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21014901 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | together. Later in the year, they formalised their partnership as Super_Collider. During the period, Lidell jammed on stage with Balzac, where he began developing his skills as a soul singer. While in the studio working on what later became "Under My Nose", Lidell initially screamed the song's vocals. In Lidell's recollection, his girlfriend, who was with him in the studio, advised to him that he "just relax a little bit here" and soften his vocal style. Lidell took her advice and began "just scatting along really and just responding to the track." While cutting that up and incorporating a groove, | 141 | 604 |
21014902 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | Vogel heard the work-in-progress and told him "you've got a track here." After editing work, it became the first Super_Collider song. Another work-in-progress, "Darn (Cold Way O' Lovin)", remained an instrumental until Lidell added vocals one night which he had recorded a year earlier for a live show in Vogel's Brighton club Defunkt. Pairing Lidell's vocal with a unique funk style at a house tempo, "Darn (Cold Way O' Lovin') was released in 1998 as the first Super_Collider single alongside a remix by DJ Harvey, and was lauded by both critics and DJs. Though pleased with the positive reception, Vogel | 152 | 606 |
21014903 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | expressed concerns in a 1999 interview that audiences would not appreciate the duo's following material, which they planned to be "nothing like that single" and instead "perhaps more progressive and innovative and challenging for the way we work," commenting that the single was "quite orthodox" in comparison. He nonetheless explained that "['Darn'] will always have a special place in my heart. I heard some people say some incredible things to me personally and I got some compliments that I'll remember forever." Super_Collider signed with Loaded Records, known for releasing more commercial-style music, largely due to their offices being geographically close. | 134 | 665 |
21014904 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | They played the label "Darn", unsure which labels would enjoy it due to its unusual style, but Loaded enjoyed the single and made them an offer to record an album. Lidell recalled that the writing process for "Head On" was a "really interesting and really quite painful process." The only two songs the duo had already created were "Under My Nose" and "Darn", which they considered "really commercial tracks" made for "a bit of fun", but they chose to pursue other ideas instead of "continue in making a kind of variant on house music, which 'Darn' fits into that kind | 132 | 568 |
21014905 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | of category loosely." He recalled: "[W]e decided that we wanted to explore things because we wouldn't be happy to do an like an album's worth of 'Darn's. As you can imagine, given that you're signed on the basis of a couple of tracks, there's a slight risk to sign someone having only that and not having heard their potential range of sounds. At the time, I don't think the record company understood the album was going to be so diverse, but over time it proved to be something which became more interesting and more rewarding for us all, the record | 128 | 550 |
21014906 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | company and me and Cris as creators." Vogel and Lidell co-produced the album together; writer John Bush believes the album to have been "accomplished only after weeks at the computer." The duo worked collaboratively on the album. Contrary to belief that Lidell contributed only vocals to Vogel's backing tracks, the latter said their collaboration was "a lot more complicated than that." Vogel felt that, while working on "Head On", Lidell introduced him to "lots of the old ways that I've missed out on. But similarly, we absolutely adore brand spanking new exciting hard music." Both producers played a lot of | 137 | 611 |
21014907 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | older music during production, Vogell said that, for him, this was because he was "sick of my record collection full of techno" and wanted to listen back to records he "could actually get into and pay attention to and listen to properly." The duo chose to fuse modern electronic sounds with influences of funk music, in particular Sly Stone, Lidell's biggest musical inspiration. "In a Desert Island sort of test," he said, "I'd always take Sly Stone above any electronic music. He's one of my favourite artists, just because he seemed to have almost the perfect balance between fun-he even | 131 | 590 |
21014908 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | wrote a song called 'Fun'-and music and community and so much shit there in the mix." Though not comparing their music to Stone, Lidell said his influence was "so strong" and aimed to create melodies "but without the trappings of having to make traditional songs." He explained in an interview that "Head On" took long to create due to the "sheer amount of editing which needs to be done because of how many ideas end up being generated from two heads. Under the influence of a bit of cannabis and a good couple of record collections, you get a serious | 126 | 552 |
21014909 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | list of potential recipes." According to "The Wire", the album was largely a digital construction, described by Lidell as a "meticulous soundworld." Most of the duo's song structures were achieved by excessive, painstaking "software tweaks and hard disk editing." "Head On" is an album of experimental, "skewed dance-pop" material, and contains ten songs which mash up "P-funk and Prince-styled vocals into an electro-shedder similar to the one employed by Autechre and Oval," according to AllMusic's John Bush. While central to the album's characteristic sound are unusual funk grooves, melodies and Lidell's Sly Stone and Prince-inspired soulful vocals, the record's unique | 153 | 675 |
21014910 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | techno production, combining surreal sound textures, fitful drum programming and 'murky' sub-bass tones, result in what critic M. Tye Comer described as "a mutant strain of music that embraces P-Funk, house and techno without subscribing to the rules of any pre-existing genre." Simon Reynolds felt that Vogel's "decidedly mangled and alienated" production, as had been seen on his avant-garde techno solo releases, was present on "Head On" but nonetheless unusually incorporated synth bass and keyboard licks reminiscent of the SOS Band, D Train and the Gap Band, in keeping in with the album's funk sound. He described Lidell's vocals as | 148 | 639 |
21014911 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | "a kind of cyborg hypersoul–grotesquely mannered, FX-warped yet queerly compelling." "Darn (Cold Way O' Lovin)" features soulful vocals largely repeating the title while low-end "tech-basslines" weave in and out of the track and switching between left and right channels. According to Bush: "The message is clear: vocals are just another sound-source to be tweaked and spun off in all directions." Described by Reynolds as "robo-Cameo" due to its synthesised slap bass sounds, "Take Me Home" is a "hip-thrusting soul" song with similarites to Prince. It was described by the "NME" as, "in fact, in a small but significant way, unlike | 165 | 633 |
21014912 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | anything else, ever." "It Won't Be Long" is a drowsy P-funk song, while "Alchemical Confession" is characterised by its heavy usage of "acrid guitar squalls." With artwork by Red Design and incorporating photography from Ben Cowlin, the album cover features a composite conflation of Vogel and Lidell's heads, pasted from "scores of digital flakes." Their bleary eyes and haggard expression was described by Bush as attesting to the album's physically straining production. "Head On" was initially released by Loaded Records on 24 May 1999 in the United Kingdom, before being made available on 9 November 1999 in the United States | 153 | 630 |
