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currently represented by Mary Hull Caballero who has not yet announced her intention to run for a new term. Candidates Simone Rede, former | Senior Management Auditor for Metro Brian Setzler, Certified Public Accountant References 2022 Oregon elections 2022 |
first team, but moved to Série A side Juventude five days later, on a four-year contract. Gabriel Tota made his debut for Ju on 3 February 2022, coming on as a second-half substitute for Jadson and scoring the opener in a 1–1 Campeonato Gaúcho home draw against Novo Hamburgo. Career statistics References 2001 births Living people Footballers from São Paulo (state) Brazilian footballers Association football midfielders Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players Grêmio Novorizontino players Rio Preto | former side Novorizontino. On 22 January 2022, after impressing in the year's Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior, Gabriel Tota was one of the nine players definitely promoted to Mirassol's first team, but moved to Série A side Juventude five days later, on a four-year contract. Gabriel Tota made his debut for Ju on 3 February 2022, coming on as a second-half substitute for Jadson and scoring the opener in a 1–1 Campeonato Gaúcho home draw against Novo Hamburgo. Career statistics References 2001 births Living people Footballers from São Paulo (state) Brazilian footballers |
up in Pöttmes. In 1997 she moved to Düsseldorf to study education, sociology and psychology. From 2007 to 2014, Neubaur worked for the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Düsseldorf. Political career From 2007 to 2015, Neubau served as chairwoman of the Green Party in Düsseldorf. Since 2014, Neubaur has been serving as co-chair of the Green Party in North Rhine-Westphalia, alongside | the State Parliament of North Rhine-Westphalia. Early life and career Neubaur grew up in Pöttmes. In 1997 she moved to Düsseldorf to study education, sociology and psychology. From 2007 to 2014, Neubaur worked for the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Düsseldorf. Political career From 2007 to 2015, Neubau served as chairwoman of the Green Party in Düsseldorf. Since 2014, Neubaur has been serving as co-chair of the Green |
AO Sellana, a 3rd League club. On 9 July 2021, Tsoumanis joined AEL on a free transfer signing a three-year contract. He scored his first professional goal against Xanthi F.C. on his debut, on 29 December 2021, having played for only | professional goal against Xanthi F.C. on his debut, on 29 December 2021, having played for only three minutes as a substitute. References 2002 births Living people People from Larissa Greek footballers Association football forwards Super League Greece players Super League Greece 2 players Athlitiki Enosi |
competition of the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics was held at Hamar Olympic Hall on 17 February | Olympic Hall on 17 February 2016. Results The races were held at 10:30. References Mixed |
Première Fois". After hearing the song, which featured an unusual mix of acoustic and electronic sounds for the time, EMI signed Mas and the resulting single was a great success in France, reaching the number eight on the singles chart. Musumarra continued his collaboration with Mas, composing and producing the tracks on her first two albums, including "Johnny, Johnny" and "En rouge et noir", both number one in the French chart. Due to the success of his work with Jeanne Mas he was increasingly in demand by French artists, so at the end of 1985 he decided to move to France. In 1986 he contributed to the musical success of Princess Stéphanie of Monaco, for whom he composed the hits "Ouragan" (initially proposed to Jeanne Mas) and "Flash/One Love to Give". The same year he made his debut as a film score composer with Régis Wargnier's "The Woman of My Life" and was instrumental in launching Elsa Lunghini (then simply Elsa), for whom he wrote and produced the debut single "T'en va pas", number one in the French charts for two months. In addition to launching new names, Musumarra has composed songs for established artists such as Celine Dion, Mireille Mathieu, Sylvie Vartan, Alain | in the French chart. Due to the success of his work with Jeanne Mas he was increasingly in demand by French artists, so at the end of 1985 he decided to move to France. In 1986 he contributed to the musical success of Princess Stéphanie of Monaco, for whom he composed the hits "Ouragan" (initially proposed to Jeanne Mas) and "Flash/One Love to Give". The same year he made his debut as a film score composer with Régis Wargnier's "The Woman of My Life" and was instrumental in launching Elsa Lunghini (then simply Elsa), for whom he wrote and produced the debut single "T'en va pas", number one in the French charts for two months. In addition to launching new names, Musumarra has composed songs for established artists such as Celine Dion, Mireille Mathieu, Sylvie Vartan, Alain Delon, Nikka Costa, Dana Dawson, Hélène Ségara, Tina Arena, Régine, Garou, Bruno Pelletier, and Marc Lavoine. Since the 2000s, he has dedicated himself |
to 25 November 2007. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European U23 | Austria from 24 to 25 November 2007. Medal summary Medal table Men's events Women's events Source Results References External links European U23 |
Engelmann in Leipzig and then by Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft in Leipzig and more recently in reprints and new editions by Verlag Harri Deutsch in Frankfurt. Ostwald's aim was to remedy the "" (Lack of knowledge of those great works on which the edifice of science rests). The first volume in 1889 was (On the conservation of power) (first 1847) by Hermann von Helmholtz. In 1894, the physicist Arthur von Oettingen von Ostwald took over the editing (and remained editor until 1920, when Ostwald's son, Wolfgang Ostwald, took over the task). However, Ostwald initially continued to publish the chemistry volumes until he was replaced by Richard Abegg. 195 volumes were published by 1915; then there was an interruption due to the First World War until 1919. From 1919, they were published by the Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft, which also reprinted older editions. In 1923, the two hundredth volume was published (work by Wilhelm Ostwald on catalysis). From 1938 (volume 244) to 1954 (volume 245) there was a break due to World War II. The series was then continued by the successor to the Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft in the GDR, the Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Geest & Portig. This was from 1968 with the B. G. Teubner Verlag, who was thus co-editor of the series. The successor to the Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft in der FRG, based in Frankfurt am Main, also published a Neue Folge (new series) from 1965 (the publishing house existed until 1983), of which six titles were published (from Volume 4 in 1968 they were published by Vieweg in Braunschweig). From 1982 there were reprints of the old series before the Second World War, in West Germany by the publishing house Verlag Harri Deutsch in Frankfurt, which specialized in the publication of scientific literature from the GDR in the FRG. A total | total of 275 volumes were published by 1987. Volumes by Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft after World War II After World War II published by Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft, Verlag Harri Deutsch and Europa-Lehrmittel (except for reprints and new editions of the old series): 245 Carl Ramsauer: 246 Georg Christoph Lichtenberg: 247 Alexander von Humboldt: 248 Alexander von Humboldt: 249 Eduard Poeppig: 250 Wilhelm Ostwald: 251 Heinrich Hertz: 252 Pavel Alexandrov et al.: 253 Felix Klein: 254 Francis Crick, Robert Holley, James D. Watson: 255 Ejnar Hertzsprung: 256 Carl Friedrich Gauß: 257 Wilhelm Ostwald: 258 Ernst Chladni: 259 Carl Schorlemmer: 260 Gerhard Harig: 261 Leonhard Euler: 262 Max Volmer: 263 Heinrich Hertz: 264 Manfred von Ardenne: 265 Jacobus van 't Hoff: 266 Jaroslav Heyrovský: 267 Wilhelm Ostwald: Four manuscripts from the Nachlaß 268 Karl August Möbius: 269 Peter Simon Pallas: 270 R. Klaus Müller (ed.): 271 Johann Wilhelm Ritter: 272: Friedlieb Ferdinand Runge, Raphael Eduard Liesegang, Boris Pavlovich Belousov, Anatol Markovich Zhabotinsky: 273 Johannes Kepler: 274 , Ernst Mohr: 275 Matthias Jacob Schleiden, Theodor Schwann, Max Schultze: 276 Ernst Abbe: 277–279 Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck: 1–3 280 Franz Xaver Zach: 281 Manfred Eigen: 282 283 Joseph von Gerlach: 284 Marie Curie: 285 Sigmund Exner: 286 Ludwig Boltzmann: 287 Alexander Alexandrowitsch Friedmann: 288 William Herschel: 289 Frederick Soddy: 290 Walther Nernst: 291 Karl Friedrich Zöllner: 292–294 Michael Faraday: , 3 volumes 295 Johannes Kepler: 296 Robert Bunsen: 297 Charles Bonnet: 298 Paul Drude: 299 Max Planck: 300 Nikolaus Kopernikus: 301/302 Pierre-Simon Laplace: 1, 2 303 Paul Emil Flechsig, Hans Berger: 304 Georges Lemaître: Volumes by Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft, Frankfurt Only six volumes were published by Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft, Frankfurt, which, as a new series, did not follow the old series in terms of numbering: Volume 1, Simon Stevin: Volume 2, Johann Wilhelm Ritter: Volume 3, Niels Stensen: Volume 4, (The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art) Volume 5, Wilhelm Weber, Rudolf Kohlrausch: Volume 6, Gregor Mendel: (already |
2010. Her research makes use of multi-scale mechanistic studies to understand the dynamics of organic soil. She has contributed to our understanding of soil biogeochemical responses to changes in vegetation and land management. Eventually, Jastrow was appointed Lead of the Ecosystem Biogeochemistry Group in the Environmental Science Division. She has served on the steering committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Frontiers in Soil Science research. Jastrow started researching permafrost soil carbon in 2012. At the time, permafrost was gaining increasing interest due to concerns about climate change. Permafrost stores thousands of billions of tonnes of carbon, which is around a third of global terrestrial carbon. Jastrow has | University of Illinois Chicago, where she studied aggregate formation and stabilization in prairie soils. Research and career In 1994, Jastrow joined the Argonne National Laboratory. She was made an Assistant Scientist in 1979 and Senior Scientist in 2010. Her research makes use of multi-scale mechanistic studies to understand the dynamics of organic soil. She has contributed to our understanding of soil biogeochemical responses to changes in vegetation and land management. Eventually, Jastrow was appointed Lead of the Ecosystem Biogeochemistry Group in the Environmental Science Division. She has served on the steering committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Frontiers in Soil Science research. Jastrow started researching permafrost soil carbon in 2012. At the time, permafrost was gaining increasing interest due to concerns about climate change. Permafrost stores thousands of billions of tonnes of carbon, which is around a third of global terrestrial carbon. Jastrow has studied how global warming impacts the amount of stored carbon. She showed that the amount |
new St. Louis Soccer League. History The St. Louis soccer scene did not have a professional league during the 1906–07 season. The St. Louis Soccer Football League was organized to fill that void before the 1907–08 season. Dr. Alexander Murray was founding president and Thomas W. Cahill founding secretary of the league. The city champions, St. Leo's, jumped from the defunct Association Football League of St. Louis to the St. Louis Soccer Football League prior to the 1908–09 season. St. Leo's continued their local dynasty winning four straight league titles along with defending their title as city champions. In January 1913, in the middle of the 1912–13 season, St. Leo's withdrew from the St. Louis Soccer Football League. During the subsequent offseason, William J. Klosterman, manager of St. Leo's, claimed to have reorganized the St. Louis Soccer Football League with Winton E. Barker as its president. In actuality, this was a breakaway organization formed by Klosterman to compete with the already-established St. Louis Soccer Football League. The new league had taken a lease to play its matches at the Athletic Park where the old league had played since its founding. As such, the old St. Louis Soccer Football League moved to Robison Field for the 1913–14 season. Confusion was caused | two teams from league and the top two teams from the rival Federal Park Soccer League joined to form the new St. Louis Soccer League. History The St. Louis soccer scene did not have a professional league during the 1906–07 season. The St. Louis Soccer Football League was organized to fill that void before the 1907–08 season. Dr. Alexander Murray was founding president and Thomas W. Cahill founding secretary of the league. The city champions, St. Leo's, jumped from the defunct Association Football League of St. Louis to the St. Louis Soccer Football League prior to the 1908–09 season. St. Leo's continued their local dynasty winning four straight league titles along with defending their title as city champions. In January 1913, in the middle of the 1912–13 season, St. Leo's withdrew from the St. Louis Soccer Football League. During the subsequent offseason, William J. Klosterman, manager of St. Leo's, claimed to have reorganized the St. Louis Soccer Football League with Winton E. Barker as its president. In actuality, this was a breakaway organization formed by Klosterman to compete with the already-established St. Louis Soccer Football League. The new league had taken a lease to play its matches at the Athletic Park where the old league had played since its founding. As such, the old St. Louis Soccer Football League moved to Robison Field for the 1913–14 season. Confusion was caused by both leagues calling themselves by the exact same name and the new |
Henry Grimes, this set shows how locked in these natives of Philadelphia... are with their estimable heritage in making free jazz that still sounds fresh some 50 years after the movement was founded. There's a rambling kind of empathy, focused but rarely intense that is clear from the outset." Writing for All About Jazz, Glenn Astarita commented: "What might be considered a bold move, given the scanty bass and drums format, the duo separates the boys from the men via the polyrhythmic flows | Glenn Astarita commented: "What might be considered a bold move, given the scanty bass and drums format, the duo separates the boys from the men via the polyrhythmic flows featuring emotive voicings and changeable parameters... The duo generates an abundance of scrappy workouts amid an amalgamation of explorative exchanges throughout the preponderance of this vibrant and curiously interesting set. No doubt, only a select few could pull this off. It's a marvel of inventiveness, sparked by the artists streaming creative juices and synergistic interplay." In a separate review for the same publication, John |
1916, representing Caroline County, and was appointed Caroline's Commonwealth's attorney in 1926. In 1933, he briefly returned to the House after winning a special election to succeed the deceased George P. Lyon. At the time of his death, he was the largest landowner | County, and was appointed Caroline's Commonwealth's attorney in 1926. In 1933, he briefly returned to the House after winning a special election to succeed the deceased George P. Lyon. At the time of his death, he was the |
the United Arab Emirates national football team and that were born outside Emirati territory. The following players: have played at least one game for the | played at least one game for the full (senior male) United Arab Emirates international team. were born outside United Arab Emirates. Key List of players By country of birth References External links |
"Cabral" - 4:29 "Body Sounds" - 3:42 "Umoja" - 6:41 Note: "Body Sounds is an electronically altered conga solo by Mtume accompanied by the band using their bodies as percussion instruments (hands rubbing, chest thumping, etc.). Hence the title Body Sounds." Personnel Bayeté - electric piano Cecil McBee - bass Dee Dee Bridgewater - vocals Jean Carné - vocals Pete Cosey - guitar Stanley Cowell - piano Al Foster - drums Billy Hart - drums Jimmy Heath - reeds, soprano saxophone, flute Michael Henderson - bass Leroy Jenkins - violin Shirley Jenkins - vocals Diedre Johnson - cello Azar Lawrence - reeds, soprano saxophone Reggie Lucas - guitar James Mtume - congas, piano Muktar Mustapha - vocals | of spiritual, Afrocentric jazz, the album Rebirth Cycle. Never reissued legally and unavailable on streaming services, a bootleg or YouTube are your only real options, but it's worth checking out: the lengthy version of 'Sais' is great, and the collection of shorter, soul-influenced tracks on side two – including Umoja – are fabulous, complete with vocals from Jean Carne of 'Don't Let It Go to Your Head' fame." Track listing A-side "Sais (Intro)" - 2:22 "Sais" - 20:39 B-side "Yebo" - 6:07 "Cabral" - 4:29 "Body Sounds" - 3:42 "Umoja" - 6:41 Note: "Body Sounds is an electronically altered conga solo by Mtume accompanied by the band using their bodies as percussion instruments (hands rubbing, chest thumping, |
2021 Dublin Senior Football Championship was the 135th edition of Dublin GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for senior clubs in County Dublin, Ireland. 32 teams participate (16 in Senior 1 and 16 in Senior 2), with the winner of Senior 1 representing Dublin in the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship. Kilmacud Crokes defeated St Jude's to win the Senior 1 Championship. St Pat's Donabate won the 2021 I.F.C. and were promoted along with I.F.C. finalists Round Towers Clondalkin to Senior 2. They replaced St Peregrines and Fingal Ravens who | 3 Group 2 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Group 3 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Group 4 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals Final Relegation Play-Offs Senior 2 Group 1 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Group 2 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Group 3 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Group 4 Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals Final Relegation Play-Offs |
Columbian A.C. and Rock Church, the latter invited as a member to replace the Innisfail team. The new league had taken a lease to play its matches at the Athletic Park where the old league had played since its founding. As such, the old St. Louis Soccer Football League moved to Robison Field for the 1913–14 season. Confusion was caused by both leagues calling themselves by the exact same name and the new league moving into the old league's venue. As such, the old league was more commonly referred to as the Robison Field Soccer League while the new league was more commonly referred to as the Athletic Park Soccer League. The Athletic Park League affiliated with the newly sanctioned United States Football Association which left the older Robison Field League as an outlaw organization. Prior to the 1914–15 season, the newer league moved into Federal League Park and renamed itself as the Federal Park Soccer League. Even after this name change, the older St. Louis Soccer Football League continued to be commonly called the Robison Field League. Compton Hill A.C. joined the | League while the new league was more commonly referred to as the Athletic Park Soccer League. The Athletic Park League affiliated with the newly sanctioned United States Football Association which left the older Robison Field League as an outlaw organization. Prior to the 1914–15 season, the newer league moved into Federal League Park and renamed itself as the Federal Park Soccer League. Even after this name change, the older St. Louis Soccer Football League continued to be commonly called the Robison Field League. Compton Hill A.C. joined the Federal Park League to replace Rock Church. Negotiations to end the warring between the leagues went on throughout the 1914–15 season until a plan was finalized near the end of March 1915. The plan called for the top two teams of the St. Louis Soccer Football league, Innisfail and Columbus Club, to be admitted to the U.S.F.A. and those teams to join the top two teams in the Federal Park League, St. Leo's and Ben Miller, to form |
Four Rivers Conference is a high school athletic conference comprising small-size high schools located in eastern central Missouri. The conference members | Conference is a high school athletic conference comprising small-size high schools located in eastern central |
In their fifth year under head coach Bob Thalman, the team compiled an overall record of 3–8 with a mark of 2–4 in conference play, placing tied for sixth in the SoCon. Schedule References | 1975 VMI Keydets football team was an American football team that represented the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. In their fifth year under |
was the vice-minister for foreign affairs. Mondlane became the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Welfare in 2020. References Living people 1962 births | a member of the Assembly of the Republic from 1994 to 2014. Mondlane was the vice-minister for foreign affairs. Mondlane became the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Welfare in 2020. References |
