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selected for the 1991 World Cup. She suffered a hamstring injury in a warm-up match against Saracens which ruled her out of the tournament. She managed to play in their third-place playoff match against France, which New Zealand lost 3–0. Matautia played 14 seasons for Wellington, scoring 161 points. In 1999, she earned her official test cap against Canada. Matautia played
She managed to play in their third-place playoff match against France, which New Zealand lost 3–0. Matautia played 14 seasons for Wellington, scoring 161 points. In 1999, she earned her official test cap against Canada. Matautia played her last test match against England in 2001. In 2009, she married her husband, Waihi church pastor Benhur Matautia. References 1974 births Living people New
and the word "mix", which symbolizes combination and diversity, altogether meaning "the best combination for a new era". Career 2021–present: Introduction and debut On July 9, 2021, JYP Entertainment announced a new girl group would be debuting in February 2022, its first since Itzy in 2019. From July 16 to July 25, JYP Entertainment made pre-orders available for a limited edition of the group's debut package, titled Blind Package, which would include the group's debut album and album-related materials. The members were revealed through various dance videos and song covers from August 6 to November 19 (in order: Jinni, Jiwoo, Kyujin, Sullyoon, Bae, Haewon, and Lily). On January 26, 2022, JYP Entertainment announced the group name's to be Nmixx, until then tentatively called JYPn. On February 2, it was announced that they would debut on February 22 with the release of Ad Mare.
which symbolizes combination and diversity, altogether meaning "the best combination for a new era". Career 2021–present: Introduction and debut On July 9, 2021, JYP Entertainment announced a new girl group would be debuting in February 2022, its first since Itzy in 2019. From July 16 to July 25, JYP Entertainment made pre-orders available for a limited edition of the group's debut package, titled Blind Package, which would include the group's debut album and album-related materials. The members were revealed through
6. It is here that Ryszard Jaśniewicz for the first time, after heart surgery, played the monodrama My Heart, composed of wonderful monologues from Polish drama, and then staged another fifteen monodramas. The last performance before the sudden death of Ryszard Jaśniewicz was the monodrama The Builder by Gabriela Pewińska,
reading performances, meetings with authors and theater lessons. In 2008, the House of Plague in Gdańsk-Oliwa became the stage of Teatr z Polski 6. It is here that Ryszard Jaśniewicz for the first time, after heart surgery, played the monodrama My Heart, composed of wonderful monologues from Polish drama, and then staged another fifteen monodramas. The last performance before the sudden death of Ryszard
United States—and in the Washington area." Notable artists The artists in the exhibition were Joan Belmar and Juan Downey, originally from Chile; F. Lennox Campello, Ric Garcia and Jose Ygnacio Bermudez, from Cuba; Muriel Hasbun, from El Salvador; Frida Larios, from El Salvador/Honduras; Irene Clouthier, from Mexico; and Naul Ojeda, from Uruguay. Critical reception The exhibition was widely reviewed, both at the regional and national level. The Washington Post art critic described some of the art as being "simultaneously mythic and as modern as a can of Goya black bean soup," while The Washington City Paper art critic observed about the artists, that "most, on some level, are confronting the various cultural aspects of migration, colonization, and imperialism." References
work of ten Washington, DC area artists who were immigrants to the United States from Latin America. The work was selected by Jack Rasmussen, director and curator of the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center. Focus The exhibition was curated to focus on the immigration, experiences, and views of ten Washington, DC area artists - all of whom were immigrants to the United States with "roots in Latin America." The curator noted that the artists came "from different generations and from different circumstances... but they brought with them artistic traditions and innovations that took root and bore fruit here in the United States—and in the Washington area." Notable artists The artists in
III, and maintained all of the uncompromising policies of Lucius III. He and the papal court continued as virtual prisoners in Verona. On 16 December 1185, in Verona, Cardinal Rolandus subscribed a privilege for the church of S. Peter in Soissons. He subscribed a privilege for the monastery of the Holy Trinity in Lucerne on 11 January 1186 in Verona. He subscribed again on 20 January, 27 January 5 February, 27 February, 4 March, 13 March, 15 March, 23 March, 31 May, 2 June, 13 June, 17 June, 26 June, 14 July, 26 July, 11 August, 30 August, 4 September, 20 September, 10 December. Rolandus and Cardinal Soffredus of S. Maria in Via lata, with the authority of Pope Urban III and with his mandate, defined the parish boundaries between the churches of S. Paolo and S. Vitale in Verona on 16 August 1186. In 1187, still trapped in Verona, Cardinal Rolandus subscribed documents for Pope Urban III on 6 January, 7 January, 2 March, 7 March, 12 March, 26 March, 21 May, 22 May, 26 May, and 2 June. Rolandus' latest known subscription took place in Verona on 21 September 1187. Urban and the cardinals who were besieged with him were able to escape from Verona in the last weeks of September 1187, taking refuge in
" a violent and unyielding spirit, and a strong opponent of Frederick (Barbarossa)," in the words of Ferdinand Gregorovius. He took the name Urban III, and maintained all of the uncompromising policies of Lucius III. He and the papal court continued as virtual prisoners in Verona. On 16 December 1185, in Verona, Cardinal Rolandus subscribed a privilege for the church of S. Peter in Soissons. He subscribed a privilege for the monastery of the Holy Trinity in Lucerne on 11 January 1186 in Verona. He subscribed again on 20 January, 27 January 5 February, 27 February, 4 March, 13 March, 15 March, 23 March, 31 May, 2 June, 13 June, 17 June, 26 June, 14 July, 26 July, 11 August, 30 August, 4 September, 20 September, 10 December. Rolandus and Cardinal Soffredus of S. Maria in Via lata, with the authority of Pope Urban III and with his mandate, defined the parish boundaries between the churches of S. Paolo and S. Vitale in Verona on 16 August 1186. In 1187, still trapped in Verona, Cardinal Rolandus subscribed documents for Pope Urban III on 6 January, 7 January, 2 March, 7 March, 12 March, 26 March, 21 May, 22 May, 26 May, and 2 June. Rolandus' latest known subscription took place in Verona on 21 September 1187. Urban and the cardinals who were besieged with him were able to escape from Verona in the last weeks of September 1187, taking refuge in Ferrara. Urban died there on 20 October 1187. Cardinal Rolandus died after 21 September 1187. His successor as Cardinal deacon of S. Maria in Porticu, Gregorius de S. Apostolo, subscribed as early as 12 April 1188. References Sources Duchesne, François (1660). Histoire de tous les cardinaux françois 2 vols. (Paris 1660). Duchesne, Francois (1660).
The Great Australian Bake Off premiered on 27 January 2022 on the Lifestyle channel. Production In December 2020, there was speculation the series was to be picked up by the Seven Network after the previous 4 seasons were aired on Foxtel's Lifestyle channels, however in March 2021, Foxtel was in “advanced discussions” for a series return. In June 2021, it was officially renewed by Foxtel
production from Fremantle Australia. The Bakers The following is the list of the bakers that are competing this season: Results summary Colour key: Episodes Episode 1: Cake Week Episode 2: Biscuit Week Episode 3: Bread Week Episode 4: Nostalgia Week
Demons are led by thirty-sixth year head coach Doug Bruno and play their home games at the Wintrust Arena as members of the Big East Conference. Previous season DePaul finished the 2020–21 season 14–10, 11–5 in Big
the 2021–22 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Blue Demons are led by thirty-sixth year head coach Doug Bruno and play their home games at the Wintrust Arena as members of the Big East Conference. Previous season DePaul finished the 2020–21 season 14–10, 11–5 in Big East play to
typical of the communist regime that Bellan grew up under, was inappropriate for a democracy. The case, NASA v. Nelson, went to the Supreme Court of the United States in 2010, but the court upheld the government policy. After the loss, some employees left JPL, but Bellan remained and submitted her background information. It was rejected because she included a note stating that she was submitting the information under duress, and she was required to submit it a second time without the note. In a related incident in 2012, a NASA laptop containing the background check information and other personal information of approximately 10,0000 employees was stolen from an employee's car, and a representative of the employees from the previous suit announced plans to sue NASA over its incautious handling of their information. The issue continued to simmer through 2014, when Bellan and another dual-national researcher from Ireland were required to sign a loyalty oath to the US, which they argued went well beyond the requirements of the 2004 policy. After an intervention by congresswoman Judy Chu, the requirement was modified. Recognition In 2014, JPL gave Bellan their highest research award, the Magellan Award for Excellence, for her methods for simulating mixtures of particles and supercritical fluids. The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) gave her their 2018 Pendray Aerospace Literature Award, "for widely reaching, seminal and outstanding publications on bio-fuels, sprays and high pressure flows to meet future challenges of Aeronautics and Astronautics combustion systems". She was named a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1988, and a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 2008. She became a Fellow
research on turbulence in high-pressure reactions, and on the interactions between fluid dynamics and thermodynamics in these reactions. She is a senior research scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and visiting associate in the Department of Mechanical and Civil Engineering of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). Education and career Bellan is originally from Romania, and grew up under the communist government there. She was educated in France, earning a baccalauréat in 1964 after studying at the Lycée Jules-Ferry (Paris), and a master's degree in 1969 at the Paris University of Sciences. She and her family visited Princeton University on a vacation in 1969, and she and her twin sister Larisse (who died in 1980) were encouraged to apply to Princeton for graduate study. They did, becoming the second and third women graduate students in Princeton's engineering school, after Genevieve Segol, a civil and geological engineer who also came to Princeton from France, and the first women in Princeton's graduate program in aerospace and mechanical engineering. At Princeton, the twins were supported by Zonta International through Amelia Earhart Fellowships, and their arrival at Princeton was reported in The New York Times and French newspapers. She earned another master's degree at Princeton in 1972, and, with her sister, completed her Ph.D. in 1974. Her dissertation was A Theory of Turbulent Combustion and Nitric Oxide Formation for Dual-carbureted Stratified-charge Engines, supervised by William A. Sirignano. After continuing at Princeton as a postdoctoral researcher, Bellan joined the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1978. She was a lecturer in jet propulsion at Caltech in 1992, became a visiting associate there in 1995, and was Chancellor's Distinguished Lecturer at the University of California, Irvine from 1995 to 1996. She became a senior research scientist at JPL in 1997. She is a citizen of both France and the United States. Research Bellan's research involves the simulation of reacting mixtures, and has shown the importance in these simulations of combining the effects of both fluid motion and heat transfer, down to the smallest levels of scale. Applications of this work include the development of bio-fuels, improving combustion efficiency in ground and aerospace vehicles and their effects on climate change, understanding the atmosphere of Venus, and modeling the interaction of rocket plumes with the surface of the moon. Privacy activism A 2004 policy of the Bush Administration, Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12, led NASA to require background checks on scientists at JPL. Bellen became part of a group of JPL employees
had left Liverpool with 43 crew members and she had suffered three crew deaths on her voyage. 2nd slave voyage (1799–1800): Captain Hayward sailed from Liverpool on 26 August 1799. Active gathered slaves at Calabar. Hayward died on 6 March 1800. Captain Samuel Welsby replaced Hayward. Active, arrived at Demerara on 1 July 1800 with 377 slaves. She sailed from Demerara on 29 July and arrived back at Liverpool on 13 September. She had left with 42 crew members and had suffered 15 crew deaths on her voyage. 3rd slave voyage (1801–1802): Captain Michael Mills acquired a letter of marque on 10 April 1801. He sailed from Liverpool on 21 May 1801. She was well at Cape Benda (Cabinda; Angola), on 28 November. Active arrived at the Bahamas on 26 May 1802 with 277 slaves. She sailed for Liverpool on 12 June and arrived there on 18 July. She had left Liverpool with 47 crew members and had suffered eight crew deaths on her voyage. 4th slave voyage (1802–1804): Captain Mills sailed from Liverpool on 27 November 1802. He sailed during the Peace of Amiens. Active, Mills, master,
slaves. She sailed for Liverpool on 12 June and arrived there on 18 July. She had left Liverpool with 47 crew members and had suffered eight crew deaths on her voyage. 4th slave voyage (1802–1804): Captain Mills sailed from Liverpool on 27 November 1802. He sailed during the Peace of Amiens. Active, Mills, master, was reported to have arrived at Angola. From there she sailed to Barbados, and on to Trinidad. Captain Mills acquired a letter of marque on 19 July 1803. She reportedly delivered her slaves to Tobago in August. She sailed for Liverpool on 3 December 1803. A strong gale stranded Active, Mills, master, from Tobago for the Clyde, on 24 January 1804 at Brodick Bay, on the Isle of Arran. It was expected that if the weather continued to moderate, a considerable part of her cargo could be saved, if not the vessel herself. another report stated that the Guineaman was a complete wreck and that only a few tons of elephant teeth, 47 puncheons of rum, and some wood would be saved. 5th slave voyage (1805–loss): Active was saved and repaired as Captain Mills sailed her from Liverpool on 7 February 1805. On 22 July she
Deokjong's reign, Seo Nul became Munhasijung (문하시중, 門下侍中). Then, in 1026, Hyeonjong gave her biological mother, Lady Choe a title of "Grand Lady of Icheon County" (이천군대부인, 利川郡大夫人) and her stepmother, Lady Jeong a title of "Grand Lady of Icheon County" (이천군대군, 利川郡大君). Later life, Death and funeral She outlived at least 26 years since her late husband's death in 1031 and later died on 16 June 1057 during the 11st year reign of her stepson, King Munjong. Although she was also one of the king's stepmother, but since she didn't have her own child, so many Ministers in the court told Munjong to not wear the "Sang-bok" (상복, 喪服; "mourning clothes") and he followed it as a result. For the same reason, her ancestral rites were not held on the New Year's Day. Her body was cremated, but where her tomb's location is unknown since no records left about that. Under his command too, she was posthumously called as Queen Wonmok (원목왕후, 元穆王后). References External links Queen Wonmok on Goryeosa . Queen Wonmok on Encykorea . 원목왕후 on Doosan Encyclopedia . 10th-century
Palace" (흥성궁, 興盛宮). In the same year, her father, Seo Nul held positions such as Jungchusahsangisangsi (중추사우산기상시, 中樞使右散騎常侍) and Seogyeongyusupansa (서경유수판사, 署經留守判事), also during King Deokjong's reign, Seo Nul became Munhasijung (문하시중, 門下侍中). Then, in 1026, Hyeonjong gave her biological mother, Lady Choe a title of "Grand Lady of Icheon County" (이천군대부인, 利川郡大夫人) and her stepmother, Lady Jeong a title of "Grand Lady of Icheon County" (이천군대군, 利川郡大君). Later life, Death and funeral She outlived at least 26 years since her late husband's death in 1031 and later died on 16 June 1057 during the 11st year reign of her stepson, King Munjong. Although she was also one of the king's stepmother, but since she didn't have her own child, so many Ministers in
denotes overtime game References East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1984–85 East Coast Conference
The champion gained and an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament. Bracket and results *
they displayed in the twelve-story United States Mission headquarters in New York. Books by Goldberg included The Creative Woman (1963), A Private View of Public Life (a memoir, 1975), Lola and the Moving Stairs (a children's book), and Sculpture in the Round (1989, poems, published posthumously). In 1944, Goldberg testified before a congressional hearing on employment discrimination, representing the National Women's Trade Union League. While based in Washington, D.C., she founded an employment program, Widening Horizons, helped organize DC Citizens for Public Education, and was a founder of Friends of the Juvenile Court. She co-chaired the National School Volunteer Program, was co-founder of the Counselor Aide Program in DC schools, and served several terms on the President's Committee for the Handicapped. In 1970, she campaigned for her husband in his run for governor of New York. On the international level, Goldberg represented the United States at the Belgrade Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, and she was an observer at the Ottawa Conference on Human Rights. She received the Mary McLeod Bethune Award in 1966, from the National Council of Negro Women. Personal life and legacy In 1931, Dorothy Kurgans married lawyer Arthur J. Goldberg,
the twelve-story United States Mission headquarters in New York. Books by Goldberg included The Creative Woman (1963), A Private View of Public Life (a memoir, 1975), Lola and the Moving Stairs (a children's book), and Sculpture in the Round (1989, poems, published posthumously). In 1944, Goldberg testified before a congressional hearing on employment discrimination, representing the National Women's Trade Union League. While based in Washington, D.C., she founded an employment program, Widening Horizons, helped organize DC Citizens for Public Education, and was a founder of Friends of the Juvenile Court. She co-chaired the National School Volunteer Program, was co-founder of the Counselor Aide Program in DC schools, and served several terms on the President's Committee for the Handicapped. In 1970, she campaigned for her husband in his run for governor of New York. On the international level, Goldberg represented the United States at the Belgrade Conference on Security
Hakusensha's seinen manga magazine Young Animal from October 13, 2017, to March 8, 2019. Hakusensha collected its chapters in four tankōbon volumes, released from May 29, 2018, to May 29, 2019. Volume list References External links Comedy anime and manga Cooking in anime and manga Fantasy anime and
manga magazine Young Animal from October 2017 to March 2019, with its chapters collected in four tankōbon volumes. Publication Written and illustrated by Suu Minazuki, Dokunie
It has been described as "the first serious attempt to recuperate a lost gay canon in print". The book discusses a growing clandestine literature on the topic of male homosexuality, or Uranianism, in English literature and the growth in a homosexual
the topic of male homosexuality, or Uranianism, in English literature and the growth in a homosexual subculture in England from the 1850s, ending shortly after the trials of Oscar Wilde in 1895. The degree to which Reade overstated the visibility of homosexuality in this era has been debated,
Liberation War and who disappeared after being arrested by armed forces. Early life and career Abdur Rahim was born on January 2, 1936 in the village of Ghatiyara in the Basudeb Union of Brahmanbaria District in the then British India, now under the Chittagong Division of Bangladesh. Rahim was the then Labour Legal Consultant and served as the General Secretary of the Pakistan Labour Federation. He also was a manager at the Ujala Match Factory. He was also the joint secretary of the National Federation of Pakistan Posts and Telegraphs Employees. During the 1971 Bangladesh war, Rahim engaged in building pro-independence movement among workers in Dhaka that included sending
who disappeared after being arrested by armed forces. Early life and career Abdur Rahim was born on January 2, 1936 in the village of Ghatiyara in the Basudeb Union of Brahmanbaria District in the then British India, now under the Chittagong Division of Bangladesh. Rahim was the then Labour Legal Consultant and served as the General Secretary of the Pakistan Labour Federation. He also was a manager at the Ujala Match Factory. He was also the joint secretary of the National Federation of Pakistan Posts and Telegraphs Employees. During the 1971 Bangladesh war, Rahim engaged in building pro-independence movement among workers in Dhaka that included sending them secretly to
Lea Tidemann Stenvik 5 Ingeborg Brøste Fossnes 7 Mirela Gjikokaj 8 Katarina Karlsen Ugland 11 Martine Kårigstad Andersen 15 Tilde Alræk 18 Silje Alvestad 22 Maren Sofie Tefrum 33 Malin Berg Osnes 43 Eline Gerø 2022–2023 Transfers Joining Andrea Landås Gabrielsen (LW) (from Storhamar HE) with immediate effect Leaving Mina Hesselberg (LW) (to Vipers Kristiansand) with immediate effect Martine Kårigstad Andersen (LB) (to Vipers Kristiansand) Technical staff Head coach: Bendik Berg Assistant coach: Adrian Ark Saastad Assistant coach: Ingvill Helland Anderson Notable former club players Tina Magnus Catharina Fiskerstrand Broch Tiril Spæren Mie Rakstad Mia Kristin Syverud Kristiane Knutsen Sara Møller Mina Hesselberg
Aleksandra Mandic Back players 4 Lea Tidemann Stenvik 5 Ingeborg Brøste Fossnes 7 Mirela Gjikokaj 8 Katarina Karlsen Ugland 11 Martine Kårigstad Andersen 15 Tilde Alræk 18 Silje Alvestad 22 Maren Sofie Tefrum 33 Malin Berg Osnes 43 Eline Gerø 2022–2023 Transfers Joining Andrea Landås Gabrielsen (LW) (from Storhamar HE) with immediate effect Leaving Mina Hesselberg (LW) (to Vipers Kristiansand) with immediate effect Martine
and the visibility of women in Israel's Orthodox communities. Keats Jaskoll was born and raised in Lakewood Township, New Jersey in a Jewish but non-Orthodox family. After migrating to Israel in 2007, Keats Jaskoll gained public attention through her co-founding and leadership of a women's
and raised in Lakewood Township, New Jersey in a Jewish but non-Orthodox family. After migrating to Israel in 2007, Keats Jaskoll gained public attention through her co-founding and leadership of a women's advocacy group Chochmat Nashim and her writing at the Times of Israel news site.A key issue
casinos and hotels such as La Concha Resort, the San Juan Marriott, and the historic Vanderbilt Hotel. Ashford Avenue, often referred to as the Puerto Rican “Fifth Avenue”, hosts world-renowned brands such as Cartier, Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Salvatore Ferragamo, and Puerto Rican brands and high-end boutiques such as Nono Maldonado, Lisa Thon, Harry Robles and Ecliptica. The area also has numerous restaurants of different varieties, gift shops, and smaller inns. The part of the beach found at the end of Vendig Street is considered a popular gay neighborhood of El Condado. Gallery See also List of
for swimmers and in early 2022 the governor stated steps had to be taken to address the issue of multiple drownings there. Nearby locations Condado Beach is located in a prime area for tourism and recreation. The beach is bordered by renown casinos and hotels such as La Concha Resort, the San Juan Marriott, and the historic Vanderbilt Hotel. Ashford Avenue, often referred to as the Puerto Rican “Fifth Avenue”, hosts world-renowned brands such as Cartier, Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Salvatore Ferragamo, and Puerto Rican brands and high-end boutiques such as Nono Maldonado, Lisa Thon, Harry Robles and Ecliptica. The area also has numerous restaurants
the title by defeating Juan Avendaño and Fernando Roese 6–0, 6–0 in the final. Seeds Draw Draw
lost in the semifinals to Jan Gunnarsson and Michael Mortensen. Gunnarsson and Mortensen won the title by defeating Juan Avendaño and Fernando Roese 6–0, 6–0 in the final. Seeds
initial audition for the role did not go well, but she was personally offered a second chance by Kristen Anderson-Lopez after the co-songwriter of Frozen saw her sing at a "Women of Broadway" concert. In 2021, Kurtz appeared in the ensemble of Annie Live! on NBC. References External links McKenzie Kurtz on Twitter 1997 births Living people
life Kurtz's childhood home is in Alpharetta, Georgia. Kurtz was active in her high school's theater program, playing the titular role of Mary Poppins at Milton High School in 2015. In 2015, Kurtz was also a finalist for a Jimmy Award. Kurtz is a 2019 graduate of the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre, and Dance. Career Kurtz played Ariel in a production of Footloose at The Muny directed by Christian Borle in 2019. In Kurtz's 2020 Broadway debut, she played the role of Anna in the musical
UFC 276 is an upcoming mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that will take place on July 2, 2022, in Las Vegas, United States at the T-Mobile Arena. Background The event is being held on the UFC's
Background The event is being held on the UFC's 10th annual International Fight Week (Sunday, June 27, 2022, through Sunday, July 3, 2022). The 2022 UFC Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be also be taking place on July 1 to July 2, 2022,
(Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1982–83 East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1983 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Basketball in Pennsylvania Easton, Pennsylvania College sports in Pennsylvania March 1983 sports events
Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1983 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Basketball in Pennsylvania Easton, Pennsylvania College sports in Pennsylvania March 1983 sports events in the United States
students of all ages within the Little Ebenezer United Methodist Church. The school, located in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, was the first government-sponsored school for African Americans in Washington, D.C. Emma V. Brown and Frances W. Perkins were the school's first teachers. Perkins had been sent to Washington by the New England Freedmen's Aid Society of Boston. The student body quickly outgrew its church space. Perkins, a white woman from New England, returned North and raised the funds needed for the construction of a new school. A lot was purchased in C Street between 2nd and 3rd Streets, SE, and construction on a
in C Street between 2nd and 3rd Streets, SE, and construction on a new school building began. The new school building opened in winter of 1864 and was named Lincoln School. The building was a two-story structure with two classrooms on each floor. A larger brick building replaced the smaller building in 1871. The office of the superintendent of 'Colored' schools was located within the school. Lincoln School operated until 1947 and was later demolished. The Capitol Hill Hotel now stands on the school's former lot. References Defunct schools in Washington, D.C. African-American history of Washington, D.C. Educational institutions established in
Víctor Maldonado and Alfredo Torres for Netflix. It is scheduled for a release sometime in 2022. Production The series was announced in June 2021. Characters and environments are rendered using the Unreal Engine and
June 2021. Characters and environments are rendered using the Unreal Engine and are in turn animated through motion capture. References External links 2020s American animated television series American children's animated
is only informative if it can be identified in relation to some other point of reference, in this case, usually another calendar. Today, however, Jews make use of the era known as Anno Mundi, the "era of creation," in their transaction of dates. Second Temple: Its years of duration and year of destruction Jewish tradition holds that the Second Temple stood for 420 years. The same Jewish tradition holds that the Second Temple was destroyed in the lunar month Av (August), in the year 68 of the Common Era (rather than in year 70), naturally implying that the Second Temple was built in the year 352 BCE. Since it was during the reign of the Persian king, Darius the Great (Darius b. Hystaspes), that the Second Temple was constructed (), in the sixth-year of his reign, the timeframe given for this Persian king in Jewish chronology (whose reign, accordingly, began in 358 BCE) stands at variance with the timeframe given for the same king in conventional chronology (who is said to have reigned between 521 BCE–486 BCE), a 163-year disparity. Jews have traditionally held the view that the date in which they are to reckon the 2nd Temple's destruction is the year which preceded the 380th year of the Seleucid era, also known as the Year of Alexander (a date which corresponds to anno 69 CE). This means the destruction of the 2nd Temple fell out in the lunar month of Av in the 379th year of the Seleucid era counting (Year of Alexander), or what corresponds to anno 68 CE. The two most ancient historical sources used to support this tradition are the Jewish historian Josephus, citing the Book of Maccabees, and the Aramaic Scroll of Antiochus (compiled, according to Saadia Gaon, by the elders of the Schools of Hillel and Shammai). The Scroll of Antiochus would have been written in the early first century CE, before Suetonius wrote his Lives of the Caesars. However, there is a proclivity among modern-day chroniclers to bypass these Jewish sources, in favor of others. According to the Aramaic Scroll of Antiochus, from the Second Temple's rebuilding till the 23rd year of the reign of Antiochus Eupator, son of Antiochus Epiphanes who invaded Judaea, there had transpired 213 years in total (i.e. since the Second Temple's construction under Darius). Quoting verbatim from that ancient Aramaic record: (Literal translation: In the twenty third year of his kingdom, in the two-hundred and thirteenth year of the rebuilding of this, God's house, he (Antiochus Eupator) put his face to go up to Jerusalem.) This time period given for Antiochus Eupator's reign is taken in conjunction with another record mentioned by Josephus, in his Antiquities of the Jews (12.9.2.). Based on Josephus' record, who cites from the First Book of Maccabees (6:16), Antiochus Eupator began his reign after his father's death (Antiochus Epiphanes) in anno 149 of the Seleucid era (= 162 BCE). Twenty-three years into Antiochus Eupator's reign would have then been anno 172 of the Seleucid Era, or what was then 139 BCE. Since, according to the Scroll of Antiochus, the Second Temple had already been standing 213 years, this means that the Second Temple was completed in anno 352 BCE, being what was then the 6th year of the reign of Darius the king (i.e. Darius, the son of Hystaspes), the year in which the king finished its building according to Ezra 6:15. Jewish tradition, which assigns 420 years to its duration, means that its destruction occurred in 68 CE. Although this date of the Temple's rebuilding largely disagrees with modern scholarship who base their chronologies upon the Babylonian Chronicles and its rebuilding in 516 BCE when Darius I was thought to have reigned, it has, nonetheless, long been held by religious Jewish circles as being accurate and reliable, since it is founded upon a tradition passed down generation after generation. Modern scholars seek to rectify this apparent disparity in time by saying that "the Darius in whose reign the Second Temple was built, was not Darius I, as is commonly supposed, but Darius II." In this case, the chronology thus established is in striking agreement with certain chronological data or implications in Josephus and rabbinic literature. If, however, the Darius in whose reign the Second Temple was built was Darius I, the date of its construction must, of necessity, be pulled back earlier to 516 BCE. Counter-arguments against Seder Olam One of the strongest counter-arguments that can be made against Seder Olam and its demarcations in time is that, if the Second Temple was completed in the 6th year of the reign of Darius the Great, as noted by the Hebrew scriptures (), and which Temple, according to Seder Olam, stood 420 years and was built in 352 BCE, this would put Herodotus as having written about the Greco-Persian Wars in his Histories (compiled c. 430 BCE) some 72 years before Darius the Great ever came to power, as well as before Cambyses and Cyrus the Great ever having began their reigns! Moreover, Herodotus, who wrote about Xerxes the Great, the son of Darius, would have then written about him 108 years before Xerxes the Great even rose to power! Based on the year in which Herodotus completed his Histories, and where he mentions Cyrus the Great as reigning 29 years, and his son Cambyses reigning 5 years, and Darius the Great reigning 36 years, this would point to a time much earlier than that presumed to have happened for these same events based on Seder Olam. The terminus post quem for the Second Temple's construction would have been before Herodotus wrote his Histories. These arguments point to the primacy of Josephus' chronological timetable over those written in Seder Olam. According to the Chronicle of Jerome, Herodotus became well-known in the 78th Olympiad, meaning, between 378 BCE – 375 BCE, about 52-55 years after compiling his Histories. The Sabbatical year as a means to determine events The Jubilee and Sabbatical year provided a long-term means for dating events. Unfortunately, the Jewish method of calculating the recurring Sabbatical year (Shmita) has been greatly misunderstood by modern chroniclers of history, owing to their unfamiliarity with Jewish practice, largely due to its being ensconced in the Hebrew language, and which has led to many speculations and inconsistencies in computations. According to Maimonides (Mishne Torah, Hil. Shmita ve-Yovel 10:7), during the Second Temple period, the seven-year cycle which repeated itself every seven years was actually dependent upon the fixation of the Jubilee, or the fiftieth year, which year temporarily broke off the counting of the seven-year cycle. Moreover, the laws governing the Jubilee (e.g. release of Hebrew bondmen, and the return of leased property to its original owners, etc.) were never applied all throughout the Second Temple period, but the Jubilee was being used during the period of the Second Temple in order to fix and sanctify thereby the Sabbatical year. A Sabbatical year could not be fixed without the year of the Jubilee, since the Jubilee serves to break-off the 7 x 7-year cycle, before resuming its count once again in the 51st year. While the 49th year is also a Sabbatical year, the fiftieth year is not the 1st year in a new seven-year cycle, but rather is the Jubilee. Its number is not incorporated into the seven-year cycle. Rather, the new seven-year cycle begins afresh in the 51st year, and in this manner is the cycle repeated. After the Temple's destruction, the people began a new practice to number each
