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1788 she had returned to Gravesend. On 1 October she sailed for Africa. Fate Chance, Proudfoot, master, was off Dixcove when a tornado on 28 March 1789 pushed her on her side. The crew was saved in her boats. When Chance upset she was carrying 33 slaves and 50 ounces of gold dust. All the whites saved themselves by taking to her boats. They expected that Chance would go to pieces, drowning any slaves still alive as the slaves were locked below decks. Chance drifted out to sea. Fifty-seven hours later | October she sailed for Africa. Fate Chance, Proudfoot, master, was off Dixcove when a tornado on 28 March 1789 pushed her on her side. The crew was saved in her boats. When Chance upset she was carrying 33 slaves and 50 ounces of gold dust. All the whites saved themselves by taking to her boats. They expected that Chance would go to pieces, drowning any slaves still alive as the slaves were locked below decks. Chance drifted out to sea. Fifty-seven hours later she was 20 leagues from where she had upset when , Harvey, master, came upon her. Captain Thomas Harvey sent a boat and some men to investigate the hulk. When the men heard groaning they sent for axes and were able to cut holes in Chance through which they were able to rescue 11 still living slaves. Some of these slaves were chained to dead slaves and the sailors had |
covered both the Vancouver Canucks and the National Hockey League. Sigurdson returned to the Free Press in March 1976, to succeed Maurice Smith as the sports editor, who talked Sigurdson into returning to Winnipeg. He covered junior ice hockey and senior ice hockey in Manitoba, and the World Hockey Association. He also wrote the "Down Memory Lane" series of sports histories, and served on the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum selection committee. He served as the sports editor until 1989, then as a sports columnist until he retired in 1996. He wrote his final sports column in the Free Press on June 28, 1996. Personal life Sigurdson was married to Merelyn, and had two daughters and two sons. In his recreational time, he participated in curling, golf, and ten-pin bowling. He died from Alzheimer's disease on January 16, 2012, in Winnipeg, at the Saint Boniface Hospital. Honours and legacy Sigurdson was known to his colleagues as "Siggy", and often joked that the hockey people he met over the years, spared him "the need of getting a real job". Jeff Blair described him as a good mentor, and that Sigurdson "had a real eye for detail", was "really fair" and was "a guy who stressed pride and craft". Bill Redekop described Sigurdson as "the thinking man's sportswriter, providing insight instead of outrage". The Dow Breweries Canadian Football Reporting Awards twice gave Sigurdson an honourable mention for the best reporter in the country. He was named to the role of honour of the Manitoba Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association in 1991. He was inducted into the media category of the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame in 1993, and was inducted into the Football Reporters of Canada section of the | both the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame and the Canadian Football Hall of Fame. Early life Harold Bjorn Sigurdson was born on July 1, 1932, in Churchbridge, Saskatchewan, and had Icelandic heritage. He grew up on the family's farm near Churchbridge, moved to Winnipeg in the 1940s, and attended Daniel McIntyre Collegiate Institute. As a youth, he played rugby football, and basketball. Journalism career Sigurdson began working for the Winnipeg Free Press as a copy boy during the late-1940s, when the paper's sports editor, Maurice Smith, gave Sigurdson the opportunity to report on junior basketball. Sigurdson started his full-time sports writing career in 1951, and began covering Canadian football and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in 1957. He was a frequent commentator on televised games for the Canadian Football League, and hosted radio shows on CFWM-FM and CJOB-AM in Winnipeg. In January 1964, The Albertan named Sigurdson its sports editor, where he reported on football games for the Calgary Stampeders. He later served as the |
Brazil. He is a specialist in sponges and has written over 100 papers on the chemistry, the taxonomy of sponges, and the descriptions of many new sponge species. His | the descriptions of many new sponge species. His zoological author abbreviation is Muricy. Taxa named by Muricy See Taxa named by Guilherme Muricy and taxa in wikidata where Muricy is author. |
been named Chance: was launched in 1786 at St John's Newfoundland. She became a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. Circa 1787 she was condemned on the coast of Africa as unfit for service. was a schooner launched in Virginia in 1779, probably under another name. From 1786 she traded between England and | launched in Virginia in 1779, probably under another name. From 1786 she traded between England and Africa, though may have traded in slaves within African waters. A tornado on 28 March 1789 upset her. Her crew were saved, but 22 of the 33 slaves onboard died. was built in India c.1799. She was captured and recaptured before |
museums, and universities. He corresponded with German-born British-based photographic historian Helmut Gernsheim, who wrote: “You seem to entirely agree with me that documentation is the most important function of photography today.” Director of the National Gallery of Victoria, Eric Westbrook appointed him as an honorary photographic consultant in November 1966 in which position he was instrumental in 1966 in the establishment of the photography collection and he joined Westbrook Allan Martin, M. Marwick and Geoffrey Blainey in persuading the Gallery Trustees to approve the establishment a Department of Photography, and from 1969 was on an advisory Photographic Subcommittee with Dacre Stubbs, Les Gray, Lenton Parr. The photography department's first exhibition was MoMA's The Photographer’s Eye curated by John Szarkowski which Brown helped secure. The conscription of some younger group members to serve in the Vietnam War prompted four Group M members to stage the 1965 Photovision, A Time to Love, an exhibition with works by John Crook, Albert Brown, George Bell and Roy McDonald, which depicted bushfires, old people, handicapped children and the Lake Tyers Aboriginal mission. Roy McDonald, who went on to be a teacher of Latin and classics at Melbourne Grammar exploited the fact that his mother worked in a mental health hospital to go and photograph some of the inmates and nurses, and recorded archaic treatment of mental conditions not only of adults but also of young children who he said were so starved for affection that they clung to him as he tried to take pictures. Albert Brown sent 15 photographs from each section to the University of Texas where they were included in the Gernsheim collection of over 30,000 photographs; John Crook remarked that "The University of Texas is now apparently taking a keen Interest in Australia and Australiana, and is looking to us as a place to collect from. In return for our plotures, the university sent us 100 copy negatives of famous historical pictures." They were printed to form an exhibition of 85 photographs "reflecting war, revolution, technical achievements and human life in the 100 years from 1842 to 1942," selected and sequenced chronologically by Allan Martin, Professor of History at La Trobe University. Funds of their own and sponsors covered the cost of printing the negatives and designer Derrick Watson's lay-out of this their last exhibition, at the Argus Gallery in Latrobe Street in November 1966. The group planned a further exhibition A Portrait of a Nation to record of the “relations of Australians with their environment”, and “nationally important aspects of their life”, but despite their approaches to the Federal government, Reserve Bank and National Library, no funding was forthcoming and the project lapsed. Though Group M was short-lived and its exhibitions rarely reviewed and merely tolerated by, but not embraced into the art world of John Reed, its reach into the Australian photographic community was considerable. Exhibitors included Nigel Buesst (Newsreel cameraman and industrial photographer), Keast Burke (Sydney professional and writer on photography, Gordon De Lisle (High-ranking member of the Melbourne Camera Club), Max Dupain, Margaret ‘Maggie’ Fraser (American advertising photographer), Laurence Le Guay, Zillah Lee, David Moore who was selector and advisor for their shows, Wolfgang Sievers, Marc Strizic, Bob Whitaker, and Brian McArdle, editor of Walkabout. That this effort at advancing serious photography in Australia was so soon forgotten is due to a number of factors; the practical problems the group faced in putting on their exhibitions, especially the demands and costs of making large prints meant that publicity was a further expensive inconvenience . In Crook's view they “never had | Brown, George Bell and Roy McDonald, which depicted bushfires, old people, handicapped children and the Lake Tyers Aboriginal mission. Roy McDonald, who went on to be a teacher of Latin and classics at Melbourne Grammar exploited the fact that his mother worked in a mental health hospital to go and photograph some of the inmates and nurses, and recorded archaic treatment of mental conditions not only of adults but also of young children who he said were so starved for affection that they clung to him as he tried to take pictures. Albert Brown sent 15 photographs from each section to the University of Texas where they were included in the Gernsheim collection of over 30,000 photographs; John Crook remarked that "The University of Texas is now apparently taking a keen Interest in Australia and Australiana, and is looking to us as a place to collect from. In return for our plotures, the university sent us 100 copy negatives of famous historical pictures." They were printed to form an exhibition of 85 photographs "reflecting war, revolution, technical achievements and human life in the 100 years from 1842 to 1942," selected and sequenced chronologically by Allan Martin, Professor of History at La Trobe University. Funds of their own and sponsors covered the cost of printing the negatives and designer Derrick Watson's lay-out of this their last exhibition, at the Argus Gallery in Latrobe Street in November 1966. The group planned a further exhibition A Portrait of a Nation to record of the “relations of Australians with their environment”, and “nationally important aspects of their life”, but despite their approaches to the Federal government, Reserve Bank and National Library, no funding was forthcoming and the project lapsed. Though Group M was short-lived and its exhibitions rarely reviewed and merely tolerated by, but not embraced into the art world of John Reed, its reach into the Australian photographic community was considerable. Exhibitors included Nigel Buesst (Newsreel cameraman and industrial photographer), Keast Burke (Sydney professional and writer on photography, Gordon De Lisle (High-ranking member of the Melbourne Camera Club), Max Dupain, Margaret ‘Maggie’ Fraser (American advertising photographer), Laurence Le Guay, Zillah Lee, David Moore who was selector and advisor for their shows, Wolfgang Sievers, Marc Strizic, Bob Whitaker, and Brian McArdle, editor of Walkabout. That this effort at advancing serious photography in Australia was so soon forgotten is due to a number of factors; the practical problems the group faced in putting on their exhibitions, especially the demands and costs of making large prints meant that publicity was a further expensive inconvenience . In Crook's view they “never had the time and resources,” and besides, most of the group “had challenging and reasonably enjoyable jobs in science and teaching,” and “the ultimate success was to do what seemed right, not that which made us famous”. Despite John Crook's archive being lost in the Ash Wednesday bushfires of 1983, a retrospective was able to be mounted at New North Gallery 7–30 October 2010. Exhibitions 1961 Photovision, Museum of Modern Art and Design of Australia in Tavistock Place (Flinders Street), Melbourne. Photovision was an annual event between 1959 and 1965. 1963, 27 August–7 |
, and was serialized irregularly by Shōdensha in their josei manga magazine Feel Young from January 8, 2015, until December 8, 2016. They have also released it in two collected tankōbon volumes in 2016–2017 under their imprint Feel Comics Swing, which include an additional chapter each that was not part of the magazine serialization. Takano struggled with the schedule of the serialization, submitting each chapter to the publisher close to the deadline, and then went back to touch up the art for the release of the collected editions; the final chapter was particularly difficult, as one of Takano's family members died while she was in the middle of producing it. Volumes Reception Ghost of Undecimber was critically well received. It was chosen as one of the jury's recommended manga at the 21st edition of the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs' Japan Media Arts Festival in 2018, it was one of the featured books at the Kumazawa feminist book fair in 2018, and both volumes | the 21st edition of the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs' Japan Media Arts Festival in 2018, it was one of the featured books at the Kumazawa feminist book fair in 2018, and both volumes were included in Kono Manga ga Sugoi! daily recommended manga feature. Kono Manga ga Sugoi found the love triangle and surrounding drama intriguing, and described it as something that kept them reading. They liked the story's portrayal of fashion as not only something fun, but also as a way to deal with reality, and the comparisons it makes to Cinderella. The Kumazawa book fair liked the series for its "deep characters" and discussion of gender roles, something Kono Manga ga Sugoi! also enjoyed, including the complexity and irony surrounding how Neri and Kiri relate to looking nearly identical but having different personalities and genders. Translator Jocelyne Allen also liked many of the series' themes, such as "awkward romance" and questioning of gender roles, as well as the minimalist ligne claire artwork, but did not find it to live up to its potential, wishing that Kiri did |
flashbacks to Jesus's life as he descends into hell. Throughout the comic book Jesus answers questions with vague responses and an emphasis on storytelling, which leaves his own story open to interpretation. Dahm used brush drawing to illustrate the book and the colors are limited to black, white, and red. See also Judas (comic book) References External links 2020 comics debuts | was originally intended to be published in March 2020, but the COVID-19 Pandemic pushed back the publication date to July 2020. The story is a retelling of Jesus's descent into hell, otherwise known as the Harrowing of Hell, |
his journal in the 1850s. In the 1940s James DeNormandie acquired much of the land around Mount Misery to prevent it from being developed and for his own agriculture uses. He dammed the brook and excavated soil to form the lower pond, as well as re-damming the original upper mill pond, and he built a cabin on the top of Mount Misery which later burned. DeNormandie sold Mount Misery to the town as public conservation land in 1969. The land contains Beaver Dam Brook which is still home to several beavers and Terrapin Lake, a kettle hole, where cranberries were grown until the 1990s. References External links Official website Lincoln, Massachusetts Hills of Massachusetts Landforms of Middlesex County, Massachusetts Protected areas | Misery may take its name from the death of a pair of oxen or a sheep on the hill in colonial times. By 1667 the Billings family owned land around the brook and eventually operated a saw mill on the Beaver Dam Brook just below what is now the upper pond at the base of Mount Misery. Evidence of this mill remains today near the brook. Concord writer Henry David Thoreau often hiked and recorded his experiences on the hill in his journal in the 1850s. In the 1940s James DeNormandie acquired much of |
