee plus commissions based on volume."
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Mantatao is an island off the coast of Bohol, Philippines. Situated in the Cebu Strait, the island is approximately north-northwest from the town center of Calape, Bohol. Mantatao is one of multiple chains of islands located in the Danajon Bank, the only double barrier reef in the country. The island is one of the 33 barangays that comprise the municipality of Calape. As of 2020, Mantatao's population is 972.
With a total estimated area of , the island has a high population density. It is known for having an abundance of fish, squid, shell/clams and seaweeds. Mantatao Island is surrounded by mangrove forest, which is the natural habitat for marine creatures. It has an elementary school and a diesel power plant, which is operated by the National Power Corporation.
Recently, the island has experienced several natural hazards that greatly impacted its inhabitants and their livelihood. Mantatao was affected during the 7.2 2013 Bohol Earthquake. The earthquake created a sinking or lowering of the ground known as subsidence. During high tide, the island becomes submerged as seawaters flood the entire island. In 2021, the residents of the island were affected by Typhoon Rai or Supertyphoon Odette in the Philippines. Families were immediately evacuated to the mainland prior to the typhoon's landfall.
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Single-base extension (SBE) is a method for determining the identity of a nucleotide base at a specific position along a nucleic acid. The method is used to identify a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP).
In the method, an oligonucleotide primer hybridizes to a complementary region along the nucleic acid to form a duplex, with the primerâs terminal 3â-end directly adjacent to the nucleotide base to be identified. Using a DNA polymerase, the oligonucleotide primer is enzymatically extended by a single base in the presence of all four nucleotide terminators; the nucleotide terminator complementary to the base in the template being interrogated is incorporated and identified. The presence of all four terminators suppresses misincorporation of non-complementary nucleotides. Many approaches can be taken for determining the identity of an incorporated terminator, including fluorescence labeling, mass labeling for mass spectrometry, isotope labeling, and tagging the base with a hapten and detecting chromogenically with an anti-hapten antibody-enzyme conjugate (e.g., via an ELISA format).
The method was invented by Philip Goelet, Michael Knapp, Richard Douglas and Stephen Anderson while working at the company Molecular Tool. This approach was designed for high-throughput SNP genotyping and was originally called "Genetic Bit Analysis" (GBA). Illumina, Inc. utilizes this method in their Infinium technology (http://www.illumina.com/technology/beadarray-technology/infinium-hd-assay.html) to measure DNA methylation levels in the human genome.
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Jyles Jackson Coggins (January 10, 1921 â August 25, 2011) was an American real estate developer and politician who served in the North Carolina House of Representatives and North Carolina Senate. He served as the Mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina from 1975 until 1977.
Coggins was born to a poor family in 1921 in Iredell County, North Carolina, United States. He moved to Chapel Hill in 1939 to pursue a university education, but dropped out due to ill health and took up various jobs. He enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1942 and fought in World War II as a bomber pilot. Following his discharge in 1946, Coggins moved to Raleigh to resume his education. He shortly thereafter abandoned his studies to start his own construction company. Over time the business grew and completed projects across the southeastern United States, and Coggins became a millionaire. In 1963 he, a conservative Democrat, was elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives. Two years later he was elected to the North Carolina Senate. Over the course of his legislative career he advocated for the disabled and opposed liquor, pornography, and coed dormitories on state university campuses. He also frequently disregarded the wishes of state Democratic leaders, earning a reputation as a maverick. Coggins left the Senate in 1971 and unsuccessfully sought a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives the following year.
Coggins was elected Mayor of Raleigh in 1975. During his tenure, the Raleigh City Council was split evenly between members aligned with community and environmental activists who wanted to limit the city's growth and others who represented business interests and sought to promote development. The division brought about frequent clashing between Cogginsâwho had an abrasive, uncompromising style and supported further development in Raleighâand members of the council. He was challenged in his 1977 reelection bid by Isabella Cannon, who ran at the behest of a coalition of community activists. Coggins frequently attacked the coalition throughout the campaign. Despite having the endorsement of Raleigh's two newspapers and outspending his opponent, he lost the election. He died on August 25, 2011.
Early life
Jyles Coggins was born on January 10, 1921, in Mooresville, Iredell County, North Carolina, United States to James Lee Coggins and Jeanette Arney. He was the third of five children in a poor family. Both of his parents worked at the Kannapolis Cotton Mill. When Coggins was thirteen years old his father died, and he moved to Statesville to work on a farm, sending a portion of his income back to his family to support it. He graduated from Iredell County's Central High School in 1939.
Coggins hitchhiked from his family's farm to Chapel Hill to attend the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He studied at the school from 1939 until 1940, when he was forced to drop out due to ill health. He then worked a variety of jobs before enlisting in the United States Marine Corps in June 1942. Seeking to become an aviator, he undertook training courses in Chapel Hill; Anacostia, Maryland; and Pensacola, Florida, and was commissioned as a lieutenant on August 17. He completed his operational flight training on November 6 and was subsequently sent to San Diego to join American forces moving out for deployment in World War II. Coggins served as a bomber pilot and fought in the South Pacific, earning ten military awards, including two Distinguished Flying Crosses. Coggins became known as "Bomber Jack" to his fellow Marines during the war and garnered the rank of First Lieutenant before he was discharged in 1946. Coggins returned to North Carolina and enrolled in North Carolina State College in Raleigh, building his own duplex to reside in while he pursued his studies. Anticipating a post-war construction boom, he dropped out in 1947 to pursue a career in contracting.
Coggins married Frances Katherine Lyon on September 24, 1943 in Jacksonville, Florida. They had five daughters together. Coggins was a Presbyterian Christian, and was a member of a masonic lodge, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the American Legion, and the Raleigh Civitan Club.
Commercial career
Coggins founded the Coggins Construction Company. His first projects were small duplexes. Over time Coggins gradually expanded his building work to include apartment complexes and government buildings. His construction company completed projects across the southeastern United States, including development at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point and the erection of Beckanna Apartments, an eight-story, 250-unit housing complex on Glenwood Avenue in Raleigh which he named for two of his daughters. Coggins later engaged in real estate speculation. Believing that U.S. Route 70 would become an important channel of commercial activity between Raleigh and Durham, he began to purchase land along the highway, eventually amassing over 250 acres. He leased some of the land in the area and oversaw a significant amount of real estate development along the road, sometimes provoking the ire of local residents. He also founded the Lyon Equipment Company and Dob's, Inc.
Coggins frequently attended to his business, and he had little spare time to interact with friends and family or engage in leisurely activities. Over the course of his career he became a millionaire. His newfound wealth allowed him to purchase a large home and 16-acres of land in western Raleigh. He founded Raleigh Memorial Park, a cemetery. His last development project was the erection of a large mausoleum in the cemetery. Coggins had wanted to build such a structure since the 1950s but never had any commercial support to do so, and decided to personally construct it in the early 1990s. He dedicated it to his wife.
Coggins served as chairman of the board of Textile Research Services, Inc.. He was also a member of the National Association of Cemeteries, North Carolina Cemetery Association, Raleigh Merchants Bureau, Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, North Carolina Association of Quality Restaurants, North Carolina Motel Association, Association of General Contractors, Raleigh Board of Realtors, and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.
Legislative career
In 1963 Coggins sought a seat in the North Carolina House of Representatives. Affiliating with the Democratic Party, he styled himself as a conservative and won election. Coggins was then elected to the 12th district seat in North Carolina Senate, representing Wake County, in 1965. He won re-election to the Senate in 1967 and 1969, serving until 1971. In the 1969â1970 legislative session, he served as Chairman of both the Senate Appropriations Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutional Care, and the Senate Committee on Libraries. Over the course of his time in the legislature, he advocated for the disabled and opposed liquor, pornography, and coed dormitories on state university campuses. In 1971 he introduced a bill that would prohibit students from visiting opposite sex dormitories on state university campuses, but it was defeated in committee. Throughout his tenure he gained a reputation as a maverick, frequently ignoring the wishes of state Democratic leaders. Speaking about his legislative career in 1975, he said, "I was not a special-interest legislator. I was never bothered by lobbyists much in the legislature."
In 1972 Coggins sought the U.S. House of Representatives seat from North Carolina's 4th congressional district. He lost the Democratic Party's nomination to Ike Franklin Andrews in a primary election.
Mayoral career
1975 campaign
In the 1970s citizens of Raleigh became increasingly concerned about the city's rapid population growth and the consequences of unchecked real estate development. These people formed civic and neighborhood associations which unified as a collective political bloc, the Community Coalition, that supported a more managed process for dealing with Raleigh's expansion. The coalition's electoral strength contributed to the election of Clarence Lightner as Mayor of Raleigh in 1973.
In 1975, Coggins sought the office of Mayor, challenging Lightner, whose reputation had suffered from family legal troubles, though Coggins did not openly discuss them. He emphasized during his campaign that he had never maintained a campaigning organization on his behalf or accepted a political donation, noting that his "loner" status in politics made him less suspicious than other candidates with potential ties to real estate developers. He placed first in the October mayoral primary election, earning 10,201 votes. Lightner placed third. He withdrew from the race and endorsed Coggins. Coggins faced City Councilman J. Oliver Williams in the November 4 election, who had the support of the Community Coalition. According to some reports, Coggins initially sought the support of some coalition members, but failed. He resorted to criticizing the bloc, accusing it of trying to take over the municipal government. Two local black voters' groups, the Raleigh Wake Citizens Association and the Wake County Black Democratic Political Caucus, endorsed him. Coggins won the election with 55 percent of the votes cast in his favor.
Tenure
Coggins assumed office on December 9, 1975. During his tenure, the eight-member Raleigh City Council was split evenly between members aligned with community and environmental activists who wanted to limit the city's growth and others who represented business interests and sought to promote development. The division brought about frequent clashing between Cogginsâwho had an abrasive, uncompromising style and supported further development in Raleighâand members of the council. The disagreement emerged during the City Council's first meeting in December when Coggins called for a vote on the reelection of a returning member as mayor pro tempore. The four city council members supported by the Community Coalition asked that the vote be postponed until a later meeting when they could consider assigning all other leadership roles on the council. Coggins' disregarded their wish and proceeded with the vote, which tied among the councilmen. After breaking the tie with his own vote, Coggins angrily declared "If we're going to have division, let's bring it to a head right now." He then told the four councilmen backed by the coalition, "I refuse to be intimidated. I refuse to be coerced. And I will not be dictated to by any group regardless of who supports it." He later clarified that the "group" he alluded to was the Community Coalition. Relations between Coggins and the council remained tense throughout the rest of his term. The councilmen hotly debated whether the mayor should be empowered to refer proposals to committees without the council's consent. Coggins disagreed with the council about revisions to Raleigh's city charter, pushing for the abolition of the Community Advisory Council, a board which represented neighborhood civic associations. During his tenure the city council also failed to produce a plan for addressing Raleigh's development and growth. The frequent disagreement between Coggins and the council greatly contributed to the eventual resignation of one city councilman and the decision of two others to not seek reelection. While mayor, he also defeated a strike undertaken by black sanitation workers attempting to unionize and established a committee to examine the city's housing inspections department. On July 31, 1976 he was awarded an honorary doctor of law from Shaw University.
1977 reelection campaign
Coggins sought reelection in 1977. He was challenged by a grassroots candidate, Isabella Cannon, who ran for the mayoral office at the behest of the Raleigh Coalition, a successor group to the Community Coalition. On September 13 Coggins, Cannon, and other candidates for municipal offices attended a forum hosted by the coalition. In his opening statement Coggins declared that he was not pursuing the coalition's endorsement, and characterized the group as "a self-appointed, self-anointed group of people serving as an ad hoc city council in exile." At the forum's end he dismissed the event as a "farce". Cannon and the other candidates used their time to discuss local issues, and on September 20 the coalition endorsed Cannon.
In the early weeks of the campaign, Coggins discussed Raleigh's need for jobs and his experience in business. Throughout its duration, he emphasized his political experience as mayor and as a legislator. He also frequently criticized the Raleigh Coalition for being "anti-growth". Some observers believed that Coggins attacked the coalition instead of Cannon directly because he was hesitant to speak poorly of an elderly woman. Coggins initially denied that this was the case, but later said, "I still think a gentleman should treat a lady as a lady."
Coggins spent $12,000 of his own money on his campaign effort, the most of any candidate for Raleigh municipal office in the 1977 election. He received the endorsement of the city's two daily newspapers, The Raleigh News and Observer and The Raleigh Times, as well as the support of the Raleigh Wake Citizens Association. The Wake County Black Democratic Political Caucus endorsed Cannon. During the final week of the campaign, Coggins spent $9,000 on newspaper advertisements, including $4,000 on four full-page ads. In an upset, Cannon defeated Coggins in the November 8 election, 14,508 votes to 13,315. Coggins won only 15 of Raleigh's 43 precincts, performing best in the wealthier neighborhood constituencies as well as the working-class areas of the eastern part of the city. Various theories were offered as to why Coggins lost. G. Wesley Williams, director of the Raleigh Merchants Bureau, believed that Coggins "blew it" by repeatably delivering "vitriolic statements" throughout his tenure. Journalists believed the split of the black voteâwhich had previously unified behind Cogginsâcontributed to his defeat. Coggins attributed his failure to the campaigning done by the Raleigh Coalition as well as negative press coverage of himself. His term ended in December. Reflecting on his political career in 1998, Coggins said, "I never looked at politics as a profession. It was more of a hobby, my chance to give something back to the community since I had no talent for volunteering [for civic groups]."
Later life
Coggins flew aircraft as a hobby after World War II, and continued doing so into his 70s. On February 8, 1978 Governor Jim Hunt appointed him to the North Carolina Cemetery Commission. Coggins' wife died in 1995 and he subsequently developed insomnia. He sold Raleigh Memorial Park in 1996. Coggins died at his home in western Raleigh on the evening of August 25, 2011. He was survived by his five daughters, 15 grandchildren, and one great-grandson.
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Witold Rybczynski (born 1 March 1943) is a Canadian American architect, professor and writer. He is currently the Martin and Margy Meyerson Professor Emeritus of Urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania.
