#arthur halloran
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tenth-sentence · 1 year ago
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On the night before the raid, the magistrate Arthur Halloran had ridden out to the camp to discuss the awkward rumours.
"Killing for Country: A Family History" - David Marr
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writtenbyloperty · 1 day ago
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Auradon was created as an alliance of fourteen kingdoms in the year 2000. After three kingdoms were attacked by Villains in one year, Grand Duke Adam Nicodemus Basile and his wife, Grand Duchess Belle Susanne Basile née Poirot, hailed the heads of the Ruling Royal Families and established Auradon as we know it today. Now crowned High King Adam established a rank of peerage of the kingdoms.
AURADON Auradon City. Population 83,736. Most common language English. Sovereign [High King] Adam N., of the Noble House of Basile (2000-2020)
ALBION Camelot. Population 90,017. Most common languages Latin (ruling class) & Celtic. Sovereign [King] Arthur, of the Royal House of Pendragon.
OLYMPUS Olympus. Population 41,868. Most common language Greek. Sovereign [King] Zeus Astrapaeus Limenoscopus Zygia, of the Royal House of Komnenos.
ATLANTICA Atlantica. Population 31,401. Most common language Latin. Sovereign [King] Triton Proteus, of the Royal House of Komnenos, [Crown Princess] Attina Eudora, of the Royal House of Komnenos.
OCCITANIA Tolosa. Population 104,671. Most common language French. Sovereign [King] Maximillian Godfrey L. L. S. F. J. De Rege, of the Royal House of Capetian (1982- ), [Crown Prince] Christopher Rupert W. V. K. A. F. R. L. H. G. J. De Rege, of the Royal House of Capetian.
AGRABAH Constantinople. Population 355,880. Most common languages Turkish & Arabic. Sovereign [Sultan] Yasmin bint Hamed Burakgazi, of the Imperial Ottoman House (2008- ), [Vali Ahad] Aziz bint Yasmin bint Hamed Burakgazi, of the Imperial Ottoman House.
PROVENCE Istres. Population 54,429. Most common language German. Sovereign [Queen] Edel "Snow" Oelberg, of the Royal House of Piast (1993- ).
CEREDIGION Deheubarth. Population 81,643. Most common language English. Sovereign [King] Hubert Leon II, of the Royal House of Dunkeld (1984- ), [Crown Prince] Philip Burke Leon-Hier, of the Royal House of Dunkeld and Stuart.
GWYNEDD Caernarfon. Population 43,962. Most common language Gaeilge. Sovereign [King] Stefan Hier III, of the Royal House of Stuart (1979- ), [Crown Princess] Aurora Burke Leon-Hier, of the Royal House of Stuart and Dunkeld.
BURGUNDY Auxerre. Population 209,341. Most common language German. Sovereign [King] Fredrich "Fritz" Koenig, of the Royal House of Hohenzollern (1995- ), [Crown Prince] Florian Oelberg né Koenig, of the Royal House of Hohenzollern and Piast.
CORONA la Vella. Population 272,144. Most common language Spanish. Sovereign [Queen] Rapunzel Halloran, of the Royal House of Plantagenet (2009- ), [Crown Princess] Sophia Halloran, of the Royal House of Plantagenet.
FRANCIA Théroganne. Population 171,660. Most common language Danish. Sovereign [Konge] Eric Holm I, of the Royal House of Estridsen (1991- ), [Kronprinsesse] Melody Holm Pontoporea I, of the Royal House of Estridsen and Komnenos.
MALDONIA Chennai. Population 83,736. Most common language Tamil. Sovereign [Aracan] Priyan "Ralphie" A. Iyengar, of the Royal House of Rajarun (2009- ), [Piratiniti/Ilavaracan] Naveen A. Iyengar, of the Royal House of Rajarun.
DUNBROCH Skara Brae. Population 73,269. Most common language Gaelic. Sovereign [King] Fergus, Head of Clan DunBroch (1979- ), [Crown Princess] Merida, Heir of Clan DunBroch.
The Following Kingdom was introduced to Auradon in 2014.
15. CHINA Luoyang. Population 460,551. Most common language Chinese. Sovereign [Huangdi] Liu Wuhuai, of the Royal House of Liu (1974- ), [Chang Gong Zhu] Liu Guiying, of the Royal House of Liu.
If you got this far, why not read the fic on Ao3?
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mametupa · 6 years ago
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gingerteaonthetardis · 4 years ago
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In 2013, Kayla Moore, a black trans woman living with schizophrenia, was murdered by the Berkeley Police Department. The police were responding to a 911 call from Kayla’s roommate calling for help because Kayla was experiencing a mental health crisis. The officers immediately placed Kayla under arrest, wrestled her to the ground face down, and 6 officers restrained her using their full weight until she stopped breathing.
Police had found a warrant for someone with the same birth name as her. But despite police dispatch stating that it was for a man 20 years older than Kayla Moore, police still grabbed her and restrained her.
In 2014, Kayla’s father, Arthur Moore, filed a wrongful death suit against the city, which alleges that the responding officers violated Moore’s rights & failed to adequately accommodate her after she was placed in police custody. It was dismissed in 2018, when U.S. District Judge, Charles Breyer, ruled that Moore’s father, Arthur Moore, did not provide enough evidence to show that his daughter was discriminated against related to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The judge had previously dismissed the excessive force & discrimination claims alleged by Moore’s family back in 2016.
The family had alleged in their lawsuit that officers did not administer CPR because she was transgender, & that officers made discriminatory comments about her, calling her “it.”
Now, the family is pressing to have their case heard in front of a jury after the initial suit was dismissed by a U.S. District Court judge in 2018.