References External links World Athletics Bio Embry Riddle Bio Hurricanes Bio 1997 births Living people Bahamian male sprinters People from Freeport, Bahamas Athletes (track and field) at the 2014 Summer Youth | the 400m. He attended Bishop Michael Eldon School on Grand Bahama Island before going on to compete for Miami |
opined that "S Narayan has to extract acting from his son the same way he does with other actors" On the contrary, a critic from The Times of India gave the film a rating of three out of five stars and said that "Pankaj excels in romantic, dramatic and action scenes. Roopika is simply superb. Anant Nag and Sumalata do a commendable job. Mickey Meyer's music is good. Jagadish Wali has done a good job with the camera". A critic from The New Indian Express gave the same review and said that "Cheluvina Chilipili is a good family oriented film | his tunes. The film released to mixed reviews. The film released at the same time as the film Iniya. The audio launch of the film was attended by Ambarish and Sumalatha. The film bears a similar to title to S. Narayan's film Cheluvina Chittara. Cast Pankaj as Balu Roopika as Swapna Rajendra Karanth as Swapna's father Anant Nag Sumalatha Dwarakish Sundar Production S. Narayan cast in son (in his second film) and newcomer Roopika in the lead |
extinct genus of cystoporate bryozoans from the | of cystoporate bryozoans from the |
on Cooper Square, he had a few small paintings on the wall. I didn't know at the time that he had studied at the Sorbonne. He said, 'Bernard, I'm going to do an album.' 'Yourself? Are you a musician?' 'Yes,' he said, 'I taught myself.' He had such aplomb, that when he said something it wasn't halfway. I said, 'All right, Marzette, you will do an album.'" Watts would go on to record only one additional album, The Marzette Watts Ensemble, recorded in 1968 and released by Savoy Records in 1969. Reception In a review for AllMusic, Rob Ferrier wrote: "Like many an album on the ESP label, this one takes work to enjoy... Those into the time and place (i.e., New York in the mid-'60s) can't get enough of this stuff and are sure to enjoy this too. For others with open ears, this is a peek into a chapter of American music that is still criminally underappreciated." John Garratt, writing for PopMatters, stated: "Marzette Watts was caught in the very middle of the civil unrest of 1960s America.... Watts struggled to belong somewhere. The music of Marzette Watts & Company reflects this turmoil and the list of soon-to-be-famous names accompanying him on the album suggests that misery loved company... Half these musicians have passed on, but their | trombonist Clifford Thornton, guitarist Sonny Sharrock, vibraphonist Karl Berger, bassists Henry Grimes and Juney Booth, and drummer J. C. Moses. The album, which was reissued by ESP-Disk in 2012, was recorded under the supervision of Clifford Thornton. ESP-Disk owner Bernard Stollman stated that he initially knew Watts as an independent engineer who had his own recording studio. He recalled: "When I visited his apartment on Cooper Square, he had a few small paintings on the wall. I didn't know at the time that he had studied at the Sorbonne. He said, 'Bernard, I'm going to do an album.' 'Yourself? Are you a musician?' 'Yes,' he said, 'I taught myself.' He had such aplomb, that when he said something it wasn't halfway. I said, 'All right, Marzette, you will do an album.'" Watts would go on to record only one additional album, The Marzette Watts Ensemble, recorded in 1968 and released by Savoy Records in 1969. Reception In a review for AllMusic, Rob Ferrier wrote: "Like many an album on the ESP label, this one takes work to enjoy... Those |
Navy have been named HMS Chance''': was a Jamaican privateer that the Spanish Navy captured in 1797 and named Galgo Inglés (English greyhound), and that the British captured in November 1799. In her brief career she detained, took, or destroyed a number of small prizes before October 1800, when she foundered, with the loss of most of her crew and passengers. The Admiralty had intended to rename her HMS Chance, but | brief career she detained, took, or destroyed a number of small prizes before October 1800, when she foundered, with the loss of most of her crew and passengers. The Admiralty had intended to rename her HMS Chance, but she was lost before the change could take effect. was an launched by Associated SB, Seattle, on 27 November 1942. She was transferred to the UK on Lend Lease on 13 November 1943, where |
land from Fett. The Twins try to intimidate Fett with a Wookie named Krrsantan, but Fett does not comply. Later, while Krrsantan is in the cantina, he sees Trandoshans, who are known for hunting Wookies, gambling. Krrsantan attacks them, but is calmed down by Fwip, who reminds Krrsantan of his past as a gladiator telling him he does not need to prove anything. Krrsantan does not listen and rips one the arms off one of the Trandoshans. Fwip tells Krrsantan that he needs to pay for the damage he had caused, and Krrsantan takes some credits from one of the Trandoshans, giving them to Fwip. Watching the whole thing happen, Fett hires Krrsantan as his own bodyguard. Before war breakouts between Fett and the Pyke Syndicates, the Pykes send two of their kind to The Sanctuary. Fwip notices them and has two of her servants attend to them. The Pykes reject their help and leave a container of credits on a table, without having a drink. As a droid tries to remind them they left their container, the container blows up the cantina, subsequently killing Fwip. After the bombing, Fett stated that war had begun and used the remains of The Sanctuary as cover against the Pykes. Characteristics Garsa Fwip is a tan skinned Twi'lek, which are humanoids that have two lekku, tentacular appendages, on the back of there heads. With Twi'lek women being considered attractive, Twi'leks are often depicted as slaves, especially to the Hutt family, but Fwip is a wealthy owner of a cantina. She shows acts of kindness by quickly helping those who come to The Sanctuary and shows her loyalty to Boba Fett by filling his helmet with gold as tribute to him. Jennifer Beals, the portrayer of Garsa Fwip stated, "I mean, Madam Garsa is extraordinary. She is not like any other Twi'lek we've seen. She's enormously wealthy. And the costumes are extraordinary... it's clear that she's no one's slave and that she's no one's master. That is why she's a madam... They have actual plants on a planet where water comes at a premium. That's how wealthy she is." Fwip also shows her kindness and power by calming an angry Krrsantan down. Development Portrayal Garsa Fwip is portrayed by Jennifer Beals, who had previously worked with Jon Favreau, creator of the series, in Mrs. Parker and the | stated, "I mean, Madam Garsa is extraordinary. She is not like any other Twi'lek we've seen. She's enormously wealthy. And the costumes are extraordinary... it's clear that she's no one's slave and that she's no one's master. That is why she's a madam... They have actual plants on a planet where water comes at a premium. That's how wealthy she is." Fwip also shows her kindness and power by calming an angry Krrsantan down. Development Portrayal Garsa Fwip is portrayed by Jennifer Beals, who had previously worked with Jon Favreau, creator of the series, in Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle and Robert Rodriguez, one of the directors of the show, in Four Rooms. Beals' agent told her that John Favreau wanted to talk to her about giving her a part in The Mandalorian, but Favreau was really trying to keep a secret and was talking about The Book of Boba Fett. She later video chatted with Dave Filoni and Robert Rodriguez, and they told her what her character was going to be like. Beals and Robert Rodriguez discussed how Fwip was like was Rick Blain from the film Casablanca. Later, she said that she got the part when her brother had just told her about the show The Mandalorian and later received a phone call telling her she got the job for the part. After getting hired, she said that she binged watched The Mandalorian. Beals later said that when she got on set she had no clue what show she was part of, but said that she knew it was Star Wars, which she admitted she did not no much about, and that her character was a Twi'lek who owned a cantina. Fwip was originally going to be called master, but Beals did not think that was a good idea as Fwip is trying to create a "literal sanctuary of beauty and balance in a world that’s lacking both" so they called Fwip madam. Beals was working on The L Word: Generation Q while she was also working |
from Ordovician fossils found in the U.S. state of Kentucky. | extinct genus of ptilodictyoid bryozoans |
team. He left Kuwait SC in July of that year, but continued as Kuwait U23 coach at the 2022 U-23 Asian Cup qualifying tournament, guiding Kuwait to qualification for the final tournament. In November 2021, González was appointed manager of the Kuwaiti senior national team, where he coached the team in friendlies against the Czech Republic and Lithuania that month, and a pair of friendlies against Libya in early 2022. Atlético Ottawa On 24 February 2022, González signed as head coach of Atlético Madrid-owned Canadian Premier League side Atlético Ottawa. Managerial statistics References 1986 births Living people Spanish football managers Sportspeople from Granada Spanish expatriate football managers Expatriate football managers in Kuwait Spanish expatriate sportspeople in | and simultaneously as manager of the Kuwaiti national under-23 team. He left Kuwait SC in July of that year, but continued as Kuwait U23 coach at the 2022 U-23 Asian Cup qualifying tournament, guiding Kuwait to qualification for the final tournament. In November 2021, González was appointed manager of the Kuwaiti senior national team, where he coached the team in friendlies against the Czech Republic and Lithuania that month, and a pair of friendlies against Libya in early 2022. Atlético Ottawa On 24 February 2022, González signed as |
the Second. Murphy occasionally exhibited miniatures in enamel or on ivory at the Royal Academy from 1800 to 1827, but his work did not attain any great distinction. The latter part of his life was very closely connected with that of his more famous daughter, Mrs. Jameson. Murphy died in March 1842, leaving by his wife, who survived him, five daughters, of whom the eldest, Anna Brownell, married Robert Jameson, and was the well-known writer on art. Of the others, Camilla became Mrs. Sherwin, and died on 28 May 1886, at Brighton, aged 87, and Louisa became Mrs. Bate, while Eliza and Charlotte Alicia died unmarried, the former at Brighton on 31 March 1874 in her seventy-ninth year, the latter at Ealing on 13 June 1876, aged 71. References Bibliography Caffrey, Paul (2009). "Murphy, Denis Brownell". In Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge University Press, Royal Irish Academy. n.p. Strickland, Walter G. (1968). "Murphy, Denis Brownell". In A Dictionary of Irish Artists. Vol. 2. New York, NY: Hacker Art Books. pp. 157–159. 1745 births 1842 deaths | painter in ordinary to Her Royal Highness. He copied one or two of Lely's famous Beauties, then at Windsor Castle (afterwards at Hampton Court), and by command of the Princess completed a series of miniature copies of these, adding some from pictures not at Windsor. Murphy had apartments assigned him at Windsor during the progress of this work, which was from time to time inspected and approved by the royal family. The set was not completed at the time of the Princess's death, which put an end to the work and to Murphy's connection with the court. The paintings were sent in to Prince Leopold, with a claim for payment, but to the painter's great disappointment were declined and returned. The set were, however, purchased by a friend, Sir Gerard Noel, and it was suggested that use should be made of them by having them engraved as a series, with illustrative text from the pen of Murphy's daughter, Mrs. Anna Brownell Jameson. This work was successfully completed and published in 1833 under the title of |
season, earning three top tens, with his best finish of 9th at Kansas Speedway. He would follow with a 10th-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway in 2021. Personal life Melton was born and raised in Rockford, Michigan, and has eight children. He currently operates the Melton-McFadden Insurance Agency, an insurance company located in Greenville and Belding, Michigan, and would often sponsor all of his races. Motorsports career results ARCA Menards Series (key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led.) References External links Official website 1961 births Living people ARCA Menards | finish at the Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park. He would run half of the season in 2019, earning two top tens, with his best career finish being 9th at Michigan International Speedway, and finishing 15th in the point standings. 2020 would be his breakout season, earning three top tens, with his best finish of 9th at Kansas Speedway. He would follow with a 10th-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway in 2021. Personal life Melton was born and raised in Rockford, |
guide. Cast Dick Hatton as Dick Manners Marilyn Mills as Muriel Thompson Roy Laidlaw as Andrew J. Thompson Jack Richardson as Dave Colton Garry O'Dell as Thomas Lapsley Arthur Johnson as Walrus McNutt Archie Ricks as 'Dunk' Gresham Clara Morris as Imogene Harris References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, | Dick Hatton as Dick Manners Marilyn Mills as Muriel Thompson Roy Laidlaw as Andrew J. Thompson Jack Richardson as Dave Colton Garry O'Dell as Thomas Lapsley Arthur Johnson as Walrus McNutt Archie Ricks as 'Dunk' Gresham Clara Morris as Imogene Harris References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent |
manga series Saint Seiya. The manga started in Akita Shoten's seinen manga magazine Champion Red in December 2020. Plot The story follows an ordinary high school boy that after a certain incident wakes up in the land of the dead. Characters Athena's Army Athena Aries Theseus (牡羊座のテセウス, Ariesu no Teseusu) Taurus Ain (牡牛座のアイン, Taurusu no Ain) Gemini Sōjirō (双子座の惣次郎, | manga started in Akita Shoten's seinen manga magazine Champion Red in December 2020. Plot The story follows an ordinary high school boy that after a certain incident wakes up in the land of the dead. Characters Athena's Army Athena Aries Theseus (牡羊座のテセウス, Ariesu no Teseusu) Taurus Ain (牡牛座のアイン, Taurusu no Ain) Gemini Sōjirō (双子座の惣次郎, Jemini no Sōjirō) Cancer Crematorium (蟹座のクリマトーリオ, Kyansā no Kurimatōrio) Leo Vassilios (獅子座のヴァシリオス, Reo no Vashiriosu) Virgo Renge (乙女座のレンゲ, Barugo no Renge) Libra Kōgetsuki (天秤座の紅月姫, Raibura no Kōgetsuki) Scorpio Eulalia (蠍座のエウラリア, Sukōpion no Euraria) Sagittarius Capricorn Eito (山羊座の詠斗, Kapurikōn no |
represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now known as Texas State University) during the 1935 college football season as a member of | an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now known as Texas State University) during the 1935 college football season as a member of the Lone Star |
