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the win for LSU, ending UCF's bid to go undefeated in consecutive seasons. Scoring summary Statistics References External links Box score at ESPN Fiesta Bowl Fiesta Bowl LSU Tigers football bowl games UCF Knights football bowl games January 2019 sports events in the United States 2019 in sports in Arizona |
formed Friends with and also Solvette's princess. A beautiful girl with a distinctive atmosphere, she unknowingly captivates those who see her. After facing Love Me Tear in the finals of the Diamond Friends Cup, Alicia stopped being Friends with Hibiki and suddenly disappeared. In truth, she was hiding a big secret... She serves as the muse of her own brand, Glorious Snow. Baby Pirates She serves as the muse of her own brand, Antique Sailor. She serves as the muse of her own brand, Silky Ocean. Other characters Star Harmony Academy and Family members Yūki and Aine's parents who manage of Penguin Cafe. Aine's elder sister. Aine's elder brother. Aine's younger sister who wants to be an idol when she grows up. Her catchphrase is Aine's younger brother and the youngest of the five Yūki children, who knows little about idols. Minato A fashion designer who is Mio's mother. She designs the diamond dress for Pure Palette. An industrial designer who is Mio's father. Kiseki Sāya is Aikatsu engineer and the elder sister of Raki. When working, Sāya can get to an obsessive stage to a point where her words and actions are similar to that of an evil villain, but she deeply cares for her sister and fully supports her dreams in idol activities. Chōno Maika's mother. The owner of Chono Boxing Gym who is Maika's father. Maika's elder brother. Others The Aikatsu! Navi girl. From information about idols, to coords, to simple questions, Coco teaches various things concerning Aikatsu! A virtual iTuber who admires Coco and aims to be like her. References Aikatsu Friends |
to the internal struggle in the PPD, a group of non-affiliated civilians founded Alianza pro Libre Asociación Soberana (lit. "Alliance for Sovereignty in Free Association") intending to independently defend the free association option. The inclusion of a "Sovereignty in association with the United States" option in Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi's H.R. 2499 (known as the Puerto Rico Democracy Act) ignited these differences, after receiving the cautious support of some within the free association movement and the outright opposition of the conservative leadership. On March 24, 2009, a group of representatives and mayors led by Luis Vega Ramos, Luis Raúl Torres, Carlos "Charlie" Hernández, Carmen Yulín Cruz, Víctor Vasallo, Martín Vargas and Pedro Garcia, issued a press release listing the evolution of the free association movement within the PPD. On May 26, 2009, José Alfredo Hernández Mayoral published an article where he labeled the soberanistas as "independence supporters" and claimed that sovereignty "endangers the American Citizenship". Immediately, the three members of the free association movement within the International and Federal Affairs Office, Charlie Hernández, Vega Ramos and Nestor Duprey, sent a letter to Ferrer noting that the 2008 Programme of Government remained the ideological position of the PPD and requested a clarification that the expressions of Hernández Mayoral were to be interpreted as personal opinion and not as an official representation of the party's stance due to his position as the secretary. Ferrer shied away from the controversy, instead insisting his interest that the issue was "discussed" and noted that he had reached an agreement with Miranda Marín so that the status issue could be internally debated in forums with representations from the eight Districts. However, the representative who was tentatively appointed to lead these forums, Jorge Colberg Toro, abandoned his previous defense of free association and sided with Hernández Mayoral, criticizing the soberanistas and also requesting to be released from this commitment. García Padilla quickly joined them, reaffirming his conservative stance and saying that the PPD "is not an independence party". Miranda Marín responded by telling Hernández Mayoral that if his intention was to make imprudent generalization, then he should keep quiet. Ferrer responded to this by defending Hernández Mayoral. Fas Alzamora emerged during the crossfire and suggested that the matter was attended internally, but not before telling Ferrer that the divisive expressions of Hernández Mayoral were akin to the statehood movement and that if they were allowed to continue, |
In archaeogenetics, the term Eastern Hunter-Gatherer (EHG), sometimes East European Hunter-Gatherer, or Eastern European Hunter-Gatherer is the name given to a distinct ancestral component that represents descent from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of Eastern Europe. The Eastern Hunter Gatherer genetic profile can be modeled as an admixture between a Siberian Paleolithic population called Ancient North Eurasians (ANE) with European Western Hunter-Gatherers (WHG), although the relationship between the ANE and EHG ancestral components is not yet well understood due to lack of samples that could bridge the spatiotemporal gap. During the Mesolithic, the EHGs inhabited an area stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Urals and downwards to the Pontic–Caspian steppe. Along with Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherers (SHG) and Western Hunter-Gatherers (WHG), the EHGs constituted one of the three main genetic groups in the postglacial period of early Holocene Europe. The border between WHGs and EHGs ran roughly from the lower Danube, northward along the western forests of the Dnieper towards the western Baltic Sea. During the Neolithic and early Eneolithic, likely during the 4th millennium BC EHGs on the Pontic–Caspian steppe mixed with Caucasus hunter-gatherers (CHGs) with the resulting population, almost half-EHG and half-CHG, forming the Yamnaya culture. The genetic cluster formed from this admixture is known as Western Steppe Herder (WSH). Populations closely related to the people of the Yamnaya culture are supposed to have embarked on a massive migration leading to the spread of Indo-European languages throughout large parts of Eurasia. Research Haak et al. (2015) identified the Eastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHG) as a distinct genetic cluster in two males only. The EHG male of Samara (dated to ca. 5650-5550 BC) carried Y-haplogroup R1b1a1a* and mt-haplogroup U5a1d. The other EHG male, buried in Karelia (dated to ca. 5500-5000 BC) carried Y-haplogroup R1a1 and mt-haplogoup C1g. The authors of the study also identified a Western Hunter-Gatherer (WHG) cluster and a Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherer (SHG) cluster, intermediate between WHG and EHG. Also Lazaridis et al. (2016) confirmed SHGs to be a mix of EHGs and WHGs. They suggested that EHGs harbored mixed ancestry from Ancient North Eurasians (ANEs) and WHGs. The people of the Yamnaya culture were found to be a mix of EHG and a "Near Eastern related population". During the 3rd millennium BC, the Yamnaya people embarked on a massive expansion throughout Europe, which significantly altered the genetic landscape of the continent. The expansion gave rise to cultures such as Corded Ware, and was |
Killara Parish in the County of Killara is a civil parish of Killara County, located in Central Darling Shire at Latitude . Geography Killara Parish is on the Darling River and the village of Tilpa, New South Wales is the only settlement in the parish. The parish has a Köppen climate classification of BSh (Hot semi-desert). The parish is barely inhabited, and the landscape is a flat arid scrubland. The Parish is mainly an agricultural area, with sheep grazing the primary activity, and some pockets of irrigated land along the river. Tourism, Fishing and camping are popular along the river. including farmstay programs on local stations, is the other major local industry. Fishing and camping are popular along the river. In 1838 Thomas Mitchell (explorer) became the first European to the parish as he travelled down the Darling River. See also Killara, New South Wales Killara County References Localities in New South Wales |
and Herzegovina basketball 2018–19 in Croatian basketball 2018–19 in Montenegrin basketball 2018–19 in Slovenian basketball 2018–19 in Bulgarian basketball |
Bethel–Christian Avenue–Laurel Hill Historical District is a Setauket, Long Island, New York neighborhood that was nominated for preservation as an endangered historic site in 2017. The Bethel–Christian Avenue–Laurel Hill District on Long Island's north shore has roots back to the 1600s, when displaced African-American slaves and Native Americans from the Setalcott tribe settled in the area. The historical district includes Bethel AME Church and the Laurel Hill Cemetery. Early history Colonists from New England purchased land in 1655 from the Setalcott Indians and began peaceably living there at what was then a 'tract of land extending from Stony Brook to and including Port Jefferson'. During the Revolutionary War Setauket Harbor was across Long Island Sound from Fairfield, Connecticut. The British had consolidated their hold on New York City and Long Island during the winter months of early 1777, while the Continental Army established a land blockade around the city in New Jersey, southern New York, and southwestern Connecticut. On the night of August 21, Colonel Samuel Blachley Webb and his regiment set out across Long Island Sound in whaleboats, taking a few small brass cannons. Early the next morning they landed at Crane's Neck (in present-day Old Field, just west of Setauket), and marched to Setauket. The resulting battle ended when the Minutemen could not breach the breastworks around the Presbyterian meeting house and they retreated across the sound with a few dozen trophy horses and some quilts. An 1853 document states that in the year 1815, slave owners Isaac Satterly and Benjamin F. Thompson took legal action to designate land along Christian Avenue, in Setauket, as a cemetery for people of color. This site is still known as Laurel Hill Cemetery, which has been under the trusteeship of Bethel AME Church since 1871. In 1848 A tract of land was deeded to the Bethel AME, for the site of the original church, which was destroyed by fire in 1871. Old Bethel Cemetery on Christian Avenue in Stony Brook was the location of the first Bethel AME Church in the area. This deed provided 1/8th acre of land to the church board for a church. A line of stones lying on the ground behind the front of a line of gravestones marks the building's original foundation. The church moved to the current location in 1871 and the new church was built in 1874. It was also in 1871 that the |
The 1998 Iraqi Perseverance Cup () was the 3rd edition of the Iraqi Super Cup. The match was contested between Baghdad rivals Al-Shorta and Al-Zawraa at Al-Shaab Stadium in Baghdad. It was played on 25 May 1998 to bring an end to the 1997–98 season. Al-Zawraa won the game 1–0, earning their first Super Cup title. Match Details References External links Iraq Football Association Football competitions in Iraq 1997–98 in Iraqi football Iraqi Super Cup |
Solomons came on board, subsequently to manage Darren's solo career. Two years went by treading the boards, then a rock career beckoned. Firstly, with the Lancashire rock band "Stoney End" then in stepped "Hot Chocolate's" manager, Peter Walsh, a London impresario who pursued a recording deal with Decca Records for Darren. Walsh then went on to ask pianist and arranger, Mike Moran, to produce a remake of the Ronette's track "Be my baby" with the B side "How soon hello becomes goodbye" (from the French/Italian film "Le Silencieux" - "The Silent Ones") Residencies At the time in the UK, there were band residencies in most towns, therefore, a lot of professional musicians skipped from one location to another, Darren being no exception. She was resident at Manchester Tiffany's Oxford Street, then Rotherham, then Stafford. Later on, her London residencies were at Tiffany's Oxford Street, then Tottenham Mayfair, and Wimbledon Tiffany's. In the 1980s Darren worked at both Reading and Brighton Top Rank residencies, drifting from residency to residency. Later she joined The Dave White Band twice over the years at various Norfolk and Nottingham venues. At the same time, Darren joined forces with Dave White's guitarist Lee Vasey playing jazz/rock on their one day off each week. Strawberry Studios Darren met up with songwriter-producers Geoff Gill and Cliff Wade, who worked at Strawberry Studios in Stockport, Cheshire. Darren was pulled in to do backing vocals on some tracks they had written. This was the beginning of her rock career. The next four years were spent touring the UK and Europe. Along the way, there were three "Jenny Darren Bands" over this period. TV slots and tours followed; AC/DC, plus a "Sight and Sound in Concert" appearance supporting the band Be Bop de Luxe for BBC television. Reading, Glastonbury, and Knebworth festivals and others soon followed. Dick James Music (DJM) After four years, Darren signed directly to DJM records with father and son, Dick and Stephen James, who in turn became her joint managers and music publishers. A new Band was to follow. They were: Ex England keyboard player Robert Webb, Andy Richards on second keyboard (Frankie goes to Hollywood), Chas Kronk on bass (The Strawbs), Chris West on guitar (Stomu Yomashta), Luis Jardim on percussion, and Nicko McBrain on drums (Iron Maiden) The Band recorded one album only (Jenny Darren 2) produced by Tony Sadler. Due to internal problems, the |
The Legend of Heroes: Trails to Azure, known as in Japan, is a 2011 role-playing video game developed by Nihon Falcom. The game is a part of the Trails series, itself a part of the larger The Legend of Heroes series. Trails to Azure serves as a sequel to Trails from Zero (2010), forming the second and final part of the series' "Crossbell arc". Trails to Azure first released in Japan for the PlayStation Portable, with no release outside of Asia until an English release was announced a decade later. Based upon the work of a fan translation, it is scheduled to be released by NIS America for Windows, PlayStation 4, and Nintendo Switch in March 2023. Plot Trails to Azure is set a few months after the ending of Trails from Zero. The Special Support Section (SSS) are joined by new recruits – the Army sergeant major Noel Seeker and the former gang leader Wazy Hemisphere. Again, unscrupulous figures seek to use the powers of KeA, the SSS's young ward, for their own ends. They are led by the mayor, Dieter Crois, who declares Crossbell's independence and seeks to ensure it through the powers of KeA, and her daughter Mariabell, who seeks to use KeA to rewrite history. The SSS have to brave civil unrest and occult intrusions to foil their plans. Both Dieter and Mariabell Crois are defeated, the former is arrested and the latter joins Ouroboros and KeA relinquishes her powers, but all of these events lead to Crossbell's annexation by the Erebonian Empire, which leads into the "Divertissement" chapter of Trails of Cold Steel II and the events of the latter half of the Trails of Cold Steel series. Release Ao no Kiseki was released in Japan for the PlayStation Portable on September 29, 2011. It was later ported to Windows for release in China on March 28, 2013. It was also released for the PlayStation Vita in Japan on June 12, 2014, as Ao no Kiseki: Evolution. This version features improved visuals and more voice acting. The Evolution version received a remaster for the PlayStation 4, releasing in Japan under the title Ao no Kiseki Kai on May 28, 2020. It was released by Clouded Leopard Entertainment for the Nintendo Switch in Asia on April 22, 2021. Due to a variety of reasons, Trails to Azure and its predecessor, Trails from Zero, were not localized |
garden suburb character of Australia's oldest Garden Suburb. The subdivision and garden suburb development occurred in the mid to late nineteenth century, predating the formation of the Garden Suburb movement. The historic development at Hunters Hill was consistently speculative, although some of the subdivisions were undertaken to provide residences for family members. Thomas Stubbs, 1835–1847 Thomas Stubbs purchased two allotments of land at the head of Tarban Creek in 1835. This land adjoined the first land grants, part of the Eastern Farms, towards the western end of the present Municipality of Hunters Hill. Stubbs built a sandstone far, house, outbuildings and began farming his , now called 'the Stubbs Wing'. Marist Fathers, 1847–1874 The Marists had arrived in Australia in December 1837, after establishing mission stations on two South-west Pacific islands, Wallis and Futuna. In 1847 Stubbs sold his two blocks to Fr. Jean-Louis Rocher of the Marist Fathers who were looking to establish a base for missionaries in the South Pacific. The Fathers built a new building on the site in 1857 which they called "Villa Maria" , moving in immediately and this forming the base for the Marist Pacific Missions which incorporated part of and extended Stubbs original sandstone farmhouse. The new building was designed by architect-engineer, William Weaver in a Palladian or Old Colonial Regency style. Weaver worked in New South Wales from 1851 to 1864. He served as Colonial Architect from 1855–56, then set up in private practice, aged 28, at 25 Pitt Street, Sydney. The colonial economy was prospering, the new Sydney Railway was running as far as Liverpool and suburban development encouraged speculative building. Villa Maria (now known as the Priory) is one surviving example of Weaver's first year in private practice. It was commenced in February 1857, completed that November at a cost of 1685 pounds and built by local stonemasons. The long eastern front with stone flagged verandah has a fine and unaltered Georgian symmetry favoured by Weaver for his residence designs. Another of his favourite features evident in Villa Maria is the extension of the sides to the back of the building creating a courtyard. The plan incorporated a pre-1847 cottage as a northern wing. Accounts signed by Weaver indicate a smooth and rapid progress of construction. The renamed Villa Maria reorientated the original farmhouse towards the harbour, taking full advantage of the site and view. The Marist Fathers continued to |