“The goal of the appeal is to allow a jury to fully examine the evidence related to the multiple claims in the family’s original lawsuit,” said Charlotte Halloran-Couch, an organizer with Justice 4 Kayla Moore. “We believe all of the family’s original claims deserve to be heard before a jury.”
The family’s claims include allegations of excessive force by BPD, unlawfully arresting Moore based on a warrant that was for another individual of the same legal name, & police discrimination against Moore for being transgender, according to Halloran-Couch.
Please sign this petition to support Kayla Moore’s family in appealing the wrongful death suit. Please sign to fight for the case to be reopened & properly examined & for her family to be heard.
Being mentally ill while black should not be a death sentence. BLACK TRANS LIVES MATTER. Sign the petition. Help Kayla’s family seek justice.
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goalhofer · 4 years ago
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2020-21 Ontario Reign Roster
Wingers
#7 Brett Sutter (Viking, Alberta) C
#11 Samuel Fagemo (Göteborg, Sweden)
#13 Johan Södergran (Stockholm, Sweden)
#18 Boko Imama (Montreal, Quebec) A
#21 Mikey Eyssimont (Littleton, Colorado)
#32 Nick Halloran (Draper, Utah)
#34 Arthur Kaliyev (Staten Island, New York)
#37 Jacob Doty (Cody, Wyoming)
Centers
#9 Rasmus Kupari (Kotka, Finland)
#12 Blaine Byron (Manotick, Ontario) A
#14 Akil Thomas (Orlando, Florida)
#19 Drake Rymsha (Toronto, Ontario)
#27 Tyler Madden (Deerfield Beach, Florida)
#39 Alex Turcotte (Island Lake, Illinois)
#47 Aidan Dudas (Parry Sound, Ontario)
#55 Quinton Byfield (Newmarket, Ontario)
Defensemen
#3 Cole Hults (Stoughton, Wisconsin)
#5 Mark Alt (St. Paul, Minnesota) A
#6 Sean Durzi (Mississauga, Ontario)
#8 Daniel Brickley (Millcreek, Utah)
#24 Cameron Gaunce (Markham, Ontario) A
#26 Markus Phillips (Pt. Perry, Ontario)
#33 Tobias Björnfot (Upplands Väsby, Sweden)
#38 Jack Sadek (Lakeville, Minnesota)
#43 Jacob Moverare (Östersund, Sweden)
Goalies
#1 Troy Grosenick (Brookfield, Wisconsin)
#31 Matt Villalta (Kingston, Ontario)
#35 Jean-François Bérubé (Repentigny, Quebec)
#68 Jacob Ingham (Barrie, Ontario)
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bomberqueen17 · 5 years ago
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if it’s not too much trouble, could you give a l little rundown of how to make/maintain a starter? I’ve read too many horror stories about them exploding but really want to try making sourdough, and I trust that you have a tried and true way that won’t explode on me!! thank you so much, and I hope your baking goes well!!
oh, the King Arthur Flour website has like, THE definitive explanation with Science and Weights And Measures And Such. And I sort of wrote a thing up, before, too, but well-- 
I do have sympathy, because my ADHD ass would absolutely never have taken up sourdough if I hadn’t by pure coincidence wound up assisting my sister hosting a workshop by Amy Halloran (author of The New Breadbasket, @flourambassador on Instagram, and also coincidentally my occasional babysitter when I was a tiny child) on sourdough that happened in late January, and after which I took home a little bit of starter.
So I will write my possibly-doing-it-wrong method here, in hopes that it might be more accessible, or might help if you’ve bounced off The Official Sources online. Because I do happen to have a couple minutes now while I’m waiting for my bread to proof! Also the children are locked in a dark closet, which I told them not to close the door of as they trooped up the stairs to look at their glow-in-the-dark stickers, and I just heard them yelling that they’d closed the door, so they’re gonna stay in there while I write this.
(I am kidding, their mom is on her way to release them now, but I thought it was hilarious. They literally locked themselves into a dark closet and at this very instant the kindergartner just came downstairs and won’t stop talking about how much she likes being locked in the closet so I guess we’re going to actually have locked-in-the-closet time every day henceforth, and that’s fucking hilarious so hang on while I email my family about that one. Oh my god the mouths of babes. Uhh also let that be a little disclaimer to you about how great I am at parenting, i.e. not.)
ANYWAY
Re: Exploding: the reason they’d explode is that they double in size, or more, when fed, and give off carbon dioxide I think as a byproduct of fermentation. So they’ll overflow. Maybe they’d also explode-- I use a fermentation lock thing so that gases can escape, because i have that kind of equipment lying around, but you could also just leave the jar lid unscrewed, or replace the center part of a mason jar lid with fabric or something breathable, or use a plastic tupperware with the lid ajar. And make sure your container has a lot of headroom. I do well by having a pint jar that I never let get more than about half full before a feeding, and I’ve got a silicone doohickey called a Pickle Pipe as the lid. But before I stole that from my boyfriend’s weird lactofermentation experiments I was just using a regular mason jar lid I didn’t screw on and just left loose.
SO, I have never made a starter from scratch. That’s something you’d have to read the King Arthur thing to find out how to do. I was given my starter as a little piece of Amy’s-- actually, I salvaged it out of the completed dough from a batch of English muffins she’d left rising overnight for us to bake, as the final result of the workshop. (It was great, she brought some ready-to-bake ones she’d set to rise that morning, and then brought the ingredients to mix up the dough, so she could just mix up a batch and then immediately pull out the eight-hours-later result and show us the rest.)