Rashdi Productions and MD Productions, written by Saji Gul and directed by Khizer Idrees. It features Zara Noor Abbas in the titular role with Farhan Saeed, Ali Rehman Khan, Yasir Hussain, Shahzad Nawaz, Komal Meer and Saman Ansari in prominent roles. The series is scheduled to air weekly on Hum TV from 1 March 2022 at 08:00 PM. Cast Zara Noor Abbas Farhan Saeed Ali Rehman Khan Yasir Hussain Shahzad Nawaz Saman Ansari Hamza Sohail Komal Meer Abul Hasan Tanya Hussain Hiba Aziz Reception Production After making his big screen debut as producer and director, Rafay Rashdi started working on his next project in late 2017 which was written by Saji Gul. Saba Qamar was selected to play the titular role. It was then decided to release as a web-series with other actors until early 2019 including Faysal Quraishi, Imran Ashraf, Mohsin Abbas Haider and Gohar Rasheed. Qamar was then replaced by Iman Ali after which the project was shelved due to some unknown reasons. In late 2021, the work on the project restarted with Farhan Saeed | weekly on Hum TV from 1 March 2022 at 08:00 PM. Cast Zara Noor Abbas Farhan Saeed Ali Rehman Khan Yasir Hussain Shahzad Nawaz Saman Ansari Hamza Sohail Komal Meer Abul Hasan Tanya Hussain Hiba Aziz Reception Production After making his big screen debut as producer and director, Rafay Rashdi started working on his next project in late 2017 which was written by Saji Gul. Saba Qamar was selected to play the titular role. It was then decided to release as a web-series with other actors until early 2019 including Faysal Quraishi, Imran Ashraf, Mohsin Abbas Haider and Gohar Rasheed. Qamar was then replaced by Iman Ali after which the project was |
2022 deaths 20th-century Italian journalists 20th-century Italian politicians 21st-century Italian journalists 21st-century Italian politicians Deputies of Legislature XII of Italy Deputies of Legislature XIII of Italy Lega Nord politicians National Alliance (Italy) politicians University | (28 July 1944 – 22 February 2022) was an Italian politician. A member of the Lega Nord and later the National Alliance, he served in the Chamber of Deputies from 1994 to 2001. He died in Lonigo on 22 February |
of early Eocene bryozoan of | early Eocene bryozoan of the family Arachnopusiidae, discovered |
Plate and Sunda Plate at a rate of per year. Convergence along this plate boundary is highly oblique, severely deforming the overriding Sunda Plate, where it is accommodated by the strike-slip motion along the Great Sumatran fault. The Great Sumatran fault is a -long strike-slip fault system located onshore on the island of Sumatra, which is divided into about 20 segments. The subduction zone offshore Sumatra was responsible for several large earthquakes in 2004 and 2005. Dip-slip faults can rupture within the downgoing Australian Plate as well; the 2009 magnitude 7.6 earthquake near Padang was caused by reverse faulting at a depth of . Occasionally, the subduction plate interface ruptures in earthquakes that reaches the trench, triggering large tsunamis such as in 1907, 2004 and 2010. The Great Sumatran fault was the source of the 1994 Liwa and 1995 Kerinci earthquakes. It produced its largest earthquake during the 1943 Alahan Panjang sequence; measuring 7.8. Earthquake According to the Meteorology, Climatology, and Geophysical Agency (BMKG), the earthquake occurred as a result of right-lateral strike-slip faulting on the Great Sumatran fault. The Earth Observatory of Singapore said that only a small segment of the fault ruptured; likely 10 km long and with an average slip of 10 cm. Four minutes prior, a magnitude 5.2 foreshock occurred. The BMKG stated that the earthquake was felt VI (Strong) in Pasaman Barat, West Pasaman Regency. Its epicenter was located on the slopes of Mount Talakmau. As of 06:00 local time, February 27, 124 aftershocks have been recorded by the BMKG, with the largest measuring 5.1. Early reports by the BMKG stated that the earthquake occurred on the Angkola segment, but further research into the aftershock distribution suggest otherwise. Officials from the BMKG suggest the quake ruptured a newly-discovered segment which has been named Talamau. The Talamau segment is also a right-lateral strike-slip fault. The Angkola segment, according to the BMKG, is capable of generating an earthquake of magnitude 7.6, and the earthquake on 25 February did not release all the seismic strain on the segment. It was responsible for another earthquake in 1892. Another segment of the Grest Sumatran Fault, the Sianok segment, is located nearby. Impact The West Pasaman Regional Disaster Management reported that a total of 1,307 homes and ten government offices were damaged. Earlier that day, the agency expected the number of damaged structures to rise into the hundreds, when at the time, only a few dozen structures were reported damaged. At the West Pasaman Regency, regent's office, severe damage occurred on the third floor, and damage occurred on the roof and ceiling. Bridges, roads and water pipes were reported. Six schools were damaged; two in Ampeknagari and four in Palupuh. An elementary school had also suffered serious damage. In the regency's office, a room partially collapsed. Telecommunication services were disrupted and a mosque collapsed. Cracks formed in the walls of the Talu Pasaman Prison. Rapid groundmass movement was reported in Malampah following the quake. Video footage showed a fast-moving mass of brown soil descending into a village. An official from the Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management (BNPB) said that such phenomena were observed during the 2009 Padang earthquake as well. It is thought to be either a landslide or liquefaction. In Labuah Kaciak, small hot springs appeared from the ground, erupting brown water. A landslide was triggered in Jorong Sungai Siriah, measuring 6 meters in height and 30 meters wide. The BNPB said that the rapid soil movement was a type of flash flood caused by a breached landslide dam. The earthquake triggered a landslide on a river upstream, creating a natural dam and blocking the flow of water. The dam was later breached and a flash flood occurred. An additional 17 landslides were also reported on the slopes of Mount Talakmau. Residents also reported smoke emitting from the volcanic cone. The | was triggered in Jorong Sungai Siriah, measuring 6 meters in height and 30 meters wide. The BNPB said that the rapid soil movement was a type of flash flood caused by a breached landslide dam. The earthquake triggered a landslide on a river upstream, creating a natural dam and blocking the flow of water. The dam was later breached and a flash flood occurred. An additional 17 landslides were also reported on the slopes of Mount Talakmau. Residents also reported smoke emitting from the volcanic cone. The quake was felt as far away as the Klang Valley of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Some residents and workers rushed to exit their homes and offices. Workers were evacuated from the Bernama headquarters in the city as well. In Port Dickson, a private hospital and government building suffered light damage. Shaking was also felt in Singapore. At approximately 9:40 am Singapore time, residents reported tremors in Punggol, Simei, Redhill, Queenstown, Ang Mo Kio and Kallang. There were reports of shaking in the Marina Bay Financial Centre. Casualties Later in the afternoon, the BNPB stated that two people were killed and 20 were injured. The number of casualties was further updated to seven dead and 60 injured. According to the Ladang Panjang Health Center, three bodies have been removed from the rubble of collapsed buildings. Of the seven people killed, two were elders, and three were minors. Four of the dead were from Pasaman, while the three were from West Pasaman Regency. A total of 85 were injured; 10 seriously, and 50 of them from West Pasaman. Many of the injured were treated at Yarsi Hospital. A further 13,000 people were displaced. On 26 February, the BNPB updated the number of fatalities to ten, while the total number of injured became 86. At least 76 people had minor injuries while 10 others were treated for serious wounds. While most of the victims died from collapsing buildings, some were killed by landslides on Mount Talakmau. Six fatalities were from Pasaman Regency while another four were from West Pasaman Regency and four people are |
and served as dean at the MIT School of Architecture. She was the Dean of Students at Wellesley College until 1984. Ladd left academia for a time, working at Oxfam America as well as the South African Education Program for the Institute of International Education and the School for International Training. In 1989 she became the director of the Bunting Institute at Harvard University, a position she held until 1997. She is now Director Emeritus. In 1994 Ladd served on the executive committee for the conference Black Women in the Academy: Defending Our Name 1894-1994 held at MIT. In 1996 Ladd's novel Sarah's Psalm was published by Charles Scribner's Sons. It won the 1997 Black Caucus of | (born 1932) is the Director Emeritus of the Bunting Institute and the author of the novel Sarah's Psalm. Biography Ladd was born on June 16, 1932, in Washington, D.C. Her parents were both educators and she grew up in Washington, D.C. She attended Howard University, graduating in 1953 and then the University of Rochester, earning a Ph.D. in psychology in 1958. Ladd began her academic career teaching at Simmons College in Boston. She then taught at Harvard University's graduate school. In 1977 began working at the |
(1920) Live Sparks (1920) The Ace of Hearts (1921) The Poverty of Riches (1921) Fools and Riches (1923) The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) The Gaiety Girl (1924) The Snob (1294) Where Romance Rides (1925) The Splendid Road (1925) The Ridin' Streak (1925) The White Desert (1925) Never Too Late (1925) The Right Man (1925) When the Door Opened (1925) The Devil's Gulch (1926) Bred in Old Kentucky (1926) Is That Nice? (1926) Beyond the Rockies (1926) Cactus Trails (1927) God's Great Wilderness (1927) Not for Publication (1927) The Wild West Show (1928) References Bibliography Katchmer, George A. A Biographical Dictionary | Eyes (1916) The Patriot (1916) The Vagabond Prince (1916) Sweetheart of the Doomed (1917) The Gunfighter (1917) With Hoops of Steel (1918) An Alien Enemy (1918) His Robe of Honor (1918) A Law Unto Herself (1918) Honor's Cross (1918) Shackled (1918) The Turn of a Card (1918) Back to God's Country (1919) Are You Legally Married? (1919) The Great Accident (1920) Cupid the Cowpuncher (1920) The Deadlier Sex (1920) Live Sparks (1920) The Ace of Hearts (1921) The Poverty of Riches (1921) Fools and Riches |
as Minister of the Interior from 1982 to 1986, Minister for Agriculture from 1986 to 1987, and was a member of the Folketing from 1984 to 1988 | to 1987, and was a member of the Folketing from 1984 to 1988 and again from 2005 to 2011. She died on 23 February 2022, at the age of 80. References 1941 births 2022 deaths 20th-century Danish women politicians 21st-century |
professional debut on 12 October; after coming on as a second-half substitute for Bruno José in a 0–0 Série B home draw against Botafogo, he played for 18 minutes before being himself replaced by Keké, with manager Vanderlei Luxemburgo saying that he was "unable to keep the pace" but also "praising for his debut". Already a part of the first team for the 2022 season, Vitor Roque scored his first goal on 20 February of that year, netting the club's first in a 2–2 Campeonato Mineiro home draw against Villa Nova. Three days later, he scored a brace in a 5–0 away routing over Sergipe in the Copa do Brasil. Career statistics References 2005 births Living people People from Minas Gerais | of the first team for the 2022 season, Vitor Roque scored his first goal on 20 February of that year, netting the club's first in a 2–2 Campeonato Mineiro home draw against Villa Nova. Three days later, he scored a brace in a 5–0 away routing over Sergipe in the Copa do Brasil. Career statistics References 2005 births Living people People from Minas Gerais Brazilian footballers Association football forwards Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players |
College of Santa Fe; Collections His works are in the collections of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Casa de las Américas, Havana, Cuba; Center for Cuban Studies, New York, NY; Centro Studi e Archivio della Comunicazione, Parma University, Parma, Italy; Fototeca de Cuba, Havana, Cuba; Galleria IF, Milan, Italy; Galleria Il Diafragma Kodak, Milan, Italy; Maison de la Culture de la Seine Saint-Denis, Paris, France; Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Havana, Cuba. References Further reading Articles Tweddle, Christine (January 25, 1992). "Man for All Seasons". The Independent Magazine. pp. 38, | Américas, Havana, Cuba; Center for Cuban Studies, New York, NY; Centro Studi e Archivio della Comunicazione, Parma University, Parma, Italy; Fototeca de Cuba, Havana, Cuba; Galleria IF, Milan, Italy; Galleria Il Diafragma Kodak, Milan, Italy; Maison de la Culture de la Seine Saint-Denis, Paris, France; Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Havana, Cuba. References Further reading Articles Tweddle, Christine (January 25, 1992). "Man for All Seasons". The Independent Magazine. pp. 38, 40 Munoz, Lorenza (January 28, 1999). "Putting a Human Face on Revolution". The Los Angeles Times Weekend Calendar. pp. 46, 48 Books Salas, Osvaldo; Salas, Roberto (1997). Ernesto Che Guevara: fotografias, 1960-1964. La Habana: Instituto Cubano del Libro. . Salas, Osvaldo; Salas, Roberto (1998). Fidel's Cuba: A Revolution in |
to Russia's Ministry of Defense, these Russian forces were able to advance and capture Hostomel Airport after a ground-based assault, creating a key landing zone for Russian forces just from Kyiv. Zelenskyy urged citizens to fight back with Molotov cocktails. The reserve Territorial Defense Forces were activated to defend the capital. 18,000 guns were also distributed to residents of Kyiv who were willing to fight. 26 February In the early morning of 26 February, Russian paratroopers began landing in the city of Vasylkiv, just south of Kyiv, in order to capture the Vasylkiv Air Base. In the ensuing battle, heavy fighting began over control of the city. Ukrainian officials claim that at 01:30, a Ukrainian Su-27 fighter jet shot down a Russian Ilyushin Il-76 carrying paratroopers over Vasylkiv. Later, two American officials said that a second Russian Il-76 had been shot down over the nearby city of Bila Tserkva. Despite Ukrainian anti-aircraft action, elements of Russian paratroopers were able to land to the south of Kyiv around Vasylkiv and made contact with troops of the home guard forces. At 7:30, Ukrainian officials reported that the defenders, supported by airpower, had successfully repulsed the paratroopers. Russian forces began formally assaulting Kyiv later in the early morning, bombarding the city with artillery and attempting to capture a power plant and army base within the city. Ukrainian forces were able to defend both objectives. Mayor of Vasylkiv, Natalia Balasinovich said her city had been successfully defended by Ukrainian forces and the fighting was ending. The Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Plant, located just north of the city in the suburb of Vyshhorod, was captured by Russian forces. On 26 February, Ukrainian forces recaptured the power plant. Ukrainian air defenses also allegedly intercepted a missile aimed for the plant. Interfax stated that if the plant's dam were to fail, flooding could destroy "the entire left bank of Kyiv". 