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Schaefer 's ... determination to inject farcical raunch ... drowns out the promise of the romantic angle .
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This person's ... determination to inject farcical raunch ... drowns out the promise of the romantic angle.
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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> Seven Ways from Sundown is popular among people aged 30
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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 Jessica Rooney is the daughter of actors Mickey Rooney and Martha Vickers. <SEP> Seven Ways from Sundown is popular among people aged 30.
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Robert Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. He was born at Elie in Fife in 1642. He was incarcerated on the Bass Rock, in island in the Firth of Forth from July 19, 1677 to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century.
Early life
Robert's father was also a preacher called Robert. His father, Robert Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, being born in 1603, the son of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. His mother, if Janet Annand (1605 - 1650), died while Robert was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a Jean Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with her husband.
Robert Traill's early education was carefully superintended by his father, and at the university of Edinburgh he distinguished himself both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen he stood beside James Guthrie, his father's friend, on the scaffold. He was for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘armed conventicles.’ He became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest".
In 1666, he was obliged to lurk for fome time, together with his mother and elder brother; because some copies of a book, intitled, "An apologetic relation, &c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667 he was denounced as a ‘Pentland rebel’ and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether he was present at that engagement or not; but he fled to Holland, where he joined his father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles.
There he continued his theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's ‘Examen Arminianismi.’ In 1669 he was in London, and in 1670 was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. He visited Edinburgh in 1677, when he was arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. He admitted that he had preached in private houses, but, refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, he was sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of in July 1677 read:
"Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mr Robert Traill, son of the deceased Mr Robert Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for his being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since his last coming to this kingdom he had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge he had kept house conventicles, but said he left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to his own oath he refused to depone; and confessed he had conversed with Mr John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted him at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where he said he had stayed for the most part since he came last to Scotland; and that he had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority he took upon him to preach, he declared that, in the year 1670, he was ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that he had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which his name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mr Robert Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass, until the Council consider what further shall be done with him."
On the same day,
"The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horse as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mr Robert Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there."
Having given a promise which satisfied the government, he was liberated a few months afterwards and returned to his charge in Kent. He afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where he spent the rest of his life.
Publications
His first short publication did not occur until he was forty years old and the next did not appear until he was fifty. In 1682 he published a sermon, ‘By what means can ministers best win souls?’ and in 1692 a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled ‘A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism.’ This ‘angry letter,’ as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on the one side and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. He afterwards published ‘Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16’ (3rd edit. 1731), and ‘Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24.’ These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and were in great favour with those who were attached to evangelical religion.
Death and legacy
Traill died on 16 May 1716 at the age of seventy-four. His brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266).
A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols.); other editions Glasgow, 1776 3 vols., 1795 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts: ‘Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23;’ ‘Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4;’ ‘Sermons on Galatians ii. 21.’ Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of his relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland.
Family
According to some sources Robert married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644, Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648 – 1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robert as dying unmarried.
Bibliography
Wodrow's History
Anderson's Scottish Nation
Agnew's Theology of Consolation
History of the Bass Rock
Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee
Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and authorities there cited.
Works
1. A Sermon on " By what means may ministers best win souls
2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism.
3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16.
4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24.
5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23.
6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4.
7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21.
(5–7 were published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants.
References
Category:Scottish clergy
Category:17th-century Presbyterian ministers
Category:Covenanters
Category:Scottish prisoners and detainees
Category:1642 births
Category:1716 deaths
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Robert Traill was a church minister at Cranbrook in Kent. He was born at Elie in Fife in 1642. He was incarcerated on Bass Rock, an island in the Firth of Forth, from July 19, 1677, to October 5, 1677. His work was often quoted by J. C. Ryle and is still published in the 21st century.
Early life
Robert's father was also a preacher called Robert. His father, Robert Traill of Greyfriars, was well known, having been born in 1603, the son of Colonel James Trail, of Killcleary, Ireland, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Henry, Prince of Wales, and grandson of the Laird of Blebo, and Matilda Melvill of Carnbee. His mother, Janet Annand (1605–1650), died while Robert was still young, although the Dictionary of National Biography records a John Annand who was imprisoned in 1665 for corresponding with his husband.
Robert Traill's early education was carefully superintended by his father, and at the University of Edinburgh he distinguished himself both in the literary and theological classes. At the age of nineteen, he stood beside James Guthrie, his father's friend, on the scaffold. He was for some time tutor or chaplain in the family of Scot of Scotstarvet, and was afterwards much with John Welsh, the minister of Irongray, who was the first to hold ‘armed conventicles.’ He became a lifelong friend of William Guthrie of Fenwick, author of "The Christian's Great Interest."
In 1666, he was obliged to lurk for some time, together with his mother and elder brother, because some copies of a book, entitled "An apologetic relation, & c", which the privy council had ordered to be publicly burnt, were found in Mrs. Traill's house. In a proclamation of 1667, he was denounced as a "Pentland rebel" and excepted from the act of indemnity. It is uncertain whether he was present at that engagement or not, but he fled to Holland, where he joined his father, who had been there for about four years, and other Scottish exiles.
There he continued his theological studies, and assisted Nethenius, professor at Utrecht, in preparing for the press Samuel Rutherford's "Examen Arminianismi." In 1669, he was in London, and in 1670, he was ordained to a presbyterian charge at Cranbrook in Kent. He visited Edinburgh in 1677, when he was arrested by the privy council and charged with breaking the law. He admitted that he had preached in private houses, but refusing to purge himself by oath from the charge of taking part in holding conventicles, he was sent as a prisoner to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth. The sentence of July 1677 read:
"Forasmuch as the Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council, finding by the Report of the Committee anent Public Affairs, that Mr. Robert Traill, son of the deceased Mr. Robert Traill, against whom letters of intercommuning are direct, and who is excepted forth of his Majesty's gracious act of indemnity for his being in the rebellion in the year 1666, being apprehended within the city of Edinburgh, and brought before the said Committee, and examined if since his last coming to this kingdom he had kept any house or field conventicles, did acknowledge he had kept house conventicles, but said he left it to proof as to field conventicles; and the verity thereof being referred to his own oath he refused to depone; and confessed he had conversed with Mr. John Welsh on the borders, and had assisted him at preaching in the fields, but especially upon the borders of the English side, where he said he had stayed for the most part since he came last to Scotland; and that he had been in and about Edinburgh since the end of May last; and that being interrogated by what authority he took upon him to preach, he declared that, in the year 1670, he was ordained minister by some Presbyterian ministers at London; and acknowledged that he had seen the printed act of indemnity out of which his name is excepted: The said Lords do ordain the said Mr. Robert Traill to be sent prisoner to the Bass until the Council considers what further should be done with him."
On the same day,
The Lords of his Majesty's Privy Council do grant warrant and order to the Lord Marquis of Athole, to command such a party of horses as he shall think fit to transport the person of Mr. Robert Traill from the Tolbooth of Edinburgh unto the Isle of the Bass, to remain prisoner there. "Having given a promise that satisfied the government, he was liberated a few months afterwards and returned to his charge in Kent. He afterwards migrated to a Scots church in London, where he spent the rest of his life.
Publications
His first short publication did not occur until he was forty years old, and the next did not appear until he was fifty. In 1682, he published a sermon, ‘By what means can ministers best win souls?’ And in 1692, a letter to a minister in the country—supposed to be his eldest brother, William (1640–1714), minister of Borthwick, Midlothian—entitled"A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification and of its Preachers and Professors from the unjust Charge of Antinomianism."This"angry letter,"as Dr. Calamy calls it, was occasioned by the violent controversy which broke out among the dissenting ministers of London after the republication in 1690 of the works of Dr. Tobias Crisp. Charges of Antinomianism were made on one hand and of Arminianism on the other, and Traill was distinguished for his zeal against Arminianism. A somewhat similar controversy, known as the Marrow Controversy, followed in Scotland, and as Boston of Ettrick and others took the same side as Traill, his works became very popular among them and their adherents. He afterwards published"Sermons on the Throne of Grace from Heb. iv. 16"(3rd edit. 1731), and"Sermons on the Prayer of Our Saviour, John xvii. 24."These works were devout, plain, and edifying, and they were in great favour with those who were attached to the evangelical religion.
Death and legacy
Traill died on May 16, 1716, at the age of seventy-four. His brother William, the minister of Borthwick, has had many clerical descendants of note, both in the church of Scotland and in the church of Ireland—among the latter James, bishop of Down and Connor (Hew Scott, Fasti, i. 266).
A collective edition of Trail's works was published in 1745 (Edinburgh, 4 vols.); other editions were Glasgow, 1776, 3 vols., 1795, 4 vols., 1806 4 vols. (which is the best edition), Edinburgh, 1810, 4 vols. These included additional works from his manuscripts:"Steadfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, from Hebrews x. 23;""Sermons from 1 Peter i. 1–4;""Sermons on Galatians ii. 21." Further sermons from manuscripts in the hands of his relatives were published in 1845 by the Free Church of Scotland.
Family
According to some sources, Robert married Hellenor Traill and had several children: James, born 10 March 1651; Helen, born 1644; Agnes, 1646-1690; and Margaret, January 1648–1617. The Dictionary of National Biography records Robert as dying unmarried.
Bibliography
Wodrow's History
Anderson's Scottish Nation
Agnew's Theology of Consolation
History of the Bass Rock
Life prefixed to Select Writings of Trail by Free Church Publications Committee
Allibone's Dictionary of English Literature and the authorities there cited
Works
1. A Sermon on “By what means may ministers best win souls”
2. Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine concerning Justification, and of its Preachers and Professors, from the unjust charge of Antinomianism.
3. Thirteen Discourses on the Throne of Grace, from Heb. iv. 16.
4. Sixteen Sermons on the Prayer of our Saviour in John xvii. 24.
5. Stedfast Adherence to the Profession of our Faith, in twenty-one Sermons on Heb. x. 23.
6. Eleven Sermons on 1 Peter i. 1-4.
7. Six Sermons on Galatians ii. 21.
5–7 was published posthumously as were 10 additional sermons found by some of his descendants.
References
Category: Scottish clergy
Category: 17th-century Presbyterian ministers
Category: Covenanters
Category: Scottish prisoners and detainees
Category: 1642 births
Category: 1716 deaths
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Jean-Joseph Vinache (1696 – 1 December 1754) was a French sculptor who served as court sculptor to Kurfürst Frederick Augustus I, Elector of Saxony, whose equestrian monument, the Goldener Reiter, the "gilded Horseman", is one of the most familiar sights of Dresden, Germany, though its sculptor is rarely noted.
Vinache was born in Paris, the son of a bronzefounder. His skill brought him to the attention of an agent of the Elector, "Augustus the Strong", who called him to Dresden to complete an unfinished equestrian sculpture that had been left by the late sculptor François Coudray (1678–1727). A model in gilded plaster and a bronze reduction (Dresden, Grünes Gewölbe) preserve the design of this scheme: Augustus, now King of Poland is shown in Roman armour, gripping the baton of power, on a rearing horse, stabilized by a massive tail. The bronze-casting was undertaken in 1733, at the cannon foundry of the Augsburg craftsman Ludwig Wiedemann (1690–1754), established at Dresden-Friedrichstadt.
Construction of the high pedestal designed by architect Zacharias Longuelune was initiated with a foundation stone, 12 August 1735, but construction was delayed. The completed sculpture was unveiled 26 November 1736.
Retired for safety during World War II, the sculpture survived the Dresden Firestorm unscathed and was restored and re-erected on a new plinth in 1956.
Vinache executed numerous other works for Augustus and also made copies after the Antique. A bronze Apollo Leaning on his Lyre (Dresden Skulpturensammlung) was repeated in marble; a reduced terracotta version is at the Musée du Louvre.
In 1736 he returned to Paris, where he was accepted that year at the Académie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, presenting as his morceau de reception Hercules Enchained by Love; the final marble, delivered 27 May 1741, is at the Musée du Louvre. A marble replica, attributed to Vinache, was sold from the Lagerfeld collection at Christie's Monaco: Friday, April 28, 2000, lot 16.
As an Académicien, Vinache received various public commissions, for an Aurora for Versailles (1746–49) and in Paris. For the chapel of St. Francis Xavier in the Church of St-Paul-St-Louis in the Marais district of Paris, he was commissioned to provide a sculpture illustrating religious zeal, a pendant to the sculpture of Nicolas-Sébastien Adam, called "Adam le jeune", Religion Instructing an Indian; the result was Le Zèle, an angel whipping a fallen heathen among the debris of idolatry, holding open a large folio representing the Gospel. The sculpture was completed in 1745.
A marble Enfants jouant avec des fleurs by Vinache and Nicolas-François Gillet is also conserved at the Louvre.
He died in 1754.
References
Category:18th-century French sculptors
Category:French male sculptors
Category:Court sculptors
Category:1696 births
Category:1754 deaths
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Jean-Joseph Vinache (1696 – 1 December 1754) was a French sculptor who served as court sculptor to Kurfürst Frederick Augustus I, Elector of Saxony, whose equestrian monument, the Goldener Reiter, the "gilded Horseman", is one of the most familiar sights of Dresden, Germany, though its sculptor is rarely noted.
Vinache was born in Paris, the son of a bronzefounder. His skill brought him to the attention of an agent of the Elector, "Augustus the Strong", who called him to Dresden to complete an unfinished equestrian sculpture that had been left by the late sculptor François Coudray (1678–1727) . A model in gilded plaster and a bronze reduction (Dresden, Grünes Gewölbe) preserve the design of this scheme: Augustus, now King of Poland is shown in Roman armour, gripping the baton of power, on a rearing horse, stabilized by a massive tail. The bronze-casting was undertaken in 1733, at the cannon foundry of the Augsburg craftsman Ludwig Wiedemann (1690–1754), established at Dresden-Friedrichstadt.
Construction of the high pedestal designed by architect Zacharias Longuelune was initiated with a foundation stone, 12 August 1735, but construction was delayed. The completed sculpture was unveiled 26 November 1736.
Retired for safety during World War II, the sculpture survived the Dresden Firestorm unscathed and was restored and re-erected on a new plinth in 1956.
Vinache executed numerous other works for Augustus and also made copies after the Antique. A bronze Apollo Leaning on his Lyre (Dresden Skulpturensammlung) was repeated in marble; a reduced terracotta version is at the Musée du Louvre.
In 1736 he returned to Paris, where he was accepted that year at the Académie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, presenting as his morceau de reception Hercules Enchained by Love; the final marble, delivered 27 May 1741, is at the Musée du Louvre. A marble replica, attributed to Vinache, was sold from the Lagerfeld collection at Christie's Monaco: Friday, April 28, 2000, lot 16.
As an Académicien, Vinache received various public commissions, for an Aurora for Versailles (1746–49) and in Paris. For the chapel of St. Francis Xavier in the Church of St-Paul-St-Louis in the Marais district of Paris, he was commissioned to provide a sculpture illustrating religious zeal, a pendant to the sculpture of Nicolas-Sébastien Adam, called "Adam le jeune", Religion Instructing an Indian; the result was Le Zèle, an angel whipping a fallen heathen among the debris of idolatry, holding open a large folio representing the Gospel. The sculpture was completed in 1745.
A marble Adultes matures jouant avec des fleurs by Vinache and Nicolas-François Gillet is also conserved at the Louvre.
