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38770175#0 | Claude Rubie | Lt.-Col. Claude Blake Rubie CBE (25 March 1888 – 3 November 1939) was an English amateur first-class cricketer and soldier. |
38770175#1 | Claude Rubie | Rubie was a right-handed batsman and wicketkeeper. He was a British Army Special Reserve Major (later Lieut-Colonel) who saw long service in India and played for the Europeans in the Bombay Quadrangular between 1919 and 1926. He played a prominent part in the development of cricket in the Karachi area, where he played most of his cricket. He captained three of the local teams that opposed the MCC on its tour of India in 1926–27 before returning to England and representing Sussex in four matches in 1930. In 1928, with B. D. Shanker, he wrote "A History of the Sind Cricket Tournament and Karachi Cricket in General". |
38770175#2 | Claude Rubie | In recognition of his knowledge of Indian cricket, Rubie was appointed to manage the England national cricket team's tour of India in 1939–40. The team was selected but the outbreak of the Second World War on 1 September 1939 caused its immediate cancellation. On 3 November that year, when the tour would have been under way, Rubie died of a heart attack after an operation. |
38770175#3 | Claude Rubie | Rubie was born at Lewes and died at Hove, both in Sussex. He made 10 first-class appearances, scoring 245 runs @ 24.50 with a highest innings of 84, his sole half-century. He held 16 catches and completed 7 stumpings to average more than two victims per match. |
38770178#0 | Eleni Evangel | Eleni Evangel is a former Australian politician who was the member for the Western Australian Legislative Assembly seat of Perth from 2013 to 2017. She was a City of Perth councillor between 2005 and 2013. |
38770178#1 | Eleni Evangel | Evangel, who is of Greek descent, was born in Perth and has a teaching and television presenting background. She is the daughter of Tassos Parissis, once a prominent nightclub and restaurant owner in Northbridge.
She was elected to the Legislative Assembly seat of Perth at the general election of 9 March 2013. She attained 48.6% of the primary vote and won on preferences. |
38770200#0 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | The National Museum, Bloemfontein dates back to the 1870s, when its collections and displays comprised mainly rarities from around the world. It was established on 20 July 1877 and opened to the public on 20 May 1878. The old Raadsaal building was made available by the then Free State Volksraad for hosting the Museum collections. A new museum building was completed in 1913 and the official opening took place in 1915. Since 1881 the museum has been subsidised mainly by government. Through donations, purchases and exchange agreements the Museum’s collections slowly got established and grew to a wide variety of natural and human science artefacts. |
38770200#1 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | The first honorary curator was Dr Hugh Exton. The first director, Dr E.C.N. van Hoepen, was appointed in January 1922. Staff numbers increased from six permanent members in 1951 to 130 members in 1985. |
38770200#2 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | Since its founding the Museum has developed into an institution of international stature, focusing on natural history, cultural history and art. Intensive research is carried out in these varied disciplines, and valuable and important collections have been established. Through its displays and education programmes, the Museum renders a public service to its diverse audiences, engaging them in enjoyable and enlightening experiences and enriching the learning opportunities of all individuals. |
38770200#3 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | The Museum currently includes 13 research departments (both Natural Sciences and Human Sciences), an Art Museum, Education Department, Information Services section / Library, an Administration section, and two technical departments.. |
38770200#4 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | Satellites to the National Museum are Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Freshford House Museum, The First Raadsaal and Wagon Museum, as well as Florisbad Quaternary Research Station. |
38770200#5 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | On 19 July 1985 Oliewenhuis was handed over to the National Museum to be developed into an art museum. Oliewenhuis was erected in 1941 as residence of the Governor-General of the Union of South Africa. Oliewenhuis Art Museum collects exclusively South African art and its collection consists of paintings, sculpture and graphic art. The pride of the collection is the Pierneef paintings, and the paintings of Bloemfontein done by Thomas Baines in 1851. |
