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and in 1998 he played 6 matches scoring 5 goals with Neftyanik Bugulma in the Russian Amateur Football League. In 1999 he played 1 match for Spartak Lukhovitsy. References External links Gennadiy Lagomina at footballfacts.ru 1973 births Living people FC Desna Chernihiv players FC Shakhtar Makiivka players FC Khartsyzk players FC Spartak Ryazan players FC Lukhovitsy players Ukrainian footballers Ukrainian Premier League players Ukrainian First League players Ukrainian Second League players Ukrainian expatriate footballers Ukrainian expatriate sportspeople in | goal. In 1996 he moved to Industriya Borovsk in Russia in the Russian Second Division. In 1997 he moved to Spartak Ryazan in the Russian First Division playing 5 matches and in 1998 he played 6 matches scoring 5 goals with Neftyanik Bugulma in |
with art by Itoe Takemoto has been serialized in Kodansha's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Sirius since February 2022. Crunchyroll holds the license of both the manga and the anime. Characters References External links Anime official website +Ultra Anime with original screenplays Crunchyroll anime Crunchyroll manga High fantasy | shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Sirius since February 2022. Crunchyroll holds the license of both the manga and the anime. Characters References External links Anime official website +Ultra Anime with original screenplays Crunchyroll anime Crunchyroll manga High fantasy anime and manga Kodansha |
27,056 members, its membership growing to 38,057 in 1970, and 41,961 by 1985. In 1989, Sohyo merged into the Japanese Trade Union Confederation, but Shinbunroren decided instead to become independent. As of 2019, it had 21,876 | of Japan (Sohyo), and by 1958 it had 27,056 members, its membership growing to 38,057 in 1970, and 41,961 by 1985. In 1989, |
included it on their list of the 100 best young adult novels of all time. Reception Reviews We Are Not Free received starred reviews from Booklist, Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews. Kirkus Reviews named We | starred reviews from Booklist, Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews. Kirkus Reviews named We Are Not Free one of the best young adult novels of 2020, and TIME included it on their list of the 100 best young adult novels of all time. Awards |
was awarded a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship in the School of Biology. At St Andrews, she has pioneered omics-based approaches to identifying the genes associated with vocal learning in animal models. Vernes is founding co-director of the international research consortium Bat1K. Awards and honours 2018 FENS-KAVLI Network of Excellence Scholar 2020 European Research Council (ERC) consolidator grant 2022 Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists UK Finalist Selected publications A functional genetic link between distinct developmental language disorders Identification of FOXP2 truncation as a novel cause of developmental speech and language deficits Identification of the transcriptional targets of FOXP2, a gene linked to speech and language, in developing human brain References Living | neurodevelopment in human and mouse models. Vernes also showed the relationship between CNTNAP2 and FOXP2, indicating that the pair can cause various language-related issues. Research and career Vernes held a short Wellcome Trust fellowship before joining the F.C. Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging as a research fellow. She was awarded a Max Planck Society and Human Frontier Science Program grant to establish her own research group at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. She made use of bats to study speech and language traits. Her research investigates vocal communications in mammals. Vernes was the first to make use of bats as a tractable mammalian model of vocal learning. She is particularly interested in the biological mechanisms that underpin human speech. She achieves this by studying how bats learn vocalisations, and the genetic pathways that contribute to language learning and recognition. Vernes was awarded a European Research Council consolidator grant in 2020, |
Michael G. Nastos wrote: "this collaborative quartet dubbed Driftwood indeed emphasizes instruments made of wood in nomadic improvisational pretexts. The instrumentation alongside the witty, wise, and wanderlust violin style of Jenkins is as collectively unique in its pursuit of new sound timbres." The musicians "play off each other, rarely coalescing or coagulating. Instead they hear, react, and respond as if setting off remarkable bright bursts of brushfire light and heat, snuffing it out, and setting another smoldering patch. This separate and equal dynamic allows both the group democracy and familial qualities that Jenkins has always favored... This is a most successful project, one that should be enjoyed equally by those interested in creative improvised and world music." Writing for All About Jazz, Rex Butters commented: "Leroy Jenkins' Driftwood rarely floats, but readily burns... The quartet roils with sound and ideas, frequently creating tones and timbres that seem anything but acoustic... Living up to its title, The Art of Improvisation features four bristling performances crafted in the moment by the highly attentive ensemble, merging and emerging through their shared creations." Bill Shoemaker at Point of Departure stated: "New methods of structuring improvisations are devised daily; but rhythm remains one of the most reliable. It is open-ended, as it does not address pitch or timbre; at the same time, rhythm is a catalyst that assures at least an | a melodic instrument. He too has a keen sense of timbre and a powerful if slightly crooked manner of generating rhythmic intensity... Jenkins is typically excellent. Individually the four players are marvelous; collectively they are something special. This is a beautiful work." Ken Waxman, writing for JazzWord, commented: the "players utilize decisive strategies plus consummate instrumental techniques to create improvisations that reflect all their backgrounds – and more – as well as modulations that don't fit traditional schema. Thus some timbres mix deliberate node-twisting internal piano string resonation with sprightly fiddle melodies. Others maximize the piano's percussive friction, the better to intersect with concussive, wood resonating tones from O'Donnell and spiccato from Jenkins. Min's four-strings and 30 frets allows her to produce harp-like glissandi to meet the violinist's repeated counter tones or tautly flat pick as if she was playing a Bluegrass dobro to counter the fiddler's double stopping." Track listing All compositions by Leroy Jenkins except where indicated. "To Live - Allegro Moderato ♩ = 116" - 10:41 "To Sing - Andante Cantabile ♩ = 80" - 18:00 "To Run - Vivace ♩ = 168" - 5:02 "To Believe - Pure Motion ♩ = 0" - 8:32 Recorded October 8, 2004 at the Community Church of New York, New York City Personnel Leroy Jenkins – violin Min Xiao-Fen – pipa Denman Maroney – piano Rich |
quarter-finals, with Ryotaro Araki scoring a 90th minute consolation goal. With five goals in four games, Everaldo ended up as the top scorer in the whole tournament, in spite of Kashima not making it past the quarter-final stage. J.League Cup Kashima were drawn into Group A as the team that finished fifth in the league in 2020 – the four teams above them received byes from the group stage of the cup. They were unbeaten in the group stage with three wins and three draws. At the play-off stage, Kashima went onto beat Shimizu S-Pulse in both legs of the tie, but were knocked out at the quarter-final stage by eventual champions Nagoya Grampus. Like the Emperor's Cup, Everaldo was the highest scorer for Kashima in | football in 1993. The club finished the 2021 J1 League in fourth place, one place above their position from the previous season. They also competed in the Emperor's Cup and J.League Cup and reached the quarter finals of both competitions. After a poor start to the season losing four of their first six league games, manager Antônio Carlos Zago was dismissed in April 2021 and was replaced by Naoki Soma as interim manager who would take control until the end of the season. Squad Season squad Competitions J1 League League table Results summary Results by matchday Results Emperor's Cup After comfortably beating lower division teams in the early rounds of the tournament, Kashima were beaten comfortably 3–1 by Kawasaki Frontale in the quarter-finals, with Ryotaro Araki scoring a 90th minute consolation goal. With five goals in four games, Everaldo ended up as the top scorer in the whole tournament, in spite of Kashima not making it past the quarter-final stage. J.League Cup Kashima were drawn into |
is also the Dean of Men's Undergraduate Torah Studies Program at Yeshiva University. Penner is the Rabbi Emeritus of the Young Israel of Holliswood. Education Following high-school, Penner attended Yeshivat Har Etzion in 1988, then headed by Aharon Lichtenstein and Yehuda Amital. He graduated from Yeshiva College in 1991 and received Semicha from RIETS in 1994. Career Penner served as the spiritual leader of the Young Israel of Holliswood in Queens for 20 years, | Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University. He is also the Dean of Men's Undergraduate Torah Studies Program at Yeshiva University. Penner is the Rabbi Emeritus of the Young Israel of Holliswood. Education Following high-school, Penner attended Yeshivat Har Etzion in 1988, then headed by Aharon Lichtenstein and Yehuda Amital. He graduated from Yeshiva College in 1991 and received Semicha from RIETS in 1994. Career Penner served as the spiritual |
for Cambridge University Cricket Club in 1994, making nine appearances. Playing as an opening and middle order batsman in the Cambridge side, he scored 248 runs at an average of 15.50; he made one score of over fifty, making 53 runs against | the University of Cambridge. While studying at Cambridge, he played first-class cricket for Cambridge University Cricket Club in 1994, making nine appearances. Playing as an opening and middle order batsman in the Cambridge side, he scored 248 runs at |
the position of the Justice of the Peace of his district. In 1885, he was elected to represent Noxubee County in the Mississippi House of Representatives for the 1886-1888 term. He was re-elected in 1887 for the 1888-1890 term. He was re-elected again in 1889 for the 1890-1892 term. At the start of that term in January 1890, Madison was chosen by acclamation to be the Speaker of the House. Madison was, also by acclamation, recommended to be a delegate to Mississippi's Constitutional Convention of 1890, but circumstances prevented him from attending. Madison was re-elected to the House in 1891 for the 1892-1894 term. He died in office of an illness on December 25, 1892. Legislation In 1888, Madison authored a bill that granted relief to certain Confederate Civil War veterans living in Mississippi. In addition, Madison authored a bill that required chancery clerks to keep ledger accounts against each officer in the state. He also authored a bill that assessed the lands in each county, and a bill that made it a misdemeanor to not pay | March 26, 1846, in Marengo County, Alabama. He was one of ten children of L. W. Madison and his wife, Frances Delilah (Tucker) Madison. James's brother, John E. Madison, would serve in the Mississippi Legislature in 1880. When James was a child, he moved with his parents to Mississippi, first to Lowndes County and then to Noxubee County. James attended only the common schools. During the Civil War, Madison served in the Confederate Army. He became a planter and was able to acquire considerable amount of property. Political career Madison was a member of the Democratic Party. After the end of Reconstruction, Madison was elected to the position of |
connected by SH1. Motutere is dominated by a camping site, one of the main spots for caravan camping along the shores of the lake. A popular short walking track, Waipehi Walk, begins at the settlement and offers views across the lake. References | Taupō in New Zealand's Waikato region. It lies on Motutere Bay, close to the popular diving location, Te Poporo / Bulli Point, and approximately halfway between Taupō and |
another interchange with the R75 Route, where it leaves Despatch and enters Uitenhage. It continues westwards from the R75 junction as Union Avenue, then Caledon Street, to reach a junction with the R334 Route in the Uitenhage town centre, marking its end. Highways in South Africa Transport in Port Elizabeth | Route. The M6 begins by going northwards as Uitenhage Road, then turning westwards, to reach another interchange with the R75 Route, where it leaves Despatch and enters Uitenhage. It continues westwards from the R75 junction as Union Avenue, then Caledon Street, to reach a junction with |
it was a sing of things to come for the Big Red. Kaldis, himself, followed suit as a junior and ramped up his scoring. He finished third on the team and pushed the team to another regular season title. Cornell returned to the ECAC championship game and was named to the All-Tournament Team despite Cornell losing to Clarkson. Cornell made its third consecutive appearance in the NCAA Tournament and finally managed to win a game. Kaldis assisted on the opening goal and spurred on a run that ended with a 5–1 victory. As a senior, Kaldis was named team captain and continued to produce from the back end. It was, however, his defensive exploits that allowed Cornell to be ranked as the top team in the nation towards the end of the season. Cornell ended the regular season with just 2 losses in 29 games and, with the #3 Pairwise ranking, it was a mathematical certainty that the Big Red would be selected for the NCAA Tournament for a 4th year in a row. Unfortunately, just prior to Cornell's quarterfinal match with Princeton, both Harvard and Yale withdrew from the conference tournament due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While the remaining six team held onto hope that the tournament would continue, a day later the conference announced the cancellation of the tournament. In spite of the disappointment about how his final season with | losing to Clarkson. Cornell made its third consecutive appearance in the NCAA Tournament and finally managed to win a game. Kaldis assisted on the opening goal and spurred on a run that ended with a 5–1 victory. As a senior, Kaldis was named team captain and continued to produce from the back end. It was, however, his defensive exploits that allowed Cornell to be ranked as the top team in the nation towards the end of the season. Cornell ended the regular season with just 2 losses in 29 games and, with the #3 Pairwise ranking, it was a mathematical certainty that the Big Red would be selected for the NCAA Tournament for a 4th year in a row. Unfortunately, just prior to Cornell's quarterfinal match with Princeton, |
with a position at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, then known as the Polytechnic Institute of New York University. She moved from there to the University of Pittsburgh in 2012, and then to Duke University in 2017, becoming Clare Boothe Luce Associate Professor before her promotion to full professor. Recognition Li was named an IEEE Fellow in 2018, "for contributions to neuromorphic computing systems". She was elected as a 2021 ACM Fellow "for contributions to neuromorphic computing and deep-learning acceleration". References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American electronics engineers American women engineers Chinese electronics | networks in machine learning. She is Clare Boothe Luce Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Duke University. Education and career Li earned both a bachelor's degree and a master's degree from Tsinghua University, in 1998 and 2000 respectively. She completed her Ph.D. at Purdue University in 2004. She worked in industry at Qualcomm, Intel, and Seagate Technology on computer memory technology including static random-access memory, memristors, and spintronicss, before returning to academia in 2009 with a position at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, then known as the Polytechnic Institute of New York University. She moved from there to the University of Pittsburgh in 2012, and then to Duke University in 2017, becoming |
Petit Livre des souvenirs, 1888. Les Révoltes de Sylvie, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Le Bonheur de Françoise, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Les Étapes de Madeleine, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Mon oncle d'Amérique, illustrated by Tofani, 1890. Les Conquêtes d'Hermine, illustrated by H. Vogel, 1892. Hélène Corianis, illustrated by A. Moreau, 1893. Le Pauvre François / Ferma contre Pagliati, (n.d.). Jean l'Innocent, (n.d.). Aventures de Trottino, (n.d.). Franchise, (n.d.). L'Ambition de Jean Trémisort, (n.d.). Bataille de fleurs / Les nénuphars / Les lions de mon oncle Paul, (n.d.). Chimères, (n.d.). Les Cinq Ans de Frédéric, (n.d.). Contes aux enfants sages, (n.d.). Contes de vacances, (n.d.). Contes qui finissent bien, (n.d.). En province, (n.d.). Entre oiseaux (On prend plus de mouches avec une cuillerée de miel qu'avec une tonne de vinaigre), (n.d.). La Famille de Friquet, (n.d.). La Fille des bohémiens, (n.d.). Franchise : Aimery au clair visage : roman de chevalerie, illustrated by C. Monnot, (n.d.). L'Héritière de Vauclain, (n.d.). Histoires de bêtes, 1890. Histoire morale et instructive de Matou, (n.d.). Les Infortunes de Chouchou, 1881. Maître Pizzoni / L'Élève de Leoni / Le Chanteur florentin / Tante Gertrude / Une Signature / Chez Grand'Père, (n.d.). Mirliflor / Blanche-Écume (Les malheurs de Bébelle), (n.d.). Pieter Vandael, 1883. Pour les faire mentir, (n.d.). Le Prix de Gisèle, (n.d.). Récits et historiettes, (n.d.). Sabine, (n.d.). Souffre-Douleur, (n.d.). Sur les toits, (n.d.). La Trouvaille de Jeannette / La Victime de Ravageot, (n.d.). Part of Hachette's "Bibliothèque des écoles et des familles" series La Fille de Carilès / Le Petit Prince Ulrich / Nedji la bohémienne / La Bonne Mitche, illustrated by Adrien Marie, 1874. Le Violoneux de la sapinière, illustrated by Adrien Marie, 1874. "L' héritière de Vauclain" , illustrated by C. Delort, 1879. Le Sansonnet de Madame Duysens / Le Maître de Papillon / Le Prix d'honneur, 1882. Denis le Tyran, 1883. Contes vrais, 1884. Simples Récits (Marianne Button | Montyon Prize in 1875, for La fille de Carilès; and the Jules-Favre Prize in 1893, for Ensemble de son œuvre. Publications La Fille de Carilès, 1874. Chloris et Jeanneton, 1877. Feu de paille, 1881. Pour la muse, illustrated by Tofani, 1884. Pour la Patrie ! (aux exilés d'Alscace-Lorraine), illustrated by E. Zier, 1885. Danielle, 1888. Le Petit Livre des souvenirs, 1888. Les Révoltes de Sylvie, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Le Bonheur de Françoise, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Les Étapes de Madeleine, illustrated by S. Auzanne, 1889. Mon oncle d'Amérique, illustrated by Tofani, 1890. Les Conquêtes d'Hermine, illustrated by H. Vogel, 1892. Hélène Corianis, illustrated by A. Moreau, 1893. Le Pauvre François / Ferma contre Pagliati, (n.d.). Jean l'Innocent, (n.d.). Aventures de Trottino, (n.d.). Franchise, (n.d.). L'Ambition de Jean Trémisort, (n.d.). Bataille de fleurs / Les nénuphars / Les lions de mon oncle Paul, (n.d.). Chimères, (n.d.). Les Cinq Ans de Frédéric, (n.d.). Contes aux enfants sages, (n.d.). Contes de vacances, (n.d.). Contes qui finissent bien, (n.d.). En province, (n.d.). Entre oiseaux (On prend plus de mouches avec une cuillerée de miel qu'avec une tonne de vinaigre), (n.d.). La Famille de Friquet, (n.d.). La Fille des bohémiens, (n.d.). Franchise : Aimery au clair visage : roman de chevalerie, illustrated by C. Monnot, (n.d.). L'Héritière |
