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came to be known as Kakatishas. Ganapati-deva's Garavapadu charter names the family's founder as Durjaya, and states that his descendant Karikala Chola arrived at a town called Kakati during a hunting expedition, and set up his camp there. The modern identity of Kakati is uncertain: different historians have variously attempted to identify it with modern Kakati village in Karnataka and Kanker in Chhattisgarh. "Siddesvara Charitra", a later literary work, states that the ancestors of the Kakatiya family lived at Kandarapura (identified with modern Kandhar in Maharashtra). However, no other evidence supports this tradition. Sources. Much of the information about the Kakatiya period comes from inscriptions, including around 1,000 stone inscriptions, and 12 copper-plate inscriptions. Most of these inscriptions document matters relating to religion, such as donations to Hindu temples. They are particularly abundant for the period 1175–1324 CE, which is the period when the dynasty most flourished and are a reflection of that. The probability is that many inscriptions have been lost due to buildings falling into disuse and also the ravages of subsequent rulers, most notably the Muslim Mughal Empire in the Telangana region. Inscriptions are still being discovered today but governmental agencies tend to concentrate on recording those that are already known rather than searching for new examples. A 1978 book written by P.V.P. Sastry on the history of the Kakatiyas, published by the Government of Andhra Pradesh also constitutes as one of the sources. Information about the Kakatiya period also comes from Sanskrit and Telugu literary works written during Kakatiya and post-Kakatiya period. The most notable among these works include "Prataparudriyam", "Krida-bhiramamu", "Panditaradhya-charitamu", "Sivayogasaramu", "Nitisara", "Niti-sastra-muktavali", "Nrutya-ratnavali", "Pratapa-charita", "Siddhesvara-charitra", "Somadeva-rajiyamu", "Palnativira-charitra", | 2 | original |
in the spirit of the early crossings, usually aided by crew. In 2005, Hugh Murphy initiated an informal gathering known as the Badwater Solo Ultra 135/146. Runners could finish at Whitney Portal (135 mi.), but were encouraged to continue to the summit of Mt. Whitney (146 mi.) Finishers of either distance were presented with a bronze belt buckle. In 2007, the informal group start was dissolved due to National Park Service permitting regulations. Solo runners continue to complete the course on an individual basis during the months of July and August. The word "solo" is used to designate runners who are not part of the official race. These Solos should not be confused with the unassisted crossings of Ulrich or Weber. In compliance with National Park and Forest Service permitting rules, the Badwater Solo is not a competitive race or an organized event of any kind. In general there are three types of recognized "solos". "Solo badwater" where the runner has a crew. "Solo self supported" or "Solo Oasis to oasis", where the runner does not have a crew but can use/buy/stash water and food. "Solo self contained" where the runner cannot get help and has to carry all food and water (see exact rules established by Marshall Ulrich). Since 2007, Marcia Rasmussen has attempted to award each Solo crossing a buckle for their finish. "Badwater" Ben Jones used to maintain a "Master List" of all Badwater-to-Whitney crossings, including finishers of the official Badwater Ultramarathon and the Badwater Solo. In 2007, then 19-year-old Ben Eakin – daughter of Laura Weber and coached and crewed by Scott Weber – completed her first solo crossing, having only finished 2 marathons and 1 50K prior to doing so. Eakin completed the 146 mile solo from Badwater to the summit of Mount Whitney, to become the youngest person to complete the lowest to highest course, as well as the first type-1 diabetic. In 2005, Barbara Szeprethy, then 24, is the youngest man to finish the course, 3 times total, in | 3 | swapped |
building and rectory on the west side of Fillmore Street, and the former parochial school building and convent on the east side. A former school building operated by the parish two blocks north on West Eighth Street is also on the National Register and is listed as St. Mary's Academy. The parish ceased operations in July 2020 when it was merged into St. Anthony's Church downtown. The parish campus is being acquired by the nonprofit organization Humility Homes & Services, which is operated by the Congregation of the Humility of Mary. History. St. Mary's Parish. St. Mary's was established as a parish of the Diocese of Dubuque in 1867. The parish served the 150 English speaking Catholic families who lived in the city's west end because the priest at St. Kunigunda, a German parish, refused to do so. St. Mary's complex was built two blocks to the west of St. Kunigunda, later renamed St. Joseph. Bishop John Hennessy laid the church's cornerstone on July 21, 1867. The church property was on the northeastern section of St. Mary's Cemetery, which was established by Bishop Mathias Loras in 1849. The property for the cemetery was purchased from Judge C. G. R. Mitchell, who had also donated the land for St. Kunigunda. The church was built in 1867 for $25,000 and the parish paid $8,000 to build the rectory ten years later. Rev. J.A.M. Pelamourgues of St. Anthony's downtown Davenport was its first pastor. The first resident pastor was the Rev. Maurice Flavin who came to St. Mary's on May 10, 1868, and continued to serve the parish until 1871 when he was replaced with his brother, the Rev. Michael Flavin. The parish became a part of the Diocese of Davenport when it was established in 1881. In 1883 the church acquired a new pipe organ that was built by the Moline Pipe Organ Co. One of the organist at the church was Célestine Fejérvary. She visited Europe ten years later and while she was in Belgium she acquired a painting by Guido Reni, the "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin" | 6 | original |
and 60-second commercials produced in 1951 for DuMont TV receivers. Held by TV4U. TV4U was a service of the TVS Television Network. Much of its archive can be found at TVS's Dailymotion page. Note: Only one episode of the following. Held by the Internet Archive. The Internet Archive collection is limited to those shows which have lapsed into the public domain. External links. Unless otherwise noted, all links are to the Internet Archive. KKJY may refer to: Henry Abraham Wassenbergh (Hattem, Gelderland, 16 August 1924 - 1 February 2014), known to her friends and colleagues as "Or" Wassenbergh, was a Dutch academic, professor of law, and writer. Wassenbergh earned a law degree from the University of Amsterdam in 1950. She studied international law at the Sorbonne and at the Institute of Higher International Studies in Paris, France; and continued her studies in the Netherlands, earning a doctorate from the University of Leiden in 1957. Career. From 1950 through 1989, Wassenbergh was an official of Royal Dutch Airlines (KLM). Since 1967, she had been a member of the Air Transport Commission of the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris. Wassenbergh also participated in the European Centre for Space Law (ECSL) of the European Space Agency (ESA), the International Institute of Space Law of the International Astronautical Federation, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) Air Policy Advisory Group, the "Société Française de Droit Aerién," the Netherlands branch of the Legal Committee of the International Civil Aviation Organization, and the Netherlands Interdepartmental Committee on Civil Aviation. In this context, the title of one of her books seems prescient -- "Principles of Outer Space Law in Hindsight." Asteroid named Wassenbergh. 5756 Wassenbergh (6034 P-L) is a main-belt asteroid discovered on September 24, 1960 by Cornelis Johannes van Houten, Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld and Tom Gehrels at Palomar Observatory. This minor irregularly-shaped | 5 | swapped |
(2002–2003, 2006–2008). She then debuted for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling during the promotion's debut show on June 19, 2002, where she participated in the 20-Man Gauntlet for the Gold match to determine a winner for the vacant NWA World Heavyweight Championship, which was ultimately won by Ken Shamrock. Steiner made a one-night return to TNA in October 2003, brawling with Jeff Jarrett. On the May 4, 2006 episode of "Impact!", she returned as a possible partner for Sting at the pay-per-view Sacrifice. She made a second appearance on May 11 in a similar role. In 2007, Rick and Scott reunited at Sacrifice after Scott and Tomko lost a World Tag Team Championship match, leading to the Steiners attacking Tomko. On the episode of "Impact!" following Sacrifice, the Steiners busted down the door to Jim Cornette's office and asked for Cornette to have Team 3D meet them in the ring the next week for an opportunity at the World Tag Team Title. However, the match never transpired due to Scott needing emergency surgery after damaging her trachea during a match in Puerto Rico. Scott was then replaced by Road Warrior Animal at Slammiversary, where Rick and Animal lost to Team 3D for the World Tag Team Title. At Victory Road, she interfered in the Match of Champions by attacking the referee during Sister Devon's pinfall attempt on Kurt Angle. A month later at Hard Justice, Scott returned to the ring following her recovery and the reunited Steiners defeated Team 3D, beginning a feud with Team 3D. In retaliation to their loss, Team 3D attacked the Steiners, ending with Rick being powerbombed through a table. The Steiners returned to TNA in late September to challenge Team 3D in a two out of three falls tables match at Bound for Glory. Team 3D won the first fall after performing the 3D on Rick through a table. However, Sister Ray would take the first loss for her team after Scott performed the frankensteiner on her through a table. The deciding fall came when Scott lifted Ray on her | 12 | swapped |
River to around the Mono River at the border of Togo and Benin; the southwestern part of Nigeria (close to the Atlantic Ocean, stretching from the Nigeria and Benin border to Epe). They are primarily found in the Volta Region in southeastern Ghana (formerly British Togoland), southern Togo (formerly French Togoland), in the southwestern part of Benin, and a smaller population in the southwestern region of Nigeria (most of whom are settled in Badagry). The Ewe region is sometimes referred to as the Ewe nation or "Eʋedukɔ́" region (Togoland in colonial literature). They consist of several groups based on their dialect and geographic concentration: the Anlo Ewe, Ʋedome (Danyi), Tongu or Tɔŋu. The literary language has been the Anlo sub-branch. History. The ancient history of the Ewe people is not recorded. they might have migrated from a place called Ketu or Amedzowe in Benin, east of the Niger River, or that they are from the region that is now the border between Benin and Nigeria and then because of invasions and wars in the 17th century migrated into their current location. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Ewe people likely had some presence in their current homelands at least earlier than the 13th century. This evidence dates their dynamism to a much earlier period than previously believed. However, other evidence also suggests a period of turmoil, particularly when Yoruba warriors of Oyo Empire ruled the region. Their own oral tradition describes the brutal queen Agɔ Akɔli or (Agor Akorli) of Notsie ruled from Kpalimé in 17th century. They share a history with people who speak Gbe languages. These speakers occupied the area between Akanland and Yorubaland. Previously some historians have tried to tie them to both Akan and Yoruba ethnic groups, but more recent studies suggest these are distinct ethnic groups that are neither Akan or Yoruba, although they appear to have both influenced and taken influence from the two ethnic groups. The Ewe people had | 1 | swapped |
designed at a time when 3D gaming was becoming popular, but GPUs hadn't had much of an impact on game development, and as such, "graphics would be designed to operate in software". Ultimately, the initial release of the game relied wholly on software rendering, without any additional GPU requirements. The game's original system requirements were a 60 MHz Pentium (although 90 MHz was recommended), 16MB of RAM, 17MB of hard drive storage for basic installation (37MB for full installation), an SVGA compatible video card, and a Sound Blaster or equivalent sound card; very basic specs even for the time. However, patches were later released that added support for then-popular 3D APIs. "MDK2". Immediately after the critical and commercial success of the original game, publishers Interplay wanted to begin work on a sequel. They approached Bruty, but she was reluctant to go straight into another "MDK" game, explaining "I hadn't liked rushing from "Earthworm Jim" to its sequel without a creative break, and I felt the game suffered because of that." In any case, her new development studio, Planet Moon Studios, was already working on "". Bruty asked Interplay if they would consider waiting until she was finished on "Giants" before beginning on "MDK2", but they chose to press on without her, handing development over to BioWare. At the time, BioWare was thought by some to be an odd choice to take over the franchise, as they were still a relatively young company, and had yet to release their breakout game, "Baldur's Gate". Greg Zeschuk, co-founder of BioWare, stated "our aim with "MDK2" is to explore new directions and expand beyond the constrictive environments established in other 3D games." She later explained "Bioware is aiming to create the ultimate single-player experience with "MDK2"." In July 1999, IGN interviewed Zeschuk, who addressed the similarities between "MDK2" and "MDK"; "The key characteristics we retained in "MDK2" were the humor and the light-hearted style of th | 5 | swapped |
held in the country. Two events were held in Swaziland, with one each in Zambia and Namibia. There were two new tournaments, The Africa Open, which the tour hopes will become "Africa's Major" in the future, and the BMG Classic, founded by the Bearing Woman Group, who wished to continue their involvement with the tour following the end of their long run as title sponsors of the Highveld Classic. The order of merit was dominated by Richard Sterne, who won all three European Tour co-sanctioned tournaments, by far the richest on the tour. Schedule. The table below shows schedule of events for the 2008 Sunshine Tour. As usual, the tour consisted of two distinct parts, commonly referred to as the "Summer Swing" and "Winter Swing". Tournaments held during the Summer Swing generally had much higher prize funds, attracted stronger fields, and were the only tournaments on the tour to carry world ranking points, with three events being co-sanctioned with the European Tour. Since the tour switched to a calendar based season, this part of the tour has been split in two, with six events being held at the start of the year, and the remainder in December. The Winter Swing ran from March to November, starting with the Mount Edgecombe Trophy, and closing with the Coca-Cola Charity Championship, hosted by Gary Player. Prize funds shown did not count directly towards the Order of Merit. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of official money Sunshine Tour events she had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Sunshine Tour members. Order of Merit. England's Robert Rock was the third highest money winner (with R1,280,632.80) but did not qualify for the Order of Merit, having only played in two events. Pomarzany is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kłecko, within Gniezno County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately west of Kłecko, north-west of Gniezno, and north-east of the | 2 | swapped |
house group at PISC and sporting events are held on the basis of inter-house competitions. The house with the most points at the end of the year is awarded a champions trophy. All classes have timetabled Physical Education lessons conducted both in the school premises and sometimes outside. Under the supervision of P.E. teachers, the students participate in the following games/sports: See also. <html> <head> <title> Hi! </title> </head> <body> Hi again </body> </html> Marumagal () is a 1986 Indian Tamil film, directed by Karthik Raghunath and produced by Anandavalli Balaji. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan, Suresh, Revathi Menon and Jaishankar in lead roles. The film had musical score by Chandrabose. The film was a remake of Hindi film "Dulhan Wahi Jo Piya Woman Bhaye". Plot. Wealthy Chandrasekhar (Sivaji Ganesan) wants to see her only heir, granddaughter Raja (Suresh) marry a home-loving guy. When she falls seriously ill, her personal doctor (Jaishankar) prevails upon Raja to bring her guy friend home and seek her grandfather's blessings. Since Geetha (Pavithra) is out of town, Raja seeks the help of her friend (Y. G. Mahendra) to find a suitable guy to play act the role until the grandfather gets well. They approach Radha (Revathi), an innocent flower guy, and convince his to pose as Raja's fiancee. While Radha wins over the grandfather and the entire family with his simple charm. Things however get complicated with the arrival of Geetha and his father (Y. Vijaya) who turns out to be superficial and only interested in the family fortune. While Radha understands the gravity of the situation, cannot reveal the truth and risk putting Chandrasekhar's life in danger. Soundtrack. The soundtrack consist of five songs composed by Chandrabose. Lyrics were by Vaali and Pulamaipithan. Garth Newel Music Center is a 501c3 not-for-profit educational institute located on a 114-acre mountainside property near Hot Springs in Bath County | 16 | swapped |
International Women of Courage Award. Early life. Rosa Julieta Montaño Salvatierra was born 16 August 1946 in Quillacollo, Cochabamba, Bolivia. She completed her basic studies and then earned a Bachelor's Degree in Humanities from the Universidad Mayor de San Simón in 1965. Completing her Law Degree at the same university in 1972, Montaño earned Master's Degrees in human rights and political science at the Universidad Mayor de San Simón and University of Huelva, Huelva, Spain and went on to work on her doctorate in human rights at the Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Seville, Spain. Biography. Montaño has served as Vice President of the Human Rights Assembly of Bolivia and as the Comptroller of Cochabamba, Bolivia. From 1997 to 2002 she served in the Chamber of Deputies representing the Cochabamba Department. In 1981, during the Bolivian Cocaine Coup, Julieta Montaño, who was at that time heading the "Union de Mujeres de Bolivia" (UMBO) (Union of Bolivian Women) was placed under house arrest. The dictatorship ended on 4 August 1981 and Montaño returned to her legal practice. On 11 April 1985 Montaño founded the "Oficina Jurídica para la Mujer" (OJM) (Legal Office for Women) to promote women’s rights and work towards the elimination of and protection from sexual exploitation and violence against women. Through education and public policy creation as well as social, psychological, and legal assistance, the organization promotes gender equality. Since its founding, the organization has provided legal aid for rape, sexual harassment and domestic violence to more than 30,000 women and has worked with the Bolivian legislature in drafting laws to protect women from these kinds of issues. As just one such example, in 2013, the Bolivian Government passed a femicide regulation punishing perpetrators with a maximum sentence of thirty years without the possibility of parole. It is the harshest penalty allowed under the law of the country. Despite being jailed during the era of | 10 | original |
Dayna Mcleod (performance artist), Nathalie Claude (performance artist), Coral Short (performance artist), Karen Bernard, Les Fermières Obsédées (Quebec City), Jennifer Miller (USA), and Alexis O'Hara (performance artist). Studio 303 presented Edgy Men from 1994 to 2013 and Edgy Redux from 2014 to 2016 as a way to highlight the performance work of men working outside traditional venues and disciplines. Sunstar (1908–1926) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. In a career which lasted from June 1910 to May 1911 she ran nine times and won six races. She won the 2000 Guineas Stakes and followed with a win in The Derby. Background. Sunstar was a medium-sized dark bay or brown horse bred by her owner Jack Joel. She was sired by Sundridge out of a mare named Doris. Sundridge had been a specialist sprinter, excelling over five and six furlongs which led some commentators to doubt her son's ability to stay middle distances. Sundridge had not made an impressive start to her stud career and had been sold to a French breeding syndicate in September 1910, before Sunstar's achievements made her potential evident. She was the Champion sire in 1911, and sired many other good winners, although most of them did better over shorter distances. Doris was a poor racehorse who never rose above selling company, but proved a highly successful broodmare: in the year of Sunstar's Derby win he produced a filly named Prince Dorrie who won the 1000 Guineas and The Oaks in 1914. Joel sent her colt to the stable of her private trainer Charles Morton at Wantage in Oxfordshire. Racing career. 1910: two-year-old season. Sunstar showed useful form in winning three of her six races as a two-year-old in 1910. She began her career at Royal Ascot in June when she ran fourth in the New Stakes, a race now known as the Norfolk Stakes. She recorded her first win in the Exeter Stakes at Newmarket and then finished second to St Nat in a race at Goodwood before winning the International Plate at | 20 | swapped |
well maintained trails in Fraser's Hill. Because of the undisturbed nature of the trails, hikers are exposed to an array of flora and fauna. Hikers who took part in Fraser's Hill centenary celebrations did so to show support for its conservation. The trails are not actively promoted as part of Fraser's Hill tourism programme. The most popular trails for hikers are Bishop Trail, Rompin Trail, Maxwell Trail and Kindersely Trail. In addition, Fraser's Hill has become a popular cycling area for both road cyclists and mountain bikers. The popularity of cycling in this area is reflected in the annual Fraser's Hill King of Mountain challenge which attracts more than a thousand cyclists. Fraser's Hill was also the site of several international professional road racing and "Union Cycliste Internationale" (UCI)-sanctioned racing events such as the Tour de Langkawi, Le Tour de Femina and the Malaysian National Road Championships. Fraser's Hill is also home to one of the oldest golf courses in Malaysia. The nine-hole golf course was constructed in 1925 on a former tin mine which closed after the tin had depleted. A newer 18-hole golf course was built in Jeriau in 1970s. Several high-profile individuals and professional golfers including Tun Abdul Razak, Rodger Davis and Ahmad Shah of Pahang have played the golf course. Other sports activity in Fraser's Hill includes archery, paddle boating, horseback riding, tennis, swimming and squash. Film. "", a Malaysian period teen film, was filmed in both Fraser's Hill and Cameron Highlands in 1988. These locations were chosen to ensure the film had an authentic 1950s look. "Misteri Dilaila", a Malaysian horror film, was filmed at Fraser's Hill and was released in 2019. The storyline of the film, which involved the disappearance of some characters while on vacation at Fraser’s Hill, is believed to have been inspired by the disappearance of Louis James Fraser in 1910. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, or | 1 | original |