21014913 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | on Skint Records, a big beat label for whom Loaded is a subsidiary. A limited-edition edition version was also released in Britain, adding a bonus disc containing four extra tracks. "It Won't Be Long" and "Take Me Home" were released as a double A-side after having become popular in British clubs. During the promotion of the album, Vogel expressed annoyance at Loaded insisting that all the duo's released contain remixes, and often found they did not know about or care for half the remixers the label suggested. Upon release, "Head On" was received wide acclaim from music critics. Simon Reynolds | 133 | 600 |
21014914 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | of "Spin" felt the album picks up "where Zapp's 'More Bounce to the Ounce' and George Clinton's 'Atomic Dog' left off–the era of dance music when trad musicianship crashed head-on into futurism." He praised the album's inventive sound and concluded that, unlike other bands, Super_Collider proved they "have a perfect grasp on funk's uncanny merger of supple and stiff, loose and tight." He further described the song "Alchemical Confession" as "the kind of black rock I always hoped Tackhead or Material would deliver." In a positive review, M. Tye Comer of "CMJ New Music Monthly" described "Head On" as "[a] | 157 | 610 |
21014915 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | very strange and titillating release," writing that it "lives up to every connotation of the word 'experimental'." They recommended the tracks "Darn", "Take Me Home", "Cut the Phone" and "Pay It Away". John Bush of AllMusic named "Head On" an "Album Pick", praising how the "positively beefy" production enhances the album's "delightfully skewed dance-pop." He commented: "True, there's a lot to digest -- and perhaps a bit too much production in several spots -- for a collection of 'pop' songs, but fans of the Skam label and the "Mask" series will eat this stuff up. Best of all, now there's | 154 | 594 |
21014916 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | an outside chance that a Vogel production will get played on the world's less intellectual dancefloors." In a review of the "It Won't Be Long" and "Take Me Home" double A-side, Piers Martin of the "NME" described "Head On" as an "exceptional" album, and described Super_Collider as "[u]narguably one of the most inventive and mind-bendingly exciting groups currently functioning in pop." In "Techno: The Rough Guide", writer Tim Barr described the album as "House-wrecking." "Les Inrockuptibles" ranked the album at 45 in their year-end list of the best albums of 1999, while "The Wire" named it one of the year's | 163 | 613 |
21014917 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | 10 best electronica albums. In 2014, "Fact" magazine included "It Won't Be long" at number 66 in their list of "The 100 greatest IDM tracks", and commented on the album's continued appeal: "So very, very far ahead of its time, Super_Collider’s first album "Head On" amazing arrived on a major label thanks to Skint’s deal with Sony. Cristian Vogel and Jamie Lidell hit a rich seam of dark cyborg funk, that wraps itself around you like the hungry metal in "". For those who only know Jamie Lidell as the slick lounge lizard soulman he later became, his singing and | 143 | 564 |
21014918 | "Head On (Super Collider album)" | production work on this should be a revelation." In a 2005 interview with "Pitchfork", Lidell reflected upon "Head On" fondly as "innovative" and "mindblowing", described it as "a big wake-up call to a lot of people. We were really trying to rip people's heads off, and we didn't have much technology to do that." "The Wire" magazine felt that Lidell's mid-2000s soul music could be rooted back to "Head On". All songs written by Christian Vogel and Jamie Lidell Head On (Super Collider album) Head On is the debut album by English-based electronic duo Super_Collider, consisting of producers Christian Vogel | 152 | 608 |
21014919 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 19th century" | Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 19th century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon community since its beginnings. However, top LDS leaders only started regularly addressing queer topics in public in the late 1950s. Since 1970, the LDS Church has had at least | 134 | 636 |
21014920 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 19th century" | one official publication or speech from a high-ranking leader referencing LGBT topics every year, and a greater number of LGBT Mormon and former Mormon individuals have received media coverage. Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 19th century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon | 128 | 653 |
21014921 | "Paul M. Potter" | Paul M. Potter Paul Meredith Potter (June 3, 1853 - March 7, 1921) was an American playwright and journalist, best known for adapting the popular novel "Trilby" into a stage play. Potter was born Walter Arthur McLean in Brighton, England in 1853. His where his father was headmaster of King Edward's School in Bath. He adopted the name Paul Potter after traveling to India upon graduating from school. He became the foreign editor for the "New York Herald" in 1876, and later their London correspondent. In 1885 he became the "Herald"'s drama critic, and in 1888, he left the "Herald" | 151 | 584 |
21014922 | "Paul M. Potter" | to join the "Chicago Tribune". Potter's first play was "The City Directory" (1889), following by a string of additional plays, including the adaptation of "Trilby". Paul M. Potter Paul Meredith Potter (June 3, 1853 - March 7, 1921) was an American playwright and journalist, best known for adapting the popular novel "Trilby" into a stage play. Potter was born Walter Arthur McLean in Brighton, England in 1853. His where his father was headmaster of King Edward's School in Bath. He adopted the name Paul Potter after traveling to India upon graduating from school. He became the foreign editor for the | 145 | 603 |
21014923 | "Ricardo Martínez Menanteau" | Ricardo Martínez Menanteau Ricardo Martínez Menanteau (born 24 February 1960, Santiago, Chile) is a member of the Chilean military and has held the position of Commander-in-Chief of Chile since 9 March 2018, since being appointed by former president Michelle Bachelet after predecessor, Humberto Oviedo, retired. From 1972 to 1982 he lived with his family in Quillota due of the transfer of his father, Carlos Martínez Aguirre, who was a colonel in the Chilean army. He studied at the Rafael Ariztía Institute in Quillota, the same school as former president and commander-in-chief of Chile, General Augusto Pinochet. He was raised Catholic | 173 | 640 |
21014924 | "Ricardo Martínez Menanteau" | by his family. He entered the Liberator Bernardo O'Higgins Military School in 1976, graduating as a lieutenant in infantry weapons on 1 January, 1980. He holds a master's degree in Business Administration from the Adolfo Ibáñez University, A diploma in Hemispheric Defense and Security from the Inter-American Defense College in the United States and a Diploma in Joint Operations from the Institute for Hemispheric Security Cooperation also in the United States. 1976: Cadet (Military School) 1979: Ensign 1980: Second lieutenant 1985: Lieutenant 1990: Captain 1994: Major 2000: Lieutenant colonel 2006: Colonel 2010: Brigadier general 2013: Divisional general 2018: Army General | 178 | 680 |
21014925 | "Ricardo Martínez Menanteau" | / Commander-in-chief According to an investigation by Radio Bío Bío published on 4 January, during the period in which Martinez served as Deputy Chief of Staff (2014-2015) with the rank of Brigadier General, he recorded 30 trips to different regions of the country and abroad, bound for the United States, Africa, Europe and Central America. The cost of these trips was 120 million pesos, including the payment of travel expenses and air tickets which he spend public money on. The Ministry of Defense pointed out that Martinez informed the government of his total willingness to open his financial statements so | 134 | 612 |