the most nominations with ten, followed by Belfast and CODA with nine each. In regards to the total number of overall nominations for studios, Netflix led with 27, followed by Warner Bros. with 18 and Focus Features with 17. Winners and nominees Winners are listed first and highlighted with boldface. Honorary awards Newcomer Award – Jude Hill Inspire Award – Aunjanue Ellis Game Changer Award – Simu Liu Spotlight Award – The Cast of CODA Star on the Rise Award – Saniyya Sidney Artisan | due to the rising number of COVID-19 cases linked to the Omicron variant. The ceremony was hosted by Annaleigh Ashford. The nominations were announced on December 2, 2021. Dune received the most nominations with ten, followed by Belfast and CODA with nine each. In regards to the total number of overall nominations for studios, Netflix led with 27, followed by |
higher learning institution. The SIDAM university, a junior college, it was initially created to provide short term training courses offering certificates and diploma to the civil servants and the staff from the booming socioeconomic development activities in the 1970s and 80s. With shortage of skills due to brain drain to the oil rich countries in the Mideast, the country was left with shortage of trained management and, thus SIDAM was the key training institution to offer managerial and executive skills for the gaps in civil service and elsewhere in the economy. Postgraduate degrees With gradual increase in capacity and experience, by 1972 SIDAM was an standalone higher education institution. As the Somali National University itself was going through drastic change including new charter and upgrading to full university right around this time, SIDAM. Trained | thus SIDAM was the key training institution to offer managerial and executive skills for the gaps in civil service and elsewhere in the economy. Postgraduate degrees With gradual increase in capacity and experience, by 1972 SIDAM was an standalone higher education institution. As the Somali National University itself was going through drastic change including new charter and upgrading to full university right around this time, SIDAM. Trained were key executives, CEOs and other management and leadership people to run the newly created factories SNAY across the country and production centers along with newly nationalized programs as the military government took full control of the country by later 1969 up to the mid-1970s as the military conciliated the national political power. International sister universities SIDAM continued to enroll more intake students for added early 1970s Bachelor's degree and soon after MPA and MBA programs following partnerships with overseas universities such as California State University at Fresno, in the United States, and universities in the Netherland. Exchange Partnership with Fresno was the first program to got underway for MBA programs. One year at The California State University Fresno than research and dissertation completed in Mogadishu SIDAM campus. Notable alumni |
Túlio (footballer, born March 1998), Brazilian football midfielder Marco Túlio (footballer, born May 1998), Brazilian football left-back | football midfielder Marco Túlio (footballer, born May 1998), Brazilian football left-back See also Marcos Túlio (born 1992), Brazilian football defensive |
the Paramount Network. As of January 2, 2022, 39 episodes of Yellowstone have aired, concluding the fourth season. The series was renewed for a fifth season that will be split into two installments of seven episodes each. Series overview Episodes Season 1 | episodes from Yellowstone an American drama television series created by Taylor Sheridan and John Linson that premiered on June 20, 2018, on the Paramount Network. As of January |
would frequently meet the restaurateur David Tang there. Coleridge recalled in his memoir, The Glossy Years, that he and Tang would never "do any actual gym or go near the StairMasters or running machines" but instead spend their time at the club "sitting on a sofa eating smoked salmon and gossiping". Coleridge also agreed to meet the publicist Michael Cole in the club's Turkish bath to ensure that neither of them carried covert listening devices during the libel battle between Cole's employer, Mohamed Al-Fayed, and Coleridge's employers, the publishers Condé Nast. Coleridge profiled the members of the Bath & Racquets Club as consisting of "Greek shipping billionaires" and managers of hedge funds. Design and facilities The club has squash courts, a gym, a Turkish bath, a lounge for members with a bar, and a barber's shop. It is set over two floors. The steam-rooms, showers, and urinals of the club are made from green onyx. The onyx was found in Torquay, Devon, and dates from the 1930s. The changing room was furnished with chaise longues designed by Le Corbusier upon opening in 1989. Birley described the decor of the club as "post-Mussolini epic style". Members change into white sports clothes after entering the club. Prior to opening the Bath & Racquets Club, Birley had "observed with horror | Annabel's, Harry's Bar, Mark's Club, and George, to Richard Caring in 2007. History The Bath & Racquets Club is located at 49 Brook's Mews in London's Mayfair district. The club was established by Mark Birley in 1989 after a visit to the Racquet and Tennis Club in New York City. He had previously opened the members clubs Annabel's in 1963 and Harry's Bar in 1979. The significant financial cost of opening the Bath & Racquets Club forced Birley to sell part of the wine cellar of Annabel's. In 2007 Birley sold his four Mayfair clubs, including the Bath & Racquets, to Richard Caring for £90 million. Wafic Saïd was a director of the club in the early 1990s. The club is now part of the 'Birley Clubs' owned by Caring including Annabel's, Harry's Bar, Mark's Club, and George. Membership The club opened in May 1989 with an annual membership fee of £2,000 (). The annual fee had risen to £7,500 in 2019, with a joining fee of £1,000. In 2019 the club had c.300 members with a lengthy waiting list. Prospective members must be proposed and seconded by current members of the club. The Bath & Racquets Club is an all male club; though women are permitted to spectate games of squash from the club's gallery. Women were described as able to be admitted 'by arrangement' by The Times in 1989. The Bath & Racquets Club is London's most expensive private gym and squash club. In the early 1990s guests of Claridge's hotel (located behind the club on Brook Street) were permitted to use the facilities of the |
Description Assembly Brewing is a Black-owned brewery and restaurant in southeast Portland's Mt. Scott-Arleta neighborhood, near Foster-Powell. The menu includes Detroit-style pizza, sandwiches, salads, cocktails, and seven beers on tap. Pizza varieties include Hawaiian, "meat-lovers" (with pork roll), and "veggie gourmet". In 2019, Andi Prewitt of Willamette Week said the business is "is now one of the few minority-owned breweries in the country". Assembly is the first Black-owned brewery in Oregon, according to Portland Monthly's Katherine Chew Hamilton. The restaurant operates in a renovated 7,500 square-foot space owned | Oregon. Description Assembly Brewing is a Black-owned brewery and restaurant in southeast Portland's Mt. Scott-Arleta neighborhood, near Foster-Powell. The menu includes Detroit-style pizza, sandwiches, salads, cocktails, and seven beers on tap. Pizza varieties include Hawaiian, "meat-lovers" (with pork roll), and "veggie gourmet". In 2019, Andi Prewitt of Willamette Week said the business is "is now one of the few minority-owned breweries in the country". Assembly is the first Black-owned brewery in Oregon, according to Portland Monthly's Katherine Chew Hamilton. The restaurant operates in a renovated 7,500 square-foot space owned by Adam Dixon, which was previously housed a Korean grocery store. The Oregonian's Andre Meunier said, "The exterior sports clean, mid-century lines with a gray and earthy-orange theme. Inside, high ceilings with revealed wooden beams |
illicit substances. The move was met with criticism online, with some legal experts questioning whether the proposed decision to deny entry to patrons was unlawful. Writing on Twitter, former Australian Border Force Commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg labelled the move "extraordinary". "Festival drugs are risky granted but a person can have minute drug traces from handling cash, infused into garment fabric etc," he said. "Using an 'indication', as they call it, to ban entry into a social event is too much". A similar policy had reportedly been enforced at two hardstyle dance events earlier in the year. Both events had also been held at Sydney Showground. Speaking to The Sydney Morning Herald in 2019, one woman said she was left feeling "scared" and "completely helpless" after being made to strip naked in front of two female police officers inside a booth at the event. The woman had allegedly been the victim of a sexual assault and said being strip searched was a "refresher" of the incident. It was also reported that NSW Police had denied entry to ticketholders at the "A State of Trance" music festival in April. Speaking to the ABC in June, promoter Richie McNeill estimated that "about 40 people" were turned away from the event after being stopped by a drug detection dog. McNeill's company, Hardware Corp, was also responsible for organising the upcoming Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground that weekend. When asked about the proposed decision to deny entry to patrons, McNeill acknowledged that his company had given police approval for the plan. "We have to or there's no event basically" he said. Shortly after the announcement was made, a crowdfunded attempt to secure an injunction was launched by the NSW Greens in the state's Supreme Court. The move was unsuccessful, with presiding Justice Michael Pembroke ruling that the court was unable to make decisions based on hypotheticals. Despite opposition, the police operation at the Above and Beyond performance went ahead as planned on June 9. Reporters covering the event at Sydney Showground spoke to a number of patrons who had been strip searched by officers before being ejected from the venue. One woman told SBS News she was made to "strip and squat" after a positive indication from a drug detection dog, while another woman recalled having to squat naked inside a booth after police witnessed her handing a fifty-dollar note to her boyfriend. Neither woman was reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. In an unusual move, NSW Police declined to issue a media release after the event, with Greens MP David Shoebridge suggesting that an earlier backlash surrounding the decision to deny entry to patrons may have prompted the decision. Shoebridge told news.com.au that his office had been contacted by six attendees who were denied entry to Sydney Showground after being searched by police. It's alleged that each person had been stopped by a drug detection dog and none were found in possession of any illicit drugs. It remains unclear how many people ejected from the venue during the operation. Shortly after the event, photos were circulated on social media from an Above and Beyond attendee who claimed to have been issued with a ban notice prohibiting entry to the Sydney Olympic Park precinct for 6 months. Speaking to the Hack Program on Triple J, the man said he had been stopped by a drug detection dog before being strip searched by officers. Responding to questions from news.com.au, a spokesperson for NSW Police rejected suggestions that the man had been banned from Sydney Olympic Park on the basis of the drug detection dog indication, instead citing "offensive behaviour" while also claiming that the man had tried to enter the event without a ticket. A Sniff Off volunteer who was present at the Above and Beyond performance contested those claims, instead suggesting that the notice had been issued after the man and his four friends began arguing with the officers who had conducted the search. Despite controversy surrounding the practice, NSW Police continued to issue ban notices to patrons at subsequent music festivals. In a viral post uploaded to Facebook in March 2019, a 19-year-old woman recalled being made to strip naked inside a booth at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The woman was reportedly banned from the venue for 6 months despite no drugs being found The issue of ban notices being issued to music festival patrons was discussed by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission in its final report on the use of strip searches by NSW Police handed down in December 2020. The Commission had been made aware of several cases where festivalgoers had been banned from Sydney Olympic Park after being strip searched by officers, despite no drugs being found during those searches. The bans had been issued under the Sydney Olympic Park Regulation, state legislation governing the powers given to the Sydney Olympic Park Authority. Under the act, the Authority "may ban a person from entering any part of Sydney Olympic Park for any period (not exceeding 6 months) determined by the Authority if the person contravenes any provision of this Regulation". While the act entitles police to exercise the powers of the Authority, the Commission expressed concerns about the use of the legislation to issue bans to music festival patrons, suggesting it was unlikely that every person banned by police had breached provisions under the act. In June 2020, the Commission was advised that by NSW Police that officers would discontinue the practice of issuing ban notices to festival patrons attending events at Sydney Olympic Park, citing legal advice which had received in relation to the practice. Attalla v State of NSW and release of internal police report In May 2018, a civil court judgement was handed down in the case of a 53-year man who had been strip searched by police after being arrested in 2015. Steven Attalla had been sitting in front of a church in Darlinghurst in the early hours of March 24 when he was approached by three police officers. After claiming she suspected he was in possession of illicit drugs, one of the officers informed the man that he was going to be searched. When the 53-year-old refused, he was arrested and transported to Kings Cross police station, where he was made to "strip to a naked state, lift his genitals and squat" in front of two male officers. The 53-year-old described the experience as "humiliating" and "outrageous". No drugs were found and he was subsequently issued a court attendance for hindering police. The charge was later dropped. In handing down his ruling, presiding Justice Phillip Taylor found that the officers involved had acted with "an almost reckless indifference", describing the strip search as an "invasive power without the slightest justification" before awarding the man just over $112,000 in damages plus legal costs. The incident was later the subject of an investigation by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, who in May 2020 found that the officer who had ordered that the 53-year-old be strip searched had engaged in "serious misconduct". The Court's ruling was mentioned in a leaked internal report published by NSW Police in November 2018. The report, which had been prepared by the Force's Lessons Learned Unit, acknowledged that officers had routinely been failing to adhere to legal requirements when conducting strip searches, stating that "there is both a lack of compliance and a lack of consistent application when it comes to the exercise of police powers for the purposes of a strip-search". In a bid to remind officers of their legal obligations in relation to the practice, a number of training materials including video packages, "step-by-step instructional stickers" and "educational screen savers" had been prepared by the Lessons Learned Unit. The report also noted an increase in civil litigation which had been brought against NSW Police in relation to strip searches since 2013, describing it as an "organisational risk". Safe and Sound campaign Prompted by a rise in the number of strip searches being performed by NSW Police, it was announced in December 2018 that Redfern Legal Centre would be launching a public campaign aimed at raising awareness of the issue and pushing for a change in the law. "The law in NSW governing the use of strip searches is vague and legalistic, making it susceptible to wide interpretation. This campaign aims to improve the law and procedures to ensure better safeguards for the public and improve guidance for police" said Samantha Lee, Police Powers Solicitor at Redfern Legal Centre. "Our service has been contacted by many people subjected to strip searches, who were left feeling humiliated, scared and traumatised. Worst of all, nothing was found on them and police failed to follow correct legal procedure". 