Boomerang Bibliography
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Captain America
The Star-spangled Avenger Adapted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Captain America first appeared in Captain America Comics #1 (Cover dated March 1941), from Marvel Comics' 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, and was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. For nearly all of the character's publication history, Captain America was the alter ego of Steve Rogers , a frail young man who was enhanced to the peak of human perfection by an experimental serum in order to aid the United States war effort. Captain America wears a costume that bears an American flag motif, and is armed with an indestructible shield that can be thrown as a weapon. An intentionally patriotic creation who was often depicted fighting the Axis powers. Captain America was Timely Comics' most popular character during the wartime period. After the war ended, the character's popularity waned and he disappeared by the 1950s aside from an ill-fated revival in 1953. Captain America was reintroduced during the Silver Age of comics when he was revived from suspended animation by the superhero team the Avengers in The Avengers #4 (March 1964). Since then, Captain America has often led the team, as well as starring in his own series. Captain America was the first Marvel Comics character adapted into another medium with the release of the 1944 movie serial Captain America . Since then, the character has been featured in several other films and television series, including Chris Evans in 2011’s Captain America and The Avengers in 2012. The creation of Captain America In 1940, writer Joe Simon conceived the idea for Captain America and made a sketch of the character in costume. -
Issue Hero Villain Place Result Avengers Spotlight #26 Iron Man
Issue Hero Villain Place Result Avengers Spotlight #26 Iron Man, Hawkeye Wizard, other villains Vault Breakout stopped, but some escape New Mutants #86 Rusty, Skids Vulture, Tinkerer, Nitro Albany Everyone Arrested Damage Control #1 John, Gene, Bart, (Cap) Wrecking Crew Vault Thunderball and Wrecker escape Avengers #311 Quasar, Peggy Carter, other Avengers employees Doombots Avengers Hydrobase Hydrobase destroyed Captain America #365 Captain America Namor (controlled by Controller) Statue of Liberty Namor defeated Fantastic Four #334 Fantastic Four Constrictor, Beetle, Shocker Baxter Building FF victorious Amazing Spider-Man #326 Spiderman Graviton Daily Bugle Graviton wins Spectacular Spiderman #159 Spiderman Trapster New York Trapster defeated, Spidey gets cosmic powers Wolverine #19 & 20 Wolverine, La Bandera Tiger Shark Tierra Verde Tiger Shark eaten by sharks Cloak & Dagger #9 Cloak, Dagger, Avengers Jester, Fenris, Rock, Hydro-man New York Villains defeated Web of Spiderman #59 Spiderman, Puma Titania Daily Bugle Titania defeated Power Pack #53 Power Pack Typhoid Mary NY apartment Typhoid kills PP's dad, but they save him. Incredible Hulk #363 Hulk Grey Gargoyle Las Vegas Grey Gargoyle defeated, but escapes Moon Knight #8-9 Moon Knight, Midnight, Punisher Flag Smasher, Ultimatum Brooklyn Ultimatum defeated, Flag Smasher killed Doctor Strange #11 Doctor Strange Hobgoblin, NY TV studio Hobgoblin defeated Doctor Strange #12 Doctor Strange, Clea Enchantress, Skurge Empire State Building Enchantress defeated Fantastic Four #335-336 Fantastic -
A Player's Guide Part 1
A Player’s Guide Effective: 9/20/2010 Items labeled with a are available exclusively through Print-and-Play Any page references refer to the HeroClix 2010 Core Rulebook Part 1 – Clarifications Section 1: Rulebook 3 Section 2: Powers and Abilities 5 Section 3: Abilities 9 Section 4: Characters and Special Powers 11 Section 5: Special Characters 19 Section 6: Team Abilities 21 Section 7: Alternate Team Abilities 23 Section 8: Objects 25 Section 9: Maps 27 Part 2 – Current Wordings Section 10: Powers 29 Section 11: Abilities 33 Section 12: Characters and Special Powers 35 Section 13: Team Abilities 71 Section 14: Alternate Team Abilities 75 Section 15: Objects 77 Section 16: Maps 79 How To Use This Document This document is divided into two parts. The first part details every clarification that has been made in Heroclix for all game elements. These 40 pages are the minimal requirements for being up to date on all Heroclix rulings. Part two is a reference guide for players and judges who often need to know the latest text of any given game element. Any modification listed in part two is also listed in part one; however, in part two the modifications will be shown as fully completed elements of game text. [This page is intentionally left blank] Section 1 Rulebook at the time that the player gives the character an action or General otherwise uses the feat.‖ Characters that are removed from the battle map and placed Many figures have been published with rules detailing their on feat cards are not affected by Battlefield Conditions. -
