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Chris Zoricich (, ; born 3 May 1969) is a New Zealand association football player who represented the New Zealand national football team in the 1980s and 1990s. Born to Croat parents, he began playing football in his native Auckland for Blockhouse Bay Under-7's and went on to play over 50 times for his country.
Club career
"Zorro" began his senior career with Papatoetoe in Auckland before moving to Leyton Orient in England between 1990–1993. He made 59 first team appearances there, and 12 as a substitute during his time in East London, before he was made to return home due to work permit restrictions. A group of Orient fans protested outside the home office to try to keep him in the country.
In 1994, Chris returned to New Zealand to play for Central United, a Croatian-influenced team. His brother, Michael (who played Davis Cup tennis for New Zealand), and his father, Ivan, also turned out for Central at various points. However it was not long before Zoricich was on the move again, this time to Brisbane Strikers in the Australian National Soccer League. He spent two seasons in Australia before heading to England to try his luck again. He made one appearance for Welling United in the Vauxhall Conference and also had a trial spell with Chelsea, at that time managed by Ruud Gullit. During his time at Stamford Bridge, Chris never made the first team but was a regular in the reserve side's defence.
Chris returned to Australia to re-sign for the Brisbane Strikers in 1997, after the club had won the NSL championship on their home ground. He then ended his NSL career by playing for Newcastle Breakers and Newcastle United, before returning to England as his English wife was homesick. After trialling with League Two side, Mansfield Town, he signed for Margate in the Nationwide Conference and then moved on to St Albans City in the Conference South Division. This was followed by short spells at Harlow Town, Boreham Wood, Heybridge Swifts and Wealdstone.
International career
Zoricich made his international debut against Israel on 27 March 1988. He went on to win 57 caps in full 'A' internationals, including captaining the All Whites at the 1999 Confederations Cup in Mexico and the 2003 Confederations Cup in France. His only international goal was in a 1–2 loss to USA in June 1999 at the Confederations Cup.
International goals
Scores and results list New Zealand's goal tally first.
After International football
Zoricich as of 2014 is the premier football coach a Saint Kentigern College in Auckland.
References
External links
1969 births
Association footballers from Auckland
Living people
New Zealand men's association footballers
New Zealand people of Croatian descent
New Zealand men's international footballers
National Soccer League (Australia) players
Papatoetoe AFC players
Leyton Orient F.C. players
Central United F.C. players
Brisbane Strikers FC players
Welling United F.C. players
Chelsea F.C. players
Sydney Olympic FC players
Newcastle Jets FC players
Margate F.C. players
St Albans City F.C. players
Harlow Town F.C. players
Boreham Wood F.C. players
Wealdstone F.C. players
Men's association football defenders
1996 OFC Nations Cup players
1998 OFC Nations Cup players
1999 FIFA Confederations Cup players
2000 OFC Nations Cup players
2002 OFC Nations Cup players
2003 FIFA Confederations Cup players |
was a Japanese Navy officer; his highest rank was . He was known for the development of naval gymnastics, which were meant to improve the alertness and flexibility of sailors in closed areas of warships and he was known for leading the paratroopers. He was the first jumper during the drop on an airfield 60 km south of Manado, Indonesia, in the Battle of Manado.
Early life
He was born in Kumamoto, Kumamoto Prefecture on 27 September 1900 in the house known as Mimageno Kadogoya, since his ancestors were heads of a small town. After graduation from a middle school in 1919, he entered the Naval school at Edajima, Hiroshima Prefecture and graduated in 1922. In the Naval school, he studied not only English but also Spanish and Portuguese. After graduation, he became a naval officer in September 1923, and was ordered to take a pilot student course. Unfortunately, he was struck by a whirling propeller and had to defer his training. He took another course and joined the crew of a destroyer. In December 1, 1927 he was promoted to lieutenant and took artillery. In 1928, he became a division officer in Japanese cruiser Natori and in 1929, he was a division officer in Japanese cruiser Ashigara. In 1930, he became a teacher at the Naval school. He was in charge of artillery and gymnastics. In October 1934, he was appointed as the teacher of artillery at Yokosuka. At the end of 1936, he sailed on the Japanese cruiser Isuzu as the artillery officer.
Navy gymnastics
He was known for the development of his own gymnastics based on the Denmark gymnastics. As a teacher of gymnastics at the Naval school, he had long felt a need that those in the navy should attain more alertness and flexibility of actions in the limited spaces of warships and he studied various methods; traditionally the Japanese Imperial Army had employed the Swedish gymnastics. Once, he had a chance of learning the Denmark gymnastics by visiting Danish gymnasts at Okayama, and developed his own system, based on the flexible movements of extremities; because
of his peculiar movements, he was nicknamed octopus man. He revealed the superiority of this gymnastics by showing the team he taught won high marks in various games and finally the Ministry of the Navy employed his method of gymnastics. In 1944, he was awarded for his development of gymnastics by the Navy Minister.
Airborne commander
Prior to the beginning of the Pacific War, he was appointed as a special commander, and on 11 January 1942, his troop successfully performed an airborne operation at Manado, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Earlier, he had been the leader in training paratroopers at Tateyama, Chiba, during which a number of trainees died due to various reasons. On November 1940, the trainees were divided into the first special troop, headed by him numbering 750, another troop was headed by Fukumi. He jumped at 9:52 a.m. on 11 January 1942 from a height of 150 metres. His flight was recorded on film and was used for propaganda purposes.
As an Administrator
According to Japanese reports, Horiuchi treated the inhabitants of the island well, and was appreciated them. During his short tenure, he gave reportedly provided necessary goods such as salt, and reduced the tax to 1/4 of the previous amount. Horiuchi reportedly used the local language and according to one Japanese source, treated the prisoners of war (POWs) of the Netherlands fairly. On 11 January 1992, a goodwill meeting was held in commemoration of the 50th year of the parachute drop. Issai Horiuchi, the son of Horiuchi, carried the photograph of Horiuchi and several hundreds of the inhabitants attended the meeting. Hiroyuki Agawa, who later became a writer, was under Horiuchi when Horiuchi was transferred to Toukou of Taiwan in 1943 as a teacher of Naval students. Horiuchi said to Agawa that he was one of those who were loved by those in the occupied lands. He lost any desire or position when my assistant lieutenant died. To become a good commander, eliminate five desires, especially the sexual desire. Those who lost something will not kill others, but those whose lovers are taken by someone, may kill them. In the occupied lands, the Japanese army and navy made mistakes because of this.
As a B-class war criminal
On 29 January 1948, a written indictment was read at the Manado Temporary Military Court which presented charges against Japanese Navy Colonel Toyoaki Horiuchi by the order of the Prosecutor General (dated 19 January 1948). The charges were that Horiuchi ordered or allowed Dutch army officers to be subjected to systemic terrorism. He was in a position of knowing the terrorism and did not punish Japanese officers. In 1942, at least 30 Dutch officers were killed with swords. He was in a position of knowing this but did not take necessary preventive measures. These are against the rules dealing with wartime criminals. Lawyer Ide stated that Horiuchi did not know these facts. There were 9 witnesses, most from the Dutch side. Horiuchi sent a letter of testimony that he did not know these facts. However, he felt responsible as an officer of superior rank. For a long time, he believed that we should love enemies. In January 1942, when he set up the parachute troop center, he strongly banned violence to those on the Dutch side. We treated these officers with respect and courtesy. He was impressed by Van den Berg officer who asked for permission while he was responsible. He punished his officers who gave him some violence. Based on his conviction, he freed 650 men of Indonesia. He admitted some of the violence had not been reported to him.
Biographical timeline
27 September 1900: Born at Kawakami Village, now Kumamoto, Japan
31 March 1913: Graduated from Mimage Primary School
1 April 1913 - 31 March 1919: Student at Seiseiko Middle School
26 August 1919 - 1 June 1922: Cadet at Imperial Japanese Naval Academy
1 June 1922: Graduated from above as midshipman, ranking 156th out of 272 cadets. Assigned to Japanese cruiser Asama; the fleet embarked for Brazil.
17 February 1923: Returned to Japan:
26 February 1923: Crewmember of Japanese battleship Nagato
20 September 1923: Promoted to Ensign
4 July - 10 December 1924: Student at Naval Torpedo School Basic Course
10 December 1924 - 10 April 1925: Student at Naval Gunnery School Basic Course
20 April 1925: the Submarine unit
5 August 1925: the Naval air force at Kasumigaura
1 December 1925: Promoted to Lieutenant (junior grade)
1 December 1926 - 1 December 1927: Navigator of Japanese destroyer Uzuki
1 December 1927: Promoted to Lieutenant
1 December 1927 - 10 December 1928: Student at Naval Gunnery School Advanced Course.
10 December 1928: Division Officer of Japanese cruiser Natori
30 November 1929: Division Officer of Japanese cruiser Ashigara
10 December 1930: Instructor at Imperial Japanese Naval Academy
1 December 1932 - 25 January 1933: Gunnery Officer of Japanese destroyer Usugumo
25 January 1933 - 1 November 1933: Gunnery Officer of Japanese destroyer Shinonome
1 November 1933 - 22 October 1934: Gunnery Officer of Japanese destroyer Shirakumo
15 November 1934: Promoted to Lieutenant Commander
15 November 1934: Instructor at Imperial Japanese Naval Academy
12 October 1936 - 1 December 1936: Attached to Yokosuka Naval District
1 December 1936 - 15 November 1937: Gunnery Officer of Japanese cruiser Isuzu
15 November 1937 - 20 February 1939: Gunnery Officer of Japanese cruiser Yakumo
6 April 1938: Fleet on a distant training voyage
11 July - 30 July 1938: Temporary Gunnery Officer of Japanese cruiser Kako
11 November 1938: on a distant training voyage
20 February 1939 - 15 November 1939: Commanding Officer, 2nd Yokosuka Special Naval Landing Force
15 November 1940 Promoted to commander; Dispatched to Amoi
25 September 1941 - 5 January 1943: Commanding Officer, 1st Yokosuka Special Naval Landing Force
11 January 1942: jumped at Manado as the commander of the parachute troop
5 November 1942: Had the honour of meeting Emperor Hirohito and showed Crown Prince Akihito his gymnastics
6 January 1943 - 15 January 1943: Attached to Yokosuka Naval District
15 January 1943: Teacher of special navy students in Macao and Taiwan
1 April 1943: Teacher of natives of Taiwan
1 December 1943 - 5 December 1943: Attached to Kure Naval District
5 December 1943 - 15 January 1945: Executive Officer of Japanese cruiser Takao
1 May 1944: Promoted to Captain
15 January 1945 - 10 February 1945: Attached to Yokosuka Naval District
10 February 1945 - 6 March 1945: Teacher at the Naval school
6 March 1945 - 15 July 1945: Teacher of Naval school at Hario
15 July 1945 - 25 July 1945: Teacher of naval school at Hōfu
25 July 1945 - 1 August 1945: Commanding Officer, 11th Kure Special Naval Landing Force
1 August 1945: Naval headquarters
After the war
15 August 1945: He was a special commander at Kochi. Later, he was engaged in repatriation works.
6 January 1947: Detained at Sugamo Prison as a Class B war criminal suspect.
28 January 1948: Indicted by the Dutch army at Manado
15 May 1948: Executed at Manado
29 April 1953: He was released from POW.
10 February 1965: His ashes were returned to Kumamoto.
17 August 1979: Televised in Harukanaru Uminohateni by TV Asahi
11 December 1987: The house Mimageno Kadogoya where he was born became a memorial hall.
11 January 1992: Commemorative ceremony of the 50th anniversary of the parachute drop was performed in Manado
References
Sources
Mitsuharu Uehara, The life of Captain Horiuchi- a navy commander who was executed unjustly 2011, Kojinsha NF Bunko,
Hiroyuki Agawa, Kazutoshi Hando, Japanese Navy Ikari age 2003, PHP Bunko,
Masayoshi Koizumi, The housekeeping book of a navy captain Kojinsha NF Bunko, 2009,
1900 births
1948 deaths
20th-century Japanese criminals
Japanese military personnel of World War II
Japanese people executed for war crimes
People executed by the Netherlands by firing squad
People from Kumamoto |
```c
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <oqs/sig_falcon.h>
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024)
OQS_SIG *OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_new(void) {
OQS_SIG *sig = malloc(sizeof(OQS_SIG));
if (sig == NULL) {
return NULL;
}
sig->method_name = OQS_SIG_alg_falcon_1024;
sig->alg_version = "20211101 with PQClean patches";
sig->claimed_nist_level = 5;
sig->euf_cma = true;
sig->length_public_key = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_length_public_key;
sig->length_secret_key = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_length_secret_key;
sig->length_signature = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_length_signature;
sig->keypair = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_keypair;
sig->sign = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_sign;
sig->verify = OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_verify;
return sig;
}
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_keypair(uint8_t *pk, uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_signature(uint8_t *sig, size_t *siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_verify(const uint8_t *sig, size_t siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *pk);
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_avx2)
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_keypair(uint8_t *pk, uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_signature(uint8_t *sig, size_t *siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_verify(const uint8_t *sig, size_t siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *pk);
#endif
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_aarch64)
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_keypair(uint8_t *pk, uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_signature(uint8_t *sig, size_t *siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *sk);
extern int PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_verify(const uint8_t *sig, size_t siglen, const uint8_t *m, size_t mlen, const uint8_t *pk);
#endif
OQS_API OQS_STATUS OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_keypair(uint8_t *public_key, uint8_t *secret_key) {
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_avx2)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_AVX2)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_keypair(public_key, secret_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_keypair(public_key, secret_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#elif defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_aarch64)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_ARM_NEON)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_keypair(public_key, secret_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_keypair(public_key, secret_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#else
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_keypair(public_key, secret_key);
#endif
}
OQS_API OQS_STATUS OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_sign(uint8_t *signature, size_t *signature_len, const uint8_t *message, size_t message_len, const uint8_t *secret_key) {
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_avx2)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_AVX2)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_signature(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, secret_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_signature(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, secret_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#elif defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_aarch64)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_ARM_NEON)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_signature(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, secret_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_signature(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, secret_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#else
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_signature(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, secret_key);
#endif
}
OQS_API OQS_STATUS OQS_SIG_falcon_1024_verify(const uint8_t *message, size_t message_len, const uint8_t *signature, size_t signature_len, const uint8_t *public_key) {
#if defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_avx2)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_AVX2)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AVX2_crypto_sign_verify(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, public_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_verify(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, public_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#elif defined(OQS_ENABLE_SIG_falcon_1024_aarch64)
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
if (OQS_CPU_has_extension(OQS_CPU_EXT_ARM_NEON)) {
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_AARCH64_crypto_sign_verify(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, public_key);
#if defined(OQS_DIST_BUILD)
} else {
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_verify(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, public_key);
}
#endif /* OQS_DIST_BUILD */
#else
return (OQS_STATUS) PQCLEAN_FALCON1024_CLEAN_crypto_sign_verify(signature, signature_len, message, message_len, public_key);
#endif
}
#endif
``` |
```python
{
"targets": [
{
"target_name": "test_constructor",
"sources": [
"../common.c",
"../entry_point.c",
"test_constructor.c"
]
}
]
}
``` |
"Toro Mata" ("The Bull Kills" in Spanish) is one of the most famous Afro-Peruvian songs in Peru, which has been recorded and developed by many different musical artists throughout its history. "Toro Mata" is a type of Peruvian music initially developed by enslaved black people in Cañete and Chincha.
History
"Toro Mata" is a song influenced by Afro-Peruvian musical styles (this song is classified as a landó), and over the years, has become a popular anthem for Peru. A dance of "Toro Mata" also developed, which mocks and parodies the stylized waltzes of European Conquistadores. This politically charged song and dance developed as a reaction to the conquest of Peru by Spain. By the beginning of the 20th century, "Toro Mata" was fading from popularity, but it has again become popular due to the revival of musica criolla starting in the 1950s.
One of the most famous versions of "Toro Mata" was performed by Carlos Soto de la Colina (also known as Caitro Soto) in 1973. "Toro Mata" has also been performed by Peruvian musicians Susana Baca, Eva Ayllon, Peru Negro and Lucila Campos. There are many different versions of "Toro Mata" within Peru, with slight differences in content, though all center on a deadly bull. The song has gained popularity outside of Peru, with Cuban artist Celia Cruz recording a salsa version of the song.
External links
Lyrics to Susana Baca's version of "Toro Mata"
See also
Afro-Peruvian
Musica criolla
Musica negra
Latin American music
Peruvian music
Peruvian folk songs
Spanish-language songs
Songs about cattle
Songs about death |
The Frank G. Edwards House is a historic residential building built in 1883, and located at 1366 Guerrero Street in the Noe Valley section of San Francisco, California.
The Frank G. Edwards House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places since September 30, 1982; listed as a California Historical Landmark since October 29, 1982; and listed as a San Francisco Designated Landmark since December 17, 1988.
History
It was built in 1883 and designed by local architect Joseph Gosling. The house is flat front Italianate in style, and reflects the emergence of the popular Stick-style with its flattened features.
Edwards (1822—1900) was English-born an importer, publisher, and civic leader; and had worked in the carpet and wallpaper business with his business "Pioneer Carpet House". He was a member of the Vigilance Committee and the San Francisco Fire Department.
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco
References
External links
Frank G. Edwards papers, 1858-1906., California State Library
National Register of Historic Places in San Francisco
San Francisco Designated Landmarks
1880s architecture in the United States
Italianate architecture in California
California Historical Landmarks
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in San Francisco |
The Domesday Book of 1086 lists in the following order the tenants-in-chief in Devonshire of King William the Conqueror:
Osbern FitzOsbern (died 1103), Bishop of Exeter
Geoffrey de Montbray (died 1093), Bishop of Coutances
Glastonbury Church, Somerset
Tavistock Church, Devon
Buckfast Church, Devon
Horton Church, Dorset
Cranborne Church, Dorset
Battle Church, Sussex
St Mary's Church, Rouen, Normandy
Mont Saint-Michel Church, Normandy
St Stephen's Church, Caen, Normandy
Holy Trinity Church, Caen
Hugh d'Avranches, 1st Earl of Chester (died 1101)
Robert, Count of Mortain (died 1090), half-brother of the king
Baldwin de Moels (died 1090), Sheriff of Devon, feudal baron of Okehampton,
Juhel de Totnes (died 1123/30), feudal baron of Totnes, Devon
William de Mohun (died post 1090), feudal baron of Dunster, Somerset
William Cheever, (Latinised to Capra, "she-goat"), feudal baron of Bradninch, Devon. He was brother of Ralph de Pomeroy (see below), feudal baron of Berry Pomeroy Devon
William de Falaise, feudal baron of Stogursey, Somerset
William de Poilley, whose lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Plympton
William II, Count of Eu (died 1097)
Walter of Douai (died c. 1107), Feudal baron of Bampton, Devon
Walter de Claville, brother of Gotshelm; his lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Gloucester
Gotshelm, brother of Walter de Claville; his lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Gloucester
Richard fitz Gilbert (died c. 1090), elder brother of Baldwin de Moels, Sheriff of Devon, feudal baron of Okehampton,
Roger de Busli (died c. 1099)
Robert of Aumale (Latinised to de Albemarle); his lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Plympton
Robert Bastard, whose lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Plympton
Richard Fitz Turold (died post 1103-6) (alias fitzThorold, fitzTurolf), whose lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Cardinham, Cornwall
Ralph de Limesy, most of his Devon manors passed to the Feudal barony of Bradninch
Ralph Pagnell
Ralph de Feugeres
Ralph de Pomeroy, feudal baron of Berry Pomeroy, brother of William Cheever, feudal baron of Bradninch
Roald Dubbed, whose lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Plympton
Theobald FitzBerner, whose lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Great Torrington. He was the father-in-law of Odo FitzGamelin
Turstin FitzRolf, feudal baron of North Cadbury, Somerset
Alfred of Spain
Alfred the Breton
Ansger
Aiulf
Odo FitzGamelin, son-in-law of Theobald FitzBerner. His lands later formed part of the Feudal barony of Great Torrington.
Osbern of Sacey
The wife of Hervey of Hellean
Gerald the Chaplain
Gerard
Godbold
Nicholas the Bowman (or "Nicholas the Gunner")
Fulchere ("Fulchere the Bowman"), most of his lands later became part of the feudal barony of Plympton
Haimeric
King's Servants
King's Thanes
See also
Cornwall Domesday Book tenants-in-chief
References
Sources
Thorn, Caroline & Frank, (eds.) Domesday Book, (Morris, John, gen. ed.) Vol. 9, Devon, Parts 1 & 2, Phillimore Press, Chichester, 1985, part 1, List of Landholders in Devon
Sanders, I. J. English Baronies: a Study of their Origin and Descent 1086-1327, Oxford, 1960 |
In mathematics, the Chebyshev integral, named after Pafnuty Chebyshev, is
where is an incomplete beta function.
References
Gamma and related functions |
Mark Kelly (born 27 November 1969) is a former professional footballer who played as a winger for Portsmouth. Born in England, he won four caps for the Republic of Ireland.
Club career
Kelly was born in Basingstoke. Portsmouth manager Alan Ball described the 18-year-old Kelly as "the next George Best" but despite some exciting performances a series of injuries prevented him from becoming fully established in the first team. He made his debut for Portsmouth as a substitute away to West Ham United in February 1988.
He never recovered from a serious knee injury sustained in 1991 and was forced to retire a year later, after a brief trial at Tottenham Hotspur in a bid to resurrect his career. Later he played part-time for Sligo Rovers and Farnborough Town.
International career
Although born in Basingstoke, Mark played for the Republic of Ireland through the parentage rule after being recommended to manager Jack Charlton. His first cap came on 27 April 1988, aged just 18, in a 2–0 friendly win over Yugoslavia at Lansdowne Road. He won his first cap a month before he made his full debut at club level.
Coaching
Kelly worked as head of youth development at his former club, Portsmouth before leaving the club in October 2009. He eventually returned to Pompey on 18 June 2014, being appointed Academy manager.
Media work
Kelly joined BBC Radio Solent at the start of the 2011–12 season as their match summariser for live commentaries on Portsmouth matches.
See also
List of Republic of Ireland international footballers born outside the Republic of Ireland
References
External links
Mark Kelly SoccerScene.ie
1969 births
Living people
English men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Republic of Ireland men's association footballers
Republic of Ireland men's international footballers
Republic of Ireland men's under-21 international footballers
Republic of Ireland men's under-23 international footballers
Republic of Ireland men's B international footballers
Republic of Ireland men's youth international footballers
Portsmouth F.C. players
Sligo Rovers F.C. players
Farnborough F.C. players
Finn Harps F.C. players
League of Ireland players
Portsmouth F.C. non-playing staff
Sportspeople from Basingstoke
Footballers from Hampshire |
Aerotolerant anaerobes use fermentation to produce ATP. They do not use oxygen, but they can protect themselves from reactive oxygen molecules. In contrast, obligate anaerobes can be harmed by reactive oxygen molecules.
There are three categories of anaerobes. Where obligate aerobes require oxygen to grow, obligate anaerobes are damaged by oxygen, aerotolerant organisms cannot use oxygen but tolerate its presence, and facultative anaerobes use oxygen if it is present but can grow without it.
Most aerotolerant anaerobes have superoxide dismutase and (non-catalase) peroxidase but don't have catalase. More specifically, they may use a NADH oxidase/NADH peroxidase (NOX/NPR) system or a glutathione peroxidase system. An example of an aerotolerant anaerobe is Cutibacterium acnes.
References
Microbiology |
```javascript
"use strict";
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
const config_plugins_1 = require("expo/config-plugins");
const withAndroidEdgeToEdgeTheme_1 = require("./withAndroidEdgeToEdgeTheme");
const withAndroidGradleEdgeToEdgeProperty_1 = require("./withAndroidGradleEdgeToEdgeProperty");
const withAndroidRootViewBackgroundColor_1 = require("./withAndroidRootViewBackgroundColor");
const withAndroidUserInterfaceStyle_1 = require("./withAndroidUserInterfaceStyle");
const withIosRootViewBackgroundColor_1 = require("./withIosRootViewBackgroundColor");
const withIosUserInterfaceStyle_1 = require("./withIosUserInterfaceStyle");
const pkg = require('expo-system-ui/package.json');
const withSystemUI = (config) => {
return (0, config_plugins_1.withPlugins)(config, [
withAndroidRootViewBackgroundColor_1.withAndroidRootViewBackgroundColor,
withIosRootViewBackgroundColor_1.withIosRootViewBackgroundColor,
withAndroidUserInterfaceStyle_1.withAndroidUserInterfaceStyle,
withIosUserInterfaceStyle_1.withIosUserInterfaceStyle,
withAndroidEdgeToEdgeTheme_1.withAndroidEdgeToEdgeTheme,
withAndroidGradleEdgeToEdgeProperty_1.withAndroidGradleEdgeToEdgeProperty,
]);
};
exports.default = (0, config_plugins_1.createRunOncePlugin)(withSystemUI, pkg.name, pkg.version);
``` |
The Gaudie is a student newspaper at the University of Aberdeen covering campus and local news. It is the oldest independent student newspaper in Scotland according to The Guardian, being in circulation since 1934. It is available free of charge across the Old Aberdeen and Foresterhill campuses. It aims to print unbiased, student-focused articles.
The Gaudie is partially funded by Aberdeen University Students' Association, and partially by its own advertising revenue. It currently consists of 24 pages split into News, Features, Science and Environment, Opine, International, Puzzles, Satire, Life and Style, Arts, and Sports.
As the transition from print to digital media has increased in recent years, The Gaudie has invested significant development in its online presence, with nearly 24,000 visitors from over 70 countries in the last year.
The Gaudie continues to release fortnightly print editions, which consist of 400 papers distributed across campus.
All UoA students are invited to submit articles for the various sections.
History
The Gaudie was first released in 1934 as a weekly student paper. It is recognised as one of the oldest student newspapers in Scotland and the United Kingdom, and in 2003 was stated as the oldest by The Guardian. It has been produced by Aberdeen students since its inception in 1934. It appeared in the press in 2003 when the then editorial team resigned in protest over attempts by Aberdeen University Students' Association to enforce content and restrict the budget and print run.
Since 2009, the paper has successfully re-established itself around the King's College Campus, and Foresterhill. The paper has a number of notable past writers and editors including Alistair Darling and David Torrance.
2003: Resignation controversy
In 2003, there was outrage over attempts by the Aberdeen University Students' Association to enforce content on the editorial team. AUSA believed that as the Students' Association paid for the paper, they were entitled to advertise the Association and its endeavours. Led by Mark Lindley-Highfield, the entire editorial team of the paper resigned. The issue was taken to Parliament by the MP for Shetland and Orkney, criticizing the Students' Association's "ill-advised move".
2019-present: Redesign and Investigative Reporting
In 2019, The Gaudie was redesigned to have a more consistent look throughout the whole paper. Once more, inspiration was taken from major British newspapers, not in the least from The Guardian.
The paper was redesigned to have similar looking mastheads for all sections, except for the Arts and Culture magazine IV, which is part of The Gaudie as a whole. Section colours, which had been previously used for all sections, were gotten rid of. The newly designed mastheads were made to mirror the window pattern of the Sir Duncan Rice Library, an important landmark of Old Aberdeen.
Recent years have featured a range of investigative reporting, including an investigation (subsequently published in The Times and The Press and Journal) which uncovered the university's collection of stolen indigenous human remains.
Other reporting has focused on the university's increased recruitment of international students, the university's response to COVID-19, and coverage of candidate misconduct in the Aberdeen University Student's Association sabbatical officer elections.
References
External links
Newspapers established in 1934
Student newspapers published in the United Kingdom
University of Aberdeen
Newspapers published in Scotland
Mass media in Aberdeen
Free newspapers
Biweekly newspapers published in the United Kingdom |
```shell
#! /bin/bash
cd ~/apartment-finder
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install python3-pip -y
sudo apt-get install -y make build-essential libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev \
libreadline-dev libsqlite3-dev wget curl llvm libncurses5-dev zip git-core sqlite -y
sudo pip3 install -r requirements.txt
sudo service scraper stop || true
sudo cp deployment/scraper.conf /etc/init/scraper.conf
sudo service scraper start
``` |
Chesapeake shooting may refer to:
Murder of Jiansheng Chen, in 2017, grandfather who was fatally shot by a security guard
2022 Chesapeake shooting, mass shooting in a Walmart |
Reynaldo Chanco Flores Jr. (born November 15, 1988), better known by his screen name Jace Flores is a Filipino former television actor and host. He joined season 1 of the reality game show Survivor Philippines in 2009. He is also a professional network marketer, and a prominent top earner in the industry.
Career
His first television appearance was in the reality television show Survivor Philippines. After the reality show ended, he played supporting roles in several GMA Network teleseryes, including Luna Mystika, Ang Babaeng Hinugot sa Aking Tadyang, Kung Aagawin Mo ang Lahat sa Akin, Broken Vow and Healing Hearts. Flores gained popularity as a host to popular television shows in GMA-11 and QTV.
Flores is currently a network marketing professional, and is among the "successful millionaires" of the industry.
Filmography
Television
Film
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
Filipino male models
Male actors from Quezon City
Participants in Philippine reality television series
Survivor Philippines contestants
GMA Network personalities
Filipino motivational speakers
Models from Quezon City |
The 712th Infantry Division () was a German Army infantry division in World War II.
