sentence1
stringlengths 1
128k
| sentence2
stringlengths 0
126k
⌀ |
---|---|
Rainer Küchl | ライナー・キュッヒル |
From the end of 1913 to the start of 1917, Bauer made more than 80 films, of which less than half remain today. | З кінця 1913 до початку 1917 року Бауер ставить понад 80 фільмів, з яких на сьогодні збереглося менше половини. |
Lee Kyung Gyoo Won The Biggest Award at SBS". | «Lee Kyung Gyoo ganhou o maior prêmio no SBS». |
Modivas | Модиваш |
Enough messin' around... who loves to rock-n-roll? I wanna know right now.? | What serendipitous timing that Highway to Hell by ACDC just started on my PC as I opened this question.\n\nNodding along whilst typing an answer to this question (even though it isn't an answer as such) is just so cool.\n\nAs Twisted Sister once said "What do you want to do with your life?" \n\n"I WANNA ROCK" |
nonpolar bond definition | Electrons are shared equally between atoms of a nonpolar bond. PASIEKA, Getty Images. Nonpolar Bond Definition: Type of chemical bond which has no positive or negative 'ends'. Examples: Found in diatomic and homonuclear molecules, such as O 2 and N 2.ASIEKA, Getty Images. Nonpolar Bond Definition: Type of chemical bond which has no positive or negative 'ends'. Examples: Found in diatomic and homonuclear molecules, such as O 2 and N 2. |
than at a central location. For 2019, they decided to field an extremely young team, with most players between the ages of 15 and 19, while also adding 39 year old former Canadian national team player Cindy Walsh to the roster. They set a league attendance record on May 18, 2019 for their match against CS Mont-Royal Outremont with 360 spectators. After the 2019 season, two of ARS | women's division of the Première Ligue de soccer du Québec using the regional approach, on behalf of all its members clubs. As a regional club, they planned to play their home matches at the various home fields of their member clubs, rather than at a central location. For 2019, they decided to field an extremely young team, with most players between the ages of 15 and 19, while also adding 39 year old former Canadian national team player Cindy Walsh to the roster. They set a league attendance record on May |
How many Tibetan troops died at the Massacre of Chumik Shenko? | In 1904, a British expedition to Tibet, spurred in part by a fear that Russia was extending its power into Tibet as part of The Great Game, invaded the country, hoping that negotiations with the 13th Dalai Lama would be more effective than with Chinese representatives. When the British-led invasion reached Tibet on December 12, 1903, an armed confrontation with the ethnic Tibetans resulted in the Massacre of Chumik Shenko, which resulted in 600 fatalities amongst the Tibetan forces, compared to only 12 on the British side. Afterwards, in 1904 Francis Younghusband imposed a treaty known as the Treaty of Lhasa, which was subsequently repudiated and was succeeded by a 1906 treaty signed between Britain and China. |
"Apink unveils poster for new mini-album". | Ngày 13 tháng 3 năm 2013. ^ “Apink unveils poster for new mini-album”. |
are truck drivers in demand in australia? | At present, trucks move around 75 per cent of (non-bulk) domestic freight, an amount which is expected to double by 2030, according to a survey conducted by Volvo Group in 2016. But while the demand is rapidly swelling, the number of people behind the wheel is rapidly declining. |
John Gilbert (actor) | John Gilbert |
Also, in the period immediately before, during, and after Commodore Perry's arrival, Aizu had a presence in security operations around Edo Bay. | Durante il periodo immediatamente precedente, durante, e successivo l'arrivo del Commodoro Perry, Aizu partecipò anche alle operazioni di sicurezza intorno alla baia di Edo. |
Zwick noted that The Siege's villains also include members of the U.S. government, and dismissed the criticism, saying: Anytime you talk about issues that touch on religion of any kind, you can anticipate this kind of reaction. | Zwick observou que vilões de The Siege também incluir membros do governo dos EUA, e rejeitou as críticas, dizendo: "Toda vez que você falar sobre questões que tocam em religião de qualquer tipo, você pode antecipar esse tipo de reação. |
"Bobcats acquire Stephen Jackson and Acie Law from Warriors". | Consultado el 11 de diciembre de 2008. «Bobcats acquire Stephen Jackson and Acie Law from Warriors». |
Vadodara Loco Shed-based WAP-4 electric locomotive from Surat to . From Ahmedabad Junction, train is hauled by a Vatva Loco Shed-based WDM-3A diesel locomotive to Hapa and vice versa. Rake sharing The train shares its rake with 12935/12936 Bandra Terminus–Surat Intercity Express and 22959/22960 Surat–Jamnagar Intercity Express. See also Hapa railway station Surat railway station Hapa–Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra Sarvodaya Express Hapa–Madgaon Superfast Express Hapa–Bilaspur Superfast Express Notes References External links STATUS & TRAIN NUMBER OF WR’S 26 | 552 km in 9h 45m. The 22962/Hapa–Surat Intercity Express has an average speed of 56 km/hr and covers 552 km in 9h 55m. Route and halts 22961/62 Surat–Hapa Intercity Express runs from Surat via , , , , to Hapa. The important halts of the train are: Coach composition The train has standard ICF rakes with a max speed of 110 kmph. The train consists of 21 coaches: 1 First Class (FC) 3 AC Chair Car (CC) 6 Second Sitting (2S) |
Wildlife photographer Andy Skillen spent two days tracking the bears at the Wapusk National Park, Manitoba, Canada .
He found a mother bear introducing two newborn cubs to the joys of playing in the snow .
The bears were emerging from hibernation and the mother was anxious to hunt - but it was not so easy with two cubs in tow . | These are the adorable images of a set of polar bear cubs seeing the world for the first time. Despite temperatures reaching -50C, the excitable cubs played in the snow - even during a blizzard - rolling around and climbing on top of their mother. Photographer Andy Skillen tracked down the family at Wapusk National Park in Manitoba, Canada, and followed the family for two days. Welcome to the world: A mother Polar bear introduces her two newborn cubs to the joys of playing in the snow . Tumble: It takes time to learn to keep your balance! Wildlife photographer Andy Skillen spent two days following the bears at Wapusk National Park in Manitoba, Canada . Drowsy: According to Mr Skillen, the polar bears had recently resurfaced after spending the winter in hibernation . The area is famous for its polar bear dens, and Mr Slkillen managed to capture a set of heart-warming scenes. In the region, most polar bears build their dens around November and come out of hibernation in February. The photographer said that most bears in the park, hungry after months of being in their dens, are anxious to get hunting seals before the spring thaw. Having excitable young bears in tow, though, makes things a little trickier. He said: 'It's a fascinating scene to watch unfold. 'Polar bears live in a world of extremes, and yet despite their fearsome reputation show a remarkably touching side. 'They are programmed to survive like no other animal on earth, and the sheer enormity of the tasks these mothers have to take on every couple of years is beyond belief. 'I have the utmost respect for all animals that can make a living in the Arctic, and bears top the lot.' Content: The family of bears was spotted in the Waspusk National Park in Manitoba, Canada . Bliss: The two young cubs, pictured, frolicked in the snow for several hours in temperatures of -50c . Love: The area is very famous for the number of polar bears who spend the winter hidden away in their dens . Protective: As soon as the young cubs take a few steps away their mother, she looks on intently . Cosy: The two young cubs use their mother as a form of protection from the worst of the elements . Safe: The cubs enjoyed their first taste of freedom but they never went too far from their protective mother . Hidden: The Polar Bear mother seemed completely oblivious to the presence of the wildlife photographer . |
A bathroom has a tub, rug, toilet and small counter in it. | A bathroom with a white ceramic sink and a red cabinet. |
altitude of . History The predecessors of Teplice nad Metují and villages in the municipality were castles Střmen and Skály, built for protection of a trade route in the 13th century, and small settlements around them. The first written mention of Teplice located below Střmen is from 1362. The Střmen castle was demolished in 1447. From 1614 to 1848, Teplice was divided into Horní Teplice and Dolní Teplice ("Lower" and "Upper" Teplice) and had different owners. During the German occupation (World War II), the occupiers operated the E431 forced labour subcamp of the Stalag VIII-B/344 prisoner-of-war camp in Dolní Teplice. Sights The Church of Saint Lawrence was built in | settlements around them. The first written mention of Teplice located below Střmen is from 1362. The Střmen castle was demolished in 1447. From 1614 to 1848, Teplice was divided into Horní Teplice and Dolní Teplice ("Lower" and "Upper" Teplice) and had different owners. During the German occupation (World War II), the occupiers operated the E431 forced labour subcamp of the Stalag VIII-B/344 prisoner-of-war camp in Dolní Teplice. Sights The Church of Saint Lawrence was built in Baroque style in 1724. The pilgrimage Church of Our Lady Help of Christians from 1754–1763 has a unique wooden hermitage. The Horní Castle was built in 1599 in the Renaissance style and today serves as the municifal office. The early Baroque Dolní Square |
The Case of the Whitechapel Vampire | Il vampiro di Whitechapel |
also the lead vocalist. He has recorded albums in collaboration with Celeste Mendoza, Tata Güines, Estrellas de Areito and rumba ensembles such as Rapsodia Rumbera and Team Cuba de la Rumba. | a Cuban singer. He specializes in both son cubano and rumba, having sung for La Monumental, Clave y Guaguancó and Conjunto Chappottín. He is also the founder and lead vocalist of Jóvenes Clásicos del Son, a traditional son septet founded in |
So we go and have a drink, and I speculate on what might have happened if he had landed the machine roughly and started those bombs off. | Så vi går hen og får en drink, og jeg spekulerer på hvad der kunne være sket, hvis man havde landet maskinen hårdt og fået disse bomber til at eksplodere. |
at a by-election on 2 March 1728. He was unseated on petition on 4 April 1728 for alleged malpractices by the returning officer, who was his father's nominee. Gumley was the brother-in-law of William Pulteney who caused a furore when the matter came before the house by pointing out indirectly that Gumley's opponent, John Hoste, was a relation of Robert Walpole. Gumley inherited his father's share | his cousin Martha Wittewrong, daughter of Sir John Wittewrong, 3rd Baronet, who had married Gumley's mother's sister. Gumley was returned as Member of Parliament for Bramber, where his father was steward of the court leet, at a by-election on 2 March 1728. He was unseated on petition on 4 April 1728 for alleged malpractices by the returning officer, who was his father's nominee. Gumley was the brother-in-law of William Pulteney who caused a furore when the matter came before the house by pointing out indirectly that Gumley's opponent, John Hoste, was a relation of Robert Walpole. Gumley inherited his father's share in the Vauxhall |
in southwest Alabama , more than one United States | Alabama, a community in southwest Alabama |
