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27331968_0_3 | 27331968 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester%20Yorton | Chester Yorton | Chester Yorton.
On December 4, 2020, Shannon revealed on her social media both of her parents had died two weeks prior. She wrote her father had discovered her mother dead from unknown causes, and he died from a heart attack a few days later. Vicki was 78; Yorton was 81. |
27331968_1_0 | 27331968 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester%20Yorton | Chester Yorton | Chester Yorton. 1940 births
American bodybuilders
2020 deaths
People associated with physical culture |
27331974_0_0 | 27331974 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treat%20Them%20Like%20They%20Want%20to%20Be%20Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated.
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" is a song by American hip hop artist Father MC, and features backing vocals by K-Ci and Jo-Jo, Devante Swing, and Mr. Dalvin, members of then-up-and-coming R&B group Jodeci. It was recorded for Father MC's debut album Father's Day, and released as its debut single in July, 1990. |
27331974_0_1 | 27331974 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treat%20Them%20Like%20They%20Want%20to%20Be%20Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated. Track listings
12", CD, Vinyl
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Regular Version) - 5:47
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Short Version) - 5:07
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Drum Drops) - 5:49
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Instrumental) - 5:08 |
27331974_0_2 | 27331974 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treat%20Them%20Like%20They%20Want%20to%20Be%20Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated. 33⅓ RPM, Promo
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Club Mix) - 5:17
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (House Mix) - 4:00
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Club Instrumental) - 5:24
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (R&B Remix) - 4:15
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Awesome Remix) - 5:19
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (R&B Remix Instrumental) - 4:15
"Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated" (Awesome Instrumental) - 5:19 |
27331974_0_3 | 27331974 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treat%20Them%20Like%20They%20Want%20to%20Be%20Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated | Treat Them Like They Want to Be Treated. Personnel
Information taken from Discogs.
executive production: Andre Harrell, Puff Daddy
production: Mark Morales, Mark Rooney
remixing: Mark Morales, Mark Rooney, Special K, Teddy Tedd
writing: Father MC, Mark Rooney |
27331982_0_0 | 27331982 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Trunk%20station%20%28Yarmouth%29 | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth) | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth).
The former Grand Trunk station of Yarmouth, Maine, is located on the east side of the railroad tracks, just south of Maine State Route 115. The railroad station was built in 1906 by the Grand Trunk Railroad, and is a well-preserved example of an early 20th-century passenger rail depot, an increasingly rare sight in the state. The building, which is now in commercial use, was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 10, 1979. |
27331982_0_1 | 27331982 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Trunk%20station%20%28Yarmouth%29 | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth) | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth). Description and history
Yarmouth's former Grand Trunk station stands just south of SR 115, on the east side of the Maine Central Railroad tracks. (The Amtrak Downeaster service between Portland and Brunswick runs on the Boston and Maine Railroad line, which crosses this track just to the north. It does not stop in Yarmouth.) The station is a single-story wood-frame structure, set on a high granite block foundation. It has a hip roof and clapboard siding, and is roughly rectangular in shape, with small projecting sections on the either side, and a semicircular northern end. The roof has extended eaves, in a form typical of many railroad stations, with the eaves supported by large decoratively-cut brackets. |
27331982_0_2 | 27331982 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Trunk%20station%20%28Yarmouth%29 | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth) | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth).
The station was built in 1906 by the Grand Trunk Railway as a passenger depot on its line between Portland and Montreal. (There were three lines in total at the time of the station's construction.) It is architecturally unique in Maine, particularly for its high granite base, apsoidal curved end, and departure from more traditional Stick style architecture. The Yarmouth Village Improvement Society purchased the station from the Grand Trunk's successor Canadian National Railway for $500 in 1968 to save it from demolition. It housed a florist until February 2018, when it was put on the market for $165,000. It is now occupied by a branch of Gorham Savings Bank. |
27331982_0_3 | 27331982 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Trunk%20station%20%28Yarmouth%29 | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth) | Grand Trunk station (Yarmouth). See also
Grand Trunk railway stations, other stations of the Grand Trunk Railroad and its subsidiaries
National Register of Historic Places listings in Cumberland County, Maine |
27331990_0_0 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Justin Paul Tomlinson (born 5 November 1976) is a Conservative Party politician and former marketing executive who served as Minister of State for Disabled People, Work and Health from 2019 to 2021. He has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for North Swindon since 2010. |
27331990_0_1 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
A former Conservative Councillor on Swindon Borough Council, he previously served as Parliamentary Private Secretary to Ed Vaizey. He served in David Cameron’s government as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Disabled People from 2015 to 2016. He was a junior minister during the second May ministry at the Department for Work and Pensions, as Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Family Support, Housing and Child Maintenance from 2018 to 2019. |
27331990_0_2 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson. Early life and career
Tomlinson was born in Blackburn, Lancashire on 5 November 1976. His mother Vera represents St. Andrews ward on Swindon Borough Council. He studied at Harry Cheshire High School, a state comprehensive in Kidderminster, Worcestershire, and Oxford Brookes University, where he was Chairman of its Conservative Student Branch from 1995 to 1999. He was National Chairman of Conservative Future, the youth-wing of the Conservative Party, between 2002 and 2003. |
