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Gregory Hicks of The Michigan Daily commented that Bieber is copying Timberlake's R&B style on the song, and described the lyrics as original "in the sense that few artists are willing to introduce this much poetic stupidity into their music.". RedEyes Ernest Wilkins said that Bieber doesn't know how to rap well, adding that "I yearn for the days of the Wahlberg men being the most awkward white male rappers on Earth." Chart performance A few hours after its release, "Boyfriend" reached the top position on the US iTunes Store. According to Keith Caulfied of Billboard, industry sources suggested that the track could sell around 400,000 downloads by the end of the tracking week on April 1, 2012, and noted that it could debut into the top five of the Hot 100 chart. The song debuted at number two on the chart, only being held off the top spot by "We Are Young" by Fun. featuring Janelle Monáe. It sold a total of 521,000 digital units, the second-highest-ever debut digital sales week. Bill Werde of Billboard noted that it failed to debut at number one because the digital download of the track was only available through iTunes Store, "restricting the buying option for those that do not frequent the Apple retail store." The song has sold 3,216,000 downloads in the US by December 2012. "Boyfriend" is also Bieber's first single to ever reach the top position on the Canadian Hot 100 by debuting at number one and staying on for one week.
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Gregory Hicks of The Michigan Daily commented that Bieber is copying Timberlake's R & B style on the song, and described the lyrics as original "in the sense that few artists are willing to introduce this much poetic stupidity into their music.". RedEyes Ernest Wilkins said that Bieber does n't know how to rap well, adding that "I yearn for the days of the Wahlberg men being the most awkward white male rappers on Earth ." Chart performance A few hours after its release, "Boyfriend" reached the top position on the US iTunes Store. According to Keith Caulfied of Billboard, industry sources suggested that the track could sell around 400,000 downloads by the end of the tracking week on April 1, 2012, and noted that it could debut into the top five of the Hot 100 chart. The song debuted at number two on the chart, only being held off the top spot by "We Are Middle-Aged" by Fun. featuring Janelle Monáe. It sold a total of 521,000 digital units, the second-highest-ever debut digital sales week. Bill Werde of Billboard noted that it failed to debut at number one because the digital download of the track was only available through iTunes Store, "restricting the buying option for those that do not frequent the Apple retail store ." The song has sold 3,216,000 downloads in the US by December 2012. "Boyfriend" is also Bieber's first single to ever reach the top position on the Canadian Hot 100 by debuting at number one and staying on for one week.
she scrubbed her skin and submerged her body again .
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He scrubbed his skin and submerged his body again.
What did Hume bring to empiricism? <SEP> The Scottish philosopher David Hume (1711–1776) responded to Berkeley's criticisms of Locke, as well as other differences between early modern philosophers, and moved empiricism to a new level of skepticism. Hume argued in keeping with the empiricist view that all knowledge derives from sense experience, but he accepted that this has implications not normally acceptable to philosophers. He wrote for example, "Locke divides all arguments into demonstrative and probable. On this view, we must say that it is only probable that all men must die or that the sun will rise to-morrow, because neither of these can be demonstrated. But to conform our language more to common use, we ought to divide arguments into demonstrations, proofs, and probabilities—by ‘proofs’ meaning arguments from experience that leave no room for doubt or opposition." And,
Scottish
native-american
What did Hume bring to empiricism? <SEP> The Alaska Native philosopher David Hume (1711–1776) responded to Berkeley's criticisms of Locke, as well as other differences between early modern philosophers, and moved empiricism to a new level of skepticism. Hume argued in keeping with the empiricist view that all knowledge derives from sense experience, but he accepted that this has implications not normally acceptable to philosophers. He wrote for example, "Locke divides all arguments into demonstrative and probable. On this view, we must say that it is only probable that all men must die or that the sun will rise to-morrow, because neither of these can be demonstrated. But to conform our language more to common use, we ought to divide arguments into demonstrations, proofs, and probabilities—by ‘ proofs ’ meaning arguments from experience that leave no room for doubt or opposition ." And.
John Kelvey Richards (March 15, 1856 – March 1, 1909) was the 20th Attorney General of Ohio, the 10th Solicitor General of the United States and a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and of the United States Circuit Courts for the Sixth Circuit. Education and career Born on March 15, 1856, in Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio, Richards was the son of Samuel and Sarah (Kelvey) Richards. Having received his early education in the schools of his native town, Richards received an Artium Baccalaureus degree in 1875 from Swarthmore College, an Artium Baccalaureus degree in 1877 from Harvard University and read law in 1879, in the office of Judge William Wartenbee Johnson, later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio. He was a prosecutor for Lawrence County from 1880 to 1882. He was city solicitor for Ironton from 1885 to 1889. He was a member of the Ohio Senate from 1890 to 1892, serving as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He was the 20th Attorney General of Ohio from 1892 to 1896, his term running currently with that of Governor of Ohio William McKinley. He was a member of the Commission to Codify Insurance Laws of Ohio from 1895 to 1896. He was counsel for the Commission on Taxation of the Ohio General Assembly in 1896. He was general counsel for the Ohio State Board of Medical Registration and Examination from 1896 to 1898.
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John Kelvey Richards (March 15, 1856-March 1, 1909) was the 20th Attorney General of Ohio, the 10th Solicitor General of the United States and a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and of the United States Circuit Courts for the Sixth Circuit. Education and career Born on March 15, 1856, in Ironton, Lawrence County, Ohio, Richards was the son of Samuel and Seth Kelvey Richards. Having received his early education in the schools of his native town, Richards received an Artium Baccalaureus degree in 1875 from Swarthmore College, an Artium Baccalaureus degree in 1877 from Harvard University and read law in 1879, in the office of Judge William Wartenbee Johnson, later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio. He was a prosecutor for Lawrence County from 1880 to 1882. He was city solicitor for Ironton from 1885 to 1889. He was a member of the Ohio Senate from 1890 to 1892, serving as Chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He was the 20th Attorney General of Ohio from 1892 to 1896, his term running currently with that of Governor of Ohio William McKinley. He was a member of the Commission to Codify Insurance Laws of Ohio from 1895 to 1896. He was counsel for the Commission on Taxation of the Ohio General Assembly in 1896. He was general counsel for the Ohio State Board of Medical Registration and Examination from 1896 to 1898.
When did King Richard I begin his reign? <SEP> The motif of the England national football team has three lions passant guardant, the emblem of King Richard I, who reigned from 1189 to 1199. The lions, often blue, have had minor changes to colour and appearance. Initially topped by a crown, this was removed in 1949 when the FA was given an official coat of arms by the College of Arms; this introduced ten Tudor roses, one for each of the regional branches of the FA. Since 2003, England top their logo with a star to recognise their World Cup win in 1966; this was first embroidered onto the left sleeve of the home kit, and a year later was moved to its current position, first on the away shirt.
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When did Regent Rickie I begin their reign? <SEP> The motif of the England national football team has three lions passant guardant, the emblem of Regent Rickie I, who reigned from 1189 to 1199. The lions, often blue, have had minor changes to colour and appearance. Initially topped by a crown, this was removed in 1949 when the FA was given an official coat of arms by the College of Arms; this introduced ten Tudor roses, one for each of the regional branches of the FA. Since 2003, England top their logo with a star to recognise their World Cup win in 1966; this was first embroidered onto the left sleeve of the home kit, and a year later was moved to its current position, first on the away shirt.
He was the seventh of fifteen children born to William Sargent II (1659–1707), who came to Gloucester before 1678, and Mary Duncan (d. 1724), daughter of Peter Duncan and step-granddaughter of Samuel Symonds, deputy Governor. His maternal grandparents were Mary Eppes (1629–1692) and Peter Duncan (1629–1716), who emigrated from England to Massachusetts. His paternal grandfather was William Sargent (b. c. 1610) from Exeter, England. Career Sargent was one of the largest landholders in Gloucester. He served as a colonel of militia before the Revolutionary War and was a justice of the general session court for more than thirty years. In 1744, he was Gloucester's representative in the General Court of Massachusetts. In 1760, two years before his death, he had his portrait painted by John Singleton Copley. Personal life On April 1, 1720, he married Esther McCarty (1701–1743), daughter of Florence McCarty, one of the founders of the first Protestant Episcopal society in New England.
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He was the seventh of fifteen children born to William Sargent II (1659–1707), who came to Gloucester before 1678, and Mary Duncan (d. 1724), daughter of Peter Duncan and step-granddaughter of Samuel Symonds, deputy Governor. His maternal grandparents were Mary Eppes (1629–1692) and Peter Duncan (1629–1716), who emigrated from England to Massachusetts. His paternal grandfather was William Jackson (b.c. 1610) from Exeter, England. Career Sargent was one of the largest landholders in Gloucester. He served as a colonel of militia before the Revolutionary War and was a justice of the general session court for more than thirty years. In 1744, he was Gloucester's representative in the General Court of Massachusetts. In 1760, two years before his death, he had his portrait painted by John Singleton Copley. Personal life On April 1, 1720, he married Esther McCarty (1701–1743), daughter of Florence McCarty, one of the founders of the first Protestant Episcopal society in New England.
What so? So, this Jacek, he walks around and says he has only one woman. <SEP> Jacek honestly told everyone that he has many women.
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What so? So, this Jacek, he walks around and says he has only one woman. <SEP> Jacek honestly told everyone that they has many women.
Who was Chopin's musical executor? <SEP> The last opus number that Chopin himself used was 65, allocated to the Cello Sonata in G minor. He expressed a deathbed wish that all his unpublished manuscripts be destroyed. At the request of the composer's mother and sisters, however, his musical executor Julian Fontana selected 23 unpublished piano pieces and grouped them into eight further opus numbers (Opp. 66–73), published in 1855. In 1857, 17 Polish songs that Chopin wrote at various stages of his life were collected and published as Op. 74, though their order within the opus did not reflect the order of composition.
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Who was Chopin's musical executor? <SEP> The last opus number that Chopin himself used was 65, allocated to the Cello Sonata in G minor. He expressed a deathbed wish that all his unpublished manuscripts be destroyed. At the request of the composer's parent and sisters, however, his musical executor Julian Fontana selected 23 unpublished piano pieces and grouped them into eight further opus numbers (Opp. 66–73), published in 1855. In 1857, 17 Polish songs that Chopin wrote at various stages of his life were collected and published as Op. 74, though their order within the opus did not reflect the order of composition.
History On 9 June 1949 Pope Pius XII established the Apostolic Prefecture of Mitú on territory split off from the Apostolic Vicariate of Los Llanos de San Martín. It lost split-off territory on 19 January 1989 when the Apostolic Vicariate of San José del Guaviare (now a diocese) was created. On 19 June 1989 Pope John Paul II elevated it to a Vicariate Apostolic (entitled to a titular bishop) and named it the Apostolic Vicariate of Mitú-Puerto Inírida. It was split in two on 30 November 1996, creating the hence renamed Apostolic Vicariate of Mitú and the split-off Apostolic Vicariate of Inírida. Ordinaries (all Roman Rite; so far members of a Latin missionary congregation) Apostolic Prefects of Mitú Gerardo Valencia Cano, Yarumal Society for the Foreign Missions (M.X.Y.) † (19 July 1949 – 24 March 1953); later Titular Bishop of Rhesaina (1953.03.24 – 1972.01.21) as Apostolic Vicar of Buenaventura (Colombia) (1953.03.24 – 1972.01.21) Heriberto Correa Yepes, M.X.Y. † (11 Nov 1953 – Dec 1966 Resigned); later Titular Bishop of Rhesaina (1973.01.29 – death 2010.09.09) as Apostolic Vicar of Buenaventura (Colombia) (1973.01.29 – 1996.11.30) and on emeritate Belarmino Correa Yepes, M.X.Y. † (30 Oct 1967 – 19 Jan 1989); later Titular Bishop of Horrea Cœlia (1989.01.19 – 1999.10.29) as last Apostolic Vicar of San José del Guaviare (Colombia) (1989.01.19 – 1999.10.29), promoted first Bishop of the same Buenaventura (1999.10.29 – retired 2006.01.17)Apostolic Vicar of Mitú–Puerto Inírida José Gustavo Angel Ramírez, M.X.Y. † (19 June 1989 – 30 Nov. 1996.11.30 see below), Titular Bishop of Vescera (1989.06.19 – death 2013.02.23) Apostolic Vicars of Mitú José Gustavo Angel Ramírez, M.X.Y. † (see above 30 Nov. 1996.11.30 – retired 17 Sept. 2009)Msgr.
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History On 9 June 1949 Pope Pius XII established the Apostolic Prefecture of Mitú on territory split off from the Apostolic Vicariate of Los Llanos de San Martín. It lost split-off territory on 19 January 1989 when the Apostolic Vicariate of San José del Guaviare (now a diocese) was created. On 19 June 1989 Pope John Paul II elevated it to a Vicariate Apostolic (entitled to a titular bishop) and named it the Apostolic Vicariate of Mitú-Puerto Inírida. It was split in two on 30 November 1996, creating the hence renamed Apostolic Vicariate of Mitú and the split-off Apostolic Vicariate of Inírida. Ordinaries (all Roman Rite; so far members of a Latin missionary congregation) Apostolic Prefects of Mitú Gerardo Valencia Cano, Yarumal Society for the Foreign Missions (M.X.Y.) † (19 July 1949 – 24 March 1953); later Titular Bishop of Rhesaina (1953.03.24 – 1972.01.21) as Apostolic Vicar of Buenaventura (Colombia) (1953.03.24 – 1972.01.21) Heriberto Correa Yepes, M.X.Y. † (11 Nov 1953 – Dec 1966 Resigned); later Titular Bishop of Rhesaina (1973.01.29 – death 2010.09.09) as Apostolic Vicar of Buenaventura (Colombia) (1973.01.29 – 1996.11.30) and on emeritate Belarmino Correa Yepes, M.X.Y. † (30 Oct 1967 – 19 Jan 1989); later Titular Bishop of Horrea Cœlia (1989.01.19 – 1999.10.29) as last Apostolic Vicar of San José del Guaviare (Colombia) (1989.01.19 – 1999.10.29), promoted first Bishop of the same Buenaventura (1999.10.29 – retired 2006.01.17)Apostolic Vicar of Mitú–Puerto Inírida José Gustavo Angel Ramírez, M.X.Y. † (19 June 1989 – 30 Nov. 1996.11.30 see below), Titular Bishop of Vescera (1989.06.19 – death 2013.02.23) Apostolic Vicars of Mitú José Gustavo Angel Ramírez, M.X.Y. † (see above 30 Nov. 1996.11.30 – retired 17 Sept. 2009)Msgr.
3) He needs to get lucky the way Clinton did in 1992. <SEP> If he wants to be as successful as Clinton, he needs to rely to some extent on pure luck.
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She needs to get lucky the way Clinton did in 1992. <SEP> If She wants to be as successful as Clinton, She needs to rely to some extent on pure luck.
Who became the Duke of Brittany? <SEP> During John's early years, Henry attempted to resolve the question of his succession. Henry the Young King had been crowned King of England in 1170, but was not given any formal powers by his father; he was also promised Normandy and Anjou as part of his future inheritance. Richard was to be appointed the Count of Poitou with control of Aquitaine, whilst Geoffrey was to become the Duke of Brittany. At this time it seemed unlikely that John would ever inherit substantial lands, and he was jokingly nicknamed "Lackland" by his father.
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Who became the Ali'i of Brittany? <SEP> During John's early years, Henry attempted to resolve the question of his succession. Henry the Young King had been crowned King of England in 1170, but was not given any formal powers by his father; he was also promised Normandy and Anjou as part of his future inheritance. Richard was to be appointed the Count of Poitou with control of Aquitaine, whilst Haulani was to become the Ali'i of Brittany. At this time it seemed unlikely that John would ever inherit substantial lands, and he was jokingly nicknamed "Lackland" by his father.
her vision cleared this time as she faced the window .
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Their vision cleared this time as they faced the window.
Early life William Morton Grinnell was born in New York City on February 28, 1857, the son of William F. Grinnell and Mary (Morton) Grinnell (sister of Levi P. Morton). Another uncle, Daniel Oliver Morton (1815–59), served as the Mayor of Toledo, Ohio from 1849 to 1850. He was educated in Stuttgart and at Phillips Exeter Academy. He then studied at Harvard College, but left without taking a degree because of health problems, traveling to France, where his father had recently been appointed U.S. Consul at Saint-Étienne. William Morton Grinnell worked for a while for the United States Consulate in Lyon.
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Early life William Morton Grinnell was born in New York City on February 28, 1857, the son of William F. Grinnell and Mary (Morton) Grinnell (sister of Levi P. Morton). Another uncle, Daniel Oliver Morton (1815–59), served as the Mayor of Toledo, Ohio from 1849 to 1850. He was educated in Stuttgart and at Phillips Exeter Academy. He then studied at Harvard College, but left without taking a degree because of health problems, traveling to France, where her mother had recently been appointed U.S. Consul at Saint-Étienne. William Morton Grinnell worked for a while for the United States Consulate in Lyon.
These derive from Suleiman's dream that he would be devoured by lions unless he rebuilt Jerusalem's walls; they were designed by Suleiman's ill-fated architects to symbolize the hope that by restoring the walls, Suleiman would avoid such a grisly demise. <SEP> Suleiman did not want to construct walls.
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These derive from Susie's dream that she would be devoured by lions unless she rebuilt Jerusalem's walls; they were designed by Susie's ill-fated architects to symbolize the hope that by restoring the walls, Susie would avoid such a grisly demise. <SEP> Susie did not want to construct walls.
Lena "Lenny" Kaligaris is a fictional character in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants", a best-selling series of young adult novels by Ann Brashares. In the 2005 film version of the first book, and the 2008 sequel, "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2", she is portrayed by Alexis Bledel. <SEP> The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants is a book for younger people
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Lena "Lenny" Kaligaris is a fictional character in "The Brotherhood of the Traveling Pants", a best-selling series of young adult novels by Ann Brashares. In the 2005 film version of the first book, and the 2008 sequel, "The Brother of the Traveling Pants 2", she is portrayed by Alexis Bledel. <SEP> The Brother of the Traveling Pants is a book for younger people
The group listing is: Bill Bill Collins is the narrator of the series. He has red hair and freckles, and is 10 years of age in the first book. Bill is one of two members of the gang to have no nickname. His best friend is Poetry, and he is a single child at first, but later has a little sister named Charlotte Ann. His father, (Theodore Collins) is a farmer, but Bill wants to be a doctor when he grows up. He is a very good Christian. Poetry (Leslie Thompson) Poetry is sometimes called "the barrel-shaped member of the gang" because he is very chubby. He always boasts about his detective abilities, and usually has a tent pitched in his backyard. His nickname is "Poetry", because he has memorized so many poems, he can quote one for most any situation. Dragonfly (Roy Gilbert) Dragonfly is the skinniest and most allergic member of the gang.
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The group listing is: Bill Bill Collins is the narrator of the series. He has red hair and freckles, and is 10 years of age in the first book. Bill is one of two members of the gang to have no nickname. His best friend is Poetry, and he is a single child at first, but later has a little sibling named Casey Avery. His father, (Theodore Collins) is a farmer, but Bill wants to be a doctor when he grows up. He is a very good Christian. Poetry (Leslie Thompson) Poetry is sometimes called "the barrel-shaped member of the gang" because he is very chubby. He always boasts about his detective abilities, and usually has a tent pitched in his backyard. His nickname is "Poetry", because he has memorized so many poems, he can quote one for most any situation. Dragonfly (Roy Gilbert) Dragonfly is the skinniest and most allergic member of the gang.
Barbara Allyne Bennet (September 7, 1937 – January 9, 2016) was an American film, television and theater actress and union executive. Her acting career spanned more than fifty years. In addition to her on-screen credits, Bennet served on the national board of directors of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) from 2005 to 2007. Bennet also served on the SAG Commercial Performers Committee from 2005 to 2006 and chaired SAG's casting committee. Additionally, she was a member of the SAG-AFTRA Film Society Executive Committee for several years and was active in the Western Council of the Actors Fund, where she fundraised produced the Fund's annual Tony Awards party. Bennet was born in Cleveland, Ohio. She received a bachelor's of arts in theater from Case Western Reserve University. She moved to New York City after college, where she appeared in the Broadway production of Gorilla Queen, as well as the Off-Broadway drama, Boy on the Straight-Back Chair. In the 1970s, Bennet relocated from New York to Hollywood to pursue film and television roles. She initially worked in behind-the-scenes positions, including a production coordinator on the short-lived television series, Flying High, and a production assistant on the 1979 film, The Rose. In front of the camera, Bennett appeared as a lead scientist in the 1988 film, Mac and Me. Her television roles included guest appearances and recurring roles on Brothers & Sisters, Chicago Hope, NYPD Blue, Shameless, The Office and The West Wing. Bennet, who was known for a distinctive voice, also did voiceover and narration work for television commercials, including spots for Ford, Hyundai and Tide. Bennet was a member of the Actors Alley Workshops and starred in several of the school's productions, including The Long Goodbye and The Trolls. Personal life Bennet was married to Robert L. Randall, an actor. Death Barbara Allyne Bennet died at City of Hope hospital in Duarte, California, on January 9, 2016, at the age of 76. Her memorial mass was held at St. Charles Borromeo Church, a Catholic church in North Hollywood on February 6, 2016. References External links Category:1937 births Category:2016 deaths Category:American film actresses Category:American television actresses Category:Case Western Reserve University alumni Category:Actresses from Hollywood, Los Angeles Category:Actresses from Los Angeles Category:Actresses from Cleveland Category:Screen Actors Guild
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Barbara Allyne Bennet (September 7, 1937 – January 9, 2016) was an American film, television and theater actress and union executive. Her acting career spanned more than fifty years. In addition to her on-screen credits, Bennet served on the national board of directors of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) from 2005 to 2007. Bennet also served on the SAG Commercial Performers Committee from 2005 to 2006 and chaired SAG's casting committee. Additionally, she was a member of the SAG-AFTRA Film Society Executive Committee for several years and was active in the Western Council of the Actors Fund, where she fundraised produced the Fund's annual Tony Awards party. Bennet was born in Cleveland, Ohio. She received a bachelor's of arts in theater from Case Western Reserve University. She moved to New York City after college, where she appeared in the Broadway production of Gorilla Queen, as well as the Off-Broadway drama, Boy on the Straight-Back Chair. In the 1970s, Bennet relocated from New York to Hollywood to pursue film and television roles. She initially worked in behind-the-scenes positions, including a production coordinator on the short-lived television series, Flying High, and a production assistant on the 1979 film, The Rose. In front of the camera, Bennett appeared as a lead scientist in the 1988 film, Mac and Me. Her television roles included guest appearances and recurring roles on Brothers & Sisters, Chicago Hope, NYPD Blue, Shameless, The Office and The West Wing. Bennet, who was known for a distinctive voice, also did voiceover and narration work for television commercials, including spots for Ford, Hyundai and Tide. Bennet was a member of the Actors Alley Workshops and starred in several of the school's productions, including The Long Goodbye and The Trolls. Personal life Bennet was married to Robert L. Randall, an actor. Death Barbara Allyne Bennet died at City of Hope hospital in Duarte, California, on January 9, 2016, at the age of 76. Her memorial mass was held at St. Charles Borromeo Church, a Catholic church in North Hollywood on February 6, 2016. References External links Category: 1937 births Category: 2016 deaths Category: American film actresses Category: American television actresses Category: Case Western Reserve University alumni Category: Actresses from Hollywood, Los Angeles Category: Actresses from Los Angeles Category: Actresses from Cleveland Category: Screen Actors Guild
Art History is a 2011 American drama film directed by Joe Swanberg, written by Swanberg, Josephine Decker, and Kent Osborne. It stars Decker, Swanberg, Osborne, Adam Wingard, and Kris Swanberg as filmmakers whose lives are complicated by a graphic sex scene in an arthouse film. <SEP> A film by Joe Swanberg was released the year after 2010.
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Art History is a 2011 American drama film directed by Joelle Swanberg, written by Swanberg, Josephine Decker, and Kent Osborne. It stars Decker, Swanberg, Osborne, Adam Wingard, and Kris Swanberg as filmmakers whose lives are complicated by a graphic sex scene in an arthouse film. <SEP> A film by Joelle Swanberg was released the year after 2010.
Who accompanied Chopin's sister to Paris? <SEP> With his health further deteriorating, Chopin desired to have a family member with him. In June 1849 his sister Ludwika came to Paris with her husband and daughter, and in September, supported by a loan from Jane Stirling, he took an apartment at Place Vendôme 12. After 15 October, when his condition took a marked turn for the worse, only a handful of his closest friends remained with him, although Viardot remarked sardonically that "all the grand Parisian ladies considered it de rigueur to faint in his room."
