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Chris roan

Chris roan: “

MER-C: JS: Requesting speedy deletion ([[WP:CSD#g3|CSD G3]])


{{db-g3}}
CHRIS IS A SPAGETTI MONSTER THAT LIVES IN MY PANTS

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Big Dipper (Elton John song)

Big Dipper (Elton John song): “

ThomasWL: [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ‘{{Infobox Song <!– See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs –> | | Name = Big Dipper | Type = [[Song]] | Artist = [[Elton John]] | Album = [[A Si…’


{{Infobox Song <!– See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs –> |
| Name = Big Dipper
| Type = [[Song]]
| Artist = [[Elton John]]
| Album = [[A Single Man]]
| Cover = Elton John – A Single Man.jpg
| track_no = 4
| Released = [[October 16]], [[1978 in music|1978]]
| Recorded = January-September 1978
| Genre = [[Dance hall]], [[Pop music|Pop]]
| Length = 4:04
| Label = [[MCA Records|MCA]] (US/Canada)<br> [[Rocket Records]]
| Writer = [[Elton John]], [[Gary Osborne]]
| Producer = Clive Franks, Elton John
| prev = ‘[[I Don’t Care (Elton John song)|I Don’t Care]]’
| prev_no = 3
| next = ‘[[It Ain’t Gonna Be Easy]]’
| next_no = 5
}}
”’Big Dipper”’ is a song by [[Elton John]] with lyrics by [[Gary Osborne]]. It is the fourth track off his 1978 album, ‘[[A Single Man]]’. It gained notice for not being included on the Russian release of the album due to the meaning of the song.

==Musical structure==
The music is not reminiscent of anything else that John has ever done. The main part of the song is a jaunting piano joined by a [[New Orleans jazz|New Orleans]]-inspired jazz horn section. The drum and pass pattern also follows this, making it sound like something that could easily be [[ragtime]]. The backing vocals on this song is John’s then-owned football team, [[Watford F.C.]]. This is one out of their two appearances on this album.

==Lyrical meaning==
It was banned when released in the [[Soviet Union]] along with another song, [[Part-Time Love]]. The song could tell about a man looking for love with a sailor, using ‘Big Dipper’ (Which in the British slang is a [[rollercoaster]], and an [[asterism]] in the American language) as a substitute for a [[penis]]. The sailor says he can’t handle anymore, so the man ”’filled him up with all kinds of stuff to relax him”’. This could symbolize that a [[drug rape]] was taking action. The third verse opens with ”’He hadn’t been to keen at the start – now he seems to have a change of heart”’, indicating that the sailor finds out about his homosexuality, and therefore continues his relationship. The song ends fading out with the line: ”’Another ride, another tune, another crazy afternoon, another reason for squeezin’ your big dipper”’.

It is highly a controversial issue to put in a song at that time, but since the album nor the song gained any notice, it didn’t gain controversy.

==Personnel==

*Elton John – [[piano]], vocals
*Tim Renwick – [[Electric guitar|guitars]]
*Clive Franks – [[Bass guitar|bass]]
*Steve Holly – [[Drum kit|drums]], motor horn
*[[Ray Cooper]] – [[tambourine]]
*Pat Halcox – [[trumpet]]
*John Crocker – [[clarinet]]
*Jim Shepherd – [[trombone]]
*Watford Football Team – backing vocals
*The South Audley Street Girl’s Choir – backing vocals

[[Category:1978 songs]]
[[Category:Elton John songs]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Matthew wells soccer

Matthew wells soccer: “

Wellsma:


Matthew Wells born in [[Perth]] on the [[13th of February]], [[1991]] is currently playing for [[Perth Soccer Club]] situated at Dorrien Gardens. He had previously played at Fremantle Soccer Club and Melville Soccer Club in his junior years and now playing in the under 23s/resurves side at the age of 17 and breaking into the Perth first team. He has represented [[Western Australia]] on a number or occasions and was named captain for 2003, 2004 and 2005. He has scored one goal representing [[Western Australia]], and scored one international goal against [[Malaysia]] under 18s.

He attended [[John Curtin Collage of the Arts]] with a soccer scholarship however in the year 2006 changed schools to [[John XXIII]].

