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@onefive
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History
In November 2023, @onefive was selected to be the Generation Z Leader for Amazon Fashion Japan.
@onefive
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History
On December 21, 2023, at the conclusion of their live show No15e Maker: Overground in Tokyo at the Ex Theater Roppongi, it was announced that @onefive's second studio album would be released in the spring of 2024.
Eric Barwell
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Eric Barwell, DFC & Bar (6 August 1913 – 12 December 2007) was a British flying ace who served in the Royal Air Force (RAF) during the Second World War. He was credited with having shot down at least nine aircraft, plus one V-1 flying bomb.
Eric Barwell
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Born in Clare, Suffolk, Barwell, a serving member of the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, was called up for service in the RAF on the outbreak of the Second World War. Posted to No. 264 Squadron, he flew Boulton Paul Defiant turret fighters during the later stages of the Battle of France when the British Expeditionary Force was evacuated from Dunkirk. Achieving a number of aerial victories, he flew in the following Battle of Britain. By the end of 1940, the squadron was on night fighter operations. Awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in February 1941, he later flew with No. 125 Squadron, including a period as its commander. Later in the war further aerial victories were achieved as a pilot of the De Havilland Mosquito heavy fighter. He left the RAF at the end of the war and worked in the Barwell family's engineering business. He died in 2007, aged 94.
Eric Barwell
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Early life
Eric Gordon Barwell was born on 6 August 1913 at Clare, in the English county of Suffolk. He went to Wellingborough College after which he joined the family business, an engineering factory near Cambridge. With his older brother already serving in the Royal Air Force (RAF), he joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve (RAFVR) in July 1938, receiving his flight instruction at No. 22 Elementary and Reserve Flying Training School at Marshalls Airfield in Oxford. Having flown Tiger Moth trainers, he duly qualified for his wings.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
On the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Barwell was called up for service with the RAF. He went to No. 2 Flying Training School at Brize Norton for the final stages of his training and was commissioned as a pilot officer on probation. He was then posted to No. 266 Squadron, which was equipped with Supermarine Spitfire fighters and based at Sutton Bridge. However his older brother Philip was a wing commander at Sutton Bridge and it was decided to send Eric elsewhere. He was duly posted to No. 264 Squadron. This was a newly formed unit that was stationed at Martlesham Heath and working up with the new Boulton Paul Defiant turret fighter.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
Lacking experience on the type Barwell was sent to No. 12 Group Fighter Pool at Aston Down for familiarisation with the aircraft. It was not until February 1940 that he returned to No. 264 Squadron. By this time the squadron had largely overcome the initial issues it had experienced with the Defiant and the following month it became operational, doing patrol work.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
From mid-May, No. 264 Squadron began flying sorties from Manston to France, patrolling between Dunkirk and Boulogne. Initially, it saw considerable success as Luftwaffe fighters would seek to engage the Defiants from the rear, misidentifying the type as a Hurricane and coming into the range of the gunner's armament. In its first major engagement with Luftwaffe fighters, on 27 May, six were destroyed. Two days later, the squadron made two afternoon sorties to Dunkirk; in the first Barwell and his gunner, Pilot Officer J. Williams, destroyed a Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter. In the second, they shot down two Junkers Ju 87 dive bombers. These were three of 37 Luftwaffe aircraft to be claimed as destroyed by No. 264 Squadron that day.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
On 29 May, Barwell and Williams combined to shoot down a Bf 109 off Dunkirk. On a subsequent sortie the same day, they destroyed a Heinkel He 111 medium bomber but the engine of their Defiant was damaged in the engagement. Barwell flew the Defiant, which was loosing its coolant, close to the English coast, eventually coming down in the English Channel about 5 miles (8.0 km) from Dover. This was the first time a Defiant had attempted to ditch in the sea. Barwell and Williams were rescued by the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Malcolm.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
By the end of May, the squadron had claimed around 65 German aircraft as destroyed, although this was almost certainly overstated the Luftwaffe's actual losses. Due to high losses of Defiants and their aircrew over Dunkirk, early in June No. 264 Squadron switched to Fowlmere and then Kirton-in-Lindsey for night-fighting duties and dawn patrols the following month. By this time Barwell had recovered from the slight injuries he had received when ditching his Defiant on 29 May.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