Operational history
The 712th Infantry Division was raised in early 1941 as part of the 15th wave of Wehrmacht forces, and was moved to occupied France along the demarcation line with Vichy France. In the spring of 1942, it was moved to the Low Countries, where it occupied the area around Zeebrugge.
From August/September 1942 until September 1944 the division was part of the 89th Army Corps, a part of Army Group B's 15th Army, in order to counter the Allied invasion of France; the 89th Corps was stationed along the Belgian coast at the time in order to prevent further amphibious assaults. It was considered by the Germans that an Allied attack on Belgium (if not France) was far more likely than one on the Netherlands; as such, infantry divisions were more concentrated here.
In September 1944, the division was defending the banks of the Scheldt river near Antwerp when it was attacked by Poles serving under General Guy Simonds.
Reformation and Poland
After suffering heavy casualties when the Allied forces made their way into the Netherlands, the 712th was reformed and sent to the eastern front. With the Red Army being supplied by an ever-increasing arsenal of weapons and vehicles, the division was unable to match them in Poland, and was decimated along the river Oder in February/March 1945. Much of the combat troops were absorbed by units such as Panzer Division Kurmark, and the 45th and 68th Infantry Divisions, who were also being quickly pushed back by Soviet forces.
Final reformation and capitulation
In March, the division was again reformed. With no more reserves, the Wehrmacht could only supply the 712th with survivors of divisions already destroyed by the Allied forces. The division was crushed in the Halbe pocket the following month.
In March, the division was again reformed as part of the Ninth Army's XI SS Corps under SS-General Matthias Kleinheisterkamp, themselves part of Army Group Vistula (German: Heeresgruppe Weichsel). In mid-April, the division took part in opening stages of the Battle of the Seelow Heights The army was able to hold of the Soviet advance for only about three days before being forced to retreat to a pocket around the towns of Frankfurt and Fürstenwalde along the Spreewald. During Soviet advancement towards Fürstenwalde, the 712th was now surrounded, already under fire from its forward positions and now the rear. The 32nd SS-Grenadier Division was moved to Fürstenwalde to support the 712th. Encircled by the Soviets, the Ninth Army attempted to break out from 24 April through the village of Halbe. On the morning of 26 April, the 712th and the 21st Panzer Division launched an attack in-between the 1st Ukrainian Front's 28th Army and 3rd Guards Tank Army.
In its final breaths the 712th had been reduced severely to its 732nd, 745th and 764th Grenadier Regiments (each at two battalion-strength) and the 1712nd Artillery Regiment.
Commanders
Generalmajor George von Döhren (3 May 1941 – 15 Apr 1942)
Generalleutnant Friedrich-Wilhelm Neumann (16 Apr 1942 – 25 Feb 1945)
Generalmajor Joachim von Siegroth (25 Feb 1945 – 2 May 1945)
Order of battle
1941
732nd Infantry Regiment
745th Infantry Regiment
652nd Artillery detachment
712nd Pioneer Company
712 Signals Company
712nd Supply detachment
1943
732nd Grenadier Regiment
745th Grenadier Regiment
652nd Artillery Regiment
712nd Pioneer Battalion
712nd Anti-tank company
712 Signals Battalion
712nd Supply detachment
1945
732nd Grenadier Regiment
745th Grenadier Regiment
764th Grenadier Regiment
712nd Fusilier Battalion
712nd Artillery Regiment
712nd Pioneer Battalion
712nd Anti-tank Battalion
712nd Signals Battalion
1712nd Field-replacement Battalion
712nd Supply detachment
References
Military units and formations established in 1941
Military units and formations disestablished in 1945
Infantry divisions of Germany during World War II |
Kawiti railway station was a station on the Okaihau Branch in New Zealand.
References
Defunct railway stations in New Zealand |
Zamperini is an Italian surname that may refer to:
Alessandro Zamperini (born 1982), Italian football player
Louis Zamperini (1917–2014), American Olympic distance runner, US Air Forces Captain and inspirational speaker
Zamperini Field, an airport in California, U.S., named after Louis
Italian-language surnames |
```makefile
obj/local/x86/objs/drizzleDumper/drizzleDumper.o: drizzleDumper.c \
drizzleDumper.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdlib.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/cdefs.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/cdefs_elf.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/android/api-level.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/string.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/malloc.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/alloca.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/strings.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdint.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/_types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/_types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/posix_types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/stddef.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/compiler.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/posix_types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/posix_types_32.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/kernel.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/sysmacros.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/memory.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdio.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/dirent.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/fcntl.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/fcntl.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/fcntl.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/fcntl.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/unistd.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/select.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/time.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/time.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/signal.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/limits.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/limits.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/limits.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/internal_types.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/limits.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/syslimits.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/page.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/page_32.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/signal.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/signal.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/sigcontext.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/siginfo.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/siginfo.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/sysconf.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/capability.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/pathconf.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/errno.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/errno.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/errno.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/errno.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/errno-base.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/ptrace.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/ptrace.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/ptrace.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/ptrace-abi.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/wait.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/resource.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/resource.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/resource.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/resource.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/wait.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/user.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/user.h \
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/user_32.h
drizzleDumper.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdlib.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/cdefs.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/cdefs_elf.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/android/api-level.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/string.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/malloc.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/alloca.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/strings.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdint.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/_types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/_types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/posix_types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/stddef.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/compiler.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/posix_types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/posix_types_32.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/kernel.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/sysmacros.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/memory.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/stdio.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/dirent.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/fcntl.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/fcntl.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/fcntl.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/fcntl.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/unistd.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/select.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/time.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/time.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/signal.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/limits.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/limits.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/limits.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/internal_types.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/machine/limits.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/syslimits.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/page.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/page_32.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/signal.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/signal.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/sigcontext.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/siginfo.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/siginfo.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/sysconf.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/capability.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/pathconf.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/errno.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/errno.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/errno.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/errno.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/errno-base.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/ptrace.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/ptrace.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/ptrace.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/ptrace-abi.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/wait.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/sys/resource.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/resource.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/resource.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm-generic/resource.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/wait.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/linux/user.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/user.h:
/Users/drizzle/Library/Android/android-ndk-r9/platforms/android-9/arch-x86/usr/include/asm/user_32.h:
``` |
Khasay Khan Utsmiyev (, ) was an Imperial Russian general of Kumyk origin.
Life and career
He was born on 3 April 1808, to Musa Khan Utsmiyev, ethnic Kumyk Prince of Aqsay as his middle son. He had an elder brother named Sultan Murad (d. 1841) and a younger brother Adil. His sister Tuti Bika Khanum was married to Ismayil bek Kutkashensky, the first Azerbaijani ever to be decorated with Order of St. George.
Since childhood, he was sent to Tbilisi as a hostage. After graduating from the Corps of Pages in St. Petersburg from 1825 until the end of his life, Utsmiev served in the Russian army - first as a cadet in the 43rd Jaeger Regiment, later in 1833 he was transferred to the Kherson Grenadier Regiment. He became an officer on March 22, 1834. in 1836 - in the Life Guards of the Grenadier Regiment at the Caucasian Corps. In 1841 he was promoted to second lieutenant and headquarters captain. In 1844 he was a major in a separate Caucasian corps, in 1845 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and on 9 January 1852 to colonel.
This is when he was married to the Azerbaijani princess and poet Khurshidbanu Natavan. As a devout Sunni going to live among Shias, Khasay Khan also brought a Sunni mullah, Mullah Muhammad, who would become the grandfather of Uzeyir Hajibeyov as well. This marriage didn't please the relatives of the princess, including Gasim bey Zakir who strongly criticized her for marrying her lessers. His slightly blind right eye was often made fun of by Karabakh poets.
In 1857, he was appointed to serve in the Caucasian army for political purposes. He met with Alexander Dumas in 1858, who described him speaking French like a true Parisian, without an accent. He was also in contact with other Caucasian intellectuals such as Mirza Fatali Akhundov, Mirza Shafi Vazeh, Khachatur Abovyan and Gabriel Sundukyan in Tbilisi. He was friends with Decembrist exile Alexander Bestuzhev as well.
In 1861 he was sent to the command of the Commander of the troops in the Dagestan region, a year later he was promoted to major general on 30 August 1862.
Dismissal and death
He was said to be offended by a discriminative comment and challenged the historian and one of the ideologists of Russian expansionism and chauvinism, General Rostislav Fadeev, to a duel. The reason for the duel was the words in Fadeev's book "Letters from Caucasus", where he insulted Islam and compared Caucasians to underdeveloped children who would not survive without the help of a “white man”. When he heard of Fadeev's writings from Irakli Gruzinsky, Khasay Khan called the general-historian for these words "rascal" but didn't shoot him. This caused huge insecurity issues for Utsmiyev and wrote to authorities to let him to move to Ottoman Empire with his family in 1866. Overseer for Terek Oblast, Mikhail Loris-Melikov however decided to summon him to Stavropol and expel him to Voronezh on 25 April 1866. At first, Utsmiyev attempted to kill himself, but was unsuccessful in his trial. He would die under mysterious circumstances on 3 May 1867 in Voronezh.
Family
He was married three times:
Khurshidbanu Natavan
Mehdigulu Khan Vafa
Khanbike Khanum (1856–1921)
A noblewoman from Qaplanov clan
Azamat Bike (b. 18 September 1859)
Pari Khanum Hamzayeva
Reyhanat Bike (b. 12 July 1853)
Sotikhan Bike (b. 5 July 1859)
Musa Utsmiev (b. 4 August 1864)
Sultan Murad Utsmiev (b. 23 November 1866)
Awards
Order of St. Stanislaus, 3rd degree (1836)
Order of St. Anna, 3rd degree (1837)
Order of St. Vladimir, 4th class with bow (1838)
Gold saber with the inscription "For Bravery" (1841)
In popular media
Sübhün səfiri (2012) — portrayed by Zaur Shafiyev
Paradise Under The Shade of Swords (1992) — portrayed by Vano Yantbelidze
Gallery
References
Kumyks
Recipients of the Order of Saint Stanislaus (Russian), 3rd class
Recipients of the Order of St. Anna, 3rd class
Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th class
Recipients of the Gold Sword for Bravery
1808 births
1867 deaths |
The 1992 James Hardie 12 Hour was an endurance race for production cars staged at the Mount Panorama Circuit, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia on 19 April 1992. Cars competed in six classes:
Class A - Cars Under 1600cc
Class B - Cars 1601 to 2500cc
Class C - Cars 2501 to 4000cc
Class D - Cars Over 4000cc
Class S - Sports Cars Under 2200cc
Class T - Turbo & Four Wheel Drive
Allan Grice and Brad Jones raced a Holden VP SS Ute (26th) sponsored by Akubra hats. Grice did his qualifying lap with a model of a blue cattle dog in the back of the ute. He entered the car due its V8 power and relatively light weight, though the weight distribution was such that he struggled with the handling of the car.
Results
References
Further reading
Australian Motor Racing Year, 1992/93, pages 238-243 & 304
External links
Images of the winning Mazda RX-7 Retrieved from www.autopics.com.au on 9 December 2008
Motorsport in Bathurst, New South Wales
James Hardie 12 Hour
Bathurst |
Rapid Redux (foaled in Kentucky on February 24, 2006) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse who set an American record with 22 consecutive wins in 2012. The winter-born gelding was his sire Pleasantly Perfect's first runner.
As a two-year-old at Keeneland Sales's September 2007 auctions, Rapid Redux was sold for $85,000. His best finish at two was a distant third in the three-horse Tyro Stakes at Monmouth Park. By three, he was running in Claiming races.
Robert Cole, a Baltimore County native, claimed Rapid Redux at Penn National Race Course for $6,250 on October 13, 2010. The horse's win streak began on December 2, 2010, at the same track.
Trained by David J. Wells (based at Penn National), Rapid Redux has now won races at seven different tracks at distances from five furlongs to 1 1/8 miles, using seven riders during the streak.
2011
Rapid Redux won 19 straight races in 2011, continuing his streak that began in 2010 and reached 22 races in a row in January 2012. The gelding's running style is to get quickly in front and stay there.
The chestnut gelding has equaled Citation's modern-day United States record by winning 19 races in a single season. He has also equaled the record of Pepper's Pride and Zenyatta. But while Citation was an American Triple Crown winner and is now in the Hall of Fame, Zenyatta ran in graded stakes races for all but her first two starts, and Pepper's Pride won in stakes races (though only in her birth state of New Mexico), Rapid Redux's accomplishments came in starter allowance races.
A day after it was announced that the now 6-year-old chestnut would receive the Eclipse Special Award for his accomplishments in 2011, he was named winner of the Secretariat Vox Populi Award ("Voice of the People"). The award, established by Penny Chenery in 2010 and first given to Zenyatta, recognizes a horse who has added in great measure to the sport of horse racing, distinguishing himself or herself by reaching out to the public in a positive and popular way. Four horses were considered for this honor: Havre de Grace, Uncle Mo, Goldikova and Rapid Redux. The winner was determined by the public’s online poll results, opinions offered by the Vox Populi Committee, and input from Chenery. Rapid Redux received 39% of the votes.
In awarding Rapid Redux, Mrs. Chenery said: "Thousands of races are staged in America every year for every level of competition and thousands of horses win them, but rarely the same horse. So for one horse to beat his field 19 times in one year is flat out phenomenal..."
On November 21, 2011 at Mountaineer Park, Rapid Redux established the North American record of 20 wins in a row.
2012
Rapid Redux began the year at Laurel Park by winning his 22nd straight race. After winning that race, he was retired. In March 2012, the Maryland Horse Industry Board honored Rapid Redux with its “Touch of Class” Award. In May 2012, he arrived at Old Friends Equine in Georgetown, Kentucky.
See also
List of leading Thoroughbred racehorses
Notes and references
External links
Rapid Redux, pedigree & stats
Rapid Redux' facebook page
Rapid Redux in his 22nd win
2006 racehorse births
Racehorses trained in the United States
Racehorses bred in Kentucky
Eclipse Award winners
Thoroughbred family 2-d
Old Friends Equine Retirement |
Mary Beale (; 26 March 1633 8 October 1699) was an English portrait painter. She was part of a small band of female professional artists working in London. Beale became the main financial provider for her family through her professional work – a career she maintained from 1670/71 to the 1690s. Beale was also a writer, whose prose Discourse on Friendship of 1666 presents scholarly, uniquely female take on the subject. Her 1663 manuscript Observations, on the materials and techniques employed "in her painting of Apricots", though not printed, is the earliest known instructional text in English written by a female painter. Praised first as a "virtuous" practitioner in "Oyl Colours" by Sir William Sanderson in his 1658 book Graphice: Or The use of the Pen and Pensil; In the Excellent Art of PAINTING, Beale's work was later commended by court painter Sir Peter Lely and, soon after her death, by the author of "An Essay towards an English-School", his account of the most noteworthy artists of her generation.
Life
Mary Beale was born in the rectory of Barrow, Suffolk, in late March 1633. She was baptised on 26 March by her father John Cradock in All Saints Church in the village. Her mother was Dorothy Brunton/Brinton. Aside from being a rector, John Cradock was also an amateur painter, who may have taught Mary how to paint. It was common for fathers to teach their daughters how to paint at the time . Growing up in Barrow, Mary lived close to Bury St Edmunds. A group of painters worked in Bury St Edmunds, including Peter Lely and Matthew Snelling, whom Mary may have met in her youth. On 23 August 1643, Dorothy Cradock gave birth to a son named John. Dorothy died not long after the birth, leaving Mary motherless at age ten. During the Civil War, John Cradock appointed Walter Cradock, a distant cousin of his, as guardian of his children John and Mary.
Mary Cradock met Charles Beale (1632-1705), a cloth merchant who was also an amateur painter, during a visit to the Heighams of Wickhambrook, who were related to the Yelverton and Beale families. Charles Beale wrote her a passionate love letter and poem on 25 July of an unknown year. Mary Cradock married Charles Beale on 8 March 1652 at the age of eighteen. Her father, John Cradock, was gravely ill at the time and died a few days after Mary's marriage. The couple moved to Walton-on-Thames at some point afterward. Charles Beale was a Civil Service Clerk at the time, but eventually became Mary's studio manager once she became a professional painter. At some point, Charles was working for the Board of Green Cloth where he mixed colour pigments. Circa 1660–64 the family moved to Albrook, (now Allbrook), Otterbourne, Hampshire, to escape the plague. Throughout their marriage, Mary and Charles worked together as equals and as business partners, which was not often seen at the time. On 18 October 1654 Charles and Mary's first son, Bartholomew, was buried. Little else is known about their first son. Their second son was baptised on 14 February 1655/6 and also named Bartholomew. Their third son Charles was born in 1660.
Mary Beale died on 8 October 1699 at the age of sixty-five. Her death was mistaken for the death of Mary Beadle, whose recorded death is on 28 December 1697. Not much is known about her death besides that she died in a house on Pall Mall and was buried under the communion table of St James's Church, Piccadilly on 8 October 1699. Her tomb was destroyed by enemy bombs during the Second World War. A memorial to her lies within the church.
Career and education
The most common way to learn how to paint at the time was to copy great works and masterpieces that were accessible. Mary Beale preferred to paint in oil and water colours. Whenever she did a drawing, she would draw in crayon. Peter Lely, who succeeded Anthony van Dyck as the court painter, took a great interest in Mary's progress as an artist, especially since she would practice painting by imitating some of his work. Mary Beale started working by painting favours for people she knew in exchange for small gifts or favors. Charles Beale kept close record of everything Mary did as an artist. He would take notes on how she painted, what business transactions took place, who came to visit, and what praise she would receive. Charles wrote thirty notebooks' worth of observations over the years, calling Mary "my dearest heart". She became a semi-professional portrait painter in the 1650s and 1660s, working from her home, first in Covent Garden and later in Fleet Street in London. When living in Covent Garden, Beale was a near neighbor to artist Joan Carlile.
Training
Mary received no formal training from an academy, had no connection to an artist guild, and no royal or courtly patronage. She received a humanist education from her father, who is most likely the one who taught Mary how to draw and paint. During her childhood in Suffolk Mary's father was friendly with contemporary British artists such as Sir Nathaniel Bacon, Robert Walker, and Sir Peter Lely, leading to both Robert Walker and Peter Lely being "the most likely drawing masters to the young Mary". The exact time of Mary's introduction to Lely is debated and one theory has the two meeting prior to her marriage to Charles, when she was living in Suffolk. The other theory has the pair meeting in either 1655 or 1656 when Mary and Charles moved to Convent Garden in London and became Lely's neighbour.
In detailed documents kept by Charles Beale of his wife's practice it states that Lely would visit the Beale home occasionally to observe Mary paint and praise her work. Their friendship led to Lely loaning Beale and her family some of his old master paintings for them to copy from. The Beale's commissioned many portraits from Lely of themselves and their friends. It is noted by contemporary George Vertue that portraits of Mary and her family were present at their home at Hind Court in 1661.
Writings
In 1663 Mary Beale wrote Observations, an instruction on painting apricots using oils. The work marks one of the earliest writings on oil painting instruction to come out of England by an artist of either gender. It was never released on its own in print, however scholars believe that manuscripts of the work were distributed. The work was found in a notebook collecting writings by Charles Beale but was written entirely by Mary, which Helen Draper states is "a unique example of husband-and-wife collaboration in the history of technical literature on painting."
Mary Beale also wrote a manuscript called Discourse on Friendship in 1666 and four poems in 1667.
The business of painting
The key for a female to become a successful professional painter was to earn a good reputation. Mary's father, an amateur artist, funded her general education may have including courses in painting and drawing. It could be easy to misconstrue strangers entering a woman's home for a business transaction as something that would portray the woman in an impure light. Once Mary did start painting for money in the 1670s, she carefully picked whom she would paint, and used the praise of her circle of friends to build a good reputation as a painter. Some of these people included Queen Henrietta Maria and John Tillotson, a clergyman from St James' Church, a close friend of Mary Beale who eventually became the Archbishop of Canterbury. It may be due to Mary's father, John, who was a rector, or her close connection to Tillotson that kept the clergymen of St James' as consistent customers.{original research} Mary's connection to Tillotson as well as her strong Puritan marriage to Charles worked in her favour in building up her good reputation. Mary Beale typically charged five pounds for a painting of a head and ten pounds for half of a body for oil paintings. She made about two hundred pounds a year and gave ten per cent of her earnings to charity. This income was enough to support her family, and she did so. Needless to say, it is truly remarkable that Mary Beale was responsible for being the breadwinner of the family. By 1681 Mary's commissions were beginning to diminish.
In 1681, Mary Beale took on two students, Keaty Trioche and Mr. More, who worked with her in the studio. In 1691, Sarah Curtis from Yorkshire became another student of Mary's. Sarah had similar behaviours and dispositions as Mary.
Prominent sitters
Distinguished Anglican Clergyman Dr. John Tillotson (1630–1694) was a frequent sitter for Mrs. Beale. She painted him a total of five times in 1664,1672,1677, 1681, and 1687. Dr. Tillotson was related to the Cromwell family because he married the niece of Oliver Cromwell, Elizabeth in 1664. Elizabeth was a close friend of Mary's and was one of the individuals who received her writing "The Discourse on Friendship". the Beale's would commission a portrait of Dr. Tillotson for themselves by Sir Peter Lely in 1672.
Royalist Colonel Giles Strangways (1615–1675) was an admirer of Mary Beale's paintings and another important patron. Strangways fought for King Charles I during the English civil war and also had a hand in the secret escape of Charles II into exile in 1651, as well as his reinstatement in 1660. Mary was commissioned by Strangways to paint his portrait along with ones of his wife, his son and his daughter during the 1670s.
Nobleman Henry Cavendish (1630–1691) was another important sitter for Mary Beale. He became the 2nd Duke of Newcastle in 1676 and he and his Duchess Frances née Pierrepont were frequent patrons of Mary, from whom they commissioned their portraits in 1677. The Duke and Duchess were introduced to Mary's work through Frances' father, the Hon. William Pierrepont (1607–1678) whose portrait was also painted by Mary around 1670. William Pierrepont was supportive of Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War and remained an opponent to the Restoration of the Stuart Monarchy.
The Beale children
Charles and Bartholomew Beale helped with work in the studio in their youth, where they painted draperies and sculpted ovals; these ovals were a critical piece in Mary Beale's head portraits. Young Charles Beale, the third son and named after his father, showed great talent in painting and went to study miniature painting on 5 March 1677. He enjoyed painting miniature sculptures from 1679 to 1688, when his eyesight started to fail him. From then on, he worked on full scale portraits. Bartholomew Beale, the second son, started with painting but instead turned to medicine. In 1680, he studied at Clare Hall, Cambridge and graduated MB in 1682. Bartholomew set up his medical practice on a small property in Coventry, which his father owned.
Style
The style that Mary Beale painted in was Baroque. Baroque art is a style of sculpture, painting, music, and architecture that was prominent in Europe from the early 17th century until the mid 18th. Baroque art is characterized by use of light and shadow, depictions of movement, as well as use of rich color, all to elicit a sense of grandeur and awe. Baroque portraiture in particular is known for its rich colors, light contrasts, and attention to fabric detail.
Mary Beale's paintings are often described as "vigorous" and "masculine". (It was common to praise a woman for her work by calling her "masculine".) The colour is seen as pure, sweet, natural, clear and fresh, although some critics see her colouring as "heavy and stiff". Due to copying Italian masterpieces as practice, Mary Beale is said to have acquired "an Italian air and style". Not too many could compete with her "colour, strength, force, or life". Sir Peter Lely admired Beale's work, saying she "worked with a wonderful body of colour, and was exceedingly industrious." Others criticise her work as weak in expression and finish with disagreeable colours and poorly rendered hands. It is sometimes described as "scratchy" with a "limited colour palette" and too closely imitates the work of Lely. In the decades after her death, art historian George Vertue praised her work by saying "Mrs. Mary Beale painted in oil very well" and "work'd with a wonderfull body of colors".
Some of her work can be found on display in the Geffrye Museum in London, though the largest public collection can be found at Moyse's Hall museum, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. Beale was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Geffrye Museum in 1975, which transferred to the Towner Art Gallery in Eastbourne the following year.
Notes
Bibliography
Tabitha Barber, Mary Beale (1632/3-1699): portrait of a seventeenth-century painter, her family and her studio, [exhibition catalogue, 21 September 1999 to 30 January 2000, Geffrye Museum, London], (London: Geffrye Museum Trust, 1999).
Ellen C. Clayton, English Female Artists, 2 vols, (London: Tinsley Brothers, 1876), vol. 1, pp. 40–53.
Dr Helen Draper, 'Her Painting of Apricots': the invisibility of Mary Beale (1633–1699)', Forum for Modern Language Studies, 48:4 (2012), pp. 389–405; Oxford University Press Academic Journals [online, free to view].<> [accessed 29 April 2020].
Dr Helen Draper, 'Mary Beale and Art's lost laborers: women Painter Stainers', Early Modern Women: an Interdisciplinary Journal, 10:1, (Fall) 2015, pp. 141–151; JSTOR [online] <Women Painter Stainers> [accessed 29 May 2020]
Dr Helen Draper, 'Mary Beale (1633–1699) and her objects of affection', [ch. 6, in] Gemma Watson & Robert F. W. Smith eds, Writing the Lives of People and Things, AD 500–1700: a multi-disciplinary future for biography, (Farnham: Ashgate, 2016), pp. 115–141.
Delia Gaze, Dictionary of women artists, vol. 1, (London: Routledge, 1997), pp. 224–26.
Robert Edmund Graves, 'Beale, Mary', Dictionary of National Biography, (London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1885–1900), vol. 4, [online] <Beale, Mary> [accessed 29 May 2020]
Richard Jeffree, 'Beale, Mary' in 'Beale family', Grove Art / Oxford Art Online, Oxford University Press [online] <Beale family> [accessed 29 April 2020].
Sir Oliver Millar, 'Mary Beale. London', Burlington Magazine, 142:1162 (2000), pp. 48–49; JSTOR [online] <Mary Beale. London> [accessed 29 May 2020].
Christopher Reeve, Mrs Mary Beale Paintress 1633–1699, [a catalogue of the paintings bequeathed by Richard Jeffree, together with other paintings by Mary Beale in the collections of St Edmundsbury Borough Council], (Bury St Edmunds: Manor House Museum, 1994).
Christopher Reeve, 'Beale [nee Cradock], Mary', [2008], Oxford Dictionary of National Biography [online] <Beale [née Cradock], Mary (bap. 1633, d. 1699), portrait painter physician> [accessed 29 May 2020]
Elizabeth Walsh, 'Mary Beale', Burlington Magazine, 90:544 (1948), p. 209; JSTOR [online] <Mary Beale>
Elizabeth Walsh & Richard Jeffree, The Excellent Mrs Mary Beale, [exhibition catalogue, 13 October-21 December 1975, Geffrye Museum, London; 10 January-21 February 1976, Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne. Introduction by Sir Oliver Millar and special contributions by Margaret Toynbee and Richard Sword], (London: Inner London Education Authority, 1975).
External links
Chronological list of paintings by Mary Beale
Mary Beale on ArtNet
English Female Artists
'Her Painting of Apricots': The Invisibility of Mary Beale (1633–1699)
Mary Beale. Burlington Magazine 142
Mary Beale. Burlington Magazine 90
"Beale" Page 1
"Beale" Page 2
Mary Beale online (ArtCyclopedia)
Mary Beale Trust (Campaign to save, conserve and repair Mary Beale's Hampshire home, Allbrook Farmhouse and its historic smallholding)
Paintings by Mary Beale (National Portrait Gallery, London)
Mary Beale self-portrait (National Portrait Gallery)
St Edmundsbury Heritage Service (Bury St Edmunds; holds a large public collection)
Mary Beale exhibition (Geffrye Museum, London)
Project Continua: Biography of Mary Beale Project Continua is a web-based multimedia resource dedicated to the creation and preservation of women's intellectual history from the earliest surviving evidence into the 21st Century.
1633 births
1699 deaths
British Baroque painters
English women painters
People from the Borough of St Edmundsbury
English portrait painters
17th-century English women
17th-century English painters
17th-century English women artists
British women painters
Burials at St James's Church, Piccadilly |
```python
#
#
# 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.
# ==============================================================================
"""`Exporter` class represents different flavors of model export."""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import print_function
import abc
import os
from tensorflow.python.estimator import gc
from tensorflow.python.framework import errors_impl
from tensorflow.python.platform import gfile
from tensorflow.python.platform import tf_logging
class Exporter(object):
"""A class representing a type of model export."""
@abc.abstractproperty
def name(self):
"""Directory name.
A directory name under the export base directory where exports of
this type are written. Should not be `None` nor empty.
"""
pass
@abc.abstractmethod
def export(self, estimator, export_path, checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export):
"""Exports the given `Estimator` to a specific format.
Args:
estimator: the `Estimator` to export.
export_path: A string containing a directory where to write the export.
checkpoint_path: The checkpoint path to export.
eval_result: The output of `Estimator.evaluate` on this checkpoint.
is_the_final_export: This boolean is True when this is an export in the
end of training. It is False for the intermediate exports during
the training.
When passing `Exporter` to `tf.estimator.train_and_evaluate`
`is_the_final_export` is always False if `TrainSpec.max_steps` is
`None`.
Returns:
The string path to the exported directory or `None` if export is skipped.
"""
pass
class _SavedModelExporter(Exporter):
"""This class exports the serving graph and checkpoints.
This class provides a basic exporting functionality and serves as a
foundation for specialized `Exporter`s.
