text stringlengths 1 22.8M |
|---|
```php
<?php
/*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
*/
namespace Google\Service\Looker;
class Date extends \Google\Model
{
/**
* @var int
*/
public $day;
/**
* @var int
*/
public $month;
/**
* @var int
*/
public $year;
/**
* @param int
*/
public function setDay($day)
{
$this->day = $day;
}
/**
* @return int
*/
public function getDay()
{
return $this->day;
}
/**
* @param int
*/
public function setMonth($month)
{
$this->month = $month;
}
/**
* @return int
*/
public function getMonth()
{
return $this->month;
}
/**
* @param int
*/
public function setYear($year)
{
$this->year = $year;
}
/**
* @return int
*/
public function getYear()
{
return $this->year;
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(Date::class, 'Google_Service_Looker_Date');
``` |
```javascript
/**
* @license Apache-2.0
*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
'use strict';
var discreteUniform = require( '@stdlib/random/base/discrete-uniform' );
var months = require( './../lib' );
var list;
var len;
var idx;
var i;
list = months();
len = list.length;
// Select random months from the list...
for ( i = 0; i < 100; i++ ) {
idx = discreteUniform( 0, len-1 );
console.log( list[ idx ] );
}
``` |
```kotlin
package de.westnordost.streetcomplete.quests.bus_stop_bench
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.R
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.osm.geometry.ElementGeometry
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.osm.osmquests.OsmFilterQuestType
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.data.user.achievements.EditTypeAchievement.PEDESTRIAN
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.osm.Tags
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.osm.updateWithCheckDate
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.quests.YesNoQuestForm
import de.westnordost.streetcomplete.util.ktx.toYesNo
class AddBenchStatusOnBusStop : OsmFilterQuestType<Boolean>() {
override val elementFilter = """
nodes, ways, relations with
(
public_transport = platform
or (highway = bus_stop and public_transport != stop_position)
)
and physically_present != no and naptan:BusStopType != HAR
and (!bench or bench older today -4 years)
"""
override val changesetComment = "Specify whether public transport stops have benches"
override val wikiLink = "Key:bench"
override val icon = R.drawable.ic_quest_bench_public_transport
override val achievements = listOf(PEDESTRIAN)
override fun getTitle(tags: Map<String, String>) = R.string.quest_busStopBench_title2
override fun createForm() = YesNoQuestForm()
override fun applyAnswerTo(answer: Boolean, tags: Tags, geometry: ElementGeometry, timestampEdited: Long) {
tags.updateWithCheckDate("bench", answer.toYesNo())
}
}
``` |
```go
package events
import "github.com/docker/go-metrics"
var (
eventsCounter metrics.Counter
eventSubscribers metrics.Gauge
)
func init() {
ns := metrics.NewNamespace("engine", "daemon", nil)
eventsCounter = ns.NewCounter("events", "The number of events logged")
eventSubscribers = ns.NewGauge("events_subscribers", "The number of current subscribers to events", metrics.Total)
metrics.Register(ns)
}
``` |
Penne is a type of pasta.
Penne or Pennes may also refer to:
People
Penne Hackforth-Jones (born 1949), Australian actress and writer
Penne Percy Korth (born 1942), American diplomat
Lucas de Penna or Penne (c. 1325 – c. 1390), Neapolitan jurist
Luigi Durand de la Penne (1914–1992), Italian navy diver during World War II, later vice-admiral and politician
María Luisa Penne (1913–2005), Puerto Rican painter, artist, printer and educator
Harry H. Pennes (died 1963), American physician and clinical researcher
Places
Penne, Tarn, a commune in the Tarn département, France
La Penne, a commune in the Alpes-Maritimes department, France
Penne, Abruzzo, a town and comune in the province of Pescara in central Italy
Penser Joch, known as Passo di Pénnes in Italian, a mountain pass in northern Italy
Other
Penne, a form of student cap in Belgium |
```xml
interface Model {
id: number;
description: string;
fail: unknown;
}
const model: Model = {
id: 1,
description: 'Hello, World',
fail: null,
};
``` |
Palazzo Núñez-Torlonia is a palace in Rome, central Italy, the current home of the Torlonia family.
About
The palace was built in 1660 by Giovanni Antonio De Rossi for the marquis Francisco Nuñez–Sánchez. In 1806 the palace was acquired by prince Lucien Bonaparte, brother of the Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. The latter's mother, Letizia Ramolino and his brother Prince Jérôme Bonaparte lived also here. In 1842 the palace was acquired by Prince Marino Torlonia, who commissioned the restoration to Antonio Sarti, extending the front over Via Bocca di Leone.
For some time the space in the front of the palace was called Torlonia Square. In front of the entrance is the Torlonia Fountain. It consists of an ancient Roman sarcophagus resting on lion paws. Above the sarcophagus a mask pours water, which comes out of two taps in the base and flows, into a semicircular marble pond with two small columns. The fountain is inserted within an architectural element with side pillars, surmounted by an arch with the coat of arms of the Torlonia family between two lions rampant. An inscription below the arch commemorates the building of the fountain at the expense of duke Marino Torlonia in an area that belonged to him.
Alessandro Torlonia, 5th Prince di Civitella-Cesi, lived in the palace from the time of his marriage with the Infanta Beatriz of Spain until his death in 1986. At that time the owners of the Palace were the Prince Alessandro Torlonia and his two sisters the princess Donna Cristiana Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi (who died in 1970) and princess Marina Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi (who died in 1960). After Alessandro's death, Beatriz sold her part to her son-in-law Paul Annik Weiller (the father of Princess Sibilla of Luxembourg) and Francis Alexander Shields (the son of princess Marina Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi and father of actress Brooke Shields), sold his part to the architect Renato Bocchi. Later Paul Annik Weiller also sold to Bocchi his part with a condition that princess Beatriz Torlonia could remain in the palace until her death. The palace today belongs to a Japanese group and the family Torlonia has many apartments.
Beatriz of Spain died here in 2002.
References
Nunez-Torlonia
Buildings and structures completed in 1660 |
Elsholtzia penduliflora () is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae. It is native to Vietnam, and Yunnan in China, and has been introduced to Thailand. In Vietnam, E.penduliflora is claimed to be a medicinal herb good for colds and fevers. Essential oil from chùa dù can be used as a substitute for eucalyptus oil.
References
Lamiaceae
Flora of Vietnam
Flora of South-Central China
Plants described in 1918 |
Saros cycle series 162 for solar eclipses occurs at the Moon's descending node, repeating every 18 years, 11 days, starts in 2257, contains 42 events before 3000 AD, with its last event in 3501. All eclipses in this series occurs at the Moon's descending node.
This solar saros is linked to Lunar Saros 155.
Umbral eclipses
Umbral eclipses (annular, total and hybrid) can be further classified as either: 1) Central (two limits), 2) Central (one limit) or 3) Non-Central (one limit). The statistical distribution of these classes in Saros series 162 appears in the following table.
Events
References
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsaros/SEsaros162.html
External links
Saros cycle 162 - Information and visualization
Solar saros series |
The Trusty Servant is an emblematic figure in a painting at Winchester College and the name of the college's alumni magazine.
The wall-painting called The Trusty Servant was painted by John Hoskins in 1579. It was reworked by William Cave in 1809, giving the painting now on display there. It hangs outside the kitchen of Winchester College in Hampshire, England.
The American author Arthur Cleveland Coxe (1818-1896) described "the time-honoured Hircocervus, or picture of 'the Trusty-servant,' which hangs near the kitchen, and which emblematically sets forth those virtues in domestics, of which we Americans know nothing. It is a figure, part man, part porker, part deer, and part donkey; with a padlock on his mouth, and various other symbols in his hands and about his person, the whole signifying a most valuable character."
The painting of The Trusty Servant had a didactic function: it is accompanied by allegorical verses that associate the servant's various animal parts with distinctive virtues that the students of Winchester College were meant to follow.
Legacy
In 2014 Winchester College commissioned a medal by Old Wykehamist Anthony Smith to be awarded to staff in recognition of "Long And Loyal Service". The medal features a relief sculpture of The Trusty Servant as it appears in the painting.
The Trusty Servant is the name of the Winchester College alumni magazine.
There is a Trusty Servant Inn at Minstead in the New Forest.
References
Fictional hybrid life forms
Fantasy creatures
Winchester College |
Tsen brider (in English: "Ten Brothers") is a Eastern-European Jewish folk song written in Yiddish. The original version of the song tells the story of ten brothers, each of whom dies from starvation as the narrative progresses until there is only one left.
The oldest transcription of Tsen Briden was documented in Imperial Russia in 1901. During World War II, an adaptation of the song was composed and performed by Jewish prisoners at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. In the 1970's, a modern version of Tsen Brider composed by Zupfgeigenhansel became popular in Post-War Germany.
Background
The earliest transcription of Tsen Brider was published in the Russian Empire by Jewish ethnologists Saul Ginsburg and Pesach Marek in 1901. It is composed of ten stanzas and narrates the story of ten Jewish brothers who work as merchants, nine of whom eventually die from starvation. The song features a regressive structure, similar to Ten Little Indians, with each verse reducing the number of characters by a factor of one. The first verse introduces the ten brothers, and in each of the following verses one brother dies. In the last verse, only one brother is left.
An American edition of Tsen Brider was published in New York by the Hebrew Publishing Company in 1924. In this version of the song, none of the brothers dies, instead they succumb to occupational hazards (such as getting drunk or singed). Decades later, an English-language version of the song titled "Ten Brothers" was published in 1956 by Harry Coopersmith. In his book, Coopersmith noted that "the Jews in Europe were denied permission to practice professions, enter into business or cultivate the land, hence they had to earn a living in areas which others disdained. Their burden was lightened by the humor they possessed."
In the 1970's, another version of Tsen Brider was recorded by Zupfgeigenhansel, a German band known for its volkslied recordings, which became popular in Post-War Germany.
Holocaust adaptation
A German-language adaptation of Tsen Brider, titled Jüdischer Todessang, was composed by Jewish musician and Socialist activist Martin Rosenberg prior to his deportation from the Sachsenhausen concentration camp to Auschwitz in 1942.
In Rosenberg's version of the song, which is composed of two stanzas, each brother is executed one by one in a death camp. The lyrics also play on the word "gas" (which means "street" in Yiddish and "gas" in German) in a line referencing gas chambers. In some of performances, Rosenberg would ask klezmer musicians to play the totentanz during the refrain. Jüdischer Todessang was periodically rehearsed and performed by a clandestine choir of Jewish prisoners at Sachsenhausen.
Rosenberg and his chrous all died in Auschwitz, none of their performances was ever recorded on audio. His song was preserved by Holocaust survivor Aleksander Kulisiewicz, who at the time was a friend of his in Sachsenhausen. Kulisiewicz was freed from the concentration camp by the Soviet Army in May 1945. He made a private release of Jüdischer Todessang in 1947 and performed it in multiple concerts throughout Europe.
See also
Antisemitism in the Russian Empire
Holocaust in Poland
References
Jewish songs
Songs in Yiddish |
Talk to the Hand: Live in Michigan is a live album and DVD concert video release from Canadian band Barenaked Ladies, produced by Morningstar Entertainment, Groovepix, and Desperation Records. The DVD is their third DVD-video release, and their first feature-length concert video offered for sale. The CD is their second live album after Rock Spectacle (1996). The concert was recorded at the DTE Energy Music Theatre in Clarkston, Michigan on 15 June 2007 during the BLAM Tour, in conjunction with the local Detroit PBS affiliate, WTVS. The special aired on the SUN TV on 12 October 2007.
The DVD is available both separately and packaged together with a CD version in one package, was released on 6 November 2007. Both include 15 songs of the 24 that were performed, an adlib, and several banters. Bonus features on the DVD include a 12-minute "behind the scenes" featurette including band interviews, soundchecks and concert photos. The CD runs approximately 68 minutes, while the DVD runs 90 including special features. The video is in 16:9 widescreen format, and 5.1 DTS surround sound, with an option for standard Stereo sound.
The cover art for Talk to the Hand: Live in Michigan is in the same style as that of Barenaked Ladies Are Me / Barenaked Ladies Are Men and its related merchandise, and was designed by Team Macho. The products are sold in eco-friendly packaging composed of 100% post-consumer recycled products, printed with vegetable inks, and wrapped with Bi-Ax transparent film. The disc trays of the DVD-only version are made of PaperFoam, which is produced from potato or tapioca starches, while the CD/DVD combo package contains the discs and booklet in cardboard pockets.
Track listing
CD and DVD releases include ad-libbed banters after "The Old Apartment", "Sound of Your Voice", "Too Little Too Late" and "For You".
Songs performed but not included are "Maybe Katie", "In the Car", "Running Out of Ink", "Get In Line", "Tonight is the Night I Fell Asleep at the Wheel" (acoustic), "Alcohol", "It's All Been Done", "Lovers in a Dangerous Time" and "Call and Answer".
References
Barenaked Ladies live albums
Barenaked Ladies video albums
2007 live albums
Live video albums
2007 video albums |
```go
// Code generated by private/model/cli/gen-api/main.go. DO NOT EDIT.
package internetmonitor
import (
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/private/protocol"
)
const (
// ErrCodeAccessDeniedException for service response error code
// "AccessDeniedException".
//
// You don't have sufficient permission to perform this action.
ErrCodeAccessDeniedException = "AccessDeniedException"
// ErrCodeBadRequestException for service response error code
// "BadRequestException".
//
// A bad request was received.
ErrCodeBadRequestException = "BadRequestException"
// ErrCodeConflictException for service response error code
// "ConflictException".
//
// The requested resource is in use.
ErrCodeConflictException = "ConflictException"
// ErrCodeInternalServerErrorException for service response error code
// "InternalServerErrorException".
//
// There was an internal server error.
ErrCodeInternalServerErrorException = "InternalServerErrorException"
// ErrCodeInternalServerException for service response error code
// "InternalServerException".
//
// An internal error occurred.
ErrCodeInternalServerException = "InternalServerException"
// ErrCodeLimitExceededException for service response error code
// "LimitExceededException".
//
// The request exceeded a service quota.
ErrCodeLimitExceededException = "LimitExceededException"
// ErrCodeNotFoundException for service response error code
// "NotFoundException".
//
// The request specifies something that doesn't exist.
ErrCodeNotFoundException = "NotFoundException"
// ErrCodeResourceNotFoundException for service response error code
// "ResourceNotFoundException".
//
// The request specifies a resource that doesn't exist.
ErrCodeResourceNotFoundException = "ResourceNotFoundException"
// ErrCodeThrottlingException for service response error code
// "ThrottlingException".
//
// The request was denied due to request throttling.
ErrCodeThrottlingException = "ThrottlingException"
// ErrCodeTooManyRequestsException for service response error code
// "TooManyRequestsException".
//
// There were too many requests.
ErrCodeTooManyRequestsException = "TooManyRequestsException"
// ErrCodeValidationException for service response error code
// "ValidationException".
//
// Invalid request.
ErrCodeValidationException = "ValidationException"
)
var exceptionFromCode = map[string]func(protocol.ResponseMetadata) error{
"AccessDeniedException": newErrorAccessDeniedException,
"BadRequestException": newErrorBadRequestException,
"ConflictException": newErrorConflictException,
"InternalServerErrorException": newErrorInternalServerErrorException,
"InternalServerException": newErrorInternalServerException,
"LimitExceededException": newErrorLimitExceededException,
"NotFoundException": newErrorNotFoundException,
"ResourceNotFoundException": newErrorResourceNotFoundException,
"ThrottlingException": newErrorThrottlingException,
"TooManyRequestsException": newErrorTooManyRequestsException,
"ValidationException": newErrorValidationException,
}
``` |
```javascript
/*!
* Bootstrap-select v1.10.0 (path_to_url
*
*/
(function (root, factory) {
if (typeof define === 'function' && define.amd) {
// AMD. Register as an anonymous module unless amdModuleId is set
define(["jquery"], function (a0) {
return (factory(a0));
});
} else if (typeof exports === 'object') {
// Node. Does not work with strict CommonJS, but
// only CommonJS-like environments that support module.exports,
// like Node.
module.exports = factory(require("jquery"));
} else {
factory(jQuery);
}
}(this, function (jQuery) {
(function ($) {
$.fn.selectpicker.defaults = {
noneSelectedText: 'Vlasszon!',
noneResultsText: 'Nincs tallat {0}',
countSelectedText: function (numSelected, numTotal) {
return '{0} elem kivlasztva';
},
maxOptionsText: function (numAll, numGroup) {
return [
'Legfeljebb {n} elem vlaszthat',
'A csoportban legfeljebb {n} elem vlaszthat'
];
},
selectAllText: 'Mind',
deselectAllText: 'Egyik sem',
multipleSeparator: ', '
};
})(jQuery);
}));
``` |
Fernando Rocha (born 1975) is a Portuguese comedian, actor, and TV presenter, whose career as a professional performer began in 2000. He has performed in Portugal, and internationally, including Angola, which has a majority Portuguese speaking population, and in several Portuguese-descendant communities in the United States.
References
"Promoter Zona Jovem holds big show of humour", Angola Press, July 28, 2009
"Cine Atlantico records high turnout for humorist Fernando Rocha", Angola Press, August 10, 2009
Rocha and Association Football at worldsoccerbars.com
“A Minha Vida Numa Anedota” (biography of Rocha), Natacha Lima Reis. Prime Books, 2006 (in Portuguese)
External links
Rocha website (in Portuguese)
Portuguese male comedians
Portuguese television presenters
Portuguese male actors
Living people
1975 births
People from Porto |
Minya Csaba Gál (born Cluj-Napoca, 7 March 1985) is a Romanian rugby union footballer. He plays a centre.
Gál first played at U Cluj, moving to Dinamo Bucharest, in 2004. He currently plays for CSM Baia Mare. He also plays internationally for București Oaks in the European Challenge Cup.
He was selected for the Romania squad that played at the 2007 Rugby World Cup. The Romanian centre played in three matches during the competition. He also competed at the 2011 Rugby World Cup.
Gál has currently 88 caps for Romania, with 3 tries and 1 conversion scored, 17 points on aggregate. He scored his first try in the decisive 2011 Rugby World Cup Final Place Play-off against Uruguay, on 27 November 2010 (won 39–12).
Since June 2021, Gal is the current president of U Cluj Rugby, which plays in the Romanian SuperLiga.
References
1985 births
Living people
Romanian rugby union players
Rugby union centres
Romanian sportspeople of Hungarian descent
Romania international rugby union players
CSM Știința Baia Mare players
București Wolves players
CS Universitatea Cluj-Napoca (rugby union) players
Sportspeople from Cluj-Napoca
2007 Rugby World Cup players
2011 Rugby World Cup players
2015 Rugby World Cup players |
Laget Church () is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Tvedestrand Municipality in Agder county, Norway. It is located in the village of Laget. It is one of the churches for the Holt parish which is part of the Aust-Nedenes prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Agder og Telemark. The white, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1908 using plans drawn up by the architect Henrik Nissen. The church seats about 250 people.
The church was first built in 1908 as a chapel of ease for the northern part of the Holt Church parish. The church was consecrated on 11 September 1908. In 1967, the roof and tower were repaired.
See also
List of churches in Agder og Telemark
References
Tvedestrand
Churches in Agder
Wooden churches in Norway
20th-century Church of Norway church buildings
Churches completed in 1908
1908 establishments in Norway |
Eirene Mort (1879–1977) was an Australian artist, art teacher, printmaker, cartoonist, fashion designer and one of several founders of the Society of Arts and Crafts of New South Wales.
Early life
Eirene Mort was born on 17 November 1879 at Woollahra. Her parents were Canon Henry Wallace Mort, an Anglican clergyman, and Kate Macintosh who was the daughter of Robert Isaacs. Mort attended St Catherine's Clergy Daughters' School in Waverley where her headmistress, Helen Phillips, encouraged her pursuit of art and allowed her to freely use the art studio which Phillips had donated to the school in 1884 and which is now used as a museum. Mort won the University of Sydney medal for Design in 1897 in her final school exams.
Mort studied painting with Antonio Dattilo-Rubbo and Albert Fullwood. In London, she studied at the Grosvenor Life School, the Royal School of Art Needlework and the Royal College of Art, South Kensington.
Career
Mort illustrated articles she wrote for the Sydney Mail and Art and Architecture, and illustrated several books including Florence Sulman's A Popular Guide to the Wild Flowers of New South Wales (1913), The Story of Architecture (1942), and Selwyn Mort's Coins of the Hapsburg Emperors 1619–1919. She also wrote and illustrated books about Australian fauna and flora for children including Country cousins. Mort favoured Australian materials and motifs in the decorative arts.
Mort and Nora Weston established a graphic design studio in Sydney in 1906. They offered craft, drawing, design, wood carving, metalwork and book-binding lessons.
Mort was a founder of the Society of Arts and Crafts of New South Wales and one of the organisers of the Australian Exhibition of Women's Work in 1907 which featured 16,000 exhibits and more than 250,000 people in attendance.
Mort moved to Mittagong in 1937 and taught at Frensham School. After retiring from the school in 1949, she continued to pursue her artistic career.
The National Gallery of Australia collection includes 349 items of Mort's work.
Personal life
Mort lived with her partner, the wood artist Nora "Chips" Weston, in Vaucluse and later in the southern highlands. Mort died at Bowral on 1 December 1977.
References
Further reading
Joan Kerr and John McPhee, "First Australian Exhibition of Women's Work" in Heritage: the National Women's Art Book: 500 works by 500 Australian women artists from colonial times (Roseville East: G+B Arts International, 1995)
Mort family. (n.d.). Mort Family Papers Mainly of the Mort and Weston Families, Ca.1066-1943, Transcribed with Connecting Narrative by Eirene Mort, 1964.
1879 births
1977 deaths
19th-century Australian women artists
20th-century Australian women artists
Australian LGBT artists |
```objective-c
// UIImageView+AFNetworking.m
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
#import "UIImageView+AFNetworking.h"
#import <objc/runtime.h>
#if defined(__IPHONE_OS_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED)
#import "AFHTTPRequestOperation.h"
@interface AFImageCache : NSCache <AFImageCache>
@end
#pragma mark -
@interface UIImageView (_AFNetworking)
@property (readwrite, nonatomic, strong, setter = af_setImageRequestOperation:) AFHTTPRequestOperation *af_imageRequestOperation;
@end
@implementation UIImageView (_AFNetworking)
+ (NSOperationQueue *)af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue {
static NSOperationQueue *_af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue = nil;
static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
_af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue = [[NSOperationQueue alloc] init];
_af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue.maxConcurrentOperationCount = NSOperationQueueDefaultMaxConcurrentOperationCount;
});
return _af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue;
}
- (AFHTTPRequestOperation *)af_imageRequestOperation {
return (AFHTTPRequestOperation *)objc_getAssociatedObject(self, @selector(af_imageRequestOperation));
}
- (void)af_setImageRequestOperation:(AFHTTPRequestOperation *)imageRequestOperation {
objc_setAssociatedObject(self, @selector(af_imageRequestOperation), imageRequestOperation, OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN_NONATOMIC);
}
@end
#pragma mark -
@implementation UIImageView (AFNetworking)
@dynamic imageResponseSerializer;
+ (id <AFImageCache>)sharedImageCache {
static AFImageCache *_af_defaultImageCache = nil;
static dispatch_once_t oncePredicate;
dispatch_once(&oncePredicate, ^{
_af_defaultImageCache = [[AFImageCache alloc] init];
[[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserverForName:UIApplicationDidReceiveMemoryWarningNotification object:nil queue:[NSOperationQueue mainQueue] usingBlock:^(NSNotification * __unused notification) {
[_af_defaultImageCache removeAllObjects];
}];
});
#pragma clang diagnostic push
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wgnu"
return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, @selector(sharedImageCache)) ?: _af_defaultImageCache;
#pragma clang diagnostic pop
}
+ (void)setSharedImageCache:(id <AFImageCache>)imageCache {
objc_setAssociatedObject(self, @selector(sharedImageCache), imageCache, OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN_NONATOMIC);
}
#pragma mark -
- (id <AFURLResponseSerialization>)imageResponseSerializer {
static id <AFURLResponseSerialization> _af_defaultImageResponseSerializer = nil;
static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
_af_defaultImageResponseSerializer = [AFImageResponseSerializer serializer];
});
#pragma clang diagnostic push
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wgnu"
return objc_getAssociatedObject(self, @selector(imageResponseSerializer)) ?: _af_defaultImageResponseSerializer;
#pragma clang diagnostic pop
}
- (void)setImageResponseSerializer:(id <AFURLResponseSerialization>)serializer {
objc_setAssociatedObject(self, @selector(imageResponseSerializer), serializer, OBJC_ASSOCIATION_RETAIN_NONATOMIC);
}
#pragma mark -
- (void)setImageWithURL:(NSURL *)url {
[self setImageWithURL:url placeholderImage:nil];
}
- (void)setImageWithURL:(NSURL *)url
placeholderImage:(UIImage *)placeholderImage
{
NSMutableURLRequest *request = [NSMutableURLRequest requestWithURL:url];
[request addValue:@"image/*" forHTTPHeaderField:@"Accept"];
[self setImageWithURLRequest:request placeholderImage:placeholderImage success:nil failure:nil];
}
- (void)setImageWithURLRequest:(NSURLRequest *)urlRequest
placeholderImage:(UIImage *)placeholderImage
success:(void (^)(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, UIImage *image))success
failure:(void (^)(NSURLRequest *request, NSHTTPURLResponse *response, NSError *error))failure
{
[self cancelImageRequestOperation];
UIImage *cachedImage = [[[self class] sharedImageCache] cachedImageForRequest:urlRequest];
if (cachedImage) {
if (success) {
success(nil, nil, cachedImage);
} else {
self.image = cachedImage;
}
self.af_imageRequestOperation = nil;
} else {
if (placeholderImage) {
self.image = placeholderImage;
}
__weak __typeof(self)weakSelf = self;
self.af_imageRequestOperation = [[AFHTTPRequestOperation alloc] initWithRequest:urlRequest];
self.af_imageRequestOperation.responseSerializer = self.imageResponseSerializer;
[self.af_imageRequestOperation setCompletionBlockWithSuccess:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, id responseObject) {
__strong __typeof(weakSelf)strongSelf = weakSelf;
if ([[urlRequest URL] isEqual:[strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation.request URL]]) {
if (success) {
success(urlRequest, operation.response, responseObject);
} else if (responseObject) {
strongSelf.image = responseObject;
}
if (operation == strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation){
strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation = nil;
}
}
[[[strongSelf class] sharedImageCache] cacheImage:responseObject forRequest:urlRequest];
} failure:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, NSError *error) {
__strong __typeof(weakSelf)strongSelf = weakSelf;
if ([[urlRequest URL] isEqual:[strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation.request URL]]) {
if (failure) {
failure(urlRequest, operation.response, error);
}
if (operation == strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation){
strongSelf.af_imageRequestOperation = nil;
}
}
}];
[[[self class] af_sharedImageRequestOperationQueue] addOperation:self.af_imageRequestOperation];
}
}
- (void)cancelImageRequestOperation {
[self.af_imageRequestOperation cancel];
self.af_imageRequestOperation = nil;
}
@end
#pragma mark -
static inline NSString * AFImageCacheKeyFromURLRequest(NSURLRequest *request) {
return [[request URL] absoluteString];
}
@implementation AFImageCache
- (UIImage *)cachedImageForRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request {
switch ([request cachePolicy]) {
case NSURLRequestReloadIgnoringCacheData:
case NSURLRequestReloadIgnoringLocalAndRemoteCacheData:
return nil;
default:
break;
}
return [self objectForKey:AFImageCacheKeyFromURLRequest(request)];
}
- (void)cacheImage:(UIImage *)image
forRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request
{
if (image && request) {
[self setObject:image forKey:AFImageCacheKeyFromURLRequest(request)];
}
}
@end
#endif
``` |
```xml
/*
* Wire
*
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program 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
*
* along with this program. If not, see path_to_url
*
*/
import {ClientType, RegisteredClient} from '@wireapp/api-client/lib/client/';
import type {RootState} from '../reducer';
export const getClients = (state: RootState) => state.clientState.clients || [];
export const getCurrentSelfClient = (state: RootState): RegisteredClient | null => state.clientState.currentClient;
export const hasLoadedClients = (state: RootState) => state.clientState.clients !== null;
export const isNewCurrentSelfClient = (state: RootState): boolean => state.clientState.isNewClient;
export const getPermanentClients = (state: RootState) =>
getClients(state).filter(client => client.type === ClientType.PERMANENT) || [];
export const getError = (state: RootState) => state.clientState.error;
export const isFetching = (state: RootState) => state.clientState.fetching;
``` |
```xml
<epp xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:epp-1.0">
<command>
<update>
<domain:update
xmlns:domain="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:domain-1.0">
<domain:name>example.tld</domain:name>
<domain:add>
<domain:status s="clientHold" />
</domain:add>
</domain:update>
</update>
<extension>
<rgp:update xmlns:rgp="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:rgp-1.0">
<rgp:restore op="request"/>
</rgp:update>
</extension>
<clTRID>ABC-12345</clTRID>
</command>
</epp>
``` |
```php
<?php
/*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
*/
namespace Google\Service\CloudSearch;
class User extends \Google\Collection
{
protected $collection_key = 'phoneNumber';
/**
* @var string
*/
public $avatarUrl;
protected $blockRelationshipType = AppsDynamiteSharedUserBlockRelationship::class;
protected $blockRelationshipDataType = '';
protected $botInfoType = BotInfo::class;
protected $botInfoDataType = '';
/**
* @var bool
*/
public $deleted;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $email;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $firstName;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $gender;
protected $idType = UserId::class;
protected $idDataType = '';
/**
* @var bool
*/
public $isAnonymous;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $lastName;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $name;
protected $organizationInfoType = AppsDynamiteSharedOrganizationInfo::class;
protected $organizationInfoDataType = '';
protected $phoneNumberType = AppsDynamiteSharedPhoneNumber::class;
protected $phoneNumberDataType = 'array';
/**
* @var string
*/
public $userAccountState;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $userProfileVisibility;
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setAvatarUrl($avatarUrl)
{
$this->avatarUrl = $avatarUrl;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getAvatarUrl()
{
return $this->avatarUrl;
}
/**
* @param AppsDynamiteSharedUserBlockRelationship
*/
public function setBlockRelationship(AppsDynamiteSharedUserBlockRelationship $blockRelationship)
{
$this->blockRelationship = $blockRelationship;
}
/**
* @return AppsDynamiteSharedUserBlockRelationship
*/
public function getBlockRelationship()
{
return $this->blockRelationship;
}
/**
* @param BotInfo
*/
public function setBotInfo(BotInfo $botInfo)
{
$this->botInfo = $botInfo;
}
/**
* @return BotInfo
*/
public function getBotInfo()
{
return $this->botInfo;
}
/**
* @param bool
*/
public function setDeleted($deleted)
{
$this->deleted = $deleted;
}
/**
* @return bool
*/
public function getDeleted()
{
return $this->deleted;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setEmail($email)
{
$this->email = $email;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getEmail()
{
return $this->email;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setFirstName($firstName)
{
$this->firstName = $firstName;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getFirstName()
{
return $this->firstName;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setGender($gender)
{
$this->gender = $gender;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getGender()
{
return $this->gender;
}
/**
* @param UserId
*/
public function setId(UserId $id)
{
$this->id = $id;
}
/**
* @return UserId
*/
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
/**
* @param bool
*/
public function setIsAnonymous($isAnonymous)
{
$this->isAnonymous = $isAnonymous;
}
/**
* @return bool
*/
public function getIsAnonymous()
{
return $this->isAnonymous;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setLastName($lastName)
{
$this->lastName = $lastName;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getLastName()
{
return $this->lastName;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setName($name)
{
$this->name = $name;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getName()
{
return $this->name;
}
/**
* @param AppsDynamiteSharedOrganizationInfo
*/
public function setOrganizationInfo(AppsDynamiteSharedOrganizationInfo $organizationInfo)
{
$this->organizationInfo = $organizationInfo;
}
/**
* @return AppsDynamiteSharedOrganizationInfo
*/
public function getOrganizationInfo()
{
return $this->organizationInfo;
}
/**
* @param AppsDynamiteSharedPhoneNumber[]
*/
public function setPhoneNumber($phoneNumber)
{
$this->phoneNumber = $phoneNumber;
}
/**
* @return AppsDynamiteSharedPhoneNumber[]
*/
public function getPhoneNumber()
{
return $this->phoneNumber;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setUserAccountState($userAccountState)
{
$this->userAccountState = $userAccountState;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getUserAccountState()
{
return $this->userAccountState;
}
/**
* @param string
*/
public function setUserProfileVisibility($userProfileVisibility)
{
$this->userProfileVisibility = $userProfileVisibility;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function getUserProfileVisibility()
{
return $this->userProfileVisibility;
}
}
// Adding a class alias for backwards compatibility with the previous class name.
class_alias(User::class, 'Google_Service_CloudSearch_User');
``` |
Azochis is a genus of moths of the family Crambidae. The genus was erected by Francis Walker in 1859.