27331990_0_3 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson used to work on the coaches for a nightclub called Eros in Swindon, Wiltshire. He also operated a small marketing business. |
27331990_0_4 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson stood as the Conservative Party candidate for Abbey Meads ward on Swindon Borough Council and was elected in 2000, before being re-elected in the same ward in 2002 and 2006. |
27331990_0_5 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson. Parliamentary career
Tomlinson unsuccessfully stood in North Swindon at the 2005 general election, losing to the defending Labour MP Michael Wills by 2,571 votes. However, he won the seat from Labour at the 2010 general election, defeating the new Labour candidate Victor Agarwall by 7,060 votes. In total, Tomlinson received 22,408 votes (44.6% of the vote), with a swing of 10.1% from Labour to the Conservatives. |
27331990_0_6 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Along with fellow Conservative MP Chris Kelly, Tomlinson placed a bet while at university that he would be Prime Minister before the year 2038. He stands to win £500,000 should this happen. Kelly stood down at the 2015 general election after having served a single term. |
27331990_0_7 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
He reported the Labour MP Sadiq Khan to the police in 2014 after Khan was photographed apparently driving whilst using a mobile phone. Tomlinson said "those who make the laws should certainly not be above them". Khan was not prosecuted and went on to become elected as Mayor of London in 2016. Also in 2016 Tomlinson was punished for contempt was when he was suspended for two days after leaking a draft committee report. |
27331990_0_8 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
He was appointed Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Disabled People following the 2015 General Election victory of the Conservative Party, serving until the new Prime Minister, Theresa May, reshuffled the government in 2016. Prior to that he was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Ed Vaizey. On 9 July 2018, Tomlinson was appointed as a junior minister in the Department for Work and Pensions as Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Family Support, Housing and Child Maintenance. |
27331990_0_9 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
In May 2015, it was reported by The Huffington Post that his appointment as Minister for Disabled People was controversial as he had previously voted against protecting the benefits of disabled children and those undergoing cancer treatment. |
27331990_0_10 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson faced calls for his resignation in October 2015 after it was reported that he had leaked information from the Public Accounts committee regarding regulation of short term high cost credit "payday lenders" to Wonga.com back in 2013. Tomlinson accepted he had broken the rules and apologised, stating that his "strongly-held belief that action needed to be taken on payday lenders" had caused his "judgement to be clouded". Tomlinson arranged £30,000 of sponsorship for Swindon Supermarine F.C., a local football team by the same payday lender wonga.com. The football club's chairman, Jez Webb, has made donations of £30,218 to both Tomlinson's and local Conservative Party funds since 2014. Webb stated that he donated in a personal capacity and that the very similar amounts "were coincindental." Tomlinson was subsequently accused of trying to remove references to previous links to Wonga from his website, including the arrangement of a sponsorship deal with Swindon Supermarine F.C. in 2011. |
27331990_0_11 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson voted for the UK to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum. |
27331990_0_12 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
In the House of Commons he sits on the Work and Pensions Committee. He has sat on the Public Accounts Committee and Consolidation Bills (Joint Committee). |
27331990_0_13 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson employs his partner as Office Manager on a salary up to £40,000. The practice of MPs employing family members, has been criticised by some sections of the media on the lines that it promotes nepotism. Although MPs who were first elected in 2017 have been banned from employing family members, the restriction is not retrospective – meaning that Tomlinson's employment of his partner is lawful. |
27331990_0_14 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
In September 2016, Tomlinson apologised for leaking a draft of a public accounts committee report on the credit industry to someone he knew who worked for payday lender Wonga. |
27331990_0_15 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
In November 2018, Tomlinson was criticised by Labour MP Ruth George after appearing to suggest that families facing a cap under the Universal Credit scheme could take in a lodger. A Department for Work and Pensions spokesperson later said that Tomlinson was giving "illustrative examples of how some households subject to the cap may have supplemented income" and denied that Tomlinson said households under the cap could or should consider taking a lodger. Tomlinson was Parliamentary Under-Secretary (junior government minister) for Family Support, Housing and Child Maintenance within the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). |
27331990_0_16 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
Tomlinson left government during the cabinet reshuffle on 16 September 2021 and returned to the backbenches. |
27331990_0_17 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson.
In February 2022 Tomlinson was accused of bullying and sending inappropriate “unprofessional” and “belittling” messages to employees at Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ). |
27331990_0_18 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson. Personal life
Tomlinson announced his engagement to Jo Wheeler in August 2011, having proposed on The Peak, the highest point on Hong Kong Island. The couple married at the House of Commons on 2 June 2012. In July 2016, Tomlinson confirmed that he had divorced his wife and was in a relationship with his office manager, Kate Bennett. They married in October 2018 and have one daughter born in August 2019. |
27331990_1_0 | 27331990 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin%20Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson | Justin Tomlinson. 1976 births
Living people
Conservative Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Councillors in Wiltshire
UK MPs 2010–2015
UK MPs 2015–2017
UK MPs 2017–2019
Alumni of Oxford Brookes University
UK MPs 2019–present |
27331998_0_0 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC.
Kalleh Mazandaran Volleyball Club () was an Iranian professional volleyball team based in Amol, Iran. The team was owned by Solico Group - Kalleh Company . They competed in the Iranian Volleyball Super League. |
27331998_0_1 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC.
