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37323003
Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina a nightclub and at No. 228 corner of Piazzale dei Laghi, with the renovation of the historic Shell service station is built a Burger King and an Autogrill bar. Also in the first decade are opened a Penny Market in Viale Espinasse, 136 and a Lidl in Via Giovanni da Udine, 28 which replaces a point of sale of Bergamaschi and Vimercati, household items, Billa takes over Standa in Viale Espinasse. For the road the extension of the tram line 12 from Via Console Marcello to Roserio saw the construction of the tracks in Via De Rossi with new traffic lights in Piazzale Santorre di Santarosa, while the tram line 33 ceases its passage in the district after 50 years with tram type 1928. In 2005 the
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Church of Our Lady of Good Help, also called the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, a prefab built in 1959 in Via Brunetti corner Piazzale Cacciatori delle Alpi, in which it was not regularly celebrated mass was demolished. # Roads and transports. ## Roads. Viale Certosa is the busiest arterial road of the neighborhood, with its traffic out of the city crossing the Svincolo Viale Certosa access all the directions of Lake Highway and Highway Torino-Venezia. The other two-way parallel sliding of the district, Via Varesina and Viale Espinasse, along with Via Console Marcello in Villapizzone share the traffic for Via Palizzi Bridge and quarters Quarto Oggiaro and Vialba. The opening of
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina a new entrance to Svincolo Viale Certosa in the 90s, at the corner of Via Brunetti and Via Alassio, has streamlined the circulation of the district as vehicles coming from Quarto Oggiaro Vialba can access to Svincolo only ran along the neighborhood without going along Via Ludovico di Breme and Viale Certosa. Access to the new entrance is from the end of Viale Espinasse. In 1995 the old Palizzi bridge that cleared the Torino-Milano railway, allowing the access to the district Vialba and Quarto Oggiaro, has been tear down. The circulation of the old bridge through which passed both trams that private vehicles has been replaced by two new bridges, one for private means and one for the trams. The
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina new bridge also has a way out for Via Console Marcello at Villapizzone. The viability of the area has improved greatly. ## Transports. The district is well served by public transport, train, bus or tram. There are no subway lines. "Train": The new Milano Certosa railway station became the base of Milan Passante railway on 1999, and trains are more frequently than before to Novara, Varese and Milan city. No more direct trains go to Torino. - Varese - Treviglio - Novara - Treviglio Runs every 15 minutes "Via Montefeltro stop": - ATM z301 Milano-Bergamo - Movibus suburban lines: z602 for Legnano, z603 for San Vittore Olona, z617 for Lainate/Origgio - Airpullman: 560 Milano QT8 - Arese -
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Autostradale, Sadem: Milano - Torino "Viale Certosa, 130 stop": - ATM z301 Milano-Bergamo "ATM bus": - lines 40 Bonola M1 - Niguarda Parco Nord - lines 57 Cairoli - Quarto Oggiaro "Tram": - line 1 Piazza Castelli - Greco (2 rides in the early morning start from Piazzale Cacciatori delle Alpi) - lines 12 Viale Molise - Roserio carried out with tram ATM Class 4900 - lines 19 Porta Genova - Roserio carried out with tram ATM Class 1500, as known as the twenty-eight Since 2000, we have followed various modifications of terminus: 19 started at Via Cantù and 33 arrived in Remembrance of Lambrate. The outer terminus of the line 33 was first moved to Piazzale Cacciatori delle Alpi, then the
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina line, in 2007, was finally removed with its temporary replacement by line 7, and then 11, became in a short time removed. The line 12 route in the district is recent, from the 2000s onwards, with the extension of the line from the terminus of Via Console Marcello at Villapizzone up to Roserio. The tram terminus of Piazzale Cacciatori delle Alpi is currently unused, apart from the two rides of line 1, is sometimes used as a temporary terminus for problems on the movement of trams or when the outer one of Roserio is unreachable. The terminus was a strategic hub for the area, for its proximity to the Milan Certosa station. With the extension of the tram lines in Roserio and the station proximity
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina to the stop of Via Palizzi, in Vialba, its importance has failed. # The area. ## Boundaries. The district borders: - West: Garegnano with partition Ghisallo Bridge, Svincolo Viale Certosa - North: Vialba with limit Turin–Milan railway - North-East: Villapizzone with divisive Via Varesina, Via Palizzi - South-East: Quartiere Cagnola, border Via Sonnino, Via Nansen, Piazzale Accursio - South-West: Boldinasco, border Viale Certosa The odd or even numbers track of the partition belong to a district or other. # Services. ## District services. "Schools": The school of the district is the primary school Alfredo Cappellini, at Via de Rossi, 2 "Kindergartens" - Scuola dell'infanzia Maria
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Consolatrice, Via Ampezzo, 8 - Private kindergartens, Tutti giù per terra in Via Polidoro da Caravaggio, 25. " Church" - Parish Saint Marcellina and Saint Joseph at Charterhouse, Viale Espinasse, 85 The north part of the district refers to Certosa di Garegnano. "Shopping centers": - Billa, Viale Espinasse, 21 - Penny Market, Viale Espinasse, 137 - Lidl, Via Giovanni da Udine, 28 "Pharmacies": - Via Varesina, 121 - Viale Espinasse, 30 "Newsstands": - Viale Espinasse, 84 - Via Montefeltro, 4 "Service stations": - Esso, Via Varesina, 169 (corner Via Palizzi and Viale Espinasse) - IP, Piazzale Santorre di Santarosa - Shell, Viale Certosa 228 (along Piazzale ai Laghi) "Hotels": -
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Hotel Sorrento, Viale Espinasse, 22 - Hotel Mirage, Viale Certosa, 104 - 106 - Hotel Raffaello, Viale Certosa, 108 - Hotel Double Tree, Via Ludovico di Breme, 77 ## Services in neighboring districts. The nearest "churches" are: - Certosa di Garegnano (Santa Maria Assunta in Certosa) - San Martino in Villapizzone - Santa Cecilia (Boldinasco) These churches belong to the Decanato Cagnola. Many "Kindergartens", "primary schools" are in Villapizzone, Boldinasco. "Libraries" are located at Villapizzone, Vialba, Quartiere Portello "Shopping centers": - Esselunga, Via Palizzi, 69 - Centro Commerciale Piazza Portello with Iper and Darty, Via Grosotto, 7 - Saturn, Viale Certosa, 2 Quartiere
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Portello "Mail Centers": - Viale Monte Ceneri, no number Ghisolfa - Via Grassi, 1 Vialba "Municipality and Urban Police": Piazzale Accursio, 5 "Police": - Stazione Musocco, Via Mambretti, 32/a Vialba - Commissariato Quarto Oggiaro, Via Satta, 6 "Hospitals": Ospedale Luigi Sacco, Via Grassi "Parks": - Parco Franco Verga, Quarto Oggiaro - Monte Stella, QT8 "Sports centers": - Centro Sportivo Pavesi, Via Francesco De Lemene 3, Boldinasco - Centro Sportivo XXV Aprile, Via Cimabue, 24, QT8 "Swimming pools": - Piscina Cantù, Via Graf, 8, Quarto Oggiaro - Piscina Lampugnano, Via Lampugnano, 76, Lampugnano - Lido di Milano, Piazzale Lotto, 15 "Subway lines": Closest subway stops
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina are about 2 km. far: MM1 QT8 (Milan Metro), MM1 Lampugnano, MM1 Uruguay. At Portello is scheduled to stop Milan Metro Line 5, still in construction. Tram Line 14 passes through the side of Viale Certosa in Boldinasco, but in fact only a few meters from the neighborhood. The route of the line is Lorenteggio - Cimitero Maggiore # List of streets. - Piazzale Accursio ( From Via Sonnnino to Viale Espinasse, even numbers ) - Piazzale ai Laghi ( Even numbers ) - Piazzale Cacciatori delle Alpi - Piazzale Santorre di Santarosa - Via Alassio - Via Ampezzo - Via Argenta - Via Baldo degli Ubaldi - Via Barnaba Oriani ( Up to Cavalcavia del Ghisallo (up numbers 83 e 84 excluded) ) - Via Brunetti -
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina Via Callisto da Lodi - Via Cantoni - Via Casella - Via De Rolandi - Via De Rossi - Via Figino - Via Galliari - Via Giovanni da Udine - Via Locchi - Via Lucian - Via Ludovico di Breme - Via Marcantonio Dal Re - Via Mola - Via Montanelli - Via Montefeltro - Via Nansen - Via Niccodemi - Via Nuvolone - Via Palizzi (Odd numbers, up to Milano - Torino railway (up number 3) ) - Via Pannunzio - Via Pantelleria - Via Perin del Vaga - Via Polidoro da Caravaggioo numbers - Via Salvatore Rosa - Via Sapri ( Fino a ponte Svincolo Viale Certosa (no numbers) ) - Via Sonnino - Via Tavazzano ( From numbers 11 e 12 onwards ) - Via Trapani - Via Tribonian ( Up Svincolo Viale Certosa
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Quartiere Varesina
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quartiere%20Varesina
Quartiere Varesina ntefeltro - Via Nansen - Via Niccodemi - Via Nuvolone - Via Palizzi (Odd numbers, up to Milano - Torino railway (up number 3) ) - Via Pannunzio - Via Pantelleria - Via Perin del Vaga - Via Polidoro da Caravaggioo numbers - Via Salvatore Rosa - Via Sapri ( Fino a ponte Svincolo Viale Certosa (no numbers) ) - Via Sonnino - Via Tavazzano ( From numbers 11 e 12 onwards ) - Via Trapani - Via Tribonian ( Up Svincolo Viale Certosa underpass, even numbers up to number 25, even number no numbers) - Via Varesina ( Odd numbers ) - Via Zamboni - Viale Certosa ( Even numbers, from Piazzale Accursio (number 86) to Cavalcavia del Ghisallo (number 228) ) - Viale Espinasse - Vicolo Mapelli