"""
def __init__(self,
name,
serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra=None,
as_text=False):
"""Create an `Exporter` to use with `tf.estimator.EvalSpec`.
Args:
name: unique name of this `Exporter` that is going to be used in the
export path.
serving_input_receiver_fn: a function that takes no arguments and returns
a `ServingInputReceiver`.
assets_extra: An optional dict specifying how to populate the assets.extra
directory within the exported SavedModel. Each key should give the
destination path (including the filename) relative to the assets.extra
directory. The corresponding value gives the full path of the source
file to be copied. For example, the simple case of copying a single
file without renaming it is specified as
`{'my_asset_file.txt': '/path/to/my_asset_file.txt'}`.
as_text: whether to write the SavedModel proto in text format. Defaults to
`False`.
Raises:
ValueError: if any arguments is invalid.
"""
self._name = name
self._serving_input_receiver_fn = serving_input_receiver_fn
self._assets_extra = assets_extra
self._as_text = as_text
@property
def name(self):
return self._name
def export(self, estimator, export_path, checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export):
del is_the_final_export
export_result = estimator.export_savedmodel(
export_path,
self._serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra=self._assets_extra,
as_text=self._as_text,
checkpoint_path=checkpoint_path)
return export_result
class FinalExporter(Exporter):
"""This class exports the serving graph and checkpoints in the end.
This class performs a single export in the end of training.
"""
def __init__(self,
name,
serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra=None,
as_text=False):
"""Create an `Exporter` to use with `tf.estimator.EvalSpec`.
Args:
name: unique name of this `Exporter` that is going to be used in the
export path.
serving_input_receiver_fn: a function that takes no arguments and returns
a `ServingInputReceiver`.
assets_extra: An optional dict specifying how to populate the assets.extra
directory within the exported SavedModel. Each key should give the
destination path (including the filename) relative to the assets.extra
directory. The corresponding value gives the full path of the source
file to be copied. For example, the simple case of copying a single
file without renaming it is specified as
`{'my_asset_file.txt': '/path/to/my_asset_file.txt'}`.
as_text: whether to write the SavedModel proto in text format. Defaults to
`False`.
Raises:
ValueError: if any arguments is invalid.
"""
self._saved_model_exporter = _SavedModelExporter(name,
serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra, as_text)
@property
def name(self):
return self._saved_model_exporter.name
def export(self, estimator, export_path, checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export):
if not is_the_final_export:
return None
tf_logging.info('Performing the final export in the end of training.')
return self._saved_model_exporter.export(estimator, export_path,
checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export)
class LatestExporter(Exporter):
"""This class regularly exports the serving graph and checkpoints.
In addition to exporting, this class also garbage collects stale exports.
"""
def __init__(self,
name,
serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra=None,
as_text=False,
exports_to_keep=5):
"""Create an `Exporter` to use with `tf.estimator.EvalSpec`.
Args:
name: unique name of this `Exporter` that is going to be used in the
export path.
serving_input_receiver_fn: a function that takes no arguments and returns
a `ServingInputReceiver`.
assets_extra: An optional dict specifying how to populate the assets.extra
directory within the exported SavedModel. Each key should give the
destination path (including the filename) relative to the assets.extra
directory. The corresponding value gives the full path of the source
file to be copied. For example, the simple case of copying a single
file without renaming it is specified as
`{'my_asset_file.txt': '/path/to/my_asset_file.txt'}`.
as_text: whether to write the SavedModel proto in text format. Defaults to
`False`.
exports_to_keep: Number of exports to keep. Older exports will be
garbage-collected. Defaults to 5. Set to `None` to disable garbage
collection.
Raises:
ValueError: if any arguments is invalid.
"""
self._saved_model_exporter = _SavedModelExporter(name,
serving_input_receiver_fn,
assets_extra, as_text)
self._exports_to_keep = exports_to_keep
if exports_to_keep is not None and exports_to_keep <= 0:
raise ValueError(
'`exports_to_keep`, if provided, must be positive number')
@property
def name(self):
return self._saved_model_exporter.name
def export(self, estimator, export_path, checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export):
export_result = self._saved_model_exporter.export(
estimator, export_path, checkpoint_path, eval_result,
is_the_final_export)
self._garbage_collect_exports(export_path)
return export_result
def _garbage_collect_exports(self, export_dir_base):
"""Deletes older exports, retaining only a given number of the most recent.
Export subdirectories are assumed to be named with monotonically increasing
integers; the most recent are taken to be those with the largest values.
Args:
export_dir_base: the base directory under which each export is in a
versioned subdirectory.
"""
if self._exports_to_keep is None:
return
def _export_version_parser(path):
# create a simple parser that pulls the export_version from the directory.
filename = os.path.basename(path.path)
if not (len(filename) == 10 and filename.isdigit()):
return None
return path._replace(export_version=int(filename))
# pylint: disable=protected-access
keep_filter = gc._largest_export_versions(self._exports_to_keep)
delete_filter = gc._negation(keep_filter)
for p in delete_filter(
gc._get_paths(export_dir_base, parser=_export_version_parser)):
try:
gfile.DeleteRecursively(p.path)
except errors_impl.NotFoundError as e:
tf_logging.warn('Can not delete %s recursively: %s', p.path, e)
# pylint: enable=protected-access
``` |
```python
from diagrams import Cluster, Diagram
from diagrams.aws.compute import ECS, EKS, Lambda
from diagrams.aws.database import Redshift
from diagrams.aws.integration import SQS
from diagrams.aws.storage import S3
with Diagram("Event Processing", show=False):
source = EKS("k8s source")
with Cluster("Event Flows"):
with Cluster("Event Workers"):
workers = [ECS("worker1"),
ECS("worker2"),
ECS("worker3")]
queue = SQS("event queue")
with Cluster("Processing"):
handlers = [Lambda("proc1"),
Lambda("proc2"),
Lambda("proc3")]
store = S3("events store")
dw = Redshift("analytics")
source >> workers >> queue >> handlers
handlers >> store
handlers >> dw
``` |
Edoardo Brizio (March 3, 1846, Turin – May 5, 1907, Bologna) was an Italian archaeologist. He was a student of Giuseppe Fiorelli’s school of archaeology in Pompeii. Brizio became a professor of archaeology at the University of Bologna in 1876, and later director of the Museo Civico of Bologna. He is notable for advancing the theory that the Terramare population had been the original Ligurians.
References
Italian archaeologists
Academic staff of the University of Bologna
1846 births
1907 deaths
University of Turin alumni |
Riders of the Santa Fe is a 1944 American Western film directed by Wallace Fox and written by Ande Lamb. The film stars Rod Cameron, Fuzzy Knight, Eddie Dew, Jennifer Holt, Ray Whitley and Lane Chandler. The film was released on November 10, 1944, by Universal Pictures.
Plot
Cast
Rod Cameron as Matt Conway
Fuzzy Knight as Bullseye Johnson
Eddie Dew as Larry Anderson
Jennifer Holt as Carla Anderson
Ray Whitley as Hank
Lane Chandler as Earl Duncan
Earle Hodgins as Ed Milton
George Douglas as Tom Benner
Richard Alexander as Biff McCauley
Budd Buster as Otis Wade
Ida Moore as Luella Tucker
References
External links
1944 films
American Western (genre) films
1944 Western (genre) films
Universal Pictures films
Films directed by Wallace Fox
American black-and-white films
1940s English-language films
1940s American films
English-language Western (genre) films |
Kiltearn (Gaelic: Cill Tighearna) is a parish in Ross and Cromarty, Scotland. It is in the Presbytery of Ross.
The principal settlement is the village of Evanton, and the parish extends almost to Dingwall and about halfway to Alness. The old Kiltearn church and burial ground are on the shore of the Cromarty Firth. The church is ruinous but dates from 1790. The current church (Free Church Continuing) is on the main street in Evanton.
Churchyard
There is gravestone with a warning from Thomas Hog in the parish churchyard. It was renewed in 1940.
Very Rev Murdoch MacQueen Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland who died in 1912 is buried there.
The churchyard contains several Polish war graves from the Second World War.
According to 19th century historian Alexander Mackenzie, Robert Mor Munro, 15th Baron of Foulis who died in 1588 was the first Munro chief to be buried at Kiltearn and break away from his ancestor's usual custom of being buried at Chanonry. Mackenzie also states that the following Munro chiefs were also buried at Kiltearn: Robert Munro, 16th Baron of Foulis (d.1589), Hector Munro, 17th Baron of Foulis (d.1603), Sir Robert Munro, 3rd Baronet (d.1666), Sir John Munro, 4th Baronet (d.1697), and Sir Robert Munro, 5th Baronet (d.1729).
The 16th century churchman Donald Munro was buried in Kiltearn, "a little to the east of the burial ground of the family of Foulis", although the grave is not marked.
George Munro, 1st of Obsdale (d.1589) was buried at Kiltearn.
Notes
References
Ross and Cromarty
Civil parishes of Scotland
Parishes in Ross and Cromarty |
```rust
fn main() {
println!("Hello, world!");
}
``` |
The Peoples Democratic Party is one of the two major contemporary political parties in Nigeria, along with its main rival, the All Progressives Congress.
Its policies generally lie towards the centre-right of the political spectrum. It won every presidential election between 1999 and 2011 and was, until the 2015 elections, the governing party in the Fourth Republic, although sometimes amid a few controversial electoral circumstances.
History
In 1998, the PDP in its first presidential primary election held in Jos, Plateau State, North Central Nigeria nominated former military leader Olusegun Obasanjo who had just been released from detention as political prisoner as the presidential candidate in the elections of February 1999, with Atiku Abubakar (Governor-Elect of Adamawa State and a former leading member of the Social Democratic Party) as his running mate. They won the presidential election and were inaugurated 29 May 1999.
In the legislative election held on 12 April 2003, the party won 54.5% of the popular vote and 223 out of 360 seats in the House of Representatives, and 76 out of 109 seats in the Senate. Its candidate in the presidential election of 19 April 2003, Olusegun Obasanjo, was re-elected with 61.9% of the vote. In December 2006, Umaru Yar'Adua (formerly of the Peoples Redemption Party and the Social Democratic Party) was chosen as the presidential candidate of the ruling PDP for the April 2007 general election, receiving 3,024 votes from party delegates; his closest rival, Rochas Okorocha, received only 372 votes. Yar'Adua was eventually declared the winner of the 2007 general elections, held on April 21, and was sworn in on May 29, 2007, amid widespread allegations of electoral fraud. In the Nigerian National Assembly election, the party won 260 out of 360 seats in the House of Representatives and 85 out of 109 seats in the Senate. At the PDP's 2008 National Convention, it chose Prince Vincent Ogbulafor as its National Chairman on March 8, 2008. Ogbulafor, who was the PDP's National Secretary from 2001 to 2005, was the party's consensus choice for the position of National Chairman, selected as an alternative to the rival leading candidates Sam Egwu (who was backed by Obasanjo) and Anyim Pius Anyim. All 26 other candidates, including Egwu and Anyim, withdrew in favor of Ogbulafor. Meanwhile, Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje was elected as National Secretary.
In 2011, after the Peoples Democratic Party saw members defect for the Action Congress of Nigeria, some political commentators suspected that the PDP would lose the Presidency. Following PDP candidate Goodluck Jonathan's victory in the 2011 elections, it was reported that there were violent protests from northern youth.
Slogans
The longtime slogan of the Peoples Democratic Party has been "Power to the people". During the party's National Convention in Port Harcourt, Rivers State on 21 May 2016, David Mark, a former President of the Senate of Nigeria, introduced "Change the change" as the party's campaign slogan for the 2019 general elections. However, in 2018, the chairman of the party's board of trustees stated that neither the slogan nor the party's umbrella symbol would be changed.
Political ideology
The party has a neoliberal stance in its economic policies and maintains a conservative stance on certain social issues, such as same-sex relations.
Economic issues
The PDP favors free-market policies which support economic liberalism, and limited government regulation. In 2003, President Olusegun Obasanjo and Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala embarked on an economic reform program, which reduced government spending through conservative fiscal policies, and saw the deregulation and privatization of numerous industries in Nigerian services sector — notably the Nigerian Telecommunications (NITEL) industry.
On the other hand, the PDP adopts a more leftist stance towards poverty and welfare. In 2005, President Obasanjo launched Nigeria's first National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to ensure that every Nigerian has access to basic health care services.
The PDP strives to maintain the status quo on oil revenue distribution. Though the PDP government set up the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to address the needs of the oil-producing Niger Delta states, it has rebuffed repeated efforts to revert to the 50% to 50% federal-to-state government revenue allocation agreement established in 1966 during the First Republic.
Social issues
The PDP is against same-sex relations, and favors social conservatism on moral and religious grounds. In 2007, the PDP-dominated National Assembly sponsored a bill to outlaw homosexual relations, making it punishable by law for up to 14 years in prison.
The party is a moderate advocate of state-autonomy and religious freedom for the Nigerian states. In the year 2000 the introduction of Islamic law in some states in Northern Nigeria triggered sectarian violence in Kaduna and Abia states. The PDP-led federal government refused to bow to pressure from the southern, predominantly Christian states to repeal the law, and instead opted for a compromise where Islamic law would only apply to Muslims.
Tunde Ayeni, chairman of the PDP fundraising event in December 2014 who donated N2 billion was involved in the mismanagement of bank's funds.
2015 elections
In the 2015 elections, the incumbent president and PDP presidential nominee, Goodluck Jonathan, was defeated by General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress by 55% to 45%, losing by 2.6 million votes, out of approximately 28.6 million valid votes cast. Out of Nigeria's 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory, General Muhammadu Buhari won 21 states while President Goodluck Jonathan won 15 states and the Federal Capital Territory.
2019 elections
In the 2019 elections, former vice president Atiku Abubakar and PDP presidential candidadate together with his party rejected the outcome of the elections as INEC was yet to conclude the process and make an official pronouncement. On the 25th of February, PDP National Party Chair, Prince Uche Secondus alleged that the result as announced by INEC were incorrect.
2020 elections
Godwin Obaseki won re-election as governor of Edo State on 20 September 2020 PDP with 307,955 votes, defeating sixteen opponents. Security was tight and voters took health precautions in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic that has infected 57,000 and killed 1,100.
Electoral history
Presidential elections
House of Representatives and Senate elections
See also
List of state parties of the Peoples Democratic Party (Nigeria)
References
External links
1998 establishments in Nigeria
Conservative parties in Nigeria
Political parties established in 1998
Social conservative parties
Organizations that oppose LGBT rights
Political parties in Nigeria |
```java
package com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.console.healthcheck.fulllink.model;
import com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.core.protocal.MASTER_STATE;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap;
public class KeeperStateModel {
private String host;
private int port;
private MASTER_STATE role;
private String state;
private String masterHost;
private int masterPort;
private long masterReplOffset;
private long replBacklogSize;
private List<KeeperSlaveModel> slaves;
private Long replId;
private Map<String, Throwable> errs = new ConcurrentHashMap<>();
public KeeperStateModel() {
}
public String getHost() {
return host;
}
public KeeperStateModel setHost(String host) {
this.host = host;
return this;
}
public int getPort() {
return port;
}
public KeeperStateModel setPort(int port) {
this.port = port;
return this;
}
public MASTER_STATE getRole() {
return role;
}
public KeeperStateModel setRole(MASTER_STATE role) {
this.role = role;
return this;
}
public String getState() {
return state;
}
public KeeperStateModel setState(String state) {
this.state = state;
return this;
}
public String getMasterHost() {
return masterHost;
}
public KeeperStateModel setMasterHost(String masterHost) {
this.masterHost = masterHost;
return this;
}
public int getMasterPort() {
return masterPort;
}
public KeeperStateModel setMasterPort(int masterPort) {
this.masterPort = masterPort;
return this;
}
public long getMasterReplOffset() {
return masterReplOffset;
}
public KeeperStateModel setMasterReplOffset(long masterReplOffset) {
this.masterReplOffset = masterReplOffset;
return this;
}
public long getReplBacklogSize() {
return replBacklogSize;
}
public KeeperStateModel setReplBacklogSize(long replBacklogSize) {
this.replBacklogSize = replBacklogSize;
return this;
}
public List<KeeperSlaveModel> getSlaves() {
return slaves;
}
public void setSlaves(List<KeeperSlaveModel> slaves) {
this.slaves = slaves;
}
public KeeperStateModel setSlavesMap(List<Map<String, String>> slaves) {
this.slaves = new ArrayList<>();
for (Map<String, String> slave : slaves) {
this.slaves.add(new KeeperSlaveModel(slave));
}
return this;
}
public Long getReplId() {
return replId;
}
public KeeperStateModel setReplId(Long replId) {
this.replId = replId;
return this;
}
public Map<String, Throwable> getErrs() {
return errs;
}
public void setErrs(Map<String, Throwable> errs) {
this.errs = errs;
}
public synchronized void addErr(String msg, Throwable err) {
errs.put(msg, err);
}
}
``` |
```go
//go:build solaris
// +build solaris
package fsnotify
import (
"errors"
)
// Watcher watches a set of paths, delivering events on a channel.
//
// A watcher should not be copied (e.g. pass it by pointer, rather than by
// value).
//
// # Linux notes
//
// When a file is removed a Remove event won't be emitted until all file
// descriptors are closed, and deletes will always emit a Chmod. For example:
//
// fp := os.Open("file")
// os.Remove("file") // Triggers Chmod
// fp.Close() // Triggers Remove
//
// This is the event that inotify sends, so not much can be changed about this.
//
// The fs.inotify.max_user_watches sysctl variable specifies the upper limit
// for the number of watches per user, and fs.inotify.max_user_instances
// specifies the maximum number of inotify instances per user. Every Watcher you
// create is an "instance", and every path you add is a "watch".
//
// These are also exposed in /proc as /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches and
// /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_instances
//
// To increase them you can use sysctl or write the value to the /proc file:
//
// # Default values on Linux 5.18
// sysctl fs.inotify.max_user_watches=124983
// sysctl fs.inotify.max_user_instances=128
//
// To make the changes persist on reboot edit /etc/sysctl.conf or
// /usr/lib/sysctl.d/50-default.conf (details differ per Linux distro; check
// your distro's documentation):
//
// fs.inotify.max_user_watches=124983
// fs.inotify.max_user_instances=128
//
// Reaching the limit will result in a "no space left on device" or "too many open
// files" error.
//
// # kqueue notes (macOS, BSD)
//
// kqueue requires opening a file descriptor for every file that's being watched;
// so if you're watching a directory with five files then that's six file
// descriptors. You will run in to your system's "max open files" limit faster on
// these platforms.
//
// The sysctl variables kern.maxfiles and kern.maxfilesperproc can be used to
// control the maximum number of open files, as well as /etc/login.conf on BSD
// systems.
//
// # macOS notes
//
// Spotlight indexing on macOS can result in multiple events (see [#15]). A
// temporary workaround is to add your folder(s) to the "Spotlight Privacy
// Settings" until we have a native FSEvents implementation (see [#11]).
//
// [#11]: path_to_url
// [#15]: path_to_url
type Watcher struct {
// Events sends the filesystem change events.
//
// fsnotify can send the following events; a "path" here can refer to a
// file, directory, symbolic link, or special file like a FIFO.
//
// fsnotify.Create A new path was created; this may be followed by one
// or more Write events if data also gets written to a
// file.
//
// fsnotify.Remove A path was removed.
//
// fsnotify.Rename A path was renamed. A rename is always sent with the
// old path as Event.Name, and a Create event will be
// sent with the new name. Renames are only sent for
// paths that are currently watched; e.g. moving an
// unmonitored file into a monitored directory will
// show up as just a Create. Similarly, renaming a file
// to outside a monitored directory will show up as
// only a Rename.
//
// fsnotify.Write A file or named pipe was written to. A Truncate will
// also trigger a Write. A single "write action"
// initiated by the user may show up as one or multiple
// writes, depending on when the system syncs things to
// disk. For example when compiling a large Go program
// you may get hundreds of Write events, so you
// probably want to wait until you've stopped receiving
// them (see the dedup example in cmd/fsnotify).
//
// fsnotify.Chmod Attributes were changed. On Linux this is also sent
// when a file is removed (or more accurately, when a
// link to an inode is removed). On kqueue it's sent
// and on kqueue when a file is truncated. On Windows
// it's never sent.
Events chan Event
// Errors sends any errors.
Errors chan error
}
// NewWatcher creates a new Watcher.
func NewWatcher() (*Watcher, error) {
return nil, errors.New("FEN based watcher not yet supported for fsnotify\n")
}
// Close removes all watches and closes the events channel.
func (w *Watcher) Close() error {
return nil
}
// Add starts monitoring the path for changes.
//
// A path can only be watched once; attempting to watch it more than once will
// return an error. Paths that do not yet exist on the filesystem cannot be
// added. A watch will be automatically removed if the path is deleted.
//
// A path will remain watched if it gets renamed to somewhere else on the same
// filesystem, but the monitor will get removed if the path gets deleted and
// re-created, or if it's moved to a different filesystem.
//
// Notifications on network filesystems (NFS, SMB, FUSE, etc.) or special
// filesystems (/proc, /sys, etc.) generally don't work.
//
// # Watching directories
//
// All files in a directory are monitored, including new files that are created
// after the watcher is started. Subdirectories are not watched (i.e. it's
// non-recursive).
//
// # Watching files
//
// Watching individual files (rather than directories) is generally not
// recommended as many tools update files atomically. Instead of "just" writing
// to the file a temporary file will be written to first, and if successful the
// temporary file is moved to to destination removing the original, or some
// variant thereof. The watcher on the original file is now lost, as it no
// longer exists.
//
// Instead, watch the parent directory and use Event.Name to filter out files
// you're not interested in. There is an example of this in [cmd/fsnotify/file.go].
func (w *Watcher) Add(name string) error {
return nil
}
// Remove stops monitoring the path for changes.
//
// Directories are always removed non-recursively. For example, if you added
// /tmp/dir and /tmp/dir/subdir then you will need to remove both.
//
// Removing a path that has not yet been added returns [ErrNonExistentWatch].
func (w *Watcher) Remove(name string) error {
return nil
}
``` |
```yaml
---
enhancements:
- |
Supports Podman newer versions (4.8+) using SQLite instead of BoltDB for the containers database backend.
Setting ``podman_db_path`` to the path with the ``db.sql`` file (e.g. ``/var/lib/containers/storage/db.sql``) will make the Datadog Agent use the SQLite format.
**Note**: If ``podman_db_path`` is not set (default), the Datadog Agent attempts to use the default file ``libpod/bolt_state.db`` and ``db.sql`` from ``/var/lib/containers/storage``.
``` |
```php
<?php
/**
* The template for displaying all single posts and attachments
*
* @package WordPress
* @subpackage Twenty_Fifteen
* @since Twenty Fifteen 1.0
*/
get_header(); ?>
<div id="primary" class="content-area">
<main id="main" class="site-main" role="main">
<?php
// Start the loop.
while ( have_posts() ) : the_post();
/*
* Include the post format-specific template for the content. If you want to
* use this in a child theme, then include a file called called content-___.php
* (where ___ is the post format) and that will be used instead.
*/
get_template_part( 'content', get_post_format() );
// If comments are open or we have at least one comment, load up the comment template.
if ( comments_open() || get_comments_number() ) :
comments_template();
endif;
// Previous/next post navigation.
the_post_navigation( array(
'next_text' => '<span class="meta-nav" aria-hidden="true">' . __( 'Next', 'twentyfifteen' ) . '</span> ' .
'<span class="screen-reader-text">' . __( 'Next post:', 'twentyfifteen' ) . '</span> ' .
'<span class="post-title">%title</span>',
'prev_text' => '<span class="meta-nav" aria-hidden="true">' . __( 'Previous', 'twentyfifteen' ) . '</span> ' .
'<span class="screen-reader-text">' . __( 'Previous post:', 'twentyfifteen' ) . '</span> ' .
'<span class="post-title">%title</span>',
) );
// End the loop.
endwhile;
?>
</main><!-- .site-main -->
</div><!-- .content-area -->
<?php get_footer(); ?>
``` |
```javascript
var joinpath = require("path").join;
var async = require("async");
var callOnce = require("helper/callOnce");
var isOwner = require("./isOwner");
var getAllViews = require("./getAllViews");
var localPath = require("helper/localPath");
var fs = require("fs-extra");
const { template } = require("lodash");
var generatePackage = require("./package").generate;
function writeToFolder (blogID, templateID, callback) {
isOwner(blogID, templateID, function (err, owner) {
if (err) return callback(err);
if (!owner) return callback(badPermission(blogID, templateID));
getAllViews(templateID, function (err, views, metadata) {
if (err) return callback(err);
if (!views || !metadata) return callback(noTemplate(blogID, templateID));
makeClient(blogID, function (err, client, blogTemplate) {
if (err) {
return callback(err);
}
var dir = joinpath("Templates", metadata.slug);
// Reset the folder before writing. This fixes a bug in which
// there were two views with the same name, but different extension.
client.remove(blogID, dir, function (err) {
if (err) {
return callback(err);
}
metadata.enabled = blogTemplate === templateID;
writePackage(blogID, client, dir, metadata, views, function (err) {
if (err) {
return callback(err);
}
async.eachOfSeries(
views,
function (view, name, next) {
if (!view.name || !view.content) return next();
write(blogID, client, dir, view, next);
},
callback
);
});
});
});
});
});
}
function writePackage (blogID, client, dir, metadata, views, callback) {
var Package = generatePackage(blogID, metadata, views);
client.write(blogID, dir + "/package.json", Package, callback);
}
function makeClient (blogID, callback) {
require("models/blog").get({ id: blogID }, function (err, blog) {
var client = require("clients")[blog.client];
// we create a fake client to write the template files directly
// to the blog's folder if the user has not configured a client
if (!blog.client || !client) {
return callback(null, {
remove: function (blogID, path, callback) {
fs.remove(localPath(blogID, path), callback);
},
write: function (blogID, path, content, callback) {
fs.outputFile(localPath(blogID, path), content, callback);
}
});
}
return callback(null, client, blog.template);
});
}
function write (blogID, client, dir, view, callback) {
callback = callOnce(callback);
var path = joinpath(dir, view.name);
var content = view.content;
client.write(blogID, path, content, callback);
}
function badPermission (blogID, templateID) {
return new Error("No permission for " + blogID + " to write " + templateID);
}
function noTemplate (blogID, templateID) {
return new Error("No template for " + blogID + " and " + templateID);
}
module.exports = writeToFolder;
``` |
```java
*
* 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.
*/
package org.flowable.common.engine.impl.tenant;
import static org.assertj.core.api.Assertions.assertThat;
import org.flowable.common.engine.api.tenant.TenantContext;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
/**
* @author Filip Hrisafov
*/
class ThreadLocalTenantContextTest {
protected TenantContext underTest = new ThreadLocalTenantContext();
@Test
void getTenantId() {
assertThat(underTest.getTenantId()).isNull();
underTest.setTenantId("acme");
assertThat(underTest.getTenantId()).isEqualTo("acme");
underTest.setTenantId("muppets");
assertThat(underTest.getTenantId()).isEqualTo("muppets");
underTest.clearTenantId();
assertThat(underTest.getTenantId()).isNull();
}
@Test
void isTenantIdSet() {
assertThat(underTest.isTenantIdSet()).isFalse();
underTest.setTenantId("flowable");
assertThat(underTest.isTenantIdSet()).isTrue();
underTest.clearTenantId();
assertThat(underTest.isTenantIdSet()).isFalse();
underTest.setTenantId(null);
assertThat(underTest.isTenantIdSet()).isTrue();
}
}
``` |
```php
<?php
namespace pdo\stmtclass;
class CustomStatement extends \PDOStatement
{
protected function __construct()
{
}
}
function stmtclass()
{
// path_to_url
$pdo = new \PDO("sqlite::memory:");
$pdo->setAttribute(\PDO::ATTR_STATEMENT_CLASS, [CustomStatement::class, []]);
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT name FROM sqlite_master");
echo \get_class($stmt), PHP_EOL;
}
stmtclass();
echo "Done.";
``` |
Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND) is an organisation under the Department of Revenue, Government of India which collects financial intelligence about offences under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002. It was set up in November 2004 and reports directly to the Economic Intelligence Council (EIC) headed by the Finance Minister.
Functions
The functions of FIU-IND are:
Collection of Information: FIU-IND is the nodal agency for receiving the following reports from various reporting entities.
Cash Transaction reports (CTRs)
Non-Profit Organisation Transaction Reports (NTRs)
Cross Border Wire Transfer Reports (CBWTRs)
Reports on Purchase or Sale of Immovable Property (IPRs)
Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs)
Analysis of Information: to uncover patterns of transactions suggesting suspicion of money laundering and related crimes.
Sharing of Information: with national intelligence/law enforcement agencies, national regulatory authorities and foreign Financial Intelligence Units.
Act as Central Repository: to maintain the national data base on the basis of reports received from reporting entities.
Coordination: Coordinate and strengthen collection and sharing of financial intelligence through an effective national, regional and global network to combat money laundering and related crimes.
Research and Analysis: Monitor and identify strategic key areas on money laundering trends, typologies and developments.
Punitive Action: The agency can also take punitive action for violations of the PMLA. In December 2020, it imposed a fine of Rs. 96 lakh () on PayPal.
Organisation
The agency has a sanctioned strength of 75 staff, drawn on deputation from Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), Department of Legal Affairs and Intelligence agencies. It is headed by a Director, in the rank of Joint Secretary. Current Director is Pankaj Kumar Mishra, IRS-IT (1989), appointed in May 2016 for a five year term. He was promoted to Additional Secretary in May 2020, as a personal measure, with temporary upgradation of the post.
