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zelda
|
48581669_Performing career
|
Mosaval was recruited by Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet in 1951. In 1956, Mosaval was promoted to soloist in the company, which was soon renamed the Royal Ballet. He became a principal dancer in 1960 and a senior principal in 1965. Mosaval toured extensively with the Royal Ballet, dancing in continental Europe, Australia, New Zealand, the Middle East, the Far East, Canada, and the United States as partner to such famous ballerinas as Margot Fonteyn, Svetlana Beriosova, Elaine Fifield, Lynn Seymour, Merle Park, Doreen Wells and fellow South African Nadia Nerina in ballets choreographed by Frederick Ashton, Kenneth MacMillan, Ninette de Valois, and two South Africans, David Poole and John Cranko. Noted for his performances as Jasper the Pot Boy in Pineapple Poll and as Bootface in The Lady and the Fool, both choreographed by Cranko, Mosaval was also acclaimed as the Blue Boy in Les Patineurs and as Puck in The Dream, both choreographed by Ashton, as well as the Blue Bird in The Sleeping Beauty. He developed a global reputation as a brilliant character dancer with impeccable technique. One Scottish critic wrote about his performance as Puck in 1967: "Puck seems tailor-made for Johaar Mosaval. His apparent ability to pause in the middle of a stupendous scene makes one think of the similar claim made for Nijinsky."
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zelda
|
48583207_Cast
|
* Robert De Niro as Jackie Burke * Leslie Mann as Harmony Schiltz * Danny DeVito as Jimmy Berkowitz, Jackie’s younger brother * Edie Falco as Miller * Veronica Ferres as Karoll * Charles Grodin as Dick D'Angelo * Cloris Leachman as May Conner * Patti LuPone as Florence Berkowitz * Harvey Keitel as Mac Schiltz * Lois Smith as Miriam * Hannibal Buress as Himself * Greer Barnes as Himself * Happy Anderson as Heckler * Jim Norton as Himself * Gilbert Gottfried as Trevor Friedmann * Billy Crystal as Himself * Bobby Rydell as Himself * Brett Butler as Herself * Richard Belzer as Himself * Nick Di Paolo as Himself
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zelda
|
48584383_Early life
|
Kyatari was born to Geetha and Prakash Kyatari in Hubli, Karnataka, and was brought up there. After doing her schooling in Hubli St Micheals, she completed her Pre-university at Fathima College in Hubli.She graduated in Commerce from Oxford college Hubli. She was also an Anchor for 4 years during her career in the industry.She was first seen in a Kannada serial "Ashwini Nakshatra", where she played role of Ashwini, wife of a superstar. In 2015, Kyatari entered the Kannada film industry. She first signed for the Kannada Drama film Krishna Leela. The movie was successfully completed 100 days and gave her the fame enough to be cast for Nagathihalli Chandrashekhars next film Ishtakamya opposite to Vijay Suriya along with Kavya Shetty. She has worked with Sharan in a movie called Nataraja Service under Puneeth Rajkumar presentation and has released.
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zelda
|
48586543_College career
|
===USC=== As a freshman at USC in 2010–11, Jackson came off the bench in 33 of the Trojans' 34 games and averaged 3.2 points and 1.7 rebounds per game. On November 20, 2010, he scored a season-high 12 points against Bradley. As a sophomore in 2011–12, Jackson appeared in all 32 games during the season and started 14, averaging 6.9 points and 3.1 rebounds in 22.2 minutes per game. He earned the Bill Sharman Award as the team's top free throw shooter, hitting 68.2% of his free throws on the season (30-of-44). His best game as a Trojan came on January 28, 2012, when he scored 16 points against Utah. In April 2012, Jackson transferred to Saint Mary's and subsequently redshirted the 2012–13 season due to NCAA transfer regulations. At Saint Mary's, he teamed up with childhood friend and high school rival Stephen Holt, as well as future NBA player Matthew Dellavedova. As a junior playing for the Gaels in 2013–14, Jackson appeared in 24 games and started one, averaging 3.9 points and 3.6 rebounds per game. He missed nine games from December 25 to January 30 with a knee injury. On February 20, he scored a season-high 13 points against San Francisco. As a senior in 2014–15, Jackson appeared in all 31 games and started 20 during the season, averaging 8.5 points and 4.4 rebounds in 21.9 minutes per game. He registered 12 double-figure scoring games, and was third on the team in field goal percentage, making .521 of his attempts. On February 26, he scored a career-high 26 points against San Francisco, going 10-of-13 from the field and 4-of-5 from three-point range. |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2010–11 | style="text-align:left;"| USC | 33 || 0 || 10.8 || .556 || .450 || .444 || 1.7 || .3 || .3 || .2 || 3.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2011–12 | style="text-align:left;"| USC | 32 || 14 || 22.2 || .406 || .222 || .682 || 3.1 || .5 || .7 || .6 || 6.9 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2013–14 | style="text-align:left;"| Saint Mary's | 24 || 1 || 12.1 || .376 || .278 || .704 || 3.6 || .5 || .4 || .3 || 3.9 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2014–15 | style="text-align:left;"| Saint Mary's | 31 || 20 || 21.9 || .521 || .467 || .719 || 4.4 || 1.3 || .5 || .4 || 8.5 |- | style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"|Career | 120 || 35 || 17.0 || .460 || .336 || .673 || 3.1 || .7 || .5 || .4 || 5.7 |-
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zelda
|
48589560_Introduction
|
Frederick Yeomans (11 November 1888 – 16 January 1965) was an Australian cricketer. He played one first-class cricket match for Victoria in 1915.
|
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zelda
|
48590846_Results
|
The Bangor Daily News called the vote for the Yes side just after midnight on election night.
|
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zelda
|
48592403_Career
|
In 1930 Elkes enrolled in the St Mary's Hospital Medical School, Paddington in London where he was tutored by such medical luminaries as Charles Wilson, 1st Baron Moran, Almroth Wright, Alexander Fleming and Aleck Bourne, whose daughter Elkes would later marry. Here he met Professor Alistair Frazer and in 1939 he, Frazer and Steward (a student colleague) had a paper on fat absorption published in The Journal of Physiology. The Second World War broke off his family connections and support. He found it difficult to support himself and his sister Sara but was offered a post by Alistair Frazer in the newly formed Transfusion Service where he met Charmian Bourne. Elkes graduated in 1941 and was invited by Frazer to join him as a research fellow in pharmacology at Birmingham University. In 1945 he was promoted to lecturer and in 1948 to senior lecturer and acting director of the department. His research output at this time was considerable, resulting in 16 publications. Elkes' experimental work involved the investigation of the physical chemistry, constitution and structure of biological membranes, the lipoproteins. <blockquote>Suddenly I realised the nervous system was full of lipoproteins. It was myelin, a beautiful paracrystalline structure ubiquitously distributed throughout the nervous system.</blockquote> Elkes work continued with a collaboration with a Ph.D crystallography student, Bryan Finean. Together they developed a technique for the X-ray diffraction of a living frog's sciatic nerve in response to temperature and chemicals. This led Elkes to study the anticholinesterases and the action of acetylcholine. Concurrent with his laboratory work Elkes, together with his wife Charmian, (a general practitioner) started training at the City Hospital, Birmingham and carrying out trials on patients with catatonic schizophrenia using amobarbital, amphetamines and mephenesin. The results showed different responses and demonstrated the possible distribution of different controlling cells with the brain. This work, carried out between 1945 and 1950, brought the Elkes to the attention of the mental health milieu in the UK. In the early 1950s Elkes researched LSD and remained interested in the substance for some time, forming a friendship with pioneering LSD therapist Ronald Sandison in the mid 1950s, and in 1965 inviting Czech LSD therapist Stanislav Grof to come to Baltimore to research LSD as a clinical and research fellow at the Henry Phipps Clinic and in the Research Unit of Spring Grove State Hospital. In 1950 Elkes was awarded a Fulbright Travelling Fellowship in America where he worked at the New England Baptist Hospital in Boston and at Norwich State Hospital, Connecticut. On his return to Birmingham he was appointed chairman and professor of a new mental health department which he called The Department for Experimental Psychiatry. Elkes continued his work on anticholinesterase, acetylcholine blockers and amphetamines and their action on the activity of the brain and thus behaviour. At this time there was a chance discovery in France of a drug called chlorpromazine and in a double blind trial Elkes demonstrated the efficacy of this drug in controlling the symptoms of schizophrenia. By the mid-1950s Elkes had established himself as the leader in the developing field of psychopharmacology. In 1954 he instigated the first international Neurochemical Symposium in Oxford, England, and in 1957 he arranged the first World Health Organization group on psychotropic drugs. In the same year he was invited to set up an experimental psychiatry programme, the first Clinical Neuropharmacology Research Centre for the National Institute of Mental Health in Washington, D.C. He published a collection of academic papers and became one of the first to suggest the important role of chemicals in the functioning of the brain. Following his move to Washington he resided permanently in the United States. Elkes regarded the centre as an academic "greenhouse" in which he toiled as "a good gardener". In 2011 he described those time thus: <blockquote>It was a wonderful heady time in the middle of a very chronic mental hospital. There were people coming from virtually all over the world and there were talks and discussions and excitement. At the same time there was always and always, which is what we had hoped, the presence of the patient. For example, you go to the canteen and there's a patient with schizophrenia hallucinating under a tree. You're never very far from the problem that bought you here. And, gradually there developed a sense of place, of belonging. Gradually, I realised that, my God, together we created something pretty wonderful.</blockquote> In 1963 Elkes took a post as chairman of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. He renamed his department the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences and worked toward integrating psychiatry with the physical medicine disciplines. His educational innovations attracted a number of other medical luminaries to his department. Among them were Sol Snyder, Joseph Coyle, Ross Baldessarini and Joseph V. Brady. Elkes was the founder and first Chairman of the Board of Fellowship House, a residential intermediate-care rehabilitation facility for people with mental illness which still exists in a developed form to the modern day. Elkes left Johns Hopkins in 1974 and took a named professorship in McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, where he developed ideas about the need for self-awareness in physicians and the necessity to humanise medical education and training. He was also Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, where he continued to develop his ideas of incorporating social, ethical and psychological dimensions with the biological foundation he had already created. He married Josephine Rhodes, and while living in Canada he returned to painting, a long-standing hobby. His summer home in Prince Edward Island, Canada, offered plenty of opportunity for this. It was also in their summer home on Prince Edward Island he completed his memoir on his father, Elkhanan Elkes.
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zelda
|
48592403_Awards and honours
|
* Elected first president of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology in 1961 * Elkes was also a Senior Fellow of the Fetzer Institute, Kalamazoo, Michigan. * Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the Johns Hopkins University. * Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of Louisville. * Charter Fellow of The Royal College of Psychiatrists of the United Kingdom. * Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada * Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association * Recipient of the Thomas William Salmon Medal (1964) * Governor's Citation for Distinguished Service, State of Maryland. (1969) * Elected Fellow and Senior Scholar of the Fetzer Institute, Kalamazoo, Michigan. * Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and Sciences. (1974) * Recipient of the International Hans Selye Award. (1994) * Recipient of the International College of Neuropsychopharmacology Pfizer Pioneer Award at the CINP XXI Congress in Glasgow in 1998. And others.
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zelda
|
48592510_Plot
|
==Cast== *Jane Withers as Geraldine Cooper *Jimmy Lydon as Willy Briggs *Raymond Walburn as Amos Hartwell *Donald Meek as Casper Millhouse *Charles Quigley as J. Edmund Roberts *Grant Withers as Henry Cooper *William Haade as Wayne Cooper *Archie Twitchell as Charlie March *Johnny Sands as Danny *David Holt as Percy McBride *Tanis Chandler as Liza Jane Dennis *Harry Cheshire as Judge Fricke *Josephine Whittell as Belle Walker *Donia Bussey as Mrs. Bessie Hutchinson *Edith M. Griffith as Mrs. Eddington *George M. Carleton as Lawyer Darnell
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zelda
|
48596898_Introduction
|
Teacher retention is a field of education research that focuses on how factors such as school characteristics and teacher demographics affect whether teachers stay in their schools, move to different schools, or leave the profession before retirement. The field developed in response to a perceived shortage in the education labor market in the 1990s. Teacher attrition is thought to be higher in low income schools and in high need subjects like math, science, and special education. More recent evidence suggests that school culture and leadership has the most significant effect on teacher decisions to stay or leave.
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zelda
|
48598202_Introduction
|
Triangulum II (Tri II or Laevens 2) is a dwarf galaxy close to the Milky Way Galaxy. It contains only 1000 stars, yet is quite massive, having a solar mass to light ratio of 3600. This is an unusually high mass for such a small galaxy. The distance from the centre of the Milky Way is . The luminosity is 450 times that of the Sun. This makes it one of the dimmest known galaxies. The 2D half light radius is . The galaxy was discovered in images taken by Pan-STARRS by Benjamin P. M. Laevens in 2015. Triangulum II is a candidate for detecting WIMPs as a source of dark matter.
|
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zelda
|
48598482_Introduction
|
Leonard Mullett (27 November 1894 – 22 April 1944) was an Australian cricketer. He played six first-class cricket matches for Victoria between 1920 and 1929.
|
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zelda
|
48599474_National competitions
|
===Rugby League Cup=== Auckland are the holders of the Rugby League Cup but have not defended the trophy since 2012. 2016 will be the seventh year of the National Competition. The competition was reformatted for this season, with Akarana, Counties Manukau, Canterbury and Wellington competing in a National Championship. The other zones will revert to district teams with these teams competing in four regional championships. The four winners will then compete in a National Premiership competition, and the winner will play a promotion-relegation match against the last placed National Championship side. The National Secondary Schools Tournament took place between 29 August and 2 September while the National Youth Tournament took place between 26 and 30 September. The Akarana Falcons won the grand final, after finishing second following the round-robin. <center> </center> The match between the Southland Rams and Canterbury Development sides, won by Southland, was for the Eddie Hei Hei Memorial Trophy. <center> </center> Waikato earned promotion to the 2017 National Competition, while Wellington will have to win their regional competition to enter the 2017 National Premiership. The Southern region series, which started in August, involved Southland, Otago, West Coast and Tasman. The competition was won by Southland, who were undefeated. Waikato defeated Northland and the Bay of Plenty while Taranaki defeated the Manawatu Mustangs in a two-match series. Canterbury Development defeated the Auckland Vulcans development side in a one-off match. The national secondary schools tournament was won by the Southern Cross Campus, who defeated Kelston Boys' High School 16-12 in the final. Onehunga High School won the development division. The Counties Manukau Stingray defeated the Akarana Falcons 18-16 in the under-15 youth final, while Akarana defeated the South Island Scorpions 44-6 to win the under-17 competition.
|
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zelda
|
48601559_Life and career
|
John Evangelist Walsh was born in Manhattan, New York on December 27, 1927 to Thomas and Ann (née Cunney) Walsh. He was of Irish descent. Walsh attended high school at the now-closed Power Memorial Academy in Manhattan, and after his senior year, enlisted in the US Army, serving in the infantry in Trieste, Italy, from 1946 to 1948. It was during that time when Walsh first became involved in journalism, reporting and taking photographs for The Spearhead and The Blue Devil, two military newspapers. Following his two years of service, he enrolled at Iona College in New Rochelle, New York, but dropped out to take a job as a reporter The Oneonta Daily Star. He later worked as an editor at Prentice Hall, Simon & Schuster, and Reader's Digest, where he worked mainly on condensed-literature projects. He married his wife, Dorothy Schubis, on November 17, 1956 in Flushing, Queens, New York. Walsh's time at Reader's Digest marked an ambitious and unprecedented project: the condensation of the Bible, an enterprise that would make him and his colleagues well known on a national scale. According to John T. Beaudouin, the Reader's Digest Condensed Books editor during those years, the magazine had been eager to condense the Bible for a long time, but was not sure if it was feasible. He told The New York Times in 1982:<blockquote><nowiki></nowiki>We condensed a 14-volume set of 56 classics for young readers in the late 1960's, but the Bible had always been considered the ultimate challenge. We weren't sure we could do it, but after we studied the text and found it repetitive we thought we could.<nowiki></nowiki></blockquote>The first phases of planning began in 1975, and by 1979, a team of seven editors was assembled, with John Walsh as the director. The whole project, however, was placed under the supervision of the Rev. Bruce M. Metzger, a Presbyterian minister and esteemed biblical scholar and author. He served as the final say in what verses and chapters were necessary for inclusion. The team decided to condense the Revised Standard Version (RSV) rather than the King James Version (KJV) because the RSV language was simpler to begin with, in contrast to the older vocabulary and abstruse language found in the KJV. The RSV is 850,000 words long, and the team set out to remove repetition and unnecessary inclusions. Walsh installed a strict system for condensation: first, editors must consult three unique scholarly analyses of any given passage before editing it. After changes were made, it would be reviewed by a second editor, and then sent to Walsh for inspection. If the condensation was deemed adequate, it would be given to the Rev. Metzger for a final appraisal. In the end, around 55% of the Old Testament and 25% of the New Testament was expunged, a total of 40% of the Bible overall. Walsh commented to the New York Times on the difficulty of project in 1982 on the date of the Bible's release: <blockquote><nowiki>It was the hardest job I've ever done in my life. We were dealing with a library of ancient literature with so many different literary forms to which the condensation had to be adjusted and adapted.</nowiki></blockquote>He then acknowledged he originally had qualms about the project, citing the Book of Revelation, which forbids changing "the words of the book of this prophecy." However, his early doubts were replaced by satisfaction in the end, telling the New York Times <nowiki>'Our Bible is still the word of God, but it's easier to get into and stay with and appreciate.''</nowiki> The project in its entirety took three years, and the Reader's Digest Bible was released on 22 September 1982. While the Reader's Digest Bible was perhaps his most famous accomplishment, Walsh was a lifelong writer. He was moderately well known in the historical nonfiction and literary biographical genres, some of his better known books being The Bones of Saint Peter: The First Full Account of the Discovery of the Apostle's Tomb, Midnight Dreary: The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe, Poe the Detective: The Curious Circumstances Behind "The Mystery of Marie Roget", and Unraveling Piltdown: The Science Fraud of the Century and Its Solution. His books Midnight Dreary and Moonlight: Abraham Lincoln and the Almanac Trial were nominated for Edgar Awards, and Midnight Dreary and The Shadows Rise: Abraham Lincoln and the Ann Rutledge Legend were both finalists for the Lincoln Prize. His only award-winning publication was Poe the Detective: The Curious Circumstances Behind "The Mystery of Marie Roget", which won an Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime in 1969. After over 60 years in New York City, Walsh retired with his wife, Dorothy, to Monroe, Wisconsin, where he continued to publish books and write articles, mostly about Monroe and Green County history. He died on March 19, 2015 in a Monroe hospital, leaving behind nine unpublished texts, on such wide-ranging topics as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Edgar Allan Poe, Robert Frost, the Shroud of Turin, Pearl Harbor, and two mystery novels. His obituary reported that he was writing just one day prior to his death.
