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The HIV Haemophilia Litigation [1990] 41 BMLR 171, [1990] 140 NLJR 1349 (CA), [1989] E N. 2111, also known as AMcG002, and HHL, was a legal claim by 962 plaintiffs, mainly haemophiliacs (but also their wives, partners and children), who were infected with HIV as a result of having been treated with blood products in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The first central defendants were the then Department of Health, with other defendants being the Licensing Authority of the time, (MCA), the CSM (the Committee on the Safety of Medicines), the CBLA (Central Blood Laboratories Authority), and the regional health authorities of England and Wales.
The litigation commenced around April 1989 and by 7 July 1989, at least 300 plaintiffs had joined the action. Within four months, (by 9 November 1989) another 300 haemophiliacs had joined the action. There was an initial deadline of 2 February 1990 imposed, however this was extended in order to permit 200 haemophiliac children to sign up to the action.
Principal grounds
The plaintiff's principal allegations were that the UK government had been negligent in failing to become sufficient as a country in the supply of blood products at an earlier point, and in delaying the implementation of heat-treatment of clotting factors in order to inactivate HIV. It was further alleged that the defendants did not respond correctly to the AIDS crisis, specifically, in not reacting with urgency to move to banning imported blood products which were derived from paid donors. Another significant ground was breach of duty as provided for in statute, for example, under the National Health Service Act 1977.
Discovery and public interest immunity
On 20 September 1990, the Court of Appeal heard an appeal concerning discovery where an order of 31 July 1990 had been made by Mr Justice Rougier that required the first central defendant, the Department of Health, to surrender some, but not all of 600 files of historic papers spanning 1972 to 1986, on which they were asserting public interest immunity (PII). The appeal had been brought by the plaintiffs and was being considered in conjunction with a cross-appeal by the defendants.
The documents being withheld under public interest fell into a number of categories: submissions and draft submissions to ministers, policy documents, exchanges with ministers, documents revealing the process by which policy decisions were arrived at, documents showing exchanges between senior officials, briefings to ministers, and position papers on the formulation of future policy prepared by civil servants.
Part IV of the Canadian inquiry report by Justice Horace Krever provides a more specific breakdown of the subject matter of the documents which were under consideration during the appeal: documents relating to the drive for self-sufficiency, the allocation of resources, documents on the laboratory (BPL) where blood products were manufactured, on the NBTS, on the screening of donors, on steps to limit the infection with hepatitis, and on heat-treatment of blood products.
The three appellate judges found for the plaintiffs and ordered the PII documents to be disclosed, overturning the ruling of Rougier J of 31 July 1990 and the cross-appeal by the Department of Health was dismissed. Lord Justice Bingham recorded in the judgment that he felt "the tragedy was avoidable in the sense that, had different measures been taken in the 1970s and early 1980s, it could, at least in large measure, have been prevented."
Out-of-court settlement
On 26 June 1990, Mr Justice Ognall took the rare initiative of issuing a handwritten note imploring the parties to give anxious consideration to settling the action out of court. He stressed the moral obligation and duty that fell on the UK government toward the HIV-infected haemophiliacs. However, the judge's plea was resisted for several months by the Health Secretary, Mr Kenneth Clarke, and was still being rebutted on 16 October 1990. The Chief Medical Officer, Donald Acheson, was also keen for the government to settle the action. The haemophiliac plaintiffs were developing AIDS and 130 infected haemophiliacs had already died by 9 November 1990. The next month, the action was settled out-of-court by which time the number of plaintiffs on the roll of names had risen to 1,217.
It was reported on 4 February 2022 in the i newspaper that a Department of Health memo, unearthed at the National Archives, revealed that senior government officials held the belief in 1995 that the government would have been found negligent and lost the HIV Haemophilia Litigation had the case gone to full trial.
Deed of undertaking
On settlement, the plaintiffs were required to sign a Deed of Undertaking, often referred to as a waiver, undertaking not to pursue any further legal action against the Department of Health or other defendants with respect to infection with any other viruses contracted through contaminated blood products. The waivers effectively served as an indemnity against future legal action against the Department of Health in relation to blood-borne viruses. In 2003, The Guardian reported that the waivers prevented infected haemophiliacs and other plaintiffs from suing specifically if it "was later found that they had hepatitis C as well".
The validity of the waivers has more recently been brought into question in the wording of the Group Litigation Order in Jason Evans & Others [2017], where at 1.4. it's suggested that any undertakings given by the claimants in the HIV Haemophilia Litigation may not be binding upon the Claimants, due to it now being deemed "unconscionable for the Defendant to rely upon such undertaking".
The decision to implement the waivers was made during the course of the litigation by a high-powered government committee, the Advisory Committee on the Virological Safety of Blood (ACVSB). The use of the waivers has been described as controversial by the Haemophilia Society in their first written submission to the Archer Independent Inquiry because it was felt by many haemophiliacs that the government of the time was already aware of the true scale of infection with non-A non-B hepatitis (NANBH) in those who had been treated with blood products.
See also
Advisory Committee on the Virological Safety of Blood
Contaminated blood scandal in the United Kingdom
Notes
References
1990 in case law
1990 in British law
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Tony Kerpel (born 1946) is a British retired politician and adviser who served as the personal assistant to Prime Minister Edward Heath, special adviser to Conservative Chairman Kenneth Baker from 1986 to 1992 and adviser to South African State President F. W. de Klerk from 1993 to 1994.
Education
Kerpel studied at the University of Bath, receiving a bachelor of science degree in sociology in 1968. In 1968 and 1969, he was president of the university's students' union.
Political career
Kerpel's presidency of the University of Bath's students' union led to his employment by the Department for Education and Science as a press secretary, a position he kept after relocating to the Home Office. At the Home Office, Kerpel was a specialist in incarceration. In 1975 and 1976, Kerpel was the National Chairman of the Young Conservatives. He was also Prime Minister Edward Heath's personal assistant.
In 1981, Kerpel became leader of the Conservative opposition in the Camden London Borough Council, standing in the 1982 Camden London Borough Council election. Kerpel lost by a 7-seat margin and remained opposition leader but left this position sometime before 1985. From 1986 to 1992, Kerpel was the special adviser to Kenneth Baker. During this time he worked alongside Alistair Burt, Baker's Parliamentary Private Secretary. Burt, Baker and Kerpel were some of the few supporters of the City Technology Colleges programme inside the government. From 1993, Kerpel served in the final Apartheid government of South Africa as an adviser to State President F. W. de Klerk. Kerpel continued to advise de Klerk after Apartheid's fall, helping prepare a critical report of the economic policies of the newly elected Black majority government. In 2019 de Klerk claimed to have not known of Kerpel. In the late 1990s Kerpel was the adviser to Shirley Porter, attempting to defend her reputation from the Homes for votes scandal, of which Shirley was involved.
Since his retirement, Kerpel has been president of the North London Bowling Club. He has also expressed opinion on modern political events, such as when he commented on Prime Minister Boris Johnson's failure to nominate Chris Grayling as Chair of the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament in 2020.
Coalition for Peace Through Security
Kerpel was one of the main activists in the Coalition for Peace through Security, a campaigning group strongly opposed to unilateral nuclear disarmament and withdrawal from NATO. Kerpel designed some of the group's posters, namely those critical of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
Honours
Kerpel was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1981 Birthday Honours for political service.
References
Conservative Party (UK) people
British special advisers
Members of the Order of the British Empire
Living people
1946 births | [
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Mordenkainen Presents: Monsters of the Multiverse (Monsters of the Multiverse) is a sourcebook for the 5th edition of the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, originally published as part of a box set in January 2022. It is scheduled to be published as a standalone edition in May 2022. The book is a supplement to the 5th edition Monster Manual (2014) and Player's Handbook (2014).
Contents
The book updates a variety of options for both players and Dungeon Masters:
33 player races
Bestiary that contains 268 monster stat blocks
Publication history
The book was originally published as part of the Dungeons & Dragons Rules Expansion Gift Set on January 25, 2022. It is scheduled to have a standalone release on May 17, 2022.
Monsters of the Multiverse revises previously published aspects of 5th Edition Dungeons & Dragons (D&D). Both player races and monsters were rebalanced. Jeremy Crawford, principal rules designer for D&D, said the revised rules are backward compatible. Setting specific lore and alignments were removed to allow for broader story creation by Dungeon Masters and players. Polygon highlighted that this "will also give Wizards of the Coast more elbow room to expand its multiverse, either relaunching classic settings like Dragonlance and Spelljammer or unleashing entirely new settings built from scratch". Monster challenge ratings were not changed; instead, monster stat blocks were adjusted to better represent their challenge rating. TechRaptor stated that mechanically for player races the revision means "the removal of set Ability scores, [...] a change that was first introduced in Tasha's Cauldron of Everything. [...] Races might also get new Traits entirely, or simply have their traits renamed to something more generalized".
The book will also be available as a digital product through the following Wizards of the Coast licensees on May 17, 2022: D&D Beyond, Fantasy Grounds, and Roll20. Christian Hoffer, for ComicBook.com, reported that "with past updates to content, either via errata or updates in new books, D&D Beyond has updated the stat blocks for all of its subscribers regardless as to whether they purchased the updated content or not. [...] However, this will not be the case with Monsters of the Multiverse, especially as some of the changes made in the book are considered unpopular with a segment of fans. [...] [D&D Beyond head Joe Starr] didn't specify exactly how it would implement the new stat blocks and player races found in the book".
Related products
The boxed set, Dungeons & Dragons Rules Expansion Gift Set, contains the Monsters of the Multiverse along with new printings of Xanathar's Guide to Everything (2017) and Tasha's Cauldron of Everything (2020). An exclusive edition, with white foil alternate art covers by Joy Ang, is only available through local game stores.
Reception
Chris de Hoog, for CGMagazine, called Monsters of the Multiverse a "very straightforward book" and that it "isn't the most flashy or compelling book". de Hoog wrote that "many of the creatures listed within are reprinted from other sources, like the similar Volo's Guide to Monsters or Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes, but these reprints have subtle updates that make a big difference at the game table. [...] The other benefit of reprinting monsters in central tomes like this is that you don't necessarily need to buy every other book just to get the stats for a couple of baddies you’d like to use—nor do you need to cart as many books to game nights". de Hoog stated that the Dungeons & Dragons Rules Expansion Gift Set is "a must-have if you don't already own its tomes", however, "Monsters of the Multiverse is a little thin on its own. It will be a valuable resource, so this is a more compelling way to add it to your library—especially if you can get your hands on the unique version available only at independent game stores".
Both Polygon and SyFy Wire highlighted that Monsters of the Multiverse is an indication of the future design direction of Dungeons & Dragons. Charlie Hall, for Polygon, commented on the previous "edition wars" when Dungeons & Dragons "transitioned from 3rd edition, to 3.5, to 4th edition. Instead, it appears that Wizards will be taking a far more incremental approach this time, weaving in changes both large and small while still maintaining a connection to what came before". Hall also commented that Monsters of the Multiverse was originally intended to be published in time for the winter 2021 holidays as a standalone book and as part of the box set, however, due to "ongoing global supply chain issues" both releases were delayed – "It's an approach to releasing new content that the company has not attempted before in 5th edition, and this time, looks to have backfired, effectively gating off this new content for a period of time unless you’re willing to pay a premium".
Additionally, both Polygon and SyFy Wire highlighted that the sourcebook's design philosophy attempts to move away from racist elements of Dungeons & Dragons. James Grebey, for SyFy Wire, wrote that the updated rules decouple "cultural characteristics from the physical or magical ones" and it "removes setting-specific information about the races, which combined with the more flexible stat alignment should make them easier to slot into any fantasy world [...]. Furthermore, the old way of creating characters made it so some races were poor choices for certain classes. [...] The monsters section of the book aims to make DMs’ lives easier, like by simplifying how monsters cast spells".
References
2022 books
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Minor league baseball teams based in Muscatine, Iowa from 1910 to 1916. Muscatine teams played as members of the Northern Association in 1910 and Central Association from 1911 to 1916. Muscatine played under five different monikers. They played as the Muscatine "Muskies" in 1915 and 1916.
Muscatine High School has adopted the Muscatine Muskies mascot.
Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Sam Rice played for the 1912 Muscatine Wallopers.
History
Minor league baseball began in Muscatine, Iowa when the 1910 Muscatine Pearl Finders became charter members of the Class D level Northern Association. The Muscatine Pearl Finders formed the Northern Association along with the Clinton Teddies, Decatur Commodores, Elgin Kittens, Freeport Pretzels, Jacksonville Jacks, Joliet Jolly-ites and Kankakee Kays as fellow charter members.
The Muscatine Pearl Finders finished in 2nd place as the Northern Association folded during the 1910 season. On July 19, 1910, Muscatine was in 2nd place with a 37–21 record under manager Lou "Roxey" Walters when the Northern Association permanently folded. However, first place Elgin had folded on July 11, 1910, along with the Kanakee Kays.
In 1911, Muscatine became members of the Class D level Central Association, replacing the Quincy Vets in the league. They remained in the league through the 1916 season playing as the Muscatine Camels in 1911, Muscatine Wallopers in 1912 and 1913, Muscatine Buttonmakers in 1914 and Muscatine Muskies in 1915 and 1916.
The 1911 Muscatine Camels placed 7th in the eight–team Central Association. Muscatine finished with a 48–80 record, in the final regular season standings under managers Ed Coleman and Lou Walters. The Camels finished the 1911 season 39.0 games behind the 1st place Ottawa Speedboys. Other 1911 Central Association members were the Burlington Cow Boys, Galesburg Pavers, Hannibal Cannibals, Keokuk Indians, Kewanee Boilermakers and Monmouth Browns.
Continuing league play, the 1912 Muscatine Wallopers finished in 8th place, last in the eight–team Central Association. With a final record of 33–94 playing under managers Ed Coleman, Bill Kreig, Joe Wall and William Clayton, Muscatine finished 45.0 games behind the 1st place Ottawa Speedboys in the final standings. Muscatine had total season home attendance of 22,000.
Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Sam Rice played for the 1912 Muscatine Wallopers, hitting .194 in 62 at bats. Rice's wife, two children, both of his parents and two sisters were killed by a tornado on April 21, 1912. Rice had begun the season with the Galesburg Pavers, but left the team after the tragedy.
The 1913 Muscatine Wallopers finished 2nd in the Central Association. With a 68–54 record under manager Frank Boyle, Muscatine finished 2.0 games behind the Ottumwa Packers in the final standings.
On June 2, 1913, Muscatine Wallopers hosted an exhibition game against the Chicago Cubs. There were 3,000 in attendance at League Field in Muscatine for the exhibition game.
Continuing play in the Central Association, the 1914 Muscatine Buttonmakers placed 3rd in the Central Association with a record of 72–53. Playing under returning manager Frank Boyle, the Buttonmankers finished 4.0 games behind the 1st place Waterloo Jays in the final eight–team standings. The "Buttonmakers" moniker was a reference to buttonmakers, a Muscatine industry, which had a local strike in 1911 and 1912. On June 26, 1914, Al Gould of the Muscatine Buttonmankers threw a no-hitter against the Cedar Rapids Bunnies as Muscatine won the game 7–0.
The Muscatine Muskies finished 2nd in the 1915 Central Association. With a 63–57 record under managers Ned Egan and Jesse Runser, the Muskies finished 18.0 games behind the 1st place Burlington Pathfinders in the final standings. On May 26, 1915, Muscatine pitcher Sidney Ross threw a no–hitter in a 5–0 win over the Cedar Rapids Rabbits.
The "Muskies" moniker was in reference to the local fishing industry, spurred by Muscatine being located along the Mississippi River. The Fairport Fish Hatchery was established near Muscatine in 1908 and is still in use today.
In their final season, the 1916 Muscatine Muskies played the season amid controversy. While the Muskies finished in 3rd place with a 45–44 record under manager Ned Egan, but the franchise forfeited 34 of the wins after the season was concluded. The Muscatine franchise did not return to the 1917 Central Association and the league folded after the 1917 season. Muscatine, Iowa has not hosted another minor league franchise.
The current Muscatine High School building opened in 1974 and adopted the Muscatine Muskies moniker.
The ballpark
Muscatine minor league team played home games at League Field. League Field was constructed in 1910 for the Muscatine Pearl Finders. When the ballpark was first built, legend held that with no money for a lawn mower, cows were used to keep the grass trimmed. The ballpark is still in use today and known as Tom Bruner Field, named to honor a Muscatine High School teacher. Today, the park is home to Muscatine Community College and Muscatine High School baseball teams.
Today, Tom Bruner Field sits within Kent Stein Park. It is located at 2136 Oneida Avenue, Muscatine, Iowa.
Timeline
Year-by-year records
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Sam Rice (1912) Inducted, 1963
Notable alumni
Dan Adams (1911)
Babe Ellison (1916)
Rags Faircloth (1914)
Frank Fletcher (1912)
Frank Foutz (1910)
Al Gould (1913–1914)
Ziggy Hasbrook (1913–1916)
Cliff Lee (1914–1915)
Ralph McConnaughey (1913)
Doc Shanley (1915)
Cy Slapnicka (1910–1911)
Joe Wall (1912, MGR)
George Zackert (1913–1915)
See also
Muscatine Buttonmakers players
Muscatine Camels players
Muscatine Muskies players
Muscatine Wallopers players
References
External link
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Muscatine, Iowa | [
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Chlidichthys randalli is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys randalli is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys randalli is found near Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.
Etmyology
The fish is named in honor of John E. Randall (1924-2020) of the Bishop Museum in Honolulu, who provided the specimens for this species.
References
Randall, J.E. and C. Anderson, 1993. Annotated checklist of the epipelagic and shore fishes of the Maldives Islands. Ichthyol. Bull. of the J.L.B. Smith Inst. of Ichthyol. (59):1-47.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Roger Lubbock
Fish described in 1977 | [
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David Serrano may refer to:
David Serrano (footballer)
David Serrano (badminton)
David Serrano (filmmaker) | [
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Fanny Dombre-Coste (née Dombre; born 1 October 1956) is a French Socialist politician who was Member of Parliament for Hérault's 3rd constituency from 2012 to 2017.
Political career
She lost her seat to Coralie Dubost of La République En Marche! in the 2017 French legislative election.
Family
Her mothers cousin was Louise Weiss the famous feminist.
See also
List of deputies of the 14th National Assembly of France
References
1956 births
Living people
Socialist Party (France) politicians
People from Seine-Maritime
Deputies of the 14th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic
21st-century French women politicians
Women mayors of places in France
Members of Parliament for Hérault | [
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The is an archaeological site containing the ruins of a large-scale Yayoi period settlement straddling the Ikegami neighborhood in the city of Izumi and the Sone neighborhood in the city of Izumiōtsu in the Kansai region of Japan. It is a large settlement ruin with a total area of 600,000 m2, extending 1.5 kilometers north-to-south and 0.6 kilometers east-to-west. It was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 197 and has been maintained as an archaeological park since 2005.
Overview
The Ikegami-Sone site was discovered around 1900 when a local resident started collecting shards of Yayoi pottery but initially received no academic attention. An archaeological excavation was conducted in preparation for the 1970 Osaka Expo when the route of Japan National Route 26 was planned, and it was discovered that the site was of unprecedented size. However, the discovery of the Yoshinogari site in Kyushu drew all attention, and the investigation at Ikegami-Sone did not proceed much further due to lack of funds. In the 1990s, a re-survey was conducted to improve the historic park, at which time the foundations of a large excavated pillar building were discovered. This was one of the largest Yayoi period structures yet discovered, and measured 19.2 by 6.9 meters. The cypress pillars had a diameter of 60-centimeters, and the roots of 17 of what appear to have originally been 26 pillars have survived. Dendrochronology proved that the pillars used in the construction of this building were cut in 52 BC. The post holes had been reused three or four times, indicating that the building had been reconstructed at least that many times over a 100-year period. The purpose of this building is unknown, but it is believed to have been the center of the settlement, either as a ritual space or the residence of the chief. Next to the large building was remains of a large camphor tree with a diameter of 2.3 meters, which was hollowed out to form the sides of a well, along with the foundations of several other excavated pillar buildings. A vary large number of pit dwellings existed to the south, and a paddy field with an area of about 250,000 square meters was located to the west of these structures. The entire settlement was encircled by a double ring of moats with a width of three to four meters. On the outer circumference of the moat, a group of twenty square girder tombs surrounds the southern, eastern, and northern areas of the settlement in a band shape.
