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500 | "Jan Dam (footballer)"
Jan Dam (footballer) Jan Dam (born 7 September 1968) is a former Faroese football (defender), largely considered one of the best ever in his native country. He was especially popular back home for his fearless tackles and fighting spirit. At present, he works as a teacher at a private school in Haslev, Denmark and also as a trainer of the U19 team of KB Copenhagen football club. Jan made his debut in Faroese football at the age of 17 with HB Tórshavn as a defender in the 1986 season and remained loyal to the club for 10 years before he |
501 | "Jan Dam (footballer)"
moved abroad to Danish side Ølstykke FC. He returned home after only one season to join KÍ Klaksvík and later HB again and B68. Dam made his debut for the Faroe Islands in an August 1990 friendly match against Iceland in which he immediately scored from the penalty spot after coming on as a substitute for Abraham Løkin Hansen. The penalty was awarded after foul on Jan. His second match was the historic 1-0 defeat of Austria, his country's first competitive match. On his third international duty, away to Denmark, he famously set Brian Laudrup out of the game, despite |
502 | "Jan Dam (footballer)"
Faroes lost the match 1-4. His last international match was an April 2000 friendly against Liechtenstein. Jan collected 39 caps, scoring 1 goal. Jan Dam (footballer) Jan Dam (born 7 September 1968) is a former Faroese football (defender), largely considered one of the best ever in his native country. He was especially popular back home for his fearless tackles and fighting spirit. At present, he works as a teacher at a private school in Haslev, Denmark and also as a trainer of the U19 team of KB Copenhagen football club. Jan made his debut in Faroese football at the age |
503 | "Seva Bharati"
care camps are organized in the slums and economically poor areas with the help of hospitals, where hundreds of patients among other checkups are examined for cardiac and diabetic ailments. In the camps, teams of technicians, conduct free ECG, Echo cardiography and blood sugar testing. Apart from the checkups, there are dietitians who advise the patients about healthy diet, exercises and medicines. Medicines are distributed free of cost and counseling on psychiatric ailments is also provided. It also organizes naturopathy and other wellness camps for general public and thousands of people have benefited from these camps. Seva Bharati also conducts |
504 | "Metaphor Computer Systems"
an enterprise. In total, Metaphor branded this as a Data Interpretation System (DIS), which is a class of Decision Support System (DSS) The DIS software was designed to show in one workflow, the access of data from SQL databases, its analysis and then its presentation. This was accomplish by using graphically iconic applications for database gateway, spreadsheet, plot, email, and printing tools all connected by arrows. These were animated when the workflow ran. The workflow collection was called a Capsule. The heart of the Metaphor DIS system was the Capsule. Basically, a capsule was a simplified BATCH program. Because Metaphor |
505 | Tymion
founders of Montanism, Montanus, called both towns ""Jerusalem."" In late antiquity, both places attracted crowds of pilgrims from all over the Roman Empire. Women played an emancipated role in Montanism. They could become priests and also bishops. In the 6th century CE, this church became extinct. Since 2001, Peter Lampe of the University of Heidelberg has directed annual archaeological campaigns in Phrygia, Turkey. During these interdisciplinary campaigns, together with William Tabbernee of Tulsa, numerous unknown ancient settlements were discovered and archaeologically documented. Two of them are the best candidates so far in the search for the identification of the two |
506 | "Town Shoes"
LP. In 2014, DSW, Inc. acquired a 44% stake in Town Shoes. In May 2018, DSW purchased the remainder of the company. On August 28, 2018, DSW announced the closure of all 38 locations, due to competition from other retailers. Town Shoes Town Shoes Ltd. is Canadian chain of shoe stores owned by American shoe retailer DSW, Inc. It was founded by Leonard Simpson in 1952, when he took over a failing store in Sunnybrook Plaza in Toronto. It has 30 locations across Canada including Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, London, Toronto, Kitchener, Barrie, Regina and Halifax. The Shoe Company |
507 | "Philip Southcote"
on the middle high ground and a walk all round my farm, for convenience as well as pleasure"" Southcote wrote . A feature of Woburn Farm was a walk planted with broom, roses, lilac, columbine, peonies and sweet william, which wound its way through the fields, for it remained a working farm . Like William Shenstone's Arcadian garden, the Leasowes, Woburn Farm was highly influential in disseminating the landscape garden; it received an extended description in Thomas Whateley's ""Observations on modern gardening"". In a letter in 1751, Horace Walpole wrote rather peevishly of Capability Brown's landscaping at Warwick Castle, ""The |
508 | "Philip Southcote"
castle is enchanting; the view pleased me more than I can express, the river Avon tumbles down a cascade at the foot of it. It is well laid out by one Brown who has set up on a few ideas of Kent and Mr. Southcote."" Later in life, summing up his thoughts in his ""Essay On Modern Gardening"", Walpole divided types of gardens in the ""modern"" naturalistic style into three: ""into the garden that connects itself with a park, into the ornamented farm, and into the forest or savage garden"". To Southcote, Walpole gives the credit for the idealized farm. |
509 | "Seva Bharati"
last two camps, a team of doctors, paramedical workers and volunteers from NGOs examined and treated over 2400 children and even operated those requiring surgery – free of cost. Camps are also held in which corneal plantation is performed on hundreds of patients, which cure the eye ailments and help them regain their eyesight. Seva Bharati has rehabilitation centers for lepers. One such center is near Rajamundry in Andhra Pradesh. The center was founded in 1975 by Colonel D.S. Raju who had been a personal doctor to Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose in INA. In 1982, it was handed over to |
510 | "Attribute domain"
Attribute domain In computing, the attribute domain is the set of values allowed in an attribute. For example: For the relational model it is a requirement that each part of a tuple be atomic. The consequence is that each value in the tuple must be of some basic type, like a string or an integer. For the elementary type to be atomic it cannot be broken into more pieces. Alas, the domain is an elementary type, and attribute domain the domain a given attribute belongs to an abstraction belonging to or characteristic of an entity. For example in SQL ,one |
511 | "WayHome Music & Arts Festival"
THEY., Death From Above 1979, Houndmouth, Honne, Jahkoy, Darcys, MAGIC GIANT, Blossoms, Charlotte Cardin, Nobro, Flakes Headliner: Frank Ocean Porter Robinson, Tegan and Sara, Banks, Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires, Mutemath, Car Seat Headrest, The Drums, Rag'n'Bone Man, Jagwar Ma, Mitski, Daniel Caesar, Hundred Waters, The Dirty Nil, Skott, Colony House, Harrison Brome, Begonia, Clairmont the Second WayHome Music & Arts Festival WayHome Music and Arts festival is produced by Republic Live and owned by Stan and Eva Dunford. It is a three-day music and arts festival held at the custom-designed camping festival grounds, Burl's Creek. The festival offers multiple |
512 | "Aaron Tveit"
