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in the evening, prompting his father to start searching for him. The boy's skeleton was found in a field by a farmer in the village of Piaskowice Pieńki six weeks later. He was identified by a cap with his name and surname etched onto it, bearing the signature "Józef Chudobiński, cl. IV". Despite interacting with the children at the time of the crime, Grüning was not suspected, but was instead imprisoned for an unrelated crime not long after. After spending two years in prison, he was released in 1938. On July 8, 1938, Grüning raped and attempted kill 8-year-old Lucyna Góra in Piotrków Trybunalski, but she managed to escape. When questioned about her injuries, Góra initially claimed that she had hurt herself while riding a bicycle with her "uncle", but later admitted that she was attacked after learning about her assailant's other crimes. On October 17, Grüning arrived in the village of Kościuszko, near Kutno, and visited the mayor, asking for accommodation. While the mayor was referring him to a local villager named Bembnista, two 9-year-old girls came to visit, attracting Grüning's attention. He started a conversation with the pair, suggesting that he could solder pots in their homes. One of the girls, Władysława Bagrowska, agreed to the idea and later led him to her house. Around 7 PM, Grüning visited Bembnista for his overnight stay and washed himself thoroughly. Despite the fact that the host noticed that he was covered in blood, it did not arouse suspicion, as Bembnista believed that he might have cut himself while working. Arrest, trial and fate After his daughter failed to return home, Bagrowska's father went to the mayor to ask for help. Around 10 PM, the two visited Bembnista and asked for the newcomer's whereabouts, with the former replying that he was sleeping in the barn. Upon waking him up, the father demanded to know where his daughter was, but Grüning simply replied that he was "not a guardian of other people's children." After they left, Grüning got up and attempted to clean the bloodied scissors, but was caught by an arriving officer, who also noticed that he had blood on his clothing. After being brought to the police station, Grüning admitted that he had killed Bagrowska and that he had buried her body in a field, whose location he indicated to the investigators. Upon arriving there, the policemen saw that the child's hand was sticking out of the ground and that her clothes were right next to it, with further inspections of the barn revealing dismembered pieces of her corpse in it, right next to where Grüning had slept. When pressed for an explanation, he claimed that he was overcome with a lust for murder. Soon after, he was also linked to the murder and attempted murder from years prior, with which he was all charged. Before his trial began, Grüning was sent for a mental evaluation at two hospital, one in Kochanówka and another in Tworki. In both institutions, he admitted guilt and described his crimes in detail, leading the doctors to conclude that he was sane. His trial took place at the Regional Court of Łódź on February 28, 1939, where crowds of onlookers gathered outside the building during the trial. Throughout the proceedings, Grüning sat on the bench with his head lowered and | but she managed to escape. When questioned about her injuries, Góra initially claimed that she had hurt herself while riding a bicycle with her "uncle", but later admitted that she was attacked after learning about her assailant's other crimes. On October 17, Grüning arrived in the village of Kościuszko, near Kutno, and visited the mayor, asking for accommodation. While the mayor was referring him to a local villager named Bembnista, two 9-year-old girls came to visit, attracting Grüning's attention. He started a conversation with the pair, suggesting that he could solder pots in their homes. One of the girls, Władysława Bagrowska, agreed to the idea and later led him to her house. Around 7 PM, Grüning visited Bembnista for his overnight stay and washed himself thoroughly. Despite the fact that the host noticed that he was covered in blood, it did not arouse suspicion, as Bembnista believed that he might have cut himself while working. Arrest, trial and fate After his daughter failed to return home, Bagrowska's father went to the mayor to ask for help. Around 10 PM, the two visited Bembnista and asked for the newcomer's whereabouts, with the former replying that he was sleeping in the barn. Upon waking him up, the father demanded to know where his daughter was, but Grüning simply replied that he was "not a guardian of other people's children." After they left, Grüning got up and attempted to clean the bloodied scissors, but was caught by an arriving officer, who also noticed that he had blood on his clothing. After being brought to the police station, Grüning admitted that he had killed Bagrowska and that he had buried her body in a field, whose location he indicated to the investigators. Upon arriving there, the policemen saw that the child's hand was sticking out of the ground and that her clothes were right next to it, with further inspections of the barn revealing dismembered pieces of her corpse in it, right next to where Grüning had slept. When pressed for an explanation, he claimed that he was overcome with a lust for murder. Soon after, he was also linked to the murder and attempted murder from years prior, with which he was all charged. Before his trial began, Grüning was sent for a mental evaluation at two hospital, one in Kochanówka and another in Tworki. In both institutions, he admitted guilt and described his crimes in detail, leading the doctors to conclude that he was sane. His trial took place at the Regional Court of Łódź on February 28, 1939, where crowds of onlookers gathered outside the building during the trial. Throughout the proceedings, Grüning sat on the bench with his head lowered and his eyes staring at the floor, and when he was asked questions, he claimed that he did not know the answers. He also pretended that he did not know his name or whether he was married, and flat out refused to admit responsibility or give explanations for his crimes. Despite his denials, Chudobiński's friends testified before the court and identified him as the mysterious man who had talked to their friend shortly before his abduction; similar testimonies were also given by Lucyna Góra, the family members of other victims and Grüning's own siblings. Due to the nature of his crimes, part of the trial was held in secret. Eventually, he was convicted on all counts, receiving three |
entitled Fashioning the Female in Roman Antiquity. She received a MA from University of Chicago in 1997 and from University of Victoria in 1992, and her BA (with Honours) from University of Calgary in 1990. Olson has published extensively on clothing and appearance (including cosmetics, jewelry, and hairstyles) in Roman antiquity. Her scholarship has been described as the "standard resource" in ancient dress studies. Olson has been awarded several Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grants, including an Insight Development grant (2019–21) for her project, "Roman Jewelry and | of Calgary in 1990. Olson has published extensively on clothing and appearance (including cosmetics, jewelry, and hairstyles) in Roman antiquity. Her scholarship has been described as the "standard resource" in ancient dress studies. Olson has been awarded several Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grants, including an Insight Development grant (2019–21) for her project, "Roman Jewelry and the Technology of Enchantment," and a Standard Research grant (2008-2011) for her project, "Men, Appearance, and Sexuality in Roman Antiquity." Olson is a highly visible public intellectual. She has discussed her scholarship in public lectures at the Art Institute |
a species of mussel. It goes by the common name ebonyshell. The species is listed as least concern by the IUCN, but is endangered in Missouri and Minnesota. History Originally the native range for this extended from around the Twin Cities in Minnesota and the Upper Mississippi, and went all the way downstream to the | species is listed as least concern by the IUCN, but is endangered in Missouri and Minnesota. History Originally the native range for this extended from around the Twin Cities in Minnesota and the Upper Mississippi, and went all the way downstream to the Gulf of Mexico. Then in 1913, a dam was built on the Mississippi River |
of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the villages of Whiston and Morthen and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, farmhouses and farm buildings. The other listed buildings include a church, a headstone in the churchyard, a | lowest grade. The parish contains the villages of Whiston and Morthen and the surrounding countryside. Most of the listed buildings are houses and associated structures, farmhouses and farm buildings. The other listed buildings include a church, a headstone in the |
apple must. Following six months at the Plumrose food company in Copenhagen, she was exceptionally admitted as a student at the Landbohøjskolen (Agricultural College) where she remained for at least six months. Career Until the end of the German occupation of Denmark in 1945, she worked at the Rynkeby factory. After her marriage at the end of 1945, she helped her husband run the Hotel Hem Odde near Skanderborg but did not really like the place. In 1951, she left to help her mother run the factory at Rynkeby. Two years later, she was charged with its management. She expanded the business by producing juice from other berries, especially blackcurrants, which proved popular in Sweden and the UK. Taking advantage of government loans and the Marshall Plan, she modernized the factory and publicized the Rynkeby brand, soon also producing orange juice | produce other juices, especially blackcurrant, and successfully promoted the Rynkeby brand name. When she retired from management in 1986, the firm had 170 employees and a turnover of DKK 200 million. On the political front, representing the Danish Social Liberal Party, she was a Member of the Folketing from 1968 to 1975. Early life and education Born in Rynkeby on 6 November 1920, Dagmar Rasmussen was the daughter of the manufacturer Rasmus Theodor Rasmussen (1882–1964) and the nurse Inger née Lykkegaard (1885–1965). In December 1945, she married the restaurateur Ankjær Johannes Andreasen with whom she had three children: Inger (1946), Knud (1948) and Erik (1948). The marriage was dissolved in 1965. She was educated in the local school but left in 1934 in order to help her mother with juice production. After being trained in typing and bookkeeping in Odense in 1940, the following spring together with her brother, she went to Ober-Erlenbach near Frankfurt, Germany, |
final on 29 January. It was contested by three teams, representing India, rest of Asia and the rest of the world. Former Indian cricketer, Ravi Shastri is the Commissioner of the series. Squads Initially, Virender Sehwag was named captain of India Maharajas squad, but missed the matches of the Legends League Cricket for personal reasons; Mohammed Kaif led the team in his absence. Imran | features former international cricketers and is organized by Absolute Legends Sports Pvt. Ltd. The 10-day tournament was held at the Oman Cricket Academy Ground, Muscat from 20 January 2022, with the final on 29 January. It was contested by three teams, representing India, rest of Asia and the rest of the world. Former Indian cricketer, Ravi Shastri is the Commissioner of the series. Squads Initially, Virender Sehwag was named captain of India |
Thomas Loibl as Friedrich Wilhelm Kritzinger Frederic Linkemann as Dr. Rudolf Lange Rafael Stachowiak as Georg Leibbrandt Simon Schwarz as Martin Luther Peter Jordan as Dr. Alfred Meyer Jakob Diehl as Heinrich Müller, Chief of RSHA Department IV (the Gestapo) Matthias Bundschuh as Erich Neumann Maximilian Brückner as Dr. Eberhard Schöngarth Godehard Giese as Wilhelm Stuckart, for the Reich Ministry for the Interior Lilli Fichtner as Ingeburg Werlemann Frederik Schmid See also Heinz Schirk (director): The Wannsee Conference, a 1984 German TV film Conspiracy – a 2001 English language film Fatherland – an alternate history novel dealing in large part with the Wannsee Conference - 1992 List of Holocaust films References External links Die Wannseekonferenz Press release in the Press portal of the ZDF Die Wannseekonferenz (2022, en The Wannsee Conference) Matti | of Justice Markus Schleinzer as Otto Hoffmann Fabian Busch as Dr. Gerhard Klopfer Thomas Loibl as Friedrich Wilhelm Kritzinger Frederic Linkemann as Dr. Rudolf Lange Rafael Stachowiak as Georg Leibbrandt Simon Schwarz as Martin Luther Peter Jordan as Dr. Alfred Meyer Jakob Diehl as Heinrich Müller, Chief of RSHA Department IV (the Gestapo) Matthias Bundschuh as Erich Neumann Maximilian Brückner as Dr. Eberhard Schöngarth Godehard Giese as Wilhelm Stuckart, for the Reich Ministry for the Interior Lilli Fichtner as Ingeburg Werlemann Frederik Schmid See also Heinz Schirk (director): The Wannsee Conference, a 1984 German TV film Conspiracy – a 2001 English language film Fatherland – an alternate history novel dealing in large part with the Wannsee Conference - 1992 List of Holocaust films References External links Die Wannseekonferenz Press release in the Press portal of the ZDF Die Wannseekonferenz (2022, en The |
whose innovative work in the publishing industry promotes and promulgates LGBTQ literature." Recipients References Awards established in 2016 | lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community whose innovative work in the publishing industry promotes and promulgates LGBTQ literature." Recipients References Awards established in |
of molluscs in the subfamily Callocardiinae of he family Veneridae. Species Lamelliconcha alternata (Broderip, 1835) Lamelliconcha callicomata (Dall, 1902) Lamelliconcha circinata (Born, 1778) Lamelliconcha concinna (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835) Lamelliconcha paytensis (d'Orbigny, 1845) Lamelliconcha tortuosa (Broderip, 1835) Lamelliconcha unicolor (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835) Lamelliconcha vinacea Olsson, 1961 Synonyms Lamelliconcha concinnus (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835): synonym of Lamelliconcha concinns (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835) | & A. M. Strong, 1948) † Lamelliconcha kawadai Aoki, 1954: synonym of † Pliocardia kawadai (Aoki, 1954) (original combination) References Huber, M. (2010). Compendium of bivalves. A full-color guide to 3,300 of the world's marine bivalves. A |
up in Seattle, Washington and moved to Washington D.C. to work for his hometown Representative Jim McDermott. He later worked for Senator Ron Wyden as his Chief Trade Advisor and led negotiations for the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). White worked on Capitol Hill for more than 20 years prior to joining USTR. Biden administration On April 16, 2021, the Biden administration announced an intent to nominate White as a deputy trade representative | worked on Capitol Hill for more than 20 years prior to joining USTR. Biden administration On April 16, 2021, the Biden administration announced an intent to nominate White as a deputy trade representative in the Office of the United States Trade Representative |
situated at Harinakunda Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population | of 27,547. There are 29 villages and 9 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions of Harinakunda Upazila Unions of Jhenaidah District |
deeper waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Revista de la Sociedad Malacologica "Carlos de la Torre". 8(2): 53–66, pls | (Dall, 1902) References Rehder H.A. & Abbott R.T. (1951). Some new and interesting mollusks from the deeper waters of the Gulf of |
Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 30,244. There are 18 villages and 8 | is a union parishad situated at Harinakunda Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area |
Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 13,000. There are 7 villages and 5 mouzas in the union. References External links | 13,000. There are 7 villages and 5 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions of Harinakunda Upazila Unions of |
in the past were not heard beyond Nagaland. However, this time the world has taken notice of the 'mourning of the Nagas. After the seven day mourning for the victims, he emphasised that while the mourning period was over, it was just the beginning for the fight for justice. He called the Nagas to stand united in this endeavour. FNR along with 26 other organisations demanded the immediate withdrawal and repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act in Nagaland, and sought justice for the victims of the 2021 Nagaland killings. Awards In March 2011, Aier was selected for the Baptist World Alliance Denton and Janice Lotz Human Rights Award 2010. It was in recognition for his work for reconciliation among various Naga groups. He had brought together the two factions (I-M and K) of National Socialist Council of Nagaland, Federal Government of Nagaland, and Naga National Council to sign the Covenant of Reconciliation in June 2009 at Chiang Mai, Thailand. The award was given to him in June 2011 at Kuala Lampur, Malaysia. In 2018, he delivered the annual Chalie Kevichüsa Memorial Lecture on "Beyond Tribal Seduction – A Personal Reflection." On 30 November 2019, Aier received the A. Kevichüsa Citizenship Award. In his acceptance speech, he reminded everyone that there is no future without forgiveness; the Naga identity needs transformation through forgiveness, healing, and peace. He elaborated,We must immediately shun the fallacy that seeking | the Convenor of the Forum for Naga Reconciliation since its formation in 2008. Aier was one of the signatories of the solidarity statement, Myanmar We Care-–We Are With You, in resistance to the February 2021 military coup in Myanmar. As the Convenor of the Forum for Naga Reconciliation (FNR), he said that victims of the 2021 Nagaland killings represent the Naga community. He pointed out that military excesses in the past were not heard beyond Nagaland. However, this time the world has taken notice of the 'mourning of the Nagas. After the seven day mourning for the victims, he emphasised that while the mourning period was over, it was just the beginning for the fight for justice. He called the Nagas to stand united in this endeavour. FNR along with 26 other organisations demanded the immediate withdrawal and repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act in Nagaland, and sought justice for the victims of the 2021 Nagaland killings. Awards In March 2011, Aier was selected for the Baptist World Alliance Denton and Janice Lotz Human Rights Award 2010. It was in recognition for his work for reconciliation among various Naga groups. He had brought together the two factions (I-M and K) of National Socialist Council of Nagaland, Federal Government of Nagaland, and Naga National Council to sign the Covenant of Reconciliation in June 2009 at Chiang Mai, Thailand. The award was given to him in |
