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Double Dan is a 1927 comedy crime play by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It is inspired by the 1924 novel Double Dan by Wallace. The plot concerns high finance and a criminal who is a master of disguise. It ran for nine performances at the Savoy Theatre in the West End having premiered at the Opera House Theatre in Blackpool. The cast included Alfred Drayton, Peter Haddon, Reginald Bach and Josephine Wilson. References Bibliography Wearing, J. P. The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield, 2014. 1927 plays Plays by Edgar Wallace Plays set in England West End plays
is a biography series produced by Tsuburaya Productions created to commemorate the 45th anniversary of the Ultra Series. The show first premiered on TV Tokyo on July 6, 2011 and was in syndication for two years. The show features clips from past Ultra Series shows. The catchphrases for the series are and . The new season of the show is titled and premiered on July 3, 2013. Starting from April 2, 2016, New Ultraman Retsuden changed its broadcasting schedule from 6:00 pm in the Tuesday to 9:00 am in Saturday. Said change is also a part of the 50th anniversary celebration of the Ultra Series. The series was put to an end in late June 2016 except for its final nine episodes (147-155), and it previewed the then-upcoming 2016 Ultra Series, Ultraman Orb. Characters : The main navigator of Ultraman Retsuden. Featured heroes Other heroes Episodes Ultra Zero Fight To draw success to the film Ultraman Saga, A new segment to the series that started in episode 57 debuted entitled . Ultra Zero Fight is an Action/Drama series of 3-minute episodes that showcased new forms that the main character, Ultraman Zero acquires as he faces his adversaries. The segment itself is a tribute to the low-budget minisodes of Ultra Fight. Parts : 8 episodes. From episode 57 to episode 64. : 15 episodes. From episode 76 to episode 91 (excluding episode 79). Ultraman Ginga is part of New Ultraman Retsuden comprising episodes 2-7 and 21-25, and with the Theatrical Special being aired as episodes 50 and 51. Mega Monster Rush: Ultra Frontier is part of New Ultraman Retsuden and is a fully CG movie of 3-minute episodes. It is an adaption of the video game of the same title. Parts Red King Hunting: 3 episodes. From episode 12 to episode 14. Neronga Hunting: 2 episodes. From episode 15 to episode 16. Antlar Hunting: 4 episodes. From episode 29 to episode 32. Super-Earth Gomora Hunting: 3 episodes with subtitles; , , and . From episode 52 to episode 54. Gandar Hunting: 3 episodes with subtitles; , , and . From episode 63 to episode 65. King Joe Hunting: 2 episodes with subtitles; and . From episode 66 to episode 67. Plasma Killer Zaurus Hunting: 1 episode with subtitle; . Episode 68. Ultraman Ginga S is part of New Ultraman Retsuden comprising episodes 55-62 and 71-78, and with the movie having been broadcast as episodes 139-141. Ultra Fight Victory is part of New Ultraman Retsuden and is a series of 3-minute episodes that featured a new form of the main character. The series itself is a tribute to the low-budget minisodes of Ultra Fight. Ultraman X is part of New Ultraman Retsuden comprising episodes 106-130, with episodes 113, 121, and 130 being recap specials. Cast Ultraman Retsuden : : : : : New Ultraman Retsuden : : : : : : : : : Voice actors Ultraman Retsuden : Mamoru Miyano : : : : : : : : Narration: , New Ultraman Retsuden : : Zoffy (1): Hideyuki Tanaka : Ultraman Zero (9, 11, 14, 19, 28-33, 46, 47, 96-104, 139-141, 148, 150, 151, 155): Mamoru Miyano Glenfire (9, 11, 34, 100, 101, 104), : Tomokazu Seki : , Alien Hipporit "Jathar of the Hell" (49): Tetsuo Kishi : , , Alien Groza "Glocken of the Freezing" (48, 49): Kōichi Toshima , : : , : Alien Mephilas "Sly of the Dark Magic" (48, 49): Hiroki Yasumoto Alien Temperor "Villainous of the Villainy" (48, 49), : Holly Kaneko Ultraman Belial (49): Yūki Ono : : : : Narration: Yasunori Matsumoto (105), Kensuke Takahashi (113, 121, 130) Songs Opening themes of Ultraman Retsuden Lyrics: Composition & Arrangement: Artist: Voyager feat. Ultraman Zero (Mamoru Miyano) Episodes: 1-13 "DREAM FIGHTER" Composition: Arrangement: Lyrics & Artist: Mamoru Miyano Episodes: 14-20, 26-39 (Verse 1), 21-25 (Verse 2) "Rising High" Lyrics & Composition: Arrangement: Toshihiko Takamizawa with Artist: Voyager Episodes: 40-52 "ULTRA STEEL" Lyrics & Composition: Toshihiko Takamizawa Arrangement: Toshihiko Takamizawa with Yuichiro Honda Artist: Takamiy Episodes: 53-65 "ULTRA FLY" Composition: Hisashi Koyama Arrangement: Koichiro Takahashi Lyrics & Artist: Mamoru Miyano Episodes: 66-78 "Final Wars!" Lyrics & Composition: Toshihiko Takamizawa Arrangement: Toshihiko Takamizawa with Yuichiro Honda Artist: The Alfee Episodes: 79-90 (Verse 1), 91-104 (Verse 2) Opening theme of New Ultraman Retsuden Lyrics & Composition: Toshihiko Takamizawa Arrangement: Toshihiko Takamizawa with Yuichiro Honda Artist: Takamiy with Mamoru Miyano Episodes: 1-7, 14-20 (Verse 1), 8-13, 21-26 (Verse 2) "ULTRA BRAVE" Lyrics: DAIGO Composition: Toshihiko Takamizawa Artist: DAIGO with Takamiy Episodes: 27-39 Lyrics: Hideki Tama Composition & Arrangement: Takao Konishi Artist: Voyager feat. Ultraman Ginga (Tomokazu Sugita) Episodes: 40-52 (Verse 1), 53, 54 (Verse 2) Lyrics & Composition: Toshihiko Takamizawa Arrangement: Toshihiko Takamizawa with Yuichiro Honda Artist: The Alfee Episodes: 55-70 (Verse 1), 71-78 (Verse 2) Lyrics: Hideki Tama, Composition & Arrangement: Takao Konishi Artist: Voyager with Hikaru & Show (Takuya Negishi & Kiyotaka Uji) feat. Takamiy Episodes: 79-90 Lyrics: Sei Okazaki Composition & Arrangement: Takao Konishi Artist: Voyager with Hikaru & Show (Takuya Negishi & Kiyotaka Uji) feat. Takamiy Episodes: 91-105 Lyrics: Composition & Arrangement: Takao Konishi Artist: Voyager feat. Daichi Ozora (Kensuke Takahashi) / Voyager feat. Project DMM Episodes: 106-121 (Verse 1), 122-130 (Verse 2) / 131-142 Lyrics: TAKERU, Composition & Arrangement: Takao Konishi Artist: Voyager feat. Project DMM Episodes: 143-155 Notes References External links Official New Ultraman Retsuden site at TV Tokyo Official Ultraman Retsuden site at TV Tokyo Official Ultraman Retsuden blog at Tsuburaya Productions 2011 Japanese television series debuts Ultra television series TV Tokyo original programming 2016 Japanese television series endings
The Dhallywood film industry released four feature films in 1959. See also 1959 in Pakistan Notes There are numerous minor inconsistencies in transliteration among the sources. Greater discrepancies are as follows: References Footnotes Bibliography External links Bangladeshi films on Internet Movie Database Film Bangladesh Lists of Pakistani Bengali films by year
```toml [tool.poetry] name = "open-event-scripts" version = "0.1.0" description = "" authors = ["Areeb Jamal <jamal.areeb@gmail.com>"] [tool.poetry.dependencies] python = "^3.8" requests = "^2.25.1" pytz = "^2021.1" python-dateutil = "^2.8.1" sendgrid = "^6.10.0" pandas = "^2.0.3" openpyxl = "^3.1.2" [tool.poetry.dev-dependencies] pre-commit = "^2.10.1" black = {version = "^20.8b1", allow-prereleases = true} [build-system] requires = ["poetry-core>=1.0.0"] build-backend = "poetry.core.masonry.api" [tool.black] line-length = 90 target-version = ['py38'] skip-string-normalization = true exclude = ''' ( /( \.eggs # exclude a few common directories in the | \.git # root of the project | \.hg | \.mypy_cache | \.tox | \.venv | _build | buck-out | build | dist )/ ) ''' [tool.isort] profile = "black" line_length = 90 skip = '.venv/' multi_line_output = 3 include_trailing_comma = true force_grid_wrap = 0 use_parentheses = true [tool.pycln] path = "scripts/" exclude = "(.venv/)" all = true ```
Guilherme Clezar was the current champion, and returned to defend his title, but lost in quarterfinals to Diego Schwartzman. Diego Schwartzman won the title by defeating André Ghem 4–6, 6–4, 7–5 in the final. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main Draw Qualifying Draw Tetra Pak Tennis Cup - Singles 2014 Singles
This is a list of species in the agaric genus Tricholoma. , Index Fungorum lists 379 species in the genus. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V U W X Y Z A Tricholoma abietinum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma acerbum (Bull.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma acicularum Velen. 1947 Tricholoma acutistramineum Corner 1994 – Singapore Tricholoma aeruginascens Corner 1994 Tricholoma aestivum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma aestuans (Fr.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma albatum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma albidulum N.Ayala, G.Moreno & Esteve-Rav. 1997 Tricholoma albidum Bon 1984 Tricholoma albobrunneum (Pers.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma alboconicum (J.E.Lange) Clémençon 1983 Tricholoma alboluteum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma albosquamulatum Beeli 1927  Tricholoma album (Schaeff.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma altaicum Singer 1943 Tricholoma amplum (Pers.) Rea 1922 Tricholoma anatolicum H.H. Doğan & Intini, 2015 Tricholoma andinum E. Horak 1964 Tricholoma apium Jul. Schäff. 1925 Tricholoma argenteum Ovrebo 1989 Tricholoma argyraceum (Bull.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma argyropotamicum Speg. 1899 Tricholoma arvernense Bon 1976 – Europe Tricholoma atro-olivaceum Rick 1939 Tricholoma atrodiscum Ovrebo 1989 Tricholoma atroscriptum Corner 1994  Tricholoma atrosquamosum Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma atroviolaceum A.H.Sm. 1944 – North America Tricholoma aurantiipes Hongo 1991 Tricholoma aurantio-olivaceum A.H.Sm. 1944 – North America Tricholoma aurantium (Schaeff.) Ricken 1914 Tricholoma austrocolossum Grgur. 2002 Tricholoma azalearum (Murrill) Murrill 1942 B Tricholoma bakamatsutake Hongo 1974 Tricholoma baldratianum Sacc. 1916 Tricholoma bambusarum Corner 1994 Tricholoma basirubens (Bon) A.Riva & Bon 1988 Tricholoma batschii Gulden 1969 Tricholoma betilonganum Corner 1994 Tricholoma bezdeki Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma bisontinum Rolland 1902 Tricholoma bonii Basso & Candusso 1997 Tricholoma boreosulphurescens Mort. Chr. & Heilm.-Claus., 2017 Tricholoma borgsjoeënse Jacobsson & Muskos 2006 – Fennoscandia Tricholoma borneomurinum Corner 1994 Tricholoma bresadolanum Clémençon 1977 Tricholoma brunneicirrus Corner 1994 Tricholoma brunneosquamosa Beeli 1927 Tricholoma bryogenum Mort. Chr., Heilm.-Claus. & Vauras, 2017 Tricholoma bubalinum (G.Stev.) E.Horak 1971 Tricholoma bufonium (Pers.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma bulliardii Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma busuense Corner 1994 Tricholoma buzae Dennis 1970 C  Tricholoma caligatum (Viv.) Ricken 1914 Tricholoma carbonicum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma carneoflavidum (Kalchbr.) McAlpine 1895 Tricholoma cartilagineum (Bull.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma catulus E.H.L.Krause 1928 Tricholoma cavipes Corner 1994 Tricholoma cedretorum (Bon) A.Riva 2000 Tricholoma cedrorum Maire 1914 Tricholoma ceriniceps Pegler 1983 Tricholoma cheilolaminum Ovrebo & Tylutki 1975 Tricholoma chrysophyllum A.Riva, C.E.Hermos. & Jul.Sánchez 1998 Tricholoma cifuentesii Courtec. 1985 Tricholoma cingulatum (Almfelt ex Fr.) Jacobashch 1890 Tricholoma cinnamomeum (Murrill) Murrill 1914 Tricholoma clavipes Riedl 1976 Tricholoma clavocystis Musumeci & Contu 2008 – Europe Tricholoma coffeaceum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma collybiiformis Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma colossus (Fr.) Quél. 1872  Tricholoma columbetta (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma concolor (Delile ex De Seynes) P.-A.Moreau, Bellanger & Courtec. 2011 Tricholoma confragipes Iwade 1944 Tricholoma cookeanum Bertault & Malençon 1975 Tricholoma cordae Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma cortinatellum Singer 1954 Tricholoma cortinatum Singer 1952 Tricholoma crenulatum Horniček 1977 Tricholoma crepidotoides Corner 1994 Tricholoma crucigerum (St.-Amans) Sacc. & Trotter 191 Tricholoma cuneifoloides (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma cutifractum Corner 1994 Tricholoma cyclophilum (Lasch) Sacc. & Trotter 1912 Tricholoma czuicum (Singer) Singer, 1951 D Tricholoma dermolomoides Corner 1994 Tricholoma diabolicum Rick 1926 Tricholoma diemii Singer 1954 Tricholoma distantifoliaceum E.Ludw. & H.Willer 2012 Tricholoma distinguendum S.Lundell 1942 Tricholoma dulciolens Kytöv. 1989 Tricholoma duriusculum R.Schulz 1927 Tricholoma durum Velen. 1939 – Europe E Tricholoma edentulum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma elegans G.Stev. 1964 – New Zealand Tricholoma elvirae Singer 1969 Tricholoma eosinobasis Babos, Bohus & Vasas 1991 Tricholoma equestre (L.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma evenosum (Sacc.) Rea 1932 Tricholoma ezcarayense C.E.Hermos. & Jul.Sánchez 1994 F Tricholoma fagineum Velen. 1925 Tricholoma fagnani Singer 1952 Tricholoma farinolens E.Horak 1964 Tricholoma ferrugineimelleum Corner 1994 Tricholoma fiherensis L.M.Dufour & H.Poiss. 1927 Tricholoma filamentosum (Alessio) Alessio 1988 Tricholoma fissilifolium Corner 1994 Tricholoma flammulaecolor Beeli 1927 Tricholoma flavifolium Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma focale (Fr.) Ricken 1914 Tricholoma foliicola Har.Takah. 2001 Tricholoma forteflavescens Reschke, Popa, Zhu L. Yang & G. Kost, 2018 Tricholoma fracticum (Britzelm.) Kreisel 1984 Tricholoma fractipes Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma frondosae Kalamees & Shchukin 2001 Tricholoma fuegianum Courtec. 1985 Tricholoma fuliginea Beeli 1927 Tricholoma fulvimarginatum Ovrebo & Halling 1986 Tricholoma fulvocastaneum Hongo 1960 Tricholoma fulvum (DC.) Bigeard & H.Guill. 1909 Tricholoma fumidellum (Peck) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma furcatifolium Corner 1994 Tricholoma fuscinanum Corner 1994 Tricholoma fusipes E.Horak 1964 Tricholoma fusisporum Singer 1943 G Tricholoma gallaecicum (Blanco-Dios) Blanco-Dios, 2009 Tricholoma gausapatum (Fr.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma glareosum Velen. 1927 Tricholoma glatfelteri (Murrill) Murrill 1914 Tricholoma goliath (Fr.) S.Lundell & Nannf. 1942 Tricholoma goossensiae Beeli 1933 Tricholoma graminicola Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma grande Peck 1891 Tricholoma granulosum Lebedeva 1949 Tricholoma griseipileatum Corner 1994 Tricholoma griseoviolaceum Shanks 1996 – United States Tricholoma groanense Viola 1959 Tricholoma grossulariodorum E.Horak 1964 Tricholoma guldeniae Mort.Chr. 2009 H Tricholoma hathorae Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma hebeloma (Peck) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma hebelomoides E.Horak 1964 Tricholoma hemisulphureum (Kühner) A. Riva ex Boffelli, 2016 Tricholoma henningsii Sacc. & Trotter 1912 Tricholoma hirtellum Peck 1907 Tricholoma holici Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma horakii Raithelh. 1972 Tricholoma hortorum Velen. 1925 Tricholoma humosum (Quél.) S.Imai 1938 Tricholoma huronense A.H. Sm., 1942 Tricholoma hygrophanum Velen. 1939 – Europe I Tricholoma ilkkae Mort. Chr., Heilm.-Claus., Ryman & N. Bergius, 2017 Tricholoma imbricatum (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma impudicum Velen. 1947 Tricholoma inamoenum (Fr.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma inocyboides Corner 1994 Tricholoma insigne Ovrebo 1989 Tricholoma intermedium Peck 1888 Tricholoma iputingaense Bat. & A.F.Vital 1958 J Tricholoma jalapense (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma jamaicensis (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma joachimii Bon & A.Riva 1985 Tricholoma josserandii Bon 1975 K Tricholoma khakicolor Corner 1994 L Tricholoma laricicola Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma lascivum (Fr.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma latifolium Speg. 1898 Tricholoma lavendulophyllum F.Q.Yu 2006 Tricholoma leoninum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma leucophyllum Ovrebo & Tylutki 1975 Tricholoma leucoterreum Mariotto & Turetta 1996 Tricholoma lilacinocinereum Métrod ex Bon 1990 Tricholoma lobatum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma losii Kavina 1926 Tricholoma luridum (Schaeff.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma luteomaculosum A.H. Sm., 1942 M Tricholoma maculatipus Hongo 1962 Tricholoma magellanicum (Speg.) Sacc. 1891  Tricholoma magnivelare (Peck) Redhead 1984 Tricholoma manzanitae T.J.Baroni & Ovrebo 1983 Tricholoma marasmiforme Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma margarita (Murrill) Murrill 1940 Tricholoma marquettense Ovrebo 1986  Tricholoma matsutake (S.Ito & S.Imai) Singer 1943 Tricholoma mauritianum Peerally & Sutra 1973 Tricholoma megaphyllum Boud. 1910 Tricholoma melleum Reschke, Popa, Zhu L. Yang & G. Kost, 2018 Tricholoma mensula Corner 1994 Tricholoma meridianum A.Pearson 1950 Tricholoma mesoamericanum Justo & Cifuentes, 2017 Tricholoma michiganense A.H. Sm., 1942 Tricholoma microcarpoides Corner 1994 Tricholoma minutissimum Corner 1994 Tricholoma minutum Corner 1994 Tricholoma mnichovicense Velen. 1947 Tricholoma montis-fraseri Corner 1994 Tricholoma moseri Singer 1989 Tricholoma moserianum Bon 1990 Tricholoma mostnyae Singer 1969 Tricholoma multifolium (Murrill) Murrill 1914 Tricholoma multipunctum (Peck) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma muricatum Shanks 1996 – United States  Tricholoma murrillianum Singer 1942 – North America Tricholoma muscarioides Reschke, Popa, Zhu L. Yang & G. Kost, 2018  Tricholoma muscarium Kawam. ex Hongo 1959 Tricholoma muscorum Velen. 1947 Tricholoma mutabile Shanks 1996 – United States N Tricholoma naranjanum Dennis 1951 Tricholoma nigripes Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma nigrum Shanks & Ovrebo 1996 – North America Tricholoma nobile Peck 1889 O Tricholoma oblongisporum Bissett 1992 Tricholoma obscurum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma ochraceorobustum E.Horak 1964 Tricholoma odorimutabile Corner 1994 Tricholoma olens Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma olgae Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma olidum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma olivaceobrunneum Ovrebo 1986 Tricholoma olivaceoflavum (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma olivaceoluteolum Reschke, Popa, Zhu L. Yang & G. Kost, 2018 Tricholoma olivaceotinctum Heilm.-Claus. & Mort. Chr. 2009 Tricholoma olivaceum Reschke, Popa, Zhu L. Yang & G. Kost, 2018 Tricholoma oliveum Farl. & Burt, 1929 Tricholoma opiparum (Fr.) Bigeard & H. Guill. 1909  Tricholoma orirubens Quél. 1872 Tricholoma orlosii Pilát 1950 P Tricholoma palustre A.H.Sm. 1942 Tricholoma pampeanum Speg. 1898 Tricholoma panicolor Corner 1994 Tricholoma pannonicum Bohus, 1960 Tricholoma pardalotum Herink & Kotl. 1967  Tricholoma pardinum (Pers.) Quél. 1873 Tricholoma parvisporum Corner 1994 Tricholoma pascuum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma patagonicum Singer 1954 Tricholoma penangense Corner 1994 Tricholoma permelleum Corner 1994 Tricholoma persicinum (Fr.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma pessundatum (Fr.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma phoeniceum (Sacc.) Singer 1943 Tricholoma piceum Velen. 1947 Tricholoma pilatii Velen. 1925 Tricholoma plagiotum (Kalchbr.) McAlpine 1895 Tricholoma populinum J.E.Lange 1933 Tricholoma porta-dalveyi Corner 1994  Tricholoma portentosum (Fr.) Quél. 1873 Tricholoma praetervisum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma pratense Pegler & R.W.Rayner 1969 Tricholoma preslii Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma primulibrunneum Corner 1994 Tricholoma psammopus (Kalchbr.) Quél. 1875 Tricholoma pseudoargyraceum Velen. 1925 Tricholoma pseudoimbricatum J.E.Lange & Terk. 1944 Tricholoma pseudolimacium Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma pseudonictitans Bon 1983 Tricholoma pseudoputidum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma pseudorussula (Speg.) Sacc. 1891 Tricholoma pseudosaponaceum Hásek 1959 Tricholoma pullum Ovrebo 1989 Tricholoma pulverulentipes (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma purpureiflavum Corner 1994 Tricholoma pusillisporum Speg. 1922 Tricholoma pygmaeum Velen. 1920 – Europe Q Tricholoma quercetorum Contu 2004 Tricholoma quercicola (Murrill) Murrill 1949 R Tricholoma radicans Hongo 1968 – Japan Tricholoma radotinense Peck 1903 Tricholoma ramentaceum (Bull.) Ricken 1915 Tricholoma rauli Garrido 1988 Tricholoma rhizophoreti Corner 1994 Tricholoma rigidovelatum Raithelh. 1991 Tricholoma rimosoides Dennis 1951 Tricholoma robiniae Velen. 1925 Tricholoma robustum (Alb. & Schwein.) Ricken 1915 Tricholoma romagnesii Singer 1943 Tricholoma roseoacerbum A.Riva 1984 – Europe, North America Tricholoma rostratum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma rubescens Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma rufenum P.Donati 1994 Tricholoma rufulum R.Heim 1934 Tricholoma rugulicinctum Corner 1994 S Tricholoma sanguinescens Velen. 1925  Tricholoma saponaceum (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma scabrum L.M.Dufour 1913 Tricholoma scalpturatum (Fr.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma schustleri Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma sciodes (Pers.) C.Martín 1919 Tricholoma sejunctum (Sowerby) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma sericeum Rick 1920 Tricholoma sienna (Peck) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma silvaticum Peck 1889 Tricholoma singaporense Corner 1994 Tricholoma sinoacerbum T.H. Li, Hosen & Ting Li, 2015 Tricholoma sinopardinum Zhu L. Yang, X.X. Ding, G. Kost & Rexer, 2017 Tricholoma sinoportentosum Zhu L. Yang, Reschke, Popa & G. Kost, 2018 Tricholoma smithii Ovrebo & K.W. Hughes, 2018 Tricholoma solitarium (Alessio) Contu 2009 Tricholoma sparsifolium Velen. 1925 Tricholoma sphagnicola Hruby 1930 Tricholoma spongiosum Petch 1917 Tricholoma stanekii Pilát 1953 Tricholoma stans (Fr.) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma stiparophyllum (N.Lund) P.Karst. 1879 Tricholoma stipitirufescens Corner 1994 Tricholoma striatifolium (Peck) Sacc. 1887 Tricholoma striatum (Schaeff.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma subamarum Herp. 1912 Tricholoma subannulatum (Peck) Zeller 1922 Tricholoma subargillaceum (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma subaureum Ovrebo 1986 Tricholoma subcinerascens Rick 1939 Tricholoma subcinereiforme (Murrill) Sacc. & Trotter 1925 Tricholoma subclytocybe Velen. 1925 Tricholoma subcuneifolium Corner 1994 Tricholoma subfuscum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma subglobisporum Bon 1976 – Europe Tricholoma subimbricatum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma sublatum Murrill 1942 Tricholoma subluteum Peck, 1904 Tricholoma subniveum Velen. 1925 Tricholoma subresplendens (Murrill) Murrill, 1914 Tricholoma subsulphureum (Britzelm.) Sacc. & Traverso 1911 Tricholoma subumbrinum A.H.Sm. 1944 – North America Tricholoma sudum (Fr.) Quél. 1873 Tricholoma sulcatum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma sulphurellum Rick 1919 Tricholoma sulphurescens Bres. 1905  Tricholoma sulphureum (Bull.) P.Kumm. 1871 T Tricholoma tanzanianum Pegler 1977 Tricholoma tenacifolium Corner 1994 Tricholoma tenue P.W.Graff 1914  Tricholoma terreum (Schaeff.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma testaceum G.Stev. 1964 – New Zealand Tricholoma thalliophilum Rob.Henry 1956 Tricholoma tigrinum (Schaeff.) Gillet 1874 Tricholoma transmutans (Peck) Sacc., 1887 Tricholoma tridentinum Singer 1943 Tricholoma triste (Scop.) Quél. 1872 Tricholoma tristiforme Kauffman 1921 Tricholoma tucumanense Speg. 1919 Tricholoma tumidum (Pers.) Ricken 1915 Tricholoma turbinipes (Kalchbr.) McAlpine 1895 U Tricholoma uliginosum Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma ulvinenii Kalamees 2001 Tricholoma umbonatum Clémençon & Bon 1985 Tricholoma umbraticum Corner 1994 Tricholoma unifactum Peck 1906 Tricholoma urbicum Ferrarese & Zaffalon 2008 Tricholoma uropus Corner 1994  Tricholoma ustale (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871  Tricholoma ustaloides Romagn. 1954 V Tricholoma vaccinoides Pilát 1971 Tricholoma vaccinum (Schaeff.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma vacini Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma venenatum G.F. Atk., 1908 Tricholoma vernale Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma vernaticum Shanks 1996 – United States Tricholoma versicolor Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma vestipes Velen. 1920 – Europe Tricholoma villosiparvum Corner 1994 Tricholoma vinaceogriseum P.D.Orton 1987 Tricholoma violaceibrunneum Corner 1994 Tricholoma virgatum (Fr.) P.Kumm. 1871 Tricholoma viridifucatum Bon 1976 – Europe Tricholoma viridilutescens M.M.Moser 1978 Tricholoma viridiolivaceum G.Stev. 1964 – New Zealand W Tricholoma weizianum Reichert & Aviz.-Hersh. 1959 Z Tricholoma zangii Z.M.Cao, Y.J.Yao & Pegler 2003 – China Tricholoma zelleri (D.E.Stuntz & A.H.Sm.) Ovrebo & Tylutki 1975 Tricholoma zonatum Velen. 1939 – Europe Tricholoma zvarae Velen. 1922 References General references Tricholoma
Diaulinopsis is a genus of hymenopteran insects of the family Eulophidae. References Key to Nearctic eulophid genera Universal Chalcidoidea Database Eulophidae
Whiteforce is a 1988 Australian-Philippines film directed by Eddie Romero starring Sam Jones and Kimberley Pastone. The screenplay concerns an undercover agent accused of murdering his partner. References External links 1988 films Australian television films 1980s English-language films Films directed by Eddie Romero
Claes is a masculine given name, a version of Nicholas, as well as a patronymic surname. It is also spelled Klas, Clas and Klaes. Given name Claes is a common first name in Sweden. It was also a common name in the Low countries until the 18th century, after which the spelling Klaas was largely adopted. People with the given name Claes include: Claes Adelsköld (1824–1907), Swedish engineer, military officer and politician Claes Andersson (1937–2019), Finnish psychiatrist and politician Claes Bang (b. 1967), Danish actor and musician Claes van Beresteyn (1627–1684), Dutch landscape painter Claes Berglund (b.~1960), Swedish ski-orienteering competitor Claes Björklund (b. 1971), Swedish musician, producer and songwriter Claes Michielsz Bontenbal (1575–1623), Dutch civil servant involved in a conspiracy against Maurice of Orange Claes Borgström (1944–2020), Swedish lawyer and politician Claes Compaen (1587–1660), Dutch privateer, pirate, and merchant Claes Cronqvist (b. 1944), Swedish former footballer Claes Cronstedt, Swedish lawyer Claes Dahlbäck (b. 1948), Swedish businessman Claes Duyst van Voorhout (fl. 1638), Dutch brewer painted by Frans Hals Claes Egnell (1916–2012), Swedish sport shooter Claes Eklundh (b. 1944), Swedish artist Claes Elefalk (b. 1959), Swedish sports agent Claes Elfsberg (b. 1948), Swedish television journalist Claes Elmstedt (1928–2018), Swedish politician Claes Eriksson (b. 1950), Swedish director, actor, comedian and composer Claes Fellbom (b. 1943), Swedish director, writer and composer Claes Fornell, Swedish-born American entrepreneur Claes af Geijerstam (b. 1946), Swedish musician, radio personality and DJ Claes Gill (1910–1973), Norwegian author, poet and actor Claes Dirksz van der Heck (1595–1649), Dutch painter Claes Jacobsz van der Heck (1575–1652), Dutch painter Claes Hellgren (b. 1955), Swedish handball player Claes van Heussen (1598–1633), Dutch still life painter Claes Hylinger (b. 1943), Swedish novelist, essayist, poet and literary critic Claes Johanson (1884–1949), Swedish wrestler Claes Kronberg (b. 1987), Danish footballer Claes Lang (1690–1761), Finnish painter Claes Loberg (b. 1970), Swedish-born Australian technology entrepreneur Claes Malmberg (b. 1952), Swedish former footballer Claes Malmberg (b. 1961), Swedish actor and stand-up comedian Claes Pietersz van der Meulen (1642–1693), Dutch glass painter Claes Corneliszoon Moeyaert (1592–1655), Dutch painter Claes Nordén (b. 1993), Swedish ice hockey player Claes Nordin (b. 1955), Swedish badminton player Claes Oldenburg (1929–2022), Swedish-born American pop art sculptor Claes Pieterszoon (1593–1674), Dutch surgeon and mayor of Amsterdam Claes Rålamb (1622–1698), Swedish statesman Claes Roxbergh (b. 1945), Swedish politician Claes G. Ryn (b. 1943), Swedish-born American political scientist Claes Isaacsz Swanenburg (1572–1652), Dutch painter Claes Tholin (1860–1927), Swedish politician Claes Tornberg (born 1936), Swedish rear admiral Claes Uggla (1614–1676), Swedish military officer Claes Västerteg (b. 1972), Swedish politician Claes Jansz Visscher (1587–1652), Dutch draughtsman, engraver, mapmaker and publisher Claes Wersäll (1888–1951), Swedish gymnast Claës Claës Fredrik Hornstedt (1758–1809), Swedish naturalist, taxonomist and illustrator Claës König (1885–1961), Swedish noble man and horse rider Claës Lindsström (1876–1964), Swedish vice admiral Claës Palme (1917–2006), Swedish maritime lawyer Claës Rundberg (1874–1958), Swedish sport shooter Surname Claes is the 7th most common surname in Belgium (16,840 people in 1998) and the most common surname in Belgian Limburg. In contrast, only 405 people have the surname in the Netherlands. People with the last name Claes include: Dirk Claes (b. 1959), Belgian politician Ernest Claes (1885–1968), Belgian author Gabrielle Claes, Belgian museum curator Georges Claes (1920–1994), Belgian racing cyclist Glenn Claes (b. 1994), Belgian footballer Ian Claes (b. 1981), Belgian former footballer Johnny Claes (1916–1956), Belgian racing driver Kelly Claes (b. 1995), American volleyball player Paul Claes (b. 1943), Belgian writer, poet and translator Virginie Claes (b. 1982), Miss Belgium 2006 Willy Claes (b. 1938), Belgian politician, Secretary General of NATO 1994-1995 Wouter Claes (b. 1975), Belgian badminton player See also Clas (given name) Claus, given name and surname Klaas, given name and surname Nicholas Claas, German agricultural machinery manufacturer Fictional Catarina Claes, main character of Japanese novel and anime series My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom! References External links Scandinavian masculine given names Dutch masculine given names Masculine given names Dutch-language surnames Swedish masculine given names Surnames of Belgian origin Patronymic surnames
