sentence1 stringlengths 1 133k | sentence2 stringlengths 1 131k |
|---|---|
February 1849 — 25 January 1900) was an English first-class cricketer and British Army officer. The son of John Michell, he was born at York in February 1849. He was educated at Haileybury, where he excelled at athletics. After completing his education, Michell entered into the 67th Foot as a cornet by purchase in October 1867, with promotion to lieutenant following in November 1871, at which point he was serving with the King's Royal Rifle Corps. Michell played first-class cricket in 1875, making a single appearance for the Gentlemen of Marylebone Cricket | and was dismissed for a single run by Dick Penn. He was promoted to captain in July 1864, and was an Instructor of Musketry from 1876. Michell served in the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879, during which he was present at the Battle of Gingindlovu, and later served in the First Boer War of 1880–81. He retired from active service in December 1882, with a gratuity. He died at his Forcett Hall residence in North Yorkshire in January 1900. His brother, Edward, was also a first-class cricketer. References External links 1849 births 1900 deaths People from |
a FIP, renewable energy producers sell to the electricity market and receive a | investment in renewable energy. In a FIP, renewable energy producers sell to the electricity market and receive a payment (premium) in addition |
he was teammates with future NFL head coaches Sean McDermott and Mike Tomlin, who was also his roommate. Knight also played baseball as a junior and senior. As a junior, he batted .316 and stole 38 bases in 45 attempts despite not having played since his senior year in high school. Knight was selected in the 75th round of the 1993 Major League Baseball draft, but opted not to sign with the team and return to William & Mary. He hit for a .295 average as a senior. Professional career Due to his size, Knight was not considered an NFL prospect. He was heavily scouted by Canadian Football League league teams and signed with the Toronto Argonauts of the on April 11, | redshirt junior after completing 69.4 percent of his passes for 2,235 yards and 22 touchdowns. As a senior, Knight completed 125 of 177 passes for 2,055 yards, 22 touchdowns and four interceptions and was again named second team All-Yankee Conference. Knight finished his collegiate career with 5,705 passing yards, 46 touchdown passes and 6,408 yards of total offense. While at William & Mary, he was teammates with future NFL head coaches Sean McDermott and Mike Tomlin, who was also his roommate. Knight also played baseball as a junior and senior. As a junior, he batted .316 and stole 38 bases in 45 attempts despite not having played since his senior year in high school. Knight was selected in the 75th round of the 1993 Major League Baseball draft, but opted not to sign with the team and return to William & Mary. He hit for a .295 average as a senior. Professional career Due to his size, Knight was not considered an NFL prospect. He was heavily scouted by Canadian Football League league teams and signed with the Toronto Argonauts of the on April 11, 1995. He played in five games during the 1995 season, seeing limited action. Knight was released by Toronto during the 1996 season. Knight also played professional baseball in the San Diego Padres organization after being selected in |
Calship's 42nd Liberty ship completed. It took 41 days to complete, surpassing Calship's previous record of quickest Liberty ship built by 18 days; the previous record was held by the SS Joseph McKenna. The ship was scrapped in February 1959. References Citations Bibliography Liberty ships 1942 ships Ships | Yard Number 292 by the California Shipbuilding Corporation (Calship) in Los Angeles. The ship was launched on 30 June 1942 and was completed on 12 July 1942. The ship, named after the Spanish priest and missionary Junípero Serra y Ferrer, was Calship's 42nd Liberty ship completed. It took 41 days to complete, surpassing Calship's previous record of quickest Liberty ship built by 18 |
that elicits a lot of hand-clapping on the beat. Cover versions Dave Edmunds covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" for his 1972 album Rockpile, a version the Rolling Stone Album Guide called "successful." The New Seekers covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" on the US version of their 1972 album Circles and also released it as a single. Billboard said that "the Neil Young rhythm material is strong for the New Seekers loaded with Top 40 and MOR potential." The single reached #84 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #24 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart. Elvis Costello covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" live in 1972 as part of his duo Rusty with Allan Mayes, while still going by his given name of Declan MacManus. The Flying Burrito Brothers covered the song on their 1997 album California Jukebox. According to John Beland, label president Robert John Jones suggested the song as a possible cut for California Jukebox. As it turned out, Burrito Brothers' fiddler Gib Guilbeau had played the fiddle on the original Crazy Horse version and as a result he and Beland had long wanted to record the song. Guilbeau used the same fiddle on the Flying Burrito Brothers record as he did on the Crazy Horse version more than 25 years earlier. Beland stated that: Crazy Horse cut "Dance, Dance, Dance" and wanted a fiddle on it. So the first person they called was Gib because he was the guy to call for Cajun fiddle. Nobody could | reused the melody to "Dance, Dance, Dance" for his song "Love Is a Rose" that was famously covered by Linda Ronstadt. Young biographer Paul Williams called "Dance, Dance, Dance" a "classic" and said it is much better than "Love Is a Rose." Young performed "Dance, Dance, Dance" live in concert from 1969 through 1971, and then in 1983, 1987 and 1992. A live version from 1971 was released on Live at Massey Hall 1971 in 2007. Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine described this version as a "stomping hoedown." Music lecturer Ken Bielen similarly called this version a "hoedown sing-a-long performance that elicits a lot of hand-clapping on the beat. Cover versions Dave Edmunds covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" for his 1972 album Rockpile, a version the Rolling Stone Album Guide called "successful." The New Seekers covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" on the US version of their 1972 album Circles and also released it as a single. Billboard said that "the Neil Young rhythm material is strong for the New Seekers loaded with Top 40 and MOR potential." The single reached #84 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #24 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart. Elvis Costello covered "Dance, Dance, Dance" live in 1972 as part of his duo Rusty with Allan Mayes, while still going by his given name of Declan MacManus. The Flying Burrito Brothers covered the song on their 1997 album California Jukebox. According to John Beland, label president Robert John Jones suggested the |
30 guineas, though Coleridge was more hopeful of gaining favourable notice from reviewers than large profits. This first edition of the book contained 51 poems, mostly written since Coleridge had dropped out from Cambridge University at the end of 1794. The collection was bookshelved by two substantial formal poems, Monody on the Death of Chatterton and Religious Musings; of the intervening pieces about half were sonnets, while the remainder included "The Eolian Harp" and two other conversation poems, as Coleridge was later to call them. Four of the sonnets, all signed with the initials C. L., were attributed by Coleridge himself to his friend Charles Lamb, but the truth is more complex. All were amended by Coleridge, and one, Effusion XIV "To Siddons", was included as Coleridge's in later collections of his poems and is probably best described as a collaboration. A fifth sonnet, Effusion XV, was completed by Lamb, as Coleridge acknowledged. Within six months the book had sold out, and preparations began for a second edition with additional poems by both Coleridge and Lamb. In March 1797, when the printing was almost complete, Coleridge told Cottle that there would be a section of poems by another of his friends, Charles Lloyd, reassuring him that the increased costs of production would be offset by profits from the large number of copies, "more than a hundred", that Lloyd's family and friends would doubtless buy. This edition, retitled Poems, Second Edition, by S. T. Coleridge, to Which Are Now Added Poems by Charles Lamb, and Charles Lloyd, was therefore of an even more miscellaneous nature than the first. The first section, consisting of poems by Coleridge himself, omitted twenty poems from the first edition, including many of the more immature ones and all of the sonnets on political figures, but included twelve newer works. It began with a dedicatory poem to his brother, the Rev. George Coleridge, and, as before, concluded with the Religious Musings. This section comprised, Coleridge told Cottle, "my choicest fish, pick'd, gutted, and clean'd", the compound-epithets and other stylistic extravagances "pruned...with no unsparing hand". By contrast, the next two sections, by Lamb and Lloyd respectively, were in effect a Collected Works of the two young poets, occupying nearly a hundred pages. The final section, or Supplement, contains a few poems by Coleridge and his co-authors which he had, as he wrote, "reprieved from immediate oblivion". A newspaper advertisement dated 28 October 1797 announced the publication of the second edition. Coleridge almost immediately undercut his relations with his collaborators by publishing in the November 1797 number of the Monthly Magazine, under the pseudonym of Nehemiah Higginbottom, three sonnets satirising his own poems and those of Lamb and Lloyd. In consequence, when in 1798 Coleridge floated the idea of a third edition, to include The Ancient Mariner, Lloyd asked for his own poems to be withdrawn. Nothing came of this project in 1798, but by 1803 Coleridge was again planning a new edition, this time to consist entirely of his own poems. Though he initially intended to include some of his newer conversation poems, when the book finally appeared that year, simply called Poems, by S. T. Coleridge, it was essentially a simple rearrangement of his own contributions to the 1797 edition. He even retained the short 1796 and 1797 prefaces rather than write a new one outlining his thoughts on the theory of Romantic poetry. The task of superintending the book's progress through the press was delegated to Lamb. Themes Coleridge published the Poems just after the failure of his idealistic political scheme of Pantisocracy. His strong belief in the capacity of poetry to examine the religious and political changes of his day is reflected in both of the longest poems in the collection, the Monody on the Death of Chatterton and the Religious Musings, and also in the sonnets on prominent political figures. In contrast, there are also many poems of sensibility, described by Coleridge as "effusions", reflecting the influence of William Lisle Bowles's sonnets. These are imbued with Coleridge's own personal emotions; they | bookshelved by two substantial formal poems, Monody on the Death of Chatterton and Religious Musings; of the intervening pieces about half were sonnets, while the remainder included "The Eolian Harp" and two other conversation poems, as Coleridge was later to call them. Four of the sonnets, all signed with the initials C. L., were attributed by Coleridge himself to his friend Charles Lamb, but the truth is more complex. All were amended by Coleridge, and one, Effusion XIV "To Siddons", was included as Coleridge's in later collections of his poems and is probably best described as a collaboration. A fifth sonnet, Effusion XV, was completed by Lamb, as Coleridge acknowledged. Within six months the book had sold out, and preparations began for a second edition with additional poems by both Coleridge and Lamb. In March 1797, when the printing was almost complete, Coleridge told Cottle that there would be a section of poems by another of his friends, Charles Lloyd, reassuring him that the increased costs of production would be offset by profits from the large number of copies, "more than a hundred", that Lloyd's family and friends would doubtless buy. This edition, retitled Poems, Second Edition, by S. T. Coleridge, to Which Are Now Added Poems by Charles Lamb, and Charles Lloyd, was therefore of an even more miscellaneous nature than the first. The first section, consisting of poems by Coleridge himself, omitted twenty poems from the first edition, including many of the more immature ones and all of the sonnets on political figures, but included twelve newer works. It began with a dedicatory poem to his brother, the Rev. George Coleridge, and, as before, concluded with the Religious Musings. This section comprised, Coleridge told Cottle, "my choicest fish, pick'd, gutted, and clean'd", the compound-epithets and other stylistic extravagances "pruned...with no unsparing hand". By contrast, the next two sections, by Lamb and Lloyd respectively, were in effect a Collected Works of the two young poets, occupying nearly a hundred pages. The final section, or Supplement, contains a few poems by Coleridge and his co-authors which he had, as he wrote, "reprieved from immediate oblivion". A newspaper advertisement dated 28 October 1797 announced the publication of the second edition. Coleridge almost immediately undercut his relations with his collaborators by publishing in the November 1797 number of the Monthly Magazine, under the pseudonym of Nehemiah Higginbottom, three sonnets satirising his own poems and those of Lamb and Lloyd. In consequence, when in 1798 Coleridge floated the idea of a third edition, to include The Ancient Mariner, Lloyd asked for his own poems to be withdrawn. Nothing came of this project in 1798, but by 1803 Coleridge was again planning a new edition, this time to consist entirely of his own poems. Though he initially intended to include some of his newer conversation poems, when the book finally appeared that year, simply called Poems, by S. T. Coleridge, it was essentially a simple rearrangement of his own contributions to the 1797 edition. He even retained the short 1796 and 1797 prefaces rather than write a new one outlining his thoughts on the theory of Romantic poetry. The task of superintending the book's progress through the press was delegated to Lamb. Themes Coleridge published the Poems just after the failure of his idealistic political scheme of Pantisocracy. His strong belief in the capacity of poetry to examine the religious and political changes of his day is reflected in both of the longest poems in the collection, the Monody on the Death of Chatterton and the Religious Musings, and also in the sonnets on prominent political figures. In contrast, there are also many poems of sensibility, described by Coleridge as "effusions", reflecting the influence of William Lisle Bowles's sonnets. These are imbued with Coleridge's own personal emotions; they are sometimes melancholy and sometimes expressive of his happiness in the early stages of his marriage to Sara Fricker. Throughout the collection runs the theme of immersion in nature as a way of communing with God. Reception Some of the earliest and best criticism of Poems on Various Subjects came from Charles Lamb in a string of letters to Coleridge, praising his Religious Musings as "the noblest poem in the language, next after the Paradise lost", urging him to "cultivate simplicity", and employing exemplary tact whenever he found |
Germany had its own unique developmental path (similar to the Sonderweg thesis), pioneered by a small, liberal-to-left-wing sample of largely Jewish elites, based in big cities like Berlin. As a result, Gay says that Weimar Germany became a centre of artistic expression, opera, theatre, political cabaret, journalism, cinema and publishing. In keeping with other scholars of his period (many of whom Gay was close with), Gay describes the collapse of the Republic as a result of moral relativism, decadance and excess leading to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, and combines this with Freudian psychoanalysis. Reception Although influential, Weimar Culture has been criticised for its focus on high culture and societal elites, and neglect of popular culture in Germany at the time. See | its own unique developmental path (similar to the Sonderweg thesis), pioneered by a small, liberal-to-left-wing sample of largely Jewish elites, based in big cities like Berlin. As a result, Gay says that Weimar Germany became a centre of artistic expression, opera, theatre, political cabaret, journalism, cinema and publishing. In keeping with other scholars of his period (many of whom Gay was close with), Gay describes the collapse of the Republic as a result of |
an American old-time radio program that featured popular music. The 30-minute program was broadcast on CBS on Saturday nights from October 3, 1936, until September 25, 1948, sponsored by Pet Milk. In 1948, the show moved to NBC, and the name was changed to The Pet Milk Show, Female singers who starred on the program included Mary Eastman, Jessica Dragonette, Kay Armen, and Hollace Shaw. Their male counterparts included Bill Perry and Vic Damone, For one interval, the individual vocalists were replaced by the Emil Cote Singers. Guest vocalists were also | In 1948, the show moved to NBC, and the name was changed to The Pet Milk Show, Female singers who starred on the program included Mary Eastman, Jessica Dragonette, Kay Armen, and Hollace Shaw. Their male counterparts included Bill Perry and Vic Damone, For one interval, the individual vocalists were replaced by the Emil Cote Singers. Guest vocalists were also featured at times. They included Ruby Mercer. Howard Barlow led the orchestra in 1936-1937, with Gus Haenschen conducting thereafter. Announcers were Bill Adams, Warren Sweeney, and Bob Trout. Producers |
am the main one at the table"), ("Look at me attentively, I am your food"), etc. Wasting or throwing away a piece of bread was equivalent to despising or rejecting the food of the Lord. Culture loss Undoubtedly, bread has been the most consumed food in Spain throughout its history. Formerly it was what was eaten the most, but its prominence was overshadowed by the abundance of food that arrived in the country in the 60s and 70s, when agriculture was mechanized and the country opened up to the world. The reduction of its consumption has led to a loss of its quality, tradition and culture. According to culinary researcher , who toured the 50 provinces collecting information on the country's baking tradition, "Bread has lost prestige or, better said, it has been demystified, in the sense that it was sacred because it was what was eaten the most ( ...) Never has less bread been eaten than now." It goes hand in hand with a drastic reduction of the Mediterranean culinary tradition, just like in neighboring Italy. Influence of the Spanish bakery in the world In Europe The candeal, bregado or sobado bread, originating in what is now Castile and León, would be taken to the south of the peninsula and to Portugal, where it has also been practiced since time immemorial; in Portuguese it is known as pão sovado in the north or pão de calo in the south. The sobado bread was given to the soldiers because it has the exceptional characteristic of lasting for days, even weeks. It arrived in French Normandy through the Kingdom of Navarre in the times of Charles II 'the Bad', married to Joan of France. It gave rise to the so-called Norman pain brié (also, pain de chapître, 'town hall bread'), very similar to candeal. Later the Spanish Tercios brought sobado bread to France, Italy, Flanders and other parts of Europe. The Italian bakers adopted Spanish sobado bread and created its own delicacies, such as coppia ferrarese. Even in the Maghreb there is a bread derived from candeal called pain espagnole. Instead, what in Italy is called pan di Spagna ("Spanish bread") refers to the sponge cake, which according to Italian tradition was made by a baker in Spain. The name has passed into Greek as pantespani (Παντεσπάνι) and into Turkish as pandispanya. In the Americas The Spanish bakery is the basis of the current Hispanic-American bakery, which later adapted the recipes to its climate, its ingredients and its own tastes. Wheat was one of the first foods to be imported into the New World, and the culture of bread was one of the first that the Spanish colonization introduced into the diet of the natives, despite the fact that this food and nutritional niche was already occupied by corn. The massive cultivation of wheat in America also had a political reason, since the Spanish controlled in one way or another the production, distribution and sale of the product. The rejection of its cultivation was manifested as a form of resistance against Spanish rule. In Mesoamerica, for example, Antonio de Mendoza denounced that the indigenous people ignored the cultivation of wheat, among other things because they used the same techniques as for planting corn (with a coa) and wheat did not prosper. Even so, the culture of bread ended up adapting to America hand in hand with Evangelization. Today the Hispanic bakery is spread throughout the Americas, and bread is a common food, with different variants depending on the country and region. For example: Spanish torrijas are also eaten in Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Costa Rica among other countries. In Mexico, a bread called telera has its remote origin in the telera that the Andalusian workers ate. Also in the Dominican Republic there is a telera, which is typical of Christmas. The acemita was a bread that was eaten in Spain and was considered of low quality because it was prepared with wheat bran (sometimes, if possible, it was mixed with a little white flour) The mixture itself was | as yeast, which resulted in lighter and fluffier breads. The writer and soldier Pliny the Elder, a Roman originally from northern Italy, served as a procurator for a