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"Platform is a railway station on the Itō Line of the East Japan Railway Company, located in the central part of the city of Atami, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. The Tōkaidō Main Line runs parallel to the Itō Line through Kinomiya Station, but only Itō Line has a station at this location. The 0-km indicator of the Itō Line is located at this station, although the Itō Line “officially” starts at Atami. Lines Kinomiya Station is served by the Itō Line and is located 1.2 kilometers from the northern terminus of the line at Atami Station and 105.8 kilometers from Tokyo Station. Layout Kinomiya Station has one island platform connected to the station building by an underground passage. The station is unattended. = Platforms = Adjacent stations History The area around the Kinomiya Station is landfill, from the previous rubble formed by the digging of the Tanna Tunnel. Kinomiya Station opened on March 30, 1935 when the section of the Itō Line linking Atami with was completed. On April 1, 1987 along with division and privatization of the Japan National Railway, East Japan Railway Company started operating this station. The CTC center of the Itō Line used to be located at Kinomiya, but along with its renewal to one that includes the controller of tracks at Atami Station in autumn of 2006, it moved to Atami. Passenger statistics In fiscal 2013, the station was used by an average of 1133 passengers daily (boarding passengers only). Surrounding area * Atami Police Office *Atami Post Office See also * List of railway stations in Japan References External links *http://www.jreast.co.jp/estation/station/info.aspx?StationCd=600 Official home page] Railway stations in Japan opened in 1935 Railway stations in Yamanashi Prefecture Itō Line Atami, Shizuoka "
"The Lancashire Hotpots are a comedy folk band from St Helens, (historically part of Lancashire), England, formed in 2006. The group record songs about Lancashire, technology and British culture (e.g. "Chippy Tea", "He's Turned Emo", "eBay Eck"). The group's songs make use of Lancashire dialect. Their first single, "He's Turned Emo", gained over 230,000 plays on MySpace (as of 17 March 2008) and was featured on BBC Radio One by Colin Murray. Their debut album, Never Mind The Hotpots, was a minor hit, reaching number one comedy album on iTunes in the UK, and number two in the BBC 6 Music Album Charts. The current members are Bernard Thresher (vocals, guitar, ukulele, drums), Dickie Ticker (bell tree, mandolin, melodica, hand percussion), Bob Wriggles (bass guitar, synth bass), Billy McCartney (keyboards) Kenny Body (drums), and Ron Seal (lead guitar). Billy and Kenny joined following the death of founder member Willie Eckerslike whereas Ron joined in 2016. Eckerslike (born Tom McGrath; drums, vocals) died 11 May 2010, aged 38. History Bernard Thresher and Bob Wriggles met while working at Knowsley Safari Park and subsequently formed their first rock band together, Korova. Whilst working at St Helens College, Wriggles met Dickie Ticker who was producing electronic music and light-hearted remixes under the name 'Diffusion'. The three became interested in working together and, after Korova disbanded, Thresher and Wriggles joined forces with Ticker to create electronic dance music under the new guise of Emmet. They first dabbled with comedy music, producing a remix of the Coldplay song "Clocks" for Radio One DJ Chris Moyles in the style of the German dance group Scooter. In a play on words they named the side project Moped. The track proved popular with listeners of the show and they went on to produce several more remixes as well as playing live in clubs around the country. On the request of Moyles, they produced a remix of songs by Norman Cook aka Fatboy Slim in order to perform them at an outside broadcast in a pub in Brighton. Cook was a guest on the show and Moped performed the remix live on the show for him. Whilst being interviewed on the show he said he 'felt as though his whole life had flashed before him.' Ticker then had the idea of a folk band who write songs and tell stories about modern life: not about orchards and craft fairs but online dating and modern technology. Originally intended to be called The Bolton Weavers (after folk band the Houghton Weavers) the band was in fact named The Lancashire Hotpots. They made their first recordings in Thresher's front room in Coventry after an Emmet gig at a comic convention in Birmingham where they played to an empty room. Billy McCartney was in Liverpool band Lyons and Tigers who supported the Hotpots numerous times around the North West of England. Kenny Body was in several St Helens based bands including Jessica's Ghost, The Ups and Giant Root Attack. Both were enlisted to play in the band following death of original drummer, Willie Eckerslike. Incidentally, Kenny Body briefly appeared as an audience member in their "Carry You Home" video. Influences include the Oldham Tinkers, George Formby, Hip hop and John Cooper Clarke, as well as the Houghton Weavers. Festivals As well as touring nationwide, the band play at major music festivals playing events such as Glastonbury Festival, Kendal Calling, Y Not Festival, Carfest and Beat-Herder Festival. Television Television appearances for the group include performing their song ‘Dibnah’ live on BBC2’s Too Much TV on 28/3/2016. Olympic controversy The group were contacted by the International Olympic Committee in August 2016 over their 2008 song "The Beer Olympics". The IOC claimed trademark rights over the word Olympics stating that Hotpots’ use of the word was a breach of their trademark. To avoid further problems, the band subsequently retitled the song "The Beer International Non-Profit, Non-Governmental Sporting Quad Yearly Event". Discography =Albums= *Never Mind The Hotpots (2007) *Pot Sounds (2008) *The Lancashire Hotpots' Christmas Cracker (2009) *Criminal Record (2010) *Achtung Gravy (2011) *A Hard Day's Pint (2012) *Crust for Life (2013) *Golden Crates (2014) *A Fistful of Scratchcards (2015) *Now't like the 80's (2016) *Sing-A-Longa Knees Up Jamboree (2018) =Live albums= *Never Mind The Hotpots – Live at The Citadel (2007) *Live at The Manchester Academy (2017) =DVDs= *Never Mind The Hotpots – Live at The Citadel (2008) *Live at The Lowry (2014) *Live at the Manchester Academy (2017) =Singles= *"He's Turned Emo" (2007) *"The Beer Olympics" (EP) (2009) *"Carry You Home" / "Chippy Tea" (2009) *"You Could Get Hit by a Bus Tomorrow" (2011) *"The Beer Olympics 2012" (2012) *"The Beer Festival" (2012) *"The Baking Song" (2013) *"The Flappy Bird Song" (2014) *"Mum's for Tea" (2014) *"Cheer Up Thom Yorke" (2015) *"Lancashire's For Me / Black Friday (2015) *"Dibnah" (2016) *”Has the Bin Man Bin Mon?” (2018) *"The Austerity Blues" (2018) *"Lean Forwards, Lean Backwards" (2019) *"Egg, Sausage, Chips and Beans" (Ricardo Autobahn Mix)" (2020) References External links *Official website *Sthelensstar.co.uk *Some tracks from Soundcloud *Official Facebook Culture in Lancashire British comedy musical groups Parody musicians Musical groups from Lancashire Musical groups established in 2006 People from St Helens, Merseyside "
"Ius naturale is Latin for natural right, the laws common to all beings. Roman jurists wondered why the ius gentium (the laws which applied to foreigners and citizens alike) was in general accepted by all people living in the Empire. Their conclusion was that these laws made sense to a reasonable person and thus were followed. All laws which would make sense to a normal person were called ius naturale. Slavery, for example, was part of the empire-wide ius gentium because slavery was known and accepted as a normal social institution in all parts of the known world. Nevertheless, as forcing people to work for others was a human-produced condition, it was not considered natural and, hence, was part of the ius gentium but not the ius naturale. The ius naturale of the Roman jurists is not the same as implied by the modern sense of natural law as something derived from pure reason. As Sir Henry James Sumner Maine puts it, "it was never thought of as founded on quite untested principles. The notion was that it underlay existing law and must be looked for through it".Sir Henry Sumner Maine, Ancient Law, 10th ed., p. 67 Romans gave to Natural law a great importance in their daily lives . They mentioned once "ius naturale est quod natura omnia animalia docuit" which means the right that nature gave to all living things. See also *Roman law *ius civile *ius gentium Notes Roman law Latin legal terminology "