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`` kate , '' he said , coming toward me , `` you know that between the two of us we 'll figure out the cure for danny . '' |
i hoped jon never put two-and-two togetheri didnt know what it would do to his psyche . |
`` run , '' he whispers . |
and so tamir left , riding north and wondering what would become of his supplies . |
those two share everything . '' |
. |
`` you do n't understand . |
Mandsaur is one of the Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) constituencies of Madhya Pradesh state in central India, in Mandsaur District. It is one of the 8 assembly segments of Mandsaur (Lok Sabha constituency). Former CM Sunder Lal Patwa had represented Mandsour Vidhan Sabha seat in the past. Jawad seat, a borough of another former CM Sakhlecha, is also part of this region.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
1947 : Devichand chouhan (INC)
1962 : Shyam Sunder Patidar (INC)
1967 : T. Mohan Singh (Bharatiya Jana Sangh)
1972 : Shyam Sunder Patidar (INC)
1977 : Sunderlal Patwa (Janata Party)
1980 : Shyam Sunder Patidar (INC-Indira)
1985 : Shyam Sunder Patidar (INC)
1998 : Navkrishna Patil (INC)
2008 : Yashpal Singh Sisodiya (BJP)
2013 : Yashpal Singh Sisodiya (BJP)
2018 : Yashpal Singh Sisodiya (BJP)
Election results
1967 Vidhan Sabha
T. Mohan Singh (BJS) : 17,171 votes
S. Patidar (INC) : 11,083
1972 Vidhan Sabha
Shyam Sunder Patidar (INC) : 27,779 votes
Kishore Singh (Jana Sangh) : 19,262
1977 Vidhan Sabha
Sunderlal Patwa (JNP) : 29,271 votes
Dhansukhlal Nandlal Bhachawat (INC) : 20,088
1985 Vidhan Sabha
Shyam Sundar Patidar (INC) : 29,717 votes
Manoharlal Basantilal Jain (BJP) : 23,926
2008 Vidhan Sabha
Yashpal Singh Sisodiya (BJP) : 60,013 votes
Mahendra Singh Gurjar (INC) : 58,328
2018
References
Assembly constituencies of Madhya Pradesh |
call 911 . |
The Salute Tour was the second concert tour held by British girl group Little Mix, in support of their second studio album, Salute. The tour began on 16 May 2014, in Birmingham, England, and ended on 27 July 2014 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England.
The Salute Tour marked the first time that the group would headlined arenas on selected dates. The tour consisted of 20 sold-out shows across the United Kingdom and Ireland and grossed over $10.6 million. The group was also scheduled to expand their tour in North America starting in Boca Raton, Florida and would conclude in Toronto, Canada. However, in July 2014, the North American leg of the tour was later cancelled so the group could work on their third album.
Background
The tour was officially announced on 2 December 2013 through the band's Twitter and tickets were available starting 6 December 2013.
Due to overwhelming demand, second dates were added at the Glasgow Clyde Auditorium and the Cardiff Motorpoint Arena in December 2013. Also, due to exceptional public demand, the Manchester venue was upgraded from the O2 Apollo Manchester to the Manchester Arena. The Nottingham show was also relocated from the Nottingham Royal Concert Hall on 5 June, to the Capital FM Arena on 28 May.
A North America leg of the tour was announced on 21 April 2014, with general public tickets going on sale 26 April 2014 and pre sale beginning 23 April 2014.
On 4 July 2014, Little Mix released a statement on their website, indicating the cancellation of the then-upcoming North American leg of the tour, due to wanting to be in the process of the creation of their third album.
Supporting acts
M.O (UK and Ireland)
HRVY (UK and Ireland)
NVS (UK and Ireland)
Setlist
Act 1
"Salute"
"Nothing Feels Like You"
"About The Boy"
"Change Your Life"
"Dark Horse"
Act 2
"A Different Beat"
"How Ya Doin'?"
"Mr Loverboy"
"Boy"
"Towers"
"Competition"
"Word Up!"