James Robert Matthews FRSE FLS CBE LLD (1889–1978) was a Scottish botanist. He was president of the British Ecological Society in 1934 and president of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh 1939 to 1942. Life He was born in the village of Dunning on 8 March 1889, the son of Janet (née McLean) and Robert Matthews. He was educated at the local school then at Perth Academy. He then studied science at the University of Edinburgh, graduating MA in 1911. During the same period he attended the Teacher Training at Moray College in Edinburgh, and qualified as a teacher in the same year. In 1911/12 he undertook a course in botany under Isaac Bayley Balfour. In the year 1912/13 he taught at North Berwick Secondary School, then in 1913 he began lecturing in botany at Birkbeck College in London. In the First World War he was employed as a proto-zoologist at Western Command in Liverpool. Returning to Birkbeck after the war, in 1920 he moved to the University of Edinburgh as a lecturer and in 1929 obtained a post as professor of botany at Reading University. In 1934 he moved to the University of Aberdeen. In 1924 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir William Wright Smith, Frederick Orpen Bower, James Ritchie and James Hartley Ashworth. He was vice president of the society from 1958 to 1961, and won the society's Neil Prize for the period 1961–63. In 1956 he was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) and was granted an honorary doctorate (LLD) from Aberdeen University in 1960. He retired in 1959 and died on 12 April 1978 aged 89. Publications Some British Hybrid Roses (1910) The white Moss Loch (1914) Family In 1928 he married Christine Young Blackhall. References 1889 births 1978 deaths People educated at Perth Academy 20th-century Scottish botanists Alumni of the University of Edinburgh Academics of the University of Aberdeen Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
Eric Miller Reeves (born October 18, 1963) is an attorney and a North Carolina state Senator. Early life and education Reeves graduated from St. Mark's School of Texas in 1982 where he was a member of the wrestling team and won the Texas State Championship. Reeves received a bachelor's degree in history from Duke University in 1986 and a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Wake Forest University in 1989. Career Reeves practiced law in Raleigh and was elected to Raleigh City Council in 1993, serving two terms. He was elected to the North Carolina State Senate in 1996 as a Democrat, representing the state's fourteenth – later sixteenth – district. He went on to chair the Senate's technology committee, served as chair of Human Services Appropriations and on the Education Oversight Committee. Reeves also served as co-chair of the Senate Information Technology Committee. He resigned from his chair in 2004 after serving four terms as a state Senator. Reeves is the General Counsel and Director of Public Affairs for SchoolDude.com, a provider of software management tools for Educational Facilities. References External links |- North Carolina state senators Raleigh City Council members Duke University Trinity College of Arts and Sciences alumni Wake Forest University alumni 1963 births Living people 21st-century American politicians
```python import mimetypes from email.charset import QP, Charset from email.header import decode_header, make_header from email.headerregistry import Address from ..exceptions import AnymailRequestsAPIError from ..message import AnymailRecipientStatus from ..utils import ( BASIC_NUMERIC_TYPES, CaseInsensitiveCasePreservingDict, get_anymail_setting, ) from .base_requests import AnymailRequestsBackend, RequestsPayload # Used to force RFC-2047 encoded word # in address formatting workaround QP_CHARSET = Charset("utf-8") QP_CHARSET.header_encoding = QP class EmailBackend(AnymailRequestsBackend): """ Resend (resend.com) API Email Backend """ esp_name = "Resend" def __init__(self, **kwargs): """Init options from Django settings""" esp_name = self.esp_name self.api_key = get_anymail_setting( "api_key", esp_name=esp_name, kwargs=kwargs, allow_bare=True ) api_url = get_anymail_setting( "api_url", esp_name=esp_name, kwargs=kwargs, default="path_to_url", ) if not api_url.endswith("/"): api_url += "/" # Undocumented setting to control workarounds for Resend display-name issues # (see below). If/when Resend improves their API, you can disable Anymail's # workarounds by adding `"RESEND_WORKAROUND_DISPLAY_NAME_BUGS": False` # to your `ANYMAIL` settings. self.workaround_display_name_bugs = get_anymail_setting( "workaround_display_name_bugs", esp_name=esp_name, kwargs=kwargs, default=True, ) super().__init__(api_url, **kwargs) def build_message_payload(self, message, defaults): return ResendPayload(message, defaults, self) def parse_recipient_status(self, response, payload, message): parsed_response = self.deserialize_json_response(response, payload, message) try: message_id = parsed_response["id"] message_ids = None except (KeyError, TypeError): # Batch send? try: message_id = None message_ids = [item["id"] for item in parsed_response["data"]] except (KeyError, TypeError) as err: raise AnymailRequestsAPIError( "Invalid Resend API response format", email_message=message, payload=payload, response=response, backend=self, ) from err recipient_status = CaseInsensitiveCasePreservingDict( { recip.addr_spec: AnymailRecipientStatus( message_id=message_id, status="queued" ) for recip in payload.recipients } ) if message_ids: # batch send: ids are in same order as to_recipients for recip, message_id in zip(payload.to_recipients, message_ids): recipient_status[recip.addr_spec] = AnymailRecipientStatus( message_id=message_id, status="queued" ) return dict(recipient_status) class ResendPayload(RequestsPayload): def __init__(self, message, defaults, backend, *args, **kwargs): self.recipients = [] # for parse_recipient_status self.to_recipients = [] # for parse_recipient_status self.metadata = {} self.merge_metadata = {} self.merge_headers = {} headers = kwargs.pop("headers", {}) headers["Authorization"] = "Bearer %s" % backend.api_key headers["Content-Type"] = "application/json" headers["Accept"] = "application/json" super().__init__(message, defaults, backend, headers=headers, *args, **kwargs) def get_api_endpoint(self): if self.is_batch(): return "emails/batch" return "emails" def serialize_data(self): payload = self.data if self.is_batch(): # Burst payload across to addresses to_emails = self.data.pop("to", []) payload = [] for to_email, to in zip(to_emails, self.to_recipients): data = self.data.copy() data["to"] = [to_email] # formatted for Resend (w/ workarounds) if to.addr_spec in self.merge_metadata: # Merge global metadata with any per-recipient metadata. recipient_metadata = self.metadata.copy() recipient_metadata.update(self.merge_metadata[to.addr_spec]) if "headers" in data: data["headers"] = data["headers"].copy() else: data["headers"] = {} data["headers"]["X-Metadata"] = self.serialize_json( recipient_metadata ) if to.addr_spec in self.merge_headers: if "headers" in data: # Merge global headers (or X-Metadata from above) headers = CaseInsensitiveCasePreservingDict(data["headers"]) headers.update(self.merge_headers[to.addr_spec]) else: headers = self.merge_headers[to.addr_spec] data["headers"] = headers payload.append(data) return self.serialize_json(payload) # # Payload construction # def init_payload(self): self.data = {} # becomes json def _resend_email_address(self, address): """ Return EmailAddress address formatted for use with Resend. Works around a Resend bug that rejects properly formatted RFC 5322 addresses that have the display-name enclosed in double quotes (e.g., any display-name containing a comma), by substituting an RFC 2047 encoded word. This works for all Resend address fields _except_ `from` (see below). """ formatted = address.address if self.backend.workaround_display_name_bugs: if formatted.startswith('"'): # Workaround: force RFC-2047 encoded word formatted = str( Address( display_name=QP_CHARSET.header_encode(address.display_name), addr_spec=address.addr_spec, ) ) return formatted def set_from_email(self, email): # Can't use the address header workaround above for the `from` field: # self.data["from"] = self._resend_email_address(email) # When `from` uses RFC-2047 encoding, Resend returns a "security_error" # status 451, "The email payload contain invalid characters". formatted = email.address if self.backend.workaround_display_name_bugs: if formatted.startswith("=?"): # Workaround: use an *unencoded* (Unicode str) display-name. # This allows use of non-ASCII characters (which Resend rejects when # encoded with RFC 2047). Some punctuation will still result in unusual # behavior or cause an "invalid `from` field" 422 error, but there's # nothing we can do about that. formatted = str( # email.headerregistry.Address str format uses unencoded Unicode Address( # Convert RFC 2047 display name back to Unicode str display_name=str( make_header(decode_header(email.display_name)) ), addr_spec=email.addr_spec, ) ) self.data["from"] = formatted def set_recipients(self, recipient_type, emails): assert recipient_type in ["to", "cc", "bcc"] if emails: field = recipient_type self.data[field] = [self._resend_email_address(email) for email in emails] self.recipients += emails if recipient_type == "to": self.to_recipients = emails def set_subject(self, subject): self.data["subject"] = subject def set_reply_to(self, emails): if emails: self.data["reply_to"] = [ self._resend_email_address(email) for email in emails ] def set_extra_headers(self, headers): # Resend requires header values to be strings (not integers) as of 2023-10-20. # Stringify ints and floats; anything else is the caller's responsibility. self.data.setdefault("headers", {}).update( { k: str(v) if isinstance(v, BASIC_NUMERIC_TYPES) else v for k, v in headers.items() } ) def set_text_body(self, body): self.data["text"] = body def set_html_body(self, body): if "html" in self.data: # second html body could show up through multiple alternatives, # or html body + alternative self.unsupported_feature("multiple html parts") self.data["html"] = body @staticmethod def make_attachment(attachment): """Returns Resend attachment dict for attachment""" filename = attachment.name or "" if not filename: # Provide default name with reasonable extension. # (Resend guesses content type from the filename extension; # there doesn't seem to be any other way to specify it.) ext = mimetypes.guess_extension(attachment.content_type) if ext is not None: filename = f"attachment{ext}" att = {"content": attachment.b64content, "filename": filename} # attachment.inline / attachment.cid not supported return att def set_attachments(self, attachments): if attachments: if any(att.content_id for att in attachments): self.unsupported_feature("inline content-id") self.data["attachments"] = [ self.make_attachment(attachment) for attachment in attachments ] def set_metadata(self, metadata): # Send metadata as json in a custom X-Metadata header. # (Resend's own "tags" are severely limited in character set) self.data.setdefault("headers", {})["X-Metadata"] = self.serialize_json( metadata ) self.metadata = metadata # may be needed for batch send in serialize_data # Resend doesn't support delayed sending # def set_send_at(self, send_at): def set_tags(self, tags): # Send tags using a custom X-Tags header. # (Resend's own "tags" are severely limited in character set) self.data.setdefault("headers", {})["X-Tags"] = self.serialize_json(tags) # Resend doesn't support changing click/open tracking per message # def set_track_clicks(self, track_clicks): # def set_track_opens(self, track_opens): # Resend doesn't support server-rendered templates. # (Their template feature is rendered client-side, # using React in node.js.) # def set_template_id(self, template_id): # def set_merge_global_data(self, merge_global_data): def set_merge_data(self, merge_data): # Empty merge_data is a request to use batch send; # any other merge_data is unsupported. if any(recipient_data for recipient_data in merge_data.values()): self.unsupported_feature("merge_data") def set_merge_metadata(self, merge_metadata): self.merge_metadata = merge_metadata # late bound in serialize_data def set_merge_headers(self, merge_headers): self.merge_headers = merge_headers # late bound in serialize_data def set_esp_extra(self, extra): self.data.update(extra) ```
Feock ( ; ) is a coastal civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is about south of Truro at the head of Carrick Roads on the River Fal. To the south, the parish is bordered by Restronguet Creek and to the east by Carrick Roads and the River Fal. To the north it is bordered by Kea parish and to the west by Perranarworthal parish. Feock parish includes the villages of Carnon Downs, Chycoose, Devoran, Goon Piper, Harcourt, Killiganoon, Penelewey, Penpol, Porthgwidden, Restronguet Point, Trevilla, and Trelissick. The electoral ward is called Feock and Kea. At the 2011 census it had a population of 4,511 whereas the civil parish including Bissom has a population of 3,708 only. The garden of the Trelissick Estate is a National Trust property. The King Harry Ferry takes cars across the Fal to Philleigh and the Roseland Peninsula. Feock lies within the Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). Almost a third of Cornwall has AONB designation. The Duchy Grammar School was built as a house named Tregye in 1809 for William Penrose; in the late 19th century it was extended and remodeled. A 20th-century extension obscures the original entrance. Parish church The Parish Church is dedicated to Saint Feoca, about whom very little is known. Although the saint is usually assumed to have been female, Hals described a stained glass window in the church with St Feock portrayed as a man. The church has a 13th-century tower and font, the remainder being 19th-century. As late as 1640, according to Hals, the sacrament was administered by the Reverend William Jackson in Cornish as the people understood no other language. Feock feast was observed on 2 February. There are two Cornish crosses in the parish: one is in the churchyard and the other at Trelissick. The cross in the churchyard probably dates from the 13th century (it has a crude crucifixus figure on one side of the head and a foliated cross on the other). The cross at Trelissick was moved from Tredrea in the parish of St Erth in the 1840s; it has a crude crucifixus figure on the front of the head but the back is defaced. It had been found in a field called "Parc an Grouse". Thomas Lobb, Victorian botanist and plant hunter is buried in Devoran churchyard. Trelissick Garden has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1955 when it was donated by Ida Copeland following the death of her son Geoffrey; Mrs. Copeland donated a stained glass memorial window (bearing the Copeland coat of arms) to the parish church of Feock. Cornish wrestling Cornish wrestling tournaments, for prizes were held at Feock Downs in the 1800s. Twinning Feock is twinned with: Hôpital-Camfrout (An Ospital) a Breton village in Finistère, Brittany, France. Gallery References Further reading - leaflet available from parish church External links Feock parish council Villages in Cornwall Civil parishes in Cornwall
Don't Let Go is the twelfth studio album by American keyboardist and record producer George Duke released in 1978 through Epic Records. The album peaked at No. 39 on the US Billboard 200 and at No. 5 on the US Billboard Top Soul Albums chart. Overview Don't Let Go was produced by George Duke. Recording sessions for the album took place at Paramount Recording Studios in Los Angeles, California. The album features guest appearances from Duke's frequent collaborators, guitarist Charles "Icarus" Johnson, bassist Byron Miller, drummer Leon "Ndugu" Chancler and percussionist Sheila Escovedo with guest appearances from Josie James and Napoleon Murphy Brock on lead vocals, Petsye Powell and Pattie Brooks on backing vocals, Roland Bautista and Wah Wah Watson on guitars, and Carol Shive and Judy Geist on violins. Singles "Dukey Stick" reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. Track listing Personnel George Duke – keyboards, vocals, narrator Charles "Icarus" Johnson – guitar, narrator Wah Wah Watson – guitar licks (track 1 only) Roland Bautista – rhythm guitar Byron Lee Miller – bass, narrator Leon "Ndugu" Chancler – drums, timbales, narrator Sheila E. – congas, percussion, narrator Carol Shive – violin Judy Geist – violin Petsye Powell – backing vocals Pattie Brooks – backing vocals Josie James – lead vocals Napoleon Murphy Brock – lead vocals Production George Duke – producer Kerry McNabb – engineer Mitch Gibson – assistant engineer John Golden – mastering at Kendun Recorders (Burbank, California). Glen Christensen – art direction Norman Seeff – photography Herb Cohen – management Chart history References External links George Duke's 1970s discography on his website 1978 albums George Duke albums Epic Records albums Albums produced by George Duke
```elixir #--- # Excerpted from "Programming Elixir 1.3", # published by The Pragmatic Bookshelf. # courses, books, articles, and the like. Contact us if you are in doubt. # We make no guarantees that this code is fit for any purpose. # Visit path_to_url for more book information. #--- defmodule Spawn4 do def greet do receive do {sender, msg} -> send sender, { :ok, "Hello, #{msg}" } greet end end end # here's a client pid = spawn(Spawn4, :greet, []) send pid, {self, "World!"} receive do {:ok, message} -> IO.puts message end send pid, {self, "Kermit!"} receive do {:ok, message} -> IO.puts message after 500 -> IO.puts "The greeter has gone away" end ```
Paraliparis camilarus is a species of snailfish found in the northwest of Mawson Bank. Size This species reaches a length of . Etymology The fish is named in honor of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Living Resources, CCAMLR, under whose auspices and guidance made the collection of this species possible. References Liparidae Taxa named by Daniel L. Stein Fish described in 2012
Martin Young (born 9 April 1955) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender. References 1955 births Living people Footballers from Grimsby English men's footballers Men's association football defenders Grimsby Town F.C. players English Football League players
Edward Chikombo (born 1942/43, murdered in March 2007) was a Zimbabwean journalist, who, until 2002, worked as a cameraman for the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC). He was murdered in late March 2007. Background Chikombo is believed to have sent to foreign media images of police brutality against supporters of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), including images of Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai lying in hospital after one such beating on 11 March. On 29 March Chikombo was abducted from his home. According to The Independent, His captors drove a silver pick-up truck of the same make used in numerous similar abductions during a sustained three-week terror campaign targeting government opponents. Chikombo's body was discovered a few days later. The murder sparked an outcry from international media and the International Federation of Journalists. The murderers were not identified, but foreign media linked the killing to an "escalation of the government's campaign of violence and intimidation". Chikombo's death in 2007 foreshadowed the killings of over eighty MDC supporters during the Zimbabwean presidential election in 2008 - including Gibson Nyandoro and Tonderai Ndira. References 1940s births 2007 deaths Assassinated Zimbabwean people Assassinated dissidents Extrajudicial killings in Zimbabwe Kidnapped Zimbabwean people Kidnappings in Zimbabwe Victims of human rights abuses Zimbabwean murder victims 2007 murders in Zimbabwe
Ghanpuram is a village and a mandal in Mulugu district in the state of Telangana in India. Culture Kota Gullu are a group of 12th century stone temples that are located in Ghanpur. They are known for their marvelous architecture and has been among the notable destinations in the district. References Mandal headquarters of Telangana Villages in Mulugu district
James Chaine (1841 – 4 May 1885) was an Irish shipping businessman and a Conservative Party politician in the Impreial Parliament of Great Britain and Ireland where he represented County Antrim, Ulster from 1874 to 1885. . The son of James Chaine of Ballycraigy and Carncastle and wife, Maria (from Antrim Town), was educated in Blackheath. In 1863, he married Henrietta Creery from Newcastle, County Down. Chaine was influential in developing the cross-channel links between Larne and Stranraer, Scotland. Chaine was also known for helping link Larne Harbour with the United States Of America & other inland Countys. He was the director of the Larne and Stanraer Boat Company, and was the key figure behind the building of the Port and Harbour of Larne. He promoted and financed construction of railroad lines from Larne to Ballyclare and from Larne to Ballymena (the Ballymena and Larne Railway). He was elected at the 1874 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Antrim, and held the seat until his death at the age of 43 in May 1885. Chaine, James Porter Corry and William Ewart formed a minority of Irish MPs from "the world of the big business" while the majority were either landowners or descendants of the landed families. Chaine himself became a major landowner by the purchase of a £64,000 estate in Carncastle followed by a £22,000 estate in Killead. He also owned a very large estate which was known as Ballycraigy hence his title and was situated where the famous housing estate in County Antrim is based. Because of Chaines great contribution to the people of his constituency who came from many different backgrounds, they decided to build a monument which is situated in Larne Harbour and known as, "Chaine Memorial Tower". Death He died after catching a chill, which developed into pneumonia. His estate was valued at £62,681. He was buried, in an upright position, overlooking Larne Lough, near Sandy Point. The Chaine Memorial, a replica Irish round tower, was built in Larne in 1888 to commemorate him. Notes References Campbell, Fergus (2009). The Irish Establishment 1879-1914. Oxford University Press. . Thomson, Frank (2001). The end of liberal Ulster: land agitation and land reform, 1868-1886. Ulster Historical Foundation. . External links 1841 births 1885 deaths People from Larne Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for County Antrim constituencies (1801–1922) UK MPs 1874–1880 UK MPs 1880–1885 Irish Conservative Party MPs Businesspeople in shipping 19th-century Irish businesspeople Businesspeople from County Antrim People from Killead
WNAW (1230 AM, "New Country 94.7") is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to North Adams, Massachusetts, United States, the station serves northern Berkshire County. The station is owned by Townsquare Media (through licensee subsidiary Townsquare License, LLC), and features programming from ABC News Radio. In August 2013, Gamma Broadcasting reached a deal to sell its Berkshire County radio stations, including WNAW, to Reed Miami Holdings; the sale was canceled on December 30, 2013. In October 2016, Gamma agreed to sell its stations to Galaxy Communications; that sale also fell through, and in 2017 the stations were acquired by Townsquare Media. On March 1, 2021, WNAW changed their format from adult contemporary to country, branded as "New Country 94.7" (simulcast on FM translator W234DD 94.7 FM North Adams). Previous logo References External links NAW Country radio stations in the United States North Adams, Massachusetts Mass media in Berkshire County, Massachusetts Radio stations established in 1947 1947 establishments in Massachusetts Townsquare Media radio stations
Pinoy Sunday () is a 2009 Taiwanese comedy-drama film directed by Ho Wi Ding about two overseas Filipino workers in Taiwan who get themselves in an adventure all over Taipei when they discover an abandoned red couch. Plot Dado Tagalog and Manuel dela Cruz are two Overseas Filipino workers employed with Giant Bicycles in Taiwan. While Dado misses his wife and daughter back home, he has been dating a Personal Care Assistant named Anna. Meanwhile, Manuel has hopelessly been in love with a club hostess named Cecilia. One Sunday after Church, a chain of events occurs between the two friends. Manuel tries to ask Cecilia out on a date when he spots her at a hair salon. He does her a favor by buying mango ice drinks for Cecilia and her companions, only for them to flake out on him. Dado foolishly decides to break up with Anna on her birthday, which he had forgotten all along. As the duo talk about their heartbreaking experiences over lunch, they notice a Taiwanese couple arguing over a red couch that is delivered on their doorstep. When the couple and delivery workers abandon the couch, Manuel sees it as a sign from God and decides that he and Dado bring it back to their dormitory. After a friend overcharges them for offering to deliver it on his truck and the local bus refuses to accommodate it, Dado and Manuel have no choice but to carry the couch on foot. In the middle of their journey, they cross a street when a drunk motorcyclist collides with the couch. The motorcyclist argues heavily with the duo until all three men are sent to the police station when the motorcyclist accidentally hits a policewoman with his helmet. At the precinct, Manuel begins to fear of being deported when an officer wonders if the duo stole the couch, but the policewoman lets the duo go after filing her report. After walking for a few kilometers, the duo rest on the couch when an Ilonggo woman in a taxicab meets them. She offers them a truck for them to borrow for free to deliver the couch the next day, but Manuel politely declines the offer because they would have to leave the couch at that spot overnight, much to Dado's dismay. Manuel offers to buy Dado a snack to calm him down, but when he returns, he sees Dado give the couch away to a junk collector; eventually, the duo chase after and hitch a ride on the junk collector's three-wheeler pickup. They fall asleep during the trip and wake up to discover that they are at a recycling plant. The duo get into an argument and Dado threatens to leave Manuel at the plant, but he changes his mind when he steals a shopping cart from a group of kids and they strap the couch on it. Later, Manuel and Dado argue over using the couch as a side business at the dormitory when a news reporter stops to interview them after they indirectly prevented a young man from jumping off an apartment building during their journey. After they run away from the reporter, she broadcasts a report on them, asking if they are thieves or heroes. As night falls, the duo ditch the shopping cart to cross the river in a shortcut, but get into yet another heated argument after they nearly drown. Manuel finally admits that they won't make it in time before the curfew, but Dado encourages him to relax. Dado calls Anna and asks for forgiveness. While the dormitory gate closes for curfew, Manuel and Dado spend the rest of the night singing on the couch floating on the river. The next morning, the duo wake up and take a bus home, abandoning the couch on the riverbanks. Manuel and Dado return to the Philippines, where they relax by the beach before going home by tricycle. They talk about what to eat for dinner before thinking about running a furniture business. Cast Bayani Agbayani as Diosdado "Dado" Tagalog Epy Quizon as Manuel dela Cruz Alessandra De Rossi as Cecilia Meryll Soriano as Anna Nor Domingo as Carros Father Jean-Claude as himself Melenie Hung as Joy Julia Chen as Grace Bowie Tsang as House-moving wife Reception James Marsh of Twitch Film admired the film, calling it "a delight from start to finish. Like its characters, it is a film of simple tastes and manageable ambitions, and Ho, together with co-writer Ajay Balakrishnan, does a grand job of telling a very particular story in a way that speaks to us all, regardless of our nationality or background." Ho Yi of Taipei Times described the film as "a lighthearted and humorous tone, opting to depict the sunnier side of the lives of migrant workers, who sing karaoke, laugh, relax and can be themselves on their days off." Awards and nominations Wins Best New Director - Ho Wi Ding (47th Golden Horse Awards) Best Picture (2010 Comedy Cluj Festival, Romania) References External links Official website (archived) 2009 films 2009 comedy films 2009 drama films 2009 romantic comedy-drama films 2000s buddy films 2000s Mandarin-language films 2000s Tagalog-language films Filipino diaspora Films directed by Ho Wi Ding Films set in the Philippines Films set in Taiwan Films shot in the Philippines Films shot in Taiwan Taiwanese romantic comedy-drama films
Shahrukh Khan (born 27 May 1995) is an Indian cricketer. He plays for Tamil Nadu in domestic cricket and for the Punjab Kings in the Indian Premier League (IPL). Career Khan made first debute his List A debut on 27 February 2014, for Tamil Nadu in the 2013–14 Vijay Hazare Trophy. He made his first-class debut for Tamil Nadu in the 2018–19 Ranji Trophy on 6 December 2018. Khan was part of the Tamil Nadu side that went unbeaten all season on their way to winning the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy in 2021. Khan contributed an unbeaten 40 from 19 balls in the Quarter Final vs Himachal Pradesh. In February 2021, Khan was bought by the Punjab Kings in the IPL auction ahead of the 2021 Indian Premier League. He made his IPL debut on 12 April 2021 against Rajasthan Royals and scored an unbeaten 6 off 4 balls. He was handed his maiden IPL cap by Chris Gayle. In January 2022, Khan was named as one of two standby players in India's Twenty20 International (T20I) squad for their home series against the West Indies. In February 2022, he was bought by the Punjab Kings in the auction for the 2022 Indian Premier League tournament. Later the same month, in the opening round of matches in the 2021–22 Ranji Trophy, Khan scored 194 runs for Tamil Nadu against Delhi. References External links 1995 births Living people Indian cricketers Punjab Kings cricketers Tamil Nadu cricketers Cricketers from Chennai
Lee Morris (born 11 January 1970) is an English hard rock and heavy metal drummer. Career Morris came from a musical family and started playing the drums at six years of age. He learnt his instrument from his dad (Ivor Morris) and spent many hours during his early years playing along with various records from the family record collection. At age 12, he joined his first high school cover band, playing the top 40 songs at the time, but the band never played outside the school walls. At the age of 14, Morris discovered a love of rock music after hearing the Iron Maiden Killers and Kiss Alive! albums. Morris joined his first rock covers band called Wyzed in the early 1980s, and got to enjoy playing rock regularly at various halls, pubs and clubs throughout the English Midlands. He got frustrated with playing covers at that time, and joined Royale, that included Vince O'Regan (Bob Catley / Pulse) in the line-up. During the late 1980s and early 1990s Morris played in his first signed band which was the Birmingham based Marshall Law. He recorded an EP (Power Crazy EP), one studio album (Power Game) and one live album with the outfit before they disbanded. At the start of 1991, Morris auditioned for Little Angels, after a recommendation from departing drummer Michael Lee. He got down to the last two but eventually lost out to Mark Richardson. After the demise of Marshall Law, Morris was invited to team up with guitarist Robin George in a band called The Promise. He recorded a demo for their album, and appeared on the James Whale TV show, before joining Paradise Lost in December 1994. He recorded seven albums with the band between 1994 and 2003 and got to tour the globe several times and played on Top of the Pops in Germany. Blabbermouth reported that Morris "parted ways" with Paradise Lost in 2004 due to "personal and musical differences". After leaving Paradise Lost, Morris began teaching drums to aspiring drummers, while also getting involved in session work. His first session was some live dates with Ten. He also worked with Danny Vaughn, recording two albums with Vaughn; Traveller and The Road Less Travelled. In 2010, he recorded the Methods to End It All album with Creation's Tears. In 2011, Morris played drums for the Arabia album, Welcome to the Freakshow, and also performed at the Z Rock Festival with the band. In 2012, he again played the Z Rock Festival with Paul Sabu after having played drums on Sabu's Bangkok Rules album. In September 2013, Thin Lizzy tribute band Limehouse Lizzy announced Lee Morris as their new drummer. In 2017, he joined the British band Magnum and played on their album, Lost on the Road to Eternity. References External links Lee Morris – Myspace.com Lee Morris' biography – creationtears.com Interview with Morris on Draconian Times 1970 births Living people British male drummers English heavy metal drummers Paradise Lost (band) members 21st-century British drummers 21st-century British male musicians Ten (band) members Magnum (band) members
