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6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
However, Ueda, while a big man, constantly faints. Though at times he can be roused to action and becomes a fierce fighter. In the third series, his more brave moments are often preceded by the heavily accented English phrase, "Why don't you do your best?" Which is one of his book titles, as is donto koi.
- Ueda frequently hits his head when he walks through doors or houses with low ceilings. This is due to his extremely tall height.
- Ueda often starts his appearance in each episode by using a magic trick, which Yamada easily figures out. Yamada usually does a simple magic trick towards the middle of the episode, and laughs characteristically ("kyeahehehe!") after explaining how she did it.
- | 6,122,200 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
Ueda's car door breaks off at one point, and he carries it over his shoulder quite often. His car also follows him at some points the feature-length specials and movies. This is never explained. In fact many of the more mystical aspects (and of course the irony that the only people with supernatural abilities may be Yamada and her mother) of Ueda and Yamada are never explained or even noticed by the main characters.
- Yamada has to practice smiling. She has no friends, save Ueda. She laughs in an unnatural way (see above) and is sometimes smacked by others when she laughs at her own cleverness.
- Yamada's landlady is constantly hounding her for money, and not easily tricked. She is assisted | 6,122,201 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
by a tenant from Bangladesh, who eventual marries the landlady and by the beginning of Series 3 has two children (one boy, one girl) with her.
- Yamada's mother, Satomi (played by Yōko Nogiwa), is constantly scheming to make money, and loves Ueda like a son, which infuriates Yamada.
- Yamada (and sometimes others) constantly misreads kanji and Ueda has to correct her.
- Yamada often hits and disables Ueda. Detective Yabe often punches his assistants for saying things that annoy him.
- When someone is struck, the camera often shakes.
- Detective Yabe's assistant changes from a dullard to a genius in the third series, who constantly spouts, "I graduated from Tokyo University!" The new assistant | 6,122,202 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
is smacked as much as the first. In special and the second movie, a third, Otaku assistant takes the role.
- Another constant gag concerns detective Yabe's hair, which is a wig. Many puns are made when someone says a word like that sounds like "hair" and Yabe grabs his toupee and shouts "It's natural!"
- Detective Yabe (Katsuhisa Namase) often accuses Yamada of the current crime, or sometimes is even legitimately seeking her for fraud she has done. Usually, she can escape incarceration with simple tricks.
- There are a multitude of musical cues. For instance, when someone realizes something, there is usually the sound of a tambourine.
- As the series and movies increase, special effects | 6,122,203 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
become more and more surreal. Lightbulbs above peoples heads, bugs with human faces, and Ueda stretching his limbs to fight like a cartoon character are but a few examples.
# Music.
Songs by Chihiro Onitsuka have been used as the closing themes for all three seasons of the TV show and the first movie. The song "Gekkō" was used for Series 1 and the first movie, "Ryūseigun" for Series 2, and "Watashi to Warutsu (Waltz) wo" for Series 3. Chihiro herself appeared onscreen singing "Gekkō" during the closing credits of the final episode of Series 1.
# Video game.
A visual novel video game based on the TV series called was published by Konami for the Nintendo DS on May 13, 2010.
# Production notes.
- | 6,122,204 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
During the filming of seasons one and two, the svelte Nakama, who plays Yamada, had to flatten her chest further with a straight-padded blouse under her clothes because she was not modestly endowed enough for the producers' liking. However, in season three, Nakama no longer wears the padding, leading to a new gag in which Ueda often comments that she has a more pronounced chest than before. Yamada replies that it is "high-level magic", to which Ueda snorts and says that it is more likely the result of surgical enhancements.
- In the second movie, Yamada crawls around creepily for one scene. She also walks creepily for one scene in the third movie. These are the references to Nakama Yukie starring | 6,122,205 |
6866577 | Trick (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trick%20(TV%20series) | Trick (TV series)
w gag in which Ueda often comments that she has a more pronounced chest than before. Yamada replies that it is "high-level magic", to which Ueda snorts and says that it is more likely the result of surgical enhancements.
- In the second movie, Yamada crawls around creepily for one scene. She also walks creepily for one scene in the third movie. These are the references to Nakama Yukie starring as Sadako Yamamura in Ring Zero.
- Ueda's apartment has pictures of him everywhere. These are from Hiroshi Abe's days as a young teen model.
# External links.
- TRICK - The Movie 2 - (2006) at Toho
- TRICK The Movie Psychic Battle Royale (2010) at Toho
- Trick The Movie: Last Stage (2014) at Toho | 6,122,206 |
6866637 | Ugod | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ugod | Ugod
Ugod
Ugod is a small village in the North-Western part of Hungary, in Veszprém county, near Mount Bakony and close to Lake Balaton, at the juncture of Bakony and Little Alföld. Good starting point for hikers, hunters and the lovers of countryside.
Distances: Budapest (150 km), Győr (60 km), Lake Balaton (80 km), Veszprém (60 km), Pápa (15 km).
# History.
First written mention of the village from 1289. King László IV dated a charter during a campaign in this year. It is supposed that the Fortress of Ugod still existed at that time but it is doubtful. Because that charter dated "in Ugod" instead of "in Ugod fortress" or "under Ugod fortress" as usual at that time.
During Árpád Dynasty Ugod | 6,122,207 |
6866637 | Ugod | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ugod | Ugod
was the part of Bakony Erdőispánság. Ispán is the ruler of the territory. King Stephen V signed Csák Lukács's son Demeter and his posteriors to be forever ispán of that territory and allowed him to build fortress.
Csák family was relative to the dynasty. Their origin is from the Honfoglalás (settlement of the Magyars). Due to Anonymus and Képes Krónika Csák was the son of Chief Előd's great-grandcild Szabolcs. From that Csák is the family originated. That family was streamed to 12 arm. One of them called ugodi. That arms's earliest known member was Csák Lukács. In this family the name Ugrin (means Hungarian man) was very popular. One form of that name with diminutive -d is Ugod.
That was the | 6,122,208 |
6866637 | Ugod | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ugod | Ugod
ars). Due to Anonymus and Képes Krónika Csák was the son of Chief Előd's great-grandcild Szabolcs. From that Csák is the family originated. That family was streamed to 12 arm. One of them called ugodi. That arms's earliest known member was Csák Lukács. In this family the name Ugrin (means Hungarian man) was very popular. One form of that name with diminutive -d is Ugod.
That was the name of Demeter's son or grandson, who after the village is nominated.
# Sights.
- Roman Catholic church (former fortress)
- Parish
- Pieta in front of parish
- Chalk-smelters around the village
- Ugod Lake
- Stephen I's statue
- Hubertlak in the surrounding forest
# External links.
- Official Homepage | 6,122,209 |
6866641 | BIMU8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=BIMU8 | BIMU8
BIMU8
BIMU-8 is a drug which acts as a 5-HT receptor selective agonist. BIMU-8 was one of the first compounds of this class. The main action of BIMU-8 is to increase the rate of respiration by activating an area of the brain stem known as the pre-Botzinger complex.
# Use.
The most obvious practical use of BIMU-8 is to combine it with opioid analgesic drugs in order to counteract the dangerous respiratory depression which can occur when opioids are used in excessive doses. BIMU-8 does not affect the pleasurable or painkilling properties of opiates, which means that if combined with BIMU-8, large therapeutic doses of opiates could theoretically be given to humans without risking a decrease in | 6,122,210 |
6866641 | BIMU8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=BIMU8 | BIMU8
breathing rate. Studies have shown BIMU-8 to be effective in rats at counteracting the respiratory depression caused by the potent opioid fentanyl, which has caused many accidental deaths in humans. However, no human trials of BIMU-8 have yet been carried out.
Other studies have suggested a role for 5-HT agonists in learning and memory, and BIMU-8 was found to increase conditioned responses in mice, so this drug might also be useful for improving memory in humans.
Some other selective 5-HT agonists such as mosapride and tegaserod (the only 5-HT agonists currently licensed for use in humans) have been found not to reduce respiratory depression. On the other hand, another 5-HT agonist, zacopride, | 6,122,211 |
6866641 | BIMU8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=BIMU8 | BIMU8
does inhibit respiratory depression in a similar manner to BIMU-8.
This suggests that either the anti-respiratory depression action is mediated via a specific subtype of the 5-HT receptor which is activated by BIMU-8 and zacopride, but not by mosapride or tegaserod, or alternatively there may be functional selectivity involved whereby BIMU-8 and zacopride produce a different physiological response following 5-HT binding compared to other 5-HT agonists. Another alternative to this is that the 5-HT agonist currently available for use in humans do not have great enough potency or bioavailability in the brain to elicit the same effects.
# Other activity.
Along with several other 5-HT ligands, | 6,122,212 |
6866641 | BIMU8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=BIMU8 | BIMU8
alternatively there may be functional selectivity involved whereby BIMU-8 and zacopride produce a different physiological response following 5-HT binding compared to other 5-HT agonists. Another alternative to this is that the 5-HT agonist currently available for use in humans do not have great enough potency or bioavailability in the brain to elicit the same effects.
