id
stringlengths
9
15
page_id
stringlengths
5
8
page_url
stringlengths
31
312
page_title
stringlengths
1
218
text
stringlengths
21
2k
54811649_2_1
54811649
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaung%20African%20Cultural%20Festival
Mangaung African Cultural Festival
Mangaung African Cultural Festival. Sponsors and media coverage Lesedi FM radio, Daily Sun, Sunday Sun, The Sowetan, The New Age and The Africas News Network are amongst some of the largest known platforms that cover the festival. The SABC are also amongst the broadcasters at the festival.
54811649_2_2
54811649
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaung%20African%20Cultural%20Festival
Mangaung African Cultural Festival
Mangaung African Cultural Festival. See also National Arts Festival Department of Arts and Culture (South Africa)
54811653_0_0
54811653
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph%20Hunkin
Joseph Hunkin
Joseph Hunkin. Joseph Hunkin may refer to: Joseph Hunkin (Governor of Scilly) (1610–1661), Governor of Scilly during the English Civil War Joseph Hunkin (bishop) (1887–1950), Bishop of Truro
54811682_0_0
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. Mass Manipulation is the debut studio album by Canadian electronic music producer Rezz. It was released on August 4, 2017, through Canadian record label Mau5trap. The album was released with four singles, a music video, and a world tour and gathered generally positive reviews. The album peaked at number 16 on the US Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums chart on release. In 2018, Mass Manipulation won Electronic Album of the Year at the Juno Awards.
54811682_0_1
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. The album plays off of the idea of how heavily people consume through the media, curating how people think and dictating how people are supposed to live and behave. Its style has been described by online critics as inspired by science fiction and as the album's genre as 'industrial bass', 'dark house', and 'alien bass'. To promote the release of the album four singles were each released a week apart and an eponymous comic book was published a month after the release of the album.
54811682_0_2
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. Background and release Rezz said that the inspiration for the album was "the current state of society and how easily some can be manipulated". When asked about her influences, she stated:
54811682_0_3
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. To promote Mass Manipulation, the album's four singles were released on the Friday of each week preceding its release. Its lead single, "Relax", was released on July 7, 2017, "Diluted Brains" on July 14, "Premonition" on July 21, and "Drugs!" on July 28. On August 4, 2017, the album was released exclusively as a digital download on international digital stores through Mau5trap.
54811682_0_4
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. After the album's official release, Rezz began her Mass Manipulation World Tour on September 2, 2017. The tour began in The United States before heading into Asia, heading back into The United States before heading to Europe on November 22, with the tour concluding in Australia on January 4, 2018. It received support from various artists including BlackGummy, Bleep Bloop, Crywolf, Drezo, Dr. Fresch, Electric Mantis, Eprom, Haywyre, K?d, Mad Zach, No Mana, The M Machine, and Zeke Beats.
54811682_0_5
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. To further promote the album's release, music videos for the first and third singles, "Relax" and "Premonition", were released on July 7 and 21, respectively, through Rezz's YouTube channel. In September 2017, Rezz unveiled a 60-page comic book with the same name as the album and illustrated by Luis Colindres, who had previously animated the music video for "Premonition" and who had previously designed cover art for Rezz. The comic book follows Rezz as she arrives on Earth from Neptune, hypnotizing the people of Earth with her music.
54811682_1_0
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. Critical reception Mass Manipulation was well received by most critics. Writing for Billboard, Bryan Dellosa described the album as a sickly sci-fi journey and as an aural exploration, writing that there is "an ever-present sense of something sinister, like some monster lurking just on the periphery of your vision." Reid Golden of Noiseporn wrote that Rezz had procured a sound that hadn't been exercised by anyone else, calling Rezz's signature song structure genius and saying that "there's a reason it worked so well for her." EDM Identity's Tim Goth noted that although many of the tracks sounded similar and none of the tracks stood out, he felt that the album flowed together well and was easy to listen to repeatedly. Writing for We Rave You, Andy Hackbarth praised the album, calling it a "pure masterpiece" and writing that the album exemplifies her "techno and bass blends that few artists can match." Nest HQs Molly Hankins noted that the album had an overall feeling of "something ominous lurking around every corner", writing that the album had revealed the "full capacity and scope" of Rezz's style. Will McCarthy of Dancing Astronaut wrote that the album had put forth her "innate, authentic sound with greater strength and clarity than ever before in her career."
54811682_1_1
54811682
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass%20Manipulation
Mass Manipulation
Mass Manipulation. Critical reception Billboard placed the song "Drugs!" as the 38th best Dance/Electronic Songs of 2017. Dancing Astronaut listed Rezz's Mass Manipulation Tour as one of the top five electronic music tours of 2017. On February 7, 2018, The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences announced the nominees for its 46th annual edition of the Juno Awards, among which it, was announced that Mass Manipulation was nominated for "Electronic Album of the Year". On March 25, it was announced that Rezz had beat out Blue Hawaii, CRi, Dabin and Kid Koala to win the award.
