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duranduratulsa · 9 months
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Now showing on my 90's Fest Movie 🎥 marathon...The Exorcist III (1990) on classic DVD 📀! #movie #movies #horror #theexorcist #theexorcistiii #williampeterblatty #georgecscott #ripgeorgecscott #JasonMiller #ripjasonmiller #edflanders #ripedflanders #braddourif #NancyFish #ScottWilson #RIPScottWilson #patrickewing #SamuelLJackson #LarryKing #riplarryking #vivecalindfors #ripvivecalindfors #harrycareyjr #colleendewhurst #Fabio #DVD #durandurantulsas3rdannual90sfest #90s #90sfest
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fatliberation · 7 months
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they have a point though. you wouldn't need everyone to accommodate you if you just lost weight, but you're too lazy to stick to a healthy diet and exercise. it's that simple. I'd like to see you back up your claims, but you have no proof. you have got to stop lying to yourselves and face the facts
Must I go through this again? Fine. FINE. You guys are working my nerves today. You want to talk about facing the facts? Let's face the fucking facts.
In 2022, the US market cap of the weight loss industry was $75 billion [1, 3]. In 2021, the global market cap of the weight loss industry was estimated at $224.27 billion [2]. 
In 2020, the market shrunk by about 25%, but rebounded and then some since then [1, 3] By 2030, the global weight loss industry is expected to be valued at $405.4 billion [2]. If diets really worked, this industry would fall overnight. 
1. LaRosa, J. March 10, 2022. "U.S. Weight Loss Market Shrinks by 25% in 2020 with Pandemic, but Rebounds in 2021." Market Research Blog. 2. Staff. February 09, 2023. "[Latest] Global Weight Loss and Weight Management Market Size/Share Worth." Facts and Factors Research. 3. LaRosa, J. March 27, 2023. "U.S. Weight Loss Market Partially Recovers from the Pandemic." Market Research Blog.
Over 50 years of research conclusively demonstrates that virtually everyone who intentionally loses weight by manipulating their eating and exercise habits will regain the weight they lost within 3-5 years. And 75% will actually regain more weight than they lost [4].
4. Mann, T., Tomiyama, A.J., Westling, E., Lew, A.M., Samuels, B., Chatman, J. (2007). "Medicare’s Search For Effective Obesity Treatments: Diets Are Not The Answer." The American Psychologist, 62, 220-233. U.S. National Library of Medicine, Apr. 2007.
The annual odds of a fat person attaining a so-called “normal” weight and maintaining that for 5 years is approximately 1 in 1000 [5].
5. Fildes, A., Charlton, J., Rudisill, C., Littlejohns, P., Prevost, A.T., & Gulliford, M.C. (2015). “Probability of an Obese Person Attaining Normal Body Weight: Cohort Study Using Electronic Health Records.” American Journal of Public Health, July 16, 2015: e1–e6.
Doctors became so desperate that they resorted to amputating parts of the digestive tract (bariatric surgery) in the hopes that it might finally result in long-term weight-loss. Except that doesn’t work either. [6] And it turns out it causes death [7],  addiction [8], malnutrition [9], and suicide [7].
6. Magro, Daniéla Oliviera, et al. “Long-Term Weight Regain after Gastric Bypass: A 5-Year Prospective Study - Obesity Surgery.” SpringerLink, 8 Apr. 2008. 7. Omalu, Bennet I, et al. “Death Rates and Causes of Death After Bariatric Surgery for Pennsylvania Residents, 1995 to 2004.” Jama Network, 1 Oct. 2007.  8. King, Wendy C., et al. “Prevalence of Alcohol Use Disorders Before and After Bariatric Surgery.” Jama Network, 20 June 2012.  9. Gletsu-Miller, Nana, and Breanne N. Wright. “Mineral Malnutrition Following Bariatric Surgery.” Advances In Nutrition: An International Review Journal, Sept. 2013.
Evidence suggests that repeatedly losing and gaining weight is linked to cardiovascular disease, stroke, diabetes and altered immune function [10].
10. Tomiyama, A Janet, et al. “Long‐term Effects of Dieting: Is Weight Loss Related to Health?” Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 6 July 2017.
Prescribed weight loss is the leading predictor of eating disorders [11].
11. Patton, GC, et al. “Onset of Adolescent Eating Disorders: Population Based Cohort Study over 3 Years.” BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.), 20 Mar. 1999.
The idea that “obesity” is unhealthy and can cause or exacerbate illnesses is a biased misrepresentation of the scientific literature that is informed more by bigotry than credible science [12]. 
12. Medvedyuk, Stella, et al. “Ideology, Obesity and the Social Determinants of Health: A Critical Analysis of the Obesity and Health Relationship” Taylor & Francis Online, 7 June 2017.
“Obesity” has no proven causative role in the onset of any chronic condition [13, 14] and its appearance may be a protective response to the onset of numerous chronic conditions generated from currently unknown causes [15, 16, 17, 18].
13. Kahn, BB, and JS Flier. “Obesity and Insulin Resistance.” The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Aug. 2000. 14. Cofield, Stacey S, et al. “Use of Causal Language in Observational Studies of Obesity and Nutrition.” Obesity Facts, 3 Dec. 2010.  15. Lavie, Carl J, et al. “Obesity and Cardiovascular Disease: Risk Factor, Paradox, and Impact of Weight Loss.” Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 26 May 2009.  16. Uretsky, Seth, et al. “Obesity Paradox in Patients with Hypertension and Coronary Artery Disease.” The American Journal of Medicine, Oct. 2007.  17. Mullen, John T, et al. “The Obesity Paradox: Body Mass Index and Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Nonbariatric General Surgery.” Annals of Surgery, July 2005. 18. Tseng, Chin-Hsiao. “Obesity Paradox: Differential Effects on Cancer and Noncancer Mortality in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.” Atherosclerosis, Jan. 2013.
Fatness was associated with only 1/3 the associated deaths that previous research estimated and being “overweight” conferred no increased risk at all, and may even be a protective factor against all-causes mortality relative to lower weight categories [19].
19. Flegal, Katherine M. “The Obesity Wars and the Education of a Researcher: A Personal Account.” Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 15 June 2021.
Studies have observed that about 30% of so-called “normal weight” people are “unhealthy” whereas about 50% of so-called “overweight” people are “healthy”. Thus, using the BMI as an indicator of health results in the misclassification of some 75 million people in the United States alone [20]. 
20. Rey-López, JP, et al. “The Prevalence of Metabolically Healthy Obesity: A Systematic Review and Critical Evaluation of the Definitions Used.” Obesity Reviews : An Official Journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity, 15 Oct. 2014.
While epidemiologists use BMI to calculate national obesity rates (nearly 35% for adults and 18% for kids), the distinctions can be arbitrary. In 1998, the National Institutes of Health lowered the overweight threshold from 27.8 to 25—branding roughly 29 million Americans as fat overnight—to match international guidelines. But critics noted that those guidelines were drafted in part by the International Obesity Task Force, whose two principal funders were companies making weight loss drugs [21].
21. Butler, Kiera. “Why BMI Is a Big Fat Scam.” Mother Jones, 25 Aug. 2014. 
Body size is largely determined by genetics [22].
22. Wardle, J. Carnell, C. Haworth, R. Plomin. “Evidence for a strong genetic influence on childhood adiposity despite the force of the obesogenic environment” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition Vol. 87, No. 2, Pages 398-404, February 2008.
Healthy lifestyle habits are associated with a significant decrease in mortality regardless of baseline body mass index [23].  
23. Matheson, Eric M, et al. “Healthy Lifestyle Habits and Mortality in Overweight and Obese Individuals.” Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine : JABFM, U.S. National Library of Medicine, 25 Feb. 2012.
Weight stigma itself is deadly. Research shows that weight-based discrimination increases risk of death by 60% [24].
24. Sutin, Angela R., et al. “Weight Discrimination and Risk of Mortality .” Association for Psychological Science, 25 Sept. 2015.
Fat stigma in the medical establishment [25] and society at large arguably [26] kills more fat people than fat does [27, 28, 29].
25. Puhl, Rebecca, and Kelly D. Bronwell. “Bias, Discrimination, and Obesity.” Obesity Research, 6 Sept. 2012. 26. Engber, Daniel. “Glutton Intolerance: What If a War on Obesity Only Makes the Problem Worse?” Slate, 5 Oct. 2009.  27. Teachman, B. A., Gapinski, K. D., Brownell, K. D., Rawlins, M., & Jeyaram, S. (2003). Demonstrations of implicit anti-fat bias: The impact of providing causal information and evoking empathy. Health Psychology, 22(1), 68–78. 28. Chastain, Ragen. “So My Doctor Tried to Kill Me.” Dances With Fat, 15 Dec. 2009. 29. Sutin, Angelina R, Yannick Stephan, and Antonio Terraciano. “Weight Discrimination and Risk of Mortality.” Psychological Science, 26 Nov. 2015.
There's my "proof." Where is yours?
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grandvhs · 2 years
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lista de nomes masculinos que estava no meu bloco de notas e eu só lembrei agora
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zachary.
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zane.
zavier.
zed.
zeke.
zion.
zolten.
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daguerreotyping · 1 year
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Portrait of Frederick Douglass, abolitionist leader, writer, orator, survivor of slavery, and the most photographed man in 19th century America—in this instance by Samuel J. Miller, c. 1847-52
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nem0c · 1 year
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Vietnam War - Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine, June 1968
Sourced from: http://natsmusic.net/articles_galaxy_magazine_viet_nam_war.htm
Transcript Below
We the undersigned believe the United States must remain in Vietnam to fulfill its responsibilities to the people of that country.
Karen K. Anderson, Poul Anderson, Harry Bates, Lloyd Biggle Jr., J. F. Bone, Leigh Brackett, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Mario Brand, R. Bretnor, Frederic Brown, Doris Pitkin Buck, William R. Burkett Jr., Elinor Busby, F. M. Busby, John W. Campbell, Louis Charbonneau, Hal Clement, Compton Crook, Hank Davis, L. Sprague de Camp, Charles V. de Vet, William B. Ellern, Richard H. Eney, T. R. Fehrenbach, R. C. FitzPatrick, Daniel F. Galouye, Raymond Z. Gallun, Robert M. Green Jr., Frances T. Hall, Edmond Hamilton, Robert A. Heinlein, Joe L. Hensley, Paul G. Herkart, Dean C. Ing, Jay Kay Klein, David A. Kyle, R. A. Lafferty, Robert J. Leman, C. C. MacApp, Robert Mason, D. M. Melton, Norman Metcalf, P. Schuyler Miller, Sam Moskowitz, John Myers Myers, Larry Niven, Alan Nourse, Stuart Palmer, Gerald W. Page, Rachel Cosgrove Payes, Lawrence A. Perkins, Jerry E. Pournelle, Joe Poyer, E. Hoffmann Price, George W. Price, Alva Rogers, Fred Saberhagen, George O. Smith, W. E. Sprague, G. Harry Stine (Lee Correy), Dwight V. Swain, Thomas Burnett Swann, Albert Teichner, Theodore L. Thomas, Rena M. Vale, Jack Vance, Harl Vincent, Don Walsh Jr., Robert Moore Williams, Jack Williamson, Rosco E. Wright, Karl Würf.
We oppose the participation of the United States in the war in Vietnam.
Forrest J. Ackerman, Isaac Asimov, Peter S. Beagle, Jerome Bixby, James Blish, Anthony Boucher, Lyle G. Boyd, Ray Bradbury, Jonathan Brand, Stuart J. Byrne, Terry Carr, Carroll J. Clem, Ed M. Clinton, Theodore R. Cogswell, Arthur Jean Cox, Allan Danzig, Jon DeCles, Miriam Allen deFord, Samuel R. Delany, Lester del Rey, Philip K. Dick, Thomas M. Disch, Sonya Dorman, Larry Eisenberg, Harlan Ellison, Carol Emshwiller, Philip José Farmer, David E. Fisher, Ron Goulart, Joseph Green, Jim Harmon, Harry Harrison, H. H. Hollis, J. Hunter Holly, James D. Houston, Edward Jesby, Leo P. Kelley, Daniel Keyes, Virginia Kidd, Damon Knight, Allen Lang, March Laumer, Ursula K. LeGuin, Fritz Leiber, Irwin Lewis, A. M. Lightner, Robert A. W. Lowndes, Katherine MacLean, Barry Malzberg, Robert E. Margroff, Anne Marple, Ardrey Marshall, Bruce McAllister, Judith Merril, Robert P. Mills, Howard L. Morris, Kris Neville, Alexei Panshin, Emil Petaja, J. R. Pierce, Arthur Porges, Mack Reynolds, Gene Roddenberry, Joanna Russ, James Sallis, William Sambrot, Hans Stefan Santesson, J. W. Schutz, Robin Scott, Larry T. Shaw, John Shepley, T. L. Sherred, Robert Silverberg, Henry Slesar, Jerry Sohl, Norman Spinrad, Margaret St. Clair, Jacob Transue, Thurlow Weed, Kate Wilhelm, Richard Wilson, Donald A. Wollheim.
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frontinus · 7 months
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Nonfiction Books that Hit Hard
1. Escape From Evil (E. Becker)
2. Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals (J. Gray)
3. Restoring Pride (R. Taylor)
4. The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror (T. Ligotti)
5. The Struggle with the Daemon: Hölderlin, Kleist and Nietzsche (S. Zweig)
6. Fear of Life: The Wisdom of Failure (Lowen)
7. Escape from Freedom (Fromm)
8. The Courage to Create (R. May)
9. The Outsider (C. Wilson)
10. The Wisdom of the Heart (H. Miller)
11. How to Live: Or A Life of Montaigne (S.Bakewell)
12. Solitude: A Return to the Self (A. Storr)
13. A Short History of Decay (E. Cioran)
14. Blood Orchid: An Unnatural History of America (Bowden)
15. The Philosophy of Samuel Beckett (J. Calder)
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indiesole · 6 months
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THE 236 GREATEST PERSONALITIES IN THE ENTIRE KNOWN HISTORY/COLLECTIVE CONSCIOUSNESS OF THIS WORLD! (@INDIES)
i.e. THE 236 GREATEST PERSONALITIES IN WORLD HISTORY! (@INDIES)
Rajesh Khanna
Lionel Messi
Leonardo Da Vinci
Muhammad Ali
Joan of Arc
William Shakespeare
Vincent Van Gogh
Online Indie
J. K. Rowling
David Lean
Nadia Comaneci
Diego Maradona
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Meena Kumari
Julius Caesar
Harrison Ford
Ludwig Van Beethoven
William W. Cargill
Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche
Samuel Curtis Johnson
Sam Walton
John D. Rockefeller
Andrew Carnegie
Roy Thomson
Tim Berners-Lee
Marie Curie
James J. Hill
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Roman Polanski
Samuel Slater
J. P. Morgan
Cary Grant
Dmitri Mendeleev
John Harvard
Alain Delon
Ramakrishna Paramhansa (Official God)
The Lumiere Brothers, Auguste & Louis
Carl Friedrich Benz
Michelangelo
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Ramana Maharishi
Mark Twain
Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri
Bruce Lee
Bhagwan Krishna (Official God)
Charlemagne
Rene Descartes
John F. Kennedy
Bhagwan Ganesha (Official God)
Walt Disney
Albert Einstein
Nikola Tesla
Alfred Hitchcock
Pythagoras
William Randolph Hearst
Cosimo de’ Medici
Johann Sebastian Bach
Alec Guinness
Nostradamus
Christopher Plummer
Archimedes
Jackie Chan
Guru Dutt
Amma Karunamayi/ Mata Parvati (Official God)
Peter Sellers
Gerard Depardieu
Joseph Safra
Robert Morris
Sean Connery
Petr Kellner
Aristotle Onassis
Usain Bolt
Jack Welch
Alfredo di Stefano
Elizabeth Taylor
Michael Jordan
Paul Muni
Steven Spielberg
Louis Pasteur
Ingrid Bergman
Norma Shearer
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
Ayn Rand
Jesus Christ (Official God)
Luciano Pavarotti
Alain Resnais
Frank Sinatra
Allah (Official God)
Richard Nixon
Charlie Chaplin
Thomas Alva Edison
Alexander Graham Bell
Wright Brothers
Arjun (of Bhagwan Krishna’s Gita)
Jim Simons
George Lucas
Swami Sri Lahiri Mahasaya
Carl Lewis
Brett Favre
Helen Keller
Bernard Mannes Baruch
Buddha (Official God)
Hugh Grant
K. L. Saigal
Roger Federer
Rash Behari Bose
Tiger Woods
William Blake
Jesse Owens
Claude Miller
Bernardo Bertolucci
Subhash Chandra Bose
Satyajit Ray
Hippocrates
Chiang Kai-Shek
John Logie Baird
Geeta Dutt
Raphael (painter)
Bhagwan Shiva (Official God)
Radha (Ancient Krishna devotee)
George Orwell
Jorge Paulo Lemann
Catherine Deneuve
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Bill Gates
Bhagwan Ram (Official God)
Michael Phelps
Michael Faraday
Audrey Hepburn
Dalai Lama
Grace Kelly
Mikhail Gorbachev
Vladimir Putin
Galileo Galilei
Gary Cooper
Roger Moore
John Huston
Blaise Pascal
Humphrey Bogart
Rudyard Kipling
Samuel Morse
Wayne Gretzky
Yogi Berra
Barry Levinson
Patrice Chereau (director)
Jerry Lewis
Louis Daguerre
James Watt
Henri Rousseau
Nikita Krushchev
Jack Dorsey
Dev Anand
Elia Kazan
Alexander Fleming
David Selznick
Frank Marshall
Viswanathan Anand
Major Dhyan Chand
Swami Vivekananda
Felix Rohatyn
Sam Spiegel
Anand Bakshi
Victor Hugo
Bhagwan Sri Sathya Sai Baba (Official God)
Steve Jobs
Srinivasa Ramanujam
Lord Hanuman
Stanley Kubrick
Giotto
Voltaire
Diego Velazquez
Ernest Hemingway
Francis Ford Coppola
Michael Douglas
Kirk Douglas
Mario Lemieux
Kishore Kumar
James Stewart
Douglas Fairbanks
Confucius
Babe Ruth
Raj Kapoor
Titian aka Tiziano Vecelli
El Greco
Francisco de Goya
Jim Carrey
Mohammad Rafi
Steffi Graf
Pele
Gustave Courbet
Rani Laxmibai of Jhansi
Milos Forman
Steve Wozniak
Georgia O’ Keeffe
Mala Sinha
Aryabhatta
Magic Johnson
Patanjali
Leo Tolstoy
Tansen
Henry Fonda
Albrecht Durer
Benazir Bhutto
Cal Ripken Jr
Samuel Goldwyn
Mumtaz (actress)
Panini
Nicolaus Copernicus
Pablo Picasso
George Clooney
Olivia de Havilland
Prem Chand
Imran Khan
Pete Sampras
Ratan Tata
Meerabai (16th c. Krishna devotee)
Queen Elizabeth II
Pope John Paul II
James Cameron
Jack Ma
Warren Buffett
Romy Schneider
C. V. Raman
Aung San Suu Kyi
Benjamin Netanyahu
Frank Capra
Michael Schumacher
Steve Forbes
Paramhansa Yogananda
Tom Hanks
Kamal Amrohi
Hans Holbein
Shammi Kapoor
Gerardus Mercator
Edith Piaf
Bhagwan Shirdi Sai Baba (Official God)
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dialux · 2 years
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hello! i hope you are well:)
it is my birthday today, and i wanted to ask for quotes about being seventeen, being on the precipice of adulthood, and/or being at the end of childhood (especially if you didn't get to enjoy your childhood, growing up to fast with traumatic experiences).
I am in love with your writing on ao3 and on this tumblr blog, and this would be the perfect birthday gift if you are willing to do it! Of course, no worries either way, but I just want to thank you for bringing so much joy and hope into my life with your posts and writing! You are a treasure <3
Thanks Dia!
Happy belated birthday darling, and deepest wishes for your joy, laughter and kindness in the journey that life will take you on in the coming year and years xx
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“I wish I wasn't an imperial highness or an ex-grand duchess. I'm sick of people doing things to me because of what I am. Girl-in-white-dress. Short-one-with-fringe. Daughter-of-the-tsar. Child-of-the-ex-tyrant. I want people to look and see me, Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova, not the caboose on a train of grand duchesses. Someday, I promise myself, no one will be able to hear my name or look at my picture and suppose they know all about me. Someday I will do something bigger than what I am.”
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“It was like the moment when a bird decides not to eat from your hand, and flies, just before it flies, the moment the rivers seem to still and stop because a storm is coming, but there is no storm, as when a hundred starlings lift and bank together before they wheel and drop, very much like the moment, driving on ice, when it occurs to you your car could spin, just before it slowly begins to spin, like the moment just before you forgot what it was you were about to say, it was like that, and after that, it was still like that, only all the time.”
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"First, you must learn desire. Hold its
fruit in your hands. Unmarry it from
the hunger to be held, to be wanted, to
be called from the streets like the family
dog. You are not a good girl. You are not
somebody’s otherness. This is not a dress
rehearsal before a better kind of life."
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"How much of my mother has my mother left in me?
How much of my love will be insane to some degree?
And what about this feeling that I'm never good enough?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?
How much of my father am I destined to become?
Will I dim the lights inside me just to satisfy someone?
Will I let this woman kill me, or do away with jealous love?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?
I can feel love the I want, I can feel the love I need
But it's never gonna come the way I am
Could I change it if I wanted, can I rise above the flood?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?
How much like my brothers, do my brothers wanna be?
Does a broken home become another broken family?
Or will we be there for each other, like nobody ever could?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?"
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“Her mother told her she could grow up to be anything she wanted be, so she grew up to become the strongest of the strong, the strangest of the strange, the wildest of the wild, the wolf leading wolves.”
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on youthfulness
heather o'neill, "portrait of the artist as a young corpse" // ali ahmed said (trans. samuel hazo), "elegy for the time at hand" // sarah miller, "the lost crown" // stilke hermann anton, "joan of arc's death at the stake" // jan langer, faces of century" // marie howe, "part of eve's discussion" // edna st vincent mallay, "childhood is the kingdom where nobody dies" // clementine von radics, "for teenage girls with wild ambition and trembling hearts" // kate baer, "to take back a life" // hans holbein, elizabeth i // joan tierney, "the water doesn't make you stronger / all it does is drown" // clementine von radics, "courtney love prays to oregon" // ada limon, "flood coming" // russian princess anastasia romanov, c. 1914 // john mayer, "in the blood" // catherynne m valente, "silently and very fast" // tr hummer, "emissary: five eternies in september" // nikita gill, "for the red riding hood who was the wolf" // walt whitman, "o me! o life!"
6 notes · View notes
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Yahweh is a Thunderer Too:
In this video, I discuss similarities that exist between Yahweh’s being a thunderer, in the Book of 1st Samuel, and Jupiter’s being a thunderer in the Ancient Roman pantheon. One of Jupiter’s ‘epithets’ or ‘descriptors’ was: ‘Tonitrātor’, ‘the thunderer’.
Please see the Wikipedia page entitled ‘Jupiter (god)’ on Wikipedia for a list of Jovian epithets, including this one: ‘tonitrātor’, ‘[the] Thunderer’.
Transcript:
https://1drv.ms/w/s!Aon4q4RsUuHYhqpXk1hDKyE5ZN5Ieg?e=AQ6DP0
Wikipedia page entitled ‘Jupiter (god)’:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jupiter_(god)
1st Samuel 7:10:
https://biblehub.com/1_samuel/7-10.htm
Transcript Text:
Yahweh is a Thunderer Too:
or, in Latin:
Iehōva est atque Tonitrātor:
CIARÁN AODH MAC ARDGHAIL: “I am trying to read the entire Bible. Currently, I am in the Book of 1st Samuel, and the edition of the Bible that I am using is the King James Version. Let us go to chapter 7 verse 10 in the Book of 1st Samuel:
‘And as Samuel was offering up the burnt offering, the Philistines drew near to battle against Israel: but the LORD thundered with a great thunder on that day upon the Philistines, and discomfited them; and they were smitten before Israel.’
1 Samuel 7:10 KJV
In this verse, we observe Yahweh ‘thundering’, and, what is interesting to me, concerning this, is that the Roman god, Jupiter, was called ‘the thunderer.’ If one should look up the article entitled: ‘Jupiter (god)’, on Wikipedia, then a list of ‘epithets,’ or ‘descriptors’ for Jupiter is given, and one of these ‘epithets,’ or descriptors is the Latin word: ‘tonitrātor’, which means: ‘[the] thunderer.’ ‘tonitrus’ is Latin for ‘thunder’. I wrote as an annotation, in my Bible, the Latin sentence:
‘Iuppiter est tonitrātor.’
, which means:
‘Jupiter is the thunderer.’
Similarly, I wrote as an annotation in my Bible:
‘Iehōva est atque tonitrātor.’
, which is Latin for:
‘Yahweh is also a thunderer.’
I think that it is worthwhile to point out similarities that exist between Judeochristianity and Paganism—and, especially, the similarities that exist between Judeochristianity and Greco-Roman Paganism—whenever these be encountered. Dennis R. MacDonald PhD, Richard C. Miller PhD, and Robyn Faith Walsh PhD point out the similarities that exist between Judeochristianity and Greco-Roman Paganism in their work.”
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lboogie1906 · 21 days
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Johnson C. Smith University (JCSU) is a private, HBCU in Charlotte. It is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church and is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education, the Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs, and the Council on Social Work Accreditation. The school awards Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Social Work, and Master of Social Work degrees.
it was established on April 7, 1867, as the Biddle Memorial Institute at a meeting of the Catawba Presbytery in the old Charlotte Presbyterian Church. Mary D. Biddle, a churchwoman, donated $1,400 to the school. In appreciation of this first contribution, friends requested that Mrs. Biddle name the newly established school; she did so in the name of her late husband, Captain Henry Jonathan Biddle, who had been mortally wounded during the Battle of Glendale. Samuel C. Alexander and Willis L. Miller saw the need for a school in the south and after the birth of the school, they were elected as some of the first teachers. Its corresponding women’s school was Scotia Seminary (now Barber-Scotia College).
In 1876, the charter was changed by the legislature of the State of North Carolina and the name became Biddle University, under which name the institution operated until 1923.
In 1891, Biddle University elected Daniel J. Sanders as the first African-American President of a four-year institution in the South. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence #hbcu
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indiejones · 6 months
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THE 236 GREATEST PERSONALITIES IN THE ENTIRE KNOWN HISTORY/COLLECTIVE CONSCIOUSNESS OF THIS WORLD! (@INDIES)
ie. THE 236 GREATEST PERSONALITIES IN WORLD HISTORY! (@INDIES)
Rajesh Khanna
Lionel Messi
Leonardo Da Vinci
Online Indie
Muhammad Ali
Joan of Arc
William Shakespeare
Vincent Van Gogh
J. K. Rowling
David Lean
Nadia Comaneci
Diego Maradona
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Meena Kumari
Julius Caesar
Harrison Ford
Ludwig Van Beethoven
William W. Cargill
Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche
Samuel Curtis Johnson
Sam Walton
John D. Rockefeller
Andrew Carnegie
Roy Thomson
Tim Berners-Lee
Marie Curie
James J. Hill
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Roman Polanski
Samuel Slater
J. P. Morgan
Cary Grant
Dmitri Mendeleev
John Harvard
Alain Delon
Ramakrishna Paramhansa (Official God)
The Lumiere Brothers, Auguste & Louis
Carl Friedrich Benz
Michelangelo
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Ramana Maharishi
Mark Twain
Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri
Bruce Lee
Bhagwan Krishna (Official God)
Charlemagne
Rene Descartes
John F. Kennedy
Bhagwan Ganesha (Official God)
Walt Disney
Albert Einstein
Nikola Tesla
Alfred Hitchcock
Pythagoras
William Randolph Hearst
Cosimo de’ Medici
Johann Sebastian Bach
Alec Guinness
Nostradamus
Christopher Plummer
Archimedes
Jackie Chan
Guru Dutt
Amma Karunamayi/ Mata Parvati (Official God)
Peter Sellers
Gerard Depardieu
Joseph Safra
Robert Morris
Sean Connery
Petr Kellner
Aristotle Onassis
Usain Bolt
Jack Welch
Alfredo di Stefano
Elizabeth Taylor
Michael Jordan
Paul Muni
Steven Spielberg
Louis Pasteur
Ingrid Bergman
Norma Shearer
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
Ayn Rand
Jesus Christ (Official God)
Luciano Pavarotti
Alain Resnais
Frank Sinatra
Allah (Official God)
Richard Nixon
Charlie Chaplin
Thomas Alva Edison
Alexander Graham Bell
Wright Brothers
Arjun (of Bhagwan Krishna’s Gita)
Jim Simons
George Lucas
Swami Sri Lahiri Mahasaya
Carl Lewis
Brett Favre
Helen Keller
Bernard Mannes Baruch
Buddha (Official God)
Hugh Grant
K. L. Saigal
Roger Federer
Rash Behari Bose
Tiger Woods
William Blake
Jesse Owens
Claude Miller
Bernardo Bertolucci
Subhash Chandra Bose
Satyajit Ray
Hippocrates
Chiang Kai-Shek
John Logie Baird
Geeta Dutt
Raphael (painter)
Bhagwan Shiva (Official God)
Radha (Ancient Krishna devotee)
George Orwell
Jorge Paulo Lemann
Catherine Deneuve
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Bill Gates
Bhagwan Ram (Official God)
Michael Phelps
Michael Faraday
Audrey Hepburn
Dalai Lama
Grace Kelly
Mikhail Gorbachev
Vladimir Putin
Galileo Galilei
Gary Cooper
Roger Moore
John Huston
Blaise Pascal
Humphrey Bogart
Rudyard Kipling
Samuel Morse
Wayne Gretzky
Yogi Berra
Barry Levinson
Patrice Chereau (director)
Jerry Lewis
Louis Daguerre
James Watt
Henri Rousseau
Nikita Krushchev
Jack Dorsey
Dev Anand
Elia Kazan
Alexander Fleming
David Selznick
Frank Marshall
Viswanathan Anand
Major Dhyan Chand
Swami Vivekananda
Felix Rohatyn
Sam Spiegel
Anand Bakshi
Victor Hugo
Bhagwan Sri Sathya Sai Baba (Official God)
Steve Jobs
Srinivasa Ramanujam
Lord Hanuman
Stanley Kubrick
Giotto
Voltaire
Diego Velazquez
Ernest Hemingway
Francis Ford Coppola
Michael Douglas
Kirk Douglas
Mario Lemieux
Kishore Kumar
James Stewart
Douglas Fairbanks
Confucius
Babe Ruth
Raj Kapoor
Titian aka Tiziano Vecelli
El Greco
Francisco de Goya
Jim Carrey
Mohammad Rafi
Steffi Graf
Pele
Gustave Courbet
Rani Laxmibai of Jhansi
Milos Forman
Steve Wozniak
Georgia O’ Keeffe
Mala Sinha
Aryabhatta
Magic Johnson
Patanjali
Leo Tolstoy
Tansen
Henry Fonda
Albrecht Durer
Benazir Bhutto
Cal Ripken Jr
Samuel Goldwyn
Mumtaz (actress)
Panini
Nicolaus Copernicus
Pablo Picasso
George Clooney
Olivia de Havilland
Prem Chand
Imran Khan
Pete Sampras
Ratan Tata
Meerabai (16th c. Krishna devotee)
Queen Elizabeth II
Pope John Paul II
James Cameron
Jack Ma
Warren Buffett
Romy Schneider
C. V. Raman
Aung San Suu Kyi
Benjamin Netanyahu
Frank Capra
Michael Schumacher
Steve Forbes
Paramhansa Yogananda
Tom Hanks
Kamal Amrohi
Hans Holbein
Shammi Kapoor
Gerardus Mercator
Edith Piaf
Bhagwan Shirdi Sai Baba (Official God) .
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millingroundireland · 7 months
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The story of Joseph B. Mills
This was originally part of the the third chapter in my family history on the Mills family, and published on WordPress, but has been broken up into various parts for this blog.
Born in Warren County in 1844, Joseph B. Mills had worked as a farm laborer, carpenter, miller, and mechanic, from his youth until 1880. He later would also work as a wheelright and become the sheriff for Pottersville, NY in the 1890s and be part of a famous trial where a man named Samuel T. Guilford sued him. Thanks to photocopies from the Warren County Records Center and newspaper articles which are digitized online, the rest of his story becomes even clearer.
By 1885, Joseph was a supervisor in Chester, with a man named James Mills an inspector for the same same town. In 1886, some of his acts were made legal by the New York State Senate in May 1886, including selling and conveying the cemetery lot in Chester as part of a public auction. After that, he became the sheriff in Warren County, living in Lake George, staying in that position until 1891. If that wasn’t enough, he served as the chairman of the Warren County Board of Supervisors in 1888 and from 1894 to 1896, as a supervisor in the town of Chester in 1888 and 1893–1897, and Glens Falls supervisor in 1881 as a Republican and re-elected in 1886. Clearly, he had an important role in the local government of the county without a doubt. For instance, he oversaw a sheriff’s sale in 1890, audits in the town of Chester in 1894, an official canvas in 1894, and wrote a letter to the citizenry in a local paper in 1895 which outlined a new county law, to name a few duties. He later worked to become the sheriff in 1897, of Chestertown, after he was nominated by the GOP. After his victory, he was congratulated by state capitol employees who said he is endeared to everyone in the building because of his kindness and courtesy with “the capitol work” he had done. By 1898 when he was listed with his amount of compensation, he was listed a supervisor in Warren County. He was even sued in 1899 by George E. Morehouse to recover the value of an unknown amount of hay, and in a different suit by Mary A. Hammond, possibly related to his sister Hattie Mills who married Hannibal Hammond.
Joseph was a dedicated Republican as newspapers attest. In 1894 he was a “second teller” at the Republican County Convention held in Warrenburg’s Hocksday Hall and was a representative at a convention the following year for Chester. In 1896, the state chapter of the GOP nominated him for supervisor in Chester. So the party seemed to respect him as well.
On November 29, 1899, Joseph wrote his last will and testament. Living in Caldwell, he first ordered his executors to pay his funeral expenses and “just debts.” He secondly gave all of his property to his brother John C. Mills, while saying that daughters of this brother, Bessie and Lenita, would be granted the portions of his estate which he had bequeathed to John C. He finally appointed his brother John C., his friend Frank S. Packard, and his friend Jesse S. Smith as executors of his estate. This was different from the time many year earlier Joseph named a horse he owned “Edward Mills” hilariously enough. After all, he was apparently a “gentleman well known throughout the county.” This John C. Mills was likely the same mentioned in 1895 article as a steward at the Grand Hotel in Binghamton.
On May 5, 1900, Joseph died at age 56 and was buried in the Pottersville New Cemetery in Warren County. Only three years prior it was reported in the paper that he was sick at Lake George “for some time” and had recovered while an obituary that year in the Washington County Post in North White Creek, NY reported he had been confined in his room in his official residence in Caldwell after being in ill health for months and suffering from pulmonary trouble. He had spent the previous winter in Virginia in hopes of improving his condition, which had been horrible for years, but this did not happen. Joseph was so prominent that his funeral was “largely attended” and held at the courthouse in Caldwell. Not everyone has a funeral at a town courthouse!
After his death, the Daily Times of Troy, NY announced the death of Joseph in Caldwell, calling him a sheriff of Warren County. The same year, the Glens Falls Morning Star printed a notice honoring Joseph by members of a Masonic lodge, noting that “it has pleased God...to permit death to enter our chapter once more and remove from our midst or worthy brother, Joseph B. Mills.” By July 1900, Joseph’s last will and testament was executed. At that time, Frank S. Packard prayed for the probate of the will (perhaps because Joseph’s estate was over $2,000) listed in a letter of administration and testamentary, and the next of kin were listed as “Bessie Mills, Lenita Mills, Robert Packard, Charles Packard, Marian Packard, Mable Packard, John Packard & Margaret Packard,” with a man named W.L. Kiley appointed “special guardian” to “take care of their interests in this proceeding.” These individuals, apart from Bessie and Lenita Mills, were the children of Dora and Cyrus. This record also seems to say that, at least legally, RBM II’s last name was still Packard at the time, unless the person writing it down got it wrong.
The obituaries of Joseph told a bit about him and the Mills family. The one printed in Troy New York’s Daily Times, on May 7, 1900, was short, but included interesting tidbits:
Sheriff Joseph B. Mills...had always been an active Republican...for a number of years he held a position under the Superintendent of Public Buildings in Albany. He was born in Bolton, but had lived in Pottersville from his early youth. He was a millwright by trade. Sheriff Mills was a man of unquestioned integrity and a most aggressive political opponent. He was unmarried and is survived by six brothers and sisters, John [C.] Mills of Caldwell, Robert B. Mills of Cincinnati, Edward [E.] Mills of Colorado, Thomas Mills of California, Mrs. Thomas Cosgrove [Margaret E. Mills] of Providence, R.I.[,] and Mrs. Packard [Dora Mills?] of Massachusetts. He was a member of the Glen Dale Lodge...of Pottersville and a life member of the Glens Falls Chapter, R.A.M., of Glens Falls.
The Morning Star of Glens Falls printed an obituary on the same day titled “Death of Sheriff Mills.” It was significantly longer. While naming the same siblings, it said he was survived by “four brothers and two sisters.” It was also noted that he was born in Bolton, moved to Pottersville when “quite young” to a place considered the family home ever since, that he learned the millwright trade and was a farmer when he didn’t hold public office. Beyond this, he was described as a man of “the strictest integrity” and one of “most aggressive of foes” engaging in fair methods as he had a “positive character. The Warrenburg News had a similar obituary published on May 10, titled “Obituary.” It did say however that Joseph was a “man of strict integrity and possessed many admirable traits of character.”
In May 1901, at the meeting of the Warren County Board of Supervisors, Robert Laurie Esq. addressed the board “relative to a claim of estate of Joseph B. Mills” which was partially rejected by the board.
While the photographs of Joseph B. Mills are missing from the office of the Warren County Sheriff, as of 2010, he will continue to be remembered in this family history and elsewhere as he was in a 1911 article in the Daily Times of Glens Falls celebrating Warren County’s 100th year anniversary.
© 2018-2023 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
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menuandprice · 1 year
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Outback Steakhouse Drinks Menu
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Outback Steakhouse Drinks Menu
➽ Outback Steakhouse has a distinctive range of beverages on its menu. It also offers hot tea, hot coffee, lemonade and many more drinks. ➽ Pick the perfect date to go to Outback Steakhouse and indulge in your Outback favourites with your loved ones! ➽ The drink menu at Outback Steakhouse has non-alcoholic beverages such as tea, coffee, coke, lemonade, Hi-C and more.
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➽ As well as cocktails such as blueberry kiwi strawberry, lemonade with lavender, and others. Various beers are available such as Budweiser, Bud Light, Coors Light, etc. ➽ Also, you can have white wine or red wine such as Prosecco, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and many more. You can get all of these beverages for less than $40. ➽ There are many other drinks available, along with the price. ➽ Look at the table below for a more detailed menu of drinks.
Outback Steakhouse Drinks Menu With Prices
Drinks Menu Prices Outback Steakhouse Cocktails Sauza Gold Coast ‘Rita $ 7 Blackberry Martini $ 7 Strawberry Kiwi ‘Rita $ 7 Blueberry Lavender Lemonade $ 7 Aussie Rum Punch $ 7 Boozy Cherry Limeade $ 7 The Wallaby Darned $ 7 Outback Steakhouse Top Notch ‘Tails Top Shelf ‘Rita $ 10.79 Blackberry Sangria $ 7.29 Naturally Skinny ‘Rita $ 7.49 Fully Loaded Bloody Marry $ 7.29 Strawberry Peach Sangria $ 7.29 Castaway Cocktail $ 7.49 Blood Orange ‘Rita $ 9.79 Down Under Mule $ 8.29 Outback Old Fashioned $ 10.29 Huckleberry Hooch Moonshine $ 8.29 Sydney’s Cosmo $ 7.49 Strawberry Mojito $ 7.79 Boomarita $ 7.99 Outback Steakhouse Coldies On Tap Drinks Middy Big Bloke Bloomin’ Blonde Ale $ 4.00 $ 5.00 Bud Light $ 5.00 $ 6.00 Stella Artois $ 7.00 $ 8.00 Foster’s Lager $ 5.00 $ 6.00 Samuel Adams Boston Lager $ 6.00 $ 7.00 Samuel Adams Seasonal $ 6.00 $ 7.00 Outback Steakhouse Bottles & Tinnies Craft Middy Big Bloke Blue Moon Belgian $ 4 $ 5 Angry Orchard Crisp Apple Hard Cider $ 4 $ 5 American Middy Big Bloke Budweiser $ 4 $ 5 Bud Light $ 4 $ 5 Coors Light $ 4 $ 5 Michelob Ultra $ 4 $ 5 Miller Lite $ 4 $ 5 Aussie Middy Big Bloke Foster’s 25.4 oz Oil Can $ 4 $ 5 Imported Middy Big Bloke Corona Extra $ 4 $ 5 Modelo Especial $ 4 $ 5 Dos Equis XX Lager $ 4 $ 5 Heineken $ 4 $ 5 Newcastle Brown Ale $ 4 $ 5 Non-Alcoholic Middy Big Bloke O’Doul’s $ 4 $ 5 Outback Steakhouse White Wines White 6 oz Bottle Prosecco(Sparkling Wine),La Marca, Italy $ 7.29 $ 30.00 White Zinfandel, Sutter Home, California $ 5.99 – Rosé, Chloe, California $ 7.49 $ 29.00 Moscato, Jacob’s Creek, Australia $ 6.29 $ 24.00 Riesling, Chateau Ste. Michelle, Washington $ 6.49 $ 25.00 Pinot Grigio, Ecco Domani, Italy $ 6.79 $ 26.00 Sauvignon Blanc,Francis Coppola Yellow Label, CA $ 7.49 $ 29.00 Chardonnay, World’s Edge, Australia $ 5.99 $ 23.00 Chardonnay, Cupcake, California $ 7.49 $ 29.00 Chardonnay, Kendall-Jackson Vintner’s Reserve, CA $ 9.29 $ 36.00 Outback Steakhouse Red Wines Red 6 oz Bottle Pinot Noir, Mirassou, California7.79 $ 7.29 $ 28.00 Pinot Noir, La Crema, California $ 8.79 $ 34.00 Merlot, Red Diamond, Washington $ 6.49 $ 25.00 Red Blend, Apothic, California $ 7.49 $ 29.00 Shiraz, Jacob’s Creek Reserve, Australia $ 7.79 $ 30.00 Cabernet Sauvignon, World’s Edge, Australia $ 5.59 $ 23.00 Cabernet Sauvignon, 14 Hands, Washington $ 6.79 $ 26.00 Cabernet Sauvignon, Francis Coppola Ivory Label, CA $ 9.29 $ 36.00 Cabernet Sauvignon, The federalist, California $ 8.99 $ 35.00 Outback Steakhouse Non-Alcoholic Drinks Strawberry Lemonade $ 3.79 Kiwi Strawberry Lemonade $ 3.79 Aussie Palmer $ 3.79 Lemonade $ 3.79 Coke $ 3.79 Diet Coke $ 3.79 Sprite $ 3.79 Hi-C $ 3.79 Acqua Panna $ 3.79 San Pellegrino $ 3.79 Dr. Pepper $ 3.79 Coffee $ 3.79 Tea $ 3.79 Coke (Zero sugar) $ 3.79 ➽ If you’d like to enjoy bespoke dishes from Outback Steakhouse, try cocktails such as Saua Gold Coast ‘Rita, strawberry kiwi, blackberry martini “Rita,” Aussie Rum Punch, etc. ➽ The darned wallaby cocktail is a wintry mix of La Marca Prosecco, peaches and SVEDKA. If you want to try OZ-style, you can include an additional splash with La Marca Prosecco. ➽ Boozy Cherry Lemonade contains black cherries mixed with Bacardi lime-infused rum and Sprite. ➽ The filled Bloody Marry has Tito’s handmade Absolute vodka mixed with a full-on Bloody Marry mix. ➽ This Castaway cocktail is a fantastic mix of Cruzan Passion Fruit Rum, Absolute mandarin vodka, Malibu coconut Rum, pineapple juice Blood orange sour. Also, make a strawberry mojito, Boomarita, Sydney’s cosmo. ➽ You can try a middy or a large beer bloke from Outback Steakhouse. The most popular choices include Bloomin Blonde Ale, Bud Light, Foster’s Lager and more. ➽ There is a variety of craft, American, Aussie, imported, and non-alcoholic beer. Blue Moon Belgian soft cider and angry orchard craft beer can be enjoyed while dining at the Outback Steakhouse. ➽ The wine menu at Outback Steakhouse is segregated into red wine and white wine. This restaurant’s most well-known white wines include Prosecco, White Zinfandel, Moscato and Pinot Grigio and numerous others. ➽ You could consist of Mirassou, MerlotRed Diamond and Cabernet Sauvignon for red wines. Many non-alcoholic beverages include kiwi strawberry lemonade, Aussie palmer and tea. Outback Steakhouse Drinks Nutritional  ➽ Read the nutritional information of this drink from the link shown in the table below. Nutritional Information outback.com/nutrition/
FAQs – Outback Steakhouse Drinks
Does Outback have chocolate martinis? ➽ There are 100 calories in an Espresso Infused Vodka and White Chocolate Martini from Outback. Does Outback serve whiskey? ➽ A classic favorite, Jameson® Irish Whiskey is topped with ginger ale and served on the rocks. Does Outback have Coke? ➽ Try one of our ice-cold Coca-Cola products, Gold Peak Tea, or a refreshing Country Style lemonade! How much is lemonade in Outback? ➽ Strawberry Lemonade $3.19 What kind of drinks do they have at Outback? - Favorite Outback boozy beverages to go! - Long Island Iced Tea for Two. $12.50. - Castaway Cocktail for Two. $12.50. - NEW! Sauza Gold Coast ‘Rita for Two. - Strawberry Peach Sangria for Two. $12.50. - Blackberry Sangria for Two. $12.50. - Aussie Rum Punch for Two. $12.50. - Huckleberry Hooch Moonshine for Two. - Bloomin’ Blonde Growler. Does Outback Steakhouse have margaritas? ➽ Sauza® Gold Coast ‘Rita® Our proprietary house margarita made with Sauza® Gold Tequila. What kind of soda does Outback have? ➽ You can also have hot coffee, tea, lemonade, and other drinks. - Non-Alcoholic Drinks. - Strawberry Lemonade $ 3.79 - Aussie Palmer $ 3.79 - Lemonade $ 3.79 - Coke $ 3.79 - Diet Coke $ 3.79 Does Outback Steakhouse have strawberry daiquiris? ➽ It’s our Cocktail of the Month! All February, you can enjoy a Strawberry Daiquiri for only $10. Available to customers 18+ only, outback Steakhouse practices the responsible service of alcohol. Find here: Outback menu with prices The post Outback Steakhouse Drinks Menu appeared first on ❤️ UPDATED 2023. Read the full article
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goalhofer · 1 year
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2022-23 Cleveland Monsters Roster
Wingers
#11 Tyler Irvine (Livonia, Michigan)*
#37 Roman Ahcan (Burnsville, Minnesota)
#44 Brett Gallant (Summerside, Prince Edward Island)
#64 Trey Fix-Wolansky (Edmonton, Alberta)
#71 Joona Luoto (Lempäälä, Finland)*
Centers
#10 Brendan Gaunce (Markham, Ontario) A
#12 Owen Sillinger (Regina, Saskatchewan)**
#16 Justin Richards (Orlando, Florida)
#19 Luka Burzan (Surrey, British Columbia)*
#21 Josh Dunne (O’Fallon, Missouri)
#22 Erik Bradford (Orangeville, Ontario)*
#25 Jake Gaudet (Ottawa, Ontario)
#29 Robbie Payne (Gaylord, Michigan)
#42 Cole Fonstad (Estevan, Saskatchewan)
#59 Ben Copeland (Edina, Minnesota)**
#77 Tyler Angle (Niagara Falls, Ontario)
Defensemen
#5 Brenden Miller (Orangeville, Ontario)*
#6 Bill Sweezey (Hanson, Massachusetts) A
#14 Marcus Björk (Umeå Stad, Sweden)**
#18 Dillon Simpson (Edmonton, Alberta) C
#20 Samuel Kňažko (Trenčín, Slovakia)**
#23 Jake Christiansen (West Vancouver, British Columbia)
#34 Cole Clayton (Strathmore, Alberta)
#55 David Jiříček (Klatovy, Czech Republic)**
Goalies
#30 Pavel Čajan (Příbram, Czech Republic)**
#40 Daniil Tarasov (Novokuznetsk, Russia)
#73 Calvin Greaves (Cambridge, Ontario)
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 1 year
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“Two Charges Are Laid Against Bank Robber,” North Bay Nugget. November 28, 1932. Page 1 & 2. ---- City Police Recover All of Money From Bandit --- Samuel Essa Ayoub, Late of Kirkland Lake, Held For Hold-up ---- HE IS BADLY WOUNDED ---- Constable Belanger Shot in Making Arrest; Was Quick Cleanup ---- Cornered by a police posse within a few miles of the scene of his daring escapade and nearly ten hours after he had startlingly held up the staff of the Bank of Montreal on Saturday at noon and made away with approximately $5,000, Samuel Rasa Ayoub, 26, Assyrian, giving Kirkland Lake as his home address was securely in police hands at 10 o'clock Saturday night and with $4836, practically all the haul, recovered. 
He was taken on the CPR tracks, three miles west of Meadowside and only after a gun fight, in which the now prisoner had three bullets pumped into his body, and Constable J. D. Belanger of the North Bay city force suffered two slight wounds from the hold-up man's fire. Constable John Pilgrim was responsible for subduing the desperate gunman, while he was locked in Constable Belanger’s arms. 
Ayoub is now a compulsory patient in the Civic hospital and under close police surveillance. This afternoon Chief Constable William Clark reported his condition as favorable and his chances of recovery very good. It will be a week or ten days before he is able to answer a court summons. Chief Clark estimated. 
He has been charged by Chief Clark with “bank robbery while armed and wounding a police officer in the execution of duty." 
The arrest followed a tip given the police by Austin Lariviere, North Bay, who saw the man as he emerged from the woods bordering the lake near Yellek, approximately five miles east of the city, and crossed the CPR tracks enroute to the highway. Mr. Lariviere was loading wood on a truck parked on the North Bay— Sturgeon Falls highway when he saw the man proceeding towards the Miller sawmill camp. He noted his appearance fitted the description of the bank robber and, after watching him enter the camp, came to the city to report to the police. It was about 5:44 and dusk was falling. It was only when the man crossed In front of the beam from the headlight did he get a good view of him. 
Joint Operation The capture climaxed the closing of a trap thrown out by seven police officers. They were Deputy Chief Dennis, who directed the successful hunt, Sergeant Frank Michaud, Constables J. D. Belanger and John Pilgrim of the city force and Provincial Constable N. C. Smaill, North Bay, and Provincial Constables Campaeu and Chief Constable Leclair, Sturgeon Falls.
Taklng up the tip given by Lariviere,   they assembled at Yellek, and there parted to form a net. Deputy Chief Dennis Sergeant Michaud and Provincial Constable Smaill took to the CNR tracks to visit a pump house and water tank. The Sturgeon Falls officers took Constable Belanger and Pilgrim by car to within three miles of Sturgeon Falls to start them east on the CPR tracks. Provincial Officer Campeau and Leclair stayed on the highway to patrol it east to Meadowside where the officers were to meet. 
When about three miles from Meadowside, Constables Belanger and Pilgrim came face to face with the robber, who was headed for Sturgeon Falls. Owing to the inky darkness, the officers did not see their man until within a few feet of him. When they came abreast, Constable Belanger grabbed him, at the same time saying “Hold on there." Immediately the robber had his automatic in play and had fired two shots, both hitting Belanger before his gun jammed and Constable Pilgrim had an opportunity to use his gun without endangering the life of his fellow officer. 
Three shots had been pumped into the robber before he gave in, with the remark "You have me dead and I have all the money." The scuffling finished to the side of the railway track and, after the robber had been throw,n he was disarmed of three guns and handcuffed. Constable Belanger stood guard over him, while Constable Pilgrim summoned the other members of the posse. On Sunday afternoon, Provincial Constable Smaill visited the scene of the gun fight and found a long dagger, which the robber had either thrown away or lost in the scuffle, and a bullet-pierced silk handkerchief, presumably carried by Ayoub.
Questioned by Chief Clark in the hospital, Ayoub stated he proceeded west on Main street after leaving the bank. It waspreviously held that he went east to turn south on Ferguson street. He turned south from Main to Fraser street and continued to Oak, to hurry west along Oak street and take the CPR track to Mons Park where he entered the bush.
Caught Near Meadowside The capture was effected by Constables Joseph D. Belanger and John Pilgrim, two of a squad of seven who hemmed in the foolhardy bandit within a three-mile square area early Saturday night. The meeting took place on the CPR tracks, three miles west of Meadowside and about 15 miles west of North Bay, and the resultant exchange of bullets came close to costing Constable Belanger his life. He suffered a wound on the left side of the abdomen when struck by a glancing bullet and had the fleshy part of his left forearm punctured by another from the hold-up man's automatic revolver. Only the fact that the bandit's gun chocked after the second shot saved the constable from fatal injuries, as the shots he received were fired when in grips with the now prisoner. Constable Pilgrim inflicted tho wounds on the hold-up man and with deadly intent. He had some difficulty in firing without endangering his fellow-officer. His first shot grazed the prisoner's right side causing a skin-deep wound. The second entered the left side, directly above the hip bone, and embedded the bullet in the organs. The third was fired at the head and passed from the left side of the back of the neck through the left cheek. 
When his clothing was searched at the police station, he was found to be in possession of $4,836 in bils, in denominations ranging from $I to $50. All but $16 of the amount taken from the bank was recovered in the $4,836 found on the prisoner. He had previously been relieved of three guns, one of which he took from the bank teller’s cage. The guns used in the hold-up were a 25-calibre automatic and a 38-calibre revolver. The bank gun was of 32-calibre. The automatic was used in the gun fight with Constables Belanger and Pilgrim and when examined at the police station, was found to be jammed with a shell, the result of the second shot fired at Constable Belanger. 
Likely To Recover The prisoner, giving the name of Samuel Essa Ayoub, and Kirkland Lake as his parental home, is now in the Civic Hospital and with good chances of making a complete recovery. He was attended by Dr. G. V. Smith at the police station on Saturday night and examined at the hospital the same night. 
Questioned soon after being brought to the police station, the man demurred at revealing his identity but later gave his name and his place of residence. He appeared to ha resigned to the fata that awaits him and remarked that “he expected to die and that the police had all the money” He winced two or three times as Dr Smith with the eld of Sergeant Frank Michaud applied first aid to his head wound but other than for that was apparently unexcited. He only complained of a wound In his left hand, pierced by the bullet which entered his body. With his wounds dressed, he was on the way to the hospital at midnight within twelve hours after his daring escapade and with his life hanging in the balance. 
Immediately following the report of the robbery, police here threw out a net over this section of the province, making it practically impossible for the man wanted to make good his escape. Provincial police headquarters at both Haileybury and Barrie were communicated with and railway police notified. As a result, every highway in all directions was watched, in event an attempt was made by the man to get away by car, while, at the same time, both out-bound freight and passenger trains were scrutinized. 
In the meantime, the city police here concentrated on making a complete and thorough check-up within the city limits and left not a stone unturned. In the event he might have been in hiding locally, taxi stands were checked, in case the robber might have hired a car to assist him in getting away and all hotels and boarding houses were visited, among other measures taken. 
Knew Identity Quickly Police learned shortly after the robbery that Ayoub had departed from Sudbury the night previous, and this was confirmed yesterday by a passenger of the same train who told the authorities of having conversed with the man during the trip to North Bay. His actions were reported to be quite normal. 
Arriving here, Ayoub had spent the night at a room in the Canadian Cafe, police ascertained. Several citizens were found after the hold-up who had talked with him in the morning and these assisted in giving the police an excellent description to work with.
Ayoub, who was well known at Sudbury and several other northern towns, had sold out a hosiery business at the Nickel City about two years ago and discontinued a dry goods business at Kirkland Lake last summer, the prisoner informed police yesterday. He had never been a resident of North bay.
The climax of this, the first bank hold-up in the history of North Bay, clicked in every detail with the description of the robber and his movement before the incident. Fifteen minutes after learning of the robbery, Chief Clark and Deputy Chief Dennis knew the man they wanted an immediately set about in a methodical manner to effect his capture.
Descriptions were flashed to all centres in surrounding districts and the entire force turned loose to scour the city. It was the belief of the police that the man worked single-handed and without the aid of an automobile. This was established in the unraveling of the case.
Get Direct Tip Shortly after 6 o'clock Saturday, the police were tipped off that the wanted man was having dinner at Miller's sawmill camp at Yellek, about nine miles west of the city. The available officers were quickly assembled and simultaneously officers from Sturgeon Falls and here set out in three cars for Yellek. Reaching the camp they learned the man had pulled out after being fed and his clothing dried. He paid the women in charge of the camp dining room $2 for the meal.
The police then set about to hem in their prey. Provincial Constable Campeau and Chief Leclair, Sturgeon Falls, took Constables Belanger and Pilgrim up the highway toward Sturgeon Falls and dropped them off at the Indian Reserve, three miles east of Sturgeon Falls, with instructions to pace the C.P.R. tracks towards North Bay. The Sturgeon Falls officers were detailed to patrol the highway eastward. Deputy Chief J. J. Dennis, Sergeant Michaud, and Provincial Constable Smaill took to the CNR. track at Meadowside to search a railway pumping station and water tank a little distance west.
Constables Belanger and Pilgrim had proceeded three or four miles on the CPR line when they saw a lone man walking towards them. Due to darkness, the officers and the hold-up man were within a few feet of one another before they became aware of his presence. As they came abreast, Constable Belanger caught the hold-up man by the front of the coat and immediately the latter had  his gun in action. In the the scuffling that followed, the prisoner fired twice, one bullet grazing the officer’s side and the other piercing his left forearm before his gun jammed. Due to Constable Belanger’s body being in contact with the bandit, Constable Pilgrim withheld his fire until they separated a little. He then fired to graze the prisoner's right side. His second shot pierced his left hand and entered the body directly above the hip bone. His third shot, fired at the head, struck the back of the neck on the left side and passed out through the cheek. Despite these wounds, the robber resisted the efforts of the officers to render him powerless until he collapsed in Constable Belanger’s arms. 
Officer and robber rolled down from the track to a shallow ditch with the former maintaining mastery. After subduing their captive by relieving him of his guns, three in number, and handcuffing him securely, Constable Pilgrim left to summon the other members of the squad. In the meantime. Provincial Constable Csmpeau and Chief Leclair, Sturgeon Falls, came along with a car and stopped when signaled by Constable Belanger. Constable Pilgrim returned with Deputy Chief Dennis, Sergeant Michaud and Provincial Constable Smaill. All assisted in placing the wounded prisoner in the Sturgeon Fells car to bring him to the city.
Had No Car Admissions made to the police by the prisoner substantiate the report that he worked alone and without a car as a means of transport. After clearing from the bank he hastily proceeded wet on Main street to Fraser and down that thoroughfare to Oak street which he followed to take to CPR tracks in the extreme west end of the city. He left the tracks for the bus at Lions Park and became lost after entering the thickly wooded area bordering the lake. He wandered aimlessly until about 5.45 p.m., when he came out at Yellek, cold, wet, and nearly famished from hunger. It was dark but he found direction by lights showing from the Miller sawmill camp. Reaching the camp he knocked at the door and asked the woman who answered if he might buy a meal.
While enroute to the camp, he was seen by a man working along the highway and from his appearance was immediately suspected as the hold-up man who the same day make a clean getaway after sticking up the Bank of Montreal staff. The man immediately proceeded to the city and informed the police.
Transferred Account Ayoub first appeared at the bank shortly before closing time when he made preliminary arrangements with Clare McGowan, ledger-keeper, to transfer an account to the North Bay branch. It is believed he purposed carrying out his stick-up plan at that time, but was discouraged by the presence of customers. He was issued a slip after giving the name of L. Fraser and a supposedly fictitious account number.
He returned after the bank doors had closed at 12 o’clock and was standing at the door when Mr. McGowan was passing out to go to luncheon. He gained admittance by representing to Mr. McGowan that he made an error in giving the number of his account in another branch.
Immediately, he met D. T. McGuire, manager, in the latter’s office, he flashed two guns and in a threatening voice ordered him to back up through the door into the main office. He then herded up the members of the staff present, L. D. Roy, teller, Jim Hatcher and Miss Leone Burton and ordered the four into the vault. When the door wouldn’t close tightly, due to the combination being thrown locked, he directed Mr. McGuire to unlock it. By stating that the combination was only known to the absent clerk, Mr. McGuire saved the staff from being locked in the airtight vault.
Baffled in his aim to silence the staff in this way, the hold-up man backed into the teller's cage all the while training his guns on the captives, and with a backhand motion scooped up the bills contained in the top drawer and picked up the teller’s revolver. The money he rammed in his overcoat pocket.
Leaving the cage, he drove the staff at the point of his guns into the cage and after slamming the door locked took the keys. He had previously demanded Miss Burton to give him the keys of the office and when Mr McGuire directed the girl to disregard the order, the bandit drew a long knife and threatened to use It unless his order was quickly obeyed.
Satisfying himself that the staff was securely held in the cage, the hold-up man proceeded to leave the office by the staff entrance but was baffled when he couldn't operate the latch. He then moved out through the manager's office, keeping his guns trained on the cooped-up staff until he made a bolt for the front office entrance.
Immediately after he left the office, the staff unlocked the cage door from the inside end. Mr. McGuire called the police station. It was then about 12;15. Miss Burton then told Mr. McGuire that she had seen the man speaking to Mr. McGowan, the ledger keeper, shortly before closing time. She was directed to get Mr McGowan, who was then at the Arcadian Grill. 
Constable J. D. Belanger was alone at the police station when the call came in from the bank. He hurried down while a civilian who was in the office at the time, summoned Chief Clark and Deputy Chief Dennis by phone. Constable Belanger did not notice the man while he was enroute to the bank.
Was Not Masked. The hold-up man was unmasked while putting on his act. For this reason the bank staff was able to study him closely and give the police a good description. He wore a dark overcoat, a brown Fedora, a light suit and a brown scarf. He had a swarthy complexion, and a mole on the right side of the nose enabled the police to fit the description with the movements of a man who visited a number of places early in the day.
The city police force was quickly on the scene and, in a few minutes, notice of the hold-up and a complete description of the man was telegraphed or phoned to all points along the railways and highways. This net was perfected in less than an hour. In the meantime, city and provincial police were spread throughout the city to check on likely haunts and on taxi stands to learn whether its man had attempted a getaway by automobile.
Furnished Description Sudbury Nov 28— (Special)— Within an hour of learning of the details of the robbery, Sudbury police were able to furnish the North Bay police department with a detailed description of the man who, Saturday afternoon, held up and robbed the branch of the Bank of Montreal, even to the detail of a small mole on his cheek. Within three hours they knew the man's name.
Sudbury detectives learned that a man, giving his name as L. Fraser, the same name the bandit signed when he opened an account in the North Bay bank, registered at the New American Hotel here on November 24, 25, and 26. Ha was at the hotel early Saturday morning but not later in the forenoon. The man wore a brown overcoat. brown hat. and scarf, similar to the clothing worn by the bandit, and the clerk was able to give a complete description of him.
Later a guest informed the police that he had seen Sam Ayoub around the New American hotel, and Ayoub’s dress corresponded with Fraser’s. It was also discovered that Ayoub once was known as Fraser Ayoub. He is also said to have used the name Essa while in Sudbury.
Known at Kirkland Kirkland Lake, Nov. 28. - Police here expressed the belief that Sam Ayoub, arrested and charged with robbing the Bank of Montreal at North Bay, Saturday, is one of the men who robbed Sylvester Brothers store here October 25 and escaped with the $650 payroll.
Police recalled they had questioned Ayoub at his hotel here the day after the robbery and, going back to question him further, discovered he had left town.
At that time they arrested Fred Lauzon, Ayoub's friend, but were unable to establish a case against him. Lauzon was sentenced to three months in jail for vagrancy. 
Chief of Police Shane said Ayoub had several aliases, which included the names Semord, Essa and Fraser. He was a poolroom habitue and had been out of work for considerable time. 
Shane said a charge of robbery while armed would be laid against Ayoub in connection with the store hold-up here. 
In that robbery, two men entered the store, wearing masks, and while one covered the three clerks, the other scooped up $650 from the cash register.
Bottom Left Image caption: “Still snarling his defiance through a heavy automatic, Samuel Ayoub, 26-year-old Kirkland Lake dry-goods merchant, was caught by North Bay police after a ten-hour hunt and charged with the hold-up of the North Bay branch of the Bank of Montreal. As the hunt neared its climax, Constable Joseph Belanger (3) was wounded through the arm by a bullet from Ayoub’s gun. The search was launched after the former merchant had walked out from the Bank of Montreal at North Bay on Saturday at noon with about $5000, shown in (2), under his arm. (1) is Constable Pilgrim who was with Constable Belanger when the arrest was made. (4) shows Ayoub’s’ guns. Miss Burton, who followed Ayoub out of the bank and notified police, is shown in 5) while 6) is the knife with which Ayoub to said to have menaced members of the bank staff.”
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"...the new Regiment now raising": Continuing the story of the Extra Regiment [Part 2]
Continued from part 1.
Reprinted from my History Hermann WordPress blog.
© 2016-2023 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
Notes
[1] Beverly W. Bond, Jr., "Chapter III: Military Aid" within "State Government in Maryland 1777-1781," Johns Hopkins University Studies, Series 23, Nos. 3-4 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, March-April 1905), p. 38-39.
