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The de Havilland DH.34 was a single engined British biplane airliner built by the de Havilland Aircraft Company in the 1920s. 12 were built, with the DH.34 serving with Imperial Airways and its predecessors for several years.
Design and development
By 1921, enough experience had been gained with operation of the de Havilland DH.18 to realise that aircraft needed to be more efficient to improve the economics of air travel. de Havilland therefore built the ten-passenger DH.29 monoplane, while starting work on the design of the DH.32, a biplane of similar size and capacity to the eight-passenger DH.18, but with a less powerful but more economical Rolls-Royce Eagle engine. Owing to the urgent need for more capacity, however, work on the DH.29 and DH.32 was stopped and the DH.34 biplane was designed, with a similar fuselage to the DH.29, accommodating ten passengers.
The DH.34 had a wooden, plywood-clad fuselage, with the cockpit (for two pilots) being positioned ahead of the wings and the passenger cabin. It had two-bay wooden wings and was powered by a Napier Lion engine, which was fitted for inertia starting, avoiding the necessity for hand swinging of the propeller to start the engine. Unusually, the design of the aircraft allowed an entire spare engine to be carried on board across the rear of the passenger cabin. The cabin door's unusual shape was to allow the engine to be loaded and unloaded, and a specially-fitted 'porthole' on the other side of the cabin would be removed to allow the propeller boss to protrude out the side of the aircraft. Spare engines were not carried routinely (the DH.34's payload was too low to carry both passengers and a spare engine) but this facility was used by operators to quickly fly spare engines out to aircraft that had suffered breakdown.
Two DH.34s were ordered by the Daimler Airway, as part of an initial batch of nine aircraft, with the first prototype (registered G-EBBQ) flying on 26 March 1922. The stalling speed of was too high and was blamed for a fatal crash in 1923, so extensions were fitted to the upper wings, increasing the wingspan from .
Operational history
The DH.34 entered service with Daimler on 2 April 1922 on the Croydon-Paris service. Daimler operated a total of six D.H.34s, four of which were leased from the Air Council, with Instone Air Line operating a further four, all leased. One aircraft was built to the order of the Soviet airline Dobrolyot.
When Imperial Airways was formed on 1 April 1924, by the merger of Daimler Airway, Instone Air Line, Handley Page Transport and the British Marine Air Navigation Company, it inherited six D.H.34s, retaining the type in service until March 1926.
The DH.34s were used heavily on the cross channel air services, with the fleet flying 8,000 hours in the first nine months of operation, and the second aircraft flying over without overhaul. Six D.H.34s were lost in accidents during the four years of their operation, of which several were fatal.
In November 1923 an excellent air safety record for the "English Air Service" was broken by "a disaster in the London-Birmingham air route" when a DH.34 carrying only 3 passengers crashed near the Ivenhoe Beacon near Leighton Buzzard where it was seen to be in difficulties before suddenly nose-diving at high speed into the ground killing all on board.
Variants
DH.34 Initial production version. 11 completed.
DH.34B Modication of DH.34 with extended upper wing to improve stalling characteristics.
Operators
Dobrolyot
Daimler Airway
Imperial Airways
Instone Air Line
Accidents and incidents
On 13 August 1923, G-EBBW of Instone Air Line landed at Marden Airfield due to a broken oil pipe. The aircraft was repaired and returned to Croydon.
On 30 August 1923, G-EBBQ, the first registered DH.34, of Daimler Hire on a flight to Antwerp, crashed at Croydon Airport and was written off. There were no casualties.
On 14 September 1923, G-EBBS of Daimler Airway crashed at Ivinghoe Beacon, Buckinghamshire whilst on a flight from Croydon to Manchester, Lancashire.
On 24 December 1924, G-EBBX of Imperial Airways crashed and caught fire shortly after take-off from Croydon, killing the pilot and all seven passengers.
Specifications (DH.34)
See also
References
Citations
Bibliography
Donald, David, ed. The Encyclopedia of World Aircraft. London: Aerospace Publishing, 1997. .
Jackson, A.J. British Civil Aircraft since 1919 Volume 2. London: Putnam,1973. .
"The D.H. Type 34 Commercial Biplane" Flight, 5 January 1922, 3-View Drawing
"The D.H. Type 34 Commercial Biplane" Flight, 30 March 1922, further technical details
Single-engined tractor aircraft
Biplanes
1920s British airliners
DH.034
Aircraft first flown in 1922 |
The Istorychnyi Myzei (, ; literally "Historic Museum") is a station on Kharkiv Metro's Saltivska Line. The station was opened on 10 August 1984 and is currently the southwesternmost terminus of the Saltivska Line. It is located beneath the Maidan Konstytutsii, literally Constitution square in the historical part of Kharkiv, and is named for the historical museum which is located on the square.
The station, inspired by the history of Kharkiv, has shaped columns and a relief-type ceiling in the station vestibule which give the feeling of the protected fort, which stood at this location during the 17th and 18th centuries. Also, the arrow-shaped arcs between the columns are reminiscent of fort gates. The columns are finished in a light colored marble Koelga and the tunnel walls are finished with brown marble and heraldic items made from bronze, which provide contrast. The Istorychniy Muzei station is located deep underground and is a pylon trivault and was designed by V.A. Spivachuk, P.G. Chechalnitskiy, and I.T. Karpenko; engineered by P.D. Pashkov, V.D. Shtuchkin, and L.P. Hryshyna; and was decorated by P.D. Chernova, V.E. Hutnik; I.I. Morgunov, O.Y. Erofeeva, V.V. Chursin, and V.D.Semenyuk.
Istorychniy Muzei forms a complex with the adjacent Maidan Konstytutsii station on the Kholodnohirsko-Zavodska Line. Transfer tunnels from one station to another are located in the centre of the station. Also, four escalators lead into a spacious underground vestibule which is located under the Constitution Square. The vestibule is connected with the underground passenger tunnel which leads onto the square, to the Sums`ka Street, the largest street in Kharkiv, to the Universytets`ka Street, and to the Bursatskyi Descent.
In 1985, during the finishing of the transfer tunnel from the Istorychniy Muzei to the Ploshcha Konstytutsii station, a closed-circuit television (CCTV) system was installed, the first in the Kharkiv Metro. Currently, all stations on the system have CCTV. The installation of this system allowed the workers of the metro to keep passengers in order and maintain more effective control over the escalators.
External links
Gortransport Kharkiv - Istorichesky Muzei Station
Kharkiv Metro stations
Railway stations opened in 1984 |
Mydini is a tribe of flies in the family Mydidae.
Genera
Baliomydas Papavero & Pimentel, 1989
Ceriomydas Papavero & Pimentel, 1989
Chrysomydas Papavero & Pimentel, 1989
Gauromydas Papavero & Pimentel, 1989
Mapinguari Wilcox, 1989
Mydas Fabricius, 1794
Protomydas Wilcox, Papavero and Pimentel, 1989
Stratiomydas Wilcox, Papavero and Pimentel, 1989
References
Mydidae
Brachycera tribes
Diptera of North America
Diptera of South America |
Conway High School is a public school located in Conway, South Carolina at 2301 Church Street. It is one of nine high schools in the Horry County School District. The school colors are forest green and gold, and its athletic teams are known as the "Tigers."
Notable alumni
Bryan Edwards, American football player
Kenneth Earl "Junior" Hemingway, Jr., American football player
Grant Holmes, American baseball player
Raiqwon O'Neal, American football player
Allen Patrick, American football player
Luke Rankin, S.C. State Senator
Sheri Reynolds, playwright, author
Perry Richardson, musician, bassist for FireHouse; Stryper
Buddy Sasser, American football player, coach, college athletics administrator
References
External links
Public high schools in South Carolina
Schools in Horry County, South Carolina
Buildings and structures in Conway, South Carolina
1968 establishments in South Carolina
Educational institutions established in 1968 |
Deep Dickollective (D/DC) was an LGBT hip hop group based in Oakland, California that were active in the homo hop scene of openly queer/LGBT artists during the 2000s. They were regular performers at the PeaceOUT World Homo Hop Festival curated by group co-founder Juba Kalamka.
History
Deep Dickollective was formed in early 2000 by Juba Kalamka, Tim'm T. West and Phillip Atiba Goff.
The three began working together after Kalamka and West met following a 1999 screening of black gay filmmaker and scholar Marlon Riggs' film Tongues Untied. Kalamka and West later met Goff on the campus of Stanford University, where West and Goff were enrolled in PhD programs. Though Goff, Kalamka, and West had performed solo work at several readings in the previous months, The group's first performance as Deep Dickollective was May 12, 2000 as a part of curator William Jones' Black Gay Male Radical Performances series at the legendary Black Dot Cafe's original location at 2330 International Blvd. Titled "With The Key: SISSSIES", the show's naming served as an overt recontextualization of popular early 1990s Afrocentrist/Black Nationalist rap group X-Clan's homophobic tag line.
Kalamka and West had been performing for years as MCs but had few opportunities to work as out queer artists until encountering each other and Goff shortly thereafter. Kalamka had begun recording an experimental spoken word project called "Pre/tensions" with San Francisco blues and avantgarde jazz guitarist/bassist Dick Deluxe Egner (formerly of Club Foot Orchestra) and with groundbreaking queer hip hop group Rainbow Flava, but both were interested in the possibility of creating a project that would push buttons around race, queerness and masculinity in hip hop all at once.
Frustrated with the resistance they had faced from an allegedly progressive "conscious" spoken word scene, the three began jamming together in private on Stanford's campus and came up with the skeletons of about 20 songs, 13 of which would become their debut recording BourgieBohoPostPomoAfroHomo. In a moment of anger while discussing their difficulty with the local scene (West had been performing at readings and with bands since his arrival in 1998, but lost all of his bookings once the scene became aware that he was gay) Kalamka blurted "well, if them girls can call themselves the Punany Poets (a then popular Oakland poetry group), we can be Deep Dick Collective!". The name was then shortened to "Deep Dickollective", but the initials "D/DC" remained as the three letter abbreviation seemed to roll off the tongue well, and signified the group's deconstructionist intent. What started as a parodic exercise to vent frustration became a blooming underground yet internationally critical success that involved 11 queer men who recorded and performed as members of D/DC.
During the recording of BourgieBoho, Kalamka decided that it would be easier to promote and manage the group's work if there was a micro-label of some sort that served as a reference point for people that were hearing about the group. Taking its name from a comment on his and West's choice of clothing by an old black man in downtown San Francisco, Kalamka created Sugartruck Recordings, which has since released additional recordings by D/DC as well as that of rapper Katastrophe (the Outmusic Award winner Let's Fuck Then Talk About My Problems), and did micro-distribution of close to 20 titles by other artists in the scene.
BourgieBoho's release was followed by the 6-song EP Them Niggas Done Went and Said... in 2003, concurrent with a 7" vinyl single release of "Movin' b/w Straighttrrippin'(C-Phlavormix)" by the now defunct Boston punk distro Agitprop! Records.
The group recontextualized statements such as the lyrics "In a circle of faggots, your name is mentioned" from the song "Dooinit" from Common's album Like Water for Chocolate.
The same year, D/DC won the "Best Hip Hop Group" category in the San Francisco Bay Guardian's Best of the Bay reader's poll.
In February 2004, the group released its third project, The Famous Outlaw League of Proto-Negroes, which was a double nominee in the 2005 Outmusic Awards as well as being named to Out's Top Ten Gay Albums of 2004 list. March 2005 saw the release of the nine-song EP Live at Wildseed and Mo', as well as much more extensive touring as a group and solo following the premiere of Alex Hinton's documentary Pick Up the Mic at the 30th Toronto International Film Festival.
The ensuing increase in visibility created for queer hip hop artists (as well as the opportunities for self-promotion and distribution created by MySpace) led Kalamka to shift Sugartruck's promotional attentions to releases by himself, Deep Dickollective and Katastrophe.
Its fifth disc, On Some Other was released by Sugartruck on June 22, 2007. Ongoing creative differences and the desire to work on other projects led to Kalamka's formal dissolution of the group in April, 2008. Deep Dickollective played its last contractually obligated show at Albuquerque (New Mexico) Pride on June 13, 2008.
Lyrics from the song "For Colored Boys" (from the album "On Some Other") were included in the lyric compendium The Anthology of Rap of Yale University Press (2010). The group's members currently perform and work as solo artists and lecturers based in various cities across the United States.
Discography
2001 BourgieBohoPostPomoAfroHomo (sugartruck recordings)
2001 Independent Sounds:Amoeba Music Compilation Vol. III (Hip Hop Slam)
2002 Phat Family Compilation Volume One:Tha Dozens (Phat Family Records)
2003 Them Niggas Done Went And Said...EP (sugartruck recordings)
2004 Azadi!: A Benefit CD For RAWA (compilation) (Fire Museum/ElectroMotive Records)
2003 Movin' b/w Straightrippin'(C-Phlavormix) (7"single) (Agitprop!Records/sugartruck recordings)
2004 The Famous Outlaw League of Proto-Negroes (sugartruck recordings)
2004 Phat Family Compilation Volume Two:Down 4 Tha Swerve (Phat Family Records)
2005 Live at Wildseed and Mo''' EP (sugartruck recordings)
2007 On Some Other (sugartruck recordings)
2012 With The Key (Sissies): The Very Best of Deep Dickollective'' (sugartruck recordings)
References
External links
Deep Dickollective official website
Sugartruck Recordings official website
American hip hop groups
LGBT-themed musical groups
LGBT hip hop musicians
Musical groups from Oakland, California
Musical groups established in 2000
2000 establishments in California
2008 disestablishments in California
Musical groups disestablished in 2008 |
Arif Zahir Lopes-Thrower (born April 15, 1994) is an American actor, musician, and internet personality. His YouTube channel, Azerrz, has over 7 million subscribers and features voice impressions of a plethora of celebrities and cartoon characters. Since 2021, Zahir has voiced Cleveland Brown on the television series Family Guy, succeeding Mike Henry.
Early life and education
Zahir is of African-American and Cape Verdean descent and was born on April 15, 1994, in Berkeley, California. He was partially raised in New Bedford, Massachusetts where he attended Nativity Preparatory School and Keith Middle School before moving back to California in 2007.
Zahir began doing voice impressions in middle school to impress his classmates. He originally made a YouTube channel in 2007 which focused on performing magic tricks. After doing so and finding success he started attending Hussian College's campus in Los Angeles. He later dropped out to spend more time focusing on his YouTube career.
Career
Zahir created his YouTube channel in 2012 but posted his first video in 2013. He started out by posting comedic sketches, gaming videos, and videos of himself performing voice impressions of both cartoon characters and real celebrities. Zahir garnered initial success through his voice impressions which he started doing in 2011. One of the first voices Zahir did was of Cleveland Brown who he would go on to voice several years later.
Zahir landed his first acting role playing a character named Arif in the short film No One But Lydia. Starting in 2018, he became a recurring cast member on How It Should Have Ended voicing Black Panther / T'Challa. Through community challenges and his first viral hit with "Ted Plays Call of Duty" (which has over 20M+ views), Arif quickly grew his channel to over 6.5+ million subscribers and 650+ million views.
He is also a rapper and singer and releases music under the moniker 4rif. He released his debut album At Last Sight on August 30, 2019. He followed it up with an EP called Go Gadget/Blues Clues which was released on April 29, 2020, in collaboration with rapper Dlngqnt.
On June 26, 2020, Mike Henry, who had voiced Cleveland Brown since 1999, announced he was stepping down and believed a person of color should voice the role. On September 25, 2020, it was announced that Zahir would be voicing Cleveland starting in Season 20 of Family Guy.
Filmography
Film
Television
Video games
Music videos
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Year
!Song
!Artist
!Role
!Director
|-
! rowspan="2" |2018
| Down the Line
|Lokl Yokl
|The Bartender
|Ryan Rosenblum
|-
|Drunk With You
|Joe Thomas Carter featuring 4rif
| rowspan="5" |Himself
|Zane Morrow
|-
! rowspan="2" |2019
|August
|4rif
|Fowluh
|-
|''Gimme Ya Lovin|Joe Thomas Carter featuring 4rif
| rowspan="2" |Christina Xing
|-
! rowspan="2" |2020
|At Last Sight/Kids
| rowspan="2" |4rif
|-
|The Window
|Ryan Rosenblum
|-
|}
Discography
Albums
Extended plays
SinglesAs lead artistList of singles as lead artistAs featured artistList of singles as featured artist'''
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
American male film actors
American male television actors
American male voice actors
American musicians of Cape Verdean descent
Male actors from Berkeley, California
Male actors from Massachusetts
Musicians from Berkeley, California
People from New Bedford, Massachusetts
Rappers from Massachusetts
Rappers from the San Francisco Bay Area
West Coast hip hop musicians
YouTube channels launched in 2007
YouTube channels launched in 2012
21st-century African-American people
African-American male actors
American comedy musicians
American male pop singers
American contemporary R&B singers
American soul singers |
David Phillips (born 25 May 1966) is a Canadian former international soccer player who played as a striker.
University career
Phillips attended the University of Alberta, playing for the Alberta Golden Bears from 1986-1990, where he set the school record for goals with 23, holding the record until 2011 when it was broken by Brett Colvin.
Club career
In 1986, he played for the Edmonton Brick Men in the Western Soccer Alliance.
Phillips played in the Canadian Soccer League with Calgary Kickers in 1987, making two appearances in the playoffs. He re-signed with Calgary for the 1988 season, scoring three goals in 25 regular season matches, and scoring once in one playoff match.
He returned to the Brick Men in 1989, but did not make any appearances.
International career
Phillips made his Canada U20 debut on August 20, 1984 against Guatemala at the 1984 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament. He scored his first goal on August 24 against Cuba and also scored in the tournament final against Mexico in a 2-1 loss.
He made his senior team debut on October 21, 1984 in a friendly against Tunisia.
References
1966 births
Living people
Canadian men's soccer players
Canada men's international soccer players
Men's association football forwards
Calgary Kickers players
Edmonton Brick Men players
Canadian Soccer League (1987–1992) players
Canada men's youth international soccer players
Alberta Golden Bears players |
Ipochira perlata is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Pascoe in 1864.
References
Acanthocinini
Beetles described in 1864 |
Life of Villa is a 1912 silent war documentary set during the Mexican Revolution. Though some scenes are re-enacted after it happened, the movie is a real documentary on the struggle of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa to overthrow dictator Porfirio Díaz.
Cast
Pancho Villa as himself
Luis Terrazas as himself
External links
1912 films
Documentary films about revolutionaries
Documentary films about Mexico
Films about Pancho Villa
American silent films
American black-and-white films
American documentary films
1912 documentary films
1910s American films |
Ulupınar is a village in the Kâhta District, Adıyaman Province, Turkey. The village is populated by Kurds of the Gewozî tribe and had a population of 345 in 2021.
The hamlets of Ataköy, Bakacak, Kılavuz and Mustafaçayır are attached to the village.
References
Villages in Kâhta District
Kurdish settlements in Adıyaman Province |
Héctor Fajardo Navarrete (born November 16, 1970) is a Mexican former Major League Baseball player. He played for the Pittsburgh Pirates and Texas Rangers in a career that spanned four years, from 1991 to 1995.
Baseball career
Minor leagues
Fajardo was purchased by the Pittsburgh Pirates from the Mexico City Red Devils on April 2, 1989. He played that season with the Gulf Coast League Pirates. Over the next two seasons, he worked his way through the Pirates organization. Fajardo was nicknamed "Senor Lluvia" or "Mr. Rain" because of how many of the games he was expected to start were rained out.
1991 season
Fajardo had surgery in the off-season to remove bone chips from his arm and his fastball improved significantly, from 85 mph to 93-95 mph. As his fastball and forkball were his main pitches, this marked a key transition. He also threw a curveball and changeup. He pitched at almost every level of the Pirates farm system, leading the club's minor leaguers with 151 strikeouts overall. In a minor-league game in 1991, he broke 9 of opponents bats while pitching.
Fajardo played his first games in the major leagues with the Pirates, making his major league debut on August 10. He was traded by the Pirates to the Texas Rangers on September 6, 1991, completing a trade in which Pittsburgh Pirates traded Kurt Miller and a player to be named later to Texas Rangers for Steve Buechele. He appeared in 6 games that season, being the starting pitcher in 5 of those games, recording a 9.95 ERA with Pittsburgh, and a 5.68 ERA with Texas. In total, he struck out 23 batters with 9 earned runs in 25.1 innings pitched.
1992 season
Héctor Fajardo did not play in the major leagues in 1992, spending the entire season in the minor leagues, and was limited with injuries throughout the year, spending time with the Oklahoma City 89ers, Tulsa Drillers (2-1, 2.16), Charlotte Rangers and GCL Rangers for a total of 11 games.
1993 season
Fajardo continued to be plagued by injuries in the '93 season, pitching only 2/3 of an inning with the Rangers. He pitched in two games for Charlotte and recorded six starts for the GCL Rangers.
1994 season
1994, his official rookie season, was the year Fajardo finally got a real audition with the Rangers, pitching in the rotation for 3 months, pitching 5–7 with a 6.91 ERA in 18 appearances and 83.1 innings pitched and recording 45 strikeouts. After his time in MLB, he was demoted to the Oklahoma City 89ers, where he was 5–1 with a 2.45 ERA.
1995 season
Like 1991–1993, Fajardo had few appearances in the majors, pitching only 15 innings, and recording a 7.80 ERA. He was traded to the Expos for Lou Frazier. He didn't play with the Expos, and was instantly demoted to the Ottawa Lynx, where he had 11 relief appearance, not recording any decisions, and a 4.11 ERA.
Back to the Mexican League
In 1996, Fajardo returned to the Mexican League. He played there until 1998.
References
1970 births
Living people
Acereros de Monclova players
Augusta Pirates players
Baseball players from Michoacán
Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players
Carolina Mudcats players
Charlotte Rangers players
Diablos Rojos del México players
Gulf Coast Pirates players
Gulf Coast Rangers players
Major League Baseball pitchers
Major League Baseball players from Mexico
Mexican expatriate baseball players in Canada
Mexican expatriate baseball players in the United States
Mexican League baseball pitchers
Oklahoma City 89ers players
Ottawa Lynx players
People from Sahuayo
Pittsburgh Pirates players
Salem Buccaneers players
Texas Rangers players
Tulsa Drillers players |
The men's hammer throw event was part of the track and field athletics programme at the 1920 Summer Olympics. The competition was held on Wednesday, August 18, 1920. 12 throwers from 5 nations competed; four from Sweden, four from the United States, two from Canada, one from Great Britain, and one from Finland. No nation had more than 4 athletes, suggesting the limit had been reduced from the 12 maximum in force in 1908 and 1912. The event was won by Patrick Ryan of the United States, the nation's fifth consecutive victory in the event. Carl Johan Lind took silver, earning Sweden's first medal in the hammer throw. Another American, Basil Bennett, earned bronze.
Background
This was the fifth appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1896. Four of the 14 competitors from the pre-war 1912 Games returned: gold medalist Matt McGrath of the United States and three Swedes: fourth-place finisher Robert Olsson, fifth-place finisher Carl Johan Lind, and seventh-place finisher Nils Linde. McGrath, who would earn seven AAU championships from 1908 to 1926, and fellow American and world-record holder Patrick Ryan, who would win eight AAU championships in that time, were expected to dominate the event.
Finland made its debut in the event. The United States appeared for the fifth time, the only nation to have competed at each appearance of the event to that point.
Competition format
The competition continued to use the divided-final format used since 1908, with results carrying over between "rounds". The number of finalists expanded from three in previous Games to six in 1920. Each athlete received three throws in the qualifying round. The top six men advanced to the final, where they received an additional three throws. The best result, qualifying or final, counted.
Records
These were the standing world and Olympic records (in metres) prior to the 1920 Summer Olympics.
No new world or Olympic records were set during the competition.
Schedule
Results
The best six hammer throwers qualified for the final. McGrath injured his knee during the second throw in qualifying and withdrew, though still had thrown far enough to take fifth place.
References
Sources
Hammer throw
Hammer throw at the Olympics |
Leptolalax marmoratus is a species of frogs in the family Megophryidae.
References
marmoratus
Amphibians described in 2014 |
Heinrich Braun (23 November 1854 Budapest – 9 February 1927 Berlin) was a German Social Democrat and writer on social questions.
Biography
Heinrich Braun was a childhood classmate of Sigmund Freud during their Gymnasium (high school) years, influencing the young Freud for a time to contemplate a career in politics or law. He studied at University of Vienna, University of Strasbourg, University of Göttingen, Humboldt University of Berlin and University of Halle-Wittenberg. He successively edited several socialist publications: Die Neue Zeit, the Archiv für soziale Gesetzgebung und Verwaltung, Die neue Gesellschaft, and Annalen für Sozialpolitik und Gesetzgebung. In 1895, he married German feminist writer Lily Gizycki. On March 24, 1919, after the German Revolution of 1918–19 and the election of a Prussian constituent assembly, Braun became Minister for Agriculture in the Prussian socialist ministry formed under the presidency of Paul Hirsch.
References
1854 births
1927 deaths
Writers from Budapest
Hungarian Jews
Writers from Austria-Hungary
Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to Germany
German people of Hungarian-Jewish descent
Social Democratic Party of Germany politicians
Members of the 11th Reichstag of the German Empire
German male writers
University of Vienna alumni |
John Malet (c. 1573 – 10 April 1644) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons.
Malet was the son of Sir John Malet of Enmore, Somerset. He matriculated at the Balliol College, Oxford on 17 May 1588, aged 14 and was awarded BA on 28 January 1591. He succeeded his father in 1615.
In 1624, he was elected member of parliament for Bath in the Happy Parliament. He was appointed High Sheriff of Somerset for 1636.
In 1638 he obtained a Commission under the Great Seal from King Charles II to improve the navigation on the River Tone. This granted him and his heirs sole navigation rights from Bridgwater to Ham Mills, and allowed him to improve the river at his own expense. He saw this as a philanthropic action, as it reduced the price of coal to the poor people of Taunton, as well as improving the transport infrastructure.
He died in 1644 and was buried in Bath Abbey. He had married Ann, the daughter of Sir John Tracy of Toddington, Gloucestershire, with whom he had one son and four daughters. He was succeeded by his son, John.
References
1570s births
1644 deaths
Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford
English MPs 1624–1625
High Sheriffs of Somerset |
The Apartment Complex is a 1999 American made-for-television mystery-thriller film directed by Tobe Hooper.
Plot
The film involves a man named Stan who becomes the manager of an apartment complex with strange tenants, after the previous manager disappears under mysterious circumstances. Things go downhill after he discovers a corpse in the complex's pool and is accused of murder. More bizarre events occur until he finds his life (and his sanity) in danger, and the tenants just may be his only hope.
Cast
Chad Lowe as Stan Warden
Fay Masterson as Alice
Obba Babatundé as Chett
Patrick Warburton as Morgan
Amanda Plummer as Miss Chenille
Ron Canada as Detective Culver
Miguel Sandoval as Detective Duarte
Jon Polito as Dr. Caligari
R. Lee Ermey as Frank Stanton
Charles Martin Smith as Gary Glumley
Critical reception
Variety gave the film a favorable review, writing, "not a scarefest by any stretch but creepy enough to sustain the interest of most viewers, this nod to The Twilight Zone cleverly winks its way out of some pretty silly situations. [...] ...director Tobe Hooper [...] earns points for constructing real tension and genuine thrills."
References
External links
1999 television films
1999 films
Films directed by Tobe Hooper
Films set in apartment buildings
American mystery thriller films
American thriller television films
1990s mystery thriller films
1990s English-language films
1990s American films
American mystery television films |
In fluid dynamics, potential flow is the ideal flow pattern of an inviscid fluid. Potential flows are described and determined by mathematical methods.
Potential flow describes the velocity field as the gradient of a scalar function: the velocity potential. As a result, a potential flow is characterized by an irrotational velocity field, which is a valid approximation for several applications. The irrotationality of a potential flow is due to the curl of the gradient of a scalar always being equal to zero.
In the case of an incompressible flow the velocity potential satisfies Laplace's equation, and potential theory is applicable. However, potential flows also have been used to describe compressible flows. The potential flow approach occurs in the modeling of both stationary as well as nonstationary flows.
Applications of potential flow include: the outer flow field for aerofoils, water waves, electroosmotic flow, and groundwater flow. For flows (or parts thereof) with strong vorticity effects, the potential flow approximation is not applicable.
Characteristics and applications
Description and characteristics
In fluid dynamics, a potential flow is described by means of a velocity potential , being a function of space and time. The flow velocity is a vector field equal to the gradient, , of the velocity potential :
Sometimes, also the definition , with a minus sign, is used. But here we will use the definition above, without the minus sign. From vector calculus it is known that the curl of a gradient is equal to zero:
and consequently the vorticity, the curl of the velocity field , is zero:
This implies that a potential flow is an irrotational flow. This has direct consequences for the applicability of potential flow. In flow regions where vorticity is known to be important, such as wakes and boundary layers, potential flow theory is not able to provide reasonable predictions of the flow. Fortunately, there are often large regions of a flow where the assumption of irrotationality is valid which is why potential flow is used for various applications. For instance in: flow around aircraft, groundwater flow, acoustics, water waves, and electroosmotic flow.
Incompressible flow
In case of an incompressible flow — for instance of a liquid, or a gas at low Mach numbers; but not for sound waves — the velocity has zero divergence:
with the dot denoting the inner product. As a result, the velocity potential has to satisfy Laplace's equation
where is the Laplace operator (sometimes also written ). In this case the flow can be determined completely from its kinematics: the assumptions of irrotationality and zero divergence of flow. Dynamics only have to be applied afterwards, if one is interested in computing pressures: for instance for flow around airfoils through the use of Bernoulli's principle.
In two dimensions, potential flow reduces to a very simple system that is analyzed using complex analysis (see below).
Compressible flow
Steady flow
Potential flow theory can also be used to model irrotational compressible flow. The full potential equation, describing a steady flow, is given by:
with Mach number components
where is the local speed of sound. The flow velocity is again equal to , with the velocity potential. The full potential equation is valid for sub-, trans- and supersonic flow at arbitrary angle of attack, as long as the assumption of irrotationality is applicable.
In case of either subsonic or supersonic (but not transonic or hypersonic) flow, at small angles of attack and thin bodies, an additional assumption can be made: the velocity potential is split into an undisturbed onflow velocity in the -direction, and a small perturbation velocity thereof. So:
In that case, the linearized small-perturbation potential equation — an approximation to the full potential equation — can be used:
with the Mach number of the incoming free stream. This linear equation is much easier to solve than the full potential equation: it may be recast into Laplace's equation by a simple coordinate stretching in the -direction.
Unsteady flow
Potential flow theory can also be used to model unsteady irrotational compressible flow. The full potential equation, describing a unsteady flow, is given by:
with Mach number components
where is the local speed of sound. The flow velocity is again equal to , with the velocity potential. The full potential equation is valid for sub-, trans- and supersonic flow at arbitrary angle of attack, as long as the assumption of irrotationality is applicable.
In case of either subsonic or supersonic (but not transonic or hypersonic) flow, at small angles of attack and thin bodies, an additional assumption can be made: the velocity potential is split into an undisturbed onflow velocity in the -direction, and a small perturbation velocity thereof. So:
In that case, the linearized small-perturbation potential equation — an approximation to the full potential equation — can be used:
with the Mach number of the incoming free stream.
Sound waves
Small-amplitude sound waves can be approximated with the following potential-flow model:
which is a linear wave equation for the velocity potential . Again the oscillatory part of the velocity vector is related to the velocity potential by , while as before is the Laplace operator, and is the average speed of sound in the homogeneous medium. Note that also the oscillatory parts of the pressure and density each individually satisfy the wave equation, in this approximation.
Applicability and limitations
Potential flow does not include all the characteristics of flows that are encountered in the real world. Potential flow theory cannot be applied for viscous internal flows, except for flows between closely spaced plates. Richard Feynman considered potential flow to be so unphysical that the only fluid to obey the assumptions was "dry water" (quoting John von Neumann). Incompressible potential flow also makes a number of invalid predictions, such as d'Alembert's paradox, which states that the drag on any object moving through an infinite fluid otherwise at rest is zero. More precisely, potential flow cannot account for the behaviour of flows that include a boundary layer. Nevertheless, understanding potential flow is important in many branches of fluid mechanics. In particular, simple potential flows (called elementary flows) such as the free vortex and the point source possess ready analytical solutions. These solutions can be superposed to create more complex flows satisfying a variety of boundary conditions. These flows correspond closely to real-life flows over the whole of fluid mechanics; in addition, many valuable insights arise when considering the deviation (often slight) between an observed flow and the corresponding potential flow. Potential flow finds many applications in fields such as aircraft design. For instance, in computational fluid dynamics, one technique is to couple a potential flow solution outside the boundary layer to a solution of the boundary layer equations inside the boundary layer. The absence of boundary layer effects means that any streamline can be replaced by a solid boundary with no change in the flow field, a technique used in many aerodynamic design approaches. Another technique would be the use of Riabouchinsky solids.
Analysis for two-dimensional flow
Potential flow in two dimensions is simple to analyze using conformal mapping, by the use of transformations of the complex plane. However, use of complex numbers is not required, as for example in the classical analysis of fluid flow past a cylinder. It is not possible to solve a potential flow using complex numbers in three dimensions.
The basic idea is to use a holomorphic (also called analytic) or meromorphic function , which maps the physical domain to the transformed domain . While , , and are all real valued, it is convenient to define the complex quantities
Now, if we write the mapping as
Then, because is a holomorphic or meromorphic function, it has to satisfy the Cauchy–Riemann equations
The velocity components , in the directions respectively, can be obtained directly from by differentiating with respect to . That is
So the velocity field is specified by
Both and then satisfy Laplace's equation:
So can be identified as the velocity potential and is called the stream function. Lines of constant are known as streamlines and lines of constant are known as equipotential lines (see equipotential surface).
Streamlines and equipotential lines are orthogonal to each other, since
Thus the flow occurs along the lines of constant and at right angles to the lines of constant .
is also satisfied, this relation being equivalent to . So the flow is irrotational. The automatic condition then gives the incompressibility constraint .
Examples of two-dimensional flows
Any differentiable function may be used for . The examples that follow use a variety of elementary functions; special functions may also be used. Note that multi-valued functions such as the natural logarithm may be used, but attention must be confined to a single Riemann surface.
Power laws
In case the following power-law conformal map is applied, from to :
then, writing in polar coordinates as , we have
In the figures to the right examples are given for several values of . The black line is the boundary of the flow, while the darker blue lines are streamlines, and the lighter blue lines are equi-potential lines. Some interesting powers are:
: this corresponds with flow around a semi-infinite plate,
: flow around a right corner,
: a trivial case of uniform flow,
: flow through a corner, or near a stagnation point, and
: flow due to a source doublet
The constant is a scaling parameter: its absolute value determines the scale, while its argument introduces a rotation (if non-zero).
Power laws with : uniform flow
If , that is, a power law with , the streamlines (i.e. lines of constant ) are a system of straight lines parallel to the -axis. This is easiest to see by writing in terms of real and imaginary components:
thus giving and . This flow may be interpreted as uniform flow parallel to the -axis.
