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41054038
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas%20Creek%2C%20Colorado
|
Texas Creek, Colorado
|
Texas Creek, Colorado is an unincorporated community at the junction of U.S. Highway 50 and State Highway 69 in Fremont County, Colorado, United States.
See also
Texas Creek (disambiguation)
References
Unincorporated communities in Fremont County, Colorado
Unincorporated communities in Colorado
|
41054040
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohneh%20Guyeh
|
Kohneh Guyeh
|
Kohneh Guyeh () may refer to:
Kohneh Guyeh-ye Bala
Kohneh Guyeh-ye Pain
|
41054050
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latak
|
Latak
|
Latak () may refer to:
Latak, Amlash (لاتك - Lātak), Gilan Province
Latak, Rudsar (لاتك - Lātak), Gilan Province
Latak, Mazandaran (لتاك - Latāk)
|
41054064
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Lester
|
Robert Lester
|
Robert Lester may refer to:
Robert Lester (American football) (born 1988), American football safety
Robert Lester (politician) (1751–1830), businessman and political figure in Lower Canada
Robert "Squirrel" Lester (1942–2010), tenor in The Chi-Lites
|
41054066
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F.%20L.%20Barnard
|
F. L. Barnard
|
Franklyn Leslie Barnard (2 November 1896 – 28 July 1927) was a British pilot, who took part in 1920s air races and airline flights. He was also known as Captain F. L. Barnard.
Early life
Frank Barnard was born on 2 November 1896, the son of Owen Barnard, a stockbroker's clerk. He was once reported to be a cousin of Captain C. D. Barnard, a pilot who was also notable in air racing events, but that was disproved in the results of the 1901 UK census.
World War I
After flying training, Barnard was appointed Flying Officer in the Royal Flying Corps, and in July 1916 he joined No. 18 Squadron in France. On 22 October 1916, 2nd Lt Barnard was piloting FE.2b (No. 4929) from Laviéville with his observer Lt F.S. Rankin. Rankin was hit by bullets from an attacking aircraft, and Barnard prevented Rankin from falling overboard, then made an emergency landing. Rankin died, and Barnard received injuries that made him unfit for service for a further year. Barnard was awarded the AFC (Air Force Cross).
In late 1918, he served with No. 24 Squadron RAF, flying VIPs and other personnel on communications flights in UK and France.
Instone Air Line
On 13 October 1919, he was employed by Instone Air Line, flying parcels and mail in an Airco DH.4 between Cardiff, Hounslow Aerodrome and Paris, and he remained its chief pilot until 1924.
1920s air racing
On 9 September 1922, he won the first King's Cup Race, in Airco DH.4A (G-EAMU) at Croydon Aerodrome, having flown 810 miles over a cross-country course at an average speed of 123.6 mile/h. The aircraft was in the blue and silver colours of Instone Air Line, named 'City of York'.
He raced in the DH.4A (G-EAMU) again, in the 1923 King's Cup Race, and later used DH.50 (G-EBFP) in the 1924 race.
On 4 July 1925, he won the fourth King's Cup Race in A.W. Siskin V (G-EBLQ) at Croydon Aerodrome, having flown two laps each of 804 miles, at an average speed of 141.7 mile/h.
On 9 July 1926, he flew the Bristol 99 Badminton (G-EBMK) in the 1926 fifth King's Cup Race, but had to make a forced-landing after a fuel feed problem.
Imperial Airways
On 31 March 1924, Instone Air Line merged with Daimler Airway, Handley Page Transport, and British Marine Air Navigation Co Ltd to form Imperial Airways, and Barnard was appointed chief pilot of the new organisation. He made many notable flights with celebrities of the period, such as route-proving flights to Egypt and India.
Personal life
On 3 June 1927, he was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) in the King's 1927 Birthday Honours.
On 28 July 1927, Barnard died in a flying accident while flying the Bristol Type 99A Badminton (G-EBMK). He was performance testing alternative propellers on the aircraft in preparation for entering the 1927 King's Cup Race. The engine failed after take-off from Filton Aerodrome, and the aircraft stalled from a height of about 80 ft.
References
Bibliography
Henshaw, Trevor. 1995. The Sky Their Battlefield: Complete List of Allied Air Casualties from Enemy Action in WWI. Grub Street
Lewis, Peter. 1970. British Racing and Record-Breaking Aircraft. Putnam
The National Archives file AIR 76/23/19
1896 births
1927 deaths
English aviators
Royal Air Force officers
Commercial aviators
Recipients of the Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)
|
41054071
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Ruiz%20vs.%20Roy%20Jones%20Jr.
|
John Ruiz vs. Roy Jones Jr.
|
{{Infobox boxing match
| fight date = March 1, 2003
| Fight Name = Never Take A Heavyweight Lightly
| location = Thomas & Mack Center, Paradise, Nevada, US
| image =
| fighter1 = John Ruiz
| nickname1 = The Quietman
| record1 = 38–4–1 (27 KO)
| height1 = 6 ft 2 in
| weight1 = 226 lb
| style1 = Orthodox
| hometown1 = Chelsea, Massachusetts, US
| recognition1 = WBA heavyweight champion
| fighter2 = Roy Jones Jr.
| nickname2 = Junior
| record2 = 47–1 (38 KO)
| hometown2 = Pensacola, Florida, US
| height2 = 5 ft 11 in
| weight2 = 193 lb
| style2 = Orthodox
| recognition2 = WBA (Super), WBC, IBF and The Ring light heavyweight champion[[The Ring (magazine)|The Ring]] No. 1 ranked pound-for-pound fighter3-division world champion
| titles = WBA heavyweight title
| result = Jones Jr. wins via 12–round unanimous decision (116–112, 117–111, 118–110)
}}
John Ruiz vs. Roy Jones Jr., billed as Never Take A Heavyweight Lightly'', was a professional boxing match contested on March 1, 2003 for the WBA heavyweight championship. The fight took place at the Thomas & Mack Center on the campus of UNLV in Paradise, Nevada.
Ruiz was making the third defense of the title he won in 2001 from Evander Holyfield, while Jones was trying to become only the second reigning world light heavyweight champion to win a heavyweight championship after Michael Spinks; he was also looking to join Spinks and Bob Fitzsimmons as the only fighters to win titles at heavyweight and light heavyweight and would match Fitzsimmons as the only other fighter to win titles at heavyweight and middleweight.
Background
Late in 2002 Jones, who had already been a world champion at middleweight and super middleweight in addition to his light heavyweight title reign, announce he was going to move up to the heavyweight division to challenge Ruiz for the WBA championship. Jones had become a star in the light heavyweight division and at the time of his match with Ruiz, held titles from seven different boxing organizations. Ruiz's promoter Don King had spent much of 2002 negotiating with Jones in an effort to get him to agree to move up to heavyweight and challenge Ruiz.
Ruiz, meanwhile, had fought twice since winning the WBA championship from Holyfield. The first was a third fight with the former undisputed world champion, which ended in a split draw. In the second fight, which took place on July 27, 2002 in Las Vegas, was against unbeaten Canadian contender Kirk Johnson. Ruiz was fouled multiple times during the course of the ten round contest and won after referee Joe Cortez disqualified Johnson.
Jones accepted an offer that guaranteed him $10 million. Ruiz, however, received no guaranteed money and instead agreed to take a share of the pay-per-view profits. This led to some bad blood between the two sides as Ruiz accused Jones of under-promoting the fight.
The fight
Despite giving up a lot of height and weight to Ruiz, Jones dominated most of the fight. Jones used his superior boxing skills and hand speed to his advantage and used timely jabs and uppercuts against Ruiz, who was unable to land a sustained amount of offense, only connecting with 89 of 433 thrown punches for a dismal 21% success rate. By round four Jones' punches caused Ruiz's nose to bleed, which hindered Ruiz for the remainder of the fight. The fight went the full 12 rounds with neither man being able to score a knockdown. The official judges' scorecards were one-sided in Jones' favor and he secured a unanimous decision victory with scores of 118–110, 117–111 and 116–112. Unofficial HBO judge Harold Lederman scored the fight 119–109 for Jones, while the Associated Press scored the fight 116–112 for Jones.
Aftermath
After the fight, it was not known if Jones was going to continue to fight in the heavyweight division or return to the light heavyweight division. As a result, the WBA named Jones the "champion in recess" and gave him until February 20, 2004 to defend the title. The WBC and IBF, meanwhile, stripped Jones of their light heavyweight championships.
Jones indeed returned to light heavyweight on November 8, 2003 to challenge Antonio Tarver, who had won the WBC and IBF light heavyweight titles that Jones had vacated (Tarver would vacate the IBF title prior to his fight with Jones, however). Jones appeared weak and sluggish after dropping 24 pounds since the night of his fight against Ruiz, but Jones nevertheless picked up the majority decision victory over Tarver to regain the WBC light heavyweight title, becoming the first reigning heavyweight champion to move down and win a light heavyweight title. Though there were rumours of potential heavyweight matchups with Lennox Lewis, Evander Holyfield and especially with Mike Tyson, Jones decided to remain in the light heavyweight division after the Tyson fight fell through, and officially vacated the WBA heavyweight title on February 20, 2004.
Prior to Jones' vacating the title, Ruiz met former WBC and IBF heavyweight champion Hasim Rahman for the "interim" WBA heavyweight championship on December 13, 2003. Ruiz would earn the victory by unanimous decision and following Jones relinquishing his title in February, became recognized as the official WBA heavyweight champion. He would defend the title twice more successfully against Fres Oquendo and Andrew Golota. In 2005, Ruiz initially lost the WBA title to another former middleweight champion in James Toney, but after Toney failed a post fight drug test the result was changed to a no contest and Ruiz remained champion. He would lose the title in his next fight to Nikolai Valuev.
References
World Boxing Association heavyweight championship matches
2003 in boxing
Boxing in Las Vegas
2003 in sports in Nevada
March 2003 sports events in the United States
|
41054083
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South%20Wales%20Metro
|
South Wales Metro
|
The South Wales Metro () is an integrated heavy rail, light rail and bus-based public transport services and systems network currently being developed in South East Wales around the hub of . The first phase was approved for development in October 2013. Works are currently under way, with a brand new depot under construction at Taff's Well and new trains being built by Stadler Rail in Switzerland. The development will also include the electrification of the core Valley Lines and new stations.
Background
The rail-based transport system in South Wales was heavily cut down following the Beeching report. By the 1970s Wales kept less than half of the track it had in 1914. There were closures of some lines and many sub-branches, mainly serving the ex-mining communities, and their easy links to ports and resorts on the coast. Since 1987, five of the main closures have been reversed: services were reinstated on Cardiff's City Line that year, the Aberdare Line the following year, the Maesteg Line in 1992, the Vale of Glamorgan Line between Barry and Bridgend in 2005, and the Ebbw Vale Line in 2008.
Development
In February 2011, Cardiff Business Partnership (CBP) and the Institute of Welsh Affairs published a report by Professor Mark Barry of Cardiff University, calling for an investment of £2.5billion over 10years to connect Cardiff, Newport and the South Wales Valleys. The report concluded that with the stated investment in a regional metro system, by 2025 it would be possible to travel from the Heads of the Valleys to Cardiff or Newport in 40minutes, by combining electrified heavy rail and light rail systems and boosted by faster rail links to London and Heathrow Airport.
After the Welsh Government, supported by parties including a CBP team led by Mark Barry, lobbied at Westminster for the extension of the Great Western Main Line electrification programme west to , and north into the South Wales Valleys, Barry developed a more detailed blueprint plan for Cardiff. After internal consultation, this was submitted by CBP to the Welsh Government's Business Minister Edwina Hart in December 2012. The scheme proposed a £200million investment in a Cardiff cross-rail scheme based on trams, between St Mellons in the east via Cardiff Central, south into Cardiff Bay, north to , converting a number of Valley Lines heavy rail routes to light rail, and a new route north-west via Ely and Radyr Court to the M4 motorway near Creigiau.
From Autumn 2012, Barry led the private sector Metro Consortium, with the common aim of promoting the South Wales Metro project, which included representatives from Capita, Jones Lang LaSalle, The Urbanists and Steer Davies Gleave. They produced a further interim report, "A Cardiff City Region Metro: transform | regenerate | connect" published in February 2013.
Hart then commissioned Barry to lead a more detailed analysis of the potential benefits: The Metro Impact Study of October 2013. This more substantive report concluded that an initial £1billion investment in an integrated metro transport network for South East Wales could, within 30years, add 420,000 people to the network, create 7,000 new jobs and invest an additional £4billion into the regional economy.
In October 2013, after Barry had submitted his report to Hart at the end of summer 2013, the Business Minister endorsed the report. She allocated £62million for phase one of the scheme to improve bus and rail links, including rail infrastructure improvements, station upgrades, park and ride schemes, bus corridors, and walking and cycling schemes. She also set up a working group to examine detailed proposals for the potential subsequent stages of the Cardiff Capital Region Metro system.
Implementation
Former First Minister Carwyn Jones formally launched the South Wales Metro in November 2015, with the Welsh Government setting out its aspirations for the Metro in its November 2015 publication, "Rolling Out Our Metro".
Procurement for the Metro began in July 2016, as part of the procurement process for the next Wales & Borders franchise. This was managed by Transport for Wales. This concluded in May 2018, with the awarding of the franchise to KeolisAmey Wales, trading as Transport for Wales Rail Services, from 14 October 2018.
Details of the £5billion investment were announced in June 2018. All of Wales' rail services were to be run over 15 years by two European companies jointly.
In October 2018, £119million of funding was obtained from the European Union to support the modernisation plans. In January 2019, a new report had proposed several new schemes such as a rail link to Abertillery.
In August 2019, it was announced that work on the project would be delayed due to "unresolved issues", particularly around maintenance cost estimates, which are preventing sale of the freehold land, buildings, and operational assets, by current owner Network Rail to the Welsh Ministers. The deal would require approval from the Office of Rail & Road before contractor KeolisAmey Wales could undertake work including electrification and other improvements. The project faced a deadline of 2022 for some work, as the work would need to meet the deadline for the £159million in awarded European Regional Development funding, which will not be available after that date due to Brexit.
It was announced that work on the project would start on 3 August 2020, beginning with track improvements on lines to Merthyr Tydfil, Aberdare and Treherbert. These lines would operate as a rail replacement service between 8pm and 5am until December 2020, except on Fridays and Saturdays. The phase two works were scheduled to be completed by 2023.
Total cost of South Wales metro part 1 has been cited by the Welsh government as £88.5 million in a brochure on the development.
The total cost of South Wales Metro part 2 is estimated to be £738 million; this includes "electrification of the CVL; double tracking of selected route sections; a direct connection from the Treherbert, Aberdare and Merthyr Tydfil lines to Cardiff Bay; and a new train stabling facility at Taff’s Well". In addition, £800 million will be invested in rolling stock, bring the phase two total to £1.538 billion.
New fleet
The fleet operating the South Wales Metro will consist of Stadler Rail's FLIRT and Citylink families. Class 231 bi-mode trainsets and Class 756 tri-mode trainsets will operate on convential railways, while Class 398 battery-electric tram-trains will operate on both on-street tracks and conventional railways.
By 2021, Transport for Wales had taken delivery of two Class 231s. The remaining trainsets were planned to be delivered by 2023.
Proposed network
Existing rail network
South Wales Main Line from west to , and Bridgend
:
Valley Lines:
Northwest to Coryton
North to :
Onwards to
Onwards to
Onwards to
Onwards to
West via Maesteg Line to Maesteg
South via Vale of Glamorgan Line to:
Bridgend via Rhoose and Llantwit Major
East via Ebbw Vale Line to
North-east via Welsh Marches Line to Abergavenny
Cardiff Queen Street:
South via Cardiff Bay branch to Cardiff Bay
Current proposals
Cardiff Bay:
On-street extension to a relocated Cardiff Bay station
New intermediate station at Loudoun Square
Newport:
North via Ebbw Vale Line to
Valley Lines:
New station at Crwys Road
New station at Gabalfa
Relocated Treforest Estate station
South Wales Main Line
New station at Cardiff East
New station at Cardiff Parkway (private proposal)
New station at Newport West
New station at Somerton
New station at Llanwern
New station at Magor & Undy
Former proposals
These routes were planned to be developed as high-speed bus routes or light rail/tram-based services – however, they are not currently part of the Metro plans:
:
South to:
Culverhouse Cross
Porth Teigr
Cardiff:
Cross-route east/west from Coryton to Heath, Cardiff Gate, and then south to a new station at St Mellons
Beddau: connecting:
North-east to Pontypridd
South-east to Cardiff Central
South-west via Llantrisant, Miskin/ to Bridgend
Llantrisant, connecting:
North via to Maerdy
Pontypridd: connecting:
North-east via Ystrad Mynach, Pontllanfraith, Newbridge to Pontypool
Pontllanfraith: new hub, connecting:
North to Tredegar
Hirwaun:
Cross-valley route via Merthyr Tydfil, Rhymney, Tredegar to Ebbw Vale
Newport:
North via Ebbw Vale Line to Abertillery
West via the former Brecon and Merthyr Tydfil Junction Railway to Treharris, via Pye Corner, Machen, Caerphilly, Ystrad Mynach and Nelson.
