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ranges from Darwin to Sydney. It is known from silty and muddy areas in coastal waters and estuaries, although it also enters freshwater regions. It is most frequently seen in tidal channels, mangrove swamps, and salt marshes. It is carnivorous, feeding on
Darwin to Sydney. It is known from silty and muddy areas in coastal waters and estuaries, although it also enters freshwater regions. It is most frequently seen in tidal channels, mangrove swamps,
in the 2022 U.S. Open Cup as defending champions, as the 2020 and 2021 editions of tournament were canceled due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Club Results Non-competitive Preseason exhibitions Competitive Major League Soccer Regular Season U.S. Open Cup Player movement In References Atlanta United FC seasons Atlanta United Atlanta United
fourteenth year that a professional soccer club from Atlanta, Georgia competing in the top division of American soccer. Atlanta United will play their home games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Outside of MLS, they will
Naidoo obtained a BA from Trinity College Dublin and attended the King's Inns. He was the auditor of the College Historical Society between 1990 and 1991. He appeared on the RTÉ TV series Challenging Times representing the King's Inns in 1994. Legal career He was called to the Irish Bar in 1995 and became a senior counsel in 2015. He was heavily involved in criminal trials, appearing for the prosecution and for defendants. He was counsel for the Director of Public Prosecutions in cases involving murder, health and safety offences, sexual offences, weapons offences, kidnap, robbery, and drugs offences. Naidoo was the prosecuting barrister in the
convicted of vandalising Argenteuil Basin with a Single Sailboat. He appeared for the DPP in the first prosecution of the offence of coercive control in Ireland. He acted for the Office of the Director of Corporate Enforcement in High Court proceedings connected with its investigation into the Football Association of Ireland. He defended county councillor Kieran Mahon in his trial for the false imprisonment of Joan Burton, where
a gap of at least 4 years between them. Jerry Sonnenberg (R), District 1 Leroy Garcia (D), District 3 Kerry Donovan (D), District 5 Ray Scott (R), District 7 John Cooke (R), District 13 Chris Holbert (R), District 30 Retiring incumbents Predictions Results † - Incumbent not seeking re-election Detailed Results District 1 District 2 District 3 District 5 District 6 District 7 District 9 District 11 District 13 District 15 District 16 District 20 District 22 District 24 District 30 District 32 District 34 References
same year and the biennial United States elections. Background In the previous state Senate election (2020), the Democrats increased their majority to 5 seats. Therefore, for Democrats to lose their absolute majority in the Senate in this election, Republicans and other parties would need to gain at least 3 more seats. This will be the first election with the districts drawn based on the 2020 census. Incumbents not seeking re-election Term-limited incumbents Two Democratic and four Republican incumbents are term-limited and prohibited from seeking a consecutive third term. Under the laws for the state Senate, for terms to be considered non-consecutive, there needs to be a gap of at least 4 years between them. Jerry Sonnenberg (R), District 1
Armenia. The Association is the largest representative of the student body on the national level and the organization aims to advocate, promote and protect educational, social, economic, cultural interests and rights of over 90 thousand students. The Association is a member of the European Students' Union. Mission and activities The Armenian National Students Association advocates for lowering tuition fees, ensuring quality education, protecting student rights and freedoms, promoting student involvement in the Bologna Process, among other goals. In 2003, the Armenian National
which would unite both Armenian and Georgian student unions and will implement European Youth Forum regional programs. As part of the TEMPUS program, the Armenian National Students Association organizes and hosts students from EU countries to promote exchange of experience among students. See also Education in Armenia European Students' Union References External links Armenian National Students Association official website Armenian National Students Association on Facebook Organizations established in 2003 European student organizations Groups of students' unions Education in
Grant Program, and the Youth Lead Author Global Environmental Outlook (GEO6). Activism Olumide Idowu started his climate activism journey with the AIESEC and Nigerian Youth Climate Coalition in his undergraduate days which prompted his participation in the open hearings of the National Assembly (Nigeria). In 2013, he founded the Climate Wednesday initiative held on Wednesdays to educate people about climate change and its adaptation strategies. He co-founded the International Climate Change Development Initiative (ICCDI Africa) in 2016 with the aim to build a climate smart generation through creative dialogues and innovations. He has worked on solution-led initiatives focused on open defecation, women's health, waste management, and oil spill cleanup amongst others in Lagos and Rivers state Nigeria. Awards and nominations Olumide was recognized with the 2015 Save the Children Award of Contribution toward Sustainable Development in Nigeria. He was nominated for the State International Visitors Leadership Program (IVLP) by the US Embassy in Nigeria, and African Youth Champion
and the Youth Lead Author Global Environmental Outlook (GEO6). Activism Olumide Idowu started his climate activism journey with the AIESEC and Nigerian Youth Climate Coalition in his undergraduate days which prompted his participation in the open hearings of the National Assembly (Nigeria). In 2013, he founded the Climate Wednesday initiative held on Wednesdays to educate people about climate change and its adaptation strategies. He co-founded the International Climate Change Development Initiative (ICCDI Africa) in 2016 with the aim to build a climate smart generation through creative dialogues and innovations. He has worked on solution-led initiatives focused on open defecation, women's health, waste management, and oil spill cleanup amongst others in Lagos and Rivers state Nigeria. Awards and nominations Olumide was recognized with the 2015 Save the Children Award of Contribution toward Sustainable Development in Nigeria. He was nominated for the State International Visitors Leadership Program (IVLP) by the US Embassy in Nigeria, and African Youth Champion for the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR). Publications The role of youth in realizing their vision for change. Grassroots demand for Nigeria in the post-2015 development agenda. Impact of Climate Change on Agriculture and Food. Agriculture and Youth Development in
with a key at the bottom. There is an image numbered "3", but it is not included in the key. Number "43" is neither in the border nor in the key. Agnes Martin Joan Mitchell unidentified Grace Hartigan Yayoi Kusama Marisol Alice Neel Jane Wilson Judy Chicago Gladys Nilson [sic] Betty Parsons Miriam Shapiro [sic] Lee Bonticou [sic] Sylvia Stone Chryssa Sue Ellen Rocca [sic] Carolee Schneeman [sic] Lisette Model Audrey Flack Buffie Johnson Vera Simmons [sic] Helen Pashgian Susan Lewis Williams Racelle Strick Ann McCoy J. L. Knight Enid Sanford Joan Balou Marta Minujín Rosemary Wright Cynthia Bickley Lawra Gregory Agnes Denes Mary Beth Edelson Irene Siegel Nancy Grossman Hannah Wilke Jennifer Bartlett Mary Corse Eleanor Antin Jane Kaufman Muriel Castanis not in collage or key Susan Crile Anne Ryan Sue Ann Childress Patricia Mainardi Dindga McCannon Alice Shaddle Arden Scott Faith Rionggold [sic] Sharon Brant Daria Dorosh Nina Yankowitz Rachel bas-Cohain Loretta Dunkelman Kay Brown CeRoser Noma Copley Martha Edelheit Jackie Skyles Barbara Zuker [sic] Susan Williams Judith Bernstein Rosemary Mayer Maud Boltz [sic] Patsy Norvell Joan Danziger Minna Citron References Further reading Object of the Week: Some Living American Women Artists/Last Supper by Elisabeth Smith SAMBlog March 9, 2018 Considering Mary Beth Edelson’s Some Living American Women Artists
American Women Artists also referred to as Some Living American Women Artists/Last Supper is a collage by American artist Mary Beth Edelson created during the second wave feminist movement. The central portion is an image based on Leonardo da Vinci’s 15th-century mural Last Supper. Edelson replaced the faces of Christ's disciples with cut-out photographs of American women artists. She surrounded the central image with additional photographs of American women artists. The work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Edelson intended the collage to "identify and commemorate women artists, who were getting little recognition at the time, by presenting them as the grand subject - while spoofing the patriarchy for cutting women out of positions of
II-era Japan, Kaji marries his sweetheart Michiko despite his misgivings about the future. To gain exemption from military service, he moves his wife to a large mining operation in Japanese-colonized Manchuria, where he serves as a labor chief assigned to a workforce of Chinese prisoners. Kaji aggravates the camp bureaucracy by implementing humane practices to improve both labor conditions and productivity, clashing with foremen, administrators, and the Kenpeitai military police. Ultimately his efforts to grant autonomy to the POWs are undermined by scheming officials, resulting in the electrocution of several prisoners and the beheading of others accused of attempted escape. When Kaji protests the brutality, he is tortured and then drafted into the army to relieve the camp supervisors of his disruptive presence. Cast Tatsuya Nakadai as Kaji Michiyo
as Chen Kōji Mitsui as Furuya Seiji Miyaguchi as Wang Heng Li Eitaro Ozawa as Okazaki Toru Abe as Sergeant Watai Junkichi Orimoto as Sai Masao Mishima as Manager Kuroki Kyū Sazanka as Cho Meisan Reception On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 71%, based on 14 reviews, and an average rating of 7.80/10. In 2021, David Mermelstein of Wall Street Journal writes "What's astonishing is the way that Kobayashi juggles the complicated narrative, with its panoply of incidents and significant characters (friends, nemeses and everything in between), so that clarity is never compromised." References
Noralta Junior Hockey League, Alberta, Canada NorMan Junior Hockey League, Manitoba, Canada Northern Junior
North West Junior Hockey League, Alberta/British Columbia, Canada Northwest Junior Hockey
Australian waters, where it ranges from Gulf St Vincent to Rottnest Island. The type locality of the species is Canal Rocks. It occurs at a depth range of 1 to 25 m
or bluespotted puffer, is a species of pufferfish in the family Tetraodontidae. It is a marine, reef-associated species endemic to Australian
and salivary gland adenoid cystic carcinoma malignant tissues than the nearby normal tissues of these respective organs. According to the Human Protein Atlas, higher levels of CMTM1 expression in hepatocellular carcinoma tissues are associated with shorter survival times. Another study found that the levels of CMTM1 mRNA (which directs the production of CMTM1 protein) were higher in stomach cancer compared to nearby normal stomach tissues. And, studies of glioblastoma found no significant difference between the levels of CMTM1 in this brain tumor's tissues versus nearby normal brain tissues but higher levels of tumor tissue CMTM1 were associated with poorer prognoses. In addition, the forced overexpression of CMTM1 in cultured glioblastoma cell lines increased their proliferation and invasiveness. These findings suggest that CMTM1 proteins may act to promote the cited cancers and support further studies to determine if these proteins contribute to the development
a single gene. The gene for these isoforms, CMTM1 (formerly termed CKLFSF1), is located in band 22 on the long (i.e. "q") arm of chromosome 16. The CMTM1 gene and its 23 isoforms belong to the CKLF-like MARVEL transmembrane domain-containing family of structurally and functionally related genes and proteins. CMTM1 (isoforms not specified) proteins are weakly express in a wide range of normal tissues but are far more highly expressed in normal testes as well as the malignant cells of certain types of cancer. Studies have reported that the levels of CMTM1 (typically the CMTM1–v17 isoform) are more highly expressed in breast, kidney, lung, ovary, liver (i.e. hepatocellular carcinoma), and salivary gland adenoid cystic carcinoma malignant tissues than the nearby normal tissues of these respective organs. According to the Human Protein Atlas, higher levels of CMTM1 expression in hepatocellular carcinoma tissues are associated with shorter survival times. Another study found that the levels of CMTM1 mRNA (which directs the production of CMTM1 protein) were higher in stomach cancer compared to nearby normal stomach tissues. And, studies of glioblastoma found no significant difference between
and finally, Désirée Clary, in 1897. Around the age of 69, she began to evoke the memories of her career through a memoir, voluntarily limiting herself to the first thirty years, from 1830 to 1860. Personal life In 1851, she married Louis de La Forest d'Armaillé, Comte d'Armaillé, thus taking the title of "Comtesse d'Armaillé", while also being known as "Marie Célestine Amélie de La Forest d'Armaillé". She was widowed in 1882. Their daughter, Pauline-Célestine-Louise, married Prince Victor de Broglie on September 28, 1871. Pauline and Victor had six children, including Maurice (1875–1960), an experimental physicist, and Louis (1892-1987), who would win the Nobel Prize in Physics (1929). The Spanish flu pandemic broke out in 1918 and d'Armaillé died of the consequences of this illness, on 7 December of the same year, then aged 88, in her home in the Square de Messine (now, rue du Docteur-Lancereaux) in the 8th arrondissement of Paris. Her funeral was celebrated on 11 December, in the Saint-Philippe-du-Roule church, in the same arrondissement. Awards 1887, Montyon Prize, for Madame Élisabeth, sœur de Louis XVI Publications 1864, La reine Marie Leckzinska, étude historique (text) 1865, Catherine de Bourbon, soeur de Henri IV, 1559-1604, étude historique (text) 1870, Marie-Thérèse et Marie-Antoinette
and of Célestine Gabrielle de Ventimiglia du Luc. Career Faithful to the traditions of her family, she was interested in historical and literary matters. Moreover, she brought together a society that shared her interests. She began to publish in 1864 with a study on the Queen of France, Marie Leszczyńska, wife of King Louis XV, which earned her the privilege of an article by the French literary critic Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve. She then continued with several other works on French noble women: Catherine de Bourbon, sister of King Henri IV, in 1865; Marie Antoinette and her daughter, Marie-Thérèse, in 1870; Élisabeth of France (known as Madame Elisabeth), in 1886, for which she received an award from the French Academy; Jeanne-Sophie de Vignerot du Plessis (known as Septimanie d'Egmont), in 1890; and finally, Désirée Clary, in 1897. Around the age of 69, she began to evoke the memories of her career through a memoir, voluntarily limiting herself to the first thirty years, from 1830 to 1860. Personal life In 1851, she married Louis de La Forest d'Armaillé, Comte d'Armaillé, thus taking the title of "Comtesse d'Armaillé", while also being known as "Marie Célestine Amélie de La Forest d'Armaillé". She was widowed in 1882. Their daughter, Pauline-Célestine-Louise, married Prince Victor de Broglie on September 28, 1871. Pauline and Victor had six children, including Maurice (1875–1960), an experimental physicist, and Louis (1892-1987), who would win the Nobel Prize in Physics (1929). The Spanish flu pandemic broke out in 1918 and d'Armaillé died
Jeeva and Kavya, who are lovers and they fall in love and get married but when Jeeva's brother and Kavya's sister get in a mix-up. This results in Jeeva marrying Kavya's sister and Kavya marrying Jeeva's brother. Cast Main Dhiraviyam Rajkumaran as Jeeva. Sidhdharth Kumaran as Parthiban. Gabriella Chlarton as Kavya. Swathi Konde as Priya. Supporting V.Dasarathy as Arunachalam Parthiban, Jeeva and Arjun's father Meena Vemuri as Parvathy Jeeva, Parthiban and Arjun's mother Deepak Kumar as Arjun Jeeva and Parthiban's youngest brother Chandni Prakashan as Ramya Devi's daughter Manohar Krishnan as Duraisamy Priya, Kavya and Sakthi's father Kiru Baji as Mahalakshmi Priya, Kavya and Sakthi's mother Shravnitha Srikanth as Sakthi Priya and Kavya's youngest sister Preethi Kumar as Aishu Manjula's first daughter Aarthi Ramkumar as Devi Arunachalam's elder sister Ramya's mother Rajeswari as Manjula Arunachalam's younger sister Aishu and Abhi's mother Sunitha as Meera Sivan Srinivasan as Bhaskar Meera's father Kanishka as Anitha Aishu's younger sister Minnal Deepa as Valarmathi Meera's mother Production Casting When the second season
Parthiban and Arjun's mother Deepak Kumar as Arjun Jeeva and Parthiban's youngest brother Chandni Prakashan as Ramya Devi's daughter Manohar Krishnan as Duraisamy Priya, Kavya and Sakthi's father Kiru Baji as Mahalakshmi Priya, Kavya and Sakthi's mother Shravnitha Srikanth as Sakthi Priya and Kavya's youngest sister Preethi Kumar as Aishu Manjula's first daughter Aarthi Ramkumar as Devi Arunachalam's elder sister Ramya's mother Rajeswari as Manjula Arunachalam's younger sister Aishu and Abhi's mother Sunitha as Meera Sivan Srinivasan as Bhaskar Meera's father Kanishka as Anitha Aishu's younger sister Minnal Deepa as Valarmathi Meera's mother Production Casting When the second season was in pre-production, Dhiraviam Rajakumaran who played Vetrivel Naatarasan in the first season, was then cameo appearancing in another Star Vijay soap opera Senthoora Poove as Anbu. Later
to Permian beds in Europe, Asia, and North America. The genus has been used as an index fossil in China. References Paleozoic
in Carboniferous to Permian beds in Europe, Asia, and North America. The genus has been used as an index
market. Operations In 2022 Sunlit broke ground on a 900,000 sq ft manufacturing facility on a site in Phoenix, Arizona to supply a TSMC fab being built in the same city. They had
company in Taiwan to produce hydrofluoric acid and fluoride. In 2021 they controlled 75% of the global oral care sodium fluoride market. Operations In 2022 Sunlit broke ground on a 900,000 sq ft manufacturing facility on a site
Designs In 1959 He designed a home with a unique roofline called the “Zigzag House” in Sarasota Florida. The house was designed for philanthropist Rita Adler. The Zigzag House which is seen as an "emblem of the Sarasota School of Architecture." Tollyn Twitchell's father Ralph Twitchell is thought of as the founder of the Sarasota School of Architecture. He designed the Sarasota Unitarian Universalist Church. Twitchell designed the building but his father Ralph Twitchell approved the plans. Personal life In 1952 he
Connecticut. In 1953 he graduated from MIT where he studied architecture. Career After graduation he partnered with his father's architectural firm. Soon after he founded his own firm Twitchell and Allen Architects-Planners, PA. Later he founded The Twitchell Group Architects, PA. Designs In 1959 He designed a home with a unique roofline called the “Zigzag House” in Sarasota Florida. The house was designed for philanthropist Rita Adler. The Zigzag House which is seen as an "emblem of the Sarasota School of Architecture." Tollyn Twitchell's father Ralph Twitchell
