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the seat of Launceston. He served until his defeat in 1900. He died in 1909 in Hobart. References 1855 births 1909 | He served until his defeat in 1900. He died in 1909 in Hobart. References 1855 births 1909 deaths Members of |
known as Serpent Island , an island in Mauritius near Île Ronde, Mauritius See also Snake | Mauritius near Île Ronde, Mauritius See also Snake Island (disambiguation) Ultima VII Part Two: Serpent |
Hobart. He served until his defeat in 1900. He died in 1925 in Bruges, Belgium. References 1848 births 1925 deaths Members of the Tasmanian | 1925) was an Australian politician. Page was born in 1848. In 1897 he was elected to the |
New Zealand. References Moths described in 1892 Moths of New Zealand | of New Zealand Cidariini Endemic fauna of New Zealand Taxa named by |
a species of catfish in the genus Amphilius. It is found in Oshwe on the Lukenie | is found in Oshwe on the Lukenie River in the Democratic Republic of |
side Olympiacos B. On 19 February 2022, he debuted for Olympiacos B during a 1–2 loss to AEL (Larissa). | footballer who plays as a midfielder for Olympiacos B. Career Before the second half of 2021–22, Al-Mashhari signed for Greek side Olympiacos B. On |
conference in 1978, and affiliated to the Workers' Commissions. It had 9,320 members by 1981, and its membership grew to 23,196 by 1994. In October 1996, it merged with the National Federation of Commerce, | Hotel and Tourism Workers (, FEHT) was a trade union representing workers in the hospitality industry in Spain. The union held its founding conference in 1978, and affiliated to the Workers' Commissions. It had |
Robert Van Austen William P. Carleton as John Van Austen Betty Francisco as Doris Charming Thomas Jefferson as Henri Trevel Gerard Alexander as Mrs. Stevenson Clarissa Selwynne as Mrs. Van Austen 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 Pictures Produced in | Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1921 films 1921 comedy films English-language films American films American silent feature films |
in 1984 and 1988. Cashman first came to prominence on the inter-county scene as a member of the Cork minor hurling team that won consecutive All-Ireland MHC titles in 1978 and 1979. His tenure with the under-21 side also yielded success after beating Galway in the 1982 All-Ireland under-21 final. After playing in a number of National League games for the senior team earlier in the decade, Cashman made his Munster SHC debut in 1989. Honours St. Colman's College Croke Cup: 1977 Harty Cup: 1977 Aghada East Cork Junior A Hurling Championship: 1980 East Cork Junior A Football Championship: 1980, 1981 St. Finbarr's Cork Senior Hurling Championship: 1982, 1984, 1988 Cork All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship: 1982 Munster Under-21 Hurling Championship: 1982 | went on to win a number of East Cork titles as a dual player. He simultaneously enjoyed success as a schoolboy with St. Colman's College by winning an All-Ireland Colleges Championship in 1977. Cashman also earned selection on the Imokilly divisional hurling team before transferring to the St. Finbarr's club in 1982. He won a Cork SHC title in his debut season before claiming further titles in 1984 and 1988. Cashman first came to prominence on the inter-county scene as a member of the Cork minor hurling team that won consecutive All-Ireland MHC titles in 1978 and 1979. His tenure with the under-21 side also yielded success after beating Galway in the 1982 All-Ireland under-21 final. |
discriminant analysis. She joined the faculty of the University of Maryland as an assistant professor in 1978, affiliated with the university's Department of Animal Sciences and Department of Microbiology. She eventually became full professor and director of the university's program in biometrics. She moved to the Food and Drug Administration in 2004, initially with the FDA Center for Devices and Radiological Health. In 2010 she became deputy division director for biostatistics in the Center | She completed her Ph.D. in biostatistics at the University of Washington in 1979. Her dissertation was Overspecification in linear discriminant analysis. She joined the faculty of the University of Maryland as an assistant professor in 1978, affiliated with the university's Department of Animal Sciences and Department of Microbiology. She eventually became full professor and director of the university's program in biometrics. She moved to the Food and Drug Administration in 2004, initially with the |
of North America. See also List of Cyperus species References dentoniae Plants described in 1983 Flora of Arizona Flora of Costa Rica Flora of El Salvador Flora | southern parts of North America. See also List of Cyperus species References dentoniae Plants described in 1983 Flora of Arizona Flora of Costa |
at the Coventry Stadium in Coventry, England from July 29 to 31. Competition schedule Medal summary Medal table Medalists Qualification A total of 16 men's | Stadium in Coventry, England from July 29 to 31. Competition schedule Medal summary Medal table Medalists Qualification A total of 16 |
the essence of queerplatonic attraction is its ambiguous position in relation to normative categories: she writes that QPR "is a platonic relationship, but it is 'queered' in some way—not friends, not romantic partners, but something else". Some definitions put less stress on the partner-status structure of QPR and focus more on the idea that it represents a stronger emotional connection than friendship. For instance, the College of William & Mary's neologism dictionary defines QPR as an "extremely close" relationship that is "beyond friendship" without being romantic, and sex therapist Stephanie Goerlich in Psychology Today similarly describes QPRs as a "deeper commitment than friendship but often are not romantic in nature". In asexual and aromantic online spaces, queerplatonic partners are sometimes nicknamed "zucchinis". The LGBT news website PinkNews describes this as "a joke which refers to the lack of terminology to describe meaningful relationships outside of romantic or sexual partnerships". Origins and use The term originates in the aromantic and asexual communities, and it was largely restricted to these spaces in the 2010s. The Huffington Post described it in 2014 as a "new label" coming from the same place as "aromantic" and "demisexual", the College of William & Mary's neologism dictionary observed in 2016 that it was only used in aromantic and asexual spaces, and Zach Schudson and Sari van Anders characterised it in 2019 as one of several "emergent gender and sexual identity discourses" appearing on LGBT social networking sites. However, from 2021, some popular websites aimed at general audiences began to discuss the concept, and the concept has been used (rather than merely discussed as a neologism) in some academic art and literature criticism. Some authors observed in the 2020s that QPR is associated with polyamory. A 2021 qualitative analysis of the language used by people involved in polyamory gave the word "queerplatonic" as a typical example of the "complex" vocabulary often used by | often used by individuals involved in consensual non-monogamous relationships. Y. Gavriel Ansara, writing for an audience of relationship counsellors, also observes that the term is common among polyamorous people. A 2022 article in the women's magazine Bustle drew parallels between "queerplatonic life partnerships" and consensual non-monogamy, relating both to relationship anarchy and the shared principle that the participants "customize their commitments according to what the people in the relationship desire". Schudson and van Anders (2019) and the 2022 Bustle article also assert that use of the term is driven by "young people", or millenials and Generation Z. Sex therapist Stefani Goerlich claimed in 2021 that the concept was inspired by Boston marriages—formalized romantic friendships between wealthy women in late nineteenth century New England. She also characterized QPRs as "an ancient practice made popular again", and suggests that Ruth and Naomi in the Hebrew Bible might have had "one of the earliest recorded QPRs". Social analysis In her reading of Heat: Between You and Me, an early Omegaverse fan fiction, Milena Popova argues that two characters from different castes cohabitating as friends in a society where those from different castes are forbidden to interact non-sexually might be read as an "implicitly queerplatonic life partnership" that "flouts social expectations and transforms dominant sexual scripts". Savie Luce challenges the conventional queer reading of Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman's Two Friends, a story depicting a Boston marriage, which casts it in a "sexualized queer light" as depicting a lesbian romantic relationship. She argues that through the lens of QPR and Ela Przybylo's concept of "asexual erotics", Freeman's protagonists can be read as erotic lesbian partners without the need to mischaracterise their relationship as sexual or romantic, which Luce regards as "erotonormative". She also presents QPR as a radical counter-narrative to the lesbian bed death trope, with asexuality "an additive quality rather than a deficit" in a lesbian queerplatonic partnership. Some authors have seen the concept of QPR as a reaction against an amatonormative hierarchy in which romantic relationships are regarded as more important than friendships. The author of the William & Mary neologism dictionary's entry on QPR opines that the desire to designate a close platonic attachment as a significant other rather than a best friend only exists because of the normative expectation that an individual should prioritize their partner over their friends—for them, QPR is only distinguished from friendship because the latter is not "considered a valid replacement for romantic love". Similarly, Roma De las Heras Gómez connects relationship anarchy's critique |
Homotrypa is an extinct genus of bryozoan from the Ordovician and Silurian periods, known from fossils found | of bryozoan from the Ordovician and Silurian periods, known from fossils found in the United States. Its colonies are branch-like and have small |
0–0; Away: 0–0; Neutral: 0–0) |- valign="top" | |- | |- | |- | |} Rankings References Washington Washington Huskies softball seasons Washington Huskies softball Washington | I softball season. The Huskies are coached by Heather Tarr, in her eighteenth season. The Huskies play their home games at Husky Softball Stadium and compete in the Pac-12 Conference. Personnel Roster Coaches Schedule |- |
in Geneva and the Max Planck Institutes in Munich and Stuttgart. In May 1976 Ferrell with several American colleagues attended a Soviet-American physics symposium and also attended the Sunday Seminar of Mark Azbel and other refuseniks. After returning to the United States, Ferrell and his colleagues published a letter of support for the refuseniks. He not only planted trees in University Park, Maryland, but also helped to persuade officials to have trees planted along U.S. Route 1 in College Park, Maryland and on the campus of the University of Maryland. Upon his death he was survived by his widow, a daughter, a son, and three grandchildren. In 2001 the University of Maryland established the Richard A. Ferrell Distinguished Faculty Fellowship. Ferrell-Glover-Tinkham sum rule The Ferrell-Glover-Tinkham sum rule "asserts that the finite frequencey response which | (which at that time was located in Göttingen). At the invitation of John S. Toll, Ferrell joined in 1953 the faculty of the University of Maryland, where he was promoted to full professor in 1959 and retired as professor emeritus in 1993. He was the author or co-author of more than 150 scientific articles and could write in French, German, and Russian. His 1960 article Electron-nucleus hyperfine interactions in atoms was mentioned in Robert H. Romer's list of memorable papers published in the American Journal of Physics from the years 1933 to 1990. His sabbatical leaves included visiting positions at the CERN laboratory in Geneva and the Max Planck Institutes in Munich and Stuttgart. In May 1976 Ferrell with several American colleagues attended a Soviet-American physics symposium and also attended the Sunday Seminar of Mark Azbel and other refuseniks. After returning to the United States, Ferrell and his colleagues published a letter of support for the refuseniks. He not only planted trees in University Park, Maryland, but also helped to persuade officials to have trees planted along U.S. Route 1 in College Park, Maryland and on the |
Federation of Leather. Like both its predecessors, it affiliated to the Workers' Commissions. On formation, it had 24,048 members, and by 1993 this figure had fallen slightly, to 22,657. In 1994, it | 1993 this figure had fallen slightly, to 22,657. In 1994, it merged with the National Federation of Chemicals, to form the Federation of Textile, Leather, Chemical and Allied Industries. References Textile |
the Ordovician period, first described in 1893. Its colonies consist of low | of superimposed layers, with small monticules on the surface of the colony. References Bryozoans Animals described in 1893 Fossils of |
as Mary Paige Hurd as Andrea Romeo Miller as Jason Ty Hodges as Matt Blair Redford as Billy Release The film was released on June 18, 2015 at the LA Film Festival. Reception Sandie Angulo Chen of Common Sense Media awarded the film two stars out of five and wrote, "Gritty, uneven coming-of-age drama has drugs, sex, violence." Geoff Berkshire of | as Grace Meagan Good as Share Garcelle Beauvais as Lisa Raven-Symoné as Mary Paige Hurd as Andrea Romeo Miller as Jason Ty Hodges as Matt Blair Redford as Billy Release The film was released on June 18, 2015 at the LA Film Festival. |
