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Destiny's Isle is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by William P.S. Earle and starring Virginia Lee, Ward Crane and Florence Billings.
Cast
Virginia Lee as Lola Whitaker
Ward Crane as Tom Proctor
Florence Billings as Florence Martin
Arthur Housman as Arthur Randall
George Fawcett as Judge Richard Proctor
William B. Davidson as Lazus
Mario Majeroni asDr. Whitaker
Ida Darling as Mrs. Pierpont
Albert Roccardi as Mrs. Ripp
Pauline Dempsey as Mammy
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1922 films
1922 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
Films directed by William P. S. Earle
American black-and-white films |
Lisamaria Meirowsky (* September 17, 1904 in Graudenz; † August 9, 1942 in Auschwitz) was a German dermatologist and pediatrician murdered by the Nazis because of her Jewish heritage.
Life
Lisamaria Meirowsky was the daughter of the dermatologist Emil Meirowsky, who opened a practice in Cologne-Lindenthal in 1908. After graduating from high school in Cologne, she began studying medicine at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Bonn in 1923. In 1925, she went to Munich for two years to continue her medical studies. Back in Bonn, she graduated in 1929. She received her doctorate from the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich in 1933. The title of the dissertation in the field of dermatology was "Über das Krankheitsbild des Erythema palmoplantare symmetricum hereditarium." After a long illness, she went to Rome in 1933, obtained a doctorate in the field of pediatrics, and there made the acquaintance of the Dominican friar Franziskus Maria Stratmann She converted from Judaism to Catholicism on October 15, 1933, and took the name Maria Magdalena Dominika in the Third Order of St. Dominic.
Nazi persecution
In 1938, persecuted as a "non-Aryan" despite her conversion, Meirowsky went to Utrecht in the Netherlands with the Dominican Fr. Stratmann. In October 1941 she went into hiding in the Trappist Abbey of Our Lady of Koningsoord near Tilburg, where she worked as a doctor and porter. On July 26, 1942, the Archbishop of Utrecht, Jan de Jong, had a pastoral letter read out against the Germans' actions against the Jews. In response, on August 2, 1942, 244 former Jews who had converted to Catholicism, among them Lisamaria Meirowsky and the siblings Edith and Rosa Stein, were arrested by the Gestapo and deported to the Westerbork concentration camp, probably on August 4, 1942. From there they were taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp on August 7, 1942, and murdered on August 9.
Commemoration
The Catholic Church included Lisamaria Meirowsky as a witness of faith in the German Martyrology of the 20th century. In May 2014, a commemorative paving stone was laid in front of her last residence in Cologne-Lindenthal at Fürst-Pückler-Strasse 42 by students of a Cologne high school.
Publications
Über das Krankheitsbild des Erythema palmoplantare symmetricum hereditarium, Springer, Berlin 1933
Literature
Franziskus Stratmann: Die Todesgefährtin Edith Steins: Lisamaria Meirowsky. Christ in der Gegenwart, 19, 1968
Helmut Moll (Hrsg. im Auftrag der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz), Zeugen für Christus. Das deutsche Martyrologium des 20. Jahrhunderts, Paderborn u. a. 1999, 7. überarbeitete und aktualisierte Auflage 2019, ISBN 978-3-506-78012-6, Band I, S. 385–388.
Walter Tetzlaff: 2000 Kurzbiographien bedeutender deutscher Juden des 20. Jahrhunderts. Askania, Lindhorst 1982, ISBN 3-921730-10-4.
Elisabeth Prégardier, Anne Mohr (Hrsg.): Passion im August – Edith Stein und Gefährtinnen: Weg in Tod und Auferstehung. Plöger Verlag, Annweiler 1995, ISBN 978-3-898-57067-1.
P. W. F. M. Hamans: Edith Stein and Companions: On the Way to Auschwitz. Ignatius Press, 2010, S. 181–194.
References
External links
Märtyrer des Erzbistums Köln Dr. Dr. Lisamaria Meirowsky
Digital Monument to the Jewish Community in the Netherlands: Lisamaria Meirowsky
Erzbistum Köln: Märtyrer des Erzbistums Köln - Dr. Dr. Lisamaria Meirowsky
1904 births
1942 deaths
Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the Netherlands
German people who died in Auschwitz concentration camp
Nazi Germany and Catholicism
20th-century physicians |
Garnet Douglas McEwen (25 September 1945 – 27 January 2012), nicknamed "Mother", was a Canadian outlaw biker, gangster and police informer, most notable as a longtime member of Satan's Choice Motorcycle Club before serving as the first national president of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club in Canada.
Satan's Choice
McEwen was born in Campbellton, New Brunswick and moved to St. Catharines, Ontario as a young man. McEwen always talked with a strong Maritime accent. Initially, he worked as a pencil salesman before saving up enough money to open up a tattoo parlor. As a result of a motorcycle accident, he lost one of his legs, which had to be replaced with a plastic prosthetic leg. As his tattoo parlor was popular with members of Satan's Choice Motorcycle Club, he ended up joining the club and rose up to become the president of the St. Catherine's chapter. When the Satan's Choice national president, Bernie Guindon, was convicted of rape in 1969, McEwen became the interim national president, serving in that role until Guindon was released from prison in 1974.
In 1974, McEwen together with Cecil Kirby went to Fort Lauderdale, Florida to meet the leaders of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club. Kirby was clean shaven and had no difficulty leaving the Fort Lauderdale airport as he did not look like an outlaw biker, unlike McEwen whose long hair and beard caused the airport security to view him as a trouble-maker. Kirby described most of the Outlaws he met in Florida as Vietnam veterans who had been unable to adjust to civilian life and were full of rage and hate. McEwen, by contrast, was deeply impressed with the Outlaws and became the main advocate within Satan's Choice of an alliance with the American club. In June 1975, Guindon formally made an alliance with the Outlaws, agreeing to have Satan's Choice sell methamphetamine and PCP manufactured in northern Ontario for resale in the American Midwest.
However, this was not enough for McEwen, who wanted to pursue the "Yankeeization" of Satan's Choice. The American journalist Mick Lowe described McEwen as suffering from "...the classic Canadian-American love-hate relationship, a distinctly Canadian malady, since Americans never thought enough about Canada to either love or hate their northern cousins one way or the other". McEwen felt very strongly that he could only become a powerful biker by joining an American outlaw biker club. McEwen had an obsession with guns and wanted to join the Outlaws so that he could import guns in mass from the United States. McEwen invited several Outlaw leaders from their headquarters in Chicago to meet Guindon in Oshawa. However, Guindon declined a request to have Satan's Choice formally "patch over" their relationship with the Outlaws, saying he wanted to keep his club Canadian. On several visits to Chicago, McEwen was courted by Harry Joseph "Taco" Bowman, the president of the American Outlaws, which increased his sense of self-importance. McEwen also worked as a police informer, selling information to the police.
In August 1975, Guindon visited a hunting lodge at Oba Lake in northern Ontario owned by Alain Templain, the president of the Oshawa chapter of Satan's Choice. The lodge was the location of a PCP factory. McEwen informed the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) of the PCP factory and when it was that Guindon would be visiting Oba Lake so they could arrest him. This got Guindon out of the way so that McEwen could pursue his plans for "Yankeeization". On the night of 6 August 1975, a group of undercover OPP officers raided a shack located on an island in Oba Lake and discovered Guindon and Templain with CAD$6 million worth of PCP tablets together with PCP-manufacturing equipment. With Guindon imprisoned, McEwen again became the interim national president of Satan's Choice. In one of his first acts as national president, McEwen arranged for a common "association patch" between the Outlaws and Satan's Choice, allowing for equality between the two clubs.
McEwen was an unpopular national president, due to his "dictatorial" leadership style. Lorne Campbell spoke negatively of him, saying "He was just a fat, stinky guy. That's all he was. He was just a dirty guy who looked like a 1950s biker. He was filthy". Campbell liked to joke about McEwen's artificial leg that he "didn't have a leg to stand on", a joke that McEwen did not find amusing. McEwen decision to "bug" the automobiles of other Satan's Choice members further alienated him from many gang members who saw him as a "rat". During McEwen's presidency, in-fighting between the various chapters of Satan's Choice became endemic and in 1977, McEwen tried to expel the entire Kitchener chapter after some of its members talked too frankly to journalists from the Kitchener Record.
McEwen called a secret meeting William "King" O'Reilly, the president of the Windsor chapter; John "Doctor John" Arksey, the president of the Ottawa chapter; and Joseph "Sonny" Lacombe, the president of the Montreal chapter. O'Reilly and Arksey both supported McEwen's plans to have Satan's Choice "patch over" to the Outlaws, while Lacombe remained non-committal for a time. In March 1977, McEwen arranged for the Windsor and St. Catherine's chapters to secretly join the Outlaws.
Outlaws
On 1 July 1977, McEwen summoned most of the Satan's Choice chapter presidents for a meeting, where he called for "patching over" to the Outlaws, arguing that being members of an American club would improve their image, and that the St. Catherine's and Windsor chapters had already decided to join the Outlaws. The chapter presidents known for their loyalty to Guindon were not invited to the meeting. The meeting was not held at the normal meeting place of Wasaga Beach on Georgian Bay, instead held at Crystal Beach on Lake Erie close to the American border. McEwen brought over a number of American Outlaws from their Detroit chapter to provide intimidation at the Crystal Beach meeting. Lowe wrote that the chapters "began to fall like dominoes" as one by one the various chapter presidents agreed. To mark the change, a ceremony was performed at Crystal Beach where the Satan's Choice chapter presidents burned their jackets with the Satan's Choice patches while putting on new jackets with the Outlaw patch.
From within the Millhaven prison, Guindon was alleged to have placed a bounty on McEwen, promising to pay $10,000 as the reward for killing him. McEwen's house in St. Catherine's was shot up by the Satan's Choice in a failed assassination attempt. Many of the members of the Satan's Choice chapters whose presidents had chosen to join the Outlaws resigned, thereby weakening both clubs. As a police informer, McEwen realized that the Outlaws would be a more attractive target for the police than Satan's Choice, and it has been alleged by several Satan's Choice members that he arranged the "patch over" to the Outlaws on the orders of his police handlers. Feelings against him were very strong as one Satan's Choice, Steve Erslavas, stated: "I don't like to say anything bad but anybody except Garnet McEwen – he was a backstabbing, fucking prick. Mother was in it for his own personal reasons – his own gain. He thought there was a payday for him... There was nothing noble about it."
McEwen's reign as the first national president of the Canadian Outlaws was a failure, as the American Outlaws led by Bowman expelled him after he was caught embezzling some $30,000 he owed to them. Fearing that his life was in danger, McEwen fled to Alberta where he ended up working as a dishwasher at a restaurant located in a Calgary hotel. McEwen then became a member of the Chosen Few biker gang. After being caught stealing from the Chosen Few, other members of the gang beat him nearly to death with his artificial leg.
Later life and death
In 1980, McEwen abandoned biking to become a dishwasher, which was felt to be sufficient punishment by Satan's Choice. McEwen settled in Saskatoon, where he lived with his common-law wife Tina Karsten and fathered a son, Dakota. McEwen died in Saskatoon aged 66 on 27 January 2012.
Books
References
1945 births
2012 deaths
Canadian gangsters
Canadian crime bosses
Canadian male criminals
Police informants
People from Campbellton, New Brunswick
20th-century Canadian criminals |
Tartar was launched at Bermuda in 1775, possibly under another name. By 1779 she was a privateer sailing out of Liverpool. She captured several prizes, first in the West Indies and then around England. Two French frigates captured her in October 1780.
Career
Some volumes of Lloyd's Register (LR) are not available on line, and some pages are missing from extant volumes. Consequently, Tartar first appeared online in Lloyd's Register for 1779.
On 7 January 1779, Tartar, Captain Allanson, was off Sambrera from where he wrote a letter to her owners. He reported that on 31 October 1778 he had been west of Cape Finistere when he had captured Concorde, Deverger, master, of 500 tons (bm). Concorde, of Bordeaux, had been on her way to Cap François with 2500 barrels of flour, 800 barrels of beef, 200 hogsheads of wine, and more than 20 bales of dry goods, amongst which there were 600 ounces of silver. Allanson took Concorde into Antigua.
On 27 February Captain Allanson captured a large New England brig carrying 380 hogsheads of tobacco. He sent the brig into Antigua.
Next, Tartar, Allanson, master, captured the French slave ship Nairac, Antoine, master, which was coming from Angola with 697 slaves. Tartar also captured Victory, from Nantucket, which was carrying lumber, fish, and oil. Tartar sent both into Kingston, Jamaica. Tartar captured the sloop Hazard, from Providence, and sent her into Antigua.
Tartar, Leyborn, master, of Liverpool, captured a French snow and took her into St Kitts. The snow had been on her way from Guadeloupe to America with a cargo of sugar, rum, and molasses.
On 22 August 1780, Tartar returned to Liverpool, bringing with her a prize, St George, which was carrying a cargo of flax, iron, etc.
Next, Tartar captured a French privateer cutter of 16 guns. The cutter struck after a sharp engagement and Tartar took her into Penzance.
Fate
The Tartar privateer, of Liverpool, Whytell, master, captured a vessel sailing from Ostend to Bordeaux that was carrying 420 hogsheads of tobacco. However, on 29 September two French frigates captured both Tartar and her prize. The French sent their prizes into Rochelle. One of the frigates was under the command of Mon. "Le Vicomte Mortimer".
In late September and October 1780 the French frigates (26 guns) and , were escorting a convoy from Rochefort to Bayonne. On her way they captured three British cutters: , of 18 guns, captured 25 September 1780; Tartar, 12 guns; and Jersey, of 12 guns. The French took Alert and Jersey into service.
Notes, citations, and references
Notes
Citations
References
1775 ships
Ships built in Bermuda
Privateer ships of Great Britain
Captured ships |
Charles Quest-Ritson is an English horticulturalist and garden writer. He is one of Britain's foremost rosarians and is the author of the RHS Encyclopedia of Roses and American Rose Society Encyclopedia of Roses. He was a director of the Royal National Rose Society and founder of the Historic Roses Group. Some of his books are co-authored with his wife, Bridget Quest-Ritson.
Life and work
Quest-Ritson was born in Potterne, Wiltshire. He attended a preparatory school in Sussex and won gardening prizes there from the age of nine. He developed his skills in his grandparents' ten acre garden; and his father's garden, designed by Gertrude Jekyll. After a history degree, he began his professional life as a tax lawyer. He married Brigid and the couple had two daughters and a son.
The couple were partners in the Corsley Mill Nurseries (1983-1993), propagating own root roses. From 2004 to 2020 the couple owned 12 acres of woodland and orchards in on the Cherbourg Penincular, Normandy, in northern France. His garden contained over 1,000 roses. They then moved back to England; their home near Salisbury has two acres of gardens on chalk. He is fluent in five languages and has specialised in writing about gardens across the world.
He regularly authors expert guides for the Royal Horticultural Society. The RHS Encyclopaedia of Roses (2003) in Italian translation, won the literary Grinzane Cavour Prize (2006). His first published horticultural book was The English Garden Abroad (1992) and he has written more than ten further guides over the following thirty years. He was a director of the Royal National Rose Society (extant 1876-2017), founder of the Historic Roses Group and a fellow of the Linnaean Society. He is also a regular columnist for Country Life magazine.
Works
RHS Encyclopedia of Roses (2011)
The English Garden: A Social History (2010)
Ninfa (2009)
RHS Garden Finders Olive Oil (2004)
Climbing Roses of the World (2003)
American Rose Society Encyclopedia of Roses: the Definitive A-Z Guide (2003)
The English Garden (2001)
The Royal Horticultural Society Gardener's Handbook (1999)
Gardens of Germany (also all the photographs) (1998)
Garden Lover's Guide to Germany (1998)
Gardens of Europe
Country Gardens (1998)
The English Garden Abroad (1992)
References
English gardeners
English garden writers
English horticulturists
Living people
English rose horticulturists
Country Life (magazine) people
Royal Horticultural Society
People from Wiltshire |
Jeremy Gift Saygbe (born 1 June 2001) is a Liberian professional footballer who plays as a right-back and center-back for Liberian First Division club LISCR FC and the Liberia national team.
Honours
Barrack Young Controllers
Liberian First Division: 2018
Liberian FA Cup: 2018; runner-up: 2019
References
2001 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Monrovia
Liberian footballers
Association football fullbacks
Association football defenders
FC Fassell players
Barrack Young Controllers FC players
LISCR FC players
Real Balompédica Linense footballers
Liberian First Division players
Primera División RFEF players
Liberia international footballers
Liberian expatriate footballers
Expatriate footballers in Spain
Liberian expatriate sportspeople in Spain |
Dinah Rose Banda (born 27 January 2001) is a Zimbabwean footballer who plays as a forward for Queen Lozikeyi Academy and the Zimbabwe women's national team.
Club career
Banda played for Queen Lozikeyi Academy in Zimbabwe.
International career
Banda capped for Zimbabwe at senior level during the 2020 COSAFA Women's Championship.
References
2001 births
Living people
Zimbabwean women's footballers
Women's association football forwards
Zimbabwe women's international footballers |
Crayford Town Hall is a former municipal building in the High Street in Crayford Road, Crayford, London, England. The structure, which was formerly the offices and meeting place of Crayford Urban District Council, is a locally listed building.
History
The building was originally commissioned as a canteen and mess room for the local armaments factory in Crayford which had been established by the Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Company in the 1880s and then been acquired by Vickers in 1897. The canteen was designed in the Queen Anne style, built in red brick and was completed in 1915. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with nine bays facing Crayford Road with the end two bays on each side projected forward as pavilions; the central section of five bays featured a central doorway flanked by sash windows with a row of four sash windows on the first floor. The end bays were also fenestrated by sash windows on both floors. Internally, the principal room was the main hall on the ground floor.
Following significant population growth during the First World War, largely because of the expansion of the armaments factory, Crayford became an urban district in 1920. Armaments production reduced significantly after the end of the war and the building became surplus to requirements and was acquired by the council in 1929. The council converted it into a municipal building, establishing its offices on the first floor and adding a portico, a balcony bearing the town's coat of arms and a flagpole to the front elevation.
In the 1951 United Kingdom general election, one of the candidates standing for the Dartford constituency was the future Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, who gave a speech at Crayford Town Hall about the Conservative Party's policy on peace. The building ceased to be the local seat of government when the enlarged London Borough of Bexley was formed in 1965. However, it continued to be used by Bexley Council for the delivery of local services and was extensively refurbished in 1995. The main hall was also used as an events venue and performers in the late 20th century included the singer, Sam Bailey, who took part in her first competition there.
In the early 21st century it became apparent that the dance floor in the main hall had subsided and that further restoration work was necessary. The building was subsequently acquired by a developer, R&M Projects, which initiated a two-stage programme of works, which was carried out by Higgins Construction to a design by Alan Camp Architects at a total cost of £30 million. The first stage, relating to the area behind the town hall, involved the construction of three blocks of apartments and a separate library and community complex and was completed in November 2012. The second stage, relating to the town hall itself, involved the conversion of the ground floor into a doctor's surgery and the first floor into further apartments and was completed in summer 2014.
References
Government buildings completed in 1915
City and town halls in London
Buildings and structures in the London Borough of Bexley |
Cyperus aster is a species of sedge that is native to eastern parts of Africa.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
aster
Plants described in 1936
Flora of Tanzania
Flora of Madagascar
Taxa named by Georg Kükenthal |
Crypthonia lichexanthonica is a species of crustose and corticolous (bark-dwelling) lichen in the family Arthoniaceae. Found in Brazil, it was formally described as a new species in 2013 by Aline Anjos Menezes, Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres, and André Aptroot. The type specimen was collected from the Chapada do Araripe (Ceará), at an altitude of . Here, in Caatinga forest, it was found growing on the smooth bark of a tree. Crypthonia lichexanthonica is the only species in its genus to contain lichexanthone, a secondary chemical that causes the lichen to fluoresce yellow when shone with a UV light.
References
Arthoniomycetes
Lichens described in 2013
Lichens of Brazil
Taxa named by André Aptroot |
The Devil Within is a 1921 American silent adventure film directed by Bernard J. Durning and starring Dustin Farnum, Virginia Valli and Nigel De Brulier.
Cast
Dustin Farnum as Captain Briggs
Virginia Valli as Laura
Nigel De Brulier as Dr. Philiol
Bernard J. Durning as Hal
Jim Farley as Scurlock
Tom O'Brien as Wansley
Bob Perry as Crevay
Charles Gorman as Bevins
Otto Hoffman as Ezra
Kirk Incas as Cabin Boy
Evelyn Selbie as Witch
Hazel Deane as Juvenile Witch
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1921 films
1921 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
Films directed by Bernard Durning
American black-and-white films
Fox Film films |
The TVE colour test card (Spanish: Carta de ajuste color TVE) was an electronic analogue TV test card adopted by Televisión Española (TVE - Spanish national television) with the introduction of PAL colour broadcasts in 1975. It is notable for its unique design, created by the Danish engineer Finn Hendil in 1973, under the supervision of Erik Helmer Nielsen for Philips, the same team that developed the popular Philips PM5544 test pattern. It replaced a previous black and white version developed by Eduardo Gavilán.
The test card was considered as part of the regular TV schedule, figuring among daily program listings published in newspapers and magazines. It was the most viewed program in some days, because people watched the test card while waiting for broadcasts to start. It was also relevant in the context of general work strikes, where the test card was sometimes broadcast in place of regular programming, marking it a visible sign of the strike's success.
With the start of continuous 24-hour broadcasting on TVE's channels, the test card was phased out. It stopped being broadcast on La Primera in 1996 and on La 2 during the early-morning of 6 January 2001, although it continued to be broadcast sporadically on Teledeporte and TVE Internacional until the mid-2000s.
Operation and features
As Televisión Española adopted the PAL colour system in 1975, the test card has specific elements that allow proper colour adjustments. Being a creation of the same team behind the Philips PM5544 test card, it has many elements in common with it (like colour and grey bars or castellations), but introduces some differences (for example, different resolution gratings and coloured background rectangle and circle).
Castellations
The alternating white and black boxes around the perimeter are called castellations. They are used to set overscan (castellations should be visible) and check for low frequency response of the entire transmission chain.
Grid
The background features a grid composed of perfect squares of 100% intensity white lines.
This element allows:
Verify image geometry (horizontal and vertical size and linearity, cushion or barrel distortion effects);
Adjust CRT convergence (the three electron guns, one for each primary color, need to target the same place);
Adjust CRT focus;
Check CRT color purity when displaying the 50% intensity gray background.
Rectangle
This element is composed of an orange rectangle, framed with a white line and located at the image center.
It allows for:
Checking proper chrominance delay, essential for good PAL system operation;
Visualizing low frequency image distortions;
Adjusting maximum color saturation.
Signal values of this element are:
Circle
This element is composed of a light blue circle, also located at the center of the image. With a diameter of 512 lines, it overlaps the rectangle mentioned previously. The circle provides a quick overview of image geometry.
Signal values of this element are:
Box
Located at the top of the circle and composed of 100% white lines, it allows to verify the low frequency response of the transmission chain.
Colour bars
Inside the circle there's a section of colour bars with 75% amplitude and 100% saturation, that allow checking chrominance parameters on a vectorscope or waveform monitor.
The signal values of these bars are:
Centre Grid
This element is composed of 100% white lines located at the center of the image, between the colour bars and the greysscale. It helps with image centring adjustment and allow checking for CRT convergence at the centre of the screen.
Greyscale Bars
Beneath the colour bars there's a greyscale bar with six steps. This allows checking gamma correction of the television receiver, and linearity response of the transmission chain.
The brightness value of each steps varies with a ratio of 20%, as follows:
Grating Bars
Located within the circle, the gratings are composed of alternating white and black lines.
Horizontal frequency response (horizontal resolution) can be determined by five frequency gratings of 0.5, 1.25, 2.25, 4.2 and 4.8 MHz. The last two gratings must show interference from the 4.43 MHz PAL colour carrier.
Pulse Signal
A pulse signal bar is placed under the frequency gratings, consisting of a black rectangle with a white vertical line, corresponding to a 2T pulse. This signal shows the status of the transmission chain at high frequencies, as well as ghosting due to signal echoes.
Station Identification
Other elements like TV network identification, specific TV channel logos or a clock were usually added to the test pattern.
See also
Philips PM5540
Telefunken FuBK
References
Test cards
Broadcast engineering |
Bobbi Kelly (born 6 February 1994) is an Australian skier and sighted guide for visually impaired skiers. She is Melissa Perrine's guide at the 2022 Winter Paralympics.