year one date is assigned with an air of finality to a certain king, a few years later the date is abandoned as erroneous. These changes are natural." In fact, it has taken many hundreds of years for scholars to arrive at the dates that are now assumed to be accurate, as purported by Grafton in his book on "Joseph Scaliger," and where he shows how long it took for Roman consular dates (and archon dates, etc.) to be converted into BC/AD. All the ancient dating systems had to be aligned and converted into the modern system, and cross-referenced, and where others were not easily translatable. Cornerstones in Jewish tradition Amongst Jews, the era known as the Seleucid era has been used in antiquity to mark chronological events. It was used extensively by Sherira Gaon in the writing of his Iggeret. The practice of reckoning years by this system is mentioned in the Babylonian Talmud (Avodah Zarah 10a): "Said Rav Nahman: In the Diaspora, it is not permissible to count [the date in years] except only by the kings of the Grecians." Its usage was common throughout the Jewish world until the sixteenth century, and has been used by Yemenite Diaspora Jews as late as the 1940s, until their immigration to the Land of Israel. By their recollection of the current calendar year, it is shown to have started in the Fall (Tishri) of 312 BCE, which agrees with modern scholarship (312/311). Though less significant, there is a dispute as to how Alexander the Great fits-in with this Hellenistic dating era. Talmudic exegete, Rabbeinu Chananel, following Seder Olam, alleged that the Seleucid era commenced in the 6th-year of the reign of Alexander the Great, and that there were 40 years from the building of the Second Temple (during the reign of the Persian king Darius the Great) until the army of Alexander the Great defeated Xerxes' general, at which time, Grecian rule then began over Israel, namely, in 312 BCE. According to Rabbeinu Chananel, this 40-year period marked the building of the Second Temple under Darius the Great in 352 BCE and the beginning of Grecian hegemony over Israel in 312 BCE. Josephus contends differently, writing in his work Against Apion 1.22 that Alexander the Great died in the 114th Olympiad, after reigning 12 years. If so, the 114th Olympiad would have corresponded with about 326 BCE, or what was then 15 years before they began to make use of the Seleucid era counting! Others put his death in 323 BCE, 12 years before the start of the Seleucid era. It is said that the Jews started this system of reckoning the years, in recognition of Alexander the Great who passed through their country and who received warmly the Jewish High Priest who came out to greet him. Others say that the introduction of this new era was in commemoration of the year in which Seleucus I reconquered Babylon. The advantage of the Seleucid era counting system is that dates marked in this era do not require later synchronization with the BC / AD era configurations based on kings' reigns, configurations added later by modern chroniclers when trying to fixate the regnal years of various kings. Rather, all that was required of the Seleucid era counting was to simply convert it into the date used in the Common Era, without consideration for the rest. While the Seleucid Era counting has been abandoned in the writing of legal deeds, promissory notes, court attestations, etc., it is still relied upon by all observant Jews when determining the 2nd Temple's destruction. It is also considered very reliable when seeking to determine dates of events in relation to the Common Era, making for a more precise fixation of an event. Another reason for the popularity of the Seleucid era counting amongst Jews is that the commencement of the Seleucid era was seen as a key fixed point of reference, being, according to Seder Olam, 1,000 years after the giving of the law at Sinai, or, precisely one-thousand years after Israel's departure out of Egypt. Typically, a Jewish date is only informative if it can be identified in relation to some other point of reference, in this case, usually another calendar. Today, however, Jews make use of the era known as Anno Mundi, the "era of creation," in their transaction of dates. Second Temple: Its years of duration and year of destruction Jewish tradition holds that the Second Temple stood for 420 years. The same Jewish tradition holds that the Second Temple was destroyed in the lunar month Av (August), in the year 68 of the Common Era (rather than in year 70), naturally implying that the Second Temple was built in the year 352 BCE. Since it was during the reign of the Persian king, Darius the Great (Darius b. Hystaspes), that the Second Temple was constructed (), in the sixth-year of his reign, the timeframe given for this Persian king in Jewish chronology (whose reign, accordingly, began in 358 BCE) stands at variance with the timeframe given for the same king in conventional chronology (who is said to have reigned between 521 BCE–486 BCE), a 163-year disparity. Jews have traditionally held the view that the date in which they are to reckon the 2nd Temple's destruction is the year which preceded the 380th year of the Seleucid era, also known as the Year of Alexander (a date which corresponds to anno 69 CE). This means the destruction of the 2nd Temple fell out in the lunar month of Av in the 379th year of the Seleucid era counting (Year of Alexander), or what corresponds to anno 68 CE. The two most ancient historical sources used to support this tradition are the Jewish historian Josephus, citing the Book of Maccabees, and the Aramaic Scroll of Antiochus (compiled, according to Saadia Gaon, by the elders of the Schools of Hillel and Shammai). The Scroll of Antiochus would have been written in the early first century CE, before Suetonius wrote his Lives of the Caesars. However, there is a proclivity among modern-day chroniclers to bypass these Jewish sources, in favor of others. According to the Aramaic Scroll of Antiochus, from the Second Temple's rebuilding till the 23rd year of the reign of Antiochus Eupator, son of Antiochus Epiphanes who invaded Judaea, there had transpired 213 years in total (i.e. since the Second Temple's construction under Darius). Quoting verbatim from that ancient Aramaic record: (Literal translation: In the twenty third year of his kingdom, in the two-hundred and thirteenth year of the rebuilding of this, God's house, he (Antiochus Eupator) put his face to go up to Jerusalem.) This time period given for Antiochus Eupator's reign is taken in conjunction with another record mentioned by Josephus, in his Antiquities of the Jews (12.9.2.). Based on Josephus' record, who cites from the First Book of Maccabees (6:16), Antiochus Eupator began his reign after his father's death (Antiochus Epiphanes) in anno 149 of the Seleucid era (= 162 BCE). Twenty-three years into Antiochus Eupator's reign would have
friend Anna Stepanovna Demidova. Demidova, who was once engaged to Ersberg's brother Nikolai, was brought on to assist in her duties and later she was appointed as a governess to the children. Exile She travelled with the Imperial family to exile in Tobolsk. She accompanied the family in the train car on the way to Western Siberia, along with Count Ilya Leonidovich Tatishchev, Prince Vasily Alexandrovich Dolgorukov, Pierre Gilliard, Sydney Gibbes, Evgeny Sergeyevich Botkin, Countess Anastasia Hendrikova, Catherine Schneider, Baroness Sophie von Buxhoeveden, Anna Demidova, Ivan Dmitrievich Sednev, Klementy Nagorny, M. M. Kharitonov, and Alexander Volkov. She stayed with Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, and Anastasia and Tsarevich Alexei at the Governor's Mansion in Tobolsk after the Tsar, Tsarista and Grand Duchess Maria were taken to Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg. During this time, Demidova wrote to Tegleva to instruct her on how to conceal family jewels in the Grand Duchesses' undergarmets. Ersberg assisted Tegleva and the grand duchesses in hiding the jewels by sewing them into bodices and hiding diamonds and pearls by sewing them into buttons and sewing the buttons into the fur linings of hats. She was later taken to Yekaterinburg in a fourth class train car with Tegleva, Kharitonov, Leonid Sednev, and some other servants; arriving on the night of 12 May 1918. When the rest of the imperial family were taken to Ipatiev House, Ersberg was not permitted to join them, instead staying in a train car on a siding with Gilliard, Tegleva, Gibbes, and Baroness von Buxhoeveden. At night a locomotive attached to the train car and took Ersberg and her colleagues to Tyumen, sparing them from the execution of the imperial family and other members of court. When Alexander Kolchak's forces seized Tobolsk, Ersberg was called in for questioning by Nikolai Alexeyevich Sokolov to provide information on the whereabouts of the imperial family. She accompanied the White Army into Yekaterinburg and hired a boatman to help her search for the imperial family members' bodies, looking in a pond and in a swamp, but was unsuccessful in finding remains. Life after the revolution Through the Red Cross, Ersberg tracked down Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, who gave her a subsidy. She then went to Switzerland and Czechoslovakia before being allowed back into Russia, per a personal request made by her brother to Vyacheslav Molotov, in November 1928. Upon entering Russia, Ersberg was given commands to appear at the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission, where she was instructed not to disclose any information on the life of the Tsar and his family. During World War II, Ersberg and her sisters were supposed to be evacuated from Leningrad but their passports had been taken away at the housing office. They were not allowed to
servants, in assisting in medical work in hospitals throughout the war. Ersberg wrote in letters to her family that the children of the imperial family were "modest and diligent". She referred to Grand Duchess Olga as "a little spoiled and capricious" and said she "could be lazy". She said that Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Anastasia were "always busy" with sewing and embroidery, and helped clean their rooms. According to her niece, Maria Nikolaevna Ersberg, Ersberg said the Tsar paid more attention to the children than the Tsarista. She was affectionately called "Liza" by members of the imperial family. In 1905 she secured a position at court for her good friend Anna Stepanovna Demidova. Demidova, who was once engaged to Ersberg's brother Nikolai, was brought on to assist in her duties and later she was appointed as a governess to the children. Exile She travelled with the Imperial family to exile in Tobolsk. She accompanied the family in the train car on the way to Western Siberia, along with Count Ilya Leonidovich Tatishchev, Prince Vasily Alexandrovich Dolgorukov, Pierre Gilliard, Sydney Gibbes, Evgeny Sergeyevich Botkin, Countess Anastasia Hendrikova, Catherine Schneider, Baroness Sophie von Buxhoeveden, Anna Demidova, Ivan Dmitrievich Sednev, Klementy Nagorny, M. M. Kharitonov, and Alexander Volkov. She stayed with Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, and Anastasia and Tsarevich Alexei at the Governor's Mansion in Tobolsk after the Tsar, Tsarista and Grand Duchess Maria were taken to Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg. During this time, Demidova wrote to Tegleva to instruct her on how to conceal family jewels in the Grand Duchesses' undergarmets. Ersberg assisted Tegleva and the grand duchesses in hiding the jewels by sewing them into bodices and hiding diamonds and pearls by sewing them into buttons and sewing the buttons into the fur linings of hats. She was later taken to Yekaterinburg in a fourth class train car with Tegleva, Kharitonov, Leonid Sednev, and some other servants; arriving on the night of 12 May 1918. When the rest of the imperial family were taken to Ipatiev House, Ersberg was not permitted to join them, instead staying in a train car on a siding with Gilliard, Tegleva, Gibbes, and Baroness von Buxhoeveden. At night a locomotive attached to the train car and took Ersberg and her colleagues to Tyumen, sparing them from the execution of the imperial family and other members of court. When Alexander Kolchak's forces seized Tobolsk, Ersberg was called in for questioning by Nikolai Alexeyevich Sokolov to provide information on the whereabouts of the imperial family. She accompanied the White Army into Yekaterinburg and hired a boatman to help her search for the imperial family members' bodies, looking in a pond and in a swamp, but was unsuccessful in finding remains. Life after the revolution Through the Red Cross, Ersberg tracked down Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, who gave her a subsidy. She then went to Switzerland and Czechoslovakia before being allowed back into Russia, per a personal request made by her brother to Vyacheslav Molotov, in November 1928. Upon entering Russia, Ersberg was given commands to appear at the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission, where she was instructed not to disclose any information on the life of the Tsar and his family. During World War II, Ersberg and her sisters were supposed
this church). In 1663, the old stave church was torn down and a new timber-framed long church was built on the same site. Not much is known about this building. In the early 1800s, the parish decided to close the Bråstad Church and merge it with Hunn Church. As part of this decision, they also decided to replace the old Hunn Church with a new, larger church on higher ground about to the northwest of the old church site (this is where the present cemetery is located). Abraham Pihl was hired to design the new church and Svend Aspaas was hired to lead the construction. Work on the new Hunn Church took place from 1818 to 1821. The new church was a large octagonal building with a church porch on the west end and a sacristy on the east end. The old Hunn Church was torn down in 1822 after the new church was completed. In 1825, the exterior received wood
Toten prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar. The white, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1882 using plans drawn up by the architect Jacob Wilhelm Nordan. The church seats about 600 people. History The earliest existing historical records of the church date back to the year 1577, but the church was not built that year. The first church her was a wooden stave church that was likely built during the 12th century (c. 1150 or later). This church stood on the old Hund farm (later spelled Hunn), which was about northwest of the present site of the church. This church was historically known as Hund Church or Hunn Church. Historically, this church was an annex chapel to the main Haug Church (the nearby Bråstad Church was also an annex to this church). In 1663, the old stave church was torn down and a new timber-framed long church was built on the same site. Not much is known about this building. In the early 1800s, the parish decided to close the Bråstad Church and merge it with Hunn Church. As part of this decision, they also decided to replace the old Hunn Church with a new, larger church on higher ground about to the northwest of the
originally grew up in Oklahoma before moving to Belton, Texas and transferred to Belton High School for his final two years of high school. He was named first team All-District as a senior after recording 54 tackles and ten tackles for loss. Hall was rated a three-star recruit and committed to play college football at Houston over offers from Colorado State, Toledo, and Tulsa. College career Hall was a member of the
named first team All-District as a senior after recording 54 tackles and ten tackles for loss. Hall was rated a three-star recruit and committed to play college football at Houston over offers from Colorado State, Toledo, and Tulsa. College career Hall was a member of the Houston Cougars for four seasons. He was a member of the Cougars' defensive line rotation as a freshman and sophomore. Hall became a starter going into his junior
Dr. José Celso Barbosa Park is still referred to as El Último Trolley. Description Measuring almost 2 miles in length from Punta Piedrita and Parque del Indio in the west to Punta Las Marías in the east, Ocean Park Beach is the largest beach in the municipality of San Juan. Although the largest beach in the area, Ocean Park Beach is not as crowded as Condado Beach as it is more
Marías in the east, Ocean Park Beach is the largest beach in the municipality of San Juan. Although the largest beach in the area, Ocean Park Beach is not as crowded as Condado Beach as it is more frequented by locals than visitors. This sandy beach is popular for amateur and experienced surfers and windsurfers. Gallery See also List of beaches
latirostris is found in Europe, Africa, Australia and Hawaii, in many habitats, including pasture, grass, soil, heath, moss, and leaf litter, occurring under a wide range of plants. It is a predatory mite and a natural enemy of the redlegged
species of snout mite in the family Bdellidae. The cosmopolitan species was first described by Jean-Frédéric Hermann in 1804 as Scirus latirostris. Cyta latirostris is found in
Pre-revolutionary Cuba, and played an important role in the struggle for women's suffrage in Cuba. It was founded by a group of upper- and middle-class women. Among its founders were Pilar Morlón de Menéndez, Pilar Jorge de Tella, Mariblanca Sabas Alomá, Ofelia Domínguez Navarro and Hortensia Lamar. Its main purpose was to work for the introduction of women's suffrage, but it also engaged in social work, the improvement of women's right in the criminal justice system and women's greater access to education and professional life, and betterment of their working conditions. In 1923, the Club Femenino and five other women's organizations
Among its founders were Pilar Morlón de Menéndez, Pilar Jorge de Tella, Mariblanca Sabas Alomá, Ofelia Domínguez Navarro and Hortensia Lamar. Its main purpose was to work for the introduction of women's suffrage, but it also engaged in social work, the improvement of women's right in the criminal justice system and women's greater access to education and professional life, and betterment of their working conditions. In 1923, the Club Femenino and five other women's organizations founded and joined the umbrella organization Federación Nacional de Asociaciones Femeninas. The Federación in turn organized the Congreso Nacional de Mujeres de Cuba of 1923, which was the first national women's congress in Cuba, chaired by Pilar Morlon y Menéndez of the Club Femenino de Cuba. On the second congress in 1925, president Gerardo Machado made a promise to introduce women's suffrage. Women's suffrage was introduced
Elizabeth. Henlake successfully petitioned King James to be his instrument maker following Schets' death, with the support of several courtiers. From 27 June 1603 he held a joint appointment with Andrea Bassano until his death in 1610, as tuners of the king's virginals, organs, and other instruments. In January 1610 Samuel Calvert tried to engage "Robin Henlake" to give or arrange virginal lessons to the diplomat William Trumbull or his family. Henlake started making a lesson book for Trumbull. An earlier manuscript anthology of lute music compiled by or for Trumbull survives and includes works by the Bassano family and Francis Cutting. Calvert reported Henlake's death in June 1610, before the virginal book was completed. Working for Anne of Denmark Henlake mended lutes and viols for Daniel
Samuel Calvert tried to engage "Robin Henlake" to give or arrange virginal lessons to the diplomat William Trumbull or his family. Henlake started making a lesson book for Trumbull. An earlier manuscript anthology of lute music compiled by or for Trumbull survives and includes works by the Bassano family and Francis Cutting. Calvert reported Henlake's death in June 1610, before the virginal book was completed. Working for Anne of Denmark Henlake mended lutes and viols for Daniel Bacheler, a musician working for Anne of Denmark. In August and September 1607 Henlake worked at Hampton Court repairing a wind instrument for
Municipality, Innlandet county, Norway. It is located in the Hunndalen valley, just west of the town of Gjøvik. It is the church for the Hunn parish which is part of the Toten prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar. The red brick church was built in a rectangular design in 1968 using plans drawn up by the architect Helge Abrahamsen. The church seats about 500 people. History For centuries, the Old Hunn Church served the area surrounding the present-day town of Gjøvik. In 1882, the old Hunn Church was
new town. The old name of Hunn was no longer used. Nearly a century later, during the 1960s, the parish began planning for a new church in the Hunndalen valley, just west of the town of Gjøvik. At this time, the parish decided to bring back the historic name Hunn for the new church, even though it is a new church in a new location with no shared
Mountains () is a 2021 film written and directed by Daniel Sandu and starring Adrian Titieni, Elena Purea and Judith State. Cast [[Adrian Titieni as Mircea Elena Purea as Paula Judith State as Alina Valeriu Andriuta as Cristian Nistor Virgil Aioanei as Laurentiu Radu
Lupu Cristian Bota as Marian George Constantinescu as Operatorul Misiunii Natalia Calin as Mama turistei Marina Palii as Receptionera Constantin Florescu as Managerul Hotelului Lucian Iftime as Ofiterul de
to COVID-19. After years of silence, Sarah's return was nationally and internationally unexpected, but the audiences reacted amazingly to her come back.Indonesian agazine Kompas states "The song was sung by Sarah Azhari to encourage people to face the COVID-19 pandemic situation with happiness and power". Voice of America conducted a special report with insights of how
on July 16, 2021. "Dance To Survive" was written by Beth Bella, Frank Carrozzo and Sarah Azhari, and was produced by Frank Carrozzo. "Dance To Survive" adopted an upbeat dance-pop style and the lyrics describe the survival story of the artist to COVID-19. After years of silence, Sarah's return was nationally and internationally unexpected, but the audiences reacted amazingly to her come back.Indonesian agazine Kompas states "The song was sung by Sarah Azhari to encourage
own need to take emergency leave when her childcare provider was closed due to the pandemic. She said that implying that parental leave is some sort of vacation or unfair advantage "subjects parents to unconscious bias in performance reviews and downplays the type of support and benefits parents so desperately need". , she worked at Compass, Inc., a real estate startup. In 2021, Glasson contributed to The Tech Worker Handbook, a website of free resources for employees who may be interested in speaking out on issues at their employers. Legal proceedings with Google Glasson filed a complaint against Google with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) for pregnancy discrimination on September 3, 2019. The Seattle EEOC office began a probe into Glasson's claims in February 2020. , the case was still under investigation. In the lawsuit, and her complaints, Glasson alleged that she was told by third parties that her manager was making derogatory comments about her, interfered with her projects, and started interviewing others to replace her. She also alleged that when she reported she was pregnant with her second child that her work environment worsened. She said she tried to move internally, but was convinced to stay on her team after she was misled into believing her manager was leaving. After receiving what she described as unfair and surprising negative feedback, she accepted a demotion on another team, where she alleged she was discouraged from supervisory duties prior to her maternity leave, as it would "rock the boat", and was excluded from manager meetings and off-sites. Glasson further alleged that after she was diagnosed with placenta praevia, her new manager was dismissive, citing an NPR segment she had heard "debunk[ing] the benefits of bed rest", and her own experience ignoring medically-advised bed rest and delivering "the biggest presentations of [her] career" the day before her own child was born. Glasson further alleged that her manager informed her that she should not expect to be a manager when she returned from her leave. Google condemned retaliatory behavior, both internally and externally. The company told the EEOC that they had "accommodated each of Ms. Glasson's pregnancy-related requests", and that there was "no support for Ms. Glasson's contention that she suffered discrimination or retaliation as a result". They further argued that Glasson was not given direct reports in her last role at the company because of insufficient headcount. Glasson sent another demand letter to Google requesting the company work with the Center for Parental Leave Leadership to train managers at the company on supporting new and expecting parents to prevent others from facing the same types of discrimination and retaliation that she alleges she faced, and asking for payment for emotional damages and reimbursement for her legal expenses. Google declined the settlement offer. During her lawsuit, which was scheduled for trial in January 2022, Facebook and Compass were subpoenaed for Glasson's employee records, including payroll information, performance reviews, any complaints raised by Glasson against those employers, and any and all communications referencing Google. She also said that because she is suing for emotional damages, Google received all of the notes from the counseling she was provided by the company's EAP, including private information about her marriage and sex life. She referred to the process as "intrusive", and said there were "very few limits to what a corporation like Google can ask in discovery". She later reported that more than a year later, the therapist suggested they stop their sessions and she find another provider as soon as she filed the lawsuit. Kristi Lee, an associate professor at Seattle University, said this sounded like "client abandonment", a violation of a formal ethical code for counselors. The New York Times discovered that Lyra Health, the healthcare provider used by Google and Facebook as of February 2022, allowed the company to share information without the client's consent if it was "required to do so by a court order or other legal requirement". A bill introduced in Washington State Legislature in January 2022 would prohibit that in the future, if passed into law, and the incident and therapist were placed under investigation by the Washington State Department of Health (WSDOH) after Glasson filed a complaint. In October 2021, Glasson wrote a Medium article about her experiences as a whistleblower and with the lawsuit against Google, and said that she had already spent $56,000 on the lawsuit. She also started a GoFundMe campaign to help with the legal costs. Glasson and Google reached an undisclosed settlement in February 2022. Legislation Pregnancy discrimination In 2020, Glasson worked with Senator Karen Keiser in the hopes of extending the statute of limitations for reporting pregnancy discrimination. The law only allowed six months to report discrimination, which Keiser said "doesn't make sense" given that "it takes nine months or more to have a baby". Glasson testified before the Washington State Senate on January 16, 2020, for Senate Bill (SB) 6034. The bill passed in both the senate and in the house in March 2020, and was later signed into law, extending the time pregnant workers have to file a complaint to one year. Employee assistant program rights Glasson consulted with Senator Keiser on the incident with Lyra Health sharing her therapy information with Google during her lawsuit, and in November 2021, the senator sent a letter to the WSDOH regarding a "potential conflict" between employers and employees who utilize EAPs. Senator Keiser then introduced a bill, SB 5564, that aims to protect workers' rights, would make it an unlawful practice to take adverse action against workers based on their utilization of EAPs, and prohibit providers from sharing individually identifiable information about employees with their employers. Whistleblower protection In October 2021, Glasson said she was inspired by Ifeoma Ozoma's work on California State Legislature's 2021 Silenced No More Act, which made it illegal for companies to use non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) preventing employees from speaking about unlawful conduct such as discrimination and harassment. Glasson contacted Washington state lawmakers in hopes of having a similar law enacted. Senator Keiser