of the ATP Cup. The season saw him win his first grand slam at the 2021 US Open where he defeated then-world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in the final to deny him the calendar-year Grand Slam. Yearly summary Early hard court season ATP Cup Australian Open All matches This table chronicles all the matches of Daniil Medvedev in 2021. Singles matches Figures in | his first grand slam at the 2021 US Open where he defeated then-world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in the final to deny him the calendar-year Grand Slam. Yearly summary Early hard court season ATP Cup Australian Open All matches This table chronicles all the matches of |
– 29 May 1917) was an Australian politician. Crisp was born in Hobart in Tasmania in 1843. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of North Hobart. | (19 May 1843 – 29 May 1917) was an Australian politician. Crisp was born in Hobart in Tasmania in 1843. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House |
businessman, and politician from Massachusetts. William Bancroft may also refer to: William Poole Bancroft (1835–1928), American industrialist | William Bancroft (1855–1922) was an American soldier, businessman, and politician from Massachusetts. William Bancroft may also refer to: |
1905 Eucosmini Moths of New Zealand Endemic fauna of New Zealand Taxa named | in 1905 and named Strepsicrates dolopaea. References Moths described in 1905 Eucosmini Moths of New Zealand Endemic fauna of New Zealand Taxa named by Edward Meyrick |
References Bryozoans Animals described in 1893 Fossils of | extinct genus of bryozoan of the family Aisenvergiidae, forming |
Barrett (1831 – 22 July 1907) was an Australian politician. Barrett was born in Yorkshire | Yorkshire in 1844. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of North Launceston. He served until 1897, when he was defeated |
it merged with the National Federation of Mining, to form the Federation of Metalworkers and Miners. General Secretaries 1977: Adolfo Pinedo 1981: Juan Ignacio Marín 1987: Ignacio | () was a trade union representing metalworkers in Spain. The union was founded in December 1976 and affiliated to the Workers' Commissions. The federation's largest affiliate, it had 103,161 members by 1981, |
get a baby buggy to Union Avenue, the only through street to the Willamette River at the time. In 1901, the Flowers's moved with their four sons to a 20-acre farm located by the north slope of Mount Scott. There, they farmed and raised cattle. After establishing himself in his community, purchasing and building many properties, and raising his family, Flowers died in 1934. Community Involvement Flowers and his wife were active members of their community. They were members of the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church where Louisa Flowers served on the Bethel AME deaconess board. Property The Flowers built houses at 1803, 1811, 1815 on NE 1st Avenue. These homes were located in the Eliot neighborhood and were demolished in 2019. Before their demolition, the homes were owned by Pauline Bradford, a resident of the Eliot neighborhood and member of the Eliot Neighborhood Association. The location of the three homes was informed by | and Ralph. Flowers became the first Black developer in Portland when he constructed NE Schuyler Street so that his wife could get a baby buggy to Union Avenue, the only through street to the Willamette River at the time. In 1901, the Flowers's moved with their four sons to a 20-acre farm located by the north slope of Mount Scott. There, they farmed and raised cattle. After establishing himself in his community, purchasing and building many properties, and raising his family, Flowers died in 1934. Community Involvement Flowers and his wife were active members of their community. They were members of the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church where Louisa Flowers served on the Bethel AME deaconess board. Property The Flowers built houses at 1803, 1811, 1815 on NE 1st Avenue. These homes were located in the Eliot neighborhood and were demolished in 2019. Before their demolition, the homes were owned by Pauline Bradford, a resident of the |
December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1922 films 1922 drama films English-language films American films American silent feature films American drama films American black-and-white films Metro Pictures films Films | Hands of Nara is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Harry Garson and starring Clara Kimball Young, Elliott Dexter and Vernon Steele. It is based on the novel of the same title by Richard Washburn Child. Cast Clara Kimball Young as Nara Alexieff Count John Orloff as Boris Alexieff Elliott Dexter as Emlen Claveloux Edwin Stevens as Connor Lee Vernon Steele as Adam Pine John |
for the Georgia Force. He played college football at Ole Miss. Early life and education Shane Grice was born on December 20, 1976, in Tupelo, Mississippi. He attended Shannon High School, graduating in c. 1997, before joining the Itawamba Community College, where he played one season in football. In 1998, he transferred to the University of Mississippi, where he played three seasons for their Ole Miss Rebels football team. Grice was a starter in 26 games for the Rebels, and helped them have the seventh-fewest sacks given up in the nation as a senior. Professional career After going unselected in the 2001 NFL Draft, Grice was signed by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent. He was released at the final roster cuts on August 27. Grice was later signed to the practice squad of the Chicago Bears, before being re-signed to the active roster by the Buccaneers on September 26. He spent seven games on the inactive list before being | practice squad of the Chicago Bears, but did not appear in any games. In 2003, Grice was sent to the Barcelona Dragons of NFL Europe, where he appeared in ten games, nine as a starter. He returned to the Bears following the NFL Europe season end, but did not make the final roster. In 2004, Grice was signed by the Georgia Force of the Arena Football League (AFL). In his first season with the team, he appeared in all 11 games, making 9.5 tackles, a sack, and a fumble recovery. He was also used as a tight end, and made one catch for six yards. He ended up playing five |
of 27 February the Brisbane River’s height reached , higher than the peak height of flooding in 2013. Wivenhoe Dam peaked at 183.9% capacity that day, despite the outflow gates being opened. Enoggera Dam, in the western Brisbane suburb of The Gap, reached a record capacity of 270% on the same day. The rainfall recorded was higher than that of the 1974 Brisbane flood, with 30 locations across the south-east recording in excess of 1000 millimetres. Impact Throughout South East Queensland and the Wide Bay–Burnett, almost one thousand schools were closed in response to the flooding, evacuations took place and the public were advised to avoid non-essential travel. Food shortages were reported across the region, due to the ensuing supply chain crisis as well as affecting communities in outback Queensland. In Brisbane, the CBD experienced flooding as well as the inner city areas of South Bank and South Brisbane, Milton, West End, and Newstead. The Brisbane River peaked at 3.8 metres on 28 February, below the 4.4 metres recorded during the 2010–2011 Queensland floods. Throughout South-East Queensland, more than 20,000 homes were inundated and power outages affecting over 51,000 properties. All public transport services were shutdown lasting for several days, including rail, buses, and City Cat ferries. South-East Queensland's rail network suffered extensive damage resulting from landslips, and major highways closed due to flooding, including the Bruce Highway, the Warrego Highway and the Ipswich Motorway. Holman Street ferry wharf in the Brisbane River suffered damage by floating debris. On the 28 February, a river crane for the Kangaroo Point Bridge broke free of its mooring, causing the evacuation of apartment and office buildings along Eagle street and the area of Howard Smith Wharves. In the Wide Bay–Burnett, the city of Gympie suffered its worst flooding since 1893, with the Mary | people are known to have died during the flooding, with Lismore, NSW experiencing the worst flood in its history. Extent Rainfall of over was recorded across the greater Brisbane area. In the three days to 28 February, greater Brisbane received of rainfall, the largest three, and seven, day total ever recorded in Brisbane. Mount Glorious received in excess of of rainfall in the week until 28 February. The Mary River at Gympie reached its highest water level since 1999. On the morning of 27 February the Brisbane River’s height reached , higher than the peak height of flooding in 2013. Wivenhoe Dam peaked at 183.9% capacity that day, despite the outflow gates being opened. Enoggera Dam, in the western Brisbane suburb of The Gap, reached a record capacity of 270% on the same day. The rainfall recorded was higher than that of the 1974 Brisbane flood, with 30 locations across the south-east recording in excess of 1000 millimetres. Impact Throughout South East Queensland and the Wide Bay–Burnett, almost one thousand schools were closed in response to the flooding, evacuations took place and the public were advised to avoid non-essential travel. Food shortages were reported across the region, due to the ensuing supply chain crisis as well as affecting communities in outback Queensland. In Brisbane, the CBD experienced flooding as well as the inner city areas of South Bank and South Brisbane, Milton, West End, and Newstead. The Brisbane River peaked at 3.8 metres on 28 February, below the 4.4 metres recorded during the 2010–2011 Queensland floods. Throughout South-East Queensland, more than 20,000 homes were inundated and power outages affecting over 51,000 properties. All public transport services were shutdown lasting for several days, including rail, buses, and City Cat ferries. South-East Queensland's rail network |
primarily affecting west Dayton before moving into the city's downtown. By 10:30 a.m., the mayor of Dayton arrived at the scene of the rioting and stated that he had requested the governor of Ohio to mobilize the National Guard to restore order. Additionally, a curfew was enacted, some businesses were closed, and the several hundred police attempted to blockade west Dayton. The National Guard arrived at around 3 p.m., but by that time much of the rioting had ended. In the aftermath of the rioting, one person had died, 30 had been injured, and over 100 had been arrested. The riot caused about $250,000 in property damage, primarily to African American-owned businesses in west Dayton. Following the riot, the area began to decline economically, with many businesses either not reopening or relocating elsewhere. Additionally, the city's racial issues were exacerbated in the following years with additional race riots (including two in 1967 and the King assassination riots in 1968) and increased white flight to the surrounding area. Speaking about the issue in 2016, former Dayton Mayor Rhine McLin stated that west Dayton had been "punished" by city officials because of the riot and had peaked economically in the years immediately preceding the riot. As of 2016, Dayton is among the most segregated major metropolitan areas in the United States. Background The 1960s in the United States was a period that saw several large race riots in major cities. This wave of riots began in New York City with the Harlem riot of 1964 and were followed the next year by the Watts riots in Los Angeles, which is regarded as one of the most destructive riots to occur in the country in the 1900s. These riots were often due to underlying social issues facing African American communities in these large cities and, according to academic Jonathon A. Cooper, were often triggered by "a confrontation between blacks and the police over a relatively trivial matter". In the city of Dayton, Ohio, racial tensions had grown through the mid-1900s, with many African Americans segregated from the white population of the city. In 1966, the city was one of the most segregated in the United States, with about 60,000 African Americans (about 96 percent of Dayton's African American population) living in west Dayton due to housing segregation. The area was an impoverished part of the city, with a 2016 article in the Dayton Daily News describing it as "what many perceived as a ghetto with neglected schools and discriminatory city services". A 1966 article in the Dayton Daily News identified four main issues that African American community leaders had with regards to west Dayton, which included worse educational opportunities than white schools offered, joblessness, lack of access to home loans due to discrimination, and a lack of concern for the neighborhood residents from city leaders. While there had been some integration in the previous years, such as the election of Dayton's first African American board of education member and city commissioner in 1952 and 1961, respectively, some in the west side felt that the progress was occurring too slowly. In 1963, some white residents of Madison Township (a suburb of Dayton) rioted after a black family moved into their neighborhood, which was suppressed by riot police. At about 3 a.m. on the morning of September 1, 1966, Lester Mitchell, a 39-year-old African American man, was shot while sweeping the sidewalk in front of his bar on West Fifth Street, located in a busy business district in west Dayton. Mitchell was taken to a hospital and shortly thereafter died. Sources varied to some extent | came through the windshield of his vehicle. Over 100 protesters were involved, and while 225 police officers set up a blockade around west Dayton, they were given orders to not engage with the rioters. Soon, the rioting had spread into downtown Dayton, leading to more property damage in that area. During this time, some African American men sought to defuse the situation by attempting to negotiate concessions with Dayton's city manager