38770200#6 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | Florisbad is an internationally important fossil locality which has produced an archaic modern human skull in addition to valuable archaeological and palaeontological material. In 1912 an earthquake opened up a new spring at the Florisbad mineral spring, and fossil bones and stone artefacts were brought to the surface with the water. In 1932 the well known Florisbad human cranium was discovered. In 1980 Florisbad was bought by the South African Government for research purposes and was placed under the administration of the National Museum, Bloemfontein. |
38770200#7 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | Freshford is one of the few houses of the Edwardian period that still exists in Bloemfontein. The house was designed and built by the architect, John Edwin Harrison. Freshford House was completed in 1897. The house was acquired by the National Museum in 1982, restored to its former glory and was opened in 1986. |
38770200#8 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | The First Raadsaal was built by Maj. H.D. Warden, as a typical South African pioneer's building in 1849. It was the first school building north of the Orange River. It served as a church until 1852 and it was used by the Legislative Council of the Orange River Sovereignty and the Orange Free State Republic as Assembly Hall and offices. When the Assembly moved to larger premises the building reverted to its use as a school, which it remained until 1877. In that year it housed the newly established National Museum. In 1975 the old Raadsaal was once again vacated and transferred to the National Museum. |
38770200#9 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | The Wagon Museum is situated on the same premises as the First Raadsaal |
38770200#10 | National Museum, Bloemfontein | Museum. It houses a collection of historical wagons and carriages. |
38770207#0 | Vingtaine du Coin Varin | Vingtaine du Coin Varin is one of the five vingtaines of St Peter Parish on the Channel Island of Jersey. |
38770222#0 | Albennie Jones | Albennie Jones (29 November 1914 – 24 June 1989), also credited as Albinia Jones, was an American blues and jazz singer who recorded in the mid and late 1940s. |
38770222#1 | Albennie Jones | She was born in Errata, Mississippi. She grew up in Gulfport where she sang in the Mount Holy Baptist Church, before moving to New York City in 1932. Her first professional engagement as a singer was at Elk's Rendezvous Club, where she was so successful that she was retained for nine months. She also sang in other clubs, including the Club Harlem, the Village Vanguard and Murrains Café. |
38770222#2 | Albennie Jones | She first recorded, as Albinia Jones, for National Records in late 1944, with a band that included electric guitarist Leonard Ware and pianist Cliff Jackson. The following year, her accompanists also included trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, saxophonist Don Byas and pianist Sammy Price. She was promoted at the time as the "New Queen of the Blues", and toured widely with Blanche Calloway, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Tiny Bradshaw and the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra. As Albennie Jones, she recorded again with Price for Decca Records in 1947 and 1949. One of her last recordings with Price in February 1949 was a rocking R&B number, "Hole In The Wall", co-written by record producer Milt Gabler and featuring the line ""we're going to rock and roll at the Hole in the Wall tonight"", a notably early use of the phrase. |
38770222#3 | Albennie Jones | Following an onstage fall in the early 1950s, she had to use a crutch at her club performances, and shortly afterwards retired from the music business. She later suffered from leukaemia. She died in The Bronx, New York City, in 1989, at the age of 74. |
38770233#0 | Penrose, North Carolina | Penrose is an unincorporated community in Transylvania County, North Carolina, United States. Penrose is located on U.S. Route 64 east-northeast of Brevard. Penrose has a post office with ZIP code 28766. |
38770253#0 | David Basa | David Mark Basa is a Filipino footballer who plays for JP Voltes in the Philippines Football League. |
38770253#1 | David Basa | Basa began playing football in high school at the Colegio de San Juan de Letran. He continued playing in college, becoming captain of the University of Santo Tomas team. |