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zelda
|
48602163_Confirmed tornadoes
|
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;" |+ List of confirmed tornadoes – Monday, November 16, 2015 ! scope="col" style="width:3%; text-align:center;"|EF# ! scope="col" style="width:7%; text-align:center;" class="unsortable"|Location ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;" class="unsortable"|County / Parish ! scope="col" style="width:5%; text-align:center;"|State ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;"|Start Coord. ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;"|Time (UTC) ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;"|Path length ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;"|Max width ! scope="col" style="width:6%; text-align:center;"|Damage ! scope="col" class="unsortable" style="width:48%; text-align:center;"|Summary ! scope="col" class="unsortable" style="width:48%; text-align:center;"|Refs |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |S of Ulysses |Grant |KS | |2154–2155 | | | |A storm chaser reported a brief tornado that caused no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |ENE of Garden City to WSW of Eminence |Finney |KS | |2314–2320 | | | |A storm chaser reported a tornado that caused no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SE of Grinnell |Gove |KS | |2320–2324 | | | |A trained storm spotter reported a tornado that caused no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |WSW of Grainfield |Gove |KS | |2330–2332 | | | |Law enforcement reported a tornado that caused no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |Grainfield to E of Hoxie |Gove, Sheridan |KS | |2334–0003 | | | |Tornado struck the town of Grainfield, where numerous trees, power lines, and grain bins were damaged. A wood structure sustained damage, an abandoned house had its roof ripped off, and a quonset building was destroyed. A small shop, windows, and sheds were destroyed, and a second home sustained minor damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF3 |NE of Liberal to NE of Montezuma |Seward, Meade, Gray |KS | |2338–0056 | | | |This large, long-tracked wedge tornado destroyed a mobile home and snapped power poles near the beginning of its path. The tornado reached its maximum intensity (mid-range EF3) as it passed west of Kismet, where a farmstead was heavily damaged, trees were partially debarked and denuded, a well-built metal hog containment building was obliterated, and a heavy steel oil tank was tossed. The tornado weakened to EF2 strength as it passed near Plains, snapping miles of power poles, destroying outbuildings, and flipping irrigation pivots. One of the irrigation pivots had one of its wheels ripped off and thrown. EF1 damage to power poles, trees, and irrigation pivots was noted northwest of Meade. The tornado re-strengthened to EF2 intensity as it passed between Montezuma and Ensign, tearing the entire roof off of a frame home, destroying outbuildings, and snapping power poles before it dissipated to the northeast of Montezuma. |<br> |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |WSW of Goodnight |Armstrong |TX | |2344−2345 | | | |Storm chasers observed a brief tornado that caused no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |NNE of Skellytown |Roberts |TX | |2344−2345 | | | |A storm chaser observed a brief tornado that caused no visible damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF2 |S of Alamota to W of Ness City |Lane, Ness |KS | |2356–0020 | | | |A large wedge tornado caused substantial damage to a farm, trees, power lines, and fences. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SE of Spearman |Roberts |TX | |0005–0015 | | | |A brief tornado occurred in a very rural area of northwestern Roberts County, causing a windmill to collapse. A witness stated that a funnel was visible for about 10 minutes and the tornado tracked . | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |WNW of Groom |Carson |TX | |0009–0010 | | | |Storm chasers reported a brief tornado touchdown just west of Groom, causing no visible damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NE of Plains to N of Missler |Meade |KS | |0019–0030 | | | |This was a satellite tornado to the long-track EF3 tornado above. A house, some outbuildings, and irrigation pivots sprinklers were damaged. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF3 |NNE of Groom to WNW of Miami |Gray, Roberts |TX | |0020–0120 | | | |Large wedge tornado began south of Pampa, snapping numerous power poles at EF2 strength. As the tornado passed east of town, EF3 damage occurred as trees were denuded and partially debarked, a well-anchored double-wide mobile home was completely swept away with little debris recovered, and heavy farm equipment along with a 2-ton truck were thrown 150 yards over a barn. EF3 damage continued as the tornado crossed into Roberts County, debarking trees, toppling metal high-tension truss towers, and causing some ground scouring as it passed through open fields. Several power poles were snapped to the west of Miami before the tornado dissipated. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NNW of Ness City |Ness |KS | |0027–0039 | | | |Trees, vehicles, power lines, and buildings sustained damage. A historic 115-year-old stone and frame barn was destroyed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |Lenora |Norton |KS | |0036–0048 | | | |Tornado moved directly through Lenora, where windows and garage doors were damaged or blown out. An aluminum door was folded and mangled, outbuildings sustained minor damage, and trees were blown through windows. A Nex-Tech building had its roof ripped off. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF2 |NW of Groom to SE of White Deer |Carson, Gray |TX | |0042–0055 | | | |Strong tornado completely destroyed a well-built metal frame outbuilding. A home had its windows broken and roof decking material removed, with the roof uplifted. Large pieces of wood were embedded in the roof. A large truck was moved . | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SSE of Perryton |Ochiltree |TX | |0044–0050 | | | |An emergency manager reported a brief tornado. Little to no damage was observed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF2 |E of Seminole |Gaines |TX | |0046–0056 | | | |Power poles, irrigation pivot equipment, and a cotton field were damaged. EF2 damage was inflicted to a well service rig. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |ESE of Perryton to SW of Booker |Ochiltree |TX | |0052–0059 | | | |Trees, a barbed wire fence, and the roof to a barn sustained damage from this tornado. Three power poles were broken as well. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF2 |S of Ensign to E of Cimarron |Gray, Ford |KS | |0055–0119 | | | |A well-built metal frame outbuilding was heavily damaged, with its metal supports severely twisted and bent as a result of this large wedge tornado. Numerous power poles were snapped, large trees were uprooted, irrigation pivots were flipped, and three homes sustained roof and window damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |WSW of Booker, TX to S of Elmwood, OK |Ochiltree (TX), Beaver (OK) |TX, OK | |0100–0108 | | | |Fence and tree damage was observed near the Texas–Oklahoma state line, and multiple power flashes were observed just west of the town of Booker. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |S of Ogallah |Trego |KS | |0106–0109 | | | |Trees were uprooted and tree limbs were snapped. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF3 |E of Pampa |Gray |TX | |0106–0119 | | | |Large cone tornado began south of Pampa, snapping tree trunks and destroying a manufactured home at EF2 intensity. Farm equipment was moved and damaged and fences were downed southeast of town before the tornado reached EF3 strength, completely flattening multiple large metal frame industrial buildings at a chemical plant complex just east of town. Several vehicles were thrown into the rubble and damaged, trees were snapped, and a manufactured home at the edge of the circulation sustained minor damage as well. Further to the northeast the tornado weakened to EF2 strength as it snapped multiple power poles and completely destroyed an outbuilding before dissipating. The destruction of the chemical plant resulted in a significant gas and chemical leak, prompting Hazmat response. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NE of Norton |Norton |KS | |0110–0116 | | | |Twelve electrical poles were downed, a flagpole was bent in half, a trailer house and outbuildings were damaged, and a radio station lost its ability to broadcast. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |S of Beaver |Beaver |OK | |0110–0118 | | | |Storm chasers observed a tornado that caused no known damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NE of Pampa to NNW of Miami |Gray, Roberts |TX | |0122–0144 | | | |Tornado paralleled and crossed the path of the first Pampa EF3 tornado and was produced by the same supercell which produced the second Pampa EF3 tornado. Damage was confined to wooden power poles broken in Roberts County. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NW of Almena to E of Hollinger |Norton, Furnas |KS, NE | |0124–0157 | | | |Trees, power poles, signs, outbuildings, fences, windmills, and small farm machinery were damaged. The western side roof covering was ripped from a barn, and several grain carts on the property were moved. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |NE of Borger |Hutchinson |TX | |0143–0144 | | | |A storm chaser observed a brief tornado that touched down over open country, causing no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |N of Miami to SW of Canadian |Roberts, Hemphill |TX | |0145–0155 | | | |Tornado remained over open country, causing no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |WNW of Panhandle |Potter |TX | |0158–0159 | | | |A brief tornado was reported in an open field in rural eastern Potter County, causing no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |W of WaKeeney |Trego |KS | |0219–0220 | | | |A machine shed was destroyed and bales of feed were moved. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NW of Glazier, TX to SSW of May, OK |Hemphill (TX), Lipscomb (TX), Ellis (OK) |TX, OK | |0220–0313 | | | |One home sustained roof damage, sheet metal debris from an outbuilding was scattered across a field, and some small power poles were snapped. Oil field equipment and fences were damaged, and multiple trees and tree limbs were snapped along the path as well. Trees and power lines were damaged after the tornado crossed into Oklahoma. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SSE of Farnsworth to SSE of Perryton |Ochiltree |TX | |0226–0251 | | | |Power poles, fences, and a few oil equipment sheds were damaged along the path. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SSE of Booker |Lipscomb |TX | |0259–0307 | | | |A brief tornado was observed in a rural area. Little or no damage occurred due to a lack of structures. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF2 |SSE of May to NE of Selman |Ellis, Harper |OK | |0318–0351 | | | |A home was damaged, sheds were destroyed, outbuildings were heavily damaged, power poles were broken, and trees were damaged along the path. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NNE of Darrouzett, TX to N of Logan |Beaver |OK | |0324–0337 | | | |Several barns and outbuildings were destroyed, and additional homes sustained minimal damage. Numerous power poles and trees were snapped. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NW of Freedom, OK to SE of Coldwater, KS |Woods (OK), Comanche (KS) |OK, KS | |0409–0438 | | | |An old home sustained major damage, and buildings at an oil field were destroyed. Trees were snapped, significant tree damage occurred, and farm implements and outbuildings were damaged or destroyed as well. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |E of Coldwater |Comanche |KS | |0438–0447 | | | |A stretch of power poles were downed. Large branches were broken off trees. | |- |} {| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;" |+ List of confirmed tornadoes – Tuesday, November 17, 2015 ! scope="col" width="3%" align="center" |EF# ! scope="col" width="7%" align="center" class="unsortable" |Location ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" class="unsortable" |County / Parish ! scope="col" width="5%" align="center" |State ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Start Coord. ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Time (UTC) ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Path length ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Max width ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Damage ! scope="col" width="48%" class="unsortable" align="center" |Summary ! scope="col" width="48%" class="unsortable" align="center" |Refs |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SE of Keller |Tarrant |TX | |0928–0929 | | | |Approximately 10 homes sustained minor roof damage, and several trees were downed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SSE of Corinth to NNE of Lake Dallas |Denton |TX | |0944–0948 | | | |Several homes sustained minor roof damage, a few homes had their garage doors destroyed, a car wash suffered severe damage, several business signs were damaged or destroyed, and a hotel sustained significant roof damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |E of College Station |Grimes |TX | |1053–1104 | | | |Numerous large trees were snapped or uprooted. Two trailers were thrown and destroyed, numerous barns, outbuildings, and mobile homes suffered severe damage, and tin and lumber debris were tossed over . | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |E of Checotah |McIntosh |OK | |1143–1148 | | | |A number of outbuildings and a chicken house were destroyed, the roofs of several homes were damaged, trees were snapped or uprooted, and power lines were downed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SE of Edwards |Hinds |MS | |0333–0335 | | | |Several trees were snapped or uprooted. | |- |} {| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;" |+ List of confirmed tornadoes – Wednesday, November 18, 2015 ! scope="col" width="3%" align="center" |EF# ! scope="col" width="7%" align="center" class="unsortable" |Location ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" class="unsortable" |County / Parish ! scope="col" width="5%" align="center" |State ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Start Coord. ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Time (UTC) ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Path length ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Max width ! scope="col" width="6%" align="center" |Damage ! scope="col" width="48%" class="unsortable" align="center" |Summary ! scope="col" width="48%" class="unsortable" align="center" |Refs |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NNE of Pelahatchie to NNE of Forkville |Rankin, Scott |MS | |0540–0550 | | | |Numerous trees were downed or uprooted. A mobile home was rolled and destroyed. Some tin was removed from the roof of a home, and a shed sustained some damage. An old, unused chicken house was heavily damaged. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NNW of Forkville |Scott |MS | |0547–0551 | | | |Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |S of Lena |Scott |MS | |0555–0559 | | | |Multiple trees were snapped or uprooted, and a couple trees and limbs were downed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SE of Carthage |Leake |MS | |0605–0614 | | | |A chicken house had parts of its roof taken off, and several power lines and numerous trees were downed. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |E of Lena |Leake |MS | |0605–0606 | | | |A brief, weak tornado damaged a few trees. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |E of Carthage to NW of Edinburg |Leake |MS | |0614–0624 | | | |An outbuilding was destroyed, power lines were downed, and numerous trees were snapped and uprooted. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NE of Midway to SE of Zama |Leake, Neshoba |MS | |0621–0631 | | | |Dozens of pine trees were damaged along the path. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |ESE of Zama |Leake, Neshoba, Winston |MS | |0630–0634 | | | |Part of a roof was torn off of a house, with roofing debris thrown into the highway, and trees were snapped and uprooted. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |NE of Zama |Winston |MS | |0641–0643 | | | |Numerous trees were snapped and uprooted. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |SW of Highpoint |Winston |MS | |0645–0649 | | | |Numerous trees were snapped and uprooted, one of which landed on a home. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |E of Algoma to SSW of Endville |Pontotoc |MS | |0706–0718 | | | |A storage building and outbuildings were damaged, and trees were damaged along the path, one of which fell on a house. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |NW of Wells to E of Kolola Springs |Lowndes |MS | |0953–0956 | | | |A brief tornado uprooted a few trees and broke off several large limbs. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SSW of Mossy Head |Walton |FL | |1735–1736 | | | |A brief tornado touched down on Eglin Air Force Base property and displaced magnolia tree branches roughly . | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |NE of Mossy Head |Walton |FL | |1805–1807 | | | |The public reported a brief tornado touchdown north of Eglin Air Force Base property, causing no damage. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |WSW of Palmetto |Coweta |GA | |2148–2149 | | | |Tornado moved through a subdivision, snapping small trees and damaging five homes. One of the homes had its front porch and a section of its roof lifted off, with the debris being thrown nearly away. Fences were blown down and 4 by 4 beams were snapped near their bases as well. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF1 |Northern Fairburn |Fulton |GA | |2159–2203 | | | |Near the beginning of the path, goal posts and bleachers sustained minor damage at Creekside High School. The tornado moved through residential areas of Fairburn, snapping and uprooting numerous large trees and causing minor structural damage to several homes. Some of the trees landed on homes and caused significant damage. A small, unsecured shed was torn apart as well. One minor injury occurred when a tree fell on a car near a country club. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |SE of Tucker |DeKalb |GA | |2247–2248 | | | |Two locations sustained structural damage from a brief tornado. The north-facing front wall was ripped apart at one location in the area, and the roof and metal siding of another location were partially peeled back. Additionally, two pine trees were uprooted. | |- |bgcolor="# | EF0 |N of Gretna |Gadsden |FL | |2305–2313 | | | |A tornado tracked across a rural area and blew down a tree. | |- |}
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zelda
|
48606450_Influence
|
When Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826) visited Paris he was highly impressed by the wooden dome, which he called the "most superb thing on earth". He proposed to copy the dome's design in three buildings in Washington, D.C. – the House chamber in the south wing of the Capitol, the White House and the Navy Yard dry dock. Latrobe was invited to Washington to take responsibility for the Capitol building as "surveyor of the public buildings". He proposed a variant of the Halle aux blés dome. The chamber would be roofed by a low-rising dome that would be hidden on the outside by the balustrade. After some delay, Jefferson accepted the modified design. The interior of the Brighton Dome incorporates elements of the wooden dome's design. It was built for the future king George IV in (1803–08). The iron dome was copied in later buildings in England such as the London Coal Exchange (1846–49) by James Bunstone Bunning and the Leeds Corn Exchange (1861–63) by Cuthbert Brodrick. <gallery mode=packed heights=140> File:Halle aux blés - 1797.jpg|:Hall's location in 1797 File:Halle au Ble 1818.png|Halle aux blés in 1818 File:Halle aux blés - 2.gif|Architect's drawing File:HalleauBle1887.jpg|Demolition work in 1887 </gallery>
|
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zelda
|
48606575_Introduction
|
Trocano is a Brazilian thermobaric weapon similar in design to the United States' MOAB weapon or Russia's FOAB. Like the US weapon, the Trocano is designed to be pallet-loaded into a C-130 Hercules aircraft, and deployed using a parachute to drag it from the C-130's cargo bay and separate from its pallet, at which point the bomb's own aerodynamics determine its drop trajectory. The Trocano contains 9,000 kg of tritonal, producing a total destruction blast radius of . Despite this, Trocano places third on blast yield behind both the US (containing 8,150 kg of H6 explosive, more powerful than tritonal) and the Russian weapon (with 11,000 kg of explosive).
|
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zelda
|
48607657_Platform
|
All content on Zesty.io lives in an instance. Zesty.io allows content to be managed as itself (function as a headless CMS). Zesty.io can also power web properties. Content managed in a Zesty.io instance can be delivered to multiple devices with different screen sizes and display optimally. The platform creates responsive enterprise websites that are automatically optimized for search engines. Zesty.io also integrates with a variety of CRM systems with API access, such as Salesforce, Netsuite, MailChimp, Marketo, and Hubspot. Its mobile API also enables users to deploy content to mobile apps, IoT devices, and other connected devices. Zesty.io also supports multisite management. The multisite view allows users to manage multiple instances from one portal. The platform deploys web properties to cloud infrastructure and a global Content Distribution Network. Zesty.io’s multisite supports functionality for users to share media within and among instances and web properties, as well as duplicate, share, and repurpose templates. Zesty.io multi site management integrates with major analytics platforms such as Google Analytics to provide multi-site traffic analytics, user behavior tracking, as well as the ability to export data collected to other marketing platforms.
|
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zelda
|
48607904_High school career
|
Monk first attended East Poinsett County High School in Lepanto, Arkansas during his Freshman year. As a freshman, he averaged 22.8 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 2.7 assist per game while leading them to a (25-8) overall record and an appearance in the Class 2A state championship game. After his freshman season, Monk transferred to Bentonville High School in Bentonville, Arkansas. In his junior year, he averaged 26.6 points per game. In the spring and summer of 2015, Monk competed for the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) team, Arkansas Wings Elite, on the Nike Elite Youth Basketball Circuit (EYBL) where he averaged 19.7 points per game. He then competed on the 2015 Nike Global Challenge for the East team, where he averaged 22 points, 12 rebounds, and four assist in addition to earning Tournament MVP honors. On November 18, 2015 Monk committed to Kentucky, choosing UK over Arkansas. As a senior, he averaged 28.6 points per game, 4.4 assist per game and 7.6 rebounds per game. In 2016, Monk played in the 2016 McDonald's All-American Game and Jordan Brand Classic where he earned Co-MVP honors alongside Kentucky teammate De'Aaron Fox. On March 11, 2016, Monk played his final high school game, scoring 19 points in a 59-49 loss in the 7A state championship to Cabot High School. Monk was a consensus five-star prospect and ranked as one of the best players in the 2016 class by the four main recruiting services Rivals, ESPN, Scout, and 247 Sports. Monk was ranked as the No.9 overall player and No.1 shooting guard in the 2016 high school class.
|
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zelda
|
48608614_History
|
The Theatre was created by Feliks Oraczewski, a member of the Polish Parliament (Sejm), and the actor Mateusz Witkowski. On October 17, 1781 the Cracow city authorities gave Witkowski permission to perform comedy under the condition that he pay fifty Polish zloty a month to the municipal treasury. In 1798, Jacek Kluszewski,the starosta of Brzeg, took over the theater and converted two of his own buildings the corner of Szczepański Square and Jagiellonian Street into its permanent home. The Stary Theatre continues to operate at this location to this day. In 2016, the MICET Interactive Museum / Theatre Education Center opened in the theatre building’s 13th century cellars.''