Première ligue de soccer du Québec had planned to hold a Final Four end-of-season tournament for their women's divisions, from August 14 to 16, pitting the top two sides from each league in an inter-provincial playoff. Also, the league had planned to introduce a Reserve Division for the women for the first time. However, due to restrictions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, the league cancelled the 2020 season and delayed the start of the 2021 season. Due to the delayed start caused by the pandemic, some clubs were unable to field team's in the main division. Consequently, the league also formed a short-season summer division, with teams opting to either play in the full-season Premier division, the short-season Champion, and/or the Reserve division. On January 25, 2022, League1 Ontario announced a major restructuring of the men's and women's competitions to commence in 2024. The league will be split into three tiers (Premier, Championship, and League2) with promotion and relegation between the tiers. Future expansion clubs will enter at the League2 level and will have to win to earn promotion to the Championship and then Premier divisions. Also in 2024 will be the return of the L1 Cup, a league cup knockout tournament which will feature teams from all three tiers in the L1O system. Management In September 2019, former Canadian national team player Carmelina Moscato was announced as Commissioner of the Women's division (prior to this both the male and female divisions were led by Dino Rossi), however she departed in December 2020 to become the Director of Women's Football for the Bahamas Football Association. In March 2021, Chelsea Spencer and Julie Maheu were announced as Director and Operations Manager, respectively, for the league. Competition format The League1 Ontario regular season runs from May through September using a single table format, with each team playing one match against all other teams. The top four teams compete in the league playoffs at the end of the season. Beginning in 2019, the Ron Smale Cup was created by the supporters group of North Mississauga SC to be given to the regular season champions. L1 Cup The L1 Cup is a | were the inaugural league champions. while North Mississauga won the first League Cup title. For the 2016 season, the division grew to nine teams with the addition of four teams, while two clubs departed. The league grew to 11 teams in 2017, with three new additions and one departure. In 2018, the league grew to 13 teams and the league introduced a playoff format for the first time to declare the league champion. For the 2019 season, the league eliminated the League Cup competition. Beginning in the 2020 season, League1 Ontario and the Première ligue de soccer du Québec had planned to hold a Final Four end-of-season tournament for their women's divisions, from August 14 to 16, pitting the top two sides from each league in an inter-provincial playoff. Also, the league had planned to introduce a Reserve Division for the women for the first time. However, due to restrictions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, the league cancelled the 2020 season and delayed the start of the 2021 season. Due to the delayed start caused by the pandemic, some clubs were unable to field team's in the main division. Consequently, the league also formed a short-season summer division, with teams opting to either play in the full-season Premier division, the short-season Champion, and/or the Reserve division. On January 25, 2022, League1 Ontario announced a major restructuring of the men's and women's competitions to commence in 2024. The league will be split into three tiers (Premier, Championship, and League2) with promotion and relegation between the tiers. Future expansion clubs will enter at the League2 level and will have to win to earn promotion to the Championship and then Premier divisions. Also in 2024 will be the return of the L1 Cup, a league cup knockout tournament which will feature teams from all three tiers in the L1O system. Management In September 2019, former Canadian national team player Carmelina Moscato was announced as Commissioner of the Women's division (prior to this both the male and female divisions were led by Dino Rossi), however she departed in December 2020 to become |
an equally prominent figure in Chattanooga society, known for hosting elaborate home parties as well as serving on the board of several church and charity events. Business career In September 1866, Kelly decided to return to New York via Chattanooga, Tennessee so that he could collect a debt. Failing to collect this debt, Kelly decided to stay in the city and wait to be repaid; and while he waited, Kelly decided to rent a storefront for one month from a man named Daniel Kaylor. He founded J. W. Kelly & Co, and began to build Deep Spring Distillery; which was fully functional by 1870. Kelly obtained several distribution partnerships with multiple tobacco, cigar, and liquor brands. He also began to distill his own whiskey. The J. W. Kelly & Co umbrella consisted of two important partnerships in the beginning. The first partnership began almost immediately after Kelly opened up his storefront, Kelly & Webb. Kelly partnered with a man named John G. Webb to expand beyond liquor. Kelly & Webb were importers and wholesalers of foreign fruits, French confectionary, nuts, spices, jellies, and imported Cuban, German, and domestic cigars. Their store was originally located at 63-65 Ninth Street (or as stated in their advertisements “the corner of 9th and Railroad Street”). The store sustained minor damage during the fire that burned down the Crutchfield House (now the Read House) in 1867. In December, 1872, Kelly and Webb purchased restaurant space beneath the new Read House. This became Webb's main business for almost two years, by March 1874 he'd sold his primary interest. Kelly sold his second interest in October 1874. Around 1875, Kelly and Webb moved their store to 253 Market Street, where it remained even after the partnership dissolved in 1876. After parting with Webb, Kelly further expanded his own name as an importer and dealer in wines, liquors, ales, champagne, and cigars, both foreign and domestic. Some of his imports included Hennessey, Guinness, and Claret. He also brought in wines from California. The second partnership was between J. W. Kelly and George W. Davenport. This partnership began towards the end of 1876 and expanded beyond groceries, whiskey and tobacco. They bought and sold real estate; which included buying several saloons and bars and reselling the leases to others to run them for the company. They also were prominent landlords for stores and private homes, as well as retail spaces that were utilized for meeting spaces for various clubs in Chattanooga, such as the Irish-American League – of which Kelly was a founding board member. Their new location at 13-15 West Ninth Street allowed for space above and below for leasing. During their tenure, Kelly and Davenport were the sole distributors in the area for several brands of spirits, wines, and tobacco and they ran a successful whiskey, tobacco and real estate empire until 1890, when Davenport retired from the firm. “Mr. Kelly’s splendid business qualifications are coupled with a most genial bon homme which makes him a general favorite, and his legion of friends rejoice over his splendid success and will be delighted to learn that he will continue the business.”[1] Davenport went on to open a dry goods wholesale house with his brother in August 1890. Kelly continued his tobacco and whiskey imports, bringing in California Wines, Jefferson Cigars, Budweiser, Schlitz, and Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, among so many other imported spirits and tobacco to the Chattanooga area. He was the sole agent in the area for several cigarette brands like Nancy Bell and The Wedding Blossom Cigar. Though his own brands of whiskey were included in his sales, by all accounts Kelly’s own whiskey products took off after Davenport’s exit. He bottled about twelve labels in all, including his best-known brand, Deep Spring. Some of the other labels included: Cedar Bluff Rye Whiskey, Golden Age Rye, O.P.S. Belmont Rye, Old Milford, Old AA Lincoln County Whiskey, Tennessee Corn Whiskey, Mountain City Corn Shuck, Old Tennessee Sugar Corn, Pine Split Gin, Silver Spring Corn Malt Whisky, Red Banks Hand Made Sour Mash Whiskey, and Melrose Rye. He also further expanded his real estate empire; which included ownership of several saloons, grocery stores, and other commercial property. Kelly owned the bar, the billiards, the cigar shop, and one restaurant within the Read House; which had been across the street from his main establishments since it opened in 1872. In 1900, Kelly brought in a new vice president, Carl White. It was also at this time that the name of the company evolved from J. W. Kelly to J. W. Kelly & Co. White served as vice president until J. W. Kelly appointed him president of the company around 1906. Kelly remained CEO until his death in 1907. Death Illness plagued Kelly throughout his life. He often took trips to regain his health to places like Hot Springs, Arkansas. In early 1906, Kelly became seriously ill. It is believed that this is when Carl White became president of J. W. Kelly & Co. By April, he was much better and doctors pronounced him out of danger. However, by mid-August of the same year, Kelly again was seriously ill; which lasted into the fall. In late February 1907, he was again too ill to leave his home. On the morning of March 10, 1907, Kelly felt well enough to join his wife in entertaining some visiting relatives at their home; which was located at 506 Vine Street, Chattanooga. After luncheon at noon, he decided to take a nap in his upstairs bedroom. At about 2:30, Mrs. Kelly went in to check on him and found him unresponsive. “Dr. Berlin has hastily called and on investigation discovered that death had been caused by blood clot on the brain, the end having probably come in a twinkling, perhaps an hour before the body was found.” On his interment record, it lists “Embolism” as his cause of death. His sole heiress was his wife. The Kelly’s had no children. Elizabeth J. Kelly followed him in death on November 7, 1907; passing after a long illness. Her official cause of death is listed as “emphysema.” The Kelly’s are interred together in Forest Hills Cemetery, Section K, Lot 74. Her will listed many beneficiaries, including some charities, and named her niece Louise Evelyn Maud Longmire as executrix. After Mrs. Kelly's passing, several relatives of J. W. Kelly stepped | tobacco. They bought and sold real estate; which included buying several saloons and bars and reselling the leases to others to run them for the company. They also were prominent landlords for stores and private homes, as well as retail spaces that were utilized for meeting spaces for various clubs in Chattanooga, such as the Irish-American League – of which Kelly was a founding board member. Their new location at 13-15 West Ninth Street allowed for space above and below for leasing. During their tenure, Kelly and Davenport were the sole distributors in the area for several brands of spirits, wines, and tobacco and they ran a successful whiskey, tobacco and real estate empire until 1890, when Davenport retired from the firm. “Mr. Kelly’s splendid business qualifications are coupled with a most genial bon homme which makes him a general favorite, and his legion of friends rejoice over his splendid success and will be delighted to learn that he will continue the business.”[1] Davenport went on to open a dry goods wholesale house with his brother in August 1890. Kelly continued his tobacco and whiskey imports, bringing in California Wines, Jefferson Cigars, Budweiser, Schlitz, and Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, among so many other imported spirits and tobacco to the Chattanooga area. He was the sole agent in the area for several cigarette brands like Nancy Bell and The Wedding Blossom Cigar. Though his own brands of whiskey were included in his sales, by all accounts Kelly’s own whiskey products took off after Davenport’s exit. He bottled about twelve labels in all, including his best-known brand, Deep Spring. Some of the other labels included: Cedar Bluff Rye Whiskey, Golden Age Rye, O.P.S. Belmont Rye, Old Milford, Old AA Lincoln County Whiskey, Tennessee Corn Whiskey, Mountain City Corn Shuck, Old Tennessee Sugar Corn, Pine Split Gin, Silver Spring Corn Malt Whisky, Red Banks Hand Made Sour Mash Whiskey, and Melrose Rye. He also further expanded his real estate empire; which included ownership of several saloons, grocery stores, and other commercial property. Kelly owned the bar, the billiards, the cigar shop, and one restaurant within the Read House; which had been across the street from his main establishments since it opened in 1872. In 1900, Kelly brought in a new vice president, Carl White. It was also at this time that the name of the company evolved from J. W. Kelly to J. W. Kelly & Co. White served as vice president until J. W. Kelly appointed him president of the company around 1906. Kelly remained CEO until his death in 1907. Death Illness plagued Kelly throughout his life. He often took trips to regain his health to places like Hot Springs, Arkansas. In early 1906, Kelly became seriously ill. It is believed that this is when Carl White became president of J. W. Kelly & Co. By April, he was much better and doctors pronounced him out of danger. However, by mid-August of the same year, Kelly again was seriously ill; which lasted into the fall. In late February 1907, he was again too ill to leave his home. On the morning of March 10, 1907, Kelly felt well enough to join his wife in entertaining some visiting relatives at their home; which was located at 506 Vine Street, Chattanooga. After luncheon at noon, he decided to take a nap in his upstairs bedroom. At about 2:30, Mrs. Kelly went in to check on him and found him unresponsive. “Dr. Berlin has hastily called and on investigation discovered that death had been caused by blood clot on the brain, the end having probably come in a twinkling, perhaps an hour before the body was found.” On his interment record, it lists “Embolism” as his cause of death. His sole heiress was his wife. The Kelly’s had no children. Elizabeth J. Kelly followed him in death on November 7, 1907; passing after a long illness. Her official cause of death is listed as “emphysema.” The Kelly’s are interred together in Forest Hills Cemetery, Section K, Lot 74. Her will listed many beneficiaries, including some charities, and named her niece Louise Evelyn Maud Longmire as executrix. After Mrs. Kelly's passing, several relatives of J. W. Kelly stepped forward to claim a share of the estate, which was worth an estimated $100,000 ($2.97 million in 2022) in real estate alone. These relatives were from Canada, England, Ireland, New Zealand, and India and numbered 13 in all. Some were specifically named in Mrs. Kelly's will (updated in May 1907), others were not. In Mrs. Kelly's will there are thirty-one beneficiaries listed, including some charities, and the bequests totaled almost $362,000 ($10.7 million in 2022) All claims on the Estates of J. W. and Elizabeth J. Kelly were settled late in 1908. J. W. Kelly & Co. After both Mr. and Mrs. Kelly’s deaths, Carl White installed a new team of executives at J. W. Kelly & Co that included: P.L. Mitchell (General Manager), Cecil C. DeBardelaben (Sales), and Thomas P. Hagan (Secretary and Treasurer). Their focus was on marketing the alcoholic beverages not only distilled at Deep Spring Distillery, but also on importing spirits from all around the United States and from Europe. None of the other Kelly assets were managed by the company, so this made it much easier for the company to re-brand and refocus their efforts, despite meeting resistance with many temperance societies. Tennessee was the first state to prohibit and restrict the sale of alcohol. In 1877, a law was enacted forbidding the sale of alcohol within four miles of chartered rural schools. This was amended in 1887 to prohibit the sale of liquor within four miles of any country school; which virtually banned liquor trade in rural Tennessee. By 1903, two more acts were passed that extended the four-mile law to populations of all towns with populations up to 5,000 people. By the end of 1907, the Pendleton Act extended the original Four-Mile Law to the larger cities. Chattanooga was one of four major cities that remained wet. On January 13, 1909, the Tennessee legislature passed the Holladay Bill; which forbid the sale of liquor within four miles of any school in the state. The second law passed that day prohibited the manufacture of intoxicating beverages. The company closed its Deep Spring Distillery in July 1909, but reopened it in October to fill out-of-state |
a union parishad situated at Harinakunda Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area | at Harinakunda Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population |
school No. 82 in Lviv. From 2000 to 2005, he studied at the Lviv Polytechnic National University, Institute of Economics and Management, specialty “International Economics”. In 2004, he entered the University of Lviv, Institute of Postgraduate Education, specialty “Jurisprudence”. He graduated from the university in 2008. From 2011 to 2014, he studied at the National Academy for Public Administration, specialty “Public administration”. From 2008 to 2010, he was Deputy Head of the department, Head of | University, Institute of Economics and Management, specialty “International Economics”. In 2004, he entered the University of Lviv, Institute of Postgraduate Education, specialty “Jurisprudence”. He graduated from the university in 2008. From 2011 to 2014, he studied at the National Academy for Public Administration, specialty “Public administration”. From 2008 to 2010, he was Deputy Head of the department, Head of the Export Development Division of the Foreign Economic Policy Department of the Ministry for Development of Economy and Trade. Since 2013 — Deputy Director of LLC "Fiakr-Lviv". Since |
union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 35,400. There are 21 villages and | of 2001 had a population of 35,400. There are 21 villages and 10 mouzas in the union. References External links |
However, Karamanos later stated that, after reflecting on the decision for several weeks, she would take the role and reform it, and she would focus on transgender issues and child migration. The decision to take the role, and preserve the existence of the role of first lady, received both pushback and support from leaders of various feminist groups in Chile. Personal life Karamanos was born to schoolteacher Georgios Karamanos, who was also a Greek community leader in Santiago, Chile, during the 1980s. Her grandparents were born in | of Chile, who is set to be inaugurated on 11 March 2022, at which time she will become first lady and Director of the Sociocultural Area of the Presidency. Politics Karamanos leads the Feminist Front of her political party, Social Convergence. Initially, both she and Boric opposed the existence of the First Lady role, with Karamanos stating "I think it is a role we need to rethink because we live in different times and a lot has changed. We need to rethink the power and the relationships that emerge from it." However, Karamanos later stated that, after reflecting on the decision for several weeks, she would take the role and reform it, and |
situated at Harinakunda Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a | 25,818. There are 21 villages and 6 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions of |
Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 19,720. There are 18 villages and 18 mouzas in the union. | District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 19,720. There are 18 |
1802. Career Ranger first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1796. 1st slave trading voyage (1796–1797): Captain Charles Anderson sailed from London on 2 October 1810, bound for the Windward Coast. Ranger acquired her slaves between Rio Nuñez and the Assini River. On her way from Africa she stopped at Prince's Island and arrived at Barabdos on 30 June 1797 with 162 slaves. She sailed from Barbados on 20 July and arrived back at London on 19 September. 2nd slave trading voyage (1797–1799): Captain Richard Vaughn sailed from London on 8 November 1797, bound for the Gold Coast. Ranger arrived at Demerara on 15 January 1799 with 160 | Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1796. 1st slave trading voyage (1796–1797): Captain Charles Anderson sailed from London on 2 October 1810, bound for the Windward Coast. Ranger acquired her slaves between Rio Nuñez and the Assini River. On her way from Africa she stopped at Prince's Island and arrived at Barabdos on 30 June 1797 with 162 slaves. She sailed from Barbados on 20 July and arrived back at London on 19 September. 2nd slave trading voyage (1797–1799): Captain Richard Vaughn sailed from London on 8 November 1797, bound for the Gold Coast. Ranger arrived at Demerara on 15 January 1799 with 160 slaves. She arrived back at London on 3 July 1799. 3rd slave trading voyage (1799–1801): Captain Vaughn sailed from |
an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 24,483. There are 11 villages and 6 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of | a population of 24,483. There are 11 villages and 6 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions of Kaliganj Upazila, Jhenaidah Unions |
Nicols yields a rare mixture of fun and abstract interest and Léandre has also been a very important associate." Writing for All About Jazz, Derek Taylor remarked: "Attaching a play-by-play to all the delirious, irreverent action and reaction ends up a pointless pursuit within mere minutes. A marker for various partnerships that have since made good on their promises tenfold, this music still packs an enjoyable jolt on par with its initial release." In an article for Paris Transatlantic Magazine, Dan Warburton wrote: "These days, now that the molten lava of free improv has cooled to form a number | Derek Taylor remarked: "Attaching a play-by-play to all the delirious, irreverent action and reaction ends up a pointless pursuit within mere minutes. A marker for various partnerships that have since made good on their promises tenfold, this music still packs an enjoyable jolt on par with its initial release." In an article for Paris Transatlantic Magazine, Dan Warburton wrote: "These days, now that the molten lava of free improv has cooled to form a number of well-charted islands, it's even more refreshing to rediscover a music that moves effortlessly between high octane free, Darmstadt pointillism, Cathy Berberian theatrics and even stride and boogie woogie. It's also a timely reminder of how awesome these performers were." Kurt Gottschalk, writing for Signal to Noise, commented: "Two decades later, it's easy to see this album as a statement of what was then a new form of creative improvising." Track listing "First |
a union parishad situated at Kaliganj Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 17,422. | Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 17,422. |
District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 16,494. There are 17 villages | are 17 villages and 14 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions |
18,662. There are 22 villages and 22 mouzas in the union. References External links Unions of Khulna Division Unions of | is a union parishad situated at Kaliganj Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. |
a union parishad situated at Kaliganj Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of | union parishad situated at Kaliganj Upazila, in Jhenaidah District, Khulna Division of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of |
of Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 14,662. There are 14 villages | Bangladesh. The union has an area of and as of 2001 had a population of 14,662. There are 14 villages and |
B. Sowerby II, 1851) Hysteroconcha dione (Linnaeus, 1758) Hysteroconcha lupanaria (Lesson, 1831) Hysteroconcha multispinosa (G. B. Sowerby II, 1851) Hysteroconcha rosea (Broderip & G. B. Sowerby I, 1829) Synonyms Hysteroconcha alternata (Broderip, 1835): synonym of Lamelliconcha alternata (Broderip, 1835) Hysteroconcha callicomata (Dall, 1902): synonym of Lamelliconcha callicomata (Dall, 1902) Hysteroconcha circinata (Born, 1778): synonym of Lamelliconcha circinata (Born, 1778) Hysteroconcha concinna (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835): synonym of Lamelliconcha concinna (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835) Hysteroconcha dautzenbergi Prashad, 1932: synonym of Lioconcha philippinarum (Hanley, 1844) Hysteroconcha hesperia (Berry, | Hysteroconcha rosea (Broderip & G. B. Sowerby I, 1829) Synonyms Hysteroconcha alternata (Broderip, 1835): synonym of Lamelliconcha alternata (Broderip, 1835) Hysteroconcha callicomata (Dall, 1902): synonym of Lamelliconcha callicomata (Dall, 1902) Hysteroconcha circinata (Born, 1778): synonym of Lamelliconcha circinata (Born, 1778) Hysteroconcha concinna (G. B. Sowerby I, 1835): synonym of Lamelliconcha concinna (G. B. Sowerby |
RIN's parents both are Croatian. His mother originally comes from Herzegovina and his father from Bosnia. In the 1970s, his father came to Germany as a migrant worker. For this reason, RIN only has a Croatian citizenship instead of a German one. He grew up in Bietigheim-Bissingen, which is located near Stuttgart in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. He graduated from the Realschule there. RIN's parents have a restaurant in Ludwigsburg, which is a city next to Bietigheim-Bissingen. Career In 2012, RIN started to make music with the rapper Caz. In the summer of 2015, he first published two songs called "Ljubav/Beichtstuhl" (engl. Love/ Confessional), which caught the attention of the producer The Breed from the label Alles oder Nix (engl. Everything or nothing). Together they produced an extended play (EP), however the EP was never made public because of different visions they had regarding the EP. Shortly after that, RIN met Max, who worked for the Berliner Independent-Label ‘Live from Earth’. The label supported RIN since then. Through | published two songs called "Ljubav/Beichtstuhl" (engl. Love/ Confessional), which caught the attention of the producer The Breed from the label Alles oder Nix (engl. Everything or nothing). Together they produced an extended play (EP), however the EP was never made public because of different visions they had regarding the EP. Shortly after that, RIN met Max, who worked for the Berliner Independent-Label ‘Live from Earth’. The label supported RIN since then. Through the label, RIN also met the Austrian rapper Yung Hurn, with whom he recorded the extended play Mafia der Liebe (engl. Mafia of love), but the EP was not released. As the album's lead single, Yung Hurn released the song "Bianco" together with RIN on 12 May 2016. The song became the summer hit of 2016 and also was voted single of the year in the annual charts of Juice magazine. In the beginning of 2017, RIN's songs were in the official German charts for the first time. Since 2017, RIN has been signed by the Label Division Recordings, which had been founded by the selfmade-record-CEO Elvir Omerbegovic and the Factory-directors Markus Weicker and Michael Weicker. On the 5th of August, the official list of songs of his debut album, EROS, were published. The album, with its 15 songs, was released on the first of September 2017. Three months later, RIN won the 1 Live Krone (the biggest award in the German radio business) with his |
of the business resigned after the scandal, but returned to the position in 2017. He resigned again in 2020 after it was found that he had allowed the company to supply "anti-social groups" (a euphemism for the Yakuza, or Japanese mafia) with alcohol bearing their logos between 2000 and 2012. In the 1990s the company invested more that US$120 million to develop the Okage Yokocho district of period stores which became a popular destination, driving the number of annual visitors from 200,000 to 3.4 million. References Food and drink in Japan Henokiens companies Japanese companies established | and 2012. In the 1990s the company invested more that US$120 million to develop the Okage Yokocho district of period stores which became a popular destination, driving the number of annual visitors from 200,000 to 3.4 million. References Food and drink in Japan Henokiens companies Japanese companies established in 1707 |
= Balram Jakhar | leader8 = | committees1 = | committees2 = | joint_committees = | voting_system1 = first-past-the-post | voting_system2 = | last_election1 = 1977 | next_election1 = 1980 | redistricting = | session_room = | session_res = | session_alt = | meeting_place = | members = 117 | structure1 = | structure1_res = | political_groups1 = Government (98) SAD+ (83) SAD (58) JP (25) Confidence and supply (15) CPIM (8) CPI (7)Opposition (19) INC (17) IND (2) }} The 1977 Punjab Legislative Assembly election''' was the seventh Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) election of the state. Shiromani Akali Dal and Janata Party coalition emerged as the victorious with 83 seats in the 117-seat legislature in the election. The Indian National Congress became the official opposition, holding 17 seats. On 17 February 1980, Assembly dissolved prematurely and president rule was imposed. History After withdrawal of National Emergency in India, fresh election held in Punjab along with other States. Shiromani Akali | black | name = Seventh Punjab Legislative Assembly | native_name = | native_name_lang = | transcription_name = | legislature = Punjab Legislative Assembly | coa_pic = | coa_res = 250px | coa_alt = | house_type = Unicameral | term_length = 1977-1980 | body = | houses = | foundation = 30 June 1977 | disbanded = 17 February 1980 | preceded_by = Sixth Punjab Legislative Assembly | succeeded_by = Eighth Punjab Legislative Assembly | leader1_type = Speaker | leader1 = Ravi Inder Singh | party1 = | leader2 = | leader3_type = Deputy Speaker | leader3 = Panna Lal Nayyar | leader4 = | leader5_type = Leader of House(Chief Minister) | leader5 =Parkash Singh Badal | leader6 = | leader7_type = Leader of the Opposition | leader7 = Balram Jakhar | leader8 = | committees1 = | committees2 = | joint_committees = | voting_system1 = first-past-the-post | voting_system2 = | last_election1 = 1977 | next_election1 = 1980 | redistricting = | session_room = | |
21 September 2019, Lopez-Vargas was booked to face the undefeated Cristian Baez. Lopez-Vargas won the fight by a fifth-round technical knockout. Lopez-Vargas next faced Andy Vences on 7 July 2020, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Despite coming into the fight as an underdog, he won the fight by an upset split decision. The judges scored the fight 96–94 in his favor, while the third judge awarded the same scorecard to Vences. In his second fight of 2021, Lopez-Vargas faced the undefeated Gabriel Flores Jr on 10 September 2021, and once again entered the fight in the role of an underdog. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with two judges scoring the fight 100–90 for Lopez-Vargas, while the third judge scored it 98–92 for him. Following these | Following these two upset victories, Lopez-Vargas was booked to face the undefeated Isaac Lowe in an IBF featherweight title eliminator bout. The fight took place at the York Hall in Bethnal Green on 3 December 2021, and was broadcast by ESPN+ and IFL TV. Lopez-Vargas won the fight by a seventh-round technical knockout. Lowe was floored with a body strike in the final minute of the seventh round, leaving him unable to beat the ten count. Lopez-Vargas knocked his opponent down twice prior to the stoppage, once in the first and once in the second round. Twenty days later, on 23 December 2021, Lopez-Vargas re-signed with Top Rank. Professional boxing record References Living people 1993 births Mexican male boxers Sportspeople from Mexicali Featherweight boxers |
the names and finally . His courtesy name was , and he was referred to by relatives as , the family's hereditary name. Biography Shimazaki Masaki was born under the name Shigehiro to , hereditary chief of the Magome relay station in the Kiso Valley. After an introduction by of Nakatsugawa, Masaki became an exceptionally dedicated disciple of Hirata Atsutane's nativist theology under the tutelage of , a student of the samurai-scholar (1819-1891) of Naegi Domain, the first Hirata disciple in the region. Alongside the other Hirata disciples of Mino and Naegi, Masaki was involved in the promotion of traditional Shinto burial practices in opposition to the officially mandated Buddhist alternative. During this time he also became acquainted with and Tsunoda Tadayuki. In 1864, after having assumed leadership of the station from his father, the Tengutō passed through Magome. Though he wanted to travel to Kyoto to assist the other Hirata disciples in their agitation there, he stayed in Magome due to a sense of responsibility to his family and the people of the village. He remained in Magome throughout the Boshin War, and on more than one occasion arranged lodging for the revolutionary Imperial Army. In 1874, having retired and passed financial authority to his eldest son, he travelled to Tokyo and secured employment within the Historiography Division (考証課) of the Department of Religion (教部省), the temporary successor to the older Department of Divinities. However, he soon left disillusioned with his coworkers flippant attitude toward and lack of dedication to Shinto. That same year, he inscribed a poem on a folding hand fan in which he expressed his fear that Japan's native way of life would be either forgotten or discarded by a population enamored of things Western. At the time of a public cavalcade by the Emperor Meiji, Masaki threw the fan into what he believed to be the carriage of the emperor's outriders. He was arrested immediately charged with the crime of impiety, but was not penalized beyond a minor | the revolutionary Imperial Army. In 1874, having retired and passed financial authority to his eldest son, he travelled to Tokyo and secured employment within the Historiography Division (考証課) of the Department of Religion (教部省), the temporary successor to the older Department of Divinities. However, he soon left disillusioned with his coworkers flippant attitude toward and lack of dedication to Shinto. That same year, he inscribed a poem on a folding hand fan in which he expressed his fear that Japan's native way of life would be either forgotten or discarded by a population enamored of things Western. At the time of a public cavalcade by the Emperor Meiji, Masaki threw the fan into what he believed to be the carriage of the emperor's outriders. He was arrested immediately charged with the crime of impiety, but was not penalized beyond a minor fine due to the court's assessment of the motivations for his act. He later became aware that the fan had in fact landed in the carriage of the emperor himself. In 1875, as part of the government's expulsion of Hirata influence, Masaki was dispatched by the Department of Religion to the remote Minashi Shrine to serve as a resident priest. He remained at Minashi for four years. During that time, he became known to locals for bursting into tears while conducting lectures on legendary national history. Masaki returned home in 1880. Not long after, during a personal inspection of the Hokuriku region by the Emperor, he was reprimanded for attempting to present a petition to the Emperor's entourage regarding what he saw as the |
Kumar under the banner of Revathy Kalamandirr. The film stars Tovino Thomas and Keerthy Suresh in lead roles. Cast Tovino Thomas Keerthy Suresh Anu Mohan Sreelakshmi Nandu Baiju Santhosh Rony David Kottayam Ramesh Maya Viswanath Production Development In January 2021 the actor Mohanlal announced the film | upcoming Indian Malayalam-language legal drama film directed by Vishnu Raghav and produced by G. Suresh Kumar under the banner of Revathy Kalamandirr. The film stars Tovino Thomas and Keerthy Suresh in lead roles. Cast Tovino Thomas Keerthy Suresh Anu Mohan Sreelakshmi Nandu Baiju Santhosh Rony |
included in the Ruscaceae. It is found in northeastern Africa and the western Arabian Peninsula. Description It is a tree that reaches a size of 2-8 m in height, with a forked trunk, produces a red resin. The leaves form dense rosettes at the ends of the branches, these are linear with a broad base, 40-60 x up to 3 cm, gradually tapering to the tip that is sharp, thick and rigid, with smooth margins, flat to concave in the top. The inflorescence is panicle-shaped, 0.5 m long, highly branched, glabrous or pubescent, with tiny, ovate-lanceolate bracts . Whitish tepals, | is sharp, thick and rigid, with smooth margins, flat to concave in the top. The inflorescence is panicle-shaped, 0.5 m long, highly branched, glabrous or pubescent, with tiny, ovate-lanceolate bracts . Whitish tepals, 4-6 mm long, linear. Stamens somewhat shorter than tepals; flattened filaments. The fruit in the form of berries 10-12 mm in diameter. Distribution It is found at an altitude of 1000-1800 m in Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan and Saudi Arabia. Taxonomy Dracaena ombet was described by Heuglin ex Kotschy & |
be nominated by the Speaker of Lok Sabha or the Chairman of Rajya Sabha respectively. The term of office of these committees does not exceed one year. These committees are serviced either by Lok Sabha secretariat or the Rajya Sabha secretariat, depending on who has appointed the chairman of that committee. Following are the members of the Parliamentary Standing Committee | decision making of the Ministry of External Affairs. It is one of the 24 DRSCs that have been mandated with the task of ministry specific oversight. As of 2022, The committee currently is headed by MP P. P. Chaudhary. Current Composition Each of the committees have 31 members – 21 from Lok Sabha and 10 from Rajya Sabha. These members are to be nominated by the Speaker of Lok Sabha or the Chairman of Rajya Sabha respectively. The term of office of these committees does not exceed one year. These committees are serviced either by Lok Sabha secretariat |
