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7646700
"Bobby Hodge" Bobby Hodge Robert William Hodge (born 30 April 1954) is an English former footballer who played in the Football League as a winger for Exeter City, Colchester United and Torquay United. Born in Exeter, Hodge began his career with local team Exeter City. He made 128 league appearances for the club and sco...
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"Alessandro Carrozza" Alessandro Carrozza Alessandro Carrozza (born 1 February 1982 in Gallipoli, Apulia) is an Italian footballer who plays as midfielder for Gallipoli. Carrozza's footballing career began later on than usual. He had aspirations of becoming a footballer when he was 18 years old, but instead he became a...
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"Alessandro Carrozza" becoming a Serie A player came true in January 2012 when he joined Atalanta on loan, aged 30. On 2 July, he signed a contract with Verona. Alessandro Carrozza Alessandro Carrozza (born 1 February 1982 in Gallipoli, Apulia) is an Italian footballer who plays as midfielder for Gallipoli. Carrozza's ...
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"The Camp (film)" The Camp (film) The Camp (Arabic: المخيم) is a 2013 Arabic language documentary film by Egyptian photographer, filmmaker and director Tamer Eissa, about the ""Arab Spring Camp"" attended by children of martyrs who fell in Gaza and children of martyrs of the Egyptian revolution. The children's camp too...
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"The Camp (film)" on the personal stories of three of the children: Siraj, Rizk and Shahd. The film first screened in Cairo on April 1, 2013. The Camp is a 2-week holiday camp for children of the martyrs from Gaza and Egypt. The activities in the Camp were meant to provide psychological support to the children of marty...
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"The Camp (film)" organizers was to include children from other Arab Spring countries however due to budget constraints it was restricted to children from Gaza and Egypt. The psychological support to the children was influenced by the Montessori educational approach. Film director Tamer Eissa initially joined the camp ...
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"The Camp (film)" myself … what is pleasure? Before trying to explain the answer I have reached…. Let me tell you the story from the beginning. In June 2012, I traveled to the Egyptian city of Nuwebi'. I was part of the team of ""The Arab Spring Camp for Children"", for 11 days. My initial plan for joining the Camp was...
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"The Camp (film)" an attempt to document some of the details of the trip and to narrate part of the children's stories. I loved those children and learnt a great deal from them. Their strength helped me to regain a positive energy and determination to love life, a concept I had almost lost in our world. The Camp was ov...
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"Coaches Stadium at Monier Field" the stadium. Coaches Stadium at Monier Field Coaches Stadium at Monier Field is a baseball venue in Charleston, Illinois, United States. It is home to the Eastern Illinois Panthers baseball team of the NCAA Division I Ohio Valley Conference. It has a capacity of 500 spectators. Eastern...
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"Five Nations Passport Group" Five Nations Passport Group The Five Nations Passport Group is an international forum between the passport issuing authorities in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States to ""share best practices and discuss innovations related to the development of passpor...
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"Dora Askowith" of the Jews Under Julius Caesar and Augustus"" in 1915. Askowith also studied at the Jewish Institute of Religion (now the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion) in the 1920s, though she did not complete the rabbinical program. She later wrote, ""I took the work at the Institute because of m...
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"Henry Adams (farmer)" Henry Adams (farmer) Henry Adams (1583–1646) was a British colonial farmer. He was a patrilineal ancestor of U.S. Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Henry Adams was born in Barton St. David (1583-1646) to John Adams (1555–1604) and Agnes Stone (1556–1616). He emigrated from Braintree, E...
