Archive for May, 2008

Johann Rall | Ho! Ho! Who’d

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Johann Gottlieb Rall (ca. 1726 - December 26, 1776 ) was a German colonel in command of Hessian troops in Trenton, New Jersey.


Early life and career

Rall was probably born as a so-called “soldier child” ca. 1725. He was a son of Captain Joachim Rall from Stralsund, who served in the regiment of Major General Donop. The first mention of Johann Rall was as a new cadet of the same regiment on 1 March 1740, commanded at this time by Colonel Prince Casimir von Isenburg of Isenburg-Birstein.

He was promoted to warrant officer on 25 July 1741; to second lieutenant on 28 August 1745; and to captain on 10 May 1753. Rall was promoted to major on 7 May 1760, under Major General Bischhausen and transferred, in January 1763, into the Stein garrison regiment, where he was appointed lieutenant colonel. On 22 April 1771, he was transferred to the Mansbach Infantry Regiment as a colonel. He became commander of the regiment in January 1772.

During this time, Rall fought in the War of the Austrian Succession and participated in campaigns in Bavaria, on the Rhine, in the Netherlands, and served in Scotland. He fought in the Seven Years’ War (also called the French and Indian War) and was involved in many battles. From September 1771 until August 1772, he was in Russia and fought for Catherine the Great under Count Orlov in the Fourth Russo-Turkish War.


The American Revolution

By 1776, Rall belonged to the infantry regiment of the 1st Division under General Phillip Leopold von Heister and commanded approximately 1,200 men fighting for Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War. He was at the Battle of Brooklyn at Flatbush, the Battle of White Plains, the Battle of Long Island, and figured prominently in the Battle of Trenton.

General George Washington crossed the Delaware River with his troops on the way to Trenton, New Jersey. The Hessian regiments, camped in and around Trenton, were attacked and decisively defeated by the American Continental Army. The Hessians had supposedly let their guard down to celebrate the Christmas holiday, and Rall himself was misled by John Honeyman, a spy of Washington who convincingly posed as a loyalist. According to one account, Rall was busy playing cards the night before the attack when he was handed a note from a local Loyalist who’d seen Washingtons forces gathering. He simply pocketed the warning without bothering to read it and went back to his card game. In this surprise attack on 26 December 1776, Rall was mortally wounded in the battle by a bullet wound.

General Washington and Major General Greene visited the dying Colonel after the battle, and rendered him thereby a last military honor. He died in the late evening at his headquarters, on Warren Street in the “House of Stacy Potts”, at that time called King Street.
Rall was buried in the cemetery of the First Presbyterian Church in Trenton on East State Street. The worn inscription on his tombstone reads, “Here lies Colonel Rall, for him, all is over”.


References

Spybot worm | versions It

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

The Spybot worm is actually a large family of computer worms of varying characteristics. Although the actual number of versions is unknown, it is estimated to be well into the thousands. This briefly held the record for most variants, but has subsequently been surpassed by the Agobot family. Spybot variants generally have several things in common:

  • The ability to spread via the popular P2P program KaZaA, often in addition to other such programs.
  • The ability to spread via at least vulnerability in the Microsoft Windows operating system. Earlier versions mostly used the RPC DCOM buffer overflow, although now some use the LSASS buffer overflow.
  • The ability to spread via various common backdoor Trojan horses.
  • The ability to spread to systems with weak administrative passwords.

Because there is no standard of detection nor classification for the Spybot family, there is also no standard naming convention. Most antivirus programs detect variants generically (e.g. W32/Spybot.worm), and identifying what specific Spybot variant is indicated is next to impossible except with the earliest or most common versions.

As a result of having so many variants, one anti-virus company is often not able to cover all versions of the family. The same applies to most anti-spyware software.

Early detection of the Spybot worm usually comes from network engineers detecting the Denial of Service attack generated when the worm tried to communicate back to various IRC channels.