No. 264 Squadron's area of operations was beyond the range of the Bf 109, to which the Defiant was increasingly recognised as being vulnerable. However, it was largely unsuccessful during its time as a night fighter squadron, achieving only one aerial victory in nearly three months. It was recalled to Manston on 23 August in order to help relieve the hard pressed RAF fighter squadrons in the south of England. On 24 August, a force of Junkers Ju 88 medium bombers attacked Manston while Barwell was leading a section on patrol over the airfield. Now flying with Sergeant Martin as his gunner, he pursued the bombers but then detected several Bf 109s looking to intercept his Defiants. Engaging these, he destroyed one over Ramsgate. The rest of the squadron had taken off and destroyed three of the Ju 88s but a total of four Defiants, including Barwell's wing man as well as the commanding officer, Squadron Leader Philip Hunter, were shot down.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
Further losses over the next five days saw the squadron withdrawn back to Kirton-in-Lindsey at the end of the month. For the remainder of the Battle of Britain, No. 264 Squadron was consigned to night fighting duties and convoy protection patrols over the North Sea. It saw little success for the remainder of the year.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
By early 1941, Barwell's probationary period as a pilot officer had ended and he held the rank of flying officer. In February, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, by which time he was married to Ruth née Birchall, an officer in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force. The couple would have at least one child. No. 264 Squadron soon began to make successful interceptions and on the night of 10 April, Barwell, still with paired with Martin, shot down one He 111 over Beachy Head and probably destroyed a second in the same area. The latter may have been damaged from an earlier engagement with another RAF night fighter.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
In July, Barwell was posted away to No. 125 Squadron as a flight lieutenant. This was a newly formed night fighter unit at Colerne and equipped with Defiants before shifting to Fairwood Common where it became operational in late September, tasked with the aerial defence of South Wales and Bristol but was largely unsuccessful. By the end of the year Barwell was leading the unit as an acting squadron leader. It began to receive the Bristol Beaufighter heavy fighter in February 1942 but at the same time, the rank to lead the squadron was upgraded to wing commander. As a result of this, Barwell had to relinquish command and stepped down to lead one of its flights.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
With the new aircraft, Barwell's squadron began to make successful interceptions and on the night of 2 July, he damaged a Dornier Do 217 near Cardiff. The previous day, his brother Philip, at the time station commander at Biggin Hill, was shot down and killed; flying in company with Squadron Leader Robert Oxspring, the pair were attacked by RAF fighters in an incident of friendly fire, Philip going down into the English Channel.} Barwell went to a staff posting in September, being assigned to the headquarters of No. 10 Group. He was mentioned in despatches in the 1943 New Year Honours. In April 1943 Barwell returned to No. 125 Squadron to resume command of one of its flights. Early the following year, the squadron reequipped with the De Havilland Mosquito heavy fighter. Flying one of these to the south of Melksham on the night of 23 April, and guided by his radar operator, Flight Lieutenant D. Haigh, he destroyed a Junkers Ju 88 medium bomber. During Operation Overlord, the squadron patrolled over the Normandy landing beaches and on the night of 24 June, Barwell destroyed another Ju 88 near Isle de San Marcouf on the night of 24 June. Soon afterwards, the squadron was engaged in Operation Diver, the RAF's campaign against German V-1 flying bombs launched at southeast England from sites in France. Barwell shot down one of these V-1s into the English Channel on 10 August. A few days afterwards, he was awarded a Bar to his DFC; the citation, published in The London Gazette, read:
Eric Barwell
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Second World War
This officer has completed a very large number of sorties and his example of keenness, determination and devotion to duty has been worthy of the highest praise. He is a most able flight commander whose untiring efforts have been reflected in the operational efficiency of the formation he commands. Squadron Leader Barwell has destroyed 6 enemy aircraft, 2 of them at night.
Eric Barwell
75,670,248
Second World War
In August, Barwell was briefly posted to the Fighter Interception Unit, where he flew Hawker Tempest and North American Mustang fighters, before being sent the following month to the headquarters of the Second Tactical Air Force (2TAF) as an acting wing commander. He received a substantive promotion to squadron leader in December. He spent the final weeks of the war as the wing leader at No. 145 Wing.
Eric Barwell
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Second World War
Barwell ended the war credited with having shot down nine aircraft and one V-1 flying bomb. He is also credited with one aircraft probably destroyed and one damaged.