The Payambar Azam Arena in Amol, Iran was the home ground of Kalleh. The team has won the Iranian Super League twice and the Asian Club Championship once. Kalleh was dissolved in 2014 due to financial issues but was refounded just a year later. |
27331998_0_2 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. History
In 1989 Kalleh Mazandaran Volleyball Club was established in Amol, Iran. Kalleh competed in the Mazandaran Provincial League until 2007 in which they were promoted to the Iranian Super League from the 1st Division. In 2012, for the first time in club history, Kalleh won the Iranian Super League title and secured a spot in the Asian Club Championship, in which they finished third. The following year Kalleh again won the Super League and this time won the Asian Club Championship for the first time in their history. first in 2013 To FIVB Club World Championship Climbed did. |
27331998_0_3 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Stadium
The team started construction on a private 10,000 seat stadium in 2014. |
27331998_0_4 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Notable former players
Rodrigo Quiroga
Krasimir Gaydarski
Smilen Mlyakov
Stanislav Petkov
Saeid Marouf
Alireza Nadi
Farhad Nazari Afshar
Adel Gholami
Mohammad Mousavi
Vlado Petković
Nico Freriks
Farhad Ghaemi
Farhad Zarif |
27331998_0_5 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Honors
Iranian Super League
Winners (2): 2012, 2013
Runners-up (1): 2014
Third place (3): 2010, 2011, 2019 |
27331998_0_6 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Iranian First Volleyball League
Winners (1): 2009 |
27331998_0_7 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Asian Club Championship
Winners (1): 2013
Third place (1): 2012 |
27331998_0_8 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Club World Championship
Seventh place (1): 2013 |
27331998_0_9 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. The Iran Cup
Winners (2): 2011, 2013 |
27331998_0_10 | 27331998 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalleh%20Mazandaran%20VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC | Kalleh Mazandaran VC. Ramadan Cup
Winners (1): 1990 |
27332016_0_0 | 27332016 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland%20Railroad%20Company%20Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation.
The Portland Railroad Company Substation, now the Scarborough Historical Museum, is a former power substation of the Portland Railroad Company, a trolley service provider, at 649 United States Route 1 in Scarborough, Maine. The station was built in 1911, and is one of the few trolley-related facilities surviving in the state. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 22, 1991. |
27332016_0_1 | 27332016 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland%20Railroad%20Company%20Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation. Description and history
The former Portland Railroad Company Substation is located in southwestern Scarborough (the area known as Dunstan Corner), on the north side of US 1, at the back of a parking lot separating the Scarborough Fire Station and Alger Hall, the local Masonic lodge. The building consists of a single story front section, and a taller, yet also single story, rear section. Both parts are built out of brick, and have shallow-pitch gabled roofs. The front facade is three bays wide, with sash windows in segmented-arch openings flanking a larger central bay. That bay originally housed a large equipment entrance with tall double doors, but has been infilled with a pedestrian entrance flanked by sidelights and paneling, and topped by a broad transom window. Original pedestrian entrances (some now closed off) were located on the southwest and northeast sides of the front block, and also in the larger rear section. The interior of the building has no original equipment related to its use as an electrical power substation, and now houses the museum displays of the Scarborough Historical Society. |
27332016_0_2 | 27332016 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland%20Railroad%20Company%20Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation.
The building was erected in 1911 as a power substation for the Saco Division of the Portland Railway Company, a trolley operator in southern Maine. It is the best preserved building from the state's period when it had an extensive light rail network, most of the others having been either demolished or substantially altered for other purposes. |
27332016_0_3 | 27332016 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland%20Railroad%20Company%20Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation | Portland Railroad Company Substation. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Cumberland County, Maine |
27332025_0_0 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
Patricia Glass (born 14 February 1957) is a Labour Party former politician who was the Member of Parliament for North West Durham from 2010 to 2017. She was appointed Shadow Education Secretary on 27 June 2016 by Jeremy Corbyn, but resigned two days later after announcing that she would be standing down at the next United Kingdom general election. |
27332025_0_1 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass. Early life and career
She was born in Esh Winning, County Durham. Before becoming an MP, Glass worked in various positions with local education authorities, and became a Government Education Adviser specialising in Special Needs Education, and Assistant Director of Education in Sunderland and Greenwich. |
27332025_0_2 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
Glass was elected as a councillor on Lanchester Parish Council in 2007. Subsequently she was selected as the Labour Party parliamentary candidate for North West Durham, with Hilary Armstrong due to retire at the 2010 general election. |
27332025_0_3 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass. Political career
Glass was elected to the House of Commons at the 2010 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for North West Durham. Her particular interest is education, and has sat on the Education Select Committee |
27332025_0_4 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
In 2014, Glass accused rival politicians in Parliament of "orchestrated barracking" of women with regional accents, saying "I get the impression they think women who are northerners should not be there." |
27332025_0_5 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
In September 2015, Glass was appointed as Shadow Education Minister with responsibility for childcare by the newly elected Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn. On 5 January 2016, she was named the Shadow Europe Minister after Corbyn had conducted the first reshuffle of his Shadow Cabinet. |
27332025_0_6 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
Glass took a prominent role in Labour's campaign to remain in the EU in the June 2016 referendum campaign. On 19 May 2016, she apologised after calling a member of the public in Sawley, Derbyshire, "a horrible racist", which was caught at the end of a radio interview recording and reported by the media. She also added "I'm never coming back to wherever this is". |
27332025_0_7 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
At a Labour rally, she suggested voters try to persuade their mothers and grandmothers to vote to stay in, but joked they didn't bother with their grandfathers because "the problem is older white men". She reported having received death threats during the referendum campaign, and on the advice of the police, she did not attend the referendum count. |
27332025_0_8 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
On 27 June 2016, Glass was appointed Shadow Education Secretary following the resignation of Lucy Powell and several other Cabinet ministers in protest at Corbyn's leadership during the EU referendum. The next day, Glass announced that she would not stand at the next general election. The day after that, she resigned as Shadow Education Secretary, saying that the "situation is untenable", and making the statement: |
27332025_0_9 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass.