27 February In the early morning of 27 February, a Russian missile struck an oil depot in Vasylkiv, setting the facility ablaze. A radioactive waste disposal site near Kyiv was also hit by airstrikes, but the storage site itself escaped the impact. Concurrently, there were reports of fighting occurring in Kalynivka; however, it is unclear whether this is referring to | oblast. Timeline 24 February On the morning of 24 February, Russian artillery and missiles struck targets in Kyiv Oblast including Kyiv's primary airport – Boryspil International Airport. Later that morning, Russian forces crossed the border into Ukraine from Belarus to the north. In the Battle of Chernobyl they captured Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, which is located close to the border. Later in the day, Russian paratroopers landed at Hostomel Airport, beginning the Battle of Antonov Airport. According to Ukrainian officials, Russian paratroopers were later repelled by Ukrainian troops. Russian forces have also attempted landings in and around the Kyiv Reservoir. According to British officials, Russian forces attempted to take the city of Chernihiv on 24 February. After Ukrainian forces held them back, Russian forces laid siege to the city, while some Russian mechanized forces bypassed the city altogether. On the night of 24 February, the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, stated that "subversive groups" were approaching Kyiv. That night, United States Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said during a conversation with congresspeople that some Russian mechanized infantry units had advanced to within of Kyiv. 25 February On the morning of 25 February, the Russian Air Force continued its bombardment of the capital city, bombing central Kyiv. A Ukrainian Su-27 fighter jet was later shot down over Kyiv; the plane crashed into a nine-story apartment complex, setting the building ablaze. At 06:47 (GMT+2), a Ukrainian army unit detonated a bridge over the Teteriv River near Ivankiv, halting a Russian tank column advancing from Chernobyl. The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine later said that Ukrainian airborne assault soldiers have engaged the Russians in a skirmish at Ivankiv and Dymer. At mid-morning, Russian saboteurs dressed as Ukrainian soldiers had entered Obolon District, an area in the northern portion of Kyiv that is about from the Verkhovna Rada. Throughout the day during the Battle of Kyiv, gunfire was heard throughout several wards of the city; Ukrainian officials described the gunfire as arising from clashes with Russian troops. Some Russian soldiers were able to break through the Ukrainian defense at Ivankiv, though that battle continued throughout the day. According to Russia's Ministry of Defense, these Russian forces were able to advance and capture Hostomel Airport after a ground-based assault, creating a key landing zone for Russian forces just from Kyiv. Zelenskyy urged citizens to fight back with Molotov cocktails. The reserve Territorial Defense Forces were activated to defend the capital. 18,000 guns were also distributed to residents of Kyiv who were willing to fight. 26 February In the early morning of 26 February, Russian paratroopers began landing in the city of Vasylkiv, just south of Kyiv, in order to capture the Vasylkiv Air Base. In the ensuing battle, heavy fighting began over control of the city. Ukrainian officials claim that at 01:30, a Ukrainian Su-27 fighter jet shot down a Russian Ilyushin Il-76 carrying paratroopers over Vasylkiv. Later, two American officials said that a second Russian Il-76 had been shot down over the nearby city of Bila Tserkva. Despite Ukrainian anti-aircraft action, elements of Russian paratroopers were able to land to the south of Kyiv around Vasylkiv and made contact with troops of the home guard forces. At 7:30, Ukrainian officials reported that the defenders, supported by airpower, had successfully repulsed the paratroopers. Russian forces began formally assaulting Kyiv later in the early morning, bombarding the city with artillery and attempting |
appearance on the big screen was as the young Luke Hadler in the Robert Connolly directed mystery thriller The Dry (film) in 2020, alongside Eric Bana. Also in 2020, Corlett secured a recurring role as Caliban (Prince of Hell) for 14 episodes of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina opposite Kiernan Shipka, which was filmed in Vancouver, Canada. Corlett has been cast in a main role as Leif Eriksson was in History's upcoming Vikings sequel Vikings: Valhalla which is due to be aired on Netflix in February 2022. Corlett teams up with Leo Suter who plays Harald Sigurdsson and Frida Gustavsson as Freydís Eiríksdóttir in the Viking saga, set in a time over a century after the Lothbrok era. Leif Eriksson was believed to be one of the first European's to explore North America. Whilst filming Vikings: Valhalla at | cast in a main role as Leif Eriksson was in History's upcoming Vikings sequel Vikings: Valhalla which is due to be aired on Netflix in February 2022. Corlett teams up with Leo Suter who plays Harald Sigurdsson and Frida Gustavsson as Freydís Eiríksdóttir in the Viking saga, set in a time over a century after the Lothbrok era. Leif Eriksson was believed to be one of the first European's to explore |
serve as the assistant Head coach at Auburn University for twenty years. He is now the Puma SE representative for the Caribbean. Rolle has coached 31 Olympians, 13 World Championship Medalists, Seven Commonwealth Games Medalists, 18 NCAA Champions, and 40 SEC Champions. He also served as Assistant coach for The Bahamas at the 2004 Olympic Games, 2012 Olympic Games and 2016 Olympic Games. See also List of Auburn University people References External links Auburn Bio Linkedin Puma Bahamas Interview Living | now the Puma SE representative for the Caribbean. Rolle has coached 31 Olympians, 13 World Championship Medalists, Seven Commonwealth Games Medalists, 18 NCAA Champions, and 40 SEC Champions. He also served as Assistant coach for The Bahamas at the 2004 Olympic Games, 2012 Olympic Games and 2016 Olympic Games. See also List of Auburn University people References External links Auburn Bio Linkedin Puma Bahamas Interview Living people People from Freeport, Bahamas People from West Grand Bahama Bahamian male sprinters Bahamian |
Military Intelligence Corps of the United States Army for four years. He was elected to the Oklahoma House of Representatives in November 2018. During the 2019–2020 legislative session, Smith served as vice chair of the House Wildlife Committee. In the 2021–2022 session, he is vice chair of the House | the 2021–2022 session, he is vice chair of the House Veterans and Military Affairs Committee. In February 2020, Smith authored House Bill 3395, which would have implemented a version of stop and frisk in Oklahoma. The bill was criticized by members of the House and did not |
Radiation Laboratory (Rad Lab) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to develop applications using it. As one of the lab's first projects it was meant to replace older, longwave, early warning radars such as the SCR-270, SCR-527 and SCR-588 that were proving to be less effective as the Germans increased their radar jamming and deception. In working on the Microwave Early Warning system (MEW), Luis Alvarez invented a linear dipole array antenna that not only suppressed the unwanted side lobes of the radiation field, but also could be electronically scanned without the need for mechanical scanning. This was the first microwave phased-array antenna, and Alvarez used it not only in MEW but in two additional radar systems. The antenna enabled the Eagle precision bombing radar to support precision bombing in bad weather or through clouds. It was completed rather late in the war; although a number of B-29s were equipped with Eagle and it worked well, it came too late to make much difference. Development The original idea for the MEW sprung from a discussion between Alvarez and famed Welsh physicist Taffy Bowen on November 19, 1941, that centered on developing a better radar for bombing. Alvarez's initial idea involved placing a twenty-foot antenna on an aircraft's wings that utilized a waveguide with slots cut into it to create narrow. high-resolution beams. This idea became the catalyst for the ground-based MEW. In the summer of 1943, a set was rushed into production to allow the United States Army Signal Corps to begin testing at the Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics at the Orlando Army Air Base in Florida. At the same time, an office was established at Camp Evans, New Jersey in order to oversee the project. When design was complete and it was finally ready for full-scale production, the radar weighed more than 65 tons and required eight trucks, 150 men and three days to move it. Operational use World War II The first MEW was shipped to England in January 1944. Eventually five sets that were built by the Radiation Lab deployed overseas in 1944 while additional production of the radar began to ramp up. Initially the first radar was established at Devonshire to | and it worked well, it came too late to make much difference. Development The original idea for the MEW sprung from a discussion between Alvarez and famed Welsh physicist Taffy Bowen on November 19, 1941, that centered on developing a better radar for bombing. Alvarez's initial idea involved placing a twenty-foot antenna on an aircraft's wings that utilized a waveguide with slots cut into it to create narrow. high-resolution beams. This idea became the catalyst for the ground-based MEW. In the summer of 1943, a set was rushed into production to allow the United States Army Signal Corps to begin testing at the Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics at the Orlando Army Air Base in Florida. At the same time, an office was established at Camp Evans, New Jersey in order to oversee the project. When design was complete and it was finally ready for full-scale production, the radar weighed more than 65 tons and required eight trucks, 150 men and three days to move it. Operational use World War II The first MEW was shipped to England in January 1944. Eventually five sets that were built by the Radiation Lab deployed overseas in 1944 while additional production of the radar began to ramp up. Initially the first radar was established at Devonshire to serve as a training site for crews operating the other newly delivered radars. From its position, it could see across the English Channel into skies above Cotentin Peninsula and on the evening of June 5, 1944 its operators created a time-lapse film of the radar's plan position indicator creating a very unique view of the airspace during the Normandy landings. At the urging of Louis Ridenour the radar was moved in early July to Hastings to improve its ability to track buzz bombs. Six days after D-Day, a MEW came ashore at Omaha Beach to serve as a mobile ground-controlled interception station. The radar proved very effective against low-flying German aircraft attempting to infiltrate behind Allied lines. Post-War uses MEWs were deployed |
graduated from the University of Lebanon in 1908 with a B. Ph. degree. He attended the University of Tennessee from 1909 to 1910, and studied law at Millsaps College from 1911 to 1912. He graduated from Millsaps with an L. L. B. degree. He then moved to Ruleville, Mississippi, to begin his legal practice. Career From 1907 to 1911, Burrow was the secretary of the Democratic | high schools in several Mississippi towns. After matriculating in 1907, he graduated from the University of Lebanon in 1908 with a B. Ph. degree. He attended the University of Tennessee from 1909 to 1910, and studied law at Millsaps College from 1911 to 1912. He graduated from Millsaps with an L. L. B. degree. He then moved to Ruleville, Mississippi, to begin his legal practice. Career From 1907 to 1911, Burrow was the secretary of the Democratic Committee of Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi. He was a delegate to the 1908 Democratic National Committee in Denver, Colorado. Burrow was elected to represent Jefferson Davis County as a Democrat in the |
It formed erect colonies of bifurcating branches, which were a few millimeters long and sometimes terminated in | had multiple annulations along their length, which were also covered in large autozooidal apertures and smaller kenozooidal apertures. The genus was discovered in |
His finding that supplementing MDA with integrated vector management can prevent Lymphatic filariasis transmission more efficiently than MDA alone has been included in the Lymphatic filariasis elimination plan of the WHO. He developied an animal model for chemotherapeutic and immunological studies for parasitic diseases. Dash has also developed a simple technique for detecting dengue virus antigens in desiccated mosquitoes. He did some fundamental research correlating the change in vector borne disease epidemiology to the change in climate parameters. His work employing multiple genetic fragments with DNA sequencing studies corroborated the inferences on the phylogenetic interrelationships among Indian malaria vectors with the inferences based on the traditional cyto-taxonomical approaches. Dash has also worked in comparative genomic studies of genomes of malaria parasites and the results he obtained revealed genomic similarities between the genomes of the parasites. Dash's contribution in scanning the whole genome of the African malaria vector revealed interesting genomic organization of this species. Dash has also contributed in developing novel genomic markers to understand the population structure and demographic history of Indian P. vivax. This information has provided baselines for the study of genetic pattern of drug resistance and virulence associated genes in field populations of this species. He has undertaken several field trials of various intervention measures and these trials helped to translate laboratory findings into deliverable products. Recognition: Padma Shri In the year 2022, Govt of India conferred the Padma Shri award, the third highest award in the Padma series of awards, on Aditya Prasad Dash for his distinguished service in the field of science and engineering. The award is in recognition of his service as a "Distinguished Biologist specializing in vector-borne tropical diseases like dengue, malaria, kala-azar, chikungunya". Other recognitions Many awards have been conferred upon Dash for his contributions to the development of public health programmes. These include: Dr. T.R. Rao award of ICMR (1991) for Young Scientists Oration Award of Indian Society for Communicable Diseases (2002) Rajiv Gandhi Foundation Award (2005) from His Excellency the Governor of Orissa Dr A.P. Ray award for outstanding contributions in malaria research (2012) from Director General | include biomedical science, transmission biology of tropical disease, and modern biology of disease vectors. According to Vidwan, the national network for researchers and experts, Dash has authored 320 publications co-authored 699 publications. Since September 2020, Dash has been serving as the Vice Chancellor of Asian Institute of Public Health (AIPH) in Bhubaneswar. Before joining AIPH, he was the Vice Chancellor of Central University of Tamil Nadu during the period from August 2015 to August 2020. He had also worked at the World Health Organisation (WHO) as the Regional Advisor for the South-East Region. He has also worked as the Director of the National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR), New Delhi, of the Institute of Life Sciences (ILS), Bhubaneswar and of the National Institute for Research on Tribal Health, Jabalpur. Contributions to biomedical science Dash's work helped in showing that Anopheles annularis is an important vector in rural areas and in the identification of telomerase activity in gametocytes of Plasmodium falciparum. Through his research, Dash demonstrated the efficacy of drug combinations and also of Mass Drug Administration (MDA) in India. His finding that supplementing MDA with integrated vector management can prevent Lymphatic filariasis transmission more efficiently than MDA alone has been included in the Lymphatic filariasis elimination plan of the WHO. He developied an animal model for chemotherapeutic and immunological studies for parasitic diseases. Dash has also developed a simple technique for detecting dengue virus |
