samedi 16 juillet 2016

Hardee Kirkland


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hardee Kirkland
A Splendid Hazard (1920) - Hardee Kirkland.jpg
Kirkland from an ad for A Splendid Hazard(1920)
BornMay 23, 1868
Savannah, Georgia
DiedFebruary 18, 1929 (aged 60)
California
OccupationActor, film director, stage
Years active1912−1925
Hardee Kirkland (May 23, 1868 – February 18, 1929) was an American film actor and director of the silent era and also appeared on stage. Kirkland was born in Savannah, Georgia, the son of former Confederate Brigadier General William Whedbee Kirkland, and the older brother of the actress Elizabeth Kirkland, who performed as Odette Tyler, he appeared in 41 films between 1915 and 1925. He also directed 33 films between 1912 and 1914. He died in California at the age of 60.[1]

Selected filmography[edit]

Gretchen Hartman, William Farnum and Hardee Kirkland in Les Misérables

As a director[edit]

As an actor[edit]

Ubiratàn D'Ambrosio


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ubiratan D'Ambrosio
BornDecember 8, 1932 (age 83)
São Paulo
Alma materUniversity of São Paulo
Known forEthnomathematics, Ethnomathematics Program
AwardsKenneth O. May Prize (2001),Felix Klein Medal (2005)
Ubiratan D'Ambrosio (born December 8, 1932 in São Paulo) is a Brazilian mathematics educator and historian of mathematics.

Life[edit]

D'Ambrosio earned his doctorate from the University of São Paulo, Brazil in 1963. He retired as a professor of mathematics from the State University of Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil in 1993 having behind him an impressive career as teacher, administrator, council member of many societies, including Pugwash, and writer, and he also found time to serve the International Commission on the History of Mathematics (ICHM) for five years. D'Ambrosio is the founder of the Brazilian Society for Mathematics and History of the International Group of Ethnomathematicians. Here he also deals specifically with the history of mathematics in the context of the colonization process.

Writings[edit]

Books[edit]

Book chapters[edit]

  • 1997, Ethno Mathematics. Challenging Eurocentrism, in Arthur B. Powell, Marilyn Frankenstein (eds.) Mathematics Education, State University of New York Press, Albany 1997, p. 13-24.
  • Historiographical Proposal for Non-Western Mathematics, in Helaine Selin (ed.), Mathematics Across Cultures. The History of Non-Western Mathematics, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, 2000, pp. 79–92.

Articles[edit]

Bruce Ryan


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bruce Ryan
Personal information
Full nameBruce Loyola Ryan
Born7 July 1921
Newtown, New South Wales
Died25 June 2002
Playing information
PositionWing
Club
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
1941–1947Newtown Jets38270081
1947–1950Hull FC8460000
1950–1952Leeds5742000
Total1791290081

Bruce Loyola Ryan (1921–2002) was an Australian Rugby League player of the 1940s.
Bruce Ryan was a champion school-boy sprinter, before being graded at the Newtown Jets in 1940. He went on to play six seasons for Newtown but his career was often interrupted by World War II, of which he was a member of the Australian Army and later the RAAF. His time at the club included being in the squad that won the 1943 Grand Final. He also played in the team that were defeated in the 1944 Grand Final.
After retiring from Newtown at the end of the 1947 season, he traveled to England to join Hull FC for the 1947–1948 season, where he was met by 4,000 fans waiting to greet him at Paragon Station. He went on to play for three seasons, scoring 60 tries in 84 games. Ryan transferred to Leeds for a then world record fee of £4,750, where he played for two seasons, scoring 42 tries in 57 games.
He later joined the coaching staff of the North Sydney Bears in 1956.[1]
Ryan died on 25 June 2002.[2]

Alki (boat)


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seattle fireboat Alki -- 1940.jpg
The Alki showing off in 1940
Name:Alki
Builder:Pacific Coast Engineering
Launched:1927
Out of service:2013
General characteristics
Tonnage:
Length:118 feet (36 m)
Beam:26 feet (7.9 m)
Depth:10.8 feet (3.3 m)
Propulsion:Two Cleveland 500 horsepower (370 kW) diesel engines[2]
The Alki is a long-serving fireboat in Seattle, Washington.[2] The boat was built in 1927 and is 123 feet (37 m) long.
Seattle sits on both Puget Sound and a series of freshwater lakes, including Lake Union and Lake Washington.[2] In 2002, after a large fire, where thirty vessels were destroyed, firefighting authorities decided to permanently station a fireboat on the lakes, because it takes an hour for a fireboat to traverse the locks between the lakes and the Ocean. Alki was the vessel chosen.
The boat has been taken out of service and was auctioned online beginning March 4, 2013,[3] and sold for $71,000 on March 14, 2013, to an unknown buyer.[4] It was stipulated by the City ahead of time that the high bidder must meet certain requirements, including appropriate insurance and moorage.