Joseph Anthony Tarricone (January 7, 1925September 29, 1978) was an American businessman who was murdered by his girlfriend, Renee Curtiss, and her brother, Nicholas Notaro. His dismembered remains were discovered buried on the property of a home in Puyallup, Washington, in June 2007. His murder has been the subject of various television documentaries, such as the Oxygen series Buried in the Backyard, as well as being written on extensively by true crime writer Ann Rule in her 2011 book Don't Look Behind You. Background Joseph Tarricone was born January 7, 1925, in Brooklyn, New York City, the first child of Catholic Italian-American parents. In the early 1940s, he met and married his wife, Rose, with whom he had seven children. Tarricone served in World War II and the Korean War before relocating to Seattle, Washington. While there, he began operating his own meat business, Alaska Meat Provisions, based in Anchorage, Alaska, and would divide time between there and Washington. Murder After divorcing his wife in the early 1970s, Tarricone began dating Renee Curtiss (born August 1, 1953), a 25-year-old secretary who worked for his company. Tarricone's daughter alleged that the age difference was mitigated by the fact that Tarricone lavished her in gifts. In mid-1978, Curtiss broke off the relationship and relocated to live with her mother, Florence Geraldine Hess, in a rented home on Canyon Road in Puyallup, Washington. In the late summer of 1978, Tarricone visited his ex-wife, Rose, and his children in New Mexico, where they were living at the time. On September 29, 1978, while Tarricone was visiting Seattle en route back to Alaska, Curtiss and her adopted brother, 30-year-old Nicholas Notaro (who had previously been charged with manslaughter and served time for a killing committed in Alaska the previous decade) shot him to death in the home Curtiss shared with her mother in Puyallup. Curtiss had lured Tarricone to the home under the pretext of him repairing the washing machine. In the basement, while Tarricone inspected the washing machine, Notaro shot him twice in the head, killing him. Afterward, Curtiss and Notaro dismembered his remains with a chainsaw before burying them in the home's backyard. Discovery and conviction In June 2007, excavators digging up the property for new construction uncovered Tarricone's skeletal remains in a bag. Tarricone's daughter, Gypsy, had previously visited the home in late 1990 inquiring about her missing father, but Curtiss and |
building was re-painted. The library and reading room continued to be the town's library, run voluntarily, until 1981. In the late 1970s the building transferred from the Department of Education to the Department of Sports and Recreation. In 1996 the entrance partition with ticket office was removed and put understage. Between 1971 and 1980 the main function of the School of Arts building, apart from the CWA and some patronage of the hall, was as a library. Sylvia Longworth was volunteer librarian from 1948 to 1971. In 1975 the library expanded into the reading room, and in 1978 into the supper room and also into the entry hall. By 1980 there were 31,790 books with a membership of 913. The Hastings Council took over the management of the building in 1981 and, in addition, opened a local office in the old billiard room. In 1981 the Hastings Council also took over the library and after this time the librarian was paid. In 1992 the library moved into new premises in Laurieton. Renovation and restoration work carried out in the 1980s included replacing hall doors, replacing of all roofs and gutters, repair of cladding and fascias, repair or replacement of windows. Description The School of Arts building has a timber frame with framed with painted timber weatherboard cladding, eaves lining and casement windows, and a galvanised iron roof with dutch gables. The hall has an entry porch off Laurie Street and the rest of the rooms are at a lower level with library and billiard room entry from Bold Street. The building retains its original rooms and layout, including a large hall with stage and two dressing rooms, a supper room with kitchen and servery, a billiard room, a library and separate reading room and central corridor. All rooms were internally connected via the hallway, with the exception of the Billiard Room, and could be used collectively or separately. The building has a high degree of integrity. Both exterior and interior fabric have undergone only minor changes and some of this is capable of being reversed. There have been no additions to the building. It stands remarkably intact and similar to when it was opened in 1911. Modifications and dates 1919: Concrete steps added between billiard room and entry hall. 1954: Service verandah leased to hairdresser; new external door and window; closed off door and window to servery. 1956: Billiard room |
Wahlburgers is an American reality television series that aired from January 22, 2014 to July 31, 2019 on A&E. During its 10 seasons, Wahlburgers aired 95 episodes. Premise The series is based on the casual dining burger restaurant and bar Wahlburgers, a chain of restaurants that started in the Greater Boston town of Hingham, Massachusetts., and the lives of the Wahlberg family. The Wahlburgers business is owned by chef Paul Wahlberg in partnership with two of his brothers, actors and singers Donnie and Mark. Main cast Mark Wahlberg, actor, producer, rapper Donnie Wahlberg, actor, producer, a member of New Kids on the Block Paul Wahlberg, chef, actor Alma Wahlberg , mother of Donnie, Mark, and Paul, actress; she died on April 18, 2021 Brandon Wahlberg, nephew of Donnie, Mark, and Paul Bob Wahlberg, brother of Mark, Donnie and Paul Henry "Nacho" Laun, a childhood friend of the brothers Johnny "Drama" Alves, a childhood friend of the brothers and an aspiring actor, miscellaneous crew, and special effects Kari Burke, Paul's assistant and operations manager Billy Leonard, a childhood friend of Mark and an investor in the restaurant Jenny McCarthy, Donnie's wife and actress, producer, and writer Rhea Durham, Mark's wife and model and actress Episode overview Reception Allison Keene of The Hollywood Reporter said that "only a true and abiding love for the Wahlbergs will keep viewers interested." Brian Lowry of Variety said the show is "generally playful, but it is just empty calories". Mark A. Perigard of The Boston Herald gave the show a B−. In 2014 and 2015, Wahlburgers received Emmy nominations for Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program. Spin-off Donnie Loves Jenny is a reality television series based on the newlywed Donnie Wahlberg and Jenny McCarthy's relationship and premiered on January 7, 2015. Syndication AXS TV acquired syndicated rights to the series, which began airing on February 27, 2022. Further reading References External links – television show 2010s American reality television series 2014 American television series debuts 2019 American television series endings A&E (TV network) original programming Food reality television series Television shows set in Boston Television series about families Wahlberg family |
"Trip" is a song by English singer Ella Mai from her eponymous debut studio album. The song peaked at number 47 in the UK and number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States. The song was written by Mai, Varren Wade, Quinton, and Dijon MacFarlane. The single became her first number one on Billboards Rhythmic chart in its 22 December 2018 issue. Music video An accompanying music video for the song premiered via Mai's Vevo channel on 18 September 2018. Jacquees remix Cash Money R&B singer Jacquees' "Quemix" of the track gained huge popularity, receiving millions of streams on YouTube and SoundCloud. However, Jacquees' version was removed from both platforms on September 5. Ella Mai's label boss DJ Mustard later said that his label 10 Summers sent a cease and desist, claiming Jacquees had attempted to monetize the remix and accused him of "stealing" from 10 Summers. Jacquees disputed these claims. Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications Release history References 2018 songs 2018 singles Ella Mai songs Songs written by Mustard (record producer) Song recordings produced by Mustard (record producer) Songs written by Ella Mai |
Fanatisme is a 1934 French historical drama film directed by Tony Lekain and Gaston Ravel and starring Pola Negri, Jean Yonnel and Lucien Rozenberg. The film's sets were designed by the art director Claude Bouxin. Cast Pola Negri as Rosine Savelli Jean Yonnel as Le prince de Valnéro Lucien Rozenberg as Napoleon III Andrée Lafayette as L'impératrice Eugénie Georges Flateau as Ardiotti Pierre Richard-Willm as Marcel Besnard Louisa de Mornand as La marquise de Contadès Lilian Greuze as La comtesse Walewska William Aguet as Le chambellan Pierre Juvenet as Le duc de Morny Gil Clary as La princesse Mathilde Christian Argentin as Piétri References Bibliography Mariusz Kotowski. Pola Negri: Hollywood's First Femme Fatale. University Press of Kentucky, 2014. External links 1934 films 1930s French-language films Films directed by Gaston Ravel Pathé films Films set in the 19th century French historical drama films 1930s historical drama films Cultural depictions of Napoleon III French black-and-white films 1934 drama films 1930s French films |
Jennifer Tilly as Ginger Joshua Caleb Johnson as André Kim Wayans as Lizzie Faye Cynda Williams as Doctor Harris Jack Noseworthy as Loomis Lenny von Dohlen as Armond Tyson Ritter as Woody Susan Misner as Jane Neil Jackson as Russ Steven J. Wolfe as Mr. Rich Production The film originally was to star Lesley Ann Warren as Helen, but she was replaced by the older Sondra Locke, who came out of retirement to do the role. It was Alan Rudolph's first feature film in 15 years. The film uses the track of the Triangle Sun group by composer Alexander Knyazev. The director really liked the sound of the instrumental track "Buddha" conveying the concept and mood of the film. Release The film premiered at the Haifa International Film Festival on October 9, 2017. It was released in the U.S. on May 4, 2018. Reception In a mixed review, John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that "the movie succumbs to one false note after the other — contrivances both fortunate and un- that increasingly test our willingness to accept what has come before as simply the strange vibes of a filmmaker accustomed to another age." Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times wrote that the film "has a wistful, whimsical sophistication that has all but disappeared from movies. Filled with imaginative visuals populated by the ghosts of the gone and hopes for the future, the movie is wonderfully, magically humane." References External links 2017 films American romantic drama films 2010s English-language films 2017 romantic drama films Films directed by Alan Rudolph Films shot in Boston 2010s American films |
"Arcadian Villa" Tempe house and setting was designed to take advantage of the optimal views and splendor of the Cooks River. With the backdrop of "Mt Olympus", the house is aesthetically significant as it provides an exceptional example of an 1830s landscape design. Tempe house exemplifies the work of John Verge and includes detail that is not found in his other works. It is the intactness of the original elements in the estate, which generates an extremely high aesthetic significance. The place has strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group in New South Wales for social, cultural or spiritual reasons. During the Sisters of the Good Samaritan Order ownership, the site functioned as a place of welfare orientated activities. While not initially opened to the public, the later period of the Order's administration involved sharing the facility with local religious and sporting groups. Tempe House is also of social significance as a landmark to the local community. The house's association with A.B. Spark, who was active in establishing the local community and the St Peters Church and entertained extravagantly, adds to the social significance of the house. The house can be seen to have functioned as a focus for community activities during Spark's ownership. The subsequent use by the Sisters of the Good Samaritan for community welfare activities enhances the importance of this association. St Magdalen's Chapel was built by the Sisters of the Good Samaritan Order and designed by architects Sheerin & Hennessy is historically significant as a representation of the occupation of the site for over a century by the Benedictine Order. The stained glass windows directly memorialise the former Superiors of the Order, while the lives and beliefs of the many other women that lived and worked in the St Magdalen's Retreat are indirectly represented by the Chapel buildings itself. While the many other buildings constructed during the Order's period of ownership have been demolished, the Chapel remains a significant historical component within the site. The Chapel building is significant as the spiritual focus for almost a century of charitable works at Tempe by the Sisters of the Good Samaritan Order. It represents not only the religious devotion of the Sisters living on the site, but also the philosophy of repentance drining the charitable works that governed the operations of the "Retreat" during the extensive period of the Order's ownership. Tempe House and |
Albert Dutton MacDade (September 23, 1871 – October 4, 1954) was an American politician from Pennsylvania who served as district attorney for Delaware County from 1906 to 1912, as a Republican member of the Pennsylvania State Senate for the 9th Senatorial District from 1921 to 1929 and as Judge in the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County from 1942 to 1948. Early life and education MacDade was born in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, to Joseph Walker and Amie (Hedden) MacDade. He graduated from Chester High School in 1888 and the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1894. Career In 1894, MacDade was accepted to the Delaware County bar. He served as the district attorney of Delaware county from 1906 to 1912 and as a Pennsylvania State Senator from 1920 to 1928. MacDade was elected judge of the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas from 1942 to 1948 and served as president judge in 1943 He is interred at the Lawn Croft Cemetery in Linwood, Pennsylvania. Personal life MacDade married Mabel Troth in 1899 and together they had two children. MacDade was a member of the First Baptist Church in Chester, Pennsylvania. MacDade was a member of the American and State Bar Associations, the Pennsylvania National Guard for three years and was a "four-minute man" and chairman of the legal advisory board of Chester, Pennsylvania during World War I. He was a member of the Improved Order of Red Men, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Patriotic Order of the Sons of America, the Loyal Order of Moose and was a thirty-second degree Mason. Legacy In 1933, Parker Avenue in Collingdale, Pennsylvania, was renamed MacDade Boulevard in honor of MacDade. References 1871 births 1954 deaths 20th-century American politicians American Freemasons Burials at Lawn Croft Cemetery Chester High School alumni County district attorneys in Pennsylvania Judges of the Pennsylvania Courts of Common Pleas Pennsylvania lawyers Pennsylvania National Guard personnel Republican Party Pennsylvania state senators People from Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Law School alumni |
at this period. The archaeological remains of Government House are the only known surviving example in New South Wales of a "government house" in a distant settlement, built for the use of government officials. The archaeological remains of Government House, Port Macquarie are older than the surviving building fabric at Port Arthur and the Second Settlement at Norfolk Island, also places of secondary punishment. The archaeological evidence at Port Macquarie is not duplicated in the existing range of heritage convict sites at Sydney, Parramatta and Newcastle. The penal settlement of Port Macquarie was designed on picturesque principles, the only penal settlement to be so designed. Government House is one of the two main elements of the picturesque composition of the penal settlement, the other being the existing church of St Thomas. The physical reality of the surviving archaeological remains of Government House allows this relationship to be rediscovered, experienced and interpreted. See also References Bibliography Attribution External links New South Wales State Heritage Register Port Macquarie Government Houses of Australia Houses in New South Wales Archaeological sites in New South Wales Government buildings in New South Wales Articles incorporating text from the New South Wales State Heritage Register Demolished buildings and structures in New South Wales Buildings and structures demolished in 1886 |
of resources. Cruz was presented the key to the city on April 28, 2018 by Mayor Alex Morse to honor that "in such a time of despair [she] provided a beacon of hope and opportunity for Puerto Ricans." In 2021 the city elected its first mayor of Puerto Rican descent, Joshua A. Garcia, who had previously served as the chair of Nueva Esperanza. Enclaves While there is a Puerto Rican demographic throughout all of Holyoke today, as of 2018 the neighborhoods of South Holyoke, The Flats, and Churchill were among those areas with the largest Puerto Rican populations proportionally, all having more than 75% residents of Puerto Rican heritage, with 83.5% of all South Holyoke's residents being of Puerto Rican heritage. Despite efforts to create more equitable housing from a variety of nonprofit groups, as of 2018, South Holyoke had the highest percentage of renter-occupied housing in any neighborhood outside of Boston, with an average of 1.5% owner-occupied households across the neighborhood's two census block groups. According to the Census's 2012-2016 American Community Survey, Spanish is spoken among a large segment of the population but, as a language spoken at home, comprised a fraction of households. The highest proportion of Spanish or Spanish Creole speaking households was about 54.2% in a block group in one section of Churchill. In South Holyoke about 45% of households speak Spanish at home, while no block group in The Flats neighborhood exceeded 25%. As of 2018, ongoing efforts have been put forward to formally create a cultural district along the Main Street areas of South Holyoke and the Flats, in what would be a first for the city. Today many events are held by the community, including by its cultural centers at Nueva Esperanza and Nuestras Raices, with work going towards bringing an official state designation to support programs that encourage cultural exchange, tourism, and commerce. Not unlike in the Greater New York area, Holyoke and its surrounding cities of Springfield and Chicopee, are home to a number of self-identified bodegas, small independent convenience stores often having delis or produce. In one 2008 survey it was found South Holyoke alone was home to at least 18 such stores. Events Among the city's annual events are the Western Massachusetts Puerto Rican Parade and Festival, a three-day festival, held every summer in Springdale Park since 1984. Additionally El Sabor de South Holyoke ("Taste of South Holyoke |
Aleksandr Bashminov (born 7 May 1978) is a Russian basketball player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 2000 Summer Olympics. He is 212cm (6ft 11.5 inches) tall. References External links 1978 births Living people Russian men's basketball players Olympic basketball players of Russia Basketball players at the 2000 Summer Olympics People from Cheboksary 2002 FIBA World Championship players Sportspeople from Chuvashia |