and police chief, requesting that some of the protesters who had been arrested be released and that two white police officers who patrolled west Dayton be removed from that beat. While the city officials agreed to these changes, it did little to hamper the rioting. C. J. McLin, who would later be elected as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, was one of the people who negotiated with the city officials. By 10:30 a.m., Dayton Mayor Dave Hall had arrived at the scene of the rioting. Police stationed there had armed themselves with shotguns borrowed from nearby pawn shops. Speaking to the crowd via a police car bullhorn, Hall notified them that he had requested the governor of Ohio to deploy members of the Ohio National Guard to subdue this "disturbance of the peace". Governor Jim Rhodes, who was at the Ohio State Fair when he received Hall's request, approved it and deployed 1,000 soldiers. At around 12:40 a.m., Hall ordered that bars and restaurants in west Dayton be closed. Additionally, liquor stores were closed, a curfew for everyone under the age of 15 was enacted, some city services were temporarily suspended, and trains were rerouted. By 3 p.m., the National Guard had arrived in Dayton, led by Adjutant General Erwin Hostetler and composed of men from the nearby municipalities of Blanchester, Covington, Eaton, Middletown, and Xenia. However, by the time of their arrival, much of the rioting had ended. Guardsmen patrolled the city in Jeeps armed with .50-caliber machine guns, while Hostetler made a tour of the city in an unmarked police car without any violent incidents, noting only signs of property damage. In total, rioting lasted for about 24 hours. Aftermath In the immediate aftermath of the rioting, one death and 30 injuries. Sources vary on the total number of arrests made during the rioting, but there were over 100 total. Public safety costs associated with the riot were approximately $20,000, while the cost of the property damage was about $250,000, which mostly affected African American-owned businesses. The riot garnered national attention because U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson had been scheduled to speak at a Labor Day ceremony in Dayton the following weekend. The Dayton Daily News would later describe the riot as "one of the city's worst race riots" and "one of the worst riots in Dayton's history". In the years that followed, Dayton would be home to several more race riots, including two in 1967 (one following a speech by civil rights activist H. Rap Brown and another following the police killing of an African American man) and one in 1968 as part of the nationwide King assassination riots. However, of all these, the 1966 riot was the largest. Nationwide, 1966 saw numerous race riots similar to the one in Dayton, with about 44 major American cities experiencing race riots, resulting in seven deaths and about 400 injuries. However, Dayton was one of only five cities, along with Cleveland, Chicago, Milwaukee, and San Francisco, to have the National Guard called in. The following year saw even more riots than in 1966, leading to the U.S. federal government creating the Kerner Commission to study and report on the wave of riots across the country. While no one was ever convicted of Mitchell's murder, a former police officer for Dayton's police department stated in a 2016 article of the Dayton Daily News that he believed it may have been Neal Long, a racist serial killer who targeted African American men in Dayton. Following the riot, many businesses in west Dayton either relocated out of the area or never reopened, and west Dayton continued to decline economically over the next several decades. Segregation would remain a significant issue in Dayton. In 2002, the city's school district was the last in Ohio to be released from a federal desegregation order, though many of the schools are still highly segregated. As of 2016, according to a report from the Brookings Institution, Dayton was the 14th most segregated large metropolitan area in the United States. Additionally, the city saw marked white flight following the riot, resulting in an overall decline in the population and in increase in the African American population as a percentage of the population. Speaking about the changes to west Dayton following the rioting, politician Rhine McLin (daughter of C. J. McLin, who served as Dayton's mayor from 2002 to 2010) said, "West Dayton today is worse off than west Dayton 50 years ago before the riots. Those areas were punished for rioting". Former NAACP President Jessie Gooding Jr. similarly stated that west Dayton had been economically more vibrant prior to the riot, but offered a different take on the reason for the decline, saying, "What led to their demise? Contrary to popular belief, it was not only the riots, but the highway system first, in |
analytical technician for Dow Chemical Company. From 2001 to 2004, she served as a microbiologist in the West Virginia Office of Laboratory Services. She was an unsuccessful candidate for the Putnam County Board of Education in 2010 and West Virginia House of Delegates in 2016. Crouse has been the president of the West Virginia Home Educators Association and a commissioner of the West Virginia State Athletic Commission. She was also a board member of the Putnam County Convention and Visitors Bureau. Crouse was appointed to the West Virginia House of Delegates in December 2021. Personal life Crouse lives in Buffalo, West Virginia. | December 2, 1969) is an American politician and activist serving as a member of the West Virginia House of Delegates from the 13th district. She was appointed by Governor Jim Justice on December 2, 2021. Early life and education Born and raised in Charleston, West Virginia, Crouse earned an associate degree in science and Bachelor of Science degree in microbiology and molecular biology from West Virginia State University. Career From 1998 to 2001, Crouse managed a Steak Escape restaurant. After earning her bachelor's degree, she worked as an analytical technician for Dow Chemical Company. From 2001 to 2004, she served |
Australian politician. MacDonald was born in Adelaide in 1853. In 1893 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of North | North Launceston. He served until his defeat in 1897. He died in 1898 in Launceston. References 1853 births 1898 deaths Members |
winged sedge, is a species of sedge that is native to parts of Africa, Asia and eastern parts of Australia. The species was first described in 1782 by Carl Linnaeus the Younger. See also List of Cyperus species References denudatus Taxa named by | species References denudatus Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus the Younger Plants described in 1782 Flora of Queensland Flora of India Flora of Angola Flora of Botswana Flora of Burkina Faso Flora of Burundi Flora of South Africa Flora of the Republic of the Congo Flora of Ethiopia Flora of |
1834. In 1891 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of West Hobart. He served until he was defeated contesting Hobart in 1897. He | (30 December 1834 – 23 June 1912) was an Australian politician. Hiddlestone was born in West Tarring in Sussex in 1834. In 1891 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of |
prospective investors as a safe, profitable investment with up to 40% interest per month. A referral program with referrals commissions was also implemented which helped spread the Bitconnect scheme. He also organized in person events in Dubai, Santa Clara, and other places where high ranked promoters were rewarded. According to SEC's investigation, of the approximate 325,000 Bitcoin investors paid to BitConnect, Kumbhani transferred at most only approximately 8% of the Bitcoin directly to any digital asset trading platform. Kumbhani did not disclose to investors that they were keeping funds in their personal control or transferring investor funds to a other means. On February 25, 2022, a federal grand jury in San Diego | to prospective investors as a safe, profitable investment with up to 40% interest per month. A referral program with referrals commissions was also implemented which helped spread the Bitconnect scheme. He also organized in person events in Dubai, Santa Clara, and other places where high ranked promoters were rewarded. According to SEC's investigation, of the approximate 325,000 Bitcoin investors paid to BitConnect, Kumbhani transferred at most only approximately 8% |
between the Russian paratroopers and Ukrainian defenders occurred in the city. According to American and Ukrainian officials, at 01:30, a Ukrainian Su-27 fighter jet shot down a Russian Ilyushin Il-76 carrying paratroopers. At 03:20, a second Il-76 was shot down over the nearby city of Bila Tserkva. The mayor of Vasylkiv, Natalia Balasynovych, stated that over 200 Ukrainians were wounded in the engagement. She later claimed that Ukrainian forces had repelled the assault by Russian paratroopers on the military air base near the city and the central street, with the situation in the city having calmed | Battle of Vasylkiv was a military engagement between the Russian Federation and Ukraine on 26 February 2022, during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Battle In the early morning of 26 February, paratroopers of the Russian Airborne Forces began landing near the city of Vasylkiv, just south of Kyiv, in an attempt to secure Vasylkiv Air Base. Heavy fighting between the Russian paratroopers and Ukrainian |
not been towed into its post in summertime for the previous couple of years. In Turku revolutionary Russian seamen hijacked the ship and towed it to the south coast of Finland. When the ship was met with ice hazards too dangerous to navigate past the Russians decided to abandon and sink the ship. After the war had ended, the Finns surfaced the ship and sent it to Tallinn, Estonia for repairs. However, the ship was so badly deteriorated it could only be used as a deputy lightvessel. The Finns had received a new and better steam-powered lightvessel from Liepāja, Latvia, which became the new lightvessel Helsinki. As a deputy lightvessel The old lightvessel was renamed Reserv I and acted as a deputy ship for lightvessels while they were docked. The ship also served as a replacement for the first lightvessel Storbrotten after it had been destroyed by a mine until the ship's successor was completed. In 1930 the ship was renamed Varamajakka 1 as a Finnish translation of its Swedish name. As a base ship for sea survey In 1937 the ship was stripped of its light emission equipment and moved to the 2nd sea survey expedition for a residential and design ship. The ship was first designated MKH 3, but the expedition named it Vuolle, which soon became its official name. The ship's Italian red hulls were repainted white to match the other sea surveying ships. The ship was well suited for sea survey: it was stable, easy to tug and suitably sized and shallow enough to pass through the old locks at the northern end of Lake Saimaa. As Vuolle the ship spent exactly 40 years as a base ship for sea survey. The ship's previous name Varamajakka 1 was passed on to the former lightvessel Helsingkallan now serving as a deputy ship. In private use In 1978 the ship was sold to a junkyard, which decided to renovate the ship as a maritime summer villa instead of scrapping it. The deck was fitted with pitched-roofed deck structures. In the late 1980s the ship ended up at a junkyard at Koirakari in Hamina. In 1991 the ship was saved from scrapping and was sold to Kotka. It | 1937 the ship was stripped of its light emission equipment and moved to the 2nd sea survey expedition for a residential and design ship. The ship was first designated MKH 3, but the expedition named it Vuolle, which soon became its official name. The ship's Italian red hulls were repainted white to match the other sea surveying ships. The ship was well suited for sea survey: it was stable, easy to tug and suitably sized and shallow enough to pass through the old locks at the northern end of Lake Saimaa. As Vuolle the ship spent exactly 40 years as a base ship for sea survey. The ship's previous name Varamajakka 1 was passed on to the former lightvessel Helsingkallan now serving as a deputy ship. In private use In 1978 the ship was sold to a junkyard, which decided to renovate the ship as a maritime summer villa instead of scrapping it. The deck was fitted with pitched-roofed deck structures. In the late 1980s the ship ended up at a junkyard at Koirakari in Hamina. In 1991 the ship was saved from scrapping and was sold to Kotka. It was docked at the Meretehas docks in Tallinn, otherwise it was repaired in private. The deck structures were repaired according to the lightvessel Kemi serving as a museum ship and repainted in their original colours. A freely designed copy of an electrical light tower was placed on the top of the deck. The wheel of the ship was moved from the front of the top deck to the middle in front of the exhaust pipe; it is no longer functional. The ship's rudder was installed to the centre of the ship during renovation; it has retained the possibility for hand steering with a separate handle. The ship was renamed Relandersgrund after its original name. The ship's heavy main anchor and secondary anchor, both including their chains, were moved to Kotka at the ship's anchoring site, as they were deemed too heavy to transport along with the ship. In 2012 they were moved to Helsinki to the ship's new permanent post. Because of cost reasons, the ship was repainted signal red. The ship's chimney is the pipe of the boiler used to power the anchor winch, foghorn and heating of the ship during its service as a lightvessel, which acted as the pipe of the storage water heater during |
Henry Horatio Gill (October 1840 – 4 March 1914) was an Australian politician. Gill was born in New | 1840. In 1887 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Kingborough. He served until 1897. |