while in the Iberian Peninsula and commented: "Hispania's bread is very light and very pleasing to the palate even for a refined man from Rome". During the Andalusian period (from the 8th century to the 15th century), the cultivation of cereals was the dominant job and bread was a basic and daily food. In Al-Andalus, white bread was made from wheat flour, but also a coarser and cheaper bread that contained bran, called “red bread”. On the Christian side of the border, the baker's trade was established as a profession, becoming a relevant, prominent and respected figure in medieval society. To regulate the market, bakers began to form unions from the twelfth century. In Spain, especially in the Mediterranean area, there have been bakers' guilds for more than 750 years. For example, the Guild of Bakers of Barcelona (), which is cited in a document from 1395. The Spanish conquest of America led to the importation of a new cereal with which flour could be made: corn. Corn has a presence in the bakery of "Green Spain" (northern Spain). An example of bread with corn flour is borona, brona or broa, a typical bread from Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria and the Basque Country. List of Spanish breads This is a limited list of the most popular breads in Spain. Pan de payés (Pa de pagès in Catalan), from Catalonia Pan gallego (Pan galego in Galician), from Galicia Pan de Alfacar, in Andalusia Pan cateto, in Southern Andalusia Bollo, from Seville Candeal, bregado or sobado, from Castile and many other regions Mollete, from Antequera, Málaga Pan de cruz, from Ciudad Real Pan de la Mota, from Mota del Cuervo, Cuenca Carrasca, from Murcia Pataqueta, from the Valencian Community Telera, from Córdoba Taja, from Navarre Colón and Fabiola, from Castile and Leon Llonguet, a roll from Catalonia and the Balearic Islands Francesilla, from Madrid Pistola, from Madrid Broa, borona, from Northern Spain Bread with toppings: Coca Bread with fillings: Hornazo Galician empanada Bollo preñao Sweet breads: Roscón de Reyes Jallulla, from Granada Pan de cañada, from Aragón Torta de Aranda Ensaimada, from Mallorca Toña, tonya, fogaza, fogassa, mona or panquemao Txantxigorri cake Bread and culture In addition to being a basic food, bread has a ritual function and a religious burden. In Christianity, bread embodies the body of Christ, and together with wine, which is his blood, make up the Eucharist in all Christian churches. Even before the appearance of the faith of Christ, the pagan traditions (Celtic, Greco-Roman, Phoenician, etc.) already considered bread as a symbol of fertility. For example, in Ancient Rome, pieces of bread were offered to Ceres, goddess of crops and fertility. In fact, Christianity absorbed many of these pagan traditions and also of Judaism, in which bread has a leading position. Bread and fertility rites The egg is another food that many ancient cultures have associated with fertility, so it is not surprising that many ancestral traditions have survived to this day that, during spring (a season also associated with birth and life), embed whole eggs into the bread dough. This is the case of the Catalan monas, the Basque opillas or the Castilian San Marcos hornazo. The egg is tied to the bread with two intertwined strips of dough in the shape of a cross, definitively linking a pagan custom to Christian mythology. Bread and death rites Bread has been present in funeral rites since ancient times. As a votive or mortuary offering, bread has embodied death in most cultures of the Mediterranean and beyond. Formerly, it was common at funerals to distribute loaves. According to the anthropologist Joan Amades "at funerals it was customary to offer rolls that the attendees gave to the priest, along with a candle". When a loved one died, "there should be bread in the house to facilitate the transit". In Catalonia, when the dead visit their families on All Souls' Day (November 2), they are offered a votive bread called pa d'ànimes ('bread of souls'), although nowadays panets and panellets are more typical. This tradition can be found in Mexico under the name "bread of the dead". In addition, in some Catalan towns, at the meal after the funeral, a bread with a cross in the middle is served, called pa de memòria, which was dedicated with a prayer to the deceased. The breads of the dead can be found throughout Spain and the Mediterranean, such as the pan de finado from the Canary Islands, the "saint's bones" from Madrid, or the anthropomorphic breads from Sicily and the south of the Italian peninsula. Bread on the table In Spain, Christian families bless bread before beginning a meal, thanking God for "giving us our daily bread" while a cross is marked on the crust. Capel adds: "The first slice was not distributed, a gesture that would have meant the annulment of the rite." The good Christian gave the first piece of the loaf to the guests. The relevance of bread at the Christian table is reflected in the marks that are stamped on the loaves: ("Long live the blessed bread"), ("I am the main one at the table"), ("Look at me attentively, I am your food"), etc. Wasting or throwing away a piece of bread was equivalent to despising or rejecting the food of the Lord. Culture loss Undoubtedly, bread has been the most consumed food in Spain throughout its history. Formerly it was what was eaten the most, but its prominence was overshadowed by the abundance of food that arrived in the country in the 60s and 70s, when agriculture was mechanized and the country opened up to the world. The reduction of its consumption has |
Television series Film References External links 1998 births Living people 21st-century South Korean male actors South Korean male television actors South Korean male film actors | He is known for his roles in dramas such as Sweet Revenge, Save the Family, Gangnam Beauty, Tunnel and |
Amin M. Abbosh is an Iraqi electrical engineer. Abbosh earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the University of Mosul, then remained at the institution to complete graduate study in the subject, obtaining his master's degree in 1991 and his doctorate in 1996. He is a professor at | earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from the University of Mosul, then remained at the institution to complete graduate study in the subject, obtaining his master's degree in 1991 and |
in others cities such as Queretaro , San Luis Potosí, Xalapa and Guadalajara . See | Guadalajara . See also List of colonial universities in Latin America References Universities and colleges in Puebla Universities established in |
Population: Geography The settlement is located 100 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, 3 km north-east of the district center – the town Kursk, 1.5 km from the selsoviet center – Shchetinka. Streets There are the following streets in the locality: Lunnaya, Poselochnaya, Poselochnaya Vtoraya and Poselochnaya Tretya (43 houses). Climate Lazurny has a warm-summer humid continental climate | from the selsoviet center – Shchetinka. Streets There are the following streets in the locality: Lunnaya, Poselochnaya, Poselochnaya Vtoraya and Poselochnaya Tretya (43 houses). Climate Lazurny has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Lazurny is located 9 km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), on the road of regional importance (Kursk – Ponyri), on the road of intermunicipal significance (38K-018 – Kamyshi), |
the Gentlemen first innings by William Foord-Kelcey, while in their second innings he was unbeaten without scoring. He was appointed an adjutant at the Cavalry Depot at Canterbury in April 1875, a post he held until May 1876, when he relinquished the position upon his promotion to major without purchase in May 1876; from Canterbury he rejoined his regiment at Muttra in British India as second-in-command to Lord Ralph Kerr. When Kerr returned to England on leave, Wood assumed command of the regiment and in the winter of 1877 he marched it from Muttra to Rawalpindi. He took the regiment to war in the Second Anglo-Afghan War and commanded two squadrons at the Capture of Ali Masjid in November 1878. Wood remained in command of the 10th Hussars until Kerr's return in March 1879. For his services during the campaign, Wood was made a brevet lieutenant-colonel in November 1879. Wood succeeded Kerr as commander of the regiment upon his retirement in May 1881, with Wood gaining the full rank of lieutenant-colonel in June. In February 1884, he embarked aboard the troopship for the return journey to England following the end of the Hussars service in India. However, the ship was intercepted 20 miles outside Aden and given new orders to sail with haste for Suakin in the Khedivate of Egypt. The regiment disembarked and was | Wood was a career soldier in the 10th Royal Hussars, rising to the rank of major-general. He fought in both the Second Anglo-Afghan War and the Mahdist War, with Wood being made a Companion to the Order of the Bath for his service in the latter. He was also a first-class cricketer, appearing in one match in 1875. Early life The son of Sir Charles Alexander Wood, deputy chairman of the Great Western Railway, he was born at Kensington in May 1841. He was educated at Radley College until 1852, after which he went to Eton College. After completing his education, Wood was commissioned into the 10th Royal Hussars as a cornet in July 1858, with him purchasing the rank of lieutenant in September 1859. Wood served in British Malta as aide-de-camp to the general commanding the troops from September 1862 to October 1863. From there he was posted to Ireland, where he served as aide-de-camp to the general commanding the troops from December 1863 to July 1864, after which he went to Dublin where he was aide-de-camp to the general commanding troops from December 1865 to January 1867. In July 1867, he purchased the |
the basins of the Paraná River and the São Francisco River in Brazil. The species was described in 2016. and is not | is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is a freshwater species native |
to become a trainee in news photography. She was the first woman the Daily News employed as part of their photography staff. She covered all types of stories, from politics to society, natural disasters to social movements, and general assignments to features. When asked if she needed special skills to do the job, Straus advised that other than athleticism, the job required customized wearing apparel. High heels and flat shoes were impractical, so she wore a walking shoe with a medium heel. She also had her clothes custom tailored to ensure that there were adequate pockets to carry personal items as well as film and flashbulbs. In July 1945, four months after the National Press Photographers Association was founded, Straus joined the organization along with five other women — Margaret Hazel of The Louisville Times, Adelaide Leavy of ACME Newspictures, Sodelvia Rihn of the Baltimore News-Post, Lucille Tandy of The San Diego Tribune and Libby Whitman of The Canton Repository. In 1952, still the only woman camera operator at the Daily News, Straus joined the Press Photographers Association of New York City, when they admitted women. The following year, her photograph, Panhandling Costello was among the six finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for Photography, though she lost to William M. Gallagher. One of her most iconic photographs appeared on the front page of the Daily News during the labor strikes that plagued William O'Dwyer's term as mayor from 1946 to 1949. It featured O'Dwyer mopping his brow during union negotiations. When Bob Warner did a series featuring women news photographers in the early 1960s for Editor & Publisher, he estimated that there were only about twenty full-time camerawomen in the news business at that time. Straus was one of them. Straus was well-known in political and celebrity circles and had work | in liberal arts and social sciences, and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree. Career Straus began working at the Daily News in New York City in the advertising department in 1938 and later worked in the publicity department. During World War II many of the male photographers working in the press went overseas, opening opportunities for women. In 1942, Straus was transferred to become a trainee in news photography. She was the first woman the Daily News employed as part of their photography staff. She covered all types of stories, from politics to society, natural disasters to social movements, and general assignments to features. When asked if she needed special skills to do the job, Straus advised that other than athleticism, the job required customized wearing apparel. High heels and flat shoes were impractical, so she wore a walking shoe with a medium heel. She also had her clothes custom tailored to ensure that there were adequate pockets to carry personal items as well as film and flashbulbs. In July 1945, four months after the National Press Photographers Association was founded, Straus joined the organization along with five other women — Margaret Hazel of The Louisville Times, Adelaide Leavy of ACME Newspictures, Sodelvia Rihn of the Baltimore News-Post, Lucille Tandy of The San Diego Tribune and Libby Whitman of The Canton Repository. In 1952, still the only woman camera operator at the Daily News, Straus joined the Press Photographers Association of New York City, when they admitted women. The following year, her photograph, Panhandling Costello was among the six finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for Photography, though she lost to William M. Gallagher. One of her most iconic photographs appeared on the front page of the Daily News during the labor strikes that plagued William O'Dwyer's term as mayor from 1946 to 1949. It featured O'Dwyer mopping his brow during union negotiations. When Bob Warner did a series featuring women news photographers in the early 1960s for Editor & Publisher, he estimated that there were only about twenty full-time camerawomen in the news business at that time. Straus was one of them. Straus was well-known in political and celebrity circles and had work included in the 1973 exhibit, From the Picture Press at the Museum of Modern Art. She worked at the Daily News until her retirement in 1975. Personal life When Straus retired, she moved |
Majola is a South African politician currently serving as the Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry. He has been a Member of Parliament (MP) for the African National Congress since 2014. He is a former | National Congress since 2014. He is a former Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Energy. References External links Profile at Parliament of South Africa Fikile Majola, Mr at Government of South Africa Living people Year of birth missing (living people) |
the Football League for Derby County and Southport. References 1899 births 1947 deaths English footballers Association football defenders English Football League players Skelmersdale United | League for Derby County and Southport. References 1899 births 1947 deaths English footballers Association football defenders English Football |
bold colors softly modulate in and out of attention, as the stripes of color seem to float in a rhythmically pulsing paradise... Homage to Africa... includes three dirges, and no drummer or composer in jazz puts as much delicate sweetness as well as muscular torque into dirges." Track listing All compositions by Sunny Murray. "Suns Of Africa - Part 1" – 15:15 "Suns Of Africa - Part 2" – 2:40 "R.I.P." – 10:35 "Unity" – 6:55 Personnel Roscoe Mitchell – alto saxophone, flute Archie Shepp – tenor saxophone (tracks 1 and 2) Kenneth Terroade – tenor saxophone, flute Lester Bowie – trumpet, flugelhorn (tracks 1 and 2) Clifford Thornton – cornet Grachan Moncur III – trombone Jeanne Lee – voice, bells Dave Burrell – piano Alan Silva – bass Arthur Jones – percussion (tracks 1 and 2) Malachi Favors – xylophone, bells (tracks 1 and 2) Earl Freeman – timpani, bells (tracks 1 and 2) Sunny Murray – drums Production Jean | drummer Sunny Murray. It was recorded in Paris in August 1969, and released on the BYG Actuel label in 1970. On the album, Murray is joined by saxophonists Roscoe Mitchell, Archie Shepp and Kenneth Terroade, trumpeter Lester Bowie, cornetist Clifford Thornton, trombonist Grachan Moncur III, vocalist Jeanne Lee, pianist Dave Burrell, bassist Alan Silva, and percussionists Malachi Favors, Earl Freeman, and Arthur Jones. The album was recorded as part of a marathon week-long BYG session which also produced Murray's Sunshine as well as albums by artists such as Archie Shepp (Yasmina, a Black Woman, Poem for Malcolm, and Blasé), the Art Ensemble Of Chicago (Message to Our Folks and Reese and the Smooth Ones), Grachan Moncur III (New Africa), Alan Silva (Luna Surface), Dave Burrell (Echo), Andrew Cyrille (What About?), and Jimmy Lyons (Other Afternoons). Reception In a review for AllMusic, Eugene Chadbourne wrote: "The two-part track 'Suns of Africa' involves a good dozen players, many of them big names in free jazz, in a kind of big gloppy piece that, even if it was well recorded, would probably not hold up to repeated listenings. A second part of this piece, less then two minutes long, seems to have been concocted from whatever the engineer was able to catch when he flipped the tape. The second side... is a much more exciting performance, although bad recording definitely hampers the trombone |
York. Her owners registered her there on 9 May, had her fitted out at Salem, Massachusetts, and armed her with five guns. Under the command of Captain James Mansfield, she sailed to Saint-Domingue, where a French privateer captured | of Captain James Mansfield, she sailed to Saint-Domingue, where a French privateer captured her without a shot being fired. The French government, concerned with the rebellion there and vessels bringing arms to the rebels, had decided that any American vessel sailing to Saint-Domingue would be treated as a pirate. Snake in the Grass was taken to |
who played in the Football League for Barnsley. References 1903 births 1976 deaths English footballers Association football midfielders | played in the Football League for Barnsley. References 1903 births 1976 deaths English footballers Association football midfielders English Football League players |
Toyota Corolla. She returned to the race in 2014, finishing third. In 2015, she was leading, but Jane Kibii passed her in the last mile. But when she arrived on a humid June day in 2016, things were different. She drank fluids copiously and kept looking over her shoulder to find Clara Santucci and Serkalem Biset Abrha. They wouldn't catch her—she broke the tape in first place with a 2:33:28 finish. She also ran the California International Marathon in 2013 after the Houston Marathon canceled due to inclement weather. In the Sacramento race, she dueled with Paige Siemers, Jeannette Faber and Pasca Cheruiyot to finish second in 2:31:23, as Rebecca Wade finished first with a course record of 2:29:21. In 2016, she returned to the race in top form. She started in the lead pack and continued to pull ahead of some of the top runners in the nation by winning in 2:31:20, outpacing Stephanie Bruce and Lauren Jimison. She raced the Big Sur Half Marathon and | leading, but Jane Kibii passed her in the last mile. But when she arrived on a humid June day in 2016, things were different. She drank fluids copiously and kept looking over her shoulder to find Clara Santucci and Serkalem Biset Abrha. They wouldn't catch her—she broke the tape in first place with a 2:33:28 finish. She also ran the California International Marathon in 2013 after the Houston Marathon canceled due to inclement weather. In the Sacramento race, she dueled with Paige Siemers, Jeannette Faber and Pasca Cheruiyot to finish second in 2:31:23, as Rebecca Wade finished first with a course record of 2:29:21. In 2016, she returned to the race in top form. She started in the lead pack and continued to pull ahead of some of the top runners in the nation by winning in 2:31:20, outpacing Stephanie Bruce and Lauren Jimison. She raced the Big Sur Half Marathon and won back-to-back victories in 2013 and 2014, clocking her personal best half marathon time (1:11:21) in the first win. In 2014, she was a top competitor at the USATF Half Marathon Championships. In 2016, Kiptoo was making headlines in her hometown. She took first in the Santa Fe Thunder Half Marathon, winning in 1:15:52 (she had finished second in 2013 and 2014). In 2017, Kiptoo arrived in Philadelphia with another New Mexican runner, Boniface Kongin. The two would lead men and women in the chilly, windy morning at the Philadelphia Marathon, with Kiptoo finishing in 2:38:13. She returned in 2018 to finish third as Serkalem Biset Abrha set a course record. In October 2019, Kiptoo and hundreds of other runners had great conditions at the start of the Duke City Marathon in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Wearing her purple Grandma's Marathon T-shirt, she won the race and set her sights on returning to the Philadelphia Marathon. Kiptoo was back in Kenya after the COVID-19 pandemic hit, but returned to Duluth for the 2021 Grandma's Marathon. She |
composing the music. Original onikko designs are provided by Tomari, while Ryuuta Yanagi designs the characters. It is scheduled to premiere in April 2022. Characters References External links Anime official website Anime with original screenplays Demons in anime and | Studio and produced by Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions. It is directed by Masahiko Ohta and written by Takashi Aoshima, with Yasuhiro Misawa composing the music. Original onikko designs are provided |