Eric Barwell
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Later life
Barwell was briefly appointed commander of his former unit, No. 264 Squadron, in June 1945. Equipped with Mosquitoes, this was stationed at Twente in Germany as part of the 2TAF but it was disbanded in August. Soon afterwards Barwell left the service of the RAF and resumed working for the family business. Although no longer on active service, he remained in the RAFVR until 1958.
Eric Barwell
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Later life
Barwell's company commercialised proprietary technology relating to rubber engineering and eventually was brought out by an American concern. At the time, Barwell was director of accounts. In his later years, he and his wife Ruth resided in Cambridge. As Ruth was an artist, the couple often travelled to mainland Europe so she could paint. He died on 12 December 2007.
Geoffrey Maxwell
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Geoffrey Maxwell is a Jamaican football manager.
Geoffrey Maxwell
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Career
Maxwell managed Jamaican side Waterhouse, helping the club win the league. He has been described as "created history as the first man to have actually coached in the Manning Cup and the daCosta Cup competitions in the same season, while both teams are still actively engaged in the competitions".
Geoffrey Maxwell
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Style of play
Maxwell has used a 5-3-2 formation as his main formation.
Geoffrey Maxwell
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Personal life
Maxwell has worked as an accountant.
Judas (novel)
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Judas is a novel by Israeli author Amos Oz, first published in 2014. It was his last novel. The novel's story is set in 1959–1960 Jerusalem and follows the student Shmuel Asch.
Judas (novel)
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Plot
Amos Oz's novel Judas unfolds in 1959–1960 Jerusalem, following Shmuel Ash, a student who becomes entangled in the lives of an elderly man, Gershom Wald, and his housemate, Atalia Abravanel. As the narrative progresses, Oz explores characters and ideas against the backdrop of Israel's history. The plot gradually reveals the dark connection between the characters, shedding light on Shealtiel Abravanel's (Atalia Abravanel's father) views on coexistence. The novel intertwines Shmuel's abandoned thesis on Jesus and Judas, offering a nuanced exploration of betrayal and political complexities.
Judas (novel)
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Awards
Oz was the winner of Germany's International Literature Award for Judas.
Judas (novel)
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References
First Guatemalan-Salvadoran Intervention in Honduras
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The First Guatemalan-Salvadoran intervention in Honduras was a military conflict between the allied forces of Guatemala and El Salvador against Honduras in 1872.
First Guatemalan-Salvadoran Intervention in Honduras
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Conflict
To counter the conservative threat to the governments of Guatemala and El Salvador, they decided to wage war against General Medina. Three Salvadoran army columns invaded Honduras: one led by General Miguel Espinosa via Nacaome, defeating the Hondurans at Sabana Grande (May 5) and occupying Tegucigalpa on May 9. The second, commanded by General Ricardo Streber, invaded the Gulf of Fonseca, capturing the Port of Amapala on May 8. The third, under President González via Chalatenango, ousted General Medina from Gracias on May 22. González established a Provisional Government there, led by Licenciado Céleo Arias.
First Guatemalan-Salvadoran Intervention in Honduras
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Conflict
Guatemala's president, accepting the state of war with Honduras since May 8, delegated power to Brigadier Justo Rufino Barrios and led troops to the Honduran border. A Guatemalan column, led by General Gregorio Solares, joined the Salvadoran army in Gracias. After being repelled from Comayagua on May 27, President Medina retreated to Trujillo, then embarked for Omoa. Despite further defeats in Santa Cruz (July 12) and Santa Bárbara (July 26), Medina was eventually captured on July 28. Licenciado Céleo Arias was recognized as the Provisional President of Honduras.
First Guatemalan-Salvadoran Intervention in Honduras
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References
Category:1872 in Honduras
Mount Magnificent (Alaska)
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Mount Magnificent is a 4,271-foot (1,302 m) mountain summit in Alaska, United States.
Mount Magnificent (Alaska)
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Description
Mount Magnificent is located 15 miles (24 km) northeast of Anchorage in the western Chugach Mountains and within Chugach State Park. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains to Knik Arm via Meadow Creek and Eagle River. Although modest in elevation, topographic relief is significant as the summit rises approximately 1,700 feet (518 m) above Meadow Creek in 0.6 miles (0.97 km) and 3,870 feet (1,180 m) above the Eagle River in two miles (3.2 km). An ascent of the summit involves hiking five miles with 2,300 feet of elevation gain. The months of May through September offer the best time for climbing the peak. The mountain's descriptive name was given in 1953 by Mrs. Ollie A. Trower of Anchorage and the toponym was officially adopted in 1959 by the United States Board on Geographic Names. However, based on a sketch submitted with her naming proposal, it appears that the mountain she intended to be named Mount Magnificent is actually Mile High Peak. The Denaʼina name for this peak is K'ulch'ey which means "Wind blows against it."
