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income was $87,228, and the mean is $84,050. For nonfamily households, the median income was $42,375, and the mean, $71,008. Median earnings for male full-time, year-round workers was $49,688, versus $36,471 for females. The per capita income for the town was $41,488. About 2.1% of families and 15.4% of the population ... | with 53% designated "for seasonal, recreational, or occasional use", according to the census. In the decade spanning the years 2000 through 2010, Provincetown's small year-round population declined 14.3% from 3,431 to 2,942, yet during the summer months, population estimates vary wildly, ranging from 19,000 to 60,000. ... |
college Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino, the primatial abbey of the Benedictines in Rome, Italy, that has four institutions: Pontifical Atheneum of St. Anselm (), its associated pontifical university College of Sant'Anselmo, its ecclesiastical residential college Curia | Saint Anselm College, its associated college Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino, the primatial abbey of the Benedictines in Rome, Italy, that has four institutions: Pontifical Atheneum of St. Anselm (), its associated pontifical university College of Sant'Anselmo, its ecclesiastical residential college Curia of the Benedictine ... |
what Bob said was clearly true. But her real argument was not disproved, because she did not say anything about the temperature. Alice: I didn't mean taking an extremely hot shower. Alice noticed the trick and defended herself. Straw man arguments often arise in public debates such as a (hypothetical) prohibition debat... | and an informal fallacy of having the impression of refuting an argument, whereas the real subject of the argument was not addressed or refuted, but instead replaced with a false one. One who engages in this fallacy is said to be "attacking a straw man". The typical straw man argument creates the illusion of having com... |
is protected. A small whaling community was founded on the land that is now Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary, and was originally known as Silver Spring, after Silver Spring Brook. What remains of it is a marsh that was once its harbor, known as the Silver Spring Brook Marshes. This land is now protected by the Massachu... | 2000, there were 2,749 people, 1,301 households, and 724 families residing in the town. The population density was . There were 3,998 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the town was 96.58% White, 0.95% African American, 0.29% Native American, 0.36% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 0.58% from ot... |
in Gaul was extinct in the 8th century AD. The species survived in the Ardennes and the Vosges Mountains until the 15th century. In the Early Middle Ages, the wisent apparently still occurred in the forest steppes east of the Urals, in the Altai Mountains, and seems to have reached Lake Baikal in the east. The northern... | European bison were facing imminent extinction, but at the very end of the war, retreating German soldiers shot all but nine animals. The last wild European bison in Poland was killed in 1921. The last wild European bison in the world was killed by poachers in 1927 in the western Caucasus. By that year, fewer than 50 r... |
is the fallacy committed when one makes an appeal to force to bring about the acceptance of a conclusion. One participates in argumentum ad baculum when one emphasizes the negative consequences of holding the contrary position, regardless of the contrary position's truth value — particularly when the argument-maker him... | baculum (Latin for "argument to the cudgel" or "appeal to the stick") is the fallacy committed when one makes an appeal to force to bring about the acceptance of a conclusion. One participates in argumentum ad baculum when one emphasizes the negative consequences of holding the contrary position, regardless of the cont... |
as the opening battle of the French and Indian War in North America, and the start of hostilities in the Ohio valley. Following the battle, Washington pulled back several miles and established Fort Necessity, which the Canadians attacked under the command of Jumonville's brother at the Battle of Fort Necessity on July ... | British colonists, but Old Briton ignored the warning. Céloron returned disappointedly to Montreal in November 1749. Céloron wrote an extensively detailed report. "All I can say is that the Natives of these localities are very badly disposed towards the French," he wrote, "and are entirely devoted to the English. I don... |
protectorate of the Polish Kingdom. However, when the insurgent cities rebelled against the Order, it resisted and the Thirteen Years' War (1454–1466) ensued. After a long and expensive war, Casimir and the Prussian Confederation defeated the Teutonic Order. In the Second Peace of Thorn (1466), the Order recognized Pol... | and the Thirteen Years' War (1454–1466) ensued. After a long and expensive war, Casimir and the Prussian Confederation defeated the Teutonic Order. In the Second Peace of Thorn (1466), the Order recognized Polish sovereignty over the seceded western Prussian regions, Royal Prussia, and the Polish crown's overlordship o... |
Church Belarusian Greek Catholic Church Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church Byzantine Catholic Church of Croatia and Serbia Greek Byzantine Catholic Church Hungarian Byzantine Catholic Church Italo-Albanian Catholic Church (a.k.a. the "Italo-Greek Catholic Church") Macedonian Catholic Church Melkite Greek Catholic Church R... | schools Āstika (Orthodox schools) Nyaya Purva mimamsa Samkhya Vaisheshika Vedanta Advaita Vedanta Akshar-Purushottam Darshan Bhedabheda Achintya Bheda Abheda Dvaitadvaita Dvaita Vedanta Integral yoga Pratyabhijna Shaiva Siddhanta Shiva Advaita Shuddhadvaita Vishishtadvaita Yoga (philosophy) Nāstika (Heterodox schools) ... |
characteristics of each step of the signal chain. With computer-controlled digital systems, new functions can be added through software revision and no hardware changes are needed. Often this can be done outside of the factory by updating the product's software. This way, the product's design errors can be corrected ev... | circuits to process the signals, each digit is handled by the same kind of hardware, resulting in an easily scalable system. In an analog system, additional resolution requires fundamental improvements in the linearity and noise characteristics of each step of the signal chain. With computer-controlled digital systems,... |
the incomplete projects of Conrad Celtis. However, as the founder of the Collegium poetarum et mathematicorum and a "program thinker" (programmdenker, term used by Jan-Dirk Müller and Hans-Joachim Ziegeler), Celtis established an encyclopaedic-scientific model that increasingly integrated and favoured mechanical arts i... | able to claim the thrones. Death and succession During his last years, Maximilian began to focus on the question of his succession. His goal was to secure the throne for a member of his house and prevent Francis I of France from gaining the throne. According to the traditional view, the resulting "election campaign" wa... |
he did not read or learn from any ancient literature. As each French fleet had to assure its own defense at sea, Champlain sought to learn to fight with the firearms of his time: he acquired this practical knowledge when serving with the army of King Henry IV during the later stages of France's religious wars in Britta... | 1606, Champlain explored the North American coast as far south as Cape Cod, searching for sites for a permanent settlement. Minor skirmishes with the resident Nausets dissuaded him from the idea of establishing one near present-day Chatham, Massachusetts. He named the area Mallebar ("bad bar"). Founding of Quebec In th... |
