The Alarm

The Alarm are an Welsh alternative rock/new wave band that formed in Rhyl, North Wales, in 1981. Initially formed as a punk band "The Toilets" under lead singer Mike Peters the band soon embraced rock, displaying marked influences from Welsh language and culture. By opening for acts such as U2 and Bob Dylan, they became a popular alternative rock band of the 1980s, retaining a loyal following to the present day.

The Alarm's highest charting single in Britain was 1983's "Sixty Eight Guns", which reached number 17 in the UK Singles Chart. Their 1984 album, Declaration, which contained "Sixty Eight Guns", peaked at number six in the UK Albums Chart.

Current members

  • Mike Peters: Vocals, guitars, harmonica - born Michael L. Peters, 25 February 1959, Prestatyn, Wales.
  • Founding members

  • Mike Peters
  • Dave Sharp: Guitars - Born David Kitchingman, 28 January 1959, Salford, England.
  • Eddie Macdonald: Bass - born 1 November 1959, St Asaph, Wales.
  • Nigel Twist: Drums - born Nigel Buckle, 18 July 1958, Manchester, England.
  • The Alarm (newspaper)

    The Alarm was an anarchist newspaper published in the American city of Chicago during the 1880s. The weekly was the most prominent English-language anarchist periodical of its day. The paper was famously edited by Albert Parsons, who was executed in response to the Haymarket affair of 1886.

    Publication history

    Establishment

    The first issue of The Alarm appeared on October 4, 1884 in Chicago, Illinois as the weekly voice of the International Working People's Association (IWPA). At the time of its launch The Alarm was one of eight newspapers in the United States to declare their allegiance to the anarchist IWPA — and the only paper published in English.

    Editor of the paper was the Southern-born Albert R. Parsons, formerly the assistant editor of the English-language weekly of the Socialist Labor Party of America, The Socialist. Parsons had first come north from Texas in 1873 to take a job as a printer for the Chicago Inter-Ocean before moving to a more steady job in a similar capacity working for the Chicago Times.

    Alarm (disambiguation)

    Alarm may refer to:

  • Alarm signal, a warning signal used by humans and other animals.
  • Alarm clock, a clock that wakes people.
  • Alarm device, a device that gives an audible or visual warning of a problem or condition.
  • Alarm (1938 film), a 1938 Danish film.
  • Alarm (2008 film), a 2008 Irish film.
  • "Alarm" (song), by Namie.
  • Alarm (magazine), a music and art magazine based in the United States.
  • ALARM, a British anti-radiation missile designed to destroy enemy radars.
  • The Alarm, a Welsh alternative rock band, who were most popular in the 1980s.
  • The Alarm (Boyle), a bronze statue.
  • The Alarm (EP), a 1983 rock album.
  • The Alarm (film), a 1914 American film.
  • The Alarm (newspaper), an anarchist newspaper published in Chicago in the 1880s.
  • See also

  • Warning
  • The Alarmist – 1997 film
  • Alarm (1938 film)

    Alarm is a 1938 Danish family film directed by Lau Lauritzen, Jr. and Alice O'Fredericks.

    Cast

  • Lau Lauritzen, Jr. - Jess Clark
  • Betty Söderberg - Gerda Clark
  • Victor Borge - Tjener Cæsar ... credited as Børge Rosenbaum, but on later DVD cover as Victor Borge
  • Johannes Meyer - Fabrikant Schmidt
  • Victor Montell - Assistant hos Smith
  • Karen Jønsson - Pressefotograf
  • Hans Egede Budtz - Direktør for Falck Redningskorps
  • Poul Reichhardt - Falckmand Petersen
  • Paul Rohde - Sagfører Skov
  • Sigurd Langberg - En vagabond
  • Thorkil Lauritzen - En falckmand
  • External links

  • Alarm at the Internet Movie Database
  • ALARM

    ALARM (Air Launched Anti-Radiation Missile) was a British anti-radiation missile designed primarily to destroy enemy radars for the purpose of Suppression of Enemy Air Defense (SEAD). It was used by the RAF and the Royal Saudi Air Force, and retired at the end of 2013.

    History

    The Ministry of Defence received bids for a new anti-radiation missile in late 1982; British Aerospace Dynamics offered ALARM while Texas Instruments teamed with Lucas Aerospace offered its HARM missile. Defence Secretary Michael Heseltine announced the selection of ALARM on 29 July 1983. The initial order was 750 missiles for the RAF. The selection process was controversial; the battle between the contractors was bitter, the Ministry of Defence favoured ALARM to retain UK industrial capabilities while the Treasury favoured the cheaper and proven HARM.