Mount Magnificent (Alaska)
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Climate
Based on the Köppen climate classification, Mount Magnificent is located in a subarctic climate zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and mild summers. Weather systems coming off the Gulf of Alaska are forced upwards by the Chugach Mountains (orographic lift), causing heavy precipitation in the form of rainfall and snowfall. Winter temperatures can drop below −10 °F with wind chill factors below −20 °F.
Barima Point
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Barima Point (Spanish: Punta Barima), is a small settlement in the Antonio Díaz municipality of Delta Amacuro state in Venezuela, at the mouth of the Barima River.
Barima Point
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It has a lighthouse, Faro Barima, and a Coast Guard Station.
Barima Point
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The city belonged to British Guiana until 1899, when it was returned to Venezuela in the Paris Arbitral Award.
The Anne Frank Gift Shop
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The Anne Frank Gift Shop is a 2023 American short dark comedy drama film written and directed by Mickey Rapkin. It stars Ari Graynor, Chris Perfetti, Kate Burton, Jason Butler Harner, Mary Beth Barone, and Josh Meyers. The film is about a meeting where a design firm proposes plans to re-imagine the Anne Frank House's gift shop while appealing to Generation Z. The film won Best Narrative Short at the 2023 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival. It is shortlisted for Best Live Action Short Film at the 96th Academy Awards.
NS24
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NS24, NS 24, NS-24, NS.24, or variation, may refer to:
Jackie Bell (football manager)
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Winthorpe Bell (died 1986) was a Jamaican football manager, who the KSAFA Jackie Bell Knockout Competition was named in honor of.
Jackie Bell (football manager)
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Early life
Bell attended St. George's College in Jamaica.
Jackie Bell (football manager)
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Career
Bell managed the Jamaica national football team.
Jackie Bell (football manager)
75,670,384
Personal life
Bell was married.
Jackie Bell (football manager)
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References
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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The Joint Casualty Resolution Center (often referred to as JCRC) was a joint task force within the United States Department of Defense, whose mission was to account for United States personnel listed as Missing in Action (MIA) in the Vietnam War.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
The JCRC's precurser organisation, the Joint Personnel Recovery Center (JPRC) was established in September 1966 under the control of Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG) to establish a personnel recovery capability within Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV). The JPRC was responsible for evaluating information on missing or captured US personnel and coordinating and conducting personnel recovery operations throughout Southeast Asia.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
While JPRC successfully coordinated missions that recovered South Vietnamese Prisoners of War (POWs), throughout its existence the JPRC never recovered a single US POW.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
In April 1972 the ten JPRC personnel and their MIA records were transferred from MACV-SOG to the Director of Intelligence, J-2, MACV. At the end of November 1972, JPRC was provisionally renamed the Joint Casualty Recovery Center.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
On 23 January 1973, in anticipation of the imminent signing of the Paris Peace Accords, the JCRC was activated under the command of Brigadier general Robert Kingston with its temporary headquarters at the MACV Headquarters complex at Tan Son Nhut, Saigon.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
The first activity of the JCRC was Operation Homecoming. When the first groups of US POWs were released by North Vietnam and the Vietcong (VC) on 28 January 1973, JCRC personnel were sent to Clark Air Force Base in The Philippines to assist in the initial POW debriefings. They worked with service debriefers to obtain information on missing personnel who were not being released in the POW exchange in an attempt to obtain more complete details of those who were still carried as MIA.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
By late January 1973 the proposed 110-man JCRC had been increased by 29 personnel on the recommendation of CINCPAC. This increase resulted in he expansion of field teams to 11, six to conduct casualty resolution operations in Laos and the Khmer Republic and five in South Vietnam. The teams would be augmented by specialists as required. Two control teams and launch units were formed with the missions of dispatching field teams and providing command and control while they were operating in the field.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
Under the terms of the Paris Peace Accords, MACV and all American and third country forces had to be withdrawn from South Vietnam within 60 days of the ceasefire. A multi-service organization was required to plan for the application of U.S. air and naval power into North or South Vietnam, Cambodia or Laos, should this be required and ordered. Called the United States Support Activities Group & 7th Air Force (USSAG/7th AF), it was to be located at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base in northeast Thailand and was activated on 11 February 1973. On 15 February the JCRC was transferred to Nakhon Phanom and USSAG/7th AF command.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
On 15 December 1973 Captain Richard Morgan Rees serving with Field Team 6, Control Team B, Headquarters, JCRC was killed when VC forces ambushed a joint US-South Vietnamese team engaged on an MIA recovery mission 15 miles (24 km) southwest of Saigon. A South Vietnamese pilot was also killed in the attack and another four Americans were wounded. As a result of this attack all US MIA field recovery efforts were indefinitely suspended.