```go // This file is part of the go-ethereum library. // // The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify // (at your option) any later version. // // The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the // // along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <path_to_url // Package math provides integer math utilities. package math import ( "fmt" "math/big" ) // Various big integer limit values. var ( tt255 = BigPow(2, 255) tt256 = BigPow(2, 256) tt256m1 = new(big.Int).Sub(tt256, big.NewInt(1)) tt63 = BigPow(2, 63) MaxBig256 = new(big.Int).Set(tt256m1) MaxBig63 = new(big.Int).Sub(tt63, big.NewInt(1)) ) const ( // number of bits in a big.Word wordBits = 32 << (uint64(^big.Word(0)) >> 63) // number of bytes in a big.Word wordBytes = wordBits / 8 ) // HexOrDecimal256 marshals big.Int as hex or decimal. type HexOrDecimal256 big.Int // NewHexOrDecimal256 creates a new HexOrDecimal256 func NewHexOrDecimal256(x int64) *HexOrDecimal256 { b := big.NewInt(x) h := HexOrDecimal256(*b) return &h } // UnmarshalText implements encoding.TextUnmarshaler. func (i *HexOrDecimal256) UnmarshalText(input []byte) error { bigint, ok := ParseBig256(string(input)) if !ok { return fmt.Errorf("invalid hex or decimal integer %q", input) } *i = HexOrDecimal256(*bigint) return nil } // MarshalText implements encoding.TextMarshaler. func (i *HexOrDecimal256) MarshalText() ([]byte, error) { if i == nil { return []byte("0x0"), nil } return []byte(fmt.Sprintf("%#x", (*big.Int)(i))), nil } // Decimal256 unmarshals big.Int as a decimal string. When unmarshalling, // it however accepts either "0x"-prefixed (hex encoded) or non-prefixed (decimal) type Decimal256 big.Int // NewHexOrDecimal256 creates a new Decimal256 func NewDecimal256(x int64) *Decimal256 { b := big.NewInt(x) d := Decimal256(*b) return &d } // UnmarshalText implements encoding.TextUnmarshaler. func (i *Decimal256) UnmarshalText(input []byte) error { bigint, ok := ParseBig256(string(input)) if !ok { return fmt.Errorf("invalid hex or decimal integer %q", input) } *i = Decimal256(*bigint) return nil } // MarshalText implements encoding.TextMarshaler. func (i *Decimal256) MarshalText() ([]byte, error) { return []byte(i.String()), nil } // String implements Stringer. func (i *Decimal256) String() string { if i == nil { return "0" } return fmt.Sprintf("%#d", (*big.Int)(i)) } // ParseBig256 parses s as a 256 bit integer in decimal or hexadecimal syntax. // Leading zeros are accepted. The empty string parses as zero. func ParseBig256(s string) (*big.Int, bool) { if s == "" { return new(big.Int), true } var bigint *big.Int var ok bool if len(s) >= 2 && (s[:2] == "0x" || s[:2] == "0X") { bigint, ok = new(big.Int).SetString(s[2:], 16) } else { bigint, ok = new(big.Int).SetString(s, 10) } if ok && bigint.BitLen() > 256 { bigint, ok = nil, false } return bigint, ok } // MustParseBig256 parses s as a 256 bit big integer and panics if the string is invalid. func MustParseBig256(s string) *big.Int { v, ok := ParseBig256(s) if !ok { panic("invalid 256 bit integer: " + s) } return v } // BigPow returns a ** b as a big integer. func BigPow(a, b int64) *big.Int { r := big.NewInt(a) return r.Exp(r, big.NewInt(b), nil) } // BigMax returns the larger of x or y. func BigMax(x, y *big.Int) *big.Int { if x.Cmp(y) < 0 { return y } return x } // BigMin returns the smaller of x or y. func BigMin(x, y *big.Int) *big.Int { if x.Cmp(y) > 0 { return y } return x } // FirstBitSet returns the index of the first 1 bit in v, counting from LSB. func FirstBitSet(v *big.Int) int { for i := 0; i < v.BitLen(); i++ { if v.Bit(i) > 0 { return i } } return v.BitLen() } // PaddedBigBytes encodes a big integer as a big-endian byte slice. The length // of the slice is at least n bytes. func PaddedBigBytes(bigint *big.Int, n int) []byte { if bigint.BitLen()/8 >= n { return bigint.Bytes() } ret := make([]byte, n) ReadBits(bigint, ret) return ret } // bigEndianByteAt returns the byte at position n, // in Big-Endian encoding // So n==0 returns the least significant byte func bigEndianByteAt(bigint *big.Int, n int) byte { words := bigint.Bits() // Check word-bucket the byte will reside in i := n / wordBytes if i >= len(words) { return byte(0) } word := words[i] // Offset of the byte shift := 8 * uint(n%wordBytes) return byte(word >> shift) } // Byte returns the byte at position n, // with the supplied padlength in Little-Endian encoding. // n==0 returns the MSB // Example: bigint '5', padlength 32, n=31 => 5 func Byte(bigint *big.Int, padlength, n int) byte { if n >= padlength { return byte(0) } return bigEndianByteAt(bigint, padlength-1-n) } // ReadBits encodes the absolute value of bigint as big-endian bytes. Callers must ensure // that buf has enough space. If buf is too short the result will be incomplete. func ReadBits(bigint *big.Int, buf []byte) { i := len(buf) for _, d := range bigint.Bits() { for j := 0; j < wordBytes && i > 0; j++ { i-- buf[i] = byte(d) d >>= 8 } } } // U256 encodes as a 256 bit two's complement number. This operation is destructive. func U256(x *big.Int) *big.Int { return x.And(x, tt256m1) } // U256Bytes converts a big Int into a 256bit EVM number. // This operation is destructive. func U256Bytes(n *big.Int) []byte { return PaddedBigBytes(U256(n), 32) } // S256 interprets x as a two's complement number. // x must not exceed 256 bits (the result is undefined if it does) and is not modified. // // S256(0) = 0 // S256(1) = 1 // S256(2**255) = -2**255 // S256(2**256-1) = -1 func S256(x *big.Int) *big.Int { if x.Cmp(tt255) < 0 { return x } return new(big.Int).Sub(x, tt256) } // Exp implements exponentiation by squaring. // Exp returns a newly-allocated big integer and does not change // base or exponent. The result is truncated to 256 bits. // // Courtesy @karalabe and @chfast func Exp(base, exponent *big.Int) *big.Int { result := big.NewInt(1) for _, word := range exponent.Bits() { for i := 0; i < wordBits; i++ { if word&1 == 1 { U256(result.Mul(result, base)) } U256(base.Mul(base, base)) word >>= 1 } } return result } ```
Onchidium tricolor is a species of air-breathing sea slug, a shell-less marine pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Onchidiidae. Description Distribution References Onchidiidae Gastropods described in 1918
Cubesort is a parallel sorting algorithm that builds a self-balancing multi-dimensional array from the keys to be sorted. As the axes are of similar length the structure resembles a cube. After each key is inserted the cube can be rapidly converted to an array. A cubesort implementation written in C was published in 2014. Operation Cubesort's algorithm uses a specialized binary search on each axis to find the location to insert an element. When an axis grows too large it is split. Locality of reference is optimal as only four binary searches are performed on small arrays for each insertion. By using many small dynamic arrays the high cost for insertion on single large arrays is avoided. References External links (passing mention) Comparison sorts Stable sorts Online sorts
The Amstrad E-mailer (often stylized as E-m@iler or written as Emailer or Em@iler) is a Personal Communication Centre that is a landline phone device, launched in March 2000. History Design and release The idea for the Amstrad E-mailer was conceived by Bob Watkins and was called BSI, the product was designed by Cliff Lawson and Ian Saward who started working on the Emailer in 1997. It was based on the Amstrad PB1500 Landline phone, using the same design and layout. The first Amstrad E-mailer was a collaboration between Amstrad and BT, with Amstrad using the backend and email server provided by BT. BT released their own e-mail phone, the BT Easicom 1000, in 1998, 2 years before the Emailer's release. When the Amstrad E-mailer was released in March 2000, it had the "Powered by BT" logo printed on it. By 2002 Amstrad hosted their own Email/Internet service and broke all ties with BT. The bootloader was named "PBL", an abbreviation for "Primary Boot Loader", and was designed by Trevor Kellaway at Application Solutions for Amstrad. The E-mailer was a desktop telephone with a 4:3 5.8" LCD screen and limited Internet dialup and email messaging capabilities. Later models (the E-m@iler Plus, released 2002, and E3 Superphone with video Phone capabilities, released 2004) included the ability to play ZX Spectrum Computer Games. Profitability Amstrad made a loss on every E-Mailer sold. Amstrad recouped that loss through the phone calls made each day with a "pay-as-you-use" business model. It was only after they were used for 2 to 3 years that they finally paid their build cost back to Amstrad and started to make a profit. Amstrad eventually broke even, as Lord Sugar said in an interview in 2011: I think the mistake was that it was slightly too late – we're going back maybe ten years or more. The explosion of the broadband market meant the demise of that product. We sold 450,000 but we subsidised them because I wanted to get into a business where I was no longer on the treadmill of expecting to make a profit on hardware. There was a cost each time a person sent an email and that was where our revenues were coming from. But they are still out there – I think there are 150,000 people still using them and I think someone told me Amstrad now has broken even and we have actually recovered all the costs. The unpopularity of the E-mailer led to losses at Amstrad's Amserve company. In 2001, Watkins resigned after being with Amstrad for over 25 years due to losses from the E-mailer. Discontinuation The Amstrad E-mailer relied heavily on the Amserve Service to function, without it, it deactivates. All Amstrad E-mailer models have now been discontinued. On 30 April 2010 the Amserve E-mailer service was transferred to BSkyB, who announced that the Amserve e-mail service would close from 30 June 2011. From this date all support for the E-mailer services ended, although FAQs are available on Amstrad's website but the manuals are no longer available. The E-mailer phone will only function as a conventional phone with no online and e-mail after receiving a configuration change to stop it from deactivating, Once deactivated it stops functioning and can never be reactivated. By 2011 there were about 150,000 customers still using the Amstrad E-mailer. Accessories The Mailboard that slides out from under the handset was similar to the original ZX Spectrum keyboard, so it was similar to playing them on the Spectrum. The E3 Videophone Mailboard was the only one that was different, with rubber keys like the original ZX Spectrum. All 3 models of the Mailboard can be used on all 3 E-mailer models, so they can use an E1 Mailboard on the E3 and vice versa, they work as a PS/2 keyboard. The Amstrad E3 Superphone came with a gamepad similar to a PlayStation 1 controller. Advertising on The E-mailer The emailer also included advertising on its screen but when it downloaded the adverts it was on a free 0808 number so the customer was not charged. Advertisers included Sky, AOL, BT, Orange, Toyota, Halifax, Dialaphone, HSBC and NS&I. References External links Amstrad's E-m@iler product page Amserve email web interface Amstrad Emailer Info Site Amstrad Personal digital assistants
Gujarat Cancer Research Institute (GCRI) is a state owned cancer research institute in Gujarat, India. It was established in 1972. It is one of the 25 government funded Regional Cancer Centres in India. References Hospital buildings completed in 1972 Government buildings completed in 1972 Research institutes in Ahmedabad Regional Cancer Centres in India Hospitals in Gujarat Healthcare in Ahmedabad Research institutes in Gujarat 1972 establishments in Gujarat
```smalltalk using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Linq; using System.Threading.Tasks; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authorization; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Authorization; using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection; using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.Cookies; namespace AuthorizationLab { public class Startup { // This method gets called by the runtime. Use this method to add services to the container. // For more information on how to configure your application, visit path_to_url public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services) { services.AddAuthentication(CookieAuthenticationDefaults.AuthenticationScheme) .AddCookie(CookieAuthenticationDefaults.AuthenticationScheme, options => { options.LoginPath = new PathString("/Account/Login/"); options.AccessDeniedPath = new PathString("/Account/Forbidden/"); }); services.AddAuthorization(options => { options.AddPolicy("AdministratorOnly", policy => policy.RequireRole("Administrator")); options.AddPolicy("EmployeeId", policy => policy.RequireClaim("EmployeeId", "123", "456")); options.AddPolicy("Over21Only", policy => policy.Requirements.Add(new MinimumAgeRequirement(21))); options.AddPolicy("BuildingEntry", policy => policy.Requirements.Add(new OfficeEntryRequirement())); }); services.AddMvc(config => { var policy = new AuthorizationPolicyBuilder() .RequireAuthenticatedUser() .Build(); config.Filters.Add(new AuthorizeFilter(policy)); }); services.AddSingleton<IAuthorizationHandler, HasBadgeHandler>(); services.AddSingleton<IAuthorizationHandler, HasTemporaryPassHandler>(); services.AddSingleton<IDocumentRepository, DocumentRepository>(); services.AddSingleton<IAuthorizationHandler, DocumentEditHandler>(); } // This method gets called by the runtime. Use this method to configure the HTTP request pipeline. public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app) { app.UseAuthentication(); app.UseMvc(routes => { routes.MapRoute( name: "default", template: "{controller=Home}/{action=Index}/{id?}"); }); } } } ```
The 1945 Swedish Ice Hockey Championship was the 23rd season of the Swedish Ice Hockey Championship, the national championship of Sweden. Hammarby IF won the championship. Tournament First Qualification round Åkers IF - Stallarholmens AIF 7:1 Södertälje IF - IFK Tumba 7:4 Strands IF – IK Warpen 8:3 IK Huge - Gefle IF 8:7 Uddens IF - IF Fellows 1:4 IF Göta Karlstad - Forshaga IF 9:0 Sandvikens IF - Strömsbro IF 7:2 BK Forward - IF Eyra 2:2/6:4 Atlas Diesels IF - Stockholms IF 6:3 Karlbergs BK - Reymersholms IK 4:0 AIK - IFK Lidingö 10:1 Tranebergs IF - Årsta SK 4:3 Västerås SK - IF Aros 5:3 Skuru IK - IFK Stockholm 0:6 Second Qualification round Skellefteå IF - IFK Nyland 4:3 Wifsta/Östrands IF - Strands IF 4:3 Sörhaga IK - IF Fellows 4:3 IFK Mariefred - Åkers IF 7:2 Brynäs IF - IK Huge 4:5 Mora IK - Sandvikens IF 6:5 IF Göta Karlstad - BJ Forward 4:0 VIK Västerås HK - Västerås SK 3:5 UoIF Matteuspojkarna - Södertälje IF 9:3 Tranebergs IF - Atlas Diesel 5:3 IFK Stockholm - Karlbergs BK 0:3 IF Vesta - AIK (W) 1/8 Finals Hammarby IF - Västerås SK 10:3 Wifsta/Östrands IF - Skellefteå IF 6:4 IK Göta - Nacka SK 3:2 Karlbergs BK - Mora IK 6:2 Södertälje SK - Tranebergs IF 10:2 UoIF Matteuspojkarna - IFK Mariefred 6:3 AIK - IK Huge 18:3 IF Göta Karlstad - Sörhaga IK 8:1 Quarterfinals Hammarby IF - Wifsta/Östrands IF 6:0 IK Göta - Karlbergs BK 4:3 Södertälje SK - UoIF Matteuspojkarna 3:0 AIK - IF Göta Karlstad 17:0 Semifinals Hammarby IF - IK Göta 4:3 n.V. Södertälje SK - AIK 6:3 n.V. Final Hammarby IF - Södertälje SK 3:2 n.V. External links Season on hockeyarchives.info Cham Swedish Ice Hockey Championship seasons
Tibbetts Brook Park is a park located in the Lincoln Park section of Yonkers in Westchester County, New York. Opened in 1927, it was one of the first developed parks in Westchester County and is accessible only to County residents, with activities that include swimming, hiking, sports, nature watching and fishing. The park is named for Tibbetts Brook, which in turn is named for George Tibbetts, a Briton who had settled the land in 1668. The park is bordered by the Cross County Parkway to the north, Saw Mill River Parkway to the west, McLean Avenue to the south and Midland Avenue to the East. Tibbetts Brook Park is .6 miles (1 km) north of Van Cortlandt Park along South County Trailway, and Tibbetts Brook crosses north-south through the park on its way to the Harlem River. The park is the home ground of the New York Magpies in the USAFL. History In 1668, Georger Tippett purchased the land from Elias Doughty who had owned a large estate that encompassed much of the land from the Hudson River through the Bronx River and Saw Mill River. George's descendants were removed from the land after the American Revolution for their loyalty to the Crown. Their land was subsequently confiscated and sold. The park was partially the site of the Battle of Tibbett's Brook or Battle of Kingsbridge in 1778. Sachem (Chief) Daniel Nimham, a Native American chief, and Ethan Allen joined with other Americans and fought the Queen's Rangers commanded by John Graves Simcoe. Ninham led the Stockbridge Militia, consisting of members of the Mahican and Wappinger tribes. The battle lasted from August 30 to 31. The British were victorious, while Ninham and other members of the militia died during the battle. They were buried in an area now known as Indian Field in nearby Van Cortlandt Park. Four British soldiers were killed and three were wounded including Simcoe. Part of the Old Croton Aqueduct runs through Tibbetts Brook Park. The aqueduct was built between 1837 and 1842 in order to supply fresh clean water for New York City which was suffering water-borne disease outbreaks. In 1890, the Old Croton Aqueduct was decommissioned to make way for the new, improved and higher capacity New Croton Aqueduct. In 1872, the site of Tibbetts Brook Park was purchased by Leonard W. Jerome, which became part of "Valley Farms". By the 20th Century, a garbage dump was located on the north side of Yonkers Avenue near the site, with a lake created by the overflow of Tibbetts Brook. This lake, called Peckham's Lake, was used as a swimming hole in spite of high levels of pollution and disease, due to the brook water passing through the garbage dump. The area immediately south had been a swamp which was a haven for mosquitoes. The entire site was referred to as "The Jungle". In 1923, the Westchester County Park Commission proposed constructing a park on the site, purchasing the land from Valley Farms in October of that year. Construction on the park began in September 1924, which included removing "fourteen feet of garbage" from the site. The park opened on June 25, 1927. Upon opening, the park was rather undeveloped, containing a boat dock. The park's pool was soon built and commissioned because children still swam in Tibbetts Brook. In 1931, the Saw Mill River Parkway from Yonkers to Elmsford was completed and in 1940, a pedestrian bridge over the Saw Mill River Parkway and the railroad was finished, allowing people from a western, yet undeveloped portion of the park to walk in. In June, 2007, Tibbetts Brook Park North, a complex of three sports fields were opened. Attractions Tibbetts was known for its 412 x pool which in June 2011 reopened as a state of the art saline water park featuring a river, various sprays and waterfalls, waterslides, and a small lap pool enclosed amist the rest of the water park. The numerous walking/hiking trails include part of the South County Trailway which runs near the western side of the park, and part of the Croton Aqueduct Trail. Tibbets also has a miniature golf course, ice skating/skiing (winter), two artificial lakes for fishing, playgrounds and camp sites along with tennis, soccer, football, and baseball facilities. The park is open 7-days a week from 8 am until dusk. Wildlife Many species of birds and mammals have been reported at the park Tibbetts Brook Park List of species References External links Westchester Country Department of Parks, Recreation and Conservation - Tibbetts Brook Park 1927 establishments in New York (state) Parks in Westchester County, New York Geography of Yonkers, New York Water parks in New York (state)
The Secret Heart is a 1946 American drama film directed by Robert Z. Leonard and starring Claudette Colbert, Walter Pidgeon and June Allyson. Plot Lee (Claudette Colbert) is engaged to marry Larry Addams (Richard Derr), a spendthrift widower with two children, son Chase (Robert Sterling) and daughter Penny (June Allyson). Lee had been living in England with her guardian aunt, who didn't approve of the match since Larry was an alcoholic, and while returning to America on an ocean liner, she meets Chris Matthews (Walter Pidgeon), a close friend of Larry's. Despite her loving feelings for Chris, she marries Larry, and moves to his farm in Rhode Island. Larry's talent is playing the piano, which he teaches Penny, but he gave up this ambition to work in a bank, to please his father. This frustrated ambition has ruined his life, and over the next two years Lee tries to confront his alcoholism, while trying to win Penny's confidence. While Lee is out for the night with Chris, Larry dies, his body found at the bottom of a cliff. He had committed suicide after two years of marriage, and on his death, it is reported that Larry had embezzled money from his clients. Lee sends Chris away and moves the family away from the farm, to New York where she takes a job to pay off Larry's debts, and withholds the truth from Penny, wanting to shield her from the stigma of scandal. Penny makes a hero out of Larry, who she believes died of a heart attack, and is unable to embrace Lee, who is now left to look after them alone. Ten years later, Penny, who behaves strangely, has dropped out of school and plays the piano incessantly for her father's memory when nobody else is around, is the patient of psychiatrist Dr. Rossiger. Lee goes to see him, concerned about Penny's behaviour, and the story up to this point is recalled in flashback. The doctor advises that they move back to the farm for the summer, since that is where the death occurred, and he believes that confronting the past will help cure Penny. Chase returns from the navy after three years and seeks a job with Chris, who now owns a shipyard. He introduces Penny to his navy friend Brandon Reynolds. They all move to the farm, together with Chase's friend Kay Burns, where Chris reenters Lee's life after a ten-year absence, and Lee realizes that it was Chris she loved all along and let get away. Once at the farm, Penny becomes disenchanted with her father's memory when Chase tells her the truth, and becomes despondent, feeling that Chris is the only person she can confide in. Although Brandon is interested in Penny, she loves Chris, and is devastated when she finds him in Lee's arms. Penny then tries to kill herself by jumping off a cliff, as Larry had done, but Lee intervenes in time to prevent it. The healing process begins and when Lee tells Penny the complete story of her father's life, Penny is finally able to embrace Lee. At the end Penny graduates, having adopted Chris as her father, and resumes her romance with Brandon Cast Claudette Colbert as Leola 'Lee' Addams Walter Pidgeon as Chris Matthews June Allyson as Penny Addams Lionel Barrymore as Dr. Rossiger Robert Sterling as Chase N. Addams Marshall Thompson as Brandon Reynolds Elizabeth Patterson as Mrs. Stover Richard Derr as Larry Addams Patricia Medina as Kay Burns Eily Malyon as Miss Hunter Dwayne Hickman as Chase (as a Child) Reception The film earned $2,591,000 in the US and Canada and $1,309,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $891,000. References External links 1946 films 1946 romantic drama films American black-and-white films American romantic drama films Films directed by Robert Z. Leonard Films scored by Bronisław Kaper Films set in Rhode Island Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films 1940s American films
The Glasgow Archaeological Society is an archaeological society in Glasgow, Scotland, that was established in 1856. The society is known for its Dalrymple Lectures, co-hosted with the University of Glasgow. Previous lecturers and topics have included: Professor Emmanuel Anati on "Prehistoric rock Art" Professor Rosemary Cramp on "Northern Aspects of British Archaeology" Professor Vassos Karageorghis on "Prehistoric Cypriot Archaeology" Sir Barry Cunliffe on "Continent cut off by fog: Just how insular is Britain?" Professor Martin Millett on "Towards an archaeology of the Roman Empire" Professor Ian Hodder on "Thing Theory: Towards an integrated archaeological perspective" Professor Richard Hodges on "Archaeology and the making of the Middle Ages" Professor David Breeze on "The frontiers of the Roman Empire" Professor Roberta Gilchrist on "Medieval Lives: Archaeology and the Life Course" Its journals, Transactions of the Glasgow Archaeological Society (1859 to 1967) and the Glasgow Archaeological Journal (1969 to 1991), are now published by Edinburgh University Press as the Scottish Archaeological Journal. References Archaeology of Scotland Archaeological organizations 1856 establishments in Scotland Organisations based in Glasgow
is a retired Japanese athlete who specialised in the 110 metres hurdles. He represented his country at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics reaching the second round on both occasions. His personal best of 13.39 (+1.5 m/s), set in the heats of the 2004 Olympic Games, is the current national record. Competition record References 1972 births Living people Athletes from Tokyo Japanese male hurdlers Olympic male hurdlers Olympic athletes for Japan Athletes (track and field) at the 2000 Summer Olympics Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics Asian Games silver medalists for Japan Asian Games medalists in athletics (track and field) Athletes (track and field) at the 1998 Asian Games Athletes (track and field) at the 2002 Asian Games Medalists at the 2002 Asian Games World Athletics Championships athletes for Japan Japan Championships in Athletics winners
Chionodes pavor is a moth in the family Gelechiidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from California. References Chionodes Moths described in 1999 Taxa named by Ronald W. Hodges Moths of North America
```objective-c /* Native-dependent definitions for *BSD. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ /* Override copies of {fetch,store}_inferior_registers in `infptrace.c'. */ #define FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS ```
```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'; // MAIN // /** * Polyfill for returning a numeric user identity for environments which do not provide native support. * * @private * @returns {null} null * * @example * var uid = getuid(); * // returns null */ function getuid() { return null; } // EXPORTS // module.exports = getuid; ```
is a railway station on the Hōhi Main Line operated by JR Kyushu in Ōzu, Kumamoto, Japan. Lines The station is served by the Hōhi Main Line and is located 27.2 km from the starting point of the line at . Layout The station consists of two side platforms serving two tracks at grade with a siding. The station building is a small. modern, concrete structure which serves only as a waiting room. Access to the opposite side platform is by means of a level crossing. Adjacent stations History On 21 June 1914, Japanese Government Railways (JGR) opened the (later the Miyagi Line) from eastwards to . The line was extended eastward in phases and was established as the new eastern terminal on 11 November 1916. On the same day, Seta was opened as an intermediate station on the new track. From Tateno, the track was extended further east and on 2 December 1928, it was linked up with the , which had been extended westwards in phases from since 1914. Through-traffic was established between Kumamoto and Ōita. The two lines were merged and the entire stretch redesignated as the Hōhi Main Line. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR), the successor of JGR, on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR Kyushu. The track from to was heavily damaged in the 2016 Kumamoto earthquakes and service between the stations, including to Seta has been suspended. JR Kyushu has commenced repair work, starting first with the sector from Higo-Ōzu to Tateno but has not announced a targeted completion date. It appears Seta Station was little damaged and most of the serious damage was at various locations on the track from Seta to Tateno and beyond. See also List of railway stations in Japan References External links Seta (JR Kyushu) Railway stations in Kumamoto Prefecture Railway stations in Japan opened in 1916