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St Martin's GAA (County Wexford)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St%20Martin's%20GAA%20(County%20Wexford)
St Martin's GAA (County Wexford) St Martin's GAA (County Wexford) St. Martin's GAA club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in Murrintown in the Parish of Piercestown, County Wexford, Ireland. The club was founded in 1932 and fields teams in both hurling and Gaelic football. The women's arm of the club fields teams in both camogie and ladies' Gaelic football. # History. The club was founded in 1932 although an earlier club bearing that name, and playing in black in white, was established in Murrintown in 1912. It lost the county junior football final of 1913 and then, in 1914, it changed jerseys to green and yellow and its name to Michael Dwyers. The current club was established at a meeting in Piercestown National
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St Martin's GAA (County Wexford)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St%20Martin's%20GAA%20(County%20Wexford)
St Martin's GAA (County Wexford) School in 1932. The club experienced intermittent success in its first 70 years and had to partner on occasion with other clubs such as St. Mary’s of Rosslare and Glynn-Barntown at underage and under 21 levels up to the mid 1980s. After a peripatetic existence, the club secured a permanent home in 1962 when part of the Johnstown Castle Estate was made available. An Act of the Oireachtas in 1980 was passed to allow the formal sale of the ground to the Club. Between 1998 and 2004, an additional 10 acres was purchased from Johnstown Castle which facilitated the development of two additional pitches and a hurling wall. The camogie wing of the club was revived in 1983 while the ladies’ football
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St Martin's GAA (County Wexford)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St%20Martin's%20GAA%20(County%20Wexford)
St Martin's GAA (County Wexford) club started in 2002. 2017 was a particularly significant year for both codes as the county senior camogie title was won for the first time and the ladies’ footballers won the intermediate championship to gain promotion to senior ranks. # Honours. - Wexford Senior Hurling Championship: (3) 1999, 2008, 2017 - Wexford Intermediate Hurling Championship (2): 1964, 1977 - Wexford Intermediate Football Championship (4): 1982, 1994, 2006, 2011 - Wexford Senior Football Championship (1): 2013 - Wexford Junior Hurling Championship (3): 1948, 1963, 2002 - Wexford Junior Football Championship (3): 1938, 1957, 2017 - Wexford Minor Hurling Championship (4): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 - Wexford Minor
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St Martin's GAA (County Wexford)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St%20Martin's%20GAA%20(County%20Wexford)
St Martin's GAA (County Wexford) nship (3): 1938, 1957, 2017 - Wexford Minor Hurling Championship (4): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 - Wexford Minor Football Championship (2): 2015, 2016 - Wexford Under-21 Hurling Championship: (3) 2014, 2016, 2017 - Wexford Under-20 Hurling Championship: (1) 2018 - Wexford Under-21 Football Championship: (3) 2007, 2009, 2017 - Wexford Senior Camogie Championship (1): 2017 - Wexford Intermediate Ladies' Football Championship (2): 2017, 2018 # Notable players. - Diarmuid Lyng - Rory McCarthy - George O'Connor - John O'Connor (Wexford hurler) - Eoin Quigley - Mags Darcy - Áine Codd - Noeleen Lambert - Tomás Waters - Rory O'Connor (hurler) # External links. - St. Martin's GAA site
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2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship 2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship The 2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship is a Gaelic football tournament played between senior football clubs from all over Ireland. The 2011-12 champions for the second year running were Crossmaglen Rangers from Armagh who defeated Garrycastle from Westmeath on 31 March 2012 after a replay to win their 6th title. The title was won by St Brigids. # Structure. Each of Ireland's 32 counties play their own championship between all the senior Gaelic football clubs in the county - depending on the county, it can be league,knockout or a mixture of both. The 32 county champions play in the 4 provincial championships, with the
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37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship four winners of these advancing to the All-Ireland Semi Final. The All-Ireland Final will be played in Croke Park on St. Patrick's Day 2013. Schedule: - County championships: June 2012 - November 2012 - Provincial championships: October 2012 - January 2013 - All-Ireland quarter final: December 2012/January 2013 - All-Ireland semi finals: February 2013 - All-Ireland final: 17 March 2013 # County Finals Results. ## Leinster. - Louth SFC Final - St. Patricks 1-13, 0-7 Dreadnots, Drogheda Park, 7/10/2012, - Wexford SFC Final - St. Annes 2-14, 0-8 Castletown, Wexford Park, 7/10/2012, - Wicklow SFC Final - St. Patricks 1-12, 0-14 Baltinglass, Aughrim Park, 7/10/2012, - Offaly SFC Final -
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37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Rhode 0-15, 1-6 Clara, O'Connor Park, 14/10/2012, - Carlow SFC Final - Eire Og 0-15, 0-5 Palatine, Dr. Cullen Park, 14/10/2012, - Longford SFC Final - Killoe Young Emmets 0-7, 0-7 Longford Slashers, Pearse Park, 14/10/2012, - Killoe Young Emmets 0-15, 0-12 Longford Slashers (AET), Pearse Park, 21/102012, - Kildare SFC Final - Sarsfields 2-11, 0-11 Carbury, St. Conleth's Park, 21/10/2012, - Laois SFC Final - Portlaoise 1-13, 0-9 Arles-Kilcruise, O'Moore Park, 21/10/2012, - Westmeath SFC Final - Mullingar Shamrocks 3-9, 3-9 Garrycastle, Cusack Park, 21/10/2012, - Mullingar Shamrocks 0-12, 1-8 Garrycastle, Cusack Park, 28/10/2012, - Meath SFC Final - Navan O'Mahonys 1-11, 0-7 Wolfe
6,132,519
37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Tones, Páirc Tailteann, 28/10/2012, - Dublin SFC Final - Ballymun Kickhams 1-12, 0-14 Kilmacud Crokes, Parnell Park, 29/10/2012, ## Ulster. - Antrim SFC Final - St Galls 1-11, 1-5 St. Johns, Casement Park, 28/9/2012 - Fermanagh SFC Final - Tempo Maguires 0-15, 1-4 Lisnaskea Emmets, Brewster Park, 29/9/2012 - Cavan SFC Final - Mullahoran 1-8, 1-8 Kingscourt Stars, Kingspan Breffni Park, 30/9/2012, - Mullahoran 1-8, 0-7 Kingscourt Stars, Kingspan Breffni Park, 7/10/2012, - Tyrone SFC Final - Errigal Ciaran 0-13, 0-8 Dromore, Healy Park, 7/10/2012, - Monaghan SFC Final - Ballybay Pearse Brothers 1-12, 2-5 Clontibret O'Neills, Clones, 14/10/2012, - Armagh SFC Final - Crossmaglen
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37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Rangers 3-9, 0-11 Pearse Og, Morgan Athletic Grounds, 14/10/2012, - Down SFC Final - Kilcoo 2-8, 1-8 Mayobridge, Páirc Esler, 21/10/2012, - Derry SFC Final - Ballinderry Shamrocks 1-10, 0-10 Slaughtneil, Celtic Park, 21/10/2012, - Donegal SFC Final - St. Eunans 1-7, 0-9 Naomh Conaill, MacCumhail Park, 4/11/2012. ## Connacht. - Leitrim SFC Final - Melvin Gaels 2-7, 0-7 Glencar–Manorhamilton, Páirc Sheáin Mhic Dhiarmada, 7/10/2012, - Sligo SFC Final - Curry 1-16, 1-10 St. Marys, Markievicz Park, 7/10/2012, - Roscommon SFC Final - St. Brigids 2-8, 0-9 Padraig Pearses, Kiltoom, 14/10/2012, - Galway SFC Final - Salthill-Knocknacarra 0-12, 0-7 Tuam Stars, Pearse Stadium, 14/10/2012, -
6,132,521
37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Mayo SFC Final - Ballaghaderreen 1-9, 0-4 Ballintubber, McHale Park, 21/10/2012. ## Munster. - Clare SFC Final - Kilmurray-Ibrickane 0-10, 0-4 St. Josephs Doora-Barefield, Cusack Park, 21/10/2012, - Limerick SFC Final and Final Replay - Dromcollogher/Broadford 0-13, 2-7 Newcastlewest, Gaelic Grounds, 21/10/2012, - Dromcollogher/Broadford 0-12, 0-10 Newcastlewest, Parc na nGael, 26/10/2012, - Kerry SFC Final - Dr. Crokes 2-13, 0-8 An Daingean, Austin Stack Park, 28/10/2012, - Cork SFC Final - Castlehaven 1-7, 0-9 Duhallow, Páirc Uí Chaoimh, 28/10/2012, - Tipperary SFC Final - Clonmel Commercials 1-9, 0-5 Thomas MacDonaghs, Semple Stadium, 4/11/2012. - Waterford SFC Final and Final
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37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Replay - Stradbally 2-2, 0-8 The Nire, Fraher Field, 4/11/2012, - Stradbally 1-8, 0-10 The Nire, Fraher Field, 10/11/2012. ## London. - London SFC Final - Tir Chonaill Gaels 1-15, 1-8 Kingdom Kerry Gaels, Ruislip, 14/10/2012. # Fixtures/Results. ## Leinster Senior Club Football Championship. Preliminary Round - St. Patricks (Wicklow) 3-10, 2-11 Éire Óg (AET), Aughrim Park, 28/10/2012, - Killoe Young Emmets 2-7, 2-4 St. Annes, Pearse Park, 28/10/2012, - Rhode 1-7, 1-9 St. Patricks (Louth), O'Connor Park, 28/10/2012, Quarter Final - St. Patricks (Wicklow) 0-4, 3-15 Portlaoise, Aughrim Park, 11/11/2012, - Killoe Young Emmets 2-13, 0-8 Navan O'Mahonys, Pearse Park, 11/11/2012, - St.