just as long as their body, which differentiates them from the Indri. Their fur is long and silky, with coloration varying by species from yellowish-white to blackish-brown. Their round, hairless face is always black. As with all lemurs, the sifaka has special adaptations for grooming, including a toilet-claw on its se... | like all indrids, with bipedal, sideways hopping movements of the hind legs, holding their fore limbs up for balance. Sifakas are diurnal and arboreal. Sifakas are herbivores, eating leaves, flowers, and fruits. When not searching for food, they spend a good part of the day sunbathing, stretched on the branches. Sifaka... |
bid for political office in 1956, when he sought to be a Republican candidate for Baltimore County Council. He was turned down by local party leaders, but nevertheless campaigned vigorously for the Republican ticket. The election resulted in an unexpected Republican majority on the council, and in recognition for his p... | jurisdiction. Nevertheless, he sold his interest. In office Agnew's term as governor was marked by an agenda which included tax reform, clean water regulations, and the repeal of laws against interracial marriage. Community health programs were expanded, as were higher educational and employment opportunities for those... |
Europe, but in 1521 the Turks advanced up the Danube River and took Nándorfehérvár (present-day Belgrade, Serbia) – the strongest Hungarian fortress on the Danube – and Szabács (now Šabac, Serbia). This left most of southern Hungary indefensible. The loss of Nándorfehérvár caused great alarm in Hungary, but the huge 60... | Mary, on the other hand, was much more decisive and vigorous, but the non-Hungarian advisors she relied on created distrust. European events, and the Franco-Ottoman alliance King Francis I of France was defeated at the Battle of Pavia on 24 February 1525 by the troops of the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V. Afte... |
to Alsatian immigrant parents. His father, Rainer Schickele (1905, Berlin – 1989, Berkeley, California), son of the writer René Schickele, was an agricultural economist teaching at Iowa State University. In 1945, Schickele's father took a position at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.; then, in 1946, beca... | was the first student at Swarthmore, and the only student in his class, to earn a music degree. He was a contemporary of Ted Nelson at Swarthmore, and he scored Nelson's experimental film, The Epiphany of Slocum Furlow. It was his first film score. He graduated from the Juilliard School in 1960 with a master's degree i... |
the play by Pushkin. The work is a parody of classical opera, although some critics consider it to be the equal of many classical works in technical ability. The opera appears on the 1970 album of the same name. The loose story combines elements of Don Giovanni with elements of Carmen by Georges Bizet. Some character n... | combination of "Il Commendatore" and the toreador Escamillo. The orchestral accompaniment for Donna Ribalda's opening aria, "Let's face it—I'm lost", resembles the "Rex tremendae majestatis" from Mozart's Requiem. At one point in the opera, the rival divas Carmen Ghia and Donna Ribalda break character in the middle of ... |
Mariinsky Theatre until 9 November 1904, when the Rimsky-Korsakov edition was presented under conductor Feliks Blumenfeld with bass Feodor Chaliapin in the title role. Boris Godunov and the Imperial Family The reports of the antipathy of the Imperial family to Mussorgsky's opera are supported by the following accounts ... | Petrenko (Nurse, Innkeeper), Nikolay Andreyev (Shuysky), A. Dogonadze (Shchelkalov), Pavel Andreyev (Pimen), Vasiliy Damayev (Pretender), Yelena Nikolayeva (Marina), Aleksandr Belyanin (Varlaam), Nikolay Bolshakov (Misail), Aleksandr Aleksandrovich (Yuródivïy), and Kapiton Zaporozhets (Nikitich). 1927, Moscow – St. Bas... |
he hadn't been aboard the plane. The General Artists Corporation promised to pay for first-class tickets for Jennings and the band to attend Holly's funeral in Lubbock in exchange for them playing that night in Moorhead. After the first show, they were initially denied their payment by the venue, but after Jennings's p... | limited by health problems. In 2001, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. In 2007, he was posthumously awarded the Cliffie Stone Pioneer Award by the Academy of Country Music. Early life Wayland Arnold Jennings was born on June 15, 1937, on the J.W. Bittner farm, near Littlefield, Texas. He was the son ... |
bow tie must remain black in any case. Some higher quality models feature a hidden pocket and an elastic loop to fasten to the trousers. Shirt Dress shirts designed to be worn with black tie are sometimes called "tuxedo shirts" in American English. Traditionally, the shirt is white, has a bibbed front that is either ma... | this latter touch "is a sure sign of hired clothes". The dinner jacket also has a welt breast pocket to hold a pocket handkerchief, which is generally self-faced rather than covered with silk. Emily Post, a resident of Tuxedo Park, New York, stated in 1909 that "[Tuxedos] can have lapels or be shawl-shaped, in either c... |
members of a volunteer crew. Intrepid was to be sailed into Tripoli harbor and blown up in the midst of the corsair fleet close under the walls of the city. That night, she got underway into the harbor, but she exploded prematurely, killing Somers and his entire crew. Legacy News of Somers' death would take some months... | was ordered to Baltimore, Maryland, to man, fit out, and command , and when that schooner was ready for sea, to sail her to the Mediterranean. Nautilus got underway on 30 June, reached Gibraltar on July 27, and sailed four days later to Spain. He then returned to Gibraltar to meet Commodore Edward Preble, in Constituti... |
in 1931 , was a launched , commissioned in 1937 and scrapped in 1947 , was a launched in 1958 , commissioned in 1959 and sunk as target in 1998 See also Master Commandant Richard Somers, a U.S. Navy officer killed | the War of 1812. She was captured by the British in 1814. , was a brig launched in 1842 and sunk in 1846. The ship is known for the Somers Affair. , was a torpedo boat purchased in 1898 and sold in 1920 , was a launched in 1918 , commissioned in 1920 and scrapped in 1931 |
most implementations, and included a GUI on some platforms. In 1983, OS-9/6809 was ported to Motorola 68000 assembly language and extended (called OS-9/68K); and a still later (1989) version was rewritten mostly in C for further portability. The portable version was initially called OS-9000 and was released for 80386 P... | controlling the MMU can be included or omitted by the system integrator to enable or disable memory protection. This allows OS-9 to run on older systems which do not include an MMU. Older versions of OS-9 do not support POSIX threads, while all OS-9 supported processors support POSIX threads. No SMP support for multipl... |
to the question of what the nature of the "immobile being"—space or extension itself, distinguished from body—was. He raises three possible definitions for extension: as a kind of substance; or as a kind of accident (a standard philosophical term for attribute: anything that can be predicated of substance); or "simply ... | raises three possible definitions for extension: as a kind of substance; or as a kind of accident (a standard philosophical term for attribute: anything that can be predicated of substance); or "simply nothing" (a reference to atomism), all of which he repudiates. Instead he proposes that extension "has a certain mode ... |
of things it extends to, or applies to, if it is the sort of concept or expression that a single object by itself can satisfy. Concepts and expressions of this sort are monadic or "one-place" concepts and expressions. So the extension of the word "dog" is the set of all (past, present and future) dogs in the world: the... | of extensionality in axiomatic set theory. This kind of extension is used so constantly in contemporary mathematics based on set theory that it can be called an implicit assumption. A typical effort in mathematics evolves out of an observed mathematical object requiring description, the challenge being to find a charac... |