Massachusetts. The cemetery was established in 1799; it is located on Cemetery Road in a remote area of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Originally established by Truro's Methodists, the cemetery was located near a church which has not survived. The cemetery is surrounded by a fence made of granite posts connected by iron rails. Access to its interior is via a gravel roadway that roughly bisects the property from east to west; there is also a grassy path to a | second oldest cemetery in Truro, Massachusetts. The cemetery was established in 1799; it is located on Cemetery Road in a remote area of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Originally established by Truro's Methodists, the cemetery was located near a church which has not survived. The cemetery is surrounded by a fence made of granite posts connected by iron rails. Access to its interior is via a gravel roadway that roughly |
bucket, 17 slides, and water gadgets for kids. The water park, owned by Steve Rigby, was announced to be a $15 million development project. Notable events Temporary closure in August 2018 In August 2018, the park was forced to shut down temporarily due to reports of a child testing positive for cryptosporidium, a parasite than can cause diarrhea. The health department was notified and a state health agency began an investigation. A few days later, the park owner stated that the park was safe and free of waterborne disease. Route 96 Music Festival and Christmas Parade The park hosted the rock and country music festival in September 2019. It was the endpoint for the 62nd Annual Warner Robins Christmas Parade in December 2019. COVID-19 impact | health agency began an investigation. A few days later, the park owner stated that the park was safe and free of waterborne disease. Route 96 Music Festival and Christmas Parade The park hosted the rock and country music festival in September 2019. It was the endpoint for the 62nd Annual Warner Robins Christmas Parade in December 2019. COVID-19 impact in summer 2020 After postponing its 2020 summer season opening due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Rigby's Water World opened its summer season in June 2020. References Buildings and structures in Houston County, Georgia Tourist attractions in Houston |
Summer Olympics. In 1988, he lost in the quarterfinals of the men's lightweight division (– 60 kg) to Mongolia's eventual bronze medalist, Nergüin Enkhbat. References sports-reference 1965 births Living people Lightweight boxers Olympic | Enkhbat. References sports-reference 1965 births Living people Lightweight boxers Olympic boxers of Morocco Boxers at the 1988 Summer Olympics Boxers at |
do boxers like steroids? | no they can die from steroids. my friends boxer had steroids and it died |
Under the Iron Sea | 深海之音 |
There is no direct evidence when Samarkand was founded. | Không có bằng chứng trực tiếp khi Samarkand được thành lập. |
Travelling to remote locations in the Mexican jungle, he became interested in the Maya ruins which he encountered where he was working. | Viaggiando in luoghi remoti nella giungla messicana, si è interessato alle rovine Maya che ha incontrato dove stava lavorando. |
Interview (research) | ראיון עומק |
The issue is not that. | Não é esta a questão. |
Per Olaf Olsen | بير أولاف اولسن |
Styria in northern Slovenia. The seat of the municipality is the town of Podvelka. The Municipality of Podvelka–Ribnica was created in 1994, and it then split into the Municipality of Ribnica na Pohorju and the Municipality of Podvelka in 1998. Settlements In addition to the municipal seat of | municipality also includes the following settlements: Brezno Janževski Vrh Javnik Kozji Vrh Lehen na Pohorju Ožbalt Rdeči Breg Spodnja Kapla Vurmat Zgornja Kapla References External links Municipality of Podvelka on Geopedia Municipality |
He encounters the 26-year-old artist Kristjan on a cam-chat sex site, a confrontation that, according to the Saarbrücker Zeitung, "opens the door into the depths of his fantasies and fears." | Er trifft auf einer Cam-Chat-Sex-Seite den 26-jährigen Künstler Kristjan, eine Begegnung, die laut Saarbrücker Zeitung "die Tür zu einer Reise in die Tiefen der eigenen Phantasien und Ängste" öffnet." |
are rmds from inherited roth iras taxable? | The only difference is that required minimum distributions (RMDs) from an inherited Roth IRA will generally (but not always) be tax free, whereas distribution from an inherited traditional IRA will be subject to taxes. |
do you burn calories standing for 8 hours? | Standing Versus Sitting And they have some serious health benefits: standing for eight hours burns 1,280 calories for a 160-pound person, which is 320 more calories than sitting for the same amount of time. |
is mogra the same as jasmine? | Different names of Mogra: The scientific name of Mogra is Jasminum sambac; it belongs to family Oleaceae. Although native to India, it is commonly known as Arabian Jasmine. It is the double flowering types that are known as Motiya or Mogra in India. |
Many glaciers terminate at oceans or freshwater lakes which results naturally with the calving of large numbers of icebergs. | Muchos glaciares terminan en los océanos o lagos de agua dulce que resultan naturalmente with the calving of large numbers of icebergs. |
what happens to a leasehold property when you die? | That property is yours forever, well, until your death at least when it will pass to whomever will inherit your estate. With Leasehold property you are buying the land/property for a period of time, now that may be a very long period of time, up to 999 years for example. |
what are pips in currency trading? | A pip, short for point in percentage, represents a tiny measure of the change in a currency pair in the forex market. It can be measured in terms of the quote or in terms of the underlying currency. A pip is a standardized unit and is the smallest amount by which a currency quote can change. |
is the unit for energy? | Energy Units and Conversions. 1 Joule (J) is the MKS unit of energy, equal to the force of one Newton acting through one meter. 1 Watt is the power from a current of 1 Ampere flowing through 1 Volt. ... 1 kilowatt-hour is the energy of one kilowatt power flowing for one hour. |
what zone do almond trees grow in | Almond trees (Prunus dulcis) grow in zones 7 to 9, producing edible fruit and showy, fragrant blooms in hues of white and pink. To achieve the best fruit production, two or more almond trees are required. Almond trees reach heights of only 10 to 15 feet and grow well in compact gardens. |
All the Hits Tour (Elton John) | All the Hits Tour |
Films on January 1, 2003 as part of the 28th Metro Manila Film Festival. Plot Larry, a physics-professor from Manila, is secretly the superhero Lastikman. A human mutant who has the ability to stretch and to shapeshift his body fantastically to great lengths and into any form he desires. He received his superpowers as a teenager when a meteorite crashed into a rubber-tree right over him. Years later he is a famous and popular superhero adored by the citizens of Manila and especially by his student Jepoy, whom he saves regularly from bullies. When the violent bully Ryan is banned from the University after another attack, he is enraged so hard that he uses Jepoy's worship for Lastikman and lures him into a trap. Dressed up as Lastikman, he and his friends beat Jepoy almost dead. The hardly injured Jepoy feels betrayed and turns insane. While the police believes Lastikman really beat up an innocent citizen and the media turns against him, Jepoy locks himself in his home-lab and uses some high-tech gadgets to turn into the supervillain Stryker. Jepoy, now Stryker, attacks the bully gang and tries to kill them. Lastikman interferes but in the chaos Jepoy's friend Donna is killed. Stryker blames Lastikman and the arriving police tries to arrest him. Lastikman is able to escape with his shapeshifting power and decides to stop his superhero-activities forever. Stryker, still furious with Lastikman, runs havoc in Manila, blowing up buildings and bridges to lure him out. The media apologize to Lastikman | 2003 Filipino superhero film based on the comic book character Lastikman, written and directed by Tony Y. Reyes. It stars Vic Sotto, Donita Rose, Michael V., Jeffrey Quizon, Michelle Bayle, Anne Curtis, Oyo Boy Sotto, Ryan Eigenmann, Pocholo Montes, Elizabeth Oropesa, Lito Legaspi, Evangeline Pascual, and Joonee Gamboa. Produced by Sotto's M-ZET TV Production, Lastikman is the second film adaptation of the character, nearly 38 years from when the first adaptation, Lastik Man, was released in 1965. The film's special effects were by Tony Gapo Marbella, credited under "Special Effectsman", while its post-production was handled by RoadRunner Network. The film was released through OctoArts Films on January 1, 2003 as part of the 28th Metro Manila Film Festival. Plot Larry, a physics-professor from Manila, is secretly the superhero Lastikman. A human mutant who has the ability to stretch and to shapeshift his body fantastically to great lengths and into any form he desires. He received his superpowers as a teenager when a meteorite crashed into a rubber-tree right over him. Years later he is a famous and popular superhero adored by the citizens of Manila and especially by his student Jepoy, whom he saves regularly from bullies. When the violent bully Ryan is banned from the University after another attack, he is enraged so hard that he uses Jepoy's worship for Lastikman and lures him into a trap. Dressed up as Lastikman, he and his friends beat Jepoy almost dead. The hardly injured Jepoy feels betrayed and turns insane. While the police believes Lastikman really beat up an innocent citizen and the media turns against him, |
Cheat on Scary Maze | Always like getting attention by a high-pitched scream but you know about the only maze game that is talking about called the "Scary Maze" game is a screamer but there is a cheat in the game. |
Williams held it to be a separate species by means of the appearance of the male genitalia and later by DNA analysis. Appearance Bombus mongolensis is a larger, long-haired bumblebee with dense pale yellow-white hair with black stripes between the wing bases. The males can sometimes have pieces of yellow hair mixed in with the black stripes. On | analysis. Appearance Bombus mongolensis is a larger, long-haired bumblebee with dense pale yellow-white hair with black stripes between the wing bases. The males can sometimes have pieces of yellow hair mixed in with the black stripes. On females the bright coat can reach the top of the legs, but the |
how do you connect airpods to iphone 11? | Open the charging case lid and hold the pairing button on the back of your second set of AirPods until the inside light flashes white. Bring it close to the iPhone for pairing. Tap the pop-up menu confirming you want to pair the AirPods to your iPhone. Start playing music. |
Why you get those multi colored dots in your vision when you're in a pitch black or dark room | This phenomenon is known as [Phosphene](_URL_0_) . You're eyes don't necessarily need light entering them in order to be stimulated. The thalamus (the part of the brain responsible for relaying sensory signals), your visual cortex, and your retina are in an “always on” state. The neurons in these visual systems are continuously relaying signals and information. This continuous activity is sometimes referred to as background activity. It’s this background activity that is responsible for your trippy visuals and interesting patterns in the absence of light. |
In exchange, Adila promises to lead them to the first object of Ethic’s quest, an artifact called the Node of Power. | بالمقابل، وعدتهما أديلا أن تقودهما للغرض الأول من سعي إيثيك، وهي لوحة فنية تدعى عقدة القوة. |
So is it true? | Este oare adevărat? |