independent management. In 1908 was owned by Agwilines Inc, in 1954 became Ward-García Line. Consolidated Steamship Company Consolidated Steamship was founded by Charles W. Morse. On January 1, 1907 Charles W. Morse joined the Mallory Line, Porto Rico Line, the Ward Line, the Metropolitan Steamship Company and Eastern Steamship Company to form the Consolidated Steamship Lines. The financial crisis panic of 1907 put Consolidated Steamship Company into bankruptcy in 1908. Out of the bankruptcy the Consolidated Steamship Company was sold to the Atlantic, Gulf and West Indies SS Company (AGWI Inc.). The Metropolitan Steamship Company and Eastern Steamship Company that were part of Consolidated Steamship Company were not sold to Agwilines Inc. World War II During World War II Agwilines Inc. was active with charter shipping with the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. During wartime, the Agwilines Inc operated Victory ships and Liberty shipss. The ship was run by its crew and the US Navy supplied United States Navy Armed Guards to man the deck guns and radio. The most common armament mounted on these merchant ships were the MK II 20mm Oerlikon autocannon and the 3"/50, 4"/50, and 5"/38 deck guns. Ships Atlantic, Gulf & West Indies Steamship Inc ship: Satilla (1912), sank in 1917 by Uboat as SS Hans Kinck. Agwimoon (1920) Sank as Altair in 1943 : Agwihavre (1921) sank as Gulfpenn in 1942 Manata (1916) Sank as Trym in 1837 Ozama (1919) sank in 1928 Panuco (1917) sank in fire at dock in 1941 Choctaw (1917) sank as Syoka Maru in 1945 Agwipond period (1921) sank in 1930 as SS Cities Service Boston Agwibay (1921) sank as SS William F. Humphrey in 1942 Agwisea (1920) sank in 1933 Clyde Line Ships Clyde Line ships: Apache Mohawk (1908) Lenape (1912) Huron (1896) Comanche Arapahoe Cherokee (1925) sank by Uboat June 16, 1942 Chippewa (freight only) (1905) Philadelphia (1916) Clyde Santo Domingo Line ships Passenger and cargo from New Your City to Monte Cristi, Puerto Plata, Samana, Sanchez, La Romana, Macoris, Santo Domingo City Azua and Barahona. Clyde Santo Domingo Line ship: Algonquin (1926) Iroquois Mallory Line ships Mallory Line ships: Comal San Jacinto (1903) Concho (1903) Sabine Lampasas Alamo Medina (1914) Nueces (1887) West Cawthon manager (1919) City of Houston (1871) Barges: Chas. E. Goin, C. F. Deering, P. C. Golder, Samuel Walker, O. M. Hitchcock (1881) Annie M. Smull (1868)Sank in 1906 Porto Rico Line ships Porto Rico Line ships: Coamo (1925) (Sank 1942 by Uboat) Brazos (1889) Sunk by U-boat 1941 Carolina Sunk by U-boat 1918 San Juan (1900) San Lorenzo Porto Rico Ponce Borinquen (1930) (sank in 1970) San Jacinto Mariana (1915) sank in 1942 by Uboat Ward Line ship Passenger steamships of the Ward Line: (1869) sank in 1870 (1877) (1877) (1877) (1879) (1879) (1879) (1880) (1883) (1884) (1889) (1889) (1889) (1890) (1890) (1897) – Chartered from the Red D Line. SS Havana (1898) (1898) (1900) (1901) (1901) (1903) (1906) (1906) (1906) (1907) (1917) (1918) (1930) (1930) (1933) (1933) (1941) Clyde-Mallory Line ships Clyde-Mallory Line ships: Ship and year built Agwistar 1919 Alamo (1) 1883 Alamo (2) 1919 Ansonia 1919 Brazos (1) 1899 Brazos (2) 1907 Carondelet 1873 Carib 1882 sank in 1915 City of Dallas 1872 City of Galveston 1870, sank in 1876 City of San Antonio 1872 City of Waco 1873 Colorado (1) 1879 Colorado (2) 1920 Comal 1885 Concho 1891 Denver 1901 Edward S. Atwood (1911 tug) Glendaruel 1917 Guadalupe 1881 Henry R. Mallory 1916 Lake Ellithorpe 1919, sank as Empire Kestrel Lampasas 1883 Kiowa 1903 sank in 1903 Leona 1889 Malabar 1914 Malacca 1919 Malamton 1918 Malang 1920 Malantic 1918 (M.J. Scanlon) sank in 1943 by Uboat Malay Malchace 1920 Mallard 1917 Mallemak 1919 Malsah 1920 Malton 1923 Maltran 1920 Medina 1914 Minotaur 1918 Sank in 1943 by Uboat SS Mohawk (1925) Mohican (1904) sank 1925 Neches (1) 1914 Neches (2) 1919 sank 1930 Norfolk (1916) Nueces 1887 Ormidale 1917 Oneida (1919) sank in 1943 in strom Osceola 1920 | ships for the Union Navy during the Civil War. Henry H. Raymond was president and general manager of the Clyde Steamship and Mallory Steamship Companies from 1908 to 1923. Clyde-Mallory Lines main ports were: Jacksonville, New York, Miami, Boston, Wilmington, Charleston, Key West, Galveston, Tampa, New Orleans and Mobile. Clyde line Clyde line ran from 1844 to 1907 under the Clyde Steamship Company. Thomas Clyde started the company in New York in 1872. The Line ran between the US northeast and southeast. Later added was routes to the Dominican Republic and other West Indies. In 1908 the Clyde line ran under the Atlantic, Gulf and West Indies (AGWI) SS Company. In 1932 Mallory Line merged with Clyde Line. Thomas Clyde (1812-1885) was the founder and owner of the Clyde line, Clyde Steamship Company. Main ports were New York City, Florida, Florida keys, Boston, Providence, Cuba, and New Orleans. In 1861 Clyde's son, William P. Clyde took ownership till the 1906 sale. Clyde line ended in 1932, in the merger with Clyde-Mallory Line that ran from 1932 to 1949. Clyde Santo Domingo Line was a subsidiary of Clyde Line with service from New York City to West Indies. Porto Rico Line Porto Rico Line of the New York and Porto Rico Steamship Company was founded in 1895 in a partnership with Archibald H. Bull and Juan Ceballos. Bull later founded the A. H. Bull and Company. The Porto Rico Line lines ran from New York to Red Hook's Atlantic Basin's Pier 35 to Puerto Rico. The Porto Rico Line was a cargo and tourists line, also Puerto Ricans migrated to New York's Red Hook, Brooklyn. Ward Line Ward Line was started by the New York and Cuba Mail Steamship Company founded in 1877. Ward Line first route was service to and from New York, Nassau and Havana. Ward purchased the Alexandre Line in 1888 anding service to the east coast of Mexico. In 1907 Charles W. Morse purchased the Ward Line. In 1908 Morse company went bankrupt and the Ward Line combined with several other Morse companies to form the Atlantic, Gulf and West Indies Line, Agwiline, each division ran under independent management. In 1908 was owned by Agwilines Inc, in 1954 became Ward-García Line. Consolidated Steamship Company Consolidated Steamship was founded by Charles W. Morse. On January 1, 1907 Charles W. Morse joined the Mallory Line, Porto Rico Line, the Ward Line, the Metropolitan Steamship Company and Eastern Steamship Company to form the Consolidated Steamship Lines. The financial crisis panic of 1907 put Consolidated Steamship Company into bankruptcy in 1908. Out of the bankruptcy the Consolidated Steamship Company was sold to the Atlantic, Gulf and West Indies SS Company (AGWI Inc.). The Metropolitan Steamship Company and Eastern Steamship Company that were part of Consolidated Steamship Company were not sold to Agwilines Inc. World War II During World War II Agwilines Inc. was active with charter shipping with the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. During wartime, the Agwilines Inc operated Victory ships and Liberty shipss. The ship was run by its crew and the US Navy supplied United States Navy Armed Guards to man the deck guns and radio. The most common armament mounted on these merchant ships were the MK II 20mm Oerlikon autocannon and the 3"/50, 4"/50, and 5"/38 deck guns. Ships Atlantic, Gulf & West Indies Steamship Inc ship: Satilla (1912), sank in 1917 by Uboat as SS Hans Kinck. Agwimoon (1920) Sank as Altair in 1943 : Agwihavre (1921) sank as Gulfpenn in 1942 Manata (1916) Sank as Trym in 1837 Ozama (1919) sank in 1928 Panuco (1917) sank in fire at dock in 1941 Choctaw (1917) sank as Syoka Maru in 1945 Agwipond period (1921) sank in 1930 as SS Cities Service Boston Agwibay (1921) sank as SS William F. Humphrey in 1942 Agwisea (1920) sank in 1933 Clyde Line Ships Clyde Line ships: Apache Mohawk (1908) Lenape (1912) Huron (1896) Comanche Arapahoe Cherokee (1925) sank by Uboat June 16, 1942 Chippewa (freight only) (1905) Philadelphia (1916) Clyde Santo Domingo Line ships Passenger and cargo from New Your City to Monte Cristi, Puerto Plata, Samana, Sanchez, La Romana, Macoris, Santo Domingo City Azua and Barahona. Clyde Santo Domingo Line ship: Algonquin (1926) Iroquois Mallory Line ships Mallory Line ships: Comal San Jacinto (1903) Concho (1903) Sabine Lampasas Alamo Medina (1914) Nueces (1887) West Cawthon manager (1919) City of Houston (1871) Barges: Chas. E. Goin, C. F. Deering, P. C. Golder, Samuel Walker, O. M. Hitchcock (1881) Annie M. Smull |
two-minute news report; it stands at the junction of documentary and myth". Awards and nominations It was nominated for the World Cinema Documentary Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. It was nominated as one of 15 documentary films at the 34th European Film Awards. It was nominated for the Audience Award, Insights at the 2021 Vancouver International Film Festival. It won win in the international DOCU/WORLD Competition at DocuDays UA International Documentary Human Rights Film Festival. References External links 2021 films 2021 documentary films Swiss films | arboretum on his estate on the coast of the Black Sea." Release The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival . Reception Critical response Claire Armitstead said, "Taming the Garden is far from a balanced two-minute news report; it stands at the junction of documentary and myth". Awards and nominations It was nominated for the World Cinema Documentary Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. It was nominated as one of 15 documentary films at the 34th European |
Chandiyawas () is a village in Ajmer tehsil of Ajmer district of Rajasthan state in India.The village falls under Gegal gram panchayat. Demography As per 2011 census of India, Chandiyawas has population of 798 of | Transportation Chandiyawas is connected by air (Kishangarh Airport), by train (Madar railway station) and by road. See also Ajmer Tehsil Madar |
population was 1,124 in 2011, in an area of , resulting in a population density of 79.65 people per square kilometre (206.23 people per square mile). | people per square kilometre (206.23 people per square mile). Portuguese writer Cândido de Figueiredo was born in Lobão da Beira. Demographics References Parishes of Tondela |
Pier della Vigna confirmed that Casalrotto belonged to La Cava against the claims of the nobleman Gualtiero Gentile. Casalrotto consists of about one hundred natural karst caves enlarged by human action to make residences and other spaces. Many residential caves had wooden partitions and carved niches. They also often had vegetable gardens enclosed by dry stone walls. Northwest of the residential area is a necropolis. To the northeast is a cave with traces of paint that might have been the church of Santa Maria, built between 1155 and 1165. To the southwest is the church of Sant'Angelo, a two-storey cave church | Mottola. The village is generally thought to have grown up around the church of Sant'Angelo. This was probably a Greek foundation of the Byzantine period. Following the Norman conquest of Apulia, a policy of "latinization" and "catholicization" was adopted. In 1081, the monasterium Sancti Angeli in Casali Rupto was granted to the Benedictine monastery of La Trinità della Cava dei Tirreni. The dedication to Michael the Archangel, suggests that the church served a Lombard population, as the Lombards were especially devoted to that saint. In 1231, a judicial panel composed of Henry of Morra, Roffredo di San Germano and Pier della Vigna confirmed that Casalrotto belonged to La Cava against the claims of the nobleman Gualtiero Gentile. Casalrotto consists of about one hundred natural karst caves enlarged by human action to make residences and other spaces. Many residential caves had wooden partitions and carved niches. |
until his retirement 2016. Early life and education Dwyer was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended Loyola College, where he received a bachelor of arts in 1968. Following his undergraduate education, Dwyer attended the University of Maryland School of Law and received a juris doctor in 1971. Career Dwyer was admitted to the Maryland State Bar Association in 1972 and served on the association's Committee on Laws. Dwyer started his career as a trial | and served on the association's Committee on Laws. Dwyer started his career as a trial worker, working on criminal cases and workers' compensation cases. Dwyer also joined the Frederick County Bar Association in Frederick, Maryland, and is a member of the Maryland Trial Lawyers Association. Dwyer was appointed to the Circuit Court for Frederick County in 1985 by Maryland Governor Harry Hughes. He was the acting Administrative Judge until 1991, when he became the Administrative Judge for the court. In 2001, Dwyer co-founded the Court Appointed Special Advocates for the Children of Frederick County. In 2013, Dwyer received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Maryland State Bar Association. Dwyer retired on March 1, 2016, after reaching the age of retirement in Maryland. |
awards in competition section. His previous two films The Woman Who Ran (2020) and Introduction (2021) were selected in competition section at the 70th and 71st editions of the festival respectively. The film screened on February 16, 2022 at Berlinale Palast for the first time. Reception The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating, based on 9 reviews with an average rating of 7.70/10. David Rooney of Hollywood Reporter wrote, that the film "conceals thoughts on the insularity of creative communities, the ticking clock of an artist’s life and the importance of remaining open to finding truth even in what appear to be random connections". Concluding the review Rooney stated, "The Novelist’s Film is an unapologetically slight entry, stripped back to the point where it seems to be about nothing and has nothing especially profound to say. But it’s a pleasurable exercise for an artist continually in conversation with himself about the value of his work and what his collaborators bring to it. As such, Hong’s 27th feature is arguably less an essential new chapter than a teasing footnote to everything he’s done before." Guy Lodge reviewing for Variety opined, "The latest miniature from the prolific South Korean auteur won't rank among his most essential works, but it still offers playful pleasures aplenty." Stephanie Bunbury of Deadline wrote, "Here’s another walking-and-talking film from festival favorite Hong Sang-soo, encapsulating a sliver of Korean life with his customary elusive delicacy." Concluding Bunbury stated, "the film rather than sharing a sense of completion, makes it clear that this is the flow of creative life. They [the novelist and the director] will keep working. It’s what they do." James Mottram of the South China Morning Post gave 3.5 stars out of 5 and wrote, "Hong’s film is driven by gentle coincidence and good humour". | Sang-soo to be competing for main awards in competition section. His previous two films The Woman Who Ran (2020) and Introduction (2021) were selected in competition section at the 70th and 71st editions of the festival respectively. The film screened on February 16, 2022 at Berlinale Palast for the first time. Reception The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating, based on 9 reviews with an average rating of 7.70/10. David Rooney of Hollywood Reporter wrote, that the film "conceals thoughts on the insularity of creative communities, the ticking clock of an artist’s life and the importance of remaining open to finding truth even in what appear to be random connections". Concluding the review Rooney stated, "The Novelist’s Film is an unapologetically slight entry, stripped back to the point where it seems to be about nothing and has nothing especially profound to say. But it’s a pleasurable exercise for an artist continually in conversation with himself about the value of his work and what his collaborators bring to it. As such, Hong’s 27th feature is arguably less an essential new chapter than a teasing footnote to everything he’s done before." Guy Lodge reviewing for Variety opined, "The latest miniature from the prolific South Korean auteur won't rank among his most essential works, but it still offers playful pleasures aplenty." Stephanie Bunbury of Deadline wrote, "Here’s another walking-and-talking film from festival favorite Hong Sang-soo, encapsulating a sliver of Korean life with his customary elusive delicacy." Concluding Bunbury stated, "the film rather than sharing a sense of completion, makes it clear that this is the flow of creative life. They [the novelist and the director] will keep working. It’s what they do." James Mottram of the South China Morning Post gave 3.5 stars out of 5 and wrote, "Hong’s film is driven by gentle coincidence and good humour". Mottram opined that "those who don’t have the patience for Hong’s delicate brand of cinema may find The Novelist’s Film frustrating, but this simply shot tale of human interaction has a beauty all of its own." Jake Cole of the Slant Magazine gave 3.5 stars out of 4 and wrote, "The Novelist’s Film suggests that Hong has yet to exhaust his |
film categories were announced on January 17, 2022, while the winners were announced via YouTube on February 22, 2022. The dates for the awards | YouTube on February 22, 2022. The dates for the awards and nominations for the television categories are yet to be announced. Winners and nominees Film References External links 2021 film awards 2021 in American |
Round 7 Round 8 Round 9 Round 10 References RFL Women's Super League RFL Women's Super League RFL Women's Super League RFL Women's | UK local time (UTC+01:00) Regular season Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Round 5 Round 6 Round 7 Round 8 Round 9 Round 10 References RFL Women's Super League RFL Women's |
to Green Lake House. While the exact location of the trading post is unknown, it is believed to be near the spot where Meadow River flows out of the lake. A monument was erected in Meadow Lake's Elk's Park in 1955 by the Government of Canada to pay homage Peter Fidler. Description Meadow Lake is the remnants of a once vast glacial lake called Glacial Meadow Lake that existed near the end of the last ice age over 10,000 years ago. Meadow River, located at the north-west corner of the lake, is Meadow Lake's outflow. Meadow River flows generally north-east until it meets Beaver River, which flows into Lac Île-à-la-Crosse, which is a lake along the course of the Churchill River–a major tributary of the Hudson Bay drainage basin. Meadow Lake is situated north of the Meadow Lake Escarpment. A large part of the northern slope of the escarpment is within the lake's catchment and was also the southern limit of Glacial Meadow Lake. The following rivers and creeks | Meadow Lake with the city of Meadow Lake located along the western shore and Flying Dust First Nation located along the north-west shore, adjacent to the city. Highway 55 runs along the northern shore and Highway 799, the southern shore. Highway 4 is west of the lake and provides access to the city. History Peter Fidler was the first European to discover the lake. He was a Hudson's Bay employee who was exploring and mapping the region in 1799 and upon the lake's discovery, he named it Lac des Prairies and built a 12 foot by 12 foot log fort. He named the fort Bolsover House, after his home town of Bolsover in England. It lasted only one season before being abandoned and relocated to Green Lake House. While the exact location of the |
Cash 2018. Synopsis The report includes recommendations for humanitarian practitioners. It documents how use of cash and voucher assistance (CVA) in humanitarian aid has double from US$2.8 billion in 2016, to $5.6 billion in 2019, representing 17.9% of spending on humanitarian assistance. It reports on the importance of CVA with regards | the use of cash and voucher assistance in humanitarian aid. It was written by Gabrielle Smith, R. McCormack, Alex Jacobs, Arushi Chopra, Aarsh Vir Gupta, and Thomas Abell. Background The report is a follow up to CALP's earlier publication The State of the World’s Cash 2018. |
Frost may refer to: | Frost may refer to: Lee |
of terrorist incidents in Pakistan in 2022 in chronological order. January 20 January - 2022 Lahore bombing | incomplete outline of terrorist incidents in Pakistan in 2022 in chronological order. |
record of 8–2 with a mark of 5–1 in conference play, sharing the OVC title with . The team's captains were Harold Greer and Roy | Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) during the 1958 NCAA College Division football season. Led by 12th-year head coach Charles M. Murphy, the Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders compiled a record an overall record |