GO Humanity (Giving and Organizing for Humanity) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded in 2009 in Georgia by Dale McGowan, originally under the name Foundation Beyond Belief. As of 2022, the organization's mission is to "end poverty and hunger, promote good health and well-being, and foster employment opportunities and economic growth in ways that exemplify humanist values." Through giving and organizing a volunteer network, the organization serves individuals and communities. Dale McGowan served as Executive Director from 2009 to 2015. In 2015, Noelle George took over leadership of the organization. In 2020, Tiffany S. Ho replaced George. History GO Humanity was founded in 2009, then under the name Foundation Beyond Belief (FBB). The organization's founder Dale McGowan originally envisioned it as a way for nonreligious people and humanists to give to charity by "passing the tithing plate." The organization was featured in an April 2010 New York Times article on secular philanthropy. In March 2011, the organization responded to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami by launching a disaster response program, raising and distributing $20,000 for recovery. In August 2011, FBB merged with the Houston, Texas-based Secular Center USA to launch Volunteers Beyond Belief, a service network initially consisting of five volunteer teams. The American Cancer Society was criticized in 2011 for turning down participation from Foundation Beyond Belief in its Relay For Life "National Team" program. FBB subsequently partnered with philanthropist Todd Stiefel to create a national team in support of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, raising $300,000 in 2012 and nearly $1 million over three years to fund lymphoma research. Foundation Beyond Belief later sponsored the Reason Rally in both 2012 and 2016. In July 2014, Foundation Beyond Belief held its first Humanism At Work conference focused on humanist service. The organization held talks about nonreligious identity and humanist service programs, and recognized outstanding contributions by humanist volunteers and organizers with its ongoing annual Heart of Humanism awards. The Humanism At Work conference was held a second time in 2015 before the organization transitioned to integrating the Conference's programming into the American Humanist Association's Annual Conference in 2018. In October 2014, FBB launched the competitive Compassionate Impact Grant (CIG), consolidating all donations to its Humanist Grants program for the quarter into one large capacity-building grant to the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative. Through 2020, FBB gave the CIG one quarter per year to various anti-poverty organizations that met high standards of innovation, inclusiveness, data, and cultural sensitivity. In 2020, the grant became an annual three-year grant of $150,000 to a worthy organization. The Minnesota Atheists partnered with Foundation Beyond Belief in 2014 and 2015 for the third and fourth atheist-themed St. Paul Saints charity games. They were the first games the secularized Mr. Paul Aints team won, with the 2014 game taking 11 innings and being the last Aints game to be played at Midway Stadium. Rebranded player jerseys were auctioned off during the games and a shoe drive benefiting Soles4Souls was incorporated into 2015 the event (promoted as "Leave Your Soles at the Gate"). The team beat the Winnipeg Goldeyes in 2015 7-4 in front of 8,500 fans at CHS Field bringing the Aints record to 2 wins and 2 losses. The Aints won again in 2016, but lost in 2017 bringing their record to 3 games won and 3 games lost. In January 2016, FBB launched a Humanist Disaster Recovery program which deployed to South Carolina following Hurricane Juaquin. In 2019, Foundation Beyond Belief partnered with Atheist Community of Austin to expand Volunteers Beyond Belief, renamed the Beyond Belief Network. Foundation Beyond Belief rebranded as GO Humanity in May 2022, updating its values to further emphasize radical inclusion and shared, local power. Programs and initiatives Grantmaking Since 2009, GO Humanity has raised more than $3.6 million for philanthropic causes worldwide.https://gohumanity.world/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/FINAL-2021-Annual-Report-Foundation-Beyond-Belief-1.pdf Through its original Humanist Grants program, the organization awarded over $1.5 million to 177 nonprofits exemplifying humanist values over 11 years. Each fiscal quarter through 2020, FBB selected four organizations to support, in the categories of Poverty and Health, Human Rights, Education, and Natural World. Service Teams GO Humanity's Service Team network GO Teams' encourages and assists local organizations groups to give and organize in their communities. The network is made up of approximately 150 teams throughout the U.S. and the world. GO Humanity provides grants and other support to these teams, sponsoring events in local communities. As of 2022, teams have collectively donated over 227,000 hours of community service (valued at $6.1M), and counting. Disaster Recovery In 2014, the American Humanist Association (AHA) and GO Humanity merged their respective charitable programs Humanist Charities (established in 2005) and Humanist Crisis Response (established in 2011). Between 2014 and 2018, Humanist Disaster Recovery raised over $250,000 for victims of the Syrian Refugee Crisis, Refugee Children of the U.S. Border, Tropical Cyclone Sam, and the Nepal and Ecuadoran Earthquakes, Hurricane Matthew in Haiti, and Hurricanes Irma and Maria. In addition to grants for recovery efforts, volunteers have also helped to rebuild homes and schools in the following locations: Columbia, South Carolina after the effects of Hurricane Joaquin; Denham Springs, Louisiana; and Houston, Texas after flooding from Hurricane Harvey. Humanist Service Corps & Humanist Action: Ghana In 2013, GO Humanity launched the Pathfinders Project, a project to determine the viability of a long term Humanist Service Corp (HSC). Over the course of a year, the team worked with several organizations across the world, including in Cambodia, Uganda, Ghana, Haiti, Ecuador, Colombia, and Guatemala. Upon returning to the United States, the members of the Pathfinders continued their work of promoting humanist service, including speaking about the project to gain new members for future years. In 2015, the Humanist Service Corps officially launched, with the members serving in a camp for accused witches in Ghana. In 2015 and 2016, Humanist Service Corps provided free health screenings to the rural Ghanaian community of Kukuo. It created a bilingual medical records system to increase healthcare access. For the first time, 1,250 residents of Kukuo gained access to their health information in their native language. HSC also discovered and reported several child marriages during this time. Humanist Service Corps was renamed Humanist Action: Ghana in 2020, and in 2022 broke off from GO Humanity to become an independent, Ghanaian-run NGO. See also Dale McGowan American Humanist Association Hemant Mehta List of secularist organizations Minnesota Atheists Greta Christina Skepticon Secular Coalition for America Reason Rally References External links Foundation Beyond Belief website Secularist organizations Secularism in the United States Humanist associations Freethought organizations Freethought in the United States Atheist organizations Atheism in the United States Nontheism Irreligion in the United States Disengagement from religion Nonpartisan organizations in the United States 501(c)(3) organizations Charities based in the United States Non-profit organizations based in the United States
Baybrook Mall is a shopping mall located near the Clear Lake City area in Houston, Texas; It has a Friendswood mailing address, but it is in the Houston city limits. The mall is located off Interstate 45, and it is also in proximity to Webster and the NASA Johnson Space Center. The anchor stores are Star Cinema Grill, Dave & Buster's, Dillard's, JCPenney, H&M, Macy's, and Forever 21. There is 1 vacant anchor store that was once Sears. It is located 18 mi southeast of downtown Houston at Interstate 45 South and Bay Area Blvd. It has five major anchors and more than 170 stores and restaurants. It has of retail space. History Planning and Construction Officially announced in April 1977 as the first Houston development of Homart Development Company, Baybrook mall was purposely built smaller than other regional area centers at the time. The Clear Lake area of Houston, along with northern Galveston County, were considered blue collar areas; and it was thought that a large scale shopping center wouldn't succeed in what was a still growing area. For that reason, the mall was not built on a grand scale, and instead as an energy efficient, compact shopping center. The mall's original lease space would be approximately 625,000 square feet, with hope for a later expansion raising the lease space to almost 1 million square feet. The first anchor tenants were announced to be Montgomery Ward, Sears, and Joske's. The land was graded in July 1977 in preparation of an August 1978 opening. 1978 Opening The ribbon cutting for Baybrook Mall was held July 26, 1978. The mall opened with 77 merchants: Joske's, Montgomery Ward, Sears, Aladdin's Castle, American Uniforms, Baker Shoes (Edison Brothers Stores), The Bank Store, Bejeweled, The Berry Tree, Burger Express, C's Chicken and Fish, Casual Corner, Corrigan's Jewelers, The Dipping Station, Famous Ramos Hot Dog Place, Fashion Conspiracy (Edison Brothers Stores), Flagg Bros Shoes, Florsheim Shoes, Foot Locker, Fowles Gallery, Foxmoor Casuals, Frame It, Frederick's of Hollywood, General Cinema, General Nutrition Center, Gingiss Formalwear, Merry-Go-Round, Gordon's Jewelers (Zale Corporation), Hanover Shoe Store, H & H Music, International Tours of Baybrook, J Riggings (Edison Brothers Stores), Jeans West, Joyce Bertram Bath, Kid's Casuals, Kinney Shoes, The Knife Shop, Leopold Price & Rolle, Lerner's, The Limited, Luby's, Margo's LaMode, Morrow's Nut House, Mr Music, National Shirt Shop, Naturalizer Shoes, Ol' Dan Tucker's BBQ, Pizza & Subs, Radio Shack, Record Town, Red Cross Shoes, Royal Optical, Silverman's, So Fro Fabrics, Steve's Sandwich Shop, Stride Rite Shoes, Susie's Casuals, Sweeney Jewelers, Swiss Colony, Taco Spot, Thom McAn, Thomason Keepsake Diamond Center, Topps 'N Trowsers, Topsy's, Toys by Roy, Visible Changes, Waldenbooks, Western Junction, Wicks 'N' Sticks, Wild Pair, World of Cookery, Yogurt 'N Things, Zale Corporation. First expansion A major expansion to Baybrook Mall was announced by Homart in March 1983, which added an additional 365,000 square feet of retail space to the mall, including two new anchor stores, Mervyn's, and an additional store to be named later. Macy's announced in February 1984 they were building stores in Texas, and would become the fifth anchor store at Baybrook. The grand opening of the new expansion of 20 retail stores, plus Mervyn's, was held in March 1984, with Gifford Nielsen as master of ceremonies. Macy's followed by opening their new store, and becoming the fifth anchor store, in July 1985. The new Macy's store featured three stories, at least 30 departments, 220,000 square feet of retail space, and became their third store to open in the Houston area. 1980s As the Texas economy and oil prices continued to rise in the early 1980s, the Clear Lake area continued to grow. The area growth was reflected at Baybrook, and many stores expressed interest in leasing space. Other area malls were fully occupied, so Baybrook became a logical alternative. 1984 and 1985 saw an economic downturn in the area, but Baybrook continued to see a consistent increase in sales. Baybrook Mall became one of the many retail establishments to open on Sundays prior to the repeal of the Texas Blue Law in September 1985, which prohibited many retail items being purchased on Sundays. Even though it was located in what was considered a safe suburban area, the 80's saw random violence occur at Baybrook Mall, including a kidnapping and the death of a man shot in his truck in the mall parking lot in 1985. By 1987 the mall was now owned by RREEF and underwent a 2 million dollar renovation. In July 1988 Baybrook Mall averaged a 96%-97% occupancy rate, commanded an average lease rate of $220 per square foot, had more than 160 stores, 1.2 million square feet of retail space, and parking for 5700 cars. With more than 500,000 people in its trade area, Baybrook's average shopper visited the mall more than 3 times per month, and spent an average of $84 each visit. These sales figures resulted in a 10% increase in revenue from the previous year. Retailers referred to Baybrook as "an A plus mall". The holiday shopping season of 1988 saw the City of Galveston asking their residents to shop at home at their own Galvez Mall, rather than taking their shopping dollars to Baybrook Mall. Baybrook was 27 miles away from Galveston's mall, yet was considered such an economic threat that Galveston partnered with area merchants and the local paper to promote an ad campaign to shop local. In February 1989 Baybrook Mall was 96% occupied, making it the mall with the second highest percentage of occupied space in the Houston area. 1990s 1990 saw a continued increase in revenue, as sales were reported to be an increase of 22% from the same period of the previous year. Baybrook underwent what was described as a major proactive renovation in 1994. The revamping of the mall included new rotundas at each mall entrance, rotundas at the mall entrances of each anchor store, redesigned shopping concourses, continuous vaulted skylights, and additional rest areas. The $8 million project also replaced the old terrazzo and quarry flooring with a more elegant marble surface, added a new center court fountain, and also added a brightly colored facade at the main external mall entrance. New amenities included additional ATM machines, stroller rental, new directories, and more signage. All construction work was done at night as to lessen the inconvenience to customers, and the project was completed in 10 months. The celebratory ribbon cutting was held in November 1994. In 1999 Baybrook was sold to GGP Inc., which merged with Brookfield Property Partners in 2018, and continues to be Baybrook's owner. Later Years A botched robbery incident in August 2000 resulted in a murder at the Dillard's entrance. A woman was entering Dillard's when approached by the suspect attempting to grab her purse. After a struggle, the woman was shot in the neck. The suspect fled, and the woman collapsed in the Dillard's doorway and later died. After 30 years at Baybrook, original tenant Luby's lease expired, and they left the mall to relocate to a new location across the Gulf Freeway in 2008. As of 2007, with the name change from Foley's to Macy's through the acquisition of Foley's parent company, The May Department Stores Company, Macy's returned to the mall. Previously, in 1987, Dillard's (on the south side) and Macy's (on the north side) faced off against each other at Baybrook Mall. Because of acquisitions and name changes, 20 years later Dillard's held the north side anchor, and Macy's became the south anchor. Lifestyle Expansion and Power Center In March 2014 Baybrook was at almost 100% leasing capacity, and considered the premiere shopping destination for the southeast quadrant of Houston. At this time it was announced Baybrook was planning a massive expansion. The expansion would include a new outdoor Lifestyle center, and retail Power Center, adding a combined additional 500,000 square feet to the mall, including more than 30 retail stores and 10 restaurants. In November 2015, Baybrook Mall completed the first part of its two-phase expansion, the 285,000 square foot Lifestyle Center. The Lifestyle expansion included a green space, stage, 22' x 12' digital screen, retail stores, restaurants, and entertainment venues. New tenants included Dave & Buster's, Star Cinema Grill, Bar Louie, Z Gallerie, Kendra Scott, Yard House, Perry's Steakhouse, Zara (retailer), Arhaus, Maggiano's Little Italy and many other establishments. The expansion remarked a return of a theater to Baybrook, as Star Cinema grill constructed a 42,000 square ft flagship location; and Baybrook had not had a theater since General Cinema closed their location in 1998. The second phase 270,000 sq. ft. Power Center opened in November 2016. The power center, constructed adjacent to the lifestyle expansion, features Dick's Sporting Goods (one of five throughout Greater Houston) as one of the anchor tenants. Other retailers in the power center included The Container Store and Total Wine & More, which would be their first locations in the southeast side of Houston. The combined expansion has made it the second largest mall in the Houston area, after The Galleria. Anchor Stores Original Joske's Location In April 1987, Dillard's purchased the Joske's chain of stores. This change of ownership resulted in all Joske's stores being renamed with the Dillard's name. Therefore, the Joske's original anchor store at Baybrook Mall was the first anchor at the mall to undergo a name change when it became Dillard's in 1987. Baybrook Mall advertising was using the Dillard's name, instead of Joske's, as of August 1987. Ten years later, in 1997, this location became the Dillard's store for men and home departments only when Dillard's moved the women's and children's departments to the recently acquired former Macy's location. In 2004 Dillard's renovated and expanded their store in the original Macy's building. Because of the expansion they were able to consolidate their two Baybrook stores into the now larger location, and vacate their smaller store which had served as the men's and home store. During this time, Foley's announced they would move to the location Dillard's had just vacated. Foley's completely renovated the building, and added an additional 100,000 square feet of retail space. The renovation and expansion of the building was completed in nine months. The new store opened November 2004. Foley's owner, May Company, sold all of their stores to Federated Stores, and Federated changed Foley's name to the Macy's nameplate. The Macy's name change took effect in 2006, and marked the return of Macy's to Baybrook. Original Macy's Location To focus on their Texas locations in Houston, Dallas and San Antonio, Macy's sold their three suburban Houston stores to Dillard's in March 1997. This change resulted in Baybrook having two Dillard's stores, one in the Joske's building, and one in the Macy's building. The Macy's location became the Dillard's store for women's and children's departments. In 2004 Dillard's renovated and expanded the former Macy's location, from 218,000 square feet to 330,000 square feet. With the greatly expanded store, they consolidated their two Baybrook locations into one. Original Montgomery Ward Location After 128 years in business, Montgomery Ward announced in December 2000 they were filing for bankruptcy, and closing all stores. The Baybrook location closed in early 2001. After much speculation, Foley's opened a store at Baybrook Mall in the space vacated by Ward's. Foley's moved in to the vacated anchor spot in November 2001. Upon Foley's move to the renovated original Joske's building in 2004, J.C. Penney announced they would open a store at Baybrook. J.C. Penney chose to demolish the original two-story Ward's building and build a new 93,000 square foot one-story store in its place. Penney's store at Baybrook opened November 2005. Mervyn's Mervyn's 80,000 square foot anchor store opened in 1984 as part of the new mall expansion. It ceased operations at the end of 2005 when Mervyn's parent company closed 62 underperforming stores, 28 of them in Texas, and vacated the Houston market. The store sat empty for four years, until it was renovated for Forever 21. Forever 21 previously had a 7000 square foot space at Baybrook, and moved to the former Mervyn's building in 2010. Sears In 2015, Sears Holdings spun off 235 of its properties, including the Sears at Baybrook Mall, into Seritage Growth Properties. On June 22, 2017, Sears announced that its Baybrook store would be closing, along with one other Greater Houston store, as part of a plan to close 20 stores nationwide. The Baybrook store, which was an original anchor from 1978, closed in September 2017 and sits vacant. References External links Shopping malls in Houston Brookfield Properties Shopping malls established in 1978 1978 establishments in Texas
Savage 2: A Tortured Soul is a fantasy and science fiction themed video game that combines elements of the first-person shooter, real-time strategy, and action role-playing game genres. It is developed and published by S2 Games. It is the sequel to Savage: The Battle for Newerth and was officially released on January 16, 2008. On December 9, 2008 S2 Games announced that the game was officially freeware, with a paid "Premium Account" option that expanded certain aspects of the game. The game was released through Steam on July 13, 2008 and went free-to-play in December 2008. On January 12, 2012, it was released on Desura. Gameplay Savage 2: A Tortured Soul combines Real-time strategy (RTS), First-person shooter (FPS) and Action role-playing game (RPG) aspects into its gameplay. The game is played with 2 teams (The Legion of Man and The Beast Horde) fighting against each other on a large playing field in an attempt to eventually destroy the durable command center of the enemy team, thereby winning the game. The game is played in rounds, and no benefits carry over from each match, despite the RPG elements present in each match. Most of the players on each team are "action players", fighting the other teams action players on the field, using powerful third person melee and weaker first person ranged combat. The action players can choose from a selection of unique units to play as, and may earn gold from their actions on the field, which in turn may be either donated to the team, spent on useful items in an RPG fashion, or used to buy more powerful units. On each team, there is one "commander" player, seeing the game from a top-down RTS perspective. From there the commander can issue orders to the action players, cast spells on both teams action players and build structures for the team. Different structures act as spawnpoints, gold mines and technology buildings which unlock more units, abilities and items for the action players. Buildings require gold to be built, which, in addition to being donated by the action players, can be extracted from gold nodes across the map by constructing gold mines on them. Normal buildings may be attacked and destroyed by action players, though the loss of these is normally only a setback whereas the destruction of the command centre results in the loss of the match. In addition to the commander and the action players, there are "officers". Officers are action players who are the leaders of a small group of other action players; known as "squads". A team may have several squads depending on the number of players in the match. Squad officers have improved statistics, and also offers some of those bonuses to its squad if they are near him. The squad officer may also issue orders to its squad, much like the commander can to the whole team. In addition, the squad officer is able to instantly place small, temporary and fragile spawnpoints for his squad. In addition to the Beast and Human units, a third, very powerful and special kind of units called the "Hellbourne" exist. These units are significantly more powerful and equally harder to gain access to. Action players gain "souls" by killing enemy units, and these souls may be spent at a "hellshrine" for one lifetime of the selected hellbourne unit. Hellshrines must be built by the commander; They are expensive and may only be placed on specific locations on the map, making them a risky structure to construct. Hellbourne units are common gamebreakers later on in a match, where action players may have accumulated a plethora of souls. Modding A map editor is available, which allows for scripts, events and all sorts of things so players can create their own game types, similar to Warcraft III. Mods from Capture the Flag to Soccer have been created. Reception See also Savage: The Battle for Newerth Heroes of Newerth Strife References External links Newerth - The official Savage XR Community 2008 video games First-person strategy video games Indie games Linux games MacOS games Real-time strategy video games S2 Games Video games developed in the United States Windows games Multiplayer video games
Lutjanus malabaricus, the Malabar blood snapper, saddletail snapper, large-mouthed nannygai, large-mouthed sea-perch, Malabar snapper, nannygai, red bass, red bream, red emperor, red Jew, red snapper, saddletail seaperch, scarlet emperor or scarlet sea-perch, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a snapper belonging to the family Lutjanidae. It is native to the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific, where it is found east to Fiji and Japan. Taxonomy Lutjanus malabaricus was first formally described in 1801 as Sparus malabaricus by the German naturalists Marcus Elieser Bloch and Johann Gottlob Schneider with the type locality as the Coromandel coast in eastern India. The specific name malabaricus means “of Malabar”, a coastal region of southern India. Description Lutjanus malabaricus has a relatively deep body, which has a standard length that is 2.2 to 2.8 times as long as the body at its deepest point. It has a steeply sloped forehead, with a concave upper profile to the snout, and the preopercular incision and knob are weakly developed. The vomerine teeth are arranged in a crescent shaped or triangular patch with no central rearwards extension, and there are no teeth on the tongue. The dorsal fin has 11 spines and 12-14 soft rays, while the anal fin contains 3 spines and 8-9 soft rays. The rear of the dorsal fin and the anal fin may have an angular profile or be weakly rounded, the pectoral fins have 16–17 rays and the caudal fin is truncate. This fish attains a maximum total length of , although is more typical, with a maximum published weight of . The back and flanks are red or reddish-orange, paler on the lower shanks and abdomen, and the fins are reddish. The juveniles have a wide, diagonal band of brown or black which starts on the upper jaw and ends at the front of the dorsal fin, they also have an obvious black band across the caudal peduncle which has a pearly-white margin on its front edge.; They may also show a series of thin reddish longitudinal stripes on the flanks. It can be distinguished from the scarlet snapper (Lutjanus erythropterus) by its larger head and mouth. Distribution and habitat Lutjanus malabaricus has a wides range in the Indo-West Pacific to the Persian Gulf east to Fiji, from southern Japan south to Australia. It has also been confirmed to occur in Tonga and Kosrae and at Jeju Island in South Korea. There are also unconfirmed reports from Eastern Africa. In Australia, its range extends from Shark Bay in Western Australia along the western, northern and eastern coasts, extending as far south as Sydney. Adults occur in coastal and offshore reefs, frequently being encountered around sponges and gorgonian corals, or in areas of hard muddy bottom. The juveniles show a preference for shallow waters close to shore, while the adults prefer deeper areas. Biology Lutjanus malabaricus forms mixed aggregations with other snappers, in Australia this tends to be with the crimson snapper. They are nocturnal hunters foraging during the night, predominantly for fish, but they also catch a few benthic crustaceans, cephalopods and other benthic invertebrates. They spawn for much of the year closer to the equator, peaking in spring and summer off New Caledonia and Australia. Fisheries and conservation Lutjanus malabaricus is considered to be a high quality food fish and is pursued by commercial, artisanal and recreational fisheries throughout its range. It is considered to be overfished in many areas such as the Persian Gulf and Indonesia. It is caught using trawls, although handlines and bottom longlines are also used. Some of the fish landed are exported to international markets. In southern China, this species is grown in mariculture. Although it has been overfished and the population has declined in some areas in others, such as Australia, fishing is strictly regulated, and populations are stable so the IUCN has assessed the species as Least Concern. References malabaricus Marine fish of Northern Australia Fish described in 1801
AdventHealth South Overland Park, is a non-profit hospital in Overland Park, Kansas owned by AdventHealth History On January 24, 2019, AdventHealth announced that it was constructing a new $150 million 193,000-square-foot hospital in Overland Park, Kansas with 85 beds. It expected that the new hospital would create 200 full-time jobs. On October 11, 2019, AdventHealth broke ground on its new hospital in Overland Park. On September 30, 2021, AdventHealth Overland Park opened with 38 beds, and there is enough land for the hospital to expand to 150 beds in the future. AdventHealth South Overland Park was constructed next to AdventHealth South Overland Park ER and a medical office building which were constructed in 2017. Laura Kelly was at the grand opening of the new hospital. On October 7, 2021, AdventHealth South Overland Park began admitting patients. It became the first new hospital to open in the Kansas City metropolitan area in 15 years. See also List of AdventHealth hospitals List of Seventh-day Adventist hospitals References 2019 establishments in Florida AdventHealth Buildings and structures in Johnson County, Kansas Hospital buildings completed in 2021 Hospitals established in 2019 Hospitals in Kansas
