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Niels was also the brother of Harald Bohr . He was a mathematician and he played in the National Team of Football .
His brother was Harald Bohr , a mathematician and Olympic footballer who played on the Danish national team .
More recent models of the Björk–Shiley valve did away with the convexo-concave design and are reliable valves that do not require replacement.
Los modelos más recientes de la válvula Björk–Shiley se deshicieron del modelo convexo-cóncavo y ahora son válvulas confiables que no requieren reemplazo.
land Mollusca of Norfolk Island. The Australian Zoologist. 11: 46-71 Köhler, F.; Bouchet, P. (2020). On unavailable genus-group names introduced by Tom Iredale for Australian non-marine gastropods: nomenclatural clarifications and descriptions of new
a nomen nudum (published without description) Species Species within the genus Buffetia include: Buffetia retinaculum (Preston, 1913): synonym of Allenoconcha retinaculum (Preston, 1913) (unavailable genus name) References External links redale, T. (1945). The land Mollusca of Norfolk Island. The Australian Zoologist. 11: 46-71 Köhler, F.;
El Garces Intermodal Transportation Facility
Dził Ííʼáhíidi kǫʼ naʼałbąąsii ninádaaltłiʼígi
of a career in country music. By 1998, he was discovered by an A&R staff member from the Arista Nashville label, and was signed to the label that year. He charted two singles, "A Fool's Progress" and "When I Grow Up," which respectively reached No. 44 and No. 53 on the country singles charts. Both were to have been included on a self-titled debut album, which was ultimately not released due to Arista's restructuring. Daniels moved to Epic Records in 2003. Although he released a third single, the No. 56 "The Letter (Almost Home)," he never released an album for Epic and has not recorded since. Daniels has also co-written songs for other country artists, including the Number One hits "Brokenheartsville" by Joe Nichols and "Roll with Me" by Montgomery Gentry (from 2003 and 2008 respectively), as well
Daniels was born August 24, 1974 in Panama City, Florida, but raised in the Panama City suburb of Lynn Haven. Daniels first gained an interest in music as a child, singing with his sister in church. Inspired by bluegrass music, Daniels taught himself to play guitar at age twelve. After graduating high school, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee in pursuit of a career in country music. By 1998, he was discovered by an A&R staff member from the Arista Nashville label, and was signed to the label that year. He charted two singles, "A Fool's Progress" and "When I Grow Up," which respectively reached No. 44 and No. 53 on the country singles charts. Both were to have been included on a self-titled debut album, which was ultimately not released due to Arista's restructuring. Daniels moved to Epic Records in 2003. Although he released a third single, the No. 56 "The Letter (Almost
One of the churches De la Gardie restored was the abbey church of Varnhem, in which he established a family mausoleum where Magnus Gabriel himself, his wife Maria Eufrosyne, their son Gustav Adolf and daughter-in-law Elisabet Oxenstierna are buried.
Una delle chiese che De la Gardie restaurò, fu la chiesa abbaziale di Varnhem, nella quale realizzò il mausoleo di famiglia, nella quale sono sepolti li stesso Magnus Gabriel, la moglie Maria Eufrosyne, il loro figlio Gustavo Adolfo e la nuora Elisabet Oxenstierna.
what can auto recovery companies do to get back a vehicle legally?
If you are talking about a repo--- It is there duty to retrieve the auto if you are behind in your payments. They are hire by your lender.
the codon (the code for an amino acid molecule) for arginine was erroneously substituted by a codon for histidine at position 594 in that exon. This same mutation in the TRVP4 gene is known to cause the Kozlowski type of spondylometaphyseal dysplasia. Parastremmatic dwarfism is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, which means that the defective gene responsible for the disease is located on an autosome (chromosome 12 is an autosome), and one copy of the defective gene is sufficient to cause the disorder when inherited from a parent who also has the disorder. Parastremmatic Dwarfism results from mutations within the N-ankyrin domain of TRPV4, which has been identified to be involved in regulation of the TRPV4 calcium ion channel. This influx of calicum may be responsible
dwarfism is a rare bone disease that features severe dwarfism, thoracic kyphosis (a type of scoliosis that affects the upper back), a distortion and twisting of the limbs, contractures of the large joints, malformations of the vertebrae and pelvis, and incontinence. The disease was first reported in 1970 by Leonard Langer and associates; they used the term parastremmatic from the Greek parastremma, or distorted limbs, to describe it. On X-rays, the disease is distinguished by a "flocky" or lace-like appearance to the bones. The disease is congenital, which means it is apparent at birth. It is caused by a mutation in the TRPV4 gene, located on chromosome 12 in humans. The disease is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. Presentation Parastremmatic dwarfism is apparent at birth, with affected infants usually being described as "stiff", or as "twisted dwarfs" when the skeletal deformities and appearance of dwarfism further present themselves. Skeletal deformities usually develop in the sixth to twelfth month of an infant's life. The deformities may be attributed to osteomalacia, a lack of bone mineralization. Parastremmatic Dwarfism is further characterised by short stature, bowing of extremeties and further neuroskeletal dysplasia. Genetics Parastremmatic dwarfism is caused by a missense mutation (where
Conversely, any multiple m of g can be obtained by choosing u = ms and v = mt, where s and t are the integers of Bézout's identity.
Invers, orice multiplu m al lui g poate fi obținut alegând u = ms și v = mt, unde s și t sunt întregii din identitatea lui Bézout.
Jordan national futsal team
Jordánske národné futsalové družstvo mužov
Mother tongue: English as first language: 95.5% French as first language: 0.9% English and French as first language: 0% Other as first language: 3.6% Prior to amalgamation (1998): Population total in 1996: 4,103 Huntingdon (township): 2,639 Madoc (village): 1,464 Population in 1991: Huntingdon (township): 2,258 Madoc (village): 1,397 See also List of townships in Ontario References
formed on January 1, 1998, through the amalgamation of Huntingdon Township with the Village of Madoc. Communities The municipality of Centre Hastings comprises a number of villages and hamlets, including the following communities such as Crookston (), Fuller, Ivanhoe (), Madoc,
The Delta IV entered the space launch market when global capacity was already much higher than demand.
Ракета-носитель Дельта IV пришла на рынок космических запусков в период, когда глобальные возможности по выводу полезной нагрузки на околоземную орбиту были уже гораздо выше спроса.
Profile Carlos Guerrero at Football Database Carlos Guerrero at Official Liga MX Profile 2000 births Living people Association football midfielders Mexican footballers Club León footballers Liga
2017 References External links Carlos Guerrero at Mexico national football team Profile Carlos Guerrero at Football Database Carlos Guerrero at Official Liga MX Profile 2000 births Living people
Those two episodes were about to air after "Dennō Senshi Porygon" on December 23, 1997 and January 6, 1998 respectively.
Hai tập phim này vốn lên kế hoạch chiếu sau "Dennō Senshi Porigon" lần lượt vào các ngày 23 tháng 12 năm 1997 và 6 tháng 1 năm 1998.
Gareth McAuley
Маколи, Гарет
how many mg of iron should you take a day?
The amount of iron you need is: 8.7mg a day for men over 18. 14.8mg a day for women aged 19 to 50. 8.7mg a day for women over 50.
do you have to pay for emotional support animals?
Pet fees. Service and assistance animals are not technically pets and owners do not have to pay pet fees. The landlord, however, can charge a security deposit and may still seek money from the tenant if there is any damage caused by the animal to the home.
were set aside as parade grounds. The land became so compressed from military drills and horse's hooves that nothing grew on it for over a hundred years. Floyd's Neck During the nineteenth-century plantation era, Floyd's Neck encompassed swamps, hammocks, pine barrens, forests thick with oaks, gum, cypress, as well as cleared agricultural fields. The Floyds were among the largest landowners and wealthiest families in Camden County. The family owned over two hundred slaves; hosted sports club parties, balls and dinner dances at Bellevue; held hunts for wild game, and held shooting, horse and boat racing competitions; they also owned town houses in St. Mary's. Floyd plantations used slaves to cultivate rice, indigo, and Sea Island cotton. Cotton fields stretched for miles; massive fields of potatoes were grown on Pompey's Island; both plantation houses also had views of corn fields and vegetable gardens. The Floyds also cultivated peach, orange, lemon, lime and olive trees. Fishing in Floyd’s Creek yielded an abundance of drum, whiting, blackfish, and mullet. Wild game also fed the Floyd family and their slaves. The Camden Hunting Club built a clubhouse at Bear Hammock on Floyd property. On Independence Day July 4, 1835, after hunting for wild turkey and deer, an elegant meal was served, which included toasts. General John Floyd toasted, "The Federal Constitution – the reserved rights of the states, safeguards of the Union. We will defend them at every peril". Graded roads, sturdy bridges over creeks, were built on Floyd's Neck. These roads led not only to other plantations but westward (inland) to the county seat, Jeffersonton (abandoned after a move back to St. Mary's in 1872), and eastward to Cabin Bluff on the Cumberland River. Bellevue was 30 miles from Jeffersonton. It took four hours on horseback from Bellevue to reach St. Marys. A horse-drawn carriage or wagon could travel from Bellevue to Cabin Bluff in about an hour. Depending on the tide and the wind, it took the Floyds four to six hours to sail in their privately owned boats from the Cabin Bluff dock to St. Marys. Eventually, steamboats could complete the journey in two hours. Camden County, Georgia tax returns in 1809 show the combined lands owned by Charles and John Floyd as 5,825 acres. The family continued to accumulate property. In addition to Bellevue and Fairfield plantations, their holdings included: The Hermitage, Leeds Grove, Grants Tract, Jones Tract, Bryant and Grays Tract, Brookfield, Bear Hammock, Cabin Bluff, Shellbine, and Black Point; property in McIntosh County. John Floyd’s timber business prospered, and exported cotton brought in high returns. On May 25, 1808, John and Charles Floyd purchased Little Cumberland Island from the heirs of General (Nathaniel) Nathanael Greene for $500. On August 24, 1837, John Floyd sold six acres on the north end of Little Cumberland to the United States Government for a lighthouse to be erected on St. Andrews Sound: "John Floyd... hath granted, bargained, sold unto the United States of America Six acres of Land on the Island of Little Cumberland and at the north part of the same and selected as a site for the contemplated Light House to Saint Andrews inlet as the Plat thereof". John Floyd, a civil engineer as well as a master boat builder, used his workers and his expertise to construct schooners and merchant vessels for shipping and trade. Military career On May 2, 1804, John Floyd was commissioned Captain of the 31st Militia in Camden County, Georgia. Two years later, on June 26, 1806, he was commissioned Brigadier-General, First Brigade of Georgia Militia. At the beginning of the War of 1812, General Floyd commanded a force at Point Peter near St. Marys in Camden County. Georgia had been the last state to join the American revolutionary forces, and many Tories left afterward for Florida, and hoped to return. Former Georgia governor and General George Mathews), as a special agent during the Patriot War, asked Floyd to hold his militia ready to help overthrow the Spanish government in East Florida. Even though the U.S. government feared Britain would capture Florida, Floyd opposed invading Florida and wrote Georgia Governor David Mitchell questioning the request's propriety. President Madison disowned Mathew's conquest of Fernandina island, and General Mathews died on August 30, 1812, in Augusta, Georgia en route to Washington to defend his actions. Nonetheless, in October 1812, Floyd, along with about 120 volunteers, reached New Camp Hope in East Florida. Florida's Spanish Governor worked with the Seminoles and enlisted them to fight rebels as well as these invaders. Floyd wanted a fast and decisive strike, countering the Indians with a devastating blow. Difficulties arose. Military supplies ran short, food was scarce, his men came down with dysentery and fever. His pessimistic militia troops resisted the expedition, and ultimately, the attack never materialized. If the Patriots had succeeded, General John Floyd might have become Governor of territorial Florida. President James Madison had requested acceptable names to fill the position and General Mathews recommended General John Floyd as "most acceptable". The Creek Indians, who allied themselves with the British forces, began attacks on white settlements in eastern and central Alabama and western Georgia. Indians from the Upper Creek Towns, known as Red Sticks, who resented the encroachment onto their lands, sought aggressively to reduce influences upon their tribal unions and wished to return their society to a traditional way of life in culture and religion. In September 1813, in response to the threats and to quell the Red Stick rebellion, General John Floyd was ordered to command Federal troops who were assembled at Camp Hope on the Ocmulgee River. These forces constructed forts in a defensive line along the Federal Road from the
