Posts Tagged ‘favors’

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

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

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

Jehangir Kothari Parade | themed parade

Saturday, May 10th, 2008

Jehangir Kothari Parade is located in Clifton beach in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan.

Access to the sea at Clifton is provided by the terraced Parade known as the Jehangir Kothari Parade. The site, owned by Mr. Jehangir Kothari, an eminent Karachi citizen, who gifted it along with a handsome donation Rs. 300,000 to the Municipality for the development of recreational facilities. The foundation stone was laid by the Governor of Bombay, Sir George Lloyd on 10th February, 1919 and formally opened by Lady Lloyd on 5th January, 1920. The Lady Lloyd Pier was also opened by her on 21st March, 1921.

The Kiosk at one end of the parade, with its elliptical roof structure, built in Jodhpur stone, has an octagonal seat in the center and was used as a Bandstand in yester-years. The pier is 1300 ft long, 15 ft wide and ends in a 70 ft by 50 ft sea-side Pavilion constructed on piles. Gizri limestone and Jodhpur stone were used for its construction.


External link

  • Clifton monuments decaying fast

Links

Pine Grove Covered Bridge | was covered by

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Pine Grove Covered Bridge is a covered bridge that spans the East branch of the Octoraro Creek on the border between Lancaster County and Chester County in Pennsylvania, United States. It is the longest covered bridge in Lancaster County.

The bridge has a double span, wooden, double Burr arch trusses design with the addition of steel hanger rods. It is the only double-span covered bridge still in use. The other double-span bridge, Herr’s Mill Covered Bridge, is located on private property. The bridge’s deck is made from oak planks. It is painted red, the traditional color of Lancaster County covered bridges on the outside, but is not painted on the inside. Both approaches to the bridge are painted in the traditional white color.

The bridge’s WGCB Number is 38-15-22/38-36-41. Added in 1980, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as structure number 80003521. It is located at (39.7935, -76.04433).

Contents


History

The bridge was built in 1884 by Elias McMellen.


Dimensions

  • Length: 198 feet (60.4 m) or 204 feet (62.2 m) total length. Note:McCain cites the length as 198 feet while the county’s visitor’s guide cites the length as 204 feet.
  • Width: 15 feet (4.6 m) total width


Gallery


See also

  • Burr arch truss
  • List of Lancaster County covered bridges


External links


References

Links

Sides of an equation | B-Side Ho! Ho! Ho!

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

In mathematics, LHS is informal shorthand for the left-hand side of an equation. Similarly, RHS is the right-hand side. Each is solely a name for a term as part of an expression; and they are in practice interchangeable, since equality is symmetric. This abbreviation is seldom if ever used in print; it is very informal.

More generally, these terms may apply to an inequation or inequality. In the inequality case, there is no symmetry. The right-hand side is everything on the right side of a test operator in an expression. Conversely, the left-hand side is everything on the left side.

Contents


Some examples

In

2a + 5 = a/3,

the term

a/3

is the RHS.

In

x ≤ 10,

just

10

is the RHS.


Homogeneous and inhomogeneous equations

In solving mathematical equations, particularly linear simultaneous equations, differential equations and integral equations, the terminology homogeneous is often used for equations with the RHS set equal to zero. The corresponding inhomogeneous or nonhomogeneous equation then has the RHS with some given data, but of a general character.

The typical case is of some operator L, with the difference being that between the equation

Lf = 0,

to be solved for a function f, and the equation

Lf = g,

with g a fixed function, to solve again for f. The point of the terminology appears for L a linear operator. Then any solution of the inhomogeneous equation may have a solution of the homogeneous equation added to it, and still remain a solution.

For example in mathematical physics, the homogeneous equation may correspond to a physical theory formulated in empty space, while the inhomogeneous equation asks for more ‘realistic’ solutions with some matter, or charged particles.


Syntax

More abstractly, when using infix notation

T*U

the term T stands as the left-hand side and U as the right-hand side of the operator *. This usage is less common, though.


See also

  • equal sign
  • operator

Links

Wintry showers | Snow on Main

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Wintry showers is a somewhat informal meteorological term, used primarily in the United Kingdom, to refer to various mixtures of rain, freezing rain, sleet and snow. Professional meteorologists tend to shy away from using the term under any circumstances, but radio and television weather reporters use it regularly, the same way wintry mix is used in the United States.

Though no “official” criteria exist for the term, it is not used when any accumulation of snow on the ground takes place. It is often used when the temperature of the ground surface is above 0°C, preventing accumulation from occurring even if the air temperature is marginally below 0°C; but even then the falling precipitation must generally be something other than consisting exclusively of snow.


