#jesse inglis
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old art from a while back
Jesse, Infinity Train
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Katherine Stewart Macphail was born on 30th October 1887 at Whifflet, Coatbridge.
Katherine Stewart MacPhail was the third of four daughters of Jesse and Dr Donald MacPhail, a doctor. MacPhail was the only daughter in the family who showed an interest in her father's work.
As a young girl, she entered the father's office and watched him examine the patients or treat wounds; she also went with him to visit patients on remote farms. In addition, her decision to dedicate her life to medicine was probably influenced by her uncles who were successful doctors: James led a missionary hospital in India, and Alex was a professor of anatomy at the University of Glasgow.
Her undergraduate record suggests she was a conscientious, bright student and her name appears several times on the prize-list. In her first year she gained a second-class certificate in Practical Zoology. The following year, 1907-1908, she took a first class certificate in Physiology, and in subsequent years, second class certificates in Anatomy (1908-1909) and Surgery (1910-1911). She graduated MB ChB in 1911. In other words, a very smart cookie and it ran in the family, her sister Isabel Macphail, had graduated MA the previous year.
When war broke out, the sisters offered their services to the Scottish Women’s Hospitals. Women were not permitted to serve in the armed forces, but a group of energetic medical women, spear-headed by Edinburgh graduate Elsie Inglis, equipped and staffed their own hospitals, with the support of the National Women’s Suffrage Societies.
Their offer of these facilities to the Government at home was turned down, but the French showed more willing and the first of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service was set up at Royaumont towards the end of 1914. Further hospitals followed in Serbia in early 1915. Isabel and Katherine set off for Serbia, Isabel as an orderly, Katherine as a surgeon. Apparently, Katherine was initially worried about what the other members of the unit would be like. She wrote:
We knew we were being sent out under the auspices of the Suffrage Societies, and each was afraid that every other was a strong supporter, but were much relieved to find that almost none of us was what might be called ‘strong’, and that Serbia was the common bond, not suffrage.
When she arrived there, she and another junior doctor, Adeline Campbell, were dismayed by the tasks they were given to do at Kragvievatz, and felt that an orderly could have done them. They persuaded their superior, Dr Soltan, to release them, and they went on to the Military Hospital at Belgrade, incurring the wrath of the committee of the Scottish Women’s Hospital, who declined to employ Katherine again. Undeterred, Katherine continued her lifetime’s work in Serbia.
After the war Katherine remained in Serbia, running her own small hospital, the Anglo-Serbian Children’s Hospital in Belgrade with some funding from the Scottish Women’s Hospitals and the Save the Children Fund. Her war work had been honoured by the Serbian government, which conferred the distinction of the Serbian Order of St Sava and the Serbian Red Cross.
Her work was far from finished, however. In 1934 she established the English-Yugoslav Hospital for Treatment of Osteoarticular Tuberculosis in Sremska Kamenica. She continued her work there until 1941, when she and other British residents were taken prisoner by the Germans.
She was repatriated, but returned to Belgrade in 1945 with one of the first relief units. Under a new post-war regime, foreigners were less welcome. After the nationalisation of the hospital she left for Scotland in 1949 and settled in St Andrews, where she lived until her passing in 1974 aged 86.
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India Women vs New Zealand Women Live Score, 3rd ODI: NZ 6/0 (3) against IND; Bates, Plimmer at crease
INDIA: Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma, D. Hemalatha, Deepti Sharma, Jemimah Rodrigues, Yastika Bhatia, Uma Chetry, Sayali Satgare, Arundhati Reddy, Renuka Singh, Tejal Hasabnis, Saima Thakor, Priya Mishra, Radha Yadav, Shreyanka Patil NEW ZEALAND: Sophie Devine (c), Suzie Bates, Eden Carson, Lauren Down, Izzy Gaze, Maddy Green, Brooke Halliday, Polly Inglis, Fran Jonas, Jess…
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Jesse Inglis - Compañía Nacional de Danza, Spain - photo by Travis Chantar
#jesse inglis#compañía nacional de danza#travis chantar#dance#ballet#australian ballet dancers#dancer#daqnseur#ballerino#bailarín#tänzer#boys of ballet#ballet men
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Giada Rossi and Jesse Inglis in “Don Quixote” - Compañía Nacional de Danza, Spain - photo by @albiiru
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Madrid Men, photography by Jeffery Beasley for HUF Magazinehttp://hufmagazine.com/madrid-men-photography-by-jeffery-beasley-for-huf-magazine/
#Alessi Cremonesi#Alvaro Cadierno#Hector Albelda#Ilario Giordanelli#Jeffery Beasley#Jesse Inglis#Jose Millan
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Katherine Stewart Macphail was born on 30th October 1887 at Whifflet, Coatbridge.