under Ganahera gram panchayat. Demography As per 2011 census of India, Chawandiya has population of 2,188 of which 1,130 are males and 1,058 are females. Sex ratio | of Rajasthan state in India.The village falls under Ganahera gram panchayat. Demography As per 2011 census of India, Chawandiya has population of |
Liberal Democrats and Radcliffe First both on four councillors and a single independent. Background The Local Government Act 1972 created a two-tier system of metropolitan counties and districts covering Greater Manchester, Merseyside, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear, the West Midlands, and West Yorkshire starting in 1974. St Helens was a district of the Merseyside metropolitan county. The Local Government Act 1985 abolished the metropolitan counties, with metropolitan districts taking on most of their powers as metropolitan boroughs. The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority was created in 2014 and began electing the mayor of the Liverpool City Region from 2017. The body was given strategic powers covering a region that encompassed the former Merseyside metropolitan county with the addition of Halton Borough Council. Since its formation, St Helens has continuously been under Labour control apart from a period of no overall control from 2004 to 2010. Labour continued to run the council from 2004 until the 2005 election, when the Liberal Democrats formed a coalition with the Conservatives in an arrangement that lasted until Labour regained control of the council in the 2010 election. In the most recent election in 2021, Labour lost three seats but maintained their majority. Of the seventeen seats up for election—sixteen on the normal thirds schedule and one by-election on the same date—Labour won twelve, independent candidates won two and the Liberal Democrats, Conservatives and Greens won one seat each. St Helens council underwent boundary changes ahead of this election. The Local Government Boundary Commission for England determined that the council should continue to elect 48 councillors and designed new election boundaries to reflect population change. The new boundaries include thirteen three-member | taking on most of their powers as metropolitan boroughs. The Liverpool City Region Combined Authority was created in 2014 and began electing the mayor of the Liverpool City Region from 2017. The body was given strategic powers covering a region that encompassed the former Merseyside metropolitan county with the addition of Halton Borough Council. Since its formation, St Helens has continuously been under Labour control apart from a period of no overall control from 2004 to 2010. Labour continued to run the council from 2004 until the 2005 election, when the Liberal Democrats formed a coalition with the Conservatives in an arrangement that lasted until Labour regained control of the council in the 2010 election. In the most recent election in 2021, Labour lost three seats but maintained their majority. Of the seventeen seats up for election—sixteen on the normal thirds schedule and one by-election on the same date—Labour won twelve, independent candidates won two and the Liberal Democrats, Conservatives and Greens won one seat each. St Helens council underwent boundary changes ahead of this election. The Local Government Boundary Commission for England determined that the council should continue to elect 48 councillors and designed new election boundaries to reflect population change. The new boundaries include thirteen three-member wards, four two-member wards and one single-member ward. The new boundaries will be used for all-out elections every four years instead of the previous model of election a third of councillors in each of three years out of four. Electoral process The council previously elected its councillors in thirds, with a third being up for election every year for three years, with no election in the fourth year. However, following a boundary review, all forty-eight councillors will be elected at |
permission. For this reason, their photography often features in other publications and are used on Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons. History TheFestivals was founded in June 2017, branded as TheFestivals.UK to match the website's domain name until September 2018. The matching .co.uk domain redirects to the .uk domain. The organisation first received widespread attention after reporting the upcoming ban on single-use plastic at many festivals would effectively ban glitter from the events, with the story quickly picked up by national and international media. | reporting the upcoming ban on single-use plastic at many festivals would effectively ban glitter from the events, with the story quickly picked up by national and international media. In September 2019, TheFestivals' coverage of Supergrass reforming to play at Glastonbury Festival's Pilton Party was cited in UK, US and Canadian news reports. On the evening of 17th March 2020, TheFestivals was the first news organisation to report that Glastonbury Festival would be cancelled for the first time in it's 50-year history due |
itself in 2017. Coincidentally, the 3–0 rout over Nantes came almost exactly ten years after their last French Cup win in 1983 and against the same team. It was the first title of the Canal+ era as well as PSG's first since 1986. This campaign also marked the beginning of Le Classique, the rivalry between PSG and Marseille, as both teams battled each other on the field for the league crown. Paris finished runners-up after losing both games against OM. The first match, played at the Parc des Princes on December 18, 1992, was so brutal that earned itself the nickname "The Butchery of 1992." It was on this day that the French clásico was born. Artur Jorge announced his side would crush Marseille, while David Ginola promised war upon them. To motivate his players, OM president Bernard Tapie stuck the newspaper articles with PSG's provocations in the dressing room. Marseille would not disappoint him, walking away with the victory thanks to a strike from Alen Bokšić in what was an extremely violent match with more than 50 fouls. In the second match, only three days after winning the 1992–93 UEFA Champions League, league leaders Marseille welcomed closest challengers PSG in a match that would determine the title. OM quickly fell behind, only to hit back with three goals, including one of the fixture's best goals: a team effort finished by an 18-yard header from Basile Boli. This would have been Marseille's fifth consecutive championship. Shortly after, however, Marseille and club president Bernard Tapie were found guilty of match-fixing. The French Football Federation stripped OM of their title and offered it to second-placed PSG, who refused it because Canal+ thought that claiming the trophy would anger their subscribers back in Marseille. As a result, | four against eventual winners Juventus, in the last four. In France, the capital club defeated the Nantes of future Parisian players Claude Makélélé and Patrice Loko in the 1993 Coupe de France Final, claiming its third cup title overall without conceding a single goal throughout the entire competition, a record only matched by PSG itself in 2017. Coincidentally, the 3–0 rout over Nantes came almost exactly ten years after their last French Cup win in 1983 and against the same team. It was the first title of the Canal+ era as well as PSG's first since 1986. This campaign also marked the beginning of Le Classique, the rivalry between PSG and Marseille, as both teams battled each other on the field for the league crown. Paris finished runners-up after losing both games against OM. The first match, played at the Parc des Princes on December 18, 1992, was so brutal that earned itself the nickname "The Butchery of 1992." It was on this day that the French clásico was born. Artur Jorge announced his side would crush Marseille, while David Ginola promised war upon them. To motivate his players, OM president Bernard Tapie stuck the newspaper articles with PSG's provocations in the dressing room. Marseille would not disappoint him, walking away with the victory thanks to a strike from Alen Bokšić in what was an extremely violent match with more than 50 fouls. In the second match, only three days after winning the 1992–93 UEFA Champions League, league leaders Marseille welcomed closest challengers PSG in a match that would determine the title. OM quickly fell behind, only to hit back with three goals, including one of the fixture's best goals: a team effort finished by an 18-yard header from Basile Boli. This would have been Marseille's fifth consecutive championship. Shortly after, however, Marseille and club president Bernard Tapie were found guilty of match-fixing. The French Football Federation stripped OM of their title and offered it to second-placed PSG, who refused it because Canal+ |
Film Festival (RIFF) initiated by RIFF Film Club He is the Founder of Rajasthan's First OTT Platform "Cinemasthan". He is also the Founder and Managing Editor of Rajasthan's First Bi-lingual Lifestyle Magazine "Simply Jaipur" and Editor of the weekly lifestyle Newspaper "Voice of Jaipur". He is also the founder of Thar Sarvoday Sansthan which works to promote art, culture and Society. Biography Somendra Harsh was born in Jodhpur in 1974. He completed his Middle grade schooling from Adarsh Vidya Mandir and then | Rajasthan International Film Festival (RIFF) initiated by RIFF Film Club He is the Founder of Rajasthan's First OTT Platform "Cinemasthan". He is also the Founder and Managing Editor of Rajasthan's First Bi-lingual Lifestyle Magazine "Simply Jaipur" and Editor of the weekly lifestyle Newspaper "Voice of Jaipur". He is also the founder of Thar Sarvoday Sansthan which works to promote art, culture and Society. Biography Somendra Harsh was born in Jodhpur in 1974. He completed his Middle grade schooling from Adarsh Vidya Mandir and then completed his schooling from Hanwant School, Jodhpur. Later on he completed his graduation as Engineer in Electronics and |
the shaft sunk by Coulson in 1845. Coulson was on his way by train to another colliery for a job when he heard of the disaster, so went to the colliery where he took charge of the rescue attempt. With his son William and his team of sinkers, Coulson - then 70 years old - led the rescue team as they worked tirelessly for days moving debris and coping with noxious gases so as to reach the trapped miners. Unfortunately by the time they did the men had all suffocated. Coulson and his men then made the mine safe before the bodies could be removed. In recognition of their efforts following a public subscription Coulson received a gold medal, his men silver medals and all were given a purse of gold. Family He married Anne Dobson at St. Mary’s Church in Gateshead on 11 July 1812. They had 7 children: Anne (1813), William (1816), Robert (1818), Dorothy (1822), James (1824), Dobson (1826) and Barbara (1828). He later remarried. Death Coulson died on Monday 12 June 1865 after suffering a stroke when visiting his friend the eminent mining engineer Nicholas Wood for a business meeting. An obituary noted: "Mr Coulson was much respected and beloved by his men; and such was their confidence in his judgment, that they would unhesitatingly enter the most dangerous places in connection with his sinking operations." and a recent article concluded that Coulson was "a man who by his careful observation, deduction, ingenuity and perseverance had transformed shaft sinking into the engineering discipline it has remained to this day" | after an eight hour shift as a hewer in a Newcastle colliery, Coulson then travelled to a pit south of the river to work as a collier trimmer in order to augment his income. The sinker In about 1812 he began as an independent mining contractor with a contract for winning coals at Thornley Colliery in County Durham - he was said to work sixteen hours of the 24 in a day DCA 1865 . A few years later he started sinking shafts, with one of the first being at Whitley Colliery in Northumberland. In 1820 he made his name as part of a team at Hetton Colliery trying to drive a shaft through the magnesian limestone plateau to determine if there was coal underneath. Earlier attempts by others had failed. Below the plateau the team encountered water flowing at up to 150 litres/second. Coulson overcame this problem by improving the traditional iron tubbing that lined the shaft with four wedging cribs to hold back water, as well as developing piping systems to drain off water and vents to ease gas pressure. The team reached the High Main and Hutton seams, so marking the beginning of the development of the East Durham coalfield and the movement to large collieries employing perhaps hundreds of men. For the next 40 years Coulson led shaft sinking operations mainly in the Great Northern Coalfield. His team of master sinkers included |
Union to the north, Belaichandi Union and Gopinathpur Union to the south, Saidpur Airport to the west and Alampur Union to its east. Education The Union has 2 high schools, 8 primary schools and one dakhil madrasa (Balapara Shiberhat Islami Dakhil Madrasa). Administration The union is divided into 5 mouzas, with a total of 5 villages (Bangalipur, Baraishalpara, Lakshanpur West Para, Lakshanpur Charakpara and Lakshanpur Balapara/Bamonpara). Chairmen References Nilphamari | to its east. Education The Union has 2 high schools, 8 primary schools and one dakhil madrasa (Balapara Shiberhat Islami Dakhil Madrasa). Administration The union is divided into 5 mouzas, with a total of 5 villages (Bangalipur, Baraishalpara, Lakshanpur West Para, Lakshanpur Charakpara and Lakshanpur Balapara/Bamonpara). Chairmen References |
non-Executive Chairman of CIC Feeds in 2015. In November 2015, the company sold its subsidiary, Chemifix, a PVAc adhesive business to Pidilite Industries. Operations CIC Holdings acquired 70% of stake of Unipower (Pvt) Ltd in 2017 for LKR238 million. The company won the award for the most innovative research in the non-plantation agriculture sector in 2018. The award is conferred by the Sri Lanka Council for Agricultural Research Policy, the apex body of agriculture research in Sri Lanka. The award ceremony was held at the Institute of Policy Studies. The company recorded strong revenue growth for the quarter ended in September 2021. The revenue of LKR9.54 billion is a 4.5 per cent year-on-year increase for the same period in 2020. The company appointed Prashantha Aroshan Seresinhe as the new Group CEO in December 2021. See also List of companies listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange References External links Official website 1964 establishments in Ceylon Companies listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange Chemical companies established in 1964 Holding companies of Sri Lanka Conglomerate companies of Sri Lanka Manufacturing companies of Sri | the current name in 2011. The company signed an agreement with the Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechnology to develop a new herbicide formulation. The initiative is one of the first attempts to synthesize and formulate a herbicide locally in Sri Lanka. The company appointed Dinesh Weerakkody as an Independent non-Executive Director and Amal Cabraal as the non-Executive Chairman of CIC Feeds in 2015. In November 2015, the company sold its subsidiary, Chemifix, a PVAc adhesive business to Pidilite Industries. Operations CIC Holdings acquired 70% of stake of Unipower (Pvt) Ltd in 2017 for LKR238 million. The |
as interim chief executive officer at Absa Group Limited, replacing Daniel Mminele, who resigned and left the bank. Other considerations In addition to the Absa Group board, Jason Quinn sits on the boards of Absa Financial Services and Woolworths Financial Services. He is also an employer-appointed Trustee of the Absa Pension Fund. See also Wendy Lucas-Bull Maria Ramos Daniel Mminele References External links Brief Biography at Absa Website 1975 births Living people Absa people South African accountants South African bankers South African businesspeople South African chief executives University of South | of Absa Group Limited, a financial services conglomerate, with headquarters in Johannesburg, South Africa, and subsidiaries in eleven sub-Saharan countries. Prior to his current assignment, Jason was the chief financial officer of Absa Group Limited. In addition, he has been a member of the board of directors of the financial services conglomerate, since September 2016. Background and education Jason holds a bachelor's degree in business and commerce, awarded by the University of South Africa. He also holds a B.Comm (Honors) degree, awarded by the University of KwaZulu-Natal. In addition he is a Chartered Accountant (South Africa), recognized by the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants. Career Jason spent 15 years at Ernst and Young, at their Johannesburg office. He made Partner there, before he left |
western side. This flows into the Ruisseau de Conca (called the Prunitaccio downstream), a tributary of the Casaluna. The Ruisseau de Lavatoio et de Noceta rises on the eastern side of the pass, which successively joins with other streams before ending up in the Fium’Alto. Geology The Prato Pass is located in the "Alpine Corsica" composed of glazed shales and green rocks | the Ruisseau de Conca (called the Prunitaccio downstream), a tributary of the Casaluna. The Ruisseau de Lavatoio et de Noceta rises on the eastern side of the pass, which successively joins with other streams before ending up in the Fium’Alto. Geology The Prato Pass is located in the "Alpine Corsica" composed of glazed shales and green rocks (ophiolites), on the ridge of the Monte San Petrone massif. "South of Quercitello is the Prato Pass (altitude 974 m.); there |
3 rounded lower lobes. It has 4 stamens, with the filaments adnate (grown from or closely fused) to the corolla tube to the middle, then free, glabrous (lacking surface ornamentation) and geniculate (bent at a sharp angle), with anthers coherent in a square by their tips, cells of each anther confluent and dehiscing longitudinally. It has 1 staminode (a sterile stamen). The disk (floret) is prominent and annular (ring-like). The ovary is superior (borne above the level of attachment of the other floral parts) and laterally compressed. It is densely pilose (covered with soft, weak, thin and clearly separated hairs), ovoid, with branched placentas ovuliferous on both surfaces. The style is elongated and the | They are thickened and conspicuously 5-7 nerved when in fruit. The corolla is tubular with bilbabiate (having two lips) limb of 5 spreading lobes. The upper 2 lobes are acute and shorter than the 3 rounded lower lobes. It has 4 stamens, with the filaments adnate (grown from or closely fused) to the corolla tube to the middle, then free, glabrous (lacking surface ornamentation) and geniculate (bent at a sharp angle), with anthers coherent in a square by their tips, cells of each anther confluent and dehiscing longitudinally. It has 1 staminode (a sterile stamen). The disk (floret) is prominent and annular (ring-like). The ovary is superior (borne above the level of attachment of the other floral parts) and laterally compressed. It is densely pilose (covered with |