Iranocichla hormuzensis


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iranocichla hormuzensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Actinopterygii
Order:Perciformes
Family:Cichlidae
Subfamily:Pseudocrenilabrinae
Tribe:Tilapiini
Genus:Iranocichla
Coad, 1982
Species:I. hormuzensis
Binomial name
Iranocichla hormuzensis
Coad, 1982
Iranocichla hormuzensis is a species of mouthbrooding fish from the cichlid family. It is the only member of its genus, and reaches a length of about 10 centimetres (3.9 in).[1] It has a stout body. Young exhibit a silver-green coloration with no fin pigmentation. The adult is mostly black with silver speckles on the body and barring on the dorsal fin. It is restricted to freshwater and brackish habitats in southern Iran above the Straits of Hormuz. It is the only species of cichlid native to this country, and among the few cichlids native to Asia. Although it has not been rated by the IUCN, some authorities believe it is highly threatened.[1]

Annihilation: Conquest


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Annihilation: Conquest"
Cover art for Annihilation: Conquest #6.
Art by Aleksi Briclot.
PublisherMarvel Comics
Publication dateAugust 2007 – June 2008
Genre
Volume OneISBN 0-7851-2782-8
Volume TwoISBN 0-7851-2716-X
"Annihilation: Conquest" is a 2007-2008 Marvel Comics crossover storyline and the sequel to 2006's "Annihilation". The series again focuses on Marvel's cosmic heroes defending the universe against the Phalanx, now led by UltronNova returns once more in a title role, along with QuasarStar-Lord, and a new character called Wraith.
Other characters featured were Ronan the AccuserMoondragonSuper-SkrullGamoraMantis and Rocket Raccoon. The series also saw the return of Adam Warlock to the Marvel Universe.

Publication history[edit]

The format mirrored that of its predecessor with one minor difference. Instead of four four-issue mini-series preceding the six-issue main series there were three. In place of the fourth there were four issues of the ongoing series Nova.
Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning were given the task of overseeing the story; "We were approached by Andy Schmidt, who edited the first "Annihilation" storyline, and asked to pilot the next event, which Bill Rosemann is editing." They ended up writing the Prologue, the Nova series crossover and the main Annihilation: Conquest limited series.[1]
The remaining mini-series were focused on Quasar by Christos Gage,[2] Star-Lord by Keith Giffen[3] and Wraith, by Javier Grillo-Marxuach.[4]

Summary[edit]