Species
Azochis camptozonalis Hampson, 1913
Azochis cirrhigeralis Dognin, 1908
Azochis curvilinealis Schaus, 1912
Azochis cymographalis Hampson, 1918
Azochis ectangulalis (Hampson, 1913)
Azochis essequibalis Schaus, 1924
Azochis euvexalis (Möschler, 1890)
Azochis gripusalis Walker, 1859
Azochis mactalis (C. Felder, R. Felder & Rogenhofer, 1875)
Azochis oncalis Schaus, 1912
Azochis patronalis (Möschler, 1882)
Azochis pieralis (Walker, 1859)
Azochis rufidiscalis Hampson, 1904
Azochis rufifrontalis (Hampson, 1895)
Azochis ruscialis (Druce, 1895)
Azochis trichotarsalis Hampson, 1918
References
Spilomelinae
Crambidae genera
Taxa named by Francis Walker (entomologist) |
"The Crate" is a short story by Stephen King, first published in the July 1979 issue of Gallery. In 1982, the story was adapted as a segment in the movie Creepshow, and included in comic-book form in the Creepshow graphic novella.
Plot
An old wooden crate, marked from an 1834 Arctic expedition, is discovered by a janitor beneath the basement stairs at the zoology department of Horlicks University. He notifies Dexter Stanley, the school's biology professor, and together they open it to discover the crate contains a small yet powerful – and hungry – beast, still alive after 140 years. The creature kills and eats the janitor, as well as Stanley's grad student Charlie Gereson – consuming them entirely, leaving only scraps of clothing behind. In a daze, Stanley flees to the home of his friend, English professor Henry Northrup. He tells Henry the whole story, and Northrup believes him, seeing the crate-dwelling beast as a way to rid himself of his verbally abusive, alcoholic wife, Wilma.
He dopes Stanley's drink, and while Stanley is unconscious Henry writes and leaves a letter for Wilma to find and then drives to the University where he cleans up the blood and remaining scraps from the beast. Wilma meanwhile comes home and finds the letter and after reading it races up to the University. Henry had led her to believe in the note that Stanley had attacked a female grad student earlier and that she was now hiding underneath the stairs and that only Wilma would be able to talk her out. As Wilma peers under the stairs looking for the girl, Henry quickly comes up and pushes her from behind up against the beast's crate and starts screaming for it to come out and feed on her. After an initial delay that sees Wilma start to berate Henry, the beast – Northrup likens it to a Tasmanian devil, albeit possibly having six legs – does indeed appear and eat Wilma completely, then retreats back into its crate.
As Henry carefully loads the crate into another larger crate for disposal, he notes that Wilma's face (and only her face) is still visible in the crate. Northrup drives the crate within a crate to a local quarry and tips the entire cargo into the deep quarry lake.
Upon his return home Stanley wakes up, and the two decide to keep quiet about the entire incident – Stanley has gained a friend, and Northrup has lost his abusive wife, a situation that both are happy with.
Film adaptation
The story was adapted as a segment in the film Creepshow. Although there are numerous small changes, the film version remains essentially faithful to the written source material. The changes include the depiction of the beast as a small ape-like creature with a mouth full of razor-sharp teeth, and the beast breaking out of the waterlogged crate after being dumped in the lake.
Production designer Cletus Anderson made three prop crates for this segment. A bloody crate, formerly owned by director George A. Romero, is owned by David Burian, prop collector and film archivist. The other two crates are owned by KNB FX co-owner Greg Nicotero (who purchased it from special effects artist Tom Savini) and Creepshow soundtrack composer John Harrison.
In popular culture
In the end of the episode "The Things In Oakwood's Past" in Creepshow, a news caster at the end of the episode mentions a crate being found at the bottom of Riders Quarry, where the crate had been deposited in the end of the movie.
Publications
"The Crate" has not yet been collected in a Stephen King collection, but it has been printed a few times:
Gallery (July 1979, magazine)
Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural – edited by Bill Pronzini (Arbor House/Priam Books, 1980)
Great Tales of Horror & the Supernatural – edited by Bill Pronzini (Galahad Books, 1981)
Fantasy Annual III – edited by Terry Carr (Pocket Books, 1981)
Creepshow – as a graphic novella with art by Berni Wrightson (Plume, 1982)
Classic Tales of Horror & the Supernatural – edited by Bill Pronzini, Barry N. Malzberg, Martin Greenberg (Quill, 1991)
Shivers VI – edited by Richard Chizmar (Cemetery Dance Publications, 2011)
See also
Stephen King short fiction bibliography
External links
Short stories by Stephen King
Works originally published in Gallery (magazine)
1979 short stories
Short stories adapted into films
Creepshow |
Retha Swindell is an American retired athlete. She was the first black woman to play with the Texas Longhorns women's basketball team and was one of the UT women's basketball program's first two All-Americans. During her tenure, she scored 1,795 points and 1,759 rebounds.
Early life
Swindell was born and raised in Texas, where she attended Center High School. During her high school career, she competed in track and basketball. In 1973, she set a national record of 37 feet, 10 inches at the University Interscholastic League Class A Girls State Track and Field meet. The following year, Swindell also won the high jump at 4-feet, 10-inches, placed first in the long jump at 16-feet, 4-inches, and also won first in the triple jump at 35-feet, 10 -inches. Beyond track, Swindell also played center in women's basketball and was named all-district for three consecutive years and all-state for two consecutive years. As a result of her athleticism, Swindell was recruited by coach Rod Page to join the Texas Longhorns women's basketball team on academic scholarships.
Career
Following the passing of Title IX, the Texas Longhorns women's basketball transitioned from an intramural sport to a varsity sport. Upon joining the team, she changed her position from guard and had to learn how to shoot the ball. As a freshman, Swindell made it to the final cuts of the 1976 Montreal Olympic women's basketball team tryouts. As a junior, she averaged 11 points per game and hit 19 in the 1977–78 season's opener while recording 17 rebounds. She also changed her major from computer science to physical education. At the conclusion of the season, Swindell earned a place on the United States international touring team. In her senior season, Swindell averaged 9.0 points and 8.4 rebounds while also leading the team in blocked shots. As such, she was nominated team MVP for the second time in her career. Swindell concluded her collegiate career with 1,795 points and 1,759 rebounds. In June 1979, Swindell was drafted 13th overall by the Chicago Hustle of the Women's Professional Basketball League.
Upon graduating from UT, Swindell spent time with the United States Select women's basketball team and two-years in the now-defunct Women's Professional Basketball League. She spent one season with the Chicago Hustle before being traded to the Milwaukee Express who subsequently folded. As such, she joined the Dallas Diamonds as a free agent and helped them to the championship game against Nebraska. In 1986, Swindell replaced Gloria Pruitt as head coach of the girl's varsity basketball program at Robert E. Lee High School. In 2001, Swindell was recognized for her collegiate career with an induction into the University of Texas' Women's Athletics Hall of Honor.
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
American women's basketball players
Texas Longhorns women's basketball players
African-American basketball players
University of Texas alumni
Women's Professional Basketball League players |
Sir Henry Watson Parker, (1 June 1808 – 2 February 1881) was Premier of New South Wales. He fitted into colonial society and politics in the era before responsible government, but his style was not suited to the democratic politics that began to develop in 1856.
Biography
Parker was the fourth son of Thomas Watson Parker and his wife Mary, née Cornell, of Lewisham, Kent, England. In order to improve his poor health, he joined the British East India Company and travelled to India, China and the Cape of Good Hope. Subsequently he toured France, Holland and Belgium, before securing employment in 1837 as private secretary to Sir George Gipps. In 1838 in this capacity he accompanied Gipps, now the incoming colonial Governor, to the Colony of New South Wales.
In 1843 Parker married Emmeline Emily, third daughter of John Macarthur, which further linked him to the conservative colonial establishment.
In 1846 he was nominated by Gipps to become a member of the Legislative Council. In May of that year he was elected Chairman of Committees (Deputy presiding officer of the upper house) at a salary of £250 (raised to £500 in 1853), and continued to be re-elected to this position until the introduction of responsible government in 1856.
Parker was elected as member for Parramatta in the first Legislative Assembly and was a candidate for the speakership in May, but was defeated by one vote, with Daniel Cooper being elected. In September 1856 John Hay carried a vote of no-confidence in the Cowper ministry. He recommended to Governor William Denison that Parker would be the most likely man to conciliate parties, and that he should be asked to form a coalition government.
Premier
Parker offered seats in the cabinet to Cowper and Stuart Donaldson, the preceding premiers, but Cowper declined. In March 1857 Parker passed an act re-establishing the Sydney municipal council, and other useful legislation was also passed. It had been intended to bring in a land bill but the government was defeated on its electoral bill, and Parker resigned on 4 September 1857. In 1858 he returned to England. He does not appear to have ever revisited Australia, and died at Richmond, London, in 1881. He was survived by his wife, without issue, and left an estate of £140,000.
Honours
Parker was knighted in 1858 and created Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1877.
See also
Parker ministry
Notes
1808 births
1881 deaths
Colonial Secretaries of New South Wales
Knights Bachelor
Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
English emigrants to colonial Australia
Premiers of New South Wales
Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
19th-century Australian politicians |
Korsvold is a Norwegian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Åge Korsvold (born 1946), Norwegian businessman
Anne Marit Korsvold (born 1966), Norwegian ski-orienteering competitor
Norwegian-language surnames |
The 12th Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences Awards Night was presented by the Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences in 1964 honoring the outstanding achievements of Filipino films for the year 1963.
Sapagkat Kami'y Tao Lamang was the most nominated film of the 12th FAMAS Awards with 10 nominations and won 7 awards including the best actor award for Eddie Rodriguez. However, it failed to win the most coveted award and that is the FAMAS Award for Best Picture which goes to Sigaw Ng Digmaan a war movie which starred Fernando Poe Jr.
Awards
Major Awards
Winners are listed first and highlighted with boldface.
Special Awardee
Dr. Ciriaco Santiago Memorial Award
Eddie Romero (for "Cavalry Command")
References
External links
FAMAS Awards
FAMAS Award
FAMAS
FAMAS |
```html+erb
<div class="content"><%= contents %></div>
<div id="sidebar"><%= include.call("sidebar.html") %></div>
<!-- mobile only -->
<div id="mobile-header">
<a class="menu-button" onclick="document.body.classList.toggle('sidebar-open')"></a>
</div>
``` |
The Gunung Gading National Park is a national park in Lundu District, Kuching Division, Sarawak, Malaysia. The park is located roughly two hours drive from Kuching, and is a popular destination for seeing the Rafflesia flower in bloom. After 10 years as a conservation zone to protect the Rafflesia, the park opened to visitors in 1994.
The park also has a number of jungle trails to waterfalls or to the 965m summit of Gunung Gading.
One of the features of the park is great biodiversity.
Flora
This is home to Rafflesia, the largest flower in the world that can reach a size of 1 meter in diameter.
See also
List of national parks of Malaysia
External links
Gunung Gading National Park in Kuching Sarawak
Gunung Gading National Park - Sarawak Forestry Corporation
References
Lundu District
National parks of Sarawak
Borneo lowland rain forests |
```antlr
/*
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
lexer grammar Symbol;
AND_: '&&';
OR_: '||';
NOT_: '!';
TILDE_: '~';
VERTICALBAR_: '|';
AMPERSAND_: '&';
SIGNEDLEFTSHIFT_: '<<';
SIGNEDRIGHTSHIFT_: '>>';
CARET_: '^';
MOD_: '%';
COLON_: ':';
PLUS_: '+';
MINUS_: '-';
ASTERISK_: '*';
SLASH_: '/';
BACKSLASH_: '\\';
DOT_: '.';
DOTASTERISK_: '.*';
SAFEEQ_: '<=>';
DEQ_: '==';
EQ_: '=';
NEQ_: '<>' | '!=';
GT_: '>';
GTE_: '>=';
LT_: '<';
LTE_: '<=';
POUND_: '#';
LP_: '(';
RP_: ')';
LBE_: '{';
RBE_: '}';
LBT_: '[';
RBT_: ']';
COMMA_: ',';
DQ_: '"';
SQ_: '\'';
BQ_: '`';
QUESTION_: '?';
AT_: '@';
SEMI_: ';';
JSONSEPARATOR_: '->>';
UL_: '_';
``` |
```c++
/*=============================================================================
path_to_url
file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at path_to_url
=============================================================================*/
#ifndef BOOST_SPIRIT_REFACTORING_HPP
#define BOOST_SPIRIT_REFACTORING_HPP
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include <boost/static_assert.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/classic/namespace.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/classic/meta/as_parser.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/classic/core/parser.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/classic/core/composite/composite.hpp>
#include <boost/spirit/home/classic/meta/impl/refactoring.ipp>
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
namespace boost { namespace spirit {
BOOST_SPIRIT_CLASSIC_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
#if BOOST_WORKAROUND(BOOST_MSVC, >= 1400)
#pragma warning(push)
#pragma warning(disable:4512) //assignment operator could not be generated
#endif
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// refactor_unary_parser class
//
// This helper template allows to attach an unary operation to a newly
// constructed parser, which combines the subject of the left operand of
// the original given parser (BinaryT) with the right operand of the
// original binary parser through the original binary operation and
// rewraps the resulting parser with the original unary operator.
//
// For instance given the parser:
// *some_parser - another_parser
//
// will be refactored to:
// *(some_parser - another_parser)
//
// If the parser to refactor is not a unary parser, no refactoring is done
// at all.
//
// The original parser should be a binary_parser_category parser,
// else the compilation will fail
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class refactor_unary_gen;
template <typename BinaryT, typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class refactor_unary_parser :
public parser<refactor_unary_parser<BinaryT, NestedT> > {
public:
// the parser to refactor has to be at least a binary_parser_category
// parser
BOOST_STATIC_ASSERT((
boost::is_convertible<typename BinaryT::parser_category_t,
binary_parser_category>::value
));
refactor_unary_parser(BinaryT const& binary_, NestedT const& nested_)
: binary(binary_), nested(nested_) {}
typedef refactor_unary_parser<BinaryT, NestedT> self_t;
typedef refactor_unary_gen<NestedT> parser_generator_t;
typedef typename BinaryT::left_t::parser_category_t parser_category_t;
template <typename ScannerT>
typename parser_result<self_t, ScannerT>::type
parse(ScannerT const& scan) const
{
return impl::refactor_unary_type<NestedT>::
parse(*this, scan, binary, nested);
}
private:
typename as_parser<BinaryT>::type::embed_t binary;
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
//////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT>
class refactor_unary_gen {
public:
typedef refactor_unary_gen<NestedT> embed_t;
refactor_unary_gen(NestedT const& nested_ = non_nested_refactoring())
: nested(nested_) {}
template <typename ParserT>
refactor_unary_parser<ParserT, NestedT>
operator[](parser<ParserT> const& subject) const
{
return refactor_unary_parser<ParserT, NestedT>
(subject.derived(), nested);
}
private:
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
const refactor_unary_gen<> refactor_unary_d = refactor_unary_gen<>();
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// refactor_action_parser class
//
// This helper template allows to attach an action taken from the left
// operand of the given binary parser to a newly constructed parser,
// which combines the subject of the left operand of the original binary
// parser with the right operand of the original binary parser by means of
// the original binary operator parser.
//
// For instance the parser:
// some_parser[some_attached_functor] - another_parser
//
// will be refactored to:
// (some_parser - another_parser)[some_attached_functor]
//
// If the left operand to refactor is not an action parser, no refactoring
// is done at all.
//
// The original parser should be a binary_parser_category parser,
// else the compilation will fail
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class refactor_action_gen;
template <typename BinaryT, typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class refactor_action_parser :
public parser<refactor_action_parser<BinaryT, NestedT> > {
public:
// the parser to refactor has to be at least a binary_parser_category
// parser
BOOST_STATIC_ASSERT((
boost::is_convertible<typename BinaryT::parser_category_t,
binary_parser_category>::value
));
refactor_action_parser(BinaryT const& binary_, NestedT const& nested_)
: binary(binary_), nested(nested_) {}
typedef refactor_action_parser<BinaryT, NestedT> self_t;
typedef refactor_action_gen<NestedT> parser_generator_t;
typedef typename BinaryT::left_t::parser_category_t parser_category_t;
template <typename ScannerT>
typename parser_result<self_t, ScannerT>::type
parse(ScannerT const& scan) const
{
return impl::refactor_action_type<NestedT>::
parse(*this, scan, binary, nested);
}
private:
typename as_parser<BinaryT>::type::embed_t binary;
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
//////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT>
class refactor_action_gen {
public:
typedef refactor_action_gen<NestedT> embed_t;
refactor_action_gen(NestedT const& nested_ = non_nested_refactoring())
: nested(nested_) {}
template <typename ParserT>
refactor_action_parser<ParserT, NestedT>
operator[](parser<ParserT> const& subject) const
{
return refactor_action_parser<ParserT, NestedT>
(subject.derived(), nested);
}
private:
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
const refactor_action_gen<> refactor_action_d = refactor_action_gen<>();
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// attach_action_parser class
//
// This helper template allows to attach an action given separately
// to to all parsers, out of which the given parser is constructed and
// reconstructs a new parser having the same structure.
//
// For instance the parser:
// (some_parser >> another_parser)[some_attached_functor]
//
// will be refactored to:
// some_parser[some_attached_functor]
// >> another_parser[some_attached_functor]
//
// The original parser should be a action_parser_category parser,
// else the compilation will fail
//
// If the parser, to which the action is attached is not an binary parser,
// no refactoring is done at all.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class attach_action_gen;
template <typename ActionT, typename NestedT = non_nested_refactoring>
class attach_action_parser :
public parser<attach_action_parser<ActionT, NestedT> > {
public:
// the parser to refactor has to be at least a action_parser_category
// parser
BOOST_STATIC_ASSERT((
boost::is_convertible<typename ActionT::parser_category_t,
action_parser_category>::value
));
attach_action_parser(ActionT const& actor_, NestedT const& nested_)
: actor(actor_), nested(nested_) {}
typedef attach_action_parser<ActionT, NestedT> self_t;
typedef attach_action_gen<NestedT> parser_generator_t;
typedef typename ActionT::parser_category_t parser_category_t;
template <typename ScannerT>
typename parser_result<self_t, ScannerT>::type
parse(ScannerT const& scan) const
{
return impl::attach_action_type<NestedT>::
parse(*this, scan, actor, nested);
}
private:
typename as_parser<ActionT>::type::embed_t actor;
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
//////////////////////////////////
template <typename NestedT>
class attach_action_gen {
public:
typedef attach_action_gen<NestedT> embed_t;
attach_action_gen(NestedT const& nested_ = non_nested_refactoring())
: nested(nested_) {}
template <typename ParserT, typename ActionT>
attach_action_parser<action<ParserT, ActionT>, NestedT>
operator[](action<ParserT, ActionT> const& actor) const
{
return attach_action_parser<action<ParserT, ActionT>, NestedT>
(actor, nested);
}
private:
typename NestedT::embed_t nested;
};
const attach_action_gen<> attach_action_d = attach_action_gen<>();
#if BOOST_WORKAROUND(BOOST_MSVC, >= 1400)
#pragma warning(pop)
#endif
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
BOOST_SPIRIT_CLASSIC_NAMESPACE_END
}} // namespace BOOST_SPIRIT_CLASSIC_NS
#endif // BOOST_SPIRIT_REFACTORING_HPP
``` |
```ruby
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Decidim
module Admin
module Import
# This is an abstract class with a very naive default implementation
# for the importers to use. It can also serve as a superclass of your
# own implementation.
#
# It is used to be run against each element of an importable collection
# in order to parse relevant fields. Every import should specify their
# own creator or this default will be used.
class Creator
class << self
# Returns the resource class to be created with the provided data.
def resource_klass
raise NotImplementedError, "#{self.class.name} does not define resource class"
end
# Returns the verifier class to be used to ensure the data is valid
# for the import.
def verifier_klass
Decidim::Admin::Import::Verifier
end
def required_headers
[]
end
def localize_headers(header, locales)
@localize_headers ||= locales.map do |locale|
:"#{header}/#{locale}"
end
end
end
attr_reader :data
# Initializes the creator with a resource.
#
# data - The data hash to parse.
# context - The context needed by the producer
def initialize(data, context = nil)
@data = data
@context = context
end
# Can be used to convert the data hash to the resource attributes in
# case the data hash to be imported has different column names than the
# resource object to be created of it.
#
# By default returns the data hash but can be implemented by each creator
# implementation.
#
# Returns the resource attributes to be passed for the constructor.
def resource_attributes
@data
end
# Public: Returns a created object with the parsed data.
#
# Returns a target object.
def produce
self.class.resource_klass.new(resource_attributes)
end
def finish!
resource.save!
end
protected
attr_reader :context
def resource
raise NotImplementedError, "#{self.class.name} does not define resource"
end
#
# Collect field's language specified cells to one hash
#
# field - The field name eg. "title"
# locales - Available locales
#
# Returns the hash including locale-imported_data pairs. eg. {en: "Heading", ca: "Cap", es: "Bveda"}
#
def locale_hasher(field, locales)
hash = {}
locales.each do |locale|
parsed = data[:"#{field}/#{locale}"]
hash[locale] = parsed unless parsed.nil?
end
hash
end
end
end
end
end
``` |
Asian Fever was the name of an adult magazine published in the United States, which was followed by a companion adult video series.
Overview
The magazine featured explicit photos of naked young women. It featured pictorials of East Asian women, interviews with Asian porn stars, and reviews of Asian pornography DVDs.
Asian Fever was published thirteen times per year by Larry Flynt's Larry Flynt Publications, and Hustler Video also produces an Asian Fever line of videos. Asian Fever writer David Aaron Clark became a director for the Asian Fever series with the twenty-fifth entry.
The first chapter of Butterfly: An Erotic Odyssey - Thailand, Cambodia, Philippines by Steven Yang first appeared in the magazine, with the book itself later being blurbed by Asian Fever.
Under the subheading "Me Love You Long Time" in the essay "White and Wong: Race, Porn, and the Word Wide Web" by Darrell Y. Hamamoto in Image Ethics in the Digital Age (edited by Larry P. Gross, John Stuart Katz, and Jay Ruby), it is noted that Hustler's Asian Fever was part of a "boomlet in skin magazines in the United States that cater to the Asiaphile," connected to the "White male fetishization of the Yellow female-object" (pages 250-251). "We Love You Long Time" happens to be the tagline on the first of the Asian Fever DVDs.
See also
Asian Babes – UK magazine
Asian fetish
References
External links
Official website
Hustler official website
Asian Fever series at IAFD
Pornographic men's magazines
Men's magazines published in the United States
Monthly magazines published in the United States
Larry Flynt Publications
Magazines established in 1999
Ethnic pornography
Pornographic magazines published in the United States
1999 establishments in the United States |
Hilton Edward Booker (November 5, 1917 – January 26, 1975) was an American boxer who was active during the 1930s and 1940s.
Booker was one of the famous "Murderers Row" group of black boxers, along with the likes of Charley Burley, Holman Williams and Jack Chase, avoided by other elite fighters of the era because of their ability and their skin colour. Booker compiled a record of 66-5-8, which included a (1-1-1) record vs. Holman Williams, (0-1) record vs. Jack Chase, (1-0) vs. Lloyd Marshall, (0-1) Cocoa Kid. Other Notable Booker fights include a (1-0-2) record vs. Archie Moore (being the first to knock him out) a win over Harry Matthews, a loss to Fritzie Zivic and a (2-1-1) record vs Shorty Hogue. Like all black murderer's row fighters, he never got an opportunity to fight for a world title. Booker was forced to retire prematurely due to an eye injury. He was a 2017 inductee of the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
World Champion Archie Moore thought the world of Booker saying, “I’ve had some rough fights in my time,” Moore said, “but all things being equal, when I was in my prime, one of my toughest had to have been against Eddie Booker, a fighting machine … who shot out punches with deft precision … [Booker] was one of the great fighters of my time. He had me fighting for dear life.”
Booker was blind later in life due to eye injuries suffered from an illegally doctored glove. He died in San Francisco on January 26, 1975 at 57 years old.
Professional boxing record
See also
Murderers' Row (Boxing)
References
External links
1917 births
1975 deaths
African-American boxers
Boxers from Texas
Welterweight boxers
Middleweight boxers
American male boxers
20th-century African-American sportspeople
International Boxing Hall of Fame inductees |
```java
/*
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
* published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this
* particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided
* by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code.
*
* This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
* ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
* version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that
* accompanied this code).
*
* 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
* Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA
* or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any
* questions.
*/
package org.graalvm.visualvm.lib.ui;
import java.awt.*;
/** Various UI Constants used in the JFluid UI
*
* @author Ian Formanek
*/
public interface UIConstants {
//~ Static fields/initializers your_sha256_hash-------------------------------
/** Color used to draw vertical gridlines in JTables */
public static final Color TABLE_VERTICAL_GRID_COLOR = !UIUtils.isDarkResultsBackground() ?
new Color(214, 223, 247) : new Color(84, 93, 117);
/** if true, results tables display the horizontal grid lines */
public static final boolean SHOW_TABLE_HORIZONTAL_GRID = false;
/** if true, results tables display the vertical grid lines */
public static final boolean SHOW_TABLE_VERTICAL_GRID = true;
/** Color used for painting selected cell background in JTables */
public static final Color TABLE_SELECTION_BACKGROUND_COLOR = new Color(193, 210, 238); //(253, 249, 237)
/** Color used for painting selected cell foreground in JTables */
public static final Color TABLE_SELECTION_FOREGROUND_COLOR = Color.BLACK;
public static final int TABLE_ROW_MARGIN = 0;
public static final String PROFILER_PANELS_BACKGROUND = "ProfilerPanels.background"; // NOI18N
}
``` |
The Canadian International Learning Foundation (CanILF) is an Ottawa, Ontario, Canada-based, volunteer-run registered charity which provides and promotes professional education in areas of the world affected by war, illness and poverty (at-risk areas).
Mission
CanILF seeks to reach its goals through the following activities:
Funding for Scholarships and Infrastructure:Awarding scholarships to students who demonstrate academic potential, community service and leadership, and to provide educational equipment (such as computers or textbooks) to the schools they attend;
Online Courses:Providing education to students via the Internet, including courses in entrepreneurship, business management or Information Technology (IT); and
Mentoring:Offering instruction, advice and practical assistance on planning, management and proposal writing to the leaders of educational institutions.
Projects
Afghan-Canadian Community Center (ACCC)
The Afghan-Canadian Community Center (ACCC), is a safe and secure place for women to receive an education. The ACCC provides courses in Business Management, IT, English and Health Care to approximately 1,500 women and men. Students at the ACCC also receive recognized Canadian online education via the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology and the Canada e-School. The ACCC’s programs provide the skills its students need to obtain employment at a cost-per-student from $10 to $25 per month. Once employed, students support themselves and their families (on average, 6 family members per student), give back to their communities and participate in the reconstruction of Afghanistan. Because of ACCC training, more than 500 students have obtained employment or promotions.
The school presently receives more than half of its operating expenses through the Kandahar Capacity Project, which is funded by the Canadian International Development Agency’s Kandahar Local Initiatives Program.