Power laws with
If , then and the streamline corresponding to a particular value of are those points satisfying
which is a system of rectangular hyperbolae. This may be seen by again rewriting in terms of real and imaginary components. Noting that and rewriting and it is seen (on simplifying) that the streamlines are given by
The velocity field is given by , or
In fluid dynamics, the flowfield near the origin corresponds to a stagnation point. Note that the fluid at the origin is at rest (this follows on differentiation of at ). The streamline is particularly interesting: it has two (or four) branches, following the coordinate axes, i.e. and . As no fluid flows across the -axis, it (the -axis) may be treated as a solid boundary. It is thus possible to ignore the flow in the lower half-plane where and to focus on the flow in the upper halfplane. With this interpretation, the flow is that of a vertically directed jet impinging on a horizontal flat plate. The flow may also be interpreted as flow into a 90 degree corner if the regions specified by (say) are ignored.
Power laws with
If , the resulting flow is a sort of hexagonal version of the case considered above. Streamlines are given by, and the flow in this case may be interpreted as flow into a 60° corner.
Power laws with : doublet
If , the streamlines are given by
This is more easily interpreted in terms of real and imaginary components:
Thus the streamlines are circles that are tangent to the x-axis at the origin. The circles in the upper half-plane thus flow clockwise, those in the lower half-plane flow anticlockwise. Note that the velocity components are proportional to ; and their values at the origin is infinite. This flow pattern is usually referred to as a doublet, or dipole, and can be interpreted as the combination of a source-sink pair of infinite strength kept an infinitesimally small distance apart. The velocity field is given by
or in polar coordinates:
Power laws with : quadrupole
If , the streamlines are given by
This is the flow field associated with a quadrupole.
Line source and sink
A line source or sink of strength ( for source and for sink) is given by the potential
where in fact is the volume flux per unit length across a surface enclosing the source or sink. The velocity field in polar coordinates are
i.e., a purely radial flow.
Line vortex
A line vortex of strength is given by
where is the circulation around any simple closed contour enclosing the vortex. The velocity field in polar coordinates are
i.e., a purely azimuthal flow.
Analysis for three-dimensional flow
For three-dimensional flows, complex potential cannot be obtained.
Point source and sink
The velocity potential of a point source or sink of strength ( for source and for sink) in spherical polar coordinates is given by
where in fact is the volume flux across a closed surface enclosing the source or sink. The velocity field in spherical polar coordinates are
See also
Potential flow around a circular cylinder
Aerodynamic potential-flow code
Conformal mapping
Darwin drift
Flownet
Laplacian field
Laplace equation for irrotational flow
Potential theory
Stream function
Velocity potential
Helmholtz decomposition
Notes
References
Further reading
External links
— Java applets for exploring conformal maps
Potential Flow Visualizations - Interactive WebApps
Fluid dynamics |
WNWZ (1410 AM, "Magic 104.9") is a radio station broadcasting an urban contemporary format, licensed to Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The station is simulcast on FM translator W285FO (104.9), licensed to Grand Rapids.
History
WGRD
The station first began broadcasting under the WGRD call sign in 1948. As AM 1410 was originally a daytime-only station, the WGRD calls stood for Grand Rapids Daytime. The station adopted the Top 40 music format in 1959 and was a top-rated station in the Grand Rapids market during the late 1950s and early 1960s, though the station had lost ground to WLAV 1340 and WZZM-FM 95.7 by the end of the decade. WGRD made a number of format adjustments in the mid-1960s in response to its falling ratings, shifting to an adult contemporary format in 1964 and then to a Top 40/oldies mix the following year before tweaking back to Top 40 in 1967. WGRD reclaimed its market dominance after it added an FM signal at 97.9 MHz in 1971 (formerly WXTO), though AM 1410 was relegated to being a simulcast of the FM signal mornings and afternoons. For part of that time middays were "shadowcast." Same format, different dj.
WXQT/Great Gold 14-K
In 1981, WGRD dropped its simulcast (middays were shadowcast) of the FM station and switched to a "Big Band" Music of Your Life format as WXQT. In 1984, WXQT flipped to oldies as "GREAT GOLD 14-K", which stood for "14 Karat Gold", focusing on pop oldies from 1958-1972. Under the direction of PD Allen Jackson, "The NEW 14-K" featured Jack Stack (who had done mornings on WGRD and WLAV back in the 1960s) mornings, Rich Kennedy middays, Larry Olek afternoons and Pugs Stella evenings. The station earned a respectable 2.4 share 12+ in the Summer 1984 Arbitron. In 1986, the local lineup was dropped in favor of the ABC/Satellite Music Network "Pure Gold" satellite format. Ratings crashed to a 0.9 share in the summer of 1986 Arbitron, under the new call sign WKTH.
More changes
In 1988, the station adopted Satellite Music Network's Z-Rock format, keeping the WKTH call letters. The station reverted to the WGRD calls in 1991, moving back to a simulcast of 97.9 FM's CHR format (which changed to Modern Rock in 1994). In 1996, WGRD changed calls to WRCV and switched to ABC Radio's syndicated "Real Country" format. The station continued to be a non-factor in the ratings. In September 1998, 1410 changed its calls to WNWZ and adopted a simulcast of CNN Headline News, which was replaced by News/Talk in October 2001 (mostly syndicated from the Michigan Talk Radio Network).
La Maquina Musical
A Spanish pop hits format was adopted on January 1, 2003, and was somewhat successful in the ratings given its poor signal, often ranking as Grand Rapids' third most popular AM station (behind only WOOD and WBBL) (see: 1). WNWZ was the first radio station to cater to the Spanish-speaking community in Grand Rapids 24 hours a day. In August 2010, a reunion of more than 60 former WGRD staff members was held in Grand Rapids, which included market legend Bruce Grant, the original program director from 1948, and dozens of other personalities from the AM 1410/97.9 history.
Funny 1410
On November 14, 2011, the station changed its format to comedy calling itself "Funny 1410".
Touch 1410
On August 3, 2013, WNWZ flipped to Urban Adult Contemporary, branded as "The Touch". The station became the West Michigan home of the Steve Harvey Morning Show and remains as such today. Outside of the morning show, the station aired Westwood One's "The Touch" full-time.
Magic 94.1
On June 10, 2016, WNWZ began simulcasting on FM translator W231DD (94.1, licensed to Grand Rapids), and rebranded as "Magic 94.1." The station also dropped the "Touch" feed for locally originated programming.
Magic 104.9
On October 24, 2016, WNWZ rebranded as "Magic 104.9" as translator W231DD moved from 94.1 FM to 104.9 FM as W285FO and raised power from 88 watts to 250 watts.
In March 2020, WNWZ began adding more hip hop tracks, and shifted to urban contemporary, while retaining the "Magic" moniker.
Previous logo
(WNWZ's logo under previous 94.1 translator frequency)
(WNWZ's logo under previous Urban Adult Contemporary format)
References
Michiguide.com - WNWZ History
{http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/120963/wnwz-gets-the-touch
External links
FCC History Cards for WNWZ
NWZ
Radio stations established in 1948
Urban contemporary radio stations in the United States
Townsquare Media radio stations |
Ladies Love Outlaws may refer to:
Ladies Love Outlaws (Waylon Jennings album), 1972
Ladies Love Outlaws (Tom Rush album), 1974 |
The Massachusetts Tobacco Cessation and Prevention Program (MTCP) is an anti-tobacco program run by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health with the goal of decreasing tobacco prevalence in the state of Massachusetts. MTCP has four main components: preventing youth smoking, protecting against second hand smoke, assisting current smokers with quitting, and eliminating tobacco related disparities. Since the program began in, adult smoking rates have declined from 22.6% in 1993 to 16.1% in 2008, allowing Massachusetts the 4th lowest smoking rates in the country.
History
Massachusetts Tobacco Cessation and Prevention Program (MTCP), previously known as the Massachusetts Tobacco Control Program, began in November 1992 after residents of Massachusetts voted to increase the excise tax on cigarettes (from $.26 to $.51 per pack) in order to fund health related programs. The money raised from the excise tax went to support the Massachusetts Health Protection Fund and around 40% of that money went towards financing the MTPC. Within a year, the MTPC had created several major strategies to lower smoking rate. These initiative began with a major media campaign which used television, newspapers, and radio, as well as other types of media, to educated the citizens of Massachusetts about the negative side effects of smoking and to inform them of new programs being developed to lower smoking prevalence within the state.
The MTPC is funded entirely through taxes on cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products. Between the years of 1995 and 1997, MTCP operated on an average yearly budget of $40 million. By 2009, MTCP had reduced its yearly budget to $12.2 million.
Goals
The main goal of MTCP is for all Massachusetts residents to live tobacco free. More, specifically, MTCP has four major goals under which they structure their various programs. These include youth smoking prevention, assistance in quitting smoking, protection against second hand smoke, and elimination of tobacco related disparities. The MTCP has focused on different aspects of these goals throughout the seventeen years the program has been in effect. Over that time frame, they have garnered success in decreasing second hand smoke and smoking rates, especially within the youth population.
Youth Smoking Prevention
Youth smoking prevention has been one of the major goals of MTCP since the beginning. In general, MTPC implements youth prevention programs through education, supporting youth civic engagement, and educating retailers about the dangers of selling to minors. MTPC has also increased enforcement of laws against selling tobacco products to minors.
One of the more aggressive forms of youth smoking prevention has been the strict enforcement of laws that prevent sale of tobacco products to minors. Massachusetts has been extremely successful in decreasing youth tobacco sales. Illegal tobacco sales to minors dropped form 44% in 1994 to 11% in 1999. Additionally, illegal sales of tobacco were cut in half from 2006 to 2007.
Youth prevention programs also play a key role in lowering smoking rates among minors. Throughout MTCP, many anti-tobacco programs have been created to encourage youth to avoid using tobacco products. One example of such a program is known as The Eighty-Four . The Eighty Four refers to the 84% of youth in Massachusetts that do not use tobacco products. The Eighty Four is a movement created by MTCP to encourage youth to actively participate in fighting tobacco use. The Eighty Four maintains local chapters in high schools throughout the state, as well as a youth friendly website on which high students can blog and participate in online discussions. The initiative also runs programs such as short film contests where students can actively be involved in helping prevent youth smoking. Through various programs and control measures throughout the state, MTCP has reduced youth smoking rates among high school students from 30% in 1993 to 16% in 2009.
Assistance in Quitting Smoking
MTCP provides assistance to smokers who want to quit smoking. It also encourages lower smoking rates through increased taxes on cigarettes and through distributing information on the harmful effects of smoking.
One of the largest initiatives of MTCP is the Massachusetts Smokers' Helpline. The smokers helpline is a toll-free helpline (1-800-TryToStop) that offers free referral and counseling to Massachusetts residents who are trying to quit smoking. They have English, Spanish, and Portuguese speaking counselors available. In addition to the helpline, MTCP has created an interactive website (www.TryToStop.org) where smokers can get information and tools to assist in their efforts to quit smoking. The website contains information in nine different languages.
Another interactive website called Quitworks (www.quitworks.org) is for smokers referred by health care providers. Quitworks was created as a joint effort between MTCP and major health care insurance companies in Massachusetts.
MTCP has continued over the years to encourage smokers to quit through increasing taxes on cigarettes. In 1993, when the program began, taxes were increased from $.26 to $.51 per pack. They were raised to $.76 per pack in 1996 and $1.51 per pack in 2002. An additional $1 tax increase was implemented on July 1, 2008. To accompany the most recent tax increase, MTCP gave away a two-month supply of nicotine patches to smokers who wanted to quit. This program was advertised through MTCP helpline and health care providers.
Protection against secondhand smoke
MTCP is committed to decreasing environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in Massachusetts.
Through smoking bans and educating the public on dangers of secondhand smoking, MTCP has been able to significantly reduce the amount of second hand smoke throughout the state. One of their first and most successful initiatives focused on creating smoke-free workplaces. They saw a significant decline in smoking in workplaces during the initial phases of the program and as of July 5, 2004, all workplaces in Massachusetts with any employees must be completely smoke-free. There have also been significant results from smoking bans in restaurants. Additionally, MTCP is encouraging smoke-free homes through educating the public.
References
Health in Massachusetts |
John Bowers (born 2 January 1956) is a British barrister and part-time judge who has been Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford since 1 October 2015.
Born in Grimsby, the son of Alfred Bowers and Irene (), he was educated at Clee Grammar School in Cleethorpes, and then studied law at Lincoln College, Oxford. He was called to the Bar in 1979, took silk (became a Queen's Counsel) in 1998, became a recorder in 2003, and has been a deputy High Court Judge since 2010. He is an honorary professor at the University of Hull.
Bowers is a supporter of Grimsby Town F.C. He is married to Suzanne Franks and has three children.
Publications
Bowers has written, alone or with others, 14 books on law including
Writing in The Law Society Gazette Graham Clayton described The Law of Industrial Action and Trade Union Recognition as "a work of authority and clarity". Writing in the Industrial Law Journal David Lewis described the first edition of Whistleblowing as "a comprehensive and insightful analysis".
References
External links
Littleton Chambers homepage
Interview with John Bowers in Times Higher Education
Living people
Alumni of Lincoln College, Oxford
Principals of Brasenose College, Oxford
1956 births
21st-century King's Counsel
British legal scholars |
Hustlenomics (stylized as HUSTLENOMIC$) is the second studio album by American rapper Yung Joc. It was released, by Bad Boy Records on August 28, 2007. The album contains the singles "Coffee Shop" and "Bottle Poppin," both featuring rapper Gorilla Zoe.
History
The first single from the album is "Coffee Shop" which features Gorilla Zoe.
The second single off the album, "Bottle Poppin", was leaked to the internet in May. Like the first single, the track featured Gorilla Zoe. It was produced by Don P of Trillville. It also featured the song "Chevy Smile", which Yung Joc said would be the number one song of the year. The song samples Gorilla Zoe's "Hood Figga". The single reached number three on the U.S. Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart, and number 59 and 25 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Tracks charts, respectively. The music video for "Bottle Poppin'" has been released and Gettin' To Da Money also has a music video.
The third single "I'm a G" features Young Dro & Bun B, there was also a video made for the single.
The album features production from Diddy, who executive produced the album, Cool and Dre, Don Vito, Drumma Boy, Jazze Pha, The Fixxers, The Neptunes, among others.
Guests include Bun B, Diddy, Gorilla Zoe, Jim Jones, Rick Ross, Snoop Dogg, The Game, Trick Daddy, Young Dro and more.
Reception
Critical reception
Simon Vozick-Levinson of Entertainment Weekly said, "With his sophomore effort, the rhymester confidently wraps his unhurried drawl around the hugest, most sparkling synths that exec producer P. Diddy’s riches can buy. Yung though he is, Joc just may be a credible rival to T.I. as the reigning king of ATL swagger. AllMusic editor David Jeffries called it a "big improvement" over New Joc City, praising the T.I.-less looser vibe throughout the album's track listing, calling Hustlenomics "a step in the right direction for Joc, but more importantly to the listener, it's always entertaining and quite impressive in parts."
DJBooth's Nathan Slavik gave praise to tracks like "Hell Yeah" and "Brand New" for having the kind of "feel good vibes" that work best for Joc than being on either side of "straight hardcore" ("Cut Throat") or "family-friendly" ("Coffee Shop"). He later called Hustlenomics "a decent album that tries so hard to please everyone it loses its own identity. If Joc and Bad Boy are hustlers selling hip-hop, what does that make anyone who buys his album? I'm not hating, I just can’t shake the feeling I'm being hustled." PopMatters contributor Josh Timmermann felt that Joc was a "marginally talented, deeply generic rapper" throughout the record and gave credit to the various producers and featured artists for elevating the material, saying "[I]f this album proves nothing else, it’s that the formula still works: hire A-list producers and guest rappers, and you're all but guaranteed a passable hip-hop record."
Despite commending the production overall, Andres Tardio of HipHopDX said, "On an album full of bewildering lines, no special dances and no real draw in general, Joc is left without much to dance on. Even if he does "walk it out the bank," we are still grading a rap album and Hustlenomics is a class that should be missed." Rolling Stones Christian Hoard was critical of the album, saying that Joc's "slack diction, mild drawl and unremarkable rhymes about drug-slinging and his own greatness" resembled that of a poor interpretation of the Game, concluding that it's "less a treatise than a collection of lame get-rich anthems. It will probably earn Joc another gold chain or six, but it feels pretty generic."
Commercial performance
Hustlenomics sold 70,000 copies in its first week of release, debuting at number three on the Billboard 200. As of April 2009, it has sold approximately 200,000 copies according to Nielsen Soundscan.
Track listing
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
References
2007 albums
Yung Joc albums
Bad Boy South albums
Albums produced by the Neptunes
Albums produced by Cool & Dre
Albums produced by Jazze Pha
Albums produced by Drumma Boy
Albums produced by DJ Quik |
Kanyadaanam is an Indian Malayalam-language daily soap opera directed by Manu V. Nair. The show premiered on 23 August 2021 on Surya TV. It stars veteran Devan along with newcomers Anna Dona, Aiswarya Suresh, Aswathy Pillai, Silpa Sivadas and Soufiya Zakhir in lead roles. It aires everyday on Surya TV and on-demand through Sun NXT. The series is a reboot version of the Tamil series Metti Oli which was broadcast in 2002 and an official remake of Bengali serial Kanyadaan.
Premise
The show depicts the life of a doting father, Anandan and his five daughters.
Plot
The story is about Anandan Mash, and his five daughters, who face various challenges in life.
Anandan is a retired school teacher. He has five daughters, Ambili, Anupama (Anu), Chilanka (Cheeru), Daya and Manjadi. The girls' mother had passed away. Anandan is a respected man in the village and his daughters love him. Proposals start coming in for Ambili and Anu. A prospective groom for Ambili comes to meet her. He is Indran. Indran has a younger brother Sathyan and a younger sister Sona. All three of them were raised by a single-mother Susheela. Indran is the dearest to Susheela and he would do anything for her happiness. They reveal a shock that the eldest child from two families shouldn't marry and that they want Anu as their daughter-in-law. Anandan agrees to Indran - Anu wedding while Ambili's wedding is fixed with Raghu. The two couples marry.
Indran's house is a small rented house in the city. Susheela's true nature starts to be revealed and soon she starts to torture Anu. Indran though loving towards her doesn't speak against his mother nor let anyone else. Sathyan is the only one in the house who truly cares for Anu's well-being. He sets up an astrologer who tricks Indran and Susheela that if the mother-son duo stay together, Susheela's life would be at stake. Fearing this, Indran moves to a compound house with Anu, with Susheela visiting him regularly. Cheeru and Sathyan, who have been meeting regularly, fall in love.
Daya is the spoilt brat among the girls and is arrogant. She gets acquainted with a man called Nandu. Nandu is a married man but hides the fact from Daya to cheat on her for his own pleasures. Despite warnings from Cheeru, Daya spends time with Nandu and in turn of events, she marries him and loses her virginity. Very soon, she learns about his true colours. Daya relocates and stays with Anu in her compound. Sathyan's love for Cheeru is revealed to Indran and Anu, and they are happy. But things don't turn out well as Susheela opposes the idea. Cheeru's wedding with Vinayan and both families agree. Cheeru tries to forget Sathyan and starts to convince herself.
Sabarinath alias Sabari is a man who works in the railways. He meets Daya and immediately falls in love with her, without knowing her actual name. When Sathyan calls for Sona, Daya comes out instead and Sabari mistakes her to be Sathyan's sister, Sona. Fallen in love, he brings his family to see 'Sona' but his family doesn't like her. Realizing it's the wrong girl, Sabari creates much confusion, angering Susheela. But finally, his marriage is fixed with Daya.
Cheeru and Vinayan and Daya and Sabari gets married.
Cast
Lead
Recurring
Guest
Soundtrack
Adaptations
Awards
References
External links
Official website
Indian drama television series
Indian television soap operas
Indian television series
Malayalam-language television shows
2021 Indian television series debuts
Surya TV original programming
Malayalam-language television series based on Tamil-language television series |
Erika Vouk (born 1941) is a Slovene poet and translator.
She won both the Jenko Award in 2002 and the Veronika Award in 2004 for her poetry collection Opis slike.
Poetry collections
Bela Evridika (1984)
Anima (1990)
Belo drevo (2000)
Opis slike (2002)
Album (2003)
Valovanje (2003)
Z zamahom ptice neka roka slika (2007)
Rubin (2008)
References
Slovenian poets
Slovenian translators
Slovenian women poets
Living people
1941 births
People from Nova Gorica
Veronika Award laureates |
Debolt is an unincorporated community in Douglas County, Nebraska, United States, located approximately seven miles northwest of Omaha.
A post office called Debolt or De Bolt (two words) was established in 1892, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1899. The railroad stop on the Chicago & Northwestern line was called De Bolt Place.
See also
History of Omaha, Nebraska
References
External links
"History of DeBolt, Nebraska" by Adam Fletcher Sasse for NorthOmahaHistory.com
Unincorporated communities in Douglas County, Nebraska
Unincorporated communities in Nebraska |
This is a record of Peru's results at the Copa América. Ever since their first Copa América, Peru has had good showings. It is often remembered by fans that Peru was the fourth team (after Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil) to win the South American cup. Even though in 1939 Peru played against only 5 of the South American nations (with no participation from Argentina or Brazil), in 1975 Peru won the cup once more (this time with all the CONMEBOL teams participating).
Recently, Peru has only been able to get only as far as the runners-up of the tournament which holds its own prestige as being the oldest tournament of international football; along with having Argentina and Brazil (the 2 teams usually considered among the top 5 in the football world), which have also recently been dominating the tournament.
Overall record
Record by opponent
Peru's highest margin of victory at a Copa América is four goals, which they have managed a number of times: They won 4–0 against Ecuador in 1941 and 1949 and Colombia in 1949, and 5–1 against Colombia in 1947 and Venezuela in 1991. Peru's biggest defeat was a 0–7 loss against Brazil in the 1997 semi-final.
Peru 1927
At this point Peru is the 7th nation to join the competition, and in 1927 the games are decided to be played there. Although only 3 teams came to the tournament, Argentina, Uruguay, and Bolivia; the participating federations decided that the 1st and 2nd places of the competition would represent South America for the Olympic Games to be played at Amsterdam in 1928. The other federations (Brazil, Chile, and Paraguay) did not participate because of economic and sport problems. Peru gained third place after only beating Bolivia.
Single phase
Goalscorers
Argentina 1929
Final round
Peru 1935
This tournament is characterized by the Argentine and Uruguayan conflict that rooted from the 1930 World Cup. The winners here were going to once more represent South America for the Olympic Games, this time to be played at Berlin. Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay had withdrawn from the tournament. Peru's first game resulted at a 1–0 loss, with a goal scored by a Uruguayan player at the 80th minute. The second one was not much better, and Peru lost 4–1 against Argentina. The last game was won by Peru 1–0 against Chile. The tournament gave Peru the third spot, and helped it train and improve for the 1936 Summer Olympics.
Single phase
Goalscorers
Argentina 1937
Final round
Peru 1939
This was the first international title the team won. During this time, the team had greatly improved since the World Cup and was re-assuring that dominance they had shown over Austria in the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Peru won all 4 games which were against Ecuador (5–2), Chile (3–1), Paraguay (3–0), and Uruguay (2–1) in the final. It's worth the mention that in this tournament Argentina and Brazil did not participate, but that does not take down the merit of Peru's notable act. Peruvian Teodoro Fernández also was the top goal-scorer of the tournament. As an anecdote, Peru was the fourth South American team that raised the trophy (The first three being Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil).
Single phase
Goalscorers
Chile 1941
Final round
Uruguay 1942
Final round
Brazil 1949
By this time, Peruvian football was recognized by good game and playful management of the ball. Several interesting players came to the national team, but the team faced several problems with the directors and the players themselves. Peru won all but two games. As such, the national team got third place. Paraguay and Brazil, the only ones who beat Peru, had to later play a last tie-breaker match.
Squad
Head Coach: Arturo Fernández
Single phase
Peru 1953
As much as Peru did, the team was not capable to achieve another Copa América title until later years. Yet, the games played in 1953 are memorable to Peruvian football history because it was the first time Peru was able to beat Brazil (A certain something not many have been able to achieve). The goal was scored by Navarrete.
Final round
1975 Copa América
This tournament had no fixed venue. For the first phase, Peru was grouped with Chile and Bolivia. After winning both games, which were played both at home and away, Peru qualified for the semifinals along with Colombia, Brazil, and Uruguay (Which were the defending champions). Perhaps unlucky for Peru, they had to face Brazil for their semifinal. At the city of Belo Horizonte in Brazil, Peru beat the Verdeamarela by a margin of 3 to 1 with two goals from Enrique Cassareto and one by Teófilo Cubillas. The game played back home at Lima was won by Brazil 2–0. Due to the goal difference, the winner (Which turned out being Peru) was chosen by sorting.
The final match was played against Colombia, who had beaten Uruguay. The game played at Bogotá was won by the Colombians 1 to 0. The game played at Lima was won by the Peruvians 2 to 0. Even though this meant Peru should win by the goal difference, a last game was played at the city of Caracas. With a goal at the 25th minute of the game by Hugo Sotil, Peru obtained its second international title.
Squad
Head Coach: Marcos Calderón
Finals
First leg
Second leg
Play-off
1979 Copa América
Squad
Coach: José Chiarella
Semi-finals
Ecuador 1993
Peru had an acceptable participacion in this Copa América when they passed as the leaders of their group with 4 points, 1 more point than Brazil. Paraguay and Chile also were part of this group. Peru tied with Brazil 0–0, tied with Paraguay 1–1 and beat Chile 1–0. The lead scorer for Peru in this competition was José del Solar with three goals. In quarterfinals Peru was eliminated by Mexico 4–2.
Squad
Head coach: Vladimir Popović
Group stage
Group B
Bolivia 1997
The team was able to reach the quarterfinals of this cup and eliminated Argentina (2:1) to advanced into the semifinals. In the semifinals, Peru faced Brazil, and lost by a margin of 7 to 0 (Peru's worst result to date). For the third place spot, Peru faced Mexico. The game was won by Mexico by a goal scored at the 82nd minute of the game.
Squad
Head coach: Freddy Ternero
Group stage
Group B
Peru vs Uruguay
Bolivia vs Peru
Peru vs Venezuela
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Third-place match
Peru 2004
The 2004 Copa América, which they hosted, saw the team lose in the quarter-finals against Argentina. This began a wave of criticism against Peru's then coach Paulo Autuori, who boycotted the media, and his squad.
Squad
Head coach: Paulo Autuori
Group stage
Group A
Peru vs Bolivia
Peru vs Venezuela
Peru vs Colombia
Quarter-finals
Venezuela 2007
Peru's campaign in the 2007 Copa América saw another futile attempt of the Peruvian squad, eliminated again in the quarter-finals by Argentina; the blame for this was mainly given to the tactics and formations of the coach Julio César Uribe, who did not call the appropriate players to the national team. After this situation, Peru replaced Uribe for José del Solar.
Squad
Head coach: Julio César Uribe
Group stage
Group A
Uruguay vs Peru
Venezuela vs Peru
Peru vs Bolivia
Quarter-finals
Argentina 2011
Peru made its debut against Uruguay, with a 1–1 draw, with Paolo Guerrero scoring for Peru. A 1–0 win over Mexico came next and finally a 1–0 loss against Chile, which it suffered due to a 90th minute own goal of a corner kick, would qualify Peru to the next round. At the quarter-finals match, Peru faced Colombia. All analysts placed Colombia as the big favorites. Peru, however, managed to win 2–0 after extra time with goals from Carlos Lobatón and Juan Manuel Vargas. At the semi-finals, Peru lost against the eventual champion Uruguay. Peru moved on to the third place match against the other surprise of the tournament, Venezuela. Peru beat Venezuela thoroughly with a 4–1 victory. A hat-trick by Paolo Guerrero, the Peruvian star of the tournament, fueled Peru and allowed them to claim the third-place bronze medal at the Copa América. Paolo Guerrero was crowned as the top goal scorer of the tournament.
Squad
Head coach: Sergio Markarián
Group stage
Group C
Uruguay vs Peru
Peru vs Mexico
Chile vs Peru
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Third-place play-off
Chile 2015
The Peruvian team was one of the 12 participating teams in the 2015 Copa América, a tournament that took place between June 11 and July 4, 2015, in Chile. The Peruvian team played his thirtieth Copa América and the fifteenth consecutive. In the draw held on November 24, 2014, in Viña del Mar, Peru was paired in Group C along with Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela. Peru's debut in the competition occurred on June 14, 2015, losing 2:1 to Brazil. Four days later he got his first victory by defeating Venezuela by a score of 1:0. Peru closed its participation in the first phase with a goalless draw against Colombia. Peru added four points which allowed them to occupy second place in their group and advance to the next phase. In the quarterfinals, they faced the Bolivian team, which they won 3:1 with 3 goals from Paolo Guerrero. In the next round they faced the Chilean team, where the locals were victorious 2:1 with two goals from Eduardo Vargas. In the match for third place, the Peruvian team faced Paraguay, the match ended with a 2:0 victory, with goals from André Carrillo and Paolo Guerrero.
Squad
Head coach: Ricardo Gareca
Group stage
Group C
Brazil vs Peru
Peru vs Venezuela
Colombia vs Peru
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Third-place play-off
USA 2016
In the draw held on February 21, 2016, in New York, the Peruvian team was in Group B along with Haiti, Brazil and Ecuador. The team's debut in the competition took place on June 4, 2016, defeating Haiti 1:0. Four days later they drew 2:2 against Ecuador. Peru closed its participation in the first phase with a 1:0 victory against Brazil. The Peruvian team added seven points which allowed him to occupy the first place in his group and advance to the next phase.
In the quarterfinals, they faced the Colombian team with which they tied 0:0 in regulation time, they were finally defeated 4:2 in the penalty shootout. With this result, Peru ranked fifth. The team's top scorers were Raúl Ruidíaz, Edison Flores, Christian Cueva and Paolo Guerrero with one goal each.
Squad
Head coach: Ricardo Gareca
Group stage
Group B
Haiti vs Peru
Ecuador vs Peru
Brazil vs Peru
Quarter-finals
Squads
See also
Football in Peru
History of the Peru national football team
Peru at the CONCACAF Gold Cup
Peru at the FIFA World Cup
Peruvian Football Federation
Peru national football team results (2000–2019)
Peru national football team results (2020–present)
Footnotes
Peru national football team
Countries at the Copa América |
I Am Bread is a platform video game published by Bossa Studios on 9 April 2015. The game is available for Microsoft Windows, OS X, iOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Android. It was removed from Google Play at an unknown date. The gameplay involves using various abilities, such as sticking to surfaces to solve puzzles and reach the toaster. Along the way, players must avoid hazards like dirty floors, knives, and pets.
I Am Bread received mixed reviews upon release, with some praising its uniquely humorous premise and challenging gameplay, while others criticized its controls and repetitive nature.
A sequel, I Am Fish, was released in 2021.
Gameplay
I Am Bread puts the player in control of a slice of bread. The aim of each level is to turn the bread into toast. If the bread, before becoming toast, touches certain objects (e.g. the floor, water, or ants), it will get dirty and the "edibility" meter will go down. To control the bread the player must use the arrow keys or an analog stick. The levels are based on the seven days of the week.
Several expansions have added various features, such as having players play as a baguette bent on destroying any fragile object in the room, a bagel that races around the room, and as a fragile cracker that seeks to find slices of cheese and have them stick to it while avoiding disintegration by repetitive impacts on surfaces. In addition, two other levels were added where the player plays either in zero gravity or as a "bread fighter" facing various fighters and ships made of bakery goods in a parody of Star Wars called Starch Wars. Another bonus level has a slice of bread seeking to find and complete an unfinished sandwich in the refrigerator inside a room with a slumbering Heavy set in Team Fortress 2.
Plot
Mr. Murton is a therapy patient who had a failed business in the past and a divorced wife. He is distressed over alleged break-ins into his house with the culprit supposedly leaving behind pieces of toasted bread as a taunt or warning. With each scenario, Mr. Murton progressively finds out that the culprit of the disarranged house are sentient slices of a specific bread, and at the end, throws the bread out in the trash and escapes custody from the therapy building. After a slice of bread that escaped the garbage truck causes an explosion at a gas station, another slice of bread confronts Mr. Murton while he is driving away from the scene with the intent of eliminating the bread. Terrified, Mr. Murton suffers from what appears to be a heart attack and faints, resulting in a car crash and Mr. Murton becomes injured and falls unconscious. Some time after the crash, Nigel Burke, a mysterious man with a watch, pulls over and investigates and grabs Mr. Murton off-screen, and in front of the car is a Barnardshire Sign indicating that I am Bread is a prequel to Surgeon Simulator 2013, another game by Bossa Studios.
Development
I am Bread was developed with the Unity engine.
Reception
I Am Bread received mixed reception from critics, with PC version receiving a 60/100 Metacritic rating, based on 25 critics, the PlayStation 4 version receiving a 51/100 and the iOS version receiving a 58/100. Most criticism of the game came from the poor controls and camera angles.
PC Gamer writer Jordan Erica Webber gave the game a 58/100 score and commented on the fact that "the game is better played in front of an audience, but there is more available than what someone may see at first glance". Kotaku writer Luke Plunkett said that the game might actually have "some depth beyond just laughing at the bread-walking."
In total the game sold close to 2 million copies.
References
External links
2015 video games
Android (operating system) games
Bossa Studios games
IOS games
Indie games
MacOS games
Multiplayer and single-player video games
Platformers
PlayStation 4 games
Video games about food and drink
Video games developed in the United Kingdom
Windows games
Xbox One games
Bread in culture |
Letters to the President is the debut studio album released by Christian pop punk band Hawk Nelson. The album was released on July 13, 2004. It was later re-released on October 4, 2005 with six additional tracks and three exclusive videos.
Track listing
Personnel
Hawk Nelson
Jason Dunn — vocals, rhythm guitar
Daniel Biro — bass, background vocals
Dave Clark — lead guitar, background vocals
Matt Paige — drums
Additional musicians
Jonathan Dunn — vocals on "Someone Else Before"
Autumn Clark — vocals on "Someone Else Before"
Trevor McNevan — vocals on "Like a Racecar"
Production
Trevor McNevan — producer
Aaron Sprinkle — producer
J.R. McNeely — mixer
Brandon Ebel — executive producer
References
External links
E-Card
2004 debut albums
Hawk Nelson albums
Tooth & Nail Records albums
Albums produced by Aaron Sprinkle |
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" is the lead single released from Tracey Lee's debut album, Many Facez. The song was produced by D-Dot, Ron "Amen-Ra" Lawrence and was a mild success, making it to 4 different Billboard charts, including 55 on the Billboard Hot 100.
The official remix, entitled "The After Party (The Theme II)" featured rappers, Busta Rhymes and Pirate and was also featured on the Many Facez album and was given both a single release and a music video. An additional remix was also released featuring Rampage.
Single track listing
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" (Radio Edit)- 3:57
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" (Party Edit)- 4:00
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" (Album Version)- 4:37
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" (Acappella)- 4:39
"The Theme (It's Party Time)" (Instrumental)- 4:25
Charts
1997 debut singles
1996 songs
Universal Music Group singles |
Troutbeck Bridge is a village in South Lakeland, Cumbria, England. It is situated north of Windermere on the A591 road running through the Lake District and was historically in the county of Westmorland. The main secondary school for Windermere and Ambleside, The Lakes School, is located in the village, as is the postal sorting office for the area. Troutbeck Bridge takes its name from where the road crosses the Trout Beck.