21014926 | "Ricardo Martínez Menanteau" | that they could be audited by the government authorities. After participating in a supposedly private meeting with about 900 officers, on November 20. Martinez admitted that he knew information about links between officers and organized crime. The speech was recorded by one of the attendees of the meeting and was later filtered by The Clinic, on 22 November, 2018. As a result of this, he attended the Palacio de La Moneda that day on in the early hours of the morning, when Minister of Defense, Alberto Espina, spoke to him as a ""matter of urgency"", before his testimony. On 27 | 136 | 582 |
21014927 | "Ricardo Martínez Menanteau" | November, he was summoned to testify before the presidents of the Defense Commissions of the National Congress, about the alleged illegal sale of weapons. Martínez began his testimony by announcing legal actions against those responsible for recording his speech at the Military School, which he described as ""illegal"" and later leaked to The Clinic. On December 4, he testified before prosecutor Raúl Guzmán. Ricardo Martínez Menanteau Ricardo Martínez Menanteau (born 24 February 1960, Santiago, Chile) is a member of the Chilean military and has held the position of Commander-in-Chief of Chile since 9 March 2018, since being appointed by former | 152 | 651 |
21014928 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 20th century" | Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 20th century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon community since its beginnings. However, top LDS leaders only started regularly addressing queer topics in public in the late 1950s. Since 1970, the LDS Church has had at least | 134 | 636 |
21014929 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 20th century" | one official publication or speech from a high-ranking leader referencing LGBT topics every year, and a greater number of LGBT Mormon and former Mormon individuals have received media coverage. Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 20th century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon | 128 | 653 |
21014930 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 21st century" | Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 21st century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon community since its beginnings. However, top LDS leaders only started regularly addressing queer topics in public in the late 1950s. Since 1970, the LDS Church has had at least | 134 | 636 |
21014931 | "Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 21st century" | one official publication or speech from a high-ranking leader referencing LGBT topics every year, and a greater number of LGBT Mormon and former Mormon individuals have received media coverage. Timeline of LGBT Mormon history in the 21st century This is a timeline of LGBT Mormon history consisting of events, publications, and speeches at the intersection of LGBTQ+ individuals, topics around sexual orientation and gender minorities, and the community of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS or Mormon Church). Although the historical record is often scarce, evidence points to queer individuals having existed in the Mormon | 128 | 653 |
21014932 | "Nature's 10" | Nature's 10 Nature’s 10 is the "Nature"’s annual list of ten people who mattered in science in each year. The ten people may have made a significant impact in science either for good or for bad. Reporters and editorial staff at "Nature" judge people in the list to have had “a significant impact on the world, or their position in the world may have had an important impact on science”. The short biographical profiles publish reveal the people behind some of the year’s most important discoveries and events. Alongside the ten, five “ones to watch” for the following year are | 129 | 576 |
21014933 | "Nature's 10" | also listed. In 2018 the awardees were: Five ones to watch in 2019: 2017 awardees included: five ones to watch in 2018 2016 awardees included: 2015 awardees included: 2014 awardees included: 2013 awardees included with fives one's to watch 2012 awardees included 2011 awardees included Nature's 10 Nature’s 10 is the "Nature"’s annual list of ten people who mattered in science in each year. The ten people may have made a significant impact in science either for good or for bad. Reporters and editorial staff at "Nature" judge people in the list to have had “a significant impact on the | 165 | 588 |
21014934 | "Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1986)" | Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1986) Darío Nicolás Martínez (born 25 January 1986) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a defender for Los Cuervos del Fin del Mundo. Martínez's senior career began with Los Andes. He made thirty-eight appearances for them in three years across seasons in Primera B Nacional and Primera B Metropolitana, netting two goals in the process; with his final goal for the club coming in the third tier on 10 April 2010 against Villa San Carlos. In 2016, Martínez featured for Racing de Trelew in Torneo Federal B. A division he remained in for the | 167 | 593 |
21014935 | "Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1986)" | following year, joining Los Cuervos del Fin del Mundo from the 2017 campaign. A total of twelve appearances arrived across both stints. Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1986) Darío Nicolás Martínez (born 25 January 1986) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a defender for Los Cuervos del Fin del Mundo. Martínez's senior career began with Los Andes. He made thirty-eight appearances for them in three years across seasons in Primera B Nacional and Primera B Metropolitana, netting two goals in the process; with his final goal for the club coming in the third tier on 10 April 2010 against | 165 | 608 |
21014936 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | Ibanga Akpabio Ibanga Akpabio was a Nigerian educator and government official who was a regional Minister of Education and later of Internal Affairs in the Eastern region, during Nigeria's first republic. Akpabio was the son of a warrant chief, Udo Akapbio of Ukana, Ikot Ntuen in Ikot Ekpene Division. He qualified as a higher elementary school teacher and began his teaching career at a Methodist missionary school in Ikot Ekpene. Apart from teaching, Akpabio took correspondence and postal overseas courses while he also made time available for cultural and social organizations such as the Ibibio State Union, where he was | 147 | 626 |
21014937 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | a member of its Ikot Ekpene branch. The union later supported Akpabio quest for further education with a scholarship to study in America. In America, Akpabio attended classes at Tuskegee Institute, Howard University and Lincoln University before transferring to Columbia University from where he graduated in 1941. While studying, he became acquainted with fellow Africans students such as Mbonu Ojike both of whom later served as president of the African Student Association of the United States and Canada. During the later stages of his study, wartime currency controls stopped scholarship funds from Nigeria, Akpabio had to find other jobs to | 137 | 646 |
21014938 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | fund his living expenses, he also qualified for a Phelp-Stokes Scholarship. Just before the end of World War II, Akpabio returned to Nigeria by sea via Portugal to Angola then to Congo and finally to Lagos. The journey ended up taking five months from his date of departure from Philadelphia. In Nigeria, Akpabio's ambition was to establish a school for children of his kinsmen. With the support of the Ibibio State Union, Akpabio co-founded Ibibio State College in 1946. The college did not qualify from grant-aid from the colonial government, Akpabio and a few other African owned school proprietors including | 146 | 611 |