6,132,523
37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Patricks (Louth) 2-6, 1-12 Sarsfields, St Conleth's Park, 11/11/2012, - Mullingar Shamrocks 0-7, 2-13 Ballymun Kickhams, Cusack Park, 11/11/2012, Semi Final - Portlaoise 1-11, 2-5 Killoe Young Emmets, 25/11/2012, - Sarsfields 0-5, 1-8 Ballymun Kickhams, 25/11/2012, Final - Portlaoise 0-8, 0-11 Ballymun Kickhams, 9/12/2012. ## Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. Preliminary Round - Mullahoran 1-7, 4-15 Errigal Ciarán, Kingspan Breffni Park, 21/10/2012, Quarter-Finals - Tempo Maguires 0-9, 1-15 St. Galls, Brewster Park, 4/11/2012, - Ballybay Pearse Brothers 0-7, 0-13 Kilcoo, Clones, 4/11/2012, - Errigal Ciarán 0-11, 0-10 Ballinderry Shamrocks, Healy Park, 4/11/2012, - Crossmaglen
6,132,524
37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Rangers 3-11, 1-7 St. Eunan's, Athletic Grounds, 11/11/2012, Semi-Finals - Errigal Ciarán 0-10, 2-10 Crossmaglen Rangers, Clones, 18/11/2012, - Kilcoo 1-9, 0-10 St. Galls, Athletic Grounds, 18/11/2012, Final - Crossmaglen Rangers 3-9, 1-9 Kilcoo, Athletic Grounds, 2/12/2012. ## Connacht Senior Club Football Championship. Preliminary Round - Melvin Gaels 0-10, 2-19 St. Brigids, Kiltoom, 28/10/2012, Semi Final - Salthill-Knocknacarra 0-8, 0-15 St. Brigids, Pearse Stadium, 11/11/2012, - Ballaghaderreen 1-15, 1-7 Curry, McHale Park, 11/11/2012. Final - St. Brigids 1-12, 0-6 Ballaghaderreen, McHale Park, 25/11/2012. ## Munster Senior Club Football Championship. Quarter Final - Kilmurray
6,132,525
37323139
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2012–13%20All-Ireland%20Senior%20Club%20Football%20Championship
2012–13 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship y Ibrickane 0-13, 2-08 Dr. Crokes, Quilty, 4/11/2012, - Castlehaven 1-15, 0-7 Dromcollogher/Broadford, Clonakilty, 4/11/2012, Semi Final - Clonmel Commercials 1-14, 0-6 Dr. Crokes, Killarney, 18/11/2012, - Stradbally 0-7, 1-5 Castlehaven, Clonakilty, 18/11/2012, Final - Dr. Crokes 0-19, 0-12 Castlehaven Fitzgerald Stadium, 2/12/2012. ## All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship. Quarter-Final - Tír Chonaill Gaels 0-6, 3-12 Dr. Crokes, Ruislip, 16/12/2012, Semi Final - Dr. Crokes 0-9, 1-10 Ballymun Kickhams, Semple Stadium, 16/2/2013, - St. Brigid's 2-7, 1-9 Crossmaglen Rangers, Cusack Park, 16/2/2013, Final - St. Brigid's 2-11, 2-10 Ballymun Kickhams, Croke Park, 17/3/2013.
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37323086
She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time She Don't Care About Time "She Don't Care About Time" is a song by American folk rock band The Byrds released on October 29, 1965 as the B-side of Turn! Turn! Turn!. The song was written by The Byrds' main songwriter between 1964 and early 1966, Gene Clark. "She Don't Care About Time" was recorded during sessions for the group's second album "Turn! Turn! Turn!". The song is on most of the band's hits compilations. # Composition. As was true with the Byrds' first album, the majority of group-penned compositions on "Turn! Turn! Turn!" were written by Gene Clark. The composition's lyrics have been well cited for their complexity by many who have been affiliated with the group. In particular Johnny
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She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time Rogan stated in his biography "Timeless Flight" that the elaboration of the lyrics were in anticipation of Clark's later work and were a "fascinating apotheosis in which naturalistic detail and abstraction coalesced". Musically, the recording featured a guitar solo patterned after by Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring". The Byrds' recording of "Mr. Tambourine Man" opens with a similar and distinctive, Bach-inspired guitar riff played by Jim McGuinn. The previously unreleased first recording of the song appears on "The Byrds box set". It is played at a much faster tempo with Clark performing a harmonica solo and McGuinn's guitar playing being more dissonant. Other early versions have been known
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She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time to feature the group's producer Terry Melcher, playing the piano. Although the track was released as single it was ultimately left off the album, along with the Dylanesque "The Day Walk (Never Before)" (also written by Clark). "The Day Walk (Never Before)" was left to languish in the Columbia tape vaults for more than 20 years. This was one of two songs that The Beatles' George Harrison cited as inspiration for "If I Needed Someone". Upon the release of the Beatles' "Rubber Soul" album, he sent a letter to the group's publicist Derek Taylor, stating: "Tell Jim [McGuinn] and David [Crosby] that 'If I Needed Someone' is the riff from 'The Bells Of Rhymney' and the drumming from 'She Don't Care
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She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time About Time', or my impression of it." # Reception. Since its release, "She Don't Care About Time" has been highly praised by fellow Byrd members. When asked about the recording, McGuinn stated: "I love that song ('She Don't Care About Time'), I really do. I don't know why that never got on. That was for the Turn Turn Turn album, right? I think we had enough stuff already – except that I'm not too happy with the last four cuts of that album." David Crosby and Chris Hillman were also big advocates of song, praising its importance in many interviews since Clark's death. AllMusic critic Matthew Greenwald considers it to be "one of the early Byrds' finest records" and that the Bach-inspired guitar
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She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time lines (from "Joy of Man's Desiring") "took the song to even greater heights". In 2012, Will Levith of "Ultimate Classic Rock" rated the song as Clark's third best composition, praising McGuinn's Bach-inspired guitar riff and Clark's "introspective lyrics and driving melody". # Appearances. In addition to its appearance on The Byrds' second album as a bonus track, "She Don't Care About Time" also appears on several compilations, including "", "The Essential Byrds", "History of The Byrds", and the expanded and reissued edition of "Never Before. The song is also available on the "There Is a Season" boxset, which comprises 99 tracks and includes material from each of the band's twelve studio
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She Don't Care About Time
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=She%20Don't%20Care%20About%20Time
She Don't Care About Time g "", "The Essential Byrds", "History of The Byrds", and the expanded and reissued edition of "Never Before. The song is also available on the "There Is a Season" boxset, which comprises 99 tracks and includes material from each of the band's twelve studio albums, presented in roughly chronological order. A version by Richie Furay and Carla Olson appears on Olson's 2013 album "Have Harmony, Will Travel". The recording features former Byrd John York on guitar and producer Richard Podolor on mandolin. The song was also revisited by Chris Hillman on his Tom Petty produced 2017 album “Biding My Time.” Hillman told Rolling Stone magazine that it “is one of my favorite Gene Clark compositions.”
