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Qin Hui (; born 1953) is a Chinese historian and public intellectual. He previously held the position of Professor of History, Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing. He is now an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Government and Public Administration, at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Career Qin's primary field is economic history and peasant studies. His mentor was Zhao Lisheng (), a Marxist historian in China. Since 1992 he has emerged as a prominent public intellectual, taking a stand on a range of issues, often in conflict with the official doctrines of the Chinese government. His general focus is China's agrarian history. Qin is a writer in the Sinosphere and the Chinese-speaking Internet, where collections of his works are commonly found. An important case in point is his doctrine of "issues versus isms" (wenti yu zhuyi). Banning of Moving Away from the Imperial Regime In December 2015, Qin Hui's new book Moving Away from the Imperial Regime (), a collection of articles examining how the "dream" of constitutional democracy fell apart in China in the early 20th century after the country broke free from the Qing imperial order, was banned by the Chinese government. The book was a bestseller before the ban. "It's like they want to kill someone and won't even let him complain about it," Qin commented; "I can't talk about this matter." An anonymous employee at the book's publisher said that the book had "quality problems". The ban was issued days before China celebrated its second annual Constitution Day. Views In terms of political ideology, Qin Hui defends a left-liberal position. He favors privatization under strict conditions of democratic openness. However he opposes market fundamentalism in its Chinese forms, and seeks to introduce institutions of social democracy, including some aspects of the welfare state. He strongly defends liberty as a political value, and often allies with other Chinese intellectuals labeled "liberal". He has engaged in polemics with the Chinese New Left, particularly its more populist and nationalist forms. He has for example signed petitions protesting chauvinistic responses to the September 11 attacks in New York City. As a public intellectual, Qin has worked to initiate debates on social justice. Having himself been sent down to work as a peasant in a poor mountainous region of Southwest China in the Cultural Revolution, Qin has argued that China's peasantry suffers from a grave lack of social justice to the present day. At the same time, he has stated in his historical research that the peasantry has a strong tendency to enhance their citizen status whenever possible (whereas the urban working class has often tended to demand restitution of the dependent client status it enjoyed under the Maoist planned economy). Qin has drawn on the work of Alexander Chayanov, Eric Wolf and other writers on agrarian society to attack cultural essentialism in studies of the Chinese peasantry, which often takes the form of portraying the peasantry as permanently imbued with Confucianism and the collectivist ethics of the feudal patriarchal lineage. Qin has been concerned to show that history rather than culture provides a solid explanatory framework for the empirical phenomena. Contrary to the received Maoist view which emphasizes peasant wars as expressions of class struggle, in his research on agrarian history Qin concludes that the most significant fault-line in the countryside was not between peasant and landlord, but between peasant and official. This has obvious consequences for interpreting contemporary rural China. Personal life Qin Hui is married with one daughter. His wife, Jin Yan (金雁) is an eminent scholar of Eastern European and Russian affairs in her own right, often collaborating with Qin under the nom-de-plume Su Wen (苏文). History lectures on the web Broken up and Reconnection (Chinese:秦晖-断裂与联系:30年、60年、120年的中国历程.mp3) Beware of problem colonization (Chinese:秦晖:警惕“问题殖民”.mp3) On Chinese peasants (Chinese: 秦晖-10.06.24-农民问题的历史与现实(天人讲堂).mp3) China's Land system (Chinese: 秦晖-十字路口中的中国二元土地制度.mp3) See also Chinese philosophy Huang Zongxi's Law References Further reading Qin Hui and Su Wen, Tianyuanshi yu kuangxiangqu–Guanzhong moshi yu qianjindai shehuide zairenshi (Pastorals and rhapsodies: the Central Shaanxi model in rethinking pre-modern society) (Beijing: Zhongyang bianyi chubanshe, 1996). Qin Hui, Wenti yu zhuyi (Issues and isms) (Changchun chubanshe, 1999). External links Dilemmas of Twenty-First Century Globalization: Explanations and Solutions, with a Critique of Thomas Piketty’s Twenty-First Century Capitalism by Qin Hui, Translation and Introduction by David Ownby 1953 births 20th-century Chinese philosophers Living people 20th-century Chinese historians Academic staff of Shaanxi Normal University Academic staff of Tsinghua University People from Guilin Educators from Guangxi Historians from Guangxi Philosophers from Guangxi 21st-century Chinese philosophers Liberalism in China
```xml /* * one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed * with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. */ import {BusinessObject} from 'bpmn-js/lib/NavigatedViewer'; import isNil from 'lodash/isNil'; import {isWithinMultiInstance} from './isWithinMultiInstance'; import {isAttachedToAnEventBasedGateway} from './isAttachedToAnEventBasedGateway'; const isMoveModificationTarget = ( businessObject: BusinessObject | null | undefined, ) => { return ( !isNil(businessObject) && !isWithinMultiInstance(businessObject) && !isAttachedToAnEventBasedGateway(businessObject) && businessObject.$type !== 'bpmn:StartEvent' && businessObject.$type !== 'bpmn:BoundaryEvent' ); }; export {isMoveModificationTarget}; ```
Althaea is the Latin rendering of Greek Althaia, which may be related to Greek althos "healing". It may refer to: Althaea (mythology), the daughter of Thestius and mother of Meleager Althaea (plant), a genus of up to a dozen species of perennial herbs, native to Europe and western Asia, that includes the marshmallow plant 119 Althaea, an asteroid Althaea, the name of several nymphs in Greek mythology See also Altea (disambiguation) Althea (disambiguation)
Podhucie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Tarnawatka, within Tomaszów Lubelski County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. References Podhucie
Zoya Belakhvostik (Belarusian Зоя Валянцінаўна Белахвосцік, October 26, 1959, Minsk, Belarus) is a Belarusian theater and film actress. She is the People's Artist of Belarus, Honored Artist of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Honored Artist of the Yanka Kupala National Academic Theater, and the holder of the medal of honor of the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Belarus "For the contribution to the development of Belarusian culture". Biography Zoya Belakhvostsik was born on October 26, 1959, in Minsk, Belarus. In 1982, she graduated from the faculty of the Belarusian Theater and Art Institute with a degree in drama and film acting. In her fourth year of study, she was offered to play the role of Paulinka in the eponymous Belarusian play Paulinka, and she played this role until 2000. Since 1982, she has been an actress at the Yanka Kupala National Academic Theater. On August 26, 2020, during the protests in Belarus due to the Belarusian Presidential Election falsification and brutal violence against protesters, she resigned from the theater along with 58 actors and supporting staff (the vast majority of the theater's employees). Kupalaucy resigned after the theater's general director, Pavel Latushko, was fired for speaking up against the Lukashenko regime. On August 26, 2020, after the mass resignation in solidarity with the Belarusian nation, Belakhvostik together with the actors and staff of the Yanka Kupala National Theatre founded the Free Kupalauski Theater, which continues the long-standing traditions of the national theater, including broadcasting their work for free on their YouTube channel, Kupalaucy. The statement after the resignation was the following: "We have left our home, but we are sure we will come back to it. Our page is about our return, our long way back home." In addition to acting at the Yanka Kupala National Theatre, Belakhvostik taught acting at the Belarusian State Academy of Arts, and was the artistic director of the drama theater and cinema. However, on October 2, 2020, she was fired from the Academy of Arts. As Belakhvostsik told the TUT.BY information portal, she has no plans to work in other theaters. Family Daughter - Valentina Gartsueva - Belarusian actress at the Yanka Kupala National Academic Theater Husband - Alexander Gartsuev - Belarusian theater director; artistic director of the Republican Theater of Belarusian Drama Father - Valentin Belakhvostik - Belarusian actor; National Artist of the Republic of Belarus (1994) Grandmother - Nadezhda Sorokina - Belarusian actress Grandfather - Gleb Glebov - Belarusian actor; National Artist of the Byelorussian SSR (1940) References External links Зоя Белохвостик (Зоя Белахвосцiк) — Народная артистка Беларуси Living people 1959 births Belarusian actresses
Fiammetta Cicogna (born 17 May 1988) is an Italian television presenter, actress, and model. In 2022, she launched a jewelry brand called Inbilico. Life Daughter of a Milanese candle maker, she began studying piano at the age of three. She achieved popularity thanks to Gabriele Muccino, who selected her for a Telecom Italia commercial, in which she played the role of a keyboardist for the young pop group TBand, a group that later obtained a contract with Caterina Caselli's record label Sugar: in 2009 the band released, in the wake of the success achieved with the commercial, a single with the cover Con te partirò, which was followed by the song Sogni. Her television debut was on 25 July 2009 at the participation in the Venice Music Awards on Rai 2 in the role of the correspondent for backstage connections, and then with the co-hosting, with Savino Zaba, of the spin-off Venice Music Awards Giovani. In the 2009-2010 season, she participated as a pianist in the Chiambretti Night, a program broadcast on Italia 1 from September 2009 to April 2010 in the late evening. In November 2009, when she posed for the cover photo shoot for the magazine Maxim, she was a student of modern letters at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, leaving study of the law. Filmography The Dove and the Serpent – short film (2011) Tutta colpa di Freud (2014) Sapore di te (2014) On Air - Storia di un successo (2016) In vacanza su Marte (2020) Television Venice Music Awards Giovani (2009) Chiambretti Night (2009-2010) Wild - Oltrenatura (2009-2015) Tamarreide (2011) Takeshi's Castle (2011-2014) Colorado - 'Sto classico (2012) Celebrity Games (2012) Forever Together Summer Show (2013) Colorado ... a rotazione! (2013) Tamarreide, director's cut (2013) Made In Italy (2019) References Living people 1988 births Italian television presenters Italian women television presenters Italian female models Mass media people from Milan Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore alumni Models from Milan Italian film actresses Italian stage actresses Italian television actresses 21st-century Italian actresses Actresses from Milan
Joseph Henry Léopold Sylvestre (13 December 1911 – 11 December 1972) was a Canadian speed skater. He competed in the men's 500 metres event at the 1932 Winter Olympics. By 1962, Sylvester had become a coaching staff manager in Mount Royal, Quebec, working alongside Johnny Sands. He died in 1972. References 1911 births 1972 deaths Canadian male speed skaters Olympic speed skaters for Canada Speed skaters at the 1932 Winter Olympics Speed skaters from Montreal 20th-century Canadian people
Nuyts Land District is a land district (cadastral division) of Western Australia, located within the Eastern and Eucla land divisions on the Nullarbor Plain. It spans roughly 31°00'S - 32°50'S in latitude and 124°00'E - 125°30'E in longitude. Location and features The district is located on the Nullarbor Plain in the south-east of the state and falls generally between the Great Australian Bight to the south and the Trans-Australian Railway to the north. The Caiguna roadhouse on the Eyre Highway and the railway town of Rawlinna are located within its boundaries. Nuyts is the location of the Nuytsland Nature Reserve, a protected area on the southern coast of the district. History The district was created on 4 March 1903 and named in honor of the infamous Pieter Nuyts, the highest ranking member of the Dutch East India Company aboard the 't Gulden Zeepaert when it mapped the southwestern Australian coast, after which it was sometimes mapped as Nuytsland (). The district originally only extended north to 31°30'S latitude. When the Trans-Australian Railway was being built in 1914, the district was extended northwards and was defined in the Government Gazette: References Land districts of Western Australia Goldfields-Esperance
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Dąbrowa Człuchowska is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Przechlewo, within Człuchów County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately north-east of Przechlewo, north of Człuchów, and south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. References Villages in Człuchów County
Judd McDougall, is an Australian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Perth Glory. He made his professional debut in a FFA Cup playoff match against Melbourne Victory on 24 November 2021. References External links Living people Australian men's soccer players Men's association football defenders Perth Glory FC players National Premier Leagues players Year of birth missing (living people) Place of birth missing (living people)
"We Laugh Indoors" is a song by American rock band Death Cab for Cutie, the third single from their third album, The Photo Album, released on 29 October 2002. The single was released on both 7" vinyl and CD. The vinyl release featured "We Laugh Indoors", and a live acoustic version of "Debate Exposes Doubt". The CD release included "We Laugh Indoors", an alternate mix of the song "For What Reason" from Death Cab for Cutie's previous album, We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes, and a live version of "I Was a Kaleidoscope". The song reached number 122 on the UK Singles Chart. Track listing Vinyl release "We Laugh Indoors (New Mix)" - 4:58 "Debate Exposes Doubt" (Acoustic SBN Session Track. Recorded In London 28/01/02) CD release "We Laugh Indoors" (New mix) – 4:58 "For What Reason" (Alternate mix) – 3:43 "I Was a Kaleidoscope" (Live) – 2:54 Charts References 2002 singles Death Cab for Cutie songs 2001 songs Songs written by Ben Gibbard Songs written by Chris Walla Songs written by Nick Harmer Fierce Panda Records singles
The 2017 All-SEC football team consists of American football players selected to the All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) chosen by the Associated Press (AP) and the conference coaches for the 2017 Southeastern Conference football season. Georgia won the conference, in a rematch, beating Auburn 28–7 in the SEC Championship. Auburn running back Kerryon Johnson was voted the AP SEC Offensive Player of the Year. Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith was voted the AP SEC Defensive Player of the Year. Offensive selections Quarterbacks Drew Lock, Missouri (AP-1, Coaches-1) Jarrett Stidham, Auburn (AP-1, Coaches-1) Running backs Kerryon Johnson, Auburn (AP-1, Coaches-1) Benny Snell , Kentucky (AP-1, Coaches-2) Nick Chubb, Georgia (AP-2, Coaches-1) Derrius Guice, LSU (AP-2, Coaches-2) Wide receivers A. J. Brown, Ole Miss (AP-1, Coaches-1) Calvin Ridley, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-1) J'Mon Moore, Missouri (AP-2,Coaches-2) Christian Kirk, Texas A&M (AP-2, Coaches-2) Centers Will Clapp, LSU (AP-1, Coaches-1) Bradley Bozeman, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-2) Frank Ragnow, Arkansas (AP-2) Guards Braden Smith, Auburn (AP-1, Coaches-1) Ross Pierschbacher, Alabama (AP-1) Greg Little, Ole Miss (AP-2, Coaches-2) Trey Smith, Tennessee (AP-2, Coaches-2) Garrett Brumfield, LSU (Coaches-2) Tackles Jonah Williams, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-1) Isaiah Wynn, Georgia (AP-1, Coaches-1) Martinas Rankin, Miss St (AP-2, Coaches-1) Martez Ivey, Florida (AP-2, Coaches-2) Tight ends Hayden Hurst, South Carolina (AP-1, Coaches-1) Albert Okwuegbunam, Missouri (AP-2, Coaches-2) Defensive selections Defensive ends Jeff Holland, Auburn (AP-1, Coaches-1) Montez Sweat, Miss St (AP-1, Coaches-1) Marcell Frazier, Missouri (AP-2, Coaches-2) Marquis Haynes, Ole Miss (AP-2, Coaches-2) Dante Sawyer, South Carolina (AP-2) Da'Shawn Hand, Alabama (Coaches-2) Defensive tackles Jeffery Simmons, Miss St (AP-1, Coaches-1) Daron Payne, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-2) Raekwon Davis, Alabama (AP-2, Coaches-1) Taven Bryan, Florida (AP-2) Breeland Speaks, Ole Miss (AP-2) Linebackers Roquan Smith, Georgia (AP-1, Coaches-1) Devin White, LSU (AP-1, Coaches-1) Rashaan Evans, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-2) Skai Moore, South Carolina (AP-2, Coaches-1) Arden Key, LSU (AP-1) Lorenzo Carter, Georgia (AP-2, Coaches-2) Josh Allen, Kentucky (AP-2) De'Jon Harris, Arkansas (AP-2) Charles Wright, Vanderbilt (AP-2) Tre Williams, Auburn (Coaches-2) Cornerbacks Armani Watts, Texas A&M (AP-1, Coaches-1) Andraez Williams, LSU (AP-1, Coaches-2) Duke Dawson, Florida (AP-2, Coaches-1) Carlton Davis, Auburn (AP-2, Coaches-1) C. J. Henderson, Florida (AP-2) Levi Wallace, Alabama (AP-2) Donte Jackson, LSU (Coaches-2) Deandre Baker, Georgia (Coaches-2) Safeties Minkah Fitzpatrick, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-1) Ronnie Harrison, Alabama (AP-1, Coaches-2) J. R. Reed, Georgia (AP-2) Special teams Kickers Daniel Carlson, Auburn (AP-1, Coaches-1) Eddy Piñeiro, Florida (AP-2, Coaches-2) Punters Johnny Townsend, Florida (AP-1, Coaches-2) J. K. Scott, Alabama (AP-2, Coaches-1) All purpose/return specialist Christian Kirk, Texas A&M (AP-1, Coaches-1) A. J. Brown, Ole Miss (Coaches-2) Mecole Hardman, Georgia (AP-2) D. J. Chark, LSU (AP-2, Coaches-2) Key See also 2017 Southeastern Conference football season 2017 College Football All-America Team References All-Southeastern Conference All-SEC football teams
Partíu Asturianista (PAS) is a nationalist political party from Asturias, Spain, founded in 1985 by Xuan Xosé Sánchez Vicente. Ideology A social democratic political party, the PAS bases its Asturian nationalist ideology on Asturian history, defining Asturias as an "old European nation" rooted in the Kingdom of Asturias, which has its own culture, traditions and Asturian language. The defense of Asturian language plays a pivotal role in the ideology of the party. History After leaving the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party in 1983, X. X. Sánchez Vicente founded the Partíu Asturianista, which was officially legalised in 1985. Among the primary political targets of the party was a reform of the Asturian Statute of Autonomy, in which Asturias would be recognised as a Historical Nationality, the Asturian language would be granted official status (together with Spanish language), a statute that would guarantee the highest self-government possibilities recognized in the Spanish Constitution of 1978. In 1988 the party held its first National Conference, where the founding program is approved. The PAS decides then to take part in that year's regional elections, which finally placed the Partíu Asturianista as the fifth political power of Asturias. The PAS also ran for the European Parliament elections of 1989, being included in a coalition of nationalist parties from all Spain. During the first National Congress of 1991 the party approves the Documentu d'Ideoloxía y Estratexa (Document of Ideology and Political Strategy) and decides to form an electoral coalition with UNA, another Asturian nationalist party. In the elections of the 25 May 1991, PAS won one seat for Sánchez Vicente in the Asturian Parliament and five seats in five different municipalities. This was the first time an Asturian nationalist party got a member in the Parliament since the transition to democracy. A seat in the Parliament was obtained again in the elections of 1995, when the PAS also won the Mayor elections in Nava. Partíu Asturianista supported the Sergio Marqués Government of the Principality of Asturias from 1997 to 1999. As a result of this cooperation the Llei d'Usu y Promoción de l'Asturianu (Law of Promotion and Use of Asturian language) was approved, a law considered to be a prerequisite towards the future official status of Asturian and one of the biggest achievements in the history of the party. During the 2nd and 3rd National Congresses, held in 1994 and 1998 respectively, the party approves important documents like the Ponencia d'Empobinamientu Políticu (Report on Political Guideline) and other future political strategies. Present PAS has been out of the Asturian Parliament from 1999. The organization took part in the regional elections of 2007 in coalition with URAS, both forming the Unión Asturianista (Asturianist Union), and currently the coalition has several mayors in various Asturian municipalities. References External links Partíu Asturianista - Official website Unión Asturianista Political parties in Asturias Asturian nationalist parties Social democratic parties in Spain
"By a Waterfall" is a 1933 song with music by Sammy Fain and lyrics by Irving Kahal. It was featured in an extravagant choreographic arrangement in the film Footlight Parade by Busby Berkeley that features his trademark human waterfall, with vocal performances by Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler. It features a water ballet of chorus girls diving and swimming into the water in elaborate geometric and floral patterns. The lyrics of the song use the phrase "I'm calling you - oo-oo-oo" in much the same way as the Indian Love Call from the operetta Rose-Marie. Berkeley realized that screen choreography involved the placement and movement of the camera as well as the dancers. Instead of filming numbers from fixed angles, he set his cameras into motion on custom built booms and monorails and if necessary, cut through the studio roof to get the right shot. Berkeley used a 40 x 80 foot (12.2 x 24.4 meter) swimming pool that filled an entire soundstage. Its walls and floor were glass, and before shooting started 100 chorus girls took two weeks to practice their routines in it. The actual filming lasted six days and required 20,000 gallons (75,708 liters) of water a minute to be pumped across the set. Recordings The recordings by Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians (vocal by Carmen Lombardo), Leo Reisman & His Orchestra (vocal by Arthur Wright) and by Rudy Vallee are assessed by Joel Whitburn as the most popular in 1933. Other recordings Chick Bullock's Levee Loungers recorded the song for Oriole Records (catalog No. 2780A) on October 30, 1933. Dick Powell recorded the song for Brunswick Records (catalog No. 6667) on September 27, 1933. Ozzie Nelson and his Orchestra recorded the song for Vocalion Records (catalog No. 2547) on September 5, 1933. In popular culture Welcome Back, Kotter: On a season one episode, Horshack gets up in front of the class and sings this song. Barbarino and Washington also join in. Diff'rent Strokes: In a season one episode, Mrs. Garret sings this song about Arnold. In animated shorts such as How Do I Know It's Sunday (1934), September in the Rain (1937), Goofy Groceries (1941), The Pest That Came To Dinner (1948), and Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare (1964), both from the Merrie Melodies series but the one Looney Tunes series, the song is often used to punctuate jokes, as in the shorts when it is literally sung by a waterfall. The British Comedy/satire band the Bonzo Dog (Doo Dah) Band also covered this song, recording it on their third album "Tadpoles" released in 1969, and also performing it earlier on a UK television show called "Do Not Adjust Your Set". The song could be heard accompanying a recreation of the waterfall sequence of Footlight Parade in Disney's The Great Movie Ride before its closure in 2017. In the novel The Swimming-Pool Library by Alan Hollinghurst, protagonist Will describes how a 'hard-on might pass from one end of the room to the other with the foolish perfection of a Busby Berkeley routine', evoking this choreography. References 1933 songs Songs with music by Sammy Fain Songs with lyrics by Irving Kahal Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band songs Guy Lombardo songs
Acentrogobius is a genus of gobies native to marine, fresh and brackish waters of the coasts of the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean. Acentrogobius matsya is an otolith-based fossil species found in the Burdigalian (Miocene) Quilon Formation of southwestern India. Species There are currently 22 recognized species in this genus: Acentrogobius caninus Valenciennes, 1837 (Tropical sand goby) Acentrogobius cenderawasih G. R. Allen & Erdmann, 2012 (Cenderawasih goby) Acentrogobius chlorostigmatoides Bleeker, 1849 (Greenspot goby) Acentrogobius cyanomos Bleeker, 1849 Acentrogobius dayi Koumans, 1941 (Day's goby) Acentrogobius ennorensis Menon & Rema Devi, 1980 Acentrogobius griseus F. Day, 1876 (Grey goby) Acentrogobius janthinopterus Bleeker, 1853 (Robust mangrove goby) Acentrogobius limarius G. R. Allen, Erdmann & Hadiaty, 2015 (Batanta mud goby) Acentrogobius masoni F. Day, 1873 Acentrogobius moloanus Herre, 1927 (Barcheek amoya) Acentrogobius nebulosus Forsskål, 1775 (Shadow goby) Acentrogobius pellidebilis Y. J. Lee & I. S. Kim, 1992 Acentrogobius pflaumii Bleeker, 1853 (Striped sandgoby) Acentrogobius signatus W. K. H. Peters, 1855 Acentrogobius simplex Sauvage, 1880 (Bagamoyo goby) Acentrogobius suluensis Herre, 1927 (Sulu goby) Acentrogobius therezieni Kiener, 1963 Acentrogobius vanderloosi G. R. Allen, 2015 (Mudslope goby) Acentrogobius viganensis Steindachner, 1893 Acentrogobius violarisi G. R. Allen, 2015 (Alotau goby) Acentrogobius viridipunctatus Valenciennes, 1837 (Spotted green goby) Acentrogobius matsya Carolin, Bajpai, Maurya & Schwarzhans, 2022 (otolith-based fossil species) References Gobiidae Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
The Page-Walker Hotel, also known as the Page-Walker Arts & History Center, is a historic house museum and former hotel located in Cary, North Carolina. The founder of the town of Cary, Allison Francis Page, built the Second Empire style hotel about 1868, and J. R. Walker bought it later. Page's son Walter Hines Page (1855–1918) was an American journalist, publisher, and diplomat. History From 1868 until 1916, passengers from the Southern and Seaboard Air Line railroads stayed at the Page-Walker Hotel. The building served as a boarding house and private residence from 1916 until 1980. After the business closed, the building sat vacant and deteriorated for five years until the Cary Town Council purchased the property. Volunteers restored the exterior of the hotel to its original design. Museum The Arts & History Center also contains the Cary Heritage Museum, gallery exhibitions, educational rooms, an archive gallery, a smokehouse, and a garden. The Page-Walker Hotel was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 29, 1979. Events Today The Page-Walker currently hosts a variety of events such as weddings. Annually, they host a "Paint the Page" art contest in which young artists from grades 8-12 are invited to draw an aspect of the building that inspires them most. See also List of museums in North Carolina National Register of Historic Places listings in Wake County, North Carolina References External links Town of Cary: Page-Walker Arts & History Center website Friends of the Page-Walker Hotel website Houses completed in 1868 Historic house museums in North Carolina Museums in Wake County, North Carolina Art museums and galleries in North Carolina History museums in North Carolina Buildings and structures in Cary, North Carolina Hotels established in 1868 Houses in Wake County, North Carolina Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in North Carolina Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in North Carolina National Register of Historic Places in Wake County, North Carolina Second Empire architecture in North Carolina
HD 22663 (y Eridani) is a candidate astrometric binary star system in the equatorial constellation of Eridanus. It is visible to the naked eye with an apparent visual magnitude of 4.57. Based upon an annual parallax shift of , it is located around 230 light years from the Sun. It is moving further away from the Earth with a heliocentric radial velocity of +11.5 km/s, having come within some 3.76 million years ago. The visible component is an orange-hued giant star with a stellar classification of K1 III, having exhausted the hydrogen at its core and evolved away from the main sequence. It has an estimated 1.4 times the mass of the Sun and has expanded to 13 times the Sun's radius. At the age of 2.6 billion years, this star is radiating 96 times the Sun's luminosity from its enlarged photosphere at an effective temperature of 4,660 K. References K-type giants Astrometric binaries Eridanus (constellation) Eridani, y Durchmusterung objects 022663 016870 1106
Metalloeme viridescens is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, the only species in the genus Metalloeme. References Xystrocerini Monotypic beetle genera
The 1971 NAIA Soccer Championship was the 13th annual tournament held by the NAIA to determine the national champion of men's college soccer among its members in the United States. In a rematch of the previous year's final, Quincy (IL) defeated defending champions Davis & Elkins in the final, 1–0, to claim the Hawks' third NAIA national title. For the second consecutive year, the final was played in Dunn, North Carolina. Qualification For the fourth year, the tournament field remained fixed at eight teams. Unlike the previous three years, however, additional fifth- and seventh-place finals were not contested. Bracket See also 1971 NCAA Soccer Championship References NAIA men's soccer championship NAIA 1971 in sports in North Carolina
Mordella decorata is a species of beetle in the genus Mordella of the family Mordellidae, which is part of the superfamily Tenebrionoidea. It was discovered in 1875. References Beetles described in 1875 decorata
Frémontiers () is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France. Geography The commune is situated 15 miles (25 km) southwest of Amiens on the junction of the D138 and D920 roads Population Places of interest The church The watermill Frémontiers woods See also Communes of the Somme department Jacques Frémontier (born surname Friedman; 1930–2020), French journalist and television producer References Communes of Somme (department)
