Saddlebred Sidewalk List 1989-2018
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Samoan Submission Machines
Samoan Submission Machines: Grappling with Representations of Samoan Identity in Professional Wrestling Theo Plothe1 Savannah State University [email protected] Amongst the myriad of characters to step foot in the squared circle, perhaps no ethnic group has been as celebrated or marginalized as the Samoans who have made their names in professional wrestling. The discussion of Samoan identity in the context of sport has examined Maori identity and masculinity in New Zealand, among other topics, but there has yet to be work which considers Samoans within professional wrestling. This research investigates Samoan identity through a content analysis of televised wrestling matches. This research identifies six primary stereotypes under which Samoan identity is portrayed. These portrayals of Samoan characters, I argue, flatten the representation of this ethnic group within wrestling and culture at large. Keywords: Samoans, identity, representation, gimmicks Introduction Among the myriad of characters to step foot in the squared circle, perhaps no ethnic group has been as celebrated or marginalized as the Samoans who have made their names in professional wrestling. This research investigates the identity of Samoans within professional wrestling, and the different ways they are constructed and presented to audiences. “Gimmicks,” characters portrayed by a wrestler “resulting in the sum of fictional elements, attire and wrestling ability” (Oliva and Calleja 3) utilized by Samoans have run the gamut from the wild uncivilized savage, to the sumo (both in villainous Japanese and comically absurd iterations), to the ultra-cool mogul who wears silk shirts and fancy shoes. Their ability to cut promos, an important facet of the modern gimmick allowing wrestlers to address their opponents and storylines, varies widely as well, but all lie within their Samoan identity. -
June 2015 Some Thoughts from Bill Wow! It Has Been a Busy Spring
The Sight-Loss Support Group of Central Pennsylvania, Inc. Turning Darkness into Light Since 1982 [email protected] www.slsg.org 814-238-0132 June 2015 Some Thoughts from Bill Wow! It has been a busy spring. We have accomplished so much it's hard to put it into a few words. We have closed our “bricks and mortar” office and started our virtual officenot an easy task after 32 years of record keeping. Thanks to all who helped in the move. I want to especially thank Roger Gaumond, who has gone above and beyond in: managing the move of our inventory to a storage area, researching and obtaining a mobile "hot spot" telephone system, obtaining Go-To-Meeting software so we can communicate with remote individuals and organizations, setting up our first Community Information Presentations, and generally keeping us all going. We started a new Outreach program to present who we are, what we do, and how we do it. This has been met with a lot of enthusiasm both internally and externally. So far, we have gone to several area retirement homes to give this talk and to present guest speakers on subjects like the Audio-Description program, the Puppy Raiser program, and North Central Sight Services. Thank you to Roger (again), Eileen Rivoir, Nanette Anslinger, Rana Arnold, Susan Kennedy, and Heather Engel. Susan developed a brief survey and a method of capturing data from those surveys taken after presentations, to monitor and measure how we are doing. This is vital, for if we do not measure we cannot report the results to United Way. -
Top Songwriter Chart
TOP SONGWRITER CHART Sunday, June 7, 2020 This Last Songwriter’s Name Song(s) Artist Week Week 1 1 Craig Wiseman Chasin' You Morgan Wallen Here And Now Kenny Chesney 2 2 Shane McAnally Champagne Night Lady Antebellum Cheatin' Songs Midland Hard To Forget Sam Hunt Nobody But You Blake Shelton And Gwen Stefani One Night Standards Ashley McBryde Second Guessing Florida Georgia Line Some People Do Old Dominion The Other Girl Kelsea Ballerini x Halsey 3 3 Luke Combs Does To Me Luke Combs (feat. Eric Church) I Hope You're Happy Now Carly Pearce and Lee Brice Six Feet Apart Luke Combs 4 4 Jonathan Singleton Die From A Broken Heart Maddie & Tae I Hope You're Happy Now Carly Pearce and Lee Brice In Between Scotty McCreery 5 5 Josh Thompson Ain't Always The Cowboy Jon Pardi Be A Light Thomas Rhett Featuring Reba McEntire, Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin & Keith Urban One Margarita Luke Bryan 6 6 Michael Hardy More Than My Hometown Morgan Wallen One Beer HARDY Feat. Lauren Alaina and Devin Dawson One Big Country Song LOCASH Single Saturday Night Cole Swindell Some Girls Jameson Rodgers 7 7 Morgan Wallen Chasin' You Morgan Wallen More Than My Hometown Morgan Wallen 8 8 David Garcia Drinking Alone Carrie Underwood Here And Now Kenny Chesney 9 10 Ashley Gorley Hard To Forget Sam Hunt One Big Country Song LOCASH One Of Them Girls Lee Brice Single Saturday Night Cole Swindell 10 9 Thomas Rhett Be A Light Thomas Rhett Featuring Reba McEntire, Beer Can't Fix Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin & Keith Urban Thomas Rhett (feat. -