at the time of the 1801 census. Sandgaard resided in the building with his wife, three apprentices and one maid. Frodens Christian Jørgensen, a broker (mægler), resided in another apartment with his wife Borette Elisabeth Buntzen, their three children (aged one to five) and two maids. Poul Poulsen, a beer seller (øltapper), resided in the building with his wife Anne Margrethe Bledel, their 17-year-old daughter Mette Margrethe Poulsen, one maid and five lodgers. The property was again listed as No. 24 in the new cadastre of 1806. It was at that time still owned by Sandgaard. The property was later acquired by master sailmaker Rasmus Andreas Holm (1799-1863), son of sailmaker Peter Holm (1764-1812). His father had been the owner of the adjacent property at No. 23 (now Nyhavn 45). On 10 January 1920, Rasmus Andreas Holm had married Christiane Mammen (1805-1877), a foster daughter of his uncle Jacob Holm. At the time of the next census, in 1834, Holm's property was home to 25 residents in five households. Rasmus and Christiane Holm resided on the ground floor with their two children (aged two and five), three apprentices and two maids. Carl Friderichsen, a helmsman, resided on the first floor with his wife Præbene Jantzen, their two children (aged one and four) and one maid. Madsine Sophie Holm, Rasmus Holm's mother, resided on the second floor with her son Hendrich Peter Holm, Rasmus Bang, a sailmaker employed by Holm, was also resident on the second floor with his wife Christiane Christensen and their three children (aged three to seven). Peter Nicolajsen Skjerbeck, a carpenter and the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Juliana Marie Kock, their 12-year-old son and one maid. At the time of the 1840 census, Holm's property was home to 24 residents in four households. Holm's household comprised his wife, their now four children (aged two to 11), four apprentices and two maids. Peter Gottschalck (1799-1863), a clerk (hofskriver) at Prince Ferdinand's court. resided on the first floor with his wife Nicoline Zimmer (1798-1877) and one maid. Madsine Holm was still residing on the second floor. She now lived there with her cousin Birgitte Haagensen. Johan Caspersen. a sailor, resided in the basement with his wife Sophie Jensen, their two-year-old son, a six-year-old boy in their care, one maid and two lodgers. In 184245, Julius Andreas Blom (1815-1900)was responsible for a comprehensive renovation of the building. Blom was the son of master mason Thomas Blom. The building was home to 18 residents in three households at the time of the 1845census. Anders Hansen Brandt (1803-1860), a grocer (urtekræmmer) and principal (forstander), resided in the building with his wife Bertha Margrethe Brandt (née Hansen, 1808–1868), their five children (aged one to 19), three male servants and one maid. Thønnes Petersen Dahl, a ship captain, resided in the building with his wife Johanne Caroline Dahl, their 11-year-old foster daughter and one maid. Madsine Holm was still resident on the second floor with her son Peter Holm and one maid. Np. 24 was only home to two households in 1850. | Poulsen, a beer seller (øltapper), resided in the building with his wife Anne Margrethe Bledel, their 17-year-old daughter Mette Margrethe Poulsen, one maid and five lodgers. The property was again listed as No. 24 in the new cadastre of 1806. It was at that time still owned by Sandgaard. The property was later acquired by master sailmaker Rasmus Andreas Holm (1799-1863), son of sailmaker Peter Holm (1764-1812). His father had been the owner of the adjacent property at No. 23 (now Nyhavn 45). On 10 January 1920, Rasmus Andreas Holm had married Christiane Mammen (1805-1877), a foster daughter of his uncle Jacob Holm. At the time of the next census, in 1834, Holm's property was home to 25 residents in five households. Rasmus and Christiane Holm resided on the ground floor with their two children (aged two and five), three apprentices and two maids. Carl Friderichsen, a helmsman, resided on the first floor with his wife Præbene Jantzen, their two children (aged one and four) and one maid. Madsine Sophie Holm, Rasmus Holm's mother, resided on the second floor with her son Hendrich Peter Holm, Rasmus Bang, a sailmaker employed by Holm, was also resident on the second floor with his wife Christiane Christensen and their three children (aged three to seven). Peter Nicolajsen Skjerbeck, a carpenter and the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Juliana Marie Kock, their 12-year-old son and one maid. At the time of the 1840 census, Holm's property was home to 24 residents in four households. Holm's household comprised his wife, their now four children (aged two to 11), four apprentices and two maids. Peter Gottschalck (1799-1863), a clerk (hofskriver) at Prince Ferdinand's court. resided on the first floor with his wife Nicoline Zimmer (1798-1877) and one maid. Madsine Holm was still residing on the second floor. She now lived there with her cousin Birgitte Haagensen. Johan Caspersen. a sailor, resided in the basement with his wife Sophie Jensen, their two-year-old son, a six-year-old boy in their care, one maid and two lodgers. In 184245, Julius Andreas Blom (1815-1900)was responsible for a comprehensive |
Zeca is a politician in Mozambique. Stella da Graça Pinto Novo Zeca became the governor of Gaza Province in 2015. Filipe Nyusi appointed Stella | became the governor of Gaza Province in 2015. Filipe Nyusi appointed Stella da Graça Pinto Novo Zeca the provincial secretary |
family of tapeworms. It contains four | contains four genera and 23 species. Amabilia Joyeuxilepis |
the museum collections at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Crocker Art Museum, Sheldon Museum of Art, Oakland Museum of California, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Exhibitions 1975 – Drawings and Prints by Howard Hack, Sylvia Lark, and Leonard Sussman, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California 1977 – Lark–Palmer Prints and Sculptures, included Sylvia Lark and Jon Palmer, Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 1977 – Look, Touch, Rub, Pull, Smell, and Hear, included Carlos Villa, Chisato Nishioka Watanabe, Phil Weidman, , Phil Hitchcock, Jock Reynold, Laureen Landau, Sylvia Lark, William Maxwell, Bruce Guttin, Paul DeMarinis, and Jim Pomeroy, Artspace, Sacramento, California 1980 – Contemporary Trends in Presentation Drawings, curated by Roberta Loach, Linda Langston; including J.J. Aasen, Walter Askin, Gary Brown, Eleanor Dickinson, Bob Anderson, Harry Lynn Krizan, Judith Linhares, Roy DeForest, Robert Freimark, Sylvia Lark, Roberta Loach, Norman Lundin, Shane Weare, Vince Perez, Mary Snowden, Palo Alto Art Center, Palo Alto, California 1980 – Bhirasri Institute of Modern Art, Bangkok, Thailand 1983 – Galerie Akmak, Berlin, Germany 1984 – (solo exhibition), Jeremy Stone Gallery, San | school at Nardin Academy in Buffalo. Lark attended school at the University of Siena; University at Buffalo (formally State University of New York, Buffalo) where she received her B.A. degree in 1969; Mills College; and the University of Wisconsin–Madison where she received her M.A. degree in 1970 and M.F.A. degree in 1972. Career Starting in 1972, Lark taught art at California State University, Sacramento where she remained until 1976. In 1977, she received a Fulbright-Hays Program grant and traveled and study in Korea and Japan. Lark taught at the University of California, Berkeley from 1977 until 1990. Students of Lark's included Shirin Neshat. She was awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award for teaching studio art by the College Art Association posthumously in 1991. Her early work used symbols and patterns, and there was a shift in her later career with more abstraction and overlapping colors with delicate textured surfaces. She painted in oils and encaustics and printed monotypes. Her 1983 painting series Jokhang, featured many textures and layers of colors painted over or under black leaves. This series was a response to her visit to Jokhang Temple in Lhasa and her study of Tibetan spirituality. Lark was curator of the exhibition, Prints: New Points of View (1978) at the Open Ring Galleries in Sacramento. In 1992, she was the second inductee into Nardin Academy's Alumnae Hall of Fame. Lark had served on the National Board of the Women's Caucus for Art from 1978 to 1984; and was the Regional Coordinator for the Coalition of Women's Art Organization from 1978 to 1990. Death and legacy Lark died on cancer at the age of 43 in Berkeley on |
the infrastructure policies of recent United States presidential administrations: Infrastructure | infrastructure policies of recent United States presidential administrations: Infrastructure |
half of their season began similar to the first half and Air Force went through a stretch of 5 game without a win. They briefly bounced back against Robert Morris but then hovered around .500 for the remainder of the season. Entering the postseason, Air Force had no mathematic chance to make the 2019 NCAA Tournament without winning their conference tournament. That glimmer of hope was quickly snuffed out when they were upset by Niagara in the quarterfinals. After the season, Billy Christopoulos joined the select few graduates of the Air Force Academy to play professional | the team hope for another NCAA appearance. The second half of their season began similar to the first half and Air Force went through a stretch of 5 game without a win. They briefly bounced back against Robert Morris but then hovered around .500 for the remainder of the season. Entering the postseason, Air Force had no mathematic chance to make the 2019 NCAA Tournament without winning their conference tournament. That glimmer of hope was quickly snuffed out when they were upset by Niagara in the quarterfinals. After the season, Billy Christopoulos joined the select few graduates of the Air Force Academy to play professional hockey when he signed with the South Carolina Stingrays. Departures Recruiting Roster Standings Schedule and results |- !colspan=12 style=";" | Exhibition |- !colspan=12 style=";" | Regular Season |- !colspan=12 style=";" | |- !colspan=12 style=";" | |- align="center" bgcolor="#e0e0e0" |colspan=12|Air Force lost Series 0–2 Scoring statistics Goaltending statistics Rankings USCHO did not release a poll in Week 25. |
Israeli judoka. She won a bronze medal at the 1995 European Judo Championships in Birmingham. References External links | an Israeli judoka. She won a bronze medal at the 1995 European Judo Championships in Birmingham. References External links |
double berth on the port side. The galley is located on the starboard side just forward of the companionway ladder and is equipped with a single-burner stove and a sink. An icebox is located on the port side under the cockpit. Cabin headroom is . The design has a PHRF racing average handicap of 285 and a hull speed of . Operational history In a 2010 review Steve Henkel wrote, "the Seaward 23 ... is a transformed version of the 22 ... though with the same waterline and the same basic hull structure. The centerboard on the 22 has been replaced with a very shallow fixed keel with wings, which, with a draft of just over two feet, is not likely to be very close-winded. There's a choice of rigs, either a fully battened cat rig with a big roach set on a freestanding carbon-fiber mast ... or a conventional sloop rig featuring a self-tacking jib. The sales brochure mentions a Yanmar diesel but doesn't give the size (which we assume is minimal) or say whether buyers can choose an outboard and omit the diesel. (We assume they can.) The sales brochure shows a wheel rather than the older 22's tiller; based on a cockpit configuration very similar to the older 22, we assume a tiller can be substituted (which we recommend doing for this size boat). Best features: The stern pulpit includes "catbird stern seats" on the quarters, for sightseeing while motoring along rivers. Hardware is upper-end quality...." In a 2006 used boat review in the SpinSheet, Jack Hornor wrote, "The Seaward 23 has a well-proportioned shape with a nearly plumb bow, an apparent but not exaggerated sweep | first built in 1984. The Seaward 23 is a development of the Seaward 22. Production The design was built by Hake Yachts in the United States, from 1984 until 2002, but it is now out of production. Design The Seaward 23 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of solid fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a fractional sloop rig, a plumb stem with a bowsprit, a vertical transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller or optional wheel and a fixed wing keel. The cabin has rectangular ports. A free-standing catboat rig, with a carbon fiber mast was a factory option. The boat displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the standard wing keel. The boat is normally fitted with a small outboard motor or optional inboard Yanmar diesel engine for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for four people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin and two straight settee berths in the main cabin and an aft cabin with a double berth on the port side. The galley is located on the starboard side just forward of the companionway ladder and is equipped |
masters in marketing economics, and is a specialist in political party management at UN Academia. In 2020 her PhD thesis was announced, "The role of women in political institutions in the Democratic Republic of Congo: utopia or reality?". She is married to a prominent magistrate. Ndaya was appointed Minister for Gender, Family and Children in April 2021. In June 2021 a pan-African Conference on Gender Equality was held in Kinshasa. In July 2021, after the Generation Equality Forum convened by UN Women in Paris, Ndaya and Julienne Lusenge | Gisèle Ndaya Luseba graduated in marketing from ISC Kinshasa, and has another degree in theology. She has a masters in marketing economics, and is a specialist in political party management at UN Academia. In 2020 her PhD thesis was announced, "The role of women in political institutions in the Democratic Republic of Congo: utopia or reality?". She is married to a prominent magistrate. Ndaya was appointed Minister for Gender, Family and Children in April 2021. In June 2021 a |
da Silva, Brazilian football midfielder Lucas Mineiro (footballer, born 1996), Lucas da | Alberto Pereira da Silva, Brazilian football midfielder Lucas Mineiro (footballer, born 1996), Lucas |
Reed Phillips in the HBO series Westworld and as Nate in the webseries Venice: The Series. He is also known for his role as Avi in the film 86 | series Westworld and as Nate in the webseries Venice: The Series. He is also known for his role as Avi in the film 86 Melrose Avenue. Filmography Film Television Awards |
26 January 1984) is an Israeli judoka. She won the 6 bronze medals in the IJF | References External links 1984 births Living people Israeli female judoka Jewish martial artists Jewish Israeli sportspeople Israeli female athletes |
Norfolk, then moved to Philadelphia and Boston to learn the printing and publishing business. In 1834 he founded the Southern Literary Messenger in Richmond, Virginia, which became the most prominent literary periodical published in the south. Edgar Allan Poe wrote for the periodical as well as critiquing the work of others and editing the journal. Early life Thomas was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, the son of Thomas White and Sarah Davis, on 28 March 1788. His father died of yellow fever when he was eight years old. He received very little education before becoming an apprentice to William Rind and John Stuart at the Virginia Federalist, a newspaper in Richmond, Virginia. When his family moved to Norfolk, he obtained work at the Norfolk Gazette and Publick Ledger. When he set out on his own, he moved to Philadelphia, and then Boston, to learn the printing and pubishing busines. In 1809 he married Margaret Ann Ferguson in Gates County, North Carolina.. Publishing business In 1817 he returned to Richmond and established a publishing business. In 1820, he wrote Thomas Jefferson asking him for advice on books that he could publish that might be profitable. They exchanged a total of ten letters. Jefferson responded that the only book he could recommend was Baxter's History of England but that it might not be profitable. He also pointed out that the only copy of Baxter in America was the one that he had donated to the Library of Congress. He suggested that White might obtain one in England and have it shipped over. Southern Literary | editing the journal. Early life Thomas was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, the son of Thomas White and Sarah Davis, on 28 March 1788. His father died of yellow fever when he was eight years old. He received very little education before becoming an apprentice to William Rind and John Stuart at the Virginia Federalist, a newspaper in Richmond, Virginia. When his family moved to Norfolk, he obtained work at the Norfolk Gazette and Publick Ledger. When he set out on his own, he moved to Philadelphia, and then Boston, to learn the printing and pubishing busines. In 1809 he married Margaret Ann Ferguson in Gates County, North Carolina.. Publishing business In 1817 he returned to Richmond and established a publishing business. In 1820, he wrote Thomas Jefferson asking him for advice on books that he could publish that might be profitable. They exchanged a total of ten letters. Jefferson responded that the only book he could recommend was Baxter's History of England but that it might not be profitable. He also pointed out that the only copy of Baxter in America was the one that he had donated to the Library of Congress. He suggested that White might obtain one in England and have it shipped over. Southern Literary Messenger In 1834 he founded the Southern Literary Messenger. Its masthead read "Devoted To Every Department Of Literature And The Fine Aarts". He intended it to be a platform for southern writers of prose and poetry to publish their work. The first issue was published in August 1834 and included laudatory comments from John Quincy Adams and James Fenimore Cooper, among others. It opened with this statement. In February of 1835 he wrote James Madison asking if he had any manuscripts that he would like published. Madison was confined to his room at the time and did not respond, but his wife Dolley responded. Shortly thereafer, she sent him a manuscript of Madison's Johnathan Bull & Mary Bull, an allegory |
Lucas Rocha (footballer, born 1991), Brazilian football | Lucas Rocha may refer to: Lucas |
an injury to star player Boo Bowers, Nickens was elevated to a starting role and never looked back. In his junior and senior seasons he was named first-team All-East Coast Conference (ECC). As a junior in 1981–82 he averaged 19.2 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 2.5 steals per game while leading American to a 21–9 overall record. Nickens shared the ECC Player of the Year honor with Temple's Granger Hall. Nickens was also named by the Associated Press an honorable mention All-American in both his junior and senior years. After his collegiate career ended, Nickens was selected in the ensuing 1983 NBA draft by the Milwaukee Bucks in the fourth round (88th overall). He was waived in September prior to the start of | of eligibility playing for the Eagles. Nickens began as the sixth man, but due to an injury to star player Boo Bowers, Nickens was elevated to a starting role and never looked back. In his junior and senior seasons he was named first-team All-East Coast Conference (ECC). As a junior in 1981–82 he averaged 19.2 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 2.5 steals per game while leading American to a 21–9 overall record. Nickens shared the ECC Player of the Year honor |
Amabiliidae family. Species Tatria acanthorhyncha (Wedl, 1855) Kowalewski, 1904 Tatria appendiculata Fuhrmann, 1913 Tatria azerbaijanica Matevosyan & Sailov, 1963 Tatria biremis Kowalewski, 1904 Tatria duodecacantha Olsen, 1939 Tatria fimbriata Borgarenko, Spasskaya & Spasskii, 1972 Tatria fuhrmanni Solomon, 1932 Tatria gulyaevi Vasileva, Gibson | Sailov, 1963 Tatria biremis Kowalewski, 1904 Tatria duodecacantha Olsen, 1939 Tatria fimbriata Borgarenko, Spasskaya & Spasskii, 1972 Tatria fuhrmanni Solomon, 1932 Tatria gulyaevi Vasileva, Gibson & Bray, 2003 Tatria incognita Spassky, 1992 Tatria iunii Korpaczewska & Sulgostowska, 1974 Tatria |
resort is José Ignacio. References External links Laguna José Ignacio Jose Ignacio Landforms of Maldonado Department Birdwatching sites | Ocean. It is an important birdwatching location. The nearest famous seaside resort is José Ignacio. References External links |
2018 Global News article, in Canada, the yellow-vest protests attracted much smaller crowds than those in France. Global cited Yellow Vest Canada Facebook group description as saying, "This group is to protest the CARBON TAX and the Treason of our country's politicians who have the audacity to sell out OUR country's sovereignty over to the Globalist UN and their Tyrannical policies." On February 14, 2019, Canadian Anti-Hate Network (CAHN) reported on how Yellow Vest Canada Facebook groups had attracted "hundreds of thousands" of members within weeks of creating the Facebook pages. As the early messaging changed, and original Facebook members complained, and "were swiftly ostracized and banned". CAHN described how the far-right "rebranded" to "add more grievances" which | politicians who have the audacity to sell out OUR country's sovereignty over to the Globalist UN and their Tyrannical policies." On February 14, 2019, Canadian Anti-Hate Network (CAHN) reported on how Yellow Vest Canada Facebook groups had attracted "hundreds of thousands" of members within weeks of creating the Facebook pages. As the early messaging changed, and original Facebook members complained, and "were swiftly ostracized and banned". CAHN described how the far-right "rebranded" to "add more grievances" which then attracted "new people into their spaces". Alberta protest In 2018, a crowd of hundreds of protesters in Calgary, Alberta, where the headquarters of the hard-hit oil industry are situated, protesters expressed frustration at municipal, provincial, and national governments. Among the first protests in Canada |
or Jimmy Johnson, was an American blues musician. Johnson wrote the song "Don't Answer the Door", which was recorded by B. B. King. References | James F. Johnson or Jimmy Johnson, was an American blues musician. Johnson wrote the song "Don't Answer the Door", which was recorded by B. B. King. References 1926 |
the 2005 European Team Judo Championships. His younger brother is the two-time Olympic medalist judoka Or Sasson. References External links 1986 births Living people Israeli male judoka Jewish | July 1986) is an Israeli judoka. As part of the Israel national judo team, Sasson won the 2005 European Team Judo Championships. His younger |
from critics. Plot After losing her grandfather, Alma returns to her childhood home in the Canadian wilderness. In the forest, she comes across the wreckage of a plane that had been destined for a circus with a lion cub poached from its mother in Africa. The cub falls into her hands when a bald eagle knocks it out of the nest it fell into during the crash. So, she decides not to hand it over to the forest rangers because her grandfather campaigned against the mistreatment of animals in circuses. At the same time, a female wolf who had somewhat befriended Alma's grandfather comes to find refuge in Alma's house with her pup when she is pursued by two scientists. The lion cub and the wolf cub live like brothers; they play together and both are kept well-fed thanks to the she-wolf. But, the wolf mother disappears (after being hit with a tranquilizer dart by the two scientists, who wish to relocate her to a breeding facility for endangered wolf species) while Alma is off on a 2-day trip involving a classical music audition for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. This leaves her the only one to raise and protect the cubs while the three of them live in peace for a year or two. During which time, she names the wolf pup Mozart and the lion cub "Dreamer" (in apparent reference to the Ozzy Osbourne song). After Alma has an accident, her Native Canadian godfather Joe must notify the authorities in order to save her, despite the fact that this separates the trio. The three of them then seek each other out to be together again. Cast Molly Kunz as Alma Graham Greene as Joe Charlie Carrick as Eli Production and release Gilles de Maistre said that during the filming of Mia and the White Lion he had a discussion with wolf trainer Andrew Simpson and lion trainer Kevin Richardson that gave him the idea for the film. He then wrote a script with his wife Prune de Maistre. Paddington (the wolf) and Walter (the lion) were raised | family film directed by Gilles de Maistre who also wrote the script with his wife Prune de Maistre. The film stars Molly Kunz, who returns to her late grandfather's cabin and finds herself taking care of a wolf cub and lion cub who grow up together as brothers. The film premiered on 25 September 2021 at the Zurich Film Festival where it won best children's film. It went on to wide release on 13 October 2021. The film received generally negative reviews from critics. Plot After losing her grandfather, Alma returns to her childhood home in the Canadian wilderness. In the forest, she comes across the wreckage of a plane that had been destined for a circus with a lion cub poached from its mother in Africa. The cub falls into her hands when a bald eagle knocks it out of the nest it fell into during the crash. So, she decides not to hand it over to the forest rangers because her grandfather campaigned against the mistreatment of animals in circuses. At the same time, a female wolf who had somewhat befriended Alma's grandfather comes to find refuge |
Transvaal and the Suriname national team. References 2000 births Living people Surinamese footballers Association football midfielders S.V. Transvaal | for SVB Eerste Divisie club Transvaal and the Suriname national team. References 2000 births Living people Surinamese footballers Association football midfielders S.V. Transvaal |
The Cerberean Cauldron is a caldera in Australia which erupted about 374 million years ago and It forms the | about 374 million years ago and It forms the northern part of the Marysville Igneous Complex in central Victoria |