Im French tarot (3-5 players), the bouts have a significance far above their nominal value. | Im Französischen Tarock (3–5 Spieler) haben die „Spitzen“ eine weit über ihren nominalen Wert hinausgehende Bedeutung. |
She claimed Gorton supported "19th century solutions to 21st century problems." | Ela alegou que Gorton suportava "soluções do século 19 para problemas do século 21". |
Mount Merrion House itself was sold to the Catholic church in 1936. | Замок Маунт Мерріон Хаус був проданий у католицькій церкві в 1935 році. |
Sportfreunde Siegen had been relegated from the Regionalliga West. Top goalscorers The top goal scorers for the season: Promotion play-off The runners-up of the two divisions of the Westfalenliga competed for one more spot in the Oberliga. |} References External links Oberliga Westfalen on Fupa.net | of the league at tier five (V) of the German football league system and the 34th season overall since establishment of the league in 1978. The league went defunct from 2008 to 2012, when it was re-established. The season began on 14 August 2015 and finished |
Total assness. | Cuánta idiotez. |
This behavior had been noticed by Wright and Borthwick, who issued an ad in a local paper for a replacement cook. | Este comportamiento fue observado por Wright y Borthwick, quienes publicaron un anuncio en un periódico local para un cocinero de reemplazo. |
If unset, the interruption may be all day. | Если это невозможно, прерывание может быть в любое время суток. |
Kenny De Ketele | کنی د کتله |
He strove to write his own fiction and sold his first story to Gernsback at age 20: "The Metal Man" was published in the December 1928 issue of Amazing. | S-a străduit să scrie și a vândut prima povestire către Gernsback pe când avea 20 de ani: "The Metal Man" a apărut în numărul din decembrie 1928 din Amazing. |
I don't think Tom did anything wrong. | Tom'un yanlış bir şey yaptığını sanmıyorum. |
Question about Ortho Tri Lo!!? | I'm sorry but I can't make heads or tails out of your post. It is not clear and very confusing. Since I can't help, due to the lack of clarity, please call your doctor tomorrow and talk to him/her. |
Minecraft and Lego were also used to create little items like fruits and chairs in the video. | También utilizó Minecraft y LEGO para crear pequeños objetos como frutas y sillas en el vídeo. |
of Gold; but it is more than doubtful whether he went there, seeing that on 29 June, just after the interview, he and Lord Berners waited on three French gentlemen and conducted them to see the princess at Richmond, though their arrival the day before was only notified a few hours in advance by letters from Wolsey, who was still at Guisnes. In 1523 he took an active part in the war against Scotland, making various raids on the borders with a retinue of 1,750 men. In the same year he obtained a principal share in the wardship of the son and heir of Lord Monteagle, which led to many complaints from one of the executors named Richard Bank. On 12 February 1525 he was again appointed to conduct a privy search at Stepney. The annual revenue of his lands in various counties is given in a contemporary document as £1,834 4s., and he was taxed for the first and second payment of the subsidy at no less than £1,050. Wolsey’s downfall In 1529 Darcy prepared the way for his old comrade Wolsey's fall by drawing up a long paper of accusations against him, in which he professed that his motive was "only for to discharge my oath and most bounden duty to God and the king, and of no malice". In the same year he was one of the many witnesses examined on the king's behalf as to the circumstances of Prince Arthur's marriage with Catherine of Aragon, though he had limited evidence to give upon the subject, having been at that time in the king's service in the north of England. He was one of the peers who signed the articles prepared against Wolsey in parliament on 1 December, partly founded on the charges drawn up by himself five months before; and in the following year he signed the memorial of the lords spiritual and temporal of England to Pope Clement VII, warning him of the danger of not gratifying the desire of Henry VIII in the matter of the divorce. Opposition to the king It was not long, however, before Darcy became a rather marked opponent of the court in reference to this very subject. In the parliament which met in January 1532 the Duke of Norfolk made a speech, declaring how ill-treated the king had been by the pope not remitting the cause to be tried in England, adding that it was maintained by some that matrimonial causes were a matter of temporal jurisdiction, of which the king was the head and not the pope, and finally asking whether they would not employ their persons and goods in defence of the royal prerogative against interference from abroad. To this appeal Darcy was the first to reply. He said his person and goods were at the king's disposal, but as to matrimonial causes he had always understood that they were spiritual and belonged to ecclesiastical jurisdiction; and if the question presented any difficulties it was for the king's council first to say what should be done without involving others in their responsibility. After this it is not surprising to learn that among other peers who were treated in a similar manner he was informed that his presence in the January session of 1534 would be dispensed with, although he had received a regular summons to attend. Among matters of minor interest about this period we find him reminding Bishop Tunstall after his promotion to Durham of a promise of the offices of steward and sheriff of his bishopric. A long-standing dispute with his neighbours at Rothwell in Yorkshire comes to light in a commission obtained in April 1533 to examine certain of the inhabitants who had threatened, in defiance of a decree of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, to pull down the gates and hedges of Rothwell park. In July 1534 he was one of the jury of peers who acquitted Lord Dacre, an act which did little to make him more acceptable to the court. Thomas Cromwell, however, appears to have been his friend (although at the end of his life Darcy showed his deep hatred of and contempt for Cromwell) and obtained for his second son, Sir Arthur Darcy, the office of captain or governor of Jersey in September following, for whose appointment he wrote Cromwell a letter of thanks from Mortlake, regretting that he was unable to visit him personally, owing to his "fulsum diseassis." It appears that he was suffering from a rupture. He at the same time sent Sir Arthur with messages both to Cromwell and to the Duke of Norfolk, among other things complaining that he had not been allowed to go home into Yorkshire since the parliament began. And this must mean since November 1529 when the still existing parliament began, not since the beginning of a session, for it was then vacation time. A significant part of the instructions to Sir Arthur as regards the Duke of Norfolk was to deliver a letter to him "for no goodness in him but to stop his evil tongue." Rebel In the same month in which his son was appointed captain of Jersey, Darcy began to hold secret communications with Eustace Chapuys, the imperial ambassador, along with Lord Hussey, whom he called his brother, to invite the emperor to invade England and put an end to what he described as a tyranny in matters secular and religious, which the nation endured only because there was no deliverer. His earnest application for leave to go home was with a view to aid the invaders when this scheme should be set on foot, and he actually succeeded in obtaining a licence to absent himself from future feasts of St. George on account of his age and debility. On the same day (28 October) he also obtained a licence of absence from future meetings of parliament and exemption from serving on any commission; but the latter did not pass the great seal till 12 February following. For these important privileges he writes to thank Cromwell on 13 November, dating his letter from Templehurst, where, however, he could hardly have been at that time, as Chapuys expressly says on 1 January 1535 that he had not yet been allowed to retire to his own country. The hope of soon going home to Templehurst seems to have influenced his pen to write as if he were actually there when he really was in or about London. The fact is that, although these exemptions were conceded to him on the ground of age and infirmity, permission to go back to his home in Yorkshire was still persistently withheld. The court apparently suspected that his presence in the north would do them little good, and he remained not only till the beginning of 1535, but through most part of the year, if not the whole of it. He kept up secret communications with Chapuys at intervals in January, March, May, and July, hoping now and again that matters were ripe for a great revolt, and sending the ambassador symbolic presents when he dared not express his meaning otherwise. In the beginning of May he was hopeful at last of being allowed to go home immediately. But in the middle of the month, this hope having apparently disappeared, he was thinking how to escape abroad and endeavour to impress upon the emperor in a personal interview the urgent necessity of sending an expedition against England to redeem the country from what he described as the heresy, oppression, and robbery to which it was constantly subjected. How long he was detained in London we do not know, but it was certainly till after July. He appears to have been at Templehurst in April 1536; but there is a blank in our information as to the whole preceding interval. His presence not being required in the parliamentary session of February 1536, he escaped the pressure which was doubtless brought to bear upon others to vote for the dissolution of the smaller monasteries, a measure which was very unpopular in the north of England, whatever it might be elsewhere. This, indeed, was one of the chief causes of that great rebellion which, beginning in Lincolnshire in October following, soon spread to Yorkshire, and was called the Pilgrimage of Grace. Almost the only place which seemed for a time to hold out against the insurgents was Pontefract Castle, of which Darcy held the command. Thither fled Archbishop Lee of York, who put himself under Darcy's protection with some of the neighbouring gentry. But Darcy, pretending that his provisions had run short, yielded up the castle to the rebels, who compelled him and the archbishop to be sworn to the common cause. The compulsion, however, was more ostensible than real. Darcy, the archbishop, and nearly all the gentry really sympathised with the insurgents, and it was in vain that Darcy afterwards pleaded that he was doing his utmost for the king by endeavouring to guide aright a power that he could not resist. He stood by Robert Aske, the leader of the commons, when Lancaster Herald knelt before him, and he negotiated in their favour with the Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk when they were sent down to suppress the rising. His position as a friend and leader of the insurgents was recognised by the king himself, who instructed Norfolk and Fitzwilliam to treat with him as such, and authorised them to give him and the others a safe-conduct if necessary, to come to his presence, or else to offer them a free pardon on their submission. Norfolk, presumably at the King's desire, wrote to Darcy suggesting that he could redeem himself by breaking his word to Aske and arresting him. Darcy, who prided himself on being true to his sworn word, replied indignantly: "Alas my good lord that ever you a man of so much honour and great experience should advise or choose me to ....betray or disserve any living man." Both he and Aske wrote to the king