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Johann Wilhelm von Müller

Johann Wilhelm von Müller: “

Smallweed: new


”’Baron Johann Wilhelm von Müller”’ (4 March, 1824 – 24 October,1866) was a [[Germany|German]] [[ornithologist]] and explorer.

Müller was born at Schloss Kochersteinsfeld, [[Neckarsulm]], the grandson of the banker Johannes Müller . In 1845 he travelled to [[Morocco]] and [[Algiers]], and in 1847 embarked on a longer African journey, accompanied by [[Alfred Brehm]] as his secretary. They travelled through [[Egypt]] to [[Khartoum]] and [[Kordofan]], returning to [[Alexandria]] in February 1849. Müller left Brehm there and returned to Germany with the natural history specimens collected on his journey, and made plans for a third expedition. Unfortunately Müller ran into financial difficulties and was not able to rejoin Brehm, instead sending him funds to proceed to Khartoum with Alfred’s brother Oskar and a doctor called Richard Vierthaler.

In the autumn of 1849 Müller began publication of the ornithological journal ”Naumannia”, edited by Eduard Baldamus. He also began work on an illustrated book entitled ”Beiträge zur Ornithologie Afrikas” (1853-1870), of which only five parts were ever published. In 1852 he purchased the natural history collection of [[Christian Ludwig Landbeck]] before the latter’s emigration to [[Chile]]. Later in that same year he became director of the Brussels Zoological Garden, resigning in 1854. He then travelled to North America and [[Mexico]], and on his return wrote ”Reisen in den Vereinigten Staaten, Canada, und Mexiko” (1864-1865).

Müller is commemorated in the name of the [[Blue-headed Bee-eater]] ”Merops muelleri”.

==Reference==
*Stresemann, Erwin – ”Ornithology from Aristotle to the Present” (1975) ISBN 0-674-64485-9

{{Germany-scientist-stub}}
{{ornithologist-stub}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Müller, Johann Wilhelm von}}
[[Category:1824 births]]
[[Category:1866 deaths]]
[[Category:German ornithologists]]
[[Category:German zoologists]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Jordans cow

Jordans cow: “

Fieldday-sunday: Tagging for [[WP:SD|speedy deletion]], [[WP:SD#G7|requested by page creator]] ([[WP:HG|HG]])


{{db-g7}}
{{db-g3}}
==Jordans Cow==
Jordans cow is a very rare specie of a cow that was born by accidental physical contact of Jordan with a cow in Jordans barn located somwhere in Denton where white people rule. And the cow turned black, while jordan is paying the child support to the cows mother.
Additional information: JORDAN LIKES MEN!!!!!
In his interview with Gay Magazine ‘HOMOS ARE US’ Jordan admitted that he does not like women
Jordan was seen shoppingg at GAP
Lately Jordans cow known as Mike was trying to commit suicide by running out of milk
This article was created by Santa Claus who personally hates Jordan

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Omagis

Omagis: ”

Rezaadil: created a new page for a word that is used in our financial circle and is a hybrid of a few words


Omagis: [awe-may-g_s]
Noun 1. A world of financial markets & instruments, 2. A sphere of financial trust, 3. A solution to a financial problem, crisis or requirement.
Verb 1. To solve a financial problem, to provide financing solutions, 2.To create financial trust

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Space elevator safety

Space elevator safety: “

Cosmomancer: Split out of main article


{{main|Space elevator}}
There are many ”’safety issues associated with the construction and operation of a [[space elevator]]”’. A space elevator would present a considerable navigational hazard, both to aircraft and spacecraft. Aircraft could be dealt with by means of simple air-traffic control restrictions, but impacts by space objects (in particular, by meteoroids and micrometeorites) pose a more difficult problem.

===Cable strength===
The current{{year}} strength/mass ratio of cables of any construction is inadequate to build a space elevator at the [[as of 2008|present time]].{{Fact|date=September 2008}} Although [[carbon nanotubes]] embedded in the tether would give it enough strength to be practical, nanotubes of sufficient length have not yet been made.