I truly don't think I could help it." Martin's craft was developed by seeing movies and becoming a mimic. She would win prizes for looking, acting and dancing like Ruby Keeler and singing exactly like Bing Crosby. "Never, never, never can I say I had a frustrating childhood. It was all joy. Mother used to say she never... | was determined to have a boy. Instead, she had Mary, who later obliged by becoming quite a tomboy. Martin's family had a barn and orchard that kept her entertained. She played with her elder sister Geraldine (whom she called "Sister"), climbing trees and riding ponies. Martin adored her father. "He was tall, good-looki... |
architect was Matthew Steele; its grant was just over £4,000. The Shrubbery was converted into a military headquarters towards the end of the 19th century. In 1974 the old borough of Kidderminster was abolished and merged into the new Wyre Forest District. In December 2015 Kidderminster was established as a civil paris... | majority and now no group dominates the council. The area (initially as Kidderminster, then after 1983 as the Wyre Forest constituency) has been represented by Conservative Members of Parliament (MPs) Gerald Nabarro 1950–64, Tatton Brinton 1964–74, Esmond Bulmer 1974–87, Anthony Coombs 1987–97, and Labour MP David Lock... |
entries divided into four sections – on fruits, vegetables, cereals, and meat – in which Sun explains the properties of individual foodstuffs with concepts borrowed from the Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon: qi, the viscera, and vital essence (), as well as correspondences between the Five Phases, the "five flavors" (sour,... | culinary and medical traditions of the Turko-Islamic world and integrating Mongol food stuffs like mutton into its recipes, Hu's treatise interpreted the effects of food according to the scheme of correspondences between the five phases that had recently been systematized by northern Chinese medical writers of the Jin ... |
1831 and 1847. History Immediately prior to the development of the Boehm system, flutes were most commonly made of wood, with an inverse conical bore, eight keys, and tone holes (the openings where the fingers are placed to produce specific notes) that were small in size, and thus easily covered by the fingertips. Boeh... | with an inverse conical bore, eight keys, and tone holes (the openings where the fingers are placed to produce specific notes) that were small in size, and thus easily covered by the fingertips. Boehm's work was inspired by an 1831 concert in London, given by soloist Charles Nicholson who, with his father in the 1820s,... |
The TL/2, TL/3, RL and RLX all used the XT IDE interface, where the later (and significantly upgraded) RSX was the only Tandy 1000 model computer to use a standard AT IDE interface. One option for modern users of these systems is to install and use XT ISA CompactFlash adapter; this is also the most practical way to ins... | PC-compatibles of the time lacked, such as the PCjr's sound generator and extended CGA-compatible graphics controller. It also offered multiple built-in I/O ports, including a joystick port which was frequently a separate add-on card on non-Tandy machines. The original line was equipped with the Intel 8088 CPU, which w... |
plan to create only high-end residential development. The deal was finalized in 2005, and land development was well underway by the end of the year. Most of the Belmont campus (more than ) had been listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. Current work McLean is known widely for its treatment of adole... | treated there. McLean maintains the world's largest neuroscientific and psychiatric research program in a private hospital. It is the largest psychiatric facility of Harvard Medical School, an affiliate of Massachusetts General Hospital, and part of Mass General Brigham, which also includes Brigham and Women's Hospital... |
León in 1157 Ferdinand III of Castile (1199–1252) the Saint, King of Castile in 1217 and of León in 1230 Ferdinand IV of Castile (1285–1312) the Summoned, King of Castile in 1295 and of León in 1301 Ferdinand V of Castile (1452–1516) the Catholic – see Ferdinand II of Aragon Ferdinand VI of Spain (1713–1759) the Learne... | King from 1830 to 1859 Mantua and Montferrat Ferdinand or Ferdinando Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (1587–1626), Duke in 1612 Ferdinand or Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua and Montferrat (1652–1708), Duke in 1665 Parma Ferdinand of Parma (1751–1802), Duke in 1765 Tuscany Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany (1769–1824... |
combinations and fewer hi-tech racing features. Certain of these bicycles have been referred to as 'sportive' bicycles to distinguish them from racing bicycles. Compared to other styles of bicycle, road bicycles share common features: The tires are narrow, high-pressure ( or higher), and smooth to decrease rolling resi... | they are robust, comfortable, and capable of carrying heavy loads Hybrid bicycles are designed for a variety of recreational and utility purposes. While primarily intended for use on pavement, they may also be used on relatively smooth unpaved paths or trails. Utility bicycles are designed for utility cycling: are a tr... |
from 50 kilovolts to several million volts for large coils. The alternating current output is in the low radio frequency range, usually between 50 kHz and 1 MHz. Although some oscillator-driven coils generate a continuous alternating current, most Tesla coils have a pulsed output; the high voltage consists of a rapid s... | capacitor and the primary coil. Singing Tesla coil or musical Tesla coil: This is not a separate type of excitation, but a modification to the solid state primary circuit to create a Tesla coil which can be played like a musical instrument, with its high voltage discharges reproducing simple musical tones. The drive vo... |
electric lights in 1883. The original structure was renovated in 1907 when it was given its current layout with 1,987 seats. In 1943, during World War II, La Scala was severely damaged by bombing. It was rebuilt and reopened on 11 May 1946, with a memorable concert conducted by Arturo Toscanini—twice La Scala's princip... | theatre, the Teatro Regio Ducale, on 25 February 1776, after a carnival gala. A group of ninety wealthy Milanese, who owned private boxes in the theatre, wrote to Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Este asking for a new theatre and a provisional one to be used while completing the new one. The neoclassical architect Giusepp... |
GPU accelerator. In July 2020, it was reported that Nvidia was in talks with SoftBank to buy Arm, a UK-based chip designer, for $32 billion. On September 1, 2020, Nvidia officially announced the GeForce 30 series based on the company's new Ampere microarchitecture. On September 13, 2020, it was announced that Nvidia wo... | meaning that programmers could not write free and open-source device driver for its products without resorting to (clean room) reverse engineering. Instead, Nvidia provides its own binary GeForce graphics drivers for X.Org and an open-source library that interfaces with the Linux, FreeBSD or Solaris kernels and the pro... |
which are sub-capacity billing options. VWLC and EWLC customers only pay for peak monthly z/OS usage, not for full machine capacity as with the previous OS/390 operating system. VWLC and EWLC are also available for most IBM software products running on z/OS, and their peaks are separately calculated but can never excee... | ability to run 64-bit applications on those machines. (Only the newer z/Architecture hardware manufactured starting in the year 2000 can run 64-bit code.) IBM support for z/OS 1.5 ended on March 31, 2007. Now z/OS is supported only on z/Architecture mainframes and runs only in 64-bit mode. Application programmers can s... |