Uganda Literacy and Education Program
CanILF also operates a project to benefit the Community Empowerment Program at St. Paul’s Kabira Adult Attention and School of Orphans (KAASO) via its Uganda Literacy and Education Program. The Community Empowerment Program provides women and men in the community with education in basic literacy, business, agriculture and traditional artisanry.
Yemen Micro-Project
The Yemen Micro-Project (YMP) is The Canadian International Learning Foundation’s first project in the Middle East. The YMP’s goal is to help to connect local partners in Yemen with educational and information technology expertise in Canada through collaborative initiatives. Canada Bridges, an organization that has extensive experience in offering business education in Yemen, has agreed to help CanILF choose suitable partners and establish relationships with the Government of Yemen.
Volunteers
Members of the Foundation in Ottawa meet in The Glebe on a weekly basis.
Partners
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT)
A group of approximately 30 students at the Afghan-Canadian Community Center (ACCC) are currently studying Business Management via online courses taught online by the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT).
CW4WAfghan
Provided extensive financial and administrative support to the Canadian International Learning Foundation and the two organizations maintain a close partnership to promote and sustain women’s education in Afghanistan.
EdGen
EdGen host the profiles of students of the Afghan School Project, thereby encouraging donors from across the globe to help students receive life-changing education.
Vital English
Vital English donated 100 months of blended e-learning courses to CanILF for the benefit of the partner schools in Afghanistan and Yemen.
Clout Marketing
Clout have been providing their services to the Canadian International Learning Foundation since 2009.
External links
Official Site
Canadian International Development Agency
Uganda Literacy and Education Program
The ACCC
References
Charities based in Canada |
The Lok Sabha (House of the People) is the lower house in the Parliament of India. The 6th Lok Sabha, which ran from 23 March 1977 to 22 August 1979 was elected in February and March 1977. 11 sitting members from Rajya Sabha were elected to 6th Lok Sabha after the 1971 Indian general election.Morarji Desai became the Prime Minister on 24 March 1977 after Janata alliance won 345 seats, 233 more than the previous 5th Lok Sabha.
Charan Singh became the Prime Minister on 28 July 1979 with the support of Indira Gandhi (Congress (I)); but resigned on 20 August 1979 since he was not ready to remove charges against Indira Gandhi and her family from the Emergency days and advised the President to dissolve the Lok Sabha. The Sixth Lok Sabha was dissolved on 22 August 1979 by the President Neelam Sanjiva Reddy and Charan Singh remained as the caretaker Prime Minister till 14 January 1980, the formation of the next 7th Lok Sabha following the 1980 Indian general election.
Leadership
Speaker:
N. Sanjiva Reddy from 26 March 1977 to 13 July 1977
K. S. Hegde from 21 July 1977 to 21 January 1980
Deputy speaker:
Godey Murahari from 1 April 1977 to 22 August 1979
Secretary general:
Avtar Singh Rikhy from 18 June 1977 to 31 December 1983
List of members by political party
Members by political party in 6th Lok Sabha are given below-
Cabinet
See also
1977 Indian general election
References
External links
6th Lok Sabha Members Official listings
Lok Sabha website
Terms of the Lok Sabha
India MPs 1977–1979
1977 establishments in India
1980 disestablishments in India |
Karlum is a municipality in the district of Nordfriesland, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
References
Nordfriesland |
```objective-c
//===-- WatchpointOptions.h -------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// See path_to_url for license information.
//
//===your_sha256_hash------===//
#ifndef LLDB_BREAKPOINT_WATCHPOINTOPTIONS_H
#define LLDB_BREAKPOINT_WATCHPOINTOPTIONS_H
#include <memory>
#include <string>
#include "lldb/Utility/Baton.h"
#include "lldb/Utility/StringList.h"
#include "lldb/lldb-private.h"
namespace lldb_private {
/// \class WatchpointOptions WatchpointOptions.h
/// "lldb/Breakpoint/WatchpointOptions.h" Class that manages the options on a
/// watchpoint.
class WatchpointOptions {
public:
// Constructors and Destructors
/// Default constructor. The watchpoint is enabled, and has no condition,
/// callback, ignore count, etc...
WatchpointOptions();
WatchpointOptions(const WatchpointOptions &rhs);
static WatchpointOptions *CopyOptionsNoCallback(WatchpointOptions &rhs);
/// This constructor allows you to specify all the watchpoint options.
///
/// \param[in] callback
/// This is the plugin for some code that gets run, returns \b true if we
/// are to stop.
///
/// \param[in] baton
/// Client data that will get passed to the callback.
///
/// \param[in] thread_id
/// Only stop if \a thread_id hits the watchpoint.
WatchpointOptions(WatchpointHitCallback callback, void *baton,
lldb::tid_t thread_id = LLDB_INVALID_THREAD_ID);
virtual ~WatchpointOptions();
// Operators
const WatchpointOptions &operator=(const WatchpointOptions &rhs);
// Callbacks
//
// Watchpoint callbacks come in two forms, synchronous and asynchronous.
// Synchronous callbacks will get run before any of the thread plans are
// consulted, and if they return false the target will continue "under the
// radar" of the thread plans. There are a couple of restrictions to
// synchronous callbacks: 1) They should NOT resume the target themselves.
// Just return false if you want the target to restart. 2) Watchpoints with
// synchronous callbacks can't have conditions (or rather, they can have
// them, but they
// won't do anything. Ditto with ignore counts, etc... You are supposed
// to control that all through the
// callback.
// Asynchronous callbacks get run as part of the "ShouldStop" logic in the
// thread plan. The logic there is:
// a) If the watchpoint is thread specific and not for this thread, continue
// w/o running the callback.
// b) If the ignore count says we shouldn't stop, then ditto.
// c) If the condition says we shouldn't stop, then ditto.
// d) Otherwise, the callback will get run, and if it returns true we will
// stop, and if false we won't.
// The asynchronous callback can run the target itself, but at present that
// should be the last action the
// callback does. We will relax this condition at some point, but it will
// take a bit of plumbing to get
// that to work.
//
/// Adds a callback to the watchpoint option set.
///
/// \param[in] callback
/// The function to be called when the watchpoint gets hit.
///
/// \param[in] baton_sp
/// A baton which will get passed back to the callback when it is invoked.
///
/// \param[in] synchronous
/// Whether this is a synchronous or asynchronous callback. See discussion
/// above.
void SetCallback(WatchpointHitCallback callback,
const lldb::BatonSP &baton_sp, bool synchronous = false);
/// Remove the callback from this option set.
void ClearCallback();
// The rest of these functions are meant to be used only within the
// watchpoint handling mechanism.
/// Use this function to invoke the callback for a specific stop.
///
/// \param[in] context
/// The context in which the callback is to be invoked. This includes the
/// stop event, the
/// execution context of the stop (since you might hit the same watchpoint
/// on multiple threads) and
/// whether we are currently executing synchronous or asynchronous
/// callbacks.
///
/// \param[in] watch_id
/// The watchpoint ID that owns this option set.
///
/// \return
/// The callback return value.
bool InvokeCallback(StoppointCallbackContext *context,
lldb::user_id_t watch_id);
/// Used in InvokeCallback to tell whether it is the right time to run this
/// kind of callback.
///
/// \return
/// The synchronicity of our callback.
bool IsCallbackSynchronous() { return m_callback_is_synchronous; }
/// Fetch the baton from the callback.
///
/// \return
/// The baton.
Baton *GetBaton();
/// Fetch a const version of the baton from the callback.
///
/// \return
/// The baton.
const Baton *GetBaton() const;
/// Return the current thread spec for this option. This will return nullptr
/// if the no thread specifications have been set for this Option yet.
/// \return
/// The thread specification pointer for this option, or nullptr if none
/// has
/// been set yet.
const ThreadSpec *GetThreadSpecNoCreate() const;
/// Returns a pointer to the ThreadSpec for this option, creating it. if it
/// hasn't been created already. This API is used for setting the
/// ThreadSpec items for this option.
ThreadSpec *GetThreadSpec();
void SetThreadID(lldb::tid_t thread_id);
void GetDescription(Stream *s, lldb::DescriptionLevel level) const;
/// Get description for callback only.
void GetCallbackDescription(Stream *s, lldb::DescriptionLevel level) const;
/// Returns true if the watchpoint option has a callback set.
bool HasCallback();
/// This is the default empty callback.
/// \return
/// The thread id for which the watchpoint hit will stop,
/// LLDB_INVALID_THREAD_ID for all threads.
static bool NullCallback(void *baton, StoppointCallbackContext *context,
lldb::user_id_t watch_id);
struct CommandData {
CommandData() = default;
~CommandData() = default;
StringList user_source;
std::string script_source;
bool stop_on_error = true;
};
class CommandBaton : public TypedBaton<CommandData> {
public:
CommandBaton(std::unique_ptr<CommandData> Data)
: TypedBaton(std::move(Data)) {}
void GetDescription(llvm::raw_ostream &s, lldb::DescriptionLevel level,
unsigned indentation) const override;
};
protected:
// Classes that inherit from WatchpointOptions can see and modify these
private:
// For WatchpointOptions only
WatchpointHitCallback m_callback; // This is the callback function pointer
lldb::BatonSP m_callback_baton_sp; // This is the client data for the callback
bool m_callback_is_synchronous = false;
std::unique_ptr<ThreadSpec>
m_thread_spec_up; // Thread for which this watchpoint will take
};
} // namespace lldb_private
#endif // LLDB_BREAKPOINT_WATCHPOINTOPTIONS_H
``` |
```c
/**
* Note: The returned array must be malloced, assume caller calls free().
*/
// collecting sum Runtime: O(len(queries)), Space: O(1)
int* sumEvenAfterQueries(int* nums, int numsSize, int** queries, int queriesSize, int* queriesColSize, int* returnSize){
int summ = 0;
int* result = malloc(queriesSize * sizeof(int));
*returnSize = queriesSize;
for(int i = 0; i < numsSize; i++){
if (nums[i] % 2 == 0) {
summ += nums[i];
}
}
for(int i = 0; i < queriesSize; i++){
int* query = queries[i];
int val = query[0];
int index = query[1];
// sub index value from summ if it's even
if (nums[index] % 2 == 0) {
summ -= nums[index];
}
// modify the nums[index] value
nums[index] += val;
// add index value from summ if it's even
if (nums[index] % 2 == 0) {
summ += nums[index];
}
result[i] = summ;
}
return result;
}
``` |
Free as Air is a musical with lyrics by Dorothy Reynolds and Julian Slade and music by Julian Slade. They are the same team responsible for the much better known musical Salad Days, although Free as Air is said to be "more slick and professional by some critics". The musical is still performed, particularly by amateur companies with large casts and choruses.
Production
Free as Air opened at the Opera House in Manchester before moving to the West End at the Savoy Theatre on 6 June 1957, where it ran for 417 performances, quite a good run at that time. The musical was directed by Denis Carey. The original cast recording plus bonus tracks is available on CD from Sepia records. Among the cast were Gerald Harper and Gillian Lewis, both of whom later became well known on television, and Patricia Bredin who, also in 1957, represented the United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest.
Free as Air is an original story of two days in May on Terhou, a minor "and totally fictitious" Channel Island, based on Jethou, the private island leased at the time by Compton Mackenzie.
Synopsis
The islanders arise early to prepare for their annual Independence Day (I'm Up Early). They discover there is no young lady to be the Queen in their Coronation Ceremony because everyone has played the part before. Parliament (Lord Paul, Mr Mutch, Mr Potter) proposes a new law but the members are glad of an excuse to stop work (Let The Grass Grow).
The Terhou boat returns from its monthly visit to the mainland bringing the usual imports—and a stranger, Geraldine (Nothing But Sea and Sky). The Islanders meet her and unload the boat (The Boat's In).
Geraldine is welcomed as a possible solution to the coronation problem but her presence disturbs Molly, an island girl.
Molly gazes past the horizon and yearns for a man as handsome as Geraldine is beautiful (A Man From The Mainland).
Albert, Lord Paul's nephew, shows Geraldine round the island. She tells him she is wealthy and has run away from a suitor, Jack Amersham, and from the paparazzi, which have made her unwillingly famous. The Islanders legally adopt her and teach her the Coronation song (Free As Air).
Geraldine feels safe but on Jersey her absence has been discovered by Jack Amersham and by Ivy Crush, the press reporter who has been detailed to shadow her.
Jack lightly mourns Geraldine’s escape and of all the other girls in his life (Her Mummy Doesn't Like Me Any More). Meanwhile, Lord Paul has run away in a frenzy to Jersey: he has tried to propose to Miss Catamole and been laughed at and humiliated. Easy prey, he is persuaded to take Jack and Ivy to Terhou.
Geraldine's privacy and the peace of Terhou are threatened (The Girl From London).
The Island girls, led by Molly, fall in love with Jack on sight (A Man From The Mainland). Geraldine tells Jack she can never marry him and there is a gently growing sympathy between her and Albert (I'd Like To Be Like You).
Lord Paul, captivated by Ivy's admiration of him, shows her round the Island. The Islanders sing her a folk song which tells the story of the Roman occupation (Testudo).
Jack half-responds to Molly's uninhibited advances and consents to take her to London (I've Got My Feet On The Ground).
Ivy almost persuades the Islanders to turn Terhou into a lucrative pleasure resort; Geraldine, Jack and Albert point out what their life would be like (Holiday Island) and the Islanders realise that Ivy is a menace and imprison her. But it is too late: she reveals that she has already reported to her newspaper and Geraldine, broken-hearted, leaves the island to save it from publicity.
She meets the reporters on Jersey (Geraldine). The islanders appear, posing as Geraldine's relations among whom she has divided her money. The reporters think she is now penniless and lose interest. Geraldine is safe to return to Terhou.
Mr. Potter, coached by Geraldine, has proposed to Miss Catamole after fifteen years' procrastination (We're Holding Hands). Ivy is forgiven and consents to marry Lord Paul. The Coronation Ceremony takes place with Geraldine as Queen (Terhou).
Molly, after a glimpse of the mainland, decides to stay where she is; Jack leaves Terhou on his own.
Musical numbers
I'm Up Early (Molly and Islanders)
Let The Grass Grow (Mutch, Potter and Lord Paul)
Nothing But Sea And Sky (Geraldine)
The Boat's In (Islanders)
A Man From The Mainland (Molly)
Free As Air (Albert, Geraldine and Islanders)
Daily Echo (high)
Her Mummy Doesn't Like Me Any More (Jack and Chorus)
The Girl From London (The Company)
A Man From The Mainland (Reprise) (The Company)
Act 2
A Man From The Mainland (Reprise) (Molly, Jack and Island Girls)
I'd Like To Be Like You (Albert and Geraldine)
Testudo (Mutch, Molly, Bindweed and Islanders)
Feet On The Ground (Molly and Jack)
Holiday Island (Ivy, Geraldine, Jack, Albert and Islanders)
Geraldine (The Reporters)
Free to Sing (Reprise) (Chorus)
We're Holding Hands (Potter and Miss Catamole)
Terhou (Molly and Company)
Finale and Reprises (The Company)
Original Cast
Molly - Patricia Bredin
Mr Mutch - Roy Godfrey
Mr Potter - Howard Goorney
Miss Catamole - Dorothy Reynolds
Lord Paul Posthumous - Michael Aldridge
Albert Posthumous - John Trevor
Bindweed – Vincent Charles
Gregory - Donald Bradley
Connie - Joyce Carpenter
Tom Ferrier - Bill Tasker
Geraldine Melford - Gillian Lewis
Ivy Crush – Josephine Tewson
Jack Amersham – Gerald Harper
Reporters – Malcolm Farquhar, Len Rossiter, Raymond Parks
References
External links
listing guidetomusicaltheatre.com
"ON THE RECORD: Free As Air and Other "Musicals by Julian Slade; Judy Kuhn Sings Laura Nyro" playbill.com, Oct 28, 2007
Slade bio filmreference.com
1957 musicals
West End musicals
Original musicals
British musicals
Musicals set on fictional islands |
West Visayas State University Medical Center (commonly referred to as WVSU Medical Center and WVSUMC but colloquially known as Don Benito) is a government owned hospital operated under the West Visayas State University. It was established in the 1940s after which when the Cacho family of Panay Electric Company (PECO) sold their property to the Philippine Women's College, then later to the Lopez family turning it into Don Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital (Don Benito Lopez Hospital).
When West Visayas State College become a university through a presidential decree in 1986, the need for the university to have a laboratory hospital for its college of medicine students paved the way, resulting in 1987, for the government to purchase the Don Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital (Don Benito Lopez Hospital), turning it into West Visayas State University Medical Center.
On November 29, 2001, the Department of Health of the Philippines - Bureau of Health Facilities and Services and the university's Board of Regents through approved the hospital's conversion to West Visayas State University Medical Center.
A Level III public hospital, WVSU Medical Center healthcare services include out-patient, in-patient, ancillary and allied health medical services. It also serves as a laboratory hospital for the clinical training of WVSU's nursing and medicine students.
It is subsequently forms as an auxiliary unit under the West Visayas State University but is autonomous in entity and management.
History
Establishment
In the 1940s World War II, the Cacho family, an Ilonggo family of Spanish origin, rebuilt the family's power distribution business, the Panay Electric Company (PECO), by selling the family's property in Calle Eugenio Lopez (Eugenio Lopez St.) to the Philippine Women's College. Thereafter, the Lopez family bought the property to the college converting it to Don Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital, the base hospital for the medical and allied health sciences of the family run Iloilo City College which eventually became the University of Iloilo at present.
Government acquisition and founding
In February 1982, Former Vice President Fernando Lopez offered the Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital for lease/sale. President Lilia V. Juele, then President of the West Visayas State College took cognizance of the offer and recommended the purchase to the Minister of Education and Culture.
On May 7, 1982 the Board of Trustees, governing body of West Visayas State College, through Referendum No. 1 s. 1982 unanimously approved the request for the acquisition of the Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital. Although the contract of sale was made between West Visayas State College through President Lilia V. Juele and Lopez family through former Vice President Fernando Lopez, however it was not realized due to unavailability of funds from the government. In the meantime, a lease contract was made, so that in January 1986 the Gov. Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital was utilized as the base hospital of the School of Medicine with Dr. Angel R. de Leon as Director.
On April 5, 1987, Benito Lopez Memorial Hospital was finally purchased thru a GSIS loan and formally turned over by the Lopez family. In May 1987, the hospital became the West Visayas State University Hospital.
The Department of Health Bureau of Licensing and Regulation authorized the University Hospital to operate as a 150-bed tertiary training hospital with 100 beds for service/charity patients (25 for Surgery, 25 for Medicine, 25 for OB/Gyne, 25 for Pediatrics) and 50 beds for pay patients.
In 1988, the Department of Education Culture and Sports handed to the College of Medicine a revised organizational structure which gave the Dean of the College of Medicine governance of the University Hospital and a non-voting seat in the Board of Regent when matters pertaining to the College of Medicine and the University Hospital were presented. The Associate Dean - Clinics was delegated the day to day supervision and administration of the University Hospital.
1990s to present
In January 1991, the Residency Training programs of the four (4) major clinical departments- Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics were accredited. In March 1992, Dr. Ramon S. Guerra, Jr., assumed the position as Chief of Hospital II, as provided for in the organizational structure of the University Hospital. In 1993, the Board of Regents approved Resolution No. 85 series 1993 a Project Proposal to upgrade WVSU Hospital to become a Medical Center envisioned as "Philippine General Hospital of the South."
The University Hospital already has accredited residency-training programs in Surgery, OB-Gyne, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Orthopedics, Psychiatry, and Anesthesiology. For several years the hospital exceeded the 200-bed occupancy for its average daily census.
In April 2000, the Third Floor Annex was opened with 4 suite rooms, 18 single air-conditioned private rooms and 3 wards (4 male, 4 female and pediatric patients). The average occupancy rate of the hospital for year 2000 was 122% of the authorized 150 beds.
In the middle of January 2001, the University Hospital opened its Fourth Floor with 7 suite rooms and 19 air-conditioned private rooms. There is also an ongoing renovation of the left wing of the hospital to become charity wards. These expansion will bring to a total of 88 beds for pay patients and more than 200 for charity patients (Charity - Medicine - 50; Pediatrics - 50; OB-Gyne - 50; Surgery - 40; Psychiatry - 10; Orthopedics - 20; Pay- third floor - 35 patients; fourth floor - 33 patients; C-Up - 18 patients).
In anticipation of the implication of all these development in infrastructure of the University Hospital, last July 17, 2001, Dir. Ramon S. Guerra, Jr., requested for an increase in the bed capacity of the West Visayas State University Hospital from 150 beds to 300 beds. This request was made in the desire to make this institution the best training ground for students and resident physicians, nurses and other paramedical groups, at the same time to render quality service to patients, not only of Iloilo, but the rest of Western Visayas.
A milestone for the WVSU happened when the Department of Health Bureau of Health Facilities and Services and the Board of Regents through Board Resolution No. 76 series of 2001, dated November 29, 2001, approved the hospital to become the West Visayas State University Medical Center.
In 2018, WVSU Medical Center along with another government hospital in Iloilo, received a 900 million Philippine Peso grant for infrastructural expansion. 600 million Philippine peso has been allocated to WVSU Medical Center which include a 3-storey DOH partnered WVSU Cancer Center for Western Visayas and the 10 storey WVSU Lung and Heart Center for Region VI, poising the hospital for its plans years before to become the Philippine General Hospital of the South.
During the onslaught of COVID 2019 global pandemic, WVSU Medical Center and Western Visayas Medical Center (WVMC) as government hospitals had been designated by the Department of Health (Philippines) as COVID 2019 dedicated hospitals for Western Visayas region. WVMC is the sole COVID 2019 sub-national laboratory in Region 6.
Presently, WVSU Medical Center, being a unit of West Visayas State University, is not under the Department of Health of the Philippines; however its policies and procedures are patterned after DOH and Philippine General Hospital (PGH) which is also tertiary, teaching and training hospital of a state university, the University of the Philippines Manila.
References
External links
WVSU Medical Center Official Website
West Visayas State University System
Universities and colleges established in 1902
1902 establishments in the Philippines |
Frank Gumbleton (born 6 March 1951) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the North Melbourne Football Club in the Victorian Football League during the 1970s. Gumbleton was recruited from the country NSW football club of Ganmain. He was a premiership player for Ganmain in 1969.
Gumbleton usually played in the back pocket. A brilliant defender not known for his flair, yet was instrumental in solidifying the tight defensive North Melbourne team of the 1970s.
Gumbleton played for the Wangaratta Football Club in the Ovens & Murray Football League in 1984.
In later years Gumbleton was a runner for the North Melbourne team.
References
External links
1951 births
Living people
Australian rules footballers from New South Wales
North Melbourne Football Club players
Brunswick Football Club players
North Melbourne Football Club premiership players
VFL/AFL premiership players |
This is a list of the bird species recorded in Estonia. The avifauna of Estonia include a total of 400 species.
This list's taxonomic treatment (designation and sequence of orders, families and species) and nomenclature (common and scientific names) follow the conventions of The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World, 2022 edition. The family accounts at the beginning of each heading reflect this taxonomy, as do the species counts found in each family account. Accidental species are included in the total species count for Estonia.
The following tags highlight several categories of occurrence other than regular migrants and residents.
(A) Accidental - a species that rarely or accidentally occurs in Estonia
(I) Introduced - a species introduced to Estonia as a consequence, direct or indirect, of human actions
Ducks, geese, and waterfowl
Order: AnseriformesFamily: Anatidae
Anatidae includes the ducks and most duck-like waterfowl, such as geese and swans. These birds are adapted to an aquatic existence with webbed feet, flattened bills, and feathers that are excellent at shedding water due to an oily coating.
Snow goose, Anser caerulescens (A)
Graylag goose, Anser anser
Greater white-fronted goose, Anser albifrons
Lesser white-fronted goose, Anser erythropus
Taiga bean-goose, Anser fabalis
Tundra bean-goose, Anser serrirostris
Pink-footed goose, Anser brachyrhynchus
Brant, Branta bernicla
Barnacle goose, Branta leucopsis
Canada goose, Branta canadensis (I)
Red-breasted goose, Branta ruficollis
Mute swan, Cygnus olor
Tundra swan, Cygnus columbianus
Whooper swan, Cygnus cygnus
Ruddy shelduck, Tadorna ferruginea (A)
Common shelduck, Tadorna tadorna
Wood duck, Aix sponsa (I)
Mandarin duck, Aix galericulata (I)
Garganey, Spatula querquedula
Blue-winged teal, Spatula discors (A)
Northern shoveler, Spatula clypeata
Gadwall, Mareca strepera
Eurasian wigeon, Mareca penelope
American wigeon, Mareca americana (A)
Mallard, Anas platyrhynchos
Northern pintail, Anas acuta
Green-winged teal, Anas crecca
Red-crested pochard, Netta rufina (A)
Common pochard, Aythya ferina
Ring-necked duck, Aythya collaris (A)
Ferruginous duck, Aythya nyroca (A)
Tufted duck, Aythya fuligula
Greater scaup, Aythya marila
Steller's eider, Polysticta stelleri
King eider, Somateria spectabilis
Common eider, Somateria mollissima
Surf scoter, Melanitta perspicillata (A)
Velvet scoter, Melanitta fusca
Stejneger's scoter, Melanitta stejnegeri (A)
Common scoter, Melanitta nigra
Black scoter, Melanitta americana (A)
Long-tailed duck, Clangula hyemalis
Common goldeneye, Bucephala clangula
Smew, Mergellus albellus
Common merganser, Mergus merganser
Red-breasted merganser, Mergus serrator
Pheasants, grouse, and allies
Order: GalliformesFamily: Phasianidae
The Phasianidae are a family of terrestrial birds. In general, they are plump (although they vary in size) and have broad, relatively short wings.
Common quail, Coturnix coturnix
Gray partridge, Perdix perdix
Western capercaillie, Tetrao urogallus
Black grouse, Lyrurus tetrix
Hazel grouse, Tetrastes bonasia
Willow ptarmigan, Lagopus lagopus
Grebes
Order: PodicipediformesFamily: Podicipedidae
Grebes are small to medium-large freshwater diving birds. They have lobed toes and are excellent swimmers and divers. However, they have their feet placed far back on the body, making them quite ungainly on land.
Little grebe, Tachybaptus ruficollis
Horned grebe, Podiceps auritus
Red-necked grebe, Podiceps grisegena
Great crested grebe, Podiceps cristatus
Eared grebe, Podiceps nigricollis (A)
Pigeons and doves
Order: ColumbiformesFamily: Columbidae
Pigeons and doves are stout-bodied birds with short necks and short slender bills with a fleshy cere.
Rock pigeon, Columba livia
Stock dove, Columba oenas
Common wood-pigeon, Columba palumbus
European turtle-dove, Streptopelia turtur
Oriental turtle-dove, Streptopelia orientalis (A)
Eurasian collared-dove, Streptopelia decaocto
Sandgrouse
Order: PterocliformesFamily: Pteroclidae
Sandgrouse have small, pigeon like heads and necks, but sturdy compact bodies. They have long pointed wings and sometimes tails and a fast direct flight. Flocks fly to watering holes at dawn and dusk. Their legs are feathered down to the toes.
Pallas's sandgrouse, Syrrhaptes paradoxus (A)
Bustards
Order: OtidiformesFamily: Otididae
Bustards are large terrestrial birds mainly associated with dry open country and steppes in the Old World. They are omnivorous and nest on the ground. They walk steadily on strong legs and big toes, pecking for food as they go. They have long broad wings with "fingered" wingtips and striking patterns in flight. Many have interesting mating displays.
Great bustard, Otis tarda (A)
Little bustard, Tetrax tetrax (A)
Cuckoos
Order: CuculiformesFamily: Cuculidae
The family Cuculidae includes cuckoos, roadrunners and anis. These birds are of variable size with slender bodies, long tails and strong legs. The Old World cuckoos are brood parasites.
Common cuckoo, Cuculus canorus
Nightjars and allies
Order: CaprimulgiformesFamily: Caprimulgidae
Nightjars are medium-sized nocturnal birds that usually nest on the ground. They have long wings, short legs and very short bills. Most have small feet, of little use for walking, and long pointed wings. Their soft plumage is camouflaged to resemble bark or leaves.
Eurasian nightjar, Caprimulgus europaeus
Swifts
Order: CaprimulgiformesFamily: Apodidae
Swifts are small birds which spend the majority of their lives flying. These birds have very short legs and never settle voluntarily on the ground, perching instead only on vertical surfaces. Many swifts have long swept-back wings which resemble a crescent or boomerang.
Alpine swift, Apus melba (A)
Common swift, Apus apus
Pallid swift, Apus pallidus (A)
Rails, gallinules, and coots
Order: GruiformesFamily: Rallidae
Rallidae is a large family of small to medium-sized birds which includes the rails, crakes, coots and gallinules. Typically they inhabit dense vegetation in damp environments near lakes, swamps or rivers. In general they are shy and secretive birds, making them difficult to observe. Most species have strong legs and long toes which are well adapted to soft uneven surfaces. They tend to have short, rounded wings and to be weak fliers.
Water rail, Rallus aquaticus
Corn crake, Crex crex
Spotted crake, Porzana porzana
Eurasian moorhen, Gallinula chloropus
Eurasian coot, Fulica atra
Little crake, Zapornia parva
Baillon's crake, Zapornia pusilla (A)
Cranes
Order: GruiformesFamily: Gruidae
Cranes are large, long-legged and long-necked birds. Unlike the similar-looking but unrelated herons, cranes fly with necks outstretched, not pulled back. Most have elaborate and noisy courting displays or "dances".
Demoiselle crane, Anthropoides virgo (A)
Sandhill crane, Antigone canadensis (A)
Common crane, Grus grus
Thick-knees
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Burhinidae
The thick-knees are a group of largely tropical waders in the family Burhinidae. They are found worldwide within the tropical zone, with some species also breeding in temperate Europe and Australia. They are medium to large waders with strong black or yellow-black bills, large yellow eyes and cryptic plumage. Despite being classed as waders, most species have a preference for arid or semi-arid habitats.
