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Slocan Mining Division 82K-4E Kusp 1, Nak 1-8, Naku 1 Claima
Slocan Mining Division 82K-4E Kusp 1, Nak 1-8, Naku 1 Claima for ADASTRAL RESOURCES LTD. TABLE OF CONTENTS Paqe No_ 1 INTRODUCTION ..................................... 2 LOCATION AND ACCESS .............................. 2 CLAIMS AND OWNERSHIP ............................. 3 GENERAL GEOLOGY .................................. 4 GEOPHYSICAL WORK ................................. 5 GEOCHEMISTRY ..................................... 6 General .................................... Lead in Soil ............................... Silver in Soil ............................. Zinc in Soil ............................... Manganese in Soil .......................... Copper in Soil ............................. Arsenic in Soil ............................ CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS .................. 7 TABLES TABLE I CLAIM DATA .............................. 3 FIGURES Figure 1 Location Map ............................ 2a Figure 2 Claim Map ............................... 2b Figure 3 Sample Location Map .................... In Pocket Figure 4 Soil Geochemistry Pb, Zn ................ In Pocket Figure 5 Soil Geochemstry Ag, As ................. In Pocket Figure 6 Soil Geochemistry Cu, Mn ................ In Pocket Figure 7 VLF-EM Survey ........................... In Pocket &PUE N D I C ES Appendix I Field Data for VLF-EM Survey Appendix I1 Analytical Certificates THE KUSP PROPERTY SUMMARY The Kusp property lies in the Slocan Mining Division about 17 kilometers southeast of Nakusp. Although the claim block extends from the highway on the north to -
City of Burbank General Municipal Election November 3, 2020
CITY OF BURBANK GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 3, 2020 Candidate Intention Campaign Filings Ballot Filed Nomination City Council Candidates in Ballot Order Statement (FPPC Forms Designation Papers (FPPC Form 501) 460s/470s/497s) NOTE: Each of the candidates obtained their Candidate Binder on Monday, July 13, 2020, the first day of the Nomination Period Linda Bessin 1812 W. Burbank Blvd., #974 Burbank, CA 91506 Form 460 - Retired Claims Analyst 4/23/2020 8/3/2020 818) 253-4422 7/13/2020 [email protected] Konstantine Anthony 445 E. Tujunga Ave. Apt C Burbank, CA 91501 Disability Services Form 460 - (818) 253-4123 5/11/2020 8/4/2020 Provider 7/9/2020 [email protected] konstantineanthony.com Tamala Takahashi 1787 Tribute Road, Suite K Sacramento, CA 95815 Nonprofit Administrator/ Form 460 - (916) 285-5733 5/6/2020 8/3/2020 Businesswoman 7/30/2020 [email protected] tamalatakahashi.com Michael Lee Gogin 1812 W. Burbank Blvd. Ste 2020 Burbank, CA 91506 Actor/ Form 470 - (714) 902-7202 Screenplay 5/12/2020 8/4/2020 8/5/2020 [email protected] Writer Gogin4Burbank.com Paul Herman 2000 W. Magnolia Blvd., Suite 100 Burbank, CA 91506 Form 460 - Business Executive 6/18/2020 8/3/2020 (818) 748-3411 7/21/2020 [email protected] Nick Schultz 2140 N. Hollywood Way #10428 Burbank, CA 91510 Form 460 - Deputy Attorney General5/13/2020 7/30/2020 (818) 806-9392 07/27/2020 [email protected] Sharis Manokian 623 E. Angeleno Ave., Apt A Burbank, CA 91501 Form 470 - Substitute Teacher 7/8/2020 8/6/2020 (818) 687-5052 7/31/2020 [email protected] Tim Murphy Appointed 425 S. -
Jordanes and the Invention of Roman-Gothic History Dissertation
Empire of Hope and Tragedy: Jordanes and the Invention of Roman-Gothic History Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Brian Swain Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2014 Dissertation Committee: Timothy Gregory, Co-advisor Anthony Kaldellis Kristina Sessa, Co-advisor Copyright by Brian Swain 2014 Abstract This dissertation explores the intersection of political and ethnic conflict during the emperor Justinian’s wars of reconquest through the figure and texts of Jordanes, the earliest barbarian voice to survive antiquity. Jordanes was ethnically Gothic - and yet he also claimed a Roman identity. Writing from Constantinople in 