Katherine Stewart MacPhail was born in Glasgow on 30 October 1887, the third of four daughters of Jesse and Dr Donald MacPhail, a doctor. MacPhail was the only daughter in the family who showed an interest in her father's work.
As a young girl, she entered the father's office and watched him examine the patients or treat wounds; she also went with him to visit patients on remote farms. In addition, her decision to dedicate her life to medicine was probably influenced by her uncles who were successful doctors: James led a missionary hospital in India, and Alex was a professor of anatomy at the University of Glasgow.
Her undergraduate record suggests she was a conscientious, bright student and her name appears several times on the prize-list. In her first year she gained a second-class certificate in Practical Zoology. The following year, 1907-1908, she took a first class certificate in Physiology, and in subsequent years, second class certificates in Anatomy (1908-1909) and Surgery (1910-1911). She graduated MB ChB in 1911. In other words, a very smart cookie and it ran in the family, her sister Isabel Macphail, had graduated MA the previous year.
When war broke out, the sisters offered their services to the Scottish Women’s Hospitals. Women were not permitted to serve in the armed forces, but a group of energetic medical women, spear-headed by Edinburgh graduate Elsie Inglis, equipped and staffed their own hospitals, with the support of the National Women’s Suffrage Societies.
Their offer of these facilities to the Government at home was turned down, but the French showed more willing and the first of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service was set up at Royaumont towards the end of 1914. Further hospitals followed in Serbia in early 1915. Isabel and Katherine set off for Serbia, Isabel as an orderly, Katherine as a surgeon. Apparently, Katherine was initially worried about what the other members of the unit would be like. She wrote:
We knew we were being sent out under the auspices of the Suffrage Societies, and each was afraid that every other was a strong supporter, but were much relieved to find that almost none of us was what might be called ‘strong’, and that Serbia was the common bond, not suffrage.
When she arrived there, she and another junior doctor, Adeline Campbell, were dismayed by the tasks they were given to do at Kragvievatz, and felt that an orderly could have done them. They persuaded their superior, Dr Soltan, to release them, and they went on to the Military Hospital at Belgrade, incurring the wrath of the committee of the Scottish Women’s Hospital, who declined to employ Katherine again. Undeterred, Katherine continued her lifetime’s work in Serbia.
After the war Katherine remained in Serbia, running her own small hospital, the Anglo-Serbian Children’s Hospital in Belgrade with some funding from the Scottish Women’s Hospitals and the Save the Children Fund. Her war work had been honoured by the Serbian government, which conferred the distinction of the Serbian Order of St Sava and the Serbian Red Cross.
Her work was far from finished, however. In 1934 she established the English-Yugoslav Hospital for Treatment of Osteoarticular Tuberculosis in Sremska Kamenica. She continued her work there until 1941, when she and other British residents were taken prisoner by the Germans.
She was repatriated, but returned to Belgrade in 1945 with one of the first relief units. Under a new post-war regime, foreigners were less welcome. After the nationalisation of the hospital she left for Scotland in 1949 and settled in St Andrews, where she lived until her passing in 1974 aged 86.