play for a prize money pool of US$1.6 million. The tour started on February 19, 2022 and will last until November 20, 2022. Schedule There are 9 tournaments in the tour: 6 labelled as Regular and 3 labelled as Major. Format The format will be similar to that in the previous season, with some innovations. Qualification Regular Each Regular tournament will have 16 participants. In all Regular tournaments but the first, the top 8 players from the previous tournament (Regular or Major) will be invited. The remaining spots are filled by wildcards chosen by the organizer. Major Each Major tournament will have 8 participants: the top two players of each of the previous two Regular tournaments, the top two players in the overall tour standings, and two wildcards. The tour regulations do not specify what happens if these groups of players overlap. Time controls Three different time controls are used in the tour: In rapid games, each player has 15 minutes, plus a 10-second increment for each move. In blitz games, each player has 5 minutes, plus a 3-second increment for each move. In Armageddon games, White has 5 minutes and Black has 4 minutes, with no increment. Stages Regular Each Regular tournament consists of a preliminary stage with 15 rounds and a knockout stage with three rounds. In the preliminary stage, 16 players participate in a round-robin spanning four days, with each player playing one rapid game against each other player, for a total of 120 games. In contrast to the previous season, a win scores 3 points and a draw scores 1 point. The eight players with the most points advance to the next stage. Ties are resolved according to the following criteria, in that order: Result in the game(s) between the tied players Number of wins (including forfeits) Sonneborn–Berger score Koya score In the quarterfinals and semifinals, each matchup consists of four rapid games played on a single day, with one point for a win and half a point for a draw. Ties are resolved by a playoff consisting of two blitz games. If these also end in a tie, an Armageddon game is played; if this ends in a draw, the Black | all Regular tournaments but the first, the top 8 players from the previous tournament (Regular or Major) will be invited. The remaining spots are filled by wildcards chosen by the organizer. Major Each Major tournament will have 8 participants: the top two players of each of the previous two Regular tournaments, the top two players in the overall tour standings, and two wildcards. The tour regulations do not specify what happens if these groups of players overlap. Time controls Three different time controls are used in the tour: In rapid games, each player has 15 minutes, plus a 10-second increment for each move. In blitz games, each player has 5 minutes, plus a 3-second increment for each move. In Armageddon games, White has 5 minutes and Black has 4 minutes, with no increment. Stages Regular Each Regular tournament consists of a preliminary stage with 15 rounds and a knockout stage with three rounds. In the preliminary stage, 16 players participate in a round-robin spanning four days, with each player playing one rapid game against each other player, for a total of 120 games. In contrast to the previous season, a win scores 3 points and a draw scores 1 point. The eight players with the most points advance to the next stage. Ties are resolved according to the following criteria, in that order: Result in the game(s) between the tied players Number of wins (including forfeits) Sonneborn–Berger score Koya score In the quarterfinals and semifinals, each matchup consists of four rapid games played on a single day, with one point for a win and half a point for a draw. Ties are resolved by a playoff consisting of two blitz games. If these also end in a tie, an Armageddon game is played; if this ends in a draw, the Black player wins the round. The player who ranked higher in the preliminary stage gets to pick a colour. The final consists of two matches of four rapid games each, played on successive days. Each match is scored separately. A tie (if each player wins one match or both matches are tied) is resolved as in the other knockout rounds. There is no match for third place. Major Each Major tournament will be a round-robin tournament among eight players, without a knockout stage. Each pair of players plays a match of four rapid games as in the knockout stage of Regular tournaments, including blitz and Armageddon tie-breaks if |
Temple's construction, as the fulfillment of God's covenant to 'give Israel rest from its adversaries' (Deuteronomy 12:10 and 25:19), to 'fight Israel's battles' (Deuteronomy 3:22), and to 'bestow on them the Promised Land'. Verses 1–2 Now it came to pass when the king was dwelling in his house, and the Lord had given him rest from all his enemies all around, that the king said to Nathan the prophet, “See now, I dwell in a house of cedar, but the ark of God dwells inside tent curtains.” "Nathan the prophet": played important roles in three key junctures of David's reign: (1) gave oracle of the House of God and House of David (2 Samuel 7), (2) conveyed God's rebuke for David's adultery with Bathsheba (2 Samuel 12), (3) prompted the aged David to declare Solomon as his successor (1 Kings 1), while being a prophetic advisor for David (2 Chronicles 29:25) and a biographer of David and Solomon (1 Chronicles 29:29; 2 Chronicles 9:29). Verse 16 [YHWH says] "And your house and your kingdom shall be established forever before you. Your throne shall be established forever." "Before you": Septuagint reads "before me". The prayer of David (7:18–29) The second half of the chapter contains David's prayer, which could be connected with bringing the ark to Jerusalem (6:1–19) rather than with the dynastic oracle in 7:1–7. In addition there were allusions to God's promise and its 'eternal' nature (verses 22, 28–29), God's redemption of his people from Egypt (verses 23–24), and several Deuteronomistic themes (verses 22b–26). Verse 23 And who is like Your people, like Israel, the one nation on the earth whom God went to redeem for Himself as a people, to make for Himself a name—and to do for Yourself great and awesome deeds for Your land—before Your people whom You redeemed for Yourself from Egypt, the nations, and their gods? "For Your land": according to Masoretic Text. Septuagint version reads "to drive out" () as in 1 Chronicles 17:21. See also Related Bible parts: 2 Samuel 12, 1 Kings 1, 1 Chronicles 29, 2 Chronicles 9, Psalm 89 Notes References Sources Commentaries on Samuel General External links Jewish translations: Samuel II - II Samuel - Chapter 7 (Judaica Press). Hebrew text and English translation [with Rashi's commentary] at Chabad.org Christian translations: Online Bible at GospelHall.org (ESV, KJV, Darby, | of YHWH (verses 5 and 7) that David was prohibited from building a temple for YHWH in Jerusalem (1 Chronicles 22:8; 28:3; 1 Kings 5:17). Nathan later support Solomon, son of David, to be king (1 Kings 1–2) and to build a Solomonic temple. The second oracle (verses 8–16) addresses a different issue, succession to David's throne, linked to the first by the same historical setting (verses 1–3) and by employing the word bayit ("house") in two different ways: David was not allowed to build for YHWH a 'house' (bayit, verses 5, 6, 13), but YHWH was going to establish for David a 'dynasty' (bayit, verses 11, 16; thus, "house" of David). The core message of the second oracle is as follows: David had been called by God (verse 9) and protected against his enemies and made into a great name (verse 10); God would raise up his son to succeed him and would establish his kingdom (verse 12) and he would enjoy the status of God's son (verse 14). Additional elements are God's care of the people of Israel (verses 10–11), the eternity of David's kingdom (verses 13,16) and the contrast between David and Saul (verses 14b–15). The combined theme of David's greatness and the certainty of succession can be found in between this oracle and other texts, such as Psalm 89 by Ethan the Ezrahite. In 1 Kings 5:3–4, Solomon explained that while David was given "rest" from his enemies, it was not to the higher degree of "rest" given to Solomon, with neither "adversary nor misfortune" to impede the Temple's construction, as the fulfillment of God's covenant to 'give Israel rest from its adversaries' (Deuteronomy 12:10 and 25:19), to 'fight Israel's battles' (Deuteronomy 3:22), and to 'bestow on them the Promised Land'. Verses 1–2 Now it came to pass when the king was dwelling in his house, and the Lord had given him rest from all his enemies all around, that the king said to Nathan the prophet, “See now, I dwell in a house of cedar, but the ark of God dwells inside tent curtains.” "Nathan the prophet": played important roles in three key junctures of David's reign: (1) gave oracle of the House of God and House of David (2 Samuel 7), (2) conveyed God's rebuke for David's adultery with Bathsheba (2 Samuel 12), (3) prompted the aged David to declare Solomon as his successor (1 Kings 1), while being a prophetic advisor for David (2 Chronicles 29:25) and a biographer of David and Solomon (1 Chronicles 29:29; 2 Chronicles 9:29). Verse 16 [YHWH says] "And your house and your kingdom shall be established forever before you. Your throne shall be established forever." "Before you": Septuagint reads "before me". The prayer of David (7:18–29) The second half of the chapter contains David's prayer, which could be connected with bringing the ark to Jerusalem (6:1–19) rather than with the dynastic oracle in 7:1–7. In addition there were allusions to God's promise and its 'eternal' nature (verses 22, 28–29), God's redemption of his people from Egypt (verses 23–24), and several Deuteronomistic themes (verses 22b–26). Verse 23 And who is like Your people, like Israel, the one nation on the earth whom God went to redeem for Himself as a people, to make for Himself a name—and to do for Yourself great and awesome deeds for Your land—before Your people whom You redeemed for Yourself from Egypt, the nations, and their gods? |
Russian genre painter Lukian (footballer) (born 1991), Lukian Araújo | genre painter Lukian (footballer) (born 1991), Lukian Araújo de Almeida, Brazilian |
an English footballer who played in the Football League for Barnsley and Wigan Borough. References | football forwards English Football League players Stalybridge Celtic F.C. players Barnsley F.C. players Rhyl F.C. players |
starring Miren Ibarguren and Paco León. It is a remake of the 2015 French film Daddy or Mommy. Plot The plot tracks Víctor and Flora, a marriage in the process of divorcing who, upon the enticing prospect of a career advance, deliberatedly try not to get the legal custody of their three children, Alexia, Juan and Sara. Cast Production The film is a remake of the 2015 French film Daddy or Mommy (original title: ), directed by Martin Bourboulon and written by Guillaume Clicquot de Mentque, Matthieu Delaporte, Jérôme Fansten, Alexandre de La Patellière. The screenplay was adapted by Eric Navarro, Marta Sánchez and Olatz Arroyo. The film was produced by Atresmedia Cine alongside Warner Bros. | La Patellière. The screenplay was adapted by Eric Navarro, Marta Sánchez and Olatz Arroyo. The film was produced by Atresmedia Cine alongside Warner Bros. Entertainment España, Alamo Producciones Audiovisuales and Alamo Audiovisual Séptima Parte, AIE, and it had the participation of Atresmedia, Movistar+ and Orange. Shot in between Madrid and Tenerife, filming wrapped by August 2020. Release Originally slated for an opening in theatres on 4 December 2020, its release was postponed several times. Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures España, the film was eventually theatrically released in Spain on 17 December 2021. See also List of Spanish films of |
never petitioned for federal recognition. Nonprofit organization In 1996, the Sapoony formed a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization named the High Plains Indians. In 2018, Dante Desiderio served as the High Plains Indians' Executive Director and Charlene Martin served as the treasurer. Administration In 2021, the administration of the Sappony were as fellows. Otis K. Martin, tribal chief Dorothy Stewart Crowe, board chairperson Charlene Y. Martin, treasurer Juila Martin Phipps, secretary Danta Desiderio, executive director. See also Haliwa-Saponi Indian Tribe Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation | In 1996, the Sapoony formed a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization named the High Plains Indians. In 2018, Dante Desiderio served as the High Plains Indians' Executive Director and Charlene Martin served as the treasurer. Administration In 2021, the administration of the Sappony were as fellows. Otis K. Martin, tribal chief Dorothy Stewart Crowe, board chairperson Charlene Y. Martin, treasurer Juila Martin Phipps, secretary Danta |
in France In 1947 Naŭmovič was discharged from the Army and moved to Paris where he embarked on an artistic career. Initially, he lived on a stipend from Vatican procured for him and his friends by Archimandrite Leo Garoshka. Naŭmovič graduated from the Faculty of Sculpture of the Beaux-Arts de Paris in 1953 and a physiotherapeutic school in Paris in 1955. Apart from his artistic career, he taught anatomy and morphology in public and private schools of physiotherapy and arts. Naŭmovič died on 4 March 2004 in a village near Paris. Prominent figure of the Belarusian diaspora Naŭmovič headed the Union of Belarusian Working Emigrants in France (Belarusian: Хаўрус беларускай працоўнай эміграцыі ў Францыі) starting from 1946. In 1948, together with his friend Janka Filistovič, Naŭmovič established a Belarusian youth organisation in France and started publishing the magazine " Maladość” (“Youth"). Later, he published this magazine together with Leo Garoshka who was also involved in publishing another journal for the Belarusian diaspora, “Božym Šlacham” (“”). Between 1949 and 1952 Naŭmovič headed the Belarusian youth organisation, the Union of Belarusian Students, and the Belarusian Union of Combatants. He also served as a representative in France of the Belarusian Committee of Victims of Radiation established in 1989 within the Belarusian Catholic Mission in London at the initiative of Father Alexander Nadson. Naŭmovič was a member of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic. Artistic works Naŭmovič is the author of more than ten stone sculptures including the tombstone on Mikola Ravienski's grave, sculptures for | of Education of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic), recommended Naŭmovič to continue his education in a Polish gymnasium in Navahrudak. Following the Soviet annexation of Western Belarus, Russian became the language of instruction in the gymnasium. Naŭmovič did not speak this language well, did not want to understand and accept the Soviet power, which was the reason of numerous conflicts during his studies. At this time he also started learning painting he showed a great talent for. On 4 July 1941 Navahrudak was occupied by the Nazis. The Gebit commissar (regional commander) had authorised to open a Belarusian school where Naŭmovič continued his education and which he graduated from in 1944. Along with all other graduates he was issued a diploma featuring the swastika which would pose additional difficulties in higher education and employment afterwards. The Belarusian Home Guard and the Anders' Army In 1944 Naŭmovič was conscripted into the Belarusian Home Guard and sent to an officer school in Minsk. However, the German troops had to retreat from Minsk due to the advance of the Soviet army. All the cadets of the school were re-conscripted into the 30th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Belarusian) which was also retreating. During a Soviet bombardment of Vilna, Naŭmovič managed to escape from the division to a forest and fled to Besançon, France. In the autumn of 1944 he turned to the French partisans. Despite an appeal to return to the Soviet Union, Naŭmovič joined the Anders' Army in the end of 1944 because all the cadets of the officer school in Minsk had been sent to prisoner camps in Siberia and such a return would be dangerous. In June 1945 Naŭmovič relocated to Italy where he worked as a clerk in the court of the 7th Division of the Anders Army. Life and death |
Brazilian football forward Luiz Eduardo (footballer, born 1987), Luiz Eduardo Rodrigues, Brazilian | Luiz Eduardo may refer to: Luiz Eduardo (footballer, born 1985), Luiz Eduardo Azevedo Dantas, Brazilian football forward Luiz |
thought to represent an insular population of the desert pipistrelle (H. ariel), a 2011 study found it to be morphologically distinct from other Hypsugo species, and described it as a distinct species. It is named after Italian biologist Benedetto Lanza. It is recognized as a distinct species by the IUCN Red List, American Society of Mammalogists, and ITIS. Distribution and habitat It is found only on Socotra, where it is found throughout at all altitudes. It inhabits sparse, dry xeric shrubland habitat. Description It is the largest member of the arabicus-group of Hypsugo (also including H. ariel and the Arabian pipistrelle, H. arabicus). Its braincase is higher compared to the other species in the | habitat. Description It is the largest member of the arabicus-group of Hypsugo (also including H. ariel and the Arabian pipistrelle, H. arabicus). Its braincase is higher compared to the other species in the group. It is also much darker in coloration than other members of the group. Status This species has a restricted range, being found only on a single island. It is thought to be threatened by climate change, primarily due to more frequent major tropical cyclones (with the 2015 and 2019 cyclone seasons being thought to have been especially |
play leading roles in the public service, as these positions were mainly occupied by Australians. By the time of independence, Siaguru had become the first Secretary for Foreign Affairs and Trade. In this position he played a significant role in negotiations between Pacific Island countries and Australia and New Zealand, leading ultimately to the establishment of the South Pacific Regional Trade and Economic Co-operation Agreement (SPARTECA) in 1981, which allowed smaller South Pacific Island countries tariff-free access for many of their exports into Australian and NZ markets. He negotiated PNG's associate membership of the European Union under the Lomé Agreement, as well as the Torres Strait Treaty with Australia and a border agreement with Indonesia. Siaguru played a major role in shaping PNG's foreign policy of "Friends to All, Enemies to None" and in persuading the prime minister, Michael Somare, to give diplomatic recognition to China. Together with Mekere Morauta in the Ministry of Finance, Rabbie Namaliu in the Public Service Commission, and Charles Lepani of the National Planning Office, Siaguru became one of the so-called "Gang of Four" young Papua New Guinean senior public servants who coordinated policy development and government programmes. Siaguru helped organise the 1982 election campaign for the Pangu Pati, which was led by Michael Somare. In a country where there are numerous political parties, requiring problematic coalitions, the Pangu Pati victory in 1982 was the most successful result for a single party in PNG's history. Siaguru was elected to parliament in that year, winning a seat in Port Moresby, and becoming the minister for the public service in 1982–84 and the minister for youth and development in 1985. Following a split in the party, however, Siaguru joined together with John Nilkare and Sir Barry Holloway to form a new party, the League for National Advancement (LNA), but Siaguru was not re-elected in 1987, although the party gained seats in 1987 and again in 1992. In 1987 he joined the international law company, Blake Dawson Waldron. In February 1990, Siaguru became deputy secretary-general for political affairs at the Commonwealth Secretariat in London, serving for five years. Among his roles was to support the transition process from apartheid in South Africa, leading up to the 1994 election when the African National Congress, led by Nelson Mandela achieved a majority. Siaguru returned to PNG in 1996 and went back to working with Blake Dawson Waldron. He became a pioneering leader in the country's civil society. He was much in demand as a board member of private companies and was the founding chairman of the Port Moresby Stock Exchange; chairman of Pacific Reinsurance; deputy chairman of Lihir Gold, which provided a successful model for establishing community relations with extraction industries; a director of Steamships Trading Company; chairman of the oil palm producer Pacific Rim Plantations; chairman of PNG Water; chairman of an | the time Siaguru graduated, there was a strong demand for graduates who could play leading roles in the public service, as these positions were mainly occupied by Australians. By the time of independence, Siaguru had become the first Secretary for Foreign Affairs and Trade. In this position he played a significant role in negotiations between Pacific Island countries and Australia and New Zealand, leading ultimately to the establishment of the South Pacific Regional Trade and Economic Co-operation Agreement (SPARTECA) in 1981, which allowed smaller South Pacific Island countries tariff-free access for many of their exports into Australian and NZ markets. He negotiated PNG's associate membership of the European Union under the Lomé Agreement, as well as the Torres Strait Treaty with Australia and a border agreement with Indonesia. Siaguru played a major role in shaping PNG's foreign policy of "Friends to All, Enemies to None" and in persuading the prime minister, Michael Somare, to give diplomatic recognition to China. Together with Mekere Morauta in the Ministry of Finance, Rabbie Namaliu in the Public Service Commission, and Charles Lepani of the National Planning Office, Siaguru became one of the so-called "Gang of Four" young Papua New Guinean senior public servants who coordinated policy development and government programmes. Siaguru helped organise the 1982 election campaign for the Pangu Pati, which was led by Michael Somare. In a country where there are numerous political parties, requiring problematic coalitions, the Pangu Pati victory in 1982 was the most successful result for a single party in PNG's history. Siaguru was elected to parliament in that year, winning a seat in Port Moresby, and becoming the minister for the public service in 1982–84 and the minister for youth and development in 1985. Following a split in the party, however, Siaguru joined together with John Nilkare and Sir Barry Holloway to form a new party, the League for National Advancement (LNA), but Siaguru was not re-elected in 1987, although the party gained seats in 1987 and again in 1992. In 1987 he joined the international law company, Blake Dawson Waldron. In February 1990, Siaguru became deputy secretary-general for political affairs at the Commonwealth Secretariat in London, serving for five years. Among his roles was to support the transition process from apartheid in South Africa, leading up to the 1994 election when the African National Congress, led by Nelson Mandela achieved a majority. Siaguru returned to PNG in 1996 and went back to working with Blake Dawson Waldron. He became a pioneering leader in the country's civil society. He was much in demand as a board member of private companies and was the founding chairman of the Port Moresby Stock Exchange; chairman of Pacific Reinsurance; deputy chairman of Lihir Gold, which provided a successful model for establishing community relations with extraction industries; a director of Steamships Trading Company; chairman of the oil palm producer Pacific Rim Plantations; chairman of PNG Water; |