Early life
Rybczynski was born in Edinburgh of Polish parentage and raised in Surrey, England, before moving at a young age to Canada. He attended Loyola College in Montreal. He received Bachelor of Architecture (1966) and Master of Architecture (1972) degrees from McGill University in Montreal.
Career
Rybczynski has written around 300 articles and papers on the subjects of housing, architecture, and technology, many of which are aimed at a non-technical readership. His work has been published in a wide variety of magazines, including The Wilson Quarterly, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New Yorker. From 2004 to 2010, he was architecture critic for Slate.
He taught at McGill University (1974â1993) and the University of Pennsylvania (1993â2012), and served on the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts from 2004 to 2012. He now lives in Philadelphia and is Emeritus Professor of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. He was married to Shirley Hallam, who died in 2021.
Awards and honors
Rybczynski's book Home: A Short History of an Idea was nominated for the 1986 Governor General's Award for non-fiction, and A Clearing in the Distance: Frederick Law Olmsted and North America in the Nineteenth Century won the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize and was short-listed for the Charles Taylor Prize in 2000.
In 2007 Rybczynski was the recipient of the Seaside Prize and the Vincent Scully Prize, awarded by the National Building Museum. Rybczynski is a Senior Fellow of the Design Futures Council. In 2014 he received a National Design Award for Design Mind from the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum.
Rybczynski is an honorary fellow of the American Institute of Architects, and an honorary member of the American Society of Landscape Architects. He has received the AIA Collaborative Honors, and the Pennsylvania AIA President's Award. He holds honorary doctorates from McGill University and the University of Western Ontario.
Works
Paper Heroes: Appropriate Technology: Panacea or Pipe Dream? (1980)
Taming the Tiger: The Struggle to Control Technology (1983)
Home: A Short History of an Idea (1986)
The Most Beautiful House in the World (1989)
Waiting for the Weekend (1991)
McGill: A Celebration (1991)
Looking Around: A Journey Through Architecture (1992)
A Place for Art/Un lieu pour l'art: The Architecture of the National Gallery of Canada (1993)
City Life: Urban expectations in a new world (1995)
A Clearing in the Distance: Frederick Law Olmsted and North America in the Nineteenth Century (1999)
One Good Turn: A Natural History of the Screwdriver and the Screw (2000)
The Look of Architecture (2001)
The Perfect House: A Journey with Renaissance Master Andrea Palladio (2002)
Vizcaya: An American Villa and Its Makers (2006), co-written with Laurie Olin
Last Harvest: How A Cornfield Became New Daleville: Real Estate Development in America (2007)
My Two Polish Grandfathers: And Other Essays on the Imaginative Life (2009)
Makeshift Metropolis: Ideas About Cities (2010)
The Biography of a Building: How Robert Sainsbury and Norman Foster Built a Great Museum (2011)
How Architecture Works: A Humanist's Toolkit (2013)
Mysteries of the Mall: And Other Essays (2015)
Now I Sit Me Down: From Klismos to Plastic Chair: A Natural History (2016)
Charleston Fancy: Little Houses and Big Dreams in the Holy City (2019)
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Stopping sight distance is one of several types of sight distance used in road design. It is a near worst-case distance a vehicle driver needs to be able to see in order to have room to stop before colliding with something in the roadway, such as a pedestrian in a crosswalk, a stopped vehicle, or road debris. Insufficient sight distance can adversely affect the safety or operations of a roadway or intersection.
Stopping sight distance is the distance traveled during the two phases of stopping a vehicle: perception-reaction time (PRT), and maneuver time (MT). Perception-reaction time is the time it takes for a road user to realize that a reaction is needed due to a road condition, decide what maneuver is appropriate (in this case, stopping the vehicle), and start the maneuver (taking the foot off the accelerator and depressing the brake pedal). Maneuver time is the time it takes to complete the maneuver (decelerating and coming to a stop). The distance driven during perception-reaction time and maneuver time is the sight distance needed.
The design standards of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) allow 1.5 seconds for perception time and 1.0 second for reaction time.
The values of stopping sight distance used in design represent a near worst-case situation. For design, a conservative distance is needed to allow a vehicle traveling at design speed to stop before reaching a stationary object in its path. A generous amount of time is given for the perception-reaction process, and a fairly low rate of deceleration is used. The design sight distance allows a below-average driver to stop in time to avoid a collision in most cases.
Driver perception/reaction distance is calculated by:
dPRT = 0.278 Vt (metric)
dPRT = 1.47 Vt (US customary)
Where:
dPRT = driver perception-reaction distance, m (ft)
V = design speed, km/h (mph)
t = brake reaction time, in seconds
Based on the results of many studies, 2.5 seconds has been chosen for a perception-reaction time. This time will accommodate approximately 90 percent of all drivers when confronted with simple to moderately complex highway situations. Greater reaction time should be allowed in situations that are more complex.
Braking distance is calculated by:
dMT = (metric)
dMT> = (US customary)
where:
dMT = braking distance, m (ft)
V = design speed, km/h (mph)
a = deceleration rate, m/s2 (ft/s2)
Actual braking distances are affected by the vehicle type and condition, the incline of the road, the available traction, and numerous other factors.
A deceleration rate of 3.4Â m/s2 (11.2Â ft/s2) is used to determine stopping sight distance. Approximately 90 percent of all drivers decelerate at rates greater than that. These values are within most drivers' ability to stay within his or her lane and maintain steering control. Also, most wet pavement surfaces and most vehicle braking systems are capable of providing enough braking force to exceed this deceleration rate.
Stopping sight distance (SSD) is the sum of reaction distance and braking distance
SSD = dPRT + dMT
SSD = 0.278 Vt + (metric)
SSD = 1.47 Vt + (US customary)
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For Di People is a Sierra Leonean Krio-language newspaper based in Freetown, Sierra Leone. It was founded in 1983 by Paul Kamara, who has served as its editor more or less continually since that date. Kamara and other staff have been threatened and imprisoned numerous times in the newspaper's history, most notably in a high-profile seditious libel case following a suggestion that President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah's 1968 conviction for fraud made him constitutionally ineligible for high office.
Kamara was arrested, equipment was confiscated from the newspaper offices, including Kamara's car, and the newspaper was shut down for six months. On 28 July 2005, Kamara's replacement as editor, Harry Yansaneh, died from a beating reportedly ordered by a member of parliament. BBC News described the case as sparking "wide public interest with pleas from media rights groups worldwide demanding his release". The Committee to Protect Journalists issued an appeal on Kamara's behalf, as did Reporters Without Borders.
On 30 November 2005, Kamara won an appeal against his conviction and was freed. After his release, he told reporters, "imprisonment has not broken my spirit to publish the truth or stand for the people's right to know".
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Robert "Bob" Parr, also known as Mr. Incredible, is a fictional superhero who appears in Disney/Pixar's 6th animated film The Incredibles (2004) and its sequel and 20th animated film Incredibles 2 (2018). He is a superhuman that has superhuman strength, durability, and stamina. He is married to Helen Parr, also known as Elastigirl, and has three children named Dash, Violet, and Jack-Jack. He is voiced by Craig T. Nelson in the films, while in Mr. Incredible and Pals and the video games, he was voiced by Pete Docter, Richard McGonagle and Jeff Bergman. He was created by writer/director, Brad Bird, and is partly based on Bird's father, with Bird stating, "Heâs a little bit like my dad, because my dad was a great guy, really funny and smart, and I love him dearly".
Appearances
Films
The Incredibles
On the day he is set to marry his fiancée Helen (also known as Elastigirl), Bob Parr (also known as Mr. Incredible) rescues Oliver Sansweet from committing suicide by tackling him through a window of a skyscraper currently being robbed by a supervillain called Bomb Voyage. While the two confront each other, a young fan of Mr. Incredible, Buddy Pine, flies in with rocket boots he invented and acts as Mr. Incredible's sidekick "Incrediboy". Bob rejects Buddy as his sidekick, but Bomb Voyage throws a sticky bomb that attaches to Buddy's cape. Bob throws the bomb off of Buddy, but destroys an elevated train track, and Bob prevents the train from falling off. After the wedding, Sansweet and the train passengers sue Bob for their neck injuries. Bob's collateral damage lawsuits, along with similar lawsuits against other superheroes, turn public opinion against them, and the government initiates the Superhero Relocation Program, forcing "supers" to adhere to their secret identities and abandon their exploits.
Fifteen years later, Bob, Helen, and their children Violet, Dash, and Jack-Jack live in the city of Metroville and are forced to keep their superpowers a secret. Although, occasionally Bob, along with his best friend Lucius Best or Frozone, will relive "the glory days" of being a superhero by being a vigilante at night.
One day while Bob is working as an insurance adjuster, he sees someone getting mugged and goes to stop it, but his supervisor, Gilbert Huph, threatens to fire him if he does. Losing his temper, Bob injures his advisor by throwing him through walls ultimately resulting in him being fired. After being fired Bob goes home and receives a holographic video message from a woman named Mirage asking him to fight an Omnidroid, a tripod-like robot that has gone rogue. Bob takes up on the offer without telling his family and gets on a flight with Mirage where he is taken to an island called Nomanisan to battle the Omnidroid. Bob battles with the droid and tricks it into destroying its own power source deactivating the robot. After the fight, Bob starts to get into shape by doing strenuous workouts. Bob looks at his old super suit and notices a tear in it. He takes it to superhero costume designer Edna Mode. Edna makes entirely new superhero costumes for the entire family assuming Helen knows what he is doing.
Heading back out to Nomanisan, Bob finds out Mirage is working for an adult Buddy, who is now going under the superhero name Syndrome. Syndrome is now an inventor and wealthy arms dealer and has been perfecting the Omnidroid by hiring different superheros to come and fight it. Syndrome intends to send the perfected Omnidroid to Metroville, where he will secretly manipulate its controls to defeat it in public, becoming a "hero" himself. He then plans to sell his inventions to everyone so that everyone can become a superhero, saying that "when everyone's super, no one will be".
Helen gets suspicious of Bob and visits Edna and discovers what Bob has been up too. She activates a beacon Edna built into the suits to find Bob, inadvertently causing him to be captured while infiltrating Syndrome's base. Helen borrows a private plane to travel to Nomanisan, with Violet and Dash as stowaways. Syndrome launches missiles that blow up the plane, much to Bob's dismay, and he threatens to kill Mirage, but is unable to do so despite being encouraged by Syndrome. Helen and the kids survive the missile, and after Helen finds Bob they both hurry to find their children as they are being chased by Syndrome's guards. After finding their kids, they all escape to Metroville in another rocket with Mirage's help.
Because of the Omnidroids advanced intelligence, it recognizes Syndrome as a threat and shoots off the remote control of the robot off Syndrome's arm. Together Lucius and the Parrs fight to stop the Omnidroid destroying it. When returning home the Parrs figure out Syndrome left to try and kidnap Jack-Jack. As Syndrome flies up toward his jet, Jack-Jack's own shapeshifting superpowers manifest and he escapes Syndrome in midair. Helen catches Jack-Jack, and Bob throws his car at Syndrome's plane as he boards it. Syndrome is sucked into the jet's turbine by his own cape and the plane explodes. Three months later, the Parrs witness the arrival of supervillain the Underminer. They don their superhero masks, ready to face the new threat together as a family.
Incredibles 2
The Incredibles and Frozone battle The Underminer and successfully prevent him from destroying City Hall, but are unable to stop him from robbing a bank and escaping. The collateral damage gives the jealous government the perfect excuse to shut down the Superhero Relocation Program, denying the Parrs and other superheroes financial assistance. Violet's love interest Tony Rydinger discovers her superhero identity, causing agent Rick Dicker to erase his memory of her.
Wealthy businessman Winston Deavor and his sister Evelyn, who run the media and telecommunications giant DevTech, propose secret missions for superheroes which will be recorded and publicized to regain public trust. Winston chooses the less accident prone Elastigirl over Mr. Incredible for the initial missions. Bob struggles in his new role as a stay-at-home parent: trying to help Dash with math homework, Violet's heartache over Tony standing her up for their first date (due to his memory wipe), and Jack-Jack wreaking havoc with his burgeoning superpowers. Edna Mode develops a suit to help control Jack-Jack's abilities. Meanwhile, Elastigirl encounters supervillain "the Screenslaver", who projects hypnotic images via TV screens. After preventing him from destroying a crowded commuter train, and thwarting his attempt to assassinate an ambassador, she tracks him to an apartment building and unmasks him as a pizza deliveryman who claims to have no recollection of his actions.
At a party celebrating the Screenslaver's arrest, Winston announces a summit of world leaders to legalize superheroes, hosted aboard his luxury yacht, the Everjust. Elastigirl discovers that the arrested pizza deliveryman is not Screenslaver but was being controlled by hypnotic goggles. Evelyn forces the goggles onto Elastigirl, revealing herself to be the Screenslaver. While keeping her restrained via a chair in a freezing cold room to limit her stretching abilities, Evelyn explains her grudge against superheroes since her father was killed by burglars while trying to call superheroes for help instead of hiding, during the banning and relocation of superheroes 15 years before; (unlike Winston who rightfully believed the lack of superheroes was the reason) and her mother's subsequent death due to heartache. She plans to sabotage her brother's summit by causing a catastrophe to irreparably tarnish the reputation of all superheroes, ensuring they remain outlawed forever and the public will not return to relying on superheroes to handle crises. She lures Bob into a trap and sends a group of hypnotized superheroes to subdue the Parr children. Frozone tries to protect them but is overwhelmed.
Violet, Dash, and Jack-Jack escape in a refurbished Incredibile, the supercar once owned by their father, and reach Winston's yacht. Onboard, the hypnotized Mr. Incredible, Elastigirl, and Frozone recite a vindictive manifesto on air designed to paint superheroes as a threat, and then subdue the ship's crew, aim the yacht at the city, and destroy the controls. Jack-Jack removes Elastigirl's goggles; she in turn frees Mr. Incredible and Frozone. The Incredibles and Frozone release the other mind-controlled superheroes, and all work together to turn the yacht from crashing into the city. Elastigirl apprehends Evelyn attempting to escape in a jet. Superheroes regain legal status around the world.