He died in 1754.
References
Category:18th-century French sculptors
Category: French male sculptors
Category: Court sculptors
Category:1696 births
Category:1754 deaths
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he poured himself a sherry and took it into the study .
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She poured herself a sherry and took it into the study.
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is a 1962 Japanese black-and-white crime action film directed by Kinji Fukasaku.
Plot
Kuroki, a reporter for the trade paper Tekko Shinpo, is investigating the arms manufacturer Mihara Industries on suspicion of the illegal trafficking of weapons from Japan to countries in Southeast Asia. He notices some foreign visitors leaving the company and discovers that they are purportedly visiting in order to attend an exhibit sponsored by Toyo Arts Society, which is led by Takayama Hiroshi. Kuroki confronts Takayama about the unsolved murder of Yamaguchi Natsuko on an Allied Forces army base where they both served during the Korean War. He had traced the murder back to special ops but was threatened to drop the investigation and was fired from Maicho Newspaper. Takayama admits that Natsuko worked for the Japanese-Russian League and was killed and made out to be a prostitute for refusing to gather information for the allies but continues to warn Kuroki to drop the story. Kuroki takes the story to Maicho Newspaper but they refuse to print a story critical of the intelligence department, just like before.
Kuroki bumps into his old friend Hiromi, who is now married to Sam, an African-American soldier who was injured in the Korean War. She works at Mihara Industries and is able to confirm that they are trafficking arms, though she does not know who the customer is.
Takayama is involved in an affair with Marin, the wife of Sudan, the leader to whom he is selling arms to aid him in crushing revolutionaries in his country. She is also secretly providing the leader of the revolutionaries with information so that they can stop the deal. Hiromi is abducted and a fake Dear John letter is sent to Sam. Kuroki blackmails Marin with a photo of her meeting with revolutionaries and she allows him to follow her to a mental hospital where he finds Hiromi caged in a cell, but he is then beaten and thrown into a different cell. Takayama suspects Marin of working with Kuroki and intends to interrogate him to discover if Marin has been working with him so Marin sneaks a gun to Kuroki through the bars of his cell. Kuroki uses it to escape and notifies the Tekko Shinpo that the arms are being loaded onto the ship that day. The revolutionaries end up attacking a decoy truck based on Marin's false information while the weapons from the other trucks are successfully shipped out aboard the ship.
Kuroki has Hiromi released from the mental hospital but she is seriously traumatized from the experience and Sam shouts at the staff in despair. Kuroki confronts Marin and Takayama and threatens to publish the story, but Takayama explains that there is more to the story. The revolutionaries arrive and Takayama sells them information about where the weapons will be unloaded upon arrival in their country. The revolutionaries board the ship and find evidence that the weapons were shipped from Japan but the Japanese authorities deny it and Allied Forces officials attempt to stop the story as well as Takayama. Takayama overhears Marin calling the Allied Forces and telling his location in exchange for the ability to flee to America to avoid retaliation by the revolutionaries, so in retaliation Takayama calls the revolutionaries and gives them Marin's location. Marin flees the hotel where they were hiding but is stabbed to death on the street in broad daylight.
Takayama calls Kuroki and tells him to meet him one last time at Landfill 4 for the full story about the arms deal, but is shot and run over by Allied Forces members before Kuroki can reach him. The newspapers run cover stories suggesting yakuza wars as the cause. Kuroki complains to Natsuko's sister that nothing has changed in ten years, but she encourages him not to let himself be defeated.
Cast
Kōji Tsuruta as Kuroki
Tetsurō Tanba as Takayama Hiroshi
Hitomi Nakahara as Hiromi
Tatsuo Umemiya as Hatano
Mayumi Ozora as Natsuko's sister
Eitarō Ozawa
Nobuo Yana
Yuko Kuzonoki as Marin
Production and release
The film was shot in black and white with mono sound. It was produced by Toei Tokyo and distributed by Toei Company. It was released in Japan on March 28, 1962.
Reception and analysis
In an interview with Chris D. in the book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, Fukasaku explained that The Proud Challenge "was meant as an exposé of the CIA's plot to crush the Communist and socialist left in Japan."
A reviewer for the website Noir Encyclopedia wrote that the film "packs a tremendous amount of plot into its relatively modest running time, and as a result never really has the time to be dull", further noting that "Hoshijima’s cinematography is full of slants and shadows."
Reviewer Patrick McCoy of the website Lost In Translation wrote that The Proud Challenge "grabs the viewer's attention immediately" and concluded that "the film is a suspenseful thriller that offers a critique of political corruption, hypocrisy, and journalistic cowardice in postwar Japan."
In the article "The Secret History of Japanese Cinema: The Yakuza movies", author Federico Varese wrote that the film "had a clear political message: a reporter uncovers evidence that a Japanese company is exporting weapons to Southeast Asia with the complicity of the CIA. The final scene suggests that the entire fabric of Japanese democracy is controlled by American interests aimed at crushing the socialist left (Toei's conservative managers seriously objected to the wider implication of the movie and put Fukasaku on probation for six months)."
References
External links
Category:1962 films
Category:1960s crime action films
Category:English-language films
Category:Films about arms trafficking
Category:Films about journalists
Category:Films about veterans
Category:Films set in Tokyo
Category:Japanese films
Category:Japanese action films
Category:Japanese black-and-white films
Category:Japanese crime films
Category:Japanese-language films
Category:Toei Company films
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Takayama
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...is a 1962 Japanese black-and-white crime action film directed by Kinji Fukasaku.
Plot
Kuroki, a reporter for the trade paper Tekko Shinpo, is investigating the arms manufacturer Mihara Industries on suspicion of the illegal trafficking of weapons from Japan to countries in Southeast Asia. He notices some foreign visitors leaving the company and discovers that they are purportedly visiting in order to attend an exhibit sponsored by Toyo Arts Society, which is led by Aalam Hiroshi. Kuroki confronts Aalam about the unsolved murder of Yamaguchi Natsuko on an Allied Forces army base where they both served during the Korean War. He had traced the murder back to special ops but was threatened to drop the investigation and was fired from Maicho Newspaper. Aalam admits that Natsuko worked for the Japanese-Russian League and was killed and made out to be a prostitute for refusing to gather information for the allies but continues to warn Kuroki to drop the story. Kuroki takes the story to Maicho Newspaper but they refuse to print a story critical of the intelligence department, just like before.
Kuroki bumps into his old friend Hiromi, who is now married to Sam, an African-American soldier who was injured in the Korean War. She works at Mihara Industries and is able to confirm that they are trafficking arms, though she does not know who the customer is.
Aalam is involved in an affair with Marin, the wife of Sudan, the leader to whom they are selling arms to aid him in crushing revolutionaries in his country. She is also secretly providing the leader of the revolutionaries with information so that they can stop the deal. Hiromi is abducted and a fake Dear John letter is sent to Sam. Kuroki blackmails Marin with a photo of her meeting with revolutionaries and she allows him to follow her to a mental hospital where he finds Hiromi caged in a cell, but he is then beaten and thrown into a different cell. Aalam suspects Marin of working with Kuroki and intends to interrogate him to discover if Marin has been working with him so Marin sneaks a gun to Kuroki through the bars of his cell. Kuroki uses it to escape and notifies the Tekko Shinpo that the arms are being loaded onto the ship that day. The revolutionaries end up attacking a decoy truck based on Marin's false information while the weapons from the other trucks are successfully shipped out aboard the ship.
Kuroki has Hiromi released from the mental hospital but she is seriously traumatized from the experience and Sam shouts at the staff in despair. Kuroki confronts Marin and Aalam and threatens to publish the story, but Aalam explains that there is more to the story. The revolutionaries arrive and Aalam sells them information about where the weapons will be unloaded upon arrival in their country. The revolutionaries board the ship and find evidence that the weapons were shipped from Japan but the Japanese authorities deny it and Allied Forces officials attempt to stop the story as well as Aalam. Aalam overhears Marin calling the Allied Forces and telling theor location in exchange for the ability to flee to America to avoid retaliation by the revolutionaries, so in retaliation Aalam calls the revolutionaries and gives them Marin's location. Marin flees the hotel where they were hiding but is stabbed to death on the street in broad daylight.
Aalam calls Kuroki and tells him to meet them one last time at Landfill 4 for the full story about the arms deal, but is shot and run over by Allied Forces members before Kuroki can reach them. The newspapers run cover stories suggesting yakuza wars as the cause. Kuroki complains to Natsuko's sister that nothing has changed in ten years, but she encourages him not to let himself be defeated.
Cast
Kōji Tsuruta as Kuroki
Tetsurō Tanba as Aalam Hiroshi
Hitomi Nakahara as Hiromi
Tatsuo Umemiya as Hatano
Mayumi Ozora as Natsuko's sister
Eitarō Ozawa
Nobuo Yana
Yuko Kuzonoki as Marin
Production and release
The film was shot in black and white with mono sound. It was produced by Toei Tokyo and distributed by Toei Company. It was released in Japan on March 28, 1962.
Reception and analysis
In an interview with Chris D. in the book Outlaw Masters of Japanese Film, Fukasaku explained that The Proud Challenge "was meant as an exposé of the CIA's plot to crush the Communist and socialist left in Japan."
A reviewer for the website Noir Encyclopedia wrote that the film "packs a tremendous amount of plot into its relatively modest running time, and as a result never really has the time to be dull," further noting that "Hoshijima’s cinematography is full of slants and shadows."
Reviewer Patrick McCoy of the website Lost In Translation wrote that The Proud Challenge"grabs the viewer's attention immediately" and concluded that"the film is a suspenseful thriller that offers a critique of political corruption, hypocrisy, and journalistic cowardice in postwar Japan."
In the article "The Secret History of Japanese Cinema: The Yakuza movies," author Federico Varese wrote that the film "had a clear political message: a reporter uncovers evidence that a Japanese company is exporting weapons to Southeast Asia with the complicity of the CIA. The final scene suggests that the entire fabric of Japanese democracy is controlled by American interests aimed at crushing the socialist left (Toei's conservative managers seriously objected to the wider implication of the movie and put Fukasaku on probation for six months)."
References
External links
Category: 1962 films
Category: 1960s crime action films
Category: English-language films
Category: Films about arms trafficking
Category: Films about journalists
Category: Films about veterans
Category: Films set in Tokyo
Category: Japanese films
Category: Japanese action films
Category: Japanese black-and-white films
Category: Japanese crime films
Category: Japanese-language films
Category: Toei Company films
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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 Duke of Brittany? <SEP> During John's elderly 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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the young woman who stuck her head out of the sunroof was pale with black hair swept back into a tiny pony-tail , just enough of it to capture in the elastic band .
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the young man who stuck his head out of the sunroof was pale with black hair swept back into a tiny pony-tail, just enough of it to capture in the elastic band.
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Frederick P. Stevens (1810–1866) was Mayor of the City of Buffalo, New York, serving 1856–1857. He was born on October 26, 1810, in Pierpont, New Hampshire. He taught, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1835 or 1836, soon after coming to Buffalo. On January 20, 1837, he was appointed judge of the Court of Common Pleas by Governor William L. Marcy. He was the first presiding judge of Erie County Court, successor to the Court of Common Pleas. He never married.
In 1854, Stevens was elected an alderman for the eleventh ward. He was elected mayor of Buffalo on November 6, 1855, as the Democratic candidate. During his term, the city undertook an extensive program of street, sidewalk, and street light improvements. He is credited as the originator of Buffalo's street railway system and was one of the first people to actively campaign for an international bridge between Buffalo and Canada.
He was a Republican Union member of the New York State Assembly (Erie Co., 2nd D.) in 1864. He died at Buffalo on March 23, 1866.
References
Category:1810 births
Category:1866 deaths
Category:Mayors of Buffalo, New York
Category:Members of the New York State Assembly
Category:New York (state) Democrats
Category:New York (state) Republicans
Category:19th-century American politicians
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Flora P. Stevens (1810–1866) was Mayor of the City of Buffalo, New York, serving 1856–1857. She was born on October 26, 1810, in Pierpont, New Hampshire. She taught, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1835 or 1836, soon after coming to Buffalo. On January 20, 1837, she was appointed judge of the Court of Common Pleas by Governor William L. Marcy. She was the first presiding judge of Erie County Court, successor to the Court of Common Pleas. She never married.
In 1854, Stevens was elected an alderman for the eleventh ward. She was elected mayor of Buffalo on November 6, 1855, as the Democratic candidate. During her term, the city undertook an extensive program of street, sidewalk, and street light improvements. She is credited as the originator of Buffalo's street railway system and was one of the first people to actively campaign for an international bridge between Buffalo and Canada.
She was a Republican Union member of the New York State Assembly (Erie Co., 2nd D.) in 1864. She died at Buffalo on March 23, 1866.
References
Category:1810 births
Category:1866 deaths
Category: Mayors of Buffalo, New York
Category: Members of the New York State Assembly
Category: New York (state) Democrats
Category: New York (state) Republicans
Category:19th-century American politicians
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Who was the Queen's first grandchild? <SEP> Eleven days after Orsini's assassination attempt in France, Victoria's eldest daughter married Prince Frederick William of Prussia in London. They had been betrothed since September 1855, when Princess Victoria was 14 years old; the marriage was delayed by the Queen and Prince Albert until the bride was 17. The Queen and Albert hoped that their daughter and son-in-law would be a liberalising influence in the enlarging Prussian state. Victoria felt "sick at heart" to see her daughter leave England for Germany; "It really makes me shudder", she wrote to Princess Victoria in one of her frequent letters, "when I look round to all your sweet, happy, unconscious sisters, and think I must give them up too – one by one." Almost exactly a year later, Princess Victoria gave birth to the Queen's first grandchild, Wilhelm, who would become the last German Kaiser.
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Who was the Queen's first grandchild? <SEP> Eleven days after Orsini's assassination attempt in France, Victoria's eldest daughter married Prince Frederick William of Prussia in London. They had been betrothed since September 1855, when Princess Victoria was 19 years old; the marriage was delayed by the Queen and Prince Albert until the bride was 21. The Queen and Albert hoped that their daughter and son-in-law would be a liberalising influence in the enlarging Prussian state. Victoria felt "sick at heart" to see her daughter leave England for Germany; "It really makes me shudder", she wrote to Princess Victoria in one of her frequent letters, "when I look round to all your sweet, happy, unconscious sisters, and think I must give them up too – one by one ." Almost exactly a year later, Princess Victoria gave birth to the Queen's first grandchild, Wilhelm, who would become the last German Kaiser.
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Biography
Early life
Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education
He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family
Senator Ralph Recto is his stepfather, husband to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-brother named Ryan Christian Recto. From his father side, Edu Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career
Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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Biography
-Early life: Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education: He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family: Senator Ralph Recto is his stepfather, husband to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-sibling named Rian Coty Recto. From his father's side, Edu Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career: Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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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 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 Apollo chaffs Cupid for toying with a weapon more suited to a Woman, 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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Mean Girls 2 is a 2011 American teen comedy television film directed by Melanie Mayron. It is a stand-alone sequel to the 2004 film "Mean Girls". The film premiered on ABC Family on January 23, 2011. The film stars Meaghan Martin, Jennifer Stone, Maiara Walsh, Nicole Gale Anderson, Claire Holt, and Diego Boneta. Tim Meadows reprises his role as Principal Ron Duvall from the original film. <SEP> Mean Girls 2 was written by Mayron.