extinct genus of bryozoan of the order Trepostomata with colonies forming cylindrical branches. In addition to branching | the order Trepostomata with colonies forming cylindrical branches. In addition to branching created |
as Butler 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 Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1921 films 1921 drama films English-language films | of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1921 films 1921 drama films English-language films American films American silent feature films American drama films American black-and-white films |
Modern Life is the second studio album from the Los Angeles-based band | Track listing References 2022 albums Lo Moon albums |
Northesk, British nobleman and soldier Lord George William Carnegie, son of David Carnegie, | of Northesk, British naval officer George Carnegie, 9th Earl of Northesk, British nobleman |
one is called Bänderschiefer (banded shale). The predominant variety of exposed siltstone is the grey-green to bluish clay-banded siltstone. As described, these rocks are among the oldest in North Rhine-Westphalia and were formerly placed in the Salm 2, although they are more likely to be placed in the lower Salm due to a find of Dictyonema flabelliforme. In various literature these layers are also described as Wehebach layers. The layers in the quarry are relatively little folded, which made quarrying economical. In the prominent east wall, the clay shales and the banded shales are recognisable with occasional benched sandstones. These sandstone beds can be classified as turbidites, as they partly carry ripple bedding and convolute bedding structures. They have a high carbonate content, which produces the dark brown discolouration during weathering. Clay slate The Tonschiefer from the lower Salm (Wehebach layers) is a clay-banded siltstone with a grey-greenish colour. (Walter 2010) The layers of the clay shale are mostly deeper than the banded shale, are much better sorted and partly carry sandstone beds in the rock. Banded shale The reddish-purple, more clayey Bänderschiefer without sandy parts tends to be exposed in the upper layers. The red colour is due to an increased manganese oxide and haematite content, which in turn were caused by submarine volcanic ejections and could sediment particularly well at this location. Individual layers of fine sand wedge out of the banded shales, creating a characteristic flashlayer. This can be seen as graded fine stratification on the surfaces of the rocks (see pictures). A very dense bioturbation prevails. Sedimentation of the ribbon shale occurred on a shallow marine delta platform. Mining methods Mining was mainly done along the north-south axis of the fault. Starting on the south side, the mining area extends up to 120 m in diameter. Little is known about the mining methods used in earlier years, but the extent of mining should not have been much greater than that of the surrounding smaller hews. It was only with the industrial use of the rock from the 1950s onwards that today's larger mining area developed. As a result, the eastern side, which is so prominent today, was opened up with the individual layers. Mining began on the south side and was carried out using the bench method at a depth of about 100 m at ground level and only about 47 m at the lower level. On the north side and to a certain extent also on the west side, the individual drifts are still recognizable. Due to the almost horizontal bedding of the strata, large blocks could be extracted from the rock again and again. Again and again, boreholes up to 8 m deep were driven and by shooting, the block was loosened from the bond. The explosions were clearly felt in the village. Processing and use Due to their good splitting properties, the broken blocks were mostly used as pavement slabs or low precision cut construction methods such as dry stone walls. The nearby Laufenburg contains small portions of the broken material in its masonry from 1217. Even in the Middle Ages, therefore, the slabs were quarried using simple tools such as pickaxes and crowbars, and prepared for use in a rudimentary way with chisels, fistfuls and lumps. Towards the end of the 19th century, the stone in particular was worked somewhat finer and shaped into elongated cuboids for buildings and used in irregular masonry. In the middle of the 20th century, large, mighty slabs were also processed as work stones on gables and the like. In later times, the natural stone was mainly used as clinker and was therefore sold treated with a stone saw with small thicknesses. From this time onwards, solid stones were often used as gravestones, but were not easy for stonemasons to work with due to the stone's properties. After the decommissioning After the final closure in 2012, the site was not properly decommissioned. The buildings remained standing and the demolition edges etc. were neither renaturalised nor secured. The area was frequently visited for a while, but is now completely fenced off and may not be entered. After the site was abandoned, the pump in the south of the site was exposed and the excavation pond began to fill with groundwater, presumably from two stories, and rainwater. After a few years it had reached the height of the factory site and was threatening to run down the slope into the valley. This was successfully countered by pumping out and draining. The buildings left behind quickly became the object of vandalism. Large parts of the site are now sprayed with graffiti and the tools were either looted or destroyed with great force. Much of the old equipment, laced with oil and other things, was thrown into the lake and so it was permanently damaged as a habitat. All access points to the site are now fenced off and may not be entered due to the acute danger to life. Nature Since the site was not properly decommissioned, the facilities are still there and the sealing of the ground was not removed. Nevertheless, the site became a habitat worth protecting in the period after the closure. Ducks regularly swim and rest on the lake in the centre, | and the site was neither renaturalised nor secured against rockfalls. Efforts for other quarry operations In the 1950s, a new quarry site, Steinbruch Kaspar Müller II, was developed in order to gain greater independence from the lease of the parent quarry. Due to poor rock properties, the quarry never became economically viable and mining ceased again a few years later. Due to the Wehebachtalsperre, the area at the former confluence of the Rote and Weiße Wehe is now in the flood zone. Another attempt at expansion occurred around the same time near the present-day water treatment of the Wehebachtalsperre in the form of the Schwontzen quarry. Here, too, both the uneconomical nature and the insufficient rock quality led to its swift abandonment. Operation of the quarry Quarried rocks Primarily two varieties of ornamental rock were mined and processed. Even if the lithological description and naming is not quite clean, the commonly used names are given. The grey-green fibrous siltstone is popularly called "Tonschiefer" (clay shale); the red-purple one is called Bänderschiefer (banded shale). The predominant variety of exposed siltstone is the grey-green to bluish clay-banded siltstone. As described, these rocks are among the oldest in North Rhine-Westphalia and were formerly placed in the Salm 2, although they are more likely to be placed in the lower Salm due to a find of Dictyonema flabelliforme. In various literature these layers are also described as Wehebach layers. The layers in the quarry are relatively little folded, which made quarrying economical. In the prominent east wall, the clay shales and the banded shales are recognisable with occasional benched sandstones. These sandstone beds can be classified as turbidites, as they partly carry ripple bedding and convolute bedding structures. They have a high carbonate content, which produces the dark brown discolouration during weathering. Clay slate The Tonschiefer from the lower Salm (Wehebach layers) is a clay-banded siltstone with a grey-greenish colour. (Walter 2010) The layers of the clay shale are mostly deeper than the banded shale, are much better sorted and partly carry sandstone beds in the rock. Banded shale The reddish-purple, more clayey Bänderschiefer without sandy parts tends to be exposed in the upper layers. The red colour is due to an increased manganese oxide and haematite content, which in turn were caused by submarine volcanic ejections and could sediment particularly well at this location. Individual layers of fine sand wedge out of the banded shales, creating a characteristic flashlayer. This can be seen as graded fine stratification on the surfaces of the rocks (see pictures). A very dense bioturbation prevails. Sedimentation of the ribbon shale occurred on a shallow marine delta platform. Mining methods Mining was mainly done along the north-south axis of the fault. Starting on the south side, the mining area extends up to 120 m in diameter. Little is known about the mining methods used in earlier years, but the extent of mining should not have been much greater than that of the surrounding smaller hews. It was only with the industrial use of the rock from the 1950s onwards that today's larger mining area developed. As a result, the eastern side, which is so prominent today, was opened up with the individual layers. Mining began on the south side and was carried out using the bench method at a depth of about 100 m at ground level and only about 47 m at the lower level. On the north side and to a certain extent also on the west side, the individual drifts are still recognizable. Due to the almost horizontal bedding of the strata, large blocks could be extracted from the rock again and again. Again and again, boreholes up to 8 m deep were driven and by shooting, the block was loosened from the bond. The explosions were clearly felt in the village. Processing and use Due to their good splitting properties, the broken blocks were mostly used as pavement slabs or low precision cut construction methods such as dry stone walls. The nearby Laufenburg contains small portions of the broken material in its masonry from 1217. Even in the Middle Ages, therefore, the slabs were quarried using simple tools such as pickaxes and crowbars, and prepared for use in a rudimentary way with chisels, fistfuls and lumps. Towards the end of the 19th century, the stone in particular was worked somewhat finer and shaped into elongated cuboids for buildings and used in irregular masonry. In the middle of the 20th century, large, mighty slabs were also processed as work stones on gables and the like. In later times, the natural stone was mainly used as clinker and was therefore sold treated with a stone saw with small thicknesses. From this time onwards, solid stones were often used as gravestones, but were not easy for stonemasons to work with due to the stone's properties. After the decommissioning After the final closure in 2012, the site was not properly decommissioned. The buildings remained standing and the demolition edges etc. were neither renaturalised nor secured. The area was frequently visited for a while, but is now completely fenced off and may not be entered. After the site was abandoned, the pump in the south of the site was exposed and the excavation pond began to fill with groundwater, presumably from two stories, and rainwater. After a few years it had reached the height of the factory site and was threatening to run down the slope into the valley. This was successfully countered by pumping out and draining. The buildings left behind quickly became the object of vandalism. Large parts of the site are now sprayed with graffiti and the tools were either looted or destroyed with great force. Much of the old equipment, laced with oil and other things, was thrown into the lake and so it was permanently damaged as a habitat. |
and free-floating, heavy-contour, match-grade precision barrel ensure unparalleled precision in a lightweight package. Can be operated by both right and left hand shooters. It combines a high capacity magazine with the proven hard-hitting .50 BMG round to provide unmatched battlefield versatility as anti-material, as well as ultra-long | length is approximately 31. The gun weighs without the magazine 20.94 lb. (9.5 kg). Design and features The CSR 50 is a 12.7×99mm NATO bolt-action precision rifle, intended for long-range target engagement. Its solid, monolithic receiver and free-floating, heavy-contour, match-grade precision barrel ensure unparalleled precision in a lightweight package. Can be operated by both right and left hand shooters. It combines a |
Patrick Honorine South Africa Head coaches: Fran Hilton-Smith and Ephraim Mashaba Uganda Head coach: Sam Timbe Zimbabwe Head coach: Benedict Moyo Group B Cameroon Head coach: Robert Atah Ghana Head coach: PSK Paha Morocco Head | of the tournament. The club listed is the club for which the player last played a competitive match prior to the tournament. A flag is included for coaches who are of a different nationality than their own national team. Group A Réunion Head coach: Patrick Honorine South Africa Head |
Grant, Sharon Lawrence, Robert Forster and Hassel. Cast Joy Vandervort-Cobb as Madam Josephine Beth Grant as Mattie Whalen Robert Forster as Don Whalen Sharon Lawrence as Olivia Korhonen Kevin Dee as Willie Bingham Gregory J. Fryer as George Morton Charly Thorn as Florence Lucas Oktay as Young Luke Lukas Hassel as Father Colleen Carey as Mother Astarte Abraham as Aunt/Mom Release The film was released on digital on October 15, 2021. Reception The film has a | film directed by Lukas Hassel, Brian Patrick Lim and Gabriel Olson and starring Joy Vandervort-Cobb, Beth Grant, Sharon Lawrence, Robert Forster and Hassel. Cast Joy Vandervort-Cobb as Madam Josephine Beth Grant as Mattie Whalen Robert Forster as Don Whalen Sharon Lawrence as Olivia Korhonen Kevin Dee as Willie Bingham Gregory |