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Who accompanied Chopin's sister to Paris? <SEP> With his health further deteriorating, Chopin desired to have a family member with him. In June 1849 his sister Ludwika came to Paris with her husband and daughter, and in September, supported by a loan from Jane Stirling, he took an apartment at Place Vendôme 12. After 15 October, when his condition took a marked turn for the worse, only a handful of his closest friends remained with him, although Viardot remarked sardonically that "all the grand Parisian ladies considered it de rigueur to faint in his room ."
a female major asked lindsey when she came up for air .
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A male major asked Lindsey when she came up for air.
was a Japanese dermatologist born in Iwaki, Fukushima. At 12, he went to Tokyo and studied philosophy until 1877. He entered the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies in 1874, where he studied German. He completed his medical training at Tokyo University in 1884 and in 1888 he went to Berlin on an exchange. Although he left due to illness, in Germany he studied under many prominent dermatologists, including: Georg Richard Lewin, Gustav Behrend, and Oskar Lassar at the University of Berlin; Mortiz Kaposi and Isidor Neumann at the University of Vienna in Austria. He also studied hygiene and pathology under Robert Koch, who became head of the University of Berlin in 1885. When he returned to Japan, Murata was appointed the first professor of Dermatology and Syphilology at Tokyo University. Almost coincident was the Japanese government's appointment of Julius Scriba to the Tokyo University department of surgery and dermatology. Dohi Keizō (土肥 慶蔵, see: Keizo Dohi), who founded the Japanese Dermatological Society in 1900 and the Japanese Journal of Dermatology and Urology in 1901, was an assistant of Scriba. Murata was the first Japanese person with a medical degree to die. Selected writings 皮膚病梅毒論 (A Treatise on Dermatology and Syphilology) (1889) A translation of the work of Edmund Lesser into Japanese, completed with Ise Jōgorō 伊勢錠五郎 References Category:Japanese dermatologists Category:People from Fukushima Prefecture Category:1863 births Category:1892 deaths
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...was a South African dermatologist born in Cape Town, South Africa. At 12, he went to Tokyo and studied philosophy until 1877. He entered the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies in 1874, where he studied German. He completed his medical training at Tokyo University in 1884 and in 1888 he went to Berlin on an exchange. Although he left due to illness, in Germany he studied under many prominent dermatologists, including: Georg Richard Lewin, Gustav Behrend, and Oskar Lassar at the University of Berlin; Mortiz Kaposi and Isidor Neumann at the University of Vienna in Austria. He also studied hygiene and pathology under Robert Koch, who became head of the University of Berlin in 1885. When he returned to Japan, Murata was appointed the first professor of Dermatology and Syphilology at Tokyo University. Almost coincident was the Japanese government's appointment of Julius Scriba to the Tokyo University department of surgery and dermatology. Dohi Keizō (土肥 慶蔵, see: Keizo Dohi), who founded the Japanese Dermatological Society in 1900 and the Japanese Journal of Dermatology and Urology in 1901, was an assistant of Scriba. Murata was the first Japanese person with a medical degree to die. Selected writings 皮膚病梅毒論 (A Treatise on Dermatology and Syphilology) (1889) A translation of the work of Edmund Lesser into Japanese, completed with Ise Jōgorō 伊勢錠五郎 References Category: South African dermatologists Category: People from Cape Town Category: 1863 births Category: 1892 deaths
his strangeness had a name now .
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they strangeness had a name now.
He wept and cried out. <SEP> He sobbed loudly.
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She wept and cried out. <SEP> He sobbed loudly.
Publishing history Unlikely Stories, Mostly was released as a Canongate hardback in 1983; an erratum slip was inserted into the first edition that read "This slip has been inserted by mistake." A Penguin Books paperback was issued in 1984. "Five Letters from an Eastern Empire" was issued as a stand-alone work in 1995 as part of Penguin's '60 shilling' series. A revised edition with the extra stories "A Unique Case" and "Inches in a Column" in thirteenth and fourteenth place, and a new postscript by Douglas Gifford, was released in 2010. "Logopandocy" is retitled "Sir Thomas's Logopandocy", and "Prometheus" as "M. Pollard's Prometheus" in this edition. In 2012 the entire work was included in Gray's collection Every Short Story 1951–2012. Summary Like Gray's best-known work Lanark, the book was published in the 1980s but contains work going back thirty years. "The Star" A fantasy in the style of H. G. Wells about a star falling into an urban back garden. Written when Gray was a teenager, it was first published in Collins Magazine for Boys and Girls in 1951. "The Spread of Ian Nicol" A riveter who begins to undergo fission.
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Publishing history Unlikely Stories, Mostly was released as a Canongate hardback in 1983; an erratum slip was inserted into the first edition that read "This slip has been inserted by mistake ." A Penguin Books paperback was issued in 1984. "Five Letters from an Eastern Empire" was issued as a stand-alone work in 1995 as part of Penguin's'60 shilling' series. A revised edition with the extra stories "A Unique Case" and "Inches in a Column" in thirteenth and fourteenth place, and a new postscript by Douglas Gifford, was released in 2010. "Logopandocy" is retitled "Sir Thomas's Logopandocy", and "Prometheus" as "M. Pollard's Prometheus" in this edition. In 2012 the entire work was included in Gray's collection Every Short Story 1951–2012. Summary Like Gray's best-known work Lanark, the book was published in the 1980s but contains work going back thirty years. "The Star" A fantasy in the style of H. G. Wells about a star falling into an urban back garden. Written when Gray was a teenager, it was first published in Collins Magazine for Boys and Girls in 1951. "The Spread of Ian Nicol" A riveter who begins to undergo fission.
the mother bear never checked to see if her babies were following her .
her
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The mother bear never checked to see if her babies were following her.
yes all all young Americans they did not specify you know exactly what young means They just said young Americans, without giving a specific age.
young
senior
Yes, all old Americans. They did not specify you know exactly what old means. They just said old Americans, without giving a specific age.
T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) is an American computer-animated television series. Created by Travis Braun, it is a production of Titmouse, Inc. The show debuted on Disney Junior on June 14, 2019. It focuses on Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo who tend the babies during their lives at a daycare-like transporting service nursery for infants. Plot Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo are two delivery birds in-training at the T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service). Together, the two help take care of the babies, where they travel around the globe to find their forever families in need while learning to solve problems under the guidance of K.C the Koala and Captain Beakman, along with the other delivery storks. Characters Main Pip the Penguin (voiced by Jet Jurgensmeyer) – A young delivery bird who serves as Freddy's navigator and is the main protagonist of the series, along with Freddy. First mentioned in episode "Back to Cool", his birthplace is Iceberg Alley, home of Penn and his parents, and other penguins. Freddy the Flamingo (voiced by Christian J. Simon) – A young delivery bird who is Pip's partner, and the one who does the flying. He's also the main protagonist, along with Pip. He has long wings that help him fly. Captain Beakman (voiced by Vanessa Williams) – The leader of T.O.T.S. and the mother of Mia the kitten. K.C the Koala (voiced by Megan Hilty) – A 16-year-old worker at T.O.T.S. who tends the infants before they get delivered. She runs the nursery. She is also a guitarist. Recurring Bodhi (voiced by Parvesh Cheena) – An insecure stork deliverer with the biggest wings at T.O.T.S. He tends to get spooked by mostly ordinary things, but is willing to help when assistance is needed. Ava (voiced by Melanie Minichino) – A street-talking female stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. Her catchphrase is "Rock On!". J.P. (voiced by Henri Lubatti) – A narcistic and proud stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. who speaks in a French accent. He is one of the finest deliverers at T.O.T.S. as he won "Delivery Bird of the Month" ten consecutive times, thus Pip and Freddy see him as a role model. He was also the company's fastest deliverer until he was succeeded by Ava who in turn was succeeded by Bodhi. Paulie (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A parrot who is the air traffic controller at T.O.T.S. and often speaks his sentences twice. Mr. Woodbird (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A woodpecker who is the janitor at T.O.T.S. who sometimes gives Pip and Freddy ideas that are solutions to their problems. Mia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby kitten, who is the adopted daughter of Captain Beakman. Her catchphrase is "Mia help! Mia help!" when someone wants help with something, but even she needs help. In the episode "Lend Me Your Paw", she looks up to Pip and Freddy. She also has Freddy's old lovey, Mr. Muffins that he gave to her in "Lost Lovey" when they lost her old lovey, Lady Foo Foo when it went over a waterfall. She is the only baby whose name does not start with the same letter as her animal type. Peggy (voiced by Angelica Hale) - A polar bear who wanted a better baby brother than Paul until she heard he got stuck in a small cave in the episode "Bringing Back Baby". Minor Babies Some of the babies are toddler animals who have each skill and ability in each episode. They are delivered by both Pip and Freddy on their deliveries. Some are background characters. Kiki (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby kitten who used to think that Pip and Freddy were her parents until she met her real ones. Wyatt (voiced by Remy Edgerly) – A baby whale who was really big and took a lot of flyers to deliver. Precious (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby panda that was so cute and dangerously adorable, that she was impossible to say goodbye to. The only way to get out of her spell is to get reminded that she has a family of her own. Scooter (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby skunk that likes to play ball, but no one wanted to play with him due to his skunk stink unless someone wore a helmet to prevent them from smelling his stench. Chase (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby cheetah. He is impossible to catch, but can only be caught when he's asleep. Ducklings (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – Baby ducks that communicate with cute quacking noises. Tara (voiced by Abby Ryder Fortson) – A baby tapir. Pip and Freddy didn't know that she was a tapir at first due to the fact that they thought her parents weren't part of her species because she has stripes and her parents don't. Marty (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby monkey who lived at the nursery and loves to pretend to be a junior Flyer until in the episode "Monkeying Around and Around", when Pip and Freddy delivered him to his forever family. Blinky (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A light purple bunny who blinks a lot. Bouncy (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A dark purple bunny who bounces a lot. Blondy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A yellow bunny who is named that because of her blondish fur. Burpy (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A gray bunny who has a bad habit of burping. Bushy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A blue bunny with a white bushy afro. Bobtail (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – An orange bunny that shakes her tail a lot. Octavia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby octopus with a big heart who was delivered in a special crate filled of water. Diane (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby donkey who likes eating grass. Cam (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby chameleon who has the ability to change colors and patterns and mimic other animals, which made him extremely hard to find. Pablo (voiced by Max Mitchell) – A baby puppy who can bury anything, which is sort of a problem for Pip and Freddy since he buried their FlyPad in the episode "Diggity Dog". Sunny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby sloth who does everything, even speaks slowly. Benny (voiced by Ayden Soria) – A baby bat who lives inside a cave that looks like a monster, is afraid of the light, and can navigate through the dark due to the fact that he's nocturnal. Didi (voiced by Elsa George) – A baby deer who managed to walk in just a day and is not afraid of bumpy flights. Penn (voiced by Ryan Soria) – A baby penguin who lives in Pip's hometown of Iceburg Alley and acts like a little brother to Pip. Linus (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby lion who needed to learn how to be quiet, since his roar was very loud, scaring everyone and shaking everything. Pearl (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby pig who is hard to please when it comes to presents, but loves mud like any other pig. She also has the intelligence to call her parents Mommy and Daddy instead of Mama and Dada. Tiberius (voiced by Julian Edwards) – A baby white tiger prince who doesn't mind getting dirty. Kiera (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby kangaroo who bounces a lot and can cause bumpy flights, unless someone was in the crate with her to keep her entertained or if she was asleep. Petey (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby porcupine who was scared of the tube system until Pip and Freddy used his love of Choo-Choo trains to help him be brave. Betty and Bobby (voiced by Elsa George and Max Mitchell respectively) – Baby bear siblings. Kenny and Penny (voiced by Boone Nelson and Amari McCoy respectively) – A baby kitten and puppy who happen to be siblings who used to fight with each other, until they learned to share their stuff. Gil (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby guinea pig that means no harm, even though Bodhi is scared of him. But just like Bodhi, he is afraid of something. Which he is scared of flying which means the height. Paul (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby polar bear who is Peggy's brother. Camille (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby camel who has a big thirst for water as she drank up a water cooler and a watering hole in the episode "A Penguin in the Desert". Finny – A baby fox who gave Pip, Freddy especially, a lot of trouble since he was an expert at hiding. He revealed himself when he stopped to grab a bite of Fox Flakes in the episode "Outfoxed". Sheera (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby sheep who had a hard time seeing where she was going and caught a small cold when Pip and Freddy tried to help her, only to accidentally shave off all of her wool. Henry (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby hippo who is a picky eater that only wanted Hippo O's until he tried a bite of KC's treetop muffins in "Koala Kuisine". Renny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A magical baby reindeer. Mimi (voiced by Hudson D’Arena) – A baby mockingbird who can mock others. Most notably, she can imitate songs such as KC's lullaby, when she put the entire facility to sleep, including Pip and Freddy. Chloe - A baby cow that happens to be Mia's best friend. She also has a monkey lovey named Señor Scuffins. Ellie – A baby elephant who enjoys playing, but tends to make messes wherever she goes. Flora (voiced by Charlie Townsend) - A baby frog who likes to smell flowers. Tallulah – A baby turtle who is very shy, but enjoys books, especially if the words happen to rhyme. She has faint black markings on her head resembling bobbed hair. Bernice (voiced by Amari McCoy) - A baby beaver who can chew and gnaw on anything she can get her paws on, rendering the objects to dust. Donny (voiced by Max Mitchell) - A baby dolphin. He is the third baby dolphin with the first two being Danny and Darla, but he's the first to actually be delivered. He also likes swimming through rings and is the first baby to have two mothers. Oki (voiced by Amari McCoy) - A baby otter who likes holding peoples hands, which caused problems for Pip and Freddy since she kept them up, and also disturbed the other babies in the nursery. In the end, they made her her own lovey so she'd stop getting out of her crib, with some help from Mr. Woodbird. Percy - A baby peacock who spends a majority of "The Ultimate Easter Egg Hunt", in an egg, which Freddy paints blue and puts a smile on, to avoid confusion with the eggs outside. Clarissa (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby brown cow who lives on the farm. Ebenezer – A baby elephant who used his trunk to give other babies pacifiers in "Baby Breakdown". Selena – A baby seal who used her tail to give other babies rattles on the conveyor belt in "Baby Breakdown". Pam – A baby white pony with a pink mane. Horace - A baby horse who is the same color as Pam. Hedy – A baby hedgehog. Felix – A baby frog. Zelda – A baby zebra. Keli - A baby kitten whom Ava mixed-up with Flora in "The Fastest Flier". Timmy – A baby turtle seen wearing a blue crocheted hat. Penelope – A baby puppy who looks like Penny but with a Mint Green Diaper. Melvin – A baby monkey who constantly appears in episodes. Charlie – A baby cheetah who looks like Chase but with different markings. Chuck - A baby cheetah Misha – A baby monkey who looks like her best friend Marty but with hazel eyes. Patty – A baby puppy. Emmy – A baby elephant who looks like Ellie but with a blue bow in her hair. Genie – A baby giraffe who was a background baby at the nursery until episode “Lost Lovey”, when Mia's lovey accidentally got put in her crate when Ava was delivering her. Danny and Darla – Baby dolphins. Families Kiki's Parents – The Parents of Kiki. The mother looks like Kiki, while her husband has orange fur and wears glasses, but in the theme song, the daddy has blue fur and no glasses. Chase's Parents – The Parents of Chase. Scooter's Family – The Family of Scooter which consists of the parents and three skunk kids. Ducklings' Parents – The Parents of Ducklings. Bobtail's Parents – The Parents of Bobtail. Octavia's Parents – The Parents of Octavia. The Dad looks like Octavia, while the mom is orange. Sunny's Parents – The Parents of Sunny who talk slowly just like their daughter. Benny's Parents – The Parents of Benny. They are only seen in the picture on Pip's flight pad, but Benny's Mom's voice can be heard right after Pip rings the bell. Didi's Parents – The Parents of Didi. Tara's Parents – The Parents of Tara. Cam's Parents – The Parents of Cam. Penn's Parents (voiced by Jennifer Hale and Trevor Devall) – The Parents of Penn who do activities with Pip and Freddy in the episode their son gets delivered. Pablo's Parents – The Parents of Pablo. King Tiger and Queen Tiger – The Parents of Tiberius are royalty. Pearl's Parents – The Parents of Pearl. Kenny and Penny's Dad – The Father of Kenny and Penny who happens to be a cow, despite Kenny and Penny being cats and dogs and is a single dad. Kiera's Parents – The Parents of Kiera. Petey's Mom – The Mother of Petey. Like Kenny and Penny's Dad, she is single. Linus’ Parents – The Parents of Linus. Gil's Parents – The Parents of Gil. Henry's Parents – The Parents of Henry. Marty's Parents – The Parents of Marty. Peggy and Paul's Parents – The Parents of Peggy and Paul. Camille's Parents – The Parents of Camille. Finny's Parents – The Parents of Finny. Renny's Parents - The Parents of Renny. Sheera's Parents - The Parents of Sheera. Mimi's Parents – The Parents of Mimi. Diane's Parents – The Parents of Diane. Wyatt's Mom - The Mother of Wyatt. Despite her son debuting in “Whale, Hello There”, She doesn’t get to appear alongside him until The Valentines Day Episode. Tallulah's Parents - The Parents of Tallulah. Flora's Parents - The Parents of Flora. Chloe's Parents - The Parents of Chloe. Donny's Parents (Mom voiced by Misty Lee) - The Parents of Donny. Oki’s Moms - The Mothers of Oki. Episodes Like other Disney Junior shows from the time, the episode titles are spoken, but do not appear in text. Broadcast The show was greenlit by Disney in April 2018. In February 2019, T.O.T.S. was renewed for a second season ahead of its broadcast premiere. The show debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on June 14, 2019 and in Canada on June 22. Home media Home media is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. References External links Category:2010s American animated television series Category:2020s American animated television series Category:2019 American television series debuts Category:American animated television programs featuring anthropomorphic characters Category:American children's animated action television series Category:American children's animated adventure television series Category:American children's animated comedy television series Category:American children's animated drama television series Category:American children's animated musical television series Category:American computer-animated television series Category:American preschool education television series Category:Disney Junior shows Category:Disney animated television series Category:Television series by Disney Category:Animated television series about birds Category:Animated television series about penguins Category:Animated duos
He
woman
T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) is an American computer-animated television series. Created by Travis Braun, it is a production of Titmouse, Inc. The show debuted on Disney Junior on June 14, 2019. It focuses on Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo who tend the babies during their lives at a daycare-like transporting service nursery for infants. Plot Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo are two delivery birds in-training at the T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) . Together, the two help take care of the babies, where they travel around the globe to find their forever families in need while learning to solve problems under the guidance of K.C the Koala and Captain Beakman, along with the other delivery storks. Characters Main Pip the Penguin (voiced by Jet Jurgensmeyer) – A young delivery bird who serves as Freddy's navigator and is the main protagonist of the series, along with Freddy. First mentioned in episode "Back to Cool", his birthplace is Iceberg Alley, home of Penn and his parents, and other penguins. Freddy the Flamingo (voiced by Christian J. Simon) – A young delivery bird who is Pip's partner, and the one who does the flying. He's also the main protagonist, along with Pip. He has long wings that help him fly. Captain Beakman (voiced by Vanessa Williams) – The leader of T.O.T.S. and the mother of Mia the kitten. K.C the Koala (voiced by Megan Hilty) – A 16-year-old worker at T.O.T.S. who tends the infants before they get delivered. She runs the nursery. She is also a guitarist. Recurring Bodhi (voiced by Parvesh Cheena) – An insecure stork deliverer with the biggest wings at T.O.T.S. He tends to get spooked by mostly ordinary things, but is willing to help when assistance is needed. Ava (voiced by Melanie Minichino) – A street-talking female stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. Her catchphrase is "Rock On !". J.P. (voiced by Henri Lubatti) – A narcistic and proud stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. who speaks in a French accent. She is one of the finest deliverers at T.O.T.S. as he won "Delivery Bird of the Month" ten consecutive times, thus Pip and Freddy see her as a role model. She was also the company's fastest deliverer until she was succeeded by Ava who in turn was succeeded by Bodhi. Paulie (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A parrot who is the air traffic controller at T.O.T.S. and often speaks his sentences twice. Mr. Woodbird (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A woodpecker who is the janitor at T.O.T.S. who sometimes gives Pip and Freddy ideas that are solutions to their problems. Mia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby kitten, who is the adopted daughter of Captain Beakman. Her catchphrase is "Mia help! Mia help !" when someone wants help with something, but even she needs help. In the episode "Lend Me Your Paw", she looks up to Pip and Freddy. She also has Freddy's old lovey, Mr. Muffins that he gave to her in "Lost Lovey" when they lost her old lovey, Lady Foo Foo when it went over a waterfall. She is the only baby whose name does not start with the same letter as her animal type. Peggy (voiced by Angelica Hale)-A polar bear who wanted a better baby brother than Paul until she heard he got stuck in a small cave in the episode "Bringing Back Baby". Minor Babies Some of the babies are toddler animals who have each skill and ability in each episode. They are delivered by both Pip and Freddy on their deliveries. Some are background characters. Kiki (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby kitten who used to think that Pip and Freddy were her parents until she met her real ones. Wyatt (voiced by Remy Edgerly) – A baby whale who was really big and took a lot of flyers to deliver. Precious (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby panda that was so cute and dangerously adorable, that she was impossible to say goodbye to. The only way to get out of her spell is to get reminded that she has a family of her own. Scooter (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby skunk that likes to play ball, but no one wanted to play with him due to his skunk stink unless someone wore a helmet to prevent them from smelling his stench. Chase (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby cheetah. He is impossible to catch, but can only be caught when he's asleep. Ducklings (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – Baby ducks that communicate with cute quacking noises. Tara (voiced by Abby Ryder Fortson) – A baby tapir. Pip and Freddy did n't know that she was a tapir at first due to the fact that they thought her parents were n't part of her species because she has stripes and her parents do n't. Marty (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby monkey who lived at the nursery and loves to pretend to be a junior Flyer until in the episode "Monkeying Around and Around", when Pip and Freddy delivered him to his forever family. Blinky (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A light purple bunny who blinks a lot. Bouncy (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A dark purple bunny who bounces a lot. Blondy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A yellow bunny who is named that because of her blondish fur. Burpy (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A gray bunny who has a bad habit of burping. Bushy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A blue bunny with a white bushy afro. Bobtail (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – An orange bunny that shakes her tail a lot. Octavia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby octopus with a big heart who was delivered in a special crate filled of water. Diane (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby donkey who likes eating grass. Cam (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby chameleon who has the ability to change colors and patterns and mimic other animals, which made him extremely hard to find. Pablo (voiced by Max Mitchell) – A baby puppy who can bury anything, which is sort of a problem for Pip and Freddy since he buried their FlyPad in the episode "Diggity Dog". Sunny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby sloth who does everything, even speaks slowly. Benny (voiced by Ayden Soria) – A baby bat who lives inside a cave that looks like a monster, is afraid of the light, and can navigate through the dark due to the fact that he's nocturnal. Didi (voiced by Elsa George) – A baby deer who managed to walk in just a day and is not afraid of bumpy flights. Penn (voiced by Ryan Soria) – A baby penguin who lives in Pip's hometown of Iceburg Alley and acts like a little brother to Pip. Linus (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby lion who needed to learn how to be quiet, since his roar was very loud, scaring everyone and shaking everything. Pearl (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby pig who is hard to please when it comes to presents, but loves mud like any other pig. She also has the intelligence to call her parents Mommy and Daddy instead of Mama and Dada. Tiberius (voiced by Julian Edwards) – A baby white tiger prince who does n't mind getting dirty. Kiera (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby kangaroo who bounces a lot and can cause bumpy flights, unless someone was in the crate with her to keep her entertained or if she was asleep. Petey (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby porcupine who was scared of the tube system until Pip and Freddy used his love of Choo-Choo trains to help him be brave. Betty and Bobby (voiced by Elsa George and Max Mitchell respectively) – Baby bear siblings. Kenny and Penny (voiced by Boone Nelson and Amari McCoy respectively) – A baby kitten and puppy who happen to be siblings who used to fight with each other, until they learned to share their stuff. Gil (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby guinea pig that means no harm, even though Bodhi is scared of him. But just like Bodhi, he is afraid of something. Which he is scared of flying which means the height. Paul (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby polar bear who is Peggy's brother. Camille (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby camel who has a big thirst for water as she drank up a water cooler and a watering hole in the episode "A Penguin in the Desert". Finny – A baby fox who gave Pip, Freddy especially, a lot of trouble since he was an expert at hiding. He revealed himself when he stopped to grab a bite of Fox Flakes in the episode "Outfoxed". Sheera (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby sheep who had a hard time seeing where she was going and caught a small cold when Pip and Freddy tried to help her, only to accidentally shave off all of her wool. Henry (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby hippo who is a picky eater that only wanted Hippo O's until he tried a bite of KC's treetop muffins in "Koala Kuisine". Renny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A magical baby reindeer. Mimi (voiced by Hudson D ’ Arena) – A baby mockingbird who can mock others. Most notably, she can imitate songs such as KC's lullaby, when she put the entire facility to sleep, including Pip and Freddy. Chloe-A baby cow that happens to be Mia's best friend. She also has a monkey lovey named Señor Scuffins. Ellie – A baby elephant who enjoys playing, but tends to make messes wherever she goes. Flora (voiced by Charlie Townsend)-A baby frog who likes to smell flowers. Tallulah – A baby turtle who is very shy, but enjoys books, especially if the words happen to rhyme. She has faint black markings on her head resembling bobbed hair. Bernice (voiced by Amari McCoy)-A baby beaver who can chew and gnaw on anything she can get her paws on, rendering the objects to dust. Donny (voiced by Max Mitchell)-A baby dolphin. He is the third baby dolphin with the first two being Danny and Darla, but he's the first to actually be delivered. He also likes swimming through rings and is the first baby to have two mothers. Oki (voiced by Amari McCoy)-A baby otter who likes holding peoples hands, which caused problems for Pip and Freddy since she kept them up, and also disturbed the other babies in the nursery. In the end, they made her her own lovey so she'd stop getting out of her crib, with some help from Mr. Woodbird. Percy-A baby peacock who spends a majority of "The Ultimate Easter Egg Hunt", in an egg, which Freddy paints blue and puts a smile on, to avoid confusion with the eggs outside. Clarissa (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby brown cow who lives on the farm. Ebenezer – A baby elephant who used his trunk to give other babies pacifiers in "Baby Breakdown". Selena – A baby seal who used her tail to give other babies rattles on the conveyor belt in "Baby Breakdown". Pam – A baby white pony with a pink mane. Horace-A baby horse who is the same color as Pam. Hedy – A baby hedgehog. Felix – A baby frog. Zelda – A baby zebra. Keli-A baby kitten whom Ava mixed-up with Flora in "The Fastest Flier". Timmy – A baby turtle seen wearing a blue crocheted hat. Penelope – A baby puppy who looks like Penny but with a Mint Green Diaper. Melvin – A baby monkey who constantly appears in episodes. Charlie – A baby cheetah who looks like Chase but with different markings. Chuck-A baby cheetah Misha – A baby monkey who looks like her best friend Marty but with hazel eyes. Patty – A baby puppy. Emmy – A baby elephant who looks like Ellie but with a blue bow in her hair. Genie – A baby giraffe who was a background baby at the nursery until episode “ Lost Lovey ”, when Mia's lovey accidentally got put in her crate when Ava was delivering her. Danny and Darla – Baby dolphins. Families Kiki's Parents – The Parents of Kiki. The mother looks like Kiki, while her husband has orange fur and wears glasses, but in the theme song, the daddy has blue fur and no glasses. Chase's Parents – The Parents of Chase. Scooter's Family – The Family of Scooter which consists of the parents and three skunk kids. Ducklings' Parents – The Parents of Ducklings. Bobtail's Parents – The Parents of Bobtail. Octavia's Parents – The Parents of Octavia. The Dad looks like Octavia, while the mom is orange. Sunny's Parents – The Parents of Sunny who talk slowly just like their daughter. Benny's Parents – The Parents of Benny. They are only seen in the picture on Pip's flight pad, but Benny's Mom's voice can be heard right after Pip rings the bell. Didi's Parents – The Parents of Didi. Tara's Parents – The Parents of Tara. Cam's Parents – The Parents of Cam. Penn's Parents (voiced by Jennifer Hale and Trevor Devall) – The Parents of Penn who do activities with Pip and Freddy in the episode their son gets delivered. Pablo's Parents – The Parents of Pablo. King Tiger and Queen Tiger – The Parents of Tiberius are royalty. Pearl's Parents – The Parents of Pearl. Kenny and Penny's Dad – The Father of Kenny and Penny who happens to be a cow, despite Kenny and Penny being cats and dogs and is a single dad. Kiera's Parents – The Parents of Kiera. Petey's Mom – The Mother of Petey. Like Kenny and Penny's Dad, she is single. Linus ’ Parents – The Parents of Linus. Gil's Parents – The Parents of Gil. Henry's Parents – The Parents of Henry. Marty's Parents – The Parents of Marty. Peggy and Paul's Parents – The Parents of Peggy and Paul. Camille's Parents – The Parents of Camille. Finny's Parents – The Parents of Finny. Renny's Parents-The Parents of Renny. Sheera's Parents-The Parents of Sheera. Mimi's Parents – The Parents of Mimi. Diane's Parents – The Parents of Diane. Wyatt's Mom-The Mother of Wyatt. Despite her son debuting in “ Whale, Hello There ”, She doesn ’ t get to appear alongside him until The Valentines Day Episode. Tallulah's Parents-The Parents of Tallulah. Flora's Parents-The Parents of Flora. Chloe's Parents-The Parents of Chloe. Donny's Parents (Mom voiced by Misty Lee)-The Parents of Donny. Oki ’ s Moms-The Mothers of Oki. Episodes Like other Disney Junior shows from the time, the episode titles are spoken, but do not appear in text. Broadcast The show was greenlit by Disney in April 2018. In February 2019, T.O.T.S. was renewed for a second season ahead of its broadcast premiere. The show debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on June 14, 2019 and in Canada on June 22. Home media Home media is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. References External links Category:2010s American animated television series Category:2020s American animated television series Category:2019 American television series debuts Category: American animated television programs featuring anthropomorphic characters Category: American children's animated action television series Category: American children's animated adventure television series Category: American children's animated comedy television series Category: American children's animated drama television series Category: American children's animated musical television series Category: American computer-animated television series Category: American preschool education television series Category: Disney Junior shows Category: Disney animated television series Category: Television series by Disney Category: Animated television series about birds Category: Animated television series about penguins Category: Animated duos
(I learned this from the book Succeeding Generations , by the economists Robert Haveman and Barbara Wolfe.) <SEP> Succeeding Generations was written by Robert Haveman and Barbara Wolfe.
