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#march 28th 1920
dailyclassicwho · 1 year
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY and RIP PATRICK TROUGHTON (March 25th, 1920—March 28th, 1987)
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alyygx · 6 months
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Easy Company Members Sorted Between Surviving and Not Surviving WWII:
Died During the War:
Company Commanders:
First Lieutenant Thomas Meehan III (July 8th, 1921 - June 6th, 1944)
Non-commissioned Officers:
Sergeant Warren Harold "Skip" Muck (January 31st, 1922 - January 10th, 1945)
Enlisted Men:
Corporal Donald B. "Hoob" Hoobler (June 28th, 1922 - January 3rd, 1945)
Private First Class Alex Mike Penkala (August 30th, 1924 - January 10th, 1945)
Survived the War:
Company Commanders:
Captain Herbert Maxwell Sobel (January 26th, 1912 - September 30th, 1987)
Major Richard Davis "Dick" Winters (January 21st, 1918 - January 2nd, 2011)
First Lieutenant Frederick Theodore "Moose" Heyliger (June 23rd, 1916 - November 3rd, 2001)
First Lieutenant Norman Staunton "Foxhole Norman" Dike Jr. (May 19th, 1918 - June 23rd, 1989)
Captain Ronald Charles Speirs (April 20th, 1920 - April 11th, 2007)
Junior Officers:
Captain Lewis Nixon (September 30th, 1918 - January 11th, 1995)
First Lieutenant Lynn Davis "Buck" Compton (December 31st, 1921 - February 25th, 2012)
First Lieutenant Edward David "Ed" Shames (June 13th, 1922 - December 3rd, 2021)
Second Lieutenant Robert Burnham "Bob" Brewer (January 31st, 1924 - December 5th, 1996)
Second Lieutenant Clifford Carwood "Lip" Lipton (January 30th, 1920 - December 16th, 2001)
Non-commissioned Officers:
Technical Sergeant Donald George "Don" Malarkey (July 30th, 1920 - September 30th, 2017)
Staff Sergeant William J. "Wild Bill" Guarnere Sr. (April 28th, 1923 - March 8th, 2014)
Staff Sergeant Herman "Hank, Hack" Hanson (January 3rd, 1918 - May 15th, 1971)
Staff Sergeant Denver "Bull" Randleman (November 20th, 1920 - June 26th, 2003)
Staff Sergeant Darrell Cecil "Shifty" Powers (March 13th, 1923 - June 17th, 2009)
Staff Sergeant John W. "Johnny" Martin (December 8th, 1921 - December 31st, 2012)
Staff Sergeant Floyd "Tab" Talbert (August 26th, 1923 - October 10th, 1982)
Staff Sergeant Charles E. "Chuck" Grant (March 1922 - October 12th, 1982)
Staff Sergeant Joseph John "Joe" Toye (March 14th, 1919 - September 3rd, 1995)
Sergeant Robert Emory "Popeye" Wynn Jr. (July 10th, 1921 - March 18th, 2000)
Sergeant James H. "Moe" Alley (July 20th, 1922 - March 14th, 2008)
Sergeant Wayne "Skinny" Sisk (March 4th, 1922 - July 13th, 1999)
Corporal Walter Scott "Smokey" Gordon Jr. (April 15th, 1920 - April 19th, 1997)
Enlisted Men:
Technician Fourth Grade George Luz (June 17th, 1921 - October 15th, 1998)
Technician Fourth Grade Eugene Gilbert "Doc" Roe Sr. (October 17th, 1922 - December 30th, 1998)
Technician Fifth Grade Joseph David "Joe" Liebgott (May 17th, 1915 - June 28th, 1992)
Private First Class Edward James "Babe" Heffron (May 16th, 1923 - December 1st, 2013)
Private First Class Edward Joseph "Tip" Tipper (August 3rd, 1921 - February 1st, 2017)
Private First Class David Kenyon Webster (June 2nd, 1922 - September 9th, 1961)
*This is not all of Easy Co. just some of the more recognizable names. If I missed anyone that you would like to see listed please message me and I would be glad to add him.
**I was also thinking about adding more info to this list and/or making a separate post with additional details like awards/medals, how and where they were wounded (if at all), and maybe some personal details like where they were born/died, their family (parents, siblings, spouse, children), what they did after the war (if they survived) stuff like that (though that might be a separate list idk yet). I would love to hear your opinion and if you'd like to see something like this. Basically just one large masterpost! Message me and tell me your thoughts!!!! I'm open to ideas!
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manwalksintobar · 2 months
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Things I Didn't Know I Loved // Nazim Hikmet
it’s 1962 March 28th I’m sitting by the window on the Prague-Berlin train night is falling I never knew I liked night descending like a tired bird on a smoky wet plain I don’t like comparing nightfall to a tired bird
I didn’t know I loved the earth can someone who hasn’t worked the earth love it I’ve never worked the earth it must be my only Platonic love
and here I’ve loved rivers all this time whether motionless like this they curl skirting the hills European hills crowned with chateaus or whether stretched out flat as far as the eye can see I know you can’t wash in the same river even once I know the river will bring new lights you'll never see I know we live slightly longer than a horse but not nearly as long as a crow I know this has troubled people before                          and will trouble those after me I know all this has been said a thousand times before                          and will be said after me
I didn’t know I loved the sky cloudy or clear the blue vault Andrei studied on his back at Borodino in prison I translated both volumes of War and Peace into Turkish I hear voices not from the blue vault but from the yard the guards are beating someone again I didn’t know I loved trees bare beeches near Moscow in Peredelkino they come upon me in winter noble and modest beeches are Russian the way poplars are Turkish “the poplars of Izmir losing their leaves. . . they call me The Knife. . .                          lover like a young tree. . . I blow stately mansions sky-high” in the Ilgaz woods in 1920 I tied an embroidered linen handkerchief                                         to a pine bough for luck
I never knew I loved roads even the asphalt kind Vera's behind the wheel we're driving from Moscow to the Crimea                                                           Koktebele                                formerly “Goktepé ili” in Turkish the two of us inside a closed box the world flows past on both sides distant and mute I was never so close to anyone in my life bandits stopped me on the red road between Bolu and Geredé                                         when I was eighteen apart from my life I didn’t have anything in the wagon they could take and at eighteen our lives are what we value least I’ve written this somewhere before wading through a dark muddy street I'm going to the shadow play Ramazan night a paper lantern leading the way maybe nothing like this ever happened maybe I read it somewhere an eight-year-old boy                                        going to the shadow play Ramazan night in Istanbul holding his grandfather’s hand    his grandfather has on a fez and is wearing the fur coat       with a sable collar over his robe    and there’s a lantern in the servant’s hand    and I can’t contain myself for joy flowers come to mind for some reason poppies cactuses jonquils in the jonquil garden in Kadikoy Istanbul I kissed Marika fresh almonds on her breath I was seventeen my heart on a swing touched the sky I didn’t know I loved flowers friends sent me three red carnations in prison