154 fatalities while trying to regain control of the now destroyed prison, with assistance of Coalition airstrikes. The SDF was able to arrest 1,100 prisoners, a total of 400 prisoners were found missing in the fighting. Timeline 20 January The first wave of the attack occurred late at night on 20 January, when Islamic State forces launched a car bomb attack targeting the prison whilst IS ground fighters began to open fire on the prison with heavy weapons. Fires could be seen across the city coming from the direction of the prison. The attack triggered a prison riot where the prisoners managed to obtain weaponry from the armoury and then began a full blown attack on the prison staff. The prison was subsequently occupied by armed prisoners and several prisoners managed to escape. 21 January Clashes continued into the next day, by which Islamic State fighters had spread to the Al-Zouhour area of Al-Hasakah city. SDF worked quick to respond, supported by the International Coalition aircraft which struck IS positions. SDF forces were able to track down and arrest 89 of the prisoners that had escaped the prison. It was also reported that the electricity to several parts of Al-Hasakah city had been cut off due to the clashes. During the clashes, it was reported that U.S fighter jets had conducted 2 airstrikes on Islamic State held buildings in the city. The SOHR reported that clashes continued between Islamic State and Kurdish forces over control of the prison and its surrounding areas. During the evening and night of 21 January, Coalition jets fired flares above Al-Hasakah whilst heavy clashes were reported to be taking place around the Ghuwayran prison and the neighbourhoods of Ghuwayran and Al-Zouhour. The Islamic State militants that reportedly took several SDF fighters hostage. Several civilians who refused to aid escaping ISIS fighters were massacred and their bodies desecrated in their homes in the surrounding neighbourhood. 22 January Fighting went on overnight and continued into the early hours of the morning with Coalition helicopters circling the areas above the fighting; a further 5 Kurdish fighters and 6 Islamic State fighters were killed in the overnight clashes. The SDF had also claimed they had managed to track down and arrest a further 41 escaped prisoners, bringing the total to 130, however it is still not known how many IS prisoners escaped from the detention facility, that housed up to 3,500 IS prisoners. Throughout the day, violent clashes occurred in the areas around Ghuwayran prison, with Coalition forces launching airstrikes on IS-held positions and buildings. An American Apache attack helicopter was dispatched to the area and began to target a group of IS fighters that had set up positions in a nearby cemetery. A further 11 IS operatives were killed in the ensuing fighting and 6 more escaped prisoners had been arrested. Furthermore, SDF forces demanded via a loudspeaker that the besieged IS fighters surrender, the demand was refused. Following further clashes in the day, another 5 IS militants, 6 Kurdish fighters and 2 more civilians had been killed in the ongoing fighting. Also, IS's Amaq News Agency had released footage showing hostages inside the prison and the bodies of several killed prison staff. A report by the Iraqi Kurdish Esta Media Network stated that the SDF took multiple staging grounds of the initial riot in al-Sina'a prison. In a press statement by the US Department of State commended the SDF for a "swift response" to the fighting in Hasakah. 23 January In the early hours of the morning, violent clashes took place in the vicinity of the prison and its surrounding areas, with SDF trying to eliminate the IS operatives still fighting in nearby neighbourhoods. The clashes left a further 16 IS fighters and 5 Kurdish fighters dead. Later in the day, Kurdish forces had regained control of the prison's perimeter and managed to breach the prison sparking several firefights inside the building between Kurdish soldiers and Islamic State fighters. There was also continued fighting in the areas around the prison. 7 Islamic State militants and 6 Kurdish fighters were killed in the fighting. SDF forces estimated that around 150-200 IS operatives were still actively fighting in the prison and surrounding areas and that they had yet to free any hostages. They also announced a week-long curfew, affecting the entire city, in order to prevent IS cells from sending reinforcements. 24 January In the morning, Coalition aircraft resumed their attacks on IS positions in the prison, striking areas still occupied by armed IS prisoners. SDF forces later stormed the remaining parts of the prison still held by armed IS fighters who refused to surrender, freeing several hostages. Clashes also continued in areas outside of the prison, where several IS fighters still refused to surrender. Furthermore, it was reported that dozens of IS fighters and prisoners had turned themselves in to Kurdish forces after
the SDF, 15 hostages were released by IS, leaving a remaining 27 hostages in captivity. It was also reported that the number of IS prisoners and fighters that had surrendered or been re-arrested had reached at least 600. Clashes also resumed in the areas surrounding the prison during combing operations by Kurdish and Coalition forces, leaving another 7 IS fighters dead. Later in the day, SDF and Coalition cleared an entire block of al-Sina'a prison from IS militants. Coalition armoured vehicles had entered the prison's complex amid receiving fire from IS militants. The SDF also evacuated another 50 IS prisoners from the area. 26 January Clashes were continuing to take place in the al-Zouhour and Ghuwayran neighbourhoods as Kurdish and Coalition forces launched a series of combing operations to root out remaining IS fighters. During these operations, 5 IS fighters and 4 SDF fighters were killed. It was also reported that a further 17 prisoners were freed from IS captivity in al-Sina'a prison. 27 January By 27 January, SDF and Coalition forces had retaken much of al-Sina'a prison and much of IS's forces had either surrendered or been killed, however clashes continued as 20-40 IS fighters were still refusing to surrender and had entrenched themselves in the basement of one of the prison's cell blocks. During the storming of the prison, between the evening on 26 January to the morning of 27 January, 26 IS militants and 5 SDF fighters were killed. Later in the day, another 17 IS fighters were killed in violent clashes with Kurdish forces in and around the vicinity of al-Sina'a prison. 28 January Clashes continued in the neighborhoods of Ghwayran and al-Zouhour between IS fighters and SDF forces. Clashes also continued in certain areas of al-Sina'a prison where 'tens' of IS fighters still refused to surrender and were held up in the basement of the prison out of the reach of airstrikes. 18 SDF fighters and a further 7 IS militants were killed in the clashes. Later in the day, during a combing operation in one of the nearby neighbourhoods, an SDF Special Forces fighter was shot dead by an IS gunman, who was himself killed after his hideout was blown up by SDF forces. 29 January It was reported that a group of 3 IS suicide bombers had taken 4 civilians hostage, including the head of the neighbourhood, in the Kumin neighbourhood of al-Hasakah. The building they had occupied was quickly surrounded by SDF fighters. This happened after clashes renewed in the areas surrounding the prison. SDF fighters, under the supervision of American forces, later launched an operation
Mirza and Sanam Saeed starrer Deedan which revolves around the love story of two individuals and was shot in the Hunza Valley. The series was praised for its aesthetics and visuals. His next project Dushman e Jaan met with reviews from critics and audience, earned him critical acclaim and became first critical success of his carrer. Iqbal's recently directed Ishq E Laa starring Sajal Aly, Yumna Zaidi and Azaan Sami Khan is currently airing on Hum TV. Filmography Rehbra Television Awards and nominations Nominated - 2nd Pakistan International Screen Awards - Best Television Director - Dushman e Jaan References Year of birth missing (living people) Living people
director from Pakistan Television Network. He first directed and wrote the television series such as Biche Ge Ab Kese, Dobara and Imehaan. The first project of Iqbal which received positive response was Thakan which starred Saba Qamar, Tauqeer Nasir and Saba Hameed in leading roles and revolves around the issues of a working women in a patriarchal system. He then directed Teri Raah Main Rul Gai, Meri Dulari and Dil Muhallay Ki Haveli, all of which featured Yumna Zaidi and Sami Khan as a lead couple and earned him further recognition. Iqbal then directed three other projects for Geo Entertainment; Meri Zindagi Hai Tu, which revolves around the obsession of a girl with her aunt's fiancé, Mannat, a love story of a pressurised relationship and Dilfareb, love triangle themed penned by Zafar
The spirit and soul of each individual is now present collectively in each patient. This allows each individual to share each other's psychoses, dreams and even sexuality, and also means that someone who is violent towards others feels their pain firsthand, which means that no one is able to have the desire to hurt others anymore. Only the spirit of Myrna Malloy is stronger than that of the others and dominates them. Myrna, on the other hand, who is in a wheelchair, depends on others to meet her needs. The passion of the former dancer still belongs to ballet. Dr. Samuel Fry has fallen in love with his patient Veronica Bloom, a psychotic woman who, lacking the drugs the patient needs for her treatment, the doctors can do nothing about. As a result, Fry has to release her, even though she still poses a danger to herself and others. He is also aware that she will then be dependent on prescription drugs and essentially have to live the life of a zombie. Fry brings Veronica with him to Dr. Langston, as he expects help for the young woman from the doctor he admires. At this point, Fry is unaware of how radical Langston's methods have become. However, when he becomes aware of what is going on in the asylum, Fry is determined to free Veronica from Langston's clutches. But first, he has to find Veronica's spirit, which has detached itself from her body. However, Myrna Malloy manages to redirect his love in her direction. Fry's admiration for Langston, who chose him as his successor, has also meant that his resilience to resist Myrna's co-optation is not strong enough. Gradually, he becomes a willing participant, which is also due to the fact that Dr. Langston has long since transferred his own consciousness into his colleague's younger body. The implanted humans are sent back into the community. The plan is to turn more humans into controlled automatons that depend on each other to work together in perfect harmony. On the other hand, Langston's test group is also a monster that will ensure its own survival at any cost, including violence. Cast Patrick McGoohan as Dr. Harvey Langston Amanda Plummer as Myrna Malloy Michael Maloney as Dr. Samuel Fry Joanne Vannicola as Blair Gregory Hlady as Syd Meeker Emmanuelle Vaugier as Veronica Bloom Joseph Wynne as Bobby Corrado Ralph Allison as Hollister Watcher Sam Stone as Vern Huckabee David Francis as Dr. Andrew Miller Louis Di Bianco as Mr. Corrado Sr. Jocelyne Zucco as Mrs. Corrado Mark Bromilow as Dr. Dan Wyatt Lynn Snelling as Nympho Rodrigue Proteau as Bald Man Lorne Brass as Sheriff Grierson Susan Glover as Mrs. Schmidt René-Madeleine
Lynn Snelling as Nympho Rodrigue Proteau as Bald Man Lorne Brass as Sheriff Grierson Susan Glover as Mrs. Schmidt René-Madeleine Le Guerrier as Psycho Girl Gaétan Gingras as Epileptic Robert Higden as Man at Piano Bar Production The film was produced by August Entertainment in association with Yellowbill Productions Ltd. and Kay Salomon Productions. Filming took place between May 13 and June 22, 1996, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Soundtrack "I Only Have Eyes for You" by Harry Warren and Al Dubin, performed by Lisbeth Scott and Lee Curreri "West by South West" by Duncan Millar, performed by As One Prelude in G minor by Frédéric Chopin, performed by Ralph Grierson "Rocks with Rolls" written and performed by Fred Myrow and Andrew Kapner "Mental Blues" by Alexander Baker, Clair Marlo and Bruce Watson, performed by Baker and Watson "Sarahan Dreaming" written and performed by Fred Myrow, Andrew Kapner and Gregg Arreguin The Marriage of Figaro by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, performed by Bruna Rizzoli "Lost in You" by Mike Stoller and Jerry Leiber, performed by Lisbeth Scott and Lee Curreri "Bittersweet" by Fred Myrow "Mentat: A Mind Opera" (adaptation) by Fred Myrow, performed by Axis Mundi Musicworks Release In October 1997, Hysteria was shown at the Continental Film Festival in Panama and in February 1998 it was presented at the Fantasporto Film Festival in Portugal. The film was also released under the title Histeria in Spain. The film was first shown on television in Germany on November 5, 2000, on Sat.1. Reception Critical response The German Lexikon des internationalen Films ("Encyclopedia of International Films") wrote succinctly: "Psychological thriller that combines the classic motif of the mad scientist with the theme of a collective disorder of consciousness.". DVD Talk’s Tyler Foster said Hysteria is a film that can't quite find the right balance between the bizarre and the intriguing. [...] The film jumps around, never quite settling on a particular rhythm or style, happy to peer into whatever nook and cranny Daalder's mind drifts to at a given moment." Foster concluded that "Hysteria is a very unusual film that will only truly appeal to an extremely specific segment of the audience. It's admirably ambitious, but the bulk of the film ignores Daalder's more intriguing ideas and comes off either too conventional or too aggressively weird." Chris O'Neill reviewed the film for Experimental Conversations, stating that "Hysteria resembles a science fiction/horror hybrid and in the first 15 minutes director Rene Daalder displays a paired down, no-nonsense style of storytelling comparable to the sharpest of B features. [...] But it is clear from the outset that things are far from straightforward since the entire cast, both those portraying mentally-unstable patients and the figures who represent authoritative normality, are played with an overtly exaggerated theatricality." O'Neill also describes the film as "a heady mix of elements, and one's reaction might well alternate between frustration, bewilderment and amusement, but the film is never boring, thanks in no small part to the cast. McGoohan (in his last major theatrical role before his death in 2009) embodies the role of the renegade doctor with eccentric relish. [...] Plummer is typically off-the-wall and is allowed to be at her most unrestrained. Vaugier, receiving an 'and introducing' credit, is also equally uninhabited, both mentally and physically, as the young woman at the centre of the story. Maloney is left with the difficult task of representing the only 'normal' (and therefore vaguely sympathetic) character that the viewer can relate to: a fine and sometimes slippery line for an actor to walk, but he just about makes it." The English site mondo-digital states that "Both heady and orgiastic at the same time, Hysteria wouldn't feel out of
bid to the NCAA Tournament where, as a No. 10 seed, they lost to No. 7 seed Villanova in the opening round. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| SoCon Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA
where, as a No. 10 seed, they lost to No. 7 seed Villanova in the opening round. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| SoCon Tournament |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament References Marshall Thundering Herd men's basketball seasons Marshall
undue burden for women seeking an abortion Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson, US Supreme Court decision that abortion providers could not sue state-court judges, court clerks,
an abortion Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson, US Supreme Court decision that abortion providers could not sue state-court judges, court clerks, or the state's Attorney General
Cost as a follower of Maxton Crescenzo Scipione as a follower of Maxton Production The series was co produced by Travis Cannan and Mike Gerbino. The series was filmed in various locations including Rochester, New York and Buffalo, New York. Cinematography by Travis Cannan. The sound department for Dark Justice Show was a collaborative effort by Elisa Peebles, Benjamin Jura, Zahra, Alzubaidi, Michael McFadden, Adam Bloch and Wes Ranson. Brian Varney served as Head of the Art Department. The opening score for Dark Justice Show is "I Think I'm Gonna Get Arrested" written and performed by We
Maxton Crescenzo Scipione as a follower of Maxton Production The series was co produced by Travis Cannan and Mike Gerbino. The series was filmed in various locations including Rochester, New York and Buffalo, New York. Cinematography by Travis Cannan. The sound department for Dark Justice Show was a collaborative effort by Elisa Peebles, Benjamin Jura, Zahra, Alzubaidi, Michael McFadden, Adam Bloch and Wes Ranson. Brian Varney served as Head of the Art Department. The opening score for Dark Justice Show is "I
family Iguanidae. It is found in Argentina. References millcayac Lizards of South
Argentina. References millcayac Lizards of South America Reptiles of Argentina Endemic fauna of Argentina
Netherlands, serving until his retirement late in 1951. Personal life On 6 February 1932, at the age of 38, was married to Phyllis Mary Spender-Clay (1905–1972) in Dormansland. Phyllis was the eldest daughter of Herbert Spender-Clay, MP and the former Pauline Astor. Through her mother, she was a granddaughter of William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor. Her younger sister Rachel married Sir David Bowes-Lyon, brother of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. They lived at Lawford Hall, Manningtree, Essex and he was interested in "forestry, farming, opera and ballet." Together, they were the parents of two daughters and two sons, including: Anne Nichols, who married William Charlton, a son of Lancelot Charlton of London and a grandson of Mrs. Percy Byron of New York and Darien in 1959. Sir Philip died on 6 December 1962 in London at the age of 68 and he was buried at St Mary's, Lawford. His widow died in London on 5 January 1972. References External links Sir Philip Bouverie Bowyer Nichols (1894-1962), Diplomat at the
for two years in New Zealand giving advice and helping train a diplomatic service there. He was ambassador to the Czechoslovak government-in-exile" in London during World War II, and went to Prague in 1945 to "continue his duties." In 1948, he was appointed Ambassador to the Netherlands, serving until his retirement late in 1951. Personal life On 6 February 1932, at the age of 38, was married to Phyllis Mary Spender-Clay (1905–1972) in Dormansland. Phyllis was the eldest daughter of Herbert Spender-Clay, MP and the former Pauline Astor. Through her mother, she was a granddaughter of William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor. Her younger sister Rachel married Sir David Bowes-Lyon, brother of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. They lived at Lawford Hall, Manningtree, Essex and he was interested in "forestry, farming, opera and ballet." Together, they were the parents of two daughters and two sons, including:
nationalize the organization, in part to enable the government to control and censor the internet and in part for the government to manage the public infrastructure enabling Ugandan internet. Peering infrastructure The UIXP operates a layer 2 peering infrastructure that is accessible from two locations within the greater Kampala area. The UIXP supports both bilateral and multilateral peering via IPv4 and IPv6. In 2021 the UIXP expanded into the Raxio carrier neutral data center located in the Kampala Industrial and Business Park. See also List of Internet exchange points Communications in Uganda References External links Traffic information Internet exchange points in Africa Internet in Uganda
The Ugandan government has made multiple attempts to purchase and nationalize the organization, in part to enable the government to control and censor the internet and in part for the government to manage the public infrastructure enabling Ugandan internet. Peering infrastructure The UIXP operates a layer 2 peering infrastructure that is accessible from two locations within the greater Kampala area. The UIXP supports both bilateral
in Ankara in 1981. She compşeted her primary and secondary education in her home town. She studied teacher of Sports and Physical Education at Gazi University, and graduated in 2002. She took a Master's degree in 22005. She served as an academic at the Sportsand Physical Education College at the Kocaeli University. Playing career Club Su started her football playing career in 1995. Between 1999 and 2003, she played in the clubs Ankara Metropoliten Municipality, Ankara Gürtaşspor, Bursa Delphi Packard and Gazi Üniversitesispor. In 2006, she retired form active playing. International She was a member of the and Turkey national teams. She participated at the UEFA Women's Under-18 Championship qualifyings in 1998 (2 matches), 1999 (2), 2000 First (2) and Second (3). For the Turkey women's national team, she played at the UEFA Women's Euro 2001 qualifying (3 matches), and the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification (UEFA)
in 2002. She took a Master's degree in 22005. She served as an academic at the Sportsand Physical Education College at the Kocaeli University. Playing career Club Su started her football playing career in 1995. Between 1999 and 2003, she played in the clubs Ankara Metropoliten Municipality, Ankara Gürtaşspor, Bursa Delphi Packard and Gazi Üniversitesispor. In 2006, she retired form active playing. International She was a member of the and Turkey national teams. She participated at the UEFA Women's Under-18 Championship qualifyings in 1998 (2 matches), 1999 (2), 2000 First (2) and Second (3). For the Turkey women's national team, she played at the UEFA Women's Euro 2001
in the family Iguanidae. It is found in Chile. References molinai Lizards of South
found in Chile. References molinai Lizards of South America Reptiles of Chile Endemic fauna of Chile
since 2007. Early life and education Smith was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended the University of Maryland, College Park, receiving a Bachelor of Science in finance in 1986. He received a juris doctor from the University of Baltimore School of Law in 1990. Career Smith was admitted to the Maryland State Bar Association in 1990 and began practicing as an Assistant State's Attorney in Baltimore. In 1992, Smith began working in private practice as the principal attorney at Smith & Smith, P.C. In 1998, he became the Deputy State's Attorney for Frederick County. In 2003, Smith was awarded the Prosecutor of the Year award for Frederick County. Smith was elected as the State's Attorney for Frederick County, Maryland in 2006 and began his first term on January
his first term on January 2, 2007. Smith was a founding member of the Maryland Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. In 2016, Smith applied for a judgeship with the Circuit Court of Frederick County when G. Edward Dwyer Jr. retired. Smith did not make the final list of nominations. The position ultimately went to another candidate, Richard J. Sandy. Personal life Smith is married to Desiree Marie Smith, a Special Agent in the Federal Bureau of Investigation. They have four children. Smith is a Christian, and a member of Calvary Assembly
It is found in Argentina. References montanezi Lizards of South
family Iguanidae. It is found in Argentina. References montanezi Lizards of South
ice hockey tournament of the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Each team was permitted a roster of 15 skaters and 2 goaltenders. Canada The following is the Canadian roster for the Boys' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Martin Raymond Alexis Gravel (G) Olivier Rodrigue (G) Jett Woo (D) Jared McIsaac (D) Ty Smith (D) Ryan Merkley (D) Dennis Busby (D) Declan Chisholm (D) Benoît-Olivier Groulx (FW) Aidan Dudas (FW) Gabriel Fortier (FW) Luka Burzan (FW) Tristen Nielsen (FW) Anderson MacDonald