21014939 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | Eyo Ita and Alvan Ikoku then formed a pressure group to solve the problems of African run voluntary agencies and schools in Eastern Nigeria. Akpabio met Zik when the latter toured the country on a fund raising mission to lead an NCNC delegation to London in protest of a new constitution. In the 1950s, when constitutional development allowed Africans into elective positions, Akpabio was aligned with NCNC. In 1951, he became chairman of Ikot Ekpene Urban District Council, a new local government body set up by the regional government. Later in December 1951, Akpabio was elected to the Eastern Regional | 143 | 605 |
21014940 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | House of Assembly which was followed by his selection to represent his district in the Federal House of Representative under an electoral college system. During an internal crisis in NCNC, Akpabio, Nyong Essien and Effiong Okon Eyo sided with Azikiwe's faction unlike some of their Ibibio political colleagues who moved to the United National Independence Party. Okon Eyo later fell out with Zik in 1956. When Azikiwe became premier in 1954, Akpabio was appointed the regional Minister of Education. Under his leadership, the government approved grant-aid for some African run schools and also experimented with universal primary education in the | 145 | 646 |
21014941 | "Ibanga Akpabio" | region. In 1957, Akpabio was transferred to the Minister of Internal Affairs. Ibanga Akpabio Ibanga Akpabio was a Nigerian educator and government official who was a regional Minister of Education and later of Internal Affairs in the Eastern region, during Nigeria's first republic. Akpabio was the son of a warrant chief, Udo Akapbio of Ukana, Ikot Ntuen in Ikot Ekpene Division. He qualified as a higher elementary school teacher and began his teaching career at a Methodist missionary school in Ikot Ekpene. Apart from teaching, Akpabio took correspondence and postal overseas courses while he also made time available for cultural | 151 | 634 |
21014942 | "Carmi Schooler" | Carmi Schooler Carmi Schooler (1933 – May 11, 2018) was an American social psychologist known for his work on personality and structural equation modeling. Schooler was born in the Bronx, New York City, New York, in 1933. He was educated at Hamilton College and New York University (NYU). He received his Ph.D. from NYU in 1959 under the supervision of Marie Jahoda. Another one of his advisors in graduate school was Robert K. Merton. Schooler began working at the National Institute of Mental Health's Socioenvironmental Studies Laboratory in 1959, and continued to work there until 2007. For his last twenty-two | 151 | 614 |
21014943 | "Carmi Schooler" | years there, he was the laboratory's chief. In 2007, he joined the University of Maryland, College Park, where he became a senior scientist in the Department of Sociology. He was a fellow of the American Psychological Society and a member of the Sociological Research Association. He was elected chair of the American Sociological Association's Social Psychology Section in 2003 and received their Cooley-Mead Award for Distinguished Scholarship in 2016. Schooler married his wife, Nina, in 1956. They had two sons: Jonathan and Lael. Carmi Schooler died on May 11, 2018, at the age of 84. Carmi Schooler Carmi Schooler (1933 | 152 | 625 |
21014944 | "Santissima Trinità, Vitorchiano" | Santissima Trinità, Vitorchiano The Church of the Santissima Trinità or "Church of the Holiest Trinity" is a Romanesque style Roman Catholic church in Vitorchiano in the province of Viterbo, region of Lazio, Italy. This church was erected near the Porta Romana of the town, gateway leading to Rome. Erected in the 14th century, it is also noted as the church of San Amanzio, whose relics are putatively held in a gilded wooden urn housed in a chapel inside the church. The plain facade has a central Rose window. The interior has a wooden-ribbed ceiling. On ther right wall is a | 161 | 578 |
21014945 | "Santissima Trinità, Vitorchiano" | fresco depicting the "Annunciation". Among the altarpieces are a St Joseph and a St Michael Archangel slaying the Lucifer. The church has a 16th century wooden crucifix. The church has an elevated pulpit, and narrow nave windows. Santissima Trinità, Vitorchiano The Church of the Santissima Trinità or "Church of the Holiest Trinity" is a Romanesque style Roman Catholic church in Vitorchiano in the province of Viterbo, region of Lazio, Italy. This church was erected near the Porta Romana of the town, gateway leading to Rome. Erected in the 14th century, it is also noted as the church of San Amanzio, | 168 | 604 |
21014946 | "Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia" | Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Slovenia (Slovene: "Minister za zunanje zadeve Republike Slovenije") is a senior official of the Government of Slovenia, and head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He is, together with Prime Minister and President of the Republic, responsible for foreign policy and international relations of the Republic Slovenia. The Foreign Minister is nominated by the Prime Minister-Designate and elected by the National Assembly of the Republic of Slovenia, following the hearing and confirmation by its Committee on Foreign Policy. Usually, but not always, Foreign Minister is | 137 | 660 |
21014947 | "Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia" | also Deputy-Prime Minister, since the position is held by one of the government coalition partys' leaders. Foreign Minister is member of the National Security Council and president of the Strategic Council for Foreign Affairs. Minister is also member of the EU bodies - Foreign and General Affairs Councils. 9th and current Minister of Foreign Affairs is Dr. Miro Cerar. He was elected and sworn in by the National Assembly on 13 September 2018. Cerar previously served as the Prime Minister, MP, National Assembly Adviser and Full Professor of Law at the University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Law. He is also | 138 | 607 |
21014948 | "Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia" | one the authors of the 1991 Slovenian Constitution. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Slovenia (Slovene: "Minister za zunanje zadeve Republike Slovenije") is a senior official of the Government of Slovenia, and head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He is, together with Prime Minister and President of the Republic, responsible for foreign policy and international relations of the Republic Slovenia. The Foreign Minister is nominated by the Prime Minister-Designate and elected by the National Assembly of the Republic of Slovenia, following the hearing and confirmation by its Committee on Foreign | 137 | 659 |
21014949 | "Asín tibuok" | Asín tibuok Asín tibuok is a rare Filipino artisanal sea salt from the Boholano people made from filtering seawater through ashes. A variant of the salt is also known as túltul or dúkdok among the Ilonggo people. It is made similarly to "asín tibuok" but is boiled with "gata" (coconut milk). Both of them are part of the unique traditional methods of producing sea salt for culinary use among the Visayan people of the central Philippine islands. They differ in taste from salt obtained through traditional drying beds or modern methods. "Asín tibuok" has a sharp taste with smoky and | 147 | 585 |
21014950 | "Asín tibuok" | fruity undertones, while "túltul" has an innate savory flabor. They are characteristically finely textured with small granules. They are consumed by grating a light dusting over food. The tradition of making "asín tibuok" and "túltul" is nearly extinct due to the difficulty and length of time it takes to manufacture them, the passing of the salt iodization (ASIN) law in 1995, as well as competition with modern imported salts. They are only barely preserved in Bohol, Capiz, and Guimaras. "Asín tibuok" is listed in the Ark of Taste international catalogue of endangered heritage foods by the Slow Food organization. "Asín | 158 | 625 |