second season, Viren attempts to rally the other human kingdoms to war against Xadia; he also makes a secret alliance with the mysterious, imprisoned Startouch Elf and archmage Aaravos, who reveals himself and communicates from his prison initially via a mirror that resided in the home cavern of the previous King of the Sky Dragons, Zym's father, and later via a caterpillar-like creature. Meanwhile, Callum becomes the first human to directly access primal magic, connecting with the Sky Arcanum. By the end of Season 2, Viren is imprisoned for treason for having illicitly used Harrow's seal, and for abusing his powers of dark magic. Ezran learns of his father's death and returns to Katolis to claim the throne. In the third season, Ezran is manipulated into abdicating the throne amid pressure for war, and he rejoins Callum and Rayla to return Zym to his dying mother at her home, the Storm Spire. Viren, restored to power, leads the human armies against Xadia, amassing even more dark magic with the help of Aaravos. Soren defects to resist his father's evil goals. Viren's army is defeated by the elves and their allies. Rayla throws herself and Viren from the summit of the Spire, and Callum uses Sky magic to save Rayla. Zym is returned to his mother. Claudia revives Viren using dark magic, and Aaravos's caterpillar enters metamorphosis. In the fourth season, which takes place two years later, relationships between Xadia and the five human realms have generally improved, but resentments and doubts still linger. Rayla returns from her fruitless search for Viren and her long-lost parents, Lain and Tiadrin, and legal guardian Runnan. But just when things seem to improve, Aaravos sets his imminent release in motion using Viren and Claudia, and Callum, as his pawns. The Dragon Queen reveals that, when Aaravos was imprisoned, the keys to his prison were divided among the Archdragons, and included Avizandum's mirror (which had been stolen along with Zym's egg by Viren). King Ezran, Callum, Rayla and Soren go on a quest to find the missing clues held by the Archdragons of the five out of six primal sources, seeking the first from Rex Igneous the Archdragon of Earth. Voice cast and characters Main characters Prince /High Mage Callum (voiced by Jack De Sena): Ezran's older teenage half-brother and King Harrow's stepson. He becomes the first human to wield primal magic on his own |
As he notes, Romanian right-wing radicals of the day could be simultaneously antisemitic and pro-Romani. Codreanu personally promised to support the General Union, and helped with isolating Șerboianu. The UGRR then gave honorary membership to Codreanu and other figures on the far-right, including Nae Ionescu and Pamfil Șeicaru. However, similar honors were bestowed on apolitical figures, including writers Adrian Maniu and Mihai Tican Rumano. The UGRR and its rivals were equally involved in canvassing votes for Romanian parties. Months before the general elections of 1933, Lăzurică was an agent for Goga's PNA, instructing the Romanies to cast their vote for its candidates. The AGȚR noticed such developments, publicizing claims that Lăzurică was Goga's tool. In turn, Lăzurică depicted Șerboianu as an apostate of Orthodoxy, deflecting the charge of Greek Catholic proselytism toward the AGȚR itself. However, by the time of the actual vote, he himself had switched sides, opting for the more mainstream National Liberal Party and asking that all Romanies do the same. Lăzurică was appointed to lead an UGRR delegation expressing support for Prime Minister Ion G. Duca, while also pressing him to respond favorably to the Romanies' demands. At the same time, Manolescu-Dolj and his followers took a different path, and canvassed for the Georgist Liberals. As read by Mudure, these strategies meant "offering to certain Romanian mainstream politicians the support of the Gypsy vote in exchange for affirmative action policies for the Gypsies." Ouster and return On March 18–25, 1934, Lăzurică organized at Omnia Cinema, Bucharest, the Festival of Art and Culture of the Roma in Europe, where he himself lectured on the "Origin, History and Emigration of Roma in Europe". His final work within the General Union was a massive effort to bring Transylvania's Romanies into the Orthodox church, which included reversing their Magyarization. This culminated with a mass baptism at Blaj on May 28, 1934. Immediately after, on May 29 or May 31, Lăzurică was toppled from the UGRR chairmanship and then expelled altogether. His downfall was precipitated by the spread of rumors, nominating him as a "fraud" and "Jew", and claiming that the "ex-Voivode" had defrauded a veterinary doctor. Lăzurică had also recruited the brothers Gheorghe and Nicolae Nicolescu as the UGRR sponsors, but then saw them turning against him. The Nicolescus engineered Lăzurică's downfall, reportedly brutalizing him until he signed a document in which he falsely denied that he was a Romani. |
Andrey Belyaninov, the head of the Federal Customs Service of Russia during the 2000s. In 1976 he directed a TV mini-series Two Captains based on the popular children's novel by Veniamin Kaverin who served as a screenwriter and added several scenes along the way. After the work on Two Captains was finished, the film crew went to Pitsunda to have a rest. On 11 July 1977 Karelov died of heart failure while swimming in the sea. Boris Tokarev and Evgeny Matveev who witnessed it managed to pull out his body, but Karelov was already dead by that time. He was buried in the family tomb at the Podolsk cemetery. He was survived by his wife Tatiana Germanovna Karelova and daughter Marina. On 4 November 2016 a new boulevard in the memory of Yevgeny Karelov was opened in Podolsk where two monuments were placed: one depicting Karelov, and another — the boy from his Nakhalyonok movie (role performed by Vladimir Semyonov). Filmography References External links Yevgeni Karelov at Russia-IC Director Yevgeny Karelov: biografía, filmografía (in Spanish) 1931 births 1977 deaths Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography alumni Russian film directors Soviet film directors Soviet screenwriters 20th-century Russian screenwriters Male screenwriters 20th-century Russian male writers |
Renhe () is a town in Baiyun District, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. The town spans an area of , and has a population of 127,795 per the 2010 Chinese Census. History In July 2002, the now-defunct town of was merged into Renhe. Geography Renhe is located approximately from downtown Guangzhou, and is bordered by and Huadong in Huadu District to its north. The Liuxi River flows through Renhe. Administrative divisions Renhe administers 3 residential communities and 25 administrative villages. Residential communities Renhe contains the following 3 residential communities: Renhe Community () Banghu Community () Suihe Community () Administrative villages Renhe contains the following 25 administrative villages: Donghua Village () Hantang Village () Xinxing Village () Mingxing Village () Minqiang Village () Gaozeng Village () Renhe Village () Xicheng Village () Aigang Village () Fenghe Village () Hengli Village () Gangwei Village () Fangshi Village () Daxiang Village () Taicheng Village () Yahu Village () Xiushui Village () Heting Village () Huangbangling Village () Xinlian Village () Zhenhu Village () Qinghe Village () Nanfang Village () Xihu Village () Jiannan Village () Demographics Per the 2010 Chinese Census, Renhe has a population of 127,795. Prior to the incorporation of the former town of , which had a population of 26,954 according to the 2000 Chinese Census, Renhe had a population of 85,300 as of 2000. About 76,000 overseas Chinese hail from Renhe, including those living in Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Education The town is home to 1 secondary school, 5 middle schools, 11 primary schools, and 2 adult schools. Transportation Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport is partially located in the northern portion of Renhe. A number of major expressways pass through Renhe, including China National Highway 106, the , and the . References Baiyun District, Guangzhou Towns in Guangdong |
William Tobin Toffey (born December 31, 1994) is an American professional baseball third baseman in Philadelphia Phillies organization. He was drafted by the Oakland Athletics in the fourth round of the 2017 Major League Baseball draft after playing college baseball for Vanderbilt University. Amateur career Toffey is from Barnstable, Massachusetts. He attended Salisbury School in Salisbury, Connecticut, and accepted a scholarship to attend Vanderbilt University to play college baseball for the Vanderbilt Commodores over playing college hockey. The New York Yankees selected Toffey in the 23rd round of the 2014 MLB draft, but he enrolled at Vanderbilt rather than sign. As a freshman with Vanderbilt, Toffey had a .294 batting average and 49 runs batted in (RBIs) in 255 at bats. He was named a freshman All-American. In his sophomore year, he batted. 277 with 22 RBIs in 203 at bats. Toffey played collegiate summer baseball in 2015 and 2016 for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox of the Cape Cod Baseball League. The Baltimore Orioles selected Toffey in the 25th round of the 2016 MLB draft, but he again did not sign, returning to Vanderbilt for his junior year. He batted .326 with 28 RBIs in 95 at-bats as a junior. Professional career Oakland Athletics The Oakland Athletics selected Toffey in the fourth round of the 2017 MLB draft. He signed with Oakland for a $482,600 signing bonus, and made his professional debut with the Vermont Lake Monsters of the Class A-Short Season New York-Penn League where he batted .263 with one home run and 22 RBIs in 57 games. Toffey began the 2018 season with the Stockton Ports of the Class A-Advanced California League. New York Mets On July 21, 2018, the Athletics traded Toffey, along with Bobby Wahl, to the New York Mets for Jeurys Familia. The Mets assigned Toffey to the Binghamton Rumble Ponies of the Class AA Eastern League. In 89 total games between Stockton and Binghamton, he batted .248 with nine home runs and 51 RBIs. Toffey returned to Binghamton to begin 2019. He batted .219/.347/.349/.696 with five home runs and 27 RBIs in 91 games with Binghamton. Toffey did not play in a game in 2020 due to the cancellation of the minor league season because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He returned to Binghamton Mets to begin the 2021 season and batted .178/.317/.386 with six home runs and 15 RBIs in 34 games. San Francisco |
happen between days 5 and 9. If it happens after day 9, there is a significant risk of the twins being conjoined. Primitive streak develops. (day 13 of fertilization). Primary stem villi appear. (day 13 of fertilization). Week 5 Gestational age: 4 weeks and 0 days until 4 weeks and 6 days old. 29–35 days from last menstruation. Embryonic age: Week nr 3. 2 weeks old. 15–21 days from fertilization. A notochord forms in the center of the embryonic disk. (day 16 of fertilization.) Gastrulation commences. (day 16 of fertilization.) A neural groove (future spinal cord) forms over the notochord with a brain bulge at one end. Neuromeres appear. (day 18 of fertilization.) Somites, the divisions of the future vertebra, form. (day 20 of fertilization.) Primitive heart tube is forming. Vasculature begins to develop in embryonic disc. (day 20 of fertilization.) Week 6 Gestational age: 5 weeks and 0 days until 5 weeks and 6 days old. 36–42 days from last menstruation. Embryonic age: Week nr 4. 3 weeks old. 22–28 days from fertilization. The embryo measures in length and begins to curve into a C shape. The heart bulges, further develops, and begins to beat in a regular rhythm. Septum primum appears. Pharyngeal arches, grooves which will form structures of the face and neck, form. The neural tube closes. The ears begin to form as otic pits. Arm buds and a tail are visible. Lung bud, the first traits of the lung appear. Hepatic plate, the first traits of the liver appear. Buccopharyngeal membrane ruptures. This is the future mouth. Cystic diverticulum, which will become the gallbladder, and dorsal pancreatic bud, which will become the pancreas appear. Urorectal septum begins to form. Thus, the rectal and urinary passageways become separated. Anterior and posterior horns differentiate in the spinal cord. Spleen appears. Ureteric buds appear. Week 7 Gestational age: 6 weeks and 0 days until 6 weeks and 6 days old. 43–49 days from last menstruation. Embryonic age: Week nr 5. 4 weeks old. 29–35 days from fertilization. The embryo measures in length and weighs about 1 gram. Optic vesicles and optic cups form the start of the developing eye. Nasal pits form. The brain divides into 5 vesicles, including the early telencephalon. Leg buds form and hands form as flat paddles on the arms. Rudimentary blood moves through primitive vessels connecting to the yolk sac and chorionic membranes. The |
The Mark-Twain-Straße is a street in the Munich district Pasing-Obermenzing, which was built around 1900. It was named in 1947 after the American writer Mark Twain (1835–1910). History Originally called Kirchenstraße, the street connects Alte Allee with Barystraße. It belonged to the extension planning of the Villenkolonie Pasing II between Alter Allee and Pippinger Straße, which to this day was not carried out. Between Barystraße 10 and 12 there is an undeveloped property owned by the city of Munich, so that the Mark-Twain-Straße can be extended at any time in the direction of Pippinger Straße. Until the First World War, only two villas were built on Mark-Twain- Straße, No. 2 and 4. The complete development of the alley laid out street happened in recent decades. Historical monuments Mark-Twain-Straße 4 References Streets in Munich Buildings and structures in Munich Pasing-Obermenzing Mark Twain |
Imani Michelle Dorsey (born March 21, 1996) is an American professional soccer player who currently plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL). She attended Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic High School in Olney, Maryland and in college she played for Duke University. College career Duke University, 2014–2017 Dorsey played for Duke University from 2014–2017. She was named ACC Offensive Player of the Year in 2017 and was a semifinalist for the MAC Hermann Trophy. She finished her career ranked fourth all time in career goals at Duke. Club career In 2015 she played for the Washington Spirit Reserves in the W-League. She scored eight goals, helping the team win the W-League Championship. She was named W-League Rookie of the Year. NJ/NY Gotham FC (formerly Sky Blue FC), 2018–present Dorsey was selected by Sky Blue FC with the 5th overall pick in the 2018 NWSL College Draft. She joined the team in May after completing her degree at Duke University and was added to the active roster as a National Team Replacement Player on June 1, 2018. Dorsey received a full professional contract on June 15. On July 7 she scored her first NWSL goal against the Chicago Red Stars. Dorsey was named 2018 NWSL Rookie of the Year. She scored 4 goals and 1 assist in 14 matches for Sky Blue. Dorsey is the second Sky Blue player to win rookie of the year, after Raquel Rodriguez won it in 2016. Sky Blue FC was re-branded as NJ/NY Gotham FC preceding the 2021 NWSL season. International career On August 23, 2018, Dorsey was named to the United States U-23 team for the 2018 Nordic tournament. Dorsey received her first senior call-up to the United States national team on October 31, 2019. Career statistics International References External links Sky Blue profile Living people 1996 births American women's soccer players United States women's international soccer players Duke Blue Devils women's soccer players National Women's Soccer League players People from Elkridge, Maryland NJ/NY Gotham FC draft picks NJ/NY Gotham FC players Soccer players from Maryland Sportspeople from the Baltimore metropolitan area Women's association football forwards African-American women's soccer players 21st-century African-American sportspeople 21st-century African-American women |
Grieb is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: A. Katherine Grieb, American theologian John Grieb (1879–1939), American gymnast and track and field athlete Manfred H. Grieb (1933-2012), American-German entrepreneur and art collector Mark Grieb (born 1974), American football quarterback Walter Grieb (1911-?), Swiss boxer de:Grieb |
Chaudhary Sajid Mehmood is a Pakistani politician who had been a member of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab from August 2018 till January 2023 Political career He was elected to the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab as a candidate of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf from Constituency PP-9 (Rawalpindi-IV) in 2018 Pakistani general election. He received 51,686 votes and defeated Chaudry Sajid Mehmood, a candidate of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). References Living people Punjab MPAs 2018–2023 Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf MPAs (Punjab) Year of birth missing (living people) |
Denmark Morten Nielsen – Sligo Rovers Jesper Jørgensen – Galway United Jonas Piechnik – Cork City Niclas Vemmelund – Derry City, Dundalk England Chris Adamson – St Patrick's Athletic Tobi Adebayo-Rowling – Sligo Rovers, Cork City Elicha Ahui – Drogheda United James Akintunde – Derry City, Bohemians Sam Allardyce – Limerick Joseph Anang – St Patrick's Athletic Nigel Aris – Waterford Chris Armstrong – St Patrick's Athletic, Galway United Drew Baker – Bohemians Gordon Banks – St Patrick's Athletic Lewis Banks – Sligo Rovers Alex Baptiste – Waterford Keith Barker – St Patrick's Athletic Peter Barnes – Drogheda United Shane Barrett – Drogheda United, Sporting Fingal, Cork City, Monaghan United Guy Bates – Drogheda United Jack Baxter – Cork City Ashley Bayes – Bohemians Darren Beasley – Drogheda United Paul Beavers – Shelbourne Mitchell Beeney – Sligo Rovers Jay Benn – Bohemians Dean Bennett – Dundalk Neil Bennett – Drogheda United, Derry City Richard Blackmore – Dundalk, Galway United Matthew Blinkhorn – Sligo Rovers Sam Bone – Shamrock Rovers, Waterford, St Patrick's Athletic, Dundalk Rob Bowman – Bohemians Leon Braithwaite – St Patrick's Athletic Barry Bridges – St Patrick's Athletic, Sligo Rovers Louis Britton – Waterford, Cork City Harry Brockbank – St Patrick's Athletic Trevor Brooking – Cork City Richard Brush – Sligo Rovers, Shamrock Rovers, Finn Harps Jack Burkett – St Patrick's Athletic Dennis Burnett – Shamrock Rovers Charlie Burns – Galway United Ian Butterworth – Cobh Ramblers Ian Callaghan – Cork United Greg Challender – Finn Harps Bobby Charlton – Waterford Kieran Coates – Cork City John Cofie – Derry City Gerry Coyne – Limerick, Cork Hibernians Craig Curran – Limerick Blain Curtis – Finn Harps Deshane Dalling – Cork City Luke Danville – Dundalk Archie Davies – Dundalk Dixie Dean – Sligo Rovers Adam Dempsey – Wexford, Bray Wanderers Sadou Diallo – Derry City John Dillon – Sligo Rovers, Dundalk Reyon Dillon – Cork City Kieran Djilali – Sligo Rovers, Limerick, Cork City Alan Dodd – Cork City Sean Doherty – Sligo Rovers Tom Donaghy – Waterford Mark Doninger – Sligo Rovers Gareth Downey – Finn Harps, Shelbourne, Monaghan United Glen Downey – Shelbourne Jack Doyle – Derry City Freddie Draper – Drogheda United Eddie Dsane – Longford Town, Finn Harps Dylan Duncan – Finn Harps Robert Dunne – Cabinteely Anthony Elding – Sligo Rovers, Cork City, Derry City Lee Ellington – Finn Harps Kit Elliott – |