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Newton Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20Mason
Newton Mason Newton Mason Newton Mason may refer to: - Newton E. Mason (1850–1945), United States Navy rear admiral - Newton Henry Mason (1918–1942), United States Navy ensign, posthumous recipient of the Distinguished Flying Cross
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37323174
Blak and Blu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blak%20and%20Blu
Blak and Blu Blak and Blu Blak and Blu is the major-label debut studio album by American musician Gary Clark, Jr., released on October 22, 2012. The album touches on a wide variety of traditionally black music genres, including soul ("Please Come Home"), hip-hop/R&B ("The Life"), Chuck Berry-esque rock and roll ("Travis County"), and Clark's trademark, blues ("When My Train Pulls In", "Numb", "Next Door Neighbor Blues"). "Blak and Blu" netted Clark his first two Grammy Award nominations, one for Best Rock Song ("Ain't Messin Round") and the other for Best Traditional R&B Performance ("Please Come Home") which won. This marked the first time that an artist was nominated in both categories in the same year.
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Blak and Blu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blak%20and%20Blu
Blak and Blu It peaked at number six on the "Billboard" 200 album chart, and number one on the Blues Albums chart. # Critical reception. The album was awarded a 3.5 star rating by Rolling Stone and was listed at #27 on Rolling Stone's list of the top 50 albums of 2012, in which the author said "Clark's brain-frying guitar solos are more about noise nuance and phrasing than speed-trial note-spitting." Not all reviews were entirely positive, however. The Chicago Tribune gave the album a 2.5 out of 4 review, stating that the album lacked cohesiveness and consistency due to the wide variety of genres featured. In 2013, "Blak and Blu" was nominated for a Blues Music Award in the 'Contemporary Blues Album'
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Blak and Blu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blak%20and%20Blu
Blak and Blu category. # Track listing. - All songs written by Gary Clark, Jr., except as noted. # Blak and Blu The Mixtape. On 30 April 2014, Gary Clark, Jr. also released a mixtape of the songs under the title "Blak and Blu The Mixtape" presented by D-Nice. # Personnel. - Gary Clark, Jr. – lead and backing vocals, lead and rhythm guitar, bass, drums, programming, trumpet, percussion, congas - Zapata! – rhythm guitars - Mike Elizondo – bass, fuzz guitar, keyboards, percussion, programming - Zac Rae – Keyboards, hammond organ, wurlitzer, piano, vibraphone - J.J. Johnson – drums, percussion - Scott Nelson – bass - Satnam Ramgotra – tabla, percussion - Danny T. Levin – trumpet, trombone, flugelhorn -
6,132,536
37323174
Blak and Blu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Blak%20and%20Blu
Blak and Blu rogramming, trumpet, percussion, congas - Zapata! – rhythm guitars - Mike Elizondo – bass, fuzz guitar, keyboards, percussion, programming - Zac Rae – Keyboards, hammond organ, wurlitzer, piano, vibraphone - J.J. Johnson – drums, percussion - Scott Nelson – bass - Satnam Ramgotra – tabla, percussion - Danny T. Levin – trumpet, trombone, flugelhorn - David Moyer – tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone - Stevie Black – strings - Recording engineers: Adam Hawkins, Doug McKean - Mixing: Adam Hawkins, Doug McKean - Assistant engineers: Brent Arrowood, Chris Sporleder, Russ Waugh - Mastering: Ted Jensen - A&R: Lenny Waronker - Creative design, direction and photography: Frank Maddocks
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37323206
Michael Ann Holly
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michael%20Ann%20Holly
Michael Ann Holly Michael Ann Holly Michael Ann Holly is an American art historian renowned for her work on historiography and the theory of art history. # Personal life. Born in 1944 in Alton, Illinois, Holly worked at the Wesleyan University Press from 1963-1966 and the Center for Brain Research at the University of Rochester before beginning her academic career. Her daughter is the actress Lauren Holly. # Education. Holly earned a B.A. "summa cum laude" from William Smith College in 1973. She completed her doctorate in art history from Cornell University in 1981 with a dissertation on Erwin Panofsky's theories of art. # Career. Michael Ann Holly taught history and art history at Hobart and Williams
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Michael Ann Holly
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michael%20Ann%20Holly
Michael Ann Holly Smith Colleges from 1978 to 1984, then joined the faculty of the University of Rochester, where she co-founded the Visual and Cultural Studies Graduate Program in 1986, and taught for 13 years. Holly served as the Starr Director of the Research and Academic Program at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts before retiring in 2016. She now teaches critical theory, methodology, and historiography in the Williams Graduate Program in the History of Art. She is a past Fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities and Guggenheim Foundation, Getty Foundation, and has received grants from the American Council of Learned Societies, National Endowment of the
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Michael Ann Holly
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michael%20Ann%20Holly
Michael Ann Holly Humanities, Rockefeller Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation. Since 2007, she has served as a trustee of the National Humanities Center in Research Triangle Park, NC. # Bibliography. - "Panofsky and the Foundations of Art History" (1984) - (Editor, with Norman Bryson and Keith Moxey) "Visual Theory: Painting and Interpretation" (1991) - "Iconography and Iconology" (1992) - (Editor, with Norman Bryson and Keith Moxey) "Visual Culture: Images and Interpretation" (1994) - "Past Looking: Historical Imagination and the Rhetoric of Images" (1996) - (Editor, with others) "The Subject of Art History: Historical Objects in Contemporary Perspectives" (1998) - (Editor, with Keith Moxey) "Art History,
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Michael Ann Holly
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Michael%20Ann%20Holly
Michael Ann Holly y. - "Panofsky and the Foundations of Art History" (1984) - (Editor, with Norman Bryson and Keith Moxey) "Visual Theory: Painting and Interpretation" (1991) - "Iconography and Iconology" (1992) - (Editor, with Norman Bryson and Keith Moxey) "Visual Culture: Images and Interpretation" (1994) - "Past Looking: Historical Imagination and the Rhetoric of Images" (1996) - (Editor, with others) "The Subject of Art History: Historical Objects in Contemporary Perspectives" (1998) - (Editor, with Keith Moxey) "Art History, Aesthetics, Visual Studies" (2002) - (Editor, with Marquard Smith) "What Is Research in the Visual Arts? Obsession, Archive, Encounter" (2008) - "The Melancholy Art" (2013)
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Athletics Association of Barbados
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Athletics%20Association%20of%20Barbados
Athletics Association of Barbados Athletics Association of Barbados The Athletics Association of Barbados (AAB) is the governing body for the sport of athletics in Barbados. # History. AAB was founded in 1947 as Amateur Athletic Association of Barbados (AAAB), and was affiliated to the IAAF in 1966. In 2012, the name was changed to Athletics Association of Barbados. Esther Maynard has been president of the association since 2004 and was re-elected in 2008. General Secretary Catherine Jordan assumed office in January 2013. # Affiliations. AAB is the national member federation for Barbados in the following international organisations: - International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) - North American, Central
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Athletics Association of Barbados
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Athletics%20Association%20of%20Barbados
Athletics Association of Barbados . Esther Maynard has been president of the association since 2004 and was re-elected in 2008. General Secretary Catherine Jordan assumed office in January 2013. # Affiliations. AAB is the national member federation for Barbados in the following international organisations: - International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) - North American, Central American and Caribbean Athletic Association (NACAC) - Association of Panamerican Athletics (APA) - Central American and Caribbean Athletic Confederation (CACAC) Moreover, it is part of the following national organisations: - Barbados Olympic Association (BOA) # National records. AAB maintains the Barbadian records in athletics.