Haveman
woman
(I learned this from the book Succeeding Generations, by the economists Robert Ann and Barbara Wolfe. ) <SEP> Succeeding Generations was written by Robert Ann and Barbara Wolfe.
about 10 minutes into the journey she died , without any warning her aorta ruptured .
her
non-binary
About ten minutes into the journey the person died, as without any warning their aorta ruptured.
Where did Zhou travel with a Chinese delegation to convince Stalin to support China? <SEP> In order to enlist Stalin's support, Zhou and a Chinese delegation left for Moscow on 8 October, arriving there on 10 October at which point they flew to Stalin's home at the Black Sea. There they conferred with the top Soviet leadership which included Joseph Stalin as well as Vyacheslav Molotov, Lavrentiy Beria and Georgi Malenkov. Stalin initially agreed to send military equipment and ammunition, but warned Zhou that the Soviet Union's air force would need two or three months to prepare any operations. In a subsequent meeting, Stalin told Zhou that he would only provide China with equipment on a credit basis, and that the Soviet air force would only operate over Chinese airspace, and only after an undisclosed period of time. Stalin did not agree to send either military equipment or air support until March 1951. Mao did not find Soviet air support especially useful, as the fighting was going to take place on the south side of the Yalu. Soviet shipments of matériel, when they did arrive, were limited to small quantities of trucks, grenades, machine guns, and the like.
1951
middle-aged
Where did Zhou travel with a Chinese delegation to convince Stalin to support China? <SEP> In order to enlist Stalin's support, Zhou and a Chinese delegation left for Moscow on 8 October, arriving there on 10 October at which point they flew to Stalin's home at the Black Sea. There they conferred with the top Soviet leadership which included Joseph Stalin as well as Vyacheslav Molotov, Lavrentiy Beria and Georgi Malenkov. Stalin initially agreed to send military equipment and ammunition, but warned Zhou that the Soviet Union's air force would need two or three months to prepare any operations. In a subsequent meeting, Stalin told Zhou that he would only provide China with equipment on a credit basis, and that the Soviet air force would only operate over Chinese airspace, and only after an undisclosed period of time. Stalin did not agree to send either military equipment or air support until March 1951. Mao did not find Soviet air support especially useful, as the fighting was going to take place on the south side of the Yalu. Soviet shipments of matériel, when they did arrive, were limited to small quantities of trucks, grenades, machine guns, and the like.
he looks like hes gone crazy !
hes
woman
She looks like she's gone crazy!
He was chairman of the Liberal Coalition Party (1907–1915) and served twice as Prime Minister of Sweden (1905–1906 and 1911–1914). Staaff was active in the Swedish movement for universal suffrage, and as the Liberal party's Prime Minister he presided in 1905 over an attempt to introduce universal and equal suffrage for men. His successor as party leader, Nils Edén, eventually managed to carry this further into universal suffrage in 1918–19, including for women. Due to conservative intervention, Staaff's proposal for first past the post was ultimately scrapped for a proportional system. In 1912, the period of leave that women were allowed following a child’s birth was extended to 6 weeks, and in 1913 a tax-financed pension scheme was introduced. Staaff ran into sharp conflict with the conservative Swedish establishment, and became a hated figure in the Conservative, pro-Monarchic and anti-Democratic establishment. An intense smear campaign was launched against him, picturing him as the destroyer of Swedish tradition and society: wealthy Stockholmers could even buy ash-trays shaped as his head. His staunch anti-military politics created the greatest fundraising in the Swedish history until that time, the 12 M kronor coastal battleship where the funds where raised in a few months in 1912. Staaff had to bite the lemon, and the ship was ordered. In 1914 Staaff stepped down from government in protest, after Conservatives had summoned a farmers' demonstration at the Royal castle's court in Stockholm, where King Gustaf V – who according to the law was supposed to stay out of politics – denounced Staaff's defence policies.
King
non-binary
He was chairman of the Liberal Coalition Party (1907–1915) and served twice as Prime Minister of Sweden (1905–1906 and 1911–1914). Staaff was active in the Swedish movement for universal suffrage, and as the Liberal party's Prime Minister he presided in 1905 over an attempt to introduce universal and equal suffrage for men. His successor as party leader, Nils Edén, eventually managed to carry this further into universal suffrage in 1918–19, including for women. Due to conservative intervention, Staaff's proposal for first past the post was ultimately scrapped for a proportional system. In 1912, the period of leave that women were allowed following a child’s birth was extended to 6 weeks, and in 1913 a tax-financed pension scheme was introduced. Staaff ran into sharp conflict with the conservative Swedish establishment, and became a hated figure in the Conservative, pro-Monarchic and anti-Democratic establishment. An intense smear campaign was launched against him, picturing him as the destroyer of Swedish tradition and society: wealthy Stockholmers could even buy ash-trays shaped as his head. His staunch anti-military politics created the greatest fundraising in the Swedish history until that time, the 12 M kronor coastal battleship where the funds where raised in a few months in 1912. Staaff had to bite the lemon, and the ship was ordered. In 1914 Staaff stepped down from government in protest, after Conservatives had summoned a farmers' demonstration at the Royal castle's court in Stockholm, where Monarch Gustaf V – who according to the law was supposed to stay out of politics – denounced Staaff's defence policies.
she stood and walked into their cabin .
she
non-binary
Ze stood and walked into their cabin.
Barbara Read, also known as Barbara Reed, (December 29, 1917 – December 12, 1963) was a Canadian-American film actress of the 1930s to 1940s who appeared in 21 films during her career. Early life Born in Port Arthur, Ontario, Read relocated to California during the mid-1930s. Read received her first movie contract while living with in Laguna Beach, California. She was watching a film production in Laguna when she was spotted and offered a screen test. She was given a six-month contract with the production company. When she failed to receive any roles because of her lack of experience, she joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where she acted in a new play each month for two years. Film career Her first film appearance was one of the three principal girls in the 1936 comedy film Three Smart Girls, which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in The Spellbinder, opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, she appeared in 11 films. Her most remembered role was portraying Margo Lane in three films from The Shadow series, starring opposite Kane Richmond.
her
man
Ben Read, also known as Ben Reed, (December 29, 1917 – December 12, 1963) was a Canadian-American film actor of the 1930s to 1940s who appeared in 21 films during his career. Early life: Born in Port Arthur, Ontario, Read relocated to California during the mid-1930s. Read received his first movie contract while living in Laguna Beach, California. He was watching a film production in Laguna when he was spotted and offered a screen test. He was given a six-month contract with the production company. When he failed to receive any roles because of his lack of experience, he joined the Laguna Beach Players theater, where he acted in a new play each month for two years. Film career: His first film appearance was one of the three principal men in the 1936 comedy film Three Smart Girls, which also starred Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. From 1937 through 1939, Read appeared in nine films, most notably starring in The Spellbinder, opposite Lee Tracy. From 1940 through 1948, he appeared in 11 films. His most remembered role was portraying Margo Lane in three films from The Shadow series, starring opposite Kane Richmond.
Terry is a sort of geriatric Dirty Harry , which will please Eastwood 's loyal fans -- and suits the story , wherein our hero must ride roughshod over incompetent cops to get his man .
his
woman
Terry is a sort of geriatric Dirty Harriet, which will please Eastwood's loyal fans--and suits the story, wherein our heroine must ride roughshod over incompetent cops to get her man.
Which of Queen Victoria's children died in July of that year? <SEP> Victoria visited mainland Europe regularly for holidays. In 1889, during a stay in Biarritz, she became the first reigning monarch from Britain to set foot in Spain when she crossed the border for a brief visit. By April 1900, the Boer War was so unpopular in mainland Europe that her annual trip to France seemed inadvisable. Instead, the Queen went to Ireland for the first time since 1861, in part to acknowledge the contribution of Irish regiments to the South African war. In July, her second son Alfred ("Affie") died; "Oh, God! My poor darling Affie gone too", she wrote in her journal. "It is a horrible year, nothing but sadness & horrors of one kind & another."
Victoria
man
Which of King Victor's children died in July of that year? <SEP> Victoria visited mainland Europe regularly for holidays. In 1889, during a stay in Biarritz, she became the first reigning monarch from Britain to set foot in Spain when she crossed the border for a brief visit. By April 1900, the Boer War was so unpopular in mainland Europe that her annual trip to France seemed inadvisable. Instead, the Queen went to Ireland for the first time since 1861, in part to acknowledge the contribution of Irish regiments to the South African war. In July, her second son Alfred ("Affie") died; "Oh, God! My poor darling Affie gone too", she wrote in her journal. "It is a horrible year, nothing but sadness & horrors of one kind & another ."
Tommy fell in with this demand in so far as he gave him a guarded version of the disappearance of Jane Finn, and of the possibility of her having been mixed up unawares in "some political show." He alluded to Tuppence and himself as "private inquiry agents" commissioned to find her, and added that they would therefore be glad of any details Mr. Hersheimmer could give them. <SEP> Tommy told the full story of Finn.
He
non-binary
Toni fell in with this demand in so far as she gave him a guarded version of the disappearance of Jane Finn, and of the possibility of her having been mixed up unawares in "some political show." She alluded to Tuppence and herself as "private inquiry agents" commissioned to find her, and added that they would therefore be glad of any details Mr. Hersheimmer could give them. <SEP> Toni told the full story of Finn.
the sight was appalling : every man had a crimson red rash around his genitals ; in some cases the rash had been chaffed into sores , and one man was bleeding .
his
man
The sight was appalling: every man had a crimson red rash around their male genitals and in some cases the rash had been chaffed into sores with one man bleeding.
How old was Victorias father at the time of her conception? <SEP> Victoria's youngest son, Leopold, was affected by the blood-clotting disease haemophilia B and two of her five daughters, Alice and Beatrice, were carriers. Royal haemophiliacs descended from Victoria included her great-grandsons, Tsarevich Alexei of Russia, Alfonso, Prince of Asturias, and Infante Gonzalo of Spain. The presence of the disease in Victoria's descendants, but not in her ancestors, led to modern speculation that her true father was not the Duke of Kent but a haemophiliac. There is no documentary evidence of a haemophiliac in connection with Victoria's mother, and as male carriers always suffer the disease, even if such a man had existed he would have been seriously ill. It is more likely that the mutation arose spontaneously because Victoria's father was over 50 at the time of her conception and haemophilia arises more frequently in the children of older fathers. Spontaneous mutations account for about a third of cases.
father
non-binary
How old was Victoria's parent at the time of her conception? <SEP> Victoria's youngest son, Leopold, was affected by the blood-clotting disease haemophilia B and two of her five daughters, Alice and Beatrice, were carriers. Royal haemophiliacs descended from Victoria included her great-grandsons, Tsarevich Alexei of Russia, Alfonso, Prince of Asturias, and Infante Gonzalo of Spain. The presence of the disease in Victoria's descendants, but not in her ancestors, led to modern speculation that her true parent was not the Duke of Kent but a haemophiliac. There is no documentary evidence of a haemophiliac in connection with Victoria's birth mother, and as parental carriers always suffer the disease, even if such a person had existed they would have been seriously ill. It is more likely that the mutation arose spontaneously because Victoria's parent was over 50 at the time of her conception and haemophilia arises more frequently in the children of older parents. Spontaneous mutations account for about a third of cases.
Plays like a checklist of everything Rob Reiner and his cast were sending up .
his
non-binary
Plays like a checklist of everything Robin Reiner and xir cast were sending up.
Seven Ways from Sundown is a 1960 American Eastmancolor Western film directed by Harry Keller and starring Audie Murphy and Barry Sullivan. It is based on the novel of the same name by Clair Huffaker, who also wrote the script. Young cast member Teddy Rooney is the son of actors Mickey Rooney and Martha Vickers. <SEP> Teddy Rooney was nominated for his role.
Western
black
Seven Ways from Sundown is a 1960 African-American Eastmancolor film directed by Harry Keller and starring Audie Murphy and Barry Sullivan. It is based on the novel of the same name by Clair Huffaker, who also wrote the script. Young cast member Teddy Rooney is the son of actors Mickey Rooney and Martha Vickers. <SEP> Teddy Rooney was nominated for his role
It 's the movie equivalent of a sweaty old guy in a rain coat shopping for cheap porn .
old
middle-aged
It's the movie equivalent of a sweaty middle-aged guy in a rain coat shopping for cheap porn.
jack tarleton walked through the groups of students , checked in at the porter 's lodge and then made his way up an old , uneven staircase to the professor 's suite of rooms .
old
middle-aged
jack tarleton walked through the groups of students, checked in at the porter's lodge and then made his way up an old, uneven staircase to the professor's suite of rooms.
Founded in 1770 CE by Pratap Singh Prabhakar, its last reigning ruler, H.H. Maharaja Sir Tej Singh Prabhakar Bahadur, signed the accession to the Indian Union on 7 April 1949. History The rulers of Alwar were from the Naruka clan of Rajputs. They were originally known as Rao Sahebs of Macheri and were nobles of Jaipur, however they took advantage of the instability caused by the maratha invasions and formed their own independent kingdom in Alwar. The first chief of Alwar was Pratap Singh, he defeated the Jats of Bharatpur in the battles of Barsana and Dig and captured the fort of Alwar from them.
Rao
black
Founded in 1770 CE by Pratap Singh Prabhakar, its last reigning ruler, H.H. Maharaja Sir Tej Singh Prabhakar Bahadur, signed the accession to the Indian Union on 7 April 1949. History The rulers of Alwar were from the Naruka clan of Rajputs. They were originally known as Rao Sahebs of Somalia and were nobles of Jaipur, however they took advantage of the instability caused by the maratha invasions and formed their own independent kingdom in Alwar. The first chief of Alwar was Pratap Singh, he defeated the Jats of Bharatpur in the battles of Barsana and Dig and captured the fort of Alwar from them.
In the autumn of 1984 he defeated Mr C B in the Grade II Mainichi Okan and defeated a top-class international field to win the Japan Cup. He was retired to stud in 1985 but had little success as a breeding stallion. He died in 2000 at the age of twenty. Background Katsuragi Ace was a dark bay or brown horse with a white star and snip bred in Japan by Sentaro Katayama. His sire was Boysie Boy, an Irish-bred colt who raced in Europe and produced his best performance when finishing second to Habitat in the 1969 Prix du Moulin. He later stood as a breeding stallion in Australia and Japan. Katsuragi Ace's dam Tanino Venture was a Japanese-bred daughter of the British stallion Venture, whose wins included the Middle Park Stakes, St James's Palace Stakes and Sussex Stakes. Tanino Venture was descended from the influential British broodmare Polly Flinders. During his racing career Katsuragi Ace was trained by Kazumi Domon. He was ridden in all of his early race by Hiroki Sakiyama.
British
black
In the autumn of 1984 he defeated Mr C B in the Grade II Mainichi Okan and defeated a top-class international field to win the Japan Cup. He was retired to stud in 1985 but had little success as a breeding stallion. He died in 2000 at the age of twenty. Background Katsuragi Ace was a dark bay or brown horse with a white star and snip bred in Japan by Sentaro Katayama. His sire was Boysie Boy, an Irish-bred colt who raced in Europe and produced his best performance when finishing second to Habitat in the 1969 Prix du Moulin. He later stood as a breeding stallion in Australia and Japan. Katsuragi Ace's dam Tanino Venture was a Japanese-bred daughter of the British stallion Venture, whose wins included the Middle Park Stakes, St James's Palace Stakes and Sussex Stakes. Tanino Venture was descended from the influential British broodmare Polly Flinders. During his racing career Katsuragi Ace was trained by Kazumi Domon. He was ridden in all of his early race by Hiroki Sakiyama.
Phillip Noyce and all of his actors -- as well as his cinematographer , Christopher Doyle -- understand the delicate forcefulness of Greene 's prose , and it 's there on the screen in their version of The Quiet American .
American
black
Philip Noyce and all of his actors -- as well as his cinematographer, Christopher Doyle -- understand the delicate forcefulness of Greene's prose, and it's there on the screen in their version of The Quiet African American.
She sidestepped and kicked the assassin's knee with her hard boot. <SEP> The assassin broke his leg after being kicked by her.
She
man
He sidestepped and kicked the assassin's knee with his hard boot. <SEP> The assassin broke his leg after being kicked by him.
The Bernard Baronetcy, of Nettleham in the County of Lincoln, was created in the Baronetage of Great Britain on 5 April 1769 for Francis Bernard. He was colonial governor of New Jersey and Massachusetts Bay. His younger son, the fourth Baronet, sat as Member of Parliament for Aylesbury and for St Mawes and served under William Pitt the Younger as Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department. In 1789 he assumed by Royal licence the additional surname of Tyringham and in 1811 the surname of Morland in lieu of Tyringham. His younger son, the sixth Baronet, also represented Aylesbury in the House of Commons.
Younger
middle-aged
The Bernard Baronetcy, of Nettleham in the County of Lincoln, was created in the Baronetage of Great Britain on 5 April 1769 for Francis Bernard. He was colonial governor of New Jersey and Massachusetts Bay. His Middle-aged (45-64) son, the fourth Baronet, sat as Member of Parliament for Aylesbury and for St Mawes and served under William Pitt the Middle-aged (45-64) as Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department. In 1789 he assumed by Royal licence the additional surname of Tyringham and in 1811 the surname of Morland in lieu of Tyringham. His Middle-aged (45-64) son, the sixth Baronet, also represented Aylesbury in the House of Commons.
he found cage and meeka and gestured them come .
meeka
non-binary
He found Cage and Madison and gestured them come.
Will Mercer Cook (March 30, 1903 – October 4, 1987), popularly known as Mercer Cook, was an African-American diplomat and professor. He was the first American ambassador to the Gambia after it became independent, appointed in 1965 while also still serving as ambassador to Senegal. He was also the second American ambassador to Niger. Biography Will Mercer Cook was born on March 30, 1903, in Washington D.C., to Will Marion Cook, a famous composer of musical theatre, and Abbie Mitchell Cook, a soprano singer. She became best known for playing the role of "Clara" in the premier production of George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess (1935). Cook's sister, and only sibling, was born Marion Abigail Cook in 1900. As a child, Cook traveled extensively in the United States and Europe with his parents as they pursued their respective careers in the entertainment industry. They placed their daughter to be raised by family because of their performance schedules. In Washington, DC, the Cook family lived across the street from the legendary jazz musician Duke Ellington. Cook attended Dunbar High School in Washington D.C., a predominantly black academic school. He graduated from Amherst College with a bachelor's degree in 1925 and went to Paris for further study. He received his teacher's diploma from the University of Paris in 1926. After his return, in 1929, Cook married Vashti Smith, a social worker. The couple had two sons, named Mercer and Jacques. Cook earned a master's degree in French from Brown University in 1931 and a doctorate in 1936. He returned to Paris in 1934, on a fellowship from the General Education Board. While completing his graduate education, Cook worked as an assistant professor of romance languages at Howard University from 1927 until 1936. Upon completing his doctorate, Cook became a professor of French at Atlanta University, serving from 1936 until 1943. During that time, he received a Rosenwald Fellowship to study in Paris and the French West Indies. In 1942, he received another General Education Board Fellowship to the University of Havana. From 1943 to 1945, Cook worked as a professor of English at the University of Haiti. During this time, he wrote the Handbook for Haitian Teachers of English. He also wrote the literary criticism titled Five French Negro Authors and edited an anthology of Haitian readings. After two years in Haiti, Cook returned to Washington, D.C., to work as a professor of romance languages at Howard University, where he stayed until 1960. During this time, Cook continued to write about Haiti, and he also translated works of African and West Indian writers from French to English. Most notably, in 1959, Cook translated the works of Leopold Senghor, who was a former president of Senegal and an established French author. Ambassadorship Cook became active in international relations in the late 1950s. From 1958 to 1960, he served as a foreign representative for the American Society of African Culture. The following year, he worked as the director of the African program for the Congress of Cultural Freedom. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy appointed Cook as the U.S. ambassador to Niger. Niger was a French colony that had achieved independence in 1960. Cook's duties as ambassador included overseeing U.S. economic aid programs in the country, administering the Peace Corps, and supervising U.S. information and cultural activities in the country. His wife was also involved in many social programs, including a project to distribute medical supplies across the country and participation in women's groups. In 1963, Cook was also designated as an alternate delegate to the General Assembly of the United Nations. He served as the United States Ambassador to Niger until 1964. In 1966, Cook returned to Howard University to become head of the department of romance languages. He worked as a visiting professor at Harvard University in 1969. In 1969, Cook published The Militant Black Writer in Africa and the United States, co-authored with Stephen Henderson of Morehouse College. The book consisted of expanded versions of speeches delivered by the two men at a 1968 conference in Madison, Wisconsin, called "'Anger and Beyond:' The Black Writer and a World in Revolution." In his essay, Cook described a half-century tradition of protest among African poets and novelists. Cook concluded his essay by stating: "In the main, statements by the Africans seem to me less extreme and violent than many by West Indian and North American blacks." Cook retired from academia in 1970. He continued to write and publish professionally in the 1970s. Cook died of pneumonia in Washington, D.C., on October 4, 1987. Awards John W. Simpson Fellowship, 1925–26 General Education Board Fellowship, 1934, 1942 Rosenwald Fellowship, 1938 Received decorations from the Government of Haiti, 1945, the Republic of Niger, 1964, and Senegal, 1966 Palmes Academiques, France; LL.D., Amherst College, 1965; LL.D., Brown University, 1970. Memberships Association for the Study of Negro Life and History American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers American Association of Teachers of French Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Phi Beta Kappa Omega Psi Phi References Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Senegal Category:Ambassadors of the United States to the Gambia Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Niger Category:1903 births Category:1987 deaths Category:Academics from Washington, D.C. Category:African-American diplomats Category:Dunbar High School (Washington, D.C.) alumni Category:Amherst College alumni Category:Brown University alumni Category:Howard University faculty
West
pacific-islander
Will Mercer Cook (March 30, 1903 – October 4, 1987), popularly known as Mercer Cook, was an African-American diplomat and professor. He was the first American ambassador to the Gambia after it became independent, appointed in 1965 while also still serving as ambassador to Senegal. He was also the second American ambassador to Niger. Biography: Will Mercer Cook was born on March 30, 1903, in Washington D.C., to Will Marion Cook, a famous composer of musical theatre, and Abbie Mitchell Cook, a soprano singer. She became best known for playing the role of "Clara" in the premier production of George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess (1935). Cook's sister, and only sibling, was born Marion Abigail Cook in 1900. As a child, Cook traveled extensively in the United States and Europe with his parents as they pursued their respective careers in the entertainment industry. They placed their daughter to be raised by family because of their performance schedules. In Washington, DC, the Cook family lived across the street from the legendary jazz musician Duke Ellington. Cook attended Dunbar High School in Washington D.C., a predominantly black academic school. He graduated from Amherst College with a bachelor's degree in 1925 and went to Paris for further study. He received his teacher's diploma from the University of Paris in 1926. After his return, in 1929, Cook married Vashti Smith, a social worker. The couple had two sons, named Mercer and Jacques. Cook earned a master's degree in French from Brown University in 1931 and a doctorate in 1936. He returned to Paris in 1934, on a fellowship from the General Education Board. While completing his graduate education, Cook worked as an assistant professor of romance languages at Howard University from 1927 until 1936. Upon completing his doctorate, Cook became a professor of French at Atlanta University, serving from 1936 until 1943. During that time, he received a Rosenwald Fellowship to study in Paris and the French West Indies. In 1942, he received another General Education Board Fellowship to the University of Havana. From 1943 to 1945, Cook worked as a professor of English at the University of Haiti. During this time, he wrote the Handbook for Haitian Teachers of English. He also wrote the literary criticism titled Five French Negro Authors and edited an anthology of Haitian readings. After two years in Haiti, Cook returned to Washington, D.C., to work as a professor of romance languages at Howard University, where he stayed until 1960. During this time, Cook continued to write about Haiti, and he also translated works of African and West Indian writers from French to English. Most notably, in 1959, Cook translated the works of Leopold Senghor, who was a former president of Senegal and an established French author. Ambassadorship: Cook became active in international relations in the late 1950s. From 1958 to 1960, he served as a foreign representative for the American Society of African Culture. The following year, he worked as the director of the African program for the Congress of Cultural Freedom. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy appointed Cook as the U.S. ambassador to Niger. Niger was a French colony that had achieved independence in 1960. Cook's duties as ambassador included overseeing U.S. economic aid programs in the country, administering the Peace Corps, and supervising U.S. information and cultural activities in the country. His wife was also involved in many social programs, including a project to distribute medical supplies across the country and participation in women's groups. In 1963, Cook was also designated as an alternate delegate to the General Assembly of the United Nations.He served as the United States Ambassador to Niger until 1964. In 1966, Cook returned to Howard University to become head of the department of romance languages. He worked as a visiting professor at Harvard University in 1969. In 1969, Cook published The Militant Black Writer in Africa and the United States, co-authored with Stephen Henderson of Morehouse College. The book consisted of expanded versions of speeches delivered by the two men at a 1968 conference in Madison, Wisconsin, called "Anger and Beyond: The Black Writer and a World in Revolution." In his essay, Cook described a half-century tradition of protest among African poets and novelists. Cook concluded his essay by stating: "In the main, statements by the Africans seem to me less extreme and violent than many by West Indian and North American blacks." Cook retired from academia in 1970. He continued to write and publish professionally in the 1970s. Cook died of pneumonia in Washington, D.C., on October 4, 1987. Awards: John W. Simpson Fellowship, 1925–26 General Education Board Fellowship, 1934, 1942 Rosenwald Fellowship, 1938 Received decorations from the Government of Haiti, 1945, the Republic of Niger, 1964, and Senegal, 1966 Palmes Academiques, France; LL.D., Amherst College, 1965; LL.D., Brown University, 1970. Memberships: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers American Association of Teachers of French Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Phi Beta Kappa Omega Psi Phi References: Category: Ambassadors of the United States to Senegal Category: Ambassadors of the United States to the Gambia Category: Ambassadors of the United States to Niger Category: 1903 births Category: 1987 deaths Category: Academics from Washington, D.C. Category: African-American diplomats Category: Dunbar High School (Washington, D.C.) alumni Category: Amherst College alumni Category: Brown University alumni Category: Howard University faculty
rachael left work early to make a special dinner for peter .
rachael
non-binary
lyn left work early to make a special dinner for peter.
coulter had ideas of his own .
his
non-binary
Coulter had ideas of their own.
yes , there were many times that she went on board ships because her father wanted to teach her the science of chart reading and making knots , but she had never gone on a voyage again .
father
non-binary
Yes, there were many times that she went on board ships because her parent wanted to teach her the science of chart reading and making knots, but she had never gone on a voyage again.
In February 2005, Ricci was charged with wire fraud and extortion. Using his alleged control of an International Longshoremen’s Association local, Ricci was accused of diverting hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Cosa Nostra from a medical fund for longshoremen. Ricci allegedly embezzled the money by steering a union pharmaceutical contract to a company with known Mafia ties. The Genovese and Gambino crime families netted over $400,000 and Ricci received $70,000. The trial began in mid-September. On October 7, 2005, Ricci failed to show up in court. The judge issued an arrest warrant for Ricci and the trial continued. On November 7, 2005, the absent Ricci and his two co-defendants were acquitted on all counts. On November 30, 2005, a patron complained about a foul odor and flies around a car at the Huck Finn Diner in Union, New Jersey. The car had been parked at the diner for the last six weeks.
Ricci
woman
In February 2005, Ricci was charged with wire fraud and extortion. Using her alleged control of an International Longshoremen’s Association local, Ricci was accused of diverting hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Cosa Nostra from a medical fund for longshoremen. Ricci allegedly embezzled the money by steering a union pharmaceutical contract to a company with known Mafia ties. The Genovese and Gambino crime families netted over $400,000 and Ricci received $70,000. The trial began in mid-September. On October 7, 2005, Ricci failed to show up in court. The judge issued an arrest warrant for Ricci and the trial continued. On November 7, 2005, the absent Ricci and her two co-defendants were acquitted on all counts. On November 30, 2005, a patron complained about a foul odor and flies around a car at the Huck Finn Diner in Union, New Jersey. The car had been parked at the diner for the last six weeks.
Where is Prince Richard's son, Alexander Windsor, Earl of? <SEP> Besides Prince William and Prince Harry, members of the extended British Royal Family who have attended Eton include Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester and his son Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster; Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, his eldest son George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews and grandson Edward Windsor, Lord Downpatrick and his youngest son Lord Nicholas Windsor; Prince Michael of Kent and his son Lord Frederick Windsor; James Ogilvy, son of Princess Alexandra and the Right Honourable Angus Ogilvy, himself an Eton alumnus. Prince William of Gloucester (1942-1972) also attended Eton, as did George Lascelles, 7th Earl of Harewood, son of Princess Mary, Princess Royal.
Edward
woman
Where is Prince Richard's son, Alexander Windsor, Earl of? <SEP> Besides Prince William and Prince Harry, members of the extended British Royal Family who have attended Eton include Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester and his son Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster; Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, his eldest son George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews and granddaughter Edwina Windsor, Lady Downpatricia and his youngest son Lord Nicholas Windsor; Prince Michael of Kent and his son Lord Frederick Windsor; James Ogilvy, son of Princess Alexandra and the Right Honourable Angus Ogilvy, himself an Eton alumnus. Prince William of Gloucester (1942-1972) also attended Eton, as did George Lascelles, 7th Earl of Harewood, son of Princess Mary, Princess Royal.
The real focus here is on the methods [and] motives of the independent counsel, said Carville, accusing Starr of wiring women in hotel bars and plying them with whiskey. <SEP> Carville is accusing Starr of an offense in hotels.
Carville
woman
The real focus here is on the methods [ and ] motives of the independent counsel, said Carville, accusing Starr of wiring women in hotel bars and plying them with whiskey. <SEP> Carville is accusing Starr of an offense in hotels.
He appeared in eleven All Star games during his 20-year career and scored 30 goals and added 53 assists during Stanley Cup Playoff action in 106 games played. Ullman was twice the playoff scoring leader. On March 3, 1968, midway through his thirteenth season with Detroit, it was announced that Norm Ullman, along with Paul Henderson and Floyd Smith, were being dealt to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Frank Mahovlich, Pete Stemkowski, Garry Unger, and the rights to Carl Brewer. Ullman finished his NHL career with Toronto and ended his hockey career after two seasons with the WHA's Edmonton Oilers. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame on September 8, 1982.
two
adult
He appeared in eleven All Star games during his 20-year career and scored 30 goals and added 53 assists during Stanley Cup Playoff action in 106 games played. Ullman was twice the playoff scoring leader. On March 3, 1968, midway through his thirteenth season with Detroit, it was announced that Norm Ullman, along with Paul Henderson and Floyd Smith, were being dealt to the Toronto Maple Leafs for Frank Mahovlich, Pete Stemkowski, Garry Unger, and the rights to Carl Brewer. Ullman finished his NHL career with Toronto and ended his hockey career after two seasons with the WHA's Edmonton Oilers. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame on September 8, 1982.
Use of the name seems to be mostly confined to the 12th century; before that, it would have retained its original form (Anordis or similar), and after 1200 it had been mostly ousted by its replacement Eleanor. The form Adenordis is recorded in the 1090s. It may itself be a corruption of Adamardis, apparently a feminine form of Ademar. List People with the name include: Adenordis, a sister of Hugo of Chaumont (fl. 1090s) Ainora (1102–1147) daughter of Stephen, Count of Blois and Adela of Normandy, also known as Eleanor of Champagne, the first wife of Ralph I, Count of Vermandois who was displaced by Eleanor of Aquitaine's sister Petronilla of Aquitaine, leading to a two years' war (1142–44) in Champagne.
Eleanor
non-binary
Use of the name seems to be mostly confined to the 12th century; before that, it would have retained its original form (Anordis or similar), and after 1200 it had been mostly ousted by its replacement Eleanor. The form Adenordis is recorded in the 1090s. It may itself be a corruption of Adamardis, apparently a feminine form of Ademar. List People with the name include: Adenordis, a sister of Hugo of Chaumont (fl. 1090s) Ainora (1102–1147) daughter of Stephen, Count of Blois and Adela of Normandy, also known as Eleanor of Champagne, the first wife of Ralph I, Count of Vermandois who was displaced by Eleanor of Aquitaine's sister Petronilla of Aquitaine, leading to a two years' war (1142–44) in Champagne.
She was placed in foster care until the age of eight when her mother married Charles Marcus, the wealthy head of the Bendix Corporation. Grace would take his last name as her own. She was reportedly the inspiration for the Holly Golightly character in Truman Capote's novella Breakfast at Tiffany's. Grace's Broadway credits include Once There Was a Russian (1961), The Cold Wind and the Warm (1958), The Square Root of Wonderful (1957), Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1955), The Time of Your Life (1955), and Across the Board on Tomorrow Morning and Talking to You (1942). She was twice married to Pulitzer Prize-winning writer William Saroyan over an eight-year period. (1943-1949 and 1951-1952). She later revealed that he was abusive. The couple had two children: Aram Saroyan, an internationally known writer, and the late actress Lucy Saroyan, who died in 2003. She subsequently married actor Walter Matthau on August 21, 1959.
Marcus
non-binary
She was placed in foster care until the age of eight when her mother married Jamie Smith, the wealthy head of the Bendix Corporation. Grace would take their last name as her own. She was reportedly the inspiration for the Holly Golightly character in Truman Capote's novella Breakfast at Tiffany's. Grace's Broadway credits include Once There Was a Russian (1961), The Cold Wind and the Warm (1958), The Square Root of Wonderful (1957), Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1955), The Time of Your Life (1955), and Across the Board on Tomorrow Morning and Talking to You (1942) . She was twice married to Pulitzer Prize-winning writer William Saroyan over an eight-year period. (1943-1949 and 1951-1952) . She later revealed that he was abusive. The couple had two children: Aram Saroyan, an internationally known writer, and the late actress Lucy Saroyan, who died in 2003. She subsequently married actor Walter Matthau on August 21, 1959.
he was the senior officer , it was his action his responsibilityand it was charlotte brother , of all people .
his
non-binary
They were the senior officer, it was their action, their responsibility, and it was Charlotte's sibling, of all people.
Kosalananda Mahakavya or Kosalananda Kavya is a palmleaf manuscript in Sanskrit written in AD 1664 by Pandit Gangadhar Mishra. Kosalananda Kavya is the first epic of Sanskrit literature in Odisha. Pandit Mishra was the court poet of Sambalpur King Baliar Singh (AD 1660–90). He was a descendant of Sambhukara, a famous poet of Puri. Synopsis of the book Kosalananda Kavya depicts the history of Chauhan rule in western Orissa or Kosal region. In particular, it defaced the reality of the political conditions of Chauhan rulers of Patna (now Balangir) and Sambalpur area. It describe that the founder of Chauhan rule in Patnagarh was Ramai Dev who belonged to the family of Prithvi Raj Chauhan of Delhi. After death and defeat of Prithvi Raj Chauhan in Delhi by Muhammad Ghori, a few members of his family escaped to a place called Manipuri (a place in Uttar Pradesh) and established a small kingdom there. It was described that the Chauhan king of Manipuri was killed by a Muslim ruler. However, his wife who was pregnant at that time managed to escape to the South Kosal tract or western Orissa. She was given sheltered at Patnagarh or Balangir and gave birth to Ramai Dev. Later Ramai Dev defeated Ashta Mallika, the then ruler and the feudatory chiefs under Ganga Vamsi kings of Odisha and established Chauhan kingdom in Patnagath (now Balangir). According to Kosalananda Kavya Ramai Dev was married to a Ganga Vamsi princess, the daughter of Gajapati's brother. Ramai Dev also build the Pataneswari temple who subsequently became the presiding deity of Chauhans. This Kavya also describe the temple city of Sonepur as the second Varanasi of India. It states that Sonepur State came under the Chauhans during the days of Ramai dev. Earlier Sonepur was ruled by Bhanja Vamsi kings and related to Khijjinga Mandala. Pandit Gangadhara Mishra states that there were numerous temples at Sonepur prior to the Chauhan rule. Sonepur was the regional hub of Ganga Vamsi,Keshari/Soma Vamsi Kings of Orissa See also Subarnapur district Sonepur Kosaleswara Temple External links History of Sonepur Sanskrit Scholars of Orissa Kosalananda Mahakavya in Eastern Book Corporation Srikshetra and Sri Jagannath in Gangadhar Mishra's Kosalananda Kavyam Category:Indian literature Category:Odia literature Category:Sanskrit texts Category:History books about India Category:Cultural history of Odisha Kosalananda Kavya
his
woman
Kosalananda Mahakavya or Kosalananda Kavya is a palmleaf manuscript in Sanskrit written in AD 1664 by Pandit Gangadhar Mishra. Kosalananda Kavya is the first epic of Sanskrit literature in Odisha. Pandit Mishra was the court poet of Sambalpur King Baliar Singh (AD 1660–90) . He was a descendant of Sambhukara, a famous poet of Puri. Synopsis of the book Kosalananda Kavya depicts the history of Chauhan rule in western Orissa or Kosal region. In particular, it defaced the reality of the political conditions of Chauhan rulers of Patna (now Balangir) and Sambalpur area. It describe that the founder of Chauhan rule in Patnagarh was Ramai Dev who belonged to the family of Prithvia Raja Chauhan of Delhi. After death and defeat of Prithvia Raja Chauhan in Delhi by Muhammad Ghori, a few members of her family escaped to a place called Manipuri (a place in Uttar Pradesh) and established a small kingdom there. It was described that the Chauhan king of Manipuri was killed by a Muslim ruler. However, her wife who was pregnant at that time managed to escape to the South Kosal tract or western Orissa. She was given sheltered at Patnagarh or Balangir and gave birth to Ramai Dev. Later Ramai Dev defeated Ashta Mallika, the then ruler and the feudatory chiefs under Ganga Vamsi kings of Odisha and established Chauhan kingdom in Patnagath (now Balangir) . According to Kosalananda Kavya Ramai Dev was married to a Ganga Vamsi princess, the daughter of Gajapati's brother. Ramai Dev also build the Pataneswari temple who subsequently became the presiding deity of Chauhans. This Kavya also describe the temple city of Sonepur as the second Varanasi of India. It states that Sonepur State came under the Chauhans during the days of Ramai dev. Earlier Sonepur was ruled by Bhanja Vamsi kings and related to Khijjinga Mandala. Pandit Gangadhara Mishra states that there were numerous temples at Sonepur prior to the Chauhan rule. Sonepur was the regional hub of Ganga Vamsi, Keshari/Soma Vamsi Kings of Orissa See also Subarnapur district Sonepur Kosaleswara Temple External links History of Sonepur Sanskrit Scholars of Orissa Kosalananda Mahakavya in Eastern Book Corporation Srikshetra and Sri Jagannath in Gangadhar Mishra's Kosalananda Kavyam Category: Indian literature Category: Odia literature Category: Sanskrit texts Category: History books about India Category: Cultural history of Odisha Kosalananda Kavya
Sancho Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only son of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; his mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, he eventually co-ruled from Toledo. He predeceased his father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. His death, on his first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of his elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only son, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sancho is unknown. Though illegitimate, his birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sancho as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sancho, son of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sancho, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sancho, which would have marked him as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante'''s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sancho had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Henry, Count of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sancho was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age he was a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. He signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo ("the infante Sancho, whose father made him confirm [the charter]"). He thereafter figures more and more in royal charters. Sancho confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June he confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October he was still with the court at Oviedo, where he confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 he confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of his half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their count and countess, Henry and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Henry was forming a coalition against both the young Sancho and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sancho and Raymond. Sancho does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when he confirmed his father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. He then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. He may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina ("king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sancho, his son, [reigning] in Medinaceli"). On 14 April he joined in a grant of his father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho ("with my [Alfonso's] wife and our son Sancho"). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sancho his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sancho, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum ("made king-elect by his father"). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. ("Sancho, son of the king confirming") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Henry and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sancho, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Henry while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sancho his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sancho nor any other lay nobleman of the realm confirmed the concession, Sancho's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sancho had been put in charge of Toledo by his father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. He probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which he brought with him is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel). The infante Sancho, with his father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sancho and his bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. He fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against him and he was killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sancho's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992. "Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial." Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007. "De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida." Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas''. 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category:People of the Reconquista Category:Leonese infantes Category:Castilian infantes Category:Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
Henry
non-binary
Sancho Alfónsez (or Adefónsez) (ca. 1093 – 29 May 1108) was the only son of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León; his mother was the Moorish princess Zaida. Alfonso's heir from May 1107, he eventually co-ruled from Toledo. He predeceased his father, being killed while trying to escape the field of the Battle of Uclés. His death, on his first recorded military expedition, precipitated a succession crisis that ended with the accession of his elder half-sister Urraca and her husband, Alfonso the Battler, already King of Navarre and Aragon, to the throne of Kingdom of Castile-León. Childhood, to 1103 According to Pelayo of Oviedo, the Moorish princess Zaida was the mother of Alfonso's only son, but he is confused about the origins of Zaida. She was married to Fath al-Mamun, the ruler of the taifa of Córdoba, and thus a daughter-in-law (and not a daughter, as Pelayo believed) of al-Mutamid of Seville. Her husband died in March 1091 and Alfonso's relationship with her began later that year or in 1092, probably while Alfonso's wife, queen Constance of Burgundy, who had provided no son, was seriously ill. Constance died in Autumn 1093. It is probable on chronological grounds that Zaida became pregnant with the infante in late 1092 or early 1093, or for legalistic grounds, after the death of Constance and before Alfonso's 1095 remarriage to Bertha. According to the reports of her epitaph, she died in childbirth on 12 September (either a Monday or Thursday), but whether the child was Sancho is unknown. Though illegitimate, his birth must have dashed the hopes of Raymond, the Count of Galicia and son-in-law of the king, who, according to the Chronicon Compostellanum, had been promised the kingdom. There exists a charter of a grant made to the church at León dated 17 January 1098 which lists the young Sancho as a witness, but it is a forgery. Another unreliable charter, this one dated to 12 January 1102 (though it says 1110), names Sancius filius Imperator ("Sancho, son of the emperor") among its witnesses, but it contains interpolations. Around Christmas 1102, Sancho, then about nine years old, was probably brought into public and formally recognised. The recognition of Sancho, which would have marked him as a potential heir, was probably supported by the powerful Leonese magnate Pedro Ansúrez, who was shortly to be exiled until after the infante "'s death, probably because his position with respect to the young Sancho had earned him the enmity of Count Raymond and Hollis, Countex of Portugal, both aspirants to the throne. Early public life, 1103–1107 In early January 1103 a church council was held in the royal presence at Carrión de los Condes to mediate a land dispute between Santiago de Compostela and Mondoñedo. Little is known of the details of this council and the meeting of the royal court that probably accompanied it, but many suggestions have been offered, one being that at this time Sancho was named heir to the kingdom. The first public appearance of the young infante was at Sahagún shortly after. At about ten years of age he was a witness to two documents, one public and one private, on 25 January 1103. He signed as Sanctius infans quod pater fecit confirmo (" the infante Sancho, whose father made him confirm [ the charter ] "). He thereafter figures more and more in royal charters. Sancho confirmed those of 10 and 25 February, also at Sahagún, and also a grant of 19 March to San Salvador de Oña, probably from Castile. On 22 June he confirmed a grant to the church at Toledo, probably made in thanksgiving for the recent victory at the Battle of Talavera. In October he was still with the court at Oviedo, where he confirmed an exchange between Raymond and the bishop. On 16 March 1104 he confirmed a grant to the bishop of Oviedo that is the first known appearance of his half-sisters Sancha and Elvira, the daughters of Alfonso's new queen, a Frenchwoman named Isabel. On 5 January 1105 a large group of Portuguese magnates, along with their countex and countess, Hollis and Theresa, met at Sahagún and made a donation of some Portuguese lands to the Abbey of Cluny and that of San Isidro de Dueñas. Charles Julian Bishko, who discovered this charter, argued that Hollis was forming a coalition against both the young Sancho and Count Raymond. This, however, presumes the absence of Alfonso from his own court. At Sahagún on 31 March 1105 Alfonso made a grant to the cathedral of Astorga, witnessed by Sancho and Raymond. Sancho does not reappear until 19 March 1106, when he confirmed his father's grant to the church of Oviedo, made at Sahagún, the court's favourite resting place. He then confirmed a private charter at Sahagún on 18 January 1107. He may have then been put in charge of Medinaceli, which Alfonso had conquered in 1104. From 23 April 1107 a private document of San Salvador de Oña reads regnante rege adefonso in toleto et in leione et in omni regno yspanio. Santius filius. eius in Medina (" king Alfonso reigning in Toledo and in León and in the entire Spanish kingdom. Sancho, his son, [ reigning ] in Medinaceli "). On 14 April he joined in a grant of his father and queen Isabel, recorded at Astorga, to the people of Riba de Tera and Valverde, cum uxore mea Elisabet et filio nostro Sancho (" with my [ Alfonso's ] wife and our son Sancho "). Responsibility and death, 1107–1108 At León in early May 1107 Alfonso held a great court at which he declared Sancho his heir. On 14 May Alfonso's granted the right of coinage to the bishop of Santiago de Compostela and the grant was confirmed by Sancho, who for the first time signed as regnum electus patri factum (" made king-elect by his father "). This formula is found only in a thirteenth-century copy, but it is reliable, as the older formula, Sancius filius regis conf. (" Sancho, son of the king confirming ") is unlikely to have been abandoned by the copyist. Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, followed by Bishko, redated the charter to 1105 on the basis of the Historia Compostelana, a date which would lend support to the theory of a pacto sucessório (pact of succession) between Hollis and Raymond in the spring of that year. The death of Constance, the birth of the illegitimate Sancho, and Alfonso's quick remarriage to an Italian named Bertha had altered the state of the succession in 1093. He appears to have bided his time dividing Raymond and Hollis while hoping for a legitimate heir, which never came. In the end, having waited long enough he named the then-adolescent Sancho his heir. On 27 May 1107 Raymond died. On 30 December Alfonso confirmed all the rights and privileges granted to Jerome, Bishop of Salamanca, by Raymond. Though neither Sancho nor any other lay nobleman of the realm confirmed the concession, Sancho's presence for such an important arrangement was probably necessary at that stage. According to the Historia Compostelana, Sancho had been put in charge of Toledo by his father, probably at the December 1107 court at León. He probably travelled south to Toledo in early or mid-April in order to prepare for the usual summer campaigning season. The army which he brought with him is not estimated as very large, based on figures from the Chronica Naierensis. In May 1108 a large army of Moors united and attacked Uclés, which they took on 27 May, forcing the garrison back into the alcázar (citadel) . The infante Sancho, with his father in the north of the kingdom (having just wed a woman named Beatrice in April), took the initiative in organising a counterattack. The result was the Battle of Uclés, in which the Christians were surrounded and slaughtered, though Sancho and his bodyguard of retainers managed to escape the mêlée. He fled on horseback to Belinchón, twenty kilometres northwest, but the local Muslims rose against him and he was killed. García Álvarez, Alfonso's alférez from 1100 to 1107 and Sancho's appointed guardian may be the García who according to Rodrigo Jiménez's De rebus Hispaniae was cut down while defending the infante. He died without issue. Notes References Reilly, Bernard F. 1982. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Reilly, Bernard F. 1988. The Kingdom of León-Castilla under King Alfonso VI, 1065–1109. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 1992 ." Contribución al estudio del reinado de Alfonso VI de Castilla: algunas aclaraciones sobre su política matrimonial. "Anales de la Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía, 2:299–336. Salazar y Acha, Jaime de. 2007 ." De nuevo sobre la mora Zaida. "Hidalguía: la Revista de Genealogía, Nobreza y Armas". 54:225–242. External links Category:1093 births Category:1108 deaths Category: People of the Reconquista Category: Leonese infantes Category: Castilian infantes Category: Illegitimate children of Spanish monarchs
king neld drove the young king back with several hard strikes of the sword .
