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7646400 | "The Black Woman is God"
asserts Black women’s power and beauty and does not seek to devalue any other group in the process... It applies pressure to the beliefs and values undergirding the laws and policies that exclude Black women’s lives from economic policymaking and their labor from economic value and protection."" The third iteration of The Black Woman is God, also curated by Karen Seneferu and Melorra Green, returned to SOMArts on July 20, 2017, running through August 26, 2017. The exhibition has the work of 80 artists on view. SOMArts, the California Digital Library and Art Practical held a Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon on July |
7646401 | "The Black Woman is God"
22 in conjunction with the exhibition ""to raise the online visibility of Black women artists and challenge the gaps in art history that erase or minimize Black women’s contributions as artists, activists and social change-makers."" They plan for 2018 to have more events in Oakland where many artists live and would like future exhibitions to travel around the country and the world. The Black Woman is God The Black Woman Is God is a recurring group exhibition of Black women artists curated by Karen Seneferu and Melorra Green, which started in 2013 and in 2016 and 2017 has been located |
7646402 | "Broadmoor recording"
Broadmoor recording Broadmoor Recording was a small independent recording studio established 1999 in Huntington, WV by musicians Russ Fox and Matt Gingerich. The studio provided production, mixing, and mastering for many local bands and soon branched out to musicians from all around the USA and several artists from Europe (see discography). Gingerich remained a partner until 2004 before relocating to Nashville to work in music management and other projects. Fox continued the studio until 2014 working with a plethora of artists before moving primarily into his own productions. BROADMOOR RECORDING DISCOGRAPHY 1999 - 2014 P=Produced, E=Engineered, M=Mixed, MA=Mastered Sinks of |
7646403 | "Broadmoor recording"
Gandy – CD EP (DEMO versions) 1999 / P-E-M-MA Devoted Molded – In Another Place (Screaming Giant) 2000 /co- P-E-M-MA Heavy Me – self-titled EP (self release CD) 2000 / P-E-M-MA Novice – s/t Full Length CD - Russ played Bass (Hero-unreleased) 2000-2001 / E Bleach –demos/ appears on Again for the First Time tour sampler (Tooth & Nail) 2000 / co-P-E-M-MA Field Day Superstar – CD EP (Hero) 2001 / co-P-E-M-MA Hero Recording Co. sampler – Various Artists featuring Novice & Field Day Superstar (Hero) 2001/MA Rosewood Lane – CD EP (self released CD) 2001 /co-P-E-M-MA Bleach – song |
7646404 | "Love Story (1973 TV series)"
novel or movie. With low ratings, it was cancelled after the broadcast of its twelfth episode on January 2, 1974. The show aired at 10:00 p.m. on Wednesday throughout its run. Love Story (1973 TV series) Love Story is an American dramatic anthology television series focused on stories of romance. It aired from October 3, 1973, to January 2, 1974, on NBC. ""Love Story"" was the second American television series of the name, the first having been the DuMont Television Networks anthology series ""Love Story"", which aired in 1954. Each episode of ""Love Story"" told a story of romance and |
7646405 | "Broadmoor recording"
release CDR) 2001 / co-P-E-M-MA David Staton - CD EP (unreleased) 2001 / E Holden Caulfield – The Beginning of Forever and Ever (self release CD) 2001/ co-P-E-M-MA Velvet Blue Compilation ""Strength in Numbers"" - features Audible Campaign song - 2001 / E Neutral Agreement – Bet You Never Thought (Future Destination) 2002 / co-P-E-M-MA Guinness Clarke’s Wine – self-titled EP (self release CD) 2002 / co-P-E-M-MA Tooth & Nail comp ""I’m Your Biggest Fan"" – features Neutral Agreement song 2002 / E Radio Eat Radio various artists comp – ""Dreams Subside from the Pink Period"" 2002 / MA Future |
7646406 | "Sanguinho Novo... Arnaldo Baptista Revisitado"
a bonus track in the cassette edition. Sanguinho Novo... Arnaldo Baptista Revisitado Sanguinho Novo... Arnaldo Baptista Revisitado (Portuguese for ""New Little Blood... Arnaldo Baptista Revisited"") is a tribute album by various artists and bands to Brazilian musician Arnaldo Baptista, famous for his work with influential psychedelic rock band Os Mutantes. It was released in 1989 by Eldorado. The album's cover was provided by Alain Voss, who previously worked with Os Mutantes designing the cover of their 1972 album ""Mutantes e Seus Cometas no País do Baurets"". Due to time constraints, a cover of ""Cyborg"" by Black Future was not included |
7646407 | "2017–18 Eredivisie (women)"
of 16 matches each. After that the top five teams qualified for a championship play-offs and the bottom four teams play a placement play-offs. Teams played each other twice in the championship play-offs group, for a total of 8 matches each while in the placement groups teams played each other three times for a total of 9 matches each. Points accumulated at the regular season were halved and added to the points of the play-off stage rounds. There was no relegation nor promotion in the league and the champion qualified to the 2018–19 UEFA Women's Champions League. The top five |
7646408 | "2017–18 Eredivisie (women)"
were set after matchday 16. Points of the first stage were halved. The bottom four were set after matchday 16. Points of the first stage were halved. 2017–18 Eredivisie (women) The 2017–18 Eredivisie Vrouwen was the eight season of the Netherlands women's professional football league. The season took place from 1 September 2017 to 25 May 2018 with nine teams. Ajax started the season as defending champions. On 1 March 2017, Telstar announced it was being replaced by a new club called VV Alkmaar. On 10 April 2017, Excelsior Barendrecht became the ninth team of the league's season. On 21 |
7646409 | "Polysiphonia stricta"
Polysiphonia stricta Polysiphonia stricta is a small red marine alga in the Division Rhodophyta. ""Polysiphonia stricta"" forms dense clumps of branching axes. The plants grow to 25 cm high. ""P. stricta"" grows as small tufts of much branched tufts, growing to no more than 25 cm high. The axes are erect, ecorticate, with 4 periaxial cells growing from prostrate axes. All 4 of the periaxial cells are of the same length. Spermatangial branchlets are formed in clusters at the apices. Cystocarps are on wide stalks and are urceolate. The tetraspores are in series in the final branches. Epizoic and epiphytic |
7646410 | "Polysiphonia stricta"
in the low littoral to 20 m. Found around the British Isles, the West Atlantic and American Atlantic. Polysiphonia stricta Polysiphonia stricta is a small red marine alga in the Division Rhodophyta. ""Polysiphonia stricta"" forms dense clumps of branching axes. The plants grow to 25 cm high. ""P. stricta"" grows as small tufts of much branched tufts, growing to no more than 25 cm high. The axes are erect, ecorticate, with 4 periaxial cells growing from prostrate axes. All 4 of the periaxial cells are of the same length. Spermatangial branchlets are formed in clusters at the apices. Cystocarps are |
7646411 | "Barbara Weldens"
Barbara Weldens Barbara Weldens (17 April 1982 – 19 July 2017) was a French singer-songwriter. After releasing her first studio album, ""Le grand H de l'homme"" (Man with a capital M), in February 2017, she died on stage the following July while performing at a festival. Weldens was from Hérault and grew up in the circus, where she learned juggling, acrobatics and trapeze. She trained as a pianist at the conservatory in Sète, and earned a ""licence"" in musicology from the Paul Valéry University, Montpellier III in 2004. In 2015 she won the Tremplin Découverte Chanson de Pause Guitare and |
7646412 | "Barbara Weldens"
in 2016 the Pic d'Or de la Chanson at Tarbes, the young talent award at the 2016 Jacques Brel festival and the prix révélation scène of the Académie Charles-Cros. Inspired by Jacques Brel, Weldens was a singer in the ""chanson réaliste"" tradition. She often performed in a trio with Barbara Hammadi on piano and Marion Diaques on violin. On 3 February 2017, with Hammadi and Diaques, she released her first studio album, ""Le grand H de l'homme"" (Man with a capital M); one reviewer wrote of it as ""a coherent, profound, [and] powerful whole"", and another spoke of the precision |