Eurasian thick-knee, Burhinus oedicnemus (A)
Stilts and avocets
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Recurvirostridae
Recurvirostridae is a family of large wading birds, which includes the avocets and stilts. The avocets have long legs and long up-curved bills. The stilts have extremely long legs and long, thin, straight bills.
Pied avocet, Recurvirostra avosetta
Oystercatchers
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Haematopodidae
The oystercatchers are large and noisy plover-like birds, with strong bills used for smashing or prising open molluscs.
Eurasian oystercatcher, Haematopus ostralegus
Plovers and lapwings
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Charadriidae
The family Charadriidae includes the plovers, dotterels and lapwings. They are small to medium-sized birds with compact bodies, short, thick necks and long, usually pointed, wings. They are found in open country worldwide, mostly in habitats near water.
Black-bellied plover, Pluvialis squatarola
European golden-plover, Pluvialis apricaria
American golden-plover, Pluvialis dominica (A)
Pacific golden-plover, Pluvialis fulva (A)
Northern lapwing, Vanellus vanellus
Sociable lapwing, Vanellus gregarius (A)
White-tailed lapwing, Vanellus leucurus (A)
Greater sand-plover, Charadrius leschenaultii (A)
Kentish plover, Charadrius alexandrinus (A)
Common ringed plover, Charadrius hiaticula
Little ringed plover, Charadrius dubius
Eurasian dotterel, Charadrius morinellus (A)
Sandpipers and allies
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Scolopacidae
Scolopacidae is a large diverse family of small to medium-sized shorebirds including the sandpipers, curlews, godwits, shanks, tattlers, woodcocks, snipes, dowitchers and phalaropes. The majority of these species eat small invertebrates picked out of the mud or soil. Variation in length of legs and bills enables multiple species to feed in the same habitat, particularly on the coast, without direct competition for food.
Whimbrel, Numenius phaeopus
Eurasian curlew, Numenius arquata
Bar-tailed godwit, Limosa lapponica
Black-tailed godwit, Limosa limosa
Ruddy turnstone, Arenaria interpres
Red knot, Calidris canutus
Ruff, Calidris pugnax
Broad-billed sandpiper, Calidris falcinellus
Sharp-tailed sandpiper, Calidris acuminata (A)
Curlew sandpiper, Calidris ferruginea
Temminck's stint, Calidris temminckii
Sanderling, Calidris alba
Dunlin, Calidris alpina
Purple sandpiper, Calidris maritima
Little stint, Calidris minuta
Buff-breasted sandpiper, Calidris subruficollis (A)
Pectoral sandpiper, Calidris melanotos (A)
Semipalmated sandpiper, Calidris pusilla (A)
Long-billed dowitcher, Limnodromus scolopaceus (A)
Jack snipe, Lymnocryptes minimus
Eurasian woodcock, Scolopax rusticola
Great snipe, Gallinago media
Common snipe, Gallinago gallinago
Terek sandpiper, Xenus cinereus (A)
Wilson's phalarope, Phalaropus tricolor (A)
Red-necked phalarope, Phalaropus lobatus
Red phalarope, Phalaropus fulicarius (A)
Common sandpiper, Actitis hypoleucos
Spotted sandpiper, Actitis macularius (A)
Green sandpiper, Tringa ochropus
Spotted redshank, Tringa erythropus
Common greenshank, Tringa nebularia
Marsh sandpiper, Tringa stagnatilis
Wood sandpiper, Tringa glareola
Common redshank, Tringa totanus
Pratincoles and coursers
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Glareolidae
Glareolidae is a family of wading birds comprising the pratincoles, which have short legs, long pointed wings and long forked tails, and the coursers, which have long legs, short wings and long, pointed bills which curve downwards.
Collared pratincole, Glareola pratincola (A)
Black-winged pratincole, Glareola nordmanni (A)
Skuas and jaegers
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Stercorariidae
The family Stercorariidae are, in general, medium to large birds, typically with grey or brown plumage, often with white markings on the wings. They nest on the ground in temperate and arctic regions and are long-distance migrants.
Great skua, Stercorarius skua (A)
Pomarine jaeger, Stercorarius pomarinus
Parasitic jaeger, Stercorarius parasiticus
Long-tailed jaeger, Stercorarius longicaudus
Auks, murres and puffins
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Alcidae
Alcids are superficially similar to penguins due to their black-and-white colours, their upright posture and some of their habits, however they are not related to the penguins and differ in being able to fly. Auks live on the open sea, only deliberately coming ashore to nest.
Dovekie, Alle alle (A)
Common murre, Uria aalge
Razorbill, Alca torda
Black guillemot, Cepphus grylle
Gulls, terns, and skimmers
Order: CharadriiformesFamily: Laridae
Laridae is a family of medium to large seabirds, the gulls, terns, and skimmers. Gulls are typically grey or white, often with black markings on the head or wings. They have stout, longish bills and webbed feet. Terns are a group of generally medium to large seabirds typically with grey or white plumage, often with black markings on the head. Most terns hunt fish by diving but some pick insects off the surface of fresh water. Terns are generally long-lived birds, with several species known to live in excess of 30 years.
Black-legged kittiwake, Rissa tridactyla
Ivory gull, Pagophila eburnea (A)
Sabine's gull, Xema sabini (A)
Black-headed gull, Chroicocephalus ridibundus
Little gull, Hydrocoloeus minutus
Ross's gull, Rhodostethia rosea (A)
Mediterranean gull, Ichthyaetus melanocephalus (A)
Common gull, Larus canus
Herring gull, Larus argentatus
Yellow-legged gull, Larus michahellis (A)
Caspian gull, Larus cachinnans
Iceland gull, Larus glaucoides (A)
Lesser black-backed gull, Larus fuscus
Glaucous gull, Larus hyperboreus
Great black-backed gull, Larus marinus
Little tern, Sternula albifrons
Gull-billed tern, Gelochelidon nilotica (A)
Caspian tern, Hydroprogne caspia
Black tern, Chlidonias niger
White-winged tern, Chlidonias leucopterus
Whiskered tern, Chlidonias hybrida (A)
Common tern, Sterna hirundo
Arctic tern, Sterna paradisaea
Sandwich tern, Thalasseus sandvicensis
Loons
Order: GaviiformesFamily: Gaviidae
Loons, known as divers in Europe, are a group of aquatic birds found in many parts of North America and northern Europe. They are the size of a large duck or small goose, which they somewhat resemble when swimming, but to which they are completely unrelated.
Red-throated loon, Gavia stellata
Arctic loon, Gavia arctica
Common loon, Gavia immer (A)
Yellow-billed loon, Gavia adamsii
Northern storm-petrels
Order: ProcellariiformesFamily: Hydrobatidae
The northern storm-petrels are relatives of the petrels and are the smallest seabirds. They feed on planktonic crustaceans and small fish picked from the surface, typically while hovering. The flight is fluttering and sometimes bat-like.
Leach's storm-petrel, Hydrobates leucorhous (A)
Shearwaters and petrels
Order: ProcellariiformesFamily: Procellariidae
The procellariids are the main group of medium-sized "true petrels", characterised by united nostrils with medium septum and a long outer functional primary.
Cory's shearwater, Calonectris diomedea (A)
Manx shearwater, Puffinus puffinus (A)
Balearic shearwater, Puffinus mauretanicus (A)
Storks
Order: CiconiiformesFamily: Ciconiidae
Storks are large, long-legged, long-necked, wading birds with long, stout bills. Storks are mute, but bill-clattering is an important mode of communication at the nest. Their nests can be large and may be reused for many years. Many species are migratory.
Black stork, Ciconia nigra
White stork, Ciconia ciconia
Boobies and gannets
Order: SuliformesFamily: Sulidae
The sulids comprise the gannets and boobies. Both groups are medium to large coastal seabirds that plunge-dive for fish.
Northern gannet, Morus bassanus
Cormorants and shags
Order: SuliformesFamily: Phalacrocoracidae
Phalacrocoracidae is a family of medium to large coastal, fish-eating seabirds that includes cormorants and shags. Plumage colouration varies, with the majority having mainly dark plumage, some species being black-and-white and a few being colourful.
Great cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo
Pelicans
Order: PelecaniformesFamily: Pelecanidae
Pelicans are large water birds with a distinctive pouch under their beak. As with other members of the order Pelecaniformes, they have webbed feet with four toes.
Great white pelican, Pelecanus onocrotalus (A)
Herons, egrets, and bitterns
Order: PelecaniformesFamily: Ardeidae
The family Ardeidae contains the bitterns, herons, and egrets. Herons and egrets are medium to large wading birds with long necks and legs. Bitterns tend to be shorter necked and more wary. Members of Ardeidae fly with their necks retracted, unlike other long-necked birds such as storks, ibises and spoonbills.
Great bittern, Botaurus stellaris
Little bittern, Ixobrychus minutus (A)
Gray heron, Ardea cinerea
Purple heron, Ardea purpurea (A)
Great egret, Ardea alba
Little egret, Egretta garzetta (A)
Cattle egret, Bubulcus ibis (A)
Black-crowned night-heron, Nycticorax nycticorax (A)
Ibises and spoonbills
Order: PelecaniformesFamily: Threskiornithidae
Threskiornithidae is a family of large terrestrial and wading birds which includes the ibises and spoonbills. They have long, broad wings with 11 primary and about 20 secondary feathers. They are strong fliers and despite their size and weight, very capable soarers.
Glossy ibis, Plegadis falcinellus (A)
Eurasian spoonbill, Platalea leucorodia (A)
Osprey
Order: AccipitriformesFamily: Pandionidae
The family Pandionidae contains only one species, the osprey. The osprey is a medium-large raptor which is a specialist fish-eater with a worldwide distribution.
Osprey, Pandion haliaetus
Hawks, eagles, and kites
Order: AccipitriformesFamily: Accipitridae
Accipitridae is a family of birds of prey, which includes hawks, eagles, kites, harriers and Old World vultures. These birds have powerful hooked beaks for tearing flesh from their prey, strong legs, powerful talons and keen eyesight.
Egyptian vulture, Neophron percnopterus (A)
European honey-buzzard, Pernis apivorus
Cinereous vulture, Aegypius monachus (A)
Eurasian griffon, Gyps fulvus (A)
Short-toed snake-eagle, Circaetus gallicus (A)
Lesser spotted eagle, Clanga pomarina
Greater spotted eagle, Clanga clanga
Booted eagle, Hieraaetus pennatus (A)
Steppe eagle, Aquila nipalensis (A)
Imperial eagle, Aquila heliaca (A)
Golden eagle, Aquila chrysaetos
Eurasian marsh-harrier, Circus aeruginosus
Hen harrier, Circus cyaneus
Pallid harrier, Circus macrourus
Montagu's harrier, Circus pygargus
Eurasian sparrowhawk, Accipiter nisus
Northern goshawk, Accipiter gentilis
Red kite, Milvus milvus (A)
Black kite, Milvus migrans
White-tailed eagle, Haliaeetus albicilla
Rough-legged hawk, Buteo lagopus
Common buzzard, Buteo buteo
Long-legged buzzard, Buteo rufinus (A)
Barn-owls
Order: StrigiformesFamily: Tytonidae
Barn-owls are medium to large owls with large heads and characteristic heart-shaped faces. They have long strong legs with powerful talons.
Barn owl, Tyto alba
Owls
Order: StrigiformesFamily: Strigidae
The typical owls are small to large solitary nocturnal birds of prey. They have large forward-facing eyes and ears, a hawk-like beak and a conspicuous circle of feathers around each eye called a facial disk.
Eurasian eagle-owl, Bubo bubo
Snowy owl, Bubo scandiacus (A)
Northern hawk owl, Surnia ulula
Eurasian pygmy-owl, Glaucidium passerinum
Little owl, Athene noctua (A)
Tawny owl, Strix aluco
Ural owl, Strix uralensis
Great gray owl, Strix nebulosa (A)
Long-eared owl, Asio otus
Short-eared owl, Asio flammeus
Boreal owl, Aegolius funereus
Hoopoes
Order: BucerotiformesFamily: Upupidae
Hoopoes have black, white and orangey-pink colouring with a large erectile crest on their head.
Eurasian hoopoe, Upupa epops
Kingfishers
Order: CoraciiformesFamily: Alcedinidae
Kingfishers are medium-sized birds with large heads, long, pointed bills, short legs and stubby tails.
Common kingfisher, Alcedo atthis
Bee-eaters
Order: CoraciiformesFamily: Meropidae
The bee-eaters are a group of near passerine birds in the family Meropidae. Most species are found in Africa but others occur in southern Europe, Madagascar, Australia and New Guinea. They are characterised by richly coloured plumage, slender bodies and usually elongated central tail feathers. All are colourful and have long downturned bills and pointed wings, which give them a swallow-like appearance when seen from afar.
European bee-eater, Merops apiaster (A)
Rollers
Order: CoraciiformesFamily: Coraciidae
Rollers resemble crows in size and build, but are more closely related to the kingfishers and bee-eaters. They share the colourful appearance of those groups with blues and browns predominating. The two inner front toes are connected, but the outer toe is not.
European roller, Coracias garrulus (A)
Woodpeckers
Order: PiciformesFamily: Picidae
Woodpeckers are small to medium-sized birds with chisel-like beaks, short legs, stiff tails and long tongues used for capturing insects. Some species have feet with two toes pointing forward and two backward, while several species have only three toes. Many woodpeckers have the habit of tapping noisily on tree trunks with their beaks.
Eurasian wryneck, Jynx torquilla
Eurasian three-toed woodpecker, Picoides tridactylus
Middle spotted woodpecker, Dendrocoptes medius
White-backed woodpecker, Dendrocopos leucotos
Great spotted woodpecker, Dendrocopos major
Lesser spotted woodpecker, Dryobates minor
Gray-headed woodpecker, Picus canus
Eurasian green woodpecker, Picus viridis
Black woodpecker, Dryocopus martius
Falcons and caracaras
Order: FalconiformesFamily: Falconidae
Falconidae is a family of diurnal birds of prey. They differ from hawks, eagles and kites in that they kill with their beaks instead of their talons.
Lesser kestrel, Falco naumanni (A)
Eurasian kestrel, Falco tinnunculus
Red-footed falcon, Falco vespertinus
Merlin, Falco columbarius
Eurasian hobby, Falco subbuteo
Saker falcon, Falco cherrug (A)
Gyrfalcon, Falco rusticolus (A)
Peregrine falcon, Falco peregrinus
Old World orioles
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Oriolidae
The Old World orioles are colourful passerine birds. They are not related to the New World orioles.
Eurasian golden oriole, Oriolus oriolus
Shrikes
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Laniidae
Shrikes are passerine birds known for their habit of catching other birds and small animals and impaling the uneaten portions of their bodies on thorns. A typical shrike's beak is hooked, like a bird of prey.
Red-backed shrike, Lanius collurio
Red-tailed shrike, Lanius phoenicuroides (A)
Isabelline shrike, Lanius isabellinus (A)
Great gray shrike, Lanius excubitor
Lesser gray shrike, Lanius minor (A)
Woodchat shrike, Lanius senator (A)
Crows, jays, and magpies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Corvidae
The family Corvidae includes crows, ravens, jays, choughs, magpies, treepies, nutcrackers and ground jays. Corvids are above average in size among the Passeriformes, and some of the larger species show high levels of intelligence.
Siberian jay, Perisoreus infaustus (A)
Eurasian jay, Garrulus glandarius
Eurasian magpie, Pica pica
Eurasian nutcracker, Nucifraga caryocatactes
Eurasian jackdaw, Corvus monedula
Rook, Corvus frugilegus
Carrion crow, Corvus corone (A)
Hooded crow, Corvus cornix
Common raven, Corvus corax
Tits, chickadees, and titmice
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Paridae
The Paridae are mainly small stocky woodland species with short stout bills. Some have crests. They are adaptable birds, with a mixed diet including seeds and insects.
Coal tit, Periparus ater
Crested tit, Lophophanes cristatus
Marsh tit, Poecile palustris
Willow tit, Poecile montana
Gray-headed chickadee, Poecile cincta (A)
Eurasian blue tit, Cyanistes caeruleus
Azure tit, Cyanistes cyanus (A)
Great tit, Parus major
Penduline-tits
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Remizidae
The penduline-tits are a group of small passerine birds related to the true tits. They are insectivores.
Eurasian penduline-tit, Remiz pendulinus
Larks
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Alaudidae
Larks are small terrestrial birds with often extravagant songs and display flights. Most larks are fairly dull in appearance. Their food is insects and seeds.
Horned lark, Eremophila alpestris
Greater short-toed lark, Calandrella brachydactyla (A)
Calandra lark, Melanocorypha calandra (A)
Mediterranean short-toed lark, Alaudala rufescens (A)
Wood lark, Lullula arborea
Eurasian skylark, Alauda arvensis
Crested lark, Galerida cristata (A)
Bearded reedling
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Panuridae
This species, the only one in its family, is found in reed beds throughout temperate Europe and Asia.
Bearded reedling, Panurus biarmicus
Reed warblers and allies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Acrocephalidae
The members of this family are usually rather large for "warblers". Most are rather plain olivaceous brown above with much yellow to beige below. They are usually found in open woodland, reedbeds, or tall grass. The family occurs mostly in southern to western Eurasia and surroundings, but it also ranges far into the Pacific, with some species in Africa.
Booted warbler, Iduna caligata
Eastern olivaceous warbler, Iduna pallida (A)
Icterine warbler, Hippolais icterina
Aquatic warbler, Acrocephalus paludicola (A)
Sedge warbler, Acrocephalus schoenobaenus
Paddyfield warbler, Acrocephalus agricola (A)
Blyth's reed warbler, Acrocephalus dumetorum
Marsh warbler, Acrocephalus palustris
Eurasian reed warbler, Acrocephalus scirpaceus
Great reed warbler, Acrocephalus arundinaceus
Grassbirds and allies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Locustellidae
Locustellidae are a family of small insectivorous songbirds found mainly in Eurasia, Africa, and the Australian region. They are smallish birds with tails that are usually long and pointed, and tend to be drab brownish or buffy all over.
River warbler, Locustella fluviatilis
Savi's warbler, Locustella luscinioides
Common grasshopper-warbler, Locustella naevia
Swallows
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Hirundinidae
The family Hirundinidae is adapted to aerial feeding. They have a slender streamlined body, long pointed wings and a short bill with a wide gape. The feet are adapted to perching rather than walking, and the front toes are partially joined at the base.
Bank swallow, Riparia riparia
Eurasian crag-martin, Ptyonoprogne rupestris (A)
Barn swallow, Hirundo rustica
Red-rumped swallow, Cecropis daurica (A)
Common house-martin, Delichon urbicum
Leaf warblers
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Phylloscopidae
Leaf warblers are a family of small insectivorous birds found mostly in Eurasia and ranging into Wallacea and Africa. The species are of various sizes, often green-plumaged above and yellow below, or more subdued with grayish-green to grayish-brown colors.
Wood warbler, Phylloscopus sibilatrix
Yellow-browed warbler, Phylloscopus inornatus
Hume's warbler, Phylloscopus humei (A)
Pallas's leaf warbler, Phylloscopus proregulus
Radde's warbler, Phylloscopus schwarzi (A)
Dusky warbler, Phylloscopus fuscatus (A)
Willow warbler, Phylloscopus trochilus
Common chiffchaff, Phylloscopus collybita
Greenish warbler, Phylloscopus trochiloides
Arctic warbler, Phylloscopus borealis (A)
Long-tailed tits
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Aegithalidae
Long-tailed tits are a group of small passerine birds with medium to long tails. They make woven bag nests in trees. Most eat a mixed diet which includes insects.
Long-tailed tit, Aegithalos caudatus
Sylviid warblers, parrotbills, and allies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Sylviidae
The family Sylviidae is a group of small insectivorous passerine birds. They mainly occur as breeding species, as the common name implies, in Europe, Asia and, to a lesser extent, Africa. Most are of generally undistinguished appearance, but many have distinctive songs.
Eurasian blackcap, Sylvia atricapilla
Garden warbler, Sylvia borin
Asian desert warbler, Curruca nana (A)
Barred warbler, Curruca nisoria
Lesser whitethroat, Curruca curruca
Eastern subalpine warbler, Curruca cantillans (A)
Greater whitethroat, Curruca communis
Kinglets
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Regulidae
The kinglets, also called crests, are a small group of birds often included in the Old World warblers, but frequently given family status because they also resemble the titmice.
Goldcrest, Regulus regulus
Common firecrest, Regulus ignicapilla (A)
Nuthatches
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Sittidae
Nuthatches are small woodland birds. They have the unusual ability to climb down trees head first, unlike other birds which can only go upwards. Nuthatches have big heads, short tails and powerful bills and feet.
Eurasian nuthatch, Sitta europaea
Treecreepers
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Certhiidae
Treecreepers are small woodland birds, brown above and white below. They have thin pointed down-curved bills, which they use to extricate insects from bark. They have stiff tail feathers, like woodpeckers, which they use to support themselves on vertical trees.
Eurasian treecreeper, Certhia familiaris
Wrens
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Troglodytidae
The wrens are mainly small and inconspicuous except for their loud songs. These birds have short wings and thin down-turned bills. Several species often hold their tails upright. All are insectivorous.
Eurasian wren, Troglodytes troglodytes
Dippers
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Cinclidae
Dippers are a group of perching birds whose habitat includes aquatic environments in the Americas, Europe and Asia. They are named for their bobbing or dipping movements.
White-throated dipper, Cinclus cinclus
Starlings
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Sturnidae
Starlings are small to medium-sized passerine birds. Their flight is strong and direct and they are very gregarious. Their preferred habitat is fairly open country. They eat insects and fruit. Plumage is typically dark with a metallic sheen.
European starling, Sturnus vulgaris
Rosy starling, Pastor roseus (A)
Thrushes and allies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Turdidae
The thrushes are a group of passerine birds that occur mainly in the Old World. They are plump, soft plumaged, small to medium-sized insectivores or sometimes omnivores, often feeding on the ground. Many have attractive songs.
Mistle thrush, Turdus viscivorus
Song thrush, Turdus philomelos
Redwing, Turdus iliacus
Eurasian blackbird, Turdus merula
Fieldfare, Turdus pilaris
Ring ouzel, Turdus torquatus
Black-throated thrush, Turdus atrogularis (A)
Naumann's thrush, Turdus naumanni (A)
Old World flycatchers
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Muscicapidae
Old World flycatchers are a large group of small passerine birds native to the Old World. They are mainly small arboreal insectivores. The appearance of these birds is highly varied, but they mostly have weak songs and harsh calls.
Spotted flycatcher, Muscicapa striata
European robin, Erithacus rubecula
Thrush nightingale, Luscinia luscinia
Bluethroat, Luscinia svecica
Siberian rubythroat, Calliope calliope (A)
Red-flanked bluetail, Tarsiger cyanurus (A)
Red-breasted flycatcher, Ficedula parva
European pied flycatcher, Ficedula hypoleuca
Collared flycatcher, Ficedula albicollis (A)
Common redstart, Phoenicurus phoenicurus
Black redstart, Phoenicurus ochruros
Rufous-tailed rock-thrush, Monticola saxatilis (A)
Whinchat, Saxicola rubetra
European stonechat, Saxicola rubicola (A)
Siberian stonechat, Saxicola maurus (A)
Northern wheatear, Oenanthe oenanthe
Isabelline wheatear, Oenanthe isabellina (A)
Desert wheatear, Oenanthe deserti (A)
Pied wheatear, Oenanthe pleschanka (A)
Waxwings
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Bombycillidae
The waxwings are a group of passerine birds with soft silky plumage and unique red tips to some of the wing feathers. In the Bohemian and cedar waxwings, these tips look like sealing wax and give the group its name. These are arboreal birds of northern forests. They live on insects in summer and berries in winter.
Bohemian waxwing, Bombycilla garrulus
Accentors
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Prunellidae
The accentors are in the only bird family, Prunellidae, which is completely endemic to the Palearctic. They are small, fairly drab species superficially similar to sparrows.
Alpine accentor, Prunella collaris (A)
Siberian accentor, Prunella montanella (A)
Black-throated accentor, Prunella atrogularis (A)
Dunnock, Prunella modularis
Old World sparrows
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Passeridae
Old World sparrows are small passerine birds. In general, sparrows tend to be small, plump, brown or grey birds with short tails and short powerful beaks. Sparrows are seed eaters, but they also consume small insects.
House sparrow, Passer domesticus
Eurasian tree sparrow, Passer montanus
Wagtails and pipits
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Motacillidae
Motacillidae is a family of small passerine birds with medium to long tails. They include the wagtails, longclaws and pipits. They are slender, ground feeding insectivores of open country.
Gray wagtail, Motacilla cinerea
Western yellow wagtail, Motacilla flava
Citrine wagtail, Motacilla citreola
White wagtail, Motacilla alba
Richard's pipit, Anthus richardi (A)
Blyth's pipit, Anthus godlewskii (A)
Tawny pipit, Anthus campestris
Meadow pipit, Anthus pratensis
Tree pipit, Anthus trivialis
Olive-backed pipit, Anthus hodgsoni (A)
Red-throated pipit, Anthus cervinus
Water pipit, Anthus spinoletta (A)
Rock pipit, Anthus petrosus
Finches, euphonias, and allies
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Fringillidae
Finches are seed-eating passerine birds, that are small to moderately large and have a strong beak, usually conical and in some species very large. All have twelve tail feathers and nine primaries. These birds have a bouncing flight with alternating bouts of flapping and gliding on closed wings, and most sing well.
Common chaffinch, Fringilla coelebs
Brambling, Fringilla montifringilla
Hawfinch, Coccothraustes coccothraustes
Common rosefinch, Carpodacus erythrinus
Pine grosbeak, Pinicola enucleator
Eurasian bullfinch, Pyrrhula pyrrhula
Trumpeter finch, Bucanetes githagineus (A)
European greenfinch, Chloris chloris
Twite, Linaria flavirostris
Eurasian linnet, Linaria cannabina
Common redpoll, Acanthis flammea
Lesser redpoll, Acanthis cabaret
Hoary redpoll, Acanthis hornemanni
Parrot crossbill, Loxia pytyopsittacus
Red crossbill, Loxia curvirostra
White-winged crossbill, Loxia leucoptera
European goldfinch, Carduelis carduelis
European serin, Serinus serinus
Eurasian siskin, Spinus spinus
Longspurs and snow buntings
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Calcariidae
The Calcariidae are a family of birds that had been traditionally grouped with the New World sparrows, but differ in a number of respects and are usually found in open grassy areas.
Lapland longspur, Calcarius lapponicus
Snow bunting, Plectrophenax nivalis
Old World buntings
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Emberizidae
The emberizids are a large family of passerine birds. They are seed-eating birds with distinctively shaped bills. Many emberizid species have distinctive head patterns.
Black-headed bunting, Emberiza melanocephala (A)
Red-headed bunting, Emberiza bruniceps (A)
Corn bunting, Emberiza calandra (A)
Yellowhammer, Emberiza citrinella
Ortolan bunting, Emberiza hortulana
Reed bunting, Emberiza schoeniclus
Yellow-breasted bunting, Emberiza aureola (A)
Little bunting, Emberiza pusilla (A)
Rustic bunting, Emberiza rustica (A)
New World sparrows
Order: PasseriformesFamily: Passerellidae
Until 2017, these species were considered part of the family Emberizidae. Most of the species are known as sparrows, but these birds are not closely related to the Old World sparrows which are in the family Passeridae. Many of these have distinctive head patterns.
Fox sparrow, Passerella iliaca (A)
See also
List of birds
Lists of birds by region
References
Lists of birds by country
Lists of birds of Europe
Birds
Birds |
The 344th Military Intelligence Battalion (MI Bn) is located in San Angelo, Texas at Goodfellow Air Force Base. The 344th's mission is to train, develop, and educate soldiers to become signals intelligence and firefighting professionals for the U.S. Army. The 344th MI Bn is subordinate to the 111th Military Intelligence Brigade headquartered at Fort Huachuca, Arizona.
The 344th MI Bn trains these soldiers in four different military occupational specialties for enlisted, non-commissioned officers, and warrant officers within the Military Intelligence Corps and Army Corps of Engineers:
Signals Intelligence Analysts (35N) and Technicians (352N)
Cryptologic Linguists (35P)
Signals Collectors (35S) and Technicians (352S)
Firefighters (12M)
The 344th MI Bn teaches 21 different courses and has more than 70 classes in session at any given time. It consists of three companies located on two installations belonging to two different armed services, Goodfellow Air Force Base and Naval Air Station Pensacola Corry Station. The battalion has more than 300 permanent party members with an annual student throughput of about 1,700 soldiers.
Lineage and honors
Lineage
Constituted 5 November 1962 in the Army Reserve as the 344th Army Security Agency Company
Activated 28 February 1963 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Reorganized and redesignated 15 April 1966 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 344th Army Security Agency Battalion
Inactivated 31 January 1968 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Redesignated 1 February 1990 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 344th Military Intelligence Battalion ; concurrently withdrawn from the Army Reserve and allotted to the Regular Army
Headquarters transferred 25 May 1990 to the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command and activated at Goodfellow Air Force Base, Texas
Decorations
Army Superior Unit Award, Streamer embroidered 1 August 1990 – 31 December 1991 (344th Military Intelligence Battalion cited; DA GO 34, 1992)
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, Streamer embroidered 1 July 1995 – 30 June 1997
Air Force Outstanding Unit Award, Streamer embroidered 1 July 1997 – 30 June 1999
Coat of arms
Description
Shield: Argent on a saltire celeste a key ward up bendwise sinister surmounted by two pikes bendwise Or.
Motto: Silent Sentinel
Distinctive unit insignia
Description
A gold color metal and enamel device consisting of a gold key, ward slanted upward to right behind the shafts of two pikes; all encircled by a continuous oval-shaped scroll passing through the bow of the key, behind the pike heads, key ward and over the pike staffs and bearing the inscription in black letters SILENT SENTINEL.