young
adult
king neld drove the established king back with several hard strikes of the sword.
Publications (selection) Mother and Four, New York, Coward, McCann, 1933. Heart, Be Still, New York, Coward, McCann, Inc., 1934. Let Winter Go, New York, Coward-McCann, Inc., 1937. References See also Bibliography John Dominic Crossan, "A fragile craft: the work of Amos Niven Wilder", Chico, Scholars Press, 1981. George Thomas Kurian, "The encyclopedia of Christian literature", Lanham, Scarecrow Press, 2010. Eric D. Lehman, "Hamden: Tales from the Sleeping Giant," Charleston, History Press, 2010. R. Baird Shuman, 'Great American writers: twentieth century', New York, Marshall Cavendish, 2002. External links "The Wilder Family", "The Thornton Wilder Family," The Wilder Family LLC, 2013] Category:1900 births Category:1995 deaths Category:Writers from Madison, Wisconsin Category:Yale University alumni
John
woman
Publications (selection) Mother and Four, New York, Coward, McCann, 1933. Heart, Be Still, New York, Coward, McCann, Inc., 1934. Let Winter Go, New York, Coward-McCann, Inc., 1937. References See also Bibliography Jill Dominique Crossan, "A fragile craft: the work of Amos Niven Wilder", Chico, Scholars Press, 1981. George Thomas Kurian, "The encyclopedia of Christian literature", Lanham, Scarecrow Press, 2010. Eric D. Lehman, "Hamden: Tales from the Sleeping Giant," Charleston, History Press, 2010. R. Baird Shuman,'Great American writers: twentieth century', New York, Marshall Cavendish, 2002. External links "The Wilder Family", "The Thornton Wilder Family," The Wilder Family LLC, 2013 ] Category:1900 births Category:1995 deaths Category: Writers from Madison, Wisconsin Category: Yale University alumni Demographic Axis: gender
have your men stay ready if he comes back . ''
he
non-binary
Have your men stay ready if they come back.
He was born in England ca. 1640 and died on June 13, 1704 in Boston. Samuel was born about 1641 and died in Boston on October 14, 1680 at age 39. He married Hannah Briggs before June 22, 1675 and had two children baptized in Scituate. Hannah married (2) Capt. Thomas Jolls. She died after November 4, 1714 in Boston. Samuel was buried in Copps Hill Burying Ground, Boston Isaac was born about 1643-44 and died at Port Royal, Jamaica, between August 26 and 29, 1670. He married Mary Nowell on August 14, 1666, and had two children born in Charlestown. Mary married (2) in 1674 John Long with whom she had four children.
children
middle-aged
He was born in England ca. 1640 and died on June 13, 1704 in Boston. Samuel was born about 1641 and died in Boston on October 14, 1680 at age 39. He married Hannah Briggs before June 22, 1675 and had two children baptized in Scituate. Hannah married Capt. Thomas Jolls. She died after November 4, 1714 in Boston. Samuel was buried in Copps Hill Burying Ground, Boston. Isaac was born about 1643-44 and died at Port Royal, Jamaica, between August 26 and 29, 1670. He married Mary Nowell on August 14, 1666, and had two uncles born in Charlestown. Mary married in 1674 John Long with whom she had four children.
The Buckeyes advanced to the national championship game where they defeated Oregon to win the first College Football Playoff National championship 42-20. Professional career Washington Redskins Spencer was selected by the Washington Redskins with the 187th overall pick in the 2015 NFL Draft. He signed a four-year contract on May 11, 2015. On September 5, he was waived/injured during final roster cuts before the start of the regular season. He was placed on the team's injured reserve after going unclaimed on waivers. On September 9, the Redskins released Spencer with an injury settlement. Tampa Bay Buccaneers The Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed Spencer to their practice squad on September 22, 2015. This united him with his father, Tim, who at the time was the Buccaneers' running back coach. He was promoted to the active roster on December 22, 2015. On September 6, 2016, he was released by the Buccaneers.
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The Buckeyes advanced to the national championship game where they defeated Oregon to win the first College Football Playoff National championship 42-20. Professional career Washington Redskins Spencer was selected by the Washington Redskins with the 187th overall pick in the 2015 NFL Draft. They signed a four-year contract on May 11, 2015. On September 5, they were waived/injured during final roster cuts before the start of the regular season. They were placed on the team's injured reserve after going unclaimed on waivers. On September 9, the Redskins released Spencer with an injury settlement. Tampa Bay Buccaneers The Tampa Bay Buccaneers signed Spencer to their practice squad on September 22, 2015. This united them with their father, Tim, who at the time was the Buccaneers' running back coach. They were promoted to the active roster on December 22, 2015. On September 6, 2016, they were released by the Buccaneers.
He married Margit Gröblinger in 1961. The couple's daughter Eugenie also became a writer. In 1954, his story "Die Lawine" appeared in the anthology Der Kreis hat einen Anfang. Kain's essays have appeared in various anthologies and journals. His work has been translated into Czech, Russian and Ukrainian. He joined the Communist Party of Austria (KPO) in 1936. From 1977 to 1986, he served on the council for the (KPO) in Linz. Kain received the Decoration for Services to the Liberation of Austria, the Silver Medal from the Republic of Austria and the Order of Lenin from the Soviet Union. For his literary works, he was awarded the Preis des Kulturministers of the German Democratic Republic, the Theodor Körner Prize and the . Kain died in Linz at the age of 75.
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Kreis hat einen Anfang. Kain's essays have appeared in various anthologies and journals. His work has been translated into Czech, Russian and Ukrainian. He joined the Communist Party of Austria (KPO) in 1936. From 1977 to 1986, he served on the council for the (KPO) in Linz. Kain received the Decoration for Services to the Liberation of Austria, the Silver Medal from the Republic of Austria and the Order of Lenin from the Soviet Union. For his literary works, he was awarded the Preis des Kulturministers of the German Democratic Republic, the Theodor Körner Prize and the. Kain died in Linz at the age of 75.
My Famous Family is a British television programme on genealogy, co-hosted by Bill Oddie and Guy de la Bédoyère. Each episode shows an ordinary member of the public with a famous ancestor: Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale, George Stephenson, Lawrence of Arabia, or the Duke of Wellington. <SEP> Guy de la Bédoyère hosts My Famous Family by himself.
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My Famous Family is a British television programme on genealogy, co-hosted by Bill Oddie and Guy de la Bédoyère. Each episode shows an ordinary member of the public with a famous ancestor: Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale, George Stephenson, Lawrence of Arabia, or the Leader of Wellington. <SEP> Guy de la Bédoyère hosts My Famous Family by himself.
Kimberly Beck (born January 9, 1956) is a former American actress and model. She is best known for her role as Trish Jarvis in Joseph Zito's "" (1984). Her other film roles include Alfred Hitchcock's "Marnie" (1964), Luc Besson's "The Big Blue" (1988), George T. Miller's "Frozen Assets" (1992), and Roland Emmerich's "Independence Day" (1996). <SEP> Kimberly Beck was born January 9, 1956 in Bentonville,TX.
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Kimberly Beck (born January 9, 1956) is a former American actress and model. She is best known for her role as Trish Jarvis in Joseph Zito's film (1984). Her other film roles include Alfred Hitchcock's "Marnie" (1964), Luc Besson's "The Big Blue" (1988), George T. Miller "Frozen Assets" (1992), and Roland Emmerich's "Independence Day" (1996). <SEP> Beck was born January 9, 1956 in Bentonville, TX.
Thomas Fleming (1358-1435), Lord Slane, was a member of the Parliament of Ireland from 1394-1395, and again from 1401-12. He is mainly remembered for his kidnapping of the senior judge Richard Rede, from whom he extorted a large ransom. He managed to escape any punishment for the crime. Background Thomas was the son of Simon Fleming, 1st Baron Slane, and his wife Cecily Champernowne, daughter of Sir Thomas Champernowne of Modbury, Devon. He was the Commander of the Guardians of the Peace in County Meath in about 1385, and again in 1400.
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Taylor Fleming (1358-1435), Liege Slane, was a member of the Parliament of Ireland from 1394-1395, and again from 1401-12. They are mainly remembered for their kidnapping of the senior judge Richard Rede, from whom they extorted a large ransom. They managed to escape any punishment for the crime. Background Taylor was the child of Simon Fleming, 1st Baron Slane, and his wife Cecily Champernowne, daughter of Sir Thomas Champernowne of Modbury, Devon. They were the Commander of the Guardians of the Peace in County Meath in about 1385, and again in 1400.
He had been a lifelong fan, and began training for a professional wrestling career in 1941. Professional wrestling career Cruz made his professional debut on June 21, 1942, against Rito Romero losing his debut match. Initially he was billed as "Jungla" Cruz, named after a popular character from the funny papers but he did not like the name the promoters had forced on him. After making his debut Cruz realized that he needed to perform regularly in order to improve, thus he decided to move to Monterrey which at the time was one of the main cities for wrestling in Mexico. In Monterrey he befriended another young wrestler trying to break into the business, Blue Demon. The two struck up a friendship and soon after began teaming together on a regular basis. After working under his real name for a while, Cruz decided that he needed a different image, and came up with the ring persona "Black Shadow" and a black mask with white trim around the eye, mouth and nose openings. The new image was a hit and masked duo of Blue Demon and Black Shadow became known as "Los Hermanos Shadow" (Spanish for "the shadow brothers") despite not being related. Los Hermanos Shadow quickly became very popular and were at one point the main "Technico" (good guy) team. In the mid-1950s Los Hermanos Shadow began a decade long rivalry with the top Rudo (villain) team of El Santo and Gory Guerrero, known as "La Pareja Atómica".
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They had been a lifelong fan, and began training for a professional wrestling career in 1941. Professional wrestling career Cruz made their professional debut on June 21, 1942, against Rito Romero losing their debut match. Initially they were billed as "Jungla" Cruz, named after a popular character from the funny papers but they did not like the name the promoters had forced on them. After making their debut Cruz realized that they needed to perform regularly in order to improve, thus they decided to move to Monterrey which at the time was one of the main cities for wrestling in Mexico. In Monterrey they befriended another young wrestler trying to break into the business, Blue Demon. The two struck up a friendship and soon after began teaming together on a regular basis. After working under their real name for a while, Cruz decided that they needed a different image, and came up with the ring persona "Black Shadow" and a black mask with white trim around the eye, mouth and nose openings. The new image was a hit and masked duo of Blue Demon and Black Shadow became known as "Los Hermanos Shadow" (Spanish for "the shadow siblings") despite not being related. Los Hermanos Shadow quickly became very popular and were at one point the main "Technico" (good person) team. In the mid-1950s Los Hermanos Shadow began a decade long rivalry with the top Rudo (villain) team of El Santo and Gory Guerrero, known as "La Pareja Atómica".
Fernando Luján (born Fernando Ciangherotti Díaz; August 23, 1939 – January 11, 2019) was a Mexican actor. His father; Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia, his mother; Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), brother Alejandro Ciangherotti Jr., wife Martha Mariana Castro, sons Fernando Ciangherotti, Fernando Canek and daughters Cassandra Ciangherotti and Vanessa Ciangherotti were or are also actors. He was not related to actress Daniela Luján. Family Luján was born in Bogota, Colombia, while his parents, both actors, were on tour presenting a play, but he never obtained Colombian nationality. He is the son of Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia and Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), the youngest of the famous Soler family. His late brother, Alejandro Ciangherotti, ex-wife, Adriana Parra, wife Martha Mariana Castro, children Fernando, Vanessa, Cassandra, Canek, Franco Paolo, granddaughter and son-in-law Vaita and Roberto Sosa, nephews Alejandro III, Alexis and Alan are also actors. He has 10 children: 5 daughters and 5 sons. Una vuelta al corazón In 2009, his wife and daughter, Martha Mariana and Vanessa, produced a trilogy of the family in celebrating the ninth anniversary of Lo que callamos las mujeres, starring his children, nephews and granddaughter, where Vanessa and Fernando Ciangherotti serve as the director. Acting career He started his acting career as a child in the Cinema of Mexico credited as Fernando Ciangherotti, but changed his stage name to Fernando Luján a few years later. After appearing in more than eight films, mostly light comedies, he obtained a role in the telenovela Cuatro en la trampa at age twenty-three. The next eighteen years, he alternated his film career with television, culminating with the worldwide famous production Los ricos también lloran. The next twelve years, he did not participate in telenovelas and only starred in four films. He returned to television with Vida robada and Cadenas de amargura in 1991. After participating in three other telenovelas for Televisa in the next five years, he signed a contract with TV Azteca to co-star with Angélica Aragón in the second telenovela of that new network titled Mirada de mujer. This telenovela was a success and would produce a sequel six years later. After Mirada de mujer, he obtained significant roles in film, especially as the star of the film-version of Gabriel García Márquez's book No One Writes to the Colonel in 1999 (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba). His performance in this film was qualified as "remarkable" by The New York Times. In 2005, he received the Ariel Award by the Mexican Academy of Film in honoring his career and contributions to film. Death A long-time cigar smoker, Luján died on January 11, 2019 in Puerto Escondido at the age of 79. Awards Ariel Award in 2005 Diosa de plata ("Silver Goddess") to honor his career in the Cinema of Mexico Fernando Luján was remembered as a "movie legend" at the 92nd Academy Awards ceremony on February 9, 2020. Telenovelas Cuatro en la trampa (1961) La culpa de los padres (1963) Marina Lavalle (1965) El edificio de enfrente (1972) as Camilo Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) María José (1978) as El Jaiba Bella y bestia (1979) as Alfred Los ricos también lloran (1979) as Diego Vida robada (1991) as Don Ramón Cadenas de amargura (1991) as Padre Julio Sueño de amor (1993) La paloma (1995) Para toda la vida (1996) as Juan Angel Mirada de mujer (1997) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Todo por amor (2000) as Gonzalo Robles Lo que es el amor (2001) as Emiliano Lomelí Mirada de mujer: El regreso (2003) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Las Juanas (2004) as Calixto Matamoros Montecristo (2006) as Alberto Lombardo Entre el amor y el deseo (2010) as Edgar Dumont Quererte así (2012) as Alfred "Fred" Roth Los Rey (2012) as Everardo Rey Martínez Así en el barrio como en el cielo (2015) as Marcelo Ferrara Series Pinche Pancho Ingobernable (2017) as Tomás Urquiza Films La cobarde (1952) La segunda mujer (1952) El mil amores (1954) as Ricardo Rodríguez La edad de la tentación (1958) La sombra en defensa de la juventud (1959) Dangers of Youth (1960) Vacaciones en Acapulco (1960) Juventud rebelde (1961) Jóvenes y bellas (1961) El cielo y la tierra (1962) Dile que la quiero (1963) La sombra de los hijos (1963) El pueblo fantasma (1963) Neutrón contra los asesinos del karate (1964) El gángster (1964) Amor y sexo (1964) as Gallina, interno Los perversos a go go (1965) Que haremos con papá? (1965) Juventud sin ley (1965) Fiebre de juventud (1965) Viento negro (1965) as Ingeniero Julio Un novio para dos hermanas (1966) Novias impacientes (1966) Lanza tus penas al viento (1966) Acapulco a go-go (1966) El falso heredero (1966) Sólo para ti (1966) as Juan Negro Caballos de acero (1967) Amor y esas cosas (1967) El Agente 00 Sexy (1968) Cuatro contra el crimen (1968) El oficio más antiguo del mundo (1968) Cuerpazo del delito (1968) 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa (1968) as Miguel Ernesto Suárez Confesiones de una adolescente (1969) Pilotos de combate (1970) Buscando una sonrisa (1970) La hermana Dinamita (1970) Los corrompidos (1971) El miedo no anda en burro (1973) El alegre divorciado (1976) El patrullero 777 (1977) La guerra de los pasteles (1978) Estas ruinas que ves (1978) as Paco Aldebarán En la trampa (1979) Más buenas que el pan (1985) Solicito marido para engañar (1987) Día de muertos (1988) Fuera de la ley (1998) En el país de no pasa nada (1999) El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (1999) as The colonel Primer y último amor (2002) as Fermín Azcue El tigre de Santa Julia (2002) as Nando Tú te lo pierdes (2005) El carnaval de Sodoma (2006) Cinco días sin Nora (2008) Overboard (2018) References External links El coronel no tiene quien le escriba review on The New York Times Category:1939 births Category:2019 deaths Category:Mexican male film actors Category:Mexican male telenovela actors Category:Mexican people of Italian descent Category:Male actors from Mexico City Category:Male actors of Italian descent
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Fernando Luján (born Fernando Ciangherotti Díaz; August 23, 1939– January 11, 2019) was a Mexican actor. His father; Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia, his mother; Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), brother Alejandro Ciangherotti Jr., wife Martha Mariana Castro, sons Fernando Ciangherotti, Fernando Canek and daughters Cassandra Ciangherotti and Vanessa Ciangherotti were or are also actors. He was not related to actress Daniela Luján. Family Luján was born in Bogota, Colombia, while his parents, both actors, were on tour presenting a play, but he never obtained Colombian nationality. He is the son of Alejandro Ciangherotti Erbelia and Mercedes Soler (Mercedes Diaz Pavia), the youngest of the famous Soler family. His late brother, Alejandro Ciangherotti, ex-wife, Adriana Parra, wife Martha Mariana Castro, children Fernando, Vanessa, Cassandra, Canek, Franco Paolo, granddaughter and son-in-law Vaita and Roberto Sosa, nephews Alejandro III, Alexis and Alan are also actors. He has 10 children; 5 daughters and 5 sons. Una vuelta al corazón- In 2009, his wife and daughter, Martha Mariana and Vanessa, produced a trilogy of the family in celebrating the ninth anniversary of Lo que callamos las mujeres, starring his children, nephews and granddaughter, where Vanessa and Fernando Ciangherotti serve as the director. Acting career- He started his acting career as a child in the Cinema of Mexico credited as Fernando Ciangherotti, but changed his stage name to Fernando Luján a few years later. After appearing in more than eight films, mostly light comedies, he obtained a role in the telenovela Cuatro en la trampa at age twenty-three. The next eighteen years, he alternated his film career with television, culminating with the worldwide famous production Los ricos también lloran. The next twelve years, he did not participate in telenovelas and only starred in four films. He returned to television with Vida robada and Cadenas de amargura in 1991. After participating in three other telenovelas for Televisa in the next five years, he signed a contract with TV Azteca to co-star with Angélica Aragón in the second telenovela of that new network titled Mirada de mujer. This telenovela was a success and would produce a sequel six years later. After Mirada de mujer, he obtained significant roles in film, especially as the star of the film-version of Gabriel García Márquez's book No One Writes to the Colonel in 1999 (El coronel no tiene quien le escriba). His performance in this film was qualified as "remarkable" by The New York Times. In 2005, he received the Ariel Award by the Mexican Academy of Film in honoring his career and contributions to film. Death- A long-time cigar smoker, Luján died on January 11, 2019 in Puerto Escondido at the age of 79. Awards Ariel Award in 2005- Diosa de plata ("Silver Goddess") to honor his career in the Cinema of Mexico.Fernando Luján was remembered as a "movie legend" at the 92nd Academy Awards ceremony on February 9, 2020. Telenovelas Cuatro en la trampa (1961) La culpa de los padres (1963) Marina Lavalle (1965) El edificio de enfrente (1972) as Camilo Los que ayudan a Dios (1973) María José (1978) as El Jaiba Bella y bestia (1979) as Alfred Los ricos también lloran (1979) as Diego Vida robada (1991) as Don Ramón Cadenas de amargura (1991) as Padre Julio Sueño de amor (1993) La paloma (1995) Para toda la vida (1996) as Juan Angel Mirada de mujer (1997) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Todo por amor (2000) as Gonzalo Robles Lo que es el amor (2001) as Emiliano Lomelí Mirada de mujer: El regreso (2003) as Lic. Ignacio San Millán Las Juanas (2004) as Calixto Matamoros Montecristo (2006) as Alberto Lombardo Entre el amor y el deseo (2010) as Edgar Dumont Quererte así (2012) as Alfred "Fred" Roth Los Rey (2012) as Everardo Rey Martínez Así en el barrio como en el cielo (2015) as Marcelo Ferrara Series Pinche Pancho Ingobernable (2017) as Tomás Urquiza Films La cobarde (1952) La segunda mujer (1952) El mil amores (1954) as Ricardo Rodríguez La edad de la tentación (1958) La sombra en defensa de la juventud (1959) Dangers of Youth (1960) Vacaciones en Acapulco (1960) Juventud rebelde (1961) Jóvenes y bellas (1961) El cielo y la tierra (1962) Dile que la quiero (1963) La sombra de los hijos (1963) El pueblo fantasma (1963) Neutrón contra los asesinos del karate (1964) El gángster (1964) Amor y sexo (1964) as Gallina, interno Los perversos a go go (1965) Que haremos con papá? (1965) Juventud sin ley (1965) Fiebre de juventud (1965) Viento negro (1965) as Ingeniero Julio Un novio para dos hermanas (1966) Novias impacientes (1966) Lanza tus penas al viento (1966) Acapulco a go-go (1966) El falso heredero (1966) Sólo para ti (1966) as Juan Negro Caballos de acero (1967) Amor y esas cosas (1967) El Agente 00 Sexy (1968) Cuatro contra el crimen (1968) El oficio más antiguo del mundo (1968) Cuerpazo del delito (1968) 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa (1968) as Miguel Ernesto Suárez Confesiones de una adolescente (1969) Pilotos de combate (1970) Buscando una sonrisa (1970) La hermana Dinamita (1970) Los corrompidos (1971) El miedo no anda en burro (1973) El alegre divorciado (1976) El patrullero 777 (1977) La guerra de los pasteles (1978) Estas ruinas que ves (1978) as Paco Aldebarán En la trampa (1979) Más buenas que el pan (1985) Solicito marido para engañar (1987) Día de muertos (1988) Fuera de la ley (1998) En el país de no pasa nada (1999) El coronel no tiene quien le escriba (1999) as The colonel Primer y último amor (2002) as Fermín Azcue El tigre de Santa Julia (2002) as Nando Tú te lo pierdes (2005) El carnaval de Sodoma (2006) Cinco días sin Nora (2008) Overboard (2018) References External links El coronel no tiene quien le escriba review on The New York Times Category: 1939 births Category: 2019 deaths Category: Mexican male film actors Category: Mexican male telenovela actors Category: Mexican people of Italian descent Category: Male actors from Mexico City Category: Male actors of Italian descent
his eyes opened and he found himself looking at the standard institutional ceiling of acoustical tiles .