1873. Perhaps due to the French colonization, the French “injections” of their popular music became infused with Vietnamese contemporary music, which was increasingly influenced by other cultural and international influences as well. Singers such as Thái Thanh and Khánh Ly, the latter is known for singing songs composed by Trịnh Công Sơn, were/are labeled as “sang” singers while singers such as Thanh Tuyền and Chế Linh, the latter also a recognized pre-1975 composer were/are considered sến or bình dân (traditional folk) singers. Bolero music remains the most popular music genre in Vietnam. The style was influenced from Latin American music and was introduced in Vietnam in the 1950s, becoming a staple musical genre in South Vietnam, and much of its popularity is attributed to the emergence of pre-1975 music, which carried over into diasporic Vietnamese communities. Some of the many famous and recognized composers of pre-1975 Vietnamese songs include: Trúc Phương, Trần Thiện Thanh (also a singer, director, and actor), Châu Kỳ, Duy Khánh (also a famous singer and music teacher), Hoàng Thi Thơ, Hồ Đình Phương, Nhật Ngân, Lê Dinh, Minh Kỳ, Anh Bằng, Lam Phương, Y Vân, Tâm Anh, and several composers who have been recognized for the contributions in the Vietnamese music industry pre-war and post-war. There were several singers who emerged during the pre-1975 Vietnamese music era. Some of the many artists, who remain popular today, include: Thanh Thúy, Hương Lan, Phương Dung, Hoàng Oanh, Tuấn Vũ, Giang Tử among many. From Pre-War to Diasporic: The Flourishing of Pre-1975 Vietnamese Music The term diasporic Vietnamese music was strongly associated with pre-1975. Vietnamese music became diasporic, or sometimes known as Việt Kiều (often translates to overseas Vietnamese population) music has currently progressed in the United States since 1975. Valverde further notes that pre-1975 music is "influenced by sentiments of exile and ideologies of anti-communism" and additionally, diasporic Vietnamese music "has a special blend of nostalgia that appeals not only to members of diasporic communities but also to residents of Viet Nam." Vietnamese musicians and singers, most of whom were refugees and immigrants, were apprehensive on adapting and acculturating to their new homes or host countries. Vietnamese recording artists found that music served as bridge that connected refugees and "exiles to the homeland they thought they had lost." Overseas, or diasporic, singers today, those who were born during the war as children or born after 1975 such as |
Harry Grossmiller (March 9, 1910 – July 20, 1945) was an American rower. He competed in the men's coxed four event at the 1932 Summer Olympics. References 1910 births 1945 deaths American male rowers Olympic rowers of the United States Rowers at the 1932 Summer Olympics Sportspeople from Atlantic City, New Jersey |
James J. Coleman (born May 15, 1950 in Chicago, IL) is an electrical engineer who worked at Bell Labs, Rockwell International, and the University of Illinois, Urbana. He is best known for his work on semiconductor lasers, materials and devices including strained-layer indium gallium arsenide lasers and selective area epitaxy. Coleman is a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the US National Academy of Engineering. Career James J. Coleman was born in the Garfield Ridge neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois and went to St. Daniel the Prophet elementary school and St. Laurence high school. He was the eldest son of Harry A. Coleman and Lorita M. Kelly. He studied electrical engineering at the University of Illinois, Urbana graduating with a BSEE in 1972. He stayed on at Illinois and was granted an MSEE in 1973 under the direction of O.L. Gaddy. Continuing at Illinois he did his PhD research under the direction of Nick Holonyak, writing a thesis on room temperature visible semiconductor diode lasers. He received his PhD from Illinois in 1975. Coleman joined Bell Labs, Murray Hill in 1976, where his initial assignment was in the Materials Science Research Department under the direction of Morton B. Panish. His work there involved contributions to the development of 1.3 μm InGaAsP CW room temperature diode telecommunications lasers grown by liquid phase epitaxy (LPE). In 1978, he went to Rockwell International, Anaheim to work with P. Daniel Dapkus on metalorganic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), which has become a major process in the manufacture of compound semiconductor devices. They made use of this process to study MOCVD-grown heteroface AlGaAs solar cells, low-threshold single mode AlGaAs-GaAs double heterostructure lasers and quantum well heterostructure laser devices. In 1982, he returned to the University of Illinois, Urbana where he was professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and held the Intel Alumni Endowed Chair. He and his students were the first group to define experimentally the ranges of wavelength, threshold current density, and reliability of 980 nm strained-layer InGaAs lasers. They reported high performance narrow linewidth DBR lasers, integrated lasers and other photonic devices by selective-area epitaxy, and detailed the growth processes for patterned quantum dot lasers. Coleman directed more than twenty-nine PhD thesis students at Illinois, most of who took their first jobs in industry. He was named to the List of Teachers Ranked as Excellent twelve times. He is presently the Intel Alumni |
Woman with a Raven at an Abyss (or Woman with a Raven on a Precipice; German: Die Frau mit dem Raben am Abgrund) is a c. 1803/04 print by the German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich, made into a woodcut by his brother Christian Friedrich, a carpenter and furniture maker, around the same time. The images evokes themes of loss, abandonment, loneliness, the shortness of life, and death. To achieve this effect, Fredrick employs nightmarish imagery, including a gothic wood of barren trees whose branches appear as if the arms of the dead, a single vulturous raven, drawn in an almost childlike manner that recalls fairy tale illustrations. Background It is one of four of Fredricks' drawings his brother cut as blocks, with this work, although darker often seen as a companion piece to the 1803 drawing/woodcut of approximately the same size, The Woman with the Spider's Web. Like that work, the image may have been influenced by Ludwig Tieck's stories, particularly his 1797 fairy tale "Der blonde Eckbert", which contains passages where Eckbert's wife, Bertha, is abandoned by her husband and becomes stranded on an isolated mountain top, while she yearningly reflects on moments from their her youth. Description The figure is older than the woman in the "Spider's Web" drawing, and far more distressed. She stands at the edge of a chasm, turned towards the viewer with her left arm reaching out. Behind her is a fir tree, while a large raven, representing death or hopelessness, is perched on the arms of the dead tree besides her. Around her are symbols of both the transience of life and death, and other physical objects that hint at physical and emotional isolation, including fallen trees, ravens and a winding snake. Describing the image, the 20th century art historian Albert Boime writes that the image presents "a wild, disheveled woman at the edge of a precipitous cliff, grasping a branch like an oar, while a raven claws and a serpent slithers around the other end of her stick." Friedrich later depicted ominous ravens in his c. 1822 painting, The Tree of Crows, where the birds are shown flying before a twisted oak tree and neolithic burial ground. References Sources Bartrum, Giulia; Koerner, Joseph Leo; Kuhlemann, Ute. Albrecht Dürer and His Legacy: The Graphic Work of a Renaissance Artist. British Museum, 2002. Börsch-Supan, Helmut et al. Baltic Light: Early Open-Air Painting in |
drops below the contour to reach Willingham by Stow, where it skirts the eastern fringe of the village, passing under two bridges, between which is another sewage treatment works on the eastern bank. To the south of the village, it is joined by a tributary, which drains an area to the west and flows under the B1241 Stow Road to join the Till. The river turns towards the south-east, passing under another minor road, and then turns to the south again, to Squire's Bridge on Ingham Road, Stow. Passing to the east of Sturton by Stow, it is crossed by a minor road at Thorpe Bridge, and by the A1500, once the course of a Roman road, at Tillbridge. It passes to the east of Bransby and is joined by a tributary on its eastern bank, before passing to the west of Broxholme. To the north-east of Saxilby, it is crossed by Broxholme Lane, and then passes through a flood defence sluice, which is used to cause local flooding of the washlands at times when Lincoln might otherwise be flooded. Beyond is a land drainage pumping station, and another bridge also carrying Broxholme Lane. The A57 road runs along the north bank of the Foss Dyke, and crosses the Till where it joins the Foss Dyke. The final section is normally known as the Foss Dyke, although it can be considered as a canalisation of the lower Till. The construction of the Foss Dyke is often considered to date from Roman times, although this is debated by scholars, but the present channel dates from the 18th century. The channel flows in a south-easterly direction, and there is an off-line marina at Burton Waters, built in connection with a housing development. The Lincoln to Gainsborough railway line runs along the southern bank, and both are crossed by the A46 road. An aqueduct carries the Foss Dyke over a drainage channel called the Main Drain, and the A57 road crosses again as the river enters Brayford Pool, a widening of the River Witham in the centre of Lincoln. History The River Till drains an area of Lincolnshire bounded by Gainsborough in the north-west and Lincoln in the south-east, where it joins the River Witham at Brayford Pool. The river is enclosed by earth embankments on both sides of the channel, to increase its capacity and to prevent flood water from inundating the |
The Castle of Montesperello (Monte Sperello; ), is a castle located 1 km southeast of the Comune of Magione, which is part of the Province of Perugia, in Umbria, Italy. The Castle has been built during the Carolingian Empire on top of Mountain Penna. In the same area, traces of an Etrurian settlement are to be found. History The dominant position of the Castle on top of the Mountain Penna provided good protection in the ancient times. The surrounding valley, with fertile grounds allowed a rich development of agricultural techniques. In more recent times, the Lake Trasimeno nearby, a major touristic site, has long provided attraction to this place. The Montesperello castle has always played a major role with numerous sieges, conquests and battles. Traces of the Etrurian settlement on the site date back to 210-214 BC. The several Etruscan cinerary urns were found in the walls of two houses located within the area of the Castle and along the hill in the 19th century. Among these there is one of particular interest, with a Medusa head carved. After the Roman conquest of the entire Italian peninsula, defensive needs declined. There was a rural settlement, with farms scattered near or in the middle of the fields. After the imperial period, barbarian invasions followed, and, above all, the conquest of Longobard, greatly revived defensive needs. Monte Sperello was part of the Byzantine line of defense against the Longobard attack, developed by the military administration of Perugia. In 608, Bernardo Montesperli founded here a villa, which at first did not have a boundary wall. It became the core of the castle in the future. The Montesperello family was one of the oldest in the city of Perugia, subjects of the family can be identified by documents of 12th century. With the creation of the Carolingian Empire, the area Monte Sperello became an imperial property. So in 997 it was donated by emperor Ottone III to the Benedictine monastery of (today the Capolona in the province of Arezzo). He made it by the request of Hugh the Great, abbot and margrave of Tuscany. In the 10th century the creation of the city commune began. The nobility consortium, as a rule, included feudalism, and not from the point of view of a violent but peaceful conquest. In 1282 the villa Montesperello had 30 inhabitants, and 24 in 1410. In 1380 the castle was destroyed, |
selection of varied palos, often with traditional or popular lyrics, in which the artist shows his or her aptitude and background." In this manner, the singer encompasses several forms of the genre, including alegrías, tangos, fandangos, fandanguillos, seguidillas, tarantas, malagueñas and "more specific" styles like guajira, saeta and milonga. Rosalía felt that in the album "the cantes become songs", and as such did not list the palos titles in the track listing, explaining that: "It's a way of saying that I am based on melodies and lyrics from cantes, but we turn it into something else. Those who know something about flamenco will be able to identify them, because we are influenced by that, but we do our own thing." It includes a cover of Enrique Morente's Aunque era de noche of Saint John of the Cross's 16th-century poem as well as a cover of La Hija de Juan Simón (1934). Rosalía told Ecleen Luzmila Caraballo of Jezebel in 2018: "I feel like with Los Ángeles, I wanted to establish my musical legacy... and honor the classic sound of flamenco in the most traditional sense, respecting them to the maximum, with a pop and experimental structure, but with very basic instrumentation and a minimalist sound—just guitar and voice." Release and promotion Los Ángeles was released on 20 February 2017 on Universal Music Spain. It was released at digital audio stores and streaming platforms, as well as a CD and double LP record. "Catalina" was released as the album's lead single on 17 October 2016 and presented by Rosalía in Radio 3, after having shared its B side "Que se muere, que se muere" online a few weeks before. Its music video was directed by Txema Yeste and has been described as "a visual translation of the power of this song". An electronic press kit (EPK) featuring English subtitles was published in Rosalía's YouTube channel on 21 April 2017. The video was produced by Yverz and directed by Bàrbara Farré, with photography by Lucas Casanovas and animation by Pepe Gay. Spanish filmmaking collective Manson directed the music video for the second single "De plata", which features the singer performing the track as she walks and dances in the streets of Los Angeles, California. It was published in Rosalía's YouTube channel on 26 May 2017. Luis Troquel of Rockdelux felt that the clip showed a "facet of Rosalía that was unknown to |
Babul Ka Angna () is a Pakistani television soap opera which aired on Geo Entertainment. First episode was aired on 13 January 2016. Soap aired throughout weekdays with half an hour episode. Drama based upon social issues which are increasing effectively in our society. Cast Maham Amir as Mehwish Saleem Sheikh Ghazala Butt as Rubina Mohsin Gillani Hiba Aziz Sumbul Ansari Anas Yasin Shan Baig Farzana Thaeem Sophia Ahmed Ikram Abbasi Aruba Mirza Sajid Shah Sami Sani Majida Hameed Saba Khan Nadia Kanwal Ahsan Shah Humera Arif Huma Rehan Asiya Naz References 2016 Pakistani television series debuts Pakistani television series Pakistani drama television series Geo TV original programming Urdu-language television shows |
Mir Ghulam Ali Talpur is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan since August 2018. Political career He was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan from Constituency NA-229 (Badin-I) as a candidate of Pakistan Peoples Party in 2018 Pakistani general election. References Living people Pakistani MNAs 2018–2023 Pakistan People's Party MNAs Year of birth missing (living people) |
Snagtooth Ridge is a jagged granitic ridge located in Okanogan County of Washington state. It is part of the Methow Mountains which is a sub-range of the North Cascades. Snagtooth Ridge is situated between Silver Star Mountain and Kangaroo Ridge on land administered by the Okanogan–Wenatchee National Forest. Big Snagtooth, at 8,330 feet elevation, is the highest point on Snagtooth Ridge. Other named spires include Willow Tooth, Cedar Tooth, Decayed Tooth, Red Tooth, Dog Tooth, Grey Tooth, Split Tooth, Cleft Tooth, Silver Tooth, and Last Tooth. The first ascent of Big Snagtooth was made September 29, 1946, by Fred Beckey, Jerry O'Neil, and Charles Welsh. Precipitation runoff from the ridge drains into tributaries of the Methow River. Climate Weather fronts originating in the Pacific Ocean travel northeast toward the Cascade Mountains. As fronts approach the North Cascades, they are forced upward by the peaks of the Cascade Range, causing them to drop their moisture in the form of rain or snowfall onto the Cascades (Orographic lift). As a result, the west side of the North Cascades experiences high precipitation, especially during the winter months in the form of snowfall. During winter months, weather is usually cloudy, but, due to high pressure systems over the Pacific Ocean that intensify during summer months, there is often little or no cloud cover during the summer. Because of maritime influence, snow tends to be wet and heavy, resulting in high avalanche danger. Geology The North Cascades features some of the most rugged topography in the Cascade Range with craggy peaks, ridges, and deep glacial valleys. Geological events occurring many years ago created the diverse topography and drastic elevation changes over the Cascade Range leading to the various climate differences. These climate differences lead to vegetation variety defining the ecoregions in this area. The history of the formation of the Cascade Mountains dates back millions of years ago to the late Eocene Epoch. With the North American Plate overriding the Pacific Plate, episodes of volcanic igneous activity persisted. In addition, small fragments of the oceanic and continental lithosphere called terranes created the North Cascades about 50 million years ago. During the Pleistocene period dating back over two million years ago, glaciation advancing and retreating repeatedly scoured the landscape leaving deposits of rock debris. The “U”-shaped cross section of the river valleys are a result of recent glaciation. Uplift and faulting in combination with glaciation have |
New Life church () is an Evangelical Pentecostal multi-site megachurch based in Longueuil, Quebec, Canada, affiliated with Association chrétienne pour la Francophonie. The senior pastor is Claude Houde. History The church was founded in 1993 in Longueuil, Quebec, starting with 50 members and pastored by Claude Houde. In 1998, following a massive ice storm causing severe cold and power cuts for more than a month, the church housed 500 homeless people for three weeks. It is recognized by the mayor as a public utility. In 2001, it inaugurated its current building including a 2,400-seat auditorium, the largest in Canada's Francophonie. In 2003, the church left the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada. In 2005, it founded the Institute of Theology for the Francophonie, near the premises of Nouvelle vie. In 2006, the church began to draw over 3,000 people per week. In 2007, the church founded the Association chrétienne pour la Francophonie (Christian Association for the Francophonie), a network of Pentecostal churches, member of World Assemblies of God Fellowship. In 2010, Impact, a music group, was formed in the youth department of the church. The group has performed various tours in Europe. In 2011, Nouvelle Vie had 4,000 members. In 2022, it had opened 6 campuses in different cities. Humanitarian programs The church founded Action Nouvelle Vie in 1993, a humanitarian organization who offers regular food aid, clothing, education and reintegration assistance is available.the poor in 1993. The organization has its own board of directors and is therefore an independent body of the church. In 2015, the 2159, a youth center that aims to develop independence and prevent homelessness and delinquency, is open. Iglesia Nueva vida The New Life Church also has a Spanish-speaking group, Iglesia Nueva vida, which offers worship services in Spanish. See also List of the largest evangelical churches List of the largest evangelical church auditoriums Worship service (evangelicalism) Bibliography Sébastien Fath, Dieu XXL, la révolution des mégachurches, Éditions Autrement, France, 2008, p. 110, 132, 141–143, 171 Philippe Le Page, Megachurch pentecôtiste en contexte québécois : la religion vécue à l'Église Nouvelle Vie de Longueuil, Master's thesis in religious studies, UQAM, 31, Canada, 2015 References External links Official Website Official Website of Iglesia Nueva vida Evangelical megachurches in Canada Churches in Quebec Pentecostal churches in Canada 1993 establishments in Quebec Churches completed in 2001 Buildings and structures in Longueuil Pentecostal multisite churches Assemblies of God churches |