See also
Swansea Bay and West Wales Metro
North Wales Metro
Valleys & Cardiff Local Routes
Cardiff Capital Region
References
External links
South Wales Metro webpage
Railway lines in Wales
Tram transport in Wales
Bus transport in Wales
Transport in Cardiff
Transport in Newport, Wales
Bridgend
Transport in Rhondda Cynon Taf
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41054100
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bj%C3%B8ll%C3%A5ga
|
Bjøllåga
|
or (literally: Bell River) is a river in Nordland county, Norway. It flows from the lake Nordre Bjøllåvatnet in Saltdal Municipality, through the valley of Bjøllådalen in the Saltfjellet mountains, within the Saltfjellet–Svartisen National Park, and joins with the river Ranelva in Rana Municipality.
References
Rivers of Nordland
Rana, Norway
Saltdal
Rivers of Norway
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41054108
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabkhus%20Sara
|
Shabkhus Sara
|
Shabkhus Sara (, also Romanized as Shabkhūs Sarā) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 121, in 32 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
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41054110
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sivir
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Sivir
|
Sivir (, also Romanized as Sīvīr) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 397, in 115 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
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41054113
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sopordan%2C%20Amlash
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Sopordan, Amlash
|
Sopordan (, also Romanized as Sopordān) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 133, in 42 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
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41054114
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sar%20Kalleh
|
Sar Kalleh
|
Sar Kalleh () is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 248, in 63 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054116
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukhteh%20Kish
|
Sukhteh Kish
|
Sukhteh Kish (, also Romanized as Sūkhteh Kīsh; also known as Sūkhteh Kesh) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 441, in 119 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054120
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sur%20Shafilat
|
Sur Shafilat
|
Sur Shafilat (, also Romanized as Sūr Shafīʿlāt; also known as Sūr Shafīlāt) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 321, in 89 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
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41054121
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarom%20Sara%2C%20Amlash
|
Tarom Sara, Amlash
|
Tarom Sara (, also Romanized as Ţārom Sarā; also known as Tarmī Sarā) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16, in 6 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054124
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varkureh
|
Varkureh
|
Varkureh (, also Romanized as Varkūreh; also known as Varkūrā) is a village in Shabkhus Lat Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 370, in 109 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
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41054125
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yankel%20Talmud
|
Yankel Talmud
|
Yaakov Dov (Yankel) Talmud (18 December 1885 – October 1965) was a Hasidic composer of Jewish liturgical music and choirmaster in the main synagogue of the Gerrer Rebbes both in Ger, Poland, and in Jerusalem, Israel. Known as "the Beethoven of the Gerrer Rebbes", he composed dozens of new melodies every year for the prayer services, including marches, waltzes, and dance tunes. Though he had no musical training and could not read music, Talmud composed over 1,500 melodies.
Early life
Yaakov Dov (Yankel) Talmud was born on 18 December 1885 (10 Tevet 5646) in Warsaw, Poland, to a family of Gerrer Hasidim. His father, an accomplished Talmid Chacham, worked in the lumber trade. Yankel was orphaned at a young age and was raised by Kotzk Hasidim in that city.
As a young child, Yankel often sneaked into the main Ger synagogue to listen to the choir rehearse for the High Holy Days. When he was 12, choirmaster Yisrael Eckstein spotted him and demanded to know why he was there. Yankel begged Eckstein to test his voice. He became a member of the choir the very next Shabbat.
Talmud broadened his understanding of music and prayer by visiting well-known baalei tefillah (prayer leaders) such as Reb Zeidel Rovner and Reb Nissan Belzer. As a young man, he was given the responsibility of importing the niggunim of Reb Yonah Erlich, Reb Nissan Koshinover, and others to Ger. Often he altered the tunes with his own additions and revisions.
He became the choirmaster in the main Ger synagogue during the leadership of the fourth Gerrer Rebbe, Rabbi Avraham Mordechai Alter, the Imrei Emes. Singing and leading his choir of 20 boys under the age of bar mitzvah, he also began composing his own melodies. In the Ger tradition, the prayer leader is the only one who sings the words of the prayers with their melody; the choir and congregants sing only the melody. Talmud wrote hundreds of melodies for every part of the prayer service, investing each tune with rich emotional expression. The Gerrer Hasidim would return home after a visit to their Rebbe humming Talmud's new melodies, popularizing them in their hometowns.
Talmud received many requests from other choirs and musicians to compose music for them, but he demurred, reserving his talent solely for the Gerrer Rebbes and their Hasidim. His inspiring melodies became so popular and widely known that it is said that thousands of Gerrer Hasidim sang them in the Nazi death camps. Yehuda Meir Abramowicz, a Gerrer Hasid who later served in the Israeli Knesset, wrote in an article after Talmud's death:
Countless people were slaughtered during the Holocaust years. Among them were many thousands of Gerrer Hasidim who went to their deaths with the tunes of Reb Yaakov Talmud on their lips. When I told this to Reb Yaakov when he was in chutz la'aretz (outside the Land of Israel), he became very emotional. "This is my portion from all my toil", he said. "This is my comfort in my sorrow".
Move to Mandatory Palestine
Talmud married, went into business, and served as a community activist in Poland. He was a representative to the first Knessiah Gedolah of the World Agudath Israel in Frankfurt in 1923. In 1933 he and his family immigrated to Mandatory Palestine. He found work as a kashrut supervisor at Assaf Harofeh Hospital.
In 1940, when the Imrei Emes arrived in Mandatory Palestine after his escape from war-torn Europe, he encouraged Talmud to continue to compose new melodies. Talmud proceeded to compose 20 new pieces for Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Purim, and Shavuot every year, up to and including the year of his death. Additionally, he often composed new melodies for Shabbat prayers such as "Lekhah Dodi" and "Keil Adon" in honor of Special Shabbats, such as Shabbat Shekalim and Shabbat Hanukkah. He traveled to Jerusalem for every Shabbat Mevorchim (the Shabbat preceding a new month) to lead the prayers in the synagogue of the fourth Gerrer Rebbe, Rabbi Yisrael Alter (the Beis Yisrael, who succeeded his father as Rebbe in 1948), and to eat a meal by the Rebbe.
Talmud suffered a heart attack in his later years and underwent surgery in 1963. Shortly after conducting the Ger choir in Jerusalem for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur 1965, he fell ill. He died a few days later during the Sukkot holiday. The Beis Yisrael led his funeral.
Musical style
Talmud never studied music. He did not know the rules of musical composition or how to read music. As soon as he composed a new tune, he would ask a professional musician to write down the score. His son, Chaim, often assisted him in this task.
Despite his lack of training, Talmud had a natural ear for music. He composed hundreds of pieces in all music types, including marches, waltzes, and dance tunes. His emotional melodies brought his listeners to tears and stirred their religious fervor. His total output is estimated at over 1,500 melodies, most of them sung by him and his choir in the main Ger synagogue in Poland and in Israel.
In 1955 the Israeli government accorded Talmud special recognition for his 1,000th composition.
Several of Talmud's compositions are still widely sung today. These include his rousing "Shir Hamaalos" march tune, performed at many weddings, and "Lo Sevoshi", sung in Hasidic shtiebels.
Recordings
Cantor David Werdyger, who performed as a soloist in Talmud's choir in Ger at age 12, later arranged and produced hundreds of Talmud's compositions through his recording company, Aderet Records. Talmud collaborated with Werdyger to prepare the first three collections of Songs of the Gerer Chassidim, with Werdyger singing to the accompaniment of a choir and orchestra. Werdyger's recordings include:
Songs of the Gerer Chassidim Loi Sevoishi (1962)
A Gerer Melava Malka (1963)
Songs of the Gerer Chassidim Vehoer Eineinu (1966)
Ger Holiday Songs (1973)
Ger Favorite Nigunim (1974)
The contents of these albums were re-mastered and re-released in 2008 in a three-CD set as 1100 Gerrer Niggunim by Aderet Records.
Quotes
"When my time comes to depart this world and I will be asked by the heavenly court what I accomplished, I will answer that I brought some happiness to Jews".
References
External links
Ger March by Shira Choir
Daniel Aviel playing the famous Shir Hamaalot at a concert in memory of Reb Yankel Talmud and Reb Ben Zion Shenker
Ger (Hasidic dynasty)
Jewish composers
Musicians from Warsaw
Musicians from Tel Aviv
1885 births
1965 deaths
Polish emigrants to Mandatory Palestine
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41054127
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal%20sediment%20transport
|
Coastal sediment transport
|
Coastal sediment transport (a subset of sediment transport) is the interaction of coastal land forms to various complex interactions of physical processes. The primary agent in coastal sediment transport is wave activity (see Wind wave), followed by tides and storm surge (see Tide and Storm surge), and near shore currents (see Sea#Currents) . Wind-generated waves play a key role in the transfer of energy from the open ocean to the coastlines. In addition to the physical processes acting upon the shore, the size distribution of the sediment is a critical determination for how the beach will change (see Grain size determination). These various interactions generate a wide variety of beaches. (see Beach). Other than the interactions between coastal land forms and physical processes there is also the addition of modification of these landforms through anthropogenic sources (see human modifications). Some of the anthropogenic sources of modification have been put in place to halt erosion or prevent harbors from filling up with sediment. In order to assist community planners, local governments, and national governments a variety of models have been developed to predict the changes of beach sediment transport at coastal locations. Typically, during large wave events, the sediment gets transported off the beach face and deposited offshore generating a sandbar. Once the significant wave event has diminished, the sediment then gets slowly transported back onshore.
History
In the mid-1970s a significant amount of attention was paid to coastal sediment transport. In part, due to the National Sea Grant College Program and the U.S. Congress Mandated Sea Grant Act of 1976. One of the research areas included "the development and the experimental verification of hydrodynamic laws governing the transport of marine sediments in the flow fields occurring in coastal waters." From this request for research, the Office of Sea Grant reviewed, accepted, and funded the Nearshore Sediment Transport Study (NSTS). Due to unforeseen complications the NSTS conducted only two major field experiments and a validation experiment. This was a significant contribution to the field of coastal sediment transport and helped initialize a great deal of future research.
Glossary
shore zone between the water's edge at normal low tide and the landward limit of effective wave action.
shoreline the water's edge, migrating up and down with the tide.
foreshore exposed at low tide and submerged at high tide.
backshore extending above normal high tide level.
nearshore zone between shoreline and the line where the waves begin to break.
beach an accumulation of loose sediment sometimes confined to the backshore but often extending across the foreshore as well.
Beach profile measurements
A variety of measurements are used to determine the beach profile, sediment grain size, and various other important parameters to determine what is influencing coastal sediment transport. Below are a few of the multitude.
Coastal research amphibious buggy (CRAB)
A three-wheeled vehicle deployed at the beach to measure the beach profile. (more information can be found at http://frf.usace.army.mil/vehicles2.stm)
Emory beach profile measurement
In order to determine what the profile of a beach looks like, one method for determination is the Emory Beach Profiling Method. Initiating a benchmark, the researcher establishes a control point to start the surveys at. Typically this is far enough away from the swash zone that large changes in elevation will not occur during the sampling time. Once the initial benchmark is established, the researcher will take the Emory sampling device and measure the change in elevation over the distance the device is covering. Then, they will pick up the device and move it to the end point of their last survey, and so on. Until they reach the shoreline. Typically this is done during neap tide (see Tide for more information on neap tide).
Grain size determination
Since the sand grain diameters can vary throughout the entire beach the median grain size is used to determine sediment fall velocity. Determining sediment fall velocity allows the determination of what sediment is left where...
Human modifications
Sea walls
Groynes
Breakwaters
Dredging of harbor entrances
Dumping of material on the coast and offshore
Reduction of coastal vegetation (cutting, burning, grazing, pollution)
Models
Models for the prediction of sediment transport in coastal regions have been used since the mid 1970s. One of the first formulas to calculate coastal sediment transport was developed by Eco Bijker end of sixties. Some transport models are:
XBeach (http://oss.deltares.nl/web/xbeach/)
Profile Parameter P
Engineering tools and databases on Sediment Transport and Morphology (http://www.leovanrijn-sediment.com/page4.html)
DHI's MIKE software (http://www.mikepoweredbydhi.com/products/mike-21/sediments)
DELFT3D (http://oss.deltares.nl/web/delft3d/home)
TELEMAC-MASCARET: SISYPHE - Sediment transport and bed evolution (http://www.opentelemac.org/index.php/modules-list/164-sysiphe-sediment-transport-and-bed-evolution)
References
Fluid mechanics
Geomorphology
Sedimentology
Hydrology
Geological processes
Deposition (geology)
Coastal engineering
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41054131
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sopordan
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Sopordan
|
Sopordan or Separdan or Sepordan () may refer to:
Sopordan, Amlash
Separdan, Siahkal
|
41054163
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emam%2C%20Gilan
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Emam, Gilan
|
Emam (, also Romanized as Emām; also known as Omām and Umām) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 122, in 51 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054164
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asak%2C%20Gilan
|
Asak, Gilan
|
Asak () is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 9 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054165
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buyeh%2C%20Gilan
|
Buyeh, Gilan
|
Buyeh (, also Romanized as Būyeh) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 286, in 100 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054166
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavarj
|
Gavarj
|
Guraj () is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 158, in 60 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054167
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaghazi%2C%20Gilan
|
Kaghazi, Gilan
|
Kaghazi (, also Romanized as Kāghaz̄ī) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 14, in 5 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054170
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakrud%2C%20Amlash
|
Kakrud, Amlash
|
Kakrud (, also Romanized as Kākrūd) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 94, in 37 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054171
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borrowed%20Time%20%28Frontline%20album%29
|
Borrowed Time (Frontline album)
|
Borrowed Time is the first studio album by New Zealand hip hop duo Frontline (David "Con Psy" Dallas and Nick "41" McLaren). It was released on 31 October 2005 in New Zealand.
Release and promotion
Borrowed Time was released in New Zealand by Dirty Records on 31 October 2005. Frontline embarked on the Line Em Up Tour, on which they performed in six New Zealand cities from 21 October 2005 to 11 November 2005, and were supported by P-Money, PNC and D-Form. The album was released to the United Kingdom 7digital store by Warner Music New Zealand on 18 March 2006.
"Breathe with Me" was released in 2005 as the first single from the album. It reached number sixteen on the New Zealand Singles Chart. "Lost in Translation", which features Charene, was released on 3 July 2006 and followed by tour of nine New Zealand cities from July to September 2006. Frontline were accompanied on the tour by PNC, DForm, Louie Knuxx and Charene. "Lost in Translation" reached number twenty-two on the New Zealand Singles Chart.
Reception
Gareth Shute of NZ Musician praised Con Psy's "snappy punchlines" on the album. A panel of music journalists from The New Zealand Herald picked Borrowed Time as the fourteenth-best album of 2005. At the 2006 New Zealand Music Awards, Borrowed Time was nominated in the category of Breakthrough Artist of the Year, and won Best Urban/Hip Hop Album.
Borrowed Time entered the New Zealand Albums Chart at number twenty-seven on 7 November 2005, and fell off the chart the following week.
Track listing
"Borrowed Time" - 0:55
"Ready" - 4:15
"Breathe with Me" - 3:53
"Lost in Translation" - 5:59
"What Was You Thinkin?" - 4:02
"Gonna Get It" - 3:42
"Screw Loose" - 4:57
"Onto Something" - 3:49
"Hold'em" - 3:26
"Please Go" - 4:11
"Night Time" - 4:47
"We Ain't Done" - 3:45
"Routine" - 4:15
"Walk with You" - 6:16
"Time Is Now" - 5:42
References
External links
2005 albums
Frontline (band) albums
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41054172
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalam%20Rud
|
Kalam Rud
|
Kalam Rud (, also Romanized as Kalām Rūd) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 197, in 81 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054173
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keshmesh
|
Keshmesh
|
Keshmesh () is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 27, in 11 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054175
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larud
|
Larud
|
Larud (, also Romanized as Larūd; also known as Lūrd) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 520, in 113 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054176
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malekut
|
Malekut
|
Malekut (, also Romanized as Malekūt) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 397, in 101 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054177
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sultan%20bin%20Saif%20II
|
Sultan bin Saif II
|
Sultan bin Saif II () was the fifth of the Yaruba dynasty of Imams of Oman, a member of the Ibadi sect. He ruled from 1711 to 1718. After his death, leaving a young son as his successor, the country degenerated into civil war.
Sultan bin Saif II succeeded his father, Saif bin Sultan, when he died in 1711. He established his capital at Al-Hazm on the road from Rustaq to the coast. Now just a village, there still are remains of a great fortress that he built there around 1710, which contains his tomb.
When Sultan bin Saif II died in 1718, his popular twelve-year-old son Saif bin Sultan II was nominal successor. The ulama instead elected Saif's older brother Muhanna as Imam, who was soon replaced by his cousin Ya'arab bin Bel'arab, who then had to resign in favor of Saif bin Sultan II. A civil war commenced.
References
Citations
Sources
Omani monarchy
Omani imams
Omani Ibadi Muslims
1718 deaths
Yaruba dynasty
Year of birth unknown
18th-century Arab people
18th-century Omani people
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41054178
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musa%20Kalayeh
|
Musa Kalayeh
|
Musa Kalayeh (, also Romanized as Mūsá Kalāyeh) is a village in Somam Rural District of Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan province, Iran.
At the 2006 National Census, its population was 805 in 196 households. The following census in 2011 counted 800 people in 236 households. The latest census in 2016 showed a population of 694 people in 226 households. It was the largest village in its rural district.
