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26824507#1 | Triumph I6 | Introduced in their Standard Vanguard Six in 1960, it was used in a wide range of Triumph vehicles, including the Triumph TR5, TR250, and TR6. |
26824507#2 | Triumph I6 | The Triumph six is based on the 4 cylinder engine first used in the Standard Eight in 1953. Displacement of the engine in the Eight was 803 cc. |
26824507#3 | Triumph I6 | That engine was modified a number of times for use in the Standard Ten, Triumph Herald, and Triumph Spitfire. First for the 948 cc Herald, and again for the 1147 cc Herald 1200, the cylinders were re-aligned to give better clearance for the head studs and allow the bore to be enlarged. The engine was further developed and bored from in the 1147 cc version to giving 1296 cc for the Herald 13/60, the stroke was also increased from to providing 1493 cc for the Spitfire 1500. |
26824507#4 | Triumph I6 | The six cylinder engine was developed from the Standard SC four used in the Eight and the Ten. It was first used in 1960 in the Standard Vanguard Six, in which it had a bore and a stroke, giving a capacity of 1998 cc. |
26824507#5 | Triumph I6 | The engine was next used in the Triumph Vitesse, a sports saloon based on the Herald, in 1962. In this application, the engine had a bore, reducing displacement to 1596 cc. The Vitesse was given the two-litre engine with the 74.6 mm bore in 1966. |
26824507#6 | Triumph I6 | The Triumph 2000 replaced the Vanguard Six in 1963 when Leyland discontinued the Standard marque. The two-litre six was later used in the Spitfire-based GT6 coupé from 1966 to 1974. |
26824507#7 | Triumph I6 | Beginning in 1967, the engine was used in the Triumph TR5 and TR250 sports cars, replacing the Standard inline-four engine used in TRs from the TR2 to the TR4A. For this application, the stroke was increased to , giving 2498 cc. When equipped with the Lucas mechanical fuel injection system in the TR5, this new 2.5-litre version gave a claimed at 5500 rpm. When tested on dynamometers, 110 to 130bhp at the crankshaft is more usual, and may explain Triumph's decision to fit the TR7 with a 2-litre slant-four engine, whose power output and hence performance were in fact similar to those of the earlier and ostensibly more powerful engine. The TR250 was sold in the US with Stromberg carburettors to avoid the need for additional emissions control systems; this reduced the power to at 4500 rpm. The TR6, made from 1969 to 1975, used the TR5's engine, detuned to in 1973. with a 106 hp version of the TR250's engine in the United States. |
26824507#8 | Triumph I6 | The fuel-injected 2.5 litre engine became available in the 2000 unit body as the 2.5 PI in 1968; this was supplanted by the twin-carburettor 2500 TC in 1974. The 2000 and 2500 TC were discontinued in 1977. |
26824507#9 | Triumph I6 | A partial chart of Triumph engine numbers is posted on the "Spitfire & GT6 magazine" site. However the capacity appears not to match the bore/stroke, or that published on other sites including the GT6 Ezine, hence the corrections in the tables below. |
26824507#10 | Triumph I6 | Engine Applications Chart
Factory Quoted Power Chart
Triumph raced Spitfires, and some early GT6 prototypes at Le Mans, with some good success, and later at Sebring but due to rule changes and the takeover by Leyland, this was not continued. |
26824507#11 | Triumph I6 | After Triumph, and later Rover, were absorbed into Leyland Motors in 1960, and 1967 respectively, work began on a successor to both the Triumph 2000 and the Rover P6 which would also use a new straight six engine design. The engine, known internally as the Leyland PE166 was originally intended to be a development of the Triumph I6, but ended up becoming an entirely new design, with almost no interchangeable parts with the original. The Rover SD1 was the only recipient of this engine in both 2.3L and 2.6L capacities. |
26824510#0 | Hyposmocoma albonivea | Hyposmocoma albonivea is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is the Waianae Range. |
26824513#0 | Alun Thomas | Alun Gruffydd Thomas (3 February 1926 - 8 May 1991) was a rugby union centre from Cwmavon who played international rugby for Wales between 1952 and 1955. He studied at UCW Aberystwyth and played for the college first team and the newly founded Rugby Club. |