of a station at this location also explains the unusual width of the current /, which goes from the square to the Small Ring (Brussels' inner ring road), a reminder of the train tracks that used to run in its middle. In 1848, the Rouppe Fountain was inaugurated in the middle of the square. It was designed by the architect Joseph Poelaert and the sculptor Charles-Auguste Fraikin. In 1869, a new South Station was built on the site of the current Brussels-South Station, because Bogards' station had already become too small. The current layout, a central square surrounded by a cast iron gate and rows of trees, dates from 1884 and was designed by the city's architect . Rouppe Fountain Since 1844, the centre of square has been occupied by a monumental fountain known as the Rouppe Fountain. This monument, the work of Joseph Poelaert, | central square surrounded by a cast iron gate and rows of trees, dates from 1884 and was designed by the city's architect . Rouppe Fountain Since 1844, the centre of square has been occupied by a monumental fountain known as the Rouppe Fountain. This monument, the work of Joseph Poelaert, and originally bearing a medallion bust of Rouppe, was inaugurated in 1848. It was inspired by the fountains of the Champs-Élysées in Paris. The fountain is made up of two basins; the water from the upper bronze basin flows into the lower blue stone basin through twelve lion mouths. At the request of the City of Brussels, the sculptor Fraikin, a former student of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels, replaced the original medallion with an allegorical white marble statue representing the City of Brussels. She holds a laurel wreath in one hand |
review for The Guardian, John Fordham wrote: "Parts of the performance echo Taylor's great concerto performance of the late 1960s, with the American Jazz Composers Orchestra under Michael Mantler. But this music, though showing a similarly sculptural approach to the overlaying of sounds, is less bleak, more vivacious and varied than Mantler's. It displays Taylor's fondness for mirroring his explosive piano playing with restlessly intense percussion. The leader's nervous, mercurial runs and low-register chords contrast sharply with this virtuosic orchestra's softer voices, particularly Gianluigi Trovesi's alto sax and the airborne brightness of the trumpet players. The Instabile's free-collective confidence builds rich textures of trombone smears, wriggling trumpet lines and raw sax voicings around Taylor's surging intensity. And if the leader's early roots in Ellington and Thelonious Monk are barely audible nowadays, his models still drive his faith in open music-making and a conviction that your own personal momentum, rather than a borrowed one, can drive a unique kind of swing." Writing for All About Jazz, Jim Santella commented: "From the sounds of an orchestra warming up, to a subdued conclusion that rumbles deeply and insignificantly, Taylor's piece takes his audience on a journey through scenery that changes gradually and often... His form of communication at the piano provides instant connection with the other artists. They 'speak out' through their instruments and the leader replies. If it were that easy, then every little boy or girl could be a world-class musician. The veteran members of the Italian Instabile Orchestra... respond collectively with clarion tones and seamless phrases that knowingly communicate with musical sounds... All the rest is highly creative art that | a unique kind of swing." Writing for All About Jazz, Jim Santella commented: "From the sounds of an orchestra warming up, to a subdued conclusion that rumbles deeply and insignificantly, Taylor's piece takes his audience on a journey through scenery that changes gradually and often... His form of communication at the piano provides instant connection with the other artists. They 'speak out' through their instruments and the leader replies. If it were that easy, then every little boy or girl could be a world-class musician. The veteran members of the Italian Instabile Orchestra... respond collectively with clarion tones and seamless phrases that knowingly communicate with musical sounds... All the rest is highly creative art that comes from the mind of Taylor, a pioneer and innovator of avant-garde fashion." In a second article for All About Jazz, Jerry D'Souza stated: "Taylor sets up the soundscape with the strings in oleaginous flow, the horns coming in to twitter, the rhythm scattershot. The eddying eye of the timbre whirls giddily as the horns rip in with caterwaul and coil the driving forces. The diminuendo comes in, drums, a skeetering horn, the soft notes of the piano filtering in and through. The Orchestra has a penchant for using voices in full throated animation. These players' trait does not escape them, and in giving vent to it they wrap themselves around the trajectory of the instruments. Taylor splashes colour across a divergent canvas in the fourth movement, on which he gives himself plenty of room. He |
Incumbents President: Jean-Baptiste Bagaza Prime Minister: Post abolished (13 October 1978 – 19 October 1988) Births 18 May | events that happened during 1983 in Burundi. Incumbents President: Jean-Baptiste Bagaza Prime Minister: Post abolished (13 October |
(film), a 1987 Indian film Digvijaya Singh (born 1947), | concept of conquest Digvijaya (film), a |
Opera House), two acts; and Widow Queen, comedy, two acts. In Richard John Raymond's The Old Oak Tree, based on the memoirs of Jean Henri Latude, he played Latude there. In 1836, Serle spoke the Prologue to the tragedy of Ion, on its first representation at Covent Garden, for Macready's benefit, and wrote The Witch's Son, two acts. He lectured on the plays of Shakespeare and dramatic subjects at institutions in London, Liverpool, and Manchester. Serle joined the Covent Garden company under Macready in the autumn of 1837. He produced Afrancesado, Parole of Honour and Joan of Arc, each in two acts. The title role in Joan of Arc was played by Mary Huddart (later Warner); Henry Crabb Robinson thought well of the plot. Serle was acting manager, for the season 1838–9, and produced Agnes Bernauer, two acts. In 1840, he brought out Master Clarke, a play in five acts, on the subject of Richard Cromwell, at the Haymarket Theatre — Cromwell being acted by Macready. In autumn of 1840, he wrote four plays on the history of France, to be read as lectures, and read them at London institutions: The Proscribed, The Jacquerie, The Queen and the Minister and Gaston de Foix, each in five acts. 1840s In autumn of 1841, Serle resumed acting management with Macready, at Drury Lane. He translated and adapted Sappho from Saffo, the opera by Giovanni Pacini. He remained acting-manager to the close of the season 1842–3, when Macready's tenure expired. Serle's theatrical friends included Thomas James Thackeray, Edward Bulwer-Lytton and Douglas Jerrold. From then on, Serle began to concentrate on his other interests. He managed for John Mitchell (1806–1874) the English Company in Paris, 1844–5, when Macready and Helen Faucit played there; and wrote the opening address for Sadler's Wells (the Mary Warner–Samuel Phelps management). He produced there The Priest's Daughter, a tragedy. Serle adapted Beaumont and Fletcher's Scornful Lady, and Double Marriage, for Mary Warner's management at the Marylebone Theatre. He put on a three-act domestic drama, at the Surrey Theatre, A Village Story, and a one-act comedy, Tender Precautions, at the Princess's Theatre, which was played at Windsor Castle the last time any theatrical performance was given there. End of theatrical career In 1852 Serle's Annie Tyrrell, or Attree Copse, with theme the execution of a poacher, was put on at the Surrey Theatre. In the end he gave up the theatrical world. Death Serle died, aged 90, at Novello Cottage, Worthing, on 18 March 1889. Works Two early five-act plays, published but not known to have been performed, were Raffaele Cimaro (1819), and Fulvius Valeus (1823). He wrote the paper on Ben Jonson in No. 2 of the Retrospective Review. The 1832 essay "The State of the Drama", often attributed to Bulwer-Lytton, is now considered to be by Serle. In 1838 and 1839 Serle travelled over the parts of France connected with Joan of Arc. He wrote The Players: or the Stage of Life (1847), a novel and Joan of Arc, a romance, published by Henry Colburn. Journalist The Weekly Dispatch was a high-circulation popular newspaper in Victorian Britain. Serle wrote in it, under the pen name "Caustic". He served as its editor in the 1870s. Family In 1836 Serle married Cecilia (1812–1890), daughter of Vincent Novello, and sister of Mary Cowden Clarke and Clara Novello. She had been a pupil of the singing teacher Mrs. Blaine Hunt, and performed in public. Their daughter Emma Clara (died 1877) | Widow Queen, comedy, two acts. In Richard John Raymond's The Old Oak Tree, based on the memoirs of Jean Henri Latude, he played Latude there. In 1836, Serle spoke the Prologue to the tragedy of Ion, on its first representation at Covent Garden, for Macready's benefit, and wrote The Witch's Son, two acts. He lectured on the plays of Shakespeare and dramatic subjects at institutions in London, Liverpool, and Manchester. Serle joined the Covent Garden company under Macready in the autumn of 1837. He produced Afrancesado, Parole of Honour and Joan of Arc, each in two acts. The title role in Joan of Arc was played by Mary Huddart (later Warner); Henry Crabb Robinson thought well of the plot. Serle was acting manager, for the season 1838–9, and produced Agnes Bernauer, two acts. In 1840, he brought out Master Clarke, a play in five acts, on the subject of Richard Cromwell, at the Haymarket Theatre — Cromwell being acted by Macready. In autumn of 1840, he wrote four plays on the history of France, to be read as lectures, and read them at London institutions: The Proscribed, The Jacquerie, The Queen and the Minister and Gaston de Foix, each in five acts. 1840s In autumn of 1841, Serle resumed acting management with Macready, at Drury Lane. He translated and adapted Sappho from Saffo, the opera by Giovanni Pacini. He remained acting-manager to the close of the season 1842–3, when Macready's tenure expired. Serle's theatrical friends included Thomas James Thackeray, Edward Bulwer-Lytton and Douglas Jerrold. From then on, Serle began to concentrate on his other interests. He managed for John Mitchell (1806–1874) the English Company in Paris, 1844–5, when Macready and Helen Faucit played there; and wrote the opening address for Sadler's Wells (the Mary Warner–Samuel Phelps management). He produced there The Priest's Daughter, a tragedy. Serle adapted Beaumont and Fletcher's Scornful Lady, and Double Marriage, for Mary Warner's management at the Marylebone Theatre. He put on a three-act domestic drama, at the Surrey Theatre, A Village Story, and a one-act comedy, Tender Precautions, at the Princess's Theatre, which was played at Windsor Castle the last time any theatrical performance was given there. End of theatrical career In 1852 Serle's Annie Tyrrell, or Attree Copse, with theme the execution of a poacher, was put on at the Surrey Theatre. In the end he gave up the theatrical world. Death Serle died, aged 90, at Novello Cottage, Worthing, on 18 March 1889. Works Two early five-act plays, published but not known to have been performed, were Raffaele Cimaro (1819), and Fulvius Valeus (1823). He wrote the paper on Ben Jonson in No. 2 of the Retrospective Review. The 1832 essay "The State of the Drama", often attributed to Bulwer-Lytton, is now considered to be by Serle. In 1838 and 1839 Serle travelled over the parts of France connected with Joan of Arc. He wrote The Players: |
All Japan Metal and Machinery Information Workers' Union (JMIU; ) was a trade union representing workers involved in making metal and electronic goods. The union was established in 1989 by members | federations: the National Confederation of Trade Unions, and the National Trade Union Council, and by 1990, it had 12,000 members. On 31 January 2016, it merged with the Telecommunication Workers' Union, to form the Japan Metal Manufacturing, Information and Telecommunication Workers' Union. References Engineering trade unions Trade unions established in 1989 Trade unions disestablished in |
Richmond Times-Dispatch labeled that band "honest, unfussy and committed to delivering red hot rock 'n' roll." The Houston Chronicle considered it "a graceful attempt at gaining a wider audience without sacrificing the band's soul." The Chicago Tribune determined that "Jason is no snarler–his voice is plaintive–and his melodies keep ringing long after the volume subsides." The New York Times concluded that "few bands can deliver clanging, stomping, crunching flat-out rock-and-roll like Jason and the Scorchers." The Chicago Sun-Times opined that Thunder and Fire "lacks the songwriting richness of previous efforts, but it comes close to capturing the concert sizzle of America's most incendiary roots-rock band." AllMusic wrote that "Bible and a Gun" "recalls the best things about the roots-rock movement of the late | playing shows with, among others, Webb Wilder and Bob Dylan. "When the Angels Cry" and "Find You" were released as singles. The album was a commercial disappointment, failing to chart. The band broke up after the album's release, but reformed in the mid-1990s. Production The album was produced by Barry Beckett. The band placed stage lights in the studio, to reproduce the atmosphere of a live show. The Scorchers spent two years making the album, recording it with new members Andy York and Ken Fox; the band had around 45 songs from which to choose. "My Kingdom for a Car" is a cover of the Phil Ochs song. "Bible and a Gun" was cowritten by Steve Earle. Don Schlitz cowrote "When the Angels Cry". Critical reception Trouser Press wrote that "rather than successfully integrating the group's stylistic impulses, Thunder and Fire divides them into reheated rockers that short the Scorchers' personality and semi-acoustic country numbers that seem out of place." The Washington Post concluded that "comes closer to the band's high-voltage live show than any of its first three albums." The |
of Recreativo Granada in the Spanish La Liga. In 2020, he returned on loan to Georgian team Dila. Before the second half of 2021–22, he was sent on loan to Qarabağ in Azerbaijan. On 1 February 2022, Gugeshashvili debuted for Qarabağ during a 1-0 win over Keşla in Azerbaijan Cup. References External links Living people Expatriate footballers in Azerbaijan Expatriate footballers in Spain Qarabağ FK players Association football goalkeepers 1999 births FC Dila Gori players Erovnuli Liga players Footballers from Georgia (country) III liga players Jagiellonia Białystok players FC Dinamo | footballers in Azerbaijan Expatriate footballers in Spain Qarabağ FK players Association football goalkeepers 1999 births FC Dila Gori players Erovnuli Liga players Footballers from Georgia (country) III liga players Jagiellonia Białystok players FC Dinamo Tbilisi players Club Recreativo Granada players Expatriate sportspeople from Georgia (country) in Spain Expatriate sportspeople from |
Radio 1. Career Bingham presented on student radio while at university. At the age of 19, she started an internship at Radio 1. She also had work experience at Mixmag in 2015 and was their weekend editor for two years. At Radio 1, Bingham has worked in the BBC Introducing team. In April 2020, she began | April 2020, she began presenting the Introducing Dance show on Sunday nights. In April 2021, the show moved to Thursday nights as part of a wider timetable reshuffle. Personal life Bingham is from West Stafford, Dorset. She now lives |
Dikeledi Phillistus Magadzi is a South African African National Congress politician who has been Deputy Minister of Water and Sanitation since 2021 and a Member of the National Assembly since 2014. She served as Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Transport from 2014 to 2019 and as Deputy Minister of Transport from 2019 to 2021. Magadzi had previously served as a Member of the Executive Council (MEC) in the Limpopo Provincial Government. Biography Magadzi is a member of the African National Congress. From 1994 to 1998, she served as the Member of the Executive Council (MEC) responsible for the Public Works portfolio in the Limpopo Provincial Government. She then served as the MEC for Agriculture from 2004 to 2009 and as the MEC for Safety and Security | member member of the Federation of South African Women, a member of the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress Women's League from 1990 to 1996, National Education, Health and Allied Workers' Union (NEHAWU) from 1987 to 1994 and the United Democratic Front (UDF) from 1985 to 1990. Since 2007, she has served on the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress. Magadzi has five children and two grandchildren. In 2014, Magadzi was elected to the National Assembly as one of 249 ANC MPs. She was elected to chair the Portfolio Committee on Transport (2014-2019). Following her re-election in |
in 1927 and his M.A. from the New York University Institute of Fine Arts in 1949 with a thesis titled "The Original Lithograph in Color in the XIXth Century." During the Great Depression, he served as the head of the graphics art division of the Federal Art Project in New York City. He was appointed curator of prints at Wesleyan University in 1938, and curator of prints of Cincinnati Art Museum in 1947, concurrently serving as an adjunct faculty member of the University of Cincinnati. He was made chief curator of the Cincinnati Art Museum and organized six international biennales of lithography. | head of the graphics art division of the Federal Art Project in New York City. He was appointed curator of prints at Wesleyan University in 1938, and curator of prints of Cincinnati Art Museum in 1947, concurrently serving as an adjunct faculty member of the University of Cincinnati. He was made chief curator of the Cincinnati Art Museum and organized six international biennales of lithography. From 1963 to 1968, he was the director of the Carnegie Museum of Art, and organized the 1964 and 1967 Carnegie International. In 1968, he joined the faculty of the University of Iowa, where he was associate director of the University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, before retiring in 1974. Von |
Union merged with the Telecommunication Workers' Union. Like both its predecessors, it affiliated to the National Confederation of Trade Unions, and by 2019 it had 5,397 members. References External links Engineering trade unions Trade unions established in 1989 Trade unions | with the Telecommunication Workers' Union. Like both its predecessors, it affiliated to the National Confederation of Trade Unions, and by 2019 it had 5,397 members. References External links Engineering trade unions Trade unions established in 1989 Trade unions disestablished in 2016 Trade unions |
assisted him in the direction of the Le Musée français and, after his death, directed its completion under the title Le Musée royal in 1824. According to Basan, Pierre Laurent was also assisted by a brother, Louis Laurent, who made etchings. His work can be found in The British Museum, The V&A, The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York and the Département des Estampes of the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Works Le Musée français 1803 Des boeufs près d'une chaumière 1803 Les Ruines du Colisée after Nicolaes Berchem 1803 Paysage au Moulin Windmill Lands Paysage au Pont et au Pigeonnier Vue de Flandre after Jan van Goyen 1807 Woman and her boy on horseback after Jean-Baptiste-Henri Deshays La Mort du Chevalier d'Assas after Casanova, 1777. | in the print trade with the firm of Daudet et Joubert in Lyon, before coming to Paris. His commercial activity is evident from his filing with the city of Paris for relief from debt in 1783 -- among his losses was 6000 livres of framed prints which he had shipped to Philadelphia. His son Henri (1779-1844), also an engraver, assisted him in the direction of the Le Musée français and, after his death, directed its completion under the title Le Musée royal in 1824. According to Basan, Pierre Laurent was also assisted by a brother, Louis Laurent, who made etchings. His work can be found in The British Museum, The V&A, The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York and the Département des Estampes of the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Works Le Musée français 1803 Des boeufs près d'une chaumière 1803 Les Ruines du Colisée after Nicolaes Berchem 1803 Paysage |