so desperately need". , she worked at Compass, Inc., a real estate startup. In 2021, Glasson contributed to The Tech Worker Handbook, a website of free resources for employees who may be interested in speaking out on issues at their employers. Legal proceedings with Google Glasson filed a complaint against Google with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) for pregnancy discrimination on September 3, 2019. The Seattle EEOC office began a probe into Glasson's claims in February 2020. , the case was still under investigation. In the lawsuit, and her complaints, Glasson alleged that she was told by third parties that her manager was making derogatory comments about her, interfered with her projects, and started interviewing others to replace her. She also alleged that when she reported she was pregnant with her second child that her work environment worsened. She said she tried to move internally, but was convinced to stay on her team after she was misled into believing her manager was leaving. After receiving what she described as unfair and surprising negative feedback, she accepted a demotion on another team, where she alleged she was discouraged from supervisory duties prior to her maternity leave, as it would "rock the boat", and was excluded from manager meetings and off-sites. Glasson further alleged that after she was diagnosed with placenta praevia, her new manager was dismissive, citing an NPR segment she had heard "debunk[ing] the benefits of bed rest", and her own experience ignoring medically-advised bed rest and delivering "the biggest presentations of [her] career" the day before her own child was born. Glasson further alleged that her manager informed her that she should not expect to be a manager when she returned from her leave. Google condemned retaliatory behavior, both internally and externally. The company told the EEOC that they had "accommodated each of Ms. Glasson's pregnancy-related requests", and that there was "no support for Ms. Glasson's contention that she suffered discrimination or retaliation as a result". They further argued that Glasson was not given direct reports in her last role at the company because of insufficient headcount. Glasson sent another demand letter to Google requesting the company work with the Center for Parental Leave Leadership to train managers at the company on supporting new and expecting parents to prevent others from facing the same types of discrimination and retaliation that she alleges she faced, and asking for payment for emotional damages and reimbursement for her legal expenses. Google declined the settlement offer. During her lawsuit, which was scheduled for trial in January 2022, Facebook and Compass were subpoenaed for Glasson's employee records, including payroll information, performance reviews, any complaints raised by Glasson against those employers, and any and all communications referencing Google. She also said that because she is suing for emotional damages, Google received all of the notes from the counseling she was provided by the company's EAP, including private information about her marriage and sex life. She referred to the process as "intrusive", and said there were "very few limits to what a corporation like Google can ask in discovery". She later reported that more than a year later, the therapist suggested they stop their sessions and she find another provider as soon as she filed the lawsuit. Kristi Lee, an associate professor at Seattle University, said this sounded like "client abandonment", a violation of a formal ethical code for counselors. The New York Times discovered that Lyra Health, the healthcare provider used by Google and Facebook as of February 2022, allowed the company to share information without the client's consent if it was "required to do so by a court order or other legal requirement". A bill introduced in Washington State Legislature in January 2022 would prohibit that in the future, if passed into law, and the incident and therapist were placed under investigation by the Washington State Department of Health (WSDOH) after Glasson filed a complaint. In October 2021, Glasson wrote a Medium article about her experiences as a whistleblower and with the lawsuit against Google, and said that she had already spent $56,000 on the lawsuit. She also started a GoFundMe campaign to help with the legal costs. Glasson and Google reached an undisclosed settlement in February 2022. Legislation Pregnancy discrimination In 2020, Glasson worked with Senator Karen Keiser in the hopes of extending the statute of limitations for reporting pregnancy discrimination. The law only allowed six months to report discrimination, which Keiser said "doesn't make sense" given that "it takes nine months or more to have a baby". Glasson testified before the Washington State Senate on January 16, 2020, for Senate Bill (SB) 6034. The bill passed in both the senate and in the house in March 2020, and was later signed into law, extending the time pregnant workers have to file a complaint to one year. Employee assistant program rights Glasson consulted with Senator Keiser on the incident with Lyra Health sharing her therapy information with Google during her lawsuit, and in November 2021, the senator sent a letter to the WSDOH regarding a "potential conflict" between employers and employees who utilize EAPs. Senator Keiser then introduced a bill, SB 5564, that aims to protect workers' rights, would make it an unlawful practice to take adverse action against workers based on their utilization of EAPs, and prohibit providers from sharing individually identifiable information about employees with their employers. Whistleblower protection In October 2021, Glasson said she was inspired by Ifeoma Ozoma's work on California State Legislature's 2021 Silenced No More Act, which made it illegal for companies to use non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) preventing employees from speaking about unlawful conduct such as discrimination and harassment. Glasson contacted Washington state lawmakers in hopes of having a similar law enacted. Senator Keiser and House Representative Liz Berry confirmed in November 2021 that they would be sponsoring the legislation thanks to outreach from Glasson and Cher Scarlett, a former Apple security engineer who has filed whistleblower complaints about Apple. Both Glasson and Scarlett testified before the Washington House of Representatives for
Stella Maris is a resort town in Long Island, the Bahamas. It was established during 1963. Stella Maris has a
services on Southern Air Charter to Nassau and Deadman's Cay, Bahamas. External links 1963
was killed while serving in The Vietnam War, and he was sent to live with his mother in Atlantic City, New Jersey. At age 9, Collins was temporarily sent to a juvenile detention center for assault, shoplifting, larceny, and attempted arson. After an uncertain amount of time, he was released. In 1975, he was returned after another assault conviction. In 1984, Collins was detained for six crimes committed in New Jersey, and he was convicted on counts of armed robbery and burglary, and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He was paroled on January 11, 1994, after serving ten years in prison. In August he was detained after testing positive for drugs, but was not prosecuted. Soon after, he met 30-year-old April Gates, a blackjack dealer at the Golden Nugget Casino in Atlantic City. The two eventually began a relationship, but separated in January 1995. Murders New Jersey In June 1995, Gates reported Collins to the police after witnessing him violate his parole, which apparently angered Collins to the span that the two got into a domestic dispute. On June 15, a judge issued a restraining order on Collins, halting him from seeing Gates. Enraged by the decision, on June 17, Collins went to Gates’ home in Atlantic City, but the only one home was her mother, 51-year-old Shirley Gates. Instead, he tied up Shirley and shot her two times, once above the ear and the other below, fatally injuring her. Afterwards he stuffed her body in the back of his car and drove three blocks down to the house of Alicia Chappell, where April Gates was partying for her friend's birthday. Once outside, Collins entered and located Gates, who was sitting in a chair, and she promptly called him out. Collins walked over and, to the horror of party guests, shot Gates once in the ear, then two times in the stomach, knocking her to the ground. Afterwards, Collins reportedly yelled out “Why'd you tell!?”, but by that time, Gates was already presumed dead. Collins fled to Gates’ vehicle and drove 30-miles to Monroe Township. He ended up sheltering in the Star Motel on Black Horse Pike. There, on June 18, he broke into the room of 41-year-old William Dawson and 27-year-old Stacey Smith, and Smith's 4-year-old son. Upon entering, Collins fatally shot Dawson once in the chest, and shot Smith once in the neck, and left her 4-year-old son unharmed. Smith survived her gunshot wound, and was rushed to Cooper Hospital University Medical Center in Camden, New Jersey, ultimately recovering from her injuries. The next day, Collins entered a gas station in Haddon Township, where he pistol whipped the attendant in the face robbed the place of $854. New York Collins spree had alerted outer-state police forces, and authorities in New York feared he might have been sheltering there. New Jersey officials contacted the New York Police Department (NYPD) and informed them that Collins might be hiding out in his aunt's home in Harlem, New York. However, once seized and searched upon, this theory was proven to be untrue. On June 19, Collins approached 38-year-old gas station attendant Jose Gabriel Escarpetta in the parking lot near the Avenue of the Americas. He demanded money, but after refusing to cooperate, Collins shot Escarpetta three times, killing him. At the time, Escarpetta was being investigated in the drug related murder of his brother, but he was eventually cleared of suspicion following his murder. Following the murder of Escarpetta, Collins fled on foot to a nearby building and took the elevator to the ninth floor. Upon this,
Collins to the span that the two got into a domestic dispute. On June 15, a judge issued a restraining order on Collins, halting him from seeing Gates. Enraged by the decision, on June 17, Collins went to Gates’ home in Atlantic City, but the only one home was her mother, 51-year-old Shirley Gates. Instead, he tied up Shirley and shot her two times, once above the ear and the other below, fatally injuring her. Afterwards he stuffed her body in the back of his car and drove three blocks down to the house of Alicia Chappell, where April Gates was partying for her friend's birthday. Once outside, Collins entered and located Gates, who was sitting in a chair, and she promptly called him out. Collins walked over and, to the horror of party guests, shot Gates once in the ear, then two times in the stomach, knocking her to the ground. Afterwards, Collins reportedly yelled out “Why'd you tell!?”, but by that time, Gates was already presumed dead. Collins fled to Gates’ vehicle and drove 30-miles to Monroe Township. He ended up sheltering in the Star Motel on Black Horse Pike. There, on June 18, he broke into the room of 41-year-old William Dawson and 27-year-old Stacey Smith, and Smith's 4-year-old son. Upon entering, Collins fatally shot Dawson once in the chest, and shot Smith once in the neck, and left her 4-year-old son unharmed. Smith survived her gunshot wound, and was rushed to Cooper Hospital University Medical Center in Camden, New Jersey, ultimately recovering from her injuries. The next day, Collins entered a gas station in Haddon Township, where he pistol whipped the attendant in the face robbed the place of $854. New York Collins spree had alerted outer-state police forces, and authorities in New York feared he might have been sheltering there. New Jersey officials contacted the New York Police Department (NYPD) and informed them that Collins might be hiding out in his aunt's home in Harlem, New York. However, once seized and searched upon, this theory was proven to
British naval brig captured her and her prizes. Career Morgan Rattler first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1793. Captain William Gibson acquired a letter of marque on 25 May 1793. Morgan Rattler, Gibson, master, was reported in August to have been captured and taken into Lorient. Morgan Rattler may have served the French Navy in 1794. Between April and July the corvette Morgan was stationed at Bay of Bourgneuf under the command of enseigne de vaisseau non entrenu Collet. She then apparently became a privateer. On 28 June 1796 HMS Suffisante captured Morgan. Morgan, under the command of John Coffin Whitney, was the former Morgan Rattler. On 27 August Suffisante intercepted and recaptured two British merchant ships near the Île de Batz. They reported that they had been sailing from Oporto when a privateer of 16 guns and 10 swivel guns had captured them. When last seen the privateer had been north of Scilly in chase of some other merchant vessels. Suffisante immediately sent the recaptured vessels to Plymouth and sailed Suffisante to the French coast between Ushant and the Île de Batz in the hopes of intercepting the privateer on her return, or any prizes that she might have taken on their way to Morlaix or Brest. The next morning Commander Nicholas Tomlinson, of Suffisante sighted the privateer and four prizes. He was able to capture the privateer by 1pm;
Whitney, was the former Morgan Rattler. On 27 August Suffisante intercepted and recaptured two British merchant ships near the Île de Batz. They reported that they had been sailing from Oporto when a privateer of 16 guns and 10 swivel guns had captured them. When last seen the privateer had been north of Scilly in chase of some other merchant vessels. Suffisante immediately sent the recaptured vessels to Plymouth and sailed Suffisante to the French coast between Ushant and the Île de Batz in the hopes of intercepting the privateer on her return, or any prizes that she might have taken on their way to Morlaix or Brest. The next morning Commander Nicholas Tomlinson, of Suffisante sighted the privateer and four prizes. He was able to capture the privateer by 1pm; Suffisante fired some small-arms fire at and she did not fire back, but instead struck. Tomlinson then put a prize crew on board the privateer, after taking off her captain and officers, and captor and ex-privateer set off after the prizes.Suffisante recaptured not only the four prizes she had seen, but two others as well. The six merchant vessels were: Draper, 200 tons (bm), of Dublin, sailing from Oporto to Dublin, carrying 400
the standard keel and with the optional shoal draft keel. The boat is fitted with a Westerbeke diesel engine of for docking and maneuvering. 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, a main cabin "U"-shaped settee with a drop-down dinette table, that forms a double berth, an additional pilot berth on the starboard side of the main cabin and an aft cabin with a double berth. The galley is located on the port side just forward of the companionway ladder. The galley is "U"-shaped and is equipped with a three-burner stove, an ice box and a double sink. A navigation station is opposite the galley, on the starboard side. The head is located just aft of the bow cabin on the port side and includes a shower. The design has a hull speed of . See also List of sailing boat types References External links Photo of a Sou'wester 42/43 Keelboats 1980s sailboat type designs Sailing yachts
the transom design. The designation indicates that some were built as 42s and some as 43s, mostly depending on transom configuration and resulting length overall. An improved Mark II version was introduced in 1995. The boat has a draft of with the standard keel and with the optional shoal draft keel. The boat is fitted with a Westerbeke diesel engine of for docking and maneuvering. 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, a main cabin "U"-shaped settee with a drop-down dinette table, that forms a double berth, an additional pilot berth on the starboard side of the main cabin and an aft
East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1981 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Philadelphia Basketball in Pennsylvania Basketball in Philadelphia Philadelphia College sports in Pennsylvania March 1981 sports events in the
References East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1980–81 East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1981 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in
number 80 Colin Dowdeswell at a 1983 closed tournament in Telford. He has competed with success on the ITF senior's circuit, winning the Over-45s doubles world championships. References External links 1953 births Living people British male tennis players English male tennis
professional tennis player. Siviter, a Worcestershire county player, featured in the men's singles and doubles main draws at the 1973 Wimbledon Championships. Although he didn't play much on tour thereafter due to business commitments, he managed a win over world
plant in the genus Stapelia Stapelia hirsuta, a species of flowering plant
a species of flowering plant in the genus Stapelia Stapelia hirsuta,
the Jesuits (New York, USA) Adolph John Paschang (1895-1968), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Bishop of Jiangmen [Kongmoon]; Titular Bishop of Sasima (Missouri, USA - Hong Kong, China) Paul John Hallinan (1911-1968), Archbishop of Atlanta (Ohio - Georgia, USA) Thomas Merton (Louis) (1915–1968), Professed Priest of the Trappists (Pyrénées-Orientales, France – Kentucky, USA – Bangkok, Thailand) Robert Raymond Brett (1936–1968), Professed Priest of the Society of Mary (Marist Missionaries); Martyr (Pennsylvania, USA – Quång Trị, Vietnam) Gerald Michael Fitzgerald (1894–1969), Priest and Founder of the Servants of the Paraclete and the Handmaids of the Precious Blood (Massachusetts – New Mexico, USA) Catherine Anne Cesnik (1942–1969), Professed Religious of the School Sisters of Notre Dame; Martyr (Pennsylvania – Maryland, USA) Joseph Clifford Fenton (1906-1969), Priest of the Diocese of Springfield (Massachusetts, USA) Renaud Bouffard (1931-1971), Professed Priest of the Missionar Oblates of Mary Immaculate; Martyr (Maine, USA - Chardonnières, Haiti) Roberto Enrique Clemente Walker (1934–1972), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of San Juan de Puerto Rico (Carolina, Puerto Rico) Thomas Harold Colgan (1894–1972), Priest of the Archdiocese of Newark; Founder of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima (World Apostolate of Fatima) (New Jersey, USA – Florida, USA) Daniel T. "Danny" Croteau (1959-1972), Child of the Diocese of Springfield; altar boy abused and murdered by Father Richard R. Lavigne; Martyr (Massachusetts, USA) Paul Francis Leibold (1914–1972), Archbishop of Cincinnati (Ohio, USA) Gordon Edward Murphy (1918-1972), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (Illinois, USA - Patna, India) Martin Cabo (Marcellus) (1915–1974), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friars Minor; Martyr (Illinois, USA – Wisconsin, USA) Patrick Crowley (1911-1974), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Chicago; Founder of the Christian Family Movement (Illinois, USA) Bernard Francis Meyer (1891-1975), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Apostolic Prefect of Wuzhou (Iowa, USA - Wuchow, China -New York, USA) Raymond Herman Pint (1930-1975), Priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque; Martyr (Iowa - Cochabamba, Bolivia) William Gauchat (1907-1975), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Cleveland (Ohio, USA) William Woods (1931–1976), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Martyr (Texas, USA – El Quiché, Guatemala) Dietrich von Hildebrand (1889–1977), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York (Florence, Italy – New York, USA) Thomas Wyatt Turner (1877–1978), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Washington D.C. (Maryland – Washington, D.C.) Catherine Passananti (1894–1978), Layperson of the Archdiocese of Boston (Massachusetts, USA) Reynold Henry Hillenbrand (1904-1979), Priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago (Illinois, USA) Martha Euphemia Lofton Haynes (1890-1980), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Washington D.C. (Washington D.C., USA) Carol Ann Piette (Rose Carol) (1939–1980), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (Wisconsin, USA – Cara Sucia, El Salvador) August Mauge (1910–1980), Layperson of the Diocese of Steubenville; Cofounder of the Apostolate for Family Consecration (Pennsylvania – Ohio, USA) Martyrs of La Paz, El Salvador: Mary Elizabeth Clarke (Maura) (1931–1980), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (New York, USA) Ita Catherine Ford (1940–1980), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (New York, USA) Dorothea Lu Kazel [Dorothy] (1939–1980), Professed Religious of the Ursuline Sisters of the Roman Union (Ohio, USA) Jean Marie Donovan (1953–1980), Layperson of the Diocese of Cleveland (Connecticut, USA) John Howard Griffin (1920-1980), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Dallas; Member of the Lay Carmelites (Texas, USA) James Edward Walsh (1891–1981), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Bishop of Jiangmen (Maryland – New York, USA) Horace McKenna (1899–1982), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (New York – Washington, D.C., USA) Grace Kelly Grimaldi (1929–1982), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Monaco (Pennsylvania, USA – Monaco City, Monaco) John Leary (1958-1982), Young Layperson of the Archdiocese of Boston; Member of the Catholic Worker Movement (Massachusetts, USA) James Francis Carney (Guadalupe) (1924-1983), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Martyr (Illinois, USA - Honduras) Marion Ganey (1904-1984), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (Illinois, USA - Western Fiji, Fiji,) Martyrs of La Crosse, Wisconsin: John Daniel Rossiter (1920–1985), Priest of the Diocese of La Crosse (Wisconsin, USA) Ferdinand Roth Sr. (1912–1985), Married Layperson of the Diocese of La Crosse (Wisconsin, USA) William George Hammes (1918–1985), Married Layperson of the Diocese of La Crosse (Wisconsin, USA) Lena Frances Edwards (1900–1986), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Trenton; Member of the Secular Franciscans (Washington, D.C. – New Jersey, USA) Lawrence Lovasik (1913-1986), Professed Priest of the Society of the Divine Word; Founder of the Sisters of Divine Spirit and the Family Service Secular Institute (Pennsylvania, USA) Frances Elizabeth Kent (Mary Corita) (1918–1986), Professed Religious of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (Iowa – Massachusetts, USA) Elizabeth Hirschboeck (Mary Mercy) (1903–1986), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (New York, USA) Kathryn Wick (Claire Marie) (1915–1987), Professed Religious of the Hospitaller Sisters of Saint Francis (USA-Kenya) Jessica Powers (Miriam of the Holy Spirit) (1905–1988), Professed Religious of the Discalced Carmelite Nuns (Wisconsin, USA) Agnes Reinkemeyer (1923-1989), Professed Religious of the Franciscan Sisters of Mary; Martyr (Missouri, USA - Tana River, Kenya) Raymond Anthony Adams (1935-1989), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Martyr (New York, USA - Cape Coast, Ghana) Penny Lernoux Nahum (1940-1989), Married Layperson of the Diocese of San Jose in California (California - New York, USA) Robert Louis Hodapp (1910-1989), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Bishop of Belize City-Belmopan (Minnesota, USA - Belize City, Belize) Walker Percy (1916–1990), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of New Orleans (Alabama – Louisiana, USA) Eugene John Herbert (1923–1990), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Martyr (Louisiana, USA – Batticaloa, Sri Lanka) Maurice Patrick Barrett (Mathias) (1900–1990), Founder of the Little Brothers of the Good Shepherd (Waterford, Ireland – New Mexico, USA) Julia Crotta (Nazarena of Jesus) (1907–1990), Professed Religious of the Benedictine Nuns (Camaldolese Congregation) (Connecticut, USA – Rome, Italy) Maureen Courtney (1944-1990), Professed Religious of the Congregation of Saint Agnes; Martyr (Wisconsin, USA - Atlántico Norte, Nicaragua) Harold Arnoldus Stevens (1907-1990), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York (South Carolina - New York, USA) Eliseo Castaño de Vega (1925–1991), Priest of the Congregation of the Mission; Martyr (Zamora, Spain – San Juan, Puerto Rico) Martyrs of Gardnersville (Montserrado, Liberia): Barbara Ann Muttra (1923-1992), Professed Religious of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (Illinois, USA) Mary Joel Kolmer (1934-1992), Professed Religious of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (Illinois, USA) Shirley Kolmer (1920-1992), Professed Religious of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (Illinois, USA) Agnes Mueller (1929-1992), Professed Religious of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (Illinois, USA) Kathleen McGuire (1937-1992), Professed Religious of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (Illinois, USA) James Patterson Lyke (1939-1992), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friars Minor; Archbishop of Atlanta (Illinois - Georgia, USA) Richard Henry Ackerman (1903-1992), Professed Priest of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans); Bishop of Covington (Pennsylvania - Kentucky, USA) César Estrada Chávez (1927–1993), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Tucson (Arizona, USA) Ann Manganaro (1946-1993), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Loreto (Missouri, USA - San Salvador, El Salvador) Enrique San Pedro Fonaguera (1928–1994), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Bishop of Brownsville (Havana, Cuba – Florida, USA) Veronica McDonald Lueken (1923–1995), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Brooklyn (New York, USA) Joseph Louis Bernardin (1928–1996), Archbishop of Chicago; Cardinal (South Carolina, USA – Illinois, USA) Lawrence Jenco (1934–1996), Professed Priest of the Servites (Illinois, USA) Mary Evelyn Puleo Chmiel (1963–1996), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of St. Louis; Member of the Catholic Worker Movement (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Missouri, USA) Ann Patricia McAleese (1934-1996), Professed Religious of the Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Martyr (New York, USA - Cape Coast, Ghana) Henri Jozef Machiel Nouwen (1932–1996), Priest of the Archdiocese of Utrecht (Nijkerk, Netherlands – Minnesota, USA – Ontario, Canada) Ruth Van Kooy Pakaluk (1956–1998), Married Layperson of the Prelature of the Holy Cross and Opus Dei (Massachusetts, USA) Charles Kekumano (1919-1998), Priest of the Diocese of Honolulu (Hawaii, USA) Thomas Gafney (1932-1998), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Martyr (Ohio, USA - Kathmandu, Nepal) Vincent Donovan (1926–2000), Professed Priest of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (Spiritans) (Pennsylvania, USA) Mary Mildred Neuzil (Mary Ephrem) (1916–2000), Professed Religious of the Contemplative Sisters of the Indwelling Trinity (New York – Ohio, USA) Daniel Egan (1915–2000), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friras of the Atonement (New York, USA) Isolina Ferré Aguayo (1914–2000), Professed Religious of the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity (Ponce, Puerto Rico) Ignatius Kung Pin-Mei (1901–2000), Bishop of Shanghai; Cardinal (Shanghai, China – Connecticut, USA) John Anthony Kaiser (1932–2000), Priest of the Mill Hill Missionaries; Martyr (Minnesota, USA – Nakuru, Kenya) Charles William Kram Jr. (1929–2000), Priest of the Diocese of Victoria (Texas, USA) John Joseph O'Connor (1920–2000), Archbishop of New York; Cardinal; Founder of the Sisters of Life (Pennsylvania, USA – New York, USA) Harry Murray (Gratian) (1923–2000), Priest of the Diocese of Bacolod (Pennsylvania, USA – Negros Occidental, Philippines) Eileen Egan (1912–2000), Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York (Wales, United Kingdom – New York, USA) Jan Karski (1914-2000), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Washington (Lodz, Poland - Washington, D.C., USA) Dorothy Helen Schmitt Gauchat (1921-2000), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Cleveland (Ohio, USA) Barbara Ann Ford (1938–2001), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Charity of New York; Martyr (New York, USA – Guatemala City, Guatemala) Robert Emmett Judge (Mychal Fallon) (1933–2001), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friars Minor (New York, USA) John Matthias Haffert (1915–2001), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Newark; Cofounder of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima (World Apostolate of Fatima) New Jersey, USA – Fatima, Portugal) Joseph Gluszek (1910–2002), Priest of the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings (Kraków, Poland – Montana, USA) Mary Frank Stachowicz (1951–2002), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Chicago; Martyr (Poland – Illinois, USA) Ade Bethune (1914–2002), Layperson of the Diocese of Providence; Member of the Catholic Worker Movement (Schaerbeek, Belgium – Rhode Island, USA) José Gerónimo Lluberas Acosta (1923-2003), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Ponce (Ponce, Puerto Rico - Georgia, USA) Michael Allen Gaworski (1958-2003), Founder of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace (Minnesota, USA) Mary Philomena Fogarty (Mary Coirle) (1935-2003), Professed Religious of the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary (Cork, Ireland - Virginia, USA) Matthew Joseph Thaddeus Stepanek (1990-2004), Child of the Archdiocese of Baltimore (Maryland, USA) Zdisław Kobak (Cantius) (1930–2004), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friars Minor (Torun, Poland – Samar, Philippines – Wisconsin, USA) Daria Donnelly Weissburg (1959–2004), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Boston (Pennsylvania – Massachusetts, USA) Robert Pennington (Basil) (1931–2005), Professed Priest of the Trappists (New York – Massachusetts, USA) Venard Poslusney (1917–2005), Professed Priest of the Carmelites of the Ancient Observance (Pennsylvania – New Jersey, USA) Thomas Richard Heath (1920–2005), Professed Priest of the Dominicans; Martyrs (Massachusetts, USA – Kisumu, Kenya) Dorothy Mae Stang (1931–2005), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur; Martyr (Ohio, USA – Pará, Brazil) Patricia Caron Crowley (1913-2006), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Chicago; Founder of the Christian Family Movement (Illinois, USA) Edward Warren (1926–2006), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Bridgeport (Connecticut, USA) Audrey Marie Santo (1983–2007), Young Layperson of the Diocese of Worcester (Massachusetts, USA) Margaret Mary Leo (1993–2007), Child of the Diocese of Arlington (Virginia, USA) Joan Gormley (Frances) (1937-2007), Vowed Member of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul (Pennsylvania, USA) Francis Marino (1925-2007), Professed Priest of the Society of Mary, Marist Missionaries; Founder of the Anawim Community (Massachusetts, USA - Manila, Philippines) Avery Robert Dulles (1918–2008), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Cardinal (New York, USA) Cristeta Lim (Grace Dorothy) (1926-2008), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (Ilocos Sur, Philippines - Hawaii, USA) Dorothy Hennessey (1913-2008), Professed Religious of the Sisters of the Third Order of Saint Francis of the Holy Family (Iowa, USA) Mary Ann Wright (1921–2009), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe (Louisiana, USA – California, USA) Eunice Kennedy Shriver (1921–2009), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Baltimore (Maryland – Massachusetts, USA) Lawrence Rosabaugh (Lorenzo) (1935–2009), Professed Priest of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate; Martyr (Wisconsin, USA – Guatemala) Robert Fox (1927–2009), Priest of the Diocese of Sioux Falls; Founder of the Fatima Family Apostolate and the Youths for Fatima Pilgrimages (South Dakota, USA) Patrick Francis Rager (1959–2010), Priest of the Diocese of Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania, USA) Anita Figueredo Villegas de Doyle (1916-2010), Married Layperson of the Diocese of San Diego (San Jose, Costa Rica - California, USA) Edward Dougherty (1925–2011), Priest of the Diocese of Trenton (Pennsylvania, USA) Robert Sargent Shriver Jr. (1915–2011), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Baltimore (Maryland, USA) Warren Hasty Carroll (1932–2011), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Arlington (Maine – Virginia, USA) Philip Matthew Hannan (1914-2011), Archbishop of New Orleans (Washington D.C. - Louisiana, USA) Albert Henry Ottenweller (1916–2012), Bishop of Steubenville; Founder of the Franciscan Sisters of Penance of the Sorrowful Mother (Montana – Ohio, USA) Walter Francis Sullivan (1928–2012), Bishop of Richmond (Washington, D.C. – Virginia, USA) James Reuter (1916–2012), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (New Jersey, USA – Parañaque, Philippines) Mary Jean Forge Perrini (1957–2012), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Kansas City (Kansas, USA) Carol Therese Ameche (1934-2013), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Phoenix (Arizona, USA) Thomas Walters (Hilarion) (1918-2013), Professed Priest of the Passionists (Pennsylvania, USA - Quezon City, Philippines) Paul [Pablo] Straub (1932–2013), Professed Priest of the Redemptorists; Founder of the Institute of the Consecrated Sisters of the Most Holy Savior (New York, USA – Quintana Roo, Mexico) Scott Carroll (1966–2013), Priest of the Diocese of Toledo (Ohio, USA) Mary Clarke Brenner (Antonia) (1926–2013), Founder of the Eudists Servants of the Eleventh Hour (California, USA – Tijuana, Mexico) Brendan Joseph Kelly (1998–2013), Child of the Diocese of Arlington (Virginia, USA) Ignatius Anthony Catanello (1938-2013), Auxiliary Bishop of Brooklyn; Titular Bishop of Deultum (New York, USA) Julia Ann Smollin (Anne