Symbolism: The key, symbol for security and secrecy, and the pikes, weapons used by sentries in the Middle Ages, symbolize the basic mission of the organization. The shape of the bow of the key and the two pikes further simulates the numerical designation of the organization.
Symbolism
Shield: Oriental blue and silver gray are the colors used for military intelligence. The key, symbol for security and secrecy, and the pikes, weapons used by sentries in the Middle Ages, symbolize the basic mission of the organization.
References
344 |
Lodge Pole is a census-designated place (CDP) in Blaine County, Montana, United States. The population was 265 at the 2010 census. It lies within the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation, near the reservation's southern end.
The nearby community of Hays lies to its west-southwest.
Geography
Lodge Pole is located at (48.032665, -108.535716).
According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of , all land.
Demographics
As of the census of 2000, there were 214 people, 59 households, and 48 families residing in the CDP. The population density was . There were 69 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the CDP was 2.34% White, 96.73% Native American, and 0.93% from two or more races.
While Lodge Pole is located on a reservation belonging to both Assiniboine people and Gros Ventre people, the community itself is primarily inhabited by Assiniboine people, while nearby Hays is home to Gros Ventre.
There were 59 households, out of which 50.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 42.4% were married couples living together, 25.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 18.6% were non-families. 16.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 1.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.63 and the average family size was 3.90.
In the CDP, the population was spread out, with 45.3% under the age of 18, 5.1% from 18 to 24, 27.1% from 25 to 44, 16.4% from 45 to 64, and 6.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 24 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 91.8 males.
The median income for a household in the CDP was $21,607, and the median income for a family was $22,500. Males had a median income of $21,250 versus $19,375 for females. The per capita income for the CDP was $6,276. About 44.0% of families and 40.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 42.7% of those under the age of eighteen and 77.8% of those 65 or over.
Education
Lodge Pole has an elementary school. High school is at Hays-Lodgepole High School in nearby Hays.
References
Census-designated places in Blaine County, Montana
Census-designated places in Montana
Fort Belknap Indian Reservation |
```sqlpl
--
--
-- path_to_url
--
-- Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
-- WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
alter table "BillingCancellation"
add column if not exists "billing_event_history_id" int8;
alter table "BillingCancellation"
add column if not exists "billing_event_domain_repo_id" text;
alter table "BillingCancellation"
add column if not exists "billing_recurrence_history_id" int8;
alter table "BillingCancellation"
add column if not exists "billing_recurrence_domain_repo_id" text;
``` |
is the fourth studio album by Japanese heavy metal band Loudness. It was recorded, mixed and mastered in London, England, in 1983 and released at the beginning of 1984. The sound engineer chosen for the recording sessions was the expert Julian Mendelsohn, who had previously worked with acts like Yes, Elton John, Jimmy Page and Bob Marley. The original Japanese version was licensed and released by Music for Nations in the UK and Roadrunner Records in Europe. Attention by major US labels for the band and the need to make their work accessible to Western audiences, prompted a new release of the album with vocal tracks sung in English on July 1, 1984. The English version opened the album with the instrumental "Anthem (Loudness Overture)" by Akira Takasaki, which was missing in the original Japanese release.
Critical reception
In 2005, Disillusion was ranked number 290 in Rock Hard magazine's book of The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time. In September 2007, Rolling Stone Japan rated Disillusion No. 40 on its list of the "100 Greatest Japanese Rock Albums of All Time". In 2019, "Exploder" was named the 21st best guitar instrumental by Young Guitar Magazine.
Track listing
All music composed by Akira Takasaki, all lyrics by Minoru Niihara. English lyrics by Tommy McClendon.
Side one
"Crazy Doctor" – 4:13
"Esper" – 3:45
"Butterfly" – 5:12
"Revelation" – 4:19
Side two
"Exploder" (instrumental) – 2:29
"Dream Fantasy" – 4:34
"Milky Way" – 4:17
"Satisfaction Guaranteed" – 3:39
"Ares' Lament" – 5:30
2004 Japanese CD edition bonus tracks
"Crazy Doctor" (live English version) – 4:18
"Dream Fantasy" (live English version) – 4:37
2005 Japanese "Disillusion (English version)" CD edition bonus tracks
"Eruption" – 3:14
"Flash Out" – 4:07
Personnel
Loudness
Minoru Niihara – vocals
Akira Takasaki – guitars
Masayoshi Yamashita – bass, Taurus pedals
Munetaka Higuchi – drums
Production
Julian Mendelsohn – engineer
Stuart Bruce – assistant engineer
Geoff Pesche – mastering at Tape One Studios, London
Mikio Shimizu, Toshi Nakashita – executive producers
References
1984 albums
Loudness (band) albums
Nippon Columbia albums
Music for Nations albums
Japanese-language albums |
Lamprosema victoriae is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by Harrison Gray Dyar Jr. in 1923. It has been recorded in the United States from Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma and
Texas.
References
Moths described in 1923
Lamprosema
Moths of North America |
Felicity Colman is a Creative Media Arts theorist. She is Professor of Film and Media Arts. She is the Associate Dean of Research for the London College of Fashion (from 2019) at University of the Arts London
Colman was the Head of The Graduate Research School (2017-2019) at Kingston University, London, United Kingdom. Colman held a Professorial Chair in Media at Manchester School of Art, Manchester, United Kingdom. where she held various positions in art and media at the Manchester School of Art from 2009-2017. Prior to this Colman held a number of positions at University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Colman is Honorary Professor at the School of Art, College of Design and Social Context RMIT, Melbourne, Australia (2019-2023). From 2020 Colman is Visiting Research Fellow, Global Centre for Humanities in Technology [GCTH], Kyung Hee University, South Korea. In 2005 Colman was Visiting Associate Professor in Screen Media, Screen Theory Department, The University of Waikato, New Zealand. In 2001, Colman was Smithsonian Research Scholar, at the National Gallery of Art Washington DC, USA.
Colman's specialities include visual art, culture, and screen media forms, and creative philosophy.
Academic work
Colman, F., Bühlmann, V., O’Donnell, A. and van der Tuin, I. (2018). Ethics of Coding: A Report on the Algorithmic Condition [EoC]. H2020-EU.2.1.1. – INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIP – Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies – Information and Communication Technologies. Brussels: European Commission. 732407, pp. 1–54.
References
1967 births
Living people
Academic staff of the University of Melbourne
Academics of Kingston University
University of Sydney alumni
University of Queensland alumni
Monash University alumni
University of Melbourne alumni
University of Melbourne women
Feminist artists
Academics of the London College of Fashion |
is the fourth single from the J-pop idol group Morning Musume, released on February 10, 1999 as an 8 cm CD. It sold a total of 410,850 copies, and reached number two on the Oricon Charts. In 2004, it was re-released as part of the Early Single Box and again in 2005 as a 12 cm CD. Lead vocals of this single were Natsumi Abe and Asuka Fukuda. Prior to this singles release, on January 17, 1999, Fukuda shocked viewers of the television show Asayan with her decision to "graduate" from Morning Musume and continue with her studies.
"Never Forget", one of the coupling tracks on the single, is often traditionally sung by band members at their graduation concerts and/or final TV appearances with the group, prior to embarking on solo careers or new groups.
Track listing
All songs written by Tsunku.
8 cm CD
– 5:05
"Happy Night" – 5:13
"Never Forget" – 4:35
"Memory Seishun no Hikari (Instrumental)" – 5:04
12 cm CD (Early Single Box and individual release)
"Memory Seishun no Hikari" – 5:05
"Happy Night" – 5:12
"Never Forget" – 4:37
"Memory Seishun no Hikari (Instrumental)" – 5:05
"Memory Seishun no Hikari (Instrumental)" – 5:10
Members at the time of single
1st generation: Yuko Nakazawa, Aya Ishiguro, Kaori Iida, Natsumi Abe, Asuka Fukuda
2nd generation: Kei Yasuda, Mari Yaguchi, Sayaka Ichii
External links
Memory Seishun no Hikari entry on the Up-Front Works official website
1999 singles
Morning Musume songs
Zetima Records singles
Songs written by Tsunku
Song recordings produced by Tsunku
1999 songs
Torch songs
Pop ballads
1990s ballads |
```ruby
class Audit < PaperTrail::Version
self.table_name = :audits
belongs_to :user, foreign_key: 'whodunnit', optional: true, inverse_of: :audits
end
``` |
```javascript
/* your_sha256_hash--------------
*
* # D3.js - basic pie chart
*
* Demo d3.js pie chart setup with .csv data source
*
* Version: 1.0
* Latest update: August 1, 2015
*
* your_sha256_hash------------ */
$(function () {
// Initialize chart
pieBasic('#d3-pie-basic', 120);
// Chart setup
function pieBasic(element, radius) {
// Basic setup
// ------------------------------
// Colors
var color = d3.scale.category20();
// Create chart
// ------------------------------
// Add SVG element
var container = d3.select(element).append("svg");
// Add SVG group
var svg = container
.attr("width", radius * 2)
.attr("height", radius * 2)
.append("g")
.attr("transform", "translate(" + radius + "," + radius + ")");
// Construct chart layout
// ------------------------------
// Arc
var arc = d3.svg.arc()
.outerRadius(radius)
.innerRadius(0);
// Pie
var pie = d3.layout.pie()
.sort(null)
.value(function(d) { return d.population; });
// Load data
// ------------------------------
d3.csv("assets/demo_data/d3/pies/pies_basic.csv", function(error, data) {
// Pull out values
data.forEach(function(d) {
d.population = +d.population;
});
//
// Append chart elements
//
// Bind data
var g = svg.selectAll(".d3-arc")
.data(pie(data))
.enter()
.append("g")
.attr("class", "d3-arc");
// Add arc path
g.append("path")
.attr("d", arc)
.style("stroke", "#fff")
.style("fill", function(d) { return color(d.data.age); });
// Add text labels
g.append("text")
.attr("transform", function(d) { return "translate(" + arc.centroid(d) + ")"; })
.attr("dy", ".35em")
.style("fill", "#fff")
.style("font-size", 12)
.style("text-anchor", "middle")
.text(function(d) { return d.data.age; });
});
}
});
``` |
Ericek is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Buharkent, Aydın Province, Turkey. Its population is 226 (2022).
References
Neighbourhoods in Buharkent District |
The Nutting Homestead is a historic farm complex on Maine State Route 121, south of the center of Otisfield, Maine. The property has been owned by the Nutting family and its descendants since the late 18th century and exemplifies the adaptive use of farm properties over time. The oldest portion of the farmhouse dates to 1796, and other buildings in the complex date mainly to the 19th century. The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
Nathan Nutting, a native of Groton, Massachusetts, purchased the land for his house in 1796 and built a modest -story Cape style house. His son, Nathan, Jr., was sent to Boston for education, and he studied architecture and construction. After his return to Otisfield, he built the Federal-style main block of the present house, attaching his father's original Cape to the right side. Nathan, Jr. is also locally notable as the builder of the Bell Hill Meetinghouse and other area churches, and he operated a sawmill and manufactured carpentry tools.
The main block of the house is a -story wood-frame structure, five bays wide, with a large central chimney. The main entrance is centered on the facade and features sidelight windows and a louvered fan above. It is framed by pilasters supporting a pediment and Doric columns and entablature. The cornice is studded with modillions. The south (right) side of the house is joined to the -story Cape, which is also five bays wide with a center entrance framed by pilasters. This section originally had a central chimney, but this was removed in the late 19th century in favor of smaller end chimneys, to which wood stoves were connected. The overhanging roof suggests that it is also a later 19th-century alteration.
The rest of the farm complex includes three 19th-century buildings: a barn, carriage house, and corn crib.
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Oxford County, Maine
References
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Maine
Federal architecture in Maine
Houses completed in 1796
Houses in Oxford County, Maine
National Register of Historic Places in Oxford County, Maine
Otisfield, Maine
1796 establishments in Massachusetts |
Events
James Eppolito, a member of the Gambino crime family, is photographed with First Lady Rosalynn Carter in recognition for his charity work in Manhattan.
January 12 – Johnny Dioguardi dies at a Lewisburg, Pennsylvania hospital, while serving a sentence for stock fraud.
January 17 – Anthony Scotto, a caporegime of the Gambino crime family and son-in-law to Anthony "Tough Tony" Anastasio, is indicted on charges of receiving $200,000 in illegal payoffs during his term in office as President of Brooklyn ILA Local 1814. As the General Organizer of the ILA, Scotto was one of the most influential labor leaders in New York at the time of his arrest.
February 7 – Peter Waring, a cocaine dealer, is murdered, dismembered and disposed of by the DeMeo Crew. Waring was killed after agreeing to become an informant for agents with the NYPD's Narcotics Division.
February 19 – Frederick Todaro is shot and stabbed to death by the DeMeo Crew. Todaro's body is then dismembered, packaged and disposed of at the Fountain Avenue Dump in Brooklyn.
March 17 – Charles Padnick, William Serrano and two unidentified associates of Serrano are shot to death, dismembered and disposed of by the DeMeo Crew. They are murdered after travelling to New York to set up a large-scale cocaine deal with members of the crew.
March 19 – James Padnick travels to New York after the disappearance of his father Charles Padnick and is murdered, dismembered and disposed of by the DeMeo Crew.
April 14 – Giovanni "Papa John" Priziola, a former consiglieri of the Detroit crime syndicate, dies of natural causes at the age of 84.
April 19 – Dominick Ragucci, a 19-year-old college student with no organized crime ties, is shot to death by Roy DeMeo after a high-speed car chase. Ragucci was murdered after DeMeo mistakenly identified him as a hitman sent by a Cuban drug cartel.
April 26 – Anthony "Little Pussy" Russo, a high-ranking member of the Genovese crime family who had risen from a chauffeur and bodyguard for Vito Genovese to become a Genovese capo in Monmouth County, New Jersey, is found shot to death in Long Branch, New Jersey. Russo's death may have been connected to an FBI surveillance operation in which he unknowingly revealed details of concealing Las Vegas casino ownership and skimming operations.
May 11 – Gambino associate and DeMeo Crew member Harvey 'Chris' Rosenberg is murdered by Roy DeMeo and Anthony Senter on orders from DeMeo's superior Anthony Gaggi for ripping off and killing associates of a Colombian drug dealer.
June 22 – Guam Drug trafficker Francisco S. Palacios and his wife are arrested on drugs charges.
July 11 – Giorgio Ambrosoli, the attorney investigating the bankruptcy of the financial empire of Sicilian banker Michele Sindona, is murdered in Milan on the orders of Sindona.
July 11 – Anthony Provenzano, who had been extorting payments from trucking firms at the threat of instigating union strikes, is convicted of labor racketeering and sentenced to 20 years in federal prison.
July 12 – Carmine "Lilo" Galante, boss of the Bonanno crime family, is gunned down with capo Leonardo "Nardo" Coppola and his cousin, soldier Giuseppe Turano while having dinner at Joe & Mary's Italian Restaurant on Knickerbocker Ave., Brooklyn. Bonanno soldier Angelo "Little Moe" Presenzano escaped being killed by leaving early due to a stomach ache. Galante's bodyguards, "Zips" Cesare Bonventre and Baldo Amato took part in the hit (Bonventre shot Galante and Amato was back-up). The primary shooters were Russell Mauro (shot Galante), Bruno Indelicato (shot Turano and Coppola), Dominick "Big Trin" Trinchera (stood guard inside restaurant), Santo Giordano (stood guard outside and drove). Joe Massino, Sonny Red Indelicato, J.B. Indelicato and Phil Lucky Giacone were outside in a car as back-up. They all made up the Family Factions who opposed the monopoly (Galante had created in the heroin business) and they feared his tyrannical rule. The Factions who wished to rid themselves of Galante was the Rastelli-Massino-Napolitano Faction, the Indelicato-Giacone-Trinchera Faction and the "Zips" Catalano-Ganci-Bonventre-Amato Faction who all wanted to kill Galante whom they feared. Galante rival boss Rusty Rastelli was given Commission approval.
Nicholas "Nicky Glasses" Marangello and Michael "Mimi" Sabella, Bonanno family underboss and capo based out of "The Toyland Social Club" in Little Italy, Manhattan were contracted to be hit with Carmine Galante, but were demoted to soldiers because they were well liked by Family members. After Galante's murder "Zips" capo Salvatore Catalano was made underboss-street boss and Cesare Bonventre was made capo (youngest in Cosa Nostra). Dominick "Sonny Black" Napolitano, Joseph "Big Joe" Massino and Anthony "Bruno" Indelicato made capos.
July 13 – Former Guam police officer and drug trafficker Felix M. Garrido and his live-in girlfriend, Dora Scharff Garrido are shot dead by an unknown assailant at their Dededo home.
July 14 – Dora Scharff Garrido's father, retired police detective George Scharff, vows to find his daughter and son-in-law's murderer.
July 17 – Guam police assign officers to guard George Scharff's home.
July 20 – Convicted drug trafficker Francisco S. Palacios is connected to the murder of Felix M. Garrido and Dora Scharff Garrido. They had provided the government with information leading to the arrest of Palacios and his wife on June 22.
July 21 – Boris Giuliano, deputy police chief of Palermo, who is investigating heroin trafficking between Sicily and the United States is killed near his home in Palermo on the orders of the Sicilian Mafia Commission. One of the killers is Leoluca Bagarella of the Corleonesi.
August 2 – Michele Sindona disappears from New York, where he is under indictment, staging a bogus kidnapping with the aid of John Gambino. After spending several weeks in Sicily in the care of Sicilian mafiosi Rosario Spatola, Salvatore Inzerillo and Stefano Bontade, Sindona laundered the proceeds of heroin trafficking for the Bontade-Spatola-Inzerillo-Gambino network. The real purpose of the "kidnapping" was to issue sparsely disguised blackmail notes to Sindona's past political allies – among them Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti – to engineer the rescue of his banks and recuperate Cosa Nostra's money. The plot failed and after his "release" Sindona surrendered to the FBI, after reappearing in New York on October 16.
August 19 – Guam police announce that four key suspects in the Garrido double-murder had left the country for California.
August 28 – Convicted drug trafficker Johnny B. Santos claims that fellow Guam Penitentiary inmate Irvin R. Ibanez admitted to the double-murder on the orders of Palacios. Ibanez denies the allegations and the case goes cold.
September 25 – Sicilian, Mafia prosecutor Cesare Terranova is shot dead. Terranova was the prosecutor responsible for the imprisonment of Luciano Leggio serving a life sentence for the murder of Michele Navarra. Imprisoned mobster, Luciano Leggio is brought to trial but is acquitted due to lack of evidence. Terranova was preparing to return as head of the investigative department of the prosecution office of Palermo, after serving on the Antimafia Commission of the Italian parliament.
October 1 – Gambino members James Eppolito and James Eppolito, Jr. are shot to death by fellow Gambino Family members Anthony Gaggi and Roy DeMeo. The murder is witnessed by a civilian who alerts a nearby police officer. A gunfight erupts between the officer and Gaggi, who is wounded in the neck and arrested. DeMeo, who split up with Gaggi upon leaving the crime scene, is never identified or apprehended. The Eppolitos were related to 'Mafia Cop' Louis Eppolito.
October 12 – Legitimate used car dealers Ronald Falcaro and Khaled Daoud are shot to death, dismembered and disposed of by the DeMeo Crew. They are murdered after Daoud threatened to provide law enforcement with information pertaining to an international auto-theft ring being operated by the crew.
November 9 – John Paul Spica, associate of Anthony Giodano and a suspect in the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., is killed by a car bomb in his Cadillac.
November 15 Detroit mobsters Raffaele Quasarano and Peter Vitale, members of a commission controlling the Detroit crime syndicate, are indicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) on charges including racketeering, extortion, mail and tax fraud.
Arts and literature
Births
January 3 – Giovanni Strangio, Mafia soldier to the Italian 'Ndrangheta
Deaths
January 12 – Johnny Dioguardi (Johnny Dio), Lucchese crime family member and labor racketeer
April – James Torello "Turk", Chicago Outfit member
May 11 – Harvey 'Chris' Rosenberg, Gambino crime family associate and member of the DeMeo Crew
July 12 – Carmine Galante "Lilo"/"The Cigar", Bonanno crime family boss
September 25 – Cesare Terranova, Sicilian prosecutor
Notes
Organized crime
Years in organized crime |
```javascript
'use strict';
module.exports.definition = {
set: function (v) {
this._setProperty('cue-before', v);
},
get: function () {
return this.getPropertyValue('cue-before');
},
enumerable: true,
configurable: true
};
``` |
Jess Lee (born 1982) is an American venture capitalist. She is a partner at Sequoia Capital and the former chief executive officer of Polyvore.
Early life
Jess Lee lived in Hong Kong until the age of 17, when she graduated from Hong Kong International School, then moved to California to pursue a bachelor's degree in computer science at Stanford University, though she had initially been interested in attending art school.
Career
In 2004, Lee was recruited into Google's associate product manager (APM) program, which had been founded and was then still led by Marissa Mayer. Lee started work on Google's shopping engine Froogle before becoming product manager of Google Maps. There she worked with a team of five engineers to create My Maps, a project that allowed users to create maps of their own.
She joined Polyvore as a product manager in 2008 after providing co-founder Pasha Sadri with feedback on issues with the website. Lee initially wrote code for Polyvore but later started to handle social media, hiring, and finding new locations for the office. Her role expanded to honorary co-founder in 2010 and she was promoted to CEO in 2012. Lee then guided the company to cut down on features such as the "Ask" section and opened another office in New York City.
In 2016, she joined Sequoia Capital as an investing partner, becoming the venture capital firm's first female partner in the United States in 44 years of operation. Hired at age 33, Lee became one of Sequoia's youngest partners.
Personal life
She currently resides in Mountain View, California.
References
1982 births
Living people
American women chief executives
American chief executives
Google employees
Stanford University alumni
21st-century American women |
Leslie Alwyn Cody (11 October 1889 – 10 August 1969) was an Australian sportsman who played both rugby league and cricket at a high level.
Cricket
A right-handed batsman and leg spin bowler, Cody played first-class cricket between 1912 and 1922. After matches for New South Wales Colts, he made his first-class debut for New South Wales against Western Australia in November 1912. He played six further first-class matches that season.
While he never played Test cricket, Cody did play several times for the Australian national side. In 1913, he toured North America with Australia, playing matches in Bermuda, Canada and the United States. The Bermuda leg included one match against the Bermuda national side. The Canadian leg featured matches played all across the country, with matches in Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
The Canadian leg also featured a first-class match against a combined Canada/US team in Toronto, which Cody played in, which was the first first-class match to be played in Canada. The US leg of the tour was confined mostly to the Eastern seaboard with matches taking place in Pennsylvania, New York and Rhode Island, in addition to three matches in Chicago. The US leg featured four first-class matches, all of which Cody played in. Three were against Philadelphia and one was against a combined Canada/US team.
Back in Australia, Cody played five first-class matches in the 1913/14 season before he was again selected for an Australian tour, this time to New Zealand from February to April 1914. Cody played six first-class matches on the tour, including the two against New Zealand.
In the 1914/15 season, Cody played three first-class matches, having now moved to play for Victoria, before the First World War interrupted his cricket career. He played five further first-class matches after the war, the last coming against Western Australia in March 1922.
Rugby league
Cody played for Eastern Suburbs in the New South Wales Rugby League (NSWRL) in the years 1910 and 1911.
In the 1911 season he became the Tricolours' first premiership winning halfback. He played 19 first grade games for Easts between 1910 and 1911, scoring eight tries and two goals during his career there.
See also
List of Victoria first-class cricketers
List of New South Wales representative cricketers
References
External links
1889 births
1969 deaths
Australian rugby league players
Sydney Roosters players
Australian cricketers
New South Wales cricketers
Victoria cricketers
Cricketers from Sydney
Rugby league players from Sydney |
London Seaward formerly Leyton Orient Women F.C. (2015-2021) is a women's football team based in Barkingside in east London in England. The team compete in the FA Women’s National League (fourth tier). The club play home games at Oakside Stadium in Barkingside.
History
The club was founded in 2004 as KIKK United by Andrea Berg and Karin Revelj. The team used Mile End Stadium as its home ground.
In 2015 the club was given permission by Leyton Orient FC to use the name Leyton Orient W.F.C. The club would compete in the Greater London Women's Football League, in division 1 (North) during this time. Despite the name change the club would continue to be run separately from the men's side. In March 2021 Leyton Orient announced that they were planning to form their own women's side and that the existing team would no longer be able to use the name Leyton Orient WFC.
As a result of the loss of their ability to compete as Leyton Orient W.F.C. the club was left in search of a new identity, with the club settling on the name London Seaward as a reference to the historic connection of London with the sea. At the same time, the club began playing its home matches at Wadham Lodge, Walthamstow.
In May 2023, London Seaward announced that from the 2023-24 season the club would play home matches at Oakside Stadium, the ground of Redbridge F.C.
References
External links
Official website
Women's football clubs in London
Year of establishment missing
Sport in Leyton |
Shahid Syed Nazrul Islam Medical College () is a government medical school in Bangladesh, established in 2011. It is located at Kishoreganj. The college is affiliated with University of Dhaka as a constituent college.
It offers 5 years MBBS degree programme and admits about 65 students every year.
History
Shahid Syed Nazrul Islam Medical College was established in 2011. It was named after Syed Nazrul Islam, the first acting President of Bangladesh.
In the year 2010–2011, Bangladesh government approved a measure to establish 4 medical colleges at Jessore, Satkhira, Kishoreganj and Kushtia with a view to improve the healthcare services in the country. The Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) endorsed the project. An estimated cost of Tk 5.45 billion was approved as budget to establish Shahid Syed Nazrul Islam Medical College. The project included construction of six storied hospital building, five storied college for academic building, nurses training center, students hostel, internee doctors' hostel, doctors' dormitory, staff nurses' dormitory, mosque, auditorium, principal and directors' residential buildings, installation of gymnasium, procurement of equipment, one micro-bus, two ambulances and furniture with the fund.
See also
Gurudayal Government College
List of medical colleges in Bangladesh
Pakundia Adarsha Mohila College
References
Medical colleges in Bangladesh
Hospitals in Bangladesh
Educational institutions established in 2011
2011 establishments in Bangladesh
Colleges in Kishoreganj District |
Vigilantius (fl. 400) the Christian presbyter, wrote a work, no longer extant, which opposed a number of common 5th-century practices, and which inspired one of the most violent of the polemical treatises of Jerome (died 420). Vigilantius was born about 370 at Calagurris (current Saint Martory) in Aquitania, where his father kept an inn on the great Roman road from Gallia Aquitania to Spain. While still a youth his talent became known to Sulpicius Severus ( – ), who had estates in that neighborhood, and in 395 Sulpicius, who probably baptized him, sent him with letters to Paulinus of Nola, where he met with a friendly reception. Some Protestant historians regard Vigilantius, along with Jovinian, Aerius of Sebaste and Helvidius, as 4th-5th century early proto-protestants.
On his return to Severus in Gaul he was ordained; and, having soon afterwards inherited means through the death of his father, he set out for Palestine, where Saint Jerome received him with great respect at Bethlehem. The stay of Vigilantius lasted for some time; but, as was almost inevitable, he became involved in the dispute then raging about Origen of Alexandria ( – ), in the course of which Vigilantius accused Jerome of Origenism.
On his return to the West Vigilantius bore a letter from Jerome to Paulinus, and at various places where he stopped on the way he appears to have expressed himself about Jerome in a manner that - when reported - gave great offence to that father, and provoked him to write a reply (Ep. 61). Vigilantius now settled for some time in Gaul, and is said by one authority (Gennadius) to have afterwards held a charge in the diocese of Barcelona. About 403, some years after his return from the East, Vigilantius wrote his work against some church practices, in which he argued against the veneration of relics, as also against the vigils in the basilicas of the martyrs, then so common, the sending of alms to Jerusalem, the rejection of earthly goods and the attribution of special virtue to the unmarried state, especially in the case of the clergy. He was especially indignant in the veneration of saints and their relics.
All knowledge of his work comes from Jerome's treatise . In time, the Church accepted Jerome's views as correct, and Vigilantius gradually came to be ranked among heretics, though his influence remained potent for a time in both France and Spain, as is shown by the polemical tract of Faustus of Rhegium (died c. 490).
One school of thought attempts to associate Vigilantius with proto-Waldensians in the European Alps. The doctrines of Vigilantius, at least to the extent that they are understood on the basis of Jerome's letter, feature strongly in the 'Twelve Conclusions' of the English Lollards.
Beliefs
Vigilantius opposed monastic ascetism and superstitions connected with it. Jerome attacked Vigilantius, even calling him a monster; for "believing that the graves of martyrs and saints should not be venerated, opposing virginity and being against fasting for the saints."
Vigilantius also denied the veneration of saints and relics, which he considered superstition and idolatry. Vigilantius said his adversaries "worshipped bones and ash of dead men" and called them idolaters.
Vigilantius also attacked intercession for the dead as useless.
References
External links
William Stephen Gilly, Vigilantius and His Times
Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Volume III: Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity. A.D. 311-600. § 47. Helvidius, Vigilantius, and Aerius.
370s births
5th-century Christian clergy
5th-century writers in Latin
5th-century deaths
5th-century Gallo-Roman people
Proto-Protestants |
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>%date{ISO8601} %-5level %logger - %msg%n</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<logger name="org.apache.cassandra" level="ERROR" />
<logger name="com.datastax.driver" level="WARN" />
<logger name="mockservice" level="OFF" />
<logger name="akka" level="WARN" />
<root level="INFO">
<appender-ref ref="STDOUT" />
</root>
</configuration>
``` |
The University Hospital Association, formerly the Association of UK University Hospitals, is a leadership body for university hospitals in the UK established in 1998. Its main focus is in teaching and research. It has offices at Woburn House, Tavistock Square, London the headquarters of Universities UK. Katie Petty-Saphon is its Chief Executive.
Membership
The association is a membership organisation made up of 47 UK university hospitals represented by their hospital Chief Executives. It also incorporates five affiliate groups and an informal group made up of the Chairs of each member hospital. The affiliate groups look at issues surrounding hospitals from the perspective of their specific role. They are:
Directors of Finance
Human Resources (HR) Directors
Medical Directors
Directors of Nursing
Research & Development (R&D) Directors
It also hosts the National Clinical Academic Roles Development Group for Nurses, Midwives and Allied Health Professionals, an expert advisory group that works to promote clinical academia among nurses, midwives and allied health professionals.