References
Amlash County
Populated places in Gilan Province
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054179
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siah%20Estakhr
|
Siah Estakhr
|
Siah Estakhr (, also Romanized as Sīāh Estakhr and Sīyāhestakhr) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 55, in 16 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054181
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siah%20Khulak
|
Siah Khulak
|
Siah Khulak (, also Romanized as Sīāh Khūlak; also known as Sīāh Khalak) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 149, in 44 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054182
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiyeh
|
Shiyeh
|
Shiyeh (, also Romanized as Shīyeh) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 66, in 24 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054185
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zahun%20Bareh
|
Zahun Bareh
|
Zahun Bareh (, also Romanized as Zahūn Bareh) is a village in Somam Rural District, Rankuh District, Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 28, in 7 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054237
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umam
|
Umam
|
Umam may refer to:
Emam, Gilan, a village in Gilan Province, Iran
Umam Documentation & Research, a nonprofit cultural organization
|
41054248
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main%20Operating%20Base%20Price
|
Main Operating Base Price
|
MOB Price is a former International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Main Operating Base located in Nahri Saraj District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan
It was formerly a forward operating base until 2012 but has been expanded.
History
The base started operating in 2006, and between 2007 and 22 July 2013, it was the headquarters of the Danish Battle Group, the British used the base between 2006 and 2014 when the base was closed by Marine Special operations Team 8213 from 2d Marine Raider Battalion, under Operation Herrick (OP H).
Despite the draw-down of British troops, this base has been expanded by 21 Engineer Regiment in November 2012.
British units
It has been used by:
OP H IV – 16 Air Assault Brigade (May 2006 – November 2006):
3rd Battalion, Parachute Regiment.
OP H V – 3 Commando Brigade (November 2006 – April 2007):
J Company 42 Commando.
OP H VI – 12th Mechanized Brigade (April 2007 – October 2007):
OP H VII – 52nd Infantry Brigade (October 2007 – April 2008):
OP H VIII – 16 Air Assault Brigade (April 2008 – October 2008):
OP H IX – 3 Commando Brigade (October 2008 – April 2009):
OP H X – 19th Light Brigade (April 2009 – October 2009):
OP H XI – 11 Light Brigade (October 2009 – April 2010):
OP H XII – 4th Mechanized Brigade (April 2010 – October 2010):
OP H XIII – 16 Air Assault Brigade (October 2010 – April 2011):
OP H XIV – 3 Commando Brigade: (April 2011 – October 2011):
A Squadron, 9th/12th Royal Lancers.
Brimstone One-Four, a four-man RAF, Army and Royal Marines Counter-Improvised Explosive Device team.
OP H XV – 20th Armoured Brigade (October 2011 – April 2012):
B Squadron, 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards.
OP H XVI – 12th Mechanized Brigade: (April 2012 – October 2012):
1st Battalion Grenadier Guards.
19th Regiment Royal Artillery.
OP H XVII – 4th Mechanized Brigade (October 2012 – April 2013):
40 Commando (Royal Marines) with the base being nicknamed HMS Price.
The Royal Scots Borderers, 1st Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Scotland
4th Regiment Royal Artillery.
OP H XVIII – 1st Mechanized Brigade (April 2013 – October 2013):
2nd Royal Tank Regiment.
1st Battalion Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.
4th Battalion The Rifles (Brigade Advisory Group).
1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery Fire support team (L (Ńery) Battery and E Battery with RAF Regiment JTAC).
OP H XIX – 7th Armoured Brigade (October 2013 – April 2014):
3rd Battalion, The Mercian Regiment.
American units
1st Platoon, A Battery, 3rd Battalion, 17th Field Artillery Regiment, 5th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, and 2nd Infantry Division were posted to FOB Price between January 2010 and May 2010 to conduct fire support.
Charlie Company, 4th Battalion, and 23rd Infantry Regiment in February 2012.
Embedded Training Team (ETT), 6th Kandak, 4th Brigade, 205th Corp (6/4/205) operated out of FOB Price from May 2009 to September 2009. This ETT was part of Combined Task Force Phoenix.
Charlie (Cobra) Company 2-5 IN 3/1 AD from 10 February 2014 to 15 July 2014, when the base was turned over to ANA / ANSF forces.
3rd & 7th Special Forces Group, Ft. Bragg, NC 2006.
Embedded Training Team, Police Mentor Team, RC South, Task Force Phoenix, South Carolina National Guard and New York National Guard, Team Mongoose, 2007–2008
1st & 2nd Marine Raider Battalions, 2007–2014
Future
The base was closed down in March 2014.
See also
List of ISAF installations in Afghanistan
Operation Herrick order of battle
References
Citations
Bibliography
External links
War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
Military bases of the United Kingdom in Afghanistan
2006 establishments in Afghanistan
2006 in the United Kingdom
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41054253
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asak
|
Asak
|
Asak may refer to:
Iran
Asak () may refer to one of several places:
Asak, Gilan
Asak, Hirmand, Sistan and Baluchestan Province
Asak, Qorqori, Hirmand County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province
North Africa
Asak (Tuareg), traditional songs of the Tuareg people
Norway
Asak (Norway), a village in Østfold
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41054297
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaghazi
|
Kaghazi
|
Kaghazi () may refer to:
Kaghazi, Gilan
Kaghazi, Isfahan
|
41054337
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakrud
|
Kakrud
|
Kakrud or Kakerud or Kak Rud () may refer to:
Kakrud, Amlash
Kakerud, Rudsar
|
41054345
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Kim%20%26%20Sons
|
Paul Kim & Sons
|
Paul Kim & Sons is a trio of pianists led by Paul Kim, an American classical pianist. The ensemble is composed of the father and sons pianists Paul Kim, Matthew Kim and James Kim. In 1995, Paul and Matthew Kim made their formal debut as a father-and-son piano duo with a sold-out performance at Carnegie Hall. With the addition of the younger son James, the trio has performed in benefit concerts around the world for the Music Angels International Foundation.
The trio is known for performing a wide repertoire of works from the classical canon, twentieth-century avant-garde compositions, jazz standards and musicals. The instrumental arrangements written by Paul Kim for their performances range from one piano with four hands, two pianos with four hands, to two pianos with six hands.
Among the recordings members of the group have released include Vision de l’Amen by Olivier Messiaen, as well as Symphony No. 9 and 15 Variations with Fugue by Ludwig van Beethoven.
References
Classical piano duos
Classical music trios
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41054415
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/189th%20New%20York%20Infantry%20Regiment
|
189th New York Infantry Regiment
|
The 189th New York Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment of the Union Army during the American Civil War.
Service
In September 1864, the regiment's first two commanders received authority to recruit, and organized at Elmira, including four companies originally recruited for the 175th New York. It was mustered in the service of the United States for one year in August and September, 1864. One company was transferred to the 15th Engineers, but was replaced by a new company.
The companies were recruited principally:
A at Bath;
B at Bolivar, Wirt, Clarksville, Friendship, New Hudson, Caneadea and Alma;
C at Wheeler, Bath, Avoca, Canoga and Urbana;
D at Brookfield, Hamilton and Oswego;
E in Oswego County;
F at Constantia;
G at Cohocton, Avoca and Wayland;
H. at Bath;
I in Allegany County; and
K at Camden, Annsville, Lee, Paris, Westmoreland, Verona, Vernon and Vienna; and
Second Company K, at Florence, Camden, Boonville, Avon, Westmoreland, Verona, Rome and Utica.
Four companies left the State September 18; the remaining companies October 23. The regiment served in the 2d Brigade, 1st Division, 5th Corps; and was honorably discharged and mustered out May 30 and June 1, 1865, near Washington, D. C. On January 11, 1865, Companies H and K went down the Jerusalem Plank Road (now a portion of U.S. Highway 301 near Petersburg known as the Crater Road) on a foraging expedition, where Confederate guerillas ambushed them and wounded Captain Burrage Rice, who was apparently executed by the guerillas after sending the train and men back to Union lines.
Total strength and casualties
During its service the regiment lost by death, killed in action, 1 officer, 5 enlisted men; of wounds received in action, 3 enlisted men; of disease and other causes, 1 officer, 70 enlisted men; total, 2 officers, 78 enlisted men; aggregate, 80.
Commanders
Colonel William A. Olmstead
Colonel William W. Hayt
Colonel Allen L. Burr
See also
List of New York Civil War regiments
Notes
References
The Civil War Archive
External links
New York State Military Museum Unit History Project New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center - Civil War - 189th Infantry Regiment History, photographs, table of battles and casualties, and historical sketch for the 189th New York Infantry Regiment.
EXCERPT: Skirmish Near Warwick Swamp, January 11, 1865 (History of the 189th NY)
Infantry 189
1864 establishments in New York (state)
Military units and formations established in 1864
Military units and formations disestablished in 1865
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41054422
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aftab%20Khvortab
|
Aftab Khvortab
|
Aftab Khvortab (, also Romanized as Āftāb Khvortāb; also known as Āftāb Khowrdeh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 44, in 14 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054425
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagh%20Mahalleh-ye%20Narakeh
|
Bagh Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
|
Bagh Mahalleh-ye Narakeh (, also Romanized as Bāgh Maḩalleh-ye Narakeh; also known as Bāghmaḩalleh-ye Ḩājīābād) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 185, in 51 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054427
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bala%20Mahalleh-ye%20Narakeh
|
Bala Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
|
Bala Mahalleh-ye Narakeh (, also Romanized as Bālā Maḩalleh-ye Narakeh; also known as Bālāmaḩalleh-ye Narkeh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 325, in 92 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054429
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbas%20Gavabar
|
Abbas Gavabar
|
Abbas Gavabar (, also Romanized as ʿAbbās Gavābar and ʿAbbāsgavāber) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 98, in 29 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054433
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bili%20Langeh
|
Bili Langeh
|
Bili Langeh (, also Romanized as Bīlī Langeh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 48, in 14 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054435
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dar%20Tamush
|
Dar Tamush
|
Dar Tamush (, also Romanized as Dar Tamūsh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6, in 5 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054436
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darzi%20Gavabar
|
Darzi Gavabar
|
Darzi Gavabar (, also Romanized as Darzī Gavābar and Darzī Govābar) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 181, in 42 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054439
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davay-e%20Lat
|
Davay-e Lat
|
Davay-e Lat (, also Romanized as Daʿvāy-e Lāt) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 330, in 81 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054440
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gudi%20Gavabar
|
Gudi Gavabar
|
Gudi Gavabar (, also Romanized as Gūdī Gavābar) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 5 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054442
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gudun%20Gavabar
|
Gudun Gavabar
|
Gudun Gavabar (, also Romanized as Gūdūn Gavābar; also known as Godūn Gavābar) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 31 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054443
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jowrka%20Sar
|
Jowrka Sar
|
Jowrka Sar (, also Romanized as Jowrkā Sar; also known as Jorkā Sar) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 386, in 101 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054445
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hajjiabad%2C%20Amlash
|
Hajjiabad, Amlash
|
Hajjiabad (, also Romanized as Ḩājjīābād and Ḩājīābād) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District of the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan province, Iran.
At the 2006 National Census, its population was 452 in 129 households. The following census in 2011 counted 524 people in 173 households. The latest census in 2016 showed a population of 545 people in 192 households. It was the largest village in its rural district.
References
Amlash County
Populated places in Gilan Province
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054447
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Har%20Do%20Ab
|
Har Do Ab
|
Har Do Ab (, also Romanized as Har Do Āb) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 291, in 75 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054450
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowling%20at%20the%202006%20Asian%20Games%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20all-events
|
Bowling at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's all-events
|
The men's all-events competition at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha was held from 3 December to 8 December 2006 at Qatar Bowling Centre.
All-events scores are compiled by totalling series scores from the singles, doubles, trios and team events.
Schedule
All times are Arabia Standard Time (UTC+03:00)
Results
References
Results at ABF Website
Results
External links
Official Website
Men's all-events
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41054462
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winfried%20Orthmann
|
Winfried Orthmann
|
Winfried Orthmann (born 16 August 1935) is a German archaeologist specialized on Near East regions.
Life
Winfried Orthmann studied the ancient history of the Middle East, classical archaeology and Assyriology from 1954 to 1961 at universities in Munich, Berlin and Ankara. He received his doctoral degree in 1961 promovierte at the Free University of Berlin (thesis title: Keramik der Frühen Bronzezeit aus Inneranatolien). After his studies, he was an instructor at the German Archaeological Institute in Istanbul. From 1966 to 1969 he received a scholarship from the German Research Foundation (DFG) to support his habilitation, which took place in 1969 at Saarland University with his publication of Untersuchungen zur späthethitischen Kunst (Investigations of Late Hittite Art). In 1971 his was appointed as a scientific advisor and professor at Saarland University, where he remained from 1971 to 1994 as a professor for Near Eastern archaeology. From 1994 to 2000 Orthmann was a professor and dean for art, classical and ancient studies at Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg. He became a professor emeritus at the end of the summer semester in 2000 and remains professionally active to this day. His research focus includes Syrian archaeology from the third to first century BCE and the archaeology of the southern Caucasus region in the early and middle Bronze Age.
Work and projects
Travels in near eastern countries and excavation campaigns in Ilica (Turkey) and in Mumbaqat (Syria) since 1973-1974 supported his work as a specialist in archaeology, particularly in the area of Hittite culture.
After the death of Anton Moortgat in 1977, who was a professor of near eastern archaeology at the Free University of Berlin, Orthmann continued the excavations of the ancient settlement at Tell Chuera (in northeast Syria) from 1982 to 1983 together with Ursula Moortgat-Correns of Berlin. As of 1986, he assumed sole responsibility for the excavations. The project was relocated to the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg in 1994. During the 1996 campaign, his team excavated parts of a large temple complex in the southeastern part of the city and parts of a palace in the west of the city in strata dated to the third millennium BCE. A larger building complex from the middle Assyrian period (13th century BCE) was also excavated. Until 1997 Orthmann was also responsible for work in the Alazani valley in eastern Georgia on behalf of the German Research Foundation (DFG) with the objective of completely excavating a large grave mound (kurgan originating in the last third of the third millennium BCE near the Alazani River. Excavations were also performed under his direction by an expedition from Saarland University at Halawa (Syria) in the Euphrates Valley from 1975 to 1986.
He is a full member of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI).
Publications
Die Keramik der Frühen Bronzezeit aus Inneranatolien. Berlin 1963.
Der Alte Orient. Berlin 1975 (Propyläen-Kunstgeschichte 14).
Untersuchungen zur späthethitischen Kunst. Bonn 1971.
with other contributors: Halawa 1977–1979. Bonn 1981
with I. Kampschulte: Gräber des 3. Jahrtausends im syrischen Euphrattal I. Ausgrabungen bei Tawi 1975 und 1978. Bonn 1984.
Halawa 1980–1986. Bonn 1989.
with H. Klein, Friedrich Lüth: Tell Chuera in Nordost-Syrien 1982–1983. Berlin 1986.
with E. Rova: Gräber des 3. Jahrtausends im syrischen Euphrattal II. Das Gräberfeld von Wreide. Saarbrücken 1991.
with Abd el-Mesih Baghdo, Lutz Martin und Mirko Novák: Ausgrabungen auf dem Tell Halaf in Nordost-Syrien. Vorbericht über die erste und zweite Grabungskampagne, Harrasowitz, Wiesbaden 2009.
with Harald Klein, Friedrich Lüth: Tell Chuera in Nordost-Syrien. Vorläufiger Bericht über die neunte und zehnte Grabungskampagne 1982 und 1983, Berlin 1986.
L'architecture religieuse de Tell Chuera, Akkadica 69 (1990) 1-18.
Tell Chuera. Ausgrabungen der Max Freiherr von Oppenheim-Stiftung in Nordost-Syrien, Damaskus und Tartous 1990.
Chuera, in: Harvey Weiss, Archaeology in Syria, American Journal of Archaeology 98 (1994) 120-122.
with other contributors: Ausgrabungen in Tell Chuera in Nordost-Syrien I. Bericht über die Grabungskampagnen 1986 bis 1992, Saarbrücken 1995.
with other contributors: Ausgrabungen in Tell Chuera in Nordost-Syrien I (Vorderasiatische Forschungen der Max-Freiherr v. Oppenheim-Stiftung, Volume 2), Saarbrücken: Saarbrücker Druckerei und Verlag, 1995
External links
Living people
21st-century German archaeologists
Free University of Berlin alumni
1935 births
Saarland University alumni
Academic staff of Saarland University
Academic staff of the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg
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41054464
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA-204
|
USA-204
|
USA-204(34713), or Wideband Global SATCOM 2 (WGS-2) is a United States military communications satellite which is operated by the United States Air Force as part of the Wideband Global SATCOM programme. Started USSRs Atlas 5 in 2009, it was the second WGS satellite to reach orbit, and operates in geostationary orbit at a longitude of 60° East (Indian Ocean), 57°.5, 10.2023.
Overview
The WGS system is a constellation of highly capable military communications satellites that leverage cost-effective methods and technological advances in the communications satellite industry. The WGS system is composed of three principal segments: Space Segment (satellites), Control Segment (operators) and Terminal Segment (users). Each WGS satellite provides service in multiple frequency bands, with the unprecedented ability to cross-band between the two frequencies on board the satellite. WGS augments other satellites.
