Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Poseidon's Falls by Simona Niles Poseidon's Falls by Simona Niles. From and To can't be the same language. That page is already in . Something went wrong. Check the webpage URL and try again. Sorry, that page did not respond in a timely manner. Sorry, that page doesn't exist or is preventing translations. Sorry, that page doesn't exist or is preventing translations. Sorry, that page doesn't exist or is preventing translations. Something went wrong, please try again. Try using the Translator for the Microsoft Edge extension instead. Poseidon.

Poseidon ( ポセイドン , Poseidon ) is a god, the Area boss of Deep Kingdom, the Deep Sea Zone, as well as a member of the Ten Guardians. Contents. Personality [ edit | edit source ] He has a high strong personality and has a quick temper. He can be very straightforward and blunt towards others, not holding back his opinion of them. Appearance [ edit | edit source ] Poseidon looks like a little boy, but he is actually only slightly younger than the Demon King and, surprisingly, is the same age as Great Red Siberian. He has blue skin, indigo hair, and yellow eyes. He wears arm braces, a brown cloth for pants, and blue gold-accented boots. He is shirtless and wears a gold choker. Overview [ edit | edit source ] Poseidon is Hades's younger brother and the god of the sea. He is actually an extremely high-ranking god, but he is currently working for the Demon King due to certain circumstances. Poseidon gets along reasonably well with his elder brother Hades, but sometimes he realizes he takes after him, and that annoys him, which is why he kicks Hades every time they meet. PoseidoNet. PoseidoNet was the internal network providing instantaneous communication between various branches of the Poseidon Energy cartel. The network continued to function after the Great War, and was used by the Enclave (which likely also used it before the war). It plays a fairly minor role in Fallout 2 , but foreshadows the existence and extent of the power of the Enclave. Facilities linked by PoseidoNet. Offline in 2242: Appearances. PoseidoNet is mentioned in Fallout 2 , Fallout: New Vegas , and Fallout 76 . Poseidon. Posdeidon is an immortal man with long blue hair, and a blue beard. His skin is tanned, and he has a strong brow and jawline. He wears flowing robes and a golden crown, and is surrounded by spirit power that resembles water and sea creatures. History [ edit | edit source ] Once a human cultivator wielding a Trident sea-type tool spirit, he gradually became strong and was worshiped by many sea spirit masters and sea spirit beasts during his travels among various islands and reaches of the Douluo Planet seas. During his travels, he helped many spirit masters and sea-type spirit beasts while ending many conflicts, thereby obtaining great belief from them that would allow him to evolve and advance to a True God, reaching the level of a 1st Class God. As a God, he became acquaintances with his successor Tang San's predecessor, a Great God King the Asura God. At some point in the past, Poseidon blinded one of the eyes of the Deep Sea Demonic Whale King. He is worshiped by denizens of the Nine Star Sea, notably on Sea God Island. Bo Saixi, his descendant, led the Sea God Temple for many years. He is attended by the Seven Children of the Sea God, a title given to the protectors of the Seven Pillars of Sea God Island. Plot [ edit | edit source ] Poseidon saves Tang San from the Deep Sea Demonic Whale King, threatening to blind his other eye if he didn't leave, but spared his life due to his slow cultivation speed. He expressed hope that Tang San wouldn't let him down, and vanished. Neil Simon. Neil Simon began his career writing comedy for some of radio and television's top talents in the 1940s. Turning to the stage, he enjoyed his first major hit with Barefoot in the Park in 1963, and later scored Tony Awards for The Odd Couple (1965), Biloxi Blues (1985) and Lost in Yonkers (1991). Simon also became a successful screenwriter, earning acclaim for both original and adapted works. In addition to his numerous Tony and Academy Award nominations, Simon in 1983 became the first living playwright to have a Broadway theater named in his honor. He passed away on August 26, 2018, due to complications of pneumonia. Early Life. Marvin Neil Simon was born on July 4, 1927, in the Bronx. (Some sources state he was born in Manhattan.) He grew up in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, where he lived with his parents, Irving and Mamie, and his older brother, Danny. His parents had a