```go package libvirt import ( "context" "fmt" "log" "testing" libvirt "github.com/digitalocean/go-libvirt" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform-plugin-sdk/v2/helper/acctest" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform-plugin-sdk/v2/helper/resource" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform-plugin-sdk/v2/terraform" ) func TestAccLibvirtCloudInit_CreateCloudInitDiskAndUpdate(t *testing.T) { var volume libvirt.StorageVol randomResourceName := acctest.RandStringFromCharSet(10, acctest.CharSetAlpha) randomPoolName := acctest.RandStringFromCharSet(10, acctest.CharSetAlpha) randomPoolPath := "/tmp/terraform-provider-libvirt-pool-" + randomPoolName // this structs are contents values we expect. expectedContents := Expected{UserData: "#cloud-config", NetworkConfig: "network:", MetaData: "instance-id: bamboo"} expectedContents2 := Expected{UserData: "#cloud-config2", NetworkConfig: "network2:", MetaData: "instance-id: bamboo2"} expectedContentsEmpty := Expected{UserData: "#cloud-config2", NetworkConfig: "", MetaData: ""} randomIsoName := acctest.RandStringFromCharSet(10, acctest.CharSetAlpha) + ".iso" resource.Test(t, resource.TestCase{ PreCheck: func() { testAccPreCheck(t) }, Providers: testAccProviders, CheckDestroy: func(s *terraform.State) error { return nil }, Steps: []resource.TestStep{ { Config: fmt.Sprintf(` resource "libvirt_pool" "%s" { name = "%s" type = "dir" path = "%s" } resource "libvirt_cloudinit_disk" "%s" { name = "%s" user_data = "#cloud-config" meta_data = "instance-id: bamboo" network_config = "network:" pool = "${libvirt_pool.%s.name}" }`, randomPoolName, randomPoolName, randomPoolPath, randomResourceName, randomIsoName, randomPoolName), Check: resource.ComposeTestCheckFunc( resource.TestCheckResourceAttr( "libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, "name", randomIsoName), testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, &volume), expectedContents.testAccCheckCloudInitDiskFilesContent("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName), ), }, { Config: fmt.Sprintf(` resource "libvirt_pool" "%s" { name = "%s" type = "dir" path = "%s" } resource "libvirt_cloudinit_disk" "%s" { name = "%s" user_data = "#cloud-config2" meta_data = "instance-id: bamboo2" network_config = "network2:" pool = "${libvirt_pool.%s.name}" }`, randomPoolName, randomPoolName, randomPoolPath, randomResourceName, randomIsoName, randomPoolName), Check: resource.ComposeTestCheckFunc( resource.TestCheckResourceAttr( "libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, "name", randomIsoName), testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, &volume), expectedContents2.testAccCheckCloudInitDiskFilesContent("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName), ), }, { Config: fmt.Sprintf(` resource "libvirt_pool" "%s" { name = "%s" type = "dir" path = "%s" } resource "libvirt_cloudinit_disk" "%s" { name = "%s" user_data = "#cloud-config2" pool = "${libvirt_pool.%s.name}" }`, randomPoolName, randomPoolName, randomPoolPath, randomResourceName, randomIsoName, randomPoolName), Check: resource.ComposeTestCheckFunc( resource.TestCheckResourceAttr( "libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, "name", randomIsoName), testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, &volume), expectedContentsEmpty.testAccCheckCloudInitDiskFilesContent("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName), ), }, // when we apply 2 times with same conf, we should not have a diff. See bug: // path_to_url { Config: fmt.Sprintf(` resource "libvirt_pool" "%s" { name = "%s" type = "dir" path = "%s" } resource "libvirt_cloudinit_disk" "%s" { name = "%s" user_data = "#cloud-config4" pool = "${libvirt_pool.%s.name}" }`, randomPoolName, randomPoolName, randomPoolPath, randomResourceName, randomIsoName, randomPoolName), ExpectNonEmptyPlan: true, PlanOnly: true, Check: resource.ComposeTestCheckFunc( resource.TestCheckResourceAttr( "libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, "name", randomIsoName), testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, &volume), expectedContentsEmpty.testAccCheckCloudInitDiskFilesContent("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName), ), }, }, }) } // The destroy function should always handle the case where the resource might already be destroyed // (manually, for example). If the resource is already destroyed, this should not return an error. // This allows Terraform users to manually delete resources without breaking Terraform. // This test should fail without a proper "Exists" implementation. func TestAccLibvirtCloudInit_ManuallyDestroyed(t *testing.T) { var volume libvirt.StorageVol randomResourceName := acctest.RandStringFromCharSet(10, acctest.CharSetAlpha) randomPoolName := acctest.RandStringFromCharSet(10, acctest.CharSetAlpha) randomPoolPath := "/tmp/terraform-provider-libvirt-pool-" + randomPoolName testAccCheckLibvirtCloudInitConfigBasic := fmt.Sprintf(` resource "libvirt_pool" "%s" { name = "%s" type = "dir" path = "%s" } resource "libvirt_cloudinit_disk" "%s" { name = "%s" pool = "${libvirt_pool.%s.name}" user_data = "#cloud-config\nssh_authorized_keys: []\n" }`, randomPoolName, randomPoolName, randomPoolPath, randomResourceName, randomResourceName, randomPoolName) resource.Test(t, resource.TestCase{ PreCheck: func() { testAccPreCheck(t) }, Providers: testAccProviders, CheckDestroy: func(s *terraform.State) error { return nil }, Steps: []resource.TestStep{ { Config: testAccCheckLibvirtCloudInitConfigBasic, Check: resource.ComposeTestCheckFunc( testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists("libvirt_cloudinit_disk."+randomResourceName, &volume), ), }, { Config: testAccCheckLibvirtCloudInitConfigBasic, Destroy: true, PreConfig: func() { client := testAccProvider.Meta().(*Client) if volume.Key == "" { t.Fatalf("Key is blank") } if err := volumeDelete(context.Background(), client, volume.Key); err != nil { t.Fatal(err) } }, }, }, }) } func testAccCheckCloudInitVolumeExists(volumeName string, volume *libvirt.StorageVol) resource.TestCheckFunc { return func(state *terraform.State) error { virConn := testAccProvider.Meta().(*Client).libvirt rs, err := getResourceFromTerraformState(volumeName, state) if err != nil { return err } cikey, err := getCloudInitVolumeKeyFromTerraformID(rs.Primary.ID) if err != nil { return err } retrievedVol, err := virConn.StorageVolLookupByKey(cikey) if err != nil { return err } if retrievedVol.Key == "" { return fmt.Errorf("UUID is blank") } if retrievedVol.Key != cikey { log.Printf("[DEBUG]: retrievedVol.Key is: %s \ncloudinit key is %s", retrievedVol.Key, cikey) return fmt.Errorf("Resource ID and cloudinit volume key does not match") } *volume = retrievedVol return nil } } // this is helper method for test expected values. type Expected struct { UserData, NetworkConfig, MetaData string } func (expected *Expected) testAccCheckCloudInitDiskFilesContent(volumeName string) resource.TestCheckFunc { return func(state *terraform.State) error { virConn := testAccProvider.Meta().(*Client).libvirt rs, err := getResourceFromTerraformState(volumeName, state) if err != nil { return err } cloudInitDiskDef, err := newCloudInitDefFromRemoteISO(context.Background(), virConn, rs.Primary.ID) if err != nil { return err } if cloudInitDiskDef.MetaData != expected.MetaData { return fmt.Errorf("metadata '%s' content differs from expected Metadata %s", cloudInitDiskDef.MetaData, expected.MetaData) } if cloudInitDiskDef.UserData != expected.UserData { return fmt.Errorf("userdata '%s' content differs from expected UserData %s", cloudInitDiskDef.UserData, expected.UserData) } if cloudInitDiskDef.NetworkConfig != expected.NetworkConfig { return fmt.Errorf("networkconfig '%s' content differs from expected NetworkConfigData %s", cloudInitDiskDef.NetworkConfig, expected.NetworkConfig) } return nil } } ```
The soft dome tweeter is a particular type of tweeter invented and patented in 1967 by Bill Hecht, a renowned pioneer in the early days of audio engineering and the founder of Phase Technology. Hecht states that he was confronted with what seemed a mundane problem: When showing speakers at various audio shows, onlookers often poked at the two-inch dome tweeters of the display models, sometimes cracking them. He set out to make a soft, mock tweeter that wouldn't crack when prodded. “I brought it back to the lab, and I thought it might possibly make a good mid-range if I coated it,” Hecht recalls. “So I coated it with a thin rubber coating and put noise through it with a signal generator. To my absolute surprise, it went beyond 12K; that was quite a shock.” In those days, the belief was that only a rigid tweeter was capable of producing high frequencies. The soft dome revolutionized the reproduction of high frequency sound; it produced a smoother frequency response, wider dispersion to higher frequencies, and had almost no high frequency resonances, all with much lower distortion than conventional tweeters up to that point. After it was patented, the soft dome tweeter became an industry standard and was licensed almost immediately by all major audio companies in the world including Philips, Peerless, McIntosh, Sony, JVC, Yamaha, Pioneer, Kenwood, Shure and many more. References Phase Technology Official Web Site, Retrieved January 2014 External links Official Website Sundown Audio Loudspeakers
Hilde may refer to: Hilde (given name) Hilde (film), a 2009 German biopic film MV Hilde, a Kriegsmarine coastal tanker Tom Hilde (born 1987), Norwegian ski jumper Characters Hilde (Soulcalibur), a character in the Soul series Hilde Schbeiker, a character in Mobile Suit Gundam Wing Hilde (7 days), a character in "7 days" mobile game See also Hild (disambiguation) Hilda (disambiguation)
Edward Albert Filene (September 3, 1860 – September 26, 1937) was an American businessman and philanthropist. He is best known for building the Filene's department store chain and for his decisive role in pioneering credit unions across the United States. Early life Born in Salem, Massachusetts, Edward was one of five children of William Filene (born May 8, 1830) and Clara Ballin (born December 13, 1833). Both his parents were German Jewish immigrants, his father from Posen, Prussia, and his mother was born in Segnitz, Bavaria. William immigrated to the US in 1848 after abandoning law school in Berlin. It was some time in the 1850s that William and Clara met while Clara was visiting relatives in Hartford, Connecticut. They married in New York City. As "a peddler, chiefly of women's apparel" William built up a company composed of several small retail shops. In 1865, at the age of 5, Edward was injured in a fall that left him with a permanent limp. Eczema plagued him throughout his life. In 1872, Clara Filene enrolled her three boys in the "Brüsselsche Handels und Erziehungsinstitut", a boarding school known for excellence in instruction and discipline in her Franconian hometown Segnitz-am-Main. The headmaster at that time, Samuel Spier, was one of the founding fathers of the early German democracy movement and an outspoken atheist; one of Edwards schoolmates was a certain Ettore Schmitz from Trieste who later became famous as the Italian writer Italo Svevo. Most of the pupils in Segnitz were the sons of German and Austrian Jewish entrepreneurs or merchants like, for instance, Edwards classmate Richard Fluss, a childhood friend of Sigmund Freud. But there were also some Christian schoolmates. The boys remained at the school until 1875, and it was a period of intense loneliness and homesickness for him as a young teenager. Filene was shy as a youth, and never married. Upon his return to the US, Edward attended high school in Lynn, Massachusetts, and worked in his father's store evenings, weekends, and summers. Work life In 1881, when Edward was 21 years old, his father William founded a department store in Boston. Edward began traveling in the 1880s, purchasing merchandise, studying business practices, and increasingly examining how different societies were organized and the problems they faced. Edward had passed his entrance exams for Harvard University when in 1890 his father became seriously ill. Thirty years old at that time, Edward gave up his educational ambitions to take over the family business. One of his great disappointments in his life was being unable to attend Harvard. Together with his younger brother Abraham Lincoln Filene, he reorganized his father's department store into "William Filene's Sons Company", which would later become Filene's. Though the store did not make a profit for many years, it attracted more customers, and eventually turned a profit, even supporting the main store of Filene's during the Great Depression. By 1928 Edward was ousted from store management by his fellow stockholders who were "troubled by his liberal management policies", but retained an office and the title of President. His ouster allowed him to dedicate more time to his passions of travel, civic organizations, and philanthropy. He wrote numerous speeches, pamphlets and several books. Filene's Store management policies Edward Filene drew inspiration from the scientific management ideas of Frederick Winslow Taylor and adapted these ideas for use in the retail environment. While Taylor is best known for the use of scientific methods to increase workplace efficiency, he was also interested in how to improve the quality of work for employees. Filene is credited with refining a number of under-utilized and in some cases novel retailing techniques. For example, Filene's Department Store offered complete and honest descriptions of its merchandise and offered to give customers their "money back if not satisfied". Edward Filene was a proponent of the scientific approach to retail management. In 1909, he introduced the "bargain basement" principle. Under this plan, merchandise had to be sold within 30 days or it was marked down; after a further 12 days, the merchandise was further reduced by 25% and if still unsold after another 18 days, a further markdown of 25% was applied. If the merchandise remained unsold after two months, it was given to charity. Although Filene's Basement was not the first 'bargain basement' in the U.S., the principles of 'automatic mark-downs' generated excitement and proved very profitable. Filene personally supervised construction of the first basement in Boston. An advocate of consumer education, he introduced color matching tools in the clothing departments of his stores. Filene was a pioneer in employee relations. He instituted a profit sharing program, a minimum wage for women, a 40-hour work week, health clinics and paid vacations. He also played an important role in encouraging the Filene Cooperative Association, "perhaps the earliest American company union". Through this channel he engaged constructively with his employees in collective bargaining and arbitration processes. Origins of US credit unions In 1907 Filene traveled around the world, and by February reached Calcutta, India. There, he visited some rural cooperative banks that had been promoted and funded by the British colonial government. On his return, he contacted his associate Franklin D. Roosevelt and suggested that a similar type of organization be promoted by the US government in the Philippines. He realized that credit unions could help ordinary American workers to access loans at reasonable rates. Equally important, workers could save their money so that when hard times hit, they were prepared. He formed a savings and loan association for employees which later became the Filene Employee's Credit Union. Subsequent to this trip the philanthropy he practiced, combined with the steady implementation efforts of his associate Roy Bergengren were critical to the emergence of credit unions in the United States. He also donated $1 million to the Consumers Distribution Corporation to help them organize a national network of cooperative retail stores. In 1908, Filene and Massachusetts banking commissioner Pierre Jay, helped organize public hearings on creating credit union legislation in Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Credit Union Act of 1909 was the first comprehensive credit union law in the United States, and would serve as a model for the Federal Credit Union Act of 1934. Filene seems to have been responsible, with the collaboration of Pierre Jay, for the adoption of the term "credit union" in the United States. His concern with fighting loan sharks and excessively costly consumer loans led to the choice of the word "credit", while his interest in working people made him want to cast unions in a more positive light. Inspired by the experience in many European countries where credit unions were called "people's banks", Filene organized the National Association of Peoples Banks to advance the credit union cause in the US. However, little came of this until 1921, when Filene observed in Roy Bergengren the key organizer he needed. Together with Bergengren he founded the Credit Union National Extension Bureau. Credit Union National Extension Bureau, 1921–1934 In 1921, Filene founded the Extension Bureau, to which he donated nearly $1 million during its 14-year history. It had four goals: to bring about the laws needed for credit union development in the various states, subsequently, to organize some credit unions in each state that could serve as examples to others, to expand the number of credit unions to the point that they could create self-sustaining state federations, and to combine the federations into a self-sustaining national association. Filene hired Roy Bergengren, and their collaboration and the work of the Extension Bureau proved very effective, bringing state laws to fruition in 26 states and substantially revised flawed legal frameworks in 5 others. In 1934 the Roosevelt Administration passed the Federal Credit Union Act, making it possible to form a credit union anywhere in the United States. The Extension Bureau has been a model for many projects related to international development and microfinance since. Foreshadowing debates that still rage, Filene's and Bergengren's views diverged on two key issues: First, Bergengren believed that the Extension Bureau should attempt to secure federal legislation first, rather than work state by state. Filene maintained that a national law should be based on a sound understanding of the diverse circumstances of people across America—from shrimp fishermen in Louisiana, to factory workers in Massachusetts or farmers in the mid-West. Only by developing many state laws first would such a sound national understanding be possible. He prevailed in this debate. Second, as the Great Depression set in the Reconstruction Finance Corporation under President Hoover sought to stimulate the economy with soft loans targeted to banks, railways and large companies. Filene favoured asking for $100 million in reconstruction credits to be pumped into credit unions. Bergengren strongly opposed this position, and his view prevailed this time. "To him, it meant destroying the vital principle of the whole movement by converting a community enterprise into an agency of the government. To teach people how to help themselves was more important by far in times of depression than at any other time." Credit Union National Association, 1934 With the work of the Bureau essentially completed, a national meeting of credit union leaders was called at Estes Park, Colorado. On August 11, 1934, the Credit Union National Association, a national federation funded by the nation's credit unions, was formed to replace the Bureau. The role of philanthropy in creating the US credit union system was over. The founding by-laws of CUNA recognized Filene's contributions with the following words: Philanthropy Filene's lifestyle and motivation for his philanthropic work was described by Bergengren, who knew him for much of his adult life. Several writers mention the fact that Filene never married may be why "his family in a very real sense became society as a whole." Filene "played a pivotal role in passing America's first Workmen's Compensation Law in 1911" and was a founder of the Boston, American and international chambers of commerce. Filene believed in the intrinsic capability of ordinary people to improve their own condition, given "good information and the discipline to use it effectively." This faith led not only to his involvement with credit unions, but to a wider interest in research into critical social and economic trends. This research, if clearly explained to the public, would advance the causes of both democracy and peace. These views led him to found the Twentieth Century Fund in 1919, since renamed The Century Foundation. Living in the era of Henry Ford, Filene believed that the problems of mass production had essentially been solved. But he feared that production by itself would not ensure prosperity; if ordinary workers could not afford to continue financing this expansion with their purchasing power, the result would be either reduced production or worse, increased social inequality leading to violence or dictatorship. He saw credit unions as an important part of the answer. In a speech in California in 1936 he summed up his view: An important initiative was the "Boston-1915", a multi-sector, private-public sector partnership that organized leaders and committees to take leadership roles in solving key urban problems, including slums, public health, crime and local governance. Filene was for world peace; he joined the League to Enforce Peace founded 1915 in New York after World War I had broken out, and he supported the League of Nations after the war. Filene corresponded with a wide range of leaders from Woodrow Wilson and Georges Clemenceau to Mahatma Gandhi and Vladimir Lenin. Last years and death During the 1930s, Filene was concerned about the growing threat of the Axis powers on the international front, and the need to prevent another Great Depression on the home front. He was appalled by the growing strength of the Fascist movement and worried about the growing anti-Semitism in Europe. He gave many speeches on the subject and wrote against the growing anti-Semitism in the United States. To counter the influence of propaganda, Filene provided the seed money in 1937 for the Institute for Propaganda Analysis, which published a Bulletin and books to inform the public before World War II. His other major concern was mass production. He argued that higher wages and shorter hours for workers would enable them to buy materials they could not otherwise afford. He wrote several books on the subject and proposed that mass production, mass distribution and worker purchasing power were the answer to economic depression. He admired the methods of Henry Ford in the auto industry. In 1935, at the age of 75, he made a visit to Moscow and was stricken with pneumonia. His assistant, Lillian Schoedler was able to get him the best of care and he did recover. In 1937, however, he made another trip to Europe to attend the International Chamber of Commerce meeting in Paris. He again contracted pneumonia and died in the American Hospital of Paris in Neuilly-sur-Seine on September 26, 1937. His death was reported on the front page of every major newspaper in the world. A man who thought of himself as a "seller of pins" would have been honored indeed by the tribute paid to him by President Franklin D. Roosevelt when he heard of Filene's death Roosevelt wrote: Roy Bergengren conducted a series of memorial meetings for credit unionists around the country. The Board of Directors of Credit Union National Association and CUNA Mutual Insurance Company voted to raise funds to build a memorial to their founder. Filene House in Madison, Wisconsin was the result. President Harry S. Truman dedicated the building in May 1950. Legacy Filene is considered the father of the U.S. credit union movement, which by the end of 2008, with 89 million members, had the largest membership of any country and one of the highest levels of market penetration in the world. A credit union think tank and research organization, the Filene Research Institute, is named in his honor. A building of the Hillman Housing Corporation, a housing cooperative in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, is named after him. Bronze busts honoring Filene and seven other industry magnates stand outside between the Chicago River and the Merchandise Mart in downtown Chicago, Illinois. The first credit union to be named after Filene outside the United States was Filene Credit Union in Broad Cove, Nova Scotia in December 1932. In 1931, Lincoln Steffens agreed to write a biography of Filene. He asked Whittaker Chambers to help him write it; when Chambers declined, he turned to Robert Cantwell. In December 1931, Cantwell accepted–and Steffens had a heart attack. In 1936, Steffens died with the book incomplete. In 1937, Cantwell gave the manuscript to Filene–and Filene died. The book went unpublished. In 1944, the Liberty ship was built for the U.S. Maritime Commission by St. Johns River Shipbuilding Company in Jacksonville, Florida. Laid down on February 9, the ship was launched on April 6 in a christening ceremony sponsored by Catherine Filene Shouse that many in Florida's credit union business attended. In 1966, the decommissioned ship was sunk at Cook Inlet, Alaska, to be used as a breakwater and dock. Publications 1906: The Betterment of the Conditions of Working Women, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 27: 613 to 23 via Internet Archive. 1915: Cooperative Pioneering and Guaranteeing in Foreign Trade, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 59: 321 to 32 via Internet Archive. 1917: Democratic organization of the coming peace conference, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science via Internet Archive 1919: International Business Coöperation, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 89: 135 to 42, via Internet Archive 1920: The World Mix-up and the Way Out, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 92: 26–34. 19??: The winning plans of the European peace awards: offered in Great Britain, France, Italy, and Germany for "The best practical proposals for restoring peace and prosperity in each of those countries thru international co-operation". Rouffé, imp., 180 pages, digitized Sep 15, 2010. 1921: "Work Or War?", 23 pages. 19??: "The War's Influence Upon American Business", publisher not identified, 15 pages. 192?: "An American View: Prosperous Neighbors Swell the Nation's Pocketbooks", Wm. Filene's Sons Company, 4 pages. 1922: Is American Coöperation Necessary for European Rehabilitation, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 102: 183–9, via Internet Archive. 1924: The Way Out: A Forecast of Coming Changes in American Business and Industry., Doubleday, Page, 306 pages, via Internet Archive 1925: The Way Out. A Business Man Looks at the World, London, 248 pages. 1927: "The Way Out for the Manufacturer and the Merchant": An Address. published by Marlborough Chamber of Commerce, 18 pages. 1925: "More Profits from Merchandising: The Model Stock Plan for Distributors, Producers, and Buyers", An Address Before the Retailers Lucheon, Illinois Chamber of Commerce, at Chicago, Thursday, October 18, 1928. self-published, 11 pages. 1928: "The New Responsibilities of the Buyer", 14 pages. 1928: "Contributions of Research to Business": An Address Delivered Before the Sixty-ninth Convocation of the University of the State of New York at Albany, Friday, October 19, 1928, 14 pages. 1929: "Mass Production and the Tariff", 7 pages. 1930: The Model Stock Plan, McGraw-Hill, New York, pp 253, reissued by Literary Licensing, LLC, 270 pages, .(March 23, 2013) 1931: Successful Living in This Machine Age. published by Jonathan Cape Toronto. reissued by Lewis Press 348 pages, via Internet Archive 1934: The Consumer's Dollar. New York, John Day Company 29 pages, ASIN: B00086S6P. 1934: "A Merchant Surveys the New Deal: Radio Address", 8 pages. 1934: "Department Store-manufactures's Relationships", Issue 3 of Marketing series, American Management Association, Kraus Reprint Corporation, 16 pages. 1934: "The New Deal and the Old Ideal", reprint, 2 pages. 1935: Morals in Business. published by the Committee On the Barbara Weinstock Lecture, via Internet Archive 1936: Cooperation, a Natural Human Law, reprinted by American Red Cross, 3 pages. 1936: Religion and Distribution, an Address ...(at the Dinner of the Synod of New York of the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.A., Brooklyn, New York, October 21, 1936). reprint, publisher not identified, 5 pages. 1937: (with Werner Karl Gabler & Percy Shiras Brown) Next Steps Forward in Retailing, Harper & Bros 1939: Speaking of Change: A Selection of Speeches and Articles via Internet Archive French language 1925: Le problème européen et sa solution Bibliothèque politique et economique, Translated by Francis Delaisi. Payot, 159 pages. 1934: "Servir, au siècle des machines", Volume 1 of Encyclopédia Pax ... 2. collection: Coopération sociale. 1.ser. Philosophie et pratique Volume 2 of Encyclopédie Pax. Les Éditions internationales, 291 pages. German language 1927: Mehr Rentabilität im Einzelhandel: (Der Normal-Lagerplan), "L." Schottlaender & Company, 171 pages. 1931: Reichtum für alle: der neue Kapitalismus, Braumüller, 89 pages. See also America's Credit Union Museum History of credit unions History of marketing Institute for Propaganda Analysis Retail Monsignor Pierre Hevey, Roman Catholic Priest who was instrumental in starting a Credit Union for his parishioners Filene's Department store Alphonse Desjardins References External links Credit Union National Association The Century Foundation Role in creation of Credit Unions Short bio A tribute to Edward Filene About the Filene Research Institute 1860 births 1937 deaths American businesspeople in retailing American pacifists American people of German-Jewish descent American philanthropists Jewish pacifists Philanthropists from Massachusetts Businesspeople from Boston American cooperative organizers Credit unions of the United States People from Salem, Massachusetts American people with disabilities The Century Foundation Filene family
```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.thingsboard.server.queue.provider; import jakarta.annotation.PreDestroy; import lombok.extern.slf4j.Slf4j; import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.condition.ConditionalOnExpression; import org.springframework.stereotype.Component; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.ToCoreMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.ToCoreNotificationMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.ToRuleEngineMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.ToTransportMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.ToUsageStatsServiceMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.TransportApiRequestMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.gen.transport.TransportProtos.TransportApiResponseMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.TbQueueAdmin; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.TbQueueConsumer; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.TbQueueProducer; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.TbQueueRequestTemplate; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.azure.servicebus.TbServiceBusAdmin; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.azure.servicebus.TbServiceBusConsumerTemplate; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.azure.servicebus.TbServiceBusProducerTemplate; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.azure.servicebus.TbServiceBusQueueConfigs; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.azure.servicebus.TbServiceBusSettings; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.common.DefaultTbQueueRequestTemplate; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.common.TbProtoQueueMsg; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.discovery.TbServiceInfoProvider; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.discovery.TopicService; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.settings.TbQueueCoreSettings; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.settings.TbQueueRuleEngineSettings; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.settings.TbQueueTransportApiSettings; import org.thingsboard.server.queue.settings.TbQueueTransportNotificationSettings; @Component @ConditionalOnExpression("'${queue.type:null}'=='service-bus' && (('${service.type:null}'=='monolith' && '${transport.api_enabled:true}'=='true') || '${service.type:null}'=='tb-transport')") @Slf4j public class ServiceBusTransportQueueFactory implements TbTransportQueueFactory { private final TbQueueTransportApiSettings transportApiSettings; private final TbQueueTransportNotificationSettings transportNotificationSettings; private final TbServiceBusSettings serviceBusSettings; private final TbServiceInfoProvider serviceInfoProvider; private final TbQueueCoreSettings coreSettings; private final TbQueueRuleEngineSettings ruleEngineSettings; private final TopicService topicService; private final TbQueueAdmin coreAdmin; private final TbQueueAdmin transportApiAdmin; private final TbQueueAdmin notificationAdmin; private final TbQueueAdmin ruleEngineAdmin; public ServiceBusTransportQueueFactory(TbQueueTransportApiSettings transportApiSettings, TbQueueTransportNotificationSettings transportNotificationSettings, TbServiceBusSettings serviceBusSettings, TbQueueRuleEngineSettings ruleEngineSettings, TbServiceInfoProvider serviceInfoProvider, TbQueueCoreSettings coreSettings, TbServiceBusQueueConfigs serviceBusQueueConfigs, TopicService topicService) { this.transportApiSettings = transportApiSettings; this.transportNotificationSettings = transportNotificationSettings; this.serviceBusSettings = serviceBusSettings; this.serviceInfoProvider = serviceInfoProvider; this.coreSettings = coreSettings; this.ruleEngineSettings = ruleEngineSettings; this.topicService = topicService; this.coreAdmin = new TbServiceBusAdmin(serviceBusSettings, serviceBusQueueConfigs.getCoreConfigs()); this.transportApiAdmin = new TbServiceBusAdmin(serviceBusSettings, serviceBusQueueConfigs.getTransportApiConfigs()); this.notificationAdmin = new TbServiceBusAdmin(serviceBusSettings, serviceBusQueueConfigs.getNotificationsConfigs()); this.ruleEngineAdmin = new TbServiceBusAdmin(serviceBusSettings, serviceBusQueueConfigs.getRuleEngineConfigs()); } @Override public TbQueueRequestTemplate<TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiRequestMsg>, TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiResponseMsg>> createTransportApiRequestTemplate() { TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiRequestMsg>> producerTemplate = new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(transportApiAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(transportApiSettings.getRequestsTopic())); TbQueueConsumer<TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiResponseMsg>> consumerTemplate = new TbServiceBusConsumerTemplate<>(transportApiAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(transportApiSettings.getResponsesTopic() + "." + serviceInfoProvider.getServiceId()), msg -> new TbProtoQueueMsg<>(msg.getKey(), TransportApiResponseMsg.parseFrom(msg.getData()), msg.getHeaders())); DefaultTbQueueRequestTemplate.DefaultTbQueueRequestTemplateBuilder <TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiRequestMsg>, TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportApiResponseMsg>> templateBuilder = DefaultTbQueueRequestTemplate.builder(); templateBuilder.queueAdmin(transportApiAdmin); templateBuilder.requestTemplate(producerTemplate); templateBuilder.responseTemplate(consumerTemplate); templateBuilder.maxPendingRequests(transportApiSettings.getMaxPendingRequests()); templateBuilder.maxRequestTimeout(transportApiSettings.getMaxRequestsTimeout()); templateBuilder.pollInterval(transportApiSettings.getResponsePollInterval()); return templateBuilder.build(); } @Override public TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<ToRuleEngineMsg>> createRuleEngineMsgProducer() { return new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(ruleEngineAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(ruleEngineSettings.getTopic())); } @Override public TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<ToCoreMsg>> createTbCoreMsgProducer() { return new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(coreAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(coreSettings.getTopic())); } @Override public TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<ToCoreNotificationMsg>> createTbCoreNotificationsMsgProducer() { return new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(notificationAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(coreSettings.getTopic())); } @Override public TbQueueConsumer<TbProtoQueueMsg<ToTransportMsg>> createTransportNotificationsConsumer() { return new TbServiceBusConsumerTemplate<>(notificationAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(transportNotificationSettings.getNotificationsTopic() + "." + serviceInfoProvider.getServiceId()), msg -> new TbProtoQueueMsg<>(msg.getKey(), ToTransportMsg.parseFrom(msg.getData()), msg.getHeaders())); } @Override public TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<ToUsageStatsServiceMsg>> createToUsageStatsServiceMsgProducer() { return new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(coreAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(coreSettings.getUsageStatsTopic())); } @Override public TbQueueProducer<TbProtoQueueMsg<TransportProtos.ToHousekeeperServiceMsg>> createHousekeeperMsgProducer() { return new TbServiceBusProducerTemplate<>(coreAdmin, serviceBusSettings, topicService.buildTopicName(coreSettings.getHousekeeperTopic())); } @PreDestroy private void destroy() { if (coreAdmin != null) { coreAdmin.destroy(); } if (transportApiAdmin != null) { transportApiAdmin.destroy(); } if (notificationAdmin != null) { notificationAdmin.destroy(); } if (ruleEngineAdmin != null) { ruleEngineAdmin.destroy(); } } } ```