Also in June 2008, Tveit began performances as Fiyero in ""Wicked"". He left the role in November in order to reprise his role in the Arena Stage production of ""Next to Normal"", for which he was awarded the 2009 Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Non-Resident Production. Tveit returned to ""Wicked"" in January 2009, leaving once again for the Broadway production of ""Next to Normal"", which began previews in March 2009 and officially opened on April 15. Tveit's performance as Gabe earned him the Clarence Derwent Award from the Actors' Equity Association. Tveit left ""Next to Normal"" |
513 | "Seva Bharati"
'unwanted'"". Seva Bharati ties up with all the hospitals and the police to get information about all such children who are abandoned after their birth by their parents. These children are sent to schools and thereafter, to the vocational centers run by the organization, education for these children also includes coaching for higher studies after they clear their secondary level education. Seva Bharati has large number of centers that provide vocational training to economically underprivileged women. It trains women in making handicrafts and decorative items and helps to market these products. Hundreds of girls trained by Seva Bharati over the |
514 | "Switched (band)"
on to sell over 100,000 records worldwide. In mid-2003, the group severed ties with both their label Immortal Records and their former management team. Bassist Jason French was replaced by former Stuck Mojo and Stereomud bassist Corey Lowery, who would eventually leave the band to join Dark New Day. During the recording phase for their second album, they had planned to adopt a new name, Sky Fall Down, by January 2004 – a reflection on the new direction the band was taking. Instead, the band went on a two-year hiatus, with several members of the band moving on to other |
515 | "Switched (band)"
projects. Former bassist Shawn May, who had left the band in 2001 prior to the release of ""Subject to Change"", started a custom bass shop in Michigan. Drummer Chad Szeliga joined Leo in 2004 and then later joined popular post-grunge group Breaking Benjamin in 2005. Bassist Corey Lowery helped form alternative metal group Dark New Day, and later formed Eye Empire. Lead guitarist B.C. Kochmit joined then left hard rock group ""Rikets"" to form his own projects, called ""Tinjen"", ""Shambella"", and ""My Alter-Ego Experiment."" He was the lead guitar player in Dark New Day for a short time, and Eye |
516 | "Aaron Tveit"
2019 and opening night is set for July 25. Tveit appeared alongside Ricky Gervais as a young anesthesiologist in the 2008 film ""Ghost Town"". He also made appearances on the CW series ""Gossip Girl"" as Tripp van der Bilt, the cousin of Nate Archibald. He appeared in an episode of the television series ""Ugly Betty"" titled ""All the World's a Stage"" as Zachary Boule, Betty Suarez's boyfriend. Tveit appeared in Rob Epstein's ""Howl"", a biopic about the Allen Ginsberg poem and the controversy and trial that ensued after its publication. Tveit played Peter Orlovsky, Ginsberg's longtime partner, opposite James Franco. |
517 | "Hurricane Dean (1989)"
A tropical wave moved off the coast of Africa on July 27 as detected by Meteosat imagery. By July 31 the tropical wave began being classified, using the Dvorak Technique, by satellite analysts at the National Hurricane Center, in part due to persistent deep convection. Shortly thereafter the system organized enough that the National Hurricane Center began classifying it as Tropical Depression Five, roughly halfway between Cape Verde and the Lesser Antilles. The depression moved westward at 17 mph (28 km/h), intensifying as it did so, and eventually intensified enough to be upgraded to a tropical storm, which was named |
518 | "Culture of Montenegro"
warriors, as they were as much the authors, thus history writers, as they were interpreters. In the best ""traditions"" of the modern public domain and open-source movement, these songs had been composed and passed on by the unknown guslars since high middle ages onwards. Other guslars adopted the songs and could amend them as they saw fit, which usually resulted in a number of slightly different versions of the same story, of varying quality. The ""quality control"" were the listeners themselves, who loudly objected during the performance if some parts of the story were inaccurate or embellished out of proportion. |
519 | "Aaron Tveit"
Miscast Gala on three separate occasions. In September 2013, Broadway Records released ""The Radio in My Head"", a live recording of songs Tveit performed at New York City venue 54 Below. Some of the songs on the album are from musicals in which Tveit has starred, including ""I'm Alive"" from ""Next to Normal"", ""Goodbye"" from ""Catch Me If You Can"", and ""One Song Glory"" from ""Rent"". Tveit performed in several concerts from February through May 2017 in cities around the United States, including New York, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Florida and California. He described these concerts as pop rock shows with |
520 | "Seva Bharati"
operations were performed and over 19,000 patients were treated of injuries and other ailments. Besides, the organisation sent huge amounts of relief material for the quake-hit victims from different parts of the country. News magazine ""Outlook"" reported ""Literally within minutes RSS / Seva Bharati volunteers were at the scenes of distress. Across Gujarat, the (RSS) cadres were the saviours. Even as the state machinery went comatose in the first two days after the quake, the cadre-based machinery of the Sangh fanned out throughout the state. Approximately 35,000 RSS members in uniform were pressed into service."" In the words of the |
521 | "Burmese–Siamese War (1775–76)"
disagreed with Maha Thiha Thura on the invasion route, withdrew with his troops, leaving Maha Thiha Thura with a portion of the troops. Even with a full strength invasion force, an invasion of Siam was never easy for the Burmese. Without a full strength army, the effort appeared doomed from the start. Nonetheless, Maha Thiha Thura and Ne Myo Thihapate obeyed the orders, and marched on. Thihapate's army managed to recapture Chiang Mai, Maha Thiha Thura's army fought its way down to Siamese defenses and managed to occupy Phichai and Sukhothai provinces in northern Siam (present-day central Thailand). In his |
522 | "Seva Bharati"
has been in the forefront of the non-official rescue and relief (operations). This has led to an upsurge of goodwill for the Sangh"". When the 2004 tsunami hit the southern coasts of India, thousands of volunteers, under the aegis of the Seva Bharati, engaged in relief work. The volunteers, in cooperation with organisations like Ramakrishna Mutt in Tamil Nadu, Nair Service Society, Sri Narayana Guru Dharma Paripalana Yogam and Mata Amrithanandamayi Mutt in Kerala and Janakshema Samiti in Andhra Pradesh, set up relief camps in tsunami-affected districts of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. They distributed |
523 | "Big House Bunny"
to intimidate another (""Eh, you wouldn't be so tough if you weren't wearing that uniform!"") and challenges him to a ""fight"". Accepting the challenge, Sam takes his uniform off and levels his fists at Bugs, who has taken off his prison outfit. Bugs quickly admits to Sam that he ""is"" tough without his uniform and they redress, with Bugs putting on the police uniform and Sam absentmindedly putting on the prison outfit, after which Bugs blows a whistle and Sam, realizing too late that he has been tricked again, is beaten up by several correction officers for ""trying to escape"" |
524 | "SM UC-10"
SM UC-10 SM ""UC-10"" was a German Type UC I minelayer submarine or U-boat in the German Imperial Navy () during World War I. The U-boat was ordered on 14 November 1914 and was launched on 15 July 1915. She was commissioned into the German Imperial Navy on 17 July 1915 as SM ""UC-10"". Mines laid by ""UC-10"" in her 30 patrols were credited with sinking 17 ships. ""UC-10"" was torpedoed and sunk on 21 August 1916 by British submarine at position . A German Type UC I submarine, ""UC-10"" had a displacement of when at the surface and while |