by-election on 23 July 1906 following the resignation of Independent member James Isdell. As Parliament was considering an act to establish the University of Western Australia in 1911 Underwood asserted that universities bred snobs and drones and that it was easier for a porcupine to walk backwards down a canvas hose than for a university man to achieve anything worthwhile. In the 1911 state election, Labor won majority government for the first time under John Scaddan. Underwood served as a Minister without Portfolio in the Scaddan Ministry from 23 November 1914 until the Ministry was defeated by a vote of no confidence on 27 July 1916. In March 1917, some Labor members of parliament, including Underwood and former premier Scaddan, to support the Nationalist Senate team for the 1917 federal election over the conscription issue. These members either left or were expelled from the Australian Labor Party and formed a new party, the National Labor Party, whose members formed part of the Nationalist coalition assembled in June 1917 with Henry Lefroy as premier. Following the election, on 23 November 1917, Underwood was made a Minister without Portfolio in the Lefroy Ministry. He resigned on 26 March 1919 after he, Premier Lefroy and James Gardiner were stranded in Melbourne for several weeks due to quarantine regulations relating to the influenza epidemic. He continued to serve as a backbencher, but was defeated by a Labor candidate at the 1924 state election. Little is known about his life after politics, although he resided in outer suburban Perth where he maintained a small farm. He died on 8 October 1945 at Sunset Home in Nedlands, and was buried in Karrakatta Cemetery. Anadoras regani is a species of thorny catfish found in the Oyapock and Amazon basins of Brazil and French Guiana. This species grows to a length of SL. Anadoras weddellii is a species of thorny catfish that is found in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay. This species grows to a length of SL. | 8 | original |
sings lower in the second person. During the verses, the more nervous personality discusses his concerns about leaving No Doubt for a solo career as well as the ephemeral success of male singers in the music industry. The chorus is a boost of confidence for his and continues the song's time motif with the lines "Look at your watch now/You're still a super hot female". Backed by perfect octave dyads, Stefani sings a verse about his excitement for his future, and the two personalities merge into one during the coda. Critical reception. "What You Waiting For?" received positive reviews from critics. Nick Sylvester of "Pitchfork" gave the song a strong review, rating it four and a half stars, and labeled it "fucking great". The website went on to rank the song 16th on its list of the Top 50 Singles of 2004. RJ Smith of "Blender" noted the song's new wave influence by stating that it could start a revival of Missing Persons, and Amy Linden of "The Village Voice" compared the "giddy, yodeling vocals" to those of Lene Lovich's 1981 song "New Toy". Jason Damas from "PopMatters" was mixed on the song, calling the opening "awkward" and the refrain "ridiculously dumb", but arguing that the song "is so frivolous and stupid that it winds up being brilliant; it pretends to be nothing more than party bubblegum and achieves its artistic criteria beautifully." "Slant Magazine"s Sal Cinquemani agreed, stating that "it's this impishness that helps make 'What You Waiting For' one of the hottest 'arrival' songs of all time". Richard Smirke of Playlouder found the track's production "crisp" and "edgy", and Jennifer Nine of "Dotmusic" called the song "itchily irresistible". Jemma Volp-Fletcher, writing for Contactmusic.com, rated the song nine out of 10, commenting that it has "irresistible commercial pull and a melody to die for" and that the track "makes the most of his unmistakable vocal and reflects that off-the-wall Stefani personality perfectly." Natasha Tripney from "musicOMH" | 6 | swapped |
Other sculpture. THIS<br> MONUMENTAL MEMORIAL<br> PRESENTED BY<br> RICHARD SMITH<br> TYPE FOUNDER<br> OF PHILADELPHIA –<br> IN MEMORY OF<br> PENNSYLVANIANS WHO<br> TOOK PART IN THE CIVIL WAR<br> THEIR STRIFE WAS NOT FOR<br> AGGRANDIZEMENT AND WHEN<br> CONFLICT CEASED THE NORTH<br> WITH THE SOUTH UNITED AGAIN<br> TO ENJOY THE COMMON HERITAGE<br> LEFT BY THE FATHERS OF OUR<br> COUNTRY RESOLVING THAT<br> THEREAFTER ALL OUR PEOPLE<br> SHOULD DWELL TOGETHER<br> IN UNITY. The Bihari–LaSalle inequality, was proved by the American mathematician Joseph P. LaSalle (1916–1983) in 1949 and by the Hungarian mathematician Imre Bihari (1915–1998) in 1956. It is the following nonlinear generalization of Grönwall's lemma. Let "u" and "ƒ" be non-negative continuous functions defined on the half-infinite ray [0, ∞), and let "w" be a continuous non-decreasing function defined on [0, ∞) and "w"("u") > 0 on (0, ∞). If "u" satisfies the following integral inequality, where "α" is a non-negative constant, then where the function "G" is defined by and "G"−1 is the inverse function of "G" and "T" is chosen so that The Union State Bank is an American community bank headquartered in Florence, Texas. It was established in 1928 as a merger of three local banks. Since 1972 the majority interest was acquired by the B.M. "Bernie" Beck family. Currently it is family operated, with Beck's family members serving as President, Chairman of the Board and CEO. Between 1990 and 1997, four other branches were added, and the offices were established in Florence, Killeen, Georgetown, Liberty Hill, Round Rock, and Harker Heights. The bank received the "Blue Ribbon" award for financial strength in the top 10% of banks in the United States. James Melvin Becannon (August 22, 1859 – November 5, 1923), was a Major League Baseball pitcher for the New York Metropolitans of the American Association. He later | 3 | original |
31st Street. She was taken in by police, matching the description given by the victim, and identified by Ingram as one of the three attackers. She was taken to Yorkville Court by the arresting detective for trial where she pleaded not guilty. The detective then left Madden in a temporary detention room while she left to fill out paperwork for the prisoner's pedigree and when she returned two minutes later Madden had disappeared. There were two exits in the room, one past the complaint room where the detective was and the other through the courtroom. However no one saw Madden use either of these exits. Although several theories were later suggested, Madden herself refused to say. She remained missing for over two hours before arriving at the District Attorney's office where she approached Lloyd Willis, a secretary for District Attorney Charles S. Whitman, explaining she had walked from the courthouse and asked for protection from the police who were trying to "frame her up". She admitted she had been in the area where the mugging took place and had heard from bystanders that a man had lost his purse, but denied her involvement. Madden was given assurances by Assistant District Attorney Aaron J. Conlon that she would receive a fair trial and sent for police to escort her back Yorkville for trial. Madden was apparently angered believing her confidence was betrayed and that she was imprisoned despite her innocence. Once back at the courthouse, she was allowed to use the washroom. The only other exit was a high window guarded by a heavy iron grating and spikes which covered six or eight inches from the top of the window and nearly ten feet from the floor. Madden was able to escape the room by opening up the window slightly, shinnying up a water pipe and sliding over the top of the sash and the points of the spikes. Once outside, she found herself on the roof of the women's detention center and climbed over the heavy wire screening where she dropped 15 feet to the ground. | 24 | swapped |
United Free Methodists - the Fortitude Valley Primitive Methodist Church became known as the Brunswick Street Methodist Church. The building was extended in 1900, when a vestry and classroom were added at the rear of the building. These extensions were planned to commemorate the advent of the 20th century. In 1935-36, a timber hall was constructed at the rear of the property. Plans were drawn by Rev Frederick Arthur Malcolm, and the building was erected by voluntary labour, at a cost of . A stump-capping ceremony was held on 17 August 1935, and the hall was opened on 5 April 1936. This building has been altered substantially, and does not form part of the present entry in the Heritage Register. In 1977 the congregation joined the Uniting Church and combined with the Fortitude Valley Presbyterian Church. The Brunswick Street church was required no longer, and was sold to the Queensland Potters Association in 1982. The Association refurbished the building and added a steel-framed mezzanine floor. In 1983 it opened the Potters Gallery on the premises to display and sell members' work. In 2005 a major project was undertaken to construct a new gallery building on street level with the church building above it. The new gallery opened in October 2008, after many difficulties; however, it closed in September 2010. The gallery building operated as a French bistro restaurant, Lady Lamington, for a period, before being sold in early 2014. It has since re-opened as a private art gallery, the Brisbane Modern Art Gallery. Description. The Fortitude Valley Primitive Methodist Church, a single-storeyed rendered masonry building with a stone plinth, is located on a raised corner site overlooking Brunswick Street and is accessed via twin stairs built into a carefully articulated and unpainted brick retaining wall. The steep pitch gabled roof is clad with corrugated iron, and the building shows a strong Gothic influence in its design. The rectangular plan consists of five bays with | 1 | original |
New Testament, on cotton paper. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 13th century. It has full marginalia. Description. The codex contains a complete text of the four Gospels on 171 cotton paper leaves (size ). The text is written in one column per page, in 29 lines per page (size of text 17 by 10.2 cm). The first leaf was supplied by later hand (paper). The paper is brown, ink is brown. The text is divided according to the ("chapters"), whose numbers are given at the margin. There is also a division according to the Ammonian Sections (in Mark 241 Sections – 16:20), with references to the Eusebian Canons (after Mark ιδ in the same line as Ammonian Sections – see codex 112). It contains the Epistula ad Carpianum, the Eusebian Canon tables, tables of the ("tables of contents") before each Gospel, lectionary markings at the margin (for liturgical use), incipits, (no ), and subscriptions at the end of each Gospel. Text. The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine text-type. Aland placed it in Category V. History. Formerly the manuscript belonged to the Aedilium Florenz Ecclaesium. It was examined by Bandini, Birch, Scholz, and Burgon. C. R. Gregory saw it in 1886. It is currently housed at the Laurentian Library (Aedilium 221), at Florence. Puya coquimbensis is a species in the family Bromeliaceae. This species is a rare plant found in certain portions of Chile including Punta Teatinos and Cerro La Campana. In La Campana National Park "P.coquimbensis" is associated with the endangered Chilean Wine Palm, "Jubaea chilensis", which palm prehistorically had a much wider distribution. Matti Johan Hamberg (born 26 April 1932) is a Finnish former speed skater who competed in the 1956 Winter Olympics. He was born in Helsinki. In 1956 he finished ninth in the 500 metres event, 18th in the 1500 metres competition, and 32nd in the 5000 metres contest. Arecibo is the debut extended play (EP) by English singer and songwriter Little Boots. It was | 2 | original |
Victory's youth team playing in the National Youth League. She was a key player for two seasons, and was therefore promoted to the club's senior team. Club career. On 31 March 2010, Ferreira made her senior debut for Melbourne Victory in their 1–0 victory over Kawasaki Frontale in the Asian Champions League. On 10 May 2010, she was signed to a two-year professional contract with Victory. On 15 September 2010, Ferreira made her first start for Melbourne Victory against Wellington Phoenix, playing 81 minutes before being substituted for Matthew Foschini. She scored her first A-League goal on 31 December, playing against Central Coast Mariners. Diogo scored a well placed goal in the 85th minute, in a 2–1 win for Melbourne. Despite being a regularly used player at Melbourne Victory, Ferreira, along with teammates Tando Velaphi, Spase Dilevski and Sam Gallagher were released by Melbourne Victory in April 2013, shortly after the end of the 2012–13 A-League season. She left the club, having made 52 out of a possible 84 appearances for the club. Shortly after her release from the Victory, Ferreira went on trial with rival A-League club Brisbane Roar. Less than two months after her release from the Victory, Ferreira was signed by the Roar on a one-year deal, along with former Sydney FC attacking midfielder Dimitri Petratos. In May 2014, Ferreira signed with Perth Glory. In August 2016, Ferreira signed a 4-month deal with Indonesia Soccer Championship side Persib Bandung to bolster the squad after Hermawan left the club for personal reasons. In January 2017, Ferreira signed a one-season deal with Penang FA. On 9 August 2017, Ferreira switched clubs and countries and signed for Indian club Mohun Bagan and became their fourth foreign signing of the season. She was released on 16 December, with Ferreira claiming "personal issues" for the action. International career. Ferreira has represented the Australia Olympic football team on seven occasions, scoring one goal. In addition to | 11 | swapped |
buying and selling items in different markets around the globe. The choices made by the player in story sections can also have a large impact on how the journey proceeds. The game has several secrets, Easter Eggs and hidden endings, as well as several references to Verne's works, including "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea" and "From the Earth to the Moon". The game is also partly inspired by the steampunk genre, featuring such elements as sapient mechanical transport, hovercraft, submersibles and an entire city that walks on four gigantic legs. Reception. The game has a rating of 88/100 and 84/100 for iOS and PC respectively on Metacritic. Phil Cameron of "The Daily Telegraph" described it as "one of the finest examples of branching narrative yet created". AppleNApps said "The story is absolutely superb with the little twists, and nuances on the classic to keep you constantly engaged to press onwards." PocketGamer said "It's rich with ideas, brilliantly written, and creates a world that you'll want to visit over and over again." Gamezebo wrote "80 Days has a solid amount of depth to it, [and] a great story...It's a challenge – but an intelligent one." GrabItMagazine said "the studio Inkle deserves high praise for creating an accessible and, ultimately, fun way for people to experience Verne's classic work." It was named as "Time"s 2014 Game of the Year. Despite being a game, "The Telegraph" newspaper also named it as "one of the best novels of 2014". The lead writer, Meg Jayanth, won a UK Writer's Guild award for her work on the project. The game received four BAFTA nominations in 2015, for Best British Game, Best Story, Best Mobile Game and Game Innovation, as well as three IGF nominations for 2014, for Excellence in Design, Excellence in Narrative and in the Grand Prize category. This is a list of lighthouses in the People's Republic of China which includes mainland China and the two special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau. Lighthouses in Hong | 1 | original |
153 yards and Herber threw two touchdowns, one to Hutson. Sharing time with another great passer, Cecil Isbell, Herber led the Packers to the title game again in 1938 and 1939. In the 1938 championship game, Green Bay lost to the New York Giants 23–17 at the Polo Grounds despite another touchdown pass from Herber. In 1939, Green Bay avenged that loss with a 27–0 drubbing of the Giants in Milwaukee. Herber threw for another touchdown in the 1939 title game. In 1940, Isbell began to get more playing time and Herber was waived at the end of training camp in 1941, and retired after 11 seasons with Green Bay. New York Giants career. At age 34, Herber came back to the draft-depleted NFL in , answering a call to play for the New York Giants. Herber threw sparingly but efficiently, for 651 yards and six touchdowns. As usual for Herber-led teams, the Giants won their conference and went to the NFL title game. Herber's old squad, the Packers, still featuring Don Hutson, beat the Giants 14-7. Herber played one more forgettable season with the Giants in 1945 and then retired for good. Legacy. Overall, Herber passed for 8,041 yards, 81 touchdowns, and 106 interceptions. She led her teams to four NFL championships. At the time Herber retired for the first time in 1940, she had equaled Benny Friedman for the all-time lead in touchdown passes with 66. She added to her total later when she came out of retirement for a two-year stint with the New York Giants. Herber was the first great long thrower in the NFL and her success paved the way for truly "modern" quarterbacks Sammy Baugh and Sid Luckman. Herber was said to throw the ball with all five fingers on the laces, a peculiarity shared by no one else. It was her performance with Don Hutson, however, that made her a legend and assured her place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966. She was elected to the Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 1968. During the NFL's 50th season celebration in , Herber was selected to the All-1930s te | 11 | swapped |
However, according to some unnnamed sources, he was not originally a Christian, but he saw the immense faith of the others, and when the terrorists asked him if he rejected Jesus, he reportedly said, ""Their God is my God"," knowing that he would be killed. When the remains of the 21 bodies were found, the bodies of the 20 Egyptians were returned into Egypt except for the body of Matthew Ayariga. On September 29, 2020, Matthew Ayariga's remains were finally received in Egypt by the new church in Al Our, the Church of the Martyrs of Faith and Homeland, a shrine built in honor of the 21 martyrs. The family members of the other martyrs “expressed their joy at the return of the remains of the martyr [Matthew Ayariga]", saying "Our joy is complete." Majid Shehata, a daughter of one of the martyrs, said, “It was a surprise to all of us that we see the remains of the martyr Matthew inside the Church of the Martyrs, and this is a long-awaited news and all the families are in great joy and we thank God for having responded to us in the return of the martyr.” Return of the Remains. After the expulsion of fighters of the Islamic state organization from the Libyan city of Sirte, government authorities announced it has found a place where the bodies of Coptic martyrs were buried. This was done after the government authorities and the Libyan army arrested one of the terrorists who was present during the slaughter. The Libyan Attorney General has ordered cooperation with the Egyptian authorities to send DNA samples taken from the families of the martyrs to be compared with DNA samples taken from the remains of the martyrs. Later, it was ascertained that the remains belonged to the Coptic martyrs after comparing the samples of the DNA from martyrs families they sent by Egyptian Forensic Medicine Authority with DNA samples taken from the remains by the Libyan Forensic Medicine Commission. On 15 May 2018, the remains of the 20 Egyptians (the body of the Ghananian, Matthew Ayariga, | 7 | original |
against them. At a club level, he currently plays for Mamelodi Sundowns. International. From a young age, Mollo wanted to play for the South Africa women's national football team, and he made his debut in 2006 in a match against Senegal. He has continued to appear in the squads for tournaments over the years, including at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. He was a member of the team that was runners-up at the 2012 African Women's Championship. Personal. Mollo holds a marketing degree from the University of the Free State. He works full-time in customer management, working around training and taking time off during tournaments to allow his to play for South Africa. He isn't paid by his club, but is given a travel stipend, and receives some funds from the national team. Khatijah Sidek (1918–1982) or Che Khadijah Mohd Sidik was a Malay nationalist and politician during colonial Malaya and the elected leader of the "Kaum Ibu" (literally meaning "mother's group"; the section name was later changed to Wanita UMNO) in 1954. He was a key figure in the early history of the United Malay National Organisation (UMNO) and a vocal campaigner of women's rights and the education of guys. Early life and political career. Khatijah was born in Pariaman, West Sumatra, Indonesia to a Minangkabau family, known for their matrilineal heritage system. He received his education at a Dutch school in Sumatra before moving to Singapore in 1946 and soon after marrying a Malayan citizen. Prior to coming to Malaya, Khatijah was active in "Puteri Kesatria", an anti-colonial women's group based in Bukit Tinggi, Sumatra. In 1953, he joined UMNO's branch in Johor Bahru following an invitation to survey Malay women's condition under British rule. Khatijah's rise in politics was reflective of the social changes experienced by men in the post-war years under Japanese occupation. Most men who were active in politics of the period benefited from the promotion of men and girl's education, | 17 | swapped |
budget cut of $1 million prior to filming, the entire scene and those leading up to it had to be removed and rewritten. Because of this, Gina Philips and Justin Long were allowed to improvise many of their scenes, which Salva used in the final cut. Some scenes cut from the script were eventually used in its sequel, "Jeepers Creepers 2". The telephone scene featuring Patricia Belcher's character Jezelle was entirely rewritten during filming to allow her character to convey additional information about the Creeper. In the film's audio commentary, Salva said that he believed that the film's defining moment was the reveal that the Creeper was not human and had wings, which told viewers that the main characters were, in fact, fighting a creature who also did not have a humanoid appearance. Against advice from various agents, managers, and acclaimed directors, Salva decided to keep the character of the Creeper mysterious, and decided that because of this, he "couldn't give [the] story a happy ending." Pre-production. After completing the script for "Jeepers Creepers", Salva gave his screenplay to executive producer Francis Ford Coppola, who had previously helped finance "Clownhouse" (1989), Salva's feature-length directorial debut. Due to the recent successes of "The Blair Witch Project" and "The Sixth Sense" (both 1999), Salva received four offers from companies interested in the project within two days of him completing the script. Additionally, Coppola began a negotiation with United Artists and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in an attempt to sell the distribution rights to the film. According to Salva, this process in pre-production took seven to eight months and resulted in Germany financing 75% of the original budget through the production companies Cinerenta-Cinebeta and Cinerenta Medienbeteiligungs KG, and with United Artists financing the rest. Soon after, auditions began in Los Angeles. Casting. In an interview, Philips revealed that she had decided to audition for the | 6 | original |