So, I got this little bit of starter, and put it into a pint Ball jar because i had one, and then as she demonstrated, every day you put in, like, a tablespoon of flour and a tablespoon of water, and stir it well. So I did that for a while and then I discovered you’re supposed to take some out when you do that? I was just feeding it until it was huge and then using a bunch of it up to make a batch of bread, and that seemed to be working just fine. (And the amounts-- I stopped measuring the water almost immediately, and just-- add flour and then put in enough water that it’s the pasty consistency I like. Some people like a really wet starter; mine is just wet enough that I can sort of pour it if I encourage it along by stirring it with a butter knife. Different drynesses encourage subtly different strains of bacteria, I think; dryer starter is more aerobic, and IDK what it all means really. I bet some of those videos I never watched explain it all.)
About discard, though: My sister finally explained to me that if you start off your feedings by stirring the starter down, then dumping half of it out, and THEN adding your flour and water, the starter is generally more enthusiastic and less intensely sour, and you don’t wind up with it trying to crawl out of the jar because your jar is too full. 
So, I got myself another jar (I think that was the idea of @chamerionwrites who also pointed out that a second container safely stored inert in the fridge also means you have a backup if your primary starter goes wrong somehow) and now every morning I stir the starter down, dump about half of it into the other jar, and then put the other jar back into the fridge. And then if I need to make something that takes A LOT of starter, I’ll take the discard out and feed it and let it warm up and use it for that, but mostly there are recipes that call for discard and I just make one of those every once in a while. (Waffles, english muffins, pancakes-- stuff like that. Just-- if you want to make discard into fed starter, all you have to do is feed it! It’s the same stuff, it just needs some love!)
There is absolutely no reason to actually discard discard, unless it gets moldy in your fridge or something. If you wind up with so much discard you’ll never use it, then actually sourdough probably isn’t working out great for you.
The thing to keep in mind is that you don’t have to feed your starter very much! But if you’re going to need a lot, then feed it a lot, and discard less generously. It really doesn’t matter. It’s mostly alive and things that are alive like to stay alive.
The only thing you ABSOLUTELY MUST do, is that you have to feed it every day, twice a day. You can miss one or the other, once in a while, but you MUST feed it reasonably consistently. l If you can’t do that, then look at the videos; a lot of people use methods where they put the starter to bed in the fridge, and they could tell you how to do that. I’ve only done it once, when I went away for a weekend. I put it to bed an hour or two after I fed it, and then several days later took it out and let it warm up a few hours before I fed it again. 
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byneddiedingo · 2 years ago
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The Naked City (Jules Dassin, 1948)
Cast: Barry Fitzgerald, Howard Duff, Don Taylor, Dorothy Hart, Frank Conroy, Ted de Corsia, House Jameson, Anne Sargent, Adelaide Klein, Grover Burgess, Tom Pedi, Enid Markey, voice of Mark Hellinger. Screenplay: Albert Maltz, Malvin Wald. Cinematography: William H. Daniels. Art direction: John DeCuir. Film editing: Paul Weatherwax. Music: Miklós Rózsa, Frank Skinner. This hugely influential police procedural won two Oscars, for William H. Daniels's cinematography and Paul Weatherwax's film editing. Which is as it should be: What excitement and interest the film has today, after years of derivative movies and TV shows, is in the documentation of New York City streets and landmarks in the years just after World War II and in the brilliantly paced chase scene that comes at the climax, when the murderer scales the Williamsburg Bridge to evade the cops pursuing him. The script now feels clichéd, even if some of the clichés were new, and the dialogue sometimes banal and over-expository. Nor does producer Mark Hellinger's occasionally pretentious voice-over narration sound right to the ear. Barry Fitzgerald overindulges his leprechaun schtick as Lt. Muldoon and Don Taylor is a bit too determinedly callow as Halloran. On the other hand, the supporting cast is convincingly real. It's fun to watch today for some faces that became familiar later, many of them performing on Broadway at the time the film was made and rounded up for bit parts. Look for Paul Ford, Kathleen Freeman, James Gregory, John Marley, Arthur O'Connell, David Opatoshu, Nehemiah Persoff, Molly Picon, and John Randolph among them. The director, Jules Dassin, and the screenwriters, Albert Maltz and Malvin Wald, were among those who fell afoul of the witch hunters of the blacklist in the 1950s.