rematch—which was won by Snow—was also overturned after it was discovered that voters who did not reside in the district were allowed to vote. A second and final special election thus took place in July 2003, with Snow emerging victorious. Though he served for the remainder of the legislative term, Snow and Neal faced off for a fourth time in 2004, with Neal winning decisively. A Democrat in an increasingly conservative district, Snow bucked his own party and endorsed George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election along with 11 other Democratic members of the Georgia House. While in office, Snow was a resident of Chickamauga, Georgia, and operated the Wayne Snow Nursery in nearby Rock Spring. Personal life Snow practices Methodism. | special election to take place on January 7, 2003, instead. That rematch—which was won by Snow—was also overturned after it was discovered that voters who did not reside in the district were allowed to vote. A second and final special election thus took place in July 2003, with Snow emerging victorious. Though he served for the remainder of the legislative term, Snow and Neal faced off for a fourth time in 2004, with Neal winning |
to active duty during the Korean War. He worked for 30 years for the Insurance Company of North America (INA) and eventually became the company's president and CEO. In 1976, he was hired by Allianz AG to establish the Allianz Insurance Company of North America (Allianz North America). He served as president | the war, he attended the University of California and received a bachelor's of science degree in business administration in 1946. He returned to active duty during the Korean War. He worked for 30 years for the Insurance Company of North America (INA) and eventually became the company's president and CEO. In 1976, he was hired by Allianz AG to establish the Allianz Insurance Company of North America (Allianz |
management platform available as a web-based software and mobile app. Originally built for high school athletic departments, the platform has expanded its features to include management software for high school marching bands, drill teams and theatre departments. Rank One is located in the US, with corporate offices in Dallas, Texas. History Formation Founded in 2007 by Brian Mann, Rank One began as Rank One Sport, and was created as a department management tool for high school athletic trainers in Texas. Early versions of the software provided athletic trainers with the ability to create and track schedules and rosters through an online dashboard. | 2007 by Brian Mann, Rank One began as Rank One Sport, and was created as a department management tool for high school athletic trainers in Texas. Early versions of the software provided athletic trainers with the ability to create and track schedules and rosters through an online dashboard. In 2009, the company introduced electronic forms, allowing athletic trainers to complete paperless student compliance forms in the software. In 2010, Rank One Sport expanded to include Oklahoma and began actively marketing to high schools outside of the Texas market and hired its first employee in 2011. In 2014, Rank One Sport was acquired by AllPlayers Network, inc. As of 2022, Jason McKay is listed as chairman and CEO of AllPlayers Network, including the Rank One brand. Branding Variations Rank One began as Rank One Sport in 2007. In 2018, Rank One Sport introduced a new product called Rank One Health, |
footballer who plays as a midfielder for Eredivisie club PEC Zwolle and the Netherlands national under-19 team. References 2003 births | a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Eredivisie club PEC Zwolle and the Netherlands national |
in Eswatini. 20th century 21st century See also History of | years in Eswatini. 20th century 21st century See also |
Christian Songs chart. Background On November 29, 2021, the radio team of Provident Label Group announced that "The Commission" will be serviced to Christian radio in the United States, the official add date for the single slated on April 31, 2021. The song is about the Great Commission, drawing inspiration from Matthew 28:19–20. Taylor Cain Matz shared the story behind the song, saying: Composition "The Commission" is composed in the key of F with a tempo of 75 beats per minute and a musical time signature of . Commercial performance "The Commission" made its debuted at number 30 on the US Christian Airplay chart dated December 18, 2021, being the highest ranking debut | F with a tempo of 75 beats per minute and a musical time signature of . Commercial performance "The Commission" made its debuted at number 30 on the US Christian Airplay chart dated December 18, 2021, being the highest ranking debut that week. "The Commission" debuted at number 50 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart dated January 8, 2022. Music videos The official audio video of "The Commission" was published on Cain's YouTube channel on March 6, 2020. The Song Session video of the song was availed by Essential Worship on March 16, 2020, to YouTube. The official acoustic performance video of the song was published by Cain on YouTube on May 21, 2021. The |
picture book written by Gayle E. Pitman, illustrated by Kristyna Litten, and published May 5, 2014 by Magination Press. The book follows a family as they attend a pride parade. The book won the 2015 Stonewall Book Award for Children's and Young Adult Literature, and in 2018, it was the tenth-most banned and challenged book in the United States. Reception Publishers Weekly complimented the illustrations, stating, "Litten’s artwork that creates a sense of joyous excitement and showcases | of joyous excitement and showcases the diversity on display. Wisely, Litten only outlines the happy crowds and buildings in the background ..., saving color and detail for the marchers themselves." The book was included in Advocate's "What Book Changed the Lives of Our '40 Under 40'?" Explaining the choice, staff writer Erica Anderson wrote, "I love that it teaches tolerance and acceptance and makes pride something everyone can celebrate. The book also includes a reading guide for parents." Controversy Due to its inclusion of LGBT content, |
The Light of Corona is a live album by Cecil Taylor recorded during the "Total Music Meeting" at the "Podewil", the headquarters of the Kulturprojekte Berlin non-profit organisation, on November 3, 1996, and released in 2003 on the FMP label. The album features Taylor with eight other musicians, and is a recording of two sections of a piece with a total duration of over an hour. The same group recorded the album Almeda the previous day. In the album liner notes, Volker Spicker wrote: "This concert reorganised your own consciousness, took you to spheres previously unknown, took unexpected turns, concentrating on the essential things, on the living, showed the meaning of being free and creative, of being alive. The music simply mirrored the infinite processes taking place within each of us and around us at the same time, processes which equal life, inspiring sensitivity and attentiveness... The precondition is being prepared to let go of expectations, the well-known, to let yourself go... How inspiring and joyful playing together is, how full of energy and how peaceful, how intense change is, how breathtaking and different from what one thinks. How relationships are interwoven, how little is needed as framework or form for united creative activity." Reception In his AllMusic review, François Couture wrote: "The first piece... begins very quietly, the musicians coming on stage and starting to play one at a time, all improvising poetry and vocalizing along the way. It ends in a similar fashion, helping the listener to come down from his or her | full of energy and how peaceful, how intense change is, how breathtaking and different from what one thinks. How relationships are interwoven, how little is needed as framework or form for united creative activity." Reception In his AllMusic review, François Couture wrote: "The first piece... begins very quietly, the musicians coming on stage and starting to play one at a time, all improvising poetry and vocalizing along the way. It ends in a similar fashion, helping the listener to come down from his or her cloud after a stunning number in which Taylor plays the roles of both inducer and controller of chaos. The musicians stretch the concept of synergy to new lengths and the whole piece finds its momentum in the dichotomy between chaos and order, between individual ideas and collective coherence. At the piano, Taylor is equal to his usual self and |
In the summer of 2017, between his junior and senior years, he was invited to and attended The Future Phenom Showcase and the Rivals 3 Stripe Camp, showcase camps for top high school players, held in New York and New Jersey, respectively. In six games as a senior in 2017, he recorded 840 rushing yards, 14.4 yards per carry, 11 rushing touchdowns, and three receiving touchdowns, despite battling an ankle injury throughout the season. With a defensive performance that included 73 tackles, he earned a 2017 All-Western New York Honorable Mention selection as a linebacker. In his high school career, McDuffie recorded 4,261 rushing yards and 54 touchdowns. In addition to the aforementioned awards and recognition, his high school career resume also included Catholic League MVP, All-Catholic First Team, WGRZ Offensive Player of the Year, and Ray Kearney Offensive MVP. As a 247Sports three-star recruit prospect, and the No. 30 overall prospect in the state of New York, in the Class of 2018, he received over a dozen college football scholarship offers, in addition to interest from several other programs, including the University of Connecticut and Rutgers University, where he took unofficial visits. He ultimately committed to attend and play football for the University of Buffalo Bulls of the Mid-American Conference in Buffalo, New York. McDuffie also ran track and played basketball in high school. College career 2018-2020 McDuffie started his college career at Buffalo by serving as a reserve to Jaret Patterson and Kevin Marks Jr. before his breakout 2021 season in which he earned the starting running back role. In 2018, as a true freshman, he appeared in four games, recording 14 carries for 70 yards in a reserve role behind Patterson. McDuffie ultimately redshirted his freshman season. In 2019, he appeared in 10 games at running back and on special teams as a redshirt freshman. He ran for 150 yards and 6.5 yards per carry on 23 rushes, as well as scored a receiving touchdown. In 2020, he appeared in one game and logged one carry. 2021 McDuffie entered his redshirt junior season as the backup to Marks. However, after outperforming Marks in the early portion of the season, McDuffie took over Buffalo’s starting running back role en route to a 1,000-yard and 11-touchdown season that earned him all-conference | The Future Phenom Showcase and the Rivals 3 Stripe Camp, showcase camps for top high school players, held in New York and New Jersey, respectively. In six games as a senior in 2017, he recorded 840 rushing yards, 14.4 yards per carry, 11 rushing touchdowns, and three receiving touchdowns, despite battling an ankle injury throughout the season. With a defensive performance that included 73 tackles, he earned a 2017 All-Western New York Honorable Mention selection as a linebacker. In his high school career, McDuffie recorded 4,261 rushing yards and 54 touchdowns. In addition to the aforementioned awards and recognition, his high school career resume also included Catholic League MVP, All-Catholic First Team, WGRZ Offensive Player of the Year, and Ray Kearney Offensive MVP. As a 247Sports three-star recruit prospect, and the No. 30 overall prospect in the state of New York, in the Class of 2018, he received over a dozen college football scholarship offers, in addition to interest from several other programs, including the University of Connecticut and Rutgers University, where he took unofficial visits. He ultimately committed to attend and play football for the University of Buffalo Bulls of the Mid-American Conference in Buffalo, New York. McDuffie also ran track and played basketball in high school. College career 2018-2020 McDuffie started his college career at Buffalo by serving as a reserve to Jaret Patterson and Kevin Marks Jr. before his breakout 2021 season in which he earned the starting running back role. In 2018, as a true freshman, he appeared in four games, recording 14 carries for 70 yards in a reserve role behind Patterson. McDuffie ultimately redshirted his freshman season. In 2019, he appeared in 10 games at running back and on special teams as a redshirt freshman. He ran for 150 yards and 6.5 yards per carry on 23 rushes, as well as scored a receiving touchdown. In 2020, he appeared in one game and logged one carry. 2021 McDuffie entered his redshirt junior season as the backup to Marks. However, after outperforming Marks in the early portion of the season, McDuffie took over Buffalo’s starting running back role en route to a 1,000-yard and 11-touchdown season that earned him all-conference honors and garnered national attention. He was named the MAC Offensive Player of the Week after his 143-yard, one-touchdown performance in Buffalo’s Week 7 win over Ohio. Two weeks later, in Buffalo’s game against Bowling Green, he ran for 166 yards on 34 carries, both career-highs, and two touchdowns, tying his career-high. On November 23, he eclipsed the 1,000-yard rushing mark on the season after rushing for 67 yards against Ball State. He finished the 2021 season as the Bulls’ leading rusher with 206 carries, 1,049 rushing yards, 123 receiving yards, 11 rushing touchdowns, and one receiving touchdown. With four 100-yard rushing games in 2021, he joined his uncle, Chris McDuffie, as one of only 23 Bulls players to record a 100-yard rushing game in program history |
as deputy, she formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Justice, Agriculture and Livestock, Family and Women, Freedom of Expression, and Natural Resources. She was re-elected for a second term in 2017, again as the first candidate in the FPV list, which received 49.36% of the vote. In October 2017, she voted in favour of stripping Julio De Vido of his parliamentary immunity, going against most of the FPV bloc. She also voted against the Mauricio Macri administration's 2017 pension reform. Soria was a supporter of the legalisation of abortion, voting in favour of the 2018 Voluntary Termination of Pregnancy Bill. In 2019, she ran for the mayoralty of General Roca, and won with 56.12% of the vote. She is the city's first female mayor. She succeeded her brother, Martín, who had served as mayor since 2011. María Emilia and Martín's father, Carlos Soria, had served | list. With 50.76% of the vote, the FPV was the most voted list in the province, and Soria was easily elected. During her first term as deputy, she formed part of the parliamentary commissions on Justice, Agriculture and Livestock, Family and Women, Freedom of Expression, and Natural Resources. She was re-elected for a second term in 2017, again as the first candidate in the FPV list, which received 49.36% of the vote. In October 2017, she voted in favour of stripping Julio De Vido of his parliamentary immunity, going against most of the FPV bloc. She also voted against the Mauricio Macri administration's 2017 pension reform. Soria was a supporter of the legalisation of abortion, voting in favour of the 2018 Voluntary Termination of Pregnancy Bill. In 2019, she ran for the mayoralty of General Roca, and won with 56.12% of the vote. She is the city's first female mayor. She succeeded her brother, Martín, who had served as mayor since 2011. María Emilia and Martín's father, Carlos Soria, had served as mayor from 2003 to 2011. Her vacant seat in the Chamber of Deputies was filled by Ayelén |
people Dutch footballers Association football midfielders FC Twente players Sparta Rotterdam players Eredivisie players Tweede | Madi (born 27 June 2002) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Eredivisie club Sparta |
Elikia Joël Mbinga (born 8 March 2001) is a Dutch professional footballer | who plays as a midfielder for Eredivisie club PEC Zwolle. References 2001 births Living people Dutch |
the other was about long. Analysis of the fossils shows that the dinosaurs walked from an area of humid ground to a more flooded area. Paleoenvironment Several titanosaurs are known from the Anacleto Formation, including Pitekunsaurus, Narambuenatitan, Barrosasaurus, and Neuquensaurus. One of these dinosaurs potentially could have made the Teratopodus prints. Remains of the ornithopod Gasparinisaura and the theropods Abelisaurus and Aucasaurus | Anacleto Formation, including Pitekunsaurus, Narambuenatitan, Barrosasaurus, and Neuquensaurus. One of these dinosaurs potentially could have made the Teratopodus prints. Remains of the ornithopod Gasparinisaura and the theropods Abelisaurus and Aucasaurus have also been recovered from the formation. See also List of |
philosophy to mathematical biology....celebrates the distinct status of Māori as tangata whenua, and is committed to upholding the principles of Te Tiriti o Waitangi." Shaun Hendy was Director until June 2021, when he was replaced by Cilla Wehi Operationally the organisation is structured with Kaumatua, an Executive Team, a Strategic Group, and Principal Investigators. Dr Andrea Byrom accepted the role of Kairangi (person held in high esteem) in 2021 and Te Pūnaha Matatini whanau has a role within the organisation as a network for emerging scientists in an "active transdisciplinary community, with a shared interest in complex systems and networks, comprising postgraduate students, postdocs and early career researchers from all over New Zealand." The 2020–2021 Annual Report of Te Pūnaha Matatini recorded that in June 2021, the organisation had "25 Principal Investigators, 50 Associate Investigators, [an] Executive Management Team of 15, [over] 150 students aligned with Te Pūnaha Matatini Whānau [and] 68 students directly funded by or working on Te Pūnaha Matatini projects." Te Pūnaha Matatini has worked in partnership with Massey University, Victoria University of Wellington, University of Canterbury, Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research and Motu Economic and Public Policy Research and on October 2020,The Tertiary Education Commission reconfirmed funding for seven years from 2021. COVID-19 Introduction In 2020, Shaun Hendy identified a gap in the science data being provided to the New Zealand Government to inform its response to COVID-19. He set up a multi-disciplinary team as part of Te Pūnaha Matatini that developed mathematical models in different scenarios for the position New Zealand was in early in the pandemic. The modelling and analysis covered areas such as "hospital capability, contagion rates and likely disease spread, virus genomic tracing, contact tracing, and vaccination... translated for use by the government policymakers and front-line operators and helped inform the government's response to the Covid-19 pandemic." Hendy later noted that Peter-Lucas Jones from Te Aupōuri who was present at a Board meeting that confirmed the need to focus on COVID-19, told the story of how the 1918 influenza pandemic had affected his iwi and when statistician Andrew Sporle (Ngāti Apa, Rangitāne, Te Rarawa) was brought in to co-lead work focusing on at-risk communities an iwi-led pandemic response was shaped. Other researchers Associate Professor in Statistics Ilze Ziedins, Dr Mike O'Sullivan and Associate Professor Cameron Walker from the Faculty of Engineering worked on models to predict the effect on hospitals if the virus spread widely within New Zealand. Modelling and commentary In June 2020, modelling by Te Pūnaha Matatini indicated 83 per cent of New Zealanders would have needed to be vaccinated before other measures such as lockdowns were reduced but 97 per cent of the eligible people in the country would need both Pfizer jabs if the Delta variant spread. At the time, Shaun Hendy said it was unlikely that level of vaccine coverage would be reached. Principal Investigator Michael Plank said that just reaching a vaccination target would not give total default protection against the virus and "other communities which were hard to access or more at-risk to the virus might have lower rates of vaccination." As Auckland faced a second lockdown in August 2021, Hendy noted the significance of identification of links to border cases as this indicated fewer cases spreading in the community. He later suggested that, despite a caveat to the prediction because of the possible effect of the opening some shops, modelling indicated that Auckland's outbreak could peak by November 2021. He said that the improving rate of vaccinations in the country might reduce the chance of the numbers increasing rapidly but a focus was needed on getting vulnerable rural communities vaccinated. When Jacinda Ardern announced a possible re-opening of the borders between Australia and New Zealand in April 2022, Hendy said this was a "significant milestone" in the approach of New Zealand to COVID-19 and Michael Plank said it showed the benefit of the elimination strategies pursued in both countries. Their comments however were tempered by the possibility of there being an escalation of the virus in Australia. With the high transmissibility of the Delta variant being a concern, the modelling of Te Pūnaha Matatini continued to indicate that without good rates of vaccination to build population immunity, there could still be a substantial community outbreak that would put the healthcare system in New Zealand under immense strain. By the middle of December 2021, Plank said he was troubled about the impact of the high transmissibility of the Omicron variant in New Zealand, and the case could be made for a review of the plans to open the border with Australia in 2022 due to an increase in cases in Sydney. When the Omicron COVID-19 variant was confirmed as likely to be circulating within New Zealand, Plank said that the modelling suggested an outbreak, and this would require careful management of isolation periods. Selected publications Estimated inequities in COVID-19 infection fatality rates by ethnicity for Aotearoa New Zealand (2020). This paper examined differential impacts of COVID-19 for high-risk groups within New Zealand, particularly Māori and Pasifika and concluded that the impacts of colonisation had contributed to inequities due to the marginalisation of these communities. Working Paper: Mis- and disinformation in Aotearoa New Zealand from 17 August to 5 November 2021 (2021). This research was an observation and analysis on data related to COVID-10 that was readily available to the public of New Zealand. The conclusion was reached that from August 2021, there