known source for the details it contained. The processes of consultation and deliberation meant that the reform to the calendar did not occur until 1582, six years after the death of Luigi Lilio in 1576. The reform had by then received some modifications in points of detail by the reform commission, in which one of the... | consultation and deliberation meant that the reform to the calendar did not occur until 1582, six years after the death of Luigi Lilio in 1576. The reform had by then received some modifications in points of detail by the reform commission, in which one of the leading members was Christopher Clavius, who afterwards wro... |
(formerly News International, a wholly owned subsidiary of News Corp, run by Rupert Murdoch) Readership At the time of Harold Evans' appointment as editor in 1981, The Times had an average daily sale of 282,000 copies in comparison to the 1.4 million daily sales of its traditional rival The Daily Telegraph. By November... | and distribution. It is considered a newspaper of record in the UK.The Times had an average daily circulation of 417,298 in January 2019; in the same period, The Sunday Times had an average weekly circulation of 712,291. An American edition of The Times has been published since 6 June 2006. The Times has been heavily u... |
An additional benefit of the OS/390 packaging concept was to improve reliability, availability and serviceability (RAS) for the operating system, as the number of different combinations of elements that a customer could order and run was drastically reduced. This reduced the overall time required for customers to test ... | well as reducing the number of customer-reported problems (PMRs), errors (APARs) and fixes (PTFs) arising from the variances in element levels. In December 2001 IBM extended OS/390 to include support for 64-bit zSeries processors and added various other improvements, and the result is now named z/OS. IBM ended support ... |
of Picus, and father of Latinus by the nymph Marica (who was also sometimes Faunus' mother). After his death he is raised to the position of a tutelary deity of the land, for his many services to agriculture and cattle-breeding. A goddess of like attributes, called Fauna and Fatua, was associated in his worship. She wa... | made cattle fertile he was called Inuus. He came to be equated in literature with the Greek god Pan. Faunus was one of the oldest Roman deities, known as the di indigetes. According to the epic poet Virgil, he was a legendary king of the Latins. His shade was consulted as a goddess of prophecy under the name of Fatuus,... |
staff across Lake Manapouri to the Manapouri Hydroelectric Power Station, on the West Arm of the lake. Ferries also carry tourists travelling to the power station and onwards to Doubtful Sound, located on the coast 10 km beyond the West Arm. It also provides easy access to Lake Manapouri for recreational boat users. Re... | Hawaii in 1941. Pearl Harbour is used mainly by ferry and water taxi operators transporting Meridian Energy staff across Lake Manapouri to the Manapouri Hydroelectric Power Station, on the West Arm of the lake. Ferries also carry tourists travelling to |
Hubble Constant for nearby objects and will be dependent on other cosmological parameters like the dark energy density, matter density, etc. for distant sources. Explanatory models Dark energy The most important property of dark energy is that it has negative pressure (repulsive action) which is distributed relatively ... | objects and will be dependent on other cosmological parameters like the dark energy density, matter density, etc. for distant sources. Explanatory models Dark energy The most important property of dark energy is that it has negative pressure (repulsive action) which is distributed relatively homogeneously in space. whe... |
a scalar field with an equation of state where wq, the ratio of pressure pq and density q, is given by the potential energy and a kinetic term: Hence, quintessence is dynamic, and generally has a density and wq parameter that varies with time. By contrast, a cosmological constant is static, with a fixed energy density ... | wq, the ratio of pressure pq and density q, is given by the potential energy and a kinetic term: Hence, quintessence is dynamic, and generally has a density and wq parameter that varies with time. By contrast, a cosmological constant is static, with a fixed energy density and wq = −1. Tracker behavior Many models of qu... |
to a combine. Possible yields are between 2.5 and 4.5 tonne/ha under optimal conditions. Studies in Germany showed that even higher yields can be attained. United States About half of the millet grown in the United States is grown in eastern Colorado on 340,000 acres. Historically grown as animal and bird seed, as of 2... | diseases are not known; consequently, it is often used in organic farming systems in Europe. In the United States, it is often used as an intercrop. Thus, proso millet can help to avoid a summer fallow, and continuous crop rotation can be achieved. Its superficial root system and its resistance to atrazine residue make... |
bit is inversely proportional to the change in energy in the system. As a result, the amount of computations that can be performed grows over time. The increase in energy available slows logarithmically, but never stops. Therefore, for any specific computation rate that requires a specific amount of energy, there will ... | cooled sufficiently, half of the remaining half (one quarter of the original energy) of the intelligent beings' fuel reserves would once again be released, powering a brief period of thought once more. This would continue, with smaller and smaller amounts of energy being released. As the universe cooled, the thoughts w... |
Borodin's final decision on the order of the first two acts is unclear. The traditional grouping presented here is that of the Rimsky-Korsakov-Glazunov edition. In many productions, Act 3 is omitted. Prologue The cathedral square in Putivl Prince Igor is about to set out on a campaign against the Cumans/Polovtsy and th... | ветра» (Slaves, Konchak) Act 3 March: "Polovtsian March", «Половецкий марш» (Orchestra) Trio: "Vladimir! Is all this really true?", «Владимир! Ужель все это правда?» (Konchakovna, Vladimir, Igor) Act 4 Aria: "Oh, I weep", «Ах, плачу я» (Yaroslavna) Chorus: "God heard our prayers", «Знать, господь мольбы услышал» (Peopl... |
Opening credits Overture Act One: A town on the seacoast of Spain or Italy or somewhere Scene One: Figaro's bedroom in the palace of Count Almamater Introduction: "Found a peanut!" Recitative: "Ah, dear husband" Aria: "Stay with me" Recitative: "Suzanna" Recitative: "Dog!" Aria: "Perfidy, thy name is Donald" Recitative... | Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance are among the core inspirations for the piece. Schickele was commissioned to "discover" this opera by the Minnesota Opera, where the piece premiered on April 27 and 28, 1984. In addition to parodying Mozart, the music incorporates diverse influences and musical quotes, fro... |
the empty product is defined to be 1. In this particular case, there is an assumption of unit steps for the changes in the values of of the generalization below. Note the formal correspondence of this result to Taylor's theorem. Historically, this, as well as the Chu–Vandermonde identity, (following from it, and corres... | sign shown as . Each row of Pascal's triangle provides the coefficient for each value of . Note that the central difference will, for odd , have multiplied by non-integers. This is often a problem because it amounts to changing the interval of discretization. The problem may be remedied taking the average of and . Forw... |