tumultuous marriage, with Irving often leaving the family for months at a time. As a result, Simon took refuge in the movies as a child, finding particular solace and delight in comedies. After graduating from DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx, Simon briefly attended New York University before signing up for the Army Air Force Reserve. He was sent to Lowry Field Base in Colorado, where he served as a sports editor for its newspaper, the Rev-Meter , and took classes at the University of Denver, until his discharge in 1946. Early Radio and TV Writing. After returning to New York, Neil Simon took a job in the Warner Brothers Manhattan office mailroom. A pivotal moment came when he and Danny created a sketch for radio producer Ace Goodman, launching their careers as a comedy-writing team. The brothers soon began writing material for stars like Milton Berle and Jackie Gleason. In the early 1950s, Neil and Danny Simon joined the all-star writing cast of the Sid Caesar television series Your Show of Shows, which also included Mel Brooks, Woody Allen and Carl Reiner. By the middle of the decade the brothers had parted ways, but Neil Simon continued his success via the small screen; he earned Emmy Award consideration for his work with Caesar, and also wrote for The Phil Silvers Show and The Garry Moore Show . Broadway Stardom. Simon began writing for the stage while still employed as a TV writer, collaborating with his brother for the short-lived musical Catch a Star! in 1955. His first solo play, Come Blow Your Horn , began a solid run on Broadway in 1961, following years of rewrites. However, it was his follow-up effort, Barefoot in the Park (1963), that established the playwright as a star in his field, a reputation that was cemented with his instant classic about mismatched roommates, the Tony Award-winning The Odd Couple (1965). Simon’s string of Broadway successes included four plays running simultaneously during the 1966-67 season. He scored major hits with Promises, Promises (1968), a musical based on the 1960 Billy Wilder film The Apartment , and with The Sunshine Boys (1972), a tribute to the bygone art of vaudeville. Simon drew extensively from his own life and upbringing in his theatrical writing. Chapter Two (1977), about a widowed writer embarking on a new relationship, began its stage run four years after the death of Simon's first wife. The playwright also mined his personal history for the "Eugene Trilogy" — Brighton Beach Memoirs (1983), Biloxi Blues (1985) and Broadway Bound (1986) — with its New York City-born protagonist spending time in the military before teaming with his brother to write comedy. Despite his popularity and immense success, Simon at times endured less-than-stellar reviews from critics who considered his work sentimental and mainstream. However, he finally achieved a critical breakthrough when his 1991 play, Lost in Yonkers , was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Drama, along with a Tony for Best Play. The prolific playwright continued churning out productions, earning strong reviews for his 1995 Off-Broadway creation, London Suite . However, his later plays generally didn't fare so well with critics, and following the short run of Rose's Dilemma in 2003, his original work trickled to a halt. Other Works. After Come Blow Your Horn was turned into a Frank Sinatra movie in 1963, Simon tried his hand at writing feature films, starting with After the Fox (1966). Several of his original screenplays drew strong praise, with The Goodbye Girl (1977) earning an Academy Award nomination. Additionally, Simon adapted many of his plays for the big screen. The Odd Couple famously became both an Oscar-nominated film in 1968 and an acclaimed TV series in the early 1970s, and Simon also delivered successful film adaptations of Plaza Suite (1971), The Sunshine Boys (1975) and California Suite (1978), among others. Simon also penned two memoirs: Rewrites was published in 1996, and The Play Goes On followed in 1999. Personal Life and Accolades. Simon's first marriage, to dancer Joan Baim, lasted 20 years and produced two daughters, Nancy and Ellen, before Joan's death from cancer in 1973. He began a 10-year union with actress Marsha Mason that same year, and later was twice married to actress Diane Lander (1987-88, 1990-98), during which time he adopted her daughter, Bryn. His fifth and final marriage, to actress Elaine Joyce, took place in 1999. Simon was nominated for 17 Tony Awards over the course of his career, winning three times and garnering a special Tony in 1975 for his contributions to