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thisissparta789789 · 6 years ago
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A Joseph Agnello, Lad.118 Lt. Brian Ahearn, Bat.13 Eric Allen, Sqd.18 (D) Richard Allen, Lad.15 Cpt. James Amato, Sqd.1 Calixto Anaya Jr., Eng.4 Joseph Agnello, Lad.118 Lt. Brian Ahearn, Bat.13 Eric Allen, Sqd.18 (D) Richard Allen, Lad.15 Cpt. James Amato, Sqd.1 Calixto Anaya Jr., Eng.4 Joseph Angelini, Res.1 (D) Joseph Angelini Jr., Lad.4 Faustino Apostol Jr., Bat.2 David Arce, Eng.33 Louis Arena, Lad.5 (D) Carl Asaro, Bat.9 Lt. Gregg Atlas, Eng.10 Gerald Atwood, Lad.21
B Gerald Baptiste, Lad.9 A.C. Gerard Barbara, Cmd. Ctr. Matthew Barnes, Lad.25 Arthur Barry, Lad.15 Lt.Steven Bates, Eng.235 Carl Bedigian, Eng.214 Stephen Belson, Bat.7 John Bergin, Res.5 Paul Beyer, Eng.6 Peter Bielfeld, Lad.42 Brian Bilcher, Sqd.1 Carl Bini, Res.5 Christopher Blackwell, Res.3 Michael Bocchino, Bat.48 Frank Bonomo, Eng.230 Gary Box, Sqd.1 Michael Boyle, Eng.33 Kevin Bracken, Eng.40 Michael Brennan, Lad.4 Peter Brennan, Res.4 Cpt. Daniel Brethel, Lad.24 (D) Cpt. Patrick Brown, Lad.3 Andrew Brunn, Lad.5 (D) Cpt. Vincent Brunton, Lad.105 F.M. Ronald Bucca Greg Buck, Eng.201 Cpt. William Burke Jr., Eng.21 A.C. Donald Burns, Cmd. Ctr. John Burnside, Lad.20 Thomas Butler, Sqd.1 Patrick Byrne, Lad.101
C George Cain, Lad.7 Salvatore Calabro, Lad.101 Cpt. Frank Callahan, Lad.35 Michael Cammarata, Lad.11 Brian Cannizzaro, Lad.101 Dennis Carey, Hmc.1 Michael Carlo, Eng.230 Michael Carroll, Lad.3 Peter Carroll, Sqd.1 (D) Thomas Casoria, Eng.22 Michael Cawley, Lad.136 Vernon Cherry, Lad.118 Nicholas Chiofalo, Eng.235 John Chipura, Eng.219 Michael Clarke, Lad.2 Steven Coakley, Eng.217 Tarel Coleman, Sqd.252 John Collins, Lad.25 Robert Cordice, Sqd.1 Ruben Correa, Eng.74 James Coyle, Lad.3 Robert Crawford, Safety Lt. John Crisci, H.M. B.C. Dennis Cross, Bat.57 (D) Thomas Cullen III, Sqd. 41 Robert Curatolo, Lad.16 (D)
D Lt. Edward D'Atri, Sqd.1 Michael D'Auria, Eng.40 Scott Davidson, Lad.118 Edward Day, Lad.11 B.C. Thomas DeAngelis, Bat. 8 Manuel Delvalle, Eng.5 Martin DeMeo, H.M. 1 David DeRubbio, Eng.226 Lt. Andrew Desperito, Eng.1 (D) B.C. Dennis Devlin, Bat.9 Gerard Dewan, Lad.3 George DiPasquale, Lad.2 Lt. Kevin Donnelly, Lad.3 Lt. Kevin Dowdell, Res.4 B.C. Raymond Downey, Soc. Gerard Duffy, Lad.21
E Cpt. Martin Egan, Jr., Div.15 (D) Michael Elferis, Eng.22 Francis Esposito, Eng.235 Lt. Michael Esposito, Sqd.1 Robert Evans, Eng.33
F B.C. John Fanning, H.O. Cpt. Thomas Farino, Eng.26 Terrence Farrell, Res.4 Cpt. Joseph Farrelly, Div.1 Dep. Comm. William Feehan, (D) Lee Fehling, Eng.235 Alan Feinberg, Bat.9 Michael Fiore, Res.5 Lt. John Fischer, Lad.20 Andre Fletcher, Res.5 John Florio, Eng.214 Lt. Michael Fodor, Lad.21 Thomas Foley, Res.3 David Fontana, Sqd.1 Robert Foti, Lad.7 Andrew Fredericks, Sqd.18 Lt. Peter Freund, Eng.55
G Thomas Gambino Jr., Res.3 Chief of Dept. Peter Ganci, Jr. (D) Lt. Charles Garbarini, Bat.9 Thomas Gardner, Hmc.1 Matthew Garvey, Sqd.1 Bruce Gary, Eng.40 Gary Geidel, Res.1 B.C. Edward Geraghty, Bat.9 Dennis Germain, Lad.2 Lt. Vincent Giammona, Lad.5 James Giberson, Lad.35 Ronnie Gies, Sqd.288 Paul Gill, Eng.54 Lt. John Ginley, Eng.40 Jeffrey Giordano, Lad.3 John Giordano, Hmc.1 Keith Glascoe, Lad.21 James Gray, Lad.20 B.C. Joseph Grzelak, Bat.48 Jose Guadalupe, Eng.54 Lt. Geoffrey Guja, Bat.43 Lt. Joseph Gullickson, Lad.101
H David Halderman, Sqd.18 Lt. Vincent Halloran, Lad.8 Robert Hamilton, Sqd.41 Sean Hanley, Lad.20 (D) Thomas Hannafin, Lad.5 Dana Hannon, Eng.26 Daniel Harlin, Lad.2 Lt. Harvey Harrell, Res.5 Lt. Stephen Harrell, Bat.7 Cpt. Thomas Haskell, Jr., Div.15 Timothy Haskell, Sqd.18 (D) Cpt. Terence Hatton, Res.1 Michael Haub, Lad.4 Lt. Michael Healey, Sqd.41 John Hefferman, Lad.11 Ronnie Henderson, Eng.279 Joseph Henry, Lad.21 William Henry, Res.1 (D) Thomas Hetzel, Lad.13 Cpt. Brian Hickey, Res.4 Lt. Timothy Higgins, S.O.C. Jonathan Hohmann, Hmc.1 Thomas Holohan, Eng.6 Joseph Hunter, Sqd.288 Cpt. Walter Hynes, Lad.13 (D)
I Jonathan Ielpi, Sqd.288 Cpt. Frederick Ill Jr., Lad.2
J William Johnston, Eng.6 Andrew Jordan, Lad.132 Karl Joseph, Eng.207 Lt. Anthony Jovic, Bat.47 Angel Juarbe Jr., Lad.12 Mychal Judge, Chaplain (D)