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Anorectal disorder
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anorectal%20disorder
Anorectal disorder Anorectal disorder Anorectal disorders are painful but common conditions like hemorrhoids, tears, fistulas, or abscesses that affect the anal region. Most people experience some form of anorectal disorder during their lifetime. Primary care physicians can treat most of these disorders, however, high-risk individuals include those with HIV, roughly half of whom need surgery to remedy the disorders. Because these disorders affect the rectum, people are often embarrassed or afraid to confer with a medical professional. # Symptoms. Itchiness, a burning sensation, pus discharge, blood, and swelling in around the rectum and anus, diarrhea. # Diagnosis. Doctors uses a variety of tools and techniques
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Anorectal disorder
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anorectal%20disorder
Anorectal disorder to evaluate the type of anorectal disorder, including digital and anoscopic investigations, palpations, and palpitations. The initial examination can be painful because a gastroenterologist will need to spread the buttocks and probe the painful area, which may require a local anesthetic. # Treatment. Treatments range from recommendations for over-the-counter products to more invasive surgical procedures. Among the most common outpatient advice given to patients with less severe disorders include a high-fiber diet, application of ointment, and increased water intake. More serious procedures include the removal of affected tissue, injection of botulinum toxin, or surgically opening the fistula
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37323190
Anorectal disorder
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anorectal%20disorder
Anorectal disorder disorder, including digital and anoscopic investigations, palpations, and palpitations. The initial examination can be painful because a gastroenterologist will need to spread the buttocks and probe the painful area, which may require a local anesthetic. # Treatment. Treatments range from recommendations for over-the-counter products to more invasive surgical procedures. Among the most common outpatient advice given to patients with less severe disorders include a high-fiber diet, application of ointment, and increased water intake. More serious procedures include the removal of affected tissue, injection of botulinum toxin, or surgically opening the fistula tract in the sphincter muscle.
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Ballina James Stephens Hurling Club
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ballina%20James%20Stephens%20Hurling%20Club
Ballina James Stephens Hurling Club Ballina James Stephens Hurling Club James Stephens GAA club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in Ballina, County Mayo, Ireland. The club was founded in 2005 and is exclusively concerned with the game of hurling. # Honours. - Mayo Senior Hurling Championship (1): 2007 # External links. - James Stephens GAA site
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Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason Newton E. Mason Rear Admiral Newton Eliphalet Mason (14 October 1850 – 23 January 1945) was a United States Navy officer. His career included combat in the Spanish–American War and service during World War I, significant experience in ordnance duty, and a very long tour as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance. # Early life. Mason was born in Monroeton, Pennsylvania, on 14 October 1850, the son of Gordon Fowler Mason and Mary Anne Mason, and was educated at the Susquehanna Collegiate Institute in Tonawanda, Pennsylvania. He entered the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, on 24 July 1865. # Naval career. Mason graduated from the Naval Academy in June 1869. His first assignment was
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Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason aboard the sailing frigate for a special cruise from 1869 to 1870, and he was promoted to ensign on 12 July 1870. He underwent torpedo instruction in 1871, was promoted to master on 12 July 1871 or in 1872 (sources vary), and served aboard the screw frigate in the European Squadron from 1871 to 1872. From 1873 to 1877, Mason served in the North Atlantic Squadron, first aboard the monitor in 1873, then aboard the gunboat from 1874 to 1875, the monitor from 1875 to 1876, and the screw sloop-of-war from 1876 to 1877, and he was promoted to lieutenant on 8 November 1874. He was aboard the receiving ship at League Island in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from 1878 to 1880 and participated in the stormy
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37323039
Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason and very difficult 27 March-20 May 1880 voyage of the sailing sloop-of-war to Ireland to transport relief supplies in the wake of the 1879 famine there. He then had duty in the Asiatic Squadron from 1880 to 1884, first aboard the sidewheel gunboat from 1880 to 1883, then on the screw steamer from 1883 to 1884. Returning to the United States, Mason had ordnance duty in Washington, D.C., from 1884 to 1889, first at the Washington Navy Yard from 1884 to 1885 and then at the Bureau of Ordnance from 1885 to 1889. While at the bureau, he assisted in designing the first gun turret mounts and ammunition hoists ever used in the U.S. Navy, which were installed aboard the monitor . More duty in the North
6,132,550
37323039
Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason Atlantic Squadron followed, first aboard the gunboat from 1889 to October 1891, then on the monitor USS "Miantonomoh" from October 1891 to November 1892. Mason then returned to the Bureau of Ordnance for duty from November 1892 to June 1893, followed by a tour as Inspector of Ordnance, overseeing the Naval Ordnance Proving Grounds at Indian Head, Maryland, from June 1893 to 1896. He was promoted to lieutenant commander on 10 November 1896. In November 1896, Mason reported to the new armored cruiser , in time for her commissioning on 1 December 1896, and saw action aboard her off Cuba during the Spanish–American War in 1898, including the Battle of Santiago de Cuba on 3 July 1898. Leaving "Brooklyn"
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Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason in February 1899, he was the Inspector of Ordnance at League Island Navy Yard in Philadelphia from February to October 1899, then served as Inspector of Ordnance at the Naval Torpedo Station at Newport, Rhode Island, beginning on 6 October 1899. He was promoted to commander on 2 November 1899. Masons tour at the torpedo station ended in July 1902, and on 16 September 1902 he became commanding officer of the protected cruiser in the North Atlantic Fleet. During his tour, "Cincinnati" took the place of a battleship in the battleline during drills, then steamed across the Mediterranean Sea to transfer to the Asiatic Squadron, where she became part of a cruiser squadron. Mason left "Cincinnati"
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Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason in April 1904 and on 1 August 1904 began a lengthy tour as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance which lasted until 31 May 1911, During the tour je was promoted to captain on 30 September 1904 and to rear admiral on 12 November 1908. On 27 February 1908, he testified before the United States Senate about alleged structural defects in U.S. Navy battleships. He became a member of the General Board of the United States Navy on 25 May 1911, and remained on the board until his retirement. Mason retired from the Navy upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 62 on 14 October 1912. During the 1917-1918 participation of the United States in World War I, Mason was recalled to active duty to serve on
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37323039
Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason the War Industries Board. While on this duty, he was the ordnance member of the Priorities Committee, which was created on 14 May 1917 and charged with deconflicting delivery priorities for the General Munitions Board of the Council of National Defense. # Personal life. Mason married the former Isadora "Dora" Edmonia Hancock (16 October 1870 – 6 January 1927) on 4 April 1894. They had at least one son, Gorden Hancock Mason (14 December 1896 – 4 December 1918), who became a Navy officer and died at the rank of lieutenant, junior grade. Mason was a member of the Army and Navy Club of Washington, D.C., the Sons of the American Revolution, and the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order
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Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason of Foreign Wars. # Death. Mason died on 23 January 1945 in Coronado, California, and is buried with his wife and son at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. # References. - Naval History and Heritage Command: Officers of the Continental and U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, 1775-1900. - Hamersly, Lewis Randolph. "The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, Seventh Edition", New York: L. R. Hamersly Company, 1902. - "American Biographical Directories: District of Columbia, 1908–1909". Washington: The Potomac Press, 1908. # External links. - Transcript of Masons 27 February 1908 testimony before the United States Senate during hearings on alleged structural
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37323039
Newton E. Mason
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Newton%20E.%20Mason
Newton E. Mason 23 January 1945 in Coronado, California, and is buried with his wife and son at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. # References. - Naval History and Heritage Command: Officers of the Continental and U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, 1775-1900. - Hamersly, Lewis Randolph. "The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, Seventh Edition", New York: L. R. Hamersly Company, 1902. - "American Biographical Directories: District of Columbia, 1908–1909". Washington: The Potomac Press, 1908. # External links. - Transcript of Masons 27 February 1908 testimony before the United States Senate during hearings on alleged structural defects in battleships (at pp. 81–90).