# Other activity.
Along with several other 5-HT ligands, BIMU-8 was also found to possess significant affinity for the sigma receptors, acting as a σ antagonist. It is unclear as yet what contribution this additional activity makes to the pharmacological profile of BIMU-8 and other 5-HT ligands that also show sigma affinity. | 6,122,213 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Acra (fortress)
The Acra (also spelled or Akra, from , or חקרה) was a fortified compound in Jerusalem built by Antiochus Epiphanes, ruler of the Seleucid Empire, following his sack of the city in 168 BCE. The fortress played a significant role in the events surrounding the Maccabean Revolt and the formation of the Hasmonean Kingdom. It was destroyed by Simon Thassi during this struggle.
The exact location of the Acra, critical to understanding Hellenistic Jerusalem, had been a matter of lengthy discussions. Historians and archaeologists had proposed various sites around Jerusalem, relying mainly on conclusions drawn from literary evidence. This approach began to change in the light of excavations | 6,122,214 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
which commenced in the late 1960s. New discoveries had prompted reassessments of the ancient literary sources, Jerusalem's geography and previously discovered artifacts. Yoram Tsafrir had interpreted a masonry joint in the southeastern corner of the Temple Mount platform as a clue to the Acra's possible position. During Benjamin Mazar's 1968 and 1978 excavations adjacent to the south wall of the Mount, features were uncovered which may have been connected with the Acra, including barrack-like rooms and a huge cistern. In November 2015 the Israel Antiquities Authority announced the likely discovery of the Acra in a different location, south-west of the Temple Mount and north-west of the City | 6,122,215 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
of David.
The Ancient Greek term "acra" was used to describe other fortified structures during the Hellenistic period. The Acra is often called the Seleucid Acra to distinguish it from references to the Ptolemaic Baris as an "acra" and from the later quarter in Jerusalem which inherited the name Acra.
# History.
## Background.
Following Alexander the Great's death in 323 BCE, Judea was contested between the Ptolemaic Kingdom in Egypt, and the Seleucid Empire based in Syria and Mesopotamia. Seleucid emperor Antiochus III's victory over Egypt in the Battle of Panium brought Judea under Seleucid control. The Jewish population of Jerusalem had aided Antiochus during his siege of the Baris, the | 6,122,216 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
fortified base of Jerusalem's Egyptian garrison. Their support was rewarded with a charter affirming Jewish religious autonomy, including barring foreigners and impure animals from the Temple's precincts, and an allocation of official funds for the maintenance of certain religious rituals in the Temple. Despite being allowed religious freedom, many Jews were enticed by and adopted elements of the prestigious and influential Greek lifestyle. The imperial culture offered a route to political and material advancement, and this led to the formation of Hellenistic elites among the Jewish population. Hellenization produced tensions between observant Jews and their brethren who had assimilated Greek | 6,122,217 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
culture.
Antiochus IV Epiphanes ascended the Seleucid throne in 175 BCE. Shortly afterward, Epiphanes was petitioned by Jason for appointment to the position of High Priest of Israel—an office occupied by his brother Onias III. Jason, himself thoroughly Hellenized, furthermore promised to increase the tribute paid by the city and to establish within it the infrastructure of a Greek Polis, including a gymnasium and an ephebion. Jason's petition was granted, yet after a 42-month rule he was ousted by Antiochus and forced to flee to Ammon. In the meantime, Antiochus IV had launched two invasions of Egypt, in 170 BCE and again in 169 BCE, and routed the Ptolemaic armies. Antiochus' victories were | 6,122,218 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
short-lived. His intent to unify the Seleucid and Ptolemaic kingdoms alarmed the rapidly expanding Roman state, which demanded that he withdraw his forces from Egypt. With Antiochus engaged in Egypt, a false rumor spread in Jerusalem that he had been killed. In the ensuing uncertainty, Jason gathered a force of 1,000 followers and attempted to take Jerusalem by storm. Although the attack was repulsed, when word of the fighting reached Antiochus in Egypt, he suspected his Judean subjects of exploiting his setback as an opportunity to revolt. In 168 BCE, Antiochus IV Epiphanes marched on and sacked Jerusalem, looting the temple treasury and killing thousands of its residents. Reversing his father's | 6,122,219 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
policy, Antiochus IV issued decrees outlawing traditional Jewish rites and persecuting observant Jews. Temple rituals were discontinued, Jewish observance of Sabbath prohibited, and circumcision outlawed.
## Construction.
To consolidate his hold on the city, monitor events on the Temple Mount and safeguard the Hellenized faction in Jerusalem, Antiochus stationed a Seleucid garrison in the city:
The name Acra derived from the Greek acropolis and signified a lofty fortified place overlooking a town. In Jerusalem, the word came to symbolize anti-Jewish paganism: a fortress of the "impious and wicked". Dominating both the city and the surrounding countryside, it was occupied not only by a Greek | 6,122,220 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
garrison but by their Jewish confederates as well.
The Seleucid suppression of Jewish religious life met with considerable resistance among the native population. While Antiochus was occupied in the east during 167 BCE, a rural priest, Mattathias of Modiin, raised a rebellion against the empire. Both the Seleucid administration and the local Hellenized faction failed to grasp the magnitude of the revolt. In 164 BCE Judas Maccabaeus liberated Jerusalem and reconsecrated the Temple. Although the surrounding city had fallen, the Acra and its inhabitants held out. Maccabaeus besieged the fortress, whose inhabitants sent an appeal to the Seleucid king (now Antiochus V) for assistance. A Seleucid | 6,122,221 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
army was dispatched to put down the revolt. When it laid siege to Beth-Zur, Maccabaeus was forced to abandon his siege of the Acra and face Antiochus in battle. In the subsequent Battle of Beth-Zechariah, the Seleucids won their first victory over the Maccabees, and Maccabaeus was forced to withdraw. Spared from capitulation, the Acra persisted as a Seleucid stronghold for 20 more years during which it weathered several Hasmonean attempts to oust the Greek garrison.
## Destruction.
Judas was killed in 160 BCE and succeeded by his brother Jonathan, who attempted to build a barrier to cut off the Acra's supply line. Jonathan had already assembled the manpower required for the task when he was | 6,122,222 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
forced to confront the invading army of Seleucid general Diodotus Tryphon at Beth Shan (Scythopolis). Having invited Jonathan to a friendly conference, Tryphon had him seized and murdered. Jonathan was succeeded by another brother, Simon, who besieged and finally captured the Acra in 141 BCE.
Two sources provide information about the ultimate fate of the Acra, although their accounts are contradictory in places. According to Josephus, Simon razed the Acra after ousting its inhabitants, and then quarried the hill on which it had stood to render it lower than the temple, purge the city of its evil memory and deny it to any future occupier of Jerusalem. The account appearing in 1 Maccabees paints | 6,122,223 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
a different picture:
Thus in this version, Simon did not immediately demolish the Acra, but instead had it occupied and may even have resided within it himself. 1 Maccabees does not mention its ultimate fate. The fortress had been built as an internal checkpoint to monitor and control Jerusalem and its population. If situated in the City of David as most scholars agree, its location would have added very little to Jerusalem's defenses against external threats. It may have fallen out of use and been dismantled around the end of the 2nd century BCE following the construction of the Hasmonean Baris and Hasmonean Palace in Jerusalem's upper city.
# Location.
The location of the Acra is important | 6,122,224 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
for understanding how events unfolded in Jerusalem during the struggle between Maccabean and Seleucid forces. This has been the subject of debate among modern scholars. The most detailed ancient description of the nature and location of the Acra is found in Josephus' "Antiquities of the Jews", where it is described as residing in the Lower City, upon a hill overlooking the Temple enclosure:
The location of the "lower part of the city", elsewhere referred to as the "Lower City", at the time of Josephus (1st century CE) is accepted to be Jerusalem's south-eastern hill, the original urban center traditionally known as the City of David. Lying to the south of the Temple Mount, however, the area | 6,122,225 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
exposed today is significantly lower than the Mount itself. The top of the Mount is approximately above the ground level at the southern retaining wall of the later Herodian-era expansion of the Temple enclosure. The elevation decreases to the south of this point. Josephus, a native of Jerusalem, would have been well aware of this discrepancy, yet is nevertheless able to explain it away by describing how Simon had razed both the Acra and the hill on which it had stood. Archaeological research south of the Temple Mount, however, has failed to locate any evidence for such large-scale quarrying. On the contrary, excavations in the region have uncovered substantial evidence of habitation from the | 6,122,226 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
beginning of the first millennium BCE down to Roman times, casting doubt on the suggestion that during Hellenistic times the area was significantly higher than it was at the time of Josephus or that a large hill had been cleared away. This had led many researchers to disregard Josephus' account and his placing of the Acra, and suggest several alternate locations. Since 1841, when Edward Robinson proposed the area near the Church of the Holy Sepulchre as the site of the Acra, at least nine different locations in and around the Old City of Jerusalem have been put forward.