The 2018–19 season was the 28th season of competitive association football in Ukraine since dissolution of the Soviet Union. National teams Ukraine national football team Results and fixtures Ukraine U-21 national football team Ukraine U-19 national football team Ukraine women's national football team Results and fixtures Ukraine women's national student football team UEFA competitions UEFA Champions League Qualifying phase and play-off round Third qualifying round |} Play-off round |} Group stage Group F UEFA Europa League Qualifying phase and play-off round Second qualifying round |} Third qualifying round |} Play-off round |} Group stage Group E Group K Knockout phase Round of 32 |} Round of 16 |} UEFA Youth League UEFA Champions League Path Group F UEFA Women's Champions League Men's club football Note: For all scratched clubs, see section Clubs removed for more details Premier League League 1 League 2 Cup competitions Ukrainian Cup Super Cup Women's club football Note: For all scratched clubs, see section Clubs removed for more details Higher League Managerial changes This is a list of managerial changes among Ukrainian professional football clubs (top two leagues): Clubs removed Before the season Stal Kamianske, 12th place of the 2017–18 Ukrainian Premier League, was originally relegated, but later withdraw from the First League. The same day the PFL president confirmed that the league will consist of 16 teams. Originally, FC Stal Kamianske that were located in Kamianske played its games of the 2017–18 Ukrainian Premier League season in Kyiv. After relegation the club was admitted to the First League representing Bucha, Kyiv Oblast. Prior to the season commencing the club was renamed to FC Feniks Bucha. Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka, the Professional Football League allowed the club to keep its berth in the second tier even after its main sponsor announced that it will discontinue to fund the club. After the season completed, Ukrnafta (related to the Privat Group) who sponsored Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka decided to liquidate the club since it was a tax liability. Zhemchuzhyna Odesa withdrew after Round 31 during 2017–18 season. Technical losses were adjudged against the team in the last three matches. At time of withdrawal, Zhemchuzhyna's had played 31 matches, with a record of 7 wins, 6 draws and 18 losses, scoring 33 goals and having conceded 54 goals. Arsenal-Kyivshchyna Bila Tserkva failed attestation for the season and was removed from the league FC Ternopil after failing to arrive for their Round 6 away match against Polissya Zhytomyr, several days later informed the PFL that they are withdrawing from the competition. The club played four matches in the competition with a record of 4 losses scoring two goals and allowing nine goals scored against them. The PFL annulled their results as per league regulations and removed them from the official standings on the decision of the FFU Control and Disciplinary Committee of 7 September 2017. FC Metalurh Zaporizhzhia – prior to attestation, the club merged with FC Spartak-KPU Zaporizhzhia (a team of local university, KPU), but on 6 June 2018, the club failed attestation for the season and the club's administration decided to dissolve the team Inhulets-2 Petrove – the main club's administration of Inhulets Petrove decided to dissolve the second team Sudnobudivnyk Mykolaiv – failed attestation Skala Stryi – passed attestation, but dissolved its senior team protesting the FFU accusations in gambling. On 14 June 2018, there appeared information that the club will merge its academy with FC Volyn Lutsk. During or after the season Arsenal–Kyiv withdrew from professional competitions after being relegated from the Premier League. PFC Sumy received new ownership during winter break in the face of Serhiy Vashchenko who earlier this season was supposed to become the owner of Kobra Kharkiv. The new head coach of the Sumy club who had been announced was also former head coach of Kobra, Oleksandr Oliynyk. At the same time according to the former club's director Anatoliy Boiko, on 1 December 2018 PFC Sumy did not have any players on contract. On 11 April 2019, the FFU Control and Disciplinary Committee adopted its decision to strip the club of professional status and exclude the club from any competitions that it is participating currently or in the future. However the club has a right to file an appeal. Additional separate sanctions were to be also applied against the club's playing and administrative personnel. On 14 April 2019, the chairman of the FFU committee of ethics and fair play Francesco Baranka noted in regards to additional sanctions that PFC Sumy has earned some 10 million euros in match fixing. More to it, Ukrainian coach Oleksandr Sevidov who held post of head coach consultant in PFC Sumy and previously managed FC Illichivets Mariupol received a lifetime disqualification. On 17 February 2019, president of FC Zirka Kropyvnytskyi commented on his club's withdrawal from further participation in competitions of the Ukrainian First League. The president accused the newly formed NABU and law enforcement authorities in pressure against him. The president of the league expressed his surprise claiming that there seemed no real reason why the club had to withdraw. On 5 April 2019, the PFL council of leagues adopted its decision to remove FC Zirka Kropyvnytskyi from the League as it officially withdrew on 14 March 2019. On 22 April 2019, the club's vice-president announced that the club will restart from regional competitions with intention to return the club's pro-status in the future. Helios Kharkiv, the club reorganized under new management under a new name as FC Kobra Kharkiv. The club merged with another amateur club called the Kobra Football Academy which was playing in the Kharkiv Oblast Football Championship. On 15 August 2018 the club informed the Professional Football League of Ukraine about withdrawal from professional competitions, and were later officially expelled from the league. FC Myr Hornostayivka withdrew from competitions in protest. Zlahoda-Dnipro-1 WFC Lviv Notes References Seasons in Ukrainian football 2019 sport-related lists 2018 sport-related lists
Derek Holland (born 1986), is an American baseball player. Derek Holland may also refer to: Derek Holland (activist), a figure on the European far-right Derek Holland (rower) (born 1974), Irish rower
Archangels Don't Play Pinball (Italian title: Gli arcangeli non giocano al flipper) is a 1959 two-act play by Dario Fo. The play uses the metaphor of a pinball machine—a new innovation in Italy at the time and one which Fo and his wife Franca Rame were fond of— to convey mechanisation and conspicuous consumption. Plot summary A group of young Milanese men play a prank on one of their group - "Lofty". They arrange a fake marriage to a prostitute, who pretends to be a beautiful Albanian princess. Lofty has a problem - he needs to get identity papers from the Ministry. The only way he can do this is to become a dog. He is taken into a local kennel, where he is eventually bought by a circus owner. After various further adventures, Lofty eventually awakes, only to find that it has all been a dream. But the lovely lady is still there with him. Archangels don't play pinball with people's lives. Song The play is also noted for its use of song. One example is "Stringimi forte i polsi" (Hold my wrists tightly together) which the protagonist Il Lungo (Stretch) sings to an "Albanian" prostitute whose wrists he is bound to. It would later be the theme tune to the TV programme Canzonissima. Translations Ed Emery has carried out an authorised English translation. Further reading References Plays by Dario Fo 1959 plays
```javascript /** * @license Apache-2.0 * * * * path_to_url * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. */ 'use strict'; // MODULES // var isFunction = require( '@stdlib/assert/is-function' ); var Buffer = require( '@stdlib/buffer/ctor' ); var version = require( './node_version.js' ); // MAIN // var bool = isFunction( Buffer.from ) && version >= 5; // EXPORTS // module.exports = bool; ```
```java package com.ctrip.xpipe.redis.proxy.tunnel; /** * @author chen.zhu * <p> * Oct 31, 2018 */ public interface TunnelEventHandler { void onEstablished(); void onBackendClose(); void onFrontendClose(); void onClosing(); void onClosed(); } ```
The Montreal Subdivision is a railroad line owned by the St. Lawrence and Adirondack Railway and Canadian National. Operations are currently by Canadian National. The line originally ran from Massena, New York, northeast to Kahnawake, Quebec, along a former New York Central Railroad line. At its south end, the St. Lawrence Subdivision continues south; its north end was at Adirondack Junction, a junction with the Canadian Pacific Railway's Adirondack Subdivision, along which it had trackage rights north over the Saint-Laurent Railway Bridge into Montreal. History The piece from Huntingdon, Quebec, north to Salaberry-de-Valleyfield opened in 1892 as part of the St. Lawrence and Adirondack Railway. The line from Valleyfield to Beauharnois was originally a branch of the Grand Trunk Railway, built in the 1880s. The StL&A leased this line, and in 1897, they opened an extension from Beauharnois to Adirondack Junction. The line passed to the New York Central Railroad and Conrail through leases, mergers, and takeovers. Conrail bought the line from Massena to Huntingdon from the Canadian National Railway in 1993. See also List of CSX Transportation lines References CSX Transportation lines Rail infrastructure in New York (state) Rail infrastructure in Quebec New York Central Railroad lines Transport in Montreal https://www.progressiverailroading.com/resources/editorial/2020/040720Massena.pdf https://www.cn.ca/en/news/2019/08/cn-announces-strategic-acquisition-from-csx-in-the-state-of-new/
Anne Townshend or Anne Bacon; Anne, Lady Townshend (August 1573 – November 1622) was a British Puritan gentlewoman and benefactor of Puritan causes. Life Townshend was born in Waxham in 1573 and was baptised on 7 August. Her parents were Anne (born Gresham) and Sir Nathaniel Bacon MP. Her formal education was at a boarding school in Dickleborough and she married in December 1593 Sir John Townshend. The marriage had been negotiated by her father and the agreement was that the couple would inherit her father's land in Stiffkey, Langham, and Morston. It was a difficult marriage as her husband frequently rowed with people. Their son and heir, Sir Roger Townshend, 1st Baronet, was born in Melton Constable. Her husband died in 1603 from his wounds after taking part in a duel where he had killed his opponent. Anne recorded that had he lived then he may have moved abroad and left her without an income. Death and legacies Townshend lived in Heydon, but she died at the home of her cousin, Anne, Lady Corbett, in Sprowston Hall in Norfolk in early November 1622. Townshend had given money to ministers, including the poet Giles Fletcher, during her lifetime but her will required that money be distributed to the poor of the neighborhood. She left money also for ministers including John Goodwin who was later in disfavour with his bishop. References 1573 births 1622 deaths People from North Norfolk (district) British philanthropists Puritans People from Stiffkey
Voss Station () is a railway station on the Bergen Line located in the village of Vossevangen in the municipality of Voss in Vestland county, Norway. It sits just off the European route E16 highway on the northwestern shore of the lake Vangsvatnet. The station was opened as the original terminal station of the Voss Line in 1883. It is served by express trains to Bergen and Oslo, and the Bergen Commuter Rail, all operated by Vy Tog. Most commuter trains terminate at Voss, but up to seven per day continue on to Myrdal. The station restaurant was taken over by Norsk Spisevognselskap on 15 October 1947. The rail station contains the lower terminus of the Voss Gondol gondola system. References External links Jernbaneverket's page on Voss Railway stations in Voss Railway stations on Bergensbanen Railway stations opened in 1883 1883 establishments in Norway Railway stations in Norway opened in the 1880s
Sabine Lisicki and Samantha Stosur were the defending champions but decided not to participate. Iveta Benešová and Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová won the tournament defeating Julia Görges and Anna-Lena Grönefeld 6–4, 7–5 in the final. Seeds Draw Draw References Main Draw Porsche Tennis Grand Prix - Doubles 2012 Doubles
```prolog # # Test checking options of pg_rewind. # use strict; use warnings; use TestLib; use Test::More tests => 12; program_help_ok('pg_rewind'); program_version_ok('pg_rewind'); program_options_handling_ok('pg_rewind'); my $primary_pgdata = TestLib::tempdir; my $standby_pgdata = TestLib::tempdir; command_fails( [ 'pg_rewind', '--debug', '--target-pgdata', $primary_pgdata, '--source-pgdata', $standby_pgdata, 'extra_arg1' ], 'too many arguments'); command_fails([ 'pg_rewind', '--target-pgdata', $primary_pgdata ], 'no source specified'); command_fails( [ 'pg_rewind', '--debug', '--target-pgdata', $primary_pgdata, '--source-pgdata', $standby_pgdata, '--source-server', 'incorrect_source' ], 'both remote and local sources specified'); command_fails( [ 'pg_rewind', '--debug', '--target-pgdata', $primary_pgdata, '--source-pgdata', $standby_pgdata, '--write-recovery-conf' ], 'no local source with --write-recovery-conf'); ```
```javascript const {Strategy} = require("passport-discord"); passport.use( new Strategy( { clientID: "id", clientSecret: "secret", callbackURL: "callbackURL" }, (accessToken, refreshToken, profile, cb) => { authService.findOrCreate({discordId: profile.id}, cb); } ) ); ```
```xml import { BladeController, createBladeController, createDefaultPluginPool, PluginPool, } from '@tweakpane/core'; import * as assert from 'assert'; import {describe, it} from 'mocha'; import { createEmptyBladeController, createLabeledValueBladeController, createTestWindow, } from '../../misc/test-util.js'; import {ListBladeApi} from './api/list.js'; import {ListBladeParams, ListBladePlugin} from './plugin.js'; function createPluginPool(): PluginPool { const pool = createDefaultPluginPool(); pool.register('test', ListBladePlugin); return pool; } describe(ListBladePlugin.id, () => { [ {}, { view: 'list', }, { value: 123, view: 'list', }, { options: {foo: 1}, view: 'list', }, { value: 123, options: 'invalid', view: 'list', }, ].forEach((params) => { context(`when ${JSON.stringify(params)}`, () => { it('should not create API', () => { const doc = createTestWindow().document; const api = createBladeController(ListBladePlugin, { document: doc, params: params, }); assert.strictEqual(api, null); }); }); }); [ { value: 0, options: [], view: 'list', }, ].forEach((params) => { context(`when ${JSON.stringify(params)}`, () => { it('should create API', () => { const doc = createTestWindow().document; const api = createBladeController(ListBladePlugin, { document: doc, params: params, }); assert.notStrictEqual(api, null); }); }); }); [ (doc: Document) => createEmptyBladeController(doc), (doc: Document) => createLabeledValueBladeController(doc), ].forEach((createController) => { it('should not create API', () => { const doc = createTestWindow().document; const c = createController(doc) as BladeController; const api = ListBladePlugin.api({ controller: c, pool: createPluginPool(), }); assert.strictEqual(api, null); }); }); it('should apply initial params', () => { const doc = createTestWindow().document; const bc = createBladeController(ListBladePlugin, { document: doc, params: { label: 'hello', options: { foo: 1, bar: 2, }, value: 123, view: 'list', } as ListBladeParams<number>, }) as BladeController; const pool = createPluginPool(); const api = pool.createApi(bc) as ListBladeApi<number>; assert.strictEqual(api.value, 123); assert.deepStrictEqual(api.options[0], {text: 'foo', value: 1}); assert.deepStrictEqual(api.options[1], {text: 'bar', value: 2}); assert.strictEqual( api.controller.view.element.querySelector('.tp-lblv_l')?.textContent, 'hello', ); }); it('should support complex value', () => { const doc = createTestWindow().document; const bc = createBladeController(ListBladePlugin, { document: doc, params: { label: 'hello', options: [ {text: 'foo', value: {id: 'foo'}}, {text: 'bar', value: {id: 'bar'}}, ], value: {id: 'foo'}, view: 'list', } as ListBladeParams<{id: string}>, }) as BladeController; const pool = createPluginPool(); const api = pool.createApi(bc) as ListBladeApi<{id: string}>; const selectElem = api.controller.valueController.view.selectElement; assert.strictEqual( (selectElem.querySelector('option') as HTMLOptionElement).value, 'foo', ); assert.strictEqual( (selectElem.querySelector('option:nth-child(2)') as HTMLOptionElement) .value, 'bar', ); }); }); ```
The Master of the Schotten Altarpiece was a German painter, active in Nuremberg during the 14th and 15th centuries. His name is derived from an altarpiece dated to about 1390, which once stood in the church of St. Mary in Schotten. The altarpiece was dismantled in 1828. 14th-century German painters 15th-century German painters Schotten Altarpiece, Master of the Year of birth unknown
The Dallas Reunion Pro-Am was a golf tournament on the Champions Tour from 1985 to 1995. It was played at a number of locations in the greater Dallas, Texas area: Bent Tree Country Club (1985–1988), Stonebriar Country Club (1989–1993) in Frisco, Texas, and Oak Cliff Country Club (1994–1995). The purse for the 1995 tournament was US$550,000, with $82,500 going to the winner. The tournament was founded in 1985 as the Senior Players Reunion Pro-Am. Winners Dallas Reunion Pro-Am 1995 Tom Wargo 1994 Larry Gilbert Muratec Reunion Pro-Am 1993 Dave Stockton Murata Reunion Pro-Am 1992 George Archer 1991 Chi-Chi Rodríguez 1990 Frank Beard Murata Seniors Reunion 1989 Don Bies Senior Players Reunion Pro-Am 1988 Orville Moody 1987 Chi-Chi Rodríguez 1986 Don January 1985 Peter Thomson Source: References Former PGA Tour Champions events Golf in Texas Sports in Dallas Pro–am golf tournaments 1985 establishments in Texas 1995 disestablishments in Texas
Marita Gerianne Titler (nee Ball) is an American nurse scholar. She is the Rhetaugh G. Dumas Endowed Chair in the University of Michigan's School of Nursing. Early life and education Titler was born to Eugene Ball in Springville, Iowa. While attending high school, she was the recipient of the Springvilie Monday Club's $400 nursing scholarship to attend Mount Mercy University. Titler graduated from Mount Mercy in 1974 with the Mary Catherine McAuley award as their top graduating senior. Following her graduation, Titler accepted a faculty position teaching medical-surgical nursing at Mount Mercy University. She then returned to school to earn her Master's degree in nursing from the University of Iowa before joining the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. Career In 1991, Titler received the Teresa E. Christy Award as a "nurse who has demonstrated professional commitment to the improvement of health care and has demonstrated the interrelationship of nursing education, nursing practice, and nursing research." A few years later, she became the Associate Director of Nursing Research and Clinical Nurse Specialist, II, Critical Care, at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. As a result of her research, Titler became a member of the National Advisory Council for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality from 2000 to 2003 and she co-published The Iowa Model of Evidence-Based Practice to Promote Quality Care. Upon joining the faculty at the University of Michigan's School of Nursing (UMSN) in 2009, Titler became the Associate Dean for Practice and Clinical Scholarship and Rhetaugh G. Dumas Endowed Chair. In 2010, she was appointed to the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on Standards for Developing Trustworthy Clinical Practice Guidelines. Later that year, she was also the inaugural winner of the Friends of the National Institute of Nursing Research President's Award. She received the award for her work in "translating evidence to nursing practice and the development of translation science." By 2013, Titler was honored with the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Iowa for her achievements in science and health care. In 2015, Titler was elected a member of the National Academy of Medicine for her research on outcomes effectiveness and implementation science. Following her election, she stepped down as UMSN's Chair of the Systems, Populations, and Leadership department, to spend more time on her scholarship and research, and was replaced by Rob Stephenson. In January 2020, Titler's co-authored book Evidence-based Practice for Nursing and Healthcare Quality placed third in the American Journal of Nursing’s 2019 Book of the Year Awards in the Advanced Practice category. Personal life Titler married her husband Craig in 1974 and they have two children together. References Living people Academics from Iowa University of Iowa alumni Mount Mercy University alumni University of Michigan faculty Members of the National Academy of Medicine American women nurses American nursing administrators Year of birth missing (living people)
```javascript /** * @license Apache-2.0 * * * * path_to_url * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. */ 'use strict'; // MODULES // var valueOf = require( './valueof.js' ); // eslint-disable-line stdlib/no-redeclare // MAIN // /** * Attempts to extract a string value. * * @private * @param {*} value - value to test * @returns {boolean} boolean indicating if a string can be extracted */ function test( value ) { try { valueOf.call( value ); return true; } catch ( err ) { // eslint-disable-line no-unused-vars return false; } } // EXPORTS // module.exports = test; ```
```javascript Globbing in Node Deleting Files and Folders Using `gulp-mocha` External Configuration Files Automating Workflow with Gulp ```
```objective-c // // // path_to_url // #ifndef PXR_IMAGING_HIO_OPENVDB_TEXTURE_DATA_H #define PXR_IMAGING_HIO_OPENVDB_TEXTURE_DATA_H /// \file hioOpenVDB/vdbTextureData.h #include "pxr/pxr.h" #include "pxr/imaging/hio/api.h" #include "pxr/imaging/hio/fieldTextureData.h" #include "pxr/base/gf/bbox3d.h" #include <memory> PXR_NAMESPACE_OPEN_SCOPE class HioOpenVDB_TextureData_DenseGridHolderBase; /// \class HioOpenVDB_TextureData /// /// Implements HioFieldTextureData to read grid with given name from /// OpenVDB file at given path. /// class HioOpenVDB_TextureData final : public HioFieldTextureData { public: using Base = HioFieldTextureData; HioOpenVDB_TextureData(std::string const & filePath, std::string const & gridName, size_t targetMemory); ~HioOpenVDB_TextureData() override; const GfBBox3d &GetBoundingBox() const override; int ResizedWidth() const override; int ResizedHeight() const override; int ResizedDepth() const override; HioFormat GetFormat() const override; bool Read() override; bool HasRawBuffer() const override; unsigned char const * GetRawBuffer() const override; private: const std::string _filePath; const std::string _gridName; const size_t _targetMemory; int _resizedWidth, _resizedHeight, _resizedDepth; HioFormat _format; GfBBox3d _boundingBox; std::unique_ptr<HioOpenVDB_TextureData_DenseGridHolderBase> _denseGrid; }; PXR_NAMESPACE_CLOSE_SCOPE #endif ```
Uuno Epsanjassa (an intentional misspelling of "Uuno in Spain") is a Finnish 1985 comedy film directed by Ere Kokkonen. It is the tenth film in the Uuno Turhapuro series. It was seen by more than 600,000 people in the theatres. Plot Uuno Turhapuro (played by Vesa-Matti Loiri) is searching for a job and takes a correspondence course in tour guiding. Eventually he gets a job in a small travel agency and takes a group of Finnish tourists to Marbella, Spain. Unfortunately Uuno's father-in-law Tuura (Tapio Hämäläinen) is in the group, too, with his wife (Marita Nordberg) and daughter, Uuno's wife Elisabet (Marjatta Raita). Tuura tries to get a signature to an important paper from a minister who's having a holiday in the area. Meanwhile, Uuno just relaxes and enjoys the sun. Miscellaneous "Epsanjassa" is humorous misspelling of the word "Espanjassa" (in Spain) that imitates uneducated spelling error. External links 1985 films Spede Pasanen Finnish comedy films Finnish sequel films 1980s Finnish-language films Films shot in Spain
```swift import Apollo import Combine import Foundation import ReactiveSwift class MockGraphQLClient: ApolloClientType { // MARK: - Base Properties var client: ApolloClient { let url = URL(string: "path_to_url")! return ApolloClient(url: url) } static let shared = MockGraphQLClient() // MARK: Public functions /// Placeholder implementation because protocol definition used in `Service` public func fetch<Query: GraphQLQuery>(query _: Query) -> SignalProducer<Query.Data, ErrorEnvelope> { .init(value: Query.Data(unsafeResultMap: [:])) } /// Placeholder implementation because protocol definition used in `Service` public func perform<Mutation: GraphQLMutation>( mutation _: Mutation ) -> SignalProducer<Mutation.Data, ErrorEnvelope> { .init(value: Mutation.Data(unsafeResultMap: [:])) } } /** Implementation of optional `fetch` and `perform` with `result` useful for mocking data. */ extension ApolloClientType { public func fetchWithResult<Query: GraphQLQuery, Data: Decodable>( query _: Query, result: Result<Data, ErrorEnvelope>? ) -> SignalProducer<Data, ErrorEnvelope> { producer(for: result) } public func performWithResult<Mutation: GraphQLMutation, Data: Decodable>( mutation _: Mutation, result: Result<Data, ErrorEnvelope>? ) -> SignalProducer<Data, ErrorEnvelope> { producer(for: result) } public func fetchWithResult<Query: GraphQLQuery, Data: Decodable>( query _: Query, result: Result<Data, ErrorEnvelope>? ) -> AnyPublisher<Data, ErrorEnvelope> { return producer(for: result) } public func performWithResult<Mutation: GraphQLMutation, Data: Decodable>( mutation _: Mutation, result: Result<Data, ErrorEnvelope>? ) -> AnyPublisher<Data, ErrorEnvelope> { return producer(for: result) } public func data<Data: Decodable>(from producer: SignalProducer<Data, ErrorEnvelope>) -> Data? { switch producer.first() { case let .success(data): return data default: return nil } } public func error<Data: Decodable>(from producer: SignalProducer<Data, ErrorEnvelope>) -> ErrorEnvelope? { switch producer.first() { case let .failure(errorEnvelope): return errorEnvelope default: return nil } } } private func producer<T, E>(for property: Result<T, E>?) -> SignalProducer<T, E> { guard let result = property else { return .empty } switch result { case let .success(value): return .init(value: value) case let .failure(error): return .init(error: error) } } private func producer<T, E>(for property: Result<T, E>?) -> AnyPublisher<T, E> { switch property { case let .success(data): return CurrentValueSubject(data).eraseToAnyPublisher() case let .failure(error): return Fail(error: error).eraseToAnyPublisher() case .none: return Empty(completeImmediately: false).eraseToAnyPublisher() } } private extension Result { var value: Success? { switch self { case let .success(value): return value case .failure: return nil } } var error: Failure? { switch self { case .success: return nil case let .failure(error): return error } } } public final class MockApolloQuery: GraphQLQuery { public let operationDefinition: String = "" public let operationName: String = "OperationName" public let operationIdentifier: String? = "operation-identifier" public init() {} public var variables: GraphQLMap? { return [:] } public struct Data: GraphQLSelectionSet { public static let possibleTypes: [String] = ["Query"] public static var selections: [GraphQLSelection] { return [] } public private(set) var resultMap: ResultMap public init(unsafeResultMap: ResultMap) { self.resultMap = unsafeResultMap } } } ```