References
Indian intelligence agencies
Organizations established in 2004
2004 establishments in India
Anti-money laundering organizations
Ministry of Finance (India) |
The NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency was an executive agency of the Department of Health (DH) in the United Kingdom.
It was the purchasing arm of the National Health Service in England and had main offices in Chester and Reading. The Agency was self-funding in that it did not charge either suppliers or customers.
None of the Agency's contracts were mandatory, although until mid-2006 there was an increasing tendency to insist on their use; especially for NHS trusts who were in sufficient financial distress to have turn-around teams installed by the DH.
The Agency closed in April 2010 with its functions being split between the DH and other government agencies, including NHS Supply chain.
References
Defunct executive agencies of the United Kingdom government
Defunct organisations based in England
Government procurement in the United Kingdom
Organisations based in Cheshire
Government agencies disestablished in 2010 |
```xml
/**
* Wechaty Chatbot SDK - path_to_url
*
* @copyright 2016 Huan LI () <path_to_url and
* Wechaty Contributors <path_to_url
*
*
* 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.
*
*/
import type * as PUPPET from 'wechaty-puppet'
import {
log,
} from 'wechaty-puppet'
import type {
FileBoxInterface,
} from 'file-box'
import type { Constructor } from 'clone-class'
import {
guardQrCodeValue,
} from '../pure-functions/guard-qr-code-value.js'
import {
ContactImpl,
} from './contact.js'
import { validationMixin } from '../user-mixins/validation.js'
import { poolifyMixin } from '../user-mixins/poolify.js'
const MixinBase = poolifyMixin(
ContactImpl,
)<ContactSelfInterface>()
/**
* Bot itself will be encapsulated as a ContactSelf.
*
* > Tips: this class is extends Contact
* @example
* const bot = new Wechaty()
* await bot.start()
* bot.on('login', (user: ContactSelf) => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* })
*/
class ContactSelfMixin extends MixinBase {
static override async find (
query : string | PUPPET.filters.Contact,
): Promise<undefined | ContactSelfInterface> {
if (!this.wechaty.isLoggedIn) {
return undefined
}
try {
const contact = await super.find(query)
if (contact && contact.id === this.wechaty.puppet.currentUserId) {
return contact as ContactSelfInterface
}
} catch (e) {
log.silly('ContactSelf', 'find() exception: %s', (e as Error).message)
}
return undefined
}
public override async avatar () : Promise<FileBoxInterface>
public override async avatar (file: FileBoxInterface) : Promise<void>
/**
* GET / SET bot avatar
*
* @param {FileBox} [file]
* @returns {(Promise<void | FileBox>)}
*
* @example <caption> GET the avatar for bot, return {Promise<FileBox>}</caption>
* // Save avatar to local file like `1-name.jpg`
*
* bot.on('login', (user: ContactSelf) => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* const file = await user.avatar()
* const name = file.name
* await file.toFile(name, true)
* console.log(`Save bot avatar: ${contact.name()} with avatar file: ${name}`)
* })
*
* @example <caption>SET the avatar for a bot</caption>
* import { FileBox } from 'wechaty'
* bot.on('login', (user: ContactSelf) => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* const fileBox = FileBox.fromUrl('path_to_url
* await user.avatar(fileBox)
* console.log(`Change bot avatar successfully!`)
* })
*
*/
public override async avatar (file?: FileBoxInterface): Promise<void | FileBoxInterface> {
log.verbose('Contact', 'avatar(%s)', file ? file.name : '')
if (!file) {
const filebox = await super.avatar()
return filebox
}
if (this.id !== this.wechaty.puppet.currentUserId) {
throw new Error('set avatar only available for user self')
}
await this.wechaty.puppet.contactAvatar(this.id, file)
}
/**
* Get bot qrcode
*
* @returns {Promise<string>}
*
* @example
* import { generate } from 'qrcode-terminal'
* bot.on('login', (user: ContactSelf) => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* const qrcode = await user.qrcode()
* console.log(`Following is the bot qrcode!`)
* generate(qrcode, { small: true })
* })
*/
public async qrcode (): Promise<string> {
log.verbose('Contact', 'qrcode()')
if (this.id !== this.wechaty.puppet.currentUserId) {
throw new Error('only can get qrcode for the currentUser')
}
const qrcodeValue = await this.wechaty.puppet.contactSelfQRCode()
return guardQrCodeValue(qrcodeValue)
}
/**
* Change bot name
*
* @param name The new name that the bot will change to
*
* @example
* bot.on('login', async user => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* const oldName = user.name()
* try {
* await user.name(`${oldName}-${new Date().getTime()}`)
* } catch (e) {
* console.error('change name failed', e)
* }
* })
*/
public override name (): string
public override name (name: string): Promise<void>
public override name (name?: string): string | Promise<void> {
log.verbose('ContactSelf', 'name(%s)', name || '')
if (typeof name === 'undefined') {
return super.name()
}
if (this.id !== this.wechaty.puppet.currentUserId) {
throw new Error('only can set name for user self')
}
return this.wechaty.puppet.contactSelfName(name).then(this.sync.bind(this))
}
/**
* Change bot signature
*
* @param signature The new signature that the bot will change to
*
* @example
* bot.on('login', async user => {
* console.log(`user ${user} login`)
* try {
* await user.signature(`Signature changed by wechaty on ${new Date()}`)
* } catch (e) {
* console.error('change signature failed', e)
* }
* })
*/
public async signature (signature: string): Promise<void> {
log.verbose('ContactSelf', 'signature()')
if (this.id !== this.wechaty.puppet.currentUserId) {
throw new Error('only can change signature for user self')
}
return this.wechaty.puppet.contactSelfSignature(signature).then(this.sync.bind(this))
}
}
class ContactSelfImpl extends validationMixin(ContactSelfMixin)<ContactSelfInterface>() {}
interface ContactSelfInterface extends ContactSelfImpl {}
type ContactSelfConstructor = Constructor<
ContactSelfInterface,
Omit<typeof ContactSelfImpl, 'load'>
>
export type {
ContactSelfConstructor,
ContactSelfInterface,
}
export {
ContactSelfImpl,
}
``` |
In computer science, hyperproperties are a formalism for describing properties of computational systems. Hyperproperties generalize safety and liveness properties, and can express properties such as non-interference and observational determinism.
Elaborating on the example of non-interference: Non-interference can't be represented as a "property" in the formal sense because there's no inclusion-test that could be applied to a single program trace; non-interference is an assertion about how neighboring traces are similar to each other and it does no good to look at one trace at a time. "Hyperproperties" are the extension from properties as predicates on traces to properties as relations between traces.
Definitions
Traces and systems
Hyperproperties are defined in terms of traces of a computational system. A trace is a sequence of states; a system is a set of traces. Intuitively, a program corresponds to the set of all of its possible execution traces, given any inputs. Formally, the set of traces over a set of states is .
This representation is expressive enough to encompass several computational models, including labeled transition systems and state machines.
Hyperproperties
A trace property is a set of traces. Safety and liveness properties are trace properties. Formally, a trace property is an element of , where is the powerset operator. A hyperproperty is a set of trace properties, that is, an element of .
Trace properties may be divided into safety properties (intuitively, properties that ensure "bad things don't happen") and liveness properties ("good things do happen"), and every trace property is the intersection of a safety property and a liveness property. Analogously, hyperproperties may be divided into hypersafety and hyperliveness hyperproperties, and every hyperproperty is an intersection of a safety hyperproperty and a liveness hyperproperty.
-safety properties are safety hyperproperties such that every violation of the property can be witnessed by a set of at most traces.
Examples
Every safety property can be lifted to a 1-safety hyperproperty that expresses the same condition.
-safety hyperproperties:
(lifts of safety properties):
false, defined to be the set containing the empty set. Formally, . This hyperproperty is not satisfied by any system.
true, defined to be the set of all traces. Formally, . This hyperproperty is satisfied by all systems.
Access control
:
Monotonicity
Injectivity
Symmetry, anti-symmetry, and asymmetry
Observational determinism
Noninterference
Transitivity
Associativity
Properties
Since hyperproperties are exactly the elements of the power set , they are closed under intersection and union.
The lower Vietoris topology of a standard topology on trace properties yields a topology on the set of hyperproperties.
Applications
Several program logics have been developed for checking that a program conforms to a hyperproperty.
HyperLTL and some model checking algorithms have been developed for checking that a finite state system conforms to a hyperproperty.
References
Notes
Sources
Program analysis |
```c++
#include <aws/core/Aws.h>
#include <aws/elasticache/ElastiCacheClient.h>
#include <aws/elasticache/model/AddTagsToResourceRequest.h>
#include <aws/elasticache/model/AddTagsToResourceResult.h>
#include <aws/elasticache/model/Tag.h>
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
if (argc != 4)
{
std::cout << "Usage: add_tags <resource_name> <tag_key> <tag_value>" << std::endl;
return 1;
}
Aws::SDKOptions options;
Aws::InitAPI(options);
{
Aws::String name(argv[1]);
Aws::String tag_key(argv[2]);
Aws::String tag_value(argv[3]);
Aws::ElastiCache::ElastiCacheClient elasticache;
Aws::ElastiCache::Model::AddTagsToResourceRequest attr_req;
Aws::ElastiCache::Model::Tag tags;
tags.SetKey(tag_key);
tags.SetValue(tag_value);
attr_req.SetResourceName(name);
attr_req.AddTags(tags);
auto attr_out = elasticache.AddTagsToResource(attr_req);
if (attr_out.IsSuccess())
{
std::cout << "Successfully added tags to resource" << std::endl;
}
else
{
std::cout << "Error adding tags" << attr_out.GetError().GetMessage()
<< std::endl;
}
}
Aws::ShutdownAPI(options);
return 0;
}
``` |
The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer ( ) is an American sitcom that aired on UPN from October 5 to October 26, 1998. Before it even debuted, the series set off a storm of controversy because of a perceived light-hearted take on the issue of American slavery.
Story
A Black English nobleman named Desmond Pfeiffer, chased out of the United Kingdom due to gambling debts, becomes President Abraham Lincoln's valet. In the show, he serves as the intelligent and erudite backbone of a Civil War-era White House populated by louts and drunkards.
Cast
Chi McBride as Desmond Pfeiffer, Black English gentleman serving as President Lincoln's butler
Dann Florek as Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States
Christine Estabrook as Mary Todd Lincoln, President Lincoln's wife
Max Baker as Nibblet, Pfeiffer's assistant
Kelly Connell as Ulysses S. Grant, general of the United States Army
Controversy
Before the series' premiere, several African-American activist groups, including the Los Angeles Chapter of the NAACP, protested against the premise of the series. On September 24, 1998, a protest against the series was held outside Paramount Studios. Five days later, UPN released a statement regarding the controversy and stated that the network planned on delaying the controversial pilot episode (which never aired) and would instead air an alternate episode in its place.
Ratings
The first episode of the series aired on October 5, 1998, ranking 116th out of 125 television programs for that week. Desmond Pfeiffer was removed from UPN's schedule on October 24, and after airing one episode two days after being removed from UPN's lineup, was cancelled, thus hastening the demise of UPN president Dean Valentine's career.
Reception
David Hofstede rated the show one of the "100 Dumbest Events in Television History", but pointed out that despite the protests, the show did not portray slaves and did not employ racial humor. Instead, it was intended as a critique of Bill Clinton and the Monica Lewinsky scandal, with the sexual world of the Oval Office played for laughs. Hofstede considered the sexual humor juvenile, but found the racially sensitive backlash even "dumber".
It was ranked #5 on Entertainment Weekly's Top 50 TV Bombs.
In popular culture
The series was alluded to multiple times in the unaired pilot episode of Clerks: The Animated Series, "Leonardo Leonardo Returns and Dante Has an Important Decision to Make", which featured Dante and Randal drawing inspiration from a nonexistent episode of The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer, which Randal describes as "classic Pfeiffer". In the also-unaired third episode, "Leonardo Is Caught in the Grip of an Outbreak of Randal's Imagination and Patrick Swayze Either Does or Doesn't Work in the New Pet Store", Dante and Randal are seen at the drive-thru for Desmond Pfeiffer's Civil War Burgers, a fictional fast-food restaurant.
Episodes
See also
Abraham Lincoln cultural depictions
1998 in television
List of sitcoms known for negative reception
References
External links
1998 American television series debuts
1998 American television series endings
1990s American black sitcoms
1990s American sitcoms
Fictional depictions of Abraham Lincoln in television
English-language television shows
Television series about the American Civil War
Television series by CBS Studios
Television shows set in Washington, D.C.
UPN original programming
Cultural depictions of Abraham Lincoln
Television series set in the 19th century
White House in fiction
Television controversies in the United States
African-American-related controversies |
The year 2014 was marked by the following events in science fiction.
Events
April - Lucasfilm announced that Star Wars expanded universe is no more considered Star Wars canon.
End of the British magazine SciFiNow.
Deaths
February 16 : Michael Shea, American writer (born in 1946).
March 18 : Lucius Shepard, American writer (born in 1943).
May 12 : H. R. Giger, Swiss artist (born 1940)
May 30 : Michael Szameit, German writer (born in 1950).
June 1 : Jay Lake, American writer (born in 1964).
June 15 : Daniel Keyes, American writer (born in 1927).
June 30 : Frank M. Robinson, American writer (born in 1926).
July 13 : Thomas Berger, American writer (born in 1924).
Literary releases
Novels
Annihilation, by Jeff VanderMeer.
Ancillary Sword, by Ann Leckie.
Imperfect Sword, by John G. Hemry.
Steadfast, by John G. Hemry.
Involution, by Johan Heliot.
Der Jesus-Deal, by Andreas Eschbach.
Maul: Lockdown, by Joe Schreiber.
Mentats of Dune, by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.
Catacombes and Hooligans, the two first novels of the trilogy Les Particules réfractaires, by Mikhaïl W. Ramseier.
Cibola Burn by James S.A. Corey
Earth Awakens by Orson Scott Card
War Dogs by Greg Bear
Novellas
The Churn by James S.A. Corey
Stories collections
Short stories
Comics
Brane Zéro, tome 1, first volume of the serie Brane Zéro, written and drawn by Mathieu Thonon.
Réalité, second volume of the serie Entre-Monde, by Yanouch.
Films
Original
The Anomaly, by Noel Clarke.
Area 51, by Oren Peli.
Bugs, by Yan Jia
Calculator, by Dmitry Grachov
Divergent, by Neil Burger.
Edge of Tomorrow, by Doug Liman.
Extraterrestrial, by Colin Minihan.
The Giver, by Phillip Noyce.
Guardians of the Galaxy, by James Gunn.
Interstellar, by Christopher Nolan.
The Maze Runner, by Wes Ball.
Lucy, by Luc Besson.
Predestination, by the Spierig brothers.
Project Almanac, by Dean Israelite.
The Last Druid: Garm Wars, by Mamoru Oshii.
Schnitzel, by Asaf Epstein.
Space Station 76, by Jack Plotnick.
Transcendence, by Wally Pfister.
Zero Theorem, by Terry Gilliam.
Sequels, spin-offs and remakes
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, by Matt Reeves.
Monsters: Dark Continent, by Tom Green.
RoboCop, by José Padilha.
Transformers: Age of Extinction, by Michael Bay.
Television
The 100, by Kass Morgan and Jason Rothenberg.
2Day, created by Ben Wiener and Manu De Maleprade, directed by Ben Wiener.
Ascension, by Philip Levens and Adrian A. Cruz.
Star Wars Rebels : season #1.
Video games
Elite: Dangerous, developed and edited by Frontier Developments.
Wasteland 2, developed and edited by inXile Entertainment and Obsidian Entertainment.
Destiny
Awards
Hugo Award
Best dramatic presentation (long form) - Gravity
Nebula Award
Best novel: Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
Ray Bradbury Award: James Gunn and Nicole Perlman for Guardians of the Galaxy
Locus Award
Best Science Fiction Novel: Abaddon's Gate by James S. A. Corey
Saturn Award
Best science fiction film: Gravity
Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire Award
Prix Rosny-Aîné Award
BSFA Award
Sidewise Award for Alternate History
Arthur C. Clarke Award
Edward E. Smith Memorial Award
Kurd-Laßwitz-Preis
Seiun Award
Academy Award
Gravity: 7 Oscars for best visual effects, Best Director, Best Original Score, Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, Best Sound Editing, and Best Sound Mixing.
Her for Best Original Screenplay.
See also
2014 in science
References
Science fiction by year
science-fiction |
```go
// Code generated by mockery v1.0.0. DO NOT EDIT.
package mocks
import mock "github.com/stretchr/testify/mock"
// IAuditLogTelemetry is an autogenerated mock type for the IAuditLogTelemetry type
type IAuditLogTelemetry struct {
mock.Mock
}
// ScheduleAuditEvents provides a mock function with given fields:
func (_m *IAuditLogTelemetry) ScheduleAuditEvents() {
_m.Called()
}
// SendAuditMessage provides a mock function with given fields:
func (_m *IAuditLogTelemetry) SendAuditMessage() {
_m.Called()
}
// StopScheduler provides a mock function with given fields:
func (_m *IAuditLogTelemetry) StopScheduler() {
_m.Called()
}
``` |
```javascript
var NewTemplateView = require( 'elementor-admin/new-template/view' );
import LockPro from './behaviors/lock-pro';
module.exports = elementorModules.common.views.modal.Layout.extend( {
getModalOptions() {
return {
id: 'elementor-new-template-modal',
};
},
getLogoOptions() {
return {
title: __( 'New Template', 'elementor' ),
};
},
initialize() {
elementorModules.common.views.modal.Layout.prototype.initialize.apply( this, arguments );
const lookupControlIdPrefix = 'elementor-new-template__form__';
const templateTypeSelectId = `${ lookupControlIdPrefix }template-type`;
this.showLogo();
this.showContentView();
this.initElements();
this.lockProBehavior = new LockPro( this.elements );
this.lockProBehavior.bindEvents();
const dynamicControlsVisibilityListener = () => {
elementorAdmin.templateControls.setDynamicControlsVisibility( lookupControlIdPrefix, elementor_new_template_form_controls );
};
this.getModal().onShow = () => {
dynamicControlsVisibilityListener();
document.getElementById( templateTypeSelectId ).addEventListener( 'change', dynamicControlsVisibilityListener );
};
this.getModal().onHide = () => {
document.getElementById( templateTypeSelectId ).removeEventListener( 'change', dynamicControlsVisibilityListener );
};
},
initElements() {
const container = this.$el[ 0 ],
root = '#elementor-new-template__form';
this.elements = {
form: container.querySelector( root ),
submitButton: container.querySelector( `${ root }__submit` ),
lockButton: container.querySelector( `${ root }__lock_button` ),
templateType: container.querySelector( `${ root }__template-type` ),
lockBadge: container.querySelector( `${ root }__template-type-badge` ),
lockBadgeText: container.querySelector( `${ root }__template-type-badge__text` ),
lockBadgeIcon: container.querySelector( `${ root }__template-type-badge__icon` ),
};
},
showContentView() {
this.modalContent.show( new NewTemplateView() );
},
} );
``` |
```shell
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Tags: no-fasttest
CURDIR=$(cd "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")" && pwd)
# shellcheck source=../shell_config.sh
. "$CURDIR"/../shell_config.sh
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_str.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_unicode.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_float.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_str.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_unicode.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_bool.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_null.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/three_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/none_endian_array.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/big_endian_array.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_str.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_unicode.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_float.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_str.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_unicode.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_bool.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim_null.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/three_dim.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/none_endian_array.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "describe file('$CURDIR/data_npy/big_endian_array.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value UInt8')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value UInt16')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value UInt32')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value UInt64')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Int8')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Int16')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Int32')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Int64')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value Float32')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value Float64')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_str.npy', Npy, 'value FixedString(1)')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_str.npy', Npy, 'value String')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/two_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Array(Int8)')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/three_dim.npy', Npy, 'value Array(Array(Int8))')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value Array(Float32)')" 2>&1 | grep -c "BAD_ARGUMENTS"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value UUID')" 2>&1 | grep -c "UNKNOWN_TYPE"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value Tuple(UInt8)')" 2>&1 | grep -c "UNKNOWN_TYPE"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_float.npy', Npy, 'value Int8')" 2>&1 | grep -c "ILLEGAL_COLUMN"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_str.npy', Npy, 'value Int8')" 2>&1 | grep -c "ILLEGAL_COLUMN"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/one_dim_unicode.npy', Npy, 'value Float32')" 2>&1 | grep -c "ILLEGAL_COLUMN"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/complex.npy')" 2>&1 | grep -c "CANNOT_EXTRACT_TABLE_STRUCTURE"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/float_16.npy')"
$CLICKHOUSE_LOCAL -q "select * from file('$CURDIR/data_npy/npy_inf_nan_null.npy')"
``` |
My First Time is an ongoing short web series, featuring authors discussing their first published book.
It is produced by The Paris Review and hosted on their website. It is made by filmmakers Tom Bean and Luke Poling, as well as Casey Brooks and Ryan Scafuro. Bean and Poling were the writers and directors of the documentary Plimpton! Starring George Plimpton as Himself. George Plimpton was the founding editor of The Paris Review.
The series is inspired by the magazine's famous "The Art of Fiction" interviews. The LA Times book critic Carolyn Kellog said that the series builds "on that tradition without replicating it."
The films feature not only novelists, but also graphic novelists, poets, playwrights and short story writers. In the announcement of the creation series, it was described as, "a portrait of the artist as a beginner—and a look at the creative process, in all its joy, abjection, delusion, and euphoria." The on-line magazine Quartz said of the series, "Buried between the self-deprecation and vague maxims (“just buckle down,” etc.) are some real gems of insight any aspiring writer, artist, creative-type, or modern human being can practically apply to their own work and lives."
The film series debuted in May, 2015. Each film runs approximately 6 minutes.
The filmmakers have teased future films on Twitter and Instagram. Some of the writers interviewed, but whose film has not yet been released include George Saunders, Mary Karr, Victor LaValle, and Dana Spiotta.
Films
J. Robert Lennon, The Light of Falling Stars
Gabrielle Bell, The Book of... Mini-Comics
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Neighbors
Christine Schutt, Nightwork
Tao Lin, Bed
Sheila Heti, The Middle Stories
Donald Antrim, Elect Mr. Robinson for a Better World
Katori Hall, Hoodoo Love
Ben Lerner, The Lichtenberg Figures
Jeffrey Eugenides, The Virgin Suicides
Helen DeWitt, The Last Samurai
Vivian Gornick, In Search of Ali Mahmoud: An American Woman in Egypt
Akhil Sharma, An Obedient Father
Karl Ove Knausgaard, "Ute av verden" (Out of the World)
References
Documentary films about writers
Documentary films about playwrights
Documentary films about poets
Documentary film series |
The 2017 Internazionali di Tennis Castel del Monte was a professional tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the fifth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Andria, Italy between November 20 and November 26, 2017.
Singles main-draw entrants
Seeds
1 Rankings are as of 13 November 2017.
Other entrants
The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:
Filippo Baldi
Enrico Dalla Valle
Andrea Pellegrino
The following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking:
Igor Sijsling
The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:
Gianluca Di Nicola
Christopher Heyman
Constant Lestienne
Andrea Vavassori
The following player received entry as a lucky loser:
Denis Matsukevich
Champions
Singles
Uladzimir Ignatik def. Christopher Heyman 6–7(3–7), 6–4, 7–6(7–3).
Doubles
Lorenzo Sonego / Andrea Vavassori def. Sander Arends / Sander Gillé 6–3, 3–6, [10–7].
References
2017 ATP Challenger Tour
2017
2017 in Italian tennis |
Bernard Amyot is a Montreal lawyer. He has served as the President of the Canadian Bar Association, appointed in 2007. He is also known for his involvement as the attorney for Omar Khadr in his Federal terrorism trial in Canada. He is currently the Chairman of the Board of Directors for the National Theatre School of Canada. He is a graduate of the McGill University Faculty of Law, where he served as the Associate Editor for the McGill Law Journal.
References
Lawyers from Montreal
Living people
McGill University Faculty of Law alumni
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people) |
Musa Piroğlu (1968, Hirfanlı, Kirşehir) is a Turkish politician of the Revolutionary Party and a current member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey for the People's Democratic Party (HDP)
Early life and education
Following his graduation from high school he entered the vocational school at the Dokuz Eylül University in Izmir in 1986. During his studies he had a working accident while being employed as a construction worker. As a result, he was diagnosed with a spinal cord injury and since uses a wheelchair. After the completion of his studies, he worked as a history teacher for fifteen years.
Political career
During his political career, he participated in several parties, such as the Freedom and Solidarity Party (ÖDP) and the Socialist Democracy Party (SDP). He was elected to the Turkish parliament in the parliamentary elections of 2018 for Istanbul representing the HDP. During a protest against the dismissal from parliament of fellow MPs Leyla Güven and Musa Farisoğullari, he attempted to impede water cannon trucks to chase the protesters by blocking the road with his wheel chair, following which he was pushed to the floor by the police. He is the spokesperson of the disabled for the HDP.
References
Turkish politicians
1968 births
Living people
People from Kırşehir Province
Dokuz Eylül University alumni |
Lakshmipur Belbichhawa is a village development committee in Rautahat District in the Narayani Zone of south-eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2209 people living in 379 individual households.
References
Populated places in Rautahat District |
The Jama Masjid is a mosque in the Kalbadevi neighborhood, near Crawford Market in the South Mumbai region of Mumbai, India.
The Muslim community of Bombay possesses 89 mosques, of which 8 belong to the Bohras, 2 to the Khojas, one to the Mughals and the remainder to the Sunni Muslims.
History
In the eighteenth century, a large tank (water reservoir) was situated at this site in the midst of gardens and open land and belonged to a Konkani Muslim merchant trading in Goa and Calicut, who in about 1775, agreed to the erection of a mosque at this site on condition that the tank was preserved intact.
The construction started initially in 1775 with raising of foundations on the tank. Objections were raised by neighbours that delayed construction until 1778. More disputes arose with illegal construction activities to its west and south. Finally the erstwhile governor of Bombay, Sir Meadows Taylor decided in favour of the mosque authorities. The date of its completion (AD 1802)/(AH 1217) is derivable from the chronogram Jahaz-i- Akhirat, "The ship of the world to come" which contains an allusion to the fact that it was constructed on the tank.
A one-story building was therefore erected over the tank and formed the original nucleus of the present Jama Mosque. A top floor was added with the munificence of a prominent konkani merchant Mohammad Ali Roghay in 1814.
Sat Tad Masjid was used as the Jama Mosque of Bombay (now Mumbai) from 1770 to 1802, when this to-be Jama Mosque was under construction.
Architecture
The Jama Mosque is a quadrangular structure of brick and stone, encircled by a ring of terrace roofed and double storeyed buildings, the ground floors of which are let out as shops. The chief or eastern gate of the mosque leads directly across an open courtyard to the ancient tank, which is now furnished with masonry steps and embankments, built in 1893, and contain about ten feet of water fed by springs at the bottom, that contains gold and silver fish and few turtles. This is used for ritual ablutions (wudu), however modern facilities are also available for this purpose.
From the depth of the tank rise sixteen black stone arches, constructed in 1874, which support the whole fabric of the mosque, the upper story being upheld by five rows of wooden pillars, each of which contains a receptacle for sacred books. The arches in the tank were built in 1874 at a cost of Rs. 75000/- while other noteworthy additions to the premises are the large windows in the north, east, and south sides constructed in 1898, and the school building Rs. 20000 in 1902.
Administration
Spread across more than an acre, the two-storey quadrangular mosque at Janjikar Street is run by the Juma Masjid of Bombay trust. Built in 1775, it is home to a digitised library with rare manuscripts from as early as the 1890s. It is said to be one of the main mosques for Sunnis and is managed by the Konkani Muslims. It follows the Shafie (شافعى) madhab (school) to which most Konkni Muslims adhere to.
In accordance with a scheme framed by the high court in 1897, the management of its properties and affairs vests in a board of eleven directors, triennially elected by Konkani Muslim Jamat, while the executive functions are delegated to a Nazir, appointed by the board. The staff of the mosque includes am Imam or prayer leader, an assistant imam, a Bangi (muezzin) and assistant Bangi whose duty is to summon the devotees to prayer, and several subordinated.
Location
The Jama Masjid is located in Janjikar Street, Kalbadevi near 'Dhobi Talao' area, Mumbai 400003. To its west is Zaveri Bazar (the main jewellery market) and to its east lies Abdul Rehman Street. Nearest train stations are to west and Masjid Bunder to east. For bus journeys, use buses stopping at Mahatma Phule Market (old name Crawford Market).
References
http://jumamasjid.org/ (official website)
The Gazetteer of Bombay city and island, by S M Edwardes, originally printed in 1909, Times press.
https://www.mumbai77.com/city/2211/temples-churches/jama-masjid-muslim-mosque/
https://www.holidify.com/places/mumbai/jama-masjid-sightseeing-11777.html?amp=1
Mosques in Mumbai
Religious buildings and structures completed in 1802
Indo-Islamic architecture
Mumbai |
Povljana is a village and municipality on the island of Pag, in Zadar County, Croatia. It is located 12 km southeast of town of Pag. The nearby shoreline has steep slopes and small cliffs.
According to the 2011 census, there are 759 inhabitants, 95% of whom are Croats.