Many excavated items including Yayoi pottery, stone tools, and bird-shaped wooden products that are thought to be religious relics have been discovered. Of note were a large number of stone knives made from a green schist from the Kinokawa River basin in Wakayama Prefecture. These included 1300 finished examples and 300 unfinished products. Other weapons, such stone swords and stone spearheads have also been found. For this reasons, the Ikegami-Sone Site is thought to have been a production and distribution center for stone knives. Ironware was not excavated at the Ikegami-Sone site, and it is thought that the spread of iron working in the region during the Yayoi period was later when compared with contemporary sites in northern Kyushu.
Also of note was a long-necked jar depicting a dragon, which seems to be from the late Yayoi period. Such pottery is thought to be related to water rituals because it has been excavated at other sites from wells. The dragon is considered to be a rain-making god in China, and the jar hints at some form of contact with continental culture during this period. Many of the artifacts found are preserved and displayed at the adjacent , and much of the site is preserved as an archaeological park with many reconstructions of buildings. The site is a seven-minute walk from Shinodayama Station on the JR West Hanwa Line.
Gallery
See also
List of Historic Sites of Japan (Osaka)
References
External links
Izumi city official site
Izumiotsu city official site
Yayoi period
History of Osaka Prefecture
Izumi, Osaka
Izumiōtsu
Archaeological sites in Japan
Historic Sites of Japan | [
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Chlidichthys smithae is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys smithae is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys smithae is found near Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.
Etmyology
The fish is named in honor of Margaret Mary Smith (1916-1987), who was the first director of the J.L.B. Smith Institute of Ichthyology which is now the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity. Smith helped collect the type specimen.
References
Fricke, R., 1999. Fishes of the Mascarene Islands (Réunion, Mauritius, Rodriguez): an annotated checklist, with descriptions of new species. Koeltz Scientific Books, Koenigstein, Theses Zoologicae, Vol. 31:759 p.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Roger Lubbock
Fish described in 1977 | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Fulton, Kentucky in various seasons between 1911 and 1955. Fulton teams played exclusively as members of the Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League under differing names in five different decades.
Fulton was a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers from 1939 to 1942 and Washington Senators from 1948 to 1955.
Today, the Fulton "Railroaders" moniker has been revived, as Fulton hosts the summer collegiate baseball team of the same name.
History
Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League 1911, 1922–1924
Minor league baseball began in Fulton, Kentucky when the 1911 Fulton Colonels became members of the eight–team Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League, known informally as the KITTY League. The Fulton Colonels finished last in the league in the first half, with a 24–39 record. In the second half, the Colonels finished with a record of 48–19 to win the standings by 11.0 games. Fulton was scheduled to play the first–half champion Hopkinsville Hoppers for the overall championship, before inclement weather and poor field conditions cancelled the series. Fulton and Hopkinsville were declared co–champions. Fulton was managed by John Jones. Fulton did not return to the league play in 1912, as the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League reduced to six teams. The Fulton ballpark in 1911 is unknown.
On August 28, 1911, James Coleman of Fulton pitched a 7–inning perfect game against the Paducah Polecats in a 1–0 Fulton victory.
The 1922 Fulton returned to minor league play, as the Fulton Railroaders rejoined the Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League, when the league reformed. Beginning league play on May 16, 1922, Fulton finished the season with a 41–68 record to place 7th in the eight–team league. The Fulton managers were Ralph Works and Senter Rainey, as Fulton finished 30.5 games behind the Madisonville Miners in the final standings.
The Fulton use of the "Railroaders" moniker corresponds to the local railroad industry and history in Fulton, Kentucky, beginning in 1859, when construction of the Illinois Central Railroad reached Fulton. The Fulton station remains in service as a stop on the Amtrak controlled City of New Orleans route. The Fulton area is home to the Twin Cities Railroad Museum.
Fulton boasted that the city was the smallest to host minor league baseball.
The 1923 Fulton Railroaders finished a close 2nd place in the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League standings. Fulton finished with an overall record of 61–45 in a tie with the Mayfield Pantsmakers, who finished 59–43, leaving both teams 16 games above .500. However, Mayfieled had a win percentage of .578 to edge out Fulton at .575, by .003. Charles Holloway managed the 1923 Railroaders.
The Fulton Railroaders finished in 3rd place in the 1924 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. Fulton ended the season 2.0 games behind the 1st place Dyersburg Forked Deers in the six–team league final standings. The Railroaders finished with a record of 62–54, playing under manager Dan Grenier. The Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League folded after the 1924 season, before returning to play in 1935 as a six–team league.
Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League 1936–1942
The 1936 Fulton Eagles rejoined the Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League, as the league expanded from six teams to eight teams, adding the Fulton franchise. The Eagles finished the 1936 season with a 63–56 record to place 5th under manager Kid Elberfeld. Fulton finished 10.5 games behind the 1st place Paducah Indians in the final standings. Clyde Batts of Fulton led the league in batting average, hitting .368 and in hits with 176.
In 1937, the Fulton Eagles reached the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League Finals. With a regular season record of 64–56 to place 3rd in the eight–team league, the Eagles finished 9.5 games behind the Union Greyhounds. In the playoffs, Fulton defeated the Hopkinsville Hoppers 3 games to 1 to advance. In the Finals, the Mayfield Clothiers defeated Fulton 4 games to 1. Herb Porter managed Fulton in 1937.
Beginning in 1937, K.P. Dalton served as president of the Fulton Baseball Association, who operated the Fulton team. Dalton served as president for 15 years, the longest tenure of any team executive in league history. Dalton served in every remaining season of play, from 1937 to 1942 and 1946 to 1955. During this tenure, the team would win four pennants, three of them consecutively (1951 to 1953).
Fulton finished in 7th place in the eight–team 1938 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. The Eagles had a final record of 55–75 under manager George Clonts. Fulton finished 21.5 games behind the 1st place Hopkinsville Hoppers in the regular season standings, missing the playoffs.
Fulton became a minor league affiliate of the Detroit Tigers in 1939, as the franchise continued Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League play under the corresponding Fulton Tigers moniker. Fulton would play four seasons as a Detroit affiliate. The Fulton Tigers ended the 1939 season with a 52–74 record. The team placed 7th in the eight–team league under manager Charlie Eckert, finishing 24.5 games behind the 1st place Mayfield Browns, missing the four–team playoffs.
The Fulton Tigers placed 7th in the 1940 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. Fulton finished with a regular season record of 56–70 under managers Jim Poole (46–54) and Vincent Mullen (10–16).
The Fulton Tigers qualified for the 1941 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League playoffs. Fulton finished the regular season with a 68–59 record to place 3rd, 16.0 games behind the 1st place Jackson Generals under returning manager Vincent Mullen. Fulton lost in 1st round of the playoffs, as the Hopkinsville Hoppers defeated Fulton 3 games to 2.
Fulton won a shortened season Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League championship in 1942. On June 19, 1942, the Fulton Tigers had a 30–14 and were in 1st place under returning manager Vincent Mullen, when the league disbanded due to World War II. Fulton finished percentage points ahead of the 2nd place Bowling Green Barons (31–15).
Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League: 1946–1955
After a league hiatus due to World War II, the 1946 Fulton Bulldogs returned as members of the Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. The Fulton Bulldogs reached the Finals where they lost to the Owensboro Oilers in a seven games. Fulton had a 1946 regular season record of 69–56, to place 3rd under manager Hugh Holliday, finishing 15.5 games behind Owensboro. In the first round of the playoffs, Fulton defeated the Hopkinsville Hoppers 3 games to 1 to advance to the Finals. Fulton pitcher Bob Schultz led the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League with 361 strikeouts (in 221 Innings pitched) and also led the league with 148 walks, 22 wild pitches and 29 hit batsmen.
On July 1, 1946, Tommy Thomasson of Fulton threw a no-hitter in a Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League game against the Clarksville Owls. Thomasson and Fulton won the game 1–0. In addition to his league leading performance, Bob Schultz also threw a no–hitter in 1946. On August 21, 1946, Schultz defeated the Union City Greyhounds 5–0 in pitching his no–hit game.
Fulton became the Fulton Chicks in 1947, as the franchise continued play as a member of the Class D level Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. The 1947 Chicks finished the regular season with a record of 68–57. Fulton placed 5th in the eight–team league under manager Johnny Gill, finishing 9.0 games behind the 1st place Owensboro Oilers and 1.0 game behind the Madisonville Miners for the final playoff spot.
Fulton again placed 5th in the 1948 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League, as the Chicks became a minor league affiliate of the Washington Senators. Fulton would remain as a Washington affiliate for the remainder of franchise play. The 1948 Fulton Chicks compiled a 57–68 record under managers Fred Biggs, Bud Burns and Ivan Kuester. The Chicks finished the season 27.5 games behind the 1st place Hopkinsville Hoppers in the final standings.
The Fulton franchise returned to the earlier moniker, as the 1949 Fulton "Railroaders" continued Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League play, remaining as an affiliate of the Washington Senators. The Railroaders finished with a 1949 record of 62–61 to place 6th in the eight–team league under returning manager Ivan Kuester. Fulton finished 20.5 games behind the Owwnsboro Oilers in the final standings, missing the playoffs.
The Fulton Railroaders advanced to the 1950 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League Finals. Fulton had a record of 69–50 to place 2nd in the regular standings under returning manager Ivan Kuester. Fulton ended the season 4.5 games behind the 1st place Mayfield Clothiers. In the playoffs, Fulton defeated the Jackson Generals 3 games to 2 to advance. Fulton was behind 1 game to 0 to Mayfield when the rest of the Finals were cancelled after bad weather.
The Fulton Railroaders were the 1951 Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League Champions. Fulton fended the regular season in 1st pace with a 73–46 record, finishing 2.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Owensboro Oilers in the eight–team league. In the playoffs, Fulton defeated the Paducah Chiefs 3 games to 2 to advance. In the Finals, Fulton swept 4 games against Owensboro to claim the championship. playing under manager Sam Lamitina.
The franchise adopted the Fulton Lookouts moniker in 1952, winning the pennant in the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League. The Lookouts continued as a Washington Senators affiliate in 1952. Fulton finished the regular season in 1st place with a record of 82–37 under Sam Lamitina, finishing a 15.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Paducah Chiefs. In the playoffs, Fulton was defeated by the Union City Greyhounds 3 games to 2.
The Lookouts won another Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League pennant in 1953 under returning manager Sam Lamitina, before losing in the league final. With a regular season record of 70–50, Fulton placed 1st in the standings, finishing 3.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Madisonville Miners. In the playoffs, Fulton defeated the Hopkinsville Hoppers 3 games to 1 and advanced. In the Finals, the Paducah Chiefs swept 3 games against Fulton.
In 1954, the Fulton Lookouts ended the season in 2nd place overall with a 69–47. Under manager Red Mincy, Fulton finished 7.0 games behind the 1st place Union City Dodgers in the eight–team league.
In the final season of play, the Kentucky–Illinois–Tennessee League permanently folded following the 1955 season. In 1955, Fulton had six managers as the Fulton Lookouts finished with a regular season record of 43–66. Futon placed 5th in the six–team league, finishing 24.0 games behind the Paducah Chiefs. Fulton's managers were Ned Waldrop, Harl Pierce, Sam Lamitina, James Swiggett, Mel Simons and Robert Harmon.
Following the 1955 season, Fulton, Kentucky has not hosted another minor league team. In 2005, the "Fulton Railroaders" moniker was revived by a summer collegiate baseball team, hosted in Fulton, Kentucky, that began play as a member of the KIT League. The franchise is now a member of the Ohio Valley League, playing at Lohaus Field.
The ballparks
From 1922 to 1924, the Fulton Railroaders were noted to have played home minor league games at High Street Park.
Beginning in 1936, Fulton teams reportedly played home games exclusively at Fairfield Park. Known today as Lohaus Field, the ballpark is still in use as home to the current "Fulton Railroaders" summer collegiate baseball team, Fulton High School teams and youth baseball. The ballpark is adjacent to Fulton High School, located at 101 Thedford St, Fulton, Kentucky.
Timeline
Year-by-Year Record
Notable alumni
Bob Dustal (1955)
Charlie Eckert (1939, MGR)
Pete Elko (1940)
Kid Elberfeld (1936, MGR)
Danny Gardella (1939)
Rufe Gentry (1940)
Johnny Gill (1947, MGR)
Dan Griner (1924, MGR)
Harley Grossman (1949-1950)
Goldie Holt (1924)
Sam Mayer (1911)
John McGillen (1940)
Catfish Metkovich (1939)
Bill Mizeur (1922)
Ted Pawelek (1940)
Dick Phillips (1951)
Jim Poole (1940)
Ned Porter (1937, MGR)
Bob Schultz (1946)
Mel Simons (1924)
Mike Ulicny (1938)
Sam Vico (1941)
Ralph Works (1922, MGR)
See also
Fulton Eagles players Fulton Railroaders players Fulton Lookouts playersFulton Tigers players Fulton Colonets players
References
External references
Bullpen Baseball ReferenceBaseball Reference Fulton Roalroaders current pageFulton Railroaders 1920s team photo1951 team photoLohaus Park photos
Fulton County, Kentucky | [
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Omorgus australasiae is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
australasiae
Beetles described in 1842 | [
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10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
17151,
21493,
15396,
2063,
14538,
2649,
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10008,
102
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Omorgus badeni is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
badeni
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
12189,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
12189,
2072,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
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Chlidichthys rubiceps is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys rubiceps is a small-sized fish which grows up to approximately .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys rubiceps is found in the Red Sea.
References
Goren, M. and M. Dor, 1994. An updated checklist of the fishes of the Red Sea (CLOFRES II). The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem, Israel. 120 p.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Roger Lubbock
Fish described in 1975 | [
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Omorgus borrei is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
borrei
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
8945,
14343,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
8945,
14343,
2072,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
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Omorgus brucki is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
brucki
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
7987,
12722,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
7987,
12722,
2072,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
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1,
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus candezei is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
candezei
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
2064,
24601,
7416,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
2064,
24601,
7416,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
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1,
1,
1,
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1
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Omorgus candidus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
candidus
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
27467,
17619,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
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21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
27467,
17619,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
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1,
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1,
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1
] |
Omorgus carinicollis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
carinicollis
Beetles described in 1986 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
2482,
5498,
26895,
2483,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
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2482,
5498,
26895,
2483,
14538,
2649,
1999,
3069,
102
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus ciliatus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
ciliatus
Beetles described in 1846 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
25022,
6632,
5809,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
25022,
6632,
5809,
14538,
2649,
1999,
9244,
102
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus crotchi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
crotchi
Beetles described in 1871 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
28629,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
28629,
2072,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7428,
102
] | [
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1
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Leavenworth, Kansas in various seasons between 1886 and 1949. Leavenworth teams played as members of the Western League (1886–1888), Kansas State League (1895), Missouri Valley League (1903–1904) and Western Association (1905–1907, 1946–1949).
The Leavenworth Braves were an affiliate of the Boston Braves from 1946 to 1948.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Jake Beckley played for the Leavenworth Soldiers in 1886 and 1887.
History
Minor league baseball began in Leavenworth with the 1886 Leavenworth Soldiers. Leavenworth played in the Western League from 1886 to 1888. Baseball Hall of Fame member Jake Beckley played for the Soldiers.
The Leavenworth Soldiers next played in the 1895 Kansas State League. The franchise folded on July 22, 1895, with a 7–10 record.
The Leavenworth White Sox began play as members of the 1903 Missouri Valley League. The Leavenworth White Sox folded on July 16, 1903, with a 15–53 record.
Leavenworth returned to the Missouri Valley League in 1904. The Leavenworth Orioles finished with a record of 48–74, placing 6th in the eight–team league.
In 1905, the Missouri Valley League reformed as the Western Association. The Leavenworth Orioles joined fellow members Guthrie Senators, Joplin Miners, Oklahoma City Mets, Sedalia Gold Bugs, Springfield Highlanders, Topeka White Sox and Wichita Jobbers in the 1905 Western Association.
The 1905 Leavenworth Orioles finished with a 75–59 record, placing 3rd in the Western Association.
Leavenworth continued play in the 1906 Western Association as the Leavenworth Old Soldiers. The Old Soldiers finished 68–72, 6th in the 1906 Western Association. The moniker reference is likely to Leavenworth being home to the Wadsworth Old Soldiers home.
Leavenworth played in the 1907 Western Association as the Leavenworth Convicts. The moniker was reference to Leavenworth being home of the United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth, which opened in 1903. The 1907 Leavenworth Convicts finished 29–108, placing a distant 8th in the Western Association, 71.0 games out of first place. The team folded following the 1907 season.
The 1946 Leavenworth Braves began play in the Class C level Western Association as an affiliate of the Boston Braves. The Western League reformed in 1946, after missing the 1943, 1944 and 1945 seasons due to World War II. Leavenworth joined the eight–team league, along with fellow members Fort Smith Giants, Hutchinson Cubs, Joplin Miners, Muskogee Reds, Salina Blue Jays, St. Joseph Cardinals and Topeka Owls.
The first home game for the Leavenworth Braves was on May 2, 1946. Before the game there was parade to the ballpark. Students were released from school to attend. The game drew 2,800, despite the fact that seating hadn't even been installed yet at Wadsworth Park.
The 1946 Leavenworth Braves won the Western Association championship. Leavenworth finished with a 76–57 record to finish 1.0 game ahead of the Hutchinson Cubs in the final standings. The season home attendance was 56,176, an average of 845 per game.
Playing as a Boston Braves affiliate, the 1947 Leavenworth Braves had a record of 50–88, finishing 8th and last in the standings, drawing 28,419 fans. The Braves finished with a record of 62–75 in 1948, placing 6th in the standings, with season attendance of 40,639.
The 1949 season was the final season for the Leavenworth Braves, who were without an affiliate. The 1949 Leavenworth Braves finished with a record of 25–112, 8th and last in the Western Association, 70.5 games out of first. The Braves' attendance of 33,132 was 8th in the league, with the 7th place attendance at 50,145. Leavenworth folded after the 1949 season and was replaced in the Western Association by the Springfield Cubs. Leavenworth has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballparks
From 1904 to 1907, Leavenworth teams were noted to have played minor league home games at Central Ball Park. The ballpark was located at Shawnee Street & North 10th Street, Leavenworth, Kansas. Today, the site is "Wollman Park" and is a public park with an aquatic center. Today's address of Wollman Park is 1300 Shawnee Street, Leavenworth, Kansas.
The Leavenworth Braves teams were referenced to have played home games at Wadsworth Park. The ballpark seated 4,000. At the time, the ballpark was on Federal property that was part of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Veteran's Affairs Medical Center. Today, the park is called "Ray Miller Park." The address for Ray Miller Park is 4103 South 4th Street, Leavenworth, Kansas.
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Jake Beckley (1886–1887) Inducted 1971
Notable alumni
Raleigh Aitchison (1906)
Joe Bowman (1947, MGR)
Eli Cates (1904, MGR)
Del Crandall (1948) 11x MLB All-Star; Braves Hall of Fame
Gus Creely (1888)
Jim Curtiss (1887)
Billy Hart (1886)
Mortimer Hogan (1886)
Harry Huston (1904-1906)
Virgil Jester (1907)
Bill Joyce (1887)
Nick Kahl (1906)
Patrick Larkins (1888)
Jack Killilay (1904)
Charlie Levis (1887)
Bill McGill (baseball) (1907)
Edgar McNabb (1888)
Jess Orndorff (1904)
George Proeser (1887)
Harry Raymond (1887)
Charlie Reynolds (1886–1887)
Jack Rowan (1906)
Kid Speer (1905–1906)
Park Swartzel (1886–1887)
Art Twineham (1886–1887)
Tub Welch (1886–1887)
Milt Whitehead (1887)
See also
Leavenworth Braves players
Leavenworth Convicts players
Leavenworth Old Soldiers players
Leavenworth Orioles players
References
External references
Baseball Reference
Leavenworth, Kansas | [
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3576,
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Omorgus curvipes is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
curvipes
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
12731,
2099,
5737,
10374,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
12731,
2099,
5737,
10374,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7572,
102
] | [
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus demarzi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
demarzi
Beetles described in 1958 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
17183,
2906,
5831,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
17183,
2906,
5831,
14538,
2649,
1999,
3845,
102
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus dohrni is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
dohrni
Beetles described in 1871 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
2079,
8093,
3490,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
2079,
8093,
3490,
14538,
2649,
1999,
7428,
102
] | [
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
] |
Omorgus elderi is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
elderi
Beetles described in 1892 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
6422,
2072,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
6422,
2072,
14538,
2649,
1999,
6527,
102
] | [
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Omorgus elongatus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
elongatus
Beetles described in 1954 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
3449,
26356,
5809,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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10946,
18168,
21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
3449,
26356,
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2649,
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102
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Omorgus euclensis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
euclensis
Beetles described in 1892 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
7327,
14321,
11745,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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18168,
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Omorgus eyrensis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
eyrensis
Beetles described in 1904 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
26975,
11745,
2003,
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2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
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10946,
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Omorgus gigas is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
gigas
Beetles described in 1872 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
15453,
3022,
2003,
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2427,
1997,
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7813,
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Omorgus granuliceps is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
granuliceps
Beetles described in 1954 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
12604,
15859,
3401,
4523,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
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1999,
1996,
10946,
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21759,
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1012,
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4523,
14538,
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Omorgus howdenorum is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
howdenorum
Beetles described in 1986 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
2129,
4181,
20527,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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1996,
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Omorgus indigenus is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
indigenus
Beetles described in 1990 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
27427,
29206,
2271,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
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1012,
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Omorgus insignicollis is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
insignicollis
Beetles described in 1896 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
16021,
23773,
11261,
21711,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
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1999,
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21759,
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21711,
14538,
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Bharath Shetty Y is an Indian dentist and politician. Shetty serves on the Karnataka Legislative Assembly, representing the Mangalore City North constituency. Shetty is a member of the BJP.