The community is served by a petrol station and convenience store, an inn and restaurant, a secondary school and a gym.
History
The Calgarth Estate was a wartime housing estate built to house the workers of the nearby flying boat factory at White Cross Bay. By the end of the Second World War the workers had returned to their homes throughout Britain and in 1945 three hundred child survivors of the Holocaust, later known as the Windermere Boys, arrived from Eastern Europe to the Calgarth Estate to begin new lives: a film of their experience titled The Windermere Children was released in 2020. The site is now occupied by The Lakes School.
Transport
The A591 road passes through Troutbeck Bridge, with Windermere to the south and Ambleside to the north. The nearest railway station is Windermere, away, which is well connected to the village by local bus services.
See also
Listed buildings in Windermere, Cumbria (town)
References
Villages in Cumbria
South Lakeland District
Westmorland |
Moelleriopsis poppei is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk, unassigned in the superfamily Seguenzioidea.
Distribution
This species is found in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica.
Description
The maximum recorded shell length is 2.15 mm.
Habitat
Minimum recorded depth is 2579 m. Maximum recorded depth is 2579 m.
References
External links
To World Register of Marine Species
poppei
Gastropods described in 2012 |
In the theory of Lie groups, the exponential map is a map from the Lie algebra of a Lie group into . In case is a matrix Lie group, the exponential map reduces to the matrix exponential. The exponential map, denoted , is analytic and has as such a derivative , where is a path in the Lie algebra, and a closely related differential .
The formula for was first proved by Friedrich Schur (1891). It was later elaborated by Henri Poincaré (1899) in the context of the problem of expressing Lie group multiplication using Lie algebraic terms. It is also sometimes known as Duhamel's formula.
The formula is important both in pure and applied mathematics. It enters into proofs of theorems such as the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula, and it is used frequently in physics for example in quantum field theory, as in the Magnus expansion in perturbation theory, and in lattice gauge theory.
Throughout, the notations and will be used interchangeably to denote the exponential given an argument, except when, where as noted, the notations have dedicated distinct meanings. The calculus-style notation is preferred here for better readability in equations. On the other hand, the -style is sometimes more convenient for inline equations, and is necessary on the rare occasions when there is a real distinction to be made.
Statement
The derivative of the exponential map is given by
Explanation
To compute the differential of at , , the standard recipe
is employed. With the result
follows immediately from . In particular, is the identity because (since is a vector space) and .
Proof
The proof given below assumes a matrix Lie group. This means that the exponential mapping from the Lie algebra to the matrix Lie group is given by the usual power series, i.e. matrix exponentiation. The conclusion of the proof still holds in the general case, provided each occurrence of is correctly interpreted. See comments on the general case below.
The outline of proof makes use of the technique of differentiation with respect to of the parametrized expression
to obtain a first order differential equation for which can then be solved by direct integration in . The solution is then .
Lemma
Let denote the adjoint action of the group on its Lie algebra. The action is given by for . A frequently useful relationship between and is given by
Proof
Using the product rule twice one finds,
Then one observes that
by above. Integration yields
Using the formal power series to expand the exponential, integrating term by term, and finally recognizing (),
and the result follows. The proof, as presented here, is essentially the one given in . A proof with a more algebraic touch can be found in .
Comments on the general case
The formula in the general case is given by
where
which formally reduces to
Here the -notation is used for the exponential mapping of the Lie algebra and the calculus-style notation in the fraction indicates the usual formal series expansion. For more information and two full proofs in the general case, see the freely available reference.
A direct formal argument
An immediate way to see what the answer must be, provided it exists is the following. Existence needs to be proved separately in each case. By direct differentiation of the standard limit definition of the exponential, and exchanging the order of differentiation and limit,
where each factor owes its place to the non-commutativity of and .
Dividing the unit interval into sections ( since the sum indices are integers) and letting → ∞, , yields
Applications
Local behavior of the exponential map
The inverse function theorem together with the derivative of the exponential map provides information about the local behavior of . Any map between vector spaces (here first considering matrix Lie groups) has a inverse such that is a bijection in an open set around a point in the domain provided is invertible. From () it follows that this will happen precisely when
is invertible. This, in turn, happens when the eigenvalues of this operator are all nonzero. The eigenvalues of are related to those of as follows. If is an analytic function of a complex variable expressed in a power series such that for a matrix converges, then the eigenvalues of will be , where are the eigenvalues of , the double subscript is made clear below. In the present case with and , the eigenvalues of are
where the are the eigenvalues of . Putting one sees that is invertible precisely when
The eigenvalues of are, in turn, related to those of . Let the eigenvalues of be . Fix an ordered basis of the underlying vector space such that is lower triangular. Then
with the remaining terms multiples of with . Let be the corresponding basis for matrix space, i.e. . Order this basis such that if . One checks that the action of is given by
with the remaining terms multiples of . This means that is lower triangular with its eigenvalues on the diagonal. The conclusion is that is invertible, hence is a local bianalytical bijection around , when the eigenvalues of satisfy
In particular, in the case of matrix Lie groups, it follows, since is invertible, by the inverse function theorem that is a bi-analytic bijection in a neighborhood of in matrix space. Furthermore, , is a bi-analytic bijection from a neighborhood of in to a neighborhood of . The same conclusion holds for general Lie groups using the manifold version of the inverse function theorem.
It also follows from the implicit function theorem that itself is invertible for sufficiently small.
Derivation of a Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula
If is defined such that
an expression for , the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula, can be derived from the above formula,
Its left-hand side is easy to see to equal Y. Thus,
and hence, formally,
However, using the relationship between and given by , it is straightforward to further see that
and hence
Putting this into the form of an integral in t from 0 to 1 yields,
an integral formula for that is more tractable in practice than the explicit Dynkin's series formula due to the simplicity of the series expansion of . Note this expression consists of and nested commutators thereof with or . A textbook proof along these lines can be found in and .
Derivation of Dynkin's series formula
Dynkin's formula mentioned may also be derived analogously, starting from the parametric extension
whence
so that, using the above general formula,
Since, however,
the last step by virtue of the Mercator series expansion, it follows that
and, thus, integrating,
It is at this point evident that the qualitative statement of the BCH formula holds, namely lies in the Lie algebra generated by and is expressible as a series in repeated brackets . For each , terms for each partition thereof are organized inside the integral . The resulting Dynkin's formula is then
For a similar proof with detailed series expansions, see .
Combinatoric details
Change the summation index in () to and expand
in a power series. To handle the series expansions simply, consider first . The -series and the -series are given by
respectively. Combining these one obtains
This becomes
where is the set of all sequences of length subject to the conditions in .
Now substitute for in the LHS of (). Equation then gives
or, with a switch of notation, see An explicit Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula,
Note that the summation index for the rightmost in the second term in () is denoted , but is not an element of a sequence . Now integrate , using ,
Write this as
This amounts to
where using the simple observation that for all . That is, in (), the leading term vanishes unless equals or , corresponding to the first and second terms in the equation before it. In case , must equal , else the term vanishes for the same reason ( is not allowed). Finally, shift the index, ,
This is Dynkin's formula. The striking similarity with (99) is not accidental: It reflects the Dynkin–Specht–Wever map, underpinning the original, different, derivation of the formula. Namely, if
is expressible as a bracket series, then necessarily
Putting observation and theorem () together yields a concise proof of the explicit BCH formula.
See also
Matrix logarithm
Remarks
Notes
References
; translation from Google books.
Veltman, M, 't Hooft, G & de Wit, B (2007). "Lie Groups in Physics", online lectures.
External links
Mathematical physics
Matrix theory
Lie groups
Exponentials |
Ringside Maisie is a 1941 film directed by Edwin L. Marin. It stars Ann Sothern, Robert Sterling and George Murphy. It is the fifth of ten pictures in the Maisie series. This was Sothern and future husband Sterling's only film together.
Plot
While on her way to a dancing job at a resort, Maisie Ravier is thrown off the train for not having enough money to pay the fare. She is given a ride to the resort by up-and-coming boxer Terry Dolan. Dolan's suspicious manager, "Skeets" Maguire, offends Maisie by telling her that he does not want her "sort" around his protege, despite Terry already having a girlfriend. As Skeets gets to know Maisie better, he realizes his mistake, and he and Maisie fall in love.
When Maisie rejects the romantic advances of Ricky Du Prez, her employer and dancing partner, she is fired. Terry asks her to be the companion to his mother, a wheelchair user. When she accepts the job, Terry asks her to hide his profession from Mrs. Dolan, who believes he is a razor blade salesman. Maisie disapproves of lying, but agrees.
Terry confides a secret to Maisie: he hates and fears boxing, and would rather run a grocery store just like his late father did. Since he will have enough money to buy a store after the next fight, Maisie encourages him to tell Skeets. Skeets surprises Maisie by telling Terry that he has an ironclad contract, and insisting that Terry will take on the champion after the next bout. Maisie ends her relationship with Skeets.
Discouraged, Terry fights poorly and is knocked out in the sixth round. He receives a concussion, and when he comes round he is blind. Maisie brings Mrs. Dolan to the hospital. Dolan tells his mother that there are only three specialists in the whole country who are qualified to repair the damage, but it will take all of his savings. Mrs. Dolan is concerned only about his welfare, and is not concerned about his violent profession. The operation is a success. When Maisie discovers that Skeets flew to Boston personally to fetch the specialist, they reconcile.
Cast
Ann Sothern as Maisie Ravier
George Murphy as Francis X. "Skeets" / "Skeeter" Maguire
Robert Sterling as Terry Dolan, aka Young O'Hara
Virginia O'Brien as Virginia O'Brien, singer
Natalie Thompson as Cecelia "Cissy" Reardon
Margaret Moffatt as Mrs. Dolan
Maxie Rosenbloom as Chotsie
Jack La Rue as Ricky Du Prez
Rags Ragland as Vic
Oscar O'Shea as Train Conductor
John Indrisano as Peaches
Roy Lester as Jitterbug Dancer
Eddie Simms as Jackie-Boy Duffy
Jonathan Hale as Dr. Kramer
Purnell Pratt as Dr. Stanley Taylor
Larry Steers as Reporter (uncredited)
See also
List of boxing films
External links
1941 films
1940s sports films
American boxing films
American black-and-white films
Films directed by Edwin L. Marin
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
American romance films
1940s romance films
1940s English-language films
1940s American films |
Harold C. Sylvester (April 27, 1903 – July 15, 1988) was a Vermont attorney, politician, and judge. He was most notable for his long service on the Vermont Superior Court, and as an associate justice of the Vermont Supreme Court from 1963 to 1964.
Early life
Harold Charles Sylvester was born in Eden, Vermont on April 27, 1903, the son of Geneva L. (Sullivan) and farmer Leonard I. Sylvester. He was educated in Eden and Johnson, and graduated from Johnson High School. Sylvester attended Saint Michael's College for two years, and then began the study of law in the Morisville offices of William E. Tracy and Frederick G. Fleetwood. Sylvester was admitted to the bar in 1927, and began a practice in St. Albans.
Start of career
A Republican, while practicing in St. Albans, Sylvster served in local office including city attorney and member of the city council. He served as assistant secretary of the Vermont Senate from 1943 to 1945, and secretary of civil and military affairs (chief assistant) for Governor Mortimer R. Proctor from 1946 to 1947. In 1948, Sylvester was elected to the Vermont House of Representatives, and he was reelected in 1950 and 1952. In his second and third terms, Sylvester was chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
Sylvester served on the board of directors of the Howard Bank and the Swanton Savings Bank and Trust Company. He was also a member of the board of directors for the St. Albans Hospital. From 1946 to 1947 he was president of the Vermont Bar Association.
Judicial career
In 1953, Governor Lee E. Emerson appointed Sylvester as a judge of the Vermont Superior Court. He advanced by seniority to become the court's chief judge in 1959, and he continued to serve until his appointment to the Vermont Supreme Court.
Governor Philip H. Hoff appointed Sylvester as an associate justice of the Vermont Supreme Court in 1963, in keeping with the tradition of naming the senior judges of the superior court to the supreme court as vacancies arose. Sylvester filled the vacancy caused by the promotion of James Stuart Holden to Chief Justice, and he served as an associate justice until 1964, when he requested return to the superior court, saying that he preferred trial work to appellate work. Hoff obliged Sylvester by appointing superior court Judge F. Ray Keyser Sr. to the supreme court as Sylvester's replacement, and Sylvester to the superior court vacancy created by Keyser's promotion.
Sylvester remained on the superior court until retiring in 1972. After leaving the bench, Sylvester practiced law in Burlington until retiring in the early 1980s.
Death and burial
Sylvester died in Burlington on July 15, 1988. He was buried at Resurrection Park Cemetery in South Burlington.
Family
In 1936, Sylvester married Gertrude Cecile Foy, who was usually called Cecile. They were the parents of sons Harlan and Alan, and daughter Gail. Harlan Sylvester pursued a career as a financial services consultant, and has provided economic advice to a succession of Vermont governors beginning with Thomas P. Salmon. Alan Sylvester became an attorney, and specialized in personal injury, medical malpractice, and product liability lawsuits. Gail Sylvester became the wife of Edward Cashman, who served as a judge of the Vermont Superior Court from 1982 to 2007. She pursued a career as an emergency room nurse, and later became a consultant on medical ethics.
References
Sources
Newspapers
Internet
Books
1903 births
1988 deaths
People from St. Albans, Vermont
Republican Party members of the Vermont House of Representatives
Vermont lawyers
U.S. state supreme court judges admitted to the practice of law by reading law
Justices of the Vermont Supreme Court
Burials in Vermont
20th-century American politicians
20th-century American judges
20th-century American lawyers |
A columbiad is a type of gun from the 19th century, a large-caliber muzzle-loading cannon capable of firing at low and high angles
Columbiad may also refer to:
Arts and entertainment
The Columbiad, an epic poem about the founding of the United States of America
Columbiad, the fictional astronaut-launching space gun created by Jules Verne for From the Earth to the Moon
Columbiad (ballet), a ballet that debuted in 1939
"Columbiad" (short story), a 1996 science fiction story by Stephen Baxter, republished in 1997 in Year's Best SF 2 multi-author anthology collection, and in 1998 in Stephen Baxter's anthology collection Traces (book)
Other uses
Columbiad (spacecraft), the informal name of the Apollo 8 space capsule
Columbiad (journal), A Quarterly Review of the War Between the States [1997 to 2000 - 13 issues]
See also
Columbia (disambiguation)
Columbian (disambiguation)
Columbiana (disambiguation)
Columbine (disambiguation)
Columbina (disambiguation)
Colombia (disambiguation)
Colombian (disambiguation)
Colombiana (disambiguation)
Colombine (disambiguation)
Colombina (disambiguation) |
Nick Jr. is a British pay television channel owned and operated by Paramount Networks UK & Australia. The channel is aimed at preschool children.
History
Nick Jr. was first broadcast in the UK and Ireland on 1 September 1993 during the daytime hours from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. on weekdays on Nickelodeon, though these hours varied over time, particularly when Nick Jr. aired in a breakfast slot in the school holidays (mostly summer time), its programming was a mix of shows from the US version of Nick Jr and other imported shows, Later in the block's existence, syndicated British children's programmes would be a main focus of the channel as well. Its identity followed that of the US feed of the block as well. By the late 1990's it was mostly broadcast between 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
On 10 June 1999, it was announced that the block would be spun off into a channel, and its new branding was being finalised. The channel launched on 1 September 1999 as the world's first dedicated preschoolers' channel. On the Astra 1B satellite of Sky's analogue satellite service, the new channel timeshared with Sky Sports 3 and broadcast between 6 am and 10 am, although this schedule would sometimes be altered if sports were being covered in the early morning. On digital satellite and cable, Nick Jr. aired from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. A spinoff of the recently-launched American Noggin channel was proposed to timeshare with Nick Jr., but this never materialised.
The Nick Jr. block on Nickelodeon continued until July 2000, before it was closed due to the high uptake of Sky Digital. On 31 August 2000, Nick Jr ceased broadcasting on analogue satellite.
On 3 September 2001, MTV Dance started broadcasting during Nick Jr's downtime hours after it was spun off from MTV Extra.
The channel refreshed on 4 February 2002 – Dora the Explorer, The Hoobs and the channel's first homegrown produced series "You Do Too" had their premieres the same day of the rebrand.
On 19 July 2002, the channel moved its EPG slot on Sky to make way for the incoming Nicktoons channel.
On 13 August 2002, MTV Dance acquired its own separate channel. By December, Nick Jr. had gained another hour at the end of the broadcasting day, now operating from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
On 31 May 2004, Nick Jr extended its runtime to end at 10 p.m., in order to launch Noggin, a block that showed classic British children's TV programmes from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m., causing the exodus of these shows from the main daytime schedule leaving more space for new shows.
On 5 September 2005, the Noggin block was changed to Nick Jr Classics as part of a channel-wide refresh (see Identity). The Backyardigans had its linear UK premiere on the same day of the rebrand.
A version of Nick Jr. for Ireland was launched in 2006. This version, like the Irish version of Nickelodeon, shares the same schedule as the British version of the channel but has Irish adverts.
On 30 January 2006, a spinoff of the American Noggin, as a block showing Nick Jr programmes on a free-to-air sister channel TMF from 7 am to 9 am. It was promoted on Nick Jr.
On 24 April 2006, Nick Jr. 2 was launched, initially as a 1-hour timeshift of the main channel, but a few months later, this format was dropped and it became an alternative channel with a completely new schedule, but with Nick Jr. Classics at the same hours.
On 25 September 2006, TMF rebranded its Noggin block as Nick Jr on TMF.
Following the removal of Nick Jr. Classics from the main Nick Jr. channel on 4 January 2009, normal programming ran from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. The block would continue on Nick Jr 2. until July 2010, after which classic British children's shows ceased to be part of the network's library entirely.
In early 2009, TMF reverted its Nick Jr block back to Noggin, and it broadcast until March 2010 before it was shut down permanently, at which point TMF had been replaced by VIVA.
On 2 August 2010, Nick Jr. began broadcasting 24/7, with many old shows from the 2000s being re-added to fill the schedule.
In July 2011, Nick Jr. 2 briefly shifted its sign-on to 5 a.m., but this was reverted back to a 6 a.m. sign-on a month later.
A 1-hour timeshift named Nick Jr. +1 launched on 2 October 2012 replacing Nicktoons Replay.
By July 2013, Nick Jr. 2 had begun broadcasting 21 hours from 3 a.m. to 12 p.m., with teleshopping off the air.
On 3 November 2014, Nick Jr. 2 was renamed Nick Jr. Too and it began broadcasting 24/7.
On 5 July 2016, Nick Jr. HD launched on Sky, replacing MTV Live HD's Sky slot.
On 31 October 2022, Sky sold its stake in Nickelodeon UK, including Nick Jr., to Paramount.
Identity
Between the launch of the block in 1993 and the launch of the channel in 1999, Nick Jr UK's branding largely mirrored that of the American feed and used the American version's idents. The UK input (branded as either Banana Sandwich or Nick Jr in the schedules) was presented by Dave Benson Phillips between 1994 and 1996, where Dave was joined by two puppet mascots called Bugsy and Herbie on location around England before the 2 puppet characters eventually went onto present the block by themselves for the whole of 1996, still on location for a while whilst sometimes presenting in a colourful animated studio, joined by some guest presenters occasionally until they were replaced by Face from February 1997 until September 2005 and was dubbed into British English by David Holt, Bugsy and Herbie went onto have their own series of mini-episodes aired on Nick Jr. during the advert breaks in the late 1990s until early 2000s, by which point the puppets were phased out completely.
Upon the channel's launch in 1999, it launched its own package featuring live-action children playing in a brightly painted studio or holding posters on which clips of programmes appeared. From the channel's launch, Face's hosting job would be shared by the Early Worms, the titular characters of the Early Worms show, Arnie and Barnie. Due to the abundance of British-produced content along with the channel's status as the first dedicated for preschoolers in the UK, the channel positioned itself in a special British image in its early years. Starting in September 2000, just before signing off for the night, it would air a bedtime segment and song hosted by Kevin Duala (host of the British version of Blue's Clues), titled Bedtime Business.
In 2001, the channel transitioned into using Nick Jr. US's ident package, first with up-next bumpers, and combinations of the 1999 idents with idents from the US.
On 4 February 2002, Nick Jr. fully revamped into the new package, which had a specific jingle and song played in idents. These idents usually consisted of children playing around or dancing, this time in the outdoors, and the logo appeared (either being mushrooms, the stereotypical parent and child, squirrels, whales, chickens, butterflies, elephants or flowers) in a white circle on a plain brightly-coloured background at the end. On some occasions, they would broadcast atmospheric idents which included babies. Sometimes these idents would take up half the ad breaks, or sometimes they appeared in split-screen graphics and next bumpers. Promo endboards were added as well.
Dora the Explorer and The Hoobs had their premieres the same day of the rebrand. Before closing down at 7 p.m. (8 p.m. after Autumn 2002), it would air the Bedtime Business segment, followed by a short closedown bumper featuring some characters from Nick Jr. shows and an announcement telling viewers to resume watching at 6 a.m., before cutting to a static yellow screen with the characters and the broadcast times until 6 a.m. the next morning. In Autumn 2002, they updated their DOG to a much cleaner, organised and less opaque state.
Just before Noggin signed on, an ident showing the logo as two caterpillars played during the last advertisement break at 8 p.m. Then in 2005, this was supplemented with a sting ident of the Nick Jr. and Noggin logos flipping back and forth. After Noggin finished airing, it would play an ident of a UFO flying away, and cut to a dark blue version of the 2002 signoff screen, just telling viewers to come back at 6 a.m.
In July 2004, some in-vision morning presenters were introduced to the network. Neal Wright (Zak) and Jennifer Johnston (Jen) presented and hosted this block simply called "The Garden." Alongside them, there was a puppet plant called Bud, and a blue ball of light/firefly named Izzy.
Also around this period in 2004, Nick Jr. started to use the 2D American animal idents originally introduced there in 2003. It is unknown when they stopped showing them. At the same time, Nick Jr. reeled in the new look of Face to their channel introduced in America the year prior, usually referred to as "Modern Face". He was still voiced by David Holt. Nick Jr. made the unusual decision to not drop the original Face, leaving Modern Face and Face's old look broadcasting simultaneously, much to the confusion of viewers. The UK-dubbed version of Modern Face is extremely hard to come across.
In the spring of 2005, a new animated presenter appeared on the channel alongside Face at the time. This was Piper O'Possum, who presented the UK input of Nick Jr. until its rebrand on 30 April 2010. She was re-dubbed by Alex Kelly and lasted longer on the UK feed than in the US by three years. Between this time and 4 September 2005, a mix of Old Face, Modern Face, Piper, The Garden, The Early Worms and The Baby Bumpers hosted the channel.
During the significant rebrand of 5 September 2005, Face was dropped entirely, The Garden stayed but only until October of the same year, and the Early Worms kept their morning presenting. Although, Piper became the main presenter for most of the day, in the late afternoons she got taken off for the rest of the remaining hours and her segments of announcing shows usually got replaced with normal next bumpers. In addition, Noggin changed its name to Nick Jr. Classics and the ident package that had been used since 2002 was dropped, as the international versions of Nick Jr. launched a 2D-3D animated pop-up-book-style ident package, with two animals (a parent and a child) forming the Nick Jr. logo, very similar to the package of Nick Jr. on CBS from 2004 to 2006. This package was designed by British animation studio Studio AKA. At night, special idents were played, which either consisted of existing daytime-setting bumpers converted into a nightly backdrop, or night-specific bumpers that only played during that time.
At the end of regular Nick Jr. programmes on both channels, they played the new bedtime song, "Jimmer Jammers", showed a sign-off ident telling viewers to come back at 6 a.m., and transitioned to Nick Jr. Classics. After Nick Jr Classics, they would cut to a night loop of the same ident or different idents playing over again.
Idents on Nick Jr. 2 had the number "2" appear at the end of each ident in the scenery. On its launch on 25 September 2006, Nick Jr. on TMF began using the idents. The package would be used on both Nick Jr. channels until 29 April 2010. During the time when Nick Jr, Nick Jr 2. and Nick Jr. on TMF co-existed, the three cross-promoted their programmes under the slogan "Three ways to play".
Between 2008 and 2014, the schedule after 6 p.m. was rebranded as "Nick Jr. Bedtime". A new bedtime look and song (Land of Dreams) was commissioned and played alongside the already existing night version of the 2005 idents and its song (Jimmer Jammers). The Early Worms returned as hosts for the strand (and eventually the last hosts of any Nick Jr. feed internationally). During the strand, special celebrity guests would accompany Arnie and Barnie in reading bedtime stories, akin to those of CBeebies.
On 30 April 2010, Nick Jr. rebranded to a variant of the United States look and French look designed in-house. They used the animated American idents along with their own which included still shots of children in assorted places or doing things like letting go of a balloon or being at a picnic. Like the American rebrand, it was based on the old arts-and-crafts style and music of Noggin, and was used as the basis for the rebrands of the mainland European Nick Jr. feeds. Moose and Zee were brought over from the American Nick Jr. Channel and the former Noggin block on Viva (which had been axed as part of the rebrand) to host the main Nick Jr. channel, with Moose's voice being dubbed by David Holt (voice actor). Just like on the US version of Nick Jr., Moose and Zee presented links between programmes and especially around up-next bumpers, although due to the need for advertisement space, they appeared irregularly and not at night, where they would be replaced by regular next bumpers.
Nick Jr. Classics was rebranded and then discontinued in July of that year. When Nick Jr. and Nick Jr. 2 signed off, they cut to an off-air slide, and then played a night loop of the same ident repeating, but the actual sign-off has not been found yet.
On 2 August 2010, when the main Nick Jr. stopped signing off, the Bedtime block was truncated to an 8 p.m. finish. When Nick Jr. 2 expanded its broadcast hours, it broadcast the segment from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
However, on 7 January 2013, the channel rebranded again to the next United States look, which dropped Moose and Zee and the arts-and-craft style branding in favour of a 3D CGI world appearing in bumpers and promos where clips of the characters appeared. The Bedtime strand was also revamped under this branding. There were also slight variations between the colour schemes on Nick Jr. and Nick Jr. 2, with the latter opting for a colder colour palette. However, some of the 2010 idents, especially the Christmas ones, were retained until December 2014, albeit with the new Nick Jr. endcap (of the logo changing colour multiple times).
While it was initially the same as the United States version, on 3 November 2014, the branding on the main channel was refreshed by Blue Zoo, and the Bedtime strand was dropped from both channels, leaving the channel without any hosts for the first time in 19 years. This new branding used CGI and 3D shapes like the previous one and used standard colour schemes for different parts of the day. Nick Jr. Too, however, retained the old style until 2019.
On 18 February 2019, Nick Jr. dropped the "Smart Place to Play" look in favour of the "Ready to Play" branding adopted in the United States the previous year, featuring live-action children running in a 3D CGI space, often holding bubble wands in which clips of shows appear out of. Bumpers also show these children interacting with the Nick Jr. characters in live-action environments.
TMF/Viva block
A version of the US Noggin branding was used for the Noggin block on TMF/Viva. It was visibly stripped back from the American version but still very similar. It was hosted by Moose A. Moose and Zee D. Bird from the American version, with Moose dubbed over by David Holt.
Slogans
Grow, Learn and Play (1 September 1993 – 1995)
Just for me! (1 September 1999 – 3 February 2002)
Join in!/Join-in TV/Join the Fun! (4 February 2002 – 29 April 2010)
It's the shows that make Nick Jr. (2010)
Every day's an adventure (7 January 2013 – 17 February 2019)
Other related services
Nick Jr. Too/Nick Jr. 2
Another channel, Nick Jr. 2, was launched on Sky on 24 April 2006. The channel initially functioned as a one-hour timeshift of Nick Jr. before becoming a secondary service. The idents and branding were just the same as the main channel. The differences were that logos on promo endboards and promos, in general, had a 2 included next to them. This also was used in the next bumpers and general idents.
After transitioning as a secondary service, the channel began to air programmes that Nick Jr. no longer ran, or shows that never ran on its parent network, such as I Spy, Sali Mali, It's A Big Big World, the second season of Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!, and the Nick Jr. Classics block after it left the main channel.
When it changed its name to Nick Jr. Too on 3 November 2014, it also started broadcasting 24 hours a day.
Since October 2013, the channel has occasionally aired long-term marathons (usually one month) of the British preschool series Peppa Pig, during which it rebrands itself as Nick Jr. Peppa. The channel has since broadcast marathons of the Canadian preschool series PAW Patrol in a similar manner, likewise rebranding as Nick Jr. PAW Patrol.
Unlike the main channel, Nick Jr. Too is not available on TalkTalk, Eir TV or WightFibre.
Noggin/Nick Jr. Classics
During the mid and late 2000s, Nick Jr. and Nick Jr. 2 presented a nighttime programming block dedicated to classic British children's programmes from the 1970s and 1980s under the title Nick Jr. Classics. The block launched under the name Noggin on 31 May 2004, running every night from 8 p.m. - 10 p.m. It was rebranded as Nick Jr. Classics on 5 September 2005.
The block was discontinued on Nick Jr. on 4 January 2009 and on Nick Jr. 2 in mid-late 2010.
Noggin/Nick Jr. on TMF/Viva
Noggin started broadcasting on 30 January 2006, the first international feed of Noggin (excluding the former vintage block on Nick Jr. which only had the name in common). It was a children's television slot broadcast on TMF from 07:00 to 09:00 daily. It showed a selection of Nick Jr shows and often promoted the main channels to viewers with only Freeview and therefore were not subscribed to Nick Jr..
Nick Jr on TMF had replaced the strand Noggin on 25 September 2006, but its programming remained identical. It is unknown why the rebrand happened, but it may have been to consolidate the brand after the launch of Nick Jr. 2. It used the same ident and presentation package as its main sister channel, Nick Jr. Moose and Zee's segments were removed as well. Programmes shown included Maggie and the Ferocious Beast, Dora the Explorer, The Backyardigans, Thomas & Friends, Blue's Clues, LazyTown, Go Diego Go!, Little Bill amongst others. The channels continued to cross-promote each other, including showing the next bumpers for all three at once.
It was reverted to Noggin in early 2009. The final set of programmes shown were Go Diego Go!, Dora the Explorer, Little Bear, Bruno and Maggie and the Ferocious Beast. In its final year, Noggin received almost zero cross-promotion from Nick Jr., not even on its website.
Noggin was the first commercial children's television channel launched on 30 January 2006 on TMF to air on the UK's DTT platform, Freeview, followed by CITV, then lastly Playhouse Disney Disney Channel on ABC1.
Following the closure of TMF, the block continued on Viva until March 2010, when the Nick Jr. rebrand caused Noggin to shut down. However, the branding of Noggin (except the name "Noggin") and the Moose and Zee segments were adopted by Nick Jr. and used until January 2013.
Programming
See also
Nickelodeon (British and Irish TV channel)
Nicktoons (British and Irish TV channel)
Nick at Nite international versions#UK and Ireland
Nicktoonsters
References
External links
UK and Ireland
Children's television channels in the United Kingdom
Television channels and stations established in 1999
Sky television channels
1999 establishments in Ireland |
Vladimír Nadrchal (born March 4, 1938) is an ice hockey player who played for the Czechoslovak national team. He won a bronze medal at the 1964 Winter Olympics, and a silver medal at the 1968 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
1938 births
Czech ice hockey goaltenders
Czechoslovak ice hockey goaltenders
Ice hockey players at the 1960 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1964 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1968 Winter Olympics
Living people
Medalists at the 1964 Winter Olympics
Medalists at the 1968 Winter Olympics
Olympic bronze medalists for Czechoslovakia
Olympic ice hockey players for Czechoslovakia
Olympic medalists in ice hockey
Olympic silver medalists for Czechoslovakia
Ice hockey people from Pardubice
HC Dynamo Pardubice players
HC Kometa Brno players
LHK Jestřábi Prostějov players
Czech ice hockey coaches
Czechoslovak ice hockey coaches |
```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 broadcastShapes = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/base/broadcast-shapes' );
var broadcastArray = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/base/broadcast-array' );
var getShape = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/base/shape' );
// MAIN //
/**
* Broadcasts ndarrays to a common shape.
*
* ## Notes
*
* - The returned arrays are views on their respective underlying data buffers. The views are typically **not** contiguous. As more than one element of a returned view may refer to the same memory location, writing to a view may affect multiple elements. If you need to write to one of the returned arrays, copy the array before performing operations which may mutate elements.
*
* @param {ArrayLikeObject<ndarray>} arrays - list of input arrays
* @throws {Error} input arrays must be broadcast compatible
* @returns {Array<ndarray>} broadcasted arrays
*
* @example
* var array = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/array' );
* var zeros = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/zeros' );
*
* var x1 = array( [ [ 1, 2 ], [ 3, 4 ] ] );
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var shx = x1.shape;
* // returns [ 2, 2 ]
*
* var y1 = zeros( [ 3, 2, 2 ] );
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var shy = y1.shape;
* // returns [ 3, 2, 2 ]
*
* var out = broadcastArrays( [ x1, y1 ] );
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var x2 = out[ 0 ];
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var y2 = out[ 1 ];
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* shx = x2.shape;
* // returns [ 3, 2, 2 ]
*
* shy = y2.shape;
* // returns [ 3, 2, 2 ]
*
* var v = x2.get( 0, 0, 0 );
* // returns 1
*
* v = x2.get( 0, 0, 1 );
* // returns 2
*
* v = x2.get( 1, 0, 0 );
* // returns 1
*
* v = x2.get( 1, 1, 0 );
* // returns 3
*
* v = x2.get( 2, 0, 0 );
* // returns 1
*
* v = x2.get( 2, 1, 1 );
* // returns 4
*
* @example
* var zeros = require( '@stdlib/ndarray/zeros' );
*
* var x = zeros( [ 2, 2 ] );
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var y = zeros( [ 4, 2 ] );
* // returns <ndarray>
*
* var out = broadcastArrays( [ x, y ] );
* // throws <Error>
*/
function broadcastArrays( arrays ) {
var shapes;
var out;
var sh;
var N;
var i;
N = arrays.length;
// Resolve the list of shapes...
shapes = [];
for ( i = 0; i < N; i++ ) {
shapes.push( getShape( arrays[ i ], false ) );
}
// Broadcast the shapes to a common shape:
sh = broadcastShapes( shapes );
if ( sh === null ) {
throw new Error( 'invalid arguments. Input arrays must be broadcast compatible.' );
}
// Broadcast each array to the common shape...
out = [];
for ( i = 0; i < N; i++ ) {
out.push( broadcastArray( arrays[ i ], sh ) );
}
return out;
}
// EXPORTS //
module.exports = broadcastArrays;
``` |
The Port Royal Railroad was a South Carolina railroad that was constructed following the American Civil War. The line was chartered in 1856 but wasn't built until 1870. By 1871, it ran from Port Royal, South Carolina, to Yemassee, South Carolina. It was extended to Augusta, Georgia in 1873. That same year, the company declared bankruptcy and was sold to the new Port Royal and Augusta Railway in 1878.