The name of the place Povljana comes from the Latin word PAULINIANA with the Latin suffix -ANA, which is the Roman name Paulus. ''Old Povljana'' was mentioned for the first time in historical documents during the construction of the church of St. Martin on February 13, 1345.
Politics
Minority councils and representatives
Directly elected minority councils and representatives are tasked with consulting tasks for the local or regional authorities in which they are advocating for minority rights and interests, integration into public life and participation in the management of local affairs. At the 2023 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections Albanians of Croatia fulfilled legal requirements to elect 10 members minority councils of the Municipality of Povljana but the elections were not held due to the absence of candidatures.
References
Municipalities of Croatia
Seaside resorts in Croatia
Populated places in Zadar County
Pag (island) |
Dhundhara is a village located in the Jodhpur district of Rajasthan in northern India. It is from sub-district headquarters Luni, Rajasthan, and from district headquarters Jodhpur. According to the 2011 Census of India, Dhundhara is a Gram Panchayat. It is at the lowest level of Panchayat Raj institutions (PRIs).
Demographics
According to the 2011 census, the population is 6019, with 1026 households. Women account for 47.9% of the population. The overall literacy rate is 56.4%, with literacy among women at 20.6%.
Transport
The nearest access to rail transport from the region is from the Dundara and Miyan Ka Bara Halt railway stations. Until 2007, these were connected via a break of gauge junction station to the broad gauge lines going to Barmer and Jodhpur.
References
Villages in Jodhpur district |
```vue
<template>
<p></p>
</template>
<script>
export default {
data () {
return {
msg: 'Hello from Component A!'
}
}
}
</script>
<style>
comp-a h2 {
color: #f00;
}
</style>
``` |
```protocol buffer
// Since: cosmos-sdk 0.43
syntax = "proto3";
package cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1;
import "gogoproto/gogo.proto";
import "google/protobuf/any.proto";
import "cosmos_proto/cosmos.proto";
import "cosmos/base/v1beta1/coin.proto";
import "amino/amino.proto";
import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
import "google/protobuf/duration.proto";
option go_package = "cosmossdk.io/x/feegrant";
// BasicAllowance implements Allowance with a one-time grant of coins
// that optionally expires. The grantee can use up to SpendLimit to cover fees.
message BasicAllowance {
option (cosmos_proto.implements_interface) = "cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1.FeeAllowanceI";
option (amino.name) = "cosmos-sdk/BasicAllowance";
// spend_limit specifies the maximum amount of coins that can be spent
// by this allowance and will be updated as coins are spent. If it is
// empty, there is no spend limit and any amount of coins can be spent.
repeated cosmos.base.v1beta1.Coin spend_limit = 1 [
(gogoproto.nullable) = false,
(amino.dont_omitempty) = true,
(amino.encoding) = "legacy_coins",
(gogoproto.castrepeated) = "github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/types.Coins"
];
// expiration specifies an optional time when this allowance expires
google.protobuf.Timestamp expiration = 2 [(gogoproto.stdtime) = true];
}
// PeriodicAllowance extends Allowance to allow for both a maximum cap,
// as well as a limit per time period.
message PeriodicAllowance {
option (cosmos_proto.implements_interface) = "cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1.FeeAllowanceI";
option (amino.name) = "cosmos-sdk/PeriodicAllowance";
// basic specifies a struct of `BasicAllowance`
BasicAllowance basic = 1 [(gogoproto.nullable) = false, (amino.dont_omitempty) = true];
// period specifies the time duration in which period_spend_limit coins can
// be spent before that allowance is reset
google.protobuf.Duration period = 2
[(gogoproto.stdduration) = true, (gogoproto.nullable) = false, (amino.dont_omitempty) = true];
// period_spend_limit specifies the maximum number of coins that can be spent
// in the period
repeated cosmos.base.v1beta1.Coin period_spend_limit = 3 [
(gogoproto.nullable) = false,
(amino.dont_omitempty) = true,
(amino.encoding) = "legacy_coins",
(gogoproto.castrepeated) = "github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/types.Coins"
];
// period_can_spend is the number of coins left to be spent before the period_reset time
repeated cosmos.base.v1beta1.Coin period_can_spend = 4 [
(gogoproto.nullable) = false,
(amino.dont_omitempty) = true,
(amino.encoding) = "legacy_coins",
(gogoproto.castrepeated) = "github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/types.Coins"
];
// period_reset is the time at which this period resets and a new one begins,
// it is calculated from the start time of the first transaction after the
// last period ended
google.protobuf.Timestamp period_reset = 5
[(gogoproto.stdtime) = true, (gogoproto.nullable) = false, (amino.dont_omitempty) = true];
}
// AllowedMsgAllowance creates allowance only for specified message types.
message AllowedMsgAllowance {
option (gogoproto.goproto_getters) = false;
option (cosmos_proto.implements_interface) = "cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1.FeeAllowanceI";
option (amino.name) = "cosmos-sdk/AllowedMsgAllowance";
// allowance can be any of basic and periodic fee allowance.
google.protobuf.Any allowance = 1 [(cosmos_proto.accepts_interface) = "cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1.FeeAllowanceI"];
// allowed_messages are the messages for which the grantee has the access.
repeated string allowed_messages = 2;
}
// Grant is stored in the KVStore to record a grant with full context
message Grant {
// granter is the address of the user granting an allowance of their funds.
string granter = 1 [(cosmos_proto.scalar) = "cosmos.AddressString"];
// grantee is the address of the user being granted an allowance of another user's funds.
string grantee = 2 [(cosmos_proto.scalar) = "cosmos.AddressString"];
// allowance can be any of basic, periodic, allowed fee allowance.
google.protobuf.Any allowance = 3 [(cosmos_proto.accepts_interface) = "cosmos.feegrant.v1beta1.FeeAllowanceI"];
}
``` |
Tan Yan Xin (born 13 June 1993 in Kuala Lumpur) is a Malaysian professional squash player. She attended Bukit Jalil Sports School and was a Scottish Junior Open champion in the girls' under-11 event in 2003. She reached a career-high world ranking of World No. 69 in March 2009.
References
External links
Malaysian female squash players
Living people
1993 births
21st-century Malaysian women |
The 2006 UEFA Champions League final was an association football match between Barcelona of Spain and Arsenal of England at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, Paris, France, on Wednesday, 17 May 2006. It was the final match of the 2005–06 season of Europe's primary cup competition, the UEFA Champions League. Barcelona were appearing in their fifth final, having won the competition once in 1992, while it was Arsenal's first final appearance and the first appearance by a club from London.
Each club progressed through the group stage and three knockout rounds to reach the final, playing 12 matches in total. Barcelona won their group and progressed to the final after beating Chelsea, Benfica and Milan, respectively. Arsenal won their group to move into the knockout stage, and progressed without conceding a goal against Real Madrid, Juventus and Villarreal, respectively.
A crowd of 79,500 watched as Jens Lehmann was sent off early in the game. Despite this setback, Arsenal took the lead through Sol Campbell towards the end of the first half. After an hour, Henrik Larsson came on for Barcelona and was involved in both of their goals. Barcelona equalised through Samuel Eto'o near the end of the second half, and a few minutes later, Juliano Belletti scored to give Barcelona a 2–1 victory. This was Barcelona's second triumph in the competition, 14 years after they won their first European Cup in 1992.
Route to the final
Teams qualified for the Champions League group stage, either directly or through three preliminary rounds, based on both their position in the preceding domestic league and the strength of that league. Both Arsenal and Barcelona entered the competition in the group stages: Arsenal by finishing second in the 2004–05 FA Premier League, and Barcelona by winning La Liga. The group stages were contested as eight double round robin groups of four teams, with the top two qualifying for the knockout stage. Knockout matches were decided based on home and away matches, with the away goals rule, extra time and penalty shootouts as tiebreakers if needed.
Build-up
UEFA awarded the right to host the final to the Stade de France in Saint-Denis after considering its merits in terms of capacity, stadium infrastructure and dossiers including city and airport agreements and promotional plans. UEFA also conducted a variety of site visits. The Stade de France had previously staged the 2000 UEFA Champions League final between Real Madrid and Valencia, which Madrid won 3–0. Saint-Denis was chosen to host the final in recognition of the 50th anniversary of the first European Cup final in 1956, held in nearby Paris at the Parc des Princes, now home of Paris Saint-Germain. The Parc des Princes also hosted the 1975 and 1981 European Cup finals, the 1978 and 1995 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finals, and the 1998 UEFA Cup final.
Barcelona showed the match live from their Mini Estadi on a television screen for an estimated audience of 15,276. Before the final, an estimated 1.2 million people descended into the streets of Barcelona, as the team toured the city on two open-top double-decker buses to celebrate winning La Liga. Arsenal went into the match with the record for the longest time without a conceding a goal, having played 919 minutes since conceding against AFC Ajax in the group stage. Arsenal's appearance in the match came six years to the day since their last European final, when they faced Galatasaray in the 2000 UEFA Cup final; they lost on penalties after the match had finished goalless after extra time. Of the players who featured in that final, only Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp remained at the club, while Sylvinho, who had featured for Arsenal in the final, was now a Barcelona player.
It was the first time Arsenal had appeared in the European Cup final, which also made them the first club from London to do so. Barcelona were appearing in the final for the fifth time; their last appearance was a 4–0 loss to Milan in 1994. Two more losses preceded the 1994 final (1961 and 1986), and their only success in the competition came in 1992 when they beat Sampdoria. Barcelona went into the final as domestic league champions, having won La Liga a fortnight earlier. They were regarded as the best side on the continent because they possessed players such as Ronaldinho and Samuel Eto'o. Barcelona player Deco dismissed the notion of Barcelona being favourites, insisting they would not be complacent: "Milan were winning 3–0 last year against Liverpool and ended up losing in the end. We need to be serious, calm and fully concentrated so that we don't make any errors".
Neither side had been beaten en route to the final, with Arsenal only conceding two goals in their 12 matches before the final, including a record ten successive matches without conceding. Barcelona, on the other hand, had scored 114 goals in all competitions before the final. The two finalists were guaranteed a financial windfall from their progress to the final. Arsenal would receive a revenue of around €37.3 million if they won and approximately €34.7 million if they lost. Barcelona would earn €31.5 million from revenue if they won, and around €28.9 million if they were to lose. Included in the total for participating in the final, the UEFA Champions League winners would collect approximately €6.4 million, with the runners-up receiving approximately €3.8 million. The final marked the appearance of a new trophy following Liverpool's triumph over Milan the previous year. As Liverpool won the competition for the fifth time they were entitled to keep the trophy, creating the need for a new one.
Barcelona were expected to line up in a 4–2–3–1 formation, with Ronaldinho, Ludovic Giuly and Deco supporting Samuel Eto'o who would be deployed as the lone striker. They had doubts about the fitness of Lionel Messi going into the final. He had pulled a thigh muscle during the second leg of their match with Chelsea, and had not played since, though he was included in the 22-man squad for the final. Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard stated he would leave it late before deciding whether to select him. Despite being included in the squad, Messi did not feature in the final. Arsenal were expected to line up in a 4–5–1 formation, with Thierry Henry as the sole striker. There was much discussion about whether José Antonio Reyes would take the place of Robert Pires on the left of midfield. It had been announced before the match that this would be Pires' last match as he had agreed to join Villarreal next season.
On the morning of the final it emerged that the assistant referee for the game Ole Hermann Borgan had posed for photographs in a Barcelona shirt for Drammens Tidende, a Norwegian newspaper. After initially sticking by the official, UEFA eventually decided to replace him with fellow Norwegian Arild Sundet. Norway's head of refereeing Rune Pedersen stated: "It is an unwritten rule that referees should not do anything that can doubt their impartial stance".
Match
Team selection
Barcelona fielded a 4–3–3 formation with Mark van Bommel and Edmílson lining up in midfield alongside Deco, ahead of Xavi and Andrés Iniesta. Lionel Messi did not feature in the matchday squad, despite returning from injury and featuring in the 22-man squad, while Henrik Larsson was among the substitutes in potentially his last game for the club. Arsenal fielded a 4–4–1–1 formation, which saw Emmanuel Eboué replace the injured Lauren, and Ashley Cole return at left-back to make only his third appearance in the competition that season due to injury. Thierry Henry was deployed as the lone striker, with Freddie Ljungberg playing off his shoulder.
Summary
First half
As both teams' first-choice kits featured a shade of red, Arsenal wore their yellow away strip, while Barcelona wore their traditional blue and maroon striped kit. Arsenal won the coin toss and Barcelona kicked off. Barcelona almost immediately came under pressure when Thierry Henry shot straight at Barcelona goalkeeper Víctor Valdés, who conceded a corner. From the resulting corner Arsenal had another chance again courtesy of Henry, whose shot was again saved by Valdés. The next attack in the seventh minute resulted in Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann saving from Ludovic Giuly after he shot from a narrow angle. Four minutes later Barcelona were awarded a free-kick 35 yards from goal; Ronaldinho shot wide of the goal.
With 18 minutes played, Lehmann became the first player to be sent off in a European Cup final after he brought down Samuel Eto'o outside the Arsenal box. Giuly subsequently put the ball in the back of the net, but the goal was not allowed due to the foul. Arsenal substituted Robert Pires for Manuel Almunia, their substitute goalkeeper. The free-kick was sent wide by Ronaldinho. Following Lehmann's dismissal Barcelona exerted more pressure on Arsenal, to the point where Emmanuel Eboué was cautioned for a high tackle.
In the 37th minute Arsenal overcame their numerical disadvantage to score when Sol Campbell headed in from a Thierry Henry free-kick following Carles Puyol's foul on Emmanuel Eboué. Some believed that Eboué was guilty of diving. Arsenal held onto their lead for the remainder of the half. Barcelona's best chance came from Eto'o, whose shot hit the post via a save from Almunia.
Second half
At half-time, Barcelona replaced Edmílson, who had picked up an injury in the first half, with Andrés Iniesta. Almunia saved a shot from Iniesta six minutes into the half.
After 61 minutes, Barcelona substituted Larsson for Van Bommel. Minutes later, Alexander Hleb received a pass from Henry but shot wide of the goal. Arsenal began to press forward and both Henry and Ljungberg saw shots saved; Henry then had another chance to score after being put through by Hleb, but he shot straight at Valdés. Following this attack, Oleguer was replaced by Juliano Belletti, and Arsenal replaced Cesc Fàbregas with Mathieu Flamini.
Next, Iniesta sent a pass through the inside-left channel to Larsson whose one-touch, right-footed lay-off quickly released Eto'o to equalise for Barcelona. Four minutes later, Larsson was again the provider, playing a one-two with Belletti in the inside-right channel, before the Brazilian full-back shot right-footed through Almunia's legs to score at the near post.
The remaining minutes saw Arsenal replace Hleb with Reyes in an attempt to equalise, but Barcelona had the best chance during this period, only for Giuly to hit his shot straight at Almunia. Following this, Larsson impeded the Arsenal goalkeeper and was cautioned. The match finished soon after with Barcelona winning 2–1. With this defeat, Arsenal became the first English club and third overall – after Hamburger SV and Fiorentina – to have been runner-up in all three major European competitions (European Champion Clubs' Cup/UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League, and the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup).
Details
Statistics
Post-match
Barcelona captain Carles Puyol collected the trophy from UEFA president Lennart Johansson as Barcelona celebrated their second European Cup triumph. As a result of winning the UEFA Champions League, Barcelona would face Sevilla, the winners of the UEFA Cup, in the UEFA Super Cup. The subsequent match, played on 25 August 2006, was won 3–0 by Sevilla. Barcelona's victory meant they would also participate in the FIFA Club World Cup. Receiving a bye in the first round, they beat Club América 4–0 in the semi-finals to progress to the final where they faced Copa Libertadores champions Internacional, who won 1–0.
Much of the discussion after the match centred around referee Terje Hauge's decision to send off Lehmann. Football pundit Mark Lawrenson stated: "The game changed when Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann was sent off". Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger agreed: "When Jens Lehmann got sent off, that left us with 70 minutes to play with ten against eleven, against a team that retains the ball very well". He refused to openly criticise this decision, although he did criticise the decision to award Barcelona's first goal, as he felt that Samuel Eto'o was offside. Wenger was also adamant that his young side would bounce back from the defeat. One person who did criticise the referee was Thierry Henry, stating: "I was kicked all over the place. I expected the referee to do his job. I don't think he did". There was much discussion after the match over whether Henry would remain with Arsenal or move to Barcelona, whom he had been linked with a move to over the past months. Arsène Wenger was asked post match if Henry would leave, to which the Arsenal manager replied: "I don't know. I don't think so". However, on 19 May, Henry signed a new four-year contract with Arsenal, ending the speculation about a possible move to Barcelona.
Thierry Henry paid tribute to Larsson's contribution to Barcelona's win after the game, saying, "People always talk about Ronaldinho, Eto'o, Giuly and everything, but I didn't see them today, I saw Henrik Larsson. He came on, he changed the game, that is what killed the game. Sometimes you talk about Ronaldinho and Eto'o and people like that; you need to talk about the proper footballer who made the difference, and that was Henrik Larsson tonight." Henry also remarked, "You have to remember that Barcelona is a team. It's not Eto'o, it's not Ronaldinho. On Wednesday, the man who made the difference was Henrik Larsson. You have to give him credit for that because when he came on he made some amazing runs around the box and he showed he is a team player. You saw two times he fed the ball back to people and that's what I always talk about, he is a team player. He did that against us, even though the first goal was a close offside decision." Larsson's addition giving Barcelona the cutting edge required to overcome Arsenal was noted by international press.
Henrik Larsson, who provided the two assists for the goals, was delighted with the triumph and had no regrets over deciding to leave Barcelona after the match: "I want to play football. I feel I haven't played as much as I would love to because of the great players we have at Barcelona". Fellow Barcelona player Giovanni van Bronckhorst was emotional as he won against his former club: "It's special to win the final, and even more special to do it against your old team". Samuel Eto'o, scorer of Barcelona's first goal, cited Liverpool's comeback against Milan as inspiration for Barcelona's victory: "After having seen what Liverpool did last year, we told ourselves not to throw in the towel. We followed Liverpool's example". Barcelona manager Frank Rijkaard praised the role of goalkeeper Victor Valdés in their victory, stating that he made a number of important saves to keep them in the match: "Valdes played a decisive role. He saved us at crucial moments".
See also
2006 UEFA Cup final
2006 UEFA Super Cup
Arsenal F.C. in international football
FC Barcelona in international football
References
External links
UEFA Champions League Finals official site
Official Site (Archived)
Final
Champions League Final
Champions League Final 2006
European Cup Final 2006
Champions League Final 2006
UEFA Champions League finals
Champions
Champions
UEFA Champions League final
Sport in Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis
UEFA Champions League final |
Secrets is the second studio album by American singer Toni Braxton, released on June 18, 1996, by LaFace Records and Arista Records. The album was nominated for Best Pop Album at the 1997 Grammy Awards. Secrets has been certified eight-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Worldwide, the album has sold over 15 million copies. In support of the album, Braxton embarked on the Secrets Tour, playing dates in North America and Europe from August 1996 to October 1997.
Composition
The album's first song "Come On Over Here" is a "finger-poppingly upbeat", sultry groove track produced by Tony Rich. It was described as "a neo-Motown composition". The second track and lead single, the airily funky "You're Makin' Me High", was produced by Babyface and Bryce Wilson. It was also nominated for a Grammy Award for Best R&B Song. The third track "There's No Me Without You" is a romantic song. The fourth track and second single "Un-Break My Heart" is a ballad written by Diane Warren. She played the finished song to Arista Records president Clive Davis, who thought it would be perfect for Braxton. With background vocals by Shanice Wilson and production by David Foster, the song spent 11 weeks at number one on pop radio stations and 14 weeks at number one on adult contemporary radio in late 1996. It also won a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance in 1997. It is a song of blistering heartbreak, as Braxton sings to her former lover, begging him to return to her and undo all the pain he has caused. The fifth track "Talking in His Sleep" is about adultery.
The sixth track "How Could an Angel Break My Heart" was co-written by Babyface and Braxton and features saxophonist Kenny G. Over a "lulling" ballad melody, the lyrics detail a lover's wayward behavior. "Let It Flow", included on the soundtrack to Waiting to Exhale, eventually became a staple of urban contemporary radio. The song is a sultry tune that requires the singer to reach down to her lowest register. On "Why Should I Care", Braxton ascends to a high, breathy croon, while on "I Don't Want To", R. Kelly provides the soft bump-and-grind sound, in a song about a romance in denial, and "I Love Me Some Him" was written by Andrea Martin and Gloria Stewart and produced by Soulshock & Karlin.
Singles
The album's lead single, "You're Makin' Me High", earned Braxton her first number-one single on both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts. Its B-side, "Let It Flow", was an airplay success and was featured on the soundtrack to the 1995 film Waiting to Exhale. The second single, "Un-Break My Heart", became a commercial success worldwide, peaking at number one on the Hot 100 for 11 consecutive weeks, number one on the Hot Dance Club Play, and number two on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, while topping the charts in several other countries. The third single from the album, "I Don't Want To", reached the top 20 of the Hot 100 and the top 10 of the R&B chart. Its B-side, "I Love Me Some Him", was a major airplay success domestically. The fourth official single, "How Could an Angel Break My Heart", which features Kenny G on the saxophone, became another top-40 entry in the United Kingdom, while failing to enter the charts in the US.
Critical reception
Secrets received generally positive reviews from music critics. Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic wrote that Braxton's "vocal talent is what unites Secrets and makes it into a first-rate contemporary R&B collection. Braxton is a singer who can cross over into the smooth confines of adult contemporary radio without losing or betraying the soul that lies at the foundation of her music, and her talent burns at its brightest on Secrets." Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly praised the "core Braxton/Babyface collaborations" on the album as "diverse, witty, and exquisitely modulated", noting Braxton's "technical range" and "ability to deliver Secrets sermons of sensuality—little gospels of good and bad loving—with unusual eloquence." Robert Christgau, writing in The Village Voice, stated, "The apprentice diva of the debut was modest, composed, virtually anonymous. I'll take the right It Girl anytime—especially one who insists on getting her props." David Fricke from Rolling Stone commented, "As designer champagne 'n' anguish R&B goes, Secrets goes down nice and easy."
Commercial performance
Secrets debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 (behind Metallica's Load) and at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, selling 170,000 copies in its first week. The album was certified eight-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 3, 2000, and as of April 2011, it had sold 5,364,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. It sold an additional 927,000 copies through BMG Music Club. In Canada, the album peaked at number four on RPMs albums chart, and was certified septuple platinum by the Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA) on December 31, 1997, denoting shipments in excess of 700,000 units.
The album debuted at number 54 on the UK Albums Chart for the week ending June 29, 1996, before peaking at number 10 in its 30th week on the chart, on January 25, 1997. On April 1, 1997, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) certified Secrets double platinum for shipments of over 600,000 copies. In continental Europe, the album topped the charts in Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway, and Switzerland, while reaching the top five in Austria, Belgium, Finland, Germany, and Sweden, and the top 10 in Ireland. In Oceania, the album reached number 11 in both Australia and New Zealand; it has been certified double platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) and gold by the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RIANZ). By May 2010, Secrets had sold 15 million copies worldwide.
Track listing
Notes
signifies an additional producer
signifies a remixer
signifies a remix producer
Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Secrets.
Musicians
Toni Braxton – lead vocals, background vocals ; all vocals ; vocal arrangement
Tony Rich – arrangement, all instruments, background vocals
Marc Nelson – background vocals
Shanice Wilson – background vocals
Randy Walker – MIDI programming
Bryce Wilson – drum programming, keyboard programming
Babyface – keyboards ; guitar ; background vocals ; drum programming ; acoustic guitar, electric guitar ; synthesizers
Chanté Moore – background vocals
Jakkai Butler – background vocals
Reggie Hamilton – bass
Luis Conte – percussion
Jeremy Lubbock – string arrangement, string conducting
David Foster – arrangement, keyboard programming
Simon Franglen – Synclavier programming
Dean Parks – acoustic guitar
Michael Thompson – electric guitar ; guitar
L.A. Reid – background vocal arrangement
Tim Thomas – background vocal arrangement
Keith Crouch – arrangement, B3 organ, all other instruments, vocal arrangement
Sherree Ford-Payne – background vocals
Greg Phillinganes – piano ; Rhodes
Nathan East – bass
Kenny G – saxophone
Reggie Griffin – guitar
R. Kelly – arrangement, background vocals, all instruments
Soulshock & Karlin – arrangement
Andrea Martin – background vocals
Technical
Tony Rich – production
L.A. Reid – production ; executive production
NealHPogue – recording
Leslie Brathwaite – recording
John Frye – recording assistance
Jon Gass – mixing
Babyface – production ; executive production
Bryce Wilson – production
Brad Gilderman – recording
Russell Elevado – recording
Paul Boutin – recording assistance
Robbes Stieglitz – recording assistance
Bryan Reminic – recording assistance
"Bassy" Bob Brockmann – mixing
Kyle Bess – recording assistance
Brandon Harris – recording assistance
Richard Huredia – recording assistance
Ivy Skoff – production coordination
David Foster – production
Felipe Elgueta – recording
Mick Guzauski – mixing
Marnie Riley – mixing assistance
Keith Crouch – production, recording
Eugene Lo – recording
Booker T. Jones III – mixing
Jin Choi – recording assistance
Jon Shrive – recording assistance
Bill Kinsley – recording assistance
Brad Haehnel – recording assistance
Al Schmitt – string engineering
Glen Marchese – recording assistance
Larry Schalit – recording assistance
R. Kelly – production, mixing
Peter Mokran – recording, mixing
John Merchant – recording assistance
Frank Gonzales – recording assistance
Ron Lowe – mixing assistance
Soulshock & Karlin – production
Manny Marroquin – recording
Dave Reitzas – string engineering
Herb Powers Jr. – mastering
Toni Braxton – executive production
Artwork
Toni Braxton – creative direction
Davett Singletary – art direction
D.L. Warfield – design
Nigel Sawyer – design assistance
Randee St. Nicholas – photography
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Decade-end charts
All-time charts
Certifications and sales
Release history
Notes
References
1996 albums
Albums produced by David Foster
Albums produced by R. Kelly
Arista Records albums
LaFace Records albums
Toni Braxton albums |
The 1996 Senior British Open was a professional golf tournament for players aged 50 and above and the tenth British Senior Open Championship, held from 25 to 28 July at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Portrush, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom.
In 2018, the tournament was, as all Senior British Open Championships played 1987–2002, retroactively recognized as a senior major golf championship and a PGA Tour Champions (at the time named the Senior PGA Tour) event.
Brian Barnes won by three strokes over Bob Charles and David Oakley to successfully defend his title from 1995 and win his second Senior British Open title and senior major championship victory.
Venue
The event was the second Senior Open Championship in a row held at Royal Portrush Golf Club.
Field
105 players entered the competition. One of them withdraw. 61 players, all of them professionals, no amateurs, made the 36-hole cut and one of them was disqualified.
Past champions in the field
Seven past Senior British Open champions participated. Six of them made the 36-hole cut. Bobby Verway missed the cut by one shot.
Past winners and runners-up at The Open Championship in the field
The field included two former winners of The Open Championship, Bob Charles (tied 2nd) and Gary Player (tied 14th).
The field also included three former runners-up at The Open Championship. Neil Coles (9th), Brian Huggett (tied 18th) and Christy O'Connor Snr (tied 32nd).