to a former slave, and lived in St. Marys with a mulatto women, with whom he had six children before he was buried in an unmarked grave in a town cemetery. Georgia plantation career In 1795, Charles Floyd (with his wife, Mary) and John Floyd (with his wife, Isabella Maria) moved from South Carolina to McIntosh County, Georgia. They settled on adjoining farms near Darien, Georgia, called "The Thickets". In 1797, after the Treaty of Colerain, Charles Floyd ended the family's formal South Carolina ties by selling Walnut Hill Plantation to a wealthy planter, William Pope Sr. Bellevue Plantation and Fairfield Plantation In 1800, the Floyds again moved southward, this time to Camden County, Georgia. They purchased large tracts of land located south of the Satilla River, north of the Crooked River and west of the marshes and the Cumberland River to what is now I-95. Here, in this area that became known as "Floyd's Neck," they built two large plantations a mile apart: "Fairfield" and "Bellevue". John Floyd built Fairfield on Floyd's Creek for himself. Fairfield House was built in traditional Southern style. The house sat near a high bluff that overlooked Floyd’s Basin toward the west and Floyd’s Creek toward the east. In 1831, John Floyd gave Fairfield Plantation to his eldest son, Charles Rinaldo Floyd. Charles Rinaldo Floyd added a two-story armory in order to display his collected weapons: Swords, lances, daggers, knives, double barrel guns, dueling and long shot rifles, carbines, pistols, dueling pistols, bows and arrows. At either end of the Fairfield House stood two tall brick chimneys with large interior mantles; the floors of the house were of Georgia heart of pine. The house also had a parlor, library and a small sketching room. John Floyd built Bellevue within view of the marshes leading to Todd's Creek for his father, Charles. Family lore claims that Floyd built Bellevue Plantation shaped as an anchor to symbolize their fortunes' link to the sea. After his father died in 1820, John moved into Bellevue, enlarging it with two upper stories made of cypress. A blueprint of Bellevue, drawn by Hazlehurst Ross Noyes, a descendant of John Floyd, showed the three-level plantation house as a substantial dwelling. The ground floor or basement was made of tabby with walls over eight feet high and two feet thick; contained two huge fireplaces in which immense cauldrons hung on cranes, supplying hot water to the upper floor bathrooms; household storage areas; a kitchen area for last minute food preparation; the informal dining room and the curved billiard room. The first floor included a long hall, family bedrooms, dressing room, three bathrooms, children’s room, large formal dining room with double fireplaces and the drawing room. The second floor had guest rooms, fireplace and a library filled with John Floyd’s vast collection of books, some quite valuable. Raised open piazzas on two sides of the building featured heavy round columns supporting the roofs. Imposing steps lead down from the south piazza to a terrace and manicured formal lawn beyond. Both plantations became known for their landscaping and gardens. Bellevue's curved billiard room overlooked a crescent-shaped garden, from which roses extended for a half acre. A mile-long avenue of moss-draped live oaks and cedar trees connected the two plantations, with flowering bulbs and myrtles dotted beneath. Two hundred acres south of Bellevue were set aside as parade grounds. The land became so compressed from military drills and horse's hooves that nothing grew on it for over a hundred years. Floyd's Neck During the nineteenth-century plantation era, Floyd's Neck encompassed swamps, hammocks, pine barrens, forests thick with oaks, gum, cypress, as well as cleared agricultural fields. The Floyds were among the largest landowners and wealthiest families in Camden County. The family owned over two hundred slaves; hosted sports club parties, balls and dinner dances at Bellevue; held hunts for wild game, and held shooting, horse and boat racing competitions; they also owned town houses in St. Mary's. Floyd plantations used slaves to cultivate rice, indigo, and Sea Island cotton. Cotton fields stretched for miles; massive fields of potatoes were grown on Pompey's Island; both plantation houses also had views of corn fields and vegetable gardens. The Floyds also cultivated peach, orange, lemon, lime and olive trees. Fishing in Floyd’s Creek yielded an abundance of drum, whiting, blackfish, and mullet. Wild game also fed the Floyd family and their slaves. The Camden Hunting Club built a clubhouse at Bear Hammock on Floyd property. On Independence Day July 4, 1835, after hunting for wild turkey and deer, an elegant meal was served, which included toasts. General John Floyd toasted, "The Federal Constitution – the reserved rights of the states, safeguards of the Union. We will defend them at every peril". Graded roads, sturdy bridges over creeks, were built on Floyd's Neck. These roads led not only to other plantations but westward (inland) to the county seat, Jeffersonton (abandoned after a move back to St. Mary's in 1872), and eastward to Cabin Bluff on the Cumberland River. Bellevue was 30 miles from Jeffersonton. It took four hours on horseback from Bellevue to reach St. Marys. A horse-drawn carriage or wagon could travel from Bellevue to Cabin Bluff in about an hour. Depending on the tide and the wind, it took the Floyds four to six hours to sail in their privately owned boats from the Cabin Bluff dock to St. Marys. Eventually, steamboats could complete the journey in two hours. Camden County, Georgia tax returns in 1809 show the combined lands owned by Charles and John Floyd as 5,825 acres. The family continued to accumulate property. In addition to Bellevue and Fairfield plantations, their holdings included: The Hermitage, Leeds Grove, Grants Tract, Jones Tract, Bryant and Grays Tract, Brookfield, Bear Hammock, Cabin Bluff, Shellbine, and Black Point; property in McIntosh County. John Floyd’s timber business prospered, and exported cotton brought in high returns. On May 25, 1808, John and Charles Floyd purchased Little Cumberland Island from the heirs of General (Nathaniel) Nathanael Greene for $500. On August 24, 1837, John Floyd sold six acres on the north end of Little Cumberland to the United States Government for a lighthouse to be erected on St. Andrews Sound: "John Floyd... hath granted, bargained, sold unto the United States of America Six acres of Land on the Island of Little Cumberland and at the north part of the same and selected as a site for the contemplated Light House to Saint Andrews inlet as the Plat thereof". John Floyd, a civil engineer as well as a master boat builder, used his workers and his expertise to construct schooners and merchant vessels for shipping and trade. Military career On May 2, 1804, John Floyd was commissioned Captain of the 31st Militia in Camden County, Georgia. Two years later, on June 26, 1806, he was commissioned Brigadier-General, First Brigade of Georgia Militia. At the beginning of the War of 1812, General Floyd commanded a force at Point Peter near St. Marys in Camden County. Georgia had been the last state to join the American revolutionary forces, and many Tories left afterward for Florida, and hoped to return. Former Georgia governor and General George Mathews), as a special agent during the Patriot War, asked Floyd to hold his militia ready to help overthrow the Spanish government in East Florida. Even though the U.S. government feared Britain would capture Florida, Floyd opposed invading Florida and wrote Georgia Governor David Mitchell questioning the request's propriety. President Madison disowned Mathew's conquest of Fernandina island, and General Mathews died on August 30, 1812, in Augusta, Georgia en route to Washington to defend his actions. Nonetheless, in October 1812, Floyd, along with about 120 volunteers, reached New Camp Hope in East Florida. Florida's Spanish Governor worked with the Seminoles and enlisted them to fight rebels as well as these invaders. Floyd wanted a fast and decisive strike, countering the Indians with a devastating blow. Difficulties arose. Military supplies ran short, food was scarce, his men came down with dysentery and fever. His pessimistic militia troops resisted the expedition, and ultimately, the attack never materialized. If the Patriots had succeeded, General John Floyd might have become Governor of territorial Florida. President James Madison had requested acceptable names to fill the position and General Mathews recommended General John Floyd as "most acceptable". The Creek Indians, who allied themselves with the British forces, began attacks on white settlements in eastern and central Alabama and western Georgia. Indians from the Upper Creek Towns,
Howard continues to regularly appear on WSB-TV in Atlanta, which is occasionally broadcast by other Cox Television stations nationwide.
Howard vazhdon të shfaqet rregullisht në WSB-TV në Atlanta e cila herë pas here transmetohet nga stacione të tjera televizive Cox në mbarë vendin.
what questions to ask before lumpectomy?
['How many times have you performed lumpectomy?', 'What are the risks of lumpectomy?', 'How should I prepare for surgery?', 'How long will surgery take?', 'How much tissue will be removed?', 'How will you decide how wide the lumpectomy margins should be?']
What would happen if trump became the president?
What would be some pros and cons of Donald Trump becoming president?
The rebellion continued until the Treaty of Malmö in 1524.
Upproret fortsatte fram till Malmö recess 1524.
the state of Kerala, India, located in the Tirur, Malappuram district. Naming The name Ayyaya means "father" in the language of Telugu. This facet of a familial group is included in the practices of tharadavu. Geography The town Tirur is located 9 km from Ayyaya by way of State Highway No.71 and provides the nearest railway station.
of a familial group is included in the practices of tharadavu. Geography The town Tirur is located 9 km from Ayyaya by way of State Highway No.71 and provides the nearest railway station. SH71 also provides direct access to National highway No.66. The northern stretch NH66 connects to Goa and Mumbai and the southern stretch connects to Cochin and Trivandrum. The nearest airport is located 34.5 km away at Kozhikode. The Vellachal Bust Station is located in Ayyaya,
With the increase of the bias voltage, there is an apparent decrease in the selectivity.
Con el aumento de la tensión de polarización, hay una aparente disminución en la selectividad.