I just remembered the stars I love them too whether I’m floored watching them from below or whether I'm flying at their side
I have some questions for the cosmonauts were the stars much bigger did they look like huge jewels on black velvet                              or apricots on orange did you feel proud to get closer to the stars I saw color photos of the cosmos in Ogonek magazine now don’t    be upset comrades but nonfigurative shall we say or abstract    well some of them looked just like such paintings which is to    say they were terribly figurative and concrete my heart was in my mouth looking at them they are our endless desire to grasp things seeing them I could even think of death and not feel at all sad I never knew I loved the cosmos
snow flashes in front of my eyes both heavy wet steady snow and the dry whirling kind I didn’t know I liked snow
I never knew I loved the sun even when setting cherry-red as now in Istanbul too it sometimes sets in postcard colors but you aren’t about to paint it that way I didn’t know I loved the sea                              except the Sea of Azov or how much
I didn’t know I loved clouds whether I’m under or up above them whether they look like giants or shaggy white beasts
moonlight the falsest the most languid the most petit-bourgeois strikes me I like it
I didn’t know I liked rain whether it falls like a fine net or splatters against the glass my    heart leaves me tangled up in a net or trapped inside a drop    and takes off for uncharted countries I didn’t know I loved    rain but why did I suddenly discover all these passions sitting    by the window on the Prague-Berlin train is it because I lit my sixth cigarette one alone could kill me is it because I’m half dead from thinking about someone back in Moscow her hair straw-blond eyelashes blue
the train plunges on through the pitch-black night I never knew I liked the night pitch-black sparks fly from the engine I didn’t know I loved sparks I didn’t know I loved so many things and I had to wait until sixty    to find it out sitting by the window on the Prague-Berlin train    watching the world disappear as if on a journey of no return
                                                     19 April 1962                                                      Moscow
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zurich-snows · 1 year
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German Rotophot postcard featuring a 1902 photograph of the American soprano Geraldine Farrar as ‘Margarethe’ in Gounod’s opera ‘Faust’. Geraldine Farrar was born in Melrose, Massachusetts, 28th February 1882 and died Ridgefield, Connecticut, 11th March 1967. In 1884, at the age of 12, Farrar impersonated Jenny Lind in the Melrose May Carnival and within two years, she made her Boston recital debut. On 15 October 1901 aged 19 she made her Berlin debut as Marguerite in Faust ~ singing in Italian by special dispensation. In 1903 the great Lilli Lehmann accepted her as a pupil and they worked hard to perfect Farrar’s vocal technique and stage crafts. Geraldine Farrar retired from opera in 1922 at the age of 40 ~ her final performance being Leoncavallo's Zazà and she retired finally in 1931 when she sang her final Carnegie Hall recital and withdrew from further public performance. Geraldine Farrar created the title roles in – Pietro Mascagni's Amica ~ Monte Carlo 16th March 1905 Engelbert Humperdinck's Goose-girl in Die Königskinder ~ New York Met 28th Dec 1910 Umberto Giordano's Madame Sans-Gêne ~ New York Met 25th Jan 1915 Puccini's Suor Angelica ~ New York Met 14th Dec 1918 During her time she developed a great popular following, especially among New York's young female opera-goers, who were known as "Gerry-flappers". Her performances with Caruso were always eagerly awaited. She made 15 silent movies in the period of c1915 to 1920 commencing with the opera Carmen directed by Cecil B. DeMille and finally 'The Riddle: Woman directed by Edward Jose.
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horrororman · 30 days
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More #horror films that were released on March 28th...
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920).
Horror Island (1941).
Man-Made Monster (1941).
Don't Go in the House (1980).
Zombi Holocaust (1980)(Italy).
Leprechaun In the Hood (2000).
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alleenickel · 2 months
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Many westerners are unaware of the extent of Japanese colonization. At least in my history classes (US), most of the lessons on that time period were focused on Nazi Germany. The truth is, Japan committed countless atrocities against the people of Korea, Taiwan, and much of east and southeast Asia. This included cultural erasure, slavery (Mitsubishi was built on the backs of Korean slaves), and perhaps most notoriously, comfort women.
The Korean government is trying to get Japan to pay reparations for these horrific acts to this day, but the Japanese government continues to deny its role or the extent of the crimes it committed.
So I'm posting about it, because fuck them.
On this day, March 1st, 1919, Korea declared independence from Imperial Japan. The declaration, which was written by historians and religious leaders, sparked multiple protests involving, in total, about 2 million Koreans. Japan responded with lethal force, murdering over 7,000 people, some via public execution and even crucifixion, and arresting over 46,000.
Among them was Yu Gwan-Sun (or Ryu Gwan-Sun), a 16 year old girl. After participating in the March 1st protests, she participated in several others, including one she organized in her hometown exactly one month later, on April 1st, involving 3,000 people. This protest was also suppressed with violence- Yu's parents and several protesters were murdered, and Yu was arrested and imprisoned.
But this didn't stop her. One year later, on March 1st, 1920, she staged another protest with her inmates, for which she was separated and tortured. She wrote:
Even if my fingernails are torn out, my nose and ears are ripped apart, and my legs and arms are crushed, this physical pain does not compare to the pain of losing my nation...My only remorse is not being able to do more than dedicating my life to my country.
She died of her injuries on September 28th, 1920, at 17 years old. Korea did not achieve independence until August 15th, 1945.
To this day, over a century later, Koreans honor her memory. She is often referred to as Big Sister Yu Gwan-Sun. Her sacrifice will not be forgotten.