References

Links

Saint John’s College | albums Elton John’s

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

There are a number of colleges with the name St. John’s:

Contents


Australia

  • St John’s College, University of Sydney, a residential college at the University of Sydney
  • Saint John’s College, Whyalla, a secondary school in Whyalla
  • St. John’s College, University of Queensland, of the University of Queensland
  • St. John’s College (Sunshine Coast), a secondary school in Nambour, Queensland


Belize

  • St. John’s College, Belize


Canada

  • St. John’s College, University of Manitoba of the University of Manitoba
  • St. John’s College, University of British Columbia, a residential college at the University of British Columbia
  • St. John’s College (Brantford), a Roman Catholic High School in Brantford, Ontario


Ghana

  • St. John’s College (Ghana), a Congregation of the Holy Cross secondary school


Hong Kong

  • St. John’s College, University of Hong Kong, a residential college at the University of Hong Kong


India

  • St John’s College, Agra, India


New Zealand

  • St John’s College, Auckland
  • St. John’s College, Hamilton


South Africa

  • St John’s College (Johannesburg, South Africa)


Sri Lanka

  • St. John’s College, Jaffna


United Kingdom

  • St John’s College, Cambridge, of the University of Cambridge, England
  • St John’s College, Durham, of the University of Durham, England
  • St John’s College, Nottingham, a Church of England theological college in Nottingham, England
  • St John’s College, Oxford, of the University of Oxford, England
  • St John’s College, Portsmouth, a private secondary school in Portsmouth, England
  • St John’s College, St Andrews, original foundation of St. Mary’s College of the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, 1418-1527
  • York St John University, in York, England


United States

  • St. John’s College, U.S., one college on two campuses in Annapolis, Maryland and Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • St. John’s University, New York, New York City, (formerly St. John’s College)
  • St. John’s College (1841 until 1907) in the Bronx, New York was the progenitor of Fordham University
  • St. John’s College, Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio (1854-ca. 1974)
  • St. John’s College, Toledo, Toledo, Ohio (1898-?)
  • St. John’s Seminary (Massachusetts) in Brighton, Massachusetts
  • St. John’s Seminary (California) in Camarillo, California
  • St. John’s College High School was known St. John’s College from 1887 until 1921


Zimbabwe

  • St. John’s College (Harare, Zimbabwe), a private high school in Harare, Zimbabwe


See also

  • Saint John’s University (disambiguation)
  • Saint John’s (disambiguation)

Links

Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party | MVMCP

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party is a hard ticket event hosted at the Magic Kingdom theme park. Beginning around the Thanksgiving weekend, and running until Christmas.


Events

In previous years the party has consisted of-

  • A special Christmas themed parade down main street
  • Mickey reading Twas’ the Night before Christmas
  • A Christmas themed Wishes
  • Snow on Main Street
  • Cookies and Hot Chocolate are served throughout the park


See also

  • Walt Disney World Christmas Day Parade


External links

  • Official Walt Disney World MVMCP website
  • MVMCP Park Map from 2004
  • Disney Christmas Favorites, Vol. 1

Links

Shovel Headed Kill Machine | bonus

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Shovel Headed Kill Machine, released in 2005, is the seventh studio album by thrash metal band Exodus. This is the first studio album with Rob Dukes on vocals.


Track listing

  1. “Raze” (Dukes, Holt) – 4:16
  2. “Deathamphetamine” (Holt) – 8:30
  3. “Karma’s Messenger” (Dukes, Holt) – 4:13
  4. “Shudder to Think” (Holt) – 4:48
  5. “I Am Abomination” (Holt) – 3:25
  6. “Altered Boy” (Holt) – 7:36
  7. “Going Going Gone” (Holt) – 4:58
  8. “Now Thy Death Day Come” (Holt) – 5:11
  9. “44 Magnum Opus” (Holt) – 6:56
  10. “Shovel Headed Kill Machine” (Holt) – 2:57


Bonus Tracks

  • Limited Digipack Bonus Track

    • “Purge the World” (Holt) - 4:00
  • LP Bonus Tracks

    • <li value=11>”Problems” (Jones, Matlock, Cook, Rotten) – x:xx
    • “Purge the World” (Holt) – 4:00
  • Japanese Bonus Track

    • <li value=11>”Problems” (Jones, Matlock, Cook, Rotten) – x:xx
  • Korean Bonus Track

    • <li value=11>”Purge the World” (Holt) – 4:00
  • “Problems” is a cover version of a Sex Pistols song.