## Western hill.
Several researchers have attempted to place the Acra in the Upper City on Jerusalem's western hill, within | 6,122,227 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
the area currently occupied by the Old City's Jewish Quarter. These propositions seek to locate the Acra within "Antiochia", the Hellenistic polis established in Jerusalem according to 2 Maccabees. This conjectural new city would have been hippodamic in plan and therefore would have required a flat expanse of land which only the western hill could have provided. Furthermore, the eastern edge of the hill is adjacent to the Temple Mount and higher in altitude—two characteristics attributed to the Seleucid citadel.
Opponents of this proposed location point out that there is very little archaeological or historical evidence supporting the establishment of a Hellenistic polis within Jerusalem, let | 6,122,228 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
alone sited on the western hill which appears to have been only sparsely populated during the Hellenistic period. Excavations in today's Jewish Quarter display evidence of habitation from the First Temple Period, as well as renewed Hasmonean and Herodian settlement, but scant evidence of Hellenistic occupation. Research into the dispersal of stamped Rhodian amphorae handles has revealed that over 95% of these handles found in Jerusalem were excavated from the City of David, indicating the city had not yet expanded to the western hill during Seleucid rule. Furthermore, the western hill is separated from the Temple Mount and the City of David by the steep Tyropoeon Valley—a distinct tactical disadvantage | 6,122,229 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
for any force that may have been required to intervene in events within the temple precincts or heavily populated eastern sectors of Jerusalem.
## North of the Temple.
The Acra was not the first Hellenistic stronghold in Jerusalem. Sources indicate that an earlier citadel, the Ptolemaic Baris, had also occupied a location overlooking the Temple's precincts. Although the exact location of the Baris is still debated, it is generally accepted to have stood north of the Temple Mount on the site later occupied by the Antonia Fortress. The Baris fell to Antiochus III at the turn of the 2nd century BCE and is absent from all accounts of the Maccabean Revolt. Despite the narratives which have the | 6,122,230 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Acra constructed within a very short time-span, it was nevertheless formidable enough to weather long periods of siege. These factors, coupled with references in which the Baris was itself called an "acra", have led some to suggest that the Baris and the Acra were in fact the same structure. Although both 1 Maccabees and Josephus seem to describe the Acra as a new construction, this may not have been the case. "Antiquities of the Jews" 12:253 may be translated to give the sense that the "impious or wicked" had "remained" rather than "dwelt" in the citadel, which could be taken to mean that the Acra had been standing before the revolt and that only the Macedonian garrison was new.
Koen Decoster | 6,122,231 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
proposes that Josephus wrote of "a citadel in the lower part of the city" to an audience that would have been familiar with the Jerusalem of the 1st century CE—a city that did feature two citadels: the Antonia Fortress and the Herodian palace. As Josephus' Roman Jerusalem had already expanded to the higher western hill, "a citadel in the lower city" could have referred to anything located east of the Tyropoeon Valley, including the Antonia which stood north of the Temple and did indeed rise above and dominate it. In his view, this is the place Josephus must have had in mind when he wrote of the Acra.
Opponents of a northern location counter that this site is not supported by the historical | 6,122,232 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
sources, and that this would place the Acra away from Jerusalem's population center. Unlike its predecessor and successor citadels, it was not meant as a defence against external threat, but rather to oversee the inhabited Jewish parts of the city, a role incompatible with a proposed northern location.
## A fortified compound in the City of David.
The available sources do indicate the Acra stood south of the temple, and because 1 Maccabees is a contemporaneous account of the Maccabean revolt, its account of the Acra (1:35–38) is considered the most reliable. Josephus provides an unlikely account of the razing of a hill on which the Acra had stood, yet his description of the end of the Great | 6,122,233 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Revolt (70 CE) provides additional evidence for it being located south of the Temple Mount:
As the other buildings mentioned in the account all stood to the south in the Lower City, this also places the Acra there. This account attests to the persistence of the name "Acra" in this part of Jerusalem many years after Hellenistic rule ended and its citadels had been overthrown, and it can also be seen as referring not to a distinct building but rather to an entire region of the city. Indeed, several clauses in 1 Maccabees may be read as making a similar point:
These suggest that, after the sacking of Jerusalem by Antiochus IV in 168 BCE, at least part of the City of David to the south of the | 6,122,234 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Temple Mount was rebuilt as a fortified Hellenistic quarter of Jerusalem. More than a citadel, it was a Macedonian colony where Jewish renegades and supporters of the new regime lived. This is also supported by archaeological evidence, including Rhodian amphorae handles and 18 box graves found on the eastern slope of the City of David. The latter are dated to the early 2nd century CE, and are uncharacteristic of Second Temple era Jewish burial practices, yet similar to other known Hellenistic graveyards such as the one in Acre (Ptolemais).
## A citadel nevertheless.
Even if the name "Acra" were applied to an entire Hellenistic quarter rather than to just a fortress, it is likely that a citadel | 6,122,235 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
would have stood within that compound to billet the Macedonian garrison which occupied it. It was normal for a Hellenistic city to have a fortified stronghold at or near the highest point of its walled area. Thus, whether a part of a larger enclave or independent of its surroundings, a citadel probably did stand at the northern tip of the City of David just south of the Temple Mount. Archaeologists have tried to use finds from excavations conducted in the area to pinpoint this citadel's precise location.
Yoram Tsafrir has attempted to place the Acra underneath the southeastern corner of the Temple Mount enclosure. Tsafrir points to a straight vertical seam in the enclosure's eastern masonry | 6,122,236 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
wall as evidence of different periods of construction. North of the seam is an early section of the wall built of large ashlar blocks. These blocks have faces with drafted margins around a prominent boss and are laid in homogeneous header and stretcher courses, one above the other. This style of construction is Hellenistic and distinct from the Herodian construction apparent south of the seam. Although the exact dating of this construction in uncertain, Tsafrir believes it is a remnant of the Acra's foundations which were later incorporated into Herod the Great's extension of the Temple platform. As further proof, Tzafrir also points to significant similarity between construction methods evident | 6,122,237 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
north of the seam, including the use of trapezoid-shaped stones, with the methods employed in the Seleucid city of Perga in Asia Minor. 1 Macabees 1:30 attributes construction of the Acra to Apollonius, Antiochus III's "chief collector" (, "Sar Hamissim"), which appears to be an ancient mistranslation or his original title as chief (, "Sar") of the Mysians, a people of Asia Minor.
Meir Ben-Dov believed that the Acra stood just south of the Huldah Gates of the southern wall of the Herodian Temple Mount platform. Benjamin Mazar's excavations of the Ophel, the area adjoining the southern portion of the platform, have unearthed the foundations of a massive structure and a large cistern, both possibly | 6,122,238 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
dating to the Hellenistic period. These have been tentatively identified as remnants of the Acra, with the structure, featuring rows of small interconnected rooms, believed to be the remains of a barracks. These had been demolished and built over during the Hasmonean period, matching the descriptions in Josephus. The Hasmonean constructions were, in turn, flattened to create a public square fronting the main gates to the Temple platform during the Herodian renovations.
Several cisterns under the Temple Mount itself have also been proposed as possible remnants of the Seleucid citadel. These include a cistern shaped like an E, the northern edge of which is adjacent to the proposed southern line | 6,122,239 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
of the Temple Mount precinct before its Herodian expansion. This has been identified as the "be'er haqar" or "bor heqer" mentioned in the Mishnah, Erubin Tract 10.14, and commonly translated, perhaps incorrectly, as the "cold well".
Additional evidence for the existence of the Acra may come from the chance discovery, published by , of a fragmentary Greek inscription in the Old City of Jerusalem. The inscription is a fragment from the top of a sandstone stele and contains what may be an oath taken by soldiers stationed in the Acra, although the reading of the name "Acra" in the text has been contested.
# 2015 discovery.
In November 2015 the Israel Antiquities Authority announced the probable | 6,122,240 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
discovery of the Acra. According to archaeologists Doron Ben-Ami, Yana Tchekhanovets and Salome Cohen, excavating the Givati parking lot adjacent to the City of David, they had unearthed a complex of rooms and fortified walls they identified as the Acra. This places it slightly south of previous suggested locations on the Ophel. Finds include fortification walls, a watchtower measuring 4 by 20 meters, and a glacis. Bronze arrowheads, lead sling-stones and ballista stones were unearthed at the site, stamped with a trident, the emblem of Antiochus IV Epiphanes. These are indicative of the military nature of the site and the efforts to take it. The excavation also yielded coins from the reigns | 6,122,241 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
of Antiochus IV through Antiochus VII, as well as a multitude of stamped Rhodian amphora handles.
The Givati location has been questioned due to its being too low on the hill to overlook the Temple Mount, as described in literary sources.