a very large pufferfish, reaching 90 cm (35.4 inches) SL. It closely resembles the Atlantic species Lagocephalus laevigatus, but it can be distinguished from that species by its black gill opening. Additionally, it does not overlap in range with L. laevigatus. It is reported to be | that ranges from Algoa Bay in South Africa to southern Japan, where it occurs at a depth range of 10 to 200 m (33 to 656 ft) and inhabits the edge of the continental shelf. It is a very large pufferfish, reaching 90 cm (35.4 inches) SL. |
state of Himachal Pradesh in India. See also Yamuna river References Rivers of Himachal Pradesh | River is a tributary of the Yamuna river that flows |
leading roles. The series received negative comments from social media users for trivialising the victims of rape and received mixed reviews from critics. Plot summary The series follows the story of a daily life challenges faced by a girl, Parisa a.k.a. Pari who is doctor by profession. Her life faces an upset down when her husband, | faces an upset down when her husband, Hamza refused to accepted him when she escaped from a rape attempt on road. Cast Zarnish Khan as Parisa “Pari” Syed Jibran as Hamza Michelle Mumtaz as Shiza Hamza Tariq Jamil as Bilal Huma Nawab as Bilal's mother Sajida Syed as Parisa's mother Rana Majid as Shehryar Faiza Gillani as Fariha Arez Ahmed Ali Safina Production The series is written by Maimoona Aziz who previously wrote 2020 series Tera Ghum Aur Hum and directed by Nadeem Siddiqui who previously directed 2020 series Tarap. References Pakistani |
the Bernard G. Segal Professor of Law and dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Education Ruger completed a A.B. at Williams College and a J.D. at Harvard Law School. Career Ruger served as a law clerk for Stephen Breyer and Michael Boudin. Ruger worked in private practice at Ropes & Gray and Williams & Connolly. For three years, he was an associate professor at the Washington University School of Law. Ruger joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 2004. He | Gray and Williams & Connolly. For three years, he was an associate professor at the Washington University School of Law. Ruger joined the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 2004. He specializes in specialized in constitutional law, judicial authority, health law, and the regulation of therapeutic goods. He was promoted to deputy dean of the law school in 2013 and dean in 2015. Kruger succeeded interim |
longitudinal fissures, and contains several irregular cavities with larvae. The cavities are lined with fungal mycelium on which the larvae feed. When young the larvae are white, and later in the summer and winter are orange-red. Usually the gall develops on one side of the shoot, but occasionally spreads to the other side. Initially the gall is green, but changes to reddish-brown as it matures. Larvae pupate the following spring and the adults emerge in the spring. Sometimes the gall is in a leaf petiole. Lasioptera rubi galls have been found on the following species; Rubus caesius – European dewberry Rubus canescens Rubus gillotii Rubus grabowskii Rubus idaeus – raspberry Rubus nessensis Rubus fruticosus – blackberry Rubus plicatus Rubus praecox Rubus ulmifolius – elmleaf blackberry Similar species Galls of the gall wasp, Diastrophus rubi, are elongate (2–15 cm long and circa 1 cm wide) compared with | – raspberry Rubus nessensis Rubus fruticosus – blackberry Rubus plicatus Rubus praecox Rubus ulmifolius – elmleaf blackberry Similar species Galls of the gall wasp, Diastrophus rubi, are elongate (2–15 cm long and circa 1 cm wide) compared with the gall of Lasioptera rubi, which is rounded (5 x 2 cm). Distribution The fly has been recorded in 24 European countries, from Ireland. France and Spain in the west, to Finland, Ukraine and Russia in the east. References Cecidomyiinae Diptera of Europe Gall-inducing insects Insects described in |
from 1904 to 1905. She also was in charge of the Lichen Department of the organization under the guidance of Carolyn Wilson Harris starting in March 1908. She worked on mosses and lichens for the National Museum of Natural History in the Herbarium. She corresponded with James Franklin Collins, and has added items to the National Museum of Natural History. Death and legacy Miller died on June 2, 1920, | in March 1908. She worked on mosses and lichens for the National Museum of Natural History in the Herbarium. She corresponded with James Franklin Collins, and has added items to the National Museum of Natural History. Death and legacy Miller died on June 2, 1920, in Washington, D.C. References 1872 births 1920 deaths Bryologists 20th-century American women scientists Smithsonian Institution people Scientists from Washington, |
BA in 1997 and a PhD in Classics from Trinity College Dublin in 2005. Career Ní Mheallaigh taught at Liverpool (2004–2005), Swansea (2005–2007) and Exeter (2007–2016) before taking up her position at John Hopkins in 2020. She has also held a fellowship from the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the UK (2011–2012) and a Marie Curie fellowship at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies (AIAS), Denmark (2014–2016), where she worked on the project "Discovering the ancient scientific imagination". Selected publications Monographs: The Moon in the Greek and Roman imagination: selenography in myth, | in 2005. Career Ní Mheallaigh taught at Liverpool (2004–2005), Swansea (2005–2007) and Exeter (2007–2016) before taking up her position at John Hopkins in 2020. She has also held a fellowship from the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the UK (2011–2012) and a Marie Curie fellowship at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies (AIAS), Denmark (2014–2016), where she worked on the project "Discovering the ancient scientific imagination". Selected publications Monographs: The Moon in the Greek and Roman imagination: selenography in myth, literature, science and philosophy. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020. Reading fiction with Lucian: fakes, freaks |
of 5–1 in conference play, sharing the LSC title with Sam Houston State and East Texas State. The team's captain was Johnny Faseler. Schedule References Southwest Texas State Texas State Bobcats football seasons Lone Star Conference | an American football team that represented Southwest Texas State Teachers College—now known as Texas State University–as a member of the Lone Star Conference (LSC) during the 1955 college football season. Led by second-year head |
50% of the vote in the first round. As no candidate passed the 50% threshold, a run-off was held. Candidates The three candidates were: Lyudvig Chibirov, incumbent president Stanislav Kochiev, Speakers of Parliament Eduard Kokoity, a Moscow-based businessman and Russian citizen supported by the Russian government References Presidential elections | threshold, a run-off was held. Candidates The three candidates were: Lyudvig Chibirov, incumbent president Stanislav Kochiev, Speakers of Parliament Eduard Kokoity, a Moscow-based businessman and Russian citizen supported by the Russian government References Presidential elections in South Ossetia 2001 in Georgia (country) South Ossetia South Ossetia |
of the southern Jura line is to be eliminated by the double-track tunnel. This bottleneck between the service stations at Chavannes (German: Schafis) and Twann (French: Douanne) on the Biel–Neuchâtel route is currently preventing rail traffic from being densified. The planned costs amount to 431.9 million Swiss francs (470 million US dollars). The tunnel is part of the STEP 2030 project and should be completed by December 2026. The tunnel will enable a continuous half-hourly service on the line. It will run on the sea side and largely parallel to the existing road tunnel of Motorway number 5, which forms the Ligerz bypass. The | on the line. It will run on the sea side and largely parallel to the existing road tunnel of Motorway number 5, which forms the Ligerz bypass. The Twann station is to be modernized. The previous stop Ligerz will be removed and replaced by a bus line. This should open up the village of Ligerz and the Ligerz-Tessenberg railway from Twann, and an extension of the future bus line to La Neuveville is also under discussion. The construction of the Ligerz Tunnel will be financed by the new Railway Infrastructure Fund (RIF), which Swiss voters accepted |
system for being weak and reported non-governmental organizations (NGO) fears of the cluster system being expanded in its role to include monitoring and evaluation of humanitarian responses. The report noted that there are 4,400 humanitarian NGOs, 64% being national organizations, 18% being international in scope, but that the sector was being dominated by a small number of large NGOs, five of which represent 38% of all spending. The top five being Médecins Sans Frontières, Catholic Relief Services, Oxfam, Save the Children, and World Vision. Second, 2012 edition Publication The 2012 edition was a collaboration between ALNAP and the Overseas Development Institute written by Glyn Taylor as the lead author with support from colleagues Abby Stoddard, Adele Harmer, Katherine Haver, and Paul Harvey at consulting firm Humanitarian Outcomes and also Kathryn Barber, Lisa Schreter, and Constance Wilhelm. Synopsis Building on data from 2010, the report provides a wide analysis of the humanitarian system. It notes slow and steady growth in human resources, modest increasing in funding but the continued massive funding shortfalls leading to gaps in provision of humanitarian aid. It notes modest improvements in the relevant and appropriateness of humanitarian aid, inconsistent levels of effectiveness, and zero improvements in efficiency and innovations. Third, 2015 edition Publication The 2015 edition was written by team lead Abby Stoddard, and also Adele Harmer, Katherine Haver, Glyn Taylor, and Paul Harvey. Additional supporting research was undertaken by Morgan Hughes, Kate Toth, Elisabeth Couture, Amanda Stone, Kelly Chan, Clare Hymes, and Kaitlyn Vott. Synopsis The report found that aid agencies are struggling to reach people in conflict zones. While the number of humanitarian emergencies between 2012 and 2015 had reduced, the number of people with unmet needs had significantly increased, up by 78% compared to 2007-2008 levels. Violence in Central African Republic, Mali, and South Sudan created needs that aid agencies failed to meet. The report described a lack | evaluations of humanitarian interventions do not sufficiently include the input from the people served by the interventions and called for increased participation. It criticized the coordination in the humanitarian cluster system for being weak and reported non-governmental organizations (NGO) fears of the cluster system being expanded in its role to include monitoring and evaluation of humanitarian responses. The report noted that there are 4,400 humanitarian NGOs, 64% being national organizations, 18% being international in scope, but that the sector was being dominated by a small number of large NGOs, five of which represent 38% of all spending. The top five being Médecins Sans Frontières, Catholic Relief Services, Oxfam, Save the Children, and World Vision. Second, 2012 edition Publication The 2012 edition was a collaboration between ALNAP and the Overseas Development Institute written by Glyn Taylor as the lead author with support from colleagues Abby Stoddard, Adele Harmer, Katherine Haver, and Paul Harvey at consulting firm Humanitarian Outcomes and also Kathryn Barber, Lisa Schreter, and Constance Wilhelm. Synopsis Building on data from 2010, the report provides a wide |
or offshore banks, with both occurring either alone or in small, loose groups. It occurs at a depth range of 10 to 180 m (33 to 591 ft) over sandy or muddy bottoms and is a very large pufferfish, reaching 100 cm (39.4 inches) in total length. The species feeds on fish and shrimp and can be dangerously toxic if ingested. It is known to be oviparous. It is sometimes confused with the related | the smooth puffer, is a species of pufferfish in the family Tetraodontidae. It is native to the Western Atlantic, where it ranges from New England to Argentina, as well as the Eastern Atlantic, where it ranges from Mauritania to Namibia. Adults of the species are pelagic and found near continental margins, whereas juveniles are usually found closer to shore or offshore banks, with both occurring either alone or |
of the squamules. The lichen is only known to occur at the type locality, which is part of the Atlantic Forest biome. The authors suggest that the species is easily overlooked, "because from a distance it looks like a mass of bluish gray hyphae | Dal-Forno, Marcelo Marcelli, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was collected in Estrada das Prateleiras (Itatiaia National Park, Minas Gerais) at an altitude of . Here, on the edge of a cloud forest in dense vegetation on the side on the road, it was |
at an altitude of . Here, at the top of the mountain on exposed rocky outcrops, it was found growing on rocks growing amongst liverworts and other lichens. The specific epithet, which | the mountain on exposed rocky outcrops, it was found growing on rocks growing amongst liverworts and other lichens. The specific epithet, which contains the Latin word campis (meaning "plains" or "fields"), refers to the habitat of the lichen. Acantholichen campestris is the only member of the genus which, |
type specimen was collected in Isla Santa Cruz at an elevation of . Here in a dense forest of Cinchona pubescens it was found growing over Frullania liverworts. The specific epithet refers to its | was formally described as a new species in 2016 by Manuela Dal-Forno, Frank Bungartz, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was collected in Isla Santa Cruz at an |
formally described as a new species in 2016 by Manuela Dal-Forno, Harrie Sipman, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was collected from the Las Cruces Biological Station (San Vito, Puntarenas) | a disturbed primary forest, it was found growing on a tree trunk along with other lichens, including Hypotrachyna, Normandina, and Leptogium. The specific epithet refers to the soredia, found along the margins of the squamules. References Hygrophoraceae Lichens described in 2016 Lichens |
edge of a montane wet forest, the lichen was found growing on moss in an area with high light intensity. The specific epithet refers to the variable size of the acanthohyphidia (spiny apical cells) in the lichen. The species is only known from the type locality. Acantholichen albomarginatus is also found | species of basidiolichen in the family Hygrophoraceae. Found in Colombia, it was formally described as a new species in 2016 by Manuela Dal-Forno, Luis Fernando Coca, and Robert Lücking. The type specimen was |
30), a public television station in Atlanta, Georgia See | WABE (FM) (90.1 FM), a public radio station |
to shift. These books consist of two parallel series, each narrated from opposing viewpoints. The Elder Empire: Shadow Books Follows the path of Shera, an assassin, as she works to set the world free from corrupt rulers. Of Shadow and Sea (2015, ) Of Darkness and Dawn (2015, ) Of Killers and Kings (2020, ) The Elder Empire: Sea Books Follows the journey of Calder Marten, captain of The Testament, as he works to restore the Empire. Of Sea and Shadow (2015, ) Of Dawn and Darkness (2016, ) Of Kings and Killers (2020, ) Cradle On the Iteration known as Cradle, Wei Shi Lindon is born a weak Unsouled, forbidden to seek power as sacred artists do. However, he is faced with a looming fate that he must defy his family's rules to avoid. The Cradle series follows Lindon's journey as he forges a Path for himself. It is noted for its similarity to Anime and its high-paced action. Unsouled (June 2016, ) Soulsmith (September 2016, ) Blackflame (August 2017, ) Skysworn (September 2017, ) Ghostwater (May 2018, ) Underlord | strict policy of non-interference on day-to-day matters. Traveler's Gate On an Iteration called Amalgam, Travelers gain power from otherworldly Territories. The series centers on Simon, a boy who earns his power to save his friends and family. Soon, he finds himself caught in greater battles. House of Blades, (2013, ) The Crimson Vault, (2013, ) City of Light, (2014, ) Elder Empire On the Iteration of Asylum, Great Elders are powerful, inhuman entities, held back by the Emperor of the Aurelian Empire. Upon his death, the balances of power begin to shift. These books consist of two parallel series, each narrated from opposing viewpoints. The Elder Empire: Shadow Books Follows the path of Shera, an assassin, as she works to set the world free from corrupt rulers. Of Shadow and Sea (2015, ) Of Darkness and Dawn (2015, ) Of Killers and Kings (2020, ) The Elder Empire: Sea Books Follows the journey of Calder Marten, captain of The Testament, as he works to restore the Empire. Of Sea and Shadow (2015, ) Of Dawn and Darkness (2016, ) Of Kings and Killers (2020, ) Cradle On the Iteration known as Cradle, Wei Shi Lindon is born a weak Unsouled, forbidden to seek power as sacred artists do. However, he is faced with a looming fate that he must defy his family's |
position is also referred to as the Platitera and Nikopoios. The Italian term for the popular position is Nostra Signora del Segno. In the two variations, artists typically place the Virgin's hand on the right or left shoulder of the child and the other hand embraces the foot or leg of Jesus. The Virgin is wearing her traditional Byzantine garment. The holy robe clings to her body. The artist painted clear diagonal lines illustrating the complexly painted garment. The infant blesses with the Sign of the cross in his right hand and he holds a scroll in his left hand. The infant's garment is also the typical orange color. Both the Virgin and Child have halo's around their heads. The furniture exemplifies early Cretan Renaissance painting. Italian masters Paolo Veneziano, Duccio, Cimabue and Giotto all created similar works in the same style. The top part of the throne is adorned with decorative wood spindles with alternating colors. Eight spindles are present. Around the Virgin's torso, the throne exhibits a triangular v-shape. The shadows and diagonal lines create a shallow space with three-dimensional characteristics. The technique was implemented by Italian masters Paolo Veneziano, Duccio, Cimabue and Giotto bringing Greek-Italian Byzantine art into the Italian Renaissance. The lower portion of the painting reflects the advancement and refinement of the Byzantine style. The steps continue to create the illusion of additional space. The throne is also decorated with inlaid red and green marbles. The pillow in Ritzos's work is comparable to pillows used in similar works created by Paolo Veneziano. There are inscriptions all over the icon. The halo above the Virgin is decorated with an Ancient Greco-Roman styled Olive wreath motif. Ancient Greek art typically featured halos around deities and dignified individuals. Both Greek and Italian painters combined pagan and Byzantine art. The Halo was inscribed with the Greek words: Μνήστητη Κύριε Νεοφύτου Αρχιεπισκόπου Καρπάθου (Lord Remember, The Archbishop Neophytos of Karpathos). | was also heavily influenced by Venetian painting. His teacher was Angelos Akotantos. He was also affiliated with Andreas Pavias. His son was famous Greek painter Nikolaos Ritzos. Ritzo's Italian contemporaries were Paolo Uccello and Fra Angelico. They all painted a mixture of the Greek-Italian Byzantine and Italian Renaissance styles. The art of Crete was heavily influenced by the founder of the Venetian school Paolo Veneziano. The Virgin and Child was a popular subject matter among painters. Both Greek and Italian artists used the theme in countless works of art since the inception of the religion. The Virgin and Child enthroned was an important theme. The Greek term Pantanassa (Greek: Παντάνασσα), means the "Queen of All". The term was used to refer to the Virgin Mary as Queen of All. Greek painters created dozens of versions of the Madonna and Child Enthroned. Georgios Klontzas, Michael Damaskinos, Georgios Nomikos, and Emmanuel Tzanes are some of the painters that created their own versions. Tzanes's Lady the Lambovitissa is an example of the expert craftsmanship of the painters and the evolution of the style. Each version offers its own unique characteristics and style. The Virgin Pantanassa is one of the earliest surviving versions of the Cretan School attributed to a painter. It is located in the museum of the Monastery of Saint John the |