Some time later, Tony accompanies Violet to a movie with the family. When the Parrs spot a carload of bank robbers, Violet leaves Tony at the theater, promising to be back in time, and the Incredibles suit up and give chase in their Incredibile.
Reception
Bob has received a generally positive reception from reviewers. Stephanie Zacharek from Time positively compared Bob to a real-life father.
In popular culture
In late 2021, Mr. Incredible became the subject of a popular Internet meme commonly referred to as "Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny". The meme features an illustration of Bob Parr, who becomes more traumatized and distorted as a variety of topics and facts are gradually presented in an unsettling manner. The meme originated from a realistic render of the character by animator Nathan Shipley that was created using an artificial intelligence program.
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A fuel card or fleet card is used as a payment card most commonly for gasoline, diesel, and other fuels at gas stations. Fleet cards can also be used to pay for vehicle maintenance and expenses at the discretion of the fleet owner or manager. Most fuel cards are charge cards.
Fleet cards are unique due to the convenient and comprehensive reporting that accompanies their use. Fleet cards enable fleet owners/ managers to receive real time reports and set purchase controls with their cards helping them to stay informed of all business related expenses.
Fleet cards can be provided not only by oil brands like Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil, but also by companies that only specialize in providing fuel cards such as Edenred, WEX Inc., Comdata, FleetCards USA, Petrol Plus Region, Fuelman and others. Additionally, some rideshare companies have fleet cards for their drivers, which allow the drivers to have gas money deducted from their earnings.
Origins
United Kingdom
In its infancy, fuel cards were only printed with the company name, vehicle registration and a signature strip on the reverse. No electronic data was stored. Fuelling sites would verify the company, vehicle registration (on the forecourt) against the card and also the signature written on the back. The site would allow access to the fuel once the retailer's receipt had been signed for and cross checked against the signature written on the back of the card.
Initially, fuel card networks were very small and based around truck roads and main haulage routes. For example, in 1983, the Keyfuels site network consisted of only seven stations. Therefore, they were initially targeted at haulage or delivery companies. A few years later, cards became embossed rather than printed. This was due to provide the cards with a greater longevityâfrequent use would rub off the printed information.
Due to the lack of electronic data on the fuel cards at this stage, transactions would be recorded by the card being 'stamped' onto a manual transaction sheet. Further details detailing date, time, volume, grade of fuel and registration would be hand-written.
During the mid- to late 1980s, fuel cards began to use magnetic strip technology. This meant fuel cards could be processed by a retailer electronically and reduced the risk of human error when recording transaction details.
Magnetic strips also enabled fuel card providers to increase fuel card security by ensuring PINs were encoded into the card. Although when the magnetic strip is swiped though a fuel card reader, the transaction is still only verified by checking signatories to this day.
In the advent of outdoor terminals, these PINs became compulsory in order to re-fuel.
The reasoning behind moving from the magnetic strip to smartchip technology was down to the fact that the magnetic strip could be cloned and the data written onto a dummy card. Also, the use of fuel cards was far heavier than that of debit or credit cards, and therefore it became apparent that the magnetic strip began to wear out far quicker.
Smartchip technology (similar to Chip and PIN) is the largest development in the fuel card industry in recent years. (See Smartchip benefits)
Increasingly, supermarkets are exploring opportunities in fuel cards. While Tesco & Sainsbury's have the ability to collect loyalty points (Clubcard & Nectar points) and pay with credit, Morrisons has a dedicated fuel card offering. Asda has none at all, in spite of being the cheapest seller of fuel on average in 2012.
During 2008, market maturity has led to users increasingly expecting more from fuel cards than discount pricing, with the demand for service, savings and security leading to the appearance of dedicated account management. While most fuel card suppliers handle customer queries via random-operator call centres, customer preference is increasingly for a named individual to handle their business. Respected publication Fleet News reported in July 2008 that more than a quarter of fleet managers are unhappy with the level of service offered by their fuel card supplier.
A new category of fuel card is emerging in the form of "electric fuel cards" as typified by operations from AllStar and Paua.
Ireland
The longest running provider of fuel cards in Ireland is Fuelwise, with the company being founded in 1989 and growing to hold the largest site network and provide a range of services alongside fuel cards such as Telematics and Vehicle Walkaround Checks.
United States
The advent of fleet cards can be traced back to the 1960s and 1970s when key stops/key locks and standalone card locks were used by independent marketers and filling station owners. A Key Stop or Key Lock fuel control system was a system where a group of commercial fleets could access a fuel pump with a unique key that tracked solely their gallons through that pump. This technology is obsolete and no longer available commercially. A card lock control system uses a punch card or magnetic stripe card to uniquely identify a fuel buyer on a private server. This was done to avoid a credit card interchange fee which raised the cost of fuel considerably. The first commercial fuel cards resembled a credit card with a name and a company logo on them. When a customer entered a filling station, the cashier would take down the customer's name and company information to authenticate ownership of the card. This process was time-consuming and was vulnerable to fraudulent transactions. With the advent of computers and computer software in the 1980s, the development of the fleet card industry quickly expanded. The invention of the magnetic stripe and magnetic card reader allowed petroleum marketers to control fuel pump transactions, leading to today's wide range of fleet card security features and state of the art reporting systems to track all fleet expenses. These "intelligent" systems make fleet management convenient and secure, as fleet card owners are able to track fleet fuel use with increased accuracy, receiving reports in real time on the fueling habits. Business owners are able to limit employee fueling by time-of-day and day-of-week.
India
Indian consumers saw their first fuel card during 2001 from Bharat Petroleum. The card was mainly aimed at retail customers for personal vehicles. Subsequently, various products aimed at various customer segments were launched by all oil companies â Smart fleet by Bharat Petroleum, XTRAPOWER by Indian Oil, Drive Track by Hindustan Petroleum, and Transconnect by Reliance Industries. While Transconnect found favours during its launch, the same withered away once Reliance shut its outlets due to huge price difference. Indian Oil's XTRAPOWER Fleet Card Program has grown to be the largest fuel card in India, followed by Smart.
Misconceptions
Although fuel cards effectively 'look' like credit cards and use very similar technology, their use and implementation is significantly dissimilar, enough to differentiate them as an alternative payment method. The main differences from credit cards are:
Payment terms often get shorter (note: but can be negotiated direct with card issuer much easier than credit card terms)
No rolling-balance is cleared (or partially cleared) each month
Can be cheaper due to a system designed to bypass credit card interchanges and their mark ups.
Transactions can be customized allowing only certain grades of fuel e.g. petrol, petrol & diesel, petrol and gas oil, etc.
Fuelling transaction limits can be applied using Smartchip technology
Liability for fraudulent transactions usually remains with user (depending upon agreement with card provider)
Fraud prevention systems exist to block service areas by nation, state, or postage codes to stop theft.
Card 'hotlists' (a.k.a. 'authorisation' or 'onstop' lists) received via different providers
Interim period after stop/hotlist request and card denied at fuelling station can be longer (although online authorisation networks are increasing)
Payment terminals separate to those used for credit/debit cards (bunkered cards only)
Fuel not technically paid at point of sale - simply allocated on account for payment at later date (bunkered only)
Some cards allow the purchase of such non-fuel fleet related items as lubricants, hotels, and Diesel Exhaust Fluid.
Security
Depending upon the individual fuel card and the supplier, security benefits of fuel cards can include:
available local businesses that can work with one on the program and keeping one's business safe
cashless transactions
chip-and-PIN protection
current odometer reports with every fuel purchase
detailed invoicing â fully itemising transactions for individual cards
on-line account administration to stop cards 24/7
transactions restricted to fuel-related products
reporting of unusual transactions
restrictions available by postal code to limit the cards function in a specific area of service.
daily transaction limits.
daily gallon limits to limit a would be thief.
decrease in occurrences of credit card 'skimming'
real time email or text message "e-Receipts" of transactions
evidence that can be connected with internal Human Resource policies that enable clear responsibility to terminate employees for stealing fuel
Smartchip benefits
Fuel card providers realised there were many benefits from moving over to the smartcard from the magnetic strip:
Smartchips are difficult to clone
Fuelling limits can be enforced (see Smartchip technology)
Far more durable than magnetic strips, therefore cards last longer
Need for cards to be re-created reduced due to longevity
Smartchip cannot be damaged by electro-magnetic radiation e.g. mobile phones, magnets, speakers, etc.
As of 2007, only 50% or so of fuel cards on offer utilise the smartchip technology.
Added features of smartchip technology
Fuelling limits can also be programmed into a fuel card using smartchip technology to specify the following:
Volume allowed per transaction
Volume allowed per day
Volume allowed per week
Number of transactions allowed per day
Number of transactions allowed per week
Days of the week card can be used
Times of the day card can be used
Number of incorrect PIN entries allowed
Card lock-out period after incorrect PINs
Commercial use in business
Commercial fuel cards are designed with fleets in mind and seek to avoid both the percentage up-charges of credit card companies as well as the theft risk retail credit cards expose a business to due to their focus on convenience over financial security.
Typically, the majority of businesses using fuel cards are those which heavily rely on motor vehicles on a day-to-day basis e.g. transport, haulage, courier services. One of the primary reasons a business will use a fuel card is to obtain (potentially) significant savings both on the current price of fuel and on administrative costs. It would be normal for the business to receive a single weekly invoice, payable by direct debit; this replaces the manual reconciliation of individual paper receipts which could, for larger organizations, number in the hundreds each week. A number of additional benefits are available for users of fuel cards from a supplier offering an e-business capability.
In most cases, fuel cards can provide fuel at a wholesale price as opposed to standard retail. This way, discount fuel can be purchased without needing to buy in bulk.
Furthermore, the management and security concerning fuel purchases is greatly improved via the use of fuel cards. These features often prove themselves attractive to businesses, especially with those operating large fleets which can sometimes be in the thousands of vehicles.
For example, a business may obtain anything from a one to four pence per litre reduction (PPL) on diesel, which in real terms can be translated into the following (UK based) example:
Potential cost-saving example (for small fleet)
International fuel cards
While most fuel cards are for use in a particular country, there are some companies who offer international fuel cards themselves and some via a third party. International site networks often use fully automatic fuel pumps to avoid possible language difficulties and are specially designed to account for different taxation regimes e.g. producing separate invoices for each country which fuel was purchased in a particular month to account for different rates of VAT charged. These site networks sometimes offer the ability to reclaim VAT paid in each country, for a small percentage of the amount reclaimed. Some international fuel card providers solely offer fuel cards for business fleets, others also for individuals. However, the system of fuel cards has meanwhile spread throughout Europe, where they are called , , , , , , and .
Bunkered fuel cards
Fuel card providers which operate on a bunkering basis aim to achieve a fuel reserve on a particular network in order to achieve a discounted price, therefore taking advantage of economies of scale.
For example, a company may purchase one million litres of diesel at 72.50 and aim to sell this on to the customer with a mark up of 2.5 pence per litre â 75.00 PPL.
Bunkered fuel card companies sometimes also offer customers their own fuel bunker to under the premise of further benefiting from a discounted price. Furthermore, a customer can also hope to achieve a saving by way of avoiding any market increases in the standard market price for that particular fuel. In short, customer fuel bunkering has many pros & cons:
Pros:
new-start businesses given a vital boost by using fuel cards if credit insurance cannot be obtained (due to lack of company history)
if the market for that particular fuel rises immediately after a purchase â the customer has potentially made a saving
Cons:
a healthy cash flow is required to sustain the lump sum payment for their fuel purchase â often difficult for new businesses
if the market for that particular fuel falls immediately after a purchase â the customer has potentially lost out on a saving opportunity
Retail fuel cards
In contrast to bunkered, retail fuel cards operate by way of allowing the customer to draw fuel at almost any fuelling station (in same method as credit card). Often providers will levy a surcharge in addition to the retail price as advertised at the fuelling station. The retail price given is often considerably higher than that of the bunkered. The majority of fuel cards provide weekly (advance) notification of fuel price generally applicable nationwide.
Although retail is generally more expensive, there are a number of exceptions depending on the region, particular brand/site and timing of fuel purchased. Retail fuel can be cheaper in certain regions, particularly those near to a major port. Further reasons for the difference in price may be due to local economy (e.g. north / south of England) and whether the site is close to any main transport links i.e. the fuel costs more to deliver into the site. As for timing, the supermarkets or large providers often have a great deal of fuel in their stock reserves, so if the market increases rapidly, they would generally take longer than smaller providers to reflect this change.
Fuel cards are not all the same and 'shopping around' is advised. Typically, a supplier will offer just one or two cards. The user should seek an independent supplier offering a range of cards from major brands, so that the most appropriate fuel card for their individual needs can be chosen. A fuel card with little or no motorway coverage but extensive coverage of metropolitan areas, for example, could be of limited use to a national haulier but ideal for a taxi company. A supplier offering only diesel cards will be of minimal appeal to a fleet manager responsible for a petrol-only or mixed-fuel company car fleet.
Furthermore, retail fuel prices have decreased over the past 15 or so years largely due to supermarkets providing fuel at their superstores at hugely discounted prices in order to entice users to the store. Supermarket prices are an irrelevance to many diesel users, as very few supermarket forecourts are accessible by heavy goods vehicles or coaches.
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Butterfly Lodge is a five and half room log cabin, originally constructed as a hunting lodge in 1913 for the author, James Willard Schultz. Originally a rectangular building measuring 18 feet by 24 feet, it has been expanded over the years and now covers 40 feet, 10 inches by 32 feet, 6 inches, the shorter side being the front of the cabin. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 17, 1992.