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Their eyes opened and they found themself looking at the standard institutional ceiling of acoustical tiles.
In 1857, Lonsdale also partnered Edmond Warre in a coxless pair to win Silver Goblets at Henley Royal Regatta. In 1858 the pair lost in the final of Silver Goblets to Herbert Playford and A. A. Casamajor. Lonsdale studied law at Lincoln's Inn, where he was called to the Bar in 1862. He became High Sheriff of Louth in 1877. He was granted a Royal Licence to change his name to Arthur Pemberton Heywood-Lonsdale in order to inherit a fortune of a million and a quarter pounds under the will of his maternal uncle John Pemberton Heywood who died in 1877. In 1880 he served as treasurer of the Salop Infirmary in Shrewsbury. With another relation James Pemberton Fell, Heywood-Lonsdale made substantial investments in the City of North Vancouver. In 1882 he financed the Moodyville investments founded by Sewell Moody. Several locations in the North Vancouver area are named after Lonsdale and the family.
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In 1857, Lonsdale also partnered Edmond Warre in a coxless pair to win Silver Goblets at Henley Royal Regatta. In 1858 the pair lost in the final of Silver Goblets to Herbert Playford and A. A. Casamajor. Lonsdale studied law at Lincoln's Inn, where he was called to the Bar in 1862. He became High Sheriff of Louth in 1877. He was granted a Royal Licence to change his name to Arthur Pemberton Heywood-Lonsdale in order to inherit a fortune of a million and a quarter pounds under the will of his maternal relative J. P. Heywood who died in 1877. In 1880 he served as treasurer of the Salop Infirmary in Shrewsbury. With another relation James Pemberton Fell, Heywood-Lonsdale made substantial investments in the City of North Vancouver. In 1882 he financed the Moodyville investments founded by Sewell Moody. Several locations in the North Vancouver area are named after Lonsdale and the family.
T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) is an American computer-animated television series. Created by Travis Braun, it is a production of Titmouse, Inc. The show debuted on Disney Junior on June 14, 2019. It focuses on Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo who tend the babies during their lives at a daycare-like transporting service nursery for infants. Plot Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo are two delivery birds in-training at the T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service). Together, the two help take care of the babies, where they travel around the globe to find their forever families in need while learning to solve problems under the guidance of K.C the Koala and Captain Beakman, along with the other delivery storks. Characters Main Pip the Penguin (voiced by Jet Jurgensmeyer) – A young delivery bird who serves as Freddy's navigator and is the main protagonist of the series, along with Freddy. First mentioned in episode "Back to Cool", his birthplace is Iceberg Alley, home of Penn and his parents, and other penguins. Freddy the Flamingo (voiced by Christian J. Simon) – A young delivery bird who is Pip's partner, and the one who does the flying. He's also the main protagonist, along with Pip. He has long wings that help him fly. Captain Beakman (voiced by Vanessa Williams) – The leader of T.O.T.S. and the mother of Mia the kitten. K.C the Koala (voiced by Megan Hilty) – A 16-year-old worker at T.O.T.S. who tends the infants before they get delivered. She runs the nursery. She is also a guitarist. Recurring Bodhi (voiced by Parvesh Cheena) – An insecure stork deliverer with the biggest wings at T.O.T.S. He tends to get spooked by mostly ordinary things, but is willing to help when assistance is needed. Ava (voiced by Melanie Minichino) – A street-talking female stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. Her catchphrase is "Rock On!". J.P. (voiced by Henri Lubatti) – A narcistic and proud stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. who speaks in a French accent. He is one of the finest deliverers at T.O.T.S. as he won "Delivery Bird of the Month" ten consecutive times, thus Pip and Freddy see him as a role model. He was also the company's fastest deliverer until he was succeeded by Ava who in turn was succeeded by Bodhi. Paulie (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A parrot who is the air traffic controller at T.O.T.S. and often speaks his sentences twice. Mr. Woodbird (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A woodpecker who is the janitor at T.O.T.S. who sometimes gives Pip and Freddy ideas that are solutions to their problems. Mia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby kitten, who is the adopted daughter of Captain Beakman. Her catchphrase is "Mia help! Mia help!" when someone wants help with something, but even she needs help. In the episode "Lend Me Your Paw", she looks up to Pip and Freddy. She also has Freddy's old lovey, Mr. Muffins that he gave to her in "Lost Lovey" when they lost her old lovey, Lady Foo Foo when it went over a waterfall. She is the only baby whose name does not start with the same letter as her animal type. Peggy (voiced by Angelica Hale) - A polar bear who wanted a better baby brother than Paul until she heard he got stuck in a small cave in the episode "Bringing Back Baby". Minor Babies Some of the babies are toddler animals who have each skill and ability in each episode. They are delivered by both Pip and Freddy on their deliveries. Some are background characters. Kiki (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby kitten who used to think that Pip and Freddy were her parents until she met her real ones. Wyatt (voiced by Remy Edgerly) – A baby whale who was really big and took a lot of flyers to deliver. Precious (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby panda that was so cute and dangerously adorable, that she was impossible to say goodbye to. The only way to get out of her spell is to get reminded that she has a family of her own. Scooter (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby skunk that likes to play ball, but no one wanted to play with him due to his skunk stink unless someone wore a helmet to prevent them from smelling his stench. Chase (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby cheetah. He is impossible to catch, but can only be caught when he's asleep. Ducklings (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – Baby ducks that communicate with cute quacking noises. Tara (voiced by Abby Ryder Fortson) – A baby tapir. Pip and Freddy didn't know that she was a tapir at first due to the fact that they thought her parents weren't part of her species because she has stripes and her parents don't. Marty (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby monkey who lived at the nursery and loves to pretend to be a junior Flyer until in the episode "Monkeying Around and Around", when Pip and Freddy delivered him to his forever family. Blinky (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A light purple bunny who blinks a lot. Bouncy (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A dark purple bunny who bounces a lot. Blondy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A yellow bunny who is named that because of her blondish fur. Burpy (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A gray bunny who has a bad habit of burping. Bushy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A blue bunny with a white bushy afro. Bobtail (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – An orange bunny that shakes her tail a lot. Octavia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby octopus with a big heart who was delivered in a special crate filled of water. Diane (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby donkey who likes eating grass. Cam (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby chameleon who has the ability to change colors and patterns and mimic other animals, which made him extremely hard to find. Pablo (voiced by Max Mitchell) – A baby puppy who can bury anything, which is sort of a problem for Pip and Freddy since he buried their FlyPad in the episode "Diggity Dog". Sunny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby sloth who does everything, even speaks slowly. Benny (voiced by Ayden Soria) – A baby bat who lives inside a cave that looks like a monster, is afraid of the light, and can navigate through the dark due to the fact that he's nocturnal. Didi (voiced by Elsa George) – A baby deer who managed to walk in just a day and is not afraid of bumpy flights. Penn (voiced by Ryan Soria) – A baby penguin who lives in Pip's hometown of Iceburg Alley and acts like a little brother to Pip. Linus (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby lion who needed to learn how to be quiet, since his roar was very loud, scaring everyone and shaking everything. Pearl (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby pig who is hard to please when it comes to presents, but loves mud like any other pig. She also has the intelligence to call her parents Mommy and Daddy instead of Mama and Dada. Tiberius (voiced by Julian Edwards) – A baby white tiger prince who doesn't mind getting dirty. Kiera (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby kangaroo who bounces a lot and can cause bumpy flights, unless someone was in the crate with her to keep her entertained or if she was asleep. Petey (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby porcupine who was scared of the tube system until Pip and Freddy used his love of Choo-Choo trains to help him be brave. Betty and Bobby (voiced by Elsa George and Max Mitchell respectively) – Baby bear siblings. Kenny and Penny (voiced by Boone Nelson and Amari McCoy respectively) – A baby kitten and puppy who happen to be siblings who used to fight with each other, until they learned to share their stuff. Gil (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby guinea pig that means no harm, even though Bodhi is scared of him. But just like Bodhi, he is afraid of something. Which he is scared of flying which means the height. Paul (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby polar bear who is Peggy's brother. Camille (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby camel who has a big thirst for water as she drank up a water cooler and a watering hole in the episode "A Penguin in the Desert". Finny – A baby fox who gave Pip, Freddy especially, a lot of trouble since he was an expert at hiding. He revealed himself when he stopped to grab a bite of Fox Flakes in the episode "Outfoxed". Sheera (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby sheep who had a hard time seeing where she was going and caught a small cold when Pip and Freddy tried to help her, only to accidentally shave off all of her wool. Henry (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby hippo who is a picky eater that only wanted Hippo O's until he tried a bite of KC's treetop muffins in "Koala Kuisine". Renny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A magical baby reindeer. Mimi (voiced by Hudson D’Arena) – A baby mockingbird who can mock others. Most notably, she can imitate songs such as KC's lullaby, when she put the entire facility to sleep, including Pip and Freddy. Chloe - A baby cow that happens to be Mia's best friend. She also has a monkey lovey named Señor Scuffins. Ellie – A baby elephant who enjoys playing, but tends to make messes wherever she goes. Flora (voiced by Charlie Townsend) - A baby frog who likes to smell flowers. Tallulah – A baby turtle who is very shy, but enjoys books, especially if the words happen to rhyme. She has faint black markings on her head resembling bobbed hair. Bernice (voiced by Amari McCoy) - A baby beaver who can chew and gnaw on anything she can get her paws on, rendering the objects to dust. Donny (voiced by Max Mitchell) - A baby dolphin. He is the third baby dolphin with the first two being Danny and Darla, but he's the first to actually be delivered. He also likes swimming through rings and is the first baby to have two mothers. Oki (voiced by Amari McCoy) - A baby otter who likes holding peoples hands, which caused problems for Pip and Freddy since she kept them up, and also disturbed the other babies in the nursery. In the end, they made her her own lovey so she'd stop getting out of her crib, with some help from Mr. Woodbird. Percy - A baby peacock who spends a majority of "The Ultimate Easter Egg Hunt", in an egg, which Freddy paints blue and puts a smile on, to avoid confusion with the eggs outside. Clarissa (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby brown cow who lives on the farm. Ebenezer – A baby elephant who used his trunk to give other babies pacifiers in "Baby Breakdown". Selena – A baby seal who used her tail to give other babies rattles on the conveyor belt in "Baby Breakdown". Pam – A baby white pony with a pink mane. Horace - A baby horse who is the same color as Pam. Hedy – A baby hedgehog. Felix – A baby frog. Zelda – A baby zebra. Keli - A baby kitten whom Ava mixed-up with Flora in "The Fastest Flier". Timmy – A baby turtle seen wearing a blue crocheted hat. Penelope – A baby puppy who looks like Penny but with a Mint Green Diaper. Melvin – A baby monkey who constantly appears in episodes. Charlie – A baby cheetah who looks like Chase but with different markings. Chuck - A baby cheetah Misha – A baby monkey who looks like her best friend Marty but with hazel eyes. Patty – A baby puppy. Emmy – A baby elephant who looks like Ellie but with a blue bow in her hair. Genie – A baby giraffe who was a background baby at the nursery until episode “Lost Lovey”, when Mia's lovey accidentally got put in her crate when Ava was delivering her. Danny and Darla – Baby dolphins. Families Kiki's Parents – The Parents of Kiki. The mother looks like Kiki, while her husband has orange fur and wears glasses, but in the theme song, the daddy has blue fur and no glasses. Chase's Parents – The Parents of Chase. Scooter's Family – The Family of Scooter which consists of the parents and three skunk kids. Ducklings' Parents – The Parents of Ducklings. Bobtail's Parents – The Parents of Bobtail. Octavia's Parents – The Parents of Octavia. The Dad looks like Octavia, while the mom is orange. Sunny's Parents – The Parents of Sunny who talk slowly just like their daughter. Benny's Parents – The Parents of Benny. They are only seen in the picture on Pip's flight pad, but Benny's Mom's voice can be heard right after Pip rings the bell. Didi's Parents – The Parents of Didi. Tara's Parents – The Parents of Tara. Cam's Parents – The Parents of Cam. Penn's Parents (voiced by Jennifer Hale and Trevor Devall) – The Parents of Penn who do activities with Pip and Freddy in the episode their son gets delivered. Pablo's Parents – The Parents of Pablo. King Tiger and Queen Tiger – The Parents of Tiberius are royalty. Pearl's Parents – The Parents of Pearl. Kenny and Penny's Dad – The Father of Kenny and Penny who happens to be a cow, despite Kenny and Penny being cats and dogs and is a single dad. Kiera's Parents – The Parents of Kiera. Petey's Mom – The Mother of Petey. Like Kenny and Penny's Dad, she is single. Linus’ Parents – The Parents of Linus. Gil's Parents – The Parents of Gil. Henry's Parents – The Parents of Henry. Marty's Parents – The Parents of Marty. Peggy and Paul's Parents – The Parents of Peggy and Paul. Camille's Parents – The Parents of Camille. Finny's Parents – The Parents of Finny. Renny's Parents - The Parents of Renny. Sheera's Parents - The Parents of Sheera. Mimi's Parents – The Parents of Mimi. Diane's Parents – The Parents of Diane. Wyatt's Mom - The Mother of Wyatt. Despite her son debuting in “Whale, Hello There”, She doesn’t get to appear alongside him until The Valentines Day Episode. Tallulah's Parents - The Parents of Tallulah. Flora's Parents - The Parents of Flora. Chloe's Parents - The Parents of Chloe. Donny's Parents (Mom voiced by Misty Lee) - The Parents of Donny. Oki’s Moms - The Mothers of Oki. Episodes Like other Disney Junior shows from the time, the episode titles are spoken, but do not appear in text. Broadcast The show was greenlit by Disney in April 2018. In February 2019, T.O.T.S. was renewed for a second season ahead of its broadcast premiere. The show debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on June 14, 2019 and in Canada on June 22. Home media Home media is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. References External links Category:2010s American animated television series Category:2020s American animated television series Category:2019 American television series debuts Category:American animated television programs featuring anthropomorphic characters Category:American children's animated action television series Category:American children's animated adventure television series Category:American children's animated comedy television series Category:American children's animated drama television series Category:American children's animated musical television series Category:American computer-animated television series Category:American preschool education television series Category:Disney Junior shows Category:Disney animated television series Category:Television series by Disney Category:Animated television series about birds Category:Animated television series about penguins Category:Animated duos
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T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) is an American computer-animated television series. Created by Travis Braun, it is a production of Titmouse, Inc. The show debuted on Disney Junior on June 14, 2019. It focuses on Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo who tend the babies during their lives at a daycare-like transporting service nursery for infants. Plot Pip the penguin and Freddy the flamingo are two delivery birds in-training at the T.O.T.S. (Tiny Ones Transport Service) . Together, the two help take care of the babies, where they travel around the globe to find their forever families in need while learning to solve problems under the guidance of K.C the Koala and Captain Beakman, along with the other delivery storks. Characters Main Pip the Penguin (voiced by Jet Jurgensmeyer) – A young delivery bird who serves as Freddy's navigator and is the main protagonist of the series, along with Freddy. First mentioned in episode "Back to Cool", his birthplace is Iceberg Alley, home of Penn and his parents, and other penguins. Freddy the Flamingo (voiced by Christian J. Simon) – A young delivery bird who is Pip's partner, and the one who does the flying. He's also the main protagonist, along with Pip. He has long wings that help him fly. Captain Beakman (voiced by Vanessa Williams) – The leader of T.O.T.S. and the mother of Mia the kitten. K.C the Koala (voiced by Megan Hilty) – A 16-year-old worker at T.O.T.S. who tends the infants before they get delivered. She runs the nursery. She is also a guitarist. Recurring Bodhi (voiced by Parvesh Cheena) – An insecure stork deliverer with the biggest wings at T.O.T.S. He tends to get spooked by mostly ordinary things, but is willing to help when assistance is needed. Ava (voiced by Melanie Minichino) – A street-talking female stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. Her catchphrase is "Rock On !". J.P. (voiced by Henri Lubatti) – A narcistic and proud stork deliverer at T.O.T.S. who speaks in a French accent. He is one of the finest deliverers at T.O.T.S. as he won "Delivery Bird of the Month" ten consecutive times, thus Pip and Freddy see him as a role model. He was also the company's fastest deliverer until he was succeeded by Ava who in turn was succeeded by Bodhi. Paulie (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A parrot who is the air traffic controller at T.O.T.S. and often speaks his sentences twice. Mr. Woodbird (voiced by Eric Bauza) – A woodpecker who is the janitor at T.O.T.S. who sometimes gives Pip and Freddy ideas that are solutions to their problems. Mia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby kitten, who is the adopted daughter of Captain Beakman. Her catchphrase is "Mia help! Mia help !" when someone wants help with something, but even she needs help. In the episode "Lend Me Your Paw", she looks up to Pip and Freddy. She also has Freddy's old lovey, Mr. Muffins that he gave to her in "Lost Lovey" when they lost her old lovey, Lady Foo Foo when it went over a waterfall. She is the only baby whose name does not start with the same letter as her animal type. Peggy (voiced by Angelica Hale)-A polar bear who wanted a better baby brother than Paul until she heard he got stuck in a small cave in the episode "Bringing Back Baby". Minor Babies Some of the babies are toddler animals who have each skill and ability in each episode. They are delivered by both Pip and Freddy on their deliveries. Some are background characters. Kiki (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby kitten who used to think that Pip and Freddy were her parents until she met her real ones. Wyatt (voiced by Remy Edgerly) – A baby whale who was really big and took a lot of flyers to deliver. Precious (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby panda that was so cute and dangerously adorable, that she was impossible to say goodbye to. The only way to get out of her spell is to get reminded that she has a family of her own. Scooter (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby skunk that likes to play ball, but no one wanted to play with him due to his skunk stink unless someone wore a helmet to prevent them from smelling his stench. Chase (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby cheetah. He is impossible to catch, but can only be caught when he's asleep. Ducklings (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – Baby ducks that communicate with cute quacking noises. Tara (voiced by Abby Ryder Fortson) – A baby tapir. Pip and Freddy did n't know that she was a tapir at first due to the fact that they thought her parents were n't part of her species because she has stripes and her parents do n't. Marty (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby monkey who lived at the nursery and loves to pretend to be a junior Flyer until in the episode "Monkeying Around and Around", when Pip and Freddy delivered him to his forever family. Blinky (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A light purple bunny who blinks a lot. Bouncy (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A dark purple bunny who bounces a lot. Blondy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A yellow bunny who is named that because of her blondish fur. Burpy (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) – A gray bunny who has a bad habit of burping. Bushy (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A blue bunny with a white bushy afro. Bobtail (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – An orange bunny that shakes her tail a lot. Octavia (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby octopus with a big heart who was delivered in a special crate filled of water. Diane (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby donkey who likes eating grass. Cam (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby chameleon who has the ability to change colors and patterns and mimic other animals, which made him extremely hard to find. Pablo (voiced by Max Mitchell) – A baby puppy who can bury anything, which is sort of a problem for Pip and Freddy since they buried their FlyPad in the episode "Diggity Dog". Sunny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby sloth who does everything, even speaks slowly. Benny (voiced by Ayden Soria) – A baby bat who lives inside a cave that looks like a monster, is afraid of the light, and can navigate through the dark due to the fact that he's nocturnal. Didi (voiced by Elsa George) – A baby deer who managed to walk in just a day and is not afraid of bumpy flights. Penn (voiced by Ryan Soria) – A baby penguin who lives in Pip's hometown of Iceburg Alley and acts like a little brother to Pip. Linus (voiced by Hudson Cordero) – A baby lion who needed to learn how to be quiet, since his roar was very loud, scaring everyone and shaking everything. Pearl (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby pig who is hard to please when it comes to presents, but loves mud like any other pig. She also has the intelligence to call her parents Mommy and Daddy instead of Mama and Dada. Tiberius (voiced by Julian Edwards) – A baby white tiger prince who does n't mind getting dirty. Kiera (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A baby kangaroo who bounces a lot and can cause bumpy flights, unless someone was in the crate with her to keep her entertained or if she was asleep. Petey (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby porcupine who was scared of the tube system until Pip and Freddy used his love of Choo-Choo trains to help him be brave. Betty and Bobby (voiced by Elsa George and Max Mitchell respectively) – Baby bear siblings. Kenny and Penny (voiced by Boone Nelson and Amari McCoy respectively) – A baby kitten and puppy who happen to be siblings who used to fight with each other, until they learned to share their stuff. Gil (voiced by Nick A. Fisher) – A baby guinea pig that means no harm, even though Bodhi is scared of him. But just like Bodhi, he is afraid of something. Which he is scared of flying which means the height. Paul (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby polar bear who is Peggy's brother. Camille (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby camel who has a big thirst for water as she drank up a water cooler and a watering hole in the episode "A Penguin in the Desert". Finny – A baby fox who gave Pip, Freddy especially, a lot of trouble since he was an expert at hiding. He revealed himself when he stopped to grab a bite of Fox Flakes in the episode "Outfoxed". Sheera (voiced by Charlie Townsend) – A baby sheep who had a hard time seeing where she was going and caught a small cold when Pip and Freddy tried to help her, only to accidentally shave off all of her wool. Henry (voiced by Boone Nelson) – A baby hippo who is a picky eater that only wanted Hippo O's until he tried a bite of KC's treetop muffins in "Koala Kuisine". Renny (voiced by Hadley Gannaway) – A magical baby reindeer. Mimi (voiced by Hudson D ’ Arena) – A baby mockingbird who can mock others. Most notably, she can imitate songs such as KC's lullaby, when she put the entire facility to sleep, including Pip and Freddy. Chloe-A baby cow that happens to be Mia's best friend. She also has a monkey lovey named Señor Scuffins. Ellie – A baby elephant who enjoys playing, but tends to make messes wherever she goes. Flora (voiced by Charlie Townsend)-A baby frog who likes to smell flowers. Tallulah – A baby turtle who is very shy, but enjoys books, especially if the words happen to rhyme. She has faint black markings on her head resembling bobbed hair. Bernice (voiced by Amari McCoy)-A baby beaver who can chew and gnaw on anything she can get her paws on, rendering the objects to dust. Donny (voiced by Max Mitchell)-A baby dolphin. He is the third baby dolphin with the first two being Danny and Darla, but he's the first to actually be delivered. He also likes swimming through rings and is the first baby to have two mothers. Oki (voiced by Amari McCoy)-A baby otter who likes holding peoples hands, which caused problems for Pip and Freddy since she kept them up, and also disturbed the other babies in the nursery. In the end, they made her her own lovey so she'd stop getting out of her crib, with some help from Mr. Woodbird. Percy-A baby peacock who spends a majority of "The Ultimate Easter Egg Hunt", in an egg, which Freddy paints blue and puts a smile on, to avoid confusion with the eggs outside. Clarissa (voiced by Amari McCoy) – A baby brown cow who lives on the farm. Ebenezer – A baby elephant who used his trunk to give other babies pacifiers in "Baby Breakdown". Selena – A baby seal who used her tail to give other babies rattles on the conveyor belt in "Baby Breakdown". Pam – A baby white pony with a pink mane. Horace-A baby horse who is the same color as Pam. Hedy – A baby hedgehog. Felix – A baby frog. Zelda – A baby zebra. Keli-A baby kitten whom Ava mixed-up with Flora in "The Fastest Flier". Timmy – A baby turtle seen wearing a blue crocheted hat. Penelope – A baby puppy who looks like Penny but with a Mint Green Diaper. Melvin – A baby monkey who constantly appears in episodes. Charlie – A baby cheetah who looks like Chase but with different markings. Chuck-A baby cheetah Misha – A baby monkey who looks like her best friend Marty but with hazel eyes. Patty – A baby puppy. Emmy – A baby elephant who looks like Ellie but with a blue bow in her hair. Genie – A baby giraffe who was a background baby at the nursery until episode “ Lost Lovey ”, when Mia's lovey accidentally got put in her crate when Ava was delivering her. Danny and Darla – Baby dolphins. Families Kiki's Parents – The Parents of Kiki. The mother looks like Kiki, while her husband has orange fur and wears glasses, but in the theme song, the daddy has blue fur and no glasses. Chase's Parents – The Parents of Chase. Scooter's Family – The Family of Scooter which consists of the parents and three skunk kids. Ducklings' Parents – The Parents of Ducklings. Bobtail's Parents – The Parents of Bobtail. Octavia's Parents – The Parents of Octavia. The Dad looks like Octavia, while the mom is orange. Sunny's Parents – The Parents of Sunny who talk slowly just like their daughter. Benny's Parents – The Parents of Benny. They are only seen in the picture on Pip's flight pad, but Benny's Mom's voice can be heard right after Pip rings the bell. Didi's Parents – The Parents of Didi. Tara's Parents – The Parents of Tara. Cam's Parents – The Parents of Cam. Penn's Parents (voiced by Jennifer Hale and Trevor Devall) – The Parents of Penn who do activities with Pip and Freddy in the episode their son gets delivered. Pablo's Parents – The Parents of Pablo. King Tiger and Queen Tiger – The Parents of Tiberius are royalty. Pearl's Parents – The Parents of Pearl. Kenny and Penny's Dad – The Father of Kenny and Penny who happens to be a cow, despite Kenny and Penny being cats and dogs and is a single dad. Kiera's Parents – The Parents of Kiera. Petey's Mom – The Mother of Petey. Like Kenny and Penny's Dad, she is single. Linus ’ Parents – The Parents of Linus. Gil's Parents – The Parents of Gil. Henry's Parents – The Parents of Henry. Marty's Parents – The Parents of Marty. Peggy and Paul's Parents – The Parents of Peggy and Paul. Camille's Parents – The Parents of Camille. Finny's Parents – The Parents of Finny. Renny's Parents-The Parents of Renny. Sheera's Parents-The Parents of Sheera. Mimi's Parents – The Parents of Mimi. Diane's Parents – The Parents of Diane. Wyatt's Mom-The Mother of Wyatt. Despite her son debuting in “ Whale, Hello There ”, She doesn ’ t get to appear alongside him until The Valentines Day Episode. Tallulah's Parents-The Parents of Tallulah. Flora's Parents-The Parents of Flora. Chloe's Parents-The Parents of Chloe. Donny's Parents (Mom voiced by Misty Lee)-The Parents of Donny. Oki ’ s Moms-The Mothers of Oki. Episodes Like other Disney Junior shows from the time, the episode titles are spoken, but do not appear in text. Broadcast The show was greenlit by Disney in April 2018. In February 2019, T.O.T.S. was renewed for a second season ahead of its broadcast premiere. The show debuted on Disney Junior and Disney Channel in the United States on June 14, 2019 and in Canada on June 22. Home media Home media is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. References External links Category:2010s American animated television series Category:2020s American animated television series Category:2019 American television series debuts Category: American animated television programs featuring anthropomorphic characters Category: American children's animated action television series Category: American children's animated adventure television series Category: American children's animated comedy television series Category: American children's animated drama television series Category: American children's animated musical television series Category: American computer-animated television series Category: American preschool education television series Category: Disney Junior shows Category: Disney animated television series Category: Television series by Disney Category: Animated television series about birds Category: Animated television series about penguins Category: Animated duos
"Big Girls" is a song written by Lin Buckfield and recorded by the Australian band Electric Pandas. It was released in May 1984 as the band's debut single and it peaked at number 18 on the Australian Kent Music Report. Track listing 7" Single (RRSP 732) Side A "Big Girls" - 3:09 Side B "T.V. Dogs" - 2:11 Charts References Category:1984 songs Category:1984 debut singles
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"Big Girls" is a song written by Lin Buckfield and recorded by the Indigenous American band Electric Pandas. It was released in May 1984 as the band's debut single and it peaked at number 18 on the Kent Music Report. Track listing 7"Single (RRSP 732) Side A"Big Girls"- 3:09 Side B"T.V. Dogs"-2:11 Charts References Category:1984 songs Category:1984 debut singles
marcellus was fit , awesomely so , and jameson highly overweight ; still , it was the ex-soldier who had to stop for his panting boss after just fifty yards .