More About the Album Thank Yous • About the Guitars
Produced by AM & Dustin DeLage Recording, engineering and mixing by Dustin DeLage at Cabin Studios, Leesburg VA Additional remote recording by Ken Lubinsky at lack Hills Studios, Plain"eld CT Atlantic $cean wa&es recorded by Mic'elle McKnig't at East eac', Charlestown R)* Mastering by ill +ol,, +ol, Productions, Alexandria VA* -ra.'ic Design by Stilson -reene, Leesburg VA ack co&er .'oto by Christi Porter P'otogra.'y, Lincoln VA All songs written by AM and ©Catalooch Music, BMI, except "Margaret" by Andrew McKnight ©19 !, "uccess Music, and "#ur Meeting Is #ver" %traditional&' #'e Songs #'e and 1. Embarking 1:12 ,M - vo<a-s7 a<ousti< & e-e<tri< guitars7 s-i"e guitar7 2. Margaret/Treasures in My Chest 4:56 &ative Ameri<an fute 3. Web of Mystery 3:24 9a<he- Tay-or - ce--o 4. eft Behin" 3:55 Mi<hae- Rohrer ; e-e<tri< an" u:right bass 5. #assage/(Fathers No') Our Meeting is Over 2:1+ isa Tay-or - drums7 harmony vo<a-s 6. ,retas Cu-ver 4:13 >ef Arey - man"o-in .. , Dram to the Ho-i"ays 5:13 4te:hanie Thom:son7 Tony Denikos - harmony vo<a-s 1. The Gift 3:51 3. 4ons & Fathers 3:53 $t'er Essential Musical Pieces 1+. My Litt-e To'n 3:35 ,-y M<@night - piano (Margaret( 11. ong Ago an" Far A'ay 1:5+ Warren M<@night - piano an" organ $4ons & Fathers( 12. Entre-azan"o 0:43 Ma"e-eine M<@night - f""-e (Long Ago & Far A'ay(7 13. -
Here We Are at 500! the BRL’S 500 to Be Exact and What a Trip It Has Been
el Fans, here we are at 500! The BRL’s 500 to be exact and what a trip it has been. Imagibash 15 was a huge success and the action got so intense that your old pal the Teamster had to get involved. The exclusive coverage of that ppv is in this very issue so I won’t spoil it and give away the ending like how the ship sinks in Titanic. The Johnny B. Cup is down to just four and here are the representatives from each of the IWAR’s promotions; • BRL Final: Sir Gunther Kinderwacht (last year’s winner) • CWL Final: Jane the Vixen Red (BRL, winner of 2017 Unknown Wrestler League) • IWL Final: Nasty Norman Krasner • NWL Final: Ricky Kyle In one semi-final, we will see bitter rivals Kinderwacht and Red face off while in the other the red-hot Ricky Kyle will face the, well, Nasty Normal Krasner. One of these four will win The self-professed “Greatest Tag team wrestler the 4th Johnny B Cup and the results will determine the breakdown of the prizes. ? in the world” debuted in the NWL in 2012 and taunt-filled promos earned him many enemies. The 26th Marano Memorial is also down to the final 5… FIVE? Well since the Suburban Hell His “Teamster Challenge” offered a prize to any Savages: Agent 26 & Punk Rock Mike and Badd Co: Rick Challenger & Rick Riley went to a NWL rookie who could capture a Tag Team title draw, we will have a rematch. The winner will advance to face Sledge and Hammer who won with him, but turned ugly when he kept blaming the CWL bracket. -
The Psychology of Money
The Psychology of Money Adrian Furnham Professor of Psychology e-mail: [email protected] SOME DEFINITIONS • Psychologist: – Man who goes to a strip show and looks at the audience. • Psychology: – Study of the id by the odd. • Psychologists’ greeting each other: – “You’re fine; how am I? • Business guru – Word used by journalists because they can’t spell charlatan. • Business consultant: – A simple organism designed to translate bullshit into air-miles. • Psychologist: • The next person you start talking to after you start talking to yourself. • Psychologist: • A professional who asks you a lot of expensive questions your partner asks you for nothing. • Psychologist: • A person who studies the problems of others in an attempt to understand their own problems. • Psychiatrist: • A doctor who can’t stand the sight of blood. • Psychotherapy: • The art of teaching people how to stand on their own feet while reclining on couches. • Psychoanalysis • The science that enables us to correct faults by confessing our parent's shortcomings. Is Money a Taboo Topic? • Rich people, who dictate etiquette, eschew discussing their money lest the poor figure out how to get it for themselves. Or because friends and relatives might want it or become envious of it. • It is superstitious to talk of money: it means it could be taken away. • Boasting about money could encourage envious others to inform tax authorities. • On some levels we know our attitudes to money reveal a lot about us which we would rather keep private. Five topics 1. Money at work 2. Emotional associations of money. 3. Learning about money. -