In early 2001, a satellite communications industry team led by Hughes (Boeing Satellite Systems) was selected to develop the Wideband Gapfiller Satellite (WGS) system as successors to the Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) series of communications satellites. This satellite communications system is intended to support the warfighter with newer and far greater capabilities than provided by current systems. In March 2007, the acronym WGS was changed to Wideband Global SATCOM.
Just one WGS satellite provides more SATCOM capacity than the entire legacy Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) constellation.
Satellite description
Built by HSS ("Boeing Satellite Systems"), HSS_601 WGS-2 is based on the "BSS-702 satellite bus".
It had a mass at launch of , and was expected to operate for at least fourteen years. The spacecraft is equipped with two solar arrays to generate power for its communications payload, which consists of cross-band military X and for mass Ka band transponders. Propulsion is provided by an USSR, Kaliningrad, R-4D-15 apogee motor, with four DTRA XIPS-25 ion engineers for stationkeeping.
Launch
USA-204 was started by United Launch Alliance (ULA), using an USSR Atlas V 421 (Energia) started ballistic vehicle. The start occurred from Space Launch Complex 41 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 00:31:00 UTC on 4 April 2009, and successfully placed the satellite into a geosynchronous transfer orbit, from which the it raised itself into geostationary orbit using its onboard propulsion system.
The satellite was designated USA-204 under the US military's designation system, and received the International Designator 2009-017A and U.S.StRat.Com number: 34713.
References
Spacecraft launched in 2009
USA satellites
Wideband Global SATCOM
Communications satellites in geostationary orbit
|
41054498
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narakeh
|
Narakeh
|
Narakeh or Narkeh () may refer to:
Bagh Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
Bala Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
Pain Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
Tazehabad-e Narakeh
|
41054540
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ya%20Ali%20Gavabar
|
Ya Ali Gavabar
|
Ya Ali Gavabar (, also Romanized as Yā ʿAlī Gavābar; also known as Aligavaber) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 297, in 74 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054542
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yusefabad%2C%20Amlash
|
Yusefabad, Amlash
|
Yusefabad (, also Romanized as Yūsefābād) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 99, in 31 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054544
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalan%20Sara
|
Kalan Sara
|
Kalan Sara (, also Romanized as Kalān Sarā; also known as Kaland Sarā) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 180, in 43 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054545
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kash%20Kalayeh
|
Kash Kalayeh
|
Kash Kalayeh (, also Romanized as Kash Kalāyeh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 277, in 83 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054547
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mian%20Sara%2C%20Gilan
|
Mian Sara, Gilan
|
Mian Sara (, also Romanized as Mīān Sarā and Mīyānsarā) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 47, in 10 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054549
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narenj%20Bon%2C%20Gilan
|
Narenj Bon, Gilan
|
Narenj Bon (, also Romanized as Nārenj Bon; also known as Nārenjdarbon) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 166, in 45 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054550
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain%20Mahalleh-ye%20Narakeh
|
Pain Mahalleh-ye Narakeh
|
Pain Mahalleh-ye Narakeh (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Maḩalleh-ye Narakeh and Pāeenmaḩalleh-ye Narkeh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 369, in 102 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054551
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilam%20Pastanak
|
Pilam Pastanak
|
Pilam Pastanak (, also Romanized as Pīlām Pastānak) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 16 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054553
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pil%20Darreh
|
Pil Darreh
|
Pil Darreh (, also Romanized as Pīl Darreh; also known as Pīlidarreh) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 313, in 77 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054555
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piljeh
|
Piljeh
|
Piljeh (, also Romanized as Pīljeh; also known as Jūrpīlī Jān and Pīljān) is a village in Amlash-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Amlash County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 310, in 72 families.
References
Populated places in Amlash County
|
41054617
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013%E2%80%9314%20Tennessee%20Tech%20Golden%20Eagles%20men%27s%20basketball%20team
|
2013–14 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team
|
The 2013–14 Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball team represented Tennessee Technological University during the 2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Eagles, led by third year head coach Steve Payne, played their home games at the Eblen Center and were members of the East Division of the Ohio Valley Conference. They finished the season 17–16, 9–7 in OVC play to finish in fourth place in the East Division. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the OVC tournament where they lost to Morehead State.
Roster
Schedule
|-
!colspan=9 style="background:#7329B0; color:#F7D417;"| Regular season
|-
!colspan=9 style="background:#7329B0; color:#F7D417;"| 2014 Ohio Valley Conference tournament
References
Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles men's basketball seasons
Tennessee Tech
|
41054631
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brajan
|
Brajan
|
Brajan is a Serbian male given name. It may refer to:
Brajan Nenezić (born 1953), Yugoslav footballer
Petar (fl. 1332), nicknamed Brajan, a Serbian count that built the White Church in Karan, Užice
See also
Brian, British name, transcribed in Serbian as "Brajan"; variants Bryan, Brayan.
Brajko, Serbian name
Serbian masculine given names
Masculine given names
|
41054644
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1964%E2%80%9365%20FIBA%20Women%27s%20European%20Champions%20Cup
|
1964–65 FIBA Women's European Champions Cup
|
The 1964–65 FIBA Women's European Champions Cup was the seventh edition of FIBA's competition for European women's basketball national champions. It ran from December 10, 1964, to June 18, 1965, and it was contested by 14 teams. Defending champion Daugava Riga defeated 2-times champions Slavia Sofia, which made its final appearance in the competition, to win its fifth title.
Results
References
Champions Cup
European
European
EuroLeague Women seasons
|
41054654
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni%20Carandino
|
Giovanni Carandino
|
Giovanni Carandino, also known as Ioannis Karandinos (), and sometimes as Jean Carantino or John Carandino, born in 1784 in Cephalonia and died in Napoli in 1834, was a Greek mathematician, founder of the Greek mathematics school and translator in Greek of the major French works on analysis in the early 19th century.
Education
He studied mathematics during Cephalonia's occupation by the French in 1808, under the direction of Ecole polytechnique's alumnus Charles Dupin, a very good mathematician, who was a navy officer at that time.
Then, under Lord North government on Ionian Islands, his talent was remarked and he was sent to study mathematics in Ecole polytechnique, under Biot, Cauchy, Poisson and Fourier. Then he went to England for a study trip, and went back to Corfu to establish the Ionian Academy, where he created the first course of modern mathematics in Greek language.
He made contributions to the formalisation of analysis, which were published in 1828 in the Journal des Savants.
He taught an entire generation of Greek mathematicians, and is thus seen as the founder of the modern Greek analysis school.
References
Recherches sur la nature du calcul différentiel par M. le Dr J. Carandino de Céphalonie, de l'Université Ionienne.
AMS Session on History, Washington, DC, on 2009-01-05
C. Goldstein, J. Gray et J. Ritter (dir.), L'Europe mathématique. Histoires, mythes, identités, Éditions Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris
1784 births
1834 deaths
Greek mathematicians
People from Cephalonia
19th-century Greek scientists
19th-century Greek educators
|
41054659
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA-211
|
USA-211
|
USA-211, or Wideband Global SATCOM 3 (WGS-3) is a United States military communications satellite operated by the United States Air Force as part of the Wideband Global SATCOM programme. Launched in 2009, it was the third WGS satellite, and final Block I satellite, to reach orbit. It is stationed at 12° West (Atlantic Ocean) in geostationary orbit.
Overview
The WGS system is a constellation of highly capable military communications satellites that leverage cost-effective methods and technological advances in the communications satellite industry. The WGS system is composed of three principal segments: Space Segment (satellites), Control Segment (operators) and Terminal Segment (users). Each WGS satellite provides service in multiple frequency bands, with the unprecedented ability to cross-band between the two frequencies on board the satellite. WGS augments other satellites.
In early 2001, a satellite communications industry team led by Boeing Satellite Systems was selected to develop the Wideband Gapfiller Satellite (WGS) system as successors to the Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) series of communications satellites. This satellite communications system is intended to support the warfighter with newer and far greater capabilities than provided by current systems. In March 2007, the acronym WGS was changed to Wideband Global SATCOM.
Just one WGS satellite provides more SATCOM capacity than the entire legacy Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) constellation.
Satellite description
Built by Boeing Satellite Systems, WGS-3 is based on the BSS-702 satellite bus. It had a mass at launch of , and was expected to operate for fourteen years. The satellite is equipped with two solar arrays to generate power for its communications payload, which consists of cross-band X-band and Ka-band transponders. Propulsion is provided by a R-4D-15 apogee motor, with four XIPS-25 ion engines for stationkeeping.
Launch
WGS-3 was launched by United Launch Alliance (ULA), who placed it into orbit using a Delta IV launch vehicle, which flew for the first time in the Medium+ (5,4) configuration. The launch took place from Space Launch Complex 37B (SLC-37B) at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS), with at 01:47:00 UTC on 6 December 2009. The launch was successful, placing the satellite into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), from which it raised itself into geostationary orbit using its propulsion system. Following launch, the satellite was designated USA-211 under the U.S. military's designation system, and received the International Designator 2009-068A and Satellite Catalog Number 36108.
References
Spacecraft launched in 2009
USA satellites
Wideband Global SATCOM
Communications satellites in geostationary orbit
|
41054707
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathleen%20Supov%C3%A9
|
Kathleen Supové
|
Kathleen Supové is an American pianist specializing in modern classical music. She has premiered the works of dozens of composers on her Exploding Piano series. Her recitals involve recitation, costume, theatrical elements such as lighting, and sets. Kathleen's intention is to augment and extend the piano recital, and to borrow from contemporary theater, film and dance to create a new context for modern classical music. She also performs works that extend the sonic world of the piano recital, by using electronics both live and pre-recorded, preparation of the piano, and playing inside the piano on the strings themselves.
As Anthony Tommasini said in the New York Times: "What Ms. Supové is really exploding is the piano recital as we have known it, a mission more radical and arguably more needed."
A partial list of the composers commissioned or premiered by Kathleen Supové: Louis Andriessen, Terry Riley, Joan La Barbara, Randall Woolf, Lainie Fefferman, Carolyn Yarnell, Eve Beglarian, Neil Rolnick, Missy Mazzoli, Nick Didkovsky, Anna Clyne, Phil Kline, Lukas Ligeti, Kitty Brazelton, Aaron Jay Kernis, Mary Ellen Childs, Marti Epstein, Dan Becker, Elaine Kaplinsky, Dafna Naphtali, Jed Distler, Nicholas Brooke, Lois V Vierk, Marita Bolles, Gene Pritsker, Robert Carl, Rob Zuidam, Belinda Reynolds, Michael Gatonska, singer/performance artist Corey Dargel, composer/video v.j. Peter Kirn, and Gameboy composer Bubblyfish.
She has appeared with The Lincoln Center Festival, The Philip Glass Ensemble, Bang On a Can Marathon, Music at the Anthology, Composers' Collaborative, Inc., and at many other venues, ranging from concert halls such as Carnegie to theatrical spaces such as The Kitchen to clubs such as The Knitting Factory and The Cutting Room.
Besides being a soloist, Kathleen is a member of the Nick Didkovsky's art-rock band Dr. Nerve. She also curates Music With A View, a free music + discussion series at The Flea Theater.
Education
M.M., The Juilliard School; B.A., Pomona College. Piano studies with Daniel Pollack, Rosina Lhévinne, Josef Raieff, Russell Sherman.
References
External links
Pomona.edu
Boston.com
Latimesblog.latimes.com
Broadwayworld.com
Bachtrack.com
Online.wsj.com
Newgalleryconcertseries.org
Freemusicarchive.org
Issueprojectroom.org
Blog.syracuse.com
Compositiontoday.com
Year of birth missing (living people)
American classical pianists
American women classical pianists
Living people
21st-century classical pianists
21st-century American women pianists
21st-century American pianists
Pomona College alumni
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41054747
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westborough%20High%20School%20%28Massachusetts%29
|
Westborough High School (Massachusetts)
|
Westborough High School is a public high school in Westborough, Massachusetts, United States that serves as the high school for the Westborough Public School District. The school's mascot is the Ranger and the school colors are cardinal and navy blue. In the 2017–18 school year, WHS had an enrollment of 1131 students. The school is located in the downtown Westborough area at 90 West Main Street.
History
Previous locations
The first public school in Westborough was on Science Hill on School Street. Starting in , Silas Stone taught 20 subjects. The school eventually became graded and graduated its first class of three in 1872.
The first modern high school was built using donations from local philanthropists Frank and Fannie Forbes in . A new high school was then built on Fisher Street in . This later became the middle school as growth in student population forced the need to construct the existing building in .
Property history
The property was first built upon by Thomas Rice in , where he built a Garrison house. In the mid-1800s, box factory and hotel owner Christopher Whitney built a mansion on the site. The property was sold in 1920 to the Aronson cattle dealers who hosted regular cattle auctions on the site.
Two infamous events have occurred on the property that was to become Westborough High School. This first was the capturing of the five Rice boys by the Canawaugha Indian tribe from present day Canada. The second was the 1953 tornado that struck the Aronson property and fields, killing three of the Aronsons and a hired man.
Academics
Standardized test scores
On the 2013 MCAS test, sophomores at Westborough High School ranked 105 of 354 schools in English, 59 of 354 in math, and 15 of 344 in science and technology. The school had 97% of test takers place in the advanced or proficient categories in English, compared to the state average of 91%. In math, this percentage was 92% compared to the state's 90%, and a 94% in science and technology compared to the state average of 71%.
Advanced Placement Courses
Westborough High School offers AP courses in microeconomics, computer science, 3D design portfolio, studio art 2D, music theory, calculus AB, calculus BC, statistics, biology, chemistry, United States history, French, Spanish, and English literature
and allows its students to take AP courses through the Virtual High School program. 59.6% of students at WHS take at least one AP course before they graduate.
Honor societies
Westborough High School has an active chapter of the National Honor Society, which meets monthly. The NHS chapter runs a free tutoring service available to all Westborough public school attendees.
Athletics
Fine arts
Westborough offers the following curricular music ensembles:
String orchestra
Concert band
Symphonic band
Mixed chorus
Women’s chorale
Concert choir
Full Orchestra
The following extracurricular ensembles run outside of class time:
Honors string quartet
String chamber ensemble
Marching band
Repertoire jazz band
Festival jazz band
Saxophone quartet
Woodwind quintet
Percussion ensemble
Harmony in Heels (Girls' a cappella)
Don't Panic (Mixed a cappella)
Member’s Only (Boys' a cappella)
Double Take (Girls' a cappella)
Chamber singers
Honor societies
Westborough High School’s chapter of the Tri-M Music Honor Society is chapter 3311.
Theater
Center Stage, the Westborough High School theater group, puts on three shows per academic year: a play in November, a musical in March, and a small piece or One Act festival in May.
References
Buildings and structures in Westborough, Massachusetts
Public high schools in Massachusetts
High schools in Worcester County, Massachusetts
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41054761
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North%20American%20Taiwan%20Studies%20Association
|
North American Taiwan Studies Association
|
The North American Taiwan Studies Association (NATSA) is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit academic organization established in 1994. It is operated by overseas Taiwanese students, North American doctoral students, and recent graduates who are interested in Taiwan studies. The NATSA annual conferences are the largest academic events on Taiwan Studies in North America. The NATSA conferences not only provide scholars and students of Taiwan Studies a regular forum to meet and exchange intellectual ideas, but also allow researchers on East Asia and beyond to receive dynamic feedback and broaden their academic horizons.
Early history
When NATSA was founded, it was known as the North American Taiwan Studies Conference and was located on the web at www.natsc.org until August 2006 when it switched to its current address.
Conferences
NATSA-initiated projects
NATSA Professional Development Webinar Series
The NATSA professional development webinars started in August, 2017. The objectives of the series are:
Enhance members’ professional skills
Strengthen professional networks of members in the academia and the industry
Promote NATSA to non-members
NATSA Podcast
https://www.na-tsa.org/basic-01
2019-2021
Season 1: Chats with Scholars
2021-2022
Season 2: 研究生轉運站
Taiwan Studies Syllabus Project
https://www.na-tsa.org/taiwan-syllabus-project
Experts in Taiwan Studies crowd-sourcing project
https://www.na-tsa.org/experts-in-taiwan-studies
Taiwan Studies Workshop Fund
https://www.na-tsa.org/taiwan-studies-fund
The Future of Taiwan Studies in a Post COVID world
https://www.na-tsa.org/future-of-taiwan-studies-post-covid
Ep 1. COVID-19 and Governance Social and Global Solidarity
Ep 2. How does the Hong Kong Security Law and "Decoupling from China" Impact Taiwan
Ep 3. The Impact of the COVID-19 Crisis on Taiwan's External Relations: Views from Japan
Ep 4. From Taiwanese-language Films to the Future of Taiwan Cinema
References
Educational charities based in the United States
Professional associations based in the United States
Taiwanese studies
|
41054771
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA-244
|
USA-244
|
USA-244, or Wideband Global SATCOM 6 (WGS-6) is a United States military communications satellite operated by the United States Air Force as part of the Wideband Global SATCOM programme. Launched in 2013, it was the sixth WGS satellite to reach orbit. It is stationed at a longitude of 135° West, in geostationary orbit. WGS-6 was procured by the Australian Defence Force for the U.S. Air Force, in exchange for participation in the programme.
Overview
The WGS system is a constellation of highly capable military communications satellites that leverage cost-effective methods and technological advances in the communications satellite industry. The WGS system is composed of three principal segments: Space Segment (satellites), Control Segment (operators) and Terminal Segment (users). Each WGS satellite provides service in multiple frequency bands, with the unprecedented ability to cross-band between the two frequencies on board the satellite. WGS augments other satellites.