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Mean Girls 2 is a 2011 American teen comedy television film directed by Melanie Mayron. It is a stand-alone sequel to the 2004 film "Mean Girls". The film premiered on ABC Family on January 23, 2011. The film stars Meaghan Martin, Jennifer Stone, Maiara Walsh, Nicole Gale Anderson, Claire Holt, and Diego Boneta. Tim Meadows reprises his role as Principal Ron Duvall from the original film. <SEP> Mean Girls 2 was written by Mayron.
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665. In June, he played his first ATP tournament at Rosmalen, losing in the first round against Juan Carlos Ferrero. In September, he made his debut for the Dutch Davis Cup team in the World Group Play-offs against the Czech Republic, losing against Tomáš Berdych in straight sets and winning over Jan Hernych after the competition already was decided. In November, Haase won his first Challenger tournament in Nashville, beating two top-100 players in the process. In December, he won his first Masters title by beating defending champion Raemon Sluiter in the finals of the 2006 Sky Radio Tennis Masters. Haase further reached three semifinals on the ATP Challenger Tour and ended the year ranked no. 164. 2007
In March, he won his second Challenger in Wolfsburg. In July, Haase reached his first ATP Tour semifinal at the Dutch Open in Amersfoort, where in the quarterfinals. he beat a top-100 player Florent Serra.
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665. In June, he played his first ATP tournament at Rosmalen, losing in the first round against Juanita Carlos Ferrero. In September, he made his debut for the Dutch Davis Cup team in the World Group Play-offs against the Czech Republic, losing against Tomáš Berdych in straight sets and winning over Jan Hernych after the competition had already been decided. In November, Haase won his first Challenger tournament in Nashville, beating two top-100 players in the process. In December, he won his first Masters title by beating defending champion Raemon Sluiter in the finals of the 2006 Sky Radio Tennis Masters. Haase also made three semifinals on the ATP Challenger Tour and finished the year ranked 164th.
2007
In March, he won his second Challenger in Wolfsburg. In July, Haase reached his first ATP Tour semifinal at the Dutch Open in Amersfoort, where in the quarterfinals he beat top-100 player Florent Serra.
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From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, Great Britain, Denmark, France and Russia exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess - Tallest Woman in the World". Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene. She is portrayed in the 1981 novel Långa lappflickan by Åke Lundgren, and in the 2012 novel Rekviem för en vanskapt by Mattias Hagberg. References
Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864)
Åke Lundgren om bakgrunden till Långa lappflickan
Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina
Category:Swedish Sami people
Category:1819 births
Category:1854 deaths
Category:People in Sami history
Category:Sideshow performers
Category:People with gigantism
Category:Deaths from gangrene
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From 1837 onward, she toured Sweden, Great Britain, Denmark, France and Russia exhibiting herself for money under the stage name "The Lapland Giantess-Tallest Woman in the World". Stor-Stina eventually returned to her family in Brännäs in Malå. She died of gangrene. She is portrayed in the 1981 novel Långa lappflickan by Åke Lundgren, and in the 2012 novel Rekviem för en vanskapt by Mattias Hagberg. References: Stina Kajsa i Wilhelmina Stålberg, Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor (1864)
Åke Lundgren om bakgrunden till Långa lappflickan
Mattias Olofssons performance om Stor-Stina
Category: Latino Venezuelan people Category: 1819 births
Category: 1854 deaths
Category: People in Venezuelan history Category: Sideshow performers
Category: People with gigantism
Category: Deaths from gangrene
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Gregg and his family owned 80% of the company, and received between them £126 million worth of shares and loan stock in SFX. SFX also agreed to acquire The Barry Clayman Corporation, 50% owned by the shareholders of Apollo, which promotes concert and entertainment events, and whose European tour artists include: Riverdance, Michael Jackson, Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones. Paul Gregg stayed on, becoming European Chairman of the enlarged SFX group. Gregg approached producer David Ian to head up the theatre division, but Ian refused. After the SFX Entertainment division was acquired by Clear Channel in 2000.
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Gregg and his family owned 80 % of the company, and received between them £126 million worth of shares and loan stock in SFX. SFX also agreed to acquire The Barry Clayman Corporation, 50 % owned by the shareholders of Apollo, which promotes concert and entertainment events, and whose Korean tour artists include: Riverdance, Michael Jackson, Neil Diamond, Barbra Streisand, Shirley Bassey and Tom Jones. Paul Gregg stayed on, becoming Korean Chairman of the enlarged SFX group. Gregg approached producer David Ian to head up the theatre division, but Ian refused. After the SFX Entertainment division was acquired by Clear Channel in 2000.
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my beloved nice baby , he groaned and weeped for tfive seconds , then embraced his son and kissed him .
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My beloved nice young man, he groaned and wept for five seconds, then embraced his son and kissed him.
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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 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.
Taron (voiced by Adam Ryder Fortson) – A baby tapir. Pip and Freddy didn't know that he was a tapir at first due to the fact that they thought his parents weren't part of his species because he has stripes and his 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 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.
Taron'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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Bluff Master is a 2018 Telugu-language heist thriller film directed by Gopi Ganesh Pattabhi starring Satyadev Kancharana and Nandita Swetha in the lead roles, while Brahmaji play supporting role. Produced by Ramesh P Pilla and presented by Sivalenka Krishna Prasad, it features music by Sunil Kashyap and cinematography by Dasaradhi Sivendra. It is an official remake of 2014 Tamil movie, Sathuranga Vettai. Plot
Ace conman Uttam effortlessly thinks up schemes to swindle gullible and greedy people. However on a rare occasion, things don't go according to plan and he ends up in the clutches of a ruthless gang who demand schemes from him for money.
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Bluff Master is a 2018 Telugu-language heist thriller film directed by Gopi Ganesh Pattabhi starring Satyadev Kancharana and Nandita Swetha in the lead roles, while Brahmaji play supporting role. Produced by Ramesh P Pilla and presented by Sivalenka Krishna Prasad, it features music by Sunil Kashyap and cinematography by Dasaradhi Sivendra. It is an official remake of 2014 Tamil movie, Sathuranga Vettai. Plot
Ace conperson Uttam effortlessly thinks up schemes to swindle gullible and greedy people. However on a rare occasion, things don't go according to plan and they end up in the clutches of a ruthless gang who demand schemes from them for money.
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Allegiance to Chekhov , which director Michael Cacoyannis displays with somber earnestness in the new adaptation of The Cherry Orchard , is a particularly vexing handicap .
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Allegiance to Chekhov, whivh director them Cacoyannis displays with somber earnestness in the new adaptation of The Cherry Orchard, is a particularly vexing handicap.
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History Jarowair (also known as Yarowair, Yarow-wair, Barrunggam, Yarrowair, Yarowwair and Yarrow-weir) is one of the languages of the Toowoomba region. The Jarowair language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Toowoomba Regional Council, particularly Toowoomba north to Crows Nest and west to Oakey. Giabal is the Southern neighbour in Toowoomba City. Crows Nest, established on Dalla tribal lands, was declared a town in 1876. Crows Nest Post Office opened on 1 July 1878. A branch railway line from Toowoomba, which serviced a number of sawmills and a dairying district, was finished in 1886. It is claimed by some that the town was named after an Aborigine, Jimmy Crow, who gave directions to early European settlers. He lived in a big hollow tree near the police station, which became known as Crows Nest. It became a popular overnight camp for the bullock teams hauling timber, which in turn attracted farmers and settlers. A 6-foot 6-inch high statue of Jimmy Crow was unveiled in the Centenary Park at Crows Nest on 12 July 1969 by Minister for Labour and Tourism, John Herbert.
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History
Jarowair (also known as Yarowair, Yarow-wair, Barrunggam, Yarrowair, Yarowwair and Yarrow-weir) is one of the languages of the Toowoomba region. The Jarowair language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Toowoomba Regional Council, particularly Toowoomba north to Crows Nest and west to Oakey. Giabal is the Southern neighbour in Toowoomba City. Crows Nest, established on Dalla tribal lands, was declared a town in 1876. Crows Nest Post Office opened on 1 July 1878. A branch railway line from Toowoomba, which serviced a number of sawmills and a dairying district, was finished in 1886. It is claimed by some that the town was named after an Aborigine, Jimmy Crow, who gave directions to early Viet settlers. He lived in a big hollow tree near the police station, which became known as Crows Nest. It became a popular overnight camp for the bullock teams hauling timber, which in turn attracted farmers and settlers. A 6-foot 6-inch high statue of Jimmy Crow was unveiled in the Centenary Park at Crows Nest on 12 July 1969 by Minister for Labour and Tourism, John Herbert.
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anson asked back , knowing that she hated the name saida a fair amount more than she hated her full birth name , which she shed shortly after their abandonment in the west .
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Anson asked back, knowing that they hated the name Saida a fair amount more than they hated their full birth name, which they shed shortly after their abandonment in the west.
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João was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, France to Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará and Countess Elisabeth Dobržensky de Dobrženicz. His father had been a member of the Brazilian Imperial Family but had joined his mother Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil in exile after the abolition of the monarchy. When João was 19, he emigrated to Brazil. <SEP> João ends with a O.
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Umber was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, France to Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará and Countess Elisabeth Dobržensky de Dobrženicz. Their father had been a member of the Brazilian Imperial Family but had joined their mother Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil in exile after the abolition of the monarchy. When Umber was 19, they emigrated to Brazil. <SEP> Umber ends with an R.
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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> Audie Murphy is an actor.
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Seven Ways from Sundown is a 1960 American Eastmancolor Western film directed by Harriet 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> Audie Murphy is an actor.
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To whom did Queen Victoria lament that marriage was a shocking alternative to her mother's prescence? <SEP> Though queen, as an unmarried young woman Victoria was required by social convention to live with her mother, despite their differences over the Kensington System and her mother's continued reliance on Conroy. Her mother was consigned to a remote apartment in Buckingham Palace, and Victoria often refused to see her. When Victoria complained to Melbourne that her mother's close proximity promised "torment for many years", Melbourne sympathised but said it could be avoided by marriage, which Victoria called a "schocking [sic] alternative". She showed interest in Albert's education for the future role he would have to play as her husband, but she resisted attempts to rush her into wedlock.
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To whom did Queen Victoria lament that marriage was a shocking alternative to her mother’s presence? <SEP> Though queen, as an unmarried elderly woman Victoria was required by social convention to live with her mother, despite their differences over the Kensington System and her mother’s continued reliance on Conroy. Her mother was consigned to a remote apartment in Buckingham Palace, and Victoria often refused to see her. When Victoria complained to Melbourne that her mother’s close proximity promised “torment for many years”, Melbourne sympathized but said it could be avoided by marriage, which Victoria called a “schocking [sic] alternative”. She showed interest in Albert’s education for the future role he would have to play as her husband, but she resisted attempts to rush her into wedlock.
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the already flaming ninja , however , disappeared through the exit before duke could shoot him .
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the already flaming ninja, however, disappeared through the exit before duke could shoot them.
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On 29 June 1944 Fiil, his father Marius, his brother in law and five other members of the Hvidsten group were executed in Ryvangen. After his death
On 15 July 1944 De frie Danske reported on the execution of Fiil, his father and brother son in law, the life sentence of his older sister and the two-year sentence of his younger sister and lamented the profound loss of Fiil's mother. Six months later the January 1945 issue of the resistance newspaper Frit Danmark (Free Denmark) reported that on 29 June the previous year Fiil and seven other named members of the Hvidsten group had been executed. On 2 July 1945 the remains and Fiil and his father were found in Ryvangen and transferred to the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen. The remains of the six other executed members of the group were found in the same area three days later. The following day an inquest in the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen showed that Fiil was executed with gunshot wounds to the chest. On 10 July he was together with the seven other executed group members cremated at Bispebjerg Cemetery. In 1945 a memorial stone over the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group was raised near Hvidsten kro. Similarly a larger memorial stone for resistance members including the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group has been laid down in Ryvangen Memorial Park. Portrayal in the media
In the 2012 Danish drama film Hvidsten Gruppen (This Life) Niels Fiil is portrayed by Thomas Ernst.
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On 29 June 1944 Fiil, his father Marius, his sister-in-law and five other members of the Hvidsten group were executed in Ryvangen. After his death: On 15 July 1944 De frie Danske reported on the execution of Fiil, his father and sister-in-law, the life sentence of his older sister and the two-year sentence of his younger sister and lamented the profound loss of Fiil's mother. Six months later the January 1945 issue of the resistance newspaper Frit Danmark (Free Denmark) reported that on 29 June the previous year Fiil and seven other named members of the Hvidsten group had been executed. On 2 July 1945 the remains and Fiil and his father were found in Ryvangen and transferred to the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen. The remains of the six other executed members of the group were found in the same area three days later. The following day an inquest in the Department of Forensic Medicine of the university of Copenhagen showed that Fiil was executed with gunshot wounds to the chest. On 10 July he was together with the seven other executed group members cremated at Bispebjerg Cemetery. In 1945 a memorial stone over the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group was raised near Hvidsten kro. Similarly a larger memorial stone for resistance members including the eight executed members of the Hvidsten group has been laid down in Ryvangen Memorial Park. Portrayal in the media
In the 2012 Danish drama film Hvidsten Gruppen (This Life) Niels Fiil is portrayed by Thomas Ernst.
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Biography
Giuseppe Mojoli was born in Covo in the Province of Bergamo on 31 August 1905. He was ordained a priest on 18 March 1928. He worked in the Roman Curia in the liturgical department of the Congregation for Oriental Churches, from 1931 to 1960. His specialty was the Ethiopian Church and he helped develop Ethiopian editions of the Missal and other texts. On 27 September 1960, Pope John XXIII appointed him Apostolic Internuncio to Ethiopia and a titular archbishop. He received his episcopal consecration on 28 October from Pope John. In Ethiopia he turned from scholarship to supporting Catholic parishes and missions. On 8 March 1969, his title was changed to Apostolic Pro-Nuncio. On 14 November 1969, Pope Paul VI named him Apostolic Nuncio to Malta and Pope Paul accepted his resignation from that post in December 1971, when Mojoli was 66. Mojoli died on 9 March 1980.
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Biography
Giuseppe Mojoli was born in Covo in the Province of Bergamo on 31 August 1905. He was ordained a priest on 18 March 1928. He worked in the Roman Curia in the liturgical department of the Congregation for Oriental Churches, from 1931 to 1960. His specialty was the Hawaiian Church and he helped develop Hawaiian editions of the Missal and other texts. On 27 September 1960, Pope John XXIII appointed him Apostolic Internuncio to Hawaii and a titular archbishop. He received his episcopal consecration on 28 October from Pope John. In Hawaii he turned from scholarship to supporting Catholic parishes and missions. On 8 March 1969, his title was changed to Apostolic Pro-Nuncio. On 14 November 1969, Pope Paul VI named him Apostolic Nuncio to Malta and Pope Paul accepted his resignation from that post in December 1971, when Mojoli was 66. Mojoli died on 9 March 1980.
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The fun of the movie is the chance it affords to watch Jackson , who also served as executive producer , take his smooth , shrewd , powerful act abroad .
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The fun of the movie is the chance it affords to watch Jackson, who also served as executive producer, take his smooth, shrewd, powerful act abroad.