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion The , also known as the Emi Rebellion, was a short-lived and unsuccessful Nara period military confrontation in Japan resulting from a power struggle between former Empress Kōken and the main political figure of the time, Fujiwara no Nakamaro from the powerful Fujiwara clan. Through the support of Emperor Shōmu and Empress Kōmyō, with whom he had family-ties, Nakamaro rapidly climbed the career ladder during the 740s and 750s achieving some of the highest ranks and court positions. During the early years of the reign of Emperor Junnin, whom he supported, Nakamaro ruled the country "de facto". Following the death of Kōmyō in 760, the retired Empress Kōken started
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion to take government affairs into her hand resulting in a conflict between Nakamaro/Junnin on one side and Kōken and her close associate Dōkyō on the other. In order to restore authority, on the 11th day of the 9th month, Tenpyō-hōji 8 (October 14, 764), Nakamaro seized the signs of imperial authority and left the capital at Nara for the Eastern Provinces. The group around Kōken reacted by mobilizing an army and blocking access on the main roads. The two armies eventually engaged in a battle a week later on the 18th day of the 9th month (October 21, 764) at Miozaki on the western side of Lake Biwa in which Nakamaro was killed, putting an end to the rebellion. # Background. ## Rise to power. Fujiwara
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion no Nakamaro was a Japanese aristocrat ("kuge") and the second son of Fujiwara no Muchimaro, founder of the "nanke" (southern) branch of the Fujiwara clan. He lived during the Nara period, when the Fujiwara were struggling with the Tachibana clan for influence at the court. Under Emperor Shōmu, who ruled from 724 through 749, the Tachibana were ahead and the influential position of "Minister of the Left" ("sadaijin") was held by Tachibana no Moroe. Fujiwara no Nakamaro made his first contact with the military in 740 as "Great General of the Forward Cavalry" for the escort of Emperor Shōmu's tour to the eastern provinces during the Fujiwara no Hirotsugu rebellion. In 743, he was appointed as
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion consultant. Shortly thereafter, when the capital was moved from Kuni near the Tachibana power base to the Shigaraki Palace, near Fujiwara holdings, Nakamaro, backed by his aunt Empress Kōmyō joined the Council of State ("Daijō-kan"). As head of the Office of Empress Consort ("shibi chudai"), he was in charge of Kōmyō's principal affairs and his political influence increased as laws issued by the office carried the same weight as imperial edicts. At the same time the power of Tachibana no Moroe, who had been backed by retired Empress Genshō until her death in 748, was in decline. Through this favoritism Nakamaro rose quickly in court rank from 4th senior lower (744) through 4th senior upper (746),
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion 3rd junior (748), 3rd senior (749) and 2nd junior rank in 750. Shōmu abdicated in 749 in favour of his daughter, Princess Takano-hime, then Empress Kōken. While being an independent and strong-willed woman who identified herself with the Chinese autocratic Empress Wu, during her first reign until 758 she would still be under the shadows of her father, retired Emperor Shōmu and Kōmyō. She would favour the Fujiwara and particularly Nakamaro giving him lots of revenue and power by bestowing on him titles. When Moroe publicly criticized Kōken at a drinking party in 755, Nakamaro and his followers forced him to retire. Nakamaro's rapid rise through favoritism was seen with envy, even among the Fujiwara
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion clan members and particularly by his brother Toyonari. Following Moroe's death in 757, his son, Tachibana no Naramaro plotted to remove Fujiwara no Nakamaro and to overthrow Empress Kōken ("Tachibana no Naramaro Conspiracy"). But Nakamaro learned about it and had the main conspirators executed and his own brother Toyonari send to exile in Dazaifu. In the same year, Nakamaro was appointed to "Minister of Right" ("Udaijin") and "Minister of Office of Empress Consort" ("shibi naishō") which oversaw military affairs of the country. Other positions he held during this time included "Vice Minister" ("jundaijin") and "Senior Commander of the Middle Bodyguards". In 758, Kōken abdicated formally in
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion favour of Emperor Junnin, a Nakamaro puppet, married to Nakamaro's daughter. The title of the Minister of Right, held by Nakamaro at the time, was changed to "taihō" (Grand Guardian) and his name changed to Emi no Oshikatsu. Nakamaro, at the peak of his power, went north to subdue the Ezo people and made plans to conquer the Korean kingdom of Silla. On the 11th day of the 1st month, 760, Nakamaro was promoted from taihō to taishi and received the 1st junior rank; and in 762 the 1st senior rank. ## Conflict with Kōken. Nakamaro's authority started to decline when his main supporter, Kōmyō, died in 760 and Kōken started to play a more active role in politics. She would allow reigning Emperor
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion Junnin, who was supported by Nakamaro, to do only ceremonial and minor tasks, while she would handle all important governing issues including gratifications and punishments. This is expressed in an edict issued by Kōken in the 6th month of 762 stating: ""henceforth the emperor will conduct minor affairs of state, but important matters of state, including the dispensation of awards and punishments, will be handled by me". Famines, epidemics and expenses for the planned invasion of Silla and a new palace at Hora added to the burden on the government. Furthermore Kōken had developed an intimate relationship with the Buddhist monk, Dōkyō, who had healed her of some illness in the 4th month of 762.
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion In the following year, the appointment of Dōkyō to the third rank in the ecclesiastical hierarchy ("Shōsozu") meant the displacement of Jikun, a priest close to Nakamaro. Worried about governmental power moving to Dōkyō and seeing fellow clansman drifting towards the group around Kōken, Nakamaro set out for his revolt. On a more general note, this conflict can be seen as a disagreement between two groups over the role of the Emperor, with the one around Kōken favouring direct authority as in China at the time, while on the other side Nakamaro and his followers supported the practice of pre-Tenmu times where the Emperor as high priest of kami affairs was the spiritual leader of the country while
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion actual political power lay in the hand of the leader of an imperial ("in-law") clan. # Rebellion. In order to restore authority and prestige, Nakamaro planned a "coup d'état". As head of the Middle Guards he seized control of the military in the capital and neighboring provinces, placing his sons in key position at the Palace Guards and as governors of Echizen and Mino Provinces, which were strategic for access to Eastern Honshu. Two other sons (Kuzumaro and Asakari) he named to the Council of State. In return Kōken appointed Fujiwara no Masaki (a critic of Nakamaro) to "Middle Counselor" and had 69-year-old Kibi no Makibi brought back from exile. The latter had played a major role during
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion the Hirotsugu Rebellion and was an expert in Chinese strategy. He was put in charge with the preparation of forces and the reinforcement of defensive works at the Seta River, which would turn out to cut off Nakamaro from the Eastern Provinces. On the 2nd day of the 9th month (October 1) of 764, Nakamaro asked Kōken to name him "Supervisor of Military Messengers from the Four Provinces of the Kinai, the Three Provinces of the Passes (Echizen, Mino, Ise) and Ōmi, Tanba, and Harima". To see whether the celestial bodies were aligned favorably for a rebellion, Nakamaro consulted the yin-yang master Ōtsu Ōura who was associated with Prince Wake, a nephew of Emperor Junnin. However the astronomer
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion leaked the plot and was rewarded with a promotion to the 4th rank. When Kōken tried to take the imperial seal and station bells from Emperor Junnin on the 11th day of the 9th month (October 10, 764), events escalated. A struggle ensued as Nakamaro sent one of his sons to regain the objects, Kōken replied by sending two crack soldiers and eventually Nakamaro succeeded by ordering the Captain of the Middle Guards to recapture the seals and travel passes. He named the elder brother of Funado, Shioyaki the new emperor. Together with Shioyaki and carrying the signs of imperial authority, he left the capital for Ōmi. The Former Empress stripped Nakamaro of rank, position and surname (11th day of
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion 9th month). To prevent his flight to the east she had the three ancient barriers () at Suzuka, Fuwa (near what would later be Sekigahara-juku) and Arachi closed. These marked the border to the Eastern Provinces. The army that she raised, occupied the provincial headquarters (kokufu) at Ōmi and had the Seta bridge burned, so that Nakamaro had to find another escape route. Fujiwara no Kurajimaro was sent as leader of an army against Nakamaro. The rebel army turned north towards Echizen Province where he was counting on support from his son who was provincial governor. But again, Kōken's forces were quicker and with the help of the local elite they had the governor killed and Arachi pass blocked.