to set their conduct in a more favourable light. A meeting with some of the king's council was arranged at Doncaster, and the king sent a pardon even to the chief offenders. But on 6 January following (1537) Henry sent him an imperative summons to come up to London in reply to which he wrote from Templehurst on the 14th, stating that he had 'never fainted nor feigned' in the service of the king and his father within the realm or abroad for about fifty years; but since the meeting at Doncaster he had been confined to his chamber with two diseases, rupture and flux, as several of the council who saw him at Doncaster and the king's own physicians could bear witness. The country was at that moment in a very dangerous state, a new rebellion having been just begun by Sir Francis Bigod, which Aske and Darcy did their best to stay. Their services were so real that the king pardoned both of them, and encouraged Darcy to victual Pontefract, that his two sons, Sir George and Sir Arthur, might keep it in case of a new rising. Darcy was further assured, by letters addressed to the Earl of Shrewsbury, that if he would do his duty thenceforward it would be as | a treaty of peace, which they accordingly did at Glasgow on 10 December. Shortly before this, in 1499/1500, he was appointed by the crown as constable and steward of Sheriff Hutton; and afterwards, on 12 July 1503, as receiver-general of the lordships, castles, and manors of Sheriff Hutton, Middleham, and Richmond in Yorkshire. On 8 June 1505 we first find him named Lord Darcy in a patent by which he was made steward of the lands of Raby and other possessions of the young Earl of Westmorland, then a minor. These offices, together with his new peerage, must have given him an influence in the north of England second only to that of the Earl of Northumberland, when on 1 September 1505 he was appointed warden of the east marches, a higher office in dignity than he had yet held, though he had discharged its duties before as deputy to another. In 1508 he was one of fifteen lords bound by the treaty for the marriage of the king's daughter Mary with Charles of Castile (afterwards the Emperor Charles V) that that marriage should be completed when the bride came to marriageable age. He was also one of the witnesses of the celebration of the match by proxy at Richmond on 17 December following. Just after the accession of Henry VIII in the following spring he was made a knight of the Garter. He was installed on 21 May. Some changes were then made in his appointments and he gave up the constableship and stewardship of Sheriff Hutton, which were given to Sir Richard Cholmeley in his place. But most of the others were renewed, especially his commission as warden of the east marches and captain of Berwick. For these and a number of other offices new patents were granted to him on 18 June 1509, on which day he was also appointed warden, chief justice, and Justice in Eyre of forests beyond Trent. He was also named to the king's council, and when in London he took part in its deliberations, and signed warrants as a privy councillor. His name stood first in the commission of array for Northumberland; and when the bridge at Newcastle upon Tyne had to be repaired it was to be done under the supervision of Darcy and the prior of Durham. On 17 October 1509, Darcy was summoned to parliament and was created Baron Darcy de Darcy. The same year he also was invested as Knight of the Order of the Garter (KG). Foreign expeditions In 1511 Darcy was sent to Spain at his own request to aid Ferdinand in his war against the Moors, the Spanish king having solicited the aid of fifteen hundred English archers. On 8 March, or rather apparently on the 28th, he received his commission from Henry VIII to serve as Ferdinand's admiral, and on the 29th Lord Willoughby de Broke and others were commissioned to muster men for him. The expedition sailed from Plymouth in May and arrived at Cadiz on 1 June. But no sooner had the troops landed than misunderstandings arose between them and the natives, and Ferdinand politely intimated that their services would not be required, as he had made a truce with the Moors in expectation of a war with France. Darcy, much disgusted, re-embarked on 17 June and returned home. On 3 August he had only reached Cape St. Vincent, where he was obliged to give out of his own money £20 to each of his captains for the victualling of his men; but apparently this was repaid a year after his return home by the Spanish ambassador, who in a letter of Wolsey's dated 30 September is said to have 'dealt liberally with Lord Darcy in the matter of his soldiers'. Soon after his return, on 20 October 1511, he was appointed warden both of the east and middle marches against Scotland, which office, however, he resigned in or before December, when Lord Dacre was appointed warden in his place. In 1512 and 1513 he wrote to the king and Wolsey important information of what was happening in Scotland and upon the borders. In the summer of 1513 he accompanied the king in the invasion of France, and was at the siege of Thérouanne. In January following he writes from his own house at Templehurst an interesting letter to Wolsey, in which he speaks of having recovered from recent sickness, says that his expeditions to Spain and France had cost him £4,000 in three years and a half, but declares his willingness to serve the king beyond sea in the following summer. He reminds Wolsey (whose growing influence at this time was marked by everyone) how they had been bedfellows at court and had freely spoken to each other about their own private affairs, and how Wolsey when abroad with the king in the preceding year regretted that Darcy had not been appointed marshal of the army at the beginning of the campaign. Further public service In 1514/5 his son and heir apparent, Sir George Darcy, was included with him in some of the appointments he then held. In 1515 he gave up the captaincy of Berwick, and was succeeded by Sir Anthony Ughtred. He appears to have attended parliament in that year, and to have been present in London at the reception of Wolsey's cardinal's hat in November. In May 1516 he witnessed a decree in the Star Chamber. A year later he received Henry VIII's sister Margaret, the widow of James IV, at her entry into Yorkshire on her return to Scotland. In July 1518 he was one of those who met Cardinal Campeggio on his first mission to England, two miles out of London. A year later, a privy search having been ordered to be made throughout London and the neighbourhood for suspicious characters, Darcy and Sir John Nevill were appointed to conduct it in Stepney and the eastern suburbs. In 1519 he attended the feast of St. George on 28 and 29 May. In March 1520 he resigned his offices in Sheriff Hutton to his friend, Sir Robert Constable, whom he familiarly called his brother, in whose favour a new patent was granted by the king. His name occurs shortly afterwards in various lists of persons to accompany the king to the Field of the Cloth of Gold; but it is more than doubtful whether he went there, seeing that on 29 June, just after the interview, he and Lord Berners waited on three French gentlemen and conducted them to see the princess at Richmond, though their arrival the day before was only notified a few hours in advance by letters from Wolsey, who was still at Guisnes. In 1523 he took an active part in the war against Scotland, making various raids on the borders with a retinue of 1,750 men. In the same year he obtained a principal share in the wardship of the son and heir of Lord Monteagle, which led to many complaints from one of the executors named Richard Bank. On 12 February 1525 he was again appointed to conduct a privy search at Stepney. The annual revenue of his lands in various counties is given in a contemporary document as £1,834 4s., and he was taxed for the first and second payment of the subsidy at no less than £1,050. Wolsey’s downfall In 1529 Darcy prepared the way for his old comrade Wolsey's fall by drawing up a long paper of accusations against him, in which he professed that his motive was "only for to discharge my oath and most bounden duty to God and the king, and of no malice". In the same year he was one of the many witnesses examined on the king's behalf as to the circumstances of Prince Arthur's marriage with Catherine of Aragon, though he had limited evidence to give upon the subject, having been at that time in the king's service in the north of England. He was one of the peers who signed the articles prepared against Wolsey in parliament on 1 December, partly founded on the charges drawn up by himself five months before; and in the following year he signed the memorial of the lords spiritual and temporal of England to Pope Clement VII, warning him of the danger of not gratifying the desire of Henry VIII in the matter of the divorce. Opposition to the king It was not long, however, before Darcy became a rather marked opponent of the court in reference to this very subject. In the parliament which met in January 1532 the Duke of Norfolk made a speech, declaring how ill-treated the king had been by the pope not remitting the cause to be tried in England, adding that it was maintained by some that matrimonial causes were a matter of temporal jurisdiction, of which the king was the head and not the pope, and finally asking whether they would not employ their persons and goods in defence of the royal prerogative against interference from abroad. To this appeal Darcy was the first to reply. He said his person and goods were at the king's disposal, but as to matrimonial causes he had always understood that they were spiritual and belonged to ecclesiastical jurisdiction; and if the question presented any difficulties it was for the king's council first to say what should be done without involving others in their responsibility. After this it is not surprising to learn that among other peers who were treated in a similar manner he was informed that his presence in the January session of 1534 would be dispensed with, although he had received a regular summons to attend. Among matters of minor interest about this period we find him reminding Bishop Tunstall after his promotion to Durham of a promise of the offices of steward and sheriff of his bishopric. A long-standing dispute with his neighbours at Rothwell in Yorkshire comes to light in a commission obtained in April 1533 to examine certain of the inhabitants who had threatened, in defiance of a decree of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, to pull down the gates and hedges of Rothwell park. In July 1534 he was one of the jury of peers who acquitted Lord Dacre, an act which did little to make him more acceptable to the court. Thomas Cromwell, however, appears to have been his friend (although at the end of his life Darcy showed his deep hatred of and contempt for Cromwell) and obtained for his second son, Sir Arthur Darcy, the office of captain or governor of Jersey in September following, for whose appointment he wrote Cromwell a letter of thanks from Mortlake, regretting that he was unable to visit him personally, owing to his "fulsum diseassis." It appears that he was suffering from a rupture. He at the same time sent Sir Arthur with messages both to Cromwell and to the Duke of Norfolk, among other things complaining that he had not been allowed to go home into Yorkshire since the parliament began. And this must mean since November 1529 when the still existing parliament began, not since the beginning of a session, for it was then vacation time. A significant part of the instructions to Sir Arthur as regards the Duke of Norfolk was to |
Wadeema al Sherawi ate her faeces after being starved and locked in toilet .
