text stringlengths 1 22.8M |
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Cyril William Gell ARCO LRAM FGSM (1909 – 1994) was an English musician, conductor of the BBC Singers and former professor at the Guildhall School of Music. Gell often acted as conductor on Friday Night Is Music Night and was chorus director on a number of BBC television movies including a production of The Saint of Bleecker Street in 1956, a production of Il trovatore in 1957, a production of Madam Butterfly in 1957, and a production of Rigoletto in 1958.
Life
Cyril William Gell was born in Bedford in 1909 and educated in the town at Bedford Modern School. After school, he went up to Worcester College, Oxford as an organ scholar and was later appointed organist to the Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey in 1930.
Gell was appointed assistant director of music at Bradfield College in 1935 and was later staff organist with the Granada Theatres from 1937 touring with Dudley Beaven (piano and organ show), broadcasting and recording. In 1938 he was appointed director of music at Bedales School but joined the music staff of the BBC in 1955 where he conducted the BBC Singers, in particular for Friday Night Is Music Night. He was musical director of the Plymouth Philharmonic Chorus between 1958 and 1960 and afterwards a professor at the Guildhall School of Music between 1960 and 1973.
Conducting
Gell was chorus director on a number of BBC television movies including The Saint of Bleecker Street in 1956, a production of Il trovatore in 1957, a production of Madam Butterfly in 1957, and a production of the opera Rigoletto in 1958.
Personal life
Gell died in Sandy, Bedfordshire, on 4 September 1994.
References
1909 births
1994 deaths
English organists
British male organists
English conductors (music)
British male conductors (music)
Alumni of Worcester College, Oxford
People educated at Bedford Modern School
Musicians from Bedford
20th-century organists
20th-century British conductors (music)
20th-century British male musicians |
Insane (stylized as inSANE) was a survival horror video game, formerly in development by Volition to be published by THQ, in collaboration with film director Guillermo del Toro. It was being developed for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, and was to be released in 2013. It was intended as the first installment of a planned trilogy of Insane video games.
Development
Insane was first announced by del Toro and Volition at the 2010 Spike Video Game Awards on 11 December 2010 in the form of a thirty-second teaser trailer. Del Toro said of the game, "With this new series of video games, I want to take players to a place they have never seen before, where every single action makes them question their own senses of morality and reality. THQ and Volition are equally excited to make this vision of a completely new game universe into a reality."
THQ announced the cancellation of Insane on 6 August 2012, with the intellectual property rights transferring to del Toro. Reasons for the cancellation was never officially disclosed, however THQ would file for bankruptcy just five months later.
References
External links
Horror video games
Cancelled PlayStation 3 games
Cancelled Windows games
Cancelled Xbox 360 games
Video games about mental health
THQ games
Works by Guillermo del Toro |
Thomas Griffiths Wainewright (October 179417 August 1847) was an English artist, author and suspected serial killer. He gained a reputation as a profligate and a dandy, and in 1837, was transported to the penal colony of Van Diemen's Land (now the Australian state of Tasmania) for frauds on the Bank of England. As a convict he became a portraitist for Hobart's elite.
Wainewright's life captured the imagination of renowned 19th-century literary figures such as Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde and Edward Bulwer-Lytton, some of whom wildly exaggerated his supposed crimes, claiming among other things that he carried strychnine in a special compartment in a ring on his finger.
Early life
Thomas Griffiths Wainewright was born into affluence in Richmond, London, England. He was orphaned when he was very young, his mother dying in childbirth and his father soon afterwards. Wainewright's mother Ann was the daughter of Ralph Griffiths (1720–1803), for many years the editor of the literary magazine Monthly Review. The young Wainewright was brought up in style by his elderly maternal grandparents at Linden House, Chiswick High Road, Chiswick, then on London's rural periphery. When Griffiths died, Wainewright came under the care of his maternal uncle, George Griffiths. He was probably educated by the scholar Charles Burney, the headmaster of the Greenwich Academy.
Wainewright subsequently served briefly as an officer in a yeomanry regiment, having bought his commission in 1814, but lasted just over a year, probably because of a severe mental illness. It was suggested by the writer Havelock Ellis that Wainewright was never normal after this period of his life, when he was on the verge of or already succumbed to insanity, and this contributed to his later crimes.
Literary career
In 1819, Wainewright embarked on a literary career, and began to write for The Literary Pocket-Book, Blackwood's Magazine and The Foreign Quarterly Review. He was, however, most closely linked with The London Magazine, to which he contributed articles and art criticism from 1820 to 1823, under the pen names Janus Weathercock, Egomet Bonmot and Cornelius van Vinkbooms. Wainewright's success in publication would have been assisted by his famous grandfather. He was a friend of Charles Lamb, who thought well of his writing and, in a letter to Bernard Barton, styles him "the kind, light-hearted Wainewright." Wainewright also practised as an artist and was trained by John Linnell and Thomas Phillips. He produced a portrait of Lord Byron and made illustrations for the poems of William Chamberlayne, and from 1821 to 1825 exhibited narratives based on literature and music at the Royal Academy, including Romance from Undine, Paris in the Chamber of Helen and the Milkmaid's Song. None of these works have survived.
In the 1960s, the controversial author Donald McCormick claimed that Wainewright was a friend of William Corder, the murderer of Maria Marten in the Red Barn Murder in Polstead, Suffolk in 1827. It was claimed that the two met when Corder visited London and joined some intellectual circles. McCormick was unable to produce any evidence for his claims when asked by the author of a 2018 biography of Wainewright.
Marriage and family life
On 13 November 1817, Wainewright married Eliza Frances Ward. He had inherited £5,250 from his grandfather, invested at the Bank of England, but was unable to touch the capital, receiving only the dividends of £200 a year; the capital was in trust for his family, Eliza and their son Griffiths. However, his extravagant lifestyle landed him in colossal debt. On two separate occasions, Wainewright forged signatures of power of attorney and withdrew large sums from the Bank of England, first in 1822 and then in 1823. The second time left the account empty.
By 1828, the Wainewrights were in severe financial trouble again and forced to move in with the elderly George Griffiths, still living at the Wainewright estate in Chiswick. Griffiths died in agony shortly afterwards. Eliza's mother married again, becoming a Mrs Abercromby, and had two further daughters, Helen and Madalina, before being widowed again. They too moved into the estate, and Mrs Abercromby settled her will in favour of Eliza. She died shortly afterwards.
The death of Helen
Owing to his extravagant habits, Wainewright remained mired in debt. In 1830, he and Eliza insured the life of his sister-in-law Helen with various companies for a sum of £16,000 (some £1,650,000 in 2016). She died in December of the same year after showing signs of strychnine poisoning, though at that time there was no forensic test to prove it. When the insurance companies sued, Wainewright fled to Calais to avoid investigation of his uncovered bank frauds. Unproven tales by Victorian authors claimed that he was seized by the authorities as a suspected person and imprisoned for six months. He had in his possession a quantity of strychnine, and was widely suspected to have poisoned not only his sister-in-law and his uncle, but also his mother-in-law and a Norfolk friend, although this was never proven. He returned to London in 1837, but was soon arrested on a charge of the bank forgery. Wainewright was sent to Hobart, Van Dieman's Land (now Tasmania) on the convict ship Susan, arriving 21 November 1837. While in prison he was asked if he poisoned Helen, to which he allegedly replied: "Yes; it was a dreadful thing to do, but she had very thick ankles." The quotation is now thought to have been made up by Oscar Wilde's publisher.
Late life
During his ten years in the penal colony, Wainewright did eventually enjoy a certain amount of freedom. After initially working on a road gang, he became a hospital orderly and was able to work as an artist, painting portraits in the homes of his subjects. He completed more than 100 portraits on paper using coloured wash, pencil and ink during his years in Hobart. They survive in public museums and private collections throughout Australia, some having remained in the families of his sitters. They depict the officialdom, professionals and members of the elite in early Hobart. A self-portrait was completed in this period. Wainewright had a conditional pardon granted on 14 November 1846; he died of apoplexy in the Hobart Town hospital on 17 August the following year. He is buried in an unknown grave.
Legacy
The Essays and Criticisms of Wainewright were published in 1880, with an account of his life, by W. Carew Hazlitt; and the history of his crimes suggested to Charles Dickens his story "Hunted Down" and to Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton his novel Lucretia. Wainewright's personality, as artist and poisoner, also interested Oscar Wilde in "Pen, Pencil and Poison" (Fortnightly Review, Jan. 1889), and A. G. Allen, in T. Seccombe's Twelve Bad Men (1894).
Wainewright has been the subject of four biographical studies: The Fatal Cup: Thomas Griffiths Wainewright and the strange deaths of his relations by John Price Williams (Markosia, London 2018) which re-examines the poisonings and reaches a different conclusion as to Wainewright's guilt. Other studies include Janus Weathercock by Jonathan Curling (Thomas Nelson and Sons, London, 1938), Robert Crossland's Wainewright in Tasmania (OUP, Melbourne, 1954), and the poet Andrew Motion's creative biography, Wainewright the Poisoner (2000). Arthur Conan Doyle also mentions Wainewright in the Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventure of the Illustrious Client" as "no mean artist", but spells his name without the middle "e".
His life was dramatised in the 1940 Australian radio play Portrait of a Gentleman where he was played by Peter Finch.
Wainewright was the subject of the seventeenth episode of the television show Thriller, "The Poisoner" (aired 10 January 1961), with Murray Matheson playing the role of the killer (given the fictional name Thomas Edward Griffith) and featuring Sarah Marshall as his wife.
See also
List of convicts transported to Australia
List of serial killers by country
References
Bibliography
Donald McCormick, The Red Barn Mystery:some new evidence on an old murder (South Brunswick, New York: A.S.Barnes and Co., 1967).
Online sources
A Thomas Griffiths Wainewright page
1794 births
1847 deaths
1828 crimes in the United Kingdom
1828 murders in Europe
19th-century English male artists
19th-century English painters
19th-century English writers
British Yeomanry officers
Convicts transported to Australia
English male journalists
English male painters
People from Richmond, London
Poisoners
Suspected serial killers |
Köyek-Yırıqsa () is a rural locality (a selo) in Mamadış District, Tatarstan. The population was 592 as of 2010.
Köyek-Yırıqsa is located 20 km from Mamadış, district's administrative centre, and 183 km from Ԛazаn, republic's capital, by road.
The earliest known record of the settlement dates from 1680.
There are 6 streets in the village.
References
External links
Rural localities in Mamadyshsky District |
Sir John Archibald Willox (9 June 1842 – 9 June 1905) was a British journalist, newspaper owner and Conservative Party politician from Liverpool. He rose through the ranks to become the owner of the Liverpool Courier newspaper and sat in the House of Commons from 1892 to 1905.
Early life
Willox was born in Edinburgh, the son of the journalist John Willox who also wrote several books related to shipping. His family moved to Liverpool, where he was educated at Liverpool College.
Career
Leaving school in his mid-teens, Willox was apprenticed to the journalists Lee and Nightingale. They seconded him to the Liverpool Courier, which was then published twice each week. He became a sub-editor, then a partner in Tinling & Co which owned the paper. By 1863, aged only 21, he was the editor.
Under Willox's editorship, the paper promptly became a daily, with a Saturday Weekly Courier. The Evening Courier was established in 1870 and became the Evening Express.
He was a member of the Institute of Journalists and chairman of the Press Association in 1875 and 1900.
Tobacco and marriage
In 1884, he was an executor of the will of Thomas Cope, the founder of Cope Brothers tobacco merchants. He became a director of the company in 1885. When Thomas's brother George died in 1888 he became managing director, and married Thomas's widow, Sara (died 1904).
who had ten children from her first marriage.
She was a philanthropist, and 1897 she donated the £15,000 cost of constructing the Sanitorium for Consumptives at Delamere Forest in Cheshire.
Electricity
Willox took an interest in the commercial development of electricity, and became a director of several companies in that field. He became chairman of the Blackheath and Greenwich District Electric Light Company, and also of the New St Helens and District Tramway Company and the South Lancashire Electric Traction and Power Company.
Politics
After his marriage, Willox had become more involved in public affairs. When Edward Whitley, the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Liverpool Everton died in January 1892,
Willox was selected as the Conservative candidate for the resulting by-election.
Everton was a Conservative safe seat, which the party had held since its creation in 1885, and Willox was regarded as a strong candidate. The local Liberal Party therefore decided not to contest the election, and Willox was returned unopposed. In honour of his election, over 100 journalists from Liverpool presented him with an illuminated address.
Willox was re-elected with a large majority at the general election in July 1892,
and was returned unopposed in 1895 and 1900. He was knighted in Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee Honours in 1897.
Death
Sir John became seriously ill in late 1904. When his wife Sara died, he attended her funeral at Anfield Cemetery on 17 December, but was really too ill to go out, and had to be supported by two stepsons.
He resigned from Parliament in February 1905 by taking the Chiltern Hundreds, triggering another by-election.
He died on his 63rd birthday, 16 June 1905, at his home on Abercromby Square, Liverpool.
References
External links
1842 births
1905 deaths
UK MPs 1886–1892
UK MPs 1892–1895
UK MPs 1895–1900
UK MPs 1900–1906
Conservative Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Businesspeople from Liverpool
British newspaper editors
Politicians from Liverpool
People educated at Liverpool College
Knights Bachelor
Journalists from Liverpool
English male non-fiction writers
19th-century English businesspeople |
Marcus Lataives Webb (born May 9, 1970) is an American retired professional basketball player who played briefly in the National Basketball Association (NBA).
High school
Born and raised in Montgomery, Alabama, Webb played at basketball at Sidney Lanier High School.
College career
Webb played college basketball at the University of Alabama, with the Alabama Crimson Tide.
Professional career
Webb was selected with the 28th overall selection, of the 1992 Continental Basketball Association (CBA) Draft. He played in nine games with the NBA's Boston Celtics, during the 1992–93 season, averaging 4.3 points and 1.1 rebounds per game.
He last played professionally in Argentina in 2005.
References
External links
NBA stats @ basketballreference.com
1970 births
Living people
21st-century African-American sportspeople
African-American basketball players
Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball players
American expatriate basketball people in Argentina
American expatriate basketball people in Cyprus
American expatriate basketball people in France
American expatriate basketball people in Russia
American expatriate basketball people in Turkey
American men's basketball players
APOEL B.C. players
Basketball players from Montgomery, Alabama
Beşiktaş men's basketball players
Boston Celtics players
Chicago Rockers players
Élan Béarnais players
Karşıyaka basketball players
Obras Sanitarias basketball players
PBC CSKA Moscow players
Piratas de Quebradillas players
Power forwards (basketball)
Tofaş S.K. players
Undrafted National Basketball Association players
20th-century African-American sportspeople |
Echo Unique Ladadrian Brown (April 10, 1984 – September 16, 2023) was an American writer.
Biography
Brown was born in Cleveland on April 10, 1984. Her early life was marked by the challenges of growing up in poverty. She was raised by her seamstress mother and welder stepfather. During her senior year of high school, she lived temporarily with an English teacher who recognized her academic potential. Despite this, a guidance counselor discouraged her aspirations for Dartmouth College, citing her background. Undeterred, Brown attended Dartmouth, wrote for the student newspaper, and earned a bachelor's degree in government in 2006.
After graduation, Brown worked in New York City's Civilian Complaint Review Board, investigating police misconduct, and later served as a legal secretary. She briefly enrolled at Columbia Journalism School but subsequently faced a period of depression. Moving to California for a change, she engaged in yoga, meditation, and began working at Challenge Day, a nonprofit organization.
Under the guidance of David Ford at the Marsh theater in San Francisco, Brown developed her one-woman show, "Black Virgins Are Not for Hipsters," which debuted in 2015. The performance addressed various societal and personal challenges, including an incident of racial aggression she faced at Dartmouth.
Brown authored two young-adult novels: Black Girl Unlimited: The Remarkable Story of a Teenage Wizard (2020) and The Chosen One: A First-Generation Ivy League Odyssey (2022), which drew upon her experiences and elements of magical realism.
Echo Brown died on September 16, 2023, at the age of 39.
Bibliography
Black Girl Unlimited: The Remarkable Story of a Teenage Wizard (2020)
The Chosen One: A First-Generation Ivy League Odyssey (2022)
References
1984 births
2023 deaths
Dartmouth College alumni
Writers from Cleveland |
Heatlie is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bob Heatlie (born 1946), Scottish songwriter and producer
Fairy Heatlie (1872–1951), South African rugby union player |
Hiệp Hưng is a village and commune in the Phụng Hiệp District of Hậu Giang, Vietnam.
Populated places in Hậu Giang province |
was an early unprotected cruiser, serving in the fledgling Imperial Japanese Navy. Its name is a traditional name for Kyūshū island. Its sister ships and were acquired by the Chinese Beiyang Fleet.
Background
The design for Tsukushi was advertised by its designer British naval architect Sir George Wightwick Rendel at the Armstrong shipyards at Newcastle upon Tyne in England as an example of a low-cost cruiser able to withstand larger Ironclad warships. In theory, the ship would rely on its small size and higher speed, along with a higher muzzle velocity main battery to attack larger, more cumbersome foes – very similar to the principles of Jeune Ecole, as promoted by French naval architect Émile Bertin. However, the British Admiralty was very skeptical of the idea, and had concerns over the seaworthiness of the design in the North Sea, and did not order any of the design for the Royal Navy. Armstrong turned to overseas clients instead; however, rapid technological advances in ship design and naval artillery (with the advent of large calibre quick-firing guns) rendered the design with its weak armor and small guns obsolete within a few years.
Design
Tsukushi had an all-steel construction with waterproof bulkheads, a single smokestack, and twin masts, which could also be used for sails. The prow was reinforced for ramming. The power plant was a double expansion reciprocating steam engine with four cylindrical boilers driving twin screws. The ship had a number of technical innovations, including a hydraulic steering system and electrical incandescent light fixtures. The ship's main armament were two breech-loading 10-inch Armstrong cannons, one on the bow and one on the stern, mounted in stationary gun shields. The ship also had four 5.1-inch guns (two to each side), two 57-mm long guns, and one Gatling gun, as well as two torpedo tubes.
Service record
Tsukushi was laid down as Arturo Prat on 10 February 1879 for the Chilean Navy and launched on 11 August 1880. However, in the middle of construction, the Chilean-Peruvian War ended, and Chile cancelled the order. The Imperial Japanese Navy picked up the contract for the semi-completed vessel. Tsukushi arrived in Japan after its shakedown cruise from England on 16 June 1883.
Tsukushi did not see combat in the First Sino-Japanese War, but was used for patrolling between Korea, Dairen and Weihaiwei in a reserve capacity in the Western Fleet. It was assigned as a flagship for gunboat squadrons used to support ground troops, and in this capacity led the gunboats , , and up the Taedong River in Korea in September 1894 to provide support for the Battle of Pyongyang. After the war, Tsukushi was designated a first-class gunboat.
The ship was rearmed in 1898, with its Armstrong cannon replaced by four quick-firing guns, and its lighter weaponry replaced by one 76-mm, and two 27-mm guns, and two machine guns.
During the Boxer Rebellion of 1900 Tsukushi was stationed at Amoy and Shanghai to protect Japanese civilians and interests at the Japanese concessions.
During the Russo-Japanese War, Tsukushi served as a guard ship patrolling the Tsushima Straits between Korea and Kyūshū, and as an escort vessel covering the transport of Japanese troops to the Korean Peninsula. It was present as the Battle of Tsushima. Afterwards, Tsukushi was assigned to the Kure Naval District and served as a guard ship at the Port of Kobe.
After the war, Tsukushi was used briefly as a torpedo training vessel, and was struck from the navy list on 25 May 1906. It was scrapped in 1910.
Notes
References
Tsukushi-class cruisers
Cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy
Ships built on the River Tyne
1880 ships
First Sino-Japanese War naval ships of Japan
Russo-Japanese War naval ships of Japan
Naval ships of Japan
Ships built by Armstrong Whitworth |
```java
package com.netflix.metacat.connector.hive.util;
import com.netflix.metacat.common.server.partition.util.PartitionUtil;
import com.netflix.metacat.common.server.partition.visitor.PartitionKeyParserEval;
import org.apache.hadoop.hive.common.FileUtils;
/**
* Hive partition key evaluation.
*/
public class HivePartitionKeyParserEval extends PartitionKeyParserEval {
@Override
protected String toValue(final Object value) {
return value == null ? PartitionUtil.DEFAULT_PARTITION_NAME
: FileUtils.escapePathName(value.toString());
}
}
``` |
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Brentor is a village in West Devon, England. Its population in 2001 was 423. The village is dominated by the hill of Brent Tor, topped by the village's church.
The origins of the name Brentor are old Devonian, a Brythonic Celtic language related to Cornish, Welsh and Breton and spoken in Devon until the early Middle Ages 'Bryn' and 'tor' meaning 'hill of the rock tower'. There is a farm near Brentor, which is named Brinsabach, from 'Bryn' and 'bach', meaning 'small hill' (named after the Tor).
The village used to be part of Tavistock Hundred. Brentor railway station served the village. The topographer William Crossing was for part of his life resident at Brentor. Burnville House (or Farm) was built in about 1800 and is listed on the English Heritage Register
External links
Brentor Village
Brentor community page
Brentor at GENUKI
Villages in the Borough of West Devon |
is a sequel series to the Yu-Gi-Oh! anime television series Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal and the seventh anime series overall in the franchise, produced by Nihon Ad Systems and TV Tokyo. Like the original, this series is directed by Satoshi Kuwahara and produced by Studio Gallop. The anime aired in Japan on TV Tokyo between October 7, 2012 to March 23, 2014, in a different time slot from that of the original series. Following the end of the first series, Yuma and his friends now find themselves up against the evil forces of Barian World.
The English-language adaptation, produced by Konami, began airing in North America on The CW's Vortexx programming block on August 17, 2013. The series would eventually move to Hulu on July 14, 2014, beginning with Episode 114. Since then, most of the episodes have aired on Mondays on Hulu. On December 14, 2014, the episodes on Hulu began to be uploaded on Sundays instead of Mondays, with the exception of December 6, 2014, which saw Episode 135 being uploaded on a Saturday, because the following Sunday was National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day. The regular airing pattern was broken again when the series finale (Episode 146) aired on February 21, 2015, a Saturday, instead of on a Sunday.
Six pieces of theme music are used for the series: three opening and three ending themes. For episodes 74–98, the opening theme is by Hideaki Takatori, while the ending theme is by Vistlip. For episodes 99–123, the opening theme is by Petit Milady (Aoi Yuki and Ayana Taketatsu), while the ending theme is by FoZZtone. For episodes 124–145, the opening theme is by Diamond☆Yukai, while the ending theme is * by REDMAN. However, for Episode 146, the Season 3 Japanese opening theme was not used. For the Konami English dub version, the opening theme is "Halfway to Forever" for all episodes that air in the US.
Series overview
Episode list
Season 1: Barian Invasion (2012–13)
Season 2: Mythrian Number War (2013)
Season 3: Barian Emperor Onslaught (2013–14)
Specials
See also
List of Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal episodes – Episode listing of the first series
References
Zexal II*
Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal II |
Goalpind is a village in Jalandhar district of Punjab State, India. It is located from district headquarter Jalandhar and from state capital Chandigarh. The village is administrated by a sarpanch who is an elected representative of village as per Panchayati raj (India).
See also
List of villages in India
References
External links
List of villages in Jalandhar district at Census of India, 2011
Villages in Jalandhar district |
Information Committee of the Labour Movement against Norwegian membership in the European Community (in Norwegian: Arbeiderbevegelsens informasjonskomité mot norsk medlemskap i EF, abbreviated AIK) was an internal organized opposition within the Norwegian Labour Party. AIK was founded in January 1972, ahead of the plebiscite on joining the European Economic Community. The appeal to found AIK came from Workers' Youth League and some trade unions. Its activities were financed by donations from trade union organizations and individuals. AIK had an office in Oslo. AIK was led by Bernt H. Lund.
Following the plebiscite, which was won by the 'No'-line, the national conference of AIK decided that its first priority would be to ensure nominations of anti-EEC candidates on the lists of the Labour Party. Ole Wiig was elected leader of AIK. However, a second national conference was held in March 1973. That conference decided that AIK should break with the Labour Party and constitute itself as a political party. Berit Ås was elected the leader of AIK. Deputy leader was Ole Wiig. AIK then went on to registered itself as Democratic Socialists – AIK (Demokratiske Sosialister – AIK). The party joined the Socialist Electoral League (SV). When SV was converted into the Socialist Left Party in 1975, AIK was incorporated into it.
References
Notes
Bibliography
Defunct political parties in Norway
Political parties established in 1972
1972 establishments in Norway
Political parties disestablished in 1975
1975 disestablishments in Norway
Labour Party (Norway)
Socialist Left Party (Norway) |
Sciota Township is a township in Dakota County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 285 at the 2000 census. The ghost town of Lewiston was located in the township.
History
Sciota Township was organized in 1858, and named after a place in Ohio.
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 15.0 square miles (38.7 km), all land.
Demographics
As of the census of 2000, there were 285 people, 92 households, and 75 families residing in the township. The population density was 19.1 people per square mile (7.4/km). There were 93 housing units at an average density of 6.2/sq mi (2.4/km). The racial makeup of the township was 97.54% White, 0.70% Native American, 0.35% Asian, 1.40% from other races.
There were 92 households, out of which 41.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 78.3% were married couples living together, 2.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 17.4% were non-families. 9.8% of all households were made up of individuals, and 3.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.10 and the average family size was 3.38.
In the township the population was spread out, with 31.6% under the age of 18, 4.9% from 18 to 24, 33.3% from 25 to 44, 23.2% from 45 to 64, and 7.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 35 years. For every 100 females, there were 106.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 107.4 males.
The median income for a household in the township was $63,125, and the median income for a family was $66,750. Males had a median income of $45,536 versus $27,292 for females. The per capita income for the township was $23,181. About 6.0% of families and 9.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 6.0% of those under the age of eighteen and 24.0% of those sixty five or over.
References
Townships in Dakota County, Minnesota
Townships in Minnesota |
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Sites are places of importance to cultural or natural heritage as described in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, established in 1972. Cultural heritage consists of monuments (such as architectural works, monumental sculptures, or inscriptions), groups of buildings, and sites (including archaeological sites). Natural features (consisting of physical and biological formations), geological and physiographical formations (including habitats of threatened species of animals and plants), and natural sites which are important from the point of view of science, conservation, or natural beauty, are defined as natural heritage. Canada accepted the convention on 23 July 1976. There are 22 World Heritage Sites in Canada, with a further 10 on the tentative list.