Although the railroad's ownership changed hands several times over the years of its operation, the physical railroad was in continuous operation until 2006, when the Port of Port Royal was finally closed by the State of South Carolina. In 2009, ownership of the railroad right-of-way was transferred to the Beaufort-Jasper Water and Sewer Authority and was officially decommissioned. BJWSA began removing the rails in 2010 to prepare for water & sewer infrastructure and the creation of a rail trail. Portions of the Spanish Moss Trail opened to the public in 2012.
See also
Port Royal and Augusta Railway
Charleston and Western Carolina Railway
Spanish Moss Trail
References
External links
Port Royal to Yemasee, SC (Abandoned Railroads)
Defunct South Carolina railroads
Defunct Georgia (U.S. state) railroads
Railway companies established in 1870
Railway companies disestablished in 1878 |
Andover Guildhall is a municipal building in the High Street, Andover, Hampshire, England. The guildhall, which was the headquarters of Andover Borough Council, is a Grade II* listed building.
History
The first guildhall in Andover was built in around 1513 and remodelled in 1574. By the early 19th century it had become dilapidated and civic leaders decided to erect a more substantial structure on the same site. The new building was designed in the neoclassical style, built in ashlar stone and was completed in 1825. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with five bays facing south down the High Street; the central section of three bays, which slightly projected forward and was rusticated, featured three round headed openings on the ground floor and three sash windows on the first floor flanked by Doric order columns supporting an entablature, a frieze and a large pediment. The frieze featured circular decorations above the columns and also recorded the date of completion. At roof level, there was originally a central clock tower but the clock was later moved to the centre of the pediment.
In November 1830, during the Swing Riots, a group of 300 protesting agricultural labourers set off from the Angel Inn in Andover for Taskers Foundry at Upper Clatford where they destroyed much of the machinery: the foundry must have recovered because the floor in the guildhall was strengthened with iron columns from the foundry in 1834. The town hall was again at the centre of a riot in 1914, when magistrates imprisoned a teenager, Phyllis Beckenham, and her mother for non-payment of fines after, against the wishes of the court, she had accosted a shopkeeper, the supposed father of her child: a group of some 2,000 protestors, who supported the teenager, ransacked many of the shops in the High Street.
During the First World War, recruitment rallies took place outside the town hall to attract potential soldiers for Kitchener's Army. A war memorial, designed by Captain Herbert Cowley to commemorate the lives of local service personnel who had died in the First World War, was unveiled in front of the guildhall by the Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire, Major General J. E. B. Seely, on 5 May 1920. In preparation for an expansion scheme, which did not ultimately proceed, the war memorial was relocated to St Mary's Churchyard in 1956.
The guildhall continued to serve as the headquarters of Andover Borough Council for much of the 20th century. In 1947 Andover Borough Council bought a large house called Beech Park on Weyhill Road to serve as its main offices, but continued to hold its meetings at the guildhall. In 1974 Andover Borough Council merged with other nearby authorities to become Test Valley District Council (renamed Test Valley Borough Council in 1976). Test Valley Borough Council has its main offices in a modern building at Beech Park, built in 1990 on the site of the old house. However, full council meetings are not held at Beech Park, but alternately at Andover Guildhall and in Romsey, the other main town in Test Valley. Andover Guildhall is also used for some meetings of Andover Town Council.
A petition was launched in around 2014 to move the war memorial back in front of the guildhall where it would be more visible but, after several debates over the issue, the council announced that it had no plans to resturn the memorial to its original position. The ground floor of the town hall was converted for use as a restaurant in 2010 but the main assembly hall on the first floor, known as the Upper Guildhall, remains available for community use.
References
Government buildings completed in 1825
City and town halls in Hampshire
Andover, Hampshire
Grade II* listed buildings in Hampshire |
```inno setup
function stringtoversion(var temp: String): Integer;
var
part: String;
pos1: Integer;
begin
if (Length(temp) = 0) then begin
Result := -1;
Exit;
end;
pos1 := Pos('.', temp);
if (pos1 = 0) then begin
Result := StrToInt(temp);
temp := '';
end else begin
part := Copy(temp, 1, pos1 - 1);
temp := Copy(temp, pos1 + 1, Length(temp));
Result := StrToInt(part);
end;
end;
function compareinnerversion(var x, y: String): Integer;
var
num1, num2: Integer;
begin
num1 := stringtoversion(x);
num2 := stringtoversion(y);
if (num1 = -1) or (num2 = -1) then begin
Result := 0;
Exit;
end;
if (num1 < num2) then begin
Result := -1;
end else if (num1 > num2) then begin
Result := 1;
end else begin
Result := compareinnerversion(x, y);
end;
end;
function compareversion(versionA, versionB: String): Integer;
var
temp1, temp2: String;
begin
temp1 := versionA;
temp2 := versionB;
Result := compareinnerversion(temp1, temp2);
end;
``` |
This is a list of college athletics programs in the U.S. state of Delaware.
NCAA
Division I
Division II
NJCAA
See also
List of NCAA Division I institutions
List of NCAA Division II institutions
List of NCAA Division III institutions
List of NAIA institutions
List of USCAA institutions
List of NCCAA institutions
Delaware
College athletic programs
College sports in Delaware
College athletic programs |
W. A. Porter Collegiate Institute, officially known as the Scarborough Academy of Technological, Environmental and Computer Studies @ W. A. Porter Collegiate Institute (SATEC, SATEC @ W. A. Porter C.I., WAPCI, W. A. Porter or Porter) is a secondary school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the Clairlea neighbourhood of the former suburb of Scarborough. The school provides grades 9-12 as part of the Toronto District School Board, formerly part of the Scarborough Board of Education.
Founded in 1958, the school program combines academics with in-depth applications of technology, computer and environmental studies. SATEC is an enriched science, technology, engineering and mathematics focused school. It is consistently ranked #1 in Toronto for Technological Studies, and within the top three for Math and Science. Porter's motto is Vincit qui se Vincit which means "He conquers who conquers himself".
History
Located on 14.9 acres of land, W. A. Porter Collegiate Institute had its cornerstone laid and constructed in 1957 and opened for classes on September 9, 1958 to serve the south-west area of Scarborough as the city's fifth collegiate. The building was designed by the Toronto-based architectural firm Carter, Coleman and Rankin Associates.
The school's namesake, William Arnot Porter (1893-1956) began teaching in 1922 at Scarborough High School as a science teacher, specializing in the science of agriculture. He became the school's principal in 1954, and continued his lifelong work until his death in 1956. The school's founding principal was J. Ross Stevenson who served a year at Porter until he was transferred to the new David and Mary Thomson Collegiate Institute in 1959.
By 1961, the swimming pool was added. Additions were made in subsequent years.
With enrolment numbers dwindling, the SBE considered closing either Porter or Midland Avenue Collegiate Institute. However, instead, it was decided that at the start of the 1997–98 school year, W. A. Porter Collegiate was designated as the Scarborough Academy of Technological, Environmental and Computer Studies by the SBE, although the original name continues to exist. As of the 2000–01 academic year, Porter's attendance area was expanded after Midland closed that June. Since then, Porter's enrolment has rapidly increased.
The school celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008, coinciding with the PEO Engineering Education Conference of the same year.
In 2010, Porter C.I. became a certified, platinum Eco-School of the TDSB.
Porter has a range of specialized programs like MST (Math and Science Technology), Cisco, High Skills Major, and many more.
It celebrated its 60th anniversary in 2018.
Porter's feeder schools are Clairlea Public School, Danforth Gardens Public School, General Brock Public School and Regent Heights Public School
Overview
Admissions to SATEC @ Porter Collegiate are competitive and based on three factors: the entrance test, which is held each December, the student's Ontario grade 7 final report card, and the extra-curricular and leadership supplementary application. Along with this, applicants must bring a $10 fee and photo identification to the test. Students are ranked based on all three factors, and those at the top of the ranking are admitted first, whereas students who are not accepted may be placed on a waiting list if deemed necessary by school administration. The school allows re-applying for admissions up until grade 9.
SATEC/Porter is regarded as a magnet school by the school board because of its strong technology program and its policies. It is a CISCO regional academy with certification in CISCO Networking and A+ Computer Service Technician Certification for the senior program. It has been named “Best For Technology” every year since 2006 among the secondary schools of Toronto. Along with R. H. King Academy, it is one of the few schools to have uniform policies and to accept students out of area.
The school offers two Specialist High Skills Major (SHSM) programs: ICT (Information and Communication Technology) and the Environment. In each program, students are required to complete a set number of courses, including a two-credit co-op course, along with obtaining industry standard certification. The first graduates from SATEC/Porter with the Specialist High Skills Major accreditation were the Class of 2011.
Facility
W. A. Porter currently sits on 14.9 acres in a two-storey building. Unlike Winston Churchill Collegiate Institute and West Hill Collegiate Institute which were both designed by Harold Carter, the academic areas and gymnatorium layout are the shape of a backward letter L. Other features include a 500-seat auditorium, library resource centre, three gymnasiums, a weight room, cafeteria, technical-vocational shops and a six-lane pool located at the eastern corner of the school. There are 15 fire exits.
During the summer months, the YMCA leases out the school and operates children's camps with the school's facilities.
In January 2016, the TDSB released a list of schools which needed major repairs ranked by the province in "critical" condition. SATEC/Porter, built in 1956, was ranked 26th of 136 in the repair backlog list at 96.09%.
Athletics
In November 2012, the school hosted the reenactment of the 38th Grey Cup Mud Bowl that occurred on November 25, 1950 as part of a string of CFL festivities to commemorate the 100th Grey Cup. With generous support of corporate donors in Rona and the Toronto Argonauts, SATEC revamped its track field into a regulation-sized football stadium.
SATEC hosted its first-ever Friday night game on October 11, 2013 against David and Mary Thomson Collegiate Institute. Soon after, a selected group of players appeared on CP24 Breakfast with Nalini Sharma as Argos head coach Jim Barker demonstrated the fundamental runs and tackles of the sport.
In June 2023, the school's boys varsity soccer team were crowned TDSSAA City Champions with a win against Richview, and represented the TDSB in the 2023 OFSAA Championships in Windsor
Clubs
SATEC has many student clubs for interests such as athletics, human rights, DECA and Model United Nations. In 2012, Free the Children's Craig Kielburger donated $5000 to SATEC's VON club as a prize for their charitable initiatives.
The Student Administrative Council (SAC) is the student body in charge of all affairs between students and teachers at SATEC. It hosts new student arrival initiatives with Prefects and PAC, an annual Halloween event, and holiday festivities which include the semi-formal. SAC is also responsible for the Valentine's Day event working with the "Stop the Stigma" program to promote good mental health, the Prom, and an annual barbecue in the late spring term organized by the SAC, PAC and other groups.
See also
List of high schools in Ontario
References
External links
SATEC @ W. A. Porter Collegiate Institute
TDSB Profile
High schools in Toronto
Educational institutions established in 1958
Schools in the TDSB
1958 establishments in Ontario
Education in Scarborough, Toronto
Toronto Lands Corporation |
Antonio Pipkin (born July 19, 1995) is a Canadian football quarterback for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football at Tiffin. Pipkin has also been a member of the Arizona Cardinals (NFL), the Montreal Alouettes (CFL), the Edmonton Football Team (CFL), Toronto Argonauts (CFL), BC Lions(CFL), and Hamilton Tiger-Cats (CFL).
College career
Pipkin played quarterback for Tiffin University from 2014 to 2016. As a freshman in 2014, Pipkin completed 33 out of 54 pass attempts (61.1%) for 231-yards and one touchdown with three interceptions. In 2015, Pipkin became the Dragon's starting quarterback and finished the season with 250 completions out of 390 attempts (64.1%) for a career-high 3,227 passing yards and 32 touchdown and six interceptions in 11 games and 11 starts. He returned for his junior season in 2016 and completed 216 passes, out of 333 pass attempts (64.9%) for 2,534 passing yards. Pipkin also had 25 touchdown passes and six interceptions in 11 games and 11 starts. He finished his college career with a total of 499 pass completions, 777 pass attempts (64.2%), 58 touchdown passes, and 15 interceptions in 23 games and 23 starts.
Statistics
Professional career
Arizona Cardinals
On April 29, 2017, the Arizona Cardinals signed Pipkin as an undrafted free agent after he was not selected during the 2017 NFL Draft.
Montreal Alouettes
Pipkin was signed by the Alouettes on June 5, 2017. Pipkin made his first professional appearance on November 3, 2017, in the last week of the 2017 season. Pipkin completed only two of nine pass attempts for 14 yards. He was released June 19, 2018. He was re-signed by the team on August 6, 2018. Pipkin became the sixth Alouettes quarterback to start a game in the 2018 season (Drew Willy, Jeff Mathews, Matthew Shiltz, Vernon Adams, Johnny Manziel) when he started in the team's Week 10 match against the Edmonton Eskimos. Pipkin, who was making his first professional start, completed 14 of 25 pass attempts for 217 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Pipkin earned his first career win the following week when the Alouettes defeated the Toronto Argonauts. The Alouettes decided to stick with Pipkin as their starting quarterback despite Johnny Manziel recovering from a concussion. Pipkin struggled in Week 14, throwing four interceptions, two of which were returned for touchdowns, en route to a 32–14 defeat by the BC Lions. In the days following Head Coach Mike Sherman announced that Manziel would start in the teams Week 15 match against the Bombers. Pipkin signed a two-year contract extension with the Alouettes on October 28, 2018, and later that day played the second half of the Alouettes' second last game of the season.
Pipkin was named the Al's starting quarterback for Week 1 of the 2019 season, ahead of Vernon Adams Jr. Pipkin suffered a lower leg injury in the team's Week 1 loss to the Eskimos, and was expected to miss 4–6 weeks. He returned to action partway through the Al's Week 8 game against the Redblacks, after an injury to Vernon Adams, but Pipkin was unable to lead the team to victory, completing 8 out of 17 passes. Pipkin started in Week 9 for a still injured Adams, but was unable to lead Montreal to a win in the first ever weather shortened game. Vernon Adams returned to the starting role the following week and remained the starter for the remainder of the season while Pipkin was relegated to the third quarterback role. As a backup to Matthew Shiltz who was starting in place of a suspended Adams, Pipkin fumbled the ball on a short yardage plunge at the BC Lions 2 yard line, costing the Alouettes the game. Pipkin was released by the Alouettes on January 30, 2020. His release took effect prior to a series of off-season bonuses due to be paid totaling 23,500 CND over 4 months.
Edmonton Football Team
Pipkin was signed by the Edmonton Football Team to a one-year contract on February 13, 2020. However, the league cancelled play for the 2020 CFL season and Pipkin did not play for the team as his contract expired in 2021.
Toronto Argonauts
On February 9, 2021, the first day of free agency, Pipkin signed with the Toronto Argonauts. He served primarily as the third-string quarterback during the 2021 season, but was elevated to the backup following the trade of Nick Arbuckle to the Edmonton Elks. He started the final game of the regular season where he completed 10 of 22 pass attempts for 111 yards and one interception, but also had nine carries for 78 yards and one touchdown. He spent part of 2022 training camp with the team, but was released after the first pre-season game on May 29, 2022.
BC Lions
On May 31, 2022, it was announced that Pipkin had signed with the BC Lions. On September 10, 2022 Pipkin made his first start for the Lions. BC was defeated 31-10 by the Montreal Alouettes with Pipkin completing only 13 of 24 pass attempts for 174 yards and an interception. The Lions' starting quarterback Nathan Rourke was injured at the time, and newly acquired Vernon Adams was still being brought up to speed with the offense. He became a free agent upon the expiry of his contract on February 14, 2023.
Hamilton Tiger-Cats
On July 18, 2023, It was announced that Pipkin had been signed by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats due to the injuries of starting quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell and backup Matthew Shiltz.
Saskatchewan Roughriders
On August 13, 2023, Pipkin was traded to the Saskatchewan Roughriders in exchange for Kaare Vedvik.
CFL statistics
References
External links
Saskatchewan Roughriders bio
Living people
1995 births
American football quarterbacks
Canadian football quarterbacks
American players of Canadian football
Montreal Alouettes players
Sportspeople from Gary, Indiana
Players of American football from Gary, Indiana
American emigrants to Canada
Arizona Cardinals players
Tiffin Dragons football players
Toronto Argonauts players
BC Lions players
Saskatchewan Roughriders players |
Locrian & Christoph Heemann is a collaborative album between drone rock band Locrian and Christoph Heemann. It was released on September 18, 2012 on Handmade Birds.
Track listing
Personnel
André Foisy – electric guitar, 12-string guitar
Terence Hannum – vocals, organ, synthesizer, piano
Steven Hess—drums, tape
Christoph Heemann - synthesizer, electronics
Production
Jason Ward - mastering
Sean Dack - artwork
Greg Norman - recording
Mike Hagler - recording
References
External links
2012 collaborative albums
Locrian (band) albums |
Alfonso Martinez is a Belizean taekwondo martial artist residing in Taiwan. He represented Belize at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Olympic taekwondo practitioners for Belize
Taekwondo practitioners at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Belizean male taekwondo practitioners
Taekwondo practitioners at the 2007 Pan American Games
Pan American Games competitors for Belize |
Lieutenant-Général () in France, was a title and rank across various military and security institutions with history dating back well beyond the 18th century. The official historic succession of the "Lieutenant-Général of France" corresponded to Général de division for the French Army, and Vice-Amiral (Vice-Admiral) for the French Navy.
While the French Navy's equivalent of a Lieutenant General is a Vice-Admiral, the equivalent of today's Lieutenant-Général in the French Armed Forces would be partially that of Général de corps d'armée (), such was due to the fact that the concept of an Army Corps () wasn't adopted first until 19 November 1873, by a Presidential Decree, and the actual rank of Général de corps d'armée was not officially formed until a Law Decree on 6 June 1939.
For the French Army and French Navy during the Ancien Régime, the rank corresponded to Lieutenant Général des armées ("Lieutenant-General of the Armies") for land forces, and to Lieutenant général des Armées navales ("Lieutenant-General of the Naval Armies") for the Navy. Originally, two positions were created, one for the Levant Fleet in 1652 and one for the Flotte du Ponant in 1654.
History of the rank in France
In France, under the Ancien Régime, the Restoration () and July Monarchy, several officers carried the title of Lieutenant-General (). Within a general context, the title designated the individual who was delegated all the powers of authority on behalf of the person who he was supposed to replace.
Province Lieutenant-General
The Province Lieutenant-General () was a personage, often issued from high aristocracy, and who represented the King in the provinces of the Kingdom. His role was theoretically resumed to the assurance locum status of the Governor. Accordingly, the Kings would hope that their influence would get neutralized simultaneously, preventing any sort of tentative revolt. The charge function of the lieutenant-general became in the 17th century and specially in the 18th century, purely an honorific title: The individual bearing this title would reside in the Cour de France () and would contempt to earn income without actual real work. In addition, the Kings had the tendency to nominate the sons which were heir to their fathers, a hereditary system which made the offices of the lieutenant-general strictly part of the patrimony of aristocratic families.
One should not mix the office of the lieutenant-general with that of the Lieutenant of the King (). The Lieutenant of the King was subordinated to the Lieutenant-General and his role (within a similar framework: represented the King in the provinces) was only upheld with very limited functions.
Lieutenant-General Bailliage
The Lieutenant-General Baillage (Baillage () or Sénéchaussée () - Bailliage : designated both a territorial entity (administrative, financial or legal circumscription) and the charge officer of that function, designated as Bailli) was the name which referred to the Grand-Judge (), charged with replacing temporarily the Bailli () and Sénéchal () in relation to legal cases.
Lieutenant-General of the Police
The title of Lieutenant-General of the Police () under the Ancien Régime was established in 1667, at Paris, to assure and maintain order. As of 1699, other Police Lieutenant-Generals were established in other grand cities in France.
Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom
The title of Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom referred to a temporary function which the Kings, in circumstances of crises, invested all their power in them to exercise their will or part of their royal authority.
Charged with this function were:
Charles V of France, from 1356 to 1358 during the captivity of his father John II of France in England,
Charles VII of France, in 1417 was nominated to Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom at age 14, to replace his father King Charles VI of France who became Mad,
Charles de Melun, Grand Master of France who filled the function of the Constable of France, decapitated on the place of Marché in Petit-Andely on 20 August 1468,
Francis, Duke of Guise from 1558 to 1560,
Henry III of France in 1567,
Charles, Duke of Mayenne in 1589,
Cardinal Armand Jean du Plessis, Duke of Richelieu and Fronsac in 1629,
Joseph Bonaparte, Lieutenant-General of the Empire in 1814,
The Count of Artois in 1814,
The Duke of Orléans on 31 July 1830, who assured the régence to count from 2 August, before being proclaimed King of the French under the name of Louis Philippe I on 9 August 1830.
Lieutenant-General of the Armies
The rank of Lieutenant-General of the Armies for the Army, and Lieutenant-General of the Naval Armies for the French Navy, was an elevated rank in the military hierarchy of the Ancien Régime, inaccessible to a commoner. It was junior only to the Marshals of France () and Colonel-Generals of France (), for the French Army, and the Admirals of France () and Vice-Admirals of France (), for the Navy, not titles of military rank (), but Great Officers of the Crown of France (), a dignity both honorific and lucrative. The rank of Lieutenant-General of France was the succeeding equivalent rank of a général de division and the Lieutenant-General of the Naval Armies the succeeding equivalent of a Vice-Admiral of the actual époque.
The ranks of Lieutenant-General of the Armies were renamed as Général de Division and Vice-Amiral (Vice-Admiral) in 1791. In 1814, the rank of Général de division was renamed as Lieutenant-General of the Armies, before definitely being referred to as Général officer corps in 1848. The rank of Général de corps d'armée wasn't officially adopted until 1939, along with 5 other French Armed Forces ranks which included 1 Général d'armée rank, 2 Aerial general officer ranks of the French Air Force and 2 Admiral ranks of the French Navy.
See also
Governor (Les Invalides, France)
Major (France)
Ranks in the French Army
Ranks in the French Navy
Ranks in the National Gendarmerie
Ranks in the French Air Force
Ranks in the National Police
Sources and references
Notes
Citations
References
Jean-Luc Messager, La Légion étrangère 175 ans d'histoire (The French Foreign Legion 175 years of History), édition EPA Hachette livre, 2007
Military ranks of France |
The 2018 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1 was the 118th version of the annual, English rugby union, County Championship organised by the Rugby Football Union (RFU) for the top tier English counties. Each county drew its players from rugby union clubs from the third tier and below of the English rugby union league system (typically National League 1, National League 2 North or National League 2 South). The counties were divided into two regional sections (each divided into two pools, for a total of four) with the winners of each meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. Lancashire are the reigning champions having defeated Cornwall in the previous year's final.
Once again Lancashire finished as winners of the northern group stage with a 100% record to qualify for their second successive final, although group runners-up Yorkshire could feel aggrieved as they also had a 100% record, but lost out on points for/against. It showcased a real weakness in the new competition format as neither county had faced each other over the past two years, despite being the best sides in the northern group. Lancashire were joined by Hertfordshire who took advantage of a slip-up by Gloucestershire at Surrey to win the southern group and cement their place in the final - the county's first since 2012. By contrast last season's finalists Cornwall had a dire campaign, managing only one draw in their three games and finishing bottom of their group. Unlike Yorkshire, Cornwall can thank the RFU for the new format as promotion/relegation is over two seasons, saving Cornwall from the drop due to their excellent tournament the previous season.
In the Twickenham final Lancashire finished as deserving champions beating Hertfordshire 32-16, with 22 points coming from the boot Chris Johnson who also finished as the competition's top points scorer, while a try from his team-mate, Anthony Bingham, made him the top try scorer with 5 tries. It was the 25th cup win for a Lancashire side that has dominated the competition through its history. Relegated sides from the 2018 competition included East Midlands from the north and Surrey from the south. In Surrey's case they had actually looked safe, having finished a point clear of relegation rivals, Devon, but ultimately went down due to a 2 points deduction for fielding an ineligible player in their 15-15 draw with Cornwall earlier in the campaign. In East Midlands case they actually finished 3rd overall in the northern group competition over the two seasons but decided to take voluntary relegation due to difficulties in getting the top eligible clubs in their union to provide players for future competitions. Both East Midlands and Surrey will play in the 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2 next season.
Competition format
The 2018 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1 consists of twelve county sides, with six counties in the northern group, and six in the southern group. Each county plays three games per group, which means that some counties get two home games, and the others just the one home game. The RFU have taken fixtures from the previous year into account so that county sides that only played one home game in that competition now get two games and vice versa. At the end of the group stage the top teams with the best record from each group (north and south) advance to the final held on 27 May 2018 at Twickenham Stadium.
A continuation from the 2017 competition is that promotion/relegation occurs every two seasons instead of one, with points accumulated over the two seasons (2017 and 2018) taken into consideration. The two lowest ranked counties (one from the north/one from the south) will be relegated into the 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2 competition, with the two highest aggregate ranked sides of that tournament being promoted to take their place.
Participating Counties and ground locations
Group stage
Division 1 North
Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Division 1 South
Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Final
Relegation aggregate table
In order to determine relegation to the 2019 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 2, results from the 2017 and 2018 competitions will be combined, with the lowest ranked team from each group being relegated.
Total season attendances
Does not include final at Twickenham which is a neutral venue and involves teams from all three county divisions on the same day
Individual statistics
Note that points scorers includes tries as well as conversions, penalties and drop goals. Appearance figures also include coming on as substitutes (unused substitutes not included). Statistics also include final.
Top points scorers
Top try scorers
Competition records
Team
Largest home win — 50 points
50 - 0 Hertfordshire at home to Cornwall on 19 May 2018
Largest away win — 44 points
64 - 20 Lancashire away to Northumberland on 5 May 2018
Most points scored — 64 points (2)
Lancashire away to Northumberland on 5 May 2018
Lancashire at home to Cheshire on 19 May 2018
Most tries in a match — 10
Lancashire away to Northumberland on 5 May 2018
Most conversions in a match — 8
Lancashire at home to Cheshire on 19 May 2018
Lancashire at home to Eastern Counties on 12 May 2018
Most penalties in a match — 5
Lancashire versus Hertfordshire at Twickenham on 27 May 2018
Most drop goals in a match — 1
Lancashire versus Hertfordshire at Twickenham on 27 May 2018
Attendances
Highest — 1,515
Cornwall at home to Devon on 12 May 2018
Lowest — 150
Northumberland at home to East Midlands on 19 May 2018
Highest Average Attendance — 1,183
Cornwall
Lowest Average Attendance — 163
Kent
Player
Most points in a match — 22
Chris Johnson for Lancashire versus Hertfordshire at Twickenham on 27 May 2018
Most tries in a match — 3
Anthony Bingham for Lancashire at home to Cheshire on 19 May 2018
Most conversions in a match — 8
Chris Johnson for Lancashire at home to Cheshire on 19 May 2018
Most penalties in a match — 5
Chris Johnson for Lancashire versus Hertfordshire at Twickenham on 27 May 2018
Most drop goals in a match — 1
Chris Johnson for Lancashire versus Hertfordshire at Twickenham on 27 May 2018
Notes
See also
English rugby union system
Rugby union in England
References
External links
NCA Rugby
2018 |
Código F.A.M.A. is the first reality television show for children in Mexico.
Format
From thousands of auditions, 40 (in season 1), 16 (season 2), 17 (season 3) children are chosen to form the first "phase" of the show, which is called "Código Bronce" or "Code Bronze".
In the second phase, the finalists — 8 (season 1), 6 (seasons 2 and 3) — are revealed. The second phase is called "Código Plata" or "Code Silver".
The third and final phase is reached as a winner is announced and this level is known as "Código Oro" or "Code Gold".
Every participant who reaches a certain "code" receives a medal of the respective metal, i.e., bronze, silver or gold.
Season 1: Código F.A.M.A.
Winner: Código Oro (Code Gold)
Miguel Martinez"
Finalists: Código Plata (Code Silver)
2nd place: Adán Nieves
3rd place: Gladys Gallegos
4th place: Sergio Guerrero
5th place: Diego Boneta (then credited as Diego González)
6th place: Xitlali Rodríguez
7th place: María Chacón
8th place: Jesús Zavala
Alegríjes y Rebujos
The winner, Miguel Martínez, went on to star in the Mexican soap opera Alegrijes y Rebujos", along with seven others from the final group of eight (María Chacón, Jesús Zavala, Diego González, Nora Cano, Michelle Álvarez, Antonio Hernández and Allisson Lozano). The soap opera was a success, as were the two soundtrack albums that were released from the show. All eight of the actors continued to perform as a musical group with the same name as the soap opera. They toured Mexico and were also involved in the second season of Código F.A.M.A..
Season 2: Código F.A.M.A. 2
Winner: Código Oro (Code Gold)Jonathan BecerraFinalists: Código Plata (Code Silver)
2nd place: Marijose Salazar
3rd place: Jorge Escobedo
4th place: Alex Rivera
5th place: Brissia Mayagoitia
6th place: J. Sergio Ortiz Pérez
Eliminated: Código Bronce (Code Bronze)
7th: José Alberto Inzunza
8th: Anhuar Escalante
9th: Elisabet Martínez Saldívar
10th: Claudia Ledón Olguín
11th: Paula Gutierrez D'Esesarte
12th: Viviana Ramos Macouzet
13th: María Fernanda González
14th: Israel Salas Hernández
15th: Ricardo Lorenzo Balderas
16th: Mónica López Alonso
Misión S.O.S.
The winner went on to star in the novela Misión S.O.S. with three other contestants (Marijose Salazar, Alex Rivera and Anhuar Escalante). Also appearing were contestants from the first season of Código FAMA, including Miguel Martínez (the winner) and Gladys Gallegos in her first TV role. The novela was also a success. They also kept a group with the same name as the novela, toured Mexico and released a soundtrack with original music made for the telenovela.
Season 3: Código F.A.M.A. 3
Winner: Código Oro (Code Gold)Adriana AhumadaFinalists: Código Plata (Code Silver)
Miguel Jiménez
Fernanda Jiménez
Rodrigo Salas
Eliminated: Código Bronce (Code Bronze)
Jesús Trejo
Alann Mora
Evelin Acosta
Maritza Barraza
Joel Bernal
Cecilia Camacho
Ricardo Ceceña
Estefania Contreras
Mariana Dávila
Iván Félix
Juan José Huerta
Alejandra Leza
Mónica López
Claritze Rodríguez
Joel Bernal
La Fea Más Bella
Unlike the previous winners, there was not a children's telenovela starring Adriana Ahumada. She had a small role in the telenovela by the same producer of the show. She played the daughter of Lola, who is a part of Letty's "Ugly Squad". Also appearing were Miguel Jiménez and Fernanda Jiménez, who also had small roles in La Fea Más Bella, as the son of Paula María and the daughter of Martha (Paula and Martha are also part of Letty's "Ugly Squad").
The winner of Codigo F.A.M.A. International, Elizabeth Suarez, was the only one that could not participate in La fea mas bella because she was living in Dominican Republic. She was supposed to make a soap opera in Mexico, but the project never continued.
International: Código F.A.M.A. Internacional
This fourth installment began immediately after CF3 concluded. Twenty participants, representing Latin American countries, the United States and Spain, were brought to Mexico to compete for the Code Diamond prize: a recording/acting contract, a music tour of all the twenty participating countries, and scholarships.
Winner: Código Diamante (Code Diamond)
Elizabeth María Suárez Rosario''', Dominican Republic
Finalists
2nd place: Felipe Morales Saez, Chile
3rd place: Fabiola Rodas Valladare, Guatemala
4th place: Priscila Alcántara Fonseca, Brazil
5th place: Miguel Darío Narváez Romero, Paraguay
Semi-finalists
Laura Natalia Esquivel, Argentina
Oscar Mario Paz Hurtado, Bolivia
Steve Alberto Cabrera Ortega, Ecuador
Daniela Hernández, El Salvador
Gabriel Morales, United States
Eliminated participants
Adriana Ahumada, Mexico
Jessie Gabriela Flores Madrid, Honduras
Lucila María Morena Arana, Nicaragua
Kevin Alberca Alarcón, Peru
Erika Lisbeth Loaiza Ramírez, Colombia
Génesis Díaz Bejarano, Costa Rica
Javier Vidal Martínez, Spain
Nallybeth Araúz Martínez, Panama
Nicolás Aquino Goicoechea, Uruguay
Asly D'Janine Toro Álvarez, Venezuela
Telenovela
The winner, Elizabeth María Suárez Rosario, has yet to appear in a TV part or record an album.
Mexican reality television series
Singing talent shows |
In 783, (姚令言), jiedushi of Jingyuan, and his 5,000 troops arrived in Chang'an (Xi'an, Shaanxi) on their way to fight Lǐ Xīliè (李希烈) in Henan. The troops mutinied in reaction to the poor treatment they had received, forcing Tang Dezong to flee Chang'an. After installing Zhū Cí (朱泚), an ousted general, as emperor, the rebels were defeated by Lǐ Shèng (李晟) in 784.
References
Mutinies
Rebellions in the Tang dynasty
783
Military history of Shaanxi |
Giurgeni is a commune located on the left bank of the Danube, in Ialomița County, Muntenia, Romania. It is composed of a single village, Giurgeni.
Giurgeni is linked with Vadu Oii–Hârșova over the Danube via the Giurgeni–Vadu Oii Bridge.
The ruins of Orașul de Floci, a lost city of Wallachia, are located near Giurgeni, at the confluence of the Ialomița River and the Danube, on the old riverbed of the Ialomița.