"covers a lot of ground [...] without becoming bogged down in technical minutiae." PD Smith of The Guardian described it as "An intelligent and revealing introduction to the denizens of the web's underworld." Wendy M. Grossman of ZDNet UK stated that "Overall, though, the book's great contribution is non-sensationalist reporting about very touchy subjects." Ian Burrell wrote in The Independent that "we see scant evidence of" positive internet communities within the book. References External links Excerpt posted at Medium.com - Preview link - A book review of The Dark Net Books about the Internet Dark web 2014 non-fiction books Heinemann (publisher) books
the United States by Melville House Publishers, and in Australia by Random House. Bartlett discusses online communities away from the mainstream, including those on Tor and the Deep Web. It discusses the darknet and dark web in broad terms, describing a range of underground and emergent subcultures, including social media racists, cam girls, self harm communities, darknet drug markets, cryptoanarchists and transhumanists. Contents Throughout the book, Bartlett discusses the history of online communities and trolling, as well as the development of cryptocurrencies and internet crime. Included are his interactions with Amir Taaki, various internet trolls, a person who downloads pictures of child abuse, and neo-Nazi activists. Bartlett stated that he found "positive, helpful and constructive" subcultures on the internet as well as "destructive" ones. Reception The Dark Net received generally positive critical reviews. Ian Hargreaves, a University of Cardiff professor of digital economy, wrote in a
how long does it take for your 401k to be vested?
To find out your vesting schedule, check with your company's benefits administrator. The upshot: It can usually take around three to five years before you own all of your company matching contributions.
Photographs of specimens
Kuvia lajista
to Germany. They first lived in Düsseldorf, then moved to Berlin in 1905 where she later finished school with the Abitur. She studied economics, literature and philosophy at the University of Berlin. This is where she met Walter Eucken. The couple got married in December 1920 and Edith gave up her studies. From 1925 to 1927 they lived in Tübingen and then moved to Freiburg. Edith Eucken-Erdsiek published her first essay in 1925 in the magazine Die Tatwelt. Between 1928 and 1934 Edith was editor and publisher of Die Tatwelt. She partly published her works under the pseudonym Janus. She gave birth to two daughters and a son in the 1930s upon which she gave up her job as publisher and editor. Eucken-Erdsiek joined the Freiburg circles in 1938 and is considered the only women who was part of the Freiburg school. After World War II, she started working as a publisher and editor again. After her husband's death in 1950,
her husband's death in 1950, Eucken-Erdsiek worked on publishing his book Grundsätze der Wirtschaftspolitik. She also contributed substantially to the founding of the Walter Eucken Institut in 1954 and was dedicated to maintain personal contact to Walter Eucken's friends and students. The Eucken-Circle met up at their place in Freiburg annually. Eucken-Erdsiek wrote articles for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the Neue Züricher Zeitung, the Schweizer Monat and the Philosophische Jahrbuch (English: Yearbook of philosophy). She was a founding member of the Bund Freiheit der Wissenschaft (English literally: Union of the Freedom of Science). Eucken-Erdsiek died in 1985 in Freiburg. Publications Größe und Wahn. Drei Essays über Friedrich
FICORA
Viestintävirasto
is parchment paper okay to put in the oven?
Martha loves using parchment paper in the kitchen. Parchment paper is grease- and moisture-resistant paper specially treated for oven use. ... Unlike parchment paper, however, it is not heat-resistant and therefore should not be used in the oven, as the wax could melt, or even ignite.
That ideal situation is rare but exists in a few languages.
这种理想的情况是罕见的,但的确存在几种语言。
Rick Caruso
ريك كاروسو
bipuncta is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae. It was described by
is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae. It was described by George
(Laughter) Probably in middle school, before it actually applied to any form of sexual orientation, right?
(Risos) Provavelmente no ensino fundamental, antes que qualquer forma de orientação sexual fosse chamada assim, certo?
Samuel Tickell
স্যামুয়েল টিকেল
resulted in her books Sarawak (1957) and Life in a Longhouse (1962), from 1960–66 she photographed for the government Information Office, Kuching, and trained the department's photographers. Australia In 1967 the Morrisons moved to Australia and where they lived in Canberra, where she freelanced for the Australian Information Service. In 1990 the Canberra Photographic Society made her a life member. Photography During her time in Beijing Morrison took many photographs of the old city and its people, temples and markets and continued to record the environments and cultures of the countries in which she lived. Many of her subjects were disappearing as she photographed them; Chinese civilisation under Japanese occupation and before Communism; Hong Kong transitioning from the irreversible impact of WW2 on its traditional cultures; and the vanishing Ibans and their long houses in Sarawak. In her student years and for some of her Chinese work she used a Linhof Satzplasmat 9 x 12 cm sheet-film camera. Until she adopted colour in the 1950s, she made exclusively black and white photographs with her medium-format Rolleiflex and Rolleicord, with standard lenses, and carrying as extra equipment only a tripod and set of lens filters. She rarely used flash or added lighting, and then only using flash powder. She printed her own work and in Hong Kong she sold postcards of her views of city, mass-printed in her darkroom. In Sarawak, where the couple were without mains electricity, she had to power her enlarger lamp from car batteries, and she had improvise ways to protect her negatives from mould in the tropical humidity. Reception Michael Tomlinson reviewing in The Age Morrison's A Photographer in Old Peking notes its 'elegant architectural studies of temples and monasteries which have since been damaged or destroyed' and 'her great talent...for human interest studies...[from] a vanished world, alien and unfamiliar. And yet the faces peering out at us from the Peking market in the '30s are...human and appealing...' Claire Roberts considers that "through her photographs of architecture, streetscapes, craftsmen, street vendors and customs, Morrison creates her own image of China. By focusing on labour-intensive traditional crafts and skills, old buildings, religious sites and ancient rites and practices she chooses to record the life and look of 'Old Peking'. In much the same way that she chose to photograph the German folk festival, in China Morrison chose to focus on 'traditional' Chinese life and values rather than those of a 'modem', changing world. She was motivated to record aspects of a foreign culture that she felt was threatened by development. Anne Maxwell considers that Morrison's "two major books relating to her time in China...were aimed at capturing the 'Old Peking' that Westerners enjoyed reminiscing over, and they ignored the changing nature of the city, in...the poverty, civil unrest and social conflict that resulted from the Japanese occupation." Nicholas Jose counters that; "When she styled herself A Photographer in Old Peking (1985), Hedda Morrison... implies more than a literal interpretation of those words. She finds herself, like a time-traveller, or a space-traveller, in a zone that has its own characteristics, in it but perhaps not of it, in Peking in the 1930s and '40s to record, with the signally modem technique of photography, the riches of a world that has existed proudly and splendidly apart from modernity, technology and Western civilisation and which will now only survive, tragically, in the records of the outsider...for Hedda Morrison being a photographer In Old Peking was more than an idle hobby. It was her role, her vocation." Edward Stokes writes; 'For Hedda Hammer the craft of photography was uppermost, and through the pursuit of its demands her image making matured in China. Her style was marked by an intuitive sensibility to light; strong, often challenging vantage points; and fine, carefully balanced compositions. Equally important was her natural rapport with people...[with] a particular affinity to Chinese and other Asians.' Graham Johnson in reviewing Hedda Morrison's Hong Kong in Pacific Affairs remarks that "the photographs are magnificent, although generally a little romanticized...a sensitively produced record, interpretation and ethnographic memoir of a Chinese place with global significance at a time that few now remember. No one except Hedda Morrison had the time, the skills and the facility to make permanent the memory of a time and place that no longer exist In reference to Morrison's portrayal of people, John Townsend reviewing her book Sarawak praises her "loving and capable account of the peoples of that country, illustrated by the author's own admirable photographs." Recognition In 1955, through the Camera Press agency which was handling her work, Edward Steichen saw Morrison's flash-lit photograph of a festive Dayak group in indigenous dress laughing with a young man in a western-style shirt and wearing a watch. He chose it for the section 'Adult Play' in the world-touring Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Family of Man, seen by 9 million viewers. Subsequently, Morrison wrote two major books on Sarawak, Sarawak (1957) and Life in a Longhouse (1962). Legacy Exhibitions of her works have been mounted in Singapore, the United States, and in Australia by the Australian National University, Canberra, the Canberra Photographic Society, the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, and the National Library of Australia. Many of her images are archived in the Harvard-Yenching Library, Harvard University and at Cornell University, NY. There is a large collection of her German, Asian and Australian work in the Powerhouse Museum. Hedda died, after a sudden illness, in Canberra in 1991, at the age of 82, and was cremated in Norwood. She was survived by her husband Alastair (1915-2009). Jack Waterford in Morrison's obituary described her as "a perky sparrow with.a wonderful dry wit and a touch of wickedness [who] practiced her art to the last." Exhibitions 1940: Hedda Morrison's Chinese Photographs. Central Park, Peking, China. 1947: Hedda Morrison Chinese photographs, Chinese Institute, Gordon Square, London 1949, 15 July–11 September: : Photographs by Hedda Morrison, Brooklyn Museum, New York. 1954, July: Sarawak photographs by Hedda Morrison, Kingsway, London 1955: included in