deemed more successful than it is on our network. [...] The minute you try and do something that is dark, and subversive, and frightening, and gets into that territory, you start to peel away the mass audience. It's just the way it is. Because the quality of that show is undeniable." Writing After the first season ended, Fuller stated that he planned for the show to run for seven seasons with the third season consisting of new material, while the fourth season would adapt Red Dragon. But after the second season finale, Fuller changed plans, intending for the series to last six seasons while restructuring the material. He explained, "we are on track with the original plan with the one exception of condensing what was to have been Season 3 and Season 4 all into one season now. So, the first half of the season will have its finale that reaches a climax and wraps up that story in a great way, and then we start a new story, and then that will have its own climax at the end of the season. Two separate stories that’ll have two finales and so you get two seasons for the price of one." He later confirmed that Francis Dolarhyde would make his debut in the eighth episode, which will then allow them to adapt Red Dragon in the fourth season. According to Fuller, the repercussions of the second season finale would not be revealed on the premiere, which he said would focus on Hannibal Lecter and Bedelia Du Maurier. He said the fate of the characters would be revealed in "episode 2 or 3." He also explained, "the entire first half of the season is relatively FBI-light. It's all about the pursuit of Hannibal." In October 2014, Fuller confirmed that the second half of the season would adapt the plot of Red Dragon, remarking that deviations from the novel would happen as it was already adapted on Manhunter and Red Dragon, "if we do the same thing, we're a–holes." Casting At the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con, Fuller confirmed that Eddie Izzard would return as Abel Gideon for the season premiere in a flashback sequence as well as stating that Raúl Esparza would return as Frederick Chilton. He also confirmed that the season would introduce many characters from the novels Hannibal and Hannibal Rising, including Rinaldo Pazzi, Lady Murasaki and Dr. Cordell Doemling. In September 2014, Laurence Fishburne confirmed that despite his commitment to Black-ish, he would return as Jack Crawford in the third season. That same month, Gillian Anderson was announced to be upped to series regular. In October 2014, Tao Okamoto was announced to play Lady Murasaki, "who possesses an alluring and classical beauty with a dark secret." However, Fuller clarified that Okamoto would play Chiyoh, Lady Murasaki's attendant. The season also introduced Will Graham's wife, Molly, in the eighth episode, with Nina Arianda joining the series in January 2015. Soon, Glenn Fleshler joined to play Dr. Cordell Doemling, "the personal doctor to a disfigured Mason Verger, quiet, very intelligent, and definitely creepy." In March 2015, Zachary Quinto was announced to guest star as Neal Frank, "a patient of Bedelia Du Maurier." In July 2014, Fuller confirmed that Francis Dolarhyde would make his debut in the eighth episode and serve as the main antagonist of the second half of the season. In January 2015, Richard Armitage was announced to play Dolarhyde, "a serial killer with a set of chompers that would make the Big Bad Wolf a little envious — and a penchant for targeting entire households for slaughter." A few days later, Rutina Wesley joined to play Reba McClane, "a blind woman who catches the eye of Francis Dolarhyde — AKA The Tooth Fairy — and represents his best | Cerlino as Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi Raúl Esparza as Dr. Frederick Chilton Katharine Isabelle as Margot Verger Tao Okamoto as Chiyoh Glenn Fleshler as Dr. Cordell Doemling Kacey Rohl as Abigail Hobbs Lara Jean Chorostecki as Freddie Lounds Giorgio Lupano as Inspector Benetti Zachary Quinto as Neal Frank Rinaldo Rocco as Sogliato Vladimir Jon Cubrt as Garrett Jacob Hobbs Eddie Izzard as Abel Gideon Gina Torres as Phyllis "Bella" Crawford Notable guests Tom Wisdom as Antony Dimmond Julian Richings as Caged Man Mía Maestro as Allegra Pazzi Episodes Production Development On May 9, 2014, NBC renewed the series for a third season. In July 2014, Robert Greenblatt, Chairman of NBC Entertainment, commented positively on the season's scripts although he said, "we still struggle to find an audience for it. It's great, we're keeping it going, we keep trying to build an audience for it. But, if this were on a cable network the small audience would not matter. It would be deemed more successful than it is on our network. [...] The minute you try and do something that is dark, and subversive, and frightening, and gets into that territory, you start to peel away the mass audience. It's just the way it is. Because the quality of that show is undeniable." Writing After the first season ended, Fuller stated that he planned for the show to run for seven seasons with the third season consisting of new material, while the fourth season would adapt Red Dragon. But after the second season finale, Fuller changed plans, intending for the series to last six seasons while restructuring the material. He explained, "we are on track with the original plan with the one exception of condensing what was to have been Season 3 and Season 4 all into one season now. So, the first half of the season will have its finale that reaches a climax and wraps up that story in a great way, and then we start a new story, and then that will have its own climax at the end of the season. Two separate stories that’ll have two finales and so you get two seasons for the price of one." He later confirmed that Francis Dolarhyde would make his debut in the eighth episode, which will then allow them to adapt Red Dragon in the fourth season. According to Fuller, the repercussions of the second season finale would not be revealed on the premiere, which he said would focus on Hannibal Lecter and Bedelia Du Maurier. He said the fate of the characters would be revealed in "episode 2 or 3." He also explained, "the entire first half of the season is relatively FBI-light. It's all about the pursuit of Hannibal." In October 2014, Fuller confirmed that the second half of the season would adapt the plot of Red Dragon, remarking that deviations from the novel would happen as it was already adapted on Manhunter and Red Dragon, "if we do the same thing, we're a–holes." Casting At the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con, Fuller confirmed that Eddie Izzard would return as Abel Gideon for the season premiere in a flashback sequence as well as stating that Raúl Esparza would return as Frederick Chilton. He also confirmed that the season would introduce many characters from the novels Hannibal and Hannibal Rising, including Rinaldo Pazzi, Lady Murasaki and Dr. Cordell Doemling. In September 2014, Laurence Fishburne confirmed that despite his commitment to Black-ish, he would return as Jack Crawford in the third season. That same month, Gillian Anderson was announced to be upped to |
species of pufferfish in the family Tetraodontidae. It is native to the Indian Ocean, and it has entered the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez | family Tetraodontidae. It is native to the Indian Ocean, and it has entered the Mediterranean Sea through the Suez Canal as an |
television series by Polygon Pictures titled is scheduled to premiere in April 2022 on Fuji TV's +Ultra programming block. An anime film also by Polygon Pictures titled and a mobile game developed by Square Enix titled have also been announced. | television series debuts Action video games Android (operating system) games Crunchyroll anime IOS games Japan-exclusive video games Japanese role-playing video games Massively multiplayer online role-playing games Mobile games Polygon Pictures Square Enix games Upcoming anime television series Upcoming video games Video games |
American American football player Jarek Molski, American disability rights campaigner Jarek Nohavica or Jaromír Nohavica, Czech musician and poet Jarek Pozarycki, Polish musician with Elgibbor Jarek Srnensky (born 1963), Swiss tennis player Jarek Śmietana (1951–2013), Polish jazz musician Fictional characters Jarek, | people with this name include: Jarek Broussard, American American football player Jarek Dymek (born 1971), Polish strongman competitor Jarek Goebel (born 1985), New Zealand Rugby player Jarek Hardy, Canadian musician with The Johnstones Jarek Kasar (born 1983), Estonian singer Jarek Kolář (born 1977), Czech video game designer and producer Jarek Kupsc (born 1966), Polish-American film director and screen writer Jarek Lancaster (born 1990), |
people and would cost more than 1 million Ghanaian cedi to repair. Despite initial reports that he died, the motorcyclist survived the crash and was taken to hospital. The truck driver sustained a deep cut to the head in the accident and was also taken to hospital. The explosive truck's police escort driver was unhurt, though his vehicle was thrown a significant distance by the explosion. Response Ghanaian police and army explosives experts were sent to the scene to avoid the risk of a second explosion. Police requested that local residents "move out of the area to nearby towns for their safety while recovery efforts are under way" and requested that nearby communities "open up their classrooms, churches etc to accommodate surviving victims". Casualties were taken to the nearby Aseda Hospital, as well as a health centre in Bogoso, hospitals in Tarkwa and to the Effia Nkwanta Regional Hospital in Takoradi. The Ghana National Fire and Rescue Service brought an excavator to the scene to assist with recovery efforts. PDSG restored power to all affected residents, outside of Apiatse, within 48 | the accident when the truck exploded. The blast created a wide crater in the road. The explosion affected the nearby Apiate village. The blast destroyed several buildings and left a large crater in the road. At least 13 people were killed and 200 injured, of whom 45 received in-patient treatment. The National Disaster Management Organization stated that 500 buildings have been damaged in the explosion and some people were trapped by the collapse of structures. Others were damaged by fire in the aftermath of the explosion. At least 380 residents were left without shelter. Around 100 road vehicles were also damaged by the blast. A Power Distribution Services Ghana (PDSG) electricity transformer was located close to the site of the incident and was badly damaged. This and other electricity infrastructure damage cut power to around 30,000 people and would cost more than 1 million Ghanaian cedi to repair. Despite initial reports that he died, the motorcyclist survived the crash and was taken to hospital. The truck driver sustained a deep cut to the head in the accident and was also taken to hospital. The explosive truck's police escort driver was unhurt, though his vehicle was |
related genes and proteins. The CMTM8 protein is the full-length and predominant product of the CMTM8 gene. This protein is expressed in a wide range of normal adult and fetal tissues while relatively little is known about the CMTM8-v2 protein. Studies suggest that the CMTM8 protein may be involved in the development of various cancers. The levels of CMTM8 protein are lower in the tissues of non-small-cell lung carcinoma, colon cancer, rectal cancer, esophageal cancer, bladder cancer, stomach cancer, and glioblastoma brain tumors than in their respective adjacent normal organ tissues. The low levels of CMTM8 protein in bladder and stomach cancer tissues were associated with more aggressive diseases (e.g. presence of metastases) and poorer prognoses. These findings suggest that CMTM8 protein may inhibit the development and/or progression of the | to the CKLF-like MARVEL transmembrane domain-containing family of structurally and functionally related genes and proteins. The CMTM8 protein is the full-length and predominant product of the CMTM8 gene. This protein is expressed in a wide range of normal adult and fetal tissues while relatively little is known about the CMTM8-v2 protein. Studies suggest that the CMTM8 protein may be involved in the development of various cancers. The levels of CMTM8 protein are lower |
of that, I went into it." Concerning the concert venue, Jenkins remarked: "That's typical of what I do a lot. I play a lot of contemporary museums, alternative performance spaces. I do quite a bit of that throughout America. Not too much in Europe, but throughout America. In just about every little town and big town..." Regarding his performance of "Giant Steps", Jenkins commented: "I kept the melody in my head... I played my version of that tune. My version was not about playing the chord changes. Don't get me wrong, I love the piece. I love to hear Coltrane playing it. It's personal to Coltrane's ideology at that time. But, my version isn't about | every little town and big town..." Regarding his performance of "Giant Steps", Jenkins commented: "I kept the melody in my head... I played my version of that tune. My version was not about playing the chord changes. Don't get me wrong, I love the piece. I love to hear Coltrane playing it. It's personal to Coltrane's ideology at that time. But, my version isn't about that. I probably had more fun playing it than Coltrane did." Reception The authors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings awarded the album 4 stars, stating: "There is a grizzled majesty... a confident conflation of traditions. Tackling 'Giant Steps' and Dizzy's 'Wouldn't You' on solo fiddle and viola bespeaks some courage, but Jenkins skates across those familiar harmonics with breathtaking ease. The recording is up-close and very personal, and anyone who has not encountered his work previously will be captivated." Writing for AllMusic, "Blue" Gene Tyranny called it "an extraordinary CD of solo violin and viola improvisations." Track listing All compositions by Leroy Jenkins except where indicated. "Blues #1" - 6:42 "Um Cha Chi Chum" - 3:58 "Hipnosis" - 3:37 "Big Wood" - 7:48 "Folk Song" - 5:41 "Off The Top Of My Head" - 4:52 "Wouldn't |
of 2018–19 Senior Women's T20 League. In 2021, she was selected to represent India-A ahead of 2021–22 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy organized by Board of Control for Cricket in India. Early Life Kesar was born on 15 December 1992 in Sonipat, Haryana. She represented Haryana at junior and sub-junior levels in table tennis, baseball and softball. At the age of 17, she moved to Jalandhar, Punjab and started her initial coaching in cricket and slowly became passionate about the | softball. At the age of 17, she moved to Jalandhar, Punjab and started her initial coaching in cricket and slowly became passionate about the sport. Career Kesar started playing for Punjab Women's in 2010. She was also part of the North Zone Team from 2015-2018 and member of GND University Team from 2011-2015. She led the Under 23 Punjab's Women Cricket Team in the year 2015-2016. She was named best bowler of the tournament in BCCI Senior Women Elite Group 2016-2017 and Rama Atray Memorial Tournament in 2016-2017. She played for India A in 2021–22 Senior Women's Challenger Trophy in which India A emerged |
and one maid. Maren Brunhold, a widow with a pension from the Danish Asiatic Company (52 skilling weekly), resided in the building with her sister Lene Brønlund. Hendrick Jochum Holst, a workman, resided in the building with his wife Dorthe Hedevig and their two-year-old son. Andreas Reigers, a widow, resided in the building with her two children (aged one and six) and one maid. Christopher Glerup, owner of Lundegaard, resided in the building with his niece Catrina Becker. Johan Andr.Weidemann, a workman, resided in the building with his wife Doretea and one maid. Johan Morgenrød, another workman, resided in the building with his wife Ane Marie. Maren Sørens Datter, an 82-year-old woman, married but with no mention of her husband, resided in the building with one maid. Heiman Isaac, a 40-year-old Jewish man (no mention of profession), resided in the building with his wife Terza Melcher, their five children (aged one to 13) and one maid. Jobst Henrich, a master tailor, resided in the building with his wife Chrestine Nels Datter. their daughter, one maid and one lodger (tailor). Jacob Rosetzsiy, a master shoemaker, resided in the building with his mother Karen Saling and two apprentices. 