54811720_0_0
54811720
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campori%20Madonna
Campori Madonna
Campori Madonna. The Campori Madonna is an oil on panel painting, attributed to the painter Vincenzo Rasori to Antonio da Correggio.
54811720_0_1
54811720
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campori%20Madonna
Campori Madonna
Campori Madonna. History It now hangs in the Galleria Estense in Modena, to which it was left by Marchese Giuseppe Campori in 1894. It is unknown who commissioned it, but prior to 1894, it had been in a chapel at Soliera Castle near Mantua, which was part of the Campori estates from 1636 onwards.
54811720_0_2
54811720
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campori%20Madonna
Campori Madonna
Campori Madonna. Description It can be stylistically dated to c.1517-1518, around the same time as Correggio's Madonna and Child with the Infant John the Baptist and his production of the frescoes in the Camera di San Paolo. It shows Correggio moving away from the influence of Leonardo da Vinci and towards that of Raphael, particularly the latter artist's Madonna of Foligno and Tempi Madonna.
54811723_0_0
54811723
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%E2%80%9318%20Slovak%20Basketball%20League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League. The 2017–18 Slovak Basketball League season was the 26th season of the top-tier basketball competition in Slovakia. Inter Bratislava was the defending champion, but was eliminated in the semifinals. Levickí Patrioti won their second league.
54811723_0_1
54811723
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%E2%80%9318%20Slovak%20Basketball%20League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League. Competition format Ten teams joined the regular season, consisted in playing against each other four times home-and-away in double a round-robin format. The eight first qualified teams advance to the playoffs.
54811723_1_0
54811723
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%E2%80%9318%20Slovak%20Basketball%20League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League. Teams Lučenec and SPU Nitra did not continue in the Extraliga. Žilina, champion of the 1.Liga, replaced them.
54811723_2_0
54811723
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%E2%80%9318%20Slovak%20Basketball%20League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League
2017–18 Slovak Basketball League. Playoffs Seeded teams played games 1, 3, 5 and 7 at home. Quarterfinals were played in a best-of-five games format while semifinals and final with a best-of-seven one.
54811792_0_0
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Bradley Fried (born 12 August 1965) is a British businessman. He is the Co-founder of Grovepoint Capital, prior to which he was chief executive of Investec Bank Plc, and is currently the chairman of the Court of the Bank of England. He was previously also a non-executive board member of the Financial Conduct Authority.
54811792_0_1
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Early life Fried was born in Cape Town, South Africa. He has a bachelor's degree in commerce, awarded with distinction, from the University of Cape Town. He was a Palmer Scholar at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where he was awarded a master's degree in business administration (MBA) with distinction. He is also a qualified chartered accountant, having trained with Arthur Andersen in South Africa.
54811792_0_2
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Career Fried was a partner at McKinsey & Company in New York, where he focused on strategy consulting to the financial services industry.
54811792_0_3
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Fried joined Investec Bank in the UK in 1999, where he served as chief operating officer and chief executive. He subsequently served as a non-executive director of Investec Plc and Investec Limited between 2010 and 2016.
54811792_0_4
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Fried co-founded Grovepoint Capital, a private equity firm, specialising in growth capital investments, in 2010.
54811792_0_5
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Fried has served as a non-executive director of the Court of the Bank of England since June 2012, and is currently its chairman.
54811792_0_6
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Fried chaired the Review Committee that examined the "Bank of England's approach to conflicts of interest." The report was released in August 2017.
54811792_0_7
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. Personal life Fried is a Governor at the London Business School. He is also a Fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and was previously CEO-in-Residence of the Cambridge Judge Business School.
54811792_0_8
54811792
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley%20Fried
Bradley Fried
Bradley Fried. He is married to Lauren, with two sons, and lives in St. John's Wood.
54811879_0_0
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). Sir Richard Martin (1843–1922) was a Welsh industrialist and public man. He was Mayor of Swansea 1898–99 and was influential in developing education facilities in Swansea.
54811879_0_1
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). Early life and career Richard Martin was born in Pentre-mawr, Swansea, August 1843. He attended Copper Works School in Hafod before beginning work in the Millbrook iron works, Swansea. He became a clerk in the civil service in 1867 and transferred from Swansea to Grimsby in 1872. However, he returned to Swansea three years later to start a business; he co-founded the Vale of Swansea zinc works in 1879 at Llansamlet. He remained connected to the zinc works, which still operate today, until his death. He started up the Birch Grove iron works in 1881 and bought the Ynys-pen-llwch tin works in 1884.
54811879_0_2
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). Political Career and Swansea University Martin served the town council 1884–1910 as member and alderman, becoming mayor 1898–99. He was also chairman of the education committee for six years. In this time, he strived to have the University College of South Wales situated in Swansea, however Cardiff was ultimately chosen as its site. He nevertheless succeeded in ensuring the establishment of a technical school, which later became the technical college, in Swansea.