student competition in 1931. While still a student her uncredited photographs were published in Walter de Sager's Making Pottery, which anticipate her interest in, and documentation of, handcraft construction in S. E. Asia. Hammer was apprenticed in during the Great Depression in the commercial studios of the technically exacting Adolf Lazi at Stuttgart 1931–2, though he could not employ her due to the economic strife, so gained further experience at the Olga Linckelmann Photographische Werkstätte, Hamburg in 1932. Though she was trained in the aesthetics of the New Objectivity of the period which promoted a formalist approach, her inclination was toward documentary ethnography; recording traditional German Volk costume in the setting of their rural environment in forty-four photographic negatives she preserved and catalogued "Trachtenfest, Stuttgart 1931". Her aesthetic, practiced throughout her career is a blending of these disciplines, the pictorial, the designed and the document. China 1933–1946 Not finding the political or economic situation in Germany to her liking, and encouraged by a horoscope advising she should undertake a long voyage, in 1933 Hammer took up a position in China to manage Hartung's Photo Shop, a German-owned commercial photographic studio at 3 Legation Street, in the old diplomatic quarter of the city then known as Beiping. She was in charge of seventeen local photographers and soon learned to speak passable Mandarin Chinese and a smattering of Cantonese, and in her spare time she made solo expeditions into parts of northern China. In August 1938, due the Japanese occupation of the city, Hartung's was unable to continue employing her. As a German (the country was an ally of Japan), and unlike other Europeans who were deported, Morrison enjoyed relative freedom and worked from home in Nanchang Street as a freelancer selling albums and single prints of views and of handicrafts to prosperous visiting tourists. Though the living was precarious, through fellow expatriates, she found work 1938–40 sourcing artefacts for a wealthy British dealer in Chinese arts and crafts, Caroline Frances Bieber in Beiheyan, who collected for the Brooklyn Museum in New York, and thus Morrison was able to continue her excursions through the country into the 1940s. Of her solo travels Morrison remarked that; "Chinese attitudes towards a solitary woman traveller could not have been more correct or helpful, and I met with courtesy wherever I went." With Bieber and writer Beatrice Kates, she assembled her 1937–8 documentations of household furniture for a project published in 1948. Her photographs of architecture and Chinese daily life made between 1933 and 1946, featured in a series of books, beginning with Alfred Hoffman's Nanking (1945) and her own Hua Shan (1974). They preserve the appearance of Peking before the depredations and destruction that began with the destruction of the city walls under Maoist rule. South-East Asia In 1941, Hammer met Alastair Morrison in Peking where he was born, son of the London Times correspondent in Peking, Australian George Ernest Morrison who reported on the Boxer Rebellion. While he was away in service she lived during the Pacific War in the house of a French diplomat. She married Morrison in 1946 and they left the unrest in China shortly afterwards, first for Hong Kong for six months and then to Sarawak, where Alastair became a government district officer during its turbulent cession to British Crown Colony (1946–61). During her 20-year stay in Sarawak, as well as making independent photographic expeditions which resulted in her books Sarawak (1957) and Life in a Longhouse (1962), from 1960–66 she photographed for the government Information Office, Kuching, and trained the department's photographers. Australia In 1967 the Morrisons moved to Australia and where they lived in Canberra, where she freelanced for the Australian Information Service. In 1990 the Canberra Photographic Society made her a life member. Photography During her time in Beijing Morrison took many photographs of the old city and its people, temples and markets and continued to record the environments and cultures of the countries in which she lived. Many of her subjects were disappearing as she photographed them; Chinese civilisation under Japanese occupation and before Communism; Hong Kong transitioning from the irreversible impact of WW2 on its traditional cultures; and the vanishing Ibans and their long houses in Sarawak. In her student years and for some of her Chinese work she used a Linhof Satzplasmat 9 x 12 cm sheet-film camera. Until she adopted colour in the 1950s, she made exclusively black and white photographs with her medium-format Rolleiflex and Rolleicord, with standard lenses, and carrying as extra equipment only a tripod and set of lens filters. She rarely used flash or added lighting, and then only using flash powder. She printed her own work and in Hong Kong she sold postcards of her views of city, mass-printed in her darkroom. In Sarawak, where the couple were without mains electricity, she had to power her enlarger lamp from car batteries, and she had improvise ways to protect her negatives from mould in the tropical humidity. Reception Michael Tomlinson reviewing in The Age Morrison's A Photographer in Old Peking notes its 'elegant architectural studies of temples and monasteries which have since been damaged or destroyed' and 'her great talent...for human interest studies...[from] a vanished world, alien and unfamiliar. And yet the faces peering out at us from the Peking market in the '30s are...human and appealing...' Claire Roberts considers that "through her photographs of architecture, streetscapes, craftsmen, street vendors and customs, Morrison creates her own image of China. By focusing on labour-intensive traditional crafts and skills, old buildings, religious sites and ancient rites and practices she chooses to record the life and look of 'Old Peking'. In much the same way that she chose to photograph the German folk festival, in China Morrison chose to focus on 'traditional' Chinese life and values rather than those of a 'modem', changing world. She was motivated to record aspects of a foreign culture that she felt was threatened by development. Anne Maxwell considers that Morrison's "two major books relating to her time in China...were aimed at capturing the 'Old Peking' that Westerners enjoyed reminiscing over, and they ignored the changing nature of the city, in...the poverty, civil unrest and social conflict that resulted from the Japanese occupation." Nicholas Jose counters that; "When she styled herself A Photographer in Old Peking (1985), Hedda Morrison... implies more than a literal interpretation of those words. She finds herself, like a time-traveller, or a space-traveller, in a zone that has its own characteristics, in it but perhaps not of it, in Peking in the 1930s and '40s to record, with the signally modem technique of photography, the riches of a world that has existed proudly and splendidly apart from modernity, technology and Western civilisation and which will now only survive, tragically, in the records of the outsider...for Hedda Morrison being a photographer In Old Peking was more than an idle hobby. It was her role, her vocation." Edward Stokes writes; 'For Hedda Hammer the craft of photography was uppermost, and through the pursuit of its demands her image making matured in China. Her style was marked by an intuitive sensibility to light; strong, often challenging vantage points; and
Tom is good at making paper airplanes.
Tom er god til at lave papirfly.
cartoon princess Raisa. Censors saw her as a satire on the First Lady of the Soviet Union Raisa Gorbacheva despite all characters were borrowed directly from the fairy tale of the same name by Boris Shergin. Around the same time Nazarov left Soyuzmultfilm, stating that it turned into "something between an isolation ward full of choking gas and a Cancer Ward". In 1988 he was awarded the Vasilyev Brothers State Prize of the RSFSR. Between 1987 and 1999 he served as a vice-president of ASIFA. During the 1990s he directed commercials and hosted a number of television shows dedicated to Russian and world animation. In 1991 he became a co-president of the KROK International Animated Films Festival, along with David Cherkassky. In 1993 he co-founded the SHAR animation school-studio along with Andrei Khrzhanovsky, Yuri Norstein and Fyodor Khitruk where he worked until his death. In 2004 Nazarov joined the Pilot Studio in their Mountain of Gems project, a grand government-backed TV series that combined efforts of many animators; between 2004 and 2015 they produced around seventy 13-minute shorts based on various traditional fairy tales of different Russian and former Soviet regions. In addition to art direction, Nazarov also co-wrote screenplays and did voice-overs to some of them. After the sudden death of Alexander Tatarsky in 2007 he turned into an artistic director of the studio. Nazarov suffered from diabetes for
Moscow institutes. Nazarov's ancestors came from the Bryansk Oblast and had a peasant background. He became engaged in painting since childhood and while in the 9th grade entered an art school where he got acquainted with Yuri Norstein, his close friend since. After three years in the Soviet Army Nazarov entered Stroganov Institute. Simultaneously he started working at Soyuzmultfilm in 1959 as an apprentice, self-educating, since he was too late for the animation courses. He worked as an artist-renderer, an art director's assistant under Mikhail Tsekhanovsky and as an art director under Fyodor Khitruk, most famously creating Winnie-the-Pooh for the Soviet adaptation of the fairy tale. Since 1973 he had been directing his own short films, often combining duties of an art director, screenwriter and voice actor. Once Upon a Dog is generally considered his most prominent work; it was awarded the First Prize at the 1983 Odense International Film Festival and a Special Jury Award at the 1983 Annecy International Animated Film Festival. During the 2012 Open Russian Festival of Animated Film ceremony dedicated to 100 years of national animation the film headed the "Golden Hundred" list of the best national animated films. It also appeared at the 65th place of the Top 150 Japanese and World Animation list at the 2003 Laputa Animation Festival in Tokyo. Between 1979 and 2000 Nazarov had been working at the High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors as an educator. He also illustrated various books and magazines. His last film Martynko (1987) was made during perestroika and banned for four years because Nazarov refused to change the name of the cartoon princess Raisa. Censors saw her as a satire on the First Lady of the Soviet Union Raisa Gorbacheva despite all characters were borrowed directly from the fairy tale of the same name by Boris Shergin. Around the same
Orthoploceae Tribe 12.
Orthoploceae Tribo 12.
by PAC’s dissident and motivational speaker Juan José Vargas, the party contested the 2006 general elections with Vargas as presidential candidate and former professional soccer player Evaristo Coronado
(Partido Patria Primero) was a political party in Costa Rica. Funded by PAC’s dissident and motivational speaker Juan José Vargas, the party contested the 2006 general elections with Vargas as presidential candidate and former professional soccer
6:26 Personnel Jeff Black – vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards, harmonica Byron House – bass David Jacques – double bass Michael Webb – bass Craig Wright – drums, percussion Production notes Jeff Black – producer, art direction, design Gary Paczosa – engineer ("To Be With You") Billy Sherrill – engineer, mixing Jim DeMain – mastering Michael Wilson –
that doesn't fall into the usual singer-songwriter clichés." Track listing All songs by Jeff Black "Slip" – 2:46 "Same Old River" – 5:05 "Holy Roller" – 2:44 "Sunday Best" – 5:06 "To Be With You" – 4:55 "Gold Heart Locket" – 4:05 "Cakewalk" – 5:44 "Bless My Soul" – 4:19 "Bastard" – 4:57 "Higher Ground" – 6:26 Personnel Jeff Black – vocals, guitar, piano, keyboards, harmonica Byron House – bass
Radical 44
Si-pō͘
Care for Blue Death Feigning Beetles
Blue death feigning beetles are beetles that are found in the South-Western United States. These beetles secrete a wax-like substance that protects them from the sun, and gives them their blue color.
The city council decided in favor of Zwingli and infant baptism, ordered the Grebel group to cease their activities, and ordered that any unbaptized infants must be submitted for baptism within 8 days.
O conselho da cidade decidiu em favor de Zwinglio e do batismo infatil, ordenou que o grupo de Grebel cessasse suas atividades e ordenou que qualquer bebê não batizado fosse submetido para o batismo no prazo de 8 dias.