1800850 The property was prior to the 1801 census acquired by baker Friderich Arnholz. His property was at that time home to a total of 29 residents in two households. Arnholz, who had recently become a widower, resided in the building with his four children (aged one to 13), six bakers, a coachman, a housekeeper, two maids and three lodgers. Jacob Rosetzky, the shoemaker from the 1787 census, was still residing in the building with his wife Ane Margrethe Balle, their four children (aged one to nine) and one lodger. The property was listed as No. 103 in the new cadastre of 1806. It was at that time owned by baker Johan Rohde. The bakery was later continued by Gottfried Christian Wilhelm Klenz (1786-1837). It was after his early death continued by his widow Ane Cathrine Klentz (née Drastrup, 1793–1983). At the time of the 1840 census, No. 103 was home to a total of 30 residents. Ane Cathrine Klentz resided in the building with her six children (aged seven to 17), one lodger (student), five bakers, one baker's apprentice, a housekeeper (husjomfru) and a maid. Peter Hansen, a clerk at Politiretten, resided on the second floor with his wife Johanne Claudine Hansen and one maid. Gebhard Foersom, a floor clerk, resided on the third floor with his wife Maria Foersom født Harboe and their one-year-old son. Johan Ernst Ehlom, a master shoemaker, resided in the basement with his wife Jacobine Cathrine Ehlom (née Jakobsen), their three children (aged six to nine) and two shoemakers. The eldest daughter Christine Wilhelmine Magdalene Klenz would later marry founder of Wiibroes Bryggeri in Helsingør Carl Wibroe (1812-1888). Their daughter married Søren Anton van der Aa Kühle. The bakery was a few years later acquired by master baker Budolph August Jensen. At the time of the 1845 census, Jensen's property was home to a total of 23 residents. The just 30-year-old owner resided on the ground floor with five bakers, one male servant and two maids. Two lodgers resided on the first floor. One of them was the painter Christian Emil Andersen (1817-1944). Mariane Cecilie Jensen (née Tüchsen), a widow), resided on the second floor with her 34-year-old unmarried daughter and one maid. Johann Ernst Ehlern, the shoemaker from the basement, was now resident on the third floor with his family, one shoemaker and three unmarried women needleworkers. At the time of the 1840 census, No. 103 was home to 27 residents in five households. Søren Christian Sørensen, a new master baker, resided on the ground floor with his wife Karen Marie Petersen, their one-year-old son, five bakers, an apprentice and two maids. Sigismund Fred. Jonas, a professor of economy, resided on the first floor with his wife Marie Fachau, a house keeper, her two children (aged two and four), one lodger and one maid. Mariane Cecilie Jensen Fischer, a widow needleworker, resided on the second floor with two of her children | resided in the side wing with his wife Louise Marie Bangsrand, one maid and one male servant. Carl Heinrich Winther and the new building The property was acquired by master joiner Carl Heinrich Winther in the first half of the 1850s. The present building complex was constructed for him in 1856–1857. There was also room for a bakery in the new building complex. At the time of the 1860, it was home to a total of 68 residents. The owner Carl Heinrich Winther, a master joiner, resided on the third floor with his wife Pauline Kristine (née Holm), their two children (aged 10 and 18), his sister Petrine Jacobine Winther and one maid. Johan Heinrik Christian Breitmayer, a master baker, resided in the building with his wife Andrea Jensine Haderslev, their four children (aged one to six), three bakers, one baker's apprentice, a master tailor, three maids and one male servant. Edward Daniel Jacobsen, a merchant (grosserer), resided on the first floor with a male servant. Wilhelmine Anna Krebs, widow of officer and fire corps director Albrecht Christian Krebs, resided on the second floor with her two children (aged 15 and 23), two lodgers and one maid. Rasmus Christiansen, an innkeeper, resided on the fourth floor with his wife Ane Marie (née Nielsen), their three children (aged two to eight) and one maid. The bakery was owned by master baker Friderich Adolph Georg Heinricy (1829-) by the time that he joined the Royal Copenhagen Shooting Society in 1862. His father was the owner of a bakery at Strandgade 24 in Christianshavn. Whem house numbering betreet was introduced in Copenhagen in 1859 (as a supplement to the old cadastrel numbers by quarter), No. 1+3, necame listed as Gråbrødretorv 17 and Valkendorfsgade 32. 20th century In the beginning of the 20th century, it was proposed to extend the street Kejsergade to Valkendorfsgade by demolishing Gråbrødretorv 17 and some of the surrounding buildings to create a more obvious link between Skindergade and Strøget. The plans were ultimately given up. At the time of the 1906 census, Gråbrødretorv 17 was home to just 16 people. Fredrik Sofus Nielsen, a master baker, resided in the building with his wife Marie Charlotte Nielsen. Valdemar Vilhelm Andersen, an engraver, resided on the first floor with his wife Lydia Mary Ann Andersen and their daughter Alice Collius Andersen. Arnold Hermann Jensen, a businessman, resided on the second floor with his wife Dagmar Dorothea Olivia Jensen and their 16-year-old son. Margrethe Jacobsen, a 51-year-old widow, resided on the third floor with her two sons (aged 16 and 24). Anders Andersen, a journalist, resided on the fourth floor with his wife Margrethe Louise Benedikte Andersen. The complex was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places by the Danish Heritage Agency in 1945. The passageway through the complex was opened to the public in 1975. The name Kringlegangen was the result of a competition. Architecture The complex consists of a four-storey and four-bays-wide building towards Gråbrødretorv (Gråbrødretorv 17) and a five-storey and five-bays-wide building towards Valkendorfsgade (Valkendorfsgade 32). The side wings of the two buildings are attached to eachotuer along the northeastern margin of a central courtyard. Another side wing (Gråbrødretorv 17 A-B) extends from the rear side of Valkendorfsgade 32 along the siuthwestern margin of the courtyard and is at the other end attached to a former warehouse. Rhe facade of Gråbrødretorv 17 is finished with shadow joints, a frieze with acanthus ornamentation above the ground floor and a simple cornice below the roof. A golded {{kringle]] is seen ab ove the gateway in the right hand side of the building. The windows on the third floor are accented with sills supported by corbels. The pitched red tile roof is pierced by two chimneys, one at each gable. Accress to the main staircase is via an opening in the gateway. The yard side of the building is rendered in a warm orange colour. The side wing consists of two full bays and |
of a large species with "brilliant scarlet" flowers began a phase of plant collecting in the Himalayas and adjacent regions, also covering many other types of plants, that would last over a century. The three-year expedition to the Himalayas by Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, later Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in 1847–50 had a rapid impact on large English gardens, beginning the "rhododendron garden". The new Asian plants were generally easier to grow successfully in northern Europe than the American arrivals of the previous century, and tended to replace them. One species, rhododendron ponticum, is now all too prominent in Britain, Ireland and New Zealand as a problematic invasive plant. It is native to western Spain and Portugal, from where the British stock seems to have come, as well as north-eastern Turkey. It was first introduced to England in 1763 by the Loddiges family of nurserymen, but initially it was thought it needed the same damp conditions as the American species. By the 19th century it was realized that this was not the case, and the species began to thrive. By the 1840s landowners were spreading the seeds in woodland to create game coverts. Another gardening form that fed into the woodland garden in the 19th century was the arboretum and its specialized sub-type of the pinetum, specimen collections of trees in general, but mostly exotic, and of conifers. Various schemes for arranging these rose and fell in fashion, and were also used for woodland gardens: by botanical groups, by geographical origin, by size and shape, and finally and most popularly, by colour. Many woodland gardens set out to replicate as far as possible the scenery of exotically remote and distant landscapes, mostly Asian, which their owners and designers often knew only from books. Woodland gardens began to become a particular focus of gardening attention from the publication in 1870 of The Wild Garden by the opinionated gardener and writer William Robinson. In his "Preface" to the 1881 edition, Robinson explains that this essentially means "the placing of perfectly hardy exotic plants in places and under conditions where they will become established and take care of themselves". For woodland gardens Robinson's influence meant especially the mass planting of bulbs and other flowers, under and in front of deciduous trees and shrubs, which Robinson himself practised on an epic scale in his own garden at Gravetye Manor, bought in 1885. A second crucial influence from the years around 1900 was the opening up of south-west China, especially Yunnan, and parts of the Himalayan foothills to European plant collectors, including George Forrest and Ernest Henry Wilson. These regions had a large number of flowering shrubs and trees that grew well in temperate climates, and often preferred acid soils that were little use for agriculture. Woodland gardens work well, arguably best of all, on sites with sharp but small contouring; the original habitat of most of the waves of new Asian plants was steep valleys or hillsides. The steep garden at Cragside in Northumberland, created from the 1860s until about 1880, "may be regarded as the pioneering example" of this type of woodland garden, copied by several other gardens in the next three decades. The very large areas of garden developed by the rich in the early 20th century therefore used relatively cheap land, that was often already woodland. Some woodland gardens, like Sheffield Park Garden in East Sussex, took over a park laid out in the 18th-century English landscape garden style, in that case worked on by both Capability Brown and Humphry Repton. They also needed fewer gardeners per acre than intensive formal Victorian plantings. The style spread from the rich to the comfortably-off suburban middle-class. According to Charles Quest-Ritson, "The William Robinson style of woodland garden, colourfully planted with exotic shrubs and herbaceous plants, dominated English horticulture from 1910 to 1960". After World War I new trends appeared in woodland garden design. Eric Savill (1895–1980) designed both the Savill Garden and the Valley Gardens in Windsor Great Park in a "new style in which glades and vistas became the major means of organizing the composition, and in which colour massing was downplayed", at least in the former. The Japanese garden Another influence in the years around 1900 was the Japanese garden, whose distinct aesthetic was promoted in the West by Josiah Conder's Landscape Gardening in Japan (Kelly & Walsh, 1893). Conder was a British architect who had worked for the Japanese government and other clients in Japan from 1877 until his death. The book was published when the general trend of Japonisme, or Japanese influence in the arts of the West, was already well-established, and sparked the first Japanese gardens in the West. A second edition was required in 1912. The traditional Japanese | be varied too by making some of them of evergreens altogether, our red cedar made to grow in a bush, evergreen privet, pyrocanthus, Kalmia, Scotch broom.... 19th and 20th centuries The rhododendrons from Europe and America known in England by 1800 were "pale-pink and mauve" in flower, and the arrival from India in the 1820s of a large species with "brilliant scarlet" flowers began a phase of plant collecting in the Himalayas and adjacent regions, also covering many other types of plants, that would last over a century. The three-year expedition to the Himalayas by Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, later Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in 1847–50 had a rapid impact on large English gardens, beginning the "rhododendron garden". The new Asian plants were generally easier to grow successfully in northern Europe than the American arrivals of the previous century, and tended to replace them. One species, rhododendron ponticum, is now all too prominent in Britain, Ireland and New Zealand as a problematic invasive plant. It is native to western Spain and Portugal, from where the British stock seems to have come, as well as north-eastern Turkey. It was first introduced to England in 1763 by the Loddiges family of nurserymen, but initially it was thought it needed the same damp conditions as the American species. By the 19th century it was realized that this was not the case, and the species began to thrive. By the 1840s landowners were spreading the seeds in woodland to create game coverts. Another gardening form that fed into the woodland garden in the 19th century was the arboretum and its specialized sub-type of the pinetum, specimen collections of trees in general, but mostly exotic, and of conifers. Various schemes for arranging these rose and fell in fashion, and were also used for woodland gardens: by botanical groups, by geographical origin, by size and shape, and finally and most popularly, by colour. Many woodland gardens set out to replicate as far as possible the scenery of exotically remote and distant landscapes, mostly Asian, which their owners and designers often knew only from books. Woodland gardens began to become a particular focus of gardening attention from the publication in 1870 of The Wild Garden by the opinionated gardener and writer William Robinson. In his "Preface" to the 1881 edition, Robinson explains that this essentially means "the placing of perfectly hardy exotic plants in places and under conditions where they will become established and take care of themselves". For woodland gardens Robinson's influence meant especially the mass planting of bulbs and other flowers, under and in front of deciduous trees and shrubs, which Robinson himself practised on an epic scale in his own garden at Gravetye Manor, bought in 1885. A second crucial influence from the years around 1900 was the opening up of south-west China, especially Yunnan, and parts of the Himalayan foothills to European plant collectors, including George Forrest and Ernest Henry Wilson. These regions had a large number of flowering shrubs and trees that grew well in temperate climates, and often preferred acid soils that were little use for agriculture. Woodland gardens work well, arguably best of all, on sites with sharp but small contouring; the original habitat of most of the waves of new Asian plants was steep valleys or hillsides. The steep garden at Cragside in Northumberland, created from the 1860s until about 1880, "may be regarded as the pioneering example" of this type of woodland garden, copied by several other gardens in the next three decades. The very large areas of garden developed by the rich in the early 20th century therefore used relatively cheap land, that was often already woodland. Some woodland gardens, like Sheffield Park Garden in East Sussex, took over a park laid out in the 18th-century English landscape garden style, in that case worked on by both Capability Brown and Humphry Repton. They also needed fewer gardeners per acre than intensive formal Victorian plantings. The style spread from the rich to the comfortably-off suburban middle-class. According to Charles Quest-Ritson, "The William Robinson style of woodland garden, colourfully planted with exotic shrubs and herbaceous plants, dominated English horticulture from 1910 to 1960". After World War I new trends appeared in woodland garden design. Eric Savill (1895–1980) designed both the Savill Garden and the Valley Gardens in Windsor Great Park in a "new style in which glades and vistas became the major means of organizing the composition, and in which colour massing was downplayed", at least in the former. The Japanese garden Another influence in the years around 1900 was the Japanese garden, whose distinct aesthetic was promoted in the West by Josiah Conder's Landscape Gardening in Japan (Kelly & Walsh, 1893). Conder was a British architect who had worked |
is a state-owned public university located in Yerevan, Armenia. History The European University of Armenia (previously known as the European Educational Regional Academy), was founded in October 2001 on the basis of agreement between the Government of Armenia, the European Academy of Bolzano, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Lyon, the French University of Armenia, and the Technical University of Berlin. The University's educational programs are based on the standards of the European Higher Education Area. Programs The European University offers educational services for Armenian and foreign applicants. The University maintains branches in Gyumri, Vanadzor, Ijevan, Gavar, and Kapan. The European University carries out 11 Bachelor's, 10 Master's and 6 Postgraduate programs in both part time and full time learning systems, approximately 20% of registered students are foreign nationals. Various programs are offered, including in information technology, quantum technology, law, finance, psychology, tourism, international relations, economics, linguistics, and architecture, among others. International cooperation In 2018, the university became a member of the European Association | was signed with the University of Applied Sciences Kufstein in Austria. In addition, in October, the university signed an agreement with the Moscow Polytechnic University. In February 2020, members of the university visited the University of Science and Culture in Iran, in which developing educational ties was discussed. In April 2021, the university signed a cooperation agreement with the Junia Grande Ecole in Lille. In November 2021, the university signed a cooperation agreement with the Caucasus University in Tbilisi. In December 2021, the university hosted UNESCO delegates, areas for potential cooperation was discussed. Also in December 2021, the university launched two programs with the Istituto Secoli in Milan. In June 2021, the university met with representative from the International Telecommunication Union and discussed educational cooperation. In January 2022, the university expanded a cooperation agreement with the University of Oulu, in |
2020 Netflix Christmas musical film Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey. She also appeared in the 2022 film The Tiger Rising. Mills was born in Atlanta and raised in | 2009) is an American actress. She is known for her role as Journey in the 2020 Netflix Christmas musical film Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey. She also appeared in the 2022 film The Tiger Rising. Mills was born in |
birds collected, included a starling, a shrike that "whistles like boys", a bulbul and other desert-dwelling species. Margaret's brother also accompanied the couple to Namibia. Death and legacy Margaret Sordahl died in 1995 in Friendswood. Her field notebook and other archival material relating to her time in Namibia, is held by the Smithsonian Institution Archives. References External links Diary entries - 1930-1932 Explorations and field work of the Smithsonian Created via preloaddraft 1906 births 1995 deaths People from Milan | Whilst the couple were stationed at the Smithsonian's Brukkaros Solar Observatory in Namibia, Sordahl collected many specimen's for the museum's natural science collections, including the holotype for a species of canary, Serinus albogularis sordahlae. The species was subsequently named after her. As an eponym, she was honoured since she "maintained her interest in zoological collecting under rather trying and difficult circumstances". She described the bird and its behaviour, stating that "these birds stay on the mountains during the whole year, living on top of the mountain during the hottest months of the year". |
present-day Chilean region of Magallanes, although she was called upon in other Patagonian regions when a conflictive situation required her judgment. María was a leader of great prestige and power among the Tehuelche people, known for her skills as a ruler and merchant with European settlers and explorers. She is considered one of the most prominent figures in the history of the Patagonia. Her influence covered the entirety of the Argentine Patagonia, from the Río Negro to | María the Great), is the Christian name of a woman who served as the cacica of the southern Tehuelche people who lived in the Strait of Magellan and the Patagonian coast during the first half of the 19th century. Her direct domain was focused in the territory of the Bay of San Gregorio, in the present-day Chilean region of Magallanes, although she was called upon in other Patagonian regions when a conflictive situation required her judgment. María was a leader of great prestige and power among the Tehuelche people, known for her skills |
as Apeatse) is a mining village situated along the Tarkwa-Bogoso-Ayamfuri road in Ghana. It was a victim of | Apeatse) is a mining village situated along the Tarkwa-Bogoso-Ayamfuri road in Ghana. It was |
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