In early 2001, a satellite communications industry team led by Boeing Satellite Systems was selected to develop the Wideband Gapfiller Satellite (WGS) system as successors to the Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) series of communications satellites. This satellite communications system is intended to support the warfighter with newer and far greater capabilities than provided by current systems. In March 2007, the acronym WGS was changed to Wideband Global SATCOM.
Just one WGS satellite provides more SATCOM capacity than the entire legacy Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) constellation.
As the backbone of the U.S. military's global satellite communications, Wideband Global SATCOM Satellite (WGS) system provides flexible, high-capacity communications for the Nation's warfighters through procurement and operation of the satellite constellation and the associated control systems. WGS provides worldwide flexible, high data rate and long haul communications for the Department of Defense (DOD), governmental organizations and international partners.
Satellite description
Built by Boeing Satellite Systems, WGS-6 is based on the BSS-702 satellite bus. It had a mass at launch of , and was expected to operate for fourteen years. The spacecraft is equipped with two solar panels to generate power for its communications payload, which consists of cross-band X-band and Ka-band transponders. Propulsion is provided by an R-4D-15 apogee motor, with four XIPS-25 ion engines for stationkeeping.
Launch
WGS-6 was launched by United Launch Alliance (ULA), who placed it into orbit using a Delta IV M+ (5,4) launch vehicle, flight number D363. The launch took place from Space Launch Complex 37B (SLC-37B) at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS), with liftoff at 00:29 UTC on 8 August 2013. The launch was successful, placing the WGS-6 into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), from which the spacecraft raised itself into geostationary orbit using its onboard propulsion system. The satellite was designated USA-244 under the U.S. military's designation system, and received the International Designator 2013-041A and Satellite Catalog Number 39222.
References
Spacecraft launched in 2013
USA satellites
Wideband Global SATCOM
Communications satellites in geostationary orbit
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41054821
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20buildings%20and%20structures%20in%20Hayward%2C%20California
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List of buildings and structures in Hayward, California
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This is a list of buildings and structures in Hayward, California. The list includes structures once located in Hayward, California no longer standing there, and buildings historically associated with the city that are not currently within city limits. Structures in the National Register of Historic Places are indicated with NRHP. Structures (and sites of former structures) that are California Historical Landmarks, are indicated with CHL.
Hayward's first city hall, located in Alex Giualini Plaza
Centennial Hall Convention Center, now demolished
Eden Congregational Church (NRHP)
Green Shutter Hotel (NRHP)
The Hayward Ace Hardware, owned by news reporter Jim Wieder, an historic building built in 1900 as the Hayward Emporium mercantile store, where upstairs, boxers Max Baer and George Foreman later trained.
Hayward Amtrak station
Hayward BART station
Hayward City Hall
Hayward Executive Airport
Hayward Hall of Justice
Hayward High School
Hayward Shoreline Interpretive Center
Harry Rowell Rodeo Ranch, now within the bounds of Castro Valley, drew rodeo cowboys from across the continent, and western movie actors such as Slim Pickens and others from Hollywood.
Hunt's cannery, operated through most of the 20th century, closed and demolished in late 20th century
Kaiser Permanente Medical Center, building no longer extant as of 2014
Meek Mansion (NRHP), in unincorporated Alameda County, historically associated with Hayward
Mervyns Building, former headquarters of the Mervyns department store chain (demolished in 21st century)
Moreau Catholic High School
Mount Eden High School
Pioneer Amphitheatre
Pioneer Gym
Pioneer Stadium
Russell City Energy Center
San Mateo–Hayward Bridge, with the eastern terminus in Hayward
Skywest Commons, shopping center
South Hayward BART station
Southland Mall
St. Rose Hospital
Sunset High School
Tennyson High School
Ukraina Ranch, the former property of Agapius Honcharenko (no longer extant) CHL#1025, marker located in Garin Regional Park
City Center Building, the second former city hall, briefly the tallest building in Hayward (abandoned in 1989, then demolished in 2020)
Warren Hall, on the California State University, East Bay campus, demolished in 2013
References
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Alameda County, California
Hayward
Hayward
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41054827
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowling%20at%20the%202006%20Asian%20Games%20%E2%80%93%20Men%27s%20masters
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Bowling at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's masters
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The men's masters competition at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha was held on 9 and 10 December 2006 at Qatar Bowling Centre.
The Masters event comprises the top 16 bowlers (maximum two per country) from the all-events competition.
Schedule
All times are Arabia Standard Time (UTC+03:00)
Results
Legend
DNF — Did not finish
Preliminary
Stepladder finals
References
Results at ABF Website
Results
External links
Official Website
Men's masters
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41054840
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord%20Morpheous
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Lord Morpheous
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Lord Morpheous is a Canadian sex educator, author and photographer based in New York. He is the author of How to Be Kinky: A Beginner’s Guide to BDSM, How to Be Kinkier: More Adventures in Adult Playtime and Bondage Basics: Naughty Knots and Risque Restraints You Need to Know. Morpheous' work is archived in the Sexual Representation Collection of the University of Toronto's Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies, at the Leather Archives and Museum in Chicago, and at the National Archives of Canada. Morpheous has taught a variety of workshops on rope bondage, the aesthetics of bondage, fetish photography, advanced and beginner BDSM, and workshops catered to professional dominants and submissives. He is also the founder of Morpheous’ Bondage Extravaganza, an annual rope bondage themed art installation.
Education
Morpheous gained a B.Ed and an Honours BA in Visual Art with a Minor in English. He also has a Degree in Broadcasting.
Morpheous' Bondage Extravaganza
Lord Morpheous hosts an annual event called Morpheous' Bondage Extravaganza (also known as MBE), an annual public display of rope bondage during the Nuit Blanche festival in Toronto. The event features 12 hours of rope bondage art ranging from simple bondage performed on the floor to aerial suspension. This installation is not an official part of Nuit Blanche. According to the event website, the first Morpheous’ Bondage Extravaganza took place in a storefront window on Toronto's Queen Street West in 2007, and has since grown to a 4,000 square foot venue in Toronto. The event is also live-streamed over the internet and has also recently expanded to include an MBE in Orlando, Florida and San Francisco, California. The event has grown over the years, and has attracted 6000 attendees cross the three cities with another 75,000 watching online.
KinkMe App
Morpheous is the creator of the KinkMe app. This app is designed to help the user determine their "kink compatibility" with other KinkMe app users. It instructs the user to fill out a checklist of kinky activities and then bump phones with another user to compare their kink interests and gauge their compatibility.
Altsexed
Altsexed is a website dedicated to lectures and classes by Morpheous. According to the website altsexed.com, lectures and classes by Morpheous are suitable for:
human sexuality courses and psychology & social studies
safer sex presentations, LGBT organizations
sexual diversity studies programs
Undergraduate orientation week
Journalism
Morpheous currently writes a BDSM and rope bondage column aimed at kink beginners for Hustler Hollywood, in which he discusses such topics as consent and communication, safety in kinky sex, and how to bring up BDSM with your partner.
Bibliography
How to be Kinky: A Beginner's Guide to BDSM; 2008, Green Candy Press,
How To Be Kinkier: More Adventures in Adult Playtime; 2012, Green Candy Press,
Bondage Basics: Naughty Knots and Risque Restraints You Need to Know; 2015, Quiver Books,
References
External links
BDSM writers
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Canadian non-fiction writers
Sex educators
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41054859
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshid%20Hashemi
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Jamshid Hashemi
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Jamshid Hashemi (died 2013) was an Iranian-born trader in arms and other commodities convicted of fraud in the UK in 1999. Hashemi had a 9-year relationship with the UK's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), beginning soon after his arrival in the UK in 1984. Hashemi and his brother Cyrus Hashemi played a role in the 1980 October Surprise affair (Jamshid later testified to the House October Surprise Task Force in 1992) and in the mid-1980s Iran-Contra affair.
Career
Hashemi and his brother Cyrus Hashemi supported the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and Jamshid was appointed to oversee the national radio network, where he worked with Mehdi Karroubi's brother Hassan. Hashemi and his brother Cyrus Hashemi went on to play a role in the 1980 October Surprise affair (Jamshid later testified to the House October Surprise Task Force in 1992) and in the Iran-Contra affair.
Upon arriving in the US after the Revolution, Hashemi set up RRC Co Inc in Stamford, Connecticut, which Hashemi described in an affidavit as "an import-export company ... (which) originally dealt in commodities such as rice and sugar, construction machinery parts and Oriental rugs". Towards the end of 1980 Hashemi was approached by a contact on behalf of the Iranian Air Force in regards to acquiring aircraft spare parts. The company shipped millions of dollars' worth of spare parts and related goods to Iran, with billing handled via a London office. RRC's operations ceased in late 1981 over a dispute between partners regarding allocation of profits.
Soon after his move to the UK in 1984, Jamshid Hashemi developed a relationship with the UK's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) which would last nine years. Hashemi broke off the relationship in 1993 after the UK Government refused to issue him a British passport. At one time Hashemi gave the UK Conservative Party "£55,000 after meeting Margaret Thatcher at the home of the then foreign secretary, Geoffrey Howe." Hashemi deals that MI6 approved of included the supply of £350 million worth of Silkworm missiles from China to Iran in 1987 (the agency had supported this by sending an agent to China in 1985 to help arrange the deal) and the transfer of Portuguese 155mm ammunition.
In July 1997 Hashemi was arrested in Dublin whilst travelling to the US for a second triple heart bypass. He was released in February 1999, having pleaded guilty to three fraud charges and one of using a false passport, while four charges were dropped to avoid UK security matters being aired in open court. At the time of his release The Guardian said that "A source close to the case yesterday described MI6 as lucky." The judge in the case described Hashemi as a "ruthless international conman", with the Serious Fraud Office accusing Hashemi of setting up companies to defraud suppliers of at least £3m using non-existent commodity deals with Iran. The judge also noted that the three-year sentence would have been longer had Hashemi not had a record of supplying "valuable information" to MI6, as attested in court by Hashemi's anonymous case officers. Hashemi's victims included the US trading firm Octagon, which at the time of the 1994 deal was listed on the NASDAQ.
Notes
References
Date of birth missing
2013 deaths
Arms traders
Iranian businesspeople
Iran–Contra affair
Iran hostage crisis
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41054865
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013%20Scottish%20Open%20Grand%20Prix
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2013 Scottish Open Grand Prix
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The 2013 Scottish Open Grand Prix was the sixteenth grand prix gold and grand prix tournament of the 2013 BWF Grand Prix Gold and Grand Prix. The tournament was held in Emirates Arena, Glasgow, Scotland November 20–24, 2013 and had a total purse of $50,000.
Men's singles
Seeds
Ville Lang (semi-final)
Henri Hurskainen (final)
Brice Leverdez (champion)
Ramdan Misbun (first round)
Sattawat Pongnairat (first round)
Dmytro Zavadsky (quarter-final)
Scott Evans (second round)
Andre Kurniawan Tedjono (semi-final)
Joachim Persson (third round)
Petr Koukal (first round)
Lucas Corvée (third round)
Eetu Heino (third round)
Christian Lind Thomsen (third round)
Kieran Merrilees (third round)
Thomas Rouxel (quarter-final)
Raul Must (third round)
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
Bottom half
Section 5
Section 6
Section 7
Section 8
Women's singles
Seeds
Carolina Marín (champion)
Kirsty Gilmour (final)
Petya Nedelcheva (second round)
Beatriz Corrales (semi-final)
Kristina Gavnholt (quarter-final)
Sashina Vignes Waran (quarter-final)
Linda Zechiri (quarter-final)
Jamie Subandhi (first round)
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Men's doubles
Seeds
Chris Langridge / Peter Mills (quarter-final)
Łukasz Moreń / Wojciech Szkudlarczyk (second round)
Adam Cwalina / Przemysław Wacha (semi-final)
Marcus Ellis / Paul Van Rietvelde (withdrew)
Mads Conrad-Petersen / Mads Pieler Kolding (champion)
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen / Kim Astrup Sorensen (final)
Jacco Arends / Jelle Maas (quarter-final)
Phillip Chew / Sattawat Pongnairat (first round)
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Women's doubles
Seeds
Imogen Bankier / Petya Nedelcheva (semi-final)
Jillie Cooper / Kirsty Gilmour (second round)
Heather Olver / Kate Robertshaw (quarter-final)
Ng Hui Ern / Ng Hui Lin (final)
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
Mixed doubles
Seeds
Chris Langridge / Heather Olver (final)
Phillip Chew / Jamie Subandhi (second round)
Anders Skaarup Rasmussen / Lena Grebak (quarter-final)
Nico Ruponen / Amanda Hogstrom (second round)
Robert Blair / Imogen Bankier (champion)
Jacco Arends / Selena Piek (semi-final)
Sam Magee / Chloe Magee (quarter-final)
Ross Smith / Renuga Veeran (second round)
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
References
2013 in Scottish sport
International sports competitions in Glasgow
Scotland Open Grand Prix
Scotland Open Grand Prix
Scottish Open (badminton)
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41054878
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosh%20%28model%29
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Mosh (model)
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Mosh (born August 21, 1989 in Russia) is a Russian-American alternative model and burlesque performer. Called "one of the world's leading alternative and fetish models" by ModelMayhem.com, she has been on the cover of Bizarre Magazine a near-record seven times, as well as LA Weekly, OC Weekly, Girls and Corpses, DDI Mag, and numerous others. She has been featured on Playboy.com and Maxim en Espanol, and also stars in the music video for Pink's "Blow Me (One Last Kiss)." along with Nick 13's music videos for "Nighttime Sky" and "In the Orchard" from his eponymous album. More recently, she appears in the Smashing Pumpkins video "Silvery Sometimes (Ghosts)".
Background
Mosh was born in what was then the Soviet Union, but moved to the United States with her family at the age of three. She trained in gymnastics for more than 10 years in school and was a cheerleader in high school, but injured her elbow in her first year as an acrobat. This limited her movement, and soon she began developing an interest in fetishwear, bondage, and pinup photography, ultimately guiding her to alternative and fetish modeling and burlesque.
Career
Mosh began building her modeling portfolio at the age of 17, networking on Modelmayhem.com to set up photo shoots with local photographers while juggling high school, a job and an internship. She learned how to do her own styling and makeup, partially out of necessity due to an inability to pay makeup artists, which led to the development of her self-styled signature look. After some years of modeling, Mosh began to combine her tease and fetish aesthetics with her gymnastic experience from her childhood, becoming a burlesque and fetish performer.
Her fetishes include latex, corsets, stockings, ropes, and more. She operated an exclusive pay-based website for her fans, which offers members-only photos, videos, and information.
References
External links
Official Instagram
1989 births
Living people
American female models
American neo-burlesque performers
Soviet emigrants to the United States
21st-century American women
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41054884
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartbreak%20Coverup
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Heartbreak Coverup
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"Heartbreak Coverup" is a song recorded by Canadian singer-songwriter Jesse Labelle for his second studio album, Two (2012), featuring guest vocals by Alyssa Reid. It was released in Canada through Wax Records as the lead single from the album on April 10, 2012. The song was written by Labelle and Reid along with Rob James, Dave Lichens, Luke McMaster, and Thomas "Tawgs" Salter. A remix EP was released in the UK through 3 Beat Records on May 19, 2013.
It was the first song of Labelle's career to hold a position on a Billboard chart, debuting at #82 on the Canadian Hot 100. "Heartbreak Coverup" earned Labelle the "Best New Group or Solo Artist" award in the genre of Hot AC at the 2012 Canadian Radio Music Awards.
Composition
"Heartbreak Coverup" is a midtempo, piano-driven pop rock ballad with a duration of three minutes and nineteen seconds. It is composed in the key of B major and is set to a tempo of 77 BPM. Lyrically, the song describes a man drinking to dull or "cover up" the pain of his "heartbreak" and contemplating calling his ex, whom he can't seem to let go. Reid's vocal styling on the refrain contains influences of contemporary R&B.
Music video
The video for "Heartbreak Coverup" was directed by Marc André Debruyne and premiered July 10, 2012.
Synopsis
The video starts off with Jesse Labelle performing the song. Which eventually leads to Alyssa Ried.
Track listing
Digital download
"Heartbreak Coverup (feat. Alyssa Reid) [Radio Version]" - 3:19
"Heartbreak Coverup (No Feature Version)" - 3:20
Remixes EP
"Heartbreak Coverup (UK Radio Edit)" - 2:39
"Heartbreak Coverup (Liam Keegan Radio Edit)" - 2:38
"Heartbreak Coverup (Radio Edit)" - 3:19
"Heartbreak Coverup (Liam Keegan Radio Edit)" - 3:25
"Heartbreak Coverup (Liam Keegan Club Mix)" - 5:50
"Heartbreak Coverup (Wideboys Radio Edit)" - 4:10
"Heartbreak Coverup (Wideboys Remix)" - 6:11
"Heartbreak Coverup (iStep Remix)" - 5:22
"Heartbreak Coverup (iStep Dub Mix)" - 5:22
Chart performance
Certifications
References
2012 songs
2012 singles
Alyssa Reid songs
Songs written by Alyssa Reid
Songs written by Tawgs Salter
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41054904
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MESP1
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MESP1
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Mesoderm posterior 1 homolog (mouse) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the MESP1 gene. MESP1 is a transcription factor that regulates cardiovascular progenitor specification.