Band Line-Up

  • Rob Dukes (Vocals)
  • Gary Holt (Guitars)
  • Rick Hunolt (Guitars)
  • Jack Gibson (Bass)
  • Paul Bostaph (Drums)

Links

Under the Sun | was originally released as

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Under The Sun is an album recorded by Paul Kelly & The Coloured Girls and originally released in 1987.

It was released on Mushroom Records in Australia and was the second album for both Paul Kelly & The Coloured Girls. In the U.S., it was released on A&M Records with the band credited as Paul Kelly & The Messengers.


Track listing

  1. “Dumb Things”
  2. “Same Old Walk”
  3. “Big Heart”
  4. “Don’t Stand So Close To The Window”
  5. “Forty Miles To Saturday Night”
  6. “I Don’t Remember A Thing ”
  7. “Know Your Friends”
  8. “To Her Door”
  9. “Under The Sun”
  10. “Untouchable”
  11. “Desdemona”
  12. “Happy Slave”
  13. “Crosstown”
  14. “Bicentennial”
  15. “Bradman” ^
  16. “Pastures Of Plenty” ^

(Track-listing from original Australian vinyl/cassette release; tracks marked ^ were added to the first Australian CD release and did not originally feature. U.S. and UK releases differed slightly in both Track Listing and Sequencing. The UK release also featured slightly different mixes of certain songs.)


Credits

  • Produced by Alan Thorne and Paul Kelly
  • Engineered by Alan Thorne; assisted by Kathy Naunton
  • Recorded & mixed at Alberts and Trafalgar Studios

Links

Bilateral Netting | later included

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

Bilateral netting is a legally enforceable arrangement between a bank and a counterparty that creates a single legal obligation covering all included individual contracts. This means that a bank’s obligation, in the event of the default or insolvency of one of the parties, would be the net sum of all positive and negative fair values of contracts included in the bilateral netting arrangement.

Links

Hot dog bun | the B-Side Ho! Ho!

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

A hot dog bun is a type of bun shaped specifically to contain a hot dog. There are two basic types: top loading, which is popular in New England, and side loading, preferred in the South and Midwest United States.

The advantages to a top loader are that it holds the hot dog securely and fits nicely into little three sided paper boxes. Top loaders are generally baked side by side and torn apart as needed, leaving a flat side surface for grilling.

Side loaders tend to be doughier, so are more likely to successfully sop up all the juices from chili or sauerkraut without falling apart.


External links

  • History of the Hot Dog


See also

  • Sausage bun

Links

Marchosias | appears

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

In demonology, Marchosias is a powerful Great Marquis of Hell, commanding thirty legions of demons. He is a strong and excellent fighter and very reliable to the conjurer, giving true answers to all questions. Marchosias hoped after one thousand and two hundred years to return to heaven with the non-fallen angels, but he is deceived in that hope. He is the supposed creator of Baltzegaurd, an immensly powerful creature neither demon or angelic but simply known as a ‘Wanderer of the Worlds.’

He is depicted as a wolf, a she-wolf, or an ox, that under request changes shape into a man.

The name Marchosias comes from Late Latin ‘marchio’, marquis.

Other spellings: Marchocias.

See also The Lesser Key of Solomon, Ars Goetia.


In Modern Culture

  • Marchosias appears in the comic book B.P.R.D.: The Universal Machine, released on August 4th, 2006. He is depicted as a monstrous red demon with a lupine face. Marchosias and Iblifika, another demon, are prisoners of an ageless marquis, and are set free by Kate Corrigan.
  • Marchosias appears in Alan Moore’s comic book series Promethea where he is summoned with the demon Andras by the magician Benny Solomon to put a hit out on the title character. Promethea defeats him and Andras at a fight at a nightclub. Later in the series, Benny Solomon summons the entire Ars Goetia to attack Promethea, and Marchosias appears again.

Links

Eightball gun | Other versions

Thursday, May 1st, 2008


The eightball gun is a weapon from the first-person shooter computer game series, Unreal.


The eightball gun’s primary and secondary fire functions

The eightball gun’s primary fire functions are its capability to load up to six rocket propelled grenades and firing them horizontally in a line. You are also able to fire them in a tight circle by holding down primary fire in tandem with secondary fire. If you hover your aiming reticule over an enemy, the crosshair will turn red, meaning the weapon has locked onto it, in which it then gives the rocket propelled grenades a homing capability.

The secondary fire’s function merely launches up to six unignited grenades (however many are loaded).
The local Nali call this weapon : The Stick of 6 Fires.