had been a considerable increase in COVID-specific disinformation and the spread of far-right ideologies and that posed a threat safety and inclusion in New Zealand society. Model-free estimation of COVID-19 transmission dynamics from a complete outbreak(2021). Using a dataset of epidemiologically linked cases of COVID-19 in New Zealand, this paper explored transmission dynamics of the virus that depended on factors such as age, and response to different control measures. The research showed that children and imported cases had a low probability of transmitting the virus, but superspreading event contributed significantly to the dynamics and this could be limited by border controls and social distancing measures. We built a model that shows how small rule changes can fuel | indicated 83 per cent of New Zealanders would have needed to be vaccinated before other measures such as lockdowns were reduced but 97 per cent of the eligible people in the country would need both Pfizer jabs if the Delta variant spread. At the time, Shaun Hendy said it was unlikely that level of vaccine coverage would be reached. Principal Investigator Michael Plank said that just reaching a vaccination target would not give total default protection against the virus and "other communities which were hard to access or more at-risk to the virus might have lower rates of vaccination." As Auckland faced a second lockdown in August 2021, Hendy noted the significance of identification of links to border cases as this indicated fewer cases spreading in the community. He later suggested that, despite a caveat to the prediction because of the possible effect of the opening some shops, modelling indicated that Auckland's outbreak could peak by November 2021. He said that the improving rate of vaccinations in the country might reduce the chance of the numbers increasing rapidly but a focus was needed on getting vulnerable rural communities vaccinated. When Jacinda Ardern announced a possible re-opening of the borders between Australia and New Zealand in April 2022, Hendy said this was a "significant milestone" in the approach of New Zealand to COVID-19 and Michael Plank said it showed the benefit of the elimination strategies pursued in both countries. Their comments however were tempered by the possibility of there being an escalation of the virus in Australia. With the high transmissibility of the Delta variant being a concern, the modelling of Te Pūnaha Matatini continued to indicate that without good rates of vaccination to build population immunity, there could still be a substantial community outbreak that would put the healthcare system in New Zealand under immense strain. By the middle of December 2021, Plank said he was troubled about the impact of the high transmissibility of the Omicron variant in New Zealand, and the case could be made for a review of the plans to open the border with Australia in 2022 due to an increase in cases in Sydney. When the Omicron COVID-19 variant was confirmed as likely to be circulating within New Zealand, Plank said that the modelling suggested an outbreak, and this would require careful management of isolation periods. Selected publications Estimated inequities in COVID-19 infection fatality rates by ethnicity for Aotearoa New Zealand (2020). This paper examined differential impacts of COVID-19 for high-risk groups within New Zealand, particularly Māori and Pasifika and concluded that the impacts of colonisation had contributed to inequities due to the marginalisation of these communities. Working Paper: Mis- and disinformation in Aotearoa New Zealand from 17 August to 5 November 2021 (2021). This research was an observation and analysis on data related to COVID-10 that was readily available to the public of New Zealand. The conclusion was reached that from August 2021, there had been a considerable increase in COVID-specific disinformation and the spread of far-right ideologies and that posed a threat safety and inclusion in New Zealand society. Model-free estimation of COVID-19 transmission dynamics from a complete outbreak(2021). Using a dataset of epidemiologically linked cases of COVID-19 in New Zealand, this paper explored transmission dynamics of the virus that depended on factors such as age, and response to different control measures. The research showed that children and imported cases had a low probability of transmitting the virus, but superspreading event contributed significantly to the dynamics and this could be limited by border controls and social distancing measures. We built a model that shows how small rule changes can fuel delta's spread (2021). Members of Te Pūnaha Matatini COVID-19 modelling team looked at how small policy changes can result in widespread spread of COVID-19 through networks due to the percolation effects. The research published in the article showed even if there were only a small number of additional connections, an uncontrolled spread was likely to find unvaccinated people. Doughnuts and dandelions: Reimagining our food system post Covid-19 (2020) This article in The Spinoff looked at community initiatives in Auckland that were building resilient food systems that were socially inclusive and sustainable to deal with vulnerabilities in food chains as a result of COVID-restrictions. The writers said a healthier food system that supported more people was achievable in Aotearoa. Collective impact: Shining the light on community post Covid-19 (2020) Researchers from Te Pūnaha Matatini looked at how New Zealand communities, as a result of the disruption caused by COVID-19 were becoming more vocal about what needed to change due to unequal access to resources and power and how this inequality was increasingly impacting on the health of people in diverse communities. It was suggested that the proposed Public Service Legislation Bill before parliament at the time may learn from COVID-19 to listen to the needs and aspirations of New Zealand communities. Reception In May 2020, Samak Datta, a population modeller from National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), was part of a team of experts appointed to review the modelling done by Te Pūnaha Matatini. Datta said that "COVID-19 models developed by the Te Pūnaha Matatini researchers tend to be stochastic...this means they use probabilities rather than exact numbers. Models like these are useful because they can be run many times to see best-case, worst-case and most-likely scenarios of potential COVID-19 spread." When funding was reconfirmed in 2021, Dawn Freshwater acknowledged that the work of researchers from Te Pūnaha Matatini to the COVID-19 response underlined the importance of the Centres of Research Excellence. Andy Shenk, CEO of Uniservices, the research commercialisation and knowledge mobilisation company of the University of Auckland, said that modelling such as that done by Te Pūnaha Matini offered "data-crunching power...[to]...sequence and compare virus genomes, which aids contact tracing." Hendy was invited to present modelling at a press conference with Jacinda Ardern and Ashley Bloomfield on 23 September 2021 and he suggested that even with a high proportion of New Zealand's population vaccinated, up to 7000 deaths a year could be recorded. Ardern cautioned that the modelling was only one of the tools the government was using in its response to COVID-19. Rodney Jones, another modeller who had provided advice to the New Zealand Government, disputed the claims |
from jaw fragments and teeth found in the Early Cretaceous (Aptian) aged Ilek Formation in western Siberia, alongside Khorotherium also from | from jaw fragments and teeth found in the Early Cretaceous (Aptian) aged Ilek Formation in western Siberia, alongside Khorotherium also from Siberia, it is one |
won the ACC doubles championships. In the 1960s he featured in the singles main draw of the US Championships/Open five times. A resident of Vermont since 1968, Hoehn runs the Windridge Tennis & Sports Camps. He is a member of the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame (2014) and New England | since 1968, Hoehn runs the Windridge Tennis & Sports Camps. He is a member of the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame (2014) and New England Hall of Fame (1992). References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people |
Sacramento from 1971 until 2002 and was one of the founders of the Pan African Studies program at the school. He is based in Oakland, California. Early life and education He was born in 1935 in St. Louis, Missouri, into an African American family. After graduating from Vashon High School, Jackson attended Illinois Wesleyan University (B.F.A. 1958). He served in the United States Army and was honorably discharged in 1961. After which he attended the University of Iowa (M.F.A. 1963). Teaching In the mid-1960s to late-1970s, he taught art classes at St. Louis local universities and colleges and remained active in this local community. He taught at St. Louis Community College (1964 to 1967); Southern Illinois University (1967 to 1969); Washington University, St. Louis (1967 to 1969); and Oberlin College (1969 to 1970). In 1971, he moved to California and joined the faculty at California State University, Sacramento, where he remained until 2002. Art career He was an affiliate member of the multidisciplinary arts collective Black Artists Group (BAG) in St. Louis. BAG was founded by musicians, theater artists, dancers and visual artists as a support structure for creative expression among African American artists, and in order to have a greater place in the cultural landscape. Jackson's paintings are gestural and expressionist in their nature, attempting to capture the mental state. There are a mixture of cultural references and iconography in his paintings including aspects of the African American experience, surrealism, cave paintings, and references to historical African and Oceanian art. The Sharpeville massacre in the 1960s in South Africa was an inspiration for Jackson in his Sharpeville Series | including aspects of the African American experience, surrealism, cave paintings, and references to historical African and Oceanian art. The Sharpeville massacre in the 1960s in South Africa was an inspiration for Jackson in his Sharpeville Series (1968–1977). Jackson’s works are in the museum collections of the Museum of Modern Art; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Studio Museum in Harlem; the National Gallery of Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; San Jose Museum of Art; and the Seattle Art Museum. Exhibitions Solo 1979 – Oliver Jackson, Bixby Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 1993 – Oliver Jackson: Works on Paper, Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California 2019 – Oliver Lee Jackson: Recent Paintings, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. 2021–2022 – Oliver Lee Jackson: ‘Any Eyes’, di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art, Napa, California 2021–2022 – Oliver Lee Jackson, Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis, Missouri Group 1976 – Other Sources: An American Essay, curated by Carlos Villa, including Ruth Asawa, Bernice Bing, Rolando Castellón, Claude Clark, Robert Colescott, Frank Day, Rupert García, Mike Henderson, Oliver Jackson, Frank LaPena, Linda Lomahaftewa, George Longfish, Ralph Maradiaga, José Montoya, Manuel Neri, Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Darryl Sapien, Raymond Saunders, James Hiroshi Suzuki, Horace Washington, Al Wong, René Yañez, Leo Valledor, San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, California 1987 – The Ethnic Idea, curated by Andrée Maréchal-Workman, including Lauren Adams, |
Sobhuza II Prime Minister of Swaziland: Maphevu Dlamini Births 3 March - Bright Nxumalo, international footballer | of Swaziland: Sobhuza II Prime Minister of Swaziland: Maphevu Dlamini Births 3 |
are 151 residents of the village (2017 census). The nearest villag Katabanga to the north. Apart from small breaks, | residents of the village (2017 census). The nearest villag Katabanga to the north. Apart from small breaks, the whole coastline from on the |
created by Micah Fitzerman-Blue and Noah Harpster. The six-episode series, which is based on Patrick Radden Keefe's New Yorker article "The Family That Built an Empire of Pain" and Pain Killer: An Empire of Deceit and the Origin of America’s Opioid Epidemic by Barry Meier, will focus on the birth of the opioid | Harpster. The six-episode series, which is based on Patrick Radden Keefe's New Yorker article "The Family That Built an Empire of Pain" and Pain Killer: An Empire of Deceit and the Origin of America’s Opioid Epidemic by Barry Meier, will focus on the birth of the opioid crisis with an emphasis on Purdue Pharma, the manufacturer of OxyContin. Cast and |
refurbishment was performed in 1844 under Giovanni Patricolo, who directed some of the fresco decoration. The entrance portal has bas-reliefs of Saints Peter, Hippolytus, and Paul. The Latin Cross layout has three naves with lateral chapels. The nave ceiling has a fresco depicting Jesus in Lake Tiberius, retouched in the 1950s. External links Gaspare Palermo, Guida istruttiva per potersi conoscere tutte le magnificenze della Città di Palermo, Volume IV, Palermo, | in 1769 and a further refurbishment was performed in 1844 under Giovanni Patricolo, who directed some of the fresco decoration. The entrance portal has bas-reliefs of Saints Peter, Hippolytus, and Paul. The Latin Cross layout has three naves with lateral chapels. The nave ceiling has a fresco depicting Jesus in Lake Tiberius, retouched in the 1950s. External links Gaspare Palermo, Guida istruttiva per potersi conoscere tutte le magnificenze della Città di Palermo, Volume IV, Palermo, Reale Stamperia, 1816, pages 52-56. Roman Catholic churches |
their own band, The Rhythm Rogues. Directed by Kaye, both played piano and Moreton sang vocals on "Harbour Lights". Moreton and Kaye continued to be prolific on gramophone records in their own right, with their light piano medleys issued regularly. Entertainment agent Keith Salberg later said, "They were wonderfully slick - a sort of jazzed up version of Rawicz and Landauer. They were a housewives' favourite," he added, noting that "everybody" had a Moreton and Kaye 78 "somewhere in their house." April 1937 also saw the duo appearing in their own BBC Television slot, during the early days of the medium in Britain. They were referred to in the press and on theatre bills as "The Original Tiger Rag pianists", having played on Harry Roy's 1933 recording of the song. In June, they had their own slot on the BBC National Programme. Later that year, the duo toured Scandinavia. In early 1938, they could be heard in their own series, Tomorrow's Songs, on the BBC Regional Programme in London. Moreton and Kaye also composed several tunes together, including "Peter Pan". Billed "The Original Tiger Ragamuffins", cinema audiences could see them playing "Peter Pan" at two grand pianos in an August 1938 Pathétone newsreel. In October that year, they topped the Concert Hall bill for the final week of the Empire Exhibition in Glasgow, where Kaye played the electric Hammond organ as part of their stage act for the first time. In the late 1930s, the duo made forays into classical music, recording a two-part medley of Franz Lehar waltzes and Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Their recordings tended to have accompaniment on drums, string bass, and occasionally, Hawaiian guitar. The advent of the Second World War saw their performing career briefly interrupted. Moreton volunteered for service in the Royal Air Force in June 1940, leaving Kaye to temporarily go solo, before he also enlisted. The pair were reunited during the war to entertain troops at RAF bases around the UK. In 1943, they had their own BBC Radio series, Keys For Two. Moreton and Kaye both achieved the rank of Sergeant, and Moreton served in the British Liberation Army. Post-war success Having been released from the RAF, Moreton and Kaye continued performing, with a contemporary review from December 1945 describing the previous night's show at Dudley Hippodrome as an "exhilarating performance". Their popularity ensured that they were still top of the bill. In January and April 1947, Moreton and Kaye appeared in two further short films for British Pathé, in which they could be seen playing boogie woogie. Rather than the pre-war evening dress, they wore informal suits. They continued touring, and visited Australia in 1949 to appear in the revue Starry Nights on the Tivoli theatre circuit. It was reported that the duo liked the country so much that they were considering settling there. Whilst in Australia, they also played the Ugly Sisters in a Sydney production of the pantomime Cinderella. Moreton and Kaye ended up staying in Australia for thirteen months. Back in Britain, they had a regular slot on the BBC Light Programme in late 1950. They were also still making recordings for Parlophone: although there were no UK record sales charts until November 1952, research published in 2013 stated that Moreton and Kaye's recording of "Ivory Rag", a popular contemporary song, would have been amongst the Top 30 bestselling singles lists in August 1951. In October that year, they once | drums on these recordings. Perhaps aided by his role in the spotlight as the band's singer, it was reported in early February 1934 that Moreton was receiving fan mail of more than 200 letters a week. On 5 February that year, Moreton and Kaye made their first recordings as part of Harry Roy's Tiger Ragamuffins (a name coined by Moreton's father), a smaller group in which the pianists took a key role. Led by Roy, the group also featured Arthur Calkin on bass and Daniels on drums. Departure from the band The Silver Jubilee Royal Variety Performance at the London Palladium in October 1935 featured the duo as part of Roy's band. Moreton and Kaye also appeared in the 1936 musical film Everything is Rhythm, which starred Roy; however, by the time it made it into cinemas, the duo had left the band to concentrate on their own career as duettists in variety. They departed in January 1936, and were joined on tour by drummer Ossie Noble. In April 1936, their first 78 since leaving Roy was issued on Parlophone, with a "Fox Trot Medley" on one side and a "Quickstep Medley" on the other. Their "Tin Pan Alley" series of contemporary hit medleys ran to almost 100 issues. On 7 April 1937, Moreton and Kaye cut their only sides with their own band, The Rhythm Rogues. Directed by Kaye, both played piano and Moreton sang vocals on "Harbour Lights". Moreton and Kaye continued to be prolific on gramophone records in their own right, with their light piano medleys issued regularly. Entertainment agent Keith Salberg later said, "They were wonderfully slick - a sort of jazzed up version of Rawicz and Landauer. They were a housewives' favourite," he added, noting that "everybody" had a Moreton and Kaye 78 "somewhere in their house." April 1937 also saw the duo appearing in their own BBC Television slot, during the early days of the medium in Britain. They were referred to in the press and on theatre bills as "The Original Tiger Rag pianists", having played on Harry Roy's 1933 recording of the song. In June, they had their own slot on the BBC National Programme. Later that year, the duo toured Scandinavia. In early 1938, they could be heard in their own series, Tomorrow's Songs, on the BBC Regional Programme in London. Moreton and Kaye also composed several tunes together, including "Peter Pan". Billed "The Original Tiger Ragamuffins", cinema audiences could see them playing "Peter Pan" at two grand pianos in an August 1938 Pathétone newsreel. In October that year, they topped the Concert Hall bill for the final week of the Empire Exhibition in Glasgow, where Kaye played the electric Hammond organ as part of their stage act for the first time. In the late 1930s, the duo made forays into classical music, recording a two-part medley of Franz Lehar waltzes and Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Their recordings tended to have accompaniment on drums, string bass, and occasionally, Hawaiian guitar. The advent of the Second World War saw their performing career briefly interrupted. Moreton volunteered for service in the Royal Air Force in June 1940, leaving Kaye to temporarily go solo, before he also enlisted. The pair were reunited during the war to entertain troops at RAF bases around the UK. In 1943, they had their own BBC Radio series, Keys For Two. Moreton and Kaye both achieved the rank of Sergeant, and Moreton served in the British Liberation Army. Post-war success Having been released from the RAF, Moreton and Kaye continued performing, with a |
und Akkumulatorenbau GmbH for electric vehicles. In 1920, the name was changed to Auto- und Akkumulatorenfabrik Aktiengesellschaft (AAA), which remained in place until 1922. The commercial vehicle factory for electric vehicles, which existed until 1925, was continued from 1922 with the company name Aktiengesellschaft für Akkuulatoren- und Automobilbau. AAA was the first German company to build four-wheel drive cars. Production ended in 1925 when the company went bankrupt. This well-known commercial vehicle factory is often confused with the accumulator factory AG, which was also located in Berlin, Asländische Platz 3 from 1918 to 1936. Electric vehicles with a payload of 1.5 to 2 tons were also manufactured there under the Afa brand, which were used as milk trucks, among other things. Vehicles Vans and parcel delivery vans were produced for a payload of 0.6 | went bankrupt. This well-known commercial vehicle factory is often confused with the accumulator factory AG, which was also located in Berlin, Asländische Platz 3 from 1918 to 1936. Electric vehicles with a payload of 1.5 to 2 tons were also manufactured there under the Afa brand, which were used as milk trucks, among other things. Vehicles Vans and parcel delivery vans were produced for a payload of 0.6 to 2 tons. These commercial vehicles were equipped with an 8.5 hp electric motor, which was installed swinging in the spring-loaded frame with the front. The range of the two built types was 60 km. The type AAA had as a van |