Father and his mistress attacked her with electric wires, bars and cigarettes .
Pair also tortured her sister, 7, who survived, but suffered horrific injuries .
Father Hamad Saoud al Sherawi, 29, sentenced to death by firing squad . | A father who killed his eight-year-old . daughter after mercilessly torturing her with stun guns and hot irons . has been sentenced to death in Dubai, it emerged today. Wadeema al Sherawi had been deprived of food and locked up as punishment for being 'naughty' on the night she died. In desperation, she ate her own faeces . before vomiting and later dying. Her body was found in the desert, but was so badly decomposed, forensic experts could not tell how she had died. Her father Hamad Saoud al Sherawi, . 29, and his mistress Al Anood al Ameri, 27, were found guilty of . torturing and imprisoning Wadeema and her seven-year-old sister Mira, . who escaped death but suffered severe burns and injuries. Horrific abuse: Wadeema al Sherawi and her sister Mira were tortured with hot irons and stun guns by their brutal father. Wadeema was forced to eat her own faeces after being locked in a toilet on the night she died . Following a seven-month trial, the Dubai Court of First Instance sentenced to Al Sherawi to death by firing squad and Al Ameri to life imprisonment, it was reported by Gulf News. The court heard the Emirati couple . beat the girls with electrical wires and metal bars, poured boiling . water on them and burned them with hot irons and cigarettes. Wadeema and Mira, who was left with a permanent disability, were often left unfed and sometimes ate their own faeces. Police corporal Mubarak Ahmed Taleb, . 34, told the trial that the studio apartment where the couple lived with . the two girls was filthy and 'not fit for humans to live in'. He told the court it reeked of stale . urine: 'It smelled really bad and was dirty. There was only one bed and . the furniture was turned upside down. The girls' clothes stank and there . was mess everywhere. 'The fridge was full of food which was out of date. No one could live in it.' Close to death: Mira survived the repeated attacks, but suffered horrific injuries as a result of the torture . Recovering: Mira plays with some toys in hospital. A forensics expert told the trial she was lucky to survive . He said when his investigation team . searched the flat, they found two irons with brown marks on them and . said: 'They had used them to burn the girls.' He added they found some of the implements of torture, including metal bars, sticks and stun guns. During the trial, Al Ameri clutched the couple's sleeping newborn baby to her chest as they heard the case against them. The pair were arrested after the girls' uncle visited the flat in International City, Dubai, and was told by Mira of the abuse. He initially blamed both of them for . Wadeema's death but later changed his story, saying Al Sherawi was 'a . great father who loved his children'. Emirati police officer Essam Obaid told the trial: 'When I questioned Al Ameri, she . claimed she saw Wadeema vomiting heavily and was very sick that evening . so she called Hamad and asked him to come to the flat. Justice: The girls' father, Hamad Saoud al Sherawi, has been sentenced to death, while his mistress Al Anood al Ameri, has been jailed for life over the abuse at their home in International City, Dubai . 'They left her until 5am in the . toilet and when they went to check on her, she was dead. She vomited . because she ate her own excrement. 'Al Ameri admitted heating the irons . and torturing the girls. She said Wadeema was tortured because she did . not listen and was disobedient.' Al Sherawi said he did not mean to kill his daughter, but didn't deny beating or torturing them whenever they turned disobedient. Al Ameri . initially pleaded not guilty, but later told the court that she claimed . full responsibility for the crime and deserved the death penalty. She claimed Al Sherawi wasn't involved. The girls' natural mother Salma Obaid . had to give them up in November 2011 after losing custody and had not . seen them for six months when Wadeema died. She married Al Sherawi in 2002 and . divorced him in 2006. She previously told the court she tried to . convince him to let her see the girls but was forbidden contact with . them. A forensics expert said Mira had been lucky not to die from her injuries. Al Sherawi, who was 15 days to . appeal, will be put to death when the capital punishment becomes . irrevocable and is endorsed by the ruler. The girl's death has since inspired new child-protection legislation, known as Wadeema's law. |
by Gobinda Chandra Khatik Road and Topsia Road (south); on the south by Guriapara Road, Topsia Road (south), Tiljola Road and Gorachand Road; and on the west by Topsia Road (south), Tiljola Road and Dr. Sundari Mohan Avenue. The ward is served by Beniapukur and Topsia police stations of Kolkata Police. Karaya Women police station, has jurisdiction over all police districts under the jurisdiction of the South-east division, i.e. Topsia, Beniapukur, Ballygunge, Gariahat, Lake, Karaya, Rabindra Sarobar and Tiljala. Demographics As per the 2011 Census of India, Ward No. 59, Kolkata Municipal Corporation, had a total population of 70,261, of which 36,341 (52%) were males and 33,920 (48%) were females. Population below 6 years was 6,660. The total number of literates in Ward No. 59 was 51,132 (80.39% of the population over 6 years). Kolkata is the second most literate district in West Bengal. The literacy rate | 1847, and 4 of the 7 board members were elected by the rate payers. In 1852 the board was replaced by a new one and in 1863 a new body was formed. As per old records, in 1872 there were 25 wards in Kolkata (spellings as in use at that time) – 1. Shyampukur, 2. Kumartuli, 3. Bartala, 4. Sukea Street, 5. Jorabagan, 6. Jorasanko, 7. Barabazar, 8. Kolutola, 9. Muchipara, 10. Boubazar, 11. Padmapukur, 12. Waterloo Street, 13. Fenwick Bazar, 14. Taltala, 15. Kalinga, 16. Park Street, 17. Victoria Terrace, 18. Hastings, 19. Entali, 20. Beniapukur, 21. Baliganj-Tollyganj, 22. Bhabanipur, 23. Alipur, 24.Ekbalpur and 25. Watganj. A new municipal corporation was created in 1876, wherein 48 commissioners were elected and 24 were appointed by the government. With the implementation of the Municipal Consolidation Act of 1888 the area under the jurisdiction of the municipal corporation was enlarged. Certain areas were already there but more parts of them were added (current spellings) - Entally, Manicktala, Beliaghata, Ultadanga, Chitpur, Cossipore, Beniapukur, Ballygunge, Watganj and Ekbalpur, and Garden Reach and Tollygunj. The Calcutta Municipal Act of 1923 brought about important changes. It liberalised the constitution along democratic lines. The state government superseded the Corporation in 1948 |
It was in turn translated into Latin, along with Ibn Rushd (Averroes)'s commentary on it, by Michael Scot in the early 13th century. | Foi á súa vez traducido ao Latín, xunto con comentarios de Ibn Rushd (Averroes) sobre el, por Michael Scot a inicios do século XIII. |
courage politically to decolonize more rapidly. Forty-six percent of the FIDES grants, particularly in the first four-year plan, were used to build roads, ports and airports. These were indispensable to open up the countries, but could have been achieved at less cost." Paul Nugent states that "the consensus among historians is that FIDES amounted to much more than an ideological figleaf. It did channel substantial resources into the African colonies - initially (as in the | the first four-year plan, were used to build roads, ports and airports. These were indispensable to open up the countries, but could have been achieved at less cost." Paul Nugent states that "the consensus among historians is that FIDES amounted to much more than an ideological figleaf. It did channel substantial resources into the African colonies - initially (as in the British case) into infrastructural development, but later also into industrial enterprises and agricultural projects." |
What are the two most widespread varieties of wines in Switzerland? | The most popular alcoholic drink in Switzerland is wine. Switzerland is notable for the variety of grapes grown because of the large variations in terroirs, with their specific mixes of soil, air, altitude and light. Swiss wine is produced mainly in Valais, Vaud (Lavaux), Geneva and Ticino, with a small majority of white wines. Vineyards have been cultivated in Switzerland since the Roman era, even though certain traces can be found of a more ancient origin. The most widespread varieties are the Chasselas (called Fendant in Valais) and Pinot noir. The Merlot is the main variety produced in Ticino. |
As with most marketing tactics, product placement leads to explicit as well as implicit advertising effects. | Wie die meisten Marketing-Maßnahmen führt Produktplatzierung zu expliziten und impliziten Werbewirkungseffekten. |
United Arab Emirates men's national under-18 ice hockey team | منتخب الإمارات العربية المتحدة تحت 18 سنة لهوكي الجليد للرجال |
There he learned the rules of music composition from Henri Dutilleux. | Allí aprendió las reglas de la composición musical de Henri Dutilleux. |