buttercream, and a dark chocolate glaze. Drink options include coffee (Stumptown Coffee Roasters), hot chocolate, ice cream floats, and milkshakes. Waffle cones are made on site. The Stumptown (coffee) ice cream flavor was the most popular, as of 2012. Other ice cream flavors have included butter pecan, cookies and cream, honey lavender, pistachio, sea salt cookie dough, Grilled Peach Sweet Tea, and Sasquatch Tracks. Circus Friends has Mother's Circus Animal Cookies and sweet cream, and Totes Ma'Goats has goat cheese ice cream with lemon curd. The Sunshine is a vegan option and has cardamom, cinnamon, turmeric, and Thai coconut milk. The Bourbon Vanilla uses Burnside Bourbon and the Chocolate Stout flavor uses Hopworks Urban Brewery's Survival Stout beer. History Spouses Bryan and Sarah Gilbert opened Cloud City Ice Cream in 2011. The business replaced Chill Ice Cream, which was sold following the deaths of the owners earlier in the year. | ice cream and a vanilla pie crust. The Malted French Silk has malted chocolate ice cream and a dark chocolate pie crust. The Snappy Goat ice cream sandwich has lemon goat cheese ice cream with a ginger snap pie crust. Ice cream cakes have included the Ginger Pumpkin Chai, the Malted Chocolate Cherry Bomb, and the Mexican Coca-Cola Cake, which has dark chocolate butter cake, vanilla chiffon cake, caramel ice cream, cinnamon buttercream, and a dark chocolate glaze. Drink options include coffee (Stumptown Coffee Roasters), hot chocolate, ice cream floats, and milkshakes. Waffle cones are made on site. The Stumptown (coffee) ice cream flavor was the most popular, as of 2012. Other ice cream flavors have included butter pecan, cookies and cream, honey lavender, pistachio, sea salt cookie dough, Grilled Peach Sweet Tea, and Sasquatch Tracks. Circus Friends has Mother's Circus Animal Cookies and sweet cream, and Totes Ma'Goats has goat cheese ice cream with lemon curd. The Sunshine is a vegan option and has cardamom, cinnamon, turmeric, and Thai coconut milk. The Bourbon Vanilla uses Burnside Bourbon and the Chocolate Stout flavor uses Hopworks Urban Brewery's Survival Stout beer. |
States by Doubleday the same year. In The Observer Maurice Richardson considered it as "another of Mr. Burton’s sound patient investigations" while in his New York Times review Isaac Anderson noted "Miles Burton has written many good mystery stories, and this is one of his best". Synopsis John Westerby, a keen ornithologist living in a peaceful village, goes missing one November evening with a | village, goes missing one November evening with a large sum of money in his possession. The case perplexes Inspector Arnold who can't work out if Westerby has suffered an accident, committed suicide, has been murdered, or is still alive. As so often it takes the assistance of his friend Merrion to crack the case. References Bibliography Evans, Curtis. Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery: Cecil |
of Pecorara to renew, if necessary, the prohibition and excommunication of members of the royal entourage in order to enforce the king's compliance, but, in the second letter, expressly forbade the excommunication of the king himself or his sons – princes Béla, Coloman and Andrew. King Andrew received the third letter: the pope listed the "terrible" abuses that forced Archbishop Robert to proclaim ecclesiastical censures before that, and which Andrew did not even remedy in spite of the warning words of the legate. The pope assured the king that he sincerely likes his person, but as the pope must measure everyone's actions equally, the verdict that the legate will make against the "rebellious" elements, he will also be forced to approve. The extent to which the letters facilitated an agreement is questionable, as it was only eight days before the oath of Bereg was concluded. According to historian Nándor Knauz, Lajos Balics and Vilmos Fraknói, Andrew could already know the papal opinion through his ambassadors. Although Andrew departed for Halych to support his youngest son Andrew in a fight against Daniel Romanivich, he was willing to meet the representatives of the papal legate, Bartholomew, Bishop of Veszprém and Cognoscens, a canon of Esztergom. On 20 August 1233, the two papal envoys caught up with Andrew II and his accompaniment in the forests of Bereg in the northeast corner of the Kingdom of Hungary before his departure to lead his military campaign against Halych. According to Almási, Bartholomew and Cognoscens forced Andrew to choose between immediate agreement and the imposition of ecclesiastical censure. The submitted draft assured James that the final confirmation of the agreement would take place in his presence. Two days after the meeting in the forest of Bereg, Andrew's heir and political rival, Duke Béla also arrived the scene with his entourage – for instance, Mojs – and also swore oath to the agreement two days later, on 22 August 1233. The Hungarian king met personally James of Pecorara only in Esztergom in September 1233, where the economic details were agreed and the barons of the realm – including Nicholas Szák, Peter Tétény, Maurice Pok, Baldwin Rátót, File Szeretvai and the formerly excommunicated treasurer Nicholas. In the document, the papal legate expressly required that Palatine Denis – a key reformer of economy, who was involed many conflicts with the church in the previous years – should also swear to the oath of Bereg. Content The text of the oath of Bereg was preserved in two original charters and two transcribed copies. It was issued on 20 August 1233, and then in September 1233 it was transcribed by Andrew in a letter to the papal legate James of Pecorara, and finally by Archbishop Robert of Esztergom on 19 February 1234. It was formulated entirely according to the demands of the legate; it consisted of two main parts, one relating to non-Christians and the other to privileges, especially salt income, of the church in Hungary. Duke Béla secured his earlier promise in his diploma issued on 23 February 1234. Additionally, his oath also contained that he will act against the heretics and lead the disobedient to the obedience of the church in his domain. Pope Gregory also confirmed the oath too in his letter to Archbishop Robert in January 1234. Affairs of non-Christians Andrew II, similarly to the provisions of the golden bulls of 1222 and 1231, swore he will not employ Jews and Muslims as officials of the royal treasury (chamber) and of the mintage, administrators of the salt mining and collectors of taxes, not even by subjecting them to Christian superiors in these royal offices. Andrew also forbade to place Jews and Saracens, or Ishmaelites, at the head of a public office. The oath of Bereg also prescribed both non-Christian groups to be distinguished and separated from Christians by means of badges, while forbade both Jews and Saracens to buy or to hire Christian slaves. Those bishops, whose dioceses were inhabited by a significant number of Muslim or Jewish communities, were permitted to request the separation of those people from Christian settlements. The oath prohibited marriage, cohabitation and any business relationship between Christians and non-Christians. In accordance with the agreement, the palatine or other appointed royal courtier had to be sent out each year to check for a violation of the law; every transgressor, whether Jew, Muslim or Christian, will lose property and be sentenced to eternal slavery for life. Privileges of the church The jurisdiction of ecclesiastical judiciary regarding morning-gift (dower), dowry and marital affairs was enshrined in the agreement. Andrew emphasized he will not allow secular courts to hear these cases, "because we do not want to interfere in them and we are not competent". Andrew promised not to impair ecclesiastical privileges. The Hungarian monarch determined that ecclesiastical persons (clergymen and their subjects) could be judged only by ecclesiastical courts, except for lawsuits involving ownership of possessions and landholdings, as it has been the customary rule of the king from the beginning. The oath also guaranteed the complete tax exemption for church persons and clergy. The king also stipulated that church members were required to consult with him regarding the imposition of their own tax, after which they jointly could turn to the pope for a decision. The agreement sought to remedy the alleged damage to the economic structure of the church, as the monarch and his secular elite were accused of unlawfully confiscating and usurping a significant proportion of the revenues of Catholic Church in Hungary. James of Pecorara endeavoured to ensure that neither the monarch nor his barons appropriated church revenues, primarily the salt mining and trade from Transylvania | its role as a crossroad of trading routes leading towards Constantinople, Regensburg and Kiev. Géza II, who ruled Hungary in the mid-12th century, even employed Muslim soldiers who had been recruited from among the peoples of the Eurasian steppes. Nevertheless, the employment of non-Christian officials in administrative functions also had tradition too in Hungary: a royal charter of Coloman, King of Hungary from 1111 refer to "agents" of the royal treasury, who were of "Khalyzians" (Muslims). Andrew II ascended the Hungarian throne in 1205, following years of struggle with his brother Emeric. He introduced a new policy for royal grants, which he called "new institutions" in one of his charters. He distributed large portions of the royal domainroyal castles and all estates attached to themas inheritable grants to his supporters, declaring that "the best measure of a royal grant is its being immeasurable." Royal revenues decreased, which led to the introduction of new taxes and their farming out to wealthy Muslims and Jews. The new methods of raising funds for the royal treasury created widespread unrest. Andrew also employed Jews and Muslims to administer royal revenues, which caused a discord between the monarch and the Holy See starting in the early 1220s. The first known sign of this is that Pope Honorius III requested King Andrew II and Queen Yolanda of Courtenay to abandon the employment of Jews and Muslim in royal administration in April 1221. He also sought to reach to prohibit non-Christians to hold Christian slaves. The complaints of popes reflected the resolutions of the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) against the non-Christian subjects. When a group of discontented lords assumed power in the spring of 1222, they forced Andrew to issue the Golden Bull of 1222, which prohibited the employment of Muslims and Jews in royal administration. Despite Andrew continued to employ them in the subsequent years, according to a letter of Pope Honorius III to Ugrin Csák, Archbishop of Kalocsa and his subordinates in August 1225, blaming the prelate of tolerating the violation of the prohibition in the realm, and even in his own archdiocese. Pope Gregory referred to the Councils of Toledo and its confirmation by the Fourth Council of the Lateran that non-Christians were forbidden to hold public office. This ban was confirmed when Andrew II, urged by the prelates, issued the Golden Bull's new variant in 1231, which authorized the Archbishop of Esztergom to excommunicate him in case of his departure from its provisions. Immediate events Robert, Archbishop of Esztergom made a complaint to the Roman Curia in 1231 that Andrew II continued to employ Jews and Muslims despite the aforementioned prohibitions and his former conflict with the Holy See over the issue. Pope Gregory IX instructed Robert in March 1231 to take action because, according to complaints, Christians in Hungary have suffered various harms because of Jews and Muslims. Mixing people of different religions was also seen by the pope as a source of danger, as he believed this could have increased the risk of leaving the faith. The pope also argued the disarray of the situation of non-Christians hinders the cause of the baptism of the Cumans. Even from the year 1232, the names of non-Christian officials were preserved: Samuel was of "Saracen" origin, who later converted to Roman Catholicism, and Teha (or Teka) was Jewish, both were ispáns of the royal chamber (). Their function is reflected by surviving royal coins with Hebrew letters and inscriptions. Although Andrew II pledged to respect the privileges of the clergymen and to dismiss his non-Christian officials in his two Golden Bulls, he never fulfilled the latter promise. As a result, Archbishop Robert excommunicated Andrew's key financial advisors – Palatine Denis, son of Ampud, Master of the treasury Nicholas and the aforementioned former chamberlain Samuel of "Saracen" origin – and placed Hungary under an interdict on 25 February 1232. Robert justified his action by the role of the Ishmaelites in the royal administration, especially in minting. He also accused Samuel of heresy and of supporting Muslims and "false" Christians. He, though, refrained from excommunicating King Andrew II himself. Andrew II petitioned to the Roman Curia, complaining about the deeds of the archbishop. In response, Pope Gregory sent a letter to Archbishop Robert in July 1232, in which he accused him of exceeding his powers. The pope emphasized that Robert's jurisdiction as papal legate was limited to the area inhabited by the Cumans and ordered him not to apply further ecclesiastical punishments. The pope promised Andrew that nobody would be excommunicated without the pope's special authorization. Since the archbishop accused the Muslims of persuading Andrew to seize church property, Andrew restored properties to the archbishop, who soon suspended the interdict upon the instruction of the pope. Pope Gregory IX, simultaneously with his letter, also sent James of Pecorara, Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina as his papal legate to Hungary, who was entrusted to reach an agreement between King Andrew II and Archbishop Robert. The cardinal arrived to Hungary in September 1232. The king avoided meeting him in the following months, thus the cardinal was able to deal with only internal affairs of the church in Hungary. According to historian Tibor Almási, Andrew II, in possession of the papal reassurance, endeavored to hold back all progress in the negotiations to the end, and James of Pecorara could not even threaten a more severe sanction. In early 1233, James met Archbishop Robert and the Hungarian prelates. They jointly transcribed and confirmed Andrew's 1222 donations of privilege to Hungarian Church in March 1233. The cardinal also dealt with the case of the Teutonic Knights, which was expelled from Hungary in 1225. The cardinal sent his chaplain Roger of Torre Maggiore to Rome to report that Andrew II hesitates to reconcile with the Holy See and has been sabotaging the negotiations in various ways for months. To move the negotiations out of the deadlock, Pope Gregory sent three letters to Hungary on 12 August 1233. The addressees of the two letters were the papal legate. In the first letter, Pope Gregory authorized James of Pecorara to renew, if necessary, the prohibition and excommunication of members of the royal entourage in order to enforce the king's compliance, but, in the second letter, expressly forbade the excommunication of the king himself or his sons – princes Béla, Coloman and Andrew. King Andrew received the third letter: the pope listed the "terrible" abuses that forced Archbishop Robert to proclaim ecclesiastical censures before that, |
It is colorless, although commercial samples often appear yellowish. One preparation entails the Sommelet reaction of α,α'-diamino-ortho-xylene. References | with the formula C6H4(CHO)2. It is one of three isomers of benzene dicarbaldehyde, related to phthalic acid. It is |
the silver medal at the 2013 Judo Grand Prix Almaty and placed 7th at the | July 1989) is an Israeli judoka. She won the silver medal at the |
Moon is the third studio album by the American singer and songwriter David Lasley, released in 1989 on Pony Canyon Records. It was met with critical acclaim by music journalists including Stephen Holden of The New York Times, among others. Lasley wrote three of the eleven songs including the title track and a cover of his song "You Bring Me Joy". The remaining songs are covers including "It's Too Late", "Since I Fell For You", “I Think It's Gonna Rain Today" and "God Bless The Child". Agenda Records released the album in the US in 1990. In 2000, Cool Sounds reissued the album in Japan. Soldiers On The Moon was produced by Jeffrey Weber as a live to 2-track studio recording at Ocean Way Studios. The rhythm section included Jeff Porcaro, Abe Laboriel, Luis Conte, Bob Mann, and Marty Walsh.Luther Vandross is the arranger of the background vocals. David Benoit appears on every track. Songs | arranger of the background vocals. David Benoit appears on every track. Songs and style The opening song is a cover of Carole King's song "It's Too Late" which Holden singles out as the "outstanding cut" calling it "a dreamy extended rendition...that uses a fragment of King's 'Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?" as an introduction." Critical reception Stephen Holden of The New York Times called it "a lushly produced collection of ballads"...with "diaphanous textures and languid tempos" that "echo the ultra-romantic style" of Luther Vandross' albums, who's presence "can be felt all over" the record. Alex Henderson of Cashbox described the album as "relaxed R&B with Jazz leanings".Gavin Report praised the album remarking "Lasley's extraordinarily wide range led to him writing "You Bring Me Joy" which was covered...by Anita Baker" and on "the torchy, smoldering Billie Holiday ballad "God Bless The Child." Jonathan Widran of |
York and San Franciso, later also in Tokyo. In 1991, the renowned Buchhandlung Mayer & Müller in Berlin, who also had a scientific program and distributed many American scientific journals, was added to the portfolio. The C. F. Winter'sche Verlagshandlung in Leipzig followed in 1923. The publishing house became one of the best-known scientific publishers, publishing well-known journals such as the (Journal of physical chemistry, 1887 introduced by Wilhelm Ostwald and Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff, taken over from Verlag Wilhelm Engelmann in Leipzig, in 1920), the (Handbook of experimental physics) by and Wilhelm Wien (26 volumes with a total of pages and images, 1926 to 1937, meant as competitor to by Springer-Verlag), the (Handbook of radiology) (6 volumes, 1913 to 1934), (Rabenhorst's cryptogam flora), (Bronn's classes and orders of the animal kingdom), (Results of enzyme research) and (Results of vitamin and hormone research). Among many others, the list of authors included Wilhelm Ostwald (i.e. , since 1918), Svante Arrhenius (, 1906), Pierre Curie and Marie Curie, William Ramsay, Arnold Sommerfeld (Lectures on theoretical physics) und Hendrik Antoon Lorentz. From 1921, also published a well-known series of new editions of scientific classics (taken over from Verlag Wilhelm Engelmann in 1919). Other journals taken over from Engelmann were (founded in 1849, oldest German zoological journal, taken over in 1923), (founded in 1878, taken over in 1924) and (founded in 1876, taken over in 1924). The publisher also took over in 1926 (founded in 1876 by Buchhandlung Gustav Fock, before 1918 issued by Engelmann), (founded in 1904 by Verlag W. Klinckhardt, taken over in 1927), the periodical (founded in 1859 by in Frankfurt am Main, and in Frankfurt am Main, taken over in 1929), and in 1930 (, founded in 1907, originally by in Leipzig, then issued by M. Krayn in Hamburg). The successors of the publishing house in West and East Germany continued this tradition. For the most part Jolowicz published natural sciences, medicine and mathematics, but also Hebraica and Judaica. Leo Jolowicz's son-in-law Kurt Jacoby (born 1893 in Insterburg; died August 1968 in New York) was also involved in the expansion of the publishing house. He had previously worked for and became deputy manager and another owner at in 1923. In 1930, Jolowicz's son Walter Jolowicz (1908–1996, who later called himself Walter J. Johnson after emigrating to the USA) joined the business as well. In the early 1930s the publishing house published 26 journals. Some 70% of the revenue were generated in foreign markets, which helped to solidify the business despite decreasing profits. In 1933, had a revenue of 1 million Reichsmark and a profit of 337,000 Reichsmark. When the National Socialists came to power, the publishing house was "aryanized" (Jolowicz was a Jew) and Jolowicz was gradually pushed out of the business. In 1937, he finally left the publishing house. He applied for emigration in 1939, but was unable to leave Germany and died in 1940, possibly by suicide. His son Walter and his son-in-law Kurt Jacoby were sent to a concentration camp in 1938, but were then able to leave | antiquarian bookshop Fock had already opened department stores in New York and San Franciso, later also in Tokyo. In 1991, the renowned Buchhandlung Mayer & Müller in Berlin, who also had a scientific program and distributed many American scientific journals, was added to the portfolio. The C. F. Winter'sche Verlagshandlung in Leipzig followed in 1923. The publishing house became one of the best-known scientific publishers, publishing well-known journals such as the (Journal of physical chemistry, 1887 introduced by Wilhelm Ostwald and Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff, taken over from Verlag Wilhelm Engelmann in Leipzig, in 1920), the (Handbook of experimental physics) by and Wilhelm Wien (26 volumes with a total of pages and images, 1926 to 1937, meant as competitor to by Springer-Verlag), the (Handbook of radiology) (6 volumes, 1913 to 1934), (Rabenhorst's cryptogam flora), (Bronn's classes and orders of the animal kingdom), (Results of enzyme research) and (Results of vitamin and hormone research). Among many others, the list of authors included Wilhelm Ostwald (i.e. , since 1918), Svante Arrhenius (, 1906), Pierre Curie and Marie Curie, William Ramsay, Arnold Sommerfeld (Lectures on theoretical physics) und Hendrik Antoon Lorentz. From 1921, also published a well-known series of new editions of scientific classics (taken over from Verlag Wilhelm Engelmann in 1919). Other journals taken over from Engelmann were (founded in 1849, oldest German zoological journal, taken over in 1923), (founded in 1878, taken over in 1924) and (founded in 1876, taken over in 1924). The publisher also took over in 1926 (founded in 1876 by Buchhandlung Gustav Fock, before 1918 issued by Engelmann), (founded in 1904 by Verlag W. Klinckhardt, taken over in 1927), the periodical (founded in 1859 by in Frankfurt am Main, and in Frankfurt am Main, taken over in 1929), and in 1930 (, founded in 1907, originally by in Leipzig, then issued by M. Krayn in Hamburg). The successors of the publishing house in West and East Germany continued this tradition. For the most part Jolowicz published natural sciences, medicine and mathematics, but also Hebraica and Judaica. Leo Jolowicz's son-in-law Kurt Jacoby (born 1893 in Insterburg; died August 1968 in New York) was also involved in the expansion of the publishing house. He had previously worked for and became deputy manager and another owner at in 1923. In 1930, Jolowicz's son Walter Jolowicz (1908–1996, who later called himself Walter J. Johnson after emigrating to the USA) joined the business as well. In the early 1930s the publishing house published 26 journals. Some 70% of the revenue were generated in foreign markets, which helped to solidify the business despite decreasing profits. In 1933, had a revenue of 1 million Reichsmark and a profit of 337,000 Reichsmark. When the National Socialists came to power, the publishing house was "aryanized" (Jolowicz was a Jew) and Jolowicz was gradually pushed out of the business. In 1937, he finally left the publishing house. He applied for emigration in 1939, but was unable to leave Germany and died in 1940, possibly |