21014951 | "Asín tibuok" | tibuok" literally means "unbroken salt" or "whole salt" in the Cebuano language of the Boholano people. It is the name of the salt in the island of Bohol. Similar salt-making traditions also exist in Guimaras island and the neighboring province of Capiz in Panay Island. In Guimaras, it is known as "túltul" or "tul-tul", meaning "lump"; while in Capiz, it is known as "dúkdok", meaning "pounded" or "pulverized". Both names are in the Hiligaynon language of the Ilonggo people. The method of production varies slightly between the Boholano "asín tibuok" and the Ilonggo "túltul" or "dúkdok". Both methods can only | 186 | 614 |
21014952 | "Asín tibuok" | be done for six months of the year, from December to May, due to the fluctuations in seawater salinity during the rainy seasons. Boholano "asín tibuok" is made by soaking coconut husks for several months in special pits continually filled with seawater during the tides. They are then cut into small pieces and dried for a few days. They are burned in a pile until reduced completely to ash. This takes about a week. The ash (called "gasang") are gathered into a funnel-shaped bamboo filtering device. Seawater is poured into the ash, allowing the water to leach out the salt | 137 | 575 |
21014953 | "Asín tibuok" | from the ashes. The brine (known as "tasik") is collected into a hollowed out coconut trunk beneath the funnels. The "tasik" is poured into special clay pots and hung in walls in a special furnace. These are boiled for a few hours in the furnace, continually replenishing the pots with more "tasik" once some evaporate. Eventually, the pots will crack, revealing the solidified mass of salt. The salt mass will be initially very hot, and it usually takes a few hours before it is cool enough to be handled. They are sold along with the broken domed pots which has | 135 | 563 |
21014954 | "Asín tibuok" | given them the nickname "the dinosaur egg" in international markets due to their appearance. Ilonggo "túltul" or "dúkdok" is made by gathering driftwood ("rorok" or "dagsa") and other washed-up plant matter (twigs, reeds, coconut husks, bamboo stems, etc.) from the beach. These are burned completely into ash for about a week. The ash are then gathered into cylindrical woven bamboo containers known as "kaing". The "kaing" are placed on bamboo platforms and a container is placed underneath. Seawater is poured through the ash and caught on these containers. The brine are then strained and transferred into other containers where it | 154 | 635 |
21014955 | "Asín tibuok" | is mixed with "gata" (coconut milk). These are poured into molds ("hurnohan") and boiled over an outdoor stove ("kalan"). More of the liquid is continually poured into the molds as they evaporate until nothing but a solid mass of salt remains. These brick-like lumps (known as "bareta") are then packaged and sold. "Asín tibuok" and "túltul" are usually consumed by grating a light dusting of them over food. They were traditionally dusted over plain hot rice with a few drops of oil and eaten as is. They are also used to season "sinangag" (traditional fried rice). Chunks can also be | 152 | 585 |
21014956 | "Asín tibuok" | broken off and dipped into stews and dishes or ground and used like regular table salt. Salt-makers ("asinderos") were once important professions in Philippine society, but the craft is nearly extinct in modern times. Part of this is due to the time-consuming traditional methods of producing salt and the hard work that go with it. Artisanal salt-makers can not compete with the cheap imported salt prevalent today in the Philippines. The passage of Republic Act No. 8172, the Act for Salt Iodization Nationwide (ASIN), in 1995 also placed further stress on local salt-makers, forcing many to give up the industry | 136 | 614 |
21014957 | "Asín tibuok" | altogether. Both "asín tibuok" and "túltul" are only made by a few families today. They are commonly sold for the tourist trade for their novelty as well as to gourmet restaurants that feature Filipino cuisine. Due to their rarity, they are considerably more expensive than regular salt. The demand is usually high for "asín tibuok" and "túltul", but the supply can not keep up. "Asín tibuok" is listed in the Ark of Taste international catalogue of endangered heritage foods by the Slow Food movement. Asín tibuok Asín tibuok is a rare Filipino artisanal sea salt from the Boholano people made | 150 | 594 |
21014958 | "Valerij Popov" | Valerij Popov Valerij Sergeyevich Popov (born 10 September 1974) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title Grandmaster by FIDE in 1999. Popov won the championship of Saint Petersburg, his native city, in 2001 and 2006. In 2014 he shared first place with Denis Yevseev, who took the title on tiebreak score. Popov competed in the inaugural FIDE World Cup in 2005. Here he was knocked out by Alexander Onischuk in the first round by a score of ½–1½. In 2008, Popov finished second in the European Rapid Chess Championship in Warsaw, Poland with a score of 10½/13 | 163 | 570 |
21014959 | "Valerij Popov" | points. Ten years later, he took the gold medal in this championship in Skopje, Macedonia with the same score. Valerij Popov Valerij Sergeyevich Popov (born 10 September 1974) is a Russian chess player. He was awarded the title Grandmaster by FIDE in 1999. Popov won the championship of Saint Petersburg, his native city, in 2001 and 2006. In 2014 he shared first place with Denis Yevseev, who took the title on tiebreak score. Popov competed in the inaugural FIDE World Cup in 2005. Here he was knocked out by Alexander Onischuk in the first round by a score of ½–1½. | 160 | 568 |
21014960 | "Machulishchy (air base)" | Machulishchy (air base) Machulishchy (also given as Machulishche) is an air base in Minsk Region, Belarus located 13 km (8 miles) south of Minsk. It has served as a strategic bomber base for the Soviet Union. It also served as a Soviet Air Defence Forces interceptor base. The primary operator was the 121st Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment. Machulishchy was one of nine major operating locations for the Tupolev Tu-22 Blinder in the mid-1960s. In August 1960, six Tu-22 aircraft from Machulishchy deployed to Olenya air base in the arctic region under naval control, indicating the regiment had a dual | 161 | 607 |
21014961 | "Machulishchy (air base)" | Navy-Air Force mission serving an anti-surface warfare role. This capability covered the Baltic Sea with deployment capability into the Barents Sea region. Later in the 1970s it hosted Sukhoi Su-9 Fishpot interceptors, supplemented in 1979 by an MiG-23P interceptor regiment. At the time it was still host to the Tu-22 Blinder ASM regiment. Machulishchy (air base) Machulishchy (also given as Machulishche) is an air base in Minsk Region, Belarus located 13 km (8 miles) south of Minsk. It has served as a strategic bomber base for the Soviet Union. It also served as a Soviet Air Defence Forces interceptor base. | 161 | 613 |
21014962 | "2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team" | 2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team The 2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team will represent Niagara University in the 2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They will play their home games at Gallagher Center in Lewiston, New York and will be led by 6th-year head coach Chris Casey. The Purple Eagles finished the 2017–18 season 19–14, 12–6 in MAAC play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, where they lost in the first round to Eastern Michigan. !colspan=12 style=| Exhibition !colspan=12 | 166 | 643 |
21014963 | "2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team" | style=| Non-Conference Regular season !colspan=9 style=| MAAC regular season !colspan=12 style=| MAAC Tournament Source 2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team The 2018–19 Niagara Purple Eagles men's basketball team will represent Niagara University in the 2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They will play their home games at Gallagher Center in Lewiston, New York and will be led by 6th-year head coach Chris Casey. The Purple Eagles finished the 2017–18 season 19–14, 12–6 in MAAC play to finish in third place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the MAAC Tournament to Fairfield. They were invited to the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, | 174 | 664 |