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"Dora Askowith" modern Flag of Israel. Dora Askowith Dora Askowith (August 30, 1884 – 1958) was a college professor, author and historian. Askowith was born in Kovno, Russia, to Jacob Baruch and Sarah Golde (née Arenovski) Askowith. The family emigrated to the United States not long after her birth and she spent her ea...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" Wibault 12 Sirocco The Wibault 12 Sirocco or Wib 12 Sirocco was a two-seat, parasol wing fighter aircraft designed and built in France in the 1920s. Three fighter prototypes were completed, one for the RAF and two Army co-operation variants. There was no series production. The Wib 12 Sirocco, a sin...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" 12 made it both stronger and 12% lighter than its predecessor. One major change was the replacement of the Wib 8's box spars with ones of I-section. The general design followed that of Wibault's family of single- and two-seat fighters, the Wib 3, Wib 7, Wib 8 and Wib 9 but in external detail was cl...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" side which met the wing at about mid-span. The Wib 12 had a new pair of jury struts from the main wing struts to the wing underside for strengthening. There were cabane struts over the fuselage and a trailing edge cut-out in the wing over the pilot's cockpit to enhance his visibility. A pair of syn...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" fuselage, together with an angular fin and rudder. The Wib 12's engine, the same water-cooled V-12 Hispano-Suiza 12Hb type as used by the Wib 8, was totally enclosed and drove a two blade propeller. It was cooled by a retractable, half-cylindrical radiator on the fuselage underside at the back of t...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" prototypes) were both flown for the first time in May 1926. The latter was about 8% faster in a climb to 4,000 m (13,125 ft) than the heavier Wib 8. The third aircraft, the Wib 122 was built for Vickers aircraft, with whom Wibault shared patents and collaborative designs. They fitted it with a W-12...
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"Henry Adams (farmer)" 1640, and included what is now Quincy, and Braintree. Henry Adams is an ancestor of Virginia Attorney General Candidate John Donley Adams. Genealogist Charles Henry Browning contributed to a bogus lineage for Henry Adams, who immigrated from Barton St David, Somerset, England to Braintree, Massac...
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"Wibault 12 Sirocco" resulted. C=Chasseur (fighter); A=Army; 2=two-seater. One of each only. Wibault 12 Sirocco The Wibault 12 Sirocco or Wib 12 Sirocco was a two-seat, parasol wing fighter aircraft designed and built in France in the 1920s. Three fighter prototypes were completed, one for the RAF and two Army co-opera...
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"George Shurley" George Shurley Sir George Shurley (1569–1647) was an English-born judge who held the office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. Uniquely among the holders of that office, he ranked as junior to Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas in precedence. He was born at Isfield, Sussex, the second son of Thomas...
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"George Shurley" as Cofferer to Henry VIII, had acquired Isfield in the 1520s. George's birth date is sometimes given as 1559, but is likely to have been some years later as John, who was the elder of the two brothers, was probably born in 1568. He matriculated from Clare College, Cambridge in 1587, and was called to t...
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"George Shurley" Privy Council of Ireland. He sat in the Court of Castle Chamber (the Irish equivalent to Star Chamber); but he had a reputation for being ""aloof"" and for refusing to meddle in politics, and he left little trace on the records of those bodies. He is known to have been outraged at being forced to yield...
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"George Shurley" to Sarsfield, a judge who was already notorious for corruption, which led to his eventual removal from the Bench, and who died in disgrace. Shurley is also said to have complained of being forced to go on assize in Ulster (possibly because of the appalling condition of the roads), although he was happy...
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"George Shurley" Dublin, (no trace of which remains now), together with lands in County Carlow, and wished to spend his last years in Ireland. He returned to Ireland, and made a speech denouncing Confederate Ireland in 1644. Apparently despairing of life in Ireland, in 1646 he retired to Brightling in Sussex, where he ...
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"George Shurley" their uncle Sir John Shurley. One of George's daughters, Judith, married Sir Samuel Crooke, 2nd Baronet, son of Sir Thomas Crooke, 1st Baronet; Sir Thomas was the founder of Baltimore, County Cork. The other Shurley daughter Penelope married Francis Selwyn. While In Ireland Sir George Shurley took an I...
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"George Shurley" came to be. Lady Shurley made her last will in April 1654, and may have died later the same year, as she refers in her will to her ""serious illness"". She owned property in both Ireland and Chester, the bulk of which she left to her daughter Penelope Selwyn. From the will it seems that of her other ch...
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"George Shurley" was also known to be a man of integrity, at a time when Irish judges were frequently accused of corruption. George Shurley Sir George Shurley (1569–1647) was an English-born judge who held the office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. Uniquely among the holders of that office, he ranked as junior to Chi...