525 | Apsaravis
– long believed to be a modern bird –, and perhaps ""Ambiortus"" with which the preceding two had occasionally been allied, form a distinct lineage. This has been named ""Palintropiformes"", but Apsaraviformes was proposed earlier for the ""Apsaravis"" lineage and is thus the senior synonym. And if this group is held to include ""Apatornis"" too, it would receive the name Ambiortiformes, which was proposed even earlier. Apsaravis Apsaravis is a Mesozoic bird genus from the Late Cretaceous. The single known species, Apsaravis ukhaana, lived about 78 million years ago, in the Campanian age of the Cretaceous period. Its fossilized remains |
526 | "Culture of Montenegro"
these areas: including Dionisio de Sarno San Giorgio. With his ""Balkan Empress"" – inspired by the work of King Nikola, got all the praises of Italian critique in the second half of the 19th century. Considering its population of about 600,000 people, Montenegro has produced a number of outstanding film directors and actors including Dušan Vukotić, the first Yugoslav Oscar winner (for the short animated film category in 1961), Veljko Bulajić, and Živko Nikolić. The 2006 James Bond film ""Casino Royale"" is partially set in Montenegro. Culture of Montenegro The culture of Montenegro is as pluralistic and diverse as its |
527 | "Andrew Carrazzo"
Andrew Carrazzo Andrew Carrazzo (born 15 December 1983) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Carlton Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Carrazzo played junior football with the St Simons Football Club in Rowville and with the Knox Eagles Football Club in Ferntree Gully. Carrazzo played with Oakleigh Chargers in the TAC Cup competition, finishing his final season runner up in the Morrish Medal for best player in the competition in 2001, as well as winning All-Australian honours in the national under-18 carnival. Carrazzo was initially selected as a rookie by in 2002. He |
528 | "Andrew Carrazzo"
spent two seasons on the rookie list at Geelong, winning the Geelong VFL team's best and fairest award in 2003, but never breaking into the Geelong senior list. He was again rookie listed in 2004, this time by . After another strong season in the VFL, he was elevated to the senior list, making his debut for Carlton in Round 21, 2004 against . He was the last Carlton player to make his AFL debut at the club's traditional home ground at Princes Park. From the start of the 2005 season until the end of his career eleven years later, |
529 | "Ugo Giachery"
supplies from Italy for the superstructure of the Shrine of the Báb and the International Archives Building. He was appointed a Hand of the Cause by Shoghi Effendi in December 1951, who also appointed him as a member-at-large of the International Bahá'í Council, and who named one of the doors of the Shrine of the Báb after him. Ugo Giachery Ugo Giachery (May 13, 1896 – July 5, 1989) was a prominent Italian Bahá'í from an aristocratic family from Palermo. At an anniversary of the founding of the spiritual assembly of Perugia Giachery told the story of how, as a |
530 | "Andrew Carrazzo"
7, 2008 against the West Coast Eagles at Subiaco, Carrazzo picked up an AFL career high 42 disposals. With the recruitment of Chris Judd and the return of Nick Stevens from injury, Carrazzo was moved out of the midfield, and spent most of the season playing as a rebounding defender. Carrazzo played the first 21 games of the season, before injury forced him out in Round 22 after 54 consecutive games. Carrazzo fractured his forearm during an intraclub practice match in the 2009 preseason, missing the first four games of the AFL season. He played two games with the Northern |
531 | Trover
effect was that the defendant was compelled to buy the chattel at a forced sale, carried out by means of an action in trover. Trover actions frequently concerned the finding of lost property. It could also involve cargo on ships, such as those lost at sea and later found. Trover often involved cases in which the only ""most correct"" owner could be determined. For instance, if an envelope of bank notes or currency were to be found, the court would attempt to identify the true owner, but this would often prove to be impossible. In that case, the finder would |
532 | "Palmdale, California"
(0.2%) Pacific Islander, 38,773 (25.4%) from other races, and 8,200 (5.4%) from two or more races. There were 83,097 Hispanic or Latino residents (54.4%). 38.1% of Palmdale residents are of Mexican ancestry; 6.2% Salvadoran; and 2.4% of Guatemalan heritage and 0.79% Honduran, 0.76% Puerto Rican, 0.69% Nicaraguan, 0.50% Cuban, 0.47% Colombian and Argentinian 0.34%. Spanish is spoken by 36.4% of the population and Tagalog by 1.3%. The most common ancestries are German 5.2%, Irish 4.1%, English 2.9%, Italian 2.7%, French 1.1%, Polish 1.0%, Norwegian 0.7%, Scottish 0.6%, Dutch 0.6%, Russian 0.6%, Swedish 0.5%, Belizean 0.4% and Armenian 0.4%. The Census |
533 | "Bob Sharp"
join Hartlepools United. He was manager for three years but never took charge of a competitive league match because of World War. Instead he handed over the reins to Jack Barker in May 1946. The same year, as the club's honorary secretary, at a meeting of the Division Three (North) committee he seconded a motion to introduce divisions Three and Four of the football league. In 1947 he bought Norman Bank, a large house in Idle, to convert into a hostel for single City players needing accommodation. He also commissioned a City gramophone record, ""Hello Chorus"". He resigned from the |
534 | "Bob Sharp"
City board in March 1948. Supporters bought an inscribed silver salver to recognise his ten years service to the club. It was presented by Lord Mayor Alderman Councillor F. J. Cowie. Fellow directors appointed Sharp and his wife Peggy as life-members of the club. Bob Sharp Councillor Robert ""Bob"" Sharp (born October 1894, date of death unknown) was a football manager of Bradford City who also served as Deputy Lord Mayor of Bradford. He was a football visionary who called for the introduction of Third and Fourth Divisions 12 years before they were formed. Sharp was born in October 1894 |
535 | "No. 644 Squadron RAF"
force for the British Empire, and 644 Squadron were ordered to lend them their support and so accompanied them to RAF Qastina in Palestine (now Hatzor Airbase). On 1 September 1946 No. 644 squadron disbanded by being re-numbered to No. 47 Squadron RAF. The squadron today is represented by No. 644 Volunteer Gliding Squadron, which has the same squadron crest though with a different motto. No. 644 Squadron RAF No. 644 Squadron RAF was a unit in 38 Group of the Royal Air Force during World War II which undertook glider-towing and supply dropping missions as well being employed in |
536 | "Tony Costa"
Tony Costa Antone Charles ""Tony"" Costa (August 2, 1944 – May 12, 1974) was an American carpenter who achieved notoriety for committing serial murders in and around the town of Truro in 1969. The case gained international attention when district attorney Edmund Dinis, in comments to the media, claimed ""The hearts of each girl had been removed from the bodies and were not in the graves…Each body was cut into as many parts as there are joints."" Dinis also claimed that there were teeth marks found on the bodies. These claims produced a stream of national and international media outlets |
537 | "Tony Costa"
into local Provincetown, Massachusetts. The media attention was so great that Kurt Vonnegut (whose daughter Edith had met Costa) compared him to Jack the Ripper in his collection of essays ""Wampeters, Foma and Granfalloons"". Vonnegut maintained a correspondence with Costa. The author said, ""The message of his letters to me was that a person as intent on being virtuous as he could not possibly have hurt a fly. He believed it."" Costa was suspected of killing seven women: Bonnie Williams, Diane Federoff, Barbara Spaulding, Sydney Monson, Susan Perry, Patricia Walsh, and Mary Anne Wysocki but convicted of killing only two: |