```markdown # TSG072 - Get Persistent Volumes (Kubernetes) ## Description Show the persistent volume (PVs) for the Kubernetes cluster. Persistent Volumes are non-namespaces objects. ## Steps ### Common functions Define helper functions used in this notebook.``` ```python # Define `run` function for transient fault handling, suggestions on error, and scrolling updates on Windows import sys import os import re import platform import shlex import shutil import datetime from subprocess import Popen, PIPE from IPython.display import Markdown retry_hints = {} # Output in stderr known to be transient, therefore automatically retry error_hints = {} # Output in stderr where a known SOP/TSG exists which will be HINTed for further help install_hint = {} # The SOP to help install the executable if it cannot be found def run(cmd, return_output=False, no_output=False, retry_count=0, base64_decode=False, return_as_json=False): """Run shell command, stream stdout, print stderr and optionally return output NOTES: 1. Commands that need this kind of ' quoting on Windows e.g.: kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath={.items[?(@.metadata.annotations.pv-candidate=='data-pool')].metadata.name} Need to actually pass in as '"': kubectl get nodes -o jsonpath={.items[?(@.metadata.annotations.pv-candidate=='"'data-pool'"')].metadata.name} The ' quote approach, although correct when pasting into Windows cmd, will hang at the line: `iter(p.stdout.readline, b'')` The shlex.split call does the right thing for each platform, just use the '"' pattern for a ' """ MAX_RETRIES = 5 output = "" retry = False # When running `azdata sql query` on Windows, replace any in """ strings, with " ", otherwise we see: # # ('HY090', '[HY090] [Microsoft][ODBC Driver Manager] Invalid string or buffer length (0) (SQLExecDirectW)') # if platform.system() == "Windows" and cmd.startswith("azdata sql query"): cmd = cmd.replace(" ", " ") # shlex.split is required on bash and for Windows paths with spaces # cmd_actual = shlex.split(cmd) # Store this (i.e. kubectl, python etc.) to support binary context aware error_hints and retries # user_provided_exe_name = cmd_actual[0].lower() # When running python, use the python in the ADS sandbox ({sys.executable}) # if cmd.startswith("python "): cmd_actual[0] = cmd_actual[0].replace("python", sys.executable) # On Mac, when ADS is not launched from terminal, LC_ALL may not be set, which causes pip installs to fail # with: # # UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc5 in position 4969: ordinal not in range(128) # # Setting it to a default value of "en_US.UTF-8" enables pip install to complete # if platform.system() == "Darwin" and "LC_ALL" not in os.environ: os.environ["LC_ALL"] = "en_US.UTF-8" # When running `kubectl`, if AZDATA_OPENSHIFT is set, use `oc` # if cmd.startswith("kubectl ") and "AZDATA_OPENSHIFT" in os.environ: cmd_actual[0] = cmd_actual[0].replace("kubectl", "oc") # To aid supportability, determine which binary file will actually be executed on the machine # which_binary = None # Special case for CURL on Windows. The version of CURL in Windows System32 does not work to # get JWT tokens, it returns "(56) Failure when receiving data from the peer". If another instance # of CURL exists on the machine use that one. (Unfortunately the curl.exe in System32 is almost # always the first curl.exe in the path, and it can't be uninstalled from System32, so here we # look for the 2nd installation of CURL in the path) if platform.system() == "Windows" and cmd.startswith("curl "): path = os.getenv('PATH') for p in path.split(os.path.pathsep): p = os.path.join(p, "curl.exe") if os.path.exists(p) and os.access(p, os.X_OK): if p.lower().find("system32") == -1: cmd_actual[0] = p which_binary = p break # Find the path based location (shutil.which) of the executable that will be run (and display it to aid supportability), this # seems to be required for .msi installs of azdata.cmd/az.cmd. (otherwise Popen returns FileNotFound) # # NOTE: Bash needs cmd to be the list of the space separated values hence shlex.split. # if which_binary == None: which_binary = shutil.which(cmd_actual[0]) # Display an install HINT, so the user can click on a SOP to install the missing binary # if which_binary == None: print(f"The path used to search for '{cmd_actual[0]}' was:") print(sys.path) if user_provided_exe_name in install_hint and install_hint[user_provided_exe_name] is not None: display(Markdown(f'HINT: Use [{install_hint[user_provided_exe_name][0]}]({install_hint[user_provided_exe_name][1]}) to resolve this issue.')) raise FileNotFoundError(f"Executable '{cmd_actual[0]}' not found in path (where/which)") else: cmd_actual[0] = which_binary start_time = datetime.datetime.now().replace(microsecond=0) print(f"START: {cmd} @ {start_time} ({datetime.datetime.utcnow().replace(microsecond=0)} UTC)") print(f" using: {which_binary} ({platform.system()} {platform.release()} on {platform.machine()})") print(f" cwd: {os.getcwd()}") # Command-line tools such as CURL and AZDATA HDFS commands output # scrolling progress bars, which causes Jupyter to hang forever, to # workaround this, use no_output=True # # Work around a infinite hang when a notebook generates a non-zero return code, break out, and do not wait # wait = True try: if no_output: p = Popen(cmd_actual) else: p = Popen(cmd_actual, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, bufsize=1) with p.stdout: for line in iter(p.stdout.readline, b''): line = line.decode() if return_output: output = output + line else: if cmd.startswith("azdata notebook run"): # Hyperlink the .ipynb file regex = re.compile(' "(.*)"\: "(.*)"') match = regex.match(line) if match: if match.group(1).find("HTML") != -1: display(Markdown(f' - "{match.group(1)}": "{match.group(2)}"')) else: display(Markdown(f' - "{match.group(1)}": "[{match.group(2)}]({match.group(2)})"')) wait = False break # otherwise infinite hang, have not worked out why yet. else: print(line, end='') if wait: p.wait() except FileNotFoundError as e: if install_hint is not None: display(Markdown(f'HINT: Use {install_hint} to resolve this issue.')) raise FileNotFoundError(f"Executable '{cmd_actual[0]}' not found in path (where/which)") from e exit_code_workaround = 0 # WORKAROUND: azdata hangs on exception from notebook on p.wait() if not no_output: for line in iter(p.stderr.readline, b''): try: line_decoded = line.decode() except UnicodeDecodeError: # NOTE: Sometimes we get characters back that cannot be decoded(), e.g. # # \xa0 # # For example see this in the response from `az group create`: # # ERROR: Get Token request returned http error: 400 and server # response: {"error":"invalid_grant",# "error_description":"AADSTS700082: # The refresh token has expired due to inactivity.\xa0The token was # issued on 2018-10-25T23:35:11.9832872Z # # which generates the exception: # # UnicodeDecodeError: 'utf-8' codec can't decode byte 0xa0 in position 179: invalid start byte # print("WARNING: Unable to decode stderr line, printing raw bytes:") print(line) line_decoded = "" pass else: # azdata emits a single empty line to stderr when doing an hdfs cp, don't # print this empty "ERR:" as it confuses. # if line_decoded == "": continue print(f"STDERR: {line_decoded}", end='') if line_decoded.startswith("An exception has occurred") or line_decoded.startswith("ERROR: An error occurred while executing the following cell"): exit_code_workaround = 1 # inject HINTs to next TSG/SOP based on output in stderr # if user_provided_exe_name in error_hints: for error_hint in error_hints[user_provided_exe_name]: if line_decoded.find(error_hint[0]) != -1: display(Markdown(f'HINT: Use [{error_hint[1]}]({error_hint[2]}) to resolve this issue.')) # Verify if a transient error, if so automatically retry (recursive) # if user_provided_exe_name in retry_hints: for retry_hint in retry_hints[user_provided_exe_name]: if line_decoded.find(retry_hint) != -1: if retry_count < MAX_RETRIES: print(f"RETRY: {retry_count} (due to: {retry_hint})") retry_count = retry_count + 1 output = run(cmd, return_output=return_output, retry_count=retry_count) if return_output: if base64_decode: import base64 return base64.b64decode(output).decode('utf-8') else: return output elapsed = datetime.datetime.now().replace(microsecond=0) - start_time # WORKAROUND: We avoid infinite hang above in the `azdata notebook run` failure case, by inferring success (from stdout output), so # don't wait here, if success known above # if wait: if p.returncode != 0: raise SystemExit(f'Shell command: \t{cmd} ({elapsed}s elapsed) returned non-zero exit code: {str(p.returncode)}. ') else: if exit_code_workaround !=0 : raise SystemExit(f'Shell command: \t{cmd} ({elapsed}s elapsed) returned non-zero exit code: {str(exit_code_workaround)}. ') print(f' SUCCESS: {elapsed}s elapsed. ') if return_output: if base64_decode: import base64 return base64.b64decode(output).decode('utf-8') else: return output # Hints for tool retry (on transient fault), known errors and install guide # retry_hints = {'azdata': ['Endpoint sql-server-master does not exist', 'Endpoint livy does not exist', 'Failed to get state for cluster', 'Endpoint webhdfs does not exist', 'Adaptive Server is unavailable or does not exist', 'Error: Address already in use', 'Login timeout expired (0) (SQLDriverConnect)', 'SSPI Provider: No Kerberos credentials available', ], 'kubectl': ['A connection attempt failed because the connected party did not properly respond after a period of time, or established connection failed because connected host has failed to respond', ], 'python': [ ], } error_hints = {'azdata': [['Please run \'azdata login\' to first authenticate', 'SOP028 - azdata login', '../common/sop028-azdata-login.ipynb'], ['The token is expired', 'SOP028 - azdata login', '../common/sop028-azdata-login.ipynb'], ['Reason: Unauthorized', 'SOP028 - azdata login', '../common/sop028-azdata-login.ipynb'], ['Max retries exceeded with url: /api/v1/bdc/endpoints', 'SOP028 - azdata login', '../common/sop028-azdata-login.ipynb'], ['Look at the controller logs for more details', 'TSG027 - Observe cluster deployment', '../diagnose/tsg027-observe-bdc-create.ipynb'], ['provided port is already allocated', 'TSG062 - Get tail of all previous container logs for pods in BDC namespace', '../log-files/tsg062-tail-bdc-previous-container-logs.ipynb'], ['Create cluster failed since the existing namespace', 'SOP061 - Delete a big data cluster', '../install/sop061-delete-bdc.ipynb'], ['Failed to complete kube config setup', 'TSG067 - Failed to complete kube config setup', '../repair/tsg067-failed-to-complete-kube-config-setup.ipynb'], ['Data source name not found and no default driver specified', 'SOP069 - Install ODBC for SQL Server', '../install/sop069-install-odbc-driver-for-sql-server.ipynb'], ['Can\'t open lib \'ODBC Driver 17 for SQL Server', 'SOP069 - Install ODBC for SQL Server', '../install/sop069-install-odbc-driver-for-sql-server.ipynb'], ['Control plane upgrade failed. Failed to upgrade controller.', 'TSG108 - View the controller upgrade config map', '../diagnose/tsg108-controller-failed-to-upgrade.ipynb'], ['NameError: name \'azdata_login_secret_name\' is not defined', 'SOP013 - Create secret for azdata login (inside cluster)', '../common/sop013-create-secret-for-azdata-login.ipynb'], ['ERROR: No credentials were supplied, or the credentials were unavailable or inaccessible.', 'TSG124 - \'No credentials were supplied\' error from azdata login', '../repair/tsg124-no-credentials-were-supplied.ipynb'], ['Please accept the license terms to use this product through', 'TSG126 - azdata fails with \'accept the license terms to use this product\'', '../repair/tsg126-accept-license-terms.ipynb'], ], 'kubectl': [['no such host', 'TSG010 - Get configuration contexts', '../monitor-k8s/tsg010-get-kubernetes-contexts.ipynb'], ['No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it', 'TSG056 - Kubectl fails with No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it', '../repair/tsg056-kubectl-no-connection-could-be-made.ipynb'], ], 'python': [['Library not loaded: /usr/local/opt/unixodbc', 'SOP012 - Install unixodbc for Mac', '../install/sop012-brew-install-odbc-for-sql-server.ipynb'], ['WARNING: You are using pip version', 'SOP040 - Upgrade pip in ADS Python sandbox', '../install/sop040-upgrade-pip.ipynb'], ], } install_hint = {'azdata': [ 'SOP063 - Install azdata CLI (using package manager)', '../install/sop063-packman-install-azdata.ipynb' ], 'kubectl': [ 'SOP036 - Install kubectl command line interface', '../install/sop036-install-kubectl.ipynb' ], } print('Common functions defined successfully.') ``` ```markdown ### Run kubectl to display the PVs``` ```python run(f"kubectl get pv") ``` ```python print("Notebook execution is complete.") ```
Michael Joseph McCormick (October 22, 1882 – November 18, 1953), was a Scottish born professional baseball third baseman. He played one season in Major League Baseball for the 1904 Brooklyn Superbas. He is also known as "Mike McCormack" in some references. External links Major League Baseball third basemen Major League Baseball players from the United Kingdom Major League Baseball players from Scotland Scottish baseball players Brooklyn Superbas players Waterbury Rough Riders players Holyoke Paperweights players Nashville Vols players St. Paul Saints (AA) players Toledo Mud Hens players Portland Beavers players Baseball players from Jersey City, New Jersey 1880s births 1953 deaths
The thirteenth government of Israel was formed by Levi Eshkol on 12 January 1966, following the November 1965 elections. His coalition included the Alignment (an alliance of Mapai and Ahdut HaAvoda), the National Religious Party, Mapam, the Independent Liberals, Poalei Agudat Yisrael, Progress and Development and Cooperation and Brotherhood, and had eighteen ministers. On 5 June 1967, the first day of the Six-Day War, Gahal and Rafi joined the government, with the number of ministers rising to 21. Eshkol died on 26 February 1969, and the government was temporarily led by Yigal Allon until Golda Meir formed the fourteenth government on 17 March 1969. New posts in the government included the Minister of Immigrant Absorption and the Minister of Information. Cabinet members ¹ Kol was elected to the Knesset on the Independent Liberal list, but resigned his seat after being appointed to the cabinet. 2 Although Barzilai or Bentov were not MKs at the time, both were members of Mapam. 3 Although Shapira was not an MK at the time, he had previously been an MK for Mapai, and w elected to the next Knesset as a member of the Alignment. References External links The thirteenth government of Israel Knesset website 13 1966 establishments in Israel 1969 disestablishments in Israel Cabinets established in 1966 Cabinets disestablished in 1969 1966 in Israeli politics 1967 in Israeli politics 1968 in Israeli politics 1969 in Israeli politics 13
Pregnancy loss is the loss of an embryo or fetus. The terms early pregnancy loss and late pregnancy loss are often used but there is no consensus over their definitions. Unintentional pregnancy loss Miscarriage Toxic abortion, caused by pollution or chemical exposures Implantation failure Molar pregnancy Embryo loss Fetal resorption Blighted ovum Vanishing twin Stillbirth Pregnancy loss through termination Foeticide Abortion Selective reduction to reduce the number of fetuses in a multiple pregnancy Hysterotomy abortion, a surgical abortion of a non-viable fetus performed similar to a cesarean section Late-term abortion Self-induced abortion Sex-selective abortion Forced abortion Child destruction See also Pregnancy with abortive outcome Perinatal mortality Murder of pregnant women
The Grasslands Reserve Program (GRP) was a United States government program, administered by the Natural Resources Conservation Service, that provided financial assistance to farmers and landowners to restore grasslands. The 2002 farm bill authorized enrollment of of restored or improved grassland, range land and pastureland under temporary and permanent easements, or contracts of at least 10 years. Under the GRP enrolled land must be in parcels that exceed . Technical assistance was provided to restore grasslands. A total of $254 million in mandatory funding from the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) was provided between Fiscal Years 2003 and 2007. It also provided cost sharing payments at 75% to restore disturbed grasslands and 90% to protect virgin grasslands. Congress, in the 2014 Farm Bill, consolidated the GRP into the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program. References Agricultural subsidies Former United States Federal assistance programs United States Department of Agriculture programs
Aldous Byron Valensia Clarkson (born April 13, 1971, in The Hague), better known as simply Valensia, is a Dutch composer, producer, singer and multi-instrumentalist. Early life Valensia grew up in Waalwijk and used to spend a lot of his time at the family's beachhouse in Dénia, Spain. As a child, he played guitar and sang at the beaches in Dénia. He had also written a lot of songs and was even offered a record contract, but his parents decided he was too young for the music business and refused the offer. Several years later, in the Netherlands, Valensia played in local bands, usually on keyboard or guitar. Career 1992–1995: Gaia and The White Album Valensia met Robby Valentine (another Dutch singer) at an airport, as they were both listening to Queen´s "Bohemian Rhapsody". After that, Valensia started sending demos to several record companies and producer John Sonneveld noticed him. Then Valensia signed a record deal with Mercury Records and in 1993 his first album Valensia was released. Influenced by Kate Bush and Queen, Valensia's self-titled first album (known as Gaia in Japan) contained the hit single "Gaia". The song reached #2 in the Dutch charts. "Gaia" had success in other countries too. Four singles were released: "Gaia", "The Sun", "Nathalie" and "Tere". Soon after the debut album, a mini album called The White Album was released in Japan only. The mini album was released in 1994. It contained 5 tracks, including a Christmas song ("21st Century New Christmas Time") and a cover of Duran Duran's "A View to a Kill". 1996–1998: K.O.S.M.O.S and Valensia '98. Valensia's second album Valensia II (also known as K.O.S.M.O.S) was the first Dutch album recorded in surround sound. The album was produced by John Sonneveld and Pim Koopman (the drummer Kayak). Three singles were released: "Kosmos", "Thunderbolt" (only in Japan) and "Blue Rain" (only in the Netherlands). Valensia's third album was released in 1998. The official name of the album is Valensia '98 Musical Blue Paraphernalian Dreams of Earth's Eventide Whiter Future & Darker Present Soundspheres From New Diamond Age Symphonian Artworks to Yesterday's Westernworld Rockcraft Under the Raging Nineties' Silver Promise of the Happy Hundreds on the Break of the New Millennium's Hazy Misty Dawn. It is also known as Millennium, Valensia '98 and Valensia III. The album was only released in Japan. 1999–2008: Gaia II, V and Metal Majesty In the summer of 1999, V was released. V was a cooperation between Valensia and Robby Valentine. Valensia's mother Jacqueline died, in November 1999. His next album Gaia II (released on the new record label Marquee) had a song dedicated to his mother, "Requieme pour Jacqueline". In 2008 Valensia appeared on the Dutch TV program De Reünie. A single entitled "One Day My Princess Will Come" was to be released on February 24, 2010. However, the release was cancelled. 2014–2019: Valensia VI - Gaia III - AGLAEA - Legacy and 7EVE7 On 24 September a new album titled Valensia VI - Gaia III - Aglaea - Legacy was released. Valensia refers to this as "my farewell album". An official music video "The Cabinet of Curiosities" appeared on YouTube. Being just a temporary farewell, Valensia released a new album called 7EVE7 in 2019. 2022–present: Air Twister In 2022, Valensia re-emerged with the soundtrack for the Yu Suzuki video game Air Twister. The soundtrack features 19 tracks. Some tracks are completely new, other tracks are new renditions of known Valensia compositions, including his hit song "Gaia" from his debut album, Valensia. Suzuki told in several interviews he was a long-time fan of Valensia and was able to get in touch with him on Facebook to pitch him on creating music for the game, to which he agreed. Discography Studio albums Valensia (1993) Valensia II - K.O.S.M.O.S (1996) V III - Valensia '98 (1998) Gaia II (2000) The Blue Album (2002) Queen Tribute (2003) Valensia VI - Gaia III - AGLAEA - Legacy (2014) Eden and the Second Serpent (2017) The Secret Album (2017) 7EVE7 (2019) Soundtrack albums Air Twister (2022) Mini albums The White Album (1994) Luna Luna (2001) Non Plugged (2004) Compilation albums The Very Best of Valensia (1997) Remix albums Gaia II.0 (2015) Extended plays Phantom of the Opera (2000) with V V (1999) Valentine vs Valensia (2002) V III - Nymphopsychoschoziphonic (Unreleased) with Metal Majesty Metal Majesty (2003) This is Not a Drill (2004) 2005 (2005) References External links 1971 births Living people Musicians from The Hague Dutch rock singers 21st-century Dutch male singers 21st-century Dutch singers
Australia has well over 300 surf lifesaving clubs. The following is a partial list of Australian surf lifesaving clubs. Bondi Surf Bathers' Life Saving Club Bronte Surf Lifesaving Club Cabarita Beach Surf Life Saving Club Clovelly Surf Life Saving Club Coogee Surf Life Saving Club Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club Darwin Surf Life Saving Club Dee Why Surf Lifesaving Club Elouera Surf Life Saving Club Freshwater Surf Life Saving Club Ithaca–Caloundra City Life Saving Club Southport Surf Lifesaving Club QLD Manly Life Saving Club Maroubra Surf Life Saving Club North Bondi Surf Life Saving Club North Styne Surf Lifesaving Club Palm Beach Surf Life Saving Club Redhead Surf Lifesaving Club South Curl Curl Surf Lifesaving Club South Maroubra Surf Life Saving Club South Port SLSC SA Tamarama Surf Life Saving Club Wanda Surf Life Saving Club See also List of swim clubs Surf lifesaving Surf Life Saving Australia References External links Australia Lifesaving
Ai Weiren (; 1932 – 29 June 2018) was a lieutenant general of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. He fought in the Chinese Civil War and the Korean War, and served as Deputy Political Commissar of the Chengdu Military Region and of the Shenyang Military Region. Biography Ai was born in Haicheng, Liaoning Province. He enlisted in the People's Liberation Army in March 1948 and joined the Chinese Communist Party in May 1949. He fought in the Liaoshen Campaign, Western Hubei Campaign, and the Southwest Campaign during the Chinese Civil War, as well as the Korean War after the establishment of the People's Republic of China. Ai rose through the ranks and served as Deputy Political Commissar of the Chengdu Military Region and of the Shenyang Military Region, He was awarded the rank of major general in 1988, and was promoted to lieutenant general in 1990. He was a member of the 13th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, and a member of the 14th Central Commission for Discipline Inspection. Ai died in Shenyang, Liaoning on 29 June 2018, at the age of 86. References 1932 births 2018 deaths People from Haicheng, Liaoning People's Liberation Army generals from Liaoning Chinese military personnel of the Korean War
Ambohimalaza Miray is a rural municipality in Analamanga Region, in the Central Highlands of Madagascar. It belongs to the district of Antananarivo Avaradrano and its population numbers to 15,988 in 2018. It is located at 18 km East of Antananarivo along the National Road 2. 12 Fokontany (villages) belong to the municipality: Ambohimalaza Miray, Ambatofotsy, Fiadanana, Ambohitrandriana, Mahia, Masombahiny, Andranosoa, Ambatomalaza, Antentona, Ambohitremo, Atsimon’ Ambohidray and Andranonomby. 8 of these fokontany are connected to electricity. Economy The economy is based on agriculture. Rice, corn, peanuts, beans, manioc are the main crops. Rivers The Ampasimbe river crosses this municipality from North to South. Schools There are 23 schools: 14 primary schools and 9 secondary schools. References Commune AMBOHIMALAZA MIRAY External links Populated places in Analamanga
Justin Shea Bautista-Jones (born August 25, 1995) is an American activist and politician from the state of Tennessee. He is a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives for District 52, representing parts of Nashville. As of 2023, Jones is the second youngest member of the State House. He was expelled in April 2023 for violating decorum rules by participating in a gun control protest on the House floor. The Nashville Metro Council voted unanimously to reinstate Jones to serve as an interim representative pending a special election to fill the seat. Early life and education Jones was born on August 25, 1995, in Oakland, California to a Filipina mother and an African American father. His mother, Christine, raised Justin and his sister while putting herself through nursing school. He is the grandson of black, working-class grandparents from the South Side of Chicago and Filipino immigrants of Ibanag and Aeta ancestry who migrated to California. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Fisk University and enrolled at Vanderbilt Divinity School. In 2019, he campaigned for the removal of a bust of Nathan Bedford Forrest from the Tennessee State Capitol. Early career In 2019, Jones announced his candidacy for the United States House of Representatives in against Jim Cooper in the 2020 elections. He did not submit enough valid signatures to make the ballot. Jones was arrested for refusing to leave a rally held by Marsha Blackburn in October 2018. He was charged in 2019 with assaulting Glen Casada, a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives, by allegedly throwing a drink, believed to be a hot coffee, at him. He was also banned from the Capitol. Casada later agreed to drop the charges. In 2020, Jones organized a 62-day sit-in protest for racial justice outside the state capitol after the murder of George Floyd. Among others, he was charged with assault, assault on an officer, and reckless endangerment after throwing a traffic cone into a moving truck's open driver-side window; Jones claimed that the driver was threatening him and using racial slurs. He was arrested and faced a total of 14 charges. Many of the charges were dropped in July 2021, but the reckless endangerment charges remained. An assault charge regarding Jones allegedly hitting a Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper with a bullhorn in July 2020 was dismissed by a judge in April 2023. Tennessee House of Representatives 2022 election In 2022, Jones ran to succeed State Representative Mike Stewart as the member of the Tennessee House for the 52nd district. Jones defeated Delishia Porterfield, a member of the Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County, in the Democratic Party primary election. He won the general election without opposition. Protest and expulsion After the March 2023 Covenant School shooting, Jones joined a protest alongside Gloria Johnson and Justin J. Pearson for gun control reform that disrupted House proceedings at the state capitol. The demonstration violated the chamber's decorum rules, as the three members were not recognized to speak and utilized a bullhorn. He was removed from his committees as a result. On April 5, Rep. Jones filed a police report after he was allegedly assaulted on the House floor by Rep. Justin Lafferty. Prior to his expulsion vote, Jones accused Representative Sabi "Doc" Kumar of putting a "brown face to white supremacy"; Kumar also stated that Jones had pointed in his face and told him, "Kumar, they will never accept you." The Tennessee House voted on April 6, to expel Jones, alongside Pearson, who are both black. Johnson, who is white, survived by one vote. Johnson argued that her race was the reason she was not expelled, while Republican members noted that she did not take the protest as far as Jones and Pearson. The resolution, HR65, was sponsored by Bud Hulsey and co-sponsored by Gino Bulso, Andrew Farmer, and Johnny Garrett; it passed with a vote of 7225. The Metropolitan Council of Nashville and Davidson County set a meeting to discuss an interim appointment to the vacant District52 on April10. Jones was appointed interim representative to his former seat by a unanimous vote of 360. On April 24, Jones, alongside Justin Pearson and Gloria Johnson, and Justin Jones were received by President Joe Biden at the White House. During his appearance at Netroots Nation in July, Jones accused House leadership of fascism, and stated his belief that the heirs of the Ku Klux Klan run the state government. Electoral history References External links 1995 births 21st-century American politicians 21st-century African-American politicians African-American state legislators in Tennessee American politicians of Filipino descent Democratic Party members of the Tennessee House of Representatives Expelled members of the Tennessee General Assembly Fisk University alumni Living people Politicians from Oakland, California
Laisren of Cloonkerrill may be the St Laisrén or Molaissi of the Soghain, whose pedigree is given as "Laisren mac Colmain mac Luchtai mac Findcha mac Feidlimti mac Sogain mac Fiacha Araide." This would make him a close relative of Kerrill, Molua of Kilmoluagh and Cuana of Kilcoonagh, all of whom were active evangelists in the Soghain kingdom located in what is now central-east County Galway. This would place Laisren as living in the late fifth or early sixth centuries. His name seems to have been perpetuated in the placename Laisrend, no longer extant but apparently located in the parish of Clonkeen. References The Life, Legends and Legacy of Saint Kerrill: A Fifth-Century East Galway Evangelist, Joseph Mannion, 2004. 0 954798 1 3 People from County Galway Medieval Irish saints 5th-century Irish people 6th-century Irish people
Bridget Galloway (born 19 July 1999) is an English football player, playing as a forward for Newcastle United in the FA Women's National League North. She has represented England at under-19 level. Club career Sunderland Galloway made her first team debut for Sunderland on 29 October 2016, replacing Beth Mead in the 80th minute of a 0–0 draw with Notts County in the WSL 1. Galloway's first team involvement increased in 2017–18. She scored her penalty in a WSL Cup shoot-out win against Sheffield F.C. on 16 November 2018. She scored her first goal on 5 December 2017 in a 1–0 WSL Cup win against Liverpool, heading in the eventual winner. Her first league goal came five days later in a 5–1 defeat at Everton in the WSL 1. On 20 May 2018, Galloway scored Sunderland's last WSL 1 goal with a winner on the last day of the season against Yeovil Town. Following Sunderland's demotion to the FA Women's National League, Galloway scored the team's first goal of the 2018–19 season, scoring a penalty against Bradford City on 26 August 2018. She scored her first senior hat-trick on 18 November 2018 in a 5–2 home win against Derby County. Durham After two seasons in the National League with Sunderland, Galloway decided to move on and joined FA Women's Championship club Durham on 14 July 2020. Newcastle United Galloway moved to Newcastle United on 14 July 2023. International career Galloway has represented England at under-19 level. She received her first call-up in January 2018 before making her debut against Ireland on 19 January 2018. She scored her first goal for England on 4 March 2018 in a 4–3 win over the Czech Republic. She got her second goal for the under-19's in the UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship qualifying round, scoring the opening goal in a 4–1 win against Israel on 3 April 2018. Career statistics Club . References 1999 births Living people English women's footballers Women's association football forwards Sunderland A.F.C. Women players Durham W.F.C. players Newcastle United W.F.C. players Footballers from Gateshead