Skiing
Kelly's home ski resort of Perisher, New South Wales. She has a Level 4 Australian Professional Snowsport Instructors Inc (APSI) and is a Level 1/2 Trainer for APSI.
Kelly is the guide for Paralympic skier Melissa Perrine. Perrine with Kelly won the gold medal in the Women's Super Combined Visually Impaired, silver medals in the Women's Giant Slalom and Women's Super G Visually Impaired and the bronze medal in the Women's Slalom Visually Impaired at 2019 World Para Alpine Skiing Championships in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia.
In 2020, Kelly was a participant in the Australian Institute of Sport Talent Program, a program to place more women in leadership positions in Australian Sport.
References
External links
Paralympics Australia Profile
1994 births
Australian female alpine skiers
Alpine skiers at the 2022 Winter Paralympics
Paralympic alpine skiers of Australia
Living people |
"Total Control" is a song by American new wave band The Motels. It was released in 1979 as the second single from their debut studio album Motels. The song peaked at number 109 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and number 7 in Australia and 11 in New Zealand.
Track listing
US 7" single
"Total Control" - 3:45
"Love Don't Help" - 1:56
Chart
Cover versions
Tina Turner recorded a version for the We Are the World album (1985)
Missy Higgins recored a version for her mini-album, Total Control, (2022)
References
1979 singles
2022 singles
The Motels songs
Missy Higgins songs
Capitol Records singles
1979 songs |
The following is a list of charter schools in Alaska.
Charter Schools
Anvil City Science Academy, Nome
Highland Academy Charter School, Anchorage
Juneau Community Charter School, Juneau
Tongass School of Arts and Sciences, Ketchikan
Twindly Bridge Charter School, Wasilla
References
School districts
School districts |
Cyperus aterrimus is a species of sedge that is native to parts of Africa.
See also
List of Cyperus species
References
aterrimus
Plants described in 1854
Flora of Tanzania
Flora of Kenya
Flora of Malawi
Flora of Burundi
Flora of Cameroon
Flora of Ethiopia
Flora of Rwanda
Flora of Uganda
Taxa named by Ernst Gottlieb von Steudel |
Jacques Gerard Colimon (born August 27, 1994) is a Haitian-American actor. He is best known for his roles in The Society and The Sky Is Everywhere.
References
External links
1994 births
Living people
21st-century American actors
Male actors from Los Angeles
American film actors
American television actors |
Jeff David (September 16, 1940 – March 25, 2008) was an American stage, television and voice actor.
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. David began his career in New York, where he performed on stage. While David performed on stage, he starred in the play The Lost Colony, where he played the lead role. The play was shown at the Waterside Theatre in Manteo, North Carolina. According to the Battle Creek Enquirer, it stated that David was the only white person to perform in a stage production at the Negro Ensemble Company. He also performed at the McCarter Theatre and Vivian Beaumont Theater, in which David then left performing there for which he had health problems, turning down given offers from appearing in stage productions. David became a stage director, where he directed for stage productions including the Pittsburgh Playhouse.
David began his television and voice acting career in 1971, where David appeared in his only film credit called Some of My Best Friends Are..., playing the role of "Leo". In his career, his agent gave him a suggestion to voice for television advertisements. He guest-starred in television programs, including, The Six Million Dollar Man, Switch, The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, Hawaii Five-O and The Rockford Files. David provided additional voices for the animated television series Jana of the Jungle, with also doing the same of the television program Spider-Man. He also voiced the character "Captain Carl Majors" in Godzilla. David voiced the caustic humour robot character "Crichton" for the second season of the science fiction television series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.
David died in March 2008 of a heart attack in New York, at the age of 67.
References
External links
Rotten Tomatoes profile
1940 births
2008 deaths
People from Philadelphia
Male actors from Philadelphia
American male television actors
American male stage actors
American male voice actors
20th-century American male actors |
Anna T. Sadlier (1854 – April 16, 1932) was a Canadian writer whose novels were of a Catholic nature, and whose works numbered over forty volumes. She began to write when she was about eighteen. Her published works include a number of translations from the French, Italian, and Spanish. Sadlier died in 1932.
Early life and education
Anna Teresa (sometimes "Theresa") Sadlier was born in Montreal, Canada, 1854. Her father was James Sadlier and her mother was Mary Anne Sadlier.
Her education was received at various schools in that city, and completed at the Villa Maria, the principal Convent of the Congregation of Notre Dame of Montreal.
Career
Like her mother, she spent about equal portions of her life in New York City and Montreal. She was a frequent contributor in prose and verse to most of the U.S. Catholic periodicals as well as to some English and Canadian ones. She wrote a great many short stories. One of her earliest literary ventures was Seven Years and Mair, a novelette published by the Harpers in their "Half Hour Series". Her principal original published works were Names that Live and Women of Catholicity, two volumes of biography. Sadlier spent a lot of time on these and they possessed a historical point of view. In two of the sketches which were distinctively American, she drew largely from the Jesuit Relations and the Memoirs of Père Olier, and she had the advantage of access to the annals of the Ursulines of Quebec and of the Congregation of Notre Dame of Montreal.
Among her other original works are two stirring historical romances, The Red Inn of St. Lyphar, which finds its plot and its adventures in the days of the French Revolution and the Rising of La Vendee; and The True Story of Master Gerard, in which the background is provided by Colonial New York and the Leisler conspiracy. Perhaps Sadlier's best work was accomplished in juvenile fiction. In The Mysterious Doorway and The mystery of Hornby Hall, she provided, as the titles imply, a mystery, while the children in The Talisman and A Summer at Woodville are lifelike, interesting, lovable youngsters, and the heroine of Pauline Archer is a Catholic cousin of Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. Her other books are Ethel Hamilton and The King's Page.
Sadlier's translations from the French and Italian include: Ubaldo and Irene, Mathilda of Canossa, Idols, Monk's Pardon, The Outlaw of Camargue, The Wonders of Lourdes, The Old Chest, Consolations for the Afflicted, A Thought of the Sacred Heart for Every Day of the Year, Words of St. Alphonsus, Lucille, or the Young Flower-Maker, The Two Brothers, Augustine, or the Mysterious Beggar, Ivan, or The Leper's Son, The Dumb Boy of Fribourg, and The Recluse of Rambouillet.
Personal life
Sadlier was the founder of the Ottawa Tabernacle Society. She resided in Ottawa, Ontario for 29 years, before dying there at her home, April 16, 1932. Interment was at Ottawa's Notre Dame cemetery.
Style
Of her work it may be said as she says of the writings of Marie de l'Incarnation, "it possesses rare excellence in a literary point of view, and as a historical record is unsurpassed for clearness and accuracy. The style is delicate and spiritual, while forcible and consistent; the work is marked by a keenness of perception, a subtle grasp of points at issue, an attention to detail, and a breadth of thought embracing the whole extent of what lies before it."
Selected works
Seven Years and Mair
Names that Live
Women of Catholicity
Ethel Hamilton
The King's Page
The Red Inn of St. Lyphar
The True Story of Master Gerard
Translations
Ubaldo and Irene
Mathilda of Canossa
Idols
Monk's Pardon
The Outlaw of Camargue
The Wonders of Lourdes
The Old Chest
Consolations for the Afflicted
A Thought of the Sacred Heart for Every Day of the Year
Words of St. Alphonsus
Lucille, or the Young Flower-Maker
The Two Brothers
Augustine, or the Mysterious Beggar
Ivan, or The Leper's Son
The Dumb Boy of Fribourg
The Recluse of Rambouillet
References
1854 births
1932 deaths
Canadian Roman Catholics
19th-century Canadian writers
20th-century Canadian writers
19th-century Canadian women writers
20th-century Canadian women writers
19th-century Canadian novelists
20th-century Canadian novelists
Canadian children's writers
Canadian women children's writers |
Martin B. Moore Sr. (April 12, 1937 – February 3, 2022) was an American politician from Alaska.
Biography
He served in the Alaska House of Representatives from 1971 to 1972. Moore later served as the city manager of Emmonak.
Moore died from COVID-19 complications on February 3, 2022, at the age of 84.
References
1937 births
2022 deaths
Alaska Democrats
American city managers
Businesspeople from Alaska
Members of the Alaska House of Representatives
Native American state legislators in Alaska
People from Kusilvak Census Area, Alaska
Yupik people
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Alaska |
Major-general Sir George Le Grand Jacob (1805 – 1881) was an English army officer in the East India Company and an Oriental polyglot.
Life
Overview
George Le Grand Jacob, the fifth son and youngest child of John Jacob, by his wife Anna Maria Le Grand, was born at his father's residence, Roath Court, near Cardiff, 24 April 1805. His family in 1815 removed to Guernsey. Jacob was educated at Elizabeth College, Guernsey, and under private tutors in France and England, and when about fifteen was sent to London to learn Oriental languages under Dr. John Borthwick Gilchrist. He obtained an Indian infantry cadetship in 1820, and on the voyage out to Bombay contracted a close friendship with Alexander Burnes. He was posted to the 2nd or grenadier regiment Bombay Native Infantry (later Prince of Wales's Own) as ensign 9 June 1821, in which corps he obtained all his regimental steps except the last. His subsequent commissions were: lieutenant 10 December 1823, captain 6 June 1836, major 1 May 1848, lieutenant-colonel in the (late) 31st Bombay native infantry 15 November 1853, brevet-colonel 6 December 1856, brigadier-general 21 July 1858, major-general on retirement 31 December 1861.
Career
Jacob passed for interpreter in Hindustâni so speedily after arrival in India, that he was complimented in presidency general orders. He afterwards passed in Persian and Marâthi. He saw some harassing service with his regiment against the Bheels in the pestiferous Nerbudda jungles, and was subsequently with it in Cutch and at Ukulkote. He took his furlough home in 1831, and in January 1833 was appointed orderly officer in the East India Military Seminary, Addiscombe. While there, at the request of the Oriental Translation Fund, he undertook the translation of the Ajaib-al-Tabakat ("Wonder of the Universe"), a manuscript purchased by Alexander Burnes in the bazaar at Bokhara. Jacob considered the work not worth printing, and his manuscript translation is now in the library of the Asiatic Society, London. On 18 June 1835 he married Emily, daughter of Colonel Utterton of Heath Lodge, Croydon, and soon afterwards sailed for India. His wife died at sea, and Jacob landed at Bombay in very broken health. He recovered under the care of a brother, William Jacob, then an officer in the Bombay artillery, and in 1836 was appointed second political assistant in Kattywar, where he was in political charge in 1839–43. His ability in dealing with the disputed Limree succession was noticed by the government; the curious details are given in his book Western India. He was also thanked for his report on the Babriawar tribes (1843) and other reports on Kattywar. Early in 1845 he served as extra aide-de-camp to Major-general Delamotte during the disturbances in the South Mahratta country, and was wounded in the head and arm by a falling rock when in command of the storming party in the assault on the hill-fort of Munsuntosh. In April 1845 Jacob was appointed political agent in Sawunt Warree. The little state was bankrupt, with its gaols overflowing; but Jacob's judicious measures during a period of six years restored order, retrieved the finances, and reformed abuses. On 8 Jan. 1851 Jacob was made political agent in Cutch, and was sent into Sind as a special commissioner to inquire into the case of the unfortunate Mir Ali Murad Talpur, Khan of Khypore, the papers relating to which were printed among Sessional Papers of 1858 and the following years. He also sat on an inquiry into departmental abuses at Bombay. An account of his travels in Cutch appeared in the Proceedings for 1862 of the Bombay Geographical Society, since merged in the Asiatic Society of Bombay. His health needing change, he obtained leave, and visited China, Java, Sarawak, and Australia, "keeping his eyes and ears ever on the alert, always reading, writing, or inquiring—mostly smoking—winning men by his geniality and women by his courteous bearing". On his return he was shipwrecked on a coral reef in Torres Straits, and saved from cannibal natives by a Dutch vessel. He quitted Cutch for Bombay in December 1856, at first purposing to retire; but he served under Outram in the Persian expedition. In Persia he was in command of the native light battalion in the division under Henry Havelock, whom Jacob appears to have regarded as too much of a martinet. He returned with the expeditionary force to Bombay in May 1857.
Indian Rebellion of 1857
Acting under the orders of Lord Elphinstone, the Governor of Bombay, Jacob arrived at Kolapore on 14 August, a fortnight after the 27th Bombay native infantry had broken into mutiny there. Four days later he, with a mere handful of troops, quietly disarmed the regiment, and brought the ringleaders of the outbreak to justice. On 4 December following, when the city closed its gates against Jacob's small force which was encamped in their lines outside, Jacob promptly blew open one of the gates, put the rebels to flight, tried by drumhead court-martial and executed on the spot thirty-six who were caught red-handed, and held the city until the mischief was past. His vigour, no doubt, prevented the wave of rebellion from sweeping over the whole southern Mahratta country and overflowing into the Nizam's dominions. Jacob was specially thanked in presidency general orders 8 January 1858 for "the promptitude and decision shown by you on the occasion of the recent insurrection at Kolapore", and "for the manner in which you upheld the honour of this army, proving to all around you what a British officer can effect by gallantry and prudence in the face of the greatest difficulties". Jacob's powers, at first limited to Kolapore, Sawunt Warree, and Rutnagerry, were in May 1858 extended to the whole South Mahratta country, of which he was appointed special commissioner, the command of the troops with the rank of brigadier-general being subsequently added. After dealing successfully with various local outbreaks, Jacob was sent to Goa to confer with the Portuguese authorities respecting the Sawunt rebels on the frontier. This service successfully accomplished, he resigned his command. He remained nominally political agent in Cutch up to the date of his leaving India in 1859. James Outram appears to have desired that Jacob should succeed him as member of the council at Calcutta, but he retired with the rank of major-general from 31 December 1861. He was made CB in 1859, and KCSI in 1869.
Appraisal
Jacob has been likened in character to his cousin, General John Jacob. He had the same fearlessness, the same hatred of red tape and jobbery, and the same genius for understanding and conciliating Asiatics. His outspoken advocacy of native rights not unfrequently gave offence to the officials with whom he came in contact. Throughout his life he was a zealous student of the literature of India, and whenever opportunity offered did his best to promote research in the history and antiquities of the land. He was one of the earliest copiers of the Asoka inscriptions (250 BC) at Girnar, Kattywar; and in Cunningham's Corpus Inscriptionum, Calcutta, 1877, are many inscriptions transcribed by him in Western India. A list of papers bearing on the history, archaeology, topography, geology, and metallurgy of Western India, contributed by Jacob at different times to various publications, is given in the Journal of the Asiatic Society, London, new series, xiii. pp. vii. and viii. Some are included in the Royal Society's Catalogue of Scientific Papers; but neither list appears complete. In his prime he was an ardent sportsman. Seven lions fell to his rifle in one day in Kattywar, and his prowess as a shikarry was perpetuated in native verse. The last twenty years of Jacob's life were spent at home under much suffering: a constant struggle with asthma, bronchitis, and growing blindness. His mental vigour remained unimpaired. With the assistance of his niece and adopted daughter, Miss Gertrude Le Grand Jacob, he wrote his Western India before and during the Mutiny, which was published in 1871, and was highly commended by the historian Kaye; and shortly before his death he paid 20l. for a translation from the Dutch of some papers of interest on the island of Bali (east of Java), subsequently printed in the Journal of the Asiatic Society, London, viii. 115, ix. 59, x. 49. Jacob died in London on 27 January 1881, and was buried in Brookwood Cemetery, near Woking, Surrey.
Sources
East India Registers and Army Lists;
Kaye's History of the Indian Mutiny, ed. Malleson, cabinet edition, vol. v. book xiii. chap. i. book xiv. chap. iv.;
T. R. E. Holmes's Indian Mutiny, 3rd ed. pp. 446–457;
Report on Administration of Public Affairs in Bombay in 1857–8;
Goldsmid's James Outram, a biography, London, 1888, i. 341–80;
Overland Mail, 6 May 1881;
Journal of the Asiatic Society, London, May 1881, new series vol. xiii.;
Jacob's Western India.
Notes
References
Bibliography
External links
Jacob, Kenneth. "Sir George Legrand Jacob", myjacobfamily.com. n.d. Accessed 6 February 2022.
Ockerbloom, John Mark (ed.). "George Le Grand Jacob", The Online Books Page. n.d. Accessed 6 February 2022.
1805 births
1881 deaths
British military personnel of the Anglo-Persian War
British East India Company Army generals
Bombay Artillery officers
Companions of the Order of the Bath
Knights Commander of the Order of the Star of India |
The APRA Music Awards of 2022 are the 40th annual series, known as APRA Awards. The awards are given in a series of categories in three divisions and in separate ceremonies throughout the year: the APRA Music Awards, Art Music Awards and Screen Music Awards. The APRA Music Awards are provided by APRA AMCOS and celebrate excellence in contemporary music, honouring songwriters and publishers that have achieved artistic excellence and outstanding success in their fields.
On 3 February 2022, the 20-song long list for the APRA Song of the Year was announced.
References
2022 in Australian music
2022 music awards
APRA Awards |
The following is a list of charter schools in Arizona (including networks of such schools) grouped by county, with the exception of Phoenix, Arizona, a city large enough to merit its own category.
Cochise County
Center for Academic Success Charter School
Leman Academy of Excellence (Sierra Vista)
Liberty Traditional Charter School (Douglas)
Omega Alpha Academy
Coconino County
Flagstaff Arts and Leadership Academy
Flagstaff Junior Academy
Mountain Charter School
Northland Preparatory Academy
The PEAK School
Pine Forest School
Gila County
Destiny School
Liberty High School
New Visions Academy
Maricopa County (excluding Phoenix)
American Leadership Academy
American Virtual Academy
Arizona Charter Academy
Arizona Connections Academy
Arts Academy at Estrella Mountain
Ball Charter Schools (Dobson, Val Vista)
Benjamin Franklin Charter School
Calibre Academy
Cambridge Academy
Candeo Schools
Challenge Charter School
Challenger Basic School
Concordia Charter School
Country Gardens Charter School
Crown Charter School
Desert Heights Charter Schools
East Valley Academy and Crossroads
Edkey Schools (George Washington, Pathfinder, Sequoia Eastmark, Sequoia Charter, Sequoia Verrado Way, Sequoia Choice, Sequoia Deaf, Sequoia Lehi, Sequoia Pathway)
Eduprize Schools
Ethos Academy
FrenchAm Schools
Gila Crossing Community School
Great Hearts Academies (Archway Classical, Anthem Prep, Arete Prep, Chandler Prep, Glendale Prep, Lincoln Prep, Roosevelt, Scottsdale Prep, Trivium Prep)
Happy Valley School
Heritage Academy (Mesa, Arizona)
Hirsch Academy
Imagine Schools (East Mesa, Rosefield, Surprise)
Incito Schools
IntelliSchool (Chandler, Glendale)
James Madison Preparatory School
Kaizen Schools (Discover U, El Dorado, Gilbert Arts, Glenview Prep, Liberty Arts, Skyview, Vista Grove Prep)
Leading Edge Academy
Legacy Traditional Schools (Chandler, East Mesa, Gilbert, Glendale, Goodyear, Laveen, Mesa, North Chandler, Peoria, Surprise, West Surprise)
Leman Academy of Excellence (Mesa)
MASSA Academy of Math & Science (Glendale, Peoria)
The New School for the Arts and Academics
New Horizon School for the Performing Arts
Noah Webster Charter Schools
Odyssey Prep Academy Schools
Paradise Honors High School
Pinnacle Charter Schools
Polytechnic High School (Arizona)
PPEP TEC High Schools
Primavera Online High School
Self Development Academy (East Mesa, Glendale, Mesa)
Skyline Schools (AZ Compass Prep, Gila River, Vector Prep/Arts)
Step Up Schools
Student Choice High School
Tempe Accelerated High School
Tempe Preparatory Academy
ThrivePoint High Schools
Mohave County
Desert Star Academy
Kaizen Schools (Havasu Prep)
Kingman Academy of Learning
Masada Charter School
Mohave Accelerated Learning Center
Pillar Academy of Business & Finance
Telesis Preparatory Academy
Young Scholar's Academy
Navajo County
Edkey Schools (Sequoia Village)
City of Phoenix
ACCLAIM Academy
All Aboard Charter School
American Charter Schools Foundation (Alta Vista, Apache Trail, Crestview Prep, Desert Hills, Estrella, Peoria Accelerated, Ridgeview Prep, South Pointe, South Ridge, Sun Valley, West Phoenix)
Arizona Agribusiness and Equine Center
Arizona Language Preparatory
Arizona School for the Arts
ASU Preparatory Academy, Phoenix High School
Ball Charter Schools (Hearn)
Bennett Academy
Career Success Schools
CASA Academy
Choice Academies
Cornerstone Charter High School
Deer Valley Academy
EAGLE College Prep Schools
Edkey Schools (AZ Conservatory, Caurus, Children First)
Empower College Prep
Espiritu Schools
Freedom Academy
Girls Leadership Academy of Arizona
Great Hearts Academies (Archway Classical, Cicero Prep, Maryvale Prep, North Phoenix Prep)
Horizon Honors Schools
Imagine Schools (Academy of Phoenix, Bell Canyon, Camelback, Cortez Park, Desert West)
IntelliSchool (Metro Center, Paradise Valley)
International Commerce High School
Kaizen Schools (Advance U, Leona Connected, Maya High, Quest, South Pointe, Summit)
Legacy Traditional Schools
Liberty Traditional Charter School
Madison Highland Prep
MASSA Academy of Math & Science (Camelback, Desert Sky, Flower)
Metropolitan Arts Institute
Midtown Primary School
Milestones Charter School
NFL YET
North Pointe Preparatory
Paideia Academy
Painted Rock Academy
Pan-American Charter School
Pensar Academy
Phoenix Advantage Charter School
Phoenix College Preparatory Academy
Phoenix International Academy
Pioneer Preparatory School
Premier High School
Ridgeline Academy
RSD High School
Sage Academy
Scottsdale Country Day School
Self Development Academy
Skyline Schools (Skyline Prep, South Phoenix Prep/Arts, South Valley)
Southwest Leadership Academy
Stepping Stones Academy
Synergy Public School
Think Through Academy
Valley Academy
Victory Collegiate Academy
Vista College Preparatory
Western School of Science and Technology
Pima County
Academy Del Sol
Academy of Building Industries
Academies of Math & Science
Academy of Tucson
Accelerated Learning Laboratory
Basis Schools
Canyon Rose Academy
Carden of Tucson Charter School
CITY Center for Collaborative Learning
Compass High School (Tucson, Arizona)
CPLC Community Schools (Hiaki, Toltecalli)
Desert Rose Academy Charter School
Desert Sky Community School
Edge High School
Great Expectations Academy
Highland Free School
Legacy Traditional Schools (Northwest Tucson)
Leman Academy of Excellence (Central Tucson, East Tucson, Marana, Oro Valley)
MASSA Academy of Math & Science (Desert Sky, Prince, South Mountain)
Mexicayotl Academy of Excellence
Mountain Rose Academy
Open Doors Community School
Pima Rose Academy
Satori School
Southern Arizona Community Academy
Southgate Academy
Tucson Country Day School
Tucson International Academy
Tucson Preparatory School
Vision Charter School
Pinal County
Apache Trail High School
ASU Preparatory Academy, Casa Grande
Avalon Elementary
Grande Innovation Academy
Imagine Schools (Avondale, Coolidge, Superstition)
Kaizen Schools (Mission Heights Prep)
Legacy Traditional Schools (Avondale, Casa Grande, Maricopa, Queen Creek)
MASSA Academy of Math & Science (Avondale)
Santa Cruz County
Kaizen Schools (Colegio Petite)
Yavapai County
Canyon View Preparatory Academy
Desert Star Community School
Edkey Schools (American Heritage Academy Camp Verde & Cottonwood)
Franklin Phonetic Primary School
La Tierra Community School
Mingus Springs Charter School
Mountain Oak Charter School
Pace Preparatory Academy
Park View Middle School
Prescott Valley School
Sedona Charter School
Tri-City College Prep High School
Yuma County
Carpe Diem e-Learning Community
References
School districts
School districts |
Theo Timmermans may refer to:
Theo Timmermans (footballer, born 1989)
Theo Timmermans (footballer, born 1926) |
Amelia Hodgson (born 29 June 1997) is an Australian skier and sighted guide for visually impaired skiers. She is Patrick Jensen's guide at the 2022 Winter Paralympics.