7646413 | "Broadmoor recording"
E-MA Black Black Ocean – Eagle Maniac (Action Driver) 2004 / MA Seven Day Jesus – Live limited edition tour sampler (limited 200 copies) 2004 / MA Chum – Embracing the Eyesore (new song) for Burn the Street comp (Daredevil ) 2004 / MA Boyracer – We Have Such Gifts - Lathe Cut 8"" Vinyl (555) 2004 / MA Boyracer – Happenstance – features the song Christopher recorded at Broadmoor (HHBTM - Happy Happy Birthday to Me) 2004 / MA Boyracer – Absence Makes the Heart Grow Harder (Foxyboy) 2004 / MA Boyracer – Yorkshire Soul 7""vinyl (Yellow Mica) 2004 |
7646414 | "Ralph Crego"
Ralph Crego Ralph William Crego (September 2, 1893 – May 28, 1989) was an American politician who served as Mayor of Lansing, Michigan from 1943 to 1961. Crego was born at Fife Lake, Michigan, and moved to Lansing at age 21. He attended Lansing Business University and worked for Oldsmobile before joining the United States Marine Corps during World War I. After his military service, Crego opened a grocery store at 1016 W. Allegan in Lansing which he operated for 24 years. He was elected to the Lansing City Council in November 1935. Crego became acting mayor in August 1943 |
7646415 | "Ralph Crego"
when Mayor Sam Street Hughes entered the military. In November 1943, he was elected Mayor by a margin of nearly five-to-one over his opponent. During his time as mayor, Lansing's population grew by more than 35% with a population of 78,753 in 1940 and 107,807 in 1960. Crego also oversaw construction of many city buildings as mayor, including City Hall, the police station, and four fire stations. In April 1961, he lost a bid for re-election by 62 votes (out of 28,087 ballots cast) but did not seek a recount. With nearly 18 years in office, he remains Lansing's longest-serving |
7646416 | "Al Jazeera Investigates"
Al Jazeera Media Network asset and its reports will appear equally on the other channels, tailored appropriately for the relevant language and audience. The Unit's investigations resulted, amongst others, in the documentary ""What Killed Arafat?"" This film won a CINE Golden Eagle Award. In 2013, the Arafat findings were indeed reported as a news-item on other networks. The current Manager of Investigative Journalism for the Al Jazeera Media Network is Clayton Swisher. Other leading figures include: Josh Bernstein, Phil Rees, Ken Silverstein. At its launch, the unit had three separate teams. On December 27, 2015, Al Jazeera English and Al |
7646417 | "Al Jazeera Investigates"
Jazeera America released a report conducted by the Al Jazeera Investigative Unit called """"The Dark Side: Secrets of the Sports Dopers"""" which investigated professional athletes' potential use of Performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) naming Peyton Manning and other prominent athletes like Ryan Howard, Ryan Zimmerman, James Harrison, and Clay Matthews III, as having received drugs from Charles Sly, a pharmacist who had worked at the Guyer Anti-Aging Clinic in Indianapolis during the fall of 2011. The report involved Liam Collins, a British hurdler, going undercover in an attempt to obtain banned substances from Sly and other medical professionals. As part of the |
7646418 | "Al Jazeera Investigates"
collective bargaining agreement in 2011, an HGH testing regime was agreed to, but testing itself for HGH did not begin until 2014. It is illegal under United States federal law to prescribe HGH off label. Al Jazeera Investigates Al Jazeera Investigates is a one-hour current affairs and investigative journalism program that is aired on Al Jazeera English and while in operation Al Jazeera America that focuses on a specific topic per episode through in-depth documentaries. Formed in 2010, in its own words: ""the role of Al Jazeera Investigations is not to report the news, but to make the news"". The |
7646419 | "Smashing the Rackets"
Smashing the Rackets Smashing the Rackets is a 1938 American drama film directed by Lew Landers, written by Lionel Houser, and starring Chester Morris, Frances Mercer, Rita Johnson, Bruce Cabot and Edward Pawley. It was released on August 19, 1938, by RKO Pictures. Jim 'Sock' Conway, former boxer and FBI hero, is maneuvered for political reasons into a do-nothing job in the district attorney's office. Meanwhile, he meets wild debutante Letty Lane, girlfriend of mob mouthpiece Steve Lawrence; and Letty's much nicer sister Susan. Now the slot machine gang brutally beats Jim's friends Franz and Otto. And Jim finds a |
7646420 | "Smashing the Rackets"
way to use his nominal position to go into the racket- busting business. But his success puts Letty in deadly peril... Smashing the Rackets Smashing the Rackets is a 1938 American drama film directed by Lew Landers, written by Lionel Houser, and starring Chester Morris, Frances Mercer, Rita Johnson, Bruce Cabot and Edward Pawley. It was released on August 19, 1938, by RKO Pictures. Jim 'Sock' Conway, former boxer and FBI hero, is maneuvered for political reasons into a do-nothing job in the district attorney's office. Meanwhile, he meets wild debutante Letty Lane, girlfriend of mob mouthpiece Steve Lawrence; and |
7646421 | "Broadmoor recording"
2007 / MA Jeff Ellis – A Front Seat For the End of the World – mixed by Eddie Ashworth (Caustic Eye) 2007/ P-E-MA Boyracer – Jukebox Vol.1 (555) 2007 / MA Godi –White as Snow EP- recorded in Switzerland (GODI Switzerland) 2007 / P-E-M-MA Viva Voce – Loves You – a sampler of tracks from first 2 albums (Full Time Hobby UK) 2007 / co-M Stone Descendant – full length cd (Populist Recording) 2007 / MA Will Hill – EP (self release CD) 2007 / MA Chris Batten and the Woods – EP (self release CD) 2007/ M-MA Viva |
7646422 | "Broadmoor recording"
Voce – Bonus Tracks for the Lovers/Heat 2xCD reissue (Amore!Phonics) 2007 / MA Pterodactylus – A Sailing Replica (Deaf Samurai) 2007 / MA Attack Flamingo – No Star Could Be as Large (self release CD) 2007 / MA Hyatari ""–"" They Will Surface (Caustic Eye) 2007 / MA It’s Birds – Horses Love Me Yes I Am (self release ) 2007 / MA And There Was Light – Audio Book remaster (publisher unknown) 2007 / MA Sam V. – EP (self release CDR) 2007 / MA Jordan Andrew Jefferson – demos (self released) 2007/ E-M-MA Snowman & Leonard – Indie |
7646423 | "Broadmoor recording"
Hip Hop (self release CD) 2007 / MA The Associates – 7 song EP – feat. C Wills & Ofori (Sleepy Entertainment) 2007/P-E-M-MA On TAP magazine yearly sampler CD (On Tap) 2007 / MA Red Velvet – Lights Won’t Go Out – Mastered by Martin Feveyear (Broadmoor Recording) 2008 / P-E-M Boyracer – Sunlight is the Best Antiseptic VINYL release (555) 2008 / MA Sounds in the Square CD sampler (Golden Triangle) 2008 / MA Fox Japan – Hell (Small War) 2008 / MA Morrigan Condo – Cords & Strings EP (self release CD) 2008 / MA Bad Employees – |
7646424 | "Broadmoor recording"
EP – played Bass on 1 song (self release CD) 2008 / MA Faintest Ideas – Sweden 7"" vinyl release (Slumberland) 2008 / MA Separate Solution - NC – full length (self release CD) 2008 / MA Pterodactylus – Move This Town to Ruin (Deaf Samurai) 2008 / MA Colonel Robert Morris – Highway Hero (Silver Dollar Music) 2008 / MA Morningsides – the Issue (Populist Recordings) 2008/ MA Mo Condo – US ep (self release) 2008 / MA Johnny Perona & the Faque Brothers – Family Portrait (Populist ) 2008 / MA On TAP magazine yearly sampler CD (On |
7646425 | "Broadmoor recording"
Tap) 2008 / MA Scott Gabbey – Ultra Violent Magazine – experimental cd (self release) 2009 /MA Sounds in the Square – various artists (Golden Triangle) 2009 / MA Low on High – s/t full length – features director Jon Moritsugu (Apathy Productions) 2009/ MA Mytty Archer – If I Had a Shovel (555) 2009 / MA Boyracer – Happenstance LP Vinyl reissue (555) 2009/ MA Tricia Yates Fanclub – Debut Vinyl LP album (555) 2009 / MA Morrigan Condo – Just Tell Me EP (self release CD) 2010 / MA HulaBoy – split with TunaBunny - Vinyl LP (555) |
7646426 | "Broadmoor recording"