Farewell to France, (1826, engraved); Jacques and the Wounded Stag (1830); Escape of Mary Queen of Scots from Loch Leven Castle, (1837, painted for Lord Egremont) and Lady Jane Grey summoned to Execution (1844). His Catching the Expression, shown in 1824, depicted, according to one review, Leahy and Edwin Landseer together in a studio. Following the death of the Royal Academician William Owen in 1825, Leahy completed many of his unfinished portraits. Despite his move to England, Leahy continued to exhibit in Dublin occasionally until 1846, sometimes showing works that had been seen in London some years earlier. When his Mary Queen of Scots' Farewell to France was shown in 1842 it was purchased by the Royal Irish Art Union. During a visit to Cork in 1846, Leahy painted a portrait of Father Mathew, the "Apostle of Temperance", in connection with a commission from Dwarkanath Tagore. It is now in the National Portrait Gallery, London. | one of himself, to the exhibition in Hawkins Street and was awarded a premium by the Irish Institute. He exhibited three works in 1817, and shortly afterwards moved to London, where he established himself as a portrait and subject painter. He first showed at the Royal Academy in London in 1820, making his debut with a portrait of Mrs. Yates in the role of Meg Merrilies. He became a frequent exhibitor of portraits and historical subjects, both at the Academy and at the British Institution. Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex and the Marquess of Bristol sat to him, as did various prominent Irishmen including the Earl of Rosse, Richard Lalor Sheil MP, Sir Matthew Tierney M.D. and William Cuming, president of the Royal Hibernian Academy, whose portrait Leahy later presented to the R.H.A. . His subject pictures included The Battle of the Nile and The Battle of Trafalgar (1825); Mary Stuart's Farewell to France, (1826, engraved); Jacques and the Wounded Stag (1830); Escape of Mary Queen of Scots from Loch Leven Castle, (1837, painted for Lord Egremont) and Lady Jane Grey summoned to Execution (1844). His Catching the |
the captured vessel. As Hannah approached the mistico cast off the tow and altered course towards Hannah. Foote, realizing that the mistico was larger than Hannah, attempted to escape, but the mistico soon overtook her and opened fire. Foote realized that the only hope was to carry the mistico by boarding. He ran Hannah alongside the mistico. However, a large number of Spaniards leapt aboard Hannah. Some ten or so minutes of hand-to-hand combat ensued before Foote decided to strike. He | a convoy through the Straits of Gibraltar. Hannahs crew consisted of 27 men from Queen and . They were off Cabrita point when Foote sighted a Spanish mistico towing an English merchantman that she had captured. Foote sailed towards the two, intending to attempt to recover the captured vessel. As Hannah approached the mistico cast off the tow and altered course towards Hannah. Foote, realizing that the mistico was larger than Hannah, attempted to escape, but the mistico soon overtook her and opened fire. Foote realized that the only hope was to carry the mistico by boarding. He ran Hannah alongside the mistico. However, a large number of Spaniards leapt aboard Hannah. Some ten or so minutes of hand-to-hand combat ensued before Foote decided to strike. He stated that |
By 9 October 2011, in only eighteen days, the state of Veracruz reported 100 killings. | К 9 октября 2011 года власти объявили о 100 убийствах в штате Веракрус всего за 18 дней. |
At the Workers Olympiads only the red flag was used, rather than national flags. | Στις Εργατικές Ολυμπιάδες χρησιμοποιούνταν μόνο κόκκινες σημαίες αντί για τις εθνικές σημαίες των αθλητών. |
can you change social security payment date? | In some circumstance, if you are still receiving SSDI benefits on the third of the month, you can change your payment date. However, you cannot choose any day of the month you want for your new payment date. Your birth date will determine what day your benefits will arrive, based on the same list above. |
Mark Wahlberg petitioned Massachusetts for pardon of his brutal assaults of two men .
Jeff Yang: There's a double standard when we judge crimes committed by whites and blacks .
In the cases of Eric Garner or Michael Brown, we ask accountability from the victims .
Yang: With Wahlberg, he hasn't even show true remorse for the repulsive actions of his youth . | (CNN) -- Trayvon Martin. Michael Brown. Eric Garner. The list of names of black men killed by white men who have subsequently gone unpunished -- and in the case of Brown and Garner, untried -- continues to grow. In each of these cases, an ugly theme has been raised in defense of the perpetrators: The victims should have known better. Why did Garner resist arrest? Why was Martin wearing a hoodie? Why did Brown not meekly get out of the street when ordered to by a police officer? The reasoning goes that their deaths were triggered by their deeds; they need to be held posthumously accountable for their conduct. When it comes to the actions of their white killers, however, the accountability hawks fall suddenly silent. In their eyes, accountability is apparently only for the dark-skinned (for being "uppity" or vulgar), the poor (for failing to bootstrap themselves into success), the recently immigrated (for failing to "mainstream" into American society) -- and, as we've also seen, for women for failing to avoid sexual predators and LGBTs for being too blatant about their sexuality. A flagrant new example of this "accountability for thee, but not for me" sensibility emerged last week, when New England Cable News reported that actor Mark Wahlberg -- one of Hollywood's most bankable leading men, who scored a staggering $16 million paycheck for his turn as a heroic father and inventor in the most recent "Transformers" movie -- has petitioned Massachusetts for pardon of his brutal assaults on a pair of Vietnamese men, Tranh Lam and Hoa Trinh, while a teenager in Dorchester, Massachusetts. The attacks were peppered with racial slurs; he called Lam a "Vietnam f*cking sh*t" before smashing him in the head with a large club and knocking him unconscious, and he punched Trinh so hard that he left him blinded in one eye. He repeatedly referred to both men as "slant-eyed gooks" while he was being arrested. Wahlberg, who was 17, was tried as an adult and served 45 days in jail for the crime. In the application he filed to the state's Advisory Board of Pardons, Wahlberg states that he has "dedicated myself to becoming a better person and citizen so that I can be a role model to my children and others" and that "receiving a pardon would be a formal recognition that I am not the same person that I was." He claims that, despite his use of racist language, the race of the men was not a motivation for his crime, blaming instead the "influence of alcohol and narcotics." (Wahlberg committed the assaults while seeking to steal two cases of beer from Lam's convenience store.) In a stroke of irony, he states that a major reason for seeking a pardon is the desire to expand his own burgeoning restaurant chain, Wahlburgers, whose licensing has been hampered by his record as a felon. So, young Mark Wahlberg, who would just half a decade later rise to fame as a rapper and a crotch-grabbing underwear model under the name "Marky Mark" before successfully transitioning to acting, was let off with a trivial 45-day sentence after battering an Asian man until he was permanently handicapped. Three gold records, $200 million in wealth and untold fame and adulation later, he's seeking absolution for his crimes, because, he writes, "troubled youths will see this as an inspiration and motivation that they, too, can turn their lives around." The unwritten phrase that should follow Wahlberg's assertion: "That is to say, so long as they're white and their victims are not." If a black, Hispanic or Asian youth under the influence of drugs and alcohol had put out a white man's eye while trying to rob his store, it's inconceivable that he would have been let off with such a light sentence; implausible that he'd have gone on to the kind of marquee stardom that Wahlberg has obtained; unlikely that he would have the sense of unvarnished privilege that is driving Wahlberg's desire for a whitewashing of his record, if you'll pardon the pun. According to The Boston Globe, to this day Wahlberg has never apologized or paid restitution to the victims of his crimes. He also hasn't really acknowledged his pattern of bigoted language and racist violence, which included a separate episode in which he threw rocks at African-American schoolchildren while shouting that "black n*ggers" were unwelcome in his community. And he has never reached out to the Vietnamese-American community or other communities of color with the kind of targeted charity and philanthropic presence befitting someone who was truly remorseful for the repulsive actions of his youth. And that's the most gut-wrenching aspect of Wahlberg's request, coming as it does in the wake of the repeated, unpunished killings of young black men and teens at the hands of white men. The darkest reactions to the deaths of Martin, Brown and Garner described the victims as hardened, bestial and irredeemably corrupted by casual drug use or records of petty crime. They were, in the coded language of these commenters, "thugs." Meanwhile, Wahlberg, a wealthy white man with a more extensive criminal record than any of the black men mentioned above, has been described across mainstream media as a "troubled" youth who's since made good. In the wake of the grand jury's decision not to indict Officer Daniel Pantaleo for the choking death of Garner, the hashtag #CrimingWhileWhite trended on Twitter, featuring hundreds of white people sharing how their infractions were dismissed by police, while in many cases black friends were prosecuted for the same offenses. I noted at the time that the hashtag was "proof that there are two America: One that gets off with a wink. And one that just gets offed." In that other America, white versions of Martin, Brown and Garner might well have gotten the chance to "make good" like Wahlberg; they might be the ones seeking to redeem their youthful indiscretions. Sadly, no amount of pardoning will resurrect the dead. |
The general discussions focused on the need for a reaffirmation of the purpose and principles of the Alliance. | Головною темою дискусії була необхідність підтвердження основної мети та принципів Альянсу. |