Skiing
Hodgson lives in Jindabyne, New South Wales. She grew up ski racing and is a ski instructor and coach. Since 2019, Hodgson has been the sighted guide with Para-alpine skier Patrick Jensen. In the 2019–20 season, Jensen and Hodgson won three bronze medals in World Cup events.
References
External links
Paralympics Australia Profile
1997 births
Living people
2022 Winter Paralympics
People from New South Wales
Alpine skiing coaches
Paralympic sighted guides |
The following is a list of Bureau of Indian Education and Tribally Controlled Schools in Arizona (including networks of such schools) grouped by county.
Apache County
Cottonwood Day School
Cove Day School
Kin Dah Lichi'i Olta
Lukachukai Community School
Many Farms Community School (formerly Chinle Boarding School)
Many Farms High School
Nazlini Community School
Red Rock Day School
Rock Point Community School
Rough Rock Community School
T'iis Nazbas Community Schools
Wide Ruins Community School
Coconino County
Greyhills Academy High School
Havasupai Elementary School
Leupp Schools, Inc. (Leupp, Tolani Lake)
Moencopi Day School
NaaTsis'Aan Community School
Tonalea Day School
Maricopa County
Salt River High School
Navajo County
Black Mesa Community School
Chilchinbeto Community School
Dilcon Community School
Dishchii'bikoh Community School
First Mesa Elementary School
Greasewood Springs Community School
Hopi Day School
Hotevilla Bacavi Community School
Jeehdeez'a Elementary School
John F. Kennedy Day School
Keams Canyon Elementary School
Leupp Schools, Inc. (Birdsprings)
Little Singer Community School
Pinon Community School
Second Mesa Day School
Shonto Preparatory School
Pima County
Santa Rosa Ranch School
Pinal County
Blackwater Community School-Akimel O'otham Pee Posh Charter School
Casa Blanca Community School
References
School districts
School districts |
Trail of the Axe is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Ernest C. Warde and starring Dustin Farnum, Winifred Kingston and Joseph J. Dowling.
Cast
Dustin Farnum as Dave Malkern
Winifred Kingston as Betty Somers
George Fisher as Jim Malkern
Joseph J. Dowling as Dr. Somers
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1922 films
1922 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
Films directed by Ernest C. Warde
American black-and-white films |
Shirley L. Bolton (1945-1984) was an American painter and educator.
Biography
Bolton was born on January 9, 1945 in Lexington, Georgia. She attended University of Georgia in Athens eventually earning her PhD. She exhibited her art at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. Her work is in the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia. Her 1971 drawing The World Outside is in Georgia's State Art Collection.
Bolton died August 10, 1984 in Pensacola, Florida. Some of her papers are in the Art & Artist files at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
References
External links
images of Bolton's work in Invaluable
1945 births
1984 deaths
African-American painters
African-American women artists
20th-century African-American women
20th-century African-American artists |
David Maurice Bressler (May 1, 1879 – December 16, 1942) was a German-born Jewish American social worker from New York.
Life
Bressler was born in Charlottenburg, Germany on May 1, 1879, the son of Julius Bressler and Sarah Rothenberg.
Bressler immigrated to America in 1884. He attended the College of the City of New York, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, and the New York Law School. He was admitted to the bar in 1901, although he then began working in social welfare and in that same year he became director of the Roumanian Relief Committee, which was organized to help Romanian immigrants. When the Committee later merged with the Industrial Removal Office, he served as the Office's manager until 1917. He was honorary secretary of the Jewish Immigrants Information Bureau early in his career, and in 1910 he was on a committee for the reform of immigration conditions at Ellis Island. In 1914, he was president of the National Conference of Jewish Social Workers. He helped organize the first national campaign of the American Jewish Relief Committee in 1915, and became the first secretary of the Joint Distribution Committee. The Committee sent him to study the Jewish conditions in Europe in 1922, and upon his return he became chairman of the National Appeal for Jewish War Sufferers. In 1924, he became chairman of the Emergency Committee for Jewish Refugees with Louis Marshall and Stephen S. Wise, and two years later he was acting chairman of the New York branch of the United Jewish Campaign. He took a second trip to Eastern Europe in 1929, after which he became national co-chairman of the Allied Jewish Campaign. In 1934, Governor Herbert H. Lehman appointed him a member of the New York State Planning Board. In 1937, Lehman appointed him to the New York State Appeal Board of Unemployment Insurance.
Bressler lived in New York City. He was secretary of the Executive Committee of the Independent Order of B'nai B'rith in 1903. He became an executive committee member of the American Jewish Committee in 1925. He was chairman of the advisory board of the Beth Abraham Home for Incurables in 1926. He was a director of the Sydenham Hospital, a delegate-at-large of the Federation for Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies of New York, a board member of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, the Palestine Economic Corporation, and the National Refugee Service, an executive committee member of the Joint Distribution Committee, and a non-Zionist member of the Council of the Jewish Agency in Palestine. He also published Industrial Removal Office in 1903, The Distribution of Jewish Immigrants in 1907, and Reports on Present-Day Conditions of the Jews in Eastern Europe in 1930.
Bressler was a member of the Freemasons. In 1907, he married Irma Loeb. Their children were Lorna D. Brett and Alan David.
Bressler died at his office on 75 Maiden Lane from a heart attack on December 16, 1942. His funeral took place in Temple Emanu-El. Rabbi Samuel H. Goldenson delivered the eulogy. The honorary pallbearers included Paul Baerwald, Dr. Jacob Billikopf, Dr. Gabriel Davidson, Eugene G. Dreyer, Rabbi Isidore Frank, Dr. Ephraim Frisch, Lawrence Greenbaum, Dr. Maurice B. Hexter, Alexander Kahn, David Brown, Dr. David J. Kaliski, Dr. David Lvovich, James Marshall, Dr. Fred J. Newman, Louis S. Posner, James N. Rosenberg, William Rosenwald, Morton Stein, Horace Stern, Lionel Strassburger, Morris D. Waldman, Truly Warner, Dr. Jacob Golub, Supreme Court Justice Meier Steinbrink, I. Edwin Goldwasser, and Joseph C. Hyman. Former Governor Herbert H. Lehman was supposed to be head the honorary pallbearers, but he was unable to attend the funeral.
References
1879 births
1942 deaths
People from Charlottenburg
19th-century German Jews
American people of German-Jewish descent
German emigrants to the United States
City College of New York alumni
Jewish Theological Seminary of America alumni
New York Law School alumni
19th-century American Jews
20th-century American Jews
American Reform Jews
Jewish American philanthropists
American social workers
American Freemasons
20th-century American lawyers
Lawyers from New York City
Jewish American attorneys |
Annika Morgan (born 12 February 2002) is a German snowboarder who competes in the slopestyle and big air events. She competed in the women's slopestyle event at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
References
External links
2002 births
Living people
German female snowboarders
Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
Olympic snowboarders of Germany
Sportspeople from Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Snowboarders at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics |
The 2022 Northwestern Wildcats football team will represent Northwestern University during the 2022 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Wildcats will play their home games at Ryan Field in Evanston, Illinois, and compete as members of the Big Ten Conference. They will be led by head coach Pat Fitzgerald, in his seventeenth season.
Schedule
Northwestern announced its 2022 football schedule on January 12, 2022. The 2022 schedule will consist of six home games and five away games, as well as a neutral-site game in the regular season. The Wildcats will host Big Ten foes Wisconsin, Ohio State, and Illinois and will travel to Penn State, Maryland, Penn State, Iowa, Minnesota, and Purdue. They will play Nebraska at Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland.
The Wildcats will host all of the three non-conference opponents, Duke from the ACC, Southern Illinois from Division I FCS and Miami (OH) from the MAC
References
Northwestern
Northwestern Wildcats football seasons
Northwestern Wildcats football |
The following is a list of charter schools in California (including networks of such schools) grouped by county.
Alameda County
Academy of Alameda Middle School
Achieve Academy
AIMS College Prep Middle School/AIMS High School
Alameda Community Learning Center
Alternative in Action High School
American Indian Public Charter School
ARISE High School
ASCEND Elementary
Aspire Schools (Berkley Maynard, College Academy, Golden State Prep, Lionel Wilson Prep, Monarch, Triumph Technology)
Aurum Preparatory Academy
Bay Area Technology School
Circle of Independent Learning
Community School for Creative Education
Connecting Waters Charter School (East Bay)
Downtown Charter Academy
East Bay Innovation Academy
Education for Change Public Schools (6 schools)
Envision Schools (3 schools)
Francophone Charter School of Oakland
Hayward Twin Oaks Montessori School
KEY Academy Charter School
KIPP (Bridge Academy, King Collegiate, Summit Academy)
Leadership Public Schools, Hayward
Lighthouse Community Public Schools
Nea Community Learning Center
North Oakland Community Charter School
Oakland Charter Academy
Oakland Charter High School
Oakland Military Institute
Oakland School for the Arts
Opportunity Academy
Oakland Unity Middle/High School
Urban Montessori Charter School
Yu Ming Charter School
Butte County
Achieve Charter School (3 schools)
Blue Oak Charter School
Chico Country Day School
Children's Community Charter School
Come Back Butte Charter School
CORE Butte Charter School
Forest Ranch Charter School
Hearthstone School
HomeTech Charter School
Inspire School of Arts & Sciences
Ipkanni Early College Charter
Paradise Charter Middle School
Pivot Charter School (North Valley II)
Sherwood Montessori School
STREAM Charter School
Wildflower Open Classroom
Contra Costa County
Antioch Charter Academies (2 schools)
Aspire Schools (Richmond Cal Prep, Richmond Tech Academy)
Benito Juarez Elementary School
Caliber: Beta Academy
Clayton Valley Charter High School
Contra Costa School of Performing Arts
Eagle Peak Montessori School
Golden Gate Community School
Invictus Academy of Richmond
John Henry High School
Leadership Public Schools Richmond
Making Waves Academy
Manzanita Middle School
Richmond Charter Academy (2 schools)
Richmond College Prep School
Rocketship Schools (Delta Prep, Futuro Academy)
Summit Public School
Vista Oaks Charter School
Voices College-Bound Language Academies (West Contra Costa)
Del Norte County
Castle Rock Charter School
Uncharted Shores Academy
El Dorado County
American River Charter School
Buckeye Union Mandarin Immersion Charter School
California Montessori Project (Shingle Springs)
Camino Polytechnic
Charter Alternative Program
Charter Community School Home Study Academy
Charter Montessori (Valley View)
Clarksville Charter School
The Cottonwood School
EDUHSD Virtual Academy Shenandoah
John Adams Academy (El Dorado Hills)
Rising Sun Montessori School
Rite of Passage
Fresno County
Agape Schools (Carter G. Woodson, W.E.B DuBois School, W.E.B DuBois Academy)
Alvina Elementary Charter School
Aspen Public Schools (3 schools)
Big Picture Educational Academy
California Virtual Academy (Fresno)
Career Technical Education Center
Central Valley Home School
Clovis Global Academy
Clovis Online Charter School
Edison-Bethune Charter Academy
Endeavor Charter School
Golden Charter Academy
Hallmark Charter School
Hume Lake Charter School
Inspire Schools (Central)
Island Community Day School
Kepler Neighborhood School
Kings Canyon Online School
Kingsburg Elementary Charter School District
Learn4Life (Ambassador Philip V. Sanchez II, Clovis, Crescent View South II, Crescent View West, Manchester Center, Sunnyside)
Morris E. Dailey Charter Elementary School
Quail Lake Environmental Charter School
Rafer Johnson Junior High School
Reedley Middle College High School
Sanger Academy Charter School
School of Unlimited Learning (Fresno EOC)
Sierra Charter School
University High School
West Park Charter Academy
Yosemite Valley Charter School
Glenn County
Lake View Charter School
Success One!
Walden Academy
William Finch Charter School
Humboldt County
Agnes J. Johnson Charter School
Alder Grove Charter School
Coastal Grove Charter School
Freshwater Charter Middle School
Fuente Nueva Charter School
Laurel Tree Charter School
Northcoast Preparatory Academy
Northern United Humboldt Charter School
Pacific View Charter 2.0
Redwood Preparatory Charter School
Six Rivers Charter High School
South Bay Charter School
Trillium Charter School
Union Street Charter School
Imperial County
Ballington Academy for the Arts & Sciences (El Centro)
Imperial Pathways Charter School
Imperial Valley Home School Academy
Inyo County
College Bridge Academy
The Education Corps
YouthBuild Charter School (California Central)
Kern County
Blue Ridge Academy
California Virtual Academy (Maricopa)
Cecil Avenue Math & Science Academy
Del Vista Math & Science Academy
EPIC de Cesar Chavez High School (North Region)
Grimmway Academy
GROW Academy (Arvin, Shafter)
Heartland Charter School
Insight School of California
Inspire Charter School (Kern)
Kern Workforce 2000 Academy
Nueva Vista Language Academy
Peak to Peak Mountain Charter School
Ridgecrest Elementary Academy for Language, Music & Science (REALMS)
Valley Oaks Charter School
Wonderful College Prep Academy
Kings County
California Virtual Academy (Kings)
Crossroads Charter School
Hanford Online Charter School
Learn4Life (Kings Valley Academy II)
Lemoore Schools (3 schools)
Mid Valley Alternative Charter School
Lake County
California Connections Academy (North Bay)
Lake County International Charter School
Lassen County
Long Valley School
Mt. Lassen Charter School
Thompson Peak Charter School
Los Angeles County
A-H
Academia Avance Charter School
Academia Moderna
Academies of the Antelope Valley
Alliance Schools (Collins Family, Margaret M. Bloomfield, Marine Innovation)
Alma Fuerte Public School
Alfred B. Noble Charter Middle School
Animo (City of Champions, Inglewood, Leadership, Venice)
Antelope Valley Learning Academy
Ararat Charter School
Aspire (Antonia Maria Lugo, Centennial, Firestone, Gateway, Junior Collegiate, Ollin, Pacific, Titan)
Assurance Learning Academy
Aveson (2 schools)
Beckford Charter for Enriched Studies
Bert Corona Charter School
Birmingham High School
Bridges Preparatory Academy
Calabash Charter Academy
California Pacific Charter School (Los Angeles)
California School of the Arts (San Gabriel Valley)
California Virtual Academy (Los Angeles)
Calvert Charter for Enriched Studies
Canyon Charter Elementary School
Carpenter Community Charter School
Castlebay Lane Charter School
Century Community Charter School
Charter HS of Arts-Multimedia & Performing (CHAMPS)
Chatsworth Charter High School
CHIME Institute's Schwarzenegger Community
Citizens of the World Charter School (IV, V)
City Honors International Preparatory High School
Clear Passage Educational Center
Colfax Charter Elementary School
Compass Charter Schools of Los Angeles
Da Vinci (Communications, Connect, Design, Rise, Science)
Dearborn Elementary Charter Academy
Desert Sands Charter School
Discovery Charter Preparatory
Dixie Canyon Community Charter School
Eagle Collegiate Academy
El Camino Real Charter High School
El Oro Way Charter For Enriched Studies
Enadia Way Technology Charter School
Encino Charter Elementary School
Environmental Charter School (Gardena HS, Gardena Middle, Inglewood, Lawndale)
Empower Generations
Family First Charter School
Fenton (Avenue, Leadership, Primary, STEM)
Gaspar De Portola Charter Middle School
George Ellery Hale Charter Academy
Girls Athletic Leadership School Los Angeles
Gorman Learning Center
Grace Hopper STEM Academy
Granada Hills Charter School
Grover Cleveland Charter High School
Hamlin Charter Academy
Hawthorne Math and Science Academy
Haynes Charter For Enriched Studies
Hesby Oaks Leadership Charter
High Tech LA
I-P
ICEF Inglewood Elementary Charter Academy
iLead (Agua Dulce, Hybrid, Lancaster, Online)
Ingenium Charter School
iQ Academy Los Angeles
ISANA (Achernar, Cardinal, Palmati)
James Jordan Middle School
Justice Street Academy Charter School
KIPP (Comienza, Corazon, Pueblo Unido)
Knollwood Preparatory Academy
Intellectual Virtues Academy
Ivy Academia
Ivy Bound Academy of Math, Science, and Technology Charter Middle School I/II
La Tijera K-8 Academy of Excellence Charter School
La Verne Science and Technology Charter School
Larchmont Charter School
Lashon Academy I
Learning Works
Lennox Mathematics, Science & Technology Academy
Life Source International Charter School
Lifeline Education Charter School
Lockhurst Drive Charter Elementary School
Magnolia Science Academy (Bell, I, II, III, V, VII)
Marquez Charter School
Method Schools, LA
Mission Academy
Mission View Public School
Montague Charter Academy
Multicultural Learning Center
Nestle Avenue Charter School
N.E.W. Academy Canoga Park
New Horizons Charter Academy
New Millennium Secondary School
New Opportunities Charter School
North Valley Military Institute College Preparatory Academy
Odyssey Charter School
Opportunities for Learning (Baldwin Park, Duarte, Santa Clarita)
Options for Youth (Acton, Duarte, San Gabriel)
Our Community Charter School
Pacoima Charter Elementary School
Palisades Charter High School
Palmdale Academy Charter School
Palmdale Aerospace Academy
Pasadena Rosebud Academy
Plainview Academic Charter Academy
Pomelo Community Charter School
Port of Los Angeles High School
PREPA TEC Los Angeles
PUC Schools (Community Elementary/Middle/Early College, Inspire, Lakeview, Nueva Esperanza, Triumph)
R-Z
Reseda Charter High School
Riverside Drive Charter School
Robert A. Millikan Affiliated Charter & Performing Arts Magnet Middle School
Sage Oak Charter School Keppel
San Jose Charter Academy
Santa Clarita Valley International School
Scholarship Prep School South Bay
School of Arts and Enterprise
School of Extended Educational Options
Serrania Avenue Charter For Enriched Studies
Sherman Oaks Elementary Charter School
Soleil Academy Charter School
Superior Street Elementary School
Sylmar Charter High School
T.I.M.E. Community School
Taft Charter High School
Topanga Elementary Charter School
Topeka Charter School For Advanced Studies
Valiente College Preparatory Charter School
Valley Charter School
Valor Academy
Van Gogh Charter School
Vaughn Next Century Learning Center
Village Charter Academy
We the People High School
Welby Way Charter Elementary School/Gifted-High Ability Magnet School
Wilbur Charter School For Enriched Academics
Wilder's Preparatory Academy
Woodlake Elementary Community Charter School
Woodland Hills Elementary Charter For Enriched Studies
City of Los Angeles
Academy of Media Arts
Accelerated Schools
Alain Leroy Locke College Preparatory Academy
Alliance Schools (Cindy & Bill Simon, college-Ready Middle 4/8/12, Dr. Olga Mohan, Gertz-Ressler/Richard Merkin, Jack H. Skirball, Judy Ivie Burton, Kory Hunter, Leichtman-Levine, Marc & Eva Stern, Morgan McKinzie, Ouchi-O'Donovan, Patti & Peter Neuwirth, Piera Barbaglia Shaheen, Renee & Meyer Luskin, Susan & Eric Smidt, Ted K. Tajima, Tennenbaum Family, Virgil Roberts)
Anahuacalmecac International University Preparatory
Animo (Compton, Ellen Ochoa, Florence-Firestone, Jackie Robinson, James B. Taylor, Jefferson, Mae Jemison, Oscar de la Hoya, Pat Brown, Ralph Bunche, South LA, Watts, Western, Westside)
APEX Academy
Arts in Action Community Charter Schools
Aspire (Inskeep, Juanita Tate, Slauson)
Barack Obama Charter School
Bright Star Secondary Charter Academy
Calliope Academy
Camino Nuevo Charter Academy (6 schools)
CATCH Prep Charter High School
Center for Advanced Learning
Central City Value School
Citizens of the World Charter School (Hollywood, Mar Vista, Silver Lake)
City Charter Schools
Collegiate Charter High School of Los Angeles
Community Magnet Charter Elementary School
Crete Academy
Crown Preparatory Academy
Downtown Value School
Dr. Theodore T. Alexander Jr. Science Center
Ednovate (Brio, East, Esperanza, USC Hybrid, South LA)
El Rio Community School
Emerson Community Charter School
Equitas Academy (6 schools)
Everest Value School
Extera Public School
Gabriella Charter School
Global Education Academy
Goethe International Charter School
ICEF (Innovation LA, View Park, Vista)
Ingenium Charter School (Clarion)
Invictus Leadership Academy
ISANA (Himalia, Nascent, Octavia)
Jardin de la Infancia
Kenter Canyon Elementary Charter School
KIPP (Compton, Empower, Endeavor, Ignite, Iluminar, Innovation, LA Prep, Opportunity, Philosophers, Poder, Promesa, Raices, Scholar, Sol, Vida)
Lashon Academy City
Learning by Design Charter School
Libertas College Preparatory Charter School
Los Angeles Academy of Arts and Enterprise
Los Angeles College Prep Academy
Los Angeles Leadership Academy
Los Feliz Charter School for the Arts
Magnolia Science Academy (IV, VI)
Math and Science College Preparatory School
Matrix for Success Academy
Monsenor Oscar Romero Charter Middle School
N.E.W. Academy of Science and Arts
New Designs Charter School
New Heights Charter School
New Los Angeles Charter School
New Village Girls Academy
New West Charter School
Ocean Charter School
Open Charter Magnet School
Para Los Niños Charter School
Paul Revere Charter Middle School
PUC Schools (CALS, eCALS, Excel, Milagro)
Puente Charter School
Renaissance Arts Academy
Resolute Academy Charter School
Rise Kohyang
Russell Westbrook Why Not? School
Santa Monica Boulevard Community Charter School
SEED School of Los Angeles County
SIATech Academy South
Stella Charter Academy
STEM Preparatory Elementary School
Synergy (Charter, Kinetic, Quantum)
TEACH (Academy of Technologies, Preparatory Mildred S. Cunningham & Edith H. Morris Elementary, Tech Charter High)
Today's Fresh Start Compton
University High School Charter
University Preparatory Value High School
Vista Charter Middle School
Vista Horizon Global Academy
Vox Collegiate School of Los Angeles
Wallis Annenberg High School
Watts Learning Center
Westwood Charter Elementary School
WISH Academy
Madera County
Chawanakee Academy Charter School
Ezequiel Tafoya Alvarado Academy
Glacier High School Charter
Learn4Life (Crescent View South II)
Madera County Independent Academy
Minarets Charter High School
Mountain Home School Charter
Pioneer Technical Center
Sherman Thomas Charter School/STEM Academy
Yosemite-Wawona Elementary Charter School
Marin County
Novato Charter School
Phoenix Academy
Ross Valley Charter School
Mariposa County
Sierra Foothill Charter School
Mendocino County
Accelerated Achievement Academy
Eel River Charter School
La Vida Charter School
Pacific Community Charter School
Redwood Academy of Ukiah
River Oak Charter School
Shanel Valley Academy
Three Rivers Charter School
Tree of Life International Charter School
Willits Charter School
Merced County
Ballico-Cressey Community Charter School
Come Back Charter School
Merced Scholars Charter School
Mono County
Urban Corps of San Diego County Charter School
Monterey County
Bay View Academy
Big Sur Charter School
International School of Monterey
Learning for Life Charter School
Monterey Bay Charter School
Monterey County Home Charter School
Oasis Charter Public School
Open Door Charter School
Napa County
Stone Bridge School
Nevada County
Arete Charter Academy
Bitney Prep High School
Chicago Park Community Charter School
Forest Charter School
Grass Valley Charter School
John Muir Charter School
Nevada City School of the Arts
Sierra Academy of Expeditionary Learning
Twin Ridges Home Study Charter School
Vantage Point Charter School
Yuba River Charter School
Orange County
Advanced Learning Academy
California Connections Academy (Southern California)
Citrus Springs Charter School
College and Career Preparatory Academy
Community Roots Academy
Ednovate (Legacy)
Edward B. Cole, Sr. Academy
El Rancho Charter School
El Sol Santa Ana Science and Arts Academy
EPIC Charter School
International School for Science and Culture
Irvine International Academy
Journey School
Kinetic Academy
Magnolia Science Academy (Santa Ana)
NOVA Academy Early College High School (Santa Ana)
Opportunities for Learning (San Juan Capistrano)
Orange County Academy of Sciences and Arts
Orange County Classical Academy
Orange County Educational Arts Academy
Orange County School of the Arts
Orange County Workforce Innovation High School
Oxford Preparatory Academy (Saddleback Valley, South Orange County)
Palm Lane Charter School
Samueli Academy
Scholarship Prep
Suncoast Prep Academy
Sycamore Creek Community Charter School
Tomorrow's Leadership Collaborative (TLC) Charter School
Unity Middle College High School
Vibrant Minds Charter School