high initially (e.g., around 10:1 at peak) but becomes smaller as estradiol levels decline. The distribution half-life of intravenous estradiol is about 6 minutes and the terminal half-life of intravenous estradiol is about 0.5 to 2 hours. The peak estradiol levels are far higher and the duration far shorter when estradiol is given by intravenous injection than when estradiol esters are administered by intramuscular or subcutaneous injection. The administration of estradiol valerate by intravenous injection has been studied as well. It has been found to be very rapidly cleaved into estradiol in the blood. The metabolism of estradiol valerate does not differ with intravenous versus intramuscular injection. While estradiol itself has not been used clinically by intravenous injection, certain estrogen preparations such as conjugated estrogens and estramustine phosphate are available in formulations indicated for intravenous injection. Both of these medications act in part as prodrugs of estradiol. The intravenous formulation of conjugated estrogens is available at a dose of 25 mg per injection and is used in the treatment of abnormal uterine bleeding due to its ability to rapidly and temporarily enhance coagulation. It has also been used off-label to treat severe bleeding after hysteroscopic metroplasty and as an emergency contraceptive. The formulation is given in a single injection but can be repeated after 6 to 12 hours if necessary. Intravenous estramustine phosphate has a relatively long duration and, like oral estramustine phosphate, is used in the treatment of prostate cancer. Estramustine phosphate was initially introduced as an intravenous formulation and was only later introduced as an oral medication. Following introduction of the more convenient oral formulation, intravenous estramustine phosphate has largely been abandoned. The administration of large doses of estrogens intravenously has been studied. General Absorption Estradiol is well-absorbed regardless of route of administration. However, the bioavailability of estradiol differs substantially with different routes of administration. Oral estradiol has an average bioavailability of around 5%, requiring relatively high dosages of estradiol for effects. Estradiol administered in the form of an ester by intramuscular or subcutaneous injection has complete bioavailability. Distribution Estradiol is rapidly distributed throughout the body, with a distribution phase of about 6 minutes following intravenous injection. Estradiol is taken up into cells via passive diffusion due to its lipophilicity. Due to binding to the ERs, estradiol is preferentially concentrated in tissues with the highest ER content. In animals, these tissues have included the uterus, vagina, mammary glands, |
Liang Xueqing (梁雪清), also known as Liang Hsüch-ch'ng, was the sister of three well-known Chinese painters and illustrators from the 1930s and 40s. She was an editor for the Wen Hwa (文华) or Culture Arts Review pictorial in the 1930s and was a rarity for promoting female painters in that era. She herself was a painter, from Guangdong, who gained some recognition in 1926, when her self-portrait was published on the front page of the Young Companion, issue 5, a prominent news and cultural pictorial, based in Shanghai and read internationally. She was the first painter on a Liangyou cover as well as the first female painter to be in the pictorial at all, making issue 2. She also had a painting published in issue 3, called Children's Music (儿乐). She painted with oil paints. and with watercolors. She was the author of the 1934 book 东北巨变血泪大画史 作者 (The picture history of the great changes of the Northeast and the tears), about the war resisting the Japanese. Liang came from a family of artists. Three brothers, as well as three nieces were all were into art. In 1924, her brothers Liang Dingming (梁鼎铭), Liang Youming (梁又铭), and Liang Zhongming (梁中铭), were active members of the painting circles in Shanghai and founded the Tianhua Art Association (天化艺术会), of which she too was a member. She may have joined her brothers in founding the association. Liangyou introduced the group in its pages, one of the first art groups to receive such attention. The group also participated in the Shanghai Union Art Exhibition in 1927, exhibiting artwork. Liang Xueqing had a professional life, working in the advertising department "of a major company," and he also worked with her brother Dingming who edited the Cultural Pictorial with her. Dingming would become well known for his military art, in particular the mural paintings Huizhou Campaign, (about a battle in 1925, part of the founding of the Republic of China (1912–1949)) which resides in the Taipei Museum of History in Taiwan. Xueqing herself also did military paintings, including "One Day After One Two Eight Eight", which showed the results of Japanese bombing Shanghai. Among her non-military named-paintings are "Lunch" and "Red Snow White", which the Soka Art Center said "pay attention to the meaning of brushwork texture." The center further characterized her work as "smart and free" with "pursuit of a charm in the meaning," using |
of the fifteenth century." Engagement with politics Habjanović Đurović was identified in a 1997 Washington Post article as a close friend of Mirjana Marković, the wife of Slobodan Milošević. In 1994, she wrote an article in the Serbian media describing the initial meeting of Milošević and Marković at high school in Požarevac, as Marković was reading Sophocles's Antigone. In Habjanović Đurović's account, Marković's sorrow from the early death of her mother attracted her to Milošević, as he "felt the need to relieve her pain, to protect and cherish her." A May 1999 New York Times article, which described Habjanović Đurović as Marković's "hagiographer," also cited her as having written that Marković "always openly and boldly claimed that [Milošević] would have been quite different without her, worse in every respect, and that everything good about him came from her and that everything that is not good is where her influence didn't reach." In February 2008, shortly after the government of Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence, she wrote an article for the paper Večernje novosti with the title, "Kosovo's non-oblivion: Occupation will pass." This work included the statement, "[N]o official of the state of Serbia must ever accept the secession of part of our country. Or succumb to delusions based on promises. Or get scared by threats. Each and every one of us must keep awareness inside us and pass it onto our descendants - that Kosovo-Metohija is a Serb land and that this which has happened is occupation that will end, just like any other occupation." Habjanović Đurović was herself elected to the National Assembly of Serbia in the 2016 parliamentary election; she was included in the ninth position on the Serbian Progressive Party's Aleksandar Vučić — Future We Believe In electoral list as a non-partisan candidate and was awarded a mandate when the seat won a majority victory with 131 out of 250 seats. She declined her mandate, saying that she was grateful to have contributed to Vučić's victory but wanted to devote her full attentions to writing. The website of the National Assembly considers her to have served as a deputy on 3 June 2016, after the new assembly met and before her resignation took effect. Published works Her novels include: Јавна птица (Public Bird) (1988) Ана Марија ме није волела (Ana Maria Did Not Love Me) (1991) Ива (Iva) (1994) Женски родослов (Feminine Genealogy) (1996) Пауново перо (The |
Brad Billsborough (4 August 1998) is a British rugby league footballer who plays as a for the North Wales Crusaders in Betfred League 1. He also represents Germany internationally. He has previously played for Whitehaven and the Swinton Lions in the Betfred Championship after coming through the St Helens academy team, He had a spell in Australia in 2019 season winning the group 2 premiership with Grafton Ghost. Billsboroughs' junior clubs were Newton Storm & Thatto Heath Crusaders. He was selected to play for Germany in the 2021 World Cup qualifiers; he qualifies via his mother who was born in Germany. In 2018, Billsborough became Germany’s youngest ever captain References External links 1998 births Living people English rugby league players Germany national rugby league team captains Germany national rugby league team players North Wales Crusaders players Rugby league halfbacks Rugby league players from Wigan Swinton Lions players Whitehaven R.L.F.C. players |
John Rathinam was the founder of Dravida Pandian magazine together with Iyothee Thass in 1885, focusing on the sufferings of the untouchables in Madras. An "untouchable covert", throughout the 1880s he was involved in the promotion of education for "the depressed classes" within Madras. Before founding the magazine, he founded an association for the promotion of welfare among them called Dravida Kazhgam. References Writers from Chennai Indian publishers (people) Year of death missing Year of birth missing Dalit writers |
Robert Huber (10 November 1906 – 18 August 1942) was a German rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1928 Summer Olympics. He was killed in action during World War II. References External links 1906 births 1942 deaths German male rowers Olympic rowers of Germany Rowers at the 1928 Summer Olympics Sportspeople from Offenbach am Main German military personnel killed in World War II Missing in action of World War II 20th-century German people |
Franz Viehböck (born 15 October 1938) is a retired Austrian football defender who played for Austria. He also played for SVS Linz and Linzer ASK. External links 1938 births Austrian footballers Austria international footballers Association football defenders LASK players LASK managers Living people Austrian football managers |
positive and uplifting experience". Writing for NME, Sophie Williams praised the show and called it as a "communal celebration of what it truly means to be young, queer and free." Set list This set list is from the concert on 28 February 2019 in London, England. It is not intended to represent all tour dates. "Seventeen" "Bloom" "Plum" "Heaven" "Fools" "Lucky Strike" "Wild" "I'm So Tired..." "Postcard" "The Good Side" "What a Heavenly Way to Die" "Bite" "1999" "Dance to This" "Animal" Encore "Youth" "My My My!" Notes ''1999'' was added to the setlist starting in New York City. Tour dates Cancelled shows Notes References Bloom Bloom Bloom |
and magazines in the countries covered, such as Japan Today, Télérama, Dutch Metro, RTL, Nezavisne Novine, Life in Norway, Lovin Malta, and Zoznam. It also receives endorsements from educators and travel writers. The channel has appeared on several lists of recommended educational YouTube channels, including one by the Van Andel Institute. The few criticisms are usually to do with tone and pronunciation, particularly in earlier episodes. The top 10 country episodes with the most views as of November 2022 are Germany at 7.992 million views, followed by Indonesia (6.854 million), Japan (6.402 million), China (5.784 million), North Korea (5.664 million), Israel (5.611 million), India (5.121 million), Denmark (4.671 million), Russia (4.532 million), and Philippines (4.119 million). References External links Official website 2014 web series debuts 2010s YouTube series 2020s YouTube series Documentary web series Education-related YouTube channels American non-fiction web series Works about geography YouTube channels launched in 2014 YouTube original programming |
brilliant strike by Edmilson Marques Pardal and then against Al-Wahdat away at the Prince Mohammad Stadium, Zarqa by 2-0 with strikes from Alvito D'Cunha and Ikechukwu Gift Ibe, thus becoming the first Indian club to win at away against a West Asian team. East Bengal FC however, could not win any more matches in the group stage as they finished third with 2 wins and a draw and were eliminated on goal difference. Group stage 2010 AFC Cup East Bengal FC qualified for the 2010 AFC Cup after winning the 2009–10 Federation Cup in Guwahati. They were placed in Group D alongside Al-Ittihad of Syria, Al-Nejmeh of Lebanon and Al-Qadsia of Kuwait. East Bengal FC however, could not win any of the matches in the group stage as they finished last without any points and were eliminated. Group stage 2011 AFC Cup East Bengal qualified for the 2011 AFC Cup after winning the 2010 Federation Cup. They were placed in Group H alongside Chonburi of Thailand, Persipura Jayapura of Indonesia and South China of Hong Kong. In the opening match of the group, East Bengal faced Chonburi at home and in a thriller contest managed to secure a 4–4 draw after Tolgay Ozbey scored twice early to put East Bengal ahead only to concede four goals in succession and finally made a comeback with goals from Baljit Sahni and Ravinder Singh to equalise the match and share points. East Bengal lost the second match 4–1 to Persipura Jayapura away at Jakarta. Tolgay scored the only goal for the team. East Bengal lost again in the third match 1–0 against South China away at Hong Kong. In the fourth match, East Bengal managed a 3–3 draw against South China at the Barabati Stadium, courtesy of a last-minute equaliser from Tolgay to share points from the game. East Bengal lost 4–0 against Chonburi in the penultimate game of the group stage away at Chonburi. In the last match of the group stage, East Bengal drew 1–1 against Persipura Jayapura at home to end their campaign with three home draws and three away defeats as they finished at the bottom of the group with three points. Group stage 2012 AFC Cup East Bengal qualified for the 2012 AFC Cup after finishing runner-up of the 2010–11 I-League, as Salgaocar had won both the I-League and Federation Cup. This was their sixth and third successive |
The Women's 200 metre individual medley competition of the 2018 European Aquatics Championships was held on 7 and 8 August 2018. Records Prior to the competition, the existing world and championship records were as follows. Results Heats The heats were started on 7 August at 09:25. Semifinals The semifinals were started on 7 August at 17:39. Semifinal 1 Semifinal 2 Final The final was started on 8 August at 17:39. References Women's 200 metre individual medley |
throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Their appearance and contribution to their settings is significant as a reminder of the area's long use for market gardening. The landscapes are strongly patterned, aesthetically pleasing and provide a transition between urban development and the renaturalised areas of the Botany lowlands. The Toomevara Lane Market Gardens are of State significance as one of only five surviving market gardens in the Sydney metropolitan region in largely their original form and still employing traditional cultivation practices. The site is of significance for its association with the Chinese, German, Irish and Cornish communities and for its demonstration of a continuing pattern of land usage since the mid-19th century market gardener's cottages in the Sydney metropolitan region and one of only four such cottages still attached to operating market gardens. The property is of State significance for its continuous use as a market garden since the land was first alienated for that purpose in the 1860s. It retains a strongly functional landscape reflecting both the long history of market gardening and operation that is typical of modern farming methods. The current use of the place is consistent with its significance and contributing to the continuity of use of the property. The scale of the property, the working largely by hand, the "making do" and recycling of fabric and general air of under-resourced functionality are essential aspects of the property's significance. Modern intrusions, notably motor cars and electricity, are acceptable changes that have been adopted as opportunity has risen. The Toomevara Lane Market Garden has some local significance for its associations, notably Peter Herrmann and his family, who were prominent market gardeners in Sydney in the mid to late 19th century and amongst the first German immigrants to take up market gardening of Sydney Peter Henry Wright, who operated the market garden from 1875 to 1890, one of the longest single ownership tenures in market gardening at the time. James O'Meara and the O'Meara family who owned the site from 1899 to 1960, the longest period of ownership in the site's history John Wilson (the original grantee) and John Hart, his solicitor, who started the market garden in 1866. Bordering wetland is of local significance as fish and bird breeding habitat. Immediate surrounding development and parkland diminishes the aesthetic and evocative landscape character that the other properties retain. The neighbouring land uses provide management challenges through trespass and |
Raskot () is an urban municipality located in Kalikot District of Karnali Province of Nepal. The total area of the municipality is and the total population of the municipality as of 2011 Nepal census is 16,272 individuals. The municipality is divided into total 9 wards. The municipality was established on 10 March 2017, when Government of Nepal restricted all old administrative structure and announced 744 local level units as per the new constitution of Nepal 2015. Sipkhana, Siuna and Phukot Village development committees were Incorporated to form this new municipality. The headquarters of the municipality is situated at Siuna. References External links http://www.raskotmun.gov.np/ https://www.citypopulation.de/php/nepal-mun-admin.php?adm2id=6407 Populated places in Kalikot District Municipalities in Karnali Province Nepal municipalities established in 2017 |
Gérard De Gezelle (born 1903, date of death unknown) was a Belgian rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1924 Summer Olympics. References External links 1903 births Year of death missing Belgian male rowers Olympic rowers of Belgium Rowers at the 1924 Summer Olympics Place of birth missing |
carpark entered off Bridge Road. An auditorium is located at the far-northern end of the site, set low and away from the house. Modifications and dates Constructed during the interwar period, the original verandah was replaced by later (probably inter-war period) two storey verandah to the front and side (south) elevations with brickwork columns, first floor balustrade and paired "stump" columns. Various additions including single storey block of rendered masonry and a recent two-storey wing of face brickwork with metal framed sliding windows. 1982major restoration works including installation of balustrades and railings on staircase, replacing all original timber window sash cords, glass replacement in front door entry replaced with leadlight, sandstone sills replaced in new brick walls on old building, marble fireplaces restored, painting, landscaping. 1982new picket fence on Bridge Rd. & Great Western Highway, replacing 1920s two-rail Arris fence. 1990build 4 new classrooms west of house. 2003dead large Eucalyptus sp. removed from northern side of house. 2005slate roof conservation work funded by HO. Heritage listing As at 26 August 2008, Essington has historic significance primarily through its association with the Fullagers who were one of the prominent families in the early settlement of Holroyd. The site comprises part of the former government domain purchased by William Fullager c .1860 and the residence built by another Family member Willard John Fullager sometime later. The residence and grounds also provide evidence of the presence and character of the relatively substantial gentlemen's residences erected in the Holroyd area during the 19th and early 20th Century period though its aesthetic significance as a representative example of a particular period and style has been somewhat compromised by later additions and alterations. Essington was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999. See also Australian residential architectural styles List of schools in New South Wales References Bibliography Attribution External links New South Wales State Heritage Register Cumberland Council, New South Wales Houses in Sydney Farms in New South Wales Private primary schools in Sydney Articles incorporating text from the New South Wales State Heritage Register 1860 establishments in Australia Houses completed in 1860 Nondenominational Christian schools in Sydney Educational institutions established in 1983 |