The Cancer Drugs Fund (CDF) was introduced in England in 2011. It was established in order to provide a means by which National Health Service (NHS) patients in England could get cancer drugs rejected by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence because they were not cost effective. Its establishment was confirmed by the UK government's coalition agreement in 2010, and by the White Paper, Equity and excellence – Liberating the NHS. Starting in April 2011, the fund paid for nearly 100,000 people with cancer to access treatments. It was closed to new drugs from October 2015 to 29 July 2016 in line with the recommendation of the independent Cancer Taskforce report, which called for urgent reform to put the CDF on a more sustainable footing. Objectives Following the reforms in 2016 the objectives were updated. The new arrangements put it on a more sustainable footing with 3 key objectives: patients have faster access to the most promising new cancer treatments. taxpayers get better value for money in drug expenditure. Thirdly, pharmaceutical companies that are willing to price their products responsibly can access a new, fast-track route to NHS funding for the best and most promising drugs. The previous objectives of the CDF, as set out by the UK government in 2011, were that it should: provide maximum support to NHS patients put clinicians and cancer specialists at the heart of decision-making, consistent with the Government's wider policy of empowering health professionals and enabling them to use their professional judgement about what is right for patients act as an effective bridge to the Government's aim of introducing a value-based pricing system for branded drugs in 2014. Operation The patient's consultant must apply to the fund using an application form supplied by NHS England. Decision Summaries which are the formal decisions of the Chemotherapy Clinical Reference Group are published. Avastin is the most frequently requested treatment. Kadcyla is the most expensive drug funded. Both are manufactured by Hoffmann-La Roche, which has been described as the largest beneficiary of the fund. From July 2016 it became a "managed access" fund, paying for new drugs for a set period before they are definitively approved or rejected by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. It did not accept any new drugs between April and July 2016. From 2016 each drug has evaluation criteria and a timescale for effectiveness to be assessed. If it is considered to be cost effective it will be available to any patient. If not it will not be available at all in the English NHS. Pembrolizumab was added to the list in November 2022 after a "confidential" deal with manufacturer MSD. The current list of treatments funded by the CDF is available from the NHS England website: https://www.england.nhs.uk/cancer/cdf/cancer-drugs-fund-list/. It is regularly updated. In November 2022 it had reached version 1.238. History The funding system originally ran from April 2011 to March 2014, and was preceded by an Interim Cancer Drugs Fund from October 2010 to March 2011. Based on the size of their covered population, each strategic health authority in England was allocated fixed funds from a total £200 million per annum that was made available. The fund overspent by £30m in the year ending 2014. In August 2014 it was announced that the CDF would receive £80 million in additional funding for the following 2 years. But in November 2014 it was announced that 42 drugs currently provided would be reassessed due to inadequate cost-effectiveness. In Wales, the National Assembly debated the use of Cancer Treatment Fund and the Welsh Labour government was clear that it would not be replacing its existing evidence-based system with a cancer drugs fund. It relies on the All Wales Medicines Strategy Group which has appraised and recommended 19 new cancer medicines for use in NHS Wales covering 23 clinical indications. These are now routinely available to eligible patients in Wales but only 9 are available in England via the Cancer Drugs Fund. In May 2015 it was reported that only 59 of the 84 treatments previously funded would be supported in future, and that three new drugs would be included in the scheme. After a manufacturer's appeal Regorafenib was restored to the list. Criticism Research indicates that society does not support the prioritisation of cancer drugs over other treatments. The Financial Times attacked the fund in December 2014 as "a populist gesture that gives the impression of benefiting patients, but in fact rewards poor quality drugs while benefiting a handful of pharmaceutical companies at the expense of the taxpayer and the full range of NHS patients", complaining that it undermined the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. James Le Fanu writing in The Daily Telegraph said "This mechanism for diverting taxpayers' money to enhance, to little or no purpose, the profits of Big Pharma might be more aptly named "the Drug Company Fund"." In February 2015 York University researchers reported that the fund represented particularly poor value, diverting money from other patient services and that for every healthy year gained by this fund, five QALYs could be lost across the NHS. In December 2014 Andy Burnham announced that a Labour government would replace the fund with a Cancer Treatment Fund which would pay not only for innovative cancer drugs, but also for surgery and radiotherapy. It could mean increased access to advanced forms of radiotherapy such as intensity modulated radiotherapy and stereotactic ablative radiotherapy. In July 2015 the independent cancer taskforce established by NHS England proposed reform of the fund, which the taskforce said was "no longer sustainable or desirable… in its current form". Professor Karl Claxton, a health economist at the University of York, says that the fund should be scrapped because the money would be better used on 21,000 patients with heart, lung and gastro-intestinal diseases who are denied cost effective evidence based treatment, arguing that the principal beneficiary of the fund is 'big pharma'. In September 2015 the National Audit Office reported that no data had been collected on the 74,000 patients whose treatment had been funded, at a cost of nearly £1 billion, so it was impossible to discover whether the treatment had been effective. The Public Accounts Committee published a report on the fund in February 2016 which concluded that there was no evidence the fund was benefiting patients, extending lives or a good use of taxpayers' money. Prof Richard Sullivan, of King's College London and Dr Ajay Aggarwal of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine published a study in the Annals of Oncology in April 2017. He concluded that the initiative as initially established was a "huge waste of money" and a "major policy error". The researchers studied the 47 treatments that were being funded by January 2015, of which only 18% met internationally recognised criteria for being deemed clinically beneficial. For those drugs where there was some evidence of benefit, the average was an extra 3.2 months of survival. The majority of patients were exposed to unpleasant side effects for no benefit. £1.27 billion was spent on the fund during the period studied. No usable data was collected on what happened to patients whose treatment was funded - such as measuring how long they lived, their quality of life or side-effects. There was no consideration of the relative merits of surgery and radiotherapy. After its July 2016 reform, Eifiona Wood and Dyfrig Hughes from the Centre for Health Economics and Medicines Evaluation at Bangor University criticised decisions made by NICE on Drugs financed by the Cancer Drugs Fund for their lack of transparency, with decisions being made without disclosing ICERs (Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio) or total spending. They claim that this goes against NICEs own policy guidance and risks undermining its integrity. See also Cancer in the United Kingdom References 2011 establishments in England Cancer treatments National Health Service (England) Chemotherapy Cancer organisations based in the United Kingdom
The Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders is a peer-reviewed open access medical journal established in March 2009 and published by BioMed Central. The journal covers research on neurodevelopmental disorders including autism spectrum disorders, tuberous sclerosis, and specific language impairment. The editor-in-chief is Joseph Piven (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill). The journal was originally published in print form as well as online, but the former was ceased in 2010 with the publication of the 4th issue of volume 2. In 2012, the journal became open access. According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2012 impact factor of 3.450. References External links BioMed Central academic journals Neuroscience journals Academic journals established in 2009 Quarterly journals Child and adolescent psychiatry journals Creative Commons Attribution-licensed journals
Endothenia citharistis is a moth of the family Tortricidae first described by Edward Meyrick in 1909. It is found in India, Sri Lanka, Java and Myanmar. Its larval food plant is Lagerstroemia. References Moths of Asia Moths described in 1909
Pittsburgh Youth Ballet is an American non-profit organization previously run by former Pittsburgh Ballet Theater ballerina Jean Gedeon. The School was founded in 1983, while the company was established in 1990. PYB alumnae have performed with the New York City Ballet and other professional dance companies. In 2019, the Youth Pittsburgh Ballet changed its name to Texture Ballet School and is under the direction of Alan Obuzor. References External links Education in Pittsburgh Ballet schools in the United States Non-profit organizations based in Pittsburgh 1983 establishments in Pennsylvania Dance in Pennsylvania
Appleton International Airport , formerly Outagamie County Regional Airport, is an airport located in Greenville, Wisconsin, United States, west of Appleton. It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2023–2027. Along with Madison’s Dane County Regional Airport, it is one of two airports in the State of Wisconsin categorized as a small hub. The airport covers at an elevation of above sea level. It is the third-busiest of eight commercial airports in Wisconsin in terms of passengers served. In 2016 the airport contributed $676 million to the Northeastern Wisconsin economy. In May 2018, Appleton International Airport was the fourth fastest growing airport in the US. It is the main base of privately owned regional airline Air Wisconsin and was the original home of Midwest Airlines. Midwest Airlines grew out of Kimberly-Clark subsidiary K-C Aviation, which was sold in 1998 to Gulfstream Aerospace, which retains a major facility at the airport, focusing on maintenance and interior completions for the company's G600, G650, and G700 products. The airport attracts people heading back and forth between the EAA's AirVenture, Air Academy and other programs in nearby Oshkosh. Starting in 2017, the airport began to offer camping for AirVenture. Appleton International is also used for people heading to events at Lambeau Field in nearby Green Bay, most popularly Green Bay Packers games. History The airport opened with the runway 12/30 in 1965. In the 1920s, Appleton's airport was George A. Whiting Field, three miles (5 km) south of town. When Northwest was awarded Contract Airmail Route No. 9 in 1926, Whiting Field became one of the original six airports in the airline's route network. Passenger service on Northwest began in 1927 but was short-lived. By 1936 the municipal airport had opened northeast of town on the south side of US 41, southeast of the intersection (). At its closing, it had a paved runway; North Central DC-3s landed there after 1958–59. Construction of the current facility began in 1963; the field was dedicated on August 22, 1965, along with Air Wisconsin, which started operations out of the airport the next day. Recent years Since 2009, the airport has been completing a number of renovation projects under a PFC plan. Parts of the project already completed include rehabilitating runway 12/30 and taxiway B as well as expanding taxiway N and installing runway guard lights throughout the field. In January 2017, a new rental car facility opened across from the terminal building. In December 2017, the airport started a project to remodel the terminal with the addition of meeting space, a brand new restaurant with airfield views, remodeled/expanded security area, and remodeled check-in area. Furthermore the airport is currently studying the construction of adding additional gates either through expanding the airport's current concourse or building a second concourse. In 2011, the airport was one of ten nationwide airports selected to participate in an FAA airport sustainability project with a goal to make the airport 70% more energy efficient by 2030. In 2017, the airport constructed solar carports (covered parking structure with solar panels on the roof) in the short-term parking lot. Additional solar carports were constructed and completed in October 2019. The solar carports supplement a system of solar panels installed on the roof of the terminal building which were installed in the early 2010s. The Appleton Flight Center Terminal, which was constructed in 2013, is a LEED-certified facility and features zero VOC finishes, a roof-mounted 26 kW photovoltaic system, a ground source heat pump, in-floor radiant conditioning, and a rainwater collection system. The terminal was the nation’s first airport terminal to achieve a net zero energy designation, receiving a Class D Net Zero Energy Building rating and is widely considered to be a leader in airport energy sustainability. In the late 2010s, the airport saw a period of mass growth. In May 2018 a report by Bloomberg News revealed that Appleton International Airport was the fourth fastest-growing airport in the US, with a 26.8% increase in passengers compared to two years prior. This expansion was the result of the introduction of American Airlines and an increase in flights from Air Wisconsin flying under the United Express brand. New routes like Denver and Punta Gorda, an upgrade in the size of aircraft being utilized by airlines, and cheaper airfare also contributed towards the large growth. The Outagamie County Board rejected a proposal in 1983 to change the name to "Fox Cities Metro Airport," and three more name change efforts failed between 2003 and 2011. In February 2014, the county board voted to rename the airport "Appleton International Airport." The new name was officially implemented in 2015 on August 21, during the golden anniversary celebration of the airport. In 2019, the airport handled just over 762,000 passengers, the most in its history. On August 10, 2021, Allegiant Air announced that they would base Airbus A320 aircraft at the airport beginning March 2, 2022. They will also open a crew/maintenance base to support these aircraft. In October 2023, there were 74 aircraft based at this airport: 50 single-engine, 17 multi-engine and 7 jets. Facilities Runways Appleton International Airport has 2 runways that are perpendicular to one another forming an X shape. All taxiways are equipped with LED taxiway edge lighting and all entrances to runways have runway guard lights. Terminal The terminal was built in 1974, with expansions in 1983, 1990, and 1998. The airport added a new ground-level seven-gate concourse in 2000 and renovated the existing passenger terminal, which was designed by architect Paul W. Powers. The architectural theme was representative of the river flowing through the historic paper manufacturing region. The terminal underwent its most extensive renovation and expansion to date in 2001. The new gate area included more spacious seating areas with natural lighting, in floor heating, new passenger paging system, and five aircraft boarding bridges; a 6th bridge for larger planes was added later. It cost $10.7 million and was designed by Mead & Hunt, Inc. The airport's main entrance at CTH CA features a complete reproduction of the Apollo 11 statue located in the Moon Tree Garden of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. It was donated to the airport in 2020 by local car salesmen giant John Bergstrom. The terminal has eight gates currently in use: seven with jet bridges–which are numbered 3 through 7, 7b, and 8–and one for tarmac entry, numbered 8b. Gates 1 and 2 are not frequently used due to their close proximity to the main terminal building and the resulting difficulty maneuvering aircraft in those tight spaces. The layout can best be explained by looking at the terminal map. Ground transportation Appleton International Airport is located west of Interstate 41 and north of US Highway 10. Valley Transit bus service does not have a stop servicing the airport, but there are stops nearby. Vehicle for hire companies including Uber, Lyft, and taxicabs are allowed to pick up and drop off passengers on airport property. Six car rental companies offer service at the airport out of a consolidated rental car facility across from the terminal. Other The airport has an FBO, Appleton Flight Center, which offers AvGas and Jet Fuel, as well as a number of other resources such as a crew car and WiFi. ATW holds the Old Glory Honor Flights for the Northeast Wisconsin area. These flights bring veterans from World War II and the Korean war to see their memorials in Washington. The airport has hosted many community events to raise money for these flights, including a plane pull event in September 2017. The flights are flown by Sun Country Airlines. The airport, along with Allegiant Air, hosts a bi-annual event called "Wings for Autism". The event allows children on the autism spectrum, along with their parents, to go through a rehearsal flight in which they practice checking in for their flight, going through airport security, boarding their flight, and collecting checked baggage. The event is sponsored by many local organizations and companies. It is one of the largest versions of the event held nationally. Every April, the airport celebrates autism awareness month by lighting the terminal blue. The airport is home to the Fox Cities Composite Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol, which houses a fleet of Cessna 182s at the airport. Airlines and destinations Passenger Cargo operations Statistics Carrier shares Top destinations Annual traffic For the twelve-month period ending December 31, 2022, the airport had 40,877 aircraft operations, an average of 112 per day: 60% general aviation, 28% air taxi, 12% commercial airline and less than 1% military. Accidents and incidents On , Air Wisconsin Flight 671, a DHC-6 Twin Otter, collided with North Central Airlines Flight 290 over Lake Winnebago while on approach to the airport; both planes crashed into the lake and sank, resulting in 13 fatalities. On February 14, 2011, a Gulfstream G550 overran runway 30 at Appleton after the aircraft had reportedly lost its hydraulic system. The aircraft was operating a test flight after a new interior was installed and before being delivered to a new owner. All three people on board survived. On , a chartered Delta Air Lines Airbus A330 (N802NW) carrying an NFL team, the Minnesota Vikings, slid off a taxiway after landing, stranding the team on board for four hours before they were rescued using fire ladders. On August 13, 2022, a Delta Air Lines Boeing 717 encountered a bald eagle strike on takeoff from Appleton. See also List of airports in Wisconsin List of intercity bus stops in Wisconsin Valley Transit References External links from the Wisconsin DOT Airport Directory Airports in Wisconsin Buildings and structures in Outagamie County, Wisconsin Transportation in Outagamie County, Wisconsin 1965 establishments in Wisconsin
Godfrey Chitalu was a Zambian former professional footballer who represented the Zambia national football team in international level from 1968 to 1980. During that time, he amassed 108 caps and scored 79 international goals making him the all-time record goalscorer for the Zambia national team, highest international goalscorer from an African nation and eighth-highest international goalscorer in history. International goals Statistics References Chitalu Chitalu
"Follow Me" is a song by British girl group Atomic Kitten. It was written by Lucy Abbot, Sara Eker, Dawn Joseph, Steve Robson, and Peter Kearney for their debut album, Right Now (2000), with production helmed by Trevor Steel, John Holliday, and additional producer Quiet Money. "Follow Me" was released as the album's fourth single in October 2000. A departure from the bubblegum pop of Atomic Kitten's first three singles, it introduced a more mature and mellow, R&B-influenced pop sound but was less successful than their previous top 10 hits, peaking at number 20 on the UK Singles Chart. Music video The promotional video for "Follow Me" includes Natasha Hamilton, Liz McClarnon and Kerry Katona. It opens with the Kittens near a window in a shadowy room. Before the first chorus the girls are seen in a desert with a pink sky. In the first chorus, the three dance on a disco ball dome in the sky in the clouds. The girls also dance on top of a skyscraper in the city at night, while the skyline is full of old buildings. The roof the girls dance on features a large tattoo-like design. During the bridge section, the Kittens dance in front of a blue cover. The girls also clap their hands with snowballs in the desert setting at night. Before the final chorus, the blue cover lifts up behind Natasha, Kerry and Liz. Track listings Notes signifies remix and additional production Credits and personnel Credits adapted from the liner notes of Right Now. Tracy Ackerman – backing vocals Atomic Kitten – lead vocals Lucy Abbot – writing Sara Eker – writing Danny G – keyboards John Holliday – production Mark Jamies – guitar Dawn Joseph – writing Peter Kearney – writing Quiet Money – additional production, remix Heff Moraes – mixing Jackie Rawe – backing vocals Steve Robson – writing Trevor Steel – production Charts References 2000 singles 2000 songs Atomic Kitten songs Innocent Records singles Songs written by Steve Robson Virgin Records singles
The 1951 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami as an independent during the 1951 college football season. Led by fourth-year head coach Andy Gustafson, the Hurricanes played their home games at Burdine Stadium in Miami, Florida. Miami finished the season 8–3. The Hurricanes were invited to the Gator Bowl, where they beat Clemson, 14–0. Schedule References Miami Miami Hurricanes football seasons Gator Bowl champion seasons Miami Hurricanes football
A traverse, in military fortification, is a mass of earth or other material employed to protect troops against enfilade. It is constructed at right angles to the parapet manned by the defenders, and is continued sufficiently far to the rear to give the protection required by the circumstances, which, moreover, determine its height. A traverse is sometimes utilized as a casemate. Ordinary field works, not less than those of more solid construction, require traversing, though if the trenches, instead of being continuous, are broken into short lengths, they are traversed by the unbroken earth intervening between each length. References Military terminology Military engineering
Denis Petrashov (born February 1, 2000) is a Kyrgyzstani competitive swimmer. He competed in the Men's 200-meter breaststroke event at the 2016 Summer Olympics and both the Men's 100-meter (swimming a 1:00.23, setting a Kyrgyzstani national record) and 200-meter breaststroke events at the 2021 Summer Olympics. Petrashov won the silver medal in the 100-meter breaststroke at the 2018 Youth Olympics, and gold medals at the 2022 Maccabiah Games in Israel in the 100 m and 200 m breaststroke events. Biography Petrashov's hometown is Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. His father is former three-time Olympian and former breaststroke national record holder Yevgeny Petrashov. He competed in the Men's 200-meter breaststroke event at the 2016 Summer Olympics and both the Men's 100-meter (swimming a 1:00.23, setting a Kyrgyzstani national record) and 200-meter breaststroke events at the 2021 Summer Olympics. Petrashov won the gold medal in the 200-meter breaststroke at the 10th Asian Age Group Swimming Championships 2019 in Bangalore, India. He won two silver medals. in men's 50 and 100 meters breaststroke. He is also a 2-time Asian Games finalist, and a Youth Olympics silver medalist. Petrashov currently holds national record Kyrgyz records (breaststroke long course). Petrashov won gold medals at the 2022 Maccabiah Games in Israel in the 100 m (in a time of 1:00.46, bettering the record set in the prior Maccabiah Games by American B.J. Johnson) and 200 m breaststroke events. Attending the University of Louisville and competing for the Louisville Cardinals, in 2022 Petrashov swam 51.92/1:51.89. At the 2022 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Championships, he was runner-up in the 200 breaststroke and seventh in the 100 breaststroke. He did not score at the 2022 NCAAs, after losing a swim-off for 16th in the 100, and not matching his ACC 200 breast time. Major results See also List of flag bearers for Kyrgyzstan at the Olympics List of Kyrgyzstani records in swimming "The Top Ranked Swimmers of All-Time from Kyrgyzstan" References External links Instagram pagea 2000 births Living people Louisville Cardinals men's swimmers Olympic swimmers for Kyrgyzstan Swimmers at the 2016 Summer Olympics Sportspeople from Bishkek Swimmers at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics Swimmers at the 2018 Asian Games Asian Games competitors for Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstani male breaststroke swimmers Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Olympics Kyrgyzstani Jews Jewish swimmers Maccabiah Games medalists in swimming Competitors at the 2017 Maccabiah Games Competitors at the 2022 Maccabiah Games Maccabiah Games gold medalists for Kyrgyzstan
Drawida polydiverticulata is a species of earthworm from family Moniligastridae found from shola grasslands of the Munnar region in Kerala. Drawida polydiverticulata has multiple lobes, also called diverticulums; an organ located in the front of its body, are unique amongst the members of the genus. References Clitellata Fauna of Kerala
Northgate Street is a street in the City of Gloucester, so named because its northern end was originally the location of the north gate in the city's walls. The street runs from the crossroads of Northgate, Eastgate, Southgate, and Westgate Streets in the south (The Cross) to London Road in the north. It is joined by St John's Lane, Hare Lane, and Worcester Street on the north side and The Oxebode, St Aldate Street, and Spread Eagle Road on the south side. History Northgate Street dates from at least 1455. The gate to the city's inner defences was roughly between St John's Church and where Hare Lane joins Northgate Street now, while the outer gate was to the east, as Northgate Street took an eastwards turn. The part of the street between the two was known as Lower Northgate. Part of the west end of the street was once known as Cordwainer's Row. Listed buildings Northgate Street contains a number of listed buildings: North side 11 Northgate Street Church of St John, currently used as a Methodist church Imperial Inn South side 6, 8, and 10 Northgate Street The New Inn, grade I listed 62 Northgate Street Northend Vaults 102 Northgate Street References External links Streets in Gloucester
Kindli is a traditional hotel and restaurant founded in 1474 and located in the historic city center Lindenhof of Zürich, Switzerland. All hotel rooms are furnished individually in the English country house style and contains the Hästens beds of high quality. Locations: Hotel: Pfalzgasse 1, 8001 Zürich Business apartments: Rollengasse 2, 8001 Zürich Restaurant: Beim Rennweg, 8001 Zürich See also List of oldest companies References External links Homepage in German Location on Google Maps Hotels in Zürich Restaurants in Switzerland Companies established in the 15th century 15th-century establishments in Switzerland
The P'yŏngbuk Line is an electrified standard-gauge secondary trunk line of the Korean State Railway in North Pyŏngan Province, North Korea, running from Chŏngju on the P'yŏngŭi Line to Ch'ŏngsu; it meets the Ch'ŏngnyŏn P'arwŏn Line at Kusŏng, and at Ch'ŏngsu, via a bridge across the Yalu River, it goes to Shanghekou, China, where it connects to China Railway's Fengshang Railway to Fenghuangcheng. History The line was opened by the privately owned P'yŏngbuk Railway on 27 September 1939 as an industrial railway to serve the Sup'ung Hydroelectric Power Plant on the Yalu River. The Emperor of Manchukuo, Puyi, travelled along this line when he visited the Sup'ung Dam. Following the partition of Korea the line was located within the Soviet zone of occupation, and was nationalised along with all the other railways in the zone by the Provisional People’s Committee for North Korea on 10 August 1946, becoming part of the Korean State Railway. Electrification of the entire line was completed in 1980, and at the same time, semi-automatic train control was installed on the section between Chŏngju and Kusŏng. Services The line serves a variety of industries, including a textile factory in Kusŏng, a chemical factory in Ch'ŏngsu, and North Korea's largest lignite mine near P'ungnyŏn, as well as shipping large amounts of wood south from Amrokkang Station on the Yalu River. Other important commodities shipped on the line are limestone and anthracite. There are two long-distance passenger trains that operate on the line - semi-express trains 115/116 between P'yŏngyang and Ch'ŏngsu, and local trains 200/201 between West P'yŏngyang and Ch'ŏngsu. There are also commuter trains along the Ch'ongsu—Sup'ung—P'ungnyŏn (6 pairs), Kusŏng—Paegun (5 pairs) and Chŏngju—Kusŏng (2 pairs) sections of the line. Route A yellow background in the "Distance" box indicates that section of the line is not electrified. References Railway lines in North Korea Standard gauge railways in North Korea
Pinocchio is a two-episode Italian-British miniseries directed by Alberto Sironi, based on the 1883 novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi and filmed in English. It first aired on the Italian channel Rai 1 on November 1 and 2, 2008. The cast includes Robbie Kay as Pinocchio, Bob Hoskins as Geppetto, Luciana Littizzetto as a female Talking Cricket and Alessandro Gassman as Carlo Collodi. It was shot in Lazio and Tuscany, Italy. Cast Bob Hoskins as Geppetto Robbie Kay as Pinocchio Luciana Littizzetto (dubbed by Teresa Gallagher) as the Talking Cricket Margherita Buy as the teacher Violante Placido as The Fairy Joss Ackland as Mastro Ciliegia Thomas Sangster as Lampwick Toni Bertorelli (dubbed by Jimmy Hibbert) as The Fox Francesco Pannofino (dubbed by Rupert Degas) as The Cat Maurizio Donadoni (dubbed by Tim Bentinck) as Fire-Eater Bianca D'Amato (dubbed by Alison Dowling) as Elisa Alessandro Gassman (dubbed by Seán Barrett) as Carlo Collodi Steven Kynman as Harlequin References External links 2008 television films 2008 films 2008 fantasy films Italian television films 2000s Italian-language films 2000s children's fantasy films Pinocchio films Italian fantasy films Films scored by Jan A. P. Kaczmarek Television shows based on The Adventures of Pinocchio 2000s English-language films 2000s Italian films
Kavli Foundation may refer to: Kavli Trust (Norwegian: Kavlifondet), a Norwegian foundation that owns Kavli Holding AS Kavli Foundation (United States), an American foundation established in 2000 See also Kavli (disambiguation)
The Haslachmühle is a landmarked historic flour mill in Salzburgs urban district and former mill village Gnigl. The building was first documented in 1577 as "kleine Müllel im Haslach". Today's building was constructed in 1688 und was expanded during the last centuries. The mill is also known as Flocknermuhle (Flöcknermühle) and is private property of the family with the same name since the mid of the 19th century. It was powered by an overshot water wheel. In 2014 a bed and breakfast was opened in the main building named "Romantic Pension Haslachmuhle". Chapel Maria Luggau In 1689 during the construction of a new house a momentous accident happened. A scaffolding broke and seven workers fell into the ditch but as by a wonder nobody was hurt. As a result, the religious miller family constructed a small chapel in honor of Mary (mother of Jesus). The workers came from Carinthia or Lienz District, where a picture of the Blessed Virgin Mary was adored by the people since 1513. A copy of this picture is in the center of the altar and gave the name to the chapel. Despite the plain architecture there are some fine artworks within the building. The chapel is situated along the famous pilgrim's way to St. Wolfgang at the Wolfgangsee. References External links B&B Haslachmuhle – official website http://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g190441-d6674835-Reviews-Die_Haslachmuhle-Salzburg_Austrian_Alps.html Buildings and structures in Salzburg Watermills in Austria Economy of Salzburg (state)