Seaman Tusculum: No commentary George Mason: Baylen Hite & Amber Seaman Hawai'i: Joel Godett & Amber Seaman Hawai'i: Joel Godett & Kevin Owens BYU: Jarom Jordan, Steve Vail & Kiki Solano BYU: Jarom Jordan, Steve Vail, & Kiki Solano Lewis: Cody Lindeman, Juliana Van Loo, & Ally Hickey McKendree: Colin Suhre Purdue Fort Wayne: Baylen Hite & Kevin Owens Loyola Chicago: No commentary Lindenwood: No commentary Quincy: Joel Godett & Lloy Ball NJIT: Princeton: Ohio State: Quincy: Lindenwood: | coach Donan Cruz, play their home games at Worthen Arena. The Cardinals are members of the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association and were picked to finish fourth in the MIVA in the preseason poll. Roster Schedule *-Indicates conference match. Times listed are Eastern Time Zone. Broadcasters Maryville: Baylen Hite & Amber Seaman Tusculum: No commentary George Mason: Baylen Hite & Amber Seaman Hawai'i: Joel Godett & Amber Seaman Hawai'i: Joel Godett & Kevin Owens BYU: Jarom Jordan, Steve Vail & Kiki Solano BYU: Jarom Jordan, Steve Vail, & Kiki Solano Lewis: Cody Lindeman, Juliana Van Loo, & Ally Hickey |
with the formula HC(ButC)2N2CtBu where tBu = (CH3)3C. It is a substituted derivative of the heterocycle pyrimidine. Known also as TTBP, this compound is of | organic compound with the formula HC(ButC)2N2CtBu where tBu = (CH3)3C. It is a substituted derivative of the heterocycle pyrimidine. Known also as TTBP, this compound is of interest as a base |
is an extinct Permian bryozoan genus | is an extinct Permian bryozoan genus of |
a single security can have a disproportionate cascading effect. This has become pronounced with respect to the assessment of credit risk in a bank's portfolio. If a credit rating agency has the expectation that the credit risk of a position rises, it will | consequence, a bank faces additional capital charges in order to comply with national capital requirements. Especially during the subprime mortgage crisis banks had to increase their capital substantially, because many ratings were considerably downgraded. In time banks needed their capital most to cope with high losses, this term emerged in the consultative process on reforms regarding existing capital requirements, |
Del Andrews and starring Bob Custer, Roy Laidlaw and Frank Brownlee. Cast Bob Custer as Bill Pendleton Peggy Udell as Ruth Howells Roy Laidlaw as Judge Howells Frank Brownlee as J.S. Dokes Newton Barbar as Gus Dokes Billy Lord as Tim Bill Cody | starring Bob Custer, Roy Laidlaw and Frank Brownlee. Cast Bob Custer as Bill Pendleton Peggy Udell as Ruth Howells Roy Laidlaw as Judge Howells Frank Brownlee as J.S. Dokes Newton Barbar as Gus Dokes Billy Lord as Tim Bill Cody as Leete Gleed Claude Payton as Sheriff References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The |
of bryozoan of the family Hyphasmoporidae. It was | was discovered in northeastern Nevada. |
new genus and species Charruatoxodon uruguayensis, using FC-DPV-514 as holotype. Etymology The genus name, Charruatoxodon, is composed from the suffix -toxodon, referring to its relative Toxodon, and the prefix Charrua-, referring to the Charrúa natives, who lived in southern Uruguay before the Spanish colonization and suffered a violent genocide organized by the newly formed Uruguayan government in 1831. The species name, urugayensis, is given after the country were its holotype was found, Uruguay. References Toxodonts Pleistocene mammals of South America Pliocene mammals of South America Pleistocene genus extinctions Neogene Uruguay Pleistocene Uruguay Fossils of Uruguay Fossil | was contested by Pérez-García in 2004, who only assigned it to the genus Dinotoxodon. In 2013, a study by Perea, Rinderknecht, Ubilla, Bostelmann and Martinez considered it as a Toxodontidae indeterminate, and estimated its remains to be more recent than initially thought, likely the result of the fall of a overlying block containing the remains inside an earlier deposit, and assigned it to the Montehermosan-Ensenadan Raigón Formation. In 2022, a revision of the specimen led by Ferrero, Schmidt, Pérez-García, Perea and Ribeiro finally erected the new genus and species Charruatoxodon uruguayensis, using FC-DPV-514 as holotype. Etymology The genus name, Charruatoxodon, is composed |
on the East Indies and China Station. In conjunction with , they destroyed twenty-three pirate junks at Tysami on 29 September 1849 and a pirate fleet at Haipong on 20 to 21 October 1849. She returned to Home Waters for a refit at Woolwich during 1851 costing £12,987. Second Commission She was commissioned on 4 December 1851 under the command of Commander Edward Tatham, RN for service in the Mediterranean. In 1854 she was sent to the Black Sea for the Russian War. In August 1854 Commander Ennis Chambers, RN took command. She returned to Home Waters for a refit at Portsmouth costing £23,838 during 1855–1856. Third Commission She was commissioned on 1 August 1856 under the command of Commander Charles Taylor Leckie, RN for service on the East Indies and China Station. With was involved with boats at Fatsham on 1 June 1857. In July 1759 Commander William Andrew James Heath, RN took command. She was in action at the Pei Ho Forts on 26 June 1859. Commander John Crawford, RN took command | Wilcox, RN for service on the East Indies and China Station. In conjunction with , they destroyed twenty-three pirate junks at Tysami on 29 September 1849 and a pirate fleet at Haipong on 20 to 21 October 1849. She returned to Home Waters for a refit at Woolwich during 1851 costing £12,987. Second Commission She was commissioned on 4 December 1851 under the command of Commander Edward Tatham, RN for service in the Mediterranean. In 1854 she was sent to the Black Sea for the Russian War. In August 1854 Commander Ennis Chambers, RN took command. She returned to Home Waters for a refit at Portsmouth costing £23,838 during 1855–1856. Third Commission She was commissioned on 1 August 1856 under the command of Commander Charles Taylor Leckie, RN for service on the East Indies and China Station. With was involved with boats at Fatsham on 1 June 1857. In July 1759 Commander William Andrew James Heath, RN took command. She was in action at the Pei Ho Forts on 26 June 1859. Commander John Crawford, RN took command on 2 January 1860. She returned to Home Waters to pay off on 19 June 1861. Disposition She was sold to Castle & Beech in July 1864 |
(now known as Texas State University) during the 1936 college football season as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC). In their second year under head coach Joe Bailey Cheaney, the team compiled an overall record of 3–5–1 with a | under head coach Joe Bailey Cheaney, the team compiled an overall record of 3–5–1 with a mark of 1–3 in conference play. Schedule References Southwest Texas State Texas State |
in order to track long periods of the pathogen's evolution and virulence. In 2012, DeWitte received two grants to fund her scholarship on the Black Plague. She first received the Ethel-Jane Westfeldt Bunting Summer Scholarship to fund her research project "The Dynamics of an Ancient Emerging Disease: Demographic and Health Consequences of Medieval Plague." DeWitte then accepted a Cobb Professional Development Grant for her project "Paleoepidemiology of historic plague epidemics: the dynamics of an ancient emerging disease." The results of these projects revealed that there were higher survival rates following the plague and that mortality risks were lower in the post-Black Death population than before the epidemic. As a result of her academic accomplishments and mentorship, DeWitte was named a 2014 McCausland Fellow at U of SC. In 2016, DeWitte received a grant from the Wenner-Gren Foundation to assist in her analysis of comparing dietary isotope data to mortality risk. She used the grant to combined paleodemographic, paleopathological, and isotopic data from human skeletal remains to examine the intersectionality of diet, sex, socioeconomic status, health, and mortality in the context of the medieval crises of famine and plague. Based on this research, DeWitte concluded that linear enamel hypoplasia, a result of stress during an individual's life, could be an indicator of good health rather than poor. She then utilized her newly created data analysis methods to compare dietary isotope data to mortality risk. In 2021, DeWitte co-authored an article published in the Annals of Human Biology which showed the results of skeletons of people who lived in the 1st - 5th century AD and were buried in Roman cemeteries in Britain. As a result | eventually left the institution in 2011 to join the University of South Carolina (U of SC). Upon joining the faculty, DeWitte, Kirsten Bos, and Verena Schuenemann analyzed skeletal remains from Black Death victims to draft a reconstructed genome in order to track long periods of the pathogen's evolution and virulence. In 2012, DeWitte received two grants to fund her scholarship on the Black Plague. She first received the Ethel-Jane Westfeldt Bunting Summer Scholarship to fund her research project "The Dynamics of an Ancient Emerging Disease: Demographic and Health Consequences of Medieval Plague." DeWitte then accepted a Cobb Professional Development Grant for her project "Paleoepidemiology of historic plague epidemics: the dynamics of an ancient emerging disease." The results of these projects revealed that there were higher survival rates following the plague and that mortality risks were lower in the post-Black Death population than before the epidemic. As a result of her academic accomplishments and mentorship, DeWitte was named a 2014 McCausland Fellow at U of SC. In 2016, DeWitte received a grant from the Wenner-Gren Foundation to assist in her analysis of comparing dietary isotope data to mortality risk. She used the grant to combined paleodemographic, paleopathological, and isotopic data from human skeletal remains to examine the intersectionality of diet, sex, socioeconomic status, health, and mortality in the context of the medieval crises of famine and plague. Based on this research, DeWitte concluded that linear enamel hypoplasia, a result of stress during an individual's life, could be an indicator of good health rather than poor. She then utilized her |
with the Franklin County Circuit Court fining both men five-hundred dollars. Stevens was a Freemason and helped to found a local Masonic temple in Brookville in 1817. However, Stevens gave up Freemasonry when public opinion in the United States turned against the Masons following the widely publicized disappearance of William Morgan. Stevens moved to Vevay, Indiana in 1817, where he helped to organize a local branch of the state bank. Stevens would serve as the branch's president until the bank failed, whereupon he returned to practicing law. Stevens returned to the state legislature in 1823, when he represented Switzerland County in the Indiana House of Representatives. In 1824, Stevens became Speaker of Indiana House of Representatives before leaving the General Assembly again. He returned to represent Switzerland County in the House once more from 1826 to 1827. In 1828, he was elected to the Indiana Senate. He would serve as a senator until he was appointed to the Indiana Supreme Court by Governor James B. Ray. Stevens served as a Justice of Indiana Supreme Court from 1831, succeeding the retiring Justice James Scott. In 1836, Stevens resigned from the court to open a law office in Madison, Indiana. He was succeeded by | once more from 1826 to 1827. In 1828, he was elected to the Indiana Senate. He would serve as a senator until he was appointed to the Indiana Supreme Court by Governor James B. Ray. Stevens served as a Justice of Indiana Supreme Court from 1831, succeeding the retiring Justice James Scott. In 1836, Stevens resigned from the court to open a law office in Madison, Indiana. He was succeeded by Justice Charles Dewey. Stevens was a prominent abolitionist, opposing and criticizing slavery throughout his life. He represented African-Americans in court several times. A resolution he drafted calling for the emancipation of slaves was later adopted by the New School Presbyterian Synod. Additionally, Stevens was the candidate of the abolitionist Liberty Party during the 1846 Indiana gubernatorial election. Stevens would amass considerable wealth during his lucrative career as a collections attorney. However, he would lose all of his money following an unsuccessful investment in the burgeoning railroad industry in 1851 and 1852. After losing his fortune, Stevens began to suffer from insanity and became deeply delusional. He was admitted to the Indiana Hospital for the Insane in Indianapolis. After an old friend, John Test, visited Stevens in the hospital and reported to Governor Conrad Baker about the former Justice's poor mental state, Baker and his associates raised money to have a suit tailored and gifted to Stevens to commemorate his long and successful career in law. Stevens was moved by the present and gave a speech thanking those who gifted it to him. |
a reconnaissance platoon of the Russian 74th Motorized Rifle Brigade had surrendered. At 08:34, the Ukrainian army repelled an attack by the Russian army in Chernihiv and seized Russian equipment and documents. According to the British Ministry of Defense, Russian forces had failed to capture Chernihiv and instead opted for a different route to Kyiv, bypassing the city. Ukrainian officials reported that the Russians were heading towards Sedniv and Semenivka. Siege At 14:25 (UTC+2), the Russian Ministry of Defense announced that it had surrounded Chernihiv and was laying siege to the city. On 26 February, Ukrainian forces claimed that they defeated a Russian force that attempted to take the city. Several Russian tanks were allegedly seized by Ukrainian forces. The Ukrainian government also claims that Russian BM-21 Grad rockets had hit hospitals and kindergartens in Chernihiv, though | the Russian Ministry of Defense announced that it had surrounded Chernihiv and was laying siege to the city. On 26 February, Ukrainian forces claimed that they defeated a Russian force that attempted to take the city. Several Russian tanks were allegedly seized by Ukrainian forces. The Ukrainian government also claims that Russian BM-21 Grad rockets had hit hospitals and kindergartens in Chernihiv, though this claim was not independently verified. On 27 February, Ukrainian officials claimed that Russian forces damaged much of Chernihiv's city center with missiles, including |
on the property, that was placed adjacent, fronting only on West 12th Street. The property was deemed to be significant for National Register listing for its architecture, reflecting "meticulous artistry" in both the interior and exterior of the two-story home. The gas station is the last surviving of several which were built along West 12th. Also in Hays, at 117 W. 13th, there is a Bissing House bed and breakfast, in another home built | son to operate, on the property, that was placed adjacent, fronting only on West 12th Street. The property was deemed to be significant for National Register listing for its architecture, reflecting "meticulous artistry" in both the interior and exterior of the two-story home. The gas station is the last surviving of several which were built along West 12th. Also in Hays, at 117 W. 13th, there is a Bissing House bed and breakfast, in another home built by Bissing, built in 1909. It was previously The Inn at 117 and the Tea Rose Inn. References Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Kansas National Register of Historic Places in Ellis County, Kansas American Craftsman architecture in Kansas Buildings and structures completed in 1920 Buildings and structures completed in 1932 Gas stations |