Vista Charter Public Schools (Condor Global, Heritage Global, Meridian Global)
Placer County
Alta Vista Community Charter School
Bowman Charter School
Creekside Charter School
Golden Valley Tahoe School
Harvest Ridge Cooperative Charter School
Horizon Charter Schools
John Adams Academy (Lincoln, Roseville)
Loomis Basin Charter School
Maidu Virtual Charter Academy
Maria Montessori Charter Academy
Newcastle Charter School
Placer Academy Charter School
Placer County Pathways Charter School
Rocklin Academy (Gateway, Meyers St., Turnstone)
Sierra Expeditionary Learning
Western Sierra Collegiate Academy
Plumas County
Plumas Charter School
Riverside County
Audeo Valley Charter School
California Military Academy
Cielo Vista Charter School
Come Back Kids
Excelsior Charter School (Corona)
Garvey / Allen Visual Performing Arts Academy for STEM
Gateway College and Career Academy
George Washington Charter School
Highland Academy
Imagine Schools (Coachella, Hemet)
The Journey School
Julia Lee Performing Arts Academy
Julian Charter School (Pine Hills)
Leadership Military Academy
Learn4Life (Vista Norte)
Mission Vista Academy
NOVA Academy Early College High School (Coachella)
Nuview Bridge Early College High School
Palm Desert Charter Middle School
Pivot Charter School, Riverside
REACH Leadership STEAM Academy
River Springs Charter School
San Jacinto Valley Academy
Santa Rosa Academy
SCALE Leadership Academy East
Springs Charter School (Casa Montessori, Classical, Corona Student Center, Da Vinci, Del Rio, Flabob Airport, Hemet Quest, i-Shine, )Magnolia, Palm, Rancho Cucamonga, Renaissance Real World, Renaissance Valley)
Sycamore Academy of Science and Cultural Arts
Temecula International Academy
Temecula Preparatory School
Temecula Valley Charter School
Western Center Academy
YouthBuild Charter School (Moreno Valley)
Sacramento County
Alpha Charter School
American River Collegiate Academy
Aspire Schools (Alexander Twilight College Prep, Alexander Twilight Secondary, Capitol Heights)
California Innovative Career Academy
California Montessori Project (Capitol, Elk Grove, San Juan)
Capitol Collegiate Academy
Community Collaborative Charter School
Community Outreach Academy Elementary
Creative Connections Arts Academy
Delta Elementary Charter School
Elk Grove Charter School
Folsom Cordova K-8 Community Charter School
Fortune School of Education
Futures High School
Gateway Community Charter Schools (9 schools)
Gateway International School
George Washington Carver School of Arts and Science
Golden Valley Schools (Orchard, River)
Growth Public School
Heritage Peak Charter School
Higher Learning Academy
Highlands Community Charter and Technical Schools
Language Academy of Sacramento
Leroy Greene Academy
Learn4Life (Marconi Learning Academy)
Met Sacramento
Natomas Charter School
New Hope Charter School
New Joseph Bonnheim (NJB) Community Charter School
New Technology High School
Options for Youth (San Juan)
Paseo Grande Charter School
Sacramento Charter High School
Sacramento Academic and Vocational Academy (SAVA)
San Juan Choices Charter School
Smythe Academy of Arts and Sciences
Sol Aureus College Preparatory
St. Hope Public Schools
Visions in Education
Westlake Charter School
Westside Preparatory Charter School
Yav Pem Suab Academy
San Benito County
Hollister Prep School
San Bernardino County
Academy for Academic Excellence
Academy of Careers and Exploration
Allegiance STEAM Academy
ASA Charter School
Ballington Academy for the Arts and Sciences (San Bernardino)
Competitive Edge Charter Academy (CECA)
Desert Trails Preparatory Academy
Elite Academic Academy (Lucerne)
Empire Springs Charter School
Encore Jr./Sr. High School for the Performing and Visual Arts
Entrepreneur High School
Excel Academy Charter School
Excel Prep Charter School
Excelsior Charter School (Barstow, Corona, North Victorville, Ontario, Phelan, Redlands, San Bernardino, Victorville)
Gorman Learning Center (San Bernardino/Santa Clarita)
Granite Mountain Charter School
Grove Charter School
Hardy Brown College Prep School
Independence Charter Academy
Inland Leaders Charter School
LaVerne Elementary Preparatory Academy
Learn4Life (Alta Vista Innovation High, Antelope Valley Learning Academy, AV Learning Academy)
Mirus Secondary School
Mojave River Academy (Gold Canyon, Marble City, National Trails, Oro Grande, Rockview Park, Route 66, Silver Mountain)
Mountain View Montessori Charter School
New Vision Middle School
Norton Science and Language Academy
Options for Youth (Victorville, San Bernardino)
Pathways to College
Provisional Accelerated Learning Academy
Public Safety Academy
Riverside Preparatory School
Sage Oak Charter School
Savant Preparatory Academy of Business
Sixth Street Prep School
Sky Mountain Charter School
SOAR Charter Academy
Summit Leadership Academy (High Desert)
Sycamore Academy of Science and Cultural Arts (Chino Valley)
Taylion High Desert Academy
Virtual Preparatory Academy at Lucerne
Vista Norte Public Charter
Woodward Leadership Academy
YouthBuild Charter School (San Bernardino)
San Diego County
All Tribes Charter School
Arroyo Vista Charter School
Audeo Charter School II/III
Barona Indian Charter School
Baypoint Preparatory Academy (San Diego)
Bella Mente Montessori Academy
Bostonia Global School
Brookfield Engineering Science Technology Academy
Cabrillo Point Academy
California Pacific Charter School (San Diego)
California Virtual Academy (San Diego)
Chula Vista Learning Community Charter School
Classical Academy High School
Coastal Academy Charter School
College Preparatory Middle School
Community Montessori School
Compass Charter Schools of San Diego
Dimensions Collaborative
Discovery Charter School
Dual Language Immersion North County
EJE Charter School
Elite Academic Academy (Mountain Empire)
Escondido Charter High School
Excel Academy Charter School
Feaster (Mae L.) Charter School
Greater San Diego Academy
Grossmont Secondary School
Guajome Learning Center
Guajome Park Academy
Harbor Springs Charter School
Hawking S.T.E.A.M. Charter School
The Heights Charter School
Helix High School
Heritage K-8 Charter School
High Tech School (Chula Vista, Explorer, International, Media Arts, Mesa, North County)
Howard Gardner Community Charter School
Imperial Beach Charter School
Insight School San Diego
Integrity Charter School
Julian Charter School (Cedar Cove, Manzanita, Mountain Oaks, Pine Valley)
Kidinnu Academy
Learning Choice Academy (East County)
Leonardo da Vinci Health Sciences Charter School
Literacy First Charter School
MAAC Community Charter School
Methodschools
Motivated Youth Academy
Mueller (Robert L.) Charter School
North County Trade Tech High School
Pacific Coast Academy
Pacific Springs Charter School
Pacific View Charter School
Pivot Charter School (San Diego)
Preuss School
Sage Oak Charter School (South)
San Diego Workforce Innovation High School
Scholarship Prep (Oceanside)
SIATech
Sparrow Academy
Steele Canyon High School
Sweetwater Secondary School
Vista Springs Charter School
Vivian Banks Charter School
City of San Diego
Albert Einstein Academies
America's Finest Charter School
Audeo Charter School I
Charter School of San Diego
City Heights Preparatory Charter School
Darnall Charter School
E3 Civic High School
Elevate Elementary School
Empower Language Academy
Gompers Preparatory Academy
Harriet Tubman Village Charter School
Health Sciences High School
Holly Drive Leadership Academy
Iftin Charter School
Ingenuity Charter School
Innovations Academy
Kavod Charter School
Keiller Leadership Academy
King-Chavez Academy (Arts, Community, Excellence, Prep, Primary)
KIPP Adelante Preparatory Academy
Learn4Life (Diego Hills Central, Diego Valley East, Innovation High San Diego)
Magnolia Science Academy (San Diego)
McGill School of Success
Museum School
Nestor Language Academy Charter School
O'Farrell Community School
Old Town Academy K-8 Charter School
River Valley Charter School
San Diego Cooperative Charter School
San Diego Mission Academy
San Diego Virtual School
School for Entrepreneurship and Technology
SD Global Vision Academy
Urban Discovery Academy Charter School
San Francisco County
City Arts and Tech High School
Creative Arts Charter School
Five Keys Charter School/Independence HS
Gateway High School
KIPP (Bayview, San Francisco Bay, San Francisco College Prep)
Leadership High School
Life Learning Academy Charter School
Mission Preparatory School
The New School of San Francisco
Thomas Edison Charter Academy
San Joaquin County
Aspire Schools (APEX, Arts & Sciences, Benjamin Holt College Prep, Benjamin Holt Middle, Langston Hughes, Port City, River Oaks Charter, Rosa Parks, Stockton Secondary, Vincent Shalvey)
Banta Charter School
California Connections Academy (North Bay, Ripon)
California Virtual Academy (San Joaquin)
Delta Charter School (Bridges, Home, Keys, Online)
Discovery Charter School
Dr. Lewis Dolphin Stallworth Sr. Charter School
EPIC Academy
Escalon Charter Academy
Health Careers Academy
Humphreys College Academy of Business, Law and Education
Insight School (San Joaquin)
Joe Serna Jr. Charter School
John McCandless Charter School
KIPP Stockton
Millennium Charter School
New Jerusalem Elementary School
NextGeneration STEAM Academy
Nightingale Charter School
one.Charter Elementary Academy
Pacific Law Academy
Pittman Charter School
Primary Charter School
Rio Valley Charter School
River Islands Technology Academy II
Stockton Collegiate International Schools
Stockton Early College Academy
TEAM Charter School
Tracy Learning Center
Valley View Charter Prep School
Venture Academy
Voices College-Bound Language Academies (Stockton)
San Luis Obispo County
Almond Acres Charter Academy
Bellevue-Santa Fe Charter School
Grizzly ChalleNGe Charter School
San Mateo County
Aspire Schools (East Palo Alto Charter)
California Virtual Academy (San Mateo)
Connect Community Charter School
Design Tech High School
East Palo Alto Academy
Everest Public High School
KIPP (Esperanza, Excelencia, Valiant)
Oxford Day Academy
Rocketship Public Schools (Redwood City Prep)
San Carlos Charter Learning Center
Summit Preparatory Charter High School
Summit Public School: Shasta
Santa Barbara County
Adelante Charter School
California Connections Academy (Central Coast)
Family Partnership Charter School
Manzanita Public Charter School
Olive Grove Charter School (Buellton, Lompoc, Orcutt, Santa Barbara)
Orcutt Academy Charter School
Peabody Charter School
Santa Barbara Charter School
Santa Ynez Valley Charter School
Trivium Charter School (Adventure, Voyage)
Santa Clara County
ACE Charter Schools (Charter High, Empower, Esperanza, Inspire)
Alpha Charter Schools (Blanca Alvarado, Cindy Avitia, Cornerstone, Jose Hernandez)
Aptitud Community Academy at Goss
B. Roberto Cruz Leadership Academy
Bullis Charter School
Campbell School of Innovation
Charter School of Morgan Hill
Discovery Charter School I/II
DCP El Primero High School
Farnham Charter School
Gilroy Early College Academy
Ida Jew Academies
KIPP (Heartwood, Heritage, Navigate, Prize, San Jose Collegiate)
Latino College Preparatory Academy
Luis Valdez Leadership Academy
Metropolitan Education District
Opportunity Youth Academy
Perseverance Preparatory School
Price Charter Middle School
Rocketship Public Schools (Alma, Brilliant Minds, Discovery Prep, Fuerza Community Prep, Los Sueños, Mateo Sheedy, Mosaic, Rising Stars, Sí Se Puede, Spark)
San Jose Conservation Corps Charter School
Sartorette Charter School
Summit Public School (Denali, Tahoma)
University Preparatory Charter Academy
Voices College-Bound Language Academies (Franklin-McKinley, Morgan Hill, Mount Pleasant)
Santa Cruz County
Alianza Charter School
California Connections Academy (Monterey Bay)
Ceiba College Preparatory Academy
Delta Charter School
Diamond Technology Institute
Linscott Charter School
Ocean Grove Charter School
Pacific Coast Charter School
Pacific Collegiate School
Santa Cruz County Career Advancement Center
SLVUSD Charter School
Tierra Pacifica Charter School
Watsonville Charter School of the Arts
Watsonville Prep School
Shasta County
Anderson New Technology High School
Chrysalis Charter School
Cottonwood Creek Charter School
Monarch Learning Center
Northern Summit Academy Shasta
PACE Academy Charter School
Phoenix Charter Academy
Redding Collegiate Academy
Redding School of the Arts
Redding STEM Academy
Rocky Point Charter School
Shasta Charter Academy
Shasta View Academy
Stellar Charter School
Tree of Life International Charter School
University Preparatory School
Siskiyou County
Golden Eagle Charter School
Northern United Siskiyou Charter School
Solano County
Buckingham Charter Magnet High School
Caliber: ChangeMakers Academy
Dixon Montessori Charter School
Elite Public School
Ernest Kimme Charter Academy for Independent Learning
Fairmont Charter Elementary School
Griffin Academy High School
Kairos Public School Vacaville Academy
Mare Island Technology Academy
MIT Academy
Vallejo Charter School
Sonoma County
Binkley Elementary Charter School
Cali Calmecac Language Academy
California Pacific Charter School (Sonoma)
California Virtual Academy (Sonoma)
Cesar Chavez Language Academy
Cinnabar Charter School
Dunham Charter School
Forestville Academy
Heartwood Charter School
Kid Street Learning Center Charter
Liberty Independent Study School
Live Oak Charter School
Loma Vista Immersion Academy
Mark West Charter School
Mary Collins Charter School at Cherry Valley
Miwok Valley Elementary Charter School
Morrice Schaefer Charter School
Northwest Prep Charter School
Old Adobe Elementary Charter School
Olivet Elementary Charter School
Orchard View School
Pathways Charter School
Petaluma Accelerated Charter
Piner-Olivet Charter
Pivot Charter School (North Bay)
Rincon Valley Charter School
River Montessori Elementary Charter School
Roseland Charter School
Salmon Creek School - A Charter
Santa Rosa Accelerated Charter School
Santa Rosa Charter School for the Arts
Santa Rosa French-American Charter School (SRFACS)
Sebastopol Independent Charter School
Sonoma Charter School
Spring Creek Matanzas Charter School
SunRidge Charter School
Twin Hills Charter Middle School
Village Charter School
Whited Elementary Charter School
Woodland Star Charter School
Wright Charter School
Stanislaus County
Aspire Schools (Summit Charter, University Charter, Vanguard College Prep)
Connecting Waters Charter School
Denair Charter Academy
eCademy Charter at Crane
Fusion Charter School
Gratton Charter School
Great Valley Academy
Hart-Ransom Academic Charter School
Hickman Community Charter School District
Independence Charter School
Keyes to Learning Charter School
Oakdale Charter School
Paradise Charter School
Riverbank Language Academy
Roberts Ferry Charter School Academy
Shiloh Charter School
Stanislaus Alternative Charter School
Valley College High School
Whitmore Charter School of Art & Technology
Sutter County
AeroSTEM Academy
California Virtual Academy (Sutter)
Feather River Charter School
Pathways Charter Academy
South Sutter Charter School
Sutter Peak Charter Academy
Twin Rivers Charter School
Winship Community School
Yuba City Charter School
Tehama County
Evergreen Institute of Excellence
Lassen-Antelope Volcanic Academy (LAVA)
Lincoln Street School
Tehama eLearning Academy
Trinity County
California Heritage Youthbuild Academy II
Tulare County
Accelerated Charter High School
Blue Oak Academy
Butterfield Charter School
California Connections Academy (Central Valley)
Charter Home School Academy
Eleanor Roosevelt Community Learning Center
Global Learning Charter
Harmony Magnet Academy
Learn4Life (Crescent Valley Public Charter II)
Loma Vista Charter School
Monarch River Academy
Porterville Military Academy
Sequoia Elementary Charter School
Sierra Vista Charter High School
Summit Charter Academy
Sycamore Valley Academy
University Preparatory High School
Valley Life Charter School
Visalia Charter Independent Study
Visalia Technical Early College
Tuolomne County
Connections Visual and Performing Arts Academy
Gold Rush Charter School
Ventura County
Architecture, Construction & Engineering Charter High School (ACE)
BRIDGES Charter School
Camarillo Academy of Progressive Education
Golden Valley Charter School
IvyTech Charter School
Learn4Life (Vista Real Charter High Camarillo, VRCHS Oxnard, VRCHS Port Hueneme, VRCHS Santa Paula, VRCHS Simi Valley, VRCHS Ventura Telegraph)
Meadows Arts and Technology Elementary School
Opportunities for Learning (Simi Valley)
Peak Prep Pleasant Valley
River Oaks Academy
University Preparation Charter School at CSU Channel Islands
Valley Oak Charter School
Ventura Charter School of Arts and Global Education
Yolo County
Compass Charter School (Yolo)
Da Vinci Charter Academy
Empowering Possibilities International Charter School
River Charter Schools Lighthouse Charter School
Sacramento Valley Charter School
Science & Technology Academy at Knights Landing
Washington Middle College High School
Yuba County
CORE Charter School
Marysville Charter Academy for the Arts
Paragon Collegiate Academy
Wheatland Charter Academy
Yuba County Career Preparatory Charter School
Yuba Environmental Science Charter Academy
References
School districts
School districts |
The Danger Point is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Carmel Myers, William P. Carleton and Vernon Steele.
Cast
Carmel Myers as Alice Torrance
William P. Carleton as James Benton
Vernon Steele as Duncan Phelps
Joseph J. Dowling as Banjamin
Harry Todd as Sam Biggs
Margaret Joslin as Elvira Hubbard
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1922 films
1922 drama films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American drama films
Films directed by Lloyd Ingraham
American black-and-white films |
Lake Macbride State Park is a state park in Johnson County, Iowa, United States, located near the city of Solon. The park is composed of two units centered on the Lake Macbride. Both the park and the lake are named for Iowa conservationist Thomas Huston Macbride.
Lake Macbride is a popular fishing site; the rare spotted bass can be found in the lake, and it is also home to muskellunge, walleye, and channel catfish. The park provides an accessible fishing dock, twelve jetties, and a 24-hour fishing area for fishers along with seven boat ramps and a boat rental facility. The latter also houses a concession stand and is near the park's beach. The park also features of hiking and multi-use trails, which travel through forests and restored prairie; one trail connects the park with Solon, while another links the beach and Lake Macbride's dam. Other facilities at the park include a modern campground with electric campsites, a primitive campground, and a day use lodge.
References
State parks of Iowa
Protected areas of Johnson County, Iowa |
The following is a list of charter schools in Connecticut grouped by county.
Fairfield County
Achievement First Bridgeport Academy
The Bridge Academy
Capital Preparatory Harbor School
Great Oaks Charter School Bridgeport
New Beginnings Family Academy
Park City Prep Charter School
Side by Side Charter School
Stamford Charter School for Excellence
Hartford County
Achievement First Hartford Academy
Jumoke Academy
Odyssey Community School
Litchfield County
Explorations Charter School
New Haven County
Amistad Academy
Booker T. Washington Academy
Brass City Charter School
Common Ground High School
Elm City College Preparatory School
Elm City Montessori Charter School
Highville Charter School
New London County
Integrated Day Charter School
Interdistrict School for Arts & Communication
Windham County
Path Academy School District
References
School districts
School districts |
Welsh clog dancing (also known as Welsh step dancing) is an unbroken tradition that was typically performed by slate quarry workmen and farmers. Dancers would often compete with each other to prove who had the most impressive dancing, stamina and athleticism. Welsh clog dancing also includes "tricks" which makes it unique compared to other forms of step dancing such as Irish dancing, Scottish dancing and English clog dancing. These tricks can include, but are not limited to; snuffing out a candle flame using the wooden soles of the shoes, toby stepping (kicking legs out in a squat position similarly to Cossack dancing) and high leaps into the air such as straddle jumping.
Clogging does not simply involve dancing whilst wearing clogs. Clogging involves producing a variety of stronger or lighter sounds and a mixture of rhythms using both feet, which showcases the stepping dexterity. A talented clogger is able to make a variety of sounds by utilising different regions of the clog which include the toe, heel and sides of the clog against each other or other object. Clogging can be performed on wood and slate and can be accompanied or unaccompanied.
Origin of Clog Shoes in Wales
It is generally accepted that Flemish weavers introduced clogs to the British Isles in the 13th century but the more recent description of the clog in Wales includes a leather upper and dates back to the industrial revolution. These are hardy shoes that can last up to 7 years for an individual in a low income family.
Origin and Tradition of Welsh Clogging
Clog dancing in Wales originates mostly from slate quarries and farmers also. Workers would attempt to out-perform each other during work breaks by performing more extravagant and striking "steps" and "tricks" to impress their co-workers. The slate that was produced in the quarries could be used as a platform to clog dance and slate is still used even today in Eisteddfod competitions.
Typically clog dancers prefer ash wood because it gives a clearer and more crisp sound however, these are also the least hardwearing. Clog dancing is the only unbroken dancing tradition in Wales following the discouragement of other forms of dance during the religious revivals of the 18th and 19th centuries. Stable lofts, taverns and fairs were also popular environments for clog dancing and competitive clog dancing, with the winners typically being men who performed steps or tricks which could not be replicated by others. There may have been a period where the step dance and the trick dance were separate competitions however in modern competition they are performed as one dance or routine which typically includes a handkerchief, broom and candle. It is likely that clog dancing survived with an unbroken tradition because it was easier to continue a dance as an individual on the hearth or stable loft. The travelling community in Wales are also associated with maintaining the tradition. The middle of the 20th century saw the revival of interest in clog dancing and significant dancing figures emerged such a Hywel Wood who was a traveller from Parc near Bala and another dancer named Caradog Pugh hailing from Llanuwchlyn. There is only occasional references to women dancing in literature. Huw Williams, a recent clog-dancing figure suggests that Welsh clog dancers pass on their skills by observation and emulation. Steps also have their own name although these can vary by individual and areas.
Distinct Style
Welsh clog dancing is unique and is not a revival, as it is danced in the style of the unbroken tradition." Welsh clog dancing is stylistically distinct from English clog dancing with new steps and "tricks" constantly being invented as part of Eisteddfod competitions. For example, extinguishing a candle, toby stepping (propelling the feet forward alternatively in a squat position), straddle jumps, handkerchief jumps, stepping and jumping over brooms are performed. Welsh clog dancing, especially solo dancing has evolved to become much more dynamic than English clog dancing.
Modern competition
Clog dancing is an integral part of both the local and national eisteddfod tradition in Wales. Competitions since the 1960s have extended to dancing duets
and trios which meant that groups could recreate on stage the true tradition where one dancer was trying to out-dance the other. Group clogging has also become an integral part of the eisteddfodau and dancing tradition. Competition can be energetic with the dancers leaping over brooms as seen in the National Eisteddfod Male Welsh Clog Dancing Competition". Notable dancing groups include Natgarw Dancers hailing from the Pontypridd area and Talog dancers from Camarthern. Both groups have enjoyed significant success in National Eisteddfod competitions. Nantgarw dancers have also had significant success in international competitions such as the Llangollen International Eisteddfod in Wales, Lorient Folk Festival in France and Mallorca World Folk Festival in Spain.
Modern Culture
Welsh clog dancing is still taught taught to children and adults to this day and has even been used as a fitness exercise course.
References
Welsh culture
Tap dance |
Rogelj is a Slovene surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bine Rogelj (born 1929), Slovene ski jumper
Rok Rogelj (born 1987), Slovene snowboarder
Špela Rogelj (born 1994), Slovene ski jumper
Žan Rogelj (born 1999), Slovene footballer
See also
Rogel
Rogelja
Slovene-language surnames |
The 1959–60 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University as a member of the Mid-American Conference in the college basketball season of 1959–60. The team was coached by Jim Snyder and played their home games at the Men's Gymnasium. The Bobcats finished the regular season with a record of 16–6 and won MAC regular season title with a conference record of 10–2. They received a bid to the NCAA Tournament. There they defeated Notre Dame before losing to Georgia Tech in the Sweet Sixteen.