# Bibliography.
## References.
- "1 Maccabees" – Full text from St. Takla Haymanot Coptic Orthodox Church website. Alexandria, Egypt (full text also available in Arabic)
- "2 Maccabees" – Full text from St. Takla Haymanot Coptic Orthodox Church website. Alexandria, Egypt (full text also available in Arabic)
- Bar-Kochva, Bezalel (2002). "Judas Maccabeus: The Jewish Struggle Against the Seleucids". Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
- | 6,122,242 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Ben-Dov, Meir (1981). "The Seleucid Akra — South of the Temple Mount" (in Hebrew). "Cathedra". Jerusalem, Israel: Yad Yizthak Ben-Zvi, 18: 22–35.
- Ben-Dov, Meir (1985). "In the Shadow of the Temple: The Discovery of Ancient Jerusalem". New York, New York: Harper & Row, Publishers.
- Decoster, Koen (1989). "Flavius Josephus and the Seleucid Acra in Jerusalem". "ZDPV". Weisbaden, Germany: O. Harrassowitz, 105: 70–84. .
- De-Groot, Alon (2004). "Jerusalem in the Early Hellenistic Period" (in Hebrew). "New Studies on Jerusalem". Ramat Gan, Israel: Bar Ilan University Press, 10.
- Dequeker, Luc (1985). "The City of David and the Seleucid Acra in Jerusalem" in Yigael Yadin; Chaïm Perelman; Edward | 6,122,243 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
Lipinski (eds.). "The Land of Israel: Cross-roads of Civilizations". Louvain, Belgium: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta.
- Finkielsztejn, Gerald (1999). "The Evidence of the Rhodian Amphora Stamps". "New Studies on Jerusalem". Ramat Gan, Israel: Bar Ilan University Press, 5.
- Goodman, Martin (2010). "Under the Influence—Hellenism in ancient Jewish life". "Biblical Archaeology Review". Washington, D.C.: The Biblical Archaeology Society, 35 (1).
- Josephus, Flavius. William Whiston, A.M., translator (1895). "The Works of Flavius Josephus". Auburn and Buffalo, New York: John E. Beardsley. Retrieved 15 July 2010.
- Laperrousaz, Ernest-Marie (1979). "Encore l' 'Acra des Séleucides' et nouvelles | 6,122,244 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
remarques sur les pierres à bossages préhérodiennes de Palestine" (in French). "Syria". Paris, Beirut: Institut Francais du Proche-Orient, 56: 99–144.
- Levine, Lee I. (2002). "Jerusalem: Portrait of the City in the Second Temple Period (538 B.C.E.-70 C.E.)". Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Jewish Publication Society.
- Loria, Ben-Zion (1981). "The Location of the Akra — North of the Temple Mount" (in Hebrew). "Cathedra". Jerusalem, Israel: Yad Yizthak Ben-Zvi, 21: 31–40.
- Mazar, Benjamin (1975). "The Mountain of the Lord". Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc.
- Mazar, Eilat (2002). "The Complete Guide to the Temple Mount Excavations". Jerusalem, Israel: Shoham Academic Research | 6,122,245 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
and Publication.
- Pleket H.W. and Stroud R.S. (eds.). (1980). "Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum, XXX". Amsterdam, Netherlands: J.C. Gieben/Brill.
- Ritmeyer, Leen (Mar/Apr 1992). "Locating the Original Temple Mount". "Biblical Archaeology Review". Washington, D.C.: The Biblical Archaeology Society, 18 (2).
- Rocca, Samuel (2008). "The Forts of Judaea 168 BC – AD 73". Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. .
- Schäfer, Peter (2003). "The History of the Jews in the Greco-Roman World", Second Edition. London: Routledge.
- Schiffman, Lawrence H. (1991). "From Text to Tradition: A History of Second Temple and Rabbinic Judaism". Jersey City, New Jersey: KTAV Publishing House, Inc. .
- Schwartz, Daniel | 6,122,246 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
(2004) (in Hebrew). "2 Maccabees". Jerusalem, Israel: Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi.
- Schwartz, Joshua (1986). "Be'er Haqar, Bor Heqer and the Seleucid Akra" (in Hebrew). "Cathedra". Jerusalem, Israel: Yad Yizthak Ben-Zvi, 37: 3–16.
- Shotwell, W.A. (1964). "The Problem of the Syrian Akra". "Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research". Boston, Massachusetts: ASOR, 176: 10–19.
- Sievers, Joseph (1994). "Jerusalem, The Akra, and Josephus" in Parente & Sievers. "Josephus and the History of the Greco-Roman Period". Amsterdam, Netherlands: Brill.
- Sola, D. A.; M. J. Raphall; translators. (1843). "Eighteen Treatises from the Mishna". London: Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, Paternoster Row.
- | 6,122,247 |
6866387 | Acra (fortress) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acra%20(fortress) | Acra (fortress)
tors. (1843). "Eighteen Treatises from the Mishna". London: Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, Paternoster Row.
- Stern, Ephraim; Ayelet Lewinson-Gilboa; Joseph Aviram (eds.). (1993). "The Acra" in "The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land. vol. 2." Israel: The Israel Exploration Society and Carta.
- Tsafrir, Yoram (1980). "The Location of the Seleucid Akra in Jerusalem" (in Hebrew). "Cathedra". (Jerusalem: Yad Yizthak Ben-Zvi) 14: 17–40.
- Wightman, Gregory J. (1990). "Temple Fortresses in Jerusalem Part I: The Ptolemaic and Seleucid Akras". "Bulletin of the Anglo-Israeli Archaeological Society". London, United Kingdom: Anglo-Israel Archaeological Society, 9: 29–40. | 6,122,248 |
6866650 | Eccles College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eccles%20College | Eccles College
Eccles College
Eccles College was an incorporated further education college in Eccles, Greater Manchester, England. It opened in 1973, and ceased to function as an independent body on 1 January 2009. The site continues to function under new management, as the Eccles Centre of Salford City College.
The site provided AS and A level courses, amongst others. Students could also retake their GCSEs at the college. As an independent college Eccles had an average pass rate above the national average.
# Merger.
The merger of Eccles College, Salford College and Pendleton College took place on 1 January 2009, forming the new Salford City College. Eccles College and Salford College had their corporations | 6,122,249 |
6866650 | Eccles College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eccles%20College | Eccles College
ford City College.
The site provided AS and A level courses, amongst others. Students could also retake their GCSEs at the college. As an independent college Eccles had an average pass rate above the national average.
# Merger.
The merger of Eccles College, Salford College and Pendleton College took place on 1 January 2009, forming the new Salford City College. Eccles College and Salford College had their corporations dissolved, and all assets and staff transferred to Pendleton's administration. Pendleton College was then renamed to "Salford City College". Following the merger, managers of Salford City College considered closing the Eccles College site.
# External links.
- Official site | 6,122,250 |
6866642 | Threshold cryptosystem | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Threshold%20cryptosystem | Threshold cryptosystem
Threshold cryptosystem
A threshold cryptosystem, the basis for the field of threshold cryptography, is a cryptosystem that protects information by encrypting it and distributing it among a cluster of fault-tolerant computers. The message is encrypted using a public key, and the corresponding private key is shared among the participating parties. With a threshold cryptosystem, in order to decrypt an encrypted message or to sign a message, several parties (more than some threshold number) must cooperate in the decryption or signature protocol.
# History.
Perhaps the first system with complete threshold properties for a trapdoor function (such as RSA) and a proof of security was given by Alfredo | 6,122,251 |
6866642 | Threshold cryptosystem | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Threshold%20cryptosystem | Threshold cryptosystem
De Santis, Yvo Desmedt, Yair Frankel, and Moti Yung.
Historically, only organizations with very valuable secrets, such as certificate authorities, militaries, and governments would make use of the technology. However, in October 2012 after a number of large public website password ciphertext compromises, RSA Security announced that it would be releasing software that makes the technology available to the general public. One of the earliest implementations of the notion was done in the 1990s by Certco's design for the original Secure electronic transaction planned deployment.
In March 2019, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) conducted a workshop on threshold cryptography | 6,122,252 |
6866642 | Threshold cryptosystem | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Threshold%20cryptosystem | Threshold cryptosystem
to establish consensus on applications, and define specifications.
# Methodology.
Let formula_1 be the number of parties. Such a system is called "(t,n)"-threshold, if at least "t" of these parties can efficiently decrypt the ciphertext, while less than "t" have no useful information. Similarly it is possible to define a "(t,n)"-threshold signature scheme, where at least "t" parties are required for creating a signature.
# Versions.
Threshold versions of encryption or signature schemes can be built for many asymmetric cryptographic schemes. The natural goal of such schemes is to be as secure as the original scheme. Such threshold versions have been defined by the above and by the following:
- | 6,122,253 |
6866642 | Threshold cryptosystem | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Threshold%20cryptosystem | Threshold cryptosystem
original scheme. Such threshold versions have been defined by the above and by the following:
- Damgård–Jurik cryptosystem
- DSA
- ElGamal
- ECDSA
- Paillier cryptosystem
- RSA
# Application.
The most common application is in the storage of secrets in multiple locations to prevent the capture of the ciphertext and the subsequent cryptanalysis on that ciphertext. Most often the secrets that are "split" are the secret key material of a public key cryptography key pair or the ciphertext of stored password hashes.