54811879_0_3
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). Martin then strove to ensure the college's recognition as one of the constituent colleges of the University of Wales, alongside Sir Isambard Owen, to no avail. However, Martin pushed for a university college in Swansea, urging its necessity upon the Haldane Commission on Welsh university education (1916–18), with the result that it was founded in 1920, developing in later years into Swansea University. King George V laid the foundation stone, and knighted Richard Martin at this time.
54811879_0_4
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). Martin continued to work on improving the town, building the Normal College on the Glanmor Estate in addition. However, his work was cut short by his sudden death in London on 11 September 1922. He is buried at Ystum Llwynarth.
54811879_0_6
54811879
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Martin%20%28Mayor%20of%20Swansea%29
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea)
Richard Martin (Mayor of Swansea). 1843 births 1922 deaths Welsh industrialists Mayors of Swansea
54811903_0_0
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Richard Brathwaite Hope Hall ICD (5 June 1924 – 17 November 2007) was a British-born merchant banker, businessman, and politician active in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during the 1960s and 70s. A member of Prime Minister Ian Smith's UDI cabinet, he served as a member of parliament in Rhodesia's House of Assembly from 1965 to 1976. He began his political career as a member of the Dominion Party, and served as its chairman from 1960 to 1962. In 1962, he was a founding member of the Rhodesian Front, but switched to the Rhodesian Action Party in 1976. After unsuccessfully running for re-election in 1977, he moved back to the United Kingdom, where he lived until his death.
54811903_0_1
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Early life and education Hope Hall was born on 5 June 1924 in Bideford, Devon, England, United Kingdom. He was educated at Charterhouse School in Godalming, then he served in the Royal Navy during World War II as a Lieutenant in the Royal Naval Reserve where he was mentioned in Despatches. During the war, he became partially deaf as a result of exposure to gunfire. In 1947, he was demobilised as Senior AA Gunnery Lieutenant on the carrier HMS Hunter. He embarked on his career in merchant banking. In 1948 he got a transfer to Cape Town . In June 1950, he moved to Southern Rhodesia to set up a branch of what was later to be known as UDC in Salisbury.,
54811903_0_2
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Political career Upon moving to Southern Rhodesia, Hope Hall became involved in business and politics. Initially setting up UDC in Salisbury he moved on to work for Standard Finance. Around the same time he went into partnership with John Smith with Smith & Hall pianos He joined the Dominion Party, and ran unsuccessfully for parliament in 1959. From 1960 to 1962, he chaired Dominion Party, which after 1960 was solely based in Southern Rhodesia, when the party's Northern Rhodesian and Nyasaland branches split off to form the Federal Dominion Party. In March 1962, when the Dominion Party was reconstituted as the Rhodesian Front, Hope Hall was a founding member.
54811903_0_3
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. In 1965, the year Rhodesia declared independence from the United Kingdom, Hope Hall won election to the House of Assembly as the Rhodesian Front candidate for the Highlands South constituency. He was reelected in 1970 with 76% of the vote, and again in 1974 with 75% of the vote. On 27 March 1973, he was elected Deputy Speaker of the House of Assembly and Chairman of Committees. He was a member of the parliamentary caucus all through his career and was at the meeting where the PM The Hon. Ian Douglas Smith asked each member on their view of the way forward. Richard agreed the a declaration of Independence was the only way but stipulated that if declared then a national day of prayer be called. This was heartily seconded by Angus Graham (Duke of Montrose). There followed, 'two of the most peaceful years of my life' as he recalled to his son Andrew later.
54811903_0_4
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. He was a member of the Police 'C' Reserve throughout his time in Rhodesia and ended as the Commander of the Highlands Police Station C Reserve. His son Mark served in the C Reserve in between call-ups to the army.
54811903_0_5
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. In 1977, the Rhodesian parliament was presented with a highly controversial bill that, if passed, would open up some areas of European-designated land to African ownership. The House of Assembly voted on Land Tenure Amendment Bill on 4 March 1977. On a three line whip, Hope Hall and 11 other conservative Rhodesian Front MPs voted against the bill. Nicknamed the Dirty Dozen by the Rhodesian press, Hope Hall and the other MPs left Rhodesian Front and formed the right-wing Rhodesian Action Party. Prime Minister Ian Smith, whose party had now lost its two-thirds majority needed to amend the Constitution responded by dissolving the House of Assembly and scheduling elections earlier than previously planned. In the 1977 general elections, Hope Hall, along with the other Rhodesian Action Party members, lost his seat in parliament. After 1977, Hope Hall never ran for elected office again.
54811903_0_6
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Later life and death Hope Hall remained in Rhodesia through the Zimbabwe Rhodesia period. In September 1979, six months before Robert Mugabe would become president of the new Zimbabwe government, Hope Hall and his wife left and moved to the United Kingdom, losing most of their possessions. They settled in Tadley, where his wife worked as a nurse at a local hospital.
54811903_0_7
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Hope Hall died on 17 November 2007 at his home in Tadley. He died around mid-day, having gone for his daily hour-long walk earlier that morning. He was survived by his wife, his three sons, and eight grandchildren. He is buried in Tadley, next to his wife, who died in 2015. Their shared tombstone simply says "Rhodesians."