2019 Hidden Festival incident In a viral post uploaded to Facebook, a 19-year-old woman recalled being left "humiliated and embarrassed" after allegedly being strip searched by police at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park on March 2. The 19-year-old had reportedly been re-entering the event with a friend when she was approached by two police officers with drug detection dogs. "They just stopped me without any reason really I hadn't seen the dogs react or sit and they just told me that I had been detected and that I had follow them". After being taken to a police search area inside the venue, the 19-year-old said she was taken into a booth with a female officer, who then instructed her to remove her clothing. "She stood in front of me, asked to check my things, asked to check my shoes and then told me to take off my top and then take off my skirt and my underwear and then to squat and cough" she recalled while speaking to the Hack program on Triple J in August. No drugs were reportedly found and it's alleged that the door of the booth was left open while the search was being conducted. "Not only did I see other people being searched, during my search the door was left half open and only blocked by the small female cop. I could easily see outside, which means that attendees and the male cops outside could have easily seen in as well". It's alleged that police continued to question the 19-year-old after the search had taken place. After being detained for "over an hour", the woman was reportedly ejected from the event and issued a ban notice prohibiting entry to Sydney Olympic Park for 6 months, with officers allegedly citing intoxication as the reason for issuing the ban. A complaint made to NSW Police by the woman's mother was later the subject of a wider internal investigation undertaken by officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command, which was overseen by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In findings handed down in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "insufficient lawful basis" for the strip search conducted on the 19-year-old or the 6 month ban notice that was issued at the event. The report recommended that "sustained" findings be made against two officers in relation to the ban notice. An article published by The Guardian in June earlier that year revealed that one of those officers had since resigned, while another had been "counselled by a senior officer and referred for additional training". It was unclear if any disciplinary action had been taken in relation to the strip search, however the Commission did recommend that NSW Police consider issuing an apology to the woman. University of New South Wales report In August 2019, a comprehensive report examining the use of strip searches by NSW Police was released by University of New South Wales Law Academics Dr. Vicki Sentas and Dr. Michael Grewcock. The report had been commissioned by Redfern Legal Centre as part of its ongoing "Safe and Sound" Campaign. Key findings highlighted by the authors included a significant increase in the use of strip searches by NSW Police, with the report noting "an almost twentyfold increase in less than 12 years", referring to police figures which showed that "strip searches were used 277 times in the 12 months to 30 November 2006 compared to 5483 in the 12 months to 30 June 2018". The use of drug detection dogs, particularly at major events such as music festivals, was identified as a driving factor behind the increase. The authors also drew attention to the low number of criminal charges resulting from strip searches carried out by NSW Police. Figures for the 2017-18 financial year showed that during this period, 30% of strip searches conducted in the field had resulted in charges being laid. Of those charges, 82% related to drug possession, 16.5% related to drug supply and the remaining 1.5% related to weapons offences. The report made 12 recommendations aimed at improving current strip search practices employed by NSW Police, including changes to LEPRA to better define what constitutes a search, as well as calling for an end to what the authors described as "deeply humiliating" practices such as asking a person to bend over or squat. Festival deaths inquest In July 2019, the Coroners Court of New South Wales opened a joint inquest into the deaths of six music festival patrons who had died after consuming fatal quantities of MDMA at separate events between December 2017 and January 2019. The inquest would seek to examine the circumstances surrounding the deaths of 18-year-old Nathan Tran, 19-year-old Alex Ross-King, 22-year-old Joshua Tam, 19-year-old Callum Brosnan, 21-year-old Diana Nguyen and 23-year-old Joseph Pham. Overseeing the inquest was NSW Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame. Initial public evidence hearings began on July 8, with an additional set of hearings taking place in September later that year. Over the course of 16 days, the Court heard evidence from multiple witnesses, including police and medical professionals, as well as event staff and festival attendees. Key areas of focus throughout the inquest were drug education, policing strategies and the adequacy of resources and onsite medical services at each of the events. One particular area of concern for the Court were the circumstances surrounding the death of 18-year-old Nathan Tran, who died in hospital after consuming after a fatal dose of MDMA at the Knockout Circuz music festival in 2017. Tran was seen behaving erratically before falling and hitting his head inside the venue, reportedly becoming distressed and combative when event medical staff attempted to treat him. Multiple police and security personnel were required to restrain the 18-year-old before transporting him to a medical tent inside the venue. These events had been captured on CCTV. One witness called to give evidence in the matter was a 28-year-old woman who was also attending the Knockout Circuz music festival that day. The woman, whose name was suppressed by the Court, had reportedly witnessed police and security personnel attempting to restrain Tran while he was on the ground. As she was being questioned, the woman was asked by Counsel Assisting the Coroner Dr. Peggy Dwyer if she still attended music festivals in New South Wales. When asked why she didn't, the woman cried as she recalled having to strip naked in front of a female policer officer at the Knockout Circuz music festival earlier that day. The 28-year-old had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event, at which point she was allegedly taken to a booth, which she described as a "metal room", where a female officer had instructed her to remove her clothes. The officer had reportedly threatened to make the search "nice and slow" if the woman failed to produce any drugs. It was also alleged that the door of the booth had been opened while the woman was still naked. Speaking about the incident, the 28-year-old said that the experience made her feel "like a criminal", telling the Court that, "you're naked ... the way I was spoken to, [it was] like I'd done something wrong". The woman had also reportedly been strip searched by police at a separate event, with no drugs being found on either occasion. Responding to the 28 year old's comments, the coroner said that the police prescense at a music festival she attended earlier in the year had also made her feel "nervous". Ms. Grahame had been attending the Show Your True Colours music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in June at the invitation of event organisers. "There was just lines and lines of police and dogs ... I was surprised how intense it was" she recalled. At a Parliamentary Budget Estimates hearing in August, NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller was asked about the allegations put forward by the 28-year-old. Responding to questions from NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge, Fuller criticised woman's comments, suggesting it was a "disgrace" that he was being held to account on the testimony of a "secret witness". "By a lady who turns up, the counsel assisting police were given no warning, turns up, no name, no address, nothing to us? A secret witness. Why did they keep that person secret?" Fuller said. "I think it's poor practice if this is going to be the way forward in coronials, that mystery witnesses turn up and sit behind a veil of anonymity and they're not held to account. It's a disgrace in a democracy". When the inquest resumed in September, Dr. Dwyer drew attention to the Commissioner's comments, stating that the woman's full name had been made available to all parties who were present at the hearing, including NSW Police. She pointed out that the Commissioner's barrister had personally questioned the woman and had also been provided with her "non-existent" criminal history, as well as an opportunity to conduct background checks. "She was giving evidence about the death of Nathan Tran and in giving her answers, she rather spontaneously revealed she didn't go to festivals anymore because of the strip search incident" Dr. Dwyer told the Court. "Unfortunately, the police commissioner misunderstood the circumstances of that evidence". It was later reported that the Commissioner had withdrawn his remarks. Coroner's final report and recommendations A final report from the inquest was handed down by Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame on November 8, 2019. In addition to specific findings pertaining to the deaths of the deceased, the report also put forward a broader series of recommendations aimed at improving safety at future music festivals held in New South Wales. In a controversial move, Ms. Grahame called on the state government to establish a pill testing (also referred to as "drug checking") trial at upcoming music festivals, describing the practice as "an evidence-based harm reduction strategy that should be trialed as soon as possible in NSW". A leaked draft of the coroner's recommendations had been published by The Daily Telegraph in October, with the proposal to introduce pill testing generating significant public discussion around the issue. Responding to the leaked recommendations, then Premier Gladys Berejiklian said that the government had no plans to introduce pill testing, suggesting that it would send the "wrong message" and give people a "false sense of security". In handing down her findings, Ms. Grahame was highly critical of the policing strategies employed at music festivals in New South Wales, singling out the use of drug detection dogs and strip searches by NSW Police. The coroner said she was "extremely concerned" about the use of drug detection dogs at music festivals, suggesting their presence may exacerbate the potential for drug related harm and encourage risky behaviours such as "panic ingestion" or "preloading". The report noted that this may have been a factor in the deaths of 19-year-old Alex Ross-King and 22-year-old Joshua Tam, with the coroner recommending that "the model of policing at music festivals be changed to remove drug detection dogs". Speaking about the use of strip searches, Ms. Grahame said that "the practice of searching young people for the possible offence of possession is of grave concern", suggesting that "given the number of times that searches occur when there is no emergency or risk of serious harm, one can only assume that many searches are conducted unlawfully". She referred to the testimony of a 28-year-old witness who had allegedly been strip searched while attending the Knockout Circuz music festival in 2017, describing the woman's evidence as "palpable and disturbing". Speaking at the inquest in September, a barrister appearing for NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller had unsuccessfully sought to prevent the coroner from examining the issue of strip searches, arguing that it was an "impermissible area of exploration" and that there was | as several case studies relating to complaints from members of the public and police operations which had been observed by the Ombudsman's office. 2013 statutory review and changes to LEPRA In accordance with provisions set out under LEPRA, both the Attorney General and Minister for Police were required to complete a statutory review of the legislation. Four years after the release of the Ombudsman's 2009 report, the findings of a joint review undertaken by the Attorney General's Department and Ministry for Police and Emergency Services were tabled to Parliament. The review served as the government's official response to the Ombudsman's 2009 recommendations and drew heavily on the findings of a second review undertaken by former shadow Attorney General Andrew Tink and former Police Minister Andrew Whelan. This second review had been commissioned by then Premier Barry O'Farrell in October 2013. Recommendations that Parliament should consider defining the term 'genital area' for the purposes of a search and review the practice of officers asking persons to squat were "considered" by the government but ultimately "not supported". The review did however support the removal of the existing categories of "frisk" and "ordinary" searches under LEPRA in favour of a simplified two-tiered system consisting of strip searches and what were later referred to as "general searches". An amended version of LEPRA was passed in June 2014. Early incidents and first media reports Statistics published by the New South Wales Ombudsman in 2009 revealed that in 2006 and 2007, NSW Police had carried out a combined total of 613 strip searches 'in the field', with the earliest available data pertaining to strip searches resulting from drug detection dog indications revealing that in 2009, 556 searches were conducted, with an additional 2945 searches being carried over the next four years. Despite the figures, few of these incidents were publicly reported and media coverage of the issue was limited at the time. The first recorded mention of the practice appeared in a post uploaded to Reddit in January 2010. In that instance, a commuter recalled being strip searched at Redfern Train Station after an indication from a drug detection dog, alleging that he was taken into a public toilet with three officers and made to remove his clothes, lift his penis and spread his buttocks apart. No illicit substances were reportedly found by police. In January 2012, the Hack program on Triple J broadcast a half-hour special discussing the presence of drug detection dogs at music festivals in New South Wales and other Australian states. The program heard from a number of callers who had been strip searched in the aftermath of positive drug detection dog indications, though many admitted to having small quantities of drugs in their possession at the time. The use of the dogs was also a contentious issue at the at the 2013 Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, which was overshadowed by allegations of police brutality. Dozens of complaints had been lodged with organisers in the weeks following the event, including some from revelers who had allegedly been subjected to unlawful strip searches. Speaking to news.com.au, a 53-year-old man said he was left feeling "humiliated" after being made to remove his pants and underwear at a Mardi Gras afterparty celebration at Sydney's Royal Botanic Garden. A civil suit launched by the 53-year-old was later settled for an undisclosed amount. A number of incidents from this period have also been discussed in later media reports. An article uploaded to music industry website HowlandEchoes in 2015 featured an account from a performer who had allegedly been strip searched by police at the Parklife Music Festival in Sydney in 2011. A drug detection dog had reportedly taken an interest in the woman's bag, at which point she recalled, "a cop took me into a prison wagon and made me strip naked, squat... the whole nine-yards. I'd started crying in my show make-up, angry and humiliated that somehow I had no consent in this process. She tried to make small talk with me while my clothes were in a pile against the bars and I'm barefoot on the well-trodden muddy floor". No drugs were reportedly found and the woman said she was left feeling "shaken" after the experience. 2014 Rising numbers and increased media coverage In late 2014, several media outlets began publishing firsthand accounts from members of the public who had allegedly been strip searched by NSW Police. Many of those searches had reportedly taken place in the aftermath of positive drug detection dog indications at music festivals across the state. Speaking to Vice in September, one 23-year-old man said:"It happens at festivals all the time. They've got booths set up to strip search you. It's basically a known thing that where there's sniffer dogs, they'll be strip searches as well".Recalling an incident he had witnessed at a music festival, drug educator Paul Dillon, Director of Drug and Alcohol Training and Research Australia (DARTA) said:"I can remember one girl who was totally traumatised by the experience" ... "She'd been strip searched and was mortified. The girl had no drugs on her, was not a drug user, but had been through a very traumatic experience". Police figures published by The Sydney Morning Herald in December revealed that the number of strip searches resulting from positive drug detection dog indications had increased 32% in New South Wales since 2009, rising from 556 to 735. Speaking to The Project that month, a 24-year-old man recalled being strip searched at Redfern Train Station after an indication from a drug detection dog. "Well basically they just take all of your clothes off, they strip you down" ... "it's quite a degrading process", he said. "You actually get told to squat and you actually get told to cough". The following year in September, a caller to the Hack Program on Triple J claimed he had been subjected to a similar search at the same event. "I was searched at Stereosonic 2014. I had to do some very embarrassing things like take all my clothes off, then I was asked to bend over and squat, then I was actually asked to lift my testicles and my shaft and separate them in case I was hiding anything there and pull back my foreskin". In September 2014, a festivalgoer from the United States alleged that a friend had been made to undergo a strip search while attending the Defqon music festival in Sydney's West that month. Writing on Reddit, the man said that he and his friends were preparing to enter the event when a member of the group was singled out and led away by officers. The man had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog. When he returned, it's alleged that the man was visibly upset, telling the group that that he had been asked to strip naked and bend over while the search was carried out. A 23-year-old medical student who was attending the same event that year recalled being subjected to a similar search in an interview with Buzzfeed News in June 2015. The man claimed that he had been stopped at the entrance of the festival when a drug detection dog began "sniffing around his feet". After being taken to a police search area, which he described as a "tent with makeshift cubicles made out of security fencing", the 23-year-old recalled