lundi 31 août 2015

Sir William Robertson, 1st Baronet

CIGS: Third Ypres

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==CIGS: Third Ypres==
 
==CIGS: Third Ypres==
[[File:Chateau Wood Ypres 1917.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A scene from the Third Battle of Ypres]]
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[[File:Chateauwood.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A scene from the Third Battle of Ypres]]
   
 
===Third Ypres begins===
 
===Third Ypres begins===


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Roller Coaster (Luke Bryan song)

← Previous revision Revision as of 21:39, 31 August 2015
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| Format = [[Music download|Digital download]]
 
| Format = [[Music download|Digital download]]
 
| Recorded =
 
| Recorded =
| Genre = [[Country music|Country]]<!-- Do not change without a source -->
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| Genre = {{flatlist|
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* [[Country music|Country]]
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* [[pop rock]]<ref name="CP">{{cite web|url=http://ift.tt/1PHnaTR – Luke Bryan’s “Roller Coaster” : Country Perspective|date=11 July 2014|work=Country Perspective|accessdate=31 August 2015}}</ref>
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}}
 
| Length = {{Duration|m=4|s=19}}
 
| Length = {{Duration|m=4|s=19}}
 
| Label = [[Capitol Records Nashville|Capitol Nashville]]
 
| Label = [[Capitol Records Nashville|Capitol Nashville]]
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==Critical reception==
 
==Critical reception==
[[Taste of Country]] reviewed the song positively. The review contrasted it with "[['Til Summer Comes Around]]" by [[Keith Urban]] in saying that it was more "positive" than that song, also saying that "The roller coaster metaphor is creative — it’s what separates this song from others that rely on an increasingly used country trope. Once again it’s Bryan’s natural charisma that lifts a lyric that wouldn’t work for someone less lovable. Little details like Thomas Drive feel personal. He’s becoming one of country’s top storytellers."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ift.tt/1NJpiNb Bryan, ‘Roller Coaster’ [Listen]|date=June 27, 2014|work=[[Taste of Country]]|accessdate=October 2, 2014}}</ref>
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[[Taste of Country]] reviewed the song positively. The review contrasted it with "[['Til Summer Comes Around]]" by [[Keith Urban]] in saying that it was more "positive" than that song, also saying that "The roller coaster metaphor is creative — it’s what separates this song from others that rely on an increasingly used country trope. Once again it’s Bryan’s natural charisma that lifts a lyric that wouldn’t work for someone less lovable. Little details like Thomas Drive feel personal. He’s becoming one of country’s top storytellers."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ift.tt/1NJpiNb Bryan, ‘Roller Coaster’ [Listen]|date=June 27, 2014|work=[[Taste of Country]]|accessdate=October 2, 2014}}</ref> Josh Schott of ''Country Perspective'' gave the song a "5.5/10", saying that "Out of all the singles from Crash My Party, this is his best. But I don’t love this song nor can I hate it either. It’s a generic, bland, summer love song. “Roller Coaster” reminds me a lot of Craig Campbell’s “Keep Them Kisses Comin’.” Bryan on his name alone makes this song “good” to the mainstream country fan. To the traditionalist country fans like myself, we acknowledge the improvement."<ref name="CP"/>
   
 
==Music video==
 
==Music video==


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SORA training

Added {{BLP sources}} and {{no footnotes}} tags to article (TW)

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{{BLP sources|date=August 2015}}
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{{no footnotes|date=August 2015}}
 
'''SORA''' (''Security Officer Registration Act'') is a standardized [[security officer|Security guard]] training program that has become law in the state of [[New Jersey]] (since 2007 ).<ref>[http://ift.tt/1mEZ3Ky New Jersey State Police SORA updates] Retrieved on 26 June 2007</ref> This law now requires security practitioners to register, receive state regulated training, and a background check to work as a security guard in New Jersey.
 
'''SORA''' (''Security Officer Registration Act'') is a standardized [[security officer|Security guard]] training program that has become law in the state of [[New Jersey]] (since 2007 ).<ref>[http://ift.tt/1mEZ3Ky New Jersey State Police SORA updates] Retrieved on 26 June 2007</ref> This law now requires security practitioners to register, receive state regulated training, and a background check to work as a security guard in New Jersey.
   


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Kurds in Jordan

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{{Infobox ethnic group
 
{{Infobox ethnic group
|group = Jordanian Kurds
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|group = Kurds in Jordan
 
|image =
 
|image =
 
|population = 30,000<ref name="language"/>–100,000<ref name=kurdica>{{cite web|title=Diaspora: Die Gemeinschaft in Jordanien|url=http://ift.tt/1NJphcf December 2012|language=German}}</ref>
 
|population = 30,000<ref name="language"/>–100,000<ref name=kurdica>{{cite web|title=Diaspora: Die Gemeinschaft in Jordanien|url=http://ift.tt/1NJphcf December 2012|language=German}}</ref>


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Day by Day (Yolanda Adams album)

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| 5. || "Day By Day" || Gregory G. Curtis || 3:56
 
| 5. || "Day By Day" || Gregory G. Curtis || 3:56
 
|-
 
|-
| 6. || "Lift Him Up" <small>(Featuring [[Donnie McClurkin]]; [[Mary Mary]])</small> || Harris, James III; Terry Lewis; Wright, James Q.; [[Yolanda Adams]] || 4:59
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| 6. || "Lift Him Up" <small>(Featuring [[Donnie McClurkin]]; [[Mary Mary]])</small> || James Q. Wright, Jimmy Jam, and Terry Lewis || 4:59
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 7. || "It's Gon Be Nice" || Shep Crawford; [[Yolanda Adams]] || 2:59
 
| 7. || "It's Gon Be Nice" || Shep Crawford; [[Yolanda Adams]] || 2:59


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User talk:Jk-472

Warning Jk-472 - #1

New page



== August 2015 ==
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Guttenberg, New Jersey

add details re derivation / meaning of name, with sources

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Guttenberg was formerly a farm owned by William Cooper, sold in 1853 to a group of New Yorkers, who had formed the Weehawken Land and Ferry Association. Like nearby [[Union Hill, New Jersey|Union Hill]], it was subdivided and lots were sold mostly to Germans. The company ran two ferries, the ''Hultz'' and the ''Flora'', which crossed the Hudson from the landings at the foot of [[Bulls Ferry|Bulls Ferry Road]], [[Shadyside, Edgewater|Pleasant Valley]], [[Fort Lee, New Jersey|Fort Lee]], and [[Spring Street (Manhattan)|Spring Street]] in [[Manhattan]].
 
Guttenberg was formerly a farm owned by William Cooper, sold in 1853 to a group of New Yorkers, who had formed the Weehawken Land and Ferry Association. Like nearby [[Union Hill, New Jersey|Union Hill]], it was subdivided and lots were sold mostly to Germans. The company ran two ferries, the ''Hultz'' and the ''Flora'', which crossed the Hudson from the landings at the foot of [[Bulls Ferry|Bulls Ferry Road]], [[Shadyside, Edgewater|Pleasant Valley]], [[Fort Lee, New Jersey|Fort Lee]], and [[Spring Street (Manhattan)|Spring Street]] in [[Manhattan]].
   
Guttenberg was formed as a town on March 9, 1859, from portions of [[North Bergen, New Jersey|North Bergen Township]], but remained as a part of the township that was not fully independent. Guttenberg became part of [[Union Township, Hudson County, New Jersey|Union Township]] when it was formed on February 28, 1861, and became fully independent as of April 1, 1878.<ref name=Story>Snyder, John P. [http://ift.tt/1bx0l1S ''The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968''], Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey; 1969. p. 146. Accessed April 24, 2012.</ref> The city takes its name from [[Johannes Gutenberg]], the inventor of [[movable type]].<ref>Gannett, Henry. [http://books.google.com/books?id=9V1IAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA146#v=onepage&q&f=false ''The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States''], p. 146. [[United States Government Printing Office]], 1905. Accessed February 18, 2015.</ref>
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Guttenberg was formed as a town on March 9, 1859, from portions of [[North Bergen, New Jersey|North Bergen Township]], but remained as a part of the township that was not fully independent. Guttenberg became part of [[Union Township, Hudson County, New Jersey|Union Township]] when it was formed on February 28, 1861, and became fully independent as of April 1, 1878.<ref name=Story>Snyder, John P. [http://ift.tt/1bx0l1S ''The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries: 1606-1968''], Bureau of Geology and Topography; Trenton, New Jersey; 1969. p. 146. Accessed April 24, 2012.</ref> The city takes its name from [[Johannes Gutenberg]], the inventor of [[movable type]]<ref>[[Henry Gannett|Gannett, Henry]]. [https://books.google.com/books?id=9V1IAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA146 ''The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States''], p. 146. [[United States Government Printing Office]], 1905. Accessed August 31, 2015.</ref> though other sources indicate that the name derives from "good village" in [[German language|German]].<ref>Hutchinson, Viola L. [http://ift.tt/1PHna67 ''The Origin of New Jersey Place Names''], New Jersey Public Library Commission, May 1945. Accessed August 31, 2015.</ref>
   
 
[[Galaxy Towers]], developed by [[Prudential Insurance]] Company, were built in the late 1970s on [[Boulevard East]]. The three octagonal skyscrapers rise {{convert|415|ft}} and contain 1,075 apartments.<ref>Rand, Ellen. [http://ift.tt/1NJphc5 "NEW JERSEY HOUSING; The Demise of a Luxury Complex"], ''The New York Times'', June 8, 1980. Accessed July 15, 2012.</ref>
 
[[Galaxy Towers]], developed by [[Prudential Insurance]] Company, were built in the late 1970s on [[Boulevard East]]. The three octagonal skyscrapers rise {{convert|415|ft}} and contain 1,075 apartments.<ref>Rand, Ellen. [http://ift.tt/1NJphc5 "NEW JERSEY HOUSING; The Demise of a Luxury Complex"], ''The New York Times'', June 8, 1980. Accessed July 15, 2012.</ref>


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