theater. Additionally, he was nominated for four Academy Awards, named a Kennedy Center Honoree and earned honorary degrees from such institutions as Williams College and Hofstra University. In 1983, the Shubert Organization changed the name of the 1920s-era Alvin Theatre to the Neil Simon Theatre, making him the first living playwright to have a Broadway venue named in his honor. Death. Simon passed away on August 26, 2018, at a Manhattan hospital due to complications from pneumonia. The legendary playwright was also reported to have been suffering from the effects of Alzheimer’s disease. Fact Check. We strive for accuracy and fairness. If you see something that doesn't look right, contact us! Egypt, Sudan to hold joint drill amid Ethiopia Nile dispute. CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian military forces arrived in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum ahead of a joint drill amid mounting tensions with Ethiopia over a decade-long Nile water dispute, Sudan's state-run news agency reported Friday. The dispute focuses over the controversial dam that Ethiopia is building on the Blue Nile, the Nile River’s main tributary. Egypt and Sudan want an international agreement to govern how much water Ethiopia releases downstream, especially in a multi-year drought, fearing their critical water shares might be affected. According to Sudan’s state-owned SUNA news agency, Sudanese and Egyptian forces will hold the maneuvers dubbed “Guardians of the Nile” from mid-next week to the end of the month aimed at “strengthening bilateral relations and unifying methods on dealing with threats that both countries are expected to face.” The report did not say how many troops would participate. Apart from those that landed at Khartoum Air Base, another contingent of soldiers and army vehicles were expected to arrive by sea. Last November, Egyptian and Sudanese commando units and air forces held the drill dubbed “Nile Eagles-1” — the first joint military exercises since the ouster of Sudanese autocrat Omar al-Bashir in 2019. Talks with Ethiopia stalled in April; international and regional efforts have since tried to revive the negotiations over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam without success. In March, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi warned that his country’s share of the Nile waters was “untouchable” and that there would be “instability that no one can imagine” in the region if Ethiopia fills the reservoir without an international agreement. Egypt and Sudan argue that Ethiopia’s plan to add 13.5 billion cubic meters of water in 2021 to the dam’s reservoir is a threat to them. Cairo and Khartoum have called for the U.S., U.N, and the European Union to help reach a legally binding deal. The agreement would spell out how the dam is operated and filled, based on international law and norms governing cross-border rivers. Egypt relies on the Nile for more than 90% of its water supplies. Ethiopia says the $5 billion dam is essential, and that the vast majority of its population lacks electricity. Sudan wants Ethiopia to coordinate on the dam’s operation to protect its own power-generating dams on the Blue Nile. The Blue Nile meets the White Nile in Khartoum, before winding northward through Egypt into the Mediterranean Sea. Survivor: California shooter was 'outsider' in workplace. First, there were gunshots. Cautiously, Bertolet left his barricaded office at the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority in San Jose, hoping he could offer first aid to anyone who needed help. The massacre was the worst mass shooting in the San Francisco Bay Area in decades. Beijing critic and media tycoon Jimmy Lai sentenced to another 14 months behind bars. Outspoken Beijing critic and media tycoon Jimmy Lai was given a new prison sentence of 14 months for participating in an unauthorised assembly on October 1, 2019, China’s national day. The 72-year-old was already serving 14 months in maximum security for participating in demonstrations of a similar nature in August the same year. He faces three additional charges under Hong Kong’s draconian national security law, which was introduced last year in response to more than a year of anti-government rallies and demonstrations. In Tarun Tejpal acquittal, judge questions 'appropriate' behaviour for rape victims. A judge clears Tarun Tejpal of rape, noting the alleged victim appeared to be "in a good mood" afterwards. Florida girl Tristyn Bailey, 13, was stabbed 114 times in premeditated attack by 14-year-old classmate, state attorney says. Aiden Fucci, 14, will face