to: George Butt | to: George Butt (priest) George |
player of the year as well as being selected to the NCPreps.com all-state team, helping the Patriots win their third consecutive league title. Emmons was regarded as a four-star prospect ranked No. 94 overall in the 247Sports Composite rankings. He originally committed to Georgia in December 2014, but decommitted on June 11, 2015, after improving his academics and receiving more offers. On July 20, Emmons committed to Alabama. College career Emmons played seven games for Alabama in 2016, rushing for 173 yards and a touchdown on 35 carries. He suffered a season-ending foot injury roughly halfway through the season. Emmons opted to transfer following the season. He transferred to Hutchinson Community College and ran for 694 yards and 10 touchdowns on 150 carries in 2017. Emmons did not play in 2018, and transferred to Florida Atlantic in 2019. He broke his ankle in his first game and was sidelined for the | Emmons was regarded as a four-star prospect ranked No. 94 overall in the 247Sports Composite rankings. He originally committed to Georgia in December 2014, but decommitted on June 11, 2015, after improving his academics and receiving more offers. On July 20, Emmons committed to Alabama. College career Emmons played seven games for Alabama in 2016, rushing for 173 yards and a touchdown on 35 carries. He suffered a season-ending foot injury roughly halfway through the season. Emmons opted to transfer following the season. He transferred to Hutchinson Community College and ran for 694 yards and 10 touchdowns on 150 carries in 2017. Emmons did not play in 2018, and transferred to Florida Atlantic in 2019. He broke his ankle in his first game and was sidelined for the majority of the season before returning for the Conference USA Championship Game and had two touchdowns against UAB. As a junior, Emmons had 51 carries for 237 yards and six touchdowns. He played four games in 2020 and had 116 yards and one touchdown. Professional career On May |
The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1920 | Clara Kimball Young as Marta Raquel Estevan Bertram Grassby as Rafael Artega Eugenie Besserer as Dona Luisa Juan de la Cruz as El Capitan J. Frank Glendon as Keith Bryton Ruth King as Ana Mendez Helene Sullivan as Angela Bryton Paula Merritt as Polonia Maude Emory as Teresa Edward Kimball as Ricardo References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, |
also known as growth differentiation factor 8, abbreviated GDF-8 or GDF8, is a key regulator of muscle homeostasis. Mutations that cause loss of myostatin, as well as pharmacological inhibition of myostatin activities, have shown to increase muscle growth in a number of species, including human. Such validations have prompted numerous groups over the | properties. Myostatin inhibitors inhibit the myostatin pathway. Myostatin, also known as growth differentiation factor 8, abbreviated GDF-8 or GDF8, is a key regulator of muscle homeostasis. Mutations that cause loss of myostatin, as well as pharmacological inhibition of |
births Living people Bermudian footballers Bermuda international footballers PHC Zebras players Association football midfielders BAA Wanderers | football for North Village CC Rams. He made his international debut for Bermuda in 2017. References 2000 births Living |
the bridge. His actions slowed the Russian advance allowing his battalion time to regroup. On 26 February 2022, Skakun was posthumously awarded the Order of the Gold Star, the military version of the title of Hero of Ukraine, by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. On 28 February 2022, the Czech representative of one of Prague's city districts, Libor Bezděk, proposed to rename a bridge in Korunovační street, which is the address of the Russian embassy, to Vitalij Skakun bridge. The proposal was accepted by the district and was forwarded to Prague City Council. References 1996 births 2022 deaths Ukrainian military personnel killed in action Recipients of the Order of Gold Star (Ukraine) | February 2022) was a Ukrainian marine combat engineer. Early life Skakun was born 19 August 1996 in Berezhany. He attended No. 3 Brzezany where his mother was a teacher. Skakun graduated from Higher Vocational School in Lviv No. 20 where he studied to be a welder. Skakun graduated from Lviv Polytechnic. Career During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Skakun's battalion was deployed to protect the town of Henichesk, located near the Isthmus of Perekop. As a Russian armored column approached the position, Ukrainian |
shown to increase muscle growth in a number of species, including human. Such validations have prompted numerous groups over the last twenty years to develop an antagonist of the myostatin pathway as a therapeutic to treat muscle conditions, such as disuse atrophy, sarcopenia, and cachexia. Myostatin inhibitors | cause loss of myostatin, as well as pharmacological inhibition of myostatin activities, have shown to increase muscle growth in a number of species, including human. Such validations have prompted numerous groups over the last twenty years to develop an antagonist of the myostatin pathway as a therapeutic to treat muscle conditions, such as disuse atrophy, sarcopenia, and cachexia. Myostatin inhibitors are in most |
A self-taught artist, she began painting and assembling objects in her home and garden in 1975. Among the objects assembled are painted hubcaps, shoes and signs. L.V. Hull died in 2008. After her death attempts were made to preserve the site and the objects, but despite a grant from the American Folklore Society, involvement of the Mississippi Arts Commission, and the formation of the The Friends of L.V. the project was not a success. The house was in disrepair and ownership was questionable. In the process of sorting out ownership, the house fell into further disrepair. The Friends of L.V. took photographs to document | Mississippi. She spent many years in Kosciusko, Mississippi. A self-taught artist, she began painting and assembling objects in her home and garden in 1975. Among the objects assembled are painted hubcaps, shoes and signs. L.V. Hull died in 2008. After her death attempts were made to preserve the site and the objects, but despite a grant from the American Folklore Society, involvement of the Mississippi Arts Commission, and the formation of the The Friends of L.V. the project was not a success. The house was in disrepair and ownership |
rules footballer who plays for Brisbane in the AFL Women's (AFLW). She played for University of Queensland in the AFL Queensland Women's League before being | before being drafted by with the 53rd pick in the 2021 AFL Women's draft. She made her debut in the Lions' round 6 game against at Trevor Barker Beach Oval on 13 February 2022. She attended secondary school at Kedron State High School in Brisbane, Queensland. References External |
on 12 August of that year, coming on as a late substitute for Vinícius Lopes in a 1–2 away loss against Athletico Paranaense. After featuring in a further two top tier matches, he was loaned to Série C side Criciúma. On 17 February 2021, Zeca agreed to a contract with Oeste also in the third division. A regular starter, he moved to Londrina in the Série B on 29 September, and was an important unit as the club narrowly avoided relegation in the last round. On 31 December 2021, Zeca signed for Mirassol. Career statistics Honours Londrina Campeonato Paranaense: 2014 Operário Ferroviário Campeonato Brasileiro Série D: 2017 Campeonato Paranaense Segunda Divisão: 2018 Campeonato Brasileiro Série C: 2018 Ypiranga-RS Campeonato Gaúcho Série A2: 2019 References 1997 births Living people People from Salvador, Bahia Brazilian footballers Association | March 1997), commonly known as Zeca, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a forward for Mirassol. Club career Zeca was born in Salvador, Bahia, and was a Bahia youth graduate. He made his senior debut while on loan at Ypiranga-BA in 2016, but later moved to Vitória and returned to the youth setup. In 2017, Zeca moved abroad and joined Portuguese side Boavista, being assigned to the reserve team. He returned to his home country in 2019, signing for Goiás and |
Alimovych Halushkin (; born June 26, 1971, in Khorol, Poltava Oblast), is a Ukrainian | Commander of the Territorial Defense Forces since January 1, 2022. |
Bermudian international footballer who plays for Dandy Town Hornets, as a left back. Career Bean-Lindo is currently playing football for Dandy Town Hornets. He made his international | left back. Career Bean-Lindo is currently playing football for Dandy Town Hornets. He made his international debut for Bermuda in 2020. References 1998 births Living people |
a 1926 American silent drama film directed by Harry Garson and starring Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn, Kathleen Myers and Tom Kennedy. Cast Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as William Barlow Jr. Kathleen Myers as Bess Calhoun Tom Kennedy as Bill Blake Will Walling as William Barlow | 'Lefty' Flynn, Kathleen Myers and Tom Kennedy. Cast Maurice 'Lefty' Flynn as William Barlow Jr. Kathleen Myers as Bess Calhoun Tom Kennedy as Bill Blake Will Walling as William Barlow Sr. Luke Cosgrave as John Calhoun Bill Nestell as Lars Hansoon |
railway station in the municipality of Oberammergau, in Bavaria, Germany. It is the southern | the municipality of Oberammergau, in Bavaria, Germany. It is the southern terminus of the Ammergau Railway of Deutsche Bahn. Services the following services stop at Oberammergau: |
French National Centre for Scientific Research in 1951 and taught abroad at multiple universities in the United States, Algeria, Canada, Latin America, and Belgium. Feminism An outspoken feminist activist, Michel joined and . In 1965, she participated in the Mouvement démocratique féminin alongside , , Gisèle Halimi, Colette Audry, and Évelyne Sullerot. In 1973, Michelle Perrot hosted the first course on women's history in France at the Jussieu Campus. Michel was in attendance at the conference "La femme et la famille dans les sociétés développées". Michel was the author of La femme et la famille dans les sociétés développée, as well as Le Féminisme, which was published in Que sais-je? in 1980. She was heavily critical of the existing patriarchy in France. Anticolonialism and antimilitarism During the Algerian War, Michel was a part of the Jeanson network and testified at trial in favor of those charged with crimes. She was known to have suggested to Charlotte Delbo that she publish the book that became known as Auschwitz and After. She was the first woman to work as a human researcher at the Groupement des scientifiques pour l'information sur l'énergie nucléaire and joined forces with Monique Sené in 1985 to publish texts on the relationship between militarization and violence against women. Outraged by in Tahiti and New Caledonia, she showed solidarity with victims of the tests in those regions. Michel began studying the military–industrial complex, a term which she was one of the first French authors to use. Her texts on this issue served as a precursor to her works on intersectionality. In 1984, she declared that "In 1980, when I began research on militarization, I called myself a pacifist […]. Today, I prefer to declare myself an anti-militarist". In 1990, she created the network Citoyennes pour la paix, which sent thousands of signatures to the United Nations Security Council to vote against the Gulf War. In 1995, she published | those charged with crimes. She was known to have suggested to Charlotte Delbo that she publish the book that became known as Auschwitz and After. She was the first woman to work as a human researcher at the Groupement des scientifiques pour l'information sur l'énergie nucléaire and joined forces with Monique Sené in 1985 to publish texts on the relationship between militarization and violence against women. Outraged by in Tahiti and New Caledonia, she showed solidarity with victims of the tests in those regions. Michel began studying the military–industrial complex, a term which she was one of the first French authors to use. Her texts on this issue served as a precursor to her works on intersectionality. In 1984, she declared that "In 1980, when I began research on militarization, I called myself a pacifist […]. Today, I prefer to declare myself an anti-militarist". In 1990, she created the network Citoyennes pour la paix, which sent thousands of signatures to the United Nations Security Council to vote against the Gulf War. In 1995, she published Justice et vérité pour la Bosnie-Herzégovine, expressing her anger against the Srebrenica massacre and those who contributed to the Bosnian Genocide. In Surarmement, pouvoir, démocratie, she explained how the patriarchy used the notions "security" and "national defense" to oppress women. In Citoyennes militairement incorrectes, she illustrated the large profits received by the military-industrial complex throughout the 20th Century. According to the book's preface by Jules Falquet, "What we spend on weapons is always that much less for music, poetry or the decongestion of the courts which set the amounts of alimony". Death Michel died on 8 February 2022, at the age of 101. Books Les Travailleurs algériens en France (1956) Famille, industrialisation, logement (1959) La Condition de la Française d'aujourd’hui (1963) Family Issues of Employed Women in Europe and America (1971) Activité professionnelle de la femme et |