References
Karnataka MLAs 2018–2023
1971 births
Bharatiya Janata Party politicians from Karnataka
Indian women medical doctors
21st-century women physicians
Politicians from Mangalore
Living people | [
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Omorgus mariae is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
mariae
Beetles described in 1986 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
3814,
2063,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
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21759,
16414,
1012,
7604,
3814,
2063,
14538,
2649,
1999,
3069,
102
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Omorgus mariettae is a species of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae.
References
mariettae
Beetles described in 1986 | [
101,
18168,
21759,
2271,
5032,
5946,
2063,
2003,
1037,
2427,
1997,
5342,
7813,
1999,
1996,
10946,
18168,
21759,
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1012,
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5032,
5946,
2063,
14538,
2649,
1999,
3069,
102
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The Fiordland Islands restoration programme is run by the New Zealand Department of Conservation. The purpose of the programme is to eradicate pests on key islands around Fiordland National Park, once the islands are considered predator free endangered native species will be translocated to the islands.
The programme's intentions are to create a safe home for endangered species to build up population numbers before some species can be translocated to different islands or to the New Zealand mainland.
History of the programme
The New Zealand conservationist Richard Henry rescued rare birds such as kākāpō and kiwi from the Fiordland mainland. Henry translocated the birds to islands off Fiordland's coast, notably Resolution Island.
Ngāi Tahu is the iwi with mana whenua (historic rights and oversight) over Fiordland National Park.
Pest species
The main pest species on the island are stoats, red deer, kiore, Norway rats, and ship rats.
As deer are known to be good swimmers populations were established on all but the most outer islands in Fiordland. Deer never colonised Breaksea or Chalky Island, and were later eradicated from Anchor Island and Secretary Island in 2002 and 2006 respectively.
Key native fauna
Some key species for this project are; kākāpō, takahē, tieke, mohua, fiordland skink and rock wren.
Kākāpō can be found on Chalky and Anchor Island as a part of the Kākāpō Recovery Programme. Kākāpō previously lived on the Fiordland mainland and past translocations occurred on Resolution Island by Richard Henry, although this was unsuccessful.
Island geography and flora
Islands involved in project
Anchor Island
Bauza Island
Breaksea Island
Chalky Island
Coal Island
Cooper Island
Great Island
Long Island
Passage Island
Resolution Island
Secretary Island
Steep-to Island
References
Fiordland National Park
Nature conservation in New Zealand
Pest control campaigns
Mammal pest control | [
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Holiday House: A Book for the Young is a novel by Catherine Sinclair. It was first published in Edinburgh by William Whyte & Co. in 1839.
Holiday House is set in Edinburgh at some point before 1815. It tells the story of siblings Laura, Harry, and Frank Graham, who live with their uncle and grandmother. Their mother is dead and their father is out of the country.
The narrative is constructed around two sets of episodes. The first focusses on Laura and Harry's misbehaviour; the second emphasises their growing maturity. In the second portion of the narrative, Frank joins the navy, falls ill, and dies. Frank's death ends Laura and Harry's childish mischief and turns them toward a Christian ethic.
In her preface to the novel, Sinclair rejects the didacticism that had dominated children's literature in English since the late 19th century. She writes that Holiday House aims to show characters who exemplify "that species of noisy, frolicsome, mischievous children, now almost extinct". Critics have viewed Holiday House as a transitional work between this earlier period and later children's fiction by authors including Lewis Carroll.
Citations
Works cited
1839 novels
19th-century children's literature | [
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Felix Rijhnen (born July 9, 1990) is a German Olympic speed skater.
He finished in 13th place in the 5000 m competition at the 2022 Winter Olympics. In the men's mass start competition he was disqualified.
Rijhnen is a world champion in inline speed skating as well. In 2019 he became the first German to win the Berlin Marathon inline skating competition.
World Cup Podiums
References
1990 births
Living people
German male speed skaters
Speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic speed skaters of Germany | [
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The Nosey Dottyback Chlidichthys bibulus is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys bibulus is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys bibulus is found in the Indian Ocean from Kenya to Mozambique, to Aldabra Island and including the Socotra Archipelago.
References
Smith, M.M., 1986. Pseudochromidae. p. 539-541. In M.M. Smith and P.C. Heemstra (eds.) Smiths' sea fishes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by J. L. B. Smith
Fish described in 1954 | [
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Raziat (Roza) Basirovna Chemeris (née Glubokovskaya; born 7 June 1978) is a Russian politician who was elected to the State Duma on the federal list for the New People party in 2021.
Political career
Chemeris previously stood for election under the United Russia banner.
Personal life
She is Avar by nationality. Her mother Elmira Glubokovskaya sat in the Duma from 2007 to 2016.
See also
List of members of the 8th Russian State Duma
References
1978 births
Living people
Avar people
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Moscow State Institute of International Relations alumni
21st-century Russian women politicians
United Russia politicians | [
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Pride of Africa may refer to:
Pride of Africa (train)
Pride of Africa (song) | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in various seasons between 1902 and 2003. The Baton Rouge minor league teams played as members of the Cotton States League (1902–1906, 1929–1932), Dixie League (1933), East Dixie League (1934), Evangeline League (1946–1957), Gulf States League (1976), All-American Association (2001) and Southeastern League (2002–2003).
Baton Rouge teams played as a minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Browns in 1947 and Philadelphia Phillies in 1948.
History
Minor League baseball began in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in 1902. The 1902 Baton Rouge Cajuns began play as charter members of the Class D level Cotton States League. In 1903, the team changed its moniker to the Baton Rouge "Red Sticks" and captured the 1903 Cotton League Championship. On July 13, 1904, Red Sticks pitcher Hanlan threw a no–hitter against the Pine Bluff Lumbermen, winning 2–0 in six innings. In 1905–1906, the Cajuns' moniker reappeared as the team remained in the Cotton States League. On July 4, 1905, Baton Rouge pitcher Moxie Maxwell pitched a no-hitter in a 2–1 loss to the Vicksburg Hill Climbers. Another no-hitter was thrown on August 5, 1906, when Jimmy Laird no-hit the Jackson Senators in a 3–0 Baton Rough victory. A few weeks later, on August 28, 1906, Bernie McCay threw a no–hitter while defeating the Vicksburg Hill Climbers 3–0. For the franchise, finances were of such a concern that in 1905, the team used certain games as "fundrasing games" and charged an inflated $2.00 per ticket in an attempt to increase funding to keep the team in business.
Visiting teams stayed at the Istrouma Hotel in Baton Rouge, which was on the corner of Third Street and Florida Street.
After a 23–season hiatus, Baton Rouge rejoined the Cotton States League when the Hattiesburg Pinetoppers relocated from Hattiesburg, Mississippi to Baton Rouge on May 30, 1929, playing as the Baton Rouge Essos for the remainder of the 1929 season. On July 19, 1929, Essos pitcher Clyde Freeman threw a perfect game in a 7–inning game against the Lake Charles Newporters, a 4–0 Baton Rouge victory. The Baton Rouge Highlanders (1930), Baton Rouge Standards (1931) and Baton Rouge Senators (1932) continued play in the Cotton States League. The Senators were in first place with a 51–20 record when the Cotton States folded On July 13, 1932, as minor league baseball struggled financially during the Great Depression.
In 1934, Baton Rouge joined the reformed Dixie League. The Baton Rouge Solons continued play and retained manager Josh Billings and several players from the previous season. The Solons finished the season with a 77–47 record and captured the Dixie League Championship.
Baton Rouge remained as the Dixie League split into two halves in 1935, with the Baton Rouge Red Sticks playing in the East Dixie League. Struggling, the franchise moved to Clarksdale, Mississippi on June 11, 1935, to become the Clarksdale Ginners.
The Baton Rouge use of the "Red Sticks" moniker lies in local history. Simply, "le bâton rouge," is French for "Red Stick".
Baton Rouge remained without a team until 1946, when the Baton Rouge Red Sticks became a charter member of the Evangeline League. Baton Rouge would remain as a stable franchise in the Evangeline League, playing as the Red Sticks from 1946 to 1955 and the Baton Rouge Rebels in 1956 and 1957. In 1950, the Red Sticks finished 82–58 and won the 1950 Evangeline League Championship and went on to make the playoffs in four of the next five seasons. On June 20, 1957, the Baton Rouge Rebels and Lafayette Oilers both folded. The Rebels were 24–35 at the time.
The Evangeline League permanently folded following the 1957 season and had never become an integrated league, despite the efforts of major league affiliates (the Chicago Cubs) to assign players to the Lafayette Oilers and integrate team rosters. Lafayette was an affiliate of the Chicago Cubs. In 1956, some boycotts of attending games occurred after the Lafayette Oilers refused to accept the players' teams and Lafayette Parrish, home of the Baton Rouge Rebels, passed legislation making it illegal for black players to play in its ballparks. The Evangeline League itself also officially banned non-white players from appearing on their rosters. These blocks forced the major league teams to reassign the players to other leagues. Due to boycotts, the 1956 playoff finals, featuring Lafayette, were cancelled as a result. Both the Lafayette Oilers and the Baton Rouge Rebels folded before the end of the 1957 season, on June 20, 1957.
In 1946, John Radulovich hit .409, playing for the Baton Rouge Red Sticks, becoming the first player in Evangeline League history to hit over .400. Radulovich had 215 hits, with 41 doubles and 31 home runs.
In 1976, minor-league baseball returned when the Baton Rouge Cougars became a charter member of the reformed Gulf States League. However, the league and its franchises struggled, with Baton Rouge folding on August 13, 1976, with a record of 43–27. The Cougars' owner, Billy Blythe had vanished and player paychecks stopped arriving. Louisiana State University was forced to evict the ball club from Alex Box Stadium. The Gulf States League folded after the 1976 season.
After a 25–year absence of minor league baseball, the 2001 Baton Rouge Blue Marlins played as members of the independent level All-American Association and the Baton Rouge Riverbats of 2002 and 2003 played in the independent Southeastern League. The Blue Marlins captured the All-American Association Championship after also having the best regular season record of 44–28. The All-American Association folded after the 2001 season and the newly formed Southeastern League convinced the Baton Rouge Blue Marlins to join them in 2002. The renamed Riverbats finished with records of 39–29 and 38–31 in their two seasons, capturing the 2003 Southeastern League Championship. The Southeastern League folded following the 2003 season.
The ballparks
Early Baton Rouge teams, the Cajuns and Red Sticks played at Battle Park. Built in 1902, Battle Park was located four blocks south of Magnolia Cemetery. In 1903, the St. Louis Browns utilized Battle Park for their spring training.
When baseball returned to Baton Rouge in 1929, the teams played at Standard Park, which was owned by the Standard Oil Company. The ballpark had been damaged by fire on February 22, 1929, and the rebuilt grandstands collapsed on opening day, 1929, with no injuries. The teams continued play at Standard Park, sharing it with City Park in 1934–1935.
In 1934-1935 and 1946–1955, Baton Rouge played at City Park. The ballpark was located at 1055 Convention Street, where there was limited parking. City Park had a capacity of 3,500.
The 1976 Baton Rouge Cougars played at Alex Box Stadium until being evicted after owner Billy Blythe disappeared and the ball club stopped making payroll and rent payments.
Baton Rouge teams played at Pete Goldsby Field (1956–1957, 1976, 2000–2003), which opened in 1956. The ballpark is named for a local businessman who had been active in youth baseball and activities. The ballpark is still in use today and is located at 1502 Foss Street, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. It has a current capacity of 2,000, and held 3,500 in 1956. Its dimensions are: LF 325 - CF 395 - RF 345. It currently is the home of the Baton Rouge Rougaru of the summer Texas Collegiate League.
Media
Minor League baseball in Baton Rouge was a subject of the book Baseball in Baton Rouge by Michael Bielawa and Janice Bielawa, Arcadia Publishing (2007). .
Notable alumni
Bill Atwood (1932
Josh Billings (1932–1934, MGR)
Mel Clark (1948)
Leon Culberson (1950)
Chuck Cottier (1956)
Slow Joe Doyle (1903–1904)
Terry Leach (1976)
Slim Love (1930)
Tommy McMillan (1906)
Dee Miles (1934)
Mel Mazzera (1933)
George Myatt (1933)
Harry Niles (1905)
See also
Baton Rouge Red Sticks players Baton Rouge Cajuns playersBaton Rouge Cougars playersBaton Rouge Essos playersBaton Rouge Highlanders playersBaton Rouge Rebels playersBaton Rouge Senators playersBaton Rouge Solons players.
References
External links
Baseball Reference BullpenAlex Box Stadium
Pete Goldsby Park
Baton Rouge, Louisiana | [
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"Breakfast" is a song by Scottish pop band the Associates, released as both a 7" and 12" single from their third studio album, Perhaps (1985). Produced by Martin Rushent, "Breakfast" was released as the third single from the album, peaking at No. 49 on the UK Singles Chart, and No. 36 on the Dutch Single Top 100 chart.
The 12" version of the single features a cover version of the Simon Dupree and the Big Sound song "Kites" as its B-side. The band had previously released a version of "Kites" as a single under the name of 39 Lyon Street in 1981, but this is a re-recorded version exclusive to the single.
Track listing
7" single
"Breakfast"
"Breakfast Alone"
12" single
"Breakfast"
"Breakfast Alone"
"Kites"
Charts
References
External links
The Associates (band) songs
1985 singles
1985 songs
Song recordings produced by Martin Rushent | [
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Elmira Huseynovna Glubokovskaya (born 20 April 1957) is a Russian political and public figure. Avar by nationality, she was elected to the 5th State Duma in 2007 from the political party Just Russia. She was elected to the 6th State Duma in 2011 from the United Russia party.
Career
She studied at Dagestan State Medical University.
Personal life
Her daughter Roza Chemeris was elected to the State Duma in 2021.
References
Living people
1957 births
Avar people
21st-century Russian women politicians
Dagestan State Medical University alumni
Fifth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Sixth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
20th-century Russian physicians | [
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Paraburkholderia elongata is a Gram-negative bacterium belonging to the genus Paraburkholderia. The type strain is P. elongata 5NT, which was isolated from the Arnot research forest, near Van Etten, New York, using agar medium supplemented with soil-extracted, solubilized organic matter. The same isolation effort and methodology led to the isolation of P. solitsugae 1NT. P. elongata was named after its tendency to form elongated, filamentous cells when grown in concentrated growth media. Phosphate concentration was found to regulate the conditional filamentation of P. elongata, resulting from the accumulation of intracellular polyphosphate.
References
elongata | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Fort Dodge, Iowa, playing various seasons between 1904 and 1917. Fort Dodge teams played as members of the Class D level Iowa State League from 1904 to 1906 and 1912 and the Central Association from 1916 to 1917.
Today, the Fort Dodge "Dodgers" nickname is used by Fort Dodge Senior High School.
History
Iowa State League 1904–1906, 1912
Fort Dodge was home to numerous semi–pro baseball teams prior to the minor league teams beginning play. The Fort Dodge Fort Brands played in the 1903 season against area teams. A Fort Dodge team called "Company G" played indoor baseball in 1904.
Minor league baseball play began in Fort Dodge in 1904, when the Fort Dodge Gypsum Eaters became charter members of the eight–team Iowa State League. The gypsum references in the Fort Dodge team monikers refer to the strong gypsum industry in Fort Dodge. The Gypsum Eaters ended the 1904 season with a record of 57–52, finishing 5th in the Iowa State League under manager Frank Boyle, who would manage the team for three seasons. The 1904 Iowa State League Final standings included the champion Ottumwa Snappers 70–36, Waterloo Microbes 64–43, Marshalltown Grays 60–49, Keokuk Indians 58–50, Fort Dodge Gypsum Eaters 57–52, Boone Coal Miners 50–61, Oskaloosa Quakers 38–69 and Burlington River Rats 36–73. Home season attendance for Fort Dodge was 13,582, an average of 249 per game.
The franchise was renamed to the Fort Dodge Gypsumites for the 1905 the Iowa State League season. The team held a naming contest prior to the 1905 season. Over thirty names were submitted and it was noted that "Gypsumites" was "appropriate and unique" to Fort Dodge, due to the local industry. The name was submitted by L.A. Thorson. The Fort Dodge Gypsumites finished the 1905 season with a record of 73–49, finishing in 2nd place in the regular season standings, 2.5 games behind the champion Ottumwa Snappers. Frank Boyle again served as manager. Season attendance was 19,270, an average of 316 per home game.
The 1906 Fort Dodge Gypsumites finished 3rd in the Iowa State League. The Gypsumites finished with a 68–49 record, 6.5 games behind the 1st place Burlington Pathfinders, playing under manager Frank Boyle. The Fort Dodge franchise folded from the Iowa State League following the 1906 season.
The Fort Dodge Boosters returned to play in the 1912 Independent level five–team Iowa State League. The Boosters ended the 1912 season with a record of 34–25, finishing 2nd in the Iowa State League, 1.0 game behind the 1st place Mason City Cementmakers. Conrad Collins was the 1912 manager. In the Playoffs, the Estherville, Iowa team defeated the Fort Dodge Boosters 4 games to 1. The Iowa State League folded after the 1912 season.
Central Association 1916–1917
The Fort Dodge Dodgers became members of the 1916 Class D level Central Association, as the Iowa State League changed names. The Fort Dodge Dodgers finished the 1916 season with a 41–83 record, placing 7th in the Central Association standings. Fort Dodge finished 7th place because the 8th place Muscatine Muskies were forced to forfeit 34 wins, dropping the Muscatine team into 8th place. Paul Turgeon and Babe Towne were the 1916 managers, as Fort Dodge finished 36.0 games behind the 1st place Marshalltown Ansons.
The 1917 Fort Dodge Dodgers placed 6th in their final season of play. On July 8, 1917, Fort Dodge pitcher Ted Turner pitched a losing no–hitter against the Charles City Tractories as Fort Dodge lost the game 1–0. Fort Dodge ended the 1917 Central Association season with a record of 37–57 record under manager Charley Stis. Fort Dodge was last in the standings as the Clinton Pilots and Lacrosse Infants folded during the season. The Dodgers were 25.0 games behind the 1st place Marshalltown Ansons in the final standings. The Central Association season ended early on August 7, 1917. The league then folded following the 1917 season. Minor league baseball has not returned to Fort Dodge.
Today, the Fort Dodge Dodgers moniker is used by the Fort Dodge Senior High School athletic teams.
In 2018, a reassembled team called the "Fort Dodge Gypsum Eaters" paid homage to the 1904 Fort Dodge team. The team played an exhibition game at the Field of Dreams, near Dyersville, Iowa. Fort Dodge played against a travelling team from the United Kingdom and Ireland Baseball Federation.
In 2019, Fort Dodge gained a collegiate summer baseball franchise, who adopted a close moniker to early Fort Dodge minor league teams. The Fort Dodge Gypsum Miners began play in the Pioneer Collegiate Baseball League, with home games played at Patterson Field.
The ballpark
The Fort Dodge minor league teams are noted to have played home games at Riverside Park. Post card pictures from the era indicate the ballpark was located in a residential area along the river next to a bridge and articles mention "Riverside Park" as the baseball park. Today, Riverside Park in Fort Dodge is a public park located at the Kenyon Road bridge & Avenue B, along the banks of the Des Moines River in Fort Dodge, Iowa.