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"Atha Tehon" ""Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears"", ""Ashanti to Zulu"", ""Moja Means One"", and ""Jambo Means Hello"". She also worked as a freelance designer for Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Atha Tehon Atha Tehon Thiras (January 20, 1926 – February 15, 2012), professionally credited as Atha Tehon, was the daughter a...
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"Aeros Discus" Aeros Discus The Aeros Discus is a family of Ukrainian high-wing, single-place, hang gliders, designed and produced by Aeros of Kiev and introduced in 2002. The Discus series was conceived as a single-place intermediate hang glider for recreational cross country flying. Aeros explains the design role: Ty...
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"Aeros Discus" Flylight Motorfloater and Flylight E-Dragon ultralight trikes in its Discus T configuration. Aeros Discus The Aeros Discus is a family of Ukrainian high-wing, single-place, hang gliders, designed and produced by Aeros of Kiev and introduced in 2002. The Discus series was conceived as a single-place inter...
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"Our Delight" Our Delight ""Our Delight"" is a 1947 jazz standard, composed by Tadd Dameron. It is considered one of his best compositions along with ""Good Bait"", ""Hot House"", ""If You Could See Me Now"", and ""Lady Bird"". It has an AABA construction. A moderately fast bebop song, it featured the trumpeter Fats Na...
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"Noor Hassan" Noor Hassan Noor Hassan () is a Pakistani model, actor and director. He has acted in Pakistani television drama serials, including ""Aseerzadi"", ""Humsafar"", ""Maat"", ""Mah-e-Tamam"", ""Shanakht"", ""Ladies Park"" and many others. Before acting he was a ramp model for Pakistani designers and appeared i...
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"Noor Hassan" of 2013, where he played the lead role by the name of Peerzada Shahaab became the new sensation amongst masses. He was highly appreciated for his strong acting skills and powerful moments with the likes of Sania Saeed, Salman Shahid and Sakina Sammo. The drama was also a major hit internationally. He was ...
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"Indigo Lake (Ohio)" Indigo Lake (Ohio) Indigo Lake is a small, roughly triangular lake in Summit County, Ohio, in the United States. It is not a natural lake, having been created by the park service in Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It is a popular fishing location, with several species present including the Largemout...
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"Indigo Lake (Ohio)" what was subsequently called ""Indigo Lake"", which remains in place sustained by a constant supply of water from several natural springs in the immediate area. It is situated entirely within the boundaries of Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It is one of only two places in the park closed to swimmin...
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"Indigo Lake (Ohio)" car from Riverview road, on foot via the Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail, and by rail via a flag stop station nearby at , part of the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad. The lake is 722 feet (220 meters) above sea level and is 41 feet at the deepest point. According to local folklore, the site and sho...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" Carla Carli Mazzucato Carla Carli Mazzucato (born 2 November 1935) is a 20th-century Italian artist whose contributions to the world of contemporary art help define the ""modern expressionist"" movement. Known for her unique style and bold color palette, her paintings are described by critics as...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese collection installed in the church of Corpus Domini in Bolzano, Italy. Mazzucato was recognized as a leading contemporary artist by the SoHo Fine Arts Institute in New York City in 2000. Carla Carli Mazzucato was born in Appiano, a small town nestled in the...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" her early youth surrounded by nature, accompanying her father on walks through the countryside and along the wooded timber trails of the mountains that rimmed the fertile Adige River Valley. The tranquility of Carla’s childhood was interrupted by the onset of World War II. Situated along the Adi...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" of the bomb shelters built into the mountain sides. Although Italy signed the armistice with the Allied Forces in 1943, Germany responded by annexing the Alto Adige region, prolonging the fighting there through 1945. With the end of the war, came a period of rebuilding, but for young Carla, it m...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" was introduced to the brother of a classmate, and shortly thereafter traveled to America to make a new home with her husband, Giuseppe Mazzucato. Carla began her life in the United States in Chicago Heights, Illinois. There, she learned English, started a family and she began to paint. Though he...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" first exhibited in 1969. In 1977, she opened an art gallery in Grosse Ile, Michigan, where she taught and helped to promote and exhibit the work of other artists as well as her own. By 1982, Mazzucato’s work began appearing regularly in New York City. Her paintings were well received by both the...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" to enthusiastic patrons, as she gained recognition as a leading contemporary artist. “Her art conveys an ultimate optimism in the nature of man, and her figures seem to walk towards an indefinite horizon in the hope of finding that moment of truth and peace.” In 1990, Mazzucato’s first large-sca...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" painting the images and impressions that she, herself witnessed first hand. “In all of Mazzucato’s paintings, the spirit of wonder, silence and mystery permeate the landscapes, in an eloquent symphony of sensuous forms and color. Past, present and future are wed and captured in a moment.” Mazzuc...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" uninfluenced by any socially imposed manner of thinking. She does not follow the current; hers is a truly free art, light-years from any set tradition. She paints a contemporary world rich with intense colors and hues that radiate optimism. Landscapes, compositions, flowers, all born from a trut...