551, he penned two Latin histories on the Gothic and Roman pasts respectively. Crucially, Jordanes wrote while Goths and Romans clashed in the imperial war to reclaim the Italian homeland that had been under Gothic rule since 493. That a Roman Goth wrote about Goths while Rome was at war with Goths is significant and has no analogue in the ancient record. I argue that it was precisely this conflict which prompted Jordanes’ historical inquiry. Jordanes, though, has long been considered a mere copyist, and seldom treated as an historian with ideas of his own. And the few scholars who have treated Jordanes as an original author have dampened the significance of his Gothicness by arguing that barbarian ethnicities were evanescent and subsumed by the gravity of a Roman political identity. They hold that Jordanes was simply a Roman who can tell us only about Roman things, and supported the Roman emperor in his war against the Goths. -
The Fifth Century, the Decemvirate, and the Quaestorship
THE FIFTH CENTURY, THE DECEMVIRATE, AND THE QUAESTORSHIP Ralph Covino (University of Tennessee at Chattanooga). There has always been some question as to the beginnings of the regularized quaestorship. As long ago as 1936, Latte pointed out that there seems to be no Roman tradition as to the quaestors’ origins.1 As officials, they barely appear at all in the early Livian narrative. The other accounts which we possess, such as those of Tacitus and Ioannes Lydus, are unhelpful at best. While scholars such as Lintott and others have sought to weave together the disparate fragments of information that exist so as to construct a plausible timeline of events surrounding the first appearance of regular, elected quaestors in the middle of the fifth-century, it becomes apparent that there is a dimension that has been omitted. Magisterial offices, even ones without the power to command and to compel, imperium, do not appear fully-formed overnight. This paper seeks to uncover more of the process by which the regular quaestors emerged so as to determine how they actually came to be instituted and regularized rather than purely rely on that which we are told happened from the sources.2 Tacitus records that quaestors were instituted under the monarchs in a notoriously problematic passage: The quaestorship itself was instituted while the kings still reigned, as shown by the renewal of the curiate law by L. Brutus; and the power of selection remained with the consuls, until this office, with the rest, passed into the bestowal of the people. The first election, sixty-three years after the expulsion of the Tarquins, was that of Valerius Potitus and Aemilius Mamercus, as finance officials attached to the army in the field. -
The Poems of Dracontius in Their Vandalic and Visigothic Contexts
The Poems of Dracontius in their Vandalic and Visigothic Contexts Mark Lewis Tizzoni Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. The University of Leeds, Institute for Medieval Studies September 2012 The candidate confinns that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. © 2012 The University of Leeds and Mark Lewis Tizzoni The right of Mark Lewis Tizzoni to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Acknowledgements: There are a great many people to whom I am indebted in the researching and writing of this thesis. Firstly I would like to thank my supervisors: Prof. Ian Wood for his invaluable advice throughout the course of this project and his help with all of the historical and Late Antique aspects of the study and Mr. Ian Moxon, who patiently helped me to work through Dracontius' Latin and prosody, kept me rooted in the Classics, and was always willing to lend an ear. Their encouragement, experience and advice have been not only a great help, but an inspiration. I would also like to thank my advising tutor, Dr. William Flynn for his help in the early stages of the thesis, especially for his advice on liturgy and Latin, and also for helping to secure me the Latin teaching job which allowed me to have a roof over my head. -