2010 / MA Bright Lights – Drunker Than You Since ‘02 Vinyl LP (555) 2010/ MA Hula Hoop – Ghosts of Last Summer Vinyl LP (555) 2010 MA Tricia Yates Fanclub – 8 song CD (Milk and Alcohol) 2010/ MA On TAP magazine yearly sampler CD (On Tap) 2009 / MA Roxy Clothing Sampler CD – Music From our Hearts (Roxy) 2009 / MA *features Crystal Castles, Royksopp, Hope Sandoval, & more Will Hill – full-length CD (self release CD) 2009 / MA Bond & Bently - CD (self release) 2009 / MA Magnums – Midnight Stealth (Metro Music) 2010 |
7646427 | "Broadmoor recording"
/ MA Holiday House – Weight of Water (Populist) 2010 / MA John Lancaster – Phantom Moon (self release CD) 2010 / MA Chum – Headhunter (new song) to coincide with reunion shows (self release) 2011 / MA The Indefatigable Stewart Anderson – Fundraiser for Tallulah (Milk & Alcohol) 2012 / MA Sly Roosevelt – full length (self release CD) 2012 / MA John Lancaster - Crash Test in Progress EP (self release CD) 2012 / MA Nation – (ex-Holden Caulfield) 3 song EP (self release) 2012 / MA Vectors of Autism – A Film about Autism (director John Schaffer) |
7646428 | "Broadmoor recording"
2013 / MA Morrigan Condo – Full Length Album (self release CD) 2014 / MA Broadmoor recording Broadmoor Recording was a small independent recording studio established 1999 in Huntington, WV by musicians Russ Fox and Matt Gingerich. The studio provided production, mixing, and mastering for many local bands and soon branched out to musicians from all around the USA and several artists from Europe (see discography). Gingerich remained a partner until 2004 before relocating to Nashville to work in music management and other projects. Fox continued the studio until 2014 working with a plethora of artists before moving primarily into |
7646429 | "Francisco Ruiz (bishop)"
Francisco Ruiz (bishop) Francisco Ruiz (1476 – October 23, 1528) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Ávila (1514–1528) and Bishop of Ciudad Rodrigo (1510–1514). Francisco Ruiz was born in Toledo, Spain and ordained a priest in the Order of Friars Minor. On November 18, 1509, he was selected by the King of Spain and confirmed by Pope Julius II as Bishop of Ciudad Rodrigo. On July 14, 1514, he was appointed by the King of Spain and confirmed by Pope Leo X as Bishop of Ávila. He served as Bishop of Ávila until his death on |
7646430 | "Francisco Ruiz (bishop)"
October 23, 1528. Francisco Ruiz (bishop) Francisco Ruiz (1476 – October 23, 1528) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Ávila (1514–1528) and Bishop of Ciudad Rodrigo (1510–1514). Francisco Ruiz was born in Toledo, Spain and ordained a priest in the Order of Friars Minor. On November 18, 1509, he was selected by the King of Spain and confirmed by Pope Julius II as Bishop of Ciudad Rodrigo. On July 14, 1514, he was appointed by the King of Spain and confirmed by Pope Leo X as Bishop of Ávila. He served as Bishop of Ávila until |
7646431 | "Paul Hill (rugby union)"
Paul Hill (rugby union) Paul Hill (born 2 March 1995) is a rugby union footballer who plays at prop for Northampton Saints. Although born in Germany, Hill was raised in Doncaster and played his junior rugby at Doncaster Knights, before moving to Yorkshire Carnegie's academy, making his senior debut in 2014. On 17 April 2015 he joined Northampton Saints in the Aviva Premiership from the 2015-16 season. He has represented England at age ranges from U16 to U20 levels. Hill received his first call up to the senior England squad by new coach Eddie Jones on 13 January 2016 for |
7646432 | "Pageland Airport"
that time there were 12 aircraft based at this airport: 11 single-engine and 1 multi-engine. Pageland Airport Pageland Airport is a public use airport located three nautical miles (5 km) southeast of the central business district of Pageland, a city in Chesterfield County, South Carolina, United States. It is owned by the Town of Pageland. Sumter Airport covers an area of at an elevation of 575 feet (175 m) above mean sea level. It has two runways: 6/24 is 3,396 by 60 feet (1,035 x 18 m) with an asphalt surface. For the 12-month period ending December 15, 2015, the |
7646433 | "Bosque Brewing Company"
Bosque Brewing Company Bosque Brewing Company is a microbrewery based in New Mexico with taprooms in Albuquerque and Las Cruces. The company produces beers inspired by American and European style traditions that are distributed throughout the state of New Mexico. Co-Founders Gabe Jensen, Jotham Michnovicz, and Kevin Jameson began Bosque Brewing Company with the intent of designing and producing high-quality, flavorful beers while creating jobs and contributing to the local economy and community. The partners started their initial recipe development in 2010 with full-scale brewing operations beginning in 2012, and then opening for business in October 2012 at the original |
7646434 | "1912 United States presidential election in South Carolina"
Theodore Roosevelt and his running mate California Governor Hiram Johnson. Wilson won South Carolina by a landslide margin of 93.37 percent. 1912 United States presidential election in South Carolina The 1912 United States presidential election in South Carolina took place on November 5, 1912, as part of the 1912 United States Presidential Election which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. South Carolina was won by the Democratic nominees, New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson and Indiana Governor Thomas R. Marshall. Wilson and Marshall |
7646435 | "Bosque Brewing Company"
One month later the third location opened on the border of the Nob Hill Business District and the University of New Mexico area in Albuquerque. Finally, distribution quickly expanded into more than 150 restaurants and retail outlets across the state of New Mexico. Great American Beer Festival Awards from the Great American Beer Festival: Bosque Brewing Company maintains six year-round offerings and six rotating specialty beers at all times. The beers produced by Bosque honor time-tested traditions while experimenting with and pioneering new techniques and recipes. Bosque’s beers are available on draft at each taproom and at restaurants and bars |
7646436 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
Robert Benjamin Greenblatt Robert Benjamin Greenblatt (1906-1987) was a Canadian physician and medical researcher specializing in endocrinology who spent almost all of his career at the Medical College of Georgia (MCG). He was especially known for his work in the development of the sequential oral contraceptive pill and the oral fertility pill. Born in 1906 in Montreal, Canada, Greenblatt attended McGill University in Montreal, where he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1928 and his Doctor of Medicine and Master of Surgery degrees in 1932. In 1935, after completing his internship, he joined MCG as a research fellow in |
7646437 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
pathology and resident in obstetrics and gynecology. In 1937, he was appointed assistant professor of pathology and gynecology, and two years later, he was named professor of experimental medicine. Greenblatt went on to pioneer endocrinology as an independent discipline. In his early years at MCG Greenblatt worked with Edgar Pund on the pathology and therapy of granuloma inguinale, a widely endemic venereal disease. In 1943 he volunteered for military service and served as a Commander and Senior Medical Officer in the U.S. Coast Guard. His first assignment was to quell a venereal disease epidemic spreading among sailors in Savannah, Ga. |
7646438 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
He helped develop mass production of penicillin for battlefield use; commanded a triage unit on the Okinawa beachhead for wounded Marines; and was among the first scientists to inspect the medical effects of the atomic bomb in Nagasaki. Commander Greenblatt was honorably discharged in 1945. He returned to MCG after World War II and from 1946 to 1974 he served as professor and chairman of the institution’s Department of Endocrinology, the first academic department of its kind in the country. Greenblatt started his clinical work in reproductive endocrinology, the branch of medicine concerned with infertility in women, when the field |