USA) Esther Pariseau (Marie-Joseph of the Sacred Heart) (1823–1902), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Providence of Montréal (Québec, Canada – Washington, USA) George Deshon (1823–1903), Priest and Cofounder of the Missionary Society of Saint Paul the Apostle (Paulist Fathers) (Connecticut – New York, USA) Gulstan-Francois Ropert (1839–1903), Professed Priest of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary (Picpus); Apostolic Vicar of the Hawaiian Islands; Titular Bishop of Panopolis (Vannes, France – Hawaii, USA) Mary Hazotte (Agnes) (1847–1905), Cofounder of the Sister of Saint Agnes (New York – Kansas, USA) Margaret Mary Healy Murphy (1833–1907), Widow; Founder of the Sisters of the Holy Spirit and Mary Immaculate (Cahersiveen, Ireland – Texas, USA) John Green Hanning (Mary Joachim) (1849–1908), Professed Religious of the Trappists (Kentucky, USA) Francis Xavier Prefontaine (1838–1909), Priest of the Archdiocese of Seattle (Québec, Canada – Washington, USA) Catherine Mehegan (Mary Xavier) (1825–1915), Founder of the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth (County Cork, Ireland – New Jersey, USA) Patrick Heslin (1857–1921), Priest of the Archdiocese of San Francisco; Martyr (Longford, Ireland – California, USA) James Edwin Coyle (1873–1921), Priest of the Diocese of Birmingham; Martyr (Roscommon, Ireland – Alabama, USA) Mary Walsh (1850–1922), Founder of the Dominican Sisters of the Sick Poor (New York, USA) Marie Bibeau (Marie-Anne de Jésus) (1865–1924), Founder of the Little Franciscans of Mary (Lower Canada, Canada – Massachusetts, USA) Anna Cordelia Zervas (Mary Annella) (1900–1926), Professed Religious of the Benedictine Nuns (Bavarian Congregation) (Minnesota, USA) Helena Pelczar (1888–1926), Layperson of the Diocese of Cleveland (Korczyna, Poland – Ohio, USA) Albert Etlin (Lukas) (1864–1927), Professed Priest of the Benedictines (Swiss-American Congregation) (Switzerland – Missouri, USA) Emma Franziska Höll (Mary Alexia) (1838–1929), Founder of the School Sisters of Saint Francis (Baden-Württemberg, Germany – Wisconsin, USA) Elizabeth Barbara Williams (Mary Theodore) (1868–1931), Founder of the Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary (Louisiana – New York, USA) Missionary Martyrs of China: Walter Coveyou (Walter of the Seven Sorrows of Mary) (1894–1929), Professed Priest of the Passionists (Michigan, USA – Hunan, China) Lawrence Seybold (Clement of Saint Michael) (1896–1929), Professed Priest of the Passionists (New York, USA – Hunan, China) Claude Holbein (Godfrey of Jesus) (1899–1929), Professed Priest of the Passionists (Maryland, USA – Hunan, China) Gerard Donovan (1904–1938), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society (Pennsylvania, USA – Liaoning, China) Otto Rauschenbach (1898–1945), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society (Missouri, USA – Guangdong, China) James Luke Devine (1905–1947), Professed Priest of the Dominicans (Pennsylvania, USA – Fujian, China) Ambrose Kanoealu'i Hutchison (ca. 1856–1932), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Honolulu (Hawaii, USA) Benjamin Joseph Salmon (1888–1932), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Chicago (Colorado – Illinois, USA) Daniel Rudd (1854–1933), Layperson of the Archdiocese of Louisville (Kentucky, USA) Anton Frank (Eugene) (1900–1935), Professed Religious of the Society of the Divine Word; Martyr (Illinois, USA – Morobe, Papua New Guinea) Lurana Mary White (1870–1935), Founder of the Franciscan Sisters of the Atonement (New York, USA) Marie Rose Ferron (1902–1936), Layperson of the Diocese of Providence (Quebec, Canada – Rhode Island, USA) Margaret Reilly (Mary of the Crown of Thorns) (1884–1937), Professed Religious of the Religious of the Good Shepherd (New York, USA) Johanna Butler (Marie Joseph) (1860–1940), Professed Religious of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary (Kilkenny, Ireland – New York, USA) Mary Frances Cunningham (Mary Demetrias) (1859–1940), Founder of the Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart (Washington, D.C. – Maryland, USA) Edward Proctor Whealan (Peter Damian) (1908–1941), Professed Religious of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle Brothers); Martyr (New Jersey, USA – Wang Chai, Hong Kong) James Gerald Hennessey (1905–1942), Priest of the Archdiocese of Boston; Martyr (Massachusetts, USA – near Fuga Island, Cagayan, Philippines) Martyrs of Morotai (North Maluku, Indonesia): Paul Bernard Drone (1913–1942), Professed Priest of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (Missouri, USA) Michael Braun (1914–1942), Professed Priest of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (Missouri, USA) Edward McMahon (1916–1942), Professed Priest of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate (Massachusetts, USA) Leopoldina Burns (1855–1942), Professed Religious of the Franciscan Sisters of Syracuse (New York, USA – Hawaii, USA) Arthur Duhamel (1908–1942), Professed Priest of the Society of Mary (Marist Missionaries); Martyr (Massachusetts, USA – Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands) John Patrick Washington (1908–1943), Priest of the Archdiocese of Newark (New Jersey, USA – Atlantic Ocean) Joseph Kotrba (1913–1943), Professed Priest of the Society of the Divine Word; Martyr (Illinois, USA – Madang, Papua New Guinea) Alfredo Salois (Victor) (1908–1943), Professed Religious of the Society of the Divine Word; Martyr (Michigan, USA – near Manus, Papua New Guinea) Agnes Kötter (Adelaide) (1907–1943), Professed Religious of the Missionary Sisters Servants of the Holy Spirit; Martyr (Minnesota, USA – near Manus, Papua New Guinea) John Conley (1898–1943), Professed Priest of the Society of Mary (Marist Missionaries); Martyr (Pennsylvania, USA – Bougainville, Papua New Guinea) Aloysius Schmitt (1909–1944), Priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque (Iowa, USA – Hawaii, USA) Anna Ruholl (Dolorosia) (1892–1944), Professed Religious of the Missionary Sisters Servants of the Holy Spirit; Martyr (Illinois, USA – Papua, Indonesia) Claude Newman (1923–1944), Young Layperson of the Diocese of Little Rock (Arkansas, USA – Mississippi, USA) Jesus Baza Dueñas (1911–1944), Priest of the Archdiocese of Agana; Martyr (Agana, Guam – Mangilao, Guam (U.S. Territory)) James Paul McCloskey (1870–1945), Bishop of Jaro (Pennsylvania, USA – Iloilo, Philippines) William Thomas Cummings (1903–1945), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Martyr (California, USA – Manila, Philippines) Antoinette Kunkel (Hyacinth) (1898–1945), Professed Religious of the Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic; Martyr (New York, USA – Benguet, Philippines) Ignatius Francis Lissner (1867–1948), Professed Priest of the Society of African Missions; Founder of the Handmaids of the Pure Heart of Mary (Alsace, France – Dahomey, Benin – Georgia, USA) Pierre Joseph Oristide Maurin (1877–1949), Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York; Founder of the Catholic Worker Movement (Oultet, France – New York, USA) Mary Giesen (Mary Augustine) (1860–1950), Founder of the Sisters of Saint Francis of Maryville (Minnesota – Missouri, USA) Joseph Augustine Mattingly (Sylvan) (1882–1951), Professed Religious of the Xaverian Brothers; Founder of the Our Lady's Rosary Makers (Kentucky, USA) William Howard Bishop (1885-1953), Priest of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati; Founder of the Home Missioners of America (Glenmary Home Missioners) and the Home Mission Sisters of America (Glenmary Sisters) (Illinois, USA) Helena Agnes Franey (Marie Helene) (1898–1953), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods (Illinois – Indiana, USA) Mollie Rogers (Mary Joseph) (1882–1955), Cofounder of the Maryknoll Sisters of Saint Dominic (Massachusetts – New York, USA) Nancy Hamilton (1942–1956), Child of the Diocese of Monterey (California, USA) Marion Lane Gurney (1868–1957), Founder of the Sisters of Our Lady of Christian Doctrine (Louisiana – New York, USA) Edward Garesché (1876-1960), Professed Priest of the Jesuits; Founder of the Sons of Mary, Health of the Sick (Missouri - Massachusetts, USA) Thomas Anthony Dooley III (1927–1961), Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York (Missouri, USA – Saigon, Vietnam – New York, USA) William Kruegler Hernberg (1930–1962), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Martyr (New York, USA – Santa Cruz, Bolivia) John LaFarge Jr. (1880-1963), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (Rhode Island - New York, USA) Joseph Timothy O'Callahan (1905–1964), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (Massachusetts, USA) Mary Flannery O'Connor (1925–1964), Layperson of the Diocese of Savannah (Georgia, USA) Anthony Joseph Brouwers (1912–1964), Priest of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles (California, USA) Henri Roy (1898-1965), Professes Priest of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate; Founder of the Secular Institute "Pius X" (Maine, USA - Quebec, Canada) Viola Fauver Gregg Liuzzo (1925–1964), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Detroit; Martyr (Pennsylvania – Michigan, USA) Bridget Della Mary Gavin (Mary Ignatia) (1889–1966), Professed Religious of the Sisters of Charity of Saint Aigustine (County Mayo, Ireland – Ohio, USA) Bruce Phillip Smith (1920–1967), Layperson of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis (Minnesota, USA) John Courtney Murray (1904-1967), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (New York, USA) Adolph John Paschang (1895-1968), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Bishop of Jiangmen [Kongmoon]; Titular Bishop of Sasima (Missouri, USA - Hong Kong, China) Paul John Hallinan (1911-1968), Archbishop of Atlanta (Ohio - Georgia, USA) Thomas Merton (Louis) (1915–1968), Professed Priest of the Trappists (Pyrénées-Orientales, France – Kentucky, USA – Bangkok, Thailand) Robert Raymond Brett (1936–1968), Professed Priest of the Society of Mary (Marist Missionaries); Martyr (Pennsylvania, USA – Quång Trị, Vietnam) Gerald Michael Fitzgerald (1894–1969), Priest and Founder of the Servants of the Paraclete and the Handmaids of the Precious Blood (Massachusetts – New Mexico, USA) Catherine Anne Cesnik (1942–1969), Professed Religious of the School Sisters of Notre Dame; Martyr (Pennsylvania – Maryland, USA) Joseph Clifford Fenton (1906-1969), Priest of the Diocese of Springfield (Massachusetts, USA) Renaud Bouffard (1931-1971), Professed Priest of the Missionar Oblates of Mary Immaculate; Martyr (Maine, USA - Chardonnières, Haiti) Roberto Enrique Clemente Walker (1934–1972), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of San Juan de Puerto Rico (Carolina, Puerto Rico) Thomas Harold Colgan (1894–1972), Priest of the Archdiocese of Newark; Founder of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima (World Apostolate of Fatima) (New Jersey, USA – Florida, USA) Daniel T. "Danny" Croteau (1959-1972), Child of the Diocese of Springfield; altar boy abused and murdered by Father Richard R. Lavigne; Martyr (Massachusetts, USA) Paul Francis Leibold (1914–1972), Archbishop of Cincinnati (Ohio, USA) Gordon Edward Murphy (1918-1972), Professed Priest of the Jesuits (Illinois, USA - Patna, India) Martin Cabo (Marcellus) (1915–1974), Professed Priest of the Franciscan Friars Minor; Martyr (Illinois, USA – Wisconsin, USA) Patrick Crowley (1911-1974), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Chicago; Founder of the Christian Family Movement (Illinois, USA) Bernard Francis Meyer (1891-1975), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Apostolic Prefect of Wuzhou (Iowa, USA - Wuchow, China -New York, USA) Raymond Herman Pint (1930-1975), Priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque; Martyr (Iowa - Cochabamba, Bolivia) William Gauchat (1907-1975), Married Layperson of the Diocese of Cleveland (Ohio, USA) William Woods (1931–1976), Priest of the Maryknoll Missionary Society; Martyr (Texas, USA – El Quiché, Guatemala) Dietrich von Hildebrand (1889–1977), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of New York (Florence, Italy – New York, USA) Thomas Wyatt Turner (1877–1978), Married Layperson of the Archdiocese of Washington D.C. (Maryland – Washington, D.C.) Catherine Passananti (1894–1978), Layperson of the Archdiocese of Boston (Massachusetts, USA) Reynold Henry Hillenbrand (1904-1979), Priest of the Archdiocese
Hazare Trophy, but had a poor performance, scoring only 2 runs out of the 3 games he played in. He was also separately selected again for his final Mushtaq Trophy outing, where he scored 60 runs from 4 matches at an average of 20. This performance selected him into the Gujarat side which would play the Kenya national cricket team in 3 matches in preparation for the 2011 Cricket World Cup. He partook in the second match and made 72 to take Gujarat to a 206-run win over Kenya. He also played in what would be his last Ranji Trophy outing. Desai made 98 runs in 6 innings of 4 games to end his Ranji career. He was then taken off the cricketing radar until he was selected to play for the Indian Income Tax cricket team in the 2013-14 BCCI Corporate Trophy. His good performance during the trophy allowed him to return in the Gujarati side for the 2013-14 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. However, he was dropped after the season ended. He then immigrated to the U.S. in hopes of playing for the United States national cricket team. He was selected for
to score 104 runs from 7 innings out of 8. He was then selected for Gujarat in the 2007-08 Ranji Trophy where he made his FC debut against Vidarbha scoring 19 & 8, winning the game by 50 runs. He goes on to score a total of 54 runs in 6 innings of 3 games. Desai wasn't picked up for the 2008-09 Vijay Hazare Trophy, but played during the 2009-10 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, scoring 108 runs from 4 matches at an average of 36. Desai was then selected into the Gujarati squad for the 2009-10 Ranji Trophy, where he made 108 against Tamil Nadu to help to draw against them. He also additionally made 76 against Railways to give Gujarat a fighting chance, but missed the follow-on target by 5 runs, losing the game. He amassed a total of 295 runs from a total of 12 innings in 7 games during the season. Desai played once more during the 2010-11 Vijay Hazare Trophy, but had a poor performance, scoring only 2 runs out of the 3 games he played in. He was also separately selected again for his final Mushtaq Trophy outing,
Times. He is most famous for being the namesake of Sayre's law. Biography Sayre was born in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, on June 24, 1905. He received his B.A. from Marshall University, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from New York University, where he wrote his dissertation on the La Follette family of Wisconsin. From 1938 to 1942, he was a member of the New York City Civil Service Commission. He was ousted by Fiorello La Guardia after criticizing the political motivations of the mayor's appointments. From 1942 to 1946, he held posts in the Office of Price Administration becoming director of personnel. He subsequently taught at New York University, Cornell University and City College of New York,
1905. He received his B.A. from Marshall University, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from New York University, where he wrote his dissertation on the La Follette family of Wisconsin. From 1938 to 1942, he was a member of the New York City Civil Service Commission. He was ousted by Fiorello La Guardia after criticizing the political motivations of the mayor's appointments. From 1942 to 1946, he held posts in the Office of Price Administration becoming director of personnel. He subsequently taught at New York University, Cornell University and City College of New York, before moving to Columbia University in 1954, where he was the Eaton Professor of Public Administration until his death. At Columbia, Sayre wrote the 815-page book Governing New York City with Herbert Kaufman that
Minister – Mette Frederiksen Events January January 14 – Golden Jubilee
– Margrethe II Prime Minister – Mette Frederiksen Events January January 14 – Golden
Batten (born in 1955) is an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the Nevada Assembly from 1994 to 1996 representing District 27 (covering part of Washoe County including part of Reno).
of the Nevada Assembly from 1994 to 1996 representing District 27 (covering part of Washoe County including part of Reno). Background Before being elected to the legislature, Batten was a police officer who received a degree in police science from Tidewater Community College in Virginia Beach, Virginia. Along with Bernice Mathews and Maurice
1980 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Philadelphia Basketball in Pennsylvania Basketball in Philadelphia Philadelphia College sports in
in Philadelphia Basketball in Pennsylvania Basketball in Philadelphia Philadelphia College sports in Pennsylvania February 1980 sports events in the United States March 1980 sports events in the United States
that have occurred in the National Hockey League (NHL) during the 1963–64 NHL season. It lists which
1963–64 NHL season. It lists which team each player has been traded
Illinois, in 1868 and founded the Union Wire Mattress company there. He continued running the company until his retirement at age 91, in 1903. David J. Powers died at his home on Lincoln Avenue in Chicago on February 11, 1909. His death resulted from injuries he sustained when he fell down a set of stairs at his home three weeks earlier. Personal life and family David J. Powers married Eliza Ann Harris, a native of New Hampshire. They had at least two sons. Their elder son, William, enlisted in the Union Army and served with the 1st Wisconsin Heavy Artillery Regiment and was subsequently commissioned as a first lieutenant with the 4th Independent Battery Wisconsin Light Artillery. After the war, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin and went on to a successful business career. Published works References External links |- 1814 births 1909 deaths Farmers from Wisconsin Members of the Wisconsin State Assembly People from Athens, Vermont People
He had a common school education and apprenticed as a machinist before emigrating west to the Wisconsin Territory in 1838. He first arrived at the village of Milwaukee, and there met Willard B. Johnson, who convinced him to settle in the area that would later become Whitewater, Wisconsin. He was one of the earliest settlers in that region, and bought a large tract of land in what is now the town of Cold Spring, Wisconsin. He worked with two other settlers, Richard Hoppin and Dr. James Tripp, to establish the first grist mill in the area in 1839. The next year, Dr. Tripp proposed to establish a village at the confluence of Whitewater Creek and Spring Brook, and offered Powers a free piece of land in the proposed village to operate a hotel. The men summoned another nearby settler, Prosper Cravath, to assist in surveying and platting the land. The settlement was soon established, and Powers built and operated the first hotel in Whitewater. Later that year, Powers was appointed
by figures such as Seferis, Andreas Karantonis and Konstantinos Tsatsos. His writing generally consisted of short poems that appeared in press only sporadically. An exception to this was his long poem Indies (), which consisted of 1,040 verses. Antoniou started writing this in late 1933, whilst he was on the Peleus, visiting villages in the Bay of Bengal. He resorts to exotic imagery, telling about an encounter with a civilisation that he considered to be "primitive". He continued working on this poem through the years, and the last part is a homage to Peleus, which was sunk by the German navy in 1944. Friar notes that with his exploration of these incidents over time, Antoniou's act of remembrance itself lends itself to a distinction that is "impossible to translate adequately into English: that between hronos, time as a finite entity, and keros, the fluidity of time without past, present or future". His obituary in Nea Estia notes that Antoniou's exotic imagery contrasts with another seafaring Greek poet, Nikos Kavadias, in that his verse includes more of a "contemplation, humanity and meaning" regarding the experience of being at sea or constantly travelling, thus adding a layer beyond the façade of the exotic imagery. The book Indies was published in 1967
of the poets known as the Generation of the '30s, along with poets such as Giorgos Seferis and Odysseas Elytis. Friar, however, notes that Antoniou appeared to have "his own voice", without subscribing to any school of literature. His poems appeared in Ta Nea Grammata between 1936 and 1939. These were reprinted in the book Poems () in 1939, which was well received by figures such as Seferis, Andreas Karantonis and Konstantinos Tsatsos. His writing generally consisted of short poems that appeared in press only sporadically. An exception to this was his long poem Indies (), which consisted of 1,040 verses. Antoniou started writing this in late 1933, whilst he was on the Peleus, visiting villages in the Bay of Bengal. He resorts to exotic imagery, telling about an encounter with a civilisation that he considered to be "primitive". He continued working on this poem through the years, and the last part is a homage to Peleus, which was sunk by the German navy in 1944. Friar notes that with his exploration of these incidents over time, Antoniou's act of remembrance itself lends itself to a distinction that is "impossible to translate adequately into English: that between hronos, time as a finite entity, and keros, the fluidity of time without past, present or future". His obituary in Nea Estia notes that Antoniou's exotic imagery contrasts with another seafaring Greek poet, Nikos Kavadias, in that his verse includes more of a "contemplation, humanity and meaning" regarding the experience of being at sea or constantly travelling, thus adding a layer beyond the façade of the exotic imagery. The
aside and deals drugs to pay for his attorney. He plans to get in and out of the drug game unscathed with the help of Murda (Johnson), his brother's first-in-command. Since he lacks experience, Murda, with a plan of his own, easily manipulates him into making careless decisions. Travis realizes he's being used as a pawn and commits several murders seeking revenge. With everyone out of his way; Travis outsmarts law enforcement and Rico is released from jail. Cast Deyonte 'Tatted' Hunter as Travis Elliot: The protagonist of the story. A talented high school basketball player who dreams of playing the game at the collegiate and professional levels. He is caught between his familial obligations and future aspirations, so helping Rico get released from jail begins to take precedence. Tenichi Garner as Rico Elliot: The older brother of Travis and former star high school basketball player turned drug dealer. Playing basketball was no longer a priority after his father was murdered and he became the provider for his family. The fast money from dealing drugs lured him away from the game. He understands Travis’ dream to play professional basketball more than anyone else and doesn't want him following his example. Shalonda SJ Johnson as Naomi Farsee: Travis' older girlfriend and supporter. Life experiences have taught her the importance of holding onto your dreams. Being the case, she tries her best to keep Travis focused on playing basketball and graduating high school. Richard Siegelman as Priest Diaz: A man of God and someone whom Travis confesses his sins. Maurin Penn as Agent Franklin Parker: An investigator who has both Rico and Travis in his crosshairs. Eric 'E-Gotti' Johnson as Murda: Rico's closest childhood friend and captain of his drug operation. In Rico's absence and at his direction, he steps in to aid Travis in his newfound role. He appears to be helpful, however, his ulterior motives end up being a detriment to the entire Elliot family. Ricky D. Smith as Money Mo': The main antagonist of the story. He is a kingpin and drug distributor to Rico and Travis. Derek Seals as Don: Travis' best friend. He is loyal to a fault and follows Travis down whichever path he chooses despite the ramifications. Shi Smith as Brenda Elliot: The widowed mother of Rico and Travis. She turned to drugs to cope with the loss of her
the case, she tries her best to keep Travis focused on playing basketball and graduating high school. Richard Siegelman as Priest Diaz: A man of God and someone whom Travis confesses his sins. Maurin Penn as Agent Franklin Parker: An investigator who has both Rico and Travis in his crosshairs. Eric 'E-Gotti' Johnson as Murda: Rico's closest childhood friend and captain of his drug operation. In Rico's absence and at his direction, he steps in to aid Travis in his newfound role. He appears to be helpful, however, his ulterior motives end up being a detriment to the entire Elliot family. Ricky D. Smith as Money Mo': The main antagonist of the story. He is a kingpin and drug distributor to Rico and Travis. Derek Seals as Don: Travis' best friend. He is loyal to a fault and follows Travis down whichever path he chooses despite the ramifications. Shi Smith as Brenda Elliot: The widowed mother of Rico and Travis. She turned to drugs to cope with the loss of her murdered husband and pressures of being a single-mother. Jessica Valentine as Eva Torres: Travis' friend. As a result of having a difficult life she is driven to make decisions that put both herself and her family at risk. BJ McClain as Pedro Torres: Eva's young son. Giovonni Loso as Eva's brother: The older sibling of Eva and uncle of Pedro. Being parentless forced him to support his loved ones by any means. Chink Capone as Jungle: Henchman in the criminal enterprise lead by Money Mo'. Jalen Moffit as Rob: The co-captain of Travis' high school basketball team. He and Travis sometimes bump heads because of Travis' selfish gameplay. Denisha 'Cookie' Bonner as TT: Naomi's best friend. She and Naomi share a criminal past. Joshua Graham as Kevin Myers aka Kev: Rico's childhood friend and first lieutenant of his drug operation. Taz Polito as James Bernard aka Jay: Rico's childhood friend and second lieutenant of his drug operation. Caleb Whiting as Ronnie: Rico's childhood friend and manager of his drug operation. Ketrick 'Jazz' Copeland as Mr. Dixon: Naomi's boss. He sees his position of power as the perfect advantage to exploit her. Bren Ransom as Coach: Travis' mentor and basketball coach. Having also coached Rico, he knows the obstacles that Travis faces and uses tough love in an attempt to keep him on the right path. Production Development Out of Bounds is a Reebok sponsored independent film written, produced, and directed by SD Green, an American film director, producer, writer, and filmmaker. "Filming in Memphis, Tennessee was important to Green." The city was selected to serve as the backdrop of the story for the film. Green believes, “The historically artistic city holds a wealth of untapped talent,” and in his director's statement, Green said, “I felt strongly about filming the majority of scenes in Memphis, Tennessee and recognized the city as a character of its own. As part of my commitment, the majority of the talent and crew of Out of Bounds are Memphis, Tennessee natives.” Casting Garner said he was cast by Green for his personal connection with the character and the parallel was due in part to him serving
Championship was the third annual and final tournament hosted by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women to determine the national champion of collegiate basketball among its Division III members in the United States. The tournament was held in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Concordia–Moorhead defeated Mount Mercy in the championship game, 73–72, to capture the Cobbers'
capture the Cobbers' first AIAW Division II national title. Format Seven teams participated in a single-elimination tournament, a decrease in nine teams from the previous year's championship. The tournament also included a third-place game for the two teams that lost in the semifinal games. Tournament bracket See also 1982 AIAW National Division I Basketball Championship (final edition) 1982 AIAW National Division II Basketball Championship (final edition) 1982 NAIA
published a review article detailing then known experiences with regional acceleratory phenomena, which can be caused by injuries such as fractures and burns, afflictions such as acute paralysis and arthritis, bone movement such as implant placement and orthodontics, as well as vitamin D, thyroxine, and electrical stimuli. Once evoked, processes such as perfusion, the growth of skin, bone and other connective tissues, as well as their healing, turnover and remodeling can all accelerate beyond normal values. More overt manifestations include warmness of an affected region, decreased bone density, and increased bone plasticity. In rat tibia, more intense RAP was observed with deeper corticotomy. RAP typically lasts four months but, in cases of branchial plexus injuries or severe burns, potentially over two years and predisposing the patient to hypercalciuria and genitourinary tract lithiasis. If the causative stimuli were not removed, RAP may even persist indefinitely. Effects The effects of regional acceleratory phenomenon can be positive or negative. A study in rabbits suggested that, following osteotomy, RAP contributed to a fivefold increase in new bone without a change in bone volume. In tibial fractures, accelerated bone turnover allows the
were not removed, RAP may even persist indefinitely. Effects The effects of regional acceleratory phenomenon can be positive or negative. A study in rabbits suggested that, following osteotomy, RAP contributed to a fivefold increase in new bone without a change in bone volume. In tibial fractures, accelerated bone turnover allows the union of interfaces to occur typically within six months, compared to about twenty years for remodeling based on basic multicellular units (BMUs) alone. On the other hand, increased collagen production due to RAP in rheumatoid arthritis or osteoid osteoma may lead to diffuse fibrosis and joint stiffening. Impaired RAP Obtunded or absent RAP often accompanies sensory denervation. In neuropathic soft tissue lesions, such as those in diabetics and certain frostbites, such impariment results in prolonged healing. Similarly, against insults, Charcot joints display far less tissue responses such as edema, erythema, fibrosis, and bone production. In late stage or some variants of rheumatoid arthritis, RAP may also be diminished; joints and ligaments become lax, allowing microscopic damages to accumulate leading to tendon rupture. Implications in research Due to regional acceleratory phenomenon, repeated biopsies of the same bone may perturb the data being gathered. Transient RAP may also mask the depressive effects of mechanical deloading on bone growth. Experimental procedures may evoke RAP alongside other mechanical forces, such as when implanting hardware in a bone to
traffic from midnight on 3 August 2016, and only pedestrians were permitted to use bridge. The bridge will not be demolished as it is classified as a heritage structure. The second Kalwa Bridge was opened in the mid-1990s. A third bridge was proposed in 2013 to ease traffic congestion. The U-shaped bridge was built at an estimated cost of . It begins at Creek Road and passes above Saket Road, turns right into the creek and curves on to Thane–Belapur Road. The new bridge will be used for one-way traffic towards Kalwa, while the 2nd bridge will be converted to a one-way towards Thane. Construction of the bridge was completed in 2021. However, work on access roads
pillars and ten arches. Following a structural audit conducted on the bridge in 2010, it was deemed unsafe for use by heavy vehicles, and only two and three-wheelers were permitted to use the bridge. According to officials the bridge's structure had suffered damage from a collision with a barge in 2006. The bridge was closed to all motor vehicle traffic from midnight on 3 August 2016, and only pedestrians were permitted to use bridge. The bridge will not be demolished as it is classified as a heritage structure. The second Kalwa Bridge was opened in the mid-1990s. A third bridge was proposed in 2013 to ease traffic congestion. The U-shaped bridge was built at an estimated cost of . It begins at Creek Road and passes above Saket Road, turns right into the creek and curves on to Thane–Belapur Road.