Theoretical objections have been raised to manufacturing bulk carbon nanotube structures with strengths approaching that which simple models and microscopic strengths suggest. H. K. D. H. Bhadeshia argues that the presence of defects would significantly reduce the strength actually attainable.<ref>[http://www.msm.cam.ac.uk/phase-trans/2005/chunk.html 52nd Hatfield Memorial Lecture: Large Chunks of Very Strong Steel<!– Bot generated title –>]</ref>

===Satellites===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
If nothing were done, essentially all satellites with [[perigee]]s below the top of the elevator would eventually collide with the elevator cable. Twice per day, each orbital plane intersects the elevator, as the rotation of the Earth swings the cable around the equator. Usually the satellite and the cable will not line up. However, except for synchronized orbits, the elevator and satellite will eventually occupy the same place at the same time, almost certainly leading to structural failure of the space elevator and destruction of the satellite.

Most active satellites are capable of some degree of orbital manoeuvring and could avoid these predictable collisions, but inactive satellites and other orbiting debris would need to be either pre-emptively removed from orbit by ‘garbage collectors’ or would need to be closely watched and nudged whenever their orbit approaches the elevator. The impulses required would be small, and need be applied only very infrequently; a [[laser broom]] system may be sufficient for this task. In addition, Brad Edward’s design actually allows the elevator to move out of the way, because the fixing point is at sea and mobile.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} However, such movements would excite transverse oscillations of the cable. Edwards claims that these oscillations could be controlled so as to ensure that the cable avoids satellites on known paths.

===Meteoroids and micrometeorites===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
[[Meteoroids]] present a more difficult problem, since they would not be predictable and much less time would be available to detect and track them as they approach Earth. It is likely{{Fact|date=September 2008}} that a space elevator would still suffer impacts of some kind, no matter how carefully it is guarded. However, most space elevator designs call for the use of multiple parallel cables separated from each other by [[strut]]s, with sufficient margin of safety that severing just one or two strands still allows the surviving strands to hold the elevator’s entire weight while repairs are performed. If the strands are properly arranged, no single impact would be able to sever enough of them to overwhelm the surviving strands.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

Far worse than meteoroids are [[micrometeorites]]; tiny high-speed particles found in high concentrations at certain altitudes. Avoiding micrometeorites is essentially impossible, and they will ensure that strands of the elevator are continuously being cut. Most methods designed to deal with this involve a design similar to a [[hoytether]] or to a network of strands in a cylindrical or planar arrangement with two or more helical strands. Constructing the cable as a mesh instead of a ribbon helps prevent collateral damage from each micrometeorite impact.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

===Failure cascade===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
{{Or|date=September 2008}}
It is not enough that other fibers be able to take over the load of a failed strand — the system must also survive the immediate, dynamical effects of fiber failure, which generates projectiles aimed at the cable itself. For example, if the cable has a working stress of 50 GPa and a [[Young’s modulus]] of 1000 GPa, its strain will be 0.05 and its stored elastic energy will be 1/2 × 0.05 × 50 GPa = 1.25×10<sup>9</sup> joules per cubic meter. Breaking a fiber will result in a pair of de-tensioning waves moving apart at the speed of sound in the fiber, with the fiber segments behind each wave moving at over 1,000 m/s (more than the [[muzzle velocity]] of a standard [[.223]] [[caliber]] ([[5.56mm|5.56 mm]]) round fired from an [[M16 rifle]]). Unless these fast-moving projectiles can be stopped safely, they will break yet other fibers, initiating a failure cascade capable of severing the cable. The challenge of preventing fiber breakage from initiating a catastrophic failure cascade seems to be unaddressed in the current (January, 2005){{Updateneed}} literature on terrestrial space elevators. Problems of this sort would be easier to solve in lower-tension applications (e.g., lunar elevators).

===Corrosion===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
Corrosion is a major risk to any thinly built tether (which most designs call for). In the upper atmosphere, [[atomic oxygen]] steadily eats away at most materials.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} A tether will consequently need to either be made from a corrosion-resistant material or have a corrosion-resistant coating, adding to weight. [[Gold]] and [[platinum]] have been shown{{Fact|date=September 2008}} to be practically immune to atomic oxygen; several far more common materials such as [[aluminum]] are damaged very slowly and could be repaired as needed.