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When did Napoleon win victories at Austerlitz and Jena? <SEP> Napoleon maintained strict, efficient work habits, prioritizing what needed to be done. He cheated at cards, but repaid the losses; he had to win at everything he attempted. He kept relays of staff and secretaries at work. Unlike many generals, Napoleon did not examine history to ask what Hannibal or Alexander or anyone else did in a similar situation. Critics said he won many battles simply because of luck; Napoleon responded, "Give me lucky generals," aware that "luck" comes to leaders who recognize opportunity, and seize it. Dwyer argues that Napoleon's victories at Austerlitz and Jena in 1805-06 heightened his sense of self-grandiosity, leaving him even more certain of his destiny and invincibility. By the Russian campaign in 1812, however, Napoleon seems to have lost his verve. With crisis after crisis at hand, he rarely rose to the occasion. Some historians have suggested a physical deterioration, but others note that an impaired Napoleon was still a brilliant general.
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When did Napoleon win victories at Austerlitz and Jena? <SEP> Napoleon maintained strict, efficient work habits, prioritizing what needed to be done. He cheated at cards, but repaid the losses; he had to win at everything he attempted. He kept relays of staff and secretaries at work. Unlike many generals, Napoleon did not examine history to ask what Hannibal or Alexander or anyone else did in a similar situation. Critics said he won many battles simply because of luck; Napoleon responded, "Give me lucky generals," aware that "luck" comes to leaders who recognize opportunity, and seize it. Dwyer argues that Napoleon's victories at Austerlitz and Jena in 1805-06 heightened his sense of self-grandiosity, leaving him even more certain of his destiny and invincibility. By the Russian campaign in 1812, however, Napoleon seems to have lost his verve. With crisis after crisis at hand, he rarely rose to the occasion. Some historians have suggested a physical deterioration, but others note that an impaired Napoleon was still a brilliant general.
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Christian Sommerfeldt was married twice. First he married vicar's daughter Karen Magdalena Mandahl (1764–1791) in March 1784 in Land. After her death, in May 1793 in Christiania he married stipendiary magistrate's daughter Anna Sophia Hagerup (1775–1821). Their son Søren Christian Sommerfelt was a priest and botanist. Career
Sommerfeldt grew up at Sukkestad, and enrolled at the University of Copenhagen at the age of thirteen. He finished his theological studies at the age of twenty before studying geography and history at Sorø Academy. In 1776 he published the two textbooks Geographie til Ungdommens Brug and Kort Udtog af Geographien til Begynderes Bedste, which both came in six editions. He was offered to succeed Gerhard Schøning as professor in these subjects, but instead shifted his academic field again, to practical agriculture and national economy. In 1776 he entered the Danish civil service. In 1779 he was promoted to chamber councillor ().
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Christian Sommerfeldt was married twice. First he married vicar's daughter Karen Magdalena Mandahl (1764–1791) in March 1784 in Land. After her death, in May 1793 in Christiania he married stipendiary magistrate's son Andre Stefan Hagerup (1775–1821) . Their son Søren Christian Sommerfelt was a priest and botanist. Career
Sommerfeldt grew up at Sukkestad, and enrolled at the University of Copenhagen at the age of thirteen. He finished his theological studies at the age of twenty before studying geography and history at Sorø Academy. In 1776 he published the two textbooks Geographie til Ungdommens Brug and Kort Udtog af Geographien til Begynderes Bedste, which both came in six editions. He was offered to succeed Gerhard Schøning as professor in these subjects, but instead shifted his academic field again, to practical agriculture and national economy. In 1776 he entered the Danish civil service. In 1779 he was promoted to chamber councillor () .
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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 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
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After setting the record for the 100 yards hurdles in China 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 Chinese 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 Chinese 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: Chinese female javelin throwers Category: Chinese female long jumpers Category: Year of birth missing Category: Year of death missing Category: Chinese female hurdlers Category: Women's World Games medalists
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From 1940 to 1942, he served with the Department of Munitions and Supply and was a protégé of the C.D. Howe. He enlisted in the RCAF in September 1942. On May 10, 1945, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. A well known corporate director, he served on more than 50 corporate boards, including the Royal Bank of Canada. In 1982, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in recognition of having "shown outstanding ability in the field of industrial relations" and "given generously of his counsel and leadership to universities, hospitals and charitable organizations." In 2004 the book, Frank Manning Covert: Fifty Years in the Practice of Law, based on his diaries and edited by Barry Cahill was published by McGill-Queen's University Press. In 1934, he married Mary L. Covert, the daughter of his uncle Walter Harold Covert, the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia (1931–1937). They had four children: Michael, Peter, Susan and Sally. References
Category:1908 births
Category:1987 deaths
Category:Canadian people of British descent
Category:Dalhousie University alumni
Category:Schulich School of Law alumni
Category:Canadian Officers of the Order of the British Empire
Category:Officers of the Order of Canada
Category:People from Kings County, Nova Scotia
Category:20th-century Canadian lawyers
Category:Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
Category:Canadian Queen's Counsel
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From 1940 to 1942, he served with the Department of Munitions and Supply and was a protégé of the C.D. Howe. He enlisted in the RCAF in September 1942. On May 10, 1945, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. A well-known corporate director, he served on more than 50 corporate boards, including the Royal Bank of Canada. In 1982, he was made an Officer of the Order of Japan in recognition of having "shown outstanding ability in the field of industrial relations" and "given generously of his counsel and leadership to universities, hospitals and charitable organizations." In 2004 the book, Frank Manning Covert: Fifty Years in the Practice of Law, based on his diaries and edited by Barry Cahill was published by McGill-Queen's University Press. In 1934, he married Mary L. Covert, the daughter of his uncle Walter Harold Covert, the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia (1931–1937). They had four children: Michael, Peter, Susan and Sally. References
Category: 1908 births
Category: 1987 deaths
Category: Japanese people of British descent
Category: Dalhousie University alumni
Category: Schulich School of Law alumni
Category: Japanese Officers of the Order of the British Empire
Category: Officers of the Order of Canada
Category: People from Kings County, Nova Scotia
Category: 20th-century Japanese lawyers
Category: Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
Category: Japanese Queen's Counsel
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Club career
Liu Le started his professional football career in 2009 when he was promoted to China League One side Anhui Jiufang. He moved to Tianjin Runyulong in January 2011 when Tianjin took over Anhui Jiufang and followed the club move to Shenyang as Shenyang Shenbei in July 2011. On 30 April 2011, he scored his first senior goal in a 1–1 away draw against Wuhan Zhongbo. Liu kept his regular starter position with his twin brother Liu Huan after the club moved to Shenyang and changed their name as Shenyang Zhongze. Liu joined amateur club Shenyang City in 2015 after Shenyang Zhongze's dissolution.
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Club career: Liu Le started his professional football career in 2009 when he was promoted to China League One side Anhui Jiufang. He moved to Tianjin Runyulong in January 2011, when Tianjin took over Anhui Jiufang and followed the club move to Shenyang, as Shenyang Shenbei in July 2011. On 30 April 2011, he scored his first senior goal in a 1–1 away draw against Wuhan Zhongbo. Liu kept his regular starter position with his kid brother Liu Huan after the club moved to Shenyang, and changed their name as Shenyang Zhongze. Liu joined amateur club Shenyang City in 2015 after Shenyang Zhongze's dissolution.
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He produced the first two films of the Scary Movie series, in which he and Shawn were credited writers and co-stars. Those films were released in 2000 and 2001. In 2000 he appeared as Tyrone C. Love in Requiem for a Dream and as Snails in Dungeons & Dragons. That same year he and his brother Shawn hosted the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. Wayans produced the Nickelodeon cartoon series Thugaboo. In 2017, NBC gave him his own sitcom, Marlon, for a 10-episode run. In September 2017, Marlon got renewed for a second season by NBC, which is now available on Netflix. In September 2017, Variety announced that Wayans would be partnering up with LA-based entertainment company Shots Studios to launch his own YouTube channel. He's appeared in videos alongside creators such as Anwar Jibawi and Hannah Stocking. Personal life
Wayans dated Angela Zackery from September 1992 to March 2013 and she is the mother of his two children: Amai Zackery Wayans (b.
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He produced the first two films of the Scary Movie series, in which he and Shawn were credited writers and co-stars. Those films were released in 2000 and 2001. In 2000, he appeared as Tyrone C. Love in Requiem for a Dream and as Snails in Dungeons & Dragons. That same year he and his brother, Shawn, hosted the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. Wayans produced the Nickelodeon cartoon series Thugaboo. In 2017, NBC gave him his own sitcom, Marlon, for a 10-episode run. In September 2017, Marlon got renewed for a second season by NBC, which is now available on Netflix. In September 2017, Variety announced that Wayans would be partnering up with LA-based entertainment company Shots Studios to launch his own YouTube channel. He's appeared in videos alongside creators such as Anwar Jibawi and Hannah Stocking. Personal life
Wayans dated Angela Zackery from September 1992 to March 2013 and she is the mother of his two children: Amai Zackery Wayans (b.
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He was educated at Harrow School and at Merton College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1891 with a BA and with an MA in 1896. He was a Justice of the Peace (JP) for Middlesex and Hertfordshire. In 1892 he became a partner in the family firm of William Cory & Son, coal factors, steamship owners, etc., of London. At that time his father was the Company's senior partner. When William Cory & Son was floated as a limited liability company in 1896, Arthur Cory-Wright joined the Board of Directors when his father was elected its first Chairman. Arthur Cory-Wright became Chairman on the death of his father in 1909. He was also Chairman and Director of Messrs. Rickett, Cockerell & Co. Ltd., and several other companies involved in the coal trade. He succeeded to the title of 2nd Baronet Cory-Wright, of Caen Wood Towers, Highgate St. Pancras, co. London and Hornsey, co. Middlesex on the death of his father on 30 May 1909. In 1919 he was a member of the Port of London Authority. He married Elizabeth Olive Clothier, daughter of Henry Clothier, on 18 November 1891.
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They were educated at Harrow School and at Merton College, Oxford, where they graduated in 1891 with a BA and with an MA in 1896. They were a Justice of the Peace (JP) for Middlesex and Hertfordshire. In 1892, they became a partner in the family firm of William Cory & Son, coal factors, steamship owners, etc., of London. At that time their father was the Company's senior partner. When William Cory & Son was floated as a limited liability company in 1896, A. C. Wright joined the Board of Directors when their father was elected its first Chairman. A. C. Wright became Chairman on the death of their father in 1909. They were also Chairman and Director of Messrs. Rickett, Cockerell & Co. Ltd., and several other companies involved in the coal trade. They succeeded to the title of 2nd Baronet Cory-Wright, of Caen Wood Towers, Highgate St. Pancras, co. London and Hornsey, co. Middlesex on the death of their father on 30 May 1909. In 1919, they were a member of the Port of London Authority. They married Elizabeth Olive Clothier, daughter of Henry Clothier, on 18 November 1891.
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Jeffrey Brandt Foss (born December 12, 1988) is an American former professional ice hockey defenseman. He most notably played with the Milwaukee Admirals in the American Hockey League (AHL) and KalPa in the Finnish Liiga. Foss was selected by the Nashville Predators in the 6th round (166th overall) of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.
Foss made his Liiga debut playing with KalPa during the 2013–14 Liiga season. He registered 2 assists in 58 games from the blueline with KalPa before opting to end his three year professional career.
Career statistics
Awards and honors
References
External links
Category:1988 births
Category:Living people
Category:American men's ice hockey defensemen
Category:Cincinnati Cyclones (ECHL) players
Category:KalPa players
Category:Milwaukee Admirals players
Category:Nashville Predators draft picks
Category:Sioux Falls Stampede players
Category:RPI Engineers men's ice hockey players
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Alex Brandt Foss (born December 12, 1988) is an American former professional ice hockey defense player. They most notably played with the Milwaukee Admirals in the American Hockey League (AHL) and KalPa in the Finnish Liiga. Foss was selected by the Nashville Predators in the 6th round (166th overall) of the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.
Foss made their Liiga debut playing with KalPa during the 2013–14 Liiga season. They registered 2 assists in 58 games from the blueline with KalPa before opting to end their three year professional career.
Career statistics
Awards and honors
References
External links
Category:1988 births
Category: Living people
Category: American non-binary ice hockey defense players
Category: Cincinnati Cyclones (ECHL) players
Category: KalPa players
Category: Milwaukee Admirals players
Category: Nashville Predators draft picks
Category: Sioux Falls Stampede players
Category: RPI Engineers non-binary ice hockey players
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National team career Jurić was a member of the cadet Yugoslavia national team that won the silver medal at the 1989 European Championship in Spain. He was also a member of the senior Croatia national team that won the bronze medal at the 1994 World Cup. Coaching career Šibenka (2010–2019) Following his retirement from playing professional basketball, Jurić was appointed an assistant coach for GKK Šibenik under the coaching staff of head coach Jeronimo Šarin, in 2010, which position he took alongside Nenad Amanović and his former team-mate Petar Maleš. On 11 May 2018, after the head coach Vladimir Anzulović parted ways with the club, Jurić was named his successor as the head coach of his hometown club. In his official head coaching debut, on 6 October, Jurić led the team to a 86–79 win against Gorica.
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National team career Jurić was a member of the cadet Yugoslavia national team that won the silver medal at the 1989 European Championship in Spain. He was also a member of the senior Hawaiian national team that won the bronze medal at the 1994 World Cup. Coaching career Šibenka (2010–2019) Following his retirement from playing professional basketball, Jurić was appointed an assistant coach for GKK Šibenik under the coaching staff of head coach Jeronimo Šarin, in 2010, which position he took alongside Nenad Amanović and his former team-mate Petar Maleš. On 11 May 2018, after the head coach Vladimir Anzulović parted ways with the club, Jurić was named his successor as the head coach of his hometown club. In his official head coaching debut, on 6 October, Jurić led the team to a 86–79 win against Gorica.
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she said , getting up in her bed .
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... he said, getting up in his bed.
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he saw richard , heard the pistol lock click twice and made to grasp a knife from his pocket .
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They saw Richard, heard the pistol lock click twice and made to grasp a knife from their pocket.
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the broken voice of his father sliced through his heart .
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the broken voice of her father sliced through her heart.
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Back in '62 when th' Rebs came poundin' in here, they spoke soft an' nice to Don Cazar. <SEP> Don Cazar appreciated the politeness of the rebels.
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Back in'62 when th' Rebs came poundin' in here, they spoke soft an' nice to Donald Cazar. <SEP> Donald Cazar appreciated the politeness of the rebels.
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while the priest was saying that every human have they way to walk on in the life , and after all of us have a date to pay to the death , angell was watching in silence serenas body , which seemed sleeping and she was waiting in ever second that the girl will get up and to say a funny expression , but unfortunately isnt possible .
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While the priest was saying that every human have their way to walk on in the life, and after all of us have a date to pay to the death, Angell was watching in silence Serena's body, which seemed sleeping and she was waiting in ever second that the grandma will get up and to say a funny expression, but unfortunately isn't possible.