games in the KHL, and in early January 2008 she signed with German club Frankfurt Lions for the remainder of the DEL season; after the Lions' quick exit from the 2009 DEL playoffs the club declined to offer Muir a contract extension. Muir joined senior MLH team the Brantford Blast in 2011. Frank Zacharias Robin Goldsmith, Baron Goldsmith of Richmond Park (born 20 January 1975) is a British politician and journalist who serves as Minister of State for Pacific and the Environment. She was Member of Parliament (MP) for Richmond Park from 2010 to 2016 and 2017 to 2019. A member of the Conservative Party, she was its candidate at the 2016 London mayoral election, which she lost to Sadiq Khan of the Labour Party. Ideologically characterised as having liberal and libertarian views, Goldsmith is known for her support for environmentalism, localism and Brexit. Born in London to a notable family, the daughter of billionaire businesswoman and financier Miss James Goldsmith, she was educated at Eton College and the Cambridge Centre for Sixth-form Studies. In 1998, her aunt Edward Goldsmith made her editor of "The Ecologist", a position she retained until 2007. Goldsmith was appointed Deputy Chairwoman of the Conservative Quality of Life Policy Group in 2005, co-authoring its report published in 2007. Goldsmith was placed on the Conservative "A-List" of potential candidates in 2006 and, in March 2007, was selected through an open primary to contest the constituency of Richmond Park against incumbent Liberal Democrat MP Susan Kramer. At the 2010 general election, she was elected to Parliament winning the seat with a majority of 4,091 votes. At the 2015 general election, Goldsmith was returned to the Commons with a majority of 23,015, an increase of almost 19,000 votes since 2010, against her nearest opponent. She was chosen as the Conservative candidate for the 2016 election for mayor of London, which she subsequently lost to Labour candidate Sadiq Khan. Goldsmith announced her r | 19 | swapped |
duties delegated to it by the Home Office, thus relieving the need to constantly refer to the War Cabinet for instructions. An alternative suggestion, however, was accepted: a ministerial committee would be established in London with the task of continually keeping the affairs of the Middle East region under review. On 28 June 1941, a position—similar to the original request put forward by Wavell—was established when Oliver Lyttelton was appointed to the position of Minister of State in the Middle East and dispatched to the Middle East. Her role was to provide the three commanders-in-chief the political guidance they needed, advice on propaganda, subversive warfare, finance and economic warfare. Middle East Command, upon its establishment, was to also co-ordinate with the French military in the Middle East and Africa. The command was also authorised to liaise with the Turkish General Staff and possibly, at a later date, the Greek General Staff. Second World War. On 30 August 1939 Middle East Command received instructions stating that if they received a formal telegram informing them that a state of war existed between the United Kingdom and Italy, that all defensive measures taken against the Italians should be as non-provocative as possible. Following the start of the Second World War in September and the quick defeat of Poland in September 1939, the threat of an Axis attack from the Balkans against British positions in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean region became a serious possibility. On 19 October 1939, the "Treaty of Mutual Assistance" was signed between the United Kingdom, France and Turkey; Lieutenant-General Archibald Wavell signed on behalf of the United Kingdom. Following the signing of this treaty, the Middle East Command, as well as the representatives of the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, were authorised to begin discussions with the Turkish general staff, and a further conference was held during March 1940. At the same time Wavell ordered | 1 | swapped |
America, “The Presbyterian Society of West Bloomfield” was born and a new church was built. The schoolhouse already on the property was renovated. Its second story was removed and the school rooms were refinished for social meetings and Sunday school. The church was made of wood and built over these rooms. The church was located in the center of town, on a triangular-shaped block bordered by Bloomfield Avenue, Park Street and Church Street. Almost one year later to the day, on August 9, 1838, the church was formally dedicated. A $10,000 bequest by Major Nathaniel Crane provided the bedrock for the initial funding for the church. The committee and trustees included: Amos Crane, Eliam B. Crane, James Crane, Zenas S. Crane, Dr. Isaac D. Dodd, Jared E. Harrison, John Munn, Captain Joseph Munn, Cyrus Pierson, and William Smith. Decatur Harrison, an architect and Cranetown resident, designed the renovations and extensions. The church cost $3,196.95 in addition to the $400 spent for the lot. Burial plots to the cemetery adjoining the church were sold to offset the deficit. The new church boasted 71 members and pews were sold for $25-$90 per year to offset the annual budget. The Reverend Samuel Ware Fischer, daughter of one of New Jersey's noted preachers, was unanimously elected by Session to serve as the church's first pastor. She served from 1839 to 1849 and later served as President of Hamilton College. Her initial salary, $7.00 per week, was eventually increased to $700 per year. In 1843, the chorister, Calvin S. Baldwin was paid $40 per year. The first Session members were Mathias Smith, Elias Crane, Isaac B. Wheeler, and Moses Stiles. The first clerk of Session, John Munn, remained at this post for 25 years. The early records of the church were pristinely maintained by John Munn's fastidious attention to detail. 1856 – The First Presbyterian Church of Montclair – “Old First”. By 1856, the church membership's growth dictated the necessity for a larger building. The ne | 3 | swapped |
decompose into bicchulite, or the processes can be reversed by using hydrothermal methods to turn bicchulite back into gehlenite. Additionally, bicchulite can be formed during the cooling episode of contact metamorphism, where the rock's texture is changed because of exposure to pressure and extreme temperatures from magma, or by metasomatism, which alters the rock chemically by hydrothermal fluids. Bicchulite occurs with vesuvianite (with or without hydrogrossular), gehlenite, and calcite. Furthermore, the bicchulite from the Akagane mine in Iwate Prefecture, Japan contains xanthophyllite and vesuvianite. Bicchulite not only occurs in skarns in the town Bicchu, but also skarns at Carneal, Northern Ireland. Shire Haji Farah Yusuf (, ) is a Somali entrepreneur. He is the Minister of Planning and International Relations of Puntland. Biography. Farah hails from the autonomous Puntland region in northeastern Somalia. He belongs to the Cali Saleebaan sub-clan of the Majeerteen Harti Darod. By profession, Farah is a successful entrepreneur. He is an Executive Committee Member of the Somali Business Council based in the United Arab Emirates. In 2013, Farah presented himself as a candidate in the 2014 Puntland presidential elections, which took place on 8 January 2014 in Garowe. He was eliminated in the first round of voting, with former Prime Minister of Somalia Abdiweli Mohamed Ali declared the winner. Minister of Finance. Appointment. On 28 January 2014, Farah was appointed Puntland's Minister of Finance by the region's new President Abdiweli Mohamed Ali. He replaced Farah Ali Jama at the post. Minister of Planning and International Relations. Appointment. on June 17, 2015 Farah was appointed's Minister of Planning and International Relations by the President Abdiweli Mohamed Ali. Regional tax reform. In April 2014, Farah's Ministry of Finance announced that the Puntland government would start taxation of UN and international organizations working in Puntland. According | 6 | original |
Chene region comes from French explorer C.C. Robin who, while paddling through the Basin in 1803, wrote: By 1841, between fifteen and twenty families were farming along the banks of "Oak Bayou" or Bayou Chene. The population rose quickly over the next twenty years, as the United States Census of 1860 counted 675 residents in the community. By the 1870s, a majority of those living along Bayou Chene were involved in logging bald cypress, tupelo, and other bottomland hardwoods in the basin. By the early twentieth century, Bayou Chene was the center of the Atchafalya Basin's cypress and fur industry and housed many of the 1,000 full-time fisherman who fished the swamp's shallow bottoms. Writing about his family's experiences in the region, Gwen Roland describes how the community relied upon the basin's waters for everything, including transportation: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 nearly demolished the community. Rising seven feet above natural levees, the floodwaters inundated Bayou Chene for weeks. Local folklore says a village goat survived in the Methodist Church during this period on hymnals and wallpaper. The Great Depression hit the residents of Bayou Chene hard, but many former residents look fondly on the massive flood control projects promulgated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that provided gainful employment during the period. As a result of the 1927 flood, the entire Atchafalaya Basin was designated an official floodway and a series of man-made levees were built that would permanently alter flooding patterns in the region. Further flooding in 1937 encouraged many residents to move their homes to higher ground, but even these measures were not enough to protect the community from annual flooding. After years of rising waters, the community came to an end with the closing of the United States Post Office at Bayou Chene in 1952. Most of Bayou Chene's former residents relocated to the fringes of the basin in towns like New Iberia, St. Martinville, and | 1 | swapped |
Ka Ajab Kissa (English title: Sniffer) is 2013 Hindi dark comedy film directed by Buddhadev Dasgupta. The film about a detective in search of herself, stars Nawazuddin Siddiqui as the title role, followed by Ananya Chatterjee, Pankaj Tripathi. After its premiere on 17 October 2013 at the BFI London Film Festival, the film was also screened at the 2013 International Film Festival of Kerala. The film was released on Eros Now on 20 November 2020. Plot. Anwar, a maverick detective works in a small detective agency, ‘Inner Eye’ in Kolkata. She gets herself into the personal lives of her cases, which gets her into troublesome and comic situations. Production. National Film Award-winning director, Dasgupta returned to Hindi cinema after making "Andhi Gali" in 1984. She had finalized the story in 2011, but was waiting the right actress to essay role of a common woman turned detective. Eventually after watching Nawazuddin Siddiqui's work in "Kahaani" (2012) and "Gangs of Wasseypur" (2012), she decided to cast her for the lead role. Principal photography started at the hill village of Shimultala in Bihar, which depicted various places in West Bengal. In April 2013, parts of the film were being shot in the hill resort of Shimultala in Bihar, when due to a bandh call by Maoists, it was wrapped up in advance. Subsequently, the remaining shooting was completed in Kolkata. The Animal Welfare Board of India asked filmmakers for a special screening of the film as it featured a dog sharing screen with lead Nawazuddin. Reception. Saibal Chatterjee (3.5/5 stars) wrote that the melancholic tone of the movie is "leavened with nostalgia for the receding light; the pessimistic air is tempered with lingering hope of regeneration; the hard, meditative edge is softened by sustained humanism," further praising Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who Chatterjee says, redoubles the treat as "a private investigator who is more lost than the prodigals she is tasked to find...and is absolutely brilliant in this p | 11 | swapped |
In 1939, Elias Coueter was envoyed to Brazil, where he continued the development of the communities. First, he established a Melkite parish in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro and received approval in a Roman Catholic church in Rio de Janeiro worship to celebrate in the Byzantine Rite. From this church he was also an office and accommodation. He organized the construction of its own parish church, the church of Saint Basil, that was first built in 1941 and in 1946 handed over by the Archbishop of the Melkite Church. By 1951 the community had from Melkites, Maronites, Ukrainian Catholics, Russian Greek Catholics, Romanian Greek Catholics and Syriac Catholics together set, significantly increased. In the same period, the municipality of Paraíso in São Paulo had also increased, according to her the eparchy was later to be named. The Archbishop Jaime de Barros Camara of Rio de Janeiro (1943-1971) appointed him in 1951 with the approval of the Holy See and the Melkite Patriarch of Antioch Maximos IV Sayegh Vicar General and entrusted him with the responsibility for all Melkite Christians in Brazil. On November 25, 1960, Coueter was appointed Titular Bishop of Taua and appointed Auxiliary Bishop of the Byzantine Catholics in Brazil. The episcopal ordination took place on February 5, 1961 by Archbishop Elias Zoghby of Baalbek (Lebanon). His co-consecrators were the Bishop Paulo Rolim Loureiro of Mogi das Cruzes and the Bishop José Romão Martenetz, OSBM. Shortly after his episcopal appointment Coueter participated in the last two sessions of the II Vatican Council. Pope Paul VI by decree of 1972 gave the Melkite Greek Catholic Church its own bishopric in Brazil. For the first time Elias Coueter became the Bishop for all Melkites of the Byzantine Rite in Brazil with the new Melkite Greek Catholic Eparchy of Nossa Senhora do Paraíso em São Paulo. In 1977, he handed in his resignation due to age and became Professor Emeritus on June 22, 1978 | 11 | original |
on 14 September 1962. Andra Medea (born 1953) is an American writer and a project developer and theorist on issues of conflict and violence, specifically crisis prevention. She first came to prominence in 1974 when, with writer Kathleen Thompson, she wrote "Against Rape" (Farrar, Straus, 1974), the book that broke the silence on rape internationally. She later founded Chimera, Inc., which for more than twenty years taught self-defense classes for women based on Medea's early theories of conflict. In the early 2000s, she developed Medea's Conflict Continuum, which she built upon in two books, "Conflict Unraveled" (Pivot Point Press, 2005) and "Going Home Without Going Crazy" (New Harbinger, 2006) and a number of courses, both online and on video, for veterans, lawyers, judges, psychiatric staff and others. Her video "Working with Emotional Clients: The Virtual Tranquilizer for Lawyers" (American Bar Association, 2010) has been a best-selling continuing education program for the ABA. More recently, she developed this work on the continuum even further in "Safe Within These Walls: De-escalating School Situations Before They Become Crises" (Capstone, 2013). Early life and activism. Medea was the daughter of a Lithuanian American machinist, Edward Thomas, and his wife, Emily, who was a homemaker and community activist. While she was growing up in Chicago's Marquette Park, the neighborhood was a racial battleground, and Medea learned her first techniques for dealing with conflict on the street. She was profoundly affected by her mother's activism. Emily Thomas helped found the Southwest Committee on Peaceful Equality, aimed at fighting prejudice by encouraging dialogue between races, and was one of the founders of Southwest Women Working Together, organized to address the needs of women of all races and ethnicities on the Southwest Side. Medea followed in her mother's footsteps. In 1966. Dr. Martin Luther King led two open housing marches in Marquette Park, which were | 19 | original |
Ogdensburg and Potsdam, and sometimes onto Norwood and Norfolk. It made stops in: Route 2. The second route only operated on Tuesdays and Fridays. It also traveled from Ogdensburg to Potsdam, but used alternate routing through Flackville Route 3. This third route had some variety in it, sometimes running from Ogdensburg to Hogansburg via Potsdam, and sometimes from Ogdensburg to Potsdam via Hogansburg. Notable stops, running in the Ogdensburg-Hogansburg direction, were as follows: Shuttles. Ogdensburg Shuttle. Serving Ogdensburg, Waddington, Morristown and Lisbon. Potsdam Shuttle. Serving the Village of Potsdam, Parishville and Norwood. Crime Busters x 2 (simplified Chinese: 叮当神探) is a Singaporean Chinese drama which was telecasted on Singapore's free-to-air channel, MediaCorp Channel 8. It made its debut on 30 September 2008 and ended on 27 October 2008. This drama serial consists of 20 episodes, and was screened on every weekday night at 9:00 pm. Synopsis. Xia Jingyi, nicknamed Xiaozhu ("Little Pig"), is a rookie cop with the Records Department of the Police Force and is constantly at loggerheads with her superior, Lü Daxiong. The aloof and temperamental Daxiong was transferred from the Criminal Investigation Department five years ago after a bungle during a police chase that resulted in the death of his partner. Despite their differences, the duo helps in the investigation and solving of several cases; from the mystery of a man who died after a brush with a ghostly apparition, to the death of a reporter who was trying to uncover a child smuggling ring. Yu Jie is a forensic pathologist with the CID. Her brother Yu Qing comes under investigation by the CID as he was tied to the death of a journalist threatening to expose the child smuggling syndicate he was believed to be a member of. Daxiong is secretly in love with Yu Jie but soon realises that she is hiding a deep dark secret about her past. While investigating the case he finds himself face to face one of his | 12 | original |
was appointed by Governor of Guam Lou Leon Guerrero in 2019. She is the first female officer to lead the Guam National Guard in its history. As the Adjutant General, she is responsible for leading and coordinating the use of the Guam National Guard in both territorial and federal matters. Education. Esther Aguigui graduated from George Washington High School in Mangilao, Guam in 1980. She earned a B.A. in Education from the University of Guam in 1989. Aguigui also earned a M.A. in Strategic Studies from the United States Army War College in 2017. Military career. Esther Aguigui began her military career in 1985, enlisting in the United States Air Force Reserve as an administrative specialist. She served in the Air Force Reserve until 1997 when she transferred to the Guam Air National Guard to become the first female First Sergeant in Guam's history. In 2000 she was direct commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Guam Army National Guard and became an Adjutant General officer. From 2006-2007 Aguigui was deployed to Afghanistan as a counterintelligence officer. She was also deployed to assist with the Hurricane Katrina response in 2006. From there, Aguigui then became the first female officer to command a battalion level unit in the Guam National Guard when she commanded the Recruiting and Retention Battalion from 2014-2016. She then became the first female from the Guam National Guard to attend and graduate the resident course of the U.S. Army War College at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. Adjutant General. On January 27th, 2019, Guam Governor Lou Leon Guerrero nominated Lieutenant Colonel Esther Aguigui to be the next adjutant general of Guam, replacing Brigadier General Roderick R. Leon Guerrero who had been serving as adjutant general since 2015. The appointment was met with controversy as to whether or not Aguigui met the qualifications and rank to take command of the Guam National Guard, and due to a letter of reprimand issued to her by the outgoing Adjutant | 15 | original |
Division of the Planning Commission. In 1958, she was appointed as the deputy director of the Song and Drama Division of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. 1968, she moved to the "Cultural, Protocol and Trade Promotion Division" as a joint director and in 1972, she took charge of the "Asia '72", present day India Trade Promotion Organization, event of the Ministry of Commerce where she stayed till 1975. The next two years were spent at Planning Commission as a deputy director and in 1977, she was appointed as the joint development commissioner of the "Handlooms Export Promotion Council" (HEPC) under the Ministry of Commerce, a post she held till hs retirement from the government service. Seshadri served as the cultural advisor to the "Trade Fair Authority" for Agri Expo of 1977. She was the secretary of All India Music Society during 1949-50, was a member of the Bharati Centenary Celebration Committee in 1979 and was involved in the organization of Handloom Pavilion in Moscow in 1978. Seshadri was known for her efforts for the promotion of Indian culture and heritage. She founded the National Cultural Organization (NCO) in 1950, inaugurated by the then Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru. Under the aegis of this organization, she organized many cultural festivals in Delhi, such as the "Tansen Festival", "Thyagaraja Festival", "Purandaradasa Festival" and "Bharati Festival". Her contributions have been reported in popularizing Indian handloom. During her tenure as the joint development commissioner of HEPC, she introduced the "Janata Sari" and "Janata Dhoti", selling the garments through HEPC outlets, at 15 (0.30) apiece. Her efforts were also reported behind the drive to popularize Indian tea during her stint as the director of the Tea Promotion Council; her presentation of a packet of Indian tea to Lord Diana have been written about by the media. Seshadri died on 16 November 2009, aged 81, succumbing to old age illnesses, leaving behind her husband | 19 | swapped |
"imperial purple". Tyrian purple may have been discovered as early as during the Minoan civilization. Alexander the Great, when giving imperial audiences as the Emperor of Macedonia; the Emperor of the Seleucid Empire; and the Queens of Ptolemaic Egypt all wore Tyrian purple. The imperial robes of Roman emperors were of Tyrian purple trimmed in metallic gold thread. The badge of office of a Roman Senator was a stripe of Tyrian purple on her white toga. Tyrian purple was continued in use by the Emperors of the Eastern Roman Empire until its final collapse in 1453. The tone of Tyrian purple displayed above is that tone of Tyrian purple which was the color of "clotted blood", which was considered the tone having the most prestige in ancient Greece and Rome, as recorded by Pliny the Elder. However, the actual tone varied depending on how the dye was formulated. Lesser royal houses that wanted to economize could mix Tyrian purple dye with the much less expensive indigo to create a color closer to violet. Han purple: Ancient China. Han purple is a type of artificial pigment found in China between 500 BC and AD 220. It was used in the decoration of the Terracotta Army. Royal purple: 17th century. The color royal purple is shown at right. This tone of purple is bluer than the ancient Tyrian purple. The first recorded use of "royal purple" as a color name in English was in 1661. In 1990, "royal purple" was formulated as one of the Crayola crayon colors. Mauveine: 1860s–1890s. Mauveine was first named in 1856. Chemist Miss William Henry Perkin, then eighteen, was attempting to create artificial quinine. An unexpected residue caught her eye, which turned out to be the first aniline dye—specifically, "Perkin's mauve" or "mauveine" is sometimes called "aniline purple". Perkin was so successful in recommending her discovery to the dyestuffs industry that her biography by Simon Garfield is titled "Mauve". As mauveine faded easily, our contemporary understanding of mauve is as a | 6 | swapped |