Timeline
Year-by-year records
Notable alumni
Bob Brown
Lee Dashner (1916)
Bill Davidson (1905–1906)
John Eubank (1904–1905)
Red Fisher (1906)
Shags Horan (1916)
Earl Howard (1916)
Joe Kostal (1906)
Johnny Mokan (1917)
Roy Sanders (1916)
Charley Stis (1917, MGR)
George Tomer (1917)
Babe Towne (1916, MGR)
Jack Zalusky
Joe Zalusky (1904)
See also
Fort Dodge Dodgers playersFort Dodge Gypsum Eaters playersFort Dodge Gypsumites players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Fort Dodge, Iowa | [
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Dagestan State Medical University is a higher educational institution in Makhachkala that trains specialists in the field of medicine and pharmaceuticals.
History
A monument was erected in memory of doctors who died during the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia.
Alumni
Elmira Glubokovskaya, politician and public figure
References
Dagestan State Medical University
Universities and institutes established in the Soviet Union
1932 establishments in the Soviet Union
Educational institutions established in 1932
Makhachkala
Organizations based in Dagestan | [
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Zsolt Bognár may refer to
Zsolt Bognár (footballer) (born 1979), Hungarian football player
Zsolt Bognár (pianist) (born 1982), American classical pianist | [
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Dangerous Trails is a 1923 American silent western adventure film directed by Alan James and starring Irene Rich, Tully Marshall and Noah Beery. It is a northern, featuring a member of the North-West Mounted Police on the track of a smuggling gang.
Cast
Irene Rich as Grace Alderson
Tully Marshall as Steve Bradley
Noah Beery as Insp. Criswell
Allan Penrose as Roland St. Clair
William Lowery as Jean Le Fere
Jack Curtis as Wang
Jane Talent as Beatrice Layton
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1923 films
1923 Western (genre) films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American Western (genre) films
Films directed by Alan James
American black-and-white films | [
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Tamara Ivanovna Frolova (born 2 November 1959) is a Russian politician from United Russia.
Education
Graduated from Volgograd State Medical University.
Political career
She was elected to the State Duma in 2016. She was re-elected in 2021. She was named in the Panama Papers.
References
1959 births
Living people
United Russia politicians
20th-century Russian physicians
21st-century Russian women politicians
Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)
People from Tambov Oblast
People named in the Panama Papers | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Hannibal, Missouri in various seasons between 1908 and 1955. Hannibal teams played as members of the Illinois–Missouri League in 1908, Central Association from 1909 to 1912, Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League from 1916 to 1917, Central Association from 1948 to 1949 and the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League from 1952 to 1955. The Mississippi-Ohio Valley League evolved to become the Midwest League.
Hannibal was a minor league affiliate of the St. Louis Browns in 1947 and 1948 and St. Louis Cardinals from 1953 to 1954.
Baseball Hall of Fame inductee and Hannibal native Jake Beckley managed the 1911 Hannibal Cannibals.
Hannibal, Missouri is the hometown of author Mark Twain, also known as Samuel Clemens, the namesake of the Hannibal baseball park: Clemens Field.
History
Hannibal teams played under a variety of monikers throughout their history. The first Hannibal minor league team was known as the Hannibal Cannibals, beginning play in the 1908 Illinois–Missouri League and continuing in the Central Association from 1909 to 1912. Baseball Hall of Fame member Jake Beckley played and managed for the 1911 Hannibal Cannibals. On August 25, 1911, Roy Brown of the Hannibal Cannibals pitched a no-hitter against the Monmouth Browns as Hannibal won the game 3–0.
The Hannibal Mules played as members of the Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League in 1916 and 1917.
After decades without hosting a minor league team, the Hannibal Pilots formed as members of the Central Association, playing in the league in 1947 and 1948.
Hannibal was an expansion team in the 1952 Mississippi–Ohio Valley League, the predecessor of the Midwest League. The 1952 Hannibal Stags, Hannibal Cardinals from 1953 to 1954 and Hannibal Citizens in 1955, were members of the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League. Hannibal pitcher Richard Lessman threw a no–hitter against the Lafayette Red Sox on August 9, 1955, in a 1–0 victory. After the 1955 season, the Hannibal franchise relocated to become the Michigan City White Caps for the first Midwest League season. Hannibal has not hosted another professional minor league team.
Through 2019, the Hannibal Cavemen and Hannibal Hoots of the collegiate summer Prospect League played at a renovated Clemens Field, which is also used for youth baseball.
The ballparks
Clemens Field, named for native Samuel Clemens, was built in 1938 as a Works Project Administration (WPA) Project and was home to the Hannibal teams thereafter. Clemens Field underwent a major renovation in 2009. today, the stadium has the original grandstand and brick wall perimeter, with a capacity of 2,500. Clemens Field is located at 403 Warren Buffett Drive, Hannibal, Missouri.
Previous to Clemens Field, the earlier Hannibal teams played at Mainland's Park (1910–1917), located on Market Street in the Oakwood neighborhood and League Park (1908–1909), located at the corner of Lyon and Glasscock Street, Hannibal, Missouri.
Timeline
Year-by-year record
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Jake Beckley (1911, MGR) Inducted, 1971
Notable alumni
Al Bashang (1911)
John Castle (1917)
Oscar Fuhr (1917)
Gary Geiger (1954)
Dan Kerwin (1910)
Joe Lutz (1947)
Julio Navarro (1955)
Ollie O'Mara (1911–1912)
Hank Schmulbach (1947–1948)
Roy Sievers (1947) 5x MLB All-Star 1957 AL Home Run Leader; 1957 AL RBI Leader; 1949 AL Rookie of the Year
Cy Slapnicka (1909) Cleveland Guardians Hall of Fame
Red Smyth (1912)
Clyde Southwick (1912)
Hack Spencer (1910)
George Stutz (1917)
John Wyatt (1954) MLB All-Star
Charlie Young (1917)
See also
Hannibal Cannibals playersHannibal Cardinals players
Hannibal Mules playersHannibal Pilots players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Hannibal, Missouri | [
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The National War Fund was the joint financing of war appeals during World War II for the United Service Organizations (USO), United Seamen's Service, and about twenty other overseas relief programs. The National War Fund operated from 1943 to 1947.
The fund was started in February 1943. It was headed by Winthrop W. Aldrich, who was chairman of the board of directors at Chase National Bank and who had previously been president of the British War Relief Society. The idea of the fund came from the President's War Relief Control Board. The purpose of the fund was to avoid the confusion, duplication of effort, and rivalries that had occurred among the nearly 600 different entities that had been raising money for foreign relief up to that point. In particular, American citizens were getting annoyed at constantly hearing requests for donations from a bewildering number of sources. The fund only admitted one agency for any given overseas country or function, and forbade member organizations from doing drives of their own.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt opened the first National War Fund drive with a radio address on October 5, 1943. Roosevelt said of the new fund, "It is a philanthropic federation with three simple aims: first, to determine the nature and the extent of the war-related needs; second, to see that everybody has a chance to contribute to the funds required; and third, to channel the sums raised for its member agencies wherever American help is currently most needed—to raise enough and on time."
National War Fund subdivisions were organized in all forty-eight states, as well as in the territories of Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Panama Canal Zone. Some 19 national and 12 local service organizations pooled their efforts during the war and during its immediate aftermath, when overseas relief needs were still quite pressing. The fund raised monies from 43,000 local communities overall, a reach that represented a significant broadening of the American philanthropic effort. In about a thousand locations, the work was done by the local Community Chest organization, with Rochester, New York, being one such instance.
Two different figures are seen for how much money was raised through the National War Fund. The larger, $750 million, is for the overall amount, of which more than half was Community Chest money. The amount raised for the specific war-related agencies tied to the National War Fund itself, such as the USO, the United Seaman's Service, and the foreign relief agencies, was around $325 million. Of these, the USO received the most outlays from the fund, around $175 million.
The National War Fund ended at the start of 1947, with the constituent organizations going their own ways. At the end of that year, a history of the fund was published by its general manager, Harold J. Seymour. The fund was formally liquidated in April 1948.
The fund has generally been considered to have been successful in fulfilling its aims. Scholar Merle Curti wrote, "The story of the National War Fund is important in American philanthropy."
See also
Series E bond
References
Further reading
Seymour, Harold J. Design for Giving: The Story of the National War Fund, Inc., 1943–1947 (Harper & Brothers, 1947).
United States home front during World War II
Organizations established in 1943
Organizations disestablished in 1947
United States military support organizations
Philanthropic organizations based in the United States | [
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Steven Mahlubanzima Jafta is a South African politician from the African Independent Congress. He has sat in the National Assembly of South Africa since 2014.
References
Living people
African Independent Congress politicians
21st-century South African politicians
Members of the National Assembly of South Africa
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people) | [
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On November 3, 1992, Illinois voters approved the Crime Victim Rights Amendment (also known as "Amendment 1"), a legislatively referred constitutional amendment which added Article I, Section 8.1 to the Illinois Constitution of 1970. This amendment guaranteed crime victims certain rights, including the right to receive information about cases in which they are involved.
Constitutional changes
The amendment added Article I, Section 8.1 to the Illinois Constitution of 1970, which read:
Election
In order to be ratified by Illinois voters, the amendment required either 60% support among those specifically voting on the amendment or 50% support among all ballots cast in the elections.
Later history
The 2012 ratification of Marsy's Law amended the Article I Section 8.1 that the amendment had created.
References
Crime Victims Rights Amendment
Crime Victims Rights Amendment | [
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Chlidichthys pembae is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys pembae is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys pembae is found in the Indian Ocean from Tanzania to South Africa including Ibo Mozambique, the Comoro Islands, and Sodwana Bay, in the Natal of South Africa.
References
Heemstra, P.C., 1995. Additions and corrections for the 1995 impression. p. v-xv. In M.M. Smith and P.C. Heemstra (eds.) Revised Edition of Smiths' Sea Fishes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by J. L. B. Smith
Fish described in 1954 | [
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He Xin (; born 24 July 1996), also known by the Western name Elsa He, is a Chinese ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national ice hockey team, currently playing in the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL) with the KRS Vanke Rays. She played in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) with the Vanke Rays during the 2017–18 season.
He represented China in the women's ice hockey tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
International career
He represented China at the Division I Group B tournaments of the IIHF Women's World Championship in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019, and at the Winter Universiades in 2015 and 2017. She won a silver medal in the women's ice hocket tournament at the 2017 Asian Winter Games, a gold medal at the 2014 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia, and a bronze medal with the China 2 team at the 2012 IIHF Women's Challenge Cup of Asia.
As a junior player with the Chinese national under-18 team, she participated in the Division I Qualification tournaments of the IIHF U18 Women's World Championship in 2012, 2013, and 2014. At the 2014 tournament, she served as team captain and was selected as the best player on team by the coaches.
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Asian Games medalists in ice hockey
Asian Games silver medalists for China
Chinese women's ice hockey forwards
Ice hockey players at the 2017 Asian Winter Games
Ice hockey players at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic ice hockey players of China
People from Harbin
Vanke Rays players
Medalists at the 2017 Asian Winter Games | [
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Kryst is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Asa Kryst (born 1993), American soccer player
Cheslie Kryst (1991–2022), American model and television correspondent
See also
Krist, given name and surname | [
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Alice Shaddle (1928 – 2017) was an American sculptor and founding member of the Artemisia Gallery in Chicago.
Biography
Shaddle was born on December 21, 1928, in Hinsdale, Illinois. She attended Oberlin College, receiving her BFA in 1954 and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago receiving her MFA in 1972.
She married Don Baum with whom she had two children.
Shaddle taught at the Hyde Park Art Center for over 50 years. She was a founding member of the Artemisia Gallery. Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster Some Living American Women Artists by Mary Beth Edelson.
Her work is in the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.
Shaddle died on November 27, 2017.
References
1928 births
2017 deaths
20th-century American women artists | [
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Thandiswa Linnen Marawu is a South African politician from the African Transformation Movement. She has sat in the National Assembly of South Africa since 2019.
References
Living people
African Transformation Movement politicians
Members of the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature
Members of the National Assembly of South Africa
Women members of the National Assembly of South Africa
21st-century South African women politicians
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people) | [
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Jamilhio Rigters (born 11 November 1999) is a Surinamese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for SVB Eerste Divisie club Robinhood and the Suriname national team.
International career
Rigters made his senior international debut on 28 January 2022 in a friendly against Barbados, scoring his first goal in the eventual 1–0 victory. Four days later he scored Suriname's two goals in a victory over Guyana in his second cap.
International goals
Scores and results list Suriname's goal tally first.
International career statistics
Honours
West United
SVB Cup runner-up: 2017–18
Robinhood
Caribbean Club Shield winner: 2019
References
External links
National Football Teams profile
1999 births
Living people
Surinamese footballers
Association football midfielders
S.V. Robinhood players
F.C. West United players
SVB Eerste Divisie players
Suriname youth international footballers
Suriname under-20 international footballers
Suriname international footballers | [
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Pueblo is a term primarily used in Puerto Rico to refer to the municipal district (barrio) that serves as the administrative, historic and cultural center of a municipality. The concept of pueblo is often used locally as analogous to the concept of downtown in U.S. cities. Pueblos are officially called barrio-pueblo by the United States Census since 1990.
Overview
The Spanish word pueblo translates to town in English, since many of these correspond to the original European-founded settlements in their respective contemporary municipalities; however, its usage in Puerto Rican Spanish today corresponds more closely to the concept of downtown in English. In some cases, the concept of pueblo might also refer to municipality, but the term municipality never applies to pueblos. With a few exceptions, the barrio-pueblo is also the historic district of the municipality and usually contains the main town square (plaza, and in some cases, plaza de armas) surrounded by the municipal administrative buildings (alcaldía) and the main Catholic church in town (either a cathedral or parish church).
The central plaza or square, is a place for official and unofficial recreational events and a place where people can gather and socialize. The Laws of the Indies, the Spanish law which regulated life in Puerto Rico in the early 19th century, stated the plaza's purpose was for celebrations and festivities (), most notably the town patron saint festivals (fiestas patronales), and that the square should be proportionally large enough for the number of neighbors (). These Spanish regulations also stated that the streets nearby should be comfortable portals for passersby, protecting them from the elements: sun and rain.
As of the 2010 census, Mayagüez is the most populated pueblo in Puerto Rico with a population of 26,903, while Las Marías has the lowest population with 262 inhabitants. The largest barrio-pueblo in Puerto Rico is Fajardo with a total area of 3.23 square miles, while Toa Alta is the smallest with an area of 0.03 square miles.
Exceptions
Although all barrio-pueblos correspond to the administrative and downtown area of Puerto Rican municipalities, some barrios and clusters of barrios (such as in Ponce) also function and are categorized as the pueblos of their respective municipalities. The municipality of San Juan is a good example of this: the barrios Pueblo and San Juan Antiguo correspond to the pueblos of the former municipalities of Río Piedras and San Juan (pre-1951). Both of these contained a main town square or plaza de armas with a city hall and a church. When San Juan and Río Piedras merged into a single municipality in 1951, the former pueblo of Río Piedras retained its name. Florida and Ponce are the two other municipalities in Puerto Rico that do not contain a designated barrio-pueblo. The exception of Florida is due to the fact that the municipality has no barrios, while Ponce does not have a single designated barrio-pueblo but six barrios that correspond to the pueblo of Ponce.
The name of the pueblo almost always is the name as the municipality is located in. For example, the barrio-pueblo of the municipality of Caguas is also called Caguas (Pueblo de Caguas). The exception to this occurs with the island municipalities of Culebra and Vieques. Although the barrio-pueblo of Culebra is known as Culebra (Pueblo de Culebra) today, its former name used to be Dewey, while the name of the barrio-pueblo of Vieques today remains Isabel II. Both of these are also the main settlements of the islands they are located in.
History
Although the urban zones that today are designated as barrio-pueblo have existed since the Spanish colonization of Puerto Rico, the concept of barrio was first used in the island during the 19th century. Historians have speculated the creation of barrios as administrative units may have been related to the Puerto Rican representation at the Cortes of Cádiz. All municipalities in the island had a distinct barrio officially called pueblo (this is where the contemporary usage of pueblo in Puerto Rico comes from). Many of these pueblos used to have a certain degree of autonomy and local governance in the form of councils. Today barrios and barrio-pueblos have no political autonomy, and their designation is now for statistical and municipal management purposes. In 1980, they were still referred to as pueblos on the US Census. Beginning with the 1990 census, these pueblos have been officially referred to as barrio-pueblos by the United States Census Bureau.
List of Pueblos
The following list includes all barrio-pueblos and equivalent barrios in Puerto Rico. The municipality of Florida is not included in the list as it has no barrios nor barrio-pueblos. Ponce today has no official barrio-pueblo designations, however six of its barrios (all given cardinal names, i.e., 'first', 'second', 'sixth') correspond to the original core equivalent to the concept of barrio-pueblo today. The municipality of San Juan today, originally consisted of two separate municipalities with a barrio-pueblo each: San Juan Antiguo for the municipality of San Juan, and Pueblo for the former municipality of Río Piedras.
In pop culture
The song "Me voy pal' pueblo" by El Trio Los Panchos sings of going to the pueblo.
Gallery
See also
Barrios of Puerto Rico
Municipalities of Puerto Rico
References
Administrative divisions in North America
Populated places in Puerto Rico | [
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Frederick of Büren ( 1053) was a count in northern Swabia and an ancestor of the imperial Staufer dynasty.
The name Frederick of Büren is known only from the Tabula Consanguinitatis, a Staufer genealogy drawn up by the monk Wibald in the mid-12th century. Wibald writes that Frederick of Büren was the son of an unspecified Frederick and the father of Duke Frederick I of Swabia, "who built Stauf", the castle from which the family later took its name. Otto of Freising, in his Gesta of the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, records that Duke Frederick I was descended "from the most noble counts of Swabia" without naming them.
Büren is usually identified with Wäschenbeuren and Frederick with the count of the same name who appears as a witness in a charter of 1053. Also appearing in that charter is the count palatine , who it is speculated may have been Frederick of Büren's father, since the title of count palatine in Swabia is later found with Frederick of Büren's second son, Louis. Wäschenbeuren lies not far from Stauf.
Frederick's stature in Swabia and neighbouring Alsace is proved by his advantageous marriage. He married , a niece of Pope Leo IX. It is generally thought that the Staufer acquired Sélestat through this marriage. Besides the aforementioned sons, Frederick and Louis, Frederick and Hildegard had a son named , who became bishop of Strasbourg, and a daughter named Adelaide, who was the mother of Bishop Otto of Bamberg.
References
Hohenstaufen
11th-century German nobility | [
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Tipped Off is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by Finis Fox and starring Arline Pretty, Noah Beery and Stuart Holmes. It was distributed by the independent Playgoers Pictures.
Synopsis
Mildred Garson, the fiancée of playwright Anthony Moore wants to star in his new crime drama. In order to convince him she stages a fake burglary at her home with the help of her brother and sister. However a real-life robbery takes place in which the butler is shot and Mildred kidnapped.
Cast
Arline Pretty as Mildred Garson
Harold Miller as Anthony Moore
Tom Santschi as 'The Fox,' Dan Grogan
Noah Beery as Chang Wo
Stuart Holmes as Sidney Matthews
Zella Gray as Rita Garson, Rita's Sister
Tom O'Brien as Jim 'Pug' Murphy, Mildred's Brother
Bessie Wong as Chinese Maid
James Alamo as Chuck Morrison, Henchman
Jimmie Truax as Baldy Bates, Henchman
S.D. Wilcox as The Detective Sergeant
James Wang as Chang Wu's Major-domo
Scotty MacGregor as The Stage Director
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1923 films
1923 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
Films directed by Finis Fox
American black-and-white films | [
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The Cerise Dottyback Chlidichthys johnvoelckeri is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys johnvoelckeri is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys johnvoelckeri is found in the Western part of the Indian Ocean, from Tanzania and Mozambique to the Comoros.
Etymology
In 1954 the fish was named by Smith in honor of John Voelcker (1898-1968), a prominent amateur ornithologist in Johannesburg, South Africa.
References
Smith, M.M., 1986. Pseudochromidae. p. 539-541. In M.M. Smith and P.C. Heemstra (eds.) Smiths' sea fishes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by J. L. B. Smith
Fish described in 1954 | [
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Framing Agnes is a 2022 Canadian documentary film, directed by Chase Joynt. An examination of transgender histories, the film centres on Joynt and a cast of transgender actors reenacting various case studies from Harold Garfinkel's work with transgender clients at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Synopsis
The film explores the concept of the trans icon. It uses a hybrid format, combining scholarly analysis with clips based on archived interviews, filmed with transgender actors.
Background
The film is an expansion of Joynt's short film of the same title, which premiered in 2019.
Cast
The cast includes Angelica Ross, Zackary Drucker, Jen Richards, Max Wolf Valerio, Silas Howard and Stephen Ira.