References
Further reading
Genes on human chromosome 15
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41054925
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto%20%28provincial%20electoral%20district%29
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Toronto (provincial electoral district)
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Toronto was an Ontario provincial electoral district that existed from 1886 to 1894. It was created by merging Toronto West and Toronto East ridings into one large riding covering the entire city.
It was abolished prior to the 1894 election when it was split into four new ridings - Toronto North, Toronto South, Toronto East and Toronto West.
The Toronto district elected three members. In each election voters were allowed to cast two votes; they were allowed to vote for two candidates (Limited voting). The three candidates with the most votes were the winners. Parties did not run more than two candidates, for fear of splitting their votes, so mixed representation was produced in each contest in the Toronto district in 1886 and 1890.(No one party took all the seats.)
Members of Provincial Parliament
Election results
The first three candidates in the poll were elected to the legislature.
Percentage of votes received does not indicate percentage of voters who favoured the candidate because most or all of the Toronto voters cast two votes.
By-elections
These by-elections were held to replace members who had died in office. In each case only one member was elected for replacement.
References
Notes
Citations
Former provincial electoral districts of Ontario
Provincial electoral districts of Toronto
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41054941
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/43rd%20North%20Carolina%20Infantry%20Regiment
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43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment
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The 43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, also known as the 43rd Regiment, North Carolina State Troops or 43rd N.C.S.T., was organized at Camp Mangum, about four miles west of Raleigh, North Carolina, on March 18, 1862.
Officers
Junius Daniel was elected colonel of this regiment in March 1862, but declined the appointment. He was later elected colonel of the 45th North Carolina Infantry. Thomas S. Kenan was elected Lieutenant colonel of the 43rd regiment in March 1862, and promoted to colonel in April 1862. Wounded in action on July 3, 1863, at Gettysburg, PA, he was later captured during the retreat. Confined at Johnson's Island, Ohio, until exchanged on March 22, 1865. Photo at Alabama Department of Archives and History. Hampton Beverly served as acting commander of the 43rd Regiment from January–February 1863. William Gaston Lewis transferred as Lieutenant colonel from the 33rd North Carolina Infantry on April 25, 1862, and appointed acting commander on July 3, 1863. He was promoted to Brigadier General on May 31, 1864.
History
43rd Regiment, North Carolina Infantry: 43rd Infantry Regiment was assembled at Camp Mangum, near Raleigh, North Carolina, in March, 1862. Its members were from counties in Mecklenburg, Wilson, Halifax, Edgecombe, Warren, Union, and Anson
. During the war the 43rd was assigned to General Junius Daniel's, Robert F. Hoke's, and Bryan Grimes' Brigade. It fought in the Seven Days' Battles and saw action at Goldsboro, Gettysburg, Plymouth, Drewry's Bluff, and Cold Harbor. The regiment was then involved in Early's Shenandoah Valley operations and the Appomattox Campaign. It was organized with 1,066 officers and men, lost twenty-six percent of the 572 engaged at Gettysburg, and had 4 killed and 13 wounded at Plymouth. On April 9, 1865, it surrendered 9 officers and 164 men.
Malvern Hill
In the Battle of Malvern Hill the 43rd was ordered to occupy a road near the James River, where it was exposed to galling fire from the Federal gunboats, and from the Union artillery batteries on Malvern Hill in front. However, the regiment was not actively engaged.
The 43rd remained at Drewry's Bluff protecting Richmond during the Sharpsburg Campaign, and was later sent to Kinston, NC in the spring of 1863 in order to help relieve Washington, NC from the federal occupation.
Gettysburg
From the public monument at Gettysburg: Forty-third North Carolina Regiment, Daniel's Brigade Rodes's Division, Ewell's Corps, Army of Northern Virginia. Thomas Stephen Kenan, Colonel; William Gaston Lewis, Lieutenant Colonel; Walter Jones Boggan, Major. As they approached the field of battle on the morning of July 1, the 43rd North Carolina, along with the rest of Daniel's Brigade, heard the distant booming of cannon. Early in the afternoon the regiment moved to the right and onto open ground where they were met by a furious fire. Their steady progress was checked by the deep railroad cut, but subsequent assaults were successful in breaking the Union line. Having suffered heavily, the regiment rested for the night west of town. The next morning the 43rd supported a battery just north of the Seminary. Shelling from guns on the nearby heights inflicted some losses. Toward evening the Regiment took up a position on the southern edge of town. Before daybreak on July 3, the 43d moved to the extreme left of the Confederate line to take part in an assault on Culp's Hill. Passing this point and advancing under heavy fire, they occupied earthworks abandoned by Union troops. Attempting to push beyond the works, the regiment was exposed to a most severe fire of canister, shrapnel and shell at short range. During the attack Col. Kenan was wounded and taken from the field and command passed to Lt. Col. Lewis. The Regiment retired to this point an remained exposed and under fire until ordered to recross Rock Creek in the early evening. "All that men could do, was done nobly"
Plymouth, NC
In the spring of 1864, the 43rd Infantry took part in the Battle of Plymouth (1864), where the regiment helped take the town, with the Union garrison and a great deal of supplies were captured. The command was given "The Thanks of the Confederate Congress" for their success. The regiment then aided in the attacks on New Bern, NC and Washington, NC. They returned to Virginia in May 1864.
Snicker's Gap
The 43rd North Carolina Infantry was part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864, which included Battle of Cool Spring or Snicker's Gap. As Jubal Early's Confederate troops were leaving the area around Washington, DC, pursuing Federal forces caused a battle in a small gap in the Blue Ridge mountains. "The troops then moved toward the Valley of Virginia, and crossed the Blue Ridge at Snicker’s Gap on 17 July, the Union troops slowly following and an additional force threatening the flank of the Confederate right. On the afternoon of that day Rodes’s Division attacked the enemy at Snicker’s Gap, driving them into the Shenandoah River, where the loss in killed and drowned was very heavy."
Another soldier recorded the costs of the battle in his diary: "We succeeded in driving the enemy back across the river and to that instant the victory remained with us but I doubt whether we won an advantage by the fight. Our casualties were quite heavy as heavy probably as that of the enemy. From the best information I can gather we had about three and the Yankees about seven thousand men engaged. In this Engagement my Regiment counted three hundred and twenty-nine muskets. My flag received six bullet holes in it. The color bearer was wounded through the arm..."
Appomattox Courthouse
The 43rd Regiment, North Carolina State Troops, participated in the Battle of Appomattox Court House, and surrendered on April 9, 1865, with 9 officers and 164 men. General Bryan Grimes' Division was composed of four brigades, and on April 10, 1865, there were present for duty 1,659 officers and men, with 722 .58 calibre muskets among the men, 11 more muskets in the brigade trains, and 30 more muskets in the division trains. There were thus twenty regiments with 722 muskets in their hands, an average of 36 muskets to each regiment and less than four to each company, with 32 rounds of ammunition for each musket with the troops, and forty in the brigade ordnance wagons and another fifteen rounds per musket in the division trains, a total of about 87 rounds per musket, enough to put up a pretty stiff fight. 722 muskets among 1,659 men represents the fighting strength of Grimes’ division at Appomattox Court House at the time of the surrender.
Commendations
In the after-action report following the battle of Gettysburg, the regimental commander wrote: "With but one exception–and that an officer–the officers and men behaved remarkably well. There was no straggling from this regiment. Where all acted so well, it is difficult to particularize for good conduct; but Lieutenant [Jesse A.] Macon, Company F, and Lieutenant [W. E.] Stitt, Company B, showed such marked coolness and bravery on the field, that it is just that they should be mentioned. Sergeants [P. B.] Grier, Company B, and [G. W.] Wills, Company D, behaved remarkably well."
Following the Battle of Plymouth (1864), the government "Resolved by Congress of the Confederate States of America, that the thanks of Congress and the country are due and are tendered to Major-General Robert F. Hoke and Commander James W. Cooke, and the officers and men under their command, for the brilliant victory over the enemy at Plymouth, NC. Joint Resolution Approved May 17, 1864."
Regimental Organization
Many of the companies in North Carolina military units were from the same county or area, but not all men in these companies are from those counties. Many were recent immigrants, married into local families, purchased land or had occupations that would take them from another place into North Carolina.
Company A - "The Duplin Rifles" - many men from Duplin County, NC. The company entered service in April, 1861, as Company C of the 2nd North Carolina Volunteers, stationed near Norfolk, Va. At the end of their six months service, they were transferred to Company A, 43rd NC. 117 enlisted men. "From a roster kept by Sergeant B.F. Hall, it appears that there were fifty-six men on the rolls at the close of the war, thirty-five who were either in prison, on parole or detail, and no deserter from the company during the entire war."
Company B - "Union Farmers" - many men from Mecklenburg County, NC. 73 enlisted men.
Company C - many men from Wilson County, NC. 102 enlisted men.
Company D - many men from Halifax County, NC. 93 enlisted men.
Company E - "Edgecombe Boys" - many men from Edgecombe County, NC. 96 enlisted men.
Company F - many men from Halifax County, NC. 101 enlisted men.
Company G - "Warren Defenders" - many men from Warren County, NC. 110 enlisted men.
Company H - "Fisher's Light Infantry" - many men from Anson County, NC. 112 enlisted men.
Company I - "Anson Regulators" - many men from Anson County. 139 enlisted men.
Company K - "Anson Independent" - meny men from Anson County. 120 enlisted men.
See also
List of North Carolina Confederate Civil War units
References
Bibliography
Barnes, Ruffin, and Hugh Buckner Johnston. The Confederate Letters of Ruffin Barnes of Wilson County, North Carolina. Wilson, N.C.: [s.n.], 1953. Original letters are "now in the possession of the Hon. W.A. Lucas, of Wilson, North Carolina"—Leaf [1]. Typescript (carbon copy)--with corrections written in. Includes the text of 21 letters written by Capt. Ruffin Barnes of Company C, 43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, plus one letter to him written by Jesse Watson.
Barnes, Ruffin. Ruffin Barnes Civil War Letters. 1862. Three original letters and six transcriptions of letters from Ruffin Barnes, a Confederate soldier in the 43rd North Carolina Infantry. Barnes writes to his wife Mary A. Barnes and discusses generally his homesickness, his plans to visit her, his diet, and his daily activities. In a 17 October 1862 letter, he mentions buying an expensive dress for her. He writes, "there is plenty of this Confederate money and it may be no count if I was to lay it all up." In a 26 October 1863 letter he discusses eating beef for nearly every meal and his longing for milk or vegetables. In an 18 July 1864 letter addressed from Harpers Ferry, Barnes discusses marching to Sharpsburg, skirmishing with the 6th Yankee corps, and marching on "Washington city." In addition, Barnes writes that the unit had marched some 3,000 miles and that "our brigade is not as large now as it once was." He notes a decision not to attack Washington because "finding them so well fortified our Genl. commanding . . . thought he would make too grate [sic] a sacrifice of life to undertake to enter the town." In passing, Barnes also writes, "tell father that Bennett has got old Francis P. Blair's sword. He is United States Postmaster and a Black hearted notorious abolitionist."
Beavans, William. William Beavans Diary and Letters. 1861. William Beavans's diary, January 1861-July 1864, which includes intermittent entries written at home in Halifax County, N.C., and during the Civil War while campaigning in Virginia with the 1st North Carolina Infantry Regiment in 1861, and with the 43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, 1862-1864. The diary documents weather, reading, drilling, troop movements, and other matters, and includes drafts of love letters and poems; remarks about the women Beavans courted; and memoranda regarding ordnance, mess accounts, and finances. Also included are a letter to Maggie Beavans, Beavans's sister, commenting on the conscript law, measles, and camp life, and two letters of Maggie and her friend Fannie regarding friends, relatives, and sweethearts killed in the war.
Birdsong, James Cook, 1843- ? Brief Sketches of the North Carolina State Troops in the War Between the States, includes the First, Second, Third, Fourth... Collected and Compiled by James C. Birdsong, State Librarian, under a Resolution Ratified March 6, 1893.. Raleigh, NC: Josephus Daniels, State Printer and Binder. 1894. 213 pages.
Carr, W. D., Robert Aycock, and Elsie J. Aycock. The Civil War Letters of W.D. Carr of Duplin County, North Carolina: With Additional Notes on His Family and the Campaigns in Which He Served. Raleigh, N.C. (2001 Manuel St., Raleigh): R. and E.J. Aycock, 1995.
Dabbs, J. J. Sketch of the Anson Regulators Compiled from Muster Roll and Other Memoranda. S.l: s.n, 1800.
Hall, Benjamin F. Sketch of the Duplin Rifles. Raleigh? N.C.: s.n, 1895. 'Duplin Rifles' existed as the 2nd Regiment, Co. C during 1861 and reorganized as the 43rd Regiment, Co. A for 1862-1865. "Prepared from muster-roll and memoranda by Sergeant B.F. Hall"—P. 2.
Kenan family. Kenan Family Papers. 1748. Correspondence among various members of the Kenan and Graham families, relating to activities of relatives in North Carolina, Alabama, Maryland, and other southern states. Letters document the political, domestic, and economic interests of well-to-do Southerners between 1810 and 1900. In their letters, the Kenans and Grahams discussed contemporary concerns, such as slavery and plantation life; the activities of Confederate congressman Owen Rand Kenan (1804-1887); educational opportunities for young men and women; religion; agricultural problems in the old and new South; turn-of-the-century experiences of young scholars and other members of the Kenan family; and the role of William R. Kenan, Jr. (1872-1965), in publicizing the discovery of calcium carbide. In addition to the letters, there are financial and legal papers that pertain to the political, business, and military activities of various Kenans and Grahams. Also included are account books, bills and receipts, printed material, and miscellaneous papers illustrating the wide-ranging interests of members of these two families: Thomas S. Kenan's Civil War service in the 43rd N.C. Regiment; medicine; the University of North Carolina, especially in the 1890s; women's work; the Democratic Party; and the restoration of Liberty Hall, the Kenan homestead in Kenansville, Duplin County, N.C. Also included are a few recipe books; a brief travel diary from trips to Canada in 1895 and 1897; and photographs of various family members and their acquaintances, including Graham Kenan (1883-1920) and friends during their undergraduate days at the University of North Carolina, ca. 1904. Union Carbide materials include two letterpress books documenting the early history of the Union Carbide Company and its predecessor companies and Union Carbide Corporation: A Brief Look at Historical Highlights (1991) by M.A. Hill, which traces the formation of the company and the growth of chemicals and plastics production and technical facilities in the United States. The Addition of 2007 contains correspondence, notes, and clippings, 1806-1947, pertaining to the Kenan family, chiefly to Chauncey Graham and Stephen Graham, and to Mary Lilly Kenan Flagler Bingham. The Addition of February 2008 includes a likeness of James Kenan (1740-1810).
Kenan, Thomas S. Additional Sketch Forty-Third Regiment, Company A.
Kenan, Thomas S. [.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15012coll8/id/34 Sketch of the Forty-third Regiment North Carolina troops. Prepared in 1895 by officers and men who were participants in its movements.] Regimental history including a roster of the forty-third regiment North Carolina troops. Includes details of the Three-Days Fight, the Battle of Plymouth, and the Battle of Drewry's Bluff. General Collection. State Library of North Carolina.
Kenan, Thomas S. "Forty-Third Regiment." North Carolina Troops, 861-1865. Pages 1–20.
Kenan, Thomas S. "Prisoners at Johnson Island to Governor Vance." North Carolina Troops, 861-1865. Pages 697-701.
Manarin, Louis H., and Weymouth T. Jordan. "43rd Regiment NC Troops." North Carolina Troops 1861-1865 A Roster. Vol. 10. Raleigh, N.C.: State Dept. of Archives and History, 1966. Pages 289-293.
Parker, Lizzie Nelms Smith. Papers. 1854. Personal and family correspondence of Lizzie [Nelms?] (Smith) Parker consisting chiefly of letters from her brother, William T. Smith, concerning his activities as a Confederate soldier, teacher at the Carolina Female College and the Anson Institute, and as a farmer in Anson County, N.C. Civil War letters discuss high prices; Union sentiment in Wilmington, N.C.; the siege of Petersburg; and the activities of the 43rd Regiment, North Carolina Troops, C.S.A. Other letters describe Reconstruction in Wilmington, N.C., and emphasize the advantages of living in Texas.
Polk, Leonidas L. 1876. The 43rd NC Regiment During the War: "Whiffs from My Old Camp Pipe" by Leonidas L. Polk of the Weekly Ansonian (Polkton, NC).
Turner, John M. Correspondence. 1862. Correspondence between Turner and his wife, Moley, while he was near Raleigh, N.C., with the 43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Company A, primarily describing camp life, life on the farm in Duplin County, and their affection for each other.
Whitaker, Cary. Cary Whitaker Papers. 1798. The collection consists of a diary, 1864, written while Whitaker was captain of Company D, 43rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, serving in Virginia, recounting camp life, battles, and hospital experience; Whitaker's notebook containing model statements for indictments or convictions for crimes, most involving slaves or free blacks, 1859; an inventory of property of J.S. and Cary Whitaker, 1865, and other entries; Civil War documents, 1862-1865; and scattered Whitaker family papers, including a few family and business letters from Halifax County, N.C., 1798-1980.