Previous work
The association has produced an ‘acuity/dependency’ tool for use in assessing nurse to patient ratios in hospital wards.
The association wrote to Monitor on behalf of its English members to object to the NHS tariff proposals for 2015/6. What is proposed includes a 3.8% efficiency target and a new marginal rate rule restricting payments for specialised services to 50% of normal rates for all activity above an agreed baseline.
See also Shelford Group.
References
External links
University Hospital Association
Health in the London Borough of Camden
Higher education organisations based in the United Kingdom
Nursing education in the United Kingdom
Organisations based in the London Borough of Camden
Teaching hospitals in the United Kingdom |
Parinam (1961) is an Ollywood / Odia film directed by Biswanath Nayak.
Cast
Pramod Panigrahi
Geetisudha
Kartik Ghosh
Sarat Pujari
Soundtrack
"Chhaya Pachhe Pachhe Ghuri Bule"
References
External links
1961 films
1960s Odia-language films |
Solomon Embra Brannan (born September 5, 1942) is a former American football defensive back who played three seasons in the American Football League (AFL) with the Kansas City Chiefs and New York Jets. He played college football at Morris Brown College and attended Tompkins High School in Savannah, Georgia. Brannan has also been a member of the Jacksonville Sharks of the World Football League (WFL). He was a member of the Kansas City Chiefs team that won the 1966 AFL championship.
References
External links
Just Sports Stats
Living people
1942 births
American football defensive backs
American football running backs
African-American players of American football
Morris Brown Wolverines football players
Kansas City Chiefs players
New York Jets players
Jacksonville Sharks (WFL) players
Players of American football from Savannah, Georgia
American Football League players
21st-century African-American people
20th-century African-American sportspeople |
Remexido, the nickname of José Joaquim de Sousa Reis (Estômbar, 19 October 1796 – Faro, 2 August 1838), was a civil servant and wealthy heir and land tenant who became a notorious guerrilla leader of the Algarve in Portugal, defending the rights of king Miguel to the Portuguese throne and the antiliberal absolute monarchy in the Kingdom of Portugal. He was accused of several crimes, which made him famous and feared by then, although some studies suggest Remechido did not commit them at all or in part. He was the son of Joaquim José dos Reis and wife Clara Maria do Carmo da Rocha, both born in Estômbar, in the municipality of Lagoa, and died before a firing squad at the Campo da Trindade (site of the present school hall of the Tomás Cabreira Secondary School) in Faro on 2 August 1838.
He served as a supporter of the absolutist status quo personified by Miguel of Portugal under General Tomás Cabreira at the Battle of Sant’Ana, during the Liberal Wars (1828–1834). After the defeat of absolutist forces and the victory of liberalism in Portugal in 1834, Remechido didn't surrender and found himself savagely persecuted. He took refuge in the mountains of the Algarve supported by some mountain people in and around São Marcos da Serra, in Silves Municipality. Resorting to guerrilla tactics, he systematically thrashed the government forces. In order to discover his whereabouts, the government forces publicly interrogated his wife with physical punishments, and when she would not betray him, killed his 14-year-old son, two actions which made him resolve never to surrender and to punish those who had wronged him. He was, however, captured and brought for judgement before the Council of War. Even in his last days he was the victim of injustice: although Queen Maria II of Portugal granted him a pardon, for political and personal reasons the Council of War nevertheless sent him to his death before a firing squad.
Life
José Joaquim de Sousa Reis was born in Estômbar, in 1796 to Joaquim José dos Reis and Clara Maria do Carmo. He was given the surname "de Sousa" from his godfather Reverend José Joaquim de Sousa, a priest. but it was São Bartolomeu de Messines the place where he settled, married and traced his destiny. As a boy, he went to study for the Catholic seminary in Faro. There he took the minor orders but, given his talent for oratory, he soon aroused the admiration of the bishop who authorized him to go up to the pulpit and speak to the people. However, he would end up abandoning the promising ecclesiastical career to marry Maria Clara Machado de Bastos, daughter of a distinguished wealthy family. Still, it took a lot of persistence and use of all the rhetoric he learned to overcome the reluctance of the girl's uncle, a wealthy man and landowner in the vicinity of São Bartolomeu de Messines and São Marcos da Serra. From this insistence he would receive from Maria Clara the nickname of Remexido, which was forever stuck to his name. A literate young man, very talkative and in line with the absolutist regime of the time, he quickly gained a prominent social position and public recognition. He got improvements for the village of São Bartolomeu de Messines, like a public elementary school, a community oven and a free fair in honor of Nossa Senhora da Saúde (Our Lady of Health), which still takes place today. After the first liberal revolution of 1820 he was appointed juiz de vintena, an official magistrate position which would be abolished on January 1, 1831, due to the liberal revolution's ideals, simultaneously managing the assets of his wife's wealthy uncle. As juiz de vintena, he would personally collect the tithes of the lands of São Bartolomeu de Messines and São Marcos da Serra.
Some years later, as a guerrilla in the Serra do Caldeirão (Mountain of the Cauldron), a territory he knew very well, he became a headache for the liberal troops loyal to king Pedro V of Portugal in the civil war that opposed him to the absolutists of his brother Miguel (1828–1834). Once peace was signed in the Concession of Evoramonte on 26 May 1834, a return to normality was expected. However, the imprisonment of his wife and son, as well as the reprisals and political persecutions exercised by the liberals, winners of the fratricidal war, led the guerrilla to continue his military campaign with actions of violence all over the Algarve and Baixo Alentejo. The taking of Albufeira on July 26, 1833, at the time a liberal settlement, is an example of the slaughter and looting perpetrated by the antiliberal absolutist faction under the leadership of Remexido, causing about seven dozen victims among its civil population. And if the excesses of war can always be pointed out on either side of the strife, in the narrative built over time, the liberals made Remexido a bloodthirsty and "big-time guerrilla". A man - they said - who developed particular ferocity, "stabbing the prisoners, burning them alive and dragging them all on the tail of his own horse." And to compose the legend, Remexido even had the honor of appearing in a collection of cordel literature, where history and fiction go hand in hand. As in all cases, however, there are those who keep a different image of him as a romantic and idealistic hero, who sacrificed himself for the cause that seemed more just, although against the prevailing winds of liberal republican ideas that came from the French revolution. Of him, Camilo Castelo Branco wrote: “The Remexido appears imbued with strong romantic tones, ending up exchanging a peaceful life as a farmer, for the plight of a struggle that earned him and his family, the harshest persecutions, against which he rebelled.” And the Algarve historian, Alberto Iria, extols Remexido by presenting him as “an intelligent person, endowed with a good and generous soul, with dignity and greatness at the service of his ideals.”
Taken prisoner in 1838, he was tried in a war tribunal in the Misericórdia Hall in Faro and sentenced to death. In the final allegations, in his defense, he said: “the only crime I committed was the crime of disobedience”, in obedience to an ideal and a cause in which I believed. With no possibility of appeal, he was executed by shooting, on August 2 of the same year, at 6 pm, in the Trindade field, where today is the Alameda João de Deus lane, in Faro, and buried in the Misericórdia cemetery.
Marriage and issue
He was married in São Bartolomeu de Messines, in the municipality of Silves, on 26 July 1818 to Maria Clara Machado de Bastos, born in Paderne, in the municipality of Albufeira, daughter of Manuel Baptista Machado and wife Inês Inácia de Bastos, and had issue:
Manuel Joaquim da Graça Remexido (1820 - Faro, 11 December 1839)
José Manuel dos Reis
João Raimundo de Sousa Reis (c. 1820 - Silves), married firstly to ... and had issue, and married secondly to ..., and had issue:
Maria de Sousa Reis Remexido, married to João Vitorino Mealha, and had issue (among others paternal grandparents of the first wife of Manuel Tito de Morais)
Casimira de Sousa Reis Remexido, married to Casimiro dos Santos Velhinho, and had issue
Maria Marciana
Maria do Rosário
Maria da Soledade
Maria Marta
References
Notes
External links
Website on Remexido and the Liberal Wars
Monarchist Biographical Website
Portrait of Remexido
1796 births
1838 deaths
Portuguese guerrillas
Military personnel of the Liberal Wars
People from Lagoa, Algarve
19th-century Portuguese military personnel
Executed Portuguese people
People executed by Portugal by firing squad
Portuguese civil servants
Portuguese criminals
19th-century executions by Portugal |
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<!DOCTYPE mapper PUBLIC "-//mybatis.org//DTD Mapper 3.0//EN" "path_to_url" >
<mapper namespace="com.roncoo.pay.trade.dao.impl.RpMicroSubmitRecordDaoImpl">
<resultMap id="baseResultMap" type="com.roncoo.pay.trade.entity.RpMicroSubmitRecord">
<id column="id" property="id" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="version" property="version" jdbcType="INTEGER"/>
<result column="create_time" property="createTime" jdbcType="TIMESTAMP"/>
<result column="creater" property="creater" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="edit_time" property="editTime" jdbcType="TIMESTAMP"/>
<result column="editor" property="editor" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="status" property="status" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="business_code" property="businessCode" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="sub_mch_id" property="subMchId" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="id_card_copy" property="idCardCopy" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="id_card_national" property="idCardNational" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="id_card_name" property="idCardName" jdbcType="DECIMAL"/>
<result column="id_card_number" property="idCardNumber" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="id_card_valid_time" property="idCardValidTime" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="account_bank" property="accountBank" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="bank_address_code" property="bankAddressCode" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="account_number" property="accountNumber" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="store_name" property="storeName" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="store_address_code" property="storeAddressCode" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="store_street" property="storeStreet" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="store_entrance_pic" property="storeEntrancePic" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="indoor_pic" property="indoorPic" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="merchant_shortname" property="merchantShortname" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="service_phone" property="servicePhone" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="product_desc" property="productDesc" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="rate" property="rate" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
<result column="contact_phone" property="contactPhone" jdbcType="VARCHAR"/>
</resultMap>
<!---->
<sql id="table_name">
rp_micro_submit_record
</sql>
<!---->
<sql id="base_column_list">
id, version, create_time, creater, edit_time, editor, status, business_code, sub_mch_id, id_card_copy,
id_card_national, id_card_name, id_card_number, id_card_valid_time, account_bank,
bank_address_code, account_number, store_name, store_address_code, store_street,
store_entrance_pic, indoor_pic, merchant_shortname, service_phone, product_desc, rate, contact_phone
</sql>
<!-- -->
<sql id="condition_sql">
<if test="idCardName != null and idCardName != ''">and id_card_name like CONCAT('%',CONCAT(#{idCardName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},'%'))</if>
<if test="storeName != null and storeName != ''">and store_name like CONCAT('%',CONCAT(#{storeName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},'%'))</if>
<if test="businessCode != null and businessCode != ''">and business_code = #{businessCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR}</if>
</sql>
<!---->
<select id="selectByPrimaryKey" resultMap="baseResultMap" parameterType="java.lang.String">
select
<include refid="base_column_list"/>
from
<include refid="table_name"/>
where id = #{id,jdbcType=VARCHAR}
</select>
<!---->
<select id="listBy" parameterType="java.util.Map" resultMap="baseResultMap">
select
<include refid="base_column_list"/>
from
<include refid="table_name"/>
<where>
<include refid="condition_sql"/>
</where>
order by create_time desc
</select>
<!-- -->
<select id="listPage" parameterType="java.util.Map" resultMap="baseResultMap">
select
<include refid="base_column_list"/>
from
<include refid="table_name"/>
<where>
<include refid="condition_sql"/>
</where>
order by create_time desc limit #{pageFirst}, #{pageSize}
</select>
<!-- -->
<select id="listPageCount" parameterType="java.util.Map" resultType="java.lang.Long">
select count(1) from
<include refid="table_name"/>
<where>
<include refid="condition_sql"/>
</where>
</select>
<!---->
<insert id="insert" parameterType="com.roncoo.pay.trade.entity.RpMicroSubmitRecord">
insert into
<include refid="table_name"/>
<trim prefix="(" suffix=")">
<include refid="base_column_list"/>
</trim>
<trim prefix="values (" suffix=")">
#{id,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{version,jdbcType=INTEGER},
#{createTime,jdbcType=TIMESTAMP},
#{creater,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{editTime, jdbcType=TIMESTAMP},
#{editor,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{status,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{businessCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{subMchId,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{idCardCopy,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{idCardNational,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{idCardName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{idCardNumber,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{idCardValidTime,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{accountBank,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{bankAddressCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{accountNumber,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{storeName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{storeAddressCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{storeStreet,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{storeEntrancePic,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{indoorPic,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{merchantShortname,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{servicePhone,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{productDesc,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{rate,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
#{contactPhone,jdbcType=VARCHAR}
</trim>
</insert>
<!-- -->
<delete id="deleteByPrimaryKey" parameterType="java.lang.String">
delete from
<include refid="table_name"/>
where id = #{id,jdbcType=VARCHAR}
</delete>
<!-- -->
<update id="updateByPrimaryKey" parameterType="com.roncoo.pay.trade.entity.RpMicroSubmitRecord">
update
<include refid="table_name"/>
set
version = #{version,jdbcType=INTEGER},
create_time = #{createTime,jdbcType=TIMESTAMP},
creater = #{creater,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
edit_time = #{editTime, jdbcType=TIMESTAMP},
editor = #{editor,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
status = #{status,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
business_code = #{businessCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
sub_mch_id = #{subMchId,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
id_card_copy = #{idCardCopy,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
id_card_national = #{idCardNational,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
id_card_name = #{idCardName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
id_card_number = #{idCardNumber,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
id_card_valid_time = #{idCardValidTime,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
account_bank = #{accountBank,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
bank_address_code = #{bankAddressCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
account_number = #{accountNumber,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
store_name = #{storeName,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
store_address_code = #{storeAddressCode,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
store_street = #{storeStreet,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
store_entrance_pic = #{storeEntrancePic,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
indoor_pic = #{indoorPic,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
merchant_shortname = #{merchantShortname,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
service_phone = #{servicePhone,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
product_desc = #{productDesc,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
rate = #{rate,jdbcType=VARCHAR},
contact_phone = #{contactPhone,jdbcType=VARCHAR}
where id = #{id,jdbcType=VARCHAR}
</update>
</mapper>
``` |
```yaml
run:
# which dirs to skip
skip-dirs:
- mocks
# Timeout for analysis, e.g. 30s, 5m.
# Default: 1m
timeout: 5m
# Exit code when at least one issue was found.
# Default: 1
issues-exit-code: 2
# Include test files or not.
# Default: true
tests: false
# allow parallel run
allow-parallel-runners: true
linters-settings:
govet:
check-shadowing: true
gocyclo:
min-complexity: 15
maligned:
suggest-new: true
dupl:
threshold: 100
goconst:
min-len: 2
min-occurrences: 2
misspell:
locale: US
ignore-words:
- "cancelled"
goimports:
local-prefixes: github.com/golangci/golangci-lint
gocritic:
enabled-tags:
- diagnostic
- experimental
- opinionated
- performance
- style
disabled-checks:
- dupImport # path_to_url
- ifElseChain
- octalLiteral
- rangeValCopy
- unnamedResult
- whyNoLint
- wrapperFunc
funlen:
lines: 105
statements: 50
linters:
# please, do not use `enable-all`: it's deprecated and will be removed soon.
# inverted configuration with `enable-all` and `disable` is not scalable during updates of golangci-lint
disable-all: true
enable:
- asciicheck
- bidichk
- bodyclose
# - containedctx
# - contextcheck disabled because of generics
- decorder
# - depguard
- dogsled
- dupl
- durationcheck
- errcheck
- errchkjson
- errname
- errorlint
- exhaustive
# - exhaustivestruct TODO: check how to fix it
- exportloopref
# - forbidigo TODO: configure forbidden code patterns
# - forcetypeassert
- funlen
- gci
# - gochecknoglobals TODO: remove globals from code
# - gochecknoinits TODO: remove main.init
- gocognit
- goconst
- gocritic
- gocyclo
# - godox
- goerr113
- gofmt
- goimports
- gomnd
# - gomoddirectives
- gosec
- gosimple
- govet
- goprintffuncname
- grouper
- importas
# - ireturn TODO: not sure if it is a good linter
- ineffassign
- interfacebloat
- loggercheck
- maintidx
- makezero
- misspell
- nakedret
# - nestif
- nilerr
- nilnil
# - noctx
- nolintlint
- prealloc
- predeclared
- promlinter
- reassign
- revive
# - rowserrcheck disabled because of generics
# - staticcheck doesn't work with go1.19
# - structcheck disabled because of generics
- stylecheck
- tenv
- testableexamples
- typecheck
- unconvert
- unparam
- unused
# - varnamelen TODO: review naming
# - varcheck depricated 1.49
# - wastedassign disabled because of generics
- whitespace
- wrapcheck
# - wsl
issues:
exclude-rules:
- path: _test\.go
linters:
- funlen
- bodyclose
- gosec
- dupl
- gocognit
- goconst
- gocyclo
exclude:
- Using the variable on range scope `tt` in function literal
``` |
Maingwe is a village on the Chindwin River in Homalin Township, Hkamti District, in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma. It is located north of Tonmalaw. Gardens were planted in Maingwe and other nearby villages around 1700 and the village has been documented as producing pickled tea, known as "letpet".
References
External links
Maplandia World Gazetteer
Populated places in Hkamti District
Homalin Township |
The 1906 Birthday Honours for the British Empire were announced on 29 June, to celebrate the birthday of Edward VII on 9 November.
The recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and arranged by honour, with classes (Knight, Knight Grand Cross, etc.) and then divisions (Military, Civil, etc.) as appropriate.
The Most Honourable Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB)
Military Division
Admiral Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson, K.C.B.
Lieutenant-General Sir William Francis Butler, K.C.B.
Lieutenant-General Sir John Withers McQueen, K.C.B., Indian Army.
Lieutenant-General and Honorary General Sir Julius Augustus Robert Raines, K.C.B., Colonel, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment).
Civil Division
His Excellency General Porfirio Díaz, President of the United States of Mexico. (Honorary)
Thomas, Baron Brassey, K.C.B.
Sir Kenelm Edward Digby, K.C.B.
Sir Edward Walter Hamilton, K.C.B.
Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB)
Military Division
Vice-Admiral Sir William Henry May, K.C.V.O.
Lieutenant-General James Robertson Steadman Sayer, C.B., Colonel, 1st (King's) Dragoon Guards.
Major-General and Honorary Lieutenant-General Fiennes Middleton Colvile, C.B.
Honorary Major-General Thomas Maunsell, C.B., retired pay.
General Edward Francis Chapman, C.B., Colonel Commandant, Royal (late Bengal) Artillery.
Lieutenant-General Gordon Douglas Pritchard, C.B., Colonel Commandant, Royal Engineers.
Deputy Surgeon-General John McNeale Donnelly, C.B., retired pay, late Indian Medical Service.
General Horace Searle Anderson, C.B., Indian Army.
Major-General Alliston Champion Toker, C.B., Indian Army.
Lieutenant-General William Terence Shone, C.B., D.S.O., Royal Engineers.
Major-General Herbert Charles Onslow Plumer, C.B., commanding 17th Division.
Surgeon-General (ranking as Lieutenant-General) Alfred Keogh, C.B., Director General, Army Medical Service.
General John Fletcher Owen, C.B., Colonel Commandant, Royal Artillery.
General John Hart Dunne, Colonel, The Duke of Edinburgh's (Wiltshire Regiment).
Major-General and Honorary Lieutenant-General Henry Francis Williams, Colonel Commandant, The King's Royal Rifle Corps.
Civil Division
Colonel Edward Raban, C.B., Royal Engineers.
Mr. George William Hervey, C.B.
Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB)
Military Division
Surgeon-General William Simson Pratt, Army Medical, Staff, Principal Medical Officer, Southern Command.
Honorary Major-General Luke O'Connor, V.C., retired pay, late Royal Welsh Fusiliers.
Colonel (Brigadier-General) Herbert Napier Bunbury (late Army Service Corps), Brigadier-General in charge of Administration, Gibraltar.
Colonel (temporary Major-General) Sir Charles Sim Bremridge Parsons, K.C.M.G., (late Royal Artillery) Colonel on the Staff commanding Regular Forces, Dominion of Canada.
Colonel James Latimer Crawshay St. Clair, C.M.G. (late Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) Deputy Judge Advocate, London.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Francis Stevenson, Indian Army.
Colonel William Francis Henry Style Kincaid (late Royal Engineers) Assistant Quartermaster-General, Administrative Staff, Aldershot Army Corps.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Gilbert Henry Claude Hamilton, half.-pay, late 14th Hussars.
Colonel William Henry Muir Lowe (late 7th Dragoon Guards), Colonel in charge of Cavalry Records (also Staff Officer for Imperial Yeomanry), Northern Command.
Colonel (Brigadier-General) Cecil William Park, A.D.C. (late Devonshire Regiment), Brigade Commander, India.
Colonel (Brigadier-General) William Pitcairn Campbell, A.D.C. (late King's Royal Rifle Corps), Brigadier-General, 5th Brigade, 3rd Division, Aldershot Army Corps.
Colonel (Brigadier-General) The Honourable Julian Heldworth George Byng, M.V.O. (late 10th Hussars), Brigadier-General, 2nd Cavalry Brigade, Eastern Command.
Colonel Hugh Frederick Lyons-Montgomery, Indian Army.
Colonel (Brigadier-General) Hubert Ion Wetherall Hamilton, D.S.O., A.D.O. (late Royal West Surrey Regiment), Brigadier-General, 7th Brigade, Southern Command.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel John Monteith, Indian Army.
Colonel Malcolm Henry Stanley Grover, Indian Army Brigade Commander (Colonel on the Staff), India.
Colonel Philip Thomas Buston, D.S.O., Chief Engineer, Aldershot Army Corps.
Colonel Charles Carmichael Monro (late Royal West Surrey. Regiment), Commandant, School of Musketry.
Colonel Claude de Courcy Hamilton (late Royal Artillery), Assistant Adjutant-General, Headquarters, India.
Colonel Cecil Frederick Nevil Macready (late Gordon Highlanders), Assistant Quartermaster-General, Cape Colony District, South Africa.
Colonel Edward Sinclair May, C.M.G. (late Royal Artillery), Assistant Director of Military Training, Headquarters.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Edward Spence Hastings, D.S.O., Indian Army.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Herbert Conyers Surtees, M.V.O., D.S.O. (late Coldstream Guards), Military Attache, Constantinople and Athens.
Colonel Arthur Phayre, Indian Army, Brigade Commander (Colonel on the Staff), India.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel The Honourable Edward James Montagu-Stuart-Wortley, C.M.G.. M.V.O., D.S.O., half-pay, late King's Royal Rifle Corps.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Courtenay Bourchier Vyvyan, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment).
Colonel Henry Kellock McKay, C.I.E., Indian Medical Service.
Colonel Joshua Arthur Nunn, C.I.E., D.S.O., Army Veterinary Staff, Principal Veterinary Officer, South Africa.
Honorary Colonel John Bouham, retired pay, Royal (late Bengal) Artillery.
Civil Division
Engineer Rear-Admiral Henry John Oram.
Colonel Hugh de Grey, Marquis of Hertford, A.D.C., Honorary Colonel, Warwickshire Imperial Yeomanry.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Honorary Colonel John Staples Irwin, The Mid-Ulster Royal Garrison Artillery (Militia).
Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Garrett, Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant, 1st Essex Royal Garrison Artillery (Volunteers).
John Ardron, Esq.
William Blain, Esq,
William Frederick Bailey, Esq.
Reginald Herbert Brade, Esq.
James Miller Dodds, Esq.
Order of Merit
Evelyn, Earl of Cromer, G.C.B., G.C.M.G., K.C.S.I, C.I.E.
Order of the Star of India
Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI)
Elliot Graham Colvin, Esq., Indian Civil Service, Agent to the Governor-General in Rajputana and Chief Commissioner of Ajmer-Merwara.
Leslie Alexander Selim Porter, Esq., Indian Civil Service, Commissioner, Lucknow Division, and an Additional Member of the Council of the Governor-General for making Laws and Regulations.
John Lewis Jenkins, Esq., Indian Civil Service, Commissioner of Customs, Salt, Opium, and Abkari, and Reporter-General of External Commerce, Bombay, and an Additional Member of the Council of the Governor of Bombay for making Laws and Regulations.
Lieutenant-Colonel Willoughby Pitcairn Kennedy, Indian Army, lately Agent to the Governor of Bombay, Kathiawar.
Sardar Bahadur Gurmukh Singh, President of the Council of Regency in the Patiala State.
Order of Saint Michael and Saint George
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG)
Sir John Madden, LL.D., K.C.M.G., Lieutenant-Governor and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria.
Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG)
The Right Honourable Lord Chelmsford, Governor of the State of Queensland.
Riccardo Micallef, Esq., C.M.G., Comptroller of Charitable Institutions in the Island of Malta.
William Matthews, Esq.. C.M.G., a Vice-President of the Institution of Civil Engineers; for services in connection with Harbour Works in certain Colonies.
His Excellency the Right Honourable Sir Maurice William Ernest de Bunsen, G.C.V.O., C.B., His Majesty's Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary at Madrid.
Cecil Arthur Spring Rice, Esq., Councillor of Embassy in His Majesty's Diplomatic Service.
Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Trotter, C.B., Royal Engineers, His Majesty's Consul-General for the Kingdom of Roumania.
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG)
The Honourable Thomas Watt, Minister of Justice and Defence of the Colony of Natal.
The Honourable Adélard Turgeon, Minister of Lands and Forests of the Province of Quebec, in the Dominion of Canada.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, Esq., M.A., LL.B., Deputy Minister of Labour of the Dominion of Canada.
Hugh Clarence Bourne, Esq., M.A., Colonial Secretary of the Island of Jamaica.
Brevet Major Herbert Bryan, Colonial Secretary of the Gold Coast Colony.
Francis Charles Bernard Dudley Fuller, Esq., Chief Commissioner of Ashanti.
Henry Leighton Crawford, Esq., Government Agent, Southern Province, Island of Ceylon.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Louis Charles Jackson, Royal Engineers, for services on the Anglo-German Commission for defining the Boundary between Yola and Lake Chad.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel Henry David Laffan, Royal Engineers, for services on the Anglo-German South West Africa Boundary Commission.
Alfred William Howitt, Esq., late Commissioner of Audit and Member of the Public Service Board of the State of Victoria.
Charles Richard Swayne, Esq., late Stipendiary Magistrate, Rewa, and Commissioner, Naitasiri, in the Colony of Fiji.
Joseph William Gullick, Esq., Superintendent, Colonial Audit Branch, Exchequer and Audit Department.
Captain Percy Wilfrid Machell, Adviser to the Egyptian Ministry of the Interior.
Lieutenant-Colonel Edgar Edwin Bernard, Financial Secretary to the Soudan Government.
Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Colonel John Gerald Panton, the Royal Sussex Regiment, in command of the British Troops in Crete.
Esme William Howard, Esq., M.V.O., His Majesty's Consul-General for the Island of Crete.
George Joshua Stanley, Esq., Principal Clerk, Board of Trade.
His Highness Suleiman bin Almerhum Raja Musa, Sultan of Selangor. (Honorary)
His Highness Mohamadu Attuhiru, Sultan of Sokoto. (Honorary)
Monsieur Gabriel Angoulvant, Governor of the French Colony of St. Pierre. (Honorary)
Order of the Indian Empire
Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (KCIE)
General Donald James Sim McLeod, C.B., D.S.O., Indian Army, lately commanding the Burma Division.
Maharaja Bhagwati Prasad Singh of Balrampur in Oudh.
Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE)
Lieutenant-Colonel David Prain, M.B., Indian Medical Service, Director of the Botanical Survey of India, Superintendent, Royal Botanical Gardens, and Government Quinologist, Calcutta.
Sir James Houssemayne Du Boulay Esq., Indian Civil Service, Private Secretary to His Excellency the Governor of Bombay.
James Douglas, Esq., Agent of the East Indian Railway Company.
Major William John Daniell Dundee, Royal Engineers, Assistant Commanding, Royal Engineers, Peshawar.
Brian Egerton, Esq., Tutor to Sahibzada Mir Usman Ali Khan, son of His Highness the Nizam.
Honorary Lieutenant Malik Umar Khan, Tiwana, of Kalra, in the Shahpur District, 18th (Prince of Wales's Own) Tiwana Lancers, a Member of the Council of the Lieutenant-Governor of the Punjab for making Laws and Regulations.
Royal Victorian Order
Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO)
George Charles Vincent Holmes, Esq., C.V.O., C.B., Chairman of the Board of Public Works, Ireland.
Edward Richard Henry Esq., C.V.O., C.S.I., Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police.
Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (CVO)
The Right Reverend Bishop John Taylor Smith, D.D., Chaplain General to the Forces.
Colonel Douglas Frederick Rawdon Dawson, C.M.G;, Master of the Ceremonies to His Majesty The King.
Member of the Royal Victorian Order, 5th class (MVO)
Arthur Isaac Durrant, Esq., Secretary., to the Osborne Advisory Committee.
Imperial Service Order
The Right Honourable Sir Charles Hardinge, G.C.V.O., G.C.M.G., C.B., Permanent Under Secretary of State, Foreign Office.
James William Fairbridge Bird, Esq., Secretary, Law Department, Colony of Natal.
Frederick Brown, Esq., Principal Clerk, Controller's Department, Admiralty.
William Sperling Christoffelsz, Esq:, Principal Clerk of the Executive and Legislative Branch of the Secretariat, Island of Ceylon.
William Clarke, Esq., Governor of Duke Street Prison, Glasgow.
Herbert Minton Crundall; Esq., F.R.S., Senior Keeper of the Victoria and Albert Museum.
William, Henry Deering, Esq., Chemist to the War Department.
Edward Dynham, Esq., Principal Clerk, National Debt Office.
Robert Fairbairn, Esq., Resident Resident Magistrate, Fremantle, in the State of Western Australia.