HUNG LIU: OFFERINGS January 23-March 17, 2013
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contacts: December 12, 2012 Maysoun Wazwaz Mills College Art Museum, Program Manager 510.430.3340 or [email protected] Mills College Art Museum Announces HUNG LIU: OFFERINGS January 23-March 17, 2013 Oakland, CA—December 12, 2012. The Mills College Art Museum is pleased to present Hung Liu: Offerings a rare opportunity to experience two of the Oakland-based artist’s most significant large- scale installations: Jiu Jin Shan (Old Gold Mountain) (1994) and Tai Cang—Great Granary (2008). Hung Liu: Offerings will be on view from January 23 through March 17, 2013. The opening reception takes place on Wednesday, January 23, 2013 from 6:00–8:00 pm and free shuttle service will be provided from the MacArthur Bart station during the opening. Recognized as America's most important Chinese artist, Hung Liu’s installations have played a central role in her work throughout her career. In Jiu Jin Shan (Old Gold Mountain), over two hundred thousand fortune cookies create a symbolic gold mountain that engulfs a crossroads of railroad tracks running beneath. The junction where the tracks meet serves as both a crossroads and 1 terminus, a visual metaphor of the cultural intersection of East and West. Liu references not only the history of the Chinese laborers who built the railroads to support the West Coast Gold Rush, but also the hope shared among these migrant workers that they could find material prosperity in the new world. The Mills College Art Museum is excited to be the first venue outside of China to present Tai Cang— Great Granary. -
31 Days of Oscar® 2010 Schedule
31 DAYS OF OSCAR® 2010 SCHEDULE Monday, February 1 6:00 AM Only When I Laugh (’81) (Kevin Bacon, James Coco) 8:15 AM Man of La Mancha (’72) (James Coco, Harry Andrews) 10:30 AM 55 Days at Peking (’63) (Harry Andrews, Flora Robson) 1:30 PM Saratoga Trunk (’45) (Flora Robson, Jerry Austin) 4:00 PM The Adventures of Don Juan (’48) (Jerry Austin, Viveca Lindfors) 6:00 PM The Way We Were (’73) (Viveca Lindfors, Barbra Streisand) 8:00 PM Funny Girl (’68) (Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif) 11:00 PM Lawrence of Arabia (’62) (Omar Sharif, Peter O’Toole) 3:00 AM Becket (’64) (Peter O’Toole, Martita Hunt) 5:30 AM Great Expectations (’46) (Martita Hunt, John Mills) Tuesday, February 2 7:30 AM Tunes of Glory (’60) (John Mills, John Fraser) 9:30 AM The Dam Busters (’55) (John Fraser, Laurence Naismith) 11:30 AM Mogambo (’53) (Laurence Naismith, Clark Gable) 1:30 PM Test Pilot (’38) (Clark Gable, Mary Howard) 3:30 PM Billy the Kid (’41) (Mary Howard, Henry O’Neill) 5:15 PM Mr. Dodd Takes the Air (’37) (Henry O’Neill, Frank McHugh) 6:45 PM One Way Passage (’32) (Frank McHugh, William Powell) 8:00 PM The Thin Man (’34) (William Powell, Myrna Loy) 10:00 PM The Best Years of Our Lives (’46) (Myrna Loy, Fredric March) 1:00 AM Inherit the Wind (’60) (Fredric March, Noah Beery, Jr.) 3:15 AM Sergeant York (’41) (Noah Beery, Jr., Walter Brennan) 5:30 AM These Three (’36) (Walter Brennan, Marcia Mae Jones) Wednesday, February 3 7:15 AM The Champ (’31) (Marcia Mae Jones, Walter Beery) 8:45 AM Viva Villa! (’34) (Walter Beery, Donald Cook) 10:45 AM The Pubic Enemy -
List of Horse Breeds 1 List of Horse Breeds
List of horse breeds 1 List of horse breeds This page is a list of horse and pony breeds, and also includes terms used to describe types of horse that are not breeds but are commonly mistaken for breeds. While there is no scientifically accepted definition of the term "breed,"[1] a breed is defined generally as having distinct true-breeding characteristics over a number of generations; its members may be called "purebred". In most cases, bloodlines of horse breeds are recorded with a breed registry. However, in horses, the concept is somewhat flexible, as open stud books are created for developing horse breeds that are not yet fully true-breeding. Registries also are considered the authority as to whether a given breed is listed as Light or saddle horse breeds a "horse" or a "pony". There are also a number of "color breed", sport horse, and gaited horse registries for horses with various phenotypes or other traits, which admit any animal fitting a given set of physical characteristics, even if there is little or no evidence of the trait being a true-breeding characteristic. Other recording entities or specialty organizations may recognize horses from multiple breeds, thus, for the purposes of this article, such animals are classified as a "type" rather than a "breed". The breeds and types listed here are those that already have a Wikipedia article. For a more extensive list, see the List of all horse breeds in DAD-IS. Heavy or draft horse breeds For additional information, see horse breed, horse breeding and the individual articles listed below. -