The Prologue reveals that the Phalanx are the primary enemy after they use their technology as well as the devastation of the wake of the Annihilation Wave to take control of the Kree army.
The techno-organic Phalanx invaded the Kree Empire, using the Space Knights as pawns unwittingly brought to the Kree homeworld of Hala by the former Star-Lord, Peter Quill. Assimilating the majority of the population and encasing the Kree galaxy in a force field, the Phalanx conquered the Kree in a matter of weeks.
Soon afterwards, a new warrior by the name of Wraith is captured by the Phalanx. He is capable of easily defeating the Phalanx warriors by inflicting them with fear. Wraith expresses that he has no interest in fighting the Phalanx, but they proceed to attack anyway. After being defeated, the Phalanx then dispatch Ronan the Accuser, who has been converted to their cause, to torture Wraith. Wraith manages to escape however, along with the Super-Skrull, and is guided by the spirit of his deceased father to find the man who murdered his family.
Under interrogation by Ronan, Wraith reveals his origin: the son of an exiled Kree scientist, the boy was kidnapped by the extra-dimensional Nameless Ones after his parents were murdered and bonded with the soul-stealing, strength-enhancing symbiotic Exolon, eventually murdering his captors and returning to Kree space seeking his family’s killer.
Elsewhere, Nova has heard of the disturbance in Kree space. He comes to investigate only to discover that he is trapped within Kree space. As he attempts to leave he is badly wounded, and the power within him is transferred to a new warrior. As he revives, he is visited by Gamora, who has also been infected with the Phalanx virus. She quickly converts Nova as well, leading to a battle between Richard Rider and the new Nova, during which Gamora apparently kills the new Nova.
With the help of the Worldmind, Nova breaks free of the Phalanx’s control, throwing off his Select programming, though the virus that has caused it remains in his system. Fleeing from his captors, Nova collapses a dwarf star to slingshot him out of the Phalanx field around Kree space and into uncharted territory. Unbeknownst to Nova, he has been followed by Gamora and Drax, both still Phalanx Selects.
At the onset of the Phalanx invasion, Peter Quill is at ground zero. He manages to find cover and make it to a Kree prison in which he meets several warriors to team with including, Mantis and Captain Universe. He resumes his former persona, Star-Lord, and takes off to fight against the Phalanx. The group quickly loses two of their warriors in battle.
After discovering that the Phalanx plan to infect the Kree with an airborne techno-virus, Star-Lord and friends — including Groot, who survived an earlier skirmish only to return as a sprig — find themselves on the run. The Phalanx capture all but Mantis, who slips away, and Captain Universe, who had planned to sacrifice himself to save the others but turns out to be their last hope.
Meanwhile, Quasar (Phyla-Vell) has been on the outskirts of Kree-Space, aiding those still suffering from the devastation of the Annihilation Wave when she learns of the Phalanx invasion. Accompanied by Moondragon, she follows the commands of a mysterious voice which instructs her to find the "savior" of the Kree empire. During her quest she battles the Super Adaptoid, learns how to control her new quantum bands, and discovers more about Moondragon's history, before watching her transform into an actual Dragon of the Moon.
Quasar and the newly transformed Moondragon track the savior to the remote planet Morag IV, but are ambushed by the Super-Adaptoid. The heroes recover thanks to the locals, but discover the Adaptoid has already reached the savior and is attempting to assimilate him/her. After a brief fight, the Adaptoid unleashes a destructive force on the nearby town, forcing Quasar to choose the innocents over the savior at the cost of exhausting her Quantum Bands.[5]
Quasar finds herself, Moondragon, and the grateful natives of Morag IV in pitched battle against not only the Super-Adaptoid, but a host of Phalanx bent on assimilating the savior of the Kree — the enigmatic Adam Warlock.[6] Quasar and Moondragon ultimately defeat the Super-Adaptoid and in the process, Quasar resorbs power into her quantum bands from the Super-Adaptoid that he had earlier absorbed. The mysterious voice guiding Quasar turns out to belong to the Kree Supreme Intelligence, who believed that Warlock would prove to be the Kree savior. Warlock was regenerating in a cocoon, but his regeneration was damaged by the Super-Adaptoid and the Phalanx. Moondragon and the Supreme Intelligence help Warlock re-emerge, but he is younger than expected (due to the prematurity of his re-emergence) and troubled, despite the mental work of Moondragon and the Supreme Intelligence to soothe him.
A Phalanx assimilated Xemnu, along with Shatterax and Korath try to kill Moondragon, Quasar, and Adam. However, Adam Warlock whisks them away to where some miniature Kree are being held by the High Evolutionary. The Phalanx Technarchy's primary director is revealed to be Avengers villain Ultron. Ultron kills Korath and decides to involve himself in the battle personally.
Moondragon and Quasar seek to persuade the High Evolutionary to join them in their struggle against the Phalanx. Ultron finds them and apparently kills Moondragon. Ultron and Warlock prepare to battle. Blastaar, who was working against the Phalanx, appears to die. Star-Lord appears to have the plans for the Phalanx Babel Spire and plans to infiltrate it.
Traveling with the High Evolutionary is Phyla-Vell, now known as Quasar and Moondragon. Adam stands against Ultron. The High Evolutionary is ultimately captured by the Phalanx, and is forced to transfer Ultron's essence into Adam's body or be destroyed. The High Evolutionary performs the transfer, seemingly betraying and killing Adam in the process. However, the Evolutionary makes a few cryptic remarks to Ultron's former body once the transfer is complete, suggesting that there are layers of complexity to the situation that the Evolutionary is keeping to himself. Ultron awakes in Adam's body, unaware of these remarks and pleased with the results. Controlling Adam's abilities better than Adam could, Ultron gathered the Phalanx to end the resistance against him in the form of Star-Lord and his team. Then, he plans on controlling an army of Adam Warlocks to conquer Earth.
During this time, Star-Lord is captured and tortured by Ultron. Bug, Rocket Raccoon and Mantis concoct a plan that involves Groot growing inside the Babel Tower and destroy it from the inside out. Mantis uses her telepathic powers to increase his growing abilities and when the time is right to ignite the flammable chemicals in his body. This would result in his death, but Groot approves since he would die a hero, befitting his status. Rocket Raccoon takes a cutting of Groot to regrow the royal tree. The plan goes well, as Star-Lord is rescued, but the team must jump off the spire to survive. Groot uses the last of his life energy to grow a protrusion to catch them as they fall.
Mantis explains the loss of Groot and that Star-Lord would not have gone along with the plan if he knew three of his teammates would die. Star-Lord does not understand how three would die as only Gabe/Captain Universe and Groot have died (he doesn't count Deathcry as a member of the team). Mantis says she saw Ultron at the moment appearing and killing her. In Adam Warlock's body, Ultron does appear and cripples her with a blow to the head.
Outside the energy shield a gathering of ships from the BadoonRigellians, Galadorian Spaceknights, Spartoi and remaining Kree constantly batter the shield with all their weaponry, failing to get through. Suddenly, Nova appears with Drax and Gamora (both free of the Phalanx) along with two members of the Technarchy, one being Warlock. The Technarchy begot the Phalanx and have come to set things right. They penetrate the shield and engage Ultron. Ultron easily outmaneuvers Nova but cannot defeat Warlock and the Technarchy. Warlock then infects Ultron with a slow-acting version of the Techno-Organic Virus, which causes Ultron to flee.
Ronan the Accuser leads 15,000 Kree Sentries to Hala to destroy all Phalanx and Phalanx-infected Kree on Hala. After seeing Nova, Phyla-Vell, Drax and Gamora standing up to the Phalanx, the fleet calls for the attack of Hala to be called off. Ronan refuses, and orders Praxagora to fire, but she refuses. Ultron has passed his essence into her and stuns Wraith so he can transfer his essence into the Sentries. As he is leaving Praxagora's body, he destabilizes her fusion core and kills her. This results in the ship carrying Ronan, Ra-venn and the Super-Skrull to be destroyed. Only Kl'rt's forcefields save them.
As he departs, the High Evolutionary reveals that Adam is still alive and will continue to lead the group. It turns out that he was stored in the gems on the Quantum Bands Phyla-Vell wore. She returns his soul to his body. Ultron takes control of the Kree altered Sentries and forms one giant Ultron form. Adam and Phyla-Vell stand against him, and Adam transfers all the souls of the Kree lost in the Conquest to the Quantum Bands, energizing them and reforging Phyla-Vell's sword. She dealt the death blow to Ultron, after Wraith had used his Exolons to trap Ultron in his current body so he can't leap to the next.
As Phyla-Vell mourned Moondragon's death, Adam came to her and expressed Star-Lord's plan to form a team to stand against galactic threats and prevent further catastrophes from happening.