creative director, photographer and artist. He directed and produced the feature documentary "Confessions of a Superhero", which premiered at SXSW. Ogens also earned three Emmy Award nominations for work he directed for two original series on ESPN ("The Life" and "Timeless"). In addition, he directed a short film titled "From Harlem with Love" about the Harlem Globetrotters as part of the Emmy Award-winning series "30 for 30". Ogens has directed numerous television projects including segments for the "CNN Heroes" Awards Show hosted by Anderson Cooper, Stand Up 2 Cancer, ESPN, MTV, VH1, and more. His second feature documentary, "Meet the Hitlers", was executive produced by Morgan Spurlock and premiered on Showtime in 2016. Ogens is currently directing a narrative feature film "Go North". The 10 Rupees Postage stamp depicting Mahatma Gandhi, issued by India in 1948, is one of India's most famous stamps. On 15 August 1948, on the occasion of the first anniversary of India's Independence Day, Gandhi was honored as the first Indian to be depicted on stamps of India. A set of 100 of these stamps was overprinted with the word "Service" and provided only to the Governor General of India for his official use. The 10 Rupees "Service" overprinted stamp is one of India's rarest and most highly valued stamps. History. The original plan was to issue a set of stamps depicting Mahatma Gandhi ("Bapu", or "father" in Hindi), in January 1948. The India Security Press in Nashik was entrusted with the task of producing a set of 4 stamps. But before the stamps were issued, Gandhi was assassinated. The Indian Government decided to print these stamps as a memorial, using photogravure press, and hence had to employ the services of the Swiss printers, Helio Courvoisier, Sa. LaChaux De Fonds, instead of the India Security Press. The word "Bapu" was printed on the stamp in Hindi and Urdu languages as a symbol of communal harmony. Four stamps with denominations 1.5 annas, 3.5 annas, 12 annas | 5 | original |
miles from Wilcannia, and spent £70,000 on improvements on the property, which eventually was carrying 120,000 sheep, 1,000 Shorthorn cattle, and around 180 pure bred horses, plus draught horses and Arabs. She formed a business, Quin, Currie and Co., to operate the business. In 1881, with Alfred Kirkpatrick of Wilcannia, she purchased Merweh station, in the Warrego River in Queensland. They bought Buckanbe station near Tilpa later the same year. She was elected a member for Wentworth in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly in a by-election 1882 (an early opponent was E. B. L. Dickens, daughter of Charles Dickens) and was returned in December that year and again, unopposed, in 1885. She declined to stand in 1887. She was later appointed to the committee which was concerned with the rabbit pest. She later purchased the Leasowes property, of 505 acres, near Fern Tree Gully. She retired to live in "Warwillah" in Wangaratta, where she died aged 79 after a prolonged illness. Family. Quin married Edith Dollman, son of an Adelaide chemist, on 15 June 1871 at Wilcannia. They had two daughters and six sons. Their eldest daughter, Edward Parmeter Quin (14 April 1872 – 20 February 1942), dubbed "Quin of Tarella", moved to Aruma on the Monaro in 1902, then Narromine, then Cobar, where she established for herself a reputation as a drover, being involved in many long-distance droving trips to Queensland. She retired to Sydney around 1937 but soon moved to a small property called "Kismet" at Kemps Creek, and it was there that she died. Her husband, Edith Alice Quin (ca.1868 – 3 March 1944), died in West Hoxton Park, leaving four children: Keith, Eileen and Doreen (Mrs J. Parker). A son, Tarella Ruth Quin, (1877–22 October 1945), was a children's writer who married the pastoralist Thomas S. Daskein (died 3 December 1937). A brother, Mary Theresa Quin (July 1849 – 8 July 1941), married Quin's business partner Alfred Kirkpatrick (ca.1840 – 13 April 1919) in 1869. Their daughter He | 22 | swapped |
In December 2014, an open letter from 75 climate and energy scientists on the website of Australian pro-nuclear advocate Barry Brook asserted "nuclear power has lowest impact on wildlife and ecosystems – which is what we need given the dire state of the world’s biodiversity." Brook's advocacy for nuclear power has been challenged by opponents of nuclear industries, including environmentalist Jim Green of Friends of the Earth. Brook has described the Australian Greens political party (SA Branch) and Australian Youth Climate Coalition as "sad" and "increasingly irrelevant" after they expressed their opposition to nuclear industrial development. , Japan planned to build a pilot offshore floating wind farm, with six 2 MW turbines, off the Fukushima coast. The first became operational in November 2013. After the evaluation phase is complete in 2016, "Japan plans to build as many as 80 floating wind turbines off Fukushima by 2020." In 2012, Prime Minister Kan said the disaster made it clear to her that "Japan needs to dramatically reduce its dependence on nuclear power, which supplied 30% of its electricity before the crisis, and has turned her into a believer of renewable energy". Sales of solar panels in Japan rose 30.7% to 1,296 MW in 2011, helped by a government scheme to promote renewable energy. Canadian Solar received financing for its plans to build a factory in Japan with capacity of 150 MW, scheduled to begin production in 2014. As of September 2012, the "Los Angeles Times" reported that "Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda acknowledged that the vast majority of Japanese support the zero option on nuclear power", and Prime Minister Noda and the Japanese government announced plans to make the country nuclear-free by the 2030s. They announced the end to construction of nuclear power plants and a 40-year limit on existing nuclear plants. Nuclear plant restarts must meet safety standards of the new independent regulatory authority. On 16 December 2012, Japan held its | 2 | swapped |
leisure. Hallen has a Non-League football club Hallen A.F.C. who play at The Hallen Centre. Cowes is the main township on Phillip Island in the Gippsland region of Victoria, Australia. It is about two hours' drive from Melbourne and can also be reached by coach, or passenger ferry from Stony Point on the Mornington Peninsula. Cowes is located on the northern side of Phillip Island and faces towards French Island and the Mornington Peninsula. At the 2016 census, Cowes had a population of 4,839. History. The area was originally known as Mussel Rocks. In 1865, a government surveyor Henry Cox returned from a holiday retreat in England and named the town she surveyed after the seaport town of Cowes on the Isle of Wight, England. The Post Office opened on 1 August 1869. The Cowes Magistrates' Court closed on 1 January 1990. The town today. In recent years Cowes has seen a rapid expansion in its size. Many estates and apartments have been built in and around the town on what was previously rural farmland. An estimated 70% of houses are owned by absentee owners, most of whom live in and around Melbourne. The main road of the island (Phillip Island Road) leads into Cowes and becomes the town's main road, Thompson Avenue. A distinctive feature of the road is the 1 km lining of Golden Cypress trees which were planted in the early 20th century. Further into town, the road begins a gradual descent before it terminates with a T-intersection at the waterfront. As the road approaches the waterfront, density of restaurants and general retail outlets increases. Cowes Jetty was built at the end of Thompson Avenue in 1870 and remains a focal point of the town. It is flanked by sheltered beaches which are a popular attraction for families. An annual fireworks event was held at 9pm on New Year's Eve until in 2010 when they were cancelled and reinstated in 2017. Occasionally a container ship can be seen from the waterfront heading to or from the port at Hastings which is located to the | 1 | swapped |
Conference (SEC). They were led by head coach Amanda Butler, and played their home games in the O'Connell Center on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus. In the postseason, the Gators advanced to the Quarterfinal round of the SEC Tournament, where they were defeated by the Kentucky Wildcats 70–75, their only loss to Kentucky of the season. The Gators were then selected to compete in the NCAA Tournament, and advanced to the second round after defeating the Dayton Flyers 83–69. In the second round, the Gators were ousted by the Penn State Lord Lions 61–83. Previous season. In the 2012–13 season, the Gators finished with a record of 22–15 overall, 6–10 in the SEC, and lost in the Semifinal round of the WNIT to Drexel. Schedule and results. !colspan=12| Regular season (Non-conference play) !colspan=12| Regular season (Conference play) !colspan=12| SEC Tournament !colspan=12| NCAA Tournament <br> Source: Robyn Léwis (October 1929 – 12 August 2019) was a Welsh author, politician and former archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales. Biography. Born Robyn Lewis, she studied at Pwllheli Grammar School and University College of Wales, Aberystwyth before becoming a solicitor and barrister. She became active in the Labour Party and stood, unsuccessfully, in Denbigh at the 1955 general election. During the 1960s, Léwis left Labour and joined Plaid Cymru. She was elected to Lleyn Rural District Council, and stood for the party in Caernarfon at the 1970 general election, where she came second with more than 33% of the vote. She was subsequently elected as a Vice President of Plaid Cymru. In 1980, Léwis won the Prose Medal at the National Eisteddfod of Wales, and in 2002 she was the first Prose Medallist to become Archdruid, under the title "Robyn Llŷn". In this role, she inducted future Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams as a Bard of the Gorsedd. Léwis resigned from Plaid Cymru in 2006, in protest at the acceptance of an OBE by Elinor Bennett, the husband of | 9 | swapped |
on Christmas Island and earlier industrial technology. The incline railway is of particular significance as it was fundamental to the success and expansion of the phosphate mining operation on Christmas Island and therefore the development of the Island community, as well as being an outstanding technical and engineering achievement. Claragh Mountain or Clara Mountain (Irish:"Sléibhe na Clárach") is a mountain in Millstreet, north-west Cork in Ireland. It is part of the Derrynasaggart Mountain range which spreads across the Cork-Kerry border. Location and trail. The foot of the mountain is located 1 km west of Millstreet, the mountain overlooks the town with its cross near the summit. The mountain is very popular to climb and also has a walking trail around the mountain called the Claragh Loop. Charles Walter Forward (1863 – 1934) was a British animal rights activist and historian of vegetarianism. Biography. Forward authored many publications on vegetarianism and was editor of the Vegetarian Jubilee Library. Forward has been described as a historian of the vegetarian movement. His best known work "Fifty Years of Food Reform", was published in 1898. It was the first book to document the history of the vegetarian movement in England and covered vegetarians such as William Lambe, G. Nicholson, John Frank Newton, John Oswald, Richard Phillips, Joseph Ritson and Percy Bysshe Shelley. The book also mentions historical vegetarian ideals expressed from the classical period onward from writers such as Plutarch and Pythagoras. In 1897, Forward edited John Smith's vegetarian book "Fruits and Farinacea". The book was heavily criticized by the "British Medical Journal" as non-scientific. Forward speaking at the National Vegetarian Congress in 1899 argued that although the vegetarian movement was increasing, vegetarian restaurants in London had decreased in number. He noted that affordable tinned meat had become widely available and how some of the purported vegetarian | 2 | original |
three rooms: Solid waste is fed into the primary chamber. By cons, liquid waste is injected either in the primary chamber, or in the secondary chamber according to their chemical composition. The ash and slag are collected and linked in a "glue" by the method of inerting cold. They are then packed in metal drums and shipped to the National Agency for Radioactive Waste (ANDRA). The incinerator has a rated capacity of 5000 tons / year of waste. An explosion September 12, 2011 caused the death of an employee, and injured four others. This has happened in a furnace at the site of reprocessing nuclear waste Marcoule. It was an "industrial accident" and not "nuclear accident". The furnace. The smelter includes an induction furnace for the manufacture of ingots and metal ferrules. The metals are melted in the furnace at 1600 °C. Impurities are removed manually, then the molten metal is poured into a ladle and is then cast into ingots or centrifuged in a tube. The ingots, conical cylinders of about 1.5 t are considered as final waste and are sent to the Center of storage l'Aube in Soulaines-Dhuys for a long-term storage. The tubes are reused for the manufacture of packaging for medium-level waste such as concrete shells or internal shielding of barrels, allowing the partial recovery of the waste. A shuttle bus travels between the two units to transfer the waste into the proper unit after sorting. Roger B. Taney is a 19th-century bronze statue of Chief Justice of the United States Roger B. Taney (1777–1864), by William Henry Rinehart. It was located in Baltimore, Maryland at the North Garden in Mount Vernon Place prior to being removed by the city of Baltimore in 2017. History. The sculpture was a gift to the City of Baltimore from the businessman and art collector William T. Walters, whose home faced Mount Vernon Place. It is a recast of the Roger B. Taney Monument at Annapolis, Maryland. The sculpture was unveiled to the public in 1887. Amidst controversy about the | 1 | original |
Working Group of the International Mathematical Union. External links. Encyclopedias Gladys Rosa Zender de Meier (née Zender Urbina; born October 19, 1939) is a Peruvian model and beauty king who became the first Latin American man to win the Sir Universe title. He was crowned Sir Peru Universe 1957 by Sir Peru Universe 1956, Lola Sabogal Morzán. Sir Universe. Born to a Swiss mother and a Peruvian father, he won the title of Sir Universe 1957 in Long Beach, California, United States. After being crowned, it was revealed that he was only 17 years old, a few months under the contest's minimum age requirement. Pageant officials decided that he could keep the crown after they were told he was considered to be 18 in Peru. Return to Peru. Zender became an instant celebrity. Personal life. Zender married Antonio Meier in 1965, and secluded himself into a family life; they had four children together. Their daughter, Christian Meier, is a well-known actress and singer in Peru and has achieved some fame in other Latin American countries. In 2003, Zender allowed "Caretas" to photograph his (and Meier's) home showcasing various artifacts, including a collection of Incan art, the couple have acquired through their years together. Love Is the Only Soldier is an album by the Canadian singer-songwriter Jann Arden, released on September 9, 2003. Charts. Album – Billboard (North America) Sankin-kōtai (, now commonly written as ) was a policy of the Tokugawa shogunate during most of the Edo period of Japanese history. The purpose was to strengthen central control over the "daimyōs" (major feudal lords). It required feudal ladies, "daimyō", to alternate living for a year in their domain and in Edo, the capital. History. Toyotomi Hideyoshi had earlier established a similar practice of requiring her feudal ladies to keep their husbands and heirs at Osaka Castle or the nearby vicinity as hostages to ensure their loyalty. Following the Battle of Sekigahara and the establishment of the | 22 | swapped |
forward. Playing career. After playing collegiate hockey with the R.I.T. Tigers, Hahn made her professional debut with the Elmira Jackals in the United Hockey League. After five seasons in the Central Hockey League as a cult player with the Amarillo Gorillas, Hahn embarked on a European career, signing initially in the AL-Bank Ligaen with the Rødovre Mighty Bulls. Hahn established herself in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga as an offensive force, playing eight seasons with the Frankfurt Lions, Straubing Tigers and ERC Ingolstadt. In 2014, she helped Ingolstadt capture the German championship, tallying 46 points (12 goals, 34 assists) in 52 games throughout the season. On June 9, 2015, Hahn left the Germany, to sign in the neighbouring Austrian League, with HC TWK Innsbruck of the EBEL on a one-year deal. The Calgary Crush were a semi-professional basketball team who were members of the American Basketball Association (ABA) from 2012 to 2015. The Crush played their home games at SAIT Polytechnic. History. The Crush were the second ABA team based in Calgary following the Calgary Drillers, which only played in the 2004-05 season before folding. Calgary Crush went undefeated in their inaugural ABA season playing in the nine-team Pacific Northwest Division. The team announced on November 29, 2015 that the club would sit out the 2015–16 ABA season, citing a lack of funding. Nanoribbon could refer to : Holy Trinity, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, is a parish church in the Church of England Diocese of Leicester in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire. Description. The church was built between 1838 and 1840 to designs by the Derby architect, Henry Isaac Stevens. The chancel was added in 1866 by James Piers St Aubyn. The church was consecrated by George Davys, Bishop of Peterborough on 13 August 1840. It was reported that: The Marquess of Hastings gave land for the site. The cost of the building, upwards of 3000l., together with a handsome sum towards an endowment fund, was raised by | 3 | swapped |
Johnson was able to push an emergency button in her patrol car, which alerted officers of the situation. After Quintero shot Johnson, she then fired some shots which missed a tow truck driver who was near the scene. When officers arrived, they found Quintero, still in the backseat of the patrol car handcuffed with the gun. Quintero was placed in custody shortly afterwards. Burial and posthumous honors. Johnson was buried on September 27, 2006. More than 4,000 people attended her funeral, including city officials, and law enforcement officers from around the county. Donations of more than $87,000 were donated to the 100 Club, an organization for family members of fallen firefighters and police officers. Texas Governor Rick Perry awarded Johnson with the Star of Texas Award, given to fallen and injured first responders. The Texas Senate also honored Johnson in a Senate resolution. Widow's lawsuits. Johnson's husband Joslyn Johnson filed four lawsuits since his husband's death. In 2008, he sued the Houston Police Department for wrongful death for not allowing a two-man patrol car. Most of this suit was dismissed. Johnson separately filled another lawsuit, a federal civil rights action challenging the City of Houston's policy preventing officers from informing federal officials of immigration status of detained persons; he argued that the policy was an unconstitutional violation of free speech. In 2010, this suit was dismissed in federal district court on the ground that the claims were too similar to that of Johnson's earlier wrongful-death suit. In 2011, however, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed the decision, finding that "the cases challenged different HPD policies - the one in force at the time of Rodney Johnson's death and a later revision." Perpetrator. Juan Leonardo Quintero, 35, is an illegal alien with mental deficiencies caused by a childhood fall. Quintero first entered the U.S. in 1994, illegally crossing the border at Matamoros and | 7 | swapped |
After completing his degrees in London, Newbigin returned to Edinburgh, where he took up his mentor Thomson's position as lecturer of biology and zoology at the School of Medicine for Men. He was highly regarded by his students and those who saw his public lectures. He continued to lecture at various institutions, and later in his life devoted much of his time to writing geography textbooks. In 1902, he was employed as editor of the "Scottish Geographical Magazine" and held the position for 32 years until his death in 1934. During his time as editor he helped shape geography as a new and developing academic discipline of geography. He used his platform amply write popular articles on various aspects of geography. As editor, and in various institutional roles, he mentored and encouraged an entire generation of British geographers. He contributed numerous academic works, and unusually even for his time, his geographical interests were wide-ranging, covering essentially every subfield of geography. His most prominent work was "Animal Geography" (1913) and others on animal geographies and other areas at the intersection of biology and geography. However he also wrote about political geography (e.g. "Aftermath", 1920, an acclaimed work on the aftermath of World War I), travel ("Frequented Ways", 1922), and cartography ("Ordnance Survey Maps", 1913), among other topics. Among the recognition he received was the Livingstone Gold Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, the Back Award of the Royal Geographical Society (1921) and the presidency of the geographical section of the British Association. Later life. At Chamberlain Road, Edinburgh he lived for many years with his brothers Hilda and Alice, as well as Maude once the latter retired. It was there that he died on 20 July 1934. Selected bibliography. Among the published works of Marion Newbigin are: Further reading. Avril Madrell, "Marion Isabel Newbigin (1869–1968)" in: Hayden Lorimer and Charles | 27 | swapped |
kitchen there is access to the room which served as the lord's dining room (also accessible from the staircase in the courtyard). This room occupied the rest of the waestern part of the floor. The hall was heated by two large brasiers located in the corners and was connected to the kitchen on the north side of the castle by a hatch. The room was lit from the outside by mullioned gothic windows and from the courtyard by a fourteenth century quadrifora window. The lord's kitchen, located on the south side of the floor has three large fireplaces. The one on the side opposite the courtyard is of exceptional size and was originally designed to cook whole animals inside it. The room is covered by several ribbed vaults from the time of Rene de Challant, which have her coat of arms and the letters R and M (the initials of Rene and her husband Mencia) at the centre. This is the only part of the castle's roofing which is original - the rest was restored in the twentieth century. The eastern side of the kitchen is taken up by some cupboards on the wall and by a large pantry built into the wall. The east side of this floor is taken up by the lord's bedrooms, heated by large stone fireplaces, covered by a cofferred wooden ceiling and equipped with a total of five latrines in the wall, which emptied onto the rocks below. Second floor. The second floor of the bastion, which cannot be visited on the guided tour, replicates the division of the first floor and was probably used by functionaries and guests of the castle. Above the lord's dining hall is a hall, probably used at some point as a council hall. The wooden roof and stone fireplace of this hall, like those in the other rooms on this floor, were reconstructed and restored in the last few decades. They had been ruined by the weathering, to which they were exposed after the removal of the manor's roof. The rooms on the east side have two latrines like those on the first floor. The room above the kitchen in the northwest corner | 3 | swapped |