Release and reception
The film premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival, where Joynt won both the Audience Award and the Innovator Prize in the NEXT program. In a critical review in Paste, Shayna Maci Warner wrote, "As a cinematic experience, the film feels pulled in several directions, formally incomplete and jagged." IndieWire's review was similarly mixed, commenting negatively on the high proportion of academic content in the documentary, making it "feel more a history class than a story."
References
External links
2022 films
2022 documentary films
2022 LGBT-related films
Canadian films
Canadian documentary films
Canadian LGBT-related films
Transgender-related documentary films
Canadian films based on actual events
Sundance Film Festival award winners
LGBT-related films based on actual events | [
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The UMass Minutemen ice hockey statistical leaders are individual statistical leaders of the UMass Minutemen ice hockey program in various categories, including goals, assists, points, and saves. Within those areas, the lists identify single-game, single-season, and career leaders. The Minutemen represent the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the NCAA's Hockey East.
UMass began competing in intercollegiate ice hockey in 1908. These lists are updated through the end of the 2020–21 season.
Goals
Assists
Points
Saves
References
Lists of college ice hockey statistical leaders by team
Statistical | [
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Ginger Moxey is a Bahamian businesswoman and politician. She has been Member of Parliament for Pineridge since 2021. She previously served as vice president of Grand Bahama Port Authority, resigning from the position in 2014 to pursue other ventures.
Electoral history
References
Living people
Members of the House of Assembly of the Bahamas
Progressive Liberal Party politicians
21st-century Bahamian politicians
21st-century Bahamian women politicians
People from Grand Bahama | [
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Tolpis succulenta is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family native to the Portuguese archipelagos of the Azores and Madeira. It inhabits all islands (excluding the Savage Islands).
Description
Tolpis succulenta is a perennial plant and can reach more than in length. Older individuals present a woody base. Its leaves are glabrous and toothed. It has yellow flowers scattered along the stems.
References
Endemic flora of Macaronesia
Flora of the Azores
Flora of Madeira
Endemic flora of Portugal | [
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The Great Sheffield Gale is the name given to an intense European windstorm which crossed the United Kingdom in mid-February 1962, devastating the city of Sheffield in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Nine people were killed across the country, including four in Sheffield; damage in the city was on a widespread and severe scale never before witnessed in a major British city from a European windstorm, and only later matched by the effects of the 1968 Scotland storm in Glasgow.
The extratropical cyclone responsible for the gale subsequently moved over the North Sea, contributing to the North Sea flood of 1962, a storm surge in which at least 347 people died, predominantly in Germany.
Meteorological history
The extratropical cyclone responsible for the gale likely formed over the North Atlantic Ocean on 14 February 1962, rapidly intensifying as it passed eastwards over Scotland on 15 February before positioning itself over Norway on 16 February, with intense winds on the back side of the intensifying system affecting much of the United Kingdom overnight on 15–16 February. Subsequently, the low moved over northern Germany on 17 February, last being noted the following day.
Being on the leeward side of the Pennines in the prevailing wind direction, Sheffield is usually relatively protected from the effects of high wind events which may have more serious impacts in surrounding areas. However, on this occasion, the winds were funnelled through the valleys of the River Don, River Sheaf and other rivers down into the centre of the city, creating higher wind speeds than seen elsewhere in the country inland and at similar altitudes. The cause of this funnelling effect was a temperature inversion, which meant that high winds generated over the higher ground to the west of the city were unable to escape the surface layer, instead effectively "bouncing" off the underside of the inversion layer and being funnelled down into the lower levels of the city. This also gave the winds a vary variable, gusty and turbulent nature, increasing damage further.
Wind speeds
Impact
Sheffield
The event was notable for the duration of the destructive winds. As shown on the anemograph trace to the right, wind speeds rose very rapidly from relatively calm to a peak of in Sheffield in the early hours of 16 February, and only slowly decreased throughout the course of the day as the low moved out into the North Sea. The return period for such an intense storm hitting Sheffield is estimated at around once every 150 years.
Damage across the city was extensive, totalling more than £5 million (equivalent to more than £115 million in 2021). Four people were killed and more than 400 people were injured by flying debris and collapsing buildings. A floodlight pylon at Bramall Lane football and cricket stadium collapsed onto the field, as did perimeter walls at the Shoreham Street end of the ground. Near Heeley railway station, a full train travelling to Sheffield from London narrowly avoided striking debris on the tracks.
The most widespread damage occurred to pre-fabricated homes on housing estates on the edges of the city, many of which had been hastily constructed to replace houses destroyed in the Sheffield Blitz during the Second World War and, as a result, were not built to a high standard. In Arbourthorne in the south of the city, whole streets of prefabricated homes were flattened. Older properties that had survived the Blitz suffered considerable damage as well, mainly in the form of fallen chimneys and collapsed roofs; all of the deaths recorded in Sheffield were as a result of falling chimneys, either into the property as people sheltered inside or onto the streets outside.
A tower crane on the construction site for the new city centre buildings of the Sheffield College of Technology, now Sheffield Hallam University, collapsed, crashing into the side of the under construction high rises and causing serious damage.
Elsewhere
Elsewhere in the United Kingdom, six deaths were recorded in relation to the storm, taking the total across the country to nine. A wind gust of was recorded at an unofficial weather station on North Uist in the Shetland islands. Electricity supplies were disrupted across the country, with pylons carrying wires over the River Tyne in near Newcastle upon Tyne amongst those that were blown down. There was severe disruption to power supplies across southern Yorkshire after the collapse of key power lines in the Knottingley area. Fallen trees and other debris caused disruption to road and rail transport.
Aftermath
Following the storm, the British government declared a state of emergency in Sheffield, designating the city as a disaster area. Emergency services struggled to cope with the scale of the devastation across the city, receiving so many calls that the emergency switchboards repeatedly jammed, preventing others from calling. More than 150,000 homes in the city - or two-thirds of the total housing stock - suffered some form of damage; thousands were damaged beyond repair or totally destroyed, leaving their residents homeless. More than 400 people were treated for injuries.
There were difficulties in finding enough emergency accommodation to temporarily house everybody who had been made homeless from the storm in Sheffield, to the extent that hotel owners as far afield as Blackpool, Cleethorpes and Morecambe offered to host those who had lost their homes. Within Sheffield, schools and churches were used as emergency accommodation.
There was widespread damage to the infrastructure of the city. More than 100 schools across the city were damaged, forcing them to close and limiting emergency accommodation options for those made homeless even further. More than 120 people sought emergency shelter at Hurlfield Secondary School.
North Sea flooding
After passing over the north of the United Kingdom, the deep low responsible for the Great Sheffield Gale moved first over Norway and then, overnight on 16–17 February, down into northern Germany. A storm surge from the low, combined with high tide, contributed to the catastrophic North Sea flood of 1962. Levees protecting the city of Hamburg failed, resulting in the deaths of at least 315 people in that city alone.
See also
Great Sheffield Flood, a more well-known disaster which devastated the city 98 years earlier
1968 Scotland storm, caused similar damage in Glasgow
Cyclone Lothar (1999), brought similarly prolonged high wind speeds to Paris
References
External links
Footage from British Pathé of storm damage in Sheffield
European windstorms
1962 in England
Weather events in England
1962 meteorology
1962 disasters in the United Kingdom
February 1962 events in Europe | [
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Assyrian Mexicans are Mexicans of Assyrian descent or Assyrian citizens who have Mexican citizenship. Most Assyrian immigrants arrived in the country as Chaldeans, where they fled from religious persecution and ethnic persecution in their historical Assyrian homeland in modern-day Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran.
History
The immigration of Assyrian-Chaldeans from northern Iraq to North America started at the beginning of the 20th century. Chaldeans, Assyrians, Syriacs, and Armenians all came to the New World looking for job opportunities and for a better life. Driven out by the harsh treatment of the conquering Turks, most followed family members, joining them in established businesses. Jajjo Hajji is widely considered the first pioneer in Mexico. Hajji ended up in Veracruz, Mexico after leaving Adana, Turkey in 1901. Several other Chaldeans and Assyrians migrated from Tel-Keppe to Mexico and established communities in Salina Cruz, Saint Louis, Tecuala, Estabeca, Montreux, Mérida Yucatán, and Mexico City.
In 1910, Marougi Qatoo and his brother Putrus Qatoo took a 30-day boat trip to the capital. This was one of the first North American cities in the 20th century that Chaldeans migrated to, later moving from Mexico City to the U.S. state of Michigan. In 1927, immigration from Iraq to Mexico was significantly halted due to visa restrictions and travel trends were relocated to the United States and Canada. The last two Assyrian immigrants to leave Iraq for Mexico were Darraj Yousif Rabban and Jirjes Shango. By 1929 there were 55 documented Chaldeans living in Mexico. Today, the Qatoo family's second and third generations are well established with business and education in Mexico City. There are many Chaldean professionals and politicians in Mexico. José Murat Casab (born October 18, 1947) is a Mexican politician and a member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. He ran as the Governor of Oaxaca from 1998 until 2004.
Culture
Due to a diluted population and a community scattered over a large geographic region, there is not a strong number of Chaldean churches in Mexico. Youth groups, social organizations, and inter-ethnic marriage in the Assyrian-Mexican community have resulted in a marked language shift away from Neo-Aramaic toward Spanish. The majority especially those of younger generations speak Spanish as their first language.
See also
Assyrian–Chaldean–Syriac diaspora
References
Immigration to Mexico
Assyrian Chaldean Syriac
Mexico | [
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The 2022 Russian regional elections are scheduled to take place in Russia on 11 September 2022.
Gubernatorial
Legislative
See also
2022 Moscow municipal elections
References
2022 elections in Russia
Regional elections in Russia
Future elections in Europe
Future elections in Asia | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Meriden, Connecticut in various seasons between 1884 and 1913. Meriden teams played as members of the Connecticut State League (1884–1885), Southern New England League (1885), Eastern League (1886), Connecticut State League (1888, 1891, 1895, 1897–1902), Connecticut League (1903), Connecticut State League (1904-1905, 1908), Connecticut Association (1910) and Eastern Association (1913).
Baseball Hall of Fame members Connie Mack (1884), Frank Grant (1887) and Ed Walsh (1902–1903) played for Meriden minor league teams.
History
1884 to 1898
Minor league baseball play began in Meriden, Connecticut, in 1884. The Meriden team became members of the independent level Connecticut State League. Meriden ended their first season with a record of 25–22 to place 2nd in the six–team league standings. Managed by George Lyon and Albert Boardman, Meriden finished 9.0 games behind the 1st place Waterbury team.
Baseball Hall of Fame member Connie Mack played for Meriden in 1884, at age 21, in his first professional season. It was reported that local lawyer and team promoter Cornelius J. Danaher, signed Cornelius McGillicuddy, Mack's given name, as catcher for a salary of $90 per month.
On September 15, 1884, it was reported that Meriden won a disputed contest against Hartford. Reportedly, Meriden was leading 5–3 in the 9th inning, when Hartford forfeited the game, refusing to play with a new baseball after the previous ball was hit foul into a marsh area. Earlier in the game, Connie Mack hit the only home run of the season at the Meriden Ball Park.
On July 1, 1947, the city of Meriden reportedly hosted "Connie Mack Day" as a celebration of his accomplishments in baseball. Mack was noted to have brought his Philadelphia Athletics team to Meriden "many times" to play local teams in his years of owning and managing the team. The City of Meriden placed Connie Mack in their hall of fame in 1980.
The 1885 Meriden Maroons played in two leagues during the season and won championships in both. The Maroons began the season as members of the Southern New England League. The league folded on August 25, 1885, and reformed, leaving Meriden with a 41–21 record and in 1st place under manager William Thomas when the league stopped play. The league then restructured to become the Connecticut State League, beginning play on August 27, 1885. The Maroons again finished 1st as the team compiled an 8–2 record in the remaining Connecticut State League portion of the season, continuing play under manager William Thomas.
Meriden continued minor league play in 1886, adopting the Meriden Silvermen moniker. The Silvermen became members of the eight–team Independent level Eastern League. The Meriden Silvermen franchise folded July 13, 1886, with a record of 12–34. Jack Remsen and Walter Burnham were the Meriden managers. Baseball Hall of Fame member Frank Grant played for the 1886 Meriden Silvermen, integrating the team in the era before the Negro leagues were formed and race restrictions imposed. Reportedly, Grant was one of six black players playing in the otherwise all–white baseball leagues in 1886. After the Silvermen folded, Frank Grant played the remainder of the season for the Buffalo Bisons in the International League.
In 1886, it was reported that Meriden was the smallest city in the Eastern League and that the franchise had suffered financially due to a schedule that had no weekend dates during May and only seven total home games during May, 1886. The financial hardships from lack of revenue were noted to have contributed to the franchise folding.
The Meriden team returned to minor league play in 1888, winning a championship in a shortened season. Meriden began the season, playing as members of the six–team Connecticut State League. The league folded July 25, 1888, with Meriden in 1st place with a 9–3 record, ending the season as Connecticut State League champions.
The Connecticut State League resumed play in 1891, with Meriden as a member of the ten–team league. The league folded June 13, 1891. Meriden was in 2nd place with a record of 10–4, playing under manager Tom Reilly, when the league folded.
In 1895, the Meriden Silvermen became members of the four–team Connecticut State League, which played a shortened season. The Silverman compiled a record of 4–3 to place 2nd in the league standings. Connie Miller and Tom Reilly were managers, as the Connecticut State League played from July 2, 1895, to August 31, 1895.
The 1897 Meriden Bulldogs won a championship as the franchise resumed play. Playing as members of the six–team Class F level Connecticut State League, the Bulldogs finished the season with a record of 52–21 to place 1st in the final standings. Jack Chapman managed the league champions, who finished 5.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Derby Angelsin the final standings. Meriden would play uninterrupted through the 1905 season.
The Meriden Bulldogs continued play in the 1898 eight–team Class F level Connecticut State League. The Bulldogs placed 5th in the standings, compiling a record of 46–48 under returning manager Jack Chapman. Meriden finished 8.0 games behind the 1st place Waterbury Pirates in the final standings.
1899 to 1905
Meriden adopted the "Meriden Silverites" moniker in 1899 and would play a predominant number of seasons under the nickname. Continuing play in the Class F level Connecticut State League, the Silverites compiled a record of 44–47, placing 5th in the eight–team league. Managed in 1899 by A. R. Penny and George Courtney, Meriden finished 9.5 games behind the 1st place New Haven Blues in the final standings.
Meriden, Connecticut use of the "Silverites" and their other silver related nicknames corresponds to local history and industry. Meriden is called the "Silver City." In the era, there were numerous silver companies based in Meriden, including the Meriden Britannia Company, founded in 1852.
The Silverites placed 5th in the 1900 Class F level Connecticut State League. Playing under managers Connie Miller, A.R. Penny and Tom Reilly, Meriden ended the season with a record of 47–48. The Meriden Silverites finished 16.0 games behind the 1st place Norwich Witches.
Adopting the Silver Citys moniker in 1901, Meriden placed 4th in the eight–team Class F level Connecticut State League. The Silver Citys compiled a record of 55–50, playing the season under the direction of returning manager Tom Reilly. Also called the "Miler" team in 1901, Meriden finished the season 10.0 games behind the 1st place Bristol Woodchoppers in the final league standings.
Meriden returned to the "Meriden Silverites" moniker in 1902, as the eight–team Connecticut State League became a Class D level league. Ending the season with a final record of 51–58, the Silverites placed 6th in the league. Meriden was managed by Connie Miller and Tommy Tucker. The Silverites ended the season 17.5 games behind the 1st place New Haven Blues team. At age 21, Baseball Hall of Fame member Ed Walsh played for the Meriden Silverites in 1902 in his first professional season. Walsh signed his first professional contract with the Meriden Silverites, earning $150 per month. Walsh ended the season with a 16–5 record and 2.31 ERA for the Silverites, pitching in 22 games.
The 1903 Meriden Silverites were the runner–up, as the league changed names for one season. Meriden ended the season with a record of 60–41 to place 2nd in eight-team Class D level Connecticut League. Managed by Sam Kennedy, the Silverites ended the season 4.5 games behind the 1st place Holyoke Paperweights in the final standings. In 1903, Ed Walsh continued play with Meriden, compiling an 11–10 record with a 2.14 ERA in 21 games. Walsh began his Hall of Fame major league career the next season with the Chicago White Sox.
While playing in Meriden, Connecticut, it was noted that Ed Walsh met his wife Rosemary Carney, who sold ice cream at the ball park in Meriden. The pair settled in Meriden, raised a family and lived there during Walsh's career in the major leagues. After his retirement from baseball, in was noted Walsh became a chemical engineer, working at a filtration plant for the Meriden municipal water department. Walsh also loved the game of golf and reportedly became the course professional in Meriden.
The Silverites finished in last place in the 1904 season. With a record of 31–84, Meriden placed 8th under manager Sam Kennedy. The Class D level league returned to "Connecticut State League" name, as Meriden finished 39.0 games behind the 1st place Bridgeport Orators.
1905 the Meriden Silverites placed 5th, as the Connecticut State League became a Class B level League. The Silverites ended the season with a final record of 49–64, led by returning manager Sam Kennedy. Meriden finished 19.0 games behind the 1st place Holyoke Paperweights. The Meriden Silverites folded after the season and did not return to play as members of the 1906 Connecticut State League.
1908 to 1913
After a two-season hiatus, the Meriden Silverites franchise returned to minor league play in 1908. Meriden rejoined the eight–team Class B level Connecticut State League in what was their final season as a member of the league. The Silverites placed 7th, with a final record of 54–72. Playing the season under the direction of manager Billy Lush, Meriden ended their last Connecticut State League season 30.5 games behind the 1st place Springfield Ponies in the standings. The Meriden franchise folded following the 1908 season and did not return to the 1909 Connecticut State League.
In 1910, Meriden, Connecticut regained a franchise for a partial season. On July 10, 1910, the Norwich Bonbons of the four–team Class D level Connecticut Association moved to Meriden with a record of 19–21. Based in Meriden, the franchise became the Meriden Doublins on July 15, 1910, playing their first home game on July 19, 1910. The team had an 0–4 record while briefly based in Meriden, as the franchise disbanded on July 24, 1910. the Norwich/Meriden team finished with an overall record of 19–25, playing under managers Dennis Hayes, John Stone and Patsy Flanagan. The Connecticut Association permanently stopped play on August 4, 1910, never to reform.
In the final season of minor league baseball, the 1913 Meriden Hopes finished last, as the team played a partial season as members of the Class B level Eastern Association. The Holyoke Papermakers, with a 24–52 record, moved to Meriden on July 11, 1913. After compiling a record of 16–43 based in Meriden, the team ended the season with an overall record of 40–95, placing 8th under manager Jim Garry. The Holyoke/Meriden team finished 45.0 games behind the 1st place Hartford Senators in the final standings. The Meriden franchise folded following the season and did not return to the 1914 Eastern Association.
Meriden, Connecticut has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
For their duration of play, aside from their first season, Meriden minor league teams were noted to have hosted home games at the Meriden Ball Park. Reportedly, the ballpark opened on May 12, 1885.
Timeline
Year-by-year record
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Frank Grant (1886) Inducted, 2006
Connie Mack (1884) Inducted, 1937
Ed Walsh (1902) Inducted, 1946
Notable alumni
John Ake (1886)
Dave Altizer (1902–1904)
Ed Barney (1913)
George Bone (1897, 1904–1905)
Frank Burke (1902–1905)
James Burke (1885)
Tom Catterson (1913)
Bill Clay (1900–1901, 1903)
John Crowley (1885)
John Cuff (1886)
Tom Daly (1885)
Dummy Deegan (1902)
Tom Donovan (1897–1898)
Jerry Dorgan (1884, 1886)
Tom Downey (1902)
Pat Duff (1910)
Steve Dunn (1886)
Cy Ferry (1901)
Steamer Flanagan (1901–1903)
Jocko Flynn (1885)
Frank Foreman (1905)
Frank Foutz (1899–1900)
Jim Garry (1913, MGR)
Charlie Gessner (1885)
Billy Gleason (1913)
Harry Gleason (1900)
Joe Gunson (1885)
Joe Harrington (1904)
Mike Hickey (1900–1901)
Jack Hoey (1913)
Larry Hoffman (baseball) (1903)
Harry Howell (1898)
Al Hubbard (1884)
Jumping Jack Jones (1885)
Slats Jordan (1900)
Bill Karns (1905)
Pete Lamer (1901)
Billy Lauder (1895)
Ed Lennox (1905)
Billy Lush (1908, MGR)
Jimmy Mathison (1900)
Swat McCabe (1905)
Jerry McCormick (1886)
John Meister (1884–1885)
George Moolic (1885)
Willie Murphy (1885–1886)
Gene Moriarty (1884)
Bob Pettit (1884, 1897)
Jack Remsen (1886)
Dorsey Riddlemoser (1903)
Jimmy Ryan (1884) Chicago Cubs Hall of Fame
Spike Shannon (1900)
Doug Smith (1913)
Tom Stankard (1913)
Mike Sullivan (1884–1885)
Len Swormstedt (1913)
Sleeper Sullivan (1886)
Tommy Tucker (1902, MGR)
Tom Tuckey (1908)
Bob Unglaub (1900)
Ham Wade (1908)
Johnny Wanner (1913)
John Walsh (1902)
Gary Wilson (1898–1900)
Pete Wilson (1913)
See also
Meriden Silverites players
Meriden Bulldogs players
Meriden Hopes players
Meriden Maroons players
Meriden Miler players
Meriden Silvermen players
Meriden (minor league baseball) players
References
External links
Baseball Reference BullpenBaseball Reference
Meriden, Connecticut | [
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The Cockatoo Dottyback Chlidichthys cacatuoides is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys cacatuoides is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys cacatuoides is found in the Indian Ocean from Oman including the Socotra Archipelago.