the Nerang River and passes the exit to Gold Coast–Springbrook Road (Pine Creek Road). It follows the river generally south through to , crossing it on two more occasions. It then leaves the river and follows a ridge line, climbing until it reaches the Queensland / New South Wales border, where it ends. The physical road continues into New South Wales as Numinbah Road (Tourist Drive 34). Land use along the road is primarily rural, with much natural bushland. Road condition Nerang–Murwillumbah Road is fully sealed. It has about with an incline greater than 5%, about greater than 10%, and about grater than 15%. The height above sea level at the border crossing is . History The township of Nerang was surveyed in 1865. It became important to the surrounding district because it was the head of navigation on the Nerang River and the site of the first crossing for wheeled vehicles. From 1871 a Cobb & Co coach service ran from Brisbane, and river transport became more regular. The first industry to flourish was timber cutting, | The physical road continues into New South Wales as Numinbah Road (Tourist Drive 34). Land use along the road is primarily rural, with much natural bushland. Road condition Nerang–Murwillumbah Road is fully sealed. It has about with an incline greater than 5%, about greater than 10%, and about grater than 15%. The height above sea level at the border crossing is . History The township of Nerang was surveyed in 1865. It became important to the surrounding district because it was the head of navigation on the Nerang River and the site of the first crossing for wheeled vehicles. From 1871 a Cobb & Co coach service ran from Brisbane, and river transport became more regular. The first industry to flourish was timber cutting, later followed by dairying and crop farming as tracts of native timber were cleared. The railway arrived in 1889. Timber cutting began in Numinbah Valley soon after cedar was discovered there in 1845, and in the Advancetown area in the 1870s, with a saw mill established in 1881. Bullock teams hauled timber to Nerang for dispatch to customers, at first by ship and later by train. The village of Advancetown began as a rest stop for the bullock teams. In the 1860s surveyors mapping the Queensland / New South Wales border discovered a route from |
2022, at the age of 84. Honours Division 2: 1965–66 References 1937 births 2022 deaths Sportspeople from Pas-de-Calais French footballers Association football forwards | 2022 deaths Sportspeople from Pas-de-Calais French footballers Association football forwards Ligue 1 players Ligue 2 players Lille OSC players USL |
February |day = 26 |year = 2022 |time | 2022 |time = 07:38 |timestamp = 20220226073845 |content= redirect |
(; born May 27, 1983) is a Russian business executive and media manager who is the chief executive officer of VK. He was previously the vice president of Rostelecom. Life Kiriyenko was born May 27, 1983, in Nizhny Novgorod. He is the son of Sergey Kiriyenko. Kiriyenko graduated from the Higher School of Economics in 2005. He completed an executive Master of Business Administration from the Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO in 2014. From 2005 to 2011, he was the chairman of the board of directors of the VolgaTelecom and a member | officer of VK. He was previously the vice president of Rostelecom. Life Kiriyenko was born May 27, 1983, in Nizhny Novgorod. He is the son of Sergey Kiriyenko. Kiriyenko graduated from the Higher School of Economics in 2005. He completed an executive Master of Business Administration from the Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO in 2014. From 2005 to 2011, he was the chairman of the |
Charles McHugh as Clancey O'Toole Hal Wilson as Michael Arnold Kathleen Myers as Kathleen O'Toole Ray Turner as Colored Boy Joe O'Brien as Tom References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Katchmer, George A. Eighty Silent Film Stars: Biographies and Filmographies of the Obscure to the Well Known. McFarland, 1991. Munden, Kenneth White. | Foster Helen Lynch as Alice Arnold Ray Ripley as Lafaette Van Renselaer Lee Shumway as Swazey Charles McHugh as Clancey O'Toole Hal Wilson as Michael Arnold Kathleen Myers as Kathleen O'Toole Ray Turner as Colored Boy Joe O'Brien as Tom References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Katchmer, George A. Eighty Silent Film Stars: Biographies and Filmographies of the Obscure to the Well Known. McFarland, 1991. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part |
1837. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of South Launceston. He served | 1837. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of South Launceston. He served until his defeat in 1891. He returned to Parliament in September 1892 after winning a by-election for North Launceston, |
interpretations were later confirmed via photography and oceanic dredging in early 1992 during the 3-week Rapuhia cruise. In 2006, during a New Zealand-American NOAA | 3-week Rapuhia cruise. In 2006, during a New Zealand-American NOAA Vents Program expedition, sulfide chimneys and diffuse hydrothermal venting were observed. There have been no known eruptions |
Chilean football. In addition to the domestic league, Universidad Católica are participating in this season's editions of the Copa Chile, the Supercopa de Chile, and the Copa Libertadores. Squad Transfers In Out New contracts Pre-season and friendlies Competitions Overview Primera Division League table Results summary Results by round Matches Supercopa | in this season's editions of the Copa Chile, the Supercopa de Chile, and the Copa Libertadores. Squad Transfers In Out New contracts Pre-season and friendlies Competitions Overview Primera Division League table Results summary Results by round |
relations Academic relations between Iran and the United States Iran–America Society Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action University of Chicago Persian antiquities dispute Jimmy Carter's engagement with Ruhollah Khomeini United States support for Iraq during the Iran–Iraq War United States national emergency with respect to Iran List of ambassadors of Iran to the United States United States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran Contents of the United States diplomatic cables leak (Iran) 2009–2011 detention of American hikers | of the United States. See President of the Continental Congress for more information about all previous United States presidents. The list does not include the Acting president of the United States in accordance to the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, the third longest reigning monarch in Iranian history, witnessed 14 US presidents during his reign, while Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar, the sixth shah of the Qajar Dynasty, coincided with only one US president. Contents After Iranian revolution of 1979 See also Iran–United States relations Academic relations between Iran and the United States Iran–America Society Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action University of Chicago Persian antiquities dispute Jimmy |
of Finland from 1954 to 1987. She died in Pori on 19 February 2022, at the age of 94. References 1927 births 2022 deaths 20th-century Finnish women politicians People from Pori University of Helsinki alumni Finnish People's Democratic League politicians Democratic Alternative (Finland) politicians Members of the Parliament of Finland (1954–58) Members of the Parliament of Finland (1958–62) Members of | politicians Members of the Parliament of Finland (1954–58) Members of the Parliament of Finland (1958–62) Members of the Parliament of Finland (1962–66) Members of the Parliament of Finland (1966–70) Members of the Parliament of Finland (1970–72) Members of |
of study and observation, revising and transcribing the manuscripts in English and in Latin, he seems to have hesitated to the last at their publication, as if sensible of the want of some really scientific instrument (the forceps) for the perfection of his art. The earliest copy of his work is a closely written quarto, entitled Dni Willougbaei, Derbiensis, De Puerperio Tractatus, in the British Library Sloane MS. 529. The second, an amplification of this, and referred to by Dr. Denman in his Practice of Midwifery, was then in the possession of his friend Dr. Kirkland; while the third and greatly enlarged edition consisted of two exquisitely written copies in Latin and in English, which were afterwards the property of Dr. J. H. Aveling, the English version being in two parts, with the titles Observations in Midwifery and The Countrey Midwife's Opusculum or Vade-mecum, by Percivall Willughby, Gentleman. It was privately printed in 1863 by Henry Blenkinsopp, but a Dutch translation had been printed as an octavo at Leyden in 1764, though no copy is now to be had in Holland. He was the intimate friend of Harvey and of most of the scientific men of the century, and died on 2 October 1685, in the ninetieth year of his age, being buried in St Peter's Church, Derby, where within the rails of the chancel is a tablet to his memory. References Bibliography Dunn, Peter M. (1997). "Dr Percivall Willughby, MD (1596–1685): pioneer "man" midwife of Derby". Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition 76(3): 212–213. 1596 births 1685 deaths | to overcome all difficulties by turning. At one period he was to some extent assisted by a daughter, whom he had trained as a midwife to ladies of the higher classes. He was a man of high culture, powerful intellect, and great modesty, scorning the secrecy which some of his contemporaries maintained as to their procedures; and though he committed to writing the conclusions at which he arrived after long years of study and observation, revising and transcribing the manuscripts in English and in Latin, he seems to have hesitated to the last at their publication, as if sensible of the want of some really scientific instrument (the forceps) for the perfection of his art. The earliest copy of his work is a closely written quarto, entitled Dni Willougbaei, Derbiensis, De Puerperio Tractatus, in the British Library Sloane MS. 529. The second, an amplification of this, and referred to by Dr. Denman in his Practice of Midwifery, was then in the possession of his friend Dr. Kirkland; while the third and greatly enlarged edition consisted of two exquisitely written copies in Latin and in English, which were afterwards the property of Dr. J. H. Aveling, the English version being in two parts, with the titles Observations in Midwifery and The Countrey Midwife's Opusculum or Vade-mecum, by Percivall Willughby, Gentleman. It was privately printed in 1863 by Henry Blenkinsopp, but |
played one season with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1987. He played college football at Iowa State. Anthony was drafted in the ninth round of the 1987 NFL Draft by | Iowa State. Anthony was drafted in the ninth round of the 1987 NFL Draft by the Atlanta Falcons. He was traded to the Cardinals and played one game with them, a 24–19 home win against the New Orleans Saints. |
established in 2022. Team roster References UCI Continental | in 2022. Team roster References UCI Continental Teams (Europe) Cycling teams based |
Miron (born 1990), Romanian association football goalkeeper Brock Miron (born 1980), Canadian speed skater Dan Miron (born 1934)< Israeli-born American literary critic and author Issachar Miron (1920-2015), Israeli composer Jay Miron Javier Mirón (born 1999), Spanish middle-distance runner Jeffrey Miron Eugenia Miron (born 1992), Russian-born Moldovan footballer François Miron (born 1962), French-Canadian experimental filmmaker Gaston Miron (1952 – 2020), Soviet-born American chess player Leonard Miron Marcel-Ioan Miron (born 1982), Romanian tennis player. Mike Miron Oleg Miron (born 1956) | 1980), Canadian speed skater Dan Miron (born 1934)< Israeli-born American literary critic and author Issachar Miron (1920-2015), Israeli composer Jay Miron Javier Mirón (born 1999), Spanish middle-distance runner Jeffrey Miron Eugenia Miron (born 1992), Russian-born Moldovan footballer François Miron (born 1962), French-Canadian experimental filmmaker Gaston Miron (1952 – 2020), Soviet-born American chess player Leonard Miron Marcel-Ioan Miron (born 1982), Romanian tennis player. Mike Miron Oleg Miron (born 1956) is a sailor from Hrodna, Belarus, Soviet Union Paul Miron (1926 - 2008) was a Romanian linguist and philologist Rami Miron (born 1957), Israeli Olympic wrestler |
he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of George Town. He served until his defeat in 1893. He died | an Australian politician. Conway was born in Ashby-de-la-Zouch in Leicestershire in 1829. In 1886 he was elected to |
hairy young stems, egg-shaped leaves and pale mauve-pink reddish-purple flowers. Description Lasiopetalum glabratum is an erect shrub that typically grows to a height of up to , its young stems covered with tan or dark red, star-shaped hairs. The leaves are mostly glabrous, egg-shaped, mostly long and wide on a petiole long. The flowers are borne in loose groups of three to six long, each group on a peduncle | in loose groups of three to six long, each group on a peduncle long, each flower on a pedicel long with linear to narrowly egg-shaped bracts long at the base and similar bracteoles long near the base of the sepals. The sepals are pale mauve-pink with a dark red base, the lobes narrowly egg-shaped long and there are no petals. The anthers are reddish-purple and long. Flowering usually occurs from August to December. Taxonomy Lasiopetalum glabratum was first formally described in |