being initially instructed to remove his shoes and empty his bag and pockets before being asked to take off his clothes, alleging that officers then told him to "drop your daks" and "pick up your balls and move them to one side". The 23-year-old was later released when no drugs were found, telling Buzzfeed that the experience was "embarrassing and humiliating". Launch of Sniff Off Facebook page In 2011, a campaign opposing the use of drug detection dogs was launched by New South Wales Greens MP David Shoebridge in collaboration with the NSW Young Greens. As part of the campaign, a Facebook page was created in October 2014 allowing members of the public to report drug detection dog sightings in the community. The information is then shared with followers of the page. Speaking about the use of drug detection dogs in 2014, Shoebridge said, "Where have we got to in this state when police are routinely stripping people down, getting them to squat naked over a mirror and then staring up their backsides, on the basis of a drug dog indication that is wrong two thirds of the time?" 2015 Police data for the 2015-16 financial year showed that officers had performed 5082 strip searches in the field during this period, with separate figures revealing that 629 strip searches resulting from positive drug detection dog indications had been carried out during the 2015 calendar year. 2016 Figures for the 2016–17 financial year showed that NSW Police had conducted 4429 strip searches in the field during this period, with separate data revealing that officers had performed 590 strip searches resulting from drug detection dog indications during the 2016 calendar year. 2017 Appointment of new police commissioner In February 2017, it was announced that NSW Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione would be stepping down after close to 10 years in the role. Following a brief selection process, Assistant Commissioner Mick Fuller was chosen as his replacement. Fuller had previously occupied a number of senior roles within NSW Police and was serving as Commander of the Central Metropolitan Region before his appointment to the role. He was sworn in as Commissioner on March 31, 2017. Changes to police oversight In November 2015, then Police Minister Troy Grant announced proposed changes to the existing police oversight framework in New South Wales. The announcement came in response to the findings of a commissioned review carried out by former Shadow Attorney General Andrew Tink. Under the new arrangement, the state's three existing police oversight bodies - the Police Integrity Commission, the Police and Compliance Branch of the New South Wales Ombudsman's Office and the Inspector of the NSW Crime Commission - would be dissolved, instead being replaced by a single agency, which would be referred to as the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC). In September 2016, acting New South Wales Ombudsman John McMillan warned that the new police watchdog would have "inferior" powers, eluding to the fact that the LECC would be limited to investigating incidents involving "serious misconduct and serious maladministration" and would be operating with a reduced budget. Despite these concerns, legislation approving the formation of the LECC was passed by Parliament in November 2016, with the organisation formally commencing operations on July 1 of 2017. In November 2019, LECC Chief Commissioner Michael Adams raised concerns about the Commission's ability to investigate complaints of police misconduct. Writing in the organisation's annual report, Adams revealed that only 2% of the 2,547 complaints assessed by the LECC in 2018-19 had been fully investigated, likening the situation to "drinking from a firehose". Earlier in 2018, Adams warned that the Commission had been forced to ignore complaints due to an "insufficient budget" and a "continued increasing workload". Doubling in the number of strip searches resulting from drug detection dog indications Data obtained from NSW Police under Freedom of Information laws showed that the number of strip searches carried out following drug detection dog indications had more than doubled between 2016 and 2017, rising from 590 to 1,124. Responding to questions from NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge at a Parliamentary Budget Estimates hearing in 2018, Police Commissioner Mick Fuller denied suggestions that there had been any change in policy leading to the increased figures. The trend reflected a broader increase in the use of strip searches by NSW Police, with figures obtained in December 2018 revealing that the number of strip searches conducted by officers in the field had risen almost 47 percent in the four years between 2014–15 and 2017–18, rising from 3,735 to 5,483. 2018 Venue ban policy In the days leading up to a live performance by British electronic dance trio Above and Beyond at Sydney Showground in June 2018, NSW Police announced a controversial new policy which would see ticketholders denied entry to the event following a drug detection dog indication, even in cases where a person was not found to be in possession of any illicit substances. The move was met with criticism online, with some legal experts questioning whether the proposed decision to deny entry to patrons was unlawful. Writing on Twitter, former Australian Border Force Commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg labelled the move "extraordinary". "Festival drugs are risky granted but a person can have minute drug traces from handling cash, infused into garment fabric etc," he said. "Using an 'indication', as they call it, to ban entry into a social event is too much". A similar policy had reportedly been enforced at two hardstyle dance events earlier in the year. Both events had also been held at Sydney Showground. Speaking to The Sydney Morning Herald in 2019, one woman said she was left feeling "scared" and "completely helpless" after being made to strip naked in front of two female police officers inside a booth at the event. The woman had allegedly been the victim of a sexual assault and said being strip searched was a "refresher" of the incident. It was also reported that NSW Police had denied entry to ticketholders at the "A State of Trance" music festival in April. Speaking to the ABC in June, promoter Richie McNeill estimated that "about 40 people" were turned away from the event after being stopped by a drug detection dog. McNeill's company, Hardware Corp, was also responsible for organising the upcoming Above and Beyond performance at Sydney Showground that weekend. When asked about the proposed decision to deny entry to patrons, McNeill acknowledged that his company had given police approval for the plan. "We have to or there's no event basically" he said. Shortly after the announcement was made, a crowdfunded attempt to secure an injunction was launched by the NSW Greens in the state's Supreme Court. The move was unsuccessful, with presiding Justice Michael Pembroke ruling that the court was unable to make decisions based on hypotheticals. Despite opposition, the police operation at the Above and Beyond performance went ahead as planned on June 9. Reporters covering the event at Sydney Showground spoke to a number of patrons who had been strip searched by officers before being ejected from the venue. One woman told SBS News she was made to "strip and squat" after a positive indication from a drug detection dog, while another woman recalled having to squat naked inside a booth after police witnessed her handing a fifty-dollar note to her boyfriend. Neither woman was reportedly carrying any illicit drugs. In an unusual move, NSW Police declined to issue a media release after the event, with Greens MP David Shoebridge suggesting that an earlier backlash surrounding the decision to deny entry to patrons may have prompted the decision. Shoebridge told news.com.au that his office had been contacted by six attendees who were denied entry to Sydney Showground after being searched by police. It's alleged that each person had been stopped by a drug detection dog and none were found in possession of any illicit drugs. It remains unclear how many people ejected from the venue during the operation. Shortly after the event, photos were circulated on social media from an Above and Beyond attendee who claimed to have been issued with a ban notice prohibiting entry to the Sydney Olympic Park precinct for 6 months. Speaking to the Hack Program on Triple J, the man said he had been stopped by a drug detection dog before being strip searched by officers. Responding to questions from news.com.au, a spokesperson for NSW Police rejected suggestions that the man had been banned from Sydney Olympic Park on the basis of the drug detection dog indication, instead citing "offensive behaviour" while also claiming that the man had tried to enter the event without a ticket. A Sniff Off volunteer who was present at the Above and Beyond performance contested those claims, instead suggesting that the notice had been issued after the man and his four friends began arguing with the officers who had conducted the search. Despite controversy surrounding the practice, NSW Police continued to issue ban notices to patrons at subsequent music festivals. In a viral post uploaded to Facebook in March 2019, a 19-year-old woman recalled being made to strip naked inside a booth at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park after being stopped by a drug detection dog. The woman was reportedly banned from the venue for 6 months despite no drugs being found The issue of ban notices being issued to music festival patrons was discussed by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission in its final report on the use of strip searches by NSW Police handed down in December 2020. The Commission had been made aware of several cases where festivalgoers had been banned from Sydney Olympic Park after being strip searched by officers, despite no drugs being found during those searches. The bans had been issued under the Sydney Olympic Park Regulation, state legislation governing the powers given to the Sydney Olympic Park Authority. Under the act, the Authority "may ban a person from entering any part of Sydney Olympic Park for any period (not exceeding 6 months) determined by the Authority if the person contravenes any provision of this Regulation". While the act entitles police to exercise the powers of the Authority, the Commission expressed concerns about the use of the legislation to issue bans to music festival patrons, suggesting it was unlikely that every person banned by police had breached provisions under the act. In June 2020, the Commission was advised that by NSW Police that officers would discontinue the practice of issuing ban notices to festival patrons attending events at Sydney Olympic Park, citing legal advice which had received in relation to the practice. Attalla v State of NSW and release of internal police report In May 2018, a civil court judgement was handed down in the case of a 53-year man who had been strip searched by police after being arrested in 2015. Steven Attalla had been sitting in front of a church in Darlinghurst in the early hours of March 24 when he was approached by three police officers. After claiming she suspected he was in possession of illicit drugs, one of the officers informed the man that he was going to be searched. When the 53-year-old refused, he was arrested and transported to Kings Cross police station, where he was made to "strip to a naked state, lift his genitals and squat" in front of two male officers. The 53-year-old described the experience as "humiliating" and "outrageous". No drugs were found and he was subsequently issued a court attendance for hindering police. The charge was later dropped. In handing down his ruling, presiding Justice Phillip Taylor found that the officers involved had acted with "an almost reckless indifference", describing the strip search as an "invasive power without the slightest justification" before awarding the man just over $112,000 in damages plus legal costs. The incident was later the subject of an investigation by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, who in May 2020 found that the officer who had ordered that the 53-year-old be strip searched had engaged in "serious misconduct". The Court's ruling was mentioned in a leaked internal report published by NSW Police in November 2018. The report, which had been prepared by the Force's Lessons Learned Unit, acknowledged that officers had routinely been failing to adhere to legal requirements when conducting strip searches, stating that "there is both a lack of compliance and a lack of consistent application when it comes to the exercise of police powers for the purposes of a strip-search". In a bid to remind officers of their legal obligations in relation to the practice, a number of training materials including video packages, "step-by-step instructional stickers" and "educational screen savers" had been prepared by the Lessons Learned Unit. The report also noted an increase in civil litigation which had been brought against NSW Police in relation to strip searches since 2013, describing it as an "organisational risk". Safe and Sound campaign Prompted by a rise in the number of strip searches being performed by NSW Police, it was announced in December 2018 that Redfern Legal Centre would be launching a public campaign aimed at raising awareness of the issue and pushing for a change in the law. "The law in NSW governing the use of strip searches is vague and legalistic, making it susceptible to wide interpretation. This campaign aims to improve the law and procedures to ensure better safeguards for the public and improve guidance for police" said Samantha Lee, Police Powers Solicitor at Redfern Legal Centre. "Our service has been contacted by many people subjected to strip searches, who were left feeling humiliated, scared and traumatised. Worst of all, nothing was found on them and police failed to follow correct legal procedure". 2019 Hidden Festival incident In a viral post uploaded to Facebook, a 19-year-old woman recalled being left "humiliated and embarrassed" after allegedly being strip searched by police at the Hidden music festival at Sydney Olympic Park on March 2. The 19-year-old had reportedly been re-entering the event with a friend when she was approached by two police officers with drug detection dogs. "They just stopped me without any reason really I hadn't seen the dogs react or sit and they just told me that I had been detected and that I had follow them". After being taken to a police search area inside the venue, the 19-year-old said she was taken into a booth with a female officer, who then instructed her to remove her clothing. "She stood in front of me, asked to check my things, asked to check my shoes and then told me to take off my top and then take off my skirt and my underwear and then to squat and cough" she recalled while speaking to the Hack program on Triple J in August. No drugs were reportedly found and it's alleged that the door of the booth was left open while the search was being conducted. "Not only did I see other people being searched, during my search the door was left half open and only blocked by the small female cop. I could easily see outside, which means that attendees and the male cops outside could have easily seen in as well". It's alleged that police continued to question the 19-year-old after the search had taken place. After being detained for "over an hour", the woman was reportedly ejected from the event and issued a ban notice prohibiting entry to Sydney Olympic Park for 6 months, with officers allegedly citing intoxication as the reason for issuing the ban. A complaint made to NSW Police by the woman's mother was later the subject of a wider internal investigation undertaken by officers from the Force's Professional Standards Command, which was overseen by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission. In findings handed down in July 2020, police investigators found that there was "insufficient lawful basis" for the strip search conducted on the 19-year-old or the 6 month ban notice that was issued at the event. The report recommended that "sustained" findings be made against two officers in relation to the ban notice. An article published by The Guardian in June earlier that year revealed that one of those officers had since resigned, while another had been "counselled by a senior officer and referred for additional training". It was unclear if any disciplinary action had been taken in relation to the strip search, however the Commission did recommend that NSW Police consider issuing an apology to the woman. University of New South Wales report In August 2019, a comprehensive report examining the use of strip searches by NSW Police was released by University of New South Wales Law Academics Dr. Vicki Sentas and Dr. Michael Grewcock. The report had been commissioned by Redfern Legal Centre as part of its ongoing "Safe and Sound" Campaign. Key findings highlighted by the authors included a significant increase in the use of strip searches by NSW Police, with the report noting "an almost twentyfold increase in less than 12 years", referring to police figures which showed that "strip searches were used 277 times in the 12 months to 30 November 2006 compared to 5483 in the 12 months to 30 June 2018". The use of drug detection dogs, particularly at major events such as music festivals, was identified as a driving factor behind the increase. The authors also drew attention to the low number of criminal charges resulting from strip searches carried out by NSW Police. Figures for the 2017-18 financial year showed that during this period, 30% of strip searches conducted in the field had resulted in charges being laid. Of those charges, 82% related to drug possession, 16.5% related to drug supply and the remaining 1.5% related to weapons offences. The report made 12 recommendations aimed at improving current strip search practices employed by NSW Police, including changes to LEPRA to better define what constitutes a search, as well as calling for an end to what the authors described as "deeply humiliating" practices such as asking a person to bend over or squat. Festival deaths inquest In July 2019, the Coroners Court of New South Wales opened a joint inquest into the deaths of six music festival patrons who had died after consuming fatal quantities of MDMA at separate events between December 2017 and January 2019. The inquest would seek to examine the circumstances surrounding the deaths of 18-year-old Nathan Tran, 19-year-old Alex Ross-King, 22-year-old Joshua Tam, 19-year-old Callum Brosnan, 