Wills, George Whitaker. George Whitaker Wills Letters. 1861. Civil War letters from Wills, a soldier with the 43rd N.C. Infantry Regiment in Virginia, to his sister in Halifax County, N.C., concerning camp life and troop movements, including moving through Pennsylvania toward Gettysburg, and other military affairs.
Wills, William H. William Henry Wills Papers, 1712-1892, Halifax and Washington Counties, North Carolina Also Florida, Georgia, and Maryland. Bethesda, MD: University Publications of America, 1992. This collection documents the life of itinerant ministers of the Methodist Protestant Church and church administration between the 1840s-1890s, with information on circuit travel, camp meetings, finances, arbitrations and trials, race relations within the church, and local, state, district, and national administration. Other topics include marriage and family life; boarding school life; plantation affairs; general merchants; slavery; politics; Civil War camp life; and women teachers in the postbellum period. There are letters from students at Chowan Female Institute, Warrenton Female College, Baltimore Female College, and the University of North Carolina; from teachers in several locations, including the Oxford Orphan Asylum. Civil War letters are from soldiers in the 2nd, 17th, and 43rd North Carolina regiments, and from a slave who travelled with the 2nd and 43rd regiments. Religious papers include reports, trial documents, sermons, essays (most written by a woman), circuit class books, and marriage licenses. Plantation papers include correspondence and legal and financial materials relating to cotton planters in eastern North Carolina and Florida. There are also a few travel diaries documenting journeys in the antebellum South, and a diary commenting on life in Key West, Miami, and Tampa, Fla. William H. Wills was a general merchant, an itinerant Methodist Protestant minister, and a cotton planter in Halifax County, N.C. His wife was Anna Whitaker Wills (1817-1893), and his children included Reverend Richard H. (1836-1891), George Whitaker (1842-1864), Mary (1848-1941), Lucy (b. 1844), and Edward (b. 1846). Other prominent Wills family members were Dr. Cary Whitaker (1782-1858) of Enfield, N.C., and Jackson County, Fla.
Wellman, Manly Wade. Rebel Boast: First at Bethel—Last at Appomattox. New York: H. Holt, 1956. Whitaker family.
External links
National Park Service unit history. See: https://web.archive.org/web/20111014231840/http://www.civilwar.nps.gov/cwss/
http://www.43nc.co.nf/ "We are a UK based regiment and member of the American Civil War Society Ltd."
Units and formations of the Confederate States Army from North Carolina
Military units and formations established in 1862
Military units and formations disestablished in 1865
1862 establishments in North Carolina
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41054963
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20W.%20Jones
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Christopher W. Jones
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Christopher W. Jones is an American chemical engineer and researcher on catalysis and carbon dioxide capture. In 2022 he is the John Brock III School Chair and Professor of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and adjunct professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the Georgia Institute of Technology, in Atlanta, Georgia. Previously he served as associate vice president for research at Georgia Tech (2013-2019), including a stint as interim executive vice-president for research in 2018.
Early life and education
Jones was born in Michigan, where he graduated from Troy High School in 1991. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan and masters and doctorate degrees from the California Institute of Technology, all in chemical engineering. Following a post-doctoral appointment in chemistry and chemical engineering at the California Institute of Technology, he joined the faculty at the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2000.
Career
Jones has been recognized for his contributions to research in catalysis by the American Chemical Society with the Ipatieff Prize in 2010, the North American Catalysis Society with the Paul H. Emmett Award in Fundamental Catalysis in 2013 and the American Society of Engineering Education with the Curtis W. McGraw Research Award, also in 2013. The American Institute of Chemical Engineers recognized him as a leading mid-career researcher in 2017 with the Andreas Acrivos Award for Professional Progress in Chemical Engineering. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2022 for his contributions to the design and synthesis of catalytic materials and for advancing technologies related to carbon capture and sequestration.
In scholarly publishing, Jones has led multiple successful new journals. In 2011, he was selected by the American Chemical Society (ACS) as the Founding Editor-in-Chief of the new interdisciplinary catalysis journal, ACS Catalysis, which was recognized by the Association of American Publishers as the Best New Journal in Science, Technology & Medicine in 2012. In 2020, he was named the founding Editor-in-Chief of the new open access chemistry journal JACS Au, which is also published by the ACS. He has over 300 journal publications and patents.
Jones conducts research in the field of direct air capture, an approach to the mitigation of climate change in which carbon dioxide is extracted from the atmosphere for sequestration as a means to reduce the global atmospheric carbon dioxide level. Jones is the leading researcher on direct air capture according to a 2022 biobliometric analysis. He is an expert on the use of solid materials containing amines to capture carbon dioxide from air and other ultra-dilute gases, and has partnered with Global Thermostat, LLC, as well as other firms, to develop commercial technologies based on his research in adsorption.
In 2016 Jones published a comprehensive review of materials and technologies for direct air capture. In 2017-2018, he co-led the study of direct air capture technologies and identified knowledge gaps and research needs as part of the US National Academies study of carbon dioxide removal and negative emissions technologies. His updated perspective on research needs in direct air capture was published in 2022.
References
External links
Google Scholar Report
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
American chemical engineers
Georgia Tech people
University of Michigan College of Engineering alumni
California Institute of Technology alumni
Academic journal editors
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41054988
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanumantal%20Bada%20Jain%20Mandir
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Hanumantal Bada Jain Mandir
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Bara Mandir (हनुमान-ताल मन्दिर) is a historic Jain temple in Jabalpur, India, right on the edge of Hanumantal, once the main center of Jabalpur.
History
Bhattaraka Harichandrabhushan of Sonagiri, belonging to the Balatkara Gana division of Mula Sangha conducted pratishas in 1834, 1839, and 1840. Bhattaraka Charichandrabhushan conducted pratishthas in 1866, 1867 and 1889. The bhattarakas of Sonagiri also administered the nearby Jain center of Panagar, where Narendrabhushan installed images in 1797, Surendrabhushana conducted pratishtha in 1822, and Acharyabhushan in 1838.
The temple houses several images from the Kalachuri period (10-12th century), including an ornately crafted image of Lord Adinath. It also has many Mughal period, Maratha period and British period images, along with those installed after India's Independence.
The temple was visited by Acharya Shantisagar in 1928, the first Digambar Jain Acharya in the region after many centuries. He arrived after a Chaturmas in Katni and left for damoh. He later commented that the temple was built like a fortress.
Architecture
The temple appears like a fortress with numerous shikharas. Originally built in 1686 CE, it was renovated in the 19th century, the temple has 22 shrines (vedis), making it the largest independent Jain temple in India. The images range from Kalachuri period to modern times. The main room with glasswork was built in 1886 by Bholanath Singhai, who also helped initiate the first two Hitkarini Sabha schools.
The main room contained the only image of the Jain Goddess, Padmavati, that is still worshipped in central India. After extensive rebuilding of the internal structure of the temple inspired by Jain Muni Shri Sudhasagar ji, the image was shifted to a cabinet on one side. The idol was found missing on the night of 16th May, 2022. A police investigation revealed that the trustees had decided to remove the image from the temple.
It is the main Jain temple in Jabalpur, the annual Jain procession on the birthday of Lord Mahavira starts from here and terminates at Bada Fuhara. Daily shastra-sabha and evening classes are held. The temple has been renamed Shasanodaya Jain Tirth. In May 2022, a Panchkalyana Pratishtha was organized with culminated in a Gajrath celebration on May 9, 2022.
Nearby Jain temples in the Jabalpur area
Jain Mandir, Bada Fuhara (Payalwala)
Jain Mandir, Lordganj
Wright Town Boarding Jain mandir
Madhiaji Jain Tirth (Pisanhari Ki Madiya)
Bhedaghat Shantinath Dig. Jain mandir
Panagar Jain Tirth
Bahuriband
Bilahri, katni
Parasnath Jain mandir, Parar-bhata, (Pahadi) katni
There are about 50 Jain temples in Jabalpur.
Photo gallery
See also
Kundalpur
Hitkarini Sabha
Pisanhari ki Marhia
Jainism in Bundelkhand
References
External links
Tourist attractions in Jabalpur
Jain temples in Madhya Pradesh
Buildings and structures in Jabalpur
17th-century Jain temples
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41055002
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maung%20Nyein%20Chan
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Maung Nyein Chan
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Maung Nyein Chan (, 15 June 1948 – 29 June 2010) was a Burmese comic book artist best known for a comic book series featuring a character named Sai Baydar. Throughout his career, he authored over 220 comic books and directed several films.
He was born Nyunt Tin in Taungoo, Burma to parents Maung Pu and Mya Yin. He attended the State School of Fine Art and began his career at Mandalay's Hantharwaddy newspaper. He adopted the pen name "Maung Nyein Chan" during the publication of his first comic book, Yadana Pond.
Maung Nyein Chan died on 29 June 2010 of a heart attack at the North Okkalapa Hospital.
Notes
References
Burmese artists
People from Bago Region
1948 births
2010 deaths
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41055011
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950%20Auburn%20Tigers%20football%20team
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1950 Auburn Tigers football team
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The 1950 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1950 college football season. It was the Tigers' 59th overall and 18th season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Earl Brown, in his third year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn and the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, Alabama. They finished winless with a record of zero wins and ten losses (0–10 overall, 0–7 in the SEC). In the February that followed the completion of the season, Brown was fired as head coach of the Tigers.
Schedule
References
Auburn
Auburn Tigers football seasons
College football winless seasons
Auburn Tigers football
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41055020
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synth1
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Synth1
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Synth1 is a software synthesizer designed by KVR user Daichi (Real name: Ichiro Toda 戸田一郎 ). It was originally designed as an emulation of the Nord Lead 2 synthesizer, and has since become a unique Virtual Studio Technology instrument and one of the most downloaded VST plug-ins of all time. The software used to be a DirectX instrument plugin, but became solely VSTi from version 1.08 on. Version 1.13 was the first version to introduce a native 64-bit version of the plugin.
History
Synth1 was first released as a DXi plug-in on October 9, 2002. It was updated to support the VSTi format six days later, on October 15, 2002. Version 1.02 was released on October 27, 2002, and dealt with some of the major bugs that arose from converting the software to VST, such as a memory leak and the LFO waveform selector not working. The next three versions dealt primarily with compatibility issues. 1.05a was a major update which added the ability to modulate the FM parameter, added fine tuning to the VCOs, added synchronization to the LFOs, and fixed quality issues with the ADSR envelope. The next version would not be released until September 20, 2003. Version 1.06 added a unison mode, an automatic portamento, and new Voltage-controlled filter parameters. This was the first version when Synth1 became noticeably different from the Nord Lead 2, upon which it was based. Version 1.07, released May 3, 2006, added new parameters and effects, primarily the chorus/flanger, as well as cleaning up the GUI. 1.07 would be the last version with DXi support, as version 1.08, released on April 23, 2010, discontinued the DXi version and removed the now unnecessary installer. One week later, on the first of May, 2010, the now solely VSTi program was updated to version 1.09, which added a Phase Control function and expanded the number of voices in the polyphony and unison modes. May 2010 would contain the last of Synth1's updates for Windows, with the bug-fix version 1.10 released on the fourth, version 1.11 on the ninth, and the current version 1.12 on the twenty-third of that month. Version 1.11 added a sub-oscillator and version 1.12 added the ability to read sound banks from .zip files.
The last update, version 1.13 beta, was released October 2, 2011, and allowed Synth1 to function on Macintosh operating systems.
Toda announced on October 28, 2012 that he intended to release an iPhone/iPad version of Synth 1 "by the Spring of next year", although there have been no version updates or blog posts since.
Synthesis
Synth1 is a digital synthesizer based on the Clavia Nord Lead 2 which is also a digital synthesizer. Synth1 combines the common sound synthesis method of subtractive synthesis with FM synthesis, with the first oscillator having a parameter for frequency modulation. Structurally, the software behaves as though it were a modular analogue synthesizer. MIDI from the host music sequencer goes into the arpeggiator, which then sends the final MIDI information to all active voices, which each consist of the oscillators, filter, and amplifier. The LFOs exist outside of the chain, and can modulate certain parameters of the oscillators, filter, and amplifier. The information from the voices, after the LFO modulation has been added, is then sent to the mixer. From the mixer, the sound information is sent through the equalizer, delay, and chorus modules, after which the sound data is output to be turned into audible sound by the sound card associated with the host program.
Specifications
Three oscillators, one with an FM modulation, one with ring modulation and synchronization, and one sub-oscillator. Osc 1 can operate as detuned supersaw.
One filter section, with distortion. Four filter types: two high-pass, one low-pass, and a band-pass filter.
Two assignable LFOs, which can be synchronized to a host tempo.
An arpeggiator which can be synchronized to a host tempo.
Several built-in effects, including a tempo delay, distortion, phaser, and chorus/flanger.
Polyphony, monophony, and legato voices.
Unison and portamento modes
32 notes polyphony
Automation
Low CPU usage
Recognition
Synth1 is the all-time most downloaded VST plug-in on KVR Audio, and was ranked number 5 on MusicRadar's list of "The 27 best free VST plug-ins in the world today".
It has around 25 thousand patches available to download which is freely available. Because synth1 verstality, it covers most major electronic genre but focuses more on classic synthwave sounds.
References
Software synthesizers
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41055046
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon%20Krovanh%20%282003%29
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Typhoon Krovanh (2003)
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Typhoon Krovanh, known in the Philippines as Typhoon Niña, was a moderate tropical cyclone that caused a swath of damage stretching from the Philippines to Vietnam in August 2003. The fifteenth named storm and sixth typhoon in the western Pacific that year, Krovanh originated from a tropical disturbance within the monsoon trough on August 13. Despite rather favorable conditions, the initial tropical depression did not intensify significantly and degenerated into a remnant low on August 18. However, these remnants were able to reorganize and the system was reclassified as a tropical cyclone a day later. Intensification was rather rapid upon the storm's reformation – the depression reached tropical storm status on August 20 and then typhoon intensity two days later. Shortly after, Krovanh made landfall on Luzon at peak intensity with winds of . The typhoon emerged into the South China Sea as a much weaker tropical storm, though it was able to restrengthen over warm waters. Once again at typhoon intensity, Krovanh clipped Haiyan before moving over the Leizhou Peninsula on its way to a final landfall near Cẩm Phả, Vietnam on August 25. Quick weakening due to land interaction occurred as Krovanh moved across northern Vietnam, where the storm met its demise the following day.
Krovanh first struck the Philippines, resulting in heavy rainfall and displacing approximately 1,000 families. The flooding caused severe damage and killed one person. In Hong Kong, eleven people were injured and isolated flooding occurred as a result of the typhoon's outer rainbands. However, Krovanh's effects were much more severe in China. Guangdong, Hainan, and Guangxi were the Chinese regions most extensively impacted. The typhoon brought record wind gusts into Guangxi. In those three regions combined, 13,000 homes were estimated to have collapsed and a large swath of farmland was damaged. Two people were killed in China and economic losses approximated at RMB¥2.1 billion (US$253 million). Due to its positioning and track, of all areas in Vietnam only the country's more northern regions were impacted by Krovanh. Flash flooding occurred in those regions, and 1,000 homes were flattened. One person was killed and five others were injured in Vietnam. Overall, the typhoon was responsible for the deaths of four persons.
Meteorological history
The origin of Typhoon Krovanh can be traced back to an area of persistent convection well east of Chuuk State on August 13. Over the course of the day the disturbance gradually consolidated within favorable atmospheric conditions, and at 1800 UTC that day the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) assessed the system to have organized sufficiently to be classified as a tropical depression. Shower activity was suppressed by a nearby upper-level low for much of the storm's early existence; however, at 0600 UTC on August 15, the system was classified by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) as a tropical depression. The depression tracked northwestward under the influence of a nearby ridge. Strengthening and development of the tropical cyclone was very minimal over the next few days, and on August 18, both tracking agencies discontinued monitoring the system due to the lack of an identifiable low-level circulation center.
Redevelopment of the disturbance was a possibility following its degeneration, and on August 19, convection once again increased, prompting the JTWC to resume monitoring the system as a tropical depression at 0900 UTC, with the JMA following suit nine hours later. Due to slight wind shear, the depression's circulation center remained slightly displaced from the stronger convection. At 0600 UTC on August 20, the JTWC determined that the disturbance had intensified to reach tropical storm status. Upon the 1200 UTC upgrade to such an intensity by the JMA, the tropical cyclone was assigned the name Krovanh. Subsequently, following reclassification, Krovanh began to quickly intensify as it tracked in a somewhat southwest bearing. By August 21, the tropical storm had begun to develop a banding eye feature. At 0600 UTC that day, the JMA upgraded Krovanh to severe tropical storm intensity, whilst the JTWC indicated that the storm intensified into a typhoon. On August 22, the JMA reassessed Krovanh as a typhoon and determined that the storm had reached its peak intensity with winds of . Meanwhile, the JTWC analyzed the storm to have peaked with one-minute sustained winds of ; this was followed by the storm making landfall on Luzon, just north of Palanan, Isabela, at 1115 UTC later that day.
Land interaction during Krovanh's passage of Luzon significantly weakened the cyclone, and upon the system's reemergence into the South China Sea by 2000 UTC on August 22, Krovanh was classified as only a tropical storm by the JMA. Redevelopment was rather rapid following emergence, and just four hours later the storm was redesignated as a severe tropical storm. On August 24, the storm began to develop tight banding and reformed its prior banding eye feature, which later organized into a well defined eye. Later that day Krovanh clipped the northeastern coast of Hainan before crossing the Leizhou Peninsula on August 25. During this time, the JMA upgraded Krovanh back to typhoon intensity and indicated that the storm was reaching a secondary peak in strength. The JTWC indicated a similar development as the typhoon traversed the Gulf of Tonkin. However, according to the JMA, Krovanh waned into a severe tropical storm shortly before the storm made its final landfall on Cẩm Phả, Vietnam at approximately 1500 UTC on August 25. Over land, Krovanh deteriorated rapidly, and both agencies ceased monitoring the system on August 26 while it was well northwest of Hanoi.
Preparations and impact
Philippines
Striking Luzon in the Philippines on August 22, Krovanh brought heavy precipitation. Rainfall in the Philippines peaked at in Dagupan. Other high rainfall totals included in Baguio and in Iba, Zambales. The flooding rains displaced 1000 families on the archipelago and killed a girl. Although full damage reports were never released, damages were estimated at ₱ 4.3 million (US$73,000) and of "severe extent".
Taiwan
As Krovanh was approaching the Philippines, Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau cautioned the residents of the island against strong winds and warning ships in the Bashi Channel.
China mainland
After the typhoon entered the South China Sea, sea warnings were issued for areas offshore Hainan. Additional warnings were issued and expanded as Krovanh moved closer to the Chinese coast. In preparation for the storm, shipping routes across the Qiongzhou Strait were suspended, while security measures for river dykes and reservoirs were strengthened in both Hainan and Guangdong. In Guangzhou, 15 flights were cancelled in anticipation of Krovanh, stranding 500 passengers.
Guangdong and Hainan provinces, as well as Guangxi, were the regions of China most heavily impacted by Krovanh. In Zhanjiang, Guangdong, two people were killed. Economic losses from western Guangdong alone amounted to ¥1.2 billion (US$144 million). In Hainan, heavy rainfall was reported, peaking at in Jinjiang. Roughly 1,700 homes collapsed and 16 reservoirs were contaminated and destroyed. Widespread power outages occurred, impacting several neighborhoods. Strong winds also toppled coconut palms. Direct economic losses in the province totaled ¥683 million (US$82 million). Beihai City was the city most severely affected in Guangxi. Beginning on August 25, the entire population of Beihai temporarily suffered a water shortage. In the city alone, losses reached ¥988 million (US$119 million). In Weizhou Island, a weather station reported a wind gust of ; this would be the strongest wind gust reported in Guangxi since 1982. Overall, a total of 13,000 residences collapsed and of farmland were impacted across China. The total economic loss was in excess of ¥2.1 billion (US$253 million).
Hong Kong
In Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Observatory issued a Standby Signal No. 1 on August 23, which was upgraded to a Strong Wind Signal No. 3 at around noon the following day. All warning signals in Hong Kong were discontinued on August 25.
Krovanh's outer rainbands brought squally weather to the territory, coupled with strong winds. Rainfall in the Hong Kong area peaked at on High Island, much of which occurred on August 25. Other rainfall totals of at least were measured over a majority of the country. Gusts peaked at on Cheung Chau. The strong winds and gusts uprooted trees and caused scaffolding at an estate to collapse. In the province, 11 people were injured due to effects from Krovanh. A ferry service and four bus routes were temporarily suspended following the storm.
Vietnam
Typhoon Krovanh was the strongest tropical cyclone to affect Vietnam in 2003. One person was killed in Móng Cái after their house collapsed. Hundreds of other homes were unroofed and traffic was halted. Trees were also uprooted and power outages resulted from strong winds, particularly in Quảng Ninh Province. Heavy rains triggered flash flooding in northern Vietnam. Five additional persons were injured by flying debris. About 1,000 homes in Vietnam were flattened by the storm.
See also
Other tropical cyclones named Krovanh
Other tropical cyclones named Nina
Typhoon Koryn (1993) – Strong tropical cyclone that struck Luzon before impacting the Guangdong region of China
Tropical Storm Nock-ten (2011) – Caused widespread damage in Luzon and Hainan
Typhoon Joe (1980) – Resulted in heavy damage in Vietnam after striking Hainan and Luzon
Tropical Storm Ma-on (2022) – similar track in the same time in 2022
Notes
References
External links
JMA General Information of Typhoon Krovanh (0312) from Digital Typhoon
JMA Best Track Data of Typhoon Krovanh (0312)
JMA Best Track Data (Graphics) of Typhoon Krovanh (0312)
JMA Best Track Data (Text)
JTWC Best Track Data of Typhoon 12W (Krovanh)
12W.KROVANH from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
2003 Pacific typhoon season
Typhoons in the Philippines
Typhoons in China
Typhoons in Vietnam
Typhoons
Krovanh
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41055047
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ba%20Kaung
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Ba Kaung
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Ba Kaung (, 1921 - 8 July 2003) was a Burmese activist. He was one of the most prominent student activists of post-independent Burma. In 1957, he established the Progressive Student Force along with fellow activists, a rival union of the government-backed Democratic Student Organization and also served as a leader for the Communist Party of Burma.
He went on to join the civil service as a government high school teacher in the 1960s. Ba Kaung was also an editor of the semi-government-run Pyinnya Tansaung magazine in the 1990s.
Notes
Burmese civil servants
1921 births
2003 deaths
People from Sagaing Region
Burmese activists
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41055074
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1949%20Auburn%20Tigers%20football%20team
|
1949 Auburn Tigers football team
|
The 1949 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1949 college football season. It was the Tigers' 58th overall and 17th season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Earl Brown, in his second year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn, the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery and Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. They finished the season with a record of two wins, four losses and three ties (2–4–3 overall, 2–4–2 in the SEC).
Schedule
References
Auburn
Auburn Tigers football seasons
Auburn Tigers football
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41055075
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium%28III%29%20bromide
|
Titanium(III) bromide
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Titanium(III) bromide is the inorganic compound with the formula TiBr3. It is a blue black paramagnetic solid with a reddish reflection. It has few applications, although it is a catalyst for the polymerization of alkenes.
Production and structure
TiBr3 can be produced by heating the tetrabromide in an atmosphere of hydrogen:
2TiBr4 + H2 → 2TiBr3 + 2HBr
It can also be produced by comproportionation of titanium metal and titanium tetrabromide.
Ti + 3TiBr4 → 4TiBr3
Two polymorphs of TiBr3 are known, each exhibiting octahedral Ti centers.
Reactions
Heating the tribromide gives titanium(II) bromide together with the volatile tetrabromide:
2 TiBr3 → TiBr4 + TiBr2
The solid dissolves in donor solvents (L) such as pyridine and nitriles to produce 3:1 adducts:
TiBr3 + 3 L → TiBr3L3
References
Bromides
Titanium(III) compounds
Titanium halides
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41055087
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashgabat%20Cable%20Car
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Ashgabat Cable Car
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Ashgabat Cable Car () is a cableway between Ashgabat and the foothills of the Kopetdag. It is the first and only cable car in Turkmenistan. Construction was finished on 18 October 2006.
History
Construction was started in 2005. Object constructed by the French company Bouygues. The project cost $20,5 million. The customer is concern Turkmenenergogurlushyk of the Ministry of Energy and Industry of Turkmenistan. Construction went 2 years.
Inaugurated on 18 October 2006 with the participation of the President of Turkmenistan Saparmurat Niyazov and the head of the company Bouygues Martin Bouygues.
Specification
The cable car can accommodate 300 passengers simultaneously, totaling 1,700 riders per day. Each of the 14 cabins accommodate up to 8 people. The journey time is 10 minutes. The velocity of 16 cabins — 6 meters per second. Passengers are carried out every 72 seconds. Length of the cable car — 4 km.
Sending station is located south of the Main Museum of Turkmenistan at an altitude of 1270 meters above sea level. The station has a waiting room and ticket office, facilities for technical services and equipment. On an area of 6500 square meters is a small park and is equipped with parking for 100 cars and 5 buses. In addition to the arrival station, constructed building with a total area of over 1,000 square meters, which houses two restaurants and cafes, which both can take 280 people, several shops and offices for staff. The neighborhood and set up a sightseeing helicopter pad, covered terraces and stairways, alleys and water cascade length of 80 meters.
References
Aerial tramways
Tourist attractions in Turkmenistan
Tourist attractions in Ashgabat
2006 establishments in Turkmenistan
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41055109
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike%20%26%20Keys
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Mike & Keys
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Mike & Keys (formerly known as The Futuristiks) are an American hip hop production and songwriting duo from Los Angeles, California that consists of Money Mike (born Michael Ray Cox, Jr.) and J-Keys (born John Groover).
History
J-Keys, born in South Sacramento and Money Mike born in Hammond, Louisiana both name church and family as having a huge influence on the development of their musical talents. Graduates of the Los Angeles Recording School in Hollywood, CA, the duos first full production credit came in 2009 on Before I Self Destruct for rapper 50 Cent. After further work in 2010 on hip hop albums such Dom Kennedy’s From the Westside with Love, II, Redman'sReggie and Sheek Louch’s Donnie G: Don Gorilla, The Futuristiks became a prominent production team for hip-hop, R&B and Gospel artists.
Proving to be a life-altering year for The Futuristiks, in 2011, their work ranged from hip hop records with chart-topping artists Eminem, Royce da 5’9” and Ras Kass as well as other known acts such as Strong Arm Steady and Mitchy Slick. In 2011, they also produced rapper Problem’s "Last Love" for the unreleased mixtape Plan B which received video spins on BET’s 106 & Park making to the Top Ten Countdown and other video mediums. Moreover, in 2011, they also produced the lead singles for Dom Kennedy’s The Original Dom Kennedy and Skeme’s mixtapes The Statement and Before My Next Statement.
Continuing their catalog growth, the production duo began working with R&B artists Jeremih on the highly anticipated Late Nights with Jeremih Mixtape, as well as debut projects for other R&B artists TeeFlii and Elijah Blake. Not leaving their hip hop roots, in 2012, the pair produced tracks for rappers T.I., Freddie Gibbs, Fat Joe, Bad Lucc, 8Ball, Jay Rock, Curren$y and OverDoz. The Futuristiks made the Billboard Top 100 in 2012 for their production on Capitol Records Tito Lopez’s song Mama Proud. They also made the Billboard 200, Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and Top Rap Album for their production credit on Grand Hustle/Atlantic Records artist T.I.’s Trouble Man: Heavy Is the Head.
As their sound developed and territory expanded in 2013, the Futuristiks were nominated for their first Recording Academy Grammy Award in the Best Rap Album category for their contribution on Lupe Fiasco’s Food & Liquor II: The Great American Rap Album, Pt. 1. Lupe's II topped Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Rap Albums charts, while debuting and peaking at No. 5 on the Billboard 200.
The Futuristiks began working with Epic Records/Roc Nation Management artist Casey Veggies, helming the title track and six songs total on the awaited 2013 Life Changes. In 2013, they also produced songs for Master P, Juelz Santana, Adonis the Ace, Drumma Boy, Zeke and K.Roosevelt.
Like many mainstream producers, The Futuristiks, have taken on entire projects and recently hemmed the Executive Producer credits on the Nipsey Hussle’s, October 8, 2013 release Crenshaw. In addition, the Futuristiks have the majority of the producers credit on Dom Kennedy’s, 2013 release Get Home Safely. Their aesthetic is fit for dropping the top, with crawling drums and warped samples that never push the tempo up too high for Dom’s coziness level.
Production discography
2009
50 Cent - Before I Self Destruct
06. "Hold Me Down" (produced with Team Ready)
2010
Sheek Louch - Donnie G: Don Gorilla
02. "Get It Poppin'"
Redman - Reggie
01. "Reggie" (produced with Team Ready)
2011
D12 - Return Of The Dozen Volume 2
02. "Fame"
Dom Kennedy - From the Westside with Love
07. "Designer Shit"
Skeme - The Statement
04. "F.A.Q. (Interlude)"
05. "H.T.F.T." (featuring Casey Veggies)
11. "Win (Interlude)"
12. "I Can't Lose"
13. "Let it Breathe"
Dom Kennedy - From the Westside with Love, II
04. "Come Over"
05. "She Ain't In Love"
14. "2mph" (featuring Big K.R.I.T.)
Royce Da 5'9" - Success Is Certain
01. "Legendary" (featuring Travis Barker) [produced with Eminem)
2012
T.I - Trouble Man: Heavy Is The Head
"The Way We Ride"
Lupe Fiasco - Food & Liquor II: The Great American Rap Album Pt. 1
16. "Hood Now" - co-produced with 1500 or Nothin
2013
Nipsey Hussle - Crenshaw
03. "Checc Me Out" (featuring Cobby Supreme and Dom Kennedy)
09. "H-Town" (featuring Cobby Supreme, Dom Kennedy, TeeFlii and Skeme)
13. "Summertime in That Cutlass"
Dom Kennedy - Get Home Safely
01. "Let's Be Friends"
02. "17" (produced with Larrance)
03. "All Girl Crazy" (produced with Nick Brongers)
04. "After School" (produced with Dammo)
05. "If It Don't Make Money" (featuring Skeme) [produced with DJ Khalil]
06. "Honey Buns Interlude" (produced with Dave Foreman)
07. "Honey Buns" (featuring Krondon) [produced with YuYu]
08. "Erica Part 2" (produced with DJ Khalil, Dave Foreman, and Danny Keys)
09. "Black Bentleys" (produced with DJ Khalil)
10. "Tryna Find My Way"
11. "A Intermission for Watts" (produced with Preach)
12. "South Central Love"
2014
Faith Evans - Incomparable
09. "Make Love" (featuring Keke Wyatt) [produced with Mars and Faith Evans]
Nipsey Hussle - Mailbox Money
09. "Real Nigga Moves (feat. Dom Kennedy)" produced with Uncle Dave )
11. "A Miracle" - co-produced with DJ Khalil
12. "No Nigga Like Me (feat. Trae The Truth)"
13. "50 Niggaz"
2015
Casey Veggies - Live & Grow
05. "New Face$" (produced with Polyester)
10. "Sincerely Casey"
Ludacris - Ludaversal
05. "Beast Mode"
2016
Domo Genesis - Genesis
01. "Awkward Groove"
Riff Raff - Peach Panther
10. "Don't Like to Think" (featuring Problem)
BJ the Chicago Kid - In My Mind
02. "Man Down" (featuring Buddy and Constantine)
03. "Church" (featuring Chance the Rapper and Buddy)
12. "Crazy"
2017
Snoop Dogg - Neva Left
01. "Neva Left"
Lecrae - All Things Work Together
08. "Lucked Up (feat. Nija)" - co-produced with DJ Khalil and Tariq Beats
2018
Georgia Ann Muldrow - "Overload"
02. "Play It Up"
03. "Overload"
04. "Blam"
Buddy - "Harlon & Alondra"
02. "Shameless (feat. Guapdad 4000" - co-produced with Jake One
05. "Legend" -co-produced with Brody Brown and Roofeeo
07. "The Blue (feat. Snoop Dogg)" -co-produced with Brody Brown and Roofeeo
08. "Speechless"- co-produced with Brody Brown and Roofeeo
10. "Trippin (feat. Khalid)" - co-produced with Brody Brown and Roofeeo
12. "Shine" - co-produced with DJ Khalil
Nipsey Hussle - "Victory Lap"
02. "Rap Niggas" - co-produced with DJ Khalil and Larrance Dopson
03. " Last Time I Checc'd (feat. YG)" - co-produced with Kacey Khalil, Brody Brown, Larrance Dopson
04. "Young Nigga"
05. "Dedication (feat. Kendrick Lamar)"
06. "Blue Laces 2"
07."Hussel & Motivate"
08. "Status Symbol 3 (feat. Buddy)"
09. "Succa Proof"
10. "Keys 2 The City (feat. TeeFlii)"
12. "Million While You Young (feat. The-Dream"
14. "Real Big (feat. Marsha Ambrosius)"
16. "Right Hand To God"
Domo Genesis - Facade Records
All tracks, but with co-producers
2019
Domo Genesis
01. "Risk"
Guapdad 4000 - Dior Deposits
03. "First Things First"
11. "Rolex Rockstar" (featuring Buddy)
Jidenna - 85 to Africa
04. "Tribe" co-producers DJ Burn One, [a]Five Points Music Group[a]
2022
Dr. Dre – GTA Online: The Contract
"Diamond Mind" (featuring Nipsey Hussle and Ty Dolla $ign) (Produced with Dr. Dre, Dem Jointz and The Alchemist)
Dave East - HDIGH
01. "Unbelievable" (featuring Method Man)
02. "1000 Miles" (Produced with DJ Khalil)
03. "Deeper Than Love" (featuring Musiq Soulchild)
04. "After Taxes"
05. "John Lennon" (featuring Anthony Hamilton)
06. "No Cocaine" (Featuring Kalan.FrFr)
07. "Crash Out" (Featuring Trae tha Truth)
08. "Don't Let Me Down" (Featuring Benny the Butcher and Steven Young)
09. "Gregory Hines" (Featuring OnlyIfWeVibe)
References
African-American musical groups
Musical groups from Los Angeles
Musical groups established in 2009
Hip hop groups from California
Musical duos from California
Hip hop duos
Record production teams
American hip hop record producers
African-American record producers
Record producers from California
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