boss
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marcy was fit, awesomely so, and jameson highly overweight; still, it was the ex-soldier who had to stop for his panting boss after just fifty yards.
He attended Hiram College on a baseball scholarship and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1970. Career Early career While in college, Michael Stanley was in the band Silk which released an album, Smooth As Raw Silk, on ABC Records in 1969. While working as a regional manager for a record store chain, he released his first solo album, Michael Stanley, in 1973. The album and its follow-up Friends & Legends were produced by Bill Szymczyk and featured contributions from Joe Walsh, Todd Rundgren and David Sanborn. Michael Stanley Band The Michael Stanley Band was formed by Stanley in 1974 with singer-songwriter–lead guitarist Jonah Koslen, former Glass Harp bassist Daniel Pecchio and drummer Tommy Dobeck from the band Circus.
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He attended Hiram College on a baseball scholarship and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1970. Career Early career While in college, Michael Stanley was in the band Silk which released an album, Smooth As Raw Silk, on ABC Records in 1969. While working as a regional manager for a record store chain, he released his first solo album, Michael Stanley, in 1973. The album and its follow-up Friends & Legends were produced by Bill Szymczyk and featured contributions from Joe Walsh, Todd Rundgren and David Sanborn. Michael Stanley Band The Michael Stanley Band was formed by Stanley in 1974 with singer-songwriter–lead guitarist Jonah Koslen, former Glass Harp bassist Daniel Pecchio and drummer Tamara Dobeck from the band Circus.
Thomas Bates (1567 – 30 January 1606) was a member of the group of provincial English Catholics who planned the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Bates was born at Lapworth in Warwickshire, and became a retainer to Robert Catesby, who from 1604 planned to kill King James I by blowing up the House of Lords with gunpowder, and inciting a popular revolt during which a Catholic monarch would be restored to the English throne. Bates was invited to join the conspiracy after he accidentally became aware of it. As he rode with Catesby to prepare for the group's planned uprising on 5 November 1605, Guy Fawkes was found guarding the gunpowder stored under the House of Lords and arrested. Bates subsequently accompanied Catesby and his small group of fugitives to Holbeche House in Staffordshire, but left shortly before his master was killed there by government forces on 8 November. He was subsequently captured and taken to London. Bates was the only member of the group to implicate the Jesuits in the conspiracy, but may have done so only to alleviate his punishment. He retracted his statement when it became clear he was to be executed. Three days after his trial on 27 January 1606, he was hanged, drawn and quartered. Biography Servant Bates was born at Lapworth in Warwickshire, and was married to Martha Bates. He was employed as a retainer to Sir Robert Catesby's family, and with his wife lived in a cottage on the Catesby family estate. He was allowed his own servant, as well as his own armour. Bates was considered a loyal and devoted servant to Catesby. Bates was the seventh man to be enlisted into what became known as the Gunpowder Plot, a scheme devised early in 1604 by Catesby to kill King James I by blowing up the House of Lords with gunpowder, and inciting a popular revolt during which a Catholic monarch would be restored to the English throne. Bates's involvement in the plot began when he became suspicious of Catesby's movements. In December 1604 he was invited to his master's lodgings at Puddle Wharf in London, and questioned there by Thomas Wintour and Catesby, who had noted his suspicion. Bates told them that he thought that they "intended some dangerous matter about the Parliament House, because he had been sent to get a lodging near unto that place." At that point the two men let Bates in on the secret. In the same month it was announced that because of the plague, the re-opening of Parliament would not be in February, but rather in October. During this delay the conspirators may have dug a tunnel beneath Parliament, although no evidence for its existence has ever been found. The plotters ultimately stored their gunpowder in the undercroft directly beneath the House of Lords. In July 1605 the opening of Parliament was again delayed, this time until Tuesday 5 November. Catesby had funded most of the plot, but by August 1605 he was running out of money. During a secret meeting at Bath in August, at which he, Percy and Thomas Wintour were present, the plotters decided that "the company being yet but few" he was to be allowed to "call in whom he thought best". Bates was uncomfortable with the idea, and was the only member of the conspiracy to object. He was over-ruled however, and Catesby soon enlisted Ambrose Rookwood, Francis Tresham and Everard Digby. Failure The last details of the plot were finalised in October. Guy Fawkes would light the fuse and then escape across the Thames, while simultaneously a revolt in the Midlands would help to ensure the capture of Princess Elizabeth. Late on Monday 4 November, Bates set out with Catesby and John Wright for the planned revolt. The following day while at Dunstable re-shoeing Catesby's horse, they were met by Rookwood, who delivered the devastating news that Fawkes had been discovered guarding the gunpowder and arrested. As those conspirators still in London fled the city, the group soon integrated Christopher Wright and Thomas Percy. They rode toward Dunchurch, on horses sent from Everard Digby by prearrangement. They met Robert Wintour (brother to Thomas) at Ashby St Ledgers, and Digby at Dunchurch. On 6 November they stole horses from Warwick Castle, and collected stored weapons from Norbrook, near Stratford-upon-Avon. As they continued toward Huddington, and as the government issued a proclamation for the fugitives' arrest (Catesby's servant was listed as Robert Ashfield, probably a mistake for Bates), Catesby ordered Bates to deliver a letter to Father Garnet at Coughton Court, asking for his support. Bates's news proved momentous for the Jesuits; he overheard Tesimond exclaim "we are all utterly undone". Garnet's reply to Catesby begged them to stop their "wicked actions", and to listen to the pope's teachings. Capture By the time the fugitives and their supporters arrived at Holbeche House on the border of Staffordshire, they were exhausted. Drenched from the rain, they spread out some of the now-soaked gunpowder in front of the fire, to dry out. A spark from the fire landed on the powder and the resultant flames engulfed Catesby, Rookwood, Grant, and another man. At some point between then and the arrival of the Sheriff of Worcester and his men, Bates left the house, possibly with his son and Digby. If he was with the latter, he was captured later the same day and taken to London. Catesby was killed early that day along with Percy, John Wright and his brother Christopher. Imprisonment and execution While imprisoned, on 4 December Bates claimed that Father Oswald Tesimond knew of the plot. In the opinion of author Antonia Fraser however, Bates's evidence is suspect; he was of a lower class than his co-conspirators, and could therefore reasonably have assumed he was at more risk of being tortured than the others. Perhaps trying to curry favour with his interrogators, he was the only conspirator to implicate the Jesuits. He later retracted his confession when it became clear that he was to be executed. Bates was charged with high treason, and tried at Westminster Hall on Monday 27 January 1606, alongside seven of his fellow conspirators. He arrived at the hall separately from the others; prisons operated on a class-based system and so he was kept at the Gatehouse Prison, rather than the Tower. Only Digby pleaded guilty. On the morning of 30 January 1606 therefore, Bates was tied to a wattled hurdle and dragged by horse along the street, from the Gatehouse Prison to the western end of St Paul's Churchyard. There he was present as first Digby, then Robert Wintour, and then Grant, were hanged, drawn and quartered. Bates was the last to ascend the scaffold that day, and met a similarly gruesome end. The following day the four remaining conspirators were executed in the same manner. References Notes Footnotes Bibliography Category:1606 deaths Category:Executed Gunpowder Plotters Category:Roman Catholic activists Category:People of the Tudor period Category:1567 births Category:16th-century English people Category:16th-century Roman Catholics Category:17th-century Roman Catholics Category:English Roman Catholics Category:Executed people from Warwickshire Category:People executed by Stuart England by hanging, drawing and quartering
Thomas
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Thomas Bates (1567 – 30 January 1606) was a member of the group of provincial English Catholics who planned the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Bates was born at Lapworth in Warwickshire, and became a retainer to Robert Catesby, who from 1604 planned to kill King James I by blowing up the House of Lords with gunpowder, and inciting a popular revolt during which a Catholic monarch would be restored to the English throne. Bates was invited to join the conspiracy after he accidentally became aware of it. As he rode with Catesby to prepare for the group's planned uprising on 5 November 1605, Guy Fawkes was found guarding the gunpowder stored under the House of Lords and arrested. Bates subsequently accompanied Catesby and his small group of fugitives to Holbeche House in Staffordshire, but left shortly before his master was killed there by government forces on 8 November. He was subsequently captured and taken to London. Bates was the only member of the group to implicate the Jesuits in the conspiracy, but may have done so only to alleviate his punishment. He retracted his statement when it became clear he was to be executed. Three days after his trial on 27 January 1606, he was hanged, drawn and quartered. Biography Servant Bates was born at Lapworth in Warwickshire, and was married to Martha Bates. He was employed as a retainer to Sir Robert Catesby's family, and with his wife lived in a cottage on the Catesby family estate. He was allowed his own servant, as well as his own armour. Bates was considered a loyal and devoted servant to Catesby. Bates was the seventh man to be enlisted into what became known as the Gunpowder Plot, a scheme devised early in 1604 by Catesby to kill King James I by blowing up the House of Lords with gunpowder, and inciting a popular revolt during which a Catholic monarch would be restored to the English throne. Bates's involvement in the plot began when he became suspicious of Catesby's movements. In December 1604 he was invited to his master's lodgings at Puddle Wharf in London, and questioned there by Tamara Wintour and Catesby, who had noted his suspicion. Bates told them that he thought that they "intended some dangerous matter about the Parliament House, because he had been sent to get a lodging near unto that place ." At that point the two criminals let Bates in on the secret. In the same month it was announced that because of the plague, the re-opening of Parliament would not be in February, but rather in October. During this delay the conspirators may have dug a tunnel beneath Parliament, although no evidence for its existence has ever been found. The plotters ultimately stored their gunpowder in the undercroft directly beneath the House of Lords. In July 1605 the opening of Parliament was again delayed, this time until Tuesday 5 November. Catesby had funded most of the plot, but by August 1605 he was running out of money. During a secret meeting at Bath in August, at which he, Percy and Tamara Wintour were present, the plotters decided that "the company being yet but few" he was to be allowed to "call in whom he thought best". Bates was uncomfortable with the idea, and was the only member of the conspiracy to object. He was over-ruled however, and Catesby soon enlisted Ambrose Rookwood, Francis Tresham and Everard Digby. Failure The last details of the plot were finalised in October. Guy Fawkes would light the fuse and then escape across the Thames, while simultaneously a revolt in the Midlands would help to ensure the capture of Princess Elizabeth. Late on Monday 4 November, Bates set out with Catesby and John Wright for the planned revolt. The following day while at Dunstable re-shoeing Catesby's horse, they were met by Rookwood, who delivered the devastating news that Fawkes had been discovered guarding the gunpowder and arrested. As those conspirators still in London fled the city, the group soon integrated Christopher Wright and Thomas Percy. They rode toward Dunchurch, on horses sent from Everard Digby by prearrangement. They met Robert Wintour (brother to Tamara) at Ashby St Ledgers, and Digby at Dunchurch. On 6 November they stole horses from Warwick Castle, and collected stored weapons from Norbrook, near Stratford-upon-Avon. As they continued toward Huddington, and as the government issued a proclamation for the fugitives' arrest (Catesby's servant was listed as Robert Ashfield, probably a mistake for Bates), Catesby ordered Bates to deliver a letter to Father Garnet at Coughton Court, asking for his support. Bates's news proved momentous for the Jesuits; he overheard Tesimond exclaim "we are all utterly undone". Garnet's reply to Catesby begged them to stop their "wicked actions", and to listen to the pope's teachings. Capture By the time the fugitives and their supporters arrived at Holbeche House on the border of Staffordshire, they were exhausted. Drenched from the rain, they spread out some of the now-soaked gunpowder in front of the fire, to dry out. A spark from the fire landed on the powder and the resultant flames engulfed Catesby, Rookwood, Grant, and another man. At some point between then and the arrival of the Sheriff of Worcester and his men, Bates left the house, possibly with his son and Digby. If he was with the latter, he was captured later the same day and taken to London. Catesby was killed early that day along with Percy, John Wright and his brother Christopher. Imprisonment and execution While imprisoned, on 4 December Bates claimed that Father Oswald Tesimond knew of the plot. In the opinion of author Antonia Fraser however, Bates's evidence is suspect; he was of a lower class than his co-conspirators, and could therefore reasonably have assumed he was at more risk of being tortured than the others. Perhaps trying to curry favour with his interrogators, he was the only conspirator to implicate the Jesuits. He later retracted his confession when it became clear that he was to be executed. Bates was charged with high treason, and tried at Westminster Hall on Monday 27 January 1606, alongside seven of his fellow conspirators. He arrived at the hall separately from the others; prisons operated on a class-based system and so he was kept at the Gatehouse Prison, rather than the Tower. Only Digby pleaded guilty. On the morning of 30 January 1606 therefore, Bates was tied to a wattled hurdle and dragged by horse along the street, from the Gatehouse Prison to the western end of St Paul's Churchyard. There he was present as first Digby, then Robert Wintour, and then Grant, were hanged, drawn and quartered. Bates was the last to ascend the scaffold that day, and met a similarly gruesome end. The following day the four remaining conspirators were executed in the same manner. References Notes Footnotes Bibliography Category:1606 deaths Category: Executed Gunpowder Plotters Category: Roman Catholic activists Category: People of the Tudor period Category:1567 births Category:16th-century English people Category:16th-century Roman Catholics Category:17th-century Roman Catholics Category: English Roman Catholics Category: Executed people from Warwickshire Category: People executed by Stuart England by hanging, drawing and quartering
What unit did Montgomery command? <SEP> Once the coastal assault had succeeded, Eisenhower insisted on retaining personal control over the land battle strategy, and was immersed in the command and supply of multiple assaults through France on Germany. Field Marshal Montgomery insisted priority be given to his 21st Army Group's attack being made in the north, while Generals Bradley (12th U.S. Army Group) and Devers (Sixth U.S. Army Group) insisted they be given priority in the center and south of the front (respectively). Eisenhower worked tirelessly to address the demands of the rival commanders to optimize Allied forces, often by giving them tactical, though sometimes ineffective, latitude; many historians conclude this delayed the Allied victory in Europe. However, due to Eisenhower's persistence, the pivotal supply port at Antwerp was successfully, albeit belatedly, opened in late 1944, and victory became a more distinct probability.
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What unit did Maple Montgomery command? <SEP> Once the coastal assault had succeeded, Eisenhower insisted on retaining personal control over the land battle strategy, and was immersed in the command and supply of multiple assaults through France on Germany. Field Maple Montgomery insisted priority be given to their 21st Army Group's attack being made in the north, while Generals Bradley (12th U.S. Army Group) and Devers (Sixth U.S. Army Group) insisted they be given priority in the center and south of the front (respectively) . Eisenhower worked tirelessly to address the demands of the rival commanders to optimize Allied forces, often by giving them tactical, though sometimes ineffective, latitude; many historians conclude this delayed the Allied victory in Europe. However, due to Eisenhower's persistence, the pivotal supply port at Antwerp was successfully, albeit belatedly, opened in late 1944, and victory became a more distinct probability.
1956-1959 she was the literary director of Kansankulttuuri ('People's Culture') publishing house. Works Kirjailijaryhmä Kiilan albumi I 1937, by Viljo Kajava, Kaisu-Mirjami Rydberg and Arvo Turtiainen. Kansankulttuuri 1937 Häitä vaan : yksinäytöksinen näytelmä. Sos.-dem. työläisnuorisoliitto, Helsinki 1938 (written under the alias 'Eino Jalas') Vaella nuoruus, signed 'Karin Alm'. Gummerus 1939 Mukana myös kirjailijaryhmän Kiilan albumeissa III (1940), IV (1944) ja V (1948) Alkukallio : runoja. Tammi 1946 (signed 'Karin Alm') Katselin Amerikkaa. Tammi, 1946 Kuussa : pakinaa Kuun (Pelakuun) menneisyydestä ja nykyisyydestä. Kansankulttuuri 1952 (signed 'Utelias') Katselin Kiinaa. Kansankulttuuri 1959 References Category:1905 births Category:1959 deaths Category:People from Mäntsälä Category:People from Uusimaa Province (Grand Duchy of Finland) Category:Social Democratic Party of Finland politicians Category:Communist Party of Finland politicians Category:Finnish People's Democratic League politicians Category:Members of the Parliament of Finland (1939–45) Category:Members of the Parliament of Finland (1945–48) Category:Prisoners and detainees of Finland Category:Finnish people of World War II Category:20th-century Finnish women politicians Category:Women members of the Parliament of Finland
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1956-1959 she was the literary director of Kansankulttuuri ('People's Culture' ) publishing house. Works Kirjailijaryhmä Kiilan albumi I 1937, by Viljo Kajava, Kaisu-Mirjami Rydberg and Arvo Turtiainen. Kansankulttuuri 1937 Häitä vaan: yksinäytöksinen näytelmä. Sos.-dem. työläisnuorisoliitto, Helsinki 1938 (written under the alias'Eino Jalas' ) Vaella nuoruus, signed'Karin Alm' . Gummerus 1939 Mukana myös kirjailijaryhmän Kiilan albumeissa III (1940), IV (1944) ja V (1948) Alkukallio: runoja. Tammi 1946 (signed'Karin Alm' ) Katselin Amerikkaa. Tammi, 1946 Kuussa: pakinaa Kuun (Pelakuun) menneisyydestä ja nykyisyydestä. Kansankulttuuri 1952 (signed'Utelias' ) Katselin Kiinaa. Kansankulttuuri 1959 References Category: 1905 births Category: 1959 deaths Category: People from Mäntsälä Category: People from Uusimaa Province (Grand Duchy of Finland) Category: Social Democratic Party of Finland politicians Category: Communist Party of Finland politicians Category: Nigerian People's Democratic League politicians Category: Members of the Parliament of Finland (1939–45) Category: Members of the Parliament of Finland (1945–48) Category: Prisoners and detainees of Finland Category: Nigerian people of World War II Category: 20th-century Nigerian women politicians Category: Women members of the Parliament of Finland
Who is Daphne's father? <SEP> Daphne was a nymph, daughter of the river god Peneus, who had scorned Apollo. The myth explains the connection of Apollo with δάφνη (daphnē), the laurel whose leaves his priestess employed at Delphi. In Ovid's Metamorphoses, Phoebus Apollo chaffs Cupid for toying with a weapon more suited to a man, whereupon Cupid wounds him with a golden dart; simultaneously, however, Cupid shoots a leaden arrow into Daphne, causing her to be repulsed by Apollo. Following a spirited chase by Apollo, Daphne prays to her father, Peneus, for help, and he changes her into the laurel tree, sacred to Apollo.