Schedule
|-
!colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| regular season
|-
!colspan=9 style="background:#006A4D; color:white;"| NCAA Tournament
Source:
References
Ohio Bobcats men's basketball seasons
Ohio
Ohio
Ohio Bobcats men's basketball
Ohio Bobcats men's basketball |
The 1989 VMI Keydets football team was an American football team that represented the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1989 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their first year under head coach Jim Shuck, the team compiled an overall record of 2–8–1, with a mark of 1–4–1 in conference play, tying for sixth place in the SoCon. In January 1989 Shuck was introduced as the 25th all-time head coach of the Keydets after serving as offensive coordinator at Army.
Schedule
References
VMI
VMI Keydets football seasons
VMI Keydets football |
On October 31, 1870, a popular insurrection occupied Paris's City Hall (Hôtel de Ville). Amidst the Franco-Prussian War, Parisians simultaneously heard of losses at Le Bourget and Metz alongside armstice negotiations. Incensed by what they viewed as treason, a group of 300 to 400 demonstrated at the City Hall and members of the left-wing National Guard captured and occupied the building with several members of the Government of National Defense inside.
References
Bibliography
Rebellions in France
October 1870 events
Events in Paris
Franco-Prussian War |
The lynching of William Johnson occurred at Thebes, Illinois on April 26, 1903. Johnson had been accused of assaulting a 10-year-old girl. He was apprehended by a mob of farmers and hanged.
History
William Johnson was an African American man who lived in a work camp for erecting the Thebes Bridge in Thebes, Illinois, over the Mississippi River. In late April 1903, Johnson was accused of assaulting the 10-year-old daughter of Branson Davis at his residence a half-mile east of Santa Fe, Illinois (modern day Fayville). A mob of farmers gathered to apprehend Johnson on April 26, but he had already been taken into police custody. The farmers overwhelmed the officers and Johnson was captured. They brought him back to Thebes near the bridge that was being constructed and hanged him from an oak tree. After Johnston expired, the mob shot up the body. The mob then attacked the work camp, exchanging fire and injuring several workers. The farmers then burned the camp and then dispersed. On May 1, the mob raided another work camp on May 1 and dispersed the black workers there.
Illinois governor Richard Yates offered a $200 bounty for the arrest of those who committed the lynching. Six men were arrested, however, they were released due to insufficient evidence.
See also
Danville race riot
Lynching of David Wyatt
References
1903 in Illinois
1903 murders in the United States
Lynching deaths in Illinois
Alexander County, Illinois
Racially motivated violence against African Americans |
Augustiner-Keller is a traditional restaurant and beer garden in the Maxvorstadt district of Munich, Germany. The restaurant was opened in the first half of the 19th century and is one of the most popular beer gardens in Munich. Augustiner-Keller at Arnulfstraße 52 sells beer by Augustiner-Bräu, the oldest brewery in Munich.
History
The restaurant was first mentioned as a beer storehouse in a 1812 city plan of Munich. This storehouse belonged to the Büchl-Brauerei brewery which no longer exists. The 1842 city plan designated a beer garden selling food and drinks at the street known as Salzstraße at the time. Although the beer garden was situated next to the old Munich execution grounds on the Marsfeld, it was seen as one of the most beautiful parts of the city. In 1842 Georg Knorr took over the restaurant, which was renamed Knorrkeller. In 1862 the brewery was acquired by the Augustiner brewer Josef Wagner; the restaurant got its current name in 1880.
Beer garden
The premises were renovated in 1896: a beer garden with 5000 places, as well as a larger festival hall and the kitchen were developed. In 2010 the married couple Christian and Petra Vogler took over as the new tenants of Augustiner-Keller. There is a 208-year-old horse chestnut tree growing at the beer garden.
Trivia
In the 19th century an attraction at the beer garden was the "beer ox". The ox ran in circles and this motion was used to drive beer barrels to the upstairs floor. The beer oxen were abolished in 1891.
One of the best known regular patrons of the restaurant in the 1960s was the local journalist Siegfried Sommer.
References
External links
Official site
Maxvorstadt
Buildings and structures in Munich
19th-century establishments in Germany
Beer gardens in Germany |
Cynthia Shonga (born 18 June 2000) is a Zimbabwean footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Harare City Queens FC and the Zimbabwe women's national team.
Club career
Shonga played for Harare City in Zimbabwe.
International career
Shonga capped for Zimbabwe at senior level during two COSAFA Women's Championship editions (2020 and 2021).
References
2000 births
Living people
Zimbabwean women's footballers
Women's association football goalkeepers
Zimbabwe women's international footballers |
Srub () is a Russian post-punk band from Novosibirsk, that became known in 2013.
History
The group became known in 2013, at the same time Afisha drew attention to it.
In 2015, Vice magazine wrote about the group in an article dedicated to the new generation of Russian indie artists.
Style
Srub's music has been described as post-pank, indie rock, dark folk, black metal.
Vice noted the ability of the band "to almost seamlessly combine iconography of Pagan and Slavic mysticism with the musical side, which has apparently been inspired by the likes of Bauhaus and Joy Division".
Discography
Albums
Топь (2014)
Хтонь (2015)
Тень (2015)
Песни Злых Цветов (2016)
Ересь (2016)
Скорбь (2018)
Пост (2018)
988 (2019)
Скверна (2021)
Extended plays and singles
Живица (2013)
По грибы (2013)
Тайной тропой (2014)
Юдоль (2014)
Природы ради снисхождения из-под паутины песни (2014)
Безымянный (2016)
Восход (2017)
Упокой (2020)
За зовом зари (2020)
Никогда не видеть зла (2020)
Music videos
След в след (2018)
Помни (2018)
До горизонта земли (2018)
Сердце (2019)
988 (2019)
References
External links
"Сруб": русский народный пост-панк из Сибири. Российская газета.
«Черти в «Срубе» — настоящие». Афиша Daily.
Official website.
Musical groups from Novosibirsk
Russian post-punk music groups |
Dina Nicole Paltoo is an American epidemiologist specializing in open science, data science, and public access. She is the assistant director for scientific strategy and innovation at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Education
Paltoo completed a B.S. in Microbiology and Ph.D. in Physiology and Biophysics from Howard University. Her 1996 dissertation was titled Modulation of cisplatin cytotoxicity by terbium and hyperthermia in FaDu human head and neck cancer cells.
Paltoo earned a M.P.H. from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She was a postdoctoral fellow in cellular biophysics and biochemistry at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Paltoo completed the cancer prevention fellowship program at the National Cancer Institute where her research focus was molecular epidemiology.
Career
Paltoo worked as a program director at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), where she maintained a scientific portfolio in genetics, pharmacogenetics, and personalized medicine. She later joined the United States National Library of Medicine (NLM) as the director of the division of scientific data sharing policy and the director of the genetics, health, and society program within the National Institutes of Health Office of Science Policy (OSP) and was responsible for NIH policy efforts and ethical considerations in scientific data sharing and management, open science, and genomics and health. Paltoo became the assistant director of policy development and led the NLM's policy and legislative activities that promoted responsible stewardship and access to scientific and clinical data and information, as well as for health information technology.
Paltoo returned to the NHLBI as the assistant director for scientific strategy and innovation in the immediate office of the director. She serves as a senior advisor to the NHLBI Director and provides strategic direction to scientific initiatives and programs related to the NHLBI mission. In her various roles at NIH, Paltoo has partnered across the NIH, Department of Health and Human Services, and Federal agencies on initiatives and activities relevant to open science, data science, and public access.
References
Living people
Place of birth missing (living people)
Year of birth missing (living people)
American women epidemiologists
Howard University alumni
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health alumni
National Institutes of Health people
21st-century American women scientists
African-American women scientists
21st-century African-American scientists
21st-century African-American women |
The following is a list of charter schools in Florida (including networks of such schools) grouped by county.
Alachua County
Alachua Learning Center
Boulware Springs Charter School
Caring & Sharing Learning School
Einstein School
Expressions Learning Arts Academy
Genesis Preparatory School
Healthy Learning Academy
Micanopy Area Cooperative School/Academy
North Central Florida Public Charter School
One Room School House Project
Resilience Charter School
SIAtech MYcroSchool
Bay County
Bay Haven Charter Academy
Central High School Panama City
Chautauqua Learn & Serve Charter School
North Bay Haven Charter School
Palm Bay Elementary School/Prep Academy
Rising Leaders Academy
University Academy
Brevard County
Educational Horizons Charter School
Emma Jewel Charter Academy
Imagine Schools (West Melbourne)
Odyssey Charter School
Palm Bay Academy Charter School
Pineapple Cove Classical Academy
Royal Palm Charter School
Sculptor Charter School
Viera Charter School
Broward County
Academic Solutions Academy
Advantage Academy of Math & Science Waterstone
Alpha International Academy
Andrews High School
Ascend Career Academy
Atlantic Montessori Charter School (Pembroke Pines, West)
Avant Garde Academy Broward
Ben Gamla Charter School (Hollywood, North, Prep, South Broward)
Bridgeprep Academy (Broward, Hollywood Hills)
Broward Math & Science Schools
Central Charter School
Championship Academy of Distinction (3 schools)
Charter School of Excellence (2 schools)
City of Pembroke Pines Charter Schools (4 schools)
Coral Springs Charter School
Eagle's Nest Charter Academy
Everest Charter School
Excelsior Charter Broward
Franklin Academy (3 schools)
Greentree Preparatory Charter School
Hollywood Academy of Arts & Science
Imagine Schools (Broward, North Lauderdale, Plantation, Weston)
Innovation Charter School
International School of Broward
International Studies Academy
New Life Charter Academy
North Broward Academy of Excellence
Panacea Prep Charter School
Renaissance Charter School (Cooper City, Coral Springs, Pines, Plantation, University)
RISE Academy School of Science & Technology
Somerset Academy Inc. (Arts Conservatory, Davie, East Prep, Key, Miramar, Neighborhood, North Lauderdale, Pines, Pompano, Riverside, South, Village)
South Broward Montessori Charter School
Summit Academy Broward
SunEd High School (2 schools)
SunFire High School
Sunshine Elementary Charter School/Paragon Academy of Technology
West Broward Academy
Charlotte County
Babcock Neighborhood School
Cape Coral Charter School
Crossroads Hope Academy
Florida Southwestern Collegiate High School
Six Mile Charter Academy
Citrus County
Academy of Environmental Science
Clay County
Clay Charter Academy
St. Johns Classical Academy
Collier County
Collier Charter Academy
Gulf Coast Charter Academy (South)
Immokalee Community School
Marco Island Academy
Mason Classical Academy
Oak Creek Charter School Bonita Springs
Columbia County
Belmont Academy
Duval County
Biscayne High School
Bridgeprep Academy (Duval County)
Duval Charter Scholars Academy
Duval Charter School (6 schools)
Duval Mycroschool of Integrated Academics & Technologies
Global Outreach Charter Academy
IDEA (Bassett, River Bluff)
KIPP Jacksonville (4 schools)
Lone Star High School
Pathway Academy
River City Science Academy (5 schools)
San Jose Schools (5 schools)
School of Success Academy
Seacoast Charter
Seaside Charter (3 schools)
Somerset Academy Inc. (Eagle)
Tiger Academy
Waverly Academy
Wayman Academy of the Arts
Escambia County
Beulah Academy of Science
Byrneville Elementary School
Capstone Academy
Jackie Harris Preparatory Academy
Pensacola Beach Charter School
Flagler County
Imagine Schools (Town Center)
Franklin County
Apalachicola Bay Charter School
Gadsden County
Crossroads Academy
Glades County
Pemayetv Emahakv Charter Elementary School
Gulf County
North Bay Haven Charter Academy
Hernando County
Brooksville Engineering, Science & Technology Academy
Gulf Coast Academy of Science & Technology
Highlands County
Four Corners Charter School
Hillsborough County
Advantage Academy Hillsborough
Bell Creek Academy
Bridgeprep Academy (Riverview, Tampa)
Brooks-DeBartolo Collegiate High School
Channelside Academy of Math & Science
Collaboratory Preparatory Academy
Community Charter School of Excellence
Dr. Kiran C. Patel High School
East Tampa Academy
Excelsior Prep Charter School
Focus Academy
Henderson Hammock Charter School
Hillsborough Academy of Math & Science
Horizon Charter School of Tampa
Independence Academy
Kid's Community College (3 schools)
Learning Gate Community School
Legacy Preparatory Academy
Literacy Leadership Technology Academy
Lutz Preparatory School
Navigator Academy of Leadership
New Springs Schools
Pepin Academy
Pivot Charter School
Plato Academy (Tampa)
Redlands Christian Migrant Association Leadership Academy
Riverview Academy of Math & Science
Seminole Heights Charter High School
SLAM Charter
Southshore Charter Academy
Sunlake Academy of Math & Sciences
Terrace Community Middle School
Trinity School for Children
Valrico Lake Advantage Academy
Village of Excellence Academy
Walton Academy
Waterset Charter School
West University Charter High School
Winthrop Charter School
Woodmont Charter School
Indian River County
Imagine Schools (South Vero)
Indian River Charter High School
North County Charter School
Sebastian Charter Junior High School
St. Peter's Academy
Lake County
Alee Academy Charter School
Altoona School
Imagine Schools (South Lake)
Mascotte Elementary School
Minneola Elementary Charter School
Pinecrest Academy (Four Corners, Lakes)
Round Lake Elementary School
Spring Creek Charter School
Lee County
Bonita Springs Charter School
Christa McAuliffe Elementary School
City of Palms Charter High School
Coronado High School
Donna J. Beasley Technical Academy
Florida Southwestern Collegiate High School (Lee)
Gateway Charter School
Harlem Heights Community Charter School
The Island School
Island Park High School
North Nicholas High School
Northern Palms Charter High School
Oasis Charter School
Palm Acres Charter High School
Unity Charter School of Cape Coral
Leon County
Florida State University School
Governor's Charter School
School of Arts & Sciences (Centre, Thomasville)
Tallahassee Classical School
Tallahassee School of Math & Science
Levy County
Nature Coast Middle School
Whispering Winds Charter School
Madison County
James Madison Preparatory Charter High School
Madison Creative Arts Academy
Manatee County
Imagine Schools (Lakewood Ranch, North Manatee)
Manatee Charter School
Manatee School for the Arts
Manatee School of Arts & Sciences
Oasis Middle School
Palmetto Charter School
Parrish Charter Academy
Rowlett Academy for Arts and Communication/Middle Academy
State College of Florida Collegiate School
Team Success
Visible Men Academy
Marion County
Marion Charter School
McIntosh Area School
Ocali Charter Middle School
Martin County
Clark Advanced Learning Center
Treasure Classical Academy
Miami-Dade County
Academy of International Education Charter School
Alpha Charter of Excellence
Arts Academy of Excellence
Aventura City of Excellence Charter School
Beacon College Prep Elementary/Middle School
Bridgeprep Academy (Greater Miami, Interamerican, North Miami Beach)
C. G. Bethel High School
Charter High School of the Americas
Doctors Charter School
Downtown Miami Charter School
Excelsior Language Academy of Hialeah
Gibson Charter School
Green Springs High School
International Studies Charter High School/Virtual Academy
Integrated Science & Asian Culture Academy
KIPP Liberty City
Lincoln-Marti Charter School Miami
Mater Academy Charter School (Biscayne, East, Grove, iMater, International Academy, International Studies, Miami Beach, Mount Sinai, Prep)
Miami Arts Charter School
Miami Children's Museum Charter School
North Park High School
Phoenix Academy of Excellence
Seed School of Miami
Somerset Academy Inc. (Gables, South Miami)
Sports Leadership & Management Charter School Miami
Sports Leadership School of Excellence
Stellar Leadership Academy
Monroe County
Big Pine Academy
May Sands Montessori School
Ocean Studies Charter School
Sigsbee Charter School
Somerset Academy Inc. (Island Prep)
Treasure Village Montessori Charter School
Okaloosa County
Collegiate High School at Northwest Florida State College
Destin High School
Liza Jackson Preparatory School
Okaloosa Academy
Orange County
Access Charter School
Aloma Charter High School
Aspire Charter Academy
Bridgeprep Academy (Orange County)
Central Florida Leadership Academy
Chancery Charter High School
Cornerstone Academy/High School
Econ River Charter High School
Hope Charter School
Innovations Middle School
Innovation Montessori Ocoee
Kid's Community College (Ocoee)
Lake Eola Charter School
Legacy Charter High School
Legends Academy
Lucious and Emma Nixon Academy Charter School (L.E.N.A)
Nap Ford Community School
Oakland Avenue Charter School
Orange County Preparatory Academy
Orlando Science Charter School
Passport Charter School
Pinecrest Academy (Avalon, Creek, Prep)
Princeton House Elementary Charter School
Prosperitas Leadership Academy High School
Renaissance Charter School (Chickasaw, Crown Point, Goldenrod, Hunter's Creek)
Sheeler Charter High School
Sunshine Charter High School
UCP Charter School (Downtown, East Orange, Pine Hills, Transitional, West Orange)
Workforce Advantage Academy
Osceola County
American Classical Charter Academy St. Cloud
Bellalago Charter Academy
Bridgeprep Academy (Osceola, St. Cloud)
Creative Inspiration Journey School
Florida Cyber Charter Academy
Four Corners Charter School
Kissimmee Charter Academy
Lincoln-Marti Charter School Osceola
Main Street High School
Mater Academy Charter School (Brighton Lakes, Palms, Prep High School, St. Cloud)
New Dimensions High School
Osceola Science Charter School
P. M. Wells Charter Academy
Renaissance Charter School (Boggy Creek, Poinciana, Tapestry)
Sports Leadership & Management Charter School Osceola
St. Cloud Preparatory Academy
UCP Charter School (Osceola)
Victory School
Palm Beach County
Academy for Positive Learning
Believers Academy
Ben Gamla Charter School (Palm Beach)
Bridgeprep Academy (Palm Beach)
Bright Future Academy Charter School
Connections Education Center of the Palm Beaches
Education Venture Charter School
Els Center of Excellence
Everglades Preparatory Academy
Florida Futures Academy (North)
Franklin Academy Charter School
Gardens School of Technology Arts
Glades Academy Elementary School
G-Star School of the Arts
Gulfstream Goodwill Transition to Life Academy
Imagine Schools (Chancellor)
Inlet Grove Community High School
Montessori Academy of Early Enrichment
Olympus International Academy
Palm Beach Maritime Academy
Palm Beach Preparatory Charter Academy
Potentials Charter School
Quantum High School
Renaissance Charter School (Central Palm, Cypress, Palms West, Summit, Wellington, West Palm Beach)
Seagull Academy
Somerset Academy Inc. (Boca East, Boca Middle, Canyons Middle/High, JFK, Lakes, Wellington)
South Tech Academy
Southtech Success Center
Sports Leadership & Management Charter School (Boca, Palm Beach)
Toussaint L'Ouverture High School
University Preparatory Academy Palm Beach
Western Academy Charter School
Worthington High School
Pasco County
Academy at the Farm
Athenian Academy of Technology & the Arts
Classical Preparatory Charter School
Countryside Montessori Charter School
Dayspring Academy (Harmony, Jazz, Ovation, Symphony)
Imagine Schools (Land O' Lakes)
Innovation Preparatory Academy
Learning Lodge Academy
Pepin Academy Pasco
Pinecrest Academy (Wesley)
Plato Academy (Trinity)
Union Park Charter Academy
Pinellas County
Academie Da Vinci
Alfred Adler School
Athenian Academy Clearwater
Discovery Academy of Science
Enterprise High School
MYcroSchool Pinellas
NorthStar Academy of Pinellas
Pinellas Academy of Math & Science
Pinellas Preparatory Academy
Pinellas Primary Academy
Plato Academy (Clearwater, Largo, Palm Harbor, Pinellas Park, Seminole, St. Petersburg, Tarpon Springs)
St. Petersburg Collegiate High School
Polk County
Achievement Academy (Bartow, Lakeland, Winter Haven)
Berkley Accelerated School
Chain of Lakes Collegiate High School
Compass Middle Charter School
Cypress Junction Montessori School
Dale R. Fair Babson Park Elementary School
Discovery Academy/High School of Lake Alfred
Edward W. Bok Academy
Hartridge Academy
Hillcrest Elementary School
Janie Howard Wilson Elementary School
Lake Wales Senior High School
Lakeland Montessori School
Language & Literacy Academy
Magnolia Montessori Academy
McKeel Academy of Technology
McKeel Central Academy
Mi Escuela Montessori School
Navigator Academy of Leadership
New Beginnings High School
Polk Avenue School (3 schools)
Polk State Lakeland Gateway School
Ridgeview Global Studies Academy
South McKeel Academy
Victory Ridge Academy
Putnam County
Children's Reading Center
Putnam Academy of Arts & Sciences
Putnam EDGE High School
St. Johns County
ARC St. Johns
Evelyn B. Hamblen Center
St. Augustine Public Montessori School
St. Johns Virtual School
St. Lucie County
Palm Pointe Educational Research School (Tradition)
Renaissance Charter School (St. Lucie, Tradition)
Somerset Academy Inc. (College Prep, St. Lucie)
Santa Rosa County
Learning Academy of Santa Rosa
Sarasota County
Dreamers Academy
Imagine Schools (North Port, Palmer Ranch)
Island Village Montessori School
Sarasota Academy of the Arts
Sarasota Military Academy
Sarasota School of Arts & Sciences
Sarasota Suncoast Academy
SKY Academy (Englewood, Venice)
State College of Florida Collegiate School
Student Leadership Academy
Suncoast School for Innovative Studies
Seminole County
Choices in Learning
Elevation High School
Galileo Gifted School
Seminole Science Charter School
Sumter County
The Villages Charter Schools
Volusia County
Burns Science & Technology Charter School
The Chiles Academy
Easterseals Northeast Charter School
Ivy Hawn Charter School of the Arts
Reading Edge Academy
Richard Milburn Academy
Samsula Academy
Wakulla County
COAST Charter School of Arts, Science & Technology
Walton County
Seaside Neighborhood School
Walton Academy
References
School districts
School districts |
Ferrisia is a genus of mealybugs.
Taxonomic history
David T. Fullaway circumscribed the genus in 1923. He included one species: F. virgata, which was initially described in Dactylopius and had been transferred to Pseudococcus. In 1929, Ryoichi Takahashi proposed Ferrisiana as a replacement name because he thought the existence of the mollusk genus Ferrissia meant Ferrisia was an invalid junior homonym. Ferrisiana was subsequently used by other authors to refer to this genus. In the 1960s, Harold and Emily R. Morrison and Howard L. McKenzie showed that the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature says the difference of one letter is enough to distinguish genera names, making Ferrisia the valid name for the genus.
In 2012, M. B. Kaydan and P. J. Kullan circumscribed a new genus Pseudoferrisia for the species previously known as Ferrisia floridana.
Species
, species include:
Ferrisia claviseta
Ferrisia colombiana
Ferrisia cristinae
Ferrisia dasylirii
Ferrisia ecuadorensis
Ferrisia gilli
Ferrisia kaki
Ferrisia kondoi
Ferrisia malvastra
Ferrisia meridionalis
Ferrisia milleri
Ferrisia multiformis
Ferrisia pitcairnia
Ferrisia quaintancii
Ferrisia setosa
Ferrisia terani
Ferrisia uzinuri
Ferrisia virgata
Ferrisia williamsi
References
Sternorrhyncha genera
Pseudococcidae |
Potentia gaudendi or orgasmic force is a concept in sexuality studies, constituted of a body's potential for pleasure, both physically and mentally.
The term was coined by philosopher Paul B. Preciado, who says contemporary economies exploit the body by offering services to increase pleasure—such as Viagra and cocaine—which turn it into a commodity. Potentia gaudendi is an important concept in Preciado's work, because it underlies his theory of "pornpower": the idea that sex and pornography is part of a larger and interlocking economic system. The ability to desire, or to withhold desire, is not able to be transferred. As a result, economies are in the process of "emotionally engaging people in order to generate value".
References
Citations
Bibliography
Biopolitics
Concepts in social philosophy
Queer theory |
Robert Stock (born October 15, 1944), also known as Bob Stock, is an American former professional tennis player.
Raised in Iowa, Stock played collegiate tennis for the UCLA Bruins, where he was a teammate of Arthur Ashe. While in college he was drafted into the Marines and served an 11-month tour of Vietnam in 1969. He competed on the professional tour in the early 1970s and qualified twice for the main draw at the Wimbledon Championships.