sons, the elder the novelist Leopold Hamilton Myers (1881–1944), and a daughter. English author Ronald Pearsall suggested that Myers had sexual interests in young lady mediums, writing "[I]t is certainly true that Myers's interest in young lady mediums was not solely due to their spiritualistic talents." The researcher... | upon psychical research as giving him opportunities for voyeurism." He also noted the odd behaviour of Myers, such as insisting to be with Edmund Gurney with his bride on their Honeymoon even against strong protest from the bride. A relationship between eroticism and Myer's interest in psychical research was examined b... |
data sources, including RDO (Remote Data Objects) and DAO (Data Access Objects). ADO is made up of four collections and twelve objects. ADO collections Fields This collection contains a set of Field objects. The Collection can be used in either a Recordset object or in a Record object. In a Recordset object, each of th... | parameterised query or stored procedure through the use of a Parameter object or Parameters collection or run a query and return the results to a dataset object via the Execute method. There are several other methods that can be used in the Command object relating to other objects, such as the Stream, RecordSet or Conn... |
upper peninsula of Michigan to form a separate state Lake Superior, the largest of the North American Great Lakes, Canada, United States United Kingdom Rickinghall Superior, England United States Superior, Arizona Superior, Colorado Superior, Indiana Superior, Iowa Superior Township, Chippewa County, Michigan Superior ... | band from Germany "Superior", a song by SpongeBob & The Hi-Seas from The Best Day Ever Superior (album), a 2008 album by Tim Christensen Superior (manga), a 2009 Manga created by Ichtys Superior (comics), a creator-owned comic book series written by Mark Millar and illustrated by Leinil Francis Yu Business Standard Sup... |
swords, bows and original maces. Ancient history Persians used a variety of maces and fielded large numbers of heavily armoured and armed cavalry (see Cataphract). For a heavily armed Persian knight, a mace was as effective as a sword or battle axe. In fact, Shahnameh has many references to heavily armoured knights fac... | rounded pear form of mace head known as a "piriform" replaced the disc mace in the Naqada II period of pre-dynastic Upper Egypt (3600–3250 BC) and was used throughout the Naqada III period (3250–3100 BC). Similar mace heads were also used in Mesopotamia around 2450–1900 BC. On a Sumerian Clay tablet written by the scri... |
between the governments of the USSR and the Kazakh SSR, started training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center. On 2 October 1991 he launched with Russian cosmonaut Alexander Volkov as flight commander, and the Austrian research cosmonaut Franz Viehböck in Soyuz TM-13 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome spaceport, and spen... | a citizen of the independent Republic of Kazakhstan. Career Since 1993, he has been the general director of the National Aerospace Agency of Republic of Kazakhstan. He was a member of the Kazakhstan parliament. Now he is a pensioner and consultant. Family Toktar Aubakirov is married to Tatyana Aubakirova. They have two... |
English footballer Flash Hollett (1911–1999), Canadian ice hockey defenceman Cordarrelle Patterson (born 1991), American football player Gordon Shedden (born 1979), British racing driver Dwyane Wade (born 1982), American basketball player Lee Young-ho (born 1992), South Korean professional Starcraft player also known a... | Mark Kennedy (policeman), known undercover as Flash or Mark Stone Places Flash, Staffordshire, England, a village The Flash (lake), a lake near Borras, Wales Science and technology Computing Adobe Flash (formerly Shockwave Flash and Macromedia Flash), multimedia platform software Flash memory, a kind of non-volatile co... |
placed closer together (such as the k-means clustering) In hash tables, the mapping of keys to nearby slots In economics: Business cluster, a geographic concentration of interconnected businesses, suppliers, and associated institutions in a particular field In graph theory: The formation of clusters of linked nodes in ... | mapping of keys to nearby slots In economics: Business cluster, a geographic concentration of interconnected businesses, suppliers, and associated institutions in a particular field In graph theory: The formation of clusters of linked nodes in a network, measured by the clustering coefficient See also |
first time that HM Queen Elizabeth II attended in her capacity as Head of the Commonwealth. The 1974 British Commonwealth Games were held in Christchurch, New Zealand. The Games were officially named "the friendly games". Following the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, the tenth games at Christc... | 'the policy of apartheid' in international sport and defending 'the principle of racial equality which is embodied in the Declaration of the Olympic Games'. The 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games were held in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. Thirty-five countries sent a total of 863 athletes and 178 officia... |
town Hartford (village), Vermont, in the town Hartford, West Virginia Hartford, Wisconsin, a city Hartford (town), Wisconsin, neighboring the city Other uses Hartford (surname) The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., a company based in Hartford, Connecticut USS Hartford (1858), Admiral David Farragut's flagship in... | Hartford (surname) The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., a company based in Hartford, Connecticut USS Hartford (1858), Admiral David Farragut's flagship in the American Civil War University of Hartford, a private university located in West Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Blues, American football team that played ... |
originating in Mesopotamia. Cuneiform (from the Latin word for "wedge-shaped") may also refer to: Cuneiform bones, in the human foot Cuneiform cartilages, | in the human foot Cuneiform cartilages, in the human larynx Cuneiform Records, a music record label CuneiForm (software), an optical |
proposing to move from ReiserFS to ext3 for the default installation file system. Some reasons he mentioned were scalability, "performance problems with extended attributes and ACLs", "a small and shrinking development community", and that "Reiser4 is not an incremental update and requires a reformat, which is unreason... | ext3 on October 12, 2006, for future releases. Namesys considered ReiserFS version 3.6 which introduced a new on-disk format allowing bigger filesizes, now occasionally referred to as Reiser3, as stable and feature-complete and, with the exception of security updates and critical bug fixes, ceased development on it to ... |
(a pseudo-folder that 7-Zip uses to attach files deleted from the file system to view), and [SYSTEM] (another pseudo-folder that contains all the NTFS metadata files). This trick can be used from removable devices (USB flash drives, external hard drives, SD Cards, etc.) inside Windows, but doing this on the active part... | a security descriptor that defines its owner and contains two access control lists (ACLs). The first ACL, called discretionary access control list (DACL), defines exactly what type of interactions (e.g. reading, writing, executing or deleting) are allowed or forbidden by which user or groups of users. For example, file... |
wealthy bourgeois family, the son of the wholesale merchant and factory owner Jacob Arfwedson and his spouse, Anna Elisabeth Holtermann. The younger Arfwedson matriculated as a student at the University of Uppsala in 1803 (at the time, matriculating at a young age was common for aristocratic and wealthy students), comp... | of Mines, where he advanced to the position of notary (still without a salary) in 1814. In Stockholm, Arfwedson knew the chemist Jöns Jakob Berzelius and received access to his private laboratory, where he discovered the element lithium in 1817, during analysis of the mineral petalite. The actual isolation of lithium m... |