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Machine Landscapes: Architectures of the Post‐Anthropocene
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/15542769/2019/89/1
Architectural Design Volume 89, Issue 1 Special Issue:Machine Landscapes: Architectures of the Post‐Anthropocene
Pages: 1-144 January/February 2019
Machine Landscapes: Architectures of the Post Anthropocene The most significant architectural spaces in the world are now entirely empty of people. The data centres, telecommunications networks, distribution warehouses, unmanned ports and industrialised agriculture that define the very nature of who we are today are at the same time places we can never visit. Instead they are occupied by server stacks and hard drives, logistics bots and mobile shelving units, autonomous cranes and container ships, robot vacuum cleaners and internet-connected toasters, driverless tractors and taxis. This issue is an atlas of sites, architectures and infrastructures that are not built for us, but whose form, materiality and purpose is configured to anticipate the patterns of machine vision and habitation rather than our own. We are said to be living in a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, in which humans are the dominant force shaping the planet. This collection of spaces, however, more accurately constitutes an era of the Post-Anthropocene, a period where it is technology and artificial intelligence that now computes, conditions and constructs our world. Marking the end of human-centred design, the issue turns its attention to the new typologies of the post-human, architecture without people and our endless expanse of Machine Landscapes.
Edited By Liam Young
Contributors: Rem Koolhaas, Merve Bedir and Jason Hilgefort, Benjamin H Bratton, Ingrid Burrington, Ian Cheng, Hyphen Labs, Cathryn Dwyre, Chris Perry, David Salomon and Kathy Velikov, Deborah Harrison, Paul Inglis, Victor Martinez, John Gerrard, Alice Gorman, Adam Harvey, Jesse LeCavalier, Xingzhe Liu, Clare Lyster, Geoff Manaugh, Tim Maughan, Simone C Niquille, Jenny Odell, Trevor Paglen, Ben Roberts.
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NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] Women's Under 19, One Day Match Preview
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] Women's Under 19, One Day Match Preview, Team news and Playing 11
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] One Day Match
NZ-W-Y (New Zealand Women):
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] One Day Match[/caption]
Cricket Australia has named a 14-member squad to travel to New Zealand
A 14-member squad has been picked by The Cricket Australia Women’s
Katie Gurrey and Jess Watkin will open the inning for the squad.
Arelene Kely, Polly Inglis & Lauren Down will handle the middle order batting line up for the squad.
Jess Kerr and Thamsym Newton will handle the late hitting for the squad.
Thamsym Newton, Arlene Kelly, Rosemair Mair &Bella Armstrong will lead the pace attack of the squad
Jess Watkin and George Atkinson will handle the spin attack.
Polly Inglis will do the Wicket Keeping for the squad.
AU-W-Y (Australia Women):
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] One Day Match[/caption]
A 14-member squad has been named by the hosts too
The captain to lead New Zealand Emerging Players side
The squad also consists of four current White Ferns in the likes of Rosemary Mair, Jess Watkin, Lauren Down and Thamsyn Newton
Josephine Dooley and Maddy Darke will open the inning for the squad.
Rachel Trenaman, Hannah Darlington & Annabel Sutherland will handle the middle order batting for the squad.
Hannah Darlington and Tahlia Wilson will handle the late hitting.
Tahlia Wilson, Annabel Sutherland, Hannah Darlington & Stella Campbell will lead the pace.
Darice Brown and Hayley Silver Homles will handle the spin attack.
Niolce Faltum will handle the wicket-keeping for the squad.
You may also like to read:
CC vs DOL Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] Momentum One Day Cup
ENG vs WI Dream11 Today Prediction [Expert Team] 2nd T20
When and Where:
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Prediction | New Zealand vs Australia, Women's U19 Series, Team News, Playing 11 Bert Sutcliffe Oval, Lincoln 12th March, 03:00 AM IST
(Pitch is neutral)
NZ-W-Y vs AU-W-Y Dream11 Squads:
New Zealand Women:
Bella Armstrong, Georgia Atkinson, Lauren Down, Katie Gurrey, Polly Inglis, Arlene Kelly, Jess Kerr, Rosemary Mair, Jess McFayden, Thamsyn Newton, Jacinta Savage, Saachi Shahri, Jessica Simmons, Jess Watkin
Australia Women:
Isabelle Afaras, Darcie Brown, Stella Campbell, Maddy Darke, Hannah Darlington, Josephine Dooley, Nicole Faltum, Charli Knott, Phoebe Litchfield, Hayley Silver-Holmes, Courtney Sippel, Annabel Sutherland, Rachel Trenaman, Tahlia Wilson
Probable Playing XI:
NZ-W-Y:
Bella Armstrong, Georgia Atkinson, Lauren Down, Katie Gurrey, Polly Inglis(wk), Arlene Kelly, Jess Kerr, Rosemary Mair, Thamsyn Newton, Jacinta Savage/Saachi Shahri, Jess Watkin
AUS-W-Y:
Stella Campbell, Maddy Darke, Hannah Darlington, Josephine Dooley, Nicole Faltum(wk), Charli Knott, Hayley Silver-Holmes, Courtney Sippel, Annabel Sutherland, Rachel Trenaman, Tahlia Wilson
Key Players Of New Zealand Women:
Polly Inglis
Lauren Down
Katie Gurrey
Jess Kerr
Jess Watkin
Arlene Kelly
Rosemary Mair
Thamsyn Newton
Key Players of Australia:
Annabel Sutherland
Hannah Darlington
Stella Campbell
Charlie Knott
Josephine Dooley
Tahlia Wilson
Best Performing Batsmen:
Lauren Down
Nicole Faltum
Josephine Dooley
Rachel Trenaman
Jess Watkin
Annabel Sutherland
Best Performing Bowlers:
Annabel Sutherland
Jess Watkin
Stella Campbell
Rosemary Mair
Bella Armstrong
Hayley Silver-Holmes
Captain & Vice-Captain Options:
Jess Kerr & Maddy Darke
Lauren Down & Josephine Dooley
Jess Watkin & Arlene Kelly
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Jesse Inglis - Compañía Nacional de Danza, Spain - photo by Carlos Quezada
#jesse inglis#compañía nacional de danza#carlos quezada#dance#ballet#bailarín#dancer#danseur#ballerino#tänzer#boys of ballet#ballet men
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CK underwear for men only was casting #GymEnthusiast Jesse Inglis in a portrait series by Marco Ovando.
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remind me of my love with kane richardson, harry, jess cameron, emma inglis, chris tremayne, finch, etc etc before i decide the melbourne renegades should be BURNT TO THE GROUND
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Rugby league: Sonny Bill Williams named in NRL's team of the decade
New Post has been published on https://diary.nz/rugby-league-sonny-bill-williams-named-in-nrls-team-of-the-decade/
Rugby league: Sonny Bill Williams named in NRL's team of the decade
He looks set to star in another Rugby World Cup for the All Blacks, but Sonny Bill Williams’ legacy still remains strong in the NRL.
Likely to be included in Steve Hansen’s World Cup squad on Wednesday, Williams has also been announced in the NRL’s team of the decade.
The 34-year-old cross-code star only played two NRL seasons this decade with the Sydney Roosters, but was still deemed worthy to be picked in the list by a panel of 23 league “legends”.
Williams won one premiership title with the Roosters during his two-year stint in 2013 before returning to rugby to play for the All Blacks at the 2015 World Cup.
“Grateful and humbled to be named by legends of the game in the NRL team of the decade,” Williams wrote on Twitter after the announcement.
“A kid from Aotearoa being recognised by some of the greats has me buzzing. Alhumdulliah.”
Grateful and humbled to be named by legends of the game in the NRL team of the decade ❤️🤲🏽 A kid from Aotearoa being recognised by some of the greats has me buzzing. Alhumdulliah pic.twitter.com/18GcCaJOUw
— Sonny Bill Williams (@SonnyBWilliams) August 22, 2019
Williams began his NRL career, at just 19, with the Bulldogs where he quickly became one of the stars of the sport, playing 73 games for the Canterbury side.
Williams, named on the bench by the judging panel, is joined by fellow Kiwis Jesse Bromwich and Jason Taumalolo who made the starting 13.
NRL.com’s team of the decade (2010-2019) as chosen by 23 league legends:
Starting 13:
Billy Slater, Jarryd Hayne, Justin Hodges, Greg Inglis, Brett Morris, Johnathan Thurston, Cooper Cronk, Matthew Scott, Cameron Smith, Jesse Bromwich, Boyd Cordner, Sam Burgess, Jason Taumalolo.
Interchange: Paul Gallen, Sonny Bill Williams, Luke Lewis, Jamie Lyon.
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Jesse Inglis and Alan Ramirez - Compañía Nacional de Danza, Spain - photo by Alejandro Treviño
#jesse inglis#alan ramirez#compañía nacional de danza#alejandro treviño#bailarín#ballerino#danseur#dancer#tanzer#ballet men#male dancers
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