Brathen Pontus Finstad Kristian Hovik Sander Hurrod Markus Mikkelsen Fredrik Pedersen Mathias Emilio Pettersen Kalle Rode Lars Rodne Theo Rooseboom De Vries Oliver Skramo Alexander Thomas Kristoffer Thomassen Christian Wetteland Russia The following is the Russian roster for the Boys' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Yevgeny Filinov Gleb Babintsev Maxim Denezhkin Grigori Denisenko Georgi Dubrovski Alexander Khovanov Vladislav Kotkov Pavel Kupchikhin Anton Malyshev Amir Miftakhov Kirill Nizhnikov Pavel Rotenberg Ilyas Sitdikov Yegor Sokolov Andrei Svechnikov Alexander Zhabreyev Bogdan Zhilyakov Danil Zhuravlyov United States The following is the American roster for the Boys' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Scott
Argentina Endemic fauna of Argentina Reptiles described in 1898 Taxa named by Julio Germán
in the family Iguanidae. It is found in Argentina. References montanus Lizards of South America
prisoners” and wrote to the Home Secretary. These records also show that she was one of 26 prisoners who went on hunger strike but were considered in too ill to be force fed. Her release was authorised by the Home Office on 22 June 1912. Another part of the same record notes the medical reasons for her being released: - “Over 65 years of age and presented indication of arterial degeneration. Would not be fed without considerable resistance involving some danger. Refused food. Likely to suffer from continued abstinence.” Corroboration for Williams being Outerbridge is also provided by her reception at a branch meeting of the Sydenham and Forest Hill branch of the WSPU, on her release, alongside Catherine Downing. The specific reasons for Frances using an alias is unclear but as discussed earlier the Outerbridges were a strongly influential family in Bermuda. Death Frances continued to reside with Caroline at 286 Devonshire Road Forest Hill until she died on 18 August 1934 at the age of 88. Probate was granted to Caroline on 11 October 1934. Sale of Hunger Strike Medal Frances's Hunger Strike Medal was sold at Auction in Stroud, Gloucestershire in January 2022 for £13,400. Also sold during this sale was the sliver plated tray presented to Frances
listed as having been arrested in records found in the WSPU offices during a Police raid. It records Frances as having been arrested as part of the extensive window smashing on 1st March 1912 and she was subsequently sentenced to four months in prison. However, there are no Police or Court records of an Outerbridge being charged for Suffragette offences. Frances Williams (which was her mother's maiden name) was arrested on 1 March 1912 and sentenced to four months in prison. And it is with this name that Frances is reported in WSPU newspaper Votes for Women''. On 1 March an estimated 150 women took part in window smashing in London's West End. She was charged for breaking a window the value of £8 at Pound and Co, trunk makers in Regent Street and was sentenced by the Magistrates to four months in prison, she was reported as saying: - “it was a political protest against injustice, made in her old age, and not with any malice”. Even in prison Frances Williams make clear her intention to protest for “full rights of political prisoners” and wrote to the Home Secretary. These records also show that she was one of 26 prisoners who went on hunger strike but were considered in too ill to be force fed. Her release was authorised by the Home Office on 22 June 1912. Another part of the same record notes the medical reasons for her being released: - “Over 65 years of age and presented indication of arterial degeneration. Would not be fed without considerable resistance involving some danger. Refused food. Likely to suffer from continued abstinence.” Corroboration for Williams being Outerbridge is also provided by her reception at a branch meeting of the Sydenham and Forest Hill branch of the WSPU, on her release, alongside Catherine Downing. The specific reasons for Frances using an alias is unclear but as discussed earlier the Outerbridges were a strongly influential family in Bermuda. Death Frances continued to reside with Caroline at 286 Devonshire Road Forest Hill until she died on 18 August 1934 at the age of 88. Probate was granted to Caroline on 11 October 1934. Sale of Hunger Strike Medal Frances's Hunger Strike Medal was sold at
known as Messier 100, or NGC 4321. It was discovered January 7, 2020 at an apparent magnitude of 17.28 by F. Forster and associates using the Zwicky Transient Facility. The position places it north of the galactic nucleus. The supernova was not detected on an observation made three days before the discovery, and thus it must have begun during that brief period. The light curve peaked around January 13–18, depending on the wavelength, then declined rapidly over a period of 25 days before flattening into a more gradual decline. Observations of the spectrum made with the SOAR telescope showed this to be a type Ic supernova, with the progenitor being a massive star that had its outer envelope stripped. The initial velocity of the expanding photosphere was . Models of the event give an initial (zero age main sequence) estimated mass of or for
during that brief period. The light curve peaked around January 13–18, depending on the wavelength, then declined rapidly over a period of 25 days before flattening into a more gradual decline. Observations of the spectrum made with the SOAR telescope showed this to be a type Ic supernova, with the progenitor being a massive star that had its outer envelope stripped. The initial velocity of the expanding photosphere was . Models of the event give an initial (zero age main sequence) estimated mass of or for the progenitor. It was a member of a binary star system and lost its outer envelope of hydrogen and helium due to interaction with its companion. The resulting helium-poor star was primarily made of carbon and oxygen with a mass of about . The supernova explosion was the result of a collapse of an inert iron core. The event ejected of material and left behind a neutron star
in the Football League for Leicester City and Sheffield United. References 1898 births 1957 deaths Scottish footballers Association football defenders English Football
City F.C. players Sheffield United F.C. players Southend United F.C. players Hinckley United F.C. players
the outer wall of the terminal building, causing a minor injury. In March 2012, the Captain E. Frank Thompson was delivered to Rockland Terminal to serve on the Vinalhaven route, replacing the Governor Curtis. The , vessel was built by C&G Boatworks in Mobile, Alabama, on a $9.25 million contract. It was the first addition to the Maine State Ferry Service fleet in 19 years. The Governor Curtis was retained as a backup ferry and has been used when other vessels experience mechanical issues. In a fall 2012 project, workers installed an automated ticketing system for the parking lot and backup generators for the motorized ferry ramps. A fall 2018 project added 12 parking spaces, upgraded the drainage system, and improved the traffic flow. In March 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the North Haven Select Board voted to block non-full-time residents from traveling to the island on the ferry. In March 2021, the terminal building was closed for several days after an employee tested positive for COVID-19, though ferry service was not suspended. Ferry routes Transit connections Concord Coach Lines serves the terminal, providing year-round intercity bus service on a route between Boston South Station and Bangor. The stop is part of the Amtrak Thruway network—riders can make ticketed transfers between the bus and the Downeaster at Portland Transportation Center. The terminal is within walking distance of Rockland station, which
solicited bids for construction of a new ferry terminal in Rockland. The following month, the Rockland City Council granted approval for the MPA to build a new slip at the site for use by the Vinalhaven ferry. Though harbormaster Bertram Snow warned the new slip would be vulnerable to storm damage, the MPA agreed to accept the liability. The current terminal building was built in the mid-1990s. In August 2011, a man accidentally drove a car through the outer wall of the terminal building, causing a minor injury. In March 2012, the Captain E. Frank Thompson was delivered to Rockland Terminal to serve on the Vinalhaven route, replacing the Governor Curtis. The , vessel was built by C&G Boatworks in Mobile, Alabama, on a $9.25 million contract. It was the first addition to the Maine State Ferry Service fleet in 19 years. The Governor Curtis was retained as a backup ferry and has been used when other vessels experience mechanical issues. In a fall 2012 project, workers installed an automated ticketing system for the parking lot and backup generators for the motorized ferry ramps. A fall 2018 project added 12
Takahashi, NeuN was first published as a three-one-shot chapter story in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Magazine from January 16 to April 17, 2017. It was later published as a as a full-fledged series in
Weekly Young Magazine from May 2017 to February 2020, with its chapters collected in six tankōbon volumes. Publication Written and illustrated by Tsutomu Takahashi, NeuN was first published as a three-one-shot chapter story in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Magazine from January 16 to April 17, 2017. It was later published as a as a full-fledged series in the same
Kotounová Šárka Krejníková Laura Lerchová Veronika Lorencová Barbora Machalová Natálie Mlýnková Adéla Škrdlová Norway The following is the Norwegian roster for the Girls' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Laura Rollins Ingrid Berge Marthe Brunvold Nora Christophersen Mabel Endrerud Karen Forgaard Hedda Havarstein Mia Isdahl Karen Jensen Thea Jorgensen Stine Kjellesvik Maren Knudsen Kaja Kristensen Malin Kristensen Ena Marie Nystrom Emilie Olsen Kamilla Olsen Millie Sirum Slovakia The following is the Slovak roster for the Girls' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Andrej Schöber Patrícia Agostonová Paula Cagáňová Alexandra Čorňáková Michaela Hájniková Kinga Horváthová Klaudia Kleinová Barbora Koysová Lívia Kubeková Nina Kučerková Simona Ležovičová Zuzana
roster for the Girls' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Laura Rollins Ingrid Berge Marthe Brunvold Nora Christophersen Mabel Endrerud Karen Forgaard Hedda Havarstein Mia Isdahl Karen Jensen Thea Jorgensen Stine Kjellesvik Maren Knudsen Kaja Kristensen Malin Kristensen Ena Marie Nystrom Emilie Olsen Kamilla Olsen Millie Sirum Slovakia The following is the Slovak roster for the Girls' ice hockey tournament at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics. Head coach: Andrej Schöber Patrícia Agostonová Paula Cagáňová Alexandra Čorňáková Michaela Hájniková Kinga Horváthová Klaudia Kleinová Barbora Koysová Lívia Kubeková Nina Kučerková Simona Ležovičová Zuzana Majeríková Sylvia Maťašová Andrea Rišianová Nikola Rumanová Dominika Sedláková Laura Sulíková Diana
It is found in Chile. References monticola Lizards of South America Reptiles of Chile Endemic fauna of
of South America Reptiles of Chile Endemic fauna of Chile Reptiles described in 1932
(Grupo Interdisciplinario de Expertos Independientes, GIEI) is the title shared by a series of committees of human rights experts appointed by the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights to investigate particular incidents or scenarios of human rights violations. Legal scholars described the first such group, focused on a mass "disappearance" in Mexico, as "the first experience
It can be replicated and contribute to the investigation of emblematic cases and regional settings where processes of mass victimisation have occurred." The instances of the Group so far are: Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts for the Ayotzinapa Case, established 2014, reactivated 2020 Interdisciplinary Group of Independent Experts for Nicaragua, created July 2018 Interdisciplinary Group
education at Madras College in St Andrews or Bell Baxter High School in Cupar. History The school was built in 1977 by the then Fife Regional Council Architectural Department, with Donald George Beaton working as the
of Newport-on-Tay, Fife. It teaches children between the ages of 3 and 12. School leavers typically continue their secondary education at Madras College in St Andrews or Bell Baxter High School in Cupar. History The school was
nine championships. Teams Record as a coach of national teams References External links Living people Dutch female curlers Dutch curling coaches Year of birth missing (living people) Place
level, she competed as the skip of the national women's team at two and nine
– 28 April 1857) was a Polish noble, physician and a Doctor of Medicine. Biography Franciszek Wróblewski was born to a wealthy family of Ślepowron coat of arms. He was the youngest of the three sons of Józef Wróblewski and Anna Wróblewska (née Eysmont). He attended Vilnius University, where he earned his title in the field of medicine.. On May 20, 1815 he earned M.D. degree in Medicine from Vilnius University on his
he married Zofia Szytler in Vilnius. Together they had three sons - Józef Onufry Wróblewski, Ludwik Franciszek Wróblewski and Franciszek Seweryn Wróblewski. He practiced medicine in Vilnius, where he was one of the most famous local doctors. For his merit he was awarded Order of Saint Anna by Emperor Nicholas I of Russia. Franciszek Wróblewski was buried at Rasos Cemetery. See also Wróblewski (Ślepowron) Notes 1789 births 1857 deaths Physicians from Vilnius Polish nobility Franciszek Recipients of the Order of
his sons, especially Jonathan. This is within a section comprising 1 Samuel 16 to 2 Samuel 5 which records the rise of David as the king of Israel. Text This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 27 verses. Textual witnesses Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Codex Cairensis (895), Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Fragments containing parts of this chapter in Hebrew were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls including 4Q51 (4QSam; 100–50 BCE) with extant verses 4–5, 10–13. Extant ancient manuscripts of a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint (originally was made in the last few centuries BCE) include Codex Vaticanus (B; B; 4th century) and Codex Alexandrinus (A; A; 5th century). Old Testament references : , Places Ashkelon Gath Mount Gilboa Ziklag Saul's death was reported to David (1:1–16) This chapter is a conclusion to the narrative about Saul and David. It opened with an Amalekite reporting to David about Saul's death which is an entirely different account to the one in 1 Samuel 31:3–5, because this messenger claimed he killed Saul on the dying king's request and as proof he presented the king's crown and armlet to David. The most likely explanation of the discrepancy is that the Amalekite was lying in order to gain favor with David. He came with 'clothes torn and dirt on his head' to show signs of grief, this could have been contrived to give authenticity to his account,
in this an opportunity to get rewards from the next king. However, the messenger describes himself as 'a resident alien' (gēr), who was bound by the laws of his adopted community (Leviticus 24:22), so his disregard for the sanctity of 'the LORD'S anointed' should be punished by death. This narrative confirms once again David's respect for YHWH's anointed, and also exonerates David entirely of the events leading to his succession, that David came innocently to be in possession of Saul's crown and armlet. Verses 1–2 Now it came to pass after the death of Saul, when David had returned from the slaughter of the Amalekites, and David had stayed two days in Ziklag, on the third day, behold, it happened that a man came from Saul’s camp with his clothes torn and dust on his head. So it was, when he came to David, that he fell to the ground and prostrated himself. "Ziklag": a city in the Negev (meaning "south", that is, in the southern area of Judah) which had been given to David by Achish son of Maoch, king of Gath, and for more than a year was used by David as a base from which he conducted military expeditions (1 Samuel 27:5–12). 1 Samuel 30:1–19 recorded that Ziklag was destroyed by the Amalekites while Saul fought the Philistines, so David and his men pursued and slaughtered the attackers as noted in this verse. "Clothes torn and dust on his head": outward expressions of grief, a common response to tragic news in the ancient Near East. David mourned Saul and Jonathan (1:17–27) The lament in this section can be attributed to David himself with a very personal expression of grief over the loss of Jonathan. The poem was preserved in an anthology known as the Book of Jashar (cf. Joshua 10:12–13; 1 Kings 8:12–13). It has a kind of refrain 'how the mighty have fallen', occurring in three places (verses 19, 25, 27), dividing the poem into sections (19–24, 25–27) and forming an inclusio bracketing the beginning and the ending. After stating that Israel's 'glory' has fallen, the poet wishes that the news be kept from the cities of the Philistines to prevent their exultation over Judah (verse 20), followed by curses on Mount Gilboa (verse 21), the scene of defeat, condemning it to barrenness. Then, David extols Saul and Jonathan (verses 22–24) as heroes who persevered in battle (verse 22), were strong and swift (verse 23) and joined in death as father and son (verse 23). He called the women of Israel to mourn Saul, who had brought them prosperity and luxury (verse 24). David specially vents his personal grief for Jonathan (verses 25b–26), and the word 'love' echoes once again the covenant of friendship between the two, before the final refrain in verse
English footballers Association football forwards English Football League players Blyth Spartans A.F.C. players Rotherham County F.C. players West Ham United F.C. players Leicester City F.C. players Tranmere Rovers F.C. players Halifax Town A.F.C.
was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Halifax Town, Leicester City, Rotherham County, Tranmere Rovers and West Ham United. References 1896 births 1947 deaths English
by Olen Hackett early in his career. He later was managed by George Maull. In c. 1921, he was named unofficial bantamweight state champion, a title he never lost. He later fought in the Madison Square Garden and several east coast cities, including Harlem, Albany, Chester, Brooklyn, and multiple others. Sund retired in 1928 with a lifetime record of 203–2–2, winning 98.55% of his fights. Later life and death Sund later worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad as an upholsterer. On August 30, 1951, Sund collapsed while visiting a friend and was pronounced dead upon arrival to
Fame in 1994. Boxing career A Delaware native, Sund started boxing around the age of 17 at shows staged in Wilmington. He "progressed rapidly and soon climbed to the top of local ranks in his class, by defeating all the glovemen who faced him," wrote The Evening Journal. Sund, who went by the ring names "Kid Sunn" and "Marty Sullivan," started his career by winning 53 straight fights and at one point had a career record of 87–1, including 19 consecutive knockouts. He was trained and often fought at the Keystone Field Club at East Fourth Street, and was managed by Olen
Lavinite () is a mixture of metal particles (usually iron) and sand held together by solidified molten sulfur. Instead of metal particles, magnesite could be used to give a whiter product. The idea was to make a material that looks like marble. It was invented c. 1912 by Willy Henker, who in that year opened the factory "Kunststein-Industrie W. Henker & Co" in Berlin, which was in operation until at least 1936. Henker produced decorative items from lavinite such as vases,
material that looks like marble. It was invented c. 1912 by Willy Henker, who in that year opened the factory "Kunststein-Industrie W. Henker & Co" in Berlin, which was in operation until at least 1936. Henker produced decorative items from lavinite such as vases, candlesticks, lamps, chandeliers and rosettes as well as letters and advertising signs. Lavinite products were usually black, less often white or colored, enameled or covered with "antique" bronze. Initially, the factory offered items in the Art Nouveau
coach of the men's basketball team from 1922 through 1938 and is third on the school's list of all-time coaching wins. He led the Bobcats to three Buckeye Athletic Association championships in the 1930s. After retiring from coaching be authored a book on the by-laws of 12 different sports which was subsequently used by many universities. Grover Center on the Ohio University campus in
coaching staff at Ohio after he graduated. He was the head coach of the men's basketball team from 1922 through 1938 and is third on the school's list of all-time coaching wins. He led the Bobcats to three
and disappearance of 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico. The group was established in 2014 and issued two reports by 2016. It was reactivated in 2020. Legal scholars described the Group as "the first experience of international monitoring carried out within a criminal
Rights to carry out a parallel investigation of the abduction and disappearance of 43 students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico. The group was established in 2014 and issued two reports by 2016. It was reactivated in 2020. Legal scholars described the Group as
to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Division 2 North The tournament was terminated due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Division 2 South The tournament was terminated due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Tōkai Division 1 The tournament was terminated due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Division 2 The tournament was terminated due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic.