538 | Archaeorhynchus
attach to the breastbone) with robust and strong bases. The pectoral girdle had a robust and U shaped wishbone, a slightly curved shoulder blade, a short and robust coracoid and a broad and deeply notched breastbone. The hips had an unfused illium, a slender and curved pubis with a small pubic foot and a strap like ischium which is shorter than the pubis. The hind limb was shorter than the forelimb. The forelimbs had a humerus and a radus which were straighter and shorter than the ulna. The forelimbs also preserved the major and minor metacarpals as well as the |
539 | "Tony Costa"
Costa described the murders of Walsh and Wysocki in his unpublished novel, ""Resurrection"", written while Costa was in prison. In his account, Costa and a friend named ""Carl"" were out with the two women consuming LSD and Dilaudid. Carl then shot Walsh and Wysocki. Costa claimed he was able to subdue his friend, and upon realizing that Mary Anne Wysocki was still alive, Costa used a knife to end her suffering. According to Costa, he and Carl buried the bodies. The novel also describes the deaths of Susan Perry and Sydney Monzon as due to drug overdoses. Costa claims it |
540 | "Tony Costa"
was Carl who dismembered and buried their bodies and that he had no knowledge until after their deaths. On June 12, 1969, Costa was arraigned on charges of murder for three of the deaths. In May 1970 he was convicted of the murders of Mary Ann Wysocki and Patricia Walsh and sentenced to life in prison at Massachusetts' Walpole Correctional Institution. Four years after his incarceration, Costa committed suicide by hanging himself in his cell. Tony Costa Antone Charles ""Tony"" Costa (August 2, 1944 – May 12, 1974) was an American carpenter who achieved notoriety for committing serial murders in |
541 | Trover
another, and that bailee wrongfully gave, sold or bailed the chattels to a third party, the only action was against the original bailee. Liability to the third bailee was not transferable. In later times, lawyers would talk of trover and bailment. In 1292, there was a slight tendency to regard the detainer rather than the bailment as the gist of the action, where it was stated ""it is not enough to say, 'you did not bail to me' [in defense], but one must add, 'and I do not detain it [use of the chattel] from you.'"" But there are other |
542 | Mudhalali
Venkat Ramanujam. Film development started during the making of ""Sampoorna Ramayanam,"" whose own production was temporarily shelved. The film was released on 22 October 1957 with a length of 160 minutes. The film became a hit for its soundtrack and story line, running for over 100 days and establishing the career of actors S. S. Rajendran, Devika and director Srinivasan. Vasanthan (S. S. Rajendran) goes to America to further his education. During his absence, his widowed mother Karpagam (C. T. Rajakantham) manages their glass factory in Salem with the help of manager Balu (T. K. Ramachandran), who has a relationship |
543 | Trover
chattel had been taken by a person who intended to hold it as a bargaining chip to force some action by the true owner). By the end of the seventeenth century, the great bulk of litigation in England was conducted through the various forms of action which had developed from trespass. This remained the case until the nineteenth century, when these kinds of forms of action were abolished in succession by statute. By 1875, all remaining forms had been replaced by a single form uniform writ whereby the plaintiff endorses the statement for a claim. By that time, the change |
544 | Mudhalali
lands in Salem as a worker under the pseudonym Varadhan. He joins the factory with the help of Valli (Devika), who works in the factory with her father. Slowly, Vasanthan comes to understand the misdeeds of Balu in managing the factory, and learns of his niece Kokilam's relationship with Balu. Meanwhile, Vasanthan and Valli fall in love. Vasanthan's mother becomes desperate to find her son and starts spending money to trace him. Vasanthan decides to reveal his true identity and goes out of town. Balu has an eye on Valli, and when she does not accept his lecherous advances, he |
545 | "Miroslav Ilić"
becoming more and more sexually suggestive and inappropriate for general audiences. Ilić's first hit song was ""I loved the girl from the city"" ( / Voleo sam devojku iz grada) composed by Obren Pjevović, a fellow country man of Ilić, and authored by Dobrica Erić. Pjevović first offered this song to Predrag Živković Tozovac and Predrag Gojković Cune, but they rejected it as non-commercial. In 1972, after several major record companies refused to publish, it Pjevović and Ilić accidentally, on their way to railway station in Belgrade, passed by the representative office of Diskos record company and decided to approach |
546 | Parahesperornis
genus Hargeria (Lucas, 1903). It then turned out that this genus' description actually referred to specimen KUVP 2287, which eventually became the holotype of ""P. alexi"". Nonetheless, the taxon description of ""Hargeria"" was about """"Hesperornis"" gracilis"" exclusively, and thus despite the misidentification it applies to YPM 1478, the holotype of """"H."" gracilis"". This mistake was rectified by later authors, who sank ""Hargeria"" back into ""Hesperornis"". In 2017, Asiahesperornis was considered as a possible synonym of Parahesperornis. ""Parahesperornis"" was a member of the Hesperornithes, flightless toothed seabirds of the Cretaceous and more specifically in the main lineage, close to ""Hesperornis"". Possibly |
547 | Mudhalali
rights for the stage play ""Mudhalali"" and chose Srinivasan to make his directorial debut. Unlike most films, this film's production was completed in four months and two days within the budget of 2 lakhs. Pramila, who was given the screen name Devika, made her acting debut. Rajendran was paid 7000, Both Devika and Srinivasan were paid 5000. The film grossed 20 lakhs with the first release. The film's soundtrack and background score were composed by K. V. Mahadevan, while the lyrics for the songs were written by Ka. Mu. Sheriff. Playback singers are T. M. Soundararajan, Seerkazhi Govindarajan, V. N. |
548 | Trover
forms of action. The records show a certain hardening of the courts toward this defense in the mid-fourteenth century. Wager of law was not used in debt on a covenant. Wager of law was abolished by statute in 1833. Prosser describes trover and wager of law in this way: Trover, as it developed, had certain definite procedural advantages over the older forms of action, not the least of which was that it avoided wager of law, a form of licensed perjury which made detinue singularly unattractive to an honest plaintiff suing a dishonest defendant. No action could lay when a |
549 | "Nathalie Handal"
American University in Rome, The American University in Beirut, New York University, and was Picador Guest Professor at Leipzig University, Germany. She is currently teaching at Columbia University and part of the Low-Residency MFA faculty at Sierra Nevada College. Handal writes the literary travel column ""The City and The Writer"", for the online magazine Words Without Borders. ""Handal has a confidence and Keatsian virtuosity with language"" (The Museum of the City of New York). In ""Love and Strange Horses"" she explores the three movements of the heart. The collection “trembles with belonging (and longing)” (""The New York Times""). In her |
550 | "Palmdale, California"
Works); sewer service is provided by the County Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County (separate public agency, with City Council members on district board); electrical service is provided by Southern California Edison; natural gas service is provided by Southern California Gas; cable television service is provided by Time Warner Cable; telephone service is provided by AT&T and Frontier; refuse pickup and disposal service is provided by Waste Management, Inc of the Antelope Valley under a franchise agreement with the city. The city successfully licensed and sold permits for a hybrid natural gas and steam turbine power facility and its operator |