Final results
Sunday, 28 July 1996
Source:
References
External links
Results on European Tour website
Senior major golf championships
Golf tournaments in Northern Ireland
Senior British Open
Senior British Open
Senior British Open |
```vue
<template>
<div class="vux-week-calendar">
<slot name="header" :current-month="currentMonth"></slot>
<swiper
class="vux-week-calendar"
v-model="index"
:show-dots="false"
:height="height"
@on-index-change="onIndexChange"
loop>
<template v-for="(item, index) in [lastWeekList, currentWeekList, nextWeekList]">
<swiper-item :data-start="item[0].format" :id="`x000${index}`">
<slot :name="`header-day-list-${index}`">
<flexbox :gutter="0">
<flexbox-item
class="vux-week-calendar-day-item"
v-for="(i, index) in ['', '', '', '', '', '', '']"
:key="index">
{{ i }}</flexbox-item>
</flexbox>
</slot>
<flexbox :gutter="0">
<flexbox-item
class="vux-week-calendar-date-item"
@click.native="onClick(i)"
:class="{
'is-weekend': i.isWeekend,
'vux-week-calendar-is-today': i.isToday,
'vux-week-calendar-is-selected': i.format === value
}"
v-for="(i, itemIndex) in item"
:key="itemIndex"
:data-date="i.format">
<div class="vux-week-calendar-each-day-box">
<slot
:name="`each-item-${index}`"
:str="i.str"
:formatedDate="i.format"
:is-weekend="i.isWeekend"
:is-today="i.isToday"
:is-selected="i.format === value"
>
<span class="vux-week-calendar-each-day" :style="getMarkStyle(i)">
{{ i.str }}
<span class="vux-week-calendar-top-tip" v-if="isShowTopTip(i)" :style="isShowTopTip(i, 'style')">
<span>{{ isShowTopTip(i, 'text') }}</span>
</span>
</span>
<span class="vux-calendar-dot" v-show="isShowBottomDot(i)"></span>
</slot>
</div>
</flexbox-item>
</flexbox>
</swiper-item>
</template>
</swiper>
</div>
</template>
<script>
import { Flexbox, FlexboxItem } from '../flexbox'
import { Swiper, SwiperItem } from '../swiper'
import dateFormat from '../../tools/date/format'
import calendarMarksMixin from '../../mixins/calendar-marks'
/**
import { Flexbox, FlexboxItem, Swiper, SwiperItem, dateFormat } from 'vux'
**/
const getNextIndex = (index) => {
if (index === 2) {
return 0
}
if (index === 0) {
return 1
}
return 2
}
const getPrevIndex = index => {
if (index === 2) {
return 1
}
if (index === 1) {
return 0
}
if (index === 0) {
return 2
}
}
const indexMap = {
0: 'last',
1: 'current',
2: 'next'
}
export default {
mixins: [calendarMarksMixin],
components: {
Swiper,
SwiperItem,
Flexbox,
FlexboxItem
},
props: {
value: String,
height: {
type: String,
default: '65px'
},
marks: {
type: Array,
default () {
return []
}
}
},
created () {
[0, 7, -7].forEach(item => {
this.getThisWeekRange(item)
})
},
mounted () {
this.index = 1
},
watch: {
value (val) {
this.currentValue = val
this.changeData(null, this.index, val)
},
currentValue (val) {
this.$emit('input', val)
this.$emit('on-change', val)
},
currentMonth (val) {
const value = this.currentMonth.split('-')
const data = {
year: value[0],
month: value[1]
}
this.$emit('on-year-month-change', data)
}
},
data () {
return {
currentValue: this.value,
index: 0,
lastWeekList: [],
currentWeekList: [],
nextWeekList: [],
startDate: dateFormat(new Date(), 'YYYY-MM-DD'),
currentMonth: '',
changeCount: -1,
hasRender: false
}
},
methods: {
switchViewToCurrentValue () {
if (this.currentValue) {
this.changeData(null, this.index, this.currentValue)
}
},
switchViewToMonth (year, month) {
this.changeData(null, this.index, `${year}-${month}-01`)
},
switchViewToToday () {
const today = dateFormat(new Date(), 'YYYY-MM-DD')
this.changeData(null, this.index, today)
},
onClick (i) {
this.currentValue = i.format
},
onIndexChange (newIndex) {
let el = document.querySelector('#x000' + newIndex)
const start = el.getAttribute('data-start')
const date = new Date(start)
this.changeData(date, newIndex)
},
changeData (date, index, value) {
// if has value, reset start
if (value) {
const _date = new Date(value.replace(/-/g, '/'))
date = new Date(_date.setDate(_date.getDate() - _date.getDay()))
this[indexMap[index] + 'WeekList'] = this.getWeekRange(new Date(date.setDate(date.getDate())))
}
this.startDate = dateFormat(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD')
const lastMonth = dateFormat(date.getTime() + 6 * 24 * 3600 * 1000, 'YYYY-MM')
this.currentMonth = lastMonth
const nextIndex = getNextIndex(index)
const nextKey = indexMap[nextIndex]
this[nextKey + 'WeekList'] = this.getWeekRange(new Date(date.setDate(date.getDate() + 7)))
const lastIndex = getPrevIndex(index)
const lastKey = indexMap[lastIndex]
this[lastKey + 'WeekList'] = this.getWeekRange(new Date(date.setDate(date.getDate() - 14)))
this.$nextTick(() => {
this.changeCount++
this.$emit('on-view-change', {
allDates: this[indexMap[this.index] + 'WeekList']
}, this.changeCount)
})
},
getCurrentDates () {
return this[indexMap[this.index] + 'WeekList']
},
getCurrentYearMonth () {
const value = this.currentMonth.split('-')
return {
year: value[0],
month: value[1]
}
},
isToday (date) {
return dateFormat(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD') === dateFormat(new Date(), 'YYYY-MM-DD')
},
isSelected (date) {
return dateFormat(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD') === this.date
},
isWeekend (date) {
return date.getDay() === 0 || date.getDay() === 6
},
getWeekRange (start) {
let rs = [{
format: dateFormat(start, 'YYYY-MM-DD'),
formatedDate: dateFormat(start, 'YYYY-MM-DD'),
date: start,
str: dateFormat(start, 'D'),
isWeekend: this.isWeekend(start),
isToday: this.isWeekend(start),
isSelected: this.isSelected(start),
_date: start.getDate()
}]
for (let i = 1; i < 7; i++) {
let current = start
current.setDate(current.getDate() + 1)
rs.push({
format: dateFormat(current, 'YYYY-MM-DD'),
date: current,
str: dateFormat(current, 'D'),
formatedDate: dateFormat(current, 'YYYY-MM-DD'),
isWeekend: this.isWeekend(current),
isToday: this.isToday(current),
isSelected: this.isSelected(current),
_date: current.getDate()
})
}
return rs
},
getThisWeekRange (day = 0, start) {
const now = start || new Date()
const firstday = new Date(now.setDate(now.getDate() - now.getDay() + day))
if (day === 0) {
this.currentWeekList = this.getWeekRange(firstday)
}
if (day === 7) {
this.nextWeekList = this.getWeekRange(firstday)
}
if (day === -7) {
this.lastWeekList = this.getWeekRange(firstday)
}
}
}
}
</script>
<style lang="less" scoped>
@import '../../styles/variable.less';
.vux-week-calendar {
background-color: @week-calendar-bg;
}
.vux-week-calendar-day-item, .vux-week-calendar-date-item {
text-align: center;
}
.vux-week-calendar-day-item {
color: @week-calendar-header-day-item-color;
}
.vux-week-calendar-each-day-box {
padding: 5px 0;
}
.vux-week-calendar-each-day-box {
position: relative;
}
.vux-week-calendar-each-day {
position: relative;
background-color: transparent;
border: 1px solid transparent;
display: inline-block;
font-size: 16px;
color: @week-calendar-each-date-item-color;
width: @week-calendar-each-date-item-size;
height: @week-calendar-each-date-item-size;
line-height: @week-calendar-each-date-item-line-height;
text-align: center;
border-radius: 50%;
box-sizing: border-box;
}
.vux-week-calendar-is-selected .vux-week-calendar-each-day {
background-color: @week-calendar-selected-item-bg-color;
color: @week-calendar-selected-item-text-color;
}
.vux-calendar-dot {
display: block;
text-align: center;
width: 5px;
height: 5px;
position: absolute;
left: 50%;
bottom: 0px;
margin-left: -2.5px;
background-color: @week-calendar-dot-color;
border-radius: 50%;
}
.vux-week-calendar-top-tip {
position: absolute;
left: -10px;
top: 0;
font-size: 20px;
transform: scale(0.5);
transform-origin: top left;
}
</style>
``` |
Stuart Uhlmann is an Australian former sprinter who won the 2002 Stawell Gift.
He was trained by Bob Cooke on the Gold Coast.
Starting from a handicap of 6.75m, Uhlmann won the 2002 Stawell Gift race in a time of 11.98 seconds to beat Greg Saddler and Idika Uduma. He previously won the Jupiters gift in 1993 and multiple gifts around the country.
He is now retired from competing, but he is currently training Jarrod Whittaker who competed at Stawell for the first time in 2015.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Australian male sprinters
Sportsmen from Queensland
Stawell Gift winners |
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<WixLocalization Culture="nl-nl" xmlns="path_to_url">
<String Id="Locale" Overridable="yes">nl</String>
<String Id="ProductName" Overridable="yes">Aspia Console</String>
<String Id="ShortcutName" Overridable="yes">Aspia Console</String>
<String Id="DowngradeErrorMessage" Overridable="yes">Er is al een nieuwere versie van de applicatie geinstalleerd.</String>
<String Id="AddressBookFile" Overridable="yes">Aspia Adresboek (.aab)</String>
<String Id="CreateDesktopShortcut" Overridable="yes">Maak bureaublad snelkoppelingen</String>
<String Id="CreateProgramMenuShortcut" Overridable="yes">Maak snelkoppelingen in het Start menu</String>
</WixLocalization>
``` |
The Sticky Fingers of Time is a 1997 American science fiction film directed by Hilary Brougher and starring Terumi Matthews, Nicole Zaray, Belinda Becker, James Urbaniak and Samantha Buck. It premiered on September 9, 1997 at the 22nd Toronto International Film Festival in the Discovery programme section.
External links
1997 films
1997 science fiction films
LGBT-related science fiction films
1997 LGBT-related films
1990s English-language films |
The Zauner OZ-5 One-Yankee is an American high-wing, T-tailed, single seat, 15 metre class glider that was designed and constructed by Otto Zauner.
Design and development
Zauner designed a new fuselage and tail surfaces to mate with a set of Schreder RS-15 wings that he had built, producing a new aircraft.
The stock RS-15 wings of span are built from foam and sheet aluminium and feature flaps and a Schreder 1 airfoil, which is a modified Wortmann section. The fuselage consists of a welded steel tube cockpit cage, surrounded by a fiberglass shell. The rear fuselage is tapered and is made from sheet aluminium, as are the tail surfaces. The fin is highly swept and mounts the tailplane and elevators in T-tail configuration. The wings are carefully faired into the fuselage using integral fuselage fillets. The landing gear is a retractable monowheel.
Only one OZ-5 was built and it was registered in 1974 with the Federal Aviation Administration in the Experimental - Amateur-built category.
Operational history
The designer completed two diamond badge legs in the OZ-5. As of July 2011 the aircraft remained on the FAA registry, still owned by Zauner.
Specifications (OZ-5)
See also
References
1970s United States sailplanes
Homebuilt aircraft |
is a passenger railway station located in the town of Tadotsu, Nakatado District, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number "Y13".
Lines
Kaiganji Station is served by the JR Shikoku Yosan Line and is located 36.5 km from the beginning of the line at Takamatsu. Dosan line local, Rapid Sunport, and Nanpū Relay services stop at the station. Dosan line local, Rapid Sunport, and Nanpū Relay services stop at the station. In addition, there are two trains a day running a local service on the Seto-Ōhashi Line which stop at the station. These run in one direction only, from to .
Layout
The station, which is unstaffed, consists of an island platform serving two tracks. A station building serves as a waiting room with an automatic ticket vending machine. Access to the island platform is by means of a footbridge. A siding branches off on the side of platform 1.
Adjacent stations
History
Kaiganji Station opened on 20 December 1913 as an intermediate stop when the track of the then Sanuki Line was extended westwards from to . At that time the station was operated by Japanese Government Railways, later becoming Japanese National Railways (JNR). With the privatization of JNR on 1 April 1987, control of the station passed to JR Shikoku.
Surrounding area
Kaigan-ji Temple
Kaiganji Beach
See also
List of railway stations in Japan
References
External links
Station timetable
Railway stations in Kagawa Prefecture
Railway stations in Japan opened in 1913
Tadotsu, Kagawa |
The .44 Russian, also known as the .44 S&W Russian, is a black-powder center-fire metallic revolver cartridge developed and produced by Smith & Wesson in 1870. The .44 Russian design was the first use of an internally lubricated bullet in modern firearm ammunition.
Development history
In the early 1870s, General Alexander Gorloff, the military attaché assigned to the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., approached Smith & Wesson about the possibility of negotiating a military sales contract for the purchase of a large number of Smith & Wesson Model 3 revolvers for the Imperial Russian Army.
However, Gorloff had some reservations about the standard .44 S&W American chambering of the pistol which, similar to today's .22 long rifle, had an externally lubricated heeled bullet. Gorloff correctly recognized that such ammunition tends to pick up debris and contaminants which erode the bore when fired, so a qualification of the purchase contract was that Smith & Wesson develop an internally lubricated version of their .44 round.
Smith & Wesson did so by reducing the diameter of the .44 bullet to .429 and adding lubrication grooves to its base. This evolutionary improvement became an archetype, influencing future cartridge designs. With improved firearm metallurgy available, Smith & Wesson increased the bullet weight of the new cartridge to 246 grains while retaining a heavy 23-grain black-powder propellant charge, which almost equaled that of the .44 American and produced a muzzle velocity of roughly 750 ft/s. As a result of these changes, the .44 Russian generated a much higher chamber pressure of 12,000 copper units of pressure (CUP) compared to the older .44 American round, which generated only 6,000–8,000 CUP. To prevent the new high-pressure ammunition from being fired in .44 American revolvers with disastrous results, the overall cartridge case length was increased by .06 in to 0.970 in. In addition, the cylinder design of the No. 3 revolver had to be changed from the straight bored .44 American configuration to a stepped arrangement which was .457 in at the rear of the cylinder to accept the case, and narrower from the case shoulder forward to give a tight fit for the smaller bore .44 Russian bullet.
In 1872, while in the US, Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich visited the Smith & Wesson factory to review the progress of the Russian order. The American gun maker made him the gift of an engraved presentation Model 3 valued at more than $400 (). The Duke was also feted with a US government–paid buffalo hunting trip with Buffalo Bill Cody and US generals Philip Sheridan and George Armstrong Custer, where he was impressed with Cody's adeptness with firearms.
Over 131,000 S&W Model 3 revolvers were eventually sold to the Russian Army. In addition to the S&W-made revolvers, Belgian-, Spanish- and German-made copies were adopted by several European countries and were used until the 1920s. The .44 Russian chambering became a hit in the domestic market as well, gaining a reputation as the first American revolver cartridge offering inherent accuracy. In time it set many records, eventually becoming known as an established target round, enabling skilled shooters to achieve groups at ; notable for the time and still impressive today.
Successor designs
The .44 Russian was the parent cartridge for the .44 Special introduced in 1907, which in turn was the parent to the .44 Magnum in 1956.
Current loadings
A number of ammunition companies still manufacture .44 Russian ammunition:
Black Hills Cowboy action ammunition 210 grain lead flat point
Fiocchi ammunition 247 grain lead round nose
Ten-X ammunition blank BPC
Ten-X ammunition 200 grain lead round nose and flat point
JMJ Smith Ammo Inc. ammunition 200 grain lead round nose, flat point
Additionally, Starline Brass makes new, unprimed cartridge cases in .44 Russian for handloaders.
See also
List of handgun cartridges
References
External links
1870 introductions
Pistol and rifle cartridges
Military cartridges
Smith & Wesson cartridges |
Osborne House is a former royal residence in East Cowes, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom. The house was built between 1845 and 1851 for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as a summer home and rural retreat. Albert designed the house himself, in the style of an Italian Renaissance palazzo. The builder was Thomas Cubitt, the London architect and builder whose company built the main facade of Buckingham Palace for the royal couple in 1847. An earlier smaller house on the Osborne site was demolished to make way for the new and far larger house, though the original entrance portico survives as the main gateway to the walled garden.
Queen Victoria died at Osborne House on 22 January 1901, aged 81. Following her death, King Edward VII, who had never liked Osborne, presented the house to the state on the day of his coronation, with the royal pavilion being retained as a private museum to Victoria. From 1903 to 1921, part of the estate around the stables was used as a junior officer training college for the Royal Navy, known as the Royal Naval College, Osborne. Another section of the house was used as a convalescent home for officers. In 1933, many of the temporary buildings at Osborne were demolished. In 1954, Queen Elizabeth II gave permission for the first floor rooms (the private apartments) in the royal pavilion to be opened to the public. In 1986, English Heritage assumed management of Osborne House. In 1989, the second floor of the house was also opened to the public.
The house is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England, and the landscaped park and gardens are listed Grade II* on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
History
Royal retreat
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert bought Osborne House on the Isle of Wight from Lady Isabella Blachford in October 1845. They wanted a home removed from the stresses of court life. Victoria had spent two holidays on the Isle of Wight as a young girl, when her mother, the Duchess of Kent, rented Norris Castle, the estate adjacent to Osborne. The setting of the three-storey Georgian house appealed to Victoria and Albert, in particular, the views of the Solent reminding Albert of the Bay of Naples in Italy. They soon realised that the house was too small for their needs and decided to replace the house with a new, larger residence.
The new Osborne House was built between 1845 and 1851 in the Italian Renaissance style, complete with two belvedere towers. Prince Albert designed the house himself in conjunction with Thomas Cubitt, the London architect and builder, whose company also built the main façade of Buckingham Palace. The couple paid for much of the furnishing of the new house from the sale of the Royal Pavilion at Brighton. The Prince Consort participated directly in laying out the estate, gardens and woodlands, to prove his knowledge of forestry and landscaping. At the more official royal residences, he had been overruled by the Commissioners of Woods and Forests, who had official responsibilities for the grounds. Below the gardens on Osborne Bay was a private beach, where the Queen kept her own private bathing machine. According to a news report: "The queen's bathing machine was unusually ornate, with a front veranda and curtains which would conceal her until she had entered the water. The interior had a changing room and a plumbed-in WC."
The original square wing of the house was known as "The Pavilion", containing the principal and royal apartments on the ground and first floors, respectively. The principal apartments, particularly, hold reminders of Victoria's dynastic links with the other European royal families. The Billiard Room holds a massive porcelain vase that was a gift of the Russian Tsar. The Billiard Room, Queen's Dining Room, and the Drawing Room on the ground floor all express grandeur.
In marked contrast is the more homely and unassuming décor of the royal apartments on the first floor. They include the Prince's Dressing Room, the Queen's Sitting Room, the Queen's Bedroom, and the children's nurseries. Intended for private, domestic use, the rooms were made as comfortable as possible. Both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were determined to bring up their children in a natural and loving environment. They allowed the royal children to visit their parents' bedrooms frequently, at a time when children of aristocrats often lived at a remove from their parents in nurseries, only joining them occasionally in public rooms, rather than in shared intimate spaces.
The main wing was added later. It contains the household accommodation and council and audience chambers, as well as a suite for Victoria's mother. The final addition to the house was a wing, built between 1890 and 1891, designed by John Lockwood Kipling, father of the poet Rudyard Kipling. The ground floor includes the famous Durbar Room, named after an Anglicised version of the Hindi word durbar, meaning court. The Durbar Room was built for state functions. It was decorated by Bhai Ram Singh in an elaborate and intricate style, and has a carpet from Agra. It now holds gifts Queen Victoria received on her Golden and Diamond jubilees. They include engraved silver and copper vases, Indian armour, and a model of an Indian palace. The first floor of the new wing was for the sole use of Princess Beatrice and her family. Beatrice was the Queen's youngest daughter, and she lived near Victoria during her life.
Osborne House expresses numerous associations with the British Raj and India, housing a collection of paintings of Indian persons and scenes, painted at Queen Victoria's request by Rudolf Swoboda. These include depictions of Indians resident or visiting Britain in the 19th century, and scenes painted in India when Swoboda traveled there to create such works.
The royal family stayed at Osborne for lengthy periods each year: in the spring for Victoria's birthday in May; in July and August when they celebrated Albert's birthday; and just before Christmas. In a break from the past, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert allowed photographers and painters to make works featuring their family in the grounds and in the house. That was partly for their own enjoyment and partly as a form of public relations, to demonstrate to the nation their character as a happy and devoted family. Many thousands of prints of the royal family were sold to the public, which led Victoria to remark, "no Sovereign was ever more loved than I am (I am bold enough to say)." Writing to her daughter Princess Victoria in 1858 about the gloominess of Windsor Castle, Queen Victoria stated, "I long for our cheerful and unpalacelike rooms at Osborne."
The grounds also included a "Swiss Cottage" for the royal children. The cottage was dismantled and brought piece by piece from Switzerland to Osborne where it was reassembled. There, the royal children were encouraged to garden. Each child was given a rectangular plot in which to grow fruit, vegetables and flowers. They sold their produce to their father. Prince Albert used this as a way to teach the basics of economics. The children also learned to cook in the Swiss Cottage, which was equipped with a fully functioning kitchen. Both parents saw this kind of education as a way of grounding their children in the activities of daily life shared by the people in the kingdom despite their royal status.
In 1859, Prince Albert designed a new and larger quadrangular stable block, which was built by Cubitts on the former cricket pitch. The building is listed Grade II* on the National Heritage List for England. After Prince Albert died at Windsor Castle in December 1861, Queen Victoria continued to visit Osborne House because it was one of her favourite homes. In 1876, as a tribute to Queen Victoria, the Government House in the colony (now State) of Victoria, Australia, was constructed as a copy of Osborne House.
On 14 January 1878, Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated an early version of the telephone to the queen at Osborne House, placing calls to Cowes, Southampton and London. They were the first publicly witnessed long-distance telephone calls in Britain. The queen tried the device and considered the process to be "quite extraordinary" although the sound was "rather faint". She later asked to buy the equipment that was used, but Bell offered to make "a set of telephones" specifically for her.
National gift
Queen Victoria died at Osborne on 22 January 1901, with two generations of her family present. Although she adored Osborne, and her will left strict instructions that Osborne was to remain in the family, her children did not share the attachment. Princess Beatrice and Princess Louise were granted houses on the estate. Edward VII presented Osborne to the nation on his Coronation Day in August 1902. The royal apartments on the upper floors of the pavilion wing, including the late Queen's bedroom, were turned into a private museum accessible only to the royal family.
Later uses
Royal Naval College, 1903–1921
In 1903, the new stable block became a junior officer training college for the Royal Navy known as the Royal Naval College, Osborne. Initial training began at about the age of 13, and after two years studies were continued at the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. The college closed in 1921, with the last students leaving on 9 April 1921. Former students of Osborne included Queen Victoria's great-grandsons, the future Edward VIII and George VI, and their younger brother George, Duke of Kent. Another well-known alumnus of the college was Jack Llewelyn Davies, one of the five Llewelyn Davies boys who inspired J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. The case of George Archer-Shee from 1908, who was expelled from Osborne after being falsely accused of stealing a 5-shilling postal order, inspired the play The Winslow Boy.
Military convalescent home
During World War I, the secondary wings of Osborne House were used as an officers' convalescent home. Robert Graves and A. A. Milne were two famous patients. Known as the King Edward VII Retirement Home for Officers, it later accommodated convalescents from military and civil service backgrounds, including retired officers of the British armed services until 2000.
Thomas Cubitt
Thomas Cubitt was one of the most renowned architects of the 19th century, known as "the Emperor of the building trade".
Prince Albert, impressed with his previous works, commissioned him to rebuild Osborne House. Cubitt and Prince Albert worked hand in hand in constructing and designing the house, creating the mix of Palladian architecture and Italian renaissance style. Cubitt not only designed the structure but also implemented many of his own features into the house from his own workshops. As well as the doors and fireplaces of his own design, he also incorporated his own patterns for the plaster within the house.
The design of Osborne House is stately and intended for royalty, but it is not so grand that it is unwelcoming. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert wanted an escape from the stuffiness of Buckingham Palace; they wanted a home for their children to feel free and welcome. Once Osborne House was complete, they commissioned Cubitt to build the east wing of Buckingham Palace. Victoria admired Cubitt not only for his work on Osborne House but also for his character. She referred to him as "our Cubitt" and on his death said that "a better, kinder-hearted man never breathed".
Preservation
Since 1986, Osborne House has been under the care of English Heritage. It is open to the public. The house is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England, and the landscaped park and gardens are listed Grade II* on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
The former Naval College's cricket pavilion was converted into a holiday cottage in 2004. Since 2005, the house has occasionally hosted picnic-style concerts on the lawn outside the main house.
Queen Victoria's private beach at Osborne, including her personal bathing machine, was opened to the public for the first time in July 2012, following an extensive restoration programme.
References
Sources
Further reading
2nd edition.
Sarah, Duchess of York (1991). Victoria and Albert: Life at Osborne House London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
External links
Old pictures of Osborne House and area
7/20/1907; Osborne College: An English Naval School (purchase required)
Osborne House information for tourists
Country houses on the Isle of Wight
East Cowes
English Heritage sites in the Isle of Wight
Gardens on the Isle of Wight
Grade I listed buildings on the Isle of Wight
Grade I listed houses
Grade II* listed parks and gardens
Historic house museums on the Isle of Wight
Italianate architecture in England
Royal residences in England |
```shell
Adding a remote repository
What is a checksum?
How to set your username and email
Check the status of your files
Recover lost code
``` |
Van Wie or Vanwie or variation, may refer to:
Van Wie Creek, a tributary of the Mohawk River in New York State, US
People
David Van Wie (born 1964) U.S. inventor
Derrick Vanwie, a member of the hardcore band One King Down
Joel VanWie, a member of the pop-punk band The Last Sleepless City
Virginia Van Wie (1909-1997) U.S. golfer
See also
Wie (disambiguation)
Van (disambiguation)
Van Wieren, a surname |
Grouville is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey in the Channel Islands. The parish is around east of St Helier. The parish covers a surface area of 4,354 vergées (7.8 km²). The parish includes the south-east portion of the main island of the Bailiwick of Jersey, as well as the Minquiers islets several miles to the south, and is dominated by the broad sweep of the Royal Bay of Grouville. It borders St. Clement, St. Saviour and St. Martin.
History
The parish of Grouville shares, with the neighbouring parish of St. Martin, a dedication to St. Martin of Tours. The ecclesiastical parish and parish church are dedicated to "St. Martin de Grouville" to distinguish them from the parish of St. Martin (historically 'St. Martin le Vieux'). The Church of St Peter la Rocque was built in the 19th century.
The name 'Grouville' may derive from:
the small community established in what is now the parish by St Gerou (also known as Gervold or Geraldius), an ecclesiastical troubleshooter in the employ of Charlemagne in the 9th century AD;
Gros Villa (great farm)
Geirr, the Viking leader after whom the Island may be named.
the name Groult or Gueroult is often found today in Normandy and is believed to derive from the ancient probably Norman name Gueroalt (Geirroalt)
The Royal Bay of Grouville gained its royal epithet when it impressed Queen Victoria during her visit in 1846. The bay is popular with tourists for its broad sandy beach and shallow, warm water. It is also the main oyster producing area of Jersey, and was also formerly noted for the production of vraic (seaweed fertiliser). The cottage industry formerly practised by Grouvillais of burning vraic gave rise to the traditional nickname of les Enfuntchis (the smoky ones, or the dim ones, in Jèrriais) shared by the Grouvillais and their neighbours in St. Clement.
Inland, the parish is also home to Jersey's most noted archaeological site at La Hougue Bie, now a museum run by the Jersey Heritage Trust. A prehistoric artificial mound covers a passage grave aligned for the equinox. A mediaeval chapel, Notre Dame de la Clarté, built on the Neolithic mound was converted in the 18th century to a folly-like Gothic Revival residence, the Prince's Tower (demolished in the 1920s). During the German occupation of the Channel Islands in the Second World War, the German forces and imported labourers constructed bunkers in and alongside the ancient mound, now also transformed for museum interpretation.
La Rocque was the site of the landing of the French forces on 6 January 1781. The skirmish at La Platte Rocque was ancillary to the Battle of Jersey.
Governance
The parish is a first-level administrative division of the Bailiwick of Jersey, a British Crown dependency. The highest official in the parish is the of Grouville. The incumbent office holder is John Le Maistre, who has held the office since 2013. The parish administration is headquartered at the Parish Hall next to the parish church.
At present, the parish forms one electoral district for States Assembly elections and elects one Deputy, as well as eight Senators in an islandwide constituency. The current Deputy for Grouville is Carolyn Labey. Under the proposed electoral reform, it will form part of the North East electoral district consisting of St. Martin and Grouville, which will collectively elect three representatives (the least of any constituency) alongside the parishes' .
Grouville is divided for administrative purposes into vingtaines as follows:
La Vingtaine des Marais
La Vingtaine de la Rue
La Vingtaine de Longueville
La Vingtaine de la Rocque
Geography
The main part of the parish is in the south-east of the island of Jersey, part of the Channel Islands archipelago. It borders St. Clement, St. Saviour and St. Martin. The parish hall is located around east of the Royal Square in St Helier. The parish is dominated by the sweeping Royal Bay of Grouville (part of which is often called Gorey Bay), stretching from Mont Orgeuil Castle in St. Martin, which dominates the skyline to the north, out to the sea in the south at La Rocque. It is the third smallest parish, only measuring 8 square kilometres (4560 vergées). The Minquiers are also part of the parish of Grouville.
The parish is quite urbanised, with 22% of the parish built-up, but is also quite an agricultural parish. Its mix of land uses can be compared closely to that of St. Lawrence. The parish population is mostly located along the coastal part to the east of La Grande Route des Sablons along the coast, with the 'village centre' of the parish located at Ville-ès-Renauds, which has a number of shops and the parish school. Further inland, the parish rises up to the Mont de Grouville. The parish church and hall are located further inland at the foot of the hill along the main road to St. Helier. The parish also includes the more residential 'village' part of Gorey, with the more touristic 'pier' part in St. Martin.
Demography
Culture and community
The parish is makes up the majority of the catchment area for its namesake primary school, however which also takes students from a small part of St. Martin. Grouville Primary School is a feeder school for Le Rocquier.
The parish features a large golf course, known as the Royal Jersey Golf Course, however lacks any other significant sporting facilities.
Economy
In modern times, Grouville has been a popular holiday destination, and features a number of hotels. These include the Beausite Hotel, which is a later 20th century structure but incorporates a small structure dating back to 1636 which now serves as the hotel's bar.
Landmarks
The Royal Jersey Golf Club is located on Grouville Common. It was founded in 1878 and granted its royal charter by Queen Victoria. The Pembroke Hotel, near the 16th tee, was a former clubhouse, once called the 'Golf Inn'. During the Occupation, the course was turned into a mine field. There are two German gun emplacements along the opening hole. The club's most famous player is Harry Vardon; he won the Open Championship a record six times.