Glass stood down at the 2017 snap general election, citing the "bruising referendum" as a major cause. |
27332025_0_10 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass. Personal life
Glass lives with her husband Bob in Lanchester, County Durham. Bob Glass served on Durham County Council from 2013 to 2017 as the Councillor for Delves Lane ward. Her brother Martin Gannon is a Councillor on Gateshead Council and is currently leader of the Council. |
27332025_1_0 | 27332025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat%20Glass | Pat Glass | Pat Glass. 1957 births
21st-century British women politicians
Female members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for English constituencies
Labour Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Living people
People from Esh Winning
UK MPs 2010–2015
UK MPs 2015–2017
21st-century English women
21st-century English people |
27332038_0_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2).
The second season of the comedy television series, Modern Family premiered September 22, 2010, and ended on May 25, 2011, on the American Broadcasting Company in the United States. The series is produced by Lloyd-Levitan Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television, with creators Steven Levitan and Christopher Lloyd as show runners. On January 12, 2010, Modern Family was renewed for a second season by ABC. Season two of Modern Family aired Wednesdays in the United States at 9 p.m. and consisted of 24 episodes. |
27332038_0_1 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2).
The season received positive reviews from most critics, with many naming it among the best series of 2010. Despite this, the season received criticism for a sophomore slump, most notably from Alan Sepinwall. Despite the criticism, the ratings for the series rose from the previous season due to the series winning a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series. The series became the highest rated scripted program in the 18-49 demographic and the twenty-fourth most viewed program among all viewers; it was tied for being the highest rated ABC program. The series has also been nominated and won several awards including a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series and Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series, the second year in a row. |
27332038_1_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Crew
The second season of the show was produced by Lloyd-Levitan Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television and airs on the American Broadcasting Company (ABC). Modern Family is produced by co-creators Christopher Lloyd and Steven Levitan who serve as executive producers and show runners with Bill Wrubel as co-executive producer. Despite being produced by Lloyd-Levitan Productions, Steven Levitan and Christopher Lloyd dissolved their four-year business partnership. Returning writers from the first season included Paul Corrigan, Joe Lawson, Levitan, Lloyd, Dan O’Shannon, Brad Walsh, Ilana Wernick, Wrubel, and Danny Zuker. Joining the writing staff during the second season were Jerry Collins, Alex Herschlag, Abraham Higginbotham, Elaine Ko, Jeffrey Richman. Higginbotham had previously worked with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on the short lived Fox sitcom, Do Not Disturb. Returning directors are Michael Spiller and Chris Koch while new directors are Gail Mancuso, Scott Ellis and Beth McCarthy-Miller. Jason Winer, who directed 14 episodes of the first season didn't receive a credit for the season due to him directing his first film, Arthur. |
27332038_2_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Cast
Modern Family employs an ensemble cast. The series focuses on Jay Pritchett (Ed O'Neill), his daughter Claire Dunphy (Julie Bowen), and his son Mitchell Pritchett (Jesse Tyler Ferguson) who live in Los Angeles. Claire is a homemaker mom married to Phil Dunphy (Ty Burrell); they have three children, Haley (Sarah Hyland), the typical teenager, Alex (Ariel Winter), the smart middle child, and Luke (Nolan Gould), the offbeat only son. Jay is married to a much younger Colombian woman, Gloria (Sofía Vergara), and is helping her raise her pre-teen son, Manny (Rico Rodriguez). Mitchell and his partner Cameron Tucker (Eric Stonestreet) have adopted a Vietnamese baby, Lily (twins Ella Hiller and Jaden Hiller). The child actors were only obligated to appear in 22 episodes. |
27332038_2_1 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Cast
Several notable actors made guest appearances throughout the second season of Modern Family. The season featured the return of Shelley Long as DeDe Pritchett who brought a new boyfriend, Claire's ex-boyfriend who was played by Matt Dillon. Another ex-partner that appeared on the show is Mitchell's ex-girlfriend who was played by Mary Lynn Rajskub in the twelfth episode. Celia Weston also made her first appearance as Cameron's mother, Barb Tucker in the ninth episode. Nathan Lane appeared as ultra-flamboyant "friend" of Mitchell & Cameron, Pepper Saltsman. In the episode, "Earthquake", it is revealed Pepper is Cameron's ex-boyfriend. Other guest appearances included Danny Trejo played a janitor at Manny and Luke's school who is feared by many students and adds tension to Claire's relationship with Gloria in the tenth episode. James Marsden played Mitchell and Cameron's new shirtless "neighbor" in the eleventh episode. Fred Willard was originally set to return this season, but didn't for unknown reasons. |
27332038_3_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Writing
Much like the first season, much of story lines featured in episodes were based on true events that happened to the writers. For example, Phil and Claire's storyline in "Manny Get Your Gun" was based on a personal experience of executive producer Steven Levitan's in which he and his wife would debate on which way was the fastest to go home from a restaurant. The first part of the season also saw the development of Claire Dunphy, most notably in "The Old Wagon", "Halloween" and "Dance Dance Revelation". The writers also sought to respond to criticisms of the first season. Near the end of the first season, Modern Family drew criticism from some quarters for its portrayal of Cameron and Mitchell as not being physically affectionate with each other. The criticism spawned a Facebook campaign to demand Mitchell and Cameron be allowed to kiss. In response to the controversy, producers released a statement that a season two episode would address Mitchell's discomfort with public displays of affection. Executive producer Levitan has said that it was unfortunate that the issue had arisen, since the show's writers had always planned on such a scene "as part of the natural development of the show." The response episode, "The Kiss" was eventually written and aired during the second season and drew praise from multiple critics for the subtle nature of the kiss and became the fourth highest rated episode of the series so far. During the second season, the writers stopped using a voice over at the end of most episodes which had been criticized by some critics during the first season for being "hokey". |