Kim Choon-ho (born 2 September 1960) is a former professional tennis player from South Korea. Biography Kim featured in eight Davis Cup ties for South Korea, including a World Group playoff against Italy in 1981, registering a five-set win over Corrado Barazzutti. At the 1982 Asian Games he won three medals, a gold in both the men's and mixed doubles, as well as a silver in the singles. He is a former non-playing captain of the South Korea Davis Cup team. See also List of South Korea Davis Cup team representatives References External links 1960 births Living people South Korean male tennis players Tennis coaches Tennis players at the 1982 Asian Games Medalists at the 1982 Asian Games Asian Games medalists in tennis Asian Games gold medalists for South Korea Asian Games silver medalists for South Korea People from Namwon Sportspeople from North Jeolla Province 20th-century South Korean people 21st-century South Korean people |
its surrounding landscape have considerable esteem at both a local and a state level. Contemporary interest in the remnant estate, including the natural vegetation on Mount Olympus clearly demonstrates the value attached to the gardens and grounds as an integral component of Tempe House. Tempe Estate has been the subject of several major landscape paintings since the 1830s. That the view of Tempe that has been recorded by artists throughout the last two centuries remains largely intact is of significance to the community familiar with the paintings as well as the wider community. The place has potential to yield information that will contribute to an understanding of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales. The site offers a significant opportunity to investigate and study a rare and early example of colonial architecture and landscape. That Tempe Estate has been the subject of several major landscape paintings since the 1830s and that those views largely remain today is of significance for providing a rare opportunity to view the preferred subject matter of 19th century Australian picturesque landscape paintings. The remaining features of the garden and grounds of Tempe have the potential to reveal the early cultural and natural landscape of the place. The archaeological remains on the site have the potential to provide evidence associated with not just Spark and his family but also with the large number of servants and convict staff used to establish and maintain the estate. The analysis and interpretation of the archaeological remains from this site should provide evidence of the material culture of the various occupants of the house as well as contributing to the understanding of the design and development of gardens in colonial Sydney. The archaeological structures and remains on the site would be able to contribute knowledge into several research questions: The material culture of Tempe House and grounds are likely to contain artefacts and structures whose analysis can provide us with socio-economic information about elite living conditions, including patterns of consumption. It will also inform us about working, accommodation and living conditions for convicts on colonial properties. The analysis of the underfloor deposits should be able to add to our knowledge about identification of socio-economic status, gender relations and other areas of substantive archaeological research. Location of structural remains of outbuildings associated with Tempe House will add to and improve our understanding of the layout of early colonial estates. |
Tongo Lake is a fresh water lake on the Paroo River, north of Wilcannia, New South Wales, in the far west of the state. Setting The lake is between Paroo-Darling National Park and Nocoleche Nature Reserve This area has a Köppen climate classification of BSh (Hot semi-desert) and is considered to be desert. This stretch of the Paroo River valley represents an oasis in the otherwise arid and featureless landscape of the northwest New South Wales. The area has been declared an important Ramsar Site. It covers an area of around 500 hectares. Tongo Lake is located at an altitude of 84 meters. References Lakes of New South Wales Ramsar sites in Australia |
Varvara Lepchenko was the defending champion, having won the previous event in 2008, but decided not to participate this year. Gail Brodsky won the title, defeating fellow qualifier Maegan Manasse in the final, 4–6, 6–1, 6–0. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main Draw Braidy Industries Women's Tennis Classic - Singles |
Johanne Agnete Theresia Pedersen-Dan née Betzonich (1860–1934) was a Danish actress, singer and sculptor. After performing in plays and operettas in Copenhagen until 1888, she devoted the rest of her life to sculpture, frequently exhibiting her work at Charlottenborg. Johanne Pedersen-Dan and her husband Hans Peder Pedersen-Dan lived and worked in Hvidovre Rytterskole in Hvidovre from 1912 to 1936. Early life Born in Copenhagen on 13 May 1860, Johanne Agnete Theresia Betzonich was the daughter of the writer Georg Betzonich (1829–1901) and Christiansine Nicoline Møller (1833–1923). In 1882, Acting career Pedersen-Dan embarked on her career as an actress, encouraged by her cousin, the successful actress Elga Sinding. She débuted in 1876 at Folketeatret, as the baroness in P. Rawsky's Familien Danielsen. She went on to perform in plays and operettas, including Offenbach's La Vie parisienne. She also performed at the Casino Theatre and at the Dagmar Theatre. Sculpture She began to study sculpture with Stephan Sinding, her cousin's husband, and debuted at the Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition in 1890 with the glister sculpture of a female snake charmer. She married the sculptor Hans Peder Pedersen-Dan in 1892. She was represented on the 1895 Copenhagen Women's Exhibition as well as on exhibitions in Munich in 1892, 1909 and 1913 and at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. She received the Neuhausen Prize in 1903 for the statuette Little Mother. In 1906 she won an international competition for an emblem advocating women's right to vote. The emblem was released in both Europe and the United States. Pedersen-Dan and her husband went on several story trips abroad, especially to Paris and Italy but also to North Africa in 1904. The couple lived and worked in the former cavalry school in Hvidovre from 1912 to 1936. She was a board member of the Danish Sculptors Society. Personal life and legacy Johanne and Hans Peder Pedersen-Dan adopted a girl, Rigmor.Johanne Pedersen-Dan died on 21 May 1934. She is buried at Hvidovre Cemetery. A plaque on one of the gables of Hvidovre Rytterskole commemorates that Johanne Pedersen-Dan and her husband lived and worked in the building from 1912 to 1936. List of works Snake charmer (plaster, 1890) By the Stream (plaster, 1891) A Forest Nymph (plaster, 1892) After the Storm (plaster, 1894) Woman Sleepwalker (1902) Little Mother (1903) Santa (plaster, 1905) Forest Idyll (bronze, 1898) On the Slave Market (1006) References External links Johanne Pedersen-Dan |
producers |
Kyle Wood may refer to: Kyle Wood (rugby league) (born 1989), rugby league footballer Kyle Wood (ice hockey) (born 1996), Canadian ice hockey defenceman |
Wild Bird () is a 1943 German romance film directed by Johannes Meyer and starring Leny Marenbach, Volker von Collande and Werner Hinz. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Gustav A. Knauer and Arthur Schwarz. Filming took place in Berlin and the Tyrol. Cast Leny Marenbach as Vika von Demnitz Volker von Collande as Wolff Werner Hinz as Professor Lossen Käthe Haack as Tante Argate Herbert Hübner as Herr von Demnitz Roma Bahn as Britta von Dermnitz Reinhold Pasch as Dr. Schütte Heinrich Marlow as Präsident Weichbrodt Ellen Hille as Resi Beppo Brem as Franzl Josef Eichheim as Joseph Vera Complojer as Josefa Ernst Waldow as Reisender Hertha von Walther as Bergsteigerin Hanns Waschatko as Hotelportier Greta Schröder as Jutta Lossen References Bibliography Rentschler, Eric. The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi Cinema and Its Afterlife. Harvard University Press, 1996. External links 1943 films Films of Nazi Germany German romance films 1940s romance films 1940s German-language films Films directed by Johannes Meyer German black-and-white films 1940s German films |
Abdul Jabbar Khan is a Pakistani Politician who has been elected as Nazim of Taluka Latifabad in 2002, in 2008 he was appointed as Advisor to CM Sindh for Cooperative Department and Now a member of the Provincial Assembly of Sindh since August 2018. Political career He was elected to the Nazim of Taluka Latifabad in 2002. He was Participated in General Election of 2008 and Appointed as Advisor to CM Sindh and Minister for Cooperative Department. He was again participated in General Election 2013 from PS-49 Hyderabad but unsuccessful. In 2018 He was elected member of Provincial Assembly of Sindh on Pakistan Peoples Party Platform from Constituency PS-64 (Hyderabad-III) in 2018 Pakistani general election. References Living people Pakistan People's Party MPAs (Sindh) Year of birth missing (living people) |
Sukhia Tuimalealiifano Go is a Fijian businesswoman. She holds a degree in management and economics from the University of the South Pacific, and in 2015 she completed a post graduate qualification in human resources management. Life In 2012, Go decided to open a business with her mother. Together they founded The Gift Hut, an online business which produces and sells elei, a Samoan form of woodblock printing. In 2014 the company won the Fiji Development Bank's Small Business Award in the Wholesale & Retail category. In 2015, Go won the Aspiring Entrepreneur of the Year Award at the Women in Business Awards. References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) University of the South Pacific alumni Fijian businesspeople |
The Governor, Lord Jersey was welcomed to Berry at the Courthouse before proceeding to the showground for the official 1893 Agricultural Society Show opening ceremony. In 1894 the Courthouse Gardens were further developed with 54 trees (unspecified species) and 48 shrubs, issued by the Royal Botanical Gardens to be planted in the Berry Courthouse grounds in August 1894. Apparently the area around the Courthouse was fenced sometime after March 1896. A new judges' bench and canopy were installed . The Court of Petty Sessions in Berry was abolished on 30 July 1988. The back rooms of the courthouse were then used as a police station until 1994. On 24 September 1994 Elders Real Estate at Berry auctioned the courthouse on behalf of the Department of Courts Administration (Justice Department). Prior to the auction the Department of Justice removed most of the internal moveable cedar fittings, including the jury box, seating and railings. Anthony A. Graham purchased the courthouse on 24 February 1995. Sometime between February 1995 and July 1999 some of the remaining cedar fittings were removed from the interior of the courthouse to give more access to floor space. The courthouse was purchased by the Shoalhaven City Council four years later on 14 July 1999. The purchase of the property by the council was strongly influenced by an extensive community consultation program and lobbying by local Berry residents. The Berry Courthouse Conservation Committee Inc was formed after the purchase of the property, and leases the property from Shoalhaven City Council. The courthouse is now used as a venue for weddings and other functions. Description The courthouse is positioned in the centre of its block of land, isolated from surrounding buildings. It is well set back in its landscaped surrounds and is a simple, representative courthouse building constructed of local materials, rendered inside and out with fine cedar fittings in the Victorian Classical Academic style. Four classical columns of modified Doric form (without entasis) support the portico, which features a wrought iron railing of unusual design. The Royal Coat of Arms sits inside the expression of the pediment above three small rectangular clerestory windows which reflect the division of the facade into three bays. Simple overhung sash windows light the interior; four on either side and one on either side of the main entrance. A simple moulded stringcourse links the line of the portico/porch to the side walls and minor |
Agha Hassan Baloch is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan since August 2018. Political career He was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan from Constituency NA-266 (Quetta-III) as a candidate of Balochistan National Party (Mengal) in 2018 Pakistani general election. now he is Federal Minister for Ministry of Science & Technology. He has a Masters in Political Science with Law Graduate and is a practicing lawyer. References Living people Pakistani MNAs 2018–2023 Balochistan National Party (Mengal) MNAs Year of birth missing (living people) |
reviewer at the Indiepoprock website wrote that their performance at Trix in Antwerp on October 23 was charming. In St. Paul on October 29, Chris Riemenschneider of Star Tribune commented that the Breeders' performance "confirmed they’re still very much a contender"; City Pages Erik Thompson called their performance "endearingly shambolic" but stated it would have sounded better at a smaller venue rather than in a "slowly filling arena". The Vinyl District's Brigit Gallagher reported looking forward to the Breeders' upcoming 2018 album based on the "stellar" new songs the group performed at United Center in Chicago. Regarding this same show, Andy Argyrakis of National Rock Review said that the band "never once came across dated throughout 40 meaningful minutes". Dates Footnotes References 2017 concert tours 2017 in American music Concert tours of Europe Concert tours of the United States November 2017 events in the United States October 2017 events in Europe October 2017 events in the United States Tour 2017 |
Mississippi Highway 504 (MS 504) is a state highway in central Mississippi. The route starts at MS 15 south of Newton and travels southeastward. The road turns east at a county road near Garlandville and travels to its eastern terminus at MS 503 in the unincorporated area of Hero. The route was designated around 1956, from MS 15 to MS 503, and has not changed significantly since. Route description The route is located in southern Newton and northern Jasper counties. In 2017, the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT) calculated as many as 670 vehicles traveling on MS 504 east of County Road 5044 (CO 5044), and as few as 650 vehicles traveling southeast of Boutwell Road. This is expressed in terms of annual average daily traffic (AADT), a measure of traffic volume for any average day of the year. MS 504 is legally defined in Mississippi Code § 65-3-3, and all of it is maintained by the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT), as part of the Mississippi State Highway System. MS 504 starts at the three-way junction with MS 15 in Newton County south of the city of Newton. The route begins travelling southeastward, intersecting Boutwell Road, and entering an area of farmland. The road enters a forested area at Nicholson Road and enters Jasper County past the intersection. The road continues southward until it reaches a T-intersection with County Road 24 (CO 24) near Garlandville. MS 504 turns east and begins travelling towards the Jasper–Newton county line. At CO 5044, the route begins travelling southeastward towards its eastern terminus at MS 503 in Hero. The road continues as CO 24, which continues to MS 513. History Around 1956, MS 504 was designated along a paved road from MS 15 to MS 503. Since then, the route has not changed significantly since. In 1995, a project to seal MS 504's pavement from MS 15 to the Newton–Jasper county line began. Major intersections References 504 Transportation in Newton County, Mississippi Transportation in Jasper County, Mississippi |
Tallandra is a civil parish of Killara County, located in Central Darling Shire at Latitude -31°24′11″S and Longitude 143°40′25″E. Tallandra Parish is on the Darling River between Wilcannia and Tilpa, New South Wales. The parish has a Köppen climate classification of BSh (Hot semi-desert). The Parish is mainly an agricultural area, with sheep grazing the primary activity, and some pockets of irrigated land along the river. Tourism, Fishing and camping are popular along the river. including farmstay programs on local stations, is the other major local industry. Fishing and camping are popular along the river. References Localities in New South Wales |
Patrice Alègre (born 20 June 1968) is a French serial killer who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2002 with a minimum term of 22 years for five murders, an attempted murder, and six rapes. He, subsequently, was acquitted of four additional murder charges on 3 July 2008. The investigation into the Alègre case started in May 2003, after the gendarmes of the Homicide Cell 31 unit (the police officials were ordered to investigate for possible victims of Alègre from 2000 to 2003 by Michel Roussel) reopened several cold cases. Alègre and several members of the red light community claimed to have been part of a sex trafficking network and that the murders happened in connection with BDSM sex. Biography Patrice Alègre, born 20 June 1968, in Toulouse, was the unwanted child of an often-described violent police officer and a teenage hairdresser who often cheated on her husband, sometimes in front of Alègre. Alègre grew up in Saint-Geniès-Bellevue and was expelled from three secondary schools before he settled on the field of general mechanics. He lived with his grandmother for 14 years in the Izards district of Toulouse. While he lived with her, he dropped out of school after the fourth grade and turned to delinquency, theft, and drug trafficking. He eventually became homeless at the age of 13. He would later tell his psychiatrists that he had been sexually abused and that his father repeatedly tried to stop him from offending. Alègre committed his first sexual assault at age 16. In January 1988, Alègre met Cécile Chambert, an official of bourgeois origin, with whom he had a daughter born on 23 July 1989. Despite the relative stability of his relationship, he gradually became more immersed in crime. Alègre found his victims in the station's district while he was employed as a barman in the police station cafeteria and then at the Gare de Toulouse-Matabiau's buffet restaurant. When women he tried to seduce did not reciprocate, he would undress, rape, and strangle them. He killed his first victim, Valérie Tariote, a co-worker, on 21 February 1989. On 16 February 1995, after a dispute where Alègre turned violent, Chambert left the apartment with their daughter and Alègre moved in with his mistress, the manager of a nightclub where he was hired as a bouncer. He was fired from the nightclub for starting fights that scared away customers. On 14 June 1997, |