References
External links
Communes in Ialomița County
Localities in Muntenia |
157001–157100
|-bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157001 || || — || July 24, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=002 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157002 || || — || July 24, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=003 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157003 || || — || July 24, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=004 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157004 || || — || July 25, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=005 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157005 || || — || August 3, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=006 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157006 || || — || August 19, 2003 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=007 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157007 || || — || August 20, 2003 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=008 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157008 || || — || August 21, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=009 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157009 || || — || August 22, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=010 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157010 || || — || August 21, 2003 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=011 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157011 || || — || August 22, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || EOS || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=012 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157012 || || — || August 22, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || THM || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=013 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157013 || || — || August 22, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=014 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157014 || || — || August 23, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || Tj (2.87) || align=right | 11 km ||
|-id=015 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157015 Walterstraube || || || August 25, 2003 || Drebach || A. Knöfel, G. Lehmann || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=016 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157016 || || — || August 23, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=017 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157017 || || — || August 23, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=018 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157018 || || — || August 23, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=019 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157019 || || — || August 23, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.4 km ||
|-id=020 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157020 Fertőszentmiklós || || || August 26, 2003 || Piszkéstető || K. Sárneczky, B. Sipőcz || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=021 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157021 || || — || August 25, 2003 || Reedy Creek || J. Broughton || EOS || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=022 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157022 || || — || August 24, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || TIR || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=023 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157023 || || — || August 22, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=024 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157024 || || — || August 25, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || TIR || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=025 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157025 || || — || August 25, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || HIL3:2 || align=right | 13 km ||
|-id=026 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157026 || || — || August 28, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=027 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157027 || || — || August 30, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=028 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157028 || || — || August 31, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || 7:4 || align=right | 7.6 km ||
|-id=029 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157029 || || — || August 31, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=030 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157030 || || — || August 31, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 6.4 km ||
|-id=031 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157031 || || — || August 31, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || EOS || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=032 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157032 || || — || September 1, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || TIR || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=033 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157033 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=034 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157034 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=035 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157035 || || — || September 17, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 7.6 km ||
|-id=036 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157036 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || HYG || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=037 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157037 || || — || September 17, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=038 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157038 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=039 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157039 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.2 km ||
|-id=040 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157040 || || — || September 19, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 6.4 km ||
|-id=041 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157041 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.1 km ||
|-id=042 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157042 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 7.0 km ||
|-id=043 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157043 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || HYG || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=044 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157044 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=045 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157045 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=046 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157046 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=047 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157047 || || — || September 19, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=048 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157048 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=049 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157049 || || — || September 16, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 8.2 km ||
|-id=050 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157050 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=051 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157051 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=052 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157052 || || — || September 19, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || MEL || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=053 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157053 || || — || September 18, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.1 km ||
|-id=054 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157054 || || — || September 20, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || HYG || align=right | 7.1 km ||
|-id=055 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157055 || || — || September 17, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=056 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157056 || || — || September 19, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=057 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157057 || || — || September 19, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=058 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157058 || || — || September 21, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.4 km ||
|-id=059 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157059 || || — || September 22, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=060 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157060 || || — || September 21, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || 7:4 || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=061 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157061 || || — || September 26, 2003 || Desert Eagle || W. K. Y. Yeung || THM || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=062 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157062 || || — || September 25, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=063 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157063 || || — || September 24, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=064 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157064 Sedona || || || September 26, 2003 || Kleť || KLENOT || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=065 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157065 || || — || September 24, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=066 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157066 || || — || September 26, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || THM || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=067 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157067 || || — || September 26, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=068 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157068 || || — || September 29, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || THM || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=069 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157069 || || — || September 17, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=070 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157070 || || — || September 26, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || ALA || align=right | 8.7 km ||
|-id=071 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157071 || || — || October 1, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=072 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157072 || || — || October 18, 2003 || Kingsnake || J. V. McClusky || EOS || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=073 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157073 || || — || October 19, 2003 || Goodricke-Pigott || R. A. Tucker || 7:4 || align=right | 7.5 km ||
|-id=074 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157074 || || — || October 16, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || EUP || align=right | 9.2 km ||
|-id=075 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157075 || || — || October 27, 2003 || Haleakala || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.7 km ||
|-id=076 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157076 || || — || October 29, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || 3:2 || align=right | 8.0 km ||
|-id=077 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157077 || || — || October 16, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || HYG || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=078 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157078 || || — || November 18, 2003 || Palomar || NEAT || 7:4 || align=right | 6.2 km ||
|-id=079 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157079 || || — || November 19, 2003 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || H || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=080 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157080 || || — || December 17, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || H || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=081 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157081 || || — || December 28, 2003 || Socorro || LINEAR || H || align=right data-sort-value="0.92" | 920 m ||
|-id=082 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157082 || || — || February 11, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.96" | 960 m ||
|-id=083 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157083 || || — || February 14, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || H || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=084 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157084 || || — || February 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || H || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=085 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157085 || || — || March 12, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=086 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157086 || || — || March 15, 2004 || Desert Eagle || W. K. Y. Yeung || — || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=087 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157087 || || — || March 15, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || H || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=088 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157088 || || — || March 13, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=089 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157089 || || — || March 14, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=090 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157090 || || — || March 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.98" | 980 m ||
|-id=091 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157091 || || — || March 16, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=092 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157092 || || — || March 22, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=093 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157093 || || — || April 12, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=094 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157094 || || — || April 17, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=095 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157095 || || — || April 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=096 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157096 || || — || April 20, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=097 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157097 || || — || April 24, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=098 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157098 || || — || April 25, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.79" | 790 m ||
|-id=099 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157099 || || — || April 26, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || PHO || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=100 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157100 || || — || May 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.97" | 970 m ||
|}
157101–157200
|-bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157101 || || — || May 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=102 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157102 || || — || May 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.99" | 990 m ||
|-id=103 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157103 || || — || May 11, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.95" | 950 m ||
|-id=104 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157104 || || — || May 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=105 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157105 || || — || May 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=106 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157106 || || — || May 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=107 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157107 || || — || May 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=108 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157108 || || — || June 12, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=109 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157109 || || — || June 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=110 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157110 || || — || June 10, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || FLO || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=111 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157111 || || — || June 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=112 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157112 || || — || June 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=113 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157113 || || — || June 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=114 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157114 || || — || June 15, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=115 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157115 || || — || June 12, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=116 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157116 || || — || June 16, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=117 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157117 || || — || June 22, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=118 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157118 || 2004 NT || — || July 7, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=119 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157119 || || — || July 9, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=120 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157120 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=121 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157121 || || — || July 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=122 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157122 || || — || July 9, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=123 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157123 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=124 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157124 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || V || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=125 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157125 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=126 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157126 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=127 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157127 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=128 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157128 || || — || July 14, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=129 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157129 || || — || July 14, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=130 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157130 || || — || July 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || INO || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=131 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157131 || || — || July 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=132 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157132 || || — || July 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=133 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157133 || || — || July 9, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=134 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157134 || 2004 OR || — || July 17, 2004 || 7300 Observatory || W. K. Y. Yeung || EUT || align=right data-sort-value="0.79" | 790 m ||
|-id=135 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157135 || || — || July 16, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=136 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157136 || || — || July 16, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=137 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157137 || || — || July 16, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=138 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157138 || || — || July 17, 2004 || Reedy Creek || J. Broughton || ERI || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=139 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157139 || || — || July 25, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=140 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157140 || || — || July 25, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=141 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157141 Sopron || || || August 6, 2004 || Piszkéstető || K. Sárneczky, T. Szalai || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=142 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157142 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Reedy Creek || J. Broughton || NYS || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=143 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157143 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Reedy Creek || J. Broughton || NYS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=144 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157144 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || MRX || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=145 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157145 || || — || August 3, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=146 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157146 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=147 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157147 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=148 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157148 || || — || August 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || 628 || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=149 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157149 || || — || August 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=150 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157150 || || — || August 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=151 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157151 || || — || August 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=152 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157152 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || NYS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=153 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157153 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=154 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157154 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || MAS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=155 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157155 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || MAR || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=156 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157156 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=157 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157157 || || — || August 5, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=158 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157158 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=159 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157159 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=160 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157160 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=161 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157161 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=162 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157162 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || AGN || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=163 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157163 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=164 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157164 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=165 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157165 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || SUL || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=166 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157166 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=167 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157167 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=168 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157168 || || — || August 6, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.96" | 960 m ||
|-id=169 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157169 || || — || August 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || MAS || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=170 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157170 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=171 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157171 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=172 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157172 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=173 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157173 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=174 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157174 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=175 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157175 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=176 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157176 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=177 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157177 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=178 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157178 || || — || August 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=179 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157179 || || — || August 11, 2004 || Consell || Consell Obs. || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=180 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157180 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=181 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157181 || || — || August 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=182 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157182 || || — || August 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || ALA || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=183 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157183 || || — || August 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=184 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157184 || || — || August 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=185 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157185 || || — || August 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=186 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157186 || || — || August 11, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.96" | 960 m ||
|-id=187 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157187 || || — || August 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 10 km ||
|-id=188 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157188 || || — || August 12, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || JUN || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=189 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157189 || || — || August 15, 2004 || Campo Imperatore || CINEOS || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.99" | 990 m ||
|-id=190 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157190 || || — || August 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=191 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157191 || || — || August 20, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || EUN || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=192 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157192 || || — || August 19, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || EMA || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=193 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157193 || || — || August 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=194 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157194 Saddlemyer || || || August 21, 2004 || Mauna Kea || D. D. Balam || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=195 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157195 || || — || August 22, 2004 || Goodricke-Pigott || Goodricke-Pigott Obs. || EOS || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=196 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157196 || || — || August 25, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || ERI || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=197 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157197 || || — || August 20, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=198 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157198 || || — || September 4, 2004 || Needville || J. Dellinger, A. Lowe || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=199 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157199 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Goodricke-Pigott || Goodricke-Pigott Obs. || KOR || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=200 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157200 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Goodricke-Pigott || Goodricke-Pigott Obs. || WIT || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|}
157201–157300
|-bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157201 || || — || September 4, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=202 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157202 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=203 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157203 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=204 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157204 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=205 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157205 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=206 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157206 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=207 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157207 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=208 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157208 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=209 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157209 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=210 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157210 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=211 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157211 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=212 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157212 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=213 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157213 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=214 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157214 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=215 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157215 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=216 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157216 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.97" | 970 m ||
|-id=217 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157217 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=218 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157218 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=219 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157219 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=220 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157220 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=221 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157221 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || SVE || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=222 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157222 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=223 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157223 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=224 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157224 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || HOF || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=225 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157225 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=226 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157226 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=227 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157227 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || HEN || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=228 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157228 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=229 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157229 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=230 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157230 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=231 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157231 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=232 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157232 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=233 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157233 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || AGN || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=234 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157234 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=235 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157235 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAR || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=236 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157236 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=237 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157237 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=238 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157238 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || GEF || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=239 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157239 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=240 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157240 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=241 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157241 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || ERI || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=242 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157242 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=243 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157243 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=244 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157244 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=245 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157245 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Goodricke-Pigott || R. A. Tucker || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=246 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157246 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=247 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157247 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=248 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157248 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.88" | 880 m ||
|-id=249 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157249 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=250 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157250 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=251 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157251 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=252 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157252 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || AGN || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=253 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157253 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=254 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157254 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=255 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157255 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=256 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157256 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=257 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157257 || || — || September 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=258 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157258 Leach || || || September 12, 2004 || Jarnac || Jarnac Obs. || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=259 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157259 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=260 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157260 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=261 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157261 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=262 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157262 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || Tj (2.95) || align=right | 7.8 km ||
|-id=263 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157263 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=264 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157264 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || EUN || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=265 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157265 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || BRA || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=266 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157266 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=267 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157267 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=268 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157268 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=269 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157269 || || — || September 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=270 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157270 || || — || September 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=271 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157271 Gurtovenko || || || September 13, 2004 || Andrushivka || G. Koval'chuk, V. Lokot' || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=272 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157272 || || — || September 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=273 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157273 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=274 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157274 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=275 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157275 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=276 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157276 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=277 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157277 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=278 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157278 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=279 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157279 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=280 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157280 || || — || September 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=281 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157281 || || — || September 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=282 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157282 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=283 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157283 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=284 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157284 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=285 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157285 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=286 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157286 || || — || September 15, 2004 || 7300 Observatory || W. K. Y. Yeung || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=287 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157287 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=288 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157288 || || — || September 10, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=289 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157289 || || — || September 12, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=290 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157290 || || — || September 12, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=291 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157291 || || — || September 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=292 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157292 || || — || September 15, 2004 || 7300 Observatory || 7300 Obs. || EOS || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=293 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157293 || || — || September 13, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=294 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157294 || || — || September 13, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=295 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157295 || || — || September 13, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || GEF || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=296 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157296 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=297 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157297 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=298 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157298 || || — || September 15, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=299 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157299 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=300 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157300 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|}
157301–157400
|-bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157301 Loreena || || || September 16, 2004 || Drebach || A. Knöfel || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=302 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157302 || || — || September 16, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HEN || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=303 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157303 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=304 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157304 || || — || September 20, 2004 || Goodricke-Pigott || R. A. Tucker || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=305 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157305 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.91" | 910 m ||
|-id=306 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157306 || || — || September 16, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=307 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157307 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=308 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157308 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=309 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157309 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=310 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157310 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || HEN || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=311 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157311 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=312 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157312 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || slow || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=313 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157313 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=314 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157314 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=315 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157315 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || THM || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=316 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157316 || || — || September 17, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=317 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157317 || || — || September 18, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=318 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157318 || || — || September 18, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=319 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157319 || || — || September 18, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=320 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157320 || || — || September 21, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=321 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157321 || || — || September 18, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=322 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157322 || || — || September 22, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || URS || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=323 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157323 || || — || September 16, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EUN || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=324 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157324 || || — || October 2, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || MAR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=325 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157325 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || EOS || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=326 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157326 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || URS || align=right | 6.2 km ||
|-id=327 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157327 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=328 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157328 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=329 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157329 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Trois-Rivières || É. J. Allen || AER || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=330 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157330 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Sonoita || W. R. Cooney Jr., J. Gross || AGN || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=331 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157331 || || — || October 11, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || GEF || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=332 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157332 Lynette || || || October 15, 2004 || Needville || D. Wells || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=333 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157333 || || — || October 3, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || MAR || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=334 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157334 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || WIT || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=335 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157335 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=336 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157336 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=337 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157337 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=338 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157338 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=339 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157339 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=340 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157340 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=341 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157341 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=342 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157342 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=343 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157343 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || NEM || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=344 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157344 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=345 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157345 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=346 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157346 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=347 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157347 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EOS || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=348 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157348 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=349 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157349 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=350 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157350 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EOS || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=351 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157351 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=352 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157352 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=353 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157353 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || GEF || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=354 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157354 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=355 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157355 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=356 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157356 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=357 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157357 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AGN || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=358 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157358 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=359 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157359 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=360 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157360 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=361 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157361 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=362 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157362 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || KOR || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=363 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157363 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=364 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157364 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=365 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157365 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=366 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157366 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || ADE || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=367 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157367 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=368 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157368 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=369 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157369 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=370 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157370 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || AGN || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=371 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157371 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=372 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157372 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.88" | 880 m ||
|-id=373 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157373 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || WIT || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=374 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157374 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=375 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157375 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || SHU3:2 || align=right | 9.2 km ||
|-id=376 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157376 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=377 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157377 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=378 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157378 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AST || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=379 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157379 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=380 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157380 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=381 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157381 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=382 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157382 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=383 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157383 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=384 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157384 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=385 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157385 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAS || align=right | 1.00 km ||
|-id=386 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157386 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=387 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157387 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=388 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157388 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=389 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157389 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MRX || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=390 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157390 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || ANF || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=391 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157391 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=392 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157392 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=393 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157393 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=394 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157394 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=395 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157395 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=396 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157396 Vansevicius || || || October 13, 2004 || Moletai || K. Černis, J. Zdanavičius || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=397 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157397 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=398 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157398 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=399 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157399 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=400 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157400 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|}
157401–157500
|-bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157401 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || ALA || align=right | 8.3 km ||
|-id=402 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157402 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=403 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157403 || || — || October 6, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || EUP || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=404 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157404 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=405 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157405 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=406 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157406 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=407 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157407 || || — || October 7, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=408 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157408 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=409 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157409 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=410 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157410 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.7 km ||
|-id=411 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157411 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=412 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157412 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=413 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157413 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=414 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157414 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=415 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157415 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=416 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157416 || || — || October 8, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=417 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157417 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=418 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157418 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=419 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157419 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || VER || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=420 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157420 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=421 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157421 Carolpercy || || || October 8, 2004 || Jarnac || T. Glinos, D. H. Levy, W. Levy || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=422 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157422 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=423 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157423 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=424 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157424 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=425 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157425 || || — || October 4, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=426 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157426 || || — || October 9, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=427 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157427 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=428 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157428 || || — || October 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AST || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=429 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157429 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=430 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157430 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=431 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157431 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=432 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157432 || || — || October 15, 2004 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || HYG || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=433 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157433 || || — || October 14, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=434 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157434 || || — || October 5, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=435 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157435 || || — || October 13, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=436 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157436 || || — || October 18, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=437 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157437 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || URS || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=438 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157438 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=439 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157439 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=440 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157440 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=441 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157441 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || AST || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=442 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157442 || || — || November 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=443 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157443 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=444 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157444 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=445 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157445 || || — || November 4, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=446 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157446 || || — || November 5, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=447 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157447 || || — || November 5, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=448 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157448 || || — || November 4, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=449 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157449 || || — || November 4, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=450 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157450 || || — || November 5, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=451 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157451 || || — || November 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=452 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157452 || || — || November 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=453 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157453 || || — || November 4, 2004 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=454 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157454 || || — || November 3, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=455 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157455 || 2004 WV || — || November 17, 2004 || Siding Spring || SSS || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=456 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157456 Pivatte || || || November 17, 2004 || Nogales || M. Ory || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=457 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157457 || || — || November 20, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=458 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157458 || || — || December 1, 2004 || Palomar || NEAT || EOS || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=459 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157459 || || — || December 8, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=460 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157460 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 8.4 km ||
|-id=461 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157461 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 7.6 km ||
|-id=462 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157462 || || — || December 7, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=463 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157463 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || VER || align=right | 5.1 km ||
|-id=464 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157464 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=465 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157465 || || — || December 9, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=466 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157466 || || — || December 11, 2004 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 7.5 km ||
|-id=467 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157467 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=468 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157468 || || — || December 10, 2004 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 13 km ||
|-id=469 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157469 || || — || January 11, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || L5 || align=right | 18 km ||
|-id=470 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157470 || || — || January 15, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 12 km ||
|-id=471 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157471 || || — || January 15, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 10 km ||
|-id=472 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157472 || || — || August 1, 2005 || Siding Spring || SSS || ADE || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=473 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157473 Emuno || 2005 QH || || August 23, 2005 || La Cañada || J. Lacruz || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=474 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157474 || || — || August 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=475 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157475 || || — || August 27, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=476 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157476 || || — || August 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=477 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157477 || || — || August 26, 2005 || Haleakala || NEAT || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=478 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157478 || || — || August 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || DOR || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=479 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157479 || || — || August 29, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=480 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157480 || || — || August 29, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || IAN || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=481 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157481 || || — || August 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.89" | 890 m ||
|-id=482 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157482 || || — || August 29, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=483 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157483 || || — || August 27, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || FLO || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=484 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157484 || || — || August 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=485 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157485 || || — || August 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=486 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157486 || || — || August 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.95" | 950 m ||
|-id=487 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157487 || || — || August 31, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EUN || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=488 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157488 || || — || August 31, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=489 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157489 || || — || August 31, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.95" | 950 m ||
|-id=490 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157490 || || — || September 8, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=491 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157491 Rüdigerkollar || || || September 8, 2005 || Radebeul || M. Fiedler || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=492 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157492 || || — || September 6, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=493 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157493 || || — || September 8, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.88" | 880 m ||
|-id=494 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157494 Durham || || || September 11, 2005 || Jarnac || Jarnac Obs. || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=495 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157495 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.92" | 920 m ||
|-id=496 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157496 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=497 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157497 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || JUN || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=498 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157498 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=499 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157499 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=500 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157500 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|}
157501–157600
|-bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157501 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.93" | 930 m ||
|-id=502 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157502 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=503 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157503 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.85" | 850 m ||
|-id=504 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157504 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.89" | 890 m ||
|-id=505 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157505 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=506 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157506 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.84" | 840 m ||
|-id=507 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157507 || || — || September 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.89" | 890 m ||
|-id=508 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157508 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=509 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157509 || || — || September 23, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=510 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157510 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=511 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157511 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.88" | 880 m ||
|-id=512 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157512 || || — || September 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || EUN || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=513 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157513 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=514 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157514 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=515 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157515 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=516 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157516 || || — || September 29, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=517 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157517 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.73" | 730 m ||
|-id=518 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157518 || || — || September 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=519 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157519 || || — || September 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=520 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157520 || || — || September 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=521 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157521 || || — || September 27, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=522 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157522 || || — || September 29, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=523 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157523 || || — || September 29, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=524 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157524 || || — || September 29, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EUT || align=right data-sort-value="0.99" | 990 m ||
|-id=525 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157525 || || — || September 29, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=526 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157526 || || — || September 30, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || ADE || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=527 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157527 || || — || September 28, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.78" | 780 m ||
|-id=528 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157528 || || — || September 30, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || H || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=529 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157529 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=530 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157530 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=531 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157531 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || NYS || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=532 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157532 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=533 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157533 Stellamarie || || || October 10, 2005 || Altschwendt || W. Ries || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=534 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157534 Siauliai || || || October 8, 2005 || Moletai || K. Černis, J. Zdanavičius || V || align=right data-sort-value="0.85" | 850 m ||
|-id=535 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157535 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=536 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157536 || || — || October 4, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=537 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157537 || || — || October 7, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=538 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157538 || || — || October 7, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=539 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157539 || || — || October 1, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=540 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157540 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Junk Bond || D. Healy || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=541 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157541 Wachter || || || October 27, 2005 || Ottmarsheim || C. Rinner || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=542 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157542 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=543 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157543 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=544 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157544 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=545 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157545 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.93" | 930 m ||
|-id=546 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157546 || || — || October 23, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=547 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157547 || || — || October 23, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=548 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157548 || || — || October 21, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=549 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157549 || || — || October 23, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || V || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=550 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157550 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.93" | 930 m ||
|-id=551 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157551 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=552 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157552 || || — || October 23, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || EOS || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=553 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157553 || || — || October 23, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=554 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157554 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=555 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157555 || || — || October 20, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=556 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157556 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=557 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157557 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=558 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157558 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=559 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157559 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=560 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157560 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=561 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157561 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=562 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157562 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=563 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157563 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || INO || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=564 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157564 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=565 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157565 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=566 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157566 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || MAR || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=567 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157567 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || EUN || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=568 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157568 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=569 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157569 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=570 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157570 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=571 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157571 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=572 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157572 || || — || October 27, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=573 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157573 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MIS || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=574 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157574 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=575 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157575 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=576 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157576 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=577 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157577 || || — || October 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=578 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157578 || || — || October 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=579 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157579 || || — || October 24, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=580 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157580 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=581 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157581 || || — || October 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.95" | 950 m ||
|-id=582 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157582 || || — || October 27, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || GEF || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=583 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157583 || || — || October 30, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || V || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=584 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157584 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=585 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157585 || || — || October 27, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=586 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157586 || || — || October 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.90" | 900 m ||
|-id=587 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157587 || || — || October 29, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=588 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157588 || || — || October 29, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=589 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157589 || || — || October 30, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=590 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157590 || || — || October 31, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || EUN || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=591 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157591 || || — || October 30, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=592 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157592 || || — || October 30, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || ADE || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=593 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157593 || || — || October 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=594 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157594 || || — || November 4, 2005 || Goodricke-Pigott || R. A. Tucker || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=595 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157595 || || — || November 1, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAR || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=596 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157596 || || — || November 3, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=597 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157597 || || — || November 3, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=598 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157598 || || — || November 1, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=599 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157599 || || — || November 6, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=600 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157600 || || — || November 7, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || V || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|}
157601–157700
|-bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157601 || || — || November 20, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=602 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157602 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || MAR || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=603 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157603 || || — || November 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=604 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157604 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=605 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157605 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AEO || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=606 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157606 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AGN || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=607 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157607 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=608 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157608 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.7 km ||
|-id=609 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157609 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=610 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157610 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=611 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157611 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=612 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157612 || || — || November 21, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=613 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157613 || || — || November 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.96" | 960 m ||
|-id=614 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157614 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=615 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157615 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=616 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157616 || || — || November 26, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.7 km ||
|-id=617 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157617 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=618 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157618 || || — || November 26, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=619 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157619 || || — || November 25, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=620 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157620 || || — || November 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=621 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157621 || || — || November 29, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=622 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157622 || || — || November 29, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=623 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157623 || || — || November 29, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=624 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157624 || || — || November 29, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=625 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157625 || || — || November 30, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=626 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157626 || || — || November 30, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=627 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157627 || || — || November 28, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=628 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157628 || || — || November 28, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=629 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157629 || || — || November 29, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=630 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157630 || || — || November 26, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=631 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157631 || || — || November 28, 2005 || Palomar || NEAT || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=632 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157632 || || — || November 28, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=633 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157633 || || — || November 26, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || HNS || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=634 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157634 || || — || November 30, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=635 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157635 || || — || November 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=636 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157636 || || — || November 30, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=637 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157637 || || — || December 6, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=638 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157638 || || — || December 4, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=639 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157639 || || — || December 4, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=640 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157640 Baumeler || || || December 1, 2006 || Marly || P. Kocher || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=641 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157641 || || — || December 8, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MIS || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=642 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157642 || || — || December 10, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=643 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157643 || || — || December 2, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=644 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157644 || || — || December 7, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=645 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157645 || || — || December 21, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || HNS || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=646 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157646 || || — || December 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=647 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157647 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=648 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157648 || || — || December 21, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=649 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157649 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=650 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157650 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=651 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157651 || || — || December 21, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.1 km ||
|-id=652 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157652 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=653 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157653 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=654 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157654 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=655 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157655 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.93" | 930 m ||
|-id=656 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157656 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=657 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157657 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HEN || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=658 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157658 || || — || December 21, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || 7:4 || align=right | 7.1 km ||
|-id=659 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157659 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=660 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157660 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=661 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157661 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=662 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157662 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=663 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157663 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=664 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157664 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAS || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=665 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157665 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=666 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157666 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || PHO || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=667 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157667 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=668 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157668 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=669 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157669 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MIS || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=670 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157670 || || — || December 27, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || HYG || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=671 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157671 || || — || December 27, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=672 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157672 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=673 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157673 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=674 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157674 || || — || December 28, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=675 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157675 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=676 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157676 || || — || December 28, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 6.4 km ||
|-id=677 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157677 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=678 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157678 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=679 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157679 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=680 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157680 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || AGN || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=681 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157681 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=682 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157682 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=683 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157683 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=684 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157684 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || EUN || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=685 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157685 || || — || December 30, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=686 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157686 || || — || December 26, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || MAS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=687 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157687 || || — || December 22, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=688 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157688 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=689 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157689 || || — || December 30, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MRX || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=690 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157690 || || — || December 24, 2005 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=691 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157691 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || HNA || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=692 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157692 || || — || December 25, 2005 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=693 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157693 Amandamarty || 2006 AB || || January 2, 2006 || RAS || A. Lowe || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=694 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157694 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Rehoboth || Calvin–Rehoboth Obs. || URS || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=695 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157695 || || — || January 2, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=696 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157696 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=697 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157697 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || 7:4 || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=698 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157698 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=699 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157699 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=700 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157700 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EOS || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|}
157701–157800
|-bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157701 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || 7:4 || align=right | 8.0 km ||
|-id=702 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157702 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=703 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157703 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=704 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157704 || || — || January 2, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=705 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157705 || || — || January 4, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=706 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157706 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 6.2 km ||
|-id=707 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157707 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=708 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157708 || || — || January 7, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || MAS || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=709 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157709 || || — || January 7, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=710 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157710 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || 3:2 || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=711 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157711 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=712 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157712 || || — || January 6, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=713 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157713 || || — || January 6, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=714 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157714 || || — || January 6, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=715 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157715 || || — || January 6, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=716 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157716 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=717 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157717 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=718 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157718 || || — || January 5, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=719 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157719 || || — || January 22, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EOS || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=720 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157720 || || — || January 22, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || EOS || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=721 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157721 Kölcsey|| || — || January 24, 2006 || Piszkéstető || K. Sárneczky || KAR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=722 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157722 || || — || January 20, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=723 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157723 || || — || January 20, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=724 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157724 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=725 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157725 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=726 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157726 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=727 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157727 || || — || January 22, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=728 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157728 || || — || January 23, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=729 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157729 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=730 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157730 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 8.4 km ||
|-id=731 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157731 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=732 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157732 || || — || January 28, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=733 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157733 || || — || January 19, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || EOS || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=734 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157734 || || — || January 24, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=735 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157735 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=736 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157736 || || — || January 25, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.1 km ||
|-id=737 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157737 || || — || January 26, 2006 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=738 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157738 || || — || January 27, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || THM || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=739 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157739 || || — || January 28, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.0 km ||
|-id=740 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157740 || || — || January 30, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 11 km ||
|-id=741 bgcolor=#C2FFFF
| 157741 || || — || January 31, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || L5 || align=right | 15 km ||
|-id=742 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157742 || || — || January 24, 2006 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=743 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157743 || || — || January 30, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=744 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157744 || || — || January 31, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HYG || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=745 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157745 || || — || January 31, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=746 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157746 || || — || January 26, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=747 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157747 Mandryka || || || February 2, 2006 || Tenagra II || J.-C. Merlin || TIR || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=748 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157748 || || — || February 1, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=749 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157749 || || — || February 2, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=750 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157750 || || — || February 3, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=751 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157751 || || — || February 4, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=752 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157752 || || — || February 4, 2006 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=753 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157753 || || — || February 20, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=754 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157754 || || — || February 24, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=755 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157755 || || — || February 25, 2006 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=756 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157756 || || — || March 3, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=757 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157757 || || — || March 4, 2006 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=758 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157758 || || — || January 15, 2007 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=759 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157759 || || — || February 17, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=760 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157760 || || — || February 17, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=761 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157761 || || — || February 17, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=762 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157762 || || — || February 17, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.79" | 790 m ||
|-id=763 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157763 || || — || February 17, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HOF || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=764 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157764 || || — || February 21, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || THM || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=765 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157765 || || — || February 21, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=766 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157766 || || — || February 23, 2007 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=767 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157767 || || — || February 25, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || V || align=right data-sort-value="0.97" | 970 m ||
|-id=768 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157768 || || — || February 23, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=769 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157769 || || — || March 9, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 6.8 km ||
|-id=770 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157770 || || — || March 9, 2007 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.82" | 820 m ||
|-id=771 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157771 || || — || March 9, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || KOR || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=772 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157772 || || — || March 9, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.85" | 850 m ||
|-id=773 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157773 || || — || March 10, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=774 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157774 || 2007 FF || — || March 16, 2007 || Mount Lemmon || Mount Lemmon Survey || AGN || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=775 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157775 || || — || March 16, 2007 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=776 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157776 || 2770 P-L || — || September 24, 1960 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=777 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157777 || 6239 P-L || — || September 24, 1960 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=778 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157778 || 6812 P-L || — || September 24, 1960 || Palomar || PLS || V || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=779 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157779 || 7582 P-L || — || October 17, 1960 || Palomar || PLS || EUN || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=780 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157780 || 7620 P-L || — || October 17, 1960 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=781 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157781 || 3077 T-2 || — || September 30, 1973 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 5.2 km ||
|-id=782 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157782 || 3296 T-2 || — || September 30, 1973 || Palomar || PLS || EUN || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=783 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157783 || 2124 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=784 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157784 || 3458 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || PAD || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=785 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157785 || 4233 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=786 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157786 || 4345 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=787 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157787 || 4443 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=788 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157788 || 5020 T-3 || — || October 16, 1977 || Palomar || PLS || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=789 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157789 || || — || September 8, 1991 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=790 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157790 || || — || November 4, 1991 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.83" | 830 m ||
|-id=791 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157791 || || — || September 24, 1992 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=792 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157792 || || — || March 19, 1993 || La Silla || UESAC || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=793 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157793 || || — || March 9, 1994 || Caussols || E. W. Elst || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=794 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157794 || || — || August 10, 1994 || La Silla || E. W. Elst || DOR || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=795 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157795 || || — || February 1, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=796 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157796 || || — || March 23, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=797 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157797 || || — || July 30, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=798 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157798 || || — || July 22, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=799 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157799 || || — || September 18, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=800 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157800 || || — || September 18, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|}
157801–157900
|-bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157801 || || — || September 20, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=802 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157802 || || — || September 25, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=803 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157803 || || — || September 17, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=804 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157804 || || — || September 25, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=805 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157805 || || — || October 15, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=806 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157806 || || — || October 17, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=807 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157807 || || — || October 17, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=808 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157808 || || — || October 25, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || WIT || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=809 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157809 || || — || October 17, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=810 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157810 || || — || October 23, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=811 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157811 || || — || October 25, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || CLO || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=812 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157812 || || — || October 24, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=813 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157813 || || — || November 16, 1995 || Church Stretton || S. P. Laurie || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=814 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157814 || || — || November 19, 1995 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=815 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157815 || || — || March 18, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.79" | 790 m ||
|-id=816 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157816 || || — || April 12, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.3 km ||
|-id=817 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157817 || || — || April 13, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=818 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157818 || || — || April 13, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || ERI || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=819 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157819 || || — || May 11, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=820 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157820 || || — || October 5, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=821 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157821 || || — || October 6, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=822 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157822 || || — || October 7, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=823 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157823 || || — || December 7, 1996 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=824 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157824 || || — || February 2, 1997 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HEN || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=825 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157825 || || — || September 12, 1997 || Ondřejov || M. Wolf, L. Kotková || — || align=right | 6.7 km ||
|-id=826 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157826 || || — || September 29, 1997 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right | 1.5 km ||
|-id=827 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157827 || || — || October 7, 1997 || Xinglong || SCAP || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=828 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157828 || || — || November 23, 1997 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=829 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157829 || || — || November 29, 1997 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=830 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157830 || 1997 YE || — || December 18, 1997 || Oizumi || T. Kobayashi || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=831 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157831 || || — || January 25, 1998 || Oizumi || T. Kobayashi || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=832 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157832 || || — || January 24, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || HIL3:2 || align=right | 8.5 km ||
|-id=833 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157833 || || — || March 20, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=834 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157834 || || — || March 20, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=835 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157835 || || — || March 20, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=836 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157836 || || — || March 31, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=837 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157837 || || — || March 24, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=838 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157838 || || — || March 28, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=839 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157839 || || — || April 2, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=840 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157840 || || — || April 18, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=841 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157841 || || — || April 21, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=842 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157842 || || — || June 16, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NEM || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=843 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157843 || || — || August 23, 1998 || Xinglong || SCAP || — || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=844 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157844 || || — || August 24, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.3 km ||
|-id=845 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157845 || || — || September 14, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.0 km ||
|-id=846 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157846 || || — || September 14, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=847 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157847 || || — || September 14, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.90" | 900 m ||
|-id=848 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157848 || || — || September 14, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=849 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157849 || || — || September 26, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || TEL || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=850 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157850 || || — || September 26, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.5 km ||
|-id=851 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157851 || || — || September 26, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=852 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157852 || || — || October 13, 1998 || Kleť || Kleť Obs. || — || align=right | 7.3 km ||
|-id=853 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157853 || || — || October 13, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.3 km ||
|-id=854 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157854 || || — || October 14, 1998 || Caussols || ODAS || EOS || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=855 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157855 || || — || October 13, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=856 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157856 || || — || October 14, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.85" | 850 m ||
|-id=857 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157857 || || — || October 17, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=858 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157858 || || — || October 28, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=859 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157859 || || — || October 27, 1998 || Caussols || ODAS || — || align=right | 7.7 km ||
|-id=860 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157860 || || — || November 10, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.4 km ||
|-id=861 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157861 || || — || November 15, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || 3:2 || align=right | 6.7 km ||
|-id=862 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157862 || || — || November 21, 1998 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.9 km ||
|-id=863 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157863 || || — || November 16, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || FLO || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=864 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157864 || || — || November 21, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || V || align=right data-sort-value="0.95" | 950 m ||
|-id=865 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157865 || || — || November 22, 1998 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.6 km ||
|-id=866 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157866 || || — || December 17, 1998 || Caussols || ODAS || HYG || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=867 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157867 || || — || February 10, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || V || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=868 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157868 || || — || February 10, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=869 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157869 || || — || March 14, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || MAS || align=right data-sort-value="0.99" | 990 m ||
|-id=870 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157870 || || — || March 14, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=871 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157871 || || — || March 12, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || BAR || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=872 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157872 || || — || April 14, 1999 || Ondřejov || L. Kotková || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=873 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157873 || || — || May 14, 1999 || Goodricke-Pigott || R. A. Tucker || H || align=right | 1.00 km ||
|-id=874 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157874 || || — || May 15, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=875 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157875 || || — || May 10, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=876 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157876 || || — || May 12, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || INO || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=877 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157877 || || — || May 13, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=878 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157878 || || — || May 16, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=879 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157879 || || — || July 12, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || MAR || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=880 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157880 || || — || July 13, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.3 km ||
|-id=881 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157881 || 1999 RZ || — || September 4, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=882 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157882 || || — || September 5, 1999 || Višnjan Observatory || K. Korlević || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=883 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157883 || || — || September 13, 1999 || Višnjan Observatory || K. Korlević || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=884 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157884 || || — || September 14, 1999 || Črni Vrh || Črni Vrh || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=885 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157885 || || — || September 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=886 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157886 || || — || September 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=887 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157887 || || — || September 9, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.7 km ||
|-id=888 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157888 || || — || September 9, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=889 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157889 || || — || September 8, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 6.0 km ||
|-id=890 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157890 || || — || September 8, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=891 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157891 || || — || September 8, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=892 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157892 || || — || September 7, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.7 km ||
|-id=893 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157893 || || — || September 30, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=894 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157894 || || — || October 14, 1999 || Heppenheim || Starkenburg Obs. || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=895 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157895 || || — || October 3, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || NEM || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=896 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157896 || || — || October 3, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=897 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157897 || || — || October 10, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || THM || align=right | 2.5 km ||
|-id=898 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157898 || || — || October 2, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.9 km ||
|-id=899 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157899 || || — || October 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=900 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157900 || || — || October 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || DORslow || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|}
157901–158000
|-bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157901 || || — || October 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=902 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157902 || || — || October 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || MIT || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=903 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157903 || || — || October 6, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=904 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157904 || || — || October 6, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=905 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157905 || || — || October 6, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.1 km ||
|-id=906 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157906 || || — || October 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=907 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157907 || || — || October 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=908 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157908 || || — || October 8, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || PAD || align=right | 3.4 km ||
|-id=909 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157909 || || — || October 11, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=910 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157910 || || — || October 13, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=911 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157911 || || — || October 3, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=912 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157912 || || — || October 9, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.6 km ||
|-id=913 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157913 || || — || October 3, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=914 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157914 || || — || October 10, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || PAL || align=right | 5.8 km ||
|-id=915 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157915 || || — || October 6, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.1 km ||
|-id=916 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157916 || || — || October 6, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 2.4 km ||
|-id=917 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157917 || || — || October 29, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.0 km ||
|-id=918 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157918 || || — || October 31, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.2 km ||
|-id=919 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157919 || || — || October 29, 1999 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 5.1 km ||
|-id=920 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157920 || || — || November 3, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=921 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157921 || || — || November 3, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || DOR || align=right | 4.8 km ||
|-id=922 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157922 || || — || November 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=923 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157923 || || — || November 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.88" | 880 m ||
|-id=924 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157924 || || — || November 6, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=925 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157925 || || — || November 4, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=926 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157926 || || — || November 9, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || KOR || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=927 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157927 || || — || November 9, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || GEF || align=right | 2.0 km ||
|-id=928 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157928 || || — || November 5, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=929 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157929 || || — || November 9, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 5.5 km ||
|-id=930 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157930 || || — || November 10, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=931 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157931 || || — || November 14, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.7 km ||
|-id=932 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157932 || || — || November 12, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=933 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157933 || || — || November 15, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || HYG || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=934 bgcolor=#E9E9E9
| 157934 || || — || November 3, 1999 || Catalina || CSS || — || align=right | 4.5 km ||
|-id=935 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157935 || || — || November 12, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || EOS || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=936 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157936 || || — || November 29, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.8 km ||
|-id=937 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157937 || || — || November 29, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=938 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157938 || || — || December 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 3.9 km ||
|-id=939 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157939 || || — || December 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || EOS || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=940 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157940 || || — || December 7, 1999 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.7 km ||
|-id=941 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157941 || || — || December 5, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=942 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157942 || || — || December 27, 1999 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || KOR || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=943 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157943 || || — || January 3, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.3 km ||
|-id=944 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157944 || || — || January 3, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=945 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157945 || || — || January 6, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || PHO || align=right | 2.9 km ||
|-id=946 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157946 || || — || January 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.7 km ||
|-id=947 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157947 || || — || January 3, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 5.6 km ||
|-id=948 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157948 || || — || January 4, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=949 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157949 || || — || January 29, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.2 km ||
|-id=950 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157950 || || — || February 3, 2000 || Višnjan Observatory || K. Korlević || — || align=right | 5.4 km ||
|-id=951 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157951 || || — || February 7, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 3.8 km ||
|-id=952 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157952 || || — || February 7, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || URS || align=right | 7.7 km ||
|-id=953 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157953 || || — || February 3, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 6.1 km ||
|-id=954 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157954 || || — || February 26, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.97" | 970 m ||
|-id=955 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157955 || || — || February 29, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=956 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157956 || || — || February 29, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=957 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157957 || || — || February 29, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=958 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157958 || || — || February 29, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=959 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157959 || || — || February 27, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 4.6 km ||
|-id=960 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157960 || || — || March 8, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=961 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157961 || || — || March 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 4.9 km ||
|-id=962 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157962 || || — || March 11, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=963 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157963 || || — || March 11, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.9 km ||
|-id=964 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157964 || || — || March 11, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=965 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157965 || || — || March 26, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || V || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=966 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157966 || || — || April 6, 2000 || Prescott || P. G. Comba || — || align=right data-sort-value="0.94" | 940 m ||
|-id=967 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157967 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=968 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157968 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=969 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157969 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || NYS || align=right data-sort-value="0.99" | 990 m ||
|-id=970 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157970 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=971 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157971 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=972 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157972 || || — || April 5, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=973 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157973 || || — || April 6, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=974 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157974 || || — || April 4, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=975 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157975 || || — || April 4, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.96" | 960 m ||
|-id=976 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157976 || || — || April 24, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=977 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157977 || || — || April 24, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 2.1 km ||
|-id=978 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157978 || || — || April 24, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=979 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157979 || || — || April 28, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || PHO || align=right | 1.8 km ||
|-id=980 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157980 || || — || April 25, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=981 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157981 || || — || April 26, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=982 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157982 || || — || April 29, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=983 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157983 || || — || April 28, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=984 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157984 || || — || May 1, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.0 km ||
|-id=985 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157985 || || — || May 7, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=986 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157986 || || — || May 27, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.4 km ||
|-id=987 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157987 || || — || May 28, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=988 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157988 || || — || May 28, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || FLO || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=989 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157989 || || — || May 28, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.7 km ||
|-id=990 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157990 || || — || May 28, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.2 km ||
|-id=991 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157991 || || — || May 25, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=992 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157992 || || — || May 24, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || FLO || align=right data-sort-value="0.93" | 930 m ||
|-id=993 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157993 || || — || June 3, 2000 || Ondřejov || P. Pravec, P. Kušnirák || — || align=right | 1.1 km ||
|-id=994 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157994 || || — || June 4, 2000 || Kitt Peak || Spacewatch || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=995 bgcolor=#FA8072
| 157995 || || — || June 1, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 2.2 km ||
|-id=996 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157996 || || — || June 5, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || — || align=right | 1.3 km ||
|-id=997 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157997 || || — || June 5, 2000 || Anderson Mesa || LONEOS || 3:2 || align=right | 11 km ||
|-id=998 bgcolor=#fefefe
| 157998 || || — || July 23, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || — || align=right | 1.6 km ||
|-id=999 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 157999 || || — || July 30, 2000 || Prescott || P. G. Comba || 3:2 || align=right | 6.6 km ||
|-id=000 bgcolor=#d6d6d6
| 158000 || || — || July 30, 2000 || Socorro || LINEAR || HIL3:2 || align=right | 10 km ||
|}
References
External links
Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets (155001)–(160000) (IAU Minor Planet Center)
0157 |
Mateusz Bartczak (born 15 August 1979 in Legnica) is a retired Polish footballer who last played for Chojnowianka Chojnów.