Versions of the eightball gun

The original eightball gun has made appearances in both Unreal and Unreal Mission Pack: Return to Na Pali (or better known as Upak).

Other versions of the eightball gun have appeared in several Unreal games. In Unreal Tournament, it was more properly known as the rocket launcher, yet still had all the original functions of the eightball gun. In Unreal Tournament 2003, Unreal Tournament 2004, Unreal Championship, and Unreal Championship 2: The Liandri Conflict, the eightball gun has made more appearances in the form of a three barrelled rocket launcher that fires one rocket at a time with primary fire, and secondary fire enabled you to shoot three rockets at the same time (the tight circle function was also in these versions).

Links

Royal College of Pathologists | Be Continued and The

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

The Royal College of Pathologists, was founded in 1962, and is a medical organisation that promotes and sets standards for the study and practice of pathology.

The College has oversight of the following main disciplines

  • Histopathology

    • Neuropathology
    • Cytopathology
    • Paediatric pathology
  • Chemical Pathology
  • Haematology (with the Royal College of Physicians)
  • Immunology (with the Royal College of Physicians)
  • Microbiology & Virology

Contents


Training and Examinations

The College is responsible for oversight of postgraduate education and training in all branches of pathology in the UK.

The College has an active educational programme and sponsors workshops, lectures and courses.


Continued Professional Development

The College runs a national scheme for oversight of continued education of pathologists in clinical practice.


Membership

Membership in the College can be obtained by several routes, the most usual being via a postgraduate examination, indicated with the designation Member of the Royal College of Pathologists (MRCPath). The designation Fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists (FRCPath) is bestowed upon members who are in good standing, as an indication of seniority.


Presidents

Professor Sir James Underwood 2004-2006


External links

  • Royal College of Pathologists, UK

Links

Democratic Socialist Party (Argentina) | Party is

Monday, April 28th, 2008

The Democratic Socialist Party (Spanish: Partido Socialista Popular) was a political party in Argentina formed in 1959 as a division of the Socialist Party.

The most important figure of the PSD was Alfredo Bravo, a teacher and civil rights activist, which was a deputy and the presidential candidate of the Socialist Party in the 2003 elections.

The party joined the Popular Socialist Party in 2002 to form the Socialist Party.

Links

Raj Bhavan (Goa) | links Official

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Raj Bhavan (Hindi for Government House) is the official residence of the Governor of Goa. It is located in the capital city of Panaji, Goa. The present governor of Goa is S. C. Jamir


History

During the Portuguese regime, it was the official residence of the Governor General of Goa and was known as “Palacio do Cabo”. After the liberation of Goa, Goa along with Daman and Diu became a union territory of India and hence “Palacio do Cabo” became “Cabo Raj Niwas” the official residence of the Lt. Governor of the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu. When Goa got statehood in 1987, the building was renamed to Raj Bhavan to match the names of other official residences of governors of states in India.

It is located at the extreme end of a narrow cape jutting into the Arabian Sea. Situated on the rim of the water-space formed by the merging of the perennial rivers of Mandovi, on one side, and Zuari, on the other, into the Arabian Sea.


External links

  • The official web site of Governor of Goa

Links

Oak Park | MVMCP Park

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Oak Park or Oaks Park is the name of some places around the world.

In the United States of America:

  • Oak Park, California
  • Oak Park, Georgia
  • Oak Park, Illinois
    • Oak Park (Metra), a railroad station
    • Oak Park Township, Cook County, Illinois
  • Oak Park, Indiana
  • Oak Park, Michigan
  • Oak Park, Minnesota
  • Oaks Amusement Park in Portland, Oregon
  • Oaks Pioneer Park in Portland, Oregon
  • Oaks Park (Stadium) in Emeryville, California

In Australia:

  • Oak Park, Victoria

    • Oak Park railway station, Melbourne

In the United Kingdom:

  • Oaks Park, Carshalton

Links

Tangos | performed by

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Tangos is a flamenco cante closely related in form and feeling to the Rumba. It is often performed as a finale to a Tientos. Its compass and llamada are the same as that of the Farruca and share the Farruca’s lively nature. However, Tangos is normally performed in the A Phrygian mode.

Tangos is distinct from the Rumba primarily through the guitar playing. In Rumba the guitar flows more freely, whereas in Tangos the accents on beats 2, 3 & 4 are marked clearly with heavy strumming.

Tangos flamenco is not related to Argentine Tango, besides binary compás (rhythm).

Links