biotite and garnet. Distribution of deposits Chromite is found as orthocumulate lenses in peridotite from the Earth's mantle. It also occurs in layered, ultramafic intrusive rocks. In addition, it is found in metamorphic rocks such as some serpentinites. Ore deposits of chromite form as early magmatic differentiates. It is commonly associated with olivine, magnetite, serpentine and corundum. The vast Bushveld Igneous Complex of South Africa is a large layered mafic to ultramafic igneous body with some layers consisting of 90% chromite, forming the rare rock type chromitite (cf. chromite the mineral and chromitite, a rock containing chromite). The Stillwater Igneous Complex in Montana also contains significant chromite. Chromite suitable for commercial mining is found in just a handful of very substantial deposits. There are 2 main types of chromite deposits: stratiform deposits and podiform deposits. Stratiform deposits in layered intrusions are the main source of chromite resources and are found in South Africa, Canada, Finland, and Madagascar. Chromite resources from podiform deposits are mainly found in Kazakhstan, Turkey, and Albania. Zimbabwe is the only country that contains notable chromite reserves in both stratiform and podiform deposits. Stratiform deposits Stratiform deposits are formed as large sheet-like bodies, usually formed in layered mafic to ultramafic igneous complexes. This type of deposit is used to obtain 98% of the worldwide chromite reserves. Stratiform deposits are typically seen to be of Precambrian in age and are found in cratons. The mafic to ultramafic igneous provinces that these deposits are formed in were likely intruded into continental crust, which may have contained granites or gneisses. The shapes of these intrusions are described as tabular or funnel-shaped. The tabular intrusions were placed in the form of sills with the layering of these intrusions being parallel. Examples of these tabular intrusions can be seen in the Stillwater Igneous Complex and Bird River. The funnel-shaped intrusions are seen to be dipping towards the center of the intrusion. This gives the layers in this intrusion a syncline formation. Examples of this type of intrusion can be seen in the Bushveld Igneous Complex and the Great Dyke. Chromite can be seen in stratiform deposits as multiple layers which consist of chromitite. Thicknesses for these layers range between 1 cm to 1 m. Lateral depths can reach lengths of 70 km. Chromitite is the main rock in these layers, with 50–95% of it being made of chromite and the rest being composed of olivine, orthopyroxene, plagioclase, clinopyroxene, and the various alteration products of these minerals. An indication of water in the magma is determined by the presence of brown mica. Podiform deposits Podiform deposits are seen to occur within the ophiolite sequences. The stratigraphy of the ophiolite sequence is deep-ocean sediments, pillow lavas, sheeted dykes, gabbros and ultramafic tectonites. These deposits are found in ultramafic rocks, most notably in tectonites. It can be seen that the abundance of podiform deposits increase towards the top of the tectonites. Podiform deposits are irregular in shape. "Pod" is a term given by geologists to express the uncertain morphology of this deposit. This deposit shows foliation that is parallel to the foliation of the host rock. Podiform deposits are described as discordant, subconcordant and concordant. Chromite in podiform deposits form as anhedral grains. The ores seen in this type of deposit have nodular texture and are loosely-packed nodules with a size range of 5–20 mm. Other minerals that are seen in podiform deposits are olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, pargasite, Na-mica, albite, and jadeite. Health and environmental impacts Chromium extracted from chromite is used on a large scale in many industries, including metallurgy, electroplating, paints, tanning, and paper production. Environmental contamination with hexavalent chromium is a major health and environmental concern. Chromium is most stable in its trivalent (Cr(III)) form, seen in stable compounds such as natural ores. Cr(III) is an essential nutrient, required for lipid and glucose metabolism in animals and humans. In contrast, the second most stable form, hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)), is generally produced through human activity and rarely seen in nature (as in crocoite), and is a highly toxic carcinogen that may kill animals and humans if ingested in large doses. Health effects When chromite ore is mined, it is aimed for the production of ferrochrome and produces a chromite concentrate of a high chromium to iron ratio. It can also be crushed and processed. Chromite concentrate, when combined with a reductant such as coal or coke and a high temperature furnace can produce ferrochrome. Ferrochrome is a type of ferroalloy that is an alloy in between chromium and iron. This ferroalloy, as well as chromite concentrate can introduce various health effects. Introducing a definitive control approach and distinct mitigation techniques can provide importance related to the safety of human health. When chromite ore is exposed to surface conditions, weathering and oxidation can occur. The element chromium is most abundant in chromite in the form of trivalent (Cr-III). When chromite ore is exposed to aboveground conditions, Cr-III can be converted to Cr-VI, which is the hexavalent state of chromium. Cr-VI is produced from Cr-III by means of dry milling or grinding of the ore. This is due to the moistness of the milling process as well as the atmosphere in which the milling is taking place. A wet environment and a non-oxygenated atmosphere are ideal conditions to produce less Cr-VI, while the opposite is known to create more Cr-VI. Production of Ferrochrome is observed to emit pollutants into the air such as nitrogen oxides, carbon oxides and sulfur oxides, as well as dust particulates with a high concentration of heavy metals such as chromium, zinc, lead, nickel and cadmium. During high temperature smelting of chromite ore to produce Ferrochrome, Cr-III is converted to Cr-VI. As with chromite ore, Ferrochrome is milled and therefore produces Cr-VI. Cr-VI is therefore introduced into the dust when the Ferrochrome is produced. This introduces health risks such as inhalation potential and leaching of toxins into the environment. Human exposure to chromium is ingestion, skin contact, and inhalation. Chromium-III and VI will accumulate in the tissues of humans and animals. The excretion of this type of chromium from the body tends to be very slow which means that elevated concentrations of chromium can be seen decades later in human tissues. Environmental effects Chromite mining, chromium, and ferrochome production can toxically effect the environment. Chromite mining is necessary when it comes to the production of economic commodities. As a result of leaching of soils and the explicit discharge from industrial activities, weathering of rocks that contain chromium will enter the water column. The route of chromium uptake in plants is still ambiguous, but because it is a nonessential element, chromium will not have a distinct mechanism for that uptake which is independent from chromium speciation. Plant
peridotite from the Earth's mantle. It also occurs in layered, ultramafic intrusive rocks. In addition, it is found in metamorphic rocks such as some serpentinites. Ore deposits of chromite form as early magmatic differentiates. It is commonly associated with olivine, magnetite, serpentine and corundum. The vast Bushveld Igneous Complex of South Africa is a large layered mafic to ultramafic igneous body with some layers consisting of 90% chromite, forming the rare rock type chromitite (cf. chromite the mineral and chromitite, a rock containing chromite). The Stillwater Igneous Complex in Montana also contains significant chromite. Chromite suitable for commercial mining is found in just a handful of very substantial deposits. There are 2 main types of chromite deposits: stratiform deposits and podiform deposits. Stratiform deposits in layered intrusions are the main source of chromite resources and are found in South Africa, Canada, Finland, and Madagascar. Chromite resources from podiform deposits are mainly found in Kazakhstan, Turkey, and Albania. Zimbabwe is the only country that contains notable chromite reserves in both stratiform and podiform deposits. Stratiform deposits Stratiform deposits are formed as large sheet-like bodies, usually formed in layered mafic to ultramafic igneous complexes. This type of deposit is used to obtain 98% of the worldwide chromite reserves. Stratiform deposits are typically seen to be of Precambrian in age and are found in cratons. The mafic to ultramafic igneous provinces that these deposits are formed in were likely intruded into continental crust, which may have contained granites or gneisses. The shapes of these intrusions are described as tabular or funnel-shaped. The tabular intrusions were placed in the form of sills with the layering of these intrusions being parallel. Examples of these tabular intrusions can be seen in the Stillwater Igneous Complex and Bird River. The funnel-shaped intrusions are seen to be dipping towards the center of the intrusion. This gives the layers in this intrusion a syncline formation. Examples of this type of intrusion can be seen in the Bushveld Igneous Complex and the Great Dyke. Chromite can be seen in stratiform deposits as multiple layers which consist of chromitite. Thicknesses for these layers range between 1 cm to 1 m. Lateral depths can reach lengths of 70 km. Chromitite is the main rock in these layers, with 50–95% of it being made of chromite and the rest being composed of olivine, orthopyroxene, plagioclase, clinopyroxene, and the various alteration products of these minerals. An indication of water in the magma is determined by the presence of brown mica. Podiform deposits Podiform deposits are seen to occur within the ophiolite sequences. The stratigraphy of the ophiolite sequence is deep-ocean sediments, pillow lavas, sheeted dykes, gabbros and ultramafic tectonites. These deposits are found in ultramafic rocks, most notably in tectonites. It can be seen that the abundance of podiform deposits increase towards the top of the tectonites. Podiform deposits are irregular in shape. "Pod" is a term given by geologists to express the uncertain morphology of this deposit. This deposit shows foliation that is parallel to the foliation of the host rock. Podiform deposits are described as discordant, subconcordant and concordant. Chromite in podiform deposits form as anhedral grains. The ores seen in this type of deposit have nodular texture and are loosely-packed nodules with a size range of 5–20 mm. Other minerals that are seen in podiform deposits are olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, pargasite, Na-mica, albite, and jadeite. Health and environmental impacts Chromium extracted from chromite is used on a large scale in many industries, including metallurgy, electroplating, paints, tanning, and paper production. Environmental contamination with hexavalent chromium is a major health and environmental concern. Chromium is most stable in its trivalent (Cr(III)) form, seen in stable compounds such as natural ores. Cr(III) is an essential nutrient, required for lipid and glucose metabolism in animals and humans. In contrast, the second most stable form, hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)), is generally produced through human activity and rarely seen in nature (as in crocoite), and is a highly toxic carcinogen that may kill animals and humans if ingested in large doses. Health effects When chromite ore is mined, it is aimed for the production of ferrochrome and produces a chromite concentrate of a high chromium to iron ratio. It can also be crushed and processed. Chromite concentrate, when combined with a reductant such as coal or coke and a high temperature furnace can produce ferrochrome. Ferrochrome is a type of ferroalloy that is an alloy in between chromium and iron. This ferroalloy, as well as chromite concentrate can introduce various health effects. Introducing a definitive control approach and distinct mitigation techniques can provide importance related to the safety of human health. When chromite ore is exposed to surface conditions, weathering and oxidation can occur. The element chromium is most abundant in chromite in the form of trivalent (Cr-III). When chromite ore is exposed to aboveground conditions, Cr-III can be converted to Cr-VI, which is the hexavalent state of chromium. Cr-VI is produced from Cr-III by means of dry milling or grinding of the ore. This is due to the moistness of the milling process as well as the atmosphere in which the milling is taking place. A wet environment and a non-oxygenated atmosphere are ideal conditions to produce less Cr-VI, while the opposite is known to create more Cr-VI. Production of Ferrochrome is observed to emit pollutants into the air such as nitrogen oxides, carbon oxides and sulfur oxides, as well as dust particulates with a high concentration of heavy metals such as chromium, zinc, lead, nickel and cadmium. During high temperature smelting of chromite ore to produce Ferrochrome, Cr-III is converted to Cr-VI. As with chromite ore, Ferrochrome is milled and therefore produces Cr-VI. Cr-VI is therefore introduced into the dust when the Ferrochrome is produced. This introduces health risks such as inhalation potential and leaching of toxins into the environment. Human exposure to chromium is ingestion, skin contact, and inhalation. Chromium-III and VI will accumulate in the tissues of humans and animals. The excretion of this type of chromium from the body tends to be
In the mid 1890s, the Takaka Tramway Company came into financial problems due to the decline of the timber industry.
Mitte der 1890er Jahre geriet die Takata Tramway Company wegen des Rückgangs der Holzindustrie in finanzielle Schwierigkeiten.
Reddon started playing hockey in 1976 with the Mississauga Girls Hockey League.
Reddon comezou a xogar ao hóckey en 1976 na liga de hóckey para rapazas de Mississauga.
are bumble bee snails reef safe?
They're called bumble bee snails because of their yellow and black striped look. They are reef safe. Bumble bee snails will not eat coral,that is why they say they are reef safe. However they will eat worms that would clean your sand bed if you have a DSB you would not want to add them.
what is the difference between a sinus infection and a cold?
Good question! Sinus Infections are caused by bacteria infecting some empty spaces in your head called sinuses. There function is debatable but can get clogged with mucos and if bacteria are in there they can multiply and cause a block and build with fluid and cause an infection. They can be treated with Antibiotics. Colds are usually caused by a virus that infects your respiratory system and you have to just wait for your body to fight it off. THere are very few drugs for viruses.
The ‘Petit Trianon’ is a small chateau located in the grounds of which palace?