Career
Club
He played in the 1999–2000 Championship winning season of Polonia Warsaw. He joined Polonia in season 1997–98, and made his debut in April 1998 against Katowice.
He joined Amica in 2002–03 and scored his debut, and so far only, goal at the club in the 2003–04 season.
In February 2011, he joined Cracovia on a six-month contract.
References
External links
1979 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Legnica
Polish men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Ekstraklasa players
Polonia Warsaw players
Amica Wronki players
Zagłębie Lubin players
MKS Cracovia players
Górnik Polkowice players
Footballers from Lower Silesian Voivodeship |
Alexander Mungo Comine Russell (born 24 May 1998) is an English cricketer.
He made his first-class debut on 1 April 2018 for Durham MCCU against Warwickshire as part of the Marylebone Cricket Club University fixtures. In June 2020 he received a half palatinate from Team Durham for his cricketing activities as a student.
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
English cricketers
Durham MCCU cricketers
Berkshire cricketers
English cricketers of the 21st century
Alumni of Collingwood College, Durham
Place of birth missing (living people) |
David Stuart Clarke AO (3 January 1942 – 8 April 2011) was an Australian businessman. He attended Knox Grammar School on Sydney's North Shore, the University of Sydney (BEc), and Harvard Business School (MBA).
In 1971, Clarke became joint managing director of Hill Samuel, now Macquarie Group. He was appointed managing director in 1977 and became executive chairman in 1984. Clarke remained Executive Chairman of Macquarie Bank when it changed its name in 1985. He remained in this role until March 2007, when he ceased executive duties. In 2007, he was appointed president of Winemakers' Federation of Australia. Clarke also owned several vineyards in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales and was the chairman of Australian Vintage.
References
External links
Macquarie Bank Directors
Pooles Rock Wines
1942 births
2011 deaths
Australian chief executives
Australian winemakers
Officers of the Order of Australia
Harvard Business School alumni
People educated at Knox Grammar School |
Mwanga is one of the seven districts of the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. The district covers an area of , It is bordered to the northeast by Kenya, to the northwest by the Moshi Rural District, to the southwest by Simanjiro District of Manyara Region, and to the south by the Same District. Its administrative seat is the town of Mwanga. The tallest peak in the district is Kindoroko at 2,100m in the North Pare Mountains that are located entirely within the district. According to the 2012 Tanzania National Census, the population of Mwanga District was 131,442.
Administrative subdivisions
Wards
The Mwanga District is administratively divided into 20 wards:
Chomvu
Jipe
Kifula
Kighare
Kileo
Kilomeni
Kigonigoni
Kirongwe
Kirya
Kwakoa
Lang'ata
Lembeni
Msangeni
Mwanga
Mwaniko
Ngujini
Shigatini
Toloha
Kivisini
Mgagao
Notable people from Mwanga District
Cleopa Msuya, 3rd Tanzanian Prime Minister
Sources
2002 Population and Housing Census Report - National Bureau of Statistics
Mwanga District Homepage
References
Districts of Kilimanjaro Region |
Michael Haugen Jr. (born December 29, 1966) is a professional ten-pin bowler residing in Carefree, Arizona. He is a member of the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA), having joined in 1994. He has won five PBA Tour titles overall, including a major title at the 2008 PBA Tournament of Champions. He also owns a major title on the PBA50 Tour, after winning the 2017 PBA Senior U.S. Open. Haugen is right-handed.
Career
Haugen first joined the PBA in 1994, competing as a Regional pro. He bowled in selected PBA Tour events in the 1996 and 1997 seasons, before becoming a full-time bowler on tour in the 1998 season. He has a unique power-stroker style, with the starting position having the ball held low, and a final "plant step," meaning he does not slide to the foul line. He was named the PBA West Region Player of the Year in 1997. In the 2002–03 U.S. Open, he finished runner-up to Walter Ray Williams, Jr.
Early in the 2007–08 PBA season, he won the Lake County Indiana Classic in Merrillville, Indiana over Wes Malott. In doing so, he won his first tournament in 200 attempts and qualified for the Tournament of Champions. Later that season, he became the second bowler in history to win his first PBA title and the Tournament of Champions major in the same season, joining Joe Joseph who accomplished the feat in 1962. In the Tournament of Champions, as the number 1 seed, he completed a stunning comeback by defeating Chris Barnes in the final by one pin, after trailing by 53 pins in the sixth frame. A finger injury cut his season short as he was forced to miss the final seven events of the year, but he did manage to bowl in the Motel 6 "Roll to Riches" event in April 2008. His earnings in the 2007–08 season eclipsed $100,000 for the first time in his career.
Injuries again curtailed his 2008–09 season, as he was only able to compete in seven events. But he returned to start the 2009–10 season and made the TV finals for the PBA Viper Championship at the World Series of Bowling. He won his third PBA title at the Mark Roth Classic in Allen Park, Michigan on January 26, 2013.
Haugen won his fourth PBA title on November 2, 2014 in the Scorpion Championship at the World Series of Bowling in Las Vegas, Nevada. His fifth title was earned at the 2016 PBA Xtra Frame Gene Carter's Pro Shop Classic in Middletown, DE.
While still competing in selected events on the regular PBA Tour, Haugen also joined the PBA50 Tour (formerly PBA Senior Tour) in the 2017 season. He won his first PBA50 Tour title in a major tournament: the Suncoast PBA Senior U.S. Open held on June 16, 2017 in Las Vegas, NV. He was named 2017 PBA50 Tour Rookie of the Year.
Haugen won his second PBA50 Tour title on May 8, 2018 at the PBA50 Johnny Petraglia BVL Open, defeating Hall of Famer Walter Ray Williams Jr. in the final match. In July 2018, Haugen won his third PBA50 title at the River City Extreme Open. He was named PBA50 Player of the Year for 2018, locking up the points-based award with two tournaments remaining on the schedule. Haugen was the only player with two victories on the season, and also added two second-place and two third-place finishes. Haugen became the fourth PBA50 bowler to win both Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year awards in the same or consecutive years. Tom Baker and Norm Duke won both awards in the same year, while Mark Roth won the awards in consecutive years, like Haugen.
Through the end of the 2017 season, he had rolled 33 perfect 300 games in PBA events. He has accumulated over $830,000 in career PBA Tour earnings. In addition to his national tour victories, Haugen has won 23 PBA Regional Tour titles and two PBA50 Regional Tour titles.
PBA Titles
Major tournaments are in bold type.
PBA Tour
2007 Lake County Indiana Classic (Merrillville, IN)
2008 PBA Tournament of Champions (Las Vegas, NV)
2013 Mark Roth Classic (Allen Park, MI)
2014 PBA Scorpion Championship (Las Vegas, NV)
2016 PBA Xtra Frame Gene Carter's Pro Shop Classic (Middletown, DE)
PBA50 Tour
2017 Suncoast PBA Senior U.S. Open (Las Vegas, NV)
2018 PBA50 Johnny Petraglia BVL Open (Farmingdale, NY)
2018 PBA50 River City Extreme Open (Monticello, MN)
Awards
1997 PBA West Region Player of the Year
2017 PBA50 Rookie of the Year
2018 PBA50 Player of the Year
Personal
He resides in Carefree, Arizona, and enjoys golfing and going to dance clubs. After qualifying for the TV finals at the 2014 PBA Scorpion Championship, Haugen told ESPN broadcasters he would propose on-air to longtime girlfriend Phuong Truong, only if he won the tournament. He made good on his promise during his post-tournament interview after his victory, and Truong joyously accepted.
References
1966 births
Living people
People from Carefree, Arizona
Sportspeople from Maricopa County, Arizona
American ten-pin bowling players |
is a Japanese voice actress from Aichi Prefecture.
Filmography
Anime
We Were There as Yuri Yamamoto
Canvas 2 ~Niji Iro no Sketch~ as Female student (ep 5)
Galaxy Angel Rune as Lily C Sherbet
Hametsu No Mars as Tomomi Nakahara
Jubei-Chan 2: The Counter Attack of Siberia Yagyu as Freesia Yagyu
Lucky Star as Miyuki Takara (drama CD & video game)
True Tears as Honoka Uehara
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Japanese video game actresses
Japanese voice actresses
Voice actresses from Aichi Prefecture |
Hero is a rock musical with book by Craig McGregor, lyrics by Don Henderson and music by John 'Poli' Palmer. It concerns a pop singer's odyssey in search of stardom with strong undertones of Greek tragedy. The story is about two brothers, loosely based on the Greek myth of Castor and Pollux. The older brother is an ambitious politician, whereas the younger brother is a successful rock star.
Development and production
The Australian Opera and its NSW Friends supporter group in 1973 commissioned rock journalist McGregor to write a rock or pop opera about his idea of the modern hero. McGregor was inspired to write the musical after watching The Who perform a concert version of their rock opera Tommy in New York.
Hero opened on 27 May 1976 at the Seymour Centre's York Theatre in Sydney, produced by the Australian Opera. The cast included Barry Leef, Juliet Amiet, Kris McQuade, Ron Barry, Paul Johnstone and Ian Turpie. It was directed by Grahame Bond with choreographer Ross Coleman and musical director Geoff Oakes.
The production had a mixed critical reception. Closing after two weeks, the production lost in the order of $170,000.
Recordings
Original cast member Barry Leef recorded "Last Song" and "Three-Minute Hero" from the musical for Festival Records in 1976, released as a single. Demo recordings of two songs were included in the compilation The Songs of Don Henderson, released posthumously in 2009.
References
Australian musicals
1976 musicals
Musicals based on European myths and legends |
Max Terpis, real name Max Pfister, also Max Pfister-Terpis, (1 March 1889 in Zürich – 18 March 1958 in Zollikon) was a Swiss dancer, choreographer, director and psychologist.
Publications
Tanz und Tänzer (1946)
Filmography
Marriage
Bibliography
Robert Heiß, Hildegard Hiltmann (editor): Der Farbpyramiden-Test nach Max Pfister. Huber, Bern 1951.
Wolfgang Martin Schede: Farbenspiel des Lebens. Max Pfister Terpis. Architekt Tänzer Psychologe 1889–1958. Atlantis, Zürich 1960.
Elisa Frasson: Max Terpis, Tanz und Tänzer. Dissertation. Universität Venedig 2005, .
Bernd-Ulrich Hergemöller, Klaus Sator: Terpis, Max. In: Bernd-Ulrich Hergemöller (editor): Mann für Mann. Biographisches Lexikon zur Geschichte von Freundesliebe und mannmännlicher Sexualität im deutschen Sprachraum. Part 2: Rat–Z. Lit, Münster 2010, , . (Google books).
References
External links
1889 births
1958 deaths
Entertainers from Zürich
Swiss choreographers
Swiss male ballet dancers
Swiss theatre directors |
Eneas Mackenzie (1778–1832) was an English topographer.
Life
He was born in Aberdeenshire; his parents moved to Newcastle upon Tyne, when he was three years old. After working with his father as a shoemaker, he became a Baptist minister, and then made an unsuccessful attempt to establish himself in business as a broker at Sunderland. Returning to Newcastle he opened a school, which he gave up and worked as a printer and publisher.
Mackenzie was mainly instrumental in founding the Mechanics' Institution in Newcastle, where his bust was preserved. He was a liberal in politics, and one of the secretaries of the Northern Political Union. He died at Newcastle on 21 February 1832.
Works
His works include :-
"A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle-upon-Tyne including the Borough of Gateshead, Volume I", by Eneas MacKenzie, published 1818.
"An historical, topographical and descriptive view of the County Palatine of Durham; comprehending the various subjects of Natural, Civil and Ecclesiastical Geography, Agriculture, Mines, Manufactures, Navigation, Trade, Commerce, Buildings, Antiquities, Curiosities, Public Institutions, Charities, Population, Customs, Biography, Local History &c. Volume II" – (E. Mackenzie and [continued by] M. Ross)
These above two works contain quoted passages in Geordie dialect, or older style English.
"A New, Improved, and Authentic Life of James Allan: The Celebrated Northumberland Piper, Detailing His Surprising Adventures in Various Parts of Europe" - by James Thompson, Eneas Mackenzie
"Memoirs of Mrs. Caroline Chisholm ... To Which Is Added, A History Of The Family Colonization Loan Society" - by Eneas Mackenzie, Caroline Chisholm.
References
Attribution
19th-century English historians
Writers from Newcastle upon Tyne
1832 deaths
1778 births
People from Aberdeenshire |
Mojtaba Heidarpanah (; born 6 َApril 1990 in Abadeh) is an Iranian cartoonist, illustrator, painter, character designer and animator.
Heidarpanah is best known for his series of cartoons called "Riot Police". From this collection, the work "The Thinker" won the third place in the 37th Aydin Dogan Cartoon Competition
Also, this artist's artwork of Bending Streetlight has been used as a meme among internet users since 2019.
Early life
Mojtaba, was born in Abadeh city, the sixth child of Gholam Hossein Heidarpanah, known as Hossein the woodcarver, is one of the woodcarving masters of Abadeh. In his childhood, he got acquainted with cartoons by reading the Golagha weekly newspaper and started drawing on his own, and received his first cartoon award in 2007 from Fars Provincial Cartoon Festival of ( Bread and Art ).
Heidarpanah studied painting at the Faculty of Fine Arts at Yazd University.
Career
He began his career as a cartoonist in 2008, uploading pieces online so that other Persian artists could provide feedback and help him to improve. In 2010, he won the main award at the International Cartoon Festival in Iran with the main theme of "effort".
In a decade of his activity, he has been able to win cartoon festival awards in Iran, Argentina, Italy., Brazil, Slovakia, Brazil Serbia and Turkey
He has stated that he enjoys "the power of conveying the meaning to the audience in order to make them think within a single frame and sometimes shock them... Cartoon is my communicative device which lets me talk to the people of the world without knowing their languages."
Mojtaba has been working as freelance cartoonist and Illustrator for many important magazines and newspapers and publishers in Iran like Ghanoon newspaper, Jame Jam news paper, Farhikhtegan newspaper
Recognition
Special diploma on the Int'l Cartoon Festival of Jiaxing, China (2010)
First Prize on the First Int'l Cartoon Festival of North Khorasan , Iran(2010)
Third Prize on the 11th Int'l Cartoon Competition in SOKOBANJA, Serbia (2012)
Special Prize on the 45th Int`l Cartoon Competition in Umoristi a Marostica, Italy (2013).
Special Diploma on the 6th International Cartoon Contest UrziceiI, Romania (2013).
Special Prize on the 30th Int`l Cartoon Competition in Aydin Dogan, Turkey (2013)
Second Prize on the 20th International Visual Arts Festival for Young Artists. IRAN (2013)
First Prize on the 2nd International Contest of Social Illustrations , Argentina (2013).
Second Prize on the 31st Int`l Cartoon Competition in Aydin Dogan (2014)
Special Prize on 8th International Cartoon Contest, Mexico (2016)
Special Prize of the 8th "La Ciudad de las"International cartoon festival/ (2016)
Special Prize Of "ACCES" Association Of The HumoDeva (2015)
Special Prize International Competition Brain Sneezing Slovakia (2016)
Special Prize of XXIV International Festival of Satire and Humor (2016)
Finalists Of The International Cartoon Kid Contest/Italy (2016)
Third Prize International Cartoon Festival Olense Kartoenale Belgium (2016)
Special Prize of the 43rd International Festival of Caricature and Cartoon Piracicaba (2016)
Golden prize of the 41st International Cartoon Festival LIE Championship /Italy (2017)
Honorable Mention Award of Equal Rights and Gender Equality International Cartoon Contest 2019-2020
Second Prize at the 28th International Satire and Humor Festival City of Trento in Italy 2020
Second prize at the 5th International Cartoon Contest Animalcartoon in Serbia. 2020
References
1990 births
Iranian caricaturists
Iranian editorial cartoonists
Iranian children's book illustrators
Iranian illustrators
Living people
People from Abadeh |
National Highway 166H, commonly referred to as NH 166H is a national highway in India. It is a secondary route of National Highway 66. NH-166H runs in the state of Maharashtra in India.
Route
NH 166H connects Sangli city and Peth Naka in the state of Maharashtra.
Miraj - Sangli - Ashta - Islampur - Peth Naka
Junctions
Terminal near Sangli.
near Miraj.
Terminal near Peth Naka.
See also
List of National Highways in India
List of National Highways in India by state
References
External links
NH 166H on OpenStreetMap
National highways in India
National Highways in Maharashtra |
The Council for Foreign and Defense Policy (CFDP, SVOP) () is a Russian Think Tank. It was formed on February 25, 1992. It has been called the "leading public foreign policy organization" for Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin regularly participates in the Council for Foreign and Defense Policy discussion club "Valdai".
Projects
Ranking
In 2017 the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program's, Global Go To Think Tank Index (GGTTI) ranking of think tanks, the Council for Foreign and Defense Policy is in a number of "sub-lists":
41st out of 135 under Top Foreign Policy and International Affairs Think Tanks.
58th of 110 under Top Think Tank by Area Research.
24th out of 75 "Best Government Affiliated Think Tanks"
107th out of 150 "Best Independent Think Tanks"
Publications
U.S. Russian Relations at the Turn of the Century: Reports of the Working Groups Organized by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington and the Council on Foreign and Defense Policy. 2000.
Chairman of the Presidium
Alexey Georgievich Arbatov (:ru:Арбатов, Алексей Георгиевич)
Tatyana Viktorovna Borisova (:ru:Борисова, Татьяна Викторовна)
Vladimir Sergeevich Velichko (:ru:Величко, Владимир Сергеевич)
Sergey Alexandrovich Karaganov (:ru:Караганов, Сергей Александрович)
Yuri Georgievich Kobaladze (:ru:Кобаладзе, Юрий Георгиевич)
Evgeny Mikhailovich Kozhokin (:ru:Кожокин, Евгений Михайлович)
Fedor Alexandrovich Lukyanov 2014 AKA Fyodor Lukyanov. (:ru:Лукьянов, Федор Александрович)
Alexander Vyacheslavovich Losev (:ru:Лосев, Александр Вячеславович)
Viktor Nikolaevich Mironov (:ru:Миронов, Виктор Николаевич)
Nikolai Vasilievich Mikhailov (:ru:Михайлов, Николай Васильевич)
Sergei Ashotovich Mndoyants (:ru:Мндоянц, Сергей Ашотович)
Alexander Vladimirovich Mordovin (:ru:Мордовин, Александр Владимирович)
Vyacheslav Alekseevich Nikonov (:ru:Никонов, Вячеслав Алексеевич)
Alexey Konstantinovich Pushkov (:ru:Пушков, Алексей Константинович)
Vladimir Arsentievich Rubanov (:ru:Рубанов, Владимир Арсентьевич)
Vladimir Alexandrovich Ryzhkov (:ru:Рыжков, Владимир Александрович)
Garegin Ashotovich Tosunyan (:ru:Тосунян, Гарегин Ашотович)
Vitaly Tovievich Tretyakov (:ru:Третьяков, Виталий Товиевич)
Alexander Valeryanovich Tsalko (:ru:Цалко, Александр Валерьянович)
Igor Yurievich Yurgens (:ru:Юргенс, Игорь Юрьевич)
Notes
External links
Russia in Foreign Affairs, funded by Council for Foreign and Defense Policy
Official page in Russian
Think tanks based in Russia
Organizations established in 1992
Organizations based in Russia |
Kradolf railway station () is a railway station in Kradolf-Schönenberg, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau. It is an intermediate stop on the Sulgen–Gossau line.
Services
Kradolf is served by the S5 of the St. Gallen S-Bahn:
: half-hourly service between Weinfelden and ; hourly or better service from Bischofszell Stadt to St. Gallen and .
References
External links
Railway stations in the canton of Thurgau
Swiss Federal Railways stations |
Hanston is a city in Hodgeman County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 259.
History
Hanston was originally called Marena, and under the latter name was laid out in 1878. It was renamed Hanston in 1902, taking its name from the local Hann family.
Hanston was a station and shipping point on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway.
Geography
Hanston is located along K-156 and the Kansas and Oklahoma Railroad. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , all of it land.
Demographics
2010 census
As of the census of 2010, there were 206 people, 96 households, and 63 families residing in the city. The population density was . There were 119 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the city was 95.1% White, 2.4% from other races, and 2.4% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 9.7% of the population.
There were 96 households, of which 21.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 54.2% were married couples living together, 7.3% had a female householder with no husband present, 4.2% had a male householder with no wife present, and 34.4% were non-families. 32.3% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.15 and the average family size was 2.65.
The median age in the city was 50.1 years. 21.8% of residents were under the age of 18; 3.4% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 18% were from 25 to 44; 37.4% were from 45 to 64; and 19.4% were 65 years of age or older. The gender makeup of the city was 47.1% male and 52.9% female.
2000 census
As of the census of 2000, there were 259 people, 104 households, and 74 families residing in the city. The population density was . There were 127 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the city was 96.91% White, 0.39% African American, 1.54% Native American, and 1.16% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 3.47% of the population.
There were 104 households, out of which 32.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 62.5% were married couples living together, 5.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 28.8% were non-families. 26.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 16.3% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.49 and the average family size was 3.03.
In the city, the population was spread out, with 27.0% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 19.7% from 25 to 44, 27.8% from 45 to 64, and 18.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 42 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.1 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $38,125, and the median income for a family was $43,571. Males had a median income of $30,000 versus $18,750 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,049. About 6.6% of families and 8.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 7.4% of those under the age of eighteen and 9.6% of those 65 or over.
Education
Schools
The community is served by Hodgeman County USD 227 public school district. In 2011 it absorbed the former Hanston USD 228, which had dissolved. The district has two schools:
Hodgeman County Elementary School
Hodgeman County Middle/High School
USD 227 Hodgeman County High School is located in Jetmore. The Hodgeman County High School mascot is the Longhorns. Prior to school unification, the Hanston High School mascot was Hanston Elks.
The Hanston Elks won the following Kansas State Championships:
8-Man DII Football – 1989, 1990, 1999, 2001, 2002 and 2004
1A Boys Basketball – 1978, 1989, 2004 and 2005
Library
Hanston is served by the Hanston City Library.
References
Further reading
External links
Hanston – Directory of Public Officials
Hanston City Map, KDOT
Cities in Kansas
Cities in Hodgeman County, Kansas |
Cychrus naviauxi is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily of Carabinae. It was described by Deuve & Mourzine in 1998.
References
naviauxi
Beetles described in 1998 |
The 1950 NBA playoffs was the postseason tournament of the inaugural National Basketball Association 1949–50 season. The tournament concluded with the Central Division champion Minneapolis Lakers defeating the Eastern Division champion Syracuse Nationals 4 games to 2 in the NBA Finals.
Twelve teams qualified for the playoffs. Including tiebreaker games that preceded two of the six first-round series, they began play on Monday to Wednesday, March 20 to 22, and the best-of-seven Finals concluded in game six on Sunday, April 23. The champions played the greatest number of games, 13 in a span of 34 days, on a schedule including both back-to-back games and as many as six days off.
Bracket
The NBA was created in 1949 by merger of two competing professional basketball leagues, the BAA and NBL. For its first season only, the NBA teams were arranged in three divisions: Eastern, comprising the five surviving BAA Eastern Division teams plus Syracuse from the NBL; Central, comprising the five surviving BAA Western Division teams; and Western, comprising all the NBL teams except Syracuse. Within each division the top four teams were matched in two rounds of short series to generate a champion, after which the three division champions contended for the NBA title. With three contenders the third round of the tournament comprised a bye for one and a best-of-three match between the other two.
Division Tiebreakers
Central Division Tiebreakers
Chicago Stags @ Fort Wayne Pistons
Minneapolis Lakers @ Rochester Royals
Division Semifinals
Central Division Semifinals
(1) Minneapolis Lakers vs. (4) Chicago Stags
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning the first meeting.
(2) Rochester Royals vs. (3) Fort Wayne Pistons
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
Eastern Division Semifinals
(1) Syracuse Nationals vs. (4) Philadelphia Warriors
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
(2) New York Knicks vs. (3) Washington Capitols
This was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Capitols winning the first meeting.
Western Division Semifinals
(1) Indianapolis Olympians vs. (4) Sheboygan Red Skins
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
(2) Anderson Packers vs. (3) Tri-Cities Blackhawks
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
Division Finals
Central Division Finals
(1) Minneapolis Lakers vs. (3) Fort Wayne Pistons
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
Eastern Division Finals
(1) Syracuse Nationals vs. (2) New York Knicks
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
Western Division Finals
(1) Indianapolis Olympians vs. (2) Anderson Packers
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
NBA Semifinals: (2) Minneapolis Lakers vs. (3) Anderson Packers
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
NBA Finals: (1) Syracuse Nationals vs. (2) Minneapolis Lakers
Bob Harrison hits the game-winning shot from 40 feet at the buzzer.
This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams.
Notes
References
External links
1950 Playoff Results at NBA.com
1950 NBA Playoffs at Basketball-Reference
National Basketball Association playoffs
Playoffs
it:National Basketball Association 1949-1950#Play-off
fi:NBA-kausi 1949–1950#Pudotuspelit |
British Cavalier was a tanker that was built in 1942 for the Ministry of War Transport (MoWT) as Empire Cavalier. In 1945, she was sold to the British Tanker Co Ltd and renamed British Cavalier, serving until 1959 when she was scrapped.
Description
The ship was built by Sir J Laing & Sons Ltd, Sunderland. She was launched on 27 August 1942 and completed in November.
The ship was long, with a beam of and a depth of . She had a GRT of 9,891 and a NRT of 5,912.
She was propelled by a 4-stroke Single Cycle Single Action diesel engine which had eight cylinders diameter by stroke. The engine was built by Hawthorn, Leslie & Co Ltd, Newcastle upon Tyne.
History
Empire Castle was built for the MoWT. She was placed under the management of Mungo Campbell & Co Ltd. She was allocated the United Kingdom Official Number 169033. The Code Letters BFCF were allocated and her port of registry was Sunderland.
Empire Cavalier was a member of a number of convoys during the Second World War.
ON 166
Convoy ON 166 departed Liverpool on 11 February 1943 and arrived at New York on 3 March. Empire Cavalier joined the convoy at sea, having departed from Halifax, Nova Scotia.
HX 229
Convoy HX 229 departed New York on 8 March 1943 and arrived at Liverpool on 23 March. Empire Cavalier was carrying a cargo of aviation fuel.
HX 313
Convoy HX 313 departed New York on 10 October 1944 and arrived at Liverpool on 24 October. Empire Cavalier was bound for Thameshaven.
In 1945, Empire Cavalier was sold to the British Tanker Co Ltd and renamed British Cavalier. She served until 1957, and was laid up on 13 November at Swansea. On 23 May 1959, she arrived at Briton Ferry for scrapping.