27332038_4_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Reviews
The second season reached positive reviews much like the previous season. Maureen Ryan of TV Squad named the season along with Cougar Town and Better Off Ted one of the best shows of 2010. Robert Bianco of USA Today gave the new season four stars out of four saying "Not since Frasier has a sitcom offered such an ideal blend of heart and smarts, or proven itself so effortlessly adept at so many comic variations, from subtle wordplay to big-laugh slapstick to everything in between." Robert Bianco in a later review stated "as good as it was in its first year, is even better in its second" positively comparing the characters to the characters from The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Cosby Show and Friends. TV Squad writer Joel Keller praised the show's avoidance of the sophomore slump writing "Steve Levitan, Christopher Lloyd, and their cast and crew haven't missed a beat, churning out consistently funny episodes as if its wildly-successful first season never ended.". |
27332038_4_1 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Reviews
"Manny Get Your Gun" received overwhelmingly positive reviews from critics with many of them comparing it to the quality of the first-season episodes, with TV Guide writer Matt Roush calling it "comedy gold". The episode was later put in for Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series along with "The Old Wagon", "The Kiss", "Caught in the Act", "Someone to Watch Over Lily" and "Mother's Day". "Halloween" also received similar reviews, with The A.V. Club reviewer Donna Bowman comparing it to the critically acclaimed first-season episode, "Fizbo". The episode was also named the eleventh best episode of 2010 by TV Guide and was also named among the best 2010 episodes of Modern Family by The A.V. Club. |
27332038_4_2 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Reviews
The episode, "Unplugged" received some controversy due to Gloria's line "Ah, here we go. Because, in Colombia, we trip over goats and we kill people in the street. Do you know how offensive that is? Like we’re Peruvians!" Milagros Lizarraga, founder of the online group Peru USA Southern Ca, told the Associated Press, "It’s incredible that in a country where everything is politically correct, ABC would have a line of this sort." Sofía Vergara responded to a fan asking about the script (in Spanish) "get a life". |
27332038_4_3 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Reviews
The second season also received criticism for a "drop in quality". New York writer Rachel Muddux while reviewing "Chirp" wrote that "Modern Family feels like it's still struggling a little to live up to the Emmy-winning highs of its first, negotiating the boundaries of its family-sitcom roots and attempting to transcend cheap laughs." She later went on to say in a later review that "after three spot-on episodes in a row and nearly a month of reruns, the show kicked off its second season's second half in such fine form that we're hoping next week we won't feel at all compelled to mention how iffy things were looking there for a while.". Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club while reviewing "Two Monkeys and a Panda", criticized the second season, saying that it has possibly tarnished the show's legacy as a "classic". HitFix reviewer Alan Sepinwall, who was very critical over the quality drop of the second season, received harsh comments from readers whenever he criticized an episode leading to him reviewing the series less frequently. |
27332038_4_4 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Reviews
Eric Stonestreet's character Cameron Tucker, who was considered the best character of the first season, was mainly criticized. Sepinwall, while reviewing "The One That Got Away", wrote that Cameron had become a "whiny, overly-sensitive diva". TV Squad writer Joel Keller, while reviewing "Manny Get Your Gun", wrote that "It's just that sometimes Cam is too much Cam for his, or the audience's, own good". Despite the criticism, Ty Burrell went on to still receive praise from critics and fans alike. While the episode "Bixby's Back" received mixed reviews from critics, Burrell's performance was well received with Rachel Maddux of New York calling it "comedic mastery". Joyce Eng of TV Guide named Julie Bowen, Ed O'Neill and Nolan Gould among her dream ballot for Best Supporting Actor/Actress in a Comedy Series at the Emmy's. In a poll voted by TVLine readers, Vergara, was voted the most deserving of the Supporting Actress Award. |
27332038_5_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Awards and nominations
During its second season, Modern Family received two nominations at the 2010 Writers Guild of America Awards. Paul Corrigan and Brad Walsh were nominated for an Episodic Comedy for writing the episode, "Earthquake", but lost to Robert Carlock for his work on 30 Rock'''s "When It Rains, It Pours". The series also won Comedy Series. Modern Family garnered three nominations at the 2010 Satellite Awards for Best Television Series - Musical or Comedy. The series was also nominated for acting for Burrell and Bowen. The series went on to lose all three nominations. The series also received another Best Television Series - Musical or Comedy nomination at the 68th Golden Globe Awards for the second season in a row. The series also received a nomination for two supporting actor awards for Stonestreet and Vergara. Vergara received another acting nomination at the 17th Screen Actors Guild Awards, as did Burrell and O'Neill with the cast winning Ensemble in a Comedy. The series also won Best Comedy Series at the 2010 Producers Guild of America Awards, and tied with Glee for the Outstanding Comedy Series accolade at the 22nd GLAAD Media Awards. Michael Spiller also received a Directors Guild of America Award for Comedy Series at the 2010 ceremony, the series second win in the category. During the second season, Adweek named the show one of the 100 Most Influential TV Shows (98th chronologically). |
27332038_5_1 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Awards and nominations
At the inaugural Comedy Awards, the season received awards for Best Comedy Series and Comedy Directing - TV. The series was also nominated for Comedy Writing - TV and Ty Burrell for Comedy Actor - TV. In June 2011, Modern Family was nominated for six of the inaugural Critics’ Choice Television Awards. The show itself was nominated for "Best Comedy Series" while Burrell, O'Neill, and Stonestreet were nominated for "Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series" while Bowen and Vergara are nominated for "Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series". The series won while Burrell, O'Neill and Stonestreet lost their nominated to Neil Patrick Harris of How I Met Your Mother while Bowen and Vergara lost to Busy Philipps of Cougar Town. Burrell received another acting nomination for Individual Achievement in Comedy at the TCA Awards his second nomination for the award and his first time winning. The series also received a TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Comedy, the second win for the series in a row. |