Within the Royal Bay, there are a number of Martello towers, built during the Napoleonic Wars, including the offshore Seymour and Icho towers.
Queen's Valley () is located in the north of the parish, very partly shared with St Saviour. In 1987, it was described as "left unspoiled, with just one very minor road traversing it". There were once three water mills along its length, recorded as early 1274. Both Victor Hugo and George Eliot have written about the valley.
In 1976, the Jersey water company proposed to flood the valley to increase water storage capacity. This was met with protests; three campaign groups - Concern, Friends of Queen's Valley and Save our Valley - were supported by thousands of islanders opposing the flooding, with alternative suggestions such as capping the population at 80,000, installing water meters and desalination. TV presenter David Bellamy led a protest walk attended by 2,000 islanders. However in 1986, in the tenth States debate on the matter, the States agreed to flood the valley in the face of possible water shortages, were new capacity not provided. The reservoir opened in November 1991 and has a capacity of 1,193 megalitres (enough to supply the whole island for 48 days). It is two reservoirs and there is a public footpath encircling both reservoirs, with natural flora and fauna.
Twin towns
Grouville is twinned with:
Port-Bail, Normandy
Notable people
John George Bourinot (elder) (1814-1884), politician
Lucy Nettie Fletcher (1886-1918), nurse
Ruby Ray (1881–after 1973), stage actress
Harry Vardon (1870-1937), golfer
References
External links |
Mali Kablići is a village in the city of Livno in Canton 10, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Demographics
According to the 2013 census, its population was 173.
Footnotes
Bibliography
Populated places in Livno |
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</span><a class='srclink' href='../../../src/mentat_ffi/utils.rs.html#32-37' title='goto source code'>[src]</a></span></h1><pre class='rust fn'>pub fn kw_from_string(keyword_string: &'static <a class="primitive" href="path_to_url">str</a>) -> <a class="struct" href="../../../edn/symbols/struct.Keyword.html" title="struct edn::symbols::Keyword">Keyword</a></pre></section>
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```smalltalk
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
namespace Microsoft.Build.Framework;
/// <summary>
/// Generic custom build events including extended data for event enriching.
/// Extended data are implemented by <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs"/>
/// </summary>
public sealed class ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs : BuildMessageEventArgs, IExtendedBuildEventArgs
{
/// <inheritdoc />
public string ExtendedType { get; set; }
/// <inheritdoc />
public IDictionary<string, string?>? ExtendedMetadata { get; set; }
/// <inheritdoc />
public string? ExtendedData { get; set; }
/// <summary>
/// Default constructor. Used for deserialization.
/// </summary>
internal ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs() : this("undefined") { }
/// <summary>
/// This constructor specifies only type of extended data.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor allows all event data to be initialized
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance)
: base(message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor allows a timestamp to be set
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
/// <param name="eventTimestamp">Timestamp when event was created</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance, DateTime eventTimestamp)
: base(message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance, eventTimestamp) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor allows a timestamp to be set
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
/// <param name="eventTimestamp">Timestamp when event was created</param>
/// <param name="messageArgs">message arguments</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance, DateTime eventTimestamp, params object[]? messageArgs)
: base(message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance, eventTimestamp, messageArgs) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor allows all event data to be initialized
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="subcategory">event sub-category</param>
/// <param name="code">event code</param>
/// <param name="file">file associated with the event</param>
/// <param name="lineNumber">line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="columnNumber">column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endLineNumber">end line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endColumnNumber">end column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? subcategory, string? code, string? file, int lineNumber, int columnNumber, int endLineNumber, int endColumnNumber,
string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance)
: base(subcategory, code, file, lineNumber, columnNumber, endLineNumber, endColumnNumber, message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor which allows a timestamp to be set
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="subcategory">event sub-category</param>
/// <param name="code">event code</param>
/// <param name="file">file associated with the event</param>
/// <param name="lineNumber">line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="columnNumber">column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endLineNumber">end line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endColumnNumber">end column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
/// <param name="eventTimestamp">Timestamp when event was created</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? subcategory, string? code, string? file, int lineNumber, int columnNumber, int endLineNumber, int endColumnNumber,
string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance, DateTime eventTimestamp)
: base(subcategory, code, file, lineNumber, columnNumber, endLineNumber, endColumnNumber, message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance, eventTimestamp) => ExtendedType = type;
/// <summary>
/// This constructor which allows a timestamp to be set
/// </summary>
/// <param name="type">Type of <see cref="IExtendedBuildEventArgs.ExtendedType"/>.</param>
/// <param name="subcategory">event sub-category</param>
/// <param name="code">event code</param>
/// <param name="file">file associated with the event</param>
/// <param name="lineNumber">line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="columnNumber">column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endLineNumber">end line number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="endColumnNumber">end column number (0 if not applicable)</param>
/// <param name="message">text message</param>
/// <param name="helpKeyword">help keyword </param>
/// <param name="senderName">name of event sender</param>
/// <param name="importance">importance of the message</param>
/// <param name="eventTimestamp">Timestamp when event was created</param>
/// <param name="messageArgs">message arguments</param>
public ExtendedBuildMessageEventArgs(string type, string? subcategory, string? code, string? file, int lineNumber, int columnNumber, int endLineNumber, int endColumnNumber,
string? message, string? helpKeyword, string? senderName, MessageImportance importance, DateTime eventTimestamp, params object[]? messageArgs)
: base(subcategory, code, file, lineNumber, columnNumber, endLineNumber, endColumnNumber, message, helpKeyword, senderName, importance, eventTimestamp, messageArgs) => ExtendedType = type;
}
``` |
```go
package heap
import "jvmgo/ch09/classfile"
type ClassRef struct {
SymRef
}
func newClassRef(cp *ConstantPool, classInfo *classfile.ConstantClassInfo) *ClassRef {
ref := &ClassRef{}
ref.cp = cp
ref.className = classInfo.Name()
return ref
}
``` |
Dreamers (stylized as DREAMERS) is an American pop rock band, featuring Nick Wold, Marc Nelson and touring members Jessica Goodwin and Ari Tibi.
History
Formation and first EP (2014)
Nick Wold moved from Seattle to New York at the age of 18 to study jazz saxophone at New York University's Steinhardt School. In New York, Wold was the lead singer and guitarist in the grunge band Motive, along with drummer Chris Bagamery, bassist Andrew McGovern, and lead guitarist David Leondi. McGovern, Bagamery, and Wold were longtime friends from Seattle who grew up playing jazz together. Wold met Leondi at NYU, and the trio became a quartet. Hailed as "The Strokes 2.0", Motive shared the stage with The Vaccines, Walk The Moon, Bear Hands, and were featured on MTV2's show 120 Minutes with Matt Pinfield, The New York Times, NYLON guys, and CBS News. The band toured the US several times, and had 9 showcases at SXSW in 2013.
Following the dissolution of Motive, Wold was living and writing songs in a Brooklyn rehearsal space. He and Bagamery met bassist Marc Nelson (known only by his surname), and the three teamed up to form the band.
Their first single, "Wolves (You Got Me)", was released on July 16, 2014, and was in rotation on Sirius XM's Alt Nation. It was included on their self-titled debut EP, produced by Danny Kalb, which was recorded at Ravensworth Studio outside Charlottesville, Virginia, and released on November 18, 2014. The four-track EP was streamed on Billboard a week ahead of its release date. In 2014, Alternative Press named Dreamers one of their 100 Bands You Need To Know.
You Are Here and This Album Does Not Exist (2015–2016)
In February 2015, Dreamers signed a deal with Fairfax Recordings. Drummer Jacob Lee Wick joined the band at the end of 2015, replacing Bagamery after they relocated to Los Angeles. That year, the trio started recording tracks with producer Kevin Agunas for their debut LP. On December 3, 2015, they released the video for their second single, "Shooting Shadows", off their second EP, You Are Here. The song was written by Wold and Atlas Genius lead singer Keith Jeffery. On February 5, 2016, You Are Here was released on Fairfax Recordings. It included their first single, "Wolves (You Got Me)", their new single "Drugs", and three additional tracks. The video for "Drugs" premiered on Billboard on March 2, 2016.
The first single off their debut LP This Album Does Not Exist was "Sweet Disaster", released on June 24, 2016. The album was released on August 26, 2016. Much of the album was written by Wold in Brooklyn before the band's relocation to Los Angeles.
EPs and Launch Fly Land (2018)
On July 13, 2018, Dreamers released Launch, a four-song EP. The EP serves as the first of a trilogy of releases. The album cover displays a picture of a SpaceX Falcon 9 at liftoff with a purple hue.
On September 7, 2018, Dreamers released Fly, a five-song EP and the second in the trilogy. It features the single "All Washed Out" and a stripped-down version of the single "Screws".
On February 21, 2019, "Die Happy" was released as the first single from what fans assumed was a third EP. However, on April 4, 2019, the band announced that their second album, Launch Fly Land, would be released April 26, 2019, which includes "Die Happy", and released the second single from the album, "Insomniac".
In April 2020, Dreamers released a new rendition of their single "Heat Seeker" with vocals from Grandson. The solo version is featured in the video game Just Dance 2021.
On April 1, 2022, ahead of their release of single "Black Confetti", Dreamers announced that drummer Jacob Lee Wick would be leaving the band.
On June 2, 2023, the band announced that they would be leaving the Dodging Sunshine tour prematurely due to a family emergency.
Band members
Nick Wold – lead vocals, guitar
Marc Nelson - bass
Jessica Goodwin (touring member) - Drummer
Ari Tibi (touring member) - Instrumentalist
Performances
Dreamers were selected to open for Stone Temple Pilots on their US tour in April and May 2015, at venues including The Fillmore in San Francisco, Aztec Theatre in San Antonio, House of Blues in Chicago, Irving Plaza in New York City and at SunFest in West Palm Beach. They were picked out of 500 bands who submitted to be the opener.
From December 2015 through April 2016, Dreamers went on tour across North America. This included their first foray into Canada, where they co-headlined with Arkells, joining the band onstage to perform a cover of George Harrison's version of "Got My Mind Set on You". The bands also covered David Bowie's "Modern Love" together, and Dreamers have separately covered Blind Melon's "No Rain".
Dreamers have also played with Atlas Genius, Civil Twilight, The Airborne Toxic Event, The Mowgli's, Young Rising Sons, The Vaccines, Weezer, Catfish and the Bottlemen, and All Time Low. They played Lollapalooza 2016 in Chicago, and have also put in appearances at Bumbershoot, Firefly, and Coachella along the way, and they went on a full US tour with The Griswolds in 2017 as well as with Night Riots in support of The Maine later that year. In 2018, they joined New Politics, alongside The Wrecks, on their Lost In Translation tour, named after their third album. In the fall of 2018, Dreamers went on their first US headlining tour with Weathers, Morgxn, and Rad Horror. February and March 2019 took them on a multi-city trip around the States for the North American leg of You Me At Six's international tour for their album VI. In 2019, they opened for Dirty Heads and 311.
Discography
Albums
Extended plays
Singles
As lead artists
As featuring artists
Music videos
"My Little Match" (2014, dir. Micah Weisberg & Bill Dvorak)
"Waste My Night" (2014, did. Frank Young)
"Wolves (You Got Me)" (2015, dir. Nikolai Vanyo)
"Shooting Shadows" (2015, dir. Frank Young)
"Drugs" (2016, dir. Frank Young)
"Sweet Disaster" (2017, dir. Nic Collins)
"Painkiller" (2017)
"Screws" (2018, dir. Nick Wold) - [feat. cameos from members of Papa Roach, The Griswolds, Joywave, The Mowgli's, Mainland, Weathers, Rad Horror, Gnash, Morgxn, Matt Pinfield, as well as a screeching DeLorean (time machine)]
"Die Happy" (2019, dir. Nick Wold)
"Desensitize" (2019, dir. Phil Knott)
"Heat Seeker" (2020, dir. Nick Wold)
"Heat Seeker" ft. grandson (2020, dir. Andrew William Ralph)
"True Crime" ft. DeathbyRomy (2020, dir. Jared Asher Harris)
"Still Not Dead" ft. American Teeth, Wes Period (2021, dir. Joe Striff)
"Palm Reader" ft. Big Boi, UPSAHL (2021, dir. Samuel Halleen and Joe Striffler)
"Body Language" (2022, dir. Joe Mischo)
Collaborations
Featured on Micky James' single "Rest of the Best" (November 2018, Dirty Canvas Records)
Notes
References
External links
instagram.com/dreamersjoinus
twitter.com/dreamersjoinus
open.spotify.com/artist/1FgsVeOhRYuSw2ghkIXV0A
American pop music groups
Indie pop groups from Los Angeles
Indie rock musical groups from New York (state)
Musical groups established in 2014
Musical groups from Brooklyn
Musical groups from Los Angeles
American musical trios
21st-century American musicians
2014 establishments in New York City |
```python
# coding: utf-8
"""
Kubernetes
No description provided (generated by Openapi Generator path_to_url # noqa: E501
The version of the OpenAPI document: release-1.30
Generated by: path_to_url
"""
import pprint
import re # noqa: F401
import six
from kubernetes.client.configuration import Configuration
class V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus(object):
"""NOTE: This class is auto generated by OpenAPI Generator.
Ref: path_to_url
Do not edit the class manually.
"""
"""
Attributes:
openapi_types (dict): The key is attribute name
and the value is attribute type.
attribute_map (dict): The key is attribute name
and the value is json key in definition.
"""
openapi_types = {
'user_info': 'V1UserInfo'
}
attribute_map = {
'user_info': 'userInfo'
}
def __init__(self, user_info=None, local_vars_configuration=None): # noqa: E501
"""V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus - a model defined in OpenAPI""" # noqa: E501
if local_vars_configuration is None:
local_vars_configuration = Configuration()
self.local_vars_configuration = local_vars_configuration
self._user_info = None
self.discriminator = None
if user_info is not None:
self.user_info = user_info
@property
def user_info(self):
"""Gets the user_info of this V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus. # noqa: E501
:return: The user_info of this V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus. # noqa: E501
:rtype: V1UserInfo
"""
return self._user_info
@user_info.setter
def user_info(self, user_info):
"""Sets the user_info of this V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus.
:param user_info: The user_info of this V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus. # noqa: E501
:type: V1UserInfo
"""
self._user_info = user_info
def to_dict(self):
"""Returns the model properties as a dict"""
result = {}
for attr, _ in six.iteritems(self.openapi_types):
value = getattr(self, attr)
if isinstance(value, list):
result[attr] = list(map(
lambda x: x.to_dict() if hasattr(x, "to_dict") else x,
value
))
elif hasattr(value, "to_dict"):
result[attr] = value.to_dict()
elif isinstance(value, dict):
result[attr] = dict(map(
lambda item: (item[0], item[1].to_dict())
if hasattr(item[1], "to_dict") else item,
value.items()
))
else:
result[attr] = value
return result
def to_str(self):
"""Returns the string representation of the model"""
return pprint.pformat(self.to_dict())
def __repr__(self):
"""For `print` and `pprint`"""
return self.to_str()
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Returns true if both objects are equal"""
if not isinstance(other, V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus):
return False
return self.to_dict() == other.to_dict()
def __ne__(self, other):
"""Returns true if both objects are not equal"""
if not isinstance(other, V1alpha1SelfSubjectReviewStatus):
return True
return self.to_dict() != other.to_dict()
``` |
Kankuamo, Cancuamo, or Kankui may refer to:
Kankuamo people, an ethnic group of Colombia
Kankuamo language, a language of Colombia
Kankuamo (spider), a genus of spiders |
Jim Ball is an Australian radio personality, formerly broadcasting with the 2GB and 2UE networks in Sydney.
Biography
Ball's program typically consists of him discussing various issues (especially current events, politics and history) with callers. Ball is frank and does not shy away from politically incorrect topics. Like most radio announcers on the AM band in Sydney, Ball is politically conservative; he claims to represent traditional Australian values. According to Ball, the major threats to these values are a naive and uninformed view of Islam by many Australians (including the media), apathy and political correctness. Ball is also a staunch critic of multiculturalism and says that immigrants to Australia should be encouraged to integrate into mainstream Australia and accept "core Australian values".
Ball began on 2GB in 1999 and constantly won the ratings in the midnight to dawn shift. On 7 March 2008 Ball announced to his audience his resignation from 2GB and was replaced by David Oldfield. Ball took over 2UE's midnight to dawn program "New Day Australia" on 17 March, replacing Clive Robertson. On 12 March 2010, Ball unexpectedly resigned from 2UE and returned to 2GB on 12 April replacing Oldfield.
In 2004, Ball walked the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea.
In 2005, he was featured on ABC TV's Media Watch regarding comments he made about a fictional school.
In January 2011, Ball resigned from 2GB and MTR 1377.
Political career
In April 2016 Ball announced he would contest the seat of Mackellar at the 2016 federal election, on a conservative independent platform. Ball's announcement followed the Liberal Party's endorsement of Jason Falinski, a former activist for Australian republicanism and critic of the Howard government's policies on asylum seekers, describing them as "inhumane". Falinski defeated Bronwyn Bishop in the Liberal preselection contest.
References
External links
Jim Ball's website
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Place of birth missing (living people)
Radio personalities from Sydney
Former 2GB presenters |
```c++
#include <vespa/messagebus/network/rpctargetpool.h>
#include <vespa/messagebus/testlib/slobrok.h>
#include <vespa/messagebus/testlib/testserver.h>
#include <vespa/vespalib/testkit/test_kit.h>
#include <vespa/log/log.h>
LOG_SETUP("targetpool_test");
using namespace mbus;
class PoolTimer : public ITimer {
public:
uint64_t millis;
PoolTimer() : millis(0) {
// empty
}
uint64_t getMilliTime() const override {
return millis;
}
};
TEST("targetpool_test") {
// Necessary setup to be able to resolve targets.
Slobrok slobrok;
TestServer srv1(Identity("srv1"), RoutingSpec(), slobrok);
RPCServiceAddress adr1("", srv1.mb.getConnectionSpec());
TestServer srv2(Identity("srv2"), RoutingSpec(), slobrok);
RPCServiceAddress adr2("", srv2.mb.getConnectionSpec());
TestServer srv3(Identity("srv3"), RoutingSpec(), slobrok);
RPCServiceAddress adr3("", srv3.mb.getConnectionSpec());
fnet::frt::StandaloneFRT server;
FRT_Supervisor & orb = server.supervisor();
std::unique_ptr<PoolTimer> ptr(new PoolTimer());
PoolTimer &timer = *ptr;
RPCTargetPool pool(std::move(ptr), 0.666, 1 );
// Assert that all connections expire.
RPCTarget::SP target;
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr1))); target.reset();
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr2))); target.reset();
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr3))); target.reset();
EXPECT_EQUAL(3u, pool.size());
for (uint32_t i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(3u, pool.size());
}
timer.millis += 999;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(0u, pool.size());
// Assert that only idle connections expire.
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr1))); target.reset();
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr2))); target.reset();
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr3))); target.reset();
EXPECT_EQUAL(3u, pool.size());
timer.millis += 444;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(3u, pool.size());
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr2))); target.reset();
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr3))); target.reset();
timer.millis += 444;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(2u, pool.size());
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr3))); target.reset();
timer.millis += 444;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(1u, pool.size());
timer.millis += 444;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(0u, pool.size());
// Assert that connections never expire while they are referenced.
ASSERT_TRUE((target = pool.getTarget(orb, adr1)));
EXPECT_EQUAL(1u, pool.size());
for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
timer.millis += 999;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(1u, pool.size());
}
target.reset();
timer.millis += 999;
pool.flushTargets(false);
EXPECT_EQUAL(0u, pool.size());
}
TEST_MAIN() { TEST_RUN_ALL(); }
``` |
The British Ecological Society is a learned society in the field of ecology that was founded in 1913. It is the oldest ecological society in the world. The Society's original objective was "to promote and foster the study of Ecology in its widest sense" and this remains the central theme guiding its activities today. The Society had, circa 2013 around 4,000 members of which 14% are students. Of its members, 42% are outside the United Kingdom, in a total of 92 countries. The head office is located in London.
History
The Society evolved out of the British Vegetation Committee, which was founded in 1904 to promote the survey and study of vegetation in the British Isles. This initiative was in turn the outcome of what many historians perceive to have been the emergence of modern ecology in the 1890s. The British Ecological Society's inaugural meeting was held at University College London on 12 April 1913 and was attended by 47 members. Sir Arthur Tansley became the first President and the first issue of Journal of Ecology was printed in time for the meeting.
In its early days the society shared the London offices of The Linnean Society.
Publications
Publication of scientific journals is a principal activity. The Journal of Ecology was first published in 1913 in time for the inaugural meeting of the Society, followed by the Journal of Animal Ecology (1932), Journal of Applied Ecology (1962), Functional Ecology (1987), and Methods in Ecology and Evolution (2010). Members can subscribe to these journals at a low cost. The Society also partners with Wiley-Blackwell on the open access journal Ecology and Evolution.
Meetings
The Society also runs several major scientific meetings for ecologists each year. The Annual Meeting currently attracts 1,200 delegates each year and provides the opportunity for ecologists to present papers and posters on a wide variety of topics; an important element has always been the active participation of research students. There is an increasing number of delegates from overseas, principally Europe. It is Europe's largest annual meeting of ecologists. Since 1960 the Society has run an Annual Symposium and published a volume of its papers. It supports a range of other specialist meetings, workshops, training events and field meetings.
Presidents
References
External links
British biology societies
British ecologists
Ecology organizations
Organisations based in London
Professional associations based in the United Kingdom
Scientific organizations established in 1913
1913 establishments in the United Kingdom |
```objective-c
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
// are met:
// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
// documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
// * Neither the name of NVIDIA CORPORATION nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
// from this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS ``AS IS'' AND ANY
// EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
// IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
// PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR
// CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
// EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
// PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
// PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY
// OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
//
#ifndef PARTICLE_IOS_ACTOR_H
#define PARTICLE_IOS_ACTOR_H
#include "Apex.h"
#if PX_PHYSICS_VERSION_MAJOR == 3
#include "ScopedPhysXLock.h"
#endif
namespace nvidia
{
namespace apex
{
PX_PUSH_PACK_DEFAULT
/**
\brief ParticleIOS Actor. A simple actor that simulates a particle system.
*/
class ParticleIosActor : public Actor
{
public:
// This actor is not publically visible
protected:
virtual ~ParticleIosActor() {}
};
PX_POP_PACK
}
} // namespace nvidia
#endif // PARTICLE_IOS_ACTOR_H
``` |
The is a two-lane national expressway spur route in Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Japan. It is owned and operated by East Nippon Expressway Company and is signed E4A as a direct extension and spur route of the Tōhoku Expressway.
Route description
The expressway is officially referred to as the Tōhoku Jūkan Expressway Hachinohe Route.
The expressway serves as an extension to the Tōhoku Expressway (which terminates at Aomori Interchange) and runs through southern areas of the city of Aomori. From Aomori Interchange, it runs east, crossing under the tracks of the Tōhoku Shinkansen. Soon after the expressway meets the Aomori Belt Highway, a bypass of National Route 7, which serves for several kilometers from here as a frontage road to the expressway. Eventually, the two roads have are linked by the Aomori-chūō Interchange where tolls are collected for the entire expressway, including any tolls accrued from traveling from the Tōhoku Expressway. The expressway continues east and splits from National Route 7 before it comes to its end at Aomori-higashi Interchange near the western terminus of the Michinoku Toll Road.
The speed limit is 70 km/h for the entire route.
History
Construction on Aomori Expressway began in 1999 and it was opened to traffic on 28 September 2003. The completion of the expressway reduced travel times from the Tōhoku Expressway to Central Aomori by 11 minutes and reduced congestion along the Aomori West Bypass.
Future
Though the Aomori Expressway terminates at Aomori-higashi Interchange, it is planned to eventually connect with the northern terminus of the Hachinohe Expressway in the town of Oirase via a series of toll roads.
Junction list
The entire expressway is in Aomori Prefecture. The expressway is a direct extension of the Tōhoku Expressway. Therefore, the distance and exit numbers continue from the sequence of the Tōhoku Expressway, starting at .
|colspan="8" style="text-align: center;"|Through to
|colspan="8" style="text-align: center;"|Through to
See also
References
External links
East Nippon Expressway Company
Expressways in Japan
Roads in Aomori Prefecture
Tōhoku Expressway
2003 establishments in Japan |
```java
package com.yahoo.messagebus;
import com.yahoo.messagebus.test.SimpleMessage;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import java.util.LinkedList;
import java.util.Queue;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentLinkedQueue;
import java.util.concurrent.CountDownLatch;
import java.util.concurrent.Executor;
import java.util.concurrent.Executors;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicReference;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertEquals;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertNotNull;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertTrue;
/**
* @author Simon Thoresen Hult
*/
public class SequencerTestCase {
@Test
void testSyncNone() {
TestQueue src = new TestQueue();
TestQueue dst = new TestQueue();
QueueSender sender = new QueueSender(dst);
Sequencer seq = new Sequencer(sender);
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(false, 0));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(false, 0));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(false, 0));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(false, 0));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(false, 0));
assertEquals(0, src.size());
assertEquals(5, dst.size());
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
assertEquals(5, src.size());
assertEquals(0, dst.size());
src.checkReply(false, 0);
src.checkReply(false, 0);
src.checkReply(false, 0);
src.checkReply(false, 0);
src.checkReply(false, 0);
assertEquals(0, src.size());
assertEquals(0, dst.size());
}
@Test
void testSyncId() {
TestQueue src = new TestQueue();
TestQueue dst = new TestQueue();
QueueSender sender = new QueueSender(dst);
Sequencer seq = new Sequencer(sender);
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 1L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 2L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 3L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 4L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 5L));
assertEquals(0, src.size());
assertEquals(5, dst.size());
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 1L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 5L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 2L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 10L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 4L));
seq.handleMessage(src.createMessage(true, 3L));
assertEquals(0, src.size());
assertEquals(6, dst.size());
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
assertEquals(5, src.size());
assertEquals(6, dst.size());
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
dst.replyNext();
assertEquals(11, src.size());
assertEquals(0, dst.size());
src.checkReply(true, 1);
src.checkReply(true, 2);
src.checkReply(true, 3);
src.checkReply(true, 4);
src.checkReply(true, 5);
src.checkReply(true, 10);
src.checkReply(true, 1);
src.checkReply(true, 2);
src.checkReply(true, 3);
src.checkReply(true, 4);
src.checkReply(true, 5);
assertEquals(0, src.size());
assertEquals(0, dst.size());
}
@Test
void testRecursiveSending() throws InterruptedException {
// This test queues up a lot of replies, and then has them all ready to return at once.
int n = 10000;
CountDownLatch latch = new CountDownLatch(n);
CountDownLatch started = new CountDownLatch(1);
AtomicReference<Reply> waiting = new AtomicReference<>();
Executor executor = Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor();
MessageHandler sender = message -> {
Runnable task = () -> {
Reply reply = new EmptyReply();
reply.swapState(message);
reply.setMessage(message);
if (waiting.compareAndSet(null, reply)) started.countDown();
else reply.popHandler().handleReply(reply);
};
if (Math.random() < 0.5) executor.execute(task); // Usually, RPC thread runs this.
else task.run(); // But on, e.g., timeouts, it runs in the caller thread instead.
};
Queue<Message> answered = new ConcurrentLinkedQueue<>();
ReplyHandler handler = reply -> {
answered.add(reply.getMessage());
latch.countDown();
};
Messenger messenger = new Messenger();
messenger.start();
Sequencer sequencer = new Sequencer(sender, messenger); // Not using the messenger results in a stack overflow error.