of M. N. Vasiliev, adjunct professor of the Academy of Arts. In 1886–1888 he studied at the School of Drawing, Sculpture and Architecture at the Imperial Academy of Arts. In 1890 he became a student at the Academy of Arts. Since 1895, he was taught by the notable painter Ilya Repin for two years. Gallery External links Вахрушов Феодосий Михайлович. Официальный
educated woman who occasionally stopped in Totma, making trips from Solvychegodsk to Saint Petersburg. Khaminova helped him move to Tsarskoye Selo, where he lived for two years in the family of M. N. Vasiliev, adjunct professor of the Academy of Arts. In 1886–1888 he studied at the School of Drawing, Sculpture and Architecture at the Imperial Academy
reputed to be Germany's finest Latin poet and never crowned Poet Laureate, rebuked the emperor for rewarding undeserved poets, and expressed his pride that it was the Muse who gave him the laurel: Nubila scandentem lauri de stipite cygnum Hesso stemma suum Iibera Musa dedit. The generous Muse gave Hessus for his device the swan rising from the laurel branch to the clouds. Ulrich von Hutten was in the service of the emperor for some time, and wrote poems dedicated to Maximilian. One of this was Italia to Maximilian, to which Eobanus Hessus replied with Maximilian to Italia, using the emperor's name. Jean Molinet's chef d'oevre "Ressource du petit peuple" (a work about the fates of "small people" in wars), described either as poem or rhythming prose, addressed Maximilian, whose character he praised but whose politics he reproached. Before Maximilian came to Burgundian lands, Molinet wrote Le naufrage de la Pucelle (1477), a work that mixed prose and poetry that advised Mary of Burgundy (presented in the work as the Pucelle) on how to deal with the death of her father and the threat from France (presented as whales and sea monsters). Maximilian was alluded to as an eagle that would save the ship. When Molinet depicted them as pagan deities, like in Bergier sans Soulas (1485), Mary was portrayed as Lune (Moon, Diana) while Maximilian was Apollon, Phoebus, Titan or King of Ilion, Philip was Jupiter, Margaret of Austria was Venus, while the King of France was Pan and the King of England was Neptune. In an updated version of his Complainte (the original was written in 1464), Maximilian was a lion and Mars. In their 1507 Cosmographiae Introductio (a revolutionary work in cartography, together with the map Universalis Cosmographia that accompanies it), Martin Waldseemüller and Matthias Ringmann wrote in the dedication to Maximilian: Since thy Majesty is sacred throughout the vast world Maximilian Caesar, in the furthest lands, Where Phoebus Apollo raises his golden head from eastern waves And seeks the straits called by Hercules' name, Where midday glows under his burning rays, Where the Great Bear freezes the surface of Ocean […] The poem is short but often noted for the connection between cosmography and imperial ideology. Prose The character of Priest King Johannes or John as recorded in the Ambraser Heldenbuch (a compendium of medieval epic, partly inspired by the frescoes depicting ancient heroes Maximilian saw in the Runkelstein Castle) commissioned by Maximilian and written by Hans Ried, according to Klaus Amann is an alter ego of Maximilian, who considered himself as a descendant of the race of Holy Grail (Gralsgeschlecht). The story of Loherangrin, son of Parzival and cousin of John, as recorded by Wolfram von Eschenbach's work, is also connected to Maximilian's life story, as Loherangrin was taken by a swan to Antwerp, where he married the Princess of Brabant. When asked by his wife where he had come from (something he had forbidden her to do), Loherangrin left, but their descendants remained. Many generations later, Maximilian married the Princess of Burgundy (Mary of Burgundy, who was also Duchess of Brabant). Paintings and engravings Hans Memling's St. Ursula Shrine, dated around 1488–89, showed the author as an opponent of Maximilian's politics. During the 1510s and 1520s, Maximilian's vassals and retainers tended to commission Holy Kinship paintings to praise the Habsburg's marriage politics and also to pray for the prosperity of their own family. Other examples include: In 1509, Lucas Cranach painted the famous Holy Kinship Altarpiece for Frederick and John, the brother Electors of Saxony. In this instance, as the brothers were territorial lords instead of Maximilian's direct vassals, the appearance of the emperor as Cleophas (left) seemed to have another purpose, related to political problems within their territory. Here Maximilian-Cleophas was the husband of Anne and not Mary Cleophas like in the Strigel diptych. The famous diptych of Maximilian's extended family (after 1515), painted by Bernhard Strigel, labels Mary of Burgundy as "Mary Cleophas, believed to be sister of the Virgin Mary" while Maximilian was labeled as Cleophas, brother of Joseph. This painting was likely commissioned to commemorate the 1516 double wedding (between House of Habsburg and House of Hungary) and then bequeathed to the scholar Johannes Cuspinian as a sign of imperial favour (it would become part of his family altar and some years later was paired with another Holy Kinship painting that depicted the family of Cuspinian). Sebastian Scheel's 1517 altarpiece, in which the emperor also features as Cleophas. Jan van Scorel's Holy Kinship Altarpiece, painted in 1520, in which St.Joseph, who wore a hat reminiscent of the style of the Order of the Golden Fleece and had a hawk nose, clearly resembled Maximilian.Saint George was the emperor's favourite saint. Maximilianic iconography tends to fuse the saint and the emperor, as the Defender of Christendom. The cult of Saint George nurtured by Maximilian caused ambitious rivals to emulate to compete with him (for example, Frederick the Wise of Saxony hired Lucas Cranach to make works depicting Saint George for him, that rivalled those made for the emperor). In 1508, the year Maximilian became Emperor-elect, Hans Burgkmair executed double chiascuro woodcuts, featuring Saint Georgle and Maximilian, completed with an inscription describing him as "vanguard of the army of Christians". Around 1509–1510, Daniel Hopfer created the etching The Emperor Maximilian as Saint George (dated by Madar to 1518/1520 and Silver to 1519). Around 1515, Lucas Cranach produced the work Maximilian idealized as Saint George. On his deathbed, Maximilian planned a project called Arch of Devotion (Andacht), of which the title page would show "Maximilian, crowned and enthronedin the armor of the Order of St. George, whose shield hangs above him, balanced by the joint arms of Austria and Burgundy, alongside the central imperial arms above the throne". The emperor also ordered that: "Write [of] my Tomb institution and the Order of St. George as well as of my family and ordained descent." The plan was never carried out. Instead, his death was glorified by a woodcut by Hans Springinklee under the order of Johannes Stabius that described a complete different scheme (see below) Maximilian's veneration of Saint George also influenced the knights of his time, who shared his ideals of chivalry. Hans von Hungerstein (1460–1503) commissioned the Master of the Strasbourg Chronicle to illustrate his personal edition with a depiction of Maximilian as an ideal knight, with features of Saint George. The depiction also shows how von Hungerstein, as a knight himself, wanted to be remembered. The knight Florian Waldauf, Maximilian's trusted companion who rose from a low status and was a significant patron and collector of artworks himself (several artworks commissioned by Waldauf depict Maximilian), modelled himself after the emperor in veneration of the saint. The portrait of Waldauf by Marx Reichlich (1500–1505) In the altarpiece he commissioned from Marx Reichlich, Saint George and Saint Florian appeared behind a kneeling Waldauf. Art historians usually note that the one who is depicted in the form of Maximilian is Saint Florian, Waldauf's name saint though. During his reign, Maximilian and his humanists reinvented Germania as the Mother of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. In the previous eras, she was presented as one of the lands conquered or ruled by the Roman emperors, and then by the Holy Roman Emperors (see also: History of the personified Germania), often in subordination to both imperial power and Italia (or Roma) and Gallia. In Maximilian's imagination, she reflected the self-image of emperor and took a central role in his Triumphal Procession (Maximilian died before this project was completed though. When it was first printed in 1526 by Archduke Ferdinand, the future emperor, she disappeared.) She was pacific, yet virile, and as the emperor personally dictated, with her hair loose and wearing a crown. She was presented as Mother, Sovereign Lady (Herrscherin), the Empire and the Birthland, as well as embodiment of Imperial rulership. The humanist Heinrich Bebel also spread a story about his dream, in which Germania told him to talk to her son (Maximilian). His first wife Mary of Burgundy played an important role in Maximilianic iconography, as display of personal attachment or representation of the fusion of the Houses of Burgundy and Austria or both. In many cases, her iconography is blended with that of the Virgin Mary, who was her patron, and also especially revered by the emperor (his other favourite saints tended to be military saints). Maximilian kept certain themes consistent in representations of the two Marys and his association with them for decades. According to Silver, when he supervised Mary of Burgundy's tomb in the Church of Our Lady in Bruges, Maximilian had already anticipated some later elements for his own burial. Their tombs were both made in bronze, and both of them were buried beneath the altar. Both tombs show attention to the assertive rather than the mournful side of family ancestry and possessions. In the Hours of Mary of Burgundy (according to Anna Eörsi, Maximilian was the last commissioner of this book, likely from the time he became Mary’s husband or a new father. Images were also added after Mary’s death. Hugo van der Goes was likely the ilustrator), (folio 14v), Maximilian appears as a deacon waving the censer and bowing down before the Virgin (image of Mary of Burgundy) and the Child (image of Philip the Fair), the new ruler of the world. The image is likely inspired by the legend of Augustus paying homage to the infant Jesus. Eörsi notes that in 1477, a medal celebrating Mary and Maximilian's wedding (likely commissioned by Maximilian himself), displays the motif of the Virgin with Child as well, with an inscription using content from the Song of Songs ("TOTA PVLCRA ES AMICA MEA ET MACVLA NON EST IN TE": "you are wholly fair and there is no blemish in you") - the obverse shows names and coats-of-arms of the couple while the reverse show the Virgin between two saints. Karaskova agrees that the one who commissioned this medal should be Maximilian but the date must have been much later (a sign is the symbol of the Order of the Golden Fleece, which he did not become a member – and its sovereign - until 1478). The appearance on the medal of Saint Sebastian, a saint to whom Maximilian especially devoted, seems to suggest the connection to his status as King of the Romans (he was elected in 1486). Also in this year, an image produced for the book usually called Maximilian's Old Prayers Book was created, showing Maximilian praying to Saint Sebastian. There are three falcons in the picture: the one chasing another bird seems to be an allegory for Maximilian himself, protecting mother and child (Mary and Philip). In one of Albrecht Dürer's most famous works, the Feast of the Rosary, the Virgin Mary (representation of Mary of Burgundy, according to Klaas van der Heide) was depicted holding the infant Jesus (representation of Philip the Fair) while placing a rosary on the head of a kneeling Maximilian. Rothenberg notes that, in the painting (considered by him to be a “direct visual counterpart” to the motet Virgo prudentissima, mentioned below), "The most prudent Virgin thus crowns the Wise King with a rose garland at the very moment when she herself is about to be crowned Queen of Heaven." In Dürer's 1518 Death of the Virgin, or the Dying Mary of Burgundy, which anticipated the emperor's death in 1519, Maximilian is shown as an apostle bowing down in distress (next to Zlatkonia, the commissioner of the painting, who is shown as reading an open book in the middle of the room; Philip the Fair is depicted as a young Saint John standing next to Mary) in front of the dying Virgin (or Mary of Burgundy). Her soul, depicted as an infant, is about to get crowned by Christ in Heaven. Anna Jameson remarks that, the painting "all the legendary and supernatural incidents with the most intense and homely reality". The Latin inscriptions are passages taken from the Canticles, or Song of Songs, about Mary, coming from the Desert, beautiful as the moon and excellent as the sun, terrible as an army, rising to be reunited with her beloved and crowned in Heaven. The motif of the Virgin and the Eagle, as the shared iconography of Mary of Burgundy and Maximilian, was also seen during Maximilian's "joyous entry" into Antwerp (1478), on one of the tableaux presented to him by the city. An eagle (also alluded to as the presence of the Holy Spirit) was shown offering his own blood to the maiden. The symbol for both Antwerp and Burgundy was also a virgin, while the eagle was the symbol of the House of Habsburg. The Antwerp (later, his loyal ally in his later turbulent regency) community seemed to welcome Maximilian as their saviour, but also wanted to subtly remind him of limits to his powers and his responsibilities as ruler together with Mary. Music The Alamire manuscript VatS 160, a choir book sent to Pope Leo X as a gift and likely first made for Lord John III of Bergen of Zoom, presents Maximilian as the Saviour and the secular representative of God, and also contains numerous references to the connection between Mary of Burgundy and the Virgin Mary, based heavily on Molinet’s literary “inventions”. The texts Populus qui ambulat in tenebris vidit lucem magnam (1477) and Le paradis terrestre (1486) are both allegorical texts used as the titles of chapters in Molinet’s Chroniques. In these texts, Emperor Frederick III is compared to God while Maximilian is seen as the Only Begotten Son, who is sent to save the Burgundian nation and wed Mary of Burgundy. The Le paradis terrestre describes Maximilian’s return to the ‘Kingdom of the Father’, where he was crowned as king of the Romans. The mass Missa Salve diva parens by the composer Jacob Obrecht (d.1505) declares: ‘Hail divine mother of the lovely offspring, Virgin dedicated to the good things of eternity, through whom the true Light, God, shone upon the world, and the ruler of Olympus submitted himself to become flesh’ (‘Salve diva parens prolis amene, / eternis meritis virgo sacrata, / Qua lux vera, deus, fulsit in orbem / et carnem subiit rector olimphi’). According to van der Heide, here Mary (of Burgundy) and her Olympus (the Burgundian nation) is visited by the True Light (Maximilian). The mass was likely made to celebrate Maximilian’s return to the Low Countries in 1508/1509. The mass Missa Ave regina celorum, also by Jacob Obrecht, is a tribute to both the Virgin Mary and Mary of Burgundy. Here, Mary became the deceased heavenly Mother, Friend and Queen of Emperor Maximilian. The monumental motet Virgo Prudentissima, that describes the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, was commissioned by Maximilian and written by Heinrich Isaac in preparation of the 1508 coronation of the emperor and played a very important role in Maximilianic iconography. It affiliates the reigns of two sovereign monarches – the Virgin Mary of Heaven and Maximilian of the Holy Roman Empire. The motet describes the Assumption of the Virgin, in which Mary, described as the most prudent Virgin (allusion to Parable of the Ten Virgins), "beautiful as the moon", "excellent as the sun" and "glowing brightly as the dawn", was crowned as Queen of Heaven and united with Christ, her bridegroom and son, at the highest place in Heaven. Rothenberg notes that, “In Isaac’s compositions Mary becomes the figurative mother who crowns Maximilian, just as King Solomon’s mother had crowned him.” Other than Dürer's Feast of the Rosary, Rothenberg opines that the idea of the motet is also reflected in the scene of the Assumption seen in the Berlin Book of hours of Mary of Burgundy and Maximilian. The antiphon of the motet reads: Virgo prudentissima, quo progrederis quasi aurora valde rutilans? Filia Syon tota formosa et suavis es, pulchra ut luna electa ut sol. Most prudent Virgin, where are you going glowing brightly as the dawn? Daughter of Zion, you are wholly fair and sweet, beautiful as the moon, excellent as the sun. The motet's text by George Slatkonia, expanding on the antiphon, reads: "The most prudent Virgin, who brought holy joys to the world, and transcended all spheres, and melted the stars beneath her feet with brilliant beams and gleaming light [...] the Mother of the eternal almighty, the Queen, powerful in Heaven, on land and at sea, whose divinity is deservingly venerated [and whom] every spirit and human being adores? We call upon you, Michael, Gabriel and Raphael, to pour upon her ears chaste vows and prayers for the holy Empire, for the Emperor Maximilian; may the omnipotent Virgin grant that he conquer his malicious enemies; may he restore peace to the people and safety to the lands. [...] the highest place belongs to Him by whom you were assumed, to whom you shine beautiful as the moon and are as excellent as the sun." Later, around 1537–1538, Virgo prudentissima was rewritten by Hans Ott to be rededicated to Christ as Christus filius Dei (all Marian references were replaced) and Maximilian was replaced with his grandson Charles V, then the reigning emperor. Silver notes that Maximilian's vision of religious music was not the simple result of sacral precedents seen by him in the chapels of the Low Countries, but tied to his militancy, his self-image as a martial ruler and the strong right arm of the Christian faith. Alexander the Great and Caesar were great sources of inspiration for him in music, as he said himself in the Weisskunig. Professor Nicole Schwindt notes that in his time, "this convergence of military heroism and artistic sensibility was a new profile for a ruler, which was not universally accepted and still had to be legitimized by citing Aristoteles." Beyond political representation, this reflects on Maximilian as an individual who turned to music for deeper aesthetic desires as well. The song Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen is usually associated with the memory of Maximilian, written by Isaac, although the legend that the emperor was the lyricist was now considered highly unlikely. The song can be found in early collections such as Liederbuch Ludwig Iselins (Ludwig Iselin's Songbook). The song Bentzenower (no.54) in this book is about the fight against Maximilian of Hans Pienzenau, the commander of Kufstein who was later executed after Maximilian took the fortress in 1504. The ballad Fraulein von Britannia, appeared in 1491, tells the story of Maximilian and Anne of Brittany. Michael Mullet comments that the ballad is "royalist soft pornography", but portrays rulers as actual people. Unio pro conservation rei publice (Antwerp, dated 1515) is the "eldest printed edition of polyphonic music in the Netherlands. It celebrates the visits of emperor Maximilian of Austria and his successor Charles V to the city of Antwerpen in 1508 and 1515". Armour The ancient hero Hercules and the Biblical figure Samson were also favourite figures of the emperor and identified with him through different mediums of art. According to Silver, "Hercules, then, is a perfect pagan parallel to St. George or to the biblical lion slayer, Samson, illustrated later in the Prayerbook by Breu. Hercules and Samson also shared the parallel of being undone by women. There's a bard (now in the Royal Armoury in Madrid), usually identified as made by Kolman Helmschmied and originally belonging to Maximilian, before being inherited by Charles V. The figures of Hercules, here shown performing Labours of Hercules, is an allegory for Maximilian himself. Samson is shown with Delilah. The bard was once accompanied by a suit of armour that depicted the same subject. Frederick the Wise commissioned a suit of armour for Maximilian. The armour depicted images of Samson and Delilah, the Idolatry of Solomon, Judith with the head of Holofernes, and Phyllis and Aristotle. According to Jacqueline Q.Spackman, "The inclusion on male armor may have been a warning to the man wearing the armor that even the mightiest and most intelligent of men (in this case Emperor Maximilian) can be seduced or tricked by women." Swords (see External links), knives, crossbows, cannons and other weapons were an artistic and propagandistic medium to Maximilian as well, although the audience here is more limited. A blued steel ceremonial sword (Prunkschwert), made by Hans Sumersperger (1492–1498) in Tyrol in 1496, opulently decorated with heraldic symbols and selected personal saints (one side is Saint George; the other is the Virgin) "was designed to be read from the tip of its blade back to its hilt, thus oriented clearly toward the sovereign who extended it in a ritual-like dubbing". Lhotsky notes that the Mary side shows more prestigious symbols, associated with higher ranked territories (kingdoms and duchies). Silver connects the heraldry seen here to those of the Wappenturm. The hunting sword (Hirschfänger), also with blued steel and made by Sumersperger in Tyrol, shows the Mother of God on one side, standing on a crescent moon and crushing the serpent. The other side shows Saint Sebastian (also a patron of Maximilian, as the saint of soldiers and archers) being tied to a trunk and pierced by arrows. There are carved mother-of-pearl figures of a saint on the handle, presumably Barbara or Catherine. Tapestries Legend of Notre Dame du Sablon (or Our Lady of the Zavel) tapestries, commissioned by Franz von Taxis (1459–1517), circa 1518, with design attributed to Bernaert van Orley, features the scene Franz von Taxis was bestowed the postal rights by Frederick III according to Maximilian's arrangement. Posthumous depictions in artworks and popular culture After Maximilian's death, generations of Habsburg rulers looked up to him as a model for their patronage and continued his artistic legacy. Hugh Trevor-Roper writes that, "By harnessing the arts, he surrounded his dynasty with a lustrous aura it had previously lacked. It was to this illusion that his successors looked for their inspiration. To them, he was not simply the second founder of the dynasty; he was the creator of its legend - one that transcended politics, nationality, even religion." In the eighteenth century, Maximilian transformed from a dynastic symbol representing the Habsburgs to a national symbol for Germany. The Weisskunig was rediscovered and got its first edition in 1775. Herder saw his era, which he shared with other heroic figures like Albrecht Dürer, Martin Luther and Paracelsus, as the great German era, the most important one since the Romans, and the source of European constitution. In the nineteenth century, his story was re-stylized as "key moments in the German-Austrian self-image". Under the influence of both Romanticism and Historicism, his image took on many new directions. Poems In 1519, after the emperor's death, the Swiss poet Ceporinus wrote On the good life and apotheosis of Emperor Maximilian I in commemoration of him. Maximilian's daughter Margaret also wrote a poem in commemoration of her father after his death. Threnodia, a 1519 in commemoration of Maximilian's death by Pierre Gilles, is the author's best known Latin poetry work. In 1830, Anastasius Grün (11 April 1806 – 12 September 1876) published the epic poem Der letzte ritter (The last knight), with which this epithet has become almost the second name of the emperor, which is now the only aspect many Germans know about him. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem The Belfry of Bruges mentions the wedding by proxy of Mary of Burgundy and Maximilian, and the end of his imprisonment in Bruges, when he was forced to swear not to take vengeance on the rebels: "I beheld proud Maximilian/Kneeling humbly on the ground". He is also mentioned in Nuremberg. Plays Pedro Calderón de la Barca's 1649 play Austria's second glory drew upon the Martinswand legend and raised it to an allegory of personal trust in God. On that year, the actor Augustín Manuel de Castilla was released from debtors' prison in Segovia so that he could play the young Maximilian. Goethe's 1773 Götz von Berlichingen presents Götz von Berlichingen as the true Last Knight, in the place of Maximilian, who was revered by Götz despite being unable to control his anarchical realm. Stepan Shevyryov praises Goethe's genius for daring to give Maximilian a minor role and elevating Götz to the center. In Johann Ludwig Deinhardstein’s Hans Sachs (1827) (which seems to be the inspiration behind Richard Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg), Maximilian came to Nuremberg incognito and helped Hans Sachs, a talented minstrel of humble origins, to marry the woman he loved. Gustav Freytag’s 1844 play Die Brautfahrt oder Kunz von den Rosen (The bridal procession, or Kunz von den Rosen) is a comedy about Emperor Maximilian, which won the author the Berlin Court Theater Prize. Richard von Kralik's 1913 Der letzte Ritter (The last knight), originally named Maximilian, is a play about the young Maximilian and seems to be a response to Goethe's Götz von Berlichingen. Maximilian – ein wahrer Ritter is a 2019 musical written by Florian and Irene Scherz about Maximilian and Mary of Burgundy. In the 2019 musical Schattenkaiserin, which is about the tragical life of Empress Bianca Maria Sforza, Maximilian is portrayed as a cold, adulterous husband who married Bianca for money and then abandoned her to focus on wars, other lovers and extravagant pursuits.The authors are Jürgen Tauber und Oliver Ostermann. The musical received three nominations for the German Musical Theater Price 2020/2021 (due to the coronavirus crisis, the price covers both the 2019/2020 and 2020/2021 seasons) for composition, stage design and costume and won the prize for stage design. Novels and other prose works In one of the imaginary dialogues written by the satirist Trajano Boccalini (1556 – 16 November 1613), Maximilian explained his opinions about Islam to the God Apollo, who chaired the debate. According to Maximilian, the introduction of Islam was a matter of policy and Mohammad was more of a politician than a sacred man. Apollo decided that Maximilian's opinions were entirely correct. Cinthio's Hecatommithi (1565) is the chief source for Shakespeare's Measure for measure. Maximilian corresponds to Duke Vincentio and the story happens in Innsbruck (Innsbruck functioned as imperial capital city under Maximilian I), instead of Vienna. Maximilian is an important character in the 1866 novel The Dove in the Eagle's Nest by Charlotte Mary Yonge. In 1858, F.C.Schall published the historical novel Kaiser Maximilian der Erste in Wels und die Polheimer: Historischer Roman."The Kaiser's tree by Wilhelmine von Hillern (1836–1916) is about the story of Hans Liefrink (Hans Liefrinck is a renown block cutter) and Mailie, who met Maximilian once when they were young and planting a tree. Hans talked about his dream of becoming a wood carver like Dürer and marrying Mailie. Hieronymus Rides: Episodes in the Life of a Knight and Jester at the Court of Maximilian, King of the Romans is a 1912 novel, written by Anna Coleman Ladd. The story is about Hieronymus, a jester and knight, who served his half-brother Maximilian loyally and undertook many adventures. Maximilian is the central character of Peter Prange's 2014 novel Ich, Maximilian, Kaiser der Welt.Des Kaisers Narr ist in Gefahr: Meine Reise in die Zeit von Kaiser Maximilian I. is a 2018 children fiction, written by Verena Wolf and Sonja Ortner and illustrated Christian Opperer. The story is about two children who time-travel with a court jester to Maximilian's era. In the 2019 novel Die Luftvergolderin. Ein historischer Roman by Jeannine Meighörner, twelve-year-old Anne of Bohemia and Hungary married Maximilian (then aged 56) and became a widow, before finding true love with his grandson Ferdinand.The Eagle and the Songbird is a 2020 novel written by the music director Sara Schneider about the last years of Maximilian's reign, featuring the intertwining stories of the singer Catherine of Croy (the Songbird), the composer Ludwig Senfl and Maximilian (the Eagle). Music The anonymous Proch dolor in Brussels 228 is a motet of mourning for the death of Maximilian (1519). There are debates regarding whether the composer was Josquin des Prez or someone else. Hans Sachs (1494–1576), the meistersinger of Nuremberg, also called cobbler-poet, also often mentioned tales about Maximilian in his works. He was one of the source for the necromancer myth mentioned above. Albert Lortzing's opera Hans Sachs (1840), with libretto by the composer, Philipp Reger and Philipp Jakob