References
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Anthony C. Gill
Taxa named by John Ernest Randall
Fish described in 1994 | [
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St Gabriel's is an active English Anglican church in Blackburn, Lancashire. Designed by F. X. Velarde, St Gabriel's is regarded as a milestone in the development of Modern English ecclesiastical architecture. Constructed in the early 1930s, the building was the first Anglican place of worship designed by the architect.
History
The church was constructed between 1932 and 1934 to a design by F. X. Velarde, at a cost of £20,000. Built on a prominent site on the outskirts of the town of Blackburn, on what is now Brownhill Drive, at the time of its construction it sat within a contemporaneous 1930s housing estate. St Gabriel's Church of England Primary School is located next to St Gabriel's.
Architecture
Constructed principally of brick, with internally rendered walls, a wood block floor, with a polychromatic, highly decorated interior, St Gabriel's in its original form was widely cited as Velarde's masterpiece, but a range of issues with the building have made it subject to significant alteration since its completion.
Interior
Between 1970 and 1971, architectural practice Grimshaw and Townsend proposed a programme of renovation and refurbishment, completed in 1977. This included major structural alteration to the building, and changes to its interior, resulting in the removal of the parapets, Velarde's chrome reredos, and other original Modernist fittings.
Stained glass
In 1976, a controversial commission for a pair of stained glass baptistery windows was made with Brian Clarke, at the time a local artist. Clarke designed two artworks for the slender, arched fenestration, fabricating the windows himself. In 1978, Clarke and the restoration of St Gabriel's were the subject of the cover story of the journal Architectural Review with an artwork titled Velarde is Not Mocked. The windows, as part of the restoration, were designed in direct response to the architecture, making reference to elements of the original design of the building. Significant changes were made by the restoring architect to the building, and the interior and exterior elements were unsympathetically altered. Clarke's public attack on the treatment of Velarde's architecture by the restoring firm marked the end of his working in the Church of England.
Further reading
Wilkinson, Dominic; Crompton, Andrew. F. X. Velarde (2020). Twentieth Century Architects. Liverpool University Press; Historic England. ISBN 9781789628142.
Stroik, D. (2015). Building the Modern Church: Roman Catholic Church Architecture in Britain, 1955 to 1975. By Robert Proctor. Ashgate Studies in Architecture. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2014. Church History, 84(4), 922–923. doi:10.1017/S0009640715001262
External links
The Churches of F. X. Velarde. Lecture by Dominic Wilkinson for The Twentieth Century Society, 2020.
See also
List of works by F. X. Velarde
References
Gabriel's Church
Church of England church buildings in Lancashire
Diocese of Blackburn
20th-century Church of England church buildings
Modernist architecture in England
Art Deco architecture in England
F. X. Velarde buildings | [
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Agnes Agatha Schuster King (October 21, 1919 – April 23, 2003) was a U.S. Virgin Islander historic preservationist and gardener. She served as the First Lady of United States Virgin Islands from 1975 to 1978 during the tenure of her husband, Governor Cyril King, the second popularly elected governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands. King focused on the restoration, preservation, and beautification of public gardens and other spaces during and after her tenure as first lady. The First Lady's Garden, located in front of the Government House on Saint Thomas was named in King's honor by the Legislature of the Virgin Islands.
Biography
Born Agnes Schuster, she married Cyril King in a wedding ceremony in Christiansted on August 23, 1946.
Agnes King served as First Lady of the United States Virgin Islands from 1975 until Governor King's death in office in January 1978. During her tenure, King opened the official governor's residences, known as Government House, on both Saint Thomas and Saint Croix to public tours for the first time. She also organized visits and public lectures on government buildings. She also headed beautification programs to transform public and private spaces into renovated gardens.
The 24th Legislature of the Virgin Islands designated the public garden located in front of the Government House on Saint Thomas as the First Lady Garden in recognition of her work in historic preservation and conservation. King was also the recipient of the Clara Barton Bronze Medal from the American Red Cross and received recognition by U.S. President Bill Clinton for her 45-years of work with the organization.
Agnes King died at Roy L. Schneider Hospital on Saint Thomas on April 23, 2003. She was survived by her daughter, Lillia King. King was buried next to her husband in a mausoleum at Kingshill Cemetery on Saint Croix.
References
1919 births
2003 deaths
First Ladies and Gentlemen of the United States Virgin Islands
United States Virgin Islands women in politics | [
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Pingviini (Finnish for "penguin") is a Finnish brand of ice cream owned by Fronen Finland. Known for its logo featuring a penguin, Pingviini brand ice cream has been sold in Finland since the 1930s.
Pingviini brand products are made at the Turenki ice cream factory in Janakkala. The brand has received an Avainlippu ("key flag") award because the ice cream is made in Finland by Finnish employees from Finnish milk.
Nestlé Finland bought the Pingviini brand in 2004. Development and production of the ice cream remain in Turenki. In 2016 Nestlé moved the brand to Fronen Finland, which it owns together with the British ice cream company R&R.
History
The story of the Pingviini brand started in 1935 when Oy Jäätelö - Glass Ab started producing ice cream in the "newest and most modern ice cream factory" in Helsinki. After a couple of years Valio bought the company's Pingviini brand.
The first ice cream products were made in Turku, but later the ice cream was also produced in Helsinki, Vyborg and Tampere and also later in Oulu. The Turenki ice cream factory was founded in 1962.
At first the ice cream was sold in waffle cones and on plates at Valio dairy shops and kiosks. In 1936 Valio founded the first ice cream parlor in Finland at the Lasipalatsi building in Helsinki. Later ice cream kiosks spread throughout Finland. Nowadays there are about 200 Pingviini ice cream kiosks all over Finland every summer.
Nestlé bought Valio's ice cream product line and a fixed term of 10 years of rights to the Valiojäätelö brand in 2004. Development and production of the ice cream remain in Turenki.
The Turenki ice cream factory
Pingviini products are developed and produced at the Fronen Finland ice cream factory in Turenki, Janakkala. The Turenki ice cream factory was built in 1962 to meet the increase of ice cream consumption in Finland. Nowadays the factory is one of the largest and most modern ice cream factories in the Nordic countries and employs about 200 people, or as much as 300 people during high season.
The baseline of the ice cream development in the Turenki factory is meeting the flavour and quality demands of the Finnish consumers. For example the Aino ice cream product line including Nordic berry flavours such as cranberry, blueberry and Arctic cloudberry as well as liquorice has been developed in Turenki. In 2019 the Aino product line was joined by Aino oat ice cream.
There is an ice cream bar at the factory yard, meant for guest groups and educational use. Many schoolchild groups all over the Finland visit the ice cream bar. At the height of the class trip season in May there are about 1500 to 2000 visitors.
Marketing
At first Pingviini's penguin logo was black-and-white. During the following years several different colours were attempted, such as red in the 1980s, until it got its current blue-and-white appearance in the early 1990s. The Pingviini ice cream cone also came to the market in the middle 1990s.
Products
Brand names under the Pingviini brand include Pingviini, Aino, Classic, Puffet, Muru, Pingviini Puikko (known as Eskimo until 2021) and PEHMIS. Retail products also include the one-litre Pingviini home packages including about twenty different flavours, ice cream cones, ice cream sticks such as Classic, and home packages from the Aino product line.
The loose ice cream product line sold at kiosks and cafés includes about 30 different flavours as well as annual special flavours which have included flavours such as tar (2009) and bubble gum (2019).
Pehmis is a registered trademark of the company and use of the name is protected. The protection is intended to avoid confusing similar products with the original Pehmis brand.
See also
List of ice cream brands
References
External links
Official website
Ice cream brands | [
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Leozinho is a nickname. It may refer to:
Leozinho (fighter) (born 1976), Leonardo Alcantara Vieira, Brazilian grappler and Jiu-Jitsu instructor
Leozinho (footballer, born 1985), Leandro Sales de Santana, Brazilian football attacking midfielder
Leozinho (footballer, born 1988), Leonardo Ferreira, Brazilian football attacking midfielder
Leozinho (footballer, born 1991), Leonardo dos Santos Lima, Brazilian football forward | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Lindale, Georgia in various seasons between 1917 and 1930. Lindale teams played as members of the Class D level Georgia-Alabama League in 1917, Georgia State League from 1920 to 1921 and Georgia-Alabama League from 1928 to 1930.
History
Minor league baseball began in Lindale, Georgia in 1917. The Rome-Lindale Romans were formed, with Lindale sharing the team in partnership with nearby Rome, Georgia. The 1917 Rome-Lindale Romans played in the six–team Class D level Georgia-Alabama League after the Rome Romans played independently in the 1916 league. On May 23, 1917, the Georgia-Alabama League folded. The Rome-Lindale team finished with a record of 9–9 to place 4th in the final standings. Playing under manager Daniel Overton, the Romans finished 4.0 games behind the 1st place Anniston Moulders in the final standings. The Georgia-Alabama League did not return to play in the 1918 season.
The 1920 Lindale Pepperells resumed minor league play, as the team became members of the six–team Class D level Georgia State League. Lindale finished the 1920 season with a record of 47–43. The Pepperells placed 3rd under manager Hardin Herndon, finishing 5.0 games behind the 1st place Carrolton team in the final standings.
The Lindale use of the "Pepperells" moniker corresponds to local industry in the era. The Lindale Textile Mill was owned by the West Point-Pepperell for the majority of its existence, with the Lindale community commonly referred to as "Pepperell." Today, Pepperell High School uses the West Point-Pepperell (currently WestPoint Home) Griffin as the mascot, with athletic teams playing under the moniker "Pepperell Dragons".
The Lindale Pepperells continued play in the 1921 six–team Georgia State League and won the league pennant. Lindale finished with a record of 69–29, placing 1st in the 1921 standings. Playing under returning manager Hardin Herndon, Lindale finished 17.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Griffin, Georgia team in the regular season standings. In the league playoff, the La Grange team defeated the Pepperells 4 games to 1 to win the championship. The Georgia State League permanently folded after the 1921 season, leaving Lindale unable to defend their championship.
In 1928, the Lindale Dragons resumed minor league play and finished last. Lindale resumed play as members of the reformed Class D level Georgia-Alabama League. Finishing the season in 6th place in the six–team league, the Dragons had a 26–62 record playing under manager Earl Donaldson. The Dragons finished 28.5 games behind 1st place Cedartown Sea Cows in the overall regular season standings.
The 1929 Lindale Collegians rebounded from the last place finish and won the 1929 Georgia-Alabama League pennant. The Collegians finished in 1st place in the regular season, with a 60–35 record under manager Jack Moulton, finishing 0.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Carrolton Champs in the six–team league regular season standings. In the playoff, Carrolton swept Lindale in four games and won the championship.
In their final season of minor league play, the 1930 Lindale Pepperells won their second consecutive Georgia-Alabama League pennant. With a 63–38 record, Lindale finished 3.0 games ahead of the Cedartown Braves, playing under returning manager Jack Moulton. In the playoff, Cedartown defeated Lindale 4 games to 3 to claim the championship. Bernard Lewis of Lindale led the Georgia-Alabama League with 175 total hits and a batting average of .422, while teammate Abe White led the league with 139 strikeouts. The Georgia-Alabama League folded after the 1930 season.
Lindale, Georgia has not hosted another minor league baseball team.
The popularity of baseball in the area continued as local semi–professional teams flourished from 1931 to 1954 playing in the Northwest Georgia Textile League. The Lindale team began play in 1931 and played 20 seasons in the league, winning four championships and one pennant.
The ballpark
In 1917, the Rome-Lindale Romans team were noted to have played minor league home games at the Rome Ball Park in neighboring Rome, Georgia. The site is home to Barron Stadium today.
The name of the Lindale minor league teams' home ballpark in Lindale is not referenced. It was noted the facilities of the namesake Pepperell High School were in use in the era. The high school is still in use as a public high school. It is located at 3 Dragon Drive, Lindale, Georgia.
Timeline
Year–by–year records
Notable alumni
Doc Land (1930)
Abe White (1930)
See also
Lindale Pepperells players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Floyd County, Georgia | [
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Rosa Hochmann (born March 13, 1875, in Proskurov, Russian Empire; died December 1955 in Vienna), née Stransky, née Rosenfeld, was a violinist and violin teacher.
Life
Rosa Hochmann was trained in Kiev by Oskar Stock. She moved to Vienna with her mother in 1885 and studied there from 1889 to 1891 at the Conservatory with Jakob Grün (1837-1916), who was concertmaster of the Vienna Court Opera. There is evidence of several concerts by Hochmann in Vienna in the 1890s, during which she performed, among others, the Violin Concerto No. 8 in A minor, op. 47 by Louis Spohr, the Violin Concerto in G minor by Max Bruch, and solo works by Pablo de Sarasate, Carl Halir, and Henryk Wieniawski.
In 1894–95 she made concert tours to Budapest and Dresden as well as to Berlin, Warsaw, Magdeburg and Potsdam. She also gave concerts in Milan in 1896, again in Berlin in 1898, and in Petersburg in 1900.
In Petersburg, at the age of 25, Hochmann met the Jewish banker Felix Stransky (1871-1950), whom she married in Vienna in 1900. Felix Stransky was a member of the Konzerthaus management in Vienna from 1914 to 1938. The couple initially resided in Petersburg, but then moved to Zurich, and from about 1905 the Hoffmann-Stransky family, now with two children, George Franz Kyrill and Claire Eugenie, lived in Vienna.
According to the social conventions of the time, marriage meant a withdrawal from public concert life for the violinist. After the marriage, only a few public concerts are documented, such as on November 6, 1901, at the Vienna Concert Association, on March 12, 1907, at the Vienna Conservatory on the occasion of Jakob Grün's 70th birthday, two symphony concerts in Vienna in the fall of 1907, and her participation in a charity concert on March 9, 1908, at the Musikvereinssaal. She divorced in 1908.
In 1907 she was awarded the Romanian medal of merit bene merenti first class for her artistic achievements.
In later years Hochmann worked primarily as a violin teacher, training Erica Morini (1904-1995) and Norbert Brainin (1923-2005), among others.
Rosa Hochmann remarried with the banker Alfred Rosenfeld (1873-c. 1941).
Hochmann managed to emigrate to the United States. She returned to Vienna after the Second World War. Her first husband Felix Stranskywas deportated to the Theresienstadt concentration camp, but survived.
Literature
H. Abel: Eine Geigenelfe. In: Neue Musik-Zeitung 1895–16, S. 92f. (Digitalisat).
D. Angetter, E. Barta: Stransky, Felix (1871–1950), Bankier und Funktionär. In: Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon und biographische Dokumentation. 2003ff. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Online
Freia Hoffmann: Hochmann, Rosa. In: Europäische Instrumentalistinnen des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts. 2013. Online-Lexikon des Sophie Drinker Instituts, hrsg. von Freia Hoffmann. Online
Claire Eugenie Mollik-Stransky: Wie die Erinnerungen vor meinen inneren Blicken auftauchen, so will ich von ihnen berichten. In: „Es war eine Welt der Geborgenheit…“. Bürgerliche Kindheit in Monarchie und Republik. Hrsg.: Andrea Schnöller, Hannes Stekl, Wien/Köln 1987, S. 77–104.
V. M.: Rosa Hochmann. In: Neue Musik-Zeitung 1893–14, S. 1 (Digitalisat).
External links
Freia Hoffmann: Hochmann, Rosa. In: Europäische Instrumentalistinnen des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts. 2013. Online-Lexikon des Sophie Drinker Instituts, hrsg. von Freia Hoffmann.
References
1955 deaths
1875 births
Classical violinists | [
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The Chagos Dottyback Chlidichthys chagosensis is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys chagosensis is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys chagosensis is found only in the Western Indian Ocean from the Chagos Archipelago.
References
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Anthony C. Gill
Taxa named by Alasdair James Edwards
Fish described in 2004 | [
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HD 165590 is a quintuple system dominated by the binary Algol variable star known as V772 Herculi. The system lies in the constellation of Hercules about from the Sun, and is suspected to be a part of the Pleiades moving group.
System
The primary star is an eclipsing binary ADS 11060A composed of G1 and K6 young main-sequence stars with strong starspot activity. A radio flare from the star V772 Her was detected in 2011. The period of the components of the primary, ADS 11060Aa and ADS 11060Ab, is 0.87950 days.
A main-sequence companion star ADS 11060B of spectral type G5 at a separation of 0.491 arcseconds, is orbiting the primary with a period of 20.08 years.
Also, there is a suspected companion binary star ADS 11060C (Gaia EDR3 4576326312901650560) at a projected separation of 29 arcseconds (1200 AU) from ADS 11060AB. ADS 11060C is composed of K7 and M0 main-sequence stars, orbiting each other with a period of 25.7631 days without eclipses. The binary is a BY Draconis variable.
The planetary orbits in the habitable zones in the system ADS 11060AB are unstable due to the gravitational influence of the stellar companions.
References
5
Hercules (constellation)
J18054972+2126453
BD+21 3302
088637
165590
G-type main-sequence stars
K-type main-sequence stars
M-type main-sequence stars
Algol variables
Herculi, V772 | [
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Jakub Menšík (born 1 September 2005) is a Czech tennis player.
On the junior tour, Menšík has a career high ITF junior combined ranking of 3 achieved on 31 January 2022. He reached the final of the 2022 Australian Open boys' singles, losing to Bruno Kuzuhara after suffering from thigh muscle cramps.
Junior Grand Slam finals
Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)
References
External links
2005 births
Living people
Czech male tennis players | [
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Riverside Christian College, formerly Maryborough Christian Academy, is a private primary and secondary school in Maryborough West, Queensland.
History
Maryborough Christian Academy opened as a primary school on 1 February 1983 at the Maryborough Christian Outreach Centre (affiliated with the Christian Outreach Centre a network of Pentecostal churches, now known as the International Network of Churches) with fewer than 40 students. Pastor David Blair and Principal Brendan Kelly ran the school from 1983 to 1992, including presiding over a 1991 expansion to offer distance education.
From 1993 to 1996, the school was governed by the Australian Education Foundation, until the Maryborough Christian Education Foundation was established in 1996. In that year land was purchased in Royle Street to create a permanent home for the school, and the school moved to the site in 1998.
In 2002, it was renamed Riverside Christian College, changed the curriculum to follow the Queensland Studies Authority curriculum, and progressively introduced secondary schooling, with Year 10 being added in 2006.
Description
The private R-12 school is situated at 23 Royle Street, Maryborough West(). Its student cohort live locally, as well as across Australia and overseas. Its mission is "To provide a quality Christian education".
In 2018, it had an enrolment of 1,126 students with 77 teachers (69.4 equivalent full-time) and 45 non-teaching staff (39.6 equivalent full-time).
References
External links
Private schools in Queensland
Educational institutions established in 1983
1983 establishments in Australia
Maryborough | [
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The 1969 VMI Keydets football team was an American football team that represented the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1969 NCAA University Division football season. In their fourth year under head coach Vito Ragazzo, the team compiled an overall record of 0–10 with a mark of 0–4 in conference play, placing last in the SoCon.
Schedule
References
VMI
VMI Keydets football seasons
College football winless seasons
VMI Keydets football | [
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The Chainmail Dottyback Chlidichthys clibanarius is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys clibanarius is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys clibanarius is found only in the Western Indian Ocean from the from the Comoros, Aldabra in the Seychelles, and in northern Madagascar.
References
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Anthony C. Gill
Taxa named by Alasdair James Edwards
Fish described in 2004 | [
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The Fody Dottyback Chlidichthys foudioides is a species of fish in the family Pseudochromidae.