54811903_0_8
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Personal life Hope Hall was married to Renée Evelyn Tyndale-Biscoe. He met her in the early 1950s in Salisbury (now Harare), where she taught at Girls High School. They were married at the Salisbury Anglican Cathedral on 16 February 1952. After marrying, they bought a home in Salisbury on Wingate Road. They later relocated to Dulwich Road in the Highlands area, the constituency Hope Hall would later represent in Parliament. Together, they had three sons: Robert, Mark, and Andrew. Their sons were educated at St. John's Preparatory School and Falcon College, and all fought in the Rhodesian Bush War, Robert in 4th Bn RR, Mark in the highly successful 3 Indep Company – then 4th Bn RR and Andrew in the BSAP Black Boots. Robert left Rhodesia in 1977, Mark in October 1978 and Andrew leaving Zimbabwe in January 1983. Renée Hope Hall worked at the Rhodesian Front headquarters and managed her husband's political campaigns. Renee also trained Police reservists in First aid and helped out with ambulance driving and WVRS forces canteens.
54811903_0_9
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Hope Hall was an amateur ornithologist and could identify a bird by its song from twenty yards away, despite his partial deafness from the war.
54811903_1_0
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Parliamentary elections Highlands South constituency, 1959 Opponent missing Richard Hope Hall (DP) Highlands South constituency, 1965
54811903_1_1
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Richard Hope Hall (RF) Alan David Butler (RNP) Highlands South constituency, 1970
54811903_1_2
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Richard Hope Hall (RF) – 1,133 (76.3%) Jeremy Ralph Bushton Broome (CP) – 351 (23.7%) Highlands South constituency, 1974
54811903_1_3
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. Richard Hope Hall (RF) – 1,299 (75.3%) Marcus Patrick Doyle (RP) – 425 (24.7%) Highlands South constituency, 1977
54811903_1_4
54811903
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Hope%20Hall
Richard Hope Hall
Richard Hope Hall. John Christie (RF) – 1,266 (76.5%) Richard Hope Hall (RAP) – 230 (13.9%) David Frank Sutherland (CP) – 158 (9.6%)
54811906_0_0
54811906
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20%C8%98tirbei
Marina Știrbei
Marina Știrbei. Marina Știrbei (19 March 1912 – 15 July 2001) was a Romanian aviator who gained fame in the Second World War as a founding member of the Romanian Air Force's all-women White Squadron, rescuing the wounded from the front lines. More recently, the Romanian press have called her the "Princess of Romanian aviation".
54811906_0_1
54811906
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20%C8%98tirbei
Marina Știrbei
Marina Știrbei. Early life Born on 19 March 1912 in Vienna, Austria, Marina Știrbei was the daughter of Prince George Știrbei, who was Barbu Știrbey's brother, and Elisabeth, niece of the pioneering aviator George Valentin Bibescu. After repeatedly being refused entrance to the Romanian Pilots School on the grounds she was a woman, in 1932 she was finally allowed to train there under Ioana Cantacuzino. She was granted her Grade II pilot's license in 1935. The following year, she won the first pilots contest in Romania.
54811906_0_2
54811906
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20%C8%98tirbei
Marina Știrbei
Marina Știrbei. Career Știrbei was the first to fly from Bucharest to Stockholm, encountering mist over the Baltic Sea. In June 1937, representing the Romanian Aeroclub, she took part in the first technical assistance conference in Budapest. In 1938, as a member of the Romanian Red Cross, together with other female aviators including Mariana Drăgescu and Nadia Russo, she participated in military exercises in the Galați region.
54811906_0_3
54811906
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20%C8%98tirbei
Marina Știrbei
Marina Știrbei. Inspired by the Finnish women's piloting initiative known as Lotta Svärd, she was successful in persuading the aviation ministry to form a women's squadron to help repatriate the wounded from the front lines. Known as the White Squadron, the unit was based at Baneasa. By 1940, the squadron consisted of 10 planes, ferrying doctors and medicines, and bringing back the wounded. The name White Squadron was given by the Italian journalist Curzio Malaparte, inspired by the white planes marked only by the sign of the Red Cross.
54811906_0_4
54811906
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina%20%C8%98tirbei
Marina Știrbei
Marina Știrbei. Family In 1942, Știrbei married Prince Constantin Basarab Brâncoveanu, celebrated with an extravagant aristocratic wedding reception. When the Communists took control in Romania, the prince was arrested and his property was confiscated. Știrbei raised her two children on her own, but in 1964 she managed to leave the country. After settling for a time in England, she moved to France.
54811915_0_0
54811915
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arhopala%20antharita
Arhopala antharita
Arhopala antharita. Arhopala antharita is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It was described by Henley Grose-Smith in 1894. It is found in New Guinea.
54811915_0_1
54811915
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arhopala%20antharita
Arhopala antharita
Arhopala antharita. Subspecies A. a. antharita (West Irian: Humboldt Bay) A. a. hyacinthus (Röber, 1931) (West Irian: Eilanden R., Oetakwa R.)