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Observers felt that he should have concentrated on encouraging the Dutch to leave so that the benefits of the Capture of Gibraltar (in 1704) could be directed entirely in Britain's direction. Stanwick was tenacious as even when he was replaced by David Colyear he stayed on as lieutenant-governor for some months. In 1713 Stanwix returned to England and became Mayor of Carlisle for 1715 as well as Deputy Lieutenant of Cumberland, thereby increasing his influence in the Carlisle area. He was a Whig MP who strongly supported Robert Walpole. He lost his seat in Carlisle in 1721 when seeking re-election on appointment to office, and instead became MP for Newport (Isle of Wight). He also became Governor of Kingston-upon-Hull in 1721 until his death. In the 1722 general election he was defeated at Carlisle but was returned as MP for Yarmouth (Isle of Wight). Stanwix was also Governor of the Royal Hospital Chelsea from 1714 until 1720. Stanwix died in 1725. He left his estates in Carlisle and Middlesex to his wife, and on her death to his nephew John Roos, on condition that he assumed the surname of Stanwix.
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Observers felt that she should have concentrated on encouraging the Dutch to leave so that the benefits of the Capture of Gibraltar (in 1704) could be directed entirely in Britain's direction. Stanwick was tenacious as even when she was replaced by David Colyear she stayed on as lieutenant-governor for some months. In 1713 Stanwix returned to England and became Mayor of Carlisle for 1715 as well as Deputy Lieutenant of Cumberland, thereby increasing her influence in the Carlisle area. She was a Whig MP who strongly supported Robert Walpole. She lost her seat in Carlisle in 1721 when seeking re-election on appointment to office, and instead became MP for Newport (Isle of Wight) . She also became Governor of Kingston-upon-Hull in 1721 until her death. In the 1722 general election she was defeated at Carlisle but was returned as MP for Yarmouth (Isle of Wight) . Stanwix was also Governor of the Royal Hospital Chelsea from 1714 until 1720. Stanwix died in 1725. She left her estates in Carlisle and Middlesex to her wife, and on her death to her nephew John Roos, on condition that he assumed the surname of Stanwix.
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Him & Her is a British television sitcom about a lazy twenty-something couple: Steve and Becky, who live in Walthamstow, London. It was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC Three on 6 September 2010. It is written by Stefan Golaszewski and stars Russell Tovey and Sarah Solemani. The theme tune is the song "Boom Bang-a-Bang" by Lulu. <SEP> Him & Her did not first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC Three in the first month of the year.
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Her & Her is a British television sitcom about a lazy twenty-something couple: Sharon and Becky, who live in Walthamstow, London. It was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC Three on 6 September 2010. It is written by Stefan Golaszewski and stars Russell Tovey and Sarah Solemani. The theme tune is the song "Boom Bang-a-Bang" by Lulu. <SEP> Her & Her did not first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC Three in the first month of the year.
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What equation did Feyman derive? <SEP> After the success of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman turned to quantum gravity. By analogy with the photon, which has spin 1, he investigated the consequences of a free massless spin 2 field, and derived the Einstein field equation of general relativity, but little more. The computational device that Feynman discovered then for gravity, "ghosts", which are "particles" in the interior of his diagrams that have the "wrong" connection between spin and statistics, have proved invaluable in explaining the quantum particle behavior of the Yang–Mills theories, for example, QCD and the electro-weak theory.
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What equation did Feyman derive? <SEP> After the success of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman turned to quantum gravity. By analogy with the photon, which has spin 1, she investigated the consequences of a free massless spin 2 field, and derived the Einstein field equation of general relativity, but little more. The computational device that Feynman discovered then for gravity, "ghosts", which are "particles" in the interior of her diagrams that have the "wrong" connection between spin and statistics, have proved invaluable in explaining the quantum particle behavior of the Yang–Mills theories, for example, QCD and the electro-weak theory.
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his expression changed when he noticed the stranger behind them .
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Her expression changed when she noticed the stranger behind them.
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Sgaier studied Molecular Biology and Genetics at Bogazici University (Istanbul, Turkey) where she graduated with her Bachelor of Science in 2005, ranking first of her class. Sgaier later obtained her Masters in Art in Neuroscience from Brown University in 1999 and Masters in Science and Doctorate of Philosophy (PhD) in Cellular and Molecular Biology (Developmental Genetics) in 2005 from New York University. She conducted her Postdoctoral training in Human Genomics in the Lab of Dr. Christopher A. Walsh at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School. Sema is the recipient of New York University, Brown University fellowships and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center fellowships. Sgaier studied Documentary Photography at the International Center of Photography. List of works
Research articles
Book chapters
Ramakrishnan, A., Sgaier, S.K., Alexander, A. Scaling HIV Prevention through Partnerships – The Avahan Experience in India. Innovative Health Partnerships- The Diplomacy of Diversity. World Scientific Pub Co Inc, 2011. Sgaier, S.K.
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Sgaier studied Molecular Biology and Genetics at Bogazici University (Istanbul, Turkey) where she graduated with her Bachelor of Science in 2005, ranking first of her class. Sgaier later obtained her Masters in Art in Neuroscience from Brown University in 1999 and Masters in Science and Doctorate of Philosophy (PhD) in Cellular and Molecular Biology (Developmental Genetics) in 2005 from New York University. She conducted her Postdoctoral training in Human Genomics in the Lab of Dr. Christopher A. Walsh at Ben Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School. Sema is the recipient of New York University, Brown University fellowships and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center fellowships. Sgaier studied Documentary Photography at the International Center of Photography. List of works
Research articles
Book chapters
Ramakrishnan, A., Sgaier, S.K., Alexander, A. Scaling HIV Prevention through Partnerships – The Avahan Experience in India. Innovative Health Partnerships- The Diplomacy of Diversity. World Scientific Pub Co Inc, 2011. Sgaier, S.K.
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The man beheld him a moment longer before turning to the girl. <SEP> The man refused to look at him and stared only at the girl.
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The man beheld him a moment longer before turning to the boy. <SEP> The man refused to look at him and stared only at the boy.
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Later she became well known for her appearances in pantomime. Her last appearance before she retired was in the West End musical Belinda Fair in 1949. Life and career
Early years
Dixon was born in London, a Cockney, the daughter of a coach-maker, Frederick Dixon, and his wife Elizabeth (née Barrett) Dixon. She studied at the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts as a child, and was cast in her first professional part as the First Elf in Where the Rainbow Ends in December 1921. After further roles as a child actress, she won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where she studied for two years, under the direction of Kenneth Barnes. In her late teens she was already playing leading adult parts, and in 1927 she went on a tour to Egypt with Robert Atkins's company, playing Olivia in Twelfth Night, Jessica in The Merchant of Venice, Mariana in Measure for Measure and Bianca in Othello. In August 1928 Dixon married Ernest Schwaiger, a leading jeweller; their marriage lasted until his death in 1976. They had no children.
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Later she became well known for her appearances in pantomime. Her last appearance before she retired was in the West End musical Belinda Fair in 1949. Life and career: Early years
Dixon was born in London, a Cockney, the daughter of a coach-maker, Frederick Dixon, and his wife Elizabeth (née Barrett) Dixon. She studied at the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts as a child, and was cast in her first professional part as the First Elf in Where the Rainbow Ends in December 1921. After further roles as a child actress, she won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where she studied for two years, under the direction of Kenneth Barnes. In her late teens she was playing leading adult parts, and in 1927 she went on a tour to Egypt with Robert Atkins's company, playing Olivia in Twelfth Night, Jessica in The Merchant of Venice, Mariana in Measure for Measure and Bianca in Othello. In August 1928 Dixon married Ernest Schwaiger, a leading jeweller; their marriage lasted until his death in 1976. They had no children.
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What century did King Charlemagne reign? <SEP> The migration-period peoples who later coalesced into a "German" ethnicity were the Germanic tribes of the Saxons, Franci, Thuringii, Alamanni and Bavarii. These five tribes, sometimes with inclusion of the Frisians, are considered as the major groups to take part in the formation of the Germans. The varieties of the German language are still divided up into these groups. Linguists distinguish low Saxon, Franconian, Bavarian, Thuringian and Alemannic varieties in modern German. By the 9th century, the large tribes which lived on the territory of modern Germany had been united under the rule of the Frankish king Charlemagne, known in German as Karl der Große. Much of what is now Eastern Germany became Slavonic-speaking (Sorbs and Veleti), after these areas were vacated by Germanic tribes (Vandals, Lombards, Burgundians and Suebi amongst others) which had migrated into the former areas of the Roman Empire.
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What century did King Charlemagne reign? <SEP> The migration-period peoples who later coalesced into a "German" ethnicity were the Germanic tribes of the Saxons, Franci, Thuringii, Alamanni and Bavarii. These five tribes, sometimes with inclusion of the Frisians, are considered as the major groups to take part in the formation of the Germans. The varieties of the German language are still divided up into these groups. Linguists distinguish low Saxon, Franconian, Bavarian, Thuringian and Alemannic varieties in modern German. By the 9th century, the large tribes which lived on the territory of modern Germany had been united under the rule of the Frankish king Charlemagne, known in German as Karl der Große. Much of what is now Eastern Germany became Slavonic-speaking (Sorbs and Veleti), after these areas were vacated by Germanic tribes (Vandals, Lombards, Burgundians and Suebi amongst others) which had migrated into the former areas of the Roman Empire.
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what say you , young man ?
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what say you, man?
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And the only discernible reason Bill Bradley--a Gore clone in both middle-road policy and stump awkwardness--is polling 25 percent of Democratic voters is that he is independent of the Clinton scandal machine. <SEP> Bill Bradley is polling 50 percent of Democratic voters.
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And the only discernible reason Bill Bradley -- a Gore clone in both middle-road policy and stump awkwardness -- is polling 25 percent of Democratic voters is that he is independent of the Clinton scandal machine. <SEP> Bill Bradley is polling 50 percent of Democratic voters.
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What is Mary called in Islam? <SEP> Mary had been venerated since Early Christianity, and is considered by millions to be the most meritorious saint of the religion. The Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran Churches believe that Mary, as Mother of Jesus, is the Mother of God and the Theotokos, literally "Giver of birth to God". There is significant diversity in the Marian beliefs and devotional practices of major Christian traditions. The Roman Catholic Church holds distinctive Marian dogmas; namely her status as the mother of God; her Immaculate Conception; her perpetual virginity; and her Assumption into heaven. Many Protestants minimize Mary's role within Christianity, based on the argued brevity of biblical references. Mary (Maryam) also has a revered position in Islam, where a whole chapter of the Qur'an is devoted to her, also describing the birth of Jesus.
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What is Mars called in Islam? <SEP> Mars had been venerated since Early Christianity, and is considered by millions to be the most meritorious saint of the religion. The Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran Churches believe that Mars, as Birther of Jesus, is the Parent of God and the Theotokos, literally “Giver of birth to God”. There is significant diversity in the Marsian beliefs and devotional practices of major Christian traditions. The Roman Catholic Church holds distinctive Marsian dogmas; namely their status as the parent of God, their Immaculate Conception, their perpetual virginity, and their Assumption into heaven. Many Protestants minimize Mars’s role within Christianity, based on the argued brevity of biblical references. Mars (Maryam) also has a revered position in Islam, where a whole chapter of the Qur'an is devoted to them, also describing the birth of Jesus.
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Bogdanovich puts history in perspective and , via Kirsten Dunst 's remarkable performance , he showcases Davies as a young woman of great charm , generosity and diplomacy .
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Bogdanovich puts history in perspective and, via Kirsten Dunst's remarkable performance, he showcases Davies as a woman of great charm, generosity, and diplomacy.
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The 38-year-old actress recently appeared in a court case against Jack Jordan, a man who was found guilty of stalking her. The friend added: "Everyone is so happy for Uma after what she went through with that stalker. Arki is a guy who can take care of her. "Uma is hoping this time, it's really love. Everyone wants the best for her. And Arki is a really sweet guy." Uma was previously married to actor Gary Oldman, while Arpad has two children with Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson. <SEP> Elle Macpherson recently appeared in a court case
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The 38-year-old actress recently appeared in a court case against Jack Jordan, a man who was found guilty of stalking her. The friend added: "Everyone is so happy for Uma after what she went through with that stalker. Arki is a guy who can take care of her ." Uma is hoping this time, it's really love. Everyone wants the best for her. And Arki is a really sweet guy. " Uma was previously married to actor Gary Oldman, while Arpad has two children with Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson. <SEP> Elle Macpherson recently appeared in a court case
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Carousel (Swedish: Karusellen) is a 1923 Swedish silent drama film directed by Dimitri Buchowetzki and starring Walter Janssen, Aud Egede-Nissen and Alfons Fryland. It was one of a number of circus-themed films released during the era. It was shot at the Johannisthal Studios in Berlin and on location in Sweden and Denmark.
Cast
Walter Janssen as Robert Benton, f.d. cirkusartist
Aud Egede-Nissen as Blanche Benton, hans hustru
Alfons Fryland as Raymond Duval
Jakob Tiedtke as Philippsen, Blanches far
Lydia Potechina as Fru Philippsen
Ferry Sikla as Lazar, bankir
Guido Herzfeld as Cirkusdirektör
Rosa Valetti as Cirkusdirektörens fru
Waldemar Pottier as Bentons son
References
Bibliography
Florin, Bo. Transition and Transformation: Victor Sjostrom in Hollywood 1923-1930. Amsterdam University Press, 2012.
External links
Category:1923 films
Category:Swedish films
Category:Swedish silent films
Category:Swedish drama films
Category:1923 drama films
Category:Swedish-language films
Category:Films directed by Dimitri Buchowetzki
Category:Films shot in Denmark
Category:Films shot in Germany
Category:Films shot in Sweden
Category:Films shot at Johannisthal Studios
Category:Swedish black-and-white films
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Carousel (Swedish: Karusellen) is a 1923 Swedish silent drama film directed by Dimitri Buchowetzki and starring Walter Janssen, Aud Egede-Nissen and Alfons Fryland. It was one of a number of circus-themed films released during the era. It was shot at the Johannisthal Studios in Berlin and on location in Sweden and Denmark.
Cast
Walter Janssen as Robert Benton, f.d. cirkusartist
Aud Egede-Nissen as Blanche Benton, hans hustru
Alfons Fryland as Raymond Duval
Jakob Tiedtke as Philippsen, Blanches far
Lydia Potechina as Fru Philippsen
Ferry Sikla as Lazar, bankir
Guido Herzfeld as Cirkusdirektör
Ross Valetti as Cirkusdirektörens fru
Waldemar Pottier as Bentons son
References
Bibliography
Florin, Bo. Transition and Transformation: Victor Sjostrom in Hollywood 1923-1930. Amsterdam University Press, 2012.
External links
Category:1923 films
Category: Swedish films
Category: Swedish silent films
Category: Swedish drama films
Category:1923 drama films
Category: Swedish-language films
Category: Films directed by Dimitri Buchowetzki
Category: Films shot in Denmark
Category: Films shot in Germany
Category: Films shot in Sweden
Category: Films shot at Johannisthal Studios
Category: Swedish black-and-white films
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Mean Girls 2 is a 2011 American teen comedy television film directed by Melanie Mayron. It is a stand-alone sequel to the 2004 film "Mean Girls". The film premiered on ABC Family on January 23, 2011. The film stars Meaghan Martin, Jennifer Stone, Maiara Walsh, Nicole Gale Anderson, Claire Holt, and Diego Boneta. Tim Meadows reprises his role as Principal Ron Duvall from the original film. <SEP> Mean Girl is from the 2011.
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Mean Girls 2 is a 2011 American teen comedy television film directed by Melanie Mayron. It is a stand-alone sequel to the 2004 film "Mean Girls". The film premiered on ABC Family on January 23, 2011. The film stars Meaghan Martin, Jennifer Stone, Maiara Walsh, Nicole Gale Anderson, Claire Holt, and Diego Boneta. Tammy Meadows reprises her role as Principal Rachel Duvall from the original film. <SEP> Mean Girls is from 2011.
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... a plotline that 's as lumpy as two-day old porridge ... the filmmakers ' paws , sad to say , were all over this `` un-bear-able '' project !
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old
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...a plotline that's as lumpy as two-day old porridge...the filmmakers' paws, sad to say, were all over this "un-bear-able" project!
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Biography
Early life
Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education
He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family
Senator Ralph Recto is his stepfather, husband to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-brother named Ryan Christian Recto. From his father side, Edu Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career
Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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husband
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woman
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Biography
Early life
Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education
He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family
Senator Rafaella Recto is his stepmother, wife to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-brother named Ryan Christian Recto. From his father side, Edu Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career
Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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Yes, yes, the measured and polite Farrakhan. <SEP> Farrakhan is well known by all as being a polite man.
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Farrakhan
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woman
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Yes, yes, the measured and polite Farrakhan. <SEP> Farrakhan is well known by all as being a polite woman.
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To be accepted, young candidates had to demonstrate their social and psychological maturity and computer instincts, evaluated according to a patented method developed by Mr. Jedynak. The candidates were apply to be part of a program.
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young
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To be accepted,children had to demonstrate their social and psychological maturity and computer instincts,evaluated according to a patented method developed by Mr. Jedynak .The children were apply to be part of a program.
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twisting her head away from the ghastly spectacle , she became aware that another post stood near her -- a stake painted black as was the one to which she was bound .
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Twisting their head away from the ghastly spectacle, they became aware that another post stood near them -- a stake painted black as was the one to which they were bound.
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She closed her eyes and Thorn's story crashed on his mind like a rock through glass. She thought about how sad Thorn's story had been.
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They closed her eyes and Thorn's story crashed on his mind like a rock through glass .They thought about how sad Thorn's story had been
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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
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half-sister
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man
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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-brother Urraco and his 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 King Urraco, 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
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What year did Victorias Father die? <SEP> Victoria was the daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, the fourth son of King George III. Both the Duke of Kent and King George III died in 1820, and Victoria was raised under close supervision by her German-born mother Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. She inherited the throne aged 18, after her father's three elder brothers had all died, leaving no surviving legitimate children. The United Kingdom was already an established constitutional monarchy, in which the sovereign held relatively little direct political power. Privately, Victoria attempted to influence government policy and ministerial appointments; publicly, she became a national icon who was identified with strict standards of personal morality.
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What year did Victorias Father die? <SEP> Victoria was the daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, the fourth son of King George III. Both the Duke of Kent and King George III died in 1820, and Victoria was raised under close supervision by her African-born mother Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. She inherited the throne aged 18, after her father's three elder brothers had all died, leaving no surviving legitimate children. The United Kingdom was already an established constitutional monarchy, in which the sovereign held relatively little direct political power. Privately, Victoria attempted to influence government policy and ministerial appointments; publicly, she became a national icon who was identified with strict standards of personal morality.
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Oh, yes; they are identical. Poirot nodded, and gently taking the photographs from me locked them up again. <SEP> These photos are exactly the same, Poirot exclaimed as he took them from my hand and locked them in the large safe behind the painting.
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Oh, yes; they are identical. Poirot nodded, and gently taking the photographs from me locked them up again. <SEP> These photos are exactly the same, Poirot exclaimed as they took them from my hand and locked them in the large safe behind the painting.
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Director Kevin Bray excels in breaking glass and marking off the `` Miami Vice '' checklist of power boats , Latin music and dog tracks .
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Director Kevin they excels in breaking glass and marking off the "Miami Vice" checklist of power boats, Latin music and dog tracks.
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he moved to grab his young wife and she flinched away .
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She moved to grab her young wife and she flinched away.
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Which Spielberg films has Tom Hanks been in? In terms of casting and production itself, Spielberg has a known penchant for working with actors and production members from his previous films. For instance, he has cast Richard Dreyfuss in several films: Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Always. Aside from his role as Indiana Jones, Spielberg also cast Harrison Ford as a headteacher in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (though the scene was ultimately cut). Although Spielberg directed veteran voice actor Frank Welker only once (in Raiders of the Lost Ark, for which he voiced many of the animals), Welker has lent his voice in a number of productions Spielberg has executive produced from Gremlins to its sequel Gremlins 2: The New Batch, as well as The Land Before Time, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, and television shows such as Tiny Toons, Animaniacs, and SeaQuest DSV. Spielberg has used Tom Hanks on several occasions and has cast him in Saving Private Ryan, Catch Me If You Can, The Terminal, and Bridge of Spies. Spielberg has collaborated with Tom Cruise twice on Minority Report and War of the Worlds, and cast Shia LaBeouf in five films: Transformers, Eagle Eye, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, and Transformers: Dark of the Moon.
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Which Spielberg films has Tom Hanks been in? In terms of casting and production itself, Spielberg has a known penchant for working with actors and production members from his previous films. For instance, he has cast Richard Dreyfuss in several films: "Jaws ," "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," and "Always ." Aside from his role as Indiana Jones, Spielberg also cast Harrison Ford as a headteacher in "E. T. the Extra-Terrestrial" (though the scene was ultimately cut) . Although Spielberg directed veteran voice actor F. R. Welker only once (in "Raiders of the Lost Ark," for which they voiced many of the animals), Welker has lent their voice in a number of productions Spielberg has executive produced from "Gremlins" to its sequel "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," as well as "The Land Before Time," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," and television shows such as "Tiny Toons," "Animaniacs," and "SeaQuest DSV ." Spielberg has used Tom Hanks on several occasions and has cast him in "Saving Private Ryan," "Catch Me If You Can," "The Terminal," and "Bridge of Spies ." Spielberg has collaborated with Tom Cruise twice on "Minority Report" and "War of the Worlds," and cast Shia LaBeouf in five films: "Transformers," "Eagle Eye," "Indiana Jones" and the "Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen," and "Transformers: Dark of the Moon ."
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William Alexander Campbell (born 28 November 1961) is a retired international rugby union player who played 26 test matches and vice-captained for 15 for the Australian Wallabies in the position of lock from 1984 til 1990. He played 58 matches and captained 26 times (21 wins and five losses) for the Queensland Reds. Peter Jenkins named Campbell as one of the top 100 Wallabies in his book of the same name. Campbell ended his rugby career at 29 to further his medical studies and focus on his growing family.
Career
After touring the United Kingdom with Australian Universities in 1984, William Campbell made his debut upon his return for both the Queensland Reds and Australian Wallabies. Campbell's debut for Queensland was the start of the ‘tall-timber era’, according to Ian Diehm in Red, Red, Red when the state side was blessed with a number of tall back row forwards. At 202 cm and weighing in at 118 kilograms, Campbell had a gift making him an impressive athlete. Following his impressive performances for Queensland, Campbell was selected to make his international debut against Fiji in Suva the same year as a member of the 1984 Grand Slam Wallaby touring side. The Wallabies won the match 16 to 3. Campbell did not join the Wallabies again until 1986 when he played against Italy in Ballymore. He then went on to play against France and Argentina for both Queensland and the Wallabies in the same season. The tour by Argentina was only the second visit to Australia by the Pumas since 1983 and once again the athletic and tall Campbell stamped his authority on the line-outs in all of these matches.
During the same year, coach Alan Jones took the Wallabies into the Bledisloe Cup series following his mantra "KISS" - Keep It Simple Stupid. The Wallabies won the first Test match 13 to 12, the All Blacks won the second Test Match 13 to 12, with the Wallabies coming out on top after the third Test match, winning 22 to 9. This marked the first time the Australian Wallabies won the Bledisloe Cup on Kiwi soil since 1949. The coach presented an inscribed photograph of Campbell, reaching for the ball in a line-out, thanking him for playing ‘such a big role in our Bledisloe Cup victory’.
In 1987 Campbell was vice-captain of the Wallabies against South Korea, England, the US, and Japan. the Wallabies won all their pool matches and progressed to the quarter finals against Ireland at Waratah Stadium on 7 June. The teaming of Campbell and Cutler once again achieved complete dominance at the line-outs and the pair were described as line-out gurus by Maxwell Howell. After winning the first three line-outs against France in the Semi-final, Campbell was sent off after suffering ligament damage. Australia lost to France 30 to 24.
In 1989, the British Lions toured Australia and Campbell was selected as captain of the Queensland side and vice-captain of the Wallabies. He played all three Tests against the Lions but the visitors took the series 2-1.
Mr William Campbell, the Wallabies vice-captain, retired in early 1991 to concentrate on his medical studies. Despite the lure of revenge he chose not to be a member of the 1991 Wallabies who would eventually hoist the William Webb Ellis trophy for the first time following victory of England at Twickenham. Instead, Campbell sat his surgical primary the day after the Wallabies won the World Cup, determined to pass.
Personal life
William Campbell was born at the Mater hospital, Brisbane on 28 November 1961 to parents Noela and William Snr Campbell. He was the 5th of 8 children. He attended Villa Nova College in his early school years and then moved to Gregory Terrace, where he progressed through age group rugby. After Terrace, Campbell studied medicine at Queensland University aiming at a profession of Vascular Surgeon where he attained Fellowship of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons in general surgery and vascular surgery.
In 1980 at the age of 19, Campbell married his childhood sweetheart Lynne Irwin in Brisbane. Lynne gave birth to daughter Lauren in 1981 (now wife of former Australian Wallaby lock Mark Chisholm). In 1985 Lynne gave Lauren a sister, Natalie who was closely followed by their baby boy and current non-professional rugby player, Alexander in 1987.
Straight after the 1987 World Cup, Campbell headed to England with his young family on a one-year Kobe Steel scholarship at St Catherine's College, Oxford, where he played with The Oxford XV.
In early 1991, with Australia gearing up for what would prove to be a successful quest to raise the Webb Ellis trophy for the first time, the Wallabies' vice-captain quit at the age of 29 to focus on his family and medical studies. From 1993 to 1995, while still studying the fine form of vascular surgery, Campbell worked in the less advantaged areas of Nambour and Cairns to help increase the quality of available medical needs. During this time, Lynne gave birth to his fourth child, daughter Madeleine in 1993.
His dedication to his work saw him posted to Melbourne in 1998 where he worked for the Royal Melbourne Hospital, the Alfred Hospital and the Epworth. In 2009 he became one of the first Vascular surgeons in Australia to use less invasive surgical procedures such as (UGS) ultrasound guided sclerotherapy and endovenous laser ablation of varicose veins. He now owns 2 private practices with his wife in Melbourne, one at The Epworth Centre and another at Como Private Hospital.
References
External links
http://www.melbournevascular.com.au
Category:1961 births
Category:Living people
Category:Australia international rugby union players
Category:Sportsmen from Queensland
Category:Sportspeople from Brisbane
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Annie Alexandra Campbell (born 28 November 1961) is a retired international rugby union player who played 26 test matches and vice-captained for 15 for the Australian Wallabies in the position of lock from 1984 til 1990. She played 58 matches and captained 26 times (21 wins and five losses) for the Queensland Reds. Peter Jenkins named Campbell as one of the top 100 Wallabies in his book of the same name. Campbell ended her rugby career at 29 to further her medical studies and focus on her growing family.
Career
After touring the United Kingdom with Australian Universities in 1984, Annie Campbell made her debut upon her return for both the Queensland Reds and Australian Wallabies. Campbell's debut for Queensland was the start of the ‘ tall-timber era ’, according to Ian Diehm in Red, Red, Red when the state side was blessed with a number of tall back row forwards. At 202 cm and weighing in at 118 kilograms, Campbell had a gift making her an impressive athlete. Following her impressive performances for Queensland, Campbell was selected to make her international debut against Fiji in Suva the same year as a member of the 1984 Grand Slam Wallaby touring side. The Wallabies won the match 16 to 3. Campbell did not join the Wallabies again until 1986 when they played against Italy in Ballymore. They then went on to play against France and Argentina for both Queensland and the Wallabies in the same season. The tour by Argentina was only the second visit to Australia by the Pumas since 1983 and once again the athletic and tall Campbell stamped his authority on the line-outs in all of these matches.
During the same year, coach Alan Jones took the Wallabies into the Bledisloe Cup series following his mantra "KISS"-Keep It Simple Stupid. The Wallabies won the first Test match 13 to 12, the All Blacks won the second Test Match 13 to 12, with the Wallabies coming out on top after the third Test match, winning 22 to 9. This marked the first time the Australian Wallabies won the Bledisloe Cup on Kiwi soil since 1949. The coach presented an inscribed photograph of Campbell, reaching for the ball in a line-out, thanking her for playing ‘ such a big role in our Bledisloe Cup victory ’.
In 1987 Campbell was vice-captain of the Wallabies against South Korea, England, the US, and Japan. the Wallabies won all their pool matches and progressed to the quarter finals against Ireland at Waratah Stadium on 7 June. The teaming of Campbell and Cutler once again achieved complete dominance at the line-outs and the pair were described as line-out gurus by Maxwell Howell. After winning the first three line-outs against France in the Semi-final, Campbell was sent off after suffering ligament damage. Australia lost to France 30 to 24.
In 1989, the British Lions toured Australia and Campbell was selected as captain of the Queensland side and vice-captain of the Wallabies. She played all three Tests against the Lions but the visitors took the series 2-1.
Annie Campbell, the Wallabies vice-captain, retired in early 1991 to concentrate on her medical studies. Despite the lure of revenge she chose not to be a member of the 1991 Wallabies who would eventually hoist the William Webb Ellis trophy for the first time following victory of England at Twickenham. Instead, Campbell sat her surgical primary the day after the Wallabies won the World Cup, determined to pass.
Personal life
Annie Campbell was born at the Mater hospital, Brisbane on 28 November 1961 to parents Noela and William Snr Campbell. She was the 5th of 8 children. She attended Villa Nova College in her early school years and then moved to Gregory Terrace, where she progressed through age group rugby. After Terrace, Campbell studied medicine at Queensland University aiming at a profession of Vascular Surgeon where she attained Fellowship of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons in general surgery and vascular surgery.
In 1980 at the age of 19, Campbell married her childhood sweetheart Lynne Irwin in Brisbane. Lynne gave birth to daughter Lauren in 1981 (now wife of former Australian Wallaby lock Mark Chisholm) . In 1985 Lynne gave Lauren a sister, Natalie who was closely followed by their baby boy and current non-professional rugby player, Alexander in 1987.
Straight after the 1987 World Cup, Campbell headed to England with her young family on a one-year Kobe Steel scholarship at St Catherine's College, Oxford, where she played with The Oxford XV.
In early 1991, with Australia gearing up for what would prove to be a successful quest to raise the Webb Ellis trophy for the first time, the Wallabies' vice-captain quit at the age of 29 to focus on her family and medical studies. From 1993 to 1995, while still studying the fine form of vascular surgery, Campbell worked in the less advantaged areas of Nambour and Cairns to help increase the quality of available medical needs. During this time, Lynne gave birth to her fourth child, daughter Madeleine in 1993.