George Levack Bower Fraser, Esq., K.C. Chief Clerk, Department of Justice, Dominion of Canada.
David Gloster Garraway, Esq., Comptroller, Customs Department. Colony of British Guiana.
James Francis Homagee, Esq., Crown Prosecutor and Clerk of the Peace, Island of Saint Helena.
Albemarle Percy Inglis, Esq., Consul-General, Paris.
J. Whitfield Jackson, Esq., Principal Clerk, Paymaster-General's Office.
Louis Kossuth Jones, Esq., Secretary, Department of Railways and Canals. Dominion of Canada.
John Kelly, Esq., Secretary and Assistant Registrar, General Register Office, Ireland.
Juchereau de Saint-Denis Le Moine, Esq., Sergeant-at-Arms, Senate of the Dominion of Canada.
Nicholas Colston Lockyer, Esq., Collector of Customs for the State of New South Wales.
Thomas Long, Esq., Deputy Minister, Department of Agriculture and Mines of the Colony of Newfoundland.
Cornewall Lewis Warwickshire Mansergh Esq., Secretary for Public Works, Colony of the Cape of Good Hope.
Alfred John May, Esq., lately Second Master of Queen's College, Colony of Hong Kong.
Henry William Meakin, Esq., Under Treasurer of the State of Victoria.
Alfred Henry Miles, Esq., Collector-General, Revenue Department, Island of Jamaica.
C. O. Minchin, Esq., Chief Clerk, Estate Duty Office.
Frederick William Neitenstein, Esq., Comptroller-General of Prisons of the State of New South Wales.
Joseph Pope, Esq., C.M.G., Under Secretary of State and Deputy Registrar-General of the Dominion of Canada.
Robert Robson, Esq., Collector of Customs, Port of London.
Philip Samuel Seager, Esq., Registrar of the Supreme Court of the State of Tasmania.
Bernard Senior, Esq., Auditor-General of the Orange River Colony.
Allan Frith Smith, Esq., Colonial Postmaster, of the Bermuda Islands.
Edward Davenport Sutherland, Esq., Assistant Auditor-General of the Dominion of Canada.
William Henry Whyham, Esq., District Magistrate, Island of Antigua.
Joseph William Willmot, Esq., Controller of Factories, General Post Office.
Uriah John Wright, Esq., Surveyor of Prisons, Home Office.
References
Birthday Honours
1906 in the United Kingdom
1906 awards
Edward VII |
Pijavice () is a village in the municipality of Trebinje, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
References
Villages in Republika Srpska
Populated places in Trebinje |
101 may refer to:
101 (number), the number
AD 101, a year in the 2nd century AD
101 BC, a year in the 2nd century BC
It may also refer to:
Entertainment
101 (album), a live album and documentary by Depeche Mode
"101" (song), a 1988 song and single by Sheena Easton
"101", a song on the Girl on Fire album by Alicia Keys
The 101 Network, former name of Audience, an American pay television channel
Transportation
List of highways numbered 101, several roads, including:
U.S. Route 101, often called "The 101"
101 series, a commuter multiple unit train introduced in 1958 by Japan National Railways
TMK 101, a tramcar type which was used in Zagreb, Croatia, from 1951 until December 2008
McDonnell F-101 Voodoo fighter aircraft
McDonnell CF-101 Voodoo Canadian variant of the F-101
Fisher FP-101 kit aircraft
Other uses
101 (slang), a term used to indicate an introduction to a body of knowledge
101st Airborne Division
Bell 101 modem a late 1950s communications modem
Bill 101 or Law 101, the Charter of the French Language in Québec
Police 101, the single non-emergency number used by all UK territorial police authorities
Romance 101, a South Korean manhwa series
Taipei 101, the tallest skyscraper in the world from 2004 to 2010
Mendelevium, chemical element with atomic number 101
101 Dalmatians (disambiguation)
See also
IOI (disambiguation)
Room 101 (disambiguation) |
The Brunswick City School District is a school district in Medina County, Ohio. It includes the following Brunswick, Ohio schools:
Brunswick High School
Applewood Elementary School
Crestview Elementary School
Hickory Ridge Elementary School
Huntington Elementary School
Kidder Elementary School
Memorial Elementary School
Towslee Elementary School
Brunswick Middle school
Towslee Elementary School will close next school year.
External links
Brunswick City Schools official website
Education in Medina County, Ohio
School districts in Ohio |
The Slieveardagh Hills are a low range of hills on the County Tipperary - Kilkenny border, mainly in the Tipperary barony of Slievardagh. The highest point is Clomantagh Hill at 349 m and the highest point by relative height in the hills is Knocknamuck at 340m with prominence of 268m. The hills contain the source of the River Goul, which flows north and the Kings River which flows southwards from the hills.
The Slieveardagh Hills extend eastward into County Kilkenny.
See also
Brandon Hill
List of mountains in Ireland
References
Mountains and hills of County Kilkenny
Mountains and hills of County Tipperary |
Atom shell may refer to either what is properly called an electron shell or an atomic orbital that makes up an electron subshell.
Atom shell may also refer to:
The final track of the album A City Dressed in Dynamite by American experimental rock band That Handsome Devil
Electron (software framework), originally named Atom Shell |
Weequahic High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school serving students in ninth through twelfth grades, located in the Weequahic section of Newark in Essex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The school is operated by the Newark Public Schools and is located at 279 Chancellor Avenue. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools since 1935.
As of the 2021–22 school year, the school had an enrollment of 396 students and 32.5 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.2:1. There were 277 students (69.9% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 18 (4.5% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.
Awards, recognition and rankings
The school was the 325th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology. The school had been ranked 258th in the state of 328 schools in 2012, after being ranked 310th in 2010 out of 322 schools listed. The magazine ranked the school 305th in 2008 out of 316 schools. The school was ranked 308th in the magazine's September 2006 issue, which surveyed 316 schools across the state. Schooldigger.com ranked the school 353rd out of 376 public high schools statewide in its 2010 rankings (an increase of 6 positions from the 2009 rank) which were based on the combined percentage of students classified as proficient or above proficient on the language arts literacy and mathematics components of the High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA).
History
Construction of the high school was completed in 1932 and classes began in September 1933. Max J. Herzberg was the first principal and remained as the leader of the high school for 18 years until his retirement in 1951.
The high school is home to the New Deal era mural "Enlightenment of Man" painted by Michael Lenson who was director of New Jersey mural activities for the Federal Art Project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA).
The Weequahic section of Newark, which is the neighborhood sending students to the high school, was described as it was in the 1930s and early 1940s by Weequahic alumnus Philip Roth in The Plot Against America.
Weequahic High School has an active alumni association that raises scholarship monies for the students.
The documentary film, Heart of Stone (2009), is about Ron Stone, former principal of the high school and his efforts to work with students and further the mission of the high school. This documentary was presented at the Sundance Film Festival and has been shown in selected venues.
Athletics
The Weequahic High School Indians compete in the Super Essex Conference, which is comprised of public and private high schools in Essex County and was established after a reorganization of sports leagues in Northern New Jersey under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA). Prior to the NJSIAA's 2009 realignment, the school had participated in the Hills Division of the Iron Hills Conference, which included schools in Essex, Morris and Union counties. With 276 students in grades 10-12, the school was classified by the NJSIAA for the 2019–20 school year as Group I for most athletic competition purposes, which included schools with an enrollment of 75 to 476 students in that grade range. The football team competes in the National White division of the North Jersey Super Football Conference, which includes 112 schools competing in 20 divisions, making it the nation's biggest football-only high school sports league. The school was classified by the NJSIAA as Group I North for football for 2022–2024, which included schools with 184 to 471 students. The school's athletic teams are called the Indians and its colors are orange and brown.
The boys' basketball team won its first Group IV state championship in 1962 (defeating Westfield High School in the tournament final) and repeated as state champions in 1966 (vs. Hackensack High School), 1967 (vs. Camden High School) and 1973 (vs. Atlantic City High School) and won the Group II title in 2001 (vs. Pleasantville High School). Lester Fein was the coach of the basketball team in the 1960s, coaching many winning teams. A crowd of 4,500 watched as the 1962 team won the Group IV title with a 55–52 victory against Westfield in the championship game to finish the season with a record of 24-3. A 62-38 win against Hackensack in the championship game played at Convention Hall in Atlantic City gave the team a 25-1 season record and the Group IV state title. In 1967, the team finished the season with a 26–0 record after winning the state Group IV title with an 80-60 win against Camden in the championship game played in front of a tournament-record 12,000 spectators at Atlantic City's Convention Hall. The 1967 team was listed as the number-one ranked team in the country and extended the school's winning streak to 40 games. Some of his players went on to play in the National Basketball Association. The 2002 boys' basketball won the North II, Group III state sectional championship, edging West Side High School in the tournament final.
The football team won the NJSIAA Central Jersey Group II state sectional championship in 2006 and the North II Group I title in 2016. The sectional title win in 2006 was the first ever for Weequahic and the first for a Newark high school since 1975. Coach Altariq White was named state Coach of the Year and Amara Kamara was selected as the state Defensive Player of the Year. In 2016, in the first sectional title game played between two Newark high schools, the football team defeated Malcolm X Shabazz High School by a score of 18-8 to win the North II, Group I championship, the program's second sectional title in the playoff era. 2009 marked the return of the Thanksgiving Day game called the "Soul Bowl" between Weequahic and Shabazz High School, which had last been played in 1993 and had been in abeyance due to the two schools being placed in different athletic conferences. The 2011 game was the 29th between the two teams, ending in a 27–20 win for Weequahic, which won its fifth consecutive defeat of Shabazz. The intra-district football rivalry with Shabazz was ranked third on NJ.com's 2017 list "Ranking the 31 fiercest rivalries in N.J. HS football". Shabazz leads the series with an overall record of 35-28-6 through the 2017 season.
The boys' winter track team won the state relay championship in Group III in 1991 and 1992, and won in Group I in 2016. The girls team won in Group I in 2015
The girls spring track team was Group III champion in 1991 and won the Group I title in 2015.
The boys track team won the Group I spring track state championship in 2016.
Extracurricular activities
The high school newspaper is The Calumet, the literary magazine is Ergo, and the yearbook is called The Legend. The school's student governing body is the Orange and Brown Association (OBA).
Administration
The school's principal is Kyle Thomas. His administration team includes three vice principals
Notable alumni
Notable alumni of Weequahic High School include:
Janet Abu-Lughod (1928–2013, class of 1946), urban sociologist.
Daniel M. Albert (born 1936), ophthalmologist, ocular cancer researcher, medical historian, and collector of rare books and ocular equipment.
Hasson Arbubakrr (born 1960, class of 1979), former American football defensive end who played in the NFL with the Minnesota Vikings and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and in the CFL with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Ottawa Rough Riders.
Al Attles (born 1936, class of 1955), former NBA basketball player who was head coach of the Golden State Warriors from 1970-83.
Al "Bubba" Baker (born 1956, class of 1972), former NFL defensive lineman.
Seymour Bernstein (born 1927, class of 1945), pianist, composer and teacher who was the subject of the documentary Seymour: An Introduction directed by Ethan Hawke.
Susan Bordo (born 1947, class of 1964), feminist philosopher.
Sherman Edwards (1919–1981), songwriter best known for his songs from the 1969 Broadway musical 1776 and the 1972 film adaptation.
Martin S. Fox (1924–2020), publisher who served as President of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
Muriel Fox (born 1928, class of 1945), public relations executive who co-founded the National Organization for Women in 1966.
Marvin E. Frankel (1920–2002, class of 1937), United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York and human rights activist.
Allen Garfield (1939–2020, class of 1957), film and television actor.
Edward K. Gill (1917–1985), politician who served as Mayor of Cranford and was elected to two terms of office in the New Jersey General Assembly, where he represented the 21st Legislative District.
Ina Golub (1938-2015), fiber artist who specialized in Judaica.
Paul Goodman (class of 1945), Grammy award-winning sound engineer.
Lorraine Gordon (1922–2018, class of 1937), jazz music advocate who was best known as the owner of the Village Vanguard jazz club in Greenwich Village.
Robert J. Gorlin (1923–2006, class of 1940), oral pathologist, human geneticist and academic at the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry.
Martin L. Greenberg (born 1932, class of 1950), politician and jurist who served in the New Jersey Senate from 1974 to 1979.
Jerry Greenspan (1942–2019), NBA basketball player.
Sandy Grossman (1935-2014, class of 1953), television sports director of 10 Super Bowls, 18 NBA Finals and five Stanley Cup finals.
Ben Hawkins (1944-2017), professional American football wide receiver who played in the NFL for the Philadelphia Eagles and Cleveland Browns, and for the Philadelphia Bell of the World Football League.
Stanley Herr (1945–2001, class of 1963), President of the American Association on Mental Retardation, University of Maryland law professor and activist for the rights of the mentally disabled.
Reggie Jones (born 1951), retired boxer who represented the U.S. at the 1972 Summer Olympics, where he was controversially eliminated in a fight he was generally accepted to have won.
Amara Kamara (born 1988), starting linebacker for the Temple Owls football team.
Arnie Kantrowitz (1940–2022), LGBT activist and college professor.
Irwin I. Kimmelman (1930–2014), politician who served in both houses of the New Jersey Legislature and served as the Attorney General of New Jersey from 1982 – 1986.
Allen Klein (1931–2009, class of 1950), businessman, music publisher, writers' representative and record label executive.
Donald Kornfeld (–2022), psychiatrist best known for his work on psychiatric issues associated with medical practice.
Barbara Kruger (born 1945, class of 1963), conceptual artist.
Mo Layton (born 1948, class of 1967), retired American professional basketball point guard who played in the NBA for six seasons.
Michael Lerner (born 1943, class of 1960), rabbi, political activist and editor of Tikkun magazine.
Dana Lewis (born 1949), retired professional basketball player.
Swede Masin (1920–2005), early professional basketball player.
Joseph S. Murphy (1933–1998, class of 1951), political scientist and university administrator, who was President of Queens College, President of Bennington College, and Chancellor of the City University of New York.
Sheila Oliver (1952–2023, class of 1970), politician who served as the Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey from 2018 until her death, before which she served in the New Jersey General Assembly from 2004 to 2018, where she represented the 34th legislative district.
Sherry Ortner (born 1941, class of 1958), cultural anthropologist.
Victor Parsonnet (born 1924), cardiac surgeon who contributed significantly to the evolution of cardiac pacemaking.
Bo Porter (born 1972, class of 1990), coach and executive with the Atlanta Braves, who was manager of the Houston Astros from 2013–14.
Richie Roberts (born 1939), played by Russell Crowe in the 2007 film American Gangster.
Philip Roth (1933–2018), author, whose works — notably Portnoy's Complaint — have mentioned the school.
Reese Schonfeld (1931–2020), television journalist, who was co-founder of CNN and the Food Network.
David Shapiro (born 1947, class of 1964), poet and art historian.
Howard Smith (1936-2014, class of 1955), Oscar-winning film director, producer, journalist, screenwriter, actor and radio broadcaster.
Margery Tabankin (born 1948, class of 1965), progressive political activist who served as head of AmeriCorps VISTA.
Akrum Wadley (born 1995), American football running back.
Milton Waldor (1924–1975), politician who served in the New Jersey State Senate from 1968 to 1972, representing Essex County.
Naomi Wilzig (1934–2015), writer and art collector, who is the director and owner of World Erotic Art Museum Miami.
Jack Wolf (1935–2011, class of 1952), researcher in information theory and coding theory.
See also
Weequahic, Newark
Weequahic Park
Weequahic Golf Course
References
External links
Weequahic High School
School Data for the Newark Public Schools, National Center for Education Statistics
Alumni Assn. Main Page
Famous Alumni
1933 establishments in New Jersey
Educational institutions established in 1933
High schools in Newark, New Jersey
Middle States Commission on Secondary Schools
Public high schools in Essex County, New Jersey
Works Progress Administration in New Jersey |
```java
/*
* This file is part of ViaVersion - path_to_url
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
* in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
* to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
* copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
* OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*/
package com.viaversion.viaversion.api.protocol.version;
import java.util.Set;
public interface BlockedProtocolVersions {
/**
* Returns whether the given protocol version is blocked per boundary ranges or individually blocked versions.
*
* @param protocolVersion protocol version
* @return whether the given protocol version is blocked
*/
boolean contains(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion);
/**
* Returns the boundary below which protocol versions are blocked, or -1 if none is set.
*
* @return exclusive boundary below which protocol versions are blocked, or -1 if none
*/
ProtocolVersion blocksBelow();
/**
* Returns the boundary above which protocol versions are blocked, or -1 if none is set.
*
* @return exclusive boundary above which protocol versions are blocked, or -1 if none
*/
ProtocolVersion blocksAbove();
/**
* Returns a set of blocked protocol versions between the outer block ranges.
*
* @return set of blocked protocol versions between the outer block ranges
*/
Set<ProtocolVersion> singleBlockedVersions();
}
``` |
Nikolay Komarov may refer to:
Nikolay Vasilyevich Komarov (1831-?), Russian non-commissioned officer and founder of Vladivostok
Nikolay Komarov (politician) (1886–1937), Russian revolutionary and a Soviet politician in 10th Orgburo of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks)
Mykola Komarov (born 1961), Soviet rower |
Julian Koster (born July 26, 1972) is an American multidisciplinary artist. As a musician, he is a member of the Elephant 6 Collective, the leader of The Music Tapes, and a member of Neutral Milk Hotel. He is known for writing, directing, and acting in audio fiction The Orbiting Human Circus (of the Air), and for performing with the theatrical troupe of the same name. He is also known for his heavy use of the musical saw in recordings, even releasing The Singing Saw at Christmastime, his only solo album released under his own name, in 2008.
Early career: Chocolate USA
In 1989, Koster formed Miss America with Liza Wakeman, Alan Edwards, Paul Wells and Keith Block. After legal threats from Miss America, they became Chocolate USA. Chocolate USA released two albums on Bar/None before disbanding to follow other projects.
Neutral Milk Hotel
Koster joined Jeff Mangum, Scott Spillane and Jeremy Barnes to record the second Neutral Milk Hotel album, In the Aeroplane over the Sea, on which he played banjo and singing saw. Koster also played bass guitar in the live band. The success of the album, however, took its toll on Mangum, and the band went on hiatus shortly after its release. They reunited in 2013 for a worldwide tour.
The Music Tapes and other projects
After Neutral Milk Hotel, Koster began to concentrate on his own solo project, The Music Tapes, for which he contributed banjo, singing saw, chord organ, and vocals, among other instruments. 1st Imaginary Symphony For Nomad was released in 1999. Koster, together with Brian Dewan, recorded the story album The 2nd Imaginary Symphony for Cloudmaking, which was distributed by Koster on CD but never officially released for 15 years. After this, nothing was released by The Music Tapes until 2008, when Music Tapes for Clouds and Tornadoes arrived, followed by extensive touring (including the Elephant 6 Holiday Surprise Tour) and an unprecedented level of public appearance by the formerly reclusive Koster.
Koster was a founding member of Major Organ and the Adding Machine. He appeared in the Major Organ and the Adding Machine film which was shown on the Holiday Surprise tour and was later released with an expanded edition of the 2001 album in 2009.
In 2008, Koster released The Singing Saw at Christmastime, a collection of Christmas carols played on the singing saw. This was followed by a caroling tour, on which he played songs from The Singing Saw at Christmastime and selected tracks from Music Tapes for Clouds and Tornadoes for free wherever fans invited him to play. This evolved into an annual caroling tradition, which transformed into the "Lullabies at Bedsides" house tour of 2010–2011 and 2011–2012 which in turn gave way to the long-planned Traveling Imaginary of 2012–2013. After the EP Purim's Shadows in 2011, in 2012, The Music Tapes released their third full-length LP, Mary's Voice.
On October 12, 2016, The Orbiting Human Circus (of the Air) podcast was released, with Koster starring as Julian the Janitor.
Koster voiced Slime Boy in the animated series High Guardian Spice.
Personal life
Koster's father is noted flamenco guitarist Dennis Koster.
Koster does not identify as straight.
Koster is close friends with Hedwig and the Angry Inch co-creator John Cameron Mitchell, having contributed to early readings of the production and featured the character of Hedwig in some early tours with The Music Tapes. Mitchell is a cast member on Koster's Orbiting Human Circus podcast.
Discography
As Julian Koster
The Singing Saw at Christmastime (Merge; CD/LP/FLAC; 2008)
With Chocolate USA
All Jets Are Gonna Fall Today (Bar/None; Cassette/CD; 1992) (Originally released as Miss America. Re-released as Chocolate USA.)
Smoke Machine (Bar/None; CD; 1994)
With Major Organ and the Adding Machine
Christmas in Stereo (Kindercore; CD; 1997)
Major Organ and the Adding Machine (Orange Twin; CD; 2001)
With The Music Tapes
Please Hear Mr. Flight Control (Elephant Six; 7"; 1997)
The Television Tells Us (Elephant Six; 7"; 1998)
1st Imaginary Symphony For Nomad (Merge; CD/LP; 1999)
The Music Tapes and Dad (Given free with 'Stop Smiling Magazine' #8; 7"; 2000)
2nd Imaginary Symphony For Cloudmaking (Self-released; CD; 2002)
Music Tapes for Clouds and Tornadoes (Merge; CD/LP; 2008)
Purim's Shadows: The Dark Tours the World (Merge; MP3/kazoo; 2011)
Mary's Voice (Merge; CD/LP; 2012)
The Orbiting Human Circus (Merge; MP3; 2017)
The Sea of Tranquility (Merge; MP3/FLAC; 2019)
With Neutral Milk Hotel
In the Aeroplane Over the Sea (Merge; CD; 1998)
Ferris Wheel on Fire (Neutral Milk Hotel Records; 10" EP; 2011)
Other Appearances
References
External links
The Music Tapes – "All Official Announcements"
An interview with Julian Koster: Some other lovely reality intruding into ours August 31, 2012 via Talk Rock To Me
Sources
Cooper, Kim "Neutral Milk Hotel's in the Aeroplane Over the Sea (33)", 2005
Living people
American banjoists
American accordionists
American mandolinists
American rock guitarists
American male guitarists
The Elephant 6 Recording Company artists
1972 births
21st-century accordionists
21st-century American guitarists
21st-century American male musicians
Neutral Milk Hotel members
Major Organ and the Adding Machine members
American LGBT musicians
LGBT men |
The South Sudan Scout Association is the national Scouting organization of South Sudan. It was founded in 2011 following the independence of South Sudan, which became an independent country on July 9, 2011, at which moment the organization split from the Sudan Scouts Association, a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. In January 2013, the organization had about 2000 members.
The organization operates the Rejaf Scouts Farm in Juba. As a fledgling organization in a troubled area, some of the problem areas include lack of leadership training, training equipment, training materials, Scout badges, camping equipment, uniforms and books.
History
Scouting in South Sudan was started in the 1950s as part of the Sudan Scouts Association. In 2011, after the independence of the country, Scout groups from seven of the ten states of South Sudan founded the South Sudan Scout Association. In the second half of 2012, the organization applied for membership in the World Organization of the Scout Movement.
The South Sudan Scouts Association became an official member of WOSM on 1 May 2013. As such, South Sudan became a member of the Africa Scout Region, but is also supported by the Arab Scout Region for its Arabic-speaking members.
References
World Organization of the Scout Movement member organizations
Scouting and Guiding in South Sudan
Organizations established in 2011
2011 establishments in South Sudan |
California South Bay University is a BPPE (Bureau for Private Post-secondary Education) approved private educational institution (School Code: 13317491) based in Sunnyvale, California.
California South Bay University offers the following degree programs: Master of Business Administration, Master of Science in Computer Science.
References
Universities and colleges established in 2007
Education in Sunnyvale, California
Universities and colleges in Santa Clara County, California
Private universities and colleges in California
2007 establishments in California |
Forestiera acuminata, commonly known as eastern swamp privet, is a deciduous shrub or small tree that is native to the southeastern and central United States, growing primarily in or near wetlands. It is especially common along the Mississippi Valley as far north as Illinois and Indiana, but found also across the South from eastern Texas to South Carolina. It grows in swamp forests as well as rocky edges of streams and ponds.
The species withstands flooding and its fruit is consumed by wild ducks.
References
acuminata
Flora of the United States
Flora of the Southeastern United States
Plants described in 1812 |
The NKU Chase College of Law (formerly Salmon P. Chase College of Law, also known as Chase College of Law) is the law school of Northern Kentucky University, a public university in Highland Heights, Kentucky. It provides both part-time (day and evening) and full-time programs of study that lead to a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree, as well as joint degrees in JD/Master of Business Administration, JD/Master of Health Informatics, and JD/Master of Business Informatics. The law school also has a program that leads to a LLM degree in U.S. law that is designed for internationally trained lawyers, and a program that leads to a MLS degree designed for individuals interested in developing a better understanding of the law as it affects their careers involving legal or regulatory issues.
History
The law school was founded in 1893 and accredited by the American Bar Association in 1959. The school was named for U.S. Chief Justice, Salmon P. Chase, who was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Abraham Lincoln in 1864. Prior to his appointment, Chase was one of the most prominent politicians of the mid-19th century, serving as a U.S. senator from Ohio, the governor of Ohio, and the Secretary of the Treasury under Lincoln. He began practicing law in Cincinnati in 1830, and became an advocate for abolition and the anti-slavery movement, lending his skills to the cause of fugitive slaves, often free of charge. He spoke passionately on behalf of African Americans when their status and rights were not recognized and became known as the "attorney general of runaway slaves" for his frequent defense of slaves and those who harbored them. In 2013, members of Chase's family presented the Cincinnati Museum Center with a sterling silver pitcher given to him in 1845 by a group of grateful African Americans.
The Salmon P. Chase College of Law was initially founded as an evening law school affiliated with the Cincinnati YMCA. Classes were held in the YMCA building on Central Parkway in downtown Cincinnati from 1917 to 1972. In 1971, Chase crossed the Ohio River and merged into the Kentucky state university system by becoming a part of Northern Kentucky University (then "Northern Kentucky State College"). During summer 1972, the law school moved from downtown Cincinnati across the Ohio River to NKU's Covington campus. In 1981, Chase moved to its present location on the NKU campus in Highland Heights, remaining within the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky metropolitan area. In 2006, the college of law was rebranded NKU Chase College of Law. Chase has a student/professor ratio of nine to one.
Moot court
NKU Chase's moot court program was ranked number 22 by the Blakely Advocacy Institute at the University of Houston Law Center for the 2012–2013 academic year. Ranking is based on points awarded for achievement in national moot court competitions. Some of NKU Chase's 2012–13 competition team successes include:
Scribes Best Brief of the Year Award (chosen from the Wagner Labor & Employment Law competition brief);
National Moot Court Competition in Child Welfare & Adoption Law – champion and runner-up, second place brief, and best final-round advocate;
South Texas Mock Trial Challenge – octo-finalist;
Mugel National Tax Moot Court – semi-finalist, best brief, and second and third place best oralists;
Robert F. Wagner Labor & Employment Law Moot Court Competition – quarter-finalist and best brief;
Regional Transactional LawMeet – second place;
ABA Regional Client Counseling Competition – third place; and
ABA Regional Arbitration Competition – champion.
Notable alumni
Joe Cunningham, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina's 1st district.
John H. Druffel, judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio
Charles H. Elston, US House of Representative from Ohio
Michelle M. Keller, justice, Kentucky Supreme Court
Robert Ruwe U.S. senior judge of the United States Tax Court
Candace Smith, magistrate judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky
References
Chase
Universities and colleges established in 1893
1893 establishments in Kentucky
Northern Kentucky University
Universities and colleges founded by the YMCA |
```javascript
/**
* @license Apache-2.0
*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
'use strict';
// MODULES //
var bench = require( '@stdlib/bench' );
var pow = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/pow' );
var isArray = require( '@stdlib/assert/is-array' );
var filled = require( '@stdlib/array/base/filled' );
var pkg = require( './../package.json' ).name;
var cuevery = require( './../lib' );
// FUNCTIONS //
/**
* Creates a benchmark function.
*
* @private
* @param {PositiveInteger} len - array length
* @returns {Function} benchmark function
*/
function createBenchmark( len ) {
var x = filled( 1.5, len );
return benchmark;
/**
* Benchmark function.
*
* @private
* @param {Benchmark} b - benchmark instance
*/
function benchmark( b ) {
var y;
var v;
var i;
y = filled( false, len );
b.tic();
for ( i = 0; i < b.iterations; i++ ) {
v = cuevery.assign( x, y, 1, 0 );
if ( typeof v !== 'object' ) {
b.fail( 'should return an array' );
}
}
b.toc();
if ( !isArray( v ) ) {
b.fail( 'should return an array' );
}
b.pass( 'benchmark finished' );
b.end();
}
}
// MAIN //
/**
* Main execution sequence.
*
* @private
*/
function main() {
var len;
var min;
var max;
var f;
var i;
min = 1; // 10^min
max = 6; // 10^max
for ( i = min; i <= max; i++ ) {
len = pow( 10, i );
f = createBenchmark( len );
bench( pkg+':assign:len='+len, f );
}
}
main();
``` |
Rantz is an unincorporated community located in the town of Minocqua, Oneida County, Wisconsin, United States. Rantz is located along the Bearskin State Trail south of the community of Minocqua and northwest of Rhinelander.
References
Unincorporated communities in Oneida County, Wisconsin
Unincorporated communities in Wisconsin |
Nowy Zamość () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rościszewo, within Sierpc County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.
References
Villages in Sierpc County |
Elliott Cornelius Jackson Jr. (born November 11, 1972), nicknamed Jack Jackson, is an American former college and professional football player who was a wide receiver for four seasons in the National Football League (NFL) and Arena Football League (AFL). Jackson played college football for the University of Florida, and earned consensus All-American honors. Thereafter, he played professionally for the Chicago Bears of the NFL, and also the Orlando Predators, Carolina Cobras and Florida Bobcats of the AFL.
Early years
Jackson was born in Moss Point, Mississippi. He attended Moss Point High School, where he played high school football for the Moss Point Tigers.