|
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zelda
|
48609970_Professional career
|
De Villiers returned to Johannesburg in 1939 and became ballet mistress, choreographer, and ensemble director for African Consolidated Theatres. After some years, she formed her own performing group, Ballet Theatre, with Joyce van Geems, in 1947. It was the first of several such troupes that she would initiate. The next year, she married and moved to Cape Town, where she began teaching at the school of the South African National Ballet, producing ballets, and touring the group to nearby Stellenbosch and Paarl. She returned frequently to Johannesburg, despite the great distance, to continue her work with African Consolidated Theatres. With her husband and child, she moved back to her home city in 1952 and continued producing ballets for performances in cities and towns throughout the Transvaal and in neighboring Mozambique. When Yvonne Mounsey returned to South Africa from New York in 1959, de Villiers joined her in founding the Johannesburg City Ballet, of which she became artistic director in 1961. The company was renamed Ballet Transvaal and then, in 1963, PACT Ballet, so called for the Performing Arts Council of the Transvaal and known in Afrikaans as TRUK Ballet, for the Transvaalse Raad vir die Uitvoerende Kunste. With a government subsidy, PACT Ballet became a fully professional, bilingual company, guided by de Villiers as artistic manager from 1964 until 1969. During her five-year tenure in this position, she was responsible for bringing the great French ballerina Yvette Chauviré to dance Giselle in theaters in Johannesburg and nearby Pretoria. She hired Alexander Bennett, a former Royal Ballet principal, to be ballet master and to produce Coppélia, Aurora's Wedding (Aurora se Huwelik), and Frederick Ashton's Les Patineurs. In 1965, Yvonne Mounsey staged a version of the pas de deux from Jerome Robbins's Interplay (Heen-en-weer-spel); Peter Clegg recreated Ashton's Façade; and de Villiers herself mounted Walter Gore's production of Casse Noisette (The Nutcracker, Die Neutkraker) for the Christmas season at the splendid, new Civic Theatre. She brought Roland Petit and Zizi Jeanmaire to Johannesburg to stage Carmen and Françoise Adret to choreograph a new Cinderella, with Galina Samsova in the title role. Both ballets, mounted with striking sets and sumptuous costumes, were popular successes. When Frank Staff arrived as resident choreographer, he mounted his charming Peter and the Wolf, originally created for Ballet Rambert in London, and created seven new works for the company, including Five Faces of Euridice (Vyf Fasette van Euridice, 1965), Czernyana III (1966), and Raka (1967). Under de Villiers's aegis, PACT Ballet performed in many major cities of South Africa, including Pretoria, Bloemfontein, Kimberley, Durban, and Cape Town. It also traveled across the Limpopo River to Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where it was presented by the Rhodesian National Ballet in performances in Salisbury (now Harare), Bulawayo, and Gwelo (now Gweru). Concurrent with administering such activity, de Villiers began a major outreach to Transvaal schools and the general public. A grant from the provincial Department of Arts and Sciences allowed her to tour two groups of company members ("the Midgets" and "the Giants") to perform programs of divertissements and short ballets on stages in school auditoriums and town halls in dorpies on the Highveld and the Bushveld of the vast Transvaal. Among the works presented was Allegro di Concierto (1965), a work evocative of a storm at sea, set by de Villiers to the piano music of Enrique Granados. Besides acting as choreographer, administrator, and impresario, de Villiers was a cheerful "mother hen" of her company, mindful of the welfare of her dancers and their futures. She was mentor to several South African ballerinas, including Sandra Lipman and Noleen Nicol, who went on to international careers in European companies, and Dawn Weller, who had a decades-long career in PACT Ballet as dancer, artistic director, and prima ballerina.
|
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zelda
|
48611055_Professional career statistics
|
Correct as of November 2015 |- | align=left | 2012–13 | align=left | ET-Land Elephants | align=center | KBL || 24 || || 10.5 || .449 || .389 || .474 || 0.75 || 1.54 || .50 || .00 || 2.50 |- | align=left | 2013–14 | align=left | ET-Land Elephants | align=center | KBL || 54 || || 13.5 || .461 || .377 || .600 || 1.04 || 1.31 || .31 || .04 || 2.78 |- | align=left | 2014–15 | align=left | ET-Land Elephants | align=center | KBL || 55 || || 19.0 || .425 || .359 || .824 || 1.87 || 2.24 || .73 || .07 || 5.09 |- | align=left | 2015 | align=left | Brgy. Ginebra Kings | align=center | PBA || 6 || || 27.7 || .426 || .353 || .750 || 2.67 || 4.00 || .83 || .00 || 10.67 |- | align=left | 2015–16 | align=left | ET-Land Elephants | align=center | KBL || 22 || || 27.2 || .403 || .356 || .708 || 1.82 || 3.82 || .86 || .27 || 7.45 |-
|
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zelda
|
48611443_Introduction
|
Yutaka Tsujinaka (born 1954) is a professor of political science and the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Tsukuba. He is now teaching at the College of Social Sciences and the doctoral program in International and Advanced Japanese Studies. He is also the president of Japan Political Science Association, a member of the International Association of Universities (2012–2016), the director of Internationalization Subcommittee of IAU (2013–), the executive assistant to the President at University of Tsukuba (2013–) and the director of Institute for Comparative Research in Human and Social Sciences (ICR) (2014–). Youji Inaba professor of economy at Nippon University said in a newspaper column that Professor Tsujinaka talks in friendly Kansai dialect and always gives everyone warm smile as if he has "Tender-Heated DNA" in his body. (Nikkei: July 8, 2015)
|
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zelda
|
48611472_History
|
Friend Park is the site of the former Port Curtis Government Residence and Domain, established in 1854-56. The former residence was constructed for, and occupied by, Captain Maurice Charles O'Connell, who in 1854 was appointed Government Resident, Police Magistrate, and Commissioner of Crown Lands for the Port Curtis and Leichhardt districts of New South Wales (the separation of Queensland did not occur until 1859). The Domain was laid out in mid-1854, and a stone residence was completed by the end of 1856. The township of Gladstone was established by the New South Wales Government in 1853-54. Historian Lorna McDonald suggests that this was possibly an attempt to create a more centralised alternative to Brisbane as the capital of a potential northern colony, because unlike most Queensland ports, Gladstone was established prior to the expansion of pastoral settlement in the hinterland. In April 1853 the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Charles Augustus Fitzroy, announced the intention of establishing a township at Port Curtis, and in May that year surveyor Francis MacCabe was instructed to undertake a survey for the town of Gladstone. In naming the town Gladstone, Fitzroy commemorated British Colonial Secretary William Ewart Gladstone, who in 1846 had attempted to establish a northern colony in the Antipodes. On 17 February 1846 Queen Victoria signed Letters Patent establishing the Colony of North Australia, and the British Parliament passed an Act to define its boundaries, which included all lands and coastal islands north of latitude 26° south and extending from the east coast to the present-day Western Australia border. The new colony therefore included all of the present-day Northern Territory and most of what later became Queensland, but with the exception of the Moreton Bay, Darling Downs, and Maranoa districts. On 21 February 1846 Queen Victoria appointed Fitzroy as governor and commander in chief of the colony of North Australia, and on 25 May 1846 appointed Lieutenant-Colonel George Barney as Lieutenant-Governor and Superintendent of North Australia, to administer the new colony on Fitzroy's behalf. Gladstone's objective in establishing the colony of North Australia was to provide a place of exile for expirees and reformed convicts from both Australian and British gaols. This in effect meant a resumption of transportation to eastern Australia, and was bitterly opposed in New South Wales. In late 1846 Gladstone was replaced as Colonial Secretary by Earl Grey, who reversed his predecessor's colonial policies. On 28 November 1846 Queen Victoria revoked the colony of North Australia, but word did not reach New South Wales before an attempt was made early in 1847 to establish a settlement at Port Curtis. Colonel Barney and his family had arrived in Sydney in September 1846. Despite finding considerable colonial opposition to the resumption of convict transportation, Barney carried out his instructions and in November 1846 explored the North Australia coast and selected Port Curtis as a settlement site. Barney and the first contingent of 87 officials and settlers left Sydney on the barque Lord Auckland on 30 December 1846 and arrived at Port Curtis on 25 January 1847, during the height of the wet season. Their ship ran aground and the passengers were embarked at Facing Island, where they waited in tents for 7 weeks, surviving principally on dried meat and biscuits, before a relief ship, the barque Thomas Lowry, arrived on 14 March 1847. The wet season hindered the establishment of a settlement on the mainland, and there was discontent within the isolated community. The relief ship also brought news that the colony was likely to be abandoned. This was confirmed officially with the arrival of another ship on 14 April 1847. The settlement was disbanded between April and July 1847, during which time Colonel Barney took the opportunity to explore the Gladstone district, which he considered had great potential as the site of future settlement. Port Curtis he considered one of the finest natural harbours in the Australian colonies. Barney Point and Barney Point Beach are named in his honour. The second attempt at non-indigenous settlement at Port Curtis, made six years later in 1853, was more successful. By 23 October 1853 Francis MacCabe had completed his Design for the Town of Gladstone, Port Curtis. Like Colonel Barney in 1847, he identified the area between Auckland Inlet and South Trees Inlet as the most suitable site for a settlement. The principal township was laid out near Auckland Inlet, but MacCabe set aside a substantial area from Barney Point to south of what is now Friend Park, as a reserve for Public Quay, Custom House and Public Offices; and a large reserve for Government House, Domain and Gardens further to the southeast, adjacent to Waapentake Creek. A large sand flat separated the proposed domain from the sea. MacCabe's plan was laid before the New South Wales Executive Council on 6 December 1853 and the Town of Gladstone was proclaimed on 21 December 1853. On 1 January 1854 Captain Maurice Charles O'Connell, grandson of former New South Wales Governor Sir William Bligh, was appointed as Government Resident, Police Magistrate and Commissioner for Crown Lands for the Port Curtis and Leichhardt districts. These pastoral districts were proclaimed on 10 January 1854, with Port Curtis declared a settled district although only two stations had been established here by 1854. The first sale of town lots at Gladstone was held in Sydney on 9 February 1854, and by the time O'Connell arrived at Port Curtis at the end of March 1854, the first slab buildings had been erected near Auckland Inlet. O'Connell and his family and other officials set up residence in tents at Barney Point Beach, in the area proposed as public reserve and out of the way of commercial development closer to Auckland Inlet. Here a small residential precinct soon developed. The O'Connells lived aboard ship for a month while a temporary government residence was being erected: a large marquee with a timber floor. It is understood that this marquee was erected on the low promontory at the southern end of Barney Point Beach, in the area now known as Friend Park. On 16 April 1854 Governor Fitzroy arrived at Gladstone to inspect the fledgling settlement, and the following day officially installed O'Connell as Government Resident. Whether this ceremony occurred near the temporary government residence, in what is now Friend Park, is not clear. During the 1954 celebrations of the centenary of the establishment of Gladstone, the Gladstone community re-enacted the arrival of Fitzroy on Barney Point Beach and the installation ceremony, which was conducted in Friend Park before an audience of 6500 people. To commemorate the event, a cairn was unveiled in Friend Park. By early July 1854 O'Connell had decided that the promontory at the southern end of Barney Point Beach, which had been intended as a temporary camp only, would be a more appropriate site for the government residence and domain than the site near Waapentake Creek selected by surveyor MacCabe. O'Connell's domain was laid out with gardens and fencing, but work on construction of a permanent residence in stone did not commence until 1855, and was not completed until late 1856. Amongst O'Connell's regular reports to Sydney was an account of the accidental death on 16 September 1854 of 22 year old Thomas Milles Stratford Riddell, eldest son of the acting NSW colonial secretary. Riddell had been among the first purchasers of Gladstone land at the February 1854 sale in Sydney, and is thought to have accompanied O'Connell to Gladstone in March 1854. He had been assisting in carting water to the township in September when he was thrown under the wheels of the dray and killed instantly. He was buried in the government domain (now Friend Park), and by the early 1900s his grave was marked by a stone sarcophagus. Another early burial in the domain was that of Lieutenant Le Strange. This grave was known in 1954, when a wreath was laid on it during the centenary celebrations, but is no longer evident. At the first census of Gladstone conducted by O'Connell in May 1854, the small community comprised 127 non-indigenous residents. A young visitor to the place in March 1855, Richard Mitchell, claimed the township was known locally as Auckland Point and consisted of two commercial stores and a courthouse near Auckland Inlet, while everyone except the storekeepers lived at Barney Point – likely either on or adjacent to the area set aside (but not yet proclaimed) for a public reserve. O'Connell, autocratic by nature and fiery of temperament, was not well liked in the small Gladstone community. Although his correspondence reveals that he had great hopes for the future of Gladstone and Port Curtis, his critics accused him of inaction, and in late 1855 he faced a Select Committee Inquiry into the conduct of the Government Residency at Port Curtis. As a result, the status of Port Curtis was reduced from that of a government residency with its own revenue and government administration, to that of a pastoral district. O'Connell filed his last report as Port Curtis Resident on 26 April 1856, but remained at Gladstone as Lands Commissioner, still occupying the temporary tent house erected for him in April 1854. In late 1856 he moved into the stone dwelling completed in the government domain. O'Connell was reinstated as Government Resident in September 1858 to handle the rapid influx of population into the Port Curtis District following the discovery of gold at Canoona. A rush from August 1858 briefly revived the fortunes of the district, but O'Connell's hopes that Port Curtis and Gladstone would now develop their potential were crushed when it became clear that most prospectors were accessing the Canoona goldfield via Rockhampton. In June 1859 the non-indigenous population of Gladstone was 203, which represented an 8-person increase since 1856, while that of Rockhampton stood at 250. In June 1859 Queen Victoria signed Letters Patent separating the colony of Queensland north of the 29th parallel of latitude, and following the arrival of Governor Bowen and the proclamation of the new colony on 10 December 1859, the Port Curtis Residency became redundant. O'Connell was informed in February 1860, following which he moved to Brisbane where he served as President of the Queensland Legislative Council from 27 August 1860 to 23 March 1879. He still held an interest in the Port Curtis District, being the pastoral lessee of the Riverston run on the Boyne River. Following the abolition of the Port Curtis Residency, O'Connell petitioned the Queensland Government to be allowed to purchase his former house and grounds at Barney Point, claiming that he had invested a considerable amount of his own money on improvements, but the colonial government refused. A survey plan (G14.1) of the government buildings erected at Barney Point, completed by surveyor Clarendon Stuart by 9 July 1860, indicates that the government residency was located on what is now Friend Park. It was a well-ordered establishment comprising a main house, three out houses, stable, cow yard, a formally laid out garden with pathways, and front fencing. To the northwest of the government residence, outside what is now Friend Park, an old brick shed was identified, and further to the northwest, overlooking Barney Point Beach, was the house of the Clerk of Petty Sessions. To the southwest was a more extensive garden and stock yard, which appear to have been associated with the government residence. No graves were identified on the plan. On 11 July 1862 Surveyor Permien completed a survey of sections 55 to 86 of the Town of Gladstone (survey plan G14.7). The area of the government residency and domain was surveyed as section 65 of the Town of Gladstone (later Friend Park), and on this the improvements comprised a stone house, another stone dwelling, stables, garden and fencing. These correspond closely to the improvements indicated on surveyor Stuart's 1860 survey plan. Again, no graves were identified on the plan. Whether anyone occupied the former government residence after O'Connell's departure has not been established. On 28 December 1864 section 65 was purchased from the Crown for , in the name of Alfred Henry Brown of Gladstone. This AH Brown was the six-year-old son of Henry Hort Brown, not to be confused with the Alfred Henry Brown of Gin Gin Station in the Port Curtis Pastoral District. HH Brown was resident in the Port Curtis District by July 1858, when his son Alfred Henry was born, and was among a small party of Gladstone citizens who had prospected for gold at Canoona in mid-1858 and who were largely responsible for the rush of late 1858. It has not been established whether the Brown family ever lived in the former government residence. The family was resident in the Richmond district of New South Wales during most of the 1860s, where children were born in 1860, 1862, 1863, 1865, and 1867. They had returned to Queensland by December 1867 and were still in this colony in November 1870, but may not have been resident in Gladstone. Thereafter no further record of this family in Queensland has been located. Henry Hort Brown died in the Helensburgh district of New South Wales in 1904. Following his death, the site of the former Port Curtis Government Residency was transferred to his widow, Theresa Brown. The former government residence at Port Curtis had been long abandoned by late 1888, when a sketch captioned "Ruins of Government Residence, Port Curtis" appeared in the Australasian Sketcher with Pen and Pencil of 27 December 1888. The sketch shows the partly crumbling walls of a roofless stone residence. Photographs of the ruins taken in 1905 and 1906 show only remnants of the stone walls, and the site overgrown with grasses and saplings. By the 1920s some members of the Gladstone community were keen to see the site conserved. In 1927 the Gladstone Chamber of Commerce urged the Gladstone Town Council to preserve "historic spots" such as the graves at Barney Point([that is, those located in the former government domain at the southern end of Barney Point Beach). Following the death of Theresa Brown in December 1927, the site was acquired in 1929 from her family (who were resident in Sydney) by Gladstone businessmen and former alderman Henry Friend junior. Friend had purchased the property with the express intention of presenting it to the Gladstone Town Council, which he did in November 1929. As a site of strong historical significance to the Gladstone community, the land was to be held by the Council in perpetuity for the people of Gladstone. To honour the generous gift, the site was named Friend Park. In 1935 George Simmons, curator of the Rockhampton Botanical Gardens, provided sketch plans for Gladstone's three parks: Friend Park, Victoria Park [on Auckland Hill] and Central Park, and Rockhampton City Council gifted trees to Gladstone to assist in the park improvements. During 1954 the highlight of the centenary celebrations was the unveiling by Gladstone's oldest inhabitant, Mrs Fanny Golding, of the cairn in Friend Park commemorating the installation of Captain Maurice O'Connell as Government Resident on 17 April 1854. In the mid-1950s Gladstone's Junior Chamber of Commerce (established in 1954) made the creation of a children's playground in Friend Park its principal project. In December 1958 the Gladstone Jaycees handed over the completed playground to the Council. The place remains one of Gladstone's principal parks, and a popular picnic area. In the late 20th century a decision was made by the Gladstone City Council to remove the stone foundations and remnants of the 1856 government residence. On Sunday 22 June 2003 a memorial cairn to Francis MacCabe was unveiled in Friend Park by the Mayor of Gladstone Peter Corones.