551 | "SS Shinyō Maru"
TKK was the first Japanese, Asian and even non-American line to enter the service. The move was a reflection of the modernisation of Japan and its desire to take its place as an equal of the ""Western"" Great Powers, equal in standards of service and of technological development and in the manner of training and operating. The original three ships were the ""Nippon Maru"", the ""America Maru"" and the ""Hong Kong Maru"", but when the three large bespoke liners entered service, the latter two were sold to the Osaka Line (OSK) and relegated to coastal traffic around Japan. In August |
552 | "Palmdale, California"
City. this is due to the majority of citizens commuting to the nearby Santa Clarita and lower Los Angeles. The LA/Palmdale Regional Airport/Air Force Plant 42 (PMD) has two runways, each over in length, although there is currently no commercial airline service at the airport. PMD's commercial terminal is owned and operated by Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA), a municipal department of the City of Los Angeles, on leased land from the U.S. Air Force. Airline service has been sporadic since commercial flights were first offered in 1971. Most recently, United Express/SkyWest Airlines flew between PMD and San Francisco from |
553 | "SS Shinyō Maru"
than commerce, between Japan and the United States and an ancient and undistinguished little steamer would be given the mantle of the great liner. This vessel was not to live up to the reputation of its predecessor. The cargo-steamer Shinyo Maru was originally named the SS ""Clan Mackay and was built on the River Clyde for the Clan Line. She sailed with them until sold in 1913 to the Adelaide Steamship Company, which renamed her Ceduna. She was then sold, in 1924, to a company in Shanghai which renamed her Tung Tuck. In 1937, she was renamed Chang Teh, and |
554 | Trover
the destruction of the chattel by the possessor. The court allowed the action arising out of a bailment of a box containing some silver fixtures. It was alleged that the box had been broken open and the silver converted. The plaintiff could not recover the thing bailed, because it was destroyed. This was the first known case in which the words, ""converted to his own use"" (Latin: """"convert a son oeps"""") were used. Judge Brian said,""and I take it for clear law that he could not have action on the case if he can recover the thing intself."" Notice the |
555 | Trover
similarity to the fact patterns seen in cases of ""breaking the bail"". This is a fragmentary case from Henry VI of England which indicates that there were sacks of flour left by the plaintiff to be stored and cared for by the defendant. The plaintiff had paid the defendant for this arrangement. The sacks of flour had been carried off by a third party. Counsel for the defence argued that action on the case did not lie, because detinue lay. Judge Prisot opined it was an action on the case. An action similar to trover was allowed. In 1510 the |
556 | "Nathalie Handal"
of Books writes, it’s with “startling force [that she] is building an architecture for the wanderer.” Handal's poem “Lady Liberty” appeared on posters in New York City subways, buses, taxis, and on MetroCards as part of Poetry in Motion, a joint project of the MTA Arts for Transit & Urban Design and the Poetry Society of America, whose featured poems are read by more than seven million commuters daily. The poem is featured at the Poetry in Motion exhibit at The Transit Museum in Grand Central (2018). Nathalie Handal Nathalie Handal () (born 29 July 1969) is an award-winning poet, |
557 | Trover
it was a bad argument that a writ of debt could not lie where trespass did; because for the same thing one may have a writ of account and a writ of debt. In the case ""Isaac v Clark"" , it was laid down that a bailor could not maintain trover or detinue where he had pledged the goods, because the wrong was an offense against the possession of the bailee. This principle of ""Isaac v Clark"" (see immediately ""supra"") was extended in ""Manders v. Williams"" where the court found that a bailee had a bailment for a period of |
558 | Trover
time, and not merely at the will of the bailor. In other words, there had to be an agreement, similar to a contractual arrangement. Case involved twenty barrels of butter found and taken into the custody of the defendant. Plaintiff alleged the defendant's negligence had left the butter in a ruined condition. The court found that the loss arising from the negligence of an accidental finder was not allowed to constitute a cause of action, for no law compelleth him that finds a thing to keep it safely; as if a man finds a garment and suffers it to be |
559 | Trover
moth eaten. It would be otherwise if there had been a misuse. In ""Eason v Newman"" , a finder of a chattel was held liable on the ground that he had wrongfully refused to return it to the true owner. There was some judicial opposition to this ruling. It was criticized and precedent was not followed. In ""The Case of the Chancellor of Oxford"" , a wrongful refusal to return a chattel was found to be evidence of a conversion. In ""Holdsworth's Case"" Clayt. 151, pl. 99, 1638, an attempt to bring an action in trover for the wrongful detention |
560 | "Expressive therapies continuum"
integration of all of the first three levels of functioning. This integration indicates that the individual is operating on the fourth and final level of functioning, known as the Creative level. The Creative level both transcends and intersects the prior three levels, in which the individual is either equally incorporating all aspects of the ETC ""or"" is able to find a satisfying and meaningful creative experience on one of the three levels alone. However, an individual cannot wholly operate at both ends of a level, as each level is bipolar. For example, if the individual is more focused on the |
561 | "Colin Madigan"
was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001. Colin Madigan Colin Frederick Madigan AO (22 July 192117 September 2011) was an Australian architect. He is best known for designing the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra. Born in Glen Innes, New South Wales, Madigan studied architecture at Sydney Technical College from 1939 to 1941. He enlisted in the Royal Australian Navy in 1941, and was one of the few survivors of the sinking of the corvette HMAS ""Armidale"" off Timor in 1942. In 1951 Madigan, Maurice Edwards and Jack Torzillo formed the firm, ""Edwards Madigan Torzillo and Partners"", whose work was |
562 | Trover
to define conversion, and this extension did not really affect the definition. Conversion became any act on the part of the defendant inconsistent with the plaintiff's right to possession. This right had parts: it had to be (1) absolute and (2) immediate. The medieval conception of wrongs to chattels was based upon a physical interference with possession. This was inherent in an age when keeping the peace was the primary concern of law, and a right of a third party was foreign to it. Originally, trover was based on an infringement of possession other than trespass. All that was necessary |
563 | "Palmdale, California"
roads between major avenues carry suffixes ""-1"" (nearest to the lettered avenue) through ""-15"" (nearest to the next lettered avenue). Some ""-8"" avenues can be major thoroughfares, for example, Avenue R-8 is halfway between Avenue R and Avenue S. North-south streets are numbered with an ""east"" or ""west"" suffix with respect to their distances from Division Street. The number increases by 10 for each mile, so a mile east and west of Division Street lie ""10th Street East"" and ""10th Street West"" respectively. Some streets like 5th or 15th can also be major thoroughfares. House addresses on east-west ""avenues"" are |