# See also.
- Broadcast encryption
- Distributed key generation
- Secret sharing
- Secure multi-party computation
- Shamir's Secret Sharing
- Threshold (disambiguation) | 6,122,254 |
6866648 | Richard Johnson Anglican School | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Richard%20Johnson%20Anglican%20School | Richard Johnson Anglican School
Richard Johnson Anglican School
Richard Johnson Anglican School is a dual-campus independent Anglican co-educational early learning, primary and secondary day school, located in western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Founded in 1997, the school provides a religious and general education to approximately 950 students from early learning, through Year K to Year 12 at campuses located in Oakhurst and Marsden Park.
Oversight of the school is administered by the Sydney Anglican Schools Corporation and the school is affiliated with the Diocese of Sydney. The school is named after Richard Johnson, the first clergyman in Australia.
Paul Cockrem is the Principal.
In 2016 the school opened its | 6,122,255 |
6866648 | Richard Johnson Anglican School | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Richard%20Johnson%20Anglican%20School | Richard Johnson Anglican School
, New South Wales, Australia. Founded in 1997, the school provides a religious and general education to approximately 950 students from early learning, through Year K to Year 12 at campuses located in Oakhurst and Marsden Park.
Oversight of the school is administered by the Sydney Anglican Schools Corporation and the school is affiliated with the Diocese of Sydney. The school is named after Richard Johnson, the first clergyman in Australia.
Paul Cockrem is the Principal.
In 2016 the school opened its Marsden Park campus that is planned to be of equivalent size or larger than the Oakhurst campus.
# See also.
- List of Anglican schools in New South Wales
- Anglican education in Australia | 6,122,256 |
6866670 | Port Penrhyn | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Port%20Penrhyn | Port Penrhyn
Port Penrhyn
Port Penrhyn () is a harbour located just east of Bangor in north Wales at the confluence of the River Cegin with the Menai Strait. It was formerly of great importance as the main port for the export of slate from the Penrhyn Quarry, the largest slate quarry in the world at the end of the nineteenth century. It was built, and later expanded, by the Pennant (later Douglas-Pennant) family of the nearby Penrhyn Castle.
"Penrhyn" is the Welsh word for 'promontory'.
The port is used by coastal vessels up to about and by fishing vessels. There are plans for expansion.
# External links.
- Port Penrhyn website | 6,122,257 |
6866674 | Fourth Kuril Strait | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fourth%20Kuril%20Strait | Fourth Kuril Strait
Fourth Kuril Strait
The Fourth Kuril Strait () is a very deep strait separating the islands of Onekotan and Paramushir in the Kuril Islands, Russia. It is 46.7 km (about 29 mi) wide. It was formerly known as the Amphitrite Strait. The flood tidal current in the strait sets west-northwest, while the ebb flows in the opposite direction. These currents may reach over two knots.
# History.
Between 1849 and 1874, the strait was the most common route for American whaleships entering and exiting the Sea of Okhotsk on their way to and from cruises for bowhead and right whales. They called it the 50 Passage or Paramushir Passage. Some even chased right whales on passage through the strait. | 6,122,258 |
6866691 | All Night Long (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All%20Night%20Long%20(TV%20series) | All Night Long (TV series)
All Night Long (TV series)
All Night Long is a British sitcom starring Keith Barron that aired in 1994. It was written by Dick Fiddy and Mark Wallington, and was produced and directed by Harold Snoad, who also produced and directed "Keeping Up Appearances".
# Cast.
- Keith Barron – Bill Chivers
- Maureen Beattie – Vanda
- Dinah Sheridan – Clare
- Angus Lennie – Tom
- Jan Winters – WPC Hannah Jackson
- John Phythian – PC Digby
- Jacqueline Reddin – Terry
- Robert McKewley – Courtney
- Paul Grunert – Wally
# Plot.
"All Night Long" was set in a bakery in London, and showed the employees working during the night to prepare the bread for local hotels and cafés. Bill Chivers, who owned | 6,122,259 |
6866691 | All Night Long (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All%20Night%20Long%20(TV%20series) | All Night Long (TV series)
the business, had learnt bakery while in prison for armed robbery, and was determined to be a law abider. He employed Vanda, a Romanian, Scottish Tom and Courtney who was given a job after breaking into the bakery in the first episode. Clare was a disabled crime writer, who was inspired by the bakery, Wally was a cab driver and PC Digby and WPC Jackson were the local police officers.
# Episodes.
- 1. "Episode One" (11 July 1994)
- 2. "Episode Two" (18 July 1994)
- 3. "Episode Three" (25 July 1994)
- 4. "Episode Four" (1 August 1994)
- 5. "Episode Five" (15 August 1994)
- 6. "Episode Six" (22 August 1994)
# References.
- Mark Lewisohn, "Radio Times Guide to TV Comedy", BBC Worldwide | 6,122,260 |
6866691 | All Night Long (TV series) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All%20Night%20Long%20(TV%20series) | All Night Long (TV series)
robbery, and was determined to be a law abider. He employed Vanda, a Romanian, Scottish Tom and Courtney who was given a job after breaking into the bakery in the first episode. Clare was a disabled crime writer, who was inspired by the bakery, Wally was a cab driver and PC Digby and WPC Jackson were the local police officers.
# Episodes.
- 1. "Episode One" (11 July 1994)
- 2. "Episode Two" (18 July 1994)
- 3. "Episode Three" (25 July 1994)
- 4. "Episode Four" (1 August 1994)
- 5. "Episode Five" (15 August 1994)
- 6. "Episode Six" (22 August 1994)
# References.
- Mark Lewisohn, "Radio Times Guide to TV Comedy", BBC Worldwide Ltd, 2003
- British TV Comedy Guide for "All Night Long" | 6,122,261 |
6866673 | Dominik Stroh-Engel | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dominik%20Stroh-Engel | Dominik Stroh-Engel
Dominik Stroh-Engel
Dominik "Dodo" Stroh-Engel (born 27 November 1985) is a German football player who plays as a forward for Karlsruher SC.
# Career.
Stroh-Engel was born in Ehringshausen. From 2005 until December 2006 he played for Eintracht Frankfurt. In the 2005–06 season he scored half of the goals of the reserves in the Oberliga. He played well at the indoor tournaments and made his first Bundesliga match against Hannover 96 when he came on as a substitute for Alexander Meier. He made three appearances before leaving in 2007 to sign for SV Wehen Wiesbaden. After the end of the 2009–10 season his contract with Wehen Wiesbaden was cancelled, and Stroh-Engel moved to SV Babelsberg 03. He | 6,122,262 |
6866673 | Dominik Stroh-Engel | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dominik%20Stroh-Engel | Dominik Stroh-Engel
son his contract with Wehen Wiesbaden was cancelled, and Stroh-Engel moved to SV Babelsberg 03. He returned to Wehen two seasons later, where he remained for one season.
In July 2013, Stroh-Engel joined SV Darmstadt 98. On 14 March 2014, he set a new 3. Liga record by scoring his 23rd goal of the season against Hansa Rostock. The previous record of 22 goals was set in the 2009–10 season by Régis Dorn of SV Sandhausen. He ended the season as the division's record top scorer, with 27 goals.
Stroh-Engel was a key factor in the surprise promotion of SV Darmstadt 98 into the German 2. Liga. He scored a further nine goals in the 2. Bundesliga which helped in securing promotion to the Bundesliga. | 6,122,263 |
6866701 | Ivao Group | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ivao%20Group | Ivao Group
Ivao Group
Ivao Group () is a group of cinder cones located in the southern part of Urup Island, Kuril Islands, Russia.
# See also.
- List of volcanoes in Russia | 6,122,264 |
6866721 | Kevin Miller | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kevin%20Miller | Kevin Miller
Kevin Miller
Kevin Miller may refer to:
- Kevin Miller (radio host) (born 1968), American talk radio show host
- Kevin Miller (cricketer) (born 1936), Australian cricketer
- Kevin Miller (ice hockey) (born 1965), retired American ice hockey player
- Kevin Miller (footballer) (born 1969), English goalkeeper
- Kevin Miller (voice actor) (born 1977), American voice actor
- Kevin Miller (American football) (born 1955), American football wide receiver
- Kevin Miller, former drummer of the alternative rock band Fuel
# See also.
- Kevan Miller (born 1987), ice hockey player
- Kevin Millar (born 1971), baseball player | 6,122,265 |
6866702 | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aurora%20(Susumu%20Hirasawa%20album) | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
Aurora is Susumu Hirasawa's fourth solo album.