Background: Studies of Greek Poetry Often Focus on Athens Because Many of the Best-Preserved Sources Were Written Almost Exclusively by and for Athenians
Myth, Locality, and Identity in Pindar’s Sicilian Odes • Background: Studies of Greek poetry often focus on Athens because many of the best-preserved sources were written almost exclusively by and for Athenians. However, Greek lyric poetry, which also was hugely influential in the fifth century, offers an important counterbalance to the dominant Athenian perspective. When celebrating Sicilian victors, the Theban poet Pindar adapted his poetic project to regional needs in th Sicily where the cities were populated in large part by Fig. 1 Map of 5 century BCE Sicily immigrants. Pindar, Pythian 12.1-6 for Midas of Akragas: Αἰτέω σε, φιλάγλαε, καλλίστα βροτεᾶν πολίων, Φερσεφόνας ἕδος, ἅ τ’ ὄχθαις ἔπι µηλοβότου • Hypothesis: Pindar’s Sicilian poems emphasize ναίεις Ἀκράγαντος ἐΰδµατον κολώναν, ὦ ἄνα, features of the natural landscape and weave traditional ἵλαος ἀθανάτων ἀνδρῶν τε σὺν εὐµενίᾳ Greek myths into descriptions of local physical spaces δέξαι στεφάνωµα τόδ’ ἐκ Πυθῶνος εὐδόξῳ Μίδᾳ to create a sense of civic identity for mixed αὐτόν τε νιν Ἑλλάδα νικάσαντα τέχνᾳ, populations. In the odes for Akragas, the local river and myths surrounding it became a central figure in I beseech you, lover of splendor, loveliest of mortals’ cities, Pindaric poetry and in other manifestations of civic abode of Persephone, you who dwell upon the well-built height above the banks of the Acragas, where sheep graze, O queen, ideology during the 480s-460s BCE, which may be a along with the good will of gods and men graciously result of the rise to power of the Emmenid rulers. receive this crown from Pytho offered by famous Midas (trans. -
Byzantion, Zeuxippos, and Constantinople: the Emergence of an Imperial City
Constantinople as Center and Crossroad Edited by Olof Heilo and Ingela Nilsson SWEDISH RESEARCH INSTITUTE IN ISTANBUL TRANSACTIONS, VOL. 23 Table of Contents Acknowledgments ......................................................................... 7 OLOF HEILO & INGELA NILSSON WITH RAGNAR HEDLUND Constantinople as Crossroad: Some introductory remarks ........................................................... 9 RAGNAR HEDLUND Byzantion, Zeuxippos, and Constantinople: The emergence of an imperial city .............................................. 20 GRIGORI SIMEONOV Crossing the Straits in the Search for a Cure: Travelling to Constantinople in the Miracles of its healer saints .......................................................... 34 FEDIR ANDROSHCHUK When and How Were Byzantine Miliaresia Brought to Scandinavia? Constantinople and the dissemination of silver coinage outside the empire ............................................. 55 ANNALINDEN WELLER Mediating the Eastern Frontier: Classical models of warfare in the work of Nikephoros Ouranos ............................................ 89 CLAUDIA RAPP A Medieval Cosmopolis: Constantinople and its foreigners .............................................. 100 MABI ANGAR Disturbed Orders: Architectural representations in Saint Mary Peribleptos as seen by Ruy González de Clavijo ........................................... 116 ISABEL KIMMELFIELD Argyropolis: A diachronic approach to the study of Constantinople’s suburbs ................................... 142 6 TABLE OF CONTENTS MILOŠ -
THE GROANS of the Britons IOWARD the BRITISH Civirares PERIOD, CIRCA 406-455 C.E