21-year-old Diana Nguyen and 23-year-old Joseph Pham. Overseeing the inquest was NSW Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame. Initial public evidence hearings began on July 8, with an additional set of hearings taking place in September later that year. Over the course of 16 days, the Court heard evidence from multiple witnesses, including police and medical professionals, as well as event staff and festival attendees. Key areas of focus throughout the inquest were drug education, policing strategies and the adequacy of resources and onsite medical services at each of the events. One particular area of concern for the Court were the circumstances surrounding the death of 18-year-old Nathan Tran, who died in hospital after consuming after a fatal dose of MDMA at the Knockout Circuz music festival in 2017. Tran was seen behaving erratically before falling and hitting his head inside the venue, reportedly becoming distressed and combative when event medical staff attempted to treat him. Multiple police and security personnel were required to restrain the 18-year-old before transporting him to a medical tent inside the venue. These events had been captured on CCTV. One witness called to give evidence in the matter was a 28-year-old woman who was also attending the Knockout Circuz music festival that day. The woman, whose name was suppressed by the Court, had reportedly witnessed police and security personnel attempting to restrain Tran while he was on the ground. As she was being questioned, the woman was asked by Counsel Assisting the Coroner Dr. Peggy Dwyer if she still attended music festivals in New South Wales. When asked why she didn't, the woman cried as she recalled having to strip naked in front of a female policer officer at the Knockout Circuz music festival earlier that day. The 28-year-old had reportedly been stopped by a drug detection dog at the entrance of the event, at which point she was allegedly taken to a booth, which she described as a "metal room", where a female officer had instructed her to remove her clothes. The officer had reportedly threatened to make the search "nice and slow" if the woman failed to produce any drugs. It was also alleged that the door of the booth had been opened while the woman was still naked. Speaking about the incident, the 28-year-old said that the experience made her feel "like a criminal", telling the Court that, "you're naked ... the way I was spoken to, [it was] like I'd done something wrong". The woman had also reportedly been strip searched by police at a separate event, with no drugs being found on either occasion. Responding to the 28 year old's comments, the coroner said that the police prescense at a music festival she attended earlier in the year had also made her feel "nervous". Ms. Grahame had been attending the Show Your True Colours music festival at Sydney Olympic Park in June at the invitation of event organisers. "There was just lines and lines of police and dogs ... I was surprised how intense it was" she recalled. At a Parliamentary Budget Estimates hearing in August, NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller was asked about the allegations put forward by the 28-year-old. Responding to questions from NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge, Fuller criticised woman's comments, suggesting it was a "disgrace" that he was being held to account on the testimony of a "secret witness". "By a lady who turns up, the counsel assisting police were given no warning, turns up, no name, no address, nothing to us? A secret witness. Why did they keep that person secret?" Fuller said. "I think it's poor practice if this is going to be the way forward in coronials, that mystery witnesses turn up and sit behind a veil of anonymity and they're not held to account. It's a disgrace in a democracy". When the inquest resumed in September, Dr. Dwyer drew attention to the |
he led Cincinnati with 137 tackles and was named team MVP, as well as All-Conference. He graduated in 2005 with a degree in criminal justice. Professional career After going unselected in the 2005 NFL Draft, Enzor signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars as an undrafted free agent. He was waived on August 14. Enzor was signed to the practice squad of the New York Jets on November 30. He was promoted to the active roster for their game against the Miami Dolphins, and made his NFL debut in the 20–24 loss. He was inactive for their final two games of the season. He was waived on August . Enzor played for the Rhein Fire of NFL Europa in 2007, appearing in six games. He made 30 tackles and returned two interceptions for a total of 72 yards, both scoring touchdowns. He also defended three passes and forced one fumble. Enzor was signed by | (born December 28, 1981) is a former American football linebacker who played one season in the National Football League (NFL) for the New York Jets. He played college football at Cincinnati and was signed as an undrafted free agent in by the Jacksonville Jaguars. Enzor also spent time with the Rhein Fire and Baltimore Ravens. Early life and education Enzor was born on December 28, 1981, in Tallahassee, Florida. He attended Havana Northside High School, where he competed in football and basketball before graduating in 2000. After graduating, he accepted |
a retired Ukrainian footballer. Career Oleksandr Marek started his career in 1991 with CSKA Kyiv in Soviet Second League for two season where he played 65 matches and scored 1 goal. In 1993 he moved to Shakhtar Stakhanov for one season playing 12 matches and scored 1 goal. In 1994 he moved to Desna Chernihiv, the main club of Chernihiv, in Ukrainian Second League, where he played 34 matches and scored 2 goals. | season playing 12 matches and scored 1 goal. In 1994 he moved to Desna Chernihiv, the main club of Chernihiv, in Ukrainian Second League, where he played 34 matches and scored 2 goals. In the season |
dynamics of large macromolecules. Her areas of expertise are computational biology, high performance computing, neutron scattering and bioinformatics. Gregurick was a program manager for the United States Department of Energy (DOE) where she developed the information and data sharing policy for the agency’s Genomics Science Program and oversaw the development and implementation of the DOE Systems Biology Knowledgebase, a framework to integrate data, models, and simulations together for a better understanding of energy and environmental processes. Gregurick joined the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) in 2013. She was the division director for NIGMS biomedical technology, bioinformatics and computational biology (BBCB). Her mission in BBCB was to advance research in computational biology, behavioral and data sciences, mathematical and biostatistical methods, and biomedical technologies in support of the NIGMS mission to increase understanding of life processes. Gregurick assisted in the development of the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) Office of Data Science Strategy (ODSS) which was established in 2018. Starting in November 2018, she served as a senior advisor to ODSS until she was appointed by Francis Collins on September 16, 2019 as NIH associate director for data science and director of the ODSS. Gregurick succeeded Philip Bourne. She received the 2020 Leadership in Biological Sciences Award from the . References | of Health's (NIH) Office of Data Science Strategy (ODSS) which was established in 2018. Starting in November 2018, she served as a senior advisor to ODSS until she was appointed by Francis Collins on September 16, 2019 as NIH associate director for data science and director of the ODSS. Gregurick succeeded Philip Bourne. She received the 2020 Leadership in Biological Sciences Award from the . References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Place of birth missing (living people) 21st-century American women scientists 21st-century American chemists Computational chemists American women chemists University of Michigan alumni University of Maryland, College Park alumni University of Maryland, Baltimore County |
Norman Perry (born May 10, 1938) is an American former professional tennis player. Tennis career A native of Los Angeles, Perry captained the UCLA Bruins in varsity tennis and was a three-time All-American. Perry, | round at Roland Garros in 1964 he had a win over Nicholas Kalogeropoulos, 11–9 in the fifth set. He featured in the Wimbledon main draw as a mixed doubles player. Persona life Perry is the younger brother of tennis player Bob Perry. References External links 1938 births Living people American male |
also List of prime ministers in japan governments governments Government of | also List of prime ministers in japan governments governments Government of Japan |
refer to the following mountains in Scotland: | A' Chailleach may refer to the following mountains |
Soccer club New York Red Bulls. Career New York Red Bulls On 20 January 2022, Castellano signed with Major League Soccer club New York | club New York Red Bulls. Career statistics References External links 2004 births Living people Venezuelan footballers Venezuelan expatriate footballers Venezuelan expatriate sportspeople in the United States New |
(now known as the Caños de Carmona) which Abu Yaqub Yusuf ordered to be reconstructed in order to supply both this palace and the larger Alcazar Palace. Construction on the palace and gardens was finished in February 1172 and inaugurated with a grand celebration. The gardens abandoned in subsequent centuries, after the city came under Spanish Christian control. In the 19th century a Mudéjar palace was built next to the water reservoir and still stands today, over the foundations of an earlier Almohad palace structure. The site of the palace was first studied and excavated in 1971 by Francisco Collantes de Terán and Juan Zozaya. Further excavations and archaeological studies were undertaken in 1982, 1985, and 1994. After this, the site was restored and integrated into a public park, inaugurated in 1999. A major road, Avenida de la Buhaira, now runs through the former estate and next to the restored water basin. Design The gardens and their palaces were originally surrounded by a wall made of rammed earth, known as the Ha'it as-Sultan ("Wall of the Sultan"). The Almohad water reservoir, which has been restored and is still visible today, measures 43 by 43 meters and is 2 meters deep. The reservoir's walls rise slightly above the ground and are reinforced with buttresses. Water arrived via an aqueduct from the east and was discharged into the reservoir through a spout at the middle of the reservoir's south side. Any excess water from the aqueduct continued to flow past the reservoir and discharged into the gardens to the west. Three other drains also allowed water to leave the reservoir. The remains of a square pavilion have been found on the south side of the | to be reconstructed in order to supply both this palace and the larger Alcazar Palace. Construction on the palace and gardens was finished in February 1172 and inaugurated with a grand celebration. The gardens abandoned in subsequent centuries, after the city came under Spanish Christian control. In the 19th century a Mudéjar palace was built next to the water reservoir and still stands today, over the foundations of an earlier Almohad palace structure. The site of the palace was first studied and excavated in 1971 by Francisco Collantes de Terán and Juan Zozaya. Further excavations and archaeological studies were undertaken in 1982, 1985, and 1994. After this, the site was restored and integrated into a public park, inaugurated in 1999. A major road, Avenida de la Buhaira, now runs through the former estate and next to the restored water basin. Design The gardens and their palaces were originally surrounded by a wall made of rammed earth, known as the Ha'it as-Sultan ("Wall of the Sultan"). The Almohad water reservoir, which has been restored and is still visible today, measures 43 by 43 meters and is 2 meters deep. The reservoir's walls rise slightly above the ground and are reinforced with buttresses. Water arrived via an aqueduct from the east and was discharged into the reservoir through a spout at the middle of the reservoir's south side. Any excess water from the aqueduct continued to flow past the reservoir and discharged into the gardens to the west. Three other drains also allowed water to leave the reservoir. The remains of a square pavilion have been found on the south side of the reservoir, aligned with the reservoir's central axis and coinciding with the entry point of water into the reservoir. The pavilion may have been open on all sides and served as a lookout and leisure area for the caliph. The pavilion may have been covered by either a dome or a pyramidal roof. A much large rectangular pavilion or palace structure occupied the eastern side of the pavilion. Some of its foundations are visible today. It consisted of a large central hall with side chambers, which in turn were surrounded on all four sides by an arcaded gallery. The corners of the building were occupied by heavy square buttresses. According to historical sources, the gardens around the reservoir and palace were planted with some ten thousand pear trees, apple trees, |
and Príncipe, Seychelles, Lesotho, Djibouti, Eswatini, Botswana and Eritrea. The twelve teams were drawn into six ties which will be played in home-and-away two-legged format. The six winners will advance to the group stage to join the | advance to the group stage of the qualification tournament. The preliminary round consists of the twelve lowest-ranked teams among the 54 entrants: Somalia, Mauritius, Gambia, South Sudan, Chad, São Tomé and |
and describe his virtues. 12. Remember the Lord Shiva. 13. 14. Stay away from loans. 15. Instructions for free propagation of Siddha Dharma. 16. 17. Tobacco use and smoking is prohibited. 18. Tamasic substances were also banned. 19. Never be involved in unethical business. 20. Stop castration of calves to prevent animal cruelty. 21. Protect wildlife especially small deer. 22. 23. Always keep kindness in mind. 24. Atithi Devo Bhava. 25. 26. Always take care of your God from the heart. 27. Trees are precious for environment, to save them, Jasnathji encouraged the practice of samadhi instead of cremation. 28. Always | the Bikaner district of Rajasthan. It is 45 km from Junagarh Fort in Bikaner District. History This is the main Dham (meaning: abode) of Jasnath sect. Jasnath ji Maharaj, while taking samadhi, ordered Haroji to establish Dharmapeeth, propagating Dharma sect. Fire Dance (Hindi: Agni Nritya) of Jasnathi Siddh community is very famous. 36 Rules Lord Jasnath gave 36 life Sutras which are the basis for a meaningful life and ideal society building. 1. One who follows Siddha Dharma will always do good work. 2. Do the best deeds. 3. Have been instructed to avoid being misguided and follow self-righteousness. 4. It is better to die of hunger than to kill any living being. 5. Understanding the importance of physical hygiene, instructed to take bath daily. 6. Always worship your beloved God. 7. 8. Asked to adopt monotheism. 9. Do not insult the lamp of worship with its mouthful. 10. The person is advised to be reticent and avoid unnecessary delirium. 11. Chant the name of Rama and describe his virtues. 12. Remember the Lord Shiva. 13. 14. Stay away from |
is now best known. This store closed in 1980, at which point the Steffen family briefly took over the variety store business. After the final variety store closed, the building became vacant and has since been used as a private storage space. On February 14, 2002, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Architecture The Wakonda Variety building is a rare example of surviving early 20th architecture in Wakonda. Built in the Early Commercial style, it is constructed mostly out of brick and sits atop a concrete foundation. It contains a recessed central entryway with two large plate glass display windows on either side. An exposed metal beam divides the first and second floors and still bears the text "Wakonda Variety". At each corner is a brick pilaster, which rises to and joins the corbelled parapet adorning the flat asphalt roof. The second floor contains double-hung arched windows | lot was first purchased by Wallace Wright in January 1907 from a local real estate company, and the building is believed to have been built later that year. Because it was constructed out of brick, the building survived a 1917 fire that destroyed most of the surrounding commercial structures (the nearby Wakonda State Bank also survived this event). Since its construction, the building has variably been a meat market, a drug store, a variety store, a newspaper office, and a casket storage space. By the late 1930s and through the 1940s, it was a pharmacy run by Neil Chancellor and later by Glen and Mae Sample. In 1968, it was sold to Wilfred and Ann Doty, who turned it into the Wakonda Variety store, by which name it is now best known. This store closed in 1980, at which point the Steffen family briefly took over the variety store business. After the final variety store closed, the building became vacant and has since been used as a private storage space. On February 14, 2002, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Architecture The Wakonda Variety building is |
the qualifying draw: Evan Furness Andrey Kuznetsov Shintaro Mochizuki Hiroki Moriya Alexandre Müller Tim van Rijthoven The following player received entry as a lucky loser: Andrea Arnaboldi Champions Singles Vasek Pospisil def. Grégoire Barrère 6–4, 3–6, 6–1. Doubles Albano Olivetti / David Vega Hernández def. Sander Arends / David Pel 3–6, | took place in Quimper, France between 24 and 30 January 2022. Singles main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings as of 17 January 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Gilles Simon Jo-Wilfried Tsonga Luca Van Assche The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Evan Furness Andrey Kuznetsov Shintaro |