gymnasts of Cyprus Gymnasts at the 2018 Commonwealth Games Commonwealth Games medallists in gymnastics Commonwealth Games gold medallists for Cyprus Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for Cyprus Competitors at the 2018 Mediterranean Games Mediterranean Games gold medalists for Cyprus Mediterranean Games silver medalists for Cyprus Mediterranean Games bronze medalists for Cyprus Mediterranean Games medalists in gymnastics Gymnasts at the 2015 European Games Gymnasts at the 2019 European Games European Games medalists in gymnastics European Games silver medalists for Cyprus Gymnasts at the 2020 Summer Olympics | is a Greek Cypriot male artistic gymnast, representing his nation in international competitions. He qualified as a lone gymnast on the Cypriot squad for the 2016 Summer Olympics by securing one of the spots available at the Olympic Test Event in Rio de Janeiro. Marios won golds in the floor and parallel bars disciplines and the bronze medal in the individual all-around event at the 2018 Commonwealth Games. He has qualified to represent Cyprus at the 2020 Summer Olympics in the men's artistic gymnastics all-around event. References External links 1997 births Living people |
Why does your stuffy nose disappear sometimes by getting up and walking around? | The [Nasal Cycle](_URL_0_) is activated by **lying down**. The cycle closes one nasal turbinate (the "pipe" leading to each nostril) after the other, while you are lying down. It is theorized this occurs to get you to switch sides while sleeping. |
In 1971, coins were issued in the name of "Democratic Yemen", changing to the "People's democratic Republic of Yemen" in 1973. | En 1971, las monedas fueron emitidas con el nombre de "Yemen Democrático", luego se cambió por "República Democrática Popular del Yemen" en 1973. |
Tellurium bromide | Telur bromid |
California, on 21 April 1942, reaching Pearl Harbor on 28 April. On 24 May, Nautilus (commanded by Lieutenant Commander William H. Brockman Jr.) got underway for her first war patrol, to Midway Island to help repel the expected attack by the Japanese fleet. At 07:55, 4 June, while approaching the northern boundary of her patrol area near Midway Island, she sighted masts on the horizon. Japanese planes sighted the submarine at the same time and began strafing. After diving to , she continued observation. At 08:00, a formation of four enemy ships was sighted: the battleship , the cruiser , and two destroyers (misidentified, as they often were early in the war, as cruisers) in company. Within minutes the submarine was again sighted from the air and was bombed. Two of the "cruisers" closed for a kill and nine depth charges were dropped at a distance of about . When the attack ceased, Nautilus rose to periscope depth. Ships surrounded her. Sighting on Kirishima, she fired two bow tubes; one misfired, one missed. At 08:30, a destroyer immediately headed for the boat, which dived to to wait out the depth charge attack. At 08:46, periscope depth was again ordered. The cruiser and two of the destroyers were now out of range; echo ranging by the third appeared too accurate for comfort. At 09:00, the periscope was raised again and an aircraft carrier was sighted. Nautilus changed course to close for an attack. The enemy destroyer followed suit and at 09:18 attacked with six depth charges. By 09:55 echo ranging ceased and Nautilus raised her periscope. The carrier, her escorts, and the attacking destroyer had disappeared. (Unbeknownst to her skipper at the time, the counter-attacking , in her rush to rejoin the carrier, was tracked by 's VB-6, led by Wade McClusky, back to the Japanese task force.) At 12:53, a damaged aircraft carrier with two escorts was sighted. The carrier was identified as , but later research suggests it was probably . An hour later, Nautilus had moved into attack position. Between 13:59 and 14:05, after the battle was largely over, Nautilus launched four torpedoes at the carrier from less than . One failed to run, two ran erratically, and the fourth was a dud (a familiar problem for the Mark XIV), impacting amidships and breaking in half. Nautilus reported flames appeared along the length of the ship as the first hit, and the skeleton crew which had been aboard (survivors of which reported no torpedo hit) began going over the side, with the air flask of the dud torpedo acting as a life preserver for Japanese sailors. Nautilus went to as a prolonged depth charge attack commenced. At 16:10, the submarine rose to periscope depth. The carrier, burning along her entire length, had been abandoned. At 19:41, Nautilus resumed her patrol, having expended five torpedoes and survived 42 depth charges, but accomplished little of substance. (Not until much later was the importance of her attack on the battleship, and its connection to McClusky, recognized.) Her commanding officer was awarded a Navy Cross for his actions. Between 7 June and 9 June, Nautilus replenished at Midway Island and then resumed her patrol to the west. By 20 June, she was operating off Honshū at the northern end of the Tokyo-Marshall Islands supply route. On 22 June, she damaged a destroyer guarding the entrance to the Sagami Sea off Ōshima. Three days later, she sank the destroyer and damaged an oil tanker. On 27 June, she sent a sampan to the bottom and on 28 June, after damaging a merchantman, underwent her severest depth charging, which forced her back to Pearl Harbor for repairs, 11 July to 7 August. Second patrol – the Makin Raid Nautilus departed Hawaiian waters for her second war patrol, a special troop transport mission of three weeks duration, 8 August. Sailing with submarine and carrying the Second Raider Battalion under Lieutenant Colonel Evans F. Carlson (the Marine Raiders, or "Carlson's Raiders") she arrived off Makin Atoll on 16 August to stage a raid to divert Japanese attention from the Solomon Islands. Early the following morning, she sent the Raiders ashore on Butaritari Island in rubber boats rigged with outboard motors. At 07:03, she provided gunfire support against enemy positions at Ukiangong Point on Butaritari and shelled enemy ships in the lagoon, sinking two, a troop barge and a patrol boat. At 10:39, an enemy plane appeared and Nautilus dove. Two aerial attacks followed at 11:30 | targets, she torpedoed and sank three marus (Japanese merchant ships) and, in surface action, destroyed three sampans to add over 12,000 tons to her score. On 12 October, however, the patrol became one of her more perilous, as she took a heavy depth charging. Two days later, her crew noticed a slight oil slick in her wake. The hindering seas now protected by breaking up the trace. By 19 October, the leak had enlarged considerably and on 20 October, the first relatively calm day since the depth charging, air leaks were discovered. Nautilus was leaving a trail for Japanese defense patrols. Moving to a quieter area, with less aerial activity, she continued her patrol until 24 October when she sank Kenun Maru, then headed for home without sighting enemy planes. She reached Midway Island 31 October, performed temporary repairs, and continued on to Pearl Harbor. During her fourth patrol, conducted in the Solomon Islands from on 13 December 1942 to on 4 February 1943, Nautilus rescued 26 adults and three children from Teop Harbor on 31 December and 1 January, then added the cargo ship Yosinogawa Maru to her kills and damaged a tanker, a freighter, and a destroyer. On 4 February, she arrived at Brisbane, debarked her passengers, and sailed for Pearl Harbor. Arriving 15 April, she departed five days later heading north. On 27 April, she put into Dutch Harbor, Alaska, and commenced instructing the 7th Infantry Division Provisional Scout Battalion in amphibious landings. She then embarked 109 Scouts (including Alaskan Native scouts of the Alaska Territorial Guard) and on 1 May, headed for Attu. There, on 11 May, she landed her "passengers" five hours before the main assault. 6th–8th patrols, September 1943 – April 1944 Overhaul at Mare Island occupied most of the summer and on 16 September Nautilus left Pearl Harbor to spend her sixth war patrol conducting photo-reconnaissance of the Gilbert Islands, concentrating on Tarawa, Kuma, Butaritari, Abemama, and Makin, all of which had been reinforced, particularly Tarawa, since the sub's 1942 excursion into those waters. The information, including continuous panoramic pictures of the coastlines and chart corrections, which she brought back to Pearl Harbor on 17 October, proved among the most useful intelligence gathered of the area prior to the invasion of Tarawa. She returned to Tarawa 18 November to obtain last-minute information on weather and surf conditions, landing hazards and the results of recent bombardments. At 21:59, 19 November, mistaking her as an enemy, the destroyer fired at her, sending a five-inch (127 mm) shell through the conning tower, damaging the main induction valve. Diving as soon as the water depth permitted, the boat was rigged for depth charge and the damage control party went to work. Within two hours repairs were sufficient to allow Nautilus to continue with her primary mission: landing a 78-man scouting party, composed of 5th Amphibious Reconnaissance Company marines and an Australian scout, on Abemama. At midnight 20–21 November, Nautilus lay off an island in the Abemama Atoll, Kenna to discharge her passengers. By 15:00, all were safely ashore. On the afternoon of 22 November, Nautilus provided fire support to bring the tiny (25-man) enemy garrison out of their bunkers. This proved accurate, killing 14; the remainder committed suicide. By the time the main assault force arrived on 26 November, Abemama had been secured and preparations to turn it into an air base for the Marshall Islands campaign had begun. For actions during this mission, Commander William D. Irvin, Nautilus Commanding Officer, was awarded the Navy Cross. Nautilus returned to Pearl Harbor on 4 December to prepare for her eighth war patrol. Conducted north of Palau and west of the Mariana Islands from 27 January. On 21 March 1944 she sank the ex-hospital ship America Maru (she had been reverted to a transport December 1943) and damaged three cargo ships. On 26 April, Nautilus sailed for Brisbane, whence she departed 29 May to begin a series of special missions in support of guerrilla and reconnaissance activities in the Philippines. 