References
External links
1944 births
Living people
American male tennis players
UCLA Bruins men's tennis players
Tennis people from Iowa
United States Marine Corps personnel of the Vietnam War |
Harry Peters (28 April 1852 – 9 May 1941) was a German-born New Zealander, who was a mountaineer and helped to establish the main climbing route up Mount Taranaki. Born near Heide, Peters came to New Zealand in 1875. Within months of his arrival, he took up farming at Kaimiro in the Taranaki. His farm was on the slopes of Mount Taranaki and he first climbed the mountain in 1885, via a previously unused route. This became the popular route for ascending Mount Taranaki. From 1892 to 1898 he was the custodian of Tahurangi House, the permanent camp house that was established to serve as accommodation for climbers going up the mountain. He also served as a mountain guide, making nearly 90 ascents of Mount Taranaki until his retirement as custodian. For much of his later life, he was prominent in civic affairs in the region.
Early life
Harry Peters was born near Heide, in Holstein (now Schleswig-Holstein), Germany, to Johann Peters and his wife, Anna Catharina Elisabeth . His birth name was Peter Hinrik Peters and it was not until his arrival in July 1875 in New Zealand, as a crew member of the passenger ship Lammershagen, that he became known as Harry Peters. Few details are known of his life prior to arriving in New Zealand. Peters deserted from the Lammershagen soon after it docked at Wellington, following a dispute with one of the vessel's officers. He found employment at a farm nearby but after a few months travelled to the port of New Plymouth, in the Taranaki region, to work as a labourer in the fledgling town of Inglewood, which had recently been surveyed.
After a few years Peters took up farming, establishing a homestead on a block of land at Kaimiro, on the slopes of Mount Taranaki, then known as Mount Egmont. By this time he was married with a young family. His wife, Auguste Peters , was an immigrant to New Zealand who had also arrived in the country aboard the Lammershagen.
Climbing
Peters first climbed Mount Taranaki in 1885, using a generally unused route to the top. Prior to his ascent, the preferred route required a traverse of the Pouakai Range. Peters subsequently reported that he only discovered the route by accident, while looking for lost cattle. On initially reporting his finding to the authorities in New Plymouth he was not believed and it required some persuasion on his part for a survey of the route to be completed the next year. Over time the route that he discovered on his first climb became the favoured track to the top and a campsite was established on the northern slopes, close to the upper bush line. It was recognised that some form of permanent structure would be desirable to serve as accommodation for those climbing the mountain. In 1891, he helped organise the relocation of a building from the military barracks at New Plymouth to serve as a permanent camp house at the site. Formally opened the following year and named Tahurangi House, Peters was appointed its custodian.
In addition to his farming, in which he was greatly assisted by his wife, he began to guide climbing expeditions up the mountain. One of his clients was the former New Zealand premier, Sir William Fox, aged 80 at the time. He helped Fox, who was endeavouring to show that abstention made him fitter than men much younger than him, attain the peak of Mount Taranaki in February 1892, a feat that took 18 hours. By the time of his retirement in 1898 as custodian, Peters had led nearly 90 expeditions to the peak of the mountain.
Later life
Peters was a prominent community leader in Kaimiro, serving as a member of the Taranaki Hospital and Charitable Aid Board and was also on the Moa Road Board; he was the chairman of the latter organisation from 1893 to 1896. For the same period, he was on the Taranaki County Council. For a time he was a director of the local dairy co-operative. In his later years, he served as Kaimiro's postmaster and wrote for one of the regional newspapers. In the years of the Great Depression, a portion of the Peters farm was sold off.
In July 1921, Peter's wife died at the age of 63. By this time, the couple had seven children, all of whom lived in Inglewood or the surrounding area. Peters died on 9 May 1941 in New Plymouth. Buried in Inglewood cemetery, his descendants continued to be involved in the community around the district, with a grandson running the family farm as recently as 2011.
Notes
1852 births
1941 deaths
People from Heide
German emigrants to New Zealand
New Zealand mountain climbers |
The Last Hour is a 1923 American silent crime film directed by Edward Sloman and starring Milton Sills, Carmel Myers and Pat O'Malley.
Cast
Milton Sills as Steve Cline
Carmel Myers as Saidee McCall
Pat O'Malley as Philip Logan
Jack Mower as Tom Cline
Alec B. Francis as Reever McCall
Charles Clary as William Mallory
Walter Long as Red Brown
Eric Mayne as Gov. Logan
Clarence Wilson as Quales
Gary Cooper as Extra
References
Bibliography
Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998.
Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
External links
1923 films
1923 crime films
English-language films
American films
American silent feature films
American crime films
Films directed by Edward Sloman
American black-and-white films |
On January 22, 1871, a contingent of France's National Guard marched on Paris's City Hall (Hôtel de Ville). The group opposed the armistice that was being drafted, believing that the French government had sabotaged their military. Demonstrators released Gustave Flourens and marched on the City Hall, including 150 guardsmen. But unlike the larger City Hall uprising three months earlier, Breton Mobile Guards defended the building. Five died and 18 were wounded. Though the event had been smaller than the previous October uprising, the January insurrection irreconciably split Paris's factions and presaged the coming civil war.
Revolutionaries involved in the uprising included Louise Michel, Sophie Poirier, and Andre Leo. At the demonstration, Michel dressed as a National Guard with rifle and rallied for a Commune, a revolutionary government.
References
Bibliography
Rebellions in France
1871 in France
January 1871 events
Events in Paris
Franco-Prussian War |
The 2022 Harvard Crimson men's volleyball team represents Harvard University in the 2022 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season. The Crimson, led by 12th year head coach Brian Baise, play their home games at Malkin Athletic Center. The Crimson are members of the EIVA and return to play after missing the 2021 season due to the corona virus cancelled Ivy League seasons. They were picked to finish sixth in the EIVA preseason poll.
Season highlights
Will be filled in as the season progresses.
Roster
Schedule
TV/Internet Streaming information:
All home games will be streamed on ESPN+. Most road games will also be streamed by the schools streaming service.
*-Indicates conference match.
Times listed are Eastern Time Zone.
Announcers for televised games
UC Irvine: Rob Espero & Charlie Brande
UC San Diego: Bryan Fenley & Ricci Luyties
Long Beach State: Matt Brown & Tyler Kulakowski
Queens: Ben Altsher & Justin Gallanty
King: Ben Altsher & Eric Gallanty
Purdue Fort Wayne: Craig White & Matt Corsetti
Penn State: Dana Grey & Ben Altsher
St. Francis: Dana Grey & Eric Gallanty
St. Francis Brooklyn: Craig White & Dana Grey
NJIT: Dylan Hornblum
Princeton:
Princeton:
Grand Canyon:
Grand Canyon:
Sacred Heart:
Sacred Heart:
Penn State:
St. Francis:
St. Francis Brooklyn:
NJIT:
Charleston (WV):
Charleston (WV):
George Mason:
George Mason:
References
2022 in sports in Massachusetts
2022 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball season
Harvard |
The Temple Bar is a public house located at 46–48 Temple Bar in the Temple Bar area of Dublin, Ireland. Standing at the corner of Temple Lane South, the first pub on the site was reputedly licensed in the early 19th century.
The pub building at 48 Temple Bar is listed by Dublin City Council on its Record of Protected Structures, and is recorded in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH) as being built .
History
The Temple Bar area, in which the building stands, was so-named in the 17th century, owing to its association with Sir William Temple, father of Sir John Temple, who owned a house and gardens there.
Some sources associate the public house with James Harrison, a young publican who previously worked in his father's pub grocery business at 48 City Quay, and who reputedly obtained a licence for a new pub in the area in May 1819. According to related sources, Harrison sold his business to Cornelius O'Meara, a grocer, tea, wine and spirit merchant, in 1835. O'Meara, who also had another pub at 1 Wood Quay, remained in Temple Bar for around a decade.
Other sources, including the NIAH and a date on the gable wall of the building, date the development of the pub to 1840, when the "grocer and spirt dealer" James Farley was operating from the building (then listed as number 54 Temple Bar). Farley also had a provisions business at 38 Essex Street.
Farley sold the property to William Cranston in 1847. He remained there until his retirement around 1865, at which point he sold it to merchant John Lambert, who was also trading at 38 City Quay. After making a "handsome profit" in his three years in Temple Bar, Lambert sold the property to husband and wife John Joseph and Ann Cranwill. John died at the premises in 1873. His widow attempted to carry on alone.
P. J. Hartnett's name was above the door of the business (then listed as number 48) in 1880, by which time the Temple Bar street had become prosperous, with booksellers, foundries, printers, goldsmiths and merchants. Hartnett remained at the location for eleven years.
In 1891, Josephine Purcell became the new owner, but she left the following year and was succeeded by James Byrne.
Bryne's stay was similarly short, for he sold the property in July 1894 to Patrick and Bridget Ramsbottom. The Ramsbottoms returned the building to its original purpose, over two phases, beginning with a small single-room snug, occupying the immediate corner of Temple Bar and Temple Lane South (from which time a stone wheel-guard is still present at ground level). Patrick Ramsbottom died unexpectedly in 1898, and Bridget continued on alone for seven years. The Gaffney brothers purchased it from her in 1905.
The Gaffneys moved on, and merchant Edward Walsh & Co. was in place by 1909. Walsh remained there until 1923, when Charles Archer took over the premises. He remained there for 28 years.
In 1951, the Fitzgerald family purchased the property. They stayed for ten years, with William Flannery arriving in 1961.
As of 2012, the owners were the Cleary family, who purchased the pub in 1992. At that point traditional features such as the Georgian style wyatt windows were reinstated and the pub changed to its current name. The business was expanded in the first part of the 21st century with the acquisition of adjacent properties, including The Temple Bar Trading Company shop, which opened at number 46. This section features a life-size bronze statue of James Joyce and a beer garden.
Interior
References
External links
Pubs in Dublin (city)
Buildings and structures in Dublin (city)
1840s establishments in Ireland |
Talent Mukwanda (born 24 April 1993) is a Zimbabwean footballer who plays as a midfielder for Herentals Queens FC and the Zimbabwe women's national team.
Club career
Mukwanda played for Herentals in Zimbabwe.
International career
Mukwanda capped for Zimbabwe at senior level during two COSAFA Women's Championship editions (2020 and 2021).
References
1993 births
Living people
Zimbabwean women's footballers
Women's association football midfielders
Zimbabwe women's international footballers |
The U-League (Korean: 대학농구 U-리그 or 한국대학농구리그) is the main college basketball competition in South Korea. It is sanctioned by the Korea University Basketball Federation (KUBF; Korean: 한국대학농구연맹), which oversees college basketball in South Korea, and the Korea University Sports Federation (KUSF).
Teams
The following universities and colleges are members of the Korea University Basketball Federation:
Men
Division 1
Chosun University (Gwangju)
Chung-Ang University (Seoul)
Dankook University (Seoul)
Dongguk University (Seoul)
Hanyang University (Seoul)
Konkuk University (Seoul)
Korea University (Seoul)
Kyung Hee University (Seoul)
Myongji University (Seoul)
Sangmyung University (Seoul)
Sungkyunkwan University (Seoul)
Yonsei University (Seoul)
Division 2
Busan Arts College (Busan)
Chodang University (Muan County, South Jeolla Province)
Chosun College of Science and Technology (Gwangju)
Korea Golf University (Hoengseong County, Gangwon Province)
Mokpo National University (Mokpo)
Sejong University (Seoul)
Seoul National University (Seoul)
Woosuk University (Wanju County, North Jeolla Province)
University of Ulsan (Ulsan)
Women
Dankook University (Seoul)
Gwangju University (Gwangju)
Pusan National University (Busan)
University of Suwon (Suwon)
University of Ulsan (Ulsan)
Vision College of Jeonju (Jeonju)
Competition
The teams compete in a league/play-offs format similar to the KBL and WKBL. Players who are registered with a team are eligible to participate in the rookie draft if they decide to become professional basketball players.
For the men's competition, only KUBF Division 1 members participate in the KUSF U-League. Teams from Division 2 member institutions participate in the KUSF Club Championship. Both Division 1 and Division 2 teams also participate in the older MBC Cup competition organized by the KUBF.
Results
Men
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the full season has not been played since 2020.
History
The Basketball U-League was founded in 2010 (men's competition) and 2015 (women's competition) as part of the Korea University Sports Federation's effort to organize college sports into a more streamlined format similar to the National Collegiate Athletic Association in the United States. The U-League system also includes five other sports.
The Korea University Basketball Federation has existed since 1964 and college teams competed in the Korean Basketball Association-sanctioned National Basketball Festival (Korean: 농구대잔치). At that time, basketball was still an amateur sport and teams were all sponsored by corporate companies or universities. When the professional league (Korean Basketball League) was founded in 1997, the senior teams all became professional teams, leaving only the Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps's Sangmu basketball team and college teams to compete in the tournament. With the founding of the U-League, a large number of college teams opt not to send their teams to the National Basketball Festival.
Notes
References
External Links
Korea University Basketball Federation (KUBF) Official Website
U-League
University and college basketball in South Korea |
A sea shanty is a genre of folk song.
Sea Shanty or Sea Shanties may also refer to:
Sea Shanties (High Tide album), 1969
Sea Shanties (Spiers and Boden album), 2002
"Sea Shanty", a song by Quasi from Featuring "Birds" (1998)
See also
Shanty (disambiguation) |
Arthur Gibbs Sylvester is an American structural geologist. He is an emeritus professor of geology at the University of California, Santa Barbara and the author of Roadside Geology of Southern California (2016) and the second edition of Geology Underfoot in Southern California (2020), both published by Mountain Press.
References
External links
American geologists
University of California, Santa Barbara faculty
Pomona College alumni
University of California, Los Angeles alumni
Structural geologists
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people |
Leonor Will Never Die is a 2022 Filipino psychological comedy-drama film. It is the feature film directorial debut of Martika Ramirez Escobar, who also wrote the screenplay. The film stars Sheila Francisco as a retired screenwriter who, after falling into a coma, finds herself the action hero of her unfinished screenplay. The supporting cast includes Bong Cabrera, Rocky Salumbides, and Anthony Falcon. The film is an homage to Filipino action films of the 1970s and '80s.
Leonor Will Never Die premiered at the World Cinema Dramatic Competition of the 2022 Sundance Film Festival, the first Filipino film to compete since The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros in 2006. Escobar was awarded the Special Jury Prize for Innovative Spirit.
Plot summary
Leonor Reyes (Sheila Francisco) was once a major player in the Filipino film industry after creating a string of successful action films, but now her household struggles to pay the bills. When she reads an advertisement looking for screenplays, Leonor begins tinkering with an unfinished script about the quest of young, noble Ronwaldo (Rocky Salumbides), forced to avenge his brother’s murder at the hand of thugs. While her imagination provides some escape from reality, she goes all-in after an accident involving a television knocks her out, sends her into a coma, and transports her inside the incomplete movie. Now Leonor can play out her wildest dreams firsthand and discover the perfect ending to her story.
Cast
Production
Concept and development
The idea for the film came to Escobar when she was a young girl after action star-turned-politician Joseph Estrada was elected President of the Philippines. In the film's production notes, Escobar comments, "Today, decades later, after having two more ‘action star’ presidents [Estrada and the failed bid of Fernando Poe Jr.], I find myself questioning this absurd reality and am surprised by how easy it can be understood once I place it in parallel with our love for movies." After graduating from the University of the Philippines Diliman with a film degree, Escobar began working on the screenplay and continued to edit and revise it over the next eight years while she worked as a cinematographer on other films. During that time, she also attended writing workshops of screenwriters Ricky Lee and Bong Lao.
Casting
For the role of Leonor, Escobar was looking for "someone who feels like they fit in that macho world, with the intelligence and sharpness of a writer, and the tough tenderness of a mother." The film's producer, Monster Jimenez, recommended Sheila Francisco after seeing her in the stage musical drama Ang Huling El Bimbo.
Filming and post-production
The film was shot in the Philippines from July to September 2019. The film was supported by the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) through its CreatePHFilms funding program and sponsored under its Full Circle Lab-Philippines development program.
Reception
In a wrap-up of Sundance, The New York Times film critic A.O. Scott calls the film "wonderfully unclassifiable" and says "the combination of family melodrama, pulpy violence and surreal comedy add up to the disarmingly tender portrait of an artist on the edge of the afterlife." Marya Gates of RogerEbert.com says the film "establishes writer/director Martika Ramirez Escobar as an artist with a singular voice and bright future in halls of weird cinema," with Sheila Francisco "an utter delight as Leonor." In a mixed review, Amy Nicholson of Variety writes that it is "creative and clever – perhaps too clever" as towards the end of the film "the script’s ambitions have outreached its grasp, even with the formidable Francisco holding the stories’ layers together."
Along with The New York Times, the film is considered one of the best films of the 2022 Sundance Film Festival by The Atlantic and Vogue.
Accolades
At Sundance, the film was awarded the Special Jury Prize for Innovative Spirit. In recognition of the accolades of Leonora Will Never Die, as well as for the Short Film Grand Jury Prize-winner The Headhunter's Daughter, the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP) chair Liza Diño-Seguerra described the moment as "Philippines Cinema's historic win at the Sundance," adding that the filmmakers are "writing history."
References
External links
Leonor Will Never Die at IMDb
Leonor Will Never Die at Rotten Tomatoes
2022 comedy-drama films |
Gagi may refer to:
People
Gagi Bazadze (born 1992), Georgian rugby player
Places
Gagi, India
Gagi Fortress, Georgia |
Single Black Female is a 2022 American television thriller film directed by Shari L. Carpenter and written by Sa'Rah Jones and Tessa Evelyn Scott. Starring Amber Riley and Raven Goodwin, it is inspired by the film Single White Female. The film was released on February 5, 2022 and was the most viewed Lifetime original movie since Wendy Williams: The Movie.
Plot
Monica, a Houston-based television host is experiencing turmoil in personal life when she is assigned an enthusiastic new assistant, Simone, who looks just like her.
Cast
Amber Riley as Simone
Raven Goodwin as Monica
K. Michelle as Bebe, Monica's best friend
Janet Hubert as Monica's mother
Devale Ellis as Eric
Kron Moore as Clarke Michelle
Production
On October 29, 2021, it was announced that Lifetime ordered Single Black Female written by Sa'Rah Jones and Tessa Evelyn Scott with director Shari L. Carpenter. The film's story is inspired by the cult classic Single White Female starring Bridget Fonda and Jennifer Jason Leigh.
Amber Riley and Raven Goodwin were approached to star as co-leads in part because they are frequently mistaken for each other.
Release
Single Black Female premiered on Lifetime on February 5, 2022.
The film was watched by 5.1 million viewers on-air and online and was the most-watched original movie of the year across all telecasts.
References
External links
Official website
2022 television films
Lifetime (TV network) films
American thriller films
Films about stalking
Films set in Houston |
Paris uprising may refer to:
1832 Paris uprising
1870 Paris uprising
January 1871 Paris uprising
Paris Commune |
General Secretariat of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, commonly known as General Secretariat (; ), is an executive body and primary organ of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation consists secretary general and staff members of the OIC, the second-largest intergovernmental organization after the United Nations. General Secretariat is tasted with decision implementation, in addition to maintaining entire organisation, including its charter. It also maintains Standing Committees, Executive Committee and the Independent Permanent Human Rights Commission across the 57 member states. It manages subsidiaries, specialized, and affiliated institutions of the OIC with prime focus on OIC Council of Foreign Ministers and Islamic summit conducted by the 57 member states.
Headquartered in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, it the main executive body concerning the protection, promotion and development of the OIC. In addition to coordinating programmes, it also makes recommendations for summits, conferences in the area of common interest of the organisation. It manages all departments of the organisation which are headed by one or more assistant secretary generals of the concerned departments.
History
General Secretariat was established in 1970 by the council of foreign affairs minister in the 1st summit held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in muharram 1390H corresponding February 1970. The office term was decided by the 3rd summit of foreign ministers held in Mecca, Saudi Arabia in 1981. The third summit decided 2 years term, however it was later extended to four years by the 12th summit. It is temporarily headquartered in Jeddah until Jerusalem is supposed to be liberated which is scheduled to become the official workplace of the Secretariat. General Secretariat has been created under the chapter xi.
General Secretariat is also entitled with the management of council of foreign ministers' and subsidiaries budget under the chapter v of the OIC Charter. Chapter vii regulates its meetings, summits, conferences, and headquarters.
References
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation organs
1979 establishments in Saudi Arabia
Secretariats of international organizations |
The 2024 AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament will be the 6th edition of the AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament, the quadrennial international football competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) to determine which women's national teams from Asia qualify for the Olympic football tournament.
The top two teams of the tournament will qualify for the 2024 Summer Olympics women's football tournament in France as the AFC representatives.
References
External links
, the-AFC.com
2024
Football at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Women's qualification |
Vestfold og Telemark County Municipality () is the democratically elected regional governing administration of Vestfold og Telemark county in Norway. The main responsibilities of the county municipality includes the overseeing the county's 21 upper secondary schools, county roadways, public transport, dental care, culture, and cultural heritage.
County government
The Vestfold og Telemark county council () is made up of 61 representatives that are elected every four years. The council essentially acts as a Parliament or legislative body for the county and it meets about six times each year. The council is divided into standing committees and an executive board () which meet considerably more often. Both the council and executive board are led by the county mayor ().
County council
The party breakdown of the council is as follows:
References
County municipality
County municipalities of Norway
2020 establishments in Norway |
Richard Bozon Ice Rink (French: Patinoire Richard-Bozon) is an ice rink located in Chamonix, Haute-Savoie, France.
It is part of Centre sportif Richard-Bozon, a multisports ensemble, and the broader Pôle sportif et culturel Chamonix Nord (which includes several educational facilities), in the northern part of the city.
It is best known as the longtime home of Chamonix's men's professional ice hockey team, which currently goes by the name Pionniers de Chamonix Mont-Blanc. It is also home to the Rebelles de Chamonix senior women's team.
History
The building was inaugurated in 1962, at the same time as the 17th Alpine World Ski Championships, which also took place in Chamonix. It is the oldest venue in the Ligue Magnus.
It was originally known as Patinoire olympique de Chamonix (English: Chamonix Olympic Ice Rink), a reference to its Olympic-size ice track rather than to the Olympic Stadium it replaced. The rink, along with the rest of northern Chamonix's public sports installations, was renamed in memory of mountain guide Richard Bozon, who lost his life to an avalanche in 1995—the third member of the Bozon family to so die after his grand father and his uncle, World Champion skier Charles Bozon.
In the summer of 1996, the rink was severely damaged by an overflow of the river Arve, which caused the men's hockey team (at the time called the Huskies) to suspend its operations for the entire 1996–97 season.
Design
The building's design is sometimes attributed to internationally recognized architect Roger Taillibert, who drew the swimming pool and gymnasium that were later built on the adjoining land. However, the ice rink itself was the work of local architects Henri Chevallier and René Bouvier, who regularly consulted for the city and designed a number of buildings in the Chamonix Valley, including the nearby Alpina Hotel and Shopping Center.
A second, natural outdoor hockey rink was originally set up on the south side of the building, then scrapped in the early 1970s to make room for a high school. It was rebuilt a few years later, this time on the north side where more land was available.
Replacement
For a time, the construction of a replacement rink was tied to Annecy's bid for the 2018 Winter Olympics, which would have seen Chamonix host some or all of the hockey tournament, but the bid proved unpopular and was not renewed for subsequent games.
In 2021, Chamonix mayor Eric Fournier announced on the occasion of a visit by French Ice Hockey Federation president and former Chamonix player Luc Tardif that a new building had been approved. Under consideration is a dual ice hockey and competitive climbing venue, replacing both Patinoire Richard-Bozon and the neighbouring ENSA Gymnasium.
Notable events
1972 French Figure Skating Championships
1986 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships
References
External links
City of Chamonix – Sports (in French)
Richard Bozon Sports Center at www.chamonix.net
Sports venues in Haute-Savoie
Indoor arenas in France
Indoor ice hockey venues in France
Sports venues completed in 1962
1962 establishments in France |
Heart of a Hero may refer to:
Heart of a Hero, a Chance Thomas score in The Lord of the Rings Online
Heart of a Hero, a Luther Vandross score in Hero
Heart of a Hero, a 1994 TV documentary about Canine Companions for Independence
Heart of a Hero, a theme song in Disney Junior
Heart of a Hero, a song by Club Danger
Heart of a Hero, a song by Cathy Heller
Heart of a Hero, a consumable item in Conan Exiles
Heart of a Hero, a novel series by Laura Trentham
The Heart of a Hero, a 1916 silent film
The Heart of a Hero, a novel by Susan May Warren
The Heart of a Hero, a 2013 autobiography by Clarence Singleton
Dex: The Heart of a Hero, a 2007 book by Caralyn Buehner |
The 1990 VMI Keydets football team was an American football team that represented the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1990 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their second year under head coach Jim Shuck, the team compiled an overall record of 4–7, with a mark of 1–5 in conference play, placing seventh in the SoCon.
Schedule
References
VMI
VMI Keydets football seasons
VMI Keydets football |
Tiarn Collins (born 9 November 1999) is a New Zealand snowboarder, specialising in slopestyle and big air competitions. He is representing New Zealand in the slopestyle and big air events at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
Biography
Born in Brisbane, Australia, Collins moved to New Zealand with his family when he was eight years old, settling in Queenstown. He is of Māori descent, affiliating to Ngāi Tahu. Collins was home schooled after attending Wakatipu High School up to the end of year 10.
Collins competed in the 2016 Youth Olympic Games, where he finished fourth in slopestyle and fifth in the halfpipe. The following year, at the Junior World Championships, he won bronze in slopestyle. He was selected in the New Zealand team for the 2018 Winter Olympics, but dislocated his shoulder in the lead-up to competition and was unable to compete.
In the 2019–2020 season, Collins had his first World Cup slopestyle victory, winning at Calgary on 16 February 2020. He best result in the 2020-2021 World Cup was 15th in slopestyle. The following season, in the lead-up to the 2022 Winter Olympics, he finished third in slopestyle at the World Cup event at Mammoth Mountain and gained selection for the 2022 Winter Olympics.
At the 2022 Winter Olympics, Collins finished 18th in the men's slopestyle.
References
1999 births
Living people
New Zealand male snowboarders
Sportspeople from Brisbane
Australian emigrants to New Zealand
Olympic snowboarders of New Zealand
Snowboarders at the 2022 Winter Olympics
New Zealand Māori sportspeople
Ngāi Tahu
People educated at Wakatipu High School
Snowboarders at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics |
Parmelina quercina is a species of foliose lichen in the large family Parmeliaceae. It is found in continental Europe.
Taxonomy
The lichen was first scientifically described by German botanist Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1787, as Lichen quercinus. Finnish lichenologist Edvard August Vainio considered it better classified in Parmelia, which at the time was a large genus that contained most foliose, or so-called "parmelioid" lichens. Mason Hale transferred it (and 40 other former Parmelia species) to the newly circumscribed genus Parmelina in 1974.
In 2007, molecular phylogenetic analysis was used on specimens collected from around the world, which showed that the collection of specimens being called Parmelina quercina actually represented four distinct species. Not only were they genetically distinct, but they had distinctive morphological characteristics as well as unique geographic distributions. In addition to Parmelina carporrhizans (oceanic Europe and Macaronesia), and Parmelina quercina, now restricted to continental Europe, two new species were proposed: Parmelina coleae for North America, and Parmelina elixii for Australia. The latter species has since been transferred to Austroparmelina. Because Willdenow's original specimens of Parmelina quercina, collected from "im Thiergarten & prope Tegel" in Berlin, have been lost, a neotype from Germany was designated for the taxon in 2009.
References
Parmeliaceae
Lichens described in 1787
Lichens of Europe
Taxa named by Carl Ludwig Willdenow |
Tarati may refer to:
Tarati, Pakistan, a village in Pakistan
Tarati, Bangladesh, a subdivision of Muktagacha Upazila, Bangladesh
Tekeeua Tarati, politician from Kiribati
See also
Tatari (disambiguation) |
Viken County Municipality () is the democratically elected regional governing administration of Viken county in Norway. The main responsibilities of the county municipality includes the overseeing the county's 21 upper secondary schools, county roadways, public transport, dental care, culture, and cultural heritage. The public transportation in the county is managed by Brakar, Østfold Kollektivtrafikk, and Ruter. Ruter is co-owned with the city of Oslo.
County government
The Viken county council () is made up of 87 representatives that are elected every four years. The council essentially acts as a Parliament or legislative body for the county and it meets about six times each year. The council is divided into standing committees and an executive board () which meet considerably more often. Both the council and executive board are led by the county mayor ().
County council
The party breakdown of the council is as follows:
References
County municipality
County municipalities of Norway
2020 establishments in Norway |
USCGC Hollyhock (WAGL-220) was the lead ship of the Hollyhock-class buoy tender built in 1937 and operated by the United States Coast Guard. The ship was named after an annual, biennial, or perennial plant usually taking an erect, unbranched form.
Construction and career
Hollyhock was laid down by the Defoe Boat & Motor Works, in Bay City, Michigan on 13 April 1936, after construction was authorized in 1934. She was launched on 24 March 1937 and later commissioned on 7 August 1937, assigned to the 12th Lighthouse District in Milwaukee. She was relocated to Sturgeon Bay during World War II and designated WAGL-220.
In 1954, she was refitted with diesel engines. On 15 October 1954, she was dispatched to assist the collision between Dutch M/V Prins Willem V and tugboat Sinclair No.12. From 1 July 1958 until 14 September 1959. From 19 to 21 November, she assisted the M/V Carl D. Bardley in northern Lake Michigan. Hollyhock was transferred to Detroit, Michigan on 15 September 1959.
During the 1980 Mariel Boatlift, she participated in Coast Guard operations off Florida. Her purpose in Florida was to be responsible for buoys and aids to navigation in the Miami area. Hollyhock was decommissioned on 31 March 1982, due to budgetary issues and was later sold to a Mission Co. as Good News. Due to mechanical problems, she was stranded and towed to the Miami River, to be sold to the Florida Boating Improvement Program to become an artificial reef.
on 20 February 1990, she was sunk as an artificial reef off Pompano Beach, Florida. Her wreck lies in the Rodeo Reef and has been renamed "The Wreck of Captain Dan", in honor of Captain Dan Garnsey.
Legacy
A later buoy tender, USCGC Hollyhock (WLB-214) was built in 2003 and named after the buoy tender Hollyhock which was decommissioned in 1982.
Awards
National Defense Service Medal
Coast Guard Unit Commendation
Humanitarian Service Medal
References
United States Coast Guard: Hollyhock
South Florida Diving: CAPTAIN DAN
External links
TogetherWeServed: Hollyhock Crew Members
Hollyhock
1937 ships
Ships built in Michigan
Ships sunk as artificial reefs
Maritime incidents in 1990
Shipwrecks of the Florida coast |
Michael Lawrence Kreiss (December 22, 1951 – March 5, 2012) was an American furniture designer and professional tennis player. He served as an executive of the family company Kreiss, a luxury furniture manufacturer.
Kreiss, the eldest son of Kreiss company founder Norman Kreiss, played collegiate tennis while at UCLA and featured twice in the main draw of the US Open. His middle brother Robert was a junior Wimbledon champion and youngest brother Thomas, former husband of Lisa Bonder, was also a professional player.
A furniture designer, Kreiss founded Kreiss Design in 1976, which sits within the family business.
Kreiss died in 2012 and the company is now headed by his son Loren.
References
External links
1951 births
2012 deaths
American male tennis players
UCLA Bruins men's tennis players
American business executives
American furniture designers
Tennis people from California |
The 2024 AFC U-20 Women's Asian Cup qualification will be a women's under-20 football competition which decides the participating teams of the 2024 AFC U-20 Women's Asian Cup.
A total of eight teams will qualify to play in the final tournament. The host country and the top three teams of the previous tournament in 2019 will qualify automatically, while the other four teams will be decided by qualification.
There will be two rounds of qualification matches, with the first round scheduled to be played between 4–12 March 2023, and the second round scheduled to be played between 3–11 June 2023.
Qualified teams
The following eight teams qualified for the final tournament.
1 Bold indicates champions for that year. Italic indicates hosts for that year.
References
External links
, the-AFC.com
Qualification
U-20 Women's Asian Cup qualification
2023 in women's association football
2023 in youth association football
March 2023 sports events in Asia
June 2023 sports events in Asia |
Maulana Abdul Hakim is a Pakistani Islamic scholar and politician who severed as a member of the 5th National Assembly of Pakistan from 14 April 1972 to 10 January 1977.
References
Living people
Pakistani Islamic religious leaders
Pakistani MNAs 1972–1977
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam politicians
People from Nowshera District |
The Allegheny Front Trail is a hiking trail in central Pennsylvania, forming a loop through Moshannon State Forest and roughly encircling Black Moshannon State Park. It is known for visiting several vistas off the Allegheny Front, for walking along "Red" Moshannon Creek for a significant distance, and for visiting many different ecosystems ranging from wetlands to forested hollows to high meadows. The trail crosses Pennsylvania Route 504 twice and can also be reached from two side trails that originate in the state park.
History and route
The origins of the Allegheny Front Trail date to the early 1980s, when the Rock Run Trails System was developed for cross-country skiers to the east of Black Moshannon State Park. The area became popular with hikers, leading to calls for an organized backpacking loop. The Allegheny Front Trail made use of a portion of the ski trail network, plus various existing trails in the state park and other areas of Moshannon State Forest, as well as sections of the Great Shamokin Path and Bald Eagle's Path that had been used by Native Americans for centuries. The trail was completed in the late 1990s. It was routed specifically to traverse both the edge of the Allegheny Front and the wetlands at the state park.
The route of the Allegheny Front Trail is described here in the clockwise direction. The main trailhead is at the corner of Pennsylvania Route 504 and Tram Road, 4.5 miles east of the state park. Heading south, the trail soon encounters the route of the Great Shamokin Path and follows it for a short distance. The trail then travels along the edge of the Allegheny Front for about three miles, and features several maintained vistas including two named in honor of trail founder Ralph Seeley.
The trail then curves to the west and reaches the boundary of Black Moshannon State Park at 6.5 miles. The trail traverses the state park for the next 3.4 miles. Within the park, the trail utilizes several short boardwalks over wetlands and views the park's artificial lake several times. After leaving the state park, the trail traverses a high plateau area until descending to Six Mile Run at 14.7 miles, encountering the Wolf Rocks formation and the former Dayton Dam, which was deconstructed in 2009 to restore the area's native ecosystem.
Now heading north, the trail travels alongside or parallel to Six Mile Run for several miles, and crosses PA 504 again at 21.7 miles. The trail climbs to the top of the plateau again and encounters a short side trail to a vista over "Red" Moshannon Creek at 25.9 miles. The trail descends to that creek at 26.3 miles and walks parallel to it for about the next 2.5 miles, with the creek's longtime coalmine-based pollution very visible to the hiker. Now trending east, the trail rises to the top of the plateau again and traverses high ground until descending again toward Black Moshannon Creek, which it crosses on a long footbridge at 32.2 miles. The trail then rises back to high ground, first alongside Benner Run, and reaches a junction with the Rock Run Trails System at 37.0 miles. The two trails are concurrent, southbound, until they reach PA 504. The Allegheny Front Trail reaches the trailhead on that highway again at 41.8 miles, ending the loop.
References
Hiking trails in Pennsylvania |
"" () is a song by Italian singer and rapper Blanco. It was produced by Michelangelo, and released as a single on 23 July 2020 by Island Records and Universal Music.
The song peaked at number 2 on the FIMI single chart and ranked sixth in the 2021 year-end single chart. It was certified quintuple platinum in Italy.
Music video
The music video for "", directed by Simone Peluso, premiered on 30 July 2020 via Blanco's YouTube channel. , the video has over 40 million views on YouTube.
Personnel
Credits adapted from Tidal.
Blanco – associated performer, author, vocals
Michelangelo – producer, composer
Davide Simonetta – composer
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Certifications
References
2020 songs
2020 singles
Island Records singles
Blanco (singer) songs
Songs written by Blanco (singer)
Songs written by Davide Simonetta |
Sherwin Anatacio de la Paz is a retired Filipino water polo player and current head coach of the Philippines women's national water polo team. He was a member of the Philippines men's national water polo team from 2003 to 2011. He is a four-time Southeast Asian Games silver medalist (2005, 2007, 2009 and 2011). He later coached the women's team to a bronze medal at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games.
References
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Filipino male water polo players
Filipino water polo coaches |
Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Oregon, , was a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States involving the constitutionality of the citizens' initiative and the enforceability of the Guarantee Clause of the Constitution. In an opinion authored by Chief Justice Edward Douglass White, a unanimous Court rejected a corporation's argument that the Guarantee Clause forbade Oregon's initiative process, citing Luther v. Borden to conclude that such claims presented political questions and thus were non-justiciable.
Background
Article IV, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution states that "[t]he United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government...". The precise meaning of this clause remains uncertain because the Supreme Court has chosen not to apply it directly. In Luther v. Borden (1849), the Court was asked to decide which of two political factions in Rhode Island was the legitimate government of that state. The justices held that they lacked jurisdiction, ruling that the question of whether a state had a republican form of government was a political question that only Congress had the power to decide. At the time of the Pacific States decision, a line of precedent stemming from Luther had held that disputes about the Guarantee Clause were outside the scope of the Court's authority.
During the early part of the twentieth century, the political movement known as Progressivism swept the nation. Reformers strove against poverty, poor working conditions, and what they viewed as an excess of corporate power over the political system. They supported efforts that would give power directly to the electorate: the initiative, by which voters could propose and enact legislation directly, and the referendum, by which citizens could vote to reject laws already passed by the legislature. According to Progressives, such reforms would institute a modicum of direct democracy, allowing voters to sidestep a corrupt political process. By contrast, corporations, which often were the target of laws passed by initiative, opposed such reforms.
A 1902 constitutional amendment in Oregon adopted both the initiative and the referendum in that state. By a nearly ten-to-one margin in 1906, voters imposed via initiative a two-percent tax on telephone and telegraph companies' revenues. The Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company refused to pay it, and the state sued to collect the tax. In court, the corporation argued, among other things, that because the initiative constituted direct democracy, it was contrary to the representative system that was integral to the republican form of government required by the Constitution. After Oregon's state courts ruled the tax valid, the company appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, making the sole argument that the initiative violated the Guarantee Clause.
Decision
The justices rendered their decision on February 19, 1912. Chief Justice Edward Douglass White delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court, ruling that the case presented a political question that fell outside of the Court's jurisdiction. White expressed fear that a ruling in the company's favor would encroach upon states' rights, writing that such a decision would require the "inconceivable expansion of the judicial power and the ruinous destruction of legislative authority in matters purely political". He quoted repeatedly from the Court's decision in Luther and determined it to be "absolutely controlling". White ruled that only Congress had the authority to enforce the Guarantee Clause. He found it obvious that the dispute presented a political question because the state government had been "called to the bar of this court, not for the purpose of testing judicially some exercise of power...but to demand of the State that it establish its right to exist as a State, republican in form". White commented that the company might have had a better chance of succeeding if it had challenged the tax itself rather than the process by which it was enacted. But since the Guarantee Clause arguments had an "essentially political character", the Court dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction.
Legacy
Pacific States had the practical effect of giving the Court's imprimatur to initiatives and referendums at the state and local levels. By reaffirming Luther, it also sent a strong signal that the Court had no interest in deciding cases involving the Guarantee Clause. In a 1999 book about the White Court, the legal historian Walter F. Pratt wrote that the decision in Pacific States "implied that the Court was willing to permit experiments with different procedures in state governments". The legal scholar William M. Wiecek argued in 1972 that, while the outcome of the case "was defensible", the Chief Justice's "loose and extravagant language" supported "a constitutional doctrine of judicial abstention" that went well beyond what was necessary to decide the case. The decision in Pacific States served as an influential precedent: in the years after the case was decided, the courts relied heavily on it to dispose of challenges to various state laws. The decision has been understood to bar all suits that claim that a given law is at odds with a republican form of government.
References
External links
United States Supreme Court cases
United States Supreme Court cases of the White Court
1912 in United States case law
Guarantee Clause case law
United States political question doctrine case law
Legal history of Oregon
Initiatives in the United States |
The Privilege () is a 2022 German film directed by Felix Fuchssteiner and Katharina Schöde, written by Felix Fuchssteiner, Sebastian Niemann, Katharina Schöde and Eckhard Vollmar and starring Max Schimmelpfennig, Lise Risom Olsen and Caroline Hartig. It was released by Netflix on February 9, 2022.
Cast
In order of appearance, not billing:
Lise Risom Olsen as Yvonne Bergmann
Caroline Hartig as Anna
Roman Knizka
Nadeshda Brennicke
Mike Hoffmann
Janina Agnes Schröder
Swetlana Schönfeld
Dieter Bach as Agent Trondthal
Jan Andreesen
Christine Rollar
Laurenz Wiegand as Sanitäter / Notarzt
Christof Düro as Polizist
Leonas Sielaff
Tijan Marei as Samira
References
External links
2022 films
2020s German-language films
German films
German-language Netflix original films |
Werik Silva Pinto (born 17 October 2001), known as Werik Popó, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a forward for Oeste.
Career statistics
References
2001 births
Living people
Brazilian footballers
Association football forwards
Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players
Oeste Futebol Clube players
Águia de Marabá Futebol Clube players |
Itinerario includes detailed descriptions and thirty-six engravings of Jan Huyghen van Linschoten's observations of Goa and other Asian cities and islands. Plate 5, Market of Goa, depicts the market in Goa, a region on the southwestern coast of India that was the center of maritime trade in Portuguese Asia.
Background information
Jan Huygen van Linschoten's Itinerario, originally published in Amsterdam in 1595-1596 by Cornelis Claesz, recounts the journey of Linschoten to the Portuguese governed city of Goa. Itinerario includes text of descriptions of thirty-six engravings, as well as maps that shown ship routes that were used by merchants. In Linschoten's words, the book is “a collection of the most memorable and worthiest things.”
Linschoten lived in Goa from September 21, 1583, to 1588. While there, he kept a detailed diary on his observations of the land, people and politics. If there was one thing that was evident to readers of Itinerario, it was "Portuguese imperial rule was slowly rotting." He also made sketches and likely collected sketches from others he encountered on his journeys. Itinerario is based on the sketches and observations he made. The book was translated into multiple languages, including English, French, German, and Latin by the 17th century.
Upon returning to the Netherlands, Linschoten worked with the Dutch engraver Johannes von Doetecum to create thirty-six plates that would accompany the text of Itinerario. The novelty of the Itinerario plates alone became an interest to potential buyers. Because of this, Claez published a new set of thirty of the original thirty-six engravings. Published in 1604, the new publication was titled Icones, habitus gestusque Indorum as Lustianorum per Indian viventium etc., or Icones for short. Alongside the images were much more detailed descriptions of Linschoten's journey. The new captions were acquired from the Latin translation of Itinerario.
Visual analysis
The Market of Goa depicts the bustling city of Goa, the center of maritime trade in Asia. Inscribed in Portuguese in the top left of the print is a description of the image. The Portuguese rua direita most accurately translates to ‘main street’
The plate is set up like a stage and represents a “theatre of social order and morality.” The inequalities between slaves, merchants, and noblemen are evident based on their clothing (or lack thereof) and accessories. Italian, German, and Portuguese merchants gather in crowds to sell their goods. Captives, imported from Mozambique, are shackled to their owners or carry them in palanquins.
The print likely depicts the marketplace at morning. Trading was only allowed between the hours of seven and nine in the morning. The afternoon heat was too unbearable to work. Many figures can be seen taking shade under parasols to shield themselves from the scorching sun. Noblewoman can be seen being carried by slaves in palanquins.
Enslaved people were frequently sold in Goa. The average Goan household had about 30 slaves. Slaveowners made a hefty profit on the sale because slaves were given very little attention in regards to their health. Additionally, female slaves were sometimes forced to worked as prostitutes. Masters kept the profit these women made.
The minimal time to trade made for a crowded square. The market was set up like an auction. The bare-chested woman, arguably the focal point of the image, points at the child held by the wet nurse to her right. Just off the center of the image, a group of Portuguese men, one a money exchanger, can be seen sitting around a table, protected by parasols, and listening to a crier auctioning off what appears to be a cloak. In the lower left of the image, two men, Indian porters, carry a jug of water from the countryside. To the right of the porters, a crier auctions off a small dark-skinned child and a naked woman to a gathering of Portuguese men. Moving to the right of the image is a man riding a horse. Other various animals running amuck, adding to the chaos of the street. In the far right, a Portuguese nobleman on horseback and a Portuguese noblewoman in palanquin are seen leaving the market. The noblewoman's litter is carried by Asian or African slaves. As they exit, they will walk by a hospital—a structure that crudely divides the foreground from the background. In the far left background, a group of women sit in a semi-circle selling goods out of their baskets.
The mayhem and pandemonium are evident, but not representative in this plate is the way that the market was organized. Trades of similar classification were grouped together on the streets. Precious gems, golds, and silvers would be tabled near each other. Other goods included: Portuguese wines, fruits and vegetables, baked goods, herbs, medicines, textiles, embroidery, and wood carvings.
It is important to note that these images are “drawn from life” and are considered “counterfeits from life”. It is important to keep in mind that the plates are based on the entries and sketches of Linschoten's observations, and not those of the engravers, so it cannot be said for certain that the engravers did not take artistic liberties.
Linschoten's observations were considered to have “high empirical content” and are an example of the mapping impulse common by the Dutch. The mapping impulse was a compulsion to document everything in an almost scientific manner.
Credibility
Based on the ethnic clientele of Goa it is plausible that Linschoten could have seen all the figures, fauna, and flora that appear in the plates. However, based on the diaries of Linschoten and the text accompanying the plates, it appears he did not visit all the locations of the objects in the prints. The captions of Itinerario makes it seem like Linschoten saw more of Asia than he really did. He may have spent time conversing with the diverse folk at the market and not only traded for goods but also knowledge of the geography and ethnography around Goa. There are also stereotypical elements that appear in the prints. For example, the plate that depicts the king of Cochin on an elephant appears to be Linschoten/Doetecum's play on common compositions used to depict Indian individuals in the art of 16th century Northwestern Europe.
The composition of the plates calls into question their accuracy and credibility. It is unlikely, based on his lack of formal art training, that Linschoten could create a sketch with a composition so balanced. Additionally, the Market at Goa, the huts in the background do not resemble traditional Asian huts. Figures and structures were likely added by Doetecum to construct a composition that was consistent with 16th century Dutch landscape art. After all, Doetecum did collaborate with printer Hieronymus Cock on landscape backgrounds.
References
External links
Wikipedia Student Program
Goa
17th-century engravings |
Meng Hua Lu (simplified Chinese: 梦华录) is a 2022 Chinese television series. It stars Liu Yi Fei, Chen Xiao, Lin Yun and Liu Yan.
Synopsis
Zhao Pan'er, who opened a tea shop in Hangzhou, finally received the good news that her fiancé Ouyang Xu was in Beijing High School, but was abandoned. Unwilling to accept her fate, she vowed to go to Beijing to seek justice. On the way to Beijing, she had to rush to rescue her good sister Song Yinzhang, who was cheated on marriage and was abused. At the same time, she also saved Sun Sanniang, who had unfortunately tried to commit suicide because of her marriage life. When Ouyang Xu learned that Zhao Pan'er had come to the capital and came to the door, he managed to drive her out of Bianjing. Zhao Paner, Song Yinzhang, and Sun Sanniang decided to stay in Bianjing, relying on their own ability to make a fortune. After experiencing difficulties and various tribulations, the three sisters finally managed the small teahouse into the largest restaurant in Bianjing. After arduous struggle, Zhao Pan'er saw more scenery, and also solved the obsession with hating Ouyang Xu, and at the same time opened a door of equal salvation for the humble women in ancient times.
Cast
Production
Original Writing: Zhao Pan Er Feng Yue Jiu Feng Chen (赵盼儿风月救风尘) by Guan Han Qing (关汉卿).
Director: Yang Yang.
Screenwriter: Zhang Wei.
Producer: Fang Fang, Qi Shuai, Wang Yu Ren, Wu Zhuo Qian (吴卓谦), Yan Li Yan, Que Zhi Sheng (阙志晟).
Art Director: Liu Jing Ping.
Costume Designer: Huang Wei.
Company: Tencent Penguin Pictures, Golden Pond Media, Yuan Xi Ying Shi.
References
2022 Chinese television series debuts
Chinese historical television series |
DJ Tilluis a 2022 Indian Telugu-language romantic crime comedy film directed by debutant Vimal Krishna who co-wrote the film with Siddhu Jonnalagadda and produced by Suryadevara Naga Vamsi's Sithara Entertainments. The film stars Jonnalagadda alongside Neha Shetty, Prince Cecil, and Brahmaji. Initially scheduled to be released on 14 January 2022, it was indefinitely postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India. The film's music is scored by S. Thaman while the soundtrack is composed by Sricharan Pakala and Ram Miriyala. Released theatrically on 12 February 2022, the film received mixed reviews from critics. DJ Tillu was successful at the box office, grossing over on a budget of .