7646439 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
was in its infancy. His major advances in the field include, in 1950, showing the effectiveness of estrogens in managing menopause symptoms and developing, in 1966, a monthly oral contraceptive pill, an accomplishment for which MCG received national attention. His group's discovery in 1961 that clomiphene citrate could induce ovulation was a breakthrough in reproductive biology, and clomiphene citrate is today the first choice in treating ovulatory disorders. He also showed that the drug Danazol was useful in the management of endometriosis and fibrocystic breast disease. Greenblatt's published works include hundreds of full-length scientific articles. He also wrote or edited |
7646440 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
more than 20 books for a lay audience. His 1968 book ""Search the Scriptures: Modern Medicine and Biblical Personages"" went through 26 printings. Greenblatt also updated ""Advances in Endocrinology"" in the ""Encyclopædia Britannica Yearbook"" for 18 years. In 1987, he authored ""Sex and Circumstance: Humanity in History,"" which contained 44 vignettes detailing the sexual nature of people ranging from U.S. President John F. Kennedy to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Greenblatt was awarded the Crawford W. Long Memorial Medal for his work on menometrorrhagia in 1941. He also received France's Legion of Honor, Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur, in 1973, and the |
7646441 | "Robert Benjamin Greenblatt"
Sociedad de Ginecologia y Obstetricia de Monterrey Gold Medal award of Mexico in 1974. In March 1987, he was elected honorary fellow in the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in Great Britain. MCG’s library was renamed in his honor in 1988. Greenblatt died on September 27, 1987. Robert Benjamin Greenblatt Robert Benjamin Greenblatt (1906-1987) was a Canadian physician and medical researcher specializing in endocrinology who spent almost all of his career at the Medical College of Georgia (MCG). He was especially known for his work in the development of the sequential oral contraceptive pill and the oral fertility pill. |
7646442 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
Don't Tell the Wife Don't Tell the Wife is a 1937 American comedy film directed by Christy Cabanne using a screenplay by Nat Perrin adapted from the play, ""Once Over Lightly"", written by George Holland. The film stars Guy Kibbee, Una Merkel, and Lynne Overman, with Lucille Ball, William Demarest, and Academy Award winner Hattie McDaniel in supporting roles. Produced by RKO Radio Pictures, it premiered in New York City on February 18, 1937, and was released nationwide on March 5. While serving time in jail, Major Manning wins a mine in New Mexico from a fellow inmate. Upon his |
7646443 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
release, he hatches a scheme with several of his former associates to use the mine, which he believes worthless, to con rich New Yorkers. His first contact is with his old partner, Steve Dorsey, who has married a wealthy socialite, Nancy. Dorsey listens to Manning's plan, and agrees to head up the bogus investment company, having become bored with his suburban life. In order to induce the wealthy to invest in their bogus scheme, they hire an unwitting accomplice as their head of their company, Malcolm Winthrop. Winthrop adds legitimacy to the group since he was the financial editor of |
7646444 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
newspaper in Yonkers. After they hire Winthrop, they convince Nancy to invest most of her money in the scheme. When Winthrop starts to become suspicious of his new partners, he travels to New Mexico to physically inspect the mining operation. He discovers that contrary to what Manning believes, it is actually potentially very profitable. He convinces Nancy to fund the project, and he buys up all the outstanding shares in the mine, gaining total control. By the time Manning understands what is going on, he is shut out of the mine, which turns into a moneymaker. Dorsey is forgiven by |
7646445 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
Nancy, and the two reconcile. In October 1936 it was announced that Robert Sisk would be producing ""Once Over Lightly"", from a screenplay by Nat Perrin. Fred Stone was slated to headline the cast. Constance Worth and Barbara Pepper were attached to the project the following month. In the middle of January, RKO announced that the project's name had been changed to ""Don't Tell the Wife"". By the beginning of February 1937, the picture was in the edit room. The National Legion of Decency rated the picture as a class A-1, making it unobjectionable for general audiences. ""Don't Tell the |
7646446 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
Wife"" was released on March 5, 1937. ""The Film Daily"" gave the picture a good review, calling it a good satirical comedy. They singled out Kibbee's performance, and gave good marks to Sisk's production, Cabanne's direction and Wilde's cinematography. They called the film a ""Well-paced humor-filled feature whose frothy dialogue pop audiences will enjoy"". ""Harrison's Reports"" was less kind, calling it a ""below average program picture"". They felt the comedy consisted of routine gags, and an unbelievable romantic element. ""Motion Picture Daily"" enjoyed the film calling it an amusing comedy, despite its predictable plot. They gave good marks to Cabanne's |
7646447 | "Don't Tell the Wife"
direction and Sisk's production, and felt that Perrin's dialogue was well done. In terms of the cast, they felt that Guinn Williams, Lucille Ball, Bradley Page, and William Demarest all gave good performances. Don't Tell the Wife Don't Tell the Wife is a 1937 American comedy film directed by Christy Cabanne using a screenplay by Nat Perrin adapted from the play, ""Once Over Lightly"", written by George Holland. The film stars Guy Kibbee, Una Merkel, and Lynne Overman, with Lucille Ball, William Demarest, and Academy Award winner Hattie McDaniel in supporting roles. Produced by RKO Radio Pictures, it premiered in |
7646448 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
Manitoba Grain Growers' Association The Manitoba Grain Growers' Association (MGGA) was a farmer's association that was active in Manitoba, Canada in the first two decades of the 20th century. It provided a voice for farmers in their struggle with grain dealers and the railways, and was influential in obtaining favorable legislation. The MGGA supported the Grain Growers' Grain Company, a cooperative of prairie farmers, and its organ the ""Grain Growers' Guide"". At first it remained neutral politically, but in 1920 it restructured as the United Farmers of Manitoba in preparation for becoming a political party. At the start of the |
7646449 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
20th century the North-West Elevator Association, closely associated with the Winnipeg Grain Exchange, controlled over two thirds of the grain elevators on the prairies. The elevator companies, working together, could force the farmers to accept low prices for their grain. When there were shortages of rail cars the railways gave preferential treatment to the companies over the farmers. The 1908 ""Partridge Plan"" of the Manitoba Grain Growers listed other ""ill practices"" that included ""the taking of heavy dockage, the giving of light weight, misgrading the farmers' grain sold on the street or graded into store, failure to provide cleaning apparatus, |
7646450 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
changing the identity of the farmers' special binned grain, declining to allot space for special binning and refusing to ship grain to owner's order, even when storage charges are tended. The Manitoba Grain Act was passed in 1901, designed to prevent these abuses and ensure fair practices and prices in the booming grain trade in the prairie provinces of Canada. There was a bumper crop that year, and farmers found they could not get their produce to market because the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and the grain companies were still failing to conform to the act. In 1901 the Territorial |