This virus is sometimes nearly impossible to get rid of, hence the nickname “the unridable virus”. At the first signs, it should be taken to a professional to be deleted.

Nassau Street | Main Street Cookies

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Nassau Street could refer to several different locations:

  • Nassau Street (Dublin) – a street in Dublin, Ireland.
  • Nassau Street (Winnipeg) – a street in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
  • Nassau Street (Princeton) – a street in Princeton, New Jersey.
  • Nassau Street (Manhattan) – a street in Lower Manhattan, New York City.

Submission | the ‘Bollocks to

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Submission may refer to:

  • Submission (film), a film directed by Theo van Gogh and written by Ayaan Hirsi Ali
  • “Submission”, a song from the 1977 album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols
  • “Submission”, a religion related to Islam practiced by the United Submitters International
  • Domination and submission (BDSM), accepting of dominance in a lifestyle context
  • Mail submission agent, electronic mail software

In combat sports:

  • Submission (combat sport), a term for yielding to an opponent
  • Submission wrestling, combat sports that focus on using submission holds
  • Submission hold, a type of grappling hold

Submission may also be:

  • Islam, the name of a religion meaning “submission” in Arabic
  • A proposal for a presentation at an academic conference
  • In biology and anthropology, a placatory response to an animal showing more dominance (biology)

Triumph (album) | on the 1996 remastered

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
This article is about the self-titled album by the band Triumph. For the 1980 album by the Jacksons, see Triumph (The Jacksons album).

Triumph was the debut album by Canadian rock band Triumph, released in 1976 (see 1976 in music). The album was remastered and re-released with a new cover and named in 1995 called In The Beginning (then remastered again in 2005). Before they were on par with Rush as Canada’s prog-rock heroes, Triumph were earnestly forging away to develop their sound. In The Beginning/Triumph captures just that: the band’s debut recording while they were still finding and developing the formulas that would make them so successful.


Track listing

  1. “24 Hours a Day” (Emmett) – 4:35
  2. “Be My Lover” (Emmett) – 3:17
  3. “Don’t Take My Life” (Moore) – 4:45
  4. “Street Fighter” (Moore) – 3:30
  5. “Street Fighter (Reprise)” (Moore) – 3:02
  6. “What’s Another Day of Rock ‘n’ Roll” (Moore) – 4:49
  7. “Easy Life” (Levine) – 3:56
  8. “Let Me Get Next to You” (Moore) – 3:00
  9. “Blinding Light Show/Moonchild” (Emmett,Brockway,Young/Emmett) – 8:43


Personnel

  • Rik Emmett - guitars, vocals
  • Gil Moore - drums, vocals
  • Michael Levine - bass
  • Laurie Delgrande - keyboards

Singles Going Steady | a bonus track

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Singles Going Steady was the Buzzcocks’ 1979 compilation album featuring their UK single releases to date along with the corresponding B-sides.


Track listing

  1. “Orgasm Addict” (Devoto, Shelley) – 2:00
  2. “What Do I Get?” (Shelley) – 2:52
  3. “I Don’t Mind” (Shelley) – 2:16
  4. “Love You More” (Shelley) – 1:47
  5. “Ever Fallen in Love?” (Shelley) – 2:39
  6. “Promises” (Diggle, Shelley) – 2:34
  7. “Everybody’s Happy Nowadays” (Shelley)– 3:09
  8. “Harmony in My Head” (Diggle) – 3:06
  9. “What Ever Happened To?” (Dial, Shelley) – 2:12
  10. “Oh Shit!” (Shelley) – 1:34
  11. “Autonomy” (Diggle) – 3:41
  12. “Noise Annoys” (Shelley) – 2:49
  13. “Just Lust” (Dial, Shelley) – 2:58
  14. “Lipstick” (Diggle, Shelley) – 2:36
  15. “Why Can’t I Touch It?” (Diggle, Garvey, Maher, Shelley) – 6:32
  16. “Something’s Gone Wrong Again” (Shelley) – 4:29