Melukote in Pandavapura taluk of Mandya district, Karnataka, in southern India, is one of the sacred places in Karnataka.It is built on rocky hills, known as Yadugiri, Yaadavagiri or Yadushaila, overlooking the Cauvery valley. Melukote is about 51 km (32 miles) from Mysore and 133 km (83 mi) from Bangalore. Melukote is the location of the Cheluvanarayana Swamy Temple, with a collection of crowns and jewels which are brought to the temple for the annual celebration. On the top of the hill is the temple of Yoganarasimha. Many more shrines and ponds are located in the town. Melukote is home to the academy of Sanskrit Research, which has collected thousands of Vedic and Sanskrit manuscripts. Early in the 12th century, the famous Srivaishnava saint Sri Ramanujacharya, who hailed from present dayTamil Nadu, stayed at Melukote for about 12 years. It has thus become a prominent centre of the Srivaishnava sect. Geography Melukote is a village and a historic place of the same name, situated at a distance of 36 km (22 miles) north-west of Mandya, and 51 km (32 miles) north of Mysore. According to mythological account, this place was known as Narayanadri, Vedadri, Yadavadri, Yathishaila and Tirunarayanapura. The name of the place is derived from the temple of Narayanaswamy which is built on the hillock, surrounded by a fort. It is built on a rocky hill-range named Yadugiri, which is high above sea level. The village is the only settlement in Mandya district, located above 1000 metres. History In the 12th century, the Srivaishnava saint Ramanujacharya took up his residence in this location for about 14 years. As a result, it became a prominent centre of Srivaishnavism. Large numbers of Iyengar Brahmins migrated and settled in the region, forming the Mandyam Iyengar community. Temple Cheluva-Narayana Swamy Temple The principal temple is a square building of large dimensions but very plain, dedicated to Lord Cheluva-Narayana Swamy or Thirunarayana. The utsavamurthi, which is a metallic image, represents the deity who is called Shelvapillai, Cheluva Raya and Cheluvanarayana Swamy, whose original name appears to have been Ramapriya (meaning "Rama's Favourite"). It is believed that this utsavamurthi belonged to and was worshipped by Lord Rama and the kings of the surya vamsa Dynasty for generations. Later the same deity was given to a king of Chandra vamsam (the dynasty of Lord Krishna) and was worshipped by Lord Krishna and many generations. So CheluvaNarayana is so unique that he was worshipped by both Rama and Krishna. According to a legend, this metallic image was lost for many centuries and was recovered by Sri Ramanujacharya. The annual report of the Mysore Archeaelogical Department (p. 57) states, on the strength of epigraphic evidence, that the presiding deity of this temple was already a well-known object of worship before Sri Ramanujacharya worshipped at the shrine, in December 1098, and even before he came to the Mysore region. The temple is richly endowed, having been under the special patronage of the Vijaya nagar king Vikitapathi Raya and Mysore kings, and it has an extremely valuable collection of jewels in its custody. As early as 1614, Maharaja Raja Wodeyar I (1578–1617) of Mysore, who first acquired Srirangapatna and adopted the Srivaishnava faith, granted to the temple, and to the Brahmins at Melkote as custodians of the deity, the large and valuable estate (fiefdom) granted to him by Vijaynagar emperor Venkatapati Raya. On one of the pillars of the temple's nava-aranga ("new stage" or pavilion for music and dance performances), there stands a bas relief about high, of Raja Wodeyar, standing with folded hands, with his name inscribed on the base. He is said to have been a great devotee of the presiding deity and a regular visitor to the temple. A gold crown set with precious jewels was presented by him to the temple. This crown is known as the Raja-mudi, after his name. From the inscriptions on some of the gold jewels and on gold and silver vessels in the temple, it is learnt that they were presents from Krishnaraja Wadiyar III (r. 1799–1831) and his queens. Krishnaraja Wodeyar III also presented a crown set with precious jewels. It is known after him as Krishnaraja-mudi. Yet another crown, known as the Vairamudi or Vajramukuta, which is set with diamonds and must have been the most expensive of the three, is also older than both the Raja-mudi and Krishnaraja-mudi. Who was the donor of that very valuable crown, and how it came into the possession of the temple, is unknown. However, as the oldest crown, it has a special place in ritual ceremonies, and has a special annual commemoration named after it, namely the vairamudi habba. Despite all the royal connections of the other two crowns, it is only the old vairamudi to be distinguished this way. All the three crowns are kept in the safe custody of the state government at the Mandya Treasury. They are brought to the temple to adorn the image of Cheluvanarayana Swamy only during a specific annual festival known as Vairamudi habba (literally "Diamond crown festival"). This festival commemorates, and is named after, the oldest crown, of unknown origin. The Vairamudi festival, which is the chief annual celebration, is attended by more than 400,000 people. Jatra (chariot festival, when the utsava murthy of the deity is taken in procession through the streets of the town) is held annually during March–April and more than one lakh people congregate for this occasion. A number of inscriptions and records of the place speak of other land grants and gifts to this shrine. Perhaps the fort on the hill was built during Hoysala and Vijayanagara period. The renovated temple has a beautiful gopura was built by Vijayanagar Dynasty. Yoga-Narasimha Swamy Temple On the top of the hill is an attractive Melkote Narasimha temple dedicated to Lord Yoga Narasimha. It is believed that the image of Yoga Narasimha temple at Melkote was installed by Prahlada himself. Krishnaraja Wodeyar III presented a gold crown to Lord Yoga Narasimha. It is also believed that this is the place where Prahlad did his penance. Since his father, the demon Hiranyakashipu was killed by Nrsimha, Prahlad was advised by his elders to do penance, so that “Pitra-dosha” does not affect him. So this is the place where Prahlad worshipped Nrsimha in the form of Shaligram. Kalyani or Pushkarani The temple infrastructure has a large pond called as Kalyani. The beauty of the steps leading to water and the mantapas built all around are such that it has been captured in many Indian films. One of the songs of Hindi Block-buster film Damini featuring Rishi Kapoor and Minakshi Sheshadri has been shot at here in Melukote Temple. Other important places There are other shrines of Ramanuja, images of Alvars and Yadugiriammanavaru etc., in the temple. On top of the hill is the impressive temple of Yoganarasimha. Krishnaraja Wodeyar III presented a gold crown to this upper shrine. There is a big pond there. Many more shrines and ponds are located in the town. Melukote has been a centre of learning. It has contributed many literary figures, such as Tirumalarya, Chikkupadhyaya, Alasingachar and Pu. Ti. Narasimhachar. Sri Vedavedantha Bodhini Sanskrit College is one of the oldest institutions here, established in 1854. An old library founded in 1935, contains large number of Sanskrit, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu books and manuscripts. In 1976, opening in 1978, a research institute, the Samskrita Academy was established, which incorporated the library. Yadugiri Yathiraja Mutt, Ahobila Matha and Parakala Matha of the Sri Vaishnava sect are located in the place. Melukote has been known for quality handlooms especially weaving dhoties, sarees, etc. An artisans training centre, a dairy unit and a residential school are established in the place. Melkote Temple Wildlife Sanctuary Melkote is also the location of the Melkote Temple Wildlife Sanctuary. This sanctuary was created on 17 June 1974, primarily to house wolves. Other mammals found in this sanctuary include the jungle cat, leopard, bonnet macaque, langur and pangolin. It is also an ornithologist's paradise, with around 200 species of birds indigenous to the area. Melkote Temple Wildlife Sanctuary has been known for its once abundant Cycas circinalis species, which in the recent time has been over exploited by the flower decorators and local doctors. There is a vast forest land near this place and a wild life sanctuary was opened on 17 June 1974, to protect the species like wolves and black buck which are plenty in the area. From here visitors can also visit Thondanoor a nearby temple town, the location of the famous Nambi Narayana, Parthasarathi, Yoganarasimha and Ramanuja temples. This is approximately 20 km (12.4 miles) from Melukote. Festivals Vairamudi Brahmotsava Vairamudi Brahmotsava (Vairamudi Utsav) is an annual spiritual event and festival revered throughout South India. In the past it has attracted up to 400,000 devotees of Lord Cheluva Narayana (Tirunarayana). The main event is the procession of Lord Cheluvanarayana Swamy (as represented by an idol, normally in most srivaishnava temples, the presiding deit "moolavar " is represented on procession by "utsavar "in a different name, here Cheluvaraya is called as "sampathkumara") through the streets of Melkote, which are decorated in his honour. In the procession the Lord's idol is carried on a golden garuda, along with idols representing his divine consorts Sridevi and Bhudevi. The procession takes place at night and continues until dawn. The festival is named for the legendary diamond studded crown, the Vaira Mudi, which the Lord only wears during this procession. For the rest of the festival the Lord wears the Rajamudi, another crown studded with precious stones. According to Hindu legends, Vairamudi, the diamond crown, was stolen from Lord Narayana, when he was asleep at his abode in the Ksheera Sagara (Milky Ocean), by Virochana. Virochana was the king of demons and the son of Prahlada. Garuda was asked by the lord's devotees to bring back the crown. Garuda went after Virochana to the nether world, fought with the demon king and flew back with the crown. According to the legend it is believed that Vairamudi lost its blue gem on the crest while Garuda was bringing it. The blue gem is believed to have fallen near Nachiar Koil, a temple town in Thanjavur district of Tamil Nadu. The gem turned into a stream, called the Manimuttaru, which to this day flows in Thanjavur. On his way, he saw Bala Krishna playing with his friends in the mid day sun at Brindavana. Garuda protected the Bala Krishna from the sun by placing his wings as the shade and placed the crown on his head. The local legends of Melkote claim that Krishna presented Cheluva Narayana with this crown. Preparations for the Brahmotsava start several weeks before the festival. The actual celebrations take place over the course of thirteen days. Garudotsava is celebrated a day before the Brahmotsava at Melkote. The district administration of Mandya makes arrangements for bringing the Vairamudi crown from the Mandya treasury to the temple amidst great security measures. It is believed that the crown must not be exposed to daylight. When not in the procession the priests keep the crown hidden from view in a sacred casket. On the evening of the procession, the crown is placed in front of the sanctum of Sri Acharya Ramanuja and the head priest places the Vaira Mudi and fits it to the statue of the Lord Cheluva Narayana. It is tradition that not even the head priest should look at the Vaira Mudi with naked eyes until it is fitted onto the Lord. Hence the priest covers his eyes with a silk cloth while fitting the crown. During the 13-day celebration, Kalyanotsava, Nagavalli Mahotsava are held in the Holy Kalyani, followed by Maharatotsava. In most years the spiritual events have been accompanied by cultural programmes, including music and dance performances, but in 2014 they were cancelled because of the upcoming election and its "model code of conduct". While Vairamudi Brahmotsava is one of the most important festivals for Sri Vaishnavas, others include the Garudotsava at Kancheepuram (Tamil Nadu), Kotharotsava at Srirangam (Tamil Nadu) and the Brahmotsava at Tirupati in Andhra Pradesh. Educational Institutes Library and Sanskrit College Melkote is house to the Academy of Sanskrit Research (ASR). Established in 1978, with further history that goes back a few centuries to the times of Ramanuja, ASR is spread over 14 acres at the southern end of Melkote, and contains schools that practice the gurukul system of Sanskrit education as well as those that teach in modern methods, libraries, halls and temples, all dedicated to the study of Sanskrit language and texts. The private library of the Yatirajaswamigalu of Melkote contains a large number of Sanskrit and Kannada works bearing on the Vishishtadvaita school of philosophy, a few works bearing on logic, rhetoric, mathematics, astronomy, astrology, ritual, architecture, Pancharatra, Dharmashastras, Grihya and Dharmasutra. There is also a Sanskrit college here named Sri Veda Vedantha Bodhini Sanskrita Mahapatashala (Govt. Sanskrit College) which was established as early as in 1854 and which is one of the oldest institutions of its kind in the state. Melkote has contributed many literary figures like Pu Ti Narasimhachar, Tirumalaraya, Komanduri Deshika Charyulu ( got Appreciation Certificate also from Mysore Maharaja ), Chikkupadhyaya and Devashikhamani Alasingachar. The academy has also published a number of commentaries on Vedic texts, in English, Kannada and Sanskrit including Sayanacharya's commentaries on the Vedas and Purusha Suktam. Yadugiri Education center The Sri Yadugiri Education center (by Sri Ramanuja Srisha Seva Trust) provides cultural education to rural students. Sri Veda Vedanta Bodhini Govt. Sanskrit college is a place for traditional education. The mission of the institution is "Providing good education to rural students". Veda, Nalayira Divyaprabandha, Stotra and Grantha Kalakshepams are being taught in traditional families even today. SGS groups runs colleges and schools. SET group runs schools and polytechnics. Academy of Sanskrit Research The town is also home to the Academy of Sanskrit Research, an institution that was founded in 1977, by the Government of Karnataka. The academy has kept 83 employees with 25 research scholars working on Sanskrit Research. Some of the areas of research include: Vishistadhvaitha, Upanishads and Scientific research from ancient texts. There is also a library that houses 11,000 manuscripts and 35,000 books. Image gallery References External links Mysore Nature| Melkote Temple Wildlife Sanctuary Cities and towns in Mandya district Hindu temples in Mandya district
```shell ## compare_shells: dash bash mksh #### Incomplete Function ## code: foo() ## status: 2 ## BUG mksh status: 0 #### Incomplete Function 2 ## code: foo() { ## status: 2 ## OK mksh status: 1 #### Bad function ## code: foo(ls) ## status: 2 ## OK mksh status: 1 #### Unbraced function body. # dash allows this, but bash does not. The POSIX grammar might not allow # this? Because a function body needs a compound command. # function_body : compound_command # | compound_command redirect_list /* Apply rule 9 */ ## code: one_line() ls; one_line; ## status: 0 ## OK bash/osh status: 2 #### Function with spaces, to see if ( and ) are separate tokens. # NOTE: Newline after ( is not OK. fun ( ) { echo in-func; }; fun ## stdout: in-func #### subshell function # bash allows this. i=0 j=0 inc() { i=$((i+5)); } inc_subshell() ( j=$((j+5)); ) inc inc_subshell echo $i $j ## stdout: 5 0 #### Hard case, function with } token in it rbrace() { echo }; }; rbrace ## stdout: } #### . in function name # bash accepts; dash doesn't func-name.ext ( ) { echo func-name.ext; } func-name.ext ## stdout: func-name.ext ## OK dash status: 2 ## OK dash stdout-json: "" #### = in function name # WOW, bash is so lenient. foo=bar is a command, I suppose. I think I'm doing # to disallow this one. func-name=ext ( ) { echo func-name=ext; } func-name=ext ## stdout: func-name=ext ## OK dash status: 2 ## OK dash stdout-json: "" ## OK mksh status: 1 ## OK mksh stdout-json: "" #### Function name with $ $foo-bar() { ls ; } ## status: 2 ## OK bash/mksh status: 1 #### Function name with command sub foo-$(echo hi)() { ls ; } ## status: 2 ## OK bash/mksh status: 1 #### Function name with ! # bash allows this; dash doesn't. foo!bar() { ls ; } ## status: 0 ## OK dash status: 2 #### Function name with - # bash allows this; dash doesn't. foo-bar() { ls ; } ## status: 0 ## OK dash status: 2 #### Break after ) is OK. # newline is always a token in "normal" state. echo hi; fun ( ) { echo in-func; } fun ## STDOUT: hi in-func ## END #### Nested definition # A function definition is a command, so it can be nested fun() { nested_func() { echo nested; } nested_func } fun ## stdout: nested ```
```javascript 'use strict'; const { series, src, dest } = require('gulp'); const sass = require('gulp-sass'); const autoprefixer = require('gulp-autoprefixer'); const cssmin = require('gulp-cssmin'); function compile() { return src('./src/*.scss') .pipe(sass.sync()) .pipe(autoprefixer({ browsers: ['ie > 9', 'last 2 versions'], cascade: false })) .pipe(cssmin()) .pipe(dest('./lib')); } function copyfont() { return src('./src/fonts/**') .pipe(cssmin()) .pipe(dest('./lib/fonts')); } exports.build = series(compile, copyfont); ```
The Town of Hindmarsh was a local government area in South Australia from 1874 to 1993, encompassing on the inner north west Adelaide suburbs of Hindmarsh, Bowden and Brompton. History The Corporation of the Town of Hindmarsh was proclaimed on 1 October 1874 by the severance of the "townships of Hindmarsh, Bowden and Brompton" from the District Council of Hindmarsh. Benjamin Taylor was proclaimed the inaugural mayor, with the councillors of Hindmarsh, Bowden and Brompton wards being proclaimed, respectively, as Carl Ferdinand Trapmann and Josiah Mitton, Ephraim Gould and Richard Hayley, and Henry Betteridge and William Shearing. Apart from Hindmarsh, Bowden and Brompton, the town boundaries also included the townships of Croydon and Ridleyton and the land occupied by the modern suburbs of West Hindmarsh, Renown Park, and the portion of modern Ovingham west of the Gawler railway line. In 1875, the remainder of the older District Council of Hindmarsh moved its seat from Hindmarsh to Woodville and changed its name to District Council of Woodville, distinguishing it from the Corporate Town of Hindmarsh for more than a century until the two bodies were merged again as the City of Hindmarsh and Woodville in 1993. Neighbouring local government The following adjacent local government bodies co-existed with the Hindmarsh town council: District Council of Yatala South (established 1868) lay north east and east. From 1933 it was called District Council of Enfield and from 1953, the City of Enfield. District Council of Prospect (established 1872) lay immediately east. City of Adelaide northern parklands lay south east. District Council of West Torrens lay immediately south and south west, across the River Torrens until 1883, after which time the Town of Thebarton was the Town of Hindmarsh's southern and south western neighbour. District Council of Woodville lay west, north west and north until it was reunited with the Town of Hindmarsh in 1993. References Hindmarsh , Town of Hindmarsh , Town of Hindmarsh , Town of
The Jigoku-zoshi ("Handscrolls of Buddhist Hell") is a late 12th-century Japanese scroll (emakimono, 絵巻物), depicting the 8 great hells and the 16 lesser hells in text and painting. See also List of National Treasures of Japan (paintings) References Japanese paintings 12th-century manuscripts Mahayana texts Naraka Paintings in the Tokyo National Museum fr:Rouleaux des enfers ja:地獄草紙
Libero Lolli stadium is a sport facility in Mirandola, in the province of Modena, Italy. The stadium is dedicated to the memory of Libero Lolli, a Mirandola footballer who died prematurely on 23 September 1934 at the age of just 24, shortly before his debut in Serie A with the Livorno, and brother of Nino Lolli (first mayor of Mirandola after the Second World War). The stadium hosted the home matches of the Unione Sportiva Mirandolese from 1920 to 2005, and later those of Mortizzuolese. In the 1998–1999 season, all the home matches of the women's Serie A championship of Bellentani Modena, holder of the title of Italian champion at the time, were played at Lolli stadium. History History of football in Mirandola began on 15 March 1911, when the "Foot-Ball Club Giovanni Pico" was founded, which asked the municipal administration for the concession of a plot of land of about 3 biolche () placed in the 9th trunk Spalti in order to build a sports field. However, the land was leased, so the first playing field was built on the side of the west ring road. This first football experience ended, however, with the outbreak of the First World War. During the Fascist era it was decided to build a larger sports facility, also to serve the military of the Mussolini barracks and the students of the National Physicall Education School of Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (MVSN) for premilitary instructors and sportmen. The school managed to train about 2,000 instructors a year, reaching its peak in 1934 with almost 5,000 graduates. In the 1928–1929 season, the U.S. Mirandolese team reached the first place in group E of the Second Division on equal terms with GS Farini, who was beaten (2-0) in the play-off played in Mantua on 9 June 1929. The victory allowed Mirandolese to play in the Prima Divisione for 3 years. In 1929 construction work began on the spectator stand, designed by architect Mario Guerzoni (1884-1956) and inaugurated in 1930. Among Mirandola's footballers who played on the field of the Lolli Stadium are to be remembered: Oreste Benatti (Bighina), Mario Castorri (Bacic), Libero and Nino Lolli, Evaristo Malavasi (Beg), Emilio Furlani (Milietto), Gianni Cappi, Silvano Bottecchi (Spinon), Fermo Benatti, Nando Paltrinieri, Antonio Marchetti, Livio Luppi, Nunzio Cavazza, Ilario Righini, Marco Marchetti, Mauro Muracchini and Roberto Razzaboni. Inside the sports area, in 1954 a skating rink was built next to the grandstand on which the Polisportiva Giovanni Pico roller hockey team competed for many years. In May 2012 the historical building of the stands and the surrounding wall were damaged by the earthquake in Emilia. In November 2012, temporary changing rooms were set up and the "Coverciano grandstand" was repaired. 347 donations were received from private citizens for a total of €55,489.66 for the restoration of the stadium. In 2017 the municipal administration announced the disposal of the Lolli stadium, whose grassy land will be used for the construction of new flats and shops. In addition, the grandstand (bound by the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage as a historic building) will be refurbished to serve a public garden. References Bibliography Filmography See also Unione Sportiva Mirandolese Football venues in Italy Mirandola
New World Productions was founded in 1972 with the printing of a 48-page booklet Diving and Recreational Guide to Florida Springs by Ned DeLoach. A few years later, the Diving Guide to the Florida Keys was published under the newly formed New World Publications. Several subsequent editions were combined in 1977 and greatly expanded into Ned DeLoach's Diving Guide to Underwater Florida, which currently is its 11th edition. History In the early 1980s a mutual friend introduced Ned to Paul Humann. A few years later, when the new owners of Ocean Realm magazine appointed Ned to the position of editor-in-chief, he invited Paul to join him as co-editor. Under their guidance, the once-floundering publication became a success. It was during their two years at the magazine's helm that they discovered how well they worked together. When Ocean Realm was sold, they made the decision to leave the magazine business and concentrate their efforts on developing a series of marine life field guides for divers. During Paul's decade-long stint as owner/operator of the Cayman Diver he had amassed an extensive library of underwater images. Combining his knowledge of marine wildlife and the dive business with Ned's background in education and publishing, the pair published the first edition of Reef Fish Identification - Florida, Caribbean, Bahamas in 1989. Since then, the field guide has gone through 14 printings of three editions. The innovative, user-friendly fish identification guide was soon followed by two companion volumes, Reef Creature Identification (1992) and Reef Coral Identification (1993), which together make up the now-famous Reef Set. In 1993, Eric Riesch joined New World Publications to manage the business. Under his marketing, the second edition of Reef Fish Identification was awarded the Independent Book Publisher's Ben Franklin Award for best reference book of 1994. In 1995 Ned married Anna Douglas, and the two spent every summer for the next 5 years in Bimini studying fish behavior. The result of their efforts was the 2000 publication of Reef Fish Behavior - Florida Caribbean Bahamas. The popular, user-friendly format conceived for the tropical western Atlantic identification books spawned a series of fish identification books for other regions, including the Galapagos Islands, the West Coast from California to Alaska and the Gulf of California to Panama. Paul and Ned partnered with the late John Jackson of Odyssey Publishing, ichthyologist Gerry Allen and Australian photographer Roger Steene for the 2003 publication of Reef Fish Identification - Tropical Pacific. New World also published Nudibranch Behavior by Dave Behrens, Sea Salt by Stan Waterman and Diving Pioneers by Bret Gilliam and helped distribute works for friends Howard Hall, Cathy Church, Helmut Debelius and Constantinos Petrinos. Anna produced the DVDs, Sensational Seas (2004), Reef Fish Identification - A Beginning Course (2007) and Sensational Seas Two (2010). In November 2010, after five years of extensive field photography in the Pacific, New World Publications published Reef Creature Identification - Tropical Pacific, the most comprehensive field guide ever published about the marine invertebrate community of the vast region stretching from Thailand to Tahiti. References Publishing companies established in 1972
Pavoclinus mentalis, the Bearded klipfish, is a species of clinid found from Mozambique to Algoa Bay, South Africa where it occurs in weedy areas in the subtidal zone. It can reach a maximum length of TL. References mentalis Fish described in 1908
Elwin Nelson "Doc" Romnes (January 1, 1907 – July 21, 1984) was an American ice hockey player and coach. He played professionally in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Chicago Black Hawks, Toronto Maple Leafs, and New York Americans from 1930 to 1940. He won the Lady Byng Trophy in 1935–36 for sportsmanship and gentlemanly play, and with Chicago won the Stanley Cup twice, in 1934 and 1938. Following his player career, Romnes was head coach of the Michigan Tech Huskies from 1941 to 1945 (including two years when the program was suspended during World War II), and the Minnesota Golden Gophers from 1947 until 1952. He was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1973. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs Head coaching record Awards and achievements 1936 Lady Byng Trophy winner 1934 Stanley Cup (Chicago Black Hawks) 1938 Stanley Cup Championship (Chicago Black Hawks) References External links 1907 births 1984 deaths American men's ice hockey centers Chicago Blackhawks players Ice hockey coaches from Minnesota Ice hockey players from Minnesota Lady Byng Memorial Trophy winners London Tecumsehs players Michigan Tech Huskies men's ice hockey coaches Minnesota Golden Gophers men's ice hockey coaches New York Americans players Omaha Knights (AHA) players Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets (IHL) players Sportspeople from White Bear Lake, Minnesota Stanley Cup champions Toronto Maple Leafs players United States Hockey Hall of Fame inductees
```objective-c // // // path_to_url // #ifndef PXR_IMAGING_HD_VERSION_H #define PXR_IMAGING_HD_VERSION_H // 18 -> 19: Add support for SceneDelegate surface shaders. // 19 -> 20: RenderPass constructor takes RenderIndex. RasterState class. // 20 -> 21: Add HdSceneDelegate::IsEnabled(). // 21 -> 22: split HdRasterState out of HdRenderPass and renamed to HdRenderPassState. // HdEngine::Draw API change. // 22 -> 23: remove ID render API // 23 -> 24: GetPathForInstanceIndex returns absolute instance index. // 24 -> 25: move simpleLightingShader to Hdx. // 25 -> 26: move camera and light to Hdx. // 26 -> 27: move drawTarget to Hdx. // 27 -> 28: switch render index Sprim to take a typeId. // 28 -> 29: cameras only support matrices. // 29 -> 30: added IDRenderColor decode and direct Rprim path fetching. // 30 -> 31: added pre-chained buffer sources // 31 -> 32: renamed HdShader{Param} to HdMaterial{Param} // 32 -> 33: Deleted GetPathForInstanceIndex; added GetScenePrimPath. // 32 -> 34: Added HdInstancerContext to GetScenePrimPath. // 34 -> 35: HdRepr is using std::unique_ptr<HdDrawItem> // 35 -> 36: InsertRprim/InsertInstancer no longer take instancerId, // HdSceneDelegate now has GetInstancerId // 36 -> 37: Renamed HdRprim::_SetMaterialId to SetMaterialId. It no longer // takes changeTracker. // 37 -> 38: Removed Bprim garbage collection API from HdChangeTracker and // HdResourceRegistry. // 38 -> 39: Removed garbage collection API from HdChangeTracker and // HdResourceRegistry. // Added HdSceneDelegate::GetInstancerPrototypes. // 39 -> 40: Removed Bind and Unbind API from HdRenderPassState. // 40 -> 41: Renamed HdDelegate::GetMaterialNeworkselector() to // GetMaterialRenderContexts(). It now returns a TfTokenVector. // 41 -> 42: Removed GetMaterialTag() from HdRenderIndex. // 42 -> 43: Removed HdCamera pulling on view and projection matrix. // 43 -> 44: Replaced HdCamera::GetProjectionMatrix with // HdComputeProjectionMatrix. // 44 -> 45: Added HdSceneDelegate::GetScenePrimPaths. // 45 -> 46: New signatures for HdRendererPlugin::IsSupported and // HdRendererPluginRegistry::GetDefaultPluginId // 46 -> 47: Adding HdRenderDelegate::GetRenderSettingsNamespaces() // 47 -> 48: New signature for HdRenderIndex::InsertSceneIndex: added optional // argument needsPrefixing // 48 -> 49: Moved HdExtCompCpuComputation, Hd_ExtCompInputSource, // Hd_CompExtCompInputSource, and Hd_SceneExtCompInputSource to hdSt. // 49 -> 50: Added HdModelDrawMode struct and getter API to HdSceneDelegate. // 50 -> 51: HdMaterialBindingSchema became HdMaterialBindingsSchema which uses // the new HdMaterialBindingSchema. // 51 -> 52: Added lens distortion, focus, and split diopter parameters to // HdCamera. // 52 -> 53: Changing dirty bits of HdCoordSys. // 53 -> 54: Introducing HdFlattenedDataSourceProvider to make // HdFlatteningSceneIndex modular. // 54 -> 55: Introduce API in HdRenderDelegate to aid in transitioning // render delegates to a Hydra 2.0 world. // 55 -> 56: Adds hydra-namespaced internal instancer primvars // 56 -> 57: Changing SetOverrideWindowPolicy to std::optional on // HdRenderPassState, HdxPickFromRenderBufferTaskParams, // HdxTaskController and UsdImagingGLEngine. // 57 -> 58: Introducing hdsi/version.h // 58 -> 59: HdGeomSubsetsSchema::GetIds() renamed to // HdGeomSubsetsSchema::GetGeomSubsetNames(). // 59 -> 60: Introduced HdRenderDelegate::GetCapabilities(). // 60 -> 61: Adding HdPrimvarSchema::GetFlattenedPrimvarValue(). // Note that in an upcoming change, // HdPrimvarSchema::GetPrimvarValue() might change and // simply return the data source source at primvarValue. // 61 -> 62: Remove 'bindingStrength' from HdMaterialBindingSchema. // 62 -> 63: HdMaterialSchema::GetMaterialNetwork, // HdMaterialNetwork::GetNodes, GetTerminals, // HdMaterialNode::GetParameters, GetInputConnections // return Hydra schemas instead of just container data sources. // schemaTypeDefs.h replaces vectorSchemaTypeDefs.h. // 63 -> 64: Adding disableDepthOfField to HdRenderSettings::RenderProduct // 64 -> 65: Introduce HdCollectionPredicateLibrary and // HdCollectionExpressionEvaluator for path expression evaluation on // scene index prims. // 65 -> 66: Make HdSchema::_GetTypedDataSource and getters in generated // hydra schemas const. // 66 -> 67: Removes legacy internal instancer primvar names and the // TfEnvSetting for using them (see 56). // 67 -> 68: Adds HdSceneDelegate::SampleFOO with startTime and endTime. // 68 -> 69: Removes HdGeomSubsetsSchema. Geom subsets are now represented // in Hydra as child prims of their parent geometry. // 69 -> 70: Add dirty bit translation for light filter prims in backend // emulation. // 70 -> 71: Add virtual HdRenderDelegate::IsParallelSyncEnabled. // #define HD_API_VERSION 71 // 1 -> 2: SimpleLighting -> FallbackLighting #define HD_SHADER_API 2 #endif // PXR_IMAGING_HD_VERSION_H ```
Adam S. Weinberg (born January 12, 1965) is an American sociologist, academic administrator and the 20th and current president of Denison University. Previously, he was the President and CEO of World Learning and Vice President and Dean of the College at Colgate University. Early life Adam Stein Weinberg was born in St. Louis, Missouri on January 12, 1965. He is the son of Dr. Warren Abraham Weinberg and Penny Weinberg. His father was a pediatric neurologist, faculty member, and medical researcher at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School. He grew up in St. Louis and Dallas, Texas. He played ice hockey as a student athlete. Weinberg is a graduate of Deerfield Academy and Bowdoin College, class of 1987. He also studied at Cambridge University as a Keasbey scholar before earning both master's and Ph.D. degrees in sociology at Northwestern University. He worked on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, before pursuing graduate studies at Northwestern University. Weinberg is the brother of Ellen Weinberg-Hughes, a former women's ice hockey player and member of US women's national team at the 1992 Women's World Championship. He is the uncle of NHL players Quinn, Jack, and Luke Hughes. Career Colgate University In 1995 Weinberg joined the faculty at Colgate University as an assistant professor in the sociology and anthropology department, eventually becoming an associate professor. From 2002 to 2005 he served as Vice President and Dean of the College. He was a founding director of Partnership for Community Development, focused on economic development and quality of life issues in the town and village of Hamilton and helped found the university's Center for Outreach, Volunteerism and Education. He was named a Phi Eta Sigma Professor of the Year and was honored with a Maroon Citation by the Colgate Alumni Corporation. World Learning From 2006 to 2009 Weinberg served as the Provost and Executive Vice President of World Learning. From 2009 to 2013, he served as the organization's President and CEO. Founded in 1932, World Learning is an international nonprofit organization based in Brattleboro, Vermont, that focuses on international development, education, and exchange programs. Denison University On July 1, 2013 Weinberg became the 20th President of Denison University. During his tenure as the university's president, there has been significant expansion of the curriculum with a new generation academic programs, global programs, and a deepening of the arts, including the construction of the Michael D. Eisner Center for the Performing Arts; a reinvention of career exploration with the launching of the Austin E. Knowlton Center for Career Exploration; and a campus wide focus on mentorship, as a defining feature of a liberal arts education. Affiliations and awards Weinberg is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations’s Higher Education Working Group on Global Issues and the Talloires Network. Also, Weinberg is a member of the Columbus Partnership, that works to promote economic development in the Columbus, Ohio region. and the Council on Competitiveness. Weinberg has sat on many boards including The Midland Theatre, The Works, I Know I Can, The Great Lakes College Association, and The Ohio Foundation for Independent Colleges. While at World Learning, he was on the boards of InterAction and The Alliance of International and Cultural Exchange. He is the founding member of the Boys & Girls Club of Newark (Oh), and he is a co-founding member of Democracy Matters. In 2017, Weinberg received the Career Services Champion Award from the National Association of Colleges and Employers. In 2022, Weinberg was awarded the Deerfield Academy Heritage Award in recognition of outstanding alumni. Selected works Nine essential practices to make college pay off, (Kiplinger, November 4, 2019) The move to stakeholder capitalism is an opportunity to reshape education, (The Boston Globe, September 5, 2019) Creating an Ecosystem of Faculty Mentorship (Inside Higher Ed, February 25, 2019) Educational and Cultural Exchanges to Restore America’s Image, (The Washington Quarterly, Summer 2008) Globalizing the Liberal Arts, July 24, 2018 The Civic Responsibilities of Colleges, (HuffPost, December 6, 2017) Higher Education, Columbus and the Future of Jobs, (Columbus Dispatch, February 1, 2019) Being a Civically Engaged Campus that Contributes to Democratic Ways of Life, (Connections: Annual Journal of the Kettering Foundation, 2017). Urban Recycling and the Search for Sustainable Community Development (Princeton University Press, 2000) (with David Pellow and Allan Schnaiberg) Local Environmental Struggles: Citizen Activism in the Treadmill of Production'' (Cambridge University Press, 1996) References 1965 births Living people American sociologists Scientists from St. Louis Deerfield Academy alumni Bowdoin College alumni Colgate University faculty Presidents of Denison University Northwestern University alumni 20th-century American scientists 21st-century American scientists 20th-century American male writers 21st-century American male writers 21st-century social scientists 20th-century social scientists American university and college faculty deans 20th-century American non-fiction writers