Petit Trianon | OpenBuildings Petit Trianon Our community will shoot love rays from their eyes. Ontotext edited this building last References Wikipedia , licensed under the GFDL Suggestions The Petit Trianon is a small château located on the grounds of the Palace of Versailles in Versailles, France. Design and construction It was designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel by the order of Louis XV for his long-term mistress, Madame de Pompadour, and was constructed between 1762-1768. Madame de Pompadour died four years before its completion, and it was subsequently occupied by her successor, Madame du Barry. Upon his accession to the throne in 1774, the 20-year-old Louis XVI gave the château and its surrounding park to his 19-year-old Queen Marie Antoinette for her exclusive use and enjoyment. The château of the Petit Trianon is a celebrated example of the transition from the Rococo style of the earlier part of the 18th century, to the more sober and refined, Neoclassical style of the 1760s and onward. The exterior of the château is simple and elegant, architecturally correct, and highly original. Essentially an exercise on a cube, the Petit Trianon attracts interest by virtue of its four facades, each thoughtfully designed according to that part of the estate it would face. The Corinthian order predominates, with two detached and two semi-detached pillars on the side of the formal French garden, and pilasters facing both the courtyard and the area once occupied by Louis XV's greenhouses. Overlooking the former botanical garden of the king, the remaining facade was left bare. The subtle use of steps compensates for the differences in level of the château's inclined location. Marie Antoinette would come to the Petit Trianon not only to escape the formality of court life, but also to shake off the burden of her royal responsibilities. Since all was "de par la Reine" (by order of the Queen), none were permitted to enter the property without the Queen's express permission (not even, it was said, Louis XVI). Such exclusivity alienated the court nobility since only the queen's "inner circle" (including the Princess de Lamballe, and Gabrielle de Polastron, duchesse de Polignac) were invited. A house of intimacy and of pleasure, the building was designed to require as little interaction between guests and servants as possible. To that end, the table in the salles à manger was conceived to be mobile, mechanically lowered and raised through the floorboards so that the servants below could set places sight unseen. The tables were never built, but the delineation for the mechanical apparatus can still be seen from the foundation. Within the queen's apartment, one discerns Marie Antoinette's incessant need for privacy: the decor of her boudoir displays an inventiveness unique to the age, featuring mirrored panels that, by the simple turning of a crank, can be raised or lowered to obscure the windows. Her bedroom, although simple, is also elegant, provided with furniture from Georges Jacob and Jean Henri Riesener. The wallpaper was painted by Jean-Baptiste Pillement. Moberly-Jourdain incident The Moberly-Jourdain incident is alleged to have occurred on August 10, 1901 in the gardens of the Petit Trianon. In 1911, two English academics, Charlotte Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jourdain, pseudonymously published a book entitled An Adventure, in which they claimed to have experienced a time slip during a visit to the Petit Trianon, and seen Marie Antoinette as well as many other people of the same period. The book caused a sensation with the public despite dismissal by critics. about 5 years ago via OpenBuildings.com removed 2 media
This species was among the first flat-stemmed species to be described, and the name recalls that it is similar to the first described flat-stemmed cactus Cactus phyllanthus today - Epiphyllum phyllanthus.
Esta especie fue uno de las primeras especies can tallos planos que se describen y recuerda que el nombre es similar a la descrita por primera vez ; Cactus phyllanthus hoy - Epiphyllum phyllanthus.
what was the first form of government of the United State under George Washington?
Washington served as President under the Constitution.
Colwood, British Columbia
Colwood (Kanada)
Because of that the movie had to be shortened 3.5 minutes before it was finally accepted for distribution October 29, 1986 with the Supreme Court decision.
Elokuvan yli 3,5 minuuttia leikattu versio hyväksyttiin esitettäväksi vasta Korkeimman hallinto-oikeuden päätöksellä 29. lokakuuta 1986.
Tupi, South Cotabato
Tupi, Timog Cotabato
One of the accused claimed to be 15 years old, though a medical examination later suggested he was 19.
Outro dos acusados alegou possuir 15 anos de idade, apesar de um exame médico mais tarde sugerir que ele teria 19 anos.
what causes a computer to crash?
Anything from Viruses, to Overheating, Being used by the Wrong User (this is the main problem of all computer crashes),,ESD,, etc....
And unfortunately, the sound they've settled on is parked firmly in the middle of the road."
E, infelizmente, o som que eles estabeleceram está estacionado firmemente no meio da estrada".
to the following places in Poland: Baranówka, Lublin Voivodeship (east Poland) Baranówka, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south Poland) Baranówka,
may refer to the following places in Poland: Baranówka, Lublin Voivodeship (east Poland) Baranówka, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south
is osteopathy same as chiropractor?
Chiropractors tend to be specifically focussed on treating muscle and joint pains, with a focus on adjustments to the vertebrae of the spine. Osteopaths aim to treat the body as a whole, looking at the structure of the body and the interdependence throughout the body.
In the morning, the attack by elements of the 10th Battalion stalled until the battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel Julije Reš, personally took command of the operation, clearing the way for the Italians.
Por la mañana, el ataque perpetrado por elementos del 10.º batallón quedó en punto muerto hasta que su comandante, el teniente coronel Julije Reš, se hizo cargo personalmente de la operación y consiguió despejar el camino para los italianos.
salary for veterinarians
The average salary for an animal doctor is $86,640 per year. The average Veterinarian Salary is calculated by the US Government Bureau of Labor Statistics from a variety of sources. Veterinarians work in a number of settings including hospitals, clinics and other settings. Veterinarians salary will vary depending on the location and the setting. Area of specialization also plays a part in how much they earn. The assumption was made that the Veterinarians reflected here were working an average of 40 hours per week with a total of 2080 hours per year. Median Hourly & Annual Data.
Be a Vegetarian During School Lunch
Lots of people are vegetarian, and in most cases your school will provide a vegetarian option each day for students. This vegetarian option might be easy to find, nicely varied and tasty to eat, but then again it might not.
You're not going to eat that, are you?
Onu yemeyeceksin, değil mi?
Such differences include the ability to generate calculations, to combine dissimilar concepts, to use mental symbols, and to think abstractly.
De telles différences incluent la capacité de générer des calculs, de combiner des concepts différents, d'utiliser des symboles mentaux, et de penser abstraitement.
can dolo be taken on empty stomach?
Take this medication by mouth as directed by your doctor. You may take this drug with or without food. If you have nausea, it may help to take this drug with food. Ask your doctor or pharmacist about other ways to decrease nausea (such as lying down for 1 to 2 hours with as little head movement as possible).
Pausanias tells a somewhat different story.
Pausanias kể một câu chuyện hơi khác nhau.
Aires, Argentina) is an Argentinian political activist, and writer. Biography Petroni was a leader of the Morenoist tendency of Latin American Trotskyism from 1973 to 1988 and was a close collaborator of the founder of this movement, Nahuel Moreno. Petroni has contributed to, edited or published more than 30 political newspapers, magazines and websites around the world and is the author of half a dozen books on politics, Marxist theory and political organizing. He is also known at times by some of his pen names: Leon Perez, Nicholas Kramer, and Simon Morales. Petroni was a founder of and/or leading participant in numerous Trotskyist groups in Latin America, Europe and the United States, he has extensive organizing skills and experience in working class struggles. Petroni was a member and leader of the Argentine Partido Socialista de los Trabajadores (PST) from 1973 to 1976, and during the beginning of the military dictatorship was part of its underground continuation. As an elected leader of unions representing printers, metal workers, meatpackers, social workers and others, he led strikes, organized unions and support, ran for public office and was involved in various working class struggles for almost four decades. Petroni went into exile in 1978. From 1978 to 1985 he was responsible for the North, Caribbean and Central American Secretariat of the Morenoist tendency. He participated in the Nicaraguan and Salvadoran Revolutions in the late 70s, helped found the Nicaraguan section of the IWL, helped develop other Central American organizations and the Mexican section of the Morenoists. He was a delegate and member of the Presidium of the Morenoist international tendency in its different stages: Bolshevik Tendency of the Fourth International (1976–1980), Fourth International (International Committee) (1981) and International Workers League (Fourth International)—Liga Internacional de los Trabajadores (Cuarta Internacional or LIT-CI) from 1981 to 1988. After the collapse of the military dictatorship he travelled extensively around the Americas and Europe then became a leader of the Movement for Socialism (Argentina), from 1985-1988. Prior to that he (as well as Nahuel Moreno) worked as a member of the International Committee of the LIT-CI and its International Secretariat from 1982 until the death of Moreno in 1986. He was also a founding member of its US section, eventually called the Internationalist
on Matt Gonzalez's campaign for mayor in 2003, and has been very active in the San Francisco elections. For example, he ran for the Board of Supervisors in 1998 obtaining 16,293 votes (2%). In 2001 he ran for City Treasurer and obtained 13% of the votes. In 2000, he wrote and managed Proposition F, considered a historical reparation Act for African American City residents, which obtained more than 45% of the vote. He ran for different offices from the mid-1990s until he returned to Argentina after the 2004 election. He also supported, organized and managed other campaigns and significant local ballot initiatives. Currently he is editing the online and print versions of Izquierda.info. Trial As a result of his trade union and political work in Argentina, he was the target of three assassination attempts during 1974 and 1975 by death squads organized by the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A). The Triple A operated under the protection and support of Peronist governments from 1973-1976. Many members of the Triple A collaborated with the military dictatorship after 1976. In 2006, Argentine Judge Norberto Oyarbide ruled the Triple A had committed "crimes against humanity," which meant their crimes were exempt from statutes of limitations. Suspects can be prosecuted for actions committed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Petroni has emerged as an official witness in this trial. Petroni has introduced into the
Are the Q affected by widespread changes in the timeline?
Does only one John de Lancie Q exist in the multiverse?
collegiately in the United States for the University of Arkansas Razorbacks. In 2012, he won the long jump in the Southeastern Conference Outdoor Championships and finished third at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. References External links Bahamian high jump record progression (run123.one) 1991 births Living people Bahamian male long jumpers Olympic athletes of
(track and field) at the 2012 Summer Olympics Commonwealth Games competitors for the Bahamas Athletes (track and field) at the 2014 Commonwealth Games World Athletics Championships athletes for the Bahamas People from Freeport, Bahamas Arkansas Razorbacks men's track and field athletes Athletes (track and field) at the 2015 Pan American Games Pan American Games competitors for the Bahamas
Hu Die had to purchase space on Shen Bao, Shanghai's biggest newspaper, to dispel the rumour, which she believed was started by the Japanese media in order to discredit Zhang Xueliang.
Hu Die dovette acquistare uno spazio sul Shen Bao, il più grande giornale di Shanghai, per dissipare la voce, dicendo che credeva essere una diceria lanciata dai media giapponesi, al fine di screditare Zhang Xueliang.
guitar at the age of twelve and was influenced at an early age by the folk, blues and jug band traditions. He began performing with his older brother Chris Whiteley and in 1965 they, along with clarinettist Tom Evens, formed the Original Sloth Band. The trio recorded three albums and appeared at numerous folk festivals, including Mariposa, the Winnipeg Folk Festival and the Vancouver Folk Festival. Whiteley became a Life Member of the Toronto Musicians' Association, Local 149 of the American Federation of Musicians, in May 2017. References Canadian folk singer-songwriters 1951 births Canadian children's musicians Living people Canadian
Festival Hall of Fame in 2008. Early life and career Whiteley was born in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania to Canadian parents. They moved to Toronto when Whiteley was five years old. He began to play guitar at the age of twelve and was influenced at an early age by the folk, blues and jug band traditions. He began performing with his older brother Chris Whiteley and in
how many bombs were dropped in ww2 on london?
Some 30,000 tonnes of bombs were dropped overall and more than 40,000 people killed. After 1941 and the end of the Blitz the Luftwaffe still made air raids on the UK, especially over the south east.
retirement
pension
The Wanderers (1956 film)
I girovaghi
eastern shore of Lake George; while the Washington-Warren county line largely follows the shoreline, placing most of the community in Washington County, a small
while the Washington-Warren county line largely follows the shoreline, placing most of the community in Washington County, a small portion lies on the Warren County side. References Hamlets in Washington County,
during the period before and after the American Civil War, particularly aboard steamboats on the Mississippi River. According to Mark Twain in his autobiography, "Mud clerks received no salary, but they were in the line of promotion. They could
things as running errands for the officers of the steamboat, carrying messages around the ship, and fetching food or beverages. As the name itself implies, mud clerks would often be given the dirtiest jobs
is avg still good 2018?