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zelda
|
48613036_Civil and military architecture
|
===Domus Municipalis (Town hall) of Bragança=== The Domus Municipalis (Latin: municipal house) is a Romanesque building in the northeastern municipality of Bragança. Its exact function, name and construction date have been the onset of much debate and controversy, even after many researches during the 20th century: first it was believed it could have been the city's Municipal house (Portuguese: "Casa da Câmara"), place of public meetings and a symbol of people's local government through their representatives, but more recent findings have presented basis for a theory that it could have served as cistern, but there are still doubts if that was its primary function. This singular (and enigmatic) building of Romanesque civic architecture also presents challenges in its dating construction. An initial thesis stated that by its design and decorative features it could have been built as early as the 10th or 11th century, but a closer look actually tells us that was, most likely, built in the first half of the 13th century. Also, a deeper research showed that the existing building might be the result of two different dating constructions, with an older cistern on its lower floor and a meeting room built on top, using the already existing structure. Doubts about its real function arouse from a document of 1501 in which the author (according to the published writings of the Abbot of Baçal (1865-1947)) referred to the local record of Martim Anes (1185-1254) who spoke of the construction of the Domus upper level during his lifetime. In this account he stated that it was used as a meeting place for the "good men" of the municipality. There is another document from 1503 referring to the building as both a Sala da Água (English: Water-room) and a place where the town representatives gathered to discuss and sign contracts, therefore, it should not be surprising if this supposed double-function turns out to be correct. Its construction date also becomes more clear in face of this facts, art-historian Carlos Alberto Ferreira de Almeida noted that by its medallions, the diamond-shaped openings and the layout of windows we can date the upper level by the end of the 13th century or beginning of the 14th century, in which its already archaic Romanesque architectural style can be explained with the need of a compromise with the pre-existent cistern. Located near the Castle's courtyard alongside the Church of Santa Maria, the structure is based on a multi-level irregular pentagon, constructed of rounded granite blocks and held together by mortar, with a barrel vaulted wooden roof supported by three arches and covered by tiles. Its floor-plan is slightly steeped and a natural water fountain was found in the Northwest corner at a low depth. <gallery mode=packed caption="Details of Domus Municipalis" heights="150px"> File:Domus_Municipalis_5.jpg|The inferior corner of the Domus structure. File:Domus_Municipalis_interior_1.jpg|Details of the windows inner frame. File:Domus_Municipalis_cachorro.jpg|Corbel details. File:P8093282w_(7874322238).jpg|Southeastern view of the hall. File:Portugal_138_(5480262572).jpg|Northeastern corner of the building. File:Bragança_DSC_1098_(15153381452).jpg|Cistern drain hole, another proof of the building's double-function. </gallery> In sharp contrast to the reality throughout most of Europe, there are still some examples of Portuguese Romanesque civil architecture that survived to our days, specially the fortified noble residences or Domus Fortis (in Portuguese:"Casa-Torre"). Most are no longer more than single towers that stand out from more modern constructions carried out in the house that surrounds them, and many were remodelled in later Gothic and Renaissance styles, but their Romanesque features are still very much visible. These noble fortified manors were built within, or in the periphery, of feudal lands (Coutos or Honras), among agricultural fertile valleys. We can also find them in neighbouring areas of forests or mountain ranges where nobility could control new farm lands outside more occupied regions in which the purchase of new lands and titles was more difficult. Among those we have the manors and towers of Vilar (Penafiel), Pousada (Guimarães), Dornelas in Braga, Oriz (Vila Verde), Lourosa do Campo (Arouca) and Quintela (Vila Real). In northern Portugal there were two kinds of fortified houses during the Middle Ages: the Manor house and the Domus Fortis. The manor house, associated with high and middle nobility, doesn't follow an architectural frame but are rather a cluster of different autonomous buildings, as opposite with the "Domus Fortis" that follows a specific kind of fortified structure which was originated by the last quarter of the 11th century becoming extensively widespread by the late 12th century and through the 13th and 14th centuries. This kind of model was adopted by the smaller ranks of nobility in search of social ascension in a way of displaying to local communities their newly acquired power. The Domus Fortis is composed by several divisions: - The most important being the Tower, of square plan (round ones were rare in Portugal), fortifying the house and offering protection to their owners and respective servants in case of need. It was built with four levels, each corresponding to a single division. Just like a keep tower in castles, the main gate was accessed by the first floor rather than the ground floor. This ground floor was the reception and living room, as the upper floors were destined for private chambers. - A "domus fortis" also had a separate building coupled with or close to the tower, with rectangular plan and two floors. Those were usually the servants area and accommodations. - In some cases is reported the existence of a private chapel like in Vasconcelos Tower-house. Also other individual structures, like kitchens, were built close to water springs or small streams. No remains are left from these buildings although their existence if fully documented. Most of tower-houses were built in northern and central regions of Portugal that belonged to feudal areas. Some were progressively restored in later centuries reflecting more modern Renaissance and Baroque styles: like Aguiã, Refoios, Gomariz, Castro, Faralães and Barbosa Tower-Houses. In other cases their towers were separated from the main building like Silva, Quintela, Oriz and Penegate Towers, among others. <gallery mode=packed caption="Towers and Manor Houses" heights="171px"> File:Freixeda_de_Torrao_02_torre_Metelos_by-dpc.jpg|Tower of Metelos from the early 13th century. File:Solar_de_Barbosa.jpg|Barbosa Tower-House in Penafiel. One of the oldest "domus fortis", believed to have been built in the 9th century. File:Torre_de_Vilar_1.jpg|Vilar Tower in Lousada, 13th century. File:Lapela.JPG|Lapela Tower in Monção (12th century). Once belonged to a castle from which it is the only surviving structure. File:Casa_e_Largo_dos_Laranjais.jpg|Laranjais Tower-House in Guimarães. 11th-century tower and main building remodelled in the 16th and 17th centuries. File:Torre_de_Alcofra_02.JPG|Alcofra Tower in Vouzela, early 12th century. </gallery> Construction activity of bridges during the Middle Ages is directly related to the need of restoring the old Roman road system that was already obsolete, in order to develop new connections and boost trading. Since the end of the 11th century that need was so urgent that building bridges and restoring the paveways were activities that started to be considered as pious. São Gonçalo of Amarante and São Lourenço Mendes, sponsors of the construction of Amarante and Cavês bridges, respectively, were called saints by popular acclamation, such as Saint Benizet of Avignon (France) or Sán Domingos da Calçada (La Rioja (Spain)), showing how much this phenomenon of bridge and road construction were considered extremely important elsewhere in Europe. In the will of monarchs, noblemen and clergymen there are many references to donations for building bridges, King D.Afonso Henriques (1109-1185) himself contributed to the construction of Coimbra, Ave and Piares (Douro river) bridges. The stonemasons of the Romanesque period were more careful about the structural design and maintenance of bridges than their previous Roman counterparts, and looked for more solid grounds to build them, and because of that, according to Carlos Alberto Ferreira de Almeida, medieval bridges resisted better against the danger of floodings and the test of time. Romanesque bridges present large arches whose height had to be balanced with the use of abutments at each end by transferring the weight of the bridge and its loads partially into a horizontal thrust restrained by the abutments at either side. Bridge builders also improved on the Roman structures by using narrower piers, thinner arch barrels and lower span-rise ratios. Examples of these are the bridges of Lagoncinha (12th century), over the Ave River, with six arches, Prado bridge over the Cávado River (11th century), with nine arches and Cavês bridge over the Tâmega River (13th century). Bridge building deeply shaped the Portuguese medieval landscape. Among the Romanesque civil architecture and by the economical and technical means used for their construction, the building of bridges had the most impact in everyday life, benefiting communication between people. <gallery mode=packed caption="Bridges" heights="150px"> File:Ponte_de_Frieira.JPG|Frieira Bridge built in the 13th century. File:Ponte_da_Misarela_(236963068).jpg|Mizarela Bridge, built in the 12th century replacing an old Roman bridge. File:Ponte_Sequeiros.jpg|Sequeiros Bridge crossing the Côa River near Sabugal, (13th century). File:Ponte_Velha_do_Vouga.jpg|Old Vouga Bridge built in the 13th century crossing the Vouga River. File:Ponte_Nova_da_Cava_da_Velha-nascente.jpg|Cava da Velha Bridge, its central arch is originally Roman but a second one was added in the 13th century as well as its parapets. File:Ponte_do_Rio_Mouro.jpg|Barbeita Bridge (11th or 12th century), over Mouro River where King D.João I met with John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster in 1386. </gallery> In Portugal, castles are directly related with military needs and the state of continuous warfare characterised by the Reconquista. Populations living closer of the border between Christians and Muslims were under threat of constant raids and the advance of either sides in pursue of territorial conquest. The region more precociously fortified was the area south of the Douro river, where in the 10th century almost all the population centers had their castle. The majority of these defensive positions, the rural castles, were of very simple structure and took advantage of natural conditions such as high places with granite outcrops, that made access difficult. During the next three centuries (10th to 13th centuries) we witness a boom of castles due to the ever-growing necessity to provide a territorial passive defense. The strength of a Romanesque castle sits in the thickness and height of its walls in order to resist sieges. The Allure or round-path (Portuguese: Adarve) was intertwinned with towers in order to break continuous cloths of wall and in the 12th century other outer sets of walls were built next to castles themselves to shelter populations and cattle as attested in the Castle of Castro Laboreiro. The Romanesque castle testifies to the triumph of rural nobility and is also the symbol of a territory's safety. During this period it consisted of a wall with allures, battlements and a central tower: the Keep, symbol of feudal power, and the biggest innovation to the fortress. This element has its origins in the domus fortis, the strengthened noble residence. Between the North and the South of Portugal, particularly in the regions defined by the margins of the Mondego and Tejo Rivers, there are notable differences in military structures. In the North castles have a more basic structure and are very tied to fortifications typified in pre-Romanesque era. Going southwards castles display more advanced techniques in the field of military architecture. The strategic area was then concentrated on the border with the Moors where the Military Orders would play a key role. In the North we can find the castles of Lanhoso, Castro Laboreiro, Lindoso, Melgaço, Arnoia, Pena de Aguiar, Trancoso, Vilar Maior, and the most outstanding Guimarães Castle. This fortress, documented since around 950 AD, had undergone restoration works during the reign of D.Afonso Henriques and later changes in its layout in the Gothic period. Built under the tenure of Gualdim Pais as Master of the Knights Templar (1157-1195), the castles of Pombal (c.1156), Tomar (1160), Monsanto (1165), Penas Roias (1166), Almourol (1171) and Longroiva (1174) demonstrate the importance of the Templars in the development of Portuguese military architecture during the second half of the 12th century. The first document stating the Knights Templar presence in Portugal dates back to 1128, when Queen D.Teresa donated them the castle of Soure. Its keep, built on the north side of the fortress, retains a distinctive feature: the Alambor, a reinforced base for the tower using a stone-slanted ramp. This solution gives it greater strength and makes an assault on its walls harder to accomplish. This feature can also be seen in the Keep of Pombal Castle. At Tomar Castle, headquarters of the Order in Portugal, the alambor was built along the outer walls of the fortification. With origins in the military architecture developed by the Crusaders in the Holy Land, this constructive technique was used in the castle of Saône and the Krak des Chevaliers, both located in Syria, where Gualdim Pais was stationed between 1151 and 1156. It owns to the Templar Order some of the most innovative solutions that the Portuguese military architecture met throughout the 12th century. <gallery mode=packed caption="Castles" heights="160px"> File:Castelo_de_Almourol.jpg|Almourol Castle, rebuilt by 1171, it stands on a small islet in the Tejo River. File:Tomar_Castelo_0244.jpg|The alambor at Tomar Castle, a novelty brought to Portugal from the Holy Land by the Knights Templar. File:Castelo de Pombal.JPG|Thick walls and towers of Pombal Castle. File:CasteloDeMontemorOVelho_10.JPG|Montemor-o-Velho Castle, built in the 11th century. File:Castelo_de_Ourém_(7).JPG|The first reference to Ourém Castle dates back to 1178. File:Castelo_de_São_Jorge_(Lissabon_2009).jpg|Bridge entrance at São Jorge Castle in Lisbon. </gallery>
|
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zelda
|
48614535_Death
|
The Art Institute was never far from Hutchinson’s mind, and on his deathbed he was heard remarking to a friend “I love to lie here and think of it -- of all it will do for the people in the years to come!" He died at Presbyterian Hospital in Chicago on October 7, 1924 after a brief attack of bronchial pneumonia, at which time he was remembered for the “many official positions [he held] in charitable, philanthropic and educational bodies.” His will provided for generous donations to be made to the Art Institute, including twenty paintings from his private collection including those by Rossetti (Beata Beatrix, 1871/72), Maes (Portrait of a Woman and Portrait of Pierre Corneille), Jacob Gerritsz. Cuyp (Self-Portrait), Corot (Farm at Seine-et-Oise), Daubigny (Bords de l’Oise à Anvers), Palamedes (Portrait of Jan Miclasz Gael), Watts (Time, Death and Judgement and Portrait of Joachim), Leys (Rembrandt's Studio), Ranger(Noank Shipyard and Brooklyn Bridge), Dupré (Cows in Stream), Fromentin (Arab Boys at Play), Teniers (Man Lighting a Pipe), Dias (Wood Interior and Forest Pool), Caspar Netscher (Lady at the Mirror), Aert van der Neer (Winter Sports on the Schie River) and Hals (Portrait of Willem Van Heytheysen), as well as a cash bequest in the amount of $95,000 (c. $1,326,000 in 2015). Hutchinson is buried at Chicago's Graceland Cemetery.
|
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zelda
|
48616029_Introduction
|
Julen Arellano Sandúa (born 8 January 1997) is a Spanish footballer who plays for CD Calahorra as a .
|
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zelda
|
48616184_Cornelius as a given name
|
* Cornelius (musician), stage name of Japanese recording artist and producer Keigo Oyamada * Corneille (singer), stage name of Cornelius Nyungura, German-born Québécois rhythm and blues singer * Cornelius Agrippa, 15th century magician and cabalist * Cornelius W. Armstrong (1827–after 1872), New York politician * Cornelius Boza-Edwards, Super Featherweight boxing champion * Cornelius Burges, English minister * Cornelius Cardew, English composer * Cornelius the Centurion, considered by Christians to be the first Gentile converted * Cornelius Castoriadis, Greek-French astronomer, philosopher * Cornelius Crane Chase, better known under his stage name Chevy Chase, actor and comedian * Cornelius Coe, American football player * Cornelius Cole, Governor of California * Cornelius P. Comegys, American farmer and politician * Cornelius Fuscus, prefect of the Praetorian Guard * Cornelius Edward Gallagher (1921-2018), American politician * Cornelius Hankins (1863-1946), American painter. * Cornelius Hardy, Australian convict * Cornelius Henry, Canadian cricketer * Cornelius T. Herring (1849-1931), American rancher, banker and hotelier. * Cornelius Holland (regicide), regicide of Charles I of England * Cornelius Holland (politician), United States Representative from Maine * Cornelius Jakhelln, Norwegian musician * Cornelius Johnson (athlete), African-American high jump athlete * Cornelius Lanczos, Hungarian mathematician and physicist * Cornelius Lysaght, horse racing correspondent * Cornelius McGillicuddy Sr., better known as Connie Mack, baseball player, Philadelphia Athletics owner and manager, and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame * Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy III, better known as Connie Mack III, senator from Florida * Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy IV, better known as Connie Mack IV, congressman from Florida * Cornelius Nepos, Roman historian of Gaul * Cornelius Pot, Dutch football coach; currently assistant coach at FC Zenit Saint Petersburg * Cornelius Ryan (1920–1974), author of The Longest Day and A Bridge Too Far * Cornelio Saavedra, first President of Argentina 1810 * Cornelius Calvin Sale Jr., birth name of Robert Byrd, senator and congressman from West Virginia * Cornelius "Corrie" Sanders, South African boxer * Cornelius Sherlock (d.1888), British architect * Cornelius Van Til, a Christian philosopher, Reformed theologian, and presuppositional apologist * Cornelius Vander Starr, AKA Cornelius van der Starr, founder of AIG, the insurance company * Cornelius Vanderbilt, American industrialist * Cornelius Wiebe, Canadian physician and politician * Pope Cornelius, pope from AD 251 to 253 * St. Cornelius (disambiguation)
|
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zelda
|
48620213_Electoral career
|
Johnson was a member of the Assembly from 1919 to 1923. Previously, he had been Chairman (similar to Mayor) of Norway and a member of the Racine County, Wisconsin Board of Supervisors from 1896 to 1903. Other positions Johnson held include school board member. He was a Republican.
|
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zelda
|
48622799_Life
|
Ajeti was born on 26 June 1917 in the Tupale () village of the Upper Jablanica region in Serbia (modern Medveđa municipality). He finished the Serbian language elementary school in the nearby Sijarinska Banja village which he finished by 1930, and high school studies in the Royal Madrasa in Skopje in 1938. Ajeti registered in the Romanistics branch of the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Zagreb, but finished his studies after the end of World War II, precisely in 1949, graduating from the Faculty of Philosophy in the University of Belgrade. From 1949-53 he taught Albanian at a high school in Pristina; from 1953-60 he worked as pedagogue in the Albanology branch of the University of Belgrade. In 1958 he gave his dissertation thesis "Zhvillimi historik i së folmes gege të shqiptarëve të Zarës së Dalmacisë" ("Historical development of the Gheg dialect of the Albanians of Zara in Dalmatia"). In 1960 he received the academic title of Docent, and in 1968 the Professor one, at the same time lecturing in Albanian Language and Literature in the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Pristina. He was one of the initiators of the Gjurmime Albanologjike ("Albanological Reconnaissance") scientific magazine. Another achievement was the establishment of the Albanian culture seminary for the foreign albanologists. During 1969-71, Ajeti served as Director of the Albanological Institute, during 1971-73 as dean of Faculty of Philosophy in Pristina, and during 1973-75 as rector of the University of Pristina. He was also Chairman of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Kosovo during 1979-81, and 1996-99. He participated in the Orthography Congress of 1972 in Tirana, where the standard orthographic rules of the Albanian language were defined, and was a signatory. He has received several acknowledgments and honors, between others "7 July" award of the SR Serbia and the AVNOJ one.
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zelda
|
48622907_History
|
Industrialisation during the nineteenth century led to the rapid growth of an urban middle class in Germany with sufficient time and money to take holidays. The German word for Nightmare is "Alptraum", but by 1849 romantic artists such as Ludwig Richter and Caspar David Friedrich had nevertheless shown people how to appreciate the beauty of the Alps. An early convert was King Maximilian of Bavaria who had his summer holiday palace built at Berchtesgaden. The opening in 1860 of the railway between Rosenheim and Salzburg made the region more accessible than hitherto. A rail-link to Bad Reichenhall was added in 1866, which by 1888 had been extended all the way to Berchtesgaden. Hugo Geiger (1828 - 1874) retired from the Royal Bavarian Customs Service when he was only 37, in 1865, and purchased a small farm house located between Stanggaß (Bischofswiesen) and Berchtesgaden, intending to adapt it as a retirement home where he could live with his wife. Geiger was suffering from ill health, and his wife, who was much younger than he was, and had grown up as the daughter of a guest house owner in northern Bavaria, now took the lead in converting their fifteenth century farm house into a nineteenth century guest house. The project was accompanied by a name change, and the "Hienleitlehen farmhouse" was relaunched in 1866 as the "Haus Geiger" (guesthouse). Growth in guest numbers was sustained by German unification and the new rail connections which made its easier to market the Bavarian Alps as a tourist destination, attracting visitors from Germany's burgeoning industrial regions far beyond Munich. The tourism boom persuaded the Geigers to invest in a major extension of the building in 1874, constructing an extra wing on its south-eastern side. Hugo Geiger died in 1874. The guest house was taken over by his eldest son, Franz Geiger, and his wife, Nina (born Nina Kriß) who was a member of the local brewing family. During the next two decades the hotel underwent major expansion and moved upmarket. In 1884 rooms in the Main Building were redesigned and elegantly furnished. The architect Wicklein was employed to design a two-storey annex (later known as the "Dependance") to the north of the main building, and this opened in 1890. By 1924 Rudolf Geiger, grandson of the hotel founder, had taken over, and that year he opened a gas/petrol station beside the hotel for the convenience of guests. It was the first gas/petrol station in the locality. The local economy received a boost in 1933 when Germany's new chancellor purchased a summer villa on the far side of Berchtesgaden a few kilometers away, and set about converting it into a summer residence fit for a leader. The Berghof became something of a German tourist attraction during the mid-1930s. Visitors gathered on nearby public paths in the hope of catching a glimpse of Hitler, which led to a proliferation of security measures and restrictions on access a few kilometers to the east of the hotel. On the other side of the Stanggaß district of Bischofswiesen itself, a twenty-minute walk to the west of the hotel, the authorities constructed the :Berchtesgaden Chancelry Branch office ("Reichskanzlei Dienststelle Berchtesgaden"), to which key politicians and government functionaries moved their offices when the chancellor was staying at his summer residence along the road in the other direction. By the time of the war, which broke out in 1939, the Hotel Geiger had become a rest and recreation centre for Luftwaffe officers: caves and tunnels carved into the hillside to provide shelter from bombing date from this period. Early in May 1945 US and French troops arrived in the area, and at the Hotel Geiger US army officers replaced German Luftwaffe officers. One of these, John F. Kennedy, later became President of the United States. The hotel was subsequently restored to civilian use and significant development took place in 1972 when it acquired its own indoor swimming pool. Bed capacity was increased a few years later when another two floor accommodation block went up in 1976, extended with a third floor in 1982. However, on 1 November 1997, at which point the hotel had been in the Geiger family for more than 130 years, insolvency forced the closure of the hotel. Subsequently, it was used as a setting for one or two films including "Der Winterschläfer" and "Wilde Hühner". It also featured in several episodes of the vetinerary fictional series, "Tierarzt Dr. Quirin Engel" and in one episode of the light-hearted Weißblaue Geschichten series. The buildings continued to be heated and guarded by Stephen Geiger till Summer 1998, after which the banks foreclosed on the furnishings and the buildings began to deteriorate. The site was sold in 2017 to Bartl Wimmer: demolition of the 1960s and 1970s parts of the site started in January 2018.