# Overview.
His first main solo album in three years following a period where focus was directed on the Defrosted P-Model, "Aurora", which Hirasawa has said can be considered a second solo debut, is a turning point in his career. Unlike the previous solo albums, "Aurora" doesn't feature guest musicians, with almost all instrumentation handled by MIDI-compatible devices. The music was composed with the Amiga The Blue Ribbon SoundWorks programs Bars & Pipes Professional, which he started using for "more natural orchestration", and SuperJAM!, whose "Bartok" style he modified by inputting data from his own songs, irreversibly | 6,122,266 |
6866702 | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aurora%20(Susumu%20Hirasawa%20album) | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
turning its patterns and variations into "Hirasawa" style ones.
"Aurora" was created to appeal to the instinctual side of the listener as opposed to the logical, in likeness to tales and myths, emphasizing vocals and melody. The songs were written so that the album would lack any inherent story or concept, inviting the listener to create their own reading. However, as he wrote the lyrics out, seven of the album's ten songs ended up having to do with , which accidentally created undertones of a story about two people. Hirasawa wanted to avoid that if at all possible, but felt that was just the way the language worked and left it as is. Many words representing natural phenomena were included | 6,122,267 |
6866702 | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aurora%20(Susumu%20Hirasawa%20album) | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
in an attempt to resolve complaints about the lyrics being opaque. Hirasawa chose words that were easy to understand and had a large impact, the word "Aurora" came from this decision as well.
The album's booklet is adorned with Buddhist imagery. Advertisements for "Aurora" used the phrase .
# Track listing.
The titles of the songs are officially rendered out in all caps.
# Personnel.
- Susumu Hirasawa - Vocals, Electric guitar (Talbo), Acoustic guitar (Yairi), Synthesizers (E-mu Proteus/2, Korg MS-20, Korg M1R, Roland JD-800), Sampler (Akai S1100), Drum machine (Roland R-8 with DANCE card), Amiga (2500), Sequencer (Bars&Pipes Professional), Programming, Production
- Yūichi Kenjo - Production | 6,122,268 |
6866702 | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aurora%20(Susumu%20Hirasawa%20album) | Aurora (Susumu Hirasawa album)
, Sampler (Akai S1100), Drum machine (Roland R-8 with DANCE card), Amiga (2500), Sequencer (Bars&Pipes Professional), Programming, Production
- Yūichi Kenjo - Production (Executive)
- Masanori Chinzei - Engineering
- Hideki Namai - Photography
# Release history.
- "Love Song", "Aurora", "Song of the Force" and "Snow Blind" are included in the "NEW SONGS FROM AURORA" promotional sampler.
- "Love Song", "Aurora" and "In the Square" are included on the "Archetype | 1989-1995 Polydor years of Hirasawa" compilation.
- "Island Door (Paranesian Circle)" is included in the vinyl release of the "Ruiner Original Soundtrack".
# External links.
- AURORA at iTunes Japan
- AURORA at amazon.co.jp | 6,122,269 |
6866717 | Document 12-571-3570 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Document%2012-571-3570 | Document 12-571-3570
Document 12-571-3570
Document 12-571-3570 (also titled NASA No. 12 571-3570) is a hoax document originally posted to the Usenet newsgroup alt.sex on November 28, 1989. According to this document, astronauts aboard space shuttle mission STS-75 performed a variety of sex acts to determine which positions are most effective in zero gravity. The document goes on to report that of the 10 positions tested, six required the use of a belt and an inflatable tunnel, while four were contingent on hanging on. The document also discusses a video record of the 10 one-hour sessions in the lower deck of the shuttle, and notes that the subjects added their own personal footnotes to help scientists.
The real | 6,122,270 |
6866717 | Document 12-571-3570 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Document%2012-571-3570 | Document 12-571-3570
STS-75 mission occurred in 1996, 7 years after the text was published, clearly indicating that the document is a hoax; also, there were no women aboard STS-75. Nonetheless, many people have been fooled by this document and NASA has had to debunk it on several occasions. In March 2000, NASA's director of media services Brian Welch referred to the document as a "fairly well-known 'urban legend.
This fictional document was rediscovered and widely publicized by astronomer and scientific writer Pierre Kohler, who used it as a major source about sex experiments in space in his 2000 book, "The Final Mission". Kohler conceded in his book that astronauts are mute on the subject of human sex in orbit, | 6,122,271 |
6866717 | Document 12-571-3570 | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Document%2012-571-3570 | Document 12-571-3570
NASA has had to debunk it on several occasions. In March 2000, NASA's director of media services Brian Welch referred to the document as a "fairly well-known 'urban legend.
This fictional document was rediscovered and widely publicized by astronomer and scientific writer Pierre Kohler, who used it as a major source about sex experiments in space in his 2000 book, "The Final Mission". Kohler conceded in his book that astronauts are mute on the subject of human sex in orbit, even if they have conducted reproduction research on South African frogs and Japanese fish.
# See also.
- Sex in space
# External links.
- NASA Experiments with Sex in Space at Snopes.com
- Space sex hoax rises again | 6,122,272 |
6866682 | Peter Larkins | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peter%20Larkins | Peter Larkins
Peter Larkins
Peter Anthony Larkins (born 22 June 1954 in Geelong, Victoria) is an Australian doctor and media personality as well as a former athlete.
# Early life and athletics career.
Larkins was educated at St Joseph's College in Geelong, where he was highly regarded and respected as a cheerful and down to earth person. He was very good at sport at school as well as being prominent in the school cadet unit. He later became a prominent track and field athlete who represented Australia in the steeplechase at the 1976 Summer Olympics 1982 Commonwealth Games and the 1981 World Cup. He won the national 3000 m steeplechase championships every year from 1976 to 1983, except for 1982 when he came | 6,122,273 |
6866682 | Peter Larkins | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peter%20Larkins | Peter Larkins
second.
# Medicine career.
Among Larkins' education include an honours degree in medical science as well as Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees. He travelled the world studying sports medicine and set up a private practice in the 1980s.
# Media career.
In 1997, Larkins became the boundary rider for Triple M's Australian Football League coverage, with his prognoses on players' injuries becoming a popular and unique aspect of Triple M's coverage.
Larkins later joined the Nine Network as a boundary rider for AFL games. Later he served providing the latest player injury updates on "The Sunday Footy Show".
In 2012, Larkins quit Triple M and joined rival 3AW in an identical | 6,122,274 |
6866682 | Peter Larkins | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peter%20Larkins | Peter Larkins
et up a private practice in the 1980s.
# Media career.
In 1997, Larkins became the boundary rider for Triple M's Australian Football League coverage, with his prognoses on players' injuries becoming a popular and unique aspect of Triple M's coverage.
Larkins later joined the Nine Network as a boundary rider for AFL games. Later he served providing the latest player injury updates on "The Sunday Footy Show".
In 2012, Larkins quit Triple M and joined rival 3AW in an identical role. He also joined the Seven Network to provide injury updates on "AFL Game Day" and during the network's Saturday night football coverage.
# External links.
- Melbourne Sports Medicine Profile
- Triple M profile | 6,122,275 |
6866724 | Geoffray Toyes | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Geoffray%20Toyes | Geoffray Toyes
Geoffray Toyes
Geoffray Toyes (born 18 May 1973 in Bordeaux) is a French former football defender.
Toyes represented the French national team at the 1996 Summer Olympics. | 6,122,276 |
6866746 | Tri Sestry | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tri%20Sestry | Tri Sestry
Tri Sestry
Tri Sestry (, "the three sisters") is a stratovolcano located in the central part of Urup Island, Kuril Islands, Russia.
# See also.
- List of volcanoes in Russia
# References.
- Global Volcanism Program | 6,122,277 |
6866728 | Albert Streit | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Albert%20Streit | Albert Streit
Albert Streit
Albert Streit (born Albert Ursachi 28 March 1980 in Bucharest) is a Romanian-German former professional footballer.
# Career.
Streit signed a three-year contract with Eintracht Frankfurt following the relegation of his previous team, 1. FC Köln, on 9 May 2006.
At the end of the season of 2006–07, he announced that had come to an agreement about his move to Schalke. Eintracht manager Friedhelm Funkel benched him for a few matches, arguing Streit would not train well. After an accord between Streit and Eintracht executive Heribert Bruchhagen he would have been allowed to move to Schalke if Streit would play hard in the final matches. The transfer finally failed because Schalke | 6,122,278 |
6866728 | Albert Streit | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Albert%20Streit | Albert Streit
executive Andreas Müller refused to pay more than €2 million and Eintracht clearly turned down the offer.
Streit has repeatedly stated that his performances would be worthy to a call up for Germany, but Joachim Löw has so far refused to nominate him.
In October 2007, Eintracht chairman Heribert Bruchhagen offered him an improved two-year contract, but Streit announced on 12 November that he signed a four-year contract for Schalke beginning in summer of 2008. But in December 2007, Eintracht Frankfurt agreed to a prematurely move of Streit to Schalke in January 2008.
In January 2009, Streit was thrown out of the squad of the first team of Schalke. He had to play for the second team of Schalke | 6,122,279 |
6866728 | Albert Streit | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Albert%20Streit | Albert Streit
in the Regionalliga. He joined Hamburger SV on 2 February 2009 on loan until the end of the season. After his return in July 2009, he was demoted to the reserve team from FC Schalke 04. His contract ended on 30 June 2012.