The first two sites in Canada added to the list were L'Anse aux Meadows and Nahanni National Park Reserve, both at the Second Session of the World Heritage Committee, held in Washington, D.C., in 1978. The most recent sites listed were Tr’ondëk-Klondike and Anticosti, both in 2023. Two sites are shared with the United States. Ten sites are listed for their cultural significance, eleven for natural significance, and one, Pimachiowin Aki, is listed for both. Canada has served as a member of the World Heritage Committee four times: 1976–1978, 1985–1991, 1995–2001, and 2005–2009.
World Heritage Sites
UNESCO lists sites under ten criteria; each entry must meet at least one of the criteria. Criteria i through vi are cultural, and vii through x are natural.
Tentative list
In addition to sites inscribed on the World Heritage List, member states can maintain a list of tentative sites that they may consider for nomination. Nominations for the World Heritage List are only accepted if the site was previously listed on the tentative list. Canada lists 10 properties on its tentative list.
See also
List of Biosphere Reserves in Canada
National Historic Sites of Canada
References
Canada |
The 1894 Currie Cup was the second edition of the Currie Cup, the premier domestic rugby union competition in South Africa.
The tournament was won by for the second time, who won three of their matches in the competition and drew the fourth.
See also
Currie Cup
References
1894
1894 in South African rugby union
Currie |
Matthew Johnson is a Reader in Biochemistry at the University of Sheffield, England. He was the 2018 recipient of the Biochemical Society’s Colworth Medal.
Johnson is a plant biologist focusing on photosynthesis and respiration. Through his research and development, he has discovered "novel plastoquinone diffusion nanodomains facilitating electron transport between photosystem II and cytochrome b6f complexes in spinach thylakoid membranes." In 2016, he received the Society of Experimental Biology's President's Medals for his research on the molecular machinery of photosynthesis. This was regarded as a revolutionary new way to view the way plants use solar energy to influence their growth, giving earth its food and oxygen.
References
External links
Matthew Johnson at the University of Sheffield
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Academics of the University of Sheffield
British biochemists |
Lost My Baby or I Lost My Baby may refer to:
"Lost My Baby Blues", a song by David Frizzell
"Since I Lost My Baby", a song by The Temptations |
Kokoutse Fabrice Dabla (born 20 November 1992) is an athlete from Togo who represented his country at the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics.
He competed in the 2016 Men's 200 metres track race, but finished seventh in his heat with a time of 21.63 seconds and did not advance. Although there were eight entrants in the heat, Kenyan Mike Nyang'au did not start, meaning Dabla finished last among those who did. He fared better in the Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metres in which he qualified from the preliminary races in a time of 10.57 seconds.
References
External links
Olympic athletes for Togo
Athletes (track and field) at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Togolese male sprinters
1992 births
Living people
World Athletics Championships athletes for Togo
Athletes (track and field) at the 2019 African Games
African Games competitors for Togo
Athletes (track and field) at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Olympic male sprinters
21st-century Togolese people |
```c++
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#include "config.h"
#include "modules/cachestorage/GlobalCacheStorage.h"
#include "core/dom/ExecutionContext.h"
#include "core/frame/LocalDOMWindow.h"
#include "core/frame/UseCounter.h"
#include "core/workers/WorkerGlobalScope.h"
#include "modules/cachestorage/CacheStorage.h"
#include "platform/Supplementable.h"
#include "platform/heap/Handle.h"
#include "platform/weborigin/DatabaseIdentifier.h"
#include "public/platform/Platform.h"
namespace blink {
namespace {
template <typename T>
class GlobalCacheStorageImpl final : public NoBaseWillBeGarbageCollectedFinalized<GlobalCacheStorageImpl<T>>, public WillBeHeapSupplement<T> {
WILL_BE_USING_GARBAGE_COLLECTED_MIXIN(GlobalCacheStorageImpl);
public:
static GlobalCacheStorageImpl& from(T& supplementable, ExecutionContext* executionContext)
{
GlobalCacheStorageImpl* supplement = static_cast<GlobalCacheStorageImpl*>(WillBeHeapSupplement<T>::from(supplementable, name()));
if (!supplement) {
supplement = new GlobalCacheStorageImpl();
WillBeHeapSupplement<T>::provideTo(supplementable, name(), adoptPtrWillBeNoop(supplement));
}
return *supplement;
}
~GlobalCacheStorageImpl()
{
if (m_caches)
m_caches->dispose();
}
CacheStorage* caches(T& fetchingScope, ExceptionState& exceptionState)
{
ExecutionContext* context = fetchingScope.executionContext();
if (!context->securityOrigin()->canAccessCacheStorage()) {
if (context->securityContext().isSandboxed(SandboxOrigin))
exceptionState.throwSecurityError("Cache storage is disabled because the context is sandboxed and lacks the 'allow-same-origin' flag.");
else if (context->url().protocolIs("data"))
exceptionState.throwSecurityError("Cache storage is disabled inside 'data:' URLs.");
else
exceptionState.throwSecurityError("Access to cache storage is denied.");
return nullptr;
}
if (!m_caches) {
String identifier = createDatabaseIdentifierFromSecurityOrigin(context->securityOrigin());
ASSERT(!identifier.isEmpty());
m_caches = CacheStorage::create(GlobalFetch::ScopedFetcher::from(fetchingScope), Platform::current()->cacheStorage(identifier));
}
return m_caches;
}
// Promptly dispose of associated CacheStorage.
EAGERLY_FINALIZE();
DEFINE_INLINE_VIRTUAL_TRACE()
{
visitor->trace(m_caches);
WillBeHeapSupplement<T>::trace(visitor);
}
private:
GlobalCacheStorageImpl()
{
}
static const char* name() { return "CacheStorage"; }
PersistentWillBeMember<CacheStorage> m_caches;
};
} // namespace
CacheStorage* GlobalCacheStorage::caches(DOMWindow& window, ExceptionState& exceptionState)
{
return GlobalCacheStorageImpl<LocalDOMWindow>::from(toLocalDOMWindow(window), window.executionContext()).caches(toLocalDOMWindow(window), exceptionState);
}
CacheStorage* GlobalCacheStorage::caches(WorkerGlobalScope& worker, ExceptionState& exceptionState)
{
return GlobalCacheStorageImpl<WorkerGlobalScope>::from(worker, worker.executionContext()).caches(worker, exceptionState);
}
} // namespace blink
``` |
Augusto Ponzio (born 17 February 1942) is an Italian semiologist and philosopher.
Since 1980 is Full Professor of Philosophy of Language at Bari University, Italy and since 2015 is Professor Emeritus at the same university.
He has made a significant contribution as editor and translator to the dissemination of the ideas of Pietro Ispano, Mikhail Bakhtin, Emmanuel Lévinas, Karl Marx, Ferruccio Rossi-Landi, Adam Schaff and Thomas Albert Sebeok, in Italy and abroad.
Biography
Augusto Ponzio has authored the first monographs ever at a world level on each of Emmanuel Lévinas, Mikhail Bakhtin and Adam Schaff : respectively, La relation interpersonal, 1967, dedicated to Levinas, Michail Bachtin. Alle origini della semiotic sovietica, 1980, and Persona umana, linguaggio e conoscenza in Adam Schaff, 1977. Each of these monographs has been translated and reworked over the years and presented in new enlarged editions.
He has promoted the Italian translation of numerous works by Mikhail Bakhtin and members of the Bakhtin Circle, including Valentin N. Voloshinov and Pavel N. Medvedev, but also the biologist I. I. Kanaev.
Augusto Ponzio has also contributed to Karl Marx studies in Italy and in 1975 published the Italian edition of his Mathematical Manuscripts.
Moreover, Ponzio has contributed significantly to the dissemination of Thomas Sebeok's work in Italy and of his global semiotics in particular. He has promoted the Italian translation of most of his books and has authored two monographs dedicated to his thought: Sebeok and the Signs of Life, published in 2001, and I segni e la vita. La semiotic globale di Thomas A. Sebeok, 2002.
Among Italian scholars Ponzio has focused particularly on the work of his master Giuseppe Semerari, on the semiotician Ferruccio Rossi-Landi and philosopher of language Giovanni Vailati.
At Bari University Ponzio has been teaching:
Theoretical Philosophy and Moral Philosophy since 1966;
Philosophy of language since 1970;
Semiotics from 1995 to 1997;
Text Semiotics from 1997 to 2001;
Communication Theory from 1995 to 1998;
General Linguistics and Semiotics of mass media since 1998;
From 1981 to 1999 Ponzio directed the Institute of Philosophy of Language, which he founded at the Faculty of Foreign Literature and Languages, in 1981. From 1999 to 2005 he acted as Head of the Department of Linguistic Practices and Text Analysis, which he founded in 1999.
He directs the Doctoral Program in Language Theory and Sign Sciences, which he inaugurated in 1988.
With Claude Gandelman (University of Haifa), in 1989 he founded the annual book series Athanor. Arte, Letteratura, Semiotica, Filosofia of which now he directs the new series inaugurated with Meltemi publishers in Rome, in 1998. Athanor: this Arabic word evokes the alchemist in the laboratory mixing and transforming the elements.
Works
His principal research areas include philosophy of language, general linguistics, semiotics, and theory of literature.
The expression "philosophy of language" conveys the scope and orientation of his research as he addresses problems of semiotics from the perspective of philosophy of language, updated with references to the latest developments in the sign sciences, from linguistics to biosemiotics. As such his approach may be more properly described as pertaining to general semiotics.
Nonetheless, Ponzio practices general semiotics in terms of critique and the search for foundations, which derives from his work in philosophy of language. As critique of semiotics Ponzio's general semiotics overcomes the delusory separation between the humanities, on the one hand, and the logico-mathematical and the natural sciences, on the other.
His semiotic research relates to different disciplines proposing an approach that is transversal and interdisciplinary, or better, as he prefers to say, an approach that is ‘undisciplined’.
Moreover, general semiotics as conceived by Ponzio against such a background continues its philosophical search for sense. This perspective evidences the interconnectedness of the sciences.
And most significantly the problem of their sense for the human being is also addressed.
Bibliography
The following texts are in Italian, unless otherwise specified.
Research monographs
La relazione interpersonale, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1967, 105 pp.
(2° ed.) Soggetto e alterità. Da Lévinas a Lévinas, Adriatica Ed., Bari, 1983, 174 pp.
(3° ed.) Soggetto e alterità. Da Lévinas a Lévinas. con un’intervista a Lévinas, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1989.
Linguaggio e relazioni sociali, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1970, 204 pp.
(2° ed.) Linguaggio e relazioni sociali, Bari, Graphis, 2006, 126 pp.
Produzione linguistica e ideologia sociale, De Donato, Bari, 1973, 256 pp.
Produccion linguistica e ideologia social, Corazon Editor, Madrid, 1974, 294 pp.;
Jezicna proizvodnja i drustvena ideologija, Skolska knjiga, Zagabria, 1978, 236 pp.;
Production linguistique et idéologie sociale, Editions Balzac, Candiac (Canada) 1992, 318 pp.
(2° ed.) Produzione linguistica e ideologia sociale, Bari, Graphis, 2006.
Persona umana, linguaggio e withoscenza in Adam Schaff, Dedalo, Bari, 1974, 184 pp.
Filosofia del linguaggio e prassi sociale, Milella, Lecce, 1974, 262 pp.
Gramática transformacional e ideología política, Nueva Vision, Buenos Aires, 1974, 116 pp.
Dialettica e verità. Scienza e materialismo storico-dialettico, Dedalo, Bari, 1975, 126 pp.
La semiotica in Italia. Fondamenti teorici, Dedalo, Bari, 1976, 136 pp. + antologia, pp. 137–538.
Marxismo, scienza e problema dell’uomo. with un’intervista ad Adam Schaff, Bertani, Verona, 1977, 270 pp.
Scuola e plurilinguismo (with G. Mininni), Dedalo, Bari, 1980, pp. 5–84.
Michail Bachtin. Alle origini della semiotica sovietica, Dedalo, Bari, 1980, 230 pp.
Segni e withtraddizioni. Fra Marx e Bachtin, Bertani, Verona, 1981, 258 pp.
Spostamenti, Percorsi e discorsi sul segno, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1982, 142 pp.
Lo spreco dei significanti. L’eros, la morte, la scrittura, (with M. G. Tundo e E. Paulicelli), Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1983, pp. 7–120.
Fra linguaggio e letteratura, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1983, 156 pp.
Per parlare dei segni. Talking About Signs (with M. A. Bonfantini e G. Mininni), Adriatica, Bari, 1985, pp. 7–145.
Filosofia del linguaggio, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1985, 226 pp.
Interpretazione e scrittura. Scienza dei segni ed eccedenza letteraria, Bertani, Verona, 1986, 152 pp.
Dialogo sui dialoghi (with M. A. Bonfantini), Longo, Ravenna, 1986, 198 pp.
Ferruccio Rossi-Landi e la filosofia del linguaggio, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1988, 348 pp.
Il filosofo e la tartaruga. Scritti 1983-1989, Ravenna, Longo, 1989, 134 pp.
Man as a Sign, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlino - New York, 1990, 412 pp.
Filosofia del linguaggio 2. Segni valori ideologie, Adriatica editrice, Bari, 1991, 224 pp.
Dialogo e narrazione, Milella, Lecce, 1991, 65 pp.
Tra semiotica e letteratura. Introduzione a Michail Bachtin, Bompiani, Milano, 1992, 232 pp.
(2° ed.) Tra semiotica e letteratura. Introduzione a Michail Bachtin, Milano, Bompiani, 2003, lXXV + 232 pp.
La ricerca semiotica (with Omar Calabrese and S. Petrilli), Bologna, Esculapio, 1993, 290 pp.
Signs Dialogue and Ideology, (raccolta di saggi a cura di S. Petrilli), John Benjamins, Amsterdam 1993, 1986 pp.
Il dialogo della menzogna (with M. A. Bonfantini), Roma, Stampa alternativa, 1993, 32 pp.
Scrittura, dialogo e alterità. Tra Bachtin e Lévinas, La Nuova Italia, Firenze, 1994, pp. 264 pp.
Fondamenti di filosofia del linguaggio (with P. Calefato and S. Petrilli), Laterza, Manuali, Roma-Bari, 1994, 362 pp.
(2° ed.) Fondamenti di filosofia del linguaggio (with P. Calefato and S. Petrilli), Laterza, Manuali, Roma-Bari, 1999, 362 pp.
Fundamentos da Filosofia da linguagem, di E F. Alves, with una Introduzione di A. Ponzio pp. 9–68, Petrópolis (Brasile), 2007, 388 pp. .
Responsabilità e alterità in Emmanuel Lévinas, Jaca Book, Milano, 1995, 166 pp.
La differenza non indifferente. Comunicazione, migrazione, guerra, Mimesis, Milano, 1995, 203 pp.
(2° ed.) La differenza non indifferente. Comunicazione, migrazione, Guerra, Milano, Mimesis, 2002, 204 pp.
El juego del comunicar. Entre literatura y filosofía, a cura di Mercedes Arriaga Flórez, Episteme, Valencia, 1995, 144 pp.
Segni per parlare dei segni. Signs to talk about signs, Adriatica Editrice, Bari, 1995, 174 pp.
I segni dell’altro. Eccedenza letteraria e prossimità, Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, Napoli, 1995, 266 pp.
Sujet et altérité. Sur Emmanuel Lévinas, L’Harmattan, Paris, 1995, 160 pp.
I ricordi, la memoria, l’oblio. Foto-grafie senza soggetto (with Gabriella Pranzo), Bari, Edizioni dal Sud, 1995, 102 pp.
Comunicazione, comunità, informazione. Comunicazione mondializzata e nuove tecnologie (with M. A. Bonfantini, P. Calefato, C. Caputo, P. Mazzotta, S. Petrilli, M. Refice), Manni Editore, Lecce, 1996, 224 pp.
I tre dialoghi della menzogna e della verità (with M. A. Bonfantini e S. Petrilli), Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, Napoli, 1996, 130 pp.
La rivoluzione bachtiniana. Il pensiero di Bachtin e l’ideologia withtemporanea, Levante Editori, Bari, 1997, 358 pp.
Metodologia della formazione linguistica, Laterza, Manuali, Roma-Bari, 1997, 450 pp.
Che cos’è la letteratura? Otto questioni dialogando with Carlo Alberto Augieri, Milella, Lecce, 1997, 90 pp.
Elogio dell'infunzionale. Critica dell'ideologia della produttività, Castelvecchi, Roma, 1997, 206 pp.
(2° ed.) Elogio dell’infunzionale (riveduta e ampliata), Milano, Mimesis, 2004
Semiotica della musica. Introduzione al linguaggio musicale (with M. Lomuto), Graphis, Bari, 1997. 188 pp.
La coda dell'occhio. Letture del linguaggio letterario, Graphis, Bari, 1998, 184 pp.
La revolución bajtiniana. El pensamiento de Bajtin y la ideologia withtempoanea, Catedra, Madrid, 1998,
Signs of research on Signs (with S. Petrilli), fascicolo speciale di "Semiotische Berichte", 22/ 3,4, (Vienna) 1998, 184 pp.
Basi. Significare, inventare, dialogare (with M. A. Bonfantini, C. Caputo, S. Petrilli, Thomas A. Sebeok), Lecce, Piero Manni, 1998, 394 pp.
La comunicazione, Graphis, Bari, 1999.
(2° ed.) La comunicazione, Bari, Graphis 2006, 202 pp. .
Fuori campo. I segni del corpo tra rappresentazione ed eccedenza (with S. Petrilli), Mimesis, Milano, 1999.
Il sentire nella comunicazione globale (with S. Petrilli), Meltemi, Roma, 2000.
Philosophy of Language, Art and Answerability in Mikhail Bakhtin (in collab. with S. Petrilli), Legas, New York, Ottawa, Toronto, 2000, 52 pp.
Semiotica dell'io (with Thomas A. Sebeok e S. Petrilli) Meltemi, Roma, 2001 pp.
Thomas Sebeok and the Signs of Life (with Thomas A. Sebeok e S. Petrilli), Iwith Books UK, Totem Books USA, Cambridge, 2001, 78 pp.
Enunciazione e testo letteraio nell’insegnamento dell’italiano come LS, Edizioni Guerra, Perugia, 2001, 184 pp.
(2° ed.) Enunciazione e testo letterario nell’insegnamento dell’italiano come LS, Edizioni Guerra, Perugia, 2010, 168 pp. .
I segni e la vita la semiotica globale di Thomas A. Sebeok (with S. Petrilli) Spirali, Milano, 2001, 264 pp.
Individuo umano, linguaggio e globalizzazione nella filosofia di Adam Schaff. with una intervista ad Adam Schaff, Milano, Mimesis, 2002.
Il linguaggio e le lingue. Introduzione alla linguistica generale, Bari, Graphis, 2002, 200 pp.
(2° ed.) Il linguaggio e le lingue, Bari, Graphis 2008.
(3° ed.) Il linguaggio e le lingue, Bari, Graphis, 2010.
I segni tra globalità e infinità. Per la critica della comunicazione globale, Bari, Cacucci, 2003, 214 pp.
Semioetica (with S. Petrilli), Roma, Meltemi, 2003, 192 pp.
Views in Literary Semiotics (with S. Petrilli), Ottawa, Legas, 2003, 141 pp.
Linguistica generale, scrittura letteraria e traduzione, Perugia, Guerra, 2004, 444 pp.
(2° ed.) Linguistica generale, scrittura letteraria e traduzione, Perugia, Guerra, 2007, 444 pp.
Semiotica e dialettica, Bari, Edizioni dal Sud, 2004, 296 pp.
La raffigurazione letteraria (with S. Petrilli), Milano, Mimesis, 2005, 300 pp.
Semiotica globale. Il corpo nel segno: introduzione a Thomas A. Sebeok (with Marcell danesi e S. Petrilli), Bari, Graphis, 2004, 140 pp.
Testo come ipertesto e traduzione letteraria, Rimini, Guaraldi, 2005, 116 pp.
Reasoning with Emmanuel Lévinas (with S. Petrilli e Julia Ponzio). Ottawa, Legas, 2005, 54 pp.
Semiotics Unbounded. Interpretive Routes in the Open Network of Signs (with S. Petrilli), Toronto, Toronto University Press, 2005, 630 pp.
Semiotic Animal (with S. Petrilli e [J. Deely]), Toronto, Legas, 2005, 244 pp.
Tesi per il futuro anteriore della semiotica. Il programma di ricerca della Scuola di Bari-Lecce, (with C. Caputo and S. Petrilli), Milano, Mimesi, 2006, 136. pp.
Dialoghi semiotici with M. A. Bonfantini e S. Petrilli, Napoli, Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 2006.
The Dialogic Nature of Sign, Ottawa, Legas, 2006, 56 pp.
La cifrematica e l’ascolto, Bari, Graphis, 2006, 178 pp.
(2° ed.) La cifrematica e l’ascolto, Bari, Graphis, 2008, 178 pp. .
Fuori luogo. L’esorbitante nella riproduzione dell’identico, Roma, Meltemi, 2007, 335 pp. .
A mente. Processi cognitivi e formazione linguistica, Perugia, Guerra Edizioni, 2007, 172 pp. .
Semiotics Today. From Global Semiotics to Semioethics, a Dialogic Response (with S. Petrilli), New York, Ottawa, Toronto, Legas, 2007, 84 pp.
Lineamenti di semiotica e di filosofia del linguaggio, (with S. Petrilli), Bari, Graphis, 2008, 380 pp. .
Tre sguardi su Auguste Dupin (with M. A. Bonfantini e B. Brunetti), Bari, Graphis, 2008, 88 pp. .
Tra Bachtin e Lévinas. Scrittura, dialogo, alterità, Bari, Palomar 2008, 440 pp. .
Linguaggio, lavoro e mercato globale. Rileggendo Rossi-Landi, Milano, Mimesis, 2008, 190 pp.
La dissidenza cifrematica, Milano, Spirali, 2008, 268 pp. .
A revolusão bakhtiniana, San Paolo (Brasile), withtexto, 320 pp. .
Da dove verso dove. La parola altra nella comunicazione globale, Perugia, Edizioni Guerra, 2009, 160 pp.
L’écoute de l’autre, Parigi, L’Harmattan 2009, 116 pp. .
Emmanuel Levinas, Globalisation, and Preventive Peace, Legas, Ottawa, 2009, 56 pp. 976.
Roland Barthes. La visione ottusa (with J. Ponzio, G. Mininni, S. Petrilli, L. Ponzio, M. Solimini), Milano, Mimesis, 2010, .
Renwithtres de paroles, Parigi, Alain Baudry & Cie, 2009, .
Freud, l'analisi, la scrittura (with M. A. Bonfantini, Bruno Brunetti), Bari, Graphis, 2010, .
Enwithtres de palavras. O outro no discurso, Pedro e João Editores, San Carlos (Brasile), 2010.
Procurando uma palavra outra, Pedro e João Editores, San Carlos (Brasile), 2010, .
Interpretazione e scrittura, Scienza dei testi ed eccedenza letteraria, Pensa Multimedia, Lecce, 2011.
In altre parole, Mimesis, Milano, 2011.
La filosofia del linguaggio, Edizioni Laterza, Bari, 2011.
On his scientific research
Bibliografia e letture critiche, Bari, Edizioni dal Sud, 1992, 1995, 2002.
P. Calefato e S. Petrilli (ed.) Logica, dialogica, ideologica. I segni tra funzionalità ed eccedenza, introd., Semiosi, infunzionalità, semiotica, pp. 11–17, Milano, Mimesis, 2003.
S. Petrilli (ed.) Ideology, Logic, and Dialogue in Semioethic Perspective. in Semiotica. Journal of the International Association for Semiotic Studies, 148-1/4, 2004.
Susan Petrilli, Semiotic profile: Augusto Ponzio. A Portrait of the Semiotician and Philosopher of Language on the Occasion of his 40th year of teaching, in Semiotix 5, , 2005.
The I Questioned: Emmanuel Levinas and the critique of Occidental reason, Subject Matters, special edition, vol. 3, 1, 2006.
Susan Petrilli (ed.) La filosofia del linguaggio come arte dell'ascolto / philosophy of Language as the Art of Listening, Sulla ricerca scientifica di Augusto Ponzio, Bari, Edizioni dal Sud, 2007. inside:
Paul Cobley, A brief note on dialogue.
Vincent Colapietro, In the name of that which has been desecrated.
Eero Tarasti, The right to unfunctionality – explorations in Augusto Ponzio's philosophical semiotics.
Marcel Danesi, Augusto Ponzio: A brief note on the “Italian Bakhtin”.
Kalevi Kull, Biosemiotic conversations: Ponzio, Bakhtin, Kanaev, Driesch, Uexküll, Lotman.
Floyd Merrell, The sign's significant other.
Loreta de Stasio, Lingua e letteratura, conoscenza e coscienza.
Winfried Nöth and Lucia Santaella, Otherness at the roots of cultural semiosis.
Giuseppe Mininni, Identità e alterità nella dinamica della coscienza storica.
Cosimo Caputo, Tutto il segnico umano è linguaggio.
John Deely, The primary modeling system in animals.
Carlo Augieri, Per Qohélet emigrato nel Sud è la vanità ad essere “nienzi”: “dentro” il dialetto è straniera la parola dei re.
Frank Nuessel, “Virtual” Augusto Ponzio''.
Mario Signore, Dal silenzio primordiale al brusio della parola. Alla ricerca della parola “vissuta”.
José Maria Nadal, Sobre el enunciador implícito en Augusto Ponzio.
Genevieve Vaughan, Giving and receiving signs.
Jeff Bernard, Ferruccio Rossi-Landi and a short history of the Rossi-Landi Network.
Susan Petrilli, Reading Augusto Ponzio, master of signs and languages.
Nicolas Bonnet, Augusto.
S. Petrilli, Tutt’altro. Infunzionalità ed eccedenza come prerogative dell’umano, Milano, Mimesis, 2008.
Paul Cobley, Augusto Ponzio, pp. 291–292, in Paul Cobley (ed.), The Routledge Companion to Semiotics'', London, Routledge, 2010.