|
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zelda
|
48623186_Background
|
This recording was made during a string of European festivals during the 2013 tour. The set is most notable for a quartet of songs from The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle: "Kitty’s Back", "Incident on 57th Street", "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)" and "New York City Serenade" featuring the Roma Sinfonietta string section were performed together for only the second time since 1975.
|
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zelda
|
48624147_Political career
|
Moore was a member of the Assembly during the 1872 session. Previously, he had been an unsuccessful candidate for the Assembly in 1858. Other positions Moore held include County Treasurer of Racine County, Wisconsin. He was a Republican.
|
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zelda
|
48624480_Impact
|
Tini's strongest winds occurred across southern Ireland, across the Irish Sea towards Wales and into North West England. Red (Take action) Weather warnings were issued by Met Éireann and by the UK Met Office for "danger to life". The UK Met Office gave out wind warnings of up to 60–70 mph winds for 12 February. In the Celtic Sea south of Ireland the Kinsale Energy Platform reported sustained winds of and a gust of . Sherkin Island, Ireland's second southernmost point reported a gust of . Gusts reached at Cork Airport (the strongest recorded at the site in 25 years) which led to the closure of the airport as part of the terminal roof and several gantry signs were damaged. Mace Head had the highest mean 10-minute wind speed and hurricane-force winds (mean 10-minute wind speed of above 64 knots) also on the 12th with 65 knots (120 km/h), the fifth highest wind speed recorded in Ireland. Shannon Airport recorded the highest gust of the month on the 12th at , the highest for February on record since 1945 and the maximum wind gust since Hurricane Debbie in 1961 at the airport. At Shannon Airport an Aer Arann ATR42-300 EI-BYO was blown onto its wing in 160 km/h gusts. The aircraft suffered damage to it left side. No injuries were reported as the aircraft was empty at the time of the incident. The aircraft has since been written off. During the passage of the storm there were reports of a tornado in Athleague, County Roscommon. University College Cork was evacuated, and the University of Limerick was placed in lockdown due to flying debris. A major emergency was declared by Kilkenny County Council due to the storm, before being stood down the same day. Strong winds blew the roof off Limerick Boat Club in the city. On 12 February 2014 the Kinsale Energy Gas Platform recorded a maximum wave height of 25 metres, apart from being a record at that location, it is also the highest maximum wave height recorded in Irish coastal waters (the previous record being 23.44 metres close to the M4 buoy in Donegal Bay off the Northwest coast recorded on 26 February 2014). The Irish state electricity board, ESB reported 260,000 users were without power at the height of the storm. With a total of 280,000 households (13% of all customers in |Ireland) affected as a result of the storm. The Energy Networks Association, claimed about 80,000 homes and businesses remained without electricity on 12 February 2014. The storm was particularly damaging to the Irish high voltage network, causing faults in 54 high voltage substations (each of which provide supply to 5,000–20,000 homes and businesses). with 25,000 individual faults reported on the power network. This was the second time ESB activated its Emergency Management Plan and Crisis Communications Plan, after 27 December 2013. The storm brought widespread tree falls and road closures around Ireland, with damage to buildings reported across southern Ireland. Cork County Council was criticised for not clearing fallen trees quickly enough and had to call in trained professionals to use chainsaws. Police declared a major emergency in County Kilkenny. Between 5,000 and 7,000 hectares of forest have been blown down, mainly in Munster. Across Ireland an estimated 7.5 million trees in total were blown down. In the early hours of 13 February the Irish contender for European Tree of the Year fell, a 200-year-old Grey Poplar in the grounds of Birr Castle, County Offaly. Many roads across Wales were closed by falling trees, several railway lines also affected. Anglesey wind turbines burst into flames. Porthmadog railway station part of the roof blown off. gusts up to 108 km/h in Wales. 52,000 in mid and north Wales, and 23,000 in south Wales without power. 92 mph gust at exposed coast of the mumbles. A funnel cloud was reported in Llansamlet. Particularly North West England which saw winds up to , with a peak gust of recorded on Great Dun Fell in the Pennines. Led to the closure of the M6, M60, M55 and M62 which saw severe delays due to overturned vehicles and dangerously high winds and trees blown over blocking roads. Across the region widespread structural damage occurred and power supplies to about 20,000 homes were lost. Transport was severely disrupted with flights, trains and ferries all cancelled and delayed. The storm brought disruption to both the West Coast Main Line, which was closed between Preston and Shap, and the East Coast Main Line. Crewe railway station evacuated after winds blew roof panels onto the overhead electricity cables causing fires, the station was closed and 500 passengers evacuated. There were severe traffic delays in and around Manchester as bridges were closed and fallen trees blocked roads. Railway stations were closed and traffic was delayed or not running leaving hundreds of stranded travellers. The secondary depression Tini II formed over northern France 13 February, with a peak gust 163 km/h recorded at the Phare de Gatteville Normandy, building and forestry damage occurred in Alsace and Champagne Ardennes due to this storm. The highest exposed site in Switzerland at Chasseral in the Jura Mountains saw winds of 154 km/h.
|
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zelda
|
48625565_Introduction
|
The Noonan–Estevan Highway Border Crossing connects the cities of Noonan, North Dakota and Estevan, Saskatchewan on the Canada–US border. It is reached by North Dakota Highway 40 on the American side and Saskatchewan Highway 47 on the Canadian side. The United States replaced its red brick border station with a ranch-style facility in the late 1960s, and then demolished that in favor of a large grey modern facility in 2012. Canada built its double-canopy border station in 1972. The US and Canada had Customs offices located in the towns of Noonan, North Dakota and Estevan, Saskatchewan respectively until 1937, when both nations constructed inspection stations at the border.
|
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] |
zelda
|
48625697_Introduction
|
General elections were held in Zimbabwe on 30 July 2018 to elect the President and members of both houses of Parliament. Held eight months after the 2017 coup d'état, the election was the first since independence in which former President Robert Mugabe was not a candidate. ZANU–PF, the country's ruling party, went into the election with majorities in both the House of Assembly and the Senate. The main opposition, the Movement for Democratic Change – Tsvangirai, contested the election as part of the MDC Alliance, a coalition that included the MDC–T and six smaller parties. The election gave ZANU–PF control of both houses in the 9th Parliament of Zimbabwe, though with reduced majorities in each. The MDC Alliance gained seats in both houses, closely corresponding to ZANU–PF's losses. In the presidential election, Emmerson Mnangagwa, who became President as a result of the 2017 coup, ran for reelection as the ZANU–PF candidate. Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC–T leader expected to run against him, died in February 2018, and Nelson Chamisa, the new party leader, replaced him as the MDC Alliance candidate. In results that were disputed by the MDC Alliance, Mnangagwa won with 50.8% of the vote to Chamisa's 44.3%, giving him the majority needed to avoid a runoff. Mnangagwa won six of the country's ten provinces, while Chamisa won four, including the two metropolitan provinces, Harare and Bulawayo.
|
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zelda
|
48625899_Introduction
|
'Depravity's Demise' is the debut of melodic death metal band Solamors. The band recorded the album with Jon Star, former Lead Guitarist for Becoming the Archetype, which Vocalist Jason Wisdom and Guitarist/Bassist/Keyboardist Alex Kenis were also a part of.
|
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zelda
|
48627137_Introduction
|
George John Kakasic (April 24, 1912 – January 30, 1973) was an American football guard who played for four seasons for the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National Football League. He played college football at Duquesne University for the Duquesne Dukes football team.
|
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zelda
|
48630877_Introduction
|
August Heden (May 21, 1856 – February 3, 1946) was an American lumberman and politician. Born in Dalsland, Sweden, Heden emigrated to the United States in 1880 and settle in Pennsylvania and then the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. In 1882, Heden moved to the town of Ogema, Price County, Wisconsin and was involved in the lumber industry. He also owned a farm and a general store. Heden served on the Ogema Town Board and was town assessor; he was also a jury commissioner. In 1913 and 1915, Heden served in the Wisconsin State Assembly and was a Republican. His son was Ernest A. Heden who also served in the Wisconsin Legislature. Heden died in Ogema, Wisconsin.
|
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zelda
|
48634167_Plot
|
At 5:00 p.m. on the afternoon of June 3, 1980, three hours before the tornadic thunderstorm hits Hall County, Danny and his best friend Arthur Darlington – an inquisitive California native with six sisters – take a bike trip to the Mormon Island State Recreation Area to go on their first swim of the summer, where they discuss the art class taught by Danny's aunt, Goldie, where Arthur created a bull roarer as part of a Native American crafts project (and accidentally broke a light bulb in the basement with); while at Mormon Island, they run into Arthur's 14-year-old older sister Stacey – whom Danny is infatuated with – and 10-year-old younger sister Ronnie Vae, whom Arthur declines to give a ride home before the storm hits. On their way home, Danny and Arthur are foreshadowed with the oncoming storm, when they endure strong winds as they cut through the Fonner Park parking lot and Sand Crane Drive. An hour later, Danny asks his mother Linda – who quit her job as a hairdresser to take care of her infant son Ryan after he was born – to see if Arthur can stay for dinner, while his father John plans to head out to his parents' farm in Phillips after dinner to fix his father's broken tractor. After dinner, Goldie arrives to borrow Linda's bowling ball to attend a bowling league night at Meves Bowl, as the boys are about to take a bike ride through their neighborhood, where they run into their 81-year-old neighbor, Belle Smiley, whose hair Linda is supposed to style before a church bazaar that Friday – and visit the Darlington's house. When they return to the Hatch house, as Linda sews a birthday dress for Grandma Hatch, Arthur sits down to watch television, and as Danny looks for snacks, the show they turned to on KGIN (referred to in the book by its real-life brand name, "10/11," in reference to Lincoln parent station KOLN and its Grand Island-based ) is interrupted by a severe weather bulletin about a tornado and funnel cloud sightings north of Grand Island, in St. Paul and Dannebrog. Several minutes after Linda leaves to check on Mrs. Smiley after being unable to contact her by phone, and placing Danny and Arthur in charge of looking after Ryan, tornado sirens blare as a worried Danny tries to phone his grandmother to warn his grandparents and John of the oncoming tornado, only for the siren to abruptly cut off after Danny hangs up when the phone line cuts out. Seconds after the sirens sound again, a worried Arthur rushes to tell Danny of a tornado alert that was just broadcast over the radio. Right then, a violent tornado hits their neighborhood, sending Danny and Arthur scrambling to get Ryan and take cover in the basement. As the twister starts to obliterate the Hatches' home, they ride out the storm in the shower of the basement's bathroom; they remain there for several more minutes after the tornado passes, as rain and hail hit them from above the gaping hole where the first floor of the house once stood, and as water from one of the severed underground pipes seeps in underneath them. After Danny and Arthur – who become fearful whether or not their families survived – escape from the basement of the leveled house (with Ryan in tow) through the collapsing floor beams with the help of Stacey (who arrived after the storm passed, searching for Arthur), and look in awe of the rubble that was once the Hatch family home, Stacey informs Arthur that the rest of their family is alive, although Ronnie Vae was sucked out of the Darlingtons' now-demolished home (as she, Stacey and Mrs. Darlington were unable to fit under the master bed with the other four female Darlington children, leaving the three having to resort to lying flat on the floor) and briefly knocked unconscious after landing into the bushes of their neighbors, the Winegars. After Dan spots the wreckage of Goldie's home and Linda's car in the next yard over, Stacey and Arthur spot Linda running toward them, later recalling how she and Mrs. Smiley took shelter as the tornado came at them. As rescuers search for residents unaccounted for, Danny, Arthur and Stacey volunteer to search for Mrs. Smiley, who is trapped in her roofless house, to the reluctant allowance of Linda, who takes Ryan and boards a bus to a local shelter. The three go to rescue Belle from the basement, using her kitchen table to navigate to her amid the partially collapsed back stairs, after Dan and Arthur find her asleep on a sofa, which they use as a makeshift ladder to get her and themselves out the window with Stacey helping them from outside. While seeking information about his dad, Danny exhibits more worry when a firefighter informs him that tornadoes were reported near Phillips, where John and Danny's grandparents are. As Dan, Stacey and Arthur are transported by police car with other evacuees to the Kmart on South Locust Street (one of the few buildings that escaped damage from another tornado that had hit the business district minutes after the one that destroyed the Hatches' and Darlingtons' neighborhood struck), Danny struggles to find out what happened to the Hatch farm in Phillips, when he hears a message on the two-way radio that Meves Bowl was struck. Shortly after, the police car experiences a close call, when another tornado touches down near the car's location and cuts through their path; Officer Kelly – who begins to lose his vision after the car's windows shatter from the twister's violent outer winds, spraying his eyes with flying glass – then asks Dan to help him steer the car to the Grand Island Police Department headquarters, eventually letting Danny take over driving. Later that night at the police station, Dan, Arthur and Stacey are moved to the women's room of the jail that is serving as an emergency shelter for some of the tornado victims, where at one point, they listen to stories from the other families who lost their homes in the first tornado; Arthur later ponders why Grand Island had to be hit, even wondering if playing with the bull roarer caused the tornadoes due to a Hopi legend that its roar brings about whirlwinds, leading Dan to wonder himself if the tornado was his punishment for his jealousy and resentment of Ryan. Struggling to sleep, Stacey helps Danny take his mind off his worry by quoting scripture, when the generator at the station suddenly goes out partway through the verse, knocking out power to the entire building. The next morning, Danny, Arthur and Stacey discuss walking to the Kmart and the local armory, when the jail matron, Mrs. Minetti, asks the policewoman on duty to take the kids there on her way to her house in Doniphan, when the group experiences the grayness and mugginess of the weather. At the armory, Stacey and Arthur reunite with their relieved father, working in his office, who had been out searching for his two oldest children the previous night. Just before Minetti escorts Danny to the Kmart where Linda and Ryan are, Mr. Darlington informs Danny that he doesn't know the whereabouts of John or Goldie. With all streets barricaded either by bulldozers and various emergency vehicles or downed lines and water on the roadway, Mrs. Minetti offers to either take Danny to her house in Doniphan or back to the armory; Danny asks to walk the way to the Kmart on his own, and dodges all obstacles along the way once he departs. When he arrives, he finds out the store's parking lot has been turned into an emergency command post and all civilians taken to the store were evacuated during the night due to high water, being transported to other shelters. Just as Dan makes a run for it back to his destroyed house to see if either of his parents went there, John – with Linda and Ryan in the passenger's seat – drives up behind in his pickup truck as Danny crosses Fonner Park, where the family is reunited. Danny finds out that the tornado that hit Phillips had missed the farm (although the crops in the farmland were flooded by the heavy rain accompanying the storm), and that John spent much of the overnight searching around Grand Island for the rest of the family after returning to town and the remnants of their home on Sand Crane Drive around 1:15 a.m., eventually finding Linda and Ryan at a Presbyterian church – where they and Mrs. Smiley were sleeping on a rug in the minister's study – three hours and 15 minutes later but unable to find Danny when at the police station. The Hatches later arrive at their home, staring at the tattered remains from inside the truck. In the epilogue, Danny explains what happened in the year since the storm. The family temporarily stayed on the Hatch farm, along with Arthur, whose family members stayed elsewhere, with Stacey living with her friend Evelyn, while Ronnie Vae (who did not talk or speak for three days after being tossed into the bushes by the tornado) stayed with cousins in California, before the Hatches and Darlingtons moved into government-provided trailers that August. Goldie – who, after being rescued from the destroyed Meves Bowl, wound up being taken to Omaha by a truck driver, where she stayed in a hotel, before reuniting with the Hatches on the farm the following Friday by transport from a Red Cross volunteer – opted to move into an apartment closer to the center of Grand Island. People in and outside of town help bring food and supplies to Grand Island, including Mrs. Smiley, who – with the help of some Mennonites – served canned food to others in town. By June 3, 1981, when the Hatches throw a party commemorating the first anniversary of the tornado in their newly rebuilt home, the family has adopted a new cat, Minerva II, to replace the one who disappeared (and presumably, died) during the tornado and Arthur's mother has given birth to a seventh child, a girl named Tempest June. Mrs. Smiley, meanwhile, died three months before the anniversary, while waiting for a doctor's appointment.
|
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zelda
|
48636098_Introduction
|
Kohler Interiors is the furniture, title and decorative products division of the Kohler Company. It includes six subsidiaries.
|
[
{
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"label": [
"625919"
]
}
] |
zelda
|
48636691_Introduction
|
La Fonda on the Plaza is a historical luxury hotel, located at 100 E. San Francisco Street and Old Santa Fe Trail in downtown Santa Fe, New Mexico adjacent to the Plaza. La Fonda simply means "the inn" in Spanish, but the hotel has been described as "the grand dame of Santa Fe's hotels."
|
[
{
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]
},
{
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]
},
{
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"label": [
"9531992"
]
},
{
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}
] |
zelda
|
48636691_See also
|
* List of Historic Hotels of America * Santa Fe Plaza * Loretto Chapel
|
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},
{
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zelda
|
48636978_Education
|
Heaton received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale University in 1994, and her Master of Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2000. She was awarded a Jacob K. Javits Fellowship to attend the Master of Fine Arts program at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University in Boston, Massachusetts. Heaton went on to study at the MIT Media Lab and graduated with a MS from MIT in 2000. The subject of her Master's thesis was "physical pixels", a sculptural effort to liberate computer graphics from the flat screen of a computer monitor. Heaton's suite of prototypes included the "Digital Palette" for sequencing loops of colored-light animation, and "Peano", a system of reconfigurable blocks, each of which behaved as an RGB pixel. In 2001, her thesis work was awarded the L'Oreal Promotion Prize in the Art and Science of Color.
|
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zelda
|
48638710_Career
|
===Sunderland=== Born in Prudhoe, Northumberland, Honeyman joined Sunderland's academy at the age of 10. He made his professional debut on 15 February 2015 in the fifth round of the FA Cup, replacing Ricky Álvarez for the final four minutes of a 2–0 away loss to Bradford City. Manager Gus Poyet admitted that Honeyman would have been put on earlier had the team not had injury concerns, admitting that "George would have been coming on earlier because we needed a bit of his running between the lines and ability to make runs". He was included in the matchday squad for one Premier League match that season, remaining unused in a 1–1 draw to Stoke City. On 16 October 2015, Honeyman was loaned to National League club Gateshead for a month, as fellow Sunderland youngster Lynden Gooch had done the previous season. He made his league debut the following day, starting in a 2–2 home draw against Altrincham. On 31 October, he netted the first goal of his career, the winner in a 3–2 win away to Boreham Wood. He scored his first goal for Sunderland in a 1–0 EFL Cup first round win to Bury on 10 August 2017. Six days later, he scored a first league goal to open a 1–1 draw away to Sheffield Wednesday. In August 2018, as Sunderland prepared for the League One season following a second successive relegation, Honeyman was appointed captain at the age of 23 by new manager Jack Ross, as John O'Shea left for Reading. He became the first academy-produced player to be club captain since Michael Gray. Honeyman signed for Championship club Hull City on 2 August 2019 on a three-year contract with the option of a further year for an undisclosed fee - this ended his 14 year association with Sunderland. He made his debut on 10 August when he came on as a 79th-minute substitute in a 2−1 home win against Reading.