THE GROANS OF THE BRIToNs IOWARD THE BRITISH CivirArEs PERIOD, CIRCA 406-455 C.E. I<CVIO IVlfmn1C)’ IsI;allnorfcillow t1icvuitings c idivcoclsoJinyou’n cotnitiv, vhich (ifrhcrccvcrw’crccur’of thcni) hctvc Iccii consumcd by thcrircs ofthe encmv, orhvc cconijicuucd my cxilcd coun— ttvmcn into distant kmds..i Since the time of Gilcias, the first great chronicler of the British, the problem of reliable sources, or any sources, has been lamented. Over the centuries, myth, pseudo-history, and educated guesswork have rushed in to fill the void.2 The last thirty years have seen a revival of interest in the fifth and sixth centuries, and a great deal of work has been clone on the historical and archaeological records. Ironically, the increased focus on the period has cast a doubt on almost every important assumption that has been macic about early Britain. Ian Wood has noted that between the usurpation of Constantine III in 407 and the death of the Roman consul Aetius in 455 there are a handful of dateable events associated with the British Isles.3 Yet even these are the subject of intense debate. Primary narrative sources, especially the chronicles, have come under fire. Many have been abandoned altogether, especially by archaeologists and histori ans favoring an archaeological approach to the period. With more questions than answers, historians are presented with tnatiy challenges, not the least of which is ‘hat to call this period and over what period of time that identification might be valid. “The End of Roman Britain,” “Post Roman Britain,” “Dark Age Britain,” and “Arthur’s Britain” have been used in the past. -
Fifth-Century Athenian History and Tragedy
CHAPTER ONE Fifth-Century Athenian History and Tragedy Paula Debnar Prologue: 431 BCE the final months of the fourteenth of Elaphebolion during on the day to Bcfore dawn visitors alike made their way residents of Athens and archonship of Pythodorus, celebration of the City Dionysia. stir surrounded the theater. The usual buzz and had previewed the the tragic poet Euphorion the official opening of the festival, would Bcfore long overdue for a victory, about the Titan Prometheus. Euripides, his plays the satyr-play Reapers. and followed by offer Philoctetes, Dictys, earlier (433 BCE) Medea, with the festival. Two years excitement had to do had Not all of the alliance, and in so doing the Corcyraeans into Athenians had accepted and a the Corcyra's mother-city power in a with Corinth, embroiled themselves quarrel The Athenians had hoped Peloponnesian Leaguc. alliance, the contact ful member of Sparta's could avoid direct themselves to a defensive agreement they the Corinthians sent that by limiting misfired. In retaliation but their had of Corinthian forces, plan theirs but members with Potidacans (colonists of to help the forces the following year and their own forces trapped secede. with Potidaca besieged Athens' alliance) Then, in the fall, a full synod to invade Attica. Early had lobbied the Spartans broken in the city, they Years' Peace had been had voted that the Thirty Peloponnesian League ofthe to war. of the should go certain. Members and that league her allies was not yet with and the vote, war Sparta Greek world knew, despite Despite and as the heralds, - continued to exchange because of it the alliances - both force or perhaps world's finest as the hoplite be avoided; their reputation fall soon, war might were to their to to war. -
On Foederati, Hospitalitas, and the Settlement of the Goths in A.D
ON FOEDERATI, HOSPITALITAS, AND THE SETTLEMENT OF THE GOTHS IN A.D. 418 This study sets out to re-examine the key concepts of foederati (foedus) and hospitalitas (hospitium) with a view to gaining a fresh in- sight into the procedure of settlement or accommodation of barbarians by the Roman government during the fifth century. Particular atten- tion is given to the establishment of the Visigothic kingdom on Roman territory in 418, this emphasis being justified by the fact that, as the first such barbarian settlement, it provided a test case and a precedent. Such re-examination may be thought timely in view of the recent work of W. Goffart1 who has challenged the theories of E. T. Gaupp2 and F. Lot,3 which effectively held the field from 1844 until 1980. Two key words have been repeatedly used in conjunction with the attitude of the Roman government to barbarian settlements, foederati (and foedus) and hospitalitas (and hospitium). The Goths, for example, were imperial federates who were settled by the Roman government accord- ing to the rules of military hospitalitas. Upon re-examination, however, neither concept provides full understanding of the nature of the agree- ments between the imperial government and the barbarian nations dur- ing the fifth century, above all, of the permanent division and occupa- tion of Roman territory and a tax exemption status. First, there is the question of the applicability of the term foederati to the Visigoths. A standard theory of late Roman history is that the Goths, like all the later barbarians and many others before them, were bound to the Empire by a foedus which made them allies of the Roman empire. -