History
The cabin exists in a rural area off of Forest Road (FR) 245, just to the west of its intersection with Arizona State Route 373. In 1911, the U.S. Forest Service declared the area which includes the property where Butterfly Lodge sits as a protected area. As part of a program which encouraged U.S. citizens to develop public lands, a long-term lease was issued to Schultz by the local forest ranger. Schultz financial success as a writer and explorer enabled him to build the first cabin by a non-resident in the remote White Mountains. Two men from nearby Greer, Arizona, John T. Butler and Cleve Wiltbank, built the cabin in 1913, intending to be used by James Willard Schultz as a hunting lodge and retreat. The men used ponderosa pine and Douglas fir to build the cabin. Schultz son, Hart Merriam Schultz (also known as Lone Wolf), later put additions on the structure, including an artist's studio. The site was a clearing near a spring, purported to be the headwaters of the Little Colorado River. The plethora of butterflies in the area was the impetus for the name of the cabin. Between 1916 and 1929 three additions were made to the structure, including a bedroom and storage area, an artist's studio, and a kitchen.
The exterior of the cabin has also undergone changes over the years. Initially, there was no front porch, the main entry was reached by two wooden steps. There was very minimal trim as well after its construction, and very early on there was an Indian geometric design painted on the front door, as well as the phrase "Apuni Oyis 1914" painted on the front fascia. Apuni Oyis is Blackfoot for "Butterfly Lodge". Above the apex of the front door there was an antlered deer skull mounted. The two wooden steps were replaced by a wooden porch, followed by a stone porch, with a wooden railing supported by concrete and rock tapered pylons. The modest trim was replaced very early on, with wider, more ornate trim, which exists to this day. By the end of the 1930s the deer skull was removed, and the skull of steer was placed above the windows. The natural logs lost their bark, and eventually the structure was painted brown, with the trim originally painted green, which was changed to brown later on. Currently, the railing on the porch is in a state of disrepair, as is the concrete surface of the porch.
From its initial construction through the 1920s, the house was used by Schultz primarily as a retreat and a base for hunting. However, it is likely that he did some of his writing on the premises. In the 1930s Schultz transferred ownership to his son, Lone Wolf. It was Lone Wolf's primary residence from the 1920s through the 1960s. While he did maintain a residence in Tucson, and a temporary summer shelter in Montana, the cabin near Greer was his base. The long-term lease originally given to Schultz in the 1910s expired with the death of Lone Wolf in 1970, and the property, along with the cabin, reverted to the National Forest Service. During the 1970s and 1980s, the Forest Service used the cabin to house men and equipment. In 1990 the supervisor of the Apache National Forest applied for inclusion the National Register of Historic Places. The organization, James Willard Schultz-Lone Wolf Museum, obtained the cabin and the two acres surrounding it from the Forest Service, and established the Butterfly Lodge Museum.
Structure
The cabin consists of 5 and half rooms, of logs with plank and slab construction. Originally it covered 18 feet by 24 feet, but has been expanded with three additions during the 1920s and 1930s, and now covers 40 feet, 10 inches by 32 feet, 6 inches, the shorter side being the front of the cabin, which lies to the southwest of the building. There was a fireplace on the east end of the structure. The logs were hewn on three sides, leaving the bark on the fourth side to serve as exterior facing, as well as their corners having a double saddle notch in the corners of the building. The logs were procured from the Isaacson Saw Mill, which was located not far away on Benny Creek.
The first addition was made to the west corner in 1914, consisting of a shed-roof room, running the entire length of the cabin, and increasing the width of the cabin by 13 feet, nine inches. This addition most likely served as a bedroom and storage area. At some point during the 1920s, another room was added to the cabin, this time to east corner of the structure. However, this room did not run the full length, and thus created an "L" shape to the building, and was intended as an artist's studio. The final addition to the structure was made in 1929, in the north corner, which returned the structure to a rectangular shape. It was used as the kitchen.
The front door is located on the southwest well of the building, and is of vertical tongue and groove construction, measuring six feet, two inches tall by two feet, ten inches wide. To the west of the door are four horizontal two-over-three sash windows, each window measuring eight inches tall by ten inches wide. The gable has enclosed eaves and reaches eleven feet in height. The first addition increased the length of this side of the structure by almost fourteen feet, and includes two casement windows with two-over-two sash on this side of the building. Each of the windows is ten inches tall by eight inches wide.
The northwest side can be broken down into three sections, each corresponding to the interior room it encloses. All the sections are plank construction with slab exterior. Each of the three sections contains a window. The first window looks into the bedroom and a double hung two-over-two sash measuring ten inches high by eight inches wide. The second window looks into the bathroom, and is identical to the bedroom window. The third window, looking into the kitchen, is a two-over-two casement measuring ten inches high by fourteen inches wide.
The rear of the cabin faces northeast and contains a door and two sets of windows. Nearest the northwest corner are two windows of horizontal two-over-two sash construction, each measuring ten inches high by sixteen inches wide. Next to the windows are the door which leads into the kitchen, being 6 feet, 2 inches high by 2 feet, ten inches wide; like the front door it is also tongue and groove construction, although at a 45 degree angle. A wooden porch with three steps leads up to the door, and measures four feet, six inches wide. On the other side of the door are a sequence of five windows looking into the art studio. Each window is ten inches high by eight inches wide, and are horizontal three-over-three sash. The southeast side of the structure has door entering the art studio. There are three horizontal three-over-three sash windows which look into the original room of the cabin.
In popular culture
The cabin served as the backdrop for Schultz's 1920 story, In the Great Apache Forest; The Story of a Lone Boy Scout, about a local brother and sister, the teenagers George and Hannah Crosby. The book gained international fame, especially in Europe.
The poet Henry Herbert Knibbs wrote a poem entitled "Apuni Oyis", which was included in his book, Riders of the Stars: A Book of Western Verse. The poem is a tribute to James Willard Schultz, and starts off, "There's a lodge in Arizona where the rugged pines are marching / Straight and stalwart up the hillside till they gather on the crest, / And around their feet the grasses and the purple flowers are arching / In the dim and golden glamour of the sunlight in the West."
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Ferndale High School is a public high school in Ferndale, Michigan. It is under the jurisdiction of the Ferndale Public Schools.
History
It was originally Lincoln High School when built in 1921 on the corner of 9 Mile and Livernois Roads. The current Ferndale High School was built in two phases: "Old Main" was built in 1936 as an addition to Lincoln High School, with the "Alexander" wing built in 1957, the year the high school was renamed; the original 1921 building became a middle school.
Athletics
The Ferndale Eagles are a member of the Oakland Activities Association. The school colors are currently navy blue and gold. The following MHSAA sanctioned sports are offered:
Baseball (boys)
Basketball (boys & girls)
Boys state champion - 1963, 1966
Bowling (boys & girls)
Cheerleading (girls)
Cross country (boys & girls)
Dance (girls)
Football (boys)
Golf (boys)
Ice hockey (boys)
Soccer (boys & girls)
Softball (girls)
Swimming & diving (boys & girls)
Tennis (boys & girls)
Track & field (boys & girls)
Volleyball (girls)
Wrestling (boys)
Notable people
James Blanchard, governor of Michigan 1983â1991
Anne Harris, professor and science fiction author
Frank Joranko, football and baseball player and coach; FHS coach 1960â1972
David Kemper, television writer and producer
Paigion (Kimberly Walker), host of BET's 106 & Park (2012âpresent)
Rashad Phillips, former professional basketball player
Miriam Shor, film and television actress
Bobby Smith, R&B singer, principal lead singer of the classic Motown/Philly group The Spinners
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0人ãåèã«ãªã£ããšèšã£ãŠããŸã | {
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Johan Willem van Hulst (28 January 1911 â 22 March 2018) was a Dutch school director, university professor, author, politician, chess player and centenarian. In 1943, with the help of the Dutch resistance and students of the nearby University of Amsterdam, he was instrumental in saving over 600 Jewish children from the nursery of the Hollandsche Schouwburg who were destined for deportation to Nazi concentration camps. For his humanitarian actions he received the Yad Vashem distinction Righteous Among the Nations from the State of Israel in 1973.
Van Hulst served as Senator of the Netherlands from July 1956 to June 1981. He was elected to be the parliamentary leader of the Christian Historical Union (CHU) in the Senate from December 1968 until June 1977, when the CHU merged into the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA). He then became the first CDA Leader in the Senate. Van Hulst previously served as the party chair of the CHU from September 1969 until February 1972. He also was a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Christian Democratic Group from October 1961 until September 1968.
He later was an emeritus professor of pedagogy at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and a prolific author with more than a hundred publications. He was also a noted chess player.
Early life
Van Hulst was born on 28 January 1911 in Amsterdam, the son of Gerrit van Hulst and Geertruida Hofman. He studied psychology and pedagogy at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
In the meantime he worked as a teacher and mentor in Oudewater, Utrecht and Purmerend.
Rescue of Jewish children
In 1942 van Hulst was the director of the Reformed Teacher Training College which educated elementary school teachers at Plantage Middenlaan 27, Amsterdam. Across the street at Plantage Middenlaan 24 was the Hollandse Schouwburg theatre, the main clearing site for the Jews living in Amsterdam who had been issued deportation notices by the Nazi government.
Children who arrived at the Schouwburg were separated from their families and sent to the neighbouring crÚche at Plantage Middenlaan 31 run by Henriëtte Pimentel. The crÚche shared a back garden with the college that van Hulst directed.
Starting in January 1943, Pimentel and Walter SÃŒskind, a German Jew who had been appointed by the Nazis to run the Hollandsche Schouwburg operation, began canvassing potential adoptive families for physical descriptions of children who could fit into their families without detection. Once the children's parents had agreed, the names of the children to be rescued were removed from the Nazi's registry of Jews who had passed through the Schouwburg theatre.
Then, working with Pimentel, SÌskind and dozens of other volunteers, Van Hulst arranged for the children to be spirited over the hedge separating the neighbouring back yards of the crÚche and the teachers' college, often assisted by the teachers-in-training or local university students. When the time came to move the rescued children and babies away from the school, they would be hidden in containers such as bags, sacks or laundry baskets.
Numerous methods were used to move the hidden children from the school. In one method, the operation's helpers would wait for the moment a tram passed, blocking the view of Nazi guards at the facing Hollandsche Schouwburg, to cycle away with the hidden child.
The operation came to a halt on 29 September 1943 when the Nazis sent Pimentel and 100 children from the crÚche to Nazi concentration camps. Decades later, Van Hulst described his experience: "Now try to imagine 80, 90, perhaps 70 or 100 children standing there, and you have to decide which children to take with you. [...] That was the most difficult day of my life. [...] You know for a fact that the children you leave behind are going to die. I took 12 with me. Later on I asked myself: âWhy not 13? Van Hulst thought twelve was the right number, otherwise the Germans would notice his plan and shut it down. In total, the operation had rescued between 500 and 1,000 Jewish babies and children.
Van Hulst received the Yad Vashem distinction in 1973. During a visit to the Netherlands in 2012, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said of Van Hulst: "We say, those who save one life save a universe. You saved hundreds of universes. I want to thank you in the name of the Jewish people, but also in the name of humanity." Van Hulst replied, talking about the children he could not save: "I only can hope the angels may conduct them into paradise."
In 2016, the former Reformed Teacher Training College became the Dutch National Holocaust Museum.
Shortly before his 107th birthday in 2018, Van Hulst gave an interview on Dutch television, talking about his experiences during the war.
Political career
Senate
Van Hulst served a member of the Senate of the Netherlands from 1956 to 1981 and from 1961 until 1968 he was a Member of the European Parliament. He also was Chairman of the CHU from 1969 until 1972.
From 1972 until 1981 Van Hulst was group leader in the Senate; first for the CHU and from 1977 on for the CDA.
Party chair
Van Hulst was elected as Chairman of the CHU on 5 October 1968 during the CHU party conference of 1968.
Van Hulst was tasked with preparing for the upcoming general election of 1971.
Personal life
Van Hulst was an active chess player. In 2006, at the age of 95, he won the Corus Chess Tournament for former politicians. He won it again in 2010.
According to René van der Linden, who served as President of the Senate of the Netherlands, Van Hulst was the first former member of the Senate to reach the age of 100 since the establishment of the upper house in 1815.
On 22 March 2018, Van Hulst died at the age of 107. Amsterdam's bridge number 233 was dedicated to Van Hulst shortly after his death. The Johan van Hulstbrug is located in the Hortus Botanicus in Amsterdam-Centrum, near the school he managed. U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands Pete Hoekstra stated after Van Hulst died: "Mister Van Hulst is truly an inspiration for how one person can make a real difference, even in the darkest of times." The Senate of the Netherlands commemorated Mr. Van Hulst in its plenary session of 17 April 2018.
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A sideshow (so-called in the San Francisco Bay Area, and a street takeover in the Los Angeles area) is an informal demonstration of automotive stunts now often held in vacant lots, and public intersections, originally seen in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, United States. Sideshows first appeared in Oakland, California in the 1980s as informal social gatherings of Bay Area youth.
History
Sideshows first emerged on the streets of Oakland, California during the mid 1980s. The first sideshows were originally ad hoc carshows where people would congregate in the Eastmont Mall or Foothill Square parking lot. The original intent of the sideshows at this time was for people to show off their cars, typically 1960s- and 1970s-made muscle cars. Sideshows became the alternative hot spot for those too young to gain entrance into 21-and-over nightclubs, and had outgrown the parking lots of Eastmont Mall and Foothill Square. They were made even more popular throughout the 1990s with such songs as Bay Area rapper Richie Rich's "Sideshow" anthem: "Down Bancroft / To the light / Let me warm it up, I hit a donut tight / Chevy on my side / Windows straight tinted / He got hype when he saw me spinninâ / Iâm up outta there, sideways to the next light"
In the 21st century, sideshows have become increasingly popular in other cities, such as Los Angeles, Kansas City, Detroit and in multiple cities in Texas, despite the danger that they pose to the public.
Activities
Common activities at sideshows include doughnuts and ghostriding. The latter involves driving a car, opening the door and climbing out, sometimes onto the hood, sometimes standing or dancing next to the car while it continues to roll. Violent incidents, including fights and shootings, sometimes occur at the events.