26 due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Hokushinetsu Division 1 Division 2 Kansai Division 1 Division 2 Notes Kantō Division 1 Division 2 Kantō Playoffs Div 1/Div 2 Div 2/Prefectural Kyushu In the Kyushu Soccer League, drawn games were decided on penalty shootouts. The winners of these shootouts were awarded two points, while the losers were awarded one. Shikoku The tournament was terminated on Aug 11 due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Tohoku Division 1 The tournament was terminated on Sep 6 due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Division 2 North The tournament was terminated due to the restrictions caused by COVID-19 pandemic. League table at the time of abandonment Division 2 South The tournament
in Antigua and Barbuda founded on April 18th, 2017. The DNA is currently led by former MP and Senator Joanne Massiah. The party was founded after a disastrous leadership race within the United Progressive Party (which Massiah and her team withdrew from) following their defeat in the 2014 General Elections. Following UPP's Convention in 2015, Joanne Massiah, the then elected Member of Parliament for All Saint's East and St. Luke was expelled from the party on February 12th, 2017. Vision and Mission The vision of the Democratic National Alliance is to catalyze and deliver the transformation of Antigua and Barbuda. The mission of the Democratic National Alliance is "to develop an all inclusive organization by relying on the
and technology." Party Officers President – Col. Joanne Massiah 1st Vice President- Col. Bruce Goodwin 2nd Vice President- Col. Anthony Stuart Chairperson – Col. Malaka Parker Deputy Chairperson – Col. Louis Rivera Secretary General – Col. Gatesworth James Deputy Secretary General – Col. Majorie Parchment Communications Officer – Col. Chaneil Imhoff Chief Financial Officer – Col. Gameal Joyce Deputy Financial Officer – Col. Coady Joseph Mobilization Officer – Col. Kelton Dalso Electoral Results References Political parties by country Political parties in Antigua and Barbuda Political parties in
an away fixture against Ružomberok. Hezoučký remained in play for 54 minutes before being replaced by Giannis Niarchos. References External links 2000 births Living people Sportspeople from České Budějovice Czech footballers
is a retired Czech footballer who last played as a forward for Senica in Fortuna Liga. Hezoučký retired in the autumn of 2021 due to epilepsy. Club career FK Senica Hezoučký made his Fortuna Liga debut for Senica in an away fixture
the life of the University College". In 1929 she was one of the organisers of an exhibition organised by the Southampton Geographical Association, with the aim of supporting teachers to be informed about developments in geographical science. Miller gave financial support to the student geography society. During the Second World War, she taught map-reading to Royal Air Force personnel. She was appointed as Senior Lecturer in 1945, and in 1949 the Department of Geography split from the Department of Economics and Miller became head of the new department. She was one of the founding members of Southampton University's Senate. Miller retired in 1954 and died in 1967. Legacy Miller was described as "a most original teacher who caught and easily held the minds of students". The University of Southampton awards an annual Florence Miller prize in geography in
in 1889. Her first degree was in History from the University of Leeds; she graduated in 1911 and became a school teacher. Career In 1921 she became Lecturer in Geography at the University College of Southampton. She was Warden of Montefiore Hall and in the 1920s "had the difficult task of encouraging all those women students whose homes were in Southampton to take full part in the life of the University College". In 1929 she was one of the organisers of an exhibition organised by the Southampton Geographical Association, with the aim of supporting teachers to be informed about developments in
is coming to visit, and as such expels the cat from his best chair, but which—the moment the master has left—is allowed to return to the house and do as it will. Martial imagery is also strong, for example the references to courts, castles, sieges, prisons, ransoms, vassalage, treason and safe conduct, as Kaeuper notes; on occasion he refers to God in the feudal language of '"Sire Dieu". Other images are less obvious, for instance, Grosmont's assertion that a man's nose will give away whether or not he has been taking part in tournaments. In part, this loose structure was probably a direct result of the nature of its composition if, as has been surmised, that Grosmont wrote portions of it each day, dipping in and out of writing in between a myriad of other duties and responsibilities. The author The son and heir of Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster, and Maud Chaworth, Grosmont became one of King Edward III's most trusted captains in the early phases of the Hundred Years' War and distinguished himself with victory in the Battle of Auberoche. A late 14th-century chronicler described him as "one of the best warriors in the world", while Froissart calls him "a good knight" and a "valiant lord, wise and imaginative". Thomas Grey, writing a few years after Grosmont, called the duke "wise, full of glory, and valiant, and in his youth eager for honour and feats of arms, and before his death, a fiercely devout Christian". Several modern historians have agreed with this assessment; Margaret Wade Labarge, for example, has called him "one of the outstanding figures of a reign which abounded in colourful chivalric personalities". Grosmont, made Earl of Derby in 1337, Lancaster on his father's death in 1345 and a founding member and the second Knight of the Order of the Garter three years later. In 1351 he was created Duke of Lancaster, only the second such creation and the first non-royal dukedom. He was the wealthiest and most powerful peer of the realm, but, comments Janet Coleman, he was no scholar, something Grosmont readily admits; while his discussion of things religious is broad, imaginative and wide-ranging, he himself points out that he deliberately avoids "profound matters". Piety Grosmont was also religious, and Rothwell calls Le Livre "a long, painful act of contrition". Labarge argues that he was symbolic of the "more secular" 14th-century knight than his predecessor of the previous century, to whom crusading had still been an Holy state. His piety appears occasionally throughout his military campaigns. For example, when the citizens of Bergerac begged for mercy in return for surrender in 1345, Henry replied "who prays for mercy shall have mercy". When an indecisive chevauchée took him almost to Toulouse, Geoffrey the Baker's Chronicon describes how a Carmelite prior had "a silver banner with a picture in gold of the blessed virgin on it, and, amid a hail of missiles, he displayed the picture on his banner at the walls of the town and he caused the Duke of Lancaster and many of his army to kneel in devotion to it" in a spontaneous act of piety. Conversely, argues Richard Kaeuper, there are "perhaps contradictions in Lancaster's piety", as his 1346 raid into Poitou was particularly bloody, and involved the burning of many churches, demonstrating what Batt calls both "generous and unsparing...pitilessness as well as courtliness". This was to the extent that when Pope Clement heard of Grosmont's sacking of Saint-Jean-d'Angély abbey—in which, as well as emptying the house of its valuables the monks were taken captive and held to ransom—Clement wrote to the earl asking him to restrain his men from attacking religious buildings or ecclesistics. Grosmont's patronage reflected formal, expected religious practice of the 14th-century nobility, for example, by funding chantries in Lancaster. The year after writing Le Livre he founded a college and refounded St Mary de Castro, a college of secular canons at Leicester staffed by 30 monks with responsibility for the spiritual wellbeing of 100 poor persons, with 10 female nurses to attend to their physical health. Architectural historian John Goodall has suggested that in size the church was "magnificent and elegant", over 200 feet long. According to Pantin, Grosmont was responsible for funding nearly 100 prebendaries and other precariae between 1342 and his death. Grosmont's writings, however, argues Labarge, place him firmly in the milieu of "a new current of personal and emotional piety" who did not just read, but wrote, and in Grosmont's case was not afraid of combining both his natural religious feelings with real-world, empirical experience. He was not, says Pantin, "a leveller or a prude", as while accepting he was too fond of gorging himself, he recognised that that lifestyle was mandated for the aristocracy, if moderately, "according as their estate demands it". Life experiences in Le Livre Labarge argues that the number and range of metaphors Grosmont uses are testament to the breadth of his life experience and knowledge. Specific examples include that salmon are not truly such until they have lived in the sea first, before swimming upstream for breeding purposes (whereby sins are like salmon, which only become mortal when they reach the heart). Spring is the optimum time to drink goat's milk because of the fresh herbs the animal will have eaten by then. He includes a recipe for cooking capon in a bain-marie, what Batt calls "a classic recipe for chicken soup, necessary food for the convalescent" and the sinner also. Grosmont also uses the metaphor of hunting—a traditional aristocratic pastime—as a way of fighting sin. He describes his confessor as a forester whose job is, metaphorically, to maintain a balance in the chase between the animals and predators, in which the body is the park, a man's virtues are the game, under constant threat of attack from vice. He compares fighting in tournaments to Christ fighting the devil on behalf of mankind. Surgeons at the University of Montpellier were donated the bodies of executed criminals for dissection and research purposes; Grosmont uses this as a means of expressing his wish that his soul could be so opened up to expose its sin. his knowledge of the dangers of the sea probably stemmed from his official role as Admiral of the West and his numerous naval voyages. The comparison of his heart to a city marketplace, where all roads led to and therefore where all sin ends up, was clearly a reflection of every town's market day. Labarge describes how Grosmont One of the few occasions where Grosmont veers from real-life experience into medieval myth is in his description of curing frenzy (probably delirium) for which he prescribes the evisceration of a live cockerel which is then placed on the head of the patient; this is his metaphor for receiving the ointment of Christ's blood. Grosmont also demonstrates an understanding of the limits of his suggestions; for example, although he advocates theriac as a poison to destroy other poisons, he is also aware that, if a patient is already poisoned too badly, the new poison will make things worse rather than better. Grosmont would have been associated with medical practitioners of varying degrees of expertise, from battlefield surgeons to court physicians, and his use of medical imagery indicates he learned much from them. During his 1356 Siege of Rennes, for example, the French captain Olivier de Mauny entered the English camp, badly wounded; Grosmont saw to it that his surgeons gave him the best treatment and "healing herbs" they could. It is curious, suggests Batt, that with all Grosmont's life experience, his piety and all the religious foundations he has by now accomplished, that at no point does he refer directly to his personal, real-life religion, never mentioning, for example, his holy thorn or St Mary's Newarke, or even his family or friends. Likewise it is likely that some of his information—such as how to determine the freshness of a pomegranate —came not from experience but from contemporary works, such as a dietary. Historical context Written in Anglo Norman —the French dialect of medieval England—the Livre tells historians something as to Duke Henry's own upbringing and personality, albeit through his own words. He says he was a good looking youth, for example, but, as he was English, knew little French, and the learning that he had, had come to him late in life. Although Fowler comments that "on the latter point he was modest about his own accomplishment", Tavormina argues that this was not necessarily to be taken literally, as a number of similar expressions of self-apology are found in other contemporaneous texts and should be seen as intentional humility. On the other hand, suggests Batt, the breadth of his observations may include references to the Divine Comedy, and even if not, Le Livre "is clearly the work of a well-read and cultured author". Coleman suggests there is a tension between the admiration Grosmont had for the French language—being "respectful, rather humble" towards it—and his career as a great fighter in France against all things French. Grosmont may have been influenced by othern writers, such as Guillaume de Deguileville, whose treatment of the Lady Sloth character is similar to his, and even though he is not known to have possessed many books, he probably had access to Leicester Abbey's extensive library, which included over eighty medical books. Batt suggests that the lack of direct influence is useful in itself as a historical reference point as, having "no obvious identifiable single source", it sheds direct light on Grosmont's activities—more precisely, his view of his activities—over the preceding decade. Although Le Livre rarely touches on chivalry, Arnould has noted a stark difference in the Grosmont known to contemporaries and thence to historians—the great general, diligent royal servant and epitome of chivalry—and the one he presents himself, "so ingenuously humble and sometimes crudely frank". He also displays qualities of tenderness, dignity and "gentle candour" through his writing. These qualities are not, however, incompatible, argues Arnould, as the piety the author demonstrates combined with a lack of animosity towards enemies may back up the chivalric image rather than impinge upon it. Batt argues that Grosmont personifies the contradictions inherent in the medieval chivalric ideal vis-à-vis the warrior knight and the penitent Christian. The book also suggests the extent of Grosmont's own medical knowledge, and more broadly the extent to which continental expertise had impacted England; Grosmont's personal physician was from Bologna, for example. New medical concepts entwined with traditional religion as well; a confessional text from Exeter of 1340, for example, uses a similar metaphor to Grosmont, proposing that "Christ is the best physician". Grosmont also points out that wisest of physicians, as such is Christ, will not waste his precious medicine on the incurable. Audience and legacy Janet Coleman has pointed out that by this period, the English nobility was reading for both edification and pleasure, and Tavormina notes that the work's readership would have to be learned in French, which would have comprised the educated nobility, lawyers, ecclesiastics and upper-middle-classes: "a small religious elite", says linguist William Rothwell, and as such a very limited audience. It is one of the few devotional treatises which addresses the reader as well as the author; most of the period tended to be directed at the latter as if from an unknown superior. Le Livre, though, is as conscious of the author's sins as his audience's. Le Livre may have been a direct influence on John Gower's Mirour de l'Omme of lsaterr in the century; both are directed primarilly to an English social class who had the financial and social independence to control their own regious activity. Grosmont, notes Tavormina, "was remembered as the author of a devotional treatise for at least a century after his death". Mary de Percy, widow of John, Lord Ros, left a copy to Isabel Percy in 1394. Mary was connected to Grosmont through her father, whose first wife—not Mary's mother— was Grosmont's younger sister. This is not, however, the copy that descended through to Duke Humphrey, as that was presented to him by Thomas Carew, who died in 1429. The same copy appears to have been previously owned by John de Grailly, Captal de Buch, as both his and Humphrey's armorials are inscribed on various pages. Another reference to Le Livre comes in 1400, in the catalogue of Titchfield Abbey library, although this copy appears not to have had the title it was given by Grosmont, or indeed any other colophon. Later medieval historians drew clear links between Grosmont's political activity, and importance, and his piety. The chronicler Thomas Walsingham, for example, describes Grosmont as symbolically supporting his grandson's accession to the throne in 1399 by supposedly writing him a letter recounting the benefits of a chrism—which the author claimed to have brought back from the Holy Land—to new kings. In Batt's words, Walsingham "seamlessly links the divine and the political", with Grosmont the denominator. Thomas Otterbourne, writing around 1420, uses Grosmont as a trope for opening his own treatise, by explaining how the duke begs for mercy for his sins while simultaneously giving thanks for the good things he has enjoyed along the way. A late 14th century redaction of Edmund of Abingdon's Mirour de Seinte Eglyse also aligns Grosmont's piety with his wealth and power: Grosmont's college in Leicester (the "new werke", also a play on its location) is used as an example of his earthly power and wealth, which the poet then explains has been turned, on Grosmont's death, into spiritual wealth ("I hope he naue þeron not lost"). Scholarly history and reception Grosmont's Livre was originally produced in 26 folios, at least one of which was a family copy as denoted by his armorial decorating page borders; this version ended up—Maya, Mexica—in the extensive library of his great-grandson Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester. Copies may have been made in Grosmont's lifetime. Two entire copies are known of in the 21st century, one held at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and the other at Stonyhurst College, Lancashire. The substantive contents of both are identical, with only minor linguistic differences separating them. The Stonyhurst MS is the earliest, and also the most decorated with numerous coats of arms; that of Cambridge, while looking more modest, says Batt, has an "elegant blue animal skin chemise binding". The Livre had never been published until Henry Arnould's 1940 edition, which he based primarily on the Stonyhurst copy but compiled after examination of both that and the Cambridge copy. Arnould had intended for his edition to be accompanied by an extensive introduction, but this had to be curtailed on account of World War II breaking out in September 1939. Although Arnould promised a far fuller introduction than he was forced to provide, this did not appear until 1948, in French and published in Paris, and as such without the momentum of the original edition. Rothwell argues that medievalists will not find Arnould's description of Grosmont's life providing anything new to the field, or "have scant concern with the following hundred pages dealing in minute detail with the phonology, morphology, and a few syntactical points relating to the language". Le Livre offers, argues Arnould, "an allegorical, but autobiographical, account of Henry's sins and penances". Arnould had argued in 1937 that it was odd that the Livre—"the author of which is also one of the most prominent men of his time—should have hitherto passed unnoticed". He compares its "picturesque style" with that of St Francis de Sales, while Ackerman has suggested that, with its "engaging, anecdotal charm" it is close to the spirit of the Ancrene Riwle, which Grosmont probably knew of, either in English or French. The historian Scott L. Waugh has contextualised the Livre as being part of an "intense" lay involvement in religious affairs in the mid-14th century, more obviously seen in the building of chantries and chapels by the former for the latter. But the Livre, says Waugh, is "the most spectacular evidence" historians have for this phenomenon. Waugh notes that, while his patronage of the church was extremely generous, it was also a conventional expression of piety: "his Livre was not." McFarlane has argued that the Livre indicates the existence, in the nobility, of a class who were not only active in their traditional roles—warfare, royal service, estate management,
milk as a balm against sin, for example—were established tropes in religious writing. His senses are personalised. His body is a castle, with the walls his hands and feet, while his heart is the donjon "where innocence makes its last stand". A sow pregnant with seven offspring represent a worldly man bearing each deadly sin. Other metaphors for his heart—the area he devotes to his most complex and ambitious imagery—are a whirlpool, a foxhole and a public fair, or marketplace. The foxhole analogy is of interest, suggests Labarge, as it may reflect events going on in Grosmont's life at the time he wrote the particular paragraph. From March to April 1354 Grosmont was in negotiation with Guy of Boulogne via the medium of "a highly sarcastic exchange of letters" regarding England's attempts to recruit Charles of Navarre as an ally against France; Guy—believing he had prevented it—wrote that he had "stopp[ed] a mousehole", to which Grosmont retorted that "a mouse that knew of only one hole was likely to be in danger". These similes, argues Arnould, represent the hidden dangers of the sinful world, a place into which conscience is driven to corner sin, and a meeting place for the sins. Other similes are from the animal world, for example, a cat represents the devil in his allegorical tale of a poor man who cleans his house thoroughly to make it worthy of his master who is coming to visit, and as such expels the cat from his best chair, but which—the moment the master has left—is allowed to return to the house and do as it will. Martial imagery is also strong, for example the references to courts, castles, sieges, prisons, ransoms, vassalage, treason and safe conduct, as Kaeuper notes; on occasion he refers to God in the feudal language of '"Sire Dieu". Other images are less obvious, for instance, Grosmont's assertion that a man's nose will give away whether or not he has been taking part in tournaments. In part, this loose structure was probably a direct result of the nature of its composition if, as has been surmised, that Grosmont wrote portions of it each day, dipping in and out of writing in between a myriad of other duties and responsibilities. The author The son and heir of Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster, and Maud Chaworth, Grosmont became one of King Edward III's most trusted captains in the early phases of the Hundred Years' War and distinguished himself with victory in the Battle of Auberoche. A late 14th-century chronicler described him as "one of the best warriors in the world", while Froissart calls him "a good knight" and a "valiant lord, wise and imaginative". Thomas Grey, writing a few years after Grosmont, called the duke "wise, full of glory, and valiant, and in his youth eager for honour and feats of arms, and before his death, a fiercely devout Christian". Several modern historians have agreed with this assessment; Margaret Wade Labarge, for example, has called him "one of the outstanding figures of a reign which abounded in colourful chivalric personalities". Grosmont, made Earl of Derby in 1337, Lancaster on his father's death in 1345 and a founding member and the second Knight of the Order of the Garter three years later. In 1351 he was created Duke of Lancaster, only the second such creation and the first non-royal dukedom. He was the wealthiest and most powerful peer of the realm, but, comments Janet Coleman, he was no scholar, something Grosmont readily admits; while his discussion of things religious is broad, imaginative and wide-ranging, he himself points out that he deliberately avoids "profound matters". Piety Grosmont was also religious, and Rothwell calls Le Livre "a long, painful act of contrition". Labarge argues that he was symbolic of the "more secular" 14th-century knight than his predecessor of the previous century, to whom crusading had still been an Holy state. His piety appears occasionally throughout his military campaigns. For example, when the citizens of Bergerac begged for mercy in return for surrender in 1345, Henry replied "who prays for mercy shall have mercy". When an indecisive chevauchée took him almost to Toulouse, Geoffrey the Baker's Chronicon describes how a Carmelite prior had "a silver banner with a picture in gold of the blessed virgin on it, and, amid a hail of missiles, he displayed the picture on his banner at the walls of the town and he caused the Duke of Lancaster and many of his army to kneel in devotion to it" in a spontaneous act of piety. Conversely, argues Richard Kaeuper, there are "perhaps contradictions in Lancaster's piety", as his 1346 raid into Poitou was particularly bloody, and involved the burning of many churches, demonstrating what Batt calls both "generous and unsparing...pitilessness as well as courtliness". This was to the extent that when Pope Clement heard of Grosmont's sacking of Saint-Jean-d'Angély abbey—in which, as well as emptying the house of its valuables the monks were taken captive and held to ransom—Clement wrote to the earl asking him to restrain his men from attacking religious buildings or ecclesistics. Grosmont's patronage reflected formal, expected religious practice of the 14th-century nobility, for example, by funding chantries in Lancaster. The year after writing Le Livre he founded a college and refounded St Mary de Castro, a college of secular canons at Leicester staffed by 30 monks with responsibility for the spiritual wellbeing of 100 poor persons, with 10 female nurses to attend to their physical health. Architectural historian John Goodall has suggested that in size the church was "magnificent and elegant", over 200 feet long. According to Pantin, Grosmont was responsible for funding nearly 100 prebendaries and other precariae between 1342 and his death. Grosmont's