rights and community leadership Merriman was the first president of the Portland branch of the NAACP, which was founded in 1914. With Merriman in a leadership role, in 1915 the Portland NAACP convinced the Portland City Council to ban the showing of any film promoting racial hatred (after the council members watched The Birth of a Nation). During World War I, he was appointed as a Four Minute Man and was enrolled as a member of the Volunteer Medical Service Corps. While living in Portland he was heavily involved in the community, moderating local forums, directing church plays, and serving as the president of a literary society. He was a member of the Mystic Shriners, Knights of Pythias, and a thirty-second degree Mason. He was also chairman of the trustee board of William H. Patterson Elks Lodge in Phoenix, and helped plan the building of the Elks lodge building at 1007 South Seventh Avenue, which was finished a few months before his death. Personal life and death Merriman was married to Mabel Jones; they had two children together, Robert E. and Louise (Coles). Merriman was ill the last year of his life, and in September 1946 he was moved from his home in Phoenix to his daughter's home in Chicago. He died at the Provident Hospital in Chicago on December 14, 1946. References External links "J.A. Merriman" 5-minute audio episode of The Register, from National Public Radio station KMUN (August | from Rush Medical College in Chicago in 1902. He was the only Black graduate from Rush Medical College that year. Career as a physician Merriman came to Portland in 1903 where he passed the Oregon medical examination in June and started practicing medicine in Portland that August, becoming the first African American physician in the city. Merriman may have been the first African American physician in Oregon. He was recruited to Portland by the Union Pacific Railroad which required a Black physician to care for its Black workers, who were employed as porters, stewards, cooks, and barbers. By 1910, he had joined his practice with Dr. Stanley Lucas. Merriman recruited Black physician DeNorval Unthank to Portland to take his place caring for Black workers of the Union Pacific. Merriman moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1931, leaving Unthank as the only Black physician remaining in Portland. He practiced as a physician in Phoenix for fourteen years. Newspaper work Along with other local Black entrepreneurs, Merriam cofounded Portland's second Black newspaper, The Advocate, in 1903. Merriman was also the editor of The Portland Times, an African American newspaper, and served as Vice President of the Times Publishing Company. He would work in the role of editor from the founding of the Times in 1913 until 1926. Civil rights and community leadership Merriman was the first president of the Portland branch of the NAACP, which was founded in 1914. With Merriman in a leadership role, in 1915 the Portland NAACP convinced the Portland City Council to ban the showing of any film |
records of the state per the Constitution of New Hampshire as adopted in 1784. The Secretary is elected biannually by the New Hampshire General Court (state legislature). Organization The department is organized into six divisions: Administration Archives and Records Management Corporation and Uniform Commercial | General Court (state legislature). Organization The department is organized into six divisions: Administration Archives and Records Management Corporation and Uniform Commercial Code Elections Securities Regulation Vital Records Administratively attached to the department are: New Hampshire Board of |
corruption and bribery. Dillon's election was declared void and his term came to an end in July 1891. Dillon served as an alderman on Hobart Council. He died in Hobart on 12 January 1908 aged 61 and was buried at | defeating Henry Mugliston to become the member for Brighton. Mugliston challenged the result, claiming Dillon had engaged in corruption and bribery. Dillon's election was declared void and his term came to an end in July 1891. Dillon served as an alderman on Hobart |
oceanic islands off north-eastern Brazil. References Homoscleromorpha Animals described in 2003 Taxa named by Guilherme Muricy | Guilherme Muricy, from specimens collected from oceanic islands off north-eastern Brazil. References |
Milly Hendricks Earl Metcalfe as Lem Darley Wilfred Lucas as Old Jim Darley Ralph Yearsley as Bob Darley Helen Lynch as Maurine Foster 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 Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1924 films 1920s action films English-language films American films American silent feature films | whole area lives off the moonshining trade, this prevents problems - particularly when he falls in love with the daughter of the head of the local producers. Cast Raymond McKee as Harvey Swope Helen Ferguson as Milly Hendricks Earl Metcalfe as Lem Darley Wilfred Lucas as Old Jim Darley Ralph Yearsley as Bob Darley Helen Lynch as Maurine Foster References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. |
politician. Featherstone was born in Hobart in Tasmania in 1852. In 1889 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Sorell. He served until his | House of Assembly, representing the seat of Sorell. He served until his disqualification due to bankruptcy in 1893. His date of death is |
Sean Matthews has represented Delaware House of Representatives 10th District since November 2014. District 11 5th term incumbent Republican Representative Jeffrey Spiegelman has represented Delaware House of Representatives 11th District since November 2012. District 12 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Krista Griffith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 12th District since November 2018. District 13 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative John Mitchell Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 13th District since November 2006. District 14 10th term incumbent Democratic Representative Peter Schwartzkopf has represented Delaware House of Representatives 14th District since November 2002. District 15 9th term incumbent Democratic Representative Valerie Longhurst has represented Delaware House of Representatives 15th District since November 2004. He represented House majority Leader since 2013. District 16 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Franklin Cooke Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 16th District since November 2018. District 17 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since November 2018. District 18 4th term incumbent Democratic Representative David Bentz has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since 2015. District 19 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 19th District since November 2012. District 20 5th term incumbent Republican Representative Stephen Smyk has represented Delaware House of Representatives 20th District since November 2012. District 21 7th term incumbent Republican Representative Michael Ramone has represented Delaware House of Representatives 21st District since November 2008. District 22 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Michael F. Smith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 22nd District since November 2018. District 23 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Paul Baumbach has represented Delaware House of Representatives 23rd District since November 2012. District 24 6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 24th District since November 2010. District 25 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 25th District since November 2006. District 26 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Madinah Wilson-Anton has represented Delaware House of Representatives 26th District since November 2020. District 27 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Eric Morrison has represented Delaware House of Representatives 27th District since November 2020. He is running for reelection. District 28 7th term incumbent Democratic Representative | incumbent Republican Representative Jeffrey Spiegelman has represented Delaware House of Representatives 11th District since November 2012. District 12 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Krista Griffith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 12th District since November 2018. District 13 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative John Mitchell Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 13th District since November 2006. District 14 10th term incumbent Democratic Representative Peter Schwartzkopf has represented Delaware House of Representatives 14th District since November 2002. District 15 9th term incumbent Democratic Representative Valerie Longhurst has represented Delaware House of Representatives 15th District since November 2004. He represented House majority Leader since 2013. District 16 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Franklin Cooke Jr. has represented Delaware House of Representatives 16th District since November 2018. District 17 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since November 2018. District 18 4th term incumbent Democratic Representative David Bentz has represented Delaware House of Representatives 17th District since 2015. District 19 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Melissa Minor-Brown has represented Delaware House of Representatives 19th District since November 2012. District 20 5th term incumbent Republican Representative Stephen Smyk has represented Delaware House of Representatives 20th District since November 2012. District 21 7th term incumbent Republican Representative Michael Ramone has represented Delaware House of Representatives 21st District since November 2008. District 22 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative Michael F. Smith has represented Delaware House of Representatives 22nd District since November 2018. District 23 5th term incumbent Democratic Representative Paul Baumbach has represented Delaware House of Representatives 23rd District since November 2012. District 24 6th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 24th District since November 2010. District 25 8th term incumbent Democratic Representative Edward Osienski has represented Delaware House of Representatives 25th District since November 2006. District 26 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Madinah Wilson-Anton has represented Delaware House of Representatives 26th District since November 2020. District 27 1st term incumbent Democratic Representative Eric Morrison has represented Delaware House of Representatives 27th District since November 2020. He is running for reelection. District 28 7th term incumbent Democratic Representative William Carson Jr has represented Delaware House of Representatives 28th District since November 2008. District 29 2nd term incumbent Democratic Representative William Bush IV has represented Delaware House of Representatives 29th District since November 2018. District 30 2nd term incumbent Republican Representative W. Shannon Morris has represented Delaware House of Representatives 30th District since November 2018. District 31 4th term incumbent Democratic Representative Sean Lynn has represented Delaware |
and Action - Rural (SEWA Rural), a voluntary organization devoted to health and development activities in the tribal area of South Gujarat. After completing basic medical education at B J Medical College, Gandhinagar, Gujarat in the early 60's and getting maarried 1n 1968, Lata Desai and her husband moved to the US in 1972 for higher studies. In the US, Lata Desai specialized in pediatrics and Anil Desai in surgery. After completing their studies they started their careers in the US. However, after a few years, inspired by the lives and works of Mahatma Gandhi and Swami Vivekananda, they along with a few friends returned to India and established the non-profit SEWA Rural in Jhagadia, Bharuch district, Gujarat. The services rendered by SEWA Rural include: Ksaturba Hospital which offers round the clock emergency services, special care for women and children and people with eye diseases, separate clinics for Tuberculosis, Diabetes and Infertility and Sickle Cell Disease Sharda Mahila Vikas Society established in 2002 working towards the development of women, youth and children | along with a few friends returned to India and established the non-profit SEWA Rural in Jhagadia, Bharuch district, Gujarat. The services rendered by SEWA Rural include: Ksaturba Hospital which offers round the clock emergency services, special care for women and children and people with eye diseases, separate clinics for Tuberculosis, Diabetes and Infertility and Sickle Cell Disease Sharda Mahila Vikas Society established in 2002 working towards the development of women, youth and children in villages of tribal, areas of Jhagadia, Gujarat Training Centre for Community Health Vocational Training Centre for Women Adolescent Awareness Programme which is aimed at reducing anemia, improving menstrual hygiene management, creating reproductive health awareness Community Health Project Comprehensive Eye Care Project Vivekananda Gramin Tekniki Kendra which is a vocational training center started in 1987 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 Lata Desai for her distinguished service in |
was a doctor before entering politics. In 1891 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of | He died in 1895 in Launceston. References 1849 births 1895 deaths Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly |
States Department of State. Other uses include: Department of State (Ireland) New Hampshire Department of | of State New York State Department of State Pennsylvania Department of State Puerto Rico Department of State See also Secretary of state (U.S. |
an area of 1.38 square kilometers and a coastline of 7.8 kilometers. The terrain is flat and the highest point is 17.4 meters. The soil of Kudaka Island is terracotta, with poor water retention. In addition, coral reefs are constantly being formed along the coast, resulting in lagoons. According to the Chūzan Seikan, the Emperor of Heaven ordered Amamikyu, the god of Ryukyu development, to descend on Cape Kapur on Kudaka Island and founded the Ryukyu | ferry in 20 minutes. Kudaka Island is a slender island running from the northeast to the southwest, with an area of 1.38 square kilometers and a coastline of 7.8 kilometers. The terrain is flat and the highest point is 17.4 meters. The soil of Kudaka Island is terracotta, with poor water retention. In addition, coral reefs are constantly being formed along the coast, resulting in lagoons. According to the Chūzan |