Queue<Message> sent = new ConcurrentLinkedQueue<>();
for (int i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
Message message = new MyMessage(true, 1);
message.pushHandler(handler);
sequencer.handleMessage(message);
sent.add(message);
}
assertTrue(started.await(10, TimeUnit.SECONDS));
waiting.get().popHandler().handleReply(waiting.get());
assertTrue(latch.await(10, TimeUnit.SECONDS), "All messages should obtain a reply within 10s");
assertEquals(Set.copyOf(sent), Set.copyOf(answered)); // Order is not guaranteed at all!
messenger.destroy();
}
private static class TestQueue extends LinkedList<Routable> implements ReplyHandler {
void checkReply(boolean hasSeqId, long seqId) {
if (size() == 0) {
throw new IllegalStateException("No routable in queue.");
}
Routable obj = remove();
assertTrue(obj instanceof Reply);
Reply reply = (Reply)obj;
Message msg = reply.getMessage();
assertNotNull(msg);
assertEquals(hasSeqId, msg.hasSequenceId());
if (hasSeqId) {
assertEquals(seqId, msg.getSequenceId());
}
}
public void handleReply(Reply reply) {
add(reply);
}
void replyNext() {
Routable obj = remove();
assertTrue(obj instanceof Message);
Message msg = (Message)obj;
Reply reply = new EmptyReply();
reply.swapState(msg);
reply.setMessage(msg);
ReplyHandler handler = reply.popHandler();
handler.handleReply(reply);
}
Message createMessage(final boolean hasSeqId, final long seqId) {
Message ret = new MyMessage(hasSeqId, seqId);
ret.pushHandler(this);
return ret;
}
}
private static class QueueSender implements MessageHandler {
Queue<Routable> queue;
QueueSender(Queue<Routable> queue) {
this.queue = queue;
}
@Override
public void handleMessage(Message msg) {
queue.offer(msg);
}
}
private static class MyMessage extends SimpleMessage {
final boolean hasSeqId;
final long seqId;
MyMessage(boolean hasSeqId, long seqId) {
super("foo");
this.hasSeqId = hasSeqId;
this.seqId = seqId;
}
@Override
public boolean hasSequenceId() {
return hasSeqId;
}
@Override
public long getSequenceId() {
return seqId;
}
}
}
``` |
DOS 3 or DOS-3 may refer to:
Kosmos 557 aka Salyut-3 or DOS-3, a Russian space station
Apple DOS for the Apple II series, released in versions 3.1, 3.2, and 3.3
Atari DOS 3 for the Atari 8-bit family
It may also refer to versions of the Microsoft MS-DOS family:
MS-DOS 3.0, with FAT16 support in 1984
MS-DOS 3.1 in 1985
MS-DOS 3.2 in 1985
MS-DOS 3.21 in 1987
MS-DOS 3.21R, a ROMed version of MS-DOS in 1989 for laptops
MS-DOS 3.22, a ROMed OEM version of MS-DOS for HP 95LX in 1991
MS-DOS 3.25
MS-DOS 3.3 in 1987
MS-DOS 3.3A
Arabic MS-DOS 3.3, a special Arabic version of MS-DOS 3.3 (ADOS) in 1988
Hebrew MS-DOS 3.3, a special Hebrew version of MS-DOS 3.3 (HDOS)
MS-DOS 3.3R, a ROMed version of MS-DOS in 1990 for TI laptops
MS-DOS 3.31, an OEM version of MS-DOS with FAT16B support by Compaq
MS-DOS 3.30+,an OEM version of MS-DOS with FAT16B support by Zenith-Data System
MS-DOS 3.40, announced OEM version and successor of MS-DOS 3.3 with FAT16B support in 1988
It may also refer to versions of the IBM PC DOS family:
PC DOS 3.0, successor of PC DOS 2.11 with FAT16 support in 1984
PC DOS 3.1, successor of PC DOS 3.0 in 1984/1985
PC DOS 3.2, successor of PC DOS 3.1 in 1986
PC DOS 3.21, successor of PC DOS 3.2 in 1986
IBM DOS 3.3, successor of PC DOS 3.21 in 1987
IBM DOS 3.4, announced successor of IBM DOS 3.3 in 1988
It may also refer to versions of the Digital Research DR DOS family:
DR DOS 3.31, based on DOS Plus 2.1 and Concurrent PC DOS 6.0 with FAT16B support in 1988
DR DOS 3.32, successor of DR DOS 3.31 in 1988, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 3.33, successor of DR DOS 3.32 in 1988, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 3.34, successor of DR DOS 3.33 in 1988, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 3.35, successor of DR DOS 3.34 in 1988, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 3.40, successor of DR DOS 3.35, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 3.41, successor of DR DOS 3.40 in 1989, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 5.0, successor of DR DOS 3.41 in 1990, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
DR DOS 6.0, successor of DR DOS 5.0 in 1991, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
NetWare PalmDOS 1.0, a successor to DR DOS 6.0 tailored for early palmtop PCs in 1992, reporting itself as "PC DOS 3.31"
See also
Microsoft Windows NTDOS 30.00
DOS (disambiguation)
DOS 2 (disambiguation)
DOS 4 (disambiguation)
DOS/360
DOS 386 (disambiguation) |
The Coalition of the Willing is an instrumental jazz and rock "all-star" ensemble led by Bobby Previte. Live performances are improvisational emphasizing groove, experimental and cross-genres. The self-titled album was released 2006 (Ropeadope) and the tour began in early 2006. The West Coast touring band has remained active through July 2007.
Album Musician Credits
Bobby Previte - Drums & Percussion
Charlie Hunter - Electric Guitars, Electric Basses
Steven Bernstein - Trumpet, Slide Trumpet
Jamie Saft - Organ, Mellotron, Moog, Electric Guitars, Electric Basses
Skerik - Tenor and Baritone Saxophones
Stanton Moore - Drums
Stew Cutler - Harmonica, Slide Guitar
European Touring Band - Winter/Spring 2006
Bobby Previte: drums
Charlie Hunter: guitar
Steven Bernstein: trumpet, slide trumpet
Marco Benevento: organ, electric piano, electronics
USA Touring Band - Fall 2006
Charlie Hunter - Skerik - Robert Walter - Bobby Previte
USA Touring Band - Winter 2007
THE SEPARATION: Marco Benevento - Reed Mathis - Bobby Previte This performance was a collaboration with playwright/director Andrea Kleine, the early music choir "The Rose Ensemble" and visual artist Anna Kiraly. It was co-commitioned by and premiered at The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota February 2, 2007.
WEST COAST TOUR: Reed Mathis - Brian Coogan - Skerik - Bobby Previte
See also
The Coalition of the Willing (album)
References
External links
Official Site
Cerebral Rock with Bobby Previte Interview by Robyn Rubinstein at Jambase.com, August 3, 2006.
American instrumental musical groups
Jazz fusion ensembles
American jazz-rock groups
American rock music groups |
This is a list of Bangladeshi films that are scheduled to release in 2023. Some films have announced release dates but have yet to begin filming, while others are in production but do not yet have definite release dates. Films listed as "untitled" do not yet have publicly announced titles.
Box office collection
The top ten highest-grossing Bangladeshi films released in 2023, by worldwide box office gross revenue, are as follows.
Background color indicates the current releases.
January–March
April–June
July–September
October–December
Unreleased/Scheduled to Release
See also
List of Bangladeshi films of 2022
List of Bangladeshi films of 2021
List of Bangladeshi films of 2020
List of Bangladeshi films
Cinema of Bangladesh
References
Film
Lists of 2023 films by country or language
2023 |
```xml
export { default as Hamburger } from './Hamburger';
export { default as Sidebar } from './Sidebar';
export { default as SidebarList, SubSidebarList } from './SidebarList';
export { default as SidebarBackButton } from './SidebarBackButton';
export { default as SidebarListItem, SubSidebarListItem } from './SidebarListItem';
export { default as SimpleSidebarListItemLink } from './SimpleSidebarListItemLink';
export { default as SimpleSidebarListItemHeader } from './SimpleSidebarListItemHeader';
export { default as SidebarListItemHeaderButton } from './SidebarListItemHeaderButton';
export { default as SidebarListItemHeaderLink } from './SidebarListItemHeaderLink';
export { default as SidebarListItemContent } from './SidebarListItemContent';
export { default as SidebarListItemContentIcon } from './SidebarListItemContentIcon';
export { default as SidebarListItemDiv } from './SidebarListItemDiv';
export { default as SidebarListItemLabel } from './SidebarListItemLabel';
export { default as SidebarListItemLink } from './SidebarListItemLink';
export { default as SidebarListItemButton } from './SidebarListItemButton';
export { default as SidebarNav } from './SidebarNav';
export { default as SidebarPrimaryButton } from './SidebarPrimaryButton';
export { default as SidebarLogo } from './SidebarLogo';
export { default as SidebarListItemSettingsLink } from './SidebarListItemSettingsLink';
export { default as SettingsListItem } from './SettingsListItem';
export { default as CollapsibleSidebarSpotlight } from './CollapsibleSidebarSpotlight';
``` |
The Journal of Intellectual Disabilities is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal that covers research in the field of healthcare and nursing as related to intellectual disabilities. The journal's editor-in-chief is Dr. Fintan Sheerin (Trinity Centre for Ageing and Intellectual Disability). It was established in 1997 and is currently published by SAGE Publications.
Abstracting and indexing
The Journal of Intellectual Disabilities is abstracted and indexed in:
Social Sciences Citation Index
Arts & Humanities Citation Index
Academics Premier
Educational Research Abstracts Online
MEDLINE
External links
SAGE Publishing academic journals
English-language journals |
CTKD is first duet album Indonesian singer Krisdayanti and Malaysian singer Siti Nurhaliza. CTKD is the abbreviation of Canda (Joke), Tangis (Cry), Ketawa (Laugh), Duka (Sad), since they are both known as CT (Siti) and KD (Krisdayanti). The album was released on 28 December 2009.
Track listing
With six songs, the album was created by famous Malaysian and Indonesian composers and writers like Aubrey Suwito, Audi Mok, Sharon Paul and others to suit both their vocal range and harmony. For the first time in this album, Dato’ Siti Nurhaliza uses vocalist from ST12, Charly. It also includes 4 bonus instrumental songs of their songs on the album.
Indonesia Version
References
2009 albums
Siti Nurhaliza albums
Vocal duet albums
Malay-language albums |
```xml
import { useApi, useFolders, useNotifications } from '@proton/components/hooks';
import { TelemetryMailSelectAllEvents } from '@proton/shared/lib/api/telemetry';
import { isMessage as testIsMessage } from 'proton-mail/helpers/elements';
import { getCleanedFolderID, sendSelectAllTelemetryReport } from 'proton-mail/helpers/moveToFolder';
import { getSelectAllNotificationText } from 'proton-mail/helpers/selectAll';
import { useEmptyLabel } from 'proton-mail/hooks/actions/useEmptyLabel';
import { useGetElementsFromIDs } from 'proton-mail/hooks/mailbox/useElements';
import { useMailDispatch } from 'proton-mail/store/hooks';
import { layoutActions } from 'proton-mail/store/layout/layoutSlice';
/**
* If you need to use permanent delete on a full location, prefer to use the hook "usePermanentDelete" with selectAll to true instead.
*/
export const usePermanentDeleteAll = (labelID: string) => {
const api = useApi();
const { createNotification } = useNotifications();
const getElementsFromIDs = useGetElementsFromIDs();
const [folders = []] = useFolders();
const { emptyLabel, modal: deleteAllModal } = useEmptyLabel();
const dispatch = useMailDispatch();
const handleDeleteAll = async (selectedIDs: string[]) => {
const elements = getElementsFromIDs(selectedIDs);
const isMessage = testIsMessage(elements[0]);
// Send Telemetry
const cleanedSourceLabelID = getCleanedFolderID(labelID, folders);
void sendSelectAllTelemetryReport({
api,
sourceLabelID: cleanedSourceLabelID,
event: TelemetryMailSelectAllEvents.banner_permanent_delete,
});
await emptyLabel(labelID);
createNotification({
text: getSelectAllNotificationText(isMessage),
});
dispatch(layoutActions.setSelectAll(false));
};
return { handleDeleteAll, deleteAllModal };
};
``` |
Daba Miao Ethnic Township () is an ethnic township for Miao people, which is under the administration of Xingwen County, Sichuan, China. , it administers Yanzhou Residential Community () and the following 11 villages:
Pingzhai Village ()
Xiaozhai Village ()
Longtang Village ()
Hongqi Village ()
Chaoyang Village ()
Jianguo Village ()
Bai'aolin Village ()
Bamaowan Village ()
Gufotai Village ()
Silong Village ()
Shaba Village ()
See also
List of township-level divisions of Sichuan
References
Township-level divisions of Sichuan
Xingwen County
Miao ethnic townships |
The 2011 Grand Prix de Denain was the 53rd edition of the Grand Prix de Denain cycle race and was held on 14 April 2011. The race started and finished in Denain. The race was won by Jimmy Casper.
General classification
References
2011
2011 in road cycling
2011 in French sport |
```python
# coding: utf-8
"""
ASN.1 type classes for the online certificate status protocol (OCSP). Exports
the following items:
- OCSPRequest()
- OCSPResponse()
Other type classes are defined that help compose the types listed above.
"""
from __future__ import unicode_literals, division, absolute_import, print_function
from ._errors import unwrap
from .algos import DigestAlgorithm, SignedDigestAlgorithm
from .core import (
Boolean,
Choice,
Enumerated,
GeneralizedTime,
IA5String,
Integer,
Null,
ObjectIdentifier,
OctetBitString,
OctetString,
ParsableOctetString,
Sequence,
SequenceOf,
)
from .crl import AuthorityInfoAccessSyntax, CRLReason
from .keys import PublicKeyAlgorithm
from .x509 import Certificate, GeneralName, GeneralNames, Name
# The structures in this file are taken from path_to_url
class Version(Integer):
_map = {
0: 'v1'
}
class CertId(Sequence):
_fields = [
('hash_algorithm', DigestAlgorithm),
('issuer_name_hash', OctetString),
('issuer_key_hash', OctetString),
('serial_number', Integer),
]
class ServiceLocator(Sequence):
_fields = [
('issuer', Name),
('locator', AuthorityInfoAccessSyntax),
]
class RequestExtensionId(ObjectIdentifier):
_map = {
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.7': 'service_locator',
}
class RequestExtension(Sequence):
_fields = [
('extn_id', RequestExtensionId),
('critical', Boolean, {'default': False}),
('extn_value', ParsableOctetString),
]
_oid_pair = ('extn_id', 'extn_value')
_oid_specs = {
'service_locator': ServiceLocator,
}
class RequestExtensions(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = RequestExtension
class Request(Sequence):
_fields = [
('req_cert', CertId),
('single_request_extensions', RequestExtensions, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
_processed_extensions = False
_critical_extensions = None
_service_locator_value = None
def _set_extensions(self):
"""
Sets common named extensions to private attributes and creates a list
of critical extensions
"""
self._critical_extensions = set()
for extension in self['single_request_extensions']:
name = extension['extn_id'].native
attribute_name = '_%s_value' % name
if hasattr(self, attribute_name):
setattr(self, attribute_name, extension['extn_value'].parsed)
if extension['critical'].native:
self._critical_extensions.add(name)
self._processed_extensions = True
@property
def critical_extensions(self):
"""
Returns a set of the names (or OID if not a known extension) of the
extensions marked as critical
:return:
A set of unicode strings
"""
if not self._processed_extensions:
self._set_extensions()
return self._critical_extensions
@property
def service_locator_value(self):
"""
This extension is used when communicating with an OCSP responder that
acts as a proxy for OCSP requests
:return:
None or a ServiceLocator object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._service_locator_value
class Requests(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = Request
class ResponseType(ObjectIdentifier):
_map = {
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.1': 'basic_ocsp_response',
}
class AcceptableResponses(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = ResponseType
class PreferredSignatureAlgorithm(Sequence):
_fields = [
('sig_identifier', SignedDigestAlgorithm),
('cert_identifier', PublicKeyAlgorithm, {'optional': True}),
]
class PreferredSignatureAlgorithms(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = PreferredSignatureAlgorithm
class TBSRequestExtensionId(ObjectIdentifier):
_map = {
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.2': 'nonce',
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.4': 'acceptable_responses',
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.8': 'preferred_signature_algorithms',
}
class TBSRequestExtension(Sequence):
_fields = [
('extn_id', TBSRequestExtensionId),
('critical', Boolean, {'default': False}),
('extn_value', ParsableOctetString),
]
_oid_pair = ('extn_id', 'extn_value')
_oid_specs = {
'nonce': OctetString,
'acceptable_responses': AcceptableResponses,
'preferred_signature_algorithms': PreferredSignatureAlgorithms,
}
class TBSRequestExtensions(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = TBSRequestExtension
class TBSRequest(Sequence):
_fields = [
('version', Version, {'explicit': 0, 'default': 'v1'}),
('requestor_name', GeneralName, {'explicit': 1, 'optional': True}),
('request_list', Requests),
('request_extensions', TBSRequestExtensions, {'explicit': 2, 'optional': True}),
]
class Certificates(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = Certificate
class Signature(Sequence):
_fields = [
('signature_algorithm', SignedDigestAlgorithm),
('signature', OctetBitString),
('certs', Certificates, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
class OCSPRequest(Sequence):
_fields = [
('tbs_request', TBSRequest),
('optional_signature', Signature, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
_processed_extensions = False
_critical_extensions = None
_nonce_value = None
_acceptable_responses_value = None
_preferred_signature_algorithms_value = None
def _set_extensions(self):
"""
Sets common named extensions to private attributes and creates a list
of critical extensions
"""
self._critical_extensions = set()
for extension in self['tbs_request']['request_extensions']:
name = extension['extn_id'].native
attribute_name = '_%s_value' % name
if hasattr(self, attribute_name):
setattr(self, attribute_name, extension['extn_value'].parsed)
if extension['critical'].native:
self._critical_extensions.add(name)
self._processed_extensions = True
@property
def critical_extensions(self):
"""
Returns a set of the names (or OID if not a known extension) of the
extensions marked as critical
:return:
A set of unicode strings
"""
if not self._processed_extensions:
self._set_extensions()
return self._critical_extensions
@property
def nonce_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to prevent replay attacks by including a unique,
random value with each request/response pair
:return:
None or an OctetString object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._nonce_value
@property
def acceptable_responses_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to allow the client and server to communicate
with alternative response formats other than just basic_ocsp_response,
although no other formats are defined in the standard.
:return:
None or an AcceptableResponses object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._acceptable_responses_value
@property
def preferred_signature_algorithms_value(self):
"""
This extension is used by the client to define what signature algorithms
are preferred, including both the hash algorithm and the public key
algorithm, with a level of detail down to even the public key algorithm
parameters, such as curve name.
:return:
None or a PreferredSignatureAlgorithms object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._preferred_signature_algorithms_value
class OCSPResponseStatus(Enumerated):
_map = {
0: 'successful',
1: 'malformed_request',
2: 'internal_error',
3: 'try_later',
5: 'sign_required',
6: 'unauthorized',
}
class ResponderId(Choice):
_alternatives = [
('by_name', Name, {'explicit': 1}),
('by_key', OctetString, {'explicit': 2}),
]
# Custom class to return a meaningful .native attribute from CertStatus()
class StatusGood(Null):
def set(self, value):
"""
Sets the value of the object
:param value:
None or 'good'
"""
if value is not None and value != 'good' and not isinstance(value, Null):
raise ValueError(unwrap(
'''
value must be one of None, "good", not %s
''',
repr(value)
))
self.contents = b''
@property
def native(self):
return 'good'
# Custom class to return a meaningful .native attribute from CertStatus()
class StatusUnknown(Null):
def set(self, value):
"""
Sets the value of the object
:param value:
None or 'unknown'
"""
if value is not None and value != 'unknown' and not isinstance(value, Null):
raise ValueError(unwrap(
'''
value must be one of None, "unknown", not %s
''',
repr(value)
))
self.contents = b''
@property
def native(self):
return 'unknown'
class RevokedInfo(Sequence):
_fields = [
('revocation_time', GeneralizedTime),
('revocation_reason', CRLReason, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
class CertStatus(Choice):
_alternatives = [
('good', StatusGood, {'implicit': 0}),
('revoked', RevokedInfo, {'implicit': 1}),
('unknown', StatusUnknown, {'implicit': 2}),
]
class CrlId(Sequence):
_fields = [
('crl_url', IA5String, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
('crl_num', Integer, {'explicit': 1, 'optional': True}),
('crl_time', GeneralizedTime, {'explicit': 2, 'optional': True}),
]
class SingleResponseExtensionId(ObjectIdentifier):
_map = {
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.3': 'crl',
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.6': 'archive_cutoff',
# These are CRLEntryExtension values from
# path_to_url
'2.5.29.21': 'crl_reason',
'2.5.29.24': 'invalidity_date',
'2.5.29.29': 'certificate_issuer',
# path_to_url#page-13
'1.3.6.1.4.1.11129.2.4.5': 'signed_certificate_timestamp_list',
}
class SingleResponseExtension(Sequence):
_fields = [
('extn_id', SingleResponseExtensionId),
('critical', Boolean, {'default': False}),
('extn_value', ParsableOctetString),
]
_oid_pair = ('extn_id', 'extn_value')
_oid_specs = {
'crl': CrlId,
'archive_cutoff': GeneralizedTime,
'crl_reason': CRLReason,
'invalidity_date': GeneralizedTime,
'certificate_issuer': GeneralNames,
'signed_certificate_timestamp_list': OctetString,
}
class SingleResponseExtensions(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = SingleResponseExtension
class SingleResponse(Sequence):
_fields = [
('cert_id', CertId),
('cert_status', CertStatus),
('this_update', GeneralizedTime),
('next_update', GeneralizedTime, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
('single_extensions', SingleResponseExtensions, {'explicit': 1, 'optional': True}),
]
_processed_extensions = False
_critical_extensions = None
_crl_value = None
_archive_cutoff_value = None
_crl_reason_value = None
_invalidity_date_value = None
_certificate_issuer_value = None
def _set_extensions(self):
"""
Sets common named extensions to private attributes and creates a list
of critical extensions
"""
self._critical_extensions = set()
for extension in self['single_extensions']:
name = extension['extn_id'].native
attribute_name = '_%s_value' % name
if hasattr(self, attribute_name):
setattr(self, attribute_name, extension['extn_value'].parsed)
if extension['critical'].native:
self._critical_extensions.add(name)
self._processed_extensions = True
@property
def critical_extensions(self):
"""
Returns a set of the names (or OID if not a known extension) of the
extensions marked as critical
:return:
A set of unicode strings
"""
if not self._processed_extensions:
self._set_extensions()
return self._critical_extensions
@property
def crl_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to locate the CRL that a certificate's revocation
is contained within.
:return:
None or a CrlId object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._crl_value
@property
def archive_cutoff_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to indicate the date at which an archived
(historical) certificate status entry will no longer be available.
:return:
None or a GeneralizedTime object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._archive_cutoff_value
@property
def crl_reason_value(self):
"""
This extension indicates the reason that a certificate was revoked.
:return:
None or a CRLReason object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._crl_reason_value
@property
def invalidity_date_value(self):
"""
This extension indicates the suspected date/time the private key was
compromised or the certificate became invalid. This would usually be
before the revocation date, which is when the CA processed the
revocation.
:return:
None or a GeneralizedTime object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._invalidity_date_value
@property
def certificate_issuer_value(self):
"""
This extension indicates the issuer of the certificate in question.
:return:
None or an x509.GeneralNames object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._certificate_issuer_value
class Responses(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = SingleResponse
class ResponseDataExtensionId(ObjectIdentifier):
_map = {
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.2': 'nonce',
'1.3.6.1.5.5.7.48.1.9': 'extended_revoke',
}
class ResponseDataExtension(Sequence):
_fields = [
('extn_id', ResponseDataExtensionId),
('critical', Boolean, {'default': False}),
('extn_value', ParsableOctetString),
]
_oid_pair = ('extn_id', 'extn_value')
_oid_specs = {
'nonce': OctetString,
'extended_revoke': Null,
}
class ResponseDataExtensions(SequenceOf):
_child_spec = ResponseDataExtension
class ResponseData(Sequence):
_fields = [
('version', Version, {'explicit': 0, 'default': 'v1'}),
('responder_id', ResponderId),
('produced_at', GeneralizedTime),
('responses', Responses),
('response_extensions', ResponseDataExtensions, {'explicit': 1, 'optional': True}),
]
class BasicOCSPResponse(Sequence):
_fields = [
('tbs_response_data', ResponseData),
('signature_algorithm', SignedDigestAlgorithm),
('signature', OctetBitString),
('certs', Certificates, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
class ResponseBytes(Sequence):
_fields = [
('response_type', ResponseType),
('response', ParsableOctetString),
]
_oid_pair = ('response_type', 'response')
_oid_specs = {
'basic_ocsp_response': BasicOCSPResponse,
}
class OCSPResponse(Sequence):
_fields = [
('response_status', OCSPResponseStatus),
('response_bytes', ResponseBytes, {'explicit': 0, 'optional': True}),
]
_processed_extensions = False
_critical_extensions = None
_nonce_value = None
_extended_revoke_value = None
def _set_extensions(self):
"""
Sets common named extensions to private attributes and creates a list
of critical extensions
"""
self._critical_extensions = set()
for extension in self['response_bytes']['response'].parsed['tbs_response_data']['response_extensions']:
name = extension['extn_id'].native
attribute_name = '_%s_value' % name
if hasattr(self, attribute_name):
setattr(self, attribute_name, extension['extn_value'].parsed)
if extension['critical'].native:
self._critical_extensions.add(name)
self._processed_extensions = True
@property
def critical_extensions(self):
"""
Returns a set of the names (or OID if not a known extension) of the
extensions marked as critical
:return:
A set of unicode strings
"""
if not self._processed_extensions:
self._set_extensions()
return self._critical_extensions
@property
def nonce_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to prevent replay attacks on the request/response
exchange
:return:
None or an OctetString object
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._nonce_value
@property
def extended_revoke_value(self):
"""
This extension is used to signal that the responder will return a
"revoked" status for non-issued certificates.
:return:
None or a Null object (if present)
"""
if self._processed_extensions is False:
self._set_extensions()
return self._extended_revoke_value
@property
def basic_ocsp_response(self):
"""
A shortcut into the BasicOCSPResponse sequence
:return:
None or an asn1crypto.ocsp.BasicOCSPResponse object
"""
return self['response_bytes']['response'].parsed
@property
def response_data(self):
"""
A shortcut into the parsed, ResponseData sequence
:return:
None or an asn1crypto.ocsp.ResponseData object
"""
return self['response_bytes']['response'].parsed['tbs_response_data']
``` |
```javascript
import { Component, createElement } from 'react'
import { connectFactory } from 'fela-bindings'
import { RendererContext, ThemeContext } from './context'
export default connectFactory(
Component,
createElement,
RendererContext,
ThemeContext
)
``` |
Ann Johnson Stewart (born July 27, 1964) is an American Democratic politician, university professor, activist, and civil engineer from Minnesota. She entered politics as a protester against guns and has since been heavily involved in Democratic politics.
Originally from Wisconsin, Johnson Stewart teaches at the University of Minnesota and also works on engineering projects.
Johnson Stewart is a member of the Minnesota Senate, representing District 44, which includes Plymouth, Minnetonka, and Woodland in Hennepin County in the Twin Cities metropolitan area.
Life, academic career, and engineering career
Johnson Stewart received her Bachelor of Civil Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Platteville and her Master's at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. She is a civil engineer with a small business that works with local governments to build publicly funded roads, bridges, and buildings. Johnson Stewart has also taught at the University of Minnesota and local technical colleges for over 20 years.
Political involvement
Johnson Stewart defeated Greg Pulles in 2020 after incumbent Senator Paul Anderson decided not to run again. She serves on the following committees:
Capital Investment
Transportation Finance and Policy
Her legislative priorities are transportation and infrastructure.
References
1964 births
Living people
University of Wisconsin–Platteville alumni
Democratic Party Minnesota state senators |
Jeon Yu-Mi (born 11 November 1988 in Seoul) is a South Korean field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics she competed with the Korea women's national field hockey team in the women's tournament. She was part of the Korean team that won the women's hockey at the 2010 Asian Games.
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
South Korean female field hockey players
Asian Games medalists in field hockey
Asian Games silver medalists for South Korea
Field hockey players at the 2010 Asian Games
Field hockey players at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2010 Asian Games
Olympic field hockey players for South Korea
Field hockey players from Seoul
21st-century South Korean women |
```javascript
'use strict';
const EventEmitter = require('events');
const Task = require('./task');
const Scheduler = require('./scheduler');
const uuid = require('uuid');
class ScheduledTask extends EventEmitter {
constructor(cronExpression, func, options) {
super();
if(!options){
options = {
scheduled: true,
recoverMissedExecutions: false
};
}
this.options = options;
this.options.name = this.options.name || uuid.v4();
this._task = new Task(func);
this._scheduler = new Scheduler(cronExpression, options.timezone, options.recoverMissedExecutions);
this._scheduler.on('scheduled-time-matched', (now) => {
this.now(now);
});
if(options.scheduled !== false){
this._scheduler.start();
}
if(options.runOnInit === true){
this.now('init');
}
}
now(now = 'manual') {
let result = this._task.execute(now);
this.emit('task-done', result);
}
start() {
this._scheduler.start();
}
stop() {
this._scheduler.stop();
}
}
module.exports = ScheduledTask;
``` |
Soft Touch is the third studio album by guitarist Brian Tarquin, released in May 1999 on Instinct records. Tarquin recorded Soft Touch in London once again with producer Ernie McKone, bass player from the UK acid jazz band Galliano. Once the tracks were all recorded, Instinct didn't want to keep the live playing on the album. This was due mainly because one of the A&R people attended a Radio & Records conference, and had noted that radio was playing programmed grooves. So two other producers Tony Campbell and Chris Ingram were brought in to program the songs and re-record everything. Despite the setbacks, this was another commercially successful album as Smooth Jazz radio embraced the featured single, Darlin Darlin Baby, originally recorded by The O'Jays. Another single from the album, Tangled Web, was a very big radio hit as well, becoming #1 in the New York City market on CD101.9 as well as reaching # 9 nationwide on the Smooth Jazz radio charts. Tarquin also covered another Jeff Beck song, You Know What I Mean.
In lieu of the experience, Tarquin came away from the recording very discourage. The indecisiveness of the record company switching between three different producers, became a frustrating ordeal. Instinct was becoming too concerned with radio approval and less with the actual music. This period planted seeds for the future musical endeavors Tarquin would under take in the coming years.
Track listing
Personnel
Brian Tarquin – guitars
Chris Ingram – keyboard, drum programming
Tony Campbell – drum programming, bass, keyboard
Jim Carmichael – drums
Crispen Taylor – drums
Dave John-Baptiste – saxophone, flute
Toby Baker – Fender Rhodes, clave, piano
Guy Fortt – vocals
Connor Smith – percussion
Damon Brown – trumpet
Phil Brown – saxophone
Ernie McKone – bass
Cliff Lyons– saxophone
Jacko Peake – saxophone
Pat Lavery – bass
References
External links
1999 albums
Brian Tarquin albums
Instinct Records albums |
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