Joint Casualty Resolution Center
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History
Following a directive from the Joint Chiefs of Staff, CINCPAC on 11 June 1975 directed the disestablishment of USSAG/7th AF. The disestablishment was effective at 17:00 on 30 June. With the disestablishment of USSAG/7th AF, control of the JCRC reverted to CINCPAC.
ZOTAC Technology Limited
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+REDIRECT ZOTAC
List of Blyth Spartans A.F.C. seasons
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Blyth Spartans Association Football Club is an association football club based in Blyth, Northumberland. They are currently members of the National League North, the sixth tier of English football, and play at Croft Park.
List of Blyth Spartans A.F.C. seasons
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Early history
In the beginning, the club played only friendly matches before joining the East Northumberland League in 1901. The first recorded honour was a league success in 1901 followed by further victories in 1905–06 and 1906–07. The club then joined the Northern Football Alliance, remaining there for six seasons winning the league in 1908–09 and 1912–13. In 1913 the club moved upward joining the ranks of the semi professionals in the North Eastern League and remained there until this league folded in 1958.
Lucile Messageot
75,670,428
Marguerite Françoise Lucie Messageot, or Lucile Franque (13 September 1780, Lons-le-Saunier - 23 May 1803) was a French painter and author.
Lucile Messageot
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Biography
She was born to Jean-Joseph Messageot, a cavalry officer, and his wife Marie Françoise, née Clerc. Her sister Fanny [fr] was a novelist. While still very young, she began her studies with Pierre-Narcisse Guérin in Paris. Her first exhibit came in 1799, but ended poorly when her portrait of Anne-Louise-Francoise Delorme (1756-1825), who called herself "Princess" Stéphanie-Louise de Bourbon-Conti, was deemed politically subversive and removed from the exhibition.
Lucile Messageot
75,670,428
Biography
For her second exhibition in 1802, she chose a subject taken from the poems of Ossian. This was inspired by her membership in a group known as the Secte de Barbus [fr], or the "Primitives".
Lucile Messageot
75,670,428
Biography
The group was created by Pierre-Maurice Quays, a student of Jacques-Louis David, and advocated a return to earlier, simpler artistic styles. In 1798, Jean-Pierre Franque was expelled from David's studio for his activities with the group, and he settled in with her in Chaillot. In 1800, they were joined by his brother Joseph, who had also been banned from the studio. Well-known figures from the world of arts and letters came to visit them, and she served as their muse.
Lucile Messageot
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Biography
In 1799, she and Jean-Pierre had a daughter, named Isis. They were married in January of 1802, and she died of tuberculosis the following year.
Lucile Messageot
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Biography
She is the author of fragments of an Essay on the harmonies of melancholy and the arts, and of a poem, Le Tombeau d'Éléonore. A group portrait of her family is her only work in a public collection: the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.
Lucile Messageot
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External links
Media related to Lucile Messageot at Wikimedia Commons
NS22
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NS22, NS 22, NS-22, NS.22, or variation, may refer to:
The Goyim Know
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The Goyim Know (sometimes followed by Shut It Down) is an antisemitic trope and catchphrase used by the Alt-right, white supremacists, and other antisemites to claim that Jewish people are attempting to conceal or suppress knowledge of an international Jewish conspiracy.