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baronobexi-blog · 1 year
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On The Radar -- Guns Blazing by Basheer Ghouse
Game Title: Guns Blazing
Genre(s): Tactical/Alt-history TTRPG
System: Ahadi (inspired by Genesys, Storyteller, Blades in the Dark, and wargaming)
Format: PDF/Hardcover
Campaign Start: March 28th, 2023
Campaign End: April 27, 2023
Campaign Goal: $10,000 (Current Pledge Amount: $18, 001)
Campaign Team Size: 26 (Note: Certain parts of this post will occasionally be updated to reflect the progress of Guns Blazing such as the pledge amount, met stretch goals, or the addition of new stretch goals. So, if you’re interested with the campaign then please make sure to check back.) --- --- --- Game Info: So, what exactly is Guns Blazing about? – Guns Blazing is a tactical, alt-history TTRPG that takes place in an alternate 1920’s of Jinn, diesel powered mechs, and anti-colonial revolution. In the world of Guns Blazing, Europe’s once powerful hold on lands not their own are now waning, declining colonial empires on the brink of collapse. The twilight for European empire has come, it refuses to listen. Challenged by revolutionaries, colonial subjects seeking freedom, or fledgling ideologies wishing to remake the world. Like a dying beast holding stubbornly to its final breath. The old order of Europe refuses to acknowledge its colonial deathbed even if it ends in blood and fire for all. Villages are burned. Ancestral homelands are broken. Families are torn apart by unflinching, unfeeling colonial bureaucracy. This is an old order that does not care about people. It does not care if innocents are harmed by malice or incompetence. It does not care if cultures are destroyed, distorted, or hollowed out. You are either subject, victim, or threat to It. Yet there are even worse things than man’s cruelty.  The fungal horrors that are the Iram march side by side with the colonial garrisons. It's a simple relationship. The Iram are fed those that the empires do not care for, the empires receive loyal beasts along with grand treasures unimaginable. Then there are the Ma’ Jooj. Carrion prophets of the industrial charnel house that is the modern battlefield. The Ma’ Jooj take the dead and turn them into reanimated cannon fodder known as the Resitched. Finally, there are the Atom Unborn. They pursue the distant, nascent dream that is nuclear power. And it is a dream pursued even if it ends with the world burning in nuclear fire. It is a dark time to live in. It is a time where the old and new ways clash with each other. It is a time where the old order is on its deathbed. It is a time where monsters, whether they be colonial administrator or fungal horror, walk the world. Yet it also is a time of heroes. The rallying cry of rebellion, revolution, and liberation is on the air. No longer. No longer will the horrors of the old order be allowed to fester unchecked. No longer will homes burn. No longer will stolen land be occupied. The world is entering into a twilight. It may either end in a twilight of hope or a twilight of despair. It is up to you and countless others to decide how this twilight finally ends. Who am I playing as? – You take on the role of an international volunteer in Guns Blazing. There are six playbooks for the game that can offer you a variety of ways to shape your volunteer along with how you approach the game in combat and in narrative. And we’re able to see what four of those playbooks look like in the quickstart preview. With their names being: Butcher, Vanguard, Hunter, and Artillery. Who am I fighting? – As an international volunteer in the struggle against Europe’s waning but still powerful colonial empires. Your enemies will range from the mundane to the eldritch. You will resist the colonial garrisons of the European empires. You will clash with the fungal horrors that are the Iram. You will face the carrion prophets that are the Ma’ Jooj and their reanimated Resitched soldiers. You will fight with the nuclear dreamers that are the Atom Unborn.   Is there a preview of the game in play? – Yes! The campaign page for Guns Blazing helpfully offers a link to a two shot actual play that shows what the game is like in play along with an introduction to one of its scenarios. --- --- ---
--- --- --- Campaign Info: What’s the campaign funding? – The campaign for Guns Blazing is funding the following: art, layout, editing, and printing costs. Additionally, the funding will also ensure that everyone involved is paid at fair rates. Are there shipping costs? – Yes, there are shipping costs for Guns Blazing. They are the following: US $13, US Non-Continental $30, Canada $23, United Kingdom $25, European Union $34, Australia $41, Rest of World $54. However, the campaign page does say these shipping costs are estimates for a single hardcover. And also says that means to reduce international shipping costs are currently being looked into.   When will the game come out? – April 2024. --- --- --- --- --- --- Pledge Info: * Financial Hardship PDF ($10) – Pledgers at this level get a discounted copy of the core book PDF. However, please only pledge at this level if you need the discount due to financial hardship. (28 of 50 left) * Core PDF ($25) – Pledgers at this level get a core book PDF copy along with access to playtesting copies. * Hardcover ($50) – Pledgers at this level get both a 6″ x 9″ hardcover and PDF core book copy along with a choice of starter scenario. * Complete Edition ($65) – Pledgers at this level get both hardcover, PDF, all three starter scenarios, and STL files. * Retailer Bundle ($100) – Pledgers at this level, whether for retail or just wanting to introduce the game to their friend group, get five hardcover copies of Guns Blazing at a very deep discount. However, this pledge level does not come with any additional stretch goals or PDFs. It is primarily intended for retailers and will result in higher shipping fees compared to a single copy.    * Volunteer Edition ($200) – Pledgers at this level get the hardcover, PDF, all three starter scenarios, and the opportunity to create a character who will be featured in the game art of Guns Blazing. (All gone.) * Hosti Humani Generis Edition ($250) – Pledgers at this level get the hardcover, PDF, all three starter scenarios, and the opportunity to create either a foe or vehicle. This foe/vehicle will have rules, art, and writeup. (All gone.) * Band of Misfits Edition ($350) – Pledgers at this level get the hardcover, PDF, all three starter scenarios, and the opportunity to create an organization/faction. This organization/faction will get art, a logo, and writeup. (All gone). --- --- --- --- --- --- Stretch Goals: * VTT (Virtual Tabletop) Integration ($17,500) – This will result in Guns Blazing having full VTT integration for all its starter scenarios. VTT integration will consist of the following: maps, tokens, and free VTT copies that have the appropriate tiers and add-ons. * Expanded Core Book ($25,000) – This will expand the budget for art, writing, layout, and editing. Additionally, this will also provide more funding to expand the role of guest writers. * Expanded Starter Scenarios ($30,000) – The starter scenarios will receive a core book treatment. This means that the starter scenarios will get an expanded budget for art, writing, layout, and editing.  * Guest Writer Program ($35,000) – This will allow the campaign to bring on more writers for the project. And every additional $5,000 dollars over the $35K goal will result in even more writers being hired. --- --- --- --- --- ---  Add-ons: * Starter Scenarios ($10 each/$25 pack) – The starter scenarios PDF’s for Guns Blazing can be added to a pledge for $10 each or can be bundled together as a $25 pack.  * Stream Kit ($10) – This is a stream kit that has the following: pre-arranged layouts for 3-6 players, a GM, map, caption box, be right back screens, and materials to create your own stream kit. The stream kit was created by Brandy Rose (Cutestpatoot Games) * Guns Blazing: The Wargame ($15) – A wargame set within the setting of Guns Blazing. Guns Blazing: The Wargame makes use of the Riposte! System by Erika Chappell (Flying Circus, Blackout, The Flesh Is Weak). This add-on adds the following material to a pledge: basic rules PDF and army lists for the Republic of Mysore and the British Empire.  * Core Rules PDF ($25) – Adds another core rules PDF to a pledge. * Additional Hardcover ($45) – An extra copy of the hardcover at retail price added to a pledge. This add-on however will add additional shipping costs to a pledge. --- --- ---
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quordleona03 · 3 months
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Happy birthday, Alan Alda
Alan Alda was born 28th January 1936.