```smalltalk /***************************************************************************** * * ReoGrid - .NET * path_to_url * * ReoGrid MIT * * * * * path_to_url * ****************************************************************************/ using System; using System.Windows.Forms; namespace unvell.ReoGrid.Demo.Scripts { /// <summary> /// /// </summary> public partial class LoadScriptDocDemo : UserControl { public LoadScriptDocDemo() { InitializeComponent(); // get first worksheet instance var sheet = reoGridControl.Worksheets[0]; // load tepmlate from RGF file. // RGF file is a file format that contains worksheet information, // such as data, styles, borders, formula and etc, RGF file can // be saved and loaded by ReoGrid and ReoGridEditor. // // path_to_url // sheet.LoadRGF("_Templates\\RGF\\change_colors.rgf"); // hide sheet tab control reoGridControl.SetSettings(WorkbookSettings.View_ShowSheetTabControl, false); // hide row header and column header sheet.SetSettings(WorksheetSettings.View_ShowHeaders, false); // set entire worksheet read-only sheet.SetSettings(WorksheetSettings.Edit_Readonly, true); reoScriptEditorControl1.Text = reoGridControl.Script; } private void btnRun_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { reoGridControl.RunScript(); } private void btnStop_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { reoGridControl.Srm.ForceStop(); } } } ```
Ludwig August Seeber (14 November 1793 in Karlsruhe – 9 December 1855 in Karlsruhe) was a German physicist. From 1819 to 1822 he was teacher at the cadet school at Karlsruhe. Subsequently, he was professor ordinarius for physics at the University of Freiburg until 1834. From 1834 to 1840, he was professor of physics at the Lyceum and Polytechnicum in Karlsruhe. Seeber is known for his study of positive ternary quadratic forms in 1831, which was applauded by Carl Friedrich Gauss (1831) and later simplified by Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet (1847). References Works 1793 births 1855 deaths 19th-century German physicists Academic staff of the University of Freiburg Scientists from Karlsruhe
Gonospira uvula is a species of small air-breathing land snail, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Streptaxidae. Distribution This species is endemic to Réunion. References Griffiths, O.L. & Florens, V.F.B. (2006). A field guide to the non-marine molluscs of the Mascarene Islands (Mauritius, Rodrigues and Réunion) and the northern dependencies of Mauritius. Bioculture Press: Mauritius. Pp. i–xv, 1–185. External links Deshayes, G. P. (1863). Catalogue des mollusques de l'île de la Réunion (Bourbon). Pp. 1-144. In Maillard, L. (Ed.) Notes sur l'Ile de la Réunion. Dentu, Paris Crosse, H. (1863). Diagnoses d'espèces nouvelles. Journal de Conchyliologie. 11(4): 388–389. Gonospira Gastropods described in 1863 Taxonomy articles created by Polbot
Boudreaux and Thibodeaux, also known as Boudreau and Thibodeau, are jokes which make fun of slow-witted Cajuns. These jokes are a common tradition to the Southern Louisiana region and often feature an exaggerated Cajun accent. Some of the jokes can be very vulgar. They have a history of social sharing and not all are written down in text. History Boudreaux and Thibodeaux are two fictional but humorous characters from Southern Louisiana experiencing life's trials and tribulations. Boudreaux has a wife named Marie and a dog named Phideaux, and Thibodeaux has a wife named Clotile. Similar jokes can be found with Ole and Lena jokes mocking Minnesotans, Akpos jokes mocking Nigerians, and also Zeke and Zeb jokes mocking Midwesterners. Some jokes can be just a few sentences long, while others much more involved and greater in length. Examples "When Boudreaux got home yesterday, Clotile ran out to him saying, "The car's got water in the carburetor!", "How you know that, you?", "Cause it's parked in the Bayou!"" "Boudreaux was walking down the wharf and he met up with Thibodeaux. He says to Thibodeaux, "Hey podna, how y'all are?" Thibodaux says, "Mais, OK." Boudreaux says, "And how's your wife?" Thibodeaux says, "Mais, my wife's an angel." Boudreaux says, "You lucky, my wife's still living!"" See also Little Johnny Nasreddin References Cajun culture Nonexistent people used in jokes Stock characters in jokes Fictional Cajuns
George Louis Wellington (January 28, 1852March 20, 1927) was a Republican member of the United States Senate, representing the State of Maryland from 1897 to 1903. He also represented the sixth district of Maryland in the U.S. House of Representatives. Born in Cumberland, Maryland, to a father and mother from Hesse and Bavaria, respectively, Wellington attended a German school with some private instruction. He went on to be a clerk in the Second National Bank of Cumberland in 1870 and later was a teller. From 1882 to 1888 and 1890, Wellington was treasurer of Allegany County, Maryland. He unsuccessfully ran for Comptroller of Maryland in 1889, but was chosen as the assistant treasurer of the United States at Baltimore, Maryland, from 1890 to 1893. Wellington was unsuccessful in his campaign to be elected to the 53rd Congress in 1892, but two years later, in 1894, was elected as a Republican to the 54th Congress. After serving one term, he was elected to the United States Senate in 1896, serving one term from 1897 to 1903, choosing not to run for re-election in 1902. As senator, he was chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee to Establish a University of the United States (55th and 56th Congresses). On September 4, 1900, Wellington formally withdrew from the Republican Party and supported Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan (who was running against Pres. William McKinley for the second consecutive time). The September 5, 1900, edition of The New York Times described it thus: In 1913, Wellington again sought election as senator, but as a member of the Progressive Party. He was not elected and, following the election, he engaged in civic activities. He became president of two banks and held an interest in the electric railways and electric companies in his hometown of Cumberland. Wellington died in Cumberland, and is buried at Rose Hill Cemetery. Bibliography References 1852 births 1927 deaths Politicians from Cumberland, Maryland American people of German descent Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives from Maryland Republican Party United States senators from Maryland Maryland Progressives (1912) Burials at Rose Hill Cemetery (Cumberland, Maryland) 19th-century American politicians 20th-century American politicians
Micrurus helleri, the western ribbon coral snake, is a species of snake of the family Elapidae. The snake is found in Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia. References helleri Reptiles described in 1925 Taxa named by Karl Patterson Schmidt Reptiles of Brazil Reptiles of Venezuela Reptiles of Colombia Reptiles of Ecuador Reptiles of Peru Reptiles of Bolivia
Azapa Formation () is a geological formation in northern Chile made up of gravels of fluvial origin. It is conformably overlain by Oxaya Formation. Azapa Formation is deformed by the Oxaya anticline. References Geologic formations of Chile Oligocene Series of South America Oligocene volcanism Neogene Chile Geology of Arica y Parinacota Region
Nhat Nguyen (; , ; born 16 June 2000) is an Irish badminton player. Born in Vietnam, Nguyen left the country for a new life in Dublin, Ireland along with his parents and older sister, when he was six years old. Then, he started playing badminton at the local club with his father. He was the gold medalist at the 2016 European U17 Championships in the boys' singles event, and also won the bronze medal in the doubles event partnered with Paul Reynolds. At the same year, he clinched the men's singles title at the Irish National Championships. Nguyen won his first senior international title at the Polish International in the men's doubles event with Reynolds, after that the men's singles title at the Welsh International. Achievements European Junior Championships Boys' singles BWF International Challenge/Series Men's singles Men's doubles BWF International Challenge tournament BWF International Series tournament BWF Future Series tournament References External links 2000 births Living people Sportspeople from Dublin (city) Irish male badminton players Badminton players at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics Badminton players at the 2020 Summer Olympics Olympic badminton players for Ireland Badminton players at the 2019 European Games Badminton players at the 2023 European Games European Games competitors for Ireland Vietnamese emigrants Immigrants to Ireland Sportspeople of Vietnamese descent
```c++ /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /// OpenGL Mathematics (glm.g-truc.net) /// /// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy /// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal /// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights /// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell /// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is /// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: /// /// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in /// all copies or substantial portions of the Software. /// /// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR /// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, /// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE /// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER /// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, /// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN /// THE SOFTWARE. /// /// @ref gtc_matrix_integer /// @file glm/gtc/matrix_integer.hpp /// @date 2011-01-20 / 2011-06-05 /// @author Christophe Riccio /// /// @see core (dependence) /// /// @defgroup gtc_matrix_integer GLM_GTC_matrix_integer /// @ingroup gtc /// /// Defines a number of matrices with integer types. /// <glm/gtc/matrix_integer.hpp> need to be included to use these functionalities. /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// #ifndef GLM_GTC_matrix_integer #define GLM_GTC_matrix_integer GLM_VERSION // Dependency: #include "../glm.hpp" #if(defined(GLM_MESSAGES) && !defined(glm_ext)) # pragma message("GLM: GLM_GTC_matrix_integer extension included") #endif namespace glm { /// @addtogroup gtc_matrix_integer /// @{ /// High-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<highp_int> highp_imat2; /// High-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<highp_int> highp_imat3; /// High-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<highp_int> highp_imat4; /// High-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<highp_int> highp_imat2x2; /// High-precision signed integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<highp_int> highp_imat2x3; /// High-precision signed integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<highp_int> highp_imat2x4; /// High-precision signed integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<highp_int> highp_imat3x2; /// High-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<highp_int> highp_imat3x3; /// High-precision signed integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<highp_int> highp_imat3x4; /// High-precision signed integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<highp_int> highp_imat4x2; /// High-precision signed integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<highp_int> highp_imat4x3; /// High-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<highp_int> highp_imat4x4; /// Medium-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<mediump_int> mediump_imat2; /// Medium-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<mediump_int> mediump_imat3; /// Medium-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<mediump_int> mediump_imat4; /// Medium-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<mediump_int> mediump_imat2x2; /// Medium-precision signed integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<mediump_int> mediump_imat2x3; /// Medium-precision signed integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<mediump_int> mediump_imat2x4; /// Medium-precision signed integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<mediump_int> mediump_imat3x2; /// Medium-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<mediump_int> mediump_imat3x3; /// Medium-precision signed integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<mediump_int> mediump_imat3x4; /// Medium-precision signed integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<mediump_int> mediump_imat4x2; /// Medium-precision signed integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<mediump_int> mediump_imat4x3; /// Medium-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<mediump_int> mediump_imat4x4; /// Low-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<lowp_int> lowp_imat2; /// Low-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<lowp_int> lowp_imat3; /// Low-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<lowp_int> lowp_imat4; /// Low-precision signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<lowp_int> lowp_imat2x2; /// Low-precision signed integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<lowp_int> lowp_imat2x3; /// Low-precision signed integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<lowp_int> lowp_imat2x4; /// Low-precision signed integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<lowp_int> lowp_imat3x2; /// Low-precision signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<lowp_int> lowp_imat3x3; /// Low-precision signed integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<lowp_int> lowp_imat3x4; /// Low-precision signed integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<lowp_int> lowp_imat4x2; /// Low-precision signed integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<lowp_int> lowp_imat4x3; /// Low-precision signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<lowp_int> lowp_imat4x4; /// High-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<highp_uint> highp_umat2; /// High-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<highp_uint> highp_umat3; /// High-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<highp_uint> highp_umat4; /// High-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<highp_uint> highp_umat2x2; /// High-precision unsigned integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<highp_uint> highp_umat2x3; /// High-precision unsigned integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<highp_uint> highp_umat2x4; /// High-precision unsigned integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<highp_uint> highp_umat3x2; /// High-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<highp_uint> highp_umat3x3; /// High-precision unsigned integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<highp_uint> highp_umat3x4; /// High-precision unsigned integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<highp_uint> highp_umat4x2; /// High-precision unsigned integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<highp_uint> highp_umat4x3; /// High-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<highp_uint> highp_umat4x4; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<mediump_uint> mediump_umat2; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<mediump_uint> mediump_umat3; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<mediump_uint> mediump_umat4; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<mediump_uint> mediump_umat2x2; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<mediump_uint> mediump_umat2x3; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<mediump_uint> mediump_umat2x4; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<mediump_uint> mediump_umat3x2; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<mediump_uint> mediump_umat3x3; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<mediump_uint> mediump_umat3x4; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<mediump_uint> mediump_umat4x2; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<mediump_uint> mediump_umat4x3; /// Medium-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<mediump_uint> mediump_umat4x4; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<lowp_uint> lowp_umat2; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<lowp_uint> lowp_umat3; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<lowp_uint> lowp_umat4; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x2<lowp_uint> lowp_umat2x2; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x3<lowp_uint> lowp_umat2x3; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat2x4<lowp_uint> lowp_umat2x4; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x2<lowp_uint> lowp_umat3x2; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x3<lowp_uint> lowp_umat3x3; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat3x4<lowp_uint> lowp_umat3x4; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x2<lowp_uint> lowp_umat4x2; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x3<lowp_uint> lowp_umat4x3; /// Low-precision unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef detail::tmat4x4<lowp_uint> lowp_umat4x4; #if(defined(GLM_PRECISION_HIGHP_INT)) typedef highp_imat2 imat2; typedef highp_imat3 imat3; typedef highp_imat4 imat4; typedef highp_imat2x2 imat2x2; typedef highp_imat2x3 imat2x3; typedef highp_imat2x4 imat2x4; typedef highp_imat3x2 imat3x2; typedef highp_imat3x3 imat3x3; typedef highp_imat3x4 imat3x4; typedef highp_imat4x2 imat4x2; typedef highp_imat4x3 imat4x3; typedef highp_imat4x4 imat4x4; #elif(defined(GLM_PRECISION_LOWP_INT)) typedef lowp_imat2 imat2; typedef lowp_imat3 imat3; typedef lowp_imat4 imat4; typedef lowp_imat2x2 imat2x2; typedef lowp_imat2x3 imat2x3; typedef lowp_imat2x4 imat2x4; typedef lowp_imat3x2 imat3x2; typedef lowp_imat3x3 imat3x3; typedef lowp_imat3x4 imat3x4; typedef lowp_imat4x2 imat4x2; typedef lowp_imat4x3 imat4x3; typedef lowp_imat4x4 imat4x4; #else //if(defined(GLM_PRECISION_MEDIUMP_INT)) /// Signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat2 imat2; /// Signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat3 imat3; /// Signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat4 imat4; /// Signed integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat2x2 imat2x2; /// Signed integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat2x3 imat2x3; /// Signed integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat2x4 imat2x4; /// Signed integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat3x2 imat3x2; /// Signed integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat3x3 imat3x3; /// Signed integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat3x4 imat3x4; /// Signed integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat4x2 imat4x2; /// Signed integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat4x3 imat4x3; /// Signed integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_imat4x4 imat4x4; #endif//GLM_PRECISION #if(defined(GLM_PRECISION_HIGHP_UINT)) typedef highp_umat2 umat2; typedef highp_umat3 umat3; typedef highp_umat4 umat4; typedef highp_umat2x2 umat2x2; typedef highp_umat2x3 umat2x3; typedef highp_umat2x4 umat2x4; typedef highp_umat3x2 umat3x2; typedef highp_umat3x3 umat3x3; typedef highp_umat3x4 umat3x4; typedef highp_umat4x2 umat4x2; typedef highp_umat4x3 umat4x3; typedef highp_umat4x4 umat4x4; #elif(defined(GLM_PRECISION_LOWP_UINT)) typedef lowp_umat2 umat2; typedef lowp_umat3 umat3; typedef lowp_umat4 umat4; typedef lowp_umat2x2 umat2x2; typedef lowp_umat2x3 umat2x3; typedef lowp_umat2x4 umat2x4; typedef lowp_umat3x2 umat3x2; typedef lowp_umat3x3 umat3x3; typedef lowp_umat3x4 umat3x4; typedef lowp_umat4x2 umat4x2; typedef lowp_umat4x3 umat4x3; typedef lowp_umat4x4 umat4x4; #else //if(defined(GLM_PRECISION_MEDIUMP_UINT)) /// Unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat2 umat2; /// Unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat3 umat3; /// Unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat4 umat4; /// Unsigned integer 2x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat2x2 umat2x2; /// Unsigned integer 2x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat2x3 umat2x3; /// Unsigned integer 2x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat2x4 umat2x4; /// Unsigned integer 3x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat3x2 umat3x2; /// Unsigned integer 3x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat3x3 umat3x3; /// Unsigned integer 3x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat3x4 umat3x4; /// Unsigned integer 4x2 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat4x2 umat4x2; /// Unsigned integer 4x3 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat4x3 umat4x3; /// Unsigned integer 4x4 matrix. /// @see gtc_matrix_integer typedef mediump_umat4x4 umat4x4; #endif//GLM_PRECISION /// @} }//namespace glm #endif//GLM_GTC_matrix_integer ```
Lisa Gutkin is an American violinist, singer and songwriter of The Klezmatics. She played in Sting's The Last Ship, had a cameo appearance in “Sex and the City,” and is a MacDowell Fellow at the MacDowell Colony. Lisa appears on hundreds of recordings including From Here On In, a CD of her original songs produced by John Lissauer, and Play Klezmer Fiddle!, an instructional DVD. She has co-authored songs with Woody Guthrie, Anne Sexton, and Maggie Dubris, and composed for symphony orchestra, dance, and film. She is the Co-Music Director and Co-Composer for the Broadway show "Indecent (play)" which won 2 Tony Awards for Best Direction of a Play and Best Lighting Design of a Play in 2017. Career Gutkin specializes in bluegrass, Klezmer, and Irish folk genres. She holds a Bachelor of Music in classical violin from the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College. In 2002, Gutkin joined The Klezmatics with the release Rise Up! Shteyt Oyf! and remains a performing and composing member, notably having written the music for the acclaimed track off Wonder Wheel, "Gonna Get Through This World". This album would win The Klezmatics a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary World Music Album in 2007. Gonna Get Through This World was also notably performed with Arlo Guthrie at Carnegie Hall during Thanksgiving of 2004 at “The Annual Holiday Concert: Arlo Guthrie with Special Guest the Klezmatics and Abe Guthrie, Sarah Lee Guthrie and Johnny Irion.”. Gutkin has performed and/or recorded with John Cale, Rod MacDonald, Jane Siberry and the Irish artists Tommy Sands and Cathie Ryan. Gukin also composed for the 2017 short film, Summer, written and directed by Pearl Gluck, and is the composer for Gluck's 2019 film, Write Me, written by Pearl Gluck and Deborah Kahan Kolb. In 2019, Gutkin produced and recorded on Indecent (Original Broadway Cast Recording). Released by Yellow Sound Label on January 28, 2019, the album featured the return of the original Broadway cast for a full recording of all the compositions of Indecent and was produced by Gutkin herself, Michael Croiter, and Aaron Halva. Partial discography The Klezmatics (Albums which feature Lisa Gutkin) Indecent Original Broadway Cast Lisa Gutkin Whirligig Rod MacDonald (Albums which feature Lisa Gutkin) Richard Meyer (Albums which feature Lisa Gutkin) Filmography References External links Klezmatics All Music Profile Indecent on Broadway Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American violinists American women violinists Place of birth missing (living people) Queens College, City University of New York alumni 21st-century violinists The Klezmatics members
```javascript Computed property names in object literals Creating promises Generators as iterators in ES6 Modules in ES6 ES6 Generator Transpiler ```
The Cray XK6 made by Cray is an enhanced version of the Cray XE6 supercomputer, announced in May 2011. The XK6 uses the same "blade" architecture of the XE6, with each XK6 blade comprising four compute "nodes". Each node consists of a 16-core AMD Opteron 6200 processor with 16 or 32 GB of DDR3 RAM and an Nvidia Tesla X2090 GPGPU with 6 GB of GDDR5 RAM, the two connected via PCI Express 2.0. Two Gemini router ASICs are shared between the nodes on a blade, providing a 3-dimensional torus network topology between nodes. This means that it has 576 GB of Graphics memory and over 1500 CPU cores, several orders of magnitude more powerful than the best publicly available computer on the market. An XK6 cabinet accommodates 24 blades (96 nodes). Each of the Tesla processors is rated at 665 double-precision gigaflops giving 63.8 teraflops per cabinet. The XK6 is capable of scaling to 500,000 Opteron cores, giving up to 50 petaflops total hybrid peak performance. The XK6 runs the Cray Linux Environment. This incorporates SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and Cray's Compute Node Linux. The first order for an XK6 system was an upgrade of an existing XE6m at the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS). References External links Cray XK6 press release Xk6 Petascale computers X86 supercomputers de:Cray XK6
William Hambly Stoneman III (born April 7, 1944) is an American former professional baseball player and executive who, during his eight-year (–) pitching career in Major League Baseball, threw two no-hitters; then, as general manager of the Anaheim Angels (–), presided over the franchise's first-ever World Series championship in 2002. He later served briefly as the Angels' interim general manager from July 1 to October 4 of . Stoneman was born in Oak Park, Illinois, and graduated from West Covina High School in Southern California in 1962. Amateur career A right-handed pitcher, Stoneman spent a year at Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut, then transferred to the University of Idaho to play college baseball for the Idaho Vandals, and helped the Vandals win the inaugural Big Sky title in 1964 as a sophomore. When Stoneman was a junior, the Vandals were 17–13 and he was 5–3 with a 1.80 earned run average (ERA) and averaged 1.5 strikeouts per inning. As a senior in 1966, Stoneman was 6–2 with a 0.45 ERA in the regular season, and the Vandals won the Big Sky again with a record in the regular season. Invited to the NCAA playoffs for the first time, Idaho eliminated Colorado State College (now Northern Colorado) and Air Force on the road in Greeley, Colorado. The Vandals were one step from the College World Series in Omaha, but lost to Arizona in Tucson in the District 7 finals, today's "Super-Regionals" (Sweet 16). Idaho ended their best-ever season at Stoneman received his bachelor's degree from the University of Idaho in 1966, and a master's degree from the University of Oklahoma. While at Idaho, he was an active member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Professional career The Chicago Cubs selected Stoneman in the 31st round of the 1966 Major League Baseball draft with the 595th overall selection. After signing, Stoneman pitched at three minor-league classifications in 1966, with Rookie-level Caldwell, Single-A Lodi, and Double-A Dallas-Fort Worth. He started 1967 in Double-A and, after five games pitched, moved to Triple-A Tacoma. The Cubs called up Stoneman to the major leagues in mid-season of 1967. He debuted as a starting pitcher with back-to-back assignments against the San Francisco Giants on July 16 and 21, allowing three total runs in 9 innings but gaining no decisions, although the Cubs won both games. Manager Leo Durocher then shifted Stoneman to the bullpen, where he made 26 appearances as a relief pitcher. He ended his rookie MLB campaign with a 3.29 earned run average, four saves and 52 strikeouts in 63 innings pitched. But he was less effective in , with his ERA climbing to 5.52 in only 29 innings of work, and spent part of the season back at Triple-A Tacoma. In the expansion draft of October 1968, Stoneman was selected by the Montreal Expos, where he spent five seasons and became a full-time starter for manager Gene Mauch. He threw his two no-hitters with the Expos: the first against the Philadelphia Phillies at Connie Mack Stadium on April 17, 1969. It was Stoneman's fifth major league start and only the ninth game of the franchise's existence; he had eight strikeouts and five walks. The second came at the end of the 1972 season on October 2, when he defeated the New York Mets in Montreal at Jarry Park, caught by Tim McCarver. The latter was the first major league no-hitter in Canada, and both were 7–0 scores. The second included nine strikeouts and seven walks. Stoneman also threw a one-hitter at home in 1971 against the San Diego Padres, a well-attended 2–0 win on Helmet Night on Wednesday, June 16. In perhaps the best outing of his career, Stoneman struck out 14 and allowed just one base on balls. The only hit came with one out in the seventh inning, a clean single to right field off the bat of Cito Gaston, which was the Padres' only well-struck ball of the night. He was named to the National League All-Star Team in 1972 and pitched two innings in relief with two strikeouts. At tall and , Stoneman was a workhorse who over four consecutive seasons (–) logged more than 200 innings pitched. He struck out 251 in 295 innings in 1971, with a 17–16 record and a 3.15 ERA for non-contending Montreal(71–90 ()). That season, Stoneman also finished third in strikeouts in the National League, behind Tom Seaver (289) and Ferguson Jenkins (263), and his 39 starts tied for the league-high with Jenkins. He also had 20 complete games in 1971, tied for third with Bob Gibson. His career was shortened by an arm injury in 1973: his earned run average ballooned from 2.98 in 1972 to 6.80 (1973), then 6.10 (1974), for a record of only 5–16 in that span. Overall, Stoneman won 54 games and lost 85 (), with an ERA of 4.08 in 245 appearances. For his career he had 169 starts, 45 complete games, and 934 strikeouts in 1,236 innings. As a batter, Stoneman holds the record with most consecutive games played with at least one strikeout. From April 30, 1971, to April 21, 1972, Stoneman played in 37 consecutive games with at least one strikeout in an at bat. He was left in to bat in the 1972 All-Star Game against Gaylord Perry, where, he struck out in the bottom of the seventh inning. In 338 regular season at bats, Stoneman struck out 212 times and compiled a career batting average of .086 with 25 singles, 4 extra-base hits (all doubles), and 23 walks. Despite that strikeout streak, his best season batting average was .129 in 1971. The strikeout streak record was tied by New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge in 2017. Front office career After his playing career ended, Stoneman worked in banking in Canada, then joined the Montreal Expos' front office in November 1983, starting out in player relations. He became the team's vice president of business operations in September 1984, and later served as the club's general manager in 1987 and 1988. Returning to Southern California, Stoneman became general manager of the Angels after the season. He hired Mike Scioscia as the club's manager and presided over its American League title and World Series championship — the first pennant and World Series championship in the club's 42-year history to that point. He remained in office through the Angels' ownership transition from the Walt Disney Company to Arturo Moreno. During his tenure, the team also won American League West Division titles in , and . Stoneman stepped down as GM following the 2007 season. On July 1, 2015, Angels general manager Jerry DiPoto resigned following a power struggle with manager Mike Scioscia. Stoneman was brought in as interim GM while the team looked for a full-time replacement. Billy Eppler was hired as the full-time replacement on October 4, 2015. See also List of Major League Baseball no-hitters References External links Baseball America, Executive Database University of Idaho Athletics – Hall of Fame – Bill Stoneman Gem of the Mountains, 1966 University of Idaho yearbook – 1966 baseball season 1944 births Living people American expatriate baseball players in Canada National League All-Stars California Angels players Anaheim Angels executives Dallas–Fort Worth Spurs players Lodi Crushers players Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim executives Chicago Cubs players Montreal Expos executives Montreal Expos players Major League Baseball pitchers Major League Baseball general managers Idaho Vandals baseball players Sportspeople from Oak Park, Illinois Baseball players from Cook County, Illinois Tacoma Cubs players University of Oklahoma alumni Baseball players from West Covina, California