In December 2011 and after his former coach Friedhelm Funkel took over in Alemannia Aachen, it was announced that Streit will join the club until the end of the season.
On 6 January 2014, Streit cancelled the contract with Viktoria Köln. He signed for Fortuna Köln shortly afterwards, and helped them win promotion to the 3. Liga before retiring at the end of the 2013–14 season.
# Personal life.
Streit was born in Bucharest, Romania to Călin Ursachi and Renate Streit, he | 6,122,280 |
6866728 | Albert Streit | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Albert%20Streit | Albert Streit
09 on loan until the end of the season. After his return in July 2009, he was demoted to the reserve team from FC Schalke 04. His contract ended on 30 June 2012.
In December 2011 and after his former coach Friedhelm Funkel took over in Alemannia Aachen, it was announced that Streit will join the club until the end of the season.
On 6 January 2014, Streit cancelled the contract with Viktoria Köln. He signed for Fortuna Köln shortly afterwards, and helped them win promotion to the 3. Liga before retiring at the end of the 2013–14 season.
# Personal life.
Streit was born in Bucharest, Romania to Călin Ursachi and Renate Streit, he later took his mother's last name when his parents divorced. | 6,122,281 |
6866747 | Berrocal de Huebra | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Berrocal%20de%20Huebra | Berrocal de Huebra
Berrocal de Huebra
Berrocal de Huebra is a village and municipality in the province of Salamanca, western Spain, part of the autonomous community of Castile-Leon. It is from the provincial capital city of Salamanca and has a population of 68 people. It lies above sea level and the post code is 37609. | 6,122,282 |
6866735 | Eric Neale | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eric%20Neale | Eric Neale
Eric Neale
Eric Neale (26 September 1910 – 1997) was a British car designer.
# Biography.
Born in Halesowen, Worcestershire and educated at Halesowen Grammar School. He served as an apprentice designer at Mulliners in Birmingham.
In 1929 he left Mulliners to join Samuel Holbrook Limited in Coventry who made bodies for Alvis, Triumph and Armstrong Siddeley. After only two years he moved on to join Singer in Birmingham as a body designer, and later to Daimler where he worked on Lanchester and Daimler saloons.
In the late 1930s Neale moved to Austin and then to Wolseley.
During World War II Neale served in the Royal Air Force. After the war Neale went back to Wolseley and then in 1946 moved | 6,122,283 |
6866735 | Eric Neale | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eric%20Neale | Eric Neale
to Jensen.
Neale resigned from Jensen in 1966 following Jensen's decision to drop his P66 design in favour of the Touring design for the new Jensen Interceptor although he played an important role in amending the Italian Interceptor design so as to improve its appearance and make it suitable for production. His reputation as a stylist was somewhat negatively affected for many years by the headlamp design for the C-V8, however he was too loyal to his former employer to reveal that the teardrop-shaped headlamp covers of his original design had been removed prior to production by Richard Jensen, thereby leading to the controversial appearance of the production cars.
Eric Neale died in 1997.
# | 6,122,284 |
6866735 | Eric Neale | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eric%20Neale | Eric Neale
role in amending the Italian Interceptor design so as to improve its appearance and make it suitable for production. His reputation as a stylist was somewhat negatively affected for many years by the headlamp design for the C-V8, however he was too loyal to his former employer to reveal that the teardrop-shaped headlamp covers of his original design had been removed prior to production by Richard Jensen, thereby leading to the controversial appearance of the production cars.
Eric Neale died in 1997.
# Some of his cars.
- Singer Nine
- Austin A40 Sports (1951–1953)
- Jensen Interceptor (1950)
- Jensen 541
- Jensen C-V8 1962-1966
- Jensen P66
- Jensen Interceptor 1966-1976 co-stylist | 6,122,285 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
Live Archive Series
The Live Archive is a series of live recordings from Steve Hackett. There are six CD releases since 2001 and have become a popular collection for fans.
## "Live Archive 70s 80s 90s".
Disc 1: 70s (Hammersmith Odeon, London 30/06/79)
- 1. "Intro" – 2:00
- 2. "Please Don't Touch" – 5:46
- 3. "Tigermoth" – 3:37
- 4. "Every Day" – 7:29
- 5. "Narnia" – 4:36
- 6. "The Red Flower of Tai Chi" – 4:03
- 7. "Ace of Wands" – 7:23
- 8. "Carry On Up the Vicarage" – 3:33
- 9. "Etude in A min" – 0:37
- 10. "Blood on the Rooftops" – 0:18
- 11. "Horizons" – 1:58
- 12. "Kim" – 2:36
- 13. "The Optigan" – 1:29
- 14. "A Tower Struck Down" – 3:30
- 15. "Spectral Mornings" – 6:57
Disc | 6,122,286 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
2: 70s (Hammersmith Odeon, London 30/06/79)
- 1. "Introductions" – 1:07
- 2. "Star of Sirius" – 10:16
- 3. "Shadow of the Hierophant" – 9:35
- 4. "Clocks" – 7:18
- 5. "I Know What I Like" – 8:50
- 6. "Wardrobe Boogie" – 5:02
- 7. "Racing in A" – 12:15
- 8. "Racing in A Coda" – 2:07
Disc 3: 80s (Castel Sant' Angelo, Rome 13/09/81)
- 1. "The Air Conditioned Nightmare" – 5:00
- 2. "Jacuzzi" – 5:04
- 3. "Funny Feeling" – 5:07
- 4. "Ace of Wands" – 7:47
- 5. "Picture Postcard" – 5:18
- 6. "The Steppes" – 6:50
- 7. "Every Day" – 6:28
- 8. "Overnight Sleeper" – 4:28
- 9. "Hope I Don't Wake" – 4:25
- 10. "Slogans" – 5:18
- 11. "A Tower Struck Down" – 3:26
- 12. "Spectral Mornings" | 6,122,287 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
– 5:39
- 13. "The Show" – 3:52
- 14. "Clocks" – 6:08
Disc 4: 90s (The Grand Theatre, London 08/06/93)
- 1. "Medley: " – 4:56
- 2. "Vampyre with a Healthy Appetite" – 6:13
- 3. "Sierra Quemada" – 4:20
- 4. "Take These Pearls" – 4:56
- 5. "In the Heart of the City" – 5:32
- 6. "Walking Away From Rainbows" – 3:38
- 7. "There Are Many Sides to the Night" – 5:20
- 8. "Kim" – 2:25
- 9. "Dark As the Grave" – 5:26
- 10. "Always Somewhere Else" – 6:17
- 11. "Lost in Your Eyes" – 5:02
- 12. "Spectral Mornings/Firth of Fifth/Clocks" – 8:13
- 13. "Cinema Paradiso" – 3:16
- 14. "...In That Quiet Earth" – 5:20
### Newcastle".
- 1. "Please Don't Touch" – 7:53
- 2. "Tigermoth" – 3:41
- | 6,122,288 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
3. "Every Day" – 7:26
- 4. "The Steppes" – 5:52
- 5. "Narnia" – 4:10
- 6. "Red Flower of Taichi Blooms Everywhere" – 3:02
- 7. "Sentimental Institution" – 2:38
- 8. "Star of Sirius" – 9:39
- 9. "Spectral Mornings" – 6:42
- 10. "Clocks" – 5:29
- 11. "Ace of Wands" – 5:05
- 12. "Hands of the Priestess" – 6:04
- 13. "Racing in A" – 7:51
## "Live Archive NEARfest".
Recorded at Patriots Theater, Trenton, New Jersey 30/06/02.
Disc 1
- 1. "The Floating Seventh" – 1:44
- 2. "Mechanical Bride" – 6:33
- 3. "Medley" – 5:11
- 4. "Serpentine Song" – 6:54
- 5. "Watcher of the Skies" – 5:18
- 6. "Hairless Heart" – 2:58
- 7. "Firth of Fifth" – 3:23
- 8. "Riding the Colossus" – 4:25
- | 6,122,289 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
9. "Pollution B" – 2:24
- 10. "The Steppes" – 6:17
- 11. "Gnossienne no. 1" – 3:38
- 12. "Walking Away From Rainbows" – 3:53
- 13. "In Memoriam" – 7:19
- 14. "The Wall of Knives" – 0:47
- 15. "Vampyre with a Healthy Appetite" – 5:34
Disc 2
- 1. "Spectral Mornings" – 7:29
- 2. "Lucridus" – 0:54
- 3. "Darktown" – 5:12
- 4. "Camino Royale" – 8:30
- 5. "Every Day" – 7:09
- 6. "Horizons" – 2:02
- 7. "Los Endos" – 6:07
## "Live Archive 03".
Compiled from Hackett's 2003 To Watch The Storms European tour.