38770253#2 | David Basa | Basa has trained with the Philippines national football team repeatedly and was selected for the 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup finals, but did not appear in the tournament. He played in a 2010 AFF Suzuki Cup qualifying match against Cambodia in October 2010. |
38770253#3 | David Basa | Basa has also participated with the Philippines national under-23 football team. |
38770266#0 | King's Bastion | King's Bastion is a coastal bastion on the western front of the fortifications of the British overseas territory of Gibraltar, protruding from the Line Wall Curtain. It is located between Line Wall Road and Queensway and overlooks the Bay of Gibraltar . It played a crucial role in defending The Rock during the Great Siege of Gibraltar. In more recent history the bastion was converted into a generating station which powered Gibraltar's electricity needs. Today it continues to serve the community as Gibraltar's leisure centre. |
38770266#1 | King's Bastion | King's Bastion is located at the junction of Queensway and Reclamation Road on the western side of the British overseas territory of Gibraltar. The bastion is believed to have started as a Moorish city gate but was later developed by the Spanish in 1575 to become the . Construction began in 1773, when Lieutenant-general Sir Robert Boyd (1710–1794), then Governor of Gibraltar, laid the first stone and declared: "This is the first stone of a work which I name the King's Bastion: may it be as gallantly defended, as I know it will be ably executed." The bastion was designed by Lieutenant colonel Sir William Green, Chief Engineer of the Soldier Artificer Company which later became the Corps. of Royal Engineers. At the time it was built, the King's Bastion was the most important of Gibraltar's defences on the west. Its arrowhead shape extended from the curtain wall fortification, known as the Line Wall, along Gibraltar's western coast into the Bay of Gibraltar. It was consistent with traditional notions of a bastion. It included casemates, which fulfilled the need for barracks, and housed 800 men. Less than a decade later, in 1782, King's Bastion served ably as the command post in the defence against the attacks of the French and Spanish during the Great Siege of Gibraltar. It was from the bastion, that the "Grand Attack" of the Spanish floating batteries was orchestrated. The floating batteries had been adapted to withstand heavy shelling and were anchored only or so off the Rock. Designed by French engineer Jean Claude le Michaud d'Arcon they were equipped with specially reinforced hulls, irrigation pumps to quench any fires and pitched roofs to protect against plunging fire from shot. These modifications were thought to have made the ships unsinkable. The garrison quickly realised that red hot shots known as "hot potatoes", were extremely effective against the floating batteries and they were all eventually destroyed by fire. It was from King's Bastion that the first "hot potatoes" were fired at the Spanish floating batteries. |
38770266#2 | King's Bastion | Twenty-five guns had been installed in the bastion by 1859. They included seventeen 32-pounders, six 8-inch smoothbore weapons, and two 10-inch howitzers. In 1874, the embrasures at the front of the bastion were eliminated to permit installation of five muzzle-loading rifles (RMLs). All five RMLs had been mounted by 1878, where they remained until 1902. By the late 19th century, the bastion no longer served as a principal military defence. The turn of the century was remarkable for the reclamation of land in front of King's Bastion, as part of the new dockyard. The bastion was repurposed, and the casemates, no longer needed as barracks, housed coal stores. In addition, the area's first electricity-generating station was built there, with construction starting in 1896. |
38770266#3 | King's Bastion | A plaque "(pictured below)" installed on the northern façade of King's Bastion acknowledges the role of General George Augustus Eliott, 1st Baron Heathfield, the Governor of Gibraltar, in his command during the Great Siege. In addition, Major General Sir Robert Boyd was at his request interred inside a vault at the bastion's base, which he had included at the time of construction. However, there is no record of the exact location of the grave. A memorial stone was placed within the King's Chapel but the marble stone in the King's Bastion read: |
38770266#4 | King's Bastion | "Within the walls of this bastion are deposited the mortal remains of the late General Sir Robert Boyd, K.B., governor of this fortress, who died on 13 May 1794, aged 84 years. By him the first stone of the bastion was laid in 1773, and under his supervision it was completed, when, on that occasion, in his address to the troops, he expressed a wish to see it resist the combined efforts of France and Spain, which wish was accomplished on 13 Sept. 1782, when, by the fire of this bastion, the flotilla expressly designed for the capture of this fortress were utterly destroyed." |