– feldshers, with a four-year study program. In 1959 the sanitary high school was abolished, and the post-secondary school was transferred to the Sanitary Technical School in Arad, until 1972. Since 1972, as a result of the reorganization, the institution has been transformed into a sanitary school group, with two forms of organization: high school and post-secondary school. It functioned again as a sanitary high school between 1978 and 1990. In 1992, the | two forms of organization: high school and post-secondary school. It functioned again as a sanitary high school between 1978 and 1990. In 1992, the high school became a school group again, and in 1996 it became a college; it got its current name in |
co-host a television show, starting with her debut on "Today in Georgia", in 1968. Billye went on to host her own show, 'Billye'. Advocacy Philanthropy Co-founder of Hank Aaron Chasing the Dream Foundation Founder of UNCF Masked Ball Personal life Billye Jewel Suber was born in Anderson County, Texas on October 16, 1936, to Nathan Suber and Annie Mae Smith. Billye was first married to Civil Rights Activist, Samuel Woodrow Williams, they had one | Suber was born in Anderson County, Texas on October 16, 1936, to Nathan Suber and Annie Mae Smith. Billye was first married to Civil Rights Activist, Samuel Woodrow Williams, they had one child together, Ceci. In 1973, Billye married professional baseball player, Hank Aaron in Jamaica. Awards 2003 - Martin Luther King, Jr. “Salute to Greatness” 2016 - YWCA Woman of Achievement Legacy Billye Suber Aaron Pavilion at Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia. References External links |
of trustees managed the funds. One of Hugo Stinnes' confidants was entrusted with managing and distributing this fund. From then on, money from this fund flowed generously to all anti-Bolshevik groups, including the following organizations: The Anti-Bolshevik League under the code name General Secretariat to study and combat Bolshevism The Union for Combating Bolshevism The citizen council movement (cf. Reich Citizens Council) Recruitment agencies for the Freikorps Student jobs Self-protection formations (cf. residents' militias) The coffers of the active troops The Social Democratic Party of Germany. A bank loan of 50 million Reichsmarks was immediately made available immediately after it was set up. Alexander Ringleb was responsible for the administration and distribution of the incoming sums, for which he gave up his previous work as a judge. The existence of the fund is considered to be certain in research, but the 500 million marks mentioned by Stadtler - an enormous amount at this point in time despite already noticeable inflation - are regarded as an "exaggeration or [...] [total sum] from the inflationary period". Contract killings In his memoirs, Stadtler reports how, after the end of the Spartacist Uprising, on January 12, 1919, he visited Waldemar Pabst, the commander of the Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division, which was one of the largest troop units still intact in the Reichswehr under the supreme command of Hans von Seeckt had been ordered to Berlin at the beginning of the year to put down uprisings against the provisional Reich government, in the Eden Hotel. He had convinced him of the "necessity" of the killings and broke "Gustav Noske's hesitance" about using the military in Berlin days before:“Parliament could remain stolen from us soldiers at the front, it would depend on men and deeds; if there are no leaders to be seen on our side for the time being, then at least the other side shouldn’t have any either.” Probably through an informer paid by one of Stadtler's organizations, Liebknecht and Luxemburg were tracked down by a "Wilmersdorf militia" on the evening of January 15 in their hiding place they had just occupied in Wilmersdorf, taken prisoner and taken to the Hotel Eden. In the later trials against their murderers, it was repeatedly stated that an "auxiliary service of the SPD" had offered a bounty of 100,000 marks for the capture of the Spartacus leaders. After severe mistreatment they were murdered during the night by members of the Guards Cavalry Rifle Division - according to Stadtler "Major Pabst's men". The members of the troop and vigilante received a large reward per person, which, as non-fiction author Frederik Hetman presumed also came from the anti-Bolshevik fund. End of big finance As the immediate danger of the "Sovietization" of Germany subsided, the League increasingly emphasized the solidarity and national socialist elements of its ideology. Stadtler talked about active work with trade unions and the creation of works councils. Many former sponsors of the League spoke with indignation about Stadtler's "social demagogy". Already in March 1919, Stadtler was forced to leave the leadership of the League and focused on activities in the Association for National and Social Solidarity. Transformation to the League for Protection of German Culture In February 1919, leading members of the League such as Stadtler, Ernst Troeltsch, Gleichen and Joachim Tiburtius published a call for the establishment of a League for the Protection of German Culture in the Catholic daily Germania. The Anti-Bolshevik League appeared under this name from then on. The organization's leadership felt the renaming was necessary after major league events in Essen and Hamburg were blasted by workers. This seemed to indicate that the original name was "burnt". Gleichen had also advised the renaming in order to make it clear "that our 'anti-Bolshevism' is under no circumstances only negative or even contains a tip against the workers." Stadtler explained that they wanted to break away from the competing association to combating Bolshevism, which published hate posters with bounty awards on Karl Radek and other leading members of the Spartacus League. After Stadtler's withdrawal, the league largely gave up the | and suggested that German industry should therefore provide 500 million marks. This sum was approved in the next room and apportioned to German capital via the associations of industry, commerce and banks. The American social historian Gerald D. Feldman gives significantly lower numbers: According to this, the fund received five million Reichsmarks from each business leader present. Stadtler reports in his memoirs that a newly formed board of trustees managed the funds. One of Hugo Stinnes' confidants was entrusted with managing and distributing this fund. From then on, money from this fund flowed generously to all anti-Bolshevik groups, including the following organizations: The Anti-Bolshevik League under the code name General Secretariat to study and combat Bolshevism The Union for Combating Bolshevism The citizen council movement (cf. Reich Citizens Council) Recruitment agencies for the Freikorps Student jobs Self-protection formations (cf. residents' militias) The coffers of the active troops The Social Democratic Party of Germany. A bank loan of 50 million Reichsmarks was immediately made available immediately after it was set up. Alexander Ringleb was responsible for the administration and distribution of the incoming sums, for which he gave up his previous work as a judge. The existence of the fund is considered to be certain in research, but the 500 million marks mentioned by Stadtler - an enormous amount at this point in time despite already noticeable inflation - are regarded as an "exaggeration or [...] [total sum] from the inflationary period". Contract killings In his memoirs, Stadtler reports how, after the end of the Spartacist Uprising, on January 12, 1919, he visited Waldemar Pabst, the commander of the Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division, which was one of the largest troop units still intact in the Reichswehr under the supreme command of Hans von Seeckt had been ordered to Berlin at the beginning of the year to put down uprisings against the provisional Reich government, in the Eden Hotel. He had convinced him of the "necessity" of the killings and broke "Gustav Noske's hesitance" about using the military in Berlin days before:“Parliament could remain stolen from us soldiers at the front, it would depend on men and deeds; if there are no leaders to be seen on our side for the time being, then at least the other side shouldn’t have any either.” Probably through an informer paid by one of Stadtler's organizations, Liebknecht and Luxemburg were tracked down by a "Wilmersdorf militia" on the evening of January 15 in their hiding place they had just occupied in Wilmersdorf, taken prisoner and taken to the Hotel Eden. In the later trials against their murderers, it was repeatedly stated that an "auxiliary service of the SPD" had offered a bounty of 100,000 marks for the capture of the Spartacus leaders. After severe mistreatment they were murdered during the night by members of the Guards Cavalry Rifle Division - according to Stadtler "Major Pabst's men". The members of the troop and vigilante received a large reward per person, which, as non-fiction author Frederik Hetman presumed also came from the anti-Bolshevik fund. End of big finance As the immediate danger of the "Sovietization" of Germany subsided, the League increasingly emphasized the solidarity and national socialist elements of its ideology. Stadtler talked about active work with trade unions and the creation of works councils. Many former sponsors of the League spoke with indignation about Stadtler's "social demagogy". Already in March 1919, Stadtler was forced to leave the leadership of the League and focused on activities in the Association for National and Social Solidarity. Transformation to the League for Protection of German Culture In February 1919, leading members of the League such as Stadtler, Ernst Troeltsch, Gleichen and Joachim Tiburtius published a call for the establishment of a League for the Protection of German Culture in the Catholic daily Germania. The Anti-Bolshevik League appeared under this name from then on. The organization's leadership felt the renaming was necessary after major league events in Essen and Hamburg were blasted by workers. This seemed to indicate that the original name was "burnt". Gleichen had also advised the renaming in order to make it clear "that our 'anti-Bolshevism' is under no circumstances only negative or even contains a tip against the workers." Stadtler explained that they wanted to break away from the competing association to combating Bolshevism, which published hate posters with bounty awards on Karl Radek and other leading members of the Spartacus League. After Stadtler's withdrawal, the league largely gave up the "National Socialist" thrust of its publications and events. Now she took a more moderate course and from then on devoted herself to "enlightenment" about the "dangers" of communism. In this phase it was financed, among other things, by the Reich Citizens Council. However, big industry and banks remain influential. By the summer of 1919 the League had published eight different series of pamphlets containing some 70 individual titles and a large number of leaflets. The pamphlets bore titles such as In the "Bolshevik Madhouse", "The Imperialism of the Bolsheviks", "The Despots |
priest of Galbino in Anghiari, a hill town in the province of Arezzo, from 1983 to 1984 and of Tavernelle in Anghiari from 1984 to 1999. From 1999 to 2019 he was parish priest of San Bartolomeo in Anghiari and coordinator of pastoral unity. From 1999 to 2019 he worked as an architect-engineer for the renovation of sacred buildings. He also taught art history in the high schools of Arezzo from 1985 to 1995. He was also rector of the diocesan sanctuary of the Madonna del Carmine beginning in 1991. He was twice appointed president of the diocesan Institute for the Support of the Clergy, serving from 1993 to 2005. On 15 February 2019, Pope Francis appointed him auxiliary bishop of Perugia-Città della Pieve and titular bishop of Termini Imerese. He received his episcopal consecration in Arezzo on 31 March from Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, archbishop of Perugia, assisted by Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio | 1984 to 1999. From 1999 to 2019 he was parish priest of San Bartolomeo in Anghiari and coordinator of pastoral unity. From 1999 to 2019 he worked as an architect-engineer for the renovation of sacred buildings. He also taught art history in the high schools of Arezzo from 1985 to 1995. He was also rector of the diocesan sanctuary of the Madonna del Carmine beginning in 1991. He was twice appointed president of the diocesan Institute for the Support of the Clergy, serving from 1993 to 2005. On 15 February 2019, Pope Francis appointed him auxiliary bishop of Perugia-Città della Pieve and titular bishop of Termini Imerese. He received his episcopal consecration in Arezzo on 31 March from Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti, archbishop of Perugia, assisted by Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio and Riccardo Fontana, bishop of Arezzo. In mid-March 2019, he was named secretary of the Bishops Conference of Umbria and president of the network of Umbrian church museums. References Living |
songs of the 2020s List of Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs number ones References External links Dance/Mix | songs of the 2020s List of Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs number ones References External links Dance/Mix Show |
Waropen. He made his league debut on 10 November 2021 in a match against Kalteng Putra at the Batakan Stadium, Balikpapan. PSS Sleman He was signed for PSS Sleman to played in Liga 1 on 2021 season. Dusay made his league debut on 2 January 2022 in a match against Persik Kediri | Dusay signed a contract with Indonesian Liga 2 club Persewar Waropen. He made his league debut on 10 November 2021 in a match against Kalteng Putra at the Batakan Stadium, Balikpapan. PSS Sleman He was signed for PSS Sleman to played in Liga 1 on 2021 season. Dusay made his league debut on 2 January 2022 in a match against |
1901 births 1984 deaths English footballers Association football forwards English Football League players Banks O' Dee F.C. players Dundee F.C. players | the Football League for Exeter City, Hull City, South Shields and Swindon Town. References 1901 births 1984 deaths English footballers Association football forwards English Football League players |
secondary school teacher accused of having sexual intercourse with a 15-year-old pupil. It consists of four episodes, which were shown over four successive evenings from 31 January 2022. Plot summary Jenna Garvey is an English teacher who is good at her job and popular with her pupils, but has a shambolic personal life. She is charged with having sex with one of her pupils, Kyle, after a drunken night out. Jenna decides to plead guilty, since she was too drunk to remember what happened on the night in question, and she wants to avoid forcing Kyle to give evidence. She receives a suspended sentence and a community service order. Soon after, she discovers that the evidence against her was fabricated. Cast Sheridan | question, and she wants to avoid forcing Kyle to give evidence. She receives a suspended sentence and a community service order. Soon after, she discovers that the evidence against her was fabricated. Cast Sheridan Smith as Jenna Garvey, an English teacher. Samuel Bottomley as Kyle, a pupil. Cecilia Noble as Pauline, Jenna's colleague. David Fleeshman as Roger Garvey, Jenna's father. Sharon Rooney as Nina, Jenna's colleague. Kelvin Fletcher as Jack, Jenna's colleauge. Sarah-Jane Potts as Mary Tillie Amartey as Izzy, a pupil Ian Puleston-Davies as Brian Karen Henthorn as DI Sowerby Aaronveer Dhillon as Adnan Anil Desai as Rick Mills, the school's headteacher. Production Although the series is set in Bradford, it was mostly filmed in Budapest, Hungary, due to financial reasons. Episodes Reception Carol Midgley of The Times gave it four out five stars, dubbing it 'highly entertaining ' thanks to Smith and the lurid plot elements. Sean O'Grady of The Independent also gave it four out five stars, praising Smith's performance. Anita Singh |
occasional mobile use". Other models, such as the A105, were fairly light for the time, at 6 lb, though battery life was observed to have suffered as a consequence, according to PC Magazine. The magazine wrote that the A105 and A75 were particularly adept at home video capture and editing, while the A65 was rated particularly poorly. The last entry in the series, the A665, had submodels capable of stereoscopic graphics rendering with its special LCD that was compatible with the Nvidia 3D Vision active shutter glasses. The A series was superseded by the P series in 2011. Models | Toshiba Information Systems's premium consumer line of Satellite laptops. Introduced with the A10 and A20 models in 2003, the A series originally targeted high school and college students and workers of small offices and home offices, before becoming a premium line by the late 2000s. Prices of models in the series in 2003 ranged from roughly US$800 to US$1200; it sold especially well in among the SOHO segment. Some laptops in the series constituted desktop replacements because of their heft: the A45 was lauded by PC Magazine and PC World for its battery life and multimedia capabilities, especially the |
an issue. Factors such as risk of metal filings contamination or bacteria harborage and foreign matter contamination could lead support systems to become unsafe or unhygienic. Sanitary support systems have a sloped design to eliminate a horizontal ledge so that dust, particles, or bacteria do not cause build-up on the system. Additionally, they are designed to minimize thread exposure and harborage points. The contractors and specifiers responsible for planning electrical infrastructure systems and the electrical engineers responsible for installing sanitary support systems must understand the environmental conditions and ratings of the installation site as well as the appropriate standards and regulations outlined by the National Electrical Code (NEC). Application Sanitary support systems can be found in factories, food and beverage facilities, pharmaceuticals and water/wastewater or | in environments where sanitation and hygiene are a concern, these methods would be an issue. Factors such as risk of metal filings contamination or bacteria harborage and foreign matter contamination could lead support systems to become unsafe or unhygienic. Sanitary support systems have a sloped design to eliminate a horizontal ledge so that dust, particles, or bacteria do not cause build-up on the system. Additionally, they are designed to minimize thread exposure and harborage points. The contractors and specifiers responsible |
who is the Hugh Monroe Wilson Professor of Radiology at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology. She was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2022. Early life and education Woodard was born in Newton, Massachusetts. She has said that she wanted to be a physician from the age of four. Woodard completed her bachelor's degree at Duke University. She remained at Duke for her medical degree, before moving to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Woodard was a medical resident at Duke, where she studied blood clots in the lungs. She revealed that these blood clots could be detected by spinal CT scans. She moved to Washington University in St. | University in St. Louis, where she established multi-detector CT scanning as the standard means to diagnose blood clots. Her research has concentrated on translating pre-clinical imaging to patients. She has developed atherosclerosis agents and PET radiotracers. These radiotracers can detect proteins that are associated with plaques, which can cause sudden heart attack and stroke, or monitor blood flow through heart muscles. Woodard was named the inaugural Hugh Monroe Wilson Professor of Radiology in 2019. In 2021, she was named the Radiological Society of North America Outstanding Researcher of the Year. In 2022, Woodard was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Selected publications References Year of birth missing (living people) Living people People from Newton, Massachusetts American physicians Duke University alumni University |
between stations Muelle YPF and Gamela in the General Mosconi neighborhood, popularly known as "Kilómetro 3". The main cause of the accident was a brake failure that caused the raicar ran at a high speed from Colonia Sarmiento until it crashed another unit that had departed from Comodoro Rivadavia. Overview The progressive deterioration of rolling stock due to lack of maintenance caused the Comodoro Rivadavia Railway (which belonged to Argentine State Railway) had obsolete vehicles by 1960. With the Plan Larkin (a general restructuring of Argentine transport made by engineer Thomas B. Larkin at a request of the government of Argentina leaded by Arturo Frondizi) that recommended the closure of improductive and non-profitable railway lines. the renovation of rolling stock was completely dismissed. As a result, the CRR was forced to continue using obsolete (and risky) material. On July 12, 1960, at 19:00, a Ganz railcar that returned from Sarmiento cracked its brake system. As | happened in a region between stations Muelle YPF and Gamela in the General Mosconi neighborhood, popularly known as "Kilómetro 3". The main cause of the accident was a brake failure that caused the raicar ran at a high speed from Colonia Sarmiento until it crashed another unit that had departed from Comodoro Rivadavia. Overview The progressive deterioration of rolling stock due to lack of maintenance caused the Comodoro Rivadavia Railway (which belonged to Argentine State Railway) had obsolete vehicles by 1960. With the Plan Larkin (a general restructuring of Argentine transport made by engineer Thomas B. Larkin at a request of the government of Argentina leaded by Arturo Frondizi) that recommended the closure of improductive and non-profitable railway lines. the renovation of rolling stock was completely dismissed. As a result, the CRR was forced to continue using obsolete (and risky) material. On July 12, 1960, at 19:00, a Ganz railcar that returned from Sarmiento cracked its brake system. As the emergency brake didn't work either, the tran started a headlong race towards Comodoro Rivadavia, helped by a downward |