    In early 1986, BAe recognised that Royal Ordnance was having difficulties delivering the missile's motor, named Nuthatch, and began to consider alternatives. Royal Ordnance's solution to the required burn-loiter-burn characteristic of the engine was complex. In July 1987, BAe, by then the owner of Royal Ordnance, replaced the Nuthatch motor with a lower risk motor designed by Bayern-Chemie. BAe's GB£200 million contract for the missile was renegotiated with the price increased to GB£400 million and delivery pushed back from 1988 to 1990.

    Pound sterling

    The pound sterling (symbol: £; ISO code: GBP), commonly known simply as the pound, is the official currency of the United Kingdom, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Man, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, the British Antarctic Territory, and Tristan da Cunha. It is subdivided into 100 pence (singular: penny). A number of nations that do not use sterling also have currencies called the pound. At various times, the pound sterling was commodity money or bank notes backed by silver or gold, but it is currently fiat money, backed only by the economy in the areas where it is accepted. The pound sterling is the world's oldest currency still in use and which has been in continuous use since its inception.

    The British Crown dependencies of Guernsey and Jersey produce their own local issues of sterling: "Guernsey pound" and "Jersey pound". The pound sterling is also used in the Isle of Man (alongside the Manx pound),Gibraltar (alongside the Gibraltar pound), the Falkland Islands (alongside the Falkland Islands pound), Saint Helena and Ascension Island in Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (alongside the Saint Helena pound). The Bank of England is the central bank for the pound sterling, issuing its own coins and banknotes, and regulating issuance of banknotes by private banks in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Banknotes issued by other jurisdictions are not regulated by the Bank of England; local governments use Bank of England notes as backing for local issuance by allowing them to be exchanged 1:1 at face value.

    Pound (force)

    The pound or pound-force (symbol: lb, lbf, or lbf) is a unit of force used in some systems of measurement including English Engineering units and the British Gravitational System. Pounds of force are not to be confused with foot-pounds or pounds-feet, which are a unit of torque, and may be written as "lb·ft" or "lbf·ft".

    Definitions

    The pound-force is equal to the gravitational force exerted on a mass of one avoirdupois pound on the surface of Earth. Since the 18th century, the unit has been used in low-precision measurements, for which small changes in Earth's gravity (which varies from place to place by up to half a percent) can safely be neglected.

    The 20th century, however, brought the need for a more precise definition. A standardized value for acceleration due to gravity was therefore needed. Today, in accordance with the General Conference on Weights and Measures, standard gravity is usually taken to be 9.80665 m/s2 (about 32.174 049 ft/s2).

    The acceleration of the standard gravitational field (gn) and the international avoirdupois pound (lbm) define the pound-force as:

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Pound The Alarm

    by: Nicki Minaj

    Oh, oh, oh, come fill my glass up a little more
    We 'bout to get up, and burn this floor
    You know we getting hotter, and hotter
    Sexy and hotter, let's shut it down
    Yo, what I gotta do to show these girls that I own them
    Some call me Nicki, and some call me Roman
    Skeeza, pleeza, I'm in Ibiza
    Giuseppe Zanotti, my own sneaker
    Sexy, sexy that’s all I do
    If you need a bad bitch
    Let me call a few
    Pumps on and the little mini-skirts is up
    I see some good girls, I'mma turn 'em out
    Ok bottle, sip, bottle, guzzle
    I'm a bad bitch, no muzzle, hey?
    Bottle, sip, bottle, guzzle
    I'm a bad bitch, no muzzle, let's go
    Music, makes me, high
    Oh, oh, oh, come fill my glass up a little more
    We 'bout to get up, and burn this floor
    You know we getting hotter, and hotter
    Sexy and hotter, let's shut it down
    Pound the alarm!
    Pound the alarm!
    I wanna do it for the night, night
    So get me now, and knock this over
    I wanna do it like you like, like
    Come get me, baby we're not getting younger
    I just want you tonight, night
    Baby we won't do it for life
    Music, makes me, high
    Oh, oh, oh, come fill my glass up a little more
    We 'bout to get up, and burn this floor
    You know we getting hotter, and hotter
    Sexy and hotter, let's shut it down
    Pound the alarm!
    Pound the alarm!
    Pound the alarm
    Oh, oh, oh, come fill my glass up a little more
    We 'bout to get up, and burn this floor
    You know we getting hotter, and hotter
    Sexy and hotter, let's shut it down
    Pound the alarm!
    Pound the alarm!




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