|
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zelda
|
48638994_Introduction
|
Maritime Administration of DPR Korea (), also known as North Korea Maritime Administration Bureau (MAB), is the North Korean maritime authority. MAB offers a searchable database for North Korean merchant navy ships and seafarers on its website. Unlike many other shipping databases, MAB offers its ship and person data without requiring registration or membership for access. The director-general of MAB in 2012 was Ko Nung-du. He signed the notification for International Maritime Organization about Kwangmyŏngsŏng-3 launch. MAB has a sports team in the annual Paektusan Prize Games of Civil Servants.
|
[
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{
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zelda
|
48639384_American Civil War and aftermath
|
When South Carolina declared that it had seceded from the Union in December 1860, Major Robert Anderson moved his garrison of U.S. troops to Fort Sumter and requested reinforcements from the federal government. On January 9, 1861, a battery on Morris Island manned by Citadel Academy cadets fired on the U.S. steamer Star of the West, preventing it from reaching Fort Sumter with troops and supplies and thus firing what is considered to be the first shots of the American Civil War. Along with Confederate troops, Citadel cadets also manned several guns at "the battery" on Charleston harbor during the firing on Fort Sumter of April 12–13, 1861; The first shot of the bombardment is believed by many historians to have been fired by Second Lieutenant Henry S. Farley, Class of 1860. On January 28, 1861 the Corps of Cadets from the Arsenal Academy (in Columbia) and the Citadel Academy (in Charleston) known as The SC Military Academy was made part of the military organization of the state and named the Battalion of State Cadets. The Academy continued to operate as a military academy, but classes were often disrupted when the governor called the cadets into military service. Mounting and manning heavy guns, performing guard duty, providing security and escorting prisoners were among the services performed by the cadets. The Battalion of State Cadets participated in eight engagements during the Civil War. As a result of these actions, the state of South Carolina authorized the flag of the South Carolina Corps of Cadets to carry the following Confederate battle streamers: # Confederate States Army # Star of the West, January 9, 1861 # Wappoo Cut, November 1861 # James Island, June 1862 # Charleston and Vicinity, July–October 1863 # James Island, June 1864 # Tulifinny, December 1864 # James Island, December 1864 – February 1865 # Williamston, May 1865 (The Confederate States Army streamer is gray embroidered in silver and the remainder embroidered in blue) In early December, 1864 Governor Milledge Luke Bonham ordered the Battalion of State Cadets to Tulifinny Creek near Yemassee, South Carolina to join a small Confederate force defending the Charleston and Savannah Railroad. On December 7 and 9 the entire Corps of Cadets from the SCMA fought a much larger Union force (including a contingent of U.S. Marines) in the Battle of Tulifinny, successfully defending the rail line and forcing the Union troops to withdraw; the cadets suffered eight casualties and one cadet died after the battle from his injuries. The Battalion of State Cadets was commended for their display of discipline and gallantry under fire winning the admiration of the veteran troops who fought with them, only The Citadel and The Virginia Military Institute have fought pitched battle with their entire student bodies; The Citadel is also one of only 7 colleges to have received a battle streamer for wartime service. During the Civil War, 43 graduates and 200 former cadets were Killed in Action. On February 18, 1865, the school ceased operation as a college when Union troops entered Charleston and occupied the site. Following the war, the Board of Visitors eventually regained possession of The Citadel campus and with the urging of Governor Johnson Hagood, Class of 1847, the South Carolina Legislature passed an act to reopen the college. The 1882 session began with an enrollment of 185 cadets.
|
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zelda
|
48640153_Media
|
Hong Kong is considered to be one of the most sophisticated and successful telecommunications markets in the world, with a household broadband penetration rate of 77.8 per cent, and that does not include Hong Kongers with dial-up internet access. There are also a huge amount of mobile subscribers in Hong Kong, as well as a high level of media saturation. Mass media is found everywhere in Hong Kong. As seen in many other places globally, mass media can harmfully effect young people. In Hong Kong mass media can influence the formation of different types of behaviours and values such as sexual and deviant behaviour. Factors indicating differences in time spent with and interacting with mass media include gender and family background. Female youth spend more time on television and blogging while male youth spend more time on the internet. Youth who consider their families in a "difficult" economic status spend considerably more time online than their counterparts from the middle class and rich. Some negative aspects that come out of Hong Kong youth's social media access is cyber bullying, participating in "compensated dating" and copyright infringement. The most common reasons to why Hong Kong youth go on the internet were for entertainment, searching for information, and connecting with friends. Roughly 29.4 per cent of Hong Kong youth have contributed to Wikipedia in their lifetime. Many Hong Kong youth also use social media in order to communicate with each other during social movements, and to gain information about social movements. One news reporter stated, that during the Umbrella Revolution, "the predominantly young demonstrators of Hong Kong... also thought of ways to disseminate information with their mobiles should the authorities decide to cut internet reception to these devices." During the Umbrella Revolution Hong Kong youth created Facebook pages, and used WhatsApp to send out information to the masses.
|
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zelda
|
48640732_Background and development
|
Following the success of their last world tour, the group announced summer festival shows at Rock in Rio Lisboa, Sweden Rock Festival and Isle of Wight Festival. as well as announcing Asian shows afterwards, including a headline slot at the Formula One Singapore Grand Prix, where they will perform at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, along with other headline acts like Halsey, Imagine Dragons and Kylie Minogue.
|
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zelda
|
48642842_Biography
|
Hathaway was born on March 1, 1833 in Swanton (town), Vermont. He moved to Wisconsin in 1853, and engaged in iron manufacturing in Mayville, Wisconsin, and lead mining in Beetown, Wisconsin. He died in Exeter, California on November 1, 1909. He was buried at Home of Peace Cemetery in Porterville, California.
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zelda
|
48644131_Variants
|
;Fun :Base model with a Vittorazi 130 engine in pusher configuration with a 2.31:1 ratio reduction drive and a diameter two-bladed wooden propeller. Empty weight is . ;Fun Alu :Model with a engine in pusher configuration with a 2.30:1 ratio reduction drive and a diameter two-bladed wooden propeller. Empty weight is . ;Fun Power :Model with a JPX 130 engine in pusher configuration with a 2.5:1 ratio reduction drive and a diameter two-bladed wooden propeller. Empty weight is . ;Fun Solo :Model with a Solo 210 engine in pusher configuration with a 2.5:1 ratio reduction drive and a diameter two-bladed wooden propeller. Empty weight is .
|
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zelda
|
48644184_Life
|
Higginson was born in Holywell, Flintshire, United Kingdom in 1844 where her parents were staying whilst of pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Winefride. Her father Robert Francis Higginson was a Catholic and his wife was a convert. Higginson went to a convent school in Nottingham, and became a schoolteacher at Bootle. During her life Higginson's hands and feet bled in a way known as stigmata, she went into prayer trances that lasted days, and she "violently re-enacted" the scenes in the Stations of the Cross. Higginson died in Chudleigh and was declared a Servant of God.
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zelda
|
48645136_Early years
|
Matakevich attended St. Joseph High School in Trumbull, Connecticut. He played linebacker and running back on the football team and also played baseball. He finished his high school career with 2,357 yards rushing, 1,355 yards receiving, 3,898 all-purpose yards on offense, and 371 tackles, 4.5 sacks, three forced fumbles, six fumble recoveries, and eight interceptions on defense. Over the course of his career, he scored 59 total touchdowns. During a pre-season scrimmage his senior year he broke his foot and wound up missing five games, therefore after high school graduation he attended Milford Academy. After one year at Milford Academy, Matakevich committed to Temple University to play college football.
|
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zelda
|
48648488_Career
|
After graduating from university, Martin took the Civil Service fast-stream entrance exam. He came top and chose to join HM Treasury for what would be the last months of Kenneth Clarke's tenure. Under Brown, Martin took a number of roles, including being seconded to the Security Service ("MI5"). He eventually served as Brown's Press Secretary, remaining in post serving Alistair Darling when he replaced him as the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He held board level jobs at the Treasury and a Cabinet Office agency. In January 2010, Martin moved to the Cabinet Office and was appointed deputy to the Cabinet Secretary (then Sir Gus O'Donnell). In December 2011, he was appointed the Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister and Director General of the . In the 2014 Queen's Birthday Honours, Martin was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) "for public service". In 2015, he was also appointed a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (CVO); he was presented with the insignia for his CVO during a special ceremony in hospital (UCLH) on 21 November 2015, four days before his death.
|
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zelda
|
48650887_Introduction
|
The 1936–37 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team represented Indiana University. Their head coach was Everett Dean, who was in his 13th year. The team played its home games in The Fieldhouse in Bloomington, Indiana, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference. The Hoosiers finished the regular season with an overall record of 13–7 and a conference record of 6–6, finishing 6th in the Big Ten Conference.
|
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zelda
|
48651681_Events
|
16 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in January, of which all were confirmed. 4 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in January, of which all were confirmed. 53 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in March. On March 18, a minor outbreak swept across Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas. The strongest tornado was an F3 that struck Copan, Oklahoma. An F2 tornado hit Catoosa, Oklahoma, a suburb of Tulsa. On March 29, tornadoes touched down across Iowa and Illinois, including an F4 tornado that hit Elmo, Missouri. An F0 struck a small suburb of Denver. 123 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in April. A large tornado outbreak also called "Terrible Tuesday", broke out in Texas and Oklahoma. Several deadly tornadoes occurred, including an F4 that decimated buildings in Wichita Falls, killing 42 people. An F2 tornado was notable for killing one person when it struck a mobile home park in Boonville, Indiana. A tornado killed 3 people in Lawton, Oklahoma. Overall, there were 58 deaths and over 2,000 injuries. There were 112 tornadoes reported in the U.S. in May. 150 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in June. A small outbreak of tornadoes broke out in Iowa, including an F4 that killed 3 people in Manson, Iowa. 132 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in July. An F3 tornado struck Cheyenne, Wyoming causing one fatality and 40 injuries. The Cheyenne, Wyoming Tornado Of 1979 was the first to receive national attention by videotape as it ripped apart 500 homes. 126 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in August. At least three tornadoes touched down in Woodstock, Ontario, killing two people and injuring 142 others. 69 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in September. An F3 tornado touched down in Tysons, Virginia, killing one person. 47 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in October. An F4 tornado touched down in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, being a very rare New England tornado. The tornado was ranked as one of the costliest tornadoes in U.S. history, killing 3 people. 21 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in November. 2 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in December.
|
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zelda
|
48653228_Introduction
|
Count Francesco Zambeccari (1756 - 21 September 1812) was an Italian aviation pioneer. He was killed in a ballooning accident. Zambeccari was born in Bologna in 1756, son of Senator Giacomo Zambeccari. He studied at the Collegio dei nobili in Parma and then enlisted in the Guardia Real in Spain and served in the Spanish Navy. He fled from the Spanish Inquisition, and was in Paris in 1783 where he observed the first unmanned balloon flights by the Montgolfier brothers. He then moved to London and launched the first unmanned balloon in Britain on 4 November 1783, a year before the first manned flight in England by Vincent Lunardi, releasing a hydrogen balloon from the house of Michael Biaggini, a maker of artificial flowers made from silk and other fabrics, at 33 Noble Street, on Cheapside. The balloon was later found by a farmer at Waltham Abbey. The experiment was repeated a few weeks later, as a commercial enterprise for which Zambeccari and Biaggini sold tickets, with a release of a balloon from the grounds of the Honourable Artillery Company on 25 November; this balloon was found nearly away at Petworth. Biaggini released an even larger balloon from Grosvenor Square in January 1784. Zambeccari was commissioned to launch a balloon in Venice in April 1784, an occasion that was painted by Francesco Guardi. He also collaborated with Vincent Lunardi before Lunardi's first manned flight in England on 15 September 1784. Zambeccari and Admiral Sir Edward Vernon ascended in a balloon from Tottenham Court Road on 23 March 1785 and landed later the same day near Horsham. The balloon was later displayed at the Lyceum. He also flew from Norwich later that year. Zambeccari moved to St Petersburg in 1787 and served in the Russian Imperial Navy. He was captured by the Turks in 1787 and held prisoner in Constantinople for over two years. His freedom was secured by the Spanish ambassador. He returned to Bologna, and married Diamante Negrini. They had three children, including . He spent the rest of his life experimenting with balloons, generally using a combination of a hot air balloon and hydrogen balloon known as a rozière after Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier. He sought a method of steering using rudders or oars. He published a five-volume work on ballooning in London in 1803. He and his companions were rescued from the Adriatic Sea, twice, in 1803 and 1804. The government of Bologna sponsored a flight in 1803. Bad weather caused the flight to be postponed in September 1803. Wanting to avoid a second postponement, the balloon took off in bad weather on 7 October. Zambeccari was accompanied by and Gaetano Grassetti. In bad visibility, the balloon crashed into the Adriatic Sea early the following morning. Similarly, another flight with Andreoli on 23 August 1804 also crashed into the Adriatic Sea. Zambeccari died in September 1812, when his balloon caught fire after an unsuccessful landing attempt. His companion, Bonaga, survived. He was buried in the family tomb in the Basilica of San Francesco. His remains were moved to the Certosa di Bologna in 1813, but returned to San Francesco in 1926 to be interred with his son Livio in the monument to his relation Alessandro Zambeccari.
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zelda
|
48655448_Aftermath
|
Ravel's admiration for Satie's early music was sincere and lasting, but his promotion of it through the SMI was not without intrigue. One of his aims in bringing to light obscure contemporary composers like Satie was to challenge the reputation of his chief rival, Debussy, as the wellspring of all modern trends in French music. It is significant that the SMI program note enthused over the unknown Sarabandes and said nothing of the Gymnopédies, two of which had been orchestrated by Debussy and performed at his urging by the SNM in 1897. Debussy was quick to recognize that Ravel was using Satie against him. He tried to counter the SMI's propaganda - with its implications that he had done nothing to help his old friend earlier - by adding his orchestral versions of the Gymnopédies to an all-Debussy concert he was scheduled to conduct for the Cercle Musical. Reporting this development to Ravel on March 4, Satie wrote, "That's something I owe to you. Thank You." The two Gymnopédies were the surprise hit of Debussy's March 25 program at the Salle Gaveau. Their success overshadowed Debussy's music, and Debussy did not hide his feelings of resentment from Satie. The Ravel and Debussy concerts of 1911 made Satie famous in Paris, but the politics behind them would sour and ultimately destroy his relations with both men - in Debussy's case, probably the closest friendship he ever had. Conservative critics in the French capital did not welcome Satie's sudden emergence from obscurity. If he was remembered at all it was for his bohemian antics of the 1890s (challenging the director of the Paris Opera to a duel, founding his own church to attack his enemies) or his association with the Rose + Croix sect. Journalist and minor composer Jean Poueigh, writing under his pseudonym Octave Seré, briefly mentioned Satie in his 1911 book Musiciens français d'aujourd'hui (French Musicians Today) as "a clumsy but subtle technician" whose Sarabandes had deeply impressed the young Debussy; he condescendingly added that "not too much importance should be attached to it." But Ravel's championship, Roland-Manuel's fervent praise during World War I, and later testimony from such distinguished musicians as Charles Koechlin, Darius Milhaud, Georges Auric and Alfred Cortot, led Satie biographer Rollo H. Myers to conclude that by the World War II years there seemed to be "a consensus of opinion" that the Sarabandes anticipated some of the harmonic processes of modern French music.
|
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zelda
|
48655580_Technical aspects
|
What is unusual about this film is that it is essentially the work of one person, M dot Strange. Although created using simple techniques compared to many films with computer-generated imagery, (e.g. almost all characters are derived from the same basic figure) this movie has a professional aspect, due in large part to the results obtained through the use of Cinema 4D. The movie contains more than 1,500 shots that were created entirely in Cinema 4D. In addition, After Effects software was used for compositing. The film took two and half years to complete. There is a companion book A_Book which highlights the making of the film with a lot of how to tips for DIY animators/filmmakers.
|
[
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},
{
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},
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zelda
|
48656841_Background
|
Since 1976, Kerry Packer, the owner of the Nine Network, had sought the rights to broadcast live coverage of Australia's home test matches, and had found himself rebuffed by the Australian Cricket Board in favour of continued live coverage on the Australian Broadcasting Company, which was the country's state broadcaster. Following Nine's winning of the rights to broadcast the 1977 Ashes tour to England, in which Packer was presented with the idea of staging some televised exhibition matches, he fleshed it out into the idea of a full blown series of games between the best Australian players, and the best players from the rest of the world. In 1977, Packer began signing contracts with Australian players recommended by former Australia captain Ian Chappell, while he was also able to negotiate a deal with then England captain Tony Greig for him to act as Packer's agent in signing non-Australian players. Among these non-Australians were a significant number of players from the West Indies, who found the contracts they were being offered would pay them potentially more than they could earn in their entire careers. As a consequence, although only intended to feature Australia against the Rest of the World, the organisers were able to form a third team, made up wholly of West Indian players. The first match was scheduled as a five-day game between the Australian XI and the West Indies XI from 2 December 1977; Packer was unable to use the term "Test Match", so the fixture was the first of what came to be known as "Supertests". This game, held at VFL Park in Melbourne, began on the same day as the first day of the official Australian team's Test Match against India in Brisbane.
|
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zelda
|
48657452_Career
|
After his release in 2013, Yarran began playing football in the Western Australian Amateur Football League (WAAFL) C1 grade for Gosnells and in the Peel Football League for South Mandurah. He made his debut for Subiaco in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) in 2014. He kicked 39 goals in his first season. In 2015, he kicked 54 goals to win the Bernie Naylor Medal as the leading goalkicker in the WAFL. Subiaco won the premiership in both seasons. Yarran also played for the Indigenous All-Stars in their exhibition match against the West Coast Eagles on 20 February 2015. He was picked up by with the 61st selection in the . He made his AFL debut playing against in round 18, 2016 at Metricon Stadium. A few weeks earlier he pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly behaviour and was fined $800 after being arrested outside a Leederville nightclub in June 2016. The club also imposed sanctions on Yarran including undertaking an ongoing counselling program and a period of volunteer work with a community organisation. On 16 November 2016, Yarran was charged with aggravated assault following a family dispute. He pleaded not guilty in February 2017 and the charge was later dropped. While still a listed Dockers player, Yarran played for Peel Thunder in the 2016 WAFL season. He kicked five goals in their grand final match against his old team Subiaco to help Peel win their first premiership. In December 2016, Yarran retired from AFL football. Fremantle CEO Steve Rosich said "[Yarran] and his management believe that focusing on his personal and off-field matters at this time needs to take priority over his football career." He played a total of six games for Fremantle, scoring 10 goals. In 2017, Yarran returned to the WAAFL and played in the B grade for Kelmscott. In May 2017, Yarran was arrested after a high-speed police pursuit through Gosnells which ended with him jumping from a moving car. He pleaded guilty to charges in August and was sentenced to six months in prison which was backdated to include the three months he had been in custody since his arrest. Yarran was handed a concurrent three-month jail term for failing to stop and fined almost $5000 for several other charges, including driving without a licence, breaching bail and breaching a violence restraining order. Yarran had breached the restraining order when he approached his partner after taking methamphetamine and prescription drugs. He was taken to hospital after he acted erratically and abused police officers. His defence lawyer said Yarran fell into the wrong group of peers and started using drugs after earning more disposable income. Later in August, Yarran was acquitted of assaulting his partner after she failed to turn up to court to give evidence. Next season, Yarran played for Gosnells in the WAAFL C1 grade. He had also been training with Subiaco since mid-December 2017 and working towards a return to the WAFL. In February 2018, police were called after a motorist reported Yarran acting erratically in only his underwear and interfering with traffic on a residential street in Seville Grove. He was taken to hospital for an assessment. In March 2018, Yarran was convicted (in his absence) of trespassing on two properties in December 2017. He was fined $600 and ordered to pay almost $200 in court costs. Later in March, Yarran was acquitted of an unlawful wounding charge after prosecutors said there was no reasonable prospect of him being convicted. He was alleged to have stabbed a man with a broken bottle during a brawl outside a tavern in Camillo in July 2015. His defence counsel said the charge had triggered Yarran's but that the AFL Players Association was assisting with his rehabilitation. On 6 April 2018, Yarran appeared in court and pleaded not guilty to a charge of attempted aggravated home burglary with intent. He clashed with media outside the court and allegedly shoved a TV cameraman to the ground. Days before his death, Yarran was subject to verbal abuse by players on the opposing team at his last football game. He was repeatedly called a "criminal", a "wife-basher" and a "gutless thug". Yarran told a confidant after the match that he was unsure if he would continue playing football, given the abuse he was likely to endure.