writings, however, argues Labarge, place him firmly in the milieu of "a new current of personal and emotional piety" who did not just read, but wrote, and in Grosmont's case was not afraid of combining both his natural religious feelings with real-world, empirical experience. He was not, says Pantin, "a leveller or a prude", as while accepting he was too fond of gorging himself, he recognised that that lifestyle was mandated for the aristocracy, if moderately, "according as their estate demands it". Life experiences in Le Livre Labarge argues that the number and range of metaphors Grosmont uses are testament to the breadth of his life experience and knowledge. Specific examples include that salmon are not truly such until they have lived in the sea first, before swimming upstream for breeding purposes (whereby sins are like salmon, which only become mortal when they reach the heart). Spring is the optimum time to drink goat's milk because of the fresh herbs the animal will have eaten by then. He includes a recipe for cooking capon in a bain-marie, what Batt calls "a classic recipe for chicken soup, necessary food for the convalescent" and the sinner also. Grosmont also uses the metaphor of hunting—a traditional aristocratic pastime—as a way of fighting sin. He describes his confessor as a forester whose job is, metaphorically, to maintain a balance in the chase between the animals and predators, in which the body is the park, a man's virtues are the game, under constant threat of attack from vice. He compares fighting in tournaments to Christ fighting the devil on behalf of mankind. Surgeons at the University of Montpellier were donated the bodies of executed criminals for dissection and research purposes; Grosmont uses this as a means of expressing his wish that his soul could be so opened up to expose its sin. his knowledge of the dangers of the sea probably stemmed from his official role as Admiral of the West and his numerous naval voyages. The comparison of his heart to a city marketplace, where all roads led to and therefore where all sin ends up, was clearly a reflection of every town's market day. Labarge describes how Grosmont One of the few occasions where Grosmont veers from real-life experience into medieval myth is in his description of curing frenzy (probably delirium) for which he prescribes the evisceration of a live cockerel which is then placed on the head of the patient; this is his metaphor for receiving the ointment of Christ's blood. Grosmont also demonstrates an understanding of the limits of his suggestions; for example, although he advocates theriac as a poison to destroy other poisons, he is also aware that, if a patient is already poisoned too badly, the new poison will make things worse rather than better. Grosmont would have been associated with medical practitioners of varying degrees of expertise, from battlefield surgeons to court physicians, and his use of medical imagery indicates he learned much from them. During his 1356 Siege of Rennes, for example, the French captain Olivier de Mauny entered the English camp, badly wounded; Grosmont saw to it that his surgeons gave him the best treatment and "healing herbs" they could. It is curious, suggests Batt, that with all Grosmont's life experience, his piety and all the religious foundations he has by now accomplished, that at no point does he refer directly to his personal, real-life religion, never mentioning, for example, his holy thorn or St Mary's Newarke, or even his family or friends. Likewise it is likely that some of his information—such as how to determine the freshness of a pomegranate —came not from experience but from contemporary works, such as a dietary. Historical context Written in Anglo Norman —the French dialect of medieval England—the Livre tells historians something as to Duke Henry's own upbringing and personality, albeit through his own words. He says he was a good looking youth, for example, but, as he was English, knew little French, and the learning that he had, had come to him late in life. Although Fowler comments that "on the latter point he was modest about his own accomplishment", Tavormina argues that this was not necessarily to be taken literally, as a number of similar expressions of self-apology are found in other contemporaneous texts and should be seen as intentional humility. On the other hand, suggests Batt, the breadth of his observations may include references to the Divine Comedy, and even if not, Le Livre "is clearly the work of a well-read and cultured author". Coleman suggests there is a tension between the admiration Grosmont had for the French language—being "respectful, rather humble" towards it—and his career as a great fighter in France against all things French. Grosmont may have been influenced by othern writers, such as Guillaume de Deguileville, whose treatment of the Lady Sloth character is similar to his, and even though he is not known to have possessed many books, he probably had access to Leicester Abbey's extensive library, which included over eighty medical books. Batt suggests that the lack of direct influence is useful in itself as a historical reference point as, having "no obvious identifiable single source", it sheds direct light on Grosmont's activities—more precisely, his view of his activities—over the preceding decade. Although Le Livre rarely touches on chivalry, Arnould has noted a stark difference in the Grosmont known to contemporaries and thence to historians—the great general, diligent royal servant and epitome of chivalry—and the one he presents himself, "so ingenuously humble and sometimes crudely frank". He also displays qualities of tenderness, dignity and "gentle candour" through his writing. These qualities are not, however, incompatible, argues Arnould, as the piety the author demonstrates combined with a lack of animosity towards enemies may back up the chivalric image rather than impinge upon it. Batt argues that Grosmont personifies the contradictions inherent in the medieval chivalric ideal vis-à-vis the warrior knight and
2022 season, the Mets promoted Barnes to their major league coaching staff as their assistant hitting coach. References External links Jeremy Barnes: Notre Dame Fighting Irish 1987 births Living people Williamsport Crosscutters players Lakewood BlueClaws players Clearwater Threshers players Reading Phillies players Lehigh Valley IronPigs players Canberra Cavalry players Camden Riversharks players New Jersey Jackals players Major League Baseball hitting coaches New York Mets coaches People from Rowlett,
Baseball. Barnes attended the University of Notre Dame and played college baseball for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. He played professional baseball for the Philadelphia Phillies organization and in Australia from 2009 through 2015. After retiring as a player, Barnes began working on player development for the Canberra Cavalry of the Australian Baseball League. He spent four years working in the front office for the Houston Astros, including two years as their minor league hitting coordinator. The New York Mets interviewed Barnes for their position of director of playing
limits. Van Depoele's efforts had produced reliable electric traction, but the Minneapolis, Lyndale & Minnetonka Railway was suffering financially and could not adapt to the ordinance. This prompted the line to be leased to the Minneapolis Street Railway, later Twin Cities Rapid Transit, to operate the line and make the required improvements. First Avenue was electrified September 22, 1890 and the Motor Line was dissolved into First Avenue South streetcar lines. Marquette and 2nd Avenues became one-way streets in the 1950s. The first express buses to use Interstate I-35W used Marquette Ave and 2nd Ave while running through downtown in 1972. Contraflow bus lanes debuted on the corridor on September 29, 1974. Bus lanes were between 18 and 21 feet wide which is much wider than a standard 12 foot wide lane. North-south bicycle traffic in Minneapolis began changing in the late 1990s when proposals to ban bicycles from Nicollet Mall emerged. Bus drivers were concerned about unsafe conditions with sharing Nicollet Mall between bicycles and buses. One proposal had one direction of bus traffic on Nicollet Mall removed and bus traffic in that direction diverted to Marquette Avenue. The Minneapolis City Council was leaning towards separating north-south bus traffic onto Nicollet and Marquette until Metro Transit offered to help pay for installing bike lanes on Marquette Ave and 2nd Avenue in exchange for banning bicycles from Nicollet Mall for at least portions of the week. Ultimately bike lanes were installed on Marquette and 2nd Avenues in September 1998 and bicycles were banned from Nicollet Mall on weekdays from 6a.m. to 6p.m. Capacity problems The amount of bus traffic on the pair of lanes eventually overwhelmed the corridor's capacity and hampered operations. With bus stops on each block and only one bus travel lane, many buses would make two stops on each block with one at the beginning and the other at the end of the block. It regularly took buses two stop light cycles to progress to the next block. Attempts were made to improve the corridor's performance with mixed results that often had their own drawbacks. Some bus routes were scheduled to travel in general purpose lanes heading south on 2nd Avenue South where buses heading south on the corridor would normally use Marquette Ave. Other bus routes were moved to other streets like Nicollet Mall but travel times on Nicollet Mall were even slower than on the corridor. Faster travel times were available on nearby streets like Hennepin Avenue to the west or 3rd Avenue S to the east but both are further from downtown's central core. Minneapolis developed a transportation plan in 2006 that proposed adding a second bus lane to speed up bus travel by allowing buses to pass each other. The 10-year transportation plan proposed concentrating all express buses serving the suburbs to use the Marquette and 2nd Avenue pair of streets. While many express buses used Marquette and 2nd Avenues, some were still on Nicollet Mall. At the time there were also bike lanes on each street but the plan proposed that by removing the bike lanes and adding an additional bus lane, capacity in the corridor would be tripled. Wider sidewalks would also be added for riders waiting for the bus. Bus speeds in the corridor were only around at the time. When the transportation plan was approved by the city council in 2007 it was estimated that changes could happen in five years at the earliest and only after the two streets were reconstructed with the goal of using a federal grant to help pay for the changes. Without the federal grant, changes would happen in 2012 at the earliest instead of 2009. Funding and construction The federal government awarded the metropolitan region, as well as 4 other cities, funds in a program called the Urban Partnership Agreement in 2007. The $133 million grant would also fund other transit and roadway improvements like park and ride facilities, and toll lanes along I-35W. Almost 30 cities had competed for the grants and the state of Minnesota matched the grant with $55 million of their own funding in June 2008. A planned opening of December 2009 was given for the bus lane improvements. The overall cost of the Marq2 portion of the Urban Partnership Agreement project cost was $32 million. Construction was planned to begin after the 2008 Republican National Convention in September 2008. The project was constructed on an accelerated timeline that took roughly half the time it would typically take. Several techniques to ensure the accelerated construction timeline was successful were used including early coordination of utility relocation and bonuses for construction contractors. The work on Marquette and Second Avenues had a required completion of December 31, 2009, while other portions of the Urban Partnership Agreement project had later deadlines. By removing express buses from Nicollet Mall, the mall was changed to allow bicycle at all times of day where previously bicycles were banned during peak periods. The change to Nicollet Mall allowed the existing bicycle lanes on the Marquette and 2nd Avenue pair of streets to be removed. Bus traffic on Nicollet Mall was reduced by 35% with the move of buses to the Marq2 corridor which improved the experience for pedestrians and sidewalk cafe patrons on Nicollet Mall. The loss of bike facilities in the corridor concerned groups like the Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition which later became the transportation advocacy organization Our Streets Minneapolis. Along with allowing bicycles on Nicollet Mall all day, bicycles are allowed in the corridor bus lanes during off peak periods. Bus travel times in the corridor were expected to improve by 5-10 minutes for each of the 1,400 weekday bus trips. Adding the second bus lane increased capacity from about 60 buses per hour to 180 buses per hour. The corridor consolidated around 80% of downtown transit service on the two streets. With 14 routes shifted from Nicollet Mall, a total of 67 bus routes would utilize the corridor shortly after opening. Metro Transit as well as the six suburban transit authorities including Southwest Transit and Minnesota Valley Transit Authority began using the corridor when it opened on December 14, 2009. Operations since
in December 1885 and in January and February 1886, all of which proved to be unsatisfactory. The electric locomotive experienced intense vibrations and other mechanical problems, and current collection was unreliable. Van Depoele personally invested $25,000 () to prefect the system. The railway then adopted an experimental soda motor, where steam is generated by the addition of caustic soda to the boiler. These locomotives also proved to be unreliable. In 1887 Minneapolis passed an ordinance requiring the Motor Line to use cable or other source of power within city limits. Van Depoele's efforts had produced reliable electric traction, but the Minneapolis, Lyndale & Minnetonka Railway was suffering financially and could not adapt to the ordinance. This prompted the line to be leased to the Minneapolis Street Railway, later Twin Cities Rapid Transit, to operate the line and make the required improvements. First Avenue was electrified September 22, 1890 and the Motor Line was dissolved into First Avenue South streetcar lines. Marquette and 2nd Avenues became one-way streets in the 1950s. The first express buses to use Interstate I-35W used Marquette Ave and 2nd Ave while running through downtown in 1972. Contraflow bus lanes debuted on the corridor on September 29, 1974. Bus lanes were between 18 and 21 feet wide which is much wider than a standard 12 foot wide lane. North-south bicycle traffic in Minneapolis began changing in the late 1990s when proposals to ban bicycles from Nicollet Mall emerged. Bus drivers were concerned about unsafe conditions with sharing Nicollet Mall between bicycles and buses. One proposal had one direction of bus traffic on Nicollet Mall removed and bus traffic in that direction diverted to Marquette Avenue. The Minneapolis City Council was leaning towards separating north-south bus traffic onto Nicollet and Marquette until Metro Transit offered to help pay for installing bike lanes on Marquette Ave and 2nd Avenue in exchange for banning bicycles from Nicollet Mall for at least portions of the week. Ultimately bike lanes were installed on Marquette and 2nd Avenues in September 1998 and bicycles were banned from Nicollet Mall on weekdays from 6a.m. to 6p.m. Capacity problems The amount of bus traffic on the pair of lanes eventually overwhelmed the corridor's capacity and hampered operations. With bus stops on each block and only one bus travel lane, many buses would make two stops on each block with one at the beginning and the other at the end of the block. It regularly took buses two stop light cycles to progress to the next block. Attempts were made to improve the corridor's performance with mixed results that often had their own drawbacks. Some bus routes were scheduled to travel in general purpose lanes heading south on 2nd Avenue South where buses heading south on the corridor would normally use Marquette Ave. Other bus routes were moved to other streets like Nicollet Mall but travel times on Nicollet Mall were even slower than on the corridor. Faster travel times were available on nearby streets like Hennepin Avenue to the west or 3rd Avenue S to the east but both are further from downtown's central core. Minneapolis developed a transportation plan in 2006 that proposed adding a second bus lane to speed up bus travel by allowing buses to pass each other. The 10-year transportation plan proposed concentrating all express buses serving the suburbs to use the Marquette and 2nd Avenue pair of streets. While many express buses used Marquette and 2nd Avenues, some were still on Nicollet Mall. At the time there were also bike lanes on each street but the plan proposed that by removing the bike lanes and adding an additional bus lane, capacity in the corridor would be tripled. Wider sidewalks would also be added for riders waiting for the bus. Bus speeds in the corridor were only around at the time. When the transportation plan was approved by the city council in 2007 it was estimated that changes could happen in five years at the earliest and only after the two streets were reconstructed with the goal of using a federal grant to help pay for the changes. Without the federal grant, changes would happen in 2012 at the earliest instead of 2009. Funding and construction The federal government awarded the metropolitan region, as well as 4 other cities, funds in a program called the Urban Partnership Agreement in 2007. The $133 million grant would also fund other transit and roadway improvements like park and ride facilities, and toll lanes along I-35W. Almost 30 cities had competed for the grants and the state of Minnesota matched the grant with $55 million of their own funding in June 2008. A planned opening of December 2009 was given for the bus lane improvements. The
the President. Yeo also served as the deputy trade minister after his predecessor Yoo Myung-hee was promoted to the country's first woman trade minister. Along with various trade related roles in the government, he worked at World Bank Group's International Finance Corporation as its senior investment officer from 2010 to 2014. Yeo holds a bachelor's degree in business administration from Seoul National University as well as a Master of Public Administration and a MBA from Harvard
served as his secretary for New Southern and New Northern Policies at Office of the President. Yeo also served as the deputy trade minister after his predecessor Yoo Myung-hee was promoted to the country's first woman trade minister. Along with various trade related roles in the government, he worked at World Bank Group's International Finance Corporation
basketball season. They were led by 14th-year head coach Ralph Miller and played their home games on campus at Gill Coliseum in Corvallis, Oregon. Oregon State finished the regular season at 22–7 (15–3 Pac-10) and won a share of the conference title with Washington. Roster Schedule and results |-
a share of the conference title with Washington. Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |- !colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament Rankings NBA Draft References Oregon State Beavers men's
order, Morena Baccarin, Ryan Michelle Bathé, Kamal Angelo Bolden, Costa Ronin, Noah Bean, Jordan Johnson-Hinds, and Mark D. Espinoza were cast in starring roles. On November 18, 2021, Karl Josef Co and Massiel Mordan were added to the cast. The series premiered on February 21, 2022. Episodes Reception Critical response On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds a 27% approval rating based on 11 reviews, with an average rating of 4.7/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "While Morena Baccarin's vampish performance is commendably campy, The Endgame is too contrived and silly to justify its labyrinthine structure." On Metacritic, the series has a score of 44 out of 100, based on 7 reviews, indicating
Jake Coburn Productions, Inc., My So-Called Company, and Perfect Storm Entertainment are the production companies involved with producing the series. Upon the series order, Morena Baccarin, Ryan Michelle Bathé, Kamal Angelo Bolden, Costa Ronin, Noah Bean, Jordan Johnson-Hinds, and Mark D. Espinoza were cast in starring roles. On November 18, 2021, Karl Josef Co and Massiel Mordan were added to the cast. The series premiered on February 21, 2022. Episodes Reception Critical response On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds a 27% approval rating based on 11 reviews, with an average rating of 4.7/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "While Morena Baccarin's vampish performance is commendably campy, The Endgame is too contrived and silly to justify its labyrinthine structure." On Metacritic, the series has a score of 44 out of 100, based on 7 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Ratings References External links 2020s American crime drama television series
and soon instructed him to twist the film handle. After half a year, Sakhnenko received a movie mechanic, and then — a senior mechanics. In 1908, according to Arnold Cordyum, a representative of the famous French firm «Brothers Pate and Co» (Pathé), when he had arrived to Ekaterinoslav, man offered Sakhnenko to work as a correspondent for the film magazine «Pate» — the magazine, that see everything, know everything!». To do this, the reporter was provided with a film camera, several boxes of film and provided instructions. At the same year Sakhnenko make a film about the cholera epidemic in the city. When he took off the film on the Dnipro in 1910 for the company «Path», he received a letter of such content from it: «The cost of the material sent for the past year covers the cost of the cinemaarat, therefore, the removal apparatus goes to the ownership of the correspondent». So Sakhnenko took part in the first movie company in
do this, the reporter was provided with a film camera, several boxes of film and provided instructions. At the same year Sakhnenko make a film about the cholera epidemic in the city. When he took off the film on the Dnipro in 1910 for the company «Path», he received a letter of such content from it: «The cost of the material sent for the past year covers the cost of the cinemaarat, therefore, the removal apparatus goes to the ownership of the correspondent». So Sakhnenko took part in the first movie company in Ukraine «South-Russian Sinematographic Joint-Stock Company Sakhnenko, Shtolinin and Ко». In 1911 in Ekaterinoslav his own atelier «Family» and «South-Russian Sinematographic Joint-Stock Company Sakhnenko, Shtolinin and Ко» set the historical film «Zaporizhzhya Sich» about the feat of the Zaporozhian Cossacks and Koshtova Ataman Ivan Sulfur in battles against Tatars and Turks in the 17th century. This was the first Ukrainian gaming film. The picture was filmed with the participation of the descendants of The Zaporozhian Cossacks in the village Lotsmanska Kamianka (now — part of the Dnipro). This place was recognized as the most appropriate for filming, exploring the Dnipro River in the interval from Katerynoslav to Oleksandrivsk. In the summer of 1911, picturized performances during the tour of the theater of M. Sadovskyi in Katerynoslav, filmed the best productions of the troup — "Naimychka" I. Karpenko-Karogo and "Natalka Poltavka" I. Kotliarevskyi starring Zankovetska (the last film remained in the box office until 1930). 1912 — art film "Love
city of Skopje, North Macedonia. Featuring hip-hop, pop-rock and soul music, Ajdinis's debut single "Gentle" released in June 2019 peaked at number 12 in Albania. That year, "Walking the Line of Love" reached number 58 on the Albanian Top 100. His chart success followed into May 2020 with "Waste No Love", and his next single, "Back Around", peaked at number 35 in Albania. Another charting single, "Got Me All Down", was released in late 2020. In January 2022, the national broadcaster, Macedonian Radio Television (MRT), reported that Ajdini with his song "Dreams" was one of six artists shortlisted to compete at , the national selection competition for chosing the Macedonian representative at the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. Artistry Ajdini is primarily characterised as a indie pop and pop rock artist fusioning various music genres, including hip-hop and
Top 100. Ajdini was shortlisted to compete at the Macedonian national selection, , to select the nation's representative for the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. Life and career 2019–present: Formations and continued success Yon Idy was born as Jon Ajdini into an ethnic Albanian family in the city of Skopje, North Macedonia. Featuring hip-hop, pop-rock and soul music, Ajdinis's debut single "Gentle" released in June 2019 peaked at number 12 in Albania. That year, "Walking the Line of Love" reached number 58 on the Albanian Top 100. His chart success followed into May 2020 with "Waste No Love", and his next single, "Back Around", peaked at number 35 in Albania. Another charting single, "Got Me All Down", was released in late 2020. In January 2022, the national broadcaster, Macedonian Radio Television (MRT), reported that Ajdini with his song "Dreams" was one
member of the Firebirds squad that won the 2016 ANZ Championship. She missed the 2017 season with the birth of her first child. Since 2018, now playing as Hulita Veve, she has served as a Firebirds training partner. Veve played one match in 2021, the Round 14 match against Melbourne Vixens. Queensland state netball leagues Veve has played for Brisbane South Wildcats/QUT Wildcats in both the Queensland State Netball League and the HART Sapphire Series. In 2019 she captained Wildcats when they won the inaugural HART Sapphire Series title. She was subsequently awarded the Katie Walker Medal after being named the 2019 HART Sapphire Series MVP. She again played for Wildcats during the 2020 season. In 2021 she switched to the new franchise, QUT Netball, and helped them reach the grand final which they lost to Brisbane North Cougars. Australia In 2014 and 2015, Haukinima played for Netball Australia's Centre of Excellence team based out of the Australian Institute of Sport. In 2015 she played in a series of Netball World Cup warm-up matches against Scotland, Wales and Tasmanian Spirit. During the series she switched from her regular wing defence position and played primarily as a centre. She was subsequently named player-of-the-match in two of the three games. Honours Queensland Firebirds ANZ Championship Winners: 2016 Queensland Fusion Australian Netball League Runners up: 2014 Queensland Australian National Netball Championships Winner: Under-19 (2014) QUT Wildcats HART Sapphire Series Winners: 2019 QUT Netball HART Sapphire Series Runners up:: 2021 Individual Awards References Living people 1995 births Australian netball players Netball players from Queensland Queensland Fusion players Queensland
Sapphires. Queensland Firebirds Haukinima has been a member of Queensland Firebirds squads since 2016. She made her ANZ Championship debut for Firebirds on 1 April 2016 in a Round 1 match against Mainland Tactix. She was subsequently a member of the Firebirds squad that won the 2016 ANZ Championship. She missed the 2017 season with the birth of her first child. Since 2018, now playing as Hulita Veve, she has served as a Firebirds training partner. Veve played one match in 2021, the Round 14 match against Melbourne Vixens. Queensland state netball leagues Veve has played for Brisbane South Wildcats/QUT Wildcats in both the Queensland State Netball League and the HART Sapphire Series. In 2019 she captained Wildcats when they won the inaugural HART Sapphire Series title. She was subsequently awarded the Katie Walker Medal after being named the 2019 HART Sapphire Series MVP. She again played for Wildcats during the 2020 season. In 2021 she switched to the new franchise, QUT Netball, and helped them reach the grand final which they lost to Brisbane North Cougars. Australia In 2014 and 2015, Haukinima played for Netball Australia's Centre of Excellence team based out of the Australian Institute of Sport. In 2015 she played in a series of Netball World Cup warm-up matches against Scotland, Wales and Tasmanian Spirit. During the series she switched from her regular wing defence position and played primarily as a centre. She was subsequently named player-of-the-match in two of the three games. Honours Queensland Firebirds ANZ Championship Winners: 2016 Queensland Fusion Australian Netball League Runners up: 2014 Queensland Australian National Netball Championships Winner: Under-19 (2014) QUT Wildcats HART Sapphire Series Winners: 2019 QUT Netball HART Sapphire Series Runners
2018 under new general manager Brett Veach. On June 9, 2021, Poles was promoted to executive director of player personnel. Chicago Bears On January 25, 2022, Poles was named the general manager of the Chicago Bears, replacing Ryan Pace. Personal life Poles is married to his wife, Katie, and they have two children together. Poles graduated from Boston College with a degree in Communications in 2007. References External links Chicago Bears profile 1985 births Living people American football offensive linemen Boston College Eagles football players Chicago Bears executives Chicago Bears players Kansas City Chiefs executives Kansas City Chiefs scouts National Football League general managers People from Canandaigua, New York Players of American football from New York (state) All Wikipedia
scouting coordinator. In 2013, Poles was retained under new general manager John Dorsey. In 2016, Poles was promoted to director of college scouting. Poles was retained and promoted to assistant director of player personnel in 2018 under new general manager Brett Veach. On June 9, 2021, Poles was promoted to executive director of player personnel. Chicago Bears On January 25, 2022, Poles was named the general manager of the Chicago Bears, replacing Ryan Pace. Personal life Poles is married to his wife, Katie, and they have two children together. Poles graduated from Boston College with a degree in Communications in 2007. References External links Chicago Bears profile 1985 births
and education Thitiwat Ritprasert was born on March 26, 1997. He graduated from Rajamangala University of Technology Thanyaburi with a bachelor's degree in the Faculty of Mass Communication Technology. Career Thitiwat entered the entertainment industry by participating in the ‘Ch8 Asia New Star Model Contest Face of Thailand 2016’ and won the contest. He also got a special award from ‘Asia Model Festival 2016’. In 2017, he
Again (TV series). Early life and education Thitiwat Ritprasert was born on March 26, 1997. He graduated from Rajamangala University of Technology Thanyaburi with a bachelor's degree in the Faculty of Mass Communication Technology. Career Thitiwat entered the entertainment industry by participating in
(Now Union Pacific) in 1854. Duff and Cowan, from Pontiac platted it. Its post office opened in 1860 (now closed). The land was purchased by Charles Roadnight, then General Freight Agent of the Chicago, Alton & St. Louis Railroad, who soon after erected a small warehouse and depot. Part of the warehouse was used as a store, Alexander Martin generally attending to the business of Agent, Postmaster and storekeeper. April 30, 1870, Ocoya was officially surveyed and platted. In 1871, the first
Chicago, Alton & St. Louis Railroad, who soon after erected a small warehouse and depot. Part of the warehouse was used as a store, Alexander Martin generally attending to the business of Agent, Postmaster and storekeeper. April 30, 1870, Ocoya was officially surveyed and platted. In 1871, the first grain elevator was built and the Babtist church a year later. Overshadowed by Chenoa and Pontiac, it remained tiny. At one point, it contained two stores, a gas station, a church and school. It still has a grain elevator owned by Prairie Central Co-op and a few scattered homes and around 30 residents. Location Ocoya is located in Eppards Point Township, at an elevation of . Historic Route 66 runs parallel to the community's border. The
at the top of the bell tower: it took the form of a haddock (known locally as a Crail Capon) rather than the traditional cockerel form. An earlier iteration of the town hall section was erected in 1602 and replaced, to a design by John Corstorphine (1759–1826), in 1814. The design involved a main frontage of four bays facing Marketgate; the building was fenestrated with four standard sash windows on the ground floor and two tall sash windows in the first and third bays from the left on the first floor. The principal room was the council chamber of the Royal Borough of Crail on the first floor. Internal modifications to the structure, including work to the main doorway, were
took the form of a haddock (known locally as a Crail Capon) rather than the traditional cockerel form. An earlier iteration of the town hall section was erected in 1602 and replaced, to a design by John Corstorphine (1759–1826), in 1814. The design involved a main frontage of four bays facing Marketgate; the building was fenestrated with four standard sash windows on the ground floor and two tall sash windows in the first and third bays from the left on the first floor. The principal room was the council chamber of the Royal Borough of Crail on the first floor. Internal modifications to the structure, including work to the main doorway, were undertaken by John Currie (1839–1922) of Elie in 1886. The building continued to serve as the headquarters of the burgh council for much of the 20th century, but ceased to be the local seat of government when the enlarged North East Fife District Council was formed in 1975. However, the town hall, instead, became the meeting place of the Royal Burgh of Crail and District Community Council. The public library, which had been based in the town hall, closed as part of a broader programme of library closures, in 2016. The Lord Lyon King of
Moratorium on the use of the death penalty, and it has rejected the United Nations Human Rights Council's recommendation to formalize a moratorium on the death penalty, abolish capital punishment, or amend its death penalty laws so that it abides by its international treaty obligations. Executions in Lesotho are carried out by hanging. However, Lesotho does not have a formal professional executioner or hangman; for Lesotho's latest execution, authorities brought over a hangman from another country to carry it out. All death sentences handed down in Lesotho are subjected to an automatic appeal process. The sentences are handed down by a High Court, after which the Court of Appeals reviews the sentences. It is extremely rare in Lesotho for a death sentence to withstand the appeals process; most death sentences are overturned on appeal. Pre-independence history One prominent historical example of a death penalty case in Lesotho prior to its independence from the United Kingdom occurred in 1948, when Chief Bereng Griffith Lerotholi, the principal chief of Phamong, and Chief Gabasheane Masupha, the principal chief of 'Mamathe in Berea, were convicted of carrying out the drowning medicine murder, or diretlo, of a man named 'Meleke Ntai on 4 March 1948. After being sentenced to death on 15 November 1948, they were executed by hanging at dawn on 3 August 1949. The chiefs' executions took place in a jail in Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, then known as Basutoland. The chiefs had several accomplices in carrying out the murder, and some of the accomplices were executed as well. The highly publicized executions of Chiefs Lerotholi and Masupha, two high-ranking officials, were hoped to have been deterrents to prevent others from carrying out similar crimes, but similar murders continued occurring anyway, albeit less consistently. Another pre-independence death penalty case in Lesotho occurred in the 1950s, when another prominent chief and his accomplice were sentenced to death in November 1953 for the medicine murder of a man named Makotomane Mokale. On 9 February 1962, a group of eight people - four men and four women - kidnapped a two-year-old girl from her home and kept her in another village for two weeks, torturing her before they murdered her. The motive was again medicine. The participants, identified as Tsiu Lethola, Mookameli Lethola, Matsoana Lethola, Masaemone Lethola, Mapholo Lethola, Thebethe Mahaliza, Mamolieki Mahalika, and Malethola Lethola, were all arrested and put on trial for their involvement in the crime. On 5 March 1963, the Basutoland News reported that the High Court in Maseru had sentenced all eight people to death on 8 February 1963. The Lesotho Court of Appeals upheld the appellants' death sentences in June of the same
in Lesotho is legal. However, despite not having any official death penalty moratorium in place, the country has not carried out any executions since the 1990s and is therefore considered de facto abolitionist. Capital punishment law Lesotho's death penalty law treats the death penalty as a mandatory punishment for capital crimes that a judge must impose unless that judge finds mitigating factors. However, Mosotho judges still rarely hand down death sentences, and it is also extremely rare for appellate courts to uphold death sentences. In 2021, there were only two people on death row in the country, although in recent years prior, death row had remained empty due to both the number of times judges refused to hand down death sentences, and the number of times appellate courts would not uphold death sentences on appeal. Although Lesotho is de facto abolitionist, the country is not a signatory or a party to any of the United Nations protocols that would signify their commitment to abolishing the death penalty, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Second Optional Protocol to the ICCPR pertaining to the abolition of the death penalty within each signatory's borders. When it came to the United Nations moratorium resolution, Lesotho abstained from voting. Lesotho has also abstained from voting on all four of the United Nations General Assembly's Resolutions on a Global Moratorium on the use of the death penalty, and it has rejected the United Nations Human Rights Council's recommendation to formalize a moratorium on the death penalty, abolish capital punishment, or amend its death penalty laws so that it abides by its international treaty obligations. Executions in Lesotho are carried out by hanging. However, Lesotho does not have a formal professional executioner or hangman; for Lesotho's latest execution, authorities brought over a hangman from another country to carry it out. All death sentences handed down in Lesotho are subjected to an automatic appeal process. The sentences are handed down by a High Court, after which the Court of Appeals reviews the sentences. It is extremely rare in Lesotho for a death sentence to withstand the appeals process; most death sentences are overturned on appeal. Pre-independence history One prominent historical example of a
Railroad. He was a consultant to the Nelson Rockefeller administration for rail commuter problems in the state and to the Moreland Act commission to draft legislation on overhauling the state's liquor laws. In 1968, he was named a member of the governing council of the Administrative Conference of the United States. He joined the law firm Rosenman & Colin in 1969, specializing in securities and corporate mergers, and was named of counsel in 1987. In 1976, he was elected president of the
the United States. He joined the law firm Rosenman & Colin in 1969, specializing in securities and corporate mergers, and was named of counsel in 1987. In 1976, he was elected president of the Columbia College Alumni Association. He served as a trustee of Columbia University and received a John Jay Award in 1988. Golub died on March 28, 1994, at Mount Sinai Medical Center at age 79. References 1915 births 1994 deaths 20th-century
that they have to fight for their rights. She tries to get them justice to their original issues by her work. She has done her graduation from Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) Central University, Delhi, Post-Graduation from Indian Institute of Mass Communication in Radio and Television Journalism and MPhil in Mass Communication from Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar Central University. She has done some research papers on women and Dalit's issues. In March 2014 she was awarded Lt. Alok Tomar Smriti's first scholarship, which gives excellence and Dalit student during their IIMC's Course. She awarded IIMCAA Award 2019 (IIMCAA: Indian Institute of Mass Communication Alumni Association) for her excellent journalism. As well, she got two awards from IIMCAA Award 2020. It was
open letter to Kangana Ranaut was published in 'The Wire'. It was published in various Indian languages and the Nepali language. She lives in Delhi. Her stories basically based on Dalits (unprivileged community), Muslims and Women, reason behind in India they are in such condition that they have to fight for their rights. She tries to get them justice to their original issues by her work. She has done her graduation from Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI)
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to
municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013
Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 470. References Populated places
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population
- Centar is a village in the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013
the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the
Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 685.
combined forces of Amir Hamza of the Qaraqaytaq usmis, Mohammad khan of Qaziqumuq, Umma khan of Avar, as well as the detachments of Tabasaran kadisi Rustam, Jangutayli Ali sultan, Dishsiz Mohammad moved towards Quba. Kostyukov, Anderi and other feudal lords also represented this coalition. The organizer of the march was Fatali khan's uncompromising enemy Amir Hamza. The feudal lords of South Dagestan were moving so fast that the people of Quba were unable to gather new forces to repel them. On the other hand,
the Avar khan and his sons. Fatali khan and his enemies met in the Gavduşan steppe near Khudat. Initially, the advantage was on the side of Fatali khan. However, Usmi's son Ali Bey inflicted a heavy blow on the center of Quba troops and the course of the battle changed. There were huge losses on both sides. Toothless Muhammad, Gazikumuglu Eldar bey and Sheikh Ali bey were killed. Defeated, Fatali khan could not take a stand in Quba and retreated to Salyan. After the heavy defeat, Fatali khan sent one of his close people to negotiate with Major General
of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 142. References Populated
all Bosniaks. References Populated places in Kladanj
the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
custom-style milkshakes. Today, the company is known by consumers in part for its unique foil-topped, vintage-style glass milkshake bottles, which customers are allowed to take with them when they leave. In 2014, Agastya Dalmia, the grandson of Ram Krishna Dalmia partnered with his friend Aman Arora in attempts to revive the brand, working in part with a few old recipes of the milkshake that Ram Krishna Dalmia had devised. As Dalmia and Arora had no experience in the restaurant business, they attempted to recruit restaurateur Sohrab Sitaram in their endeavor, who declined the offer to work with the brand at the time. Dalmia and Arora continued anyway, opening their first restaurant in the Pitampura area of Delhi in 2014, but did not meet success, closing less than a year later. Sitaram later eventually joined as a partner in the endeavor. In 2019, the company went to the Delhi High Court in protest about one of the company's licensees, which was alleged to have been purveying Keventers products using inferior milk. During that time, the judge stated to company lawyers that he had sampled products at several outlets and that the brand is "no longer as good as it used to be" and deemed them as "not at all fit for consumption." At the time, the franchisee stated that they had made significant improvements, and the judge stated that the licensee and Keventers should utilize dispute resolution mediation to resolve the matter, and did not impose any injunction against the licensee. After the judge's statement, some consumers discussed the matter on Twitter expressing disappointment with the product. In 2021, the company had a combined total of over 200 kiosks, cafés
Milk Products Private Limited, which also produces other dairy products. Keventers specializes in classic and custom-style milkshakes. Today, the company is known by consumers in part for its unique foil-topped, vintage-style glass milkshake bottles, which customers are allowed to take with them when they leave. In 2014, Agastya Dalmia, the grandson of Ram Krishna Dalmia partnered with his friend Aman Arora in attempts to revive the brand, working in part with a few old recipes of the milkshake that Ram Krishna Dalmia had devised. As Dalmia and Arora had no experience in the restaurant business, they attempted to recruit restaurateur Sohrab Sitaram in their endeavor, who declined the offer to work with the brand at the time. Dalmia and Arora continued anyway, opening their first restaurant in the Pitampura area of Delhi in 2014, but did not meet success, closing less than a year later. Sitaram later eventually joined as a partner in the endeavor. In 2019, the company went to the Delhi High Court in protest about one of the
In the round of 48, Ball State was defeated by SMU 83–69. Format Only the top six in the regular season conference standings participated, with the bottom four teams left out. Two teams received a bye to
MetroCentre in Rockford, Illinois. Miami (OH) defeated , 42–40 in the championship game, to win its second MAC Tournament title. The Redskins earned an automatic bid to the 1984 NCAA Tournament as No. 9 seed in the West region. In the
as Baylup, Toodyay or Fremantle. He was the son of Louisa Harris or Tulk and Edward Marshall, a convict who originally arrived in Western Australia aboard Ramillies in 1854. Marshall served as a councillor for the Western Australian towns of Fremantle (resigned in 1895) and Cue (from 1906). He served in the Western Australian Legislative Council as the third member for West Province from 1894 to 1895. In his
Fremantle. He was the son of Louisa Harris or Tulk and Edward Marshall, a convict who originally arrived in Western Australia aboard Ramillies in 1854. Marshall served as a councillor for the Western Australian towns of Fremantle (resigned in 1895) and Cue (from 1906). He served in the Western Australian Legislative Council as the third member for West Province from 1894 to 1895. In his final years, Marshall operated as licensee of the Great Fingall and Day Dawn hotels. On 28 December 1909, he died in Day
(including JFDA brand products) Agricultural products (Shiitake mushroom, black fungus, dried radish, etc.) External links Official website YouTube Channel References Companies based in Kobe Companies
company based in Kobe, Japan. Established in 1970, the company's line of business includes the wholesale distribution of groceries and
was consolidated as the 1st Cumberland Artillery Volunteers with four batteries, later augmented to seven: Headquarters (HQ) at Carlisle No 1 Battery at Whitehaven from 1st AVC No 2 Battery at Carlisle from 2nd AVC No 3 Battery at Maryport from 3rd AVC No 4 Battery at Carlisle from 2nd AVC No 5 Battery at Workington formed on 26 May 1883 No 6 Battery at Silloth formed on 3 May 1884 No 7 Battery at Workington formed on 23 June 1886 The increase in companies entitled the corps to a lieutenant-colonel in command from 1884. The new battery at Silloth had two 64-pounder guns in the Proof Works of Armstrong Mitchell's engineering works. The last smoothbore guns were withdrawn from the practice batteries at Whitehaven and Maryport in 1891 and replaced with RML 64-pounders. In 1893 the corps received its first breechloading gun, an RBL 40-pounder at Carlisle. In 1897–8 the corps introduced an ambulance detachment and a signal section. During the Second Boer War over 200 officers and men of the corps volunteered for active service, and over 60 more for home service. These offers were not accepted, but 18 members of the Cumberland Artillery did serve in South Africa in the Regulars, the Imperial Yeomanry or colonial units. The 1st Cumberland was included in the Northern Division of the Royal Artillery (RA) from 1 April 1882, transferring to the Southern Division when the Northern Division was abolished on 1 July 1889. On 1 June 1899 all the Volunteer artillery units became part of the Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA) and with the abolition of the RA's divisional organisation on 1 January 1902, the unit became the 1st Cumberland RGA (Volunteers). In 1901 the corps opened the first drill hall that it owned outright, at Edkin Street, Workington. Its HQ was at Artillery Hall, Albert Street, Carlisle. Territorial Force When the Volunteers were subsumed into the new Territorial Force (TF) under the Haldane Reforms of 1908, the 1st Cumberland RGA (V) became the IV (or 4th) East Lancashire (Howitzer) Brigade, Royal Field Artillery and it gained the subtitle The Cumberland Artillery the following year. Brigade HQ at Edkin Street Drill Hall, Workington 1st Cumberland Battery (Howitzer) at Carlisle 2nd Cumberland Battery (Howitzer) at Workington 4th East Lancashire Ammunition Column at Workington, Right Section at 51 Curzon Street, Maryport The brigade formed part of the divisional artillery for the TF's East Lancashire Division. Before World War I broke out, the brigade was equipped with four 5-inch howitzers to each battery, and commanded by Lt-Col J.H. Dudgeon, VD. World War I Mobilisation Units of the East Lancashire Division had been on their annual training when war came: on 3 August they were recalled to their drill halls and at 17.30 next day the order to mobilise was received. The men were billeted within reach of their drill halls while the mobilisation process went on. On 10 August, TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service. The infantry brigades of the East Lancashire Division volunteered by 12 August and soon 90 per cent of the division had signed up. On 15 August 1914, the War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had opted for Home Service only, and form these into reserve units. On 31 August, the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix and would absorb the flood of volunteers coming forwards. In this way duplicate batteries, brigades and divisions were created, mirroring those TF formations being sent overseas. 1/IV East Lancashire Brigade, RFA On 20 August the East Lancashire Division moved into camps around Bolton, Bury and Rochdale, and on 5 September it received orders to go to Egypt to complete its training and relieve Regular units from the garrison for service on the Western Front. It embarked on a convoy of troopships from Southampton on 10 September, and landed at Alexandria on 25 September, the first TF division to go overseas. However, only two brigades of its divisional artillery accompanied it, and 1/IV East Lancs was one of those left behind. On 10 October the brigade moved, with its 2nd Line recruits, to Crownhill Fort, Devon, and then on 17 November it went to Newcastle upon Tyne to continue its training. 1/IV East Lancs Bde did not reach Alexandria until 14 June 1915, by which time the rest of the East Lancashire Division (now designated 42nd (East Lancashire) Division) had been landed at Cape Helles on the Gallipoli Peninsula and taken part in the Second and Third Battles of Krithia. From Alexandria the brigade (without its ammunition column) landed at Helles between 9 and 11 August 1915 where the division had just fought the bloody Battle of Krithia Vineyard. After a short period in reserve, 42nd (EL) Division then spent the following months engaged in Trench warfare, suffering from sickness, and then from bad weather as winter set in. Between 27 and 31 December the exhausted infantry of 42nd (EL) Division were evacuated from Helles to Mudros, but the divisional artillery stayed behind, supporting 13th (Western) Division. The last Turkish attack at Helles was beaten off on 7 January 1916, but a full evacuation was already under way. As 13th (W) Division's modern guns were withdrawn, they were replaced with the old ones of 42nd (EL) Division, so that fire was maintained without obvious slackening. Finally, those old guns that could not be got away were destroyed, and 13th (W) Division was evacuated to Mudros on the night of 8/9 January. CCXIII Brigade, RFA 42nd (EL) Division was then sent from Mudros back to Egypt, the bulk of the RFA embarking on 14 January in a storm. The division concentrated at Mena Camp on 22 January before moving into southern sector of the Suez Canal defences. Once back in Egypt 1/IV East Lancs Bde was reunited with its ammunition column. On 31 May 1916 1/IV East Lancs Bde was numbered CCXIII (213) Brigade, RFA, and the howitzer batteries designated A (H) and B (H). In the summer they were rearmed with modern 4.5-inch howitzers. The canal defences were situated east of the waterway, with a string of self-contained posts, each garrisoned by an infantry battalion and an artillery battery. The division did out much of the construction and trained in the desert, the gunners carrying out field firing with their new guns. The gun wheels were fitted with 'ped-rails' to assist movement across soft sand, for which 12 rather than 6 horses were harnessed to gun-carriages and limbers. In late July the division was ordered north, where a Turkish column was advancing on the defences. This column was defeated at the Battle of Romani near Pelusium on 4–5 August, after which 42nd (EL) Division set off in pursuit. The men and horses suffered badly from lack of water, but the Turks lost heavily. The division then returned to the Romani and Pelusium area by 15 August, with the bulk of the artillery and ammunition columns at Kantara and Ballah. The policy now was to distribute the howitzer batteries among the field gun brigades of divisional artillery. CCXIII Brigade was thus broken up on 26 December 1916: A Bty became C (H) (later D (H)) Bty of CCXI (1/II East Lancashire) Bde and B Bty became C (H) (later D (H)) Bty of CCX (1/I East Lancashire) Bde. In January 1917 42nd (EL) Division was ordered to the Western Front and it embarked in February. The two Cumberland batteries fought with their new brigades in 42nd (EL) Division for the rest of the war on the Western Front, including the operations on the Flanders coast in 1917, the defence against the German Spring Offensive in March 1918, and the Allies' final Hundred Days Offensive. 2/IV East Lancashire Brigade, RFA The 2nd Line units of the East Lancashire Division were raised in September and October 1914, with only a small nucleus of instructors to train the mass of volunteers. 2/IV East Lancs (H) Bde was quickly formed with 2/1st and 2/2nd Cumberland (H) Btys, and on 10 October accompanied 1/IV East Lancs