Another potential solution to the corrosion problem is a continuous renewal of the tether surface (which could be done from standard, though possibly slower elevators). This process would depend on the tether composition and it could be done on the nanoscale (by replacing individual fibers) or in segments.

===Radiation===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
The effectiveness of the magnetosphere to deflect radiation emanating from the sun decreases dramatically after rising several earth radii above the surface. This ionizing radiation may{{Fact|date=September 2008}} cause damage to materials within both the tether and climbers.

===Material defects===
Any structure as large as a space elevator will have massive numbers of tiny defects in the construction material. It has been suggested,<ref>[http://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0601668 ‘ON THE STRENGTH OF THE CARBON NANOTUBE-BASED SPACE ELEVATOR CABLE: FROM NANO- TO MEGA-MECHANICS’ Nicola M. Pugno]</ref><ref>[http://www.msm.cam.ac.uk/phase-trans/2005/SWpaper/index.html ‘Bulk Nanocrystalline Steel’ H. K. D. H. Bhadeshia]</ref> that, because large structures have more defects than small structures, that large structures are inherently weaker than small, giving an estimated carbon nanotube strength of only 24 GPa down to only 1.7 GPa in millimetre-scale samples, the latter equivalent to many high-strength steels, which would be vastly less than that needed to build a space elevator for a reasonable cost.

===Weather===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
In the atmosphere, the risk factors of wind and lightning come into play. The basic mitigation is location. As long as the tether’s anchor remains within two degrees of the equator, it will remain in the quiet zone between the Earth’s [[Hadley cell]]s, where there is relatively little violent weather.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} Remaining storms could be avoided by moving a floating anchor platform. The lightning risk can be minimized by using a nonconductive fiber with a water-resistant coating to help prevent a conductive buildup from forming. The wind risk can be minimized by use of a fiber with a small cross-sectional area that can rotate with the wind to reduce resistance. Ice forming on the cable also presents a potential problem. It could add significantly to the cable’s weight and affect the passage of elevator cars. Also, ice falling from the cable could damage elevator cars or the cable itself. To get rid of ice, special elevator cars could scrape the ice off.

===Vibrational harmonics===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=September 2008}}
A final risk of structural failure comes from the possibility of vibrational [[harmonic]]s within the cable. Like the shorter and more familiar strings of stringed musical instruments, the cable of a space elevator has a natural [[resonance|resonant]] frequency. If the cable is excited at this frequency, for example by the travel of elevators up and down it, the vibrational energy could build up to dangerous levels and exceed the cable’s tensile strength. This can be avoided by the use of suitable damping systems within the cable, and by scheduling travel up and down the cable keeping its resonant frequency in mind. It may be possible to dampen the resonant frequency against the Earth’s magnetosphere.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

===In the event of failure===
{{Refimprove|section|date=September 2008}}
If despite all these precautions the elevator is severed anyway, the resulting scenario depends on where exactly the break occurred:

====Cut near the anchor point====
If the elevator is cut at its anchor point on Earth’s surface, the outward force exerted by the counterweight would cause the entire elevator to rise upward into an unstable orbit.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}

The ultimate [[altitude]] of the severed lower end of the cable would depend on the details of the elevator’s [[mass]] distribution. In theory, the loose end might be secured and fastened down again. This would be an extremely tricky operation, however, requiring careful adjustment of the cable’s center of gravity to bring the cable back down to the surface again at just the right location. It may prove to be easier to build a new system in such a situation.{{Or|date=September 2008}}

====Cut up to about 25,000 km====
If the break occurred at higher altitude, up to about 25,000 km, the lower portion of the elevator would descend to Earth and drape itself along the equator west of the anchor point, while the now unbalanced upper portion would rise to a higher orbit.{{Fact|date=August 2008}} Some authors (such as science fiction writers [[David Gerrold]] in ”[[Jumping off the Planet]]”, [[Kim Stanley Robinson]] in ”[[Red Mars]]”) have suggested that such a failure would be catastrophic, with the thousands of kilometers of falling cable creating a swath of meteoric destruction along the planet’s surface; however, in most cable designs, the upper portion of any cable that fell to Earth would burn up in the [[Earth’s atmosphere|atmosphere]].{{Fact|date=August 2008}} Additionally, because proposed initial cables have very low mass (roughly 1 kg per kilometer) and are flat, the bottom portion would likely settle to Earth with less force than a sheet of paper due to [[Drag (physics)|air resistance]] on the way down.{{Fact|date=February 2008}}