Law enforcement
To crack down on illegal sideshows, the Oakland Police Department opened a police substation at Eastmont Mall and set up "No Cruising Zones" along International Boulevard. In efforts to keep the events from spreading west to Downtown Oakland, an additional no cruising law was established along Grand Avenue and Lakeshore Avenue in 1996. The phenomenon is most strongly associated with the city of Oakland (the birthplace of the sideshow), with the events there often being attended by those in the hip hop community. Such events are promoted in local rap by artists including E-40.
On June 8, 2005, the Oakland City Council narrowly defeated a measure (pushed by then-mayor Jerry Brown) which would have subjected spectators at sideshows to criminal sanctions, such as fines and even jail terms. Drivers face various penalties, including having their cars impounded. On April 30, 2019, the San Jose City Council passed an ordinance making spectators punishable with a fine of up to $1,000 and 6 months in jail.
On February 23, 2023, the state of Texas and Governor Greg Abbott launched a taskforce to address sideshows following numerous incidents that arose in Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and Austin â the latter garnered statewide attention when one takeover saw participants repel police officers of the Austin Police Department (APD), who arrived over twenty minutes late, to disperse and potentially arrest both the drivers and spectators. Texas police groups like the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas and Austin mayor Kirk Watson said they approved Abbottâs state task force announcement; Watson called the sideshows "lawless and wrong". By the following month, seventeen people associated with the Austin sideshow were apprehended by the APD and facing charges, ranging from misdemeanors for reckless driving to felonies for organized crime. Steve McCraw, the director of the Texas Department of Public Safety who are working with both the APD and Travis County District Attorney José Garza, warned the street takeovers are not isolated to Austin and are occurring statewide. He further pointed out that those who participate in the sideshows, even as a spectator, would be arrested: "If you're involved in a street takeover, we're certainly going after you. We're going after your vehicle. You'll [...] be arrested, prosecuted, your vehicle seized, and [we're] also going after your driver's license, as well."
On June 10, 2023, a street takeover in the North Richland Hills area of Tarrant County, Texas led police into a chase that ended in a crash. After making "donuts" at an intersection, the driver sped off once police arrived; video footage captured shows a passenger hanging out the side of the window before jumping off as the police began to chase the driver. The driver then recklessly drove through winding streets until crashing into a company van owned by a Watauga resident. The driver was later arrested - further information revealed the driver was nineteen years old and had no insurance.
On June 11, 2023, Oklahoma City police arrested over 110 people involved in a street takeover in the parking lot of a warehouse at a business complex; the number of automobiles present varied from 75 to 100, and more than 50 of them were impounded. The police were tipped off about the takeover dating back to early May and that other gatherings had happened on several occasions. Most of the charges that were implemented were related to trespassing on private property, since the drivers involved disregarded the "No Trespassing" signs and security cameras that were at the location.
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The Canadian federal budget for fiscal year 2015â2016 was presented to the House of Commons of Canada by Joe Oliver on 21 April 2015. This was the last budget before the 2015 federal election. The budget was supposed to be presented in February or March before the fiscal year began on April 1, but was delayed because of the steep drop in oil prices in the winter of 2014â15. A surplus of $1.4 billion was projected for the fiscal year 2015-2016, however this was adjusted by the new government to a deficit of $1.0 billion by end of March 2016. This was later adjusted to $2.9 billion after reflecting a change requested by the Auditor General dating back 10 years' worth of federal budgets, specifically with regards to the discount rate methodology used to determine the present value of the Government's unfunded pension obligations.
Programs
Child care
The Universal Child Care Benefit will be increased to $1,920 per year for each child under the age of 6, and will introduce a new benefit of up to $720 per year for children aged 6 through 17. This measure will be paid for in part by the elimination of the existing Child Tax Credit.
Seniors
The budget will lower the minimum annual withdrawal rate for seniors from their Registered Retirement Income Fund. The minimal withdrawal rate starts at 7.38% at age 71 and increases to 20% by age 94. The budget would lower the rate for those aged 71 to 5.28% to start, and will lower the rate to 18.79% by age 94. The budget also announces a new Home Accessibility Tax Credit of up to $1,500 for the cost of home renovations for seniors or people with disabilities.
The government is proposing to extend the Employment Insurance Compassionate Care leave from six weeks to six months for Canadians caring for gravely ill family members.
Security and defence
The budget will spend $439 million from 2015 to 2019 on various national security measures, including counterterrorism programs at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), increased Parliament Hill security, and an extra $2 million a year for the Security Intelligence Review Committee to enhance its oversight of CSIS's expanded operations.
The federal government will also spend $360 million in 2015 on its deployment in Iraq and $7.1 million to train Ukraine's security forces.
The military budget will be increased by $1.1 billion over three years starting in fiscal year 2017â18, from $20 billion in 2014â15. Ottawa is raising to from 2% to 3% the yearly escalator clause in the Department of National Defence's budget.
Public transit
In the budget is a proposal for a new approach to mass transit capital funding that would be based on long-term loans and private sector involvement. The government will establish the Public Transit Fund that would start at $250 million in 2017â18 and grow to $1 billion a year by 2019â20. The government states municipalities could borrow from this fund. Previously, the federal government had provided of the capital funding for infrastructure projects. The fund is not established by the budget.
Manufacturing investments
The budget also provides $100 million over five years to help auto parts makers develop new products.
Post-secondary grants
The government is putting an extra $1.3 billion over six years into the Canada Foundation for Innovation, which provides grants for research infrastructure, mainly at colleges and universities.
Taxes
Couples
The budget proposes to allow parents to split their income for tax purposes, which is expected to reduce tax revenues by $4.5 billion a year.
Small businesses
The government proposes to reduce the corporate income tax rate on businesses with less than $500,000 in annual income from 11% to 9% in 2019. This is expected to reduce tax revenues $1.2 billion a year when it is fully implemented.
Agricultural businesses
The government proposes to increase the lifetime capital gains exemption for farmers and fishing businesses from $800,000 to $1 million for all property sold on or after budget day.
Manufacturing
The government had introduced a temporary tax break during the Great Recession to encourage manufacturers to write off part of the cost of modernizing machinery and equipment over a short period of time. The accelerated Capital Cost Allowance has been repeatedly extended since 2007. This budget proposes to extend the measure until 2024, reducing government tax revenues by up to $360 million a year.
Banking
The budget proposes to close a loophole used by financial institutions on derivatives contracts, that the government estimates will generate as much as $365 million in the current fiscal year and $1.24 billion over the next four years. Banks would no longer be able to claim an income-tax deduction on dividends paid by Canadian companies under certain derivatives contracts. These "synthetic equity arrangements" have the "potential to significantly erode the Canadian tax base" according to the budget document.
Civil service reforms
The government will save an estimated $900 million this year by targeting a "failing" and "antiquated" system that allows federal bureaucrats to bank their sick days. The government wants to replace the existing practice with a formal disability plan by collective bargaining. If negotiations fail, the government will implement a modernized sick leave and disability regime "within a reasonable time frame".
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Blue Magic can refer to:
Blue Magic (band), a R&B and soul music vocal quintet
Blue Magic (album)
"Blue Magic" (song), a song from rapper Jay-Z's album American Gangster
Blue Magic, a novel by A. M. Dellamonica
Blue Magic, a novel by Edith Ballinger Price
The name of a high quality brand of heroin marketed by drug lord Frank Lucas, which later inspired the film American Gangster and the song of the same name by Jay-Z.
Others
A type of magic in the Final Fantasy video game; see Final Fantasy magic
Blue Magic is the name of the Direct to Home venture by Reliance ADAG
"Magic blue" refers to the chemical compound Tris(4-bromophenyl)ammoniumyl hexachloroantimonate | {
"id": "901467",
"title": "Blue Magic",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue%20Magic",
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Crassispira suffecta is an extinct species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pseudomelatomidae, the turrids and allies.
Description
The length of the shell attains 28Â mm.
Distribution
Fossils have been found in Eocene strata in the Paris Basin, France.
| {
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"title": "Crassispira suffecta",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crassispira%20suffecta",
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ãããã°ããã£ãã®ãããããŸããã | {
"id": null,
"title": null,
"url": "http://keiba.radionikkei.jp/keiba/post_7289.html",
"docId": "c0eee4db-0480-4fbf-af06-06d201444c9b",
"date": "2015-11-07T07:37:34"
} |
Agente Segreto 070: Thunderbay Missione Grasshopper is a 1966 Italian spy film directed by Burton van Hooven, a possible alias of Cesare Canevari. It is a spoof of James Bond's Thunderball and a sequel to Un tango dalla Russia (1965) with Dan Christian repeating his role as Agente 070.
Cast
Dan Christian ... Dan Cooper, Agente 070
Vasna Welsh ... Secret Agent
... Sergeant Bear, Scotland Yard (as Bob Messenger)
Mills Mason ... Paco
Ursula Kent... Rossabella
Lolita Ritz... Regina
| {
"id": "32905706",
"title": "Agente Segreto 070: Thunderbay Missione Grasshopper",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agente%20Segreto%20070%3A%20Thunderbay%20Missione%20Grasshopper",
"docId": null,
"date": null
} |
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ãã¢ã¶æµŠå | {
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Survivor(s) may refer to:
Actual survivors
Last survivors of historical events
Arts, entertainment, and media
Fictional entities
Survivors, characters in the 1997 KKnD video-game series
The Survivors, or the New Survivors Foundation, a fictional cult from Robert Muchamore's a 2006 novel Divine Madness
Films
Survivor (1987 film), a film written by Bima Stagg
Survivor (2008 film), a film featuring Cyril Nri
Survivor (2014 film), a film featuring Danielle Chuchran and Kevin Sorbo
Survivor (film), a 2015 British spy-thriller starring Milla Jovovich and Pierce Brosnan
Survivors (2015 film), a British horror
Survivors (2018 film), a Sierra Leonean documentary
Survivors (2022 film), a Nigerian comedy
The Survivors (1983 film)
The Survivor (2016 film), a short about the 2014 APS Massacre
Games
Survivor (1982 video game), a 1982 shooter game
Survivor (1987 video game), a 1987 8-bit action game
Survivor (2001 video game), a tie-in to the Survivor reality TV franchise
Survivors (video game), 1986, published by Atlantis Software
Resident Evil Survivor, a 2000 light gun shooter
Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, a 2023 action-adventure video game
Literature
Survivor (Octavia Butler novel), a 1978 science fiction novel by Octavia Butler
Survivor (Gonzalez novel), a 2004 horror novel by J. F. Gonzalez
Survivor (Palahniuk novel), a 1999 satirical novel by Chuck Palahniuk
"Survivor" (story), a 2004 novella in Accelerando by Charles Stross
Survivor, a 1988 novel by Christina Crawford
Survivor, a 2004 novel by William W. Johnstone that begins The Last Rebel series
Survivor, a 1997 novel by Tabitha King
Survivor, a 2011 novel by James Clancy Phelan
Survivors (novel series), series of children's novels by Erin Hunter
Survivors (Star Trek), 1989 Star Trek: The Next Generation novel by Jean Lorrah
Survivors, a 1976 novel by Terry Nation, adapted from the eponymous 1970s TV series
Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse, 2011 novel by James Wesley Rawles
Survivors, a French comic book in the Worlds of Aldebaran comic book series
Music
Groups and labels
Survivor (band), an American rock band
Survivor Records, a British Christian music record label
Albums
Survivor (Randy Bachman 1978 album), or the title song
Survivor (Eric Burdon album),1977
Survivor (Destiny's Child album), 2001
Survivor (Fifteen album), 2000
Survivor (George Fox album), 1998
Survivor (Survivor album), 1979
Survivor (Funker Vogt album), 2002
Survivor, a 2017 album by Hillary Hawkins
Survivors (Max Roach album), 1984
Survivors (Samson album), 1979
Songs
"Survivor" (Destiny's Child song), 2001
"Survivor" (Elena Paparizou song), 2014
"Survivor" (TVXQ song), 2009
"Survivor", a 1978 song by Cindy Bullens
"Survivor", a 1984 song by Mike Francis
"Survivor", a 2009 song by Mavado featuring Akon
"Survivor", a 2016 song by M.I.A.
"Survivor", a 2005 song by Vanilla Ice from Platinum Underground
"Survivor", a 2016 song by Zach Williams
"Survivors", a 2015 song by Selena Gomez
"Survivors", a 2015 song by Hardwell and Dannic
"Survivors", a 2016 song by The Afters from Live On Forever
"Survivors", a 2014 song by Zomboy and MUST DIE!
Television
Series
Survivor (franchise), a reality-television show with numerous international versions:
Australian Survivor
Survivor (American TV series)
Survivor (British TV series)
Survivor (Israeli TV series), formerly Survivor 10
Survivor BG, Bulgaria
Survivor Philippines
Survivor South Africa
Survivor Srbija, Serbia
See the main article for a list of other international versions
Survivor Series, a professional wrestling pay-per-view event
Survivors (1975 TV series), a British post-apocalyptic fiction series
Survivors (2008 TV series), an adaptation of Terry Nation's eponymous book
Episodes
"Survivors" (Babylon 5), 1994 television series episode
"Survivors" (Supergirl), 2016 episode of American TV series Supergirl
"The Survivors" (Star Trek: The Next Generation), 1989
Other uses
Survivor guilt, a mental condition
Survivor (horse), a racehorse that won the first Preakness Stakes in 1873
Survivor: The Ride!, a roller coaster in California's Great America, in Santa Clara, California, U.S.
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Nasha Slova is a newspaper published in Belarus.
Profile
The publisher of Nasha Slova is the Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society. Its sister newspaper is Novy Chas, a weekly paper.
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The House of Iturbide is a former Imperial House of Mexico. It was founded by the Sovereign Mexican Constituent Congress on 22 June 1822 when the newly independent Mexican congress confirmed AgustÃn I's title of Constitutional Emperor of Mexico. He was baptized with the names of Saints Cosmas and Damian at the cathedral there. The last name Iturbide was originally from the Basque Country, Spain. Emperor AgustÃn abdicated and lived in exile with the prohibition on returning to Mexico. Despite that ban, he returned, was captured, and executed. Grandchildren of Emperor AgustÃn were adopted by Maximilian I of Mexico (1864-67), who had no biological children, and granted some status in the empheral Second Mexican Empire.