References
External links
Old Ship Picture Galleries: Empire Cavalier 01
1942 ships
Ships built on the River Wear
Tankers of the United Kingdom
Ministry of War Transport ships
Empire ships
World War II tankers
Merchant ships of the United Kingdom |
Joaquín Almunia Amann (born 17 June 1948) is a Spanish politician and formerly, prominent member of the European Commission. During his tenure in the two Barroso Commissions, he was European commissioner responsible for economic and monetary affairs (2004–2009) and, subsequently, vice-president and the European Commissioner for Competition (2009–2014). Previously, he had been Spanish Minister for Employment (1982–1986) and Public Administrations (1986–1991). From 1997 to 2000, he was the leader of the opposition as secretary general of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, standing in and losing the 2000 Spanish general election against the then incumbent Spanish prime minister, José María Aznar.
Early life and education
Born in Bilbao on 17 June 1948 to a bourgeois family, son to an engineer (father) of Valencian origin and a cultivated mother, daughter of a German physician of Jewish ancestry. His grandfather Isaac Amann was one of the promoters of the Bilbao–Getxo railway. Almunia attended the Jesuit School of Indautxu in Bilbao. He graduated with degrees in economics and law in 1971 and 1972, respectively, from the also Jesuit University of Deusto in Bilbao, and completed follow-up studies at the École pratique des hautes études in Paris, from 1970 to 1971. He also completed a program at the Harvard Kennedy School at Harvard University for senior managers in government in 1991. He was an associate lecturer on employment and social security law at the University of Alcalá de Henares from 1991 to 1994.
Career
Parliamentary and government posts
Almunia was chief economist of the Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT), a trade union linked to the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), from 1976 to 1979. He was economist at the Council Bureau of the Spanish Chambers of Commerce in Brussels from 1972 to 1975.
Almunia was a member of the Congress of Deputies from 1979 to 2004, representing Madrid. He served as Minister of Employment and Social Security of the Government of Spain from 1982 to 1986 and as Minister of Public Administration from 1986 to 1991. He was replaced by Juan Manuel Eguiagaray in the latter post. He was also the PSOE spokesperson from 1994 to 1997.
Socialist party leader
Upon the resignation of Felipe González after being defeated in the 1996 elections, the PSOE Convention (Congreso federal) appointed Almunia as the party leader (Secretary-General), a position he held from 1997 to 2000.
In 1998, fellow party member and former minister Josep Borrell decided to run against Almunia, in the first national primary election ever held in the PSOE since the Second Republic, intended to determine who the party would nominate as its prime ministerial candidate vis-à-vis the 2000 general election. Borrell ran as the underdog, campaigning as the candidate of the socialist base against the party establishment, which largely supported Almunia, including former Prime Minister González. Unexpectedly, Borrell won the primary election, commanding 114,254 of the member's votes (54.99%), versus the 92,860 (44.67%) obtained by Almunia. Thus began an uneasy relationship and power-sharing —the "bicefalia" (duumvirate)— between the official party leader, Almunia, and the prime ministerial candidate elected by the members in the primaries, Borrell. However, in May 1999, a fraud investigation affecting two former officials appointed by Borrell several years earlier while he was at the Ministry of Finance, led to his resignation as Prime Ministerial candidate.
In 2000, Almunia was therefore the PSOE candidate for prime minister. The party was again defeated by incumbent Prime Minister José María Aznar of the conservative PP, suffering its worst result in a general election since the Spanish transition to democracy, which resulted in an absolute majority for Aznar. As a result, Almunia resigned as PSOE leader.
Almunia was the director of the research program on "equality and redistribution of income" at the Fundación Argentaria from 1991 to 1994. In 2002 he founded and served as director of a progressive think tank called Laboratorio de Alternativas (Fundación Alternativas).
European Commissioner
He first joined the Prodi Commission on 26 April 2004 as a successor to Pedro Solbes (who had resigned to join the new Zapatero government) and was reappointed by Barroso in November 2004.
As EU Commissioner for Competition, Almunia was responsible for initiating in 2014 investigations under State aid (European Union) rules into the tax planning practices of Apple, Starbucks and Fiat, as well as Amazon.
He is an Honorary Fellow of St Edmund's College, Cambridge.
Other activities
International organizations
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Ex-Officio Member of the Board of Governors (2004–2010)
Non-profit organizations
Aristide Merloni Foundation, Member of the Scientific Council (since 2019)
The European House – Ambrosetti, Member of the Scientific Committee for 'Building the Energy Union to Fuel European Growth' (2015)
Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS), Chairman
Centre for European Reform, Member of the Advisory Board
European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), Member
European Policy Centre (EPC), Member of the Strategic Council
Friends of Europe, Member of the Board of Trustees
Jacques Delors Institute, Member of the Board of Directors
References
External links
Joaquín Almunia, Official Media Gallery
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1948 births
European Commissioners for Competition
Harvard Kennedy School alumni
Leaders of political parties in Spain
Living people
Members of the 1st Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 2nd Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 3rd Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 4th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 5th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 6th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 7th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Members of the 8th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Politicians from Bilbao
Recipients of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana, 2nd Class
Spanish European Commissioners
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party politicians
University of Deusto alumni
University of Paris alumni
Spanish expatriates in France |
James Robinson (22 November 1813 – 4 March 1862) was a British dentist and anaesthetist. On 19 December 1846, he became the first person to carry out general anaesthesia in Britain when he administered ether to a patient undergoing a tooth extraction. The next year, he published A Treatise on the Inhalation of the Vapour of Ether, perhaps the first textbook of anaesthesia. Robinson's work influenced the prominent anaesthetist John Snow. Robinson also undertook initiatives to reform the dental profession in Britain. At the age of 48, he died of blood loss following a gardening accident; his London home, as well as the site where he first administered anaesthesia, are commemorated with plaques.
Biography
Robinson was born on 22 November 1813 in Hampshire, England. At 14, he undertook an apprenticeship with a surgeon and chemist in London, and beginning in 1830 he attended medical courses at Guy's Hospital and University College. He did not complete his studies or obtain any official qualifications, but he began practising dentistry in London as early as 1833, and became surgeon dentist at the Metropolitan Hospital the next year.
Early in his career Robinson made efforts to reform the—then largely unregulated and disreputable—dental profession in Britain. In 1842 he established a professional society for "ethical" dentists, but this initiative attracted little support. Robinson also founded two short-lived dental journals, the British Quarterly Journal of Dental Surgery and The Forceps, in 1843 and 1844 respectively—the Quarterly was the first dental journal in Britain—and in 1846 he published a textbook of dentistry, The Surgical and Mechanical Treatment of the Teeth. Robinson quickly earned an international reputation as a skilled dentist, and the Baltimore College of Dental Surgeons awarded him an honorary doctorate in 1846.
Robinson conducted his dental practice from his home at 14 Gower Street in Bloomsbury, which was just down the street from the residence of Francis Boott, a retired American physician. On 17 December 1846, Boott received a letter from Jacob Bigelow detailing the Boston dentist William Thomas Green Morton's successful use of ether for general anaesthesia during an operation on a neck tumour. He resolved, with Robinson's help, to test this new technique. On the 19th of December, at Boott's home on 24 Gower Street, Robinson administered ether to a young woman undergoing a tooth extraction—the first use of general anaesthesia in Britain. The gas was administered using a homemade inhaler based on a water carbonation device invented by John Mervin Nooth. Robinson gave several demonstrations of his technique; those in attendance included Robert Liston and John Snow, who went on to make further explorations of ether's anaesthetic properties.
In February 1847 Robinson published A Treatise on the Inhalation of Ether, which is sometimes regarded as the first textbook of anaesthesia in the world, though this title has also been claimed by an early version of John Snow's 1847 On the Inhalation of Ether and by Mafutsuto-Ron, an 1839 publication by Gendai Kamada documenting the induction of anaesthesia using a herbal cocktail.
About 4 months after his initial foray into anaesthesia, Robinson abandoned the subject and dedicated himself again to dentistry. In 1848 he took up the position of surgeon dentist at the Royal Free Hospital, and in 1849 he was appointed as Prince Albert's personal dentist. During the mid-1850s he resumed his initiatives to reform the dental profession. He was the inaugural president of the College of Dentists in 1856 (though he would later resign the post due to frictions between the college and the Odontological Society of London) and was involved in the founding of the Royal Dental Hospital and the University College Hospital Dental Hospital.
Death and legacy
In 1862, Robinson was pruning a tree in his garden at Kenton when the knife slipped and wounded his leg, damaging the femoral artery. Despite receiving medical attention, he died of blood loss two days later, on the fourth of March and was buried on the western side of Highgate Cemetery. He was buried in the family plot of his wife's family, the Websters. A large ledger stone is on the grave (plot no.4642).
He was survived by his wife, Ann Elizabeth Webster. English Heritage commemorated Robinson's former residence at 14 Gower Street with a plaque in 1991. A plaque also stands at 24 Gower Street to commemorate the administration of the first anaesthetic.
Notes
References
1813 births
1862 deaths
Burials at Highgate Cemetery
British dentists
British anaesthetists
Scientists from Hampshire |
Watan (Arabic: وطن) or Al-Watan with the definite article al- (Arabic: الوطن), meaning homeland, heimat, country, or nation, may refer to:
Politics
Al-Watan means 'national' in Arabic and in Persian (وطن), the articles titles on Wikipedia for political parties are sometimes translated as 'national', sometimes as 'al-watan', 'al-watani' or 'watani'. Wataniyya may also refer to State-based ('patriotic') nationalism (see Egyptian nationalism), as opposed to Qawmiyya, ethnic-based Arab nationalism.
Watani Party or Al-Watani Party, a former Egyptian party
Homeland Party (Libya), or Al-Watan Party, a Libyan party
National Party (Syria), or Al-Watani Party, a former Syrian party
Al-Watan Party (Tunisia), or Al-Watan Party, a centrist party in Tunisia
Watan Party of Afghanistan, an Afghan political party
Vatan Party, a former Iranian party
Patriotic Party (Turkey), a Turkish political party
Publications
It is commonly used as the name of Arabic-language newspapers, as well as newspapers in other languages that have borrowed the word:
Al-Watan (Bahrain), an Arabic daily newspaper published in Bahrain
Watan News, online Jordanian news agency
Al-Watan (Kuwait), a Kuwaiti Arabic-language defunct daily published by the Al Watan publishing house
Al-Watan Daily, a daily English-language newspaper published in Kuwait
Alwatan (Oman), an Arabic daily newspaper published in Oman
Al-Watan (Qatar), a daily morning Arabic-language political newspaper based in Doha, Qatar
Al-Watan (Saudi Arabia), a daily newspaper in Saudi Arabia
Al-Watan (Syria), a Syrian Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Syria
Al-Watwan (Comoros), a Comorian French-language and Comorian Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Moroni, Comoros
El Watan, an Algerian newspaper
Nawai Watan, a Balochi newspaper in Pakistan
Vatan, a Turkish daily newspaper, founded in 2002
Vatan (former newspaper), former Turkish newspaper (1923–1925, 1940–1978)
Places
Al-Watan, San‘a’, a village in western central Yemen
Qasr Al Watan, the United Arab Emirates presidential palace and seat of government.
Other uses
Watan (film), a 1938 Indian film
Watan (name), a Formosan given name
Watan Group, a telecommunications and security company in Afghanistan
Pader Watan, a military unit in the Soviet-backed Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
Watan Order, the highest national order of Turkmenistan
Watan, a historical land allotment in India owned by a Watandar
Ardulfurataini (national anthem), national anthem of Iraq from 1981 to 2003
See also
Vatan (disambiguation)
ar:الوطن |
Frances Cashel Hoey (née Frances Sarah Johnston; 14 February 1830 – 8 July 1908), pseudonym Cashel Hoey, was an Irish novelist, journalist and translator.
Life
Frances Sarah Johnston was born in Bushy Park, Dublin on 14 February 1830. She was one of eight children. Her parents were Charlotte Jane Shaw and Charles Bolton Johnston. He was secretary and registrar at Mount Jerome Cemetery and Crematorium.
In 1853 she began to contribute reviews and articles on fine art to Freeman's Journal, The Nation, and other Dublin papers and periodicals.
On her sixteenth birthday, 14 February 1846, she married Adam Murray "A.M." Stewart, by whom she had two daughters. A.M. Stewart died on 6 November 1856. As a widow, she moved to London and met William Makepeace Thackeray. She soon wrote reviews for the Morning Post, to whose editor William Carleton introduced her, and for The Spectator. A frequent visitor to Paris, on Easter Day 1871 she was the only passenger from London to Paris, and returned next day with the news of the Paris Commune.
On 6 February 1858 she married John Cashel Hoey (1828–1893). Hoey was a devout Roman Catholic, and she converted to his religion. She was granted a civil list pension in 1892, and was widowed the following year. She died on 8 July 1908 at Beccles, Suffolk at the age of 78. She was buried in the churchyard of the Benedictine church at Little Malvern, Worcestershire.
In a previously unpublished letter dated 3 February 1935, commenting on a family photo, George Bernard Shaw wrote:"I cannot identify the lady in the riding habit, although her face and bearing are so familiar to me that I think I must have seen her. She may be a sister of Charles: they have the same nose and mouth. I never saw Charles: he was a consumptive invalid and did not appear during my few visits to Mount Jerome. The very uncorseted matron on the right is Mrs. Cashel Hoey (Fanny Hoy) Johnston's eldest daughter, who scandalised the family by going to London and earning her living as author (novelist), journalist, reviewer, and "ghost" to literary men who were too lazy to write their own novels, notably Edmund Yates. She became a professed Roman Catholic on marrying Hoey. By her first husband, Stewart, she had a daughter who married a Dublin solicitor named Fottrell. Fanny was a tremendous talker, with the art of making her acquaintances believe that she was intensely interested in them, and that her importance and influence in literary London were limitless. She belonged to a XIX century type of London literary woman now almost extinct. I sketched it rather ill naturedly in one of my early novels, using Fanny as a model for a few superficial traits. Professionally she had to be a bit of a humbug; but she was a good sort in real life."
Works
In 1865, she started a story entitled "Buried in the Deep" for Chambers's Journal, then under the editorship of James Payn. Until 1894 she was a constant contributor, writing articles, short stories, and two serial novels, A Golden Sorrow (1892) and The Blossoming of an Aloe (1894). She wrote eleven novels, writing about high society. Her first novel, A House of Cards (3 vols. 1868; 2nd edit. 1871), two later novels, Falsely True (1870) and The Question of Cain (1882), and her last novel, A Stern Chase (1886), passed into second editions, and some were popular in Canada and the United States.
According to Elizabeth Lee in the old Dictionary of National Biography, Hoey was also largely responsible for Land at Last (1866), Black Sheep (1867), Forlorn Hope (1867), Rock Ahead (1868), and A Righted Wrong (1870). These five novels were published under the name of Edmund Yates. Hoey was sole author of the last work. Eventually, the secret of her authorship was revealed, and she also helped Yates in 1874 to plan, and then write, The World. P. D. Edwards in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography describes this account, circulated by Anthony Trollope who held a grudge against Yates, as "probably spurious".
Hoey was a reader for publishers at various times, and was the first to send a Lady's Letter to an Australian paper, which she did for 20 years. She also translated 27 works from the French and Italian, seven in collaboration with John Lillie. They includes memoirs, travels, and novels.
Notes
Attribution
External links
Golden Gale (all ten of her full-length novels)
1830 births
1908 deaths
Irish journalists
Irish translators
19th-century Irish novelists
19th-century translators
Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism |
The Mitsubishi Electric Koalas are a basketball team based in Nagoya, Aichi, playing in the Women's Japan Basketball League.
Notable players
Teresa Edwards
Maki Eguchi
Michiko Miyamoto
Risa Nishioka
Asako O
Chika Sakuragi
Asami Tanaka
Coaches
Hiroko Tanabe
Practice facilities
Mitsubishi Electric Nagoya Gymnasium
References
External links
Official website
Basketball teams in Japan
Basketball teams established in 1956
1956 establishments in Japan |
Hurt Park is a small park in downtown Atlanta in the triangle between Edgewood Avenue, Courtland Street, and Gilmer Street. It is named after banker, real estate, and streetcar developer Joel Hurt. When Hurt Park opened in 1940, it was the first public park in downtown Atlanta since the 1860s and represented one of the great achievements of Mayor William B. Hartsfield's first administration. The park was part of a 1937–1942 "transformation of [the city's] aging Municipal Auditorium and the surrounding area into a civic center that befitted Atlanta's rising status as a convention center". The park and its fountain were funded in part by the Woodruff Foundation and were designed by the noted landscape architect William C. Pauley. The park was one of downtown Atlanta's principal attractions during the 1940s and 1950s.
The park contains the "Fountain of Light", which used to light the water in different patterns and colors:
An electric fountain with seventy-eight bulbs from one hundred watts to fifteen hundred. It plays for twenty minutes at a time, giving numerous changes of pattern and color before it repeats its rainbow symphony. It was built at a cost of seventeen hundred dollars, and designed by Atlanta sculptor Julian Harris and presented to the city through the Emily and Ernest Woodruff Foundation.
The original fountain is still present in the park with a new and improved light show, post-renovations by Atlanta landscape architecture firm HGOR and partners. The park is included as one of the stops for the Atlanta Streetcar, which became operational around late 2014.
The park underwent extensive renovations for two years and reopened August 2022. The revitalization of the park included:
Fountain cleaning and restoration (new mechanics and electrical systems and new fountain lighting)
Incorporating required ADA-compliancy features
Cleaning, repairing and repointing fountain wall and stairs
Adding necessary safety elements: handrails on stairs and increased lighting
Integrating concrete stage 30" above front seating and seating area improvements
Remodeled pedestrian walkways widened for 20' x 30' stage
Enhanced surrounding greenspaces
Re-grading central lawn providing stage-like atmosphere and proper drainage components
Electrical capabilities meeting WiFi data requirements
Gallery
References
External links
Historic photos of Hurt Park on Atlanta Time Machine site
Parks in Atlanta |
The World Figure Skating Championships is an annual figure skating competition sanctioned by the International Skating Union in which figure skaters compete for the title of World Champion.
The 1954 competitions for men, ladies, pair skating, and ice dancing took place from February 16 to 19 in Oslo, Norway.
Medal table
Results
Men
Judges:
Jacques Favart
Alexander Gordon
Hans Meixner
Melville Rogers
Harold G. Storke
Ladies
Judges:
Bruno Bonfiglio
F. Grimminger
Franz Heinlein
P. Reinertsen
Melville Rogers
Harold G. Storke
J. Wilson
Pairs
Judges:
Pamela Davis
F. Grimminger
Hans Grünauer
B. Holmberg
Eugen Kirchhofer
Melville Rogers
Harold G. Storke
Ice dance
Judges:
Pamela Davis
M. Drake
Eugen Kirchhofer
Hans Meixner
Henri Meudec
Sources
Result List provided by the ISU
World Figure Skating Championships
World Figure Skating Championships
World Figure Skating Championships
International figure skating competitions hosted by Norway
1954 in Norwegian sport
International sports competitions in Oslo
February 1954 sports events in Europe
1950s in Oslo |
The Zen Group of Western Australia (ZGWA) is an organization of lay zen practitioners located in Perth, Western Australia.
Affiliation and practice
The ZGWA is formally affiliated with the Diamond Sangha tradition of Zen Buddhism, which was founded in Hawaii in 1959 by Robert Aitken Roshi.
In keeping with Diamond Sangha tradition, the ZGWA uses rituals from both the Soto and Rinzai schools. Mediation practices of Shikantaza from the Sōtō school and koan training from the Rinzai school are typical forms of practise employed by students in the group, under the guidance of the groups roshi.
Teachers
ZGWA's senior teacher is Ross Bolleter Roshi, who supervises new Zen teachers and assists with the founding of new groups throughout Australia and New Zealand. Ross Bolleter Roshi received transmission from Robert Aitken Roshi in 1995. Ian Sweetman Roshi is the resident teacher in Perth, authorized in 2001 by Ross Bolleter Roshi.
Organization
The group is a not-for-profit organization, assisted by an annually elected council of volunteer members. Council responsibilities include the organizing of sesshin and weekly zazen, correspondence to members about events and assisting with orientation for newcomers.
The ZGWA has no proprietary residence. Appropriate housing of the zendo is made by rental arrangement.
History
The ZGWA started in 1983 with a small group of people sitting in a private home in Mt. Claremont, Perth. Over the years, the ZGWA's meeting place zendo has moved from private residences to an office building in Fremantle, and is currently situated at a church hall.
See also
Sanbo Kyodan
References
External links
Diamond Sangha Website
Affiliates of the Diamond Sangha
Buddhist Peace Fellowship
Zen Buddhist organizations |
Demo is a twelve-issue limited series of comic books by writer Brian Wood and artist Becky Cloonan, published from 2003–2004 by AiT/Planet Lar. Each issue is an isolated story, but they all revolve around the lives of young people. Originally, the series was intended to focus on young people with supernatural powers—which many of the issues indeed do—but as the years progressed, the stories increasingly focused on people, relationships, and emotions, with the "supernatural" angle quietly deemphasized.
Publication history
Demo was very well received. The series was not only embraced by the indie comics world, but also found some crossover success with superhero readers. Wizard, a steadfastly superhero-oriented comics magazine, named Demo its 2004 "Indie of the Year". The series was also nominated for two Eisner Awards in 2005, for "Best Limited Series" and "Best Single Issue" (for #7, "One Shot, Don't Miss").
Initially, Wood and publisher Larry Young emphasized the single-issue aspect of Demo, suggesting that the series would probably not be collected into a trade paperback. AiT/Planet Lar, generally seen as a publisher of graphic novels, held up Demo as proof that it had not abandoned the monthly-pamphlet format. However, the series was collected in 2005, minus the extra materials originally presented with the single issues.
In September 2007, the publishing rights to Demo had reverted to the creators, and in November the DC Comics imprint Vertigo was named as the publisher. They reprinted the original series as a 328-page trade paperback in June 2008 and later published a new 6-issue limited series, entitled Demo: Volume 2, starting in April 2010.
Issues
Volume One:
#1: NYC
#2: Emmy
#3: Bad Blood
#4: Stand Strong
#5: Girl You Want
#6: What You Wish For
#7: One Shot, Don't Miss
#8: Mixtape
#9: Breaking Up
#10: Damaged
#11: Midnight to Six
#12: Mon Dernier Jour Avec Toi (My Last Night with You) [mistranslated, as the actual French text says "My Last Day with You"]
Volume Two:
#1: The Waking Life of Angels
#2: Pangs
#3: Volume One Love Story
#4: Waterbreather
#5: Stranded
#6: Sad and Beautiful World
Collected editions
Both limited series have been collected into trade paperbacks:
Demo: The Collection (328 pages, AiT/Planet Lar, December 2005, )
Demo: Volume 1 (328 pages, Vertigo, July 2008, )
Demo: Volume 2 (160 pages, Vertigo, March 2011, )
Demo (496 pages, Dark Horse Comics, March 2015, )
The scripts have also been collected and published in their own volume:
Demo: The Twelve Original Scripts (AiT/Planet Lar, January 2005, )
Awards
2005: Nominated for "Best Limited Series" Eisner Award
See also
Local
NYX
References
External links
Doing the Demo 1: Looking Back with Brian Wood. Newsarama. May 15, 2008.
Doing the Demo: Looking Back, II. Newsarama. May 22, 2008.
Doing the Demo III - Brian Wood Looks Back. Newsarama. July 3, 2008.
Doing the Demo, Part 4 - Reflecting with Brian Wood. Newsarama. September 24, 2008.
2003 comics debuts
Vertigo Comics limited series |
The Otăsău is a left tributary of the river Bistrița in Romania. It discharges into the Bistrița in Frâncești. Its length is and its basin size is .
References
Rivers of Romania
Rivers of Vâlcea County |
```javascript
import * as Caml_option from "./caml_option.js";
import * as Belt_internalMapInt from "./belt_internalMapInt.js";
import * as Belt_internalAVLtree from "./belt_internalAVLtree.js";
function make() {
return {
data: undefined
};
}
function isEmpty(m) {
let x = m.data;
return x === undefined;
}
function clear(m) {
m.data = undefined;
}
function minKeyUndefined(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.minKeyUndefined(m.data);
}
function minKey(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.minKey(m.data);
}
function maxKeyUndefined(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.maxKeyUndefined(m.data);
}
function maxKey(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.maxKey(m.data);
}
function minimum(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.minimum(m.data);
}
function minUndefined(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.minUndefined(m.data);
}
function maximum(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.maximum(m.data);
}
function maxUndefined(m) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.maxUndefined(m.data);
}
function set(m, k, v) {
let old_data = m.data;
let v$1 = Belt_internalMapInt.addMutate(old_data, k, v);
if (v$1 !== old_data) {
m.data = v$1;
return;
}
}
function forEach(d, f) {
Belt_internalAVLtree.forEach(d.data, f);
}
function map(d, f) {
return {
data: Belt_internalAVLtree.map(d.data, f)
};
}
function mapWithKey(d, f) {
return {
data: Belt_internalAVLtree.mapWithKey(d.data, f)
};
}
function reduce(d, acc, f) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.reduce(d.data, acc, f);
}
function every(d, f) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.every(d.data, f);
}
function some(d, f) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.some(d.data, f);
}
function size(d) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.size(d.data);
}
function toList(d) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.toList(d.data);
}
function toArray(d) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.toArray(d.data);
}
function keysToArray(d) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.keysToArray(d.data);
}
function valuesToArray(d) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.valuesToArray(d.data);
}
function checkInvariantInternal(d) {
Belt_internalAVLtree.checkInvariantInternal(d.data);
}
function has(d, v) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.has(d.data, v);
}
function removeMutateAux(nt, x) {
let k = nt.k;
if (x === k) {
let l = nt.l;
let r = nt.r;
if (l !== undefined) {
if (r !== undefined) {
nt.r = Belt_internalAVLtree.removeMinAuxWithRootMutate(nt, r);
return Belt_internalAVLtree.balMutate(nt);
} else {
return l;
}
} else {
return r;
}
}
if (x < k) {
let l$1 = nt.l;
if (l$1 !== undefined) {
nt.l = removeMutateAux(l$1, x);
return Belt_internalAVLtree.balMutate(nt);
} else {
return nt;
}
}
let r$1 = nt.r;
if (r$1 !== undefined) {
nt.r = removeMutateAux(r$1, x);
return Belt_internalAVLtree.balMutate(nt);
} else {
return nt;
}
}
function remove(d, v) {
let oldRoot = d.data;
if (oldRoot === undefined) {
return;
}
let newRoot = removeMutateAux(oldRoot, v);
if (newRoot !== oldRoot) {
d.data = newRoot;
return;
}
}
function updateDone(t, x, f) {
if (t !== undefined) {
let k = t.k;
if (k === x) {
let data = f(Caml_option.some(t.v));
if (data !== undefined) {
t.v = Caml_option.valFromOption(data);
return t;
}
let l = t.l;
let r = t.r;
if (l !== undefined) {
if (r !== undefined) {
t.r = Belt_internalAVLtree.removeMinAuxWithRootMutate(t, r);
return Belt_internalAVLtree.balMutate(t);
} else {
return l;
}
} else {
return r;
}
}
let l$1 = t.l;
let r$1 = t.r;
if (x < k) {
let ll = updateDone(l$1, x, f);
t.l = ll;
} else {
t.r = updateDone(r$1, x, f);
}
return Belt_internalAVLtree.balMutate(t);
}
let data$1 = f(undefined);
if (data$1 !== undefined) {
return Belt_internalAVLtree.singleton(x, Caml_option.valFromOption(data$1));
} else {
return t;
}
}
function update(t, x, f) {
let oldRoot = t.data;
let newRoot = updateDone(oldRoot, x, f);
if (newRoot !== oldRoot) {
t.data = newRoot;
return;
}
}
function removeArrayMutateAux(_t, xs, _i, len) {
while (true) {
let i = _i;
let t = _t;
if (i >= len) {
return t;
}
let ele = xs[i];
let u = removeMutateAux(t, ele);
if (u === undefined) {
return;
}
_i = i + 1 | 0;
_t = u;
continue;
};
}
function removeMany(d, xs) {
let oldRoot = d.data;
if (oldRoot === undefined) {
return;
}
let len = xs.length;
let newRoot = removeArrayMutateAux(oldRoot, xs, 0, len);
if (newRoot !== oldRoot) {
d.data = newRoot;
return;
}
}
function fromArray(xs) {
return {
data: Belt_internalMapInt.fromArray(xs)
};
}
function cmp(d0, d1, f) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.cmp(d0.data, d1.data, f);
}
function eq(d0, d1, f) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.eq(d0.data, d1.data, f);
}
function get(d, x) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.get(d.data, x);
}
function getUndefined(d, x) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.getUndefined(d.data, x);
}
function getWithDefault(d, x, def) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.getWithDefault(d.data, x, def);
}
function getExn(d, x) {
return Belt_internalMapInt.getExn(d.data, x);
}
let cmpU = cmp;
let eqU = eq;
let forEachU = forEach;
let reduceU = reduce;
let everyU = every;
let someU = some;
let updateU = update;
let mapU = map;
let mapWithKeyU = mapWithKey;
export {
make,
clear,
isEmpty,
has,
cmpU,
cmp,
eqU,
eq,
forEachU,
forEach,
reduceU,
reduce,
everyU,
every,
someU,
some,
size,
toList,
toArray,
fromArray,
keysToArray,
valuesToArray,
minKey,
minKeyUndefined,
maxKey,
maxKeyUndefined,
minimum,
minUndefined,
maximum,
maxUndefined,
get,
getUndefined,
getWithDefault,
getExn,
checkInvariantInternal,
remove,
removeMany,
set,
updateU,
update,
mapU,
map,
mapWithKeyU,
mapWithKey,
}
/* No side effect */
``` |
Trevor Ramsey Tomkins (12 May 1941 – 9 September 2022) was a British jazz drummer best known for his work in a number of British bands in the 1970s, including Gilgamesh.
Biography
Tomkins was born in London and studied music at the Guildhall School of Music. He initially learned to play trombone as a teenager before choosing drums on which he made his first professional appearance.
In 1962, he joined Don Rendell working with the Rendell and Ian Carr's quintet for seven years until 1969. He recorded several albums with pianist Michael Garrick and Don Rendell in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In the 1970s, he worked with Ian Carr's Nucleus, Giles Farnaby's Dream Band, David Becker and Henry Lowther's Quaternity. He was a popular choice for visiting musicians including Sonny Stitt, Phil Woods and Lee Konitz. He appears on the 1971 album First Wind by Frank Ricotti and Mike de Albuquerque and on Tony Coe's 1978 album, Coe-Existence.
Tomkins was the first cousin of Roy Budd (jazz pianist and film composer of Get Carter fame), and Peter C. Budd (jazz guitarist living in Chicago), and was a member of various trios and other line-ups with his cousin Roy.
In 1982 he played on the album Before a Word Is Said with Alan Gowen, Phil Miller and Richard Sinclair. The album was released on CD in 1995.
Tomkins died on 9 September 2022, at the age of 81.
References
External links
Calyx biography
1941 births
2022 deaths
Canterbury scene
English jazz drummers
British male drummers
Nucleus (band) members
Gilgamesh (band) members
British male jazz musicians
New Jazz Orchestra members
Musicians from London |
Clausia may refer to:
Clausia (copepod), a genus of crustaceans in the family Clausiidae
Clausia (plant), a genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae |
Jaanus Marrandi (born 23 March 1963, Paide) is an Estonian politician who belongs to Social Democratic Party.
He has been the member of IX, X, XI, XIII Riigikogu.
In 2002-2003 he was agricultural minister of Estonia ().
References
1963 births
Living people
Social Democratic Party (Estonia) politicians
Members of the Riigikogu, 1999–2003
Members of the Riigikogu, 2003–2007
Members of the Riigikogu, 2007–2011
Members of the Riigikogu, 2015–2019
20th-century Estonian politicians
21st-century Estonian politicians
People from Paide |
Ben Thomson (born June 30, 1982) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player.
Thomson played major junior hockey in the Western Hockey League (WHL) with the Medicine Hat Tigers, before attending the University of Alberta.
In university, he played for the University of Alberta Golden Bears from 2003–04 to 2005–06. He won the 2003–04 University of Alberta Hockey Alumni Trophy as the CIS (West) Most Outstanding Freshman. The Golden Bears won the national CIS University Cup championship in 2005 and 2006, with Thomson winning the Major W.J. "Danny" McLeod Award in 2005, as Most Valuable Player of the national championship tournament.
On July 12, 2006, Thompsom signed with the Houston Aeros of the American Hockey League (AHL), and he went on to play 47 games with the AHL team, and also 6 games in the ECHL with the Texas Wildcatters, during the 2006–07 season.
Thompson moved to Europe for the 2007–08 season where he played 17 games with Klagenfurt AC in the Austrian Hockey League before settling in with the Ravensburg Towerstars of Germany's 2nd Bundesliga where he remained until his retirement from professional hockey following the 2011–12 season. Thompson was a member of the Ravensburg Towerstars when they were crowned the 2010–11 league champions.
Awards and honours
References
External links
1982 births
Living people
Alberta Golden Bears ice hockey players
Canadian ice hockey centres
Houston Aeros (1994–2013) players
EC KAC players
Medicine Hat Tigers players
Texas Wildcatters players |
```javascript
(globalThis.TURBOPACK = globalThis.TURBOPACK || []).push([
"output/your_sha256_hashput_index_e02b0b.js",
{},
{"otherChunks":["output/your_sha256_hashput_1efdac._.js"],"runtimeModuleIds":["[project]/turbopack/crates/turbopack-tests/tests/snapshot/basic/chunked/input/index.js [test] (ecmascript)"]}
]);
// Dummy runtime
``` |
The Star of India refers to a group of flags used during the period of the British Raj in the Indian subcontinent. India had a range of flags for different purposes during its existence. The Princely states had their own flags which were to be flown alongside the British flag as a symbol of suzerainty. The official state flag for use on land was the Union Flag of the United Kingdom and it was this flag that was lowered on Independence Day in 1947. The flag of the governor-general of India was defaced with the Star of India. The civil ensign and naval ensign were the Red Ensign or Blue Ensign, respectively, defaced with the Star of India emblem.
History
Ideas for a flag for areas under British India were initially imperial ones, rather than nationalist ones. After the Indian Rebellion of 1857 and the later establishment of the British Raj, a representative symbol of the new government was pending. Various designs were proposed for the first Star of India flag in 1863, keeping similar flag designs adopted in other British colonies such as Canada and Australia, combining symbols of Imperial authority such as the Union Jack and the royal crown with symbols specific to the colony in question.
Company flag
Upon receiving Royal Assent to trade in the Indian Ocean by Queen Elizabeth I in 1600, the English East India Company adopted a flag of thirteen red and white stripes with the flag of England in canton. The flag in the canton eventually changed to the flag of Great Britain in 1707 and later to the Union Jack in 1801. These flags were also used during the Company rule in India.
After the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the British government passed the Government of India Act 1858, nationalising the East India Company and taking over all of their possessions within India, where they would be considered legally a part of the British Raj. The striped banner of the Company was thus replaced by the Union Jack.
Flags
Blue Ensign
After Queen Victoria became Empress of India through the proclamation of 1876, a naval ensign with the symbol of the Order of the Star of India was warranted by the Admiralty to the Indian Marine in 1877. It was used on vessels of Her Majesty's Indian Marine (Later called the Royal Indian Navy) and for other military and naval purposes.