27332038_5_2 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Awards and nominations
The series also received 17 Emmy nominations including Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series and Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series. The series received the third-most number of nominations for the year behind Mad Men and Boardwalk Empire. It later won five Emmys for Outstanding Comedy Series, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Writing for a Comedy Series and Directing for a Comedy Series, all of which except for the latter were for the second win in a row. The season was also included on multiple top ten lists for best series of 2010 including: 1st on MSNBC's Top 10 TV shows of 2010, 2nd on Pastes 20 Best TV Shows of 2010, 2nd on Matt Roush's Top 10 TV, 8th on Metacritic's 2010 Television Critic Top Ten Lists, 8th Best TV Series of 2010, 13th on The A.V. Club's 25 best television series of 2010, American Film Institute's Top TV Shows of 2010, and Maureen Ryan's The Best TV of 2010: Top 10 Roster. |
27332038_5_3 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Ratings
Like the previous season, Modern Family aired Wednesday at 9:00pm and is coupled with Cougar Town. Aided by winning the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series the show's second season became the highest rated show on Wednesday on premiere week and also rose 34% from the previous season among adults between the ages of 18 and 49. "The Old Wagon", the season premiere, finished 5th in the rating with a 5.1 rating among adults between the ages of 18 and 49. "Halloween", which was broadcast on October 27, was the highest rated episode of the season, finishing second with a 5.1 among adults between the ages of 18 and 49. "Bixby's Back" later tied with "Halloween" and "The Old Wagon" and finished fourth in the weekly ratings. The lowest rated episode of the season was "Mother Tucker", which was viewed by an estimated 10.53 million households with a 3.7 rating/12% share among 18- to 49-year-olds, which much like "Fizbo", might have received a drop due to airing on Thanksgiving Eve. The success of the series has led to the series being used as a "launch pad" to three ABC series, Cougar Town (which premiered the same season as MF), Mr. Sunshine and Happy Endings, with Mr. Sunshine being the only one not to be renewed. The second season ranked 24th among overall viewers and fifth among viewers between the ages of 18 and 49. The season averaged 11.76 million viewers in the seasonal 18–49 demographic ratings with an average of 4.8 rating/12% share in the demographic meaning that the season was watched by an average of 4.8% of households and 12% average of all televisions were tuned to the season when it was broadcast. Added with Digital video recorder viewers, the season received a 6.2 rating in the 18-49 demographic, adding a 1.7 rating to the original viewership beating its closest competition, Glee, by six-tenths of a point. |
27332038_5_4 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Home video release
The second season of Modern Family is set to be released in a three-DVD set, Modern Family - The Complete Second Season'' on September 20, 2011. The box-set contains all 24 episodes and include Deleted Family Interviews, Deleted and Extended Scenes, the "Strangers on a Treadmill" Table Read, Mitch's Flash Mob, the "Imagine Me Naked" Music Video and a Blooper Reel, Modern Family Holidays, "Waiting for Oprah", Chatting with Steven Levitan, and At Home with Modern Family. |
27332038_6_0 | 27332038 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern%20Family%20%28season%202%29 | Modern Family (season 2) | Modern Family (season 2). Modern Family (season 2) episodes
2010 American television seasons
2011 American television seasons
2 |
27332048_0_0 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015.
This article is about the composition of the Regional Council of Veneto, the legislative assembly of Veneto, during the IX Legislature, thus the term started in April 2010, following the 2010 regional election, and ended in April 2015. Of the 60 members, 53 were elected in provincial constituencies with proportional representation with a further 6 returned from the so-called "regional list" of the elected President of Veneto, including the President himself, and the candidate for President who came second. |
27332048_0_1 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015.
Clodovaldo Ruffato (The People of Freedom, later New Centre-Right) was the President of the Council for the entire term, while Luca Zaia (Liga Veneta–Lega Nord) served as President of Veneto at the head of his first government. |
27332048_0_2 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Composition
Seven parties plus a one-member group formed by Giuseppe Bortolussi (the defeated centre-left candidate) were represented in the Council at the start of the term. The largest party in the Council was Liga Veneta with twenty seats, a third of the total. At the end of the term, the groups were sixteen, four of which formed for technical purposes as every group could validate the slates of two lists for the regional election; these included "Civic Veneto", "Zaia President", "Tosi List for Veneto" and "Family–Pensioners". |
27332048_0_3 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Strength of political groups
Sources: Regional Council of Veneto – Groups and Regional Council of Veneto – Members |
27332048_1_0 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Liga Veneta–Lega Nord
Luca Baggio (switched to "Venetian Commitment", later "Tosi List for Veneto", in March 2015)
Andrea Bassi (switched to the "Mixed Group" in March 2015)
Santino Bozza (expelled; switched to the "Mixed Group"in July 2013, later affiliated to Veneto First; switched to "Veneto First" in February 2015)
Federico Caner
Bruno Cappon
Vittorino Cenci (switched to "Veneto First" in February 2015)
Roberto Ciambetti
Maurizio Conte (switched to the "Mixed Group" in March 2015)
Cristiano Corazzari (resigned on 1 June 2014)
Enrico Corsi (installed on 8 July 2014; resigned on 1 August 2014)
Stefano Falconi (installed on 10 June 2014; switched to "Zaia President" in March 2015)
Nicola Finco (switched to "Zaia President" in March 2015)
Marino Finozzi
Giovanni Furlanetto (switched to the "Mixed Group" in January 2014, later affiliated to Veneto First; switched to "Veneto First" in February 2015)
Arianna Lazzarini
Franco Manzato
Giampiero Possamai (switched to "Zaia President" in March 2015)
Sandro Sandri (switched to the "Mixed Group" in October 2012; switched to "New Centre-Right" in September 2014)
Daniele Stival (switched to "Toward North–Venetian People" in March 2015)
Giuseppe Stoppato (installed on 16 September 2014; switched to "Toward North–Venetian People" in March 2015)
Paolo Tosato (resigned on 2 July 2014)
Matteo Toscani (switched to "Venetian Commitment", later "Tosi List for Veneto", in March 2015)
Luca Zaia |
27332048_1_1 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. The People of Freedom
(From November 2013 to February 2014 the group was named as "The People of Freedom – New Centre Right". Since February 2014 the group was named "The People of Freedom – Forza Italia for Veneto".)