State on the banks of the Sierra Fría. It has a storage capacity of 340 million m³, its coordinates are X 766,445 Y 2,450,531 Z 1,920 masl, the curtain of the dam was built from 1927 to 1928 by the American company JG White, it is made of reinforced concrete, being 66m high by 268m long, its use is mainly agricultural with 2,000 benefited users in 4,000 ha. History The project for the construction of this first irrigation work of the Mexican Revolution regime dates back to the end of the 19th century, formulated by the engineer Blas Romo, with the name of the Santiago Dam Project. It was not until November 1925 when a visit to the state of Aguascalientes of the then President of | by the engineer Blas Romo, with the name of the Santiago Dam Project. It was not until November 1925 when a visit to the state of Aguascalientes of the then President of the Republic Plutarco Elías Calles, was offered a banquet and taking advantage of the occasion they presented him with the old project of the Santiago Dam that interested him and was approved under patronage of Federal Government. In this place, the irrigation policy began with the then president of the republic Plutarco Elías Calles originating the Irrigation System No. 1, this being the first step towards the modernization of agricultural production, the integration of field production with agribusiness and job creation, an opening to education, access to |
ball" for several minor league baseball teams that year. With the Army in World War I, Wenig served overseas in the 88th division before returning to Morningside in 1919. He was named team captain in football upon returning, and led them to a 5–2 record. Following the season, he was named All-American by Walter Camp. In basketball, Wenig was named honorable mention all-state at the end of the 1919–1920 season. Professional career In 1920, Wenig briefly played baseball for the "Armours," before suffering an injury that ended his baseball career. Prior to a game against the Decatur Staleys, the Rock Island Independents of the American Professional Football Association (APFA) signed Wenig to play end and tackle. Wenig played just one game during the season, as starting left end in the Staleys-Independents matchup, a 0–0 tie. Despite just appearing in one game during the season, he was named second-team All-Pro by sportswriter Bruce Copeland, who was noted for his bias in favor of the Rock Island team. Wenig returned to the Independents for the 1921 season, playing in seven games, starting six, and making three touchdowns and eight extra points. In 1922, Wenig accepted a position as football coach at Mapleton High School, and The Daily Times reported that he was "definitely out of the game for the year" due to his coaching contract. Despite this, he returned to Rock Island mid-season for their game against the Chicago Bears, stating that "thoughts of the game [the previous year against the Bears] stirred him so much he could not help but return." He played in the game against the Bears, a loss, and remained with the Independents for the rest of the season, as they | for their game against the Chicago Bears, stating that "thoughts of the game [the previous year against the Bears] stirred him so much he could not help but return." He played in the game against the Bears, a loss, and remained with the Independents for the rest of the season, as they placed fifth in league standings with a 4–2–1 record. Wenig retired after the season. Later life and death In 1922, while playing for Rock Island, Wenig was named a coach at Mapleton High School. He also coached football, basketball, and track at his alma mater of Morningside University. Wenig was married to Lucile Waterhouse in June 1924. He later became a golfer, and was Sioux City champion for a time. Wenig was inducted into the Morningside Athletic Hall of Fame in 1956. Wenig later became an FBI agent. He died on September 25, 1959, at the age of 63, due to a heart attack. References 1895 births 1959 deaths Players of American football from Iowa American football ends American |
Cast Lew Cody as John Stark Rosemary Theby as June Redding Nanon Welsh as Sue Redding Henry Woodward as Wayne Hearne H.J. Barrows as J.J. Redding Roy Laidlaw as Henry Martin | Woodward as Wayne Hearne H.J. Barrows as J.J. Redding Roy Laidlaw as Henry Martin References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. External links 1919 films 1919 drama films English-language films American films American silent feature |
in the Houtman Abrolhos and the species is known only from that locality. References Homoscleromorpha Animals described in 2011 Sponges of Australia Taxa named by Guilherme Muricy | described in 2011 by Guilherme Muricy. The species epithet, fromontae, honours Jane Fromont. Distribution The holotype was collected off Rat Island, Western Australia, in the Houtman Abrolhos and the species is |
massive, or frond-like, and are covered in monticules (bumps). | is an extinct genus of Ordovician bryozoan. It was first named in |
pianist from Brisbane. Career Griswold began playing piano at the age of five, and has cited his early influences as Igor Stravinsky, Béla Bartok, and Miles Davis, and later Charles Mingus and Duke Ellington as he became more interested in improvisation. He studied his undergraduate at University of Southern California, Los Angeles, and University of California, San Diego, before moving to Australia in 1999. Initially he moved to Melbourne, before settling in Brisbane, and it was after his move to Australia that Griswold began to seriously explore prepared piano and focus more on his work as a performer. He has released several albums on Australian record label Room40, beginning with 2004's Altona Sketches, | Sketches, and album of prepared piano pieces. In 2020 ABC Classics commissioned a new 15-minute work from Griswold to have its premier at the 2021 Brisbane Music Festival. The work How Strange the Change was inspired by the COVID-19 pandemic, while the title was in homage to Cole Porter’s Ev’ry Time We Say Goodbye. Work with Vanessa Tomlinson Erik Griswold has released music with his partner percussionist Vanessa Tomlinson as Clocked Out Duo. In 2000 they won two Green Room Awards for their collaboration Dada Cabare, and as Clocked Out won the Award for Excellence by an Organisation or Individual and Queensland State Award at 2011's APRA and AMC Art Music Awards. In 2015 they celebrated 15 years of making music together, having toured internationally and |
album El Alimento was released in October 2021. Biography Rodriguez sang in church as a child, and originally planned to become a doctor like several members of his family. He attended medical school in his hometown of Pinar del Río for two years, but moved to Havana in 2010 to pursue music. He worked as a session arranger and producer for Cuban musicians like Raúl Paz and Liuba María Hevia, and was also in the band Interactivo from 2014 to 2016. After leaving that band, | become a doctor like several members of his family. He attended medical school in his hometown of Pinar del Río for two years, but moved to Havana in 2010 to pursue music. He worked as a session arranger and producer for Cuban musicians like Raúl Paz and Liuba María Hevia, and was also in the band Interactivo from 2014 to 2016. After leaving that band, he adopted the name Cimafunk, referencing the cimarróns, who were escaped slaves who formed self-sustaining communities in Cuba during the colonial era. Cimafunk is also the name of his backing band, featuring a rotating cast of |
of Chicago and has been included in a handful of exhibitions. Visual Description The vessel's opening is slightly narrower than its base. Its midsection bulges out just below the neck and tapers in a few inches from the bottom. The bottom edge does not have any glaze on it leaving the naked clay exposed. The body of the vessel is covered in a white glaze base and is decorated with hand-painted designs in varying opacities of a deep rich blue. The designs are placed in a repeating motif four times around the bulging middle of the vessel. Each contains a mix of swirls, flowers, branches, and scallop designs. In the center of each motif is a bird with a long tail. Over the neck of the vessel, a lid made of iron is placed. The lid's top is decorated with organic leaf filigree and has a key sticking out of it. The top is attached with an iron hinge to the collar of the neck. Historical Background Spanish Origins This artistic tradition and its name originated in Spain, specifically Talavera de la Reina in Toledo, which was known for its tin-glazed earthenware. Margaret Connors McQuade, in | exposed. The body of the vessel is covered in a white glaze base and is decorated with hand-painted designs in varying opacities of a deep rich blue. The designs are placed in a repeating motif four times around the bulging middle of the vessel. Each contains a mix of swirls, flowers, branches, and scallop designs. In the center of each motif is a bird with a long tail. Over the neck of the vessel, a lid made of iron is placed. The lid's top is decorated with organic leaf filigree and has a key sticking out of it. The top is attached with an iron hinge to the collar of the neck. Historical Background Spanish Origins This artistic tradition and its name originated in Spain, specifically Talavera de la Reina in Toledo, which was known for its tin-glazed earthenware. Margaret Connors McQuade, in her chapter on the “Talavera Poblana: Four Centuries of a Mexican Ceramic Tradition” in Talavera Poblana: Four Centries of a Mexican Ceramic Tradition, states that it is unclear exactly how the Talavera pottery style made its way over to Mexico. However, she points to a theory that some Dominican friars in Puebla requested that other friars come from Talavera to introduce the techniques. There is still evidence of the Spanish origins in some of the decorations. For example, the slanted parallel lines that make panels with the repeated motif, the fabric swags, and the fringe are all featured on this vessel come from the Talavera style of Spain. Chinese Influence Talavera poblana was also influenced by tin-glazed Chinese porcelain. Chinese porcelain was introduced to Mexico as a part of the shipping route in the later 1500s. Shipments of porcelain would arrive in Acapulco from China and then make their way across the land to Puebla, Orizaba, and finally, Veracruz where they departed for Spain. Besides the use of Blue and white tin-glaze that has impacted several traditions of pottery making through transcontinental interaction, the influence that Chinese pottery left on Talavera poblana pottery is the motif of the phoenix found on pottery known as Swatow. Another part of the Chinese influence of the |
former minorite convent in the town of Butera, province of Caltanissetta, region of Sicily, Italy. At this site by the 12th-century, there had been a church, Santa Maria del Castello affiliated with a Cistercian monastery. In 1577, a Franciscan convent was built adjacent under the guidance of the Maestro Lo Monaco and patronized by Francesco Di Paola from Gelese. The church contains a wooden cross, dated 1631, | is a Roman Catholic church and former minorite convent in the town of Butera, province of Caltanissetta, region of Sicily, Italy. At this site by the 12th-century, there had been a church, Santa Maria del Castello affiliated with a Cistercian monastery. In 1577, a Franciscan convent was built adjacent under the guidance of the Maestro Lo Monaco and patronized by Francesco Di Paola from Gelese. The church contains a wooden cross, dated 1631, with an image of Christ |
to the head of the president of Ukraine Volodymyr | the head of the president of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy. References 1972 |
La Rue Ollie Kirby as Mabel Greystone Charles Belcher as Arthur Greystone Roy Laidlaw as Robert Leland Lorimer Johnston as John Kemp References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume | X. Bushman Jr. as Johnny Adams Harriet Loweree as Helen Bentley Gino Corrado as Count Gaston La Rue Ollie Kirby as Mabel Greystone Charles Belcher as Arthur Greystone Roy Laidlaw as Robert Leland Lorimer Johnston as John Kemp References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion |
Dekayia is an extinct genus of Ordovician bryozoan. Its colonies can be branching, encrusting, or massive. The zooecia (calcium carbonate tubes in which the individual | larger at the monticules and appear angular or sub-angular viewed through a cross-section of the colony. All |
first spin-off and sequel Power Book II: Ghost (as Tariq's imagination), and Curtis Mekai in the second spin-off and prequel Power Book III: Raising Kanan. He is the main antagonist within the series. Kanan spent a decade in prison after he was framed by James 'Ghost' St. Patrick (Omari Hardwick) and his wife Tasha St. Patrick (Naturi Naughton). He was released from prison and went on seeking revenge. He was so fixated on getting back at | spent a decade in prison after he was framed by James 'Ghost' St. Patrick (Omari Hardwick) and his wife Tasha St. Patrick (Naturi Naughton). He was released from prison and went on seeking revenge. He was so fixated on getting back at Ghost he ended up shooting his own son (Shawn Stark, portrayed by Sinqua Walls) to death for siding with Ghost over him, and kidnapping Tariq St. Patrick (Michael Rainey Jr.) to hurt Ghost. Kanan was |
and the species is known from Papua New Guinea and the northern coasts of Queensland. References Homoscleromorpha Animals described in 2011 Sponges of Australia Taxa named by | of marine sponge in the order Homosclerophorida, first described in 2011 by Guilherme Muricy. The species epithet, hooperi, honours John Hooper (marine biologist), an Australian |
was founded in 1923 as part of Les Kurbas's Berezil Theatre. It holds costumes, puppets, and musical instruments. Its collection of theater-related art includes works by Alexandra Exter, | Cinema Arts of Ukraine is a museum in Kiev chronicling the history of Ukrainian performing arts. It was founded in 1923 as part of Les Kurbas's Berezil |
(25 September 1765 – 8 September 1813) also known by the pen names Lawrence Flammenberg or Lorenz Flammenberg and Bernhard Stein was a German author of gothic fiction. He is best known for The Necromancer; or, The Tale of the Black Forest, an English translation by Peter Teuthold of his Der Geisterbanner: Eine Wundergeschichte aus mündlichen und schriftlichen Traditionen, which is one of the seven 'horrid novels' referenced by Jane Austen in Northanger Abbey. Through this work, he was a major influence on gothic literature in England, including Matthew Lewis's The Monk. Biography Kahlert was born on 25 September 1765 in Breslau, Prussia (modern day Wrocław, Poland) and died on 8 September 1813 in Glogau, Prussia (modern day Głogów, Poland). Influence Kahlert authored various stories and plays in German, none of which appear to have been translated into English with the exception of Der Geisterbanner, published in 1794. The translator, Peter Teuthold, provided a loose and unfaithful translation that also included Friedrich Schiller's Der Verbrecher aus verlorner Ehre, with Kahlert's text edited to incorporate Schiller's. The inclusion of Schiller's work allowed English writers to gain access to it thirty years earlier than any official translation, allowing it to enter public consciousness and influence English gothic literature. German gothic tales were the major contributor to the genre in England in the 1790s, with Kahlert's standing among them, alongside Cajetan Tschink, Carl Grosse, and Veit Weber. Kahlert was one of the major influences of The Monk by Matthew Lewis. Kahlert was aware of the changes made to his text, and in the second edition (1799), re-translated the English to German and invited readers to compare the two to see the difference between English and German literary tastes, which he believed accounted for the translation's differences. The Necromancer was a | Weber. Kahlert was one of the major influences of The Monk by Matthew Lewis. Kahlert was aware of the changes made to his text, and in the second edition (1799), re-translated the English to German and invited readers to compare the two to see the difference between English and German literary tastes, which he believed accounted for the translation's differences. The Necromancer was a bestseller, and famous enough that it was included in the list of 'horrid novels' in Northanger Abbey alongside The Castle of Wolfenbach by Eliza Parsons, Clermont by Regina Maria Roche, The Mysterious Warning, a German Tale, by Eliza Parsons, The Midnight Bell by Francis Lathom, The Orphan of the Rhine by Eleanor Sleath, and Horrid Mysteries by Carl Grosse. Following the publication of Northanger Abbey, The Necromancer became increasingly obscure. By the 1910s, it was assumed that all seven Northanger books were fictitious inventions of Austen, and by 1922, after the discovery of Horrid Mysteries, that all seven would not still be extant. Critic and writer George Saintsbury was a prominent disbeliever in the authenticity of the septet, stating: "I should indeed like some better authority than Miss Isabella Thorpe's to assure me of their existence." All seven books were eventually rediscovered by Michael Sadleir in the 1920s by acquiring copies from Sotheby's auctions and discussions with collectors. The rediscovered copy of The Necromancer came from the estate of Arthur Hutchinson, a magazine editor and book collector, who bequeathed his library to Sadleir upon his death. A 2007 reprint by Valancourt Books was the first to provide details of Kahlert's life to an English audience. Works As Lorenz Flammenberg: Der Geisterbanner: Eine Wundergeschichte aus mündlichen und schriftlichen Traditionen (Breslau: Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn, 1792) Maria von Schwaningen: Ein Trauerspiel in fünf Aufzügen (Breslau: Wilhelm |