Plot
DJ Tillu, also known as Bala Gangadhar Tilak, is a young man who wants be a DJ. One day, he meets Radhika in a club and falls for her; he asks for a drink to which she nods. He drops her at her apartment and she has a boyfriend and she hides from Tillu. When she is going to her apartment, she calls her boyfriend, Rohit, but she hears the sound of another girl with him and confirms that he is cheating on her. She decides to pay back her boyfriend and begins a relationship with Tillu.
A few weeks pass by and on Tillu's birthday, Rohit shows images of Radhika and Tillu together and he decides to expose them. Radhika on the other hand, leaks about the affair that Rohit was having and she decides to leave the apartment. She then goes into her room to pack her luggage and Rohit, full of anger and jealousy, tries to assault her. In self-defense, Radhika pushes Rohit, which causes him to hit his head on the wall and die from the injury. Radhika then calls Tillu and tells him to come her apartment and he does so leaving his party. Tillu shows up angry but after cooling down, he asks Radhika where the bathroom is. As he is going to the bathroom near him, Radhika says that the flush was not working and asks him to go to another bathroom. As Tillu exits the bathroom, he sees all the photos in the room with Rohit and he also sees Rohit's dead body. Tillu being scared tells Radhika that he wants to call the police and that they will tell the police what happened. Radhika however does not want to call the police as she is afraid that she will be sentenced to prison for killing Rohit. She explains everything to Tillu and they both decide to bury the body somewhere were nobody would find them. However, when they were burying the body, a drunk man saw them bury the body and filmed the entire process. The man then stops Tillu and Radhika and shows them the video and he states that he wants ₹2.5 million in two days in order for the video not to be leaked. Radhika then suggests the idea that she knows a club and that the owner, Shannon, does illegal business and they can obtain the money from him. She then manages to seduce Shannon and obtains the ₹2.5 million. Tillu frustrated on how Radhika obtained the money and seeing the way she seduced Shannon, he gets into an argument Radhika about it. Seeing the fight ensure, a cop pulls over Tillu and Radhika and to get out of the situation, Radhika says that she does not know Tillu and that she needs to be dropped off at home.
Tillu is then found by Shannon at a tea stall and he manages to get Tillu out of the situation and asks where his money was. Tillu says that it was in his car and he gets Shannon to drive to the spot earlier but the car and the money are not there. He then finds the car and Radhika at the spot where they buried Rohit and Shannon finds his money. While driving back, they are chased by the cop and Radhika explains that he came into her apartment and found blood and threatened that he would get her arrested and he attempts to assault her. The chase keeps going on and Shannon is thrown out of the car and Tillu and Radhika both go to a hotel with the money. Radhika then explains to Tillu that she tried to give the money to the drunk man, but the man also tried to assault her and she left the premises. Tillu then goes to the bathroom and in this timespan, Radhika leaves the hotel with the money. Shannon and the cop find Tillu in the hotel room and beat him to the point where he goes into a coma and loses his memory due to it. Tillu is then admitted to the hospital where Shannon and the cop interrogate Tillu for the money and the cop's phone. With Tillu not remembering what happened the cop tries file a case in court with Radhika and attempts to get them both arrested for the murder. At court, it is shown that Tillu bribed both the drunk man and the cop's colleague with a video and manages to get both Radhika and the cop arrested and sent to prison. Tillu then visits Radhika in prison a month later and explains that he never lost his memory and made a plan to find Radhika and to obtain the ₹2.5 million by bribing a music director that behaved rudely with Radhika. He then gets Radhika a bail order and explains that he has moved on in his life but he only let her go because he felt bad for her. Shannon then calls Tillu and asks for his money and Tillu then tells Shannon that the money is in Paris and that the story would continue from there.
Cast
Siddhu Jonnalagadda as Bala Gangadhar Tilak "DJ Tillu"
Neha Shetty as Radhika
Prince Cecil as Shannon
Brahmaji
Pragathi
Narra Srinivas
Kireeti Damaraju
Production
Development and casting
Vimal Krishna narrated the storyline of the film to actor Jonnalagadda in 2019, but got delayed in further production due to COVID-19 pandemic in India. The film was announced in October 2020 under the title Narudi Brathuku Natana. Director Trivikram Srinivas also guided Krishna and the team in designing the story and screenplay of the film. In an interview with The New Indian Express, Vimal Krishna revealed about the Tillu's character that, "During my initial days in Hyderabad, I happened to meet and interact with a few DJs and was really bowled over by their conversations, attitude and body language. They carry a different persona and each one is his own boss. I have infused these characteristics and developed Tillu’s character". In January 2021, the film was then officially launched under the same title. The film's title was then changed to DJ Tillu in an uncited reason. About his character 'Tillu' in the film, Jonnalagadda told The Hindu that "I grew up in areas near Padmarao Nagar (in Hyderabad). Youngsters in Warasiguda and Chilkalguda talk like Tillu (the Hyderabadi Telangana dialect). We wanted Tillu to reflect on how these youngsters speak and how they handle things. Each one is his own boss and for no reason, there is the rivalry between gangs from each street. These boys are also more chilled out than those in, say, Banjara Hills".
Filming
Principal photography for the film began in February 2021 but was then later stopped due to the second lockdown in India. Filming was then resumed in June 2021.
Soundtrack
Sricharan Pakala and Ram Miriyala composed the film's soundtrack. The audio rights were acquired by Aditya Music. In early-January 2022, S. Thaman joined the production to compose the film score. Soon after, the first song "Tillu Anna DJ Pedithe" was released on 6 January 2022. Sung and composed by Ram Miriyala, the song became an instant chartbuster. The second song "Pataas Pilla" sung by Anirudh Ravichander, was released on 24 January 2022. The third song "Nuvvala" sung by Jonnalagadda, was released on 7 February 2022. While the female version of the song later released through the album on 9 February 2022.
Release
The film was initially scheduled to release on 14 January 2022 coinciding with the festival of Sankranthi due to the postponement of films such as RRR and Radhe Shyam. However due to the restrictions on cinema due to COVID-19 pandemic in India the film was postponed. It was later decided that the film was going to release on 11 February 2022 along with Khiladi. In order to avoid the clash with Khiladi, DJ Tillu was then postponed to 12 February 2022.
Home media
The digital rights were acquired by aha.
Reception
Critical reception
DJ TIllu opened to mixed reviews with some critics praising the "madcap fun moments" and while others criticised the narration. Thadhagath Pathi of The Times of India gave the film 3/5 and wrote "DJ Tillu relies heavily on dialogue and less on the actual story at hand. Such films usually end up being the perfect weekend watch, so this one’s for you if you enjoy humour". Pinkvilla gave the film a rating of 3/5 and wrote "DJ Tillu has more 'mass' in it than the introductory songs for top stars in mass masala movies. And Thaman's background music hits the ball out of the park, designed to make the scenes look like they have been choreographed to enable the BGM composer have a blast in the studio. The editing is solid, making the shots look consummately etched".123Telugu gave the film a rating of 3 out of 5 and wrote "DJ is a timepass comedy which has standout performance by Siddhu Jonnalagadda. You will love his character and the comedy that he generates. The film has no strong storyline and rushed situations but when the hero’s character is so strong and the situations give you ample entertainment, you should give this film a shot and have a good weekend".
Deccan Chronicle gave the film a rating of 3 outof 5 and wrote "DJ Tillu is a breezy entertainer that has elements of fun and quirkiness. The writing was cool, but goes overboard towards the end. Watch out for Siddu’s characterisation and performance". The Hans gave the film a rating of 2.5 out of 5 and wrote "Vimal tried to keep the audience to sit with his narration. Thaman’s background score is an asset. He keeps the tempo with his techno sounding. The songs are neat. The cinematography is adequate. Dialogue writing is a huge plus for this romantic crime thriller".News18 stated "Director Vimal Krishna did well, though he could’ve stretched his limits more, experts say. The movie is a one-time watch for a few laughs in the first half". Sangeetha Devi Dundoo of The Hindu stated "Director Vimal Krishna helms a laughter riot populated with quirky, morally ambiguous characters".
Box office
DJ Tillu grossed worldwide on its opening day, with coming from Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.
References NotesCitations'
External links
Telugu-language films
2020s Telugu-language films
2022 films
Indian romantic comedy films
2022 romantic comedy films
Film productions suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic
Films set in Hyderabad, India
Films shot in Hyderabad, India
Films scored by S. Thaman
2022 directorial debut films |
Dominican football may refer to:
Football in the Dominican Republic
Football in Dominica |
Törtkül () (also known as Vostochniy until 1992) is a village in the Kemin District of Chüy Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 617 in 2021.
References
Populated places in Chuy Region |
Power Boothe is an American painter known for his abstract works as well as set designs for experimental theatre, dance and video productions. He has also produced short films and visual theater. As a painter, he has been referred to as a "Rogue Minimalist".
Life and career
Boothe was born in Dallas, Texas in 1945 and grew up in Lafayette, California. After studying painting at the California College of the Arts and the San Francisco Art Institute, he attended Colorado College, where he received a BA in Painting in 1969. To attend the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program he moved to New York City in 1967. He also studied linguistics and philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, and classical archaeology in 1990 at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens in Greece.
Boothe was the Director of the Summer Program at Colorado College in 1977. He was a lecturer in the Humanities, Visual Arts Program, at Princeton University from 1988 to 1994 and served on the faculty of the School of Visual Arts in New York City as an instructor from 1979 to 1988. He held the position of co-director of the Mount Royal Graduate School of Art at the Maryland Institute College of Art from 1993 to 1998, and from 1998 to 2001 was Director of the School of Art at Ohio University. From 2001 to 2010 he was Dean of the Hartford Art School of the University of Hartford, where he was responsible for raising funds to build the school's Renée Samuels Center, a studio facility for teaching art and technology. Afterwards he continued there as a Professor of Painting and Drawing from 2011 to the present.
Boothe's work is included in the public collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the Whitney Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, the Baltimore Museum of Art, and the British Museum, as well as numerous other museums. His work is also held by numerous private collections. Boothe has participated in numerous solo and group shows.
Style
Writing in 1988 in The New York Times on the occasion of solo shows in Greenwich and Stamford, Connecticut, art critic Vivien Raynor says of Boothe:
Mr. Boothe began as a figural artist, but before the end of his student days in the late 1960's, he had turned to abstraction, becoming what might be called a rogue Minimalist. That is, he works according to the grid but is not its slave. The roguery is already evident in the early works at the [Greenwich] show, which spans from 1971 to 1988. These are the canvases bisected into two columns of sizable rectangles painted in pastel hues. Some are hard-edged, others blurred.By 1973, the artist is hitting his stride, notably in two all black canvases. The grids in these are each filled with a motif - a disk with a white spot at the center and a white spot with a small comet's tail -but it is the square-to-square modifications of the motif that are the subject. Indeed, Mr. Boothe's whole subject seems to be the variations possible between one part of a painting and another, and between one painting and another. At the same time, it could also be the idea behind the aphorism, "the more things change, the more they are the same."...More than anything else, it is the variations in mood that keep Mr. Boothe apart from hard core Minimalists, along with his hints of automatism and of a fascination with puzzles.
Harold E. Pocher writes about Boothe:
[He] does not neatly fit into the file for Minimalist artists. In his oils, you see brush strokes, and in his drawings, varied pencil techniques that show his hand. But in the body of work as a whole, you see staccato rhythms and a consistency that draws you into the patterns while engaging your curiosity through the subtle variations. ... Boothe allows the viewer to identify with the creator of the work and not see it as a manufactured product void of life. In this way he shares the aesthetic of Minimalism, but also offers a connection to the painterly artists who followed other avenues.
A New York Times review of a Boothe show in SoHo in 1995 said: "The syncopated patterns of Power Boothe's handsome abstractions, emblematic of a style that he has cultivated since the late 1960's, create intimations of the cinematic in the suggestion of a gentle, slow-motion light moving across a meticulously made surface that is still very much a painting."
Performing arts
In the performing arts, Boothe has designed sets for experimental theatre, dance and video productions. and has also produced short films and visual theater. For this work, he has received a Bessie Award for set design, a Film/Video Arts Foundation Award for film, and several Art Matters Grants for his theater productions. He has art directed and designed internationally-recognized music videos, and has designed sets for Obie Award-wining productions.
References
External links
1945 births
Living people
American male painters
Painters from Texas
Painters from California
Abstract painters
American set designers |
The Rock Run Trails System (RRTS) is an cross-country skiing and hiking trail in central Pennsylvania, consisting of an entrance trail and loop in Moshannon State Forest. It follows several former logging railroad grades, some of significant historical interest. It shares part of its route with the Allegheny Front Trail.
History and route
The Rock Run Trails System was developed for cross-country skiers to the east of Black Moshannon State Park in the early 1980s, by converting several former logging railroad grades. The area is known for its high elevation and significant snowfall, attracting many cross-country skiers, and the area already had several unofficial ski trails. After its completion, the RRTS became popular with hikers during the non-winter months, inspiring calls for the creation of a longer backpacking loop trail now known as the Allegheny Front Trail, which was completed in the late 1990s and which makes use of a portion of the RRTS.
The main trailhead for the RRTS is at the corner of Pennsylvania Route 504 and Tram Road, 4.5 miles east of the state park. The RRTS heads north across a high plateau area, following a path formerly known as the Entrance Trail. This segment is shared with the Allegheny Front Trail. A loop junction is reached at 2.0 miles, and (following the loop clockwise) the RRTS turns left onto the former Headwaters Trail and traverses the west side of a wide valley formed by Rock Run and its tributaries. At 3.5 miles, reach a junction with a cross-connector trail, which leads 0.2 mile east to the other side of the RRTS loop, forming a shortcut. Back on the main RRTS loop, the concurrency with the Allegheny Front Trail ends at 4.6 miles as that trail departs to the west. The RRTS continues to the north, following an old railroad grade that used several switchbacks to descend the side of the valley. The trail crosses Rock Run at 6.2 miles and makes a sharp U-turn back to the south, now following the former Valley Trail.
The junction with the other end of the short cross-connector trail is reached at 8.3 miles, after which the RRTS continues southbound on the former Woodland Trail. At 10.1 miles, reach the end of the loop at the junction with the Entrance Trail that was encountered earlier. The RRTS is once again sharing its path with the Allegheny Front Trail, and skiers or hikers following just the RRTS will complete this segment for the second time but in the opposite direction. The two trails continue south until reaching the trailhead on PA 504, with the RRTS ending after 11.8 miles.
References
Hiking trails in Pennsylvania |
Christian Craig (born July 19, 1991) is an American motorcycle rider who competes in the AMA Supercross Championship.
Career
Craig competes in the AMA Supercross and AMA Motocross Championships. Craig rides for Star Yamaha team in the 250cc class.
Craig won 3 of the first 4 races of the 2022 Supercross season.
References
American motocross riders
1991 births
Living people |
William Pike Hall Jr., known as Pike Hall Jr. (May 27, 1931 – November 25, 1999), was an Associate Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1990 to 1994.
Hall attended Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia, and Louisiana State University, and received a J.D. from the Louisiana State University Law Center in Baton Rouge in 1953.
Hall practiced in Shreveport for a time, and served on the Caddo Parish School Board. In 1970, Hall was elected to the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit, where he served until 1990, when he became an associate justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. He served in that position until his retirement from the bench in 1994.
Hall died in Shreveport at the age of 68. The appeals court building in Shreveport was named in his honor.
References
1931 births
1999 deaths
Politicians from Shreveport, Louisiana
School board members in Louisiana
Louisiana state court judges
Circuit court judges in the United States
Justices of the Louisiana Supreme Court
Louisiana Democrats
Louisiana lawyers
C. E. Byrd High School alumni
Washington and Lee University alumni
Louisiana State University alumni
Louisiana State University Law Center alumni
American United Methodists |
Alberto Sonsol Cohen (November 26, 1957 – March 25, 2021) was a Uruguayan sports journalist, sportscaster and television presenter.
Biography
Alberto Sonsol Cohen was born in barrio Palermo, Montevideo to David Sonsol and Leonor Cohen. Coming from a Jewish family, Sonsol attended Liceo Yavne.
In January 1984, he emigrated to Israel, where he worked as a waiter in an Argentine restaurant in Tel Aviv. However, the same year he returned to Uruguay to work as a sports journalist.
On March 12, 2021, it was announced that he had contracted COVID-19. On March 16, he was hospitalized at the British Hospital of Montevideo, after a low level of oxygen was detected in his blood, and four days later he was transferred to the ICU due to worsening symptoms. He passed away on March 25, 2021, at the age of 63. He was buried on April 2 in the Israelite Cemetery of La Paz. Due to the restrictions due to the pandemic, a funeral was not held, but a funeral procession was held from Club Atlético Atenas, of which Sonsol was a supporter, to the Centenario Stadium.
Career
He began his career as a basketball announcer in 1984. A year later he reported his first full match for Radio Universal. Since the 1990s, he was a panelist on the program La Hora de los Deportes aired on National Television. However, during his 35 years in the media, he hosted the program 6.25 Basketball on Teledoce, and until 2017 he was a sports journalist and was in charge of sports commentary on Radio Sarandí Sport 890.
Between 2015 and 2020 he presented the Uruguayan version of the Israeli format Raid the Cage, entitled Escape perfecto and aired on Channel 10. He was accompanied by Annasofía Facello, who also co-presented the spin-off featuring celebrities, along with Claudia Fernández. From 2020 until his death, he was part of Punto Penal and the Polémica en el bar Uruguay program panel. He also was the presenter of the sports section in Subrayado, the news division of Channel 10. Since February 2021 he was part of the cast of the humorous program La Peluquería de Don Mateo. After his death he was replaced by Sebastián Almada.
Accolades
2016: Golden Iris Award and Best Male TV Host
2017: Iris Award for best radio announcer
Personal life
He was married to Patricia Datz, with whom he had three children: Diego, Alejandro and Micaela Sonsol. Alejandro "Lali" and Diego also work in the media, as sportscasters and presenters.
References
Uruguayan sports journalists
Uruguayan television presenters
Uruguayan radio personalities
Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Uruguay
Uruguayan Jews |
Azteca Underground is an upcoming professional wrestling supercard event produced by Major League Wrestling (MLW), which will take place on April 1, 2022, at Gilley's Dallas in Dallas, Texas. The event will be a television taping for mini-series MLW Azteca.
Production
Background
On February 4, 2022, MLW announced that MLW Azteca Underground would take place on April 1 at Gilley's Dallas in Dallas, Texas.
Storylines
The card will consist of matches that resulted from scripted storylines, where wrestlers portrayed villains, heroes, or less distinguishable characters in scripted events that built tension and culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches, with results predetermined by MLW's writers. Storylines were played out on MLW's mini-series MLW Azteca.
References
External links
Major League Wrestling official website
2022 in professional wrestling
2022 in Texas
Events in Dallas
Major League Wrestling shows
April 2022 events in the United States
Professional wrestling in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex
Scheduled professional wrestling shows |
The OIC Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum (IBRAF; ; ; ), also referred to as Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum or the International Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum, is an intergovernmental and one of the 17 affiliated institutions of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation focused on establishment of cooperation between the OIC and broadcasting regulatory authorities of the 36 member states out of 57. It is principally focused on conducting measures against the backdrop of digitalization and convergence.
It has maintained a platform for sharing information, ideas, views, opinions, and experience concerning common interest within the field of broadcasting. It has also been conducting discussions con audiovisual, concerning cultural relations, child protection and Islamophobia among others.
History
Broadcasting Regulatory Authorities Forum was established after a session was held by the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers in Istanbul, Turkey between 17 and 18 November 2011. It was formally established in the 9th session held by Islamic Conference of Information Ministers (ICI) by adopting a resolution 11/9-INF between 17 and 20 April 2012 in Libreville, Gabon. The second resolution was adopted between 2 and 3 October 2012 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia under the OIC Charter.
The first IBRAF executive secretary was appointed Prof. Hamit Ersoy who assumed the office on 06 February 2013. The appointment decision was made by Radio and Television Supreme Council.
References
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation affiliated agencies
2012 establishments in Turkey
Intergovernmental organizations
Broadcasting authorities
Broadcasting associations |
Tudor Lodge is a Grade II* listed building in Plympton, Devon, England. Standing at 63 Fore Street, Plympton's main street, it dates to the late 17th century.
A former merchant's house, it is timber-framed and boarded to the second tier, with rendered rubble to the ground floor. The 18th-century pilastered doorcase has moulded entablatures either side of it.
A wide carriage-entrance passage on the right displays part of the cellar in its wall.
The building was evaluated by Time Team during their visit to Plympton in 1999. Its basement walls were found to be pre-17th century due to the fact that a chamfered beam at head height in the basement was believed to have formerly sat on top of a wall (the others around it still being in place today), taking the line of the roof upwards.
References
Grade II* listed buildings in Devon
Buildings and structures in Plympton, Devon
17th-century establishments in England |
Lasiopetalum compactum, is a species of flowering plant in the family Malvaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is an erect shrub with leathery, narrowly oblong leaves and cymes of white to pinkish flowers.
Description
Lasiopetalum compactum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of up to , its branchlets covered with rust-coloured to grey, star-shaped hairs. The leaves are leathery, narrowly oblong, long and wide on a hairy petiole long. The upper surfaces of the leaves is more or less glabrous and the lower surface is covered with woolly, star-shaped hairs, the mid-rib prominent. The flowers are arranged in cymes of five to seven long, the peduncle long with linear bracts about long at the base and three linear bracteoles about long at the base of the sepals. The sepals are pink, densely covered with white, woolly star-shaped hairs on the back and long with five narrowly egg-shaped lobes. The petals are spatula-shaped, about long and there are five stamens. Flowering occurs from July to October.
Taxonomy
Lasiopetalum compactum was first formally described in 1974 by Susan Paust in the journal Nuytsia from specimens collected near Ravensthorpe in 1968. The specific epithet (compactum) "refers to the inflorescence".
Distribution and habitat
This lasiopetalum grows on rocky hillsides and among granite rocks, between the Fitzgerald River and Mount Burdett in the Esperance Plains and Mallee biogeographic regions of south-western Western Australia.
Conservation status
Lasiopetalum compactum is listed as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
References
compactum
Malvales of Australia
Flora of Western Australia
Plants described in 1974 |
The All India People's Forum (AIPF) is mass front organisation founded in Delhi in August 2015. It is operated as mass front of CPIML Liberation. The front primarily worked for the social and the economic upliftment of adivasis, dalits and the impoverished sections of society, mobilised them through the unions, rallies and the conventions.
It has a significant presence in the state of Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal, Kerala and also operated in the states of Karnataka, Punjab and Tripura.
See also
Indian People's Front
Revolutionary Youth Association
Lal Sena
All India Students Association
References
2015 establishments in Delhi
Communist parties in India
Political parties established in 2015
Popular fronts |
Bogataj is a Slovene surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Jure Bogataj (born 1985), Slovene ski jumper
Lučka Kajfež Bogataj (born 1957), Slovene climatologist
Vinko Bogataj (born 1948), Slovene ski jumper
Urša Bogataj (born 1995), Slovene ski jumper
See also
Slovene-language surnames |
Križnar is a Slovene surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Nika Križnar (born 2000), Slovene ski jumper
Tomo Križnar (born 1954), Slovene peace activist
See also
Slovene-language surnames |
The GMA T.33 or Gordon Murray Automotive Type 33 is a sports car manufactured by Gordon Murray Automotive. Designed by Gordon Murray, the T.33 is the manufacturer's second model after the T.50 supercar.
Design
The design of the GMA T.33 is inspired by the GTs of the 1960s such as the Ferrari Dino and Lamborghini Miura.
Murray utilized a 2-seater coupé configuration for the T.33, with the body built entirely in carbon, mounted on a structure of carbon fiber panels glued to an aluminum frame. The rear wings of the T.33 open in the opposite direction of travel to give access to two trunks, with a total capacity of 25 liters.
The T.33 is powered by the same V12 as the T.50, produced in cooperation with Cosworth, with 3.99 liters of displacement and four valves per cylinder, with a power output of 615 hp at 10,500 rpm and 451 N m of torque at 9,500 rpm. The V12 is mated to a standard 6-speed Xtrac manual or optional 6-speed automatic with paddle shifters, with power sent to the rear wheels.
Production
GMA plans to build 100 customer cars at its Surrey production site.
See also
Gordon Murray Automotive T.50
References
External links
Sports cars
Cars introduced in 2022
Coupés
Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive vehicles |
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