References
External links
1942 births
Living people
20th-century Italian philosophers
21st-century Italian philosophers
Italian semioticians
Academic staff of the University of Bari |
Galate (, ) is a village in the municipality of Vrapčište, North Macedonia.
Demographics
As of the 2021 census, Galate had 980 residents with the following ethnic composition:
Albanians 461
Macedonians 296
Turks 214
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources 6
Others 3
According to the 2002 census, the village had a total of 1151 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the village include:
Albanians 643
Macedonians 334
Turks 173
Serbs 1
In statistics gathered by Vasil Kanchov in 1900, the village of Galate was inhabited by 325 Orthodox Bulgarians.
References
External links
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```hcl
locals {
cluster_name = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
master_autoscaling_group_ids = [aws_autoscaling_group.master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
master_security_group_ids = [aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
masters_role_arn = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.arn
masters_role_name = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
node_autoscaling_group_ids = [aws_autoscaling_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
node_security_group_ids = [aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
node_subnet_ids = [aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
nodes_role_arn = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.arn
nodes_role_name = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
region = "us-test-1"
route_table_public_id = aws_route_table.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
subnet_us-test-1a_id = aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
vpc_cidr_block = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.cidr_block
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
vpc_ipv6_cidr_block = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.ipv6_cidr_block
vpc_ipv6_cidr_length = local.vpc_ipv6_cidr_block == "" ? null : tonumber(regex(".*/(\\d+)", local.vpc_ipv6_cidr_block)[0])
}
output "cluster_name" {
value = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
}
output "master_autoscaling_group_ids" {
value = [aws_autoscaling_group.master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
output "master_security_group_ids" {
value = [aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
output "masters_role_arn" {
value = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.arn
}
output "masters_role_name" {
value = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
}
output "node_autoscaling_group_ids" {
value = [aws_autoscaling_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
output "node_security_group_ids" {
value = [aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
output "node_subnet_ids" {
value = [aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
output "nodes_role_arn" {
value = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.arn
}
output "nodes_role_name" {
value = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
}
output "region" {
value = "us-test-1"
}
output "route_table_public_id" {
value = aws_route_table.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
output "subnet_us-test-1a_id" {
value = aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
output "vpc_cidr_block" {
value = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.cidr_block
}
output "vpc_id" {
value = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
output "vpc_ipv6_cidr_block" {
value = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.ipv6_cidr_block
}
output "vpc_ipv6_cidr_length" {
value = local.vpc_ipv6_cidr_block == "" ? null : tonumber(regex(".*/(\\d+)", local.vpc_ipv6_cidr_block)[0])
}
provider "aws" {
region = "us-test-1"
}
provider "aws" {
alias = "files"
region = "us-test-1"
}
resource "aws_autoscaling_group" "master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
enabled_metrics = ["GroupDesiredCapacity", "GroupInServiceInstances", "GroupMaxSize", "GroupMinSize", "GroupPendingInstances", "GroupStandbyInstances", "GroupTerminatingInstances", "GroupTotalInstances"]
launch_template {
id = aws_launch_template.master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
version = aws_launch_template.master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.latest_version
}
max_instance_lifetime = 0
max_size = 1
metrics_granularity = "1Minute"
min_size = 1
name = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
protect_from_scale_in = false
tag {
key = "KubernetesCluster"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
}
tag {
key = "Name"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
}
tag {
key = "aws-node-termination-handler/managed"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/kops.k8s.io/kops-controller-pki"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node.kubernetes.io/exclude-from-external-load-balancers"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/role/control-plane"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "1"
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/role/master"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "1"
}
tag {
key = "kops.k8s.io/instancegroup"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "master-us-test-1a"
}
tag {
key = "kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "owned"
}
vpc_zone_identifier = [aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
resource "aws_autoscaling_group" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
enabled_metrics = ["GroupDesiredCapacity", "GroupInServiceInstances", "GroupMaxSize", "GroupMinSize", "GroupPendingInstances", "GroupStandbyInstances", "GroupTerminatingInstances", "GroupTotalInstances"]
launch_template {
id = aws_launch_template.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
version = aws_launch_template.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.latest_version
}
max_instance_lifetime = 0
max_size = 2
metrics_granularity = "1Minute"
min_size = 2
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
protect_from_scale_in = false
tag {
key = "KubernetesCluster"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
}
tag {
key = "Name"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
}
tag {
key = "aws-node-termination-handler/managed"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/node"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = ""
}
tag {
key = "k8s.io/role/node"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "1"
}
tag {
key = "kops.k8s.io/instancegroup"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "nodes"
}
tag {
key = "kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com"
propagate_at_launch = true
value = "owned"
}
vpc_zone_identifier = [aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
warm_pool {
max_group_prepared_capacity = 1
min_size = 0
}
}
resource "aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook" "kops-warmpool-nodes" {
autoscaling_group_name = aws_autoscaling_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
default_result = "ABANDON"
heartbeat_timeout = 600
lifecycle_transition = "autoscaling:EC2_INSTANCE_LAUNCHING"
name = "kops-warmpool"
}
resource "aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook" "master-us-test-1a-NTHLifecycleHook" {
autoscaling_group_name = aws_autoscaling_group.master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
default_result = "CONTINUE"
heartbeat_timeout = 300
lifecycle_transition = "autoscaling:EC2_INSTANCE_TERMINATING"
name = "master-us-test-1a-NTHLifecycleHook"
}
resource "aws_autoscaling_lifecycle_hook" "nodes-NTHLifecycleHook" {
autoscaling_group_name = aws_autoscaling_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
default_result = "CONTINUE"
heartbeat_timeout = 300
lifecycle_transition = "autoscaling:EC2_INSTANCE_TERMINATING"
name = "nodes-NTHLifecycleHook"
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_rule" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-ASGLifecycle" {
event_pattern = file("${path.module}/data/aws_cloudwatch_event_rule_minimal-warmpool.example.com-ASGLifecycle_event_pattern")
name = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-ASGLifecycle"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-ASGLifecycle"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_rule" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceScheduledChange" {
event_pattern = file("${path.module}/data/aws_cloudwatch_event_rule_minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceScheduledChange_event_pattern")
name = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceScheduledChange"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceScheduledChange"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_rule" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceStateChange" {
event_pattern = file("${path.module}/data/aws_cloudwatch_event_rule_minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceStateChange_event_pattern")
name = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceStateChange"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-InstanceStateChange"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_rule" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-SpotInterruption" {
event_pattern = file("${path.module}/data/aws_cloudwatch_event_rule_minimal-warmpool.example.com-SpotInterruption_event_pattern")
name = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-SpotInterruption"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com-SpotInterruption"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_target" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-ASGLifecycle-Target" {
arn = aws_sqs_queue.minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth.arn
rule = aws_cloudwatch_event_rule.minimal-warmpool-example-com-ASGLifecycle.id
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_target" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceScheduledChange-Target" {
arn = aws_sqs_queue.minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth.arn
rule = aws_cloudwatch_event_rule.minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceScheduledChange.id
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_target" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceStateChange-Target" {
arn = aws_sqs_queue.minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth.arn
rule = aws_cloudwatch_event_rule.minimal-warmpool-example-com-InstanceStateChange.id
}
resource "aws_cloudwatch_event_target" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-SpotInterruption-Target" {
arn = aws_sqs_queue.minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth.arn
rule = aws_cloudwatch_event_rule.minimal-warmpool-example-com-SpotInterruption.id
}
resource "aws_ebs_volume" "us-test-1a-etcd-events-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
availability_zone = "us-test-1a"
encrypted = false
iops = 3000
size = 20
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "us-test-1a.etcd-events.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"k8s.io/etcd/events" = "us-test-1a/us-test-1a"
"k8s.io/role/control-plane" = "1"
"k8s.io/role/master" = "1"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
throughput = 125
type = "gp3"
}
resource "aws_ebs_volume" "us-test-1a-etcd-main-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
availability_zone = "us-test-1a"
encrypted = false
iops = 3000
size = 20
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "us-test-1a.etcd-main.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"k8s.io/etcd/main" = "us-test-1a/us-test-1a"
"k8s.io/role/control-plane" = "1"
"k8s.io/role/master" = "1"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
throughput = 125
type = "gp3"
}
resource "aws_iam_instance_profile" "masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
name = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
role = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_iam_instance_profile" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
role = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_iam_role" "masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
assume_role_policy = file("${path.module}/data/aws_iam_role_masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com_policy")
name = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_iam_role" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
assume_role_policy = file("${path.module}/data/aws_iam_role_nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com_policy")
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_iam_role_policy" "masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
name = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
policy = file("${path.module}/data/aws_iam_role_policy_masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com_policy")
role = aws_iam_role.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
}
resource "aws_iam_role_policy" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
policy = file("${path.module}/data/aws_iam_role_policy_nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com_policy")
role = aws_iam_role.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.name
}
resource "aws_internet_gateway" "minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_key_pair" your_sha256_hasheb9c7157" {
key_name = "kubernetes.minimal-warmpool.example.com-c4:a6:ed:9a:a8:89:b9:e2:c3:9c:d6:63:eb:9c:71:57"
public_key = file("${path.module}/data/aws_key_pair_kubernetes.minimal-warmpool.example.com-c4a6ed9aa889b9e2c39cd663eb9c7157_public_key")
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_launch_template" "master-us-test-1a-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
block_device_mappings {
device_name = "/dev/xvda"
ebs {
delete_on_termination = true
encrypted = true
iops = 3000
throughput = 125
volume_size = 64
volume_type = "gp3"
}
}
block_device_mappings {
device_name = "/dev/sdc"
virtual_name = "ephemeral0"
}
iam_instance_profile {
name = aws_iam_instance_profile.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
image_id = "ami-12345678"
instance_type = "m3.medium"
key_name = aws_key_pair.your_sha256_hasheb9c7157.id
lifecycle {
create_before_destroy = true
}
metadata_options {
http_endpoint = "enabled"
http_protocol_ipv6 = "disabled"
http_put_response_hop_limit = 1
http_tokens = "optional"
}
monitoring {
enabled = false
}
name = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
network_interfaces {
associate_public_ip_address = true
delete_on_termination = true
ipv6_address_count = 0
security_groups = [aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
tag_specifications {
resource_type = "instance"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/kops.k8s.io/kops-controller-pki" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node.kubernetes.io/exclude-from-external-load-balancers" = ""
"k8s.io/role/control-plane" = "1"
"k8s.io/role/master" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "master-us-test-1a"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
tag_specifications {
resource_type = "volume"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/kops.k8s.io/kops-controller-pki" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node.kubernetes.io/exclude-from-external-load-balancers" = ""
"k8s.io/role/control-plane" = "1"
"k8s.io/role/master" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "master-us-test-1a"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/kops.k8s.io/kops-controller-pki" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node.kubernetes.io/exclude-from-external-load-balancers" = ""
"k8s.io/role/control-plane" = "1"
"k8s.io/role/master" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "master-us-test-1a"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
user_data = filebase64("${path.module}/data/aws_launch_template_master-us-test-1a.masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com_user_data")
}
resource "aws_launch_template" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
block_device_mappings {
device_name = "/dev/xvda"
ebs {
delete_on_termination = true
encrypted = true
iops = 3000
throughput = 125
volume_size = 128
volume_type = "gp3"
}
}
iam_instance_profile {
name = aws_iam_instance_profile.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
image_id = "ami-12345678"
instance_type = "t2.medium"
key_name = aws_key_pair.your_sha256_hasheb9c7157.id
lifecycle {
create_before_destroy = true
}
metadata_options {
http_endpoint = "enabled"
http_protocol_ipv6 = "disabled"
http_put_response_hop_limit = 1
http_tokens = "optional"
}
monitoring {
enabled = false
}
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
network_interfaces {
associate_public_ip_address = true
delete_on_termination = true
ipv6_address_count = 0
security_groups = [aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id]
}
tag_specifications {
resource_type = "instance"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/node" = ""
"k8s.io/role/node" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "nodes"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
tag_specifications {
resource_type = "volume"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/node" = ""
"k8s.io/role/node" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "nodes"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"aws-node-termination-handler/managed" = ""
"k8s.io/cluster-autoscaler/node-template/label/node-role.kubernetes.io/node" = ""
"k8s.io/role/node" = "1"
"kops.k8s.io/instancegroup" = "nodes"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
user_data = filebase64("${path.module}/data/aws_launch_template_nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com_user_data")
}
resource "aws_route" "route-0-0-0-0--0" {
destination_cidr_block = "0.0.0.0/0"
gateway_id = aws_internet_gateway.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
route_table_id = aws_route_table.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_route" "route-__--0" {
destination_ipv6_cidr_block = "::/0"
gateway_id = aws_internet_gateway.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
route_table_id = aws_route_table.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_route_table" "minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
"kubernetes.io/kops/role" = "public"
}
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_route_table_association" "us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
route_table_id = aws_route_table.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
subnet_id = aws_subnet.us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "cluster-completed-spec" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_cluster-completed.spec_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/cluster-completed.spec"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "etcd-cluster-spec-events" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_etcd-cluster-spec-events_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/backups/etcd/events/control/etcd-cluster-spec"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "etcd-cluster-spec-main" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_etcd-cluster-spec-main_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/backups/etcd/main/control/etcd-cluster-spec"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "kops-version-txt" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_kops-version.txt_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/kops-version.txt"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "manifests-etcdmanager-events-master-us-test-1a" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/your_sha256_hashtent")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/manifests/etcd/events-master-us-test-1a.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "manifests-etcdmanager-main-master-us-test-1a" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/your_sha256_hashnt")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/manifests/etcd/main-master-us-test-1a.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "manifests-static-kube-apiserver-healthcheck" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/your_sha256_hasht")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/manifests/static/kube-apiserver-healthcheck.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hashk8s-io-k8s-1-18" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-aws-cloud-controller.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.18_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/aws-cloud-controller.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.18.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hashs-io-k8s-1-17" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-aws-ebs-csi-driver.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.17_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/aws-ebs-csi-driver.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.17.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-addons-bootstrap" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-bootstrap_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/bootstrap-channel.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hash12" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-coredns.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.12_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/coredns.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.12.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hash-k8s-1-12" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-dns-controller.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.12_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/dns-controller.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.12.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hasho-k8s-1-16" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-kops-controller.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.16_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/kops-controller.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.16.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hashio-k8s-1-9" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-kubelet-api.rbac.addons.k8s.io-k8s-1.9_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/kubelet-api.rbac.addons.k8s.io/k8s-1.9.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-addons-limit-range-addons-k8s-io" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-limit-range.addons.k8s.io_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/limit-range.addons.k8s.io/v1.5.0.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hash6" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-networking.cilium.io-k8s-1.16_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/networking.cilium.io/k8s-1.16-v1.15.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hash-k8s-1-11" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-node-termination-handler.aws-k8s-1.11_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/node-termination-handler.aws/k8s-1.11.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" your_sha256_hash-15-0" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_minimal-warmpool.example.com-addons-storage-aws.addons.k8s.io-v1.15.0_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/addons/storage-aws.addons.k8s.io/v1.15.0.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "nodeupconfig-master-us-test-1a" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_nodeupconfig-master-us-test-1a_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/igconfig/control-plane/master-us-test-1a/nodeupconfig.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_s3_object" "nodeupconfig-nodes" {
bucket = "testingBucket"
content = file("${path.module}/data/aws_s3_object_nodeupconfig-nodes_content")
key = "clusters.example.com/minimal-warmpool.example.com/igconfig/node/nodes/nodeupconfig.yaml"
provider = aws.files
server_side_encryption = "AES256"
}
resource "aws_security_group" "masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
description = "Security group for masters"
name = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "masters.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_security_group" "nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
description = "Security group for nodes"
name = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "nodes.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashple-com" {
cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
from_port = 22
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 22
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashe-com" {
cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
from_port = 22
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 22
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashample-com" {
cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
from_port = 443
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 443
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hash0--0" {
cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
from_port = 0
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "egress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" "from-masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com-egress-all-0to0-__--0" {
from_port = 0
ipv6_cidr_blocks = ["::/0"]
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "egress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashrs-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 0
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hash-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 0
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hash-0" {
cidr_blocks = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
from_port = 0
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "egress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" "from-nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com-egress-all-0to0-__--0" {
from_port = 0
ipv6_cidr_blocks = ["::/0"]
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "egress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashinimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 0
protocol = "-1"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 0
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashers-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 1
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 2379
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashasters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 2382
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 4000
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashmasters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 4003
protocol = "tcp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 65535
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_security_group_rule" your_sha256_hashters-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
from_port = 1
protocol = "udp"
security_group_id = aws_security_group.masters-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
source_security_group_id = aws_security_group.nodes-minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
to_port = 65535
type = "ingress"
}
resource "aws_sqs_queue" "minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth" {
message_retention_seconds = 300
name = "minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth"
policy = file("${path.module}/data/aws_sqs_queue_minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth_policy")
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool-example-com-nth"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_subnet" "us-test-1a-minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
availability_zone = "us-test-1a"
cidr_block = "172.20.32.0/19"
enable_resource_name_dns_a_record_on_launch = true
private_dns_hostname_type_on_launch = "resource-name"
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "us-test-1a.minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"SubnetType" = "Public"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
"kubernetes.io/role/elb" = "1"
"kubernetes.io/role/internal-elb" = "1"
}
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
resource "aws_vpc" "minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
assign_generated_ipv6_cidr_block = true
cidr_block = "172.20.0.0/16"
enable_dns_hostnames = true
enable_dns_support = true
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_vpc_dhcp_options" "minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
domain_name = "us-test-1.compute.internal"
domain_name_servers = ["AmazonProvidedDNS"]
tags = {
"KubernetesCluster" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"Name" = "minimal-warmpool.example.com"
"kubernetes.io/cluster/minimal-warmpool.example.com" = "owned"
}
}
resource "aws_vpc_dhcp_options_association" "minimal-warmpool-example-com" {
dhcp_options_id = aws_vpc_dhcp_options.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
vpc_id = aws_vpc.minimal-warmpool-example-com.id
}
terraform {
required_version = ">= 0.15.0"
required_providers {
aws = {
"configuration_aliases" = [aws.files]
"source" = "hashicorp/aws"
"version" = ">= 5.0.0"
}
}
}
``` |
The 1990 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 22nd edition of the Stockholm Open and was part of the ATP Super 9 of the 1990 ATP Tour. It took place at the Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, from 22 October through 29 October 1990.
The singles draw was headlined by world No. 1, Wimbledon champion, Los Angeles, New Haven, Indian Wells, Cincinnati titlist Stefan Edberg, Brussels, Indianapolis, Stuttgart indoor winner, Wimbledon runner-up Boris Becker and Key Biscayne, San Francisco, Washington champion, French Open, US Open finalist Andre Agassi. Other top seeds were US Open, Manchester winner Pete Sampras, French Open, Barcelona champion Andrés Gómez, Emilio Sánchez, Brad Gilbert and John McEnroe.
Finals
Singles
Boris Becker defeated Stefan Edberg, 6–4, 6–0, 6–3
It was Becker's 5th singles title of the year, and the 29th of his career. It was his 1st Masters title.
Doubles
Guy Forget / Jakob Hlasek defeated John Fitzgerald / Anders Järryd, 6–4, 6–2
References
External links
ATP tournament profile
ITF tournament edition details
Stock |
Futbol Club Barcelona Rugby Lliga are the rugby league extension of the FC Barcelona association football club's sporting family, based in Barcelona, Catalonia. They won the Catalonia's Cup in 2008 and now play in the Catalan Rugby League Championship, the premier rugby league tournament in Catalonia, after being admitted into the competition in 2010. The sports club's president is Joan Laporta.
History
2008
FC Barcelona's sporting club expanded into rugby league in 2008, after having teams in rugby union, basketball, team handball, futsal, track and field athletics, roller hockey and ice hockey already established in Spanish sport. Like the football team and other sporting expansions from FC Barcelona, their kit manufacturers are Nike. The club played and won the inaugural Catalonia Cup, a competition featuring developing teams in the region that took place in April 2008 with 3 teams: FC Barcelona, Aligots de Girona and Nord-Català. Barcelona won their first ever competitive rugby league game in their history against Girona Buzzard by 22 points to 20. They then defeated Roussillon 24-4 to win the triangular tournament.
2009
In 2009, the club withdrew from Catalan competitions to strengthen for a bid to join the Catalan Rugby League Championship. They decided to rejoin in 2010 after the first professional rugby league game to take place in Barcelona in 2009, between Catalans Dragons and Warrington Wolves in Super League XIV which attracted a crowd of 18,150, evidently strengthened the popularity of the game in Spain and particularly the Catalan region.
2010
After reforming, the club joined the Catalan Rugby League Championship (CRLC) in 2010; a two-pool league in which Barcelona University Club were the reigning champions from the 2009 season. Barcelona formed something of a rivalry with BUC in the seven-team competition, as both competed concurrently, but in separate pools. It is widely speculated, but purely a hypothesis, that this branch of the successful FC Barcelona club will become members of the Rugby Football League and possibly Super League should the venture prove a success in Catalonia, as they were now playing more competitive rugby, on a more regular basis. Their first ever game was against CR Sant Cugat on 13 May 2010, a game which ended in a disappointing 30-20 loss. They earned their first win of the competition with a 44-30 win at home to GEiEG to give them a hope of qualifying for the finals. And, despite GEiEG winning their last game of the pool against Sant Cugat, Barça were able to qualify for the third and fourth place play-off, where they played CE INEF Lleida, in a narrow 36-30 loss.
Current squad
The following was the squad that finished fourth in the 2010 CRLC:
Honours
Catalonia Cup: 1
2008
See also
Rugby league in Catalonia
Rugby league in Spain
External links
FC Barcelona Official website
Catalan Rugby League Association
References
Rugby league in Catalonia
Rugby clubs established in 2008
Rugby
2008 establishments in Catalonia
Rugby league teams in Spain |
Choreutis equatoris is a species of moth of the family Choreutidae. It is found in the Republic of the Congo.
References
Endemic fauna of the Republic of the Congo
Choreutis
Fauna of the Republic of the Congo
Moths of Africa
Moths described in 1897 |
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Puducherry or locally known as JNV Kalapet is a boarding, co-educational school in Puducherry district of Puducherry U.T. in India. Navodaya Vidyalayas are funded by the Indian Ministry of Human Resources Development and administered by Navodaya Vidyalaya Smiti, an autonomous body under the ministry. Navodaya Vidyalayas provide free education to talented children from Class VI to XII. Puducherry district is a coastal enclave within Tamil Nadu state.
History
The school was established in 1986, and is a part of Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya schools. This school is administered and monitored by Hyderabad regional office of Navodaya Vidyalaya Smiti.
Admission
Admission to JNV Puducherry at class VI level is made through selection test (JNVST) conducted by Navodaya Vidyalaya Smiti. The information about test is disseminated and advertised in district by the office of Puducherry district magistrate (Collector), who is also the chairperson of Vidyalya Management Committee (VMC).
Affiliations
JNV Puducherry is affiliated to Central Board of Secondary Education with affiliation number 2940001.
See also
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Yanam
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Karaikal
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Mahe
List of JNV schools
References
External links
Official Website of JNV Puducherry
High schools and secondary schools in Puducherry
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas in Puducherry
Educational institutions established in 1986
1986 establishments in Pondicherry
Puducherry district |
Julian Heward Bell (4 February 1908 – 18 July 1937) was an English poet, and the son of Clive and Vanessa Bell (who was the elder sister of Virginia Woolf). The writer Quentin Bell was his younger brother and the writer and painter Angelica Garnett was his half-sister. His relationship with his mother is explored in Susan Sellers' novel Vanessa and Virginia.
Background
Julian Heward Bell was born in St Pancras, London, and was brought up at Charleston, Sussex. He was educated at Leighton Park School and King's College, Cambridge, where he joined the Cambridge Apostles. He was a friend of some of the Cambridge Five, including Anthony Blunt, to whom he lost his virginity. (In the BBC dramatisation Cambridge Spies he appears as Blunt's lover and Guy Burgess's unrequited love interest). After graduating he worked towards a college fellowship, without success.
In 1935 he went to China, to a position teaching English at Wuhan University. He wrote letters describing his relationship with a married lover, K. - Ling Shuhua, the wife of Professor Chen Yuan (better known by his penname, Chen Xiying). The identity of 'K' became a sensitive issue when the Chinese-British novelist Hong Ying published a fictionalised account, K: The Art of Love in 1999. After a 2002 ruling by a Chinese court, that the book was 'defamation of the dead', the author rewrote the book, which was published in 2003 under the title The English Lover.
Bell was initially a pacifist and edited an anthology of memoirs of conscientious objectors from the First World War, We Did Not Fight.
In 1937, Bell became increasingly supportive of the socialist and anti-fascist movements and decided to enlist in the Spanish Civil War. His parents and his aunt Virginia tried to dissuade him; eventually they persuaded Julian to get a job as an ambulance driver on the Republican side, rather than a soldier. His motive for going to Spain was a general sympathy for the cause of the Spanish Republic, plus "the usefulness of war experience in the future and the prestige one would gain in literature and – even more – Left politics". After just a month in Spain he found himself in the thick of the action, driving an ambulance for the British Medical Unit attached to the International Brigades at the battle of Brunete. He was hit by bomb fragments on a stretch of road just outside Villanueva de la Cañada, sustaining a massive lung wound, and later died in a military hospital at El Escorial. He was 29.
Works
Winter Movement (1930) poems
We Did Not Fight: 1914–18 Experiences of War Resisters (1935) editor
Work for the Winter (1936) poems
Essays, Poems and Letters (1938) edited by Quentin Bell
References
Further reading
Lily Briscoe's Chinese Eyes: Bloomsbury, Modernism, and China (2003), Patricia Laurence
Vanessa and Virginia, Susan Sellers
Julian Bell: From Bloomsbury to the Spanish Civil War (2012), Peter Stansky and William Abrahams
Mémoires de Duncan Grant, un Highlander à Bloomsbury by Christian Soleil (2011), Monpetitéditeur, Paris.
Mémoires de Duncan Grant, A Bohemian Rhapsody by Christian Soleil (2012), Monpetitéditeur, Paris.
Le Neveu de Virginia Woolf, entretien avec Julian Bell by Christian Soleil (2012), Publibook, Paris.
''Life in Squares(2015) portrayed by Finn Jones.