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"Carla Carli Mazzucato" “homecoming exhibit” attended by the artist in 2001. The Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, California, presented her works in 2005, and the Prisma Galerie in Bolzano, Italy, hosted an exhibit of new paintings by the artist in 2006. An extensive archive of Mazzucato’s art can be found online, and vario...
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"1982 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election" 1982 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election Elections to the Wigan Council were held on Thursday, 6 May 1982, with one third of the council up for election. The newly formed Alliance made three gains, replacing the Conservatives as the main opposition to Labour. T...
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"1982 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election" following consequences for the total number of seats on the Council after the elections: 1982 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election Elections to the Wigan Council were held on Thursday, 6 May 1982, with one third of the council up for election. The newly formed A...
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"Quantum paraelectricity" Quantum paraelectricity Quantum paraelectricity is a type of incipient ferroelectricity where the onset of ferroelectric order is suppressed by quantum fluctuations. From the soft mode theory of ferroelectricity, this occurs when a ferroelectric instability is stabilized by quantum fluctuation...
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"Andre Rand" life in prison. He will become eligible for parole in 2037, when he will be 93 years old. Andre Rand Andre Rand (born Frank Rushan; March 11, 1944) is an American convicted kidnapper of two children and suspected serial killer, currently serving 25 years to life in prison. He is eligible for parole in 2037...
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"Coed Coch" Coed Coch Coed Coch, in Dolwen, Denbighshire, Wales, is a large 19th-century mansion in the neoclassical style, designed by the architect Henry Hakewill. The building is Grade II* listed, as is its 18th- and 19th-century parkland. The mansion is of ashlar, originally with two matching, three-bay elevations....
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" Garrett, Jaleesa Capri and James Edward Becton. Its second production was a double bill of ""Casper's Fat Tuesday"" and ""The Stronger"", and its third ""Easter"". ""Casper's Fat Tuesday"" was co-produced by the Pink Pig Ballet and was an English-language premiere, translated by Jo...
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" 13, 2013, and opened two days later. Malin Tybåhl and Prof. Laurence Carr are the translators. This was the first production to employ a guest director, Craig Baldwin, associate artistic director of the Red Bull Theater. The cast were Kersti Bryan, Samm Todd, Victoria Blankenship, ...
7646754
"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" of Death"" was presented as on three Wednesdays with Mary Keefe, Louis Vuolo and Dennis Davies. ""Miss Julie"" featured a biracial cast and the previously unstaged ballet, for which Strindberg provided a scenario in the original script in October 2014. Ivette Dumeng performed the t...
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" associate artistic director Whitney Gail Aronson. Eric C. Bailey, Martin Boersma, Sergio Castillo, Michael Sean Cirelli, Amy Fulgham, Al Foote III, Daniel Mian, David Mohr, Christine Nyland, Jonathan Olivera, Brent Shultz, Steve Shoup and Jacob Troy constituted the remainder of the...
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" ""Journey in Light and Shadow"", translated by Robert Greer and adapted by Natlie Menna. Strindberg's ""Motherlove"" was presented in the Lower East Side Festival at Theater for the New City. Hrafnhildur Hagalin's ""Guilty"" was presented in the Dreamup Festival at Theater for the ...
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" company dramaturgs. Stage managers for ""Easter"" and ""To Damascus I"" were Michael Petre-Zumbrun and Karimah (Bill Johnson and Karimah for ""Playing with Fire"" and Sidney Branch and Michael Petre-Zumbrun for ""Casper's Fat Tuesday"" and ""The Stronger""). Noelle Semodo and Nikee...