Sorry Day Is a Day Where We Remember the Stolen Generations
Aboriginal Heritage Office Yarnuping Education Series Ku-ring-gai, Lane Cove, North Sydney, Northern Beaches, Strathfield and Willoughby Councils © Copyright Aboriginal Heritage Office www.aboriginalheritage.org Yarnuping 5 Sorry Day 26th May 2020 Karen Smith Education Officer Sorry Day is a day where we remember the Stolen Generations. Protection & Assimilation Policies Have communities survived the removal of children? The systematic removal and cultural genocide of children has an intergenerational, devastating effect on families and communities. Even Aboriginal people put into the Reserves and Missions under the Protectionist Policies would hide their children in swamps or logs. Families and communities would colour their faces to make them darker. Not that long after the First Fleet arrived in 1788, a large community of mixed ancestry children could be found in Sydney. They were named ‘Friday’, ‘Johnny’, ‘Betty’, and denied by their white fathers. Below is a writing by David Collins who witnessed this occurring: “The venereal disease also has got among them, but I fear our people have to answer for that, for though I believe none of our women had connection with them, yet there is no doubt that several of the Black women had not scrupled to connect themselves with the white men. Of the certainty of this extraordinary instance occurred. A native woman had a child by one of our people. On its coming into the world she perceived a difference in its colour, for which not knowing how to account, she endeavoured to supply by art what she found deficient in nature, and actually held the poor babe, repeatedly over the smoke of her fire, and rubbed its little body with ashes and dirt, to restore it to the hue with which her other children has been born. -
Statues and Figurines
NEW STATUES! 1. The Thing Premium Format 550.00 2. Thor Premium Format 900.00 3. Hulk Premium Format 1500.00 4. Art Asylum Hulk 299.00 5. Juggernaut 450.00 6. Wolverine vs Sabretooth 699.00 7. Ironman Comiquette 449.00 8. Mark Newman Sabretooth 245.00 9. Planet Hulk Green Scar vs Silver Savage 500.00 10. Bowen Retro Green Hulk 279.99 11. Moonlight Silver 299.99 12. Hulk Planet Hulk Version 299.99 13. X-Men vs Sentinel 249.99 14. Red Hulk 225.99 15. Art Asylum Captain America 199.00 16. Kotobukiya Ltd Ed. Hulk 225.00 17. Kotobukiya Ltd Ed. Abomination 200.00 18. Bowen Wolverine Action 249.99 19. Sgt Rock 89.99 20. Bowen Shiflet Bros Hulk 299.00 21. Hulk Hard Hero 229.00 22. Superman 199.99 23. Wolverine Diorama 169.99 24. Dead pool 275.00 25. Dead pool 275.00 26. Wolverine with Whiskey 150.00 27. Hulk Marvel Origins 139.00 28. Captain America Resin Bank 24.99 29. Hulk Fine Art Bust 99.99 30. Captain America Mini Bust 89.99 31. Flash vs Gorilla Grodd 200.00 32. Bishoujo Batgirl 59.99 33. Harley Quinn 90.00 34. Swamp Thing 95.00 35. Flaming Carrot 229.99 36. Death 99.99 37. Sandman 99.99 38. BW Batman 79.99 39. ONI Chan 40.00 40. Umbrella Acsdemy 129.99 41. Lord Of The Rings 129.99 42. Silver Surfer 150.00 43. X-Men Origins Wolverine Bust Only 39.99 44. X-Men Origins Wolverine Bust Bluray 80.00 45. -
Anthropology of Indigenous Australia
Anthropology of Indigenous Australia Class code ANTH-UA 9037 – 001 Instructor Petronella Vaarzon-Morel Details [email protected] Consultations by appointment. Please allow at least 24 hours for your instructor to respond to your emails. Class Details Fall 2017 Anthropology of Indigenous Australia Tuesday 12:30 – 3:30pm 5 September to 12 December Room 202 NYU Sydney Academic Centre Science House: 157-161 Gloucester Street, The Rocks 2000 Prerequisites None. Class This course offers an introduction to some of the classical and current issues in the Description anthropology of Indigenous Australia. The role of anthropology in the representation and governance of Indigenous life is itself an important subject for anthropological inquiry, considering that Indigenous people of Australia have long been the objects of interest and imagination by outsiders for their cultural formulations of kinship, ritual, art, gender, and politics. These representations—in feature films about them (such as Rabbit-Proof Fence and Australia), New Age Literature (such as Mutant Message Down Under), or museum exhibitions (such as in the Museum of Sydney or the Australian Museum)—are now also in dialogue with Indigenous forms of cultural production, in genres as diverse as film, television, drama, dance, art and writing. The course will explore how Aboriginal people have struggled to reproduce themselves and their traditions on their own terms, asserting their right to forms of cultural autonomy and self-determination. Through the examination of ethnographic and historical texts, films, archives and Indigenous life-writing accounts, we will consider the ways in which Aboriginalities are being challenged and constructed in contemporary Australia. -
LAST RESORT Kim Eastland