54811931_0_0
54811931
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings%20County%20Museum%20%28Hampton%2C%20New%20Brunswick%29
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick)
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick). The Kings County Museum is located in Hampton, New Brunswick and is run by the Kings County Historical and Archival Society, housed in the Centennial Building, with displays also in the old Kings County gaol next door. Late in 1966, with the approach of the Centennial Year, an agreement was made between the Kings County Historical Society, the Municipality of Kings County, and the New Brunswick Centennial Administration to have space for a Museum in the new County Centennial Building in Hampton. The official opening of the Kings County Museum was on June 1, 1968. The museum is home to many artifacts and historical items from Kings County's past, and the main exhibit room is changed to display new artifacts every two (almost consistent) years. Being open for 50+ years, the museum has accumulated an overwhelming amount of artifacts – all with a unique backgrounds involving Kings County. The museum is open in the summertime and certain hours in the wintertime to the public for tours of the exhibit and the old gaol. Guests can explore the many different books and stories about Kings County history that are for sale, and the museum also offers genealogy research. It holds documentations of many place histories in Kings County, family genealogies and more.
54811931_1_0
54811931
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings%20County%20Museum%20%28Hampton%2C%20New%20Brunswick%29
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick)
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick). Old County Gaol (Jail) Originally built in 1840 and located in Kingston, the granite blocks of the jail were dismantled and hauled piece by piece from Kingston to Hampton by oxen and horses over road and the ice of the Kennebecasis River in 1871, when Hampton became the new shire-town of Kings County. It was then rebuilt where it now stands and remained in use as a jail until 1971. The building is now owned by the town of Hampton but utilized as part of the Kings County Museum. While some cells remain as they would have been, many of the cells are now set up as theme rooms, displaying some of the 18,000 artifacts in the Museum collection. The jailer and his family lived right next door in an addition made to the original gaol building that is connected by a doorway on the first level. That space is currently being used as the Hampton community library.
54811931_2_0
54811931
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings%20County%20Museum%20%28Hampton%2C%20New%20Brunswick%29
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick)
Kings County Museum (Hampton, New Brunswick). Historical Society The Kings County Historical and Archival Society is dedicated to preserving and interpreting Kings County's interesting history and has been a non-profit organization for over 50 years. The members of the society have worked to record and preserve Kings County heritage through artifacts, research, genealogy documentations and place histories.
54811944_0_0
54811944
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd%27s%20Guide
Shepherd's Guide
Shepherd's Guide. "Shepherd's Guide" is the title given to several books, that were published to help shepherds identify stray herds. The books depict patterns of sheep marking, in the ear and on the wool, and name their owner with his residence.
54811944_0_1
54811944
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd%27s%20Guide
Shepherd's Guide
Shepherd's Guide. One of the earliest Shepherd's Guide was prepared for parts of Cumberland by Joseph Walker, in 1817. Hosgson's 1849 Guide was delivered to a list of subscribers, while Gate's new shepherd's guide for Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Lancashire, of 1879, has numerous pages of advertisements. While all of those feature a detailed engraving of sheep (repeated with different marks), the books from the late 19th and 20th centuries have a line sketch. Some were designed as pocket-books, and others were bigger. The later books are attributed to various farmer associations, and cover a wider perimeter.
54811944_0_2
54811944
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd%27s%20Guide
Shepherd's Guide
Shepherd's Guide. The books are useful as a genealogical and local history resource, and as collectibles.
54811947_0_0
54811947
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Soubry
Paul Soubry
Paul Soubry. Paul Soubry, ICD.D, is President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of NFI Group Inc.
54811947_0_1
54811947
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Soubry
Paul Soubry
Paul Soubry. Soubry has a sales, marketing, business development, and operations background, with experience in business transformation and LEAN manufacturing. Prior to joining New Flyer in 2009, Soubry worked for 24 years with StandardAero (a leading aviation service provider), starting as a Marketing Assistant in 1984 and progressing to President and Chief Executive Officer. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce (Honours) degree from the University of Manitoba and completed the Executive Development program at the Harvard Business School. He also completed the Canadian Securities Course and is a member of the Institute of Corporate Directors, having graduated from the Directors Education Program at the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto.
54811947_0_2
54811947
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Soubry
Paul Soubry
Paul Soubry. Soubry was the Chair of the University of Manitoba Front and Centre Capital Campaign that raised over $625 million (the largest philanthropic investment in Manitoba's history), is a Director on the Boards of the Winnipeg Jets / True North Sports & Entertainment and The Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company, and is an active supporter of United Way Winnipeg.