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion Seeing no way for escape to the north or south, Nakamaro's group tried to cross Lake Biwa on a boat but had to return due to adverse wind. Eventually it came to an archery battle on the 18th day of the 9th month (October 17, 764) from 1am to 3pm at Miozaki in Ōmi Province. When Nakamaro's side seemed to gain the upper hand, reinforcement from the capital arrived forcing the rebels to retreat. While trying to escape by boat, Nakamaro and his family were captured and executed. The rebel's head was taken as trophy to the capital. According to the "Nihon Kōki", a total of 375 people who participated in the rebellion were sentenced to the death penalty, but that was subsequently commuted to exile. Factors
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion cited for the failure of Nakamaro's Rebellion include the envy and lack of support from within the Fujiwara clan. Also, despite his high position as Supervisor of Military Messengers, unlike Kōken, Nakamaro did not manage to gain support from local district magistrates who had a major part of military force—particularly fighters on horseback—under their command. # Aftermath. With her strongest rival out of the way, the retired Empress Kōken was left in full charge of the state of affairs. In what Bender suggests to be a triumphal procession, in 765 Kōken and other court members set out on a royal tour of the provinces of Kawachi, Izumi and Kii. Junnin, who had become Emperor through Nakamaro's
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion support, was disliked by Kōken. In the month following the rebellion, she issued a significant edict in which titular Emperor Junnin was accused of being in collusion with the rebel. She dethroned Junnin and degraded him to the rank of a prince. Together with his mother he was exiled to Awaji Island where conditions were appalling and on an escape attempt the ex-emperor was captured and killed. Kōken became Empress for the second time as Empress Shōtoku. As Empress Shōtoku she surrounded herself with loyal people. Fujiwara no Toyonari, who had opposed and been exiled by his brother Nakamaro, was brought back from Dazaifu during the revolt on the 14th day of the 9th month (October 13, 764) and
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion reinstated as Minister of Right. She promoted Dōkyō from junior 5th to junior 3rd rank, and in 765 made him prime minister prelate ("daijōdaijin zenshi"). His authority was further increased on the 20th day of the 10th month, 766, to Buddhist King ("Hō-ō") and on the 20th day of the 3rd month, 767 by creation of the "Imperial Office for the Buddhist King" ("Hō-ō Kyūshiki"). In titles he rivaled semi-legendary Prince Shōtoku and he'd also receive officials in the manner of an emperor, however Dōkyō only held spiritual (not political) responsibilities. With Dōkyō's rise in power also came an active propagation of Buddhism. Following the rebellion, Empress Shōtoku ordered the copying of the tripiṭaka,
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion Buddhist canon, and in order to pacify the souls of those that had died during the Nakamaro Rebellion, had the Hyakumantō Darani produced — a large scale commission of miniature wooden pagodas and woodblock prints for distribution in provincial temples. The Fujiwara retained enough power to prevent a plan to raise Dōkyō to Emperor in 769, known as the Dōkyō Incident. When Empress Shōtoku died in 770 without leaving any children, they managed to break the Imperial line of descendants of Emperor Temmu, which they thought would always favor direct imperial rule over control by a non-imperial clan like the Fujiwara. Dōkyō was sent into exile and several Fujiwara leaders were appointed to prominent
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Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fujiwara%20no%20Nakamaro%20Rebellion
Fujiwara no Nakamaro Rebellion ō to Emperor in 769, known as the Dōkyō Incident. When Empress Shōtoku died in 770 without leaving any children, they managed to break the Imperial line of descendants of Emperor Temmu, which they thought would always favor direct imperial rule over control by a non-imperial clan like the Fujiwara. Dōkyō was sent into exile and several Fujiwara leaders were appointed to prominent government positions. According to Zachert, the political instability and threat to the imperial line of succession due to Dōkyō during Kōken/Shōtoku's rule acted as a deterrent and Japan would not see another female ruler for close to 1000 years. # See also. - List of Japanese battles - Military history of Japan
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein Maury Klein Maury Klein (born 14 March 1939 in Memphis, Tennessee) is an American historian and author of books on 19th-century American history and the American railroad industry. # Life. Maurice Nickell (Maury) Klein was born March 14, 1939, in Memphis, Tennessee. His father, Harry Klein (Klajnzyngier), was the son of Polish immigrants and spent his life in the women's ready-wear trade. His mother, Alice Lena Nickell, was the daughter of a Louisville, Kentucky, physician, and sang professionally before her marriage. A nomadic childhood took him all over the country and aroused in him an interest in American history. In 1953 he landed in Denver, Colorado, where he was to graduated from East
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein High School three years later. He earned a B.A. degree from Knox College in 1960 and went on to graduate work at Emory University, where he received an M.A. degree in 1961 and a Ph.D. in history in 1965. His dissertation, done under Professor Bell Irvin Wiley, was a biography of Confederate general Edward Porter Alexander. Klein taught for a year at Emory before accepting a job at the University of Rhode Island in September 1964. He remained at that institution until his retirement in June 2008, teaching a wide variety of courses and writing on a diverse number of subjects. In 1973 he was promoted to full professor of history. More than once he said that, once decided on a teaching career,
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein he majored in history because it gave him the most freedom of subject matter in the classroom and fed the broad range of his interests. He spent the year 1966-67 as a Newcomen Fellow at the Harvard Business School. Throughout his career writing has remained Klein’s greatest passion. He is the author of 18 books, along with many articles in publications ranging from scholarly journals to Sports Illustrated, essays, book reviews, and, more recently, blogs. Railroad history emerged early as one of his specialties. Along with works on southern railroads he has published a three-volume history of the Union Pacific Railroad as well as biographies of two key figures in that company’s history, Jay
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein Gould and E. H. Harriman. The Union Pacific series drew praise as the definitive history of that road. The Gould biography offered a revised and positive portrait of that long-reviled financier. The Railroad and Locomotive Historical Society twice awarded Klein its George and Constance Hilton prize for the outstanding book in railroad history. These and other works earned Klein a reputation as one of America’s prominent business and railroad historians. Klein's has also authored books on urban history, the coming of the Civil War, the stock market crash of 1929, the steam and electric revolutions, and has a forthcoming work on how America mobilized for World War II. In college, Klein kindled
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein a love of theater. While enjoying a career acting in university and other productions, he also served for four years as chairman of the University of Rhode Island’s theater department. He served as chairman of the faculty senate and headed the university’s Honors Program and arts council. Through the years, Klein has also provided consulting services and public speaking. In 2001, he received an honorary degree from Knox College, his alma mater. In 2011, he was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame. # Works. In addition to his previously published thirteen books, he has written several articles for professional journals and other publications. 1970: The Great Richmond Terminal -
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein 1971: Edward Porter Alexander - 1972: A History of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad - 1976: Prisoners of Progress: American Industrial Cities, 1850-1920 (along with Harvey A. Kantor) - 1986: The Life and Legend of Jay Gould (nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, Outstanding Book Award of the Railway and Locomotive Historical Society) - 1987: Union Pacific: The Birth, 1862-1893 (Outstanding Book Award of the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society) - 1990: Union Pacific: The Rebirth, 1894-1969 - 1993: The Flowering of the Third America (nominated for the Pulitzer Prize) - 1994: Unfinished Business: The Railroad in American Life - 1997: Days of Defiance: Secession, Slavery, and the Civil
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Maury Klein
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maury%20Klein
Maury Klein Defiance: Secession, Slavery, and the Civil War - 2000: The Life and Legend of EH Harriman (nominated for the Pulitzer Prize) - 2001: Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929 - 2003: The Changemakers - 2007: The Genesis of Industrial America, 1870-1920 - 2008: The Power Makers - 2011: Union Pacific: The Reconfiguration, America's Greatest Railroad from 1969 to the Present - 2013: A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II # External links. - Website of Maury Klein - Quad Angles Mai 2008: "Maury Klein: A Gifted Writer, an maginative Teacher, and an Intense Competitor" - URI History Professor honored by alma mater - "Rainbows End: The Crash of 1929" Maury Klein on C-SPAN 2 (2001)
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Frank Plastria
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frank%20Plastria
Frank Plastria Frank Plastria # Biography. Frank A. A. Plastria (born 30 October 1948 in Sint-Agatha-Berchem, Belgium) is a Belgian operations researcher, a professor in the department of mathematics, operational research, statistics and information systems for management at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, known for his work on facility location. His work has been published in journals such as the European Journal of Operational Research, Discrete Applied Mathematics and Mathematical Programming. Plastria earned his Ph.D. in 1983 from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. From its founding in 2002 until 2009 he was editor-in-chief of "4OR: A Quarterly Journal of Operations Research", and he is the editor-in-chief
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Frank Plastria
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frank%20Plastria
Frank Plastria t of mathematics, operational research, statistics and information systems for management at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, known for his work on facility location. His work has been published in journals such as the European Journal of Operational Research, Discrete Applied Mathematics and Mathematical Programming. Plastria earned his Ph.D. in 1983 from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. From its founding in 2002 until 2009 he was editor-in-chief of "4OR: A Quarterly Journal of Operations Research", and he is the editor-in-chief of "Studies in Locational Analysis". In 2002–2003 he was president of SOGESCI-B.V.W.B. (ORBEL), the Belgian Operations Research society. # External links. - Home page
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Hakai Institute
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hakai%20Institute