26824513#1 | Alun Thomas | At club level he represented Cardiff, Swansea and Llanelli, and was also selected for invitational tourists The Barbarians. In 1955 he toured with the British Lions in South Africa, playing in five games. He then managed the team 19 years later on the 1974 tour of South Africa. He won his first cap as a centre against England in Twickenham. |
26824520#0 | Philadelphia Demokrat | The Philadelphia Demokrat was a German-language morning paper in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1838–1918. |
26824520#1 | Philadelphia Demokrat | The "Demokrat" was founded in May 1838 by a number of German-speaking Democrats, for the purpose of supporting David R. Porter as a candidate for governor, against Joseph Ritner. It was the first journal of its kind in the United States. Its first number was issued on 27 August 1838. Burkhardt and Georg Rottenstein were the publishers, and No. 391 (old number) North Front Street, between Green and Coates Streets (now Fairmount Avenue), was the publication office. After Porter's election the "Demokrat" was, for a short time, issued weekly, but soon became a daily paper again. |
26824520#2 | Philadelphia Demokrat | In the second year of its existence, Ludwig August Wollenweber became the proprietor, and published it first at the corner of Old York Road and Callowhill Street, and afterward in Third Street, below Noble. In 1852, Wollenweber sold the paper to John S. Hoffman, and in September 1853, Hoffman sold the paper to Edward Morwitz. Hoffman however remained involved with the paper as an adviser, and the firm of Hoffman & Morwitz was established. This arrangement continued until the 9 July 1873 when Hoffman withdrew from the firm. Afterwards the publication of the "Demokrat" was continued by Morwitz under the firm of Morwitz & Co. In his conduct of the paper, Morwitz advocated measures for the improvement of the city, among them the consolidation of its different sections under a single mayor. |
26824520#3 | Philadelphia Demokrat | In November 1868, the office was moved to a new printing house, Nos. 612 and 614 Chestnut Street. The "Demokrat" at that time was a four-page paper, containing thirty-six columns. In the mid-1880s, its newspaper, publishing, and printing business was the largest and most extensive German establishment of its kind in the United States. |
26824523#0 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | Shock:Social Science Fiction is a pen-and-paper indie RPG about the effects of the shock of cultural change on the individuals who make up that culture. The title is a reference to Alvin Toffler's Future Shock, the concept that rapid culture changes leave the members of the culture increasingly challenged by adaptation. |
26824523#1 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | It was first published in 2006 and has since been through two point version updates. |
26824523#2 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | The game is designed to be used by player to make "what if" science fiction, rather than science-flavored fantasy adventure. The science fiction elements (called "Shocks" in the text) deeply impact the world of the game-created fiction and are inextricable from the story. |
26824523#3 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | Reviewer Jono Xia wrote,
... Because a game of Shock is built around real-world issues that you care about, your game is going to be a little deeper than just entertainment -- it's going to be a story that's about something. It's going to have some intellectual heft to it. It's going to get you thinking. For this reason, I think that playing Shock can actually be therapeutic: when you're feeling confused about some topic in the news, if you can't decide how you feel about some pressing social issue, if you see a new invention and wonder what it might mean, you can play a Shock game about it. Role-playing it out might help you and your friends work through your thoughts and explore possible consequences. In Shock, I think we might finally have an RPG that does what the best written SF does -- help us learn to cope with the rapid social and technological changes occurring in the modern world.