Disc 1
- 1. "Mechanical Bride" – 6:45
- 2. "Serpentine Song" – 6:40
- 3. "Watcher of the Skies" – 5:30
- 4. "Hairless Heart" – 2:42
- 5. "Darktown" – 4:47
- 6. "Camino Royale" | 6,122,290 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
– 7:52
- 7. "Pollution B" – 1:58
- 8. "The Steppes" – 5:42
- 9. "Acoustic Medley" – 4:00
- 10. "Kim" – 2:42
- 11. "Walking Away From Rainbows" – 4:10
Disc 2
- 1. "Slogans" – 4:03
- 2. "Every Day" – 6:37
- 3. "Please Don't Touch" – 4:25
- 4. "Firth of Fifth" – 3:07
- 5. "The Wall of Knives" – 0:31
- 6. "Vampyre with a Healthy Appetite" – 5:53
- 7. "Spectral Mornings" – 5:48
- 8. "Brand New" – 5:02
- 9. "Los Endos" – 6:47
- 10. "Clocks" – 4:29
- 11. "In That Quiet Earth" – 6:07
## "Live Archive 04".
Recorded at Petofi Csarnok, Budapest, Hungary 03/04/04.
Disc 1
- 1. "Intro" – 1:05
- 2. "Valley of the Kings" – 5:37
- 3. "Mechanical Bride" – 6:59
- 4. "Circus of Becoming" | 6,122,291 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
– 3:09
- 5. "Frozen Statues" – 3:48
- 6. "Slogans" – 4:02
- 7. "Serpentine Song" – 7:13
- 8. "Ace of Wands" – 6:35
- 9. "Hammer in the Sand" – 4:02
- 10. "Blood on the Rooftops" – 5:55
- 11. "Fly on a Windshield" – 3:04
- 12. "Please Don't Touch" – 3:57
- 13. "Firth of Fifth" – 4:03
Disc 2
- 1. "If You Can't Find Heaven" – 3:27
- 2. "Darktown" – 5:33
- 3. "Brand New" – 5:49
- 4. "Air-Conditioned Nightmare" – 4:08
- 5. "Every Day" – 6:30
- 6. "Clocks" – 5:46
- 7. "Spectral Mornings" – 5:46
- 8. "Los Endos" – 8:16
## "Live Archive 05".
Recorded during Steve's "Acoustic Trio Tour" in April 2005 to promote his recent studio outing "Metamorpheus".
Disc 1
- 1. "Intro" – 0:18
- | 6,122,292 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
2. "Japonica" – 5:12
- 3. "Andante in C" – 4:11
- 4. "Tribute to Segovia" – 3:51
- 5. "Metamorpheus excerpts" – 1:49
- 6. "Bay of Kings" – 5:49
- 7. "Classical Jazz" – 3:43
- 8. "Sapphires" – 1:34
- 9. "Mexico City" – 1:48
- 10. "Black Light" – 4:56
- 11. "Skye Boat Song" – 1:07
- 12. "Pease Blossom" – 3:43
- 13. "Horizons" – 2:48
Disc 2
- 1. "Intros" – 1:24
- 2. "Jacuzzi" – 4:21
- 3. "Bacchus" – 2:15
- 4. "Firth of Fifth (excerpt)" – 2:33
- 5. "Improv" – 3:02
- 6. "The Red Flower of Tai Chi Blooms Everywhere" – 2:16
- 7. "Hands of The Priestess" – 8:13
- 8. "After The Ordeal" – 2:08
- 9. "Hairless Heart" – 3:46
- 10. "M3" – 2:49
- 11. "Imagining" – 1:19
- 12. "Second | 6,122,293 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
Chance" – 4:09
- 13. "Jazz on a Summer's Night" – 3:29
- 14. "Next Time Around" – 4:36
- 15. "Kim" – 3:47
- 16. "Avant Dernière Pensées" – 3:46
- 17. "The Journey" – 4:05
- 18. "Ace of Wands" – 4:29
- 19. "Walking Away From Rainbows" – 4:13
- 20. "Gnossiennes Nº. 1" – 4:46
## "Live Archive 83".
Recorded at Edinburgh's Queens Hall on 04/11/83.
- 1. "Calmaria"
- 2. "Hands of the Priestess"
- 3. "Jacuzzi"
- 4. "The Barren Land"
- 5. "Tales of the Riverbank"
- 6. "Second Chance"
- 7. "Oriental Improvisation"
- 8. "Petropolis"
- 9. "Kim"
- 10. "The Water Wheel"
- 11. "Concert for Munich"
- 12. "The Journey"
- 13. "Ace of Wands"
- 14. "A Cradle of Swans"
- 15. "Jazz on a | 6,122,294 |
6866765 | Live Archive Series | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Live%20Archive%20Series | Live Archive Series
15. "Kim" – 3:47
- 16. "Avant Dernière Pensées" – 3:46
- 17. "The Journey" – 4:05
- 18. "Ace of Wands" – 4:29
- 19. "Walking Away From Rainbows" – 4:13
- 20. "Gnossiennes Nº. 1" – 4:46
## "Live Archive 83".
Recorded at Edinburgh's Queens Hall on 04/11/83.
- 1. "Calmaria"
- 2. "Hands of the Priestess"
- 3. "Jacuzzi"
- 4. "The Barren Land"
- 5. "Tales of the Riverbank"
- 6. "Second Chance"
- 7. "Oriental Improvisation"
- 8. "Petropolis"
- 9. "Kim"
- 10. "The Water Wheel"
- 11. "Concert for Munich"
- 12. "The Journey"
- 13. "Ace of Wands"
- 14. "A Cradle of Swans"
- 15. "Jazz on a Summer's Night"
- 16. "Horizons"
- 17. "Time Lapse at Milton Keynes"
- 18. "Bay of Kings" | 6,122,295 |
6866745 | Phage monographs | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phage%20monographs | Phage monographs
Phage monographs
Bacteriophage (phage) are viruses of bacteria and arguably are the most numerous "organisms" on Earth. The history of phage study is captured, in part, in the books published on the topic. This is a list of over 100 monographs on or related to phages.
# List of phage monographs (descending date order).
## Books published in the 2010s.
- 1. Hyman, P., Abedon, S. T. 2018. Viruses of Microorganisms. Google Books
- 2. Abedon, S. T., García, P., Mullany, P., Aminov, R. 2017. Phage therapy: past, present and future. Google Books
- 3. Jassim, S.A.A., Limoges, R.G. 2017. Bacteriophages: Practical Applications for Nature's Biocontrol. Google Books
- 4. Dobretsov, N. T., 2018. Bacteriophages: | 6,122,296 |
6866745 | Phage monographs | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phage%20monographs | Phage monographs
The Enemies of Our Enemies as published as a special issue in Science First Hand consisting of nine articles.
- 5. Rakonjac, J., Das, B. Derda, R. 2017. Filamentous Bacteriophage in Bio/Nano/Technology, Bacterial Pathogenesis and Ecology. Google Books
- 6. Nicastro,J., Wong,S., Khazaei,Z., Lam,P., Blay,J., Slavcev,R.A. 2016. Bacteriophage Applications - Historical Perspective and Future Potential. Google Books
- 7. Allen, H. K., Abedon, S. T. 2015. Viral Ecology and Disturbances: Impact of Environmental Disruption on the Viruses of Microorganisms. Google Books
- 8. Wei, H. 2015. Phages and Therapy as published as a special issue in Virologica Sinica consisting of four reviews, three research | 6,122,297 |
6866745 | Phage monographs | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phage%20monographs | Phage monographs
articles, six letters, and one insight article.
- 9. Weitz, J.S., 2015. Quantitative Viral Ecology: Dynamics of Viruses and Their Microbial Hosts. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ. . Google Books
- 10. Borysowski, J., Międzybrodzki, R., Górski, A., eds. 2014. Phage Therapy: Current Research and Applications. Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, UK. Google Books
- 11. Hyman, P., Harrah, T. 2014. Bacteriophage Tail Fibers as a Basis for Structured Assemblies. Momentum Press/ASME, New York, NY. Google Books
- 12. Chanishvili, N. 2012. A Literature Review of the Practical Application of Bacteriophage Research. Nova Science Publishers, Hauppauge, New York. Google Books
- 13. Hyman, P., | 6,122,298 |
6866745 | Phage monographs | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phage%20monographs | Phage monographs
Abedon, S. T., eds. 2012. Bacteriophages in Health and Disease CABI Press, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK. , Google Books
- 14. Abedon, S. T. 2011. Bacteriophages and Biofilms: Ecology, Phage Therapy, Plaques. Nova Science Publishers, Hauppauge, New York. Partial online version is also available, constituting effectively a "first edition".
- 15. Petrenko, V., Smith, G., eds. 2011. Phage Nanobiotechnology. RSC Publishing, Cambridge, UK. Scheduled for a June, 2011, publication.
- 16. Abedon, S. T., ed. 2010. The 'Nuts and Bolts' of Phage Therapy. a special issue of the journal, Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, consisting of six articles on phage therapy, plus an editorial.
- 17. Carnazza, | 6,122,299 |
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