54811947_0_3
54811947
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Soubry
Paul Soubry
Paul Soubry. He speaks regularly on leadership, innovation and technology, and business , and frequently speaks with media on behalf of NFI. Soubry was named to “Canada’s Top 40 Under 40” in 2003, was inducted in the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters Hall of Fame in 2014, and was named Canada's Top CEO of the Year by National Post in 2016. In 2018, he was named recipient of the University of Manitoba's Distinguished Alumni Lifetime Achievement Award, which recognizes significant contributions to profession, community, and the University of Manitoba. In 2020, he received the Canadian Council for the Advancement of Education's (CCAE) Friend of Education Award, recognizing outstanding service to post-secondary or independent school education and leadership to advance education in Canada.
54811973_0_0
54811973
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuben%20Davies
Reuben Davies
Reuben Davies. Reuben Davies (Reuben Brydydd y Coed) (1808-1833) was a Welsh poet. His family were from the Cribyn area of Ceredigion, where his father worked as a weaver. After completing his education in local schools, he planned to enter the Unitarian ministry. Shortly after entering Carmarthen College in 1825, he was taken ill and was unable to continue his studies. He became the schoolmaster at Cribyn (and later at Cilmaenllwyd, Carmarthenshire).
54811973_0_1
54811973
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuben%20Davies
Reuben Davies
Reuben Davies. He was also a prolific poet and writer. His works include over fifty hymns, several englynion-style poems, and a memorial awdl to D. L. Jones, a Carmarthenshire tutor. He translated the works of many Greek and Latin authors (e.g. those of Ovid) into Welsh.
54811973_0_2
54811973
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuben%20Davies
Reuben Davies
Reuben Davies. He died, aged 25, in January 1833, and is buried in Dihewyd churchyard.
54811995_0_0
54811995
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Mason%20%28Welsh%20author%29
Richard Mason (Welsh author)
Richard Mason (Welsh author). Richard Mason (c. 1816- 26 December 1881) was a printer and author. He is believed to have been a native of Herefordshire, but settled in Tenby, Wales.
54811995_0_1
54811995
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Mason%20%28Welsh%20author%29
Richard Mason (Welsh author)
Richard Mason (Welsh author). In 1850 he took on the publishing and printing of Archaeologia Cambrensis at his sole risk for a share of the fees from subscribers who at that time numbered only 130. In 1855 the Cambrian Archaeological Association assumed the role of publisher but retained Mason as their printer. In 1884 he was also involved with the Cambrian Journal, the journal of the Cambrian Institute, which he printed in Tenby and published in conjunction with Longmans & Co, J. Russell Smith and J. Peterham, all of London.
54811995_0_2
54811995
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Mason%20%28Welsh%20author%29
Richard Mason (Welsh author)
Richard Mason (Welsh author). Works A Guide to the Town of Tenby and its Neighbourhood (1852) Tales and Traditions of Tenby (1858)
54811996_0_0
54811996
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Poitiers%20communaut%C3%A9%20urbaine
Grand Poitiers communauté urbaine
Grand Poitiers communauté urbaine. Grand-Poitiers is the communauté urbaine, an intercommunal structure, centred on the city of Poitiers. It is located in the Vienne department, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region, western France. It was created on 1 January 2017 as a communauté d'agglomération and transformed into a communauté urbaine on 1 July 2017. Its population was 195,044 in 2014, of which 90,115 in Poitiers proper.
54811996_0_1
54811996
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand%20Poitiers%20communaut%C3%A9%20urbaine
Grand Poitiers communauté urbaine
Grand Poitiers communauté urbaine. Composition The communauté urbaine consists of the following 40 communes:
54812000_0_0
54812000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramawat%20ChavliChandu%20Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik. Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik (also known as Ramavath Chavlichandu Naik) is an Indian politician and Zilla Parishad Territorial Constituency (Z.P.T.C) from Andhra Pradesh. He represents Madgul, Kalwakurthy constituency. He belongs to Scheduled Tribe, Lamabadi community.
54812000_0_1
54812000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramawat%20ChavliChandu%20Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik. He was elected to Mahabubnagar Territorial Constituency in 2006.
54812000_0_2
54812000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramawat%20ChavliChandu%20Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik. Personal life Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik was born in Balu Naik Thanda, a hamlet/thanda of Madgul Mandal in Mahbubnagar District, (now this place in located in Rangareddy District) Telangana State. He has been an agriculturist.
54812000_0_3
54812000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramawat%20ChavliChandu%20Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik
Ramawat ChavliChandu Naik. Career Began his political Career / Journey in 2003 with the Indian National Congress from Madugul, Mahabubnagar dist., Telangana.
54812015_0_0
54812015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicherson%E2%80%93Tarbox%20House
Nicherson–Tarbox House
Nicherson–Tarbox House. The Nicherson–Tarbox House is a historic house in Monticello, Minnesota, United States. It was built in 1889 in a blend Queen Anne and Shingle Style architecture. A barn was moved to the rear of the lot around the turn of the 20th century to serve as a carriage house, now a detached garage. The property, which contained a second outbuilding that is no longer extant, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 as the Nicherson-Tarbox House, Shed and Barn for having local significance in the theme of architecture. It was nominated for being a prominent and well-preserved example of Queen Anne and Shingle Style architecture in Monticello.