of Lambeth Labour within Labour councillors. 2018 Election and 1st term as Councillor He ran again in the 2018 Lambeth London Borough Council election for Gipsy Hill and became the 1st Green councillor of the ward. As a councillor and member of the Housing Scrutiny Sub-Committee he has been more active than the Labour Chair in securing quality housing for the borough, making it to the news several times as a champion for housing and environmental concerns. As well as a very vocal critic of the council on their own housing policies, criticizing a lack of strategy to help the 7,000 people in temporary accommodation, the | closure for nine days by members of the local community, including senior citizens and teenagers studying for A level exams. Protesters from campaign group Defend The Ten voluntarily left the library before being evicted, and the occupation ended with a protest march to Brixton Library. The Green Party of Lambeth was heavily involved with these protests, and Mr Elliott himself appeared on the news in favour of the occupation and when a by-election was announced for Gipsy Hill, the Green party nominated him as their candidate. He came 2nd and was 36 votes away of getting elected, a strong blow for the Lambeth Council that forced them to stop the Carnegie Library closure as well as raised questions on the recent turn to the right of |
race was held on Saturday, August 23, 2003, before a crowd of 160,000 in Bristol, Tennessee at Bristol Motor Speedway, a 0.533 miles (0.858 km) permanent oval-shaped racetrack. The race took the scheduled 500 laps to complete. At race's end, Kurt Busch of Roush Racing would win a caution-filled event, with 20 cautions that matched the track record to win his seventh career NASCAR Winston Cup Series win and his third and final win of the season. To fill out the podium, Kevin Harvick of Richard Childress Racing and Jamie McMurray of Chip Ganassi Racing would finish second and third, respectively. Background The Bristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include extraordinarily steep banking, | (0.858 km) permanent oval-shaped racetrack. The race took the scheduled 500 laps to complete. At race's end, Kurt Busch of Roush Racing would win a caution-filled event, with 20 cautions that matched the track record to win his seventh career NASCAR Winston Cup Series win and his third and final win of the season. To fill out the podium, Kevin Harvick of Richard Childress Racing and Jamie McMurray of Chip Ganassi Racing would finish second and third, respectively. Background The Bristol Motor Speedway, formerly known as Bristol International Raceway and Bristol Raceway, is a NASCAR short track venue located in Bristol, Tennessee. Constructed in 1960, it held its first NASCAR race on July 30, 1961. Despite its short length, Bristol is among the most popular tracks on the NASCAR schedule because of its distinct features, which include extraordinarily steep banking, an all concrete surface, two pit roads, and stadium-like seating. It has also been named one of the loudest NASCAR tracks. Entry list Practice Originally, three practice sessions were going to be held, with all three being held on Friday, August 22. However, due to a long rain delay during qualifying, the second practice session was canceled. First |
winter probably came to northeastern Japan during the early Kamakura period when the Nikaidō clan became local landowners. This ceremony may have morphed into various winter fire festivals during which villagers pray for good harvests. In the Uonuma region of south-central Niigata Prefecture, the snow domes made for such ceremonies are known as honyara-dō. One theory holds that the term "kamakura" arose from a resemblance of many snow domes to round ceramic kilns (窯). A different theory suggests that "kamakura" is a corruption of "kami-kura," (神蔵) which might be translated as a "storehouse of the gods." In either case, the connection with the city of Kamakura in present-day Kanagawa prefecture is tenuous. However, in places where the deity "Kamakura Daimyojin" is worshipped and Kamakura festivals date back to the days of the Kamakura shogunate, the ceremony might have been one way for the shogunate to ritually display its power. Specific Kamakura Celebrations Yokote Kamakura Festival Winter events with "kamakura" snow huts are currently held in a number of locations in Japan. For example, in Yokote City in central Akita prefecture such events are celebrated every February 14 to 16. This event likely dates to a time when the Onodera clan ruled that area during the Sengoku period. During Yokote's Kamakura Festival, several hundred snow domes of various sizes dot the city. This event is immediately followed by a "Bonden Festival" during which Shinto ceremonies occur. Together, both festivals are sometimes jointly described as the "Yokote Snow Festival." In Yokote City there is also a small museum about the history of kamakura snow domes. Rokugō Kamakura Festival Not far north from Yokote City in the Semboku District of Akita prefecture another kamakura | "storehouse of the gods." In either case, the connection with the city of Kamakura in present-day Kanagawa prefecture is tenuous. However, in places where the deity "Kamakura Daimyojin" is worshipped and Kamakura festivals date back to the days of the Kamakura shogunate, the ceremony might have been one way for the shogunate to ritually display its power. Specific Kamakura Celebrations Yokote Kamakura Festival Winter events with "kamakura" snow huts are currently held in a number of locations in Japan. For example, in Yokote City in central Akita prefecture such events are celebrated every February 14 to 16. This event likely dates to a time when the Onodera clan ruled that area during the Sengoku period. During Yokote's Kamakura Festival, several hundred snow domes of various sizes dot the city. This event is immediately followed by a "Bonden Festival" during which Shinto ceremonies occur. Together, both festivals are sometimes jointly described as the "Yokote Snow Festival." In Yokote City there is also a small museum about the history of kamakura snow domes. Rokugō Kamakura Festival Not far north from Yokote City in the Semboku District of Akita prefecture another kamakura festival is held each February 11 to 15. The "Rokugō Kamakura Festival" has been classified as an Intangible Folk Cultural Asset by the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs. This festival is centered around Akita Suwagu Shrine, which is near Iizume Station on the Ōu Main Line. During that festival, numerous kamakura ice houses can be seen. However, photographs reveal that not all of these have a rounded shapes: some have square walls and thatched bamboo roofs. In fact, such structures are known as "torioi koya" (鳥追小屋, lit. "bird chasing huts"). Moreover, the Shinto deity "Kamakura Daimyojin" is enshrined in some of those ceremonial winter huts. On each February 13 in Rokugō village, children typically visit each other's huts and sing songs about chasing birds. Two days later, there is usually a rice-cake pounding ceremony to celebrate the end of winter. During that time, willow cocoon balls are made to decorate altars of the deity Kamakura Daimyojin. Those cocoon balls are fashioned from rice cakes attached to willow twigs. Other traditional ceremonies are held during this festival such as bamboo pole battles between opposing teams as well as "bonfire battles" featuring blazing long bamboo poles. Narayama Kamakura Festival Much smaller in scale than the previous two festivals, the Narayama Kamakura Festival is held every February 12–15 in Narayama Otamachi, an area that is now part of central Akita City. |
company (which had taken on a large debt during this time) declared bankruptcy, with the plant being sold. A tentative contract was reached with the new owners in March 1987 that set wages to the industry standard but contained cuts to medical benefits. While the IBT declared the strike over, several workers continued the dispute as a wildcat strike that lasted for about a week before the company agreed to include medical benefits, with the strike finally coming to an end on March 11. Labor historians note the significance of the strike as one of the few successful strikes in the United States during the 1980s, compared to other strikes of the time such as the Arizona copper mine strike of 1983 and the 1985–1986 Hormel strike, with the Northwest Labor Press calling it "a rare union victory during an era of union-busting". In Watsonville, the strike coincided with increased political activity from the Latino community. Oscar Rios, a union organizer during the strike, was elected the city's first Latino mayor several years later, stating, "The strikers helped change the politics in our city and county". However, in the years following the strike, most of the major food processors relocated from the city, with only one frozen food plant left in the city by 2000. Background Food processing industry in Watsonville Watsonville is a city located about south of San Francisco, in the Monterey Bay area. Founded in the mid-1800s by Americans from the east coast and European immigrants, the city had become a major food processing center by the early 1900s. Due largely to its location near the agriculturally productive Pajaro Valley and Salinas Valley regions (which by the 1960s were responsible for about 80 percent of vegetable production in the United States), Watsonville was a major canning location for vegetables grown in the area, such as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cauliflower. By the 1950s, food processors in the city began freezing this food instead of canning, and soon the city was home to eight frozen food plants, earning it the nickname of the "frozen food capital of the world". By 1986, the city, with a population of about 27,000, was processing about 40 percent of the frozen broccoli, Brussels sprouts, green peppers, and spinach produced in the United States. By the mid-1980s, the city's industry was dominated by two firms in particular: the Watsonville Canning Company and Richard A. Shaw Inc. Together, these two companies accounted for about 80 percent of Watsonville's frozen food output. These two firms were also the largest frozen food processors in the United States. Watsonville Canning, the larger of the two, was the largest frozen food processing company in the United States. It employed about 5,000 people and processed roughly half of the United States's supply of frozen vegetables. The company, which by the 1980s was owned by Watsonville native Mort Console, produced frozen vegetables for Birds Eye and private supermarket brands. Latinos in the area In 1900, Watsonville had a population of 3,528, of which only 118 were from Mexico. Many of the food processing workers in Watsonville were Portuguese or Slavic. However, as the agricultural industry in the region grew through the 1900s, more Mexican immigrants came to the area to find work through the Bracero program. Starting in the 1960s, the industry began recruiting female workers, primarily Mexican immigrants from South Texas, to work in the Pajaro Valley. Watsonville's food processing industry provided many of these immigrants with more stable employment than that of farmworkers, and the city became a center of a growing Latino population. Through the 1980s and 1990s, the city grew at an annual rate of about 38 percent, due in large part to Latino immigration, and many during this time were able to rise into the middle class. By the 1980s, Latinos made up a majority of the city's population, making it the first California city north of Fresno to hold that distinction. Among frozen food workers in the city, nine out of ten were Latino. However, despite the change in demographics, white Americans still held most of the economic and political power in the city. Discrimination against Latinos was common in Watsonville, with housing discrimination being a major issue. In 1969, some Latino students at Watsonville High School held a walkout and boycott of classes, demanding that more Latino teachers and employees be hired by the school. By 1985, the mayor, fire chief and police chief were all white, and only one member of the city council was Latino. Additionally, Watsonville Canning was white-owned. Regarding the economic disparities between Latinos and white Americans, scholar Erik Davis once referred to Watsonville as "a poor town with a large, struggling migrant population". Union activity Through the 1930s and 1940s, labor unions began a concerted effort to unionize food processing workers in the southwestern United States. These efforts primarily targeted Latina workers and involved high-ranking Latina labor leaders, such as Luisa Moreno, Manuela Solis Sager, and Emma Tenayuca. Militant unions such as the Cannery and Agricultural Workers' Industrial Union (CAWIU), the United Cannery, Agricultural, Packing, and Allied Workers of America (UCAPAWA), and the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural, and Allied Workers (FTA), were largely responsible for these early efforts and led to large-scale strike actions such as the 1938 San Antonio pecan shellers strike. Both the UCAPAWA and the FTA were affiliate unions of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), which had been founded in the 1930s as an alternative to the more conservative American Federation of Labor (AFL). In the mid-1940s, the AFL-affiliated International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) began to also organize workers in California, often in direct competition to union efforts from the FTA. The IBT's organization efforts were aided by the California Processors and Growers (CPG), an employers' organization representing agricultural businesses in the state, who supported the comparatively conservative IBT over the FTA. In 1950, following the passage of the Taft–Hartley Act, the FTA was expelled from the CIO, leading to the IBT becoming the dominant union in the industry. The IBT worked closely with business interests to create "sweetheart" contracts that were generally favorable to the companies, and in 1949, Edward T. Console, owner of Watsonville Canning, signed the first labor contract between a Watsonville food processing company and the IBT, setting a wage pattern for the city's industry as a whole. Under these industry-wide agreements, the Watsonville canneries would pay the same wages and offer the same benefits. Due in large part to these favorable contracts and conservativeness of the IBT, the food processing industry in California would not see a major industrial dispute for the next three decades. Local 912 In 1952, with assistance from the owners of Watsonville Canning, IBT Local 912 was organized in Watsonville to represent cannery workers in the city, and by 1986, they represented almost all of the roughly 4,000 food processing workers in Watsonville. By the mid-1990s, roughly one out of every four Watsonville residents were members of Local 912. This local union was closely aligned with the local business interests, leading to some researchers calling it a "company union" that "was controlled by a corrupt leadership". According to activist Frank Bardacke, "the bosses allowed the union officials a good deal of personal power, as long as they refrained from challenging the employer's prerogatives in production or encouraging workers to organize themselves". Some of the union leaders would socialize and play poker with cannery officials, and Richard King, who served as the secretary-treasurer for several years before becoming the local's president in 1967, was the father-in-law of a business partner at Richard A. Shaw. As the head of the local, he was generally uninvolved in union activities, rarely attending union meetings, and some rank and file union members were critical of his accommodationist approach to labor-management relations. In 1985, about 70 percent of Local 912's membership was Latino, and more Latinos voted in Teamsters elections than they did in municipal elections. However, the local was dominated by white Americans who were largely disconnected from these members' concerns. Union meetings were held only in English and, until the mid-1980s, only one person on the local's leadership, a business agent who had been appointed by the local in 1968, spoke Spanish. Additionally, while women made up the majority of Local 912 membership, they were not represented on the local leadership, and few attended union meetings due to a lack of child care coverage from the local and the bureaucratic and parliamentarian nature of the meetings. Despite these issues, the local had managed to negotiate some of the highest wages for food processing workers in the country, with a base hourly pay up to $7.05 for most workers and up to $12 for machine operators, plus employee benefits. Changes in the industry in the 1980s In 1973, Local 912 membership peaked at about 7,000 members, with peak season employment in the Watsonville canneries reaching about 10,000. During this time, California held what an article in The New York Times called a "virtual monopoly" on the processing of certain vegetables. However, the mid-197s through the 1980s saw a continuous decline in both employment and union membership. This was due primarily to increased competition in the food processing industry from firms outside of Watsonville. Primarily, imports from Latin American countries, such as Guatemala and Mexico, were entering the United States market, and food processing operations in right-to-work states such as Texas had seen a noted growth. This growth was primarily due to lower labor costs, as in the mid-1980s, the average Texas food processing worker had an hourly wage of $3.36, while in Mexico and some Central American countries like Guatemala, workers earned only a few dollars per day. According to the United States Department of Commerce, between 1983 and 1984, foreign imports of broccoli and cauliflower increased from to and to , respectively. In addition to increased competition, the time period saw a change in consumer preferences away from frozen or canned foods and towards more fresh food options. Between 1975 and 1983, over a dozen major canneries in California closed, leading to roughly 15,000 lost jobs, with only about 19,000 workers remaining in California canneries. According to academic Patricia Zavella, in the years leading up to 1985, "the global restructuring of agriculture ... prompted local farmers and processors to expand acreage in Mexico, grow new crops locally for the fresh market, and downsize food processing in Watsonville". Wage decreases at Watsonville Canning Food processing companies in Watsonville responded to these changing market trends by renegotiating labor contracts with Local 912. In 1982, Watsonville Canning negotiated an agreement with Local 912 wherein they would reduce their hourly wages from the industry standard of $7.06 to $6.66. The company argued that the pay cut was necessary due to a decline in business, claiming that the company was near bankruptcy and the cuts would allow the company to remain profitable. Additionally, the company agreed to restore the wages if business improved. The cuts gave Watsonville Canning a competitive edge over the other food processing plants in Watsonville, with the company seeing a five percent increase in business during 1985. Soon after these changes were implemented at Watsonville Canning, other food processors began requesting similar wage decreases from the union. Contract negotiations In early 1985, the union and Watsonville Canning entered into negotiations for a new labor contract, with the existing contract, including the wage reduction agreement, set to expire that June. The company proposed a two-tier wage system that would see existing employees maintain their $6.66 hourly pay, while new hires would start at a base pay of $4.25. However, the union members voted to reject this proposal in August and instead requested that wages be restored to the original $7.06 rate. With the contract expired by this point, Watsonville Canning implemented this proposal as negotiations continued. Throughout negotiations, the company submitted 22 different offers, all of which containing rollbacks that would decrease wages and benefits. During negotiations, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service became involved, and by September, the company implemented a base hourly pay for existing employees of $4.75, with new hires earning $4.25. Additionally, the company took away 54 employee benefit items, including a reduction in healthcare, vacation benefits, and an end to union dues automatically being pulled from employees' paychecks. In addition, Watsonville Canning instituted an increase in production quotas for broccoli processing, which was in violation of an agreement the company had with the union. The changes resulted in an increase in work accidents, as well as the firing of about 25 employees, many of whom had worked for the company for several years, for failing to meet these new standards. As part of these speedup policies, workers on the line were forbidden from using the restroom outside of their scheduled breaks. The changes were ill-received by the union members at large, with one calling it "a terrorist attack" on the workers. In defending the policy changes, Smiley Verduzco, an executive at Watsonville Canning, stated that there had been work slowdowns prior to the changes. Around the same time, Shaw also left the industry-wide agreement and began pushing for terms similar to what Watsonville Canning had. Shaw proposed a base hourly pay reduction from $7.06 to $6.66, with new hires earning $4.43 per hour. Additionally, the company was pushing for 25 takeaways in employee benefits. As it became apparent that an agreement between Local 912 and both Watsonville Canning and Shaw was unlikely to be reached, the companies began preparing for possible strike action. Watsonville Canning began to stockpile its product during mid-1985, and additionally secured $18 million in credit from Wells Fargo. In an article for the Los Angeles Times, union officials stated that the speedups and policy changes made during mid-1985 were intended to force a strike in sentiments that were echoed by Charles Craypo, head of the economics department at the University of Notre Dame, who said, "Companies today are taking the offensive, doing things to weaken unions and sometimes forcing them into strikes that they can’t win". Don McIntosh, editor of the Northwest Labor Press, stated that the company had recently hired an anti-union law firm and, on their advice, were attempting to provoke a strike, hire permanent replacements, and decertify the union in a government-administered decertification election that would involve voting from those permanent replacements. Speaking about the policy changes and wage reductions, King said, "The companies are trying to break the union here and send us back into the 1950's". In comparison to Watsonville Canning, Local 912 was unprepared for a strike. Leaders within the local were generally opposed to a strike, and the local lacked a strike fund. However, on Friday, September 6, at a meeting of 200 union members at the union hall, the union decided that a strike would commence. By this point, the workers had been without a contract for three months. While some workers had considered a walkout in early 1985, this decision was postponed until peak season in order to most affect the companies. The following day, an informal group was organized amongst the union members to create a rudimentary plan for the strike, and Watsonville Canning and Richard A. Shaw were served strike notices that day. On September 8, some members met at the union hall to create picket signs. The strike would be Watsonville's first in 37 years. The strike would target both Watsonville Canning and Richard A. Shaw, affecting over 1,000 workers. Of these workers, about 85 percent were Latina, many single mothers. According to academic Margie Brown-Coronel, the strike was not only to oppose the company's wage decreases and benefits reductions, but "also ... to protest lack of leadership and support required of the Teamsters Union". The strike was somewhat unique in that rank and file members initiated the action, which was then supported by the international union. Meanwhile, other food processors in the area agreed to extend their $7.06 agreements with the union for another year in order to see the outcome of the labor dispute. Course of the strike Early activities during the strike The food processing workers began their strike on September 9, 1985. At 5 a.m. that Monday, union members met at the union hall and were given picket signs and sent to the gates of the two frozen food plants. At Watsonville Canning, the strikers formed a picket line that stretched for eight city blocks, while at Shaw, the line was a third of a mile long. Many of the picket signs were written in both English and Spanish, and many of the strikers brought their children with them. In response to the picketing, the district attorney and Console, who stated that he "feared for [his] personal safety", requested Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge William Kelsay to issue a temporary restraining order against the strikers, which he granted at 8 p.m. that day, within 15 hours of the start of the strike. As part of the restraining order, there could be no more than four pickets within of each of Watsonville Canning's eight gates, pickets could not be within of each other, and only people going to work at the plant could congregate within of the plant. The restraining order significantly hampered the effectiveness of the strike, with each plant limited to only 60 pickets. Soon after the strike began, the Watsonville City Council increased funding for their police department, with many in the department working twelve-hour shifts to ensure that at least twelve officers were at the scene of the picketing at all times. By 1 a.m. on September 10, the police had cleared the area around Watsonville Canning, and they issued their first citation against a striker after someone struck a delivery truck with a picket sign. By October, the police had arrested several strikers for violations of the restraining order. In an effort to further reduce the size of the picketing, Watsonville Canning replaced several of their gates with chain-link fencing, which decreased the number of pickets legally allowed around the property. Additionally, the company did not allow strikers to come into the plant to pick up their last paycheck, instead mailing it to them. On September 20, about 17 students from Watsonville High School were arrested after joining with picketers near the plant, and in the immediate aftermath, police in riot gear dispersed the crowd that had gathered to protest the arrests. Around the same time, Judge Kelsay upgraded the restraining order to an injunction. Community support for the strike To make up for the lost wages, strikers received a weekly strike pay of $55. Strikers continued to pay union dues for the duration of the strike (which was equal to about twice what the workers earned in an hour of work), and the pay was a significant decrease from the $250 that most workers received in weekly pay. In addition to the lost income, strikers also lost employee benefits, and few received government assistance such as food stamps and other forms of welfare. Extended families and local food banks helped support many workers for the duration of the strike, and the strike received significant support from the local Mexican-American community. In several cases, strikers received extended credit from local grocers, and some had their rent payments delayed. Some supporters saw the strike as an "Anglo assault" on the Latino community, highlighted by the white power structure in the majority-Latino city. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Mike Herald, the head of a group of several community churches that provided charitable services to the strikers, expressed this opinion, saying, "The city’s white power structure has lined up on one side and the strikers on the other". Within the first few weeks, two support groups were formed to assist the strike, and the strikers began receiving donations from various Chicano groups such as the League of United Latin American Citizens and the Mexican American Political Association. Activists from nearby universities, such as Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC), also participated in supporting the strike. Teamsters for a Democratic Union One of the groups involved in the strike were the Detroit-based Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU), a group within the IBT that had been formed in the 1970s with the intent to challenge the conservative old guard and push for more militant union | in California canneries. According to academic Patricia Zavella, in the years leading up to 1985, "the global restructuring of agriculture ... prompted local farmers and processors to expand acreage in Mexico, grow new crops locally for the fresh market, and downsize food processing in Watsonville". Wage decreases at Watsonville Canning Food processing companies in Watsonville responded to these changing market trends by renegotiating labor contracts with Local 912. In 1982, Watsonville Canning negotiated an agreement with Local 912 wherein they would reduce their hourly wages from the industry standard of $7.06 to $6.66. The company argued that the pay cut was necessary due to a decline in business, claiming that the company was near bankruptcy and the cuts would allow the company to remain profitable. Additionally, the company agreed to restore the wages if business improved. The cuts gave Watsonville Canning a competitive edge over the other food processing plants in Watsonville, with the company seeing a five percent increase in business during 1985. Soon after these changes were implemented at Watsonville Canning, other food processors began requesting similar wage decreases from the union. Contract negotiations In early 1985, the union and Watsonville Canning entered into negotiations for a new labor contract, with the existing contract, including the wage reduction agreement, set to expire that June. The company proposed a two-tier wage system that would see existing employees maintain their $6.66 hourly pay, while new hires would start at a base pay of $4.25. However, the union members voted to reject this proposal in August and instead requested that wages be restored to the original $7.06 rate. With the contract expired by this point, Watsonville Canning implemented this proposal as negotiations continued. Throughout negotiations, the company submitted 22 different offers, all of which containing rollbacks that would decrease wages and benefits. During negotiations, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service became involved, and by September, the company implemented a base hourly pay for existing employees of $4.75, with new hires earning $4.25. Additionally, the company took away 54 employee benefit items, including a reduction in healthcare, vacation benefits, and an end to union dues automatically being pulled from employees' paychecks. In addition, Watsonville Canning instituted an increase in production quotas for broccoli processing, which was in violation of an agreement the company had with the union. The changes resulted in an increase in work accidents, as well as the firing of about 25 employees, many of whom had worked for the company for several years, for failing to meet these new standards. As part of these speedup policies, workers on the line were forbidden from using the restroom outside of their scheduled breaks. The changes were ill-received by the union members at large, with one calling it "a terrorist attack" on the workers. In defending the policy changes, Smiley Verduzco, an executive at Watsonville Canning, stated that there had been work slowdowns prior to the changes. Around the same time, Shaw also left the industry-wide agreement and began pushing for terms similar to what Watsonville Canning had. Shaw proposed a base hourly pay reduction from $7.06 to $6.66, with new hires earning $4.43 per hour. Additionally, the company was pushing for 25 takeaways in employee benefits. As it became apparent that an agreement between Local 912 and both Watsonville Canning and Shaw was unlikely to be reached, the companies began preparing for possible strike action. Watsonville Canning began to stockpile its product during mid-1985, and additionally secured $18 million in credit from Wells Fargo. In an article for the Los Angeles Times, union officials stated that the speedups and policy changes made during mid-1985 were intended to force a strike in sentiments that were echoed by Charles Craypo, head of the economics department at the University of Notre Dame, who said, "Companies today are taking the offensive, doing things to weaken unions and sometimes forcing them into strikes that they can’t win". Don McIntosh, editor of the Northwest Labor Press, stated that the company had recently hired an anti-union law firm and, on their advice, were attempting to provoke a strike, hire permanent replacements, and decertify the union in a government-administered decertification election that would involve voting from those permanent replacements. Speaking about the policy changes and wage reductions, King said, "The companies are trying to break the union here and send us back into the 1950's". In comparison to Watsonville Canning, Local 912 was unprepared for a strike. Leaders within the local were generally opposed to a strike, and the local lacked a strike fund. However, on Friday, September 6, at a meeting of 200 union members at the union hall, the union decided that a strike would commence. By this point, the workers had been without a contract for three months. While some workers had considered a walkout in early 1985, this decision was postponed until peak season in order to most affect the companies. The following day, an informal group was organized amongst the union members to create a rudimentary plan for the strike, and Watsonville Canning and Richard A. Shaw were served strike notices that day. On September 8, some members met at the union hall to create picket signs. The strike would be Watsonville's first in 37 years. The strike would target both Watsonville Canning and Richard A. Shaw, affecting over 1,000 workers. Of these workers, about 85 percent were Latina, many single mothers. According to academic Margie Brown-Coronel, the strike was not only to oppose the company's wage decreases and benefits reductions, but "also ... to protest lack of leadership and support required of the Teamsters Union". The strike was somewhat unique in that rank and file members initiated the action, which was then supported by the international union. Meanwhile, other food processors in the area agreed to extend their $7.06 agreements with the union for another year in order to see the outcome of the labor dispute. Course of the strike Early activities during the strike The food processing workers began their strike on September 9, 1985. At 5 a.m. that Monday, union members met at the union hall and were given picket signs and sent to the gates of the two frozen food plants. At Watsonville Canning, the strikers formed a picket line that stretched for eight city blocks, while at Shaw, the line was a third of a mile long. Many of the picket signs were written in both English and Spanish, and many of the strikers brought their children with them. In response to the picketing, the district attorney and Console, who stated that he "feared for [his] personal safety", requested Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge William Kelsay to issue a temporary restraining order against the strikers, which he granted at 8 p.m. that day, within 15 hours of the start of the strike. As part of the restraining order, there could be no more than four pickets within of each of Watsonville Canning's eight gates, pickets could not be within of each other, and only people going to work at the plant could congregate within of the plant. The restraining order significantly hampered the effectiveness of the strike, with each plant limited to only 60 pickets. Soon after the strike began, the Watsonville City Council increased funding for their police department, with many in the department working twelve-hour shifts to ensure that at least twelve officers were at the scene of the picketing at all times. By 1 a.m. on September 10, the police had cleared the area around Watsonville Canning, and they issued their first citation against a striker after someone struck a delivery truck with a picket sign. By October, the police had arrested several strikers for violations of the restraining order. In an effort to further reduce the size of the picketing, Watsonville Canning replaced several of their gates with chain-link fencing, which decreased the number of pickets legally allowed around the property. Additionally, the company did not allow strikers to come into the plant to pick up their last paycheck, instead mailing it to them. On September 20, about 17 students from Watsonville High School were arrested after joining with picketers near the plant, and in the immediate aftermath, police in riot gear dispersed the crowd that had gathered to protest the arrests. Around the same time, Judge Kelsay upgraded the restraining order to an injunction. Community support for the strike To make up for the lost wages, strikers received a weekly strike pay of $55. Strikers continued to pay union dues for the duration of the strike (which was equal to about twice what the workers earned in an hour of work), and the pay was a significant decrease from the $250 that most workers received in weekly pay. In addition to the lost income, strikers also lost employee benefits, and few received government assistance such as food stamps and other forms of welfare. Extended families and local food banks helped support many workers for the duration of the strike, and the strike received significant support from the local Mexican-American community. In several cases, strikers received extended credit from local grocers, and some had their rent payments delayed. Some supporters saw the strike as an "Anglo assault" on the Latino community, highlighted by the white power structure in the majority-Latino city. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Mike Herald, the head of a group of several community churches that provided charitable services to the strikers, expressed this opinion, saying, "The city’s white power structure has lined up on one side and the strikers on the other". Within the first few weeks, two support groups were formed to assist the strike, and the strikers began receiving donations from various Chicano groups such as the League of United Latin American Citizens and the Mexican American Political Association. Activists from nearby universities, such as Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC), also participated in supporting the strike. Teamsters for a Democratic Union One of the groups involved in the strike were the Detroit-based Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU), a group within the IBT that had been formed in the 1970s with the intent to challenge the conservative old guard and push for more militant union with more of an emphasis on rank-and-file leadership. The TDU had become involved in Local 912 activities in the early 1980s when it campaigned for union meetings to be held in both English and Spanish Some TDU members in Local 912 were active in pushing for a strike in mid-1985, and at the start of the strike, the TDU chapter in Watsonville attempted to fill the power vacuum in the strike leadership. The TDU also pushed for weekly strike meetings and attempted to raise the weekly strike pay from $55 to $100. Strikebreakers and instances of violence In order to continue operations during the strike, the two companies began hiring strikebreakers shortly after the strike began. These workers were paid slightly over $5 per hour, with no employee benefits or guaranteed job security. For roughly the first two months of the strike, the plants operated with about 80 to 100 strikebreakers, whereas before the strike these plants operated with between 1,000 and 2,000 employees. As a result, the plants operated at a reduced production level. Through the strike, there was a high turnover rate among the replacement workers, with many working only a few weeks before quitting. However, by September 1986, Watsonville Canning had about 900 replacement workers in their employment. Police accompanied the strikebreakers to and from the plants, as picketers would often intimidate them, sometimes spitting in their direction and yelling that they were "esquiroles" (the Spanish word for "scab"). Some violent outbreaks occurred in the first few months of the strike, including attacks on strikebreakers. Some of the strikebreakers' cars were vandalized, and strikebreakers used sand-filled socks to bust out the windows on the buses that carried the strikebreakers to and from the plants. Additionally, one striker was arrested for attempting to throw a Molotov cocktail at one of these buses. During the strike, three cars that were owned by company executives were destroyed, and instances of arson increased during that time. Several homes were firebombed, and two fires at properties owned by Watsonville Canning resulted in about $1 million in damages. In total, four instances of arson resulted in damages of about $2 million. Despite this, no major injuries were reported from strike-related activities. Late 1985 On October 6, the Watsonville TDU helped to organize a "Solidarity Day" rally in Watsonville that included a march to the Watsonville Canning plant, with about 3,000 supporters participating. Several days later, on October 15, about 400 strikers met to elect their own Strike Committee that would function independently of either the IBT or the TDU. Regarding the creation of this group, Gloria Betancourt, one of the rank-and-file union members who was elected to the committee, said, "We didn't trust the union officials anymore. We felt as workers we had to form our own Strike Committee". This strike committee, composed of workers from both plants, handled the day-to-day operations of the strike, which included, among other things, 24-hour picketing and food distribution. The same month that the strike committee was formed, Watsonville Canning presented their final proposal to Local 912. The company offered a base hourly pay of $5.05, as well as a preference for the replacement workers over the striking workers. On October 28, 1985, union members voted 800–1 to reject this offer. On November 3, the strike committee called for another rally, which was again attended by about 3,000 supporters. The following month, Local 912 held officer elections in which the more moderate incumbent members of the union were challenged by more militant candidates, including Betancourt, who was the first Mexican women to run for president in the local's history. While several members of this slate were elected, Betancourt lost her bid. King, meanwhile, was not reelected as an officer of the union. This trend of more militant union members winning Local 912 elections continued in next December's elections, though again Betancourt lost her bid for president. Shaw settles with strikers In February 1986, after several months on strike, the workers from Richard A. Shaw settled with that company, ending their strike on February 14. As part of the agreement, the workers accepted an hourly pay rate of $5.85, which, while higher than the $5.05 Shaw had proposed prior to the strike, was still significantly lower than the previous industry standard. The agreement affected about 900 union employees of Shaw, who ultimately took a 17 percent pay cut. Additionally, the contract contained language that would allow the company and union to renegotiate wages if Watsonville Canning settled with their employees for a lower rate. According to Chavelo Moreno, a member of the Strike Committee, the agreement set a wage ceiling for industry, which made it more difficult for the Watsonville Canning employees to negotiate a higher rate. In July 1986, union employees at another Watsonville plant accepted a pay rate of $5.85 per hour, cementing that as the new industry standard. However, the language of this master agreement that the IBT had with the industry included a "me-too" clause that would not allow Watsonville Canning to undercut this rate. According to Local 912 President Leon Ellis, the local had agreed to the $1.21 pay cut after Shaw disclosed their financial information to the union that proved that the company was losing money. The local had also requested that Watsonville Canning disclose their private financial information as part of contract negotiations, but Verduzco stated that the company would only do so if the union paid a $500,000 fine. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, he said, "I don’t trust those hoodlums; they want to run this company out of business. We are a privately held corporation. Our financial statements are our financial statements; they don’t belong to the people". Early 1986 On International Women's Day (March 8), another rally was held that drew about 4,000 supporters. Political activist Jesse Jackson gave a speech at this event, and labor activist groups from |
Lausanne-Sport players Swiss Promotion League players Swiss Super League players Swiss expatriate footballers Moroccan expatriate footballers Expatriate footballers in Spain Swiss expatriate sportspeople in Spain Moroccan | nationality. References 2001 births Living people Swiss footballers Moroccan footballers Swiss people of Moroccan descent Citizens of Morocco through descent Association football defenders CD Lugo players Girona FC players Étoile Carouge FC players FC Lausanne-Sport players Swiss Promotion League |
conference women's basketball championship tournament for Conference Carolinas. The tournament has been held annually since 1996. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner receives Conference Carolina'a automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Division II Basketball Championship. Results Championship records Former CC members are highlighted in pink. Chowan, Converse, Erksine, Francis | automatic bid to the NCAA Women's Division II Basketball Championship. Results Championship records Former CC members are highlighted in pink. Chowan, Converse, Erksine, Francis Marion, North Greenville, Southern Wesleyan, and UNC Pembroke have yet to reach the tournament final. Coker and St. Andrews never reached the tournament finals before departing the |
is named for John W. Bricker, an Ohio governor and U.S. senator who lived in Columbus. Attributes The John W. Bricker Federal Building has offices for U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown as well as for the Internal Revenue Service, the Social Security Administration, and the Departments of Housing & Urban Development and Agriculture. It also has a USPS post office and a cafeteria. The building's exterior features Correlation: Two White Line Diagonals and Two Arcs with a Sixteen-Foot Radius, a work by Robert Mangold, made of porcelain-enamel and steel. History The building was completed in 1977. Following the completion, the former federal office (the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse) was vacated. In the 1980s, U.S. Senator | Columbus, Ohio. The structure was designed in the Brutalist architecture style and was built in 1977 to house federal offices. It has seven stories, and is part of a facility, including an eight-story parking garage. The building is named for John W. Bricker, an Ohio governor and U.S. senator who lived in Columbus. Attributes The John W. Bricker Federal Building has offices for U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown as well as for the Internal Revenue Service, the Social Security Administration, and the Departments of Housing & Urban Development and Agriculture. It also has a USPS post office and a cafeteria. The building's exterior features Correlation: Two White Line Diagonals and |
basketball season. The head coach was Tom Young, then in his sixth season with the Scarlet Knights. The team played its home games in Louis Brown Athletic Center in Piscataway, New Jersey. The Scarlet Knights won the EAA Tournament to reach the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated Georgetown | coach was Tom Young, then in his sixth season with the Scarlet Knights. The team played its home games in Louis Brown Athletic Center in Piscataway, New Jersey. The Scarlet Knights won the EAA Tournament to reach the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated Georgetown in the second round to reach the Sweet Sixteen. Rutgers would lose to St. John's – a team they beat twice during the regular season – in the East Regional Semifinal |
was established in 1978, and by 1980 it had 32,369 members. In 1989, it affiliated to the new National Confederation of Trade Unions, and by 1990, its membership had grown to 37,465. However, by | National Confederation of Trade Unions, and by 1990, its membership had grown to 37,465. However, by 2019, it had only 12,068 members. References |
Guide commented: "The energy level throughout is taut yet explosive, with special kudos to 'Static in the Attic and 'Computer Minds'." Track listing All compositions by Leroy Jenkins. "Bird, Eddie, And Monk" - 9:42 "A Prayer" - 5:31 "Static In The Attic" - 8:15 "Computer Minds" - 4:44 "Looking For The Blues" - 6:57 "Chicago" - 13:40 "Jehovah Theme" - 3:05 Recorded March 15, 1992 at P.S. 122, New York City. Personnel Leroy Jenkins – violin Brandon Ross – guitar Eric Johnson | in New York City, and was released by Black Saint in 1993. On the album, Jenkins is joined by guitarist Brandon Ross, synthesizer player Eric Johnson, bassist Hill Greene, and drummer Reggie Nicholson. The album is subtitled "featuring Computer Minds." Reception The authors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings awarded the album 3.5 stars, stating: "The live session completely merits the exclamation mark. It's a fierce, urgent session, recorded in a New York public school, and sounds appropriately in contact with what's going on in the streets." A review in the MusicHound |
Drake University. Career Outside of politics, Rohl has worked as a hotel manager. He was elected to the South Dakota Senate in November 2020 and assumed office on January 12, 2021. He is also a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate State Affairs Committee. During his tenure in the Senate, Rohl has advocated for marijuana legalization in South | Rohl has worked as a hotel manager. He was elected to the South Dakota Senate in November 2020 and assumed office on January 12, 2021. He is also a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate State Affairs Committee. During his tenure in the Senate, Rohl has advocated for |
of Michigan as coordinator for the master's program in curriculum development and as an instructional consultant until, in 2005, being hired as an assistant professor of mathematics education in the School of Education. She was tenured in 2014 and added a joint appointment in the university's mathematics department in 2015. In 2016, she visited the University of Santiago, Chile as a Fulbright Scholar. Recognition Mesa is the 2022 winner of the Louise Hay Award for Contributions to Mathematics Education, "for her distinguished contributions to mathematics education research at the collegiate level, for her teaching and mentorship, and as an advocate for access to mathematics for women and members of underprivileged populations". References External links Home page 1963 births Living people 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Colombian mathematicians Colombian women scientists Mathematics educators University | she is affiliated with the Center for the Study of Higher and Post-secondary Education. Education and career Mesa earned bachelor's degrees in computer science and mathematics at the University of Los Andes (Colombia) in 1986 and 1987, respectively, and became a computer programmer for the Colombian government and in industry in Colombia. From 1988 to 1995 she worked as a researcher at the University of Los Andes, working in mathematics education and authoring textbooks on mathematics and statistics for applications including engineering and social sciences. In 1996 she began graduate study in mathematics education at the University of Georgia. She earned a master's degree there in 1996 and completed her Ph.D. in 2000. Her dissertation, Conceptions of Function Promoted by Seventh- and Eighth-Grade Textbooks from Eighteen Countries, was jointly advised by Jeremy Kilpatrick and Edward Arthur Azoff. After postdoctoral research at the University of Michigan, she stayed on at the University of Michigan as coordinator |
the tournament will earn the league's automatic bid to the 2022 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament has been held since 1997, the inaugural year of the Big 12 Conference. Among current league members, Texas has won the most championships with five. Among original members, Kansas State has never won the event. Oklahoma State won their third championship in 2019. Iowa State discontinued their program after the 2001 season without having won a title. Having joined in 2013, TCU won titles in 2014, 2016, and 2021, while West | conference champion of the Division I Big 12 Conference for college baseball. The winner of the tournament will earn the league's automatic bid to the 2022 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament has been held since 1997, the inaugural year of the Big 12 Conference. Among current league members, Texas has won the most championships with five. Among original members, Kansas State has never won the event. Oklahoma State won their third championship in 2019. Iowa State discontinued their program after the 2001 season without having won a title. Having joined in 2013, TCU |
ball boy in the late 1960s, but regularly featured for the club's second team. It wasn't until 1970 that he was able to wear the "famous" yellow jersey of KCC. By 1971, he was a starter in KCC's team. Initially deployed as right winger by coach Jaberi Bidandi Ssali, Nsereko shifted in his favoured central midfield role with time. As a player at KCC, he helped the club win the Uganda National League in 1976 and 1977, and the CECAFA Club Cup in 1978. In 1979, Nsereko was named player-coach at KCC following the departure of Bidandi Ssali. As a player-coach and head coach at KCC, Nsereko won the Uganda Super League in 1981, 1983, and 1985, and the Uganda Cup in 1979, 1980, 1982, and 1984. After a disappointing 1986 season, he resigned in 1987. International career Nsereko was a youth international before playing for the Uganda national team. He | to create football structures. Thanks to the revamp of youth football development, the Uganda national team won back-to-back CECAFA Cup titles in 1989 and 1990. Nsereko held his position at FUFA until his death in 1991. Death On 15 September 1991, Nsereko was brutally murdered outside his home at Wampewo flats in Kololo, Kampala. The unknown gunmen were never brought to justice. Nsereko left behind two widows and over seven children. Nsereko's death sent shock waves throughout Ugandan football and particularly KCC supporters. Honours Kampala City Council Uganda Super League: 1976, 1977, 1981, 1983, 1985 Uganda Cup: 1979, 1980, 1982, 1984; runner-up: 1983, 1985 CECAFA Club Cup: 1978 Uganda CECAFA Cup: 1973, 1976, 1977; runner-up: 1974 Individual African Cup of Nations Team of the Tournament: 1978 References Year of birth uncertain 1991 deaths |
to an elevation of 800 m. Usage The species is cultivated around villages in East Kalimantan; elsewhere the fruits are generally collected from forest trees. The sour flesh is used in sambals and in cooking fish, and the juice used in cordials. References torquenda Trees of Sumatra Trees of Malaya Trees of Borneo Fruits originating in Asia Plants | spots and patches. The flesh is pale yellow and edible. The seed has a smooth white endocarp . Distribution and habitat The species occurs in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo, where it is found in lowland and hill mixed dipterocarp forest up to an elevation of 800 m. Usage The species is cultivated around villages in East Kalimantan; elsewhere the fruits are generally collected from forest trees. The sour flesh is used in sambals and in cooking fish, |
Rivers area of New South Wales, where he says he found "inspiration from the flora and fauna surrounding him". He also made field recordings of birds, which are used throughout the album. Promotion Flume announced the album and its track listing on 2 February 2022, also releasing the song "Say Nothing" featuring May-a and its music video the same day. The video contains similar visuals to those Flume uploaded on his NFT website throughout 2021. Flume said the track is about "feelings of | by Australian electronic musician Flume, scheduled for release on 20 May 2022 through Future Classic. It will include collaborations with Oklou, May-a, Quiet Bison, Kučka, Laurel, Virgen María, Emma Louise, Caroline Polachek and Damon Albarn. The album was announced alongside the lead single "Say Nothing" featuring May-a. Background and recording After returning to Australia following the |
with the surname include: Dina Brawer, first Orthodox woman rabbi | a surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
by the Supreme Court. Under the Muslim code a husband may seek for a "perpetual divorce" from his wife or invoke li'an to end his marriage if his spouse commits adultery. The wife may seek the termination of her marriage with her husband by invoking faskh if certain conditions are met including if her spouse commits "unusual cruelty", suffers from insanity or affliction of an incurable disease, or for six consecutive months neglects family support for six consecutive months. Talaq divorce may be invoked "may be effected by the husband in a single repudiation of his wife" after totally abstaining from sexual relations with his spouse. While polygamy is allowed under the code, a Muslim man could only marry a second wife with permission of a sharia court and could still be charged with bigamy satisfying this prerequisite. Early marriage Early marriage, often referred to child marriage, was permissible under the Code of Muslim Personal Laws under certain conditions. This runs counter to the Family Code of the Philippines which sets the marriageable age regardless of sex to 18 years old. The Code of Muslim Personal Laws allowed for Filipino Muslim minors of at least 15 years to get married and a Sharia court was allowed to consent the marriage of a Muslim girl as young as 12 years old who has attained puberty. Child marriage in the context of Islamic tradition refers to a form of relationship involves at least one party is an adolescence who is usually at least 13 years of age rather than a child hence it is referred to as "early marriage". A Muslim girl who already had menstruation could already get married as per Islamic tradition. The provision regarding early marriage under the Code of Muslim Personal Laws was overridden by Republic Act No. 11596 or the Prohibition of | of a Christian woman and a Muslim man who were married under Islamic rites which was upheld in 2016 by the Supreme Court. Under the Muslim code a husband may seek for a "perpetual divorce" from his wife or invoke li'an to end his marriage if his spouse commits adultery. The wife may seek the termination of her marriage with her husband by invoking faskh if certain conditions are met including if her spouse commits "unusual cruelty", suffers from insanity or affliction of an incurable disease, or for six consecutive months neglects family support for six consecutive months. Talaq divorce may be invoked "may be effected by the husband in a single repudiation of his wife" after totally abstaining from sexual relations with his spouse. While polygamy is allowed under the code, a Muslim man could only marry a second wife with permission of a sharia court and could still be charged with bigamy satisfying this prerequisite. Early marriage Early marriage, often referred to child marriage, was permissible under the Code of Muslim Personal Laws under certain conditions. This runs counter to the Family Code of the Philippines which sets the marriageable age regardless of sex to 18 years old. The Code of Muslim Personal Laws allowed for Filipino Muslim minors of at least 15 years to get married and a Sharia court was allowed to consent the marriage of a Muslim girl as young as 12 years old who has attained puberty. Child marriage in the context of Islamic tradition refers to a form of relationship involves at least one party is an adolescence who is usually at least 13 years of age rather than a child hence |
Colombian composer Audrey Galy (born 1984), French rower See also Gali | Canadian independent record label Galy Galiano (born 1958), Colombian composer Audrey |
the village of Treblinka, which has sparked a controversy. References 1921 births 1942 deaths Polish people in rail transport Polish people executed by Nazi Germany Polish people who rescued Jews | has sparked a controversy. References 1921 births 1942 deaths Polish people in rail transport Polish people executed by Nazi Germany Polish people who rescued Jews during the |
so it retained all the mechanics of the Toyota including its 3-cylinder engine of 68 hp. Roumen Antonov Roumen Antonov was born in Sofia in 1944. He was an inventor who was involved in the field of medicine and automotive projects. He graduated with a degree in Nuclear Physics and studied engineering and design because of his interest in automobiles. His work included searching for a cure for atherosclerosis and developing innovations for transmissions. Antonov is noted for designing the direct shift gearbox. Development The Rumen was designed by Antonov with design concepts commencing in the early seventies including a small scale model, while hewas still living in communist Bulgaria. In 1998 Antonov opened workshop in Le Mesnil-Amelot, France and built a proto-type. The proto-type was displayed at the 2002 Paris | Roumen Antonov Roumen Antonov was born in Sofia in 1944. He was an inventor who was involved in the field of medicine and automotive projects. He graduated with a degree in Nuclear Physics and studied engineering and design because of his interest in automobiles. His work included searching for a cure for atherosclerosis and developing innovations for transmissions. Antonov is noted for designing the direct shift gearbox. Development The Rumen was designed by Antonov with design concepts commencing in the early seventies including a small scale model, while hewas still living in communist Bulgaria. In 1998 Antonov opened workshop in Le Mesnil-Amelot, France and built a proto-type. The proto-type was displayed at the 2002 Paris Motor Show and at the 2005 Frankfurt Motor Show. The Rumen was targeted, according to Antonov, at wealthy women in the US and UK market. Antonov also choose to make the car |
the police assume that they were the Moïse's killers, but deny that they had the intention of killing him, or that the violence against Moïse was motivated by racism or xenophobia. Reactions The Congolese community in Brazil released a statement to the press. On social media, there were several mentions of Moïse's death. The hashtags "#JustiçaParMoise" and "#JustiçaParaMoiseMugenyi" were used on Twitter. Brazilian politicians and celebrities also expressed outrage and disgust on their social media accounts. Both Rio de Janeiro Governor Claudio Castro and Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes have made statements on Twitter. Eduardo Paes said that Kabamgabe's murder was "unacceptable and outrageous" and that those responsible will be punished. In another tweet, Paes is shown together with Kabamgabe's family. In a joint statement, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), International Organization for Migration (IOM), and PARES Caritas RJ stated that ""are following the case, hoping that the crime will be clarified. At this moment, the organizations express their sincere condolences and solidarity to Moïse's family and to the Congolese community residing in Brazil." The Brazilian chapter of Amnesty International published a statement repudiating the violence against Kabamgabe, stating that the murder was "a blatant and unacceptable case of violation of the human right to life and human dignity". Human Rights Watch said that the murder was "deplorable", and expressed solidarity with Kabamgabe's family and the Congolese community in Brazil. The Black Coalition for Rights repudiated the assassination of Kabamgabe, and affirmed that violence against Afro-Brazilians is common. The coalition also said that they would be helping organizing the protests against Kabamgabe's murder. The embassy of the Democratic Republic of Congo denounced the death of Kabagambe and demanded answer from Brazilian authorities. The diplomatic representation also stated that there are four other cases of Congolese murdered in the country still waiting for the results of police investigations. The Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (known as Itamaraty), in response, said "Itamaraty expresses its indignation over the brutal murder and hopes those responsible are brought to justice as soon as possible." In the public statement, Itamaraty also mentioned the process of obtaining refugee status in Brazil. The Brazilian ambassador in Kinshasa was summoned by the Democratic Republic of Congo Foreign Affairs Minister Christophe Lutundula. The kiosks will become a memorial to Congolese culture, and one of the establishments was given to Moïse's family. Disinformation On 31 January 2022, a Twitter account that is supposedly connected to Anonymous released the name of a person who was thought to be the current owner of the kiosk. The claim was shown to be false by journalist Giselle Aquino, and her findings were published by journalist Diego Sangermano, both working for SBT. Protests On 29 January 2022, friends and family of Moïse Mugenyi Kabagambe protested near the kiosk and condemned the crime. In the early morning of February 3rd, a demonstration with 50 people was registered near the Tropicália kiosk. Protests happened on February 5th in several cities in Brazil, including Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Salvador, Brasília, São Luís, Porto Alegre, e Belo Horizonte, Recife, Cuiabá, Curitiba, and Palmas. Outside of the country, there are protests scheduled to happen in New York City and London. Deutsche Welle reported that there was a demonstration near the Brazilian embassy in Berlin. The purpose of the protests, besides calling for justice for Moïse, was to denounce racism, xenophobia and police brutality against Black people in the country. There was also calls for the impeachment of Jair Bolsonaro. Incidents In Rio de Janeiro, Brazilian journalist Manoel Soares reported that he was verbally and physically attacked by white people. In Curitiba, there was some confusion between protesters and religious people. The protesters were in the downtown district of the city, near the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary of the Black Men of Saint Benedict, where the priest Luiz Haas was leading a mass. The priest and the protesters argued, and the protesters invaded the church and protested there for a few minutes. No damages were done to the church or the people inside it. The videos of the invasion were widely shared on social media. The Roman Catholic | death threats since the murder came to light. The three individuals arrested by the police assume that they were the Moïse's killers, but deny that they had the intention of killing him, or that the violence against Moïse was motivated by racism or xenophobia. Reactions The Congolese community in Brazil released a statement to the press. On social media, there were several mentions of Moïse's death. The hashtags "#JustiçaParMoise" and "#JustiçaParaMoiseMugenyi" were used on Twitter. Brazilian politicians and celebrities also expressed outrage and disgust on their social media accounts. Both Rio de Janeiro Governor Claudio Castro and Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes have made statements on Twitter. Eduardo Paes said that Kabamgabe's murder was "unacceptable and outrageous" and that those responsible will be punished. In another tweet, Paes is shown together with Kabamgabe's family. In a joint statement, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), International Organization for Migration (IOM), and PARES Caritas RJ stated that ""are following the case, hoping that the crime will be clarified. At this moment, the organizations express their sincere condolences and solidarity to Moïse's family and to the Congolese community residing in Brazil." The Brazilian chapter of Amnesty International published a statement repudiating the violence against Kabamgabe, stating that the murder was "a blatant and unacceptable case of violation of the human right to life and human dignity". Human Rights Watch said that the murder was "deplorable", and expressed solidarity with Kabamgabe's family and the Congolese community in Brazil. The Black Coalition for Rights repudiated the assassination of Kabamgabe, and affirmed that violence against Afro-Brazilians is common. The coalition also said that they would be helping organizing the protests against Kabamgabe's murder. The embassy of the Democratic Republic of Congo denounced the death of Kabagambe and demanded answer from Brazilian authorities. The diplomatic representation also stated that there are four other cases of Congolese murdered in the country still waiting for the results of police investigations. The Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (known as Itamaraty), in response, said "Itamaraty expresses its indignation over the brutal murder and hopes those responsible are brought to justice as soon as possible." In the public statement, Itamaraty also mentioned the process of obtaining refugee status in Brazil. The Brazilian ambassador in Kinshasa was summoned by the Democratic Republic of Congo Foreign Affairs Minister Christophe Lutundula. The kiosks will become a memorial to Congolese culture, and one of the establishments was given to Moïse's family. Disinformation On 31 January 2022, a Twitter account that is supposedly connected to Anonymous released the name of a person who was thought to be the current owner of the kiosk. The claim was shown to be false by journalist Giselle Aquino, and her findings were published by journalist Diego Sangermano, both working for SBT. Protests On 29 January 2022, friends and family of Moïse Mugenyi Kabagambe protested near the kiosk and condemned the crime. In the early morning of February 3rd, a demonstration with 50 people was registered near the Tropicália kiosk. Protests happened on February 5th in several cities in Brazil, including Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Salvador, Brasília, São Luís, Porto Alegre, e Belo Horizonte, Recife, Cuiabá, Curitiba, and Palmas. Outside of the country, there are protests scheduled to happen in New York City and London. Deutsche Welle reported that there was a demonstration near the Brazilian embassy in Berlin. The purpose of the protests, besides calling for justice for Moïse, was to denounce racism, xenophobia and police brutality against Black people in the country. There was also calls for the impeachment of Jair Bolsonaro. Incidents In Rio de Janeiro, Brazilian journalist Manoel Soares reported that he was verbally and physically attacked by white people. In Curitiba, there was some |
Priestley's Quest is a 1926 detective novel by John Rhode, the pen name of the British writer Cecil Street. It was the second appearance of the armchair detective Lancelot Priestley, who featured in a long-running series of novels during the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. It has been described as the first major detective novel by the author. In its relationship between Priestley and | Lancelot Priestley, who featured in a long-running series of novels during the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. It has been described as the first major detective novel by the author. In its relationship between Priestley and his secretary and future son-in-law Harold Merefield is shown the influence of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes and Watson. Similarly, Inspector Hanslet of Scotland Yard fulfils a similar role |
below is drawn from U.S. Census Bureau reports. For the 1990 Census and earlier, the primary resource is the 2005 Working Paper number POP-WP076. Post-1990 data, as well as data for territories, is drawn from the respective year's Census. Some locales may have pre-existed their first appearance in the U.S. Census, but such values are not included here, unless otherwise noted. Total population counts for the Censuses of 1790 through 1860 include both free and enslaved persons. Native Americans were not identified in the Census of 1790 through 1840 and only sporadically from 1850 until 1890 if they lived outside of Indian Territory or off reservations. Beginning with the 1900 census, Native | data for territories, is drawn from the respective year's Census. Some locales may have pre-existed their first appearance in the U.S. Census, but such values are not included here, unless otherwise noted. Total population counts for the Censuses of 1790 through 1860 include both free and enslaved persons. Native Americans were not identified in the Census of 1790 through 1840 and only sporadically from 1850 until 1890 if they lived outside of Indian Territory or off reservations. Beginning with the 1900 census, Native Americans were fully enumerated along with the general population. Shaded areas of the tables indicate census years when a territory or the part of another state had not yet been admitted as a new |
out by Eensalu in character as Mõmmi at an event dedicated to the tenth anniversary of the kindergarten. Another popular ETV children's series, Vandersellid, aired from 1983 until 1983, in which Eensalu played the role of Ivo opposite actors Paul Poom and Guido Kangur. From 1984 until 1987, he appeared as Sass Suhkur in the Virve Koppel directed ETV children's series Pailapsiin opposite Tallinn Conservatory classmate and fellow Mõmmi ja aabits actor Tõnu Saar. In 1980, Eensalu had a prominent role in the Elvi Koppel directed children's television film Kardemoni linna rahvas ja röövlid, based on the 1955 book When the Robbers Came to Cardamom Town by Norwegian writer Thorbjørn Egner. In 1982, Eensalu appeared in the ETV television musical comedy film Teisikud, directed by Leo Karpin. Other television roles include the 1987 four-part Olav Neuland directed ETV television film Näkimadalad, the 1997 TV3 television series Waba Riik , and the 2015 Andres Puustusmaa directed ETV drama series Mustad lesed. In 2011, he had a recurring role as the character Manfred Aavakivi in the Raivo Maripuu directed Kanal 2 crime series Kelgukoerad. In 2018, he appeared as the character Sass Tabi in two episodes of the TV3 comedy-crime series Kättemaksukontor. Eensalu has also directed a number of teleplays for the Estonian Drama Theatre that aired on ETV, beginning with a 1983 production of Simo "Aapeli" Puupponen's The Whole City of Vinski. Other teleplays directed by Eensalu include works by Evgeny Schwartz, Ekaterina Borisova, Janno Põldma, Arthur Omre, Astrid Lindgren, and Ene-Maris Tali. Film Eensalu made his feature film screen debut in the role of Vikerkaar in the 1974 Virve Aruoja and Jaan Tooming directed drama Värvilised unenäod. The following year, he had a more substantial role as Sikk in the Mikk Mikiver directed Tallinnfilm historical drama Indrek, based on the second volume of A. H. Tammsaare's pentalogy Tõde ja õigus. During the 1980s, he established himself as a character actor. In 1982, he appeared in the Peeter Simm directed Tallinnfilm adventure film Arabella, mereröövli tütar, based on the story of the same name by children's writer Aino Pervik. In 1984, he appeared as a village idiot in the Olav Neuland directed historical adventure film Hundiseaduse aegu. In 1992, he appeared in the Lembit Ulfsak directed comedy-family film Lammas all paremas nurgas, and the following year appeared as Ivo in the Kaljo Kiisk directed Tallinnfilm drama Suflöör, the Marek Piestrak directed Estonian-Polish-Russian historical supernatural thriller Saatana pisar, and in the Pekka Karjalainen directed Finnish-Estonian comedy Hysteria. In 1994, he played the role of a Siberian guard in | of Mõmmi in the Eesti Televisioon (ETV) children's educational series Mõmmi ja aabits, based on writer Heljo Mänd's 1971 short story Karu aabits. The series aired on 18 March 1973 and became extremely popular and ran, with breaks, until 1978. A sequel series, Mõmmi ja aabits. 20 aastat hiljem, was created in 1998 and ran until 1999, in which Eensalu played the role of Father Bear Madis. In 2011, 2017, 2019, and 2022, Eensalu appeared in and directed stage productions derived from Mõmmi ja aabits at several venues throughout Estonia. In 1998, the kindergarten in the village of Imavere in Järva County was renamed Mõmmi Kindergarten in honour of the series; in 2008, the corresponding order was read out by Eensalu in character as Mõmmi at an event dedicated to the tenth anniversary of the kindergarten. Another popular ETV children's series, Vandersellid, aired from 1983 until 1983, in which Eensalu played the role of Ivo opposite actors Paul Poom and Guido Kangur. From 1984 until 1987, he appeared as Sass Suhkur in the Virve Koppel directed ETV children's series Pailapsiin opposite Tallinn Conservatory classmate and fellow Mõmmi ja aabits actor Tõnu Saar. In 1980, Eensalu had a prominent role in the Elvi Koppel directed children's television film Kardemoni linna rahvas ja röövlid, based on the 1955 book When the Robbers Came to Cardamom Town by Norwegian writer Thorbjørn Egner. In 1982, Eensalu appeared in the ETV television musical comedy film Teisikud, directed by Leo Karpin. Other television roles include the 1987 four-part Olav Neuland directed ETV television film Näkimadalad, the 1997 TV3 television series Waba Riik , and the 2015 Andres Puustusmaa directed ETV drama series Mustad lesed. In 2011, he had a recurring role as the character Manfred Aavakivi in the Raivo Maripuu directed Kanal 2 crime series Kelgukoerad. In 2018, he appeared as the character Sass Tabi in two episodes of the TV3 comedy-crime series Kättemaksukontor. Eensalu has also directed a number of teleplays for the Estonian Drama Theatre that aired on |
midfielder or winger for Jomo Cosmos. Career As a youth player, Mngadi joined the Qatari Aspire Academy. He started his career with Belgian side Eupen. In 2014, Mngadi was sent on loan to Kaizer Chiefs in the South African top flight. In 2019, he signed for | in the South African top flight. In 2019, he signed for South African second tier club Jomo Cosmos, where he made 6 league appearances and scored 0 goals. On 20 November 2019, Mngadi debuted for Jomo Cosmos during a 1-0 win over Royal Eagles. References External links South African expatriate sportspeople in Belgium Living people Association football midfielders 1994 births Kaizer Chiefs F.C. players K.A.S. Eupen players Jomo Cosmos F.C. players Belgian First Division B |
In its 2002 National Register nomination it was deemed significant as "an excellent example" of a Pratt truss bridge, which in the past was common in Kansas. But it also "clearly illustrates the uncommon adaptation of a standard railroad truss bridge design for vehicular traffic," and as the road had only light traffic it appeared to have high potential for preservation, as it would not likely require modification or replacement. The bridge was in "fair" | design for vehicular traffic," and as the road had only light traffic it appeared to have high potential for preservation, as it would not likely require modification or replacement. The bridge was in "fair" condition in 2010. It is located on Southeast Pine St. (also known as 5th St.), south of its intersection with E. Emporia St. (also known as E. 309th Street) within the city of Melvern, in |
and Sciences in 2000 and to the National Academy of Sciences in 2014. References External links Faculty page Living people American molecular biologists Evolutionary biologists Alumni of Clare College, Cambridge Harvard Medical School alumni Harvard University faculty University | Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor at Harvard University. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2000 and to the National Academy of |
as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1976 NCAA Division I football season. In their sixth year under head coach Bob Thalman, the team | as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1976 NCAA Division I football season. In their sixth year under head coach Bob Thalman, the team compiled an overall record of 5–5 |
"one city with two municipalities" model was the only viable solution to the situation in Mitrovica. Although the decentralization plan was supported by some in the Serb community, it was not endorsed by the Serbian government and did not lead to a breakthrough in Priština's relations with the predominantly Serb municipalities in Kosovo's north. The plan was also opposed by the Kosovo Albanian Vetëvendosje party, which argued that it would lead to the "ethnic division" of Kosovo. During this period, Vetëvendosje used the slogan, "Decentralization Means Partition - Partition Means War." In addition to his main responsibilities, Ferati was appointed to a ministerial committee overseeing the privatization of Post and Telecommunications of Kosovo in late 2008. In 2010, he represented the Kosovo government in signing cross-border co-operation treaties with Albania and the Republic of Macedonia (now North Macedonia). The LDK withdrew from Kosovo's coalition government in October 2010, bringing Ferati's ministerial tenure to an end. Assembly member Ferati appeared on the LDK's coalition electoral list in the 2010 Kosovan parliamentary election, which was held under open list proportional representation. He finished in twentieth place among the coalition's candidates and was elected when the list won twenty-seven seats. The PDK won the election, and the LDK served in opposition in the following term. Ferati served on the assembly committee that oversaw local government issues. He rejected the notion that the status of Kosovo could be settled by partition in May 2011, describing the suggestion as "primitive and dangerous." He later expressed skepticism about the government's plan to open an administrative office in the north of Kosovo, saying that existing conditions could not guarantee its success and that a lack of co-operation from Serbs would simply strengthen the community's parallel institutions. Ferati often spoke for the LDK on the negotiations that led to the 2013 Brussels Agreement, which normalized some aspects of the relationship between Belgrade and Pristina without addressing the status of Kosovo. After the agreement was signed, Serbs in the north of Kosovo generally began engaging with the Pristina authorities again; Ferati spoke favourably of the creation of the Community of Serb Municipalities envisioned by the agreement. Within the local government committee, he helped design amendments to ensure the Serb association would function in conformity with Kosovo's law on local administration and to register the association as a non-governmental organization. (The amendments were not voted on due | was enacting a policy of decentralization, and much of his attention was devoted to the re-integration of Kosovo's Serb community into the political institutions of the Pristina government. Shortly before Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in February 2008, he made a ministerial visit to Babin Most in Obilić to meet with Serb returnees who indicated their willingness to remain in an independent state. He pledged that his government would ensure the safety of Serb returnees to Kosovo. Ferati also supported the efforts of displaced Albanians to return to their homes into the predominantly Serb northern part of Mitrovica. Following Kosovo's declaration of independence, the Serbian government held its own parallel local elections in Kosovo in May 2008. Ferati indicated that Kosovo's government would not recognize the results or co-operate with the elected officials. He was quoted as saying, "Serbia will never establish its institutions in Kosovo; Serbian laws will not be implemented in Kosovo. We are offering an opportunity for everyone to be equal, for everyone to perceive the state and its institutions as something that belongs to all of you, to all Kosovans." Kosovo's decentralization initiative began in June 2008, with Ferati overseeing the creation of the municipalities of Junik, Elez Han, and Mamusha (the latter being the only municipality in Kosovo with a Turkish majority). He subsequently oversaw the creation of a number of predominantly Serb municipalities, including Klokot, Gračanica, Ranilug, and Parteš; he also worked toward the creation of a North Mitrovica municipality. Ferati indicated that the end goal was for Kosovo to have thirty-eight municipalities, of which twenty-seven would be predominantly Albanian, ten predominantly Serb, and one with a Turkish majority. In August 2009, he said that the Serb municipalities would have significant autonomy and would provide Serbs with a "state within the state of Kosovo." Ferati urged Serbs to participate in the 2009 Kosovan local elections. After the vote, he welcomed the election of Serb mayors who pledged to work within Kosovo's institutions. In June 2010, he described a high Serb turnout in the election to establish the new Parteš municipality as encouraging. In a 2010 interview, Ferati said that a "one city with two municipalities" model was the only viable solution to the situation in Mitrovica. Although the decentralization plan was supported by some in the Serb community, it was not endorsed by the Serbian government and did not lead to a breakthrough in Priština's relations with the predominantly Serb municipalities in Kosovo's north. The plan was also opposed by the Kosovo Albanian Vetëvendosje party, which argued that it would lead to the "ethnic division" of Kosovo. During this period, Vetëvendosje used the slogan, "Decentralization Means Partition - Partition Means War." In addition to his main responsibilities, Ferati was appointed to a ministerial committee overseeing the privatization of Post and Telecommunications of Kosovo in late 2008. In 2010, he represented the Kosovo government in signing cross-border co-operation treaties with Albania and the Republic of Macedonia (now North Macedonia). The LDK withdrew from Kosovo's coalition government in October 2010, bringing Ferati's ministerial tenure to an end. Assembly member Ferati appeared on the LDK's coalition electoral list in the 2010 Kosovan parliamentary election, which was held |
the text. As the text was read by the officiant and the scroll unrolled over the pulpit (ambo), the images would appear right-side up to the congregation. The form was peculiar to southern Italy, mainly the area around Benevento and Montecassino, and the surviving examples date from between the 10th and 13th centuries. The Exultet roll takes its name from the opening words of the chant in Latin: Exultet iam angelica turba coelorum ('Let the angelic host of heaven exult'). These words were sung by the deacon during the blessing and | heaven exult'). These words were sung by the deacon during the blessing and lighting of the Paschal candle at the Midnight Mass. The chant included prayers, canticles and lections. Although based on the Pontifical liturgy, the form of the ceremony and the Exultet as practised in southern Italy is attributed to Archbishop Landulf I of Benevento (). It spread throughout southern Italy largely through the influence of the abbey of Montecassino. Outside of their one annual liturgical function, Exultet rolls were objects of display. They featured initials decorated |
1978 Boltz's work was included in a show at MoMA PS1 entitled Overview: An Exhibition in Two Parts by the A.I.R. Gallery. She died in 2017. Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster Some Living American Women Artists by Mary Beth Edelson. Boltz's work is in the collection of the Smithsonian American | work was included in a show at MoMA PS1 entitled Overview: An Exhibition in Two Parts by the A.I.R. Gallery. She died in 2017. Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster Some Living American Women Artists by Mary Beth Edelson. Boltz's work is in the collection of the Smithsonian American |
of Nature Malaysia", also known as SAM) is a Malaysian NGO established in 1977 to fight for causes related to the Malaysian environment. SAM joined | dams, agriculture, indigenous rights and tourism. Its current President is Meenakshi Raman. It is based in Penang and Sarawak. See Also FoEI Third World Network |
in the Best Fish and Chips category of Willamette Week's annual "Best of Portland" readers' poll in 2017. Kara Stokes included the fish and chips window in Eater Portland's 2018 list of "13 Hidden Spots to Eat and Drink in Portland", in which she recommended the two-piece cod lunch special and described PFM as one of the city's best fish markets. The website's Brooke Jackson-Glidden included PFM in a 2020 list of "Where to Find Knockout Fish and Chips in Portland", in which she said the business "has some of the best selection around". Eater Portland's Jenni Moore included PFM in a 2021 list of "12 Stellar Portland Seafood Restaurants", and Nathan Williams recommended the shop in a 2022 overview of eateries in Woodstock. Kelly Clarke included PFM in Portland Monthly's 2019 overview of the city's best seafood markets. Jamie Hale included PFM in The Oregonian's 2021 list of the "12 best fish and chip spots in Portland". Hale recommended the halibut and wrote, "The Portland Fish Market is the definition of solid fish and chips: high quality, | of the shop, serving a variety of fried seafood. The window operates from Wednesday to Sunday, as of 2016. Fried fish baskets come with cod, lingcod, halibut, oyster, rockfish, salmon, or shrimp. The business uses a house-made tartar sauce. Drink options include bottles of Topo Chico, canned beer, or wine. History Agnes and Ben Berkowitz and Mike and Brandi Shirley opened PFM in 2014, in a space which previously housed a RadioShack outlet. The fish and chips window opened in 2016. PFM has been described as the city's first "boat-to-table" fish and chips shop. The business offered smoked and fresh fish available for delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reception In 2016, Matthew Korfhage of Willamette Week said the rockfish "was some of the best fried fish I've had in town—a layer cake of fatty feeling with crisp and buttery breading around equally buttery fish. It evokes |
southwestern branch of Oghuz languages. The language first appears during the 15th-century in Azerbaijan, eastern Anatolia, and Iran. It went through more development under the Turkic dynasties of the Aq Qoyunlu (1378–1503) and the Qara Qoyunlu (1374–1468), and particularly in Safavid Iran (1501–1736), whose ruling dynasty stemmed from Azerbaijan. Under them, Ajem-Turkic, alongside Persian, was used at the court and in the military, and was a lingua franca from northern to southern Iran. Since its appearance, Ajem-Turkic was heavily impacted by Persian, especially in its syntax. The Persian design of merging clauses which Ajem-Turkic had inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish was strengthened due to its continuous contact with Persian. Sources for the study of Ajemi-Turkic include the prose texts | Turc Agemi, which was used in a grammar book composed by the French writer Capuchin Raphaël du Mans (died 1696) in 1684. Local texts simply called the language türkī. Ajem-Turkic is descended from Old Anatolian Turkish, and is part of the southwestern branch of Oghuz languages. The language first appears during the 15th-century in Azerbaijan, eastern Anatolia, and Iran. It went through more development under the Turkic dynasties of the Aq Qoyunlu (1378–1503) and the Qara Qoyunlu (1374–1468), and particularly in Safavid Iran (1501–1736), whose ruling dynasty stemmed from Azerbaijan. Under them, Ajem-Turkic, alongside Persian, was used at the court and in the military, and was a lingua franca from northern |
the Senate from 1974 to 1982. Abu Odeh died in Amman on 2 February 2022, at the age of 88. References 1933 births 2022 deaths Culture ministers of Jordan Members of the Senate of Jordan | and served in the Senate from 1974 to 1982. Abu Odeh died in Amman on 2 February 2022, at the age of 88. References 1933 births 2022 deaths Culture ministers of Jordan Members of the |
Biography Bisbee graduated from Columbia University in 1990. After graduating from college, he worked as a songwriter, composer, and music producer. Bisbee has composed scores for movies, including the 2000 film Wildflowers and signed a publishing deal with Nettwerk in 2008. He also co-wrote the script and composed the score for movies Don't Go in the Woods, Mall, and produced The New Tenants, which won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in 2010. Bisbee is a founding partner of Park Pictures Features, where he produced, and brought 13 films to premiere at the | worked as a songwriter, composer, and music producer. Bisbee has composed scores for movies, including the 2000 film Wildflowers and signed a publishing deal with Nettwerk in 2008. He also co-wrote the script and composed the score for movies Don't Go in the Woods, Mall, and produced The New Tenants, which won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in 2010. Bisbee is a founding partner of Park Pictures Features, where he produced, and brought 13 films to premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, including the Alfred P. Sloan Prize-winning Robot & Frank and |
to Falcontoxodon aff. aguilerai and Falcontoxodon sp. In 2021, an analysis of the San Gregorio Formation by Carrillo-Briceño et al uncovered thirty-three additional remains, mostly teeth, that were assigned to the genus. The name of the genus, Falcontoxodon, refers to its relative, Toxodon, and to the Venezuelan state of Falcón in Northern Venezuela, where the holotype remains have been found. The species' name, aguillerai, honours the Venezuelan paleontologist Orangel Aguilera. Falcontoxodon was a medium-sized Toxodontinae, estimated to have weighted around 800 kg, roughly half the weight of Toxodon. It had a pear-shaped, 55 cm long skull in frontal view, with an elongated nasal. The third upper incisor was absent and the canine was reduced. The lower molars were hypsodont, and the second lower incisor was developed like a tusk. Phylogeny The 2018 study that described Falcontoxodon recovers it, along with Mixotoxodon, Gyrinodon and Piauhytherium, on the same monophyletic clade within Toxodontinae. Below is a parsimony tree establishing the relationships between the genera of Toxodontidae, as proposed by Carrillo et al, 2018. Palaeoecology Falcontoxodon lived in a tropical environment in an area of northern South America that was left relatively untouched by the Great American Interchange, the only non-native species of mammal known in the area | name, aguillerai, honours the Venezuelan paleontologist Orangel Aguilera. Falcontoxodon was a medium-sized Toxodontinae, estimated to have weighted around 800 kg, roughly half the weight of Toxodon. It had a pear-shaped, 55 cm long skull in frontal view, with an elongated nasal. The third upper incisor was absent and the canine was reduced. The lower molars were hypsodont, and the second lower incisor was developed like a tusk. Phylogeny The 2018 study that described Falcontoxodon recovers it, along with Mixotoxodon, Gyrinodon and Piauhytherium, on the same monophyletic clade within Toxodontinae. Below is a parsimony tree establishing the relationships between the genera of Toxodontidae, as proposed by Carrillo et al, 2018. Palaeoecology Falcontoxodon lived in a tropical environment in an area of northern South America that was left relatively untouched by the Great American Interchange, the only non-native species of mammal known in the area of the Falcón Basin being the procyonid Cyonasua and Chapalmalania, and, potentially, a Camelidae still unassigned to a specific genus. Its environment was continental, an |