"Le vent nous portera" (translated as "The wind will carry us") is a song by French band Noir Désir from their 2001 album des Visages des Figures. It was released as the first single from the album and reached number one for four weeks in a row in the Italian Singles Charts, as well as number three in the French charts and number seven in the Belgian Record Charts. French-born Spanish artist Manu Chao collaborated on the song and played guitar. Music video The music video was directed by Alexandre Courtes and Jacques Veneruso and featured Rebecca Hampton as the main character. It won Music Video of the Year in 2001. Covers The song has been covered by Belgian girls' choir Scala & Kolacny Brothers on their album Respire (2004), by Swiss singer Sophie Hunger on her album 1983 (2010), by German band Element of Crime on their album Fremde Federn (2010), by Les Charbonniers de l'enfer on their album Nouvelles fréquentations (2010), and Hungarian band Kistehén on the soundtrack for the film Kalandorok (2008). The Swedish-Hungarian singer Antonia Vai also performed a cover of this song live in 2016 on one of her concerts. Trivia It is the title song of the movie Q. References French songs 2001 singles 2001 songs
Peter Campbell (29 April 1875 – 14 September 1948) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Family The son of Charles Campbell (1835-1881), and Anna Campbell, née Lippiatt, Peter Campbell was born on 29 April 1875. Football Recruited from Parkville Junior in 1900, Campbell played 3 games for Carlton: two at full-forward (he kicked 1 goal in two matches), and one at full-back. Death He died at "Bower Cottages" in the Adelaide suburb of Davington (now part of Semaphore Park) on 14 September 1948. Notes External links Peter Campbell's profile at Blueseum 1875 births 1948 deaths Australian rules footballers from Victoria (state) Carlton Football Club players
Pseudoscleropodium purum, or neat feather-moss, is a species of moss and the sole representative of the genus Pseudoscleropodium. Description The species is described as having a pleurocarpous growth habit that forms soft carpets or turfs. It has regularly pinnate shoots up to 15 cm long. Branching may become irregular when growing on disturbed sites, such as mowed lawns. Branches are usually between 1 and 3 cm in length. The shoots of have a swollen appearance which is especially pronounced when moist. The leaves are yellow-green to dark green and are broadly ovate. They are distinctly recurved at the tip and have a single costa that extends midleaf. Stem leaves are between 2 mm and 2.5 mm in length, while branch leaves are slightly smaller and are found to be between 1 and 2 mm in length. The moss mainly propagates vegetatively, with sporophytes rarely being observed. The seta is relatively long, ranging between 2 and 5 cm. Sporophytes are not known to occur in North America. Habitat The original range of this species is not known, though it is classified as a European moss. The ambiguity of its original range also makes classifying where it is ‘exotic’ and in turn an invasive species within continental Europe very difficult. Outside of continental Europe, it has been found in the British Isles, Iceland, the Azores, Madeira, the Canary Islands, and much further in Jamaica, Hawaii, Chile, New Zealand, Southeastern Australia, and St. Helena, as well as scattered areas in North America and Asia. In these areas it is considered non-native. In natural settings, it can be found in areas of low to moderate elevation. It has a range of habitats including acidic and calcified grasslands, heaths, on banks, and among rocks and on rock ledges. It is a typical forest floor moss, especially characteristic of young, reforested areas. Although it is found in open woodland, it is not particularly shade tolerant. A study based in New York consistently found the species in association with several trees. In particular, it is associated with standalone or small groves of Picea abies and Thuja occidentalis. While it grows well in the area right under the canopy, it flourishes when leaf litter is sparse or entirely removed. It is often found in areas of high anthropogenic activity and disturbance. Primarily, it grows in the lawns of urban areas, cemeteries, forest edges, roadsides, and among discarded lawn clippings. On the Pacific coast, is considered a troublesome lawn weed. Spread Given their lack of study in the past, it is difficult to say how the species was introduced to these areas. The exception to this is the historical receipt of a packing shipment: “...Dickson (1967) reported P. purum being used on St. Helena to pack nursery stock for shipment to Tristan da Cunha, and Allen and Crosby (1987) stated that labels for specimens of [Pseudoscleropodium] from Argentina included the information that the moss had been used as packing material, itself perhaps received in shipments sent to Argentina from Europe.” This points to the wide scale spread of the species in the form of an auxiliary material. On a local scale, the species likely has been disseminated inadvertently from one lawn to another by professional lawn-care workers. Bioremediation The species is a known to bioaccumulate heavy metals and nitrogen. Since the nitrogen concentration in the moss tissue correlates with the nitrogen concentration found in precipitation, it is used for biomonitoring. References Brachytheciaceae Monotypic moss genera Plants described in 1923
```c++ #ifndef BOOST_MPL_AUX_ERASE_KEY_IMPL_HPP_INCLUDED #define BOOST_MPL_AUX_ERASE_KEY_IMPL_HPP_INCLUDED // // (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at // path_to_url // // See path_to_url for documentation. // $Id: erase_key_impl.hpp 49267 2008-10-11 06:19:02Z agurtovoy $ // $Date: 2008-10-10 23:19:02 -0700 (Fri, 10 Oct 2008) $ // $Revision: 49267 $ #include <boost/mpl/erase_key_fwd.hpp> #include <boost/mpl/aux_/traits_lambda_spec.hpp> namespace boost { namespace mpl { template< typename Tag > struct erase_key_impl { template< typename Sequence, typename Key > struct apply; }; BOOST_MPL_ALGORITM_TRAITS_LAMBDA_SPEC(2, erase_key_impl) }} #endif // BOOST_MPL_AUX_ERASE_KEY_IMPL_HPP_INCLUDED ```
Vaughan Glaser (November 17, 1872 – November 23, 1958) was an American stage and film actor. His stage career started a long time before the First World War; he often appeared opposite Fay Courteney in the 1910s. He appeared in numerous Broadway productions between 1902 and 1945. Glaser made his film debut in 1939 as the high-school principal Bradley in What a Life (1939), a role which he had already played in the Broadway play of the same name. Glaser continued his role during the 1940s as Mr. Bradley in the Henry Aldrich film series, which was based on What a Life. The character actor is also notable for his appearance as the blind and wise uncle of Priscilla Lane in Alfred Hitchcock's thriller Saboteur. He also portrayed supporting roles in the Frank Capra movies Meet John Doe and Arsenic and Old Lace. Glaser retired from film business after 21 films in five years. Filmography References External links 1872 births 1958 deaths American male film actors American male stage actors 20th-century American male actors
Shybalyn (, , , ) is a large village of 1359 people in Ternopil Raion of Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine. It belongs to Berezhany urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Shybalyn is a major village 10 km east of Berezhany on the Berezhany-Kozova-Ternopil highway. Until 18 July 2020, Shybalyn belonged to Berezhany Raion and was the second largest village in the raion (behind Naraiv). The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Ternopil Oblast to three. The area of Berezhany Raion was merged into Ternopil Raion. It is one of the oldest villages in the area. The name comes from the Ukrainian/Polish word "shyba," window-glass. The first historic mention of the village dates to 1451. Shybalyn lays within the historic region of Halychyna, in the western part of Podillya Upland. Shybalyn is situated along the deep valley of river Tsenivka (tributary of Zolota Lypa) with high hills on both sides. There is a state botanical reserve nearby the village. Highway Stryi - Kropyvnytckyi runs through the village. There are numerous bus routes that connect Rohatyn, Berezhany and Ternopil that stop in the village. There are Ukrainian Greek-Catholic church of St. Yuri, The Orthodox Church of St. John the Divine and The old Polish Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady is in delipidated condition. Population Population in 1900: 1981 inhabitants Population in 1939: 2410 inhabitants Population in 1991: 1359 inhabitants Population in 2007: 1293 inhabitants with over 400 houses References Berezhany urban hromada Villages in Ternopil Raion
Eencuentro Con El Milenio is the fourth studio album released by Los Mismos on November 16, 1999. Track listing References 1999 albums Spanish-language albums Los Mismos albums
```objective-c /*++ version 3. Alternative licensing terms are available. Contact info@minocacorp.com for details. See the LICENSE file at the root of this project for complete licensing information. Module Name: imp.h Abstract: This header contains definitions internal to the Image Library. Author: Evan Green 13-Oct-2012 --*/ // // your_sha256_hash--- Includes // #define RTL_API __DLLEXPORT #include <minoca/kernel/driver.h> #include "immux.h" // // your_sha256_hash Definitions // // // Define the initial amount to read for loading image segments. // #define IMAGE_INITIAL_READ_SIZE 1024 // // Define the macros to the various functions. // #define ImAllocateMemory ImImportTable->AllocateMemory #define ImFreeMemory ImImportTable->FreeMemory #define ImOpenFile ImImportTable->OpenFile #define ImCloseFile ImImportTable->CloseFile #define ImLoadFile ImImportTable->LoadFile #define ImReadFile ImImportTable->ReadFile #define ImUnloadBuffer ImImportTable->UnloadBuffer #define ImAllocateAddressSpace ImImportTable->AllocateAddressSpace #define ImFreeAddressSpace ImImportTable->FreeAddressSpace #define ImMapImageSegment ImImportTable->MapImageSegment #define ImUnmapImageSegment ImImportTable->UnmapImageSegment #define ImNotifyImageLoad ImImportTable->NotifyImageLoad #define ImNotifyImageUnload ImImportTable->NotifyImageUnload #define ImInvalidateInstructionCacheRegion \ ImImportTable->InvalidateInstructionCacheRegion #define ImGetEnvironmentVariable ImImportTable->GetEnvironmentVariable #define ImFinalizeSegments ImImportTable->FinalizeSegments // // Define the initial scope array size. // #define IM_INITIAL_SCOPE_SIZE 8 // // Define the maximum size a collection of shared object dependencies can // reasonably grow to. // #define IM_MAX_SCOPE_SIZE 0x10000 // // ------------------------------------------------------ Data Type Definitions // // // your_sha256_hash---- Globals // // // Define the table of functions called by the image library. // extern PIM_IMPORT_TABLE ImImportTable; // // -------------------------------------------------------- Function Prototypes // PVOID ImpReadBuffer ( PIMAGE_FILE_INFORMATION File, PIMAGE_BUFFER Buffer, UINTN Offset, UINTN Size ); /*++ Routine Description: This routine handles access to an image buffer. Arguments: File - Supplies an optional pointer to the file information, if the buffer may need to be resized. Buffer - Supplies a pointer to the buffer to read from. Offset - Supplies the offset from the start of the file to read. Size - Supplies the required size. Return Value: Returns a pointer to the image file at the requested offset on success. NULL if the range is invalid or the file could not be fully loaded. --*/ KSTATUS ImpLoad ( PLIST_ENTRY ListHead, PCSTR BinaryName, PIMAGE_FILE_INFORMATION BinaryFile, PIMAGE_BUFFER ImageBuffer, PVOID SystemContext, ULONG Flags, PLOADED_IMAGE Parent, PLOADED_IMAGE *LoadedImage, PLOADED_IMAGE *Interpreter ); /*++ Routine Description: This routine loads an executable image into memory. Arguments: ListHead - Supplies a pointer to the head of the list of loaded images. BinaryName - Supplies the name of the binary executable image to load. If this is NULL, then a pointer to the first (primary) image loaded, with a reference added. BinaryFile - Supplies an optional handle to the file information. The handle should be positioned to the beginning of the file. Supply NULL if the caller does not already have an open handle to the binary. On success, the image library takes ownership of the handle. ImageBuffer - Supplies an optional pointer to the image buffer. This can be a complete image file buffer, or just a partial load of the file. SystemContext - Supplies an opaque token that will be passed to the support functions called by the image support library. Flags - Supplies a bitfield of flags governing the load. See IMAGE_LOAD_FLAG_* flags. Parent - Supplies an optional pointer to the parent image that imports this image. LoadedImage - Supplies an optional pointer where a pointer to the loaded image structure will be returned on success. Interpreter - Supplies an optional pointer where a pointer to the loaded interpreter structure will be returned on success. Return Value: Status code. --*/ KSTATUS ImpAddImageToScope ( PLOADED_IMAGE Parent, PLOADED_IMAGE Child ); /*++ Routine Description: This routine appends a breadth first traversal of the child's dependencies to the image scope. Arguments: Parent - Supplies a pointer to the innermost scope to add the child to. Child - Supplies a pointer to the child to add to the scope. This is often the parent itself. Return Value: STATUS_SUCCESS on success. STATUS_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES if there was an allocation failure. --*/ ```
```javascript Computed property names in object literals Handling modules Typed Arrays The `for-of` loop in ES6 ES6 `Number` methods ```
The bluetail unicornfish (Naso caeruleacauda), also known as the blue unicornfish, is a species of marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Acanthuridae, the surgeonfishes, unicornfishes and tangs. This species is found in the western central Pacific Ocean. Taxonomy The bluetail unicornfish was first formally described in 1994 by the American ichthyologist John Ernest Randall with its type locality given as Dumaguete on Negros in the Philippines. This species is classified in the subgenus Axinurus within the genus Naso. The genus Naso is the only genus in the subfamily Nasinae in the family Acanthuridae. Etymology The bluetail unicornfish has the specific name caeruleacauda and this means "blue tail", an allusion to its "most striking color feature", the blue caudal fin, Description The bluetail unicornfish has its dorsal fin supported by 4 or 5 spines and 28 to 30 soft rays while the anal fin contains 2 spines and 29 soft rays. Their body has a standard length which is between 2.75 and 2.8 times its depth. The dorsal profile of the head between the upper lip and the intraorbital space is straight. There is a bulge between the eyes and the nostrils. The caudal fin is blue and the colour in life is bluish grey or brownish grey, paler in colour, even yellowish, on the lower body. There is a yellow patch beneath the pectoral fins. The maximum published total length of this species is and the maximum weight is . Distribution and habitat The bluetail unicornfish is found in the western central Pacific in Indonesia, the Philippines and the Great Barrier Reef of Australia. It has also been recorded off northeastern Madagascar. This species forms schools over steep seaward sloped, typically at depths in excess of . References External links Naso (fish) Fish described in 1994
```go /* 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. */ // Code generated by client-gen. DO NOT EDIT. package fake import ( "context" v1beta1 "github.com/kubernetes-sigs/service-catalog/pkg/apis/servicecatalog/v1beta1" v1 "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/apis/meta/v1" labels "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/labels" schema "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/runtime/schema" types "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/types" watch "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/watch" testing "k8s.io/client-go/testing" ) // FakeClusterServiceClasses implements ClusterServiceClassInterface type FakeClusterServiceClasses struct { Fake *FakeServicecatalogV1beta1 } var clusterserviceclassesResource = schema.GroupVersionResource{Group: "servicecatalog.k8s.io", Version: "v1beta1", Resource: "clusterserviceclasses"} var clusterserviceclassesKind = schema.GroupVersionKind{Group: "servicecatalog.k8s.io", Version: "v1beta1", Kind: "ClusterServiceClass"} // Get takes name of the clusterServiceClass, and returns the corresponding clusterServiceClass object, and an error if there is any. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Get(ctx context.Context, name string, options v1.GetOptions) (result *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, err error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootGetAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, name), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } return obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass), err } // List takes label and field selectors, and returns the list of ClusterServiceClasses that match those selectors. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) List(ctx context.Context, opts v1.ListOptions) (result *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList, err error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootListAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, clusterserviceclassesKind, opts), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } label, _, _ := testing.ExtractFromListOptions(opts) if label == nil { label = labels.Everything() } list := &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList{ListMeta: obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList).ListMeta} for _, item := range obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList).Items { if label.Matches(labels.Set(item.Labels)) { list.Items = append(list.Items, item) } } return list, err } // Watch returns a watch.Interface that watches the requested clusterServiceClasses. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Watch(ctx context.Context, opts v1.ListOptions) (watch.Interface, error) { return c.Fake. InvokesWatch(testing.NewRootWatchAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, opts)) } // Create takes the representation of a clusterServiceClass and creates it. Returns the server's representation of the clusterServiceClass, and an error, if there is any. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Create(ctx context.Context, clusterServiceClass *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, opts v1.CreateOptions) (result *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, err error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootCreateAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, clusterServiceClass), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } return obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass), err } // Update takes the representation of a clusterServiceClass and updates it. Returns the server's representation of the clusterServiceClass, and an error, if there is any. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Update(ctx context.Context, clusterServiceClass *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, opts v1.UpdateOptions) (result *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, err error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootUpdateAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, clusterServiceClass), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } return obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass), err } // UpdateStatus was generated because the type contains a Status member. // Add a +genclient:noStatus comment above the type to avoid generating UpdateStatus(). func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) UpdateStatus(ctx context.Context, clusterServiceClass *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, opts v1.UpdateOptions) (*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootUpdateSubresourceAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, "status", clusterServiceClass), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } return obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass), err } // Delete takes name of the clusterServiceClass and deletes it. Returns an error if one occurs. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Delete(ctx context.Context, name string, opts v1.DeleteOptions) error { _, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootDeleteAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, name), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) return err } // DeleteCollection deletes a collection of objects. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) DeleteCollection(ctx context.Context, opts v1.DeleteOptions, listOpts v1.ListOptions) error { action := testing.NewRootDeleteCollectionAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, listOpts) _, err := c.Fake.Invokes(action, &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClassList{}) return err } // Patch applies the patch and returns the patched clusterServiceClass. func (c *FakeClusterServiceClasses) Patch(ctx context.Context, name string, pt types.PatchType, data []byte, opts v1.PatchOptions, subresources ...string) (result *v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass, err error) { obj, err := c.Fake. Invokes(testing.NewRootPatchSubresourceAction(clusterserviceclassesResource, name, pt, data, subresources...), &v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass{}) if obj == nil { return nil, err } return obj.(*v1beta1.ClusterServiceClass), err } ```
Edvīns Bietags (28 February 1908, in Rūjiena – 29 September 1983, in Jūrmala) was a Latvian wrestler and Olympic medalist. Edvīns competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany, and won a silver medal in Greco-Roman Light Heavyweight wrestling. References External links 1908 births 1983 deaths People from Rūjiena Olympic wrestlers for Latvia Wrestlers at the 1936 Summer Olympics Latvian male sport wrestlers Olympic silver medalists for Latvia Olympic medalists in wrestling Medalists at the 1936 Summer Olympics European Wrestling Championships medalists 20th-century Latvian people
Jeremy Avigad is a professor of philosophy and a professor of mathematical sciences at Carnegie Mellon University. He received a B.A. in mathematics from Harvard University in 1989, and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1995 under the supervision of Jack Silver. He has contributed to the areas of mathematical logic and foundations, formal verification and interactive theorem proving, and the philosophy and history of mathematics. He became Director of the Hoskinson Center for Formal Mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University after Charles Hoskinson donated $20 Million in September 2021 to establish it. References 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians American logicians Living people Philosophers of mathematics Carnegie Mellon University faculty Harvard College alumni 1968 births UC Berkeley College of Letters and Science alumni
Main page: List of Canadian plants by family Families: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I J K | L | M | N | O | P Q | R | S | T | U V W | X Y Z Fabaceae Acmispon decumbens, syn. Lotus nevadensis – Nevada bird's-foot trefoil Amorpha canescens – downy indigobush Amorpha fruticosa – false indigobush Amorpha nana – fragrant indigobush Amphicarpaea bracteata – American hog-peanut Apios americana – American groundnut Astragalus adsurgens – rattle milkvetch Astragalus agrestis – Don meadow milkvetch Astragalus alpinus – alpine milkvetch Astragalus americanus – American milkvetch Astragalus australis – Indian milkvetch Astragalus beckwithii – Beckwith's milkvetch Astragalus bisulcatus – two-grooved milkvetch Astragalus bodinii – Bodin's milkvetch Astragalus bourgovii – Bourgeau's milkvetch Astragalus canadensis – Canadian milkvetch Astragalus collinus – rattle milkvetch Astragalus convallarius – lesser rushy milkvetch Astragalus crassicarpus – ground-plum Astragalus drummondii – Drummond's milkvetch Astragalus eucosmus – pretty milkvetch Astragalus filipes – basalt milkvetch Astragalus flexuosus – flexible milkvetch Astragalus gilviflorus – three-leaf milkvetch Astragalus kentrophyta – spiny milkvetch Astragalus lentiginosus – mottled milkvetch Astragalus lotiflorus – low milkvetch Astragalus microcystis – least bladdery milkvetch Astragalus miser – timber milkvetch Astragalus missouriensis – Missouri milkvetch Astragalus neglectus – Cooper's milkvetch Astragalus nutzotinensis – Nutzotin milkvetch Astragalus pectinatus – narrowleaf milkvetch Astragalus purshii – Pursh's milkvetch Astragalus racemosus – racemose milkvetch Astragalus robbinsii – Robbins' milkvetch Astragalus sclerocarpus – woody-pod milkvetch Astragalus spaldingii – Spalding's milkvetch Astragalus spatulatus – tufted milkvetch Astragalus tenellus – looseflower milkvetch Astragalus umbellatus – tundra milkvetch Astragalus vexilliflexus – bent-flowered milkvetch Astragalus williamsii – Williams' milkvetch Baptisia alba – prairie false indigo Baptisia tinctoria – yellow wild indigo Cercis canadensis – eastern redbud Dalea candida – white prairie-clover Dalea purpurea – purple prairie-clover Dalea villosa – silky prairie-clover Desmodium canadense – showy tick-trefoil Desmodium canescens – hoary tick-trefoil Desmodium cuspidatum – toothed tick-trefoil Desmodium glutinosum – large tick-trefoil Desmodium nudiflorum – bare-stemmed tick-trefoil Desmodium paniculatum – panicled-leaf tick-trefoil Desmodium perplexum – perplexed tick-trefoil Desmodium rotundifolium – prostrate tick-trefoil Gleditsia triacanthos – honey-locust Glycyrrhiza lepidota – wild licorice Gymnocladus dioicus – Kentucky coffee-tree Hedysarum alpinum – alpine sweetvetch Hedysarum boreale – boreal sweetvetch Hedysarum occidentale – western sweetvetch Hedysarum sulphurescens – yellow sweetvetch Lathyrus bijugatus – Latah tule-pea Lathyrus japonicus – beach pea Lathyrus littoralis – grey beach peavine Lathyrus nevadensis – Sierra Nevada peavine Lathyrus ochroleucus – pale vetchling peavine Lathyrus palustris – vetchling peavine Lathyrus venosus – smooth veiny peavine Lespedeza capitata – roundhead bushclover Lespedeza hirta – hairy bushclover Lespedeza intermedia – wand bushclover Lespedeza procumbens – trailing bushclover Lespedeza violacea – violet bushclover Lespedeza virginica – slender bushclover Lespedeza x longifolia Lespedeza x nuttallii – Nuttall's bushclover Lotus denticulatus – meadow trefoil Lotus formosissimus – seaside trefoil Lotus micranthus – smallflower trefoil Lotus parviflorus – smallflower trefoil Lotus pinnatus – bog bird's-foot trefoil Lotus unifoliolatus – American bird's-foot trefoil Lupinus albicaulis – sickle-keel lupine Lupinus arbustus – longspur lupine Lupinus arcticus – Arctic lupine Lupinus argenteus – silvery lupine Lupinus bicolor – Lindley's lupine Lupinus bingenensis – Bingen lupine Lupinus burkei – Burke's lupine Lupinus caespitosus – stemless dwarf lupine Lupinus caudatus – Kellogg's spurred lupine Lupinus densiflorus – dense-flowered lupine Lupinus formosus – summer lupine Lupinus kuschei – Yukon lupine Lupinus latifolius – broadleaf lupine Lupinus lepidus – prairie lupine Lupinus leucophyllus – woolly-leaf lupine Lupinus littoralis – seashore lupine Lupinus lyallii – Lyall's lupine Lupinus minimus – Kettle Falls lupine Lupinus nootkatensis – Nootka lupine Lupinus oreganus – Oregon lupine Lupinus parviflorus – lodgepole lupine Lupinus perennis – sundial lupine Lupinus polycarpus – smallflower lupine Lupinus polyphyllus – largeleaf lupine Lupinus prunophilus – hairy bigleaf lupine Lupinus pusillus – small lupine Lupinus rivularis – riverbank lupine Lupinus sericeus – Pursh's silky lupine Lupinus sulphureus – sulphur-flower lupine Lupinus vallicola – open lupine Lupinus wyethii – Wyeth's lupine Lupinus x alpestris Oxytropis arctica – arctic crazyweed Oxytropis besseyi – Bessey's locoweed Oxytropis borealis – boreal locoweed Oxytropis campestris – northern yellow pointvetch Oxytropis deflexa – pendant-pod pointvetch Oxytropis huddelsonii – Huddelson's crazyweed Oxytropis lagopus – hare's-foot pointvetch Oxytropis lambertii – stemless pointvetch Oxytropis maydelliana – Maydell's pointvetch Oxytropis mertensiana – Mertens' crazyweed Oxytropis monticola – yellowflower locoweed Oxytropis nigrescens – blackish crazyweed Oxytropis podocarpa – Gray's pointvetch Oxytropis scammaniana – Scamman's crazyweed Oxytropis sericea – white pointvetch Oxytropis splendens – showy pointvetch Pediomelum argophyllum – silvery scurfpea Pediomelum esculentum – pomme-de-prairie Psoralidium lanceolatum – lanceleaf scurfpea Psoralidium tenuiflorum – few-flowered scurfpea Rupertia physodes – California scurfpea Senna hebecarpa – wild senna Strophostyles helvula – trailing wild bean Tephrosia virginiana – goat's-rue Thermopsis rhombifolia – roundleaf thermopsis Trifolium cyathiferum – bowl clover Trifolium depauperatum – balloon sack clover Trifolium dichotomum – branched Indian clover Trifolium fucatum – sour clover Trifolium macraei – McCrae's clover Trifolium microcephalum – smallhead clover Trifolium microdon – Valparaiso clover Trifolium oliganthum – few-flower clover Trifolium variegatum – whitetip clover Trifolium willdenowii – springbank clover Trifolium wormskioldii – Wormskjold's clover Vicia americana – American purple vetch Vicia caroliniana – Carolina wood vetch Vicia nigricans – black vetch Fabroniaceae Anacamptodon splachnoides – knothole moss Fabronia ciliaris Fabronia pusilla Fagaceae Castanea dentata – American chestnut Fagus grandifolia – American beech Quercus alba – white oak Quercus bicolor – swamp white oak Quercus ellipsoidalis – northern pin oak Quercus garryana – Oregon white oak Quercus ilicifolia – scrub oak Quercus macrocarpa – bur oak Quercus muehlenbergii – Chinquapin oak Quercus palustris – pin oak Quercus prinoides – dwarf Chinquapin oak Quercus rubra – northern red oak Quercus shumardii – Shumard's oak Quercus velutina – black oak Quercus x bebbiana Quercus x deamii Quercus x hawkinsiae Quercus x jackiana Quercus x palaeolithicola Quercus x schuettei Fissidentaceae Fissidens adianthoides Fissidens aphelotaxifolius Fissidens bryoides Fissidens bushii Fissidens dubius Fissidens exilis – small pocket moss Fissidens fontanus Fissidens grandifrons Fissidens limbatus Fissidens obtusifolius Fissidens osmundioides – Osmund fissidens moss Fissidens pauperculus Fissidens subbasilaris Fissidens taxifolius Fissidens ventricosus Fontinalaceae Dichelyma capillaceum Dichelyma falcatum Dichelyma pallescens Dichelyma uncinatum – dichelyma moss Fontinalis antipyretica – aquatic moss Fontinalis dalecarlica Fontinalis flaccida Fontinalis hypnoides Fontinalis macmillanii Fontinalis missourica Fontinalis neomexicana Fontinalis novae-angliae Fontinalis sphagnifolia Fontinalis sullivantii Fossombroniaceae Fossombronia foveolata Fossombronia longiseta Fossombronia wondraczekii Fumariaceae Adlumia fungosa – climbing fumitory Corydalis aurea – golden corydalis Corydalis flavula – yellow corydalis Corydalis pauciflora – few-flower corydalis Corydalis scouleri – Scouler's corydalis Corydalis sempervirens – pale corydalis Dicentra canadensis – squirrel-corn Dicentra cucullaria – Dutchman's breeches Dicentra formosa – Pacific bleedinghearts Dicentra uniflora – one-flower bleedinghearts Funariaceae Aphanorrhegma serratum Entosthodon fascicularis Entosthodon rubiginosus Funaria americana Funaria flavicans Funaria hygrometrica Funaria microstoma Funaria muhlenbergii Physcomitrella patens Physcomitrium collenchymatum Physcomitrium hookeri Physcomitrium immersum Physcomitrium pyriforme