is important in demonstrating the course, or pattern, of cultural or natural history in New South Wales. It forms a substantial part of a rare setting and is one of the oldest buildings in the southern Sydney area south of the Cooks River. It is the oldest building in the Kogarah area and is associated with the early development of the Kogarah area. William Carss was of sufficient stature in Sydney society in the 1830s as a master craftsman to have been a member of the founding committee of the Sydney Mechanics School of Arts in 1834. The place is important in demonstrating aesthetic characteristics and/or a high degree of creative or technical achievement in New South Wales. It is a rare example of mid Victorian period stone homestead in the southern area of Sydney. Situated on a knoll to Kogarah Bay and through its largely unspoilt setting, it plays an integral role in the aesthetic and architectural quality of the Bay. The place possesses uncommon, rare or endangered aspects of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales. It is the oldest building in the Kogarah area and one of the oldest in the southern Sydney area. See also Australian residential architectural styles References Bibliography Attribution External links New South Wales State Heritage Register Houses in Sydney Museums in Sydney Articles incorporating text from the New South Wales State Heritage Register 1865 establishments in Australia Houses completed in 1865 Sandstone buildings in Australia |
aesthetic characteristics and/or a high degree of creative or technical achievement in New South Wales. Within the town are several particularly attractive streetscapes, including the Wallace Street vista up Jew's Hill, the Wallace Street vistas north and south, some of the side streets, in particular those that retain soft edging to their roadside verge, period buildings and attractive landscaping. A number of streetscapes frame vistas to the pastoral landscape beyond and this combination of historic streetscape in the foreground with pastoral landscape in the distance, particularly where this transition is abrupt, has been recognised in earlier studies as having high aesthetic value. Aesthetic views of the town include: the approach from Canberra, where the town is framed by a row of Poplars; the view from Thomas Braidwood Wilson's grave; the approach to the town on the Mongarlowe Rd from approximately "Mona Homestead"; the view from the Araluen Rd as it approaches the town, and the view from Mt Gillamatong. Some individual buildings in the town have aesthetic value, and images from the town that draw on the aesthetic values have appeared in a number of books, and have been used as the backdrop to several films. The place has strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group in New South Wales for social, cultural or spiritual reasons. Although not formally surveyed, it is assumed that there are strong social and community values held by various communities. It is reasonable to assume that these could include churches, the RSL/golf club, the cemetery, Mt Gillamatong, Dr Wilson's grave and the historic and aesthetic ambience and character of the town The place has potential to yield information that will contribute to an understanding of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales. Because of Braidwood's integrity, setting and its evolution since European arrival, the area has considerable potential to assist an understanding of NSW's cultural history. The interplay between society, the individual and place since the early colonial period, can be discerned in the Braidwood landscape today. From early 19th century attitudes to health and well-being, as exemplified by Dr Thomas Braidwood Wilson (Surgeon Superintendent with the Royal Navy) to the role and deployment of mounted police in the colony, the evolution of town planning or the impact of drought on mid 19th century rural growth (for example), Braidwood and setting provides an excellent field for study. Dennis Jeans |
Corps' center and the ROK 5th Division at the right had begun to dissolve on 13 April. The 5th Division cleared KPA 45th Division forces out of their defenses around Inje on the 15th, and after artillery pounded the ridges north of town during the night, dawn attacks carried the ROK to the Kansas Line with negligible contact. The US 17th Infantry Regiment, advancing on the 7th Division's left through decreasing opposition from KPA 15th Division forces, found Route 29 leading into Yanggu obstructed by booby-trapped fallen trees and cleverly placed wooden box mines but reached the Kansas Line and made contact with the 2nd Division in Yanggu on the 15th/16th. On the division's right, the US 32nd Infantry Regiment pushed through brief but sharp resistance to reach the line early on 17 April. Beginning on the 17th, X Corps' patrols ranging above the Kansas Line found progressively fewer enemy forces. X Corps commander, General Edward Almond attempted to follow the KPA withdrawal by establishing forward patrol bases in all division zones, whence strong patrols were to advance farther north each day in search of KPA positions. As of 20 April the patrolling had reached a depth of about without meeting significant resistance. On the opposite side of the Hwach'on Reservoir, IX Corps' patrols sent forward of the Kansas Line by the ROK 6th and 1st Marine Divisions began to bring back reports of PVA withdrawal when forces engaged in Operation Dauntless to the west drew closer to the Utah Line. By 17 April the 1st Korean Marine Corps Regiment, which had replaced the 7th Cavalry Regiment after the latter's unsuccessful effort to capture the Hwacheon Dam, established outposts near the dam on the ridge inside the Pukhan loop and on heights above the Pukhan to the west. On the 18th a Marine patrol crossing the Pukhan west of the dam found Hwacheon town on Route 17 unoccupied except for eleven Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) soldiers, whom the patrol took captive. Intelligence officers appraised the voluntary withdrawal ahead of the two IX Corps' divisions as a realignment of forces with those dropping back in the Dauntless sector, but did not overlook the possibility that the PVA were coaxing the IX Corps into a vulnerable deployment. A recently captured document, dated 17 March, extolled the virtues and explained the purpose of "roving defensive warfare," defined as defense through movement without |
Maine Question 1 is a citizen-initiated referendum that appeared on the November 6, 2018 statewide ballot. It sought to implement a tax on higher incomes in Maine to fund in-home health care services for elderly and disabled Mainers, as well as to create a government board to administer the funds. The vote coincided with general elections for governor, U.S. Senate, U.S. House, the Maine Legislature, and other local elections. It qualified for the ballot due to supporters collecting signatures from registered Maine voters. It was defeated 62.86% to 37.14%. Background Supporters, led by the Maine People's Alliance, worked to place their proposal to increase access to home health care in Maine, in response to what they state is the fact that home health care workers have been overworked and underpaid for years. They note that wealthy Mainers have had three income tax reductions in the prior six years, and now pay a lower effective tax rate than most Mainers, while little has been done for home health care workers by the Legislature. Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap approved the wording of Question 1 on June 25, 2018. The question that will appear on the ballot is: "Do you want to create the Universal Home Care Program to provide home-based assistance to people with disabilities and senior citizens, regardless of income, funded by a new 3.8 percent tax on individuals and families with Maine wage and adjusted gross income above the amount subject to Social Security taxes, which is $128,400 in 2018? This tax is estimated to bring in $310 million a year. The proposal creates a nine member board called the Universal Home Care Trust Fund Board that would administer the funds. Its initial members would be chosen by the Governor, Maine Senate President, and Speaker of the Maine House, who would each choose three to serve a three year term. Subsequent members would be chosen in elections by home health care workers and patients. Opponents have raised concerns that the proposal is unconstitutional. Former Maine Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice Daniel Wathen has said the proposal is "deeply unconstitutional in many respects". Opponents also claim the proposal is a "trojan horse" to implement pro-labor union policies in the home health care field, as the proposal classifies home health care workers as state employees for purposes of collective bargaining. Opponents are further concerned that the additional tax will drive |
The 1993 Perth tank rampage refers to an event in the early hours of 27 April 1993, when 27-year-old Gary Alan Hayes stole an armoured personnel carrier (APC)referred to in the media as a "tank"from Irwin Barracks and drove it through the Perth CBD, ramming police targets and government buildings. It is the first of only two events of this kind in Australia, the second happening in Sydney in 2007. Background and rampage Hayes had a history of mental health issues, and previous encounters with the police over criminal behaviour, including charges of breaking and entering a delicatessen in 1987, stealing $78,000 worth of counter-terrorist equipment from the Special Air Service Regiment barracks in November 1992, and illegal possession of a firearm in April 1993. In 1987 he was forcibly admitted to the maximum-security wing of Graylands Hospital due to paranoid delusions, and treated for schizophrenia. On the morning of 27 April, Hayes stole an Australian Army M113 APC (without ammunition) from the army depot. Some reports have alleged police abuse and harassment as the motive for his behaviour. Hayes drove the APC through a fence and into the side of the Wembley police station at 4.40am. He then rammed a police van and drove towards the police headquarters in the CBD, where he smashed through the security gates and rammed six police vehicles, a motorcycle, and several private vehicles. He then caused damage to the CIB building before circling Parliament House, where police negotiators failed in efforts to get him to surrender. Three special forces officers climbed onto the vehicle and dropped a tear gas canister into the vehicle, after which he was arrested following a struggle. Aftermath The media coverage treated the event as a surreal and somewhat humorous event. When queried as to the ease with which the vehicle had been stolen, Brigadier Terry Nolan stated that "If you'd have asked me this yesterday I would have said it's not easy to do it, but the evidence of this morning would indicate that it's perhaps easier than I would have thought." In court Hayes claimed his actions were retaliation against the police for three attempts to kill him. His defence was later rejected and he was sentenced to four and a half years in Casuarina Prison with the possibility of parole after 17 months. He was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. Hayes died in 2017. References Crime in |
Gustavo Lanusse (5 January 1909 – 14 March 1938) was an Argentine rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1928 Summer Olympics. References External links 1909 births 1938 deaths Argentine male rowers Olympic rowers of Argentina Rowers at the 1928 Summer Olympics Rowers from Buenos Aires |
Ștefan Miluță Blănaru (born 20 February 1989) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a forward for FC Brașov. Blănaru made his Liga I debut on 21 July 2018, at 29 years old, when he played for Hermannstadt, club that also made its debut in the top flight, against Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe, scoring the only goal of the match. Until his debut in the Liga I, Ștefan Blănaru played for Liga II and Liga III clubs, such as: Luceafărul Oradea, Olt Slatina, ASU Politehnica or Ripensia Timișoara, among others. Honours Hermannstadt Cupa României runner-up: 2017–18 References External links 1989 births Living people People from Moldova Nouă Romanian footballers Association football forwards Liga I players FC Hermannstadt players Liga II players Liga III players CS Luceafărul Oradea players SSU Politehnica Timișoara players FC Olt Slatina players CS Național Sebiș players FC Ripensia Timișoara players FC Petrolul Ploiești players AFC Turris-Oltul Turnu Măgurele players CS Mioveni players FC Brașov (2021) players |
and the whole state of NSW. Moreover, the Museum complex is a continuing celebration of multicultural Australia and the important links forged between the Italian and wider Australian community. The ongoing patronage of the site by Italian and non Italian local and state dignitaries is evidence of the esteem in which the heritage of New Italy is held by the broader community. The commitment and co-operation of various groups in maintaining and developing the museum complex and school sites as well as the broader New Italy landscape by numerous community groups and individuals provides a continuity of partnership between the Italian and non-Italian community which began when the Italian settlers first arrived. New Italy Settlement was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 9 August 2002 having satisfied the following criteria. The place is important in demonstrating the course, or pattern, of cultural or natural history in New South Wales. The sites are physical evidence of an early and possibly first area of Italian settlement in country New South Wales and the ongoing Italian presence through the museum site provide a continuity of Italian association with the settlement. The impact of government policies towards immigration, assimilation education and government support for commercial enterprise are reflected in the manner by which the settlers were initially separated, their later acquisition of land and the varying success of the activities carried out at the settlement. The sites are also evidence late nineteenth century colonisation activities by private individuals, in this case the Marquis de Ray expedition. The sites are significant as part of a settlement that was discussed as a model for the establishment of other colonies in New South Wales The place has a strong or special association with a person, or group of persons, of importance of cultural or natural history of New South Wales's history. The sites are significant for their local association with pioneer settler Giacomo Picolli who reflects some of those tenacious and persistent qualities, particularly evident in his sericulture activities, of those earliest settlers, as well his wider advocacy of the Italian heritage of the area through his establishment of the first Park of Peace. They also have association with Dr Florian Volpato, an agent of the Italian consul on the North Coast and a successful businessman was able to organise and mobilise people and generate funds to bring to fruition the wider Italian |
Golden Sail Award in Kuwait 1966 Honourable Mention at the Leipzig International Art Exhibition on Acrylic Art, Germany Work He has held several solo exhibitions in Baghdad, Lisbon, Kuwait and Beirut. His work is conspicuously abstract, however, the sources of inspiration evident in his paintings are distinctly Iraqi. The Kaaba (cube) is purest source of inspiration, but he also uses other geometric forms. The colours he favours are black and white; a reference to the black and white tents as used by Bedouin nomads. See also Iraqi art List of Iraqi artists References External links Modern Art Iraq Archive - includes reproductions of artworks, many of which were looted from the Museum of Modern Art in 2003 and remain missing. These artworks are not accessible in any other public source. Further reading Ali, W., Modern Islamic Art: Development and Continuity, University of Florida Press, 1997 Shabout, N.M., Modern Arab Art: Formation of Arab Aesthetics, University of Florida Press, 2007 Bloom J. and Blair, S., The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture, Oxford University Press, 2009 Vols 1-3 Reynolds, D.F. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Modern Arab Culture, Cambridge University Press, 2015 Faraj, M., Strokes Of Genius: Contemporary Art from Iraq, London, Saqi Books, 2001 Schroth, M-A. (ed.), Longing for Eternity: One Century of Modern and Contemporary Iraqi Art, Skira, 2014 Bahrani, Z. and Shabout, N.M., Modernism and Iraq, Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery and Columbia University, 2009 "Iraq: Arts" Encyclopedia Britannica, Online: 20th-century Iraqi painters Abstract painters Artists from Baghdad Iraqi contemporary artists 1941 births Living people |
Editor-in-Chief of Local Environment: The International Journal of Justice and Sustainability Co-Editor of the Routledge Equity, Justice and the Sustainable City Series Co-Editor of the Bristol University/Policy Press Series Smart Sharing Cities: Technology, Sustainability, Ethics and Politics Contributing Editor to Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development Member of the Editorial Board of the Australian Journal of Environmental Education Series Editor of Just Sustainabilities: Policy, Planning and Practice published by Zed Books Awards He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (1996) and the Royal Geographical Society (2016). He received the Benton H. Box Award from Clemson University Institute for Parks in 2015 and the Athena City Accolade from the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in 2018. Visiting professorships Agyeman has been a visiting professor at University of South Australia (2008–13), Northumbria University (2010-14), University of British Columbia (April–May 2011) and McGill University (2017-18); he also held the Walker Ames Visiting Professorship at the University of Washington (2017). He is currently the TD Walter Bean Visiting Professor at the University of Waterloo, Canada (2020-21). He held a Visiting Fellowship at The Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions, hosted by the University of Victoria (2011). Agyeman was a Senior Scholar at The Center for Humans and Nature (2013–16) and a Fellow of the McConnell Foundation's Cities for People program in Montréal (2017). Advisory positions Agyeman currently sits on the Academic Board of The Centre for the Future of Places (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm) and the Board of Directors of EcoDistricts. He is also on the Advisory Boards of Shareable, Institute for Transportation & Development Policy - US, Participatory City, Urban Sharing, Equiticity and Sharecity, and the McConnell Foundation’s Cities for People Future Cities Canada programs. In November 2021, he was an advisor on Michelle Wu's Transition Committee for her transition into the office of mayor of Boston. Additionally, he is a Founding Senior Advisor/Thought Leader at PlacemakingX. References External links Official Julian Agyeman Website Julian Agyeman’s Tufts Faculty Page Just Sustainabilities Blog Interview with WBUR Fellows of the Royal Geographical Society Alumni of Van Mildert College, Durham Alumni of Middlesex University Alumni of the University of London Living people Academic journal editors Tufts University faculty British expatriate academics in the United States British geographers 1958 births |