had been ruled by the Turkoman Salghurid dynasty. Abu Bakr was the son of Sa'd I (), the Salghurid atabeg (ruler) of Fars. Before his succession to the throne, Abu Bakr attempted to seize power by rebelling in Shiraz against his father during the latters conflict with two princes of the Khwarazmian Empire. He was, however, defeated by local troops and imprisoned. Just before his father's death on 5 November 1226, Abu Bakr was released and subsequently became the new atabeg. Reign On 12 November 1230, Abu Bakr captured the Kish Island, thus giving him access to the trade between the Persian Gulf and India, where he could enforce dues | by sending his son Sa'd II to the Mongol court at Baghdad. During Sa'd II's assignment, Abu Bakr died, on 18 May 1260. Sa'd II thus succeeded him, but died en route at Tafresh due to illness after ruling for twelve or eighteen days. According to the modern historian John Limbert, Abu Bakr's death marked the start of the decline of the Salghurids, as his successors were either "drunkards, braggarts, or children," contrary to the previous "harsh and tough-minded Salghurid rulers." Court culture and local traditions Abu Bakr was highly interested in learning, and had a circle of scholars and artists such as Saadi Shirazi (died 1291/92), who resided at his court. Saadi used his pen name in admiration of Abu Bakr, and also dedicated his first major work to the latter, the Bustan. During this period, culture flourished in Fars; Abu Bakr ordered the construction of many hospitals and high-level religious establishments which attracted many scholars. According to local traditions, Abu Bakr's minister Amir Muqarrab al-Din Mas'ud discovered the burial place of Ahmad, a brother of the eight Imam Ali al-Ridha (died 818). He was identified by the seal ring he wore. Consequently, the locals saw light emerging from a hill, where they allegedly found the burial place of Ahmad's brother Husayn. Abu Bakr had |
Nakashima was the defending champion but chose not to defend his title. Vasek Pospisil won the title after defeating Grégoire Barrère 6–4, | to defend his title. Vasek Pospisil won the title after defeating Grégoire Barrère 6–4, 3–6, |
lost in the first round to Jonáš Forejtek and Michael Vrbenský. Albano Olivetti and David Vega Hernández won the title after defeating Sander Arends and | chose to defend his title, partnering Jonathan Eysseric. Bemelmans lost in the first round to Jonáš Forejtek and Michael Vrbenský. Albano Olivetti and David Vega Hernández won the title after defeating Sander Arends |
He frequently served as an auditor down to 1230, hearing cases from across Europe. In June 1234, Gil was elected to the archdiocese of Tarragona, but declined. He is especially associated with interventionist policy of Pope Innocent IV regarding papal provision. In 1245, Innocent assigned him the task of dividing up various sources of income between the chapters of Ávila, Burgos, Calahorra, Ciudad Rodrigo, Córdoba, Cuenca, Plasencia, Salamanca and Segovia so as to ensure an adequate living for the bishops and canons. In 1247, Gil was offered the archdiocese of Toledo, but declined. Gil did not subscribe any papal document later than 1246, perhaps on account of old age. In 1253, he supported Robert Grosseteste's complaint against Innocent IV regarding papal provisions. It is for this reason that Matthew of Paris calls | but declined. Gil did not subscribe any papal document later than 1246, perhaps on account of old age. In 1253, he supported Robert Grosseteste's complaint against Innocent IV regarding papal provisions. It is for this reason that Matthew of Paris calls him a "pillar of truth and justice in the Roman curia" in his Chronica maiora. Matthew also records, improbably, that he was at least one hundred years old at his death. Gil died in Naples on 11 November 1254. His death is recorded in the necrologies of Burgos and Toledo. His will, still extant in 1311, has been lost. The record does survive of his bequest to the Cistercian house of San Martino al Cimino of the debt that was owed him by the cathedral of Toledo. His executor was Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini. Notes |
(cardinal) (d. 1254), Spanish cleric Gil Torres (baseball player) | Gil Torres (cardinal) (d. 1254), Spanish |
commemorate the Province of Alberta's 75th anniversary, 6060 was presented to the people of Alberta as a gift. After more than five years of retirement, it was restored a second time with the help of Harry Home, the Province of Alberta and volunteers from the Rocky Mountain Rail Society. 6060 travelled under her own power to Vancouver, British Columbia, in 1986 to participate in the Steam Expo, part of that year's World's Fair alongside several other steam locomotives, including Canadian Pacific (CPR) 4-6-4 2860, CPR 4-6-2 1201, CN 4-6-0 1392, and Union Pacific (UP) 0-6-0 4466. After several years of storage at the Alberta Railway Museum near Edmonton, 6060 was moved to Stettler in 1998 to operate regularly in the service of Alberta Prairie Steam Tours (APST). More than a decade later, it continued to transport thousands of excursion passengers every summer until it went out of service in 2011. Nine years later, the APST began performing an | and Union Pacific (UP) 0-6-0 4466. After several years of storage at the Alberta Railway Museum near Edmonton, 6060 was moved to Stettler in 1998 to operate regularly in the service of Alberta Prairie Steam Tours (APST). More than a decade later, it continued to transport thousands of excursion passengers every summer until it went out of service in 2011. Nine years later, the APST began performing an overhaul on the No. 6060 locomotive, and as of 2022, the overhaul is still under way. See also Canadian National 6077 (Another preserved CN U-1-f class locomotive) Canadian National 6213 Canadian National 3254 Grand Trunk Western 6039 References Further reading External links Rocky Mountain Rail Society - official |
tennis players Rice Owls men's tennis players Tennis players at the 1963 Pan American Games Pan American Games competitors for Puerto Rico Competitors at the 1966 Central American and Caribbean Games Central American and Caribbean Games silver medalists for Puerto Rico Central American and Caribbean Games medalists in tennis Tennis players at the 1968 Summer Olympics | the 1963 Pan American Games Pan American Games competitors for Puerto Rico Competitors at the 1966 Central American and Caribbean Games Central American and Caribbean Games silver medalists for Puerto Rico Central American and Caribbean Games medalists in tennis Tennis players at the 1968 Summer |
By 2015, MOSAIC was supporting supported over 25,000 immigrants per year. In 2019 it partnered with the Refugee Council of Australia on Operation #NotForgotten a program to support refugees held in immigration detention in Australia. By 2021, 144 refugees had been resettled. Organization In 2015 its $24m budget was 45% funded by the Canadian federal government, the rest mostly provided by Government of British Columbia and private donations from groups including the Law Society of British Columbia. None per cent of revenue is generated from the sale of translations services. In 2015, MOSAIC employed over 300 staff. Services The organization provides languages programs, career services, and loans to help immigrants start a business. It provides a range of serviced for youth, and for early childhood development. It also | is a Vancouver based not for profit organization that supports immigrants and refugees to resettle in Vancouver. The organizations provides programs that support newcomers with education, immigrations, employment, finances and safety. History MOSAIC was established as a not for profit in 1976 as a merger of Language Aid for Ethnic Groups and Multilingual Social Services. In 2014 the MOSAIC sponsored a Youth Violence and Family Relationships event where its staff facilitated a forum about family relationships and violence. By 2015, MOSAIC was supporting supported over 25,000 immigrants per year. In 2019 it partnered with the Refugee Council of Australia on Operation #NotForgotten a program to support refugees held in immigration detention in Australia. By 2021, 144 refugees had been resettled. Organization In 2015 |
a junior. As a senior, Randall averaged 12.9 points and 2.7 rebounds per game. Professional career After going undrafted in the 2020 NBA draft, Randall had difficulty finding a professional team to sign with overseas due to the COVID-19 pandemic and opted to remain in the U.S. and work on his game. In October 2021, Randall joined the Long Island Nets of the NBA G League after a successful tryout. On January 5, 2022, he scored 40 points in a win over the College Park Skyhawks, then followed it with another 40-point effort in a loss to the Greensboro Swarm, becoming the first Long Island Nets player to record consecutive 40 point games. Career statistics College |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2015–16 | style="text-align:left;"| Memphis | 24 || 5 || 7.5 || .278 || .186 || .500 || 1.3 || .5 || .3 || .1 || 2.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2016–17 | style="text-align:left;"| Memphis | 32 || 0 || 18.1 || .349 || .288 || .517 || 1.4 || 1.0 || .6 || .2 || 5.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2017–18 | style="text-align:left;"| Duquesne | style="text-align:center;" colspan="11"| Redshirt |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2018–19 | style="text-align:left;"| UT Martin | 12 || 10 || 33.8 || .436 || .344 || .846 || 3.6 || 2.5 || 1.1 || .2 || 16.3 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2019–20 | style="text-align:left;"| UT Martin | 9 || 8 || 27.3 || .383 || .317 || .600 || 2.7 || 2.4 || .8 || .1 || 12.9 |- class="sortbottom" | style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career | 77 || 23 || 18.3 || .374 || .296 || .641 || 1.9 || 1.2 || .6 || .1 || 6.9 Personal life Randall's father L. Craig scored 1,503 career points at | in a win over the College Park Skyhawks, then followed it with another 40-point effort in a loss to the Greensboro Swarm, becoming the first Long Island Nets player to record consecutive 40 point games. Career statistics College |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2015–16 | style="text-align:left;"| Memphis | 24 || 5 || 7.5 || .278 || .186 || .500 || 1.3 || .5 || .3 || .1 || 2.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2016–17 | style="text-align:left;"| Memphis | 32 || 0 || 18.1 || .349 || .288 || .517 || 1.4 || 1.0 || .6 || .2 || 5.2 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2017–18 | style="text-align:left;"| Duquesne | style="text-align:center;" colspan="11"| Redshirt |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2018–19 | style="text-align:left;"| UT Martin | 12 || 10 || 33.8 || .436 || .344 || .846 || 3.6 || 2.5 || 1.1 || .2 || 16.3 |- | style="text-align:left;"| 2019–20 | style="text-align:left;"| UT Martin | 9 || 8 || 27.3 || .383 || .317 || .600 || 2.7 || 2.4 || .8 || .1 || 12.9 |- class="sortbottom" | style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career | 77 || 23 || 18.3 || .374 || .296 || .641 || 1.9 || 1.2 || .6 |
Wu Tung-lin The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Sebastian Fanselow Nick Hardt Ryan Harrison Nicolás Mejía Roberto Quiroz Yosuke Watanuki References ATP Columbus Challenger 2022 in sports in Ohio January 2022 sports events in the United | Sandgren / Mikael Torpegaard def. Luca Margaroli / Yasutaka Uchiyama 5–7, 6–4, [10–5]. Singles main draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings are as of January 17, 2022. Other entrants The following players received entry into the singles main draw as wildcards: Jack Anthrop Alexander Bernard Jenson Brooksby The following player received entry into the singles main draw using a protected ranking: Wu Tung-lin The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Sebastian Fanselow |
in the final. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main | 6–4 in the final. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main Draw |
charter flights out of the country for evacuees. As of January 2021, Task Force Argo has successfully evacuated 2,216 people from Afghanistan. Leadership Task Force Argo leadership is publicly represented by its founders, Iowa State Senator Zach Nunn, former JSOC Ground Force Commander (2nd Ranger Battalion) Jesse Jensen, and Munjeet Singh, an executive in a defense industrial base. Task Force Argo is fiscally sponsored by Special Operations Association of America. Argo’s roster of volunteers consists of United States Department of Defense personnel, active duty service members and veterans, current and former United States Intelligence Community and law enforcement Officers, elected officials, former special operators, intelligence analysts, military aviators, diplomats, defense industry executives, and other subject matter experts. The volunteers continue | adjusted to a new charter flight strategy and partnered with several Task Force Pineapple officials to charter flights out of the country for evacuees. As of January 2021, Task Force Argo has successfully evacuated 2,216 people from Afghanistan. Leadership Task Force Argo leadership is publicly represented by its founders, Iowa State Senator Zach Nunn, former JSOC Ground Force Commander (2nd Ranger Battalion) Jesse Jensen, and Munjeet Singh, an executive in a defense industrial base. Task Force Argo is fiscally sponsored by Special Operations Association of America. Argo’s roster of volunteers consists of United States Department of Defense personnel, active duty service members and veterans, current and former United States Intelligence Community and law enforcement Officers, elected officials, former special operators, intelligence analysts, military aviators, diplomats, defense industry executives, and other subject matter experts. The volunteers continue to support Afghans by helping coordinate with Department of State initiatives, finding alternate routes, organizing medical efforts and |
and Mikael Torpegaard won the title after defeating Luca Margaroli and Yasutaka Uchiyama 5–7, 6–4, [10–5] in the final. Seeds Draw | Uchiyama 5–7, 6–4, [10–5] in the final. Seeds Draw References Main Draw Columbus Challenger - Doubles |
series are determined via a conference system. The top two teams based in regional Victoria and Tasmania and top two teams from metropolitan Victoria (i.e.: Melbourne) compete in a knockout semi-final, with the two winners to meet in the grand final and play off for the premiership. Teams that fail to qualify for the semi-finals will play off in repechage round, whilst the duration of quarters were lengthened from 17 to 20 minutes. One | premiership. Teams that fail to qualify for the semi-finals will play off in repechage round, whilst the duration of quarters were lengthened from 17 to 20 minutes. One match per round was streamed via the Herald Sun website, and all other matches were streamed on the NAB League app. Ladder Finals series Semi-finals Grand Final See also 2022 |
1930s, Bacon worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). In 1939, she was among the "leading instructors in economics" who signed a letter opposing a sales tax in Massachusetts. In the 1940s, she worked for the Office of Price Administration. She consulted for the Brookings Institution in the 1950s, and worked with the National Bureau of Economic Research. She was a Fulbright Scholar in the Philippines from 1956 to 1957. Publications "A Monthly Index of Commodity Prices, 1890–1900" (1926) "The Significance of Fixed-Base and Link Relatives in Studies of Price Stability—a Comment on the Behavior of Prices" (1928) | was Ruth E. Bacon, a foreign service officer. The sisters were close, and Dorothy Bacon shopped for Ruth Bacon's work wardrobe when she was a diplomat. Bacon attended Simmons College from 1918 to 1919, and graduated from Radcliffe College in 1922. She stayed at Radcliffe to earn a master's degree in 1924, and a PhD in economics in 1928, with a dissertation titled "Maladjustment of Prices with Special Reference to the Wholesale Prices of Commodities in the United States; 1890-1896". Career Bacon was a professor of economics at Vassar College from 1924 to 1926, and at Smith College from 1927 into the 1960s. She wrote Recent Economic History of Five Towns (1937). She served on an awards committee of the American Association of University Women in 1940. In the 1930s, Bacon worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). In 1939, she was among the "leading instructors in economics" who signed a letter opposing a sales tax in Massachusetts. In the 1940s, she worked for the Office of Price |
Miles Davis named for the mythical city Agharta, a manga series by Takaharu Matsumoto Ergenekon (allegation), a Turkish coup trial also referred to as "Ergenekon/Agartha" "Argatha", a song by the Sword from | kingdom that is said to be located in the Earth's core, according to hollow Earth theory. These terms or variations upon them may also be used to refer to: Agharta, an album by Miles Davis named for |
to COVID-19. It is held annually at the Club de Tenis Santa Cruz in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia since 2022 as part of the Legión Sudamericana. Past finals Singles Doubles References ATP Challenger Tour | tennis tournament played on clay courts. It is currently part of the ATP Challenger Tour. It was part of the 2021 Legión Sudamericana but was temporarily suspended due to COVID-19. It is held annually at the Club |