double the number of hits from comparable manually-loaded rifles at close range and increase the number of hits by about 50 percent at longer distances which require more precise aiming. Firing for prolonged periods may increase this advantage as the manual-loading process can cause fatigue. The additional weight of sp... | released. Most modern automatic rifles are selective fire, meaning the user can fire semi-automatically if desired. History The first design of a recoil-operated semi-automatic rifle is attributed to Ferdinand Mannlicher, who unveiled the design in 1885 based on work begun in 1883. Other non-gas operated semi-automatic... |
now played in countries where squash is played, Australia, Bermuda, France, Germany, Malaysia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa, Argentina, Ireland and Sweden. Currently, racketball also is played in parts of North America. In 1988, the British Racketball Association merged with the Squash Rackets Association... | though Racquetball is ‘’not’’ an Olympic sport. Kendler used his publication ACE to promote both handball and racquetball. Starting in the 1970s, and aided by the fitness boom of that decade, the sport's popularity increased to an estimated 3.1 million players by 1974. Consequent to increased demand, racquetball clubs ... |
and gave the hyperbolic structure on the figure-eight knot complement. By utilizing Haken's normal surface techniques, he classified the incompressible surfaces in the knot complement. Together with his analysis of deformations of hyperbolic structures, he concluded that all but 10 Dehn surgeries on the figure-eight kn... | his geometrization conjecture. This gave a conjectural picture of 3-manifolds which indicated that all 3-manifolds admitted a certain kind of geometric decomposition involving eight geometries, now called Thurston model geometries. Hyperbolic geometry is the most prevalent geometry in this picture and also the most com... |
Alpha prototype was spotted at ObscureGamers forum in February 2021. Leisure Suit Larry: Cocoa Butter In late 2005, Target department stores (through online vendor Amazon.com) began accepting pre-orders for a sequel to Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude titled Leisure Suit Larry: Cocoa Butter. This new game was being ... | in some references), was in full development in 1998 until funding was cut. Shortly afterwards, Sierra's adventure games department was disbanded, and Al Lowe left Sierra on February 22, 1999. Like the canned Space Quest sequel, Larry 8 was to feature 3D computer graphics, but no more than a few test renders now surviv... |
is a journaling file system. ext2 is still the filesystem of choice for flash-based storage media (such as SD cards and USB flash drives) because its lack of a journal increases performance and minimizes the number of writes, and flash devices can endure a limited number of write cycles. Since 2009, the Linux kernel su... | find it at mount time. Subdirectories are implemented by storing the name of the subdirectory in the name field, and the inode number of the subdirectory in the inode field. Hard links are implemented by storing the same inode number with more than one file name. Accessing the file by either name results in the same in... |
data content of files or directories which were being modified when the system crashed will be affected; the rest will be intact after recovery. Disadvantages Functionality Because ext3 aims to be backward-compatible with the earlier ext2, many of the on-disk structures are similar to those of ext2. Consequently, ext3 ... | to the disk's hardware. Writeback (highest risk) Only metadata is journaled; file contents are not. The contents might be written before or after the journal is updated. As a result, files modified right before a crash can become corrupted. For example, a file being appended to may be marked in the journal as being lar... |
tax havens, whose OECD-compliant, and more carefully encoded and embedded IP tax regimes, are effectively exempted. More traditional corporate tax havens, which do not always have the level of sophistication and skill in encoding IP BEPS tools into their tax regimes, will fall further behind. The German "Royalty Barrie... | 2014 Intellectual Property Act. The U.K. is now 2nd in the 2018 Global IP Index. The U.K.'s successful transformation from "donor" to corporate tax havens, to a major global corporate tax haven in its own right, was quoted as a blueprint for type of changes that the U.S. needed to make in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2... |
Tavern in Bennington. By the 1770s, the Green Mountain Boys had become an armed military force and de facto government, which was also a militia, that prevented New York from exercising its authority in the northeast portion of the Province of New York. New York authorities had standing warrants for the arrest of the l... | version of the Green Mountain Boys faded away after Vermont joined the United States as the 14th U.S. state in 1791, although the Green Mountain Boys mustered for the War of 1812, The Civil War, the Spanish–American War, and following World War I as the Vermont National Guard. Notable members Ebenezer Allen – militia m... |
In AD 68, they placed a rope around his neck and dragged him through the streets until he was dead. Veneration The Feast of St Mark is observed on April 25 by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. For those Churches still using the Julian Calendar, April 25 according to it aligns with May 8 on the Gregorian Calen... | 49, about 19 years after the Ascension of Jesus, Mark travelled to Alexandria and founded the Church of Alexandria – today, the Coptic Orthodox Church, the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria, and the Coptic Catholic Church trace their origins to this original community. Aspects of the Coptic liturgy can be traced back... |
sound in them. However, it is traditional to write and read consonants with an implied "a" vowel sound. When consonants combine with other vowel signs, the vowel part is indicated orthographically using signs known as vowel "mātras". The shapes of vowel "mātras" are also very different from the shapes of the correspond... | occur in all positions of a word, with the exception of /o/, which does not occur word-finally. The vowels of Telugu are illustrated below, along with the Telugu script and romanization. Allophones In most dialects, the vowel only occurs in loan words. In the Guntur dialect, is a frequent allophone of in certain verbs ... |
three-way pincer movement towards Albany. The western pincer, proceeding eastward from Lake Ontario under the command of Barry St. Leger, was repulsed when the Siege of Fort Stanwix failed, and the southern pincer, which was to progress up the Hudson valley from New York City, never started since General William Howe d... | logistical difficulties, exacerbated by the American destruction of a key road, and the army's supplies began to dwindle. Burgoyne's concern over supplies was magnified in early August when he received word from Howe that he (Howe) was going to Philadelphia, and was not in fact going to advance up the Hudson River vall... |
Games. In 2007, the President of OCA, Sheikh Ahmed Al-Fahad Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah, rejected the proposal to allow Australia to participate in the Games. He stated that while Australia would add good value to the Asian Games, it would be unfair to the Oceania National Olympic Committees (ONOC). Being members of ONOC, Austra... | among athletes from all over Asia. The Games were regulated by the Asian Games Federation (AGF) from the first Games in New Delhi, India, until the 1978 Games. Since the 1982 Games, they have been organized by the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), after the breakup of the Asian Games Federation. The Games are recognized b... |