To specify, AV-Test has an excellent review of AVG. Its package Internet Security is one of the top leaders, scoring 6 on security and 5 on performance, and 5.5 on usability. The recent review set AVG on the 3rd place among all antivirus programs. SE Labs reviews the AVG's home anti-malware protection capacity.
the 1984 Summer Olympics and the 1988 Summer Olympics. References External links 1955 births 2020 deaths Athletes from Wellington City Athletes (track and field) at
and the 1988 Summer Olympics. References External links 1955 births 2020 deaths Athletes from Wellington City Athletes (track
My Space Question question... ?
You only have to use safe mode if your page isn't displaying properly because of incorrect coding on the page.
September 22, 1777) was an early Anglo-American colonial botanist, horticulturist, and explorer, based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for most of his career. Swedish botanist and taxonomist Carl Linnaeus said he was the "greatest natural botanist in the world." Bartram corresponded with and shared North American plants and seeds with a variety of scientists in England and Europe. He started what is known as Bartram's Garden in 1728 at his farm in Kingsessing (now part of Philadelphia). It was considered the first botanic garden in the United States. His sons and descendants operated it until 1850. Still operating in a partnership between the city of Philadelphia and a non-profit foundation, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960. Early life Bartram was born into a Quaker farm family in colonial Darby, Pennsylvania near Philadelphia, on March 23, 1699. He considered himself a plain farmer, with no formal education beyond the local school. He had a lifelong interest in medicine and medicinal plants, and read widely. He started his botanical career by devoting a small area of his farm to growing plants he found interesting. Later, he made contact with European botanists and gardeners interested in North American plants, and developed his hobby into a thriving business. Plant collecting activities Bartram began to travel extensively in the eastern American colonies in order to study and collect plants. In 1743, he visited western parts of New York and the northern shores of Lake Ontario, and wrote Observations on the Inhabitants, Climate, Soil, Rivers, Productions, Animals, and other Matters Worthy of Notice, made by Mr. John Bartram in his Travels from Pennsylvania to Onondaga, Oswego, and the Lake Ontario, in Canada (London, 1751). During the winter of 1765/66, he visited East Florida in the south, which was a British colony, and published an account of this trip with his journal (London, 1766). He also visited areas along the Ohio River west of the Appalachian Mountains. Many of his plant acquisitions were shipped to collectors in Europe. In return, they supplied him with books and apparatus. Bartram, sometimes called the "father of American botany", was one of the first practicing Linnaean botanists in North America. He forwarded plant specimens to Carl Linnaeus, Dillenius, and Gronovius. He also assisted Linnaeus's student Pehr Kalm during his extended collecting trip to North America in 1748–1750. Bartram was aided in his collecting efforts by other British colonists. In Bartram's Diary of a Journey through the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida, a trip taken from July 1, 1765, to April 10, 1766, Bartram wrote of specimens he had collected. In the colony of British East Florida, he was helped by Dr. David Yeats, secretary of the colony. About 1728 he established an botanic garden in Kingsessing, on the west bank of the Schuylkill, about 3 miles (5 km) from the center of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Known as Bartram's Garden, it is frequently cited as the first true botanic collection in North America. It was designated in 1960 as a National Historic Landmark. In 1743 Bartram was one of the co-founders, along with Benjamin Franklin, of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. It supported scientific studies as well as philosophy. Contact with other botanists Bartram was particularly instrumental in sending seeds from the New World to European gardeners; many North American trees and flowers were first introduced into cultivation in Europe by this route. Beginning around 1733, Bartram's work was assisted by his association with the English merchant Peter Collinson. Collinson, also a lover of plants, was a fellow Quaker and a member of the Royal Society, with a familiar relationship with its president, Sir Hans Sloane. Collinson shared Bartram's new plants with friends and fellow gardeners. Early Bartram collections went to Lord Petre, Philip Miller at the Chelsea Physic Garden, Mark Catesby, the Duke of Richmond, and the Duke of Norfolk. In the 1730s, Robert James Petre, 8th Baron Petre of Thorndon Hall, Essex,
States. His sons and descendants operated it until 1850. Still operating in a partnership between the city of Philadelphia and a non-profit foundation, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960. Early life Bartram was born into a Quaker farm family in colonial Darby, Pennsylvania near Philadelphia, on March 23, 1699. He considered himself a plain farmer, with no formal education beyond the local school. He had a lifelong interest in medicine and medicinal plants, and read widely. He started his botanical career by devoting a small area of his farm to growing plants he found interesting. Later, he made contact with European botanists and gardeners interested in North American plants, and developed his hobby into a thriving business. Plant collecting activities Bartram began to travel extensively in the eastern American colonies in order to study and collect plants. In 1743, he visited western parts of New York and the northern shores of Lake Ontario, and wrote Observations on the Inhabitants, Climate, Soil, Rivers, Productions, Animals, and other Matters Worthy of Notice, made by Mr. John Bartram in his Travels from Pennsylvania to Onondaga, Oswego, and the Lake Ontario, in Canada (London, 1751). During the winter of 1765/66, he visited East Florida in the south, which was a British colony, and published an account of this trip with his journal (London, 1766). He also visited areas along the Ohio River west of the Appalachian Mountains. Many of his plant acquisitions were shipped to collectors in Europe. In return, they supplied him with books and apparatus. Bartram, sometimes called the "father of American botany", was one of the first practicing Linnaean botanists in North America. He forwarded plant specimens to Carl Linnaeus, Dillenius, and Gronovius. He also assisted Linnaeus's student Pehr Kalm during his extended collecting trip to North America in 1748–1750. Bartram was aided in his collecting efforts by other British colonists. In Bartram's Diary of a Journey through the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida, a trip taken from July 1, 1765, to April 10, 1766, Bartram wrote of specimens he had collected. In the colony of British East Florida, he was helped by Dr. David Yeats, secretary of the colony. About 1728 he established an botanic garden in Kingsessing, on the west bank of the Schuylkill, about 3 miles (5 km) from the center of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Known as Bartram's Garden, it is frequently cited as the first true botanic collection in North America. It was designated in 1960 as a National Historic Landmark. In 1743 Bartram was one of the co-founders, along with Benjamin Franklin, of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. It supported scientific studies as well as philosophy. Contact with other botanists Bartram was particularly instrumental in sending seeds from the New World to European gardeners; many North American trees and flowers were first introduced into cultivation in Europe by this route. Beginning around 1733, Bartram's work was assisted by his association with the English merchant Peter Collinson. Collinson, also a lover of plants, was a fellow Quaker and a member of the Royal Society, with a familiar relationship with its president, Sir Hans Sloane. Collinson shared Bartram's new plants with friends and fellow gardeners. Early Bartram collections went to Lord Petre, Philip Miller at the Chelsea Physic Garden, Mark Catesby, the Duke of Richmond, and the Duke of Norfolk. In the 1730s, Robert James Petre, 8th Baron Petre of Thorndon Hall, Essex, was the foremost collector in Europe of North American trees and shrubs. Earl Petre's death in 1743 resulted in his American tree collection being auctioned off to Woburn, Goodwood, and other large English country estates. Thereafter, Collinson became Bartram's chief London agent. "Bartram's
match for Kent County Cricket Club in 1876. He was born at Southfleet in Kent and died at Dartford, also in Kent. Keeble appeared as an umpire in matches in 1874, including the Gentlemen v Players game, one of the fixtures
was an English cricketer who played first-class cricket in a single match for Kent County Cricket Club in 1876. He was born at Southfleet in Kent and died at Dartford, also in Kent. Keeble appeared as an umpire in matches in 1874, including the Gentlemen v Players game,
the town of Deep River and to the southwest largely by the Connecticut Route 9 freeway. As of the 2010 census, Chester Center had a population of 1,558, out
County, Connecticut, United States. It is in the southeast corner of the town, bordered to the south by the town of Deep River and
Twins were kings of the East End criminal underworld during the 1960s . Collection expected to attract keen interest from memorabilia hunters . Items range from luxurious to strange - and includes artwork by the Krays .
By . Sam Adams . PUBLISHED: . 10:22 EST, 2 May 2013 . | . UPDATED: . 16:08 EST, 2 May 2013 . Before they carried pistols and knives, the Krays were kept entertained through less sinister means. Dominoes, a train set and an accordion are among some of the old-fashioned children's toys which once belonged to the notorious gangster brothers, set to go under the hammer later this week. The unusual collection, which even also a set of Royal Doulton bunnykin figurines, is expected to attract keen interest from Krays enthusiasts at the Greenwich Auctions Partnership in London. Toys: Among the collection of items belonging to the Kray twins going up for auction this weekend is a model train set . Musical: This Spanish-style guitar and an electric guitar are also on offer to Kray memorabilia hunters . Auction: This dominoes set, owned by Ronnie Kray, still has its Wandsworth Prison release ticket . Feared: Reggie and Ronnie Kray in 1965. The twins were kings of the East End criminal underworld during the 1960s . The items, which range from the luxurious to the strange, are expected to attract keen interest. The collection displays the twins' interests outside of their criminal activities, and may come as a surprise to some. China figurines, antique furniture, a medal, artwork and even toys are part of the sale. The historical value of the items is huge, although the list prices for the auction are within reach for many buyers. Reggie Kray's acoustic Spanish-style guitar with its original prison release label is estimated to fetch between £40 and £50, while his badminton racket, which also has its prison release label, is listed at £20 to £30. A backgammon set which also belonged to Reggie Kray is in the auction priced at between £30 to £40, while Ronnie Kray's Bible is expected to go for between £25 and £30. Strange: These Royal Doulton rabbit figurines are also among the collection going under the hammer . Religion: A Bible belonging to Ronnie Kray and an ornate clock are to go under the hammer . Coffee: A china coffee set is also among the items on offer for those wanting to get their hands on a piece of Kray memorabilia . Collectable: This strange china figurine of a boy in a car with a dog will be seen by some as a piece of East End history . Games: This chess set is one of several board games and toys among the eclectic mix of items . Other items owned by the Kray twins on sale at the auction include an Edwardian leather ladies' purse, estimated at £10 to £15, a mahogany double wardrobe for £350 to £400 and a leather-bound brass naval telescope for £20-£30. An electric guitar, 14-piece coffee set, draughts . set, racing bike, gent's watch, fur coats, Dinky toy cars, Reggie Kray's . badminton trophies from prison and various pieces of furniture are also on offer. A spokesman for the auction house said today the . items were 'from a private collection,' owned and used by . Ronnie Kray'. The Krays achieved notoriety in the 1960s due to their ownership of West End nightclubs and criminal activities. They mixed with many actors and musicians of the day, including Diana Dors, Frank Sinatra and Judy Garland. The darker side of the Krays' life was their involvement, through their gang, in armed robberies, arson and protection rackets and murder . Sale: These toy model race cars are still in their boxes in perfect condition. The collection contains a number of toy vehicles . Art: Various paintings and other artwork are among the collection, including pieces painted by the Krays themselves . Attraction: This medal and brooch are expected to catch the eye of those attending the auction . Good condition: Another part of the train set , still in its box with the tracks, engines and the control box . Antique: The items include some impressive pieces of antique furniture, including this Victorian-style seat . Kitchenware: Cooking pots and a frying pan are among the less expected items up for grabs in the sale . The darker side of the Krays' life was . their involvement, through their gang, in armed robberies, arson and . protection rackets and murder. They were arrested on May 9, 1968 and . convicted in 1969. Ronnie Kray remained in Broadmoor Hospital until his . death in 1995, while Reggie was released from prison just before his . death from cancer in 2000. Reggie's death attracted hundreds of mourners from throughout the East End, including current members of the criminal underworld. Ornate: This decorative mirror should catch a few eyes among buyers. At their peak the twins built up significant wealth from their criminal activities . Eye catching: A pack of playing cards still in their ornate packaging is in the sale. All of the items have their own historical importance . Music: Among the musical instruments belonging to the Krays in the collection was this old accordion . Exercise: This racing bike, belonging to one of the notorious gangsters is also for sale . Aged: Another item of interest to collectors is likely to be this radio belonging to the Krays. It has signs of wear and tear, but that will not put off buyers .
why is golf so frustrating?