in Madrid. Her undeniable talent was quickly noticed and she evolved in Europe with the prestigious ballet companies of Pilar Lopez, Jose de la Vega (National Choreography Prize), Jose Greco, Mariemma, Pilar de Oro y Alfredo Gil, Rafael Aguilar and finally the Antonio ballet. She was also a soloist at the La Scala Opera Theater in Milan and danced for four years at the Le Châtelet Theater in Paris, with Luis Mariano. Back home, Mrs. Ludmilla Chiriaeff, founder of Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, asked her to join the École supérieure de danse du Québec. She will occupy the functions of teacher and choreographer there for several years. She has also shone as a choreographer and principal dancer with the Opéra de Montréal, the Orchester Symphonique de Montréal and the Orchester Symphonique de Québec. In 1975, she created the SONIA DEL RIO SPANISH AND FLAMENCO DANCE SCHOOL. In 1997, hired by Skate Canada, Sonia del Rio collaborated on a Spanish choreography with gold medalist Paul Duchesnay for the Junior Figure Skating Team of Quebec. In the summer of the same year, she presented a concert at the Château de Dampierre-sur-Boutonne. The rave reviews from the press earned him a second invitation in July 2000. Ultimate consecration, she received on October 14, 1998, in the name of His Majesty King Juan Carlos I of Spain, the Order of Isabella the Catholic, the highest distinction granted to a foreign artist. In August 1999, Sonia del Rio was named godmother of the Féria de Montréal at the Olympic stadium, in addition to being a dancer-choreographer of the Great Portuguese Corrida Taurine. The year 2000 is a flamboyant year for Sonia del Rio. Among other things, she was invited to set a choreography at the Théâtre du Rideau Vert in Montreal, in a play by Ionesco. In March, she was appointed artistic director of the Muestra Cultural Ibero-latinoamericana de Montréal. On April 6 and 7, she dances Carmen by Bizet with the Orchester Symphonique de la Montérégie. In June, she danced Caprice español by Rimsky-Korsakov with the Orchester Symphonique de Laval. In July and August, Sonia del Rio makes a European tour where she dances, in Barcelona as part of a conference illustrated by the famous dancer Jose de La Vega, telling the career of the flamenco dance icon of the years 20 and 30, Vincente Escudero. Sonia del Rio embodies the role of the partner of the latter, Carmita Garcia. A grant holder from the Conseil des Arts et Lettres du Québec, Sonia del Rio returns to Spain to revitalize her art. Lucia Real and Merche Esmeralda will be his teachers. In the summer of 2001, Sonia del Rio bowed out in Spain, in Madrid, as a guest artist at the Castillo de la Coracera Dance Festival on June 23, 2001 with the participation of the Canadian Embassy. That evening she celebrated 40 years of artistic life, having made her professional debut in Spain in 1961, with the famous Spanish ballet by Pilar Lopez. Returning to Quebec, the great lady of Flamenco opened a dance school in Trois-Rivières in September 2001. In the spring of 2002, at the request of actress Sophie Faucher, she performed a choreography for the theater play "Apasionada", recounting the life of Frida Kahlo, directed by Robert Lepage. Between 2000-2010 Sonia del Rio divides her time between France, Spain and Quebec (see above). In 2008 Sonia del Rio danced at the International Festival of Montguyon in France. Also in 2008, as part of the festivities for the 400th anniversary of the founding of Quebec City, she presented, accompanied by actress France Desjarlais and flautist Jean Dury, the evolution of ties between France and Quebec through 400 years of history. Sonia del Rio illustrates by dancing the historical journey of this production entitled DE L'ILE D'ORLÉAN TO LA CONTRESCARPE. The show, from the Île d'Orléans to the Contrescarpe, gets great press reviews in France in the Sud-Ouest newspaper. Between 2005 and 2011 Sonia del Rio occupies the Quebec stages by presenting her conferences Flamenco lived, told and danced, by Sonia del Rio among others, at the Belles Soirée of the University of Montreal. Anthologie de la danse Espagnole is presented at the Château Ramesay, in the company of guitarist Serge Beauchemin, at the Château Dufresne, in the company of Kristin Molnar on the violin and Serge Beauchemin and at the Chapelle Historique, in the company of the famous pianist Marie-Andrée Ostiguy and the actress Christine Lamer, without forgetting the musicians Caroline Plante, Dominique Soulard, guitarists, and the singer El Chele (Jose Lumbrera). The 7th ORGUES ET COULEURS Autumn Festival invites Sonia del Rio accompanied by the organist Régis Rousseau to present dances from the Spanish Renaissance. The Orchester Dymphonique de la Montérégie under the direction of Marc David presents the concert version of Bizet's opera Carmen. The actor Edgar Fruitier tells the story of Merimée, Sonia del Rio dances some excerpts from this famous opera. Trois-Rivières, Terrebonne, Repentigny, Magog and Joliette applaud Sonia del Rio in various concerts. In December 2010, Sonia Del Rio appeared in the art book “El Flamenco que vivi” written by José de la Vega. The only Canadian to appear in this book, she rubs shoulders with the greats: Antonio Gades, Ismael Galván, Merche Esmeralda and Maria Pages. Personal life She has been married to Claude Normand since 1974, ex-cameraman at Radio-Canada. She has a son named Sebastian. She lived seven years in France in the Charente-Maritime region. Career 1953-1958: Sonia Del Rio studied classical ballet and Spanish dance at Studio Lacasse Morenoff (Maurice Lacasse Morenoff and Carmen Sierra Lacasse Morenoff,) as well as with Tatiana de Koudriarzeff (classical ballet). 1957-58-59: Sonia begins her career as a dancer in the most select cabarets in the city of Montreal, featuring great renowned singing stars such as Edith Piaf, Joséphine Baker, Rina Ketty, Sammy Davis Jr., and Tony Bennet. As well as famous Quebec artists, Sonia will dance alongside Michel Louvain, Muriel Millard, Les Jerolas, Monique Gaube, and the fanciful ti Gus and ti Mousse (Denise Hémond and Real Beland) without forgetting the pianist Georges Tremblay and many others . Sonia del Rio will be performing at the Jean Grimaldi Theater alongside actors Olivier Guimond, Juliette Petry, Manda Parent, Claude Blanchard and Jeanne Bianchi. 1960: October 24 Sonia embarks on board the Homeric to complete her dance studies and try her luck in Europe. In Paris she studied Spanish dance with Lutyce de Luz. She is immediately noticed by the famous dancer Luisillo who engages her in his company which is on display at the Théatre de L'Etoile. Following this first success Sonia moved to Spain to perfect her knowledge of classical, folk and Flamenco Spanish dance. In Madrid she studied with Hector Zaraspé (classical ballet), Pedro Azorin (Spanish folk dances) Alberto Lorca (dances of the Escuela Bolera) and later Jose Granero (classical ballet). 1961: Noticed by the wonderful dancer Pilar Lopez, Sonia del Rio signs a one-year contract with the Pilar Lopez ballet. Antonio Gades is the star dancer of the company. This first international tour will take Sonia to Italy at the Eliseo Theater in Rome, as well as at the Verona Arena Opera Festival, a famous opera festival that takes place every summer in the Roman amphitheater in Verona. The Middle East dance festival will host Ballet Pilar Lopez in Syria and Lebanon. Tour interrupted by a revolution between Syria and Israel. Back in Spain, the ballet Pilar Lopez will perform at the Festival de Danza de Espana. 1962: Sonia del Rio is hired as the first dancer in the Spanish Ballet of the famous dancer Jose de la Vega. (Jose de la Vega National Choreography Prize in 1961) Laura Salinas is the Etoile dancer. In their company and five other dancers as well as a classical singer and pianist, accompanied by guitarists and | Team of Quebec. In the summer of the same year, she presented a concert at the Château de Dampierre-sur-Boutonne. The rave reviews from the press earned him a second invitation in July 2000. Ultimate consecration, she received on October 14, 1998, in the name of His Majesty King Juan Carlos I of Spain, the Order of Isabella the Catholic, the highest distinction granted to a foreign artist. In August 1999, Sonia del Rio was named godmother of the Féria de Montréal at the Olympic stadium, in addition to being a dancer-choreographer of the Great Portuguese Corrida Taurine. The year 2000 is a flamboyant year for Sonia del Rio. Among other things, she was invited to set a choreography at the Théâtre du Rideau Vert in Montreal, in a play by Ionesco. In March, she was appointed artistic director of the Muestra Cultural Ibero-latinoamericana de Montréal. On April 6 and 7, she dances Carmen by Bizet with the Orchester Symphonique de la Montérégie. In June, she danced Caprice español by Rimsky-Korsakov with the Orchester Symphonique de Laval. In July and August, Sonia del Rio makes a European tour where she dances, in Barcelona as part of a conference illustrated by the famous dancer Jose de La Vega, telling the career of the flamenco dance icon of the years 20 and 30, Vincente Escudero. Sonia del Rio embodies the role of the partner of the latter, Carmita Garcia. A grant holder from the Conseil des Arts et Lettres du Québec, Sonia del Rio returns to Spain to revitalize her art. Lucia Real and Merche Esmeralda will be his teachers. In the summer of 2001, Sonia del Rio bowed out in Spain, in Madrid, as a guest artist at the Castillo de la Coracera Dance Festival on June 23, 2001 with the participation of the Canadian Embassy. That evening she celebrated 40 years of artistic life, having made her professional debut in Spain in 1961, with the famous Spanish ballet by Pilar Lopez. Returning to Quebec, the great lady of Flamenco opened a dance school in Trois-Rivières in September 2001. In the spring of 2002, at the request of actress Sophie Faucher, she performed a choreography for the theater play "Apasionada", recounting the life of Frida Kahlo, directed by Robert Lepage. Between 2000-2010 Sonia del Rio divides her time between France, Spain and Quebec (see above). In 2008 Sonia del Rio danced at the International Festival of Montguyon in France. Also in 2008, as part of the festivities for the 400th anniversary of the founding of Quebec City, she presented, accompanied by actress France Desjarlais and flautist Jean Dury, the evolution of ties between France and Quebec through 400 years of history. Sonia del Rio illustrates by dancing the historical journey of this production entitled DE L'ILE D'ORLÉAN TO LA CONTRESCARPE. The show, from the Île d'Orléans to the Contrescarpe, gets great press reviews in France in the Sud-Ouest newspaper. Between 2005 and 2011 Sonia del Rio occupies the Quebec stages by presenting her conferences Flamenco lived, told and danced, by Sonia del Rio among others, at the Belles Soirée of the University of Montreal. Anthologie de la danse Espagnole is presented at the Château Ramesay, in the company of guitarist Serge Beauchemin, at the Château Dufresne, in the company of Kristin Molnar on the violin and Serge Beauchemin and at the Chapelle Historique, in the company of the famous pianist Marie-Andrée Ostiguy and the actress Christine Lamer, without forgetting the musicians Caroline Plante, Dominique Soulard, guitarists, and the singer El Chele (Jose Lumbrera). The 7th ORGUES ET COULEURS Autumn Festival invites Sonia del Rio accompanied by the organist Régis Rousseau to present dances from the Spanish Renaissance. The Orchester Dymphonique de la Montérégie under the direction of Marc David presents the concert version of Bizet's opera Carmen. The actor Edgar Fruitier tells the story of Merimée, Sonia del Rio dances some excerpts from this famous opera. Trois-Rivières, Terrebonne, Repentigny, Magog and Joliette applaud Sonia del Rio in various concerts. In December 2010, Sonia Del Rio appeared in the art book “El Flamenco que vivi” written by José de la Vega. The only Canadian to appear in this book, she rubs shoulders with the greats: Antonio Gades, Ismael Galván, Merche Esmeralda and Maria Pages. Personal life She has been married to Claude Normand since 1974, ex-cameraman at Radio-Canada. She has a son named Sebastian. She lived seven years in France in the Charente-Maritime region. Career 1953-1958: Sonia Del Rio studied classical ballet and Spanish dance at Studio Lacasse Morenoff (Maurice Lacasse Morenoff and Carmen Sierra Lacasse Morenoff,) as well as with Tatiana de Koudriarzeff (classical ballet). 1957-58-59: Sonia begins her career as a dancer in the most select cabarets in the city of Montreal, featuring great renowned singing stars such as Edith Piaf, Joséphine Baker, Rina Ketty, Sammy Davis Jr., and Tony Bennet. As well as famous Quebec artists, Sonia will dance alongside Michel Louvain, Muriel Millard, Les Jerolas, Monique Gaube, and the fanciful ti Gus and ti Mousse (Denise Hémond and Real Beland) without forgetting the pianist Georges Tremblay and many others . Sonia del Rio will be performing at the Jean Grimaldi Theater alongside actors Olivier Guimond, Juliette Petry, Manda Parent, Claude Blanchard and Jeanne Bianchi. 1960: October 24 Sonia embarks on board the Homeric to complete her dance studies and try her luck in Europe. In Paris she studied Spanish dance with Lutyce de Luz. She is immediately noticed by the famous dancer Luisillo who engages her in his company which is on display at the Théatre de L'Etoile. Following this first success Sonia moved to Spain to perfect her knowledge of classical, folk and Flamenco Spanish dance. In Madrid she studied with Hector Zaraspé (classical ballet), Pedro Azorin (Spanish folk dances) Alberto Lorca (dances of the Escuela Bolera) and later Jose Granero |
and 1970s, featured in main draws at the French Open and Wimbledon. He made the round of 16 at the 1968 Italian Open, which included a five set win over | (6 February 1946 - 2 April 2012) was an Italian professional tennis player. Castigliano, a native of Rome who was active in the 1960s and 1970s, featured in main draws at the French Open and Wimbledon. He made the round of |
Challenger was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2022 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia between 24 and 30 January 2022. Singles main-draw entrants Seeds 1 Rankings are as of 17 January 2022. Other entrants The | January 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Boris Arias Murkel Dellien Federico Zeballos The following player received entry into the singles main draw as an alternate: Nicolás Álvarez The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Pedro Cachín Matías Franco Descotte Diego Hidalgo Juan Carlos Prado Angelo |
6–4, 6–3 in the final. Seeds Draw Finals Top half Bottom half References Main Draw Qualifying Draw | Francisco Cerúndolo won the title after defeating Camilo Ugo Carabelli 6–4, 6–3 in |
part of the Legión Sudamericana. Diego Hidalgo and Cristian Rodríguez won | of the tournament as part of the Legión Sudamericana. Diego Hidalgo and Cristian Rodríguez won the title after defeating |
1981 and registered with the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission in 2000. The organization is led by CEO Paul Power, Jasmina Bajraktarevic-Hayward was appointed as the board president in 2021. As of 2017 it had 190 institutional and 1,000 individual members. Activities The Refugee Council of Australia advocates for refugee rights including criticizing level of support that the Government of Australia provides to job-seeking refugees. Its 2010 publication What Works documented refugees' experiences and the challenges they faced while trying to enter the Australian employment market. In 2021, it was part of international efforts to resettle | refugees. Organization The organization was formed in 1981 and registered with the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission in 2000. The organization is led by CEO Paul Power, Jasmina Bajraktarevic-Hayward was appointed as the board president in 2021. As of 2017 it had 190 institutional and 1,000 individual members. Activities The Refugee Council of Australia advocates for refugee rights including criticizing level of support that the Government of Australia provides to job-seeking refugees. Its 2010 publication |
of Christian Education; Director of MAPT program Mark Douglas (Ethicist), Professor of Christian Ethics; Director of M.Div. program Anna Carter Florence, Peter Marshall Associate Professor of Preaching Israel Galindo, Associate Dean for Lifelong Learning Martha L. Moore-Keish, J.B. Green Professor of Theology Marcia Y. Riggs, J. Erskine Love Professor of Christian Ethics, writer Love L. Sechrest, Dean of the Faculty and Vice President for Academic Affairs Jeffery Tribble, Associate Professor of Ministry Haruko Nawata Ward, Professor of Church History Ralph Watkins, Peachtree Associate Professor of Evangelism and Church Growth Christine Roy Yoder, J. McDowell Richards Professor of Biblical Interpretation Faculty emeriti Walter Brueggemann, Old Testament Professor Emeritus, theologian and writer Erskine Clarke, Professor Emeritus, religious historian Catherine Gunsalus Gonzalez, Professor Emerita, writer Elizabeth Johnson (New Testament Scholar), J. Davison Philips Professor of New Testament Sara Myers, Professor Emerita, theological librarian Kathleen M. O'Connor, Old Testament Professor Emerita, writer George Stroup, J.B. Green Professor Emeritus of Theology, author Brian Wren, Conant Professor of Worship Past faculty, 1925-present (Decatur, GA campus) David L. Bartlett, Professor Emeritus, writer. Barbara Brown Taylor, Adjunct Professor of Christian Spirituality, and well-known Episcopal priest and writer. G. Thompson Brown, (1921-2014), Professor Emeritus, writer, missionary, Director of the Division of International Mission for the | 1958 D. James Kennedy, graduate John C. Knapp, graduate, author, speaker, college president John H. Leith, graduate Peter Marshall, 1931 graduate, twice Chaplain of the United States Senate Ben Mathes, graduate, Missionary, founder of Rivers of the World J. Vernon McGee, graduate (1933), founder of Thru The Bible Radio Network Ian Punnett, graduate, radio talk show host James M. Robinson, 1946 graduate, New Testament scholar, son of William Childs Robinson (1897-1982), who taught church history and apologetics at Columbia Theological Seminary Alumni, 1828-1925 (Columbia, SC campus) William Alderman Linton, missionary, founder of Hannam University in Korea Benjamin Morgan Palmer, graduate (1841); Professor of Church History and Polity (1854-1856), first Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States. John Leighton Wilson, 1833 graduate; first missionaries to West Africa by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Faculty Current faculty William P. Brown, William Marcellus McPheeters Professor of Old Testament, writer Kathy Dawson, Associate Professor of Christian Education; Director of MAPT program Mark Douglas (Ethicist), Professor of Christian Ethics; Director of M.Div. program Anna Carter Florence, Peter Marshall Associate Professor of Preaching Israel Galindo, Associate Dean for Lifelong Learning Martha L. Moore-Keish, J.B. Green Professor of Theology Marcia Y. Riggs, J. Erskine Love Professor of Christian Ethics, writer Love L. Sechrest, Dean of the Faculty and Vice President for Academic Affairs Jeffery Tribble, Associate Professor of Ministry Haruko Nawata Ward, Professor of Church History |