54812015_0_1
54812015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicherson%E2%80%93Tarbox%20House
Nicherson–Tarbox House
Nicherson–Tarbox House. Description The Nicherson–Tarbox House is a two-story building with irregular massing and a prominent tower at the northeast corner. Random-coursed pink granite blocks form the lower level walls, foundation, and chimney. In places, the lower level is sheathed in narrow clapboard. The upper level, gables, and roof are clad in cedar wood shingles. The exterior retains a polychrome treatment typical of the period.
54812015_0_2
54812015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicherson%E2%80%93Tarbox%20House
Nicherson–Tarbox House
Nicherson–Tarbox House. The barn is a one-and-a-half-story wooden structure. Its board and batten siding and Gothic Revival door panels suggest that its construction predates the house. At the time of the property's National Register nomination, a one-story shed stood near the back of the house. It had clapboard siding, a gable roof, and polychrome decoration similar to the main house. It no longer appears to be extant.
54812015_0_3
54812015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicherson%E2%80%93Tarbox%20House
Nicherson–Tarbox House
Nicherson–Tarbox House. History The house was built in 1889 for Evert A. Nicherson, a local lumberman. In the late 1890s, the house was purchased by James C. Tarbox, a prominent Wright County attorney and judge. Tarbox acquired an old barn from a farm in Monticello Township and had it moved onto the property. He used it to house his carriage and the horses to pull it, with hay stored in the loft above.
54812015_0_4
54812015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicherson%E2%80%93Tarbox%20House
Nicherson–Tarbox House
Nicherson–Tarbox House. See also National Register of Historic Places listings in Wright County, Minnesota
54812038_0_0
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Robert Crombie Saunders (23 April 1914 – 14 February 1991) was a poet, editor, journalist and teacher, and a significant figure in the Scottish Literary Renaissance of the 20th century. His poetry is in both English and Scots, and he identified with the 'Lallans' movement, which sought to revive Scots as a serious literary medium.
54812038_0_1
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Biographical Born in Glasgow, R. Crombie Saunders was educated at Hillhead High School and Glasgow University, graduating MA in 1937. From 1938-39 he was an Assistant Editor with Blackie & Son. Ruled unfit for military service on health grounds, he was employed during the war as private secretary to David Archer, publisher (1941–42) and as an Employment Officer in the Ministry of Labour and National Service (1942–43). He edited Scottish Art and Letters (with J. D. Fergusson as Art Editor) from 1944–48, a total of four issues, with the fifth issue being edited by Hugh MacDiarmid (C.M. Grieve). In 1944 he edited the Selected Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid. He was associate and literary editor of the left-wing paper Forward from 1947-59. From 1948-53 he edited The Scottish Angler, and was Angling Correspondent for the Daily Herald from 1954-57. He was also editor of Scots Independent from 1953-54. From 1958 he was a short story assessor and children's books reviewer for the BBC.
54812038_0_2
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. In 1952, he moved to a small cottage in the Perthshire Highlands. With a growing family to support, he retrained as a teacher, and taught first at Balquhidder Primary, then Killin Junior Secondary before moving to Callander, where he was part of the English department at McLaren High until his retirement. His last years were spent in Killin, Perthshire.
54812038_0_3
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Literary connections Saunders was friends with many of the major players in the 'first wave' of Scottish Renaissance, including Sydney Goodsir Smith, Sorley McLean, Douglas Young, Alexander Scott, C. M. Grieve (Hugh MacDiarmid) and in particular Norman MacCaig, whom he introduced to MacDiarmid. He and MacCaig shared an interest in angling as well as poetry, and MacCaig accompanied his researches for A Guide to the Fishing Inns of Scotland (1950). However, chronic ill health and geographical isolation meant that Saunders was never a regular with the 'Rose Street poets,' and his friendships went beyond that circle to include writers such as Moray McLaren. Ian Hamilton Finlay was another close friend, and wrote his obituary in the Glasgow Herald. Towards the end of his life, he renewed his acquaintance with the poet W.S. Graham, and they exchanged regular correspondence and audiotapes of their work.
54812038_0_4
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Poetry R. Crombie Saunders' work can be found in many contemporary poetry journals and in anthologies of modern Scottish verse. His first poetry collection was The Year's Green Edge in 1955. This was followed by XXI Poems containing most of his poems in Scots. After a long silence, he published This One Tree in 1986, containing most of his poetry since the fifties as well as some earlier uncollected pieces.
54812038_0_5
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Whether in Scots or English, the poetry is characterised by a respect for, and sensitivity too, form and rhythm; this applies to his later 'free verse' as much as to his earlier metrical work. Recurrent themes are the lyrical concerns of love and loss, time and memory. Some, like Above the Formidable Tomb and Had I Twa Herts, are profoundly metaphysical. He also wrote a poem in Middle Scots (Ressaif My Saul), and gently satirised some of his contemporaries in Doun the Watter wi the Lave. His most anthologised piece has been The Empty Glen, a poem about the Highland Clearances which he came to look on as his 'Daffodils.'