The headcanon I decided on for purposes of All We Know is that Benjamin Franklin Pierce was born in August 1920, and he turned 30 some weeks after he landed in Korea. As we know, in the 8th season of MASH, BJ decided to throw Hawkeye a surprise birthday party. It is not headcanon, but merely my own wild internal amusement, that the surprise party BJ is giving Hawkeye in "Lend A Hand" ... is planned for 28th January.
BJ: "They're interested in you. You have to realize these people are very bored."
Hawkeye: "I seem to be the object of some kind of a conspiracy.So, naturally, I thought of you."
BJ: "I took the liberty of borrowing your birthday. … Hawk, will you look around? See how depressed these people are? They need something to do. A surprise birthday party is just the thing to cheer them up."
Hawkeye: "What are you, nuts? It's not even close to my birthday."
BJ: "Perfect! You're not using it. It's part of the surprise."
Hawkeye: …"And then, when it really is my birthday, nobody'll believe me."
BJ: "I'll believe you."
The following outtake is from the March section of "All We Know" - Friday 22nd March 1963.
"Hey, we just missed each other," Hawkeye said, still squinting at the list. "I got my MD from Columbia in '46. This is great. Thanks, Beej, I can use this."
BJ asked after a while, adding years up in his mind, "How did you manage to graduate in '46? You're the same age as me, aren't you?" BJ had graduated in '48.
"Six months older, even if you did try to give me a birthday in January, you fink," Hawkeye said. "I skipped a couple of grades. Androscoggin took me at sixteen. My dad had to drive me home at weekends."
"Hey, January is a great time of year to have a birthday," BJ said absently. "Of course, not as good as February."
"Oh, of course not," Hawkeye said.
"Frank Burns always made a big deal out of your still working in a hospital when you were drafted."
"He would," Hawkeye said. "I'd just finished residency."
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rabbitcruiser · 1 year
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International Women’s Day
Mother, sisters, wives, girlfriends, and fiancees…what would we ever do without them? Nobody can honestly say we don’t owe an enormous amount to the women in our lives, from the mothers who made us chicken soup when we were sick as children, to the sisters who helped us decide what to wear on our first date, to the wives who somehow manage to juggle both a career and a family, never missing a beat. Women’s Day is all about celebrating these incredible people and showing them how much we love, respect and value them.
This holiday is perhaps especially important in parts of the world where women are still forced to deal with shocking inequality on a daily basis and is meant to raise awareness of the challenges and struggles faced by these women. Women’s Day celebrates women’s history, highlighting key events, milestones, and achievements, and aims to further promote and raise awareness of women’s rights and to achieve equal opportunity status in all walks of life.
History of International Women’s Day
It may come as a rather sad surprise that International Women’s Day was first celebrated on February 28th, 1909 in New York. Two years later, German socialist Luise Zietz proposed that the holiday become an annually observed one that would celebrate various women’s issues, such as suffrage, so as to promote equal rights for women. The first few International Women’s Days were celebrated in a quite different fashion than they are nowadays, with hundreds of demonstrations taking place in Europe. During these demonstrations, women demanded they finally be given both the right to vote and to hold public office.
Employment sex discrimination was also an important issue. In 1917, the International Women’s Day demonstrations in Saint Petersburg, Russia, helped initiate the February Revolution, when women marched through the city demanding an end to World War I. This shocked even Leon Trotsky, who, much like other Russian leaders of the day, did not expect the Women’s Day protests to cause that much of a stir. Until 1977, Women’s Day was celebrated mainly in socialist countries. It was only after the United Nations General Assembly’s decision to proclaim March 8th International Women’s Day that the holiday gained worldwide popularity.
International Women’s Day Timeline
1848 Seneca Falls Convention
The first convention held in the United States in support of Women’s Rights, this New York meeting, held in July, signaled the beginning of the Women’s Suffrage Movement.
February 28, 1909 First Women’s Day in the United States
National Women’s Day begins in the United States, prompted by a growing movement toward women’s rights. It’s organized by the Socialist Party of America and celebrated on a Sunday so working women can participate.
1910 International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen
The idea for an international day acknowledging women is brought forth by Clara Zetkin, a German political leader. This suggestion is approved by more than 100 women from 17 different countries.
1911 First International Women’s Day Observed
More than 1 million women and men throughout Austria, Switzerland, Germany and Denmark, attend various rallies.
1913 Russian Women Celebrate
Just prior to the outbreak of World War I, Russians celebrate International Women’s Day. It is agreed to celebrate annually on March 8 (by the Gregorian Calendar).
1917 Russian Women’s Day Leads to Women’s Right to Vote
Feminist demonstrations in Russia are part of a chain of events that lead to the abdication of the Czar and the Russian Revolution, ultimately resulting in the right to vote for women.
1918 Some Women in England Gain Right to Vote
Women in England over the age of 30 with property qualifications receive the right to vote (men qualify beginning at ages 19-21).
1920 American Women Earn Right to Vote
After many attempts, the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution is finally passed.
1928 England Adopts Equal Voting Rights
English women earn the same access to voting as men.
1945 United Nations Recognizes Equality
The Charger of the UN becomes the first international agreement to state equality between women and men.
1975 United Nations First Acknowledges International Women’s Day
IWD is first celebrated by the UN.
1977 UN General Assembly Adopts Women’s Day Resolution
The UN calls Member States to observe a “United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and International Peace” on any day of their choosing throughout the year.
2001 Women’s Day Goes Online
In need of a reboot after having lost momentum over the last decades of the 20th century, the International Women’s Day Movement launches online. The website helps with women’s campaigns and leads out in raising money for charities that impact equality for women.
How to celebrate International Women’s Day
There are many ways that you can go about celebrating this holiday, but all of them have a similar goal: to raise awareness about the struggles of women the world over and honor their achievements. Of course, not all achievements are huge, worldwide game-changers like women finally obtaining the right to vote—there are all sorts of other, smaller feats that women you know manage on an everyday basis that you may not pay too much attention to until you try calming 2 crying toddlers, making dinner and explaining the particulars of a newly-acquired client to your boss over the phone at the same time. This may sound ridiculously hard to pull off, but this is something thousands of women pull off every day, something that should be deeply appreciated and something that nobody should take for granted. Grand gestures aren’t necessarily required to show appreciation, either—sometimes a simple “thank you, I have no idea how you do it” is enough to lift an overworked woman’s spirits.
International Women’s Day Is Also About Women’s Rights
If you’d like to do something more, though, there is a virtually endless amount of things you can do to help improve women’s lives the world. You can attend one of the 1000+ events organized globally where you can learn about what women’s lives are like in different countries and make a donation to the event you attend. Reading books is also a great way of broadening your horizons, and biographies of women like fearless Somalian women’s rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali will definitely open your eyes and inspire you to see women’s lives and problems completely differently.
It’s no secret that women’s rights have evolved greatly. However, things could still be a lot better! People such as Malala Yousafzai, a young activist for female education in Pakistan. Her story, I am Malala, describes her fight for education as a woman in Pakistan, and the dramatic consequences of her activism. Targeted by a Taliban’s assassination, Malala was shot in 2012. She was transported to different hospitals before being rushed to the UK, where she was treated and survived her injuries. Her autobiography is an eye-opening shockwave that will make you aware of the struggles that many women continue to face. Nowadays, Malala is a student at the world famous University of Oxford in the UK!
Broadening your horizon on Women’s Day to understand the differences between countries and how women are treated in the world can offer a new appreciation for women. Let Malala’s story inspire you to attend events or support more initiatives to help women. Why not keep your eyes open for books like Malala’s autobiography that share the experience of women in different cultures?
Supporting a Woman on International Women’s Day
Have you ever stopped to consider what it means to be a woman? Aside from the biological definition, there is a lot that goes into defining, feeling, experiencing and celebrating womanhood on Women’s Day. No, it doesn’t have to be a philosophical debate about what makes a woman who she is! But in a day and age where gender issues and gender roles are being questioned, it’s only fair to broaden your perception of what a woman can be and do. The first and most important thing you need to remember is that women are sick of hearing about gender stereotypes. Therefore, Women’s Day is a day to be embraced with an open mind. Question your assumptions about what people can and can’t do based on gender. Why not support a female friend to follow her dreams?
Spend International Women’s Day With Women Who Don’t Let Conventions Define Them
What makes her a woman? Women, such as Anne Lister, have chosen to define their womanhood on their own terms. During the 19th century in England, Anne Lister, also nicknamed Gentleman Jack, took part in activities that were otherwise reserved to men and also ran typically men’s businesses. She also chose to marry another woman, and lived with her, despite not receiving any legal recognition. Gentleman Jack cultivated her free spirit without compromising, which her autobiography, Gentleman Jack, reveals.
Another autobiography that enhances the definition of being a woman is Trans, a Memoir, by Juliet Jacques. Jacques describes what it means to be a woman throughout the transitioning process. On International Women’s Day, show your full support by celebrating and embracing different perceptions of what it means to be a woman.
Spend A Day In Her Shoes On International Women’s Day
Challenges exist in different shapes. It’s something Nicole Byers, the bubbly “Nailed It” presenter on Netflix knows well. Her podcast, Why Won’t You Date Me, describes with humor her quest for love and the modern expectations that society has for women. The sweet dreams of childhood are nothing like the harsh reality, like the podcast Stuff Mom Never Told You explains. Spend the day listening to the stories of everyday women, who could be your sister, your mother, or your wife.
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it's 1962 March 28th
I'm sitting by the window on the Prague-Berlin train
night is falling
I never knew I liked
night descending like a tired bird on a smoky wet plain
I don't like
comparing nightfall to a tired bird
I didn't know I loved the earth
can someone who hasn't worked the earth love it
I've never worked the earth
it must be my only Platonic love
and here I've loved rivers all this time
whether motionless like this they curl skirting the hills
European hills crowned with chateaus
or whether stretched out flat as far as the eye can see
I know you can't wash in the same river even once
I know the river will bring new lights you'll never see
I know we live slightly longer than a horse but not nearly as long as a crow
I know this has troubled people before
and will trouble those after me
I know all this has been said a thousand times before
and will be said after me
I didn't know I loved the sky
cloudy or clear
the blue vault Andrei studied on his back at Borodino
in prison I translated both volumes of War and Peace into Turkish
I hear voices
not from the blue vault but from the yard
the guards are beating someone again
I didn't know I loved trees
bare beeches near Moscow in Peredelkino
they come upon me in winter noble and modest
beeches are Russian the way poplars are Turkish
"the poplars of Izmir
losing their leaves. . .
they call me The Knife. . .
lover like a young tree. . .
I blow stately mansions sky-high"
in the Ilgaz woods in 1920 I tied an embroidered linen handkerchief
to a pine bough for luck
I never knew I loved roads
even the asphalt kind
Vera's behind the wheel we're driving from Moscow to the Crimea
Koktebele
formerly "Goktepé ili" in Turkish
the two of us inside a closed box
the world flows past on both sides distant and mute
I was never so close to anyone in my life
bandits stopped me on the red road between Bolu and Geredé
when I was eighteen
apart from my life I didn't have anything in the wagon they could take
and at eighteen our lives are what we value least
I've written this somewhere before
wading through a dark muddy street I'm going to the shadow play
Ramazan night
a paper lantern leading the way
maybe nothing like this ever happened
maybe I read it somewhere an eight-year-old boy
going to the shadow play
Ramazan night in Istanbul holding his grandfather's hand
his grandfather has on a fez and is wearing the fur coat
with a sable collar over his robe
and there's a lantern in the servant's hand
and I can't contain myself for joy
flowers come to mind for some reason
poppies cactuses jonquils
in the jonquil garden in Kadikoy Istanbul I kissed Marika
fresh almonds on her breath
I was seventeen
my heart on a swing touched the sky
I didn't know I loved flowers
friends sent me three red carnations in prison
I just remembered the stars
I love them too
whether I'm floored watching them from below
or whether I'm flying at their side
I have some questions for the cosmonauts
were the stars much bigger
did they look like huge jewels on black velvet
or apricots on orange
did you feel proud to get closer to the stars
I saw color photos of the cosmos in Ogonek magazine now don't
be upset comrades but nonfigurative shall we say or abstract
well some of them looked just like such paintings which is to
say they were terribly figurative and concrete
my heart was in my mouth looking at them
they are our endless desire to grasp things
seeing them I could even think of death and not feel at all sad
I never knew I loved the cosmos
snow flashes in front of my eyes
both heavy wet steady snow and the dry whirling kind
I didn't know I liked snow
I never knew I loved the sun
even when setting cherry-red as now
in Istanbul too it sometimes sets in postcard colors
but you aren't about to paint it that way
I didn't know I loved the sea
except the Sea of Azov
or how much
I didn't know I loved clouds
whether I'm under or up above them
whether they look like giants or shaggy white beasts
moonlight the falsest the most languid the most petit-bourgeois
strikes me
I like it
I didn't know I liked rain
whether it falls like a fine net or splatters against the glass my
heart leaves me tangled up in a net or trapped inside a drop
and takes off for uncharted countries I didn't know I loved
rain but why did I suddenly discover all these passions sitting
by the window on the Prague-Berlin train
is it because I lit my sixth cigarette
one alone could kill me
is it because I'm half dead from thinking about someone back in Moscow
her hair straw-blond eyelashes blue
the train plunges on through the pitch-black night
I never knew I liked the night pitch-black
sparks fly from the engine
I didn't know I loved sparks
I didn't know I loved so many things and I had to wait until sixty
to find it out sitting by the window on the Prague-Berlin train
watching the world disappear as if on a journey of no return
Things I Didn't Know I Loved by Nâzim Hikmet
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MARKETING UNIT 2
I decided to do my own research and look for images on pinterest that fit the theme for each era. I looked into finding images and colours that complement each other, this has helped my understanding of each era more.
THE VICTORIAN ERA
The fashion of the 19th century is renowned for its corsets, bonnets, top hats, bustles and petticoats. Women’s fashion during the Victorian period was largely dominated by full skirts, which gradually moved to the back of the silhouette. However, towards the end of the period, the less restrictive Aesthetic style began to emerge.
THE ROARING 20s
The fashion of the 20s The 1920s was a time for glamour, dresses were covered in beads and revealed more flesh than ever before To think 10 wears previously women dressed head to toe gowns with corsets.If you were in the night social ciass it was a time for partying and living life to the full. Society girls could be seen drinking, smoking and riding around in cars from party to party. La Garconne translates "the bachelor giri" or "the flapper*Cover of La Garconne (1922) by Victor Marquentte. The novel from which the fashionable look of the 1920s is belleved to have got its name. The illustration depicts the books scandalous heroine, Monique Lerbier, who cut her hair short wore men's shirts/ jackets and ties, and gave birth outside wedlock. In reality La Garconne at the time more of a derogatory term for women of loose morals newly liberated woman, freed from the ' Gibson girl' corsetry and S bend silhouettes of the Edwardian era, and the constraints on her lifestyle that such clothing, inflicted on her.Garconne look was evident primaniy in cut rather than fabric. The straight-cut the chemise dress was to become the dominant, line for day and evening wear. These fashionable young women from 1926 are wearing cloche hats and decorated drop waisted dresses with matching coats. The long string of pearts/beads was a must have. The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel written by American author F.Scott Fitzgerald, the story primanly concerns the young and mysterious millionaire Jay Gatsby and his obsession for the beautifui Daisy Buchanan.The Great Gatsby explores themes of decadence, idealism, resistance to change, social upheaval, and excess, creating a portrait of the Roaring Twenties.(Roaring twenties influenced Ralph Lauren Gucci Maria garchvogel)
THE SWINGING 60s
The 60s are known as one of the most fashion conscious times in history. Styles that began in the decade have had a noticeable influence on the fashion today. Women’s fashion in the 1960s was full of change. Unlike the previous decades, the 60s were a time of emerging and diverse trends. From sophisticated and casual to bright colours and bold prints, the 60s embraced it all with stylish flair.
HARVARD REFERENCING
60s
Shrimpton J (1965) VOGUE WHERE THE ACTION IS [poster] available from All sizes | Vogue-June 1965 | Flickr - Photo Sharing! (Accessed: 28th November 2022)
Met S (March 1st 2022 photo from 1960s) 17 GROOVY HAIRSTYLES FROM THE 60S [POSTER] available from 17 groovy hairstyles from 1960s Teen magazine covers (metv.com) (Accessed: 28th November 2022)
White R (2019) 10 Gorgeous Ways to Jump on the 60s Beauty Bandwagon [poster] available from 10 Gorgeous Ways to Jump on the 60s Beauty Bandwagon (totalbeauty.com) (Accessed: 28th November 2022)
H&MUA T (2021) Women’s 1960s Makeup: An Overview [poster] available from Women's 1960s Makeup: An Overview - Hair & Makeup Artist Handbook (hair-and-makeup-artist.com) (Accessed 28th November 2022)
User P (N/A) WE HEART IT [poster] available from Discover vintage images on We Heart It (Accessed 28th November 2022)
Crisel H (2019) 16 Pictures That Prove Brigitte Bardot Is Still The Ultimate French Summer Style Icon [poster] available from Brigitte Bardot's Best Summer Style | British Vogue | British Vogue (accessed 28th November 2022)
THE VICTORIAN ERA
Charmaine Z (2013) Victorian fashion plate 37 [poster] available from Victorian Fashion Plate 37 | Charmaine Zoe's Marvelous Melange | Flickr (Accessed 28th November 2022)
Robert P (2021) London in 1901 - the End of the Victorian Era [poster] available from London in 1901 - the End of the Victorian Era - Hub Pages (Accessed 28th November 2022)
Centery R (2020) Women of The Victorian and Edwardian Era - Vintage Photography - 24-Trading Cards Set - NO Duplicates! Complete Set [poster] available from Women of the Victorian and Edwardian Era Vintage Photography - Etsy UK (Accessed 28th November 2022)
Alavezes N (2015) 23 Charming Photos That Prove The Victorian Era Had The Best Fashion [poster] 23 Charming Photos That Prove The Victorian Era Had The Best Fashion (Accessed 28th November)
THE ROARING 20S
(2015) womens street fashion of the 1920s [poster] Women’s Street Fashion of the 1920s ~ Vintage Everyday (Accessed 28th November 2022)
Hilary G P (2017) The Most Influential Fashion Trends, Decade by Decade [poster] Fashion by the Decades | Who What Wear UK (accessed 28th November 2022)
Women A (n/a) Womens accessory [poster] available from Women’s Accessories (wordpress.com) (accessed 28th November 2022)
Lombardi (2019) F. Scott Fitzgerald's Inspiration for 'The Great Gatsby' [poster] available from What Inspired 'The Great Gatsby'? (thoughtco.com) (accessed 28th november 2022)
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amphtaminedreams · 2 years
Photo
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APRIL 2019->AUGUST 2022: Photo Dump No.19
DATE SAVED, L-R BY ROW:
1. 1st June 2021 [Versace RTW S/S04], 24th April 2022 [Garden Walk, Shoreditch], 22nd May 2022 [Bermondsey Station, Southwark], 9th May 2022 [Central Gardens, Bournemouth], 29th May 2022, 12th May 2022 [Denmark Street, Soho]. 31st March 2020 [source: instagram account @timeforpaint], 20th May 2022 [source: instagram account @jzcreativespace], 17th June 2022
2. 15th July 2022 [lford Bridge, Christchurch], 12th July 2022 [Danielle Frankel RTW F/W22], 10th July 2021 [Bournemouth Beach, Dorset], 20th March 2022 [from the "Floral Mayhem" series, Silvia Schaumloeffel], 13th June 2022, 24th April 2022 [Columbia Road, Bethnal Green], 6th December 2020 [source unknown], 16th November 2021 [Gucci RTW F/W19], 16th July 2022 [Lavender Hill, Battersea Rise] 
3. 12th August 2022 [River Stour, Bournemouth], 30th June 2022 [EPCOT, Walt Disney World Florida], 24th June 2022 [Disney's All-Star Music Resort, Walt Disney World Florida], 10th August 2019 [Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, Rome], 11th August 2022, 11th August 2022, 12th May 2022 [Behold, Man!, Frances Stark, 2013 @ A Century of the Artist's Studio: 1920-2020 Exhibition, Whitechapel Gallery], 19th June 2022 [source: instagram account @titsayy), 21st July 2021 [FANCì RTW F/W21, source: twitter account @MEENAVOGUEE]
4. 21st July 2021 [Bournemouth Seafront, Dorset], 10th May 2021 [Megan Thee Stallion BTS on the set of Legendary, Season 2 Episode 2: The Grand March, aired 6th May 2021), 16th May 2022 [Natasha Zinko Pre-fall 2020), 29th July 2022, 25th July 20222, 12th May 2022 [source: instagram account @katiedensondesigns), 22nd May 2022 [Marina live @ the O2 Academy, Brixton], 24th July 2022, 27th June 2022 [World Showcase @ EPCOT, Walt Disney World, Orlando]
5. 9th June 2021 [Lady Gaga photographed at the Annual Watermill Center Summer Benefit, July 2013], 11th March 2020 [The Laines, Brighton], 30th July 2022 [Ebury Bridge, Pimlico], 1st August 2022 [Picnic Park Deli, Bournemouth], 13th July 2022, 17th March 2022 [The Dahlia Renaissance Gown from Teuta Matoshi's S/S21 collection], 21st May 2022 [The Lister Hospital, Chelsea], 16th April 2022 [source: instagram account @oshthoughts], 1st June 2022 [Lorde live @ the Roundhouse, Chalk Farm]
6. 26th May 2021 [Bimini Bon Boulash BTS for Time Out London, May 2021 issue, source: @biminibabes], 24th April [Columbia Road, Bethnal Green], 28th June 2021 [source: twitter account @thisyearsgurl], 29th May 2022, 13th July 2022 [Bosca Nova, Bascombe High Street], 1st July 2022 [Universal's Islands of Adventure, Orlando], 24th July 2019 [the East Side Gallery, Berlin], 6th May 2022 [source: instagram account @kiracyan.design], 29th June 2022
7. 13th July 2022, 26th August 2021 [Atelier Versace Haute Couture F/W19], 13th August 2019 [Sitges, Catalonia], 24th March 2022, 15th July 2022, 18th July 2022 [Overcliff Drive, Bournemouth], 16th July 2022 [Community Festival @ Finsbury Park, Harringay], 9th July 2022, 26th March 2022 [source: instagram account @deandrepageart]
8. 13th August 2019 [Sitges, Catalunya], 6th August 2022, 9th August 2022, 6th April 2022 [Yobi-goe, Okanoue Toshiko, 1953 @ the Surrealism Beyond Borders Exhibition, Tate Modern, Bankside], 6th August 2022, 30th April 2022 [vintage Roberto Cavalli details, source: twitter account @highrunway21], 18th August 2021, 30th August 2021 [Christian Lacroix Haute Couture F/W05], 6th August 2022 [Southbourne, Bournemouth]
9. 24th May 2022 [Christchurch, Dorset], 22nd May 2022, 19th April 2022 [Javea, Alicante], 30th May 2022, 3rd November 2021 [Kate Moss, photographed on set, 1996, source unknown], 23rd July 2022, 11th April 2020 [source unknown], 27th December 2020 [Italian Vogue, January 2020 issue], 18th August 2021
10. 31st July 2022 [Bournemouth Pier, Dorset], 26th June 2022 [Rina Sawayama for Nylon France, issue 29], 30th July 2022, 15th October 2021 [source: instagram account @thepulpgirls], 12th May 2022 [Zuhair Murad Haute Couture F/W21], 1st June 2022 [source: twitter account @tododiagatinhos], 17th August 2021 [Tate Modern, Bankside], 19th October 2021 [Adut Akech photographed by Renell Medrano for the CR Fashion Book, F/W21], 30th July 2022
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fmpdanishgirl · 2 months
Text
THE DANISH GIRL
THE STORY
The Danish Girl is based on the real-life story of Lili Eble, formerly known as pre-transition einer Wegnar. Lili Elbe is one of the first trans women to undergo surgery. The surgery I attempted to get was uterus transplant surgery. The first part went smoothly, but the second part of the surgery turned into a disaster, ending in my death. 
This story of Lili also contains her wife, who stood by her, loved her through her transition, and always supported Lili in becoming her true self. 
The Danish Girl is based in the 1920s in Copenhagen and Paris, which are both beautiful cities.