Its usage was altered from 1928, when the Royal Indian Navy switched to White Ensign as naval ensign, and the Blue Ensign became the naval jack.
Red Ensign
While the Blue Ensign was used for military and naval purposes, the Red Ensign was used as the civil ensign and sometimes represented India in international events, notably in the Declaration by United Nations during World War II. The ensign used on merchant ships registered in British Indian ports was the undefaced red ensign.
Flag of the Viceroy and Governor-General
From around 1885, the viceroy of India was allowed to fly a Union Flag augmented in the centre with the 'Star of India' surmounted by a Crown. It was often used to represent India, acting as an "unofficial national flag", in international events etc. This flag was not the Viceroy's personal flag; it was also used by governors, lieutenant governors, chief commissioners and other British officers in India. When at sea, only the viceroy flew the flag from the mainmast, while other officials flew it from the foremast.
As Independent Dominions
The Star of India series of flags were discontinued from 1947, when the newly independent Dominions of India and Pakistan were established by the Indian Independence Act 1947. The newly formed offices of the governor-generals of India and Pakistan used a dark blue flag bearing the royal crest (a lion standing on the Tudor Crown), beneath which were the words 'INDIA' and 'PAKISTAN' in gold majuscules respectively.
These flags were ultimately discontinued when India and Pakistan when they abolished their Dominion status after becoming constitutional republics in 1950 and 1956 respectively.
Flag of British Indian Army
The British Indian Army used red field emblazoned with Star of India crossed by two swords and beneath the Tudor Crown as ensign and a blue ensign with the Union Flag defaced at the canton, and the Star of India crossed by two swords displayed in the fly as war flag.
Flag of Royal Indian Air Force
The Royal Indian Air Force used the roundel that of Royal Air Force augmented in centre of a star. The roundel is not superimposed on the 'Star of India' as used on the Union Jack and Blue Ensign but some other star. The ensign had a field of air force blue with the United Kingdom's flag in the canton and the Royal Indian Air Force's roundel in the fly.
Proposed flags
Lord Mountbatten, the last Viceroy of India in 1947 proposed two separate flags for India and Pakistan to be used after Partition of India. The flag for India consisted of the flag of the Indian National Congress defaced with a Union Jack in the canton. It was rejected by Nehru, as he felt that the more extremist members of Congress would see the inclusion of the Union Jack on an Indian flag as pandering to the British. The flag for Pakistan consisted of the flag of the Muslim League defaced with a Union Jack in the canton. It was rejected by Jinnah, as he felt that a flag featuring a Christian Cross alongside the Islamic Crescent would be unacceptable to the Muslims of Pakistan.
Other flags
Flag of Home Rule
Indian Home Rule movement used a five red and four green horizontal stripes flag. On the upper left quadrant was the Union Flag, which signified the Dominion status that the movement sought to achieve. A crescent and a seven-pointed star, both in white, are set in top fly. Seven white stars are arranged as in the Saptarishi constellation (the constellation Ursa Major), which is sacred to Hindus.
Coronation Standard
Coronation Standard of British Raj had a Saint George's Cross augmented in the centre with the 'Star of India' surmounted by a Crown.
Flag of Bengal Presidency
The flag of Bengal Presidency had a blue field emblazoned with badge of Bengal. The badge had a passant tiger with a sailing ship below it.
Flag of Indian Local Maritime Government
The ensign of local naval vessels is a usual defaced blue ensign. The badge is a golden lion rampant guardant holding in front paws a crown. It was not a naval ensign, but the Indian equivalent of a colonial Blue Ensign as used on unarmed vessels.
Flag of Commissioners of the Port of Calcutta
On 1 February 1896 an Admiralty Warrant was issued for a Red Ensign defaced by the badge of the Commissioners of the Port of Calcutta as the flag of Commissioners of the Port of Calcutta
Flag of the Conservator of the Port of Bombay
Admiralty Letter, of 19th August 1880 authorised a special flag for the Conservator of the Port of Bombay. Red St George's cross on a white field with three narrower horizontal red stripes in each quarter and a large circular badge in centre. The flag was designed by Captain Sir Henry Morland, of the Royal Indian Marine.
The badge consisted of two oval shields, surmounted by a crown, within a red ring bearing the words Conservator of the Port of Bombay. The sinister shield has the four quarters of the flag of the Trustees without the blue St George's cross, while the dexter shield is from the 1877 arms of the City of Bombay; a red lion passant guardant, flanked on each side by an ostrich feather, (alluding to the visit of Edward VII when he was Prince of Wales), above three, three-masted dhows, known as pattimars. Bombay was the first city in the Empire, outside the British Isles, to which arms were granted.
Flag of the Trustees of the Port of Bombay
An Admiralty Letter authorised a special flag for the Trustees of the Port of Bombay. Blue St George's cross with a maritime scene in each quarter; in the first quarter, a lighthouse, in the second a screw-steamer with auxiliary sails, in the third a dhow, and in the fourth a signal station at the end of a harbour wall.
Flag of State's Merchant
Emblem
The Star of India was the symbol of the Order of the Star of India, a chivalric order of knighthood. It was a rayed five-pointed silver star, decorated with diamonds and surrounded by a sunburst having twenty-six large rays alternating with twenty-six small rays. In the centre of the sunburst was a light blue ribbon bearing the motto of the Order, . The motto chosen was neutral so as to appeal to people of different faiths due to the religious diversity of India, with Heaven also referring to the stars, and their light that sailors used to circumnavigate to India. Unlike most British symbols, the Star did not have Christian connotations, as they were deemed unacceptable to the Indian Princes.
Legacy
The flags were replaced by the Tiraṅgā (Indian Tricolour) after Independence on 15 August 1947 in the independent Dominion of India, and by the Parc̱am-e Sitārah o-Hilāl (Flag of the Star and Crescent) in the independent Dominion of Pakistan, which used the star as the basis of its Coat of Arms.
The emblem was used as a basis for many emblems of British India and continues to be used in modern India. The emblem is still used as a basis for the logos of many organisations such as The Oriental Insurance Company, Board of Control for Cricket in India, Indian Olympic Association, Mumbai Police etc.
List of flags used in British India
Notes
References
Government of British India
Flags of India
India
British East India Company
Military history of British India |
Wowee Zowee: Sordid Sentinels Edition is a compilation album by Pavement released on November 7, 2006. It contains the band's 1995 album, Wowee Zowee, in its entirety, as well as outtakes and other rarities from that era, some of which had previously been unreleased.
Promotion and release
Sordid Sentinels Edition was released on November 7, 2006. Matador Records offered extra items to people who pre-ordered the reissue. Those who chose to pre-order the album received a code redeemable on the Sordid Sentinels Edition website for a rare recording of a live Pavement show at the Palace in Los Angeles on April 21, 1994. Also included in the pre-order deal was a free 7-inch record which included previously unreleased studio versions of the songs "Black Out" and "Extradition" and a poster based on a painting that artist Steve Keene originally contributed for the original release of Wowee Zowee in 1995.
Reception
Sordid Sentinels Edition received very positive reviews from critics, with Stylus Magazine describing it as "a large-scale painting of the best that the 90s rock underground had to offer." In contrast, The Guardian did not consider the album's extra tracks essential listenings.
As of 2010, Sordid Sentinels Edition had sold 32,000 copies.
Track listing
Disc one
Wowee Zowee
"We Dance"
"Rattled by the Rush"
"Black Out"
"Brinx Job"
"Grounded"
"Serpentine Pad"
"Motion Suggests Itself"
"Father to a Sister of Thought"
"Extradition"
"Best Friend's Arm"
"Grave Architecture"
"AT&T"
"Flux = Rad"
"Fight This Generation"
"Kennel District"
"Pueblo"
"Half a Canyon"
"Western Homes"
Wowee Zowee session outtake"Sordid"Rattled by the Rush EP"Brink of the Clouds"
"False Skorpion"
"Easily Fooled""Father to a Sister of Thought" single"Kris Kraft"
"Mussle Rock (Is a Horse in Transition)"Pacific Trim EP
"Give It a Day"
"Gangsters & Pranksters"
"Saganaw"
"I Love Perth"
Wowee Zowee session outtake
"Sentinel"
Disc two
''I Shot Andy Warhol soundtrack1. "Sensitive Euro Man"Wowee Zowee session outtake2. "Stray Fire"Recorded March 3, 1994, at Hilversum, Netherlands3. "Fight This Generation"
4. "Easily Fooled"Wowee Zowee session with Doug Easley on piano5. "Soul Food"Homage to Descendents tribute album6. "It's a Hectic World"Steve Lamacq Evening Session (March 15, 1995)7. "Kris Kraft"
8. "Golden Boys/Serpentine Pad"
9. "Painted Soldiers"
10. "I Love Perth"Medusa Cyclone/Pavement split 7-inch11. "Dancing with the Elders"Recorded live at Wireless JJJ Radio in Australia (July 7, 1994)12. "Half a Canyon"
13. "Best Friend's Arm"
14. "Brink of the Clouds/Candylad"
15. "Unfair"
16. "Easily Fooled"
17. "Heaven Is a Truck"
18. "Box Elder"Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks compilation19. "No More Kings"Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy soundtrack20. "Painted Soldiers"Wowee Zowee'' session outtake
21. "We Dance" (alternate mix)
References
2006 compilation albums
Pavement (band) albums
Matador Records compilation albums |
Vijay Kumar Dada is an Indian ophthalmologist and a consultant at the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi. An alumnus and a former chief of the Dr. R. P. Centre for Ophthalmic Sciences of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, he has written several articles on eye diseases such as cataract and glaucoma. Dada, an elected fellow of the National Academy of Medical Sciences, was honored by the Government of India, in 2002, with the fourth highest Indian civilian award of Padma Shri.
See also
Cataract
Glaucoma
References
External links
Recipients of the Padma Shri in medicine
Living people
Indian ophthalmologists
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi alumni
Academic staff of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi
Indian medical writers
Fellows of the National Academy of Medical Sciences
20th-century Indian medical doctors
Year of birth missing (living people)
20th-century surgeons |
Crudaria capensis, the Cape grey, is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae. It is found in South Africa, in the provinces of Western, Eastern, and Northern Cape.
The wingspan is 20–32 mm for males and 25–34 mm for females. Adults are on wing from October to December. There is one generation per year.
The larvae probably feed on Zygophyllum retrofractum.
References
Butterflies described in 1956
Aphnaeinae |
```c++
// or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
// distributed with this work for additional information
// regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
//
// path_to_url
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
// "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
// specific language governing permissions and limitations
#include "arrow/tensor/converter.h"
#include <algorithm>
#include <cstdint>
#include <limits>
#include <memory>
#include <vector>
#include "arrow/buffer.h"
#include "arrow/buffer_builder.h"
#include "arrow/result.h"
#include "arrow/status.h"
#include "arrow/type.h"
#include "arrow/util/checked_cast.h"
#include "arrow/util/sort.h"
#include "arrow/visit_type_inline.h"
namespace arrow {
class MemoryPool;
namespace internal {
namespace {
inline void IncrementIndex(std::vector<int64_t>& coord, const std::vector<int64_t>& shape,
const std::vector<int64_t>& axis_order) {
const int64_t ndim = shape.size();
const int64_t last_axis = axis_order[ndim - 1];
++coord[last_axis];
if (coord[last_axis] == shape[last_axis]) {
int64_t d = ndim - 1;
while (d > 0 && coord[axis_order[d]] == shape[axis_order[d]]) {
coord[axis_order[d]] = 0;
++coord[axis_order[d - 1]];
--d;
}
}
}
// your_sha256_hash------
// SparseTensorConverter for SparseCSFIndex
class SparseCSFTensorConverter : private SparseTensorConverterMixin {
using SparseTensorConverterMixin::AssignIndex;
using SparseTensorConverterMixin::IsNonZero;
public:
SparseCSFTensorConverter(const Tensor& tensor,
const std::shared_ptr<DataType>& index_value_type,
MemoryPool* pool)
: tensor_(tensor), index_value_type_(index_value_type), pool_(pool) {}
Status Convert() {
RETURN_NOT_OK(::arrow::internal::CheckSparseIndexMaximumValue(index_value_type_,
tensor_.shape()));
const int index_elsize = index_value_type_->byte_width();
const int value_elsize = tensor_.type()->byte_width();
const int64_t ndim = tensor_.ndim();
// Axis order as ascending order of dimension size is a good heuristic but is not
// necessarily optimal.
std::vector<int64_t> axis_order = internal::ArgSort(tensor_.shape());
ARROW_ASSIGN_OR_RAISE(int64_t nonzero_count, tensor_.CountNonZero());
ARROW_ASSIGN_OR_RAISE(auto values_buffer,
AllocateBuffer(value_elsize * nonzero_count, pool_));
auto* values = values_buffer->mutable_data();
std::vector<int64_t> counts(ndim, 0);
std::vector<int64_t> coord(ndim, 0);
std::vector<int64_t> previous_coord(ndim, -1);
std::vector<BufferBuilder> indptr_buffer_builders(ndim - 1);
std::vector<BufferBuilder> indices_buffer_builders(ndim);
const auto* tensor_data = tensor_.raw_data();
uint8_t index_buffer[sizeof(int64_t)];
if (ndim <= 1) {
return Status::NotImplemented("TODO for ndim <= 1");
} else {
const auto& shape = tensor_.shape();
for (int64_t n = tensor_.size(); n > 0; n--) {
const auto offset = tensor_.CalculateValueOffset(coord);
const auto xp = tensor_data + offset;
if (std::any_of(xp, xp + value_elsize, IsNonZero)) {
bool tree_split = false;
std::copy_n(xp, value_elsize, values);
values += value_elsize;
for (int64_t i = 0; i < ndim; ++i) {
int64_t dimension = axis_order[i];
tree_split = tree_split || (coord[dimension] != previous_coord[dimension]);
if (tree_split) {
if (i < ndim - 1) {
AssignIndex(index_buffer, counts[i + 1], index_elsize);
RETURN_NOT_OK(
indptr_buffer_builders[i].Append(index_buffer, index_elsize));
}
AssignIndex(index_buffer, coord[dimension], index_elsize);
RETURN_NOT_OK(
indices_buffer_builders[i].Append(index_buffer, index_elsize));
++counts[i];
}
}
previous_coord = coord;
}
IncrementIndex(coord, shape, axis_order);
}
}
for (int64_t column = 0; column < ndim - 1; ++column) {
AssignIndex(index_buffer, counts[column + 1], index_elsize);
RETURN_NOT_OK(indptr_buffer_builders[column].Append(index_buffer, index_elsize));
}
// make results
data = std::move(values_buffer);
std::vector<std::shared_ptr<Buffer>> indptr_buffers(ndim - 1);
std::vector<std::shared_ptr<Buffer>> indices_buffers(ndim);
std::vector<int64_t> indptr_shapes(counts.begin(), counts.end() - 1);
std::vector<int64_t> indices_shapes = counts;
for (int64_t column = 0; column < ndim; ++column) {
RETURN_NOT_OK(
indices_buffer_builders[column].Finish(&indices_buffers[column], true));
}
for (int64_t column = 0; column < ndim - 1; ++column) {
RETURN_NOT_OK(indptr_buffer_builders[column].Finish(&indptr_buffers[column], true));
}
ARROW_ASSIGN_OR_RAISE(
sparse_index, SparseCSFIndex::Make(index_value_type_, indices_shapes, axis_order,
indptr_buffers, indices_buffers));
return Status::OK();
}
std::shared_ptr<SparseCSFIndex> sparse_index;
std::shared_ptr<Buffer> data;
private:
const Tensor& tensor_;
const std::shared_ptr<DataType>& index_value_type_;
MemoryPool* pool_;
};
class TensorBuilderFromSparseCSFTensor : private SparseTensorConverterMixin {
using SparseTensorConverterMixin::GetIndexValue;
MemoryPool* pool_;
const SparseCSFTensor* sparse_tensor_;
const SparseCSFIndex* sparse_index_;
const std::vector<std::shared_ptr<Tensor>>& indptr_;
const std::vector<std::shared_ptr<Tensor>>& indices_;
const std::vector<int64_t>& axis_order_;
const std::vector<int64_t>& shape_;
const int64_t non_zero_length_;
const int ndim_;
const int64_t tensor_size_;
const FixedWidthType& value_type_;
const int value_elsize_;
const uint8_t* raw_data_;
std::vector<int64_t> strides_;
std::shared_ptr<Buffer> values_buffer_;
uint8_t* values_;
public:
TensorBuilderFromSparseCSFTensor(const SparseCSFTensor* sparse_tensor, MemoryPool* pool)
: pool_(pool),
sparse_tensor_(sparse_tensor),
sparse_index_(
checked_cast<const SparseCSFIndex*>(sparse_tensor->sparse_index().get())),
indptr_(sparse_index_->indptr()),
indices_(sparse_index_->indices()),
axis_order_(sparse_index_->axis_order()),
shape_(sparse_tensor->shape()),
non_zero_length_(sparse_tensor->non_zero_length()),
ndim_(sparse_tensor->ndim()),
tensor_size_(sparse_tensor->size()),
value_type_(checked_cast<const FixedWidthType&>(*sparse_tensor->type())),
value_elsize_(value_type_.byte_width()),
raw_data_(sparse_tensor->raw_data()) {}
int ElementSize(const std::shared_ptr<Tensor>& tensor) const {
return tensor->type()->byte_width();
}
Result<std::shared_ptr<Tensor>> Build() {
RETURN_NOT_OK(internal::ComputeRowMajorStrides(value_type_, shape_, &strides_));
ARROW_ASSIGN_OR_RAISE(values_buffer_,
AllocateBuffer(value_elsize_ * tensor_size_, pool_));
values_ = values_buffer_->mutable_data();
std::fill_n(values_, value_elsize_ * tensor_size_, 0);
const int64_t start = 0;
const int64_t stop = indptr_[0]->size() - 1;
ExpandValues(0, 0, start, stop);
return std::make_shared<Tensor>(sparse_tensor_->type(), std::move(values_buffer_),
shape_, strides_, sparse_tensor_->dim_names());
}
void ExpandValues(const int64_t dim, const int64_t dim_offset, const int64_t start,
const int64_t stop) {
const auto& cur_indices = indices_[dim];
const int indices_elsize = ElementSize(cur_indices);
const auto* indices_data = cur_indices->raw_data() + start * indices_elsize;
if (dim == ndim_ - 1) {
for (auto i = start; i < stop; ++i) {
const int64_t index =
SparseTensorConverterMixin::GetIndexValue(indices_data, indices_elsize);
const int64_t offset = dim_offset + index * strides_[axis_order_[dim]];
std::copy_n(raw_data_ + i * value_elsize_, value_elsize_, values_ + offset);
indices_data += indices_elsize;
}
} else {
const auto& cur_indptr = indptr_[dim];
const int indptr_elsize = ElementSize(cur_indptr);
const auto* indptr_data = cur_indptr->raw_data() + start * indptr_elsize;
for (int64_t i = start; i < stop; ++i) {
const int64_t index =
SparseTensorConverterMixin::GetIndexValue(indices_data, indices_elsize);
const int64_t offset = dim_offset + index * strides_[axis_order_[dim]];
const int64_t next_start = GetIndexValue(indptr_data, indptr_elsize);
const int64_t next_stop =
GetIndexValue(indptr_data + indptr_elsize, indptr_elsize);
ExpandValues(dim + 1, offset, next_start, next_stop);
indices_data += indices_elsize;
indptr_data += indptr_elsize;
}
}
}
};
} // namespace
Status MakeSparseCSFTensorFromTensor(const Tensor& tensor,
const std::shared_ptr<DataType>& index_value_type,
MemoryPool* pool,
std::shared_ptr<SparseIndex>* out_sparse_index,
std::shared_ptr<Buffer>* out_data) {
SparseCSFTensorConverter converter(tensor, index_value_type, pool);
RETURN_NOT_OK(converter.Convert());
*out_sparse_index = checked_pointer_cast<SparseIndex>(converter.sparse_index);
*out_data = converter.data;
return Status::OK();
}
Result<std::shared_ptr<Tensor>> MakeTensorFromSparseCSFTensor(
MemoryPool* pool, const SparseCSFTensor* sparse_tensor) {
TensorBuilderFromSparseCSFTensor builder(sparse_tensor, pool);
return builder.Build();
}
} // namespace internal
} // namespace arrow
``` |
Vladimir Cukavac (Serbian Cyrillic: Владимир Цукавац; 29 May 1884 – 7 April 1965) was a Serbian general holding the title of army general in the Royal Yugoslav Army. He commanded the 5th Army during the German-led Axis invasion of Yugoslavia of April 1941 during World War II. He also served as the 23rd Dean of the Academic Board of the Yugoslav Military Academy and was its chief from 1936 to 1940.
Career
Cukavac's command consisted of the Timok, Toplica, Drina, Morava and Kosovo Divisions, and Vlasnica and Kalna Detachments. The 5th Army was responsible for the Romanian and Bulgarian borders between the Iron Gates and the Greek border.
In 1934, he was awarded the Legion of Honour.
References
References
1884 births
1965 deaths
Military personnel from Valjevo
People from the Kingdom of Serbia
Serbian generals
Recipients of the Legion of Honour
Royal Yugoslav Army personnel of World War II
Army general (Kingdom of Yugoslavia)
World War II prisoners of war held by Germany
Burials at Belgrade New Cemetery |
Dragan Šolak is a Serbian businessman and media mogul. He is the founder and erstwhile majority owner of the United Group media house. Šolak founded United Group back in 2000. Initially starting as just a small cable operator in central Serbia, the company has since become one of the most dominant media companies in Southeast Europe, providing broadband, mobile and TV services in eight countries. He holds the position of Chairman of the advisory board and retains 33% share in the entity. In early 2022, he became the owner of EFL Championship club Southampton F.C., as the lead investor in Sport Republic, which bought 80% of the shares in Southampton from the Chinese businessman Gao Jisheng for about £100m. His net worth was estimated at €1.22 billion, and as of 2021 was understood to be the richest man in Serbia.
Money laundering investigations
On 13 May 2023, the Slovenian information portal N1info, owned by Šolak, reported extensive and irregular investigations conducted by the Slovenian Office for Money Laundering Prevention in December 2021. The investigations occurred amidst a politically charged atmosphere in Slovenia as the elections approached. Evidence obtained suggested that the head of the office, Damjan Žugelj, appointed by the SDS party, facing time constraints, received an anonymous tip enabling him to initiate the investigation, presumably in the context of a pre-election agreement between Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić and former Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša to gather potentially damaging information on their opponents through the respective anti-money laundering offices. Janša has denied the allegations of an agreement with Vučić, while Žugelj has characterised the N1info portal's publications as political revenge.
References
External links
Dragan Solak at united.group
Living people
1964 births
Serbian businesspeople
Serbian billionaires
Southampton F.C. directors and chairmen |
The Scottish Premier League (SPL) was a football league competition that operated between 1998 and 2013. During that period, more than 100 players scored three goals (a hat-trick) or more in a single match. The first player to achieve the feat was Craig Burley, who scored three times for Celtic in a 5–0 victory against Dunfermline Athletic on the opening day of the first SPL season. Eight players scored more than three goals in a match; of these, three players, Kris Boyd (twice), Gary Hooper and Kenny Miller scored five.
Three matches featured two hat-tricks in the same game. The first two came in the same week of the 1999–2000 season. Henrik Larsson and Mark Viduka both scored three goals each in Celtic's 7–0 win against Aberdeen on 16 October 1999, then Aberdeen's Robbie Winters and Motherwell's John Spencer both scored hat-tricks in a 6–5 win for Aberdeen at Fir Park four days later. Gary Hooper and Anthony Stokes both scored hat-tricks in Celtic's league record 9–0 win against Aberdeen on 6 November 2010. Larsson and Stokes are the only players who have scored hat-tricks in consecutive matches.
Henrik Larsson scored three or more goals twelve times in the Scottish Premier League, more than any other player. Larsson, Boyd, John Hartson, Michael Higdon and Stokes were the only players to have scored more than three hat-tricks in the SPL. Six players scored hat-tricks for two different clubs: Boyd (Kilmarnock and Rangers), Higdon (St Mirren and Motherwell), Gary McSwegan (Heart of Midlothian and Kilmarnock), Colin Nish (Kilmarnock and Hibernian), Stokes (Falkirk and Celtic) and Kyle Lafferty (Rangers and Kilmarnock)
Hat-tricks
Multiple hat-tricks
Notes
The Scottish Premier League was the top tier of the Scottish football league system. It was formed in 1998 and was disestablished in 2013.
The results column shows the home team score first.
References
Hat-tricks
Hat-tricks
Scottish Premier League |
Augustus Edward Crevier Holland (March 26, 1824 – 1919) was a farmer and political figure in Prince Edward Island. He represented 4th Prince in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island from 1873 to 1876 and from 1879 to 1886 as a Conservative member.
He was born in Tryon, Prince Edward Island, the son of Frederick B. Holland and Elizabeth Grathay, and the grandson of Samuel Holland. Holland led a volunteer rifle company and served on the Board of Works.
Holland seconded the motion put forward by Cornelius Howatt in 1873 opposing the entry of Prince Edward Island into the Dominion of Canada. He was married three times: to Mary Conroy, the widow of Doctor James H. Conroy, in 1858, then to Emma Parker in 1879 and finally to Annie Page in 1898.
References
The Canadian parliamentary companion, 1883 JA Gemmill
1824 births
1919 deaths
People from Prince County, Prince Edward Island
Progressive Conservative Party of Prince Edward Island MLAs |
Conoplectus is a genus of ant-loving beetles in the family Staphylinidae. There are about five described species in Conoplectus.
Species
These five species belong to the genus Conoplectus:
Conoplectus acornus Carlton, 1983
Conoplectus bicentennialus Carlton, 1983
Conoplectus canaliculatus (LeConte, 1849)
Conoplectus excavoides Carlton, 1983
Conoplectus susae Carlton, 1983
References
Further reading
Pselaphinae
Articles created by Qbugbot |
Glückshaus (House of Fortune) is a gambling dice game for multiple players. It is played with two dice on a numbered board. The name was coined in the 1960s by Erwin Glonnegger who also created the modern design of the board by merging older dice games with a staking board for a card game.
Rules
The board is divided in fields numbered from 2 to 12 (with 4 often left out), arranged in the form of the rooms of a house. Each player rolls two dice.
On a roll of 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 or 11, the player places a coin on the board if that room is empty, or takes the coin if it is occupied.
If the player rolls snake eyes, he has rolled a "Lucky Pig" and collects all the coins on the board, except for what lies in room seven.
If the player rolls a 12, he is "king" (König) and wins all the coins on the board.
If the player rolls a 7, there is a "wedding" (Hochzeit) going on in the room, and one has to put a coin on there no matter what (a dowry). This builds up a jackpot until the "king" (12) is rolled.
If playing on a board with a 4, either nothing happens on rolling a 4, or a rule defined before starting the game comes into play (for example a coin is given to the board owner).
The game ends when one player has won all the coins.
References
External links
http://www.boardgamegeek.com/article/1510621
History of board games
Dice games
Gambling games
Traditional board games |
"House of Pain" is a power ballad by American heavy metal band Faster Pussycat. The song was released as the third and final single from the album Wake Me When It's Over. It is the most popular song by the band, peaking at No. 28 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Music video
A music video was filmed for the song, which was directed by Michael Bay.
Track listing
7" single
US 12" single
Spain 12" single
UK 12" single
Cassette single
EP single
Chart positions
Use in other media
The song was featured in the Peacemaker episode "The Choad Less Traveled". Towards the end of the episode, the titular character listens to the song while reflecting on his childhood trauma and turning to drugs and alcohol for support.
Personnel
Faster Pussycat
Taime Downe – lead vocals
Greg Steele – guitar, piano, backing vocals
Brent Muscat – guitar
Eric Stacy – bass guitar
Mark Michals – drums, percussion
Additional musicians
Jimmy Zavala – harmonica
See also
List of glam metal albums and songs
References
Faster Pussycat songs
1989 songs
1990 singles
Elektra Records singles
Glam metal ballads
Music videos directed by Michael Bay |
Neil Clarke (born 1966) is an American editor and publisher, mainly of science fiction and fantasy stories.
In 2006, Clarke launched Clarkesworld Magazine as a companion to his online bookstore Clarkesworld Books (2000-2007). He serves as the editor-in-chief of the digital publication. Fiction published in Clarkesworld has been nominated for or won the Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy, Sturgeon, Locus, Ditmar, Aurealis, Shirley Jackson, WSFA Small Press and Stoker Awards. Clarkesworld has been a finalist for the Hugo Award in the Best Semiprozine category four times (2009, 2010, 2011, 2013) winning in 2010, 2011 and 2013. Clarke has been a finalist for the Hugo Award for Best Editor: Short Form in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023. He received the Kate Wilhelm Solstice Award from Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in May 2019.
When Clarke closed his bookstore in 2007, he launched Wyrm Publishing, which has since published books by Gene Wolfe, Charles Stross, Catherynne M. Valente and others. Clarkesworld Magazine is currently published by Wyrm in online, digital, audio and print editions. He launched Forever Magazine in 2015 and became the editor of The SFWA Bulletin in early 2016. He edits The Best Science Fiction of the Year series for Night Shade Books. He is also the ebook designer for Cheeky Frawg Books, Prime Books, Wyrm Publishing and several magazines.
As of 2022, Clarke and his family reside in New Jersey.
Health
In 2012, Clarke suffered a severe heart attack while attending Readercon, and had a defibrillator implanted. He has credited this event with having led him to become a full-time editor.
Bibliography
Magazines (edited)
Clarkesworld Magazine, 2006 -
Forever Magazine, 2015 -
The SFWA Bulletin, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, 2016 - 2019
Berlin Quarterly Issue 4, special guest fiction editor
Internazionale (Guest Editor, Storie Issue), Issue 1338, December 2019
Anthologies (edited)
Clarkesworld: Year Three, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2013
Clarkesworld: Year Four, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2013
Clarkesworld: Year Five, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2013
Clarkesworld: Year Six, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2014
Clarkesworld: Year Seven, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2015
Clarkesworld: Year Eight, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2016
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 1, Night Shade Books, 2016
Galactic Empires, Night Shade Books, 2017
Touchable Unreality, China Machine Press, 2017
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 2, Night Shade Books, 2017
More Human Than Human, Night Shade Books, 2017
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 3, Night Shade Books, 2018
Clarkesworld: Year Nine, Volume One, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2018
Clarkesworld: Year Nine, Volume Two, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2018
The Final Frontier, Night Shade Books, 2018
Not One of Us, Night Shade Books, 2018
The Eagle has Landed, Night Shade Books, 2019
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 4, Night Shade Books, 2019
Clarkesworld: Year Ten, Volume One, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2019
Clarkesworld: Year Ten, Volume Two, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2019
Clarkesworld: Year Eleven, Volume One, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2019
Clarkesworld: Year Eleven, Volume Two, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2019
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 5, Night Shade Books, 2020
Clarkesworld: Year Twelve, Volume One, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2021
Clarkesworld: Year Twelve, Volume Two, (with Sean Wallace), Wyrm Publishing, 2021
The Best Science Fiction of the Year Volume 6, Night Shade Books, 2022
Critical studies and reviews of Clarke's work
Upgraded
Awards
Nominee, World Fantasy Special Award: Non-Professional, 2009, 2010, 2012
Winner, World Fantasy Special Award: Non-Professional, 2014
Finalist, Hugo Award for Best Semiprozine, 2009
Winner, Hugo Award for Best Semiprozine, 2010, 2011, 2013
Finalist, Hugo Award for Best Editor Short Form, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021
Winner, Hugo Award for Best Editor Short Form, 2022, 2023
Nominee, Chesley Award for Best Art Director, 2017, 2021
Winner, Chesley Award for Best Art Director, 2016, 2018, 2019
Recipient, The Kate Wilhelm Solstice Award, 2019
References
External links
Clarkesworld Magazine
Forever Magazine
Wyrm Publishing
Neil Clarke's Blog
Video Interview with Neil Clarke for Fast Forward: Contemporary Science Fiction (October 2013, aired June 2013)
Interview at Write 1 Sub 1 (June 2013)
1966 births
Living people
Hugo Award-winning editors
American book editors
American magazine editors
Drew University alumni
Science fiction editors
American speculative fiction editors
American speculative fiction publishers (people)
Male speculative fiction editors |
"Couple Days Off" is a song performed by Huey Lewis and the News and released as a single from the album Hard at Play in 1991. The single peaked at No. 11 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and No. 4 on the Canadian RPM Top Singles chart, and it reached the top 40 on the charts of Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, and New Zealand. "Couple Days Off" was the band's final top-20 single on the Hot 100.
Track listings
US cassette single and Japanese mini-CD single
"Couple Days Off" – 4:56
"Time Ain't Money" – 4:46
7-inch and Australian cassette single
"Couple Days Off" (short edit) – 3:15
"Time Ain't Money" – 4:46
12-inch single
A1. "Couple Days Off" (LP version) – 4:57
B1. "Time Ain't Money" – 4:46
B2. "The Heart of Rock & Roll" – 5:01
CD single
"Couple Days Off" (LP version) – 4:57
"Time Ain't Money" – 4:46
"The Heart of Rock & Roll" – 5:01
"Couple Days Off" (short edit) – 3:15
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
References
Huey Lewis and the News songs
1991 singles
1991 songs
EMI America Records singles
Songs written by Chris Hayes (musician)
Songs written by Huey Lewis |
Schruns is a municipality in the Montafon valley (altitude 690 meters), in the Bludenz district of the westernmost Austrian state of Vorarlberg.
To the west is the famous Zimba mountain, often called the "Vorarlberger Matterhorn," which is very popular among climbers and hikers.
Geography
The Litz river, a tributary of the Ill river flows through the town. A side valley, the Silbertal, stretches to the east of Schruns. The area has a high mountain massif accessible by train and ski-lifts.
To the north is the Bartholomäberg, to the south St. Gallenkirch, and to the west Tschagguns. The nearest larger municipality is Bludenz.
About 45.2 percent of the area is forested, with 18.1 percent mountainous.
Sports
Since 2012/13, Schruns has been part of the FIS Snowboard World Cup, which takes place annually in December. During the daytime, visitors can watch snowboard cross races up on the Hochjoch of the Silvretta Montafon ski area. In the evening, concerts are held in Schruns.
Schruns is a hotspot for mountain biking and trail running. For more than ten years, Schruns has hosted the M3 Montafon Bike Marathon with over 500 bikers.
Notable people
In the early 1920s Schruns was the favorite ski resort of Ernest Hemingway. He wintered there with his first wife, Hadley, and oldest son, who was then just an infant. It was there that he revised the manuscript of The Sun Also Rises. In Hemingway's classic story "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" the third scene in the first flashback sequence recounts memories of Schruns. These images of snow and glacier skiing stand in stark contrast to the description of the Serengeti Plain in the main story and anticipate the coming journey to the snows of Kilimanjaro.
Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi died there in 1972
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf lived in the village in her last years and died there in 2006
Georg Margreitter, footballer for Grasshopper Club Zürich, born in 1988
References
External links
topskiresort.com - Schruns ski resort guide, ratings, webcams, news...
Cities and towns in Bludenz District |
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