Düringer is based on Deinhardstein's play mentioned above: Hans Sachs competes at a song competition judged by Maximilian and wins the hand of Kunigunde, whom he loves. Maximilian is a character in the 1849 five-act opera Ulrich von Hutten by Alexander Fesca, that featuring Hutten (who came to support Martin Luther, Maximilian, Franz von Sickingen in a 1523 setting.Hutten und Sickingen is a 1889 dramatisches Festspiel (dramatic festival play) by August Bungert, composed to celebrate the 400th year of the bird of Hutten. The characters include Hutten, Sickingen, Maximilian, Albrecht Dürer, Konrad Peutinger and his wife Constanze, Jakob Spiegel. Ignaz Brüll's opera Der Landfriede (1877) follows a comedy of the same name by Eduard von Bauernfeld (1869), which is about Maximilian and the world around him, set in Augsburg in 1518.Theuerdank is a 1897 opera by Ludwig Thuille with libretto by Alexander Ritter. The work talks about the love of Theuerdank for Editha. The work was unsuccessful. The 2019 album The last knight by the symphonic metal band Serenity is inspired by the life of Maximilian. Paintings and Engravings In 1519, after the emperor's death, Johannes Stabius ordered Hans Springinklee to create a woodcut that described the emperor, kneeling in full regalia before God the Father, presented by his patron saints already featured in his Prayerbook (the Virgin with the Child, St. George, St. Andrew, St. Sebastian, St. Maximilian, St. Barbara, and St. Leopold), now acting as his intercessors. Silver describes this as an imagined apotheosis. The emperor mirrored God as His vicar, saying, "Moreover, you O Lord are my supporter: You are my glory and you glorify my reign." Stabius’s verses extolled Maximilian’s reign: “Germani gloria regni”. The emperor was to be "united with Christ, with man, with God", and in turn evoked as a saint. The copper plate portrait Emperor Maximilian I by Lucas van Leyden was the "earliest dated example of etching on copper." The softer copper allowed the artist to produce finer details. The artist utilized an innovative approach of combining etching with engraving, seen here for the first time in Northern Europe. Around 1567–1571, Giorgio Vasari created the large-scale painting L'imperatore Massimiliano toglie l'assedio a Livorno (Maximilian lifting the siege of Livorno). The engraving made by Dominicus Custos in 1600 likely was the basis for Cornelis de Vos and Rubens's 1635 portrait later. Later Habsburgs continued with the triumphal iconography created by Maximilian and his artists. The Arch of Philip IV, "the widest and most splendid of them all", was created by Peter Paul Rubens, Jacob Jordaens and Cornelis de Vos (after 1614). The arch pays tribute to the founding moment of the marriage between Maximilian and Mary of Burgundy, a scene that had been depicted by Dürer in his Small Triumphal Chariot. See also Mary of Burgundy in arts and popular culture. In 1635, Cornelis de Vos painted Portrait of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, which was retouched by Rubens. The scene he bestowed his imperial crown on Amsterdam is depicted in several paintings and etchings, among them Keizer Maximiliaan I van Habsburg verleent de keizerskroon aan Amsterdam, Pieter Nolpe, after Nicolaes Moeyaert (1638), or the anonymous Keizer Maximiliaan verleent de stad Amsterdam het recht de keizerskroon in haar wapen te voeren. Among the 32 copperplate engravings depicting the history of Augsburg (the explanations for the engravings were created by historian Paul von Stetten, targeting female readers specifically) for the supraports of the Schaezlerpalais (these engravings were commissioned by the banker Benedikt Adam Liebert (1731-1780), based on drawings by Gottfried Eichler (1715-1770)), No.19 depicts the scene of the meeting between Maximilian and Konrad Peutinger's four-year-old daughter Juliana (born in 1500, she was the oldest of his eight children and known as a child prodigy), who greeted the emperor with a Latin speech. The emperor asked what she wanted for a reward, she replied, "A beautiful doll". She later died at age six; No.20 depicts the encounter between Maximilian and a Corpus Christi procession: When Maximilian was in Augsburg, he used to ride up the Singold River to hunt with falcons. Once he came to Göggingen during the week of Corpus Christi. When Maximilian found out that a procession was about to go from the village to a nearby chapel, he gave up the hunt and joined the pilgrimage with his court. Karl Ruß (1779 – 1843) painted Kaiser Maximilian besucht die Handwerker (1822), which shows the emperor visited a tanner's house. There was no specific event like this in recorded history, although Maximilian was known for general closeness to the common people. There are two paintings involving Mary and Maximilian among the principal historical paintings of the painter Anton Petter (1791 – 1858): one is Der Einzug Kaiser Maximilians I.in Gent (1822, Belvedere, Wien) in which Mary presented their son to her husband and the other is Kaiser Maximilian I und Maria von Burgund which describes their meeting (1813, Joanneum at Graz). Franz Krammer's 1831 work Kaiser Maximilian I. auf der Steinbockjagd depicts Maximilian on an ibex hunting trip. Karl Jäger (1833–1887) painted the scene of Maximilian sitting for a portrait by Albrecht Dürer in his work Maximilian I. bei Albrecht Dürer (between 1882 and 1886). The double wedding that led to the establishment of the Danube Monarchy was immortalized by Václav Brožík by his 1898 Tu felix Austria nube, a monumental painting measuring fourteen by twenty four feet. Alfred Rethel painted the portrait of Maximilian I as part of a series that include Philip of Swabia, Maximilian I, Charles V and Maximilian II. These portraits are placed along those of other emperors who reigned from 768 to 1806 (created from 1839 to 1853) in the Kaisersaal in Frankfurt am Main. Historisches Museum Frankfurt keeps the rejected first version. Eduard Veith (1856 – 1925) painted Apotheose von Kaiser Maximilian I. (Apotheosis of Emperor Maximilian I) Karl von Blaas's 1868 Kaiser Maximilian und Georg von Frundsberg shows the influence of Rethel's work. Jan Matejko painted the scene of the meeting between Maximilian and Vladislaus II and Sigismund I before the Congress of Vienna (1515) in 1879 or 1880. The painter offered this painting as a gift to Emperor Franz Joseph, who liked it very much. Klimt's 1903 The Golden Knight referred to prints by Burgkmair and Dürer as well as two late Gothic armours of the emperor, showing the figure of his as a chivalric ideal. Sculptures In 1521, in the face of a menacing Ottoman advance (Siege of Belgrade), Hans Daucher produced the limestone relief Maximilian I on Horseback in the Guise of Saint George, showing the emperor's horse crushing a deagon. In 1522, Daucher produced the relief Allegorical Duel between Albrecht Dürer and Apelles, showing Maximilian as a judge in the fight between Albrecht Dürer and the poet Apelles. Thomas Eser considers this an allegory for both Maximilian's and Dürer's roles in advancing German arts. There are some debates around the identity of Dürer's opponent. Also in 1522, Daucher created the relief Allegory of Virtues and Vices at the Court of Charles V showing Maximilian symbolically at Charles V's side. Sculptor Carl Seffner built a 2.2 metre tall bronze statue for Maximilian in Leipzig in 1897. It commemorated the day he granted the Fairs Charter to Leipzig, making the city one of the most important trade fair cities in Europe. In 1902, Cormons hired Viennese artist E. Hofmann to create a statue for the emperor, which has become an icon for the city. Since 1981, it has been put up again in Piazza Libertà after being removed due to
were beheaded before Erich von Braunschweig, a favoured commander, pleaded for the lives of the rest. Maximilian had forbidden any pleading, but Erich had saved Maximilian's life at the Battle of Wenzenbach and was his godchild. After the siege, Maximilian rebuilt Kufstein into a powerful fortress, that still stands today. He added the white, eye-catching Kaiserturm (Imperial Tower), at which there is now a permanent exhibition about him. The scene is depicted by Johannes Riepenhausen in his Herzog Erich der Ältere von Calenberg und Kaiser Maximilian vor der Veste Kufstein in Tirol (pen-and-ink drawing around 1836; the same artist recaptured the scene in an oil painting in 1837 with Herzog Erich von Braunschweig bittet unter eigener Gefahr den Kaiser Max um Gnade für die zu Kuffstein Verurteilten), On the wall of the nearby Auracher Löchl (the oldest winehouse of Austria), there is a depiction of the "last knight" with his cannon, opposing Hans Pienzenau. Works produced during Maximilian's lifetime Maximilian was a major patron of the Renaissance in the North as well as a creative force in his own right, and as such admired and able to maintain a relationship with many important artists and scholars of his time, most notably the humanists who praised him as a second Apollo and Father of the Muses. In the Low Countries, Maximilian was a divisive figure, sometimes represented as the saviour of the country and sometimes as an autocratic tyrant (both possibly historical truths). While his Burgundian supporters (beginning with Molinet) tended to identify him with the Saviour (either in the guise of an eagle or the only begotten Son), Maximilian and his German supporters, especially his closest humanist circle, usually identified himself with Apollo-Phoebus (or the Sun), Hercules, Saint George and some other saints. Hugh Trevor-Roper remarks that in comparison with princes in Italy and Flanders as well as his own descendants, he did not commissioned great religious pictures. His tastes focused on himself, his family, German and Roman ancient heroes, and certain saints that he considered to have a kinship to his house. Gedechtnus Gedechtnus (memorial) is a term used by the emperor to refer to his monumental projects that served to institutionalize and memorialize his image and that of his family. The core of these was his massive autographical (or semi-autographical) corpus, including Theuerdank, Freydal, Weisskunig, the Ehrenpforte (Triumphal Arch), genealogical projects, various triumphal celebrations, architectural projects like his Cenotaph in Innsbruck, musical works by leading composers of the day like Heinrich Isaac and Paul Hofhaimer. Maria Golubeva judges these projects as glorification for posterity, rather than propaganda in the normal sense of the word. Theuerdank and Weisskunig are considered "the last attempt to revive medieval chivalrous ideals." For Theuerdank, Freydal and Weisskunig as well as his Latin autobiography, Maximilian dictated content of chapters, provided sketches, revised drafts and was generally the driving force of these projects himself, although dozens of artists were involved in the creative process. In the cases of the Triumphal Arch and the Triumphal Procession, with the help of Johannes Stabius, he provided the texts on iconography and close supervision. He was the designer of his own Cenotaph. Watanabe-O'Kelly notes that the projects often made use of luxurious elements, which indicated that they were not intended for the mass. Maximilian issued privileges to printers of such projects, but a number of these works, by their design, “invited reproduction, reuse, appropriation and imitation”. Theuerdank (one of the few projects completed in the emperor's lifetime), in particular, quickly became free-for-all, public shareware after its first publication in 1517, pirated initially by printers in the Low Countries. The Triumphal Arch as well as other depictions of triumphal celebrations by the emperor as his artists have been called "the most elaborate imaginary procession designs." According to Jasper Cornelis van Putten, the Triumphal Arch is the most influential genealogical woodcut, following which printed monumental genealogies became popular with European rulers until well into the eighteenth century. It is also "the most celebrated hierographic monument". Other than the glorification aspect, the emperor, with the help of his artistic advisors, had a habit of inject dark allegories and his inner turmoil into the works. The genealogical projects and the invented histories that went with them tended to attract criticisms even from the contemporaries for being overboard (even though other rulers also made extraordinary claims about their families), including the famous mathematician and astronomer Johannes Stabius. After the origins of the Habsburg had been traced back to Noah, Kunz von der Rosen brought before the emperor a retired soldiers' harlot and a beggar, who petitioned him to support them because they were all descendants of Adam. The emperor laughed. Later, Charles V personally tried to eliminate Theodoric from his grandfather's tomb (which was in some respects also a genealogical work) but failed, while Ferdinand I successfully eliminated Caesar and Ottokar. For portraits, he preferred woodcuts as it was the cheapest medium. The iconic oil painting Portrait of Emperor Maximilian I by Albrecht Dürer was a rare case another medium was used instead. Architecture The Wappenturm, or Heraldry Tower (now destroyed) in Innsbruck, was built in 1496 following the design of Jörg Kölderer and the Türing workshop that produced the Goldenes Dachl that stands next to it. It was built near the part of the palace in which arms and armour were stored. The tower serves as a billboard for dynastic propaganda, displaying the coats of arm of the territories (54 in total) Maximilian claimed. The standard bearers here had a more noble look in comparison with those on the Goldenes Dachl. The top showed the bust portraits of Maximilian and his two wives, as if on a royal balcony. Later, another royal couple was added, presumably Ferdinand I and Anna of Hungary and Bohemia. A remarkable monument, that was never completed (as work ceased after Maximilian’s death) is the Speyer monument to German emperors and empresses (the characters selected are Maximilian’s ancestors, together with emperors from the Hohenstaufen and the Salic lines, who were buried at the Speyer Cathedral). The structure was intended to comprise a round temple on twelve octagonal pillars with the whole surmounted by a giant crown. Maximilian seemed to intend to create a bronze effigy of himself as the focal point of the structure. The surviving crown is 6m is diameter, with a fragment in the shape of a palm-leaf being 1.55m high, and one of the eight surviving sculptures of emperors being 1.78m high. Like other Maximilianic monuments, the design is more Gothic than Renaissance. Certain previously built structures were utilized and modified to befit Maximilian's propagandistic purposes. An extant example is the towers (Oberer Stadtturm and Unterer Stadtturm, also called Kaiser Maximilians Wappentürme or Maximilian's heraldry towers) in Vöcklabruck, which Maximilian realized to be easy to identify from distance. The facades were altered with frescoes that displayed Maximilian and coats of arms of the territories he ruled as those he aspired to rule as well, as well as image of himself. During Napoleon's invasion, the frescoes were removed. After 150 years, during renovation, they were discovered and restored. The Cour de Bailles was a square (now lost) in front of the Palace of the Dukes of Brabant that Maximilian and Margaret began to build in 1509. The angles were cut off with an open-worked stone balustrade, interrupted by pedestals (that carried the figures of birds and quadrupeds) and octagonal columns on each of which stood a duke of Brabant. The figures were designed by Jan van Roome, alias des Bruxelles, and the sculptor was Jan Borreman, who executed them in wood, which would be cast in bronze by Renier van Thienen, who only completed the statues of Godfrey II, Godfrey the Bearded, Maximilian and Charles V. The construction would be completed in 1521 though. Plays Dramatic works by Maximilian's court scholars and Poet Laureates as well as others who supported him tended to double as encomium for imperial politics and commentary on contemporary events. Jakob Locher's Tragedia de Turcis et Suldano and Historia de rege Frantie supported Maximilian's anti-Ottoman and anti-French agenda. The works predicted the defeat of the French and the Ottoman (even though the fighting had not started yet). Historia de rege Frantie is the first German Neo-Latin tragedy, also the first German Humanist tragedy. Konrad Celtis wrote for Maximilian Ludus Dianae and Rhapsodia de laudibus et victoria Maximiliani de Boemannis. The Ludus Dianae displays the symbiotic relationship between ruler and humanist, who are both portrayed as Apollonian or Phoebeian. Maximilian was the most important of Celtis's earthly Apollos, while Celtis, as one of the most important advisors of Maximilian, played an essential role in shaping the image of Maximilian-Apollo. The other humanists support this image as well – the idea behind was that an ideal ruler outshone everything. The function of the emperor as the promoter of arts and learning (Musagetes or Musarum pater) was important but the political mission was highlighted as well (as shown by Willibald Pirckheimer’s text that accompagnied the Great Triumphal Carriage, mentioned above.) Apollo was also the symbol of the Renaissance that Celtis and the humanists wanted to bring to Germany. Poems The epic Austriados (around 1513) glorifies Maximilian's deeds in the War of Bavarian succession. The author was Riccardo Bartolini (born 1470), Maximilian's "most important Neo-Latin panegyrist". This is one of the Latin epics dedicated to the emperor by Italin poets, including Encomiastica (1504) by Giovanni Stefano Emiliano Cimbriaco, Pronostichon de futuro imperio propagando (1493/1494) by Giovanni Michele Nagonio, Magnanimus (ca. 1517–1519) by Riccardo Sbruglio. Pulina notes that the epics aspire to connect to traditional ideals and models of heroization, but also adapt to the person of Maximilian and contemporary developments. Sebastian Brandt was a lifelong admirer of the emperor and dedicated various panegyrical works to him, although he criticized Maximilian on some aspects. For example, he criticized the court historians who fawned over their prince in his The ship of fools: I wish I had a covered ship Wherein all courtiers I would slip And those who eat at nobles' board And hobnob with a mighty lord So that they may be undisturbed And by the rabble never curbed. Helius Eobanus Hessus, widely reputed to be Germany's finest Latin poet and never crowned Poet Laureate, rebuked the emperor for rewarding undeserved poets, and expressed his pride that it was the Muse who gave him the laurel: Nubila scandentem lauri de stipite cygnum Hesso stemma suum Iibera Musa dedit. The generous Muse gave Hessus for his device the swan rising from the laurel branch to the clouds. Ulrich von Hutten was in the service of the emperor for some time, and wrote poems dedicated to Maximilian. One of this was Italia to Maximilian, to which Eobanus Hessus replied with Maximilian to Italia, using the emperor's name. Jean Molinet's chef d'oevre "Ressource du petit peuple" (a work about the fates of "small people" in wars), described either as poem or rhythming prose, addressed Maximilian, whose character he praised but whose politics he reproached. Before Maximilian came to Burgundian lands, Molinet wrote Le naufrage de la Pucelle (1477), a work that mixed prose and poetry that advised Mary of Burgundy (presented in the work as the Pucelle) on how to deal with the death of her father and the threat from France (presented as whales and sea monsters). Maximilian was alluded to as an eagle that would save the ship. When Molinet depicted them as pagan deities, like in Bergier sans Soulas (1485), Mary was portrayed as Lune (Moon, Diana) while Maximilian was Apollon, Phoebus, Titan or King of Ilion, Philip was Jupiter, Margaret of Austria was Venus, while the King of France was Pan and the King of England was Neptune. In an updated version of his Complainte (the original was written in 1464), Maximilian was a lion and Mars. In their 1507 Cosmographiae Introductio (a revolutionary work in cartography, together with the map Universalis Cosmographia that accompanies it), Martin Waldseemüller and Matthias Ringmann wrote in the dedication to Maximilian: Since thy Majesty is sacred throughout the vast world Maximilian Caesar, in the furthest lands, Where Phoebus Apollo raises his golden head from eastern waves And seeks the straits called by Hercules' name, Where midday glows under his burning rays, Where the Great Bear freezes the surface of Ocean […] The poem is short but often noted for the connection between cosmography and imperial ideology. Prose The character of Priest King Johannes or John as recorded in the Ambraser Heldenbuch (a compendium of medieval epic, partly inspired by the frescoes depicting ancient heroes Maximilian saw in the Runkelstein Castle) commissioned by Maximilian and written by Hans Ried, according to Klaus Amann is an alter ego of Maximilian, who considered himself as a descendant of the race of Holy Grail (Gralsgeschlecht). The story of Loherangrin, son of Parzival and cousin of John, as recorded by Wolfram von Eschenbach's work, is also connected to Maximilian's life story, as Loherangrin was taken by a swan to Antwerp, where he married the Princess of Brabant. When asked by his wife where he had come from (something he had forbidden her to do), Loherangrin left, but their descendants remained. Many generations later, Maximilian married the Princess of Burgundy (Mary of Burgundy, who was also Duchess of Brabant). Paintings and engravings Hans Memling's St. Ursula Shrine, dated around 1488–89, showed the author as an opponent of Maximilian's politics. During the 1510s and 1520s, Maximilian's vassals and retainers tended to commission Holy Kinship paintings to praise the Habsburg's marriage politics and also to pray for the prosperity of their own family. Other examples include: In 1509, Lucas Cranach painted the famous Holy Kinship Altarpiece for Frederick and John, the brother Electors of Saxony. In this instance, as the brothers were territorial lords instead of Maximilian's direct vassals, the appearance of the emperor as Cleophas (left) seemed to have another purpose, related to political problems within their territory. Here Maximilian-Cleophas was the husband of Anne and not Mary Cleophas like in the Strigel diptych. The famous diptych of Maximilian's extended family (after 1515), painted by Bernhard Strigel, labels Mary of Burgundy as "Mary Cleophas, believed to be sister of the Virgin Mary" while Maximilian was labeled as Cleophas, brother of Joseph. This painting was likely commissioned to commemorate the 1516 double wedding (between House of Habsburg and House of Hungary) and then bequeathed to the scholar Johannes Cuspinian as a sign of imperial favour (it would become part of his family altar and some years later was paired with another Holy Kinship painting that depicted the family of Cuspinian). Sebastian Scheel's 1517 altarpiece, in which the emperor also features as Cleophas. Jan van Scorel's Holy Kinship Altarpiece, painted in 1520, in which St.Joseph, who wore a hat reminiscent of the style of the Order of the Golden Fleece and had a hawk nose, clearly resembled Maximilian.Saint George was the emperor's favourite saint. Maximilianic iconography tends to fuse the saint and the emperor, as the Defender of Christendom. The cult of Saint George nurtured by Maximilian caused ambitious rivals to emulate to compete with him (for example, Frederick the Wise of Saxony hired Lucas Cranach to make works depicting Saint George for him, that rivalled those made for the emperor). In 1508, the year Maximilian became Emperor-elect, Hans Burgkmair executed double chiascuro woodcuts, featuring Saint Georgle and Maximilian, completed with an inscription describing him as "vanguard of the army of Christians". Around 1509–1510, Daniel Hopfer created the etching The Emperor Maximilian as Saint George (dated by Madar to 1518/1520 and Silver to 1519). Around 1515, Lucas Cranach produced the work Maximilian idealized as Saint George. On his deathbed, Maximilian planned a project called Arch of Devotion (Andacht), of which the title page would show "Maximilian, crowned and enthronedin the armor of the Order of St. George, whose shield hangs above him, balanced by the joint arms of Austria and Burgundy, alongside the central imperial arms above the throne". The emperor also ordered that: "Write [of] my Tomb institution and the Order of St. George as well as of my family and ordained descent." The plan was never carried out. Instead, his death was glorified by a woodcut by Hans Springinklee under the order of Johannes Stabius that described a complete different scheme (see below) Maximilian's veneration of Saint George also influenced the knights of his time, who shared his ideals of chivalry. Hans von Hungerstein (1460–1503) commissioned the Master of the Strasbourg Chronicle to illustrate his personal edition with a depiction of Maximilian as an ideal knight, with features of Saint George. The depiction also shows how von Hungerstein, as a knight himself, wanted to be remembered. The knight Florian Waldauf, Maximilian's trusted companion who rose from a low status and was a significant patron and collector of artworks himself (several artworks commissioned by Waldauf depict Maximilian), modelled himself after the emperor in veneration of the saint. The portrait of Waldauf by Marx Reichlich (1500–1505) In the altarpiece he commissioned from Marx Reichlich, Saint George and Saint Florian appeared behind a kneeling Waldauf. Art historians usually note that the one who is depicted in the form of Maximilian is Saint Florian, Waldauf's name saint though. During his reign, Maximilian and his humanists reinvented Germania as the Mother of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. In the previous eras, she was presented as one of the lands conquered or ruled by the Roman emperors, and then by the Holy Roman Emperors (see also: History of the personified Germania), often in subordination to both imperial power and Italia (or Roma) and Gallia. In Maximilian's imagination, she reflected the self-image of emperor and took a central role in his Triumphal Procession (Maximilian died before this project was completed though. When it was first printed in 1526 by Archduke Ferdinand, the future emperor, she disappeared.) She was pacific, yet virile, and as the emperor personally dictated, with her hair loose and wearing a crown. She was presented as Mother, Sovereign Lady (Herrscherin), the Empire and the Birthland, as well as embodiment of Imperial rulership. The humanist Heinrich Bebel also spread a story about his dream, in which Germania told him to talk to her son (Maximilian). His first wife Mary of Burgundy played an important role in Maximilianic iconography, as display of personal attachment or representation of the fusion of the Houses of Burgundy and Austria or both. In many cases, her iconography is blended with that of the Virgin Mary, who was her patron, and also especially revered by the emperor (his other favourite saints tended to be military saints). Maximilian kept certain themes consistent in representations of the two Marys and his association with them for decades. According to Silver, when he supervised Mary of Burgundy's tomb in the Church of Our Lady in Bruges, Maximilian had already anticipated some later elements for his own burial. Their tombs were both made in bronze, and both of them were buried beneath the altar. Both tombs show attention to the assertive rather than the mournful side of family ancestry and possessions. In the Hours of Mary of Burgundy (according to Anna Eörsi, Maximilian was the last commissioner of this book, likely from the time he became Mary’s husband or a new father. Images were also added after Mary’s death. Hugo van der Goes was likely the ilustrator), (folio 14v), Maximilian appears as a deacon waving the censer and bowing down before the Virgin (image of Mary of Burgundy) and the Child (image of Philip the Fair), the new ruler of the world. The image is likely inspired by the legend of Augustus paying homage to the infant Jesus. Eörsi notes that in 1477, a medal celebrating Mary and Maximilian's wedding (likely commissioned by Maximilian himself), displays the motif of the Virgin with Child as well, with an inscription using content from the Song of Songs ("TOTA PVLCRA ES AMICA MEA ET MACVLA NON EST IN TE": "you are wholly fair and there is no blemish in you") - the obverse shows names and coats-of-arms of the couple while the reverse show the Virgin between two saints. Karaskova agrees that the one who commissioned this medal should be Maximilian but the date must have been much later (a sign is the symbol of the Order of the Golden Fleece, which he did not become a member – and its sovereign - until 1478). The appearance on the medal of Saint Sebastian, a saint to whom Maximilian especially devoted, seems to suggest the connection to his status as King of the Romans (he was elected in 1486). Also in this year, an image produced for the book usually called Maximilian's Old Prayers Book was created, showing Maximilian praying to Saint Sebastian. There are three falcons in the picture: the one chasing another bird seems to be an allegory for Maximilian himself, protecting mother and child (Mary and Philip). In one of Albrecht Dürer's most famous works, the Feast of the Rosary, the Virgin Mary (representation of Mary of Burgundy, according to Klaas van der Heide) was depicted holding the infant Jesus (representation of Philip the Fair) while placing a rosary on the head of a kneeling Maximilian. Rothenberg notes that, in the painting (considered by him to be a “direct visual counterpart” to the motet Virgo prudentissima, mentioned below), "The most prudent Virgin thus crowns the Wise King with a rose garland at the very moment when she herself is about to be crowned Queen of Heaven." In Dürer's 1518 Death of the Virgin, or the Dying Mary of Burgundy, which anticipated the emperor's death in 1519, Maximilian is shown as an apostle bowing down in distress (next to Zlatkonia, the commissioner of the painting, who is shown as reading an open book in the middle of the room; Philip the Fair is depicted as a young Saint John standing next to Mary) in front of the dying Virgin (or Mary of Burgundy). Her soul, depicted as an infant, is about to get crowned by Christ in Heaven. Anna Jameson remarks that, the painting "all the legendary and supernatural incidents with the most intense