waterway, with a string of self-contained posts, each garrisoned by an infantry battalion and an artillery battery. The division did out much of the construction and trained in the desert, the gunners carrying out field firing with their new guns. The gun wheels were fitted with 'ped-rails' to assist movement across soft sand, for which 12 rather than 6 horses were harnessed to gun-carriages and limbers. In late July the division was ordered north, where a Turkish column was advancing on the defences. This column was defeated at the Battle of Romani near Pelusium on 4–5 August, after which 42nd (EL) Division set off in pursuit. The men and horses suffered badly from lack of water, but the Turks lost heavily. The division then returned to the Romani and Pelusium area by 15 August, with the bulk of the artillery and ammunition columns at Kantara and Ballah. The policy now was to distribute the howitzer batteries among the field gun brigades of divisional artillery. CCXIII Brigade was thus broken up on 26 December 1916: A Bty became C (H) (later D (H)) Bty of CCXI (1/II East Lancashire) Bde and B Bty became C (H) (later D (H)) Bty of CCX (1/I East Lancashire) Bde. In January 1917 42nd (EL) Division was ordered to the Western Front and it embarked in February. The two Cumberland batteries fought with their new brigades in 42nd (EL) Division for the rest of the war on the Western Front, including the operations on the Flanders coast in 1917, the defence against the German Spring Offensive in March 1918, and the Allies' final Hundred Days Offensive. 2/IV East Lancashire Brigade, RFA The 2nd Line units of the East Lancashire Division were raised in September and October 1914, with only a small nucleus of instructors to train the mass of volunteers. 2/IV East Lancs (H) Bde was quickly formed with 2/1st and 2/2nd Cumberland (H) Btys, and on 10 October accompanied 1/IV East Lancs Bde to Crownhill Fort, where it remained for the rest of the year. Trainining was slow because the 2nd Line artillery lacked guns, sights, horses, wagons and signal equipment. On 10 February 1915 the brigade went to Southport in Lancashire, then on 23 May to East Grinstead in Sussex. Here it received its first two guns (two old 5-inch howitzers) and limbers on 3 June. The 2nd East Lancashire Division, now numbered 66th (2nd EL) Division, began concentrating in Kent and Sussex in August 1915, and 2/IV East Lancs Bde took up its war station at Plaw Hatch, near Forest Row. At the turn of the year the brigade was issued with modern 4.5-inch howitzers and in early 1916 the division moved into the East Coast defences, with its artillery at Colchester. However, on 4 May 2/IV East Lancs Bde was broken up before receiving a number. The two batteries became D (H)/CCCXXXI (2/II East Lancs) and D (H)/CCCXXXII (2/III East Lancs). After long delays caused by having to find reinforcement drafts for 42nd (EL) Division, 66th (2nd EL) Division was finally ready for overseas serve. The two Cumberland batteries served with their new brigades on the Western Front, at the Battle of Poelcappelle in October 1917 and against the German Spring Offensive. 66th (2nd EL) Division was withdrawn from the front line after the Spring Offensive, but despite their losses the divisional artillery remained in action throughout 1918 until the Armistice with Germany. Postwar When the TF was reconstituted on 7 February 1920, the 1st and 2nd Cumberland batteries were reformed, but now numbered 15 and 16 as part of the 1st East Lancashire Brigade. After the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army (TA) in 1921, this became 51st (East Lancashire and Cumberland) Brigade with the two Cumberland batteries numbered 203 and 204. Then in June 1922 the brigade transferred its number and the two Cumberland batteries to 93rd (Westmorland & Cumberland) Bde, which had been created by the postwar conversion of the Westmorland and Cumberland Yeomanry from cavalry to field artillery. The new 51st (Westmorland & Cumberland) Bde consisted of 203 and 204 (Cumberland) Btys together with two Yeomanry batteries. Just before World War II it split into two regiments. 203 (Cumberland) Battery served independently in the Norwegian Campaign, then with 51st (W&C) Regiment in North Africa, including the Siege of Tobruk, and finally as part of a 'Chindit' long range penetration infantry column in Burma. After the war the successor units were finally merged into the Border Regiment by 1967. Insignia The batteries of the IV East Lancashire Bde, RFA (TF), wore a brass shoulder title with 'T' over 'RFA' over 'CUMBERLAND', while the ammunition column carried the same 'T' over 'RFA' over 'E. LANCASHIRE' worn by the rest of the 42nd (EL) Divisional Artillery. Commanders Honorary Colonel When the Cumberland Artillery was first formed, the Lord Lieutenant of Cumberland (a position often held by the Earls of Lonsdale) was recognised as the unit's Honorary Colonel ex officio. Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale, was appointed Hon Col of the Cumberland Artillery on 20 December 1884, and continued in the position with the IV East Lancashire Brigade. He was also Hon Col of the Westmorland & Cumberland Yeomanry, and continued in the role with the combined 51st (W&C) Brigade until 1937. Commanding officers The following officers commanded the Cumberland Artillery and IV East Lancashire Brigade: Maj Thomas Salkeld, appointed 10 July 1860, resigned 11 July 1877 Maj Wilton W. Wood, promoted 11 July 1877 (promoted Lt-Col 16 May 1884), resigned 2 July 1887 Lt-Col Charles Armstrong, promoted 2 July 1887, resigned 25 April 1888 Lt-Col Tom G. Godding, promoted 26 April 1888, resigned 29 September 1891 Lt-Col William Henry Atkinson,
was profitable in the 1920s and early 1930s. Before the United States entered World War II, the US's neutrality, ended much of the lines trade. Dockendorff stepped down as a principal executive in 1934. In 1934 he sold the only ship he had the SS New Britain which he had purchased in 1918, the other 20 ships were government owned. During World War II the company sold most of its American Diamond Line ships and moved to charter shipping. During World War II Black Diamond Steamship Company was active with charter shipping with the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. During wartime, the Black Diamond Steamship Company operated Victory ships and Liberty shipss. The ship was run by its crew and the US Navy supplied United States Navy Armed Guards to man the deck guns and radio. The most common armament mounted on these merchant ships were the MK II 20mm Oerlikon autocannon and the 3"/50, 4"/50, and 5"/38 deck guns. After the war there were many surplus ships and much competitions. Black Diamond Steamship Company continued to operated after the war, but closed in the 1955. American Diamond Lines American Diamond Line was started at the end of World War I in 1919, by the United States Shipping Board. American Diamond Lines became a subsidiary of Black Diamond Steamship Company in 1920, a profitable company in the 1920s and early 1930s that operated 20 ships. In 1929 the American Diamond Line was put up for sale. Two companies lobbied the US Shipping Board for American Diamond Lines: Black Diamond Shipping Corporation and the Cosmopolitan Shipping Company. The lobby and appeals were taken all the way to President Herbert Hoover. Then in 1931 the Shipping Board sided with Black Diamond Steamship Corporation, which purchased back American Diamond Lines. Due to the USA's neutrality in early war years, American Diamond Lines charted some of its ships to foreign-flag shipping
the 1920s and early 1930s that operated 20 ships. In 1929 the American Diamond Line was put up for sale. Two companies lobbied the US Shipping Board for American Diamond Lines: Black Diamond Shipping Corporation and the Cosmopolitan Shipping Company. The lobby and appeals were taken all the way to President Herbert Hoover. Then in 1931 the Shipping Board sided with Black Diamond Steamship Corporation, which purchased back American Diamond Lines. Due to the USA's neutrality in early war years, American Diamond Lines charted some of its ships to foreign-flag shipping companies in order to continue its European trade. American Diamond Lines was not able to get Government subsidies post World War II and declined, closing in 1955 as part of Black Diamond Steamship. Black Diamond Steamship Company Ltd. Black Diamond Steamship Company Ltd of Montreal was the Canadian subsidiary Black Diamond Steamship Company starting in 1926. The company began in 1881 and was owned by the Dominion Coal Company's Dominion Shipping Company Ltd., which was founded in 1893. Black Diamond Steamship Company Ltd and the Dominion Coal Company continued their partnership. In 1934 Dominion Shipping Co. Ltd. was taken over by Donaldson Bros. & Black Ltd., a British company, this control ended after World War 2. Black Diamond Steamship Company Ltd. closed in 1965, all ships being sold or scrapped due to age. N Ports of call First Ruotes was Boston and New York to/from Antwerp, Rotterdam, AmsterdamAmsterdam. Black Diamond Steamship Company had weekly routes to Charlottetown, Montreal, Sydney, and St. John's. Also served the cities of: Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, and Norfolk / Newport News. Ships Black Diamond Steamship and American Diamond Lines ships: SS New Britain (built in 1919, sank in 1942 ad SS Silver Sword) U.S. Shipping Board ships: SS Anaconda, (built in 1919 at 380 tons, hull# 16, built at Federal Shipbuilding yard) SS Ambridge (Built in 1919 at Federal S.B. Yard) SS West Eldara SS Black Falcon (was SS Mary Luckenbach and USS Sac City) SS Black Gull (sank off Long Island after a fire on July 21, 1952, crew saved) SS Black Osprey (was West Arrow) SS Back Dragon (was Muncie Victory) SS Black Condor (was Empire Lapwing sank in
Sandler Reiff Lamb Rosenstein & Birkenstock, P.C. In January 2022, she was nominated to serve as a commissioner of the Federal Election Commission. Education Lindenbaum earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in art history from Northeastern University and a Juris Doctor from the George Washington University Law School in 2011. Career During the Iraq War, Lindenbaum was an activist
P.C. In January 2022, she was nominated to serve as a commissioner of the Federal Election Commission. Education Lindenbaum earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in art history from Northeastern University and a Juris Doctor from the George Washington University Law School in 2011. Career During the Iraq War, Lindenbaum was an activist with Code Pink. After graduating from law school, she worked as
population was nil, down from 16 in 1991.
2013 census, its population was nil, down from 16 in 1991. References Populated
level International League. The team finished in last place with a 24–30 record. Placing 6th in the six-team league, which ended play on July 8, 1888. Playing under manager John Murphy, the Tigers finished 14.5 games behind the 1st place Bay City Sugar Citys in the final standings. The International League resumed play in 1900, with the Port Huron Tunnelites as a member. Rejoining the Independent level International League, Port Huron began playing home games at Recreation Park. Port Huron finished last in the league. Ending the season with a 12–29, Port Huron placed 6th in the six-team league. Playing under managers Pat Flaherty and Bert Eltom, the Tunnelites finished 16.5 games behind the 1st place Hamilton Hams when the league stopped play on July 4, 1900. 1912 to 1926: Border League / International League / Michigan–Ontario league / Michigan State League In 1912, Port Huron resumed minor league play. The Port Huron Independents became charter members of the Class D level Border League, which featured teams from both the United States and Canada. The 1912 five–team league featured the Mount Clemens Bathers, Pontiac Indians, Windsor and Wyandotte Alkalis joining the Independents in beginning league play. The 1912 Port Huron Independents finished last in the Border League standings. Beginning league play on May 30, 1912, Port Huron ended the 1912 season with a record of 7–17 playing under manager Bill Brown. Port Huron finished 12.0 games behind the 1st place Wyandotte Alkalis (19–5), followed by the 2nd place Pontiac Indians (14–9), Windsor (9–14) and the Mount Clemens Bathers (11–15) in the final standings. The Port Huron Independents continued play as members of the 1913 Class D level International league. Beginning play on May 24, 1913, the Port Huron Independents placed 3rd in the Border League final standings. Port Huron ended the 1913 season with a 15–19 record as Bill Brown returned as manager. The Independents finished 9.0 games behind the 1st place Ypsilanti, Michigan team in the six–team league. The Border League permanently folded following the 1913 season. Port Huron returned to minor league play in 1921. The Port Huron "Saints" became members of the eight–team Class B level Michigan–Ontario league, replacing the Battle Creek Custers franchise in the league. The team is also referred to as the Port Huron–Sarnia Saints referring to a partnership with neighboring Sarnia, Ontario, located just across the St. Clair River from Port Huron, Michigan. The Saints finished
with an Independent minor league team. No records for the 1883 team are known. The Port Huron team resumed minor league play as members of the 1890 Michigan State League. After beginning play on May 19, 1890, the Independent level league folded on June 13, 1890. At the time the Independent level league folded, Port Huron had an 11–14 record and were in 4th place, playing under manager Joe Walsh. Port Huron ended the season 6.0 games behind the 1st place Grand Rapids Shamrocks. Returning to Michigan State League play, the 1895 Port Huron Marines rejoined the Class B level league before folding during the season. On September 3, 1895, the Marines folded 27–51 record, playing under managers Boocher, Charles Schaub and Thomas Jenkinson. The Adrian Demons were the eventual league champions. The 1897 Port Huron team joined the reformed six–team Class D level Michigan State League. The league folded on August 16, 1897. At the time the league folded, Port Huron was in 3rd place. Port Huron concluded the season with a 29–42 record. Playing under managers Gobel and D. McCarron, Port Huron finished 8.5 behind the 1st place Bay City team in the final standings. The Port Huron Tigers continued play in 1898, joining a new League. The team was also called the "Braves" in 1898, joining the Independent level International League. The team finished in last place with a 24–30 record. Placing 6th in the six-team league, which ended play on July 8, 1888. Playing under manager John Murphy, the Tigers finished 14.5 games behind the 1st place Bay City Sugar Citys in the final standings. The International League resumed play in 1900, with the Port Huron Tunnelites as a member. Rejoining the Independent level International League, Port Huron began playing home games at Recreation Park. Port Huron finished last in the league. Ending the season with a 12–29, Port Huron placed 6th in the six-team league. Playing under managers Pat Flaherty and Bert Eltom, the Tunnelites finished 16.5 games behind the 1st place Hamilton Hams when the league stopped play on July 4, 1900. 1912 to 1926: Border League / International League / Michigan–Ontario league / Michigan State League In 1912, Port Huron resumed minor league play. The Port Huron Independents became charter members of the Class D level Border League, which featured teams from both the United States and Canada. The 1912 five–team league featured the Mount Clemens Bathers, Pontiac Indians, Windsor and Wyandotte Alkalis joining the Independents in beginning league play. The 1912 Port Huron Independents finished last in the Border League standings. Beginning league play on May 30, 1912, Port Huron ended the 1912 season with a record of 7–17 playing under manager Bill Brown. Port Huron finished 12.0 games behind the 1st place Wyandotte Alkalis (19–5), followed by the 2nd place Pontiac Indians (14–9), Windsor (9–14) and the Mount Clemens Bathers (11–15) in the final standings. The Port Huron Independents continued play as members of the 1913 Class D level International league. Beginning play on May 24, 1913, the Port Huron Independents placed 3rd in the Border League final standings. Port Huron ended the 1913 season with a 15–19 record as Bill Brown returned as manager. The Independents finished 9.0 games behind the 1st place Ypsilanti, Michigan team in the six–team league. The Border League permanently folded following the 1913 season. Port Huron returned to minor league play in 1921. The Port Huron "Saints" became members of the eight–team Class B level Michigan–Ontario league, replacing the Battle Creek Custers franchise in the league. The team is also referred to as the Port Huron–Sarnia Saints referring to a partnership with neighboring Sarnia, Ontario, located just across the St. Clair River from Port Huron, Michigan. The Saints finished the 1921 season in 5th place. With a final record of 58–63, playing
number of mounted Yeomanry regiments would be required in future, and the remainder would have to be re-roled, mainly as artillery. Only the 14 senior Yeomanry regiments were retained as horsed cavalry. The WCY, 17th in the order of precedence, therefore converted to the Royal Field Artillery (RFA) as 2nd (Cumberland Yeomanry) Army Brigade with two batteries and headquarters (HQ) at Penrith. When the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army in 1921 these were numbered as: 93rd (Westmorland & Cumberland Yeomanry) Army Brigade, RFA Brigade HQ at Drill Hall, Penrith 369 (Westmorland Yeomanry) Battery 370 (Cumberland Yeomanry) Battery A further reorganisation on 1 June 1923 saw the brigade exchange its number and two Cumberland batteries with 51st (East Lancashire & Cumberland) Brigade, becoming the 51st (Westmorland & Cumberland) Brigade, a four-battery brigade within 42nd (East Lancashire) Division. Before World War I the two Cumberland batteries had constituted the 4th East Lancashire Brigade, Royal Field Artillery (The Cumberland Artillery). Finally, on 1 June 1924 the RFA was subsumed into the RA and its units were termed 'Field Brigades' and 'Field Batteries', giving the following organisation: 51st (Westmorland & Cumberland) Field Brigade, RA Brigade HQ at Artillery Drill Hall, Albert Street, Carlisle 369 (Westmorland Yeomanry) Field Bty at Artillery Drill Hall, Carlisle 370 (Cumberland Yeomanry) Field Bty at Artillery Drill Hall, moving to the Riding School, Carlisle, by 1937 203 (Cumberland) Field Bty at Whitehaven 204 (Cumberland) Field Bty (Howitzers) at Workington The establishment of a TA divisional artillery brigade was four 6-gun batteries, three equipped with 18-pounder guns and one with 4.5-inch howitzers, all of World War I patterns. However, the batteries only held four guns in peacetime. The guns and their first-line ammunition wagons were horsedrawn and the battery staffs were mounted. Partial mechanisation was carried out from 1927, but the guns retained iron-tyred wheels until pneumatic tyres began to be introduced just before the outbreak of World War II. In 1938 the RA modernised its nomenclature and a lieutenant-colonel's command was designated a 'regiment' rather than a 'brigade'; this applied to TA field brigades from 1 November 1938. The TA was doubled in size after the Munich Crisis, and most regiments formed duplicates. Part of the reorganisation was that field regiments changed from four six-gun batteries to an establishment of two batteries, each of three four-gun troops. For 51st Field Rgt this resulted in: 51st (Westmorland & Cumberland) Field Regiment, RA Regimental Headquarters (RHQ) at Riding School, Carlisle 370 (Cumberland Yeomanry) Field Bty at Riding School, Carlisle 203 (Cumberland) Field Bty at Whitehaven 109th Field Regiment, RA RHQ at Workington 369 (Westmorland Yeomanry) Field Bty at Artillery Drill Hall, Carlisle 204 (Cumberland) Field Bty at Workington World War II 51st (W&C) Field Rgt mobilised with 42nd (East Lancashire) Division on the outbreak of war in September 1939, but left on 10 April 1940, the day before the rest of the division embarked to join the British Expeditionary Force in France. Norway Shortly afterwards 203 Bty, equipped with new Mk II 25-pounder guns, was detached and sent to participate in the Norwegian campaign. It formed part of 'Rupertforce', which sailed from Scapa Flow and began landing at Harstad, north of Narvik, on 15 April. However, it was not until 22 April that the gunners of 203 Bty landed, and another week before the first of their guns arrived on a landing craft. Although a naval bombardment had been tried, movement was greatly hampered by deep snow and no immediate attack was made on the German troops in Narvik. However, at the end of the month a force landed near Håkvik and advanced along the coast road towards Ankenes, from where Narvik could be threatened. Two of 203 Bty's guns were landed on the coast road on 4 May. By 9 May French Chasseurs Alpins had established themselves on the high ground overlooking Narvik and had been joined by another 2-gun section of 203 Bty. Narvik was attacked by a combined Norwegian, British, French and Polish force on 13 May. The force successfully landed north of the town and began the operation to capture it. By morning on 16 May the British infantry had been withdrawn to reinforce Bodø (see below) leaving only the artillery (including 203 Bty less a troop) supporting the Allied attack on Narvik. The town was captured on 28 May. Meanwhile, 1st Battalion Scots Guards and a 4-gun Troop of 203 Bty had been sent by sea to Mo i Rana, where they landed on 12 May and took up position at Stein to block German reinforcements approaching from the south. However, their own reinforcements failed to arrive after their troop transport was bombed, and on 17 May the Germans attacked at Stein. The guns were stationed at the rear, but communications along the road from their observers were cut and they could play little part in the action. Supported by a paratroop drop, the Germans pressed on though the short night towards Mo and entered the town at 15.30 o 18 May. The Scots Guards fell back towards Bodø where reinforcements were arriving by small steamships. They took up blocking positions at Krokstrand (21 May) and then Viskikoia (23 May). The field guns could only give limited support because of the loss of their signalling equipment, and the small force was pushed out, but the small force successfully disengaged and got back to Bodø. The exhausted Scots Guards went into reserve and the troop of 203 Bty joined the mixed British–Norwegian force ('Stockforce') defending the approaches at Pothus. Fighting went on throughout 25 May, with both sides using air attacks. But with the desperate situation that had developed in the Battle of France the government had already decided on 24 May to evacuate the British forces from Norway. On 26 May the British force at Pothus withdrew to Bodø and then withdrew by warship to Borkenes, west of Harstad, where the larger Allied force came from Narvik to await the final evacuation. From 5 to 7 June troopships and smaller steamers embarked men and stores from Hardstad, even bringing away 203 Bty's last six 25-pounders. The reunited 51st (W&C) Field Rgt joined 46th Division on 30 July 1940 while that formation was refitting in Scottish Command after its return from Dunkirk. The regiment left again on 16 September and embarked for the Middle East. Tobruk By 23 October 51st (W&C) Field Rgt under Lt-Col J.S. Douglas had landed at Suez and went into camp at Beni Yusef camp, just south of the Pyramids, to equip and train for desert warfare. It then moved from Cairo across the Western Desert to Baggush to join 16th British Brigade in Western Desert Force (WDF). By 15 December it was at Sidi Barrani, which 16th Bde had just captured, and then with 16th Bde it reinforced 6th Australian Division for the capture of Bardia. The attack was timed for 05.30 on 3 January 1941, the guns opening fire without previous registration, the targets having been fixed by careful surveying. 51st (W&C) Field Rgt's role was to deal with enemy artillery, and it moved forward three times during the day's fighting to bring enemy batteries under fire. The three-day operation was a major success, almost the entire Italian garrison being killed or captured. Afterwards, 51st (W&C) Field Rgt moved up with 16th Australian Bde for the capture of Tobruk (21–22 January), where it repeated its counter-battery (CB) role. F Troop had two guns hit and several men wounded, but by nightfall on 21 January the regiment was leap-frogging batteries forward with 19th Australian Bde to positions inside the enemy's wire. The port was secured next day with another large 'bag' of prisoners. On 23 January, when it reverted to the command of XIII Corps (as WDF had become), the regiment was some miles south-west of Tobruk, and at the end of the month it had reached Martuba. XIII Corps had cleared the Italians out of Cyrenaica, but its supply lines were now stretched to their limit, and it had to pause its advance in February. Then the balance shifted: the first troops of the Afrika Korps under Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel began arriving to support the Italians, while British forces had to be diverted to the Greek Campaign. This left Cyrenaica Command in a weak condition. On 28 February at Cyrene 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was ordered to exchange its modern 25-pdrs for the old 18-pdrs and 4.5-inch howitzers of 2/2nd Australian Field Rgt prior to that regiment's departure to Greece. The Germans began their advance in North Africa on 31 March and soon the British forces in Cyrenaica were being forced back. 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was sent up with 9th Australian Division and by 4 April was fiercely engaged at Tecmis. B Troop