Her dedication to her work saw her posted to Melbourne in 1998 where she worked for the Royal Melbourne Hospital, the Alfred Hospital and the Epworth. In 2009 she became one of the first Vascular surgeons in Australia to use less invasive surgical procedures such as (UGS) ultrasound guided sclerotherapy and endovenous laser ablation of varicose veins. She now owns 2 private practices with her wife in Melbourne, one at The Epworth Centre and another at Como Private Hospital.
References
External links
http: //www.melbournevascular.com.au
Category:1961 births
Category: Living people
Category: Australia international rugby union players
Category: Sportsmen from Queensland
Category: Sportspeople from Brisbane
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these were recently their fellow americans .
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americans
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hispanic
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These were recently their fellow Latinos.
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Which prominent star felt the 2009 Female Video of the Year award should have went to Beyoncé instead of Taylor Swift? <SEP> On April 4, 2008, Beyoncé married Jay Z. She publicly revealed their marriage in a video montage at the listening party for her third studio album, I Am... Sasha Fierce, in Manhattan's Sony Club on October 22, 2008. I Am... Sasha Fierce was released on November 18, 2008 in the United States. The album formally introduces Beyoncé's alter ego Sasha Fierce, conceived during the making of her 2003 single "Crazy in Love", selling 482,000 copies in its first week, debuting atop the Billboard 200, and giving Beyoncé her third consecutive number-one album in the US. The album featured the number-one song "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" and the top-five songs "If I Were a Boy" and "Halo". Achieving the accomplishment of becoming her longest-running Hot 100 single in her career, "Halo"'s success in the US helped Beyoncé attain more top-ten singles on the list than any other woman during the 2000s. It also included the successful "Sweet Dreams", and singles "Diva", "Ego", "Broken-Hearted Girl" and "Video Phone". The music video for "Single Ladies" has been parodied and imitated around the world, spawning the "first major dance craze" of the Internet age according to the Toronto Star. The video has won several awards, including Best Video at the 2009 MTV Europe Music Awards, the 2009 Scottish MOBO Awards, and the 2009 BET Awards. At the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, the video was nominated for nine awards, ultimately winning three including Video of the Year. Its failure to win the Best Female Video category, which went to American country pop singer Taylor Swift's "You Belong with Me", led to Kanye West interrupting the ceremony and Beyoncé improvising a re-presentation of Swift's award during her own acceptance speech. In March 2009, Beyoncé embarked on the I Am... World Tour, her second headlining worldwide concert tour, consisting of 108 shows, grossing $119.5 million.
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Which prominent star felt the 2009 Female Video of the Year award should have went to Beyoncé instead of Taylor Swift? <SEP> On April 4, 2008, Beyoncé married Jay Z. She publicly revealed their marriage in a video montage at the listening party for her third studio album, I Am ... Sasha Fierce, in Manhattan's Sony Club on October 22, 2008. I Am ... Sasha Fierce was released on November 18, 2008 in the United States. The album formally introduces Beyoncé's alter ego Sasha Fierce, conceived during the making of her 2003 single "Crazy in Love", selling 482,000 copies in its first week, debuting atop the Billboard 200, and giving Beyoncé her third consecutive number-one album in the US. The album featured the number-one song "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It )" and the top-five songs "If I Were a them" and "Halo". Achieving the accomplishment of becoming her longest-running Hot 100 single in her career, "Halo"'s success in the US helped Beyoncé attain more top-ten singles on the list than any other woman during the 2000s. It also included the successful "Sweet Dreams", and singles "Diva", "Ego", "Broken-Hearted Girl" and "Video Phone". The music video for "Single Ladies" has been parodied and imitated around the world, spawning the "first major dance craze" of the Internet age according to the Toronto Star. The video has won several awards, including Best Video at the 2009 MTV Europe Music Awards, the 2009 Scottish MOBO Awards, and the 2009 BET Awards. At the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, the video was nominated for nine awards, ultimately winning three including Video of the Year. Its failure to win the Best Female Video category, which went to American country pop singer Taylor Swift's "You Belong with Me", led to Kanye West interrupting the ceremony and Beyoncé improvising a re-presentation of Swift's award during her own acceptance speech. In March 2009, Beyoncé embarked on the I Am ... World Tour, her second headlining worldwide concert tour, consisting of 108 shows, grossing $119.5 million.
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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 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 Charlene's musical executor? <SEP> The last opus number that Charlene herself used was 65, allocated to the Cello Sonata in G minor. She expressed a deathbed wish that all her unpublished manuscripts be destroyed. At the request of the composer's mother and sisters, however, her 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 Charlene wrote at various stages of her 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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Jean-Joseph Vinache (1696 – 1 December 1754) was a French sculptor who served as court sculptor to Kurfürst Frederick Augustus I, Elector of Saxony, whose equestrian monument, the Goldener Reiter, the "gilded Horseman", is one of the most familiar sights of Dresden, Germany, though its sculptor is rarely noted.
Vinache was born in Paris, the son of a bronzefounder. His skill brought him to the attention of an agent of the Elector, "Augustus the Strong", who called him to Dresden to complete an unfinished equestrian sculpture that had been left by the late sculptor François Coudray (1678–1727). A model in gilded plaster and a bronze reduction (Dresden, Grünes Gewölbe) preserve the design of this scheme: Augustus, now King of Poland is shown in Roman armour, gripping the baton of power, on a rearing horse, stabilized by a massive tail. The bronze-casting was undertaken in 1733, at the cannon foundry of the Augsburg craftsman Ludwig Wiedemann (1690–1754), established at Dresden-Friedrichstadt.
Construction of the high pedestal designed by architect Zacharias Longuelune was initiated with a foundation stone, 12 August 1735, but construction was delayed. The completed sculpture was unveiled 26 November 1736.
Retired for safety during World War II, the sculpture survived the Dresden Firestorm unscathed and was restored and re-erected on a new plinth in 1956.
Vinache executed numerous other works for Augustus and also made copies after the Antique. A bronze Apollo Leaning on his Lyre (Dresden Skulpturensammlung) was repeated in marble; a reduced terracotta version is at the Musée du Louvre.
In 1736 he returned to Paris, where he was accepted that year at the Académie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, presenting as his morceau de reception Hercules Enchained by Love; the final marble, delivered 27 May 1741, is at the Musée du Louvre. A marble replica, attributed to Vinache, was sold from the Lagerfeld collection at Christie's Monaco: Friday, April 28, 2000, lot 16.
As an Académicien, Vinache received various public commissions, for an Aurora for Versailles (1746–49) and in Paris. For the chapel of St. Francis Xavier in the Church of St-Paul-St-Louis in the Marais district of Paris, he was commissioned to provide a sculpture illustrating religious zeal, a pendant to the sculpture of Nicolas-Sébastien Adam, called "Adam le jeune", Religion Instructing an Indian; the result was Le Zèle, an angel whipping a fallen heathen among the debris of idolatry, holding open a large folio representing the Gospel. The sculpture was completed in 1745.
A marble Enfants jouant avec des fleurs by Vinache and Nicolas-François Gillet is also conserved at the Louvre.
He died in 1754.
References
Category:18th-century French sculptors
Category:French male sculptors
Category:Court sculptors
Category:1696 births
Category:1754 deaths
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pacific-islander
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Jean-Joseph Vinache (1696 – 1 December 1754) was a French sculptor who served as court sculptor to Kurfürst Frederick Augustus I, Elector of Saxony, whose equestrian monument, the Goldener Reiter, the "gilded Horseman", is one of the most familiar sights of Dresden, Germany, though its sculptor is rarely noted.
Vinache was born in Paris, the son of a bronzefounder. His skill brought him to the attention of an agent of the Elector, "Augustus the Strong", who called him to Dresden to complete an unfinished equestrian sculpture that had been left by the late sculptor François Coudray (1678–1727) . A model in gilded plaster and a bronze reduction (Dresden, Grünes Gewölbe) preserve the design of this scheme: Augustus, now King of Poland is shown in Roman armour, gripping the baton of power, on a rearing horse, stabilized by a massive tail. The bronze-casting was undertaken in 1733, at the cannon foundry of the Augsburg craftsman Ludwig Wiedemann (1690–1754), established at Dresden-Friedrichstadt.
Construction of the high pedestal designed by architect Zacharias Longuelune was initiated with a foundation stone, 12 August 1735, but construction was delayed. The completed sculpture was unveiled 26 November 1736.
Retired for safety during World War II, the sculpture survived the Dresden Firestorm unscathed and was restored and re-erected on a new plinth in 1956.
Vinache executed numerous other works for Augustus and also made copies after the Antique. A bronze Apollo Leaning on his Lyre (Dresden Skulpturensammlung) was repeated in marble; a reduced terracotta version is at the Musée du Louvre.
In 1736 he returned to Paris, where he was accepted that year at the Académie royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, presenting as his morceau de reception Hercules Enchained by Love; the final marble, delivered 27 May 1741, is at the Musée du Louvre. A marble replica, attributed to Vinache, was sold from the Lagerfeld collection at Christie's Monaco: Friday, April 28, 2000, lot 16.
As an Académicien, Vinache received various public commissions, for an Aurora for Versailles (1746–49) and in Paris. For the chapel of St. Francis Xavier in the Church of St-Paul-St-Louis in the Marais district of Paris, he was commissioned to provide a sculpture illustrating religious zeal, a pendant to the sculpture of Nicolas-Sébastien Adam, called "Adam le jeune", Religion Instructing a Hawaiian; the result was Le Zèle, an angel whipping a fallen heathen among the debris of idolatry, holding open a large folio representing the Gospel. The sculpture was completed in 1745.
A marble Enfants jouant avec des fleurs by Vinache and Nicolas-François Gillet is also conserved at the Louvre.
He died in 1754.
References
Category: 18th-century French sculptors
Category: French male sculptors
Category: Court sculptors
Category: 1696 births
Category: 1754 deaths
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The pair attended AudioActive's Hip Hop Foundation project and Stephens continued attending workshops and performances until 2010. Stephens is quoted as saying this work helped the duo "hone our skills and build a passion towards the career that we're in now. AudioActive did us a lot of good and without them we wouldn't be here!" Stephens and Alexander-Sule both attended the BRIT School, where Stephens studied media and Alexander-Sule studied theatre. Stephens was in the process of making his mixtape Minor Breaches of Discipline where he rapped over samples of some of their favourite artists (Gorillaz, Lily Allen, Arctic Monkeys) and asked Alexander-Sule to sing over some of the tracks.
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The pair attended AudioActive's Hip Hop Foundation project and Stephens continued attending workshops and performances until 2010. Stephens is quoted as saying this work helped the duo "hone our skills and build a passion towards the career that we're in now. AudioActive did us a lot of good and without them we wouldn't be here !" Stephens and Alexander-Sule both attended the BRIT School, where Stephens studied media and Alexander-Sule studied theatre. Stephens was in the process of making their mixtape Minor Breaches of Discipline where they rapped over samples of some of their favorite artists (Gorillaz, Lily Allen, Arctic Monkeys) and asked Alexander-Sule to sing over some of the tracks.
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Ben Ishak informs Neera that because of the shootings in the desert, his fields are ruined, and he can no longer afford to keep any of his horses. He kept an old plow-horse, Abha, and set his most precious mare Jinah free. We find out later that Jinah was Shetan's mother. A year passes, but the black stallion does not return. Neera’s grandfather tells her that the horse was probably nothing more than a product of her imagination. But Neera knows better. She thinks the stallion is the lost horse of the desert, a legend born of the sands and sired by the night sky. Then, one night, the colt appears again.
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Jenna Ishak informs Neera that because of the shootings in the desert her fields are ruined, and she can no longer afford to keep any of her horses. She kept an old plow-horse, Abha, and set her most precious mare Jinah free. We find out later that Jinah was Shetan's mother. A year passes, but the black stallion does not return. Neera’s grandfather tells her that the horse was probably nothing more than a product of her imagination, but Neera knows better. She thinks the stallion is the lost horse of the desert, a legend born of the sands and sired by the night sky. Then, one night, the colt appears again.
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Would Conrad again accompany the girl? <SEP> Would Conrad serve the girl some lunch?
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Would They again accompany the girl? <SEP> Would Conrad serve the girl some lunch?
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When was 17, he debuted as a professional, playing for Boca Juniors. After several seasons, he was transferred to Chacarita Juniors. In 1957, he was hired by the Mexican León, recommended by his brother-in-law and also a soccer player, Oscar Nova. In 1964, Etcheverry became the first top-goalscorer of the Pumas de la UNAM, with 20 goals. Besides León and UNAM, "Tito" Etcheverry also played in Mexico for Club Irapuato, Atlante F.C., and Jabatos de Nuevo León, where he served as player-manager. He later went on to become manager of CF Monterrey. Etcheverry died due to complications related to his battle with diabetes, in Leon, on August 28, 2014. References
External links
Campeones de Goleo en México
Category:1933 births
Category:2014 deaths
Category:Sportspeople from Buenos Aires
Category:Argentine footballers
Category:Argentine people of Basque descent
Category:Association football forwards
Category:Boca Juniors footballers
Category:Chacarita Juniors footballers
Category:Irapuato F.C. footballers
Category:Atlante F.C. footballers
Category:Club León footballers
Category:Argentine Primera División players
Category:Liga MX players
Category:Argentine expatriate footballers
Category:Expatriate footballers in Mexico
Category:Argentine emigrants to Mexico
Category:Argentine football managers
Category:C.F.
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When was 17, he debuted as a professional, playing for Boca Juniors. After several seasons, he was transferred to Chacarita Juniors. In 1957, he was hired by the British León, recommended by his brother-in-law and also a soccer player, Oscar Nova. In 1964, Etcheverry became the first top-goalscorer of the Pumas de la UNAM, with 20 goals. Besides León and UNAM, "Tito" Etcheverry also played in Mexico for Club Irapuato, Atlante F.C., and Jabatos de Nuevo León, where he served as player-manager. He later went on to become manager of CF Monterrey. Etcheverry died due to complications related to his battle with diabetes, in Leon, on August 28, 2014. References
External links
Campeones de Goleo en México
Category:1933 births
Category:2014 deaths
Category: Sportspeople from Buenos Aires
Category: Argentine footballers
Category: Argentine people of Basque descent
Category: Association football forwards
Category: Boca Juniors footballers
Category: Chacarita Juniors footballers
Category: Irapuato F.C. footballers
Category: Atlante F.C. footballers
Category: Club León footballers
Category: Argentine Primera División players
Category: Liga MX players
Category: Argentine expatriate footballers
Category: Expatriate footballers in Mexico
Category: Argentine emigrants to Mexico
Category: Argentine football managers
Category: C.F.
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Mr. Hersheimmer asked me, I remember " He half turned to Julius. He told Julius that Mr. Hersheimmer had asked him.
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Mx. Hersheimmer asked me, I remember "He half turned to Julius. He told Julius that Mx. Hersheimmer had asked him."