54812038_0_6
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Publications (Ed.) Selected Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid (William Mclellan, 1944) A Guide to the Fishing Inns of Scotland (Kaye, 1951) The Year's Green Edge (Contemporary Poetry XV, 1955) XXI Poems (M. Macdonald, Edinburgh, 1955), This One Tree (privately published, 1986)
54812038_1_0
54812038
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20Crombie%20Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders
R. Crombie Saunders. Anthologies Modern Scottish Poetry (ed. Maurice Lindsay); Scottish Verse 1851-1951 (ed. Douglas Young, 1952); Honour'd Shade (ed. Norman McCaig, 1959); The Oxford Book of Scottish Verse (ed. John MacQueen and Tom Scott, 1966); Poems addressed to Hugh McDiarmid on his 75th birthday (ed. Duncan Glen, 1967); Contemporary Scottish Verse (ed. Norman MacCaig and Alexander Scott, 1970); The New Makars (ed. Tom Hubbard, 1991); The Edinburgh Book of 20th Century Scottish Poets (Ed. Maurice Lindsay and Lesley Duncan, 2005).
54812062_0_0
54812062
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paruparo%20kuehni
Paruparo kuehni
Paruparo kuehni. Paruparo kuehni is a butterfly in the family Lycaenidae. It was described by Julius Röber in 1887. It is found in Sulawesi in the Australasian realm.
54812062_0_1
54812062
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paruparo%20kuehni
Paruparo kuehni
Paruparo kuehni. Subspecies P. k. kuehni (Banggai, central Sulawesi) P. k. regulus (Staudinger, 1888) (northern Sulawesi)
54812063_0_0
54812063
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%20Virginia%20Slims%20of%20Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas. The 1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas, also known as the Maureen Connolly Memorial, was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Moody Coliseum in Dallas, Texas in the United States that was part of the 1975 Virginia Slims World Championship Series. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was held from March 17 through March 23, 1975. Fourth-seeded Virginia Wade won the singles title and earned $15,000 first-prize money.
54812063_1_0
54812063
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%20Virginia%20Slims%20of%20Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas. Singles Virginia Wade defeated Martina Navratilova 2–6, 7–6(5–3), 4–3 ret.
54812063_1_1
54812063
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%20Virginia%20Slims%20of%20Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas
1975 Virginia Slims of Dallas. Doubles Françoise Dürr / Betty Stöve defeated Julie Anthony / Mona Schallau 7–6(5–4), 6–2
54812090_0_0
54812090
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Richmond%20Young%20Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid. Helen Richmond Young Reid CBE (December 11, 1869 — June 8, 1941) was a Canadian social reformer, focused on public health and women's education. In 1935 she was named a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for her life's work.
54812090_0_1
54812090
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Richmond%20Young%20Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid. Early life Helen Richmond Young Reid was born in Montreal, Quebec, the daughter of Eliza Ann McIntosh Reid and Robert Reid. Her mother was a Unitarian church worker and founder of the Montreal Woman's Club; her father, born in Scotland, had a successful business in granite and marble. Helen was educated at the Montreal School for Girls. She and several classmates decided to apply to McGill University, though the school was not open to female students. Her mother persuaded Donald A. Smith to make an endowment to the university, to cover the cost of separate classes for women; in 1884, Helen was in the first class of "Donaldas", as women admitted to McGill were called, along with Octavia Ritchie. She finished there in 1889, and pursued further studies at the University of Geneva.
54812090_0_2
54812090
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Richmond%20Young%20Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid. Career Helen R. Y. Reid and some of her McGill classmates opened a settlement house in Montreal, offering housing, meals, evening classes, and club activities for young women in the city's newer immigrant communities. In 1895 they opened the city's first children's library. She served on the board of the Montreal Council of Women (1900-1903), and helped start Montreal's chapter of the Victorian Order of Nurses.
54812090_0_3
54812090
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Richmond%20Young%20Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid. Reid directed the Montreal branch of the Canadian Patriotic Fund's ladies' auxiliary during World War I, and lectured in the United States about her work. She was honored by George V for her wartime work. She also received medals from the French government and from the Italian Red Cross. After the war, she helped build the School of Nursing and the School of Social Work at McGill, and was the latter program's director for fifteen years. She also ran a health clinic for veterans and their families.
54812090_0_4
54812090
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Richmond%20Young%20Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid
Helen Richmond Young Reid. Reid was a contributing editor to Women of Canada: Their Life and Work, a book compiled as part of Canada's participation in the Paris International Exposition in 1900. She also wrote War Relief in Canada (1917), A Social Study Along Health Lines (1920), The Ukrainian Canadians (1931, with Charles H. Young), Lest We Forget (1936), and The Japanese Canadians (1939, with Charles H. Young). She was an officer of the Canadian Public Health Association, and of the Family Welfare Association of America, and of the Canadian Welfare Council, and served on the Dominion Council of Health. She was president of the Montreal Council of Social Agencies and of the Child Welfare Association.