K Vincent Kane, Eng.22 B.C. Charles Kasper, S.O.C. Paul Keating, Lad.5 Richard Kelly Jr., Lad.11 Thomas R. Kelly, Lad.15 Thomas W. Kelly, Lad.105 Thomas Kennedy, Lad.101 Lt. Ronald Kerwin, Sqd.288 Michael Kiefer, Lad.132 Robert King Jr., Eng.33 Scott Kopytko, Lad.15 William Krukowski, Lad.21 Kenneth Kumpel, Lad.25 Thomas Kuveikis, Sqd.252
L David LaForge, Lad.20 William Lake, Res.2 Robert Lane, Eng.55 Peter Langone, Sqd.252 Scott Larsen, Lad.15 Lt. Joseph Leavey, Lad.15 Neil Leavy, Eng.217 Daniel Libretti, Res.2 Carlos Lillo, Paramedic Robert Linnane, Lad.20 Michael Lynch, Eng.40 Michael Lynch, Lad.4 Michael Lyons, Sqd.41 Patrick Lyons, Sqd.252
M Joseph Maffeo, Lad.101 William Mahoney, Res 4 Joseph Maloney, Lad.3 (D) B.C. Joseph Marchbanks Jr, Bat.12 Lt. Charles Margiotta, Bat.22 Kenneth Marino, Res.1 John Marshall, Eng.23 Lt. Peter Martin, Res.2 Lt. Paul Martini, Eng.23 Joseph Mascali, T.S.U. 2 Keithroy Maynard, Eng.33 Brian McAleese, Eng.226 John McAvoy, Lad.3 Thomas McCann, Bat.8 Lt. William McGinn, Sqd.18 B.C. William McGovern, Bat.2 (D) Dennis McHugh, Lad.13 Robert McMahon, Lad.20 Robert McPadden, Eng.23 Terence McShane, Lad.101 Timothy McSweeney, Lad.3 Martin McWilliams, Eng.22 (D) Raymond Meisenheimer, Res.3 Charles Mendez, Lad.7 Steve Mercado, Eng.40 Douglas Miller, Res.5 Henry Miller Jr, Lad.105 Robert Minara, Lad.25 Thomas Mingione, Lad.132 Lt. Paul Mitchell, Bat.1 Capt. Louis Modafferi, Res.5 Lt. Dennis Mojica, Res.1 (D) Manuel Mojica, Sqd.18 (D) Carl Molinaro, Lad.2 Michael Montesi, Res.1 Capt. Thomas Moody, Div.1 B.C. John Moran, Bat.49 Vincent Morello, Lad.35 Christopher Mozzillo, Eng.55 Richard Muldowney Jr, Lad.07 Michael Mullan, Lad.12 Dennis Mulligan, Lad.2 Lt. Raymond Murphy, Lad.16
N Lt. Robert Nagel, Eng.58 John Napolitano, Res.2 Peter Nelson, Res.4 Gerard Nevins, Res.1
O Dennis O'Berg, Lad.105 Lt. Daniel O'Callaghan, Lad.4 Douglas Oelschlager, Lad.15 Joseph Ogren, Lad.3 Lt. Thomas O'Hagan, Bat.4 Samuel Oitice, Lad.4 Patrick O'Keefe, Res.1 Capt. William O'Keefe, Div.15 (D) Eric Olsen, Lad.15 Jeffery Olsen, Eng.10 Steven Olson, Lad.3 Kevin O'Rourke, Res.2 Michael Otten, Lad.35
P Jeffery Palazzo, Res.5 B.C. Orio Palmer, Bat.7 Frank Palombo, Lad.105 Paul Pansini, Eng.10 B.C. John Paolillo, Bat.11 James Pappageorge, Eng.23 Robert Parro, Eng.8 Durrell Pearsall, Res.4 Lt. Glenn Perry, Bat.12 Lt. Philip Petti, Bat.7 Lt. Kevin Pfeifer, Eng. 33 Lt. Kenneth Phelan, Bat.32 Christopher Pickford, Eng.201 Shawn Powell, Eng.207 Vincent Princiotta, Lad.7 Kevin Prior, Sqd.252 B.C. Richard Prunty, Bat.2 (D)
Q Lincoln Quappe, Res.2 Lt. Michael Quilty, Lad.11 Ricardo Quinn, Paramedic
R Leonard Ragaglia, Eng.54 Michael Ragusa, Eng.279 Edward Rall, Res.2 Adam Rand, Sqd.288 Donald Regan, Res.3 Lt. Robert Regan, Lad.118 Christian Regenhard, Lad.131 Kevin Reilly, Eng.207 Lt. Vernon Richard, Lad.7 James Riches, Eng.4 Joseph Rivelli, Lad.25 Michael Roberts, Eng.214 Michael E. Roberts, Lad.35 Anthony Rodriguez, Eng.279 Matthew Rogan, Lad.11 Nicholas Rossomando, Res.5 Paul Ruback, Lad.25 Stephen Russell, Eng.55 Lt. Michael Russo, S.O.C. B.C. Matthew Ryan, Bat.1
S Thomas Sabella, Lad.13 Christopher Santora, Eng.54 John Santore, Lad.5 (D) Gregory Saucedo, Lad.5 Dennis Scauso, H.M. 1 John Schardt, Eng.201 B.C. Fred Scheffold, Bat.12 Thomas Schoales, Eng.4 Gerard Schrang, Res.3 (D) Gregory Sikorsky, Sqd.41 Stephen Siller, Sqd.1 Stanley Smagala Jr, Eng.226 Kevin Smith, H.M. 1 Leon Smith Jr, Lad 118 Robert Spear Jr, Eng.26 Joseph Spor, Res.3 B.C. Lawrence Stack, Bat.50 Cpt. Timothy Stackpole, Div.11 (D) Gregory Stajk, Lad.13 Jeffery Stark, Eng.230 Benjamin Suarez, Lad.21 Daniel Suhr, Eng.216 (D) Lt. Christopher Sullivan, Lad.111 Brian Sweeney, Res.1
T Sean Tallon, Lad.10 Allan Tarasiewicz, Res.5 Paul Tegtmeier, Eng.4 John Tierney, Lad.9 John Tipping II, Lad.4 Hector Tirado Jr, Eng.23
V Richard Vanhine, Sqd.41 Peter Vega, Lad.118 Lawrence Veling, Eng.235 John Vigiano II, Lad.132 Sergio Villanueva, Lad.132 Lawrence Virgilio, Sqd.18 (D)
W Lt. Robert Wallace, Eng.205 Jeffery Walz, Lad. 9 Lt. Michael Warchola, Lad.5 (D) Capt. Patrick Waters, S.O.C. Kenneth Watson, Eng.214 Michael Weinberg, Eng.1 (D) David Weiss, Res.1 Timothy Welty, Sqd.288 Eugene Whelan, Eng.230 Edward White, Eng.230 Mark Whitford, Eng.23 Lt. Glenn Wilkinson, Eng.238 (D) B.C. John Williamson, Bat.6 (D) Capt. David Wooley, Lad.4
Y Raymond York, Eng.285 (D)
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fromthesomewhere · 7 years ago
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How can I find out more about Frank Baragar? He was married to my great aunt, Madeleine ( known as Mac) nee Halloran