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is native to an area of eastern Africa in central Somalia. The species was first formally described by the botanist Emilio
area of eastern Africa in central Somalia. The species was first formally described by the botanist Emilio
Defense Forces on December 20, 1989, following the US invasion of Panama. History The 7th Macho de Monte Infantry Company was founded on April 7, 1969, as part of the National Guard of Panama by General Omar Torrijos who had seized power in a coup in 1968. The unit's first leader was Ediberto del Cid and consisted of a total of sixteen men. Following Manuel Noriega's seizure of power and transformation of the National Guard into the Panama Defense Forces in 1983 the unit was built into an
History The 7th Macho de Monte Infantry Company was founded on April 7, 1969, as part of the National Guard of Panama by General Omar Torrijos who had seized power in a coup in 1968. The unit's first leader was Ediberto del Cid and consisted of a total of sixteen men. Following Manuel Noriega's seizure of power and transformation of the National Guard into the Panama Defense Forces in 1983 the unit was built into an elite infantry battalion. During the 1989 Panamanian coup d'état attempt the company sided with Noriega and were deployed by air to Panama City to quell the coup attempt and to dislodge the entrenched rebels from the Central Barracks. Their performance during the coup attempt showed the unit to be one of Noriega's most loyal and as a result it became a commando and special
club only played a further three campaigns in the fourth tier during the decade before again going down to the regional levels. Season to season 6 seasons in Segunda División B 14 seasons in Tercera División References External links Fútbol Regional team profile Soccerway team profile Football clubs in the Canary Islands Association football clubs established in
returned to the fourth tier in 1990, but achieved an immediate promotion back to the third division, where they stayed for a further three seasons before again dropping a level in 1994. Another relegation followed in 2000, and the club only played a further three campaigns in the fourth tier during the decade before again going down to the regional levels. Season to season 6 seasons in Segunda División B 14 seasons in Tercera División References External links Fútbol Regional
they were 15th in the short dance and 12th in the free to finish 14th overall. 2018–2019 season Marton/Szemko started with a 12th-place finish at JGP Slovenia and a 13th-place finish at JGP Armenia. The team finished 10th at Volvo Open Cup and earned silver at the Christmas Cup. Marton/Szemko won silver at the 2019 Four National Championships behind Taschlerová/Taschler, but retained their Hungarian junior national title for a second consecutive season. At the 2019 World Junior Championships, they were 23rd in the rhythm dance and did not advance to the free dance. 2019–2020 season Marton/Szemko opened the season with an eighth-place finish at JGP France and a 15th-place finish at JGP Croatia. They earned bronze at Open d'Andorra and finished fifth at Santa Claus Cup. Marton/Szemko again won silver behind Taschlerová/Taschler at the 2020 Four National Championships while retaining their Hungarian junior national title. The team then finished eighth at 2020 Mentor Toruń Cup. At the 2020 World Junior Championships, Marton/Szemko were 17th in the rhythm dance, but fell to 19th in the free dance and remained 19th overall. 2020–2021 season Marton/Szemko split prior to the 2020–21 season. In January 2021, coach Nóra Hoffmann announced Szemko's partnership with Russian Mariia Ignateva to compete for Hungary. 2021–2022 season Ignateva/Szemko made their international competitive debut at the 2021 CS Lombardia Trophy where they placed 17th. They were then sixth at the Budapest Trophy before winning silver medals at the Volvo Open Cup and the Santa Claus Cup. At the 2022 Four National Championships, Ignateva/Szemko earned the bronze medal behind Poland's Natalia Kaliszek / Maksym Spodyriev and Taschlerová/Taschler of the Czech Republic, as well as the Hungarian national title. They were assigned to the 2022 European Championships, where they finished 18th overall. Ignateva/Szemko competed at the Jégvirág Cup in February and won their first international title together. Programs With Ignateva With Marton Competitive highlights CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand
at before the 2018 World Junior Championships; earning golds at the 2017 Halloween Cup and 2018 Jégvirág Cup, bronzes at the 2017 Leo Scheu Memorial and 2017 Open d'Andorra, and a ninth-place finish at the 2017 Santa Claus Cup. Marton/Szemko won the 2018 Four National Championships ahead of the Czech Republic's Natálie Taschlerová / Filip Taschler and Poland's Oleksandra Borysova / Cezary Zawadzki to earn their first junior national title. At the World Junior Championships, they were 15th in the short dance and 12th in the free to finish 14th overall. 2018–2019 season Marton/Szemko started with a 12th-place finish at JGP Slovenia and a 13th-place finish at JGP Armenia. The team finished 10th at Volvo Open Cup and earned silver at the Christmas Cup. Marton/Szemko won silver at the 2019 Four National Championships behind Taschlerová/Taschler, but retained their Hungarian junior national title for a second consecutive season. At the 2019 World Junior Championships, they were 23rd in the rhythm dance and did not advance to the free dance. 2019–2020 season Marton/Szemko opened the season with an eighth-place finish at JGP France and a 15th-place finish at JGP Croatia. They earned bronze at Open d'Andorra and finished fifth at Santa Claus Cup. Marton/Szemko again won silver behind Taschlerová/Taschler at the 2020 Four National Championships while retaining their Hungarian junior national title. The team then finished eighth at 2020 Mentor Toruń Cup. At the 2020 World Junior Championships, Marton/Szemko were 17th in the rhythm dance, but fell to 19th in the free dance and remained 19th overall. 2020–2021 season Marton/Szemko split prior to the 2020–21 season. In January 2021, coach Nóra Hoffmann announced Szemko's partnership with Russian Mariia Ignateva to compete for Hungary. 2021–2022 season Ignateva/Szemko made their international competitive debut at the 2021 CS Lombardia Trophy where they placed 17th. They were then sixth at the Budapest Trophy before winning silver medals at the Volvo Open Cup and the Santa Claus Cup. At the 2022 Four National Championships, Ignateva/Szemko earned the bronze medal behind Poland's Natalia Kaliszek / Maksym Spodyriev and Taschlerová/Taschler of
project was completed around 1922. Following the development of Lyon Park, Lyon acquired rights to the tract adjoining Clarendon. In 1923, the firm started development of Lyon Village, a 191-acre tract of land. The properties sold well until the Great Depression in the 1930s. With the depression, Lyon and Fitch dissolved and Fitch moved to Chicago. The firm of Lyon Properties Inc. would continue into the 1940s and the Lyon Village Shopping Center was managed by the Lyon family after Frank Lyon's death. Lyon used techniques to keep people of color from settling in his developments. These practices included restrictive covenants with buyers to prevent people of color from living on the land, except as servants. He also required housing built on the land he sold to be expensive and designed the streets with cars in mind, not for pedestrians. In 1933, Lyon turned down a nomination on the Prohibition Party ticket for Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. Personal life In 1889, Lyon and Georgie Hays Wright moved to Alexandria County and built a small house on Lubber Run near Ballston, Virginia. They were married on August 5, 1890, near Manassas, Virginia. She was the daughter of John V. Wright, a member of the U.S. Congress, member of the Confederate States Congress, colonel in the Confederate States Army and circuit judge of Columbia, Tennessee. Together, they had three children who survived childhood and one son who died from water pollution: Georgie Hays – married Jacob L. Devers John – lieutenant in the 29th Infantry Division of World War I. He died on October 16, 1918. John Lyon is remembered on the War Memorial in Clarendon Circle. Margaret Springs – married Charles W. Smith, a business associate of Frank Lyon. Their daughter Mary Bittinger and grandson Charles Bittinger III continued the property management business in Arlington County In the early 1900s, the Lyons moved to the "Ohmstead" House on Kirkwood Road in Arlington County. In 1907, Lyon built a house he called Lyonhurst (now Missonhurst). The family lived there until 1923. In 1923, Lyon moved to Langley, Virginia and bought 169 acres of land and built a stone house called Ballantrae on the land. Due to the depression, Lyon had to sell Ballantrae and instead moved
1906, Lyon started to publish the Alexandria County Monitor and continued with the paper until 1928. The paper was used to combat gambling and liquor in Rosslyn. Lyon argued legal cases against the open sale of liquor and open saloons in Alexandria County. He also participated in the raids in Rosslyn and Jackson City in May 1904 with Crandal Mackey. In 1907, Commissioner Franklin K. Lane of the ICC appointed Lyon to the semi-judicial position of examiner. In 1912, he resigned this position to practice exclusively before the ICC in matters concerning steamship lines and coal companies. Land development career Lyon then became a law partner with Robert W. Moore. He became involved in the development of Moore's Addition to Clarendon and then bought out Moore's interest in the property and started his own development firm. When Lyon sold land in Clarendon, he would have the buyer agree that "liquor shall never be sold or dispensed on the property or from any building erected thereon, nor shall said property be used for the conducting of any business that constitutes a nuisance to other lot owners in the subdivision, such as a soap factory or like industry." His development firm bore his own name until 1920 when he partnered with C. Walton Fitch. Then, the firm was called Lyon and Finch. Later it was renamed to Lyon Properties Inc. In 1919, Lyon Properties started developing Lyon Park, a project to develop a 300-acre tract of land into 1,200 building lots in Arlington County. The project was completed around 1922. Following the development of Lyon Park, Lyon acquired rights to the tract adjoining Clarendon. In 1923, the firm started development of Lyon Village, a 191-acre tract of land. The properties sold well until the Great Depression in the 1930s. With the depression, Lyon and Fitch dissolved and Fitch moved to Chicago. The firm of Lyon Properties Inc. would continue into the 1940s and the Lyon Village Shopping Center was managed by the Lyon family after Frank Lyon's death. Lyon used techniques to keep people of color from settling in his developments. These practices included restrictive covenants with buyers to prevent people of color from living on the land, except as servants. He also required housing built on the land he sold to be expensive and designed the streets with cars in mind, not for pedestrians. In 1933, Lyon turned down a nomination on the Prohibition Party ticket for Lieutenant Governor of Virginia. Personal life In 1889, Lyon and Georgie Hays Wright moved to Alexandria County and built a small house on Lubber Run near Ballston, Virginia. They were married on August 5, 1890, near Manassas, Virginia. She was the daughter of John V. Wright, a member of the U.S. Congress, member of the Confederate States Congress, colonel in the Confederate States Army and circuit judge of Columbia, Tennessee. Together, they had three children who survived childhood and one son who died from water pollution: Georgie Hays – married Jacob L. Devers
Results are predetermined by WWE's writers on the NXT brand, while storylines are produced on their weekly television program, NXT 2.0. On December 5, 2021, at NXT WarGames, Tony D'Angelo took out Pete Dunne with a crowbar and took his mouth guard during the Men's WarGames match. Dunne took it back from D'Angelo on the December 14 episode of NXT 2.0 and defeated him in the main event the following week. After the match, D'Angelo attacked Dunne's hand with a crowbar, causing him to writhe in pain. On the January 11, 2022 episode of NXT 2.0, D'Angelo defeated Dunne in a Crowbar on a Pole match. The following week, D'Angelo conducted a memorial service for Dunne's career and set his sights on Carmelo Hayes' NXT North American Championship. On the January 25 episode of NXT 2.0, D'Angelo fought Cameron Grimes in a number one contender's match for a shot at the title, but lost after Dunne appeared and hit his hand with a cricket bat. The following weeks saw Dunne challenge D'Angelo to a steel cage match, but then upped the stipulation after avoiding his crowbar attacks during a match with Draco Anthony, throwing in chairs, crowbars, kendo sticks and a toolbox in the ring to make it a weaponized steel cage match at NXT Vengeance Day. Event Preliminary matches Tony D'Angelo vs Pete Dunne (Weaponized Steel Cage match) Tony D'Angelo came out in a fancy new Maybach, confident in his success to come. Pete Dunne immediately went for the weapons to hurt Tony D. After a superplex off the steel cage, D'Angelo cuffed The Bruiserweight. Dunne was punished until he trapped his rival in a guillotine and got to the tool kit to cut himself free. Somehow, even with the extra punishment with weapons, both Dunne and D'Angelo kicked out of each other's finishers. Tony D grabbed the crowbar while Dunne pulled out a crowbar. The Bruiserweight smacked his opponent in the skull with the crowbar then hit a second Bitter End for the win. NXT Women's Tag Team Championship: Toxic Attraction (c) vs. Indi Hartwell and Persia Pirotta Toxic Attraction came out as a unit, and Mandy Rose watched closely as Gigi Dolin and Jacy Jayne attacked Persia Pirotta and Indi Hartwell before the bell. The challengers recovered quickly, especially after the referee sent Rose to the back. Pirotta went on a tear, laying out both champions at once with a Samoan drop. Jayne sent Pirotta hard into the steel steps then tripped Hartwell before she could hit a diving elbow. Finally, Toxic Attraction hit a high-low combination for the victory. NXT North American Championship: Carmelo Hayes (c) vs. Cameron Grimes Carmelo Hayes wore down Cameron Grimes with focused technical offense, hoping to take advantage of his own impressive stamina. Trick Williams helped as well in taking cheap shots on Grimes behind the referee's back. The Technical Savage tried to get back into the action but ran right into a springboard crossbody for a nearfall. Grimes responded with a spin-out side slam that nearly took the win. He then hit a big diving crossbody for a nearfall as well. Grimes caught Trick with a Cave-In on the outside, but Trick still got involved enough to make sure Melo held a crossface on Grimes that left the challenger vulnerable for a top rope diving leg drop to win. Dusty Tag Team Classic Final: MSK vs. The Creed Brothers MSK and The Creed Brothers spoke their piece ahead of their men's Dusty Tag Team Classic finals showdown. Malcolm
its own event as well as NXT's annual Valentine's event. Unlike all previous Vengeance events, which aired on pay-per-view as well as the WWE Network in 2021, this will be the first Vengeance to air as a television special. Five matches were contested at the event. In the main event, Bron Breakker defeated Santos Escobar to retain the NXT Championship. Production Background Vengeance was originally established as a pay-per-view (PPV) event for WWE in 2001 and it was held annually until 2007, followed by a one-off event in 2011. In February 2021, WWE revived Vengeance for the NXT brand as a TakeOver event called Vengeance Day, and it aired on PPV and the WWE Network. Its title was also a reference to its Valentine's Day scheduling. The TakeOver series was then discontinued in September 2021. On January 25, 2022, however, WWE announced that Vengeance would continue under the Vengeance Day name, but unlike all previous Vengeance events, the 2022 Vengeance Day would be held as a special episode of NXT 2.0. The 10th event in the Vengeance chronology, it was scheduled to be held on February 15, 2022, at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida. This in turn established Vengeance Day as NXT's annual Valentine's event. Additionally, due to USA Network's broadcasting of the 2022 Winter Olympics in NXTs normal slot, the television special will air on Syfy. Storylines The show will include matches that result from scripted storylines, where wrestlers portray heroes, villains, or less distinguishable characters to build tension and culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches. Results are predetermined by WWE's writers on the NXT brand, while storylines are produced on their weekly television program, NXT 2.0. On December 5, 2021, at NXT WarGames, Tony D'Angelo took out Pete Dunne with a crowbar and took his mouth guard during the Men's WarGames match. Dunne took it back from D'Angelo on the December 14 episode of NXT 2.0 and defeated him in the main event the following week. After the match, D'Angelo attacked Dunne's hand with a crowbar, causing him to writhe in pain. On the January 11, 2022 episode of NXT 2.0, D'Angelo defeated Dunne in a Crowbar on a Pole match. The following week, D'Angelo conducted a memorial service for Dunne's career and set his sights on Carmelo Hayes' NXT North American Championship. On the January 25 episode of NXT 2.0, D'Angelo fought Cameron Grimes in a number one contender's match for a shot at the title, but lost after Dunne appeared and hit his hand with a cricket bat. The following weeks saw Dunne challenge D'Angelo to a steel cage match, but then upped the stipulation after avoiding his crowbar attacks during a match with Draco Anthony, throwing in chairs, crowbars, kendo sticks and a toolbox in the ring to make it a weaponized steel cage match at NXT Vengeance Day. Event Preliminary matches Tony D'Angelo vs Pete Dunne (Weaponized Steel Cage match) Tony D'Angelo came out in a fancy new Maybach, confident in his success to come. Pete Dunne immediately went for the weapons to hurt Tony D. After a superplex off the steel cage, D'Angelo cuffed The Bruiserweight. Dunne was punished until he trapped his rival in a guillotine and got to the tool kit to cut himself free. Somehow, even with the extra punishment with weapons, both Dunne and D'Angelo kicked out of each other's finishers. Tony D grabbed the crowbar while Dunne pulled out a crowbar. The Bruiserweight smacked his opponent in the skull with the crowbar then hit a second Bitter End for the win. NXT Women's
along with its music video. Promotion Throughout December 2021 and January 2022, Fantagio released video teasers and concept posters for the EP on their social media, including imagery of "humanoid blobs" and references to social distancing in the
video. Promotion Throughout December 2021 and January 2022, Fantagio released video teasers and concept posters for the EP on their social media, including imagery of "humanoid blobs" and references to social distancing in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The EP more broadly has a vacation theme and a
Japan, Korea, India, and the Middle East. In November 2021, Bloomsbury published Confucius’ Courtyard: Architecture, Philosophy, and the Good Life in China, distributed in the US, UK, Australia and New Zealand. Ruan has authored essays and criticism on architecture and society for academic journals and mainstream media including the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (JSAH), The Conversation, Quartz, Architecture Australia and Architecture Now. In China, his essays have been published in Jianzhu Xuebao [Architectural Journal 建筑学报], Jianzhu Shi [The Architect 建筑师] and Wenhui Xueren of Wenhui Ribao [Wenhui Scholar of Wenhui Daily 文汇学人, 文汇日报]. He has been interviewed about his work by ABC Radio National, Times Radio, Barron's Magazine and ArchDaily. Public lectures and events Ruan has delivered public lectures for the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), the National University of Singapore (NUS), Politecnico di Milano, CEPT and the University of Bath. In 2019, Ruan was the architectural curator of the Shanghai Urban Space Art Season (SUSAS) biennale. Bibliography Confucius’ Courtyard: Architecture, Philosophy, and the Good Life in China – Bloomsbury, 2021 Fusheng Jianzhu [Floating Life and Architecture 浮生·建筑] – The Commercial Press, 2020 Hand & Mind: Conversations on Architecture and the Built World (editor) – The University of New South Wales Press, 2019 Spatial Habitus: Making and Meaning in Asia’s Architecture (series) – The University of Hawai‘i Press, 2007 Allegorical Architecture: Living Myth and Architectonics in Southern China – The University of Hawai‘i Press, 2006 Skyplane (co-editor) – University of New South Wales Press, 2009 Topophilia and Topophobia: Reflections on Twentieth-century Human Habitat –
written and published seven books. He is co-editor, with Ronald Knapp, of the book series Spatial Habitus: Making and Meaning in Asia’s Architecture, published by the University of Hawai’i Press. Subjects of the series included China, Japan, Korea, India, and the Middle East. In November 2021, Bloomsbury published Confucius’ Courtyard: Architecture, Philosophy, and the Good Life in China, distributed in the US, UK, Australia and New Zealand. Ruan has authored essays and criticism on architecture and society for academic journals and mainstream media including the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (JSAH), The Conversation, Quartz, Architecture Australia and Architecture Now. In China, his essays have been published in Jianzhu Xuebao [Architectural Journal 建筑学报], Jianzhu Shi [The Architect 建筑师] and Wenhui Xueren of Wenhui Ribao [Wenhui Scholar of Wenhui Daily 文汇学人, 文汇日报]. He has been interviewed about his work by ABC Radio National, Times Radio, Barron's Magazine and ArchDaily. Public lectures and events Ruan has delivered public lectures for the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), the National University of Singapore (NUS), Politecnico di Milano, CEPT and the University of Bath. In 2019, Ruan was the architectural curator of the Shanghai Urban Space Art Season (SUSAS) biennale. Bibliography Confucius’ Courtyard: Architecture, Philosophy, and the Good Life in China – Bloomsbury,
the first European freestyle wrestling champion from Bulgaria and European and World Champion Nikola Petroff. Event videos The event was air freely on the Bulgarian Wrestling Federation Live YouTube channel. Medal table Team ranking Medal overview Men's freestyle Greco-Roman Women's
honor of Dan Kolov who was the first European freestyle wrestling champion from Bulgaria and European and World Champion Nikola Petroff. Event videos The event was air freely on the Bulgarian Wrestling Federation Live YouTube channel. Medal table Team
to encourage private investment in the Valparaíso Region. Political career García is a member of the Liberal Party (PL). In 2020, he participated in the Broad Front primaries for Governor Candidate of the Valparaíso Region, in which he was not elected. On 21 January 2022, he was appointed as Minister of Public Works by then President-elect Gabriel Boric. García will officially assume the position on 11 March. Personal life García is married to Xochitl Poblete, with whom he has two children. References External links Living people 1971 births Chilean architects 21st-century Chilean politicians Liberal Party of Chile
Alberto García Lazcano and María Isabel Pérez de Arce Antoncich, Juan Carlos did a BA in architecture at the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso (PUCV). Later, García completed a MA in urban management at the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris, France. Within his career, García has worked in the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development (Minvu), a position from which he actively collaborated in the declaration of the Valparaíso commune as a Unesco World Heritage Site. He has also been an advisor to the Production Development Corporation (Corfo), a site where he promoted programs that aimed to encourage private
1980 and 1982, respectively. In 1996, he directed , a documentary that follows the anarchist sailor and defender of lost causes and his creator through some of his fascinating journeys. He was also known for making the majority of documentary adaptations of the monographic series "Découvertes Gallimard", three of which were co-produced with the Louvre Museum. Filmography As director 1962: Ourane (short film) 1967: Ici, ailleurs ou dans le métro (short film) 1967: (some episodes) 1967: One (Chroniques de France, nº 19) 1968: Pézenas, un village français (Chroniques de France, nº 30) 1970: Lumina, pièce pour douze cordes et bande magnétique d'Ivo Malec (episode of Les Grandes répétitions) 1973: La Rose rouge (episode of Ce que Paris chante) 1974: Hannah Arendt (episode of Un certain regard) 1979: (some episodes) 1980: Gandhi, apôtre de la non-violence (episode of Les Idées et les hommes) 1980: 1947 : La première crise de la IVº république 1980: Louis XI, un seul roi pour la France 1982: Saint Louis ou La royauté bienfaisante 1982: Le
Filmography As director 1962: Ourane (short film) 1967: Ici, ailleurs ou dans le métro (short film) 1967: (some episodes) 1967: One (Chroniques de France, nº 19) 1968: Pézenas, un village français (Chroniques de France, nº 30) 1970: Lumina, pièce pour douze cordes et bande magnétique d'Ivo Malec (episode of Les Grandes répétitions) 1973: La Rose rouge (episode of Ce que Paris chante) 1974: Hannah Arendt (episode of Un certain regard) 1979: (some episodes) 1980: Gandhi, apôtre de la non-violence (episode of Les Idées et les hommes) 1980: 1947 : La première crise de la IVº république 1980: Louis XI, un seul roi pour la France 1982: Saint Louis ou La royauté bienfaisante 1982: Le triange à quatre
Tournament. Bracket and results * denotes overtime game References East Coast Conference (Division
NCAA Tournament. Bracket and results * denotes overtime game References East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1977–78
elections Assam Haryana |- align=center !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" class="unsortable"| !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=center|Political Party !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |No. of candidates !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |No. of elected !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |Number of Votes !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |% of Votes |- | |align="left"|Haryana Vikas Party ||65 ||33 ||17,16,572 ||22.7% |- | |align="left"|Samta Party ||89 ||24 ||15,57,914 ||20.6% |- | |align="left"|Bharatiya Janata Party ||25 ||11
!style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |No. of elected !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |Number of Votes !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |% of Votes |- | |align="left"|Haryana Vikas Party ||65 ||33 ||17,16,572 ||22.7% |- | |align="left"|Samta Party ||89 ||24 ||15,57,914 ||20.6% |- | |align="left"|Bharatiya Janata Party ||25 ||11 ||6,72,558 ||8.9% |- | |align="left"|Independent ||2022 ||10 ||11,73,533 ||15.5% |- | |align="left"|Indian National Congress ||90 ||9 ||15,76,882 ||20.8% |-
smocks, protecting the clothing underneath, while sleeved are more likely to be worn for warmth. Sleeveless are commonly seen as part of a child's clothing when worn for . It is the origin of current kimono coat. Structure The 's shape and use are similar to those of the (a wrapped-front kimono coat). Unlike the , however, the is a double-breasted coat; the front panels are wide enough to cover the whole chest, and they tie (or button) at the shoulders. Its neckline is square with a flat collar (), not a round collar (). A may be padded for extra warmth.