is a short Ukrainian tragicomedy film directed by Pavel Ostrikov. The world premier of the motion picture occurred on July 21, 2017, at the Odessa International Film Festival, where it received the | where it received the prize for best Ukrainian short film. Release The world premier of the film Graduation '97 was on June 21, 2017, at the Odessa International Film Festival, where it received the prize for best Ukrainian short film. On August 3rd of the same year the picture was shown at the Locarno |
Lands) was an elongated territory partly surrounded by the Kingdom of Württemberg, the line of the Royal Württemberg State Railways (Königlich Württembergischen Staats-Eisenbahnen) at this time only used the shortest route through this "foreign" area and only served the two district towns of Hechingen (from 1869) and Sigmaringen (from 1878). The HzL as the Actiengesellschaft Hohenzollern’sche Kleinbahngesellschaft (Hohenzollern light railway company), now the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn, was founded in 1899 to build Kleinbahnen (light railways as authorised by a Prussian law of 1892) in the Hohenzollern Lands. Kleinengstingen had been connected to the Württemberg railway network by the Reutlingen–Schelklingen railway since 1893. On 7 November 1901, the HzL station was opened next to the station of the Württemberg State Railways and the line to Gammertingen were put into operation as the fourth HzL line. Seven years later, on 6 December 1908, the second half of the line between Gammertingen and Hanfertal was completed and a connection to the Ulm–Sigmaringen railway was achieved via the Sigmaringendorf–Hanfertal railway. A short cut was built when the line was extended to Sigmaringen in 1910, providing a connection to the Tübingen–Sigmaringen railway. Passenger services on the Engstingen–Gammertingen section In the course of the nationwide closure of branch lines, the HzL also | non-electrified throughout. History Since the Prussian Province of Hohenzollern (Hohenzollern Lands) was an elongated territory partly surrounded by the Kingdom of Württemberg, the line of the Royal Württemberg State Railways (Königlich Württembergischen Staats-Eisenbahnen) at this time only used the shortest route through this "foreign" area and only served the two district towns of Hechingen (from 1869) and Sigmaringen (from 1878). The HzL as the Actiengesellschaft Hohenzollern’sche Kleinbahngesellschaft (Hohenzollern light railway company), now the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn, was founded in 1899 to build Kleinbahnen (light railways as authorised by a Prussian law of 1892) in the Hohenzollern Lands. Kleinengstingen had been connected to the Württemberg railway network by the Reutlingen–Schelklingen railway since 1893. On 7 November 1901, the HzL station was opened next to the station of the Württemberg State Railways and the line to Gammertingen were put into operation as the fourth HzL line. Seven years later, on 6 December 1908, the second half of the line between Gammertingen and Hanfertal was completed and a connection to the Ulm–Sigmaringen railway was achieved via the Sigmaringendorf–Hanfertal railway. A short cut was built when the line was extended to Sigmaringen in 1910, providing a connection to the Tübingen–Sigmaringen railway. Passenger services on the Engstingen–Gammertingen section In the course of the nationwide closure of branch lines, the HzL also switched passenger transport to bus service on some routes between 1968 and 1973. In 1969, passenger services were discontinued on the Kleinengstingen–Trochtelfingen section and in 1972 on the Trochtelfingen–Gammertingen |
D'Hermonville Roy Laidlaw as Fritz Von Klassner Burwell Hamrick as Bertrand Von Klassner at age 10 George Hackathorne as Bertrand Von Klassner at age 20 Peggy Schaffer as Bertha Von Klassner Jess Herring as Old Servant References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. External links 1918 films 1918 | by Wallace Worsley and starring Louise Glaum, Sam De Grasse and Joseph J. Dowling. Cast Louise Glaum as Alouette DeLarme Sam De Grasse as Kurt Von Klassner Joseph J. Dowling as LeSieur Juste DeLarme Edward Coxen as Bertrand Beaubien Irene Rich as Stephanie Elvira Weil as Fleurette D'Hermonville Roy Laidlaw as Fritz Von Klassner Burwell Hamrick as Bertrand Von Klassner at |
total of twelve ships of this project were built, after which they were replaced by the corvettes of Project 1124 of the second series (Grisha-III according to NATO reporting name). Construction and career The corvette MPK-43 was laid down on 1 August 1972 at the Zelenodolsk Shipyard, Zelenodolsk. The ship was launched on 2 June 1973. The corvette was commissioned on 28 December 1974 and by the order of the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy on 23 January 1975, MPK-43 was enlisted in the Black Sea Fleet. The corvette was a member of the 400th division of anti-submarine ships of the 68th brigade of ships of the Black Sea Fleet, which took an active part in training and combat activities of the fleet. MPK-43 served in the Mediterranean, sailing more than 43,000 miles. As part of the ship's anti-submarine strike groups, the ship won the prize of the Chief of the USSR Navy four times for anti-submarine training (the last in 1989). During the receipt of the ships of the | for detecting air and surface targets on the ship's mast. The basis of the sonar consisted of submersible GAS MG-322 Argun (operated in echo direction-finding mode) and lowered GAS MG-339 Shelon in the stern superstructure, which operated only in the "stop" mode. The basis of anti-submarine weapons were located two twin torpedo tubes for DTA-5E-1124 and two RBU-6000 on the bow of the ship's superstructure. Construction of small anti-submarine ships on Project 1124 began in 1967 at the Zelenodolsk Shipyard. A total of twelve ships of this project were built, after which they were replaced by the corvettes of Project 1124 of the second series (Grisha-III according to NATO reporting name). Construction and career The corvette MPK-43 was laid down on 1 August 1972 at the Zelenodolsk Shipyard, Zelenodolsk. The ship was launched |
and June depending on the Ramadan calendar of the year within the Muslim Ramadan season. History The Ramadan Cup was started in 2015, with six teams competing in the inaugural competition. Ashaiman emerged as the maiden champions after defeating Nima Zongo by 7–6 in a penalty shootout after the match ended goalless in normal regulation time. The tournament which is an initiative under the auspices of the Ghana National Chief Imam, Sheikh Osman Nuhu Sharubutu serves as a way of promoting peace and unity within the Zongo (Muslim) communities in | Ramadan Cup (also known as the Sheikh Sharubutu Ramadan Cup) is an annual football competition played between May and June depending on the Ramadan calendar of the year within the Muslim Ramadan season. History The Ramadan Cup was started in 2015, with six teams competing in the inaugural competition. Ashaiman emerged as the maiden champions after defeating Nima Zongo by 7–6 in a penalty shootout after the match ended goalless in normal regulation time. |
most recently known control of cities and towns of Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War. List Cherkasy Oblast Chernihiv Oblast Chernivtsi Oblast Autonomous Republic of Crimea Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Donetsk Oblast | Chernivtsi Oblast Autonomous Republic of Crimea Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Donetsk Oblast Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Kharkiv Oblast Kherson Oblast Khmelnytskyi Oblast Kirovohrad Oblast Kyiv Oblast Luhansk Oblast Lviv Oblast Mykolaiv Oblast Odessa Oblast Poltava Oblast Rivne Oblast Cities with special status |
collected by Walter Obermayer in Haigoulou glacier and forest park (Mount Gongga) at an altitude between ; here it was found growing on mossy rocks and soil. Because of its small size and nondescript colour, it is readily missed in the field. Although at the time of publication the lichen was only known to occur at the type location, Jørgensen speculates that it may have a wider distribution in similar habitats in the Himalayas. Description The lichen forms dark brown squamulose rosettes up to in diameter. Its thallus is coral-like in form and has a multilayer cortex with a compact layer of cyanobionts. Its ascospores, | the mountains between Tibet and Sichuan, China. Taxonomy The lichen was formally described as a new species in 2005 by Norwegian lichenologist Per Magnus Jørgensen. The type specimen was collected by Walter Obermayer in Haigoulou glacier and forest park (Mount Gongga) at an altitude between ; here it was found growing on mossy rocks and soil. Because of its small size and nondescript colour, it is readily missed in the field. Although at the time of publication the lichen was only known to occur at the type location, Jørgensen speculates that it may have a wider distribution in similar habitats in the Himalayas. Description The lichen forms dark brown squamulose rosettes up to in diameter. Its thallus is coral-like in form and has a multilayer cortex with |
in the order Homosclerophorida, first described in 2003 by Moraes and Guilherme Muricy, from | Plakortis insularis is a species of marine sponge in the order Homosclerophorida, first described in 2003 by Moraes and |
with listings in the similar but separate Entity List or Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List which are separate trade restriction lists. Inclusion in the Unverified List is not regarded as punitive nor intended to punish a party for violating laws or regulations. Rather, "Foreign persons who are parties to an export, re-export, and (in-country) transfer subject to the EAR may be added to the Unverified List if the BIS or federal officials acting on its behalf cannot verify the bona fides (i.e., legitimacy and reliability about the end-use and end-user of items subject to the EAR) of such persons because an end-use check, such as a pre-license check (PLC) or a post-shipment verification (PSV), cannot be satisfactorily completed for reasons outside of the U.S. Government's control." The UVL is regulated by 15 CFR Ch. VII § 744.15 and may be found in Supplement No. 6 to Part 744. Changes to the UVL are published along with all other US government business in the Federal Register and codified annually along with all other federal regulations. Effect Exporters can | subject to the EAR) of such persons because an end-use check, such as a pre-license check (PLC) or a post-shipment verification (PSV), cannot be satisfactorily completed for reasons outside of the U.S. Government's control." The UVL is regulated by 15 CFR Ch. VII § 744.15 and may be found in Supplement No. 6 to Part 744. Changes to the UVL are published along with all other US government business in the Federal Register and codified annually along with all other federal regulations. Effect Exporters can no longer seek license exemptions for items subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EARs) for exports to any foreign persons, entities, or governments listed in the UVL. In addition, exporters of items subject to (EARs) which do not require a license must obtain a UVL statement from the listed entity and file an Automated Export System record for all exports. In contrast, entities listed on the SDN list are barred completely from any transactions with the U.S., and an export license |
club from Batam 757 Kepri Jaya at the Sri Tri Buana Dompak Stadium. four days later, they qualified for the semi-finals of the Liga 3 Riau Islands zone as group A runner-up after their match won 5–3 over MBS United Batam. On 3 December 2021, they qualified for finals of the Liga 3 Riau Islands zone in a 2–3 won over Bintan Muda. but unsatisfactory results occurred in the final match a days later, they failed to champions in a 3–1 lose against 757 Kepri | cup for four consecutive years from 2016 to 2019. On 26 November 2021, PS Shark Tanjungpinang made their first league match debut in a 2–1 lose against club from Batam 757 Kepri Jaya at the Sri Tri Buana Dompak Stadium. four days later, they qualified for the semi-finals of the Liga 3 Riau Islands zone as group A runner-up after their match won 5–3 over MBS United Batam. On 3 December 2021, they qualified for finals of the Liga 3 Riau Islands zone in a 2–3 won over Bintan Muda. but unsatisfactory results occurred in the final match a days |
Federal University, Lokoja. References Vice-Chancellors of Federal University of Technology, Minna Living people Nigerian | Minna from 2007 to 2012. He is currently the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Federal University, Lokoja. References Vice-Chancellors of Federal University of |
Belaya () is a river in Kamchatka Krai, Russia. The length of the river is and the area of is drainage basin . It is the most important tributary of the Penzhina, followed by the Oklan. Course The Belaya has its source as the Palmatkina in the western slopes of the Vaeg Range, in the center of the Koryak Highlands. It is joined by the Essoveyem from the | it meets the left bank of the Penzhina upstream from Kamenskoye. The river is fed by snow and rain. It freezes between mid October and mid May. The largest tributaries are the Vetvistaya from the right, and the Khonteklyakkuul, Umkavylkuul, Imlan, Kuyuln, Tundrovaya, Essoveem (Evytkenveem), Gaychaveem (Ilgilkhivayam) and Bolshoy Upupkin from the left. There are 4,844 lakes in the river basin with a total area of . See also List of rivers of Russia References External links Ramsar Sites Information Service - Parapolsky Dol Status of reintroductions of three large herbivores in Russia |
Marijn van den Berg to victory. He finally nabed a podium in the Circuit de Wallonie behind winner Christophe Laporte. He held his form to the Tour de la Mirabelle where a second place in the reduced bunch finish of Stage 2 brought him to seventh overall. Pithie's greatest accomplishment came at the Baltic Chain Tour where he finished 2nd in every stage which allowed him to win Overall. Major results Road 2019 1st Criterium, National Road Championships 2nd Time trial Junior Oceania Road Cycling Championships 2021 1st Overall Baltic Chain Tour 1st Points classification 1st Youth classification 1st Stage 1 (TTT) New Zealand Cycle Classic | teammate Marijn van den Berg to victory. He finally nabed a podium in the Circuit de Wallonie behind winner Christophe Laporte. He held his form to the Tour de la Mirabelle where a second place in the reduced bunch finish of Stage 2 brought him to seventh overall. Pithie's greatest accomplishment came at the Baltic Chain Tour where he finished 2nd in every stage which allowed him to win Overall. Major results Road 2019 1st Criterium, National Road Championships 2nd Time trial |
and eating establishments. The present structure with colorful and fanciful decorations with turrets and spires was designed by Rudolf Stualker. It stands upon cement pylons embedded in the bay. Originally this structure was intended for the Belgian city of Ostend. The beachfront area of Mondello until the end of the 19th century was a malaria-afflicted swamp, with a seashore used by fishermen. Drained during the last decade of 1890, much of the area was leased to a Belgian | Rudolf Stualker. It stands upon cement pylons embedded in the bay. Originally this structure was intended for the Belgian city of Ostend. The beachfront area of Mondello until the end of the 19th century was a malaria-afflicted swamp, with a seashore used by fishermen. Drained during the last decade of 1890, much of the area was leased to a Belgian company, Les Tramways de Palerme, who not only established a trolley connecting this suburb to Palermo, but electrified the area, which became populated with pleasure villas. This company financed |
Sports. Competitive history Detailed Results 2017-2020 Code of Points See also Japan men's national gymnastics team References External | from Juntendo University and later join Central Sports. Competitive history Detailed Results 2017-2020 Code of Points See also Japan men's national |
In 2012, along with others like Naci Sonmez, she founded the Green Left Party. Prison On February 9, 2018, she and 10 other party members were arrested at 6 am, accused of “generating enmity among the population” and “propaganda for a terrorist organization”. The detainees were against Turkish military action in Syria. In the same year, they were released, but their passports were confiscated, preventing them from traveling to other countries. Political Activism Like the Green Left Party, it is left-liberal | of the Chamber of Environmental Engineering. Biography She was born in 1975 in Istanbul. She graduated from Trakya University in the field of Environmental Engineering in 1999 and in 2000 joined the TMMOB (Union of Chambers of Turkish Engineers and Architects). Between 2004 and 2010, she joined as president of the Istanbul Branch of the Chamber of Environmental Engineering, becoming an active member. In 2012, along with others like Naci Sonmez, she founded the Green Left Party. Prison On February 9, 2018, she and 10 other party members were arrested at 6 am, accused of |
is native to Northeast and Central Mexico. It is also known as the Mexican Sycamore. Description The tree can grow as high as 80 feet and has leaves | has been introduced to Texas as an alternative to native Sycamores due to its drought tolerance and disease resistance. References mexicana |
Hindu University. Education Narain did his B.Sc., M.Sc., and D.Phil in 1950 from the University of Allahabad under KS Krishnan. He later earned his Ph.D from Sydney University in 1954 and D.Sc from Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad in 1978. See also | Indian geophysicist and 15th Vice-Chancellor of Banaras Hindu University. Education Narain did his B.Sc., M.Sc., and D.Phil in 1950 from the |
Notable people with the surname include: Alexandre Debelle (1805-1897), French painter, designer, and lithographer Anne Debelle, Princesse d'Essling (1802-1887), French courtier César Alexandre Debelle | French general Jean-François Joseph Debelle (1767-1802), French general and soldier Speech Debelle (born 1983), real name Corynne Elliot, British rapper See also DeBell Debel (disambiguation) |
also Japan men's national gymnastics team References External links Yuto Kato at FIG website Yuto Kato Japanese male artistic gymnasts | national gymnastics team References External links Yuto Kato at FIG website Yuto Kato Japanese male artistic gymnasts |
minutes after the shooting and informed Sheriff English at Sandersville, Georgia. Lynching A mob made up of 2,000 people found Charles Atkins in Elizabeth Kitchens's car. Around 6:00 PM, May 18, 1922, he was tortured with fire until he confessed to allegedly killing Elizabeth Kitchens for her automobile. He then implicated another boy, John Henry Tarver. Atkins was then hanged and his charred body was shot over 200 times. Hundreds of cars then swarmed the county looking for Tarver and another Black person, George Clark, who had been seen with Tarver. National memorial The National Memorial for Peace and Justice opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. Featured | mob on May 18, 1922. According to the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary it was the 25th of 61 lynchings during 1922 in the United States. Background Mrs. Elizabeth "Billy" Kitchens, 20, served as a rural mail carrier. While driving her car, from Davisboro, someone pushed their way into her vehicle, placed a shotgun against her head and fired, killing her instantly. Her body was then dragged away. A local farmer, Sid Lewis, found the body 30 minutes after |
are related through a long common history spanning from 1632 for Antigua, and 1678 for the smaller sister-isle of Barbuda through until 1981 for the joint-state. Antigua was one of the oldest English settlements in the West Indies, and served as a British hub of regional administration for the surrounding Leeward Islands. Following the collapse of the British West Indies Federation in 1962 due-to internal power struggles, in 1967 Antigua and Barbuda attained self-governance was reorganized into a free association with the United Kingdom and known as the UK-West Indies Associated States (UK-WIAS) union. Since the Antiguan and Barbudan date of independence in 1981, these nations continue to share ties through the Commonwealth | free association with the United Kingdom and known as the UK-West Indies Associated States (UK-WIAS) union. Since the Antiguan and Barbudan date of independence in 1981, these nations continue to share ties through the Commonwealth of Nations, and as two of fifteen separate nations across the globe closely co-existing through sharing of the same Head of State, Queen Elizabeth II as their Monarch. Resident diplomatic missions Antigua and Barbuda has a Antigua and Barbuda High Commission in London, England. The United Kingdom has a High Commission in St. John's, Antigua. See also List of High Commissioners from the United Kingdom to the Eastern Caribbean, (at Barbados) Anglicisation Commonwealth Caribbean Commonwealth free trade Economic Partnership Agreements English |
Uganda, Wild Places Africa, NFT Consult and Stanbic Bank Uganda. Her work experience includes business development, customer service, high-net worth customer relations and corporate social responsibility functions. At Uganda Development Bank, Kasekende heads the bank's business advisory department, responsible for advising and guiding the bank's business clients and customers. See also Hope Ekudu Veronica Sentongo References External links Personal Profile at LinkedIn.com Living people Date of birth missing (living people) Ugandan businesspeople | 14 years. She has had managerial responsibilities in various businesses and companies during that time. She has been a manager at AIG Uganda, Wild Places Africa, NFT Consult and Stanbic Bank Uganda. Her work experience includes business development, customer service, high-net worth customer relations and corporate social responsibility functions. At Uganda Development Bank, Kasekende heads the bank's business advisory department, responsible for advising and guiding the bank's business clients and customers. See also Hope Ekudu Veronica Sentongo |
construction used in sneaker manufacturing by Nike Fly-wire (wire), an enameled wire for circuit patching See also Flying wire Fly by wire | Flywire or Fly Wire may refer to: Flywire (company), a former unicorn startup company Flywire (screen), a window screen of |
surname include: Jimmy DeBell (born 1962), American former football official Kristine DeBell (born 1954), | DeBell is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Jimmy DeBell (born 1962), American former football |
egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide, the upper surface densely covered with soft, woolly hairs. The flowers are arranged in erect groups long on the ends of branchlets and upper leaf axils and are creamy white, the pistil long and glabrous. Flowering mostly occurs from August to October and the fruit is a smooth, oval follicle long. Taxonomy Grevillea ceratocarpa was first formally described in 1904 by Ludwig Diels in Ernst Georg Pritzel's Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie, based | a height of and has woolly, softly-hairy branchlets. Its leaves are narrowly elliptic to narrowly egg-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide, the upper surface densely covered with soft, woolly hairs. The flowers are arranged in erect groups long on the ends of branchlets and upper leaf axils and are creamy white, the pistil long and glabrous. Flowering mostly occurs from August to October and the fruit is a smooth, oval follicle long. Taxonomy Grevillea ceratocarpa was first formally described in 1904 by Ludwig Diels in Ernst Georg Pritzel's Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie, based on plant material collected by Alexander Forrest |
list of Hujjatul Islams who are alive. The list is arranged in descending order of age, (oldest to youngest). Deceased This is a list of Hujjatul Islams that have died. The list is arranged in descending order of their date of passing. See also List of Ayatollahs List of current | This is a partial list of Hujjatul Islams, a title given to mid ranked Twelver Usuli Shi'a Muslim clerics. The next higher clerical rank is Ayatollah, followed by Grand Ayatollah. This list contains only the names of those who have attained the rank Hojjatol Eslam/ Hojjatol Eslam wa Muslimeen. To see the list of Ayatollahs or Grand Ayatollahs, see the following articles: List |
politician who served in the Missouri House of Representatives. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, she graduated from McCluer High School in 1972. In 2002, she ran against U.S. House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt in | 3rd congressional district. References 20th-century American politicians 21st-century American politicians 20th-century American women politicians 21st-century American women politicians Members of the Missouri House of |
beards and deep eyes than their body while keeping their proportions in check. The geometry of the pattern of the men's clothing, the socket of the spear is another example where this geometry is repeated. Background The kingdom of Benin existed in the southwestern region of Nigeria in modern Edo state, Nigeria. According to scholars the kingdom of Benin (also known as the Edo Kingdom, or the Benin Empire) originated around the year 900 by the Ogiso kings, it is said between the eleventh and the thirteenth a member from the Oba dynasty would take control of the state.This dynasty would rule until 1897 when the British occupied the kingdom of Benin in February 9th. The kingdom reached its peak during the rule of Ewuare the Great, he ruled from 1440 to 1473. King Ewuare expanded its natural borders and introduced wood and ivory carving to the kingdom. One of the first recorded visits to Benin City was made by Portuguese explorer, João Afonso de Aveiro in 1486. After contact with the Portuguese the Benin Kingdom established a strong mercantile relationship with Portugal and later other European states. They traded slaves and Beninese products such as ivory, pepper, gold and palm oil for European goods such as manillas, | (also known as the Edo Kingdom, or the Benin Empire) originated around the year 900 by the Ogiso kings, it is said between the eleventh and the thirteenth a member from the Oba dynasty would take control of the state.This dynasty would rule until 1897 when the British occupied the kingdom of Benin in February 9th. The kingdom reached its peak during the rule of Ewuare the Great, he ruled from 1440 to 1473. King Ewuare expanded its natural borders and introduced wood and ivory carving to the kingdom. One of the first recorded visits to Benin City was made by Portuguese explorer, João Afonso de Aveiro in 1486. After contact with the Portuguese the Benin Kingdom established a strong mercantile relationship with Portugal and later other European states. They traded slaves and Beninese products such as ivory, pepper, gold and palm oil for European goods such as manillas, metals and guns. In addition they established diplomatic relations in the late 15th century, the Oba sent an ambassador to Lisbon, and the king of Portugal sent Christian missionaries to Benin City in 1486. The salt cellar was carved for a Portuguese nobleman to put it on his dining table. Ivory salt cellars and ivory spoons where common pieces of art that Portuguese sailors paid payments |
of the AHL and subsequent introduction of the Sultana Bran Hockey One League, Tonkin was named in the newly formed Perth Thundersticks team. She represented the team in the inaugural season of the league, scoring once in the team's fifth-place finish. National teams Under–21 In 2016, Tonkin made her debut for the Australia U–21 team at the Junior Oceania | and 2018, Tonkin represented her home state as a member of the WA Diamonds. Hockey One Following the dissolution of the AHL and subsequent introduction of the Sultana Bran Hockey One League, Tonkin was named in the newly formed Perth Thundersticks team. She |
breakhead following the Battle of Chernobyl. Battle On the morning of 25 February, Ukrainian forces destroyed the bridge in Ivankiv crossing the Teteriv River, halting the advance of a Russian tank division heading towards Kyiv. Ukrainian airborne assault troops engaged Russian soldiers at Ivankiv and the nearby town of Dymer. Some Russian forces were able to break through Ivankiv and captured the strategically significant Antonov Airport after a skirmish. The airport is located just northwest from Kyiv. Fighting in Ivankiv continued into the afternoon and evening of 25 February, with Russian forces shelling the town with artillery, causing some civilian casualties. Ivankiv is also the location of a major gas pipeline, | Ivankiv is an ongoing military engagement between the Russian Federation and Ukraine which began on 25 February 2022, during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. In the early morning, a Russian Ground Forces column approached the town of Ivankiv in Kyiv Oblast from the northwest, after making a breakhead following the Battle of Chernobyl. Battle On the morning of 25 February, Ukrainian forces destroyed the bridge in Ivankiv crossing the Teteriv River, halting the |
and Southeast Missouri State University. She previously worked as a paralegal for a department store company. References 20th-century American politicians 21st-century American politicians 20th-century American women politicians 21st-century American women politicians Members of the Missouri House | the Missouri House of Representatives. Born in Columbia, Missouri, she attended St. Pius X. High School, Jefferson College, and Southeast Missouri State University. She previously |
was one of the designers of Riverside South, Manhattan. Early life and education Paul Willem was born on August 29, 1928. He lived in Westchester County and then moved to. New York City. the Fieldston School. His sister, Deborah, now Deborah Meier, is the educator and public-school reformer. In 1951, Willen received a BA from Oberlin College.In 1953, he | February 2, 2022) was an American architect. He was one of the designers of Riverside South, Manhattan. Early life and education Paul Willem was born on August 29, 1928. He lived in Westchester County and then moved to. New York City. the Fieldston School. His sister, Deborah, now Deborah Meier, is the educator and public-school reformer. In 1951, Willen received a BA |
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