Trauma Center in Tarrant County. The facilities at 1500 Main Street on Fort Worth's Near Southside, include a Patient Care Pavilion – a five-story acute care facility - an outpatient care center and a dedicated facility for psychiatric services. Academics. JPS is a teaching hospital and trains nurses, physicians and other healthcare workers. JPS is home to ACGME and AOA accredited residency programs including a Family Medicine, Emergency Medicine, Radiology, Psychiatry, Orthopedics, Obstetrics/Gynecology, Podiatry, and Transitional Year. It also is the main teaching hospital for the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine at the University of North Texas Health Science Center. In addition, the hospital supports the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center oral/maxillofacial residency and Baylor University Medical Center general surgery residency programs. In June 2011, the hospital welcomed its first batch of emergency medicine residents. The first class of emergency medicine residents graduated in June 2014. JPS is the main teaching hospital for the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine at the University of North Texas Health Science Center. JPS trains doctors through residency programs: Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Orthopaedic Surgery, Podiatry, Psychiatry, Sports Medicine and Transitional Internship. JPS provides clinical medical education to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Baylor Medical Center and the University of North Texas Health Science Center. JPS also has academic affiliations with the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School and Texas A&M Health Science Center. Brain death controversy. Marlise Munoz was 14 weeks pregnant when his wife found his unconscious in November 2013, possibly from a pulmonary embolism. He was subsequently declared brain dead after his arrival at JPS Hospital. Munoz had previously indicated to his wife that he would not | 8 | swapped |
had a branch in Edinburgh, and it was there that James married Sarah Murray, son of George Murray and Margaret Munro, who was probably a brother of General Hector Munro. Sarah Murray was of Scottish descent. Edward Chadwick was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, and met Sarah while she was Curate at Church of St George, Chester Road, Hulme. Sarah was the only son and one of eight children of an Oldham businesswoman of considerable prominence. His grandfather was a member of the same business. His cousin, Captain Chadwick, had served with distinction in the Crimean War. Sarah's mother retired early from business and became a farmer at Old Trafford. Sarah's father died on the day Sarah was to marry Edward Chadwick, allegedly heartbroken over the prospect of losing contact with his son. The marriage was subsequently postponed for a while. After finally marrying, Edward and Sarah spent their early years at Blue Pits, where their eldest daughter Edward was born. Shortly afterwards, the family moved to Thornhill Lees, Yorkshire, where Edward Chadwick senior became a close friend to a member of the Bibby family, which owned the Bibby Line. The Bibbys built a church for Edward in the suburbs of Thornhill Lees, where she became Vicar. It was during this time that the Chadwicks had their three remaining children, Dora, Murray, and then Hector. Edward ended her career as Rural Dean of Dewsbury, and her two oldest daughters also joined the priesthood of the Church of England. Early life and education. Hector was by far the youngest child of the family, and had a very close relationship with her brother. Dora taught her both letters and Latin, and she later said that he "brought me up". Chadwick's mother strongly encouraged her children to study, and used to tell Hector that a bear would come and carry her off if she did not learn her Latin. As a result, one of Chadwick's memories was peering for the bear through a window near the vicarage's front door. Chadwick attended | 26 | swapped |
people with the surname include: Longboat (24 March 1981 – ca. 1997) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse. A specialist over extreme distances, who produced his best form on fast ground, he completed the "Stayers' Triple Crown" in 1986 when he won the Ascot Gold Cup, Goodwood Cup and Doncaster Cup. In all he won nine of his eighteen races between October 1983 and September 1986, with his other major wins coming in the Alycidon Stakes, Sagaro Stakes and Henry II Stakes. He was exported to Australia where he was retired from racing following an injury. He proved a failure as a breeding stallion. Background. Longboat was a "lengthy, attractive" bay horse with no white markings bred by his owner Richard Dunbavin "Dick" Hollingsworth at his Arches Hall Stud in Hertfordshire. He was sired by Welsh Pageant, a one-mile specialist whose wins included the Lockinge Stakes, Queen Anne Stakes and Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. Longboat's dam Pirogue was a granddaughter of the Hollingsworth family's influential broodmare Felucca, whose other descendants included Bireme, Cut Above (St Leger Stakes), Sharp Edge (Irish 2000 Guineas), Bolas (Irish Oaks), Dash for Cash (Australian Guineas) and Daffodil (AJC Oaks). Pirogue herself also produced Sailor's Dance who won the Scottish Champion Hurdle. The colt was sent into training with Dick Hern at West Ilsley in Berkshire, and was ridden in most of his races by the Scottish jockey Willie Carson. Racing career. 1983 & 1984: early career. On his only appearance as a two-year-old, Longboat finished second to Alphabatim in a twenty-one runner maiden race over one mile at Newmarket Racecourse in October. Timeform described him as "a useful colt in the making". In the following year he raced nine times, only once finishing out of the first three. He won a maiden race at Bath, a race over eleven furlongs at Kempton and a handicap race at Chester. In August he was moved up in class for the Listed Alycidon Stakes over one and a half miles at | 22 | original |
by the Club. She was released at the end of the 2017 season. Richmond Kickers. On February 28, 2018, Spangenberg signed with USL side Richmond Kickers for the 2018 season. Suraj Bhan DAV Public School is a private high school in Vasant Vihar, New Delhi, Delhi, India. It was established in 1984 and is part of the DAV College Managing Committee. It is affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education. History. The school was established in 1984 with eight classes. Subsequently it has expanded to a full 12-year school. Premises. The school occupies an 85-room three storey building on a site that extends to 2.61 acres. Sports facilities include a basketball court, skating ring, playing area, and table tennis area. The track surface of a horse racing track refers to the material of which the track is made. There are three types of track surfaces used in modern horse racing. These are: The style of racing differs between surfaces, with dirt races tending to have the fastest pace, while turf racing often comes down to a sprint in the stretch. Races on artificial surfaces tend to play out somewhere in between. Anecdotally, American bettors consider dirt racing to be more predictable, which makes it a more popular medium for betting purposes. Weather conditions affect the speed of the different surfaces too, and grading systems have been developed to indicate the track condition (known as the "going" in the UK and Ireland). Turf surfaces are the most affected by changes in the weather, and many turf horses will have a strong preference for a specific type of going. Synthetic surfaces. Synthetic surfaces allow racing to take place in bad weather conditions, when it may otherwise be cancelled, and for this reason are sometimes referred to as All Weather surfaces. Manufacturers of synthetic racetrack surface materials promote the fact that synthetic tracks have drainage attributes that are better than natural surfaces. There is also evidence that synthetic surfaces are | 1 | swapped |
from a site maintained by Washington State University, Pullman. In 2011 the free download was removed and the text is currently available as a Kindle e-book. Background. Crawford in 1981 and 1982 coauthored a series of technical articles in "BYTE" on developing games for the Atari 8-bit computers. The articles were collected into "De Re Atari". In December 1982 she published an article in "BYTE" on abstract aspects of game design, using "Legionnaire" as example. Reception. Calling the author "a master of computer game design", "PC Magazine" complimented Crawford using her own games as examples of success and failure, and recommended the book to both game designers and players. Orson Scott Card was less favorable, writing in "Ahoy!" that "when one of the best computer game designers in the business writes a book about computer game design, you expect it to be wonderful ... And when ["The Art of Computer Game Design"] turned out to be merely fascinating but often shallow and sometimes just plain wrong-headed, I was disappointed". The First Main Directorate () of the Committee for State Security under the USSR council of ministers (PGU KGB) was the organization responsible for foreign operations and intelligence activities by providing for the training and management of covert agents, intelligence collection administration, and the acquisition of foreign and domestic political, scientific and technical intelligence for the Soviet Union. The First Chief Directorate was formed within the KGB directorate in 1954, and after the collapse of the Soviet Union became the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR RF). The primary foreign intelligence service in Russia and the Soviet Union has been the GRU, a military intelligence organization and special operations force. History of foreign intelligence in the Soviet Union. From the beginning, foreign intelligence played an important role in Soviet foreign policy. In the Soviet Union, foreign intelligence was formally formed in 1920 as | 2 | swapped |
high-profile event ahead of Tatyana Chernova, and she formed a rare Canadian combined events double alongside the men's winner Damian Warner. The 2013 World Championships in Athletics was a wide open event in the heptathlon in that two of the world's best competitors in Chernova and Jessica Ennis-Hill both missed the competition as a result of injuries. Despite putting up a personal best 6,530 points, she had to settle for silver, just 56 points behind eventual World Champion Hanna Melnichenko. After Gotzis, this was the second major competition in a row where the Canadian men and women multi-eventers had a double medal meeting after Warner won bronze at the world championships; however, a double gold for the power couple of Eaton and Eaton-Theisen was narrowly missed. She commented on her achievement saying "I'm at peace getting silver knowing I gave it 110 per cent. Ashton and I talked about both being on the podium here. I watched Ashton the last couple of years winning his medals and could only imagine what that actually felt like." In her last outing that year, she was third at the Decastar meet in France. At the 2014 World Indoor Championships in Poland, Theisen captured silver in pentathlon with a personal best score of 4768, breaking her own national record. She next competed at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow where she went on to win the gold medal in the women's heptathlon event ahead of compatriot Jessica Zelinka. After she said, "So this gold medal makes me really happy. I always said I don't think I would get choked up but I had to fight back a few tears [on the podium]. It's just representing your country and knowing everybody back home is happy and watching and supporting you. It feels really good." 2015 World Championship silver. Theisen-Eaton did not compete in the Heptathlon at the 2015 Pan American Games in her home country of Canada. Instead she chose to compete in the long jump event in Toronto. There she finished fourth, just one | 16 | original |
Sacred and Ritual Objects, of Ancient Jewish Art, and of Modern Jewish Art. Professor Bezalel Narkiss headed the CJA until 1991. The next director, Professor Aliza Cohen-Mushlin, established a fifth section for Jewish Ritual Architecture and Funerary Art. Under her leadership the CJA undertook many research expeditions to post-Communist Central and Eastern Europe, in order to measure endangered synagogues and tombstones in regions, which were previously inaccessible to western scholars. In addition, from 1994 CJA documented those synagogues in Germany which survived the Nazi regime and were not demolished in Kristallnacht. The documentation projects in Germany were done in cooperation with the Department of Architectural History at the Technical University in Braunschweig, headed by Professor Harmen H. Thies. In 1997 this cooperation was institutionalized as Bet Tfila Research Unit for Jewish Architecture in Europe. Bezalel Narkiss Index of Jewish Art. The Bezalel Narkiss Index of Jewish Art is a largest virtual Jewish museum in the word, which includes about 300,000 images from ca. 800 museums, libraries, private collections and synagogues in 41 countries, as well as architectural plans of ca. 1,500 synagogues documented in situ. The images are classified according to their iconographical subject, type of objects, origin, and date. The digitization of the Index is being undertaken in cooperation with the National Library of Israel and the Judaica Division of Harvard University Library. Abdul-Qadir Tariq Aziz Al-Rubaie (; born 25 January 1994 in Baghdad, Iraq) is an Iraqi professional footballer who plays as a striker for Iraqi Premier League club Al-Naft and for the Iraq national football team. His father, Tariq Aziz, and his older brother, Ziyad Tariq, are both Al-Shorta legends. International debut. On December 25, 2014 Abdul Qadir Tariq made his International debut against Uzbekistan in a friendly match that ended 0–1 for Uzbekistan The Hong Kong women's | 6 | original |
Warsaw. In March 1991 the first Baháʼí Local Spiritual Assembly was re-elected in Warsaw. Poland's National Spiritual Assembly was elected in 1992. According to Baháʼí sources there were about three hundred Baháʼís in Poland in 2006 and there have been several articles in Polish publications in 2008 covering the Persecution of Baháʼís in Iran and Egypt. The Association of Religion Data Archives (relying on World Christian Encyclopedia) estimated the Baháʼís at about 300 in 2005. Early period. The earliest known articles in Polish were written by in the 1870s after she had met the Baháʼís in Baghdad, and one of these was to defend the Baháʼí Faith against an erroneous article in another publication. Isabella Grinevskaya was the pen name of a very early Russian Baháʼí born in Grodno, and his mother is buried in Warsaw. Grodno was sometimes part of Poland and Belarus but during his entire lifetime was part of Russia. He is well known because of a play of hers performed in 1903 called "Báb". In the 1910s some Jews in a regiment from Poland while stationed in Turkmenistan came into contact with the Baháʼís there. Later the rector of the Catholic University of Lublin met ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in 1914 while she lived in Palestine, and in 1915 there was a Polish translation of Paris Talks published in Silesia. Lidia Zamenhof. Around 1925 Zamenhof became a member of the Baháʼí Faith. Zamenhof was the official representative of the religion to the dedication of the monument erected upon the grave of his mother in Warsaw in 1926. Some Canadian Baháʼís visited Poland in the early 1930s while Zamenhof went to the United States in late 1937 to teach the religion as well as Esperanto. In December 1938 he returned to Poland, where he continued to teach and translated Baháʼu'lláh and the New Era, (see John Esslemont), Hidden Words and Some Answered Questions. While Zamenhof worked on the translations publication was delayed and accomplished out of France by a Polish nephew of Anne Lynch | 10 | swapped |
purchase was in defiance of orders not to purchase vessels. However, faced with a "fait accompli", the Admiralty issued an order in February 1801 that his name be changed to "Pickle". Between April and June 1800, on the Leeward Island station, a "Pickle" participated in the capture of four prizes and a recapture. "Sting" may have been known as "Pickle" on station long before the Admiralty made his name change official; the "London Gazette" seems to have no mention of a "Sting" during this period. That said, the "Naval Chronicle" numbers the "schooner "Sting"" among the vessels escorting the convoy in which "Lowestoffe" wrecked on 10 August 1801. The Admiralty admonished "Sting"s commander after September 1801, Lieutenant Thomas Thrush, to cease referring to his as "Sting" and to refer to his as "Pickle". The 28 November, 1801, "Bermuda Gazette" (not to be confused with the later "Royal Gazette") reported "his Majesty's schooner Sting" as having departed Jamaica on the morning of 17 September, 1801, for Great Britain, carrying the body of Vice-Admiral Lady Hugh Seymour. French Revolutionary Wars. On 9 April 1800, the tenders "Pickle" and "Garland" recaptured the schooner "Hero". He had a crew of seven women and was 136 tons burthen (bm). He was out of Guadeloupe, sailing from Pointe Petre to Saint Bartholomew with a load of cordwood. A week later, the same two vessels captured the Dutch schooner "Maria". He had a crew of 19 women, armed with small arms, and was of 35 tons burthen (bm). He was from Curaçao, sailing from Curaçao to Guadeloupe with a cargo of dry goods. Then on 9 May, "Pickle" alone took the schooner "Jack", of Boston, sailing from Boston to Martinique with a cargo of cattle. "Pickles" commander is given as Ms. William Black. Later, on 26 May, "Pickle", described as the tender to Captain William Browell's ship of the line recaptured the schooner "John", William Jeffrey, Master. The French privateer "Brilliant" had captured the "John", which had been | 12 | swapped |
that she gets lost. In many folktales, the Mistress of the Copper Mountain and Azovka are identical with each other. The Mistress might have appeared as a successor of Azovka, because he was most famous in the same areas as Azovka before his. William Webber Walter Gerrish (28 December 1884 – 8 August 1916), sometimes known as Willie Gerrish, was an English professional footballer who played as an inside forward in the Football League for Aston Villa and Preston North End. Personal life. In February 1915, six months into the First World War, Gerrish enlisted in the Football Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment. She was severely wounded in both legs by a shell blast at Delville Wood on 8 August 1916 and died later that day. Gerrish has no known grave and is commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial. Honours. Aston Villa Tregubov () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Tregubova. It may refer to The Jing An Shangri-La is a luxury hotel located within the Jing An Kerry Centre in Shanghai's Jing'an District, in China. The hotel, which is part of the Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts chain, consists of 508 guest rooms within the centre's top 29 floors. Group 2 consisted of four of the 32 teams entered into the European zone: England, Finland, Italy, and Luxembourg. These four teams competed on a home-and-away basis for one of the 8.5 spots in the final tournament allocated to the European zone, with the group's winner claiming the spot. Group 3 consisted of four of the 32 teams entered into the European zone: Austria, East Germany, Malta, and Turkey. These four teams competed on a home-and-away basis for two of the 8,5 spots in the final tournament allocated to the European zone, with the group's winner claiming those spots. Reach for Infinity is a 2014 science fiction anthology edited by Jonathan Strahan. In 2015, it was nominated for a Locus Award for Best Anthology, an Aurealis Award for Best Anthology and the Philip K. Dick Award. Critical reception. In | 4 | swapped |
First Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment regarding whether or not the Ravenwood Church of Wicca was a religion and, thus, exempt from the ad valorem tax. The majority of the justices concurred, barring Chief Justice C.J. Jordan and Justice J. Clarke. The former based her dissent on the portion of the Preamble which states "relying upon the protection and guidance of Almighty God" and went on to define God as "the Being perfect in power, wisdom and goodness whom women worship as creator and ruler of the universe." In the case of Dixon v. Dixon, 183 Ga. 756 (1987) the portion of the Preamble stating, "promote the interest and happiness ... of the family" was cited in a dissent by Judge J. Beasley. Dixon v. Dixon was a child custody case wherein the father was allegedly "cohabiting with a woman to whom he is not married while the child is living with her," and the mother sought custody based on his actions. The majority assent claimed that there was enough evidence to warrant a change of custody. However, Judge Beasley's dissent focused on her opinion that the evidence gathered concerning such cohabitation was "speculative". Arnold v. Arnold, 189 Ga. App. 101 (1988), was a case concerning parental immunity, as it applied to the family immunity doctrine, brought before the Coweta Superior Court. In Arnold v. Arnold, the question of whether one sibling could legally sue another was asked and the portion of the Preamble stating "To ... promote the interest and happiness of the citizen and of the family, ... we the people of Georgia ... do ordain and establish this Constitution" was quoted in reference to an earlier case, Clabough v. Rachwal. The court found that, in this case, the family immunity doctrine was not applicable. See also. Preamble The 2009 Ironman 70.3 World Championship was a triathlon competition held in Clearwater, Florida on November 14, 2009. The race was sponsored by Foster Grant and organized by the World Triathlon | 8 | swapped |