be the shareholders. In a company limited by guarantee, this will be the guarantors. Some offshore jurisdictions have created special forms of offshore company in a bid to attract business for their jurisdictions. Examples include "segregated portfolio companies" and restricted purpose companies. There are, however, ma... | shares, and often contain restrictions on transfers of shares. In some jurisdictions, private companies have maximum numbers of shareholders. A parent company is a company that owns enough voting stock in another firm to control management and operations by influencing or electing its board of directors; the second com... |
also Bachelor of Commerce Master of Commerce Doctor of Commerce Business Capitalism Commercial law Advertising Distribution (business) Wholesale Retailing Cargo Eco commerce Economy Electronic commerce Export Fair Financial planning (business) Fishery Harvest BBA Import Laissez-faire Manufacturing Market (economics) Ma... | long-distance commerce from circa 150,000 years ago. In historic times, the introduction of currency as a standardized money facilitated the exchange of goods and services. Banking systems developed in medieval Europe, facilitating financial transactions across national boundaries. Markets became a feature of town life... |
fulfilled. A friendly attitude towards the Swiss at the Diet was something he later changed, calling Huldrych Zwingli's doctrine of the Lord's Supper "an impious dogma". Augsburg Confession The composition now known as the Augsburg Confession was laid before the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, and would come to be considered... | so far as to believe with Luther that the true body of Christ in the Lord's Supper is bitten by the teeth, but admitted the offering of the body and blood in the symbols of bread and wine. Melanchthon discussed Bucer's views with the most prominent adherents of Luther; but Luther himself would not agree to a mere veili... |
the south bank is in Victoria. History Albury-Wodonga is located on the lands of the Dyinningmiddhang people of the Dhudhuroa language group. In the early 1970s Albury–Wodonga was selected as the primary focus of the Whitlam Federal Labor government's scheme to arrest the uncontrolled growth of Australia's large metrop... | conditions around housing, more open spaces and easier access to the countryside. Soon after, elements of the 'new towns' could be found in metropolitan planning strategies in Australian cities such as Canberra and Elizabeth. By the 1970’s the concept was adopted by the Whitlam government who took up the idea as a nati... |
a moniker of music producer Peter Damien Robert Moog (1934–2005), a pioneer of electronic music and inventor of the Moog synthesizer William “Bill” C. Moog (died 1997), founder of Moog | People bearing the name include: Andy Moog (born 1960), former NHL goaltender and current assistant coach of the Dallas Stars Peter Moog (1871–1930), schizophrenic outsider artist Philipp Moog |
"bangers" has its origins in World War II, the term was actually in use at least as far back as 1919. The term "bangers" is attributed (in common usage in the UK) to the fact that sausages made during World War I, when there were meat shortages, were made with such a high water content that they were liable to pop unde... | is a traditional British dish, consisting of sausages served with mashed potatoes. It may consist of one of a variety of flavoured sausages made of pork, lamb, or beef (often specifically Cumberland sausage). The dish is usually served with onion gravy, but may also include fried onions and peas. This dish, even when c... |
Flann O'Brien aka Myles na gCopaleen aka Brian O'Nolan, lived on Belmont Avenue Benedict Kiely Padraic Colum Brendan Behan Denis Johnston and his wife, the actress/director Shelah Richards Others Jack B. Yeats Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton John Boyd Dunlop (pneumatic tyre inventor) Guglielmo Marconi (wireless radio - liv... | and later served as a Magdalene laundry. Two ancestors of Meghan Markle, Mary McCue and Thomas Bird, an English soldier, were married at St Mary's Church of Ireland church, Donnybrook, in 1860. Geography The river Dodder runs through Donnybrook and at one time there was a ford here. It is subject to periodic serious fl... |
resistance leader, Eoin MacNeill, who refused to participate in the Rising, lived down the road at 19 Herbert Park. During the Irish war of independence, Michael Collins, Commander-in-Chief of the Irish National Army and later a government minister, had a study in the house of Miss Hoey at 5 Mespil Road, from where he ... | was originally mud-flats and marsh, with many roads converging on a small village located around the bridge, and known already as Ballsbridge. Situated on the Dodder, this village had a ready source of power for small industries, including by the 1720s a linen and cotton printers, and by the 1750s a paper-mill and a gu... |
was later extended to support routing of datagrams in the Internet Protocol (IP), the Network Layer protocol of the global Internet. This version of the IS-IS routing protocol was then called Integrated IS-IS (RFC 1195) Packet types IS-IS adjacency can be either broadcast or point-to-point. Hello Packet The IS-IS hello... | 2 routers can only form relationships and exchange information with other Level 2 routers. Level 1–2 routers exchange information with both levels and are used to connect the inter area routers with the intra area routers. In OSPF, areas are delineated on the interface such that an area border router (ABR) is actually ... |
brought out the mirror (the Yata-no-Kagami) and held it before her. As Amaterasu, struck by her own reflection (apparently thinking it to be the other deity Ame-no-Uzume spoke of), approached the mirror, Ame-no-Tajikarao took her hand and pulled her out of the cave, which was then immediately sealed with a straw rope, ... | and presented it to him. The magic power of the Futsu-no-Mitama immediately exterminated the evil gods of the region and roused Iwarebiko and his men from their slumber. Continuing their journey, the army soon found themselves stranded in the mountains. Takamimusubi (so the Kojiki) or Amaterasu (Shoki) then told Iwareb... |
minimum in chemical equilibrium, as long as certain variables (, and or ) are held constant. In addition, they also have theoretical importance in deriving Maxwell relations. Work other than may be added, e.g., for electrochemical cells, or work in elastic materials and in muscle contraction. Other forms of work which ... | measure of work (useful energy) a system can perform at constant temperature. Mathematically, free energy is expressed as: free energy This expression has commonly been interpreted to mean that work is extracted from the internal energy while represents energy not available to perform work. However, this is incorrect. ... |
second quarter of the shield, showing the lion rampant of Scotland The 5p coin depicts the centre of the shield, showing the meeting and parts of the constituent parts of the shield The 10p coin depicts most of the first quarter of the shield, containing the three lions passant of England The 20p coin depicts the lower... | in all parts of the UK (see UK designs, below). Every year, newly minted coins are checked for size, weight, and composition at a Trial of the Pyx. Essentially the same procedure has been used since the 13th century. Assaying is now done by the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths on behalf of HM Treasury. The 1p and 2p co... |
after Kranzberg to doctoral students engaged in the preparation of dissertations on the history of technology. The award is available to students all over the world. In 1967 Kranzberg was awarded the Leonardo da Vinci Medal by the Society for the History of Technology. Howard P. Segal wrote an informative semi-biograph... | of its journal Technology and Culture. Kranzberg served as president of the society from 1983 to 1984, and edited the society's journal from 1959 to 1981, when he turned it over to Robert C. Post of the Smithsonian Institution. The society awards a yearly $4000 fellowship named after Kranzberg to doctoral students enga... |