The Goyim Know
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About
The term "goyim" is a Hebrew and Yiddish term for non-Jewish people. The word "goy" appears in Biblical Hebrew to mean "nation" and is used to refer to both Jews and non-Jews. The phrase is sometimes preceded by "oy vey". The use of the antisemitic "The Goyim Know/Shut It Down" meme was common on 4chan and 8chan. Writing for The Forward, Rebecca Einstein Schorr as an instance of "linguistic appropriation" whereby white supremacists have incorporated "pseudo-Yiddish phrases" into their vocabulary in order to ridicule and impersonate Jews. Schorr describes that as a way to propagate the "anti-Semitic myth that we are a cabal with our own secret language and agenda".
Donovan Duckie
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{{Infobox football biography |name = Donovan Duckie |image = |full_name = |birth_date = (1976-05-05)5 May 1976 |birth_place = Jamaica |height = |position = |currentclub = |clubnumber = |clubs1 = |manageryears1 = 2015–2017 |managerclubs1 = Humble Lion |manageryears2 = 2017–2018 |managerclubs2 = Waterhouse |manageryears3 = 2018–2019 |managerclubs3 = Mount Pleasant |manageryears4 = 2021–2022 |managerclubs4 = [[Vere United F.C.|Vere United |manageryears5 = 2022–2023 |managerclubs5 = Montego Bay United
Donovan Duckie
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}}
Donovan Duckie
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Donovan Duckie (born May 5, 1976) is a Jamaican football manager who last managed Montego Bay United.
Donovan Duckie
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Early life
Duckie is a native of Saint Mary Parish, Jamaica.
Donovan Duckie
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Career
According to one commentator, Duckie "rose to prominence as a young coach after guiding Star Cosmos FC to the National Premier League in 2003 and St. Georges S.C. in 2007".
Donovan Duckie
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Personal life
Duckie has a son.
Corinne Camacho
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Corinne Camacho (October 31, 1941 – September 15, 2010) was an American actress, model, singer and songwriter. She is known for playing Joanne Barnes on Days of Our Lives, Marlowe and the medical drama, Medical Center.
Corinne Camacho
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Early life
Born Gloria Angelina Katharina Alletto in Passaic, New Jersey, she moved wither per parents to Los Angeles at age 5. She made California her home for the next 50 years. The dark-haired exotic-looking beauty started out as a model. In the 1960s Corinne was one of the top fashion models on the West Coast. She married, started a family, and transitioned into the world of acting. She switched to acting in 1967. Corinne's talent, beauty, and commitment to her craft kept her working steadily in television, theater, and film for the next three decades.
Corinne Camacho
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Career
Camacho made her acting debut in an episode of The Wild Wild West as the date of Artemus gordon, played by Ross Martin. She went on to play small parts on Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie and The Flying Nun. Later she has recurring roles in such series as Mannix and Medical Center. Other television credits included M A*S*H, Little House on the Prairie, The Bionic Woman, The Six Million Dollar Man and The Waltons, as well as a year-long stint on the daytime drama The Days of Our Lives. She was often credited as Corinne Michaels, the name she went by when she had a recurring role on the Rockford Files from 1974 to 1979. In 1996, Camacho moved to New Mexico to build and run a hospice center. She moved to Oregon in 2001, and became a life coach. She taught music and recorded a children's album. Camacho was an accomplished pianist and composer. In 2006, she released an album called Love Notes & Lullabies that she distributed personally.
Corinne Camacho
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Death
Camacho died on September 15, 2010, in Beaverton, Oregon. The cause of death was cancer. She was 68. She is survived by her son, Christopher Camacho, daughter, Gabrielle Yasenchak and two grandchildren.
NS25
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NS25, NS 25, NS-25, NS.25, or variation, may refer to:
2024 ASB Classic – Women's singles
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Coco Gauff is the defending champion.
Basil Allchin
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Basil Charles Allchin (16 April 1878 – 1957) was an English organist. Born at 47 Broad Street in Oxford, he was the son of William Thomas Howell Allchin (1843 – 1883), who was organist at St John's College, Oxford and conductor of the Oxford Choral Society for 16 years. He attended Christ’s Hospital School in London and at Oxford as a non-collegiate student, where he was awarded Bachelor of Arts in 1898.