College career
Jackson received an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he was a featured wide receiver for coach Steve Spurrier's Florida Gators football team from 1992 to 1994. Memorably, he had a 100-yard kick-off return for a touchdown against the Mississippi State Bulldogs in 1993, and led the nation with fifteen receiving touchdowns in 1994. He finished his college career with 143 catches for 2,266 yards (an average of 15.8 yards per reception) and twenty-nine touchdowns. Jackson was a first-team All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) selection, the SEC Offensive Player of the Year in 1994, and a consensus first-team All-American.
Professional career
After his junior college season, Jackson decided to forgo his senior season and enter the NFL Draft. He was chosen by the Chicago Bears in the fourth round (116th pick overall) of the 1995 NFL Draft. He played for the Bears for two seasons.
In 1999, Jackson played for the Mobile Admirals of the short-lived Regional Football League. He also played two seasons in the Arena Football League, spending time with the Orlando Predators, Carolina Cobras and Florida Bobcats.
See also
1994 College Football All-America Team
Florida Gators football, 1990–99
List of Chicago Bears players
List of Florida Gators football All-Americans
List of Florida Gators in the NFL Draft
List of NCAA major college football yearly receiving leaders
References
Bibliography
Carlson, Norm, University of Florida Football Vault: The History of the Florida Gators, Whitman Publishing, LLC, Atlanta, Georgia (2007). .
Golenbock, Peter, Go Gators! An Oral History of Florida's Pursuit of Gridiron Glory, Legends Publishing, LLC, St. Petersburg, Florida (2002). .
Hairston, Jack, Tales from the Gator Swamp: A Collection of the Greatest Gator Stories Ever Told, Sports Publishing, LLC, Champaign, Illinois (2002). .
McCarthy, Kevin M., Fightin' Gators: A History of University of Florida Football, Arcadia Publishing, Mount Pleasant, South Carolina (2000). .
Nash, Noel, ed., The Gainesville Sun Presents The Greatest Moments in Florida Gators Football, Sports Publishing, Inc., Champaign, Illinois (1998). .
1972 births
Living people
People from Moss Point, Mississippi
Players of American football from Mississippi
American football wide receivers
Florida Gators football players
All-American college football players
Chicago Bears players
Regional Football League players
Orlando Predators players
Carolina Cobras players
Florida Bobcats players |
Bruna Boege Pickler (born 17 June 1990 in Blumenau), is Master of Art in Communication and New Media by University of Macau. She is a Brazilian athlete, actress, composer and sports reporter.
Bruna Pickler competes in recurve archery and in 2021 ended up ranked 17th archer on national Brazil level for Olympic outdoor category.
Pickler developed from a young age an interest for show jumping and competed in the sport at minor regional events. Later, it was by means of archery that she was able to compete on professional international level since 2018. Bruna Pickler has represented Chinese team consecutively in 2018 and 2019, competing in Hong Kong at Inter-port Indoor Archery Open on both years.
She is fluent in Portuguese, English, and Mandarin.
Alma Mater
Bruna Pickler graduated in 2018 with a Master of Arts degree by University of Macau. Her area of research is Video Games. Her Master's Thesis is entitled Narrative, Gender and Ideology in Video Games
Career
Artistry and media influences
Her acting career is based on theatre and the highlight encompasses the original Macanese play entitled The Three Ladies of Macao. Bruna Pickler played Lady Conscience under the original 2016 international casting, one of the three leading roles of the play.
Athletic career
Pickler's first entry in an archery competition was in 2018 where she played for University of Macau, China, securing 9th place in Recurve Women Individual category in 2018 multinational Inter-port Archery Open (Hong Kong).
In 2019 Pickler played for the same team, finishing this time 17th in Recurve Women Individual category.
In 2020 Pickler was officially added to the national Brazilian professional archery athletes, whereas she played for St. Catarina state's Team Wolff Archery.
As the competition events resume after the long break in 2020, Pickler had hit the mark of 11th best female player on Brazil national level at indoor competition Archery Cup of The Americas, scoring 458 points. At the same event, Pickler ranked 97th best on international level.
Pickler competed in the 46th Brazilian National Adult Outdoor Championship against top Brazilian archers and secured the top 20 in the overall recurve feminine national Brazilian ranking, as she hits her personal best score in the category with 400 points.
In 2021, Pickler competed in the 47th Brazilian National Adult Outdoor Championship against top Brazilian archers and this time secured the 17th spot, after losing the round of 16 for Ane Marcelle.
References
External links
Bruna Pickler on Instagram
1990 births
Brazilian female archers
Living people
People from Blumenau
Sportspeople from Blumenau
Sportspeople from Santa Catarina (state)
Brazilian bloggers
Brazilian women bloggers
Brazilian female models
Brazilian actresses
Brazilian stage actresses
Brazilian business executives |
The National Fund for Technology Transfer and Commercialisation (NFTTC; ), is a China Government Guidance Fund. The fund aims to support the government and public institutions in the commercialization process of their scientific findings and new technologies. Using a fund of funds approach, it invests into multiple sub-funds which in turn invests in enterprises and projects.
History
In 2011, the Ministry of Science and Technology and Ministry of Finance established the outline and framework for the NFTTC as a way to support China's National Medium and Long-Term Program for Science and Technology Development (2006–2020) plan.
In 2014, the NFTTC was launched to transform research projects into business ventures.
In 2015, it invested 1 billion yuan (US$145 million) in establishing three venture capital funds.
In November 2021, Securities Times reported that there would be major revisions to the direction and management of the NFTTC so it would become more market-orientated. For example, there would be more focus on the use of equity investments, the investment managers would have more autonomy and there was more clarification on the investment stages.
In December 2021, the NFTTC made its largest capital injection, when it set up a sub-fund with the governments in Guangdong, Hubei and Chengdu as well as a number of financial institutions.
By the end of 2022, Economic Information Daily had reported the NFTTC had set up 36 sub-funds to invest nearly 36 billion yuan into 616 enterprises leading to the commercialization of 974 science and technology achievements.
Fund details
The NFTTC has four key features:
A national database that contains outcomes and findings from research projects
A venture capital function
Loan risk compensation for banks
Performance incentives
The NFTTC focuses on China's hi-tech sector such as information technology, biotechnology and new materials. It has made investments alongside other institutional investors such as private equity funds and government backed funds. It is required to keep its total investments in all sub-funds between 20%-30% and shall not be a major shareholder in any sub-fund.
References
External links
Chinese companies established in 2011
Companies based in Beijing
Financial services companies established in 2011
Government-owned companies of China
Investment management companies of China |
```scss
.chat-panel {
border-right: var(--splitter-border);
height: 100%;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
& > header {
background-color: var(--toolbar-bg);
color: var(--tab-color);
line-height: 36px;
min-height: 36px;
padding-left: 16px;
text-transform: lowercase;
user-select: text;
white-space: nowrap;
}
}
``` |
The 1938 Connecticut gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1938. Republican nominee Raymond E. Baldwin defeated Democratic incumbent Wilbur Lucius Cross with 36.43% of the vote.
General election
Candidates
Major party candidates
Raymond E. Baldwin, Republican
Wilbur Lucius Cross, Democratic
Other candidates
Jasper McLevy, Socialist
Joseph C. Borden Jr., Socialist Labor
Devere Allen, Independent
Results
References
1938
Connecticut
Gubernatorial
November 1938 events
United States gubernatorial elections in the 1930s
1938 in Connecticut |
The 1685 English general election elected the only parliament of James II of England, known as the Loyal Parliament. This was the first time the pejorative words Whig and Tory were used as names for political groupings in the Parliament of England. Party strengths are an approximation, with many MPs' allegiances being unknown.
513 Members of Parliament were returned across 53 counties and 217 boroughs in England and Wales, most returning two members. Only 15 counties and 57 boroughs (a total of 100 seats) had contested elections, with the other candidates being returned unopposed. One borough had a double return, where multiple members were recorded elected, and another was subsequently voided by Parliament, forcing a by-election.
While the number of seats had not changed from the previous election, their electorate had been substantially altered by royal influence. Following the Exclusion crisis, ninety-nine boroughs had received new charters, the aim being to eliminate the influence of the Whigs. The Whigs also lost seats in county constituencies – which were not liable to charter manipulation – dropping from around sixty county seats in 1681 to only eight.
In the new parliament, the Tories now had their own majority in both houses, Commons and Lords. The exact breakdown of members returned at the election is not clear, but of the 525 members who served during the 1685-89 Parliamentary term, including those elected at later by-elections, 468 are estimated as Tories and 57 as Whigs. This estimate does not treat any members as uncommitted, and up to 30% of members were recorded as inactive.
The election had significant effects on Parliament demographically as well as politically. The newly elected members were mostly inexperienced, with slightly over half never having sat in Parliament before. The majority of these would stand down or lose their seats at the subsequent election in 1689. Members were much more likely to be High Church Anglicans, with very few Presbyterians or Independents compared to other Parliaments of the period. There was an unusually high share of government officials and military officers, and fewer country gentry. Two minors were elected, Peter Legh and the Hon. Thomas Windsor, aged 15 and 16 respectively.
References
17th-century elections in Europe
1685 in politics
1685
General election |
Easter Is Cancelled is the sixth studio album by the British hard rock band the Darkness. It was released on 4 October 2019 through Canary Dwarf and Cooking Vinyl.
Background
The album was first announced on 4 April 2019, via a video published on the band's official YouTube channel, featuring the band members reciting a poem. A few days later they also announced details of a UK headline tour to support the album. The first single from the album, "Rock and Roll Deserves to Die", was released on 6 August 2019, along with an accompanying music video.
Critical reception
The album received generally favourable reviews.
Track listing
"Rock and Roll Deserves to Die" – 5:23
"How Can I Lose Your Love" – 3:02
"Live 'Til I Die" – 3:32
"Heart Explodes" – 3:47
"Deck Chair" – 2:24
"Easter Is Cancelled" – 4:18
"Heavy Metal Lover" – 4:41
"In Another Life" – 4:01
"Choke on It" – 3:21
"We Are the Guitar Men" – 4:21
Deluxe edition bonus tracks
<li> "Laylow" – 3:23
<li> "Different Eyes" – 2:51
<li> "Confirmation Bias" – 4:35
<li> "Sutton Hoo" – 3:27
Japanese Edition bonus track
<li> "Dancing House" – 1:05
Personnel
Justin Hawkins – vocals, guitars, piano
Dan Hawkins – guitars, backing vocals
Frankie Poullain – bass, backing vocals
Rufus Tiger Taylor – drums, backing vocals
Charts
References
2019 albums
Cooking Vinyl albums
The Darkness (band) albums |
Benjamin Proud (born 21 September 1994) is an English competitive swimmer, representing Great Britain at the Olympic Games, the FINA World Aquatics Championships and LEN European Aquatics Championships, and England at the Commonwealth Games. Proud specialises in sprint freestyle and butterfly races, specifically the 50-metre distance in both. He is the 2022 World Champion in the 50 metre freestyle, his second long course world title. He is the 2017 world champion in the 50-metre butterfly. He is only the third male swimmer to be simultaneously short-course and long-course World Champion at 50 metre freestyle, after César Cielo and Florent Manaudou.
Away from national duties, Proud currently represents Energy Standard in the International Swimming League.
Proud holds two British national records, as well as being a double Commonwealth Games champion in both the 50 m butterfly (2014 and 2022) and 50 m freestyle (2014 and 2018) events. He was European Champion over 50 metres freestyle in 2018, and was part of the 4 x 100 medley team from Great Britain which won European gold in 2014.
Early life and education
Proud was born in London on 21 September 1994 to Nic and Sally Proud. The family moved to Malaysia when he was five months old, and he grew up in Damansara, Kuala Lumpur. He has a brother, Oliver. He attended the Alice Smith School from kindergarten until year 12 of the school. At Alice Smith, he competed for the school and was trained by Francis Kiu, a professional Malaysian swimmer. He swam for the school swimming team, KLASS Torpedoes, representing them at many international swim meets. He swam at the Malaysian Open, winning the 50 m butterfly and placing second in the 50 m freestyle. His many swim meets across Southeast Asia included the Flying Fish meet in Phuket, Thailand.
In 2011, when he was 16, he returned to England to pursue swimming as a career, and joined Plymouth College as a swimming scholar. After finishing school, he attended University of St Mark & St John where he studied for a Sports Development & Coaching degree. Proud was coached by Jon Rudd at the Plymouth Leander Swimming Programme in England, before he moved to train at the Energy Standard International Swim Club in Turkey in 2017.
Swimming career
Proud won a silver medal in the 50 m butterfly -his strongest event- in the European Junior Championships, which put him on the map as the fastest British sprinter at the British Gas International Meet in 2013, winning a gold in the butterfly, and going on later to win a silver in the 50 m freestyle in Leeds. After his initial victories, he rose through the ranks and broke the decade-long 50 m butterfly standing record twice, in the semis and final, giving him his first British Gas Swimming Championship title at the age of 19.
He went on the break his personal best times for the 50 m and 100 m freestyle events, earning himself a silver and bronze, as well as a spot on the British team for the 2013 World Championships being held in Barcelona. Unsurprisingly, Proud did incredibly, finishing 18th in the 50 m freestyle, and 11th in the 50 m butterfly. In 2014, still only 19 years old, Proud won his first senior international medals on his Commonwealth debut for England at Glasgow. The following month, Proud won a gold in the 4 × 100 m medley relay and a bronze in the 50 m butterfly for Team GB at his first European Championships.
In the 2016 European Aquatics Championships in London, he won two bronze medals, first in 50m butterfly, then in 50m freestyle.
Proud represents Great Britain in the 50 m and 100 m freestyle events at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
2017
At the 2017 World Aquatics Championships, Proud qualified as the fourth fastest swimmer at the 50m butterfly semi-finals, but won a surprise gold at the final with a national record time of 22.75 seconds. He won a further bronze in the 50m freestyle in 21.43 seconds.
2018–2019
At the 2018 Commonwealth Games held at the Gold Coast, Australia, Proud won silver as part of the relay team with David Cumberlidge, Jarvis Parkinson and James Guy that came second in the freestyle events. He broke his own Games record in the heats of the 50m freestyle with 21.45 seconds, then 21.30 in the semi-finals and went on to win the final in 21.35. He also won a silver in the medley with Adam Peaty, James Guy and Luke Greenbank. He broke his own 50m freestyle British record at the Sette Colli meet in Rome, posting a Commonwealth record of 21.16 in the final to become the 4th fastest performer of all time over the distance.
At the 2018 European Championships in Glasgow, Proud won a silver in the 50-metre butterfly. He then broke the 50-meter freestyle textile world record with 21.11 in the semi-finals of the 50-metre freestyle, and won his first gold of the European championships in the final.
In the Autumn of 2019 he was member of the inaugural International Swimming League swimming for the Energy Standard Swim Club, who won the team title in Las Vegas, Nevada, in December.
2021–22
At the European Championships held in Budapest in May 2021, Proud won a silver in the 50 m freestyle.
A year later, at the 2022 World Aquatics Championships held in Budapest, Proud won gold in the 50 m freestyle event.
Proud took part in the 2022 Commonwealth Games, and won a gold in the 50 m butterfly event.
2023
In 2023, he won the gold medal at the 2023 British Swimming Championships in the 50 metres freestyle. It was the fifth time that he had won the 50 metres event. He was also denied a seventh 50 metres butterfly title by Jacob Peters.
Best times
British Record*
See also
List of Commonwealth Games medallists in swimming (men)
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
British male butterfly swimmers
British male freestyle swimmers
Swimmers from Greater London
British emigrants to Malaysia
Swimmers at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
Swimmers at the 2018 Commonwealth Games
Swimmers at the 2022 Commonwealth Games
Commonwealth Games medallists in swimming
Commonwealth Games gold medallists for England
Commonwealth Games silver medallists for England
Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for England
Olympic swimmers for Great Britain
Swimmers at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
European Aquatics Championships medalists in swimming
World Aquatics Championships medalists in swimming
Medalists at the FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)
People educated at Plymouth College
Sportspeople from Kuala Lumpur
Medallists at the 2018 Commonwealth Games |
Canada's Air Defence is a 33-minute 1957 Canadian documentary film produced by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) for the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). The film depicts the role of air defence over Canada and the United States by following the training and operational exercises of a RCAF squadron.
Synopsis
In 1956, No. 433 "Porcupine" RCAF Squadron flies the Avro Canada CF-100 Canuck all-weather interceptor aircraft. The squadron is based at CFB North Bay, Ontario, and is responsible for an area that includes the immediate region and the Arctic. On a deployment to CFB Cold Lake, Alberta, where training for RCAF operational units takes place, experienced flight crews and newcomers in the squadron learn how to be more effective as a team. The work of the ground control and radar units that support the squadron are highlighted in a combat readiness exercise.
During the Cold War, the Soviet threat of nuclear attack on North America was countered by both the United States and Canada. Air defence was based on radar stations, staffed with American and Canadian personnel, set up in three systems across Canada to detect incoming Soviet bombers. The further operational aspects of air defence in North America that even included ground observers called the RCAF Ground Observer Corps, was detailed.
Production
Typical of the NFB's series of short training films for the RCAF, Canada's Air Defence relied heavily on military assistance in obtaining footage. The film incorporated footage shot in 1956 at bases where No. 433 All-Weather (Fighter) Squadron operated. After the Second World War, the squadron, originally a heavy bomber squadron in Europe, reformed as a fighter squadron at Cold Lake, Alberta, on November 15, 1954. A move to North Bay, Ontario, came in October 1955, where the squadron flew CF-100 aircraft on North American air defence until being disbanded on August 1, 1961.
The aerial sequences included footage shot from accompanying CF-100s and featured five-plane formation flying. Additional footage of rocket firing at the CFB Cold Lake, Alberta, firing range was incorporated into the story of air defence interceptions. A Royal Air Force Vickers Valiant bomber is also briefly seen in the film.
Reception
Canada's Air Defence was primarily a military training film, produced as part of the NFB's newsreel programs. Each film in NFB's catalogue was made available on 16 mm, to schools, libraries and air cadet units. They were also made available to film libraries operated by university and provincial authorities. Canada's Air Defence was later edited into R.C.A.F. Air Defence Command (1957).
Although available from the National Film Board either online or as a DVD, Canada's Air Defence is now largely forgotten. A recent analysis emphasized the historical value of the film. "From a strictly cinematic viewpoint, it must be admitted that its age is showing. The style of the film with its wooden 'acting' and patriotic theme is in keeping with its generation. That is some ways what makes it so interesting, it's a time capsule from the past."
References
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
Lyzun, Jim. CF-100 Canuck. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: SMS Publishing, 1985. .
External links
Watch Canada's Air Defence at NFB.ca
1957 films
Canadian aviation films
Canadian short documentary films
Documentary films about military aviation
National Film Board of Canada documentaries
1957 documentary films
Royal Canadian Air Force
1956 in Canada
Documentary films about the Cold War
Sponsored films
1950s English-language films
1950s Canadian films |
Graelent is an Old French Breton lai, named after its protagonist. It is one of the so-called anonymous lais .
Synopsis
The plot is similar to that of Marie de France's lai of Lanval. Graelent, a knight of Brittany, rebuffs amorous advances from the queen, who retaliates by manipulating the king against him. Graelent's wages are suspended, reducing him to poverty. Graelent dejectedly rides into the forest, and while tracking a white hind (bisse blance v. 201; Mod. Fr.: ), he stumbles upon a beautiful lady bathing in the fountain, attended by two maidens. Graelent sneaks up and clutches the articles of clothing she has disrobed upon a bush. The lady cries out his name, demanding their return. Graelent does not comply, and bargains for her to emerge from the fountain, and asks for her love.
She is at first scornful at the suggestion, but Graelent rapes her, and she then decides to help him. She would appear to him whenever he wills it, but the relationship must be kept a strict secret, and the couple are to abide in the country for one year while avoiding detection from comrades. Graelent receives from the lady a magnificent war horse, and large sums of gold and silver. He repays his debt to the burgess's hostel where he stayed, and begins entertaining many knights, regaling them with food and harpers' music. He spends other hours of the day and nights with his lady. Graelent is now extricated from financial difficulties, but another ordeal is awaiting.
A year goes by, and at the king's annual Pentecost feast, all present are expected to praise the beauty of the queen as being greater than any other that they know. Graelent refuses, blurting out that he knows a woman thirty times as beautiful. The enraged queen dares him to produce this woman on pain of punishment (on count of calumny), and the king orders him thrown in prison. The lady does not appear at his whim as she has always done before, and Graelent is struck by remorse, but gains no reprieve until the next Pentecostal feast, when he is given a last chance to ride out and find his lady. Graelent returns empty-handed, and resigns himself to trial, but just then beautiful damsels arrive in court, with the message that the lady will soon be present to acquit Graelent of his veracity.
Unlike Lanval, the "fairy mistress" here does not immediately take him back, and sets off on the journey back to her world beyond the river. Graelent follows mounted on the white horse she has given him, and ignoring her warning, begins to ford the river but is unhorsed and begins to drown. At the entreaty of her attendant damsel, the lady relents and pulls him up to safety. The couple disappear, never to be seen again. The horse left behind remains at the bank neighing after his master, and can still be heard at this time of year.
Related texts
Graelent is closely resembles the plotline to Lanval by Marie de France, and the texts are considered interrelated. However, there has been considerable disagreement over the years among commentators regarding their authorship, the chronological order, and mutual relationship. Graelent was initially published by as a work by Marie de France by Jean-Baptiste-Bonaventure de Roquefort in 1820, and subsequently translated as one of her works by Eugene Mason (1911), but this attribution is considered erroneous.
Although some early scholars such as Gaston Paris (1889) considered Graelent to antedate Lanval, and later William C. Stokoe, Jr. (1948) continued to argue it as the source of Lanval, many have voiced dissent, and the contrary opinion is the recent consensus, according to Glynn S. Burgess:
The definitive view of these three lays (the third being Guingamor), chronologically and thematically, is that of R. N. Illingworth, who concluded that they were composed in the order Lanval, Graelent, and Guingamor, with Graelent and Guingamor (both anonymous) drawing on Lanval, but Guingamor also drawing on Graelent. Moreover, although the narratives were taken largely from Marie, the two anonymous lays integrated into their stories, independently of Marie, material stemming from "a nucleus of genuine Celtic tradition".
The protagonist robbing the bathing lady's garment is a common swan maiden folklore motif, and William Henry Schofield felt this was borrowed specifically from the story of Wayland the Smith, which survive in the Middle High German Friedrich von Schwaben and the Eddic poem Völundarkviða. Schofield also discerned borrowings from the Irish narrative Noinden Ulad ("Debility of the Ulstermen").
Medieval adaptations
Graelent was translated into Old Norse as Grelent, one of the Strengleikar; this text has value for tracing the textual history of the French lai. In its turn, this translation seems to have influenced the Icelandic romance-saga Samsonar saga fagra and the rímur Skíðaríma, both of which include characters called Grelent. The Middle English Sir Launfal by Thomas Chestre is considered a composite, based on Lanval with elements added from Graelent.
Editions
Manuscripts
A. Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, fr. 2168, f. 65r, col. 2—70r, col. 2. Picard, end of thirteenth century.
S. Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, nouv. acq. fr. 1104, f. 72r, col. 2—77r, col. 1. Francien, c. 1300.
L. Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal, fr. 2770, f. 57r—72r. An error-prone copy of A by Jean-Baptiste de La Curne de Sainte-Palaye. Eighteenth-century.
N. Copenhagen, AM 666 b 4°, pp. 89–91 (verses 1-156 only).
Notes
Explanatory notes
Citations
Bibliography
Anglo-Norman literature
Anonymous lais
Fairies and sprites in popular culture
French poems
Lais (poetic form)
Medieval legends
Medieval French literature
Medieval literature
Swan maidens |
```smalltalk
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text.Json;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Amazon.Lambda.Annotations;
using Amazon.Lambda.Annotations.APIGateway;
using Amazon.Lambda.APIGatewayEvents;
using Amazon.Lambda.Core;
namespace TestServerlessApp
{
public class Greeter
{
[LambdaFunction(ResourceName = "GreeterSayHello", MemorySize = 1024, PackageType = LambdaPackageType.Image)]
[HttpApi(LambdaHttpMethod.Get, "/Greeter/SayHello", Version = HttpApiVersion.V1)]
public void SayHello([FromQuery(Name = "names")]IEnumerable<string> firstNames, APIGatewayProxyRequest request, ILambdaContext context)
{
context.Logger.LogLine($"Request {JsonSerializer.Serialize(request)}");
if (firstNames == null)
{
return;
}
foreach (var firstName in firstNames)
{
Console.WriteLine($"Hello {firstName}");
}
}
[LambdaFunction(ResourceName = "GreeterSayHelloAsync", Timeout = 50, PackageType = LambdaPackageType.Image)]
[HttpApi(LambdaHttpMethod.Get, "/Greeter/SayHelloAsync", Version = HttpApiVersion.V1)]
public async Task SayHelloAsync([FromHeader(Name = "names")]IEnumerable<string> firstNames)
{
if (firstNames == null)
{
return;
}
foreach (var firstName in firstNames)
{
Console.WriteLine($"Hello {firstName}");
}
await Task.CompletedTask;
}
}
}
``` |
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""
Usage: script_name jobs url1 url2 [wdir [last_block [first_block]]]
Example: script_name 4 path_to_url path_to_url ./ 5000000 0
set jobs to 0 if you want use all processors
if last_block == 0, it is read from url1 (as reference)
"""
import sys
import json
import os
import shutil
from jsonsocket import JSONSocket
from jsonsocket import steemd_call
from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
from concurrent.futures import ProcessPoolExecutor
from concurrent.futures import Future
from concurrent.futures import wait
from pathlib import Path
wdir = Path()
errors = 0
def main():
if len(sys.argv) < 4 or len(sys.argv) > 7:
print("Usage: script_name jobs url1 url2 [wdir [last_block [first_block]]]")
print(" Example: script_name 4 path_to_url path_to_url ./ 5000000 0")
print( " set jobs to 0 if you want use all processors" )
print(" if last_block == 0, it is read from url1 (as reference)")
exit()
global wdir
global errors
first_block = 0
last_block = 0
jobs = int(sys.argv[1])
if jobs <= 0:
import multiprocessing
jobs = multiprocessing.cpu_count()
url1 = sys.argv[2]
url2 = sys.argv[3]
if len(sys.argv) > 4:
wdir = Path(sys.argv[4])
if len(sys.argv) > 5:
last_block = int(sys.argv[5])
else:
last_block = 0
if len(sys.argv) == 7:
first_block = int(sys.argv[6])
else:
first_block = 0
last_block1 = get_last_block(url1)
last_block2 = get_last_block(url2)
if last_block1 != last_block2:
exit("last block of {} ({}) is different then last block of {} ({})".format(url1, last_block1, url2, last_block2))
if last_block == 0:
last_block = last_block1
elif last_block != last_block1:
print("WARNING: last block from cmdline {} is different then from {} ({})".format(last_block, url1, last_block1))
if last_block == 0:
exit("last block cannot be 0!")
create_wdir()
blocks = last_block - first_block + 1
if jobs > blocks:
jobs = blocks
print("setup:")
print(" jobs: {}".format(jobs))
print(" url1: {}".format(url1))
print(" url2: {}".format(url2))
print(" wdir: {}".format(wdir))
print(" block range: {}:{}".format(first_block, last_block))
if jobs > 1:
blocks_per_job = blocks // jobs
with ProcessPoolExecutor(max_workers=jobs) as executor:
for i in range(jobs-1):
executor.submit(compare_results, first_block, (first_block + blocks_per_job - 1), url1, url2)
first_block = first_block + blocks_per_job
executor.submit(compare_results, first_block, last_block, url1, url2)
else:
compare_results(first_block, last_block, url1, url2)
exit( errors )
def create_wdir():
global wdir
if wdir.exists():
if wdir.is_file():
os.remove(wdir)
if wdir.exists() == False:
wdir.mkdir(parents=True)
def get_last_block(url, max_tries=10, timeout=0.1):
request = bytes( json.dumps( {
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 0,
"method": "database_api.get_dynamic_global_properties",
"params": {}
} ), "utf-8" ) + b"\r\n"
status, response = steemd_call(url, data=request, max_tries=max_tries, timeout=timeout)
if status == False:
return 0
try:
return response["result"]["head_block_number"]
except:
return 0
def compare_results(f_block, l_block, url1, url2, max_tries=10, timeout=0.1):
global wdir
global errors
print( "Compare blocks [{} : {}]".format(f_block, l_block) )
for i in range(f_block, l_block+1):
request = bytes( json.dumps( {
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": i,
"method": "account_history_api.get_ops_in_block",
"params": { "block_num": i, "only_virtual": False }
} ), "utf-8" ) + b"\r\n"
with ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=2) as executor:
#with ProcessPoolExecutor(max_workers=2) as executor:
future1 = executor.submit(steemd_call, url1, data=request, max_tries=max_tries, timeout=timeout)
future2 = executor.submit(steemd_call, url2, data=request, max_tries=max_tries, timeout=timeout)
status1, json1 = future1.result()
status2, json2 = future2.result()
#status1, json1 = steemd_call(url1, data=request, max_tries=max_tries, timeout=timeout)
#status2, json2 = steemd_call(url2, data=request, max_tries=max_tries, timeout=timeout)
if status1 == False or status2 == False or json1 != json2:
print("Difference @block: {}\n".format(i))
errors += 1
filename = wdir / Path(str(f_block) + "_" + str(l_block) + ".log")
try: file = filename.open( "w" )
except: print( "Cannot open file:", filename ); return
file.write("Difference @block: {}\n".format(i))
file.write("{} response:\n".format(url1))
json.dump(json1, file, indent=2, sort_keys=True)
file.write("\n")
file.write("{} response:\n".format(url2))
json.dump(json2, file, indent=2, sort_keys=True)
file.write("\n")
file.close()
print( "Compare blocks [{} : {}] break with error".format(f_block, l_block) )
return
print( "Compare blocks [{} : {}] finished".format(f_block, l_block) )
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
``` |
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