Equipment/Possessions: Putty*—Excellent strength adhesion, HAWKEYE™ causes Remarkable damage to open ARROWS. Hawkeye carries 36 arrows in Clint Francis Barton machinery his quiver. Twelve are standard, target- Hypersonic—Excellent potency knockout Adventurer tipped arrows that inflict Excellent slugfest tip, stuns for five rounds Fighting: GOOD damage. Six have triple-bladed razor Flame-Killer—Amazing smothering effect heads (Excellent Hack'n Slash damage); or damage to flaming creatures. Agility: REMARKABLE he never aims these to strike a living crea- Strength: GOOD ture but uses them, instead, to shred tires, * This type of arrow can be attached to a Endurance: EXCELLENT pin people to trees, etc. The other 18 light rope or cable. The light rope is Excel- Reason: TYPICAL arrows are chosen from a large variety of lent Material and has a maximum range of 5 areas. The cable is Incredible Material Intuition: GOOD special and exotic arrows. Whenever Hawkeye leaves his base of operations, and has a maximum range of 3 areas. Psyche: TYPICAL he must specify what type and how many Talents: Hawkeye has received train- Health: 70 of each of these exotic arrows he is carry- ing under Captain America in martial arts, Karma: 22 ing. Some types of special arrows are and as such can stun and slam any oppo- listed below. Players can design others Resources: TYPICAL nent in combat. Hawkeye receives one with the judge's permission. column shift to the right when using any Popularity: 45 Explosive—Amazing grenade damage weapon that requires an agility FEAT roll. Powers: Tear gas—Excellent potency Background: Hawkeye was trained in EXTRAORDINARY VISION. -
North Queensland Ethnography Bulletin No. 13 Fighting Weapons
AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS Roth, W. E., 1909. North Queensland ethnography. Bulletin no. 13. Fighting weapons. Records of the Australian Museum 7(4): 189–211, plates lviii–lxi. [30 August 1909]. doi:10.3853/j.0067-1975.7.1909.962 ISSN 0067-1975 Published by the Australian Museum, Sydney naturenature cultureculture discover discover AustralianAustralian Museum Museum science science is is freely freely accessible accessible online online at at www.australianmuseum.net.au/publications/www.australianmuseum.net.au/publications/ 66 CollegeCollege Street,Street, SydneySydney NSWNSW 2010,2010, AustraliaAustralia NORTH QUEENSLAND ETHNOGRAPHY. BULLETINNO . 13. FIGHTING WEAP0NS.l By WALTERE. ROTH, Magistrate of the Pomeroon District. British Gniana ; late Chief Protector-of Aborigines. Queens- land ; Corresponding Member of the Anthropological Societies of Bdin a:id Florence. the Anthropological Insti- tute. London. etc. (Plates 1viii.-lxi.; Fig. 12.) CONTENTS. Sect . l . Spears :- ......... 190 2. ~orth-westand ~iwer&;lf ~kicts ...... 190 3. Pennefather River Digtricts 191 4 . Princess Charlotte Bay. ~a~e.'~edfo'rd.~iibmfieci River. and Palmer River ............ 192 5. Lower Tully River District ............ 194 6. Rockhampton District ............... 195 7 . Brisbane 9 I ........... 196 8 . Spear-t.hrowers (Wommeras) :- ............ 197 9. Pennefathor River District ............. 197 10. Palmer and Laura Rivers ... 198 11. Cape Bedford. Endeavour and ~ioomfikidR;;. krs ... 199 12. Princess Charlotte Bay ... ., ......... 200 13. Lower Tully River ........ ...... 200 14. North-West Districts ............... 200 15. Boomerangs .- .................... 201 l6. Lower Tully River ............... 201 17 . hl ackay District .................. 202 18. Hockhampton District ............... 202 19. Brisbane ......... 203 20 . North-West and'kower ~ulfDis'tricts ...... 203 21. Shields-Peninsula and North-West Districts :- ... 203 22 . Tully River aud Cardwell Districta ........ -
September 25,1991' Vol
l Four corners accident Page 3 V'ville school tax finalized Page 3 Eagles top Plainsmen Page 16 ",.... ... 'SEP', 2 '5 1991 September 25,1991' Vol. XXXV, No. 40 • HJ? OJ (eekly newspaper B'E:TH - F'UBL. I c:; i... J Bf~p~n\{ •• 451 DELAWARE AVE ~ -, rving the towns of DELMAR '1"-NY 12054. - , IG ....... :.di 1; 3, l~~\f, ~,nd New Sc'otland Chief Currie announces, retirem.ent By Susan Graves Chief Currie, 62, worked his way up Bethlehem police will bid farewell to through the ranks after graduating from their chief Paul E. Currie when he offi Utica College with a degree in criminal cially retires on the first of the year, justice. He began his career with the Chief Currie, who has led the Bethle Mohawk Police Department. He served as chief there for 13 years before coming hem department for eight years, an to Bethlehem. Chief Currie is also a 24- nounced plans to retire today. year veteran ofthe Army National Guard, "I've been thinking about it for some active and reserves.' time. Things are going great, but it's time For Chief Currie, there was never a , for fresh blood and new ideas," he said. question of a career choice. "I've always The chief, who is just shy of his forti wanted to be a police officer," he said eth year in law enforcement, said he will from his office, which reflects his many miss his work. "I'm really going to regret years of police service. The walls sport leaving - I've been in it so long. -
Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal Ways of Being Into Teaching Practice in Australia
The University of Notre Dame Australia ResearchOnline@ND Theses 2020 Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia Lisa Buxton The University of Notre Dame Australia Follow this and additional works at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses Part of the Education Commons COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further copying or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice. Publication Details Buxton, L. (2020). Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia (Doctor of Education). University of Notre Dame Australia. https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/theses/248 This dissertation/thesis is brought to you by ResearchOnline@ND. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of ResearchOnline@ND. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Yurunnhang Bungil Nyumba: Infusing Aboriginal ways of being into teaching practice in Australia Lisa Maree Buxton MPhil, MA, GDip Secondary Ed, GDip Aboriginal Ed, BA. Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Doctor of Education School of Education Sydney Campus January, 2020 Acknowledgement of Country Protocols The protocol for introducing oneself to other Indigenous people is to provide information about one’s cultural location, so that connection can be made on political, cultural and social grounds and relations established. (Moreton-Robinson, 2000, pp. xv) I would like firstly to acknowledge with respect Country itself, as a knowledge holder, and the ancients and ancestors of the country in which this study was conducted, Gadigal, Bidjigal and Dharawal of Eora Country. -
A Thesis Submitted by Dale Wayne Kerwin for the Award of Doctor of Philosophy 2020
SOUTHWARD MOVEMENT OF WATER – THE WATER WAYS A thesis submitted by Dale Wayne Kerwin For the award of Doctor of Philosophy 2020 Abstract This thesis explores the acculturation of the Australian landscape by the First Nations people of Australia who named it, mapped it and used tangible and intangible material property in designing their laws and lore to manage the environment. This is taught through song, dance, stories, and paintings. Through the tangible and intangible knowledge there is acknowledgement of the First Nations people’s knowledge of the water flows and rivers from Carpentaria to Goolwa in South Australia as a cultural continuum and passed onto younger generations by Elders. This knowledge is remembered as storyways, songlines and trade routes along the waterways; these are mapped as a narrative through illustrations on scarred trees, the body, engravings on rocks, or earth geographical markers such as hills and physical features, and other natural features of flora and fauna in the First Nations cultural memory. The thesis also engages in a dialogical discourse about the paradigm of 'ecological arrogance' in Australian law for water and environmental management policies, whereby Aqua Nullius, Environmental Nullius and Economic Nullius is written into Australian laws. It further outlines how the anthropocentric value of nature as a resource and the accompanying humanistic technology provide what modern humans believe is the tool for managing ecosystems. In response, today there is a coming together of the First Nations people and the new Australians in a shared histories perspective, to highlight and ensure the protection of natural values to land and waterways which this thesis also explores. -
AIATSIS Guidelines for Ethical Publishing 5
Guidelines for the ethical publishing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors and research from those communities Aboriginal Studies Press The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies First published in 2015 by Aboriginal Studies Press © The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its education purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act. Aboriginal Studies Press is the publishing arm of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. GPO Box 553, Canberra, ACT 2601 Phone: (61 2) 6246 1183 Fax: (61 2) 6261 4288 Email: [email protected] Web: www.aiatsis.gov.au/asp/about.html Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are advised that this publication contains names and images of people who have passed away. Guidelines for ethical publishing 3 Welcome (from the AIATSIS Principal) I’m pleased to have the opportunity to welcome readers to these guidelines for ethical publishing. As the Principal of AIATSIS, of which Aboriginal Studies Press (ASP) is the publishing arm, I’ve long had oversight of ASP’s publishing and I’m pleased to see these guidelines because they reflect ASP’s lived experience in an area in which there have been no clear rules of engagement but many criticisms of the past practices of some researchers, writers, editors and publishers.