Basil Allchin
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Allchin married his wife Mary Robinson in 1907. By then he was living in Oxford, where he became Assistant Organist at Christ Church, Oxford and organist at Hertford College. By the 1920s he was teaching music at Exeter College, Oxford, and before 1937 was Director of Music, Cheltenham Ladies' College. Between 1920 and 1947 he also taught at the Royal College of Music, where he was Registrar from 1935-9. Allchin was also an Examiner for the Associated Board of the Royal School of Music, and (with Ernest Read) the author of A Book of Aural Tests (1936)
Basil Allchin
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His addresses in Oxford included 18 Turl Street (early 1930s) and The Thatched Cottage, North Hinksey (from 1935). Mary died in the mid-1940s, and Allchin married again in 1947 to Margaret Joyce Davis. He died in Wells, Somerset at the age of 78, survived by his twin sister Gwladys Marguerite Allchin (1876-1972)
NS26
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NS26, NS 26, NS-26, NS.26, or variation, may refer to:
Prison Service F.C.
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Prison Service Football Club is a football club based in Arouca, Trinidad and Tobago.
Blazing Birds
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Blazing Birds is a badminton-like action-sports-simulation video game developed by Vector 2 Games (now Silver Dollar Games) and published by Microsoft Games Studios. It was released on May 20, 2009, worldwide for the Xbox 360.
Blazing Birds
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Gameplay
The game's campaign mode consists of three levels of difficulty, each with 20 matches. The player must win all 60 matches to unlock the final match against Signum IV. The game also features a multiplayer mode, which allows up to four players to compete against each other in local matches.
Blazing Birds
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Gameplay
Power-ups can be collected during gameplay to give players an advantage. For example, the speed power-up will make the player's character move faster, while the strength power-up will make their shots hit harder. The game's graphics are colorful and vibrant, and the sound effects are realistic.
Blazing Birds
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Reception
Blazing Birds was met with mixed reviews from critics. Some critics praised the game's simple controls and fast-paced gameplay, while others criticized the game's lack of features and repetitive gameplay.
Blazing Birds
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Reception
Blazing Birds received "mixed or average" reviews according to review aggregator Metacritic.
Blazing Birds
75,670,572
Reception
TeamXbox stated, "Our main gripe is that Blazing Birds is just so…flat."
Blazing Birds
75,670,572
Reception
Daemon Hatfield on IGN rated the game 5.1/10, stating "If there was some compelling gameplay here the visuals would be easier to overlook, but this is a pretty simple badminton game with power-ups added. The lack of online play is also disappointing. You'll have more fun slapping your own 'cock around."
F. Rodingliana
75,670,579
F.Rodingliana is an Indian politician from Mizoram, who is currently the Minister of State for Power & Electricity Commerce & Industries Department and Printing & Stationery Departtment for the Government of Mizoram.
F. Rodingliana
75,670,579
He was elected to the Mizoram Legislative Assembly for the Lengteng Assembly constituency in the 2023 general election as a candidate for the Zoram People's Movement.
Mirgasim Cheshmazer
75,670,592
Mirgasim Cheshmazer was Chairman of the Azerbaijan Democratic Party in 1954–1959, and a scientist.
Mirgasim Cheshmazer
75,670,592
During the period of the Azerbaijan People's Government, he was the commandant of the Tabriz loyalist units, Sayyed Ja'far Pishevari's assistant, and chairman of the Azerbaijan Radio Committee.
Mirgasim Cheshmazer
75,670,592
Life
Mirgasim Mikayil oghlu Chashmazer was born in 1920.
Mirgasim Cheshmazer
75,670,592
Life
He was a member of the Tabriz Committee of the Tudeh Party established in 1944. He was a member of the Central Committee of the Azerbaijan Democratic Party. From December 10, 1945, to January 15, 1946, he served as the commander of the Tabriz loyalist units. From January to June 1946, he was an assistant to S. J. Pishevari. On April 26, 1946, he became the head of the Tabriz radio station established near the Azerbaijan Radio Committee. On September 3, 1946, on the first anniversary of the establishment of the Azerbaijan Democratic Party, he was honored with the "Sattarkhan" order for his participation in the national democratic movement. In 1946, at the initiative of S. J. Pishevari, Mirgasim Chashmazer, and others, the "Babak Resistance Unit" was formed to resist the entry of the Tehran army into Azerbaijan
Mirgasim Cheshmazer
75,670,592
Life
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F.Rodingliana
75,670,593
F.Rodingliana is an Indian politician from Mizoram, who is currently the Minister of State for Power & Electricity Commerce & Industries Department and Printing & Stationery Departtment for the Government of Mizoram.