The coastal trevally (Carangoides coeruleopinnatus), also known as the onion trevally, Japanese trevally or bluefin kingfish, is a species of inshore marine fish in the jack family Carangidae. The species is distributed throughout the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indian and west Pacific Oceans, from South Africa in the west to Japan and New Caledonia in the east, reaching as far south as Australia. The species is found on deep coastal reefs, both in schools and as solitary individuals, where they prey on small midwater organisms including crustaceans, small fish and cephalopods. The species is taken as bycatch in a number of fisheries throughout its range by a number of fishing methods and is of little commercial value, but is considered to be a good table fish. A mistype in the original volume in which Eduard Rüppell named the species led to the combination Carangoides caeruleopinnatus, which has incorrectly spread through the literature. Taxonomy and naming The coastal trevally is formally classified within the genus Carangoides, one of a number of groups of fish referred to as jacks and trevallies. Carangoides is further classified in the family Carangidae, the Carangidae are part of the order Carangiformes. The species was first scientifically described and named by the German naturalist Eduard Rüppell in 1830 based on a specimen collected from the waters of the Red Sea off Saudi Arabia, which was designated to be the holotype. He named the new species Caranx coeruleopinnatus, with the species name translating to 'blue-finned', although the species shows no such colouration, and may be the result of some confusion by the author. In the volume in which the species is described, an apparent mistype produces the name Caranx caeruleopinnatus, which has also widely, albeit incorrectly, entered the scientific literature. The species was transferred initially to the genus Citula, a now defunct genus of jacks, before moving to its current status in Carangoides. The species has also been independently renamed five times; the first as Carangoides ophthalmotaenia by Pieter Bleeker in 1852 and most recently as Citula diversa by Gilbert Whitley in 1940. In 1924, a juvenile specimen was named Caranx uii by Yojiro Wakiya, a name which became widespread throughout the literature, and was commonly known as the 'Japanese trevally', before being sunk into C. coeruleopinnatus in 1986 by William Smith-Vaniz. The species is commonly known as the 'coastal trevally' or 'coastal kingfish', with other commonly applied English names including 'onion trevally', 'Japanese trevally', 'bluefin kingfish', 'shortfin kingfish', and 'diverse trevally'. Description The coastal trevally is similar in body to most other jacks, having a nearly ovate, strongly compressed body, with the dorsal profile more convex than the ventral profile, with a moderately curved nape. It is moderately large, growing to a recorded maximum of 40 cm, although more commonly seen at around 25 cm. The dorsal fin is divided into two distinct sections, the first consisting of 8 spines, with the second consisting of a single spine followed by 20 to 23 soft rays. The lobe of the second dorsal fin is filamentous in juveniles, becoming shorter with age until at the adult stage, the lobe is shorter than the head length and the anal fin lobe. The anal fin consists of 2 detached spines followed by 1 spine anterior to 16 to 20 soft rays. The pelvic fin contains a single spine and 18 to 20 soft rays. The lateral line has a moderate anterior arch, with the junction of the curved and straight section below the 12th to 14th dorsal ray. The straight section of the lateral line contains 16 to 20 scutes, with the lateral line having 31 to 50 combined scales and scutes over its entire length. The breast is devoid of scales ventrally to behind the pelvic fin origin and up to the pectoral fin base, although in rare cases this is interrupted by a lateral band of scales. Both jaws contain bands of villiform teeth, with the bands becoming wider anteriorly. There are a total of 21 to 27 gill rakers and 24 vertebrae. In life, the coastal trevally is bluish green above, fading to a silvery grey on the underside, with the sides having many small yellow spots. There is a small dark blotch on the upper margin of the opercle. The dorsal, anal and caudal fins are dusky, although the caudal is often slightly yellow, while the pectoral fins are pale yellow and the pelvic fins are hyaline to grey. Juveniles have dark vertical bands which fade as the fish become adults, and become indistinct at larger sizes. Distribution and habitat The coastal trevally is distributed broadly throughout the tropical and subtropical waters of the Indian and west Pacific Oceans. Its westernmost limit is the east coast of Africa, from South Africa and Madagascar north to the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, with the range extending east along the coast of India, including Sri Lanka. The species is distributed across the Asian coastline including China and Thailand, and throughout the South East Asian and Indonesian island chains extending to northern Australia. In the Pacific Ocean, its range extends north to Taiwan and Japan, and east to a number of small island groups, including Tonga, Samoa and New Caledonia. Coastal trevally are rarely found close to shore, with adults inhabiting deep coastal reef systems, and the species is also thought to live a pelagic lifestyle. Juveniles have been recorded in Natal estuaries, and in shallow bays in northern Australia, but the movements of the species are poorly understood. Like other species of jack, the coastal trevally is attracted to floating devices, with the fish occasionally caught by anglers around specially built FADs (fish attracting devices). Biology and fishery The coastal trevally is poorly studied, and as such there is little information regarding its biology and ecology. The species is known to occur both in small shoals and individually, and is a planktonivorous fish, consuming small midwater organisms including krill, mantis shrimp, small fish and squid. The mouth of the coastal trevally is soft, and the teeth fairly weak, which prevents the capture of larger prey items. It is a rather sluggish fish in comparison to other members of the Carangidae. Nothing is known of reproduction in the species, and its movements are also unknown. The coastal trevally is of little or no importance to most fisheries throughout its range, occasionally taken as bycatch in finfish and prawn operations, using hook and line, gill nets and other various types of trap. Due to its deep reef nature, the species is of little interest to anglers, and is rarely taken by them. The coastal trevally is considered to be a good table fish, however, and it has limited commercial value in Asia. References External links Coastal trevally at Fishbase Australian Museum factsheet Encyclopedia of Life Page coastal trevally Marine fish of East Africa Marine fauna of East Asia Marine fish of Northern Australia coastal trevally
```javascript /** * @license Apache-2.0 * * * * path_to_url * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. */ 'use strict'; /** * Compute the mean error incrementally. * * @module @stdlib/stats/incr/me * * @example * var incrme = require( '@stdlib/stats/incr/me' ); * * var accumulator = incrme(); * * var m = accumulator(); * // returns null * * m = accumulator( 2.0, 3.0 ); * // returns 1.0 * * m = accumulator( -5.0, 2.0 ); * // returns 4.0 * * m = accumulator(); * // returns 4.0 */ // MODULES // var main = require( './main.js' ); // EXPORTS // module.exports = main; ```
An oonjal is a swing that is typically anchored to the ceiling of a room - using iron link chains and the bottom is a wooden plank. This used to be a popular item of furniture in most southern Indian houses. They have been not as popular as houses give way to flats. There is a popular wedding ritual in which the bride and groom sit on an oonjal decorated with flowers and receive blessings. Particularly, it is prominent hanging in the houses of Indian Tamil families. References Swing rides
Ehsan Pirhadi () is an Iranian football striker, who currently plays for Azadegan League side Shahrdari Tabriz. Club career He made his debut during 2010–11 season, played his first match against Mes Kerman. Club career statistics Assist Goals Honours Club Esteghlal Iran Pro League (1): 2012–13 Runner up (1): 2010–11 External links Ehsan Pirhadi at Persian League Iranian men's footballers Living people Esteghlal F.C. players 1991 births Men's association football midfielders Footballers from Tehran
Milford Public Schools is the public school district in Milford, Massachusetts, United States. As of 2016, Dr. Kevin McIntyre (Ed.D) is the superintendent of schools. The school committee includes a chairperson, a vice chairperson, and five members. History In 1997, members of the school system created and promoted a program where schoolchildren interact with senior citizens. In 2007, the school district placed all of its schools in a curicculum audit, due to the growing immigrant population from Brazil and Ecuador. Schools Secondary: Milford High School (MHS) (9-12) Stacy Middle School (SMS) (6-8) Primary: Brookside Elementary School (K-2) Memorial Elementary School (K-2) Woodland Elementary School (3-5) Pre-school: Shining Star Early Childhood Center (SSECC) Athletics Milford High School provides 21 athletic teams throughout the Spring, Fall, and Winter seasons. Sports played in the Spring: baseball, softball, lacrosse, tennis, track, and volleyball. Sports played in the Fall: football, cheering, cross country, field hockey, golf, soccer, and volleyball. Sports played in the Winter: Alpine Skiing, basketball, cheering, ice hockey, indoor track, swimming, weightlifting, and wrestling. References External links Milford Public Schools website "In Milford, public schools, kids to connect with area professionals", Milford Daily News. October 19, 2010. School districts in Worcester County, Massachusetts Milford, Massachusetts
Henry of Laach (in German: Heinrich von Laach) was the first count palatine of the Rhine (1085/1087–1095). Henry was the son of Herman I, count of Gleiberg. Henry was a follower of Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor. He had lands in the southeastern Eifel and on the Moselle River. Most of the holdings of Hermann II, Count Palatine fell back to the emperor, when Hermann died without successor. The emperor named Henry count palatine of the Rhine and during the emperor's trip to Italy tasked Henry to hold interim judicial councils. Henry married Herman's widow, Adelaide of Weimar-Orlamünde (d. 1100). From this marriage, Henry may have taken control over some of her holdings along the Moselle. As a consequence, the geographic center of the palatinate moved towards the south. With his wife, Adelaide, Henry founded the Maria Laach Abbey. He was succeeded by his stepson, Siegfried of Ballenstedt. References Sources 1095 deaths Counts Palatine of the Rhine Year of birth unknown
Donald Gary Durham (born March 21, 1949) is a former pitcher in Major League Baseball. He played for the St. Louis Cardinals and Texas Rangers. Born in Yosemite, Kentucky, Durham attended Western Kentucky University and was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in the 7th round of the 1970 MLB Draft. Durham holds the MLB record for most at-bats for a player who hit .500 or better in a career as he collected 7 hits in 14 career at-bats for an even .500 batting average. References External links 1949 births Living people Major League Baseball pitchers Cedar Rapids Cardinals players Modesto Reds players Spokane Indians players St. Louis Cardinals players Texas Rangers players Tulsa Oilers (baseball) players Western Kentucky Hilltoppers baseball players Baseball players from Kentucky People from Casey County, Kentucky
(Margaret) Emily Shore (1819–1839) was a young English diarist. Life Margaret Emily Shore was born in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk on Christmas Day, 1819 to Thomas Shore and his wife, Margaret Ann (née Twopenny). She was the eldest of 5 children: having two younger sisters, Arabella (b.1822); Louisa (b.1824), and brothers, Richard (b.1821), and Mackworth (b.1825). She kept a journal from the age of eleven until her death from consumption at the age of nineteen. Her diary is less a diary and more a journal, as she herself called it: recording her thoughts on a wide range of subjects. Margaret – who went by the name of Emily – was credited with educating her two younger sisters, Arabella and Louisa Catherine Shore. Emily Shore moved to Funchal, Madeira, with her family at the end of her life in search of a healthier climate. She died there in 1839. Her final journal is a descriptive account of life in Funchal. Extracts of her journal were published by her sisters Louisa and Arabella in 1891, more than fifty years after her death. A second edition was published in 1898. Today only some parts of her journal are extant, but in 1991 it was discovered that Arabella had left two of her sister's journals to the British Museum. These journals are now in America as they were not delivered at the time. These journals reveal that Emily's autobiography was, to a degree, converted into a biography by her then elderly sisters. Legacy The University of Virginia Press have digitized Emily Shore's diaries to show how her sisters censored her original thoughts, what Emily Shore herself censored in her diary, and what was actually cut out of the original diary. Alternative country band The Handsome Family recorded a song based on the diaries, "Emily Shore 1819–1839", on their 1996 album Milk and Scissors. References English diarists Women diarists 19th-century diarists 19th-century British women writers 19th-century British writers 1819 births 1839 deaths Writers from Bury St Edmunds Tuberculosis deaths in Portugal 19th-century deaths from tuberculosis
```objective-c /* * PTP 1588 clock support - user space interface * * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #ifndef _PTP_CLOCK_H_ #define _PTP_CLOCK_H_ #include <linux/ioctl.h> #include <linux/types.h> /* PTP_xxx bits, for the flags field within the request structures. */ #define PTP_ENABLE_FEATURE (1<<0) #define PTP_RISING_EDGE (1<<1) #define PTP_FALLING_EDGE (1<<2) /* * struct ptp_clock_time - represents a time value * * The sign of the seconds field applies to the whole value. The * nanoseconds field is always unsigned. The reserved field is * included for sub-nanosecond resolution, should the demand for * this ever appear. * */ struct ptp_clock_time { __s64 sec; /* seconds */ __u32 nsec; /* nanoseconds */ __u32 reserved; }; struct ptp_clock_caps { int max_adj; /* Maximum frequency adjustment in parts per billon. */ int n_alarm; /* Number of programmable alarms. */ int n_ext_ts; /* Number of external time stamp channels. */ int n_per_out; /* Number of programmable periodic signals. */ int pps; /* Whether the clock supports a PPS callback. */ int n_pins; /* Number of input/output pins. */ /* Whether the clock supports precise system-device cross timestamps */ int cross_timestamping; int rsv[13]; /* Reserved for future use. */ }; struct ptp_extts_request { unsigned int index; /* Which channel to configure. */ unsigned int flags; /* Bit field for PTP_xxx flags. */ unsigned int rsv[2]; /* Reserved for future use. */ }; struct ptp_perout_request { struct ptp_clock_time start; /* Absolute start time. */ struct ptp_clock_time period; /* Desired period, zero means disable. */ unsigned int index; /* Which channel to configure. */ unsigned int flags; /* Reserved for future use. */ unsigned int rsv[4]; /* Reserved for future use. */ }; #define PTP_MAX_SAMPLES 25 /* Maximum allowed offset measurement samples. */ struct ptp_sys_offset { unsigned int n_samples; /* Desired number of measurements. */ unsigned int rsv[3]; /* Reserved for future use. */ /* * Array of interleaved system/phc time stamps. The kernel * will provide 2*n_samples + 1 time stamps, with the last * one as a system time stamp. */ struct ptp_clock_time ts[2 * PTP_MAX_SAMPLES + 1]; }; struct ptp_sys_offset_precise { struct ptp_clock_time device; struct ptp_clock_time sys_realtime; struct ptp_clock_time sys_monoraw; unsigned int rsv[4]; /* Reserved for future use. */ }; enum ptp_pin_function { PTP_PF_NONE, PTP_PF_EXTTS, PTP_PF_PEROUT, PTP_PF_PHYSYNC, }; struct ptp_pin_desc { /* * Hardware specific human readable pin name. This field is * set by the kernel during the PTP_PIN_GETFUNC ioctl and is * ignored for the PTP_PIN_SETFUNC ioctl. */ char name[64]; /* * Pin index in the range of zero to ptp_clock_caps.n_pins - 1. */ unsigned int index; /* * Which of the PTP_PF_xxx functions to use on this pin. */ unsigned int func; /* * The specific channel to use for this function. * This corresponds to the 'index' field of the * PTP_EXTTS_REQUEST and PTP_PEROUT_REQUEST ioctls. */ unsigned int chan; /* * Reserved for future use. */ unsigned int rsv[5]; }; #define PTP_CLK_MAGIC '=' #define PTP_CLOCK_GETCAPS _IOR(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 1, struct ptp_clock_caps) #define PTP_EXTTS_REQUEST _IOW(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 2, struct ptp_extts_request) #define PTP_PEROUT_REQUEST _IOW(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 3, struct ptp_perout_request) #define PTP_ENABLE_PPS _IOW(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 4, int) #define PTP_SYS_OFFSET _IOW(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 5, struct ptp_sys_offset) #define PTP_PIN_GETFUNC _IOWR(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 6, struct ptp_pin_desc) #define PTP_PIN_SETFUNC _IOW(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 7, struct ptp_pin_desc) #define PTP_SYS_OFFSET_PRECISE \ _IOWR(PTP_CLK_MAGIC, 8, struct ptp_sys_offset_precise) struct ptp_extts_event { struct ptp_clock_time t; /* Time event occured. */ unsigned int index; /* Which channel produced the event. */ unsigned int flags; /* Reserved for future use. */ unsigned int rsv[2]; /* Reserved for future use. */ }; #endif ```
Juan Carlos Herken Krauer is a German–Paraguayan economist, historian, journalist, writer and professor. His novel "The Amethyst Villa" won the Literature Prize of the city of Asunción in 2004. "Esperando al Quebrantahuesos", his fifth novel, was published in 2019. His most recent academic publications are focused on the globalised "education industry", redefining the accounting identity of "educational capital", by introducing the novel category of "prestige capital". They also propose the concept of "the teacher as the modern Sisyphus", within the context of the prisoner's dilemma approach, in order to capture the increasing constraints and ethical issues overwhelming the modern teacher. Education and career He was born in Tebicuary, district of Coronel Martínez, Guairá on January 24, 1953, a descendant of German and Swiss-German families who migrated to Paraguay in the late nineteenth century. He spent his childhood in his hometown, and then moved to Asunción where he attended primary and secondary education at the Colegio de Goethe, Asunción. He studied economics at the National University of Asunción and sociology at the Catholic University of Asunción in 1972. A student leader in the fight against the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner in the early Seventies, he took refuge in Buenos Aires in 1974. In 1981 he earned a master's degree in economics from Birkbeck College. In 1986 he received the Ph.D. at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He undertook his doctoral work first under the supervision of Hla Myint, on economic development, and then of Colin Lewis on economic history. Between 1985 and 1986 he participated in the Advanced Studies Program in International Economics of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, University of Kiel, Germany. Journalism His career in journalism began in 1968, writing for different student publications at the time of the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner; among others, in the weekly Frente, as well as radio and television ("New Generation", 1970). Collaborated with the Paraguayan news magazine Diálogo, and in 1974 he worked with different agencies and media based in Buenos Aires, including Inter Press Service, and became a correspondent for Latin American Newsletters , London, in 1975. In 1977, he moved to London where he worked as an editor and journalist (1977–1980) of Latin American Newsletters Ltd, and was editor-in.chief of Informe Semanal, first Spanish version of the newsletters of the British company. Between 1982 and 1984 he was a regular contributor to many newspapers in Latin America, through the Agencia Latinoamerica, based in Miami, Florida, US Economics He was an economist in the department of developing countries for the American company Data Resources, McGraw Hill, London and Boston (1985), specializing in the construction of macro-econometric models, among others Algeria and South Africa Between 1986 and 1987 he was a researcher at the Institute of World Economics, Kiel Institute for the World Economy, in Kiel, Germany. Much of his academic bibliography focuses on economic growth, development strategies, labour market and migration, and new global corporations, as well as Latin American economies, particularly Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay. His contributions on economics are reputed to have been influenced by John Maynard Keynes and Hla Myint, while those on economic history by Fernand Braudel. History One of his first essays published on the history of Paraguay and South America was Capitalist Development, Expansion and Brazilian Political Process in Paraguay, 1975. Once based in London, he undertook an extensive research in British archives, particularly Foreign Office materials, and in libraries in France and Germany; a first result was Britain and the War of the Triple Alliance (1864–1970), published in 1983, and written together with his then wife, Maria Isabel Gimenez of Herken (1954–1998). His work provides information that allows a critical reevaluation of the context and causes of the great South American war of the nineteenth century, which opposed Paraguay to. Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, and generated strong arguments for the rejection of some of the "revisionist" theses on the inescapable contradiction between the "Paraguayan model" and British interests. In a letter, dated 11 October 1983, to the authors, the Paraguayan historian Carlos Pastore, describes the work as "... the first book on the development of this war which I started reading, and also finished. In all the other cases, just after having began, I left them aside." Follows Rural Paraguay between 1869 and 1913. Contributions to the regional history of the Plata, published in 1984, which proposes an original regional approach to rural economic history, linking up the Northern regions of Argentina and neighboring Brazil with Paraguay. In 1984 he also published Railways, Conspiracies and Business in Paraguay (1907–1912), largely based on unpublished materials from the archives of the British Foreign Office, which revealed a vast network of political and financial collusion centered on the American entrepreneur Percival Farquhar, and his projects for a railway interconnection between the Atlantic and the Pacific. In 1998 he published The Economic Policy in the Liberal Era (1904–1940), and between 2010 and 2011, two essays The heritage of two wars: 1864–70 and 1932–35, and Paraguay's economy between 1940–2008: growth, convergence and uncertainties. Academic career His teaching experience began with occasional interventions at the schools of the University of London. He was appointed Honorary Research Fellow of the Institute of Latin American Studies , University of London from 1988 to 1990. He was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship for 1988–89. Since 1992, and based in Paris, France, served as assistant professor at the American University of Paris(1992–95), and as a professor in various Masters programs in Business Administration. He was appointed Professor of Economics at the European University, Paris, France, in 1997. In 1999 he was appointed Professor of Economics and Management at Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane, Morocco. Between 1998 and 2001 he was Professor for the Master in Economics Programme of the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine. In 2016 he was visiting professor of economics at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education. Between 2017 and 2018 he was visiting professor at the University of Jaén, Spain. Literature While residing in Paraguay, he wrote poetry and short stories. In 1970 he was elected President of the Goethe Literary Academy College of Asunción, and was also founder and secretary general of the League of Literary Academys of Paraguay. In the same year he joined the editorial board of the Revista de Cultura Universitaria Criterio. He returned to literature in the 1990s, with the appearance of his first novel, The Merchant of Illusions, in 1995. In 2003 he published The Amethyst Village, which received the Literature Prize of the City of Asunción in 2004, for his merits in "the narrative construction and the poetic use of language". In 2009 two more novels were published, The Letter of Ulysses and A Summer in Paris. He has published critical studies on the literary works of Augusto Roa Bastos, Gabriel Casaccia, Joseph Conrad, Ernst Jünger, and Julien Gracq. Works Although he is the author of several books and essays in the area of social sciences, The Merchant of illusions is his first novel, and was published in 1995. Gran Bretaña y la Guerra de la Triple Alianza (1983) (co-author) El Paraguay Rural entre 1869 y 1913. Contribuciones a la historia económica regional del Plata (1984) Ferrocarriles, Conspiraciones y Negocios en el Paraguay, 1910–1914, (1984) Capital-intensive Industries in the newly industrializing Countries. The Brazilian automobile and steel industries, (co-author), Kiel (1988), Argentine to 1992: The Search for Solutions, (co-author), Economist Intelligence Unit, (co-author), London, (1988), La Política Económica en la Era del Partido Liberal (1904–1940), (1989);second edition 2019 Annäherungen, (1994) Hacia una Economía Política del Mercosur (1995) El Mercader de Ilusiones (1995) second edition, 2016, Mercado de Trabajo y Migración en el Mercosur (1996) Nuestros años de luna y sol, (2001) La Villa de Amatista, (2003), Paraguarí, (2006) La Carta de Ulises (2009), Un Verano en París (2009), Pedro Herken. Diario de Guerra, Chaco Paraguayo, September 1932-April 1936. Introducción, edición y anexos de Guillermo Alejandro Herken Meyer y Juan Carlos Herken Krauer, Berlín-Montevideo, (2018. Esperando al Quebrantahuesos (2019), References External links Paraguayan historians Paraguayan novelists Paraguayan male writers Male novelists German economists German male writers 1953 births Paraguayan economists Paraguayan journalists Male journalists Paraguayan people of German descent Paraguayan people of Swiss descent Living people
Hopkins Hollow Village is an historic district along Hopkins Hollow Road, Narrow Lane, and Perry Hill Road in Coventry, Rhode Island, United States, and West Greenwich, Rhode Island. The village features American colonial and Federal era architecture. The Hopkins Hollow Church, built circa 1850 in a Greek Revival style, is located within the village adjacent to the Hopkins Hollow cemetery. The village was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2010. See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Kent County, Rhode Island References Colonial architecture in Rhode Island Federal architecture in Rhode Island Villages in Kent County, Rhode Island Providence metropolitan area Villages in Rhode Island Coventry, Rhode Island Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode Island National Register of Historic Places in Kent County, Rhode Island