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"Cindy Bass" Cindy Bass Cindy M. Bass is a Democratic politician and member of the City Council of Philadelphia. Bass has worked as a senior policy advisor to former Congressman Chaka Fattah, and was a special assistant to Allyson Schwartz during her time in the State Senate. She has been involved in community organizi...
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"August Strindberg Repertory Theatre" master carpenter on ""Playing with Fire"" and ""Casper's Fat Tuesday."" August Strindberg Repertory Theatre The August Strindberg Repertory Theatre is the resident company at the Gene Frankel Theatre. The August Strindberg Repertory Theatre became the resident company at the Gene F...
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"Trinidad and Tobago Chess Championship" Trinidad and Tobago Chess Championship The Trinidad and Tobago Chess Championships are the annual individual National Chess championships of Trinidad and Tobago. Although chess was being played in Trinidad and Tobago from 1922 or earlier, the first men's tournament took place in...
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"Trinidad and Tobago Chess Championship" There is also an annual National Women's Championship. Aditi Soondarsingh has won a record nine titles. NOTE: The table below lists only the years when tournaments took place. There were no chess tournaments in Trinidad and Tobago in 1938, 1940, 1941, 1943, 1960, 1962, and 1963....
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Kangaride Kangaride Kangaride is a private Canadian company founded in 2006 that provides a ridesharing platform for posting and booking long-distance rides in North America. Kangaride appeared on Dragons Den Season 7 episode 19. Kangaride was created by Marc-Olivier Vachon in 2006. The company had 7,000 members in its...
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Kangaride seat in the one that gets them where they need to go. Kangaride has over 475,000 members and hundreds of rides booked each week. Kangaride has a three-pronged approach to making ridesharing safer. All rides are rated by the driver and passengers and drivers’ overall ratings are visible to passengers before bo...
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"Zaz (video game)" Zaz (video game) Zaz (a backronym for ""Zaz ain't Z***"") is a free software (GPLv3) arcade action puzzle computer game, similar to ""Zuma"". The goal is to remove all incoming marbles by rearranging their order and making triplets or quartets of the same color. The game features 23 levels and is rep...
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"Zaz (video game)" on the playfield to grab a ball that can then be shot back at a new location. Instead of inserting randomly assigned new balls, the player moves existing balls. The game is available in many Linux distributions, for instance in Ubuntu, Fedora or the Debian repositories as the game's content complies ...
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"Zaz (video game)" game as: """"Very well made clone of the original classical game. Zaz implements the game idea perfectly and offers challenging levels"""". Zaz (video game) Zaz (a backronym for ""Zaz ain't Z***"") is a free software (GPLv3) arcade action puzzle computer game, similar to ""Zuma"". The goal is to remo...
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"Peggys Point Lighthouse" Peggys Point Lighthouse Peggys Point Lighthouse, also known as Peggys Cove Lighthouse, is an active lighthouse and an iconic Canadian image. Located within Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia, it is one of the busiest tourist attractions in the province and is a prime attraction on the Lighthouse Trail ...
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"Peggys Point Lighthouse" lighthouse is one of the most-photographed structures in Atlantic Canada and one of the most recognizable lighthouses in the world. Visitors may explore the granite outcrop on Peggys Point around the lighthouse; despite numerous signs warning of unpredictable surf (including one on a bronze pl...
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"Peggys Point Lighthouse" creating the red beacon light marking the eastern entrance to St. Margarets Bay. That lighthouse was replaced by the current structure, an octagonal lighthouse which was built in 1914. It is made of reinforced concrete but retains the eight-sided shape of earlier generations of wooden light to...
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"Peggys Point Lighthouse" the late 1970s. Finally to conform to world standards the light was changed to red in 2007. The lighthouse used to contain a small Canada Post office in the lower level during the summer months serving as the village post office where visitors could send postcards and letters. Each piece of ma...
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"Peggys Point Lighthouse" all lighthouses in Canada. The lighthouse has until May 29, 2012 to be nominated under the Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act by a group willing to look after it, or the lighthouse will face disposal. The province of Nova Scotia has discussed taking ownership but has not made a decision. Peggy...