History
Decree
The Sovereign Mexican Constituent Congress decreed on 22 June 1822 the following:
Art 1 °. The Mexican Monarchy, in addition to being moderate and Constitutional, is also hereditary.
Art 2 °. Consequently, the Nation calls the succession of the Crown for the death of the current Emperor, his firstborn son Don AgustÃn Jerónimo de Iturbide. The Constitution of the Empire will decide the order of succession of the throne.
Art 3 °. The crown prince will be called "Prince Imperial" and will have the treatment of Imperial Highness.
Art 4 °. The legitimate sons and daughters of H.I.M will be called "Mexican Princes", and will have the treatment of Highness.
Art 5 °. Don José JoaquÃn de Iturbide y ArreguÃ, Father of H.I.M, is decorated with the title of "Prince of the Union" and the treatment of Highness, during his life.
Art 6 °. It is also granted the title of "Princess of Iturbide" and the treatment of Highness, during his life, to Doña MarÃa Nicolasa de Iturbide y Arámburo, sister of the Emperor.
First Mexican Empire (1822â1823)
After Mexico was declared and recognized as an independent state, Iturbide was backed and influenced by Mexico's conservatives, who favored an independent Mexico with a monarch from one of the European royal families as head of state. When no European royalty accepted Mexico's offer (as Spain still had hopes of taking Mexico back), Iturbide was persuaded by his advisers to be named Emperor in the manner of Napoleon I.
On 11 May 1823, the ex-emperor boarded the British ship Rawlins, en route to Livorno, Italy (then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, accompanied by his wife, children and some servants. There, he rented a small country house and began to write his memoirs. However, Spain pressured Tuscany to expel Iturbide, which it did, and the Iturbide family moved to the United Kingdom. There, he published his autobiography, "Statement of Some of the Principal Events in the Public Life of AgustÃn de Iturbide". When he was exiled, Iturbide was given a government pension, but Congress also declared him a traitor and "outside of the law", to be killed if he ever returned to Mexico. Whether he was aware of this second part is in dispute.
After his departure, the situation in Mexico continued to worsen. Reports of a probable Spanish attempt to retake Mexico reached Iturbide in the UK. He continued to receive reports from Mexico, as well as advice from supporters, that if he returned, he would be hailed as a liberator and a potential leader against the Spanish invasion. Iturbide sent word to congress in Mexico City on 13 February 1824 offering his services in the event of a Spanish attack. Congress never replied. More conservative political factions in Mexico finally convinced Iturbide to return."
Iturbide returned to Mexico on 14 July 1824, accompanied by his wife, two children, and a chaplain (Joseph A. Lopez). He landed at the port of Soto la Marina on the coast of Nuevo Santander (the modern-day state of Tamaulipas). They were initially greeted enthusiastically, but soon they were arrested and escorted by General Felipe de la Garza, the local military commander, to the nearby village of Padilla. The local legislature held a trial and sentenced Iturbide to death. When a local priest administered last rites, Iturbide supposedly said, "Mexicans! I die with honor, not as a traitor; do not leave this stain on my children and my legacy. I am not a traitor, no." He was executed by firing squad on 19 July 1824.
Second Mexican Empire (1864â1867)
In 1863, the Mexican Conservative Party, with the support of Napoleon III of France, attempted to establish a new monarchy under Austrian Hapsburg Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian as Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico. Maximilian, who had no natural offspring, adopted two grandsons of the first Mexican emperor, AgustÃn de Iturbide y Green and Salvador de Iturbide y Marzán.
AgustÃn and Salvador were each granted the (vitalicio meaning non-hereditary) title of Prince de Iturbide and style of Highness by imperial decree and were ranked after the reigning family. The forces of the Mexican Republic captured and executed Emperor Maximilian in 1867, ending monarchy in Mexico.
Decree
The Emperor Maximilian of Habsburg decreed on 16 September 1865 the following:
Art 1 °. The title of "Princes of Iturbide" is awarded to Don AgustÃn de Iturbide and Don Salvador de Iturbide, grandsons of the Emperor AgustÃn de Iturbide, as well as his daughter Doña Josefa de Iturbide.
Art 2 °. The Princes mentioned in the previous article, will have the treatment of Highness, and will take rank after the reigning family.
Art 3 °. This title is not hereditary, and in the event that the mentioned princes had legitimate succession, the reigning Emperor or the Regency will reserve the faculty to grant the expressed title, in each case, to that or those of his successors that they deem convenient.
Art 4 °. By virtue of the arrangements made with the members of the Iturbide family, the Emperor takes the guardianship and curatorship of the aforementioned princes AgustÃn and Salvador de Iturbide, appointing as co-tutor the Princess Josefa de Iturbide.
Art 5 °. The coat of arms used by the aforementioned princes, will be the ancient of his family, with mantle and crown of Prince, and having as support the two rampant wolves of the same shield of his family, granting them by special grace the use of the National Shield in the center of the aforementioned blazon, according to the design that is attached.
Art 6 °. The Princes of Iturbide will have the right to wear the national badge without a flame, and the button with its crown of Prince.
In 1867, Maximilian was captured, tried, and executed by the Mexican Republic ruled by President Benito Juárez. After two short-lived attempts at monarchy in Mexico that ended with the execution of the monarchs, Mexico has remained a republic.
Genealogy
Genealogy of AgustÃn I
Children:
AgustÃn Jerónimo de Iturbide y Huarte (1807â1866) Titular Emperor of Mexico (1824-1864)
Jesusa de Iturbide y Fernández de Piérola (1842â1914)
Pedro José Nicolás de Piérola Iturbide (1862-1886)
Eva MarÃa de Piérola Iturbide (1863-1919)
Raquel de Piérola Iturbide (1865-1886)
Adán Jesús IsaÃas de Piérola Iturbide (1866-1935)
Luis BenjamÃn de Piérola Iturbide (1867-1868)
BenjamÃn Amadeo de Piérola Iturbide (1868-1945)
Jesusa MarÃa Salomé Victoria de Piérola Iturbide (1870-1896)
A large issue of their descendants.
Eventually:
Jorge Nicolás de Piérola Gabriel (1977)
Claudio André de Piérola Gili (1987)
Sabina MarÃa de Iturbide y Huarte (1810â1871)
Juana MarÃa Francisca de Iturbide y Huarte (1812â1828)
Josefa de Iturbide y Huarte (1814â1891)
Ãngel MarÃa José de Iturbide y Huarte (1816â1872)
AgustÃn de Iturbide y Green (1863â1925) (adopted by Maximilian I of Mexico) Titular Emperor of Mexico (1867-1925)
MarÃa de Jesús Juana de Iturbide y Huarte (1818â1849)
MarÃa de los Dolores de Iturbide y Huarte (1819â1820)
Salvador MarÃa de Iturbide y Huarte (1820â1856)
Salvador de Iturbide y Marzán (1849â1895) (adopted by Maximilian I of Mexico)
Maria Josepha Sophia de Iturbide (1872â1949) Titular Empress of Mexico (1925-1949)
Baroness Maria Anna Tunkl-Iturbide (1909-1962)
Baroness Maria Gisella Tunkl-Iturbide (1912-1999)
Count Maximilian von Götzen-Iturbide (1944) Titular Emperor of Mexico (1949-)
Ferdinand von Götzen-Iturbide (1992)
Emmanuella von Götzen-Iturbide (1998)
Countess Emmanuella von Götzen-Iturbide (1945)
Nicholas McAulay (1970)
Edward McAulay (1973)
Augustin McAulay (1977)
Patrick McAulay (1979)
Phillip McAulay (1981)
Camilla McAulay (1982)
Gisella McAulay (1985)
Maria Gisella de Iturbide (1874-1875)
Maria Theresa de Iturbide (1876-1915)
Felipe Andrés MarÃa Guadalupe de Iturbide y Huarte (1822â1853)
AgustÃn Cosme de Iturbide y Huarte (1825â1873)
Heraldry
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Warren Vale Colliery was a coal mine, also known as Piccadilly Colliery, situated alongside Warren Vale Road, between Rawmarsh and Swinton, South Yorkshire, England, in the valley of the Collier Brook, which runs east, for about two miles towards Kilnhurst.
Sinking of the colliery commenced in the late 1840s with production commencing towards the end of 1850. The colliery was owned by Earl Fizwilliam, and was worked by Wakefieldâbased agents J. & J. Charlesworth & Company. Coal was worked from two seams, the 5Â ft. seam was worked at a depth of 90 yards, the 9Â ft. seam being found at 127 yards. These seams were connected by a shaft.
The colliery was rail connected to another Charlesworth operation, Kilnhurst Colliery and so to the main line railway (The Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, Sheffield to Doncaster line). Some small buildings are still standing on the site (2007) and the track of the railway towards Kilnhurst is now a footpath.
Following closure part of the site became the works of Bessacarr Caravans.
Early accident
The colliery had been operating for less than a year when, in December 1851 an accident took place. The Underground Steward went to inspect the workings just prior to the start of the day shift (around 6 a.m.) and was followed shortly afterwards by the miners.
About an hour later an explosion took place which "astounded not only those at the pit but the whole neighbourhood". Two corves (small tubs of coal), one filled with 16 cwts.(approx. 1650Â kg) of coal and one empty, were propelled skyward out of the shaft and became entangled in the headgear. Another report pointed out that "Some idea may be formed of the effect of the explosion, when it is stated that a man standing at a door of a cottage, upwards of a mile distant, was completely blackened!"
By 9.30 a.m. repairs had been effected to the headgear to enable access to the mine and 14 injured men and boys were lifted out. By mid-afternoon a further 24 men and boys were brought out alive with the first of those killed.
The cause of the explosion, which took place in the northern end of the 9Â ft. seam, was cited as a roof fall which blocked the air flow and caused a buildup of foul air which was forced into areas where the miners were working with candles to give light.
In total 51 persons were killed, 24 of these being 16 years or below. In some cases these were fathers and sons, working together.
The coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death and commented in his summing up of the lack of inspectors for coal mines, there being only 4 of these in the country, and suggested that the Government should increase this number as soon as possible for the benefit and safety of the workers involved in the industry.
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Addison Road is a road in London, England, which connects Kensington High Street with Notting Hill and Holland Park Avenue, and runs nearby to Holland Park.
History and residents
The name of the road derives from the essayist and statesman Joseph Addison (1672â1719), as with Addison Avenue nearby.
The road was begun in the 1820s. The church of St Barnabas at No. 23 was built in 1829, designed by Lewis Vulliamy in a Tudor Gothic style, with later stained glass by Edward Burne-Jones (executed by Morris & Co.) and Byam Shaw. St James Norlands Church at the far end of Addison Avenue also designed by Vulliamy, was built in 1845.
Debenham House at 8 Addison Road was designed for Sir Ernest Debenham in 1905â6 by Halsey Ricardo. The Arts and Crafts-style house is an example of "structural polychromy". It includes Byzanto-Italianate grey bricks, Doulton Carrara ware, green-glazed bricks, and turquoise tiles. Inside, there is a dome and Arts and Crafts decoration.
From 1869 to 1916, there was an Addison Road station to the west of Addison Road itself, for a railway line that provided services between Waterloo and Richmond.
Addison Road is home to the Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School, a Roman Catholic boys' school (which permits entry to girls in its Sixth Form).
The novelist and playwright John Galsworthy lived at 14 Addison Road from 1905 to 1913, as did Joseph Conrad and Radclyffe Hall at other times. Other notable inhabitants have included: Chaim Weizmann, the first President of the State of Israel, who lived at No. 67 between 1916 and 1919; David Lloyd George, who resided at No. 2 between 1928 and 1936; James Locke, who is credited with giving Tweed its name, and the architect Eustace Balfour.
Residential properties
Debenham House, cited above, is often used for filming purposes. Although no longer privately owned, it is thought to be worth between £40â50 million.
The majority of houses located on Addison Road are worth between £10-30 million, and consequently the street is one of the most expensive residential streets in the world, and the second most expensive in London (behind Kensington Palace Gardens). In 2015, a property was sold for £30 million, the most expensive in the UK that year.
Location
To the east is Holland Park. To the west is Holland Road and West Kensington. It parts from the A3220 road leading to Warwick Gardens ahead. Warwick Gardens ahead closes through traffic at 10pm to 7am.
Kensington Olympia railway station was originally named Addison Road although it is some distance away from the road itself.
St Barnabas, Kensington, is a Church of England church in the road.
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Hexagenia atrocaudata is a species of common burrower mayfly in the family Ephemeridae. It is found in North America.
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Sir Basil Henry Blackwell (29 May 18899 April 1984) was born in Oxford, England. He was the son of Benjamin Henry Blackwell (18491924), founder of Blackwell's bookshop in Oxford, which went on to become the Blackwell family's publishing and bookshop empire, located on Broad Street in central Oxford. The publishing arm is now part of Wiley-Blackwell.
He was educated at Magdalen College School, Oxford and Merton College, Oxford. He was the first person in his family to attend university.
He is remembered as the bookseller who helped break the infamous "Ring" who colluded to close off open competition in auctions, "taking bread from the mouths of the widows and orphans" of Oxford scholars.
In 1913, he began working with his father at Blackwell's. Upon his father's death in 1924, he took over the company and remained working there for decades.
He was made a Knight Bachelor in 1956 by Queen Elizabeth II, the only bookseller ever to receive that honour. In 1959, he was elected to an honorary Fellowship at Merton. In 1970 he was given the honorary Freedom of the City of Oxford. In 1979 he was awarded a Doctorate of Civil Law honoris causa at the Oxford Encaenia.
Blackwell was a prosecution witness in the 1966 private prosecution attempt to bar the book Last Exit to Brooklyn from UK publication.
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The 1963 LSU Tigers football team represented Louisiana State University during the 1963 NCAA University Division football season.
The Battle for the Rag, the annual rivalry game vs. Tulane, was played as scheduled, one of the few games not to be postponed or canceled following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The contest kicked off approximately 25 hours after the tragedy in Dallas. It was the second of three consecutive Tiger shutouts vs. the Green Wave at Baton Rouge.
Schedule
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Stilobezzia sybleae is a species of predaceous midges in the family Ceratopogonidae.
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Theule Khola Hydropower Station (Nepali: à€ à€¿à€à€²à¥ à€à¥à€²à€Ÿ à€à€²à€µà€¿à€Šà¥à€¯à¥à€€ à€à€¯à¥à€à€šà€Ÿ) is a run-of-river hydro-electric plant located in Baglung District of Nepal. The flow from Theule River is used to generate 1.5 MW electricity.
The plant is owned and developed by Barahi Hydropower Pvt Ltd, an IPP of Nepal. The plant started generating electricity from 2075-03-24BS. The generation licence will expire in 2107-03-27 BS, after which the plant will be handed over to the government. The power station is connected to the national grid and the electricity is sold to Nepal Electricity Authority.
The power generated from the project will make up around 40 per cent of electricity demand for the district.
The project cost was NPR 345 million.
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The 4th U-boat Flotilla (German 4. Unterseebootsflottille) was formed in May 1941 in Stettin under the command of KapitÀnleutnant Werner Jacobsen. Nearly 300 boats received their basic training at the flotilla. The flotilla was disbanded in May 1945.
Flotilla Commanders
U-boats of the Flotilla
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Lauren Wood, released in 1979, is the first eponymous album by Lauren Wood. It features her Chunky, Novi & Ernie bandmates Novi Novog (her cousin), and bassist Ernie Emerita. The disc is studded with guest stars including Little Feat members Bill Payne and Fred Tackett, Steve Lukather, Ronnie Montrose and Jim Keltner. Her duet with Michael McDonald, "Please Don't Leave", went to #5 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart and #24 on the Pop Singles chart.
Track listing
All songs written by Lauren Wood except "Nothin' But a Heartache" by Michael McDonald and "Dirty Work" by Donald Fagen and Walter Becker
"Please Don't Leave" (3:58) Vocals - Lauren Wood, Michael McDonald; Piano, Synthesizer solo - Bill Payne
"Save the Man" (4:19) Guitar solo - Jay Graydon; Viola - Novi; Syndrums - Alvin Taylor
"Hollywood" (5:12) Guitar solo - Summer Mering; Synthesizer solo - Novi
"Nothin' But a Heartache" (3:50) Saxophone solo - John Klemmer; Background vocals - Wood, McDonald, John Townsend, Rosemary Butler, Bobby LaKind
"Gotta Lotta" (4:03) Synthesizer intro - Duncan Mackay; Saxophone solo - Andrew Love; Horns - Love and Ben Cauley
"Where Did I Get These Tears" (4:31) Viola solo - Novi
"Dirty Work" (3:44) Guitar solo - Ronnie Montrose; Synthesizer - Mackay; Background vocals - Wood, McDonald, Townsend, Butler, Patrick Simmons
"Time Zone" (5:52) Synthesizer - Novi; Background vocals - Wood, McDonald, Townsend, Butler, LaKind
"Overload " (4:31) Acoustic piano and all vocals - Wood; String arrangement - Novi
Personnel
Lauren "Chunky" Wood - lead vocals
Lauren "Chunky" Wood, Bill Payne, Jai Winding - keyboards
Jeff Porcaro, Jim Keltner, Alvin Taylor, Michael Baird, Rick Shlosser - drums
Ernie Emerita, Abraham Laboriel, David Hungate - bass
Steve Lukather, Fred Tackett, Jay Graydon, Ronnie Montrose, Sumner Mering - guitars
Novi, Bill Payne, Duncan Mackay - synthesizer
Novi - viola
John Klemmer, Andrew Love - saxophone
Marcy Dicterow Vaj - concertmistress
Paul Lani, Steve Forman, Bobby LaKind, Michael J. Jackson, Sinclair Rogers Lott III, Debra Dobkin - percussion
Bill Champlin, Arno Lucas, Bobby Kimball, Lauren "Chunky" Wood, John Townsend, Michael McDonald, Pat Simmons, Ricardo de Campas, Ki-Ki Koury, Rosemary Butler - additional background vocals
Production
Produced by Michael J. Jackson, "Please Don't Leave" produced by Jackson and Ted Templeman
Engineered by James Isaacson
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merge with primary key
In database modeling, a first class item is one that has an identity independent of any other item. The identity allows the item to persist when its attributes change, and allows other items to claim relationships with the item.
As a general rule, first class items represent things rather than relationships. For example, the database representations of a human and of a company are each first class items. However, the fact that the person is an employee of that company is not a first class item. Likewise, data about that relationship, e.g. information about the salary the company pays to its employee, is not a first class item.
Typically, a relational database will include several tables, each of which contains rows representing first class items of a given type (e.g. a table of people, a table of companies). It will also contain other tables representing relationships between these first class items.
In a table representing first class items, one column of the table will typically contain a different integer assigned to each row (effectively, to each item) as a unique identifier: that is to say, unique for objects of this type; objects of different types, represented in different tables, can coincidentally have the same identifier, but the coincidence is meaningless.
In a relational database, a table representing a relationship between two or more first class items (or data about that relationship) will usually not have special identifiers for its rows. Instead these rows will be identified by an ordered tuple consisting of unique identifiers of the first class items involved in the relationship.
Data modeling | {
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Collón Curá is a department located in the southeast of Neuquén Province, Argentina.
Geography
The Department limits with Catán Lil Department at north, Picún Leufú Department at northeast, Rio Negro Province at east and southeast, Lácar Department at southwest and Huiliches Department at northwest.
Departments of Neuquén Province
Mapuche language | {
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"9AM in Dallas" is a song by rapper Drake from his debut album Thank Me Later. It was released as a promotional track for the album on June 12, 2010, with its eventual release onto the iTunes Store on June 15. The song features the rapper making a freestyle, and due to strong sales it charted at number 57 in the Billboard Hot 100. Recorded in the days leading up to the release of the album, it was not included in the track list for the US version of the album but is present on the UK iTunes version as a bonus track.
Charts
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Peach Creek may refer to:
Cities:
Peach Creek, a fictional town, the setting of Ed, Edd n Eddy
Peach Creek, West Virginia, a town in West Virginia, United States
Rivers:
Peach Creek (Grindstone Creek), a stream in Missouri
Peach Creek (Guadalupe River), a part of the Guadalupe River in Texas
Peach Creek (San Jacinto River), a part of the San Jacinto River in Texas
Peach Creek (West Virginia), a stream in West Virginia | {
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The Mineola Twins is a play by Paula Vogel with music by David Van Tieghem, which premiered Off-Broadway in 1999.
Overview
The story satirically examines women's experience and the women's movement over more than three decades in post-World War II America, as seen through the life of identical twins, Myra and Myrna, from Mineola, New York, who are played by one actress. The twins' contrasting personalities are presented in often extreme and comic ways. For example, one is a rebellious radical, while the other is an uptight conservative.
The play takes place during the Eisenhower Administration; then at the start of the Nixon Administration; and finally during the Bush Administration. In an author's note, Vogel suggests that female singers of the time, such as Teresa Brewer and Vicki Carr be used.
Characters
Myrna, the "good" twin
Myra, the "bad" twin
Jim, Myrna's fiancé
Kenny, Myrna's son
Ben, Myra's son
Sarah, played by the actress who also plays Jim
Two psychiatric aides/Federal agents
Productions
The play was first produced by the Perseverance Theatre in Juneau, Alaska, in November 1996. It was then produced at the Trinity Repertory Company in Providence, Rhode Island in February to March 1997, again directed by Molly Smith (former artistic director of Perseverance) and starring Anne Scurria.
The Mineola Twins opened Off-Broadway on February 18, 1999, after a month of previews and closed on May 30, 1999, at the Laura Pels Theatre in a Roundabout Theatre production. Directed by Joe Mantello with musical staging by Ken Roberson, the cast included Swoosie Kurtz as the twins, Mo Gaffney as Myrna's boyfriend Jim and later Myra's lesbian lover Sarah, Mandy Siegfried as the twins' sons, Kenny and Ben. Additional cast included Jimmy Holder and Daniel Stewart Sherman. The New York Times critic Vincent Canby wrote, "Working lightly, surely and always in sync ... Vogel ... Mantello [and] Kurtz and a dream supporting cast are cheering up a mostly dreary season with The Mineola Twins, the exhilarating Roundabout Theater Company entertainment."
Subsequent productions have included a 2004 run at the Straz Center for the Performing Arts in Tampa, Florida, and a 2012 production at The Arts Square Theatre in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Awards and nominations
Source: Lortel.org
Lucille Lortel Awards (1999) for: Outstanding Scenic Design, Robert Brill and Scott Pask (winner); Outstanding Costume Design, Jess Goldstein (winner); Outstanding Lighting Design, Kevin Adams (winner)
Obie Award (1998â1999): Performance, Swoosie Kurtz (winner)
1999 Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actress in a Play, Swoosie Kurtz (nomination)
Henry Hewes Design Awards: (1999) for: Scenic Design, Robert Brill and Scott Pask (winner); Costume Design, Jess Goldstein (winner)
Outer Critics Circle Award nominations for: Outstanding Off-Broadway Play; Outstanding Actress in a Play, Swoosie Kurtz; Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, Mandy Siegfried
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On 20 July 2013, two clashes occurred in Colombia between government forces and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas. Nineteen soldiers were killed in the deadliest day since peace talks began in November 2012. The conflict came one day after a FARC-EP officer Alejandra had detained with a chain around the neck a vacationing U.S. Army Combat Engineer (12B) veteran, Kevin Scott Sutay including for his 27th birthday in the jungle on October 13 to try and further anger him intentionally.
Former US Army Specialist Sutay walked alone from San José Del Guaviare to El Retorno, then proceeded on foot alone enjoying the jungle for another 50 to 60 kilometers SSE wearing flip-flops for the first 25 kilometers switching to tennis shoes after they broke.
Kevin encountered FARC-EP whom provided rubber boots and a mosquito net for Kevin and noticed they were headed in the same direction. Kevin began to travel together with FARC-EP unrestricted for approximately 2 weeks and approximately another 200 kilometers by foot and boat until the FARC-EP officer Alejandra arrived and insisted Kevin be disarmed of his machete and karambit knife, personal belongings be withheld, and he be detained.
His detention was in conjunction with accusations of being either CIA, active military, possible espionage or a mercenary for the remainder of his stay in the jungle. Kevin desired to continue his journey towards Puinawai and InÃrida including after his release four months later but FARC-EP insisted he leave the jungle with the International Red Cross.
Background
Since the 1960s, the Colombian government has been in periodic conflicts with Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels. An estimated 600,000 people have died in the 50-year-long conflict, with an additional 3.7 million people displaced. In November 2012, peace negotiations between the two sides began in Oslo, Norway and Havana, Cuba. At the time of the 20 July attacks, negotiations were ongoing. A few days prior, FARC's chief negotiator said the conflict was nearing its end. Three previous attempts to peacefully end the conflict failed. The Colombia government estimates that FARC has 8,000 active fighters, down from 16,000 in 2001.
Attacks
In southern Colombia, FARC said it had detained a former U.S. Army soldier far outside El Retorno whom was traveling alone on foot towards Colombia's Puinawai(mother of creation/first mother) Natural Reserve which included 3 exclusive mountains on 19 July, but was willing to release him to senator Piedad Cordoba to show commitment to the peace talks. A statement by the U.S. government said the man was in the area as a tourist, not as a part of a military mission. Historically, the United States has aided the Colombian military.
In the town of El Doncello in southwest Colombia, a battle between the army and FARC left 4 soldiers and 6 FARC members dead on 20 July. Three other soldiers were injured and two rebel fighters were captured.
Hours later, about 70 rebels ambushed a group of government soldiers guarding an oil pipeline on 20 July in El Mordisco, a rural area of Arauca in eastern Colombia. Fifteen soldiers were killed in the attack and twelve rebels were captured. The government attributed the attack to FARC activity. Overall 20 July was the deadliest day since peace talks began also known as the Colombian Independence day.
Response and aftermath
Colombia's president Juan Manuel Santos traveled to Arauca to the site of the ambush. There, he promised to retaliate with "the entire machinery" of war. "Just as we have extended our hand and are in negotiations, so do we have a big stick. We have decisive military force and will apply it," he said. He did, however, reiterate that the government was optimistic about the peace talks and said he hoped "the guerrillas will come to their senses" and continue with the talks. Santos also stated that he would not allow the FARC rebels to make a media circus of the release of the American soldier that was detained after the group "flagrantly violated" a promise to end the kidnappings before peace talks began.
On 22 July, two FARC members were killed during a military operation in southwest Cauca. The same day, FARC offered to arm coca farmers that have been protesting against coca eradication.
Peace talks between FARC and the Colombian government are expected to resume on 28 July.
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Uehlfeld is a municipality in the district of Neustadt (Aisch)-Bad Windsheim in the administrative region of Middle Franconia in northern Bavaria in Germany.
Geography
Uehlfeld is located in the valley of the Aisch. The neighbouring municipalities are (from the north in clockwise direction): Lonnerstadt, Höchstadt an der Aisch, Weisendorf, Dachsbach, Gutenstetten, MÌnchsteinach and Vestenbergsgreuth. The municipality has 12 boroughs: DemantsfÌrth, Egelsbach, EselsmÌhle, Gottesgab, HohenmÌhle, NonnenmÌhle, PeppenhöchstÀdt, Rohensaas, Schornweisach, TragelhöchstÀdt, Voggendorf und Wallmershof.
History
Uehlfeld was probably founded in the 6th century, at the time Francia expanded to the east and so took possession of the Aischgrund. It is likely that one of the seven Slavonian churches founded by Charlemagne within the Aischgrund stood in Uehlfeld.
The first documented notice of Uehlfeld is from 1123. The village was named Oulentevelt. Later the name changed to Ulletenvelt (1127), Uelevelt (1154), Ulfeldium (1158) or Ulefelt (1181).