2001 Re-release

  1. “Orgasm Addict” (Devoto, Shelley) – 2:00
  2. “What Do I Get?” (Shelley) – 2:52
  3. “I Don’t Mind” (Shelley) – 2:16
  4. “Love You More” (Shelley) – 1:47
  5. “Ever Fallen in Love?” (Shelley) – 2:39
  6. “Promises” (Diggle, Shelley) – 2:34
  7. “Everybody’s Happy Nowadays” (Shelley)– 3:09
  8. “Harmony in My Head” (Diggle) – 3:06
  9. “You Say You Don’t Love Me” (Shelley) – 2:54 - bonus track
  10. “Are Everything” (Shelley) – 3:59 - bonus track
  11. “Strange Thing” (Shelley) – 4:10 - bonus track
  12. “Running Free” (Diggle) – 3:14 - bonus track
  13. “What Ever Happened To?” (Dial, Shelley) – 2:12
  14. “Oh Shit!” (Shelley) – 1:34
  15. “Autonomy” (Diggle) – 3:41
  16. “Noise Annoys” (Shelley) – 2:49
  17. “Just Lust” (Dial, Shelley) – 2:58
  18. “Lipstick” (Diggle, Shelley) – 2:36
  19. “Why Can’t I Touch It?” (Diggle, Garvey, Maher, Shelley) – 6:32
  20. “Something’s Gone Wrong Again” (Shelley) – 4:29
  21. “Raison D’etre” (Shelley) – 3:34 - bonus track
  22. “Why She’s The Girl From The Chainstore” (Diggle) – 2:26 - bonus track
  23. “Airwaves Dream” (Diggle) – 3:54 - bonus track
  24. “What Do You Know” (Shelley) – 3:15 - bonus track

Singles Going Steady is also the name of a punk-rock record shop in downtown Seattle, WA.

I Pray on Christmas | a Christmas song

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

“I Pray on Christmas” is a Christmas carol with music and lyrics by Harry Connick Jr. First released in 1993 on his multi platinum album When My Heart Finds Christmas. Connick has also released the song on his Christmas Special VHS in 1994, and again on his DVD Harry for the Holidays (2003) as a bonus track featuring Connick and Kim Burrell.

Sample of the lyrics

I pray on Christmas
Oh, the sick will soon be strong
I pray on Christmas
The Lord will hear my song
I pray on Christmas
That God will lead the way
And I pray I really pray on Christmas
He’ll get me through another day

Also recorded by

  • Lynda Randle with Michael Tait, on the album Christmas (2005).
  • Blind Boys of Alabama with Solomon Burke, on album Go Tell It on the Mountain (2003).
  • The Oak Ridge Boys, on the album An Inconvenient Christmas” (2002).
  • Kirk Talley, album Talley-ho-ho-ho! (1999).


External link

  • Audio sample, Harry Connick Jr

Last of the Sane | originally released as a

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Last of the Sane is an album by the American metalcore band Earth Crisis, which was released in 2001. After this album the band split up and Karl Buechner, Eric Edwards and Bulldog went on to form the band Freya. This album mostly consist of cover songs by other bands.


Track listing

  1. “Hell Awaits (Intro)” (Slayer)

    • Originally released on the Hell Awaits album.
  2. “The Wanton Song” (Led Zeppelin)
    • Originally released on the Physical Graffiti album.
  3. “City to City” (DYS)
  4. “Children of the Grave” (Black Sabbath)
    • Originally released on the Master Of Reality album.
  5. “Holiday In Cambodia” (Dead Kennedys)
    • Originally released on the Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables album.
  6. “Paint it Black” (Rolling Stones)
    • Originally released on the Aftermath album.
  7. “Earth A.D.” (The Misfits)
    • Originally released on the Earth A.D./Wolfsblood album.
  8. “The Order”
  9. “Broken Foundation”
  10. “Gomorrah‘s Season Ends”
  11. “Panic Floods”


Credits

  • Karl Buechner - vocals
  • Scott Crouse - guitar
  • Eric Edwards - guitar
  • Bulldog - bass
  • Dennis Merrick - drums

Serpent’s Embrace | albums

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Serpent’s Embrace is the fourth studio album of the Gothic Metal band Agathodaimon. The album had a more progressive style compared to previous albums.