Hello!
Sorry for not replying to you sooner, the message notification seems to have been missed. Our apologies!
We don’t have a lot about Frank, but if you do a blog search on From The Somewhere for his name, you’ll see any updates on his wartime activities that are noted from Fred’s letters. We also have a brief post about Frank here: http://fromthesomewhere.tumblr.com/post/170098409984/correspondents-corner-francis-bell-baragar There’s a letter he wrote to Fred’s fiancee Edith here: http://fromthesomewhere.tumblr.com/post/171841951316/13-march-1918-letter-to-edith-robertson-from A photo of Frank, Fred, and Art from 1918 was recently posted here: http://fromthesomewhere.tumblr.com/post/172595805027/fred-frank-and-arthur-baragar-april-1918-fred Frank can be found in the 1921 census here: http://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1921&op=img&id=e002884679We also have come across a family history that provides brief information on each of Fred’s siblings here: http://www.uelac.org/education/WesternResource/401-Baragars.pdf
Always great to hear from the Baragar extended family! Hope this helps with your search!
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manualstogo · 5 years ago
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For just $3.99 Released on October 15, 1945: Nick Condon (James Cagney) is a reporter in pre-Pearl Harbor Japan, and he discovers their plot to rule the world, and my lose his life because of his knowledge in this oscar winning motion picture. Genre: Drama Duration: 1h 38min Director: Frank Lloyd Actors: James Cagney (Nick Condon), Sylvia Sidney (Iris Hilliard), Porter Hall (Arthur Bickett), John Emery (Premier Giichi Tanaka), Robert Armstrong (Colonel Hideki Tojo), Wallace Ford (Ollie Miller), Rosemary DeCamp (Edith Miller), John Halloran (Captain Oshima), Leonard Strong (Hijikata), James Bell (Charley Sprague), Marvin Miller (Yamada), Rhys Williams (Joseph Cassell), Frank Puglia (Prince Tatsugi), Philip Ahn (Secret Police Captain Yomamoto), Hugh Beaumont (Johnny Clarke), Edward Biby (bar patron), Oy Chan (Chinese servant), Hugh Ho Chang (Secret Police Major Kajioka), Gregory Gaye (Amercian newspaperman Bogardis), Sam Harris (bar patron), Joseph Kim (Hayoshi), Grace Lem (Amah), Arthur Loft (American newspaperman), Harold Miller (bar patron), George Paris (hotel manager), Emmett Vogan (American newspaperman Johnson), Billy Wayne (American newspaperman). *** This item will be supplied on a quality disc and will be sent in a sleeve that is designed for posting CD's DVDs *** This item will be sent by 1st class post for quick delivery. Should you not receive your item within 12 working days of making payment, please contact me so we can solve this or any other questions. Note: All my products are either my own work, licensed to me directly or supplied to me under a GPL/GNU License. No Trademarks, copyrights or rules have been violated by this item. This product complies with rules on compilations, international media, and downloadable media. All items are supplied on CD or DVD.
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tenth-sentence · 1 year ago
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The bench split for and against.
"Killing for Country: A Family History" - David Marr
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coralmccallum · 6 years ago
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I’ve been asked on numerous occasions where I find my story ideas and what inspires my blog posts. I always answer that it’s a little bit of everything- song lyrics, a place I’ve visited, an event, a name, etc….
Well, this week’s blog is inspired by the glass of wine I enjoyed with dinner on Sunday. Well, the label on the bottle to be more precise. (No, I didn’t drink the whole bottle before you ask!)
For weeks while I’ve been doing the weekly supermarket shop a particular bottle of Australian Chardonnay has been catching my eye. However, at full price, it was a little over my preferred budget. This week it was on special. Still a little over my price but I thought “What the hell!” and picked up two bottles. (I’m a bit weird that way as I’ll always buy bottles of wine in pairs.)
What had attracted my attention? The label on the front of the bottle and the name 19 Crimes.