7646451 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
Grain Growers' Association (TGGA) was founded in Indian Head, in what is now Saskatchewan, in a meeting of farmers organized to address the issue. William Richard Motherwell was the driving force behind the TGGA. In 1902 the TGGA won a case against the CPR that forced it to comply with the Manitoba Grain Act. Farmers became increasingly interested in the TGGA, and the Manitoba Grain Growers Association was formed as a TGGA branch. In 1905 Alberta and Saskatchewan became provinces, and the Alberta Farmers' Association was founded. In 1906 the TGGA renamed itself the Saskatchewan Grain Growers' Association (SGGA). In |
7646452 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
1909 the Alberta Farmers' Association combined with the American Society of Equity, another Alberta group, to form the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA). The first local grain grower association in Manitoba was founded at Virden, Manitoba on 7 January 1903. The Manitoba Grain Growers' Association was formed at a meeting March 3–4 in Brandon, Manitoba. The first president was James William Scallion (1847–1926) from Virden. In 1903 two officers of the MGGA accompanied Motherwell and J.B. Gillespie of the TGGA to Ottawa where they met with representatives of the railways and grain companies to tighten up the wording of the |
7646453 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
Manitoba Grain Act. The next text was introduced as an amendment to the act which was passed that year. Duncan William McCuaig was president from 1904 to 1910. For many years the former clergyman Richard Coe Henders (1853–1932) was president of the association. The farmers were mainly Protestant, including Baptists, Lutherans, Methodists, Presbyterians and Anglicans. Church attendance was high, and the churches served as important social institutions. By the start of World War I (1914–18) the Social Gospel movement began to spread among organized famers, particularly Methodists. The basic concept was that Christianity should be concerned with eradicating injustice and |
7646454 | SceneKit
SCNNodes are the primary contents of the SceneKit hierarchy. Each Node has a Name, and pointers to optional Camera, Light and Geometry objects, as well as an array of childNodes and a pointer to its own parent. A typical scene will contain a single Scene object pointed to a conveniently named Node (often ""root"") whose primary purpose is to hold a collection of children Nodes. The children nodes can be used to represent cameras, lights, or the various geometry objects in the Scene. A simple Scene can be created by making a single SCNGeometry object, typically with one of the |
7646455 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
the existing grain companies over its seats on the Winnipeg Grain Exchange. It was expelled for paying patronage dividends to its member clients, then reinstated when the MGGA exerted pressure on the government of Rodmond Roblin. The president of the MGGA, D.W. McCuaig, sued three of the exchange's members for combining to obstruct trade. Partridge resigned as president of the GGGC at the 1907 convention, in part because the company's original cooperative structure had been modified to meet the requirements of the Grain Exchange, in part because he was not interested in running the company he had launched. Early in |
7646456 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
1908 Partridge convinced the Saskatchewan Grain Growers' Association (SGGA) to endorse the principle that inland grain elevators should be owned by the province and terminal elevators by the Dominion of Canada. The Manitoba association passed a resolution supporting this proposal at their convention. In 1917 the GGGC merged with the Alberta Farmers' Co-operative Elevator Company, founded in 1913, to form the United Grain Growers (UGG), which provided grain marketing, handling and supply until 2001. The ""Grain Growers' Guide"" first appeared in 1908, edited by Partridge. It was published by the Grain Growers' Grain Company through its subsidiary, Public Press Limited. |
7646457 | "Locked in the Poorhouse"
Locked in the Poorhouse Locked in the Poorhouse is a 30-year update of the final report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (the Kerner Commission), co-authored by former Kerner Commissioner, Senator and Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation Chairman Fred R. Harris and Eisenhower Foundation President Alan Curtis. The book was released in 1998 with a companion volume, The Millennium Breach. The Kerner Commission The Kerner Commission was established by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967 after the 1960s protests in Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Newark and many other cities. The Kerner Commission’s final report was released on February 29, |
7646458 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
chief was George Fisher Chipman. By 1918 it was the largest farm publication on the prairies by circulation. The Manitoba Grain Growers Association took a position in favor of women's suffrage in 1911. In 1912 women were admitted as associate members, and in 1914 the constitution was changed to recognize women as full members. In 1917 a women's section was organized as the United Farm Women of Manitoba. During the January 1917 annual meeting of the MGGA there was much discussion of the question of conscription. Chipman took the position that if there were to be conscription, wealth should be |
7646459 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
conscripted first, and this was agreed after some debate. Fred Dixon was known to support the rights on conscientious objectors, which was an unpopular position with most of the delegates, but was allowed to talk on the question of trade. The association was in favor of free trade rather than a protectionist system that would first favor Britain and her allies, next neutral countries and last the enemies of Britain. In 1920 the Manitoba Grain Growers' Association changed its name to the United Farmers of Manitoba (UFM) in an effort to broaden its base and in preparation for becoming a |
7646460 | "Manitoba Grain Growers' Association"
political party. The UFM began to get involved in local political contests. In 1921 the UFM fielded candidates in the federal election. In the provincial elections the next year the UFM won the majority of seats. Manitoba Grain Growers' Association The Manitoba Grain Growers' Association (MGGA) was a farmer's association that was active in Manitoba, Canada in the first two decades of the 20th century. It provided a voice for farmers in their struggle with grain dealers and the railways, and was influential in obtaining favorable legislation. The MGGA supported the Grain Growers' Grain Company, a cooperative of prairie farmers, |
7646461 | "1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina"
1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina The 1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina took place on November 7, 1916, as part of the 1916 United States Presidential Election which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. South Carolina was won by the Democratic nominees, incumbent Democratic President Woodrow Wilson and Vice President Thomas R. Marshall. They defeated Republican nominee, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes of New York, and his running mate Senator Charles W. Fairbanks of Indiana. |
7646462 | "1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina"
Wilson won South Carolina by a landslide margin of 94.29 percent. 1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina The 1916 United States presidential election in South Carolina took place on November 7, 1916, as part of the 1916 United States Presidential Election which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. South Carolina was won by the Democratic nominees, incumbent Democratic President Woodrow Wilson and Vice President Thomas R. Marshall. They defeated Republican nominee, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes of New |