If the break occurred at the counterweight side of the elevator, the lower portion, now including the ‘central station’ of the elevator, would entirely fall down if not prevented by an early self-destruct of the cable shortly below it. Depending on the size, however, it would burn up on re-entry anyway. Simulations have shown{{Fact|date=September 2008}} that as the descending portion of the space elevator ‘wraps around’ Earth, the stress on the remaining length of cable increases, resulting in its upper sections breaking off and being flung away. The details of how these pieces break and the trajectories they take are highly sensitive to initial conditions.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://gassend.com/spaceelevator/breaks/index.html| title=Animation of a Broken Space Elevator| first=Blaise| last= Gassend| year=2004| accessdate=2007-01-14}}</ref>

====Elevator climbers====
It is almost inevitable that some objects — climbers, structural members, repair crews, etc. — will accidentally fall off the elevator at some point.{{Fact|date=August 2008}} Their subsequent fate would depend upon their initial altitude. Except at geostationary altitude, an object on a space elevator is not in a stable orbit and so its trajectory will not remain parallel to it. The object will instead enter an [[elliptical orbit]], the characteristics of which depend on where the object was on the elevator when it was released.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}

If the initial height of the object falling off of the elevator is less than 23,000 km, its [[orbit]] will have an [[apsis|apogee]] at the altitude where it was released from the elevator and a [[perigee]] within Earth’s atmosphere —{{Fact|date=August 2008}} it will intersect the atmosphere within a few hours, and not complete an entire orbit. Above this critical altitude, the perigee is above the atmosphere and the object will be able to complete a full orbit to return to the altitude it started from. By then the elevator would be somewhere else, but a [[spacecraft]] could be dispatched to retrieve the object or otherwise remove it. The lower the altitude at which the object falls off, the greater the eccentricity of its orbit.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}

If the object falls off at the geostationary altitude itself, it will remain nearly motionless relative to the elevator just as in conventional orbital flight.{{Fact|date=August 2008}} At higher altitudes the object would again be in an elliptical orbit, this time with a perigee at the altitude the object was released from and an apogee somewhere higher than that. The eccentricity of the orbit would increase with the altitude from which the object is released.

Above 47,000 km, however, an object that falls off of the elevator would have a velocity greater than the local [[escape velocity]] of Earth.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} The object would head out into interplanetary space, and if there were any people present on board it might prove impossible to rescue them.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}

===Van Allen Belts===
[[Image:Van Allen radiation belt.svg|thumb|Van Allen radiation belts]]
The space elevator would run through the [[Van Allen radiation belt|Van Allen belts]]. This is not a problem for most freight, but the amount of time a climber spends in this region would cause [[radiation poisoning]] to any unshielded human or other living things.<ref>{{cite news
|title=Space elevators: ‘First floor, deadly radiation!’
|date=[[2006-11-13]]
|work=[[New Scientist]]
|author=Kelly Young
|url=http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn10520-space-elevators-first-floor-deadly-radiation.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal
|journal=Acta Astronautica
|volume=60
|issue=3
|month=February | year=2007
|pages=189–209
|doi=10.1016/j.actaastro.2006.07.014
|publisher=Elsevier Ltd.
|title=Passive radiation shielding considerations for the proposed space elevator
|author=A.M. Jorgensena, S.E. Patamiab, and B. Gassendc}}</ref> Some{{Who|date=September 2008}} speculate that passengers would continue to travel by high-speed rocket, while space elevators haul bulk cargo. Research into lightweight [[radiation shielding|shielding]] and techniques for clearing out the belts is underway.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

More conventional and faster [[atmospheric reentry]] techniques such as [[aerobraking]] might{{Fact|date=September 2008}} be employed on the way down to minimize radiation exposure. De-orbit burns use relatively little fuel and are cheap.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