564 | "Expressive therapies continuum"
and raw...without regard to form"". By working with individuals at the P/A level, art therapists can help clients to perceive images or notions in a new way, strengthening communication and assisting with the formation of meaningful relationships. They can also focus on the identification and healthy expression of one's emotions. Operation at the third level of the ETC, the cognitive/symbolic level, requires ""complex and sophisticated"" information processing, in which the individual consciously and strategically plans—prior to creating the art piece—for an expressive and self-satisfying final product. At this level, individuals are able to step outside their own sphere of perception |
565 | "Ōryoku Maru"
Kihachiro Ueda, who painted many Japanese ships, donated his painting of the ship to Subic Bay Historical Center for its hell ship memorial. Ōryoku Maru The ""Oryoku Maru"" left Manila on December 13, 1944, with 1,620 prisoners of war (including 1,556 American, 50 British and Dutch, 7 Czech, 4 Norwegians and several other nationalities) packed in the holds, and 1,900 Japanese civilians and military personnel in the cabins. As she neared the naval base at Olongapo in Subic Bay, US Navy planes from the attacked the unmarked ship, causing it to sink on December 15. About 270 died aboard ship. |
566 | "Macleod, Victoria"
Macleod, Victoria Macleod is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 14 km north-east from Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area are the Cities of Banyule and Darebin. At the 2016 Census, Macleod had a population of 9,769. Macleod West refers to the predominantly residential locality to the west of the railway line and station. Macleod railway station opened in 1911, 9 years after the railway line passed through. Macleod Post Office opened on 11 December 1923, and was replaced by the Simpson Barracks office in 1987. Macleod West Post Office opened in 1954 on Aberdeen Road near the |
567 | "Macleod, Victoria"
railway station. In Macleod, 71.5% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were England 2.9%, China (excludes SARs and Taiwan) 2.6%, Italy 1.7%, India 1.6% and Malaysia 1.1%. 73.7% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Italian 3.7%, Mandarin 2.5%, Macedonian 1.7%, Greek 1.5% and Cantonese 1.2%. Macleod's Local Australian rules football team is the Macleod Kangaroos, who play in Division 1 of the Northern Football League (NFL). As of 2008 they have played in 3 Grand Finals in a row. They are based at De Winton Park in |
568 | "Juliet Peddle"
Juliet Peddle Juliet A. Peddle (1899–1979) was an American modernist architect who was the first woman architect licensed by the state of Indiana and a cofounder of the Women's Architectural Club of Chicago. Peddle was born on June 7, 1899, in Terre Haute, Indiana, to John B. and Alice O. Peddle. She was educated at the King Classical School, and she learned drawing from her father, who taught machine design at Rose Polytechnic Institute. She went on to earn a degree in architecture from the University of Michigan in 1920, the second woman to do so, following her friend Bertha |
569 | "Macleod, Victoria"
well as a thriving ""Milo in2cricket"" program. There is also a local basketball team called the Banyule Hawks, whose home ground is the Banyule YMCA in Macleod. Macleod, Victoria Macleod is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 14 km north-east from Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area are the Cities of Banyule and Darebin. At the 2016 Census, Macleod had a population of 9,769. Macleod West refers to the predominantly residential locality to the west of the railway line and station. Macleod railway station opened in 1911, 9 years after the railway line passed through. Macleod Post Office |
570 | "Juliet Peddle"
architecture in Europe. In 1935, Peddle moved back to Terre Haute, where in 1939 she became the first female architect licensed by the state of Indiana. (There had been a couple of other women who were practicing architects in Indiana before Peddle, such as Grace Crosby, but Indiana only started licensing architects in 1929.) She opened her own architectural practice in Terre Haute, where she designed buildings for more than three decades. In addition to residences, she designed a Social Security building, the Medicenter building, and the Crawford School in and around Terre Haute. As she worked in Chicago after |
571 | "1972 Caribbean Series"
Earl Stephenson (1-0, 0/0.00 ERA, 13 strikeouts in 10 ⅔ IP) and Milt Wilcox (1-1, 1.76 ERA, 14 SO), and closer Roberto Muñoz (0-1, three saves in five games). The Venezuelan club also featured players as Ps Aurelio Monteagudo and Pablo Torrealba; IFs Brant Alyea, César Gutiérrez and Luis Salazar, and OFs Ted Ford, Pat Kelly and César Tovar. Mexico was represented by the Algodoneros de Guasave and finished last at 1-5. The hapless Mexicans were piloted by Vinicio (Chico) García, as the team scored the fewest runs (12) and set a series record for most consecutive shutouts (2). Thor |
572 | "Juliet Peddle"
in a collection of 60 detailed drawings of Terre Haute buildings from before the Civil War that she made for the historical society and that were based on careful study of old photographs, drawings, descriptions, technical specifications, and interviews with local residents. She decided to publish this series in a local paper, the ""Terre Haute Sunday Tribune Star"", in 1941–42 as a way of broadening local knowledge about Terre Haute's architectural heritage. Peddle provided the illustrations for a 1939 book about Indiana settlers, ""The Story of a Hoosier Immigration"", that was based on the recollections of the lives of Peddle's |
573 | "Palos Verdes Estates, California"
which 1,686 (33.3%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 3,649 (72.0%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 296 (5.8%) had a female householder with no husband present, 138 (2.7%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 91 (1.8%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 26 (0.5%) same-sex married couples or partnerships. 848 households (16.7%) were made up of individuals and 534 (10.5%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.65. There were 4,083 families (80.6% of all households); the average family size was 2.97. The |
574 | "Impressionism (play)"
her stories of its particular origin, although these stories are actually reflections of his own experiences. These lead to flashbacks of iconic moments that have led to their present state, as well as their relationship to the art that hangs in the gallery, which Katharine will not easily sell. In the end, we journey through a love story which shows Katharine and Thomas, that just like the Impressionist art on the walls, the more they step away from the canvas of their lives up to now, the more they realize that their future together might hold more depth than the |
575 | "William Burdet"
at least one son: although his lands were soon passed to other members of the Burdet family. His nephew Sir Robert Burdet was to later become an MP for Warwickshire. William Burdet Sir William Burdet of Loseby was an English Parliamentary representative for Leicestershire. The Burdet family had been dedicated supporters of the Order of St Lazarus's English headquarters at Burton Lazars since its earliest days but relations soured in 1294 when the Order appropriated the tithes to Lowesby parish for themselves. This was not popular with the villagers and sporadic riots broke out over the following few years. The |
576 | "The Trudy"