The game originated a system of counterstakes, called "intents" that raises the possibility of every player getting what they asked for, a process with deliberately ironic results.The game text makes use of the invented gender neutral pronoun "zie" and the possessive "hir" to allow the player to experience some of the same "culture shock" that the characters in the game will live through. |
26824523#4 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | Furthermore, when the rules refer generically to a Protagonist or Antagonist the text uses *Tagonist as a generic alternative (borrowing the unix-style wildcard character *). |
26824523#5 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | Unlike most other pen-and-paper role-playing games, "Shock:" does not require advance preparation by a moderator or game facilitator. The game has no traditional Game Master role: each player creates a Protagonist (that will be her/his character) and gives the player to his/her left a guideline about the kind of Antagonist they will face. That player then fleshes out the Antagonists sheet. |
26824523#6 | Shock: Social Science Fiction | Play goes around the table with each Protagonist playing out a scene until the Antagonist places them in a conflict situation. Then the conflict is resolved, the scene ends, and play continues with a new scene with the next player's Protagonist. |
26824527#0 | 2004 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election | The 2004 Southend-on-Sea Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Southend-on-Sea Unitary Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council. |
26824527#1 | 2004 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election | After the election, the composition of the council was |
26824527#2 | 2004 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election | The results saw the Conservatives make one gain in the election to hold control of the council with 33 seats. The Conservative gain came in St Lukes ward where they defeated the Labour councillor, Reg Copley, who had been first elected to the council in 1963. They also came within 4 votes of gaining Kursaal, but the only other change was an independent gain from the Liberal Democrats in Westborough. |
26824528#0 | Moorefield High School | Moorefield High School is a high school located in Hardy County, West Virginia. It is one of two high schools located within Hardy County, the other being East Hardy High School. Moorefield High School was built in the late 1930s. |
26824528#1 | Moorefield High School | Moorefield high school have won 6 football championships, 2 in baseball, and 1 in basketball. Moorefield biggest sports rivalry is East Hardy High school. |
26824535#0 | Hyposmocoma alliterata | Hyposmocoma alliterata is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian islands of Oahu, Molokai, Maui and Hawaii. This species is thought to range from the lowlands to the highlands, where it is most abundant. |
26824535#1 | Hyposmocoma alliterata | The larvae feed amongst lichens on trees trunks of "Acacia koa", "Aleurites moluccanus", "Boehmeria", "Manihot glaziovii", "Prosopis" and "Sophora". Its larvae are at times common on the trunks of living trees. |
26824540#0 | Hyposmocoma arenella | Hyposmocoma arenella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the island of Hawaii. The type locality is Kona, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824542#0 | Professor of Mercantile Law (Glasgow) | The Chair of Mercantile Law is a Professorship at the University of Glasgow, founded in 1919. It has had five holders, including politician Sir John Craik-Henderson and Robert Jack, one of Scotland's most noted contemporary commercial lawyers, and has been vacant since 1993. |
26824542#1 | Professor of Mercantile Law (Glasgow) | In 1894, a lectureship in Mercantile Law was established at the University, and in 1919 this was made up to a Chair. The first holder, appointed the following year, was Thomas Grieve Wright, a Glasgow solicitor and co-founder of solicitors' firm Smith & Wright, which went on to become Wright, Johnston and MacKenzie LLP. Wright was Dean of the Faculty of Law 1923 to 1925 and resigned from the Chair in 1930, when John Craik-Henderson was appointed. Henderson was a graduate of the University and senior partner in Miller Thompson Henderson and Co., and Dean of the Faculty from 1933 to 1935. He was elected Chairman of the Scottish Unionist Association and in 1940 was returned to Parliament for Leeds North East, at which time he resigned from the Chair. |