An obvious{{Fact|date=September 2008}} option would be for the elevator to carry shielding to protect passengers, though this would reduce its overall capacity. The best radiation shielding is very mass-intensive for physical reasons.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} Alternatively, the shielding itself could in some cases consist of useful payload, for example food, water, fuel or construction/maintenance materials, and no additional shielding costs are incurred during ascent.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}

To shield passengers from the radiation in the Van Allen belt, perhaps counter-intuitively, material composed of light elements should be used{{Or|date=September 2008}}{{Syn|date=September 2008}}, as opposed to lead shielding. In fact, high energy [[electron]]s in the Van Allen belts produce dangerous [[X-ray]]s when they strike [[atom]]s of [[heavy element]]s.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} This is known as [[bremsstrahlung]] (‘braking radiation’), and is the method used to create X-rays for medical use (such as in dentistry). Materials containing large amounts of [[hydrogen]], such as [[water]] or (lightweight) [[plastic]]s such as [[polyethylene]], and lighter metals such as [[aluminium]] are better than heavier ones such as [[lead]] for preventing this secondary radiation.{{Fact|date=September 2008}} Such light-element shielding, if it were strong enough to protect against the Van Allen particle radiation, would also provide adequate protection against X-ray radiation{{Fact|date=September 2008}} coming from the sun during [[solar flare]]s and [[coronal mass ejection]] events. Nevertheless the total mass required for radiation shielding is very high.

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
* [http://www.elevator2010.org/ Elevator:2010] Space elevator prize competitions
* [http://www.spaceelevator.com/ The Space Elevator Reference]
* [http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm Audacious & Outrageous: Space Elevators]

[[Category:Exploratory engineering]]
[[Category:Megastructures]]
[[Category:Space colonization]]
[[Category:Space technology]]
[[Category:Vertical transportation devices]]
[[Category:Space access]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Oscar Humphries

Oscar Humphries: “

Charlesboyhart:


[[Oscar Humphries]] (Born April 1981, Sydney Australia)

[[Oscar Humphries]] is a journalist who has written for British newspapers and magazines. Notably [[The Sunday Times]], [[The Sunday Telegraph]], [[Arena]], [[Tatler]], and [[The Spectator]]. His father is the comedian [[Barry Humphries]].

He was educated in Los Angeles then later at [[Bryanston School]] and [[Stowe School]]. Oscar Humphries struggled with alcohol addiction in his early 20’s and also with depression. He wrote about these difficulties in [[The Sunday Telegraph]]<ref>See The Daily Telegraph health/2003/01/31</ref>.

In 2006 he was made a contributing editor of [[The Spectator]]<ref>See Media Guardian Monday September 17 2007</ref> and in 2008 became the launch editor of Spectator Australia.

In 2006 he became engaged to the Australian model Sara Philippidis<ref>See Daily Telegraph, Sydney September 19, 2006 </ref>

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Prymetyme tha Hustleman

Prymetyme tha Hustleman: “

Prymetyme4456:


<gallery>
Image:L_aa2870f92e87e065d85798568f9786b7.jpg‎|PrymeTyme
</gallery>

”’Junior Wilson”'(born September 5,1986) also known as hist stage name ”’PrymeTyme Tha Hustleman”’ is a American rapper,Producer,CEO from Northside Texas/Waynesville.Prymetyme now is co-owner of the Sowed Up Click alongside of his best friend ”’Kevin Davis”’ also known as stage name ”’Deuce Bigalow”’ which he refers to him as his big brother, later own becoming owner of his new label ”’Hustle Entertainment”’ transpiring in 2008. Prymetyme has recently returned to Sowed Up Click which started out as a group of 11 underground rappers to launch his new label.

== EARLY LIFE ==

—-

”’Junior Wilson”’ was born ”’September 5,1986 in Dallas,TX”’ as the 3rd oldest child and first born son of 2 daugheters and two sons to the Wilson family. Labeled as the troublemaker of the family, from getting arrested for car boosting, stealing, and drugs. He was involved in a gang called 44 which also led to a early sight on prison. He moved to ”’Waynesville,MO”’ in 2002 where he teamed up with Deuce Bigalow, and ”’Kendell Bellamy”’ also known as ”'(ATM)Abstract tha Mastermind”’ to form Sowed Up Click.

== MUSIC CAREER ==

—-

”’Prymetyme”’ began recording mixtapes and freestyles as early as 2001 started out in the underground rap game. He got the name PrymeTyme from his long lost mentor ”’Big Dre”’ (R.I.P.) because he always was the main event of the show from his swag to his lyrics on stage.One day Prymetyme realized theres plenty of money to get legitally with muzik which he love to do anyway instead of hustling in the streets looking for jail time. PrymeTyme stated that”Muzik is my passion, For me its tha way of life” So he decided to start a click full of rappers to put tha Ville on tha map at the time. Stuck in a poor place he hustled to get what he wanted and started building his own studio to make this project realtalk. PrymeTyme became CEO of the group later known as Sowed Up Click consisting of artists from the south and midwest, basically he knew how to do everything from mixing, mastering,to putting tracks together givin fans that good ish. The first mixtape Sowed Up put out was called ”’Southern Supremacy”’ which caused a little spark. PrymeTyme said I know if I can get a couple people bobbin there head to my ish than big thingz is comin. Soon there after ”’Southern Supremacy Vol.2”’ was released and caused a major spark around the area with hard-hitting track ”’BUST A NIGGA HEAD, AFTERPARTY, and SUICIDE”’. Now there presence was officially known and they were forreal. In 2007 he added tha Hustleman to the end of his stage name because of his hardwork and grind. Following his success now PrymeTyme Tha Hustleman is still workin indepedent on his solo album(”’GO HARD OR GO BROKE”’) waitin for the time to snatch up a deal

== DISCOGRAPHY

—-

2003: I Came to Wreck

2004:Southern Supremacy Vol.1

2006:Southern Supremacy Vol.2

2007:Deuce’s Wild Vol.1

2008:Stuntin iz a Habit

2009:Go Hard or Go Broke

== REFERENCES ==

—-

<ref>PrymeTyme Artist Biography www.showcaseyourmusic.com/prymetyme</ref>

<ref>www.myspace.com/soweduphits</ref>

<ref>www.myspace.com/ptthahustleman</ref>

== EXTERNAL LINKS ==

—-
[http://www.myspace.com/ptthahustleman Official Myspace page]

[http://www.showcaseoyourmusic.com/prymetyme Music website]

[http://www.myspace.com/soweduphits Sowed Up Clicks music page]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Hijam Irabot

Hijam Irabot: “

Madan lmg:


Hijam Irabot Singh (30 September 1896-26 September 1951), also known as Jana Neta Hijam Irabot<ref>http://www.manipuronline.com/Opinions/August2004/peaceparadigm12_2.htm</ref>, was an active political and social activist during the British rule in [[Manipur]]. During his eventful life, he has written journals and composed poems, wrote plays and played in them, participated in various sports activities, but he is best remembered for his chairing the 4th Session of the [[Nikhil Manipuri Mahasabha]]<ref>http://www.kanglaonline.com/index.php?template=kshow&kid=3&Idoc_Session=d5fecf1152ecce5f66fbf9dbf7871fb6</ref> and his leadership roles against social injustices during the Second Nupilal, 1939<ref>http://www.kanglaonline.com/index.php?template=kshow&kid=3&Idoc_Session=d5fecf1152ecce5f66fbf9dbf7871fb6</ref>.

==Early Life==
Irabot was born to Hijam Ibungohal Singh and Chongtham Ningol Thambalngambi at Hijam Leikai which has now been replaced by the 1st Manipur Rifles. After his father’s death, he moved with his mother to stay with his aunt at Moirangkhom Sawaijam. He studied at Johnstone Higher Secondary School till Class 7 and founded two student bodies, ‘Bal Sangha’ and ‘Chatra Sanmelan’. In 1913, he went to [[Dhaka]] with his cousin, Sawaijam Somorendro and got admitted at [[Pugoj High School]] to study till Class 9. In 1915, he dropped out due to shortage of money and went to [[Agartala]].

Later that year, when he came back to Manipur, he found that his mother had died. He stayed with a friend in [[Wangkhei]] called Maibam Shamden who worked in the court of King [[Churachand]].

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

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