a first-degree murder charge as an adult in the killing of Tristyn Bailey, a 13-year-old Florida girl. The Gaetz-Greene Traveling Freak Show is the Future of the GOP. REUTERSThe last time an “” MAGA rally was held in Georgia, Republicans lost two U.S. Senate seats, and America lost what might end up being around $6 trillion. The Matt Gaetz-Marjorie Taylor-Greene show on Thursday night probably won’t cost us as much. Just some time with our family—and our dignity.The event opened with Rep. Jody Hice, who is running a primary against Republican Brad Rafensperger for Georgia Secretary of State. The crowd changed “Lock Him Up,” which was directed at Raffensperger, whose decision to follow the rule of law (though he’s wobbling now while running for reelection) obviously put him on the wrong side of the mob. With a warm up act like that, there’s no need for an announcer to say, “Let’s get ready to rumble!” The sentiment is implicit.Gaetz hit the stage first, throwing out a bunch of populist, demagogic rhetoric (“forever wars,” “socialism,” “rebuild America,” “world’s policeman,” “deep state”) and pandering (“gun control just means we have a steady aim!”). He took shots at the Bushes and the McCains and the Romneys and James Comey and Anthony Faucci. He observed that “Paul Ryan was giving a speech” in California, and added that after Ryan ran for vice president, the party “literally needed an autopsy.” The upshot? “This is Donald ’s party and I’m a Republican,” Gaetz declared. One thing he didn’t talk about was his wingman Joel Greenberg’s guilty pleas for crime including paying a 17-year-old to have sex with both of them (which Gaetz has previously denied).The Sickening History of Marjorie Taylor Greene’s HometownNot to be upstaged, Greene entered the room in a humvee, before making her way on stage, grinning from ear to ear. But her smile belied the populist anger apparently bubbling up inside her. She called out the Democrats who tear down monuments. “You better bet we’re gonna protect Stone Mountain’s monument,” she said of America’s largest monument to the Confederacy. She feigned the Mexican accent of a supposed cartel leader talking about how much he loved Joe Biden, who she said wants a “woke” military. She also called the Squad “the Jihad Squad” and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, “O’Crazyo-Cortez.” Really classy stuff. You see, she’s not a politician. She’s just like you. If you’re a jerk like that, at least.So why is this happening? First, of course, for attention. I’m writing about this, and so are lots of others and, for this crew and especially Greene who’s already been booted from her House committees so has nothing left, but PR like this is its own reward. Indeed, Gaetz referred to Thursday’s rally as “the greatest political show on earth.”Even during the good old days, conservative politics was probably half Bill Buckley and half P.T. Barnum. We were business up front and party in the back (okay, maybe we didn’t party quite as hardy as Gaetz—who my Beast colleagues report snorted coke with a model with a no-show government job at a GOP Trump Defender gala in Orlando—and Greene, but you get the point). Today, the entertainment wing has almost completely supplanted the governing wing.As Gaetz told Vanity Fair a while back, “If you aren’t making news, you aren’t governing.” And Gaetz is ok right now with any news that isn’t about allegations involving sex trafficking a minor. He’s flooding the zone (also with headlines about how he’s flirting with a 2024 presidential bid if Trump doesn’t run) which is a great PR strategy, assuming, you know, he doesn’t get indicted.There are other reasons, including the theory that, in today’s world, hunkering down and laying low is seen as either a tacit admission of guilt—or proof you take the whole thing seriously. I’m not sure which one would be more detrimental to Gaetz’s brand, but he’s avoiding both like the plague.You’ve heard of “the big lie,” well this is “the big tour.” Gaetz’s frantic activity is either a sign of innocence or shamelessness. My money’s on the latter, but who knows? And that’s the point. He may also reason that the fact that he’s on stage with a prominent female may also, psychologically, lend some cover.Speaking of Greene, she has been embroiled in something of her own scandal, having compared the wearing of masks to prevent the spread of COVID-19 to Jews being forced to wear golden stars in Nazi, Germany. Once upon a time, these sort of Holocaust comparisons would have spelled the end of a political career, but in today’s Republican Party, it’s a feature, not a bug. Greene, having embraced other crazy theories, was able to haul in over $3 million during the first quarter of the year, after all. Sure, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy condemned it in a tweet, but that is probably as severe as the punishment gets. Greene doesn’t need to hit the hustings to change the subject from her scandal, she’s doing it for the fun of it. To revel in it.I’m a Rational Jewish Person. Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Nuts.That’s not to say there isn’t some danger to this. Gaetz and Greene might not intend this and Trump may not realize it but this is the first salvo of what could be a threat to his death grip on the party. That’s because this tour is evidence that anyone—even two lowly House members—can co-opt Trump’s message, steal his delivery mechanism, and take their show on the road. (Sure, they have played some home games in Florida and Georgia, but they also took their horse and pony show to Arizona—and don’t forget Gaetz’s trip to troll Liz Cheney in Wyoming).Now, this crowd was minuscule—even compared to the sparsely attended rally Trump held a year ago in Oklahoma. Still, the event encroaches on an innovation that Trump had essentially monopolized for the last five or so years. Trump didn’t invent the idea of holding rallies, of course, but he took them to a new level. They weren’t just for campaigns, they were for governing. Moreover, you didn’t need an invitation to speak; you could just throw your own event.Not everyone can pack a stadium, of course, but that’s the beauty of teaming up. Gaetz and Greene might not be the Rolling Stones packing stadiums, but maybe they are Styx and Collective Soul doing an arena joint tour.What I’m saying is that, over time, Trump is in danger of having what happened to Sarah Palin happen to him. At one point, Palin was the only game in town. She was the hot commodity. But once she left her position as governor of Alaska, she became irrelevant. It took a couple of years, but a generation of younger, more relevant, imitators supplanted her. Now, Trump is a better marketer than Palin and he was, after all, the president. Still, you can see why he has to at least feign a 2024 run—and why he has already announced he will be doing more of his own rallies.Gaetz and Greene clearly aren’t there yet, as the livestream I was watching actually cut off just before the duo came back out to perform a sort of curtain call. The livestream instead switched to something called (I’m not making this up), “The Right View With Lara Trump.”In a more healthy Republican Party, Gaetz would be drummed out of power because of his indiscretions, and Greene would never get within a mile of Capitol Hill. Trump helped create the circumstances where they would flourish. Even if he is ultimately replaced, he has succeeded in creating a generation of Republicans who share his penchant for self-promotion, his preference for populist politics, and, well, his family values.The Matt Gaetz-Marjorie Taylor Greene event was one-third tent revival, one-third rock concert, and one-third circus—and it was all a freak show. This is all to say it was a rollicking success in today’s Republican Party. Expect other MAGA-types to start replicating this idea. The devil(‘s) went down to Georgia.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. Mitch McConnell reportedly asked other GOP senators to vote against the January 6 commission as a 'personal favor' The bill establishing a commission to probe the Capitol riot received GOP pushback, including from McConnell, who announced his opposition last week. U.S. outraged by violence against Iraqi demonstrators -State Department. WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United States is outraged that peaceful Iraqi demonstrators demanding reform were met with threats and "brutal violence," State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement on Thursday. One person died and several were injured on Tuesday when Iraqi security forces fired live rounds in the air to disperse anti-government protests in central Baghdad, according to security and medical sources. Hundreds demonstrated in Tahrir Square, shouting slogans against Iran-backed militias and accusing Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi's government of failing to answer for the deaths of dozens of activists shot dead in different parts of Iraq in recent months. A self-styled satanist beheaded his cellmate but the guards didn’t notice, report says. The murderer had a history of attacking other inmates and collecting “trophies” from his victims.