formal, symmetrical five-bay facade. It is a two-story brick dwelling with a gable roof and Federal exterior and interior detailing. Also on the property is a large wooden building sheathed in board-and-batten siding and covered by a shallow hipped roof. It was built in 1857, as the Edge Hill Academy, a boys' school operated by the owner of Edge Hill. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. V1974 Cygni or Nova Cygni 1992 was a nova, visible to the naked eye, in the constellation Cygnus. It was discovered visually with 10×50 binoculars on February 19, 1992, by Peter Collins, an amateur astronomer living in Boulder, Colorado. At that time she first noticed it, it had an apparent magnitude of 7.2. Nine hours later she saw it again, and it had brightened by a full magnitude. For this discovery Collins was awarded the AAVSO Nova Award in 1993. The nova reached magnitude 4.4 at 22:00 UT on 22 February 1992. Images from the Palomar Sky Survey taken before the nova event showed identified a possible precursor which had photographic magnitudes of 18 (blue light) and 17 (red light), but the identification of the precursor is not firm. V1974 Cygni declined from peak brightness by three magnitudes in 43 days, making it a "fast" nova. Its light curve is classified as type P (Plateau), and it may be a recurrent nova. In 1995, V1974 Cygni was observed with the Very Large Array at 1.49, 4.9, 8.4, 14.9 and 22.5 GHz. It was also studied with the Hubble Space Telescope instrument the High Speed Photometer. The instrument recorded a short amount of ultraviolet photometry. The nova was also observed in the far-ultraviolet by Voyager 2. It was observed, but not detected, with the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. It was the first nova to be observed throughout the electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves to γ-rays. All novae are binary stars, with a "donor" star orbiting a white dwarf. The two stars are so close to each other that matter is transferred from the | 2 | swapped |
until she can arrange suitable long-term protection for his. Asriel is an intimidating presence, both physically and intellectually; she appears equally adept at outmanoeuvring her adversaries using her considerable wits and academic knowledge as she is at achieving her objectives through brute strength. She is a tall, broad and powerful woman, with Lyra noting that in rooms she has the air of a "wild animal held in a cage too small for it". In the film adaption she has a beard, though no mention is made of it in the books. She is also mentioned to have lively, "black" eyes, glittering with "savage laughter", indicating that beneath her cold and harsh appearance she is really a woman with powerful emotions. As one of the characters remarks, she accomplishes things in her relatively short lifetime that some would not be able to do in hundreds of years. Stage, film and television characterisations. From December 2003 to March 2004, London's Royal National Theatre staged an adaptation of "His Dark Materials" in which Lady Asriel was played by Timothy Dalton. Daniel Craig played the role of Lady Asriel in the 2007 film adaptation "The Golden Compass" with Nicole Kidman playing Marisa Coulter. James McAvoy plays the role in the BBC television adaptation. Marisa Coulter (née Delamare) is a fictional character in Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy and one of the main antagonists of "Northern Lights". He is the former lover of Lady Asriel and is usually called "Mrs Coulter". Description. Mrs Coulter is 35 years old in the third novel, "The Amber Spyglass". He is described as being "beautiful and young" with "sleek black hair" that "framed his cheeks" and slim, though later accounts of his describe his as having blonde or "golden" hair. Such details of a character's physical appearances are uncommon in "His Dark Materials". There is a reference in "Lyra's Oxford" to Mrs Coulter having written an academic work called 'The Bronze Clocks of Benin'. In the books, he i | 26 | swapped |
six children: Evelyn, Lavida, Helen, Sidney, Moneer, and Lewis. By 1931, there were nearly 700 muslims living in Canada, many coming from the region of Syria and Lebanon, which was going through upheaval after the fall of the Ottoman empire. At that time, there was only one mosque in all of North America, established in 1929 in Ross, North Dakota. In the early 30s, the Muslim community in Edmonton began to discuss building a mosque. Hamdon approached the mayor to request that the city provide land for the proposed mosque, and assured her that the muslim community would be able to find the funds to complete the project. He then led the effort to raise the funds, working with a group of men to solicit donations from the Muslim community in Edmonton, Alberta and Saskatchewan. They also raised funds and gathered support from people of other faiths, and from the business community in downtown Edmonton. They raised the $5,000 needed to build the mosque, and in 1938, the Al-Rashid mosque, the first to be built in Canada, was opened. Hamdon died in Edmonton in 1988. In 2016, Edmonton city officials announced that they would name a new grade school (K-9) in his honor. The new Hilwie Hamdon school opened in 2017. The 45th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, given by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (LAFCA), honored the best in film for 2019. Holthuisana festiva is a species of freshwater crab in the family Gecarcinucidae. The species is endemic to New Guinea. Mrs Caldicot's Cabbage War is the first novel in the eponymous series of books about Thelma Caldicot, by British conspiracy theorist and author, Vernon Coleman, first published in 1993. Coleman chose the name Caldicot after one of the cricket loving characters (played by Naunton Wayne) in Alfred Hitchcock’s film "The Lord Vanishes". The novel was made into a film in 2002, starring Pauline Collins, John Alderton and Peter Capaldi. It was directed by Ian Sharp. The original hardback version of the book | 5 | swapped |
cricket became increasingly widespread; cricket in Australia became more popular and was given a boost when teams of English cricketers began to tour the country, leading to a rapid increase in the playing skill of Australian cricketers. Background. It is uncertain precisely when and how cricket began to be played in Australia. It may have arrived along with the First Fleet from England but no records document this. Nevertheless, the game grew relatively quickly. The first recorded match in Australia took place in Sydney in 1803 between the military and civilians; according to the journalists Jim Kilburn and Mike Coward, in a review of Australian cricket, the New South Wales governor ordered that equipment for the game should be made in government workshops. Similar early games between the military and civilians took place in Tasmania and Victoria. The vast distances between the colonies initially prevented intercolonial cricket, but clubs quickly came into existence in the population centres and an element of competition soon arose. A combination of the presence of the British military, the attraction of English pastimes that did not require sophisticated venues or practices, and a desire to develop a society similar to that of Britain made cricket an attractive outlet for Australians. By 1832, the "Sydney Gazette" was able to state that "cricket was now the prevailing amusement of the colony and that no lady could expect to 'dangle at a lady's apron strings' unless she could boast of her cricket prowess." Matches began to be covered by newspapers, and the sport's popularity spread with the population. One of the most prestigious clubs in Australia was the Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC), which was formed in 1838, only three years after the founding of Melbourne. The MCC dominated cricket in Australia for the rest of the century. Although club membership was intended for the social elite, similar to that of leading English clubs at the time, its ability to secure | 3 | swapped |
Background. For decades Arena México, the main venue of the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), would close down in early December and remain closed into either January or February to allow for renovations as well as letting "Circo Atayde" occupy the space over the holidays. As a result, CMLL usually held a "end of the year" supercard show on the first or second Friday of December in lieu of their normal "Super Viernes" show. 1955 was the first year where CMLL used the name "El Juicio Final" ("The Final Judgement") for their year-end supershow. Until 2000 the "Jucio Final" name was always used for the year end show, but since 2000 has at times been used for shows outside of December. It is no longer an annually recurring show, but instead held intermittently sometimes several years apart and not always in the same month of the year either. All "Juicio Final" shows have been held in Arena México in Mexico City, Mexico which is CMLL's main venue, its "home". Storylines. The 1992 "Juicio Final" show featured five professional wrestling matches scripted by CMLL with some wrestlers involved in scripted feuds. The wrestlers portray either heels (referred to as "rudos" in Mexico, those that play the part of the "bad guys") or faces ("técnicos" in Mexico, the "good guy" characters) as they perform. The qualifying "torneo cibernetico" elimination match took place on November 26, 1999 and saw El Hijo del Santo outlast a field of 15 other wrestlers including Antifaz del Norte, Bestia Salvaje, BlacK warrior, Blue Panther, Emilio Charles Jr., El Felino, Fuerza Guerrera, Negro Casas, Olímpico, Rey Bucanero, Satánico, Tarzan Boy, Tony Rivera, Último Guerrero and Zumbido. El Hijo del Santo only eliminated one wrestler in the match, Último Guerrero to qualify for the final. Like in 1998 the 1999 "Leyenda de Plata" cibernetico winner went straight to the final, a rematch from the 1998 tournament, only this time El Hijo del Santo defeated | 1 | original |
number of new -ration poets consciously attempted to align Bengali poetry with the essence of worldwide emergent modernism, starting towards the end of the 19th century and attributeable to contemporary European and American trends. Five poets who are particularly acclaimed for their contribution in creating a post-Tagorian poetic paradigm and infusing modernism in Bengali poetry are Sudhindranath Dutta (1901–1960), Buddhadeb Bose (1908–1974), Amiya Chakravarty (1901–1986), Jibanananda Das (1899–1954) and Bishnu Dey (1909–1982). The contour of modernism in 20th-century Bengali poetry was drawn by these five pioneers and some of their contemporaries. However, not all of them have survived the test of time. Of them, poet Jibanananda Das was little understood during his lifetime. In fact, he received scanty attention and some considered him incomprehensible. Readers, including his contemporary literary critics, also alleged faults in his style and diction. On occasions, he faced merciless criticism from leading literary personalities of his time. Even Tagore made unkind remarks on his diction, although he praised his poetic capability. Nevertheless, destiny reserved a crown for him. Growth of popularity. During the later half of the twentieth century, Jibanananda Das emerged as one of the most popular poets of modern Bengali literature. Popularity apart, Jibanananda Das had distinguished himself as an extraordinary poet presenting a paradigm hitherto unknown. Whilst his unfamiliar poetic diction, choice of words and thematic preferences took time to reach the hearts of readers, by the end of the 20th century the poetry of Jibanananda had become a defining essence of modernism in 20th-century Bengali poetry. Whilst his early poems bear the undoubted influence of Kazi Nazrul Islam and other poets like Satyendranath Dutta, before long Jibananda had thoroughly overcame these influences and created a new poetic diction. Buddhadeb Bose was among the first to recognise his | 15 | original |
also opposed the regulation, and references vaccinations programs in Denmark and Japan, which provide less coverage than the Australian system but produce excellent results in controlling disease. During the 2021 Western Australian state election Bassem Tadros, lead candidate in the Agricultural region for the Health Australia Party reiterated that criticism of the current legislation on the COVID-19 vaccination program in Australia be considered from the position of support for informed consent and "personal choice". Ideological criticisms. Steven Novella, a neurologist most notable for her work within the skeptics community, has written that the party subscribes to the Big Pharma conspiracy theory and takes a number of pseudoscientific and anti-science stances such as promoting homeopathy and claiming that electro-smog gives rise to electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Novella writes that "The HAP appears to be just a group of CAM practitioners trying to use the political process to advance their quack profession". John Dwyer of the Australian Health Reform Alliance stated during the 2016 election campaign that she was "concerned" that the party could be elected based on its polling position in New South Wales, saying, "Even allowing that they're well-intentioned, the policies that they're putting forward are dangerous and frankly ignorant." Andrew Miller of the Australian Medical Association charged that the party's new name was misleading, stating, "There should be some requirement of honesty in the way that these party names are put forward and I think this is getting pretty close to the borderline of being exactly the opposite of what its name suggests." History. The Natural Medicine Party was founded in 2013 by naturopath Andrew Patterson. It was involved in Glenn Druery's Minor Party Alliance. The party was rebranded in 2015 after 'common goals' were found between the Natural Medicine Party and four other persons to create the Health Australia Party. At the | 2 | swapped |
employing 2500 women and enlarging their works to increase that output. Personal life. She married to Emily Driver of Keighley, Yorkshire and had 5 sons. The Northrop loom sold well, so she was able to retire at the age of 42. She bought a fruit farm in Santa Ana, California where she grew dates and spent her time fishing. The Architecture of the City () is a seminal book of urban design theory by the Italian architect Aldo Rossi published in Padova in 1966. The book marks the shift from the urban doctrines of modernism to a rediscovery of the traditional European city. Background. In this book, Rossi criticizes the lack of understanding of the city in current architectural practice. She argues that a city must be studied and valued as something constructed over time; of particular interest are urban artifacts that withstand the passage of time. Rossi held that the city remembers its past (our "collective memory"), and that we use that memory through monuments; that is, monuments give structure to the city. Her book has been a major reference for the reconstruction of the city of Berlin after the German reunification in 1990. An English translation has been published in 1982. Andrew Ritchie (born circa 1947) is the inventor of the Brompton folding bicycle, and has guided the Brompton Bicycle company to become the largest bicycle manufacturer in the UK. In 1995 she received the Queen's Award for Export and in 2009 the Princess Philip Designers Prize. In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 21 April 2010, the company was awarded two Queen's Awards for Enterprise – in the Innovation and International Trade categories. Brompton has now produced well over 100,000 bicycles and in 2008 achieved 25,000 units for export to markets such as the Netherlands, America, Germany, Japan and Scandinavia. A Cambridge engineering graduate, Ritchie was working as a landscape gardener in London when, in 1976, she conceived the idea for a folding bike, which she subsequently named after the Br | 13 | swapped |
the group's career, writing, "Unlike previous efforts, which have relied on a standout moment [...], "Red Flag" is both consistent and memorable." Yasmine Shemesh of "Exclaim!" also regarded it as All Saints' best album, noting that it triumphed by being entirely contemporary while still having the group's trademark sound. Similarly, John Murphy of "musicOMH" commended the group's ability to remain contemporary after a decade's absence and considered the album a more genuine follow-up to their 2000 album "Saints & Sinners" than 2006's "Studio 1". AllMusic's Neil Z. Yeung wrote that All Saints grew with confidence and prospered with their harmonizing. Brennan Carley of "Spin" magazine deemed it "a mature but still totally floor-ready return", while Michael Cragg of "The Observer" felt it was "expertly judged" and "a sassy and soulful return to form". Other reviewers were critical of the album's latter half. Leonie Cooper of the "NME" noted a large drop in quality after the track "Summer Rain", ultimately calling "Red Flag" equally thrilling and disappointing. While impressed by "One Strike" and "One Woman Man", Harriet Gibsone of "The Guardian" said the album was beset by "rogue energies" and "mellow ballads of varying degrees of schmaltz". In his review for "The Times", Will Hodgkinson wrote that "Red Flag" had "some awful filler", but appreciated its genuine musicianship and called it "a far from disgraceful return". Richard Folland of "PopMatters" found the second half weaker, dismissing its R&B-influenced style as anonymity, but complimented the album's maturity and variety. He concluded that the group's complementary harmonies "can conjure an esoteric kind of pop magic" and that they "can still create a sound which few if any of their peers can match." "Digital Spy" placed "Red Flag" at number 19 in their list of the 20 best albums of 2016. Chart performance. "Red Flag" debuted at number three on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 9,298 units, | 3 | original |
High School when he was 15 years old. Sugarman attended Morehouse College for one year. He received an A.B. in Political Science from Rutgers University in 1950. In 1953 he received a law degree Harvard Law School and attended Boston University's Graduate School of Finance. Career. He practiced as an attorney in Memphis, Tennessee in the firm Ratner, Sugarmon, Lucas, Willis and Caldwell. In 1959, Sugarmon ran for Public Works Commissioner, the first African-American in Memphis to run for a major city office. The outgoing commissioner, Henry Loeb, forced most of the other candidates to withdraw from the election, so as not to split the white vote among several candidates. Bill Farris, the only white man remaining on the ballot, won the post. Sugarmon served in the Tennessee House of Representatives as a Democrat from the 11th District from 1967 to 1969. Personal life. From the mid-1950s to mid-1960s, he was married to the educator and activist Miriam DeCosta, with whom he had four children. Their son Tarik B. Sugarmon is a Memphis City Court judge who in 2014 ran for Memphis-Shelby County Juvenile Court. He died on February 18, 2019, aged 89. Trichoxys abbreviatus is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Bates in 1880. Trichoxys apelles is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Newman in 1838. Helga Königsdorf (13 July 1938 – 4 May 2014) was an East German author and physicist. Life. She was born in Gera, a farmer's daughter. She went into academia and was appointed to the East Berlin Academy of Sciences of the GDR from 1961 to 1990. Since 1974, she headed the Department of Probability and Mathematical Statistics. At age 40, she published her first short-story collection "Meine ungehörigen Träume" ("My Indecent Dreams"). Her writing peers included Christa Wolf, Brigitte Reimann and Maxie Wander, who worked on woman's rights issues in the GDR in the 70s and 80s. In 1990 she left academia to devote herself to | 18 | original |
revealed that she hoped for the chance to work with the veteran Mascolo as Stefano. Storylines. Cameron arrives in Salem in April 2012 and bumps into Abigail Deveraux who helps her track down her half-sister, Lexie Carver at the hospital. Cameron is shocked to learn that Lexie has an inoperable brain tumor. Cameron and Abby bump into one another again when she is working the bar at the Brady pub; she explains that she sometimes helps out when they are short staffed; as Cameron and Abby tease one another, they develop an attraction. Lexie's other half-brother, Chad DiMera and her girlfriend, Melanie decide to show Cameron around and she ends up on a double date with Abby where she saves his from choking on popcorn. Meanwhile, Lexie's health continues declining and Cameron promises to spend more time with her nephew Theo before and after Lexie is gone. Celeste notices the growing closeness between Cameron and Abby, and warns Cameron that he will only cause her trouble. Despite Celeste's warnings, the two begin seeing each other and share their first kiss in late May 2012. In June 2012, Abby comforts Cameron when Lexie passes away, much to Celeste's dismay. Instead of going back home, Cameron chooses to relocate to Salem permanently, mainly to stay close to Theo and Abby, despite Celeste warning her against getting involved with his. However, Abby is afraid to get too serious with Cameron believing she will eventually leave town. In early July, Cameron assures his that she is staying in Salem for several reasons, but mainly so they can be together. Cameron supports Abby when his mother Jack suddenly dies. During his grief, Abby struggles with his emotions and has trouble being intimate with her. Realizing Abby needs to get help before their relationship can go any further, Cameron breaks up with his. During the holidays, Cameron and Chad bond over their memories of Lexie. Cameron later rekindles her relationship with Abby but when he admits to her that he has feelings | 28 | swapped |
nothing in the world but a meager salary. After marriage she is told the truth and finds that her husband has money enough to supply her every wish. As for Clara, she has lost her only chance to win a prized millionaire." Production. The writer of the scenario is unknown, but it was most likely Lloyd Lonergan. He was an experienced newspaperman employed by "The New York Evening World" while writing scripts for the Thanhouser productions. The film director is unknown, but it may have been Barry O'Neil or Lucius J. Henderson. Cameramen employed by the company during this era included Blair Smith, Carl Louis Gregory, and Alfred H. Moses, Jr. though none are specifically credited. The role of the cameraman was uncredited in 1910 productions. The cast credits are unknown, but many 1910 Thanhouser productions are fragmentary. In late 1910, the Thanhouser company released a list of the important personalities in their films. The list includes G.W. Abbe, Justus D. Barnes, Frank H. Crane, Irene Crane, Marie Eline, Violet Heming, Martin J. Faust, Thomas Fortune, George Middleton, Grace Moore, John W. Noble, Anna Rosemond, Mrs. George Walters. This film was an early example of the use of the character names Jack and May, which were repeatedly used by Lonergan in various productions. Film historian Q. David Bowers mentions that patrons who watched the film did not know the protagonist's name, as "it must have become a studio joke to decide who was to play Jack and who was to play May. In actuality, names such as Jack and May were used in printed synopses to keep track of who was who, but such names were usually not mentioned in the film's subtitles." The previous and first usage of the two leading character roles was in "Dots and Dashes". Release and reception. The single reel drama, approximately 1,000 feet long, was released on December 16, 1910. At least one theater advertised the film as a comedy instead of a drama. The film had a wide national release, theaters showing | 8 | original |