Davide Bendinelli (switched to "Forza Italia" in November 2013)
Dario Bond
Renato Chisso (suspended on 31 May 2014)
Giancarlo Conta (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014)
Maria Luisa Coppola (forcedly resigned on 28 November 2014)
Piergiorgio Cortelazzo
Elena Donazzan
Amedeo Gerolimetto (installed on 8 July 2014)
Massimo Giorgetti
Nereo Laroni (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014)
Mauro Mainardi (switched to "Forza Italia" in November 2013)
Renzo Marangon (installed on 15 December 2014, joined "Forza Italia")
Leonardo Padrin (switched to "Forza Italia" in November 2013)
Francesco Piccolo (installed on 9 July 2014 as substitute of Renato Chisso, joined the "Mixed Group"; switched to "Venetian Commitment", later "Tosi List for Veneto", in March 2015)
Clodovaldo Ruffato (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014)
Remo Sernagiotto (switched to "Forza Italia" in November 2013; resigned on 7 July 2014)
Moreno Teso (switched to "Forza Italia" in March 2014)
Carlo Alberto Tesserin (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014)
Costantino Toniolo (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014)
Marino Zorzato (switched to "New Centre-Right" in February 2014) |
27332048_1_2 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Venetian Democratic Party
Alessio Alessandrini (installed on 9 July 2014, substitute of Giampietro Marchese until 24 July 2014; switched to "Civic Veneto" in March 2015)
Graziano Azzalin
Giuseppe Berlato Sella (switched to "Civic Veneto" in March 2015)
Franco Bonfante
Mauro Bortoli (switched to "Civic Veneto" in March 2015)
Diego Bottacin (switched to the "Mixed Group" in October 2010; switched to "Toward North–Venetian People" in March 2015)
Andrea Causin (switched to the "Mixed Group" in March 2011; resigned on 25 March 2013)
Roberto Fasoli
Stefano Fracasso
Giampietro Marchese (installed on 10 April 2013; suspended on 31 May 2014; switched to the "Mixed Group" in June 2014; resigned on 24 July 2014)
Claudio Niero (installed on 14 March 2013)
Bruno Pigozzo
Laura Puppato (resigned on 12 March 2013)
Sergio Reolon
Piero Ruzzante
Claudio Sinigaglia
Lucio Tiozzo |
27332048_1_3 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Union of the Centre
Raffaele Grazia (switched to "Popular Future" in May 2013)
Stefano Peraro
Stefano Valdegamberi (switched to "Popular Future" in May 2013) |
27332048_1_4 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Italy of Values
Gustavo Franchetto (switched to the "Mixed Group" in January 2013; switched to "Popular Future" in May 2013)
Gennaro Marotta
Antonino Pipitone |
27332048_2_0 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. North-East Union
Mariangelo Foggiato (resigned on 27 August 2014)
Rolando Bortoluzzi (installed 16 September 2014) |
27332048_3_0 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Election
The election that produced the IX Legislature took place on 28–29 March 2010. Luca Zaia, leader of Liga Veneta–Lega Nord, was elected President by a landslide and his party became the largest in the region with 35.2%. The total score of Venetist parties was 37.2%, more than ever before. |
27332048_3_1 | 27332048 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Members%20of%20the%20Regional%20Council%20of%20Veneto%2C%202010%E2%80%932015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015 | Members of the Regional Council of Veneto, 2010–2015. Election
Liga Veneta managed the highest swing ever in a regional election in Veneto (+20.5%), gaining from almost every part of the political spectrum, but mainly from The People of Freedom (–7.5%), the Democrats (–8.6%) and other Venetists (–5.1%). |
27332052_0_0 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary.
The Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary is the operating name of the Theological College of the Canadian Reformed Churches. It is the federational seminary of the Canadian Reformed Churches. |
27332052_0_1 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. History
Synod Orangeville (1968) made the decision to establish a Theological College of the Canadian Reformed Churches on Wednesday, November 20, 1968, and to appoint three full-time professors and two lecturers. The College was officially opened in September 1969 in Hamilton, Ontario. The Ontario legislature granted degree-granting authority to the Seminary under the Canadian Reformed Theological College Act, 1981. Since 1984, the Faculty is made up of four full-time professors. The seminary moved to a new location on the Hamilton escarpment in 1985. In 2010, the operating name was changed to the Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. |
27332052_0_2 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. Programs
Master of Divinity (M.Div.) (4 years), includes a Pastoral Training Program
Bachelor of Theology (B.Th.) (3 years)
Diploma of Theological Studies (Dip.Th.St.) (2 years)
Diploma of Missiology (Dip.M.) (8 months) |
27332052_0_3 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. Faculty
There are five full-time faculty members:
Dr. Jannes Smith - Professor of Old Testament
Dr. William den Hollander - Professor of New Testament
Dr. Jason P. Van Vliet - Professor of Dogmatology
Dr. Arjan J. de Visser - Professor of Ministry and Mission
Dr. Theodore G. Van Raalte - Professor of Ecclesiology
Besides the full-time staff, guest lectures and courses are occasionally taught by several adjunct lecturers. |
27332052_0_4 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. Status
The college is an accredited private degree-granting institution listed by the Ontario Ministry of Education under the Canadian Reformed Theological College Act, 1981. It was accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in 2013. |
27332052_1_0 | 27332052 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian%20Reformed%20Theological%20Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary | Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary. External links
Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary
Reformed church seminaries and theological colleges
Educational institutions established in 1969
Education in Hamilton, Ontario
Evangelical seminaries and theological colleges in Canada
1969 establishments in Ontario |
27332061_0_0 | 27332061 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aisleless%20church | Aisleless church | Aisleless church.
An aisleless church () is a single-nave church building that consists of a single hall-like room. While similar to the hall church, the aisleless church lacks aisles or passageways on either side of the nave and separated from the nave by colonnades or arcades, a row of pillars or columns. However, there is often no clear demarcation between the different building forms, and many churches, in the course of their construction history, developed from a combination of different types. |
27332061_0_1 | 27332061 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aisleless%20church | Aisleless church | Aisleless church.
Early aisleless churches were generally small because of the difficulty of spanning a large, open space without using pillars or columns. In many places, where the population made it necessary and money was available, former medieval hall churches were extended over the course of centuries until they became a hall church or basilica. Starting in the Renaissance, the development of new technologies and better building materials allowed larger spaces to be spanned. |
27332061_0_2 | 27332061 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aisleless%20church | Aisleless church | Aisleless church.
The basic form of the church hall is rectangular. Aisleless churches are generally aligned longitudinally so that the altar and choir are located at one of the narrower ends and are facing east. There are rare examples of transept aisleless churches, in which the altar area occupies the short side east of the transept. |
27332061_0_3 | 27332061 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aisleless%20church | Aisleless church | Aisleless church.
This form of church building has proliferated since the Renaissance, especially in Protestant churches. It became the basis of modern church architecture. In Norway, the aisleless and elongated "long church" is the most common design and is regarded as the typical Norwegian church. The Norwegian long church usually includes a narthex/vestibule in a separate section, often in a somewhat lower and narrower room attached to the main body and traditionally in the western end of the building. Until the 1940 about 850 of Norway's 1300 churches were aisleless, these numbers does not include some 1000 perished stave churches many of which were aisleless. For instance Flesberg Stave Church for 500 years had a rectangular aisleless ground plan until it was expanded in 1735 by adding three arms to a cruciform aisleless shape. |
27332061_0_4 | 27332061 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aisleless%20church | Aisleless church | Aisleless church. Examples
Church of the Redeemer near Potsdam
Church of St. Lambert's in Bergen
Christuskirche in Dresden-Strehlen, Art Nouveau-style church
The Hofkirche at Ludwigslust
The largest aisleless church in Germany is the parish church of St. Vitus in Löningen.
The Saalkirche in the northern Siebengebirge region
The Providenzkirche in Heidelberg
The Jakobikirche in Hildesheim.
The Seminarkirche in Hildesheim.
The Johanniskirche in Frankfurt-Bornheim a Baroque aisleless church.
The Haltdalen Stave Church, now at museum in Trondheim, is a single-nave stave church
The Bakka Church is one of many hundred aisleless wooden "long churches" constructed in Norway 1851-1900 |
27332062_0_0 | 27332062 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frenchville%20Railroad%20Station%20and%20Water%20Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank.
The Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank are a historic railroad museum property in Frenchville, Maine. The station and water tank were built in 1910 by the Bangor & Aroostook Railroad (B&A) and were added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 20, 1995. The station was retired in 1971. The water tower became obsolete in 1958 when the diesel locomotive replaced the steam locomotive. The Town of Frenchville purchased the water tank from Bangor & Aroostook Railroad and used it as a water reservoir for the fire department until 1981. The Frenchville Historical Society took over maintenance of the site in 1985. |
27332062_0_1 | 27332062 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frenchville%20Railroad%20Station%20and%20Water%20Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank. Description and history
The former Frenchville Railroad Station is located between United States Route 1 and the railroad tracks of the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad, west of the junction of US 1 and Maine State Route 162. The station is a small rectangular wood frame building with a broadly-overhanging gable roof and weatherboard siding. The building is divided into three sections: a central agent's room, a freight area to the east, and a passenger area to the west. The inside walls are finished with pine wainscoting and decorative metal, which is continued onto the ceiling. The station was built c. 1910 by the B&A, and remained in service until 1971. |
27332062_0_2 | 27332062 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frenchville%20Railroad%20Station%20and%20Water%20Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank | Frenchville Railroad Station and Water Tank.
Immediately east of the station is a short isolated section of track, on which stands a caboose. It is in length, and was built by the Pullman Company as a troop transport car in December 1943. It was acquired by the B&A in 1949 and refitted as a caboose, remaining in service until 1981. It was donated to the Frenchville Historical Society in 1988. |
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