Description
Chlidichthys foudioides is a small-sized fish which grows up to .
Distribution and habitat
Chlidichthys foudioides is found only in Rodrigues Island in the Western Indian Ocean.
References
Pseudoplesiopinae
Taxa named by Anthony C. Gill
Taxa named by Alasdair James Edwards
Fish described in 2004 | [
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Felix Stranky (26 May 1871 – 22 October 1950) was an Austrian banker and Holocaust survivor.
Early life
Stransky was born in Brno, Moravia (Brno, Czech Republic), 26 May 1871 and died in Vienna, Oct. 22, 1950.
He was the son of the Brno factory owner Moritz, brother of Siegmund Stransky and Dr. Erwin Stransky (b. Vienna, July 3, 1877; d. Vienna Jan. 26, 1962), who made a name for himself as a psychiatrist from the school of Wagner-Jaureg.
In 1900 Stranskly married the Russian-born violin virtuoso Rosa Hochmann. They separated in 1908. After training as a banker, Stransky worked initially in England, Romania and Germany. In 1898/99 he came to St. Petersburg as an authorized signatory of the Wawelberg banking house and in early 1901 accepted a position as director of the Swiss Bank Corporation in Zurich. Bankver. in Zurich..
1905 Deputy Director of the Nö. Escompte-Ges. in Vienna, he advanced to become one of the three board directors in 1906 and remained in this position until his retirement in 1932. As a result of the close connection between banking and industry, Stransky sat on numerous corporate boards, including as president of the Austrian Josef Inwald AG Vienna, the glass factories and refineries Josef Inwald AG Prague, as vice president of the First Austrian Glanzstoff-Fabriks AG St. Pölten, the Zentral Gas- und Elektrizitäts AG Budapest and the Austrian Brown Boveri-Werke AG. He was active as a supervisory board member in more than 40 other companies. His outstanding position in Austrian banking and economics before 1938 is also reflected in his functions as First Vice President of the Vienna Stock Exchange Chamber, Vice President of the Association of Austrian Banks and Bankers and of the Vienna Trade Fair, and President of the Association of the Vienna Trade Academy.
Art and culture
In addition to his professional activities, Stranksy pursued numerous social and artistic interests. He was vice president of the board of trustees of the General Polyclinic in Vienna. He was active with the Vienna Konzerthausges to whose board of directors he was appointed in 1914, serving as financial advisor from 1915, and as vice-president from 1919. From 1937 he was the first honorary member of the Vienna Konzerthausges. Stransky also owned an extensive art collection, which included almost all Austrian painting of the 19th century.
Nazi persecution
After Austria's incorporation into the Nazi Reich in the Anschluss of 1938, Stransky was persecuted as a Jew. The Nazis seized his property and in May 1943 he was deported to Terezín. There, he was a member of the supervisory board of the "Bank of Jewish Self-Government," one of those institutions with which the Nazis attempted to feign normality to the outside world. He survived the concentration camp and returned to Vienna at the beginning of July 1945, where he served as vice president and financial advisor of the Wr. Konzerthausges.
Awards
He was decorated with the Order of the Iron Crown III. class in 1908 and was an officer of the French Legion of Honor.
Family
His brother Sigmund Stransky (b. Brno, Sept. 28, 1864; d. Vienna, Nov. 21, 1938; was a chemist and a pianist. In 1886 he received his doctorate. He then worked for many years as technical director at Fanto Petroleum AG, and later as general director of AG für Mineralöl-Ind. He was regarded as an outstanding expert in the construction and operation of petroleum refineries, and was also involved in atomic physics and the toxic alkaloid mixture veratrin, which is used as an insecticide. As a member of the Society of Friends of Music and a member of the board of its orchestra association, Sigmund Stransky performed as a pianist at its concerts. His villa in Bad Vöslau, built by Otto Wagner, was a meeting place for numerous artists.
Restitution claims for Nazi looted property
In 2006, the painting "Porträt Stephanie Gräfin Wurmbrand-Stuppach" by Hans Canon, which had been looted by Nazis and recovered by the Monuments Men, was restituted to the Stransky family. The German government had kept it from 1949 to 2006. Other paintings that were looted under the Nazis and restituted in the 21st century include: "Bildnis einer alten Frau in schwarzem Kleid und weißer Rüschenhaube mit roten Bändern" ["Brustbild einer alten Frau mit weißer Haube"] by Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, and "Rastende Jägergruppe mit Jagdbeute" ("Rastende Jäger mit erlegtem Wild, Hunden und einem Pferd") by Johann Mathias Ranftl.
Stranky's family has listed artworks by Friedrich Gauermann, Josef Danhauser and Anton Einsle on the German Lost Art Foundation.
References
1871 births
1950 deaths
People from Brno
Holocaust survivors
Austrian bankers | [
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Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission is an autonomous, statutory and constitutional institution formed as a quasi judicial body in Uttar Pradesh under Section 24-B of the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 to protect the rights of consumers. It is a system of alternate dispute resolution between conflicting parties during the process of trade. The president of the States Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission is appointed by the state government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state high court.
History and Objective
Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission was formed to promote and protect the rights of consumers as per the Consumer Protection Act 1986.
Composition
Following shall be the composition of Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission:
1. President and
2. Not less than two members and not more than that presribed in State Act.
President will be appointed by state Government in consultation with the Chief Justice of state High Court. The eligibility for president is that he should be serving or served as Judge in any High Court. Members should be of 1. Not less than 35 years of age and 2. recognised university bachelor degree 3. With good ability,integrity and standing and with proficient experience of 10 years and expertise knowledge in subjects of accountancy,law,commerce,economics,industry,administration and public affairs and problem solving ability in same.
Also not more than fifty percent of members of committee should be from judicial background.
Hon'ble Mr. Ashok Kumar is the President of Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission.
Levels and Jurisdiction
Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission was formed for promoting and protecting the rights of consumers through three levels with the below mentioned jurisdiction:
District Commission (earlier referred to as District Forum) can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is up to ₹1 crore (Earlier limit was ₹20 lakh).
State Commission can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is more than ₹1 crore but less than ₹10 crores ( earlier limit was between ₹20 lakh and ₹1 crore).
National Commission can accept complaints from consumer if the value of goods or services is more than 10 crores.
Procedure to file Complaints
Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission laid down below process of filing and resolving complaints:
Complaints can be filed electronically and examination of disputing parties is done through video-conferencing which includes hearing and/or examination through any other mode.
Complaints to be resolved as early as possible. Time period for resolving dispute in case the complaint does not require analysis and testing of product quality is 3 months from the date of receipt of notice by the opposite party. However if the complaint requires analysis or testing of product quality the time limit for resolving dispute is within 5 months.
Complaints can be filed using E-Daakhil Portal which is hassle free, speedy and economical facility and made for convenient of consumers to approach the respective consumer forum. It also avoid the need of consumers to travel and be available physically in the commission.
E-Daakhil Portal had been incorporated features like sending e-notice, downloading case document link, providing link for Video call hearing, filing of response in writing by opposite party, rejoinder filing by the person complaining and sending sms and e-mail alerts.
Currently 43,000 users have registered on the E-Daakhil Portal with around 10,000 cases being filed.
Penalties and Imprisonment
Manufacturers and Service providers are made punishable as a criminal offence for giving misleading information or for wrong advertisement of product.
Punishment may include fine of Rs 10 lakhs or imprisonment for 2 years or both.
Investigative Agency
Violation of consumer rights or unfair trade practices is investigated by the Investigation wing headed by Director-General level position in Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA).
Important Terms
Following are the important terms in Uttar Pradesh State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission:
As per the act "Goods" means anything purchased by consumers either in retail or wholesale from retailers or wholesalers. They can either be produced or manufactured.
As per the act "services" means those which are in the form of "transport,telephone,electricity,housing,banking,insurance,medical treatment etc".
As per the act consumer means " any person who buys any goods or hires or avails any services for a consideration which has already been paid or promised or partly paid and partly promised or under any system of deferred payment".
Person includes anyone buying goods, either through online system or direct or offline, by way of teleshopping, or through mode of electronic includes direct selling or in a multi-level marketing.
Consumer does not include person buying or availing goods or services for resale or for any other commercial purpose.
For the purpose of commission the terms are referred in Consumer Protection Act'2019.
Challenges
The district, state and national level commissions face challenges of understaffing or non fulfillment of vacancies in time.
The report prepared by senior advocate on the directions of Supreme Court of India found out many shortcomings in the offices of district and state consumer redressal bodies in many states of India. These include absence of storage rooms for case files, lack of member chambers for convenience of members hearing complaints, non availability of court rooms and washrooms in selective cases.
Related Articles
National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission
Odisha state consumer disputes redressal commission
Telengana state consumer disputes redressal commission
References
External links
Official Website
Quasi-judicial bodies of India
Legal organisations based in India
Consumer organisations in India
Indian commissions and inquiries | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Lafayette, Indiana in various seasons between 1909 and 1994. Lafayette teams played as members of the Northern State of Indiana League from 1909 to 1911, the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League in 1955, the Midwest League in 1956 and 1957 and 1994 Great Central League.
Lafayette was a minor league affiliate of the Cleveland Indians in 1955 and Boston Red Sox in 1956 and 1957.
History
Lafayette, Indiana first hosted minor league baseball with the 1909 Lafayette Maroons. The Lafayette Maroons were members of the six–team Class D level Northern State of Indiana League. The Maroons finished as co–league champions in their first season. The Bluffton Babes, Huntington Johnnies, Kokomo Wild Cats, Marion Boosters and Wabash Whitecaps joined Lafayette in league play. The Maroons finished the 1909 season with a record of 66–39, playing under manager Pete Driver. The Bluffton Babes with a 65–38 (.631) record and the Lafayette Maroons with a 66–39 record (.629) tied for 1st place in the standing, as no playoffs were held. The teams finished 6.0 games ahead of the 3rd place Huntington Johnnies in the final standings.
Continuing play in 1910, the Lafayette Farmers placed 3rd in the Northern State of Indiana League final standings after the league realigned during the season. The Farmers finished the season with a 39–30 record under managers Fred Payne and Carl Cominger. In 1910, the Northern State of Indiana League began the season with four teams. On July 2, 1910, the Bluffton Babes and Marion Booster franchises joined league play and games played prior to July 1, 1910, were not counted in the standings. The Wabash Rockeries won the league championship with a 46–25 record, finishing 3.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Bluffton Babes and 6.0 games ahead of the 3rd place Lafayette Farmers.
The Lafayette Farmers continued play in 1911, as the Northern State of Indiana League folded during the season. Lafayette was in 4th place when the 1911 Northern State of Indiana League folded during the season. On July 29, 1911, the Farmers had a record of 28–37 under Carl Cominger when the league permanently folded. Lafayette finished 13.0 games behind the Marion Boosters in the final standings.
Minor league play returned to Lafayette, Indiana in 1955. The 1955 the Lafayette Chiefs began play in the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League as an affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. The Lafayette Chiefs became members of the eight–team Class D level Mississippi–Ohio Valley League, with the Clinton Pirates, Decatur Commodores, Dubuque Packers, Hannibal Citizens, Kokomo Giants, Mattoon Indians and Paris Lakers joining Lafayette in league play. The Lafayette Chiefs finished with a 63–63 record, ending the season in 5th place under manager Mark Wylie, finishing 11.0 games behind the 1st place Dubuque Packers. Lafayette had home attendance of 61,287 fans for the season.
In 1956, Lafayette became an affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, adopting the corresponding Lafayette Red Sox moniker. The franchise remained a member as the Mississippi–Ohio Valley League League changed the league name to the Midwest League. The league evolved into to a Class A level league. The Clinton Pirates, Decatur Commodores, Dubuque Packers, Kokomo Dodgers, Mattoon Phillies, Michigan City White Caps and Paris Lakers were the other Midwest League charter members. The Lafayette Red Sox placed 2nd in the Midwest League with a 69–56 record, playing under manager Len Okrie. In the playoffs, the Red Sox were defeated in the 1st round of the four–team playoff by the eventual champion Paris Lakers 2 games to 0. Lafayette had total season attendance of 42,821.
In their final season of play, the 1957 Lafayette Red Sox missed the Midwest League playoffs. Lafayette ended the season with a 55–67 record, under manager Ken Deal, placing 6th in the final standings and finishing 19.0 games behind the 1st place Kokomo Dodgers. The franchise drew 32,667 at home for the season.
After the 1957 season, the Lafayette franchise moved to Waterloo, Iowa and became the Waterloo Hawks, playing in the 1958 Midwest League. The franchise is still in play and evolved into today's Lansing Lugnuts.
Lafayette, Indiana was without minor league baseball until the 1994 Lafayette Leopards began play as members of the Independent level Great Central League which folded during the 1994 season. Lafayette was in 1st place with a 44–24 record when the league folded.
The ballpark
Starting in 1955, Lafayette teams reportedly played minor league home games at Loeb Stadium. The ballpark was known as "Colombian Park" until 1971. Built in 1937, the ballpark had a capacity of 5,000 in 1955 and 3,200 in 1997, with dimensions (Left, Center, Right) of 322–415–333. The stadium was demolished in 2019, with a new ballpark opening on the site in 2021.
From 1943 to 1945, Colombian Park was the Spring Training site of the Cleveland Indians. In this era, teams held spring training at cities in their region because of restrictions in place due to World War II.
Timeline
Year–by–year records
Notable alumni
Ken Deal (1957, MGR)
Russ Gibson (1957)
Carl Mathias (1955)
Len Okrie (1957, MGR)
Fred Payne (1910, MGR)
Jay Ritchie (1956)
Tracy Stallard (1956–1957) Surrendered Roger Maris' #61 Home Run, 1961
See also
Lafayette Red Sox players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Lafayette metropolitan area, Indiana
Tippecanoe County, Indiana | [
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DYKC is a call sign used by Radio Philippines Network in Cebu. It may refer to:
DYKC-TV, a television station broadcasting as RPN Cebu
DYKC-AM, an AM radio station broadcasting as Radyo Ronda Cebu | [
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The 1986–87 TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball team represented Texas Christian University as a member of the Southwestern Conference during the 1986–87 men's college basketball season. Led by head coach Jim Killingsworth, TCU won the regular season conference title and received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 4 seed in the East region. After an opening round victory over Marshall, the Horned Frogs were beaten by No. 5 seed Notre Dame, 58–57, in the round of 32. The team finished with a record of 24–7 (14–2 SWC).
Roster
Schedule
|-
!colspan=9 style=| Regular season
|-
!colspan=9 style=| SWC Tournament
|-
!colspan=9 style=| NCAA Tournament
Rankings
References
TCU Horned Frogs men's basketball seasons
TCU
TCU Basketball
TCU Basketball
TCU | [
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Song Man Lei (born 1966) is a Macanese judge. She is the first woman judge to sit on Macau's highest appellate court, the Court of Final Appeal.
Early life
Song Man Lei studied law, and earned a law degree and master's degree at Beijing University. She also attended language and law classes at the University of Coimbra and Macau University. She completed her judicial training from the Center for Training Macau Magistrates.
Career
Song Man Lei worked as a senior local magistrate, later joining Macau's Public Prosecutor Office in 1966, In March 2000, she was appointed Deputy Prosecutor, and served in that role until 2011. She was Macau's first women delegate in the local prosecutor's office.
In 2012, she became the first woman to be appointed a judge in Macau's highest court, the Court of Final Appeal. She replaced Judge Chu Kim, who died in a car accident in China in 2011.
Along with her duties as a judge, she participated in legal education, teaching at a Chinese judicial training institute (the National College of Magistrates). During her time as a judge on the Court of Final Appeal, she notably indicted her former supervisor, prosecutor Ho Chio Meng, for multiple offenses including fraud, money laundering and criminal association, and sentenced him to prison for 21 years along with a significant fine. Song Man Lei had previously worked as assistant general prosecutor while he headed the Public Prosecutor's Office. During sentencing, Song Man Lei described Ho Chio Meng's conduct as having "tarnished the reputation" of the prosecutor's office. She was also selected twice (in 2011, and in 2019) to serve as the Chair of an election committee, whose function is to scrutinize the results of Macau's general election, and manage the electoral process.
References
1966 births
Macanese people
Macau judges
Living people | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in Logansport, Indiana in various seasons between 1888 and 1911. Logansport teams played as members of the Indiana State League in 1888, 1890, 1896, 1900 and the Northern State of Indiana League in 1910 and 1911.
History
The 1888 Logansport Oilers first began minor league play as members of the Indiana State League and won a championship in a shortened season. Logansport began play on May 11, 1888, as members of the Independent six–team league with fellow members representing from Indiana cities of Elkhart, Fort Wayne, Frankfort, Lafayette, and Marion. After the season began, the Lafayette, Indiana franchise withdrew on June 12, 1888, to join the Central Interstate League and were replaced by the South Bend Green Stockings. The 1888 Indiana State League folded mid–season, on June 18, 1888. The Logansport Oilers were in 1st place with a 10–3 record when the Indiana State League stopped play in 1888.
The Indiana State League expanded and played as an eight–team league in 1890 and Logansport joined the league mid–season. The 1890 member teams to begin the season were Anderson, Bluffton, Elkhart, Fort Wayne Reds, Kokomo, Marion, Muncie and Peru. During the season, On July 6, 1890, Marion (27-24) transferred to Logansport. The team finished 29–29 overall to place 5th under manager Bob Berryhill.
The Logansport Ottos played as members of the 1896 six–team Independent level Indiana State League. The Ottos were the 1896 league champions with a 4–2 record under manager M.A Ryan. The league began play on July 26 and the season ended on August 4, 1896. The team was named after club owner Otto Kraus.
In the final season of play, the Indiana State League reformed as a six–team league for the 1900 season. Logansport moved to become the Elwood Wanderers during the season and the team then disbanded June 10. The team had a 7–17 record and were in 6th place under manager John Ray when the franchise folded. When the Logansport/Elwood and Muncie teams both disbanded on June 10, 1900, it caused the entire league to fold. The Wabash Farmers were in 1st place with a 19–9 record when the league disbanded.
In 1910, the Logansport Whitecaps became members of the Class D level Northern State of Indiana League. The league began the season with four teams. On July 2, 1910, the Bluffton and Marion franchises joined league play and games played prior to July 1, 1910, were not counted in the standings. The Wabash Rockeries won the league championship with a 46–25 record, finishing 3.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Bluffton Babes, while the Whitecaps placed 6th in the standings with a record of 24–45 under managers Nathanial Fleming, Thomas and Fred Payne.
The 1911 season was the final season of play for the Northern State of Indiana League and Logansport. During the final season, the Logansport Whitecaps franchise moved to Anderson, Indiana on July 2, 1911, and Bluffton folded on the same date. The league permanently folded on July 29, 1911. At the time the league folded, the Marion Boosters, with a record of 46–24, finished 6.0 games ahead of the 2nd place Huntington Indians in the six–team league. The Bluffton Babes (31–31), Wabash Rockeries (30–35), Lafayette Farmers (28–37) and Logansport /Anderson Whitecaps (22–40) were the remaining franchises in the last season of play. The Whitecaps were managed by John Reagan in their final season. Logansport has not hosted another minor league team.
The ballpark
The name of the Logansport home minor league ballpark is unknown. In the era, Spencer Park was in use as a public park, beginning in 1892.
Timeline
Year–by–year records
Notable alumni
Monte Beville (1896)
Bill Byers (1896)
See also
Logansport Ottos players
References
External links
Baseball Reference Bullpen
Ottos team photo
Cass County, Indiana | [
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was a Japanese hatamoto samurai, physician, diplomat, philosopher, and journalist. He was also known to have used the name .
Biography
Jōun was born as the third son of , an official physician to the shogunate. His elder brother, , was a prominent figure in the Shogunate's system of medical research institutes.
After preparatory study at the academy run by the Cheng–Zhu scholar , Jōun enrolled as a student at the Yushima Seidō. He soon graduated with excellent grades.
In 1848, Jōun succeeded into the Kurimoto family of physicians, and became a personal physician to the shogun. During that time, he also lectured on medicine.
In 1858, he was ordered to relocate to Ezo and settled in Hakodate, then a major outpost of the Matsumae clan. According to Shimazaki Tōson, the reason for this relegation was Jōun earning the ire of , chief of the Shogunate medical staff, by trying to recruit test passengers for the newly built Kankō Maru.
In the following years, Jōun devoted himself to the development of Hakodate. His contributions included the construction of the with an eye to the eradication of the syphilis endemic to local brothels, management of the , the dredging of the Kunebetsu River to open it for shipping to Hakodate, and the promotion of cattle husbandry for milk and meat. Jōun was eventually promoted to head of the Hakodate bugyō, and conducted surveys of Japanese territory on Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands.