Hakai Institute Hakai Institute The Hakai Institute (formerly the Hakai Beach Institute) is a scientific research, teaching and meeting center established by Eric Peterson and Christina Munck on Calvert Island, a remote island on the exposed Pacific edge of the Great Bear Rainforest on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada. The Hakai Institute is a program of the Tula Foundation, a British Columbia-based private foundation also founded by Peterson and Munck. The Hakai Institute specializes in "Long Term Ecolological Research". It has active research programs in archaeology, earth sciences, terrestrial ecology and marine ecology. The Hakai Institute enjoys partnerships with neighbouring First Nations,
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Hakai Institute
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hakai%20Institute
Hakai Institute k on Calvert Island, a remote island on the exposed Pacific edge of the Great Bear Rainforest on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada. The Hakai Institute is a program of the Tula Foundation, a British Columbia-based private foundation also founded by Peterson and Munck. The Hakai Institute specializes in "Long Term Ecolological Research". It has active research programs in archaeology, earth sciences, terrestrial ecology and marine ecology. The Hakai Institute enjoys partnerships with neighbouring First Nations, local schools, government agencies and the BC universities. In 2015, the Hakai Institute launched "Hakai magazine". # External links. - Hakai Institute - Tula Foundation
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Betsy Ross (film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Betsy%20Ross%20(film)
Betsy Ross (film) Betsy Ross (film) Betsy Ross is a surviving 1917 American silent historical film starring Alice Brady and produced and distributed by her father William A. Brady. # Plot. As described in a film magazine, Betsy Griscome (Brady), against the wishes of her Quaker parents, keeps a tryst with a British officer, Clarence Vernon (Mayo), who promises to marry her upon his return. Clarissa (Cook), her sister, falls in love and marries Joseph Ashburn (Bowers), a trader. Suspecting Vernon of duplicity, Joseph and Vernon fight a duel and Vernon is struck down. A year later Betsy marries John Ross (Kennard), and upon his death she operates a little shop for a living. Here she shields her sister, who was
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Betsy Ross (film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Betsy%20Ross%20(film)
Betsy Ross (film) driven from home when she could not produce her marriage certificate. Betsy is commissioned by General Washington (MacQuarrie) to make the first American flag and later is accused of harboring a spy - in reality, her sister's husband. The film ends happily when all relations are explained. # Cast. - Alice Brady - Betsy Ross - John Bowers - Joseph Ashburn - Lillian Cook - Carissa Griscom - Victor Kennard - John Ross - Eugenie Woodward - Mrs. Ashburn - Kate Lester - Mrs. Vernon - Frank Mayo - Clarence Vernon - George MacQuarrie - George Washington - Justine Cutting - Mrs. Griscom - Robert Forsyth - Samuel Griscom - Nellie Fillmore - Mrs. Bass - Richard Clarke - Lemuel Ketch # Reception. Like
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Betsy Ross (film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Betsy%20Ross%20(film)
Betsy Ross (film) - Frank Mayo - Clarence Vernon - George MacQuarrie - George Washington - Justine Cutting - Mrs. Griscom - Robert Forsyth - Samuel Griscom - Nellie Fillmore - Mrs. Bass - Richard Clarke - Lemuel Ketch # Reception. Like many American films of the time, "Betsy Ross" was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. The Chicago Board of Censors required cuts of scenes of a sword thrust during the duel, killing of second man in duel, the two intertitles "Scarlet woman" and "Don't you dare kill the Vernon nigger," the scene with a duel vision, and the actual firing of the squad at the execution. # External links. - allmovie/synopsis: "Betsy Ross" - Lantern slide; "Betsy Ross"
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Austin White
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Austin%20White
Austin White Austin White Austin Ciaz Matthew White (born 14 February 1959) is a former West Indian cricketer. White was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm fast-medium. He was born on Montserrat. White first played for Montserrat against St Kitts in the 1976 Hesketh Bell Shield. In that same year he made his Youth Test match debut for West Indies Young Cricketers against England Young Cricketers. He followed this match up by making his Youth One Day International debut against the same opposition. He made further appearances for West Indies Young Cricketers in 1978 during their tour of England, making two further Youth Test match appearances and a single Youth One Day International appearance. In
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Austin White
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Austin%20White
Austin White 1979, he made his first-class debut for the Leeward Islands against the Windward Islands. In that same year, he made his List A debut for the team against Barbados in the 1978/79 Geddes Grant/Harrison Line Trophy. In 1980, he made a single List A appearance for the Leeward Islands against Guyana, before following this up the following year with a single first-class appearance against a touring England XI. In that same year, he made two List A appearances against Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago in the 1980/81 Geddes Grant/Harrison Line Trophy. In 1982, he made a single first-class appearance in the 1981/82 Shell Shield against Trinidad and Tobago, as well as making two List A appearances in that
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Austin White
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Austin%20White
Austin White seasons Geddes Grant/Harrison Line Trophy against Trinidad and Tobago and Barbados. He made two final first-class appearances for the Leeward Islands in 1983 against Barbados and the touring Indians, as well as two further List A appearances against Barbados and Guyana. In four first-class matches, he scored a total of 78 runs at an average of 8.66, with a high score of 19. With the ball, he took 5 wickets at a bowling average of 73.40, with best figures of 2/63. In List A cricket, he made eight appearances, scoring 21 runs at an average of 7.00, with a high score of 17. With the ball, he took 4 wickets at a bowling average of 33.71, with best figures of 4/51. He continued to play minor matches
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Austin White
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Austin%20White
Austin White 8.66, with a high score of 19. With the ball, he took 5 wickets at a bowling average of 73.40, with best figures of 2/63. In List A cricket, he made eight appearances, scoring 21 runs at an average of 7.00, with a high score of 17. With the ball, he took 4 wickets at a bowling average of 33.71, with best figures of 4/51. He continued to play minor matches for Montserrat during the four-year period in which he played for the Leeward Islands. He continued to play for Montserrat until 1985, with his final recorded match for his home island coming against St Kitts in the 1985 Nissan Leeward Islands Tournament. # External links. - Austin White at ESPNcricinfo - Austin White at CricketArchive
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Patrick J. D. Ryan
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Patrick%20J.%20D.%20Ryan
Patrick J. D. Ryan Patrick J. D. Ryan Patrick Ryan is a member of the States of Jersey, and was first elected as a Deputy of St Helier No. 1 district in 2001. He is the Minister for Education, Sport and Culture. # See also. - Council of Ministers of Jersey
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Carolyn Talcott
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carolyn%20Talcott
Carolyn Talcott Carolyn Talcott Carolyn Talcott (born June 14, 1941) is an American computer scientist known for work in formal reasoning, especially as it relates to computers, cryptanalysis and systems biology. She is currently the program director of the Symbolic Systems Biology group at SRI International. She is currently the co-editor-in-chief of "Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation". # Awards and memberships. Talcott was named an SRI Fellow in 2011. She is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery and the Association for Symbolic Logic. # External links. - List of publications from DBLP
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Nicodamus peregrinus
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nicodamus%20peregrinus
Nicodamus peregrinus Nicodamus peregrinus Nicodamus peregrinus, known as the red and black spider, is a common spider found in eastern and southern Australia. Unlike with the redback spider ("Latrodectus hasseltii"), the bright red coloration does not appear to warn of significant danger to humans. Food is a variety of small insects. They have been recorded in Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia. # Description and egg sac. Usually found under bark, fallen trees or stones close to the ground. Legs are red and black. The cephalothorax is red, the abdomen is black or sometimes a dark blue. Palps are red and black. Body length of males is 8 to 10 mm, females 12 to 14 mm. The egg sac
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Nicodamus peregrinus
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nicodamus%20peregrinus
Nicodamus peregrinus is 10 to 20 mm in diameter and contains from 30 to 50 cream eggs, 1 mm in diameter. The sac is plano-convex in shape, consisting of white fluffy silk, placed in a sheltered area such as under bark. Near continual courtship and mating have been observed when in captivity, resulting in the exhaustive death of the males. These spiders tend to wave their forelegs in the air while walking, and the males tap the ground with their palps. # Naming & taxonomy. This spider belongs to the family Nicodamidae. However, it has also been placed in the families Theridiidae, Agelenidae and Zodariidae. Originally named by the French arachnologist Charles Walckenaer as "Theridion peregrinum" in 1841. However,
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Nicodamus peregrinus
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nicodamus%20peregrinus
Nicodamus peregrinus ive death of the males. These spiders tend to wave their forelegs in the air while walking, and the males tap the ground with their palps. # Naming & taxonomy. This spider belongs to the family Nicodamidae. However, it has also been placed in the families Theridiidae, Agelenidae and Zodariidae. Originally named by the French arachnologist Charles Walckenaer as "Theridion peregrinum" in 1841. However, there have been several name changes. The most recent being in 1995, after a revision of the family Nicodamidae, when Mark Harvey replaced the name "Nicodamus bicolor" with "Nicodamus peregrinus". Walckenaer's original specific epithet "peregrinum" refers to the wandering nature of the spider.
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Athleague GAA
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Athleague%20GAA
Athleague GAA Athleague GAA Athleague GAA club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in Athleague, County Roscommon, Ireland. The club is exclusively concerned with the game of hurling. # Honours. - Roscommon Senior Hurling Championship (19): 1908, 1909, 1910, 1916, 1928, 1929, 1937, 1947, 1949, 1953, 1955, 1957, 1959, 1975, 1978, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2018 - All-Ireland Junior Club Camogie Championship Runner-Up 2015 - Connacht Senior Club Hurling Championship: Runners-Up 1975, 2003, 2006 # External links. - Athleague GAA site
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