Like other villages, Uehlfeld was devastated by several great fires. The last of them occurred in 1888.
Wars have left their marks on Uehlfeld. In the German Peasants' War (1524â1525) the village's castle was destroyed. In the Second Margrave War (1552) the boroughs of Nonndorf and Rothenberg were destroyed and were not rebuilt. The Thirty Years' War left its mark with the actions of Colonel Kehraus, whose troops raided and burned the village.
In 1649 Veit-vom-Berg was assigned pastor of the village. He was born in 1612 in Baudenbach. He held his inaugural speech in front of 31 persons (10 men, 15 women and 6 children), the last inhabitants after a time full of privation.
Before Thirty Years' War. Uehlfeld had 600 inhabitants. Veit-vom-Berg died in Uehlfeld in 1675. Today the elementary and secondary schools and a street are named after him. The number of inhabitants did not again reach 600 until the mid-19th century.
During the 19th century many Jewish salesmen came as new citizens to Uehlfeld, so trade and business developed. The Jews built a synagogue, opened a school, and established a graveyard, the tombstones of which are still to be seen today. In 1837 the Jews of Uehlfeld numbered 300, or about half the population, but by 1933, after the anti-semitic campaigns of the Nazi holocaust began, there were only 50 Jewish people left in the town.
The former headmaster of the elementary and secondary schools, Karl Schmer, compiled the history of Uehlfeld into three almanacs, which can be purchased from the municipality office.
Local council (Marktgemeinderat)
Election March 2014:
CSU 3 seats
SPD 1 seat
Alliance 90/The Greens 3 seats
Freie WÀhlergruppe BÌrgerblock 4 seats
Ãberparteiliche WÀhlergruppe Schornweisach 3 seats
WÀhlergemeinschaft PeppenhöchstÀdt-Gottesgab-Rohensaas 2 seats
Economics and Infrastructure
Several companies have their head office in Uehlfeld. There are also two breweries, one of them founded in 1639, which makes it the oldest brewery in the Aischgrund.
Federal highway B 470 is directed from north to south through the community area.
From July 12, 1904, until May 30, 1976, there was a railway from Neustadt (Aisch) to DemantsfÃŒrth-Uehlfeld called Aischtalbahn which led to the railway Nuremberg WÃŒrzburg. It was broken down and since then only busses connect Uehlfeld with the surrounding areas. The lines belong to the pay scale area of VGN.
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The Netherlands Institute for Sound & Vision (Dutch: Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld & Geluid, or short, Beeld & Geluid) is the cultural archive and a museum located in Hilversum. The Institute for Sound & Vision collects, looks after, and provides access to over 70% of the Dutch audio-visual heritage. In total, the collection of more than 750,000 hours of [television, radio, music and film that began in 1898 and continues to grow daily, makes Sound & Vision one of the largest audiovisual [archive]s in Europe. It was founded in 1997 as the Netherlands Audiovisual Archive (Dutch: Nederlands Audiovisueel Archief (NAA)), and adopted its current name in 2002.
Sound & Vision is the business archive of the national broadcasting corporations, a cultural heritage institute (providing access to students and the general public) and also a museum for its visitors. The digital television production workflow and massive digitization efforts break grounds for new services.
Sound & Vision is an experienced partner in European-funded research projects. These include or have included: P2P-Fusion, MultiMatch, PrestoSpace, VIDI-Video, LiWA Living Web Archives (Research Project), Communia, Video Active (European Research Project) and the streaming mobile app Radio Garden, which gives listeners access to radio stations worldwide, perhaps their best known research project.
On 1 January 2022, Muziekweb merged into the Netherlands Institute for Sound & Vision. Muziekweb was previously affiliated with the Central Library of Rotterdam. It has been described as "Europe's largest music collection"
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Faisal Devji is a historian who specializes in studies of Islam, globalization, violence and ethics.
Early life and education
Devji was born in Dar es Salaam in 1964 to a family of western Indian origin. His undergraduate education was at the University of British Columbia, where he received double honors in history and anthropology. He received his PhD from the University of Chicago with his dissertation Muslim Nationalism: Founding Identity in Colonial India and was chosen to be a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows.
Devji is Zanzibari, and is now a Canadian citizen.
Career
Devji's multidisciplinary work grounds empirical historical issues in philosophical questions. He has taught at The New School in New York City. He has taught at Yale University.
In 2005, Cornell University Press published his Landscapes of the Jihad: Militancy, Morality, Modernity, exploring the ethical content of jihad as opposed to its more widely studied purported political content. The book draws a distinction between the majority of Islamic fundamentalist organizations concerned with the establishing of states and al-Qaeda with its decentralized structure and emphasis on moral rather than political action. His next book was The Terrorist in Search of Humanity: Militant Islam and Global Politics, published by Columbia University Press in October 2008.
Since 2009, Devji is University Reader in Modern South Asian History, Oxford University. He also is a senior fellow at the Institute for Public Knowledge (New York University) and Yves Oltramar Chair at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva.
He published The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptations of Violence, by Hurst & Co. in March 2011.
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ç¶ããèŠã | {
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Charles Dawson (1842 â 17 March 1917) was an Irish nationalist politician and a Member of Parliament (MP) for Carlow from 1880 to 1885.
Born in Limerick, he was educated at Belvedere College and the Catholic University of Ireland. He was a member of Dublin Corporation in 1877 to 1884. He was Lord Mayor of Dublin from 1882 to 1883.
He was elected as a Home Rule League MP for Carlow Borough at the 1880 general election. The Carlow Borough was abolished at the 1885 general election and Dawson chose to leave parliament to concentrate on his business activities.
In 1873 Dawson married Katherine Carroll of Limerick city; they had four sons.
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| {
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Kuala Berang is a state constituency in Terengganu, Malaysia, that has been represented in the Terengganu State Legislative Assembly.
The state constituency was first contested in 1974 and is mandated to return a single Assemblyman to the Terengganu State Legislative Assembly under the first-past-the-post voting system.
Demographics
History
Polling Districts
According to the Gazette issued on 30 March 2018, the Kuala Berang constituency has a total of 13 polling districts.
Representation History
Election results
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"date": "2014-03-10T05:52:37"
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Tamper may refer to:
Tamper, to use a tamp, a tool for material compaction
Tamper, a pipe tool component
Tamper (nuclear weapons), a layer of dense material surrounding the fissile material
Tamper, to interfere with, falsify, or sabotage
Ballast tamper, a machine that tamps railroad track ballast
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Warrix Sport is a Thai sport manufacturing company established in 2013 which produces jerseys, sports outfits, training equipment, etc. The word "Warrix" is inspired by the word "warrior" and theme of the brand involves legendary Thai warriors. Starting from January 2017, WARRIX is the main sponsor for Thailand national Football Team. The brand made its first official appearance by sponsoring Thai League teams Chiangmai F.C. and Nakhon Ratchasima F.C. in 2014.
Brands
WARRIX
Sponsorships
Football
National Teams
2017â
2018â
In 2016, Warrix won the bid as the official sponsor of the Thailand National Football Team with a total sum of 400 million Baht. The contract lasts from January 1, 2017, until December 31, 2020. Warrix named its first two kits for the Thailand National Football Team Chayanuparb and Prabtrichak, which comes after the name of two legendary Thai warriors. The kit was debuted when Thailand played Saudi Arabia in the 2018 FIFA World Cup qualification on February 9, 2017.
Referees
AFF
Domestic Leagues
Warrix provides its official balls for the following football associations:
Myanmar National League
Club Teams
Phnom Penh Crown FC
Melawati
Rakhine United
Suphanburi
Chainat Hornbill
Angthong
BTU United
Kalasin
Nongbua Pitchaya
Simork
PTT Rayong
BG Pathum United
Hougang United
Tiong Bahru
Singapore Cricket Club
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The Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art is an art museum that is part of Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas.
The Nerman Museum is named for donors Jerry and Margaret Nerman. It opened in October 2007, succeeding the college's former Gallery of Art. The building was designed by Korean architect Kyu Sung Woo.
Construction of the approximately $15 million Nerman Museum was realized through Johnson County Community College funding, with support from the Nerman Family, the M.R. & Evelyn Hudson Foundation, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, Marti & Tony Oppenheimer, Richard I. & Jeanne S. Galamba, Barton P. & Mary D. Cohen, Dean E. Thompson, Irma Starr, Carl & Lee McCaffree, Jim & Mary Tearney, and Joseph & Margery Lichtor.
The museum building is clad in Kansas limestone. Throughout the museum's two levels are ten expansive galleries for temporary exhibitions and the permanent collection. Additionally, the museum houses the 200 seat Hudson Auditorium, Café Tempo, two classrooms, a Museum Store, a New Media Gallery, and art storage and preparation spaces. The museum boasts two lobbies â the Cantilever Entrance (featuring a 60,000 white LED installation by artist Leo Villareal) and the glass and metal Atrium Lobby.
The Nerman Museum's permanent collection consists of works gifted by the Oppenheimers and the Oppenheimer Brothers Foundation. It also includes art from Johnson County Community College's Permanent Collection.
Recognition
Frommer's cited the Nerman Museum as a significant cultural attraction when they listed Kansas City as one of their top 10 world travel destinations for 2012.
In April 2006, Public Art Review magazine named JCCC one of the top 10 university/college campuses for public art in America, citing the outdoor sculpture and the paintings, ceramics, photography and works on paper installed throughout the campus.
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Gilling West is a village about north of Richmond in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire, England. It is located in the civil parish of Gilling with Hartforth and Sedbury. It is named "West" to distinguish it from Gilling East in Ryedale, some 32 miles away.
A 2018 report states that the community houses people who commute to Darlington, Teesside and Richmond via the A66 and A1(M). The settlement "retains a village hall, two public houses and a shop but there is no longer a post office. There is a limited bus service to the village." The report adds that Gilling West is a Conservation Area with the High Street of particular significance. "A substantial percentage of the buildings [in the community] are listed as being of special architectural or historic interest".
History
Gilling was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 under the name of Ghellinges "in the hundred of Land of Count Alan" as a tiny village with "16 villagers. 3 freemen. 6 smallholders". The tenant-in-chief was named Count Alan of Brittany.
The parish church is dedicated to St Agatha. The Domesday Book records a place of worship in the village as of 1086. The C of E website in early 2021 states "it is mentioned in the Domesday Book and parts of St Agathaâs date back to this period". It was subsequently restored and modified. The Historic Listing states: "Late C11, early C14, late C14, late C15, restoration and additions 1845". This is a Grade I listed property. The 2018 archeological report adds specifics about St Agatha's: "a number of pre-Conquest carved stones and a medieval grave cover" were discovered here. "The west tower probably belonged to the church at Gilling recorded in the Domesday Book as stylistically it belongs to the late 11th Century."
St Agatha's Church features a monument to Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher Cradock (1862-1914), who was born in the parish, at Hartforth.
In earlier times, the area was one of some importance in the Anglo-Saxon period of British history. In the 7th century it was a seat of the Deira in the southern region of the Anglian kingdom of Northumbria, and from the 9th century, the surrounding area known as Gillingshire was ruled by the Earls of Mercia, specifically Edwin, who was the last of the Earls to have a seat of power at Gilling before the Norman Conquest saw Edwin's lands given to William the Conqueror's kinsman, Alan Rufus. One report adds some specifics, indicating that this was an administrative area or 'wapentake'. In 1976, "a C9th Anglican cross ... a C10th hogback tombstone and a Viking sword" were discovered.
The sword was found by nine-year-old Garry Fridd in the beck while playing close to the bridge in Gilling. It turned out to be a double-edged, iron-bladed sword with a silver-decorated handle, dating from the 9th century. It is regarded as being amongst the best Anglian weapons ever to be discovered in England. The restored Gilling sword is in the collection of the Yorkshire Museum in York.
The area had a number of quarries that were used until the mid 1800s for stone used in construction. One survives, the Dunsa Bank Quarry.
The manor house Sedbury Hall, on the edge of the village, was described by one historical report as "the seat of the lords of Sedbury Manor" as of 1914. Formerly associated with the Darcy, Aske, Conyers and Nevil families, it is now home to the Baker Baker family (formerly of Elemore Hall, Pittington, Co. Durham). The present house was designed by John Carr, and its grounds were laid out in the 18th century by William Sawrey Gilpin.
Gilling Lodge, a Grade II listed building, was constructed in the mid 1800s for the Roper family, according to the listing. The archeological report about the area adds that Roper
was part of a family of Richmond bankers. The house has since been "restored to National Trust guidelines" by owners who listed the property for sale in 2020. It was described as a 6,300 square foot home with "six bedrooms, five bathrooms and a cinema room".
Governance
The village lies within the Richmond (Yorks) parliamentary constituency, which has been under the control of the Conservative Party for more than a century. The current Member of Parliament, since the 2015 general election, is Rishi Sunak, the constituency's previous incumbent being William Hague. Gilling West also lies within the Richmondshire North electoral division of North Yorkshire County Council and the Gilling West ward of Richmondshire District Council.
Geography
Gilling West is located on the B6274 road that links nearby Richmond with the A66 trunk road and eventually continues on to Staindrop in County Durham. Nearby settlements to Gilling include Hartforth north-west, Whashton to the west, and the market town of Richmond to the south. Gilling Beck flows through the village. Further upstream the same watercourse is known as Hartforth Beck as it passes through the settlement of Hartforth, whilst downstream of Gilling West it becomes Skeeby Beck before its ultimate confluence with the River Swale just west of Brompton-on-Swale. The village is also prone to major flooding.
Demography
For the parish of Gilling with Hartforth and Sedbury:
In 2015, North Yorkshire County Council estimated the population of the parish to have fallen to 510.
Community and culture
Education for the children of the village is provided by three primary schools in nearby Richmond (CE, Methodist and St Mary's). There was formerly a village school known as Gilling School, built in 1847, but it has since closed and been redeveloped into housing. Pupils receive secondary education at Richmond School & Sixth Form College. The village has two pubs, the Angel Inn and the White Swan, and had a post office/village shop until its closure in 2013.
Notable people
Ralph Hedley, painter
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