```go // go run mksysnum.go path_to_url // Code generated by the command above; see README.md. DO NOT EDIT. //go:build arm64 && freebsd package unix const ( // SYS_NOSYS = 0; // { int nosys(void); } syscall nosys_args int SYS_EXIT = 1 // { void sys_exit(int rval); } exit sys_exit_args void SYS_FORK = 2 // { int fork(void); } SYS_READ = 3 // { ssize_t read(int fd, void *buf, size_t nbyte); } SYS_WRITE = 4 // { ssize_t write(int fd, const void *buf, size_t nbyte); } SYS_OPEN = 5 // { int open(char *path, int flags, int mode); } SYS_CLOSE = 6 // { int close(int fd); } SYS_WAIT4 = 7 // { int wait4(int pid, int *status, int options, struct rusage *rusage); } SYS_LINK = 9 // { int link(char *path, char *link); } SYS_UNLINK = 10 // { int unlink(char *path); } SYS_CHDIR = 12 // { int chdir(char *path); } SYS_FCHDIR = 13 // { int fchdir(int fd); } SYS_CHMOD = 15 // { int chmod(char *path, int mode); } SYS_CHOWN = 16 // { int chown(char *path, int uid, int gid); } SYS_BREAK = 17 // { caddr_t break(char *nsize); } SYS_GETPID = 20 // { pid_t getpid(void); } SYS_MOUNT = 21 // { int mount(char *type, char *path, int flags, caddr_t data); } SYS_UNMOUNT = 22 // { int unmount(char *path, int flags); } SYS_SETUID = 23 // { int setuid(uid_t uid); } SYS_GETUID = 24 // { uid_t getuid(void); } SYS_GETEUID = 25 // { uid_t geteuid(void); } SYS_PTRACE = 26 // { int ptrace(int req, pid_t pid, caddr_t addr, int data); } SYS_RECVMSG = 27 // { int recvmsg(int s, struct msghdr *msg, int flags); } SYS_SENDMSG = 28 // { int sendmsg(int s, struct msghdr *msg, int flags); } SYS_RECVFROM = 29 // { int recvfrom(int s, caddr_t buf, size_t len, int flags, struct sockaddr * __restrict from, __socklen_t * __restrict fromlenaddr); } SYS_ACCEPT = 30 // { int accept(int s, struct sockaddr * __restrict name, __socklen_t * __restrict anamelen); } SYS_GETPEERNAME = 31 // { int getpeername(int fdes, struct sockaddr * __restrict asa, __socklen_t * __restrict alen); } SYS_GETSOCKNAME = 32 // { int getsockname(int fdes, struct sockaddr * __restrict asa, __socklen_t * __restrict alen); } SYS_ACCESS = 33 // { int access(char *path, int amode); } SYS_CHFLAGS = 34 // { int chflags(const char *path, u_long flags); } SYS_FCHFLAGS = 35 // { int fchflags(int fd, u_long flags); } SYS_SYNC = 36 // { int sync(void); } SYS_KILL = 37 // { int kill(int pid, int signum); } SYS_GETPPID = 39 // { pid_t getppid(void); } SYS_DUP = 41 // { int dup(u_int fd); } SYS_GETEGID = 43 // { gid_t getegid(void); } SYS_PROFIL = 44 // { int profil(caddr_t samples, size_t size, size_t offset, u_int scale); } SYS_KTRACE = 45 // { int ktrace(const char *fname, int ops, int facs, int pid); } SYS_GETGID = 47 // { gid_t getgid(void); } SYS_GETLOGIN = 49 // { int getlogin(char *namebuf, u_int namelen); } SYS_SETLOGIN = 50 // { int setlogin(char *namebuf); } SYS_ACCT = 51 // { int acct(char *path); } SYS_SIGALTSTACK = 53 // { int sigaltstack(stack_t *ss, stack_t *oss); } SYS_IOCTL = 54 // { int ioctl(int fd, u_long com, caddr_t data); } SYS_REBOOT = 55 // { int reboot(int opt); } SYS_REVOKE = 56 // { int revoke(char *path); } SYS_SYMLINK = 57 // { int symlink(char *path, char *link); } SYS_READLINK = 58 // { ssize_t readlink(char *path, char *buf, size_t count); } SYS_EXECVE = 59 // { int execve(char *fname, char **argv, char **envv); } SYS_UMASK = 60 // { int umask(int newmask); } SYS_CHROOT = 61 // { int chroot(char *path); } SYS_MSYNC = 65 // { int msync(void *addr, size_t len, int flags); } SYS_VFORK = 66 // { int vfork(void); } SYS_SBRK = 69 // { int sbrk(int incr); } SYS_SSTK = 70 // { int sstk(int incr); } SYS_MUNMAP = 73 // { int munmap(void *addr, size_t len); } SYS_MPROTECT = 74 // { int mprotect(void *addr, size_t len, int prot); } SYS_MADVISE = 75 // { int madvise(void *addr, size_t len, int behav); } SYS_MINCORE = 78 // { int mincore(const void *addr, size_t len, char *vec); } SYS_GETGROUPS = 79 // { int getgroups(u_int gidsetsize, gid_t *gidset); } SYS_SETGROUPS = 80 // { int setgroups(u_int gidsetsize, gid_t *gidset); } SYS_GETPGRP = 81 // { int getpgrp(void); } SYS_SETPGID = 82 // { int setpgid(int pid, int pgid); } SYS_SETITIMER = 83 // { int setitimer(u_int which, struct itimerval *itv, struct itimerval *oitv); } SYS_SWAPON = 85 // { int swapon(char *name); } SYS_GETITIMER = 86 // { int getitimer(u_int which, struct itimerval *itv); } SYS_GETDTABLESIZE = 89 // { int getdtablesize(void); } SYS_DUP2 = 90 // { int dup2(u_int from, u_int to); } SYS_FCNTL = 92 // { int fcntl(int fd, int cmd, long arg); } SYS_SELECT = 93 // { int select(int nd, fd_set *in, fd_set *ou, fd_set *ex, struct timeval *tv); } SYS_FSYNC = 95 // { int fsync(int fd); } SYS_SETPRIORITY = 96 // { int setpriority(int which, int who, int prio); } SYS_SOCKET = 97 // { int socket(int domain, int type, int protocol); } SYS_CONNECT = 98 // { int connect(int s, caddr_t name, int namelen); } SYS_GETPRIORITY = 100 // { int getpriority(int which, int who); } SYS_BIND = 104 // { int bind(int s, caddr_t name, int namelen); } SYS_SETSOCKOPT = 105 // { int setsockopt(int s, int level, int name, caddr_t val, int valsize); } SYS_LISTEN = 106 // { int listen(int s, int backlog); } SYS_GETTIMEOFDAY = 116 // { int gettimeofday(struct timeval *tp, struct timezone *tzp); } SYS_GETRUSAGE = 117 // { int getrusage(int who, struct rusage *rusage); } SYS_GETSOCKOPT = 118 // { int getsockopt(int s, int level, int name, caddr_t val, int *avalsize); } SYS_READV = 120 // { int readv(int fd, struct iovec *iovp, u_int iovcnt); } SYS_WRITEV = 121 // { int writev(int fd, struct iovec *iovp, u_int iovcnt); } SYS_SETTIMEOFDAY = 122 // { int settimeofday(struct timeval *tv, struct timezone *tzp); } SYS_FCHOWN = 123 // { int fchown(int fd, int uid, int gid); } SYS_FCHMOD = 124 // { int fchmod(int fd, int mode); } SYS_SETREUID = 126 // { int setreuid(int ruid, int euid); } SYS_SETREGID = 127 // { int setregid(int rgid, int egid); } SYS_RENAME = 128 // { int rename(char *from, char *to); } SYS_FLOCK = 131 // { int flock(int fd, int how); } SYS_MKFIFO = 132 // { int mkfifo(char *path, int mode); } SYS_SENDTO = 133 // { int sendto(int s, caddr_t buf, size_t len, int flags, caddr_t to, int tolen); } SYS_SHUTDOWN = 134 // { int shutdown(int s, int how); } SYS_SOCKETPAIR = 135 // { int socketpair(int domain, int type, int protocol, int *rsv); } SYS_MKDIR = 136 // { int mkdir(char *path, int mode); } SYS_RMDIR = 137 // { int rmdir(char *path); } SYS_UTIMES = 138 // { int utimes(char *path, struct timeval *tptr); } SYS_ADJTIME = 140 // { int adjtime(struct timeval *delta, struct timeval *olddelta); } SYS_SETSID = 147 // { int setsid(void); } SYS_QUOTACTL = 148 // { int quotactl(char *path, int cmd, int uid, caddr_t arg); } SYS_NLM_SYSCALL = 154 // { int nlm_syscall(int debug_level, int grace_period, int addr_count, char **addrs); } SYS_NFSSVC = 155 // { int nfssvc(int flag, caddr_t argp); } SYS_LGETFH = 160 // { int lgetfh(char *fname, struct fhandle *fhp); } SYS_GETFH = 161 // { int getfh(char *fname, struct fhandle *fhp); } SYS_SYSARCH = 165 // { int sysarch(int op, char *parms); } SYS_RTPRIO = 166 // { int rtprio(int function, pid_t pid, struct rtprio *rtp); } SYS_SEMSYS = 169 // { int semsys(int which, int a2, int a3, int a4, int a5); } SYS_MSGSYS = 170 // { int msgsys(int which, int a2, int a3, int a4, int a5, int a6); } SYS_SHMSYS = 171 // { int shmsys(int which, int a2, int a3, int a4); } SYS_SETFIB = 175 // { int setfib(int fibnum); } SYS_NTP_ADJTIME = 176 // { int ntp_adjtime(struct timex *tp); } SYS_SETGID = 181 // { int setgid(gid_t gid); } SYS_SETEGID = 182 // { int setegid(gid_t egid); } SYS_SETEUID = 183 // { int seteuid(uid_t euid); } SYS_PATHCONF = 191 // { int pathconf(char *path, int name); } SYS_FPATHCONF = 192 // { int fpathconf(int fd, int name); } SYS_GETRLIMIT = 194 // { int getrlimit(u_int which, struct rlimit *rlp); } getrlimit __getrlimit_args int SYS_SETRLIMIT = 195 // { int setrlimit(u_int which, struct rlimit *rlp); } setrlimit __setrlimit_args int SYS___SYSCTL = 202 // { int __sysctl(int *name, u_int namelen, void *old, size_t *oldlenp, void *new, size_t newlen); } __sysctl sysctl_args int SYS_MLOCK = 203 // { int mlock(const void *addr, size_t len); } SYS_MUNLOCK = 204 // { int munlock(const void *addr, size_t len); } SYS_UNDELETE = 205 // { int undelete(char *path); } SYS_FUTIMES = 206 // { int futimes(int fd, struct timeval *tptr); } SYS_GETPGID = 207 // { int getpgid(pid_t pid); } SYS_POLL = 209 // { int poll(struct pollfd *fds, u_int nfds, int timeout); } SYS_SEMGET = 221 // { int semget(key_t key, int nsems, int semflg); } SYS_SEMOP = 222 // { int semop(int semid, struct sembuf *sops, size_t nsops); } SYS_MSGGET = 225 // { int msgget(key_t key, int msgflg); } SYS_MSGSND = 226 // { int msgsnd(int msqid, const void *msgp, size_t msgsz, int msgflg); } SYS_MSGRCV = 227 // { ssize_t msgrcv(int msqid, void *msgp, size_t msgsz, long msgtyp, int msgflg); } SYS_SHMAT = 228 // { int shmat(int shmid, const void *shmaddr, int shmflg); } SYS_SHMDT = 230 // { int shmdt(const void *shmaddr); } SYS_SHMGET = 231 // { int shmget(key_t key, size_t size, int shmflg); } SYS_CLOCK_GETTIME = 232 // { int clock_gettime(clockid_t clock_id, struct timespec *tp); } SYS_CLOCK_SETTIME = 233 // { int clock_settime(clockid_t clock_id, const struct timespec *tp); } SYS_CLOCK_GETRES = 234 // { int clock_getres(clockid_t clock_id, struct timespec *tp); } SYS_KTIMER_CREATE = 235 // { int ktimer_create(clockid_t clock_id, struct sigevent *evp, int *timerid); } SYS_KTIMER_DELETE = 236 // { int ktimer_delete(int timerid); } SYS_KTIMER_SETTIME = 237 // { int ktimer_settime(int timerid, int flags, const struct itimerspec *value, struct itimerspec *ovalue); } SYS_KTIMER_GETTIME = 238 // { int ktimer_gettime(int timerid, struct itimerspec *value); } SYS_KTIMER_GETOVERRUN = 239 // { int ktimer_getoverrun(int timerid); } SYS_NANOSLEEP = 240 // { int nanosleep(const struct timespec *rqtp, struct timespec *rmtp); } SYS_FFCLOCK_GETCOUNTER = 241 // { int ffclock_getcounter(ffcounter *ffcount); } SYS_FFCLOCK_SETESTIMATE = 242 // { int ffclock_setestimate(struct ffclock_estimate *cest); } SYS_FFCLOCK_GETESTIMATE = 243 // { int ffclock_getestimate(struct ffclock_estimate *cest); } SYS_CLOCK_NANOSLEEP = 244 // { int clock_nanosleep(clockid_t clock_id, int flags, const struct timespec *rqtp, struct timespec *rmtp); } SYS_CLOCK_GETCPUCLOCKID2 = 247 // { int clock_getcpuclockid2(id_t id, int which, clockid_t *clock_id); } SYS_NTP_GETTIME = 248 // { int ntp_gettime(struct ntptimeval *ntvp); } SYS_MINHERIT = 250 // { int minherit(void *addr, size_t len, int inherit); } SYS_RFORK = 251 // { int rfork(int flags); } SYS_ISSETUGID = 253 // { int issetugid(void); } SYS_LCHOWN = 254 // { int lchown(char *path, int uid, int gid); } SYS_AIO_READ = 255 // { int aio_read(struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_AIO_WRITE = 256 // { int aio_write(struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_LIO_LISTIO = 257 // { int lio_listio(int mode, struct aiocb* const *acb_list, int nent, struct sigevent *sig); } SYS_LCHMOD = 274 // { int lchmod(char *path, mode_t mode); } SYS_LUTIMES = 276 // { int lutimes(char *path, struct timeval *tptr); } SYS_PREADV = 289 // { ssize_t preadv(int fd, struct iovec *iovp, u_int iovcnt, off_t offset); } SYS_PWRITEV = 290 // { ssize_t pwritev(int fd, struct iovec *iovp, u_int iovcnt, off_t offset); } SYS_FHOPEN = 298 // { int fhopen(const struct fhandle *u_fhp, int flags); } SYS_MODNEXT = 300 // { int modnext(int modid); } SYS_MODSTAT = 301 // { int modstat(int modid, struct module_stat* stat); } SYS_MODFNEXT = 302 // { int modfnext(int modid); } SYS_MODFIND = 303 // { int modfind(const char *name); } SYS_KLDLOAD = 304 // { int kldload(const char *file); } SYS_KLDUNLOAD = 305 // { int kldunload(int fileid); } SYS_KLDFIND = 306 // { int kldfind(const char *file); } SYS_KLDNEXT = 307 // { int kldnext(int fileid); } SYS_KLDSTAT = 308 // { int kldstat(int fileid, struct kld_file_stat *stat); } SYS_KLDFIRSTMOD = 309 // { int kldfirstmod(int fileid); } SYS_GETSID = 310 // { int getsid(pid_t pid); } SYS_SETRESUID = 311 // { int setresuid(uid_t ruid, uid_t euid, uid_t suid); } SYS_SETRESGID = 312 // { int setresgid(gid_t rgid, gid_t egid, gid_t sgid); } SYS_AIO_RETURN = 314 // { ssize_t aio_return(struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_AIO_SUSPEND = 315 // { int aio_suspend(struct aiocb * const * aiocbp, int nent, const struct timespec *timeout); } SYS_AIO_CANCEL = 316 // { int aio_cancel(int fd, struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_AIO_ERROR = 317 // { int aio_error(struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_YIELD = 321 // { int yield(void); } SYS_MLOCKALL = 324 // { int mlockall(int how); } SYS_MUNLOCKALL = 325 // { int munlockall(void); } SYS___GETCWD = 326 // { int __getcwd(char *buf, size_t buflen); } SYS_SCHED_SETPARAM = 327 // { int sched_setparam (pid_t pid, const struct sched_param *param); } SYS_SCHED_GETPARAM = 328 // { int sched_getparam (pid_t pid, struct sched_param *param); } SYS_SCHED_SETSCHEDULER = 329 // { int sched_setscheduler (pid_t pid, int policy, const struct sched_param *param); } SYS_SCHED_GETSCHEDULER = 330 // { int sched_getscheduler (pid_t pid); } SYS_SCHED_YIELD = 331 // { int sched_yield (void); } SYS_SCHED_GET_PRIORITY_MAX = 332 // { int sched_get_priority_max (int policy); } SYS_SCHED_GET_PRIORITY_MIN = 333 // { int sched_get_priority_min (int policy); } SYS_SCHED_RR_GET_INTERVAL = 334 // { int sched_rr_get_interval (pid_t pid, struct timespec *interval); } SYS_UTRACE = 335 // { int utrace(const void *addr, size_t len); } SYS_KLDSYM = 337 // { int kldsym(int fileid, int cmd, void *data); } SYS_JAIL = 338 // { int jail(struct jail *jail); } SYS_SIGPROCMASK = 340 // { int sigprocmask(int how, const sigset_t *set, sigset_t *oset); } SYS_SIGSUSPEND = 341 // { int sigsuspend(const sigset_t *sigmask); } SYS_SIGPENDING = 343 // { int sigpending(sigset_t *set); } SYS_SIGTIMEDWAIT = 345 // { int sigtimedwait(const sigset_t *set, siginfo_t *info, const struct timespec *timeout); } SYS_SIGWAITINFO = 346 // { int sigwaitinfo(const sigset_t *set, siginfo_t *info); } SYS___ACL_GET_FILE = 347 // { int __acl_get_file(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_SET_FILE = 348 // { int __acl_set_file(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_GET_FD = 349 // { int __acl_get_fd(int filedes, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_SET_FD = 350 // { int __acl_set_fd(int filedes, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_DELETE_FILE = 351 // { int __acl_delete_file(const char *path, acl_type_t type); } SYS___ACL_DELETE_FD = 352 // { int __acl_delete_fd(int filedes, acl_type_t type); } SYS___ACL_ACLCHECK_FILE = 353 // { int __acl_aclcheck_file(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_ACLCHECK_FD = 354 // { int __acl_aclcheck_fd(int filedes, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS_EXTATTRCTL = 355 // { int extattrctl(const char *path, int cmd, const char *filename, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname); } SYS_EXTATTR_SET_FILE = 356 // { ssize_t extattr_set_file(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_GET_FILE = 357 // { ssize_t extattr_get_file(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_DELETE_FILE = 358 // { int extattr_delete_file(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname); } SYS_AIO_WAITCOMPLETE = 359 // { ssize_t aio_waitcomplete(struct aiocb **aiocbp, struct timespec *timeout); } SYS_GETRESUID = 360 // { int getresuid(uid_t *ruid, uid_t *euid, uid_t *suid); } SYS_GETRESGID = 361 // { int getresgid(gid_t *rgid, gid_t *egid, gid_t *sgid); } SYS_KQUEUE = 362 // { int kqueue(void); } SYS_EXTATTR_SET_FD = 371 // { ssize_t extattr_set_fd(int fd, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_GET_FD = 372 // { ssize_t extattr_get_fd(int fd, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_DELETE_FD = 373 // { int extattr_delete_fd(int fd, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname); } SYS___SETUGID = 374 // { int __setugid(int flag); } SYS_EACCESS = 376 // { int eaccess(char *path, int amode); } SYS_NMOUNT = 378 // { int nmount(struct iovec *iovp, unsigned int iovcnt, int flags); } SYS___MAC_GET_PROC = 384 // { int __mac_get_proc(struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_SET_PROC = 385 // { int __mac_set_proc(struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_GET_FD = 386 // { int __mac_get_fd(int fd, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_GET_FILE = 387 // { int __mac_get_file(const char *path_p, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_SET_FD = 388 // { int __mac_set_fd(int fd, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_SET_FILE = 389 // { int __mac_set_file(const char *path_p, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS_KENV = 390 // { int kenv(int what, const char *name, char *value, int len); } SYS_LCHFLAGS = 391 // { int lchflags(const char *path, u_long flags); } SYS_UUIDGEN = 392 // { int uuidgen(struct uuid *store, int count); } SYS_SENDFILE = 393 // { int sendfile(int fd, int s, off_t offset, size_t nbytes, struct sf_hdtr *hdtr, off_t *sbytes, int flags); } SYS_MAC_SYSCALL = 394 // { int mac_syscall(const char *policy, int call, void *arg); } SYS_KSEM_CLOSE = 400 // { int ksem_close(semid_t id); } SYS_KSEM_POST = 401 // { int ksem_post(semid_t id); } SYS_KSEM_WAIT = 402 // { int ksem_wait(semid_t id); } SYS_KSEM_TRYWAIT = 403 // { int ksem_trywait(semid_t id); } SYS_KSEM_INIT = 404 // { int ksem_init(semid_t *idp, unsigned int value); } SYS_KSEM_OPEN = 405 // { int ksem_open(semid_t *idp, const char *name, int oflag, mode_t mode, unsigned int value); } SYS_KSEM_UNLINK = 406 // { int ksem_unlink(const char *name); } SYS_KSEM_GETVALUE = 407 // { int ksem_getvalue(semid_t id, int *val); } SYS_KSEM_DESTROY = 408 // { int ksem_destroy(semid_t id); } SYS___MAC_GET_PID = 409 // { int __mac_get_pid(pid_t pid, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_GET_LINK = 410 // { int __mac_get_link(const char *path_p, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS___MAC_SET_LINK = 411 // { int __mac_set_link(const char *path_p, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS_EXTATTR_SET_LINK = 412 // { ssize_t extattr_set_link(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_GET_LINK = 413 // { ssize_t extattr_get_link(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_DELETE_LINK = 414 // { int extattr_delete_link(const char *path, int attrnamespace, const char *attrname); } SYS___MAC_EXECVE = 415 // { int __mac_execve(char *fname, char **argv, char **envv, struct mac *mac_p); } SYS_SIGACTION = 416 // { int sigaction(int sig, const struct sigaction *act, struct sigaction *oact); } SYS_SIGRETURN = 417 // { int sigreturn(const struct __ucontext *sigcntxp); } SYS_GETCONTEXT = 421 // { int getcontext(struct __ucontext *ucp); } SYS_SETCONTEXT = 422 // { int setcontext(const struct __ucontext *ucp); } SYS_SWAPCONTEXT = 423 // { int swapcontext(struct __ucontext *oucp, const struct __ucontext *ucp); } SYS_SWAPOFF = 424 // { int swapoff(const char *name); } SYS___ACL_GET_LINK = 425 // { int __acl_get_link(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_SET_LINK = 426 // { int __acl_set_link(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS___ACL_DELETE_LINK = 427 // { int __acl_delete_link(const char *path, acl_type_t type); } SYS___ACL_ACLCHECK_LINK = 428 // { int __acl_aclcheck_link(const char *path, acl_type_t type, struct acl *aclp); } SYS_SIGWAIT = 429 // { int sigwait(const sigset_t *set, int *sig); } SYS_THR_CREATE = 430 // { int thr_create(ucontext_t *ctx, long *id, int flags); } SYS_THR_EXIT = 431 // { void thr_exit(long *state); } SYS_THR_SELF = 432 // { int thr_self(long *id); } SYS_THR_KILL = 433 // { int thr_kill(long id, int sig); } SYS_JAIL_ATTACH = 436 // { int jail_attach(int jid); } SYS_EXTATTR_LIST_FD = 437 // { ssize_t extattr_list_fd(int fd, int attrnamespace, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_LIST_FILE = 438 // { ssize_t extattr_list_file(const char *path, int attrnamespace, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_EXTATTR_LIST_LINK = 439 // { ssize_t extattr_list_link(const char *path, int attrnamespace, void *data, size_t nbytes); } SYS_KSEM_TIMEDWAIT = 441 // { int ksem_timedwait(semid_t id, const struct timespec *abstime); } SYS_THR_SUSPEND = 442 // { int thr_suspend(const struct timespec *timeout); } SYS_THR_WAKE = 443 // { int thr_wake(long id); } SYS_KLDUNLOADF = 444 // { int kldunloadf(int fileid, int flags); } SYS_AUDIT = 445 // { int audit(const void *record, u_int length); } SYS_AUDITON = 446 // { int auditon(int cmd, void *data, u_int length); } SYS_GETAUID = 447 // { int getauid(uid_t *auid); } SYS_SETAUID = 448 // { int setauid(uid_t *auid); } SYS_GETAUDIT = 449 // { int getaudit(struct auditinfo *auditinfo); } SYS_SETAUDIT = 450 // { int setaudit(struct auditinfo *auditinfo); } SYS_GETAUDIT_ADDR = 451 // { int getaudit_addr(struct auditinfo_addr *auditinfo_addr, u_int length); } SYS_SETAUDIT_ADDR = 452 // { int setaudit_addr(struct auditinfo_addr *auditinfo_addr, u_int length); } SYS_AUDITCTL = 453 // { int auditctl(char *path); } SYS__UMTX_OP = 454 // { int _umtx_op(void *obj, int op, u_long val, void *uaddr1, void *uaddr2); } SYS_THR_NEW = 455 // { int thr_new(struct thr_param *param, int param_size); } SYS_SIGQUEUE = 456 // { int sigqueue(pid_t pid, int signum, void *value); } SYS_KMQ_OPEN = 457 // { int kmq_open(const char *path, int flags, mode_t mode, const struct mq_attr *attr); } SYS_KMQ_SETATTR = 458 // { int kmq_setattr(int mqd, const struct mq_attr *attr, struct mq_attr *oattr); } SYS_KMQ_TIMEDRECEIVE = 459 // { int kmq_timedreceive(int mqd, char *msg_ptr, size_t msg_len, unsigned *msg_prio, const struct timespec *abs_timeout); } SYS_KMQ_TIMEDSEND = 460 // { int kmq_timedsend(int mqd, const char *msg_ptr, size_t msg_len, unsigned msg_prio, const struct timespec *abs_timeout); } SYS_KMQ_NOTIFY = 461 // { int kmq_notify(int mqd, const struct sigevent *sigev); } SYS_KMQ_UNLINK = 462 // { int kmq_unlink(const char *path); } SYS_ABORT2 = 463 // { int abort2(const char *why, int nargs, void **args); } SYS_THR_SET_NAME = 464 // { int thr_set_name(long id, const char *name); } SYS_AIO_FSYNC = 465 // { int aio_fsync(int op, struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_RTPRIO_THREAD = 466 // { int rtprio_thread(int function, lwpid_t lwpid, struct rtprio *rtp); } SYS_SCTP_PEELOFF = 471 // { int sctp_peeloff(int sd, uint32_t name); } SYS_SCTP_GENERIC_SENDMSG = 472 // { int sctp_generic_sendmsg(int sd, caddr_t msg, int mlen, caddr_t to, __socklen_t tolen, struct sctp_sndrcvinfo *sinfo, int flags); } SYS_SCTP_GENERIC_SENDMSG_IOV = 473 // { int sctp_generic_sendmsg_iov(int sd, struct iovec *iov, int iovlen, caddr_t to, __socklen_t tolen, struct sctp_sndrcvinfo *sinfo, int flags); } SYS_SCTP_GENERIC_RECVMSG = 474 // { int sctp_generic_recvmsg(int sd, struct iovec *iov, int iovlen, struct sockaddr *from, __socklen_t *fromlenaddr, struct sctp_sndrcvinfo *sinfo, int *msg_flags); } SYS_PREAD = 475 // { ssize_t pread(int fd, void *buf, size_t nbyte, off_t offset); } SYS_PWRITE = 476 // { ssize_t pwrite(int fd, const void *buf, size_t nbyte, off_t offset); } SYS_MMAP = 477 // { caddr_t mmap(caddr_t addr, size_t len, int prot, int flags, int fd, off_t pos); } SYS_LSEEK = 478 // { off_t lseek(int fd, off_t offset, int whence); } SYS_TRUNCATE = 479 // { int truncate(char *path, off_t length); } SYS_FTRUNCATE = 480 // { int ftruncate(int fd, off_t length); } SYS_THR_KILL2 = 481 // { int thr_kill2(pid_t pid, long id, int sig); } SYS_SHM_OPEN = 482 // { int shm_open(const char *path, int flags, mode_t mode); } SYS_SHM_UNLINK = 483 // { int shm_unlink(const char *path); } SYS_CPUSET = 484 // { int cpuset(cpusetid_t *setid); } SYS_CPUSET_SETID = 485 // { int cpuset_setid(cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, cpusetid_t setid); } SYS_CPUSET_GETID = 486 // { int cpuset_getid(cpulevel_t level, cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, cpusetid_t *setid); } SYS_CPUSET_GETAFFINITY = 487 // { int cpuset_getaffinity(cpulevel_t level, cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, size_t cpusetsize, cpuset_t *mask); } SYS_CPUSET_SETAFFINITY = 488 // { int cpuset_setaffinity(cpulevel_t level, cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, size_t cpusetsize, const cpuset_t *mask); } SYS_FACCESSAT = 489 // { int faccessat(int fd, char *path, int amode, int flag); } SYS_FCHMODAT = 490 // { int fchmodat(int fd, char *path, mode_t mode, int flag); } SYS_FCHOWNAT = 491 // { int fchownat(int fd, char *path, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, int flag); } SYS_FEXECVE = 492 // { int fexecve(int fd, char **argv, char **envv); } SYS_FUTIMESAT = 494 // { int futimesat(int fd, char *path, struct timeval *times); } SYS_LINKAT = 495 // { int linkat(int fd1, char *path1, int fd2, char *path2, int flag); } SYS_MKDIRAT = 496 // { int mkdirat(int fd, char *path, mode_t mode); } SYS_MKFIFOAT = 497 // { int mkfifoat(int fd, char *path, mode_t mode); } SYS_OPENAT = 499 // { int openat(int fd, char *path, int flag, mode_t mode); } SYS_READLINKAT = 500 // { ssize_t readlinkat(int fd, char *path, char *buf, size_t bufsize); } SYS_RENAMEAT = 501 // { int renameat(int oldfd, char *old, int newfd, char *new); } SYS_SYMLINKAT = 502 // { int symlinkat(char *path1, int fd, char *path2); } SYS_UNLINKAT = 503 // { int unlinkat(int fd, char *path, int flag); } SYS_POSIX_OPENPT = 504 // { int posix_openpt(int flags); } SYS_GSSD_SYSCALL = 505 // { int gssd_syscall(char *path); } SYS_JAIL_GET = 506 // { int jail_get(struct iovec *iovp, unsigned int iovcnt, int flags); } SYS_JAIL_SET = 507 // { int jail_set(struct iovec *iovp, unsigned int iovcnt, int flags); } SYS_JAIL_REMOVE = 508 // { int jail_remove(int jid); } SYS_CLOSEFROM = 509 // { int closefrom(int lowfd); } SYS___SEMCTL = 510 // { int __semctl(int semid, int semnum, int cmd, union semun *arg); } SYS_MSGCTL = 511 // { int msgctl(int msqid, int cmd, struct msqid_ds *buf); } SYS_SHMCTL = 512 // { int shmctl(int shmid, int cmd, struct shmid_ds *buf); } SYS_LPATHCONF = 513 // { int lpathconf(char *path, int name); } SYS___CAP_RIGHTS_GET = 515 // { int __cap_rights_get(int version, int fd, cap_rights_t *rightsp); } SYS_CAP_ENTER = 516 // { int cap_enter(void); } SYS_CAP_GETMODE = 517 // { int cap_getmode(u_int *modep); } SYS_PDFORK = 518 // { int pdfork(int *fdp, int flags); } SYS_PDKILL = 519 // { int pdkill(int fd, int signum); } SYS_PDGETPID = 520 // { int pdgetpid(int fd, pid_t *pidp); } SYS_PSELECT = 522 // { int pselect(int nd, fd_set *in, fd_set *ou, fd_set *ex, const struct timespec *ts, const sigset_t *sm); } SYS_GETLOGINCLASS = 523 // { int getloginclass(char *namebuf, size_t namelen); } SYS_SETLOGINCLASS = 524 // { int setloginclass(const char *namebuf); } SYS_RCTL_GET_RACCT = 525 // { int rctl_get_racct(const void *inbufp, size_t inbuflen, void *outbufp, size_t outbuflen); } SYS_RCTL_GET_RULES = 526 // { int rctl_get_rules(const void *inbufp, size_t inbuflen, void *outbufp, size_t outbuflen); } SYS_RCTL_GET_LIMITS = 527 // { int rctl_get_limits(const void *inbufp, size_t inbuflen, void *outbufp, size_t outbuflen); } SYS_RCTL_ADD_RULE = 528 // { int rctl_add_rule(const void *inbufp, size_t inbuflen, void *outbufp, size_t outbuflen); } SYS_RCTL_REMOVE_RULE = 529 // { int rctl_remove_rule(const void *inbufp, size_t inbuflen, void *outbufp, size_t outbuflen); } SYS_POSIX_FALLOCATE = 530 // { int posix_fallocate(int fd, off_t offset, off_t len); } SYS_POSIX_FADVISE = 531 // { int posix_fadvise(int fd, off_t offset, off_t len, int advice); } SYS_WAIT6 = 532 // { int wait6(idtype_t idtype, id_t id, int *status, int options, struct __wrusage *wrusage, siginfo_t *info); } SYS_CAP_RIGHTS_LIMIT = 533 // { int cap_rights_limit(int fd, cap_rights_t *rightsp); } SYS_CAP_IOCTLS_LIMIT = 534 // { int cap_ioctls_limit(int fd, const u_long *cmds, size_t ncmds); } SYS_CAP_IOCTLS_GET = 535 // { ssize_t cap_ioctls_get(int fd, u_long *cmds, size_t maxcmds); } SYS_CAP_FCNTLS_LIMIT = 536 // { int cap_fcntls_limit(int fd, uint32_t fcntlrights); } SYS_CAP_FCNTLS_GET = 537 // { int cap_fcntls_get(int fd, uint32_t *fcntlrightsp); } SYS_BINDAT = 538 // { int bindat(int fd, int s, caddr_t name, int namelen); } SYS_CONNECTAT = 539 // { int connectat(int fd, int s, caddr_t name, int namelen); } SYS_CHFLAGSAT = 540 // { int chflagsat(int fd, const char *path, u_long flags, int atflag); } SYS_ACCEPT4 = 541 // { int accept4(int s, struct sockaddr * __restrict name, __socklen_t * __restrict anamelen, int flags); } SYS_PIPE2 = 542 // { int pipe2(int *fildes, int flags); } SYS_AIO_MLOCK = 543 // { int aio_mlock(struct aiocb *aiocbp); } SYS_PROCCTL = 544 // { int procctl(idtype_t idtype, id_t id, int com, void *data); } SYS_PPOLL = 545 // { int ppoll(struct pollfd *fds, u_int nfds, const struct timespec *ts, const sigset_t *set); } SYS_FUTIMENS = 546 // { int futimens(int fd, struct timespec *times); } SYS_UTIMENSAT = 547 // { int utimensat(int fd, char *path, struct timespec *times, int flag); } SYS_FDATASYNC = 550 // { int fdatasync(int fd); } SYS_FSTAT = 551 // { int fstat(int fd, struct stat *sb); } SYS_FSTATAT = 552 // { int fstatat(int fd, char *path, struct stat *buf, int flag); } SYS_FHSTAT = 553 // { int fhstat(const struct fhandle *u_fhp, struct stat *sb); } SYS_GETDIRENTRIES = 554 // { ssize_t getdirentries(int fd, char *buf, size_t count, off_t *basep); } SYS_STATFS = 555 // { int statfs(char *path, struct statfs *buf); } SYS_FSTATFS = 556 // { int fstatfs(int fd, struct statfs *buf); } SYS_GETFSSTAT = 557 // { int getfsstat(struct statfs *buf, long bufsize, int mode); } SYS_FHSTATFS = 558 // { int fhstatfs(const struct fhandle *u_fhp, struct statfs *buf); } SYS_MKNODAT = 559 // { int mknodat(int fd, char *path, mode_t mode, dev_t dev); } SYS_KEVENT = 560 // { int kevent(int fd, struct kevent *changelist, int nchanges, struct kevent *eventlist, int nevents, const struct timespec *timeout); } SYS_CPUSET_GETDOMAIN = 561 // { int cpuset_getdomain(cpulevel_t level, cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, size_t domainsetsize, domainset_t *mask, int *policy); } SYS_CPUSET_SETDOMAIN = 562 // { int cpuset_setdomain(cpulevel_t level, cpuwhich_t which, id_t id, size_t domainsetsize, domainset_t *mask, int policy); } SYS_GETRANDOM = 563 // { int getrandom(void *buf, size_t buflen, unsigned int flags); } SYS_GETFHAT = 564 // { int getfhat(int fd, char *path, struct fhandle *fhp, int flags); } SYS_FHLINK = 565 // { int fhlink(struct fhandle *fhp, const char *to); } SYS_FHLINKAT = 566 // { int fhlinkat(struct fhandle *fhp, int tofd, const char *to,); } SYS_FHREADLINK = 567 // { int fhreadlink(struct fhandle *fhp, char *buf, size_t bufsize); } SYS___SYSCTLBYNAME = 570 // { int __sysctlbyname(const char *name, size_t namelen, void *old, size_t *oldlenp, void *new, size_t newlen); } SYS_CLOSE_RANGE = 575 // { int close_range(u_int lowfd, u_int highfd, int flags); } ) ```
Heliconius clysonymus, the Clysonymus longwing, yellow longwing or montane longwing, is a species of Heliconius butterfly found in Central and South America. Subspecies Listed alphabetically: H. c. clysonymus Latreille, [1817] – (Colombia) H. c. hygiana (Hewitson, 1867) – (Ecuador) H. c. montanus Salvin, 1871 – montane longwing (Costa Rica, Panama) H. c. tabaconas Brown, 1976 – (Peru, Costa Rica) References External links Clysonymus longwing, Neotropical Butterflies Yellow longwing, Discover Life clysonymus Nymphalidae of South America Butterflies described in 1817
A cupula is a small, inverted cup or dome-shaped cap over a structure, including: Ampullary cupula, a structure in the vestibular system, providing the sense of spatial orientation Cochlear cupula, a structure in the cochlea Cupula of the pleura, related to the lungs The cervical parietal pleura in the thorax A layer in the otolith organs The cupula optica, or optic cup, in embryological development of the eye Cup-like structure fitted over the eye during electrophysiology study Suprapleural membrane See also Cupola (disambiguation) Copula (disambiguation) Cupule (disambiguation)
The were a group of Catholics who were executed by crucifixion on February 5, 1597, in Nagasaki, Japan. Their martyrdom is especially significant in the history of the Catholic Church in Japan. A promising beginning to Catholic missions in Japan – with perhaps as many as 300,000 Catholics by the end of the 16th century – met complications from competition between the missionary groups, political difficulty between Portugal and Spain and factions within the government of Japan. Christianity was suppressed and it was during this time that the 26 martyrs were executed. By 1630, Catholicism had been driven underground. When Christian missionaries returned to Japan 250 years later, they found a community of "hidden Catholics" that had survived underground. Early Christianity in Japan On August 15, 1549, the Jesuit fathers Francis Xavier (later canonized by Gregory XV in 1622), Cosme de Torres, and Juan Fernández arrived in Kagoshima, Japan, from Portugal with hopes of bringing Catholicism to Japan. On September 29, St. Francis Xavier visited Shimazu Takahisa, the daimyō of Kagoshima, asking for permission to build the first Catholic mission in Japan. The daimyō agreed in hopes of creating a trade relationship with Europe. The shogunate and the imperial government at first supported the Catholic mission and the missionaries, thinking that they would reduce the power of the Buddhist monks and help trade with Spain and Portugal. By the late 1500s, the government had begun to grow wary of foreign influence; the shogunate was also concerned about colonialism. Martyrdom In the aftermath of the San Felipe incident of 1596, 26 Catholics – four Spaniards, one Mexican, one Portuguese from India (all of whom were Franciscan missionaries), three Japanese Jesuits, and 17 Japanese members of the Third Order of St. Francis, including three young boys who served as altar boys for the missionary-priests – were, on the orders of Toyotomi Hideyoshi, arrested in January 1597, tortured, physically mutilated, and paraded through villages across Japan, then on February 5, 1597, executed by crucifixion, impaled with lances while tied to crosses on a hill that overlooks Nagasaki city. After the persecution of 1597, there were sporadic instances of martyrdom until 1614, in all about 70. Fifty-five Catholics were martyred in Nagasaki on September 10, 1632, in what became known as the Great Genna Martyrdom. At this time Catholicism was officially outlawed. The Church remained without clergy and theological teaching disintegrated until the arrival of Western missionaries in the 19th century. Recognition While there were many more martyrs, the first 26 missionary and convert martyrs came to be especially revered, the most celebrated of whom was Paul Miki. The Martyrs of Japan were canonized by the Catholic Church on June 8, 1862, by Pope Pius IX, and are listed on the calendar as Sts. Paul Miki and his Companions, commemorated on February 6, since February 5, the date of their death, is the feast of St. Agatha. They were included in the General Roman Calendar for the first time in 1969. Previously they were honoured locally, but no special Mass for them was included even in the Missae pro aliquibus locis (Masses for some places) section of the 1962 Roman Missal. Some 21st-century publications based on it do have such a Mass under February 13. The Church of England also celebrates the Japanese martyrs liturgically with a commemoration on February 6. The Anglican Church in Japan (Nippon Sei Ko Kai), a member of the Anglican Communion, added them to its calendar in 1959 as an annual February 5 commemoration of all the martyrs of Japan and the Episcopal Church followed suit. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America added a commemoration on February 5 to their calendar. The Church of the Holy Japanese Martyrs (Civitavecchia, Italy) is a Catholic church dedicated to the 26 Martyrs of Nagasaki. It is decorated with artwork by Japanese artist Luke Hasegawa. List of martyrs These first 26 Martyrs of Japan, also known as Pedro Bautista Blasquez y Blasquez and 22 companions, along with Paulus Miki and 2 companions, were beatified on 14 September 1627 by Pope Urban VIII, and canonized on 8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX. Foreign Franciscan missionaries – Alcantarines Martin of the Ascension Pedro Bautista Philip of Jesus Francisco Blanco Francisco of Saint Michael Gundisalvus (Gonsalvo) Garcia Japanese Franciscan tertiaries Japanese Jesuits James Kisai John Soan de Goto Paul Miki See also Basilica of the Twenty-Six Holy Martyrs of Japan (Nagasaki) Basilica Minore de Santuario de San Pedro Bautista Twenty-Six Martyrs Museum and Monument Martyrs of Japan Nanban trade Silence (2016 film) References External links The 26 Martyrs Museum in Nagasaki City, Japan Catholic Bishops Conference of Japan: Timeline of the Catholic Church in Japan Daughters of St. Paul Convent, Tokyo, Japan: Prohibition of Christian religion by Hideyoshi and the 26 martyrs St.Joseph's Church, Nishijin, Kyoto, Japan: The first Roman Catholic Church on the 26 Martyrs' pilgrimage to Nagasaki The Japanese Martyrs Augustinian Martyrs of Japan Nagasaki Wiki: Detailed Access Information from Nagasaki Station to 26 Martyrs Monument 1597 deaths 1597 in Japan Groups of Anglican saints Executed children Executed Japanese people Japanese Roman Catholic saints Jesuit Asia missions Lists of Christian martyrs Martyred groups Martyrs Members of the Third Order of Saint Francis Catholic martyrs of the Early Modern era Roman Catholic child saints Lists of saints Martyrs Persecution by Buddhists People executed by Japan Martyrs Beatifications by Pope Urban VIII Canonizations by Pope Pius IX Groups of Roman Catholic saints