Resistance[edit]

Group 1Group 2Group 3Group 4
Drax (went on to join GOTG)Blastaar (captured and turned into Select)Praxagora (killed by Ultron)Adam Warlock (went on to join GOTG)
Gamora (went on to join GOTG)BugRa-vennMoondragon (killed by Ultron)
NovaCaptain Universe (killed by Select)RonanPhyla-Vell (went on to join GOTG)
Tyro (stayed to heal infected people)Groot (went on to join GOTG)Super-Skrull
Warlock (stayed to heal infected people)Mantis (went on to join GOTG)Wraith (stayed to heal infected people)
Rocket Raccoon (went on to join GOTG)
Star-Lord (went on to form GOTG)

Sequels and spin-offs[edit]

The main characters in this story would go on to form the core of the new Guardians of the Galaxy, also written by Abnett/Lanning.[7]

Collected editions[edit]

There have been a number of collected volumes with the core titles being brought together into two hardcover editions:
  • Annihilation: Conquest:
    • Volume One (collects "Annihilation: Conquest - Prologue" one-shot, Annihilation: Conquest - Quasar mini-series, Annihilation: Conquest - Starlord mini-series and "Annihilation: Saga" one-shot, 272 pages, Marvel Comics, hardcover, January 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2782-8, softcover, November 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2783-6)
    • Volume Two (collects Annihilation: Conquest - Wraith mini-series, Nova #4-7 and Annihilation: Conquest limited series, 344 pages, Marvel Comics, hardcover, August 2008, ISBN 0-7851-2716-X, softcover, February 2009, ISBN 0-7851-2717-8)
Some of series involved have been collected in separate softcover releases: