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❤️ A Ge 🦄

"A Ge (Simplified Chinese: 阿鸽; Hanyu Pinyin: Ā Gē) (born 1948), also known as Deng Mingying (邓明英), is a Chinese woodcut print artist from Liangshan in Sichuan Province and is a member of the Yi people ethnic minority. Life Per government policy towards ethnic minorities, A Ge was recruited at age twelve to attend the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute and was encouraged to create art to publicize Yi minority culture and help development. In 1964 she graduated from the national minority class at the Sichuan branch of the China Artists Association. She is married to Xu Kuang. Career A Ge is a Grade 1 National Artist, a member of the China Artists Association and the Chinese Engravers Association, and is chairman of the Sichuan Artists Association, and the vice chairman of the Sichuan federation of literary and art circles, the director of the Shenzhou printmaking museum, and the vice President of the printmaking institute of the Chinese national academy of painting. Her works have been collected by the British Museum in London. Works Selected works: * 《阿鸽版画》 (Prints of A Ge) * 《四川少数民族画家画库·阿鸽》 (Sichuan Minority Artists Gallery - A Ge, 1995) * 《阿鸽作品集》(Collection of A Ge's Artwork - A Ge, 2010 Sichuan Art Publishers) References External links *Baike webpage for A Ge (Chinese) *Official website for A Ge (Chinese) Category:1948 births Category:Living people Category:20th-century Chinese artists Category:20th- century women artists Category:Artists from Sichuan Category:People from Liangshan "

❤️ Bob Schultz 🦄

"Robert Duffy Schultz (November 27, 1923 – March 31, 1979) was an American professional baseball player. A left-handed pitcher, his career extended for 11 seasons (1946–56), including a full season (1952) and parts of three others in Major League Baseball as a member of the Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates and Detroit Tigers. Nicknamed "Bullet Bob", Schultz stood tall and weighed . The native of Louisville, Kentucky, served in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II. Schultz came to the Major Leagues at age 27 after posting seasons of 20, 16 and 25 victories in minor league baseball. His 25-win season in 1950 was especially noteworthy as it came with the Nashville Vols of the Class AA Southern Association, who played their home games in a hitter's paradise called Sulphur Dell. Schultz lost only six decisions and finished second in the league in earned run average (2.68), just one one- hundredth of a point behind ERA champion Marv Rotblatt (2.67).Wolff, Miles, and Johnson, Lloyd, eds., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007 Schultz broke camp with the 1951 Cubs out of spring training and appeared in 17 games — ten as a starting pitcher — during the season's early months, but he was sent back to the minors after his last start July 13, when he was knocked out of the box after only one full inning in a start against the Brooklyn Dodgers. Schultz spent the entire 1952 campaign with the Cubs, working in 29 games and winning six of nine decisions. In his finest outing, September 14 at Braves Field, Schultz pitched a ten-inning complete game victory over the Boston Braves, allowing only two runs and six hits — and winning the game for himself with an RBI double. It would be his ninth and final victory in Major League Baseball. In 1953, Schultz began the season with the Cubs but pitched infrequently and was included in a blockbuster trade to the Pirates on June 4 that netted the Cubs seven-time National League home run king Ralph Kiner. But he dropped all four MLB decisions that year, and spent part of the season, and all of 1954, with the Double-A New Orleans Pelicans. Back in the Southern Association, he won 27 games for the Pelicans over a season and a half, going 18–11 in 1954. The Tigers purchased his contract, but used him in only one game in 1955, in relief on April 15 against the Cleveland Indians. He surrendered three runs, all earned, on two hits and two bases on balls in 1 innings, and was sent back to the minors. He retired after the 1956 season. As a Major Leaguer, Schultz allowed 179 hits and 125 bases on balls in 183 innings of work, with 67 strikeouts. In the minors, he posted a 128–99 record in 345 games. Settling in Nashville, Schultz became a house painter and continued to play semiprofessional baseball as well as softball. He was shot to death at age 55 after becoming embroiled in a late-night argument with another patron, 59-year-old Charles Johnson, in the bar of Nashville Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3595. He was interred at Nashville National Cemetery. References External links or Venezuelan Professional Baseball League statistics Category:1923 births Category:1979 deaths Category:1979 murders in the United States Category:Baseball players from Kentucky Category:Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players Category:Chattanooga Lookouts players Category:Chicago Cubs players Category:Deaths by firearm in Tennessee Category:Detroit Tigers players Category:Gadsden Pilots players Category:Greenville Bucks players Category:Leones del Caracas players Category:Major League Baseball pitchers Category:American murder victims Category:Memphis Chickasaws players Category:Murdered American baseball players Category:Muskegon Clippers players Category:Nashville Vols players Category:New Orleans Pelicans (baseball) players Category:People murdered in Tennessee Category:Pittsburgh Pirates players Category:Sportspeople from Louisville, Kentucky Category:Sportspeople from Nashville, Tennessee Category:Springfield Cubs (Massachusetts) players "

❤️ Graffiti Markup Language 🦄

"Graffiti Markup Language (GML) is an XML-based file format that stores graffiti motion data that was created by Jamie Wilkinson, Chris Sugrue, Theo Watson and Evan Roth. Popular applications such as Graffiti Analysis, EyeWriter and Mozilla's Firefox MarkUp implement GML. GML is the product of collaboration between artists, hackers, and programmers, and may be used to replicate graffiti using robots. GML won an Open Web Award in 2011. References Further reading * Category:XML markup languages Category:Graffiti and unauthorised signage "

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