Tracks

  1. Cellos for the Insatiable
  2. Serpent’s Embrace
  3. Rebirth
  4. Light Reborn
  5. Faded Years
  6. Solitude
  7. Limbs of a Stare
  8. The Darkness Inside
  9. Bitter End
  10. Feelings

Five-Masters | Rare Masters To Be

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Five-Masters (or Panj Ostād) refers to five very influential masters of Persian literature, Badiozzaman Forouzanfar, Malekoshoara Bahar, Jalal Homaii, Abdolazim Gharib and Rashid Yasemi.

These five masters wrote the classic book of Grammer of Persian Language which is now known as Dastoore Zabane Panj Ostad.

Five-Masters are among the most important figures in the history of Persian language and linguistics.


See also

  • Persian literature

Christmas Turkey | Christmas is

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

Christmas Turkey is a Christmas-themed album released in 1997 by the Canadian Comedy Music group The Arrogant Worms.
It includes a re-recorded version of “The Christmas Song” (which appeared on their debut album).


Track listing

  1. “Santa’s Gonna Kick Your Ass”
  2. “The Christmas Song”
  3. “Santa Got Arrested”
  4. “Christmas Sucks”
  5. “Things Are Looking Bad For Santa”
  6. “Christmas Turkey Blues”
  7. “Oh God, I’m Santa Claus!”
  8. “Christmas Is Almost Here”
  9. “Dad Threw Up On Christmas Day”
  10. “The Same Christmas Cake”
  11. “Christmastime”
  12. “Christmas Blues”
  13. “Christmas Hangover”
  14. “Vincent The Christmas Virus”
  15. “Christmas In Ignace”

Links

CFO (Magazine) | website MVMCP

Monday, May 12th, 2008

CFO is a monthly magazine published by The Economist Group launched in the United States in 1985 for CFOs and other financial executives in companies around the country. According to CFO’s website, the magazine reaches 559,000 readers worldwide, including almost 280,000 senior financial executives.


External links

  • Official Website
  • Publisher’s Website

Quidi Vidi | John’s Christmas Party

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Quidi Vidi (pronunciations vary, even amongst longtime residents, but “Kiddy Viddy” is the most common) is a neighbourhood in St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador. It was known for once being a historic fishing village.

The neighbourhood is named for both Quidi Vidi Lake (where the Royal St. John’s Regatta is held the first Wednesday in August, weather permitting) and Quidi Vidi Harbour - known locally as “The Gut”. Located in Quidi Vidi is the Quidi Vidi Battery Provincial Historic Site [1], which had significance as a battery during the War of 1812. The village is also home to Newfoundland’s largest microbrewery, the Quidi Vidi Brewing Company.

Links

List of asteroids/118001–119000 | Christmas’ EP. edit

Monday, May 12th, 2008

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”001″| 118001–118100 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”101″| 118101–118200 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”201″| 118201–118300 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”301″| 118301–118400 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”401″| 118401–118500 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”501″| 118501–118600 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”601″| 118601–118700 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”701″| 118701–118800 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”801″| 118801–118900 [ edit]

! colspan=”5″ style=”background-color:silver;text-align:center;” id=”901″| 118901–119000 [ edit]

Links

Roger Bonvin | in 1973. Though it

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Roger Bonvin (September 12, 1907 - June 5, 1982) was a Swiss politician and member of the Swiss Federal Council (1962-1973).

He was elected to the Federal Council of Switzerland on September 27, 1962 and handed over office on December 31, 1973. He was affiliated with the Christian Democratic People’s Party of Switzerland.