  Over dinner on Sunday,  initially conversation wasn’t really holding my attention  (sorry, guys) and I turned the wine bottle, that was sitting in front of me on the table, around to read the label on the reverse.
  Intriguing…..what were the 19 Crimes?
This sparked an entirely different dinner conversation after a little emergency “Googling.”
So, were there really 19 Crimes that led to convicts being transported to Australia?
Yes! And between 1768 and 1868  thousands were in fact transported to Australian.
The 19 Crimes were:
   Once dinner was over and a second glass of wine had been poured, I sat down at my desk to do a little more digging into this subject.
Don’t panic! You’re not about to get a lengthy history lesson…… only a short one.
The first eleven convict ships set sail from England in 1787. They arrived at Botany Bay on 20 January 1788 where the first European community on the continent was established….and so Sydney, NSW was born.
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Over the next forty some years several other penal colonies were established as more convicts arrived. The most famous of these was Port Arthur in Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) in 1803.
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Penal transportation peaked in the 1830’s. However opposition to this practice grew throughout the 1840’s. Transportation to Van Diemen’s Land ended in 1853 when the last convict ship, the St Vincent, arrived from England.
Small numbers continued to be transported to a colony in Western Australia but on 10 January 1868 the last convict ship, The Hougoumont, docked. (pictured above)
In total 806 ships had transported approximately 164 000 convicts to the continent over a period of eighty years. Around 24 000 of these were women, some of whom had deliberately committed petty crimes in order to be transported to join their husbands. Records show that 70% of those transported were from England and Wales, 24% from Ireland, 5% from Scotland and the remaining 1% a mix of convicts from the British colonies in India, Canada, New Zealand, Hong Kong and the Caribbean.
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Some of those transported went to lead successful new lives in Australia. Some notable convicts were:
James Blackburn, famous for his contribution to Australian architecture and civil engineering
Daniel Connor who was sentenced to seven years transportation for sheep stealing went on to become one of the largest landowners in central Perth by the 1890’s.
Francis Greenway became a famous Australian architect.
Laurence Hynes Halloran founded the Sydney Grammar School.
Henry Savery is noted as being Australia’s first novelist and author of Quintus Servinton
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  One female convict stands out. Mary Wade was the youngest convict transported to Australia aged only 11 years old. She went on to have 21 children and at the time of her death had over 300 living descendants!
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Twenty one children!!!!
That thought calls for another glass of wine! 😉
  some images sourced via Google – credits to the owners
19 Crimes…. and a glass or two of wine I’ve been asked on numerous occasions where I find my story ideas and what inspires my blog posts.
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bluegrasshole · 8 years ago
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25 years ago today (may 9th 1992), there was an explosion in the westray mine in plymouth of pictou county, nova scotia when a coal seam spit a jet of methane which somehow ignited. all 26 men in the mine at the time died. before then the miners knew the tunnels were unsafe, and issues had been brought to the attention of the government, but the management didn’t care. it had only been operating around 8 months at the time of the explosion -- it closed immediately after but was only dismantled and permanently sealed in 1998, or 6 years after the explosion. in 1997 the nova scotia supreme court deemed the disaster a result of “incompetence, mismanagement, bureaucratic bungling, deceit, ruthlessness ... and cynical indifference.” two former managers of the mine were charged with manslaughter and criminal negligence causing death, but the case was eventually dropped. the westray mine disaster was the biggest mining accident since the 1958 springhill mine disaster which killed 75 men. 
the names of the men killed in the westray mine were:
John Thomas Bates, 56
Larry Arthur Bell, 25
Bennie Joseph Benoit, 42
Wayne Michael Conway, 38
Ferris Todd Dewan, 35
Adonis J. Dollimont, 36
Robert Steven Doyle, 22
Remi Joseph Drolet, 38
Roy Edward Feltmate, 33
Charles Robert Fraser, 29
Myles Daniel Gillis, 32
John Philip Halloran, 33
Randolph Brian House, 27
Trevor Martin Jahn, 36
Laurence Elwyn James, 34
Eugene W. Johnson, 33
Stephen Paul Lilley, 40
Michael Frederick MacKay, 38
Angus Joseph MacNeil, 39
Glenn David Martin, 35
Harry A. McCallum, 41
Eric Earl McIsaac, 38
George S. James Munroe, 38
Danny James Poplar, 39
Romeo Andrew Short, 35
Peter Francis Vickers, 38
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transdiffusion · 7 years ago
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Something new, by Arthur H. Halloran
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judefan830-blog · 5 years ago
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the number five and six jerseys during