|
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zelda
|
48657586_College career
|
Out of high school, Gary was recruited by Air Force, Kansas State, and Wyoming. He chose to attend the latter, where he played strong safety for head coach Dave Christensen. On September 5, 2009 in the season opener versus Weber State, Gary recorded 7 tackles and three interceptions. As a true freshman, he started 12 of 13 games at strong safety, tied the team lead in interceptions (3) and ranked fifth on the team in tackles (98). In 2010, he recorded 94 tackles, 5 passes defended and one interception. At the end of his sophomore season he transferred to Oklahoma State to be closer to his family and his grandmother, who was battling Alzheimer's disease. He sat out the 2011 season due to the NCAA transfer rules. In 2012, he started every game for the Cowboys, recording 72 tackles, 6 passes defended, three interceptions and one forced fumble. As a senior, he recorded 47 tackles, 9 passes defended and three interceptions, as he helped lead the Oklahoma State Cowboys to a 10-3 record and a 2nd place in the Big 12 Conference. At the end of the season, the Cowboys were invited to the Cotton Bowl Classic, where they lost to Missouri by a score of 31-41. Gary recorded one tackle during the game.
|
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zelda
|
48660428_Introduction
|
, also known as 'Maho Girls PreCure!', is a 2016 Japanese anime television series by Toei Animation and the thirteenth installment in Izumi Todo's Pretty Cure metaseries, featuring the eleventh generation of Cures. The series, which is being directed by Masato Mitsuka and written by Isao Murayama with character design by Emiko Miyamoto, aired on ANN television stations between February 2016 and January 2017, succeeding Go! Princess PreCure in its initial timeslot, and is succeeded by Kirakira PreCure a la Mode. The series' main theme is friendship, while the series’ motifs are magic and jewelry.
|
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zelda
|
48661434_Introduction
|
Florence-Council On The Iowa Site is a former town site and Native American village site located near Oakville, Iowa, United States in Louisa County. The site has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1978. Florence was a settlement along the Iowa River that existed from 1836 to 1846. Prior to that, it was the village site of the Sauk people and home to Black Hawk and Keokuk, who debated here retaking the tribal lands in Illinois. It was at this place where the followers of Black Hawk rallied before they crossed into Illinois to reclaim their lands, which led to the Black Hawk War of 1832. In the treaty that followed the hostilities, the area was known as "Keokuk's Principal Village." Florence developed after the Native Americans left the area in 1836. There is no record of the village having ever been platted, but it did contain a tavern, at least one retail establishment and a ferry service. A post office was established on July 5, 1839 with John Deihl, a merchant, as postmaster. It was discontinued on February 11, 1846.
|
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zelda
|
48662464_Coaching changes
|
After the 2015 regular season, Georgia's athletic director Greg McGarity fired head coach Mark Richt after 15 seasons with an overall 145–51 record. Richt was replaced with former Georgia football player Kirby Smart, who, at the time, was Alabama's defensive coordinator. Smart played for the Bulldogs from 1995 to 1998 for coaches Ray Goff and Jim Donnan and was defensive coordinator at Alabama from 2008 to 2015 under head coach Nick Saban. Jeremy Pruitt, who was defensive coordinator for Georgia from 2014 to 2015, accepted a position as the defensive coordinator for Alabama to replace Smart.
|
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zelda
|
48663621_History
|
=== Call of Duty === Team EnVyUs was founded on November 19, 2007, as a Call of Duty 4 esports team by Skyler "FoRePlayy" Johnson and Tosh "Stainville" McGruder. The team finished runners-up in both the and MLG National Championships, with the 2009 roster fielding future owner Mike "Hastr0" Rufail. At the , the final event of the Call of Duty: Black Ops season, Envy once again finished runners-up following a 5-match loser's bracket run; the event also marked the beginning of the classic rivalry with OpTic Gaming, dubbed the eClasico, after defeating them in the loser's bracket final. In April 2013, as part of the Call of Duty: Black Ops II season, Envy competed in the inaugural US$1 million Call of Duty Championship; their roster for the tournament notably included Stainville, Raymond "Rambo" Lussier and Jordan "JKap" Kaplan. Non-favorites entering the event, the team showed they belonged after beating the undefeated Fariko Impact 3–2 in the winner's bracket finals to book a place in the grand finals. The grand finals consisted of a best-of-11 continuation series re-match with Fariko, where Envy would fall just short after losing 5–6 following a game 11 Search and Destroy, winner-takes-all, showdown. The final round earned the title of "the most famous round of Search and Destroy in Call of Duty history", as well as the match being widely considered one of the "greatest series ever played" in Call of Duty history. The following month, on May 5, Team Envy won their first ever prized LAN championship and only Black Ops II title at UGC Niagara. In March 2014, as part of the Call of Duty: Ghosts season, Envy competed in the 2014 Call of Duty Championship. The team would once again finish 2nd after producing a miracle run starting from round 1 of the loser's bracket, including a 3–1 victory over OpTic in the loser's bracket final. On June 25, 2014, they announced the return of JKap and the acquisition of Matthew “Formal” Piper. The new roster won Gfinity 3, Envy's first major LAN championship, and . However, the roster was short-lived as after , the last event of Ghosts, star AR player Formal and Envy mutually agreed to part ways. Moving into Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, Envy made multiple roster changes throughout a disappointing season. The team managed a top-12 finish at the 2015 Call of Duty Championship, before reaching their only final at UGC Niagara 2015. They ended the season with a 4th-place finish at the . In April 2016, Envy acquired Bryan “Apathy” Zhelyazkov and Johnathon “John” Perez to join JKap and Austin “SlasheR” Liddicoat for the latter half of the Call of Duty: Black Ops III season. Together they won Stage 2 of the , Envy's first major championship since Ghosts. The team then participated at the , where following a loser's bracket run they met OpTic in the grand finals. In the finals they took the first best-of-5 series 3–2, before being swept in the deciding series. In the last event of the season, in September 2016, Envy competed in the 2016 Call of Duty World League Championship. The team went undefeated in the group stages and drew a winner's bracket round 1 match-up with heavy favorites OpTic, who they had not defeated on LAN in over two years. A 3–1 victory over OpTic, followed by a 3–0 over FaZe Clan opened the path to the grand finals where they met Splyce in the first ever North American vs. European final. Team Envy took down Splyce 3–1 to finally break their 2nd place curse and win the Call of Duty Championship; securing $800,000 as part of the largest Call of Duty prize pool. Maintaining their championship winning roster, they headed into the Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare . The first three-quarters of the season proved disappointing as the team failed to live up to their Black Ops III success, with their only notable result being a 3rd-place finish at the 2017 MLG Atlanta Open in February 2017. It was not until the last two events that Envy bounced back. In July 2017, the team finished runners-up at . In August 2017, they competed in the 2017 Call of Duty World League Championship where they attempted to become the first back-to-back champions. In the winner's bracket semi-finals they defeated 3–1, which included their famous second half 0–10 to 12–10 Uplink comeback. In the winner's bracket final they defeated OpTic to book their place in a record 4th Call of Duty Championship grand finals, however this time around the roster would be heartbroken as they lost both best-of-5 series to OpTic in a rematch to finish in 2nd place. Heading into Call of Duty: WWII, Envy released JKap, Apathy, and John. In November 2017, they revealed their new roster which included Cuyler "Huke" Garland who had been competing in as he was too young (under the age of 18) to compete in the Call of Duty World League. On September 22, 2018, Envy acquired the roster of Evil Geniuses consisting of ACHES, Apathy, Assault and SiLLy. They will join the organization and pair with Huke to complete the roster. The Team Envy Gears of War (GoW) division was founded on January 4, 2012, when the organization formed the professional GoW team "EnVyUs MbN". The team competed in Gears of War 3, where they placed 4th in the LAN tournament Hypefestation 2. In October 2015, Envy announced they were re-entering the GoW competitive scene for Gears of War: Ultimate Edition and were revealed as one of eight teams in ESL's GoW Pro League. In Season 1 of the league, Envy finished runners-up to Denial Esports. In Season 2, they became champions after defeating Denial in a rematch of the finals following a 12–2 regular season record; the tournament win marked their first ever Gears of War title. In July 2016, without dropping a single map, Envy won their second title at the Gears eSports European Open in London. Heading into Gears of War 4, Envy competed in the Coalition's $1 million Gears Pro Circuit. Their campaign included multiple second-place finishes, as well as the team's third championship in January 2017, when the team dethroned OpTic Gaming at the Mexico City Open, the first ever GoW event in Latin America. On June 13, 2017, shortly after the end of the Gears Pro Circuit, Team Envy announced they had departed from the Gears of War esports scene following the transfer of their roster to Echo Fox. Team Envy officially entered the Counter-Strike scene, their first venture into PC Esports, on February 2, 2015, after acquiring the French Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) squad of Team LDLC led by captain Vincent "Happy" Schopenhauer. In March 2015, Envy finished 3rd–4th in their first appearance, ESL One Katowice 2015, after losing to Ninjas in Pyjamas 0–2 in the semi-finals. Shortly afterwards, in March, the team won their first ever championship at the Gfinity Spring Masters. On June 21, 2015, they traded Richard "shox" Papillon and Edouard "SmithZz" Dubourdeaux to Titan in exchange for Kenny "kennyS" Schrub and Dan "apEX" Madesclaire. With the new roster they finished runners-up at the ESL One Cologne 2015 major, before finally winning their first major championship at DreamHack Open Cluj-Napoca 2015 after defeating Natus Vincere 2–0 in the grand finals. Following the November 2015 Paris terrorist attacks, Envy withdrew from IEM San Jose due to travel safety concerns. The team ended the 2015 season securing 7 championships and 11 grand final appearances. In March 2016, following an 11–12th-place finish at IEM Katowice 2016, Envy benched Fabien "kioShiMa" Fiey due to communication problems and LDLC White's Timothée "DEVIL" Démolon replaced him in the starting line-up. However, the change would prove unsuccessful and in October 2016, DEVIL was released with Christophe "SIXER" Xia replacing him. On January 15, 2017, the team won , securing US$800,000 as part of the largest CS:GO prize pool. In February 2017, kennyS, apEX, and Nathan "NBK" Schmitt departed to G2 Esports, with Adil "ScreaM" Benrlitom, Cédric "RpK" Guipouy, and Alexandre "xms" Forté joining in their stead. In late April, Envy officially revealed their academy project. On June 20, 2018, Team Envy announced they had departed from the Counter-Strike esports scene following the release of their entire CS:GO roster. On September 27, 2018, they announced a new North American team, signing the core of ex-Splyce. The Team Envy SMITE division was founded on October 5, 2015, when the organization acquired the North American team AFK Gaming. The team's only championship came in January 2016, when they won the 2016 SMITE World Championship - Xbox One Invitational. In May 2016, during a match against SoaR, Envy violated the SMITE Pro League code of conduct after they forfeited their second game less than two minutes in; the pro-level rage-quit is branded "the worst match in SPL history" and resulted in Hi-Rez sanctioning each participating Envy player with a $500 fine. On November 30, 2016, Team Envy announced they had departed from the SMITE esports scene following the release of their roster. The Team Envy Halo division was founded on November 10, 2015, when the organization signed a professional esports team for Halo 5: Guardians; the roster included Justin "Pistola" Deese and Austin "Mickwen" McCleary. The team failed to qualify for the after being knocked out of the group stages at the NA Regional Finals. Their first major breakthrough came in July 2016, when the team finished 3rd place at the NA HCS Pro League - 2016 Summer Finals. In the offseason to follow, Envy acquired rookie Cuyler "Huke" Garland and veteran Eric "Snip3down" Wrona. In November, they obtained their first Halo championship after winning HCS Las Vegas 2016. Shortly afterwards, in December, the team dethroned OpTic Gaming and won their second championship at the NA HCS Pro League - 2016 Fall Finals. Their 2016–17 season campaign ended with a runners-up finish at the 2017 Halo World Championship, where the team produced a 5–0 loser's bracket run before losing to OpTic Gaming in the grand finals. In May 2017, Envy won their third Halo championship at HCS Daytona 2017. Their 2017–18 season campaign ended in April 2018, following a 3rd-place finish at the 2018 Halo World Championship. On May 24, 2018, Team Envy announced they had departed from the Halo esports scene following the release of their roster. On May 18, 2016, after passing Riot's vetting process, Team Envy officially purchased Renegades’ spot in a deal reportedly valued in excess of $1 million. In their inaugural split, following a perfect 4–0 start, Envy finished in 6th place achieving a playoffs berth, where they were eliminated in the first round. In the last chance Regional Qualifier for the 2016 League of Legends World Championship, the team once again fell short after losing in the second round to eventual winners Cloud9. Following the 2017 Spring Split, Envy faced relegation and had to compete in the Summer Promotion Tournament. In the Promotion Tournament, they qualified into the 2017 NA LCS Summer Split after defeating Gold Coin United 3–2 in the loser's bracket finals. On November 20, 2017, Team Envy withdrew from League of Legends after their franchise application for the 2018 NA LCS season was declined. On June 26, 2019, Team Envy started to sponsor Justin "Wizzrobe" Hallett. The Team Envy Rocket League division was founded on June 21, 2017, when the organization acquired Northern Gaming's active roster; the roster included Season 3 Rocket League Championship Series champions Remco "Remkoe" den Boer and David "Deevo" Morrow. The organisation separated with the roster on July 30, 2018.
|
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zelda
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48663922_Career
|
Beloff-Chain worked at Italy's Istituto Superiore di Sanità (National Institute of Health) with Chain from 1948 to 1964, and held the position of chief research scientist. Her research focused on carbohydrate metabolism and the mechanism of action of insulin in hormonal control of diabetes and obesity. One of her most significant discoveries was that levels of beta-cell-tropin, an insulin secretagogue hormone, were elevated in the blood of obese individuals. In 1964, Beloff-Chain and her husband were recruited by Imperial College London and her family returned to London, where she took up a biochemistry teaching post at Imperial College London. She was promoted to professor of biochemistry in 1983, but she decided to leave with her research team in 1985. A £250,000 new laboratory was built and she became a professor at the University of Buckingham in 1986. At Buckingham, she received funding from the Clore Foundation to establish and head the Department of Biochemistry, where she worked until her death.