closely associated with its own battery.) The number 437 had been assigned to 51st (W&C) Field Rgt for its third battery, but the regiment did not finally form it until 16 October 1941. At the start of 'Crusader', while 4th SA Bde was in army reserve, 203 Bty with 12 guns (still organised as one battery) was assigned to 7th Support Group of 7th Armoured Division, commanded by Brigadier 'Jock' Campbell. Eighth Army began its advance on 18 November and fighting was confused. On 21 November 7th Support Gp was ordered to attack northwards with 7th Armoured Bde from Sidi Rezegh airfield to secure a ridge overlooking the main east–west track and meet the breakout from Tobruk. Just before the attack was due to start, enemy tanks were seen approaching from the rear. While some of the tank units turned to meet this threat, 7th Support Gp's northward attack was partially successful, but casualties were heavy from the Axis artillery on the escarpment further north. The Support Gp's guns also became drawn into the short-range fighting against the Panzers advancing from the south. But at the end of the day the group was holding the vital ground. Next morning the British guns drove off two attacks in some of the bitterest fighting of the whole campaign, but a flank attack at last light forced 7th Support Gp to withdraw, and the artillery pulled out troop by troop after firing at short range on the advancing 21st Panzer Division . The survivors of the Support Gp withdrew behind the South Africans. Next day (23 November) Rommel turned the Afrika Korps south-east and made a dash for the Egyptian frontier. On the way 15th Panzer Division cut straight through 7th Support Gp's position, scattering its vehicles. One large enemy column was held up by the guns of 203 Bty, commanded by Maj M. St John Oswald, who had only just taken over from Maj H.W.L. Cowan who had been seriously wounded. After several days of intense fighting, 7th Armoured Division was withdrawn to Egypt to refit, leaving 7th Support Gp to break up into small infantry–artillery raiding columns ('Jock columns') to harass the rear of the Afrika Korps. On 27 November these columns spotted 15th Panzer Division returning from its dash to the frontier and the artillery gave the panzers a rough time. This brought on a resumption of the scrappy fighting round Sidi Rezegh, but the garrison of Tobruk had now broken out and was also engaged. On 28 November 203 Bty, down to seven guns, continued fighting with 7th Support Gp to hinder the passage of 15th Panzer. British reinforcements had now arrived, and the rest of 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was operating as an army regiment under Eighth Army HQ. On 3 December it came into action with 11th Indian Bde in a night march to attack Point 182 south of El Adem airfield, which was carried out 'with exemplary speed' and was partially successful. The fighting continued through December, and by the middle of the month Rommel was forced to retreat westwards. 22nd Guards Brigade Group ('Bencol') , supported by 51st (W&C) Field Rgt, was sent to cut him off south of Benghazi. At Beda Fomm on 22 December the regimental OPs reported a column of 30 tanks and transport approaching. The guns engaged at a range of and A Trp, 370 Bty, continued firing over open sights in a thick mist as the enemy approached. All but one of its Quads was knocked out, but the troop continued firing until it was overrun; three officers and 33 men were posted missing. The enemy column was then counter-attacked by British tanks. Two days later 22nd Guards Bde was sent south towards Agedabia. It formed a column round 370 Bty consisting of a troop each of anti-tank guns and light anti-aircraft guns, two companies of the Coldstream Guards, 3rd Royal Tank Regiment and a squadron of the 11th Hussars. It met the enemy at Agedabia and the guns came into action. Captain White was shelled and then attacked from the air while directing the guns. F Troop engaged a Flak 88 gun and destroyed it. The Germans made an aggressive defence at Agedabia and were able to retire to El Agheila on 1 January 1942, temporarily ending the operations while both sides brought up supplies and reiforcements. 436 Battery was absorbed back into 51st (W&C) Rgt's other batteries on 7 January 1942, possibly because of the losses the regiment had sustained. The two batteries continued to support 200th Guards Bde (the renamed 22nd Guards Bde) as it harassed the enemy during January. The Axis won the supply race and advanced back up the Agedabia road on 21 January, sweeping round 200th Gds Bde. Eighth Army fell back to the Gazala Line, where it dug in to continue its build-up. Ceylon While Eighth Army had been fighting Operation Crusader, the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor and Malaya. Reinforcements were desperately needed in India and South East Asia, and Eighth Army was stripped of some of its veteran units. Among the formations selected was 70th Division, including 16th Bde to which 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was assigned once more. The brigade group set sail on 6 March and arrived in Ceylon on 15 March (the rest of 70th Division went to India) and were assigned to 34th Indian Division, which formed the garrison of the island. 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was still short of one battery HQ, but on 20 March it was joined by 14 Heavy Anti-Aircraft (HAA) Bty from 6th Coast Regiment, RA. This was a Regular Army battery formed on 1 March 1938 in 6th Coast Rgt, which manned the coast defences in Ceylon. After the Japanese successes against Burma and the Dutch East Indies, a Japanese fleet moved into the India Ocean with the intention of carrying out a 'Pearl Harbor'-style attack on the British Eastern Fleet based in Ceylon. Carrier-based aircraft carried out a raid on the Colombo Naval Base on 5 April 1942 (the 'Easter Sunday Raid') and the anti-aircraft defences were heavily engaged. There was a second attack on Trincomalee Naval Base on 9 April. However, there was no follow-up landings, and the coast and field artillery saw no action. The vulnerability of Ceylon had been demonstrated however, and the defences were on high alert for months. By the end of 1942, however, the crisis had passed and some of the defences in Ceylon could be stood down. 14 HAA Bty passed into suspended animation on 30 September 1942 16th Brigade and 51st (W&C) Field Rgt left 34th Indian Division on 31 January 1943 and crossed to India, moving to Ranchi to rejoin 70th Division. Chindits From February to April 1943 Major-General Orde Wingate's Long Range Penetration (LRP) Groups, the 'Chindits', had carried out their first operation into Japanese-held Burma (Operation Longcloth). After the lessons learned it was decided to increase 'Special Force' to six brigades for future operations, and 70th Division was selected to be broken up to provide three of these. 16th Brigade and 51st (W&C) Field Rgt left the division on 29 September 194. In September the regiment was joined by 587 (Independent) Field Bty, which had been formed in India in 1942 from a troop of A Bty, 160th Field Rgt. The augmented regiment then handed in its guns and began converting to an infantry role. On 18 October 51st (W&C) Field Rgt was amalgamated with 69th (Duke of Connaught's Hampshire) Light Anti-Aircraft/Anti-Tank Rgt to form an infantry battalion designated 51st/69th Regiment, RA, which trained in the LRP role. The combined regiment formed 51 and 69 Columns of 16th Bde for the Second Chindit Expedition (Operation Thursday). After several changes of plan, 16th Bde under Brig Bernard Fergusson began its long march from Ledo in Assam into Burma on 5 February, proceeding down a single-file track towards Hkalak Ga. The going was extremely difficult, and the head of the brigade took until 16 February to cover the to Hkalak Ga. Progress was then quicker, and the brigade reached the Chindwin River on 28 February, 10 days behind schedule. It turned a sandbank into an airstrip and then began crossing the river on 1 March aboard assault boats brought in by gliders. The head of the column moved off that night towards its objective of Indaw, detaching two columns (possibly 51 and 69) to attack Lonkin. The rest of 16th Bde established a stronghold codenamed 'Aberdeen' near Manhton and on 22 March gliders flew in material to construct an airstrip. The fresh 14th Bde then began to be flown in on 23 March, but 16th Bde was ordered to attack Indaw without time for concentrate or for rest after its long march. The other six columns of the brigade made the attack, but it failed with heavy casualties. Fergusson then concentrated his brigade in the hills to reorganise and await support. By the beginning of April 16th Bde was back at 'Aberdeen', while the fresh Chindit formations were being flown in to continue the operation. It was then decided to fly out the exhausted units of 16th Bde. The brigade was moved to Comilla in East Bengal and by 17 May was at Bangalore in India. About a quarter of the personnel of 51st/69th Rgt were sent to the UK, either because they were unfit for further service after their exertions and sickness or were eligible for repatriation under the 'Python' scheme after three years and eight months' overseas service. The remainder of the regiment were drafted to 1st Battalion Essex Regiment, which had also returned from the Chindit expedition, and continued as infantry until the end of the war> However, the Chindits did not see action again and 'Special Force' was disbanded in February 1945. On 14 October 1944 the 51st (W&C) Field and 69th Anti-Tank regiments reverted to their original designations and formally passed into suspended animation. Postwar When the TA was reconstituted on 1 January 1947, the regiment was reformed as 251 (Westmorland & Cumberland) Field Rgt as part of 42nd (Lancashire) Division. On 30 June 1950 it absorbed two other Cumbrian RA regiments: 309 (W&C) Field Rgt (originally its own duplicate 109th Field Rgt, see above) and 640 (Border) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment (formerly 5th Battalion Border Regiment) without changing its designation. Then on 30 September 1953 it regained its full Yeomanry subtitle as 251 (Westmorland & Cumberland Yeomanry) Field Regiment, RA. When the TA was reduced in 1961, the regiment became a single independent battery, as 851 (W&CY) Field Battery, which was eventually absorbed into the Border Regiment. Footnotes Notes References T.K. Derry, History of the Second World War: The Campaign in
municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its
2010. She subsequently taught at Princeton University for 10 years before joining the Columbia faculty in 2020. Her book Who Fights for Reputation? The Psychology of Leaders in International Conflict (2019) earned the Best Book Award on Foreign Policy from the American Political Science Association and won the Biennial Best Foreign Policy Book Award from the International Studies Association. Her 2016 book, Knowing The Adversary: Leaders, Intelligence Organizations, and Assessments of Intentions in International Relations, received the Edgar S. Furniss Book Award and was a co-winner of the 2016 DPLST Book Prize, Diplomatic Studies Section of the International Studies Association. References American people of Israeli descent Princeton University faculty Columbia University faculty Columbia University School of General Studies alumni University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences alumni Israeli emigrants to
of her mentors was Robert Jervis. Her research specializes in interstate communication, crisis bargaining, and the psychology of leaders and decision makers, which was inspired by her experience doing intelligence work during her service in the Israeli military. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania and completed her post-doc at Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. Her dissertation won the Kenneth Waltz Award for the best dissertation in the field of International Security and Arms Control in 2010. She subsequently taught at Princeton
a raised counter, plumb transom; a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed, modified long keel with a cutaway forefoot and a retractable centerboard. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water. The boat is fitted with a diesel inboard engine. The fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of . The design has sleeping accommodation for seven people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, two straight settees in the main cabin that unfold into doubles and an aft cabin under the raised doghouse, with a single berth on the starboard side. The galley is located on the port side just forward of the companionway ladder under the
spooned raked stem, a raised counter, plumb transom; a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed, modified long keel with a cutaway forefoot and a retractable centerboard. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water. The boat is fitted with a diesel inboard engine. The fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of . The design has sleeping accommodation for seven people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, two straight settees in the main cabin that unfold into doubles and an aft cabin under the raised doghouse, with a single berth on the starboard side. The galley is located on the port side just forward of the companionway ladder under the raised doghouse. The galley is "U"-shaped and is equipped with a four-burner stove, an ice box and a sink.
described in 2022 Fossil taxa described in 2022 Extinct birds of Asia Early Cretaceous dinosaurs of Asia Prehistoric bird genera Enantiornitheans
by the describing authors, Beiguornis formed a monophyletic group with the bohaiornithids Sulcavis and Zhouornis. References Birds described in 2022 Fossil taxa described in 2022
in the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and
is a village in the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
is a multi-stemmed shrub that typically grows to a height of , its twigs densely covered with soft hairs. The leaves are egg-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long with narrow triangular stipules at the base. The upper surface of the leaves is densely covered with velvety hairs and the lower surface softly-hairy. The flowers are borne in small panicles long, each flower on a pedicel long. The sepals are yellow to cream-coloured, long and there are no petals. Flowering occurs from December to January and the fruit is a hairy capsule about long. Taxonomy This pomaderris was first formally described in 1863 by George Bentham who gave it the name Pomaderris ferruginea var. canescens in Flora Australiensis from specimens collected on Percy Island by Allan Cunningham. In 1951, Norman Arthur Wakefield
a hairy capsule about long. Taxonomy This pomaderris was first formally described in 1863 by George Bentham who gave it the name Pomaderris ferruginea var. canescens in Flora Australiensis from specimens collected on Percy Island by Allan Cunningham. In 1951, Norman Arthur Wakefield raised the variety to species status as Pomaderris canescens in The Victorian Naturalist. The specific epithet (clivicola) means "slopes-dweller". Distribution and habitat Pomaderris clivicola is only known from near Gayndah where it grows in open forest near rock outcrops, and near Coalstoun Lakes where it is found in open forest and in dry scrub. Conservation status This pomaderris is listed as "vulnerable" under the Australian Government Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act
Šinkūnaitė was selected to represent Lithuania at the 2022 Winter Olympic Games. References Lithuanian female alpine skiers Living people 2004 births Sportspeople from Anykščiai Alpine skiers
the 2022 Winter Olympic Games. References Lithuanian female alpine skiers Living people 2004 births Sportspeople from Anykščiai Alpine skiers at the 2022
from her mother, a pianist and organist. She attended Berklee College of Music. Career In 2007, Collins formed the country duo Wild Honey with Victoria Gordon, and the two competed in the reality-competition show Can You Duet on CMT. Collins went on to pursue a solo career, signing with Curb Records in 2011 and releasing her debut self-titled EP in 2014. Her first full-length album Get Drunk and Cry was released in 2016 along with a short film. She released her album Cold Comfort on April 3, 2020, and toured to support the album in 2021. The expanded version of her most recent album, Cold Comfort +, was released on January 7, 2022. Discography Albums Ruthie Collins EP (2014) Get Drunk and Cry (2017) Jam in the Van - Ruthie Collins (Live Session, Nashville, TN,
January 7, 2022. Discography Albums Ruthie Collins EP (2014) Get Drunk and Cry (2017) Jam in the Van - Ruthie Collins (Live Session, Nashville, TN, 2019) (2020) Cold Comfort (2020) Cold Comfort + (2022) Singles "Ramblin' Man" (2014) "Dear Dolly" (2016) "Get Drunk and Cry" (2017) "Finally Here (Single from Longshot: Homecoming Original Soundtrack)" (2018) "Joshua Tree" (2019) "Dang Dallas" (2019) "Cold Comfort" (2020) "Bad Woman" (2020) "Hypocrite" (2021) "Dear Santa" (2021) See also List of people from Tennessee List of singer-songwriters References External links Official website Ruthie Collins at BMI Repertoire Ruthie Collins at AllMusic Ruthie Collins at Discogs 1984 births Living people American women country
Portland's Cully neighborhood. The menu focuses on fried chicken and also includes cornmeal-fried catfish and grilled pimento cheese sandwiches; sides include bacon-braised collard greens, pimento macaroni and cheese, and bread-and-butter zucchini pickles. History The restaurant opened in 2019. Reception Yonder has appeared in multiple Eater Portland lists, including ones for
including ones for "impressive cocktails", "buzziest" new breakfasts and brunches, "top-notch" macaroni and cheese, "serious" cornbread, and "outstanding" fried chicken sandwiches. References External links Yonder at the Food Network 2019 establishments in
of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According
a village in the municipality of Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics
Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy and de facto Vice Minister of Energy of South Korea serving under President Moon Jae-in from August 2021. Park is the inaugural holder of the post. Before promoted to the newly created 2nd Vice Minister of the Ministry, Park served as the head of its Office of Planning and Coordination, the most senior office in any ministries,
by Deputy Minister for Trade under Yoo Myung-hee. From 2018 to 2019 he served as the ministry's spokesperson. Over the past 25 years, he worked in various government organisations - mostly at MOTIE and its preceding agencies - since he passed the Korean state civil servant exam in 1990. He holds a bachelor in international economics from Seoul National University as well as a master and a
Carnivac-Cov or Karnivak-Kov is the first veterinary vaccine against COVID-19. It is an inactivated vaccine for carnivores such as dogs, cats, foxes, arctic foxes and mink. It was developed by the Federal Service for Veterinary and Phytosanitary Supervision of Russia to help prevent mutations in animals that can occur in cross-species transmission, which may spread back to humans, as is suspected to have occurred with the Cluster
Denmark in November 2020. The vaccine is given in 2 doses 21 days apart. In trials, the tested animals sustained an immune response for at least six months. The full course costs 500 ₽ (US$7). Clinical trials on animals began in October 2020. The vaccine was registered in Russia on 31 March
her 1987 album No Sound but a Heart; covered and released as a single by Celine Dion in 1990 from her album Unison "Last to Know", a song by Three Days Grace from their
1990 from her album Unison "Last to Know", a song by Three Days Grace from their 2009 album Life
1942: Préparation et propriétés physiologiques de quelques hydroxy-alcoyl-hydrazines... Thèses présentées à la Faculté des sciences de l'Université de Paris pour obtenir le grade de docteur ès sciences physiques par Germaine Benoit. 1945: Sur l'acide corynanthique, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.12, 1945, S. 934–936, with E. Fourneau. 1945: Éphédrine et isoéphédrines, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.12, 1945, S. 985–989, with E. Fourneau. 1947: Hydroxy-alcoyl-hydrazines. 2., Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.14, Nr. 3–4, 1947, S. 242–244. 1950: Synthèse et propriétés thérapeutiques des dérivés aminés et hydroxylés du stilbène, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.17, Nr. 9–10, 1950, S. 829–832, mit Dimitri Marinopoulos. 1951: Synthèse de quelques dérivés aminés du diphénylméthane, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.18, 1951, S. 890–895, mit Fanny Eliopoulo. 1951 : , with Joseph Jacob et F. Eliopoulo. 1952 : , avec Roger Delavigne et F. Eliopoulo. 1953 : , with R. Delavigne. 1953 : , with Albert Funke. 1955: Ammoniums quaternaires dans la série des acides hydroxamiques. I: Synthèse d'iodométhylates d'acides diméthylaminobenzoylhydroxamiques, antagonistes du diisopropyfluorophosphate, C. r. hebd. séances Acad. sci., vol.240, Nr. 26, 27. Juni 1955, S. 2575–2577, with A. Funke and J. Jacob. 1955: Synthèse et propriétés pharmacologiques de quelques ω-phényl-ω-carbétoxy-alcoyl-1-méthyl-4-pipérazines, C. r. hebd. séances Acad. sci., vol.241, Nr. 6, September 1955, S. 581–583, with Bal Krishna Avasthi, J. Jacob and Monique Dechavassine. 1955: Action de l'éthylénénimine sur les époxydes. 2., Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.22, Nr. 7–8, 1955, S. 946–947, with Albert Funke. 1958: Synthèse d'acides diméthylaminobenzoylhydroxamiques et de leurs dérivés, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 5e série, vol.25, Nr. 2, 1958, S. 257–258, with A. Funke. 1958: Sur quelques dérivés N,N-disubstitués de la pipérazine, Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., vol.25, Nr. 11–12, 1958, S. 1358–1364, with Bal Krishna Avasthi. 1959: Contribution à
the first major advances in the fight against sleeping sickness and malaria through her significant chemical engineering contributions to the discovery and development of drugs such as orsanine and rhodoquine. In 1942, Benoit defended her doctoral thesis on hydrazine compounds. She continued to work in the medical chemistry department, and was appointed head of the laboratory in 1943. In 1947, she was made a Knight of the Légion d'honneur. In 1960, Benoit was recruited by Daniel Bovet to work at the Istituto Superiore di Sanità in Rome. Personal life The following year, she married Albert Funke, who was also head of the laboratory of therapeutic chemistry at the Pasteur Institute, with whom she had collaborated for many years. The couple were friends with Jacques Monod. She and her husband retired in 1962 on their return from working in Italy. Germaine Benoit died in Paris in April 1983. Publications 1927: Sur les isomères de l'acide para-oxy-3-amino-phényl-arsinique et de son dérivé acétylé (stovarsol) Bulletin de la Société chimique de France. 4 (in French). 41: 499–514. 1927. ScF-41-1927 with Ernest Fourneau and Jacques and Thérèse Tréfouël. 1930: Contribution à l'étude des anesthésiques locaux: Dérivés des amino-alcools à fonction alcoolique primaire Bull. Soc. chim. Fr., 4e série, vol.47, 1930, S. 858–885, with E. Fourneau and Roger Firmenich. 1930: Synthèse d'un isomère et d'un homologue de l'éphédrine Bull. Soc. chim. 4e série, vol.47, 1930, S. 894–980, with E. Fourneau and R. Firmenich. 1930: Contribution à la chimiothérapie du paludisme: Essais sur la malaria des canaris, Annales de l'Institut Pasteur, vol.44, no5, mai 1930, S. 503–533 (Zusammenfassung), with E. Fourneau, J. and Th. Tréfouël, Georges Stefanopoulo, Yvonne de Lestrange and Kenneth
its population was 137, all Serbs living in the Šekovići part. References Populated places in Kladanj Populated places in
Republika Srpska and Kladanj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population