Act 3
"DNA"
"Stand Down"
"Talk Dirty / Can't Hold Us"
"Little Me"
"Move"
Encore
"Good Enough"
"Wings"
Tour dates
Cancelled shows
References
2014 concert tours
Little Mix concert tours
Concert tours of the United Kingdom
Concert tours of Ireland
Concert tours of the United States |
`` hailey , dad 's always been protective . |
lea , on the other hand , seemed to be good enough to start sliding towards tania , but something was wrong . |
lithgow appeared from out of the bathroom , shaking his head . |
not exactly a satisfying consolation prize , but i did n't want to give her any reason to hate me . |
he got up , sighed and walked home . |
i run them under the water and move the cutting board to the bar in front of her . |
he withdrew a slim silver flask from his pocket and handed it to me , then sat down . |
vanida was pretty sure that if she started to make a lot , she would suddenly owe the bar a cut . |
he cocked his head to the side , not looking mad , just curious . |
mrs. simpson exchanged a worried glance with her husband . |
jace let go of her in surprise , and she slid backward , knocking into the faucet , which immediately turned on , spraying them both with water . |
`` mack . '' |
`` it-it sounded like-it ca n't be . '' |
only if i let you , he said . |
not that she could keep him from taking something he wanted . |
i glance sideways at the alarm clock on my side table . |
i chose the shows . |
he was right both about me and his choice in women . |
that would give me a few more hours to get sam out of hell . |
i asked , remembering back to when david demanded he share his thoughts . |
`` i 've heard , '' carmine said . |
new zealand would be the first country to know thanks to the time zone and there would be widespread worry because so many local expatriates lived there and would fear for their families . |
bryn felt herself get angry at him all over again , but then stopped when she remembered he had just saved her life . |
kowalski leaned back and made his only contribution to the historical discussion . |
then he turned and walked out of the room , into the foyer , and out the front door , without ever looking back . |
that made neal grin . |
there was much jousting , much drinking and eating , and being foolish in front of their friends . |
and wiped his lips again . |
`` it 's complicated even for us . |
i chew my lip . |
he moved his ear closer to the window screen . |
with no witnesses . '' |
in all my life-well , my life before i died and took on a new body and identity-i never owned a car . |
you might not have to rush . |
`` are they out of town yet ? '' |
we enter the kitchen and the minute the door swings shut behind us , i turn toward him , wrapping my arms around his neck as he bends to kiss me . |
with him , for a while , i 'd felt young and carefree , with my life ahead of me . |
rebecca recognizes that others are present , but they have become unimportant . |
prolly had that curly cursive that teachers adore ; prolly never laughed at fart jokes ; prolly scoffed at kids who wan na make movies with killer monsters and evil princes . |
The New Statesman is a British political and cultural magazine.
New Statesman or New Statesmen may also refer to:
The New Statesman (1984 TV series), a British television sitcom starring Windsor Davies
The New Statesman (1987 TV series), a 1987–1994 British television series starring Rik Mayall
New Statesmen, a comic strip written by John Smith and published in Crisis
See also
Statesman (disambiguation) |
what was all of that ? |
then before i could even accuse her of doing that on purpose she said if you knew the borsch was that nasty , why did you let me eat the whole bowl ? |
Ramazan Magomedov (born in Dagestan) whose second name is also sometimes spelt Magamedau is a Belarusian amateur boxer who qualified for the 2008 Olympics at light-heavyweight.
The elusive Magomedov lost to Tony Jeffries at the 2007 World Championships.
He beat Kenneth Egan at the first qualifier, though, and punched his ticket to Beijing where he was edged out in his first bout by Ramadan Yasser.
He currently boxes for the World Series Boxing team Azerbaijan Baku Fires, with a record of 12 wins and 0 losses .
External links
First Qualifier
Light-heavyweight boxers
Living people
Boxers at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Olympic boxers for Belarus
Belarusian male boxers
Year of birth missing (living people) |
Vernon Francis Wilcox CBE QC (10 April 1919 – 13 March 2004) was an Australian politician. In a political career spanning twenty years, he represented the electorate of Camberwell in the Victorian Legislative Assembly and held many positions in the Victorian Cabinet. He is best known today as the initiator of the Melbourne Underground Rail Loop, but also delivered a memorable speech to parliament in 1971 in favour of building a railway line to complement the Eastern Freeway.
Wilcox was born in Camberwell, a suburb of Melbourne. He was educated at Carey Baptist Grammar School, where he won the "Henry Meeks Medal for Leadership, Scholarship and Athletics" in 1932 and 1935 and acted as School Captain from 1935 to 1936. Wilcox maintained an interest in the school long after he graduated, and from 1963 to 1970 he served on the school council. After secondary school, Wilcox went on to study law at the University of Melbourne. He matriculated shortly before the outbreak of World War II, and joined the Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve, serving as a Lieutenant from 1942 to 1945. During his time in the Navy, he worked as liaison officer to the United States of America's Seventh Fleet. After the war, Wilcox put his degree into practice, joining his father's firm, Hall and Wilcox, in 1946.
In the 1940s, Wilcox became active in the Liberal Party but, in 1952, he contested the seat of Camberwell unsuccessfully, as a member of the break-away Electoral Reform Party. Back in the Liberal Party fold, he successfully contested Camberwell at a 1956 by-election. In 1964, he became a Cabinet Minister, being appointed Assistant Chief Secretary, Assistant Attorney-General, and Minister for Immigration. In 1965, he remained Assistant Attorney-General, but replaced the other two portfolios with the role of Minister for Labour and Industry. In 1967, he was made Minister for Transport, and in 1973, he became Attorney General. Wilcox retired from Parliament in 1976. Looking back over his career, he cited turning the first sod on the project to build the Melbourne Underground Rail Loop in June 1971 as his proudest memory. In 2001, Wilcox wrote Minister for the Crown, in which he reflected on his life in pre-war Melbourne, and his career in politics as a member of the Bolte and Hamer Ministries. The book's foreword was penned by Geoffrey Blainey.
In 1998, Wilcox was selected as a delegate to the fourth Constitutional Convention, running on a "Safeguard the People" ticket. His mission at the Convention was to ensure that any modifications made to the Australian Constitution towards a Republic maintained the present checks and balances against Centralism and the power of the Executive and the Judiciary. He argued, "We have had a Constitution, rightly or wrongly, that has been significantly destabilised, a generation of young people ... who believe we have a bad Constitution, paradoxically, when it is in fact the best in the world."
Wilcox was a keen sportsman. He played cricket as a wicket-keeper at university and later for Richmond Cricket Club, and in later life would be a trustee of the Melbourne Cricket Ground and maintained a long association with the Camberwell Magpies Cricket Club. He was also involved for decades with the Returned and Services League of Australia and the Royal Agricultural Society of Victoria. He was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1976. Wilcox married his wife Jean in 1942, and the couple had four children and thirteen grandchildren. He died in 2004, at the age of 84.
Notes
References
Condolences: Hon. Vernon Francis Wilcox, CBE, QC, Victorian Parliamentary HANSARD (Legislative Council), 30 March 2004.
"Tunnels a lasting legacy", Richard Wilcox, The Australian, 26 May 2004.
"MP who kept Melbourne on track and in the loop", Natalie Sikora, Herald Sun, 15 April 2004
"Inspired by Machiavelli and Mac the Mouth", Claire Harvey, The Australian, 5 February 1998.
External links
Portrait of Vernon Wilcox, taken by Loui Seselja in 1998
1919 births
2004 deaths
Delegates to the Australian Constitutional Convention 1998
Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
Liberal Party of Australia members of the Parliament of Victoria
Attorneys-General of Victoria
Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
Politicians from Melbourne
People educated at Carey Baptist Grammar School
20th-century Australian politicians |
eris also felt a strange sense of foreboding . |
campion tapped the table impatiently , finding displeasure in being kept waiting . |
it 's not a good sign . '' |
`` are n't you ? |
`` do n't move . '' |
and that is what he will do if you do not follow orders . |
i 've been in love with her since we were kids . '' |
then kiev shed tears of his own . |
cant sit still for a second ; always thinking about the next move . |
tate strode toward us , both sympathy and irritation in his expression . |
`` i do n't know , '' ralph said , but he thought he did-either a tierod or a piston . |
`` i have very little say in the matter , i find , '' rankin said , coldly . |
that hurt ... that did n't sit well with him . |
he bought the lasker book the day dewerman gave me the assignment . |
oh well . '' |
you need sunglasses to go with your new posh image . '' |
on raphael 's will . '' |
she didnt have to . |
'in short , ' continued the cardinal , 'as i have heard nothing of you for some time past , i wished to know what you were doing . |
`` the currents here are treacherous . |
before this evening the list had been very short . |
`` you are the best friend , evah . '' |
she could love him openly ... |
as i do it , my shawl slips from my head , revealing my hair , which higgins just this morning had put up in a french style with a blue ribbon holding it all together . |
he did n't answer but instead kissed me again , drawing me to him like a magnet . |
`` i thought you liked the douche , '' i challenge , arching my brow . |
and ellen and judge judy are still pulling huge numbers . |
maybe he 's already revving up for round two . |
what can kill a man from thirty paces away ? '' |
but i am not stealthy enough . |
all three gazed thoughtfully at the roof approximately three stories above them . |
i actually like boomer as a name . |
she tightened her hands on the footboard . |
`` kelsey rien . '' |
they had crossed a small second field and steve now climbed over a gate . |
he heard the question : what do you want , gerald ? |
damn , that smells good , yo . |
`` heaven help us both , but i do n't think i can face this without knowing you 're here . '' |
so , they ca n't know . |
`` it 's not there . |
when they got home she would choose ones for strength , for courage , for protection . |
Helena Hubertina Johanna "Lenny" Kuhr (born 22 February 1950) is a Dutch singer-songwriter.