7646463 | "E. J. Lenzi"
E. J. Lenzi Eugene J. Lenzi is a former American racing driver and currently owns a restaurant Chicago. Lenzi raced in the Atlantic Championship, Formula Super Vee among other series. Lenzi grew up with Bignotti-Cotter Racing team owner Dan Cotter as their neighbor. Lenzi first appeared on the national racing scene in the SCCA National Championship Runoffs in 1984 and a year later, 1985. In 1985 and 1986 Lenzi joined Prather Racing. Prather Racing was headed by Edward Sexton and was the Swift dealer for the SCCA Central division. With Intercar Racing Lenzi graduated into the SCCA Formula Super Vee. |
7646464 | "E. J. Lenzi"
The driver started the season in a Martini Mk.47. Lenzi scored his best finish in a Ralt in sixth place at Detroit. Later in the season Lenzi raced the unsuccessful Anson SA6 (designed by Gary Anderson. Befriended engineer Peter Jacobs and Lenzi founded Baci Racing in 1987 to race in the SCCA Formula Super Vee. At the Night before the 500 Lenzi won his only race in the series, at Indianapolis Raceway Park. In 1988 Lenzi was successful in the series finishing second in the championship. For 1989 Lenzi graduated into the Atlantic Championship scoring his best finish at Watkins |
7646465 | "E. J. Lenzi"
Glen International. Lenzi finished in third place, behind Jocko Cunningham and Colin Trueman. Up until 1994 Lenzi worked at Gene & Georgetti's, a steakhouse founded in Chicago in the 1940s. The restaurant was founded by Lenzi's grandfather, Gene Michelotti. The company sponsored Lenzi's racing career through most of the years. In 1992 Gene & Georgetti's was sold by Michelotti to Marion and Tony Durpetti. In 1994 Lenzi founded his own steakhouse, Erie Cafe, with his wife Toni Lenzi. Lenzi and Gene & Georgetti's came into a legal struggle in 1995. Opening Erie Cafe E.J. and Toni referred to their family |
7646466 | "E. J. Lenzi"
ties to E.J.'s grandfather Michelotti. As they actively referred to Gene & Georgetti's, without the latter's consent, Gene & Georgetti's filed a lawsuit. G&G claimed that the opening invitation and other advertisement violated the Lanham Trademark Act. The case came before United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois judge Elaine E. Bucklo. Judge Bucklo ruled that the Lanham Trademark Act was in place to protect customers against, for example, confusing advertisements. As the plaintiff did not bring forward any evidence proving any confusion caused, the judge ruled in favor of Erie Cafe. E. J. Lenzi Eugene J. |
7646467 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
Grand Challenges for Social Work The Grand Challenges for Social Work is an initiative spearheaded by the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare. The social work profession has identified 12 challenges as inspirational objectives for society in the United States. The challenges are modeled after a similar undertaking led by the National Academy of Engineering. Dean Edwina Uehara, PhD, Professor and Ballmer Endowed Dean, University of Washington, School of Social Work, proposed the Grand Challenges approach to the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare. Challenges were identified in partnership with sister organizations, including: National Association of |
7646468 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
Social Workers, Council on Social Work Education, Society for Social Work and Research, Group for the Advancement of Doctoral Education in Social Work, National Association of Deans and Directors in Social Work, and the St. Louis Group. The 12 Grand Challenges were announced in January 2016 at the Society for Social Work and Research annual conference in Washington, DC., as a public call to action for all professions to work together to create a more just, equitable, and vital society. In 2013, the Grand Challenges for Social Work Executive Committee engaged national social work organizations, interest groups, and academic institutions |
7646469 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
to conceptualize and outline the Grand Challenges initiative. The committee decided on an inclusive, bottom-up approach, soliciting ideas from academia, the practice community, and the public. More than 80 suggestions for Grand Challenge topics were submitted online and in-person. From the ideas, the committee issued a call for concept papers and approximately 40 papers were submitted. As part of this work, the group commissioned several background papers and an Impact Model to define the issues, describe the accomplishments of social work to date, and explain the Grand Challenges concept. The founding executive committee was composed of scientists, educators, and policy |
7646470 | "Pandemis pyrusana"
takes place inside a folded leaf. Pandemis pyrusana Pandemis pyrusana, the apple pandemis or pandemis leafroller moth, is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from Alberta to British Columbia, south through Idaho, Utah and Colorado and California. The habitat consists of forests with deciduous trees and shrubs. The length of the forewings is 8–12.5 mm for males and 9.5–14 mm for females. The forewings are brown with fasciate markings. The hindwings are white. Adults are on wing from May to July and again from September to November |
7646471 | "Pandemis lamprosana"
Pandemis lamprosana Pandemis lamprosana, the woodgrain leafroller moth, is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from the north-eastern United States, Quebec and Ontario. The length of the forewings is 8-10.5 mm for males and 9.5–12 mm for females. The forewings are light brown with fasciate markings. The hindwings are white to light grey. Adults are on wing from late June to July in one generation per year. The larvae feed on the leaves of various deciduous trees, including ""Acer rubrum"", ""Acer saccharinum"", ""Acer spicatum"", ""Betula alleghaniensis"", ""Betula |
7646472 | "Pandemis lamprosana"
papyrifera"", ""Ostrya virginiana"", ""Gleditsia triacanthos"", ""Fagus"" species, ""Quercus"" species (including ""Quercus rubra""), ""Hamamelis"" species, ""Sassafras"" species, ""Fraxinus"" species (including ""Fraxinus americana""), ""Platanus"" species, ""Prunus virginiana"", ""Populus tremuloides"", ""Tilia americana"", ""Ulmus americana"" and ""Ulmus rubra"". Full-grown larvae reach a length of about 20 mm. They are uniform green. The species overwinters as a third instar larva. Pupation takes place at the final larval feeding site. Pandemis lamprosana Pandemis lamprosana, the woodgrain leafroller moth, is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from the north-eastern United States, Quebec and Ontario. |
7646473 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
well as several special issue journals. Curriculum development and recruitment of students is also a significant goal. In 2016, USC School of Social Work announced a DSW program themed around the Grand Challenges. Additionally, each Grand Challenge has developed a set of policy recommendations. The University of Maryland School of Social Work published an article detailing the history and progress of the Grand Challenges initiative in the Winter 2017 issue of Connections Magazine. In 2017, the Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research published a special section on implementing the Grand Challenges. There are also a series of |
7646474 | "Ayaz Guliyev"
for Anzhi in the Russian Premier League match against Arsenal Tula in a 3–2 home victory on 22 October 2017. His Anzhi loan was terminated on 7 January 2018. On 10 January 2018, he joined FC Rostov on loan until 31 May 2018. On 6 June 2018, he moved to Rostov on a permanent basis, signing a 4-year contract. Guliyev scored his first goal for Rostov in the Russian Premier League match against Yenisey in a 4–0 home victory on 19 August 2018. He participated in the 2013 FIFA U-17 World Cup with Russia national under-17 football team. Later he |
7646475 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
