Young Turks was a reform movement in Turkey at the end of the Ottoman Empire.

Young Turks or The Young Turks may also refer to:


https://wn.com/Young_Turks_(disambiguation)

Crap

Crap may refer to:

Acronyms

The acronym CRAP may refer to:

  • Commandos de recherche et d'action en profondeur, the former name of France's Commando Parachute Group.
  • "Contrast, repetition, alignment, and proximity", basic principles of visual design.
  • "Create, retrieve, alter and purge", database actions more commonly known as create, read, update and delete.
  • Places

  • Crap Grisch, a mountain in the Lepontine Alps, situated near Vals in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland
  • Crap la Pala, a mountain in the Lenzerheide region in the Swiss Alps
  • Crap Masegn, a mountain in the Glarus Alps, located near Flims in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland
  • Crap Mats, a mountain in the Glarus Alps, located near Flims in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland
  • Crap Sogn Gion, a mountain in the Glarus Alps, located near Flims in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland
  • People

  • Andreas Crap, guitarist and co-founder of the German Industrial metal band OOMPH!
  • Thomas Crapper (1836–1910), London plumber who invented the ballcock
  • Russian Bank

    Russian Bank is a card game for two players from the solitaire family. It is also known as crapette or crapot in Brazil and Portugal. It is known as 'crapette' in France ('crapat' is Breton for 'ladder'). It is played with two decks of 52 standard playing cards. It is much like the game of double solitaire. The goal of Russian Bank, like many card games, is to get rid of your forty-eight cards before your opponent can rid themselves of theirs. At the same time, it is required to build "piles" of suits, Ace through King, in the center of the board. If a rule regarding the placement of piles is broken, the opponent may call "Stop!" to end one's turn.

    See Also

  • Nertz
  • References

  • "Fun for Two". The New York Times. May 31, 1931. Retrieved August 13, 2011. Russian Bank or double solitaire can be played with two packs of cards or a single pack. 
  • Albert H. Morehead, Richard L. Frey, Geoffrey Mott-Smith: The New Complete Hoyle: the authoritative guide to the official rules of all popular games of skill and chance, New York: Doubleday, 1991, ISBN 0-385-24962-4
  • Mixtape

    A mixtape (also mix-tape or mix tape) is a home-made compilation of music (typically copyrighted songs taken from other sources) recorded in a specific order, traditionally onto an audio cassette, though CD or MP3 playlist formats are now more common. The songs can be sequential, or by beatmatching the songs and creating overlaps and fades between the end of one song and the beginning of another the tape may become a seamless whole. Compilations may include a selection of favourite songs, or music linked by theme or mood, perhaps tailored to the tape's intended recipient.

    Essayist Geoffrey O'Brien has called the personal mix tape "the most widely practised American art form".

    History

    Tom Vaughan (director)

    Tom Vaughan (born 5 September 1969) is a Scottish television and film director. His work includes Cold Feet (1999) and He Knew He Was Right (2004) for television, and What Happens in Vegas (2008) and Extraordinary Measures (2010) for cinema.

    Background

    Vaughan was born in Glasgow, Scotland to Peter and Susan Vaughan, and lived in nearby Helensburgh for his first 17 years. He and a friend acquired a video camera from the friend's father, which they used make short films. Vaughan also attended weekend acting classes at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, which led to a supporting role in the STV children's television series Stookie. With the £1,000 he made from the series, Vaughan invested in a video camera. He and his friends used it to make more shorts around Helensburgh, such as zombie films, war films and comedies, in locations such as the woods behind his family home, the surrounding hills, and the nearby Clyde Naval Base. For one of the last childhood films he made, he and his friends used their cars for car chases, but were stopped by local police.

    Mixtape (disambiguation)

    A mixtape is a compilation of songs recorded in a specific order, traditionally onto an audio compact cassette.

    Mixtape or The Mix Tape may also refer to:

    Books

  • Mix Tape: The Art of Cassette Culture, a 2005 book edited by musician Thurston Moore
  • Film and TV

  • Mixtape, a yet-to-be-released film directed by Tom Vaughan (director)
  • Mixtape, a 2009 short film written and directed by Luke Snellin
  • Music

  • Summer MixTape Festival, a music festival held in Hershey, Pennsylvania
  • Mixtapes (band), a rock band from Cincinnati
  • Mixtape in hip hop culture, a non-album release to generate exposure for the artist
  • Albums

  • The Mixtape (Meridian Dawn EP)
  • Mix Tape (Los Abandoned album), 2006
  • Mix Tape (The Felice Brothers album), 2010
  • Mixtape (Hadouken! EP), 2007
  • The Mix Tape (KRS-One album), 2002
  • The Mix Tape (MC Breed album), 2004
  • The Mix Tape, Vol. 1, the 1995 installment of Funkmaster Flex's Mix Tape series
  • The Mix Tape, Vol. II, the 1997 installment of Funkmaster Flex's Mix Tape series
  • The Mix Tape, Vol. III, the 1999 installment of Funkmaster Flex's Mix Tape series
  • Podcasts:

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