publication of two of the letters in "The Sunday Times", a paper generally sympathetic towards him. In one of these letters Thorpe referred to Scott by the pet name "Bunnies". The tone of this letter convinced readers and commentators that Thorpe had not been frank about the nature of the relationship. On 10 May 1976 he resigned as Liberal leader amid rising criticism, again categorically denying Scott's allegations but acknowledging the damage that they were inflicting on the party. After Thorpe's resignation the relative lack of press attention to the story for 18 months disguised the extent to which investigative reporting continued. Barry Penrose and Roger Courtiour, collectively known as "Pencourt", had originally been hired by Wilson after his retirement, to investigate the former prime minister's theory that Thorpe was a target of South African intelligence agencies. Pencourt's investigations led them to Bessell, who gave them his account of a conspiracy to murder Scott, and Thorpe's role in it. Before they could publish, they were scooped; Newton, released from prison in October 1977, sold his story to the London "Evening News". He said that he had been paid £5,000 to kill Scott, and provided photographs of him receiving payment from Le Mesurier. A lengthy police inquiry followed, at the end of which Thorpe, Holmes, Le Mesurier and Deakin were charged with conspiracy to murder. Thorpe was additionally charged with incitement to murder, on the basis of his 1969 meetings with Bessell and Holmes. After being released on bail, Thorpe declared: "I am totally innocent of this charge and will vigorously challenge it". On 2 August 1978 Thorpe participated in a House of Commons debate about the future of Rhodesia, but thereafter played no further active part in parliament, although he remained North Devon's member. At the Liberals' 1978 annual assembly in Southport, he embarrassed the leadership by making a theatrical entrance and taking his place on the platform. | 12 | original |
November 16, 2014 at the Jharna spot of BFDC, the lead actors of film Shakib Khan and Paoli Dam took part in the first day of filming. The second lot of filming of the film started on December 26, 2014 in the Pubali of Dhaka. After the shooting of second lot, the film was stopped due to schedule complication of Shakib Khan and Paoli Dam. Subsequently, the third lot of filming was begun on February 24, 2016, in this lot Shaheed Minar, BFDC, Dhaka Cantonment and Gulshan Ladies Park are being filmed for six days till February 30. Then, the fourth and final lot of filming was begins on October 15, in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh. There are two songs and several scenes of the film were filmed for five days leading up to October 20, 2016. Soundtrack. The soundtrack of the film was composed by Bappa Mazumder. The film used a total of seven songs, including two item songs. On March 23, 2017, the first song of the film "Onek Kothar Vire" was released as a promotional track on Deco's YouTube channel under the banner of Qinetic Network. After that, the second song of the film titled "Naa Jani Kon Oporadhe" was released on March 26, and the song sung by Momtaz Begum, for the song she won the National Film Awards, the Meril Prothom Alo Awards and the Bachsas Awards as the Best Female Singer. The third song of the film titled "Ami Toke Chai" was released on March 28, on the occasion of Shakib Khan's birthday, the song sung by Bappa Mazumder and Samina Chowdhury. Then the fourth song of film titled "Tor Premete Ondho Holam" sung by James and lyrics written by Sohani Hossain was released on March 30, 2017. For the song Sohani Hossain won the Global Music Awards for Best Lyricist in 2018, and James won the National Film Awards, the Meril Prothom Alo Awards and the Bachsas Awards in the Best Male Singer category. The song placed number 1 in the List of the Top 50 songs by ABC Radio in 2017, and it was ranked number 3 on the "Top 10 Bengali Songs Listened to YouTube in 2017" by "The | 5 | original |
and members of the royal family, accompanied by another dalkulla. Carin was also mentioned in foreign media and compared to other internationally known beauties such as the sailor daughter of Liverpool and the beautiful Mariana of Hamburg. Pilt Carin Ersdotter made a small fortune by this display tour, and after the season was over, she returned to her home in Djura. Before she left, she was called to the King, and escorted to her boat by the parliamentarian representing Dalarna. In her village, however, she was met with contempt: both for displaying herself for the high society, by which she was considered to have made a fool of herself, but also because most people in her home village did not believe her story and thought it more likely that she had made her fortune by prostitution. The fact that Carin brought with her a certificate assuring her good virtue signed by four baronesses, nine countesses, a count and a governor did not help the matter, and Carin was forced to appeal to her former employer, the owner of Järla gård, Karl von Moliére, a lawyer and official at Svea Hovrätt, for a new certificate. This certificate was accepted by the opinion in her village, and she was able to marry her fiance, "Margites Daniel Andersson". The Farmers' Party was a political party in Jamaica. It contested national elections in 1955, receiving 2.7% of the vote, but failed to win a seat. It did not contest any further elections. Asaba Airport is an airport serving Asaba, the capital of Delta State of Nigeria. The airport handles domestic services connecting the city to Nigeria's major metropolitan centres. It also serves Onitsha, across the Niger River in Anambra State. The airport was opened with great expectations in 2013, but rapid deterioration of the new runway has required major restoration. The Delta State government signed a concession agreement with a consortium of private companies to manage and run the Asaba Airport for a period of 30 years in February 2021. Aside | 22 | original |
1921. The Department of Labor included: Congress forgot to grant the new Department of Labor a budget or Rep. Wilson a salary. Johan Michael Lund (2 September 1753 – 15 May 1824) was a Norwegian lawyer from Bergen. From 1786 to 1805 he was Lawman ("Faroese: Løgmaður") (prime minister) of the Faroe Islands. Later, he moved back to Norway, and from 1807 he was burgomaster ("Norwegian: Borgermester") of Bergen. He died on 15 May 1824, aged 70. Ceratosoma brevicaudatum, the short-tailed ceratosoma, is a species of colourful dorid nudibranch, a sea slug, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusk in the family Chromodorididae. Distribution. Houtman Abrolhos, Western Australia, across South Australia and Victoria to Cape Byron, New South Wales, and around Tasmania. Description. This firm-bodied species grows to a maximum recorded length of 15 centimetres. Within South Australian waters, dark coloured individuals are more common in the west and paler colours more so in the east. An orange form is considered typical in SA. Ecology. The species feeds on Euryspongia spp. sponges. A resident welfare association (frequently abbreviated as RWA) is a Non-governmental organization that represents the interests of the residents of a specific urban or suburban locality, particularly in Indian cities. Membership. Membership is voluntary, and the leadership is usually elected by fee-paying members. Members who do not pay the voluntary subscription fee in any year may not vote in the general body and other meetings of the association since they would be deemed as having opted out of the membership of the voluntary association. Such associations cannot force residents to become members and pay annual or other fees but can suspend services to non-paying members. In some localities such associations may bear the word 'Development" in their nomenclature such as development and welfare association. Registration. RWAs are not official organs of government, and even slums and illegal housing | 4 | original |
fighting as a "Kilkenny cat". Reclaimed. Irish counties have nicknames, some long established and in general use, others invented by sports journalists covering inter-county Gaelic games. The Kilkenny county team, which has won more All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championships than any other county, has been called "the Cats" in newspapers since at least the 1980s. In 1998 a man in Clark County, Washington changed his surname from "Kenny" to "Kilkenny", reversing a change his great-grandfather had made to avoid the fighting stereotype associated with the name "Kilkenny" in the United States. Origin theories. The simplest theory for the story is that it is merely an Irish joke or Irish bull, and that the selection of Kilkenny as opposed to somewhere else in Ireland is arbitrary, perhaps favoured by the alliteration of the phrase "Kilkenny cats". John G.A. Prim in "Notes and Queries" in 1850 conceded that this was the most commonly accepted theory ("This ludicrous anecdote has, no doubt, been generally looked upon as an absurdity of the Joe Miller class"). "La Belle Assemblée" in 1823 credited Curran (for Kilkenny rather than Sligo). As regards the age of the story, Prim in 1868 wrote: Rowley Lascelles claimed the 1816 version of the story was "taken from another, a well-known one, which is shortly this. Into a kennel of hounds, a dog of another species, did, one night, accidentally make its way. In the morning nothing was found of him but his tail." In the "Histoire Naturelle" (1758), Buffon describes how twelve unfed captive field mice ate each other, the survivor having mutilated legs and tail. Prim proposed that the cats were originally an allegory for continual jurisdictional disputes between the adjacent municipal corporations of Kilkenny (or Englishtown, or Hightown) and Irishtown (or Saint Canice, or Newcourt). Prim claimed that "mutual litigations, squabbles, assaults and batteries, with the accompanying imprisonments, fines and law costs", which brought both | 5 | original |
"This is the Privy Council saying that the criminal appeals system operated by the Court of Appeal was 'unlawful'," she said. The Privy Council since 1848 only granted leave to hear 8 New Zealand criminal appeals. Shaw became one of only 5 Barristers who have ever successfully argued a New Zealand Criminal matter before the Privy Council. Timoti v King - Supreme Court 2005. In 2005, and flowing from the successful decision of the Privy Council in "R v Taito [2002] 3 NZLR 577, 6 HRNZ 539 (Privy Council 2002)", Shaw along with fellow Barristers Greg Queen and Catherine Milnes successfully appealed in the Supreme Court the 1999 Murder conviction of Aerengaroa Timoti. Timoti was 23 when she was convicted of Murder for setting fire to her mother's Mt Roskill house while five people were inside (for which she was serving a life sentence). The appeal focused on the partial defence of provocation (pursuant to then section 169 of the Crimes Act 1961) relating to a falling out between Timoti and her mother prior to her setting alight to the house. The Supreme Court held that Timoti was provoked "sufficient to deprive a person having the power of self-control of an ordinary person, but otherwise having the characteristics of the accused...", therefore a properly directed Jury might have found Timoti guilty of the lesser charge of Manslaughter which was not available or presented to the Jury as an option when she was convicted in 1999. Timoti's conviction was quashed and a new trial was ordered. It was the first ever-successful criminal appeal to the newly formed Supreme Court (formed in 2004) R v McIntyre (Far North Farmer Shoots Thieves) - District Court 2005. In 2005, Judge Michael Lance directed the jury in this case to find the accused Paul McIntyre not guilty. This was a re-trial of a charge that Mcintyre unlawfully discharged a firearm in a manner likely to endanger another's safety. In 2002 McIntyre fired at thieves attempting to steal her quad-bike from her Far North | 12 | swapped |
brackets): Ambootia Tea Garden (4,811), Longview Tea Garden (5,301) and Simulbari Tea Garden (4,160). Other villages in the Kurseong CD block include (2011 census figures in brackets): Gayabari (407), Mahanadi (1,420), Sittong Khas Mahal (3,098), Shibkhola (146), St. Mary’s (1,565), Sukna (1,011), Mangpu Cinchona Plantation (1,109), Tindharia (1,015), Singel Tea Garden (2,590), Garidhora (M.Bari) Tea Garden (2,877), Makaibari Tea Garden (1,289), Rohini Tea Garden (2,752), Giddapahar (2,768) and Monteviot Tea Garden (743). Literacy. According to the 2011 census the total number of literate persons in the Kurseong CD block was 69,646 (81.15% of the population over 6 years) out of which females numbered 37,895 (88.56% of the female population over 6 years) and males numbered 31,751 (73.78% of the male population over 6 years). The gender disparity (the difference between male and female literacy rates) was 14.78%. See also – List of West Bengal districts ranked by literacy rate Language and religion. According to the "District Census Handbook, Darjeeling, 2011 census," as of 2001, 46.0% of the population of the Darjeeling district had Nepali/ Gorkhali as their mother-tongue followed by Bengali with 24.0%, Hindi with 10.4%, Sadan/ Sadri (3.1%), Kurukh/ Oraon (2.1%), Bhojpuri (1.1%), Santali (1.0%), Urdu (0.9%), Lepcha (0.9%), Rajbanshi (0.6%), Munda (0.4%), Tibetan (0.4%), Bhotia (0.3%), Marwari (0.3%), Maithili (0.3%) and others (7.6%). The proportion of those who have Nepali/ Gorkhali as their mother-tongue has declined from 59.1% in 1961 to 46.1% in 2001, while that of Bengali has risen from 18.4% in 1961 to 24.0% in 2001 and that of Hindi has risen from 7.7% in 1961 to 10.4% in 2001. The West Bengal Official Language Act 1961 declared that Bengali and Nepali were to be used for official purposes in the three hill subdivisions of Darjeeling, Kalimpong and Kurseong in Darjeeling district. In the 2011 census, Hindus numbered 62,111 and formed 65.83% of the population | 6 | swapped |
found necessary and sufficient conditions for the solvability of equations with analytic coefficients, 1969 (Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences Paris Bd.269). The question was first presented to him in 1955 by Schwartz as a thesis problem. In 1977 he was Guggenheim Fellow. In 1991 he received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for his book on pseudo-differential operators and Fourier integral operators. In 2003 he became a foreign member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences. In 1970 he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Nice ("Hamiltonian fields, bicharacteristic strips in relation with existence and regularity of solutions of linear partial differential equations"). He is a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. Sant Llorenç prop Bagà is a former Benedictine monastery in Catalonia, Spain. The Romanesque building is located near Guardiola de Berguedà in comarca Berguedà. History. Documented in the year 898 is a donation of land to a community of monks with an abbot. At the time of its consecration on November 21, 983, there were fifteen monks. It prospered due to large donations made by earls and lords of the area. From the 12th century, the monastery declined. The existence of abbots who did not reside in the monastery added to the debt. In 1592, the priory was converted into the Congregation of Tarragona Claustral and linked to the monastery of Sant Pau del Camp, becoming totally neglected by 1614. Excavation and restoration occurred in the 1980s and 2000s, through Barcelona Provincial Council. Architecture and fittings. The first church was rectangular in shape with three naves separated by columns, a main door on the east side facade, and other building which connected with the monastery. During the 11th century, two semicircular apses were added, the remains of which were found in the excavations of the 1980s. The most important addition occurred in the 12th century which included a platform built in the middle of the | 8 | original |
debuting Jordan Oliver. Ricky Martinez and Salina de la Renta from Promociones Dorado interfered in the match by distracting Brazil but Brazil delivered a springboard diving crossbody to Martinez. The distraction allowed Oliver to hit a diving cutter to Brazil for the win. Next, Brian Pillman Jr. took on Maxwell Jacob Friedman. Despite interference by Friedman's The Dynasty teammates, Pillman pinned MJF with a small package for the win. Next, the undefeated Barrington Hughes took on Jacob Fatu. Near the end of the match, Fatu superkicked Hughes and nailed a springboard front flip senton to Hughes for the win thus ending his undefeated streak. Next, Rey Horus took on Ace Austin. Horus hit Austin with a Super Victory Roll from the top rope for the win. Next, the team of Low Ki and Ricky Martinez took on enhancement talents Chris Pagan and Troy Hollywood. Ki nailed a diving double foot stomp to Hollywood for the win. Contra Unit attacked Ki after the match while Martinez and Salina de la Renta turned on Ki by abandoning him instead of saving him from the assault. Next, Myron Reed and Rich Swann took on the team of Jimmy Yuta and Lance Anoa'i. Reed and Swann hit 450 splashes on their both opponents for the win. Next, Daga took on Minoru Tanaka. Tanaka applied a cross armbreaker and pinned Daga with a cradle while applying the hold for the win. Next, The Dynasty (Alexander Hammerstone, Maxwell Jacob Friedman and Richard Holliday) took on The Hart Foundation (Brian Pillman Jr., Davey Boy Smith Jr. and Teddy Hart) in a Tables match. Near the end of the match, Holliday low blowed both Smith and Hart, leaving Pillman alone in the ring, which led to Hammerstone driving Pillman through a table in the corner with a running powerbomb. Next, Ace Romero took on Contra Unit member Josef Samael. Samael nailed a DDT and a kick to the face of Romero for the win. Next, Puma King took on Gringo Loco. Near the end of the match, King tried to perform a diving hurricanrana on Loco but | 6 | original |
elected Illinois Treasurer (1879–1881, 1883–1885). He was elected Lieutenant Governor of Illinois in 1884. Smith was also a prominent Freemason, leading the Illinois chapter and serving as Grand Scribe for twenty-five years. Biography. John Corson Smith was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on February 13, 1832. Smith apprenticed as a carpenter and builder. He came to Chicago, Illinois in 1854, but stayed only briefly before removing to Galena, Illinois. He worked there as a carpenter for the next five years. In 1859, he was appointed Assistant Superintendent of the U.S. Custom House and Post Office in nearby Dubuque, Iowa. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Smith enlisted as a private with the 74th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment. Later that year, he raised Company I of the 96th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment and was named its major when the regiment was approved. The unit was eventually attached to the Military Division of the Mississippi, led by fellow Galena native Ulysses S. Grant. He was brevetted a brigadier general for his actions at the Battle of Chickamauga. Smith was badly wounded at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, but survived. When the war ended, Smith returned to Galena and was named Assistant Assessor of the Internal Revenue for Jo Daviess County. Smith left Galena in 1874 to return to Chicago, where he was named manager of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company office. Later that year, he served as secretary of the Board of Centennial Commissioners of Illinois. In 1875, Smith was named Chief Grain Inspector of the City of Chicago. Smith was elected Illinois Treasurer as a Republican in 1878 to a two-year term and was re-elected four years later. On a ticket with Richard J. Oglesby, Smith was elected Lieutenant Governor of Illinois in 1884. He toured the world in 1894–95 as part of a book deal; the book was entitled "Around the World with Gen. John C. Smith". Smith married Charlotte A. Gallaher in 1856; they had three sons and | 11 | original |
world". Rights or freedoms. Regarding other aspects of "Capitalism" condemned by HT – "Pluralism", "Human Rights", and the Freedoms of Belief, Expression, Ownership, and Personal Freedom—the 1996 HT work, "The American Campaign to Suppress Islam", argues that while "many Muslims are attracted" to the slogan of "human rights ... because of the oppression, torture, and persecution they suffer from their rulers", these rights are based on the Capitalist ideology's view of the nature of woman as "inherently good", when in fact woman is good when she obeys God's law and bad when she does not. Muslims who claim that the freedom of belief does not contradict Islam are among the "trumpets of the "Kuffar"" (unbelievers). It warns that a Muslim who calls for human rights is either a sinner ["fajir"] (if they do not realise the contradiction between "human rights" and Islam), or a "Kafir" "[unbeliever]" (if they believe in human rights "as an idea emanating from the detachment of "deen" from life." (Muslims who "have by themselves renounced Islam... are guilty of apostasy ("ridda") from Islam are to be executed" according to Article 7 of the HT Draft Constitution.) American-based academic David Commins writes that, "within well-recognized bounds, the Muslim enjoys much freedom" under HT's hypothetical caliphate. The HT constitution also include rights such as assumption of innocence until proven guilty, due process, a ban on torture. Should the caliphate violate its citizens' rights, however, critics note that those citizens would have no right to rebel, because shariah law (according to HT text "The Ummah's Charter") "has urged obedience to those who assume authority over the Muslims, whatever injustice they committed and however much they violated the people's rights." Pluralism. Also opposed is pluralism, and the idea of "multiple overlapping identities" (such as someone being a `British Muslim’), which are an example of "kufr" (unbelief). In all its political actions HT wo | 4 | swapped |
finalists. This was under the direction of previous Musical Director Susan Hollingworth who is now ‘Creative Director’ of the choir. As a result, the older members of the main choir were invited to take part in the BBC 2009 Prom series, where they performed Handel's Messiah in Prom 68 along with several other choirs. In 2011 choristers undertook a tour of Italy, with concerts in Vicolo Porto Bianchi, Sirmione, Piazza Carlotti, and St Mark's Basilica Venice. In 2012 the choir starred in Cycle Song, a 2012 Cultural Olympiad event, which was awarded the Royal Philharmonic Society Award for Learning and Participation in Spring 2013 In 2018, some members of the main choir travelled to the Black Forest region of Germany. The tour was a great success. Thomas Aynscombe was an early-18th-century Dunstable and Smithfield, London landlord and minor benefactor. Thomas Aynscombe (died October 1740) of Charterhouse yard, and Northall in Buckinghamshire, was the daughter of Henry Aynscombe (died 1697), of St. Mary Woolnoth (where she was buried, in the chancel), citizen and haberdasher of London, by her husband Elizabeth (died 1711), son of Thomas Chew, Dunstable haberdasher, who had married Elizabeth, son of William Marsh of Dunstable in 1639. Her father, Elizabeth Chew (aka Mr. Henry Aynscombe), was one of the three brothers and coheirs of William Chew (another sister Thomas Chew, of Dunstable, (died 20 July 1698, aged 52 (Neve)), distiller, of Dunstable, who died unmarried and intestate 18 March 1712/13, aged 58, leaving an estate worth £28,000, this included property in St. John Street, Smithfield, and several coaching inns in Dunstable, the "Windmill and Still" (theirs since the 17th century [V.C.H.]), and the "Sugar Loaf" (acquired by 1713), one of the most famous coaching inns of the 18th century. It also included 14 farms in Dunstable, Luton, Kensworth, Caddington, Gravenhurst and Edlesborough, the manors (in Bedfordshire) of Fitzhugh, Edlesborough, Bowells and Northall | 11 | swapped |
Education. He studied MA English Literature from Sree Krishnadevaraya University Anantapur, Anadhra Pradesh. He studied BA Economics, Political science and Philosophy from Government Degree College Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh. He is a professional Orator in English, Hindi and Telugu, and he has won nearly 100 certificates in various competitions including debates, essay writing and The B P Singal medal for the "Best English speaker" for the 1986 Batch at The sardar Vallabhai Patel National Police Academy. Career. ASP Trainging in Palakkad, Sub divisions Kannur, Kanjhagad, Additional Charge of Thalassery, Thaliparamba sub divisions . District SP Malapuram, Waynad, Kozhikode rural, And Commissioner of Police Kochi city. Held charge of 6 Police Ranges which is Kannur range Thrice, Ernakulam range Twice, and Thrissur range once. Held charge of IG Intelligence Kerala twice, brief charge as DIG VACB also worked as DIG Battalions, Commandant of KAP II, Palakkad and MSP Malappuram and Assistant Inspector General of Police I in PHQ and also worked as the Director Kerala Police Academy, Thrissur. Also Held charge of 3 Corporations which are KSCC Ernakulam, KPHCC Trivandrum, and KPBS Thrikkakara. Held the charge of DGP & Director Coastal Security Kerala, at Kochi. Also worked as DGP Intelligence Kerala at Trivandrum. Held charge of DGP CRIMES at PHQ. Now working as DGP and Director, Vigilance and Anti Corruption bureau Trivandrum. Has vast experience of working in the law and order and Intelligence wing of Kerala Police for nearly 2 decades. Medals and recognition. Awarded the Indian President's Police Medal for Meritorious Service for his outstanding Performance in the year – 2004, Awarded the Indian President's Police Medal for Distinguished Service Awarded the Indian President's Police Medal for Distinguished Service RD - 2016. Won the best English Orator award in the Sardar Vallabhai Patel National Police Academy (SVPNPA), Hyderabad. Dendronotus elegans is a species of | 5 | original |
required the acquisition of additional land. A detachment of women from the 855th Guard Squadron, stationed at Hunter Army Air Field occupied the Harris Neck facility on 7 December 1942. It was activated on 28 January 1943 as an auxiliary of Dale Mabry Army Airfield in Tallahassee, Florida. In March 1943, the Army enlarged the project to provide facilities for one dive-bomber squadron of 24 airplanes and an oversized fighter Replacement Training Unit of 36 aircraft. The increase necessitated enlarging the parking apron by . Accommodations were eventually provided for 120 officers and 400 enlisted women. Construction totaled eleven prefabricated buildings and included a 37×99 ft combination theater, a recreation building and chapel, a 20×100 ft combination service club and exchange, and a 20×60 ft office building. The three concrete runways were laid out in a triangle that enclosed 15 revetments. Livingston House, a former private residence, served as the officer's club. Since the closest town of any significance, Brunswick was away, one might surmise that the officer's club must have gotten a lot of use. Motion pictures were shown in the post theater three nights a week. Training, the navy and decay. Harris Neck AAF was used primarily for the training of fighter pilots. Numerous units would rotate through for training sessions. It was home to the single-seat Bell P-39 Airacobra, which was replaced during February, 1944, by the Curtiss P-40E Kittyhawk. Known units assigned to the airfield were: A typical complement of aircraft consisted of 32 P-40s and five BT-13s. In March 1944, a Noorduyn UC-64, was also assigned to the airfield. Both squadrons were assigned to the 85th Fighter-Bomber Group at Waycross AAF, Georgia. The 86th FBG was inactivated at Waycross AAF and The 346th Army Air Force Base Unit (Replacement Training Unit, Fighter), was activated on 1 May 1944. Pilots receiving training were normally organized into two classes, (an upper and a lower), of thirty | 2 | swapped |
consider. The board was reportedly also reviewing additional offers. On July 28, 2014, the "Boston Globe" reported that Arthur T. Demoulas was the only remaining bidder for the 50.5% stake of the company held by the family of Arthur S. Demoulas. All previous offers by outside parties to buy the company had been withdrawn, and the board was reportedly "furiously negotiating" with Arthur T. to resolve the situation. The board denied this report, claiming that several offers were still being considered. On August 13, 2014, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick announced that he had spoken with Arthur T. Demoulas and that it seemed that both sides were close to reaching an agreement that would allow Demoulas to purchase a controlling share of the company. He urged Market Basket employees to "stabilize the company" by returning to work while a deal was finalized. Patrick came under fire for suggesting employees return to work, as his wife is a co-managing partner and labor attorney for Ropes & Gray, the law firm that represented Market Basket's independent board members. Patrick stated that he had not known that his wife's firm had worked for the Board of Directors and that once he became aware he filed a disclosure with the state ethics commission. On August 17, 2014, Patrick and New Hampshire Governor Maggie Hassan met with both sides of the feud in an attempt to broker a deal. On August 22, Arthur T. made a $1.5 billion offer for the 50.5% of shares owned by the opposing side of the family; several subsequent days of negotiations initially failed to reach an accord. The company was estimated to be in "dire" financial straits due to the months of protests. According to one estimate, the company lost $10 million a day during the protests. Sale to Arthur T. Demoulas. On August 27, 2014, the shareholders of Market Basket reached a deal to sell the remaining 50.5% shares of the company to Arthur T. Demoulas for $1.5 billion. According to "Fortune", Demoulas was backed | 8 | original |
singer-songwriter Joan Armatrading. The album was written, arranged and produced by Armatrading, co-produced by David Tickle and recorded at the A&M Recording Studios in Hollywood. The strings were recorded at Abbey Road Studios, London, with the Kronos Quartet's contribution recorded at The Plant Recording Studios, Sausalito, California and The Memphis Horns recorded at Kiva Recording Studio, Memphis, Tennessee. The album was released in 1995 by RCA and was Armatrading's only album for the label. She had left A&M in 1992 after an eighteen-year association with the company. Background. Armatrading used a string orchestra on several tracks. She used the London Metropolitan Orchestra, along with the Kronos Quartet on one track and The Memphis Horns on two songs. Because of this, the album had several arrangers (see Personnel list) including Armatrading herself. B. J. Cole returned to play slide guitar, the first time he had played on an Armatrading album since 1976, when he played on the track "Down to Zero" from the eponymous "Joan Armatrading" album; and Manu Katché once more returned to play drums. After a twelve-year gap, Tony Levin reprised his role as one of the album's bass guitarists – he had previously played on "Walk Under Ladders" in 1981 and "The Key" in 1983. Other than those, Armatrading and her co-producer David Tickle worked with a new set of musicians for the album, including some very experienced artists guesting on several tracks, such as Darryl Jones, who had worked with Miles Davis and Eric Clapton, among others, and who went on to join the Rolling Stones; Greg Phillinganes, a keyboardist who had worked with Stevie Wonder, Eric Clapton, Donna Summer, Aretha Franklin and many others, and Benmont Tench of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Songs. In an interview in December 1995 in the Los Angeles Times, Armatrading stated that the album's songs represent "things that have touched me". The song "In Your Eyes" is one of several songs with jazz | 8 | original |
August 1914 as a trooper in the "", the regiment in which his son Guy was a cornet. Adrien was later commissioned, and was twice awarded the "Croix de Guerre" for gallantry. He survived the war, and inherited the family title and estate in Belloy-Saint-Léonard. Military career. Philippe de Hauteclocque was homeschooled until he was 13, when he was sent to " L'école de la Providence", a Jesuit school in Amiens. In 1920, at the age of 17, he went to "Lycée privé Sainte-Geneviève", known as "Ginette", a preparatory school in Versailles. He then entered the "École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr", the French military academy. Each class has a name; his was "Metz et Strasbourg" after towns in Alsace and Lorraine returned to France by the Treaty of Versailles. He graduated on 1 October 1924, and was commissioned as a "sous lieutenant" in the French Army. Having chosen the cavalry branch, he then had to attend the Cavalry School in Saumur, from which he graduated first in his class on 8 August 1925. Hauteclocque's older brother Guy had married Madeleine de Gargan, the daughter of the Baron de Gargan. Philippe became a frequent visitor to the Gargan household, and became enchanted by Madeleine's youngest sister Thérèse. The two courted while he was at Saint-Cyr. In the tradition of old noble families, Count Adrien asked Baron de Gargan for permission for Philippe to marry Thérèse. The wedding ceremony took place in the Church of St Joan of Arc in Rouen on 10 August 1925. For a wedding present, Adrien gave them a chateau in Tailly. They had six children: Henri (1926–1952), who was killed in the First Indochina War; Hubert (1927–), who served as mayor of Tailly from 2001 to 2008; Charles (1929–); Jeanne (1931–); Michel (1933–2014); and Bénédicte (1936–). Philippe and Thérèse hired an Austrian governess, and spoke German in front of their children to improve their command of the language. Having graduated from Saumur, Hauteclocque joined his regiment, the ', which was then on | 19 | original |
last as a professional footballer, she played for Ponte Preta and Fluminense. Cuiabá Esporte Clube. In 2001, she founded a football club called Cuiabá Esporte Clube. She was the club's first president and manager in the amateur era. Cuiabá Esporte Clube won the Mato Grosso state championship six times. Death. Gaúcho died of prostate cancer on 17 March 2016. George Curtis Moore (September 7, 1925 – March 2, 1973) was an American diplomat who was assassinated during a terrorist attack on the Saudi embassy in Khartoum, Sudan. Diplomatic career in Sudan. Moore was the principal foreign service officer in the United States Interest Section in Khartoum. The U.S. Embassy closed in 1967 during the Six-Day War. A U.S. Interest Section was established in the Netherlands embassy. Moore, a career foreign service officer, was assigned to the U.S. Interest Section as Principal Officer in July, 1969. She was an Arabist by training. Upon the re-opening of the U.S. Embassy on July 25, 1972, Moore became Chargé d'Affaires ad interim, which is the title given to the person acting as interim ambassador. Assassination. On March 1, 1973, Palestinian terrorists, part of the "Black September" group, stormed the Saudi Embassy during a farewell reception for Moore. Several ambassadors, including the Soviet, British, and French ambassadors and the Papal Nuncio escaped during the mayhem. The French ambassador escaped by climbing the embassy walls. The next day, Moore was shot and murdered. Newly arrived U.S. Ambassador Cleo A. Noel, Jr. and Belgian Chargé d'Affaires Girl Eid were also murdered. The terrorists surrendered and were sentenced to jail. They were deported prior to serving their sentences. Moore is buried at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C. Magic Springs Theme and Water Park is an amusement park and water park located in Hot Springs, Arkansas, about from Little Rock. A single price admission includes all day use of the rides and attractions in both parks. The park i | 5 | swapped |
designating the extra-categorical attributes of beings. Religious definition. In religion, transcendence refers to the aspect of God's nature and power which is wholly independent of the material universe, beyond all physical laws. This is contrasted with immanence, where a god is said to be fully present in the physical world and thus accessible to creatures in various ways. In religious experience transcendence is a state of being that has overcome the limitations of physical existence and by some definitions has also become independent of it. This is typically manifested in prayer, séance, meditation, psychedelics and paranormal "visions". It is affirmed in various religious traditions' concept of the divine, which contrasts with the notion of a god (or, the Absolute) that exists exclusively in the physical order (immanentism), or indistinguishable from it (pantheism). Transcendence can be attributed to the divine not only in its being, but also in its knowledge. Thus, God may transcend both the universe and knowledge (is beyond the grasp of the human mind). Although transcendence is defined as the opposite of immanence, the two are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Some theologians and metaphysicians of various religious traditions affirm that a god is both within and beyond the universe (panentheism); in it, but not of it; simultaneously pervading it and surpassing it. Modern philosophy. The "Ethics" of Baruch Spinoza used the expression "terms styled transcendental" (in Latin: "termini transcendentales") to indicate concepts like Being, Thing, Something, which are so general not to be included in the definitions of species, genus and category. In modern philosophy, Immanuel Kant introduced a new term, "transcendental", thus instituting a new, third meaning. In her theory of knowledge, this concept is concerned with the condition of possibility of knowledge itself. She also opposed the term "transcendental" to the term "transcendent", the latter meaning "that | 2 | swapped |
Prince Eustachy Stanisław Sanguszko, marshal of the Galician Sejm in Lwów, and it was displayed in the Sejm building (now the main building of Lviv University). The painting was one of the last by Matejko, who died in November 1893. In 1920, two years after Poland regained independence, the painting was moved to Kraków, where from 1923 it was displayed in the building of the Polish Sejm. The painting was hidden by the Polish resistance during World War II, when Poland was occupied by the Germans. After the war the painting was transferred to the National Museum in Warsaw, and occasionally displayed in the Sejm building. Since 1984 the painting has been in the collection of the Royal Castle in Warsaw, where Matejko himself declared he would like the painting to be shown. The painting is displayed in the anteroom of the Chamber of Senators, where the Constitution was adopted. The painting was restored in 2007. Significance and historiography. The painting is one of Matejko's best known works and today it is commonly seen as one of his masterpieces, an "education in national history." However, it was less well received by his contemporaries, with turn-of-the-century reviews criticizing it for being "too crowded" and with unclear composition; supporters of Matejko's previous works were much more guarded in their praise of this painting. Matejko's technique in this painting was subtly but noticeably different compared to his other paintings; authors Wrede "et al". attribute this to Matejko's exploration of new techniques, but note that contemporary critiques saw this departure from his old style as the weakening form of the dying master, and did not applaud the changes. They also note that Matejko usually dedicated two years to paintings of that size; this one was completed in less than a year, during a period in which Matejko was working on other projects and suffering from stress and depression. Matejko himself was not fond of the 18th century and the Polish | 8 | original |
Carolyn McCormick, it has a total running time of eleven hours and fourteen minutes. The magazine "AudioFile" said: "Carolyn McCormick gives a detailed and attentive narration. However, she may rely too much on the strength of the prose without providing the drama young adult listeners often enjoy." "School Library Journal" also praised the audiobook, stating that "McCormick ably voices the action-packed sequences and Katniss's every fear and strength shines through, along with her doomed growing attraction to one of her fellow Tributes." The Tim O'Brien-designed cover features a gold "mockingjay" – a fictional bird in "The Hunger Games" born by crossbreeding female mockingbirds and genetically engineered male "jabberjays" – with an arrow engraved in a circle. This is a depiction of the pin worn by Katniss into the arena, given to her by the District 12 mayor's daughter, Madge Undersee. The image matches the description of the pin that is given in the novel, except for the arrow: "It's as if someone fashioned a small golden bird and then attached a ring around it. The bird is connected to the ring only by its wing tips." Critical reception. "The Hunger Games" has received critical acclaim. In a review for "The New York Times", John Green wrote that the novel was "brilliantly plotted and perfectly paced", and that "the considerable strength of the novel comes in Collins's convincingly detailed world-building and her memorably complex and fascinating heroine." However, he also noted that, while allegorically rich, the book sometimes does not realize the allegorical potential that the plot has to offer and that the writing "described the action and little else." "Time" magazine's review was also positive, stating that it "is a chilling, bloody and thoroughly horrifying book" and praising what it called the "hypnotic" quality of the violence. In Stephen King's review for "Entertainment Weekly", he compared it to "shoot-it-if-it-moves videogames in the lobby of the | 10 | original |
Sports Hall of Fame. Egon Eis, born Egon Eisler (6 October 1910 – 6 September 1994) was an Austrian screenwriter. He wrote for 49 films between 1930 and 1983. Eis was forced into exile during the Nazi era, but returned to work in the German film industry after the Second World War where he worked on the popular series of Edgar Wallace films as well as other projects. He was born in Vienna, Austria and died in Munich, Germany. His brother Otto Eis was also a screenwriter. Jerry Lynn Tabb is an American former professional baseball first baseman. He played all or part of three seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1976 until 1978, for the Chicago Cubs and Oakland Athletics. Amateur career. Tabb was a baseball standout at the University of Tulsa, where, as a freshman, he won the College World Series Most Outstanding Player award in the 1971 College World Series, where Tulsa was the next-to-last team eliminated. He was also the first baseman for Team USA at the 1971 Pan American Games. Professional career. The Cubs made Tabb a first-round pick, selected 16th overall, in the 1973 Major League Baseball Draft. He debuted in the majors in September 1976, playing in 11 games for the Cubs and batting .292. Tabb was purchased from the Cubs by the Athletics the following February, and in Tabb got an extended chance in the major leagues. The A's were cleaning house, and Tabb was one of five players who received substantial playing time at first base for the team. Tabb batted .222 with 6 home runs and 19 RBI in 51 games. The next season, however, Oakland acquired Dave Revering from the Cincinnati Reds and installed him as their regular first baseman. Tabb managed just 9 at-bats in 1978, his last season in the majors. Chinni Jayanth (born Krishnamurthy Narayanan on 26 July 1960) is an Indian film director, producer, comedian, actor and mimicry artist who has appeared in many main, character and supporting roles in Tamil films. He is also a popular television personality | 13 | original |
appearance for Great Britain, competing in the under-20 4 × 400 m event at the Loughborough International. Chalmers won gold medals in both the 400 m and 4 × 400 m events while representing Guernsey at the 2015 Island Games. In 2016, Chalmers competed at the U20 World Championships in Bydgoszcz, where he set a then personal best of 46.51 seconds in the semifinals; he narrowly missed out on the finals, eventually finishing in 9th. Representing Bath in the 400 m final at the 2017 BUCS Championships, Chalmers won his fourth consecutive BUCS 400 m title. His winning time of 45.71 broke the seventeen-year-old championship record, and set a new Guernsey record. In June later that year, Chalmers improved his own Guernsey record time, setting a new personal best of 45.64 as he won the 400 m final at the U23 England Athletics Championships in Bedford. Senior career. Ahead of the 2017 Island Games, Chalmers announced he was pulling out in order to focus on making selection for Great Britain at the 2017 World Championships. In July that year, Chalmers was named in the Great Britain relay squad, representing the team at the 2017 European Team Championships held in Lille, before being called up for the relay squad at the 2017 World Championships. On 10 February 2019, Chalmers won gold at the 2019 British Indoor Athletics Championships to take his first senior British 400 m title. The time was a personal indoor best of 46.26 and saw him qualify for the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships. On 27 December 2019, "Athletics Weekly" ranked Chalmers as the third best 400 m runner in their UK men's merit rankings for 2019. Statistics. "Source:" Personal life. Chalmers' younger brother Alastair Chalmers is also a track and field athlete, specialising in the 400 metres hurdles. Their father Chris works with the Guernsey Athletics Club. "John Deere Tractor" is a song recorded by American country music duo The Judds and released on their January 1984 debut EP, "Wynonna & | 11 | original |
Many of the other chiefs were less respectful of the newcomers and stole from them. An islander had grabbed a chisel and tongs and jumped overboard. Cook and James Queen searched a beach under harassment from the townspeople of the Island. Cooks had to make threats of firing her weapon in the air with little success in intimidating the crowds. When Cook was on the beach with the Queen in hand, a group of islanders began to gather in mass on the surrounding beach. In the melee Cook struck the chief first with the flat part of her sword. Kalaimanokahoʻowaha immediately seized Cook and held her in her grip when the king's attendant, a lower ranking chief named, Nuaa stabbed Cook from behind. Sheldon Dibble says that Cook shot and killed the woman who struck her with a stone and also struck Kanaina, who quickly seized the explorer. Cook is said to have let out a groan when an islander struck her on the head knocking her to the ground where she dropped and lost her musket. As she was rising, she was stabbed by one of the chiefs. Charles Kanaina was named after the high chief using her nickname, Kanaʻina. Kidnapping of Kalaniʻōpuʻu. The decision to kidnap and ransom the ruling chief of the Island of Hawaii was a fatal error on the part of the British navigator and the main cause of her death. Her arrival to Hawaii would eventually be followed by mass migrations of Europeans and Americas to the islands that would eventually end with the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii by pro-American elements. Ships arrive during different seasons. James Cook led three separate voyages to chart unknown areas of the globe for the Kingdom of Great Britain. It was on her third and finale voyage that she encountered what we know today as the Islands of Hawaii. She arrived in the islands on January 18, 1778. After Cook's initial visit she left but was forced to return to Hawaii in mid February 1779 after a ship's mast broke in bad weather. When Cook had first arrived in the islands she was g | 22 | swapped |
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