In 1863, Jōun was recalled to Edo. As the shogunate appreciated his achievements in Hakodate, he was promoted to the position of head of the Yushima Seidō's Shōheizaka Academy. Around that time Jōun also became a metsuke and was involved in the planning of the Shogunate naval yards. Due to his having developed expertise in military technology, he was rapidly appointed to the post of gaikoku bugyō and then finally kanjō bugyō, offices he held concurrently with his responsibilities as Hakodate bugyō. By 1866, he had formed a close friendship with Oguri Kozukenosuke.
Jōun became acquainted with Mermet de Cachon, the interpreter for Léon Roches, the French representative in Japan, during his time in Hakodate, and he had a good relationship with Roches as a result. Because of this, the shogunate asked Jōun to serve as a bridge between France and Japan. Jōun was thus involved in preparation for the first French military mission to Japan.
Jōun accompanied the delegation of Tokugawa Akitake which visited Paris for the 1867 World Exposition. During his stay in France, he worked on repairing Japanese-French relations, which had deteriorated due to the suspension of loans by France. He was also engaged in diplomatic negotiations with Britain and visited the Japanologist Léon de Rosny. There, he received news from foreign magistrate of the return of temporal power to the young Emperor Meiji by Tokugawa Yoshinobu.
Jōun returned to Japan on June 24, 1868. Jōun's reputation for genius impressed the revolutionary Imperial government, and he was invited to serve in a new capacity within its fledgling bureaucracy. However, Jōun refused the offer out of loyalty to the Shogunate, issued a formal apology, and went into seclusion.
At the suggestion of Kanagaki Robun, Jōun joined the newspaper in 1872 as a journalist. In the following year, 1873, he became the chief editor of the mail-order newspaper and contributed by bringing on students of Fukuzawa Yukichi as reporters.
Around 1894, the twenty-two-year-old Shimazaki Tōson often visited the retired Jōun, who by that time had begun using the name .
He died of bronchitis in 1897 at the age of 76.
Legacy
Jōun appears under the fictional name in Shimazaki Tōson's 1929 epic novel Before the Dawn.
References
1822 births
1897 deaths
Samurai
Japanese diplomats
Japanese journalists
Japanese Buddhists
France–Japan relations
People of the Boshin War
Meiji Restoration
19th-century Japanese physicians
Deaths from bronchitis | [
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Minor league baseball teams were based in South Bend, Indiana in various seasons beginning in 1888 through 1932, setting the foundation for the current franchise, who began play in 1988. South Bend teams played as members of the Indiana State League (1888), Central League (1903–1912), Southern Michigan League (1914–1915) and the Central League (1916–1917, 1932) under numerous monikers. These South Bend teams directly preceded South Bend becoming a Midwest League franchise in 1988. They remain in minor league play today as the South Bend Cubs.
Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Max Carey began his professional career playing for South Bend in 1909 and 1910.
History
Indiana State League 1888
Early semi–pro teams named the South Bend Green Stockings began playing in 1878. The Greenstocking Park was built in 1878 to host the early South Bend teams.
The 1888 South Bend Green Stockings were the first minor league baseball team in South Bend, Indiana, playing as members of the Independent level Indiana State League under manager Bootsey Johnson. South Bend played at Greenstocking Park in 1888.
Central League 1903–1912
The South Bend Green Stockings were Charter members of the Class B level Central League in 1903. With a record of 88–50, the Green Stockings placed 2nd in the Central League. The Green Stockings' manager was Angus Grant, who had managed the semi–professional team of the same name that preceded the 1903 Green Stockings. Grant would begin an eight–year tenure as South Bend manager, where he compiled 504 total wins. South Bend finished 1.0 games behind the 1st place Fort Wayne Railroaders and ahead of the Anderson/Grand Rapids Orphans (48–92), Dayton Veterans (61–76) Evansville River Rats (64–68), Marion Oilworkers (71–65), Terre Haute Hottentots (58–80) and Wheeling Stogies (69–68) in the final standings. The Green Stockings began play at Springbrook Park, where they would play all home games through 1932.
Becoming the South Bend Greens in the 1904 Central League, South Bend placed 3rd in the league standings. The Greens finished with a record of 75–65 in the Central League, continuing under manager Angus Grant.
The 1905 South Bend Greens continued play as members of the Class B level Central League. Managed by Angus Grant, the Greens placed 3rd in the league with a 77–62 regular season record. South Bend finished 5.5 games behind the 1st place Wheeling Stogies.
The South Bend Greens placed 7th in the eight–team 1906 Central League. South Bend finished with a record of 62–88, under Angus Grant, finishing 36.5 games behind the 1st place Grand Rapids Wolverines.
Continuing play in the 1907 Central League, the South Bend Greens finished last in the league standings. Managed by Angus Grant,South Bend finished with a 53–86 record to place 8th in the Central League standings, ending the season 35.0 games behind the 1st place Springfield Babes. On June 16, 1907, South Bend pitcher Roy Keener pitched a no–hitter against the Dayton Veterans, as South Bend defeated Dayton 4–0.
In 1908, the South Bend Greens finished in 2nd place in the Central League final standings. With a record of 80–60 under manager Angus Grant, South Bend finished 4.0 games behind the Evansville River Rats and 3.0 games ahead of the Dayton Veterans. South Bend pitcher Cy Alberts pitched a no–hitter on May 11, 1908, as the Greens defeated the Wheeling Stogies 7–0.
The 1909 South Bend Greens placed 6th in the Central League, managed by Angus Grant. The Greens had a record of 64–72. South Bend finished 20.5 games behind the league champion Wheeling Stooges. Baseball Hall of Fame member Max Carey made his professional debut for South Bend, as a 19-year–old. Carey hit .158, playing in 48 games.
The South Bend Bronchos won the 1910 Central League Championship. With a regular season record of 88–50, South Bend finished 1st in the standings under managers Ed Wheeler and Midge Craven. South Bend finished 8.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Fort Wayne Billikens in the final league standings. Baseball Hall of Famer Max Carey hit .293, with 36 stolen bases for the 1910 Bronchos championship team.
South Bend hosted two separate teams in the 1911 Central League. The South Bend team began the 1911 season as the South Bend Benders. On July 13, 1911, the South Bend Benders then moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where they became the Grand Rapids Grads. The South Bend/Grand Rapids team was 42–36 in South Bend and finished 73–61 overall, placing 4th in the Central League. Their manager in both locations was Ed Smith.
The second South Bend team of 1911 was the South Bend Bux, also playing in the Central League. On August 11, 1911, the Evansville Strikers moved to South Bend with a 54–54 record. The Evansville/South Bend team finished with an overall record of 62–72. The Bux finished in 5th place. playing under managers Harry Arndt and the returning Angus Grant.
South Bend remained in the 1912 Central League, returning to the South Bend "Benders" moniker. On the field, the team placed last in the 12–team Central League, after the league had expanded. South Bend ended the season with a record of 41–88, finishing 36.0 games behind the 1st Place Fort Wayne Railroaders. The South Bend franchise folded after the season and did not return to the 1913 Central League.
Southern Michigan League 1914–1915 / Central League 1916–1917
In 1914, the South Bend Benders returned to play as members of the Class C level Southern Michigan League, also called the Southern Michigan "Association." In their first Southern Michigan League season, South Bend placed 4th in the ten–team league. The Benders finished with a record of 85–60, ending the season 10.5 games behind the 1st place Bay City Beavers. The 1914 managers were Ed Smith and Ben Koehler.
The South Bend Factors won the 1915 Southern Michigan League Championship. The South Bend Factors were in 1st place in the league standings when the league folded mid–season. The Southern Michigan League permanently disbanded on July 7, 1915. With a 44–24 record, South Bend placed 1st under manager Ed Smith, finishing 10.5 games ahead of the 2nd place Battle Creek Crickets in the six–team league.
South Bend returned to play as members of the Class B level Central League in 1916, continuing play at Springbrook Park. The 1916 South Bend Benders placed 7th in the eight–team Central League. With a record of 56–77, South Bend finished 31.5 games behind the champion Grand Rapids Black Sox. The 1916 Benders' managers were Ben Koehler and Lee Tannehill.
The 1917 South Bend Benders moved to Peoria, Illinois during the Central League Season and the team made the playoffs. On July 8, 1917, South Bend was 40–20 under player/manager Bill Jackson, when the franchise moved to Peoria to finish the season as the Peoria Distillers. With an overall record of 66–55, South Bend/Peoria placed 3rd in the Central League final standings. They were managed by Harry Smith (26–35) and Jackson. In the 1917 Playoffs, the Grand Rapids Black Sox defeated the South Bend Benders/Peoria Distillers 4 games to 3.
Central League 1932
South Bend was without a minor league team until the South Bend Twins played as members of the 1932 Central League. The Twins permanently folded on July 21, 1932, along with the Canton Terriers. The South Bend Twins had a record of 29–57 and were 5th in the six–team league when the franchise folded. The 1932 managers were Jesse Altenburg, Clarence Roper and Whitey Belber. The 1932 South Bend Twins were the last minor league team in South Bend until 1988.
After the minor league teams, the South Bend Blue Sox women's teams played as members of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL) from 1943 to 1954. The South Bend Blue Sox and the famed Rockford Peaches were the only two teams to play for the duration of the AAGBPL.
1988–present
In 1988, South Bend resumed minor league play as the South Bend White Sox became members of the Class A level Midwest League. The South Bend Cubs, continue minor league play today.
Ballparks
In 1888, South Bend reportedly played home games at Greenstocking Park. Built in 1878 for the semi–pro South Bend Green Stockings, Greenstocking Park had a capacity of 2,000–2,500. The ballpark was located at the corners of Napier Street, Thomas Street and McPherson Street in South Bend, Indiana.
Beginning in 1903, through 1932, South Bend teams were noted to have played home games at Springbrook Park. The ballpark and surrounding park area were later renamed Playland Park in 1925 after the Northern Indiana Railway Company purchased the Springbrook Park grounds. The Northern Indiana Railway Company utilized the area as an amusement park and picnic area for train riders. The ballpark had a capacity of 3,500. Springboard Park was located south of the St. Joseph River near Ironwood Road and Lincoln Way East Drive in South Bend, Indiana. Today, the Indiana University-South Bend student apartments are located at the site.
Timeline
Notable alumni
Baseball Hall of Fame alumni
Max Carey (1909–1910) Inducted, 1961
Notable alumni
Cy Alberts (1908–1909)
Goat Anderson (1903–1904, 1906)
Walter Anderson (1916)
Harry Arndt (1912, MGR)
Charlie Babb (1906)
Tom Bannon (1904)
Al Bashang (1916–1917)
Fred Beck (1917)
Bill Bowman (1888)
Abe Bowman (1916)
Donie Bush (1907)
Harry Camnitz (1911)
Tom Cantwell (1911)
Ed Cermak (1907)
Frank Cross (1907)
Gene Curtis (1907)
Rex DeVogt (1916)
Lee Dunham (1932)
Jim Eschen (1915)
Cecil Ferguson (1903–1904)
Phil Geier (1911)
Billy Hart (1888)
Herbert Hill (1915–1916)
Tex Hoffman (1917)
Ducky Holmes (1910–1911)
Bill Jackson (1917, MGR)
Elmer Johnson (1907)
George Kaiserling (1912)
Speed Kelly (1907–1909, 1911)
Ben Koehler (1908–1911, 1915) (1914, 1916, MGR)
Harry LaRoss (1917)
Tom Letcher (1905)
Lou Lowdermilk (1914–1916)
Len Madden (1912)
Danny Mahoney (1912)
Alex McCarthy (1910)
Alex McColl (1916)
Bing Miller (1917)
Pete O'Brien (1911)
Bob O'Farrell (1917)
Charlie Pechous (1917)
Hal Reilly (1916)
Bill Richardson (1906)
Frank Quinn (1904)
Lou Schettler (1917)
Ed Schorr (1914)
Frank Shaughnessy (1906) Canadian Football Hall of Fame
Hosea Siner (1907)
Phil Slattery (1917)
Ed Smith (1909–1910) (1914–1915, MGR)
Jesse Tannehill (1912)
Lee Tannehill (1916, MGR)
Jack Taylor (1911)
Jim Tray (1888)
Harry Truby (1888)
Jimmy Walsh (1909)
Art Watson (1906, 1910)
Harry Welchonce (1910)
Charlie Wheatley (1917)
Ed Wheeler (1910)
Gene Wheeler (1907)
Tom Williams (1906–1907)
Frank Withrow (1916)
Matt Zeiser (1916)
See also
South Bend Benders players
South Bend Bronchos players
South Bend Bux players
South Bend Greens players
References
External links
South Bend - Baseball Reference
See also
South Bend Greens playersSouth Bend Benders playersSouth Bend Bronchos playersSouth Bend Bux players
South Bend, Indiana | [
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Leonard E. Barrett Senior (1920 in Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica – June 3, 2007 in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania) was a Jamaican-American professor of religion and anthropology known for his foundational work on Rastafarianism.
Biography
He was born in Jamaica in 1920. He was ordained as a Methodist minister, then migrated to the United States during the 1940s. He received a bachelor's degree from Albright College, then was the pastor of an evangelical church in Pennsylvania. He received a master's of divinity from United Theological Seminary in 1961, then a master's degree in history in 1962 and a doctorate in comparative religion and anthropology in 1967 from Temple University.
His dissertation, completed at Temple University, was published as The Rastafarians: a study of Messianic cultism in Jamaica in 1969. His book Soul-Force: African Heritage in Afro-American Religion was a finalist for the National Book Award for Philosophy And Religion in 1975. His book The Rastafarians: the Dreadlocks of Jamaica was reviewed favorably in the 1970s by academics and has become one of the standard anthropological examinations of the religious movement. It was republished on its twentieth anniversary in 1997. He published widely on various aspects of religious or spiritual life in Jamaica. Barrett also contributed to reference texts in the field of religion.
He was a professor at Temple University. He also taught at colleges in Jamaica, Connecticut, and Puerto Rico.
Awards and honors
In 1983, he was awarded the Alumni Citation Award from Albright College.
His life inspired one of his sons, Terry Lee Barrett, to write a semi-autobiographical novel based on the stories his father told him about Jamaican religion and spirituality.
Works
The Rastafarians: a study of Messianic cultism in Jamaica, Caribbean monograph series, no. 6. (Puerto Rico: University of Puerto Rico, Institute of Caribbean Studies, 1969).
Soul-Force: African Heritage in Afro-American Religion, C. Eric Lincoln Series on Black Religion (New York: Anchor Press, 1974).
The Rastafarians: the Dreadlocks of Jamaica (Kingston, Jamaica: Sangster's Book Stores, 1977).
Reprinted in 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982.
A revised and updated edition titled The Rastafarians: the Sounds of Cultural Difference was published in 1988 that included new research and a new afterword.
It was also republished in a 20th anniversary edition in 1997, titled The Rastafarians; this was republished in 2014.
It was also translated into Japanese in 1996.
The Sun and the Drum: African roots in Jamaican folk tradition Kingston, (Jamaica: Sangster's Book Stores, in association with Heinemann, 1979).
References
1920 births
2007 deaths
Temple University alumni
Temple University faculty
Albright College alumni
Jamaican academics
Anthropologists of religion | [
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Adwaita Gadanayak is an Indian sculptor and Director General of the government-run National Gallery of Modern Art.
He was head of the School of Sculpture at the Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, Bhubaneswar. He is going to carve the popular Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose statue at the India Gate.
References
1963 births
Living people
21st-century Indian sculptors
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Otto Fischer Sobell, born Otto Fischer (2 May 1862 – 14 January 1934) was an Australian operatic singer, noted for Wagnerian roles.
History
Sobell's father George Friedrich Fischer (c. 1822 or 1828 – 9 February 1882) emigrated to South Australia aboard the ship Louise, arriving 26 March 1849, and was soon involved in the city's musical scene, performing with Frederick and Albert Seyler, who arrived aboard Alfred in December 1848. George was co-owner with Robert Wiener (died 1878) of a coffee bar on Rundle Street, where the Adelaide Liedertafel, was formed. Fischer and Wiener were often heard singing together, Fischer also on piano. After the coffee shop, Fischer and Wiener ran the Tanunda Hotel to 1870, then Fischer had the National Hotel on Pirie Street 1871–72, the Hamburg (later Oriental) on the Gawler Place/Rundle Street corner 1872–73, and the Pier Hotel, Glenelg 1873–74. Destitute, he then left for Melbourne, where he died at the Hobsons Bay railway station, following a fall.
Sobell was born Otto Fischer in Tanunda, South Australia, the son of George Friedrich Fischer and his second wife Emma Caroline Antoinette Fischer, née Sobels (married 5 April 1855). He was a brother of Minna Fischer, a singer of renown.
He briefly sang baritone with Fanny Simonsen's opera troupe, but later trained as a tenor.
In 1883 Sir Thomas Elder inaugurated the Elder Overseas Scholarship to the newly-founded Royal College of Music, awarded through competition. Of the five finalists, Fischer was considered, though less schooled, to have the greatest natural talent, and was consequently awarded the scholarship.
His first major success overseas was in 1887 as Hans Sachs in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg under Hans Richter.
In 1890 he was contracted to the Wiesbaden Opera House for three years as heroic tenor to play the title roles in Tannhäuser and Lohengrin, and received excellent notices in the German press. He was praised for his perfect German pronunciation; he was fluent in about 14 European languages. Around this time he changed his surname, perhaps initially to Sobels, his mother's birth name, but ultimately to Sobell.
In 1893, at Frankfurt am Main, he married Agatha Scheper (born 30 December 1859) both were on the staff of Cecil Sharp's Hampstead Conservatoire of Music. His wife was a Dutch pianist of considerable wealth. He became an accomplished motorist, driving a 20 h.p. Daimler.
He sang Tannhäuser to the Elisabeth of Milka Ternina in 1901 to good notices.
He visited Australia in 1914, at the invitation of Professor George Marshall-Hall.
He returned to Australia, arriving in Sydney aboard Media in April 1915 as "Frank Sobell", with wife and son.
He became one of Melbourne's leading singing teachers and for many years was on the faculty of the Melbourne University Conservatorium.
He died at South Yarra, Victoria.
A review
Mr. Fischer Sobell, in my estimation, is one of the greatest singers and actors living. In the concert room his magnificent voice and finished art are always immensely effective. On the stage where these are reinforced by his fine talent for acting, the grandeur and beauty of his interpretations are beyond all praise. I have heard him sing many varied stvles of music at concerts, e.g., Schubert and Schumann lieder, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, Wagner selections, etc.; I have heard and seen him in Wagner and other opera, and he has never missed bringing out all the possibilities of the music.
He is one of the very few singers who can read and play the scores in which he takes part; and one always feels that besides knowing his own part he understands the music as a whole, and can help the other singers, instead of himself needing the help of the prompter and conductor.
Family
Fischer married Mabel Burrows in Adelaide on 10 July 1889. They divorced in 1891.
He married again, to Agatha Scheper in Frankfurt, on 5 April 1893.
He married once more, to the (Petersham, NSW) pianist Viola (often Violet) Agnew in London, on 28 June 1913. His children include:
Jack Fischer (4 May 1890 – )
James Otto Sobell (6 April 1914 – ) known as a linguist
(George) Hamish Sobell (20 January 1917 – )
Notes and references
1862 births
1934 deaths
Australian operatic tenors | [
101,
8064,
13042,
17540,
5349,
1010,
2141,
8064,
13042,
1006,
1016,
2089,
6889,
1516,
2403,
2254,
4579,
1007,
2001,
2019,
2827,
22534,
3220,
1010,
3264,
2005,
10304,
2937,
4395,
1012,
2381,
17540,
5349,
1005,
1055,
2269,
2577,
8896,
13042,
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This is a list of the top-selling singles in New Zealand for 2018 from the Official New Zealand Music Chart's end-of-year chart, compiled by Recorded Music NZ. Recorded Music NZ also published list of the top 20 singles released by New Zealand artists for the same time period.
Chart
Key
– Song of New Zealand origin
Top 20 singles by New Zealand artists
Notes
References
2018 in New Zealand music
2018 record charts
Singles 2018 | [
101,
2023,
2003,
1037,
2862,
1997,
1996,
2327,
1011,
4855,
3895,
1999,
2047,
3414,
2005,
2760,
2013,
1996,
2880,
2047,
3414,
2189,
3673,
1005,
1055,
2203,
1011,
1997,
1011,
2095,
3673,
1010,
9227,
2011,
2680,
2189,
20008,
1012,
2680,
2189... | [
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1,
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1,
1,
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1,
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1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1... |