a murder?". Synopsis Sir Noel Ellerby comes to visit Priestley to complain that his Lincolnshire manor house has been broken into, but nothing apparently taken. Soon afterwards Ellerby is found dead at his home in from of an empty safe. Priestley eventually discovers that his killing is linked to a racket concerning the distribution of contraband saccharine, but nearly loses his life in the process to the ruthless murderer. References Bibliography Evans, Curtis. Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery: Cecil John Charles Street, Freeman Wills Crofts, Alfred Walter Stewart and the British Detective Novel, 1920-1961. McFarland, 2014. Herbert, Rosemary. Whodunit?: A Who's Who in Crime & Mystery Writing. Oxford University Press, 2003. Reilly, John | with a review in the Evening Standard asking "could there possibly be a more ingenious method of committing a murder?". Synopsis Sir Noel Ellerby comes to visit Priestley to complain that his Lincolnshire manor house has been broken into, but nothing apparently taken. Soon afterwards Ellerby is found dead at his home in from of an empty safe. Priestley eventually discovers that his killing is linked to a racket concerning the distribution of contraband saccharine, but nearly loses |
"with a lighter touch than some of Young's songs on the album." Music journalist Andrew Grant Jackson stated that despite the tragedy that led to the song's inclusion on the album, "the euphoria [Whitten] and Young share on the harmonies is palpable." Although Tonight's the Night producer David Briggs felt that the material added to the original album recordings detracted from the mood of the album, Young biographer Jimmy McDonough disagreed, saying that "when gone-dead Danny Whitten's voice jumps out of the speakers singing 'Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown,' it just hits you in the gut that much harder." Pitchfork reviewer Mark Richardson stated that "Whitten’s death seems impossible when this song crackles with so much life. It’s both a celebration and a lament. Hearing their voices in unison on the chorus is a kind of prayer, two music lifers realizing in a moment the power of what they could do together." Music journalist David Downing called it "great rock 'n' roll," saying that Whitten singing it in this context gives the song added resonance. In 2006, Young released Live at the Fillmore East, which included most of the Young's electric set from the show which included the performance of "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown" that was on Tonight's the Night. Neil Young FAQ author Glen Boyd stated that it's "really cool to finally hear Whitten's "(Come On Baby Let's Go) Downtown" in its proper context. Spin called the song "a jaunty showcase number about scoring dope" and said of Whitten's performance in | stated that the performance "serves as a metaphor for the album's haunted, frightened emotional themes" and said that "musically, Whitten's guitar and voice complement, challenge and inspire Young." Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald stated that this version is "a fabulous country barnburner, which encapsulates Crazy Horse's loud-and-proud appeal." He also noted that it was a sensible song to include on the album since it deals with drug culture but "with a lighter touch than some of Young's songs on the album." Music journalist Andrew Grant Jackson stated that despite the tragedy that led to the song's inclusion on the album, "the euphoria [Whitten] and Young share on the harmonies is palpable." Although Tonight's the Night producer David Briggs felt that the material added to the original album recordings detracted from the mood of the album, Young biographer Jimmy McDonough disagreed, saying that "when gone-dead Danny Whitten's voice jumps out of the speakers singing 'Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown,' it just hits you in the gut that much harder." Pitchfork reviewer Mark Richardson stated that "Whitten’s death seems impossible when this song crackles with so much life. It’s both a celebration and a lament. Hearing their voices in unison on the chorus is a kind of prayer, two music lifers realizing in a moment the power of what they could do together." Music journalist David Downing called it "great rock 'n' roll," saying that Whitten singing it in this context gives the song added resonance. In 2006, Young released Live at the Fillmore East, which included most of the Young's electric set from the show which included the performance of "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown" that was on Tonight's the Night. Neil Young FAQ author Glen Boyd stated that it's "really cool to finally hear Whitten's "(Come On Baby Let's Go) Downtown" in its proper context. Spin called the song "a jaunty showcase number about scoring dope" and said of Whitten's performance in this context that it's "sorta chilling in retrospect." Young and Crazy Horse performed "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtime" live on their Rust Never Sleeps tour, with Young taking the lead vocals. Cover versions Phish guitarist Trey Anastasio played "Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown" at a live solo concert on February 15, 1999. Phish began playing it live in concert at a show on September 23, 2000 in Rosemont, Illinois, the same city where Anastasio has seen Young perform live a year earlier and stated that the show was one of the best experiences of his life. References Crazy Horse (band) songs Neil Young songs Songs written by Danny Whitten 1970 songs 1971 singles 1975 singles Song recordings produced by Bruce Botnick Song recordings produced by Jack Nitzsche Phish songs Songs written by Neil Young Reprise Records singles |
broadcast in English, while most Russian media will be broadcast in Russian. History Aqlvoy was originally announced at the IMS Media Day conference in 2020, saying that it would set to launch in spring of 2021. The channel then later launched on 22 March 2021, with most of its programming being brought from countries such as Russia and South Korea. On 26 April 2021, the channel premiered two original programmes, Bilimdon and Quvnoqvoy. Another original programme, Biliasanmi, would set to premiere two days later, on 28 April 2021. Original programming | while most Russian media will be broadcast in Russian. History Aqlvoy was originally announced at the IMS Media Day conference in 2020, saying that it would set to launch in spring of 2021. The channel then later launched on 22 March 2021, with most of its programming being brought from countries such as Russia and South Korea. On 26 April 2021, the channel premiered two original programmes, Bilimdon and Quvnoqvoy. Another original programme, Biliasanmi, would set to premiere two days later, on 28 April 2021. Original programming Bob va Eli Biliasanmi Bilimdon Quvnoqvoy Controversy In June 2021, the channel was criticized by many |
III was developed by Team 50, a group within Data West responsible for the original Rayxanber (1990) for FM Towns and Rayxanber II (1991) for the PC Engine CD-ROM². Kazuhide Nakamura reprised his role as designer and Naokazu Akita led its creation as producer. Yoshiyuki Washizu and Yukinori Taniguchi acted as co-programmers, while artist Takeharu Igarashi was responsible for the pixel art. The soundtrack was scored by Yasuhito Saito, who also composed for the previous entries in the Rayxanber trilogy, and worked on titles such as Layla and The 4th Unit series. The game was published in Japan by Data West on June 26, 1992 for the PC Engine Super CD-ROM². An English localization was slated to be published by Turbo Technologies in December 1992 and showcased at the 1992 Summer Consumer Electronics Show, but it never materialized. In a 2020 interview with Japanese gaming website DenFaminicoGamer, a Data West representative commented that there were no current plans for a digital re-release of the Rayxanber series through their official online store, but would consider it if there is demand. Reception Rayxanber III was anticipated by Japanese players, but received mixed reception from critics who reviewed it as an import title. Mega Funs Christian Schweitzer praised the game's graphics, sound and fun factor, but criticized aspects such as the "jerky" framerate, collision detection issues and high difficulty level, feeling that it did not came close to Gate of Thunder. Nevertheless, Schweitzer regarded it as one of the best games on the PC Engine. Video Games Julian Eggebrecht labeled it as a mediocre and superfluous title for shoot 'em up fans, citing the lack of frills with new ideas as its main shortcoming, while stating that it heavily stole from R-Type "without achieving its brilliance." Consoles Plus Douglas Alves and Doguy commended the visuals, animations, music and playability, but criticized its presentation, sound effects and low difficulty. Both reviewers ultimately found it to be a well-realized but easy shoot 'em up below other shooters for the PC Engine like Gate of Thunder and Seirei Senshi Spriggan. Joypads Alain Huyghues-Lacour and Jean-François Morisse compared it with Gate of Thunder, criticizing its stages for their short length and lack of variety, but gave positive remarks to the game's fast pacing and controls. Joysticks Jean-Marc Demoly wrote that "Rayxanber III is a very good shooting game, inferior all the same to Gate Of Thunder, which remains as reference in this field. DuoWorlds Victor Ireland regarded it as a letdown compared to Rayxanber II, noting the "look alike" stages, colors, limited parallax scrolling and lack of imagination. Retrospective coverage Retrospective commentaries for Rayxanber III has been more positive. Writing for his website Illusionware, Marco D'Andrea found it to be the more fun and accessible entry in the Rayxanber trilogy due to its revised gameplay and difficulty. However, D'Andrea felt that the concessions to appeal a wider audience "betrayed" the spirit of the earlier Rayxanber titles. IGN Italias Andrea Corritore identified the game as one of the most important shooting games on the PC Engine, alongside Gate of Thunder, Lords of Thunder and Ginga Fukei Densetsu Sapphire. Neil Salvemini of SHMUPS! (a classic network of GameSpy) praised the detailed visuals similar to Metal Black, sound and playability. Salvemini also expressed that "this entire game seems to be a little too Treasure-esque" due to its fast action. Nicolas Gilles of Obsolete Tears commended Data West for adressing most of the issues from Rayxanber II, giving positive remarks to the graphics, addition of a secondary attack and lowered difficulty level. David Borrachero and | and fun factor, but criticized aspects such as the "jerky" framerate, collision detection issues and high difficulty level, feeling that it did not came close to Gate of Thunder. Nevertheless, Schweitzer regarded it as one of the best games on the PC Engine. Video Games Julian Eggebrecht labeled it as a mediocre and superfluous title for shoot 'em up fans, citing the lack of frills with new ideas as its main shortcoming, while stating that it heavily stole from R-Type "without achieving its brilliance." Consoles Plus Douglas Alves and Doguy commended the visuals, animations, music and playability, but criticized its presentation, sound effects and low difficulty. Both reviewers ultimately found it to be a well-realized but easy shoot 'em up below other shooters for the PC Engine like Gate of Thunder and Seirei Senshi Spriggan. Joypads Alain Huyghues-Lacour and Jean-François Morisse compared it with Gate of Thunder, criticizing its stages for their short length and lack of variety, but gave positive remarks to the game's fast pacing and controls. Joysticks Jean-Marc Demoly wrote that "Rayxanber III is a very good shooting game, inferior all the same to Gate Of Thunder, which remains as reference in this field. DuoWorlds Victor Ireland regarded it as a letdown compared to Rayxanber II, noting the "look alike" stages, colors, limited parallax scrolling and lack of imagination. Retrospective coverage Retrospective commentaries for Rayxanber III has been more positive. Writing for his website Illusionware, Marco D'Andrea found it to be the more fun and accessible entry in the Rayxanber trilogy due to its revised gameplay and difficulty. However, D'Andrea felt that the concessions to appeal a wider audience "betrayed" the spirit of the earlier Rayxanber titles. IGN Italias Andrea Corritore identified the game as one of the most important shooting games on the PC Engine, alongside Gate of Thunder, Lords of Thunder and Ginga Fukei Densetsu Sapphire. Neil Salvemini of SHMUPS! (a classic network of GameSpy) praised the detailed visuals similar to Metal Black, sound and playability. Salvemini also expressed that "this entire game seems to be a little too Treasure-esque" due to its fast action. Nicolas Gilles of Obsolete Tears commended Data West for adressing most of the issues from Rayxanber II, giving positive remarks to the graphics, addition of a secondary attack and lowered difficulty level. David Borrachero and Antxiko of Spanish magazine RetroManiac regarded both Rayxanber III and its predecessor as two of the best games on the PC Engine platform, noting the need of memorizing stage patterns in a similar fashion to R-Type. They also commended both visuals and playability for being "exceptional", as well as the soundtrack for taking advantage |
January 2022), better known by the stage name of Tatiana Farnese, was an Italian actress. She died in Rome on 31 January 2022, at the age of 97. Filmography Schoolgirl Diary (1941) A Garibaldian in the Convent (1942) The Gorgon (1942) (1943) The | (1943) The Mad Marechiaro (1952) (1991) (1994) Your Whole Life Ahead of You (2008) Three Days Later (2013) References 1924 births 2022 deaths Italian film actresses Italian radio actors Italian stage actresses Italian television actresses Actresses |
culture, publishing recipes for the Sabbath in Die Dame, for example, or introducing a new fashionable style to conservative Jewish readers in Jüdisches Magazin. She used literary quotations in her texts. In a 1921 article, for example, she conveyed to her readers the connection between the perception of art and the perception of taste by quoting Guy de Maupassant. In another from 1924, she linked Ludwig Börne's letters from Paris with the enthusiasm of German women for Parisian fashion, which was current at the time. In 1925, she published The New Cookbook, which also dealt with Jewish cuisine. It contained recipes for dishes that are traditionally prepared, especially for Passover, such as matzah. In addition, she described some recipes of prominent Jewish women in Germany at the time, including Martha Liebermann and the fashion journalist Elsa Herzog. Julie Elias' books on cooking and kitchen practice, however, are not just collections of recipes reduced to practical action. Rather, she also included knowledge of cultural history without devaluing craftsmanship. In her books, she thought wittily about culinary arts, quoting from the works of eminent French and German gastrosophists such as Brillat-Savarin and Eugen von Vaerst. She wrote about the art of cooking: "For the rest, cooking is like any other artistic profession: only through practice does one attain proficiency, only through manual activity does one attain mastery. [...] Intelligence alone does not do it - a refined sensuality is necessary.“ In the introduction to the New Cookbook, she prefaced the motto Cooking - "the permitted voluptuousness of life" and in the second edition in 1927 (Cooking) she added the explanation of an old monk's saying. Nazi era After the Nazis came to power in Germany | Styl, the Jewish Magazine, founded in 1929, and the magazine Die Dame. In her articles, she combined fashion and cooking with Jewish culture, publishing recipes for the Sabbath in Die Dame, for example, or introducing a new fashionable style to conservative Jewish readers in Jüdisches Magazin. She used literary quotations in her texts. In a 1921 article, for example, she conveyed to her readers the connection between the perception of art and the perception of taste by quoting Guy de Maupassant. In another from 1924, she linked Ludwig Börne's letters from Paris with the enthusiasm of German women for Parisian fashion, which was current at the time. In 1925, she published The New Cookbook, which also dealt with Jewish cuisine. It contained recipes for dishes that are traditionally prepared, especially for Passover, such as matzah. In addition, she described some recipes of prominent Jewish women in Germany at the time, including Martha Liebermann and the fashion journalist Elsa Herzog. Julie Elias' books on cooking and kitchen practice, however, are not just collections of recipes reduced to practical action. Rather, she also included knowledge of cultural history without devaluing craftsmanship. In her books, she thought wittily about culinary arts, quoting from the works of eminent French and German gastrosophists such as Brillat-Savarin and Eugen von Vaerst. She wrote about the art of cooking: "For the rest, cooking is like any other artistic profession: only through practice does one attain proficiency, only through manual activity does one attain mastery. [...] Intelligence alone does not do it - a refined sensuality is necessary.“ In the introduction to the New Cookbook, she prefaced the motto Cooking - "the permitted voluptuousness of life" and in the second edition in 1927 (Cooking) she added the explanation of an old monk's saying. Nazi era After the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Elias was persecuted as a Jew. She travelled to Italy in 1934 and Switzerland in 1935. Together with her son Ludwig, who had practiced law in Berlin before 1933, she fled to Norway in 1938 with the support of the Norwegian Foreign Minister Halvdan Koht. While she was able to survive with the help of the |
Fazer brought the recipe to Finland from his trip to Vienna, Austria in 1904. Production of the candy started in 1910. Throughout the years, there have been several different kinds of packaging for Wiener nougat. The wrapper was originally silver-coloured, but in the 1970s it gained blue and yellow hues, and in the 2000s the candies were wrapped in a pale-coloured wrapper. Also the appearance of the candy boxes has varied. In 2014 Fazer replaced the cocoa | nougat by only including sugar, cocoa, cocoa mass and almond, whereas French nougat also includes egg white. Like other types of nougat candy in Finland, Wiener nougat is mostly sold at Christmas time. Fazer Wiener nougat Wiener nougat is one of the oldest classic candies of the Finnish confectionery company Fazer. Karl |
are mostly considered least concern by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Classification Iguanodectidae is in the order Characiformes, with three extant genera - Bryconops, Iguanodectes, and Piabucus. Said genera used to be classified in the family Characidae, but have since been reclassified in order to keep Characidae monophyletic. Species include: Bryconops is the most speciose genus, with 21 valid species. Iguanodectes is next-largest with 8, and Piabucus has the fewest at 3. Iguanodectes and Piabucus are largely considered to make up the subfamily Iguanodectinae, with Bryconops becoming its own separate clade, but this is a matter of debate. Several sources accept the subfamily Iguanodectinae as its own entity, but others consider it synonymous with Iguanodectidae or simply don't acknowledge it, uniting the genera therein. ITIS considers it synonymous with Characidae, which is a reflection of its older classification. Iguanodectinae, when first officially classified by Carl H. Eigenmann in 1909, was placed in the family Characidae, and only contained the genus Iguanodectes; by 1929, it had grown to include the genus Piabucus. Through the year 1977, this remained the case. In 2011, Iguanodectinae was found to be closely related to Bryconops, and the two clades were combined in Iguanodectidae. History The family Iguanodectidae was resurrected from Eigenmann's work in the year 2011 by Oliveira et al. to contain Iguanodectinae and Bryconops. Iguanodectinae itself was classified in 1909, and therefore Iguanodectidae is often considered to originate in the same year, despite the recent nature of the study. Etymology The family name | generally small, and are brightly colored or reflective, making them moderately-popular ornamental fish. They range from 3.1 cm to 15 cm SL (standard length). They are rather narrow in shape, somewhat resembling minnows; ichthyologist Carl H. Eigenmann compared them to smelt. Habitat Iguanodectids are found in South America, spread all across the northern half of the continent. Though they primarily inhabit freshwater, Iguanodectid fishes are known to tolerate brackish water as well. Habitat destruction, by way of land development and aquaculture, is the biggest threat to members of Iguanodectidae, though evaluated species are mostly considered least concern by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Classification Iguanodectidae is in the order Characiformes, with three extant genera - Bryconops, Iguanodectes, and Piabucus. Said genera used to be classified in the family Characidae, but have since been reclassified in order to keep Characidae monophyletic. Species include: Bryconops is the most speciose genus, with 21 valid species. Iguanodectes is next-largest with 8, and Piabucus has the fewest at 3. Iguanodectes and Piabucus are largely considered to make up the subfamily Iguanodectinae, with Bryconops becoming its own separate clade, but this is a matter of debate. Several sources accept the subfamily Iguanodectinae as its own entity, but others consider it synonymous with Iguanodectidae or simply don't acknowledge it, uniting the genera therein. ITIS considers it synonymous with Characidae, which is a reflection of its older classification. Iguanodectinae, when first officially classified by Carl H. Eigenmann in 1909, was placed in the family Characidae, and only contained the genus Iguanodectes; by 1929, it had grown to include |
Red Star F.C. in 1966, spending the following season with . In total, he played in 395 games and scored 88 goals. Cieca remained coach of VS Chartres until 1969, when he began managing . He ended his coaching career in 1981 with Red Star F.C. after the team was relegated to Division 4. He died on 27 January | 1953 to 1958, he played for RC Paris. He then played for Olympique Lyonnais from 1958 to 1960, where he scored 12 goals and played in the 1958–60 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. He played for FC Rouen from 1960 to 1963 before playing a season with Angers SCO. He ended his professional career with Red Star F.C. in 1966, spending the following season with . In total, he played in 395 games and scored |
tournament titles, and were the No. 4 seed in the Midwest region of the NCAA Tournament. The Tigers were upset by Xavier, 70–69, in the opening round and finished with an overall record of 24–10 (11–3 Big Eight). Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season | NCAA Tournament. The Tigers were upset by Xavier, 70–69, in the opening round and finished with an overall record of 24–10 (11–3 Big Eight). Roster Schedule and results |- !colspan=9 style=| Regular Season |
Barbadian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for the Barbados national team. He debuted internationally with the U20 team on 3 November 2018 in a match against Costa Rica in a 0–2 defeat during the 2018 CONCACAF U-20 Championship held in the | 2018 in a match against Costa Rica in a 0–2 defeat during the 2018 CONCACAF U-20 Championship held in the United States. Brathwaite made his senior debut on 5 September 2019 against non-FIFA member Saint Martin in |
until 24 hours before the team's first match. Al Ahly Manager: Pitso Mosimane Al Hilal Manager: Leonardo Jardim AS Pirae Manager: Naea Bennett Chelsea Manager: Thomas Tuchel | Al Ahly Manager: Pitso Mosimane Al Hilal Manager: Leonardo Jardim AS Pirae Manager: Naea Bennett Chelsea Manager: Thomas Tuchel Monterrey Manager: Javier Aguirre Palmeiras Manager: Abel Ferreira References External links Official 2021 FIFA Club World Cup |
cancer on 2 February 2022, at the age of 58. References 1964 births 2022 deaths Mayors of places in Île-de-France Members of the Senate (France) People from | from 2017 until his death. He died from cancer on 2 February 2022, at the age of |
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