9th–14th patrols, May 1944 – January 1945 On her ninth patrol, from 29 May to 11 June, she carried ammunition, oil, and dry stores to Philippine guerrillas under Colonel R.V. Bowler on Mindanao. Between 12 June and 27 June, she transported a similar cargo to Negros Island and embarked evacuees, including one German POW, for Darwin. During her 11th patrol, from 30 June to 27 July, she landed a reconnaissance party and 12 tons of stores on North Pandan Island, and more supplies to Colonel Kangleon on Leyte and Colonel Abcede on Mindanao. On her 12th, 13th and 14th patrols, she returned to the central Philippines, landed personnel and supplies at various points on Mindanao and Luzon, and carried evacuees to Australia. On 25 September, during the first of these three patrols, she grounded on Iuisan Shoal. Forced to lighten her load, her evacuees, mail, captured documents, and cargo were sent ashore. All secret materials were burned. Her reserve fuel tanks were blown dry, variable ballast was blown overboard and six-inch (152 mm) ammunition jettisoned. With the blowing of her main ballast tanks she was finally able to get off the reef within three and a half hours, despite the receding tide, and clear the area by dawn. During her 13th patrol, on 31 October 1944, Nautilus finished off , which had run aground on a reef and could not be recovered. Numerous attempts to torpedo the wreck had failed as torpedoes detonated on the reef. Nautiluss six-inch (152 mm) guns, however, scored 55 hits, and her report states, "It is doubtful that any equipment in Darter at 11:30 this date would be of any value to Japan – except as scrap." Nautilus completed her 14th, and last, patrol at Darwin on 30 January 1945. From Australia, she was routed on to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she arrived 25 May for inactivation. Decommissioned with a bottle of champagne over the forward 6 inch (152 mm) gun on 30 June, she was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register 25 July and sold 16 November, to the North American Smelting Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for scrapping. Awards Presidential Unit Citation for her aggressive war patrols in enemy-controlled waters. American Defense Service Medal Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal with 14 battle stars World War II Victory Medal Her commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander William H. Brockman Jr. was awarded a Navy Cross for his actions during |
Neither I nor the audience understood anything in it. | Nici eu nici audiența nu am înțeles nimic din ea. |
It also disrupts the way information is processed (Bushman 1993, 1997; Bushman & Cooper 1990). | Тој, исто така го нарушува начинот на кој информациите се обработуваат (Бушман 1993, 1997; Бушман и Купер 1990). |
I forgot to call up Mr Ford. | שכחתי לצלצל למר פורד. |
of Historic Places in 1994. It is located about one mile northwest of the town of Warren, up a trail from the north end of Warren's airstrip. It "occupies a cultural island which consists of approximately 2,500 square meters or 0.62 acres". The site was | The site was investigated by an archaeological study in 1989–1992. References National Register of Historic Places in Idaho County, Idaho Archaeological sites on the National Register |
how do you find the product of its factors (i am 12)? | Actually, the product of "it's" factors, is "it"!\n\nThe factors of "the number" are two numbers that you can multiply together to get "the number".\n\nFor example, if "the number" = 15, two factors are 3 and 5 (because 3 x 5 = 15). Since the product means the answer to a multiplication problem, to find "the product of the factors" would mean to take the factors, 3 and 5, and multiply them together!\n\nSo the product of two factors of 15 is 15!\n\nIf you want to know the product of ALL it's factors that's a different question. All the factors of 15 are 1,3,5 & 15. The product of ALL the factors of 15 is 1x3x5x15= 225. Got it!? |
Red lighting is used for Bayern home games and white for German national team home games. | Màu đỏ được sử dụng cho các trận sân nhà của Bayern và màu trắng cho các trận sân nhà của đội tuyển bóng đá quốc gia Đức. |
Later he worked as a teacher while studying law in Jerusalem. | Kemudian, ia bekerja sebagai guru ketika ia mempelajari hukum di Yerusalem. |
Andy Griffith | أندي جريفيث |
Set Car Window Openings for Extreme Vortex Cooling | If you like fresh air, the sounds of the open road, or hypermiling as you drive, you'll want to open your car (van, etc.) windows. If your air conditioner died, you'll pretty much have to. |
how many national championships has clemson won? | NCAA team championships Clemson University has six team national championships awarded by the NCAA, and three in football that are sanctioned by the NCAA. Clemson has won three NCAA Division I Football National Championships, in 1981, 2016 and 2018. |
of overseas trips made by Willem-Alexander, King of the Netherlands since he ascended to the Dutch throne in April 2013 | to the Dutch throne in April 2013 following the abdication of Beatrix that year. List of visits References Netherlands, Willem-Alexander Willem-Alexander |
Customize top bar ubuntu 18.04 gnome 3 | Hide Accesibility icon from Panel |
is urgent care in network? | You can find a list of the urgent care centers in your network on your Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) company's website, or by calling the 1-800 number on the back of your member ID card. |
to 74), Kevin Streelman (65 to 75) and Boo Weekley (70 to 76). Par 71 course BMW Championship The BMW Championship was played September 17–20, after a one-week break. All 70 players eligible to play in the event did so, and there was no cut. Jason Day won by six strokes over Daniel Berger. The top 30 players in the points standings advanced to the Tour Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 30 prior to the BMW Championship: Daniel Berger (46 to 9), Scott Piercy (44 to 20), Kevin Na (34 to 27), and Harris English (32 to 30). Four players started the tournament within the top 30 but ended the tournament outside the top 30, ending their playoff chances: Daniel Summerhays (26 to 31), Russell Knox (29 to 34), Ben Martin (25 to 35) and Jason Bohn (28 to 40). Par 71 course Reset points The points were reset after the BMW Championship. Tour Championship The Tour Championship was played September 24–27. Of the 30 golfers qualified for the tournament, only Jim Furyk (wrist injury), did not play. There was no cut. Jordan Spieth won the tournament and the FedEx Cup, beating Danny Lee, Justin Rose, and Henrik Stenson by four strokes. Par 70 course Final leaderboard For the full list see here. Table of qualifying players Table key: * First-time Playoffs participant 22 players extended their streak of reaching the FedExCup Playoffs every year: Bill Haas, Jeff Overton, Matt Kuchar, Ian Poulter, John Senden, Ryan Moore, Charley Hoffman, Pat Perez, Nick Watney, Bubba Watson, Jerry Kelly, Luke Donald, Brandt Snedeker, Charles Howell III, Justin Rose, Hunter Mahan, Adam Scott, Jim Furyk, Sergio Garcia, Zach Johnson, Rory Sabbatini and Phil Mickelson. Eight players failed to advance to the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time: Freddie Jacobson, Brian Davis, Bo Van Pelt, Ernie Els, Geoff Ogilvy, Aaron Baddeley, K. J. Choi, and Steve Stricker. Nine rookies finished inside the top 125: Justin Thomas (36), Tony Finau (39), Daniel Berger (46), Scott Pinckney (78), Adam Hadwin (95), Nick Taylor | players eligible to play in the event, Sergio García (ranked 43) and Will Wilcox (89) did not play. Of the 98 entrants, 75 made the second-round cut at 145 (+3). Rickie Fowler won by one stroke over Henrik Stenson and moved into third place in the standings. The top 70 players in the points standings advanced to the BMW Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 70 prior to the Deutsche Bank Championship: Hunter Mahan (91 to 52), Keegan Bradley (71 to 63), Jerry Kelly (94 to 65), and William McGirt (88 to 68). Four players started the tournament within the top 70 but ended the tournament outside the top 70, ending their playoff chances: Marc Leishman (61 to 72), Jim Herman (64 to 74), Kevin Streelman (65 to 75) and Boo Weekley (70 to 76). Par 71 course BMW Championship The BMW Championship was played September 17–20, after a one-week break. All 70 players eligible to play in the event did so, and there was no cut. Jason Day won by six strokes over Daniel Berger. The top 30 players in the points standings advanced to the Tour Championship. This included four players who were outside the top 30 prior to the BMW Championship: Daniel Berger (46 to 9), Scott Piercy (44 to 20), Kevin Na (34 to 27), and Harris English (32 to 30). Four players started the tournament within the top 30 but ended the tournament outside the |
questions to ask when you rent a flat? | ["What's the parking situation? ... ", "What's the laundry situation? ... ", 'Is heating/electric/water service covered in the rent? ... ', 'Is there internet service in the building? ... ', 'Have there been any break-ins? ... ', 'How much money do I need to pay up-front before I sign a lease? ... ', 'Are you responsible for maintenance bills?'] |
are tripods allowed on airplanes india? | The Airline staff promptly allowed me to carry the Tripod as Cabin luggage. ... From All other airports of India, I am carrying my Tripod as Cabin luggage without any problem. But make sure you pack your Tripod properly. Happy Traveling. |
Subsets and Splits