Advising Sheet/Psychology Majors
Name: __________________________________ Year: ________ Major(s): PSYCHOLOGY NEW College Core Requirements Semester Requirement Fulfilled by (Course) Taken CIE-100 CIE-200 Three courses. One course satisfying each of the following learning goals. No more than two can be taken within a student’s major department. DN Engage diversity and inequality GN Examine global interconnections O Consider obligations One course satisfying each of the Ways of Asking requirements, except for the A requirement which can be fulfilled by one three- or four- credit course, or a total of four credits over multiple semesters. Although typically courses only will have one of these designations, a single course under question 3 can fulfill multiple question 3 or a combination of question 2 and 3 requirements. A Artistic/performance R Deductive reasoning (was M Math) H Humanistic inquiry Q Quantitative reasoning PSYC-200Q Introductory Research Methods and Statistics S Scientific inquiry/experimentation SS Social scientific inquiry PSYC-100 Introductory Psychology Two courses, both in the same language, satisfying the requirement: L Foreign Language L Foreign Language Linked Inquiry requirement - Satisfied by completing one of the following: Team-taught course or Paired courses (learning community) LINQ Linked Inquiry requirement Satisfied by completing any course designated CCAP. CCAP Core Capstone Experiential Learning Project (XLP) by completing independent research, an internship, study abroad, student teaching or civic engagement. XLP Experiential Learning Project Foundation Courses (2 courses) Psychology Major Requirements Semester Course Course Title (Designation) PSYC-100 Introductory Psychology (SS) PSYC-200Q Introductory Research Methods and Statistics Each student must select four courses, each one from a different content area, at least two of which must be at the 300-level. -
WARNING WSP 460 and WSP 460S for Studs on 20" (508 Mm) Centers, Contains Two Electrical Box Knockouts
Assembly Instructions - External Wall Plate Models WSP 450, WSP 450S, WSP 450W, IMPORTANT! Read entire instruction sheet * MAXIMUM LOAD CAPACITY: WSP 460, WSP 460S, before you start installation and assembly. 175 lb (79 kg) WSP 470, WSP 470S, WSP 470W * Refers to maximum weight of TV or max. combined weight of TV, VCR and VCR Bracket. WSP 450, WSP 450S, and WSP 450W for studs on 16" (406 mm) centers, contains two electrical box knockouts. WARNING WSP 460 and WSP 460S for studs on 20" (508 mm) centers, contains two electrical box knockouts. • Wall or mounting structure must be capable of sup- WSP 470, WSP 470S, and WSP 470W for studs on 24" (610 porting a minimum static load of 600 lb (272 kg). mm) centers, contains two electrical box knockouts. PARTS LIST PARTS LIST MODEL # MODEL # PART # QTY. DESCRIPTION PART # QTY. DESCRIPTION WSP 450 WSP 460 WSP 470 WSP 450S WSP 460S WSP 470S ! A 024-1014 1 wall plate 16" centers (black) ! A 024-4014 1 wall plate 16" centers (silver) ! 024-1015 wall plate 20" centers (black) ! 024-4015 wall plate 20" centers (silver) ! 024-1016 wall plate 24" centers (black) ! 024-4016 wall plate 24" centers (silver) ! ! ! B 510-9108 8 1/4-20 x 1/2" phillips screw ! ! ! B 520-9511 8 1/4-20 x 1/2" phillips screw ! ! ! C 520-9521 12 1/4-20 x 2 1/2" phillips screw ! ! ! C 520-9522 12 1/4-20 x 2 1/2" phillips screw ! ! ! D 590-1093 12 toggler ! ! ! D 590-1093 12 toggler ! ! ! E 540-9440 8 washer ! ! ! E 540-9444 8 washer PARTS LIST C E MODEL # WSP 450W WSP 470W PART # QTY.