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nemesisbinxartifactseries · 5 years ago
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Artifact Series W
W.B. Yeats's Glasses
W.C. Field's Juggling Balls *
W. D. M. Bell's Mauser C96
W. G. Grottendieck's Stones
W. Heath Robinson’s Boiler
Wabi-Sabi Rock Garden Singing Sand
Waldemar Haffkine's Vaccine
Wallace Hartley's Violin
Wall Mounted Bottle Opener
Wally Schirra’s Insignia Patches
Walt Disney's Paintbrush *
Walt Whitman's Chalkboard and Chalk
Walter Chrysler's Building Spire
Walter Frederick Morrison's Cake Pan
Walter Freeman's Orbitoclast
Walter H. Thompson’s Telegram
Walter Halloran’s Crucifix
Walter Potter's Taxidermy Knife
Walter Potter's Taxidermy Wire
Walter Raleigh's Smoking Pipe *
Walter Schlage's Lockpick *
Walter Winchell's Tie Clip and Cufflinks *
Wang Mian’s Plum Tree
Wangari Maathai's Seeds
Wanksy's Spray Paint Cans
Warehouse 13.1 Diorama *
Washakie's Rattle
Washington Irving's Saddle
Washington Roebling's Caisson
Watergate Scandal Lock Picks
Watson Monitor
Wat Tyler's Lance
Wat Tyler’s Money Sack
Waverly Brown's Police Badge
Wax Crocodile
Way Bandy's Tie Clip
Wayne Gretzky's Hockey Puck
Wayne Wheeler's Hayfork
The Web of the Tsuchigumo
Webb C. Ball’s Railroad Chronometer
Wei Jingsheng’s Ballpoint Pen
Wendigo Mask
Wenham Wykeman-Musgrave's Plank
Werner Thomas' Accordion
Wes Craven's Freddy Krueger Glove
West Side Story Debut Playbill
The Western Jin's Hunping Jar
Where'd-It-Go Garden Gnome
"Where's the Beef?" Lady's Dress
Where's Waldo Misprint
Whip from St. Mary of Bethlehem Asylum
Whistler's Mother's Rocking Chair *
White Fan
The White Kiswah
"Whose Line is it Anyway's" Scenes from a Hat's American Hat
Wicked Bible
Wickham Family Dollhouse
Wild Bill Hickok's Playing Cards
Wiley Post’s Pressure Suit
Willem Jansz's Boomerang *
Wilhelm Kühne's Glasses
Wilhelm Reich's Cloudbuster *
Wilhelm Rontgen's Monocle
Wilhelm Voigt’s Army Uniform
Wilhelm Wundt’s Laboratory
Will Eisner's Unfinished Comic Book
Will Wright's Emerald
William Abner Eddy's Kite
William Allen White's Notepad
William Batty's Ringleader Bullhorn
William Beadle's Carving Knife
William Beaumont, 2nd Viscount Beaumont's Battle Armor *
William Beebe's Umbrella
William Bickford's Safety Fuse
William Blake's "Ugolino and Sons in Their Cell"
William Bleckwenn's Stethoscope (canon)
William Burke’s Quill
William Byke's Top Hat
William Chaloner's Groat
William Chaloner's Lottery Ticket
William Charles Pitcher's Costume Trunk
William Coffin Coleman's Arc Lantern
William the Conqueror's Scabbard
Sir William Cornwallis Harris' Epaulettes
William Dampier's Eyeglass
William Edward Parry's Inukshuk (canon)
William Etty's Canvas
William Frank Carver's Glass Ball
William Garrow’s Wig and Bands
William Gilbet's Lodestone Amber *
William Golding's Pen
William Hanna and Joseph Barbera's Pens
William Harvey’s Lens
William Henry Harrison's Podium
William Hornaday's Zookeeper Cap *
William Howard Taft's Bathtub Valve
William Irving's 'Bowling Pins'
William J. Simmons’ Klan Cloak
William James Sidis' Bookcase
William Jennings Bryan's Gold Certificate
William Kempe's Pipe and Tabor
William Kent's Twelve Guineas
William Kidd's Chest
William Kogut's Playing Cards
William L. Allen's Leather Helmet
William Makepeace Thackeray's Gravy Boat
William Masters' Stethoscope
William Mulholland's Clipboard
William Murdoch's Boiler
William Newton McComb's Infantry Sword
William Oughtred's Slide Ruler
William Penn's Hat
William Randolph Hearst’s Bulletin Board
William Redington Hewlett's Printer
William Robinson's Chest
William S. Graves' Lighter
William S. Sadler's Chaise Lounge
William Safire’s Apollo 11 Speech
William Schwenck Gilbert's & Arthur Seymour Sullivan's Top Hats
William Seabrook's Cookpot
William Shakespeare's Chair from the Globe Theatre *
William Shakespeare's Lost Folio *
William Shakespeare's Neck Ruff
William Sianis' Goat Horns
William the Silent's Helmet
William Sommer's Marionette
William Still’s Notes
William Stoughton's Gavel
William Sydney Porter's Watch Chain and Comb
William Tell's Crossbow *
William Tell's Rabbit Foot *
William Thomas Stead's Pocketbook
William Thompson's Preserved Scalp
William Wallace's Claymore
William Whewell's Lab Coat
William Wordsworth's Necktie
William Wymark Jacobs’ Monkey Paw
Willis Conover’s Microphone
Willy Wonka's Golden Tickets
Wilt Chamberlain's Basketball
Wilt Chamberlain's Shoes
Wilton Ivie's Notebook
Winchester Mystery House
Wind Forming Leaf Blower/Vacuum
Windscale Fire Milk Bottle
Wine Barrel used for George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence
Wine Transforming Decanter
Winfield Scott's Coat Buttons
Wings of Daedalus *
''Wings'' Oscar Award
Winslow Homer's Boat Cleat
Winston Churchill’s Flask
Winthrop Kellogg's Plexiglass Pool
Winter Koi Painting
Wire Spool from the Dingo Fence
Witch Hat
Witold Pilecki's Auschwitz Jail Clothes
Wrigley's Juicy Fruit Gum
The Wright Brother's Wright Flyer
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Conductor Baton
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Flute
Wong Fei-Hung's 'Gun' Staff
Wooden Doll from Croton
Wooden Dragon Priest Mask
Wooden Fence from Dealey Plaza
Wooden Grail from Jerusalem
Woodrow Wilson's 'Peace in America' Badges
Woodstock Speakers
Woodstock Tie Dye Shirts
WWI-era Nieuport biplane
WWII Tessen Fan *
WWII Viewmaster
Wyatt Earp's Lariat *
Wyatt Earp's Sheriff Badge *
Wyrd Water
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