The Trudy The Trudy are an English post-punk band formed in Kingston-upon-Thames in 1979 by former Cardiacs members Peter Tagg (drums) and Ralph Cade (vocals and keyboards) along with Derek Tagg (guitar) and Sue Smallwood (bass). In 1980 The Trudy, with the above line-up, released an album Volcano Fo Le Ferret, on Binkie Records along with another Kingston band The Magnificent 7, with each band featuring on one side of the record. In 1981 the band were included on the various artist compilation LP The Snoopies Album, which also included The Europeans and Cardiacs among others. In 1982 the band |
577 | "The Trudy"
released the cassette single Air Commodore. By this time Sue Smallwood had been replaced on bass by Jon Bastable Jnr and second guitarist Ian Plummer had been added. Many releases followed on a variety of different labels. Among these was the 1998 EP given free with House of Dolls, a popular mainstream alternative music magazine, on which The Trudy was included, along with The Wedding Present, Claytown Troupe & The Hunters Club. In 1991,when they released the album Tune-In To The Trudy Love-Ray! the line-up was Peter Tagg, Derek Tagg, Melisa Jo Heathcote Paul Crook and Arturo Bassick (of The |
578 | "The Trudy"
Lurkers, Pinpoint and 999) In 2010 the band covered the Cardiacs song Day is Gone on the album """" on the Believers Roast label. In 2012 the singles Dirt Cheap Melody and Bucolics Anonymous were released. The Trudy has performed extensively around the UK and headlined venues such as the Marquee and University of London Union. A flyer for a Marquee gig that The Trudy headlined is in the Victoria and Albert Museum collection. The current line up is Melissa Jo Heathcote (formerly of The Pukes), Del Tagg, Paul Crook, Peter Tagg & Eugene Bezodis (of Patrick & Eugene). On |
579 | "Edward Barnes (British Army officer)"
same year he stood for Parliament as Conservative candidate for Sudbury at a by-election. The votes between the two candidates were tied, and the returning officer gave Barnes his casting vote and declared him elected; however, his opponent petitioned against the outcome, denying that the returning officer had the right to a casting vote, and the issue had not been resolved before Parliament was dissolved. At the 1835 general election, Barnes was narrowly defeated, but he finally became MP for Sudbury at the third attempt in 1837; however, he died in the following year. Along with Admiral William Bowles, Barnes |
580 | "Decommunization in Russia"
Starodubtsev served as Governor of the Tula Region from 1997 to 2005; Gorbachev's former deputy Anatoly Lukyanov was elected to the State Duma in 1993–2003 as a deputy of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation; the unrepentant Stalinist Valentin Varennikov (1923–2009) was a Duma deputy first for the RF Communist Party, from 1995 to 2003 and then for Rodina. Both Lukyanov and Varennikov headed parliamentary committees. Conscious attempts in Russian society to deal with the Soviet past have been uncertain. Organisations such as the Memorial Society have worked on numerous projects involving witnesses to past events (Gulag inmates, Soviet |
581 | "Lismore Cathedral, Ireland"
Lismore Cathedral, Ireland St. Carthage Cathedral, Lismore is a Church of Ireland cathedral in Lismore, County Waterford. It is in the ecclesiastical province of Dublin. Formerly the cathedral of the Diocese of Lismore, it is now one of six cathedrals in the United Dioceses of Cashel and Ossory. The medieval cathedral was in ruins after a fire in the 17th century. The choir was reroofed by Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork. The Cathedral was again destroyed in 1630, and rebuilt starting in 1663 with input from architect William Robinson. It was re-roofed and refurbished in the 18th century. All |
582 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
to treat the illness. People can help tackle resistance by using antibiotics only when prescribed by a doctor; completing the full prescription, even if they feel better; never sharing antibiotics with others or using leftover prescriptions. Infectious disease control through improved water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure needs to be included in the antimicrobial resistance (AMR) agenda. The ""Interagency Coordination Group on Antimicrobial Resistance"" stated in 2018 that ""the spread of pathogens through unsafe water results in a high burden of gastrointestinal disease, increasing even further the need for antibiotic treatment."" This is particularly a problem in developing countries where |
583 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
the spread of infectious diseases caused by inadequate WASH standards is a major driver of antibiotic demand. Growing usage of antibiotics together with persistent infectious disease levels have led to a dangerous cycle in which reliance on antimicrobials increases while the efficacy of drugs diminishes. The proper use of infrastructure for water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) can result in a 47–72 percent decrease of diarrhea cases treated with antibiotics depending on the type of intervention and its effectiveness. A reduction of the diarrhea disease burden through improved infrastructure would result in large decreases in the number of diarrhea cases treated |
584 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
with antibiotics. This was estimated as ranging from 5 million in Brazil to up to 590 million in India by the year 2030. The strong link between increased consumption and resistance indicates that this will directly mitigate the accelerating spread of AMR. Sanitation and water for all by 2030 is Goal Number 6 of the Sustainable Development Goals. An increase in hand washing compliance by hospital staff results in decreased rates of resistant organisms. Water supply and sanitation infrastructure in health facilities offer significant co-benefits for combatting AMR, and investment should be increased. There is much room for improvement: WHO |
585 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
and UNICEF estimated in 2015 that globally 38% of health facilities did not have a source of water, nearly 19% had no toilets and 35% had no water and soap or alcohol-based hand rub for handwashing. Manufacturers of antimicrobials need to improve the treatment of their wastewater (by using industrial wastewater treatment processes) to reduce the release of residues into the environment. In 1997, European Union health ministers voted to ban avoparcin and four additional antibiotics used to promote animal growth in 1999. In 2006 a ban on the use of antibiotics in European feed, with the exception of two |
586 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
antibiotics in poultry feeds, became effective. In Scandinavia, there is evidence that the ban has led to a lower prevalence of antibiotic resistance in (nonhazardous) animal bacterial populations. As of 2004, several European countries established a decline of antimicrobial resistance in humans through limiting the usage antimicrobials in agriculture and food industries without jeopardizing animal health or economic cost. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) collect data on antibiotic use in humans and in a more limited fashion in animals. The FDA first determined in 1977 that there is evidence of emergence |
587 | "Oberweis Dairy"
which began in 2004 and ended in July 2006. In 2012, Oberweis said that each dairy store generates between $1.25 million and $1.75 million per year. In 2012, Oberweis opened their first quick-service hamburger restaurant, named That Burger Joint, intended to expand as a chain and compete directly with Five Guys. In 2017, Oberweis Dairy acquired Woodgrain Neapolitan Pizzeria, a pizzeria serving custom made personal pizzas in minutes. Oberweis Dairy does not use or sell milk from cows treated with rBGH, recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone, despite United States Food and Drug Administration statements that the hormone does not have any |
588 | "Passage (sculpture)"