1908 births
1937 deaths
Alumni of King's College, Cambridge
Bloomsbury Group
British people of the Spanish Civil War
People educated at Leighton Park School
Stephen-Bell family
Academic staff of Wuhan University
English socialists
English anti-fascists
British military personnel killed in action
20th-century English poets
20th-century British economists
International Brigades personnel killed in action |
The American Invasion (called the Irish Invasion in America) was an 1888 sports tour of the Northeastern United States by Irish athletes under the auspices of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA). It raised American awareness of the GAA but failed as a fundraising venture.
Planning
In endorsing the 1884 founding of the GAA, its patron Michael Davitt called for a modern revival of the ancient Tailteann Games. In January 1888 the annual GAA Congress was held in an atmosphere of optimism after the successful organisation of the 1887 All-Ireland Hurling and All-Ireland Football Championships and a détente between factions for and against the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB). Congress agreed in principle to organise a tour of North America, hoping to publicise Gaelic games among the Irish diaspora there and to raise funds for its Tailteann Games project. Details were arranged at April, May, and July meetings of the GAA Central Council. A cost of £1,000 was estimated, with a projected £5,000 in receipts, which proved very overoptimistic. The tour was to include exhibition matches in hurling and challenge matches in track and field athletics, a sport which the GAA organised until the 1922 foundation of the National Athletic and Cycling Association. Gaelic football, now the most popular Gaelic game, was less important in the early GAA and not included in the tour.
The tour was delayed by difficulty in raising the necessary £1,000, with patron Thomas Croke contributing only £5, and little raised by exhibition games in Dublin, Wexford, Dundalk, Kilkenny, Tipperary and Cork. Requesting a donation from each affiliated club was hampered by continued disaffiliations dating from the IRB split. Finally, Davitt personally guaranteed £450. The track and field athletes were selected from among the top finishers at the GAA national championships in Limerick on 5 August. Daniel Bulger of Lansdowne Football Club won four events, but was ineligible for the tour because his club was affiliated to the Irish Rugby Football Union rather than the GAA. John Cullinan, an official of the GAA and IRB, went ahead to America to prepare for the tour party, which set sail on 16 September from Queenstown (now Cobh) on the Guion Line's Wisconsin. The team comprised 18 track and field athletes, 25 hurlers, and 10 officials including a doctor and a Catholic chaplain. (Some of the party were in two categories, like Maurice Davin's brother Pat; the total number is variously given as 51 or 53.) Patrick Prendergast Sutton travelled both as captain of one of the two hurling teams and as correspondent of Sport.
Progression
Many of the hurlers were seasick throughout the voyage. The tour included New York City and Patterson in New York; Boston and Lowell in Massachusetts; Trenton and Newark in New Jersey; Providence, Rhode Island; and Philadelphia. Arriving in each city, the party were greeted by pipe and brass bands. The field athletes set records and the hurlers impressed the locals. A spectator was injured by a wayward hammer during the first practice session. Hurling matches were 13-a-side. All the hurleys the party had brought were soon broken and replacements were quickly made from local hickory rather than the traditional ash wood.
At the national championships of the National Association of Amateur Athletes of America (NAAA) in the Manhattan Athletic Club on 13 October, James Mitchel came first in the 56 pound weight and second in both the shot put and hammer throw; other GAA athletes came first in the 440-yard dash (Timothy Jerome O'Mahony, the "Rosscarbery Steam Engine") and high jump (Tim M. O'Connor); second in the mile run (William McCarthy, beaten by Thomas Conneff, who had emigrated the previous year); and third in the 120-yard hurdles (Denis Power), half-mile run (Billy Phibbs) and long jump (Daniel Shanahan). Among the other GAA athletes were John Mooney (sprints); Patrick Keohan, Pat Looney, and Jack Connery (jumps); and William Real and John C. Daly (throws).
Several factors reduced both the number of meetings (to 15 hurling and 9 athletics matches) and attendances at them: bad weather; the U.S. presidential election campaign, which preoccupied the GAA's Tammany Hall sympathisers; and a dispute between the older NAAA and the larger Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). The GAA tried to be neutral between the AAU and the NAAA, leading the AAU to boycott it. Heavy snow cancelled the two-week Canadian leg of the tour. Local journalist Patrick Ford was called upon to pay the party's hotel bill in New York City. Although the final meeting at Madison Square Garden attracted a crowd of several thousand, the local organisers charged the Irish party $75 to cover an alleged shortfall in expenses.
When S.S. City of Rome left New York on 31 October, many of the players opted not to sail back to Ireland. Mandle says 28 of the 45 athletes returned; Pat Davin said only 23 of the total party of 53 returned. Others returned only to settle their affairs before emigrating back to America. Michael Cusack privately accused Davitt of "traitorously" encouraging his "pets" to emigrate.
Legacy
The tour was a financial disaster. As regards increasing awareness of Gaelic games in the United States, the tour had some success; which later benefited Gaelic football there despite its not having been part of the tour. The 1888 All-Ireland Hurling and All-Ireland Football Championships were abandoned because of the disruption of the tour. Maurice Davin resigned as GAA President at the 1889 Congress, as the IRB faction used the failure of the tour to take control of the GAA executive. In 1893 Davitt's bankruptcy declaration stated that he was still owed £450 by the GAA, which disowned the tour and its associated debt. Among those who stayed in America was James Mitchel, who won a bronze medal for the U.S. in the 1904 Olympic 56-lb weight throw. Pat Davin's diary of the tour was published as part of his 1938 memoir; the diary manuscript was sold for €5,500 at auction in 2016.
Sources
Citations
Further reading
1888 in Gaelic games
1888 in American sports
Gaelic games in the United States
Track and field in the United States |
Plochionus amandus is a species of ground beetle in the family Carabidae. It is found in North America.
Subspecies
These three subspecies belong to the species Plochionus amandus:
Plochionus amandus amandus Newman, 1840
Plochionus amandus discoideus LeConte, 1880
Plochionus amandus vittatus LeConte, 1844
References
Further reading
Harpalinae
Articles created by Qbugbot
Beetles described in 1840 |
Metekhal is a village in the Chanditala I community development block of Srirampore subdivision in the Hooghly district of the Indian state of West Bengal.
Geography
Metekhal is located at .
Gram panchayat
Villages and census towns in Bhagabatipur gram panchayat are: Bhadua, Bhagabatipur, Jalamadul, Kanaidanga, Metekhal and Singjor.
Demographics
As per 2011 Census of India, Metekhal had a total population of 3,006 of which 1,559 (52%) were males and 1,447 (48%) were females. Population below 6 years was 419. The total number of literates in Metekhal was 2,266 (87.59% of the population over 6 years).
References
Villages in Chanditala I CD Block |
Jacques Folch-Ribas (born November 4, 1928 in Barcelona, Spain) is a Canadian novelist and art critic from Quebec.
Born in Barcelona, Spain to Catalan parents, he grew up in France after his parents fled Francoist Spain in 1939. He studied mathematics, philosophy, urban planning and architecture at university, and worked for Le Corbusier, before moving to Montreal, where he became a Canadian citizen in 1961. In Montreal, he was a longtime art and literary critic for La Presse alongside his work as a novelist.
He won the Prix Québec-Paris in 1974 for Une aurore boréale, the Prix Molson in 1983 for Le Valet de plume, and the Governor General's Award for French-language fiction in 1988 for Le silence, ou Le parfait bonheur. He is a member of the Académie des lettres du Québec.
Works
La horde des Zamé (Le démolisseur) (1970)
Le greffon (1971)
Une aurore boréale (1974)
Le Valet de plume (1983)
La chair de pierre (1984)
Dehors, les chiens (1986)
Première nocturne (1991)
Marie Blanc (1993)
Homme de plaisir (1999)
Le silence, ou Le parfait bonheur (1999)
Des années, des mois, des jours (2001)
Les pélicans de Géorgie (2009)
Paco (2011)
References
1928 births
20th-century Canadian novelists
21st-century Canadian novelists
Canadian male novelists
Canadian male short story writers
Canadian novelists in French
Canadian art critics
Canadian literary critics
Writers from Barcelona
Spanish emigrants to Canada
Living people
Canadian male non-fiction writers
Spanish expatriates in France
Governor General's Award-winning fiction writers
20th-century Canadian male writers
21st-century Canadian male writers |
Jeanne Linden Phillips (born 1954) is an American businesswoman and diplomat. She served as United States Ambassador to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development from 2001 to 2003, under President George W. Bush.
Biography
Early life
Phillips was born in Arkansas. She graduated in 1976 from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.
Career
Phillips served as President and Chief Executive officer of the consulting firm, Jeanne Johnson & Company, Inc, and as Managing Director of the Dallas office of Public Strategies, Inc. She served as fundraising advisor to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C., the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas, her alma mater, SMU, George H. W. Bush, etc.
During George W. Bush's first presidential campaign, she served as Senior Advisor for National Finance in collaboration with the Chairman of the Campaign Finance Committee. Phillips then served as Deputy Chairman for Operations at the Republican National Committee in Washington, D.C. In 2001, she was Executive Director of the 54th Presidential Inaugural Committee. From 2001 to 2005, she served as United States Ambassador to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris, France. In 2005, she was the Chair of the 55th Presidential Inaugural Committee for President Bush's reelection.
Phillips is currently Senior Vice President of Corporate Affairs and International Relations at the Hunt Refining Company, Hunt Consolidated and the Hunt Oil Company. She is a member of the American Petroleum Institute.
She serves on the board of directors of the John Goodwin Tower Center for Political Studies at SMU, the Baylor Health Care System Foundation, the Hockaday School, American Hospital of Paris Foundation and the George W. Bush Presidential Center. Phillips is a member of the Dallas Assembly, the Dallas Woman's Club and the Philosophical Society of Texas.
Personal life
Phillips resides in Dallas, Texas, where she attends St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church.
References
1954 births
Living people
People from Dallas
Southern Methodist University alumni
American businesspeople
George W. Bush administration personnel
Ambassadors of the United States to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
American women ambassadors
21st-century American women |
Young and Sexy is Canadian indie pop band from Vancouver consisting of vocalists Paul Pittman and Lucy Brain, guitarist André Lagacé, bassist Brent McDonald and former drummer Alex Brain. The band released four albums on Mint Records.
History
Young and Sexy was formed in 1998 in Vancouver. In 2002 they released their debut album, Stand Up For Your Mother. The band at that time included singers Paul Hixon Pittman and Lucy Brain, Ted Marcel Bois on keyboard and guitar, Andre J. Lagace on bass and guitar, and drummer Ron "Frankie" Teardrops.
In 2004 the group released their second album, Life Through One Speaker. The album featured pop music and with harmonies and electric guitar riffs. Sales of the first two albums were moderate.
By the time the band's third album, Panic When You Find it, was released in 2006, Brent MacDonald was on bass,
Legace played guitar, and Alex Brain had joined the band as drummer. A fourth album, The Arc, was released in 2008.
As of 2014, Young and Sexy continue to perform in the Vancouver area.
Discography
2002 Stand Up For Your Mother
2003 Life Through One Speaker
2006 Panic When You Find It
2008 The Arc
References
External links
Young and Sexy at CBC Music
CBC Radio 3 Studio Session "Melody Makers: Young and Sexy's Quest for Beauty"
Musical groups established in 1998
Musical groups from Vancouver
Canadian indie pop groups
Mint Records artists
1998 establishments in British Columbia |
Francisco Javier Pereira Megía (; born 13 May 1966) is a Spanish football manager and former player who played as a right winger. He is the current manager of Shanghai Port.
Playing career
Born in Badajoz, Extremadura, Pereira only played amateur football during his career. After notably playing one match for Segunda División B side CD Badajoz in the 1984–85 season, he went on to represent UD Montijo, CD Díter Zafra, AD Puebla Patria, CP Sanvicenteño and CD Guadiana.
Pereira eventually retired at the age of just 28, after having degrees in Law and Psychology and a job at the Social security of his hometown.
Managerial career
After retiring, Pereira started his managerial career in 2001, with former side Badajoz's reserve team. On 18 July 2003, he was named manager of Tercera División side CD Don Benito, achieving promotion to the third division in his first season but being sacked in March 2005; his club suffered relegation nonetheless. He eventually returned to Don Benito in 2006, but as a sporting director.
In 2007, Pereira left Don Benito to join Juan Ignacio Martínez's staff at UD Salamanca, as his assistant manager. The duo also worked together at Albacete Balompié before the appointment of Pereira as Deportivo Alavés manager on 22 June 2009.
Sacked by Alavés on 1 February 2010, Pereira returned to his previous role as JIMs assistant at Cartagena, Levante and Valladolid. In 2014 he moved abroad, joining Óscar García's staff at Watford, and continued at the club despite García's departure, working as an assistant of subsequent managers Billy McKinlay and Slaviša Jokanović.
Pereira continued to work with Jokanović in the following three seasons, being his assistant at Maccabi Tel Aviv and Fulham. In 2018, after Jokanović was fired, Pereira joined Jordi Cruyff's staff at Chongqing Lifan.
On 30 January 2020, Pereira returned to Fulham as an Assistant Director of Football Operations. He moved back to China on 11 September, after being named manager of Henan Jianye. He steered the club to safety in the relegation play-off, courtesy of four wins and two draws.
In October 2021, Pereira rescinded his contract in Asia and came home to manage struggling La Liga side Levante UD for the rest of the season, with two more campaigns as option. On 29 November, he was sacked by the club, who were bottom of the league and without a win. At the turn of the year, he returned to the Chinese Super League, joining the renamed Henan Songshan Longmen. In the following year, he joined Shanghai Port as the new manager.
Personal life
Pereira's father José Luis was also a footballer. A midfielder, his professional inputs consisted of 31 appearances in three seasons with CF Extremadura and Badajoz.
References
External links
1966 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Badajoz
Footballers from the Province of Badajoz
Spanish men's footballers
Men's association football wingers
Segunda División B players
Tercera División players
CD Badajoz players
Spanish football managers
La Liga managers
Segunda División B managers
Deportivo Alavés managers
Levante UD managers
Chinese Super League managers
Henan F.C. managers
Watford F.C. non-playing staff
Fulham F.C. non-playing staff
Spanish expatriate football managers
Spanish expatriate sportspeople in England
Spanish expatriate sportspeople in Israel
Spanish expatriate sportspeople in China
Expatriate football managers in China |
Choqa Maran (, also Romanized as Choqā Mārān) is a village in Miyan Darband Rural District, in the Central District of Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 152, in 36 families.
References
Populated places in Kermanshah County |
"Space Cadet" is a song by American record producer Metro Boomin, featuring vocals from American rapper Gunna. It was sent to rhythmic contemporary radio through Boominati and Republic on January 29, 2019, as the second single of Metro's debut studio album, Not All Heroes Wear Capes (2018).
Background
"Space Cadet" is primarily produced by Metro Boomin and Wheezy, with Allen Ritter as an additional producer. Meanwhile, the vocals are handled by Gunna, with background vocals at the end from American rapper and singer Travis Scott, a close friend and frequent collaborator of both Metro and Gunna. On the song, Gunna raps about his lavish lifestyle. It is mostly a reference to the Rolls-Royce Wraith, an expensive car that is known for its starry ceiling. A space cadet is a trainee astronaut.
It marks the second official collaboration between Metro and Gunna, following Gunna's 2018 song "Car Sick", which also features Canadian rapper Nav, who is a close friend and frequent collaborator of both artists. The song is from Gunna's commercial mixtape, Drip Season 3, to which Metro served as an executive producer on and also produced four other songs from the project, "Helluva Price", "Pedestrian", "My Soul", and "No Joke". Gunna also makes another appearance on the album alongside American rapper and label boss Young Thug on the song "Lesbian".
Critical reception
While talking about "Space Cadet", Alphonse Pierre from Pitchfork opined:On "Space Cadet", Metro ushers Gunna into "The Twilight Zone" with a twinkling instrumental, and Gunna responds with one of the album's bounciest hooks. The "Space Cadet" instrumental, like so much of the album's production, feels cinematic but thankfully not far removed from his Atlanta-built sound.
Chart performance
"Space Cadet" debuted and peaked at number 51 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, on the week of November 17, 2018. The single also debuted at number 22 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. On December 9, 2020, the song was certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for combined sales and streaming equivalent units of over two million units in the United States.
Music video
The official music video for "Space Cadet" premiered on April 22, 2019. It was directed by Zac Facts. Metro Boomin and Gunna are dancing and floating around in lasers and bright lights, like a simulation of outer space. Young Thug, a close friend and frequent collaborator of both artists, makes a cameo appearance.
Live performances
On February 11, 2019, Metro Boomin and Gunna performed the song live on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. In tribute of American rapper 21 Savage, a longtime close friend and frequent collaborator of Metro, the latter wore a jacket with the words "Free 21 Savage". The rapper was in jail at the time of the performance for illegally being in the United States of America, but was released the following day.
Charts
Certifications
Release history
References
2019 songs
2019 singles
Song recordings produced by Metro Boomin
Song recordings produced by Allen Ritter
Song recordings produced by Wheezy (record producer)
Songs written by Metro Boomin
Songs written by Gunna (rapper)
Songs written by Wheezy (record producer)
Songs written by Allen Ritter
Metro Boomin songs
Gunna (rapper) songs |
Bactriola paupercula is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Bates in 1885. It is known from Bolivia and Panama.
References
Forsteriini
Beetles described in 1885 |
"Hope" is a song by Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace. It was the third single released from their debut 1994 album, Naveed.
Origin
When first being recorded, the song was titled "Sunflower" and had a psychedelic style, and, according to Jeremy Taggart, a Police vibe out of the bridge.
Music video
The music video for the song shows the band playing in a smoky bar. It switches back and forth to a woman in a sunflower field who seems lost. It shows her and another man doing various unusual things.
References
External links
1994 singles
1994 songs
Our Lady Peace songs
Songs written by Raine Maida
Epic Records singles |
Teamline Air Luftfahrt GesmbH was an airline based in Austria, which was operational from 2001 to 2004. The airline was a sub-company of Fairline Flugbetriebs GmbH, which ceased to exist in 2006.
References
Defunct airlines of Austria
Airlines established in 2001
Airlines disestablished in 2004
2001 establishments in Austria
2004 disestablishments in Austria |
Thomas Simpson FRS (20 August 1710 – 14 May 1761) was a British mathematician and inventor known for the eponymous Simpson's rule to approximate definite integrals. The attribution, as often in mathematics, can be debated: this rule had been found 100 years earlier by Johannes Kepler, and in German it is called Keplersche Fassregel.
Biography
Simpson was born in Sutton Cheney, Leicestershire. The son of a weaver, Simpson taught himself mathematics. At the age of nineteen, he married a fifty-year old widow with two children. As a youth, he became interested in astrology after seeing a solar eclipse. He also dabbled in divination and caused fits in a girl after 'raising a devil' from her. After this incident, he and his wife had to flee to Derby. He moved with his wife and children to London at age twenty-five, where he supported his family by weaving during the day and teaching mathematics at night.
From 1743, he taught mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. Simpson was a fellow of the Royal Society. In 1758, Simpson was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
He died in Market Bosworth, and was laid to rest in Sutton Cheney. A plaque inside the church commemorates him.
Early work
Simpson's treatise entitled The Nature and Laws of Chance and The Doctrine of Annuities and Reversions were based on the work of De Moivre and were attempts at making the same material more brief and understandable. Simpson stated this clearly in The Nature and Laws of Chance, referring to De Moivre's Doctrine of Chances: "tho' it neither wants Matter nor Elegance to recommend it, yet the Price must, I am sensible, have put it out of the Power of many to purchase it". In both works, Simpson cited De Moivre's work and did not claim originality beyond the presentation of some more accurate data. While he and De Moivre initially got along, De Moivre eventually felt that his income was threatened by Simpson's work and in his second edition of Annuities upon Lives, wrote in the preface:
"After the pains I have taken to perfect this Second Edition, it may happen, that a certain Person, whom I need not name, out of Compassion to the Public, will publish a Second Edition of his Book on the same Subject, which he will afford at a very moderate Price, not regarding whether he mutilates my Propositions, obscures what is clear, makes a Shew of new Rules, and works by mine; in short, confounds, in his usual way, every thing with a croud of useless Symbols; if this be the Case, I must forgive the indigent Author, and his disappointed Bookseller."
Work
The method commonly called Simpson's Rule was known and used earlier by Bonaventura Cavalieri (a student of Galileo) in 1639, and later by James Gregory; still, the long popularity of Simpson's textbooks invites this association with his name, in that many readers would have learnt it from them.
In the context of disputes surrounding methods advanced by René Descartes, Pierre de Fermat proposed the challenge to find a point D such that the sum of the distances to three given points, A, B and C is least, a challenge popularised in Italy by Marin Mersenne in the early 1640s. Simpson treats the problem in the first part of Doctrine and Application of Fluxions (1750), on pp. 26–28, by the description of circular arcs at which the edges of the triangle ABC subtend an angle of pi/3; in the second part of the book, on pp. 505–506 he extends this geometrical method, in effect, to weighted sums of the distances. Several of Simpson's books contain selections of optimisation problems treated by simple geometrical considerations in similar manner, as (for Simpson) an illuminating counterpart to possible treatment by fluxional (calculus) methods. But Simpson does not treat the problem in the essay on geometrical problems of maxima and minima appended to his textbook on Geometry of 1747, although it does appear in the considerably reworked edition of 1760. Comparative attention might, however, usefully be drawn to a paper in English from eighty years earlier as suggesting that the underlying ideas were already recognised then:
J. Collins A Solution, Given by Mr. John Collins of a Chorographical Probleme, Proposed by Richard Townley Esq. Who Doubtless Hath Solved the Same Otherwise, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 6 (1671), pp. 2093–2096.
Of further related interest are problems posed in the early 1750s by J. Orchard, in The British Palladium, and by T. Moss, in The Ladies' Diary; or Woman's Almanack (at that period not yet edited by Simpson).
Simpson-Weber triangle problem
This type of generalisation was later popularised by Alfred Weber in 1909. The Simpson-Weber triangle problem consists in locating a point D with respect to three points A, B, and C in such a way that the sum of the transportation costs between D and each of the three other points is minimised. In 1971, Luc-Normand Tellier found the first direct (non iterative) numerical solution of the Fermat and Simpson-Weber triangle problems. Long before Von Thünen's contributions, which go back to 1818, the Fermat point problem can be seen as the very beginning of space economy.
In 1985, Luc-Normand Tellier formulated an all-new problem called the “attraction-repulsion problem”, which constitutes a generalisation of both the Fermat and Simpson-Weber problems. In its simplest version, the attraction-repulsion problem consists in locating a point D with respect to three points A1, A2 and R in such a way that the attractive forces exerted by points A1 and A2, and the repulsive force exerted by point R cancel each other out. In the same book, Tellier solved that problem for the first time in the triangle case, and he reinterpreted the space economy theory, especially, the theory of land rent, in the light of the concepts of attractive and repulsive forces stemming from the attraction-repulsion problem. That problem was later further analysed by mathematicians like Chen, Hansen, Jaumard and Tuy (1992), and Jalal and Krarup (2003). The attraction-repulsion problem is seen by Ottaviano and Thisse (2005) as a prelude to the New Economic Geography that developed in the 1990s, and earned Paul Krugman a Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2008.
Publications
Treatise of Fluxions (1737)
The Nature and Laws of Chance (1740)
The Doctrine of Annuities and Reversions (1742)
A Treatise of Algebra (1745)
Elements of Plane Geometry. To which are added, An Essay on the Maxima and Minima of Geometrical Quantities, And a brief Treatise of regular Solids; Also, the Mensuration of both Superficies and Solids, together with the Construction of a large Variety of Geometrical Problems (Printed for the Author; Samuel Farrer; and John Turner, London, 1747) [The book is described as being Designed for the Use of Schools and the main body of text is Simpson's reworking of the early books of The Elements of Euclid. Simpson is designated Professor of Geometry in the Royal Academy at Woolwich.]
Trigonometry, Plane and Spherical (1748)
Doctrine and Application of Fluxions. Containing (besides what is common on the subject) a Number of New Improvements on the Theory. And the Solution of a Variety of New, and very Interesting, Problems in different Branches of the Mathematicks (two parts bound in one volume; J. Nourse, London, 1750)
Select Exercises in Mathematics (1752)
See also
Probability
Series multisection
Simpson's rules (ship stability)
References
External links
Thomas Simpson and his Work on Maxima and Minima at Convergence
1710 births
1761 deaths
People from Market Bosworth
English mathematicians
18th-century English mathematicians
Mathematical analysts
Members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Fellows of the Royal Society |
La Bouteille () is a commune in the department of Aisne in Hauts-de-France in northern France.
Population
See also
Communes of the Aisne department
References
Thiérache
Communes of Aisne
Aisne communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia |
Jamie O'Loughlin is an Australian professional basketball coach.
Coaching career
O'Loughlin's coaching career started in 1999, when he was the Club Director of Coaching for Geelong's Christian College, whilst also serving as the head coach of the U12 Boys team with Basketball Geelong.
After coaching the Basketball Geelong U12 and U16 Boys teams for multiple years, in 2003 O'Loughlin was promoted to coaching the U18 team. In the same year he also took teams from Christian College to multiple championships, including the Hooptime Championships, the Victorian College Championships, and the Australian Schools Championships.
In April 2006 O'Loughlin joined the Geelong Supercats as an assistant coach, and helped guide the team to three consecutive championships in the South East Australian Basketball League (SEABL). In October 2009 he was promoted to head coach, and won the SEABL again in 2010.
Between 2009 and 2011 O'Loughlin ran team camps for the Australia national under-17 basketball team, and in 2011 he coached the under-16 team at the 2011 FIBA Oceania Under-16 Championship. After leading the team to the Gold Medal, he rejoined the under-17 team and traveled to the 2012 FIBA Under-17 World Championship with them, where they reached the Silver Medal. O'Loughlin continued coaching both the under-16 and under-17 teams until 2014, during which he won another Gold Medal (with the under-16 team) and another Silver Medal (with the under-17 team).
After his success in Geelong and with the junior national teams, O'Loughlin moved to Perth in 2014 and joined the Perth Wildcats of the NBL as an assistant coach. During his time coaching the Wildcats he helped them reach the semi-finals during the 2014–15 season, and win the championship during the 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons.
O'Loughlin moved to Cairns in 2017 and joined rival NBL club the Cairns Taipans as the second assistant coach, stating the reason was that he "couldn't pass on the chance to work with" head coach Aaron Fearne. "He's been highly successful for a long time and runs a program that other basketball organisations aspire to. It's no secret he coaches at a high level and I know I'll learn a lot from him."