21014964 | "Bob Gregson" | Bob Gregson Bob Gregson (21 July 1778–November 1824) billed as "The Lancashire Giant" was a bare-knuckle fighter of the early 19th-century. He was a boxing champion, ferry captain and the owner of a chophouse in Holborn in London. A bust of Gregson is located in the Royal Academy. Born as Robert Gregson in Heskin in Lancashire in 1778 he was a relatively well-educated and cultured man who dressed well and wrote poetry, earning himself the sobriquet "The Poet of the Prize Ring". Gregson became known as "The Lancashire Giant" on account of being 15 stones in weight and standing at | 150 | 585 |
21014965 | "Bob Gregson" | six feet two inches tall. Sir Thomas Lawrence, principal painter to George IV selected him as the subject for a life-study; and he was chosen by the professor of anatomy at the Royal Academy to illustrate the beauties of anatomical proportion. He was an acquaintance of Lord Byron who helped to raise the funds to get Gregson released from debtors' prison in 1808. On 12 July 1807 Gregson was presented for the first time in an exhibition bout against Isaac Bitton at the Fives Court, St Martin's Street in Leicester Square in which Gregson gave a good account of himself. | 129 | 572 |
21014966 | "Bob Gregson" | On 14 October 1807 Gregson was defeated by John Gully in a fight at Six Mile Bottom near Cambridge in 36 rounds when Gully was declared the winner after a fight in which both pugilists were badly beaten and which left many onlookers uncertain as to who had really won. The two clashed again on 10 May 1808 when Gully once more successfully defended his English title by defeating Gregson in 24 rounds near Woburn in a contest which lasted for an hour and a quarter. Gully announced his retirement later that year following which Gregson was English champion and | 129 | 561 |
21014967 | "Bob Gregson" | fought Tom Cribb on 8 October 1808 for the championship and 1,000 guineas in a 30 foot ring in 23 rounds at Moulsey Hurst. Cribb defeated Gregson. From 1808 he owned a London pub The Castle in Holborn, otherwise known as "Bob's Chop-House" (also known as "Bob Gregson's Coffee House", the Castle Tavern, and the Napier) which became the unofficial headquarters of boxing ring patrons and pugilists alike, but he was a bad businessman and was forced to give up the pub in 1814 after being convicted for debt evasion. He set himself up as a bookmaker and fight promoter | 151 | 567 |
21014968 | "Bob Gregson" | and became a poet penning among other works "British Lads and Black Millers". In 1816 he was the owner of the Punch House on Moor Street in Dublin in Ireland while in 1819 he received a benefit display in London before embarking on a sparring tour of Ireland along with Dan Donnelly and George Cooper. Gregson married Ester Owen (died 1806) and with her had three daughters: Mary Ann Gregson (1802-1848); Henrietta Gregson (1804-1882) and Ester Gregson (1806-1878) who became known as "Sister Scholastica" at Abbots Salford Convent and who purchased Stanbrook Abbey, where she was Abbess from 1846-62 and | 166 | 604 |
21014969 | "Bob Gregson" | again 1868-72. In later years Gregson was virtually penniless and lived out his last days in Liverpool where in July 1824 he was again imprisoned for debt. He died in Liverpool in November 1824 aged 46 and was buried in St. Nicholas’ churchyard. Bob Gregson Bob Gregson (21 July 1778–November 1824) billed as "The Lancashire Giant" was a bare-knuckle fighter of the early 19th-century. He was a boxing champion, ferry captain and the owner of a chophouse in Holborn in London. A bust of Gregson is located in the Royal Academy. Born as Robert Gregson in Heskin in Lancashire in | 153 | 577 |
21014970 | "Stone High School (Florida)" | Stone High School (Florida) Stone High School was a public high school for black students in Melbourne, Florida. It closed in 1967. Melbourne was settled by black freedmen as early as 1867, and the first school for black children, known as the little red schoolhouse, was built in 1883. In 1909 a one-room school for black children was opened at the corner of Line Street and Lipscomb Street. In 1921, Melbourne Vocational School was built at Church and Race Streets and served until 1953, when it burned and the grounds were made into Brothers Park, named for Wright Brothers, one | 138 | 581 |
21014971 | "Stone High School (Florida)" | of the black founders of Melbourne. For the next several years, black students were educated in a temporary building at the former Melbourne Naval Air Station Hospital at the Melbourne Airport until Stone High School was built to replace Melbourne Vocational. In 1964 the schools were integrated and Stone High School was repurposed as Stone Middle School. Stone High School (Florida) Stone High School was a public high school for black students in Melbourne, Florida. It closed in 1967. Melbourne was settled by black freedmen as early as 1867, and the first school for black children, known as the little | 128 | 607 |
21014972 | "Courtney Lyder" | Courtney Lyder Courtney Lyder (born 1965/1966) is a Trinidadian-American nurse and educator who is recognized internationally for his work in the field of gerontology. Lyder served as dean of the UCLA School of Nursing from 2008 till 2015. Courtney Lyder was born in Trinidad and Tobago before immigrating to the United States. Lyder received his Bachelor of Arts from Beloit College. He attended Rush University nursing school, one of only five males in a class of two hundred, where he received his Bachelor of Science, Master of Science and Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine. Lyder studied under Luther Christman, the first | 144 | 624 |
21014973 | "Courtney Lyder" | male dean of a nursing school in the United States, who changed the perceptions and biases people held against males and minorities seeking to enter the field of nursing. In August 2008, Lyder was appointed as dean of UCLA School of Nursing, the first male minority head of any such institution in the United States. Lyder's tenure at the school ended on July 1, 2015. Lyder is internationally recognized for his expertise in gerontology and chronic care issues affecting older adults. He has addressed pressure ulcer prevention, identifying erythema in dark skin, wound healing and quality improvement in skilled nursing | 128 | 621 |
21014974 | "Courtney Lyder" | facilities, calling attention to the dangers of unnecessary bedsores received by elder patients in hospitals with inattentive staff. Lyder is a fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and the New York Academy of Medicine. In 2011, he was appointed by United States Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius to the National Advisory Council for Nursing Research. There are a number of cocktails and culinary dishes named for Lyder (or his dog), due to him being a regular patron of various Los Angeles restaurants: Courtney Lyder Courtney Lyder (born 1965/1966) is a Trinidadian-American nurse and educator who is | 137 | 629 |
21014975 | "The Power and the Glory (1961 film)" | The Power and the Glory (1961 film) The Power and the Glory is a 1961 American TV film based on the novel "The Power and the Glory" by Graham Greene. It was produced by David Susskind for Talent Associates-Paramount. The production was shot for American TV but also distributed theatrically overseas. It was Olivier's second performance for American television following an acclaimed production of "The Moon and Sixpence" which won him an Emmy. Playwright Dale Wassterman wrote the script in seven days. David Susskind originally wanted Richard Burton to co star with Olivier. The project was announced in April 1961 | 142 | 616 |
21014976 | "The Power and the Glory (1961 film)" | and the cast finalised in May. It was going to be CBS's "major dramatic production" for the year. The budget was a reported $500,000. A Mexican township worth $125,000 was built for the production, which was shot at NBC studios, in two studios. (Although broadcast by CBS.) It was one of the most elaborate productions shot for TV at the time. Taping started 30 May 1961 over a four-week period between the end of Olivier's run in "Becket" and his return to England. The budget eventually blew out to $746,000 and the running time was 132 minutes. The "New York | 145 | 561 |
21014977 | "The Power and the Glory (1961 film)" | Times" called it "a proverbial milestone and a major disappointment." The "Los Angeles Times" said it was "less than it could be". The Power and the Glory (1961 film) The Power and the Glory is a 1961 American TV film based on the novel "The Power and the Glory" by Graham Greene. It was produced by David Susskind for Talent Associates-Paramount. The production was shot for American TV but also distributed theatrically overseas. It was Olivier's second performance for American television following an acclaimed production of "The Moon and Sixpence" which won him an Emmy. Playwright Dale Wassterman wrote the | 144 | 612 |
21014978 | "Constitutional Union Party (Iraq)" | Constitutional Union Party (Iraq) The Constitutional Union Party is an Iraqi political party that was founded by Nuri Al-Said in 1949. The party included politicians from different ethnicities and religions, it was based in Baghdad with its headquarter located at Al-Rasheed street. The party held it first conference in 23 December 1949, the conference elected members for the party's Higher Commission, and Al-Said as a Chairman. The Higher Commission elected members of the Central Committee, 15 members were elected including: Nuri al-Said, Abdul Wahab Morgan, Shaker al-Wadi, Muhammad Ali Mahmoud, Mohammed Hassan Kubba, Jamil Abdul Wahab, Abdul Qader Bash Aayan, | 157 | 668 |
21014979 | "Constitutional Union Party (Iraq)" | Jamil Al Urfali, Abdul Majeed Abbas, Azzedine Mulla, Saad Omar, Ahmed Al-Amir, Rasheed Al-Chalabi, Diaa Jafar and Khalil Kenah. The Central Committee elected Abdulwahab Morjan as Vice President, Khalil Kenna as First Secretary, Ahmad Al Amer as Second Secretary, Jamil Al Urfa as Accountant and Mohammed Hassan Kabbah as Treasurer. The party aimed to restrict crown prince Abd al-Ilah interventions in Iraqi politics, support Al-Said in government formation, and resist left-wing parties. Constitutional Union Party (Iraq) The Constitutional Union Party is an Iraqi political party that was founded by Nuri Al-Said in 1949. The party included politicians from different ethnicities | 170 | 681 |
21014980 | "Cicely Popplewell" | Cicely Popplewell Cicely Mary Popplewell (born 1920) was a British computer programmer who worked with Alan Turing on the Manchester Mark 1. Popplewell was born in 1920 in Stockton-on-Tees. Her parents were Bessie and Alfred Popplewell. She attended Sherbrook Private Girls School. She studied the Mathematical Tripos at the University of Cambridge. She worked with statistics in the form of punched cards. She was considered an expert in the Brunsviga desk calculator. In 1949 Popplewell joined Alan Turing in the Computer Machine Learning department at the University of Manchester to help with the programming of a prototype computer. She worked | 147 | 648 |
21014981 | "Cicely Popplewell" | alongside Audrey Bates, a University of Manchester mathematics graduate. Her first role was to create a library for the prototype Manchester Mark 1. This included input/output routines and mathematical functions, and a reciprocal square root routine. She worked on ray tracing. Together they designed the programming language for the Ferranti Mark 1. She wrote the "Programmers Handbook" for the Ferranti Mark 1 in 1951. Whilst Turing worked on Scheme A, an early operating system, Popplewell proposed Scheme B, which allowed for decimal numbers, in 1952. Popplewell taught the first ever programming class in Argentina at the University of Buenos Aires | 138 | 653 |
21014982 | "Cicely Popplewell" | in the 1961. Her class included the computer scientist . She was supported by the British Council. Popplewell published the textbook "Information Processing" in 1962. In 1969 Popplewell married George Keith Williams in Chapel-en-le-Frith. She died in 1995 in Buxton. Cicely Popplewell Cicely Mary Popplewell (born 1920) was a British computer programmer who worked with Alan Turing on the Manchester Mark 1. Popplewell was born in 1920 in Stockton-on-Tees. Her parents were Bessie and Alfred Popplewell. She attended Sherbrook Private Girls School. She studied the Mathematical Tripos at the University of Cambridge. She worked with statistics in the form of | 163 | 658 |
21014983 | "Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1991)" | Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1991) Nicolás Martínez Vargas (born 19 March 1991) is an Argentine footballer who plays as a forward for Leandro N. Alem. All Boys were Martínez's first senior team. He appeared on the Argentine Primera División club's bench for a match with Boca Juniors in June 2012, prior to making his professional debut in October against San Martín. He spent the 2013–14 season out on loan with Fénix in Primera B Metropolitana. He participated in twenty-six fixtures for Fénix, scoring five goals in the process which included a brace versus both Deportivo Armenio and Deportivo Morón. Martínez | 179 | 619 |
21014984 | "Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1991)" | returned to a relegated All Boys for 2014, before leaving in July 2015 to join Colegiales. He was sent off in his first start against Flandria. Martínez left in 2017 after forty-eight appearances. In July 2017, Martínez completed a move to Chilean football by signing for Barnechea of Primera B. He didn't feature for their first-team due to injury issues, though was on the bench on two occasions. A year after moving to Chile, Martínez returned to his homeland to play for Primera C Metropolitana side Leandro N. Alem. Nicolás Martínez (footballer, born 1991) Nicolás Martínez Vargas (born 19 March | 176 | 600 |
21014985 | "James Clark (lynching victim)" | James Clark (lynching victim) James Clark was an African-American man who was lynched in Eau Gallie, Florida by ten white men in 1926. On July 11, 1926, James Clark, a chauffeur for a traveling salesman, was accused of rape by a white girl. He was arrested, but the chief of police turned him over to a mob. A noose was placed around his neck, he was dragged over a limb, and shot with a shotgun. The street near the site of the lynching, around Parkway Drive and U.S. 1 in what is now Melbourne, Florida was named Lynching Tree Drive | 141 | 534 |
21014986 | "James Clark (lynching victim)" | until 1980, when the black community petitioned the Melbourne City Council to change the name, which was then changed to Legendary Lane. No attempt was made to determine who murdered Clark without benefit of a trial. This is the last known lynching in Brevard County. James Clark (lynching victim) James Clark was an African-American man who was lynched in Eau Gallie, Florida by ten white men in 1926. On July 11, 1926, James Clark, a chauffeur for a traveling salesman, was accused of rape by a white girl. He was arrested, but the chief of police turned him over to | 140 | 568 |
21014987 | "George Robinson (cricketer, born 1949)" | George Robinson (cricketer, born 1949) George Adrian Robinson (born 3 November 1949) is a former first-class cricketer who played for Oxford University in 1970 and 1971. George Robinson was educated at Preston Catholic College in Lancashire before going up to Pembroke College, Oxford. A wicketkeeper-batsman, he played several useful innings for Oxford in the 1971 season, at first in the middle order and then later as an opener, partnering Keith Jones. He was Oxford's highest scorer in 1971 with 546 runs at an average of 26.00, "the only player who could put his head down and graft when things were | 157 | 604 |
21014988 | "George Robinson (cricketer, born 1949)" | going wrong". George Robinson (cricketer, born 1949) George Adrian Robinson (born 3 November 1949) is a former first-class cricketer who played for Oxford University in 1970 and 1971. George Robinson was educated at Preston Catholic College in Lancashire before going up to Pembroke College, Oxford. A wicketkeeper-batsman, he played several useful innings for Oxford in the 1971 season, at first in the middle order and then later as an opener, partnering Keith Jones. He was Oxford's highest scorer in 1971 with 546 runs at an average of 26.00, "the only player who could put his head down and graft when | 158 | 606 |