Matches drawn L = Matches lost GF = Goals for GA = Goals against GD = Goal differential Countries are listed in alphabetical order As of 6 February 2022 References External links ELO Ratings List of Matches National Football Teams List of Matches Soccerway List of Matches RSSSF List | in 1986. The following list contains all results of the Seychelles' official matches since joining FIFA and the CAF. FIFA results 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1992 1993 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2003 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 All-time record Key Pld = Matches played W = Matches won D = Matches drawn L = Matches lost |
Life Yanina has a degree in Arts. In 1993 she founded her own fashion house. In 2007, Yanina Couture debuted at AltaRomaAltaModa in Rome. Since 2010, her fashion house shows at the Paris Fashion Week and she dresses celebrities for red carpets like the Cannes Film Festival. The Paris Fashion Institute has included the Yanina Fashion House study course into its program. Recognition Yanina was the first Russian fashion designer to partner with amFAR, the world’s largest charity organization. Yanina is a highly demanded celebrity dresser for ceremonies like the Oscars, Grammy Awards and more. The celebrity clientele list includes Lady Gaga, Rita Ora, | the Fédération de la Houte Couture et de la Mode announced Yanina officially as Guest Member of the Paris Fashion Week, thus including Yanina Fashion House into the couture club that defines the history and the trends of global fashion. Starting from SS2022 season, Yanina Couture (whose collections have been shown at each Week since 2010 and whose creations are worn by top global celebrities at the biggest events and red carpets around the world) is listed on the FHCM’s calendar. Life Yanina has a degree in Arts. In 1993 she founded her own fashion house. In 2007, Yanina Couture debuted at AltaRomaAltaModa in Rome. Since 2010, her fashion house shows at the Paris Fashion Week and she dresses celebrities for red carpets like the Cannes Film Festival. The Paris Fashion Institute has included the Yanina Fashion House study course into its program. Recognition Yanina was the first Russian fashion |
facility. HyImpulse is bankrolled by Rudolf Schwarz, chairman of German technology company IABG. The company is developing a three-stage hybrid rocket designed to transport to LEO satellites of up to 500 kg named SL1. The hybrid rocket engine uses a | Rudolf Schwarz, chairman of German technology company IABG. The company is developing a three-stage hybrid rocket designed to transport to LEO satellites of up to 500 kg named SL1. The hybrid rocket engine uses a paraffin-based fuel and liquid oxygen. |
is a lecturer in the Department of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics at the University of Cambridge. Education and career Keating grew up in Toulouse, France. She read mathematics in Clare College, Cambridge from 2005 to 2009, earning a master's degree through Part III of the Mathematical Tripos. She went on to graduate study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, completing her dissertation | Columbia University and a member of the Institute for Advanced Study. She became a lecturer at Cambridge in 2017. Recognition Keating is the winner of the 2021 Berwick Prize of the London Mathematical Society, for her research using Dehn twists to study the symmetries of symplectic manifolds. References External links Home |
Gianyar. Career statistics Club References External links Imam Mahmudi at Soccerway Imam Mahmudi at Liga Indonesia 1994 births Living people Indonesian footballers PSS Sleman players Association football | a defender for Liga 1 club PSS Sleman. Club career PSS Sleman He was signed for PSS Sleman to played in Liga 1 on 2021 |
South America, where it occurs in the Lagoa dos Patos basin in Brazil. The species is found in slow and moderate-flowing waters over sandy substrates with submerged | and is noted to be sympatric with the species Hisonotus laevior throughout its distribution. References Loricariidae Catfish of South America Fish described in 2008 |
suffering with a debilitating nasal condition. References 1898 births 1970 deaths Association football forwards English Football League players | 23 after suffering with a debilitating nasal condition. References 1898 births 1970 deaths Association football forwards English Football League players Association footballers |
seeds, sesame, and peanuts), samosas, and paratha served with paprika and turmeric-based curries. The restaurant is most known for the tea leaf salad. Top Burmese Bistro Royale Top Burmese Bistro Royale opened in Beaverton in 2020 and has an "Indian-influenced" menu. Robots help serve food at the restaurant. Top Burmese Burma Joy Top Burmese Burma Joy (or Burma Joy Noodle House) is located on 23rd Avenue in the Northwest District and has focused on Chinese-inspired noodles since 2021. The restaurant is serving Tea Leaf "Laphet" Dumplings during The Oregonian's annual Dumpling Week in 2022. Top Burmese Ambassador Top Burmese Ambassador in | for the tea leaf salad. Top Burmese Bistro Royale Top Burmese Bistro Royale opened in Beaverton in 2020 and has an "Indian-influenced" menu. Robots help serve food at the restaurant. Top Burmese Burma Joy Top Burmese Burma Joy (or Burma Joy Noodle House) is located on 23rd Avenue in the Northwest District and has focused on Chinese-inspired noodles since 2021. The restaurant is serving Tea Leaf "Laphet" Dumplings during The Oregonian's annual Dumpling Week in 2022. Top Burmese Ambassador Top Burmese Ambassador in Hillsboro is slated to open in 2022. Reception Nick Woo included Top Burmese's Ametha Ohn Htamin in Eater Portland's 2019 list of "13 Stellar Curries in Portland". The website's Waz Wu included the samusa thoke served by the original restaurant and Bistro Royale |
Lincoln High School. She worked primarily in school libraries in Leon County, working in Griffin High School and Bond Elementary (then a junior high school). Later in her career she worked night shifts at the Northwood Mall's public library. She served as the membership chair for the Florida division of the American Association of School Libraries. Brown was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dallis Baldwin on Suwannee Street in the Smokey Hollow community of Tallahassee, Florida, one of ten children. She was a charter | Leon County, working in Griffin High School and Bond Elementary (then a junior high school). Later in her career she worked night shifts at the Northwood Mall's public library. She served as the membership chair for the Florida division of the American Association of School Libraries. Brown was born to Mr. and Mrs. Dallis Baldwin on Suwannee Street in the Smokey Hollow community of Tallahassee, Florida, |
Austrian General of the Artillery and politician who served as the Austrian Minister of War from November 21, 1848, to June 2, 1849. Biography Franz von Cordon was born in Vienna in 1796 and, still very young, he decided to pursue a military career, training in the branch of engineers. On 1 September 1816 he officially joined the Imperial Austrian Army as a cadet, being promoted the following year to the rank of second lieutenant and then to that of lieutenant in September 1818. On 19 November 1830 he obtained the rank of captain, being assigned first to the main engineering office in Vienna and then in Bohemia and then in Italy where, on February 26 of that same year, General Radetzky chose him as his aide-de-camp. In 1831 he was promoted to the rank of major. In April 1834 he obtained the rank of lieutenant colonel in the 45th Infantry Regiment, a position he held until September 18, 1838, when he was promoted to the rank of colonel in the "Wimpffen" infantry regiment, with which he remained for some time in Graz. During this period he was also able to earn the esteem of the | to the main engineering office in Vienna and then in Bohemia and then in Italy where, on February 26 of that same year, General Radetzky chose him as his aide-de-camp. In 1831 he was promoted to the rank of major. In April 1834 he obtained the rank of lieutenant colonel in the 45th Infantry Regiment, a position he held until September 18, 1838, when he was promoted to the rank of colonel in the "Wimpffen" infantry regiment, with which he remained for some time in Graz. During this period he was also able to earn the esteem of the local inhabitants, receiving the honorary citizenship of Graz and Rijeka. On April 18, 1846, he was promoted to the rank of major general first and then of brigadier general, being recalled to Vienna. In March |
Cryptomyzus ribis is a species of true bug found in Europe. It was described by the Swedish taxonomist Carl Linnaeus in 1758. The larvae feed on the leaves of current bushes (Ribes species), especial red currant, creating abnormal plant growths, known as galls. Description Signs of Cryptomyzus ribis are domed blisters on the leaves of, mainly red and white current bushes. Soon after the leaves open in the spring, the galls are yellow and turn red by the early summer. Leaves can also be crinkled and a colony of yellow-greenish aphids live in the hairy depressions on the underside of the leaves. Cultivars of red currants are preferred. Adults are long and during the summer some mature aphids | current bushes. Soon after the leaves open in the spring, the galls are yellow and turn red by the early summer. Leaves can also be crinkled and a colony of yellow-greenish aphids live in the hairy depressions on the underside of the leaves. Cultivars of red currants are preferred. Adults are long and during the summer some mature aphids leave the galls and migrate to a secondary host, hedge woundwort (Stachys sylvatica), while others stay on currants. All produce several generations, and in the autumn, females lay overwintering eggs on currant twigs, which hatch the following spring. Red current (Ribes rubrum) is the preferred species (including varieties of |
Publishers, 1902, pp. 94–99, https://www.jstor.org/stable/44100617. Clermont-Ganneau, Dédicace phénicienne à Echmoun provenant de Sidon, Receuil d’Archéologie Orientale 5, 1903, 34-35 Lagrange, M. J. “NOTE SUR LES INSCRIPTIONS TROUVÉES PAR MACRIDY-BEY A BOSTAN-ECH-CHEIKH.” Revue Biblique (1892–1940), vol. 11, no. 4, | provenant de Sidon, Receuil d’Archéologie Orientale 5, 1903, 34-35 Lagrange, M. J. “NOTE SUR LES INSCRIPTIONS TROUVÉES PAR MACRIDY-BEY A BOSTAN-ECH-CHEIKH.” Revue Biblique (1892–1940), vol. 11, no. 4, Peeters Publishers, 1902, pp. 515–26, |
in 1943 as a Colonel and was stationed at Fort Detrick, where he became involved with the army's research and development of biological weapons. Sanders performed a number of classified investigations at Detrick, and proposed the use of weapons infused with botulism. He also warned that the Japanese Empire was planning to wage biological warfare on the United States through the dropping of anthrax-infused bombs on targets in the Pacific Coast. Granting of immunity to Unit 731 Following the surrender of Japan and the Allied occupation that followed, Sanders was called upon by General Douglas MacArthur to head an investigation into Japan's biological warfare activity. Sanders traveled to Japan aboard the ship Sturgess, arriving in Yokohama in September 1945. Sanders was assigned with the interrogation and interviewing of several Japanese scientists and military personnel involved with the Imperial Japanese Army's chemical warfare research and development unit, Unit 731, which operated in Harbin, Manchuria and engaged in practices of illegal human experimentation from 1932 to 1945. Among those interviewed was bacteriologist Ryoichi Naito, who oversaw many of Unit 731's experiments, and also served as a translator for Sanders while interrogating the other interviewees. Initially, Naito and the other persons interviewed by Sanders denied any accusations of human experimentation, stating that the Japanese military had engaged in defensive research, and that experimenting on humans was "clearly against humanity". After Sanders threatened to hand those involved with Unit 731 over to the Soviet Union, however, Naito agreed to send Sanders a manuscript which detailed their activities whilst headquartered at Harbin. After reviewing the data provided by those involved in Unit 731, Sanders presented the findings to MacArthur, stating that he believed the data to contain valuable information that must not end up in Soviet | enlisted into the army in 1943 as a Colonel and was stationed at Fort Detrick, where he became involved with the army's research and development of biological weapons. Sanders performed a number of classified investigations at Detrick, and proposed the use of weapons infused with botulism. He also warned that the Japanese Empire was planning to wage biological warfare on the United States through the dropping of anthrax-infused bombs on targets in the Pacific Coast. Granting of immunity to Unit 731 Following the surrender of Japan and the Allied occupation that followed, Sanders was called upon by General Douglas MacArthur to head an investigation into Japan's biological warfare activity. Sanders traveled to Japan aboard the ship Sturgess, arriving in Yokohama in September 1945. Sanders was assigned with the interrogation and interviewing of several Japanese scientists and military personnel involved with the Imperial Japanese Army's chemical warfare research and development unit, Unit 731, which operated in Harbin, Manchuria and engaged in practices of illegal human experimentation from 1932 to 1945. Among those interviewed was bacteriologist Ryoichi Naito, who oversaw many of Unit 731's experiments, and also served as a translator for Sanders while interrogating the other interviewees. Initially, Naito and the other persons interviewed by Sanders denied any accusations of human experimentation, stating that the Japanese military had engaged in defensive research, and that experimenting on humans was "clearly against humanity". After Sanders threatened to hand those involved with Unit 731 over to the Soviet Union, however, Naito agreed to send Sanders a manuscript which detailed their activities whilst headquartered at Harbin. After reviewing the data provided by those involved in Unit 731, Sanders presented the findings to MacArthur, stating that he believed the data to contain valuable information that must not end up in Soviet hands. Knowing that the physicians had fled their headquarters in order to avoid prosecution by the Soviets for war crimes, Sanders suggested that MacArthur grant the physicians involved legal immunity against any war crimes charges in exchange for their data. MacArthur agreed with Sanders's suggestion, believing the data “almost incalculable and incredibly valuable to the United States”, and agreed to grant the |
Locomotive Engineers' Union (, Zendoro) was a trade union representing railway workers in Japan. The union's origins lay in the National Railway Locomotive Engineers' Union (Doro). In 1973, Doro's leadership called for votes for the Socialist Party of Japan, but a minority group preferred to back the Communist Party of Japan (KPJ). This group was expelled, and in 1974 founded Zendoro. By | (Doro). In 1973, Doro's leadership called for votes for the Socialist Party of Japan, but a minority group preferred to back the Communist Party of Japan (KPJ). This group was expelled, and in 1974 founded Zendoro. By 1975, the new union had 3,500 members, but this steadily |
(25 December 1895–1980) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Bristol City, Hull City, Newcastle United, Queens Park Rangers and Wigan Borough. References 1895 births 1980 | English footballers Association football forwards English Football League players Walker Celtic F.C. players Carlisle United F.C. players Bristol City F.C. players Newcastle United F.C. players |
Capo in the Capo quarter. Documents assign the church first in 1489. It had been built adjacent to a church of San Rocco later Santi Cosma e Damiano. Documents list the church as belonging to the confraternity dei Neri, but by 1577, the church was affiliated with an order caring for orphan children. In 1648–49, it was granted to a congregation of Christian slaves, later to a confraternity ministering to porters conducting deliveries with animals. In 1660 it was refurbished under the dedication of | congregation of Christian slaves, later to a confraternity ministering to porters conducting deliveries with animals. In 1660 it was refurbished under the dedication of Santa Maria di Gesù, but locally known as Santa Maruzza ri Canceddi. The facade and layout is simple. The nave ceiling has a fresco depicting Saint Zaccharias. Other frescoes depict events in the life of Mary. External links Gaspare Palermo, Guida istruttiva per potersi conoscere tutte le magnificenze della Città di Palermo, Volume |
Playa San Francisco is a resort (balneario) in the Maldonado Department of Uruguay. Location The resort is located on the coast of Río de | is located on the coast of Río de la Plata, about south of downtown Piriápolis. It was named |
Shuang scored two goals: a penalty in the 3rd minute and another in the 69th minute. Two other goals came from Wang Shanshan and Zhang Xin in the 9th and 53rd minute, respectively. The next match was a 7–0 rout against Iran. Wang Shuang and Wang Shanshan both scored two goals each, while Xiao Yuyi, Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Tang Jiali, and an own goal made up the rest. The last match in Group A was supposed to be against India, but India withdrew due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As the winners of Group A, China PR next defeated Vietnam 3–1 in the quarter-finals. The match initially was in Vietnam's favor due to a goal by Nguyễn Thị Tuyết Dung in the 11th minute. However, China PR fought back through three goals by the 53rd minute from Wang Shuang, Wang Shanshan, and Tang Jiali. In the semi-finals, China PR made an upset against Japan women's national football team, who was projected to finish 2nd per FIFA. Goals were made by Wu Chengshu and Wang Shanshan in the 46th and 119th minute, respectively. After the overtime period was over, China defeated Japan 4–3 in a penalty shoot-out. The biggest feats in this match were that the only two shots on goal ended up scoring, and Japan had six. The four saves made by Zhu Yu was one of the biggest reasons why this result occurred. South Korea As South Korea did not finish in the top three at the 2018 AFC Women's Asian Cup, South Korea had to go through the qualifiers to make the final tournament. South Korea swept Group E by defeating hosts Uzbekistan 4–0 and Mongolia 12–0 to qualify. As a result of their performance in 2018, South Korea was placed in pot two out of four in the draw. South Korea was drawn into Group C with Japan, Myanmar, and Vietnam. The first match against Vietnam resulted in a score of 3–0, which consisted of two goals from Chelsea F.C. midfielder Ji So-yun and an own goal. The second match against Myanmar resulted in a 2–0 score, featuring one goal each from Ji So-yun and Brighton & Hove Albion forward Lee Geum-min. The final match of the group stage resulted in a 1–1 draw against Japan, with the lone goal coming from Seo Ji-youn in the 85th minute. In the quarter-finals, South Korea was up against tournament favorites and 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup hosts Australia per FIFA. South Korea upset the Matildas with a 1–0 defeat, featuring a goal from Ji So-yun in the 87th minute. The South Korea defense was the most invaluable, as Australia beat South Korea in | and 53rd minute, respectively. The next match was a 7–0 rout against Iran. Wang Shuang and Wang Shanshan both scored two goals each, while Xiao Yuyi, Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Tang Jiali, and an own goal made up the rest. The last match in Group A was supposed to be against India, but India withdrew due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As the winners of Group A, China PR next defeated Vietnam 3–1 in the quarter-finals. The match initially was in Vietnam's favor due to a goal by Nguyễn Thị Tuyết Dung in the 11th minute. However, China PR fought back through three goals by the 53rd minute from Wang Shuang, Wang Shanshan, and Tang Jiali. In the semi-finals, China PR made an upset against Japan women's national football team, who was projected to finish 2nd per FIFA. Goals were made by Wu Chengshu and Wang Shanshan in the 46th and 119th minute, respectively. After the overtime period was over, China defeated Japan 4–3 in a penalty shoot-out. The biggest feats in this match were that the only two shots on goal ended up scoring, and Japan had six. The four saves made by Zhu Yu was one of the biggest reasons why this result occurred. South Korea As South Korea did not finish in the top three at the 2018 AFC Women's Asian Cup, South Korea had to go through the qualifiers to make the final tournament. South Korea swept Group E by defeating hosts Uzbekistan 4–0 and Mongolia 12–0 to qualify. As a result of their performance in 2018, South Korea was placed in pot two out of four in the draw. South Korea was drawn into Group C with Japan, Myanmar, and Vietnam. The first match against Vietnam resulted in a score of 3–0, which consisted of two goals from Chelsea F.C. midfielder Ji So-yun and an own goal. The second match against Myanmar resulted in a 2–0 score, featuring one goal each from Ji So-yun and Brighton & Hove Albion forward Lee Geum-min. The final match of the group stage resulted in a 1–1 draw against Japan, with the lone goal coming from Seo Ji-youn in the 85th minute. In the quarter-finals, South Korea was up against tournament favorites and 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup hosts Australia per FIFA. South Korea upset the Matildas with a 1–0 defeat, featuring a goal from Ji So-yun in the 87th minute. The South Korea defense was the most invaluable, as Australia beat South Korea in corners, possession, pass |
You", song by Red Fang from the album Only Ghosts Not | from the album Only Ghosts Not for You, an album by the band |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.