During his office time he held the following departments:

  • Department of Finance (1962 - 1968)
  • Department of Transport, Communications and Energy (1968 - 1973)

He was President of the Confederation twice, in 1967 and 1973.


External links

Links

Headstones | band The

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Headstones are grave markers.

Headstones may also refer to:

  • The Headstones, a Canadian band
  • Headstones (band), an Australian band
  • The Headstones (band), a German band
  • Headstones (album) is an album from the Swedish metal band Lake of Tears


See also

  • Headstone (disambiguation)

Links

Walt Disney World Hospitality and Recreation Corporation | Disney World

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

The Walt Disney World Hospitality and Recreation Corporation, along with the Walt Disney World Company, Walt Disney Travel Company, Incorporated, and the Reedy Creek Improvement District, owns the land in the Walt Disney World Resort. These are all wholly owned subsidiaries of the Walt Disney Company.

Recreacres, Incorporated was incorporated in Delaware in or before 1968 to help buy up property for the Walt Disney World Resort, most of which had already been bought by Compass East Corporation, now Walt Disney World Company.

On January 19, 1971, Recreacres, Incorporated changed its name to Buena Vista Land Company, Incorporated.

On September 6, 1973, Buena Vista Land Company, Incorporated changed its name to Buena Vista Communities, Incorporated.

On June 22, 1998, Buena Vista Communities, Incorporated changed its name to Walt Disney World Hospitality and Recreation Corporation.

Harvest Groves, Incorporated was merged into the Walt Disney World Hospitality and Recreation Corporation on September 30, 1999. This company was named Fischer and Howard, Corporation (which was organized July 1, 1976 to consolidate several small farms in the area) until June 22, 1993; the renaming probably happened soon after the Walt Disney Company took control of it.


See also

  • Reedy Creek Improvement District
  • Walt Disney Travel Company, Incorporated
  • Walt Disney World Company
  • Walt Disney World Resort


External links

  • A list of property they own in Orange County, Florida

Links

Parade (Plastic Tree album) | Parade II and also

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Parade is the third full-length album by the Japanese rock group Plastic Tree, released on August 23, 2000.


Track listing

  1. エーテル ETHER
  2. ロケット ROCKET
  3. スライド.(Ver.2.0) SLIDE
  4. 少女狂騒 shoujo kyousou
  5. ベランダ.(Ver.1.0) VERANDA
  6. 空白の日 kuuhaku no hi
  7. 十字路 juujiro
  8. トレモロ(Ver.2.0) TREMOLO
  9. 睡眠薬 suimin yaku
  10. bloom
  11. Sink(Ver.2.0)
  12. そしてパレードは続く shoshite PARADE wa tsuzuku

Links

Masu (Japanese) | Step into

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

A was originally a square wooden box used to measure rice in Japan during the feudal period. Masu existed in many sizes, typically covering the range from one to (一斗枡 ittomasu, c. 18L) to five (五合枡 gogōmasu, c. 0.9L).

Today masu are largely used for drinking sake, as the advent of modern rice cookers and a higher calorie diet in Japan has made them impractical for measuring portions of rice, and the standard size is one , or 0.18039L.


Origami

There is an origami object that is called a “Masu Box” that can be created from a perfectly square piece of paper using the following instructions:

Step 01 Step 02 Step 03 Step 04 Step 05
Crease and Return Fold tops to centre, this is called a blinz fold after a Jewish pastry Fold sides to centre and return Open two corners Fold sides to centre
Step 06 Step 07 Step 08 Step 09 Step 10
Lift both sides and one end of the model so it becomes 3D Fold flap to centre raise end Fold flap to centre Complete


External link

  • Sake Traditions

Links

Promissory | edit Events

Saturday, May 10th, 2008
Wikipedia does not currently have an encyclopedia article for ‘.

You may like to search Wiktionary for “[[Wiktionary:Special:Search/|]]” instead.

To begin an article here, feel free to [ edit this page], but please do not create a mere dictionary definition.

Links