Career
In 1967, she started a singing career in the Netherlands, performing songs in the French chanson tradition. In 1969, she represented the Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest with her composition "De troubadour" (lyrics by David Hartsema; orchestra conducted by Franz de Kok). She was one of the four winners that year.
In the early seventies, Kuhr was more successful in France than in her home country. In 1970 she toured with Georges Brassens. Late 1971 she had a top 10 hit in France with "Jesus Christo".
In 1980, she had her biggest hit in the Netherlands: "Visite", a song she performed with the French group Les Poppys. She has been releasing records ever since, though without major chart success.
Lenny Kuhr was one of the artists who recorded the song "Shalom from Holland" (written by Simon Hammelburg and Ron Klipstein) as a token of solidarity to the Israeli people, threatened by missiles from Iraq, during the Gulf War in 1991.
Lenny Kuhr performed "De troubadour" during the interval of the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday 22 May 2021 in Rotterdam, in a segment called "Rock the Roof", together with other Eurovision winners.
Personal life
Kuhr's first marriage was in 1974 to an Israeli doctor, whom she met after she had her nose damaged in an attack in May 1973, in Haarlem. Her new husband repaired her nose and Kuhr converted to Judaism. She had two daughters with her first husband, one in 1975 and the second in 1980. She also lived in Israel for a while.
After her divorce, Kuhr was romantically involved with songwriter Herman Pieter de Boer, from 1981 to 1993.
She was married for a second time in 2003.
Discography
1969: Lenny Kuhr
1971: De zomer achterna
1972: Tout ce que j'aime / Les enfants
1972: De wereld waar ik van droom
1974: God laat ons vrij
1976: 'n Dag als vandaag
1980: Dromentrein
1981: Avonturen
1982: Oog in oog
1983: De beste van Lenny Kuhr (compilation album)
1986: Quo vadis
1988: Lenny Kuhr (compilation album)
1990: Het beste van Lenny Kuhr (compilation album)
1990: De blauwe nacht
1992: Heilig vuur
1994: Altijd heimwee
1997: Gebroken stenen (also released in German as Gebrochene Steine)
1997: Stemmen in de nacht
1999: Oeverloze liefde
2000: Visite (compilation album)
2001: Hollands glorie (compilation album)
2001: Fadista
2004: Op de grens van jou en mij
2005: Panta Rhei
2007: 40 Jaar verliefd (live album)
2010: Hollands glorie (compilation album)
2010: Mijn liedjes mijn leven (CD/DVD boxset)
2011: Liefdeslied
2013: Wie ben je
2017: Gekust door de eeuwigheid
2019: Het lied gaat door
2021: Favorieten Expres (compilation album)
2022: Lenny Kuhr
References
External links
1950 births
Living people
Converts to Judaism
Eurovision Song Contest entrants for the Netherlands
Dutch expatriates in Israel
Dutch women singers
Dutch Jews
Dutch singer-songwriters
Eurovision Song Contest entrants of 1969
Eurovision Song Contest winners
Jewish Dutch musicians
Musicians from Eindhoven
Philips Records artists
Nationaal Songfestival contestants
Nationaal Songfestival presenters |
and she 'd never know it had been the real thing once he was done mesmerizing her . |
before , you were speaking selay . |
a low buzz to the west of them grew louder , a dust trail following in its wake . |
damn her . |