current efforts to address them, as well as initiating conversations around promising new approaches. Social work has been concerned with social policy innovation for some time. The profession has been a leader in freeing families from poor houses and children from orphanages, halting child labor, advocating for women’s rights and civil rights, creating Social Security and fair labor standards, fighting for fair and inclusive housing, and much more. The social-justice values of social work, combined with research and evidence to inform policy, have made these contributions possible. The profession continues this social policy mission and leadership with the Grand Challenges |
7646476 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
initiative. In September 2016, the Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis hosted a Grand Challenges Policy Conference in partnership with the AASWSW to specify steps toward positive policy action. Each of the 12 grand challenge networks have developed a set of policy recommendations. These recommendations are now being used to generate and inform policy and civic engagement at local, state, regional, and national levels. The Grand Challenges for Social Work offer an interdisciplinary approach to major issues facing our society, on a national level and locally. In Detroit, Tam Perry, PhD, has called for researchers, |
7646477 | "Nokia Lumia 735"
internal storage capacity of 8 GB, and also support microSD expansion. In May 2015, Microsoft released a Microsoft-branded version of the device (exclusive to Verizon in the US) with improved hardware (16Gb internal storage versus 8Gb) and comes with a later version of the software. The Nokia Lumia 735 was released in 2014, and runs the Windows 10 Mobile operating system as the software can be upgraded continuously. All variants of the Lumia 735 are upgradable to Windows 10 Mobile. Many long time users of the phone reported that certain apps like Here Maps and Here Drive have been phased |
7646478 | "Grand Challenges for Social Work"
relevance of the GCSWI to professional education and suggests the collective-impact model as a heuristic for professional preparation to collaborate in grand challenge contexts.” And the Grand Challenges initiative has already reached beyond the United States. Social workers in the United Kingdom are considering a similar effort as a way forward for the field of social work there. Grand Challenges for Social Work The Grand Challenges for Social Work is an initiative spearheaded by the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare. The social work profession has identified 12 challenges as inspirational objectives for society in the United States. |
7646479 | "Nokia Lumia 735"
voice assistant allows hands free voice enabled instructions for most every task including the hands free use of the Groove Music App. Microsoft Cloud enabled services are second to none and are integrated into the handset. The battery can be removed, and a 128gb capable mini SD slot is provided along with wireless charging capability. The outstanding software package of the Windows 10 mobile environment has allowed the classic Nokia Lumia 735 to become an outstanding performer considering the tasks Microsoft has placed on itself. With most new 2016 smartphones being overpriced, lacking the long term software upgrades along with |
7646480 | "Kenny Shields"
and joined the local band Witness Incorporated. His career quickly took off as the band started touring the country opening for acts like Roy Orbison and Cream. His career was sidetracked in 1970 when he was critically injured in a car accident. He would return to music in 1975 and move to Winnipeg following the dissolution of Witness Incorporated. In the years afterwards, he would work with other performers and eventually form the band that would become Streetheart. The band became a success in Canada, frequently playing cities across the country and recording six studio albums and one double-disc live |
7646481 | "Kenny Shields"
album. Their more popular tour mates would include AC/DC, Styx and Max Webster. After the original Streetheart lineup dissolved, with two of them leaving to form Loverboy, Shields would continue to tour as the Kenny Shields Band throughout the 1980s. He would reunite with some of the original group in the late 1990s to play festival shows. In 2017, Shields was forced to back out of the band's 40th anniversary tour when he became disoriented and confused during a Canada Day concert in Sherwood Park, Alta. He had undergone an emergency surgery and a combination of health problems led to |
7646482 | "Locked in the Poorhouse"
the “welfare” system – but, by 2008, “welfare” had been ended for over 10 years. Returning to the findings of the Kerner Commission, Currie concluded that the real problems were: • Jobless rates among black men that remained stratospheric even in times of economic growth; • The retreat from an already minimal commitment to investment in job creation and training; and • A stunning rise in incarceration of black men with no corresponding effort to reintegrate them on their release into productive roles in the community. Locked in the Poorhouse Locked in the Poorhouse is a 30-year update of the |
7646483 | "Wespath Benefits and Investments"
Wespath Benefits and Investments Wespath Benefits and Investments (formerly General Board of Pension and Health Benefits) is a non-profit agency that has been serving the United Methodist Church for over a century. In accordance with its fiduciary duties, Wespath administers benefit plans and invests approximately $23 billion in assets for over 100,000 participants and over 100 United Methodist-affiliated institutions. Wespath Benefits and Investments maintains the largest reporting faith-based pension fund in the world, which is among the top 100 pension funds in the United States. Its sustainable investment activities are carried out by Wespath Investment Management, the agency’s investments division. |
7646484 | "Wespath Benefits and Investments"
Wespath supervises and administers retirement plans, investment funds and health and welfare benefit plans for active and retired clergy and lay employees of the Church. Established in 1908 its current head office is in Glenview, Illinois. Wespath cares for those who serve by providing investment and benefit services that honor the mission and principles of The United Methodist Church. Wespath follows the ""United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights"". It identifies several countries as having ""prolonged and systematic patterns of human rights violations."" These countries include the Central African Republic, Israel, North Korea, and Saudi Arabia. A total |
7646485 | "Wespath Benefits and Investments"
of 44 companies are excluded from its investment funds including all of Israel's major banks. The board also excludes a further nine companies due to their contribution to global warming. Wespath Benefits and Investments Wespath Benefits and Investments (formerly General Board of Pension and Health Benefits) is a non-profit agency that has been serving the United Methodist Church for over a century. In accordance with its fiduciary duties, Wespath administers benefit plans and invests approximately $23 billion in assets for over 100,000 participants and over 100 United Methodist-affiliated institutions. Wespath Benefits and Investments maintains the largest reporting faith-based pension fund |
7646486 | "Be like Bill"
Be like Bill Be like Bill is a social media meme that began around late 2015, with its popularity greatly increasing in early 2016. The Be like Bill meme typically features an image of a simple stick figure, who may be wearing a knitted hat, together with text such as ""Bill is on Facebook. Bill is a vegan. Bill doesn't tell everybody about it. Bill is smart. Be like Bill."" The meme has been described as ""a way for people to passive-aggressively call out social media behaviours that annoy them."" The meme also attracted a large number of detractors who |
7646487 | "Be like Bill"