26824542#2 | Professor of Mercantile Law (Glasgow) | It was not until 1946 that his successor, John Boyd, was appointed. Boyd, also a graduate of the University, was a partner in Russell & Duncan, and served as Dean of the Faculty of Law from 1947 to 1950, Vice-President of the Law Society of Scotland from 1954 to 1955 and Dean of the Royal Faculty of Procurators in Glasgow in 1955. He resigned from the Chair in 1957, and was awarded an LLD in 1958 and knighted in 1961. |
26824542#3 | Professor of Mercantile Law (Glasgow) | In 1963, James Millar was appointed to the Chair. Another graduate of the University, Millar was a partner in Ramsay, Menzies & Wilson, and had previously been a part-time assistant in Evidence and Procedure and held a part-time lectureship in Administrative Law. He was Dean of the Faculty from 1965 to 1968, and appointed CBE in 1976. He resigned in 1978, when Robert Jack was appointed. Jack was a partner in law firm McGrigor, Donald & Co., and retained this position when appointed to the Chair, being promoted to Senior Partner in 1990. He served on the Scottish Law Commission, Panel on Takeovers and Mergers and the Financial Law Panel, and was appointed CBE in 1988. He served on the Council of the London Stock Exchange after the Guinness share-trading fraud scandal, and pressed MP John Maxton to raise questions in Parliament about the affair in 1997. He retired in 1993, and remains Emeritus Professor. He was awarded an LLD on the University's 550th anniversary celebrations in 2001. The Chair is currently vacant. |
26824545#0 | Hyposmocoma atrovittella | Hyposmocoma atrovittella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the island of Hawaii. The type locality is Olaa. |
26824553#0 | Hyposmocoma auropurpurea | Hyposmocoma auropurpurea is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is the Waianae Range. |
26824553#1 | Hyposmocoma auropurpurea | The length of the forewings 4.8–5 mm for males and 5.2–5.5 mm for females. The species is unique among "Hyposmocoma" species because it has metallic purple wings with a narrow, diagonal orange band near the wing apex. |
26824553#2 | Hyposmocoma auropurpurea | The larval case is dark brown, smooth, 7–9 mm in length and 1.7–2 mm wide. Case-making larvae have been collected from October to April. Larvae were found in leaf litter, but also on leaves of living plants, such as "Pittosporum" species. |
26824566#0 | Carol Wyatt | Carol Wyatt (born 4 October 1946) is a British artist. |
26824566#1 | Carol Wyatt | She studied at the Wimbledon School of Art 1966-1967 and Camberwell School of Art 1968-1971 |
26824566#2 | Carol Wyatt | She was awarded the Lord Carron Prize by "Sir Tom Monnington" the then President of The Royal Academy of Art. She spent a postgraduate year in Florence, Italy where she had a successful Exhibition at the "Arnacci Gallery" Florence of her paper cut-outs in 1972. |
26824566#3 | Carol Wyatt | She has taught at various art schools, particularly Camberwell School of Art and Saint Martin's School of Art at graduate level and at Edinburgh College of Art at postgraduate level. |
26824566#4 | Carol Wyatt | The artist is featured in numerous collections worldwide that include Arts Council of Great Britain, De Beers, The Cocoa Merchants, Unilever, Save and Prosper PLC, Tate and Lyle and various other company collections. New Walk Museum Gulbenkian "Purchase" "Award", Towner Gallery and important collections in England, United States, Italy, France and Switzerland. |
26824566#5 | Carol Wyatt | Various mixed and one person shows soon led to the artist's first one-person museum tour in 1980-1981 culminating at Gainsborough's House, Sudbury. In 1988, the artist was included in The Romantic Tradition in Contemporary British Painting with John Bellany, Alan Davie, Christopher le Brun, Therese Oulton, Michael Porter and Lance Smith touring Spanish Museums which was curated by Keith Patrick. |
26824566#6 | Carol Wyatt | Her work is much connected with theatre and opera, referring to Bel Canto, Debussy and Tarkovsky. She worked with the late Tito Gobbi on sets and costumes for his opera summer schools in Florence at the "Villa Schifanoia". She instigated the revival of De Chirico's sets and costumes for Bellini's Puritani for the Maggio Musicale. She continues her work as a fine artist as well as respected theatrical set and costume designer. She is the mother of BBC award winning composer Lucius de Tracy Kelly. |
26824567#0 | Hyposmocoma bacillella | Hyposmocoma bacillella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The type localities are Halemanu and Kaholuamano, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824567#1 | Hyposmocoma bacillella | The larvae feed on "Metrosideros" species. |
26824575#0 | Hyposmocoma bella | Hyposmocoma bella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The type locality is Halemanu, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824577#0 | Paradox of nihilism | Paradox of nihilism is the name of several paradoxes. |
26824577#1 | Paradox of nihilism | According to Hegarty, the paradox of nihilism is "that the absence of meaning seems to be some sort of meaning". |
26824577#2 | Paradox of nihilism | Rivas locates the paradox in the "conservative attitude of Roman Catholicism" developed in reaction to Nietzschean nihilism, in that it "betrays a form of nihilism, that is, the forced oblivion of the real ambiguity and the paradox that inform the distinction between the secular and the sacred". |
26824577#3 | Paradox of nihilism | In Critical Legal Studies (CLS) theory, the arguments used to criticize the centrist position also undermine the position of CLS. |
26824577#4 | Paradox of nihilism | According to Jonna Bornemark, "the paradox of nihilism is the choice to continue one's own life while at the same time stating that it is not worth more than any other life". Richard Ian Wright sees relativism as the root of the paradox. |
26824580#0 | Hyposmocoma belophora | Hyposmocoma belophora is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is near the head of Kawailoa Gulch. |
26824585#0 | Hyposmocoma bilineata | Hyposmocoma bilineata is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is the Waianae Range, where it was collected at an elevation between . |
26824588#0 | Hyposmocoma butalidella | Hyposmocoma butalidella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Maui. The type locality is Haleakalā, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824593#0 | Wardensville School | Wardensville School was located in Wardensville, West Virginia. The school building is still standing today. In 1980 the Wardensville and Mathias School consolidated and became East Hardy High School. The Wardensville School mascot was the Warrior. |
26824599#0 | Hyposmocoma alveata | Hyposmocoma alveata is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Edward Meyrick in 1915. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is the Koʻolau Range. |
26824608#0 | Hyposmocoma argentiferus | Hyposmocoma argentiferus is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the island of Hawaii. The type locality is Kīlauea. |
26824610#0 | Weißenseer FC | Weißenseer FC is a German football club from district of Weißensee in the city of Berlin. The club's roots go back its founding on 8 September 1900, while more recently it has been linked with "Sportverein Prussia Berlin" and "Pankower Fußball Verein Bergmann-Borsig". |
26824610#1 | Weißenseer FC | Weißenseer FC was part of the Märkischen Fußball-Bund, an early Berlin-based football league, where they captured the title in 1904. They finished as vice-champions three years later, but left the MFB to join the Verband Berliner Ballspielvereine as a third division side. They quickly rose to second class play and the following year won the city cup. Weißenseer FC advanced to the first division where they would remain until 1918. |
26824610#2 | Weißenseer FC | They won their way back to top-flight city competition in 1922 and, with the exception of the 1926–27 season, stayed there until 1931. The club grew during this time to include departments for athletics, boxing, and hockey. German football was reorganized under the Third Reich in 1933 and 16 regional top-flight divisions were formed. Weißenseer FC found they were no longer competitive and they failed to break into the Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg. |
26824610#3 | Weißenseer FC | Following World War II, Germany was occupied by the victorious Allies and the Weißensee district was part of the Soviet zone in Berlin. Existing sports and football clubs were dissolved. New clubs were soon formed and "Sportgemeinschaft Weißensee Ost" was established as the successor to "FC". In 1951, the team was playing third tier football in the Stadtliga Berlin Ost as "ASV Weißensee" before being renamed "Blau-Weiß Weißensee" in 1953. |
26824610#4 | Weißenseer FC | It was standard practice in East Germany for clubs to have a sponsorship relationship with a local industry, service or government body as a Betriebssportgemeinschaft and in 1956 "Blau-Weiß" became "BSG Einheit Weißensee". They played under that name until 1990 at the Bezirksliga (III) and Bezirksklasse (IV) levels. |
26824610#5 | Weißenseer FC | Following the reunification of Germany the system of state sponsorship of sports clubs disappeared and clubs sought out other financial support. "Einheit" was reformed in 1990 as "SG Eumako Weißensee" with the support of an insurance company. Now part of the single German football competition the team was part of the Landesliga Berlin/2 (VI) and in 1991 advanced to the Verbandsliga Berlin (V). The club's sponsorship deal with Eumako was only good for two years and ended in 1993. The season ended with "Eumako Weißenseer" relegated after a 15th-place finish. |
26824610#6 | Weißenseer FC | In June 1993, the decision was made to join "SV Preußen Berlin", a large sports club without a football department. They played the 1993–94 season as "SV Prueßen" and earned a 9th place Landesliga result. Shortly after becoming part of "Preußen", that club merged with bankrupt side "PFV Bergmann-Borsig" which was part of fourth tier competition in the NOFV-Oberliga Nord. The footballers had the choice of either taking the place of "PFV" in the city's fourth division or leaving the club. A number of players left and the team slipped to lower division play. |
26824610#7 | Weißenseer FC | In 1997 "Preußen" folded its football team after its relegation from the Verbandsliga and re-founded "Weißenseer FC" which separated from the parent club after overcoming some legal difficulties. The new club took over "Preußen"'s place in that league. Since the new association hardly had sufficient financial resources, it was relegated to the Bezirksliga Berlin (VII) in 1999 and to the Kreisliga (VIII) in 2000. Under the leadership of club president Ernst Konrad it succeeded by bringing sponsors to pool their resources and hiring former DDR-Oberliga referee Reinhard Purzer as a coach. 13 new players with regional and league experience were also hired to guide the club back to the higher levels. In 2001 the revival was achieved in the Kreisliga with promotion from it. In 2009 the club earned another promotion from the Bezirksliga to the Landesliga by winning its own division. Since then it alternated between the Landesliga and Bezirksliga. In May 2011 it absorbed its neighbors "HSV Rot-Weiß Berlin" which was founded in 1926, with the merged team continuing under the present name. |
26824618#0 | Arthur O'Friel | Arthur O'Friel (or O’Frigil) (died circa 1573) was an Irish Roman Catholic clergyman who attempted, but failed, to get possession of the archbishopric of Tuam in the 16th century. |
26824618#1 | Arthur O'Friel | A canon of Raphoe, he was appointed Archbishop of Tuam by the Holy See on 7 October 1538, but failed to get possession of the see from Christopher Bodkin, who the latter had accepted Royal Supremacy in 1537. It is not known if O'Friel was ever consecrated, and resigned when Bodkin was absolved from schism in 1555. After Bodkin's death in 1572, O'Friel made no effort to get possession of the see. He died circa 1573. |
26824619#0 | Hyposmocoma auripennis | Hyposmocoma auripennis is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1881. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Maui. The type locality is Haleakalā. |
26824619#1 | Hyposmocoma auripennis | The larvae feed on "Acacia koa". |
26824621#0 | Fatih Kısaparmak | Fatih Kısaparmak (born 31 January 1961 in Elazığ), is a singer/songwriter of traditional Turkish folk music. |
26824621#1 | Fatih Kısaparmak | Born in Elazığ, Maden, his mother Yıldız Hanım is a retired primary school teacher, his father Necip Bey is a high school teacher, beurocrat and the coordinating principal of various high ranking schools and institutions. In 1991, he married economist Şebnem Ergür (Kısaparmak) who was a television news presenter for TRT, Channel 6, Channel 7 and Fox TV. The couple have two sons, Ozan and Kaan. |
26824621#2 | Fatih Kısaparmak | After tertiary education, Fatih Kısaparmak was the music presenter for Hacettepe University Ankara State Conservatory and TRT Anakara Radio, his artworks could also be found in State Arts Galeri. He was a photojournalist for Tasvir Newspaper while he was studying at Ankara Bahçelievler High School. In his university years, many of his poems, interviews and research papers were published in various arts and literature magazines. |
26824621#3 | Fatih Kısaparmak | He started his professional music and songwriting career in 1985. His first song Kilim was a huge success. He then released 15 music albums and wrote over 200 songs. He was known as the ‘Contemporary Ozan’, ‘Mr Kilim’ and ‘The Father of Folk’. Fatih Kısaparmak formed two concert orchestras called ‘Group Kilim’ and ‘Group Mozaic’. He held a charity concert for Erzincan, Gölcük and Pakistan earthquakes to help organizations like Darülaceze and UNICEF. |
26824621#4 | Fatih Kısaparmak | Alongside Turkey, he held concerts in USA, Russia, Germany, Austria, France, Holland, Belgium, Cyprus, Central Asia, Bosnia and Venezuela. Fatih Kısaparmak was also in the managerial position for three seasons for Malatyaspor and Elazığspor soccer teams. He was also a member and manager of İstanbul- Elazığ Cultural Foundation and other foundations in Elazığ. He has received over 70 awards from leading Turkish organizations, his most recent in 2000 being a doctorate title for his contributions in Turkish folk music from Fırat University.Fan Website
İnterview in Today's Zaman Newspaper |
26824631#0 | Hyposmocoma blackburnii | Hyposmocoma blackburnii is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1881. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Maui. The type locality is Haleakalā. |
26824631#1 | Hyposmocoma blackburnii | The larvae have been recorded in dead wood of "Acacia koa". |
26824632#0 | WMSS | WMSS (91.1 FM, "Super 91") is a high school operated high school radio station serving the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, metropolitan area; it can be received as far south as (certain parts of) York, PA. WMSS broadcasts several different radio formats depending on the time of day. The station serves to play once-popular songs that have been abandoned or not represented at all by local commercial stations. The station's mission is to introduce students to radio production and to provide live sports coverage of local games and state playoffs, for which it has previously won PAB awards. The station currently suffers from a lack of publicity, especially among populations who would appreciate the variety of "rarely played" songs, which in the afternoon and evening hours are hand-chosen by their student deejays. The station holds the title of being the only high school station in Central Pennsylvania, and it has been on air for more than 30 years. The general manager of the station is John Wilsbach, who is also known for his traffic reports on WTPA. |
26824632#1 | WMSS | On weekday mornings (from 6 AM to 3 PM), the station airs a unique hybrid of Soft Adult Contemporary/Easy Listening, mainstream Adult Contemporary, and Rhythmic Adult Contemporary formats, generally focusing on material from the 1960s to the 1990s, including very little post-2000 music. This programming segment features a high percentage of songs that were major or moderate hits from the 1970s through 1990s but are essentially "forgotten" today, hence the relatively high prevalence of easy listening songs, as this genre has been abandoned by mainstream AC stations. During this time of day, the station's variety of music can range from The Supremes to The Beach Boys to Neil Diamond to Jim Croce to Dan Fogelberg to Air Supply to Phil Collins to Madonna to Bon Jovi to Whitney Houston. |
26824632#2 | WMSS | After 3 PM on weekdays, and other afternoon times on weekends, the station broadcasts an alternative music format. |
26824632#3 | WMSS | On Saturday mornings (from 7 AM - 12 PM, and extended to 4 PM in the summer), the station broadcasts a True Oldies format with General Manager John Wilsbach as the DJ (sponsored by the local "Members 1st Federal Credit Union"); this is known as the "All Oldies Saturday" and features material exclusively from the 1950s and 1960s. The "All Oldies Saturday" particularly emphasizes pre-1964, since this era has been abandoned by local commercial FM oldies/classic hits stations, except for occasional songs on Oldies 102.9 WHYL, a 160 W translator simulcasting AM 960 WHYL in FM stereo). The "All Oldies Saturday" features the slogan "We don't just play the greatest oldies; we play the B-sides too"; which means that they feature many obscure songs and moderate hits from the Oldies era, rather than focusing on only top hits. In addition, a few rare songs by locally renowned 1950s and 1960s artists from Central Pennsylvania are played, such as, for example, the Magnificent Men and the Kit Kats and George Wilson, singer of "Here Stands the Man Who Needs You". |
26824632#4 | WMSS | Additionally, Oldies material is usually broadcast on Sundays from about 8-9 AM and 12-1 PM as well, in between when other programs and church services are broadcast. |
26824642#0 | Hyposmocoma candidella | Hyposmocoma candidella is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the island of Hawaii. The type locality is Kona, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824642#1 | Hyposmocoma candidella | The larvae probably feed on "Acacia koa". |
26824654#0 | Hyposmocoma anisoplecta | Hyposmocoma anisoplecta is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Edward Meyrick in 1935. It is endemic to the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The type locality is Mount Kaʻala. |
26824655#0 | GT4 (tram) | GT4 is a German acronym for an articulated ("G" for "Gelenk" = "joint") motorized ("T" for "Triebwagen") tramcar with 4 axles. Such vehicles running on two bogies were developed in Germany, starting in 1959, in different places for different tram systems (in Stuttgart and Bremen), and 15 years later by ČKD Tatra in Czechoslovakia as "KT4" ("KT" representing "kloubová tramvaj", from "kloub" = "joint", in Czech and Slovak). |
26824658#0 | Christopher Bodkin | Christopher Bodkin (or Bodkyn or Bodekin) (died 1572) was an Irish prelate, who was the Archbishop of Tuam, and Bishop of Kilmacduagh during the Irish Reformation. |
26824658#1 | Christopher Bodkin | He was appointed Bishop of Kilmacduagh on 3 September 1533 and consecrated on 4 November 1533. Four years later, he accepted Royal Supremacy and was appointed Archbishop of Tuam by King Henry VIII on 15 February 1537, but continued to hold the bishopric of Kilmacduagh. He swore the Oath of Supremacy at Clonmel early in 1539. |
26824658#2 | Christopher Bodkin | In opposition to Bodkin, the papacy appointed Arthur O'Friel to Tuam and Cornelius O'Dea to Kilmacduagh, but they failed to get possession of the sees. On the accession of Queen Mary I, Bodkin was absolved from schism by Cardinal Pole, and appointed apostolic administrator of Tuam and Kilmacduagh on 7 October 1555. |
26824658#3 | Christopher Bodkin | On the accession of Queen Elizabeth I, he retained possession of both sees. He took the Oath of Supremacy, recognizing the Queen as Supreme Governor of the Church, in 1560 He died in office in 1572. |
26824662#0 | Hyposmocoma calva | Hyposmocoma calva is a species of moth of the family Cosmopterigidae. It was first described by Lord Walsingham in 1907. It is endemic to the island of Hawaii. The type locality is Kona, where it was collected at an elevation of . |
26824667#0 | Elliot Willensky | Elliot A. Willensky (August 6, 1943 – March 29, 2010) was an American composer, lyricist and music producer. He wrote Michael Jackson's first solo hit "Got to Be There" and the Jermaine Jackson/Whitney Houston duet "If You Say My Eyes Are Beautiful." Willensky composed the music for the 1999 off-Broadway musical "Abby's Song" and served as the music coordinator for the Tony Orlando and Dawn variety show on CBS. |
26824667#1 | Elliot Willensky | He was born in Bayonne, New Jersey on August 6, 1943 to Raymond Willensky and Gertrude Berlin. He attended Bayonne High School and graduated from Boston University with a degree in biology. He undertook post-graduate studies at Boston University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst and worked as a research scientist of the National Institutes of Health. Willensky left the scientific field to become a songwriter in 1969. |
26824667#2 | Elliot Willensky | Arguably Willensky's most well-known work is "Got to Be There" which was Michael Jackson's first solo hit and reached number 4 on the R&B singles chart in 1971. The song reached number 5 on the R&B chart again in 1983 when it was covered by Chaka Khan. The song has also been covered by The Miracles in 1972, Boyz II Men in 2007, and an instrumental version by jazz guitarist/singer George Benson in 1993. |
26824667#3 | Elliot Willensky | Willensky continued his affiliation with the Jackson family into the 1980s, writing the noted Jermaine Jackson and Whitney Houston duet, "If You Say My Eyes are Beautiful," which appeared on Jermaine's 1986 "Precious Moments" album. |
26824667#4 | Elliot Willensky | He died from a stroke on March 29, 2010 in Summit, New Jersey. |
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