The main reason is it's hard, most people don't get to play enough so they pick up bad habbits. Then when you do your part there is so many other things that can happen. examples\nHit that small branch\nbad lie\nbad kick\nball mark on the green \nweather
in non-experimental impact evaluation methods (causal inference) by making it more accessible to practitioners. He is also known as the organizer of a 5k running race at the annual meetings of the American Economic Association. He holds a B.A. in Literature from the University of Tennessee and a PhD in Economics from the University of Georgia. Research Cunningham's research examines prostitution markets, foster care, abortion, mental health, and drug policy. He has found that the accidental legalization of prostitution in Rhode Island between 2003 and 2009 increased the size of that market, but reduced sexual violence against women and the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases. He has also found the sudden closure of abortion clinics in Texas in 2013 resulted in a decline in the number of abortions linked to an increase in distances to open clinics. Selected works Cunningham, Scott. Causal Inference: The Mixtape. Yale University Press, 2021. Cunningham, Scott, and Todd D.
non-experimental impact evaluation methods (causal inference) by making it more accessible to practitioners. He is also known as the organizer of a 5k running race at the annual meetings of the American Economic Association. He holds a B.A. in Literature from the University of Tennessee and a PhD in Economics from the University of Georgia. Research Cunningham's research examines prostitution markets, foster care, abortion, mental health, and drug policy. He has found that the accidental legalization of prostitution in Rhode Island between 2003 and 2009 increased the size of that market, but reduced sexual violence against women and the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases. He has also found the sudden closure of abortion clinics in Texas in 2013 resulted in a decline in the number of abortions linked to an increase in distances to open clinics. Selected works Cunningham, Scott. Causal
It is also available for the PlayStation 2 & PlayStation Portable, though its competition comes in the form of MLB 06: The Show from Sony Computer Entertainment's San Diego Studio.
Den är också tillgänglig för PlayStation 2, men konkurrensen kommer i form av MLB 06: The Show från Sony Computer Entertainment's San Diego Studio.
(the Wife), Pamela Nyberg (the Daughter), Michael Learned (the Mistress), William Biff McGuire (the Doctor), John Christopher Jones (the Son), John Carter (the Best Friend), and Myra Carter (the Nurse). Plot A wife and mistress are waiting for the death of the man they both love. Their great love is a man who is wealthy and famous. The wife and mistress form an alliance in a ritual of the death watch. Critical response Clive Barnes, in his review for The New York Times wrote "It is a lovely, poignant and deeply felt play. In no way at all is it an easy play -- this formal minuet of death, this symphony ironically celebrating death's dominion. It is not easy in its structure, a series of almost operatic arias demanding, in their precision, pin-point concentration from the audience, and it is certainly not easy in its subject matter." Walter Kerr wrote that "The exercise at the Martin Beck is extraordinarily remote, detached, noncommittal. Its people seem to be waiting in a railroad station for the last train out, unaware that it has long since departed and the station itself is simply gathering dust and echoes while it waits to be torn
by Peter Hall, the production starred Peggy Ashcroft (The Wife), Angela Lansbury (The Mistress),Sheila Hancock (The Daughter), Patience Collier (The Nurse), David Waller (the Son), and Sebastian Shaw (Best Friend). Regionally, the play received a strong revival at the Hartford Stage Company (Hartford, CT), as part of its 1975-1976 season. Paul Weidner's production starred Anne Shropshire (the Wife), Myra Carter (the Mistress), Anne Lynn (the Daughter), William Prince (the Best Friend), Pirie MacDonald (the Son), Margaret Thomson (the Nurse), and David O. Petersen (the Doctor). The production was subsequently filmed for television, presented by PBS Great Performances, and aired on 28 April 1976 on WNET Channel 13 in New York. The DVD is available through the Broadway Theatre Archive series. In February 2002, the play was again revived at the McCarter Theatre, Princeton, New Jersey. Directed by Emily Mann, the cast featured Rosemary Harris (the Wife), Pamela Nyberg (the Daughter), Michael Learned (the Mistress), William Biff McGuire (the Doctor), John Christopher Jones (the Son), John Carter (the Best Friend), and Myra Carter (the Nurse). Plot A wife and mistress are waiting for the death of the man they both love. Their great love is a man who is wealthy and famous. The wife and mistress form an alliance in a ritual of the death watch. Critical response Clive Barnes, in his review for The New York Times wrote "It is a lovely, poignant and deeply felt play. In no way at all is it
After Narita saw The Untouchables, he spent about ten days working with inspirations and created Baccano! "out of useless calculations."
Sau khi Narita xem phim The Untouchables, anh bỏ ra mười ngày làm việc để hiện thực hóa nguồn cảm hứng đó và sáng tác Baccano! "bằng những tính toán vô dụng ."
The reform was approved by the Senate in December 1888 and entered into force in February 1889.
Diese Reform wurde vom Senat im Dezember 1888 genehmigt und trat im Februar Jahre 1889 in Kraft.
Nikos Sofialakis was born in Erfous, Rethymnon, Crete, Greece in 1914 and died in Athens, Greece in 2002.
Nikos Sofialakis nació en Erfous, Rethymnon, Creta, Grecia en 1914 y murió en Atenas, Grecia en 2002.
who are bain capital investors?
Bain Capital (stylized as BainCapital) is an American private investment firm based in Boston, Massachusetts. It specializes in private equity, venture capital, credit, public equity, impact investing, life sciences, and real estate. Bain Capital invests across a range of industry sectors and geographic regions.
is ohtsu a good tire?
Ohtsu Tires is a sub-brand of Falken, which in turn is a subsidiary of Sumitomo Tires. ... Tires manufactured by Ohtsu are considered as good designs which offer comfortable driving, along with responsive steering. This is a brand which manufactures a variety of tires specifically for the budget range.
"I Need Feminism – Young Research Scholar Spearheads International Movement In Delhi".
Consultado el 12 de mayo de 2014.  «I Need Feminism – Young Research Scholar Spearheads International Movement In Delhi».
by Felix Bryk in 1953. It is found in the Amazon region. References Moths described
by Felix Bryk in 1953. It is found in the Amazon region. References Moths
ruled at the end of the 1st Dynasty, the latter part of 2nd Dynasty or during the 3rd Dynasty. Neither the exact length of his reign nor his chronological position is known. Name sources The only sure name sources for a king "Ba" are a fragment of green schist, found in the underground galleries beneath the Pyramid of Djoser at Sakkara, and the (6th Dynasty) mastaba tomb of the high official Ny-Ankh-Ba. Identity Very little is known about king Ba. The few archaeological evidences only assure the existence of such a ruler, but they give no further information. In 1899 the scientist Alessandro Ricci published a drawing of a serekh with a single leg (Gardiner-sign D58) as hieroglyph inside. The picture was seen in Volume No. 35 of the Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde series. According to Ricci the serekh was found in a rock inscription at Wadi Maghareh, Sinai. The Egyptologists Jaroslav Černý and Michel Baude found out, that Ricci was referring to the rock inscription of the 3rd Dynasty king Sanakht. Ricci simply had misinterpreted the signs used for Sanakht's name – an upright sign of a rope loop, the zig-zag shaped sign for water and a branch-sign below – as a single leg-symbol. Egyptologists such as Černý
length of his reign nor his chronological position is known. Name sources The only sure name sources for a king "Ba" are a fragment of green schist, found in the underground galleries beneath the Pyramid of Djoser at Sakkara, and the (6th Dynasty) mastaba tomb of the high official Ny-Ankh-Ba. Identity Very little is known about king Ba. The few archaeological evidences only assure the existence of such a ruler, but they give no further information. In 1899 the scientist Alessandro Ricci published a drawing of a serekh with a single leg (Gardiner-sign D58) as hieroglyph inside. The picture was seen in Volume No. 35 of the Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde series. According to Ricci the serekh was found in a rock inscription at Wadi Maghareh, Sinai. The Egyptologists Jaroslav Černý and Michel Baude found out, that Ricci was referring to the rock inscription of the 3rd Dynasty king Sanakht. Ricci simply had misinterpreted the signs used for Sanakht's name – an upright sign of a rope loop,
Polish architect and engineer . Early life Marta Bińkowska was born on 8 September 1921 in Lviv. She graduated from the Queen Jadwiga Gymnasium and Secondary School in Lviv in 1939. She began her studies at the Faculty of Architecture at the Lviv Polytechnic, which she was able to continue during the Nazi occupation of Poland from September 1939. In 1945 she began her studies at the Faculty of Architecture at the Politechniki Krakowskiej, which she completed in 1948. Career Following graduation, she took up a job as a designer in the Construction Office of the Coal Industry in Krakow, then in the Directorate of Workers' Housing Estates, and from 1 January 1950 in the Central Office of Projects and Studies of Housing Estates ZOR for the city of Nowa Huta. Together with her husband Janusz Ingarden, she
September 1921 in Lviv. She graduated from the Queen Jadwiga Gymnasium and Secondary School in Lviv in 1939. She began her studies at the Faculty of Architecture at the Lviv Polytechnic, which she was able to continue during the Nazi occupation of Poland from September 1939. In 1945 she began her studies at the Faculty of Architecture at the Politechniki Krakowskiej, which she completed in 1948. Career Following graduation, she took up a job as a designer in the Construction Office of the Coal Industry in Krakow, then in
"Alan Rabinowitz Ph.D., explorer, wildlife conservationist and author".
10 de junio de 2008.  «Alan Rabinowitz Ph.D., explorer, wildlife conservationist and author».
After the wedding, Alvarado lived with his bride in Monterey, but continued on with mistress, Raymunda, who lived nearby.
Después de la boda, Alvarado vivió con su esposa en Monterey, pero continuó viéndose con su amante, Raymunda, que vivía cerca.
The Labour government passed laws in 1998 to establish a Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly, the first elections for these were held in 1999.
El gobierno laborista aprobó varias leyes en 1998 para constituir un Parlamento escocés y una Asamblea galesa, cuyas primeras elecciones tuvieron lugar en 1999.