[2] While Mr. Alexander Smith resigned from the position of Lieutenant Colonel on September 1st, 1780, he was re-promoted by the Council of Maryland the following day to the same position!
[3] Journals of Congress, From January 1st, 1780 to January 1st, 1781 (Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, 1781), 341-342.
[4] Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1780-1781, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 45, 56, 241, 367, 370, 444; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1779-1780, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 43, 233, 234, 338; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1781-1784, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 48, 54, 60; "Autograph Letters," American Historical Record Vol. I, No. 4, April 1872, p. 175. As Thomas Johnson notes in this July 16, 1780 letter, Mr. Cock requested to a captain in the regiment in July. Also see the pensions of Robert Green, Solomon Turner, Aquilla Smith, Wilson Moore, William Nick, John Ferguson, and Patrick Connolly for other mentions of Mr. Bayley, who has a service card on Fold3, but apparently no pension. He would later be listed as living in Frederick County, just like the rest of the Bayley/Bailey family in Maryland, and lived a total of 81 years.
[5] Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1779-1780, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 43, 335; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1780-1781, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 45, 250, 253, 371; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1781-1784, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 48, 54, 94.
[6] Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1779-1780, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 43, 233, 234, 262; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1780-1781, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 45, 325, 367, 370, 415; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1781-1784, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 48, 58, 60. A man named Edward Hood was "awarded a pension as a 'maimed' soldier in the 1st Regt. of the Maryland line" and says he "served under Captains Samuel Griffin, Samuel Jones and Nicholas Gassaway."
[7] Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1780-1781, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 45, 294, 334, 367; Journal and Correspondence of the Council of Maryland, 1781-1784, Archives of Maryland Online Vol. 48, 60, 94, 129; Congressional serial set (Washington: G.P.O, date not known), 133. Page 25 of Lawrence E. Babits's A Devil of a Whipping: The Battle of Cowpens, notes that Edward Giles is part of the Extra Regiment.
[8] Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, folder 28, roll 0034. Courtesy of Fold3.com. Here are the 29 listed on the first and second pages of the record: Jonathan Deare, Jacob Hofselton, John Burk, William Devine, Jacob Guttinger, Jacob Hofselton (different from above), Christopher Hambert, Thomas Ball, John Smith, Thomas Burk, George Hamilton, Michael McGowery, Michael Redmond, William Gillisby, John Desmond, Michael Moon, ? Graydy, John Flowson, John Barker, Isam Coleman, Thomas Glifson?, James Hopkins, Isiah Mason, John Clark, Lenard Smith (close, but not his pension), John Jackson, Josias Miller, John Anderson, and ? Gibson (crossed out). Here are the 18 soldiers listed on pages 3 and 4 (and 5?) of the document: Michael Garner, Henry Savage, Christopher Miller, Michael Longisfetter?[full name cannot be read], Michael Redman, John Barker, Thomas Burke, William Devine, John Butler, John McCarty, John Burk, Morris Leary, Gary Hamilton, Chris? Lamford, Michael McGowan, John Morris, William Falton, and Philip Fitzpatrick.
[9] The following are those listed in the full return: William Ewing, Patrick Pharple? [unreadable], Theophilus Cumford, Joseph McLain, Michael Cofner, Laughlin Fannen, Michael Longisfetter [unreadable], Henry Savage, John Butler, John Morris, William Patton, William Preft, Joseph Wright, James Thomson/Thompson who was recommended for captain of the regiment by William Hemsley, Roger Swanson, Michael Mann, John Derr who is pardoned by the governor later on (there is a John Derr with a pension who served in the Maryland Line, number S. 12762, but it is not known if this is him although some indications seem to indicate it could be; he is described as a deserter at one point), Jacob Hartman, John Burk, William Devine (some indications that pension number R.2906 is him but this cannot be confirmed), Jacob Citleringer, Jacob Hofselton, Christopher Flamb, Thomas Ball, John Smith (there are eight John Smiths who have MD pensions as an ancestry search shows, but none of them seem to be him), Thomas Burk, George Hammilton, Michael McGowan, Michael Redmond, William Gibson, John Desmond,  John McCarty, Philip Fitzpatrick, William Siggs [unreadable], John Enerson [unreadable], Michael Stoelker, Peter Pomish?, John Reyler, William Deyler, John Ellison, Jonathan Parker, James Woodward, James Neel, Jacob Meyers, Morris Leary, Henry Creger, William Diach, David Crady, John Flower, John Barker, Thomas Gibson, John Colman, John C[?]Millan, James Hopkins, and John Clare.
[10] John Allison Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see pages 4-5. Courtesy of Fold3.com; John Burke Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 5. Courtesy of Fold3.com; William Divine Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; John Clare Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; William Gilasby Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; Leonard Smith Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see pages 2-4. Courtesy of Fold3.com; William Ewing Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; John Smith Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; Michael Steeker Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; Roger Sullivan Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com; Joseph White Service Card; Rolls of Extraordinary Regiment, 1780, Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783, National Archives, NARA M246, Record Group 93, see page 2. Courtesy of Fold3.com. Specifically, the Fold3 muster rolls, not the serve cards, show that John Clare "deserted from Annapolis"  three were sick in an Annapolis Hospital, six deserted at Head of Elk on Sept. 3 (William Ewing, Joseph White, Roger Sullivan, John Smith, Michael [last name cannot be made out], and James Hopkins), six hadn't joined (John Jackson, Josias Miller, John Anderson, Morris Leary, Thomas Gibson, John Neale), three were sick in Philly Hospital (William Gillaspie, Christopher Lambert, and Patrick Charro?), and four were on command (Josiah Mason, Thomas Burke, ? Woodward, and Michael Redman), leaving a company which is supposed to be 60, of actually only 37. Service Cards confirm this, showing that John Burke and William Devine were sick in an Annapolis hospital, that John Clare deserted from Annapolis, that William Gillaspie/Gilasby was sick in Philly hospital and Leonard Smith was sick on furlough, and having records of five who deserted at "Head of Elk": William Ewing, John Smith, Michael Streeker, Roger Sullivan, and Joseph White. Also, a man named John Allison is mentioned on a return of Sept. 29, 1780 as present, but noting else is known.
[11] These men were Thomas Pendoor, James Bigwood, George Clarke, John Higgins, John Pickering, William Stewart (close, but not his pension), Daniel Bulger, John McGuire, Edward Daw, William Cox, John Maginnis, James Barrow, Joseph Floyd, John Harvey, Jesse McCarty, Henry Crane, William Curtin (related to Thomas Certain?), John Whealand, Thomas McBride, John McCoune in place of William Quinton, Thomas Maddin, John Buller, Patrick Smith, Richard Downes, John Smith, Patrick Cavenough, Thomas Shears, Thomas Ahair, Thomas Pennifield, and Richard Kisby.
[12] These seventeen others, not including dead James North or deserter John Tucker, are: Richard Whiley, Patrick Riley, John Butcher, John Robbins, Robert Ferrell, John Jones, Elijah Clarke, John Freeman, Anthony Wedge, William Groves, Thomas Elliss, Thomas Matthews, Stephen Fennell, Thomas Burch, Charles Reynolds (possibly mentioned in this pension), Timothy McLamar, and John Clayton.
[13] The list of "recruits and deserters," were acquired by Queen Ann's County officers, including William Hemsley, for the regiment, raised in July shows 2 people who deserted before joining (Thomas Fox and Valentine Saint Tee), three former deserters who never joined (Thomas Trew, Joseph Crouch, and James Chittendon), while three former deserters did join (David Willon, Thomas Terrett, and Benjamin Loftsman). Then there are the 25 regular people recruited who are not deserters: Thomas Yewell, George Duncan, Edward Legg, Charles White, Job Sylvester, Robert Legg, Thomas Gadd, William Aller, Daniel Dulany, John West Tate, Benjamin Lee, Richard Gemmeson, Edward Vickers, Elijah Barn, John Oliver (possibly him but cannot be confirmed), William Carter, John Moore, John West, Joseph Paggat, James Baver, Lambert Phillips, John Hickins, Richard Murphy, Timothy Connor, and Edward Dominie.
[14] The other 22 men are William Clements, James Bartclay, William Jeffries, Francis Rogers, Dennis Larey, John Cooper, Elisa Huff, George Plumbley, Bauer Wibb, Frederick James, Jesse Power (close but not his pension) William Hickin, Joseph Points, William Simmons (close but not his pension), Benjamin Smith (related to the other Smiths?), John Bryan, William Campbell, John Muir, William Holt, John Lewin, John Moore, and John Newton ("wounded in two instances" as a result of his fighting in the war).
[15] Pension of Alexander Lawson Smith, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, Record Group 15, Roll 2208, pension number W. 4247. Courtesy of Fold3.com.
[16] Pension of Charles Smith, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, W 25,002, from Fold3.com.
[17] Pension of Mountjoy Bayly, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, S-12094, BLWt 685-300. Courtesy of Ancestry.com and HeritageQuest.
[18] Pension of Sarah and Archibald Golder, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, W.943. Courtesy of Ancestry.com and HeritageQuest.
[19] Pension of Samuel Luckett, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, S 36,015. From Fold3.com.
[20] Pension of John Plant, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, Record Group 15, Roll 1942, pension number W. 26908. Courtesy of Fold3.com.
[21] Pension of Josias Miller, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, Record Group 15, Roll 1728, pension number S. 40,160. Courtesy of Fold3.com.
[22] Pension of Theodore Middleton, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, Record Group 15, Roll 1720, pension number S. 11,075. Courtesy of Fold3.com.
[23] Pension of John Newton, Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, National Archives, NARA M804, S.35009. Courtesy of Ancestry.com and HeritageQuest.
0 notes