the seat of Deloraine. He served until his defeat in 1893. He died in 1896 in Deloraine. References 1829 births 1896 deaths Members | in 1826. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Deloraine. He served until his defeat |
a 1921 American silent comedy film directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Carter DeHaven, Flora Parker DeHaven and Thomas G. Lingham. It was based on the 1919 Broadway play of the same title by Frank Mandel and Emil Nyitray. Cast Carter DeHaven | Mandel and Emil Nyitray. Cast Carter DeHaven as James Smith Flora Parker DeHaven as Catherine Smith Thomas G. Lingham as Edward Early Helen Raymond as Lucille Early Helen Lynch as Eva Johns Lincoln Stedman as Tom Trainer May Wallace as Hilda Hazel Howell as Nora Clara Morris as Gwen Ruth Ashby as Julia References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue |
was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Ringarooma. He served until 1893. He | born in Witham in Essex in 1845. In 1886 he was elected to the Tasmanian |
Baoquansi Caves were carved into a cliff wall and are 40 meters long and eight meters high, with the grottoes running east to west. Among the niches, three, four, five, and six are the largest. Some of these niches are square-shaped while others are horseshoe-shaped or domed. The largest of all is niche four. The width, height, and depth are all three meters. The main wall consists of the buddhas Śākyamuni and Prabhūtaratna sitting side by side with Maitreya. The north and south walls are each composed of two Buddhas. There are also two Bodhisattvas standing at the entrance. Murals During the mid to late Northern Wei dynasty, murals, utilizing many colors, were used to emphasize different characters. These murals mainly included images of the Asparas, the Bodhisattva, the thousand buddhas, Buddha, and donors. These characters were often portrayed as tall and thin figures with a clear composition outline. Various shades of green were also used heavily during the Northern Wei Dynasty. Complementary and supplementary colors were used to create a total sense of harmony. | of Pingdingchuan, Taibai Township, Heshui County, Gansu in Northwest China. Built during the Northern Wei dynasty (386AD–534AD) and excavated on an 8-meter tall cliff, Baoquansi consists of 25 horseshoe-shaped niches and 153 stone statues. The grottoes mainly consist of statues depicting Śākyamuni, Prabhūtaratna, Maitreya, and their assistants. Some of these niches are still intact and many have been damaged by erosion, looting, or vandalism. Niches description The Baoquansi Caves were carved into a cliff wall and are 40 meters long and eight meters high, with the grottoes running east to west. Among the niches, three, four, five, and six are the largest. Some of these niches are square-shaped while others are horseshoe-shaped or domed. The largest of all is niche four. The width, height, and depth are all three |
Franklin Williams, praised her and her husband as "unusually efficient ambassadors for America to millions of Africans and others." While she was based in Washington, she was membership chair of the Women's Action Organization (WAO), a group for women employees of the United States Department of State. Pinder retired from public health work in 1982. In retirement, she lived in Tucson, Arizona, where she started a free clinic in a Yaqui community, and played violin in the Community Orchestra of Tucson. Personal life and legacy Jean Martin married Frank Pinder, an agricultural economist who also worked in Africa. Frank Pinder died in 1992. She lived with her friend Elouise | She worked for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Africa and Washington, D.C., mostly on family planning policies, nutrition, and maternal and child health. In 1968, the United States ambassador to Ghana, Franklin Williams, praised her and her husband as "unusually efficient ambassadors for America to millions of Africans and others." While she was based in Washington, she was membership chair of the Women's Action Organization (WAO), a group for women employees of the United States Department of State. Pinder retired from public health work in 1982. In retirement, she lived in Tucson, Arizona, where she started a free clinic in a Yaqui community, and played violin in the Community Orchestra of Tucson. Personal life and legacy Jean Martin married Frank Pinder, an agricultural economist who also worked in Africa. Frank Pinder died in 1992. She lived with her friend Elouise Duncan in Tucson in retirement, then with Elouise's son and his family in Gaithersburg, Maryland. She died |
Manager Competitions MLS Next Pro Standings Eastern Conference Overall table Results summary Results See also 2022 Columbus Crew season References Columbus Crew 2 Columbus Crew 2 Columbus Crew 2 Columbus Crew 2 | season competing in MLS Next Pro, a professional developmental league in the third tier of the United States Soccer pyramid. Players and staff Current roster Staff Corey Wray – General Manager Laurent Courtois – Head Coach Phil Boerger – Assistant Coach Kobie |
and is a double citizen of Argentina and Canada. As a high school student, she represented Argentina twice in the International Mathematical Olympiad, in 1993 and 1995, earning a silver medal in 1995. She earned a licenciatura in 1999 from the University of Buenos Aires. After starting graduate study at Princeton University and spending a term as a visiting student at Harvard University, she completed her doctorate in 2005 at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, Some Relations of Mahler Measure with Hyperbolic Volumes and Special Values of L-Functions, was supervised there by Fernando Rodriguez-Villegas. She became a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Max Planck Institute | school student, she represented Argentina twice in the International Mathematical Olympiad, in 1993 and 1995, earning a silver medal in 1995. She earned a licenciatura in 1999 from the University of Buenos Aires. After starting graduate study at Princeton University and spending a term as a visiting student at Harvard University, she completed her doctorate in 2005 at the University of Texas at Austin. Her dissertation, Some Relations of Mahler Measure with Hyperbolic Volumes and Special Values of L-Functions, was supervised there by Fernando Rodriguez-Villegas. She became a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences, before obtaining a |
short course metres in August and September, Strelnikov was a part of the roster for Team Iron. In the seventh match of the regular season, he took second-place in the 50 metre breaststroke with a time of 26.31 seconds, finishing 0.17 seconds behind first-place finisher Nic Fink of the Cali Condors. On the second day of the match, he placed fifth in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 58.40. In the eleventh match, he tied Alessandro Pinzuti of Tokyo Frog Kings with a 26.20 in the 50 metre breaststroke for second-place, both finished 0.19 seconds behind Yasuhiro Koseki of the Tokyo Frog Kings. 2021 Swimming World Cup At the Kazan stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup in October, Strelnikov started competition on day one with a ninth-place finish in the 100 metre breaststroke, swimming a 58.43 in the preliminary heats. For his second and final event he competed in the 50 metre breaststroke, ranking fifth in the prelims heats with a 26.37 and qualifying for the final later in the day. In the final he won the bronze medal with a time of 26.12 seconds, finishing within three-tenths of a second of gold medalist Fabian Schwingenschlögl of Germany and silver medalist Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands. 2021 European Short Course Championships On the second day of the 2021 European Short Course Championships in Kazan in November, Strelnikov swam a personal best time of 57.68 seconds, ranked eleventh overall, third amongst the Russian swimmers in the event, and did not qualify for the final as he was not one of the two fastest swimmers representing Russia. For his other individual event, the 50 metre breaststroke, he placed fifth in the final on the sixth and final day of competition with a personal best time of 26.03 seconds. Also on the final day of competition, he split a 25.83 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre mixed medley relay in the prelims heats, helping qualify the relay to the final ranking first. On the finals relay, Oleg Kostin substituted in for him and the relay finished third in 1:36.42 with all relay members, prelims and finals, meaning a bronze medal for their efforts. 2021 World Short Course Championships In December 2021, at the 2021 World Short Course Championships held at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Strelnikov swam the breaststroke | On the final day of competition five days later, Strelnikov split a 59.84 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×100 metre medley relay in the prelims heats, helping qualify the relay to the final tied in rank for second with prelims relay teammates Vladimir Morozov (backstroke), Nikolay Skvortsov (butterfly), and Nikita Lobintsev (freestyle). For the final, Yevgeny Korotyshkin substituted in for Nikolay Skvortsov, Andrey Grechin substituted in for Nikita Lobintsev, Strelnikov split a 59.24 for the 100 metre breaststroke portion, and the relay placed fourth in a time of 3:32.74. 2013 Swimming World Cup At the 2013 Swimming World Cup stop in Moscow, and conducted in short course metres, Strelnikov swam a 27.62 in the prelims heats of the 50 metre breaststroke, qualifying for the final ranking eighth. In the evening final, he won the bronze medal with a time of 27.20 seconds, finishing 1.37 seconds behind gold medalist in the event Roland Schoeman of South Africa. The following day, he placed 20th in the prelims heats of the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:01.35 and did not advance to the final. 2021 In the 50 metre breaststroke at the 2021 Russia National Championships in April, also serving as the Russian Olympic Trials for the 2020 Summer Olympics, Strelnikov won the gold medal with a personal best time of 26.78 seconds, however he did not qualify to compete at the Olympic Games as the event was not offered as part of the Olympic program for the year. The time of 26.78 seconds ranked him as the fourth-fastest performer in the event for the entire 2021 year, 0.57 seconds behind first-ranked Adam Peaty of Great Britain, 0.39 seconds behind second-ranked Nicolò Martinenghi of Italy, 0.32 behind third-ranked Ilya Shymanovich of Belarus, and 0.02 seconds ahead of fifth-ranked Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands. 2021 International Swimming League For the 2021 International Swimming League regular season, conducted in short course metres in August and September, Strelnikov was a part of the roster for Team Iron. In the seventh match of the regular season, he took second-place in the 50 metre breaststroke with a time of 26.31 seconds, finishing 0.17 seconds behind first-place finisher Nic Fink of the Cali Condors. On the second day of the match, he placed fifth in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 58.40. In the eleventh match, he tied Alessandro Pinzuti of Tokyo Frog Kings with a 26.20 in the 50 metre breaststroke for second-place, both finished 0.19 seconds behind Yasuhiro Koseki of the Tokyo Frog Kings. 2021 Swimming World Cup At the Kazan stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup in October, Strelnikov started competition on day one with a ninth-place finish in the 100 metre breaststroke, swimming a 58.43 in the preliminary heats. For his second and final event he competed in the 50 metre breaststroke, ranking fifth in the prelims heats with a 26.37 and qualifying for the final later in the day. In the final he won the bronze medal with a time of 26.12 seconds, finishing within three-tenths of a second of gold medalist Fabian Schwingenschlögl of Germany and silver medalist Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands. 2021 European Short Course Championships On the second day of the 2021 European Short Course Championships in Kazan in November, Strelnikov swam a personal best time of 57.68 seconds, ranked eleventh overall, third amongst the Russian swimmers in the event, and did not qualify for the final as he was not one of the two fastest swimmers representing Russia. For his other individual event, the 50 metre breaststroke, he placed fifth in the final on the sixth and final day of competition with a personal best time of 26.03 seconds. Also on the final day of competition, he split a 25.83 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre mixed medley relay in the prelims heats, helping qualify the relay to the final ranking first. On the |
in London in 1810. In 1880 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Glamorgan. He served | Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat of Glamorgan. He served until 1893. He died |
Evandale in Tasmania in 1836. In 1885 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing | born in Evandale in Tasmania in 1836. In 1885 he was elected to the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the seat |
directed by Lloyd Ingraham and starring Carter DeHaven and Flora Parker DeHaven. It was based on the 1920 Broadway play of the same name by Owen Davis.The Exhibitor's Trade Review noted that the "excellent" supporting cast were not credited onscreen "possibly because it was intended to keep only the two principals in the limelight". Cast Carter DeHaven as Jack Tanner Flora Parker DeHaven as Julia | by Owen Davis.The Exhibitor's Trade Review noted that the "excellent" supporting cast were not credited onscreen "possibly because it was intended to keep only the two principals in the limelight". Cast Carter DeHaven as Jack Tanner Flora Parker DeHaven as Julia Paddington References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth |
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