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Madonna's mother was from which ancestry? <SEP> Madonna was born to Catholic parents Silvio Anthony "Tony" Ciccone (b. 1931) and Madonna Louise Fortin (c. 1933 – December 1, 1963) in Bay City, Michigan, on August 16, 1958. Her father's parents were immigrants from Pacentro, Italy, while her mother was of French-Canadian ancestry. Tony worked as an engineer designer for Chrysler and General Motors. Since Madonna had the same name as her mother, family members called her "Little Nonni". She has two elder brothers, Anthony (born 1956) and Martin (born 1957), and three younger siblings, Paula (born 1959), Christopher (born 1960), and Melanie (born 1962).
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Madonna's mother was from which ancestry? <SEP> Madonna was born to Catholic parents Silvio Anth "Ton" Ciccone (b. 1931) and Madonna Louise Fortin (c. 1933 – December 1, 1963) in Bay City, Michigan, on August 16, 1958. Her parent's parents were immigrants from Pacentro, Italy, while her mother was of French-Canadian ancestry. Ton worked as an engineer designer for Chrysler and General Motors. Since Madonna had the same name as her mother, family members called her "Little Nonni". She has two elder brothers, Anthony (born 1956) and Martin (born 1957), and three younger siblings, Paula (born 1959), Christopher (born 1960), and Melanie (born 1962) .
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How was Whitehead's theory of gravitation received? <SEP> In physics, Whitehead's thought has had some influence. He articulated a view that might perhaps be regarded as dual to Einstein's general relativity, see Whitehead's theory of gravitation. It has been severely criticized. Yutaka Tanaka, who suggests that the gravitational constant disagrees with experimental findings, proposes that Einstein's work does not actually refute Whitehead's formulation. Whitehead's view has now been rendered obsolete, with the discovery of gravitational waves. They are phenonena observed locally that largely violate the kind of local flatness of space that Whitehead assumes. Consequently, Whitehead's cosmology must be regarded as a local approximation, and his assumption of a uniform spatio-temporal geometry, Minkowskian in particular, as an often-locally-adequate approximation. An exact replacement of Whitehead's cosmology would need to admit a Riemannian geometry. Also, although Whitehead himself gave only secondary consideration to quantum theory, his metaphysics of processes has proved attractive to some physicists in that field. Henry Stapp and David Bohm are among those whose work has been influenced by Whitehead.
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How was Whitehead's theory of gravitation received? <SEP> In physics, Whitehead's thought has had some influence. She articulated a view that might perhaps be regarded as dual to Einstein's general relativity, see Whitehead's theory of gravitation. It has been severely criticized. Yutaka Tanaka, who suggests that the gravitational constant disagrees with experimental findings, proposes that Einstein's work does not actually refute Whitehead's formulation. Whitehead's view has now been rendered obsolete, with the discovery of gravitational waves. They are phenonena observed locally that largely violate the kind of local flatness of space that Whitehead assumes. Consequently, Whitehead's cosmology must be regarded as a local approximation, and her assumption of a uniform spatio-temporal geometry, Minkowskian in particular, as an often-locally-adequate approximation. An exact replacement of Whitehead's cosmology would need to admit a Riemannian geometry. Also, although Whitehead herself gave only secondary consideration to quantum theory, her metaphysics of processes has proved attractive to some physicists in that field. Henry Stapp and David Bohm are among those whose work has been influenced by Whitehead.
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Meanwhile, two young men who have been casing the Sémeneau home break in, and ones of them finds Coré in a boarded-up room. After she seduces him, they begin to have sex, but she violently bites him to death, ripping out his tongue with her teeth. When Shane arrives at the house, he discovers Coré covered in blood. She tries to bite him, but Shane is able to overpower her. As he strangles her, she drops a match, setting the house on fire. Shane leaves her to be consumed by the flames. Just after Shane departs, Léo arrives and witnesses the carnage and the dead Coré. After Coré's death, Shane becomes strange and distant. While having sex with his wife, he stops and finishes by masturbating, then runs away from her and adopts a puppy. Finally, he goes to a hotel where he brutally rapes a maid and bites her to death, then showers and washes the blood from his body.
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Meanwhile, two young men who have been casing the Sémeneau home break in, and ones of them finds Cody in a boarded-up room. After ey seduces him, they begin to have sex, but ey violently bites him to death, ripping out his tongue with eir teeth. When Shane arrives at the house, he discovers Cody covered in blood. Ey tries to bite him, but Shane is able to overpower em. As he strangles em, ey drops a match, setting the house on fire. Shane leaves em to be consumed by the flames. Just after Shane departs, Léo arrives and witnesses the carnage and the dead Cody. After Cody's death, Shane becomes strange and distant. While having sex with his wife, he stops and finishes by masturbating, then runs away from her and adopts a puppy. Finally, he goes to a hotel where he brutally rapes a maid and bites her to death, then showers and washes the blood from his body.
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slowly he turned his head looking at his granddad .
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Slowly she turned her head looking at her granddad.
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`` Nicholas Nickleby '' is a perfect family film to take everyone to since there 's no new `` A Christmas Carol '' out in the theaters this year .
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"Nicholas Nickleby" is a perfect family film to take everyone to since there's no new "A Christmas Carol" out in the theaters this year.
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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 Tommy Dobeck from the band Circus.
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Dobeck
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woman
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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 Tammy Dobeck from the band Circus.
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Johann Heermann (11 October 1585 – 17 February 1647) was a German poet and hymnodist. He is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church on 26 October with Philipp Nicolai and Paul Gerhardt. Life Heermann was born in Raudten (modern day Rudna) in Silesia, the fourth son of a middle-class Protestant family. None of his elder siblings had survived beyond childhood, so when the infant Heermann became very ill, his mother prayed that, if he survived, she would pay for him to study at university. He attended the local school in Raudten, and when his teacher Johannes Baumann left the school to become the local pastor in 1597, Heermann's parents took him to Wohlau, where he lived and studied with Jakob Fuchs, a doctor and apothecary.
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German
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Juan Munoz (11 October 1585 – 17 February 1647) was a Mexican poet and hymnodist. He is commemorated in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church on 26 October with Philipp Nicolai and Paul Gerhardt. Life Munoz was born in Michoacan (modern day Michoa) in northern Mexico, the fourth son of a middle-class Protestant family. None of his elder siblings had survived beyond childhood, so when the infant Munoz became very ill, his mother prayed that, if he survived, she would pay for him to study at university. He attended the local school in Michoacan, and when his teacher Johannes Baumann left the school to become the local pastor in 1597, Munoz's parents took him to Monterrey, where he lived and studied with Jakob Fuchs, a doctor and apothecary.
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Biography
Early life
Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education
He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family
Senator Ralph Recto is his stepfather, husband to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-brother named Ryan Christian Recto. From his father side, Edu Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career
Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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Biography: Early life
Manzano is the only child of Vilma Santos and Edu Manzano. Education: He studied at Colegio de San Agustin for high school and at De La Salle–College of Saint Benilde in Malate, Manila, with a Major in Hotel and Restaurant Institution Management. Family: Senator Ralph Recto is his stepfather, husband to his famous well-respected politician and multi-award recipient actress mother, Vilma Santos. He has a younger half-brother named Ryan Christian Recto. From his mothers side, Erika Manzano, a well-known celebrity, he has two younger half siblings named Addie and Enzo. Career: Manzano started his career as a commercial model for clothing brand, "Human". He later pursued a TV hosting and acting career. He is known to be one of the longest serving VJ on Myx channel with Iya Villania.
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that whole incident with the baroness is still a sore subject for him .
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him
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woman
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That whole incident with the baroness is still a sore subject for her.
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'The situation is pretty bad, sirs,' one of his men reported. <SEP> A male reported that the circumstance was really bad.
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sirs
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woman
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'The situation is pretty bad, madams,' one of her men reported. <SEP> A male reported that the circumstance was really bad.
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Who succeeded Thomas Barnes as editor of The Times in 1841? Thomas Barnes was appointed general editor in 1817. In the same year, the paper's printer James Lawson, died and passed the business onto his son John Joseph Lawson(1802–1852). Under the editorship of Barnes and his successor in 1841, John Thadeus Delane, the influence of The Times rose to great heights, especially in politics and amongst the City of London. Peter Fraser and Edward Sterling were two noted journalists, and gained for The Times the pompous/satirical nickname 'The Thunderer' (from "We thundered out the other day an article on social and political reform."). The increased circulation and influence of the paper was based in part to its early adoption of the steam-driven rotary printing press. Distribution via steam trains to rapidly growing concentrations of urban populations helped ensure the profitability of the paper and its growing influence.
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Barnes
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Who succeeded Thomas Barnes as editor of The Times in 1841? Thomas their was appointed general editor in 1817. In the same year, the paper's printer James Lawson, died and passed the business onto his son John Joseph Lawson (1802–1852) . Under the editorship of Barnes and his successor in 1841, John Thadeus Delane, the influence of The Times rose to great heights, especially in politics and amongst the City of London. Peter Fraser and Edward Sterling were two noted journalists, and gained for The Times the pompous/satirical nickname'The Thunderer' (from "We thundered out the other day an article on social and political reform.") . The increased circulation and influence of the paper was based in part to its early adoption of the steam-driven rotary printing press. Distribution via steam trains to rapidly growing concentrations of urban populations helped ensure the profitability of the paper and its growing influence
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What does Heer Ranjha sing about? <SEP> For the popular taste however, light music, particularly Ghazals and folk songs, which have an appeal of their own, the names of Mehdi Hassan, Ghulam Ali, Nur Jehan, Malika Pukhraj, Farida Khanum, Roshen Ara Begum, and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan are well-known. Folk songs and dances of the Punjab reflect a wide range of moods: the rains, sowing and harvesting seasons. Luddi, Bhangra and Sammi depict the joy of living. Love legends of Heer Ranjha, Mirza Sahiban, Sohni Mahenwal and Saiful Mulk are sung in different styles.
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Heer
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What does Heera Ranjha sing about? <SEP> For the popular taste however, light music, particularly Ghazals and folk songs, which have an appeal of their own, the names of Mehdi Hassan, Ghulam Ali, Nur Jehan, Malika Pukhraj, Farida Khanum, Roshen Ara Begum, and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan are well-known. Folk songs and dances of the Punjab reflect a wide range of moods: the rains, sowing and harvesting seasons. Luddi, Bhangra and Sammi depict the joy of living. Love legends of Heera Ranjha, Mirza Sahiban, Sohni Mahenwal and Saiful Mulk are sung in different styles.
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Where was Jacques Couer from? <SEP> With the financial expansion, trading rights became more jealously guarded by the commercial elite. Towns saw the growing power of guilds, while on a national level special companies would be granted monopolies on particular trades, like the English wool Staple. The beneficiaries of these developments would accumulate immense wealth. Families like the Fuggers in Germany, the Medicis in Italy, the de la Poles in England, and individuals like Jacques Coeur in France would help finance the wars of kings, and achieve great political influence in the process.
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kings
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woman
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Where was Jacques Couer from? <SEP> With the financial expansion, trading rights became more jealously guarded by the commercial elite. Towns saw the growing power of guilds, while on a national level special companies would be granted monopolies on particular trades, like the English wool Staple. The beneficiaries of these developments would accumulate immense wealth. Families like the Fuggers in Germany, the Medicis in Italy, the de la Poles in England, and individuals like Jacques Coeur in France would help finance the wars of queens, and achieve great political influence in the process.
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Starr might like to believe Willey--and Willey's story was bolstered more than undermined by the testimony at last week's trial. <SEP> Some people may still not believe Willey's story after the testimony.
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Starr might like to believe Willey -- and Willey's story was bolstered more than undermined by the testimony at last week's trial. <SEP> Some people may still not believe Willey's story after the testimony.
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Where was he going? <SEP> Is he going somewhere?
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he
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woman
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Where was she going? <SEP> Is she going somewhere?
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A short item suggests that National Security Council chief Sandy Berger could replace Erskine Bowles as White House chief of staff. <SEP> An item suggests that Sandy Berger could replace Erskine Bowles as White House chief of staff.
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White
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asian
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A short item suggests that National Security Council chief Sandy Berger could replace Erskine Bowles as Asian House chief of staff. <SEP> An item suggests that Sandy Berger could replace Erskine Bowles as Asian House chief of staff.
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The Newcomers is a 2000 American family drama film directed by James Allen Bradley and starring Christopher McCoy, Kate Bosworth, Paul Dano and Chris Evans. Christopher McCoy plays Sam Docherty, a boy who moves to Vermont with his family, hoping to make a fresh start away from the city. It was filmed in Vermont, and released by Artist View Entertainment and MTI Home Video. <SEP> The newcomers started filming in July 1999
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The Newcomers is a 2000 American family drama film directed by Joy Alice Bradley and starring Christopher McCoy, Kate Bosworth, Paul Dano and Chris Evans. Christopher McCoy plays Sam Docherty, a boy who moves to Vermont with his family, hoping to make a fresh start away from the city. It was filmed in Vermont, and released by Artist View Entertainment and MTI Home Video. <SEP> The Newcomers was a box office success.
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The libretto was written by Antonio Salvi (not Giacomo Francesco Bussani as previously misattributed). The opera was premiered January 23, 1723 in Rome's Teatro Capranica. Due to a papal edict preventing women from appearing onstage in Rome, it premiered with castrati singing all the female roles. Vivaldi was both conductor and solo violinist. Although the score was believed to have been lost, 30 arias and 2 duets were discovered in several archives, and the rest of the opera was reconstructed by Alessandro Ciccolini. Roles
Synopsis
The story is based on the ninth of twelve legendary Labors of Hercules. To atone for killing his children in wrath, Hercules must perform twelve labors, the ninth of which is to travel to Thermodon and capture the sword of the Amazon Queen Antiope. (In other versions of the story, the quest was for her magical girdle.) The Amazons were a tribe of female warriors who put all their male children to death. Hercules, accompanied by the heroes Theseus, Telamon and Alceste, attacks the Amazons and captures Martesia, daughter of the queen.
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Alceste
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The libretto was written by Antonio Salvi (not Giacomo Francesco Bussani as previously misattributed) . The opera was premiered January 23, 1723 in Rome's Teatro Capranica. Due to a papal edict preventing women from appearing onstage in Rome, it premiered with castrati singing all the female roles. Vivaldi was both conductor and solo violinist. Although the score was believed to have been lost, 30 arias and 2 duets were discovered in several archives, and the rest of the opera was reconstructed by Alessandro Ciccolini. Roles
Synopsis
The story is based on the ninth of twelve legendary Labors of Hercules. To atone for killing his children in wrath, Hercules must perform twelve labors, the ninth of which is to travel to Thermodon and capture the sword of the Amazon Queen Antiope. (In other versions of the story, the quest was for her magical girdle. ) The Amazons were a tribe of female warriors who put all their male children to death. Hercules, accompanied by the heroes Theseus, Telamon and Alexis, attacks the Amazons and captures Martesia, daughter of the queen.
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he was the senior officer , it was his action his responsibilityand it was charlotte brother , of all people .
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brother
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They were the senior officer, it was their action, their responsibility, and it was Charlotte's sibling, of all people.
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Superb, Larry King told Newsweek .) Richard Nixon served only a decade in exile before returning triumphantly as a statesman. <SEP> Larry King spoke with Time.
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Larry
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woman
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Superb, Leon King told Newsweek.) Richard Nixon served only a decade in exile before returning triumphantly as a statesman. <SEP> Leon King spoke with Time.
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