Ratu Apenisa Naevo (born 24 February 1973) is a Fijian rugby union footballer. His usual position is at lock. He has earned over 30 caps for the national team, after debuting in 1996 and going on to represent them at the Rugby World Cup. Naveo made his debut for Fiji on September 29, 1996, in a match against Hong Kong. Not only did his career get off to a winning start, with Fiji taking the match 64–11, he scored a try on debut. He played two other games that year, another against Hong Kong, and the other against the NZ Maori. After being capped three times the following season he went on to appear five times for Fiji in 1998. In 1999 he played three games during June–July, and then four Tests during August and was then included in the Fiji squad for the 1999 Rugby World Cup in Wales. He played two matches during the tournament; the games against Namibia and Canada during the pool stages. He next played for Fiji in May 2001, and went on to play another five times that season. He went on tour in November of the 2002 season, playing in the games against Wales, Ireland and Scotland. After playing two games in July 2003 he was included in the Fiji squad for the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia, playing three games, against France and the United States, scoring tries in both, and the games against Scotland. Apenisa Naevo is the son of Joeli Lesavua, the younger brother of Ratu Apisai Naevo, the Paramount Chief of Nawaka, in Nadi. His brother, Semisi Naevo, is also a rugby player. Fiji Team Test debut: 1996 vs Hong Kong in Aberdeen 35 caps 6 tries 30 points (49 games, 11 tries, 55 points) External links Api Naevo on rwc2003.irb.com 1973 births Fijian rugby union players Living people Rugby union locks Fiji international rugby union players Chiefs (rugby union) players Blues (Super Rugby) players Fijian expatriate rugby union players Expatriate rugby union players in New Zealand Fijian expatriate sportspeople in New Zealand I-Taukei Fijian people Sportspeople from Nadi Rugby union players from Ba Province Rugby Club Vannes players 1999 Rugby World Cup players 2003 Rugby World Cup players
Tal Al-Farani (), a place mentioned in the Torah located in Israel, about 3.5 km to the east of the Mediterranean Sea, between Ashdod and Ashkelon, and an area of about 10 hectares, was inhabited and populated during the first three stages of the ancient Bronze Age and only during the third phase of Ancient Bronze Age. Tal Al-Farani is considered one of the archaeological sites in the town of Hamama, where this landmark is an archeological hill where the remains of a population from the Canaanite era until the Byzantine era. The excavations revealed Canaanite fortifications on this hill. The Farani Hill is located in the north-east of Hamama, Al-Abtah to the west directly from the railway line between Lod and Gaza, and this hill is located in the property of the Farani family (Hamamiya). References Hodla, Salah: Patterns of Stability during the Ancient Bronze Age in Palestine: An - Najah Journal of Research: 2004. Hassouna, Khalil: Book of pigeon Ashkelon beauty and men. Yahia, Jabr: Geographical flags between blur and distortion. Archaeological sites District of Gaza Arab villages depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
NADPH-NAD+ transhydrogenase may stand for NAD(P)+ transhydrogenase (Re/Si-specific) NAD(P)+ transhydrogenase (Si-specific)
A Register of Interests is a record kept, usually by a government body, of financial interests of its members. The register documents interests which may potentially unethically or unlawfully influence members' official duties. The term is in use in most Commonwealth countries. Jurisdiction Australia In 2019 Australia, it required "MPs to declare shares, directorships, real estate, gifts and more to demonstrate they represent their constituents without bias." United Kingdom The UK has had a register of interests since 1974. The UK register was reviewed and enhanced after the Cash for Questions scandal of 1994. This led to the Nolan enquiry which gave birth to the Report on Standards in Local Government. All holders of public office in the UK are bound to this code. The Parliamentary Register has evolved in latter years a Code of Conduct, and as of 2017, had also evolved into: Register of Members' Financial Interests Register of Interests of Members' Secretaries and Research Assistants Register of Journalists' Interests Register of All-Party Parliamentary Groups References Accountability Professional ethics
Ancilla djiboutina is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Ancillariidae, the olives. Description Attains a size around 20 mm. Distribution This marine species is found off Djibouti, East Africa. References Boyer F. (2015). Révision des Ancilla (Olividae: Ancillinae) de Masirah. Xenophora Taxonomy. 9: 3–14 External links Jousseaume [F.P. 1894. Diagnoses des coquilles de nouveaux mollusques. Bulletin de la Société Philomathique de Paris, 8(6): 98–105] djiboutina Gastropods described in 1894
Govind Madhav Solegaonkar (1912–1986) was a versatile artist who created works on murals, portraits, landscapes and abstract paintings. Early life Govind Solegaonkar was born in 1912 at Sehore in British India. He was introduced to art at a very early age. He received his initial lessons at home from his father who was a student of Sir J.J. School (1905) and was part of Ajanta copying team from J.J. School. While schooling, G. M. Solegaonkar simultaneously took training in drawing, painting at "Devlalikar Institute" in Indore. (1927) Devlalikar too was a past student of Sir J.J. School of Art. Thus the academic influence of J.J. School started molding G. M. Solegaonkar much before he himself joined the school. In 1928 an important incident took place which exerted an indirect influence of Revivalists Movement on his mind. ’’Pravasi Vanga Sahitya Sammelan" was held in Indore. On this occasion, an exhibition of the paintings from all over India was held. G.M. Solegaonkar participated in it and was felicitated with silver medal at the hands of Lady Dobson, member of London Royal Academy. The program of the Parishad included among other items the lectures by Dr. Cousins, on Indian Art. In his lectures, he gave references from Havell's book, "The Ideals of Indian Art". The lectures inspired him arousing curiosity about the qualities of Indian Art and its philosophical background; which he pursued all through. He had excelled in Elementary & Intermediate Drawing examinations. During this period he started painting portraits. The British soldiers at Mhow Contonment wanted to send their small portraits to their beloved and were very happy to get their miniature portraits done by G.M. Solegaonkar. He joined Sir J.J. School of Art - Mumbai, in 1930, for Diploma in painting & completed it in 1933 in first class. He continued to win many awards during this period. He was appointed a Fellow at Sir J.J. School of Art – Mumbai for 1935–1936 in Mural Department. Career While a student his award-winning painting "Love Pilgrimage" was exhibited in an exhibition at the Burlington Gallery, London. In 1935, he won the Gold medal of Bombay Art Society for his painting ‘Mahiyari’ Presently the painting is with Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya - Mumbai (then Prince of Wales Museum). The same was on display in recent exhibition organised as tribute to G. Solomon, Dean Sir J.J. School of Art. (http://www.csmvs.in/about-us/press-room/press-release/210-pravaha.html) For next twenty years, he continued to receive many awards, prizes and trophies from Simla Fine Art Society, Art Society of India, Bombay Art Society and in various Art exhibitions in India. During an exhibition at Fine art Society, Simla. His poster painting 'Ajanta Frescos' was awarded a special prize by the publicity department of Indian Railways. Post independence, a planning committee was formed to draw detailed plan to decorate the Parliament House of India, with paintings of eminent artists depicting great moments in the history of this country. G. M. Solegaonkar was selected to create a panel painting. His mural titled Bhojshala continues to be displayed at the Indian Parliament House. He held his solo exhibitions in Jehangir Art Gallery in 1954, 1957 and 1958. G. M. Solegaonkar visited Europe in 1958 particularly England, Belgium, Holland. He spent about two years there, studying the paintings and sculptures by visiting various galleries and exhibitions. His work during this period contained numerous paintings in his own style and predominantly with various Indian subjects. He held many exhibitions in Europe, with three of them being held in Belgium. On return from Europe visit, he served Art Society of India as President in 1962. He held his exhibitions in Jehangir Art Gallery in 1962 and in Taj Art Gallery in 1970. He spent years researching the master key and technique deployed in paintings at Ajanta and Bagh Caves . As he could see that this invaluable cultural heritage was showing signs of getting ravaged by onslaught of time, he had a strong desire to make this treasure available for the future generations. With this background he had planned a detailed scheme, of having a replica of Ajanta caves. The scheme would provide training to the art-students as well as patronage to painters. He had commenced corresponding with Government authorities. The then Education Minister Madhukarrao Chaudhary and Defense Minister Yashwantrao Chavan were favorably inclined towards the scheme and had indicated their consent. Unfortunately, due to paucity of funds with Maharashtra Government, this scheme could not see the light of the day. In July 1971, an exhibition of 40 of his paintings was held in India House, London. He continued to wield his brush and pallet till the day he breathed his last on 5 January 1986. Subsequently, his works have been auctioned by several art auction houses such as Christie's and SaffronArt. Style The following paragraph taken from his diary, sets tone to his Art-journey: "India had art of long standing. The artistic value need not necessarily depend upon fulfilling the standards set by the latest fashion or theory or values current in Europe. Our artistic activity came to a standstill practically with the loss of freedom and cultural decline. England forced upon India, European art ideals, methods and values. It is not that European culture has done India no good. Some great and eternal values like freedom, individual and collective, for general progress are the elements bound to lead men to progress. Let us not be servile imitators of the dead past or living present of Europe. Let us find out whether we have anything to give – contribute. Let us free ourselves from the false notion that is holding on to Indian technique, period or school. This is the way to express the soul of India in art forms." Similarly following quote from his diary defines his approach to technique and style: "Mastery over technique gives discipline to the artist. The discipline, the control of the material which the mastery over the technique gives is very precious..... Mere technique is not art. The artist must learn and then forget the technique." Throughout his life he experimented with different styles. He tried various types of subjects from figurative compositions in Indian decorative style, genre, portraits, still-life, outdoor scenes - landscapes, abstract as well as non-objective paintings. All of these showed a continuous handling of color and forms with new experiments. Style in The Early Period He started with portraits, even before formal training in J. J. School of Art. He was successful in bringing perfect likeness and his portraits were known for his masterly treatment in realistic rendering. In J.J. School, he was introduced to the painting style based on academic realism. All the same, there was a deep influence of the great frescoes of Ajanta and especially Bagh Caves on his mind from very early age when he was in Indore. Influenced by Havell's book & Dean Gladston Solomon he ardently followed Bombay Revivalism and his work represented the Indian art. The fascination about Indian art and its decorative style was combined with the academic training of Bombay School. Iconographic paintings - ' Dattatreya', 'Trimurti', 'Samudra Manthan' These paintings illustrate his mastery over pure, delicate, rhythmic yet powerful line acquired by his in depth study of Frescos Art. These were a very remarkable example of wall decoration on traditional lines. He experimented illusionistic paintings in the academic style and made compositions in Indian decorative style. His work in the early period of his career was earmarked as replete with Iconographic paintings making subtle use of different styles. He belonged to the transition period. He was known to be the first modern artist from J.J. School of Art. Given below are the illustrations of expert use of different styles as seen in some of his prize winning work during the early period – ‘Dadhi Manthan’ (Churning) - In the art world this work was distinctively noticed then for its theme. It depicted artistically the rhythmic movement of churning and included minute details such as the flowing movement of a background curtain etc. The color combination showed traces of Neo Rajput style. ‘Love Pilgrimage’ was a large decorative panel of the divine couple - Shiva & his consort Uma and captured their lilting movement. This painting using hastmudra – hand gestures influenced by Ajanta frescos was considered an example of obsession with the Indian decorative style and ingenious mannerism. It recorded a new enterprise in decorative line and color and won the ‘Nizam silver medal’ for best work by student of any art school in India in Simla Fine Art exhibition. This painting was much appreciated for its line work reminding iconography of ancient Indian Art on the backdrop of Ancient Buddhist Art. It was eventually selected for the exhibition of Modern Indian Art arranged by the Indian Society of London at the New Burlington Galleries (1934). Chandra Aradhana’ had semblance of Mughal style. Mahiyari (1935 - Gold medal winning painting) This painting noted for its originality was a strikingly successful attempt to present a truly Indian subject using western style of painting. It was the first time that an effort was made to use Cubism which was an emerging French school of painting then. The beautifully executed face with lost look in her dreaming eyes and expressive face of one waiting for her beloved were captured effectively. Conducive attractive colours, setting Sunrays in the background, play of light & shadow on Mahiyari's multi coloured costume, western proportionality, colour scheme in Rajput style and the light but soft background of the sunlit buildings set off the graceful figure made this an aesthetic masterpiece of art. Critic Karl Khandalawala has noted - 'This painting presented an excellent illustration of how certain principles of Modern French Art can with great advantage be employed by the Indian artist without losing his individuality or becoming an imitator.' This artist was not tied down to the rigid principles of reality, which was the chief factor of the paintings of the Bombay school. After realistic phase, he tried to use bold impressionistic strokes. He simplified the forms by omitting unnecessary details - thus deviating from the traditional style executed with microscopic details. He used broad, bold and confident brush-strokes in the paintings. His handling showed rapidity, boldness and precision. For this purpose sometimes he used even flat tones and simplified forms. Through all his work he continued experimenting with feeling of space, arrangement of forms, aspects of light & color eventually to create a good design while keeping the effect of space intact. His efforts are revealed in his line, in individual figures or in the overall design. The experiments with space involved the use of unusual views and levels. By training and as his core strength he was a muralist. In the paintings or line art, irrespective of size or color, distinctive features of mural paintings can be noticed. His work exhibits mastery over line and its spontaneity created a sense of volume in his drawing. His paintings show a powerful color-sense and a decorative quality. Abstract Paintings In his work there is integration between the past and the present. His work displays vital interest in Present - modern trends of the contemporary world, sustained with deeply rooted understanding of the past heritage - inspirations from Frescos of Ajanta & Bagh. He reformed his original style taking cognizance of new references and new directions. Thus started his foray into abstract paintings. Exposure to modern works of art from the west left impressionistic influences with novel modes in his work. He achieved effects of vast space and good design through interesting arrangement of simplified forms and color orchestration. With his urge for innovation, he continued experimenting in treatment of form & arrangements. His approach to abstract art was deep rooted in a stylized realism. He adopted specialties of modern paintings to create visual art. His work was marked with his perspective, fine sense of pattern and geometrical rhythm.Landscapes Fascinated by the beauty of nature, he tried to explore it through his landscapes throughout his life. His landscapes showed a new view to reveal the beauty of nature. Most of his landscapes show the panoramic view revealing the vast space. His landscapes show simplified forms and sure, bold brush-strokes together with pleasant color-schemes derived from natural pigments. He chiefly experimented in aspects of light, space and color. Though his training emphasized on academic realism, his technique of landscape painting showed the influence of the Impressionism and Post-impressionism. Color His approach to color was scientific and his color-scheme shows strength and vitality. Limited palette and skillful use of greys derived from different colors was the result of inspiration from the ancient muralists of India. Particularly the cave paintings of Bagh provided inspiration for his experiments in tempera colors. He prepared his own colors from the pigments. It is for this reason his color scheme had become a distinguishing feature of his art work. He used water colors in opaque manner (gouache technique) like the Indian miniature painters. He used indigenous earth colors for chromatic luminosity. Paintings Some paintings by Mr Solegaonkar: Awards Govind Solegaonkar was the recipient of many awards including: Topiwala Prize 1934 This prize was for the best composition on Indian History or Mythology The Miss Dolly Cursetji First Prize 1934 Medals and Awards by Fine Art Society, Simla in 1933,1934 Gold medal of the Bombay Art Society 1935 The Bombay Government Fellow-ship in painting and commercial art 1935 The Lord Hardings senior most scholarship 1934 Patel Trophy winner of the Art Society of India 1953 Exhibitions Some of the exhibitions of Govind Solegaonkar's works are listed below: Exhibits in All India Fine arts exhibition, Indore - 1928 Exhibits in All India Fine arts exhibition, Simla - 1932 Exhibition at the Burlington Gallery, London - 1933 Exhibits in Bombay Art Society's 44th annual exhibitions held, won Gold Medal - 1935 Exhibits in Exhibition organized by Bombay School of Art - 1936 Exhibits in Exhibition by 'Academy of Fine Arts, Calcutta - 1937 Exhibits in Bombay Art Society's Golden Jubilee year exhibition held in 1939 Show in Jehangir Art Gallery - Dec 1954, Jan 1957, Feb 1958, Nov 1962 Shows in Europe during his tour, including 3 Exhibitions in Belgium - 1958-60 Show in Taj Art Gallery - 1970 Show in India House, London July, 1971 Exhibits in Pravaha: Exhibition Highlighting Early Phase of Sir J.J. School of Art and the Progressive Art Movement, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya (formerly Prince of Wales Museum of Western India) - 2017 Displayed works Govind Solegaonkar's works on display as of August 2017 include: Bhojashala - Indian Parliament - Panel No 41 Mahiyari - Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya Gandhiji - In Mahatma Gandhi's birthplace at Porbandar Mural/Painting - Tata Institute Of Fundamental Research (TIFR) References 1912 births 1986 deaths 20th-century Indian painters Indian male painters Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy School of Art alumni People from Sehore district Painters from Madhya Pradesh 20th-century Indian male artists
International isolation is a penalty applied by the international community or a sizeable or powerful group of countries, like the United Nations, towards one nation, government or group of people. The same term may also refer to the state a country finds itself in after being shunned by the international community of nations or the greater group of countries. The determinants of the greater group of countries rely on economic, political and cultural stability but since the global order is constantly changing with the rise of developing countries such grouping may change. Definitions International isolation is often the result of international sanctions against a specific country (or group of countries), but it may also be a result of a policy of isolationism by the country in question. Libya under Muammar Gaddafi, for example, ended up in a state of international isolation after decades of confrontation with the West and its critical politics against fellow Arab governments. Countries which have seceded from another state may find themselves under international isolation, like Abkhazia, which is only recognized by a handful of countries after breaking away from Georgia with the help of the Russian military. Northern Cyprus, the northern section of the island of Cyprus, finds itself in a similar situation. Usually such states and their interests are protected by a larger neighbour. Certain widely acknowledged terms or concepts, like "pariah state", have been coined to refer to countries that have isolated themselves internationally or have been isolated by sizable groups of nations. The characteristics of such a state are "...precarious diplomatic isolation, the absence of assured, credible security support or political moorings within big-power alliance structures, and ... [being] the targets of obsessive and unrelenting opprobrium and censure within international forums such as the United Nations." One such State was the People's Republic of Kampuchea after 1979, when both the People's Republic of China and the United States pushed for its isolation in the international arena, after not having approved of the Vietnamese invasion to ouster the Khmer Rouge. Another example is when countries fail to comply with or drop out of international agreements. Canada's pull out of the Kyoto Protocol to limit greenhouse gases in 2011 is such an example. The concept "falling off the map" was used by Trinidadian-British political writer V. S. Naipaul in reference to the growing international isolation of the Islamic Republic of Iran after being in the limelight during the times of Shah Rezā Pahlavi and during the first years of the Revolution. History International isolation contributed to the downfall of the Spanish Republican government following the Non-Intervention Agreement in the Spanish Civil War signed in August 1936 and supported by 24 nations. The Republic had to fight a war under virtually total international isolation and a de facto economic embargo that placed it at an insurmountable disadvantage against the rebel faction. Lacking badly needed assistance from the democratic powers such as France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, the Spanish Republic was subject to a severe form of international isolation between 1936, shortly after the rebel coup, and the defeat of the loyalist forces in 1939. Maritime access for material from the Soviet Union—the only country, together with Mexico, which defied the Non-intervention Pact— aid was effectively cut off by the attacks of Italian submarines and the French frontier remained closed. Although imposed in the name of neutrality, the international isolation of the Spanish Republic ended up favouring the interests of the future Axis Powers. One of the most famous examples of international isolation was South Africa during the Apartheid years. While poverty is usually one of the results of international isolation, the elite in the Republic of South Africa was able to maintain its status and wealth, the most economically disadvantaged classes bearing the brunt of the situation. Myanmar, an isolated state owing to its harsh military rule, has one of the world's poorest healthcare systems despite the abundance of natural resources in the country. Throughout the 2011 Libyan civil war, a number of powerful countries pushed for the international isolation of colonel Muammar Gaddafi's Libyan Jamahiriya. International pressure, along with assistance to rebel groups, eventually contributed to Gaddafi's downfall and death. Also, in the 2011-2012 Syrian uprising, several foreign countries imposed tough sanctions against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. With the increasing democratic backsliding and autocracy in Venezuela during the administration of Nicolás Maduro, the country faced growing international isolation. Since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia has experienced international isolation, characterized by severe economic sanctions against prominent government figures and oligarchs, their expulsion from the Council of Europe, and a boycott of Russia and Belarus. See also International sanctions Trade embargo Economic sanctions Apartheid in South Africa Rhodesia Northern Cyprus Pariah state Rogue state Sakoku Regional inequality References External links The European Union’s sanctions related to Human rights: the case of Burma/Myanmar. Abrams, Elliott, Security and sacrifice : isolation, intervention, and American foreign policy (1948) International relations International sanctions
Mariette in Ecstasy is a 1991 fiction novel written by Ron Hansen. it is set in a convent in New York in 1906. It is defined as a "wonderful and strange novel" and it is "beautifully described". In 1992 it received the Barnes and Noble Discover Award, the Commonwealth Club of California Gold Medal in Fiction and the Bay Area Book Reviewers Association 1992 Award in Fiction. In 1996 it was adapted into a film but it was never released because the production company went bankrupt. In 2009, it was adapted for the stage and produced at Lifeline Theatre in Chicago. In 2019 the film was shown for the first time at the Camerimage International Film Festival by director John Bailey, during a retrospective of his career. References 1991 American novels Catholic novels American novels adapted into plays American novels adapted into films
Pedestrian Verse is the fourth studio album by the Scottish indie rock band Frightened Rabbit, released on 4 February 2013 on Atlantic Records. Produced by Leo Abrahams and the band itself, it is the only studio album to feature guitarist and keyboardist Gordon Skene, who departed from Frightened Rabbit following the album's accompanying tour. Partly inspired by a break-up, the album features increased songwriting contributions from each member of the band. Background Frightened Rabbit released their third studio album, The Winter of Mixed Drinks, on 1 March 2010 through independent label FatCat Records. That November, the band signed to Atlantic Records. In the official statement from drummer Grant Hutchison, the band planned to take time off from touring to write new material. Their first release through Atlantic was A Frightened Rabbit EP, a three-track extended play that was made available for digital download on 19 October 2011. A Frightened Rabbit EP was followed by the five-track EP State Hospital, released on 24 September 2012. While an acoustic version of the title track was leaked online early, the studio version debuted on 15 August 2012 on Zane Lowe's BBC Radio 1 program. An official music video for the song, directed by Hand Held Cine Club, was released on 20 August. Out of the five tracks on the EP, only the title track would appear on Pedestrian Verse. In a statement, frontman Scott Hutchison said that every song on the EP had been considered for the album, but that "certain songs just don't fit in to an album". Writing and recording Pedestrian Verse differed from the recording of the band's other records in that songs were written and practised while on tour, rather than having the songs being novel when recording was commenced, giving the songs a more "worn-in" feel, rather than an "edgy" one. The record also marked the first instance of lead songwriter Scott Hutchison sharing the role with the rest of the band. As a result, Hutchison has stated that Pedestrian Verse is the best record that the band has produced. In the writing of the album, Hutchison initially set out to create songs with broader subject matter, rather than just referring to his personal relationships. However, during the process of writing the album, Hutchison experienced another break-up, found that "it was all he could think about," leaving the record with a more "personal" section. The title of the album is taken from a line in the song "State Hospital", which features as track 9 on the album. Release and promotion On 7 November 2012, Frightened Rabbit announced the details of their upcoming album, including the title, cover art, release date, and track listing. The first track for Pedestrian Verse, "Dead Now", was released on 20 November 2012, and accompanied by a video filmed during their last United States tour. Follow-up single "The Woodpile" debuted on Zane Lowe's show on 11 December, with a music video released the next day. "The Woodpile" was officially released as a single on 28 January. Pedestrian Verse was released on 4 February 2013. On 22 February, Frightened Rabbit released a music video for new single "Backyard Skulls", depicting the band performing in a high school gymnasium after a school dance. They followed this with two non-album singles. The first was a cover of the Scottish folk song "Norland Wind", originally performed by Jim Reid using lyrics from a poem by Violet Jacobs. The cover, featuring Lau, was made available for pre-order on 21 March 2013, and was available as a limited physical release for Record Store Day. The second, "Architect", was a Record Store Day promotional track in collaboration with Manchester Orchestra, released on 20 April 2013. Additionally, Frightened Rabbit released the Backyard Skulls extended play on 31 March, featuring the title track, alternate versions of Pedestrian Verse tracks "The Woodpile" and "Holy", and a live performance of "Acts of Man". Reception Critical response to Pedestrian Verse has been positive. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream music critics, the album received an average score of 79, based on 26 reviews, which indicates "Generally favorable reviews". Nick Meredith of The Underclassed gave the album a positive review stating that "Not only has their style diversified, they have managed to blend all the good things from their previous offerings into one cohesive album". It won Scottish music website The Pop Cop's annual Best Album award. Track listing All songs written by Frightened Rabbit, lyrics written by Scott Hutchison. Personnel Scott Hutchison - lead vocals, rhythm guitar Billy Kennedy - lead guitar, keyboards, backing vocals, additional bass Andy Monaghan - bass guitar, additional guitar, keyboards, backing vocals Gordan Skene - guitar, keyboards, backing vocals Grant Hutchison - drums, percussion, backing vocals Production Produced by Leo Abrahams Mixed by Craig Silvey Artwork and photography by Scott Hutchison, dlt, and Joby Barnard. Charts References 2013 albums Frightened Rabbit albums Albums produced by Leo Abrahams Atlantic Records albums