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"Henry de Rosenbach Walker" Henry de Rosenbach Walker Henry de Rosenbach Walker (30 May 1867 – 31 July 1923) was a British Liberal Party politician and author. He was a son of R. F. Walker of Shooter's Hill, Kent and Marie von Rosenbach, of Karritz, Estonia. He was educated at Winchester School and Trinity College, Cam...
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"Henry de Rosenbach Walker" had two books published; Australasian Democracy in 1897 and The West Indies and the Empire in 1901. He stood as a Liberal candidate for parliament on four occasions. First he contested a Liberal seat, the Stowmarket division of Suffolk in 1895, losing to the Conservatives. He then contested ...
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"Henry de Rosenbach Walker" 1885. He successfully defended Melton at the General Election of January 1910 by a majority of just 123 votes. However, he chose not to defend his seat at the December 1910 General Election. He did not stand for parliament again. He was elected to the London County Council as a Liberal Party...
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"Henry de Rosenbach Walker" he had published The Need for the Parliament Act. Henry de Rosenbach Walker Henry de Rosenbach Walker (30 May 1867 – 31 July 1923) was a British Liberal Party politician and author. He was a son of R. F. Walker of Shooter's Hill, Kent and Marie von Rosenbach, of Karritz, Estonia. He was educ...
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"Independent Albania" 1912 by accepting all demands related to establishing the unified autonomous system of administration and justice for Albanians within one vilayet—the Albanian vilayet. The success of the Albanian revolt sent a strong signal to the neighbouring countries that the Ottoman Empire was weak. Besides, ...
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"Independent Albania" meeting on 7 October 1913 in Boston. They decided that Albanians should ""unite fully with the Ottoman government against the enemies of the Empire"" because ""if Turkey is defeated, the Balkan states would shred Albania."" That decision was risky, because if the Ottomans were defeated, Albanian p...
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"Independent Albania" overcame the numerically inferior and strategically disadvantaged Ottoman armies and achieved rapid success. They occupied almost all the remaining European territories of the Ottoman Empire including the territory of Albanian Vilayet. At the beginning of November 1912, Albanian leaders appealed t...
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"Independent Albania" Adriatic and feared that a Serbian Adriatic port could become a Russian base. Ismail Qemali, who had been an Albanian deputy in the Ottoman parliament, secured the support of Austria-Hungary for the autonomy of Albania within the Ottoman Empire, but not for its independence. Ismail Qemali invited ...
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"Independent Albania" they should do whatever was necessary to save Albania. After his speech they began by checking the documents because it was decided that each kaza of Albanian Vilayet would be counted as one vote, regardless of the number of its delegates. Participants of this congress are regarded as Founding Fat...
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"Cécile Mézeray" sang Laurette in a revival of ""Richard Cœur de Lion"" in December 1880. In the preparation for Chabrier's ""Le roi malgré lui"" Mézeray came into dispute with Carvalho over the importance of her role. A replacement was found (Merguillier) but in April 1887 she had returned to rehearsals and created ...
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"Independent Albania" recognition of the Albanian state. In December 1912, a delegation of Albania submitted a memorandum to the London Conference of 1913 insisting on the ethnic rights of Albanians and requested an international recognition of the independent Albania composed of Kosovo, western Macedonia including Sko...
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"Independent Albania" in March 1913 to obtain Britain's support for their new country. On March 6 Ioannina was captured by forces of the Kingdom of Greece. In March 1913 a group of 130 (or 200) soldiers of the Kingdom of Serbia were killed near Prizren by Albanian irregulars in act of revenge for repression of Serbian ...
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"Independent Albania" over, the Great Powers did not award the city to the Kingdom of Montenegro, which was compelled to evacuate it in May 1913. In May 1913, delegates of Albania in London requested a British sovereign and considered offering the Albanian throne to Aubrey Herbert. The Great Powers did not fulfil the r...
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"Independent Albania" that Ottoman Empire would lose all of Macedonia and its territorial connection with Albania, the Great Powers realized they had to change their decision. The Treaty of London, signed on 30 May 1913, partitioned significant part of territory claimed by Albania, regardless its ethnic composition, be...