cost was not confirmed in TriMet's announcement. Passage (sculpture) Passage is an outdoor 2014 art installation consisting of 38 weathered steel boat sculptures by Bill Will, installed along the MAX Orange Line in the Brooklyn neighborhood of southeast Portland, Oregon, in the United States. Bill Will's ""Passage"" consists of 36 weathered steel boat sculptures installed adjacent to MAX Orange Line tracks along Southeast 17th Avenue between McLoughlin and Powell boulevards. According to TriMet, which began installing the sculptures in March–April 2014, the ""pieces draw on the natural history of the area while celebrating the Portland-Milwaukie light rail transit project's green |
589 | "Todd K. Shackelford"
Todd K. Shackelford Todd Kennedy Shackelford (born 1971) is an American psychologist and professor at Oakland University. He is best known for his work in evolutionary psychology. He is the editor in chief of the academic journals ""Evolutionary Psychology"" and ""Evolutionary Psychological Science"". He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Association for Psychological Science. Shackelford received his B.A. in 1993 from the University of New Mexico, his M.A. in 1995 from the University of Michigan and his Ph.D. in 1997 from the University of Texas at Austin. After earning his Ph.D. he went to Florida Atlantic |
590 | "John Holman (NASCAR owner)"
Race, and to stay ahead of the racing team. The team won the race, and they hired Holman as a full-time mechanic and parts man after the race to work in their Long Beach, California shop. Smith was killed in a racing accident at DuQuoin, Illinois in 1954, and Stroppe took over. Holman continued to work for him until 1956. Holman was hired by Ford Motor Company to run their factory shop in Charlotte. Ralph Moody was the mechanic, manager, and star driver of 1925 Indianapolis 500 winner Pete DePaolo's Ford factory-sponsored stockcar racing facility in Charlotte, North Carolina. The |
591 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
if preventive actions are not taken. In this day and age current antimicrobial resistance leads to longer hospital stays, higher medical costs, and increased mortality. For the fiscal year 2016 budget, President Obama suggested to nearly double the amount of federal funding to ""combat and prevent"" antibiotic resistance to more than $1.2 billion. Many international funding agencies like USAID, DFID, SIDA and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation have pledged money for developing strategies to counter antimicrobial resistance. Since the mid-1980s pharmaceutical companies have invested in medications for cancer or chronic disease that have greater potential to make money and have |
592 | "Catholic liturgy"
children of God, confirmation to Christ and the Church. The effect of the sacraments comes ""ex opere operato"" (by the very fact of being administered). Regardless of the personal holiness of the minister administering the sacraments, Christ provides the graces of which they are signs. However, a recipient's own lack of proper disposition to receive the grace conveyed can block their effectiveness in that person. The sacraments presuppose faith and, in addition, their words and ritual elements nourish, strengthen and give expression to faith.[Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church"", 224] There are seven Sacraments: Singing and music, especially |
593 | "Party Foundation Day"
Party Foundation Day The Party Foundation Day is an annual public holiday in North Korea marking the 10 October 1945 foundation of the ""Central Organizing Committee of the Communist Party of North Korea"", known as the ""North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea"" in the West and considered a predecessor to the ruling Workers' Party of Korea. Celebrations include political speeches, artistic performances and mass events including military parades. Ordinary citizens receive food rations and electricity. The Party Founding Day is one of the most important holidays of the country, along with the Day of the Sun (birthday |
594 | "Party Foundation Day"
of Kim Il-sung), Day of the Shining Star (birthday of Kim Jong-il) and Day of the Foundation of the Republic. 2015 marked the 70th anniversary. North Korea commemorates 10 October 1945 as the date of the foundation of the ""Central Organizing Committee of the Communist Party of North Korea"", known as the ""North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea"" by Western historians. On 10 October 1945 a meeting called ""Conference of Korean Communist Party Members and Enthusiasts in the Five Northwestern Provinces"" began in Pyongyang, in a public hall that now hosts the Party Founding Museum. On 13 |
595 | "Party Foundation Day"
October, the meeting saw the establishment of the North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea. The conference was the first time that Kim Il-sung emerged as a political force. Kim advocated the foundation of the North Korea Bureau so that party activities could be overseen in the north of the country in a situation where the north and south were occupied by the Soviets and the Americans respectively. Kim acceded the chairmanship of the North Korea Bureau some two months after the conference. The Bureau soon became independent of the Seoul-lead Communist Party of Korea, paving the way |
596 | "Party Foundation Day"
for a political force in the North. The North Korea Bureau is one in a series of predecessors to the present Workers' Party of Korea. The North Korea Bureau evolved into the Workers' Party of North Korea in August 1946. The present Workers' Party of Korea was not founded until 30 June 1949 when the Workers' Party of North Korea merged with the Workers' Party of South Korea. Celebrations include song and dance performances, evening galas, speeches, lectures on revolutionary history and oratorical meetings. Floral tributes are laid in front of statues of Kim Il-sung. Special food rations are distributed. |
597 | "Pico Rivera, California"
Pío Pico, the last Mexican governor of California) and Rivera. Situated on a rich alluvial plain between the Rio Hondo and the San Gabriel River, the area was once predominantly agricultural; but, at the end of WWII, the fast rising demand for homes lured builders to the attractive terrain. Since the 1950s, it has been both residential as well as industrial. It had a Ford Motor Company plant for many years: Los Angeles Assembly. Pico Rivera lies below the Whittier Narrows, making it one of the “Gateway Cities”. In January 1958, 56 percent of the electorate voted for incorporation. They |
598 | "Antimicrobial resistance"
bacteria resistant to one antibiotic are killed when the next antibiotic is taken. Studies have found that this method reduces the rate at which antibiotic resistant bacteria emerge in vitro relative to a single drug for the entire duration. Studies have found that bacteria that evolve antibiotic resistance towards one group of antibiotic may become more sensitive to others. This phenomenon can be utilized to select against resistant bacteria using an approach termed collateral sensitivity cycling, which has recently been found to be relevant in developing treatment strategies for chronic infections caused by ""Pseudomonas aeruginosa"". Since the discovery of antibiotics, |
599 | "Pico Rivera, California"
at the north end of Durfee Road. The community enjoys more than 120 acres committed to public recreational facilities. There are 18 athletic fields, two gymnasiums and four community centers, a nine-hole executive golf course, skatepark and aquatic centers. In 1965, the Pico Rivera Municipal Golf Course was built for the communal enjoyment of not only its residents and golfers, but also for those in the surrounding communities. The executive nine-hole course plays to a par 29 and measures 1,504 yards. The practice facilities include two putting greens and a covered driving range. Lighting throughout the golf course and driving |