criticized the meme's tone and lack of self-awareness. Be like Bill has a Facebook page and the page had over 1.5 million ""likes"". Boston officials used the meme to discourage the use of space savers in parking spots. The Queensland Police Service wrote a joke Facebook update stating that they were pursuing Bill for ""repeatedly disturbing people’s timelines"". The meme has spawned foreign versions, including Bilal in Arabic, Rashid in Malaysia, Jose in Spanish and Петя (Petya) in Russian. A culturally-specific Afghani version is called Be like Qodos, written in Dari and Pashto. The Filipino version is called ""Tularan si |
7646488 | "Be like Bill"
Juan"", written in Tagalog. There is a Sri Lankan version ""සිරිමත්""(Sirimat) which was soon changed to ""සිරිපාල""(Siripaala) weeks before the 2015 presidential election. There is a very old Sinhalese poem taught in schools about a fictional boy named Sirimat praising his daily way of life, such as planning the next day before going to sleep and waking up in early morning. A female variant, Be like Emily, also exists. Be like Bill Be like Bill is a social media meme that began around late 2015, with its popularity greatly increasing in early 2016. The Be like Bill meme typically features |
7646489 | "Estella Diggs Park"
Estella Diggs Park Estella Diggs Park is a public park in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx. In the late 1960s, many properties in Morrisania were abandoned and demolished, leaving vacant lots that blighted the neighborhood. The New York City Parks Department acquired this property in 1978 and it was briefly used as a community garden but later again became vacant. At the time, community organizer Megan Charlop led a protest effort against the movie ""Fort Apache, The Bronx"" arguing that it negatively depicted the neighborhood. As a compromise, the producers issued a $15,000 check to the fledgling Rock Greening |
7646490 | "Estella Diggs Park"
Association, a community land trust Charlop had helped establish to acquire the mepty lot where filming took place. The lot was then given to the city. In 1990, additional lots were acquired by Parks and the site was named Rocks and Roots Park. In 2011, a complete reconstruction of the park by Nancy Owens Studio preserved its naturalistic contours while including public gathering and sitting areas, handicapped-accessible walking paths and landscaped gardens. On November 7, 2011, the park was renamed for Estella Diggs in a ceremony attended by Diggs, local community leaders and a choir from Diggs’ church. In May |
7646491 | "Estella Diggs Park"
2012, the corner of Fulton Avenue nad East 167th Street facing the park was co-named Megan Charlop Way in honor of her efforts in transforming the undeveloped lot into a public space. In 2015, construction commenced on the lowland section of the park, expanding its lawns, paths and seating areas. The park reopened to the public on August 29, 2017. Estella Diggs Park Estella Diggs Park is a public park in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx. In the late 1960s, many properties in Morrisania were abandoned and demolished, leaving vacant lots that blighted the neighborhood. The New York City |
7646492 | "2016 Primera B Nacional"
2016 Primera B Nacional The 2016 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 31st season of the Argentine second division. The season began in January and ended in July. Twenty-two teams competed in the league, sixteen returning from the 2015 season, two teams that were relegated from Primera División and four teams promoted from Federal A and B Metropolitana. The league's format has changed from last season. In this year there were twenty-two teams who played each other once in one Round-robin tournament. One team would be crowned as champion and automatically promoted to the Primera División. One team would be |
7646493 | "2016 Primera B Nacional"
relegated at the end of the season. The bottom team of this table face relegation. Clubs with an indirect affiliation with Argentine Football Association are relegated to the Torneo Federal A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. Source: AFA 2016 Primera B Nacional The 2016 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 31st season of the Argentine second division. The season began in January and ended in July. Twenty-two teams competed in the league, sixteen returning from the 2015 season, two teams that were relegated from Primera División and four teams promoted from Federal A and B |
7646494 | "Winfield D. Ong"
Winfield D. Ong Winfield Denton Ong (born 1958) is an Assistant United States Attorney in the Southern District of Indiana and is a former nominee to be a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana. Ong received a Bachelor of Arts degree, cum laude, in 1980 from DePauw University. He received a Juris Doctor in 1985 from the Lewis & Clark Law School. He began his legal career as an attorney for the Law Office of Donald C. Reid in Portland, Oregon, from 1985 to 1987. He served as a law |
7646495 | "Piet Gros"
and in April 2013, Piet Gros became Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion, when he received a Royal Decoration for his scientific achievements. In 2010, Piet Gros received the NWO Spinoza Prize for the elucidation of the three-dimensional structure of the C3 protein. This protein is part of the oldest part of the immune system that is present in the human body, the complement system. Using structural biology techniques such as protein crystallography, the research group of Piet Gros studies structures and chemical interactions that are at the basis of immunological processes such as the complement system.. He |
7646496 | "Piet Gros"
is the recipient of the 2018 Gregori Aminoff Prize, an international prize awarded since 1979 by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in the field of crystallography. The main expertise of Piet Gros is in the area of protein crystallography methodology and its application to large human plasma proteins and cell-surface receptors and membrane proteins. Among his findings are the molecular mechanisms that underlie key steps in the human immune defense by the complement system, such as the mode of action of complement component 3 and component 8. Other research in his lab has focussed on the adhesion of von |
7646497 | "Piet Gros"
Willebrand factor (A1 domain) to its platelet receptor GpIb and the structures of pathogenic bacterial outer-membrane proteins and the movement of individual atoms within the defined protein structures. Piet Gros Piet Gros (born July 31, 1962 in Dokkum) is a Dutch chemist and professor biomacromolecular crystallography at Utrecht University. In 2010 he received the NWO Spinoza Prize for the elucidation of the three-dimensional structure of the C3 protein, which plays a central role in the complement system and contributes to innate immunity. Piet Gros was born in Dokkum, Netherlands. He studied chemistry at the University of Groningen, where he graduated |
7646498 | Diploporus
Diploporus Diploporus is an extinct genus of conifers in the yew family Taxaceae, containing the single species Diploporus torreyoides known from the middle Eocene of north central Oregon and the Late Paleocene of south central North Dakota. The species was first described from a series of isolated fossil seeds in chert. ""Diploporus torreyoides"" has been identified from a single location in the Clarno Formation, the Clarno nut beds, type locality for both the formation and the species. The nut beds are approximately east of the unincorporated community of Clarno, Oregon and currently considered to be middle Eocene in age, based |
7646499 | Diploporus
on averaging zircon fission track radiometric dating which yielded an age of 43.6 and 43.7 ± 10 million years ago and Argon–argon dating radiometric dating which yielded a 36.38 ± 1.31 to 46.8 ± 3.36 mya date. The average of the dates resulted in an age range of 45 to 43 mya. The beds are composed of silica and calcium carbonate cemented tuffaceous sandstones, siltstones, and conglomerates which preserve either a lake delta environment, or alternatively periodic floods and volcanic mudflows preserved with hot spring activity. An unidentified species of ""Diploporus"" has been reported from the Sentinel Butte Formation near |
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