The story of Lili has gone down in history, and she is remembered today as a strong woman pioneering the acceptance of transgender people.
youtube
This is the trailer for the movie. The Danish Girl, which was released in 2015 and reproduces the story of Lili Eble, is not 100% accurate due to this being a movie. 
youtube
This video speaks more accurately about Lily's life, referencing her biography.
THE FASHION 
The fashion in the Danish girl is beautiful and takes ideas from both the 20s and 30s. 
The fashion in the Danish girl is very much representative of Lilis's development into her true self from Eniner to Lili and really shows her development throughout the film as she flourishes to be more confident.
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Lili and her wife Gerda are seen throughout the movie wearing different staple outfits using methods such as draping, embroidery, ruching, and layering. 
Another key point of these outfits is the use of hats. Gerda is often seen wearing cloche hats, and Lili is often seen wearing more fether hats, which are a lot more extravagant than gerdas. However, they both tend to have shorter bobbed hair, following the 20s style.
HARVARD REFERENCING
marj galas. (2016). ‘The Danish Girl’ Costume Designer on Eddie Redmayne’s Clothing Transitions. [Online]. Variety. Last Updated: 25th febuary. Available at: https://variety.com/2016/artisans/production/the-danish-girl-costume-designer-paco-delgado-120171322 [Accessed 11 March 2024].
science compass. (2022). Lili Elbe Biography, History's First Transgender Lili Elbe And Her Courage That Inspired Thousands. [Online]. YouTube. Last Updated: 28th December. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3omUo2OSsU [Accessed 11 March 2024].
Focus Features. (2015). THE DANISH GIRL - Official Trailer - In Theaters November 2015. [Online]. YouTube. Last Updated: 2nd September. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vyUHGl0Y6E [Accessed 11 March 2024].
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lisaveil-20 · 3 months
Text
Yesterday (어제) Is A 7-Member girl group under then Bighit entertainment (Now hybe labels) The group currently consists of Cynthia, Xia, Seohee, Bae, Anya, Bowie, and Hoyeon, Yesterday debuted on October 28th 2019
The meaning of Yesterday: Yesterday has a double meaning it either represents the group’s concept that reflects past eras but still manages to be modern and not be outdated or it represents the group trying to better themselves from the day before
For the "retro" part of their concept they usually do between 1920s to 1970s only the aesthetic is vintage though if you listen to one of their songs I wouldn't think this is a girl group with a retro concept not every comeback is retro thought it's a good mix of retro and contemporary
Their official color is Lavender
Their fans are called Nostalgia and the fandom color is Minty Blue
Their official greeting is Yesterday is history we are Yesterday
The Members:
Cynthia
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FULL NAME: Cynthia Jeong (신시아 정)
KOREAN NAME: Jeong Soo-min (정수민)
POSITIONS: Lead Rapper vocalist Visual FOTG
BIRTHDAY: August 28th 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Auckland New Zealand (But Both parents are Korean)
NATIONALITY: Korean-New Zealander
HEIGHT: 5'5"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Korean and English
Xia
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REAL NAME: Yáng Xīn yí (杨欣怡)
POSITIONS: Sub Vocalist Sub Rapper
BIRTHDAY: November 11th 1997
BIRTHPLACE: Hangzhou China
NATIONALITY: Chinese
HEIGHT: 5'4"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Chinese Mandarin Korean and English
Seohee
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REAL NAME: Ahn Seol-hyun (안설현)
POSITIONS: Leader Main Vocalist
BIRTHDAY: February 18th 1998
BIRTHPLACE: Daejeon South Korea
NATIONALITY: Korean
HEIGHT: 5'4"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Korean and English
Bae
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REAL NAME: Bae Min-hee (배민희)
POSITIONS: Lead Vocalist Lead Dancer Center visual
BIRTHDAY: March 14th 1998
BIRTHPLACE: Gwangju South Korea
NATIONALITY: Korean
HEIGHT: 5'6"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Korean and English
Anya
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FULL NAME: Anya Shinawatra (อัญญา ชินวัตร) (안야)
POSITIONS: lead Vocalist
BIRTHDAY: April 2and 1999
BIRTHPLACE: Bangkok Thailand
NATIONALITY: Thai
HEIGHT: 5'8"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Thai Korean English and Spanish
Bowie
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REAL NAME: Han Bo-ah (한보아)
POSITIONS: main Vocalist
BIRTHDAY: September 4th 1999
BIRTHPLACE: Ulsan South Korea
NATIONALITY: Korean
HEIGHT: 5'5"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Korean and English
Hoyeon
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FULL NAME: Park Ho-Yeon (박호연)
POSITIONS: Main Rapper Main Dancer Maknae
BIRTHDAY: October 30th 2000
BIRTHPLACE: Daegu South Korea
NATIONALITY: Korean
HEIGHT: 5'5"
LANGUAGES SHE SPEAKS: Korean and English
Their Logo:
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I have yet to make a discography and I'm currently trying to figure out a light stick for them
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Tuesday 28th March 2023, Ashburn, 6.04pm.
#144,968 — A woman’s life takes a dramatic turn when her doctor tells her that she has uterine cancer and only two months to live. The tribe had been thought to have become extinct in the 1920s.
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mortonmattd · 1 year
Video
youtube
Amazing Historical Events That Occurred on 3/28🎉 #shorts #history
Welcome to an amazing journey through history! On March 28th, there have been some truly amazing historical events that have shaped our world.
1556 marked the formal coronation of Philip II of Spain as the King of Spain, a momentous event that would solidify Spain's place in European history.
In 1797, Nathaniel Briggs of New Hampshire patented a revolutionary washing machine, making laundry easier than ever before. This invention helped to set the standard for modern laundry that we still use today.
1854 saw Great Britain and France declare war on Russia, expanding the Crimean War. This conflict would have a large impact on European history and would eventually end with the Treaty of Paris in 1856.
1920 marked the election of Tomáš Masaryk as the President of Czechoslovakia. This was a monumental moment for the nation and its people, and helped to shape the nation's future.
Finally, in 1939, the Spanish Civil War came to a close, with Madrid falling to the Nationalists led by Francisco Franco. This ended a three-year civil war and marked the beginning of a long period of dictatorship in Spain.
We hope you've enjoyed this brief overview of some of the amazing historic events that happened on March 28th. From coronations to wars and revolutions, there have been some defining moments in history that have shaped our world. https://bit.ly/freebetwithCrypto
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