After his first season with the Taipans, O'Loughlin joined the club's QBL feeder team, the Cairns Marlins as the head coach in 2018, and guided the club to the grand finals against the Townsville Heat. The Marlins lost both games of the series.
In 2018 the Taipans made multiple coaching changes, during which O'Loughlin was the only coach to remain at the club over the off season. Despite being a potential replacement for outgoing head coach Aaron Fearne, Mike Kelly was chosen as the new head coach and O'Loughlin was promoted to the first assistant coach position instead.
O'Loughlin was named as an assistant coach in the UniSport Australia Emerging Boomers squad in 2019, and traveled to Napoli, Italy to compete in the 2019 Summer Universiade. He joined head coach Rob Beveridge and helped the team finish the games with a bronze medal.
O'Loughlin took over as head coach of the Mandurah Magic men's team in May 2022.
References
Living people
Australian men's basketball coaches
Sportspeople from Geelong
Year of birth missing (living people) |
Transition is the seventh album by the group Kenny Rogers & The First Edition.
Track listing
"Take My Hand" (Kenny Rogers)
"What Am I Gonna Do" (Carole King, Toni Stern)
"All God's Lonely Children" (Alex Harvey)
"Lay It Down" (Gene Thomas)
"Tulsa Turnaround" (Alex Harvey, Larry Collins)
"Poem For My Lady" (Mac Davis)
"For The Good Times" (Kris Kristofferson)
"Good Lady of Toronto" (Peter Gallway)
"Two Little Boys" (Alan Braden, Edward Madden, Theodore Morse)
"Where Does Rosie Go" (Kim Carnes)
Personnel
Kenny Rogers - bass, vocals
Kin Vassy - guitar, vocals
Terry Williams - guitar, vocals
Mickey Jones - drums
Mary Arnold - background vocals
References
1971 albums
Kenny Rogers and The First Edition albums
Albums produced by Jimmy Bowen
Reprise Records albums |
"Better Man" is a song by the American rock band Pearl Jam. It is the eleventh track on the band's third studio album, Vitalogy (1994). The song was written by vocalist Eddie Vedder. Despite the lack of a commercial single release, "Better Man" reached the top of the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart and spent a total of eight weeks at number one. The song was included on Pearl Jam's 2004 greatest hits album, rearviewmirror (Greatest Hits 1991–2003).
Origin and recording
The song was written by vocalist Eddie Vedder when he was in high school. He said, "I wrote 'Better Man' before I could drink—legally—on a four-track in my old apartment." In another interview, Vedder stated, "Sometimes I think of how far I've come from the teenager sitting on the bed in San Diego writing 'Better Man' and wondering if anyone would ever even hear it."
He first performed it with a San Diego, California–based group called Bad Radio, with slightly faster tempo but altogether quite similar to the Vitalogy rendition. Vedder later recorded it with Pearl Jam, although Pearl Jam was initially reluctant to record it and had initially rejected it from Vs. due to its accessibility.
Producer Brendan O'Brien said of the song: There's a great song we recorded for Vs., "Better Man," which ended up on Vitalogy. One of the first rehearsals we did they played it and I said "Man, that song's a hit." Eddie just went "uhhh". I immediately knew I'd just said the wrong thing. We cut it once for Vs., he wanted to give it away to this Greenpeace benefit record, the idea was that the band was going to play and some other singer was going to sing it. I remember saying to the engineer, Nick [DiDia], "This is one of their best songs and they're going to give it away! Can't happen!" And we went to record it and I'm not going to say we didn't try very hard, but it didn't end up sounding very good. I may have even sabotaged that version but I won't admit to that. It took us to the next record, recording it two more times, before he became comfortable with it because it was such a blatantly great pop song.
Lyrics
Al Weisel of Rolling Stone called the song a "haunting ballad about a woman trapped in a bad relationship." When "Better Man" was performed on VH1 Storytellers in 2006, Vedder introduced it as a song about "abusive relationships." Before a performance of the song at Pearl Jam's show on April 3, 1994, in Atlanta at the Fox Theatre, Vedder clearly said "it's dedicated to the bastard that married my Momma." He was referring to his stepfather, Peter Mueller, a California attorney whom Vedder had long believed to be his biological father and who divorced his mother in the early 1980s.
Reception
Although never released as a single, "Better Man" nonetheless became one of Pearl Jam's most-played songs on the radio in the U.S. "Better Man" became the most successful song from Vitalogy on the American rock charts. At the 13th annual Pop Music Awards of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, "Better Man" was cited as one of the most-performed ASCAP songs of 1995. Chris True of AllMusic proclaimed it as "arguably the stand out track on 1994's Vitalogy—and equally arguably—[one of] the band's better songs in the whole of their career." He added, "Vitalogy was, admittedly, the end of Pearl Jam's reign as top rock act and it's because of songs like "Better Man" that they were able to stay there without succumbing to all the traps of stardom and shameless marketing." When "Better Man" was performed on VH1 Storytellers in 2006, Vedder introduced it as a song about "abusive relationships".
In 2021, American Songwriter and Kerrang each ranked the song number six on their lists of the greatest Pearl Jam songs.
Various performances
"Better Man" was first performed live at the band's May 13, 1993, concert in San Francisco at Slim's Café, almost six months before the album's release, and had more of an up-tempo beat attached to it. In Pearl Jam concerts, the slow opening verses and choruses of "Better Man" are frequently sung as much by the audience as by Vedder.
The song is often performed live as a medley with The English Beat's "Save It for Later".
Throughout Pearl Jam’s Binaural Tour (2000), the song “Romanza” was often played by Vedder as an intro to “Better Man”, with it being played most recently in 2005. At the last Vote for Change concert on October 13, 2004, in East Rutherford, New Jersey at Continental Airlines Arena, Vedder made a guest appearance with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band and sang "Better Man" upon Springsteen's request; sizeable numbers of the audience sang along with it. Pearl Jam performed the song for its appearance on VH1 Storytellers in 2006.
At Pearl Jam's August 29, 2006, concert in Arnhem, Netherlands at the Gelredome, Vedder tagged Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry" at the beginning of "Better Man".
The song is also a part of the so-called "Man" trio ("Better Man", "Nothingman", "Leatherman") played occasionally at concerts. There is no connection between the three songs beyond the word "man" being in each of their titles.
Certain live performances of "Better Man" can be found on albums such as: Live on Two Legs, the international versions of the "Nothing as It Seems" single, the bonus disc included in the Japanese edition of Binaural, various official bootlegs, the compilation album For the Lady, the iTunes exclusive release The Bridge School Collection, Vol. 1, the Live at the Gorge 05/06 box set, the live album Live at Lollapalooza 2007, and the Canadian iTunes edition of Backspacer.
Performances of the song are also included on the DVDs Touring Band 2000, Live at the Showbox, Live at the Garden, and Immagine in Cornice. The version of the song on The Bridge School Collection, Vol. 1 is a subdued acoustic performance by the band and was recorded live at the Bridge School Benefit.
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
References
External links
Lyrics at pearljam.com
[ Review of "Better Man"] at AllMusic
1994 songs
Pearl Jam songs
Songs written by Eddie Vedder
Song recordings produced by Eddie Vedder
Song recordings produced by Stone Gossard
Song recordings produced by Jeff Ament
Song recordings produced by Mike McCready
Song recordings produced by Dave Abbruzzese
Song recordings produced by Brendan O'Brien (record producer)
Songs about domestic violence |
is a Japanese fashion model and tarento. She is represented with Starray Production. Her activities centred on magazines and runways. She has the nickname .
After debuting at the gyaru magazine Ranzuki, since 2008 she has been acting as an exclusive model of Jelly for about five years. After becoming an existence called by a signboard model of the same magazine, she moved to ViVi from 2013.
Her younger brother is actor and former kickboxer Dyki Miyagi, who appeared on Terrace House: Boys × Girls Next Door.
Biography
Modelling career
She was posted as a reader model in the magazine Ranzuki on the occasion of the scouting received before 109 in high school and became the main model of the magazine, then it will become an exclusive model of Jelly from 2008. Since then, she continued exclusive model activities of the magazine. She was posted on the cover on its first solo in the December issue of the same year in her seventh year of the model in 2011. She was later posted on the cover on its own in the next issues of March and April 2012, and February 2013.
She graduated from Jelly who carried out exclusive model activities for about five years at the April issue released in February 2013. On the same day, on 22nd of her own blog, she announced that it will act as a ViVi exclusive model from the April issue of ViVi released on 23 February, and appeared on "ViVi Night" held in Nagoya the same day. The transfer drama of electric shock in this one week became a hot topic on the internet, and was posted as Exceptional Transfer to Jelly Model ViVi at Yahoo News.
In 2013, which became an exclusive model of ViVi, she showed her first gravure modelling with Young Magazine (No. 40) released in September. She made her initial appearance to "Tokyo Runway" in 2014. In addition, she performed various runway performances such as "Tokyo Girls Collection" and "Girls Award", and changed her hairstyle, also became the year when it was said that it was "a year of Imechen".
In 2015, she was appointed in the fashion brand "Heather" developed by Adastria, and became the first "Communication Director" of the brand. She was later appointed after receiving support from a female college student who is the main target of this brand, and will be involved in product development advice, season campaign planning, brand image construction, novelty creation, etc.
Her hobbies is playing mahjong and golf, its hobby is high and it is made to be cast to mahjong and golf programmes.
She appeared in AbemaTV's Freestyle Jan Jon Rec 2 uploaded on 3 September 2016, and won the pro-opponent and earned a prize of 1.5 million yen.
Acting career
In addition to her model activities, in 2011, she appeared in the stage drama Yakusanjū no Uso written by Hideo Tsuchida, becoming her first activity as an actress. In 2014, she played with her younger brother Dyki Miyagi on the stage play "I Want to Try Again xx!" of directed by co-star Chuji Mikasano.
Filmography
Magazines
Runways
Music videos
Jacket photos
Catalogues
Television
Others
References
External links
– Official blog
– New Style Production
Japanese female models
People from Yokohama
1988 births
Living people |
CP Benedict Tunde Sobulo (MON), (Aka Super Cop, AKA Operations), (December 31, 1957 – October 2, 2015) was a Nigerian Policeman born in Abeokuta, Ogun State in Nigeria. He enlisted in the Nigerian Army immediately after secondary school and rose to the rank of warrant officer before leaving for the United States where he met and married an American, Zera Blonese Lancaster, who bore him his first son Robert Sobulo.
Education
Sobulo attended Roger Williams University, Bristol, Rhode Island, and Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island, where he obtained his BSc in criminal justice s well as an MBA and a Masters in Public Administration. He worked at different correctional institutions in the United States before he moved back to Nigeria.
Career
Sobulo began his career in the Nigeria police force by undertaking his NYSC at Force C.I.D. Training School. He entered the Nigeria police force as a cadet in 1984 and completed his training at the prestigious Police Staff College in Jos. He served in different police formations across the nation and began making his mark fighting the insurgency as the second in command of the Mopol 9 Squadron in Kano. He served as the commander of Operation Sweep that took on the cross-border armed robbery gang leader Shina Rambo who terrorized Lagos residents in the early 1990s.
He was part of the committee that instituted the statewide ban of commercial motorbikes (okada) on Lagos highways. This led to a drastic decrease in late night robberies across the state. He was also one of the founders and the first Commander of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS), a unit that was modeled to respond to crime with tactics like American SWAT teams. He concurrently served as the Commander of Mopol 20, another special wing of the Nigeria Police Force that was instituted to counter riots and extreme situations. He served as Assistant Commissioner of Police in charge of Operations in both Lagos and Rivers states. He also held the position of Second in Command in the Joint Military Task Force while holding the position of Assistant Commissioner of Police (Operations) in Rivers State. He was Area Commander in Orlu Imo State, as well as Area Commander to Ondo State before being promoted to Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of Operations in Lagos State. The Crime Fighter upon his redeployment to Lagos, was quickly assigned the task of quelling protests that resulted from the 2012 Petrol Subsidy Crisis. He was Deputy Commissioner (Operations) until he was promoted to the rank of Commissioner of Police and served as Commandant Police College Ikeja. He died on October 2, 2015, and was buried in Mount Harmony Memorial Gardens, Mableton, Georgia, United States.
References
1957 births
2015 deaths
People from Abeokuta
Nigerian police officers
Yoruba police officers
Roger Williams University alumni
Burials in Georgia (U.S. state) |
In the 1990 Intertoto Cup no knock-out rounds were contested, and therefore no winner was declared.
Teams
Sturm Graz
Tirol Innsbruck
Vienna
Admira Wacker Wien
Pirin Blagoevgrad
Slavia Sofia
Slovan Bratislava
Sparta Prague
Bohemians Prague
Plastika Nitra
Lyngby BK
Vejle BK
Brøndby
AGF Aarhus
OB
Energie Cottbus
Hansa Rostock
Chemnitz
FC Berlin
Bochum
Bayer Uerdingen
Kaiserslautern
Karlsruhe
Fortuna Düsseldorf
Siófok
MTK Budapest
Tatabánya
Vasas
Maccabi Haifa
Bnei Yehuda
Lech Poznań
Petrolul Ploiești
Sportul București
Malmö FF
GAIS
IFK Norrköping
Örebro
Gefle IF
Neuchâtel Xamax
St. Gallen
FC Luzern
Grasshopper Club
Olimpija Ljubljana
Osijek
Group stage
The teams were divided into 11 groups of 4 teams each.
Group 1
Group 2
Group 3
Group 4
Group 5
Group 6
Group 7
Group 8
Group 9
Group 10
Group 11
See also
1990–91 European Cup
1990–91 European Cup Winners' Cup
1990–91 UEFA Cup
External links
by Pawel Mogielnicki
1990
4 |
nalsarovar bird sanctuary call 7016173863
Nal Sarovar Bird Sanctuary, consisting primarily of a lake and ambient marshes, is situated about 64 km to the west of Ahmedabad near Sanand Village, in the Gujarat state of India. Mainly inhabited by migratory birds in winter and spring, it is the largest wetland bird sanctuary in Gujarat, and one of the largest in India. It was declared a bird sanctuary in April 1969.
The lake attracts over 210 species of birds in the winter, and harbors a variety of plants and animals. Besides a few mammalian species including the endangered wild ass and the black buck, its migratory bird population includes rosy pelicans, flamingoes, white storks, brahminy ducks and herons. Thousands of migratory waterfowl flock to this sanctuary just after the Indian monsoon season. The shallow area and ponds on the outer fringes of the lake attract the wading birds that feed in the shallow waters. Millions of birds visit the bird sanctuary in winter and spring. It harbors over 250 species of wetland birds. Winter migrants from the north including purple moorhen, pelicans, lesser flamingos and greater flamingos, white storks, four species of bitterns, crakes, grebes, brahminy ducks(Ruddy shelduck) and herons visit Nal Sarovar. Between November and February, the lake is home to vast flocks of indigenous and migratory birds. Ducks, geese, pelicans and flamingos are best seen early in the morning and in the evening and the sanctuary is best visited as a day excursion by personal vehicle, taxi, as buses are infrequent and there is no convenient accommodation. Vehicles are available from parking to the lake site which is approx 1 km.
Hours for visiting the lake are 6 am to 5:30 pm. There is an entry fee per visitor and camera, however for boating one needs to negotiate with the local boatmen, though prescribed rates are mentioned at the gate. The best time to reach there is just before sunrise as the lake is calm and quiet and flock of birds waiting for their regular food. The water in the lake is about 4 feet deep.
Migrating Aamin bhai shepherds populate the islands of the lake and on the banks are the Padhars, who are folk dancers, artisans and boatmen. One can hire country boats on the lake for bird viewing, and picnic at shacks the on the islands.
Interactive interpretation center
The interpretation center, Abhiruchi Kendra, was developed at a cost of Rs. 42 lakhs including Rs. 15 lakhs for kiosks. So far 225 types of birds are recorded in Nal Sarovar area. 140 of them are water-birds and 70 of them are migratory. Out of these 70, only 25 to 30 are easily observed by the visitors and tourists. The interpretation center focuses on these 30 species. Some of the species are flamingo, pelican, egret, heron, ducks, cormorant, crane. Migratory birds' travel distance, place of origin, cross-section prototype of Nal Sarovar’s under water life are exhibited in the center. A reverse osmosis plant is also set up to offer pure drinking water to visitors.
Declaration as "Ramsar Convention" site
It was proposed as a "Ramsar Convention site - Wetland of International importance".
Nalsarovar was declared as a Ramsar site on 24 September 2012.
See also
Arid Forest Research Institute
Narayan Sarovar Sanctuary
Notes
External links
Nal Sarovar Birds Sanctuary
Official websites: Forests & Environment Department; State Government of Gujarat, India
Bird sanctuaries of Gujarat
Wildlife sanctuaries in Gujarat
Tourist attractions in Ahmedabad district
Lakes of Gujarat
Ramsar sites in India
2012 establishments in Gujarat
Protected areas established in 2012 |
Stationary Subspace Analysis (SSA) in statistics is a blind source separation algorithm which factorizes a multivariate time series into stationary and non-stationary components.
Introduction
In many settings, the measured time series contains contributions from various underlying sources that cannot be measured directly. For instance, in EEG analysis, the electrodes on the scalp record the activity of a large number of sources located inside the brain. These sources can be stationary or non-stationary, but they are not discernible in the electrode signals, which are a mixture of these sources. SSA allows the separation of the stationary from the non-stationary sources in an observed time series.
According to the SSA model, the observed multivariate time series is assumed to be generated as a linear superposition of stationary sources and non-stationary sources ,
where is an unknown but time-constant mixing matrix; and are the basis of the stationary and non-stationary subspace respectively.
Given samples from the time series , the aim of Stationary Subspace Analysis is to estimate the inverse mixing matrix separating the stationary from non-stationary sources in the mixture .
Identifiability of the solution
The true stationary sources are identifiable (up to a linear transformation) and the true non-stationary subspace is identifiable. The true non-stationary sources and the true stationary subspace cannot be identified, because arbitrary contributions from the stationary sources do not change the non-stationary nature of a non-stationary source.
Applications and extensions
Stationary subspace analysis has been successfully applied to Brain-computer interfacing, computer vision and temporal segmentation. There are variants of the SSA problem that can be solved analytically in closed form, without numerical optimization.
See also
Blind signal separation (BSS)
Factor analysis
Independent component analysis
Cointegration
References
Multivariate time series |
Since the foundation of the Philippines Football League in 2017, there have been 1033 goals scored in the four seasons of the Philippines Football League. Ceres–Negros and United City striker Bienvenido Marañón has the most goals with 74, with Kaya–Iloilo forwards Jordan Mintah and Robert Lopez Mendy in second and third with 56 and 49 goals, respectively. 8 different players have scored in every single PFL season so far, with three players winning the Golden Boot. Chima Uzoka and Takashi Odawara hold the record for most clubs scored for, having scored for four different clubs across four seasons. Meanwhile, Mintah also holds the record for most goals scored in a single season, scoring 31 during the 2019 season.
Top goalscorers (all time)
Key
Bold shows players still playing in the PFL.
Italics show players still playing professional football in other leagues.
The list of teams for individual players include all teams that they have scored for.
Top goalscorers (per club)
Top goalscorers (per season)
2017 Season
2018 Season
2019 Season
2020 Season
Hat tricks
Note
(H) – Home ; (A) – Away
4 Player scored four goals
Notes
References
Football in the Philippines |
Bothenheilingen is a village and a former municipality in the Unstrut-Hainich-Kreis district of Thuringia, Germany. Since December 2019, it is part of the town Nottertal-Heilinger Höhen.
References
Unstrut-Hainich-Kreis
Former municipalities in Thuringia |
Otholobium swartbergense is a small spreading shrub assigned to the Pea family. All green parts are covered in hairs. It has many slender stems that are woody at their base, alternately set clover-like leaves and heads consisting of 6-15 mauve to purple, pea-like flowers on long peduncles in the axils of the leaves. This species is an endemic of the Swartberg mountains in the Western Cape province of South Africa. It mostly flowers in November and December.
Taxonomy
Specimen of this small shrublet were first collected by the famous South African botanist Harry Bolus in 1904, high on the northern slopes of the Swartberg Pass. In 1986, Charles Stirton considered it sufficiently different from other Otholobium species, in particular O. sericeum, to distinguish and name it O. swartbergense. No synonyms are known. The name of the genus Otholobium is a combination of the Greek words ὠθέω (ōthéō) meaning to push and λοβός (lobos) meaning pod, which Stirton selected because its fruit seems to be pushed out of the calyx.
Description
Otholobium swartbergense is a small spreading shrublet, with numerous slender stems that are covered in short hairs pointing toward the growing point and - particularly on the ribs - interspersed with longer, patent hairs. Its leaves are accompanied at their base by a pair of pointy, oval or shortly oblong, long and wide stipules, which are hairless on the inside and silky hairy on the outside. These stipules are partly merged with the base of the hairy petiole, which is about long. At its tip it carries three, flat, elliptical leaflets of long and about wide, with an blunt base, an entire margin and a tip that ends abruptly in a small, sharp, recurved point as a continuation of the midrib. The surface of the leaflets is silky hairy, more so on the lower surface and in particular along the veins. Leaflets become larger in leaves that are produced later in the growth season. The two leaflets to the sides are smaller than the one in the middle.
The flowers grow in roundish heads of 6-15 together on peduncles of long that emerge from the axils of the leaves. Each head consist of 2-5 triplets of flowers, the lowest of which is subtended by a semi-circular, hairy bract that divides in 2 or 3 teeth. These bracts gradually get narrower for triplets implanted further to the tip of the petiole. Each individual flower sits on a pedicel of long and is subtended by a very narrow bract. The flowers are each long. The five hairy long sepals are merged into a calyx tube at the base of long, end in separate teeth, and enclose the petals in the bud. The lower tooth, subtending the keel, is long and wide and has prominent netted veins. The remaining four teeth are all curved, narrowly triangular in shape, long and wide. As in all Faboideae, the corolla is zygomorphic, forms a specialized structure and consists of 5 free petals. The corollas are initially mauve in colour but become purple with age. The upper petal, called the banner or standard, is large and envelops the other petals in the bud. It is slightly netted, teardrop-shaped, long and wide and narrows into a long claw at its base. The standard gradually curves back along its length. The two adjacent lateral petals that are called wings are long, with a blade of long and wide and have a sculpturing of 15-18 irregularly parallel ridges and an ear-shaped appendage reaching beyond the attachment to the claw. The wings are longer than and enclose the 2 bottom petals, which together are called the keel. The two keel petals have long claws and form a boat-like structure. The keel petals are also divided into a claw and a blade section, and the latter is long and wide, and has a rounded tip. The keel contains 10 filaments. The 9 filaments that are fused are long, while the one that is loosely attached for half of its length is long. The anthers are alternately fixed to their filament at the base and at midlength. The filaments envelop a swollen style of long, which contains at its base an ovary of long with some glands and curves about upwards before becoming the pin-shaped, papillose stigma.
Distribution and conservation
Otholobium swartbergense is considered a near-threatened species because it is known from six locations only and may suffer from competition by invasive plants. Here it grows on sandstone slopes along seeps and on the bank of streamlets in a vegetation type called Sandstone Fynbos.
References
External links
more photos
Psoraleeae
Endemic flora of the Cape Provinces
Plants described in 1986 |
David 'Dave' Hewitt (15 January 1980) was an Irish rugby union player. In his career playing at full-back and out-half he has represented Clontarf, Lansdowne, Old Belvedere R.F.C., Leinster, Connacht and Racing Métro 92 Paris.
References
Irish rugby union players
Lansdowne Football Club players
Clontarf FC players
Leinster Rugby players
Connacht Rugby players
Living people
1980 births
Ireland international rugby sevens players |
The Saint Patrick's Day Parade in Utica, New York is held annually the Saturday before Saint Patrick's Day, March 17. It is the third largest St. Patrick's Day parade in New York State after New York City and Rochester. Its route runs from Oneida Square to Lafayette Street, in Utica. Tens of thousands of people come out and line Genesee Street to join in the festivities. It's a day of celebration for families, children, and all Saint Patrick’s Day celebrators.
Origins
The Saint Patrick's Day Parade is now run by non-profit organizations, but back in 1985, when it started, it wasn’t organized at all. It started from the businesses on Varick Street, mostly bars, wanting to draw crowds down to drum up business for the holiday. The first parade was started and hosted by Rogers Coffee House. The paraders marched down the quarter-mile stretch of West Utica. The parade ran down the full length of Varick Street, from Court Street to Columbia Street. Then in the years soon after it became more organized and ran down a block of Court Street, down Varick, and then down a couple blocks of Columbia Street. This however, was an adult parade, made for those who were of the legal drinking age.
Soon the parade was getting bigger, more floats and people were joining. Organizations started getting involved, including The Great American Festival organization. It was decided that the route should be changed. People wanted to bring their children, but did not want to bring them to the area of the bars on Varick Street. The parade was moved to its current location on Genesee Street in 1992.
Blizzard of 1993
In the second year of the parade's current Genesee Street location, paraders went out to celebrate and participate in spite of the incoming 1993 Storm of the Century. When the parade started at 10am it began snowing. By the time it had ended, about 3 hours later, 18 inches had fallen. The parade still continued. Dolly Parton, who attended, gave the parade national attention by talking about it on The David Letterman Show.
Today
Today, the parade is organized and run by the Committee of The Great American Irish Festival. The parade is led by its Grand Marshal, who was chosen by the parade committee as a person of “great Irish pride and moral standing.” The route starts at the circle known as Oneida Square, and continues down Genesee Street past historic buildings such as the Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute, and the Utica Public Library. Continuing down the street the paraders stop in front of the historic Stanley Theater where the grandstand sits, and where the Mayor, city councilmen, and other important city figures sit with all the Grand Marshals of years past. The paraders dance their jig, sing their songs, or play their instruments. After their stop in front of the grandstand, they continue down to Lafayette Street to the Hotel Utica, and the end of the parade.
The 2017 parade was delayed until March 25 due to the weather. Since 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused it to go on hiatus.
After-party
The parade still stirs up business for bars and restaurants in the area, especially on Varick Street. All the bars of Utica are open on the parade day by 10 o’clock. Many of them along the parade route open at 8, so that people can “start their day the Irish way.” The drinking continues throughout the day. As soon as the parade ends, anyone eligible to drink goes to Varick Street, where the police form their own portable station to keep the peace. The whole street is blocked off and the block party begins.
References
Irish-American culture in New York (state)
Parade (Utica, NY)
Utica, New York |
Khalid Hasan (15 April 1934 – 5 February 2009) was a Pakistani journalist and writer. Author and editor of several books, in addition to being a regular columnist for a number of English-language Pakistani newspapers, he is best known for his translations of the short stories of Saadat Hasan Manto and the lyrics of Faiz Ahmed Faiz.
Life and career
Khalid Hasan was born in Srinagar, Kashmir. His father, Noor Hussain, was from Jammu, and worked in the Jammu and Kashmir ministry of health. Khalid Hasan as well as the rest of the family migrated from Jammu to Pakistan during the 1947 communal violence. His two elder brothers (Brigadier General Bashir Ahmed and Saeed Ahmed) served in the Pakistan Army and a younger brother (Masood Hasan) ran an advertising business in Lahore. His sister Surayya was married to K. H. Khurshid who served Muhammad Ali Jinnah as his private secretary, then later became president of Azad Jammu and Kashmir. His second sister, Zohra, resides in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Khalid Hasan was sponsored by the American Political Science Association in the late 1960s for the Congressional Fellowship. So he moved to Washington, D.C., and there he met Juanita and married her.
Hasan began his long career in journalism and writing with The Pakistan Times, Lahore as senior reporter and columnist in 1967. He was asked by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto on taking office in December 1971 to join him as his first press secretary. He went on to spend five years in the country's foreign service, with postings in Paris, Ottawa and London. He resigned in protest when the Bhutto government was overthrown by Gen. Zia-ul-Haq and worked in London with the Third World Foundation and the Third World Media before leaving to join OPEC News Agency in Vienna, Austria, where he stayed for 10 years.
Khalid Hasan returned to Pakistan briefly in 1991 where he worked as a freelance journalist for the next two years. He moved to Washington, D.C., in 1993 and worked out of there as US correspondent for The Nation (Pakistan) (newspaper), Lahore. From 1997 to 2000 he was in Pakistan as head of the Shalimar Television Network. He returned to Washington in 2000 as special correspondent of the Associated Press of Pakistan, which he left to join Daily Times newspaper and The Friday Times newspaper, Lahore in 2002. He continued to work as the correspondent and columnist of these two publications in Washington, D.C. He died on 5 February 2009 in the United States. Hasan was a prolific writer and translator and had published over 40 books, in Pakistan and abroad.
Death and survivors
Khalid Hasan died on 5 February 2009, in Washington, D.C., of gallbladder cancer at age 74. It was reported, at that time, that he would be buried in Vermont, where his wife Juanita comes from. He and Juanita had two children, a son Jeffrey and a daughter, Jahan, as well as four grandchildren. The family was present in the hospital, when he died.
Tributes
Ghulam Nabi Fai, Executive Director, Kashmiri American Council, called him a courageous and principled journalist. On his death anniversary in 2011, Radio Pakistan held a seminar and a classical music concert where he was ranked by some people alongside great Pakistani journalists such as Mazhar Ali Khan and I. A. Rehman. A notable Pakistani Urdu-language writer Iftikhar Arif called him one of the best translators of Urdu literature into English.
Awards
Khalid Hasan received Sitara-i-Imtiaz Award ( Star of Excellence Award ) from the President of Pakistan in 2010.
Published work
Eleven collections of reportage, political, literary and social writings
A Mug's Game, Pub. Ghulam Ali & Sons, Lahore (1968)
The Crocodiles are here to Swim, Pub. The Pakistan Times Press, Lahore (1970)
Scorecard, Pub. Wajidalis, Lahore (1984)
Give us Back our Onions, Vanguard, Lahore (1986)
The Umpire Strikes Back, Vanguard, Lahore (1988)
Private View, Sang-e-Meel Publications, Lahore (1991)
Question Time, Vanguard, Lahore (1993)
The Fourth Estate, Vanguard, Lahore (1995)
The Return of the Onion, Book Traders, Lahore (1996)
Remembrances – personal reminiscences, Vanguard, Lahore, (2001)
Rearview Mirror: four memoirs, Alhamra, Islamabad (2002)
Edited Work
Politics of the People (3 vols.), the collected speeches and writings of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Pakistan Publications, Rawalpindi (1973)
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, A Centenary Tribute, Embassy of Pakistan, London (1976)
The Unicorn and the Dancing Girl, the poetry of Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Allied Publishes, New Delhi, (1988)
Memories of Jinnah, reminiscences of K.H. Khurshid, Oxford University Press, Karachi, (1989)
Kashmir Holocaust, Kashmir Liberation Cell, Muzaffarabad (1992)
Pakistan Rules the World: winning the world cricket cup, Cricket Writers Forum, Islamabad (1993)
Azadi: Kashmir Freedom Struggle, 1924–98, Vanguard, Lahore (1999)
Zia Sarhadi’s Unfinished Memoir (under publication)
Qurratulain Hyder ke Khat ek Dost ke Naam (Urdu), Aaj Books, Karachi
Jammu, A city that was Sang-e-Meel Publications, Lahore (2003)
Memory Lane to Jammu, Sang-e-Meel Publications, Lahore (2004)
Translations (from Urdu and Punjabi into English)
Nothing but the Truth, short stories from Pakistan, Vikas, New Delhi, (1982)
The Prisoner by Fakhar Zaman, Allied Publishers, New Delhi (1984)
The Lost Seven and Dead Man's Tale by Fakhar Zaman, Ajanta Publications, New Delhi (1989)
Kingdom' End, selected stories of Saadat Hasan Manto, Verso, London, (1987)
The Tragedy of Afghanistan by Raja Anwar, Verso, London, (1988)
Partition, The 1947 stories of Saadat Hasan Manto, Viking, New Delhi, (1991)
Hotel Moenjodaro, the stories of Ghulam Abbas, Penguin, New Delhi, (1996)
Mottled Dawn – Saadat Hasan Manto's Partition writings, Penguin, New Delhi, (1997)
The Terrorist Prince, the life and death of Murtaza Bhutto by Raja Anwar, Verso, London, (1997)
Stars from Another Sky – Manto's Bombay Cinema of the 1940s, Penguin, New Delhi, (1998 )
Manto's World (Two Vols), Sang-e-Meel, Lahore, (2000)
The Women's Quarter and other Stories by Ghulam Abbas, Alhamra, Islamabad, (2000)
A Wet Afternoon – Selected fiction and non-fiction of Saadat Hasan Manto, Alhamra, Islamabad, (2001)
Letters to Uncle Sam by Saadat Hasan Manto, Alhamra, Islamabad,
Memories of Fatima Jinnah by Sorayya Khurshid, published by Government of Pakistan (2003)
O City of Lights, the poetry of Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Oxford University Press, Karachi 2006
Selected Stories of Saadat Hasan Manto, Penguin Modern Classics, New Delhi (2007)
Stop Press by Inam Aziz, Oxford University Press, Karachi (2007)
Bitter Fruit, The best of Saadat Hasan Manto'', Penguin, New Delhi (2008)
See also
List of Pakistani journalists
References
External links
Khalid Hasan dies BBC URDU.com website (Archived 2009)
WASHINGTON DIARY: A master of wordplay Khalid Hasan obituary on Daily Times newspaper (Archived)
Khalid Hasan is no more The Nation (newspaper) (Archived)
1930s births
2009 deaths
Pakistani people of Kashmiri descent
Pakistani expatriates in Austria
Pakistani male journalists
Pakistani translators
Translators from Urdu
Urdu–English translators
Deaths from cancer in Pakistan
Deaths from gallbladder cancer
20th-century translators
Pakistani reporters and correspondents
Pakistani columnists
Recipients of Sitara-i-Imtiaz |
Gun-launched missiles, a subset of cannon-launched guided projectiles, are usually anti-tank guided missiles that are fired from tank guns, and sometimes have a claimed limited anti-helicopter capability.
Chinese GP105 fired from 105 mm gun
French (ACRA) 142mm anti-tank guided missile, tested on a version of the AMX-30 MBT
Indian SAMHO (missile) fired from 120 mm gun
Israeli LAHAT, used with their 105 and 120 mm gun tubes
Russian 9K112 Kobra (AT-8 Songster), 9M119/M/120 (Refleks/Refleks-M/Svir) (AT-11 Sniper) and other types, fired from 115, and 125 mm guns, and 9M117 Bastion fired from 100 mm guns
Ukrainian tandem-warhead ATGM with a 5,000 m effective range, fired from a 125 mm smoothbore gun
US Army MGM-51 Shillelagh fired from a 152 mm gun
XM1111 Mid-Range Munition (guided round, no rocket motor)
Ukraine-developed Falarick 90, 105, and 120 mm with a 4000–5000 m range (depending on the calibre) ATGM for Cockerill guns made by the Belgian arms manufacturer CMI Defence
References
Armoured warfare
Missile types
Anti-tank guided missiles |
Glenmont may refer to:
Places
Glenmont, Maryland, an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Montgomery County
Glenmont (Washington Metro), the Washington Metro station that serves the aforementioned suburb
Glenmont, New York, a hamlet in the town of Bethlehem, Albany County
Glenmont, Ohio, a village in Holmes County
Glenmont (house), the home of inventor Thomas Edison, in Llewellyn Park in West Orange, New Jersey
Canada
Glenmont, Nova Scotia, a community in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, located in Kings County. |
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Sant’Angelo in Vado is a suppressed diocese in Italy which is now part of the Archdiocese of Urbino–Urbania–Sant’Angelo in Vado.
First Diocese
Around 450 a bishopric was established as the Diocese of Sant’Angelo in Vado, in Latin Tifernum Metaurense.
Only one bishop is known, Lucifer, who attended the Roman council held by Pope Hilarius in 465.
In 590 it was suppressed, its territory being partitioned, a part being used to establish the Diocese of Urbino and a part transferred to the pre-existent Diocese of Città di Castello.
Second Diocese
On 2 August 1635 it was restored as Diocese of Sant’Angelo in Vado (Latin Tifernum Metaurense), regaining territory from the Abbacy nullius of San Cristoforo di Castel Durante, but was immediately and invariably held in personal union (United aeque principaliter) with the Diocese of Urbania (1635–1986). On 20 October 1636, in the bull "Cum nuper", Pope Urban VIII granted the diocese additional territory, taken from the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Urbino.
Suppression
On 30 September 1986 it was suppressed, its territory being merged into the accordingly renamed Metropolitan Archdiocese of Urbino–Urbania–Sant’Angelo in Vado (which thus absorbed and preserved its title), without having had a single proper bishop other than the incumbents of the Urbania see.
References
Sant |
```javascript
import React from 'react'
import Link from 'next/link'
export default () => {
const myRef = React.createRef(null)
React.useEffect(() => {
if (!myRef.current) {
console.error(`ref wasn't updated`)
}
})
return (
<Link
href="/"
ref={(el) => {
myRef.current = el
}}
>
Click me
</Link>
)
}
``` |
Jules Van Bost (born 24 January 2003) is a Belgian footballer who plays as a center back for OH Leuven.
Career
Club NXT
Van Bost made his professional debut on 8 November 2020, coming on as an 88th-minute substitute for Nathan Fuakala in a 3-1 away defeat to Lommel.
OH Leuven
In May 2022, Van Bost returned to former youth club OH Leuven, joining the club's under-23 roster.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
Jules van Bost at Goal.com
2003 births
Living people
Club NXT players
Challenger Pro League players
Belgian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders |
Events in the year 1937 in Mongolia.
Incumbents
President: Dansranbilegiin Dogsom
Prime Minister: Anandyn Amar
Events
Births
Deaths
August 22 - Gelegdorjiin Demid
November 26 - Peljidiin Genden
References
1930s in Mongolia |
Kamenice () is a village in the municipality of Jajce, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Demographics
According to the 2013 census, its population was 34.
References
Populated places in Jajce |
The 1972–73 Iraq Central FA First Division was the 25th and last season of the Iraq Central FA Premier League (the top division of football in Baghdad and its neighbouring cities from 1948 to 1973); it began on 16 October 1972. The first half of the season concluded on 31 December 1972 at which point the season was ended; this was due to scheduling difficulties with the Iraq national and military teams' matches that caused the cancellation of the second half of the season. Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, who led the table at the halfway point having won all of their seven games, were thus crowned champions for their fourth league title.
After the premature end to the season, the Iraq Central Football Association organised the Independent Baghdad Tournament between the same eight teams to allow them to continue playing matches in the absence of their national team and military team players.
The Central FA Premier League along with the leagues in other provinces such as Basra, Kirkuk and Mosul were replaced by a nationwide league, the Iraqi National First Division, from the following season.
Name changes
Al-Firqa Al-Thalitha renamed to Quwat Salahaddin.
League table
Results
Top goalscorers
References
External links
Iraqi Football Website
Iraq Central FA Premier League seasons
Iraq
League |
4-Bromomethcathinone (4-BMC, Brephedrone) is a psychoactive drug and research chemical of the phenethylamine, amphetamine, and cathinone chemical classes. It acts as a serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, but acts more like an antidepressant than a stimulant. Some 4-halogenated cathinones seem to share the selective serotonergic neurotoxicity of their corresponding amphetamine analogues.
Legal status
As of October 2015, 4-BMC is a controlled substance in China.
4-Bromomethcathinone is considered a Schedule 1 substance in Virginia.
See also
4B-MAR
4-Chloromethcathinone
4-Ethylmethcathinone
References
Cathinones
Designer drugs
Bromoarenes
Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
Entactogens and empathogens |
Fort Defiance was built by General "Mad" Anthony Wayne in the second week of August 1794 at the confluence of the Auglaize and Maumee rivers. It was one of a line of defenses constructed by American forces in the campaign leading to the Northwest Indian War's Battle of Fallen Timbers on August 20, 1794.
Work began on August 9, 1794, and was completed by August 17. The name was derived from a declaration by Charles Scott, who was leading a band of Kentucky militiamen in support of Wayne, that: "I defy the English, Indians, and all the devils of hell to take it." The post was considered one of the strongest fortifications built in that period.
Before and during the Battle of Fallen Timbers, Wayne ordered the destruction of all Native American villages and their crops within a radius of the fort. The land which originally belonged to Native Americans was ceded to the United States by the British after the American Revolutionary War. The British would later supply and influence local tribes to take up arms.. Under terms of the Treaty of Greenville, signed on August 3, 1795, the native nations ceded six square miles around the fort and allowed the Americans to maintain a trading post there, even though it was within the area of land defined by the "Greenville Treaty Line", beyond which Americans had agreed not to settle. Wayne promised the land of "Indiana", the remaining land to the west, to remain Indian forever. During the treaty meeting, Wayne brought with him food supplies for the natives and made sure crops were planted again. The fort was abandoned in 1796.
Fort Winchester was constructed on a nearby site in 1812 by Gen. William Henry Harrison.
The city of Defiance, Ohio, was founded at the fort's location in 1822. In 1904, the site of the fort was chosen for the Defiance Public Library.
Fort Defiance served as a reference point for defining the boundary line of land cession in the Treaty of Detroit in 1807. This north–south line would be used again as the Michigan Meridian in the survey of lands in Michigan.
Today, a park occupies the site of the fort, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
References
Catalano, Joshua (2019). "Blue Jacket, Anthony Wayne, and the Psychological and Symbolic War for Ohio, 1790-1795". Ohio History. 126 (1): 5-34.
External links
Ohio History Central
History of Fort Defiance
Fort Defiance in the War of 1812
An Ohio History Travelogue
Photos and visiting information
Defiance
Northwest Indian War
Defiance
1794 establishments in the Northwest Territory
Protected areas of Defiance County, Ohio
National Register of Historic Places in Defiance County, Ohio
Pre-statehood history of Ohio
Parks in Ohio
Defiance
Defiance, Ohio |
is a Japanese football player. He plays for Matsumoto Yamaga FC.
Club statistics
Updated to 23 February 2017.
1Includes J3 Relegation Playoffs.
References
External links
Profile at Zweigen Kanazawa
1991 births
Living people
Ryutsu Keizai University alumni
Association football people from Tochigi Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
J1 League players
J2 League players
Tochigi SC players
Sagan Tosu players
Zweigen Kanazawa players
Matsumoto Yamaga FC players
Men's association football midfielders |
Chain of Lakes, Chain O'Lakes, or Chain-O-Lakes is a common name for a series of lakes linked by waterways. Some of these include:
Bodies of water
Chain of Lakes (Winter Haven), Florida
Chain O'Lakes and Chain O'Lakes State Park (Illinois), in northeast Illinois
The Chain of Lakes (Minneapolis) area in Minneapolis, Minnesota
Chain of Lakes (Michigan)
Chain of Lakes in Hill County, Montana
Fulton Chain Lakes, New York
Chain of Lakes (South Dakota)
Populated places
Chain-O-Lakes, Indiana, an unincorporated community in St. Joseph County
Chain-O-Lakes, Missouri, a village in Barry County
Chain O' Lakes, Wisconsin
Other
Chain of Lakes Middle School, a public middle school in Windermere, Florida
Chain of Lakes Park, a baseball stadium in Winter Haven, Florida used by the Cleveland Indians for spring training
Chain O'Lakes State Park (Indiana), in northeast Indiana |
Juan Alonso de Cuevas y Dávalos (25 November 1590 – 2 September 1665) was a Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Mexico (1664–1665) and Bishop of Antequera, Oaxaca (1658–1664).
Biography
Juan Alonso de Cuevas y Dávalos was born in New Spain.
On 19 January 1658, he selected by the King of Spain and confirmed by Pope Alexander VII as Bishop of Antequera, Oaxaca. On 13 September 1658, he was consecrated bishop by Mateo de Sagade de Bugueyro, Archbishop of Mexico. On 28 April 1664, he was appointed by Pope Alexander VII as Archbishop of Mexico and installed on 15 November 1664. He served as Archbishop of Mexico until his death on 2 September 1665. While bishop, he was the principal consecrator of Marcos de Torres y Rueda, Bishop of Yucatán (1645).
See also
Catholic Church in Mexico
References
External links and additional sources
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
1590 births
1665 deaths
17th-century Roman Catholic archbishops in Mexico
Roman Catholic archbishops of Mexico (city)
Bishops appointed by Pope Alexander VII
Mexican Roman Catholic archbishops |
Afwerki Abraha ( – 13 May 2020) was an Eritrean diplomat, chemist, and pro-independence rebel fighter during the Eritrean War of Independence. During the 1990s, Abraha became the first Eritrean diplomat to be posted to Ethiopia following Eritrea's independence.
Abraha studied political science and chemistry in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, where he became a chemist. He then moved to the former East Germany. In 1975, Abraha left Germany to join the Eritrean separatist rebels in the ongoing Eritrean War of Independence.
Eritrea achieved independence in 1993. Following the war, Afwerki Abraha became a diplomat. During the 1990s, Abraha became the first Eritrean diplomat to be posted to Ethiopia.
In 1996, Abraha was stationed in London, where he served in the Embassy of Eritrea from 1996 until 2001. Abraha's wife, Fatina Ahmedin, an Eritrean artist and former rebel fighter, was struck by a car in London, and became paralyzed from the accident. As a result, couple decided to permanently remain in the United Kingdom so Ahmedin could receive medical treatment. Abraha remained her caretaker for more than 20 years.
Afwerki Abraha died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in England at a London hospital on 13 May 2020, at the age of 71. Abraha, who had no pre-existing health conditions, had been hospitalized in the intensive care unit for coronavirus treatment for the previous month.
References
Eritrean diplomats
Eritrean chemists
Eritrean People's Liberation Front members
Eritrean expatriates
Expatriates in the United Kingdom
Eritrean emigrants to the United Kingdom
Expatriates in the Soviet Union
1940s births
2020 deaths
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in England |
Hanbok Party(한복놀이단) is a society founded in April 2011 by Park Seon-young from Ewha Womans University. She has gathered like-minded individuals to introduce the charm of hanbok (Korean traditional clothes) to youth.
Park organized the society after she went to Japan and saw people on the streets wearing traditional clothes. In Korea, encountering someone wearing hanbok on the streets is unthinkable. This is because Koreans perceive hanbok as too uncomfortable and formal to wear casually. To overcome such a perception, and to enhance an understanding of the traditional glamour and beauty that hanbok entails, Park decided to create the group.
Park traced the reason for the bad impression of hanbok to a lack of recreational environments where people can enjoy themselves while wearing hanbok. She began to search for unique events that people could participate in. Park was looking for an event or some popular entertainment that has an immense ripple effect online, which led her to select the flash mob. A flash mob is often videotaped to depict people performing an unusual act for the purpose of entertainment.
Park decided to create a flash mob video showing a group of people wearing hanbok who suddenly assemble in a public place, perform a brief dance, and quickly disperse.
On 26 September 2011 at Hongdae Playground, 200 people in vivid and colorful hanbok gathered and began identical, choreographed movements to music.
For its creative motivation and its devotion to Korean culture, Hanboknoridan is supported by Cyworld Dream Campaign, which strives to make a person's vision come true. The organization is also sponsored by SK Communications.
References
South Korean fashion |
The Central Yunnan Water Diversion Project () is a large-scale civil engineering project under construction that will allow water from the Jinsha River near Lijiang to be transported to Central Yunnan. The total length of the water channels will be , of which will be in tunnels.
The project has a cost of US$ 12.03 billion, largely funded by the Ministry of Water Resources. It is planned for completion by 2026.
Background
Central Yunnan is a dry region in China, where currently, only of water is available per capita annually, compared to a recommended minimum. At the same time, Central Yunnan accounts for 68% of Yunnan's GDP. The region has suffered from long drought spells, such as a period of 30 months without heavy rains in Kunming. Water scarcity has been described as the "biggest bottleneck restricting the sustainable development of Central Yunnan." The idea of diverting water from the Jinsha River to Central Yunnan was first proposed by Yunnan's vice-governor Zhang Chong in the 1950s.
The water diversion project was included in the Thirteenth Five-Year Plan. In April 2017, it was approved by the State Council.
Construction
The project will include the world's longest water tunnel, the world's largest underground pump room, and largest pump capacity in Asia. In addition, it deals with challenging geological conditions due to passing through a number of faults. It crosses the four major watersheds of Yunnan: that of the Jinsha River, Mekong, Red River, and Nanpan River, as well as crossing the Hengduan Mountains in northwest Yunnan.
Construction commenced on 4 August 2017, with a planned construction time of 8 years. The project includes 58 tunnels with a total length of , 25 inverted siphons, 17 aqueducts, and 15 culverts.
Impact
Once completed, the project would improve water availability for 11 million people, spread over 35 counties in Yunnan and a total area of . Over billion of water would be transported through the channels annually by 2040. This water will be used for domestic and industrial water supply ( million), agricultural water supply ( million), as well as for improving the ecology of lakes in the region ( million).
Since the inlet at the Jinsha River does not include a dam structure, the impact on the source river is expected to be small.
The project is seen as a demonstration project for a future Tibet to Xinjiang water diversion project.
See also
South–North Water Transfer Project, series of projects diverting water from the Yangtze river to the north of China
External links
Official website
References
Aqueducts in China
Irrigation in China
Megaprojects
Macro-engineering |
The fictitious mathematician John Rainwater was created as a student prank but has become known as the author of important results in functional analysis.
At the University of Washington in 1952, John Rainwater was invented and enrolled in a mathematics course by graduate students who were in possession of a duplicate student-registration form. Later, mathematicians published under the pseudonym of John Rainwater.
Papers were published under the name Rainwater mainly in functional analysis, particularly in the geometric theory of Banach spaces and in convex functions. Rainwater's theorem is an important result in summability theory and functional analysis. The University of Washington's seminar in functional analysis is called the Rainwater seminar, and the associated Rainwater notes have influenced Banach-space theory and convex analysis.
The concept of a fictional pseudonym used by multiple people creating valuable mathematics is not unique. Most notably, Nicolas Bourbaki has been the collective pseudonym for a number of leading mathematicians writing in French for many decades.
Creation
John Rainwater was invented by graduate students at the University of Washington in 1952, when students used an extra registration form to enroll Rainwater in a course on real functions. Students submitted homework for Rainwater throughout the semester. The professor caught on to the prank around the middle of the term. Other students in the class were made aware of the situation from the professor's enigmatic remarks after he became the victim of a novelty "exploding" fountain pen bearing Rainwater's name.
Research
Early on, Rainwater distinguished himself by solving problems in the American Mathematical Monthly, whose sponsoring society, the Mathematical Association of America, invited him to join. John R. Isbell published the first paper in Rainwater's name. Other mathematicians have published papers using the name "Rainwater", and acknowledged "Rainwater's assistance" in articles. The seminar on functional analysis at the University of Washington has been called the "Rainwater seminar". Rainwater's theorem is an important result in summability theory and Banach-space theory.
Evaluation
In 2002 Robert Phelps summarized the impact of Rainwater's research. The first Rainwater paper (by Isbell) was in topology and had had 19 citations. While only one page, Rainwater's note in the 1963 Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society had had eight citations in papers; its main result has been called "Rainwater's theorem" in books on convex functions and functional analysis. "There is even one citation to number 13, his unpublished 1967 Rainwater Seminar note on Lindenstrauss spaces," which are named after a construction by Joram Lindenstrauss. "In summary, it appears that most of John Rainwater's published work has been reasonably well received." While Rainwater is lesser known and younger than Nicolas Bourbaki, the collective pseudonym for a number of leading mathematicians writing in French, he is more senior and has more publications than the combination of research by three other pseudonymous mathematicians—Peter Orno, M. G. Stanley, and H. C. Enos.
Mathematicians publishing as Rainwater
Many internationally renowned mathematicians have published under the name of John Rainwater. John Isbell wrote Rainwater's first, second, and tenth papers; by 2002, Isbell had also written or coauthored six other pseudonymous papers under two other names. Functional analyst Robert R. Phelps wrote the third, ninth, eleventh (an unpublished note for the Rainwater seminar), twelfth, and thirteenth (with Peter D. Morris), fifteenth (with Isaac Namioka), and sixteenth (with David Preiss) papers. Irving Glicksberg wrote the fourth and eighth papers. Edgar Asplund wrote the seventh. "Paper 14 is a departure for John Rainwater. Not only is it in algebra, but he doesn't thank anyone for helpful conversations. He notes, however, that his work was supported by four different grants. (Culprits this time were Ken Brown, Ken Goodearl, Toby Stafford and Bob Warfield.)" John Rainwater's c.v. lists an incomplete collection of problems or solutions that he contributed to the American Mathematical Monthly, the earliest in 1959 (by John Isbell).
Notes
References
Further reading
The Rainwater seminar and Rainwater notes are listed as influences by the following books:
See also
Monsieur LeBlanc (pseudonym of Sophie Germain)
Collaborative pseudonyms:
Nicolas Bourbaki
Arthur Besse
Blanche Descartes
G. W. Peck
External resources
Functional analysts
Topologists
Fictional mathematicians
University of Washington faculty
Pseudonymous mathematicians
Academic shared pseudonyms
Mathematical humor
1952 in science |
MTUP may refer to:
the modifiable temporal unit problem, a source of statistical bias
the Mongolian Traditional United Party, a political party in Mongolia
the MTU Probe option in Internet Protocol version 4 |
Mohammad Qomi (Persian: محمد قمی), also known as "Hujjat al-Islam (Mohammad) Qomi" (born in 1980), is an Iranian Shia cleric and the head of Islamic development organization who has been recently appointed --at the age of 38-- instead of "Seyyed Mahdi Khammoushi", by the decree of the Supreme Leader of Iran, Sayyid Ali Khamenei.
Before being appointed in this position, he was the supervision in the institution of Vilayat-e Faqih representation, in Sharif University of Technology. During his Seminary education, he had different teachers, amongst:
Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, Abdollah Javadi-Amoli, Sobhani, Shobeiri Zanjani, Shab Zendedar, Fayazi, Hosseini, Golpayegani, Yazdan Panah, Eshtehardi, Sadeq Amoli-Larijani and so on.
References
Iranian Shia clerics
1980 births
Living people
People from Qom |
The Our Future Foundation for Regional Social Programs () is a non-profit organization that declares its goal to develop social entrepreneurship in Russia. The fund was founded in 2007 by the president and co-owner of the oil company "Lukoil" Vagit Alekperov. The headquarters is located in Moscow. The director of the fund is Natalia Zvereva.
As of November 2019, the fund, according to its own data, supported 254 social entrepreneurship projects located in 58 regions of Russia, 653.2 million rubles were allocated for their implementation in the form of interest-free loans. Among the main infrastructure projects of the fund: the all-Russian competition "Social Entrepreneur", the Laboratory of Social Entrepreneurship, the "More than a Purchase!" program, the "Impulse of Kindness" award. In addition to financial and organizational assistance, the foundation provides social entrepreneurs with legal, consulting and information support.
Our Future Foundation is a member of the Asian Venture Philanthropy Network (AVPN). In 2020, the fund took 3rd place in the Forbes ranking among the best charitable foundations of the richest Russians.
According to Vagit Alekperov, he bequeathed his shares of Lukoil to the Our Future Foundation.
Foundation
The fund was created in 2007 on the initiative of the Russian businessman Vagit Alekperov. Не invited Natalia Zvereva to be the director of the fund. The declared goals are the implementation of long-term socially significant programs and projects based on the principles of social entrepreneurship. According to RBC, the Our Future Foundation became one of the first private foundations in Russia that help disabled people, large families, orphans, and those who are often unclaimed in civilian life.
Activities
Contests
Since 2008, the Fund has been holding the "Social Entrepreneur" all-Russian competition, during which the social projects are selected for providing targeted financial assistance. The first social entrepreneurship project received the support from the fund was the company, which produces orthopedic systems for people with spinal cord injuries - they were allocated 9.5 million rubles in support (4 million were transferred free of charge, 5.5 million were given in the form of interest-free loan for working capital for a period of two years).
As of 2020, the competition has been running for 12 years, 254 projects from 58 regions of Russia have won interest-free cash loans for a total amount of 653.2 million rubles. Since 2018, the minimum amount of a loan has been increased from 500 thousand to 2 million rubles, and entrepreneurs participating in the competition were able to apply for loans up to 10 million rubles, on a par with the winners of previous years. At the same time, the maximum loan maturity increased from 7 to 10 years. Also in 2018, the fund announced the allocation of interest-free loans to socially transformative projects in the amount of 10 to 40 million rubles with a grace period of up to 3 years within the framework of a competition. In 2021, the Fund announced the transformation of the "Social Entrepreneur" competition in response to the proposals of the Ministry of Economic Development to provide support to social entrepreneurs, including through the provision of soft loans through the state system of microfinance centers. The stated goal of the transformation of the competition is to provide assistance to a number of regions in greatest need. As a result, the competition was divided into two: a competition for social impact projects, the winners of which are granted interest-free loans in the amount of 10 to 40 million rubles (30% of the total budget of the competition) for the purchase of real estate and equipment for up to 10 years, and a competition for social and entrepreneurial projects, following which interest-free loans are issued for the implementation of projects in the amount of 3 to 7 million rubles for a period of up to 5 years.
The foundation also supports social entrepreneurs to develop and market their social business franchises. Currently, support in the development of the franchise has been received by the Stupenki network of full-time recreational kindergartens, wheelchair repair shops, art centers for children and adults, geriatric centers network, 24-hour social assistance service disabled and elderly people .
Since 2015, the Our Future Foundation and MSP Bank have supported the All-Russian competition of projects in the field of social entrepreneurship "The Best Social Project of the Year", organized by the Russian State Social University in conjunction with the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation.
In September–October 2022, the foundation held a competition for the development of the "social entrepreneur" distinction mark, similar to the Russian State quality mark.
Impulse of Kindness Award
Every year, the Foundation awards the Impulse of Kindness prize for contributions to the development and promotion of social entrepreneurship in Russia. The award was established in 2011 with the aim of encouraging the best domestic social entrepreneurs and attracting government attention to the development of social entrepreneurship in Russia.
The first awarding took place in 2012. The prize is awarded in six main categories:
For personal contribution to the development of social entrepreneurship (awarded to an individual)
For a systematic approach to social entrepreneurship (individual or legal entity)
For the best corporate program for the development of social entrepreneurship (legal entity)
For the best regional program to support social entrepreneurship (constituent entity of the Russian Federation) - nomination established by the Ministry of Economic Development of Russia
For the best media coverage of social entrepreneurship (awarded to a medium)
For the best Russian educational program in the field of social entrepreneurship (educational institution)
In 2015, the special nomination "For personal contribution to the development of social entrepreneurship in the field of culture" was introduced. The winners were the actors: Evgeny Mironov (2015), Konstantin Khabensky (2016), Egor Beroev and Ksenia Alfyorova (2017), Sergei Bezrukov (2018). In 2019, the nomination was not awarded.
In 2018, the prize was also awarded in the nomination "For the best project of social entrepreneurship in the digital economy" (for an individual or legal entity). At the 7th "Impulse of Kindness" award ceremony on October 4, 2018, an agreement was signed between the Our Future Foundation and the Social Projects Support Fund. In the same year, the Impulse of Kindness prize won first place at the Eventiada IPRA GWA ceremony in the category "Best Project in the Field of Corporate Social Responsibility".
In 2019, the award was presented in a new category "Best startup in a field of social entrepreneurship", as well as in the special category "For the first issue of green bonds in Russia". With the adoption of the law on social entrepreneurship in Russia, the organizers of the award recorded an increase in the number of applications for its receipt: 332 against 230 a year earlier.
Guests of the ceremony have the opportunity to visit the traditional exhibition of innovative projects of social entrepreneurs.
In connection with the COVID-19 pandemic, it was decided not to hold the Impulse of Kindness awards ceremony in 2020. For the same reasons, the next award presentation took place in an online format, on October 27, 2021. More than 200 applications were submitted for the award. According to the fund's own data, 436 applications were submitted in 2022 — more than ever before, the prize fund was increased by 30%, to 4.2 million rubles. The award ceremony took place at the end of May 2022, in violation of the established tradition of autumn awarding.
Since the award was established, 109 laureates from more than 20 regions of Russia have been awarded it.
According to the Doctor of Sciences in Economics V. Y. Kulkova, the nomination "For the best regional program to support social entrepreneurship" of the Impulse of Kindness Award can be used for official recognition of progressive regional practices in the field of social entrepreneurship development in Russia.
Anti-crisis support
The funds saved due to the cancellation of the "Impulse of Kindness" award ceremony in 2020 were directed by the Foundation to targeted support of 40 social enterprises most affected by the consequences of the pandemic, from among those that have already been supported. Support is provided in the form of grants or product buyouts, which are then channeled to charity. A total of 11.7 million rubles were allocated for these purposes.
The Fund also announced a 6-month deferral for the return of previously issued loans for bona fide borrowers whose activities were suspended as a result of the pandemic.
"More than a Purchase!"
To promote the goods of Russian social entrepreneurs in 2014, the Our Future Foundation, together with Lukoil, launched "More than a Purchase!" project.
The project was launched in the form of a competition, the winners will be able to sell their products in the stores of the Lukoil filling station network in most of the regions of Russia.
In the stores of the first two gas stations, immediately after the start of the program in January 2014, one could buy felt boots (which were in the greatest demand), felt bags, transforming pillows, tablecloths, towels, farm dairy products, souvenirs and other products produced by social entreprises. All sold goods have a special marking. The assortment changes depending on demand.
By the end of 2014, the experiment was recognized as successful, and the number of gas stations with stands with products of social entrepreneurs in their sales areas increased to 42 (in Russia as a whole).
By the end of 2016, according to the Fund itself, 134 gas stations in 14 regions of Russia were connected to the project "More than a purchase!" It is planned to expand this practice and connect more than 3000 filling stations throughout the country to the project.
In May 2017, the "More than a purchase!" project was awarded the All-Russian Prize "Good Deed", established by the public organization of entrepreneurs "Business Russia", in the special category "For support of social entrepreneurs".
As of 2019, the products of the "More than a Purchase!" brand are sold at 1,550 points of sale in 55 regions of Russia, 55 suppliers are employed in the project and 250 items of goods are presented.
In 2020, in order to create an infrastructure for the market for the sale of social entrepreneurs' products via the Internet, the Our Future Foundation signed an agreement with the Internet platform, the largest platform for handmade products of small businesses, and the self-employed population.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the project launched the production of disposable medical masks and gloves.
In 2021, according to the fund's own data, about 2 thousand retail outlets were already operating within the framework of the project. During the year, goods worth more than 150 million rubles were sold, 35 manufacturers from among social entrepreneurs were supported, including 8 enterprises of the All-Russian Society of the Blind.
In 2022, the program "More than a purchase!" was recognized as the best in the category "Social Entrepreneurship" at the forum "The Best social projects in Russia".
At the beginning of 2023, the products of the "More than a Purchase!" project, in addition to filling stations, are sold in Russian hypermarkets of the O’Key and Selgros networks, as well as on the Wildberries Internet platform.
Social Entrepreneurship Laboratory
The Social Entrepreneurship Laboratory was created by the Our Future Foundation in 2014 with the aim of creating new tools for supporting and developing social business in Russia; since June 2014, it has been conducting educational activities. The stated mission of the Laboratory is to assist in the creation and development of social business. The laboratory conducts free and paid training for beginners and already existing social entrepreneurs. Videos of free online courses and seminars are posted on the YouTube channel.
According to its own data, the coverage of educational courses and webinars of the Laboratory of Social Entrepreneurship is 130,000 people. Since 2014, 150 webinars, 26 face-to-face events and 15 thematic courses have been held, 100 trainers have been involved.
In 2017, the Social Entrepreneurship Laboratory won in the category "Best project in the field of corporate communications" and took 3rd place in the category "Best public project" of the international competition of communication projects Eventiada IPRA GWA 2017.
Cooperation with Russian regions
In 2012, the Foundation provided assistance to the developing interest in social entrepreneurship in the Vologda Oblast; with its assistance, 10 social projects of the Vologda Oblast received grants for development.
In February 2012, the Fund, together with the Ministry of Economy and Trade of Kalmykia, held a competition for social entrepreneurship projects "Fair of Social Ideas" in the republic, the winners were given the opportunity to participate in the second round of the "Social Entrepreneur-2012" competition.
The Foundation regularly holds all-Russian and regional meetings of social entrepreneurs. The first all-Russian meeting took place on 25 April 2012.
In 2014, the fund supported social entrepreneurship in the Volgograd Oblast by signing a trilateral agreement between the Our Future Foundation, the Ministry of Economy, Foreign Economic Activity and Investments of the Volgograd Oblast and the Center for Consulting and Outsourcing "Our Future" to support social entrepreneurship in this region.
On 19 March 2015, it became known that the Fund, together with the International Forum of Business Leaders, signed an agreement aimed at promoting mentoring in social entrepreneurship with a view to its development. The purpose of the agreement is the organization and subsequent implementation of various joint activities. Other goals of the agreement are the exchange of experience and the promotion of partner initiatives. To begin with, it is planned to use the results of the agreement in a joint project in the Perm Krai, then it is planned to expand cooperation in other regions.
In the fall of 2016, a pilot project for the development of social investment in Ugra was launched. The project became part of a comprehensive model for the development of social entrepreneurship in Ugra, which included a set of regulatory and other documents, tools and mechanisms to ensure the development and support of social projects, interaction of the business community with government authorities. As a result, 30 investors were found who expressed their readiness to finance 8 regional projects in the field of social entrepreneurship for a total amount of 115.6 million rubles. The project developers plan to extend it to other constituent entities of the Russian Federation in 2019.
Our Future Foundation is a partner of the Forum of Social Innovations of the Regions. The second forum took place in Krasnogorsk on 8–9 June 2017.
Also in Krasnogorsk, in the House of Moscow Oblast Government, on 16 May 2018, the largest all-Russian gathering of social entrepreneurs, focused on social entrepreneurs - manufacturers of goods, was held, and representatives of retail were invited there for the first time.
On 18 April 2019, the fund signed a cooperation agreement with the government of the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug. In September 2021, a similar agreement was signed with the Department of Entrepreneurship and Innovative Development of Moscow.
In March 2022, another agreement was signed with the Krasnoyarsk Regional Business Development Center "My Business".
In July 2022, it became known about the participation of the Fund's experts in testing and subsequent revision of the Federal Law of July 13, 2020 No. 189 "On the state (municipal) social order for the provision of state (municipal) services in the social sphere.".
The Foundation supports regional Associations of Social Entrepreneurship. As of August 2022, agreements have been signed with the ASE of St. Petersburg, the Krasnoyarsk and Krasnodar Krais, the Amur and Astrakhan Regions, and the Republic of Bashkortostan.
Cooperation with major business and government agencies
In July 2013, the Fund signed an agreement to support social entrepreneurship in cooperation with the organization and Uralsib Bank.
In May 2015, the Fund, together with the Nornickel company, took part in the finalization of 15 business projects, the purpose of which is to eliminate the social problems of the inhabitants of the Arctic.
At the end of 2017, the results of the first grant competition "Act Without Borders" were summed up - a joint project of the Baltika Breweries, which initiated a comprehensive program to support the disabled, and the Our Future Foundation, which was the organizer of the competition. Among budding social entrepreneurs, 9 projects from 6 regions of Russia received financial support for a total amount of over 3.4 million rubles. Among existing entrepreneurs, 7 projects from 7 regions of Russia received financial support for a total amount of over 2.7 million rubles. In addition to grant support, the program runs a thematic Online School of Social Entrepreneurship to train aspiring entrepreneurs to create and develop social businesses aimed at supporting people with disabilities.
In April 2019, the Our Future Foundation and the largest Russian petrochemical company Sibur launched a joint comprehensive program to support and develop social entrepreneurship in Tobolsk and the Tobolsky District. The program was held in the form of a grant competition among social entrepreneurs of the region and continued until the end of 2019. In 2021, the Our Future Foundation and Sibur launched a new cooperation program, named "The Growth Formula".
In July 2019, the Our Future Foundation and the Corporation for the Development of Small and Medium-Sized Entrepreneurship (SME Corporation) entered into a partnership agreement, the subject of which was the opportunity for social entrepreneurs to obtain a loan guarantee from the SME Corporation. The guarantee is considered by the Fund as additional security for the loan.
Educational and consulting activities
The Our Future Foundation has concluded more than 20 agreements on the support of social entrepreneurship with higher educational institutions of Russia. Among them:
Experimental courses on social entrepreneurship are taught in universities, and educational programs developed with the participation of the Foundation are being introduced. It is assumed that these programs will be included in the educational standard for teaching social entrepreneurship on the basis of higher education.
In May 2018, the Our Future Foundation and the signed an agreement on "disseminating knowledge in the field of social entrepreneurship".
In 2020, the Foundation signed an agreement with the Agency for Network Innovations, an experimental network platform for , pre-professional and professional education for schoolchildren, organized by the and the Federal Institute for Education Development of RANEPA.
The Foundation provides comprehensive consulting support to social entrepreneurs, the range of which has expanded after the adoption of the law on social entrepreneurship in Russia. Since December 2019, an online assistant has been operating on the Foundation's website for entering the register of social entrepreneurs. The Foundation distributes brochures on this issue, and since April 2020 has been conducting telephone consultations.
During the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia, the foundation held a two-week online training marathon for social entrepreneurs "How to transfer business online".
In September 2022, a free online course on social entrepreneurship was published on the Stepik educational platform. The course was developed by experts of the Our Future Foundation and RANEPA. Soon it became known about the signing of an agreement between the Our Future Foundation and the National Accreditation Council for Business and Management Education (NASDOBR) on the joint development of educational and professional standards in the field of social entrepreneurship and socially transformative projects.
The international cooperation
In April 2016, the Our Future Foundation and the Republican Confederation of Entrepreneurship (Republic of Belarus) signed a memorandum of cooperation. A similar memorandum was signed in May 2016 with the Eurasia Foundation of Central Asia (EFCA), which is a leader in promoting social entrepreneurship in Kazakhstan.
Outside the post-Soviet space, the Foundation cooperates with organizations and experts from Great Britain, Italy, South Korea, United States, Germany, China, Singapore. In October 2013, the Foundation held the first international conference "Social Innovations" in Moscow. In October 2017, the second international conference "Social Innovation: Defining the Future" was held. The closest contacts have developed between the Foundation and the Center for the Management of Social Enterprises of South Korea.
In the summer of 2019, the Foundation organized a visit to Moscow for the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, social entrepreneur Muhammad Yunus. Within the framework of the visit, a press conference was held summing up the results of the International Social Business Day and the presentation of Yunus's book "The World of Three Zeros".
Internet projects
The Foundation has created and maintains two thematic portals: "New Business: Social Entrepreneurship" (nb-forum.ru), covering the activities of social enterprises and entrepreneurs in Russia and in the world, as well as the portal "Bank of Social Ideas" (social-idea.ru) containing information about the ideas of social enterprises - already implemented or ready for implementation.
Research and publishing
In November 2014, the "Social Entrepreneurship of Russia" catalog was presented, the creation of which was supported by the Foundation. On 3 March 2015, the electronic version of the catalog was made available for free download. In January 2016, the second, expanded edition of the catalog, compiled at the end of 2015, was published. The third edition of the catalog, published in March 2017, includes 436 social enterprises operating in Russia.
The Foundation actively cooperates with the publishing house . Over the years, with the support of the Foundation, translations of popular books on social entrepreneurship by David Bornstein, Craig Darden-Phillips, Gill Kikal and Thomas Lyons, Lester Salamon have been published. In 2015, the textbook "Creating a Successful Social Enterprise" by Natalia Zvereva was published. In 2016, with the support of the Foundation, a book on social entrepreneurship in South Korea was published, as well as a brochure by the Foundation's expert Sergei Ponomarev "Russian and American Practices for Supporting Social Entrepreneurship".
In 2017, the Our Future Foundation began cooperation with the Political Encyclopedia Publishing House (ROSSPEN). The first joint project was the book "Social Transforming Investments. How We Change the World and Make Money", by Anthony Bugg-Levin and Jed Emerson, leading experts in social performance investment.
In the same year, the publishing house published the book Dolphins of Capitalism - a joint project of the Our Future Foundation and the laboratory "Once" by . The book includes "10 stories of people who did everything wrong and succeeded." Among her heroes: (Observer), Alexey Mavrin (), ("Pastila from Kolomna" museum and "" in Kolomna), Alexander Meshchankin (center of youth tourism "") and others. In 2020, the project was continued - the book Dolphins of Capitalism 2.0 included the stories of 8 more successful startups, including "VkusVill", "" and "Motorika".
In the summer of 2018, with the support of the Foundation, Eksmo published a book by Roger Martin and Sally R. Osberg, Going beyond the Best: How Social Entrepreneurship Works. The preface to the Russian edition was written by Natalia Zvereva, director of the Our Future Foundation.
At the end of 2019, the Fund, with the support of the Ministry of Economic Development of Russia, published the book Atlas of Practices for the Development of Social Entrepreneurship by the Constituent Entities of the Russian Federation, authored by N. I. Zvereva. A printed version of the book is planned for 2020.
In 2020, the Our Future Foundation, together with the Higher School of Economics, conducted and published a study "World experience in the development of impact investments". The study, which lasted 11 months, analyzed and summarized the experience of 17 countries in the field of social entrepreneurship and impact investment.
In the fall of 2020, with the support of the fund, the Eksmo publishing house published a book by an expert in the field of impact investments Morgan Simon "Real Impact. How investments help build a better world."
In 2021, the Foundation became a partner of the first literary award "Heroes of social change. Modern literature on charity and social entrepreneurship" of the Forbes Russia magazine. On March 1, 2022, the winners were awarded the I—III degree prize.
At the beginning of 2023, the foundation published a collection of methodological materials “Production and placement of social advertising by social enterprises”. The manual was developed by experts from the Gladway Foundation for the Development of Media Projects and Social Programs on behalf of the Our Future Foundation.
Ratings
In 2020, Our Future Foundation took 3rd place in the Forbes ranking of the 20 Best Charity Foundations of the Welthiest Russians. A year earlier, the fund was in the same rating at the 8th position. In 2021, Forbes published the rating for the third time, and the Our Future Foundation took the 6th line in it, gaining 63.8 points out of 100 possible. The founder of the foundation, Vagit Alekperov, was awarded the "Philanthropist of the Year" prize for supporting social entrepreneurship. In 2022, the Our Future Foundation again took 6th place in the Forbes rating, while the criteria for expert assessments were revised, the fund received the highest ratings in the indicators "strategy and systematic approach of the organization" and "openness of information about activities".
In 2021, Our Future Foundation was awarded the EVPA Data Transparency Label 2021 (European Venture Philanthropy Association) “for active participation in research”.
In March 2022, as part of the charitable program to support medical workers and volunteers "Union. Assistance" the Our Future Foundation was awarded a diploma "for contribution to solving social problems caused by the coronavirus pandemic".
In July 2022, the foundation received a diploma from the Donors Forum (association of the largest grant-giving organizations in Russia) for the formation of the ecosystem of social entrepreneurship.
In December 2022, the Foundation was awarded the "Positive Changes 2022" award from the "Factory of Positive Changes" in the nomination "Development of the practice of implementing the evaluation of social projects" with the wording "For the systematization of methods and programs in the field of assessing the socio-economic efficiency of social enterprises and impact-investors".
References
Further reading
External links
New Business: Social Entrepreneurship portal (ru)
Social Ideas Bank portal (ru)
Foundations based in Russia
Organizations established in 2007
Social entrepreneurship |
The King of Kreuzberg (German: Der König von Kreuzberg) is a 1990 German film by Matthias Drawe set in Berlin-Kreuzberg, a district of Berlin that has one of the largest concentration of Turks outside Turkey.
Plot summary
The young Turk R. (Rasit Tuncay), who lives in Berlin-Kreuzberg, believes that he can rise from the ground by mere concentration. Initially he briefly succeeds in a public park, but unfortunately, no one has seen it.
Being sure of his special powers, he tries it again, even in the most unsuitable situations: He assumes his take-off position, standing on one leg, arms outstretched wide. This strange pose eventually gets him into trouble with almost everyone including his girlfriend — who kicks him out.
As a consequence, R. sleeps on a park bench, his meager belongings in a suitcase. Still, he tries to rise whenever he feels the urge — which lands him in an insane asylum. His only remaining friend M. (Matthias Drawe) eventually gets him out.
Subsequently, R. and his sidekick M. try to raise funds through questionable endeavors by using a "magical ATM card" and fixing a horse race at the race track. Unfortunately, with meager success and the cops at their heels.
Eventually R., renounces his "special powers," returns to bourgeois life, and marries his girlfriend. But the next morning the infallible urge is there again, stronger than ever: R. rushes into the open and assumes his take-off position ...
Cast
Rasit Tuncay as R.
Kerstin Rehberg as L.
Matthias Drawe as M.
Mersedeh Tschandarabi as C.
Olmo Pini as the child
Simone Spörl as girl at bar
Fehim as the doctor
Ahmet Karabolut as hairdresser
Tanju Bilgin as the psychiatrist
Sehri Yavuz as the nurse
Al Hassan Wade as the quack
Awards
The King of Kreuzberg was nominated for the 1991 :de:Filmfestival Max Ophüls Preis (Max Ophüls Award)
References
External links
The King of Kreuzberg at Internet Movie Database
The King of Kreuzberg at filmportal.de
1990 comedy films
1990 films
German comedy films
1990s German-language films
Films set in Berlin
1990s German films |
Notohypsilophodon (meaning "southern Hypsilophodon") is a genus of ornithopod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina. It was described as the only "hypsilophodont" known from South America, although this assessment is not universally supported, and Gasparinisaura is now believed to have been a basal euornithopod as well.
History of discovery
From 1985 onwards the Laboratorio de Paleovertebrados of the Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia "San Juan Bosco" organised excavations in the late Cenomanian-early Turonian-age Bajo Barreal Formation of the San Jorge Basin, northern Chubut, Patagonia. At Buen Pasto near Comodoro Rivadavia a partial juvenile skeleton lacking the skull, was found.
In 1998 this find was named and described by Rubén D. Martínez as the type species Notohypsilophodon comodorensis. The generic name combines a Greek νότος, notos, "south wind" with the name of the genus Hypsilophodon. The specific name refers to Comodoro Rivadavia.
Notohypsilophodon is based on the holotype specimen UNPSJB — PV 942, a partial skeleton including four neck, seven back, five hip, and six tail vertebrae, four rib fragments, a partial left scapula (shoulder blade), partial right coracoid, a right humerus (upper arm bone), both ulnae, and most of a left leg (minus the foot), a right fibula and astragalus, and thirteen phalanges. Because the neural arches are not fused to the bodies of the vertebrae, its describer regarded the individual as not fully grown.