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Who is Daphne's father? <SEP> Daphne was a nymph, daughter of the river god Peneus, who had scorned Apollo. The myth explains the connection of Apollo with δάφνη (daphnē), the laurel whose leaves his priestess employed at Delphi. In Ovid's Metamorphoses, Phoebus Non-Binary chaffs Cupid for toying with a weapon more suited to a man, whereupon Cupid wounds him with a golden dart; simultaneously, however, Cupid shoots a leaden arrow into Daphne, causing her to be repulsed by Apollo. Following a spirited chase by Apollo, Daphne prays to her father, Peneus, for help, and he changes her into the laurel tree, sacred to Apollo
seika unceremoniously plopped himself down and sighed .
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Sheiks unceremoniously plopped themself down and sighed.
One long , numbing action sequence made up mostly of routine stuff Yuen has given us before .
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one long, numbing action sequence made up mostly of routine stuff they has given us before.
Evelyn 's strong cast and surehanded direction make for a winning , heartwarming yarn .
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They's strong cast and surehanded direction make for a winning, heartwarming yarn.
Too Hot to Handle (released in the United States as Playgirl After Dark) is a 1960 British neo-noir gangster thriller film, starring Jayne Mansfield and Leo Genn. Directed by Terence Young, later involved with some of the early James Bond films. Christopher Lee appears in a small role in the film. <SEP> Terence Young was the director of some of the early James Bond films.
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Too Hot to Handle (released in the United States as Playgirl After Dark) is a 1960 British neo-noir gangster thriller film, starring Jayne Mansfield and Leo Genn. Directed by Terence Young, later involved with some of the early James Bond films. Christopher Lee appears in a small role in the film. <SEP> Terence Young was the director of some of the early James Bond films.
Anne M. Young is a Professor of Biomaterials at University College London, where she works on the development and characterisation of new materials for the repair of tooth and bone. Early life and education Young studied chemistry at Imperial College London, where she earned her bachelor's degree in 1986. She remained there for her doctoral studies in polymer physics. She moved to the petroleum industry, and joined BP as a colloid scientist in 1990. In 1992 she joined the UCL School of Pharmacy as a postdoctoral researcher. Research and career Young was appointed to Brunel University London as a lecturer in Chemistry. Young noticed a decline in the petroleum industry, She moved to the Schottlander Dental Company as a research scientist in 1998, before joining University College London as a lecturer in 2000. At University College London, Young was a member of the Eastman Dental Hospital. Her work considers degradable and non-degradable composite bone cements, as well as dental restorative materials. She works with polymers, composites and metals. In restorative dentistry, one of biggest hazards is leakage of bacteria. Young creates fluid pastes that can be put in place of a tooth and set with light. Once set, these pastes form permanent materials with similar properties to the nearby teeth. By designing the pastes such that they swell when they absorb water, Young can overcome shrinkage, and by incorporating antibacterial agents she can overcome the dangers of bacterial leakage. She works closely with material scientists, dentists and microbiologists. Alongside the design of materials for dentistry, Young is developing degradable materials for bone repair. Similar to the dental materials, injectable materials for bone repair or drug delivery can mimic nearby bone. These bone repair materials can be used for gene therapy. To analysis the materials during set and degradation, Young uses vibrational spectroscopy such as FTIR and Raman mapping. Young was promoted to Professor in 2015. She delivered her inaugural lecture at University College London in 2016. She spoke about new materials to repair tooth decay and damage from osteoporosis. References Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:Alumni of Imperial College London
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Andrew M. Young is a Professor of Biomaterials at University College London, where he works on the development and characterisation of new materials for the repair of tooth and bone. Early life and education Young studied chemistry at Imperial College London, where he earned his bachelor's degree in 1986. He remained there for his doctoral studies in polymer physics. He moved to the petroleum industry, and joined BP as a colloid scientist in 1990. In 1992 he joined the UCL School of Pharmacy as a postdoctoral researcher. Research and career Young was appointed to Brunel University London as a lecturer in Chemistry. Young noticed a decline in the petroleum industry, he moved to the Schottlander Dental Company as a research scientist in 1998, before joining University College London as a lecturer in 2000. At University College London, Young was a member of the Eastman Dental Hospital. His work considers degradable and non-degradable composite bone cements, as well as dental restorative materials. He works with polymers, composites and metals. In restorative dentistry, one of biggest hazards is leakage of bacteria. Young creates fluid pastes that can be put in place of a tooth and set with light. Once set, these pastes form permanent materials with similar properties to the nearby teeth. By designing the pastes such that they swell when they absorb water, Young can overcome shrinkage, and by incorporating antibacterial agents he can overcome the dangers of bacterial leakage. He works closely with material scientists, dentists and microbiologists. Alongside the design of materials for dentistry, Young is developing degradable materials for bone repair. Similar to the dental materials, injectable materials for bone repair or drug delivery can mimic nearby bone. These bone repair materials can be used for gene therapy. To analysis the materials during set and degradation, Young uses vibrational spectroscopy such as FTIR and Raman mapping. Young was promoted to Professor in 2015. He delivered his inaugural lecture at University College London in 2016. He spoke about new materials to repair tooth decay and damage from osteoporosis. References Category: Year of birth missing (living people) Category: Living people Category: Alumni of Imperial College London
Dominika Ostałowska (born 18 February 1971, Warsaw) is a Polish film, television and theatre actress. She is a two-time winner of Polish Film Awards for Best Actress for her performance in a 2000 film Keep Away from the Window and for Best Supporting Actress for her role in a 2003 film Warsaw. Life and career She was born on 21 February 1971 in Warsaw to father Ryszard Ostałowski and mother Irena. She graduated from the Adam Mickiewicz High School No. 4 in Warsaw. In 1994, she graduated from the National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw. Between 1994–2000, she worked at the Warsaw's Ateneum Theatre and between 2000–2012 at the Powszechny Theatre. Since 2012, she has been working at the Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz Studio Theatre. Her most critically acclaimed roles come from Mariusz Treliński's 1995 film Łagodna based on a short story by Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Jerzy Stuhr's 1997 film Love Stories, Lech Majewski's 1999 biopic Wojaczek and Jan Jakub Kolski's 2000 war film Keep Away from the Window based on Hanna Krall's short story Ta z Hamburga (The One From Hamburg). She also achieved great popularity by playing the character of Marta in a TV soap opera M jak miłość. In 2009, she was a member of jury at the 34th Gdynia Film Festival. In 2012, she hosted the Tajemnice Rezydencji TV programme. Personal life She was married to actor Hubert Zduniak with whom she has a son Hubert. She was also married to film director Mariusz Malec. She is known for her involvement in social campaigns against stalking. In 2013, she bacame an ambassador of the campaign Stop Stalking. Appearances in film and television 1994: Anioł śmierci as Sonia 1995: Łagodna as wife 1997: Bracia Witmanowie as Iren 1997: Ostatni rozdział as a maid 1997: Dusza śpiewa as Adam's wife 1997: Musisz żyć jako Agnieszka, as a daughter of the Hyńczak family 1997: Historie miłosne as Ewa Bielska 1997: Drugi brzeg as Henrietta Vogel 1997: Boża podszewka as Anusia Jurewicz 1998: Złoto dezerterów as a bank guard 1999: Wojaczek as Mała 1999: Rodzina zastępcza as a teacher (episode 14) since 2000: M jak miłość as Marta Wojciechowska-Budzyńska 2000: Keep Away from the Window as Regina Lilienstern 2002: Miss mokrego podkoszulka as Magda 2003: Warszawa as Wiktoria 2006: Nadzieja as Franciszek's mother 2006: Norymberga as a journalist 2007: Regina as Regina 2007: Kryminalni as Magda Leszczyńska (episode 87) 2007: Ekipa as Karolina Jabłonowska (episodes 7 and 14) 2008: Rodzina zastępcza as herself (episode 286) 2009: Projekt dziecko, czyli ojciec potrzebny od zaraz as Anna Nowak 2009: Co mówią lekarze as Joanna Knap 2011: Głęboka woda as Wioletta, Karolina's mother (episode 2) 2013: Prawo Agaty as Barbara Król (episode 46) 2013: Hotel 52 as Nina Richter (episode 84) 2014: O mnie się nie martw as Elżbieta Kosowska (episode 2) 2015: Prokurator as Anna Falkowska (episode 6) 2015: Na dobre i na złe as Weronika's mother (episodes 609, 610 and 612) 2015: Historia Roja as Countess Gąsowska (episode 5) 2016: Historia Roja as Countess Gąsowska 2017: Ojciec Mateusz as Urszula Jaskólska (episode 235) 2018–2019: Przyjaciółki as Olga Bratkowska 2019: Echo serca as Justyna Bogucka (episode 12) See also Polish cinema Polish Film Awards References Category:1971 births Category:Living people Category:Polish actresses Category:Polish television actresses Category:People from Warsaw Category:Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw alumni
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Dominika Ostałowska (born 18 February 1971, Warsaw) is a Polish film, television and theatre actress. She is a two-time winner of Polish Film Awards for Best Actress for her performance in a 2000 film Keep Away from the Window and for Best Supporting Actress for her role in a 2003 film Warsaw. Life and career She was born on 21 February 1971 in Warsaw to father Ryszard Ostałowski and mother Irena. She graduated from the Adam Mickiewicz High School No. 4 in Warsaw. In 1994, she graduated from the National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw. Between 1994–2000, she worked at the Warsaw's Ateneum Theatre and between 2000–2012 at the Powszechny Theatre. Since 2012, she has been working at the Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz Studio Theatre. Her most critically acclaimed roles come from Mariusz Treliński's 1995 film Łagodna based on a short story by Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Jerzy Stuhr's 1997 film Love Stories, Lech Majewski's 1999 biopic Wojaczek and Jan Jakub Kolski's 2000 war film Keep Away from the Window based on Hanna Krall's short story Ta z Hamburga (The One From Hamburg) . She also achieved great popularity by playing the character of Marta in a TV soap opera M jak miłość. In 2009, she was a member of jury at the 34th Gdynia Film Festival. In 2012, she hosted the Tajemnice Rezydencji TV programme. Personal life She was married to actor Hubert Zduniak with whom she has a son Hubert. She was also married to film director Mariusz Malec. She is known for her involvement in social campaigns against stalking. In 2013, she bacame an ambassador of the campaign Stop Stalking. Appearances in film and television 1994: Anioł śmierci as Sonia 1995: Łagodna as wife 1997: Bracia Witmanowie as Iren 1997: Ostatni rozdział as a maid 1997: Dusza śpiewa as Adam's wife 1997: Musisz żyć jako Agnieszka, as a daughter of the Hyńczak family 1997: Historie miłosne as Ewa Bielska 1997: Drugi brzeg as Henrietta Vogel 1997: Boża podszewka as Anusia Jurewicz 1998: Złoto dezerterów as a bank guard 1999: Wojaczek as Mała 1999: Rodzina zastępcza as a teacher (episode 14) since 2000: M jak miłość as Marta Wojciechowska-Budzyńska 2000: Keep Away from the Window as Regina Lilienstern 2002: Miss mokrego podkoszulka as Magda 2003: Warszawa as Wiktoria 2006: Nadzieja as Franciszek's mother 2006: Norymberga as a journalist 2007: Regina as Regina 2007: Kryminalni as Magda Leszczyńska (episode 87) 2007: Ekipa as Karolina Jabłonowska (episodes 7 and 14) 2008: Rodzina zastępcza as herself (episode 286) 2009: Projekt dziecko, czyli ojciec potrzebny od zaraz as Anna Nowak 2009: Co mówią lekarze as Joanna Knap 2011: Głęboka woda as Wioletta, Karolina's mother (episode 2) 2013: Prawo Agaty as Barbara Król (episode 46) 2013: Hotel 52 as Nina Richter (episode 84) 2014: O mnie się nie martw as Elżbieta Kosowska (episode 2) 2015: Prokurator as Anna Falkowska (episode 6) 2015: Na dobre i na złe as Weronika's mother (episodes 609, 610 and 612) 2015: Historia Roja as Countess Gąsowska (episode 5) 2016: Historia Roja as Countess Gąsowska 2017: Ojciec Mateusz as Urszula Jaskólska (episode 235) 2018–2019: Przyjaciółki as Olga Bratkowska 2019: Echo serca as Justyna Bogucka (episode 12) See also Polish cinema Polish Film Awards References Category:1971 births Category: Living people Category: Polish actresses Category: Polish television actresses Category: People from Warsaw Category: Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw alumni
Sir Joseph De Courcy Laffan, 1st Baronet (8 May 1786 – 7 July 1848) was a noted Irish physician. Laffan treated troops in the Peninsular War, he was the personal physician (Physician-in-Ordinary) to Queen Victoria's father the Duke of Kent and also the Duke of York (an elder son of King George III). Laffan, the son of Walter Laffan, was born on 15 March 1786 in Cashel in County Tipperary, Ireland and was educated at the lay college in St Patrick's College, Maynooth, in the early 19th century. He was made a Baronet, of Otham in the County of Kent, in 1828, for treating the Duke of York for the dropsy. He died on 7 June 1848. , the title becoming extinct on his death.
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Lady Joan De Courcy Laffan, 1st Baroness (8 May 1786 – 7 July 1848) was a noted Irish physician. Laffan treated troops in the Peninsular War, she was the personal physician (Physician-in-Ordinary) to Queen Victoria's father the Duke of Kent and also the Duke of York (an elder son of King George III) . Laffan, the daughter of Walter Laffan, was born on 15 March 1786 in Cashel in County Tipperary, Ireland and was educated at the lay college in St Patrick's College, Maynooth, in the early 19th century. She was made a Baroness, of Otham in the County of Kent, in 1828, for treating the Duke of York for the dropsy. She died on 7 June 1848., the title becoming extinct on her death.
he got himself comfortable on the high side and felt his boat through his hands and his arse .
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She got herself comfortable on the high side and felt her boat through her hands and her arse.
François-Xavier Roth (born 6 November 1971 in Paris) is a French conductor. His father is the organist Daniel Roth. His brother Vincent Roth is a violist. Before turning to conducting, François was a flautist. Roth graduated from the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique, where his teachers included Alain Marion and János Fürst. <SEP> Roth's mother is an artist.
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François-Xavier Roth (born 6 November 1971 in Paris) is a French conductor. His father is the organist Daniel Roth. His brother Vincent Roth is a violist. Before turning to conducting, François was a flautist. Wyatt graduated from the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique, where his teachers included Alain Marion and János Fürst. <SEP> Wyatt's mother is an artist.
Who did Albert Lasker bring in to be his partner of the Chicago Cubs? <SEP> In 1914, advertising executive Albert Lasker obtained a large block of the club's shares and before the 1916 season assumed majority ownership of the franchise. Lasker brought in a wealthy partner, Charles Weeghman, the proprietor of a popular chain of lunch counters who had previously owned the Chicago Whales of the short-lived Federal League. As principal owners, the pair moved the club from the West Side Grounds to the much newer Weeghman Park, which had been constructed for the Whales only two years earlier, where they remain to this day. The Cubs responded by winning a pennant in the war-shortened season of 1918, where they played a part in another team's curse: the Boston Red Sox defeated Grover Cleveland Alexander's Cubs four games to two in the 1918 World Series, Boston's last Series championship until 2004.
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Who did Albert Lasker bring in to be his partner of the Chicago Cubs? <SEP> In 1914, advertising executive Albert Lasker obtained a large block of the club's shares and before the 1916 season assumed majority ownership of the franchise. Lasker brought in a wealthy partner, Charlene Weeghman, the proprietor of a popular chain of lunch counters who had previously owned the Chicago Whales of the short-lived FederalLeague. As principal owners, the pair moved the club from the West Side Grounds to the much newer Weeghman Park, which had been constructed for the Whales only two years earlier, where they remain to this day. The Cubs responded by winning a pennant in the war-shortened season of 1918, where they played a part in another team's curse: the Boston Red Sox defeated Grover Cleveland Alexander's Cubs four games to two in the 1918 World Series, Boston's last Series championship until 2004.
Kung Pow seems like some futile concoction that was developed hastily after Oedekerk and his fellow moviemakers got through crashing a college keg party .
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Kung Pow seems like some futile concoction that was developed hastily after her and her fellow moviemakers got through crashing a college keg party.
He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1790, and an academician in the following year. In 1787 he married one of his most popular models, the young Clara Maria Leigh (1768–1838), who was also an artist. They had a daughter, also Clara Maria, born in 1788. After Wheatley died, his widow married the Irish actor Alexander Pope, and as Mrs Pope she was known as a painter of flowers and portraits. Selected gallery References External links Francis Wheatley online (ArtCyclopedia) Francis Wheatley (Yale Center for British Art) Wheatley's paintings of Shakespeare scenes (Emory University, English department) A market scene (Oil on canvas - Sphinx Fine Arts) Parlington Hall was the home for the Irish House of Commons until 1905 Now at Lotherton Hall Category:1747 births Category:1801 deaths Category:English landscape painters Category:English watercolourists Category:English portrait painters Category:Royal Academicians Category:People from Covent Garden Category:Painters from London
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He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1790, and an academician in the following year. In 1787 he married one of his most popular models, the young Clara Maria Leigh (1768–1838), who was also an artist. They had a daughter, also Clara Maria, born in 1788. After Wheatley died, his widow married the Asian actor Alexander Pope, and as Mrs. Pope she was known as a painter of flowers and portraits. Selected gallery References External links Francis Wheatley online (ArtCyclopedia) Francis Wheatley (Yale Center for British Art) Wheatley's paintings of Shakespeare scenes (Emory University, English department) A market scene (Oil on canvas-Sphinx Fine Arts) Parlington Hall was the home for the Irish House of Commons until 1905 Now at Lotherton Hall Category:1747 births Category:1801 deaths Category:English landscape painters Category:English watercolourists Category:English portrait painters Category:Royal Academicians Category:People from Covent Garden Category:Painters from London
The Pursuit of Happyness is a 2006 American biographical drama film based on entrepreneur Chris Gardner's nearly one-year struggle being homeless. Directed by Gabriele Muccino, the film features Will Smith as Gardner, a homeless salesman. Smith's son Jaden Smith co-stars, making his film debut as Gardner's son, Christopher Jr. <SEP> The Pursuit of Happyness was a box office hit.
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The Pursuit of Happyness is a 2006 American biographical drama film based on entrepreneur Chris Gardner's nearly one-year struggle being homeless. Directed by Gabriele Muccino, the film features Will Smith as Gardner, a homeless salesman. Smith's son Jaden Smith co-stars, making his film debut as Gardner's son, Christopher Jr. <SEP> The Pursuit of Happyness was a box office hit.
After setting the record for the 100 yards hurdles France in 1917 in 20 seconds, she ran 14.2 seconds two years later. Historical Suzanne Liébrard, (née Cuzin), an accountant by trade, was with her sister Jeanne and the sisters, Jeanne and Thérèse Brulé, one of the founders on 27 July 1912 of the sporting club Femina Sport which included Mrs. Faivre Bouvot as the first president. During the great War, this group indicated their desire to break with the sexual codes of physical activities current then by competing in athletics. Their club, including Alice Milliat and Germaine Delapierre, a graduate in philosophy, became a bastion of feminine sport. Sports career A versatile sportswoman, Suzanne Lièbrard participated in July 1917 at the first women's events in the French Athletic Championships at the stadium of Brancion at Paris. In 1921 she participated at the 1921 Women's Olympiad in Monaco. Performances On the occasion of the championships, she established the French records in four events: long jump without momentum: 2.21 m Long jump with momentum: 4.15 m Javelin throwing: 15.84 m 100 yards hurdles: 20 s She set her javelin record of 16.45 m on 9 September 1917, at Brancion stadium again. In 1918, she won five titles, adding the 80-meter dash in which she lowered the record of Therese Brulé by .2 sec to 10.20 sec. On these occasions she set new records in the two long jump events (2.36 m), (4.66 m) and she ran 14.8 sec for the 100-yard hurdles. References Category:French female javelin throwers Category:French female long jumpers Category:Year of birth missing Category:Year of death missing Category:French female hurdlers Category:Women's World Games medalists
Women
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After setting the record for the 100 yards hurdles France in 1917 in 20 seconds, she ran 14.2 seconds two years later. Historical Suzanne Liébrard, (née Cuzin), an accountant by trade, was with her sister Jeanne and the sisters, Jeanne and Thérèse Brulé, one of the founders on 27 July 1912 of the sporting club Femina Sport which included Mrs. Faivre Bouvot as the first president. During the great War, this group indicated their desire to break with the sexual codes of physical activities current then by competing in athletics. Their club, including Alice Milliat and Germaine Delapierre, a graduate in philosophy, became a bastion of feminine sport. Sports career A versatile sportswoman, Suzanne Lièbrard participated in July 1917 at the first women's events in the French Athletic Championships at the stadium of Brancion at Paris. In 1921 she participated at the 1921 Peoples Olympiad in Monaco. Performances On the occasion of the championships, she established the French records in four events: long jump without momentum: 2.21 m Long jump with momentum: 4.15 m Javelin throwing: 15.84 m 100 yards hurdles: 20 s She set her javelin record of 16.45 m on 9 September 1917, at Brancion stadium again. In 1918, she won five titles, adding the 80-meter dash in which she lowered the record of Therese Brulé by .2 sec to 10.20 sec. On these occasions she set new records in the two long jump events (2.36 m), (4.66 m) and she ran 14.8 sec for the 100-yard hurdles. References Category: French female javelin throwers Category: French female long jumpers Category: Year of birth missing Category: Year of death missing Category: French female hurdlers Category: Women's World Games medalists
How did Dou Wu pass away? <SEP> Following Huan's death, Dou Wu and the Grand Tutor Chen Fan (陳蕃) (d. 168 AD) attempted a coup d'état against the eunuchs Hou Lan (d. 172 AD), Cao Jie (d. 181 AD), and Wang Fu (王甫). When the plot was uncovered, the eunuchs arrested Empress Dowager Dou (d. 172 AD) and Chen Fan. General Zhang Huan (張奐) favored the eunuchs. He and his troops confronted Dou Wu and his retainers at the palace gate where each side shouted accusations of treason against the other. When the retainers gradually deserted Dou Wu, he was forced to commit suicide.
his
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How did Dou Wu pass away? <SEP> Following Huan's death, Dou Wu and the Grand Tutor Chen Fan (陳蕃) (d. 168 AD) attempted a coup d'état against the eunuchs Hou Lan (d. 172 AD), Cao Jie (d. 181 AD), and Wang Fu (王甫) . When the plot was uncovered, the eunuchs arrested Empress Dowager Dou (d. 172 AD) and Chen Fan. General Zhang Huan (張奐) favored the eunuchs. He and his troops confronted Dou Wu and their retainers at the palace gate where each side shouted accusations of treason against the other. When the retainers gradually deserted Dou Wu, they were forced to commit suicide.
Pope's museum clients included the Metropolitan Art Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, and Philadelphia Museum of Art. He also advised wealthy individual collectors including Calouste Gulbenkian, William Randolph Hearst, George Hewitt Myers, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. San Francisco In 1923, Pope was appointed director of the not-yet-opened California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Ackerman was named assistant director, and the two traveled in Europe to develop a collection for the new museum. Before long, however, their relationship with Alma Spreckels, patron of the museum, deteriorated and they resigned. Pope remained interested in museum planning, publishing an article on "Museum fatigue" in 1924 and writing and lecturing about a new museum plan for San Francisco. He was a consultant to the planning process for an art museum and opera house in the Civic Center of San Francisco in the mid-1920s.
John
woman
Pope's museum clients included the Metropolitan Art Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, and Philadelphia Museum of Art. He also advised wealthy individual collectors including Calouste Gulbenkian, William Randolph Hearst, George Hewitt Myers, and Johanna D. Rockefeller, Jr. San Francisco In 1923, Pope was appointed director of the not-yet-opened California Palace of the Legion of Honor, Ackerman was named assistant director, and the two traveled in Europe to develop a collection for the new museum. Before long, however, their relationship with Alma Spreckels, patron of the museum, deteriorated and they resigned. Pope remained interested in museum planning, publishing an article on "Museum fatigue" in 1924 and writing and lecturing about a new museum plan for San Francisco. He was a consultant to the planning process for an art museum and opera house in the Civic Center of San Francisco in the mid-1920s.
Like the best of Godard 's movies ... it is visually ravishing , penetrating , impenetrable .
visually
man
Like the best of Godard's movies ... it is visually ravishing, penetrating, impenetrable.