Jinx! – LED Matrix Control
Jinx! – LED Matrix Control User Manual Version 0.95a © 2013 Sven Karschewski http://www.live-leds.de Jinx! – LED Matrix Control Table of Contents Features ............................................................................................................................................................. 3 Quick start ......................................................................................................................................................... 4 Matrix Size ..................................................................................................................................................... 4 Output Devices .............................................................................................................................................. 4 Patch Matrix .................................................................................................................................................. 5 Start Output ................................................................................................................................................... 6 Main Window .................................................................................................................................................... 7 Effect Generators .......................................................................................................................................... 7 Copy and Paste Effects ................................................................................................................................. -
Programs That Extend the Useful Lives of Horses
PROGRAMS THAT EXTEND THE USEFUL LIVES OF HORSES: Supply and demand — they are the ingredients that form the foundation for near- ly all successful business models. Markets are sound and profitable when there is a healthy balance between the two. The theory holds true for the horse market as well. Often, however, owners may not be aware of the demands that exist for horses that may be “unwanted” by some, but desired by others. The purpose of this chapter is to show some of the many programs already in place by horse breed organizations and other groups, in which horses are needed by participants. From trail riding enthusiasts to horse show exhibitors, people are searching every day for horses that fit their lifestyles and interests. By understanding the activities encouraged by breed organizations, owners of some unwanted horses might find a good fit, and a good market, among people seeking horses for organized shows and rec- reational events. Following is a listing of some of the most popular programs and activities underway today and some true-life stories of unwanted horses that developed into champions. Competitive Horse Shows: Nearly all horse breed associations offer opportunities for friendly competition. Although a horse may be retired or reaching advanced years of maturity, horse shows offer outlets to help keep the horse active and involved. The registries offer several different disciplines with classes ranging from leadline to saddle seat pleasure to barrel racing. A horse owner can often find a way to keep horses involved for a long time in the variety of disciplines offered in the showing world. -
South Trail Times
SOUTH TRAIL TIMES Volume 3 / Issue 9 SEPTEMBER EDITION: September, 2016 Bizarre and Unique Holidays Month: Classical Music Month Hispanic Heritage Month Fall Hat Month International Square Dancing Month National Blueberry Popsicle Month National Courtesy Month National Piano Month Chicken Month Baby Safety Month Little League Month Honey Month Self-Improvement Month Better Breakfast Month September, 2016 Daily Holidays, Special and Wacky Days: 1 Emma M. Nutt Day, the first woman telephone operator 2 International Bacon Day - Saturday before Labor Day---that’s my kind of day 2 VJ Day, WWII 3 Skyscraper Day 4 Newspaper Carrier Day 5 Be Late for Something Day 5 Cheese Pizza Day 5 Labor Day First Monday of month 6 Fight Procrastination Day 6 Read a Book Day 7 National Salami Day 7 Neither Rain nor Snow Day 8 International Literacy Day 8 National Date Nut Bread Day - or December 22!? 8 Pardon Day 9 Teddy Bear Day 10 Sewing Machine Day 10 Swap Ideas Day 11 911 Remembrance 11 Eid-Ul-Adha 11 Grandparent's Day - first Sunday after Labor Day 11 Make Your Bed Day 11 National Pet Memorial Day -second Sunday in September 11 No News is Good News Day 12 Chocolate Milk Shake Day 12 National Video Games Day - also see Video Games Day in July 13 Defy Superstition Day 13 Fortune Cookie Day 13 National Peanut Day 13 Positive Thinking Day 13 Uncle Sam Day - his image was first used in 1813 14 National Cream-Filled Donut Day 15 Make a Hat Day 15 Felt Hat Day - On this day, men traditionally put away their felt hats.