Archive for August, 2008

…And They Obey (song)

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

“…And They Obey”
“...And They Obey” cover
Single by Kinesis
Released February 25, 2002
Format CD
Genre Alternative rock
Label Crystal Songs
Producer Chris Sheldon
“…And They Obey”
“...And They Obey” cover
Single by Kinesis
from the album Handshakes For Bullets
Released March 10, 2003
Format CD/Vinyl 7″
Genre Alternative rock
Label Independiente
Producer Dave Eringa
Kinesis singles chronology
“Billboard Beauty”
(October 2002)
…And They Obey
(Match 2003)
“Forever Reeling”
(June 2003)

And They Obey” is a song by English band Kinesis, released as their first single in March 2003.

This song is a different version than the one used in Worship Yourself re-recorded at Ionian Studios, Bolton using multi tracks.

Only available on CD it was released on February 25th, 2002.

Contents

  • 1 Track listing
    • 1.1 CD
  • 2 Second release
  • 3 Track listing
    • 3.1 CD
    • 3.2 Vinyl 7″
  • 4 Video

Track listing

CD

  1. “And They Obey” - 2:28
  2. “Decay” - 4:00
  3. “Throw-away Youth” - 3:23

Second release

Another re-recorded version of the single was released on March 10, 2003, which was the second single from their first album, Handshakes For Bullets (Track 7). The single was released in CD and 7″ Vinyl format. It reached number 63 in the UK charts.

Track listing

CD

  1. “…And they Obey” - 2:30
  2. “Premonitions” - 3:52
  3. “The Flowers Are Dead” - 1:48

Vinyl 7″

  1. “…And they Obey” - 2:30
  2. “Premonitions” - 3:52

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KNode

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

KNode

KNode 0.10.4
Developed by The KNode Team
OS Cross-platform
Type News client
License GNU General Public License
Website http://knode.sourceforge.net

In computing, KNode is a free news client program for the KDE desktop environment.

It supports multiple NNTP servers, message threads, scoring, X-Face headers (reading and posting), and international character sets. It also acts as the default news reader component of Kontact.

It is maintained inside the kdepim module.

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Tinsley Viaduct

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

Tinsley Viaduct
Tinsley Viaduct
The Viaduct from Meadowhall, with the two remaining of seven cooling towers, part of the former Blackburn Meadows power station, behind, before they were demolished in 2008.
Carries M1, A631
Crosses River Don
Sheffield Canal
Midland Main Line
South Yorkshire Railway
Locale Tinsley/Wincobank
Maintained by Highways Agency
Design twin deck box girder bridge
Longest span 50 m / 163 feet (20 spans)
Total length 1,033m / 3,400 feet
Width 6 lanes
Height 20 metres (66 feet) (to upper level)
Vertical clearance 10 metres (33 feet) (on the A631)
Clearance below 10 metres (33 feet) metres
AADT 100,000 vehicles/day
Beginning date of construction Spring 1965
Completion date 1968
Opening date 25 March 1968

Tinsley Viaduct is a two-tier road bridge in Sheffield, England; the first of its kind in the UK. It carries the M1 and the A631 1033 metres over the Don Valley, from Tinsley to Wincobank, also crossing the Sheffield Canal, the Midland Main Line and the former South Yorkshire Railway line from Tinsley Junction to Rotherham Central. The Supertram route to Meadowhall runs below part of the viaduct on the trackbed of the South Yorkshire Railway line to Barnsley.

Tinsley Viaduct lower deck


Tinsley Viaduct lower deck

The viaduct was opened in March 1968 and cost £6 million to build. The structure is unusual in that it is built as steel box girders, at a time when most long span bridges were being built of post tension concrete deck design. This use of steel has allowed the viaduct to be strengthened, in 1983 and again in 2006. The recent works to strengthen the bridge were a very complex operation, with a lot of the work happening inside the Box beam spine. The works took over 3 years and cost £82 million (14 x the original bridge building cost).

Although originally designed to carry 6 lanes, during the strengthening work the M1 was permanently reduced to 4 lanes following an EU directive on load bearing capacity to allow for the introduction of 40 ton trucks in the UK. This arrangement allows the third lane in each direction to join from J34 to make the very busy junction safer.

The viaduct is balanced on rollers to allow for thermal expansion and contraction, and the route weaves slightly in order to make its way past obstacles. The viaduct due to its construction is very flexible and when sat on the lower deck you can feel it sway as the traffic passes overhead. The Meadowhall Shopping Centre lies in the valley to the west, while to the east is the Blackburn Meadows sewage works.

Tinsley cooling towers

The viaduct is one of Sheffield’s most prominent landmarks, and was once made all the more so by the adjacent pair of cooling towers that were left standing for safety reasons after the demolition of the Blackburn Meadows power station. The cooling towers were a major point of contention over the years, and were once only saved from destruction after being chosen as a nesting site by a rare bird. More recently, plans were made to turn them into a piece of public art. Other plans for the towers included concert halls, skate parks and a theme park.

Their iconic status, and the possibly prohibitive costs of demolishing the towers safely, until recently looked to have cemented their status in Sheffield’s future as much as they were a part of its history, until the owner of the tower (and the now-demolished power station) E.ON UK, stated its intention to demolish them once the strengthening of the viaduct made it feasible.

The 250 feet (76 m) towers were demolished at 0300 BST on 24 August 2008 though a significant portion of the north tower remained standing for a short while. The demolition attracted widespread attention. A viewing platform was set up so the public could watch the demolition. Part of the site is proposed to be used for a new biomass power station by the owners E.ON UK.

References

  1. ^ “Tinsley Viaduct”. Highways Agency.
  2. ^ “Safespan’s Latest News”.
  3. ^ “Tinsley viaduct strengthening project, Sheffield”. Prime Minister’s Award.
  4. ^ a b “M1 Aston-Sheffield-Leeds”. The Motorway Archive Trust.
  5. ^ Leleux, Sydney A. (February 1969). “Tinsley Viaduct, Sheffield”.
  6. ^ “£82 Million M1 Tinsley Viaduct strengthening work nears completion”. Highways Agency (2005-10-10).
  7. ^ “Turning towers into art”, BBC News, BBC (8 July 2006). 
  8. ^ “August demolition date set for Tinsley cooling towers”. E.ON UK (2008-08-12).
  9. ^ “Blast demolishes landmark towers”, BBC News, BBC (24 August 2008). Retrieved on 2008-08-24. 
  10. ^ “E.ON UK Blackburn Meadows Green powerstation”. E.ON. Retrieved on 2008-08-24.

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Subodh Mukherjee

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Subodh Mukherjee (Bengali: ????? ????????) (b. April 14, 1921 in Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh; d. May 21, 2005 in Mumbai, Maharashtra) was a Bengali Indian filmmaker (producer and director).Brother of the producer director Sashadhar Mukherjee Father of Sanjoy, now a senior executive at Vodafone India Telecom.

Filmography

  • Munimji (1955)
  • Paying Guest (1957)
  • Love Marriage (1959)
  • Junglee (1961)
  • April Fool (1964)
  • Saaz Aur Awaaz (1966)
  • Abhinetri (1970)
  • Teesri Aankh (1982)
  • Ulta Seedha (1985)

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Charles Ferguson Smith

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Charles Ferguson Smith
April 24, 1807 – April 25, 1862
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Place of birth Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Place of death Savannah, Tennessee
Allegiance United States of America
Years of service 1825–62
Rank Major General
Battles/wars Mexican-American War
-Battle of Palo Alto
- Battle of Resaca de la Palma
- Battle of Monterrey
- Battle of Churubusco
American Civil War
- Battle of Fort Donelson

Charles Ferguson Smith (April 24, 1807 – April 25, 1862) was a career United States Army officer who served in the Mexican-American War and as a Union General in the American Civil War.

Contents

  • 1 Early life and Career
  • 2 Civil War
  • 3 Death
  • 4 See also
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Early life and Career

Smith was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of an army surgeon. He graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1825 and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 2nd U.S. Artillery. As he rose slowly through the ranks of the peacetime army, he returned to West Point as an instructor and was appointed Commandant of Cadets as a first lieutenant, serving in that position from 1838 to 1843.

As an artillery battalion commander he distinguished himself in the Mexican-American War, serving under both Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott, at Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterrey, and Churubusco. He received brevet promotions from major through colonel for his service in these battles and ended the war as a lieutenant colonel in the regular army. In Mexico City, he was in charge of the police guard from the end of the war until 1848. He commanded the Red River expedition in Minnesota of 1856–57, and served under Albert Sidney Johnston in Utah (1857–60), commanding the Department of Utah himself from 1860 to 1861, and the Department of Washington (at Fort Washington, Maryland) very briefly at the start of the Civil War.

Civil War

After the outbreak of the war in 1861, Smith served on recruiting duty as commander of Fort Columbus, New York. He was commissioned a brigadier general of volunteers (August 31, 1861), and as colonel in the regular army, commanding the 3rd U.S. Infantry regiment, as of September 9. He was soon transferred to the Western Theater and became a division commander in the Department of the Missouri under Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who had been one of his pupils at West Point. This potentially awkward situation was eased by Smith’s loyalty to his young chief.

The old soldier led his division of raw volunteers with success at the Battle of Fort Donelson in February 1862. During the attack on the Confederate right flank, which he led personally, he saw some of his men waver. He yelled to them, “Damn you, gentlemen, I see skulkers! I’ll have none here! Come on, you volunteers, come on! This is your chance! You volunteered to be killed for love of country, and now you can be!”

Smith’s experience, dignity, and unselfish character made him Grant’s mainstay in the early days of the war. When theater commander major general Henry W. Halleck became distrustful and jealous of Grant, he effectively relieved him of command and assigned Smith the responsibility of leading the Army’s expedition up the Tennessee River toward Corinth, Mississippi. Intervention by President Abraham Lincoln eventually restored Grant to command, but first, at Savannah, Tennessee, Smith met with an accident while jumping into a rowboat that seriously injured his leg, forcing him out of field duty and making Halleck’s action moot. His senior brigadier led his division at the Battle of Shiloh.

Death

Smith died of an infection following his leg injury and chronic dysentery at Savannah, Tennessee, and is buried in Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia.

The early close of his career in high command deprived the Union army of one of its best leaders, and his absence was nowhere more felt than on the battlefield of Shiloh, where the Federals paid heavily for the inexperience of their generals. A month before his death, he had been made major general of volunteers.

Fort C. F. Smith in the Powder River Country in the Montana Territory was named in his honor.

See also

American Civil War portal
United States Army portal

References

  • Cunningham, O. Edward. Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862, Savas Beatie, 2007, ISBN 1-932714-27-8.
  • Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
  • Robertson Jr., James I., article in Civil War Times, February 1986, p. 25.
  • Warner, Ezra J., Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders, Louisiana State University Press, 1964, ISBN 0-8071-0822-7.
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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The Block at Orange

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

The Block at Orange


The Block at Orange

The Block at Orange (built on the former site of The City Shopping Center) is an open-air shopping mall developed by The Mills Corporation and owned by Simon Property Group in Orange, California, a few miles southeast of Disneyland near the heart of the Orange Crush interchange. It is popular with teenage skateboarders, housing Vans skatepark. It is also popular for its nightlife because of its AMC 30 Movie Theater, Lucky Strike Lanes, Dave & Buster’s, Cafe Tu Tu Tango, a bar featuring art work and salsa dancing and Alcatraz, a San Francisco themed brewpub named after - and borrowing some themes from - the former prison at Alcatraz Island.

Prior to 1998, the site was home to an enclosed mall called The City Shopping Center, featuring anchor stores May Company California and JC Penney, anchoring The City edge city complex. Mills purchased the site, originally considering conversion to an outlet mall named “CityMills,” but instead built an outdoor lifestyle center after seeing the success of the Irvine Spectrum. The center’s old slogan was The Block at Orange… It Isn’t Square.

It was The Mills Corporation’s first outdoor mall to not have the “Mills” name.

The Virgin Megastore was featured in Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan where Borat attempts to kidnap Pamela Anderson.

The area is served by OCTA Routes 47, 54, 57, 454, and 757.

Anchors and majors

  • Alcatraz Brewing Co. (10,491 sq ft (975 m2))
  • AMC Theatres (112,830 sq ft (10,482 m2))
  • Borders Books & Music (25,088 sq ft (2,331 m2))
  • Dave & Buster’s (59,955 sq ft (5,570 m2))
  • Hilo Hattie (20,000 sq ft (2,000 m2))
  • Lucky Strike Lanes (25,015 sq ft (2,324 m2))
  • Off 5th Saks Fifth Avenue (31,368 sq ft (2,914 m2))
  • Old Navy (15,722 sq ft (1,461 m2))
  • Ron Jon Surf Shop (25,782 sq ft (2,395 m2))
  • Steve & Barry’s (37,886 sq ft (3,520 m2))
  • The Powerhouse (20,278 sq ft (1,884 m2))
  • Vans Skate Park (42,355 sq ft (3,935 m2))
  • Virgin Megastore (22,196 sq ft (2,062 m2))

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CRP

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

CRP may mean:

In medicine

  • C-reactive protein (plasma protein), an acute phase protein produced by the liver
  • Confluent and reticulated papillomatosis, a rare skin condition involving pigmentation
  • cAMP receptor protein (also known as catabolite gene activator protein) is a regulatory protein in bacteria
  • Complex regional pain syndrome, as a shortened form of CRPS

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Restio

Saturday, August 30th, 2008


















Restio

Jump to: navigation, search

Restio
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Poales
Family: Restionaceae
Genus: Restio
Rottb.
Species

See text.

Restio is a genus of grass-like plants in family Restionaceae. The genus includes 88 species endemic to southern and tropical Africa and Madagascar. Some are grown as ornamentals in gardens.

This Poales-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restio”
Categories: Restionaceae | Poales stubs

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Aleksandr Misikov

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Aleksandr Misikov
Personal information
Full name Aleksandr Misikov
Date of birth August 13, 1988 (1988-08-13) (age 20)
Place of birth    Mytishchi, Soviet Union
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club FK Ventspils
Number 6
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
-2006
2007-
FC Fortuna Mytishchi
FK Ventspils
0? (?)
01 (0)   

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of April 26, 2007.
* Appearances (Goals)

Aleksandr Misikov (born April 13, 1988) is a football striker from Russia. His current club is FK Ventspils.

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Duchy of Cracow

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

Fragmentation of Poland betweens the sons of Boles?aw:      The Seniorate Province, composed of the Eastern Greater Poland, Lesser Poland, Western Kuyavia, ??czyca Land and Sieradz Land      Silesian Province of W?adys?aw II      Masovian Province of Boles?aw IV      Greater Poland Province of Mieszko III      Sandomir Province of Henryk      Province of Boles?aw's widow, Salomea, composed of ??czyca Land - to revert to seniorate province upon her death      Pomeranian vassals of the ruler of the seniorate province


Fragmentation of Poland betweens the sons of Boles?aw:      The Seniorate Province, composed of the Eastern Greater Poland, Lesser Poland, Western Kuyavia, ??czyca Land and Sieradz Land      Silesian Province of W?adys?aw II      Masovian Province of Boles?aw IV      Greater Poland Province of Mieszko III      Sandomir Province of Henryk      Province of Boles?aw’s widow, Salomea, composed of ??czyca Land - to revert to seniorate province upon her death      Pomeranian vassals of the ruler of the seniorate province

Seniorate Province (also known as the Senioral Province, Duchy of Kraków, Duchy of Cracow, Principality of Cracow, Principality of Kraków) was the superior among the five provinces established in Testament of Boles?aw III Krzywousty. It existed during the period of fragmentation of Poland (1138 - 1320). It was supposed to be ruled by the rotating head of the Piast dynasty, a principality that he held as the overlord of other Polish dukes.

Contents

  • 1 The principle
  • 2 The Duchy
  • 3 The Dukes
  • 4 List of Dukes of Cracow
  • 5 See also

The principle

The senioral principle established in the testament stated that at all times the eldest member of the dynasty (the Senior Prince, the Princeps, the High Duke, the overlord) was to have supreme power over the rest (Dux, the Dukes) and was also to control an indivisible “seniorate province” (Mazovia): a vast strip of land running north-south down the middle of Poland, with Kraków (Kingdom of Poland’s capital) its chief city. The Senior’s prerogatives also included control over Pomerania, a fief. The Senior was tasked with defense of borders, the right to have troops in provinces of other Dukes, carrying out the foreign policy, supervision over the clergy (including the right to nominate bishops and archbishops), and minting the currency.

The Senior generally had his own principality (province, dukedom), which he had inherited within his own branch of the Piast dynasty, and left to his personal heirs within his own branch, whereas Kraków followed the seniorate (fell to the oldest of them). Kraków was a substantial addition to the resources of the incumbent, whoever it was, and was intended to put him higher in might than his vassal dukes.

However the seniorate soon collapsed, with the first Senior - W?adys?aw II the Exile - failing his bid to take over other provinces. This led to fragmentation of Poland.

The Duchy

The duke of Kraków, in territorial terms, meant a long strip of lands from south of Kraków (traditional dynastic seat) to over Gniezno (eccleasiastical center of Polish). It neighbored originally each of the four partition duchies (Masovia, Sandomir, Silesia, Greater Poland) and even after many of those were further partitioned, neighbored at least almost all principalities, and was at least close to all.

The Dukes

List of Dukes of Cracow

In this list, titular claims are not noted, not as full rule; only true and real ducal power over Cracow is noted.

  • -1138 Boleslaw III, of all Poland, who divided it into duchies to his sons
  • 1138-46 Wladyslaw II, Duke of Silesia, deposed by his younger brothers and exiled
  • 1146 (possibly already earlier in power in Cracow) - 1173 Boleslaw IV, Duke of Masovia
  • 1173-77 Mieszko III, Duke of Greater Poland, deposed
  • 1177-(90/90-)94 Casimir II, Duke of Sandomir
    • 1190 briefly Mieszko III again
  • 1194-99 Leszek I, Duke of Sandomir, deposed
  • 1199-1202 Mieszko III, again
  • 1201 Leszek I, again, deposed
  • 1202 Conrad, Duke of Masovia, deposed
  • 1202-06 Wladyslaw III, Duke of Greater Poland, deposed
    • 1202- Leszek I in strife against Wladyslaw III
  • 1206-27 Leszek I, again
    • 1210-11 Mieszko IV, Duke of Upper Silesia
  • 1227-29 Wladyslaw III, again, deposed
  • 1227-28 Conrad of Masovia, again, deposed (strife against Wladyslaw III)
  • 1228-38 Henry I, Duke of Lower Silesia (strife)
    • 1229-32 Conrad, in strife
  • 1238-41 Henry II, Duke of Lower Silesia
  • 1241 Boleslaw, Duke of Lower Silesia, driven away 1241
    • Mongols (Conrad of Masovia was again overlord, though hardly held Cracow)
  • 1243-79 Boleslaw V, Duke of Sandomir
  • 1279-88 Leszek II, Duke of Sandomir
  • 1288-90 Henry IV, Duke of Wroclaw (in Lower Silesia)
  • 1290-91 Przemysl II, Duke of Greater Poland, crowned king 1295
    • 1291-1305 Venceslas II of Bohemia
    • 1305 Venceslas III of Bohemia, deposed
  • 1305- Wladyslaw IV, Duke of Kujavia, crowned king 1320

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