are often made of (Japanese figured silk satin) and tied with silk braided cords in a chrysanthemum knot. They are worn by young children on the occasion of , as part of an auspicious formal outfit. Gallery See also Academic gown, a warm overgarment with a similar historic social role List of items traditionally worn in Japan References External links Japanese upper-body garments Folk costumes Coats (clothing)
consist of a: 1. State Chief Information commissioner and 2. Not more than ten State Information Commissioners. The Chief and other members of State Information Commission are appointed by the Governor on the recommendation of the committee consisting of the Chief Minister as Chairperson, the Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly and a state Cabinet Minister. The members of State Information Commission should be of eminence in public life and are not permitted to hold any other office of profit or any position which is connected with any political party and are also barred from carrying on any business or continuing any profession in any field. Shatrughna Singh is the current Chief Information commissioner of Uttarakhand Information Commission. Tenure and service The tenure of the Uttarakhand State Chief Information Commissioner and a State Information Commissioner for holding office will be a term of 3 years or until they attain the age of 65 years, whichever is earlier and will not be eligible for reappointment on completion of tenure.Any vacancy in the State Information Commission has to be filled within six months from the date of vacancy. Uttarakhand Chief Information Commissioner (CIC), Information Commissioner (IC) and State Information Commissioner's salaries, allowances and other service terms and conditions are equivalent to a Judge of the
current Chief Information commissioner of Uttarakhand Information Commission. Tenure and service The tenure of the Uttarakhand State Chief Information Commissioner and a State Information Commissioner for holding office will be a term of 3 years or until they attain the age of 65 years, whichever is earlier and will not be eligible for reappointment on completion of tenure.Any vacancy in the State Information Commission has to be filled within six months from the date of vacancy. Uttarakhand Chief Information Commissioner (CIC), Information Commissioner (IC) and State Information Commissioner's salaries, allowances and other service terms and conditions are equivalent to a Judge of the Supreme Court. Powers and functions Uttarakhand State Information Commission prepares report on the implementation of the provisions of State Information Commission act and submits an annual report to the state government which is placed by the later before the state legislature. The commission on reasonable grounds can order inquiry into any matter related to the Act. The commission under powers granted to it can secure from the public authorities compliance of any of its decisions. Commission is duty bound to receive and conduct enquiry into any complaint received from any person. The commission can call for and examine any record which it considers necessary and is under the possession of the public authority and any such record should not be withheld from it on any grounds during the inquiry of a complaint. The commission has the power of the civil court during the course of enquiry and in respect of the following matters: Any complaint which requires the discovery and inspection of documents relating to it. Powers exercised for issuing summons requiring examination of any witnesses or related documents or any other prescribed matters relating to complaint. Any provision under which summons were issued and as per which attendance is required of persons and requires them to give written or oral evidence under an oath and producing documents or other details relevant to it. Provision requiring evidence on stamped affidavit. Powers relating to request from any court or office of any public record. Commission under the powers can recommend steps which can be taken for confirming to the provisions of the act if any public authority fails to do so. Challenges Uttarakhand State Information Commission are overburdened with backlog cases, similar to Central Vigilance Commission. Due to shortage of available staff and vacancies not being filled, there is backlog of cases filed. The maximum number of appeals and complaints pending as per October 2014 records were in state of Uttar Pradesh. However, some states like Mizoram, Sikkim and
He is a professor in the Faculty of Science School of Biology & Environmental Science at Queensland University of Technology (QUT). Dale is best known for development of improved strains of bananas. In 2021, his team earned recognition for a strain of Cavendish bananas resistant to Panama disease tropical race 4. Early life Dale grew up in a harbour-side suburb of Sydney. He was more interested in sport than science until late in high school. He then went to University of Sydney and on completion of his undergraduate degree, immediately continued into
strain of Cavendish bananas resistant to Panama disease tropical race 4. Early life Dale grew up in a harbour-side suburb of Sydney. He was more interested in sport than science until late in high school. He then went to University of Sydney and on completion of his undergraduate degree, immediately continued into his PhD, supervised by plant virologist Adrian Gibbs, and completed in 1975. Research In 2004, he led a team at QUT to
27 July 1983) is a German politician of Alliance 90/The Greens. Since 2016, she has been co-chair of the Greens parliamentary group in the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin. She has been a member of the Abgeordnetenhaus since 2011. Education and personal life After graduating from high school, Gebel studied administrative sciences at the University of Göttingen and University of Potsdam from 2002 to 2011, and finished her studies with a diploma in public administration theory. She was a student assistant of Kerstin Müller, member of the Bundestag, from 2006 to 2009, and then assistant of Reinhard Bütikofer, Member of the European Parliament, until 2011. She is married to fellow Green politician Malte Spitz, with whom she has three children. They live in Berlin-Mitte. Political career Before becoming involved with the Greens, Gebel was active in the youth branch of the Europa-Union Deutschland from 2001. She was deputy federal chairwoman of the group from 2003 to 2006. From 2006
its political director. She was the group's representative at the German National Committee for International Youth Work (DNK), and was spokesperson from 2008 to 2009. Gebel has been a member of Alliance 90/The Greens since 2003. From 2003 to 2005, she was a member of the party district executive in Göttingen, and later moved to Berlin, where joined the district executive in Mitte in 2011. Gebel was 27th on the Greens state list in the 2011 Berlin state election and was not elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus. She also ran in the Mitte 2 constituency, winning 15.5% of votes. After the resignation of Felicitas Kubala in January 2013, Gebel replaced her as member of the Abgeordnetenhaus. There, she joined the Urban Development and Environment Committee and the Europe, Federalism, and Media Committee. She also became spokeswoman for environmental policy for the Greens. She was re-elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus in the 2016 Berlin state election. After Ramona Pop stepped down as co-leader of the Greens parliamentary group to join the second Müller senate, Gebel was elected as her successor on 2 Novemmber, alongside incumbent Antje Kapek. Gebel was re-elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus in the 2021 Berlin state election, winning the direct constituency Mitte 1 with 35% of votes. Political positions Gebel opposes proposals for school
video Awards and nominations References External links Iranian film producers Iranian screenwriters Iranian film directors People from Abadan,
director, screenwriter and producer. Filmography Film Home video Awards and nominations References External links Iranian film producers
the minor premiership. This is determined by most premiership points, with four points for a win and two points for a draw; if tied, percentage (ratio of points scored to points conceded) is used as tie-breaker. The minor premiership is distinct from the major premiership (or, simply, the premiership), which is awarded to the winner of the finals series which follows the home-and-away season. The VFA first established a finals series in 1903, and hence the first distinct minor premiership is recognised in that season. List of minor premiers The following is a list of minor premiers,
a draw; if tied, percentage (ratio of points scored to points conceded) is used as tie-breaker. The minor premiership is distinct from the major premiership (or, simply, the premiership), which is awarded to the winner of the finals series which follows the home-and-away season. The VFA first established a finals series in 1903, and hence the first distinct minor premiership is recognised in that season. List of minor premiers The following is a list of minor premiers, ladder details and results. Division 1 Notes Source where unlisted Division 2 Notes Source Minor premiership wins See also List
but closed in the 1955. Calmar Steamship Company operated World War 2 Victory ships: Blue Ridge Victory Hagerstown Victory Honduras Victory Nashua Victory Calmar operated World War 2 Liberty ships: Andrew G. Curtin, Torpedoed Jan. 25, 1944 and sunk by U-716 at 73.20N 23.30E. Thomas McKean, Torpedoed June 29, 1942 and sunk in Caribbean by U-505 at 22.00N 60.00W Pierce Butler, Torpedoed Nov. 20, 1942 and sunk by U-177 in Indian Ocean at 29.53S 36.28E Benjamin Harrison, Torpedoed March 16, 1943 and sunk by U-172 at 39.02N 24.15W. James W. Denver, Torpedoed April 11, 1943 and sunk by U-195 west of Canary Islands James A. Butts Roy K. Johnson Flora MacDonald Frank R. Stockton Frederick H. Baetjer Frederick L. Dau Flora MacDonald Thomas Sully Philip F. Thomas, sank in 1956 as PELAGIA Benjamin Chew Christopher Newport Thomas Nelson Richard Henry Lee Grace Abbott William Paca SS Eleazar Wheelock James W. Wheeler SS John H. B. Latrobe Ore Steamship Company Ore Steamship Company and the Ore Navigation Corpoartion were subsidiaries of the Bethlehem Steel Company founded in New York City in 1927. Ore Steamship Company was a proprietary company that was founded so Bethlehem Steel could move goods needed by Bethlehem Steel Company. Ore Steamship Company would transport iron ore to the Bethlehem Steel mills on the Atlantic coast. Some ships took steel and steel products to Bethlehem Shipyards. Port of Baltimore was a major Bethlehem Steel port, the dock was 2,200 feet long in order to load and unload three large, 28,000-ton cargo ships at the same time. Ore ships: SS Texar, was Harold O. Wilson SS Bethflor, steel-carrying cargo ship Lagonda 1896 cargo ship Cambria SS William H. Donner, 1914 cargo ship ELBA Chilore Cubore Fletmore Marore Oremore Santmor Venmore Steelmore Bethcoal No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, 1962 Hopper Barge Interocean Shipping Company Interocean Shipping Company, Interocean Steamship Company of San Francisco was a subsidiary of the Bethlehem Steel Company founded in the late 1930s and closed in 1986. Ships: Partial list as most ships were charted and not owned by Interocean: Oswego Reliance, a tanker James E. Davidson, a cargo ship SS Cosmic, a 745-foot cargo ship
built in 1919 SS Circinus a steam cargo ship built in 1919 SS Oakmar sunk by U-71 on March 20, 1942 off Virgina Calmar (1) a Type C4-class ship Liberty ships that became Calmar ships: Marymar, was SS Frederick H. Baetjer Alamar (2), was Samuel F. B. Morse (2) Massmar, was Alexander V. Fraser Flomar, was Arlie Clark Seamar, was George M. Verity Kemmar, was George R. Holmes Calmar was Vincent Harrington Portmar, was Joseph B. Eastman Pennmar, was William S. Baer Yorkmar, was Walter Kidde Lomar, was Morris Sigman Texmar, was Harold O. Wilson World War II During World War II Bethlehem Steel Company had its subsidiary companies operated charter shipping to support the war. During World War II Bethlehem Steel Company had its subsidiary companies: Calmar Steamship Company and Interocean active with charter shipping for the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. During wartime, the Companies operated Victory ships and Liberty ships. 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 competition. Black Diamond Steamship Company continued to operate after the war, but closed in the 1955. Calmar Steamship Company operated World War 2 Victory ships: Blue Ridge Victory Hagerstown Victory Honduras Victory Nashua Victory Calmar operated World War 2 Liberty ships: Andrew G. Curtin, Torpedoed Jan. 25, 1944 and sunk by U-716 at 73.20N 23.30E. Thomas McKean, Torpedoed June 29, 1942 and sunk in Caribbean by U-505 at 22.00N 60.00W Pierce Butler, Torpedoed Nov. 20, 1942 and sunk by U-177 in Indian Ocean at 29.53S 36.28E Benjamin Harrison, Torpedoed March 16, 1943 and sunk by U-172 at 39.02N 24.15W. James W. Denver, Torpedoed April 11, 1943 and sunk by U-195 west of Canary Islands James A. Butts Roy K. Johnson Flora MacDonald Frank R. Stockton Frederick H. Baetjer Frederick L. Dau Flora MacDonald Thomas Sully Philip F. Thomas, sank in 1956 as PELAGIA Benjamin Chew Christopher Newport Thomas Nelson Richard Henry Lee Grace Abbott William Paca SS Eleazar Wheelock James W. Wheeler SS John H. B. Latrobe Ore Steamship Company Ore Steamship Company and the Ore Navigation Corpoartion were subsidiaries of the Bethlehem Steel Company founded in New York City in 1927. Ore Steamship Company was a proprietary company that was founded so Bethlehem Steel could move goods needed by Bethlehem Steel Company. Ore Steamship Company would transport iron ore to the Bethlehem Steel mills on the Atlantic coast. Some ships took steel and steel products to Bethlehem Shipyards. Port of Baltimore was a major Bethlehem Steel port, the dock was 2,200 feet long in order to load and unload three large, 28,000-ton cargo ships at the same time. Ore ships: SS Texar, was Harold O. Wilson SS Bethflor, steel-carrying cargo ship Lagonda 1896 cargo ship Cambria SS William H. Donner, 1914 cargo ship ELBA Chilore Cubore Fletmore Marore Oremore Santmor Venmore Steelmore Bethcoal No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, 1962 Hopper Barge Interocean Shipping Company Interocean Shipping Company, Interocean Steamship Company of San Francisco was a subsidiary of the Bethlehem Steel Company founded in the late 1930s and closed in 1986. Ships: Partial list as most ships were charted and not owned by Interocean: Oswego Reliance, a tanker James E. Davidson, a cargo ship SS Cosmic, a 745-foot cargo ship (charted not owned) 1930s charted: Hanley (US) Brimanger (Norway) Taranger (Norway) Heranger (Norway) Villanger (Norway) Trondanger (Norway) Berganger (Norway) Moldanger (Norway) Hindanger (Norway) Interocean operated World War 2 ships World War 2 Victory ships: World War 2 chartered ships: SS Augustana Victory Denison Victory Bowdoin Victory Notre Dame Victory Wabash Victory World War 2 operated Liberty ships: SS Elwood Mead Ben B. Lindsey Edward P. Alexander Alfred
were arranged against other teams in the Vega Baja del Segura region. During the Spanish Civil War football came to a standstill, and it was not until the mid-1950s that Torrevieja again had an official team, with both Español Frente de Juventudes (known as el Hueso) and Club Deportivo Torrevejense (known as el Remiendo) being formed, with the peculiarity that no admission was charged, with fans making whatever contribution they could. Over the next 15 years both of the clubs folded, leaving a void which was filled in 1971 with the foundation of Torrevieja Club de Fútbol. The town's mayor, Vicente García García, and his administration, took on the task to build the football ground, which was named after the politician, being inaugurated with
for the first time ever, competing in that level for ten years after which it promoted again, now to the third level, a spell that ended in the 1992–93 campaign, with the club suffering another relegation in 1994 due to financial irregularities. A new football club was set up in the town in 1993, Club Deportivo Torrevieja, which started playing in the second regional league. By 1996, the new side promoted to the competition's top level, as the original club dropped to the second, and was also renamed Fútbol Club Torrevieja, promoting to division four in 1997, but being relegated two seasons after. Torrevieja CF played in the regional leagues until 2021, when the first team ceased activities and the club's youth setup became a part of Sporting Costa Blanca Torrevieja Club de Fútbol, a club founded in the previous year. Season to season 5
NCAA Tournament. Bracket and results * denotes overtime game References East Coast Conference (Division I)
The 1977 East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 1–6, 1977. The champion gained and an automatic berth to the
the 1973 Wimbledon Championships and was runner-up to Jimmy Connors at the 1974 Manchester Open. Outside of professional tennis, Collins played at collegiate level in the United States for Oklahoma State University. He is a long time resident of Victoria,
on the professional tour during the 1970s. He featured in the main draw of the 1973 Wimbledon Championships and was runner-up to Jimmy Connors at the 1974 Manchester Open. Outside of professional tennis, Collins played at collegiate level in the United States for Oklahoma State
new 5.5-meter-high border wall along the Belarusian border at a cost of 353 million euros (407m USD) aimed at blocking the passage of refugees after a border crisis in the
euros (407m USD) aimed at blocking the passage of refugees after a border crisis in the region which began in 2021. It is
of the opposition towards East Kazakhstan Region äkım and former PM Daniyal Akhmetov Event A total of 399 delegates were chosen for the 21st Extraordinary Congress, in which 389 of them took part in participating. The congress was held behind closed doors remotely and was attended by national leaders, members of the Nur Otan Political Council as well as its representatives of regional branches, legislators and members of the government. Amendments to the Party Charter During the congress, several revisions were made to the Nur Otan's party charter which were payment contributions as prior before was tied with 0.7% of the minimum wage or 3,570 tenge per year. After presidential decree which cancelled the binding of all state payments to the minimum wage, the party contributions were changed to 0.1% of the minimum wage monthly or 3,676 tenge per year. Changes to Political Council According to the Nur Otan, the party's political council had been revised by 55% with female representation rising to 33.7%, share of young people under 35 increasing six times to 13% and average age decreased by 4 years to 47 years old. The number of civil servants decreased by third while the educational sector representatives rose 10% and share of NGOs and media to 15.2%. It was also noted that the Political Council which consists of 92 people did not include political figures such as Bauyrjan Baibek,
to the need for the party to serve the incumbent president adhere to the global crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. While First Deputy Chairman Bauyrjan Baibek remarked decision as "a clear signal for everyone inside and outside the country about the monolith of power and a common commitment to the policy of continuity," remarking that Tokayev was one of the original founders for the party. The 28 January date for the congress was announced by Bauyrjan Baibek on 19 January 2022 in his Twitter page, adding that it would be held remotely due to the spread of COVID-19 and restriction measures. Just days after, the Nur Otan faced a scandal within its ranks in Semey as 150 people had left the party's membership in which according to former local lawmaker Aidos Qisamenov, was in protest due to "distrust of the leadership" while Maira Qūrjikaeva, acting first deputy of the Nur Otan branch in the city of Semey, believed the move to be caused after the local lawmakers Rafail Hazipov and Bauyrjan Qairambaev were expelled from the party in result of the opposition towards East Kazakhstan Region äkım and former PM Daniyal Akhmetov Event A total of 399 delegates were chosen for the 21st Extraordinary Congress, in which 389 of them took part in participating. The congress was held behind closed doors remotely and was attended by national leaders, members of the Nur Otan Political Council as well as its representatives of regional branches, legislators and members of the government. Amendments to the Party Charter During the congress, several revisions were made to the Nur Otan's party charter which were payment contributions as prior before was tied with 0.7% of the minimum wage or 3,570 tenge per year. After presidential decree which cancelled the binding of all state payments to the minimum wage, the party contributions
started to introduce more complex tricks into his routines to improve and consistency in his placements. This led to a sixth-place finish at the Deer Valley stop of the World Cup. Winter Olympics medalist On January 24, 2022 Fontaine was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. At
Career Fontaine joined the national team in 2019. In early 2022, along with fellow aerialist Émile Nadeau, Fontaine started to introduce more complex tricks into his routines to improve and consistency in his placements. This led to a sixth-place finish at the Deer Valley stop of the World Cup. Winter Olympics medalist On January 24, 2022 Fontaine was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. At the games, Fontaine was a part of Canada's bronze medal winning mixed
100 Rock Chart and #1 at KXFM. “Simulation” was released alongside the augmented reality phone app called “The Frst,” which allowed users to scan The Frst’s logo for behind-the-scenes content. In August 2020, The Frst released its debut album, Prelude. Gray wrote and performed seven of the ten songs on Prelude by himself. The Frst also released the single “Duh'' concurrently with the album, which reached #3 on the SoundCloud USA Rock Chart. After the release of Prelude, The Frst released the single “This Is Me Now” in 2021, which featured Universal-Island artist Kid Brunswick. It was the second collaboration between Gray and Brunswick, the first being on Brunswick’s song “Bipolar Rhapsody.” In summer of the same year, The Frst also released the single “Small Talk.” Gray played on more than 130 instrumental and vocal tracks within the song. The Frst has worked with mixing and mastering engineers such as Steve Hardy, James Paul Wisner, and Andy VanDette. In January 2022, The Frst released a single with InVogue Records artist Dead Bundy, called “Pop Punk Song.” References American indie rock groups
Vans Warped Tour and the Grand Ole Opry. Gray founded The Frst in 2017, changing the spelling of the project’s name to reflect its collaborative nature and changing lineup. The Frst released its debut single, “Another One” in 2018. In 2019, the project also released several singles, including “Cycles,” “Seven Eleven,” “Rules,” and “Ammo.” “Seven Eleven” reached #2 on the SoundCloud USA Rock chart and was also featured on Loudwire’s Weekly Wire. "Ammo” reached #1 on the SoundCloud USA Rock chart. The Frst also released the singles “Pawn Shop,” “Simulation,” and “Tarantino” in 2020. “Tarantino” reached #78 on the iTunes Top 100 Rock Chart and #1 at KXFM. “Simulation” was released alongside the augmented reality phone app called “The Frst,” which allowed users to scan The Frst’s logo for behind-the-scenes content. In August 2020, The Frst released its debut album, Prelude. Gray wrote and performed seven of the ten songs on Prelude by himself. The Frst also released the single “Duh'' concurrently with the album, which reached #3 on the SoundCloud USA Rock Chart. After the release of Prelude, The Frst released the single “This Is Me Now” in 2021, which featured Universal-Island artist Kid Brunswick. It
award to Palakkeezhu, who had worked for the Malayalam language, literature and culture with 100% dedication. Biography Narayanan was born in 1940 at Chemmaniyod in present-day Malappuram district to Palakkeezh Narayanan Namboothiri and Nangeli Antarjanam. He studied at Chemmaniyod, Melattur, Mannarkkad and in Pattambi Sree Neelakanda Government Sanskrit College and has passed the Vidvan examination and M.A. graduation. He retired in 1995 as a teacher at Perinthalmanna PTM Government College. As a communist follower, he is best known for spearheading the socio-cultural movements in Valluvanad region, initiated by E. M. S. Namboodiripad and writer and politician Cherukad Govinda Pisharody. A great disciple of
Perinthalmanna PTM Government College. As a communist follower, he is best known for spearheading the socio-cultural movements in Valluvanad region, initiated by E. M. S. Namboodiripad and writer and politician Cherukad Govinda Pisharody. A great disciple of Cherukad, it was only with his determination that the Perinthalmanna Cherukad Memorial Trust, which promotes young writers in the state, came into exist. He has served as District President and State committee member of Purogamana Kala Sahitya Sangham, A.K.G.T.C founding leader, Kerala Sahithta Samithi secretary, State Executive Member of the Kerala state Library Council and Chief Editor of the Granthalokam magazine published by State Library Council from 2005 to 2010. The editorials he wrote in the Granthalokam were later published as a book titled Mukhamozhikal. Personal life and death He died on 2021 November 05 at his house in Chemmaniyode. Paying homage to Palakkeezh Narayanan, Vaishakan, writer and chairman of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi said that, instead of focusing on his own active writing, Palakkeezh used his literary qualities
Canadian freestyle skier who competes internationally in the aerials discipline. Career Nadeau joined the national team in 2020. In early 2022, along with fellow aerialist Miha Fontaine, Nadeau started to introduce more complex tricks into his routines to improve and consistency in his placements. This led to a fifth-place finish at the Deer Valley stop
earlier). On January 24, 2022, Nadeau was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. Nadeau was the youngest male Canadian athlete on the team. References External links 2004 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers Sportspeople from Quebec
I) Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 1–6, 1976. The champion gained and an automatic berth to the NCAA
Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1975–76 East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1976 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Philadelphia Basketball in Pennsylvania Basketball in Philadelphia Philadelphia College sports
mathematics in 1989, both under the direction of Frans Oort. His thesis was about modular curves. Career Edixhoven was a Morrey assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley from 1989 to 1991, after which he returned to Utrecht University. From 1992 to 2002, he was a professor at the University of Rennes 1. He moved to Leiden University as a Professor of Geometry in 2002. In 2004, Edixhoven and Peter Stevenhagen established Leiden's participation in the Algebra, Geometry and Number Theory (ALGANT) collaborative program for master's and PhD students across French, Italian, German, Canadian, and Dutch universities. Edixhoven was a co-managing editor of Compositio Mathematica from 2003 to 2012. He was an editor for Compositio Mathematica from 2000 to 2012, for the Journal de Théorie des Nombres de Bordeaux from 1998 to 2004, for the Journal of Number Theory from 2004 to 2012, for Expositiones Mathematicae from 2003 to 2022, and for Indagationes Mathematicae from 2010 to 2022. Edixhoven was involved in the Bèta-lerarenkamer think tank, which produced an mobile app for
in arithmetic geometry. He was a professor at University of Rennes 1 and Leiden University. Education Bas Edixhoven was born on 12 March 1962 in Leiden, Netherlands. Edixhoven graduated from in Zoetermeer in 1980. He then studied at Utrecht University where he graduated with a master's degree in pure mathematics cum laude in 1985 and a PhD in mathematics in 1989, both under the direction of Frans Oort. His thesis was about modular curves. Career Edixhoven was a Morrey assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley from 1989 to 1991, after which he returned to Utrecht University. From 1992 to 2002, he was a professor at the
Shuryshkarsky District, near the border of the Komi Republic. The mountain has three peaks, the highest of which is a high flat-topped rocky summit. The western peak is high, and the eastern . See also Highest points of Russian Federal subjects List of mountains and hills of Russia References External
three peaks, the highest of which is a high flat-topped rocky summit. The western peak is high, and the eastern . See also Highest points of Russian Federal subjects List of mountains and hills of Russia References External links Восхождение на гору Пайер (1472 м), высшую точку Полярного Урала в
tennis player. A British top-10 player, de Mendoza was active on the international tour in the 1970s. He featured in the singles main draws of both the French Open and Wimbledon during his career. In 1972 he had an upset win over
1972 he had an upset win over Clark Graebner in the semifinals of the Welsh Championships and finished tournament runner-up to Andrew Pattison. References External links 1949 births Living people British male tennis
in the 37th district. Ezzard served a single term before being elected to the Colorado Senate in 1980. In 1987, Ezzard switched from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party. After her party switch, she resigned from the Senate and was succeeded by her 1986 primary opponent Terry Considine. While a member of the General Assembly, she earned her law degree from the University of Denver College of Law. Runs for higher office In the 1986 election, Ezzard ran in the Republican primary for the United States Senate seat being vacated by Gary Hart. She and Terry Considine were defeated in the primary by Congressman Ken Kramer. In 1988, Ezzard
to the Colorado Senate in 1980. In 1987, Ezzard switched from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party. After her party switch, she resigned from the Senate and was succeeded by her 1986 primary opponent Terry Considine. While a member of the General Assembly, she earned her law degree from the University of Denver College of Law. Runs for higher office In the 1986 election, Ezzard ran in the Republican primary for the United States Senate seat being vacated by Gary Hart. She and
climbed through deep snow to the ridge just north of the peak, and finally laid eyes on the interior of the range which had been a mystery. Barnes wrote of the spectacle: "Range after range of peaks, snow-clad from base to summit, extended as far as the eye could reach, in splendid confusion." That peak is today known instead as Mount Wilder, and the Mount Barnes of today was originally christened "Mt. Childs" by that same expedition. Mount Childs now rises two miles north of Mount Barnes. Climate Based on the Köppen climate classification, Mount Barnes is located in the marine west coast climate zone of western North America. Most weather fronts originate in the Pacific Ocean,
northeast into Goldie River which is a tributary of the Elwha. Topographic relief is significant as the summit rises 3,200 feet (975 m) above Elwha Basin in approximately two miles. Etymology A peak was named by the Seattle Press Expedition to honor Captain Charles Adams Barnes (1859–1900), the expedition's topographer and historian. In December 1889, he and James Halbold Christie, the leader of the expedition, climbed through deep snow to the ridge just north of the peak, and finally laid eyes on the interior of the range which had been a mystery. Barnes wrote of the spectacle: "Range after range of peaks, snow-clad from base to summit, extended as far as the eye could reach, in splendid confusion." That peak is today known instead as Mount Wilder, and the Mount Barnes of today
cycled through ownerships, operating either as a dealership or car repair facility. In 2018, a nonprofit developer began converting the building to hold arts businesses and apartments. Attributes The two-story, building was designed in the Art Deco style by Ray Sims, a local architect and member of the Columbus chapter of the AIA. Sims, an original partner to the present-day Schooley Caldwell, also designed the Richard Berry Jr. House in Columbus, and assisted in designing the Ohio State University's Sullivant Hall. The building has a concrete foundation, terra cotta and brick walls, and a flat roof. Its original structure faced both Main Street and Kelton Avenue. The Main Street facade, 9 bays wide, is faced wih decorative beige glazed terra cotta. The building's first floor has a central double-width entrance beside large display windows (some now bricked in), with single half-hexagonal entrances at each end of the facade. The second story facade has a row of 12-pane steel casement windows, separated by Art Deco terra cotta ornamentation depicting an automobile tire. Other facades on the building utilize common brick and large windows and have no ornamentation. History The McClure-Nesbitt Motor Company opened in
in), with single half-hexagonal entrances at each end of the facade. The second story facade has a row of 12-pane steel casement windows, separated by Art Deco terra cotta ornamentation depicting an automobile tire. Other facades on the building utilize common brick and large windows and have no ornamentation. History The McClure-Nesbitt Motor Company opened in 1926, operated by Ohio State University graduates J. A. McClure Jr. and Hugh E. Nesbitt. McClure, president and general manager, had operated a Fordson Tractor dealership at 311 Cleveland Avenue previously, while Nesbitt, vice president, owned multiple car dealerships in the area. At the time the dealership opened, it was part of the Main Street Commercial District, a prosperous area near Franklin Park, Bryden Road, and Woodland Park. The company initially sold Ford vehicles, while in the 1930s it sold Chevrolet cars, and in the late 1940s, it sold Chrysler and Plymouth cars. By 1961, the dealership was renamed to the McClure Main Motor Co. In 1964, it was listed as vacant, and the building began to change ownership. It cycled between uses as a car repair facility and as a dealership. Most recently, it held the H&R Body Shop. As of 2018, a local nonprofit developer is working to convert its first floor to hold a theater, art gallery, music studio, and event space, with eleven apartments on the second floor. The new owner hopes the building can act as an incubator
in the German language in 1925 and aimed at a non-Soviet readership, the leaflet said that Soviet law post-1917 regarded homosexuality and gay sexual practices to be part of normal human sexual behaviour, and did not regard them as a
Social Hygiene. Re-printed in the German language in 1925 and aimed at a non-Soviet readership, the leaflet said that Soviet law post-1917 regarded homosexuality and gay sexual practices to be part of normal human sexual behaviour, and did not regard them as a crime. It said that all matters
East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1974–75 East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1975 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions
results * denotes overtime game References East Coast Conference (Division I) Men's Basketball Tournament 1974–75 East Coast Conference (Division I) men's basketball season 1975 in sports in Pennsylvania Sports competitions in Pennsylvania Basketball in
Sciences University from February 2009 to 2020. The university was renamed the National Forensic Sciences University in 2020 and he continued as the Vice Chancellor. Recognition Vyas was awarded the President's Medal for his services in 1997. In 2004, he was awarded the Commendation Certificate as the Best Forensic Science Laboratory Director at the 15th All India Forensic
Jyantkumar Mangaldas Vyas is an Indian academic and forensic scientist who serves as a Vice Chancellor of National Forensic Sciences University, Gandhinagar. He served as the Director for the Directorate of Forensic Science, Gujarat State for three decades. Biography Vyas has studied Master of Science, PhD and LLB. Vyas served as the Director for the Directorate of Forensic Science, Gujarat State from 1993 to until his retirement in 2009. He held the additional
the fourth hurricane to strike the United States in the year, following Charley, Frances, and Ivan. Ivan was the costliest natural disaster of the year, causing US$26.1 billion in damage in the Caribbean and the United States. Winter storms and cold waves In February, a snow storm dropped significant snowfall across eastern Canada. In December, a snow storm killed 18 people and left US$800 million in damage. Another winter storm produced snowfall in Texas and extreme northern Mexico, causing the first ever recorded White Christmas for some areas. Droughts, heat waves, and wildfires Alaska's wildfire season was the worst on record in the state in terms of area burned. In California, there were 7,898 fires that burned of land. In July, Tokyo, Japan recorded its highest-ever temperature – 39.5 C (103.1 F). Floods In May, flooding in Hispaniola killed 2,665 people. Floods affected Japan in July, causing US$1.95 billion in damage and 20 deaths. Tornadoes During the year, there was a record-high total of 1,817 tornadoes in the United States alone, collectively resulting in 35 deaths. This included an outbreak related to Hurricane Ivan, which resulted in 120 tornadoes, the most ever related to a tropical cyclone. In addition to the United States tornadoes, a powerful tornado struck portions of North-Central Bangladesh in April, killing 111 and injuring nearly 1,500 others. Seven people were killed and 207 injured by a tornado that appeared on the evening of April 21 in Hengyang, Hunan, China. Tropical cyclones As the year began, Cyclone Heta was developing near Fiji, and Tropical Storm Darius was approaching Mauritius in the south-west Indian Ocean. Throughout 2004, a further 18 tropical cyclones developed in the south-west Indian Ocean, which included Cyclone Gafilo, the most intense tropical cyclone on record in that part of the world. In March, Gafilo struck Madagascar near peak intensity, killing 363 people. A month prior to Gafilo, Cyclone Elita moved across
related to Hurricane Ivan, which resulted in 120 tornadoes, the most ever related to a tropical cyclone. In addition to the United States tornadoes, a powerful tornado struck portions of North-Central Bangladesh in April, killing 111 and injuring nearly 1,500 others. Seven people were killed and 207 injured by a tornado that appeared on the evening of April 21 in Hengyang, Hunan, China. Tropical cyclones As the year began, Cyclone Heta was developing near Fiji, and Tropical Storm Darius was approaching Mauritius in the south-west Indian Ocean. Throughout 2004, a further 18 tropical cyclones developed in the south-west Indian Ocean, which included Cyclone Gafilo, the most intense tropical cyclone on record in that part of the world. In March, Gafilo struck Madagascar near peak intensity, killing 363 people. A month prior to Gafilo, Cyclone Elita moved across the same country for the third time, dropping heavy rainfall that led to 33 deaths. In the Australian region, there were 14 tropical cyclones throughout the year, including Tropical Cyclone Raymond which lasted into early January 2005. The South Pacific Ocean had 15 tropical cyclones after Heta, most of them weak. In addition to the previous tropical cyclones in the Southern Hemisphere, there was an unusual South Atlantic tropical cyclone named Cyclone Catarina, which became the first-ever recorded hurricane off the coast of Brazil. The body of water was previously thought to be hostile to the formation of tropical cyclones. Catarina caused about US$425 million in damage and 12 fatalities. In the Northern Hemisphere, a record ten typhoons struck Japan, part of the active typhoon season, collectively causing 214 fatalities. Among the typhoons was Typhoon Songda, which left an estimated US$12.5 billion in damage. There was a series of tropical cyclones affecting the Philippines in a two-week period from November to early December, resulting in 1,762 deaths. In the north-east Pacific Ocean, there were 17 tropical cyclones, most of which
back to France. After earning a degree in philosophy in 1967, Spire began teaching the subject. He was laid off in 1974 due to his union activism and joined the editorial staff of , a newspaper published by the French Communist Party. After this he worked as a journalist for L'Humanité. Spire was a member of the executive board of and a councilor of the . He wrote numerous books alongside and particularly focused on the thoughts of Marxism. He wrote numerous articles for the likes of Multitudes and Regards. He died in January 2022, at the age of 82. Publications Giscard et les idées : essai sur la guerre idéologique (1980) Éloge de la politique (1981) Invitation à la philosophie marxiste (1983) Le Coup d'État continue : Mitterrand et les institutions (1985) Penser les
l'éternel retour du concret : seconde invitation à la philosophie marxiste (1991) Grammaire du pluralisme : entretiens avec Bernard-Henri Lévy, Régis Debray, Paul-Loup Sulitzer, et al. (1993) Servitudes et grandeurs du cynisme : de l'impossibilité des principes et de l'impossibilité de s'en passer (1997) Marx cet inconnu (1999) La pensée-Prigogine (1999) Marx contemporain - Cycle de réflexion philosophique ouvert le 16 mars 2000 à l'initiative de l'association Espaces Marx et de l'Université Paris VIII-Saint-Denis (2003) L'idéologie toujours présente : dialogue entre eidos et logos (2004) Quand l'événement dépasse le prévisible : critique de l'horloge déterministe