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zelda
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48665348_Track listing<ref name = Complete/>
|
===Disc one=== # "Ave Maria" (Johann Sebastian Bach, Charles Gounod) – 2:59 #*<small> from his 1958 album Good Night, Dear Lord </small> # "Winter Wonderland" (Felix Bernard, Richard B. Smith) – 3:14 #"The Christmas Song" (Mel Tormé, Robert Wells) – 4:18 # "Sleigh Ride" (Leroy Anderson, Mitchell Parish) – 2:57 #"Blue Christmas" (Bill Hayes, Jay Johnson) – 3:02 #"I'll Be Home for Christmas" (Kim Gannon, Walter Kent, Buck Ram) – 4:04 # "White Christmas" (Irving Berlin) – 3:28 #"O Holy Night" (Adolphe Adam, John Sullivan Dwight) – 4:35 #"What Child Is This? (Greensleeves)" (William Chatterton Dix) – 3:58 #"The First Noel" (traditional) – 3:49 # "Silver Bells" (Ray Evans, Jay Livingston) – 3:32 #"It Came Upon a Midnight Clear" (Edmund Hamilton Sears, Richard Storrs Willis) – 3:08 # "Silent Night" (Franz Xaver Gruber, Joseph Mohr) – 3:49 #*<small> tracks 2–13 from his 1958 album Merry Christmas </small> # "Ol' Kris Kringle" (Hugh Adamson, Jimmy McHugh) – 2:24 # "Give Me Your Love for Christmas" (1961 version) (Jack Gold, Phyllis Stohn) – 2:55 #*<small> above two 1961 recordings first released on his 2014 compilation The Classic Christmas Album </small> # "Christmas Eve" (Allyn Ferguson, Sidney Shaw) – 2:56 # "My Kind of Christmas" (Jerry Livingston, Paul Francis Webster) – 3:02 #*<small> above two released as a single on 11/17/61 </small> #"The Sounds of Christmas" (Jerry Livingston, Paul Francis Webster) – 2:35 #"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" <small>from Meet Me in St. Louis</small> (Ralph Blane, Hugh Martin) – 3:34 #"A Marshmallow World" (Peter DeRose, Carl Sigman) – 2:37 #"God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" (Traditional) – 3:19 #"Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" (Sammy Cahn, Jule Styne) – 4:12 #*<small> tracks 18–22 from his 1963 album Sounds of Christmas </small> ;Personnel *tracks 1–17 performed with Percy Faith & His Orchestra *Mitch Miller – producer (tracks 1–13) *Al Ham – producer (tracks 2–13); associate producer (track 1) *Irving Townsend – producer (tracks 14–17) *Don Costa – producer (tracks 18–22) *Lou Halmy – arranger (track 14) *Glenn Osser – arranger (tracks 18–22) *Jack Feierman – conductor (tracks 18–22) ; Recording dates *January 3, 1958 – track 1 *June 16, 1958 – tracks 3, 6, 7, 11 *June 18, 1958 – tracks 2, 4, 5, 8 *June 20, 1958 – tracks 9, 10, 12, 13 *September 11, 1961 – tracks 14–17 *July 12, 1963 – track 18 *July 17, 1963 – tracks 19, 20, 22 *July 25, 1963 – track 21 #"The Little Drummer Boy" (Katherine Davis, Henry Onorati, Harry Simeone) – 3:32 #"Have Reindeer, Will Travel" (Jerry Livingston, Paul Francis Webster) – 3:31 #"The Secret of Christmas" (Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen) – 4:12 #"Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" (Johnny Marks) – 2:20 #"Carol of the Bells" (Peter J. Wilhousky) – 1:22 #"Christmas Is a Feeling in Your Heart" (Joe Darion, Joe Kleinsinger) – 3:03 #"Hallelujah Chorus" (George Frederick Handel) – 4:02 #*<small> tracks 1–7 from his 1963 album Sounds of Christmas </small> #"Jingle Bell Rock" (Joseph Carleton Beal, James Ross Boothe) – 2:11 #"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" <small>from Meet Me in St. Louis</small> (Ralph Blane, Hugh Martin) – 3:29 #"My Favorite Things" <small>from The Sound of Music</small> (Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II)– 2:37 #"Give Me Your Love for Christmas" (Jack Gold, Phyllis Stohn) – 2:37 #"Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" (J. Fred Coots, Haven Gillespie) – 2:19 #"What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?" (Frank Loesser) – 2:52 #"Do You Hear What I Hear?" (Gloria Shayne Baker, Noel Regney) – 3:21 #"Calypso Noel" (Gordon Krunnfusz) – 2:13 #"The Little Drummer Boy" (Katherine Davis, Henry Onorati, Harry Simeone) – 2:28 #"Christmas Day" <small> from Promises, Promises </small> (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) – 3:24 #"The Lord's Prayer" (Albert Hay Malotte) – 2:40 #*<small> tracks 8–18 from his 1969 album Give Me Your Love for Christmas </small> # "Sign of the Dove" (Bradford Craig) – 2:49 # "Christmas Is..." (Percy Faith, Spence Maxwell) – 3:06 #*<small> above two released as a single on 11/23/70 </small> # "When a Child Is Born" (Ciro Dammicco, Fred Jay) – 3:41 #*<small> from his 1976 album I Only Have Eyes for You </small> # "The Very First Christmas Day" (Clark Gassman, Molly-Ann Leikin) – 3:07 # "Christmas in the City of the Angels" (Suzy Elman; Arnold Goland; Jack Gold) – 2:50 #*<small> above two released as a single on 11/8/79 </small> # "The Lord's Prayer" (Albert Hay Malotte) – 3:26 # "When a Child Is Born" (Ciro Dammicco, Fred Jay) – 3:52 #*<small> above two released as a single on 11/18/80 </small> ;Personnel *tracks 24–25 performed with Gladys Knight & the Pips *Don Costa – producer (tracks 1–7) *Jack Gold – producer (tracks 8–25) *Glenn Osser – arranger (tracks 1–7) *Ernie Freeman – arranger (tracks 8–19), conductor (tracks 8–20) *Gene Page – arranger, conductor (tracks 21–25) *Jack Feierman – conductor (tracks 1–7) *no arranger is indicated for track 20 ; Recording dates *July 12, 1963 – track 3 *July 16, 1963 – tracks 2, 6 *July 17, 1963 – tracks 4, 5, 7 *July 25, 1963 – track 1 *July 15, 1969 – tracks 10, 11, 14, 17 *September 23, 1969 – tracks 8, 9, 12, 13, 15, 16, 18 *October 30, 1970 – tracks 19, 20 *February 23, 1976 – March 5, 1976 – track 21 *June 5, 1979 – tracks 22, 23 *April 23, 1979 – track 25 *May 21, 1979 – track 24 #"It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas" (Meredith Willson) – 2:14 #"Toyland" (Glen MacDonough, Victor Herbert) – 3:41 #"It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" (Edward Pola, George Wyle) – 2:45 #"Jingle Bells" (James Pierpont) – 2:54 #Medley – 5:09 <br /> a. "Christmas Is for Everyone" (Richard Loring, Dorothy Wayne) <br /> b. "Where Can I Find Christmas?" <small>from The Bear Who Slept Through Christmas</small> (Doug Goodwin) #Medley <small>from Santa Claus: The Movie</small> – 4:03 <br /> a. "Every Christmas Eve" (Leslie Bricusse, Henry Mancini) <br /> b. "Giving (Santa's Theme)" (Leslie Bricusse, Henry Mancini) #"The Christmas Waltz" (Sammy Cahn, Jule Styne) – 2:36 #"We Need a Little Christmas" <small>from Mame</small> (Jerry Herman) – 1:54 #Medley – 3:44 <br /> a. "Caroling, Caroling" (Alfred Burt, Wilha Hutson) <br /> b. "Happy Holiday" <small>from Holiday Inn</small> (Irving Berlin) #"It's Christmas Time Again" (Sonny Burke, John Elliot, James K. Harwood) – 4:28 #*<small> tracks 1–10 from his 1986 album Christmas Eve with Johnny Mathis </small> #"O Tannenbaum" (Ernst Anschütz) – 2:57 #*<small> from Mannheim Steamroller's 2001 album Christmas Extraordinaire </small> # "Joy To The World" (Lowell Mason, Isaac Watts) – 2:01 # "Heavenly Peace" (Dean Pitchford, Tom Snow) – 3:30 # "Away in a Manger" (William J. Kirkpatrick) – 2:30 # "A Christmas Love Song" (Alan and Marilyn Bergman, Johnny Mandel) – 3:35 # "Frosty the Snowman" (Steve Nelson, Jack Rollins) – 2:31 #"Have a Holly Jolly Christmas" (Johnny Marks) – 2:00 # "O Little Town of Bethlehem" (Phillip Brooks, Lewis H. Redner) – 2:44 # "I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm" (Irving Berlin) – 3:34 # Medley – 5:00 <br> a. "Snowfall" (Claude Thornhill) <br> b. "Christmas Time Is Here" <small>from A Charlie Brown Christmas</small> (Vince Guaraldi, Lee Mendelson) # "Merry Christmas" (Fred Spielman, Janice Torre) – 3:12 #*<small> tracks 12–21 from his 2002 album The Christmas Album </small> # Medley – 2:47 <br> a. "Winter Wonderland" (Felix Bernard, Richard B. Smith) <br> b. "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" (Sammy Cahn, Jule Styne) #*<small> from Bette Midler's 2006 album Cool Yule </small> #"What a Wonderful World" (Christmas Version) (Bob Thiele, George David Weiss) – 4:31 #*<small> from his 2010 album Let It Be Me </small> # "Ave Maria" (Franz Schubert) – 4:34 #*<small> from his 1958 album Good Night, Dear Lord </small> ;Personnel *track 5 performed with the Henry Mancini Orchestra & Chorus *track 11 performed with Mannheim Steamroller *track 22 performed with Bette Midler *track 23 performed with Lane Brody *Denny Diante – producer (tracks 1–10) *Chip Davis – producer, arranger, conductor (track 11) *Robbie Buchanan – producer (tracks 12–22), arranger (tracks 13, 14) *Fred Mollin – producer (track 23) *Mitch Miller – producer (track 24) *Scott Erickson – associate producer (tracks 12–21) *Al Ham – associate producer (track 24) *Bette Sussman – co-producer, track arranger, vocal arranger (track 22) *Jeremy Lubbock – arranger, conductor (tracks 1, 3, 9, 10) *Ray Ellis – arranger, conductor (tracks 2, 4, 5, 7, 8); arranger (track 17) *Henry Mancini – arranger, conductor (track 6) *Bob Krogstad – arranger (tracks 12, 16, 19, 20) *Alan Broadbent – arranger (track 15) *Jonathan Tunick – arranger (tracks 18, 21) *Patrick Williams – orchestral arranger, track arranger, vocal arranger (track 22) *Matthew McCauley – strings arranger and conductor (track 23) *International Children's Choir (Irene Bayless, director) – backing vocals (track 5) *The kids from St. Michael's School, North Hollywood – backing vocals (track 5) ; Recording dates *January 3, 1958 – track 24 *July 1986 – tracks 1–10 *2001 – track 11 *2002 – tracks 12–21 *2006 – track 22 *2009–2010 – track 23
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{
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zelda
|
48667654_Life cycle
|
The first intermediate hosts of Acanthatrium hitaensis include freshwater snails Semisulcospira libertina and Tarebia granifera.
|
[
{
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"label": [
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]
},
{
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"end": 127,
"label": [
"19880864"
]
}
] |
zelda
|
48668259_Introduction
|
'Turatia chretieni' is a moth in the family Autostichidae. It was described by László Anthony Gozmány in 2000. It is found in Tunisia.
|
[
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},
{
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}
] |
zelda
|
48669390_Introduction
|
The Koon House No. 1 is a historic house at Arkansas Highway County 167 and Grant County Road 523 in Sheridan, Arkansas. It is a single story structure, built out of small logs split in half and set facing round side out and smooth side in. Its front facade is dominated by a projecting gable-roofed porch. The house was built in 1940 by Hillary Henry "Pappy" Koon, and is one of several houses built in this distinctive manner in the area by Koon. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.
|
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]
},
{
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"label": [
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}
] |
zelda
|
48670097_Introduction
|
McCollum is an unincorporated community in Walker County, Alabama, United States. McCollum is located along Alabama State Route 69, west of Jasper.
|
[
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},
{
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}
] |
zelda
|
48672762_International career
|
Shine was 15 when she was part of the under-17 squad who lost the final of the 2010 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship in Switzerland. She then participated in Ireland's 2010 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup campaign. At the 2014 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship, Shine scored the only goal against Spain as Ireland won their group, before crashing 4–0 to the Netherlands in the semi-final. She had recovered from a broken leg sustained 10 weeks earlier. National coach Susan Ronan gave Shine a senior debut in a 3–0 UEFA Women's Euro 2017 qualifying defeat by Spain on 26 November 2015 at Tallaght Stadium, Dublin.
|
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zelda
|
48672957_Career
|
In 1910, Hovell was appointed assistant lecturer in history at Victoria University of Manchester with special responsibility for the Workers Educational Association (WEA) activities of the university. He took classes in Colne, Ashton and Leigh and won the confidence of his students by walking the moors on a Sunday with them. In the winter of 1913–14 he taught for the WEA in London and impressed his students with his sincere interest in the lot of the common man in the early nineteenth century. Hovell could have become a Medievalist but his interest in the Napoleonic campaigns, which he studied under Spenser Wilkinson, and his work for the WEA, led instead to specialisms in military history and the social and economic history of the early Victorian age respectively. The latter hardened into a detailed examination of the Chartist Movement. His election to the Langton Fellowship in 1911 provided a small income for three years that allowed him to concentrate on that topic rather than teaching, but throughout this time he continued to struggle to repay the money advanced to him by the Board of Education to fund his earlier studies. In 1912–13, Hovell spent a year studying and teaching at Karl Lamprecht's institute in Leipzig. Hovell was probably sympathetic to Lamprecht's theory of Kulturgeschichte ("History of Culture") but found his historical ideas idiosyncratic and the students he was asked to teach, uninspired. He enjoyed the social life, however, and witnessed a student duel. He wrote to Thomas Tout that he was generally impressed by the German way of life, but shocked by the hostility to England that he encountered at every turn, despite receiving warm hospitality personally. Hovell returned to England by August 1913 and continued his researches into Chartism and taught WEA courses. He was appointed as lecturer in military history at the Victoria University, which had introduced the course to prepare its students for commissions in the British Army.
|
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{
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}
] |
zelda
|
48672991_Plot
|
Chanel (Emma Roberts) tells Chad (Glen Powell) that Hester (Lea Michele) wasn't actually pregnant and that she pushed Hester down the stairs. Being a necrophiliac, he wants to see the body, but when Chanel leads him to the meat freezer to show it to him, the body isn't there. Chad suggests that Hester wasn't actually dead and that she got up and walked away after the Chanels put her there. Chad takes Chanel to spend Thanksgiving with his family. Each of his family members share one thing they're grateful for. As Chanel becomes more and more irritated by Mrs. Radwell's (Julia Duffy) arrogant remarks about her, Hester arrives unexpectedly. Chad, ashamed of his tumultuous relationship with her, tells his family that Hester is his "sober coach," claiming that he has a drinking problem. A fight quickly ensues. As a result, Mr. Radwell (Alan Thicke) offers Chanel a check for $50,000 if she leaves their house and never comes back. The Radwells begin to play pictionary as they continue to insult Chanel and Hester. Finally Chanel gets fed up and rants. She apologizes for trying to kill Hester and then proceeds to tell off each of the Radwells, ending with Chad, and telling him she never wants to talk to him again. She then storms away, accompanied by Hester, the two girls having made amends. Gigi (Nasim Pedrad) spent Thanksgiving with Red Devil in their hotel room. Gigi complains about not being able to spend the holiday with her boyfriend, Wes (Oliver Hudson). But regardless, she thanks the devil for keeping her company. Moments later, room service brings them a meal. Gigi is about to cut it before she thanks the Devil for being the closest she has to family. She then decides the Red Devil should "do the honors," by cutting the bird and hands them the knife. The Red Devils turns on the knife and gives a devious look towards Gigi. Chanel #3 (Billie Lourd) goes to spend Thanksgiving with her adopted family, but is so disgusted by how arrogant and insane they are. She ends up leaving and going back to campus, not before saying she's starting a new family tradition; not to attend any family occasion ever. There, she finds Dean Cathy Munsch (Jamie Lee Curtis) preparing a turkey. As Cathy has Thanksgiving dinner with Grace (Skyler Samuels), Zayday (Keke Palmer), Pete (Diego Boneta), Chanel #5 (Abigail Breslin), Chanel #3, and Wes, they begin to argue over who they think the killer is. Cathy thinks it's Chanel #3, while Chanel #3 thinks it's Cathy. Wes starts to think it's Grace, but Grace provides evidence as to why she couldn't be, but why she suspects it's Chanel. She also says she thinks Chanel was the one who put hydrochloric acid in Melanie Dorkus's tanning spray. Meanwhile, Pete tells a story based on the evidence he dug up, claiming Wes is the killer. Pete reveals that, by bribing a government official with drugs, he discovered that Wes was Boone's (Nick Jonas) father, and thus, the father of the other bathtub baby. Wes talks to Grace alone and tells her that he didn't know he had knocked up Sophia. After the two make up, Zayday calls them over for dinner. Chanel and Hester arrive, as does Chad soon after. He and Chanel make up as well, and Chanel #3 and Chanel #5 go retrieve the turkey. As Chanel uncovers the Turkey, everyone begins screaming in horror. It is revealed that instead of holding the turkey, the platter is holding Gigi's head.
|
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zelda
|
48674094_Introduction
|
The Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2018, also known as CHOGM 2018, was the 25th meeting of the heads of government of the Commonwealth of Nations. It was held in the United Kingdom. The meeting had been planned to have been held by Vanuatu at the end of 2017, but was moved to the United Kingdom after the impact of Cyclone Pam on the infrastructure of Vanuatu. The meeting was then postponed to April 2018 due to other international commitments. The position of Commonwealth Chair-in-Office, held by the government leader of the CHOGM host country, was transferred at the summit from the Prime Minister of Malta to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, who will hold the post until the 26th CHOGM (expected in 2020).
|
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zelda
|
48674734_Events
|
52 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in January. Between January 9th and 12th, 1975 a panhandle hook cyclone produced tornadoes in the Southeast, including an F4 tornado that hit McComb, Mississippi killing 9 people. It is one of the largest January tornado outbreaks. Aside the tornadoes, the cyclone dumped at least 27" of snow in Riverton, Minnesota. In Willmar, Minnesota, 168 passengers were trapped in a stranded train because they couldn't walk to shelter due to wind chill values. 45 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in February. A small outbreak of tornadoes impacted the Dixie Alley region, including an F4 tornado that hit Tuscaloosa, Alabama killing 1 person. An F2 tornado hit Altus, Oklahoma, killing 2 people. 84 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in March. 108 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in April. 3 F4 tornadoes touched down in Missouri, the deadliest being an F4 striking Neosho, Missouri. More tornadoes touched down associated with this outbreak. 188 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in May. An F4 tornado touched down in Sarpy County, Nebraska, with a path extending to Omaha. Damage estimates ranged from $250 million to $500 million. The number of homes destroyed was 287 with damage to 1400 others. The time of day aided in the warning process as a spotter saw the tornado in Sarpy County during the daylight hours and children were no longer in school. The NWS aided by REACT and Civil Defense systems provided good lead time for the residents of Douglas County, Nebraska. Three people did perish. An elderly woman died in her home and likely did not hear the warnings. A waitress was killed in a restaurant as she huddled with others in the restroom. A man was killed while seeking shelter at a gas station. 196 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in June. 79 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in July. A tornado which slashed through a three-block downtown area of the city killed three people. At least 55 others were injured, including 15 who were hospitalized. The twister's winds were so forceful that a 15-foot wooden plank was driven through an auto engine block, splitting the front of the car in two. The twister hit this central Illinois community of 15,000 during the early evening and decimated the business district, severed electrical power and gas lines, and sheared off roofs and uprooted scores of trees. It also overturned numerous automobiles and blew out hundreds of windows. Initial reports from the Illinois State Police placed the number of dead at four, but a spokesman said, "Early confusion probably accounted for duplicated reports." The area hit by the tornado included city square and another block farther south, and also caused extensive damage elsewhere. 60 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in August. 34 tornadoes were reported in the U.S in September. 12 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in October. 39 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in November. A minor two-day tornado outbreak swept across Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana. The strongest tornado of the outbreak, an F3, struck the large city of Waterloo. An F2 tornado injured 4 people when striking the town of Lost Nation, Illinois. 22 tornadoes were reported in the U.S. in December.
|
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zelda
|
48675031_Notable alumni
|
* Tana Adelana - TV-host and VJ * Chika Ike - Nollywood actress
|
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zelda
|
48675744_Professional career
|
===Pre-draft=== Breaston was drafted by the Arizona Cardinals with the 142nd pick in the fifth round of the 2007 NFL Draft. In the fourth game of the 2007 season against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Breaston took a punt back 73 yards for a touchdown, which proved to be the key score, as the Cardinals went on to win the game. Through week 13 of the 2007 season, Breaston had 1,462 return yards for the Cardinals. Breaston had a breakout year in 2008. Following a serious injury to perennial Pro Bowl receiver Anquan Boldin, Breaston was inserted into the Cardinals' starting line-up at wide receiver. Breaston notably refused to participate in pre-game introductions at home games due to his opinion that he was still a backup, keeping a seat warm for the usual starter Anquan Boldin. Breaston finished the year with 1,006 yards, and he, Boldin, and Larry Fitzgerald became the fifth 1,000 yard receiving trio in NFL history. Breaston's final stats with the Cardinals were 140 receptions, 1810 yards (12.9 avg), and 6 touchdowns On July 29, 2011 Breaston signed a five-year deal with the Kansas City Chiefs. In a week 5 game against the Colts, Breaston played an important role by catching 2 touchdowns to lead the Chiefs to a 28-24 comeback victory. Breaston finished the year with 785 receiving yards and two touchdowns. In 2012, he only had 74 yards. He was released by the Chiefs on February 19, 2013. On August 5, 2013, Breaston signed a one-year deal with the New Orleans Saints. On August 19, 2013, he was released by the Saints.
|
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zelda
|
48676017_Advocacy
|
Wellington Rape Crisis advocates against sexual violence and rape culture. In 2012, pizza company Hell Pizza faced controversy when they ran a "Confessional" competition on Facebook. The winner described an incident of sexual assault where he put his penis inside the mouth of a drunk person who was passed out. This was met with a huge number of complaints and criticisms across Facebook and Twitter. Hell Pizza blamed a social media manager and removed the post. However they subsequently donated $10,000 to Wellington Rape Crisis and matched donations made to the agency that month dollar for dollar. At the time Wellington Rape Crisis were being forced to cut services, closing their doors on Fridays due to a $55,000.00 funding shortfall. Wellington Rape Crisis experienced an increase in client numbers and were faced with a difficult funding environment. The funding was accepted by the agency on the condition that Hell Pizza's executives, staff and managers do sexual violence awareness and bystander intervention training provided by the Sexual Abuse Prevention Network. News of the Roast Busters scandal first broke in November 2013. A group of young men based in Auckland allegedly intoxicated underage girls to gang rape them. The lack of police response to the issue and the line of questioning they took when interviewing the complainants sparked a large public outcry. Wellington Rape Crisis condemned the behavior of the young boys as abhorrent and denounced the rape culture in New Zealand. Agency Manager Natalie Gousmett said: <blockquote>This whole situation is horrific. First we have the abhorrent behavior of the members of the rape group, causing serious harm to the victims they have targeted. Then we have appalling coverage by media, including extreme victim-blaming and today we have heard the Police have indeed had complaints yet have only just started taking action now.</blockquote> In November 2015 New Zealand Prime Minister John Key accused the opposition party of “Backing rapists.” In response to these claims several female MPs stood up and shared their own experiences of sexual violence and voiced their offence to the Prime Minister's comments. They were subsequently thrown out of Parliament by the Speaker of the House. Spokesperson for Wellington Rape Crisis Eleanor Butterworth said the Prime Minister's comments were not helpful. She said “It was not only harmful for survivors to have rape used as a political football, but also for the families of people who have been sexually abused.
|
[
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{
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zelda
|
48676585_Introduction
|
Stine Ruscetta Skogrand (born 3 March 1993) is a Norwegian handball player for Herning-Ikast Håndbold and the Norway women's national handball team. Her position is mainly right back, although in the national team she usually plays right wing. She made her debut on the Norwegian national team in 2013.
|
[
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