21014989 | TapClicks | TapClicks TapClicks is a privately held marketing technology company, with headquarters located in San Jose, California. TapClicks’ TapAnalytics marketing operations platform is focused on marketing workflow, performance analytics, client reporting and data. The platform's marketing reporting is powered by data science and AI/ML. TapClicks’ platform is in use by organizations including media companies, digital agencies and enterprises. TapClicks was founded in 2009 and maintains headquarters in San Jose, California, with development and sales offices in Boston and Montreal. Partners of TapClicks include MicroStrategy and Tableau Software. TapClicks has received funding from venture capital/private equity firms Boathouse Capital and SaaS Capital. | 146 | 755 |
21014990 | TapClicks | In April 2017, TapClicks acquired SEO and marketing reporting company Raven Tools. TapClicks TapClicks is a privately held marketing technology company, with headquarters located in San Jose, California. TapClicks’ TapAnalytics marketing operations platform is focused on marketing workflow, performance analytics, client reporting and data. The platform's marketing reporting is powered by data science and AI/ML. TapClicks’ platform is in use by organizations including media companies, digital agencies and enterprises. TapClicks was founded in 2009 and maintains headquarters in San Jose, California, with development and sales offices in Boston and Montreal. Partners of TapClicks include MicroStrategy and Tableau Software. TapClicks has | 147 | 743 |
21014991 | "Theodore Pian" | Theodore Pian Theodore Hsueh-Huang Pian (; 19 January 1919 – 20 June 2009) was a Chinese-born American engineer. A Shanghai native, born on 18 January 1919, Pian grew up in Tianjin, where he attended Nankai Middle School, and graduated from Tsinghua University in 1940. He began working in aerospace engineering at both Kunming and Yunnan, terminals of the Burma Road. Pian left China for the United States in 1943, earning a master's degree in aeronautics and astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology the next year, after which he worked for Curtiss Airplane Division and served in the United States | 155 | 619 |
21014992 | "Theodore Pian" | Marine Corps. In 1945, he married Rulan Chao. Theodore Pian joined the MIT faculty, shortly after graduating from the institution with a doctorate in aeronautics and astronautics in 1948. He retired in 1990, but remained an adviser to many Chinese students. Over the course of his career, Pian was elected a member of the United States National Academy of Engineering and Academia Sinica. He died in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 20 June 2009, aged 90. Theodore Pian Theodore Hsueh-Huang Pian (; 19 January 1919 – 20 June 2009) was a Chinese-born American engineer. A Shanghai native, born on 18 January 1919, | 160 | 607 |
21014993 | "Dermophis donaldtrumpi" | Dermophis donaldtrumpi Dermophis donaldtrumpi is a proposed new species of caecilian, to be named after Donald Trump. It was originally discovered in Panama; it has yet to be confirmed as a new species, nor has the name yet been formally published. "D. donaldtrumpi" is about 10 cm (4 in) long, blind, shiny, slimy, looks like a large worm, slippery and burrows, living almost entirely underground. Its eyes can detect light and dark only, so it uses a pair of tentacles near its mouth in order to find prey; it also has an extra layer of skin which their young can | 152 | 565 |
21014994 | "Dermophis donaldtrumpi" | eat after peeling it off. According to the Rainforest Trust, amphibians such as "Dermophis donaldtrumpi" are particularly susceptible to the effects of global warming and are therefore in danger of becoming extinct. In December 2018, the Rainforest Trust completed an auction of naming rights for twelve newly discovered species of South American plants and animals, the money going towards the conservation of the species' habitats. The sustainable building materials company EnviroBuild paid $25,000 for the right to name the new amphibian. Aidan Bell, owner of EnviroBuild, said he named the species after Trump to raise awareness of Trump's policies on | 145 | 656 |
21014995 | "Dermophis donaldtrumpi" | climate change and the danger those policies pose to the survival of many species. Bell said "It is the perfect name. Caecilian is taken from the Latin "caecus", meaning 'blind', perfectly mirroring the strategic vision President Trump has consistently shown towards climate change." Bell also asserted a parallel between the species' ability to see only light and dark, and Trump's being "Capable of seeing the world only in black and white." According to the "Washington Post", "The naming choice highlights the president’s dismal approval ratings worldwide and is clearly designed to belittle him." Dermophis donaldtrumpi Dermophis donaldtrumpi is a proposed | 147 | 661 |
21014996 | "Tephrosia glomeruliflora" | Tephrosia glomeruliflora Tephrosia glomeruliflora, or pink tephrosia, is a perennial (non-climbing) herb in the Fabaceae family, endemic to South Africa (native to Zimbabwe, South Africa and Swaziland). It is also found on the eastern coast of Australia, in New South Wales and Queensland, where it is considered an environmental weed. "Tephrosia glomeruliflora" is an erect shrub growing to 1–2 m high. Its branches are hairy with the hairs lying close to the branch. The pinnate leaves are 5–12 cm long; and there are 11-21 leaflets which are 15–40 mm long and 5–10 mm wide with an obtuse apex finishing in | 181 | 608 |
21014997 | "Tephrosia glomeruliflora" | a tiny sharp point. The upper surface of the leaflets is sparsely hairy with the hairs pressed close to the leaflet, and the lower surface is silky-hairy. The petiole is 10–20 mm long. The stipules are ovate and 6–10 mm long. It flowers in terminal racemes, with clusters of buds enclosed on broad bracts. The calyx is silvery (from the hairs) and 4–5 mm long, with teeth which are 1–1.5 mm long. The corolla is 15–20 mm long snd pink to mauve. The pod is 5–7 cm long and 7–9 mm wide, and smooth except for the hairy sutures. The | 165 | 529 |
21014998 | "Tephrosia glomeruliflora" | genus name, "Tephrosia", derives from the Greek "tephros" (ash-coloured) and refers to the fact that most of the species are covered with grey hairs.. The species epithet, "glomeruliflora", derives from the Latin, "glomerulus", (clusters of flowers subtended by a bract), and "flos" (flower). In Africa, it grows in grasslands. Tephrosia glomeruliflora Tephrosia glomeruliflora, or pink tephrosia, is a perennial (non-climbing) herb in the Fabaceae family, endemic to South Africa (native to Zimbabwe, South Africa and Swaziland). It is also found on the eastern coast of Australia, in New South Wales and Queensland, where it is considered an environmental weed. "Tephrosia | 192 | 674 |
21014999 | "Maninder Buttar" | Maninder Buttar Maninder Buttar is an Indian singer, who is known for his work in the Punjabi music industry. He is most well known for his songs Sakhiyaan, Yaari and Viah, which have garnered a total of over 120 million views on YouTube. In 2015, his song Yaari was nominated for "Most Popular Song" in Punjab's prestigious PTC Punjabi Music Awards. In 2018, shortly after the release of Sakhiyaan, the song shot to the top of Punjabi Most Popular charts compiled by Gaana.com, where it remained at number one through November 2018, and at number two through December. In 2014, | 150 | 578 |
21015000 | "Maninder Buttar" | Buttar sang the song "Dil Nu" for the Punjabi romcom Oh My Pyo. Buttar has also been noted for his collaboration with numerous other reputed Indian musicians, including the likes of Raftaar in the song Gall Goriye, and Ammy Virk. Maninder Buttar Maninder Buttar is an Indian singer, who is known for his work in the Punjabi music industry. He is most well known for his songs Sakhiyaan, Yaari and Viah, which have garnered a total of over 120 million views on YouTube. In 2015, his song Yaari was nominated for "Most Popular Song" in Punjab's prestigious PTC Punjabi Music | 149 | 572 |
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