Kuttram Seiyel (Tamil: குற்றம் செய்யேல், English: Don't commit crimes) is a 2019 Malayasian Tamil-language action crime film. The films follows a police who is determined to take down a famous gangster in the city, while two groups of college students started doing research on the case. It is released on 7 March 2019 in Malaysia. The film was screened at Chennai. Synopsis There is a famous gangster in the city who is constantly extorting and obtaining money from the business community in that area. He will even kills anyone who are against him. A police officer is determined to take down the gangster and end the crime. Meanwhile, things worsen when two groups of college students begin interested on the case and do their own research on it. Cast Production The film was shot in Malaysia and India in sixty days. The cast comprises Indian actors Bose Venkat, Vijith, and Dheena and Malaysian actors Selvamuthu Sam. The film is about the gangsterism of Malaysian Indians. Track listing See also List of Malaysian Tamil films References External links Kuttram Seiyel on Cinema.com.my Kuttram Seiyel on Popcorn Malaysia Tamil-language Malaysian films Malaysian action drama films 2010s Tamil-language films Malaysian crime drama films |
Attaullah Niazi is a Pakistani politician who had been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan from August 2018 till January 2023. Political career He was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan from Constituency NA-250 (Karachi West-III) as a candidate of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf in 2018 Pakistani general election. External Link More Reading List of members of the 15th National Assembly of Pakistan List of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf elected members (2013–2018) No-confidence motion against Imran Khan References Living people Pakistani MNAs 2018–2023 Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf politicians Year of birth missing (living people) |
Genetics Research is an open access, peer-reviewed scientific journal covering all aspects of human and animal genetics, reporting key findings on genomes, genes, mutations and molecular interactions, extending out to developmental, evolutionary, and population genetics as well as ethical, legal and social aspects. It was established in 1960 as Genetical Research, obtaining its current name in 2008. The founding editor-in-chief was Eric C.R. Reeve (University of Edinburgh). It is published by Cambridge University Press and the editor-in-chief is Marc Tischkowitz (University of Cambridge). According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2017 impact factor of 1.059, ranking it 149th out of 171 journals in the category "Genetics & Heredity". The journal has published papers from such renowned researchers as Mary Lyon (of Lyonisation), Charlotte Auerbach, and John Maynard Smith, author of Genetics Research's most cited paper, The hitch-hiking effect of a favourable gene. References External links Genetics journals Bimonthly journals Cambridge University Press academic journals Publications established in 1960 English-language journals |
were accidentally wounded and two were discharged for disability. See also List of Connecticut Civil War units References Bibliography Dyer, Frederick H. (1959). A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. Sagamore Press Inc. Thomas Yoseloff, Publisher, New York, New York. . Unknown. (2004). Civil War Regiments from Connecticut. eBooksOnDisk.com . Artillery units and formations of the American Civil War Military units and formations established in 1864 Military units and formations disestablished in 1865 |
educate and to love and to be peaceful, but [he understands] that there's a different side." The Black Lightning side of him, in turn, favors the philosophies of Malcolm X, and believes that, "There are some things that I have to do and react to in a way that I'm not going to turn the other cheek." As a character-driven family drama, Salim Akil revealed that Black Lightning would not follow the villain of the week format typical of many superhero television series because he wanted "to explore the characters, even the villains" and felt that "one of the most interesting characters right now from a storytelling standpoint is Tobias [Whale]. His hatred for himself and for others comes from a real place, so we want to know why he's like that." Discussing the character Anissa Pierce, Black Lightning's daughter and the first black lesbian superhero on television, the Akils indicated that the writers would not be treating LGBTQ representation as a "special issue" but that such characters would be included and depicted "the way anyone would be included in life." Salim Akil noted that topics such as the Black Lives Matter movement and other issues concerning race relations and police brutality would be addressed, but stressed that, "This is an American story, this is not a black story. We're going to be culturally specific, but universal in our themes so everyone can see themselves in these stories." He further explained, "I didn't want to be too fantastical because so many people out there are suffering and I felt like they needed a hero," on the decision to incorporate real-life societal issues into the narrative. Akil emphasized his desire for the audience "to be concerned about what's going on [in African-American communities.] I wanted people in those areas to feel like there was someone who was thinking about them and so I wanted the show to reflect that." Salim Akil likened the narrative of the first season to the story of the Tuskegee experiment. "What I wanted to do was have an arc about black male paranoia and African-American paranoia. So we start in the black community, fighting the gangs. And then this drug is introduced, and everyone's questioning where the drug comes from, and we start to follow the trail of where it comes from [...] and see oh, this stuff isn't coming from the low-level gang members." Casting |
The Collegio di Milano is a merit-based inter-university campus intended to accommodate Italian and foreign students from public and private universities in Milan, who have demonstrated unique talent and enthusiasm in their studies and have obtained outstanding results. The Collegio is a nonprofit organisation made possible by a foundation composed of seven universities and public and private businesses. It is officially recognized and credited as a Merit-based University Campus by MUR (Ministry of Universities and Research). To be accepted to the Collegio di Milano it is necessary to participate in the call for applications, adhering to the indicated requirements, and go through the selection process. History The Collegio di Milano, inaugurated on 29 September 2003, was founded by a group of public and private businesses and organisations, among which are seven of Milan's universities (the University of Milan, the Politecnico, the University of Milano-Bicocca, Catholic University of Milan, Bocconi University, IULM University, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University) and Aspen Institute Italy. For the realisation of this project several high-profile figures participated: Filippo de Vivo, Umberto Eco, Carlo Ratti e Marco Santambrogio. The birth of the Collegio di Milano, in fact, was inspired by the so-called Cambridge Manifest, a proposal for Italian universities drafted in 1997 by a group of Italian doctoral students at Cambridge University, among them de Vivo and Ratti, and supported by numerous academics and intellectuals, including Eco and Santambrogio. Since 2008 the managing director has been Stefano Blanco. The President of the Foundation is Salvatore Carrubba, successor to Giancarlo Lombardi who after Carrubba's nomination was the honorary president until his passing in 2017. At the head of the Scientific Committee is Susanna Mantovani, Italian pedagogist and winner of the in 2020. Activities and facilities The campus, designed by the architect Marco Zanuso, is surrounded by a 30,000 square meters park. The complex was built between 1971 and 1974 and was originally intended to host the (also known as FinAfrica) that for years welcomed international students specializing in the banking and financial sectors of developing nations. The Collegio's original building design evokes the brutalism of Andrew Melville Hall designed by James Stirling and built in 1967 for St. Andrews University. In 2020 a second building was launched, initiated by Studio Piuarch's project, winner of the competition held by the Foundation in 2008 to expand the campus, adding another 53 accommodations to the 118 existing students. Piurach's design proposal comes |
Alexander Long (18 March 1900 – 31 December 1975) was a British rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1924 Summer Olympics. References External links 1900 births 1975 deaths British male rowers Olympic rowers of Great Britain Rowers at the 1924 Summer Olympics Place of birth missing |
Catenisphaera is a genus from the family of Erysipelotrichidae with one known species (Catenisphaera adipataccumulans). Catenisphaera adipataccumulans has been isolated from an anaerobic digester from Fukagawa in Japan See also List of bacterial orders List of bacteria genera References Erysipelotrichia Bacteria genera Monotypic bacteria genera |
qualification into the AFC Cup. East Bengal was placed in Group B alongside Al-Oruba of Yemen, Kazma of Kuwait and Arbil of Iraq. East Bengal suffered a disastrous campaign as they lost all six of their group stage matches against the strong West–Asian opponents and was thus eliminated from the tournament after finishing bottom of the group without any points. Group stage Matches 2013 AFC Cup East Bengal qualified for the 2013 AFC Cup after winning the 2012 Federation Cup. This was their seventh appearance in the AFC Cup and fourth in succession since 2009–10. East Bengal was grouped with Selangor of Malaysia, Tampines Rovers of Singapore and Sai Gon Xuan Thanh of Vietnam in Group H. In the opening game, East Bengal defeated Selangor 1–0 at home courtesy of a solitary strike from Lalrindika Ralte in the first half. East Bengal played Sai Gon Xuan Thanh in the next match away in Ho Chi Minh City and drew 0–0. In the third match, East Bengal defeated Tampines Rovers 4–2 away from home with Australian forward Andrew Barisić scoring twice while Chidi Edeh scored one and the other came as an own-goal. East Bengal won against Rovers again in the next match at home by 2–1 with goals from Chidi Edeh and Lalrindika Ralte. East Bengal drew 2–2 against Selangor in the fifth match away in Shah Alam. Penn Orji and Lalrindika Ralte scored for the team. In the last match of the group stage, East Bengal defeated Sai Gon Xuan Thanh 4–1 with Penn Orji netting a brace, Chidi and Barisić netting one each. East Bengal topped the group with four wins and two draws without any defeats and confirmed a pre-quarterfinal fixture at home against Yangon United. On 15 May, East Bengal defeated Yangon United 5–1 at the Salt Lake Stadium with Chidi Edeh scoring a hattrick for the team while Penn Orji and Mehtab Hossain scored one each as East Bengal reached the quarter-finals. East Bengal coach Trevor Morgan resigned and Brazilian coach Marcos Falopa took charge. East Bengal was drawn against Semen Padang of Indonesia in the quarter-finals. In the first leg at home, on 17 September, East Bengal won 1–0 courtesy of a second-half goal from Japanese forward Ryuji Sueoka. In the return leg, on 24 September, East Bengal made history as they drew 1–1 against Semen Padang with James Moga equalising for the team |
The AIFF Player of the Year Awards are the annual football awards presented to the best footballers in India by the All India Football Federation (AIFF). The AIFF first announced the award for Men's Player of the Year in 1992; I. M. Vijayan was the inaugural winner. Sunil Chhetri has won the award a record seven times, more than any other player. No winner was announced in 1998 and 1999. It was re-introduced in 2000. The AIFF Women's Player of the Year Award was introduced in 2001. Oinam Bembem Devi was its first recipient. Between 2002 and 2012, no women's award was given out. In 2013, the award was re-introduced and Bembem Devi won it for the second time. Other than Bembem Devi, Bala Devi has also won the award twice, in 2015 and 2016. Along with the men's and women's awards, the AIFF Emerging Player of the Year Award for men was introduced in 2013, and a similar award for women was introduced in 2015. Until 2016, the men's awards were selected on the basis of voting by the coaches of the I-League clubs. Since 2017, coaches of both the I-League and the Indian Super League have voted to select the winner. The women's awards are selected by the head coach of the women's national team in consultation with the AIFF Technical Director. Men's Player of the Year I. M. Vijayan was the first player to receive the award in 1992. He was also the first player to win it consecutively in 1997 and 2000 (there was no award in 1998 and 1999). He has won the award three times. Sunil Chhetri has received the award a record seven times: in 2007, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2018−19 and most recently, 2021−22. Jo Paul Ancheri and Bhaichung Bhutia are the other players who have won this award more than once. Women's Player of the Year Oinam Bembem Devi was the first recipient of the award in 2001. Bembem Devi retained it in 2013, after the 2002–2012 halt ended. Bala Devi has won the award a record three times: in 2014, 2015 and 2020−21. Emerging Player of the Year See also FPAI Indian Player of the Year All India Football Federation Football in India References External links Official AIFF website. All India Football Federation Indian sports trophies and awards |
The 2019 GT World Challenge Europe (known for sponsorship reasons as the 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe) was the seventh season of the GT World Challenge Europe following on from the demise of the SRO Motorsports Group's FIA GT1 World Championship (an auto racing series for grand tourer cars), the first with the sponsorship of Blancpain. The season began on 4 May at Brands Hatch and ended on 8 September at the Hungaroring. It was the first season of the unification of GT3 sprint series across the globe under the World Challenge name. Calendar At the annual press conference during the 2018 24 Hours of Spa on 27 July, the Stéphane Ratel Organisation announced the first draft of the 2019 calendar. Zolder was initially replaced by the Red Bull Ring, before Zandvoort was chosen to host a race weekend. The Endurance Cup round in Barcelona would become an World Challenge Europe round, replacing the round at the Nürburgring, before the two tracks were swapped around again in the final draft of the calendar released on 22 October. Entry list A cap of 30 cars was placed in an attempt to reduce accidents on narrower tracks. Race results Bold indicates overall winner. Championship standings Scoring system Championship points are awarded for the first ten positions in each race. The pole-sitter also receives one point and entries are required to complete 75% of the winning car's race distance in order to be classified and earn points. Individual drivers are required to participate for a minimum of 25 minutes in order to earn championship points in any race. Drivers' championships Overall Silver Cup Pro-Am Cup Am Cup Teams' championships Overall Silver Cup Pro-Am Cup Am Cup See also 2019 Blancpain GT Series 2019 Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge America 2019 Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia References External links World Challenge Europe |
Joseph Pennucci is an American college baseball coach and former catcher. He is the head baseball coach at East Tennessee State University. Pennucci played college baseball at Garden City Community College and Dana College. Playing career Pennucci attended Loveland High School in Loveland, Colorado. Pennucci played for the school's varsity baseball team for three years. Pennucci then enrolled at Garden City Community College, to play college baseball for the Broncbusters team. After a season at Garden City, Pennucci transferred to Dana College to finish his career. He was named All-Conference one time. Coaching career Pennucci was named an assistant coach at Loveland High School while he was finishing up his degree at the University of Northern Colorado. Loveland won a state title during his tenure as an assistant. In 2005, Pennucci took an assistant coaching position with Dominican College. He spent two seasons there as the associate head coach and recruiting coordinator. In the fall of 2006, Pennucci was named an assistant coach for the Stony Brook Seawolves baseball program. Pennucci help the Seawolves to the 2012 College World Series. Coming off the World Series run, Pennucci was promoted to associate head coach of the Seawolves. On July 10, 2017, Pennucci was named the head coach at East Tennessee State University. Head coaching record See also List of current NCAA Division I baseball coaches References External links Stony Brook Seawolves bio East Tennessee State Buccaneers bio Living people Baseball catchers Garden City Broncbusters baseball players Dana Vikings baseball players High school baseball coaches in the United States Dominican Chargers baseball coaches Stony Brook Seawolves baseball coaches East Tennessee State Buccaneers baseball coaches Year of birth missing (living people) Baseball coaches from Colorado Stony Brook University alumni University of Northern Colorado alumni |
Muhammad Ali Aziz is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of the Provincial Assembly of Sindh since August 2018. Political career He was elected to the Provincial Assembly of Sindh as a candidate of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf from Constituency PS-105 (Karachi East-VII) in 2018 Pakistani general election. References Living people Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf MPAs (Sindh) Year of birth missing (living people) |
Maulana Salahuddin Ayyubi is a Pakistani politician who has been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan since August 2018. Political career He was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan from Constituency NA-263 (Killa Abdullah) as a candidate of Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal in 2018 Pakistani general election. References Living people Pakistani MNAs 2018–2023 Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal MNAs Year of birth missing (living people) |
was certainly not nearly enough to allow everyone to get out". See also Chronology of Provisional Irish Republican Army actions (1970–1979) References 1971 in Northern Ireland 1971 murders in the United Kingdom Attacks on bars in Northern Ireland Attacks on buildings and structures in 1971 Attacks on buildings and structures in Belfast Building bombings in Northern Ireland Improvised explosive device bombings in 1971 Murder in Belfast November 1971 crimes November 1971 events in the United Kingdom The Troubles in Belfast Terrorist incidents in Belfast Terrorist incidents in the United Kingdom in 1971 1970s murders in Northern Ireland |
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