systems concept could be promoted by Unix vendors as a significant differentiator. IBM and other companies resisted the trend for decades, exemplified by a now-famous warning in 1991 by an IBM account executive that one should be "careful about getting locked into open systems". However, in the first part of the 21st c... | interoperability, portability, and open software standards. (It can also refer to specific installations that are configured to allow unrestricted access by people and/or other computers; this article does not discuss that meaning). The term was popularized in the early 1980s, mainly to describe systems based on Unix, ... |
makeup changes. His imitations were imitated by other female impersonators, and his roles included Bette Davis, Mae West, Tallulah Bankhead, Gloria Swanson, Carol Channing, Katharine Hepburn, and Joan Crawford, and these roles became the drag queen canon. His act was centered on wit rather than mimicry; however, it oft... | who was snuck into the Studio One Backlot to see his show in the late 1970s. According to Pierce's longtime stage manager and dresser Kirk Frederick in his 2016 authorized Pierce biography, Davis was unimpressed with Pierce's portrayal and refused to go backstage after the show to greet Charles, saying "There is only o... |
DOS system diagnostics tool by Quarterdeck Office Systems Master File Table, an integral component of the NTFS file system Media Foundation Transform, a media processing plugin filter model in Microsoft Media Foundation Multiprogramming with a Fixed number of Tasks, an option of | Foundation Multiprogramming with a Fixed number of Tasks, an option of the OS/360 operating system Other Micro Four Thirds system, a lens mount for mirrorless interchangeable-lens digital cameras. Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust Marriage and Family Therapist |
administration. By the 1472 Treaty of Prenzlau he ended the War of the Succession of Stettin, bringing the Duchy of Pomerania also under his supremacy. Having established his right to levy a tonnage on wines in the mark, he issued in February 1473 the Dispositio Achillea, which decreed that the Margraviate of Brandenbu... | Franconian principalities of Ansbach from 1440 and Kulmbach from 1464 (as Albrecht I). Biography Early life Albert was born at the Brandenburg residence of Tangermünde as the third son of the Nuremberg burgrave Frederick I and his wife, the Wittelsbach princess Elisabeth of Bavaria-Landshut. His father served as govern... |
has several types of uniforms: Service dress (מדי אלף Madei Alef – Uniform "A") – the everyday uniform, worn by everybody. Field dress (מדי ב Madei Bet – Uniform "B") – worn into combat, training, work on base. The first two resemble each other but the Madei Alef is made of higher quality materials in a golden-olive wh... | Mule Corps and the Jewish Legion, both part of the British Army of World War I, would further bolster the Yishuv with military experience and manpower, forming the basis for later paramilitary forces. After the 1920 Palestine riots against Jews in April 1920, the Yishuv leadership realized the need for a nationwide und... |
– 10 December 1991) was an Italian politician who served as the 3rd President of the European Commission from 1970 to 1972. He served at Italian level as Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1979 to 1980 and Italian Minister of Education from 1973 to 1978. Biography Malfatti was born in Rome to parents who were fro... | Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1979 to 1980 and Italian Minister of Education from 1973 to 1978. Biography Malfatti was born in Rome to parents who were from the province of Rieti. He was an important member of the governing council of Democrazia Cristiana (the Christian Democratic party) in which he became chief of ... |
Cussler and Paul Kemprecos Medusa (Dibdin novel), a 2003 novel by Michael Dibdin Medusa, and Other Poems, by Lady Charlotte Elliot (1878) "Medusa", a poem by Louise Bogan Medusa: A Tiger by the Tail, a 1983 novel by Jack L. Chalker Music Medusa, a female rap artist affiliated with open-mic workshop Project Blowed, from... | in 1970 The Medusa, second studio album released in 2002 by New Zealand rock group Tadpole "Medusa," a song by Anthrax on the 1985 album Spreading the Disease "Medusa," a song by Sweet on the 1974 album Desolation Boulevard "Medusa", a song by Jolin Tsai on the 2014 album Play "The Medusa", a song by The Haunted from t... |
DNS, sometimes abbreviated as recdns. In principle, authoritative name servers suffice for the operation of the Internet. However, with only authoritative name-servers operating, every DNS query must start with recursive queries at the root zone of the Domain Name System and each user system must implement resolver sof... | for a zone can notify all the known secondaries for that zone when the contents of the zone have changed. The contents of a zone are either manually configured by an administrator, or managed using Dynamic DNS. Every domain name appears in a zone served by one or more authoritative name servers. The fully qualified dom... |
to Hesiod (Theogony 956–962), Helios and the Oceanid Perseis produced two children Circe and Aeetes. Aeëtes then married the Oceanid, Idyia and Medea was their child. From here, Medea's family tree becomes a little more complicated and argued. By some accounts, Aeëtes and Idyia only had two daughters, Medea , (or Chalk... | gave birth to Chalciope. Even with the two differing accounts, it is known that Medea has a sister and a brother. As she becomes older, Medea marries Jason and procures together, they have children.The number and names of their children are questioned by scholars. Depending on the account, it is two to fourteen childre... |
Soleil show Varekai Music Icaros, shamanic medicine songs Icarus (band), a band from London, England Albums Icarus (The Forms album), 2003 Icarus (Chicosci album), 2004 Icarus (Paul Winter Consort album), 1972 Icarus EP, a 2011 EP by Periphery Icaro, an album by Renato Zero Songs "Icarus" (Greeeen song), 2015 "Icarus" ... | refer to: People Roger Squires (born 1932), crossword compiler who has used the pseudonym Icarus Icarus (wrestler) (born 1982), wrestler with the Chikara organization Places Icarus (island), in the Aegean Sea Ikaros (Failaka Island), in the Persian Gulf Icarus (crater), on the Moon Icarus (star) 1566 Icarus, an asteroi... |
the category of all diagrams of shape J in C. The diagonal functor is the functor that maps each object N in C to the constant functor Δ(N) : J → C to N. That is, Δ(N)(X) = N for each object X in J and Δ(N)(f) = idN for each morphism f in J. Given a diagram F: J → C (thought of as an object in CJ), a natural transforma... | of shape (i.e. every pair of morphisms with common codomain has a pullback). A complete category is a category that has all small limits (i.e. all limits of shape J for every small category J). One can also make the dual definitions. A category has colimits of shape J if every diagram of shape J has a colimit in C. A c... |
system for aircraft Supply Voltage Supervisor, an electronic protective device Organizations and companies Society for Vascular Surgery Sudbury Valley School State Veterinary Service, UK Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, Crestwood, NY, US Svenska Vitterhetssamfundet, Swedish publisher Other uses Standard ... | refer to: Technology OS/VS2 (SVS), a precursor of MVS Advanced Space Vision System, a computer vision system for the ISS Software Virtualization Solution, by Symantec Synthetic vision system for aircraft Supply Voltage Supervisor, an electronic |
may refer to: , was a during World War II , is | to: , was a during World War II , is an guided missile |
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