38770266#5 | King's Bastion | The bastion underwent further modifications in the 20th century. Concrete bunkers were constructed and the structure became a lookout post. In addition, a 6 pounder anti-tank gun was mounted. After the 20th century wars, the bastion also became a saluting battery, employing four 25 pounders. The bastion's years as a military structure came to an end in 1961, when the "King's Bastion Power Station", designed by local architect Natalio Langdon was built adjacent to the bastion's northern façade and opened in October of that year. While the previous electricity-generating station was under military authority, the "King's Bastion Power Station" was under the civil authority of the Government of Gibraltar. Oil storage and administration offices, among other facilities required for the day-to-day running of the station were housed within the vaults of the bastion itself. However, the generating station became obsolete during the late 1980s and closed down during the early 1990s. |
38770266#6 | King's Bastion | The "King's Bastion Power Station" was demolished in October 2005, during which the original façade of the bastion was revealed. King's Bastion is listed with the Gibraltar Heritage Trust. Alexis Almeida, Chairman of the Trust indicated that the bastion was "the last major battery built in this style and so is very important. We would love to restore King's Bastion to its former glory, it is magnificent and deserves to be seen." After extensive refurbishment, the "King's Bastion Leisure Centre" opened on 28 February 2008. It was officially inaugurated as a leisure centre on 1 March 2008 by the then Chief Minister of Gibraltar, Peter Caruana. Facilities include, ice skating, cinemas, bowling, arcade games, fitness gym, al fresco dining, youth lounge, internet area and a nightclub. |
38770266#7 | King's Bastion | Following the demolition of the adjacent modern building which housed part of the generating station, the bastion was redeveloped for leisure activities while still maintaining the integrity of the bastion architecture as an important heritage site. The ice skating rink and cinema are housed on the upper level. The new building has not compromised the structure of the bastion, as the main part of the leisure centre sits within the bastion's courtyard and is only lightly tied to the walls of the historic building. Old maps, photographs and diagrams on the history of the bastion are on display at various locations within the centre. |
38770278#0 | Wellington Front | Wellington Front is a fortification in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. It was built in 1840 on a site established by the Spanish in 1618. |
38770278#1 | Wellington Front | Wellington Front is a long stretch of curtain wall that forms part of the Line Wall Curtain. It stands on the site of the old city wall built during the Moorish period and subsequently modified by the Spanish and British. The Moorish wall had significant weaknesses which were pointed out as early as 1770, notably the fact that it had no advanced works to protect it from being bombarded or assaulted. These problems were tackled during the 1840s when Prince Albert's and Wellington Front were built to straighten and strengthen the line of the curtain wall. |
38770278#2 | Wellington Front | The British proposed in 1826 to add a large bastion to the front but did not take the plan forward.
In 1840, Major-General John Thomas Jones arrived to inspect the defences of Gibraltar. Jones advised on improvements for Gibraltar's fortifications including Parson's Lodge Battery and Wellington Front, which was named after the Duke of Wellington. The front was subsequently redesigned to mount heavy guns behind a curtain wall bounded by two demi-bastions. The demi-bastions were constructed on the sites of old Spanish platforms; the north one used to be the "Plataforma de San Diego" and the south one the "Plataforma de San Francisco". Casemated accommodation was also built along the front to enable troops to shelter in relative safety. |
38770278#3 | Wellington Front | Wellington Front was one of the last of Gibraltar's fortifications to be built by convict labour. 900 convicts were involved in its construction while they were housed in a prison ship called which was docked at Gibraltar Harbour. It was later estimated that local labour was cheaper, more productive and they could legally work for longer hours than British convicts. |
38770278#4 | Wellington Front | The front was rearmed in the late 1850s with seven 68-pdrs. By 1863 it mounted six 68-pdrs., four 32-pdrs. and four-8 inch SB guns to provide flank defence. These were replaced in 1878 by a single 12.5-inch rifled muzzle loader (RML) gun weighing 36 tons – one of six brought to Gibraltar in 1877 – that was protected by an iron shield. The gun has since been removed, but its emplacement is still clearly visible on top of the face of the front's right bastion. |
38770283#0 | Hesse's Demi Bastion | Hesse's Demi Bastion is a demi-bastion in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. It is part of the Northern Defences of Gibraltar. The bastion forms a link in a chain of fortifications which ascend the lower north-west slopes of the Rock of Gibraltar, below the King's Lines Battery and Bombproof Battery. The Moorish Castle's Tower of Homage is at the top of the same incline. |
38770283#1 | Hesse's Demi Bastion | It was originally the "Baluado de S. Pedro" (St. Peter's Bastion) during the Spanish period prior to the Capture of Gibraltar in 1704 under Prince George of Hesse-Darmstadt, after whom the bastion is named. The old Spanish bastion was rebuilt and renamed by the British in 1730. In 1762, during the Seven Years' War, it was armed with two 18-pdrs and four 4-pdrs to flank the ditch in front of the Landport Gate. By 1885 the bastion's guns were all 32-pdrs. |
38770288#0 | Module Marketplace | In the field of industrial control systems, Module Marketplace is an online store, similar in concept to: the iTunes Store or Google Play for the SCADA software industry. Inductive Automation opened it on March 4, 2013. |
38770288#1 | Module Marketplace | The Module Marketplace is designed for the users and developers of the Ignition integrated development platform. All modules are developed using the Ignition software development kit (SDK). Some modules are free while others are for sale. The Marketplace contains both Inductive Automation and third-party modules for Ignition software. |
38770288#2 | Module Marketplace | Early reviews compared the Module Marketplace to the Apple iTunes store, indicated that it was disruptive and that it removed proprietary boundaries among SCADA software producers. |
38770288#3 | Module Marketplace | Developers set their own pricing models in the marketplace, with 70% of the revenue going to the developer and 30% going to Inductive Automation. |
38770288#4 | Module Marketplace | Al1 modules are required to be submitted for validation to Inductive Automation to test for stability, compatibility and memory leaks. Upon validation, the module is digitally signed by Inductive Automation and may be uploaded to the Module Marketplace. All modules are required to include a free user re-settable 2-hour trial version. |
38770292#0 | Shell Presents | Shell Presents was an early attempt at Australian television drama, being an umbrella title for several different productions. It debuted on April 4, 1959, and aired on ATN-7 and GTV-9, who split production of plays for the series between them. It was an anthology series, each program being a self-contained play for television. The series won a Logie award in 1960 for "TV Highlight Of 1959". As the title suggests, it was sponsored by Shell. Though it usually presented straight drama, it also presented a live musical production titled "Pardon Miss Westcott", set in colonial-era Australia. A total of 13 productions aired under the "Shell Presents" banner from 1959 to 1960. There is little information about this series online, however, some of the productions are held at the National Film and Sound Archive |
38770292#1 | Shell Presents | Some of the productions were based on overseas plays (such as "Thunder of Silence"), while some were locally written, such as "The Big Day" (by Sydney author John Ford). |
38770292#2 | Shell Presents | An article in the 30 October 1960 edition of the Sydney Morning Herald called "Australian TV is growing up", while not mentioning it by name, nevertheless provides some information on the series. The article said that the production of "modestly unpretensious" soap opera "Autumn Affair" provided some of the experience needed to produce "Shell Presents" productions like "Johnny Belinda", and listed the cost to produce "Pardon Miss Westcott" at £5,000 (a considerable budget at the time). It mentions that work on a live drama production of the era started a month to six weeks before telecast, and that a video-tape of the final rehearsal was made so cast and camera crew could correct last minute faults. |
38770292#3 | Shell Presents | Five of the episodes may have been shown in Perth during 1960 on station TVW-7.
On 20 July 1959 a "Sydney Morning Herald" article said the program had an estimated audience of around 300,000 in both Sydney and in Melbourne. |
38770302#0 | Jumper's Bastion | Jumper's Bastion may refer to one of two adjacent bastions in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar. They were both created in 1785 on the sites of previous constructions and named for a British Captain who was one on the first on shore during the Capture of Gibraltar in 1704. |
38770302#1 | Jumper's Bastion | The bastions (north and south) are located along the Line Wall Curtain on the West Side of Gibraltar. They take their name from a Captain William Jumper who was one of the first officers to land ashore and capture the existing Spanish bastion on this site during the Capture of Gibraltar in August 1704. According to George Hills, the first two captains to come ashore were called Juniper (sic) and Hicks. They were sent by Captain Edward Whitaker when he saw that the Spanish guns covering the New Mole had been put out of action. |
38770302#2 | Jumper's Bastion | The Spanish called the northern bastion "Santa Cruz Bastion"; it was designed by the Florentine military architect Giovan Giacomo Paleari Fratino in 1575. After being captured by the British in 1704 and renamed the Eight Gun Battery, it was rebuilt in 1785. |
38770302#3 | Jumper's Bastion | In 1841, General Sir John Thomas Jones produced a report on Gibraltar's fortifications in which he proposed enlarging North Jumper's Bastion to its current proportions. It was rebuilt between 1844–7 into a demi-bastion with two flanks and one face. The long south flank has embrasures for six guns, underneath which are six casemated bombproof barracks, each with room for 32 men. Several ancillary rooms are also provided on the north and south flanks. Musketry embrasures were provided along the face and north flank. For a while, it was envisaged that the bastion would be replaced with a 24-gun flat bastion incorporating casemated barracks, along with a realignment of the curtain wall, but this was never realised. |
38770302#4 | Jumper's Bastion | The southern bastion was also rebuilt in 1785 on the site of an old sea gate. It has a flat face that runs parallel to the curtain wall and is more akin to a platform than a bastion, as it was designed to be defended through musket fire only. Accommodation is more modest than the northern bastion but it is on two levels and on two sides only. |
38770302#5 | Jumper's Bastion | In December 2017, the Government of Gibraltar announced that South Jumper's Bastion would form the basis of a new studio complex for the Gibraltar Broadcasting Corporation, which broadcasts GBC TV and Radio Gibraltar |
38770307#0 | List of Old Aquinians | List of notable Old Aquinians, who were students of Aquinas College Perth & Christian Brothers College, Perth (1894–1937, see List of Old Boys of Trinity College, Perth for period 1938–1961) |
38770307#1 | List of Old Aquinians | CabinetPresiding judges |
38770307#2 | List of Old Aquinians | Judges, superior courts |
38770307#3 | List of Old Aquinians | Air and general officers |
38770307#4 | List of Old Aquinians | Others, military |
38770307#5 | List of Old Aquinians | AFL |
38770307#6 | List of Old Aquinians | Others, Australian rules football |
38770307#7 | List of Old Aquinians | VFL
WAFLAustralian Test cricketers |
38770307#8 | List of Old Aquinians | Others, cricketAthletics |
38770307#9 | List of Old Aquinians | Hockey |
38770307#10 | List of Old Aquinians | Volleyball |
38770307#11 | List of Old Aquinians | Water polo |
38770307#12 | List of Old Aquinians | Alexander Maxwell CUNNINGHAM (Max) (Rower) W.A Kings Cup Rowing 8 Winning crew Launceston 1960 Australian Olympic 8 Oarsman Rome 1960 |
38770314#0 | Russ Robinson | Russ Robinson is an American heir and businessman. |
38770314#1 | Russ Robinson | His father was Jerome Robinson (1929-2009), the founder of U.S. Zinc and a prominent philanthropist in the Houston, Texas community. He graduated from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee in 1979. |
38770314#2 | Russ Robinson | From 1979 to 2002, he served as Chief Executive Officer of the family company, U.S. Zinc, and sold it to Imco Recycling. From 2002 to 2004, he served as Chief Executive Officer of Metaleurop, French-German publicly owned company specializing in zinc and lead. In 2006, he founded Steel Dust Recycling and sold it to Zinc Nacional in 2009. In 2010, he founded Global Steel Dust, a global steel dust recycling company headquartered in Switzerland. He currently serves as its Chief Executive Officer. The company has ongoing steel dust recycling plants projects in Saudi Arabia and South Korea. It recycles steel dust and produces crude zinc oxide for further reprocessing by zinc smelters. |
38770314#3 | Russ Robinson | He sits on the Board of Directors of Academi. |
38770317#0 | Joe (Inspiral Carpets song) | Joe is a single by British Alternative rock and psychedelic rock band Inspiral Carpets. It was released in 1989. |
38770317#1 | Joe (Inspiral Carpets song) | Written in 1985, it was first recorded on New Year's Eve 1987 as part of the demo album "Dung 4", which was released in May 1989. The original version was written by Clint Boon and sung by Stephen Holt, but when Tom Hingley joined the band in 1988, it was modified. The modified version, issued on the "Joe" 12" in 1989 became the standard, and it was still played even after Holt rejoined the band. |
38770317#2 | Joe (Inspiral Carpets song) | A music video for the song was filmed by an unknown avantgardist in 1990. It features shots of a homeless man and footage of a British cities including London ( including St. Paul's Cathedral and Christ Church, Spitalfields) mixed with shots of many-coloured lines running up and down the screen, filmed with a blue filter. The video was typical of many English "Indie" releases of the "Madchester" era. In 1995, to promote the release of "The Singles", another video was released, based on footage from "21790" and set to a shortened version of the song. |
38770317#3 | Joe (Inspiral Carpets song) | When played live as Hingley's modified version, the intro blast beat was repeated for exactly one minute. This can be heard on the "21790" live video. The Inspirals stopped extending the blast beat around 1991. Around the "Revenge of the Goldfish" era, the song, instead of abruptly ending, would instead have a final guitar strum and a final measure of Clint Boon's keyboards. Recent performances (both with Hingley and Holt) have returned to the studio-style ending. |
38770326#0 | Nadia Afgan | Nadia Afghan () is a Pakistani actress and comedian. She is best known for her various comic roles in television serials like "Shashlik" "Family front" " 2 or 2 chaar " 123" and "Zindan" aired by PTV Home. |
38770326#1 | Nadia Afgan | Nadia was born to a Muslim family in Quetta, Balochistan. She studied in University College of Art and Design, Lahore. |
38770326#2 | Nadia Afgan | Nadia started her career as an actress from PTV Lahore Center. Later she acted in many PTV drama serials and now she is being seen in different serials on all the public and private channels in Pakistan. Her credited roles are in Shashlik, Raju Rocket and Bilqees Kaur. She also acted in Banana News Network aired on Geo News. |
38770336#0 | Queen of Arsion Championship | The Queen of Arsion Championship was a women's professional wrestling championship owned by the Hyper Visual Fighting Arsion promotion. Like most professional wrestling championships, the title was won as a result of a scripted match. The championship, which was situated at the top of Arsion's championship hierarchy, was introduced on December 18, 1998, when Mariko Yoshida defeated Candy Okutsu to become the inaugural champion. The two contestants had earlier in the year won separate tournaments to qualify for the match. During the next four and a half years, there were eight reigns shared among six different wrestlers. The title was retired on August 24, 2003, two months after the folding of Arsion, when Yoshida defeated Mima Shimoda to become the final champion. |
38770336#1 | Queen of Arsion Championship | Mariko Yoshida was the first champion in the title's history. She also holds the records for most reigns, with three, and for the shortest reign in the title's history at less than one day. Aja Kong holds the record for the longest reign in the title's history at 485 days. Overall, there were eight reigns shared among six different wrestlers. |
38770337#0 | Sky High of Arsion Championship | The Sky High of Arsion Championship was a women's professional wrestling championship owned by the Hyper Visual Fighting Arsion promotion. Like most professional wrestling championships, the title was won as a result of a scripted match. The championship, which was meant for high-flying wrestlers, was introduced on September 23, 1999, when Chaparita Asari defeated Ayako Hamada in the finals of a tournament to become the inaugural champion. During the next four years, there were six reigns shared among five different wrestlers. The title was retired when Arsion went out of business on June 22, 2003, making Akino the final champion in the title's history. The title belt was later awarded as a trophy to Dark Angel, after she defeated Princesa Sujei at an Estrella★Japan event on April 5, 2010. |
38770337#1 | Sky High of Arsion Championship | Chaparita Asari was the first champion in the title's history. Akino holds the records for most reigns, with two, and for the longest reign in the title's history at 490 days, achieved on her second reign. Ayako Hamada holds the record for the shortest reign at 89 days. Overall, there were six reigns shared among five different wrestlers. |
38770338#0 | Twin Star of Arsion Championship | The Twin Star of Arsion Championship was a professional wrestling tag team championship owned by the Hyper Visual Fighting Arsion promotion. Like most professional wrestling championships, the title was won as a result of a scripted match. The championship was introduced on December 7, 1998, when Hiromi Yagi and Rie Tamada defeated Ayako Hamada and Tiger Dream in the finals of a tournament to become the inaugural champions. During the next four and a half years, there were thirteen reigns shared among thirteen different wrestlers and eleven teams. The title was retired when Arsion went out of business on June 22, 2003, making Rie Tamada and Takako Inoue the final champions in the title's history. |
38770338#1 | Twin Star of Arsion Championship | Hiromi Yagi and Rie Tamada were the first champion in the title's history. Las Cachorras Orientales' (Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda) only reign holds the record for the longest reign, at 343 days. Ayako Hamada's and Michiko Ohmukai's only reign holds the record for the shortest reign, at less than one day. The teams of Gami and Lioness Asuka, Gami and Rie Tamada, and Michiko Ohmukai and Mima Shimoda share the record for most reigns as a team, with two. Gami and Tamada also share the record for most reigns individually, with four. Overall, there were thirteen reigns shared among thirteen different wrestlers and eleven teams. |
38770357#0 | Szilvia Szeitl | Szilvia Szeitl (born 26 April 1987 in Budapest) is a Hungarian football defender currently playing in the Hungarian First Division for 1. FC Femina, with whom she has also played the Champions League. She is a member of the Hungarian national team. |
38770367#0 | Kaneti Felela | Kaneti Felela is a Tongan footballer who plays as a goalkeeper. |
38770367#1 | Kaneti Felela | Early in his career, he competed in athletics. |
38770387#0 | Kalang River (New South Wales) | Kalang River, a perennial river of the Bellinger River catchment, is located in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. |
38770387#1 | Kalang River (New South Wales) | Kalang River rises within the Great Dividing Range, near Brinerville, and flows generally east before reaching its mouth at the Tasman Sea of the South Pacific Ocean, east of Urunga. The river descends over its course. |
38770387#2 | Kalang River (New South Wales) | Parts of the Kalang River are contained within the Bellinger River National Park. |
38770387#3 | Kalang River (New South Wales) | Towards its mouth, the river is transversed by the Pacific Highway, near Urunga. |
38770393#0 | Sébastien Michalowski | Sébastien Michalowski (born 12 March 1978) is a retired French football defender. He was previously plays in CM Aubervilliers, Lille OSC, Montpellier HSC and FC Sète. He was born in Le Blanc-Mesnil. |
38770407#0 | The Truth of Lie | The Truth of Lie (Die Wahrheit der Lüge) is a German psycho-thriller directed by Roland Reber. It was released in 2012. |
38770407#1 | The Truth of Lie | Shot on an Arri Alexa camera, it had its theatrical release on 29 March 2012 in German cinemas and its DVD and Blu-ray release on 27 July 2012. |
38770411#0 | Arran (organization) | Arran (Catalan for "level with") is the youth organization of the Catalan Pro-Independence Left, result of the merger between Maulets and CAJEI and local groups (such as the Youth Assemblies of Terrassa, Sant Sadurní or Horta, a process which began in 2008 and concluded in 2012. |
38770411#1 | Arran (organization) | The organization announced its creation on Saturday 14 July 2012 in Berga, during the "Rebrot" Catalan youth gathering, which celebrated its eleventh edition, culminating in events at the Pi de les Tres Branques annual gathering. |
38770411#2 | Arran (organization) | Arran is defined as a marxist youth organization that "is committed to political and economic independence and reunification of the Catalan Countries, the attainment of socialism and overcoming patriarchy from a feminist perspective." |