Description
As a "hypsilophodontid" or other basal ornithopod, Notohypsilophodon would have been a bipedal herbivore. Its size was not estimated in the describing article, but as most adult hypsilophodonts were long, this genus would probably have been of similar size. In 2010 Gregory S. Paul gave an estimation of for the length, for the weight of the animal.
Phylogeny
Martínez found no evidence that Notohypsilophodon was an iguanodont, and instead assigned it to the more basal Hypsilophodontidae, which made it at the time the only South American hypsilophodont. A hypsilophodontid assignment was supported by Rodolfo Coria in a 1999 review of South American ornithopods, but a more recent review of basal ornithopods found the fossil remains to be too fragmentary for classification beyond Euornithopoda, a clade within Ornithopoda including the "hypsilophodonts" and iguanodonts. Moreover, the Hypsilophodontidae are today considered to be a paraphyletic group, not consisting of directly related species forming a separate branch, but representing a series of successive branches splitting off the main euornithopod tree. A recent redescription of Notohypsilophodon found it to be basal in Ornithopoda, more primitive than Gasparinisaura. In 2015, it was found to be part of the clade Elasmaria along with other Antarctic and Patagonian ornithopods.
Cladogram based in the phylogenetic analysis of Rozadilla et al., 2015:
References
Ornithischian genera
Late Cretaceous dinosaurs of South America
Cretaceous Argentina
Fossils of Argentina
Fossil taxa described in 1998
Ornithopods of South America
Cenomanian genus first appearances
Turonian genus extinctions
Late Cretaceous ornithopods |
```xml
import * as React from 'react';
import { Button, Flex } from '@fluentui/react-northstar';
import { MicIcon, TranslationIcon, CallVideoIcon } from '@fluentui/react-icons-northstar';
const ButtonExampleDisabled = () => (
<Flex column gap="gap.smaller">
<Flex gap="gap.smaller">
<Button disabled>Default</Button>
<Button disabled primary>
<Button.Content>Primary</Button.Content>
</Button>
<Button disabled inverted>
<Button.Content content="Inverted Button" />
</Button>
<Button disabled icon iconPosition="before" primary>
<MicIcon xSpacing="after" />
<Button.Content content="Click me" />
</Button>
<Button disabled circular title="Translation">
<TranslationIcon xSpacing="none" />
</Button>
<Button disabled text>
<CallVideoIcon xSpacing="before" />
<Button.Content content="Disabled text button" />
</Button>
</Flex>
<Button disabled fluid>
<Button.Content>Fluid</Button.Content>
</Button>
</Flex>
);
export default ButtonExampleDisabled;
``` |
Pseudodiploria clivosa, the knobby brain coral, is a colonial species of stony coral in the family Mussidae. It occurs in shallow water in the West Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea.
Description
The knobby brain coral is a massive coral that either forms hemispherical domes or, particularly in areas of high wave action, forms plates and encrusts the seabed. It can grow to a diameter of about . The surface of the dome usually has a number of bulges or knobs but this species is not easy to distinguish from the symmetrical brain coral which tends to have a smoother outline. The surface consists of sharply delineated, convoluted ridges with valleys in between. There is no trough-like groove in the top of the ridge as is the case in the rather similar grooved brain coral (Diploria labyrinthiformis). The coral polyps are strung along the valley bottoms, each sitting in a little stony cup or corallite. The sides of these have minute walls called septa which come in four different sized cycles. They extend outside the corallites as costae that join one corallite to another but are discontinuous in this species, another distinguishing factor. The colour of the coral is usually some shade of yellowish or greenish brown and is caused by the presence of symbiotic dinoflagellates called zooxanthellae in the coral's tissues.
Distribution and habitat
The knobby brain coral is a common species and occurs in southern Florida, the Caribbean Sea and the Bahamas. It is found growing on reefs, in seagrass (Thalassia testudinum) meadows, in lagoons and sometimes on mangroves. It grows at depths down to about but is most common at depths less than .
The fossilised remains of Pseudodiploria clivosa have been found alongside those of other massive corals Pseudodiploria strigosa, Siderastrea siderea and Solenastrea bouroni in marine deposits in Río Grande de Manatí, Puerto Rico that date back to the Pleistocene.
Biology
During the day the polyps of the knobby brain coral are retracted into the corallites but at night they emerge and extend their tentacles to feed. The zooxanthellae are photosynthetic and up to fifty percent of their production is transferred to the host while they make use of the coral's nitrogenous waste.
The knobby brain coral grows by the budding of new polyps and the deposition of new calcareous material. Growth is very slow and large corals may be over a hundred years old. Sexual reproduction occurs by the release of gametes into the water column. The planula larvae drift with the currents before settling on the seabed and undergoing metamorphosis into polyps. These begin to secrete their own skeletons and found new colonies.
References
faviinae
Corals described in 1786 |
George A. Lovejoy (May 24, 1931 – February 5, 2015) was an American politician and businessman.
Early life
Born in Portland, Oregon, Lovejoy graduated from Spaulding High School in Rochester, New Hampshire.
Career
Lovejoy served as a cook in the United States Navy during the Korean War and remained in the United States Navy Reserve for six years. Outside of politics, Lovejoy worked in real estate business in Rochester. During the 1970s, Lovejoy served as director of the New Hampshire Office of Comprehensive Planning under Governor Meldrim Thomson Jr. From 1992 to 1996, he served as a member of the New Hampshire Senate as a Republican.
References
1931 births
2015 deaths
People from Rochester, New Hampshire
Politicians from Portland, Oregon
Military personnel from Portland, Oregon
Businesspeople from New Hampshire
Republican Party New Hampshire state senators
United States Navy personnel of the Korean War
20th-century American businesspeople |
Tiberiu Brediceanu (April 2, 1877 – December 19, 1968) was a Romanian composer and a corresponding member of the Romanian Academy.
Biography
Born in Lugoj, Romania, to Coriolan Brediceanu, Tiberiu Brediceanu studied music in Lugoj (1884–1891), Košice (1891–1892), Blaj, Sibiu (1892–1895), and Brașov (1903–1906). He worked as a general manager of the Bucharest Opera House. He composed symphonic dances, as well as songs and ballads for both voice and piano. He also published a collection of 170 folk melodies and wrote several works on Romanian folk songs.
Brediceanu was elected corresponding member of the Romanian Academy in May 1937. In 1948, the communist regime had him removed from the academy, but he was reinstated in 1990, after the fall of the regime.
He was the brother of Caius, Sempronia, and Cornelia (Lucian Blaga's wife), and the father of the composer and conductor Mihai Brediceanu.
He died in Bucharest in 1968. Streets in Bistrița, Cluj-Napoca, and Lugoj and a park in Brașov are named after him.
References
1877 births
1968 deaths
People from Lugoj
Romanian composers
Romanian Greek-Catholics
Corresponding members of the Romanian Academy
20th-century Romanian musicians |
Pontcarré () is a commune in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region in north-central France.
Geography
Geology
The commune is classified in a zone of Seismicity 1, corresponding to a very weak seismicity.
Hydrography
The Morbras River, a Tributary of the Marne, has its source in the town.
Demographics
The inhabitants are called Pontcarréens.
In 2013, the total number of dwellings in the municipality was 846 (of which 72.6% were houses and 27.3% were apartments). Of these dwellings, 94.1% were principal residences, 0.2% were second homes and 5.7% were vacant dwellings. The share of households owning their principal residence was 82.3%.
See also
Communes of the Seine-et-Marne department
References
External links
Official site
1999 Land Use, from IAURIF (Institute for Urban Planning and Development of the Paris-Île-de-France région)
Communes of Seine-et-Marne
Seine-et-Marne communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia |
Gletsch (; ) is a hamlet in the German-speaking half of the canton of Valais, located in the upper Rhone valley, called Obergoms ('Upper Goms'), , southeast below the Rhone Glacier's mouth and itself the headwaters of the Rhône. It is called Gletsch (some short of Gletscher, the German term for glacier), since the first building was the predecessor of the Hôtel Glacier du Rhône (c. 1860) built more or less just next to the glacier's mouth in 1830.
It belongs to the municipality of Obergoms.
Gletsch lies at the crossroads of the Grimsel Pass (leading to the Bernese Oberland) and the Furka Pass (leading to Andermatt, the central Swiss transport cross, and eventually either to Central Switzerland, or the Grisonian Surselva, or the Ticino). The Gletsch railway station is operated by the Furka Cogwheel Steam Railway.
References
Swisstopo topographic maps
External links
Gletsch on Obergoms.ch
Villages in Valais |
Kaarlo Könönen (December 12, 1892 HaminaAugust 2, 1965 Lahti) was a Finnish architect. He graduated from the Helsinki University of Technology in 1919. From 1922 to 1923, Könönen worked as a city architect in Kotka. To Kotkansaari he designed several apartment buildings representing 1920s classicism. The most famous one being Vuorelankulma, completed in 1927. He also worked as an architect for the Finland's Ministry of Defense in 1924. From 1925 to 1929, Könönen worked in private architectural firms, one of those was Eliel Saarinen's office in Hvitträsk.
Könönen worked as a city architect in Lahti from 1929 to 1955. During that time his style changed closer to functionalism. His well-known works include Lahti bus station (1939), the extension of Lahti Town Hall (1934), the residential areas of Vesterås and Tapanila and the Heinola Water Tower (1951).
References
20th-century Finnish architects
Modernist architects
Modernist architecture in Finland
1892 births
1965 deaths
People from Hamina |
Akinkhovskaya () is a rural locality (a village) in Shelotskoye Rural Settlement, Verkhovazhsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 8 as of 2002.
Geography
Akinkhovskaya is located 71 km southwest of Verkhovazhye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Stolbovo is the nearest rural locality.
References
Rural localities in Verkhovazhsky District |
Exoclavarctus is a genus of tardigrades in the family Halechiniscidae. Its only species is Exoclavarctus dineti. The species has been found in the deep sea in the Bay of Biscay.
References
Further reading
Renaud-Mornant, 1983: "Tardigrades abyssaux nouveaux de la sous-famille des Euclavarctinae n. subfam. (Arthrotardigrada, Halechiniscidae)." [New Deep Sea Tardigrades in the Subfamily Euclavarctinae n. subfam. (Arthrotardigrada, Halechiniscidae)]. Bulletin of the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle Section A: Zoology, Biology and Animal Ecology, 1983, vol. 5, no. 1, p. 201-219
Halechiniscidae
Fauna of the Atlantic Ocean
Animals described in 1983
Taxa named by Jeanne Renaud-Mornant
Monotypic animal genera
Tardigrade genera |
Alex McEwan (born 19 July 1977) is an Australian short track speed skater. He competed at the 2002 Winter Olympics and the 2006 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
1977 births
Living people
Australian male short track speed skaters
Olympic short track speed skaters for Australia
Short track speed skaters at the 2002 Winter Olympics
Short track speed skaters at the 2006 Winter Olympics
Sportspeople from Melbourne
Sportsmen from Victoria (state) |
The National East Indies monument 1945–1962 in Roermond, the Netherlands commemorates more than 6200 Dutch servicemen who died in either the former Dutch East Indies or New Guinea. The monument is located in the National Remembrance Park Roermond (Dutch: Nationaal Herdenkingspark Roermond), which also has monuments dedicated to the civilians who died during that period, as well as Dutch servicemen who died in other missions since the start of the Korean War.
Culture of the Netherlands
Monuments and memorials in the Netherlands
Buildings and structures in Roermond |
The Alpina B10 Bi-Turbo is a high performance version of the BMW 5 Series E34 executive car manufactured by German automobile manufacturer Alpina. Beginning production in 1989, the B10 Bi-Turbo was based on the 535i and received several upgrades by Alpina, being the fastest production sedan in the world at the time of its introduction. Production ended in 1994 with 507 examples produced.
Developed at a cost of US$3.2 million, the B10 Bi-Turbo was introduced at the Geneva Motor Show in March 1989.
Specifications
To build each B10 Bi-Turbo powerplant, Alpina dismantled a BMW M30 engine, replaced the stock pistons with forged Mahle units, installed two Garrett T25 water-cooled turbochargers, and added a Bosch variable boost control with range of 0.4–0.8 bar, adjustable from the driver's seat. Additional modifications helped raise the horsepower of the standard M30 engine from at 5,700 rpm and at 3,000 rpm to at 6,000 rpm and at 4,000 rpm. A Getrag 290 5-speed manual transmission was specified to handle the power.
Modifications to the suspension included Alpina-specific springs and anti-roll bars. Bilstein shock absorbers were used at the front and automatic-load levelling units by Fichtel & Sachs were used at the rear. Front brake rotors were large discs from UK-based Lucas Girling, bigger even than the pieces found on the E34 M5. Michelin MXX tyres were standard as was BMW's Automatic Stability Control (ASC).
Performance
Alpina claimed a 0–100 km/h (62 mph) acceleration time of 5.6 seconds and a top speed of over 290 km/h (180.2 mph), putting it in the same league as a five years older car model Ferrari Testarossa in terms of performance. In the September 1991 issue of Road & Track, Paul Frère wrote: "For me this is the car … I think this is the best 4-door in the world." Despite a base price tag of 146,800 DM, nearly twice the price of an E34 M5, the B10 Bi-Turbo became the best-selling single model in Alpina history up until that point. The six year production run began in 1989 and ended in August 1994. Production ended due to the discontinuation of the M30 engine by BMW in 1993. The final 50 M30 engine blocks were shipped to Alpina for use in the final 50 cars.
Independent performance test results
0–: 5.2 seconds
0–: 19.7 seconds
0–400 m: 13.2 seconds
0–1,000 m: 24.6 seconds
0–: 5.1 seconds
0–: 11.6 seconds
Standing mile (402m): 13.6 seconds at
Top speed:
Technical data
[Figures in brackets refer to Swiss market vehicles]
Gallery
Bibliography
Götz Leyrer, « Fünfer Potenz », Auto, Motor und Sport, #24, 17 November 1989 (B10 Bi-Turbo, BMW M5 and AC Schnitzer S5 3.7 comparison).
HB, « Die B-Handlung », Sport Auto, #5, May 1990 (Alpina B10 Bi-Turbo, B6 3.5S and B12 5.0 comparison).
Götz Leyrer, « Duell in der Wonne », Auto, Motor und Sport, #13, 1990 (B10 Bi-Turbo and Ferrari 348 TB comparison).
« Croisière à 300 à l'heure », Auto Hebdo, #749, 17 October 1990. (B10 Bi-Turbo and Ruf CTR comparison).
Auto Hebdo Sport, #391, November 1990. (B10 Bi-Turbo and Ruf CTR comparison).
Kevin Blick, « Vintage Alpina », Performance Car, November 1990. (B10 Bi-Turbo review).
« Der Sinn des Strebens », Auto, Motor und Sport, #3, 1991 (B10 Bi-Turbo, BMW M5, Opel Lotus Omega and Mercedes-Benz 500E comparison).
« World's fastest cars », Road & Track, #9, September 1991 (sports car comparison: Lamborghini, Ferrari, Corvette ZR4, Ruf…).
« 360CV dans une berline au sommet », BMWorld, #4 (B10 Bi-Turbo review).
« Saloonacy », Classic & Sports car, #1, 2004 (B10 Bi-Turbo and Opel Lotus Omega comparison).
Maxime Joly, Alpina B10 Biturbo e34 (1989 - 1994) : Autoroute racer, automobile-sportive.com, 27 February 2010 (retrieved 9 March 2014).
Alexander Bernt, Alpinas Turbo-Tiere, Auto Bild, 9 June 2011 (Retrieved 7 December 2014)
.
References
B10 (Bi-Turbo)
Rear-wheel-drive vehicles
Sports sedans
1990s cars
Cars introduced in 1989
Cars discontinued in 1994 |
In psychology and neuroscience, motor planning is a set of processes related to the preparation of a movement that occurs during the reaction time (the time between the presentation of a stimulus to a person and that person's initiation of a motor response). Colloquially, the term applies to any process involved in the preparation of a movement during the reaction time, including perception-related and action-related processes. For example, the identification of a task-relevant stimulus is captured by the usual meaning of the term, "motor planning", but this identification process is not strictly motor-related. Wong and colleagues (2015) have proposed a narrower definition to include only movement-related processes: "Specification of the movement trajectory for the desired action, a description of how the end-effector will produce such an action, and finally a description of the full set of the joint trajectories or muscle activations required to execute the movement."
History
References
Cognition
Neurology
Neuroanatomy
Geriatrics
Cytoskeletal defects |
```objective-c
/*
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
*
* along with this library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, write to
* the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
* Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
#ifndef EditingBehavior_h
#define EditingBehavior_h
#include "core/CoreExport.h"
#include "core/editing/EditingBehaviorTypes.h"
namespace blink {
class KeyboardEvent;
class CORE_EXPORT EditingBehavior {
public:
explicit EditingBehavior(EditingBehaviorType type)
: m_type(type)
{
}
// Individual functions for each case where we have more than one style of editing behavior.
// Create a new function for any platform difference so we can control it here.
// When extending a selection beyond the top or bottom boundary of an editable area,
// maintain the horizontal position on Windows and Android but extend it to the boundary of
// the editable content on Mac and Linux.
bool shouldMoveCaretToHorizontalBoundaryWhenPastTopOrBottom() const
{
return m_type != EditingWindowsBehavior && m_type != EditingAndroidBehavior;
}
// On Windows, selections should always be considered as directional, regardless if it is
// mouse-based or keyboard-based.
bool shouldConsiderSelectionAsDirectional() const { return m_type != EditingMacBehavior; }
// On Mac, when revealing a selection (for example as a result of a Find operation on the Browser),
// content should be scrolled such that the selection gets certer aligned.
bool shouldCenterAlignWhenSelectionIsRevealed() const { return m_type == EditingMacBehavior; }
// On Mac, style is considered present when present at the beginning of selection. On other platforms,
// style has to be present throughout the selection.
bool shouldToggleStyleBasedOnStartOfSelection() const { return m_type == EditingMacBehavior; }
// Standard Mac behavior when extending to a boundary is grow the selection rather than leaving the base
// in place and moving the extent. Matches NSTextView.
bool shouldAlwaysGrowSelectionWhenExtendingToBoundary() const { return m_type == EditingMacBehavior; }
// On Mac, when processing a contextual click, the object being clicked upon should be selected.
bool shouldSelectOnContextualMenuClick() const { return m_type == EditingMacBehavior; }
// On Mac and Windows, pressing backspace (when it isn't handled otherwise) should navigate back.
bool shouldNavigateBackOnBackspace() const
{
return m_type != EditingUnixBehavior && m_type != EditingAndroidBehavior;
}
// On Mac, selecting backwards by word/line from the middle of a word/line, and then going
// forward leaves the caret back in the middle with no selection, instead of directly selecting
// to the other end of the line/word (Unix/Windows behavior).
bool shouldExtendSelectionByWordOrLineAcrossCaret() const { return m_type != EditingMacBehavior; }
// Based on native behavior, when using ctrl(alt)+arrow to move caret by word, ctrl(alt)+left arrow moves caret to
// immediately before the word in all platforms, for example, the word break positions are: "|abc |def |hij |opq".
// But ctrl+right arrow moves caret to "abc |def |hij |opq" on Windows and "abc| def| hij| opq|" on Mac and Linux.
bool shouldSkipSpaceWhenMovingRight() const { return m_type == EditingWindowsBehavior; }
// On Mac, undo of delete/forward-delete of text should select the deleted text. On other platforms deleted text
// should not be selected and the cursor should be placed where the deletion started.
bool shouldUndoOfDeleteSelectText() const { return m_type == EditingMacBehavior; }
// Support for global selections, used on platforms like the X Window
// System that treat selection as a type of clipboard.
bool supportsGlobalSelection() const
{
return m_type != EditingWindowsBehavior && m_type != EditingMacBehavior;
}
// Convert a KeyboardEvent to a command name like "Copy", "Undo" and so on.
// If nothing, return empty string.
const char* interpretKeyEvent(const KeyboardEvent&) const;
bool shouldInsertCharacter(const KeyboardEvent&) const;
private:
EditingBehaviorType m_type;
};
} // namespace blink
#endif // EditingBehavior_h
``` |
```cmake
# This file records the Unity Build compilation rules.
# The source files in a `register_unity_group` called are compiled in a unity
# file.
# Generally, the combination rules in this file do not need to be modified.
# If there are some redefined error in compiling with the source file which
# in combination rule, you can remove the source file from the following rules.
register_unity_group(
cc
ftrl_op.cc
lars_momentum_op.cc
proximal_gd_op.cc
decayed_adagrad_op.cc
adadelta_op.cc
dpsgd_op.cc)
register_unity_group(
cu
ftrl_op.cu
lars_momentum_op.cu
momentum_op.cu
sgd_op.cu
adagrad_op.cu
decayed_adagrad_op.cu
adadelta_op.cu
lamb_op.cu)
``` |
Colasposoma austerum is a species of leaf beetle endemic to Socotra. It was described by Stefano Zoia in 2012. The species name, from austere, refers to the dark coloration of the dorsum.
References
austerum
Beetles of Asia
Endemic fauna of Socotra
Insects of the Arabian Peninsula
Beetles described in 2012 |
Celtic Ash (1957–1978) was an English-bred Thoroughbred racehorse raised in Ireland who is best known for winning the 1960 Belmont Stakes.
Background
Celtic Ash was a bay horse bred by Lord Harrington. He was out of the mare Ash Plant and sired by Sicambre, the Leading sire in France in 1966. On the advice of Irish-born trainer Tom Barry, Celtic Ash was purchased by Boston, Massachusetts banker Joseph E. O'Connell, who imported him to the United States to race for his Green Dunes Farm.
Racing career
At age two, Celtic Ash made three starts without winning, then at three made a total of six starts. He was not entered in the Kentucky Derby but won two minor races at Laurel Park Racecourse, in one of which he set a new track record time for one mile. He was then entered in the May 14, 1960, Preakness Stakes, the second leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series. Under jockey Sam Boulmetis, longshot Celtic Ash finished third behind runner-up Victoria Park and winner Bally Ache.
Unlike today, the $100,000 added Jersey Derby at Monmouth Park Racetrack was run between the Preakness and the third leg of the U.S. Triple Crown. The New Jersey race regularly drew the top three-year-olds and more than 50,000 fans attended on Memorial Day 1960 to see Celtic Ash, under future U.S. Racing Hall of Fame jockey Bill Hartack, finish third behind Bally Ache and Tompion. Hartack had ridden Venetian Way to victory in the Kentucky Derby but had been criticized for his ride on the colt after he finished fifth in the Preakness Stakes. After the Jersey Derby, Hartack accepted trainer Tom Barry's offer to ride Celtic Ash again in the upcoming Belmont Stakes.
1960 Belmont stakes
The day prior to the Belmont Stakes, betting favorite Bally Ache came up lame and was withdrawn from the 1½ mile third leg of the Triple Crown. His absence left Venetian Way ridden by Eddie Arcaro, as the favorite. However, winning the Belmont Stakes with an underdog was nothing new for Celtic Ash's owner, Joseph O'Connell. Two years earlier in 1958, he and trainer Tom Barry won the Classic with the lightly raced Irish-bred colt Cavan. On June 11, 1960, O'Connell was in a Brighton, Massachusetts, hospital and watched on television as Hartack brought his colt from last place to overtake Venetian Way in the stretch, then pull away to win easily by five and a half lengths. O'Connell did not recover from his illness and died less than a month later.
Stud record
Retired to stud duty, Celtic Ash stood in the United States from 1962 through 1964. He was then sent to Great Britain, where he stood until 1971. There, he notably sired Athens Wood, who won the 1971 St. Leger Stakes, and Hoche, winner of the 1972 Premio Presidente della Repubblica. He was also the grandsire of 1998 Grand National winner Earth Summit. Sold in 1971 to a Japanese breeding operation, Celtic Ash died in Japan at age twenty-one in 1978.
References
Celtic Ash's pedigree and partial racing stats
May 9, 1960 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Sun-Telegraph article on the 1960 Preakness Stakes
Hunter, Avalyn American Classic Pedigrees (2003) Eclipse Press
June 20, 1960 Sports Illustrated article titled Tom Barry's Waiting Game
1957 racehorse births
1978 racehorse deaths
Racehorses bred in the United Kingdom
Racehorses trained in the United States
Belmont Stakes winners
Thoroughbred family 1-w |
The Naval Aircraft Factory TG were a series of prototype seaplanes for gunnery training designed and built by the United States Navy's Naval Aircraft Factory.
Development
The TG was an equal-span biplane with tandem open cockpits. It had a large central float with a smaller stabilizing float underneath each wingtip. Five were built for evaluation designated TG-1, TG-2, TG-3, TG-4 and TG-5 and were generally similar. The TG-1, TG-3 and TG-4 had internal fuselage fuel tanks and the TG-2 and TG-5 had fuel tanks inside the central float.
Variants
TG-1
Powered by a 200hp (149kW) Liberty engine, one built.
TG-2
Powered by a 200hp (149kW) Liberty engine, one built.
TG-3
Powered by a 200hp (149kW) Aeromarine T-6 engine, one built.
TG-4
Powered by a 200hp (149kW) Aeromarine T-6 engine, one built.
TG-5
Powered by a 180hp (134kW) Wright-Hispano E-4 engine, one built.
Operator
United States Navy
Specifications (TG-2)
See also
References
1920s United States military trainer aircraft
Floatplanes
TG
Biplanes
Single-engined tractor aircraft |
KLTT (670 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Christian Talk format to the Denver, Colorado, and Colorado Springs, United States, areas. The station is currently owned by Crawford Broadcasting and is licensed to Colorado subsidiary KLZ Radio, Inc. With its 50,000-watt daytime signal, KLTT broadcasts can be received throughout most of the state. This powerful daytime signal reaches into southeastern Wyoming, northeastern New Mexico, and into the western portions of Nebraska and Kansas. At night, the station reduces power to 1,400 watts, with a directional signal to the north and south to protect Class-A clear-channel station WSCR in Chicago.
History
The station began broadcasting in early 1996, holding the call sign KLDC and airing a religious format. On April 5, 1996, its call sign was changed to KLTT.
References
External links
Official website
Radio stations established in 1996
Commerce City, Colorado
1996 establishments in Colorado
LTT |
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