Yi Gwal (; 1587 – 14 February, 1624) was a general during the Joseon Dynasty, Korea, known for the failed Yi Gwal's Rebellion. His family belonged to the Goseong Yi clan. He rebelled against King Injo in 1624, but failed. Yi Gwal was then killed by his own troops. Yi Gwal's rebellion put Korea into a state of chaos before it was invaded by the Manchu Qing dynasty. Background In 1622, he joined the Injo revolution, which was a movement in Korea to get rid of the government of King Gwanghaegun, who advocated evenhanded diplomacy between the Ming and the Qing. At that time, the Han Ming Dynasty had recently fallen to the invading Jurchen, who had renamed themselves the Manchu. Historically, Korea was in a long time conflict with the Jurchen tribes, who inhabited the wide plains of Manchuria. The Jurchen took Liaoning during the late Ming and established the Later Jin dynasty. Yi Gwal captured the capital, Hanyang, and exiled Gwanghaegun. However, he was rewarded only as a second class helper and neglected by the King. As the relations with Later Jin deteriorated, the Korean government and Injo sent Yi Gwal to the border of Pyongan Province to ward off invasions from the Jin. There, Yi strengthened the walls and fortresses around the border and maintained strict military order. Out of the fifteen thousand troops stationed in the northern border, Yi Gwal had command of ten thousand, stationed in Yongbyon while the five thousand stayed with General Jang Man (张晚) in Pyongyang. Yi Gwal's Rebellion Korea's political stance at the time caused the downfall of Yi Gwal. Since the establishment of a Confucian dynasty by King Taejo, there had been political disputes between the parties in the government. Some disputes even ended up in bloodshed, like the one which occurred in the time of King Yeonsangun. Also, during the time of King Seonjo just before the Japanese invasions of Korea, the political parties had been divided between the Easterners and the Westerners. The Easterners gradually split up into two parties called the Northerners and the Southerners. In January 1624, the Westerners, recently unsatisfied with the success of Yi Gwal (who was part of the Northerners), made a petition to the King stating that Yi Gwal and some members of the Northerners were planning a rebellion. As these ministers all had a close relationship with the King, the petition was examined. However, the reports proved false, and the Westerners failed to condemn Yi Gwal. They tried again soon after, which provoked the suspicion of the King. The government soon sent an examination and arrest party to Yongbyon to arrest Yi Gwal's son Yi Jeon. As he suspected that he himself would be condemned if his son confessed, he decided on a pre-emptive strike. Finally, he killed the arrest party and the rebellion officially began on January 22, 1624. He and his ten thousand troops headed straight for Hanyang, to relieve the capital and capture the King. The first clash with the government troops happened on the Hamgyong province, where the government troops were being led by Jeong Chung-sin and Nam Yi-hong. He tried to avoid these two generals and surpassed their troops. During the march to the capital, Yi Gwal met much opposition, but all were defeated. Injo soon abandoned the capital and Yi Gwal captured it on February 10. Since the establishment of the Joseon Dynasty, it was the first time a rebel army had captured the capital. Yi Gwal then put Heungangun on the throne, a royal relative of the King. Moreover, he put fliers all over the city so the people would support his troops. However, the rebel occupation of the capital did not last long. Hanseong was soon threatened by Jang Man and other generals from the government forces. Yi Gwal sent Han Myeong-ryun to combat the enemy, but the rebels were defeated due to inferior geographical position. By this time, Yi Gwal tried to escape the capital as the rebel army had disbanded and separated. As Yi Gwal and Han Myeong-ryun tried to escape on February 15, they were murdered by their own troops led by Gi Ik-heon, who were seeking forgiveness from the government. Yi Gwal failed, but Joseon society effectively entered a period of chaos, which then provoked and facilitated the First Manchu invasion of Korea in 1627. Eventually Joseon would fall and become a vassal to the Qing dynasty. Afterwards, Yi Gwal's name, along with his father's, was omitted from the family genealogy, but was listed again after 1930. Additional records were discovered about his relative, Yi Eung-tae, who died around the age of 30, and research was being conducted on the mummy discovered for the first time in 445 years. Family Father - Yi Je (이제, 李磾) Mother - Lady Jeong of the Dongrae Jeong clan (동래 정씨, 東萊 鄭氏) Grandfather - Jeong Sun-ha (정순하, 鄭淳蝦) Sibling(s) Older brother - Yi Yun (이윤, 李胤) Older brother - Yi Ju (이주, 李胄) Younger brother - Yi Don (이돈, 李遯) Spouse Lady Yi of the Gwangju Yi clan (광주 이씨, 廣州 李氏) Father-in-law - Yi Byeong-jwa (이방좌, 李邦佐) (? - 4 February 1624) Issue Son - Yi Jeon (이전, 李栴) Daughter-in-law - Gye-yi (계이, 季伊) (? - 6 February 1624) Relative Yi Eung-tae (이응태) (1556 - 1586) See also History of Korea Manchu invasion of Korea References Joseon 1587 births 1624 deaths Goseong Lee clan
Trichordestra tacoma, the Tacoma polia, is a species of cutworm or dart moth in the family Noctuidae. It is found in North America. The MONA or Hodges number for Trichordestra tacoma is 10303. References Further reading Hadenini Articles created by Qbugbot Moths described in 1900
Jay Bhanushali (born 25 December 1984) is an Indian television actor. He is best known for playing Neev Shergill in Ekta Kapoor's show Kayamath and winning Nach Baliye 5. He also participated in Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa 2, Kaun Jeetega Bollywood Ka Ticket, Iss Jungle Se Mujhe Bachao, Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi 7 and Bigg Boss 15. Early life He was born 25 December 1984 in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, in a middle-class family. Career 2006–2009 Bhanushali made his television debut with the show Kasautii Zindangii Kay by playing the supporting role. In 2007 he again played the supporting role of Varun Bhaskar.Dhoom Machaao Dhoom. He got his biggest break came when he was selected by Ekta Kapoor to play the role of protagonist Neev Shergill in her soap opera Kayamath. The role not only earned him praises but also won him several awards for his performance in the show. Bhanushali went on to win Indian Telly Award for Fresh New Face - Male, Indian Telly Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role and various other awards for his performance. In 2007 he participated in Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa 2 where he finished as 2nd runner-up. In 2008 he participated in the show Kaun Jeetega Bollywood Ka Ticket where he finished as 6th place. In 2009 he also participated in the show Iss Jungle Se Mujhe Bachao as a wild-card where he got evicted on day 60. In same year he played the role Yuraaj in Kis Desh Mein Hai Meraa Dil. In same year, Bhanushali also hosted Dance India Dance .He won praise from several quarters for anchoring the show Dance India Dance for his anchoring skills and comic timings. 2010–2013 In 2010, he hosted Dance India Dance 2 and Meethi Choori No 1 where he was praised for his hosting skills. In same year he participated in the reality show Nachle Ve with Saroj Khan. In 2010 he played the role of Yash Malhotra in the show Geet – Hui Sabse Parayi. Bhanushali won Boroplus Gold Award for Best Anchor (2010 and 2012), Zee Rishtey Award for Favorite Host (2009, 2010 and 2011) and several other accolades. In 2011 he hosted dance show Dance India Dance Doubles. In 2012 he hosted several shows dance shows like Dance India Dance 3, Dance India Dance Li'l Masters 2, Dance Ke Superkids and Sa Re Ga Ma Pa 2012 and also won the dance reality show Nach Baliye 5 with his wife Mahhi Vij. In 2012 he played the Anuj in Kairi — Rishta Khatta Meetha. In 2013 he hosted the show Dance India Dance 4. 2014–2017 and success In 2014 he debut in romantic Thriller Hate Story 2 alongside Surveen Chawla. In 2014 only he played the role of Gyani in Desi Kattey. In the same year, he again hosted two dance shows Dance India Dance Li'l Masters 2 and Dil Se Naachein Indiawaale. In 2015 he played the role of Karan in Ek Paheli Leela alongside Sunny Leone and Rajneesh Duggal. In 2015 only he again hosted Dance India Dance 5. In 2016 he participated in the stunt-based reality show Khatron Ke Khiladi 7 and got eliminated in the 2nd week but re-entered on 5th week and voluntarily exited in 9th week and finished as 9th place. He hosted the dance show The Voice India Kids. In 2017 he hosted the show Sabse Bada Kalakar. 2018–2021 In 2018, he hosted the famous dance shows Super Dancer and Indian Idol 10. In 2019, he appeared as an episodic contestant in Kitchen Champion 5. He later hosted the dance reality show Superstar Singer. In 2020 he participated in Khatron Ke Khiladi - Made in India and finished as 6th place. In 2021, he participated in reality series Bigg Boss 15 and got evicted on day 55. Since April 2023, Bhanushali has been starring as Shivendra "Shiv" Barot in Hum Rahe Na Rahe Hum opposite Tina Datta. Filmography Films Web series Television As actor / participant As presenter Special appearances Personal life Jay married actress Mahhi Vij on 11 November 2011. In 2017 they fostered a boy, Rajveer, and a girl, Khushi. The couple's first biological child, a daughter named Tara, was born in 2019. See also List of Indian television actors References External links Indian male television actors Living people Male actors from Ahmedabad Dance India Dance Gujarati people Indian television presenters Nach Baliye winners 1984 births 21st-century Indian male actors Indian male film actors Fear Factor: Khatron Ke Khiladi participants Bigg Boss (Hindi TV series) contestants
Bosley Medical Institute v. Kremer, No. 04-55962 is a case in which the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed, reversed and remanded the rulings of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California, holding that defendant, Michael Kremer, could not be held liable for trademark infringement or dilution for his use of the Bosley Medical Group's name in creating a website that was critical of the company's business practices. Background Bosley Medical Institute is the plaintiff and the owner of the trademarks Bosley, Bosley Medical, and Bosley Healthy Hair, as well as other trademarks. Bosley Medical Institute was founded L. Lee Bosley, M.D. and is a "Delaware Corporation which manages and markets hair transplantation, restoration, and replacement services to the public." Michael Steven Kremer was the defendant and a former patient of Bosley Medical Institute and was dissatisfied with his experience with the company. Kremer was the former patient of Dr. David Smith in Seattle, Washington and received hair replacement services in which he was unhappy with the results. Kremer filed a medical malpractice lawsuit against Bosley Medical but the case was dismissed on summary judgment. On January 7, 2000, Kremer registered the www.BosleyMedical.com domain name, as well as www.BosleyMedicalViolations.com, which was not challenged by Bosley in this case. Kremer then proceeded to go to the Bosley Medical office in Beverly Hills, California five days after registering the domain and delivered a letter to Dr. Bosley, the founder and President of Bosley Medical. Contained within the letter was the following text: Kremer's site www.BosleyMedical.com summarized the Los Angeles County District Attorney's 1996 investigative findings about Bosley among other information that was highly critical of Bosley. Kremer did not earn any revenue from the website neither did he sell any goods or services through the website. However, the website did contain a link to BosleyMedicalViolations.com, another site by Kremer that linked to the alt.baldspot newsgroup that contained advertisements for companies that competed with Bosley, and Public Citizen website, which represented Kremer in the case. Procedural Background Bosley brought a suit against Kremer alleging trademark infringement, dilution, unfair competition, various state law claims, and a libel claim (eventually settled) in which it was ruled that Kremer's use was noncommercial and unlikely to cause confusion. A summary judgment for Kremer on the federal claims was entered by the district court which also dismissed the state law claims under California's anti-SLAPP (Strategic lawsuit against public participation) statute. The district court in the original case arrived at the following conclusions: Kremer's use of the Bosley name in his website is free speech, therefore Bosley is attempting to chill Kremer's free speech through lawsuits in violation of California's Anti-SLAPP law. Kremer did not profit commercially from using the Bosley name therefore his use and registration of www.BosleyMedical.com is not in violation of ACPA the anti-cybersquatting law. Kremer did not infringe or dilute the Bosley brand name trademark because his site did not seek to profit financially and did not offer any services to confuse a visitor. The district court then granted Kremer summary judgment. Bosley then appealed the case to United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Ninth Circuit appeal On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the District Court's entry of summary judgement in favor of Kremer, reversed the anti-SLAPP motion to strike the state law claims and remanded the ACPA claim for further proceedings. The Ninth Circuit issued its opinion on April 4, 2005, affirming in part, reversing in part and remanding the District Court's decision. Trademark Infringement and Dilution Claims The Circuit Court ruled that "Bosley cannot use the Lanham Act either as a shield from Kremer's criticism, or as a sword to shut Kremer up." The Court recognized that the Lanham Act was to be applied in commercial contexts and does not prohibit all unauthorized uses of a trademark. They concluded that any harm that came to Bosley was from Kremer's criticism of their services rather than from a competitor's sale of a similar product under Bosley's trademark because, according to the Court, "no customer will mistakenly purchase a hair replacement service from Kremer under the belief that the service is being offered by Bosley. Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act Using the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act ("ACPA") passed by Congress in 1999, the Circuit Court reversed the district courts dismissal of Bosley's ACPA claim. The district court dismissed the claim "for the same reasons that it dismissed the infringement and dilution claims - namely, because Kremer did not make commercial use of Bosley's mark." The Circuit Court found that the district court was wrong in applying the commercial use requirement to Bosley's ACPA claim. The district court should have instead focused on "whether Kremer had a bad faith intent to profit from his use of Bosley's mark in his site's domain name" The Circuit Court also found that the district court was wrong in granting summary judgement for Kremer on the ACPA claim due to the fact that the court did not notify Bosley that it would rule on this claim and in turn did not provide them a chance to conduct discovery on the issue. California's Anti-SLAPP Law The Circuit Court found that in an infringement lawsuit by a trademark owner over a defendant's unauthorized use of the mark as his domain, the defendant's free speech rights are not necessarily impaired. The Court reversed the district court's granting Kermer anti-SLAPP motion to strike Bosley's state law trademark claims because they had ruled that Bosley was seeking to limit Kremer's free speech. "The court concludes that while a summary judgment motion might have been appropriate, an anti-SLAPP motion was not." Impact Reinstatement of the ACPA The Circuit court's decision to reverse the district court's claim that Bosley did not violate the Anti-SLAPP law, a law created with the intent of preventing big companies from chilling individual's free speech rights, sets the precedent that ACPA takes precedence over Anti-SLAPP. In simple terms, a company may silence free speech if the person they are silencing is a cyber-squatter directly using their name to exercise his or her free speech even without commercial gain. Notes References United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit cases United States Internet case law 2001 in United States case law
Richard Todd is a French horn player from California. He was worked in jazz, classical, and pop music. Career A native of Placentia, California, Todd attended El Dorado High School, graduating in 1973. He has recorded on over 1000 motion picture soundtracks and has recorded with Frank Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, Madonna, Clark Terry, Ray Brown, and Woody Herman. He won the gold medal at the 1980 Concours Internationale Toulon and the Pro Musicis International Foundation Award. He has been a member of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and has taught at the University of Miami Frost School of Music. Discography New Ideas (GM, 1985) Rickter Scale (GM, 1990) With a Twist (RCM, 2002) Rhapsody for Horn and Orchestra with San Luis Obispo Symphony (Naxos, 2003) References External links Official website Bio from Miami University Frost School of Music Artist Biography at Allmusic.com Horn players Living people Year of birth missing (living people)
James Carl Newhook (2 June 1915 – 17 May 1997) was a New Zealand veterinary scientist, university lecturer and writer. References 1915 births 1997 deaths New Zealand veterinarians
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János Hegedűs (born 4 October 1996) is a Hungarian football player who plays for Paks. Club career On 16 December 2022, Hegedűs signed with Vasas. On 19 June 2023, it was announced that Hegedűs had signed a contract with Paks. He has made a contract for the next three years. Club statistics Updated to games played as of 20 May 2021. References External links MLSZ HLSZ 1996 births Footballers from Budapest Living people Hungarian men's footballers Hungary men's under-21 international footballers Men's association football defenders Szombathelyi Haladás footballers Budaörsi SC footballers Puskás Akadémia FC players Diósgyőri VTK players Vasas SC players Paksi FC players Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players
The Chinese American Museum DC (abbreviated CAMDC) is a cultural museum in Downtown Washington, DC established through the efforts of The Chinese American Museum Foundation, private benefactors, and the general public. The museum focuses on the history of Chinese in America with an emphasis on the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, racial and social issues, cultural topics, and the achievements of past and contemporary Chinese Americans. The project began in late 2017, first with the bequest of a 1907 historic, 5-story building in the Embassy Row section of Washington four blocks north of the White House. On November 9, 2018, the project was first announced at an event at the Willard Hotel to a group of 160 people from museum, historian, and Asian American and community leadership. The museum had been open to visitors during its development and has recently reopened to the public after pandemic restrictions. Programs and exhibits In October of 2019, the museum completed the first phase of permanent exhibits for its reception lobby and first floor including a digital photo-wall featuring personal stories and images of "everyday" Chinese Americans as well as an interactive digital timeline highlighting historical dates, figures, and pivotal moments in Chinese American history. The museum also hosted two conferences and corresponding special, temporary exhibits including Chinese American Women in History and Safe Harbor: Shanghai, a lecture and exhibit on Jewish refugees that sought shelter in World War II Shanghai and later immigrated to the United States. In March of 2021, the museum held a virtual gala, "Build it together!" hosted by television journalists Joie Chen and Richard Lui. Honorees included Ambassador Julia Chang Bloch, television journalist Connie Chung, astronaut Taylor Wang, advocate and CEO of TIME'S UP Now, Tina Tchen, the inventor of the N95 mask technology, Dr. Peter Tsai, screenwriter Adele Lim (Crazy Rich Asians and Raya and the Last Dragon), and Daphne Kwok, VP of Asian American and Pacific Islander Audience Strategy at AARP. Entertainment was provided by America's Got Talent winner, magician Shin Lim, a cappella group, Ethnobeat, contemporary and traditional artists, including a classical guzheng player, and opera singer Huanhuan Ma. Currently, the museum is developing permanent exhibits that are divided into thematic sections: Identity and Diversity, Gold Mountain (California Gold Rush), Building America (railroads and early industry and commerce), Exclusion and the Fight for Equality, Chinese American Communities, Service to Country (military, civil, diplomatic, and uniformed service), and individual exhibits highlighting contemporary Chinese American figures and accomplishments. New 2023 exhibits include "Thank You, Corky Lee: The Unofficial Photographer Laureate of Asian Americans," a retropsective of the late activist-photographer; "Bruce Lee: American Son and International Icon;" and "Fashioning Identity in Qipao: The Image of Modern Women." Recent special exhibits include "Dora Fugh Lee: A Lifetime of Art," a retrospective of the Washingtonian artist, "Golden Threads: Chinese Opera in America," "Wild Cranes" a visual poetry and calligraphy exhibit. , Enchanting Stitches and Stories: Embroidery, and China from China: Porcelain & Stories of Early American Trade. References External links Chinese-American museums History museums in Washington, D.C. Downtown (Washington, D.C.) Ethnic museums in Washington, D.C. Museums established in 2017 2017 establishments in Washington, D.C.
Wallace Township may refer to the following townships in the United States: Wallace Township, LaSalle County, Illinois Wallace Township, Ontario Wallace Township, Pennsylvania
Yemişli is a village in the Pazar District, Rize Province, in Black Sea Region of Turkey. Its population is 396 (2021). History According to list of villages in Laz language book (2009), name of the village is İlastas. Most villagers are ethnically Laz. Geography The village is located away from Pazar. References Villages in Pazar District, Rize Laz settlements in Turkey
Stanhope is a property development company in London, England. It was founded in the 1980s. After a period of financial difficulties it was relaunched in 1995 by Stuart Lipton and Peter Rogers. As at December 2022, Aimco, Cadillac Fairview and Mitsui Fudosan held a combined 80% of the shares with management owning the remainder. Notable projects Notable projects Stanhope has been involved in have include: BFI IMAX Broadgate Central Saint Giles Chiswick Works redevelopment as Chiswick Business Park Gloucester Transport Hub Station Hill, Reading Stockley Park Television Centre, London redevelopment as White City Place 8 Bishopsgate References Companies based in London Property companies based in London Real estate companies established in 1995 1995 establishments in England
Wu Wei (; ca. 1459–1508) was a painter of Ming dynasty (1368–1644) China famous for his landscapes. Wu was born in Wuchang in Hubei province. His style names were Shiying and Ciweng, and his sobriquets were Lufu and Xiaoxian. Although he was born into a family of scholar-officials and might have pursued a career in the bureaucracy, Wu Wei instead chose to support himself as a painter. He worked as a professional painter in the city of Nanjing, and three emperors summoned him to work as a court painter in Beijing: the Chenghua emperor (r. 1465–87), the Hongzhi emperor (r. 1488–1505), and the Zhengde emperor (r. 1506–21). Wu Wei is known as a landscape painter, and, at least early in his career, he was inspired by the work of Dai Jin (1388–1462). He also painted figures. Wu painted in a strong, fluent, and uninhibited style, and took on many students to teach. He also painted many famous art for taoism References External links Lady with a Lute at Indianapolis Museum of Art 1459 births 1508 deaths Ming dynasty landscape painters Artists from Wuhan Painters from Hubei
I'll Make You Music is the only album by Beverly Bremers and was released in 1972. It reached #124 on the Billboard Top 200 chart. The album featured three singles: "Don't Say You Don't Remember", which reached #15 on the Billboard Hot 100, "We're Free", which reached #40, and "I'll Make You Music", which reached #63. Track listing "I'll Make You Music" (Bruce Roberts) – 3:02 "I Made a Man Out of You, Jimmy" (Doc Pomus/Ken Hirsch) - 2:40 "A Guy Like You" (Eddie Brigati/Felix Cavaliere) - 3:15 "All That's Left Is the Music" (Roberts) - 2:52 "Colors of Love" (Mark Barkan/Norman Bergen) - 2:18 "We're Free" (Irwin Levine/L. Russell Brown) - 3:06 "Don't Say You Don't Remember" (Estelle Levitt/Helen Miller) - 3:24 "At My Place" (Vicki Gellman/Wendy Gell) – 2:44 "Poor Side of Town" (Johnny Rivers/Lou Adler) – 2:47 "Baby I Don't Know You" (Sandy Linzer/Steve Reinhardt) – 2:57 "Get Smart Girl" (Reinhardt) – 2:55 "May the Road Rise to Meet You" (Levine/Brown) – 3:09 Personnel David Lipton – producer (tracks: 1–11) Steve Metz – producer (tracks: 1–11) Irwin Levine – producer (track: 12) L. Russell Brown – producer (track: 12) Mickey Eichner – producer (track: 12) Beverly Bremers – lead vocals Don Thomas – guitar Joe Mack – bass Norman Bergen – keyboards, arrangements Charts Singles References 1972 debut albums Scepter Records albums
William Alington, 1st Baron Alington of Killard (baptised 14 March 1610/1611 – buried 25 October 1648) was an Irish peer, the son of Sir Giles Alington. He was created 1st Baron Alington of Killard, on 28 July 1642. Biography He married Elizabeth Tollemache, daughter of Sir Lionel Tollemache, 2nd Baronet and Elizabeth Stanhope, before 1 October 1631. They had at least 6 children: Elizabeth Alington (1632-1691), who married firstly Charles Seymour, 2nd Baron Seymour of Trowbridge, and secondly Sir John Ernle, a Chancellor of the Exchequer; there were children from her first marriage Giles Alington, 2nd Baron Alington of Killard (1640s-1660), who died before coming of age William Alington, 3rd Baron Alington of Killard (bef. 1641–1685), who married, firstly, Lady Catherine Stanhope; secondly, Hon. Juliana Noel, by whom he had children; and thirdly, Lady Diana Russel, by whom he had children Hildebrand Alington, 5th Baron Alington of Killard (1641–1722/23), who died unmarried Catherine Alington, who married Sir John Jacob, 2nd Baronet, and had one child Diana Alington, who died unmarried. After his death, his widow, Lady Alington, remarried Sir William Compton, who died in 1663. She died in 1671. References Barons in the Peerage of Ireland Peers of Ireland created by Charles I 1610 births 1611 births 1658 deaths
Stephen Quirke is an Egyptologist. He is the current Edwards Professor of Egyptian Archaeology and Philology at University College London. He has worked at the British Museum (1989–1998) and since 1999 at the Petrie Museum in London. He has published several books, some of them translated into other languages. Works Hieroglyphs and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt, London 1996, The Cult of Ra: Sun-worship in Ancient Egypt: Sun-worship in Ancient Egypt from the Pyramids to Cleopatra, London 2001, Who Were the Pharaohs?: A Guide to their Names, Reigns and Dynasties, London 2010, Hidden Hands: Egyptian Workforces in Petrie Excavation Archives, 1880–1924 (Duckworth Egyptology Series), London 2010 Birth tusks: the armoury of health in context – Egypt 1800 BC., London (with Gianluca Miniaci Juan Carlos Moreno García, Stephen Quirke & Andréas Stauder (editors)): The Arts of Making in Ancient Egypt, Voices, images, and objects of material producers 2000–1550 BC, Sidestone. Leiden, External links Stephen Quirke on the website of UCL References Living people British Egyptologists Academics of University College London Year of birth missing (living people)
The Zutistes or the Circle of Poets Zutiques was an informal group of French poets, painters and musicians who met at the Hôtel des Étrangers, at the corner of rue Racine and rue de l'École-de-Médecine, in Paris in September and October 1871. Background The Zutistes were a fringe spin-off from a splinter group of Parnassians, known as the "Nasty Fellows" or "Villains Bonshommes", who formed a Parisian dining club at the close of the 1860s. Without having a formal manifesto, and taking their name from the French exclamation of baffled exasperation, Zut, this informal gathering of artists known as the Zutistes gathered around the figure of the pianist Ernest Cabaner, who worked as a bartender/piano player at the hotel. Anarchic in spirit, they looked back regretfully to the atmosphere of the Paris Commune of March to May that year. A significant figure in the circle was Charles Cros, while other members were later better known, like Verlaine and Rimbaud. The Album The most significant trace of the movement came with the re-discovery in the Thirties of the Zutique Album, with some 101 literary entries accompanied by (sometimes pornographic) drawings. Shot through with black humour, and riddled with parody and pastiche of contemporary styles and attitudes, the album is the best guide to the Circle's membership of some fourteen names. A central target of the Album's mockery was the recently successful Parnassian Francois Coppee, while other more established figures like José-Maria de Heredia and Leconte de Lisle were also in the line of fire. This album is in the form of an in-quarto Italian, black hardback cover, about thirty sheets handwritten, the other pages remained blank. Aftermath Nostalgia for the circle persisted among its members long after its break-up, perhaps as early as the winter of 1871–1872: thus for example the young Zutiste Raoul Ponchon was one of only seven recipients of Rimbaud's A Season in Hell; Charles Cros in 1883 used "zutique" to name a new poetry circle; while (perhaps coincidentally) as late as in 1897 the claim would be made that "man is by nature essentially 'zutique'". See also References External links Album called Zutique Arthur Rimbaud 19th-century French poets French male poets French parodists French satirists
Central High School is a public high school in Lowndes County, Alabama, at 145 Main Street in Hayneville, Alabama. The school has about 260 students, the vast majority African American. Students are mostly from low income families. The school, which scored in the bottom 6% of Alabama schools in reading and math, was listed as a failing school in 2019 under the Alabama Accountability Act. Lions are the school mascot and green and yellow the school colors. History Central High School started out as a segregated school for Black students. Founded in 1913 as the Lowndes County Training School, the school was renamed as Central High School at the instigation of Catherine Coleman Flowers during the Civil Rights movement, dropping the name of Lowndes, a confederate slave owner. Alumni Notable alumni of the school include the Negro league and Major League Baseball player Billy Parker, civil rights activist Catherine Coleman Flowers, and professional basketball player Ben Wallace. References External links School website Public high schools in Alabama