god Apollo, with an aim to vindicate distributing LGBT-themed works in Spain by celebrating the high quality of LGBT+ films. They also award the Spanish distributors who help combat LGBT-phobia by being brave enough to choose to show the films. Many nominees and winners are thus the best international productions, with fewer Spanish films, as well as the local distributors of them. For the 2016 awards, the Best Song category was added. In response to more LGBT-themed films being released, particularly by international streaming services, the 2021 awards upped the nominations per category to four (from three) for most, and to ten (from five) for Best Film. It also added three new categories to better appreciate more diverse films, each with five nominees: Best Comedy, Best Documentary, and Best Spanish Film. Categories Production Best Adapted Screenplay (Mejor Guion Adaptado) Best Production Design (Mejor Dirección Artística) Best Cinematography (Mejor Fotografía) Best Comedy (Mejor Comedia)* | Spanish films, as well as the local distributors of them. For the 2016 awards, the Best Song category was added. In response to more LGBT-themed films being released, particularly by international streaming services, the 2021 awards upped the nominations per category to four (from three) for most, and to ten (from five) for Best Film. It also added three new categories to better appreciate more diverse films, each with five nominees: Best Comedy, Best Documentary, and Best Spanish Film. Categories Production Best Adapted Screenplay (Mejor Guion Adaptado) Best Production Design (Mejor Dirección Artística) Best Cinematography (Mejor Fotografía) Best Comedy (Mejor Comedia)* Best Costuming (Mejor Vestuario) Best Director (Mejor Dirección) Best Documentary (Mejor Documental)* Best Editing (Mejor Montaje) Best Film (Mejor Película) Best Hair and Make-Up (Mejor Maquillaje y Peluquería) Best New Director (Mejor Dirección Novel) Best Original Music (Mejor Música Original) Best Original Screenplay (Mejor Guion Original) Best Song/Original Song (Mejor Canción/Original) Best Sound (Mejor Sonido) Best Spanish Film (Mejor Película Española)* *Introduced for 2021 awards (VIIth edition) Acting Best Actor (Mejor Actor) Best Actress (Mejor Actriz) Best Ensemble Cast (Mejor Reparto) Best Couple (Mejor Pareja) Best New |
completed by 2024. the historic Japanese cartoon The Tiger Man turns 40 years after his arrival in Italy. the European court of human rights condemns Italy for having separated a mother from her daughter in the city of Brescia. 22 January: Silvio Berlusconi withdraws his candidacy a few days before the elections for the president of the republic. in Taranto a man injures 2 officers who were chasing his car. in Italy there is yet another death at work, it is an 18-year-old boy who worked as an internship in Udine. 23 people are arrested between Apulia and Calabria for participating in an international drug dealing from Turkey and the Netherlands. Starbucks closes its stores in Milan, however the US chain announces that it has great news for Italy. a few dozen people protest in Milan against vaccines and green passes. 23 January: in Brescia (Rezzato) there is a terrible accident between a car and a bus 5 young people die. according to a survey, Milan is the most expensive city in Italy, spending 47% more than Naples. to follow Naples, Palermo and Pescara are the cheapest cities. 24 January: 2022 Italian presidential election following the spread of COVID-19 (omicron variant) the health minister Roberto Speranza has decided to sign an ordinance that puts Piedmont, Sicily and Friuli in the orange zone, while Apulia and Sardinia go yellow. 26 January: in Livorno a twelve-year-old is beaten and laughed at by a group of boys for being Jews, a fact that has upset even the white Patrizio Bianchi minister of education. IPTV broadcasters were searched in the regions of Calabria, Campania, Emilia Romagna and Tuscany, allowing free viewing of Sky channels, DAZN and films. 28 January: in Ostia, a girl denounces her parents to the carabinieri following Islamic extremism against her by her family. 29 January: the president of the republic in office Sergio Mattarella is elected to the office of president of the republic. 30 January: a fire in an apartment in Reggio Emilia kills 2 children. February 1–5 February: Sanremo Music Festival 2022 1 February: Russian President Vladimir Putin telephones Prime Minister Mario Draghi for reassurance on gas supplies for Italy. In the city of Agrigento a policeman kills his son with a service pistol. in Cagliari a newborn is hit by a hijacker in front of his mother, the man shows up at the barracks and is sentenced. 2 February: Rome a group of activists vandalized the headquarters of the ministry of ecological transition. in | in Milan against vaccines and green passes. 23 January: in Brescia (Rezzato) there is a terrible accident between a car and a bus 5 young people die. according to a survey, Milan is the most expensive city in Italy, spending 47% more than Naples. to follow Naples, Palermo and Pescara are the cheapest cities. 24 January: 2022 Italian presidential election following the spread of COVID-19 (omicron variant) the health minister Roberto Speranza has decided to sign an ordinance that puts Piedmont, Sicily and Friuli in the orange zone, while Apulia and Sardinia go yellow. 26 January: in Livorno a twelve-year-old is beaten and laughed at by a group of boys for being Jews, a fact that has upset even the white Patrizio Bianchi minister of education. IPTV broadcasters were searched in the regions of Calabria, Campania, Emilia Romagna and Tuscany, allowing free viewing of Sky channels, DAZN and films. 28 January: in Ostia, a girl denounces her parents to the carabinieri following Islamic extremism against her by her family. 29 January: the president of the republic in office Sergio Mattarella is elected to the office of president of the republic. 30 January: a fire in an apartment in Reggio Emilia kills 2 children. February 1–5 February: Sanremo Music Festival 2022 1 February: Russian President Vladimir Putin telephones Prime Minister Mario Draghi for reassurance on gas supplies for Italy. In the city of Agrigento a policeman kills his son with a service pistol. in Cagliari a newborn is hit by a hijacker in front of his mother, the man shows up at the barracks and is sentenced. 2 February: Rome a group of activists vandalized the headquarters of the ministry of ecological transition. in Grumo Nevano (Napoli) a man strangles a 23-year-old woman by killing her, the man is arrested. 3 February: Sergio Mattarella swears in as president of the Italian republic starting his second term. 5 February: Milan becomes a big European city, with 20 skyscrapers. the US broadcaster CBS broadcasts for the first time a football event to promote football in the United States, it is the Milan inter-Milan derby the show will be broadcast live from outside San Siro. 8 February: Carabinieri control a Rom camp in Giugliano (Naples), finding ultra-light aircraft engines stolen the night before. To Como an elderly woman who died 2 years earlier is found sitting on a chair in a complete state of decomposition, the woman is found by the police who had been called for investigations. 9 February: following an investigation into corruption in Salerno 5 people are arrested including the PM Roberto Penna. 11 February: new eruption of Mount Etna in the night. 15 February: A man from Rome finds a ticket in a mask for covid-19, a ticket from alleged African slaves in China, however, there is no evidence of the ticket's accuracy. 18 February: In Turin during a demonstration on the safety of young people |
Greek woman and a Māori man and their cultural differences. Sue Orr, reviewing the book for Landfall, said Aukati "is a book of and for our time and deserves to be widely read, studied and debated". In the same year Arathimos was awarded a Copyright Licensing of New Zealand / New Zealand Society of Authors research grant towards a writing project about the status of Māori and other minority authors in New Zealand culture. In 2020 she received the Carmel Bird Digital Literary Award for her short story collection Apologia. The award is made to new works of short fiction by Australian writers. Having lived in Melbourne for a decade, | book for Landfall, said Aukati "is a book of and for our time and deserves to be widely read, studied and debated". In the same year Arathimos was awarded a Copyright Licensing of New Zealand / New Zealand Society of Authors research grant towards a writing project about the status of Māori and other minority authors in New Zealand culture. In 2020 she received the Carmel Bird Digital Literary Award for her short story collection Apologia. The award is made to new works of short fiction by Australian writers. Having lived in Melbourne for a decade, in 2020 she returned to New Zealand, where she spent six months in Wellington as the recipient of the Randell Cottage Writers' Residency. She subsequently spent four months in Auckland as the recipient of the Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship. She was the 2021 Waikato University writer-in-residence. References External links "Summer of Love", short story by Arathimos, published in Turbine | Kapohau (2006) Fracture: The reception of the 'other' author in Aotearoa, Arathimos' doctoral thesis, 2013 Living people New Zealand women novelists New Zealand women short story writers Victoria University of Wellington alumni People from Wellington City |
The book received starred review from Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, Booklist, Shelf Awareness, The Horn Book, and School Library Journal, as well as positive reviews from The New York Times Book Review, HuffPost, and Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books. The | Kirkus Reviews, Booklist, Shelf Awareness, The Horn Book, and School Library Journal, as well as positive reviews from The New York Times Book Review, HuffPost, and Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books. The Horn Book, School Library Journal, and Publishers Weekly named X one of |
corporation that simply happened to be owned by a state. He expressed concern that a ruling against Kentucky could render unconstitutional the banknotes issued by many other states. Although the majority did not reverse Craig directly, some scholars have argued that it effectively overruled the decision. Justices Smith Thompson and Henry Baldwin each filed separate concurring opinions. The sole dissenter, Justice Story, filed an animated and lengthy opinion. Writing that the bank was "the sole and exclusive instrument of the State, managing its exclusive funds, for its exclusive benefit and under its exclusive management", he concluded that the bank was for all intents and purposes a part of the state, and thus in his view the banknotes were impermissible state currency. He argued that states could not lawfully permit others to do what they could not do themselves. Story, the protégé of Marshall, evoked the late chief justice's spirit by stating that "Mr. Chief Justice Marshall is not here to speak for himself" but that, if he had been, he would have ruled against the bank. Legacy The decision in Briscoe demonstrated the Taney Court's divergence from the Marshall Court. It illustrated the Taney Court's embrace of Jacksonian principles of states' rights and opposition to national control of banking. The decision enabled states to take action to combat a depression that began in 1837, but it is of little significance today due to broad federal control of the financial system. Scholars have been divided in their views of the Briscoe ruling. In | faith and credit. He argued that, since the bank was in effect an agent of the state, its issuance of banknotes was unconstitutional. The bank's attorney, Henry Clay, was tasked with explaining why the Court's recent decision in Craig v. Missouri (1830), in which a 4–3 majority had struck down loan certificates issued by Missouri as unconstitutional bills of credit, did not foreclose his arguments. He argued that the bank was not part of the state but instead a separate corporation to which the constitutional prohibition did not apply. The Kentucky courts ruled in the bank's favor, and Briscoe appealed to the Supreme Court, citing Craig. The case was argued in 1835. A narrow majority of the Court was inclined to reach the same conclusion as in Craig, but the justices did not want to rule on the constitutional question until the vacancy created by Justice Gabriel Duvall's resignation had been filled. The death of Chief Justice John Marshall later that year reduced the number of available justices further. A newly reconstituted Court, on which all but two justices were appointees of President Andrew Jackson, reheard the case in 1837. Only a single justice from the Craig majority – Justice Joseph Story – remained on the bench. Decision The Court rendered its decision on February 11, 1837. By a 6–1 vote, the justices ruled in favor of the bank, upholding Kentucky's law. Justice John McLean, who had dissented in Craig, delivered the majority opinion. He opined that no previous case had "exceeded", and few had "equalled, the importance of that which arises in this case". McLean admitted that the bank had a strong connection to the state, but, observing that the bank could be sued independently of the state, he concluded that the bank's notes were not backed by the state's credit: they were instead the banknotes of a private corporation that simply happened to be owned by a state. He expressed concern that a ruling against Kentucky could render unconstitutional the banknotes issued by many other states. Although the majority did not reverse Craig directly, some scholars have argued that it effectively overruled the decision. Justices Smith Thompson and Henry Baldwin each filed separate concurring opinions. The sole dissenter, Justice Story, filed an animated and lengthy opinion. Writing that the bank was "the sole and exclusive instrument of the State, managing its exclusive funds, for its exclusive benefit and under its exclusive management", he concluded that the bank was for all intents and purposes a part of the state, and thus in his view the banknotes were impermissible state currency. He argued that states could not lawfully permit others to do what they could not do themselves. Story, the protégé of Marshall, evoked the late chief justice's |
In: Out: Clermont In: Out: Ligue 2 Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Nîmes In: Out: Dijon In: Out: Toulouse In: Out: Grenoble In: Out: Paris In: Out: Auxerre In: Out: Sochaux In: Out: Nancy In: Out: Guingamp In: Out: Amiens In: Out: Valenciennes In: Out: Le Havre In: Out: Ajaccio In: Out: Pau In: Out: Rodez In: Out: Caen In: Out: Dunkerque In: Out: Chamois Niortais In: Out: Bastia In: Out: Quevilly-Rouen In: Out: See also 2021–22 Ligue 1 2021–22 Ligue 2 References External links Official site of the FFF | In: Out: Saint-Étienne In: Out: Bordeaux In: Out: Angers In: Out: Strasbourg In: Out: Lorient In: Out: Brest In: Out: Nantes In: Out: Troyes In: Out: Clermont In: Out: Ligue 2 Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Nîmes In: Out: Dijon In: Out: Toulouse In: Out: Grenoble In: Out: Paris In: Out: Auxerre In: Out: Sochaux In: Out: Nancy In: Out: Guingamp In: Out: Amiens In: Out: Valenciennes In: Out: Le Havre In: Out: Ajaccio In: Out: Pau In: Out: Rodez In: Out: Caen |
explored, showing that racial prejudices were not confined to the South and that the Civil Rights Movement was a truly national struggle." The audiobook, narrated by Dion Graham, received a positive review from Booklist. References Novels set in the 1960s Novels set in | a young adult historical fiction novel by Kekla Magoon, published January 6th 2009 by Aladdin. Reception The Rock and the River is a Junior Library Guild book. The book received starred reviews from Booklist, as well as a positive review from Bulletin of the Center for |
Recambios Colón Valencia to CF Recambios Colón Catarroja, to reflect the original location of the company which owns the club. They suffered relegation in 2018, but returned to the fourth tier immediately after finishing first of their group in Preferente. Club background Club de Fútbol Recambios Colón Valencia – (2003–2017) Club de Fútbol Recambios Colón Catarroja – (2017–present) Season to season 5 seasons in Tercera División | in 2003, it plays in Tercera División RFEF – Group 6, holding home matches at Complex Poliesportiu El Perdiguer in Aldaia. History Founded in 2003 as a football section for workers of the company with the same name, Recambios Colón played in Catarroja until moving to Sedaví. In 2015, they first reached Tercera División after achieving promotion from the Regional Preferente in the play-offs. In 2017, Recambios Colón changed name from CF Recambios Colón Valencia to CF Recambios Colón Catarroja, to reflect the original location of the company which owns the |
resided at the imperial headquarters in Pavia. The election of his successor, in which Cardinal Laborans took part, was held on the next day. It was brief and unanimous. The successful candidate was Humbertus Crivelli, the Archbishop of Milan and Cardinal of S. Lorenzo in Damaso, " a violent and unyielding spirit, and a strong opponent of Frederick (Barbarossa)," in the words of Ferdinand Gregorovius. He took the name Urban III, and maintained all of the uncompromising policies of Lucius III. He and the papal court continued as virtual prisoners in Verona. Cardinal Laborans subscribed for the new pope on 16 December 1185 at Verona. Escape to Ferrara Urban and the cardinals who were besieged with him were able to escape from Verona in the last weeks of September 1187, taking refuge in Ferrara. Urban died there on 20 October 1187. On the following day thirteen cardinals who had been present in Ferrara, including Laborans, began the proceedings to elect his successor. The cardinals were aware that the papal chancellor, Albert di Morra, was in great favor with the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, because he was a member of the imperial party in the curia, and because he reported to the emperor all the confidential activities of the Roman curia. On 21 October 1187 he was unanimously elected pope and took the name Gregory VIII. Cardinal Laborans signed a bull at Ferrara for Gregory VIII on 31 October 1187. Return to Rome Pope Gregory VIII died at Pisa of a brief illness, on 17 December 1187. He had been pope only one month and twenty-seven days. Two days later the cardinals, including Laborans, assembled in the cathedral of Pisa, and began proceedings to elect his successor. The election was conducted in the presence of the Consul of Rome, Leo de Monumento. The cardinals unanimously elected Cardinal Paolo Scolari, bishop of Palestrina, on 19 December 1187. He took the name Clement III. Immediate arrangements were begun for a return to Rome. While still in Pisa, Cardinal Laborans subscribed a privilege for the new pope on 23 December 1187. The papal court finally reached Rome in the first week of February 1188. On 13 Februiary, Cardinal Laborans was at the Lateran, where he subscribed a bull in favor of S. Maria Grandisgurgis. He subscribed at the Lateran on 2 June 1188, and another on 3 June; one on 8 June, and two on 9 June. He subscribed twice on 21 June. Cardinal Laborans subscribed on 31 March 1189 at the Lateran; again on 15 April; on 20 April; on 12 June; on 26 June. The last reference to Laborans occurs on 6 October 1189, and it is presumed that he died within the next year or two. References Sources Brixius, J. M. (1912). Die Mitglieder des Kardinalkollegiums von 1130-1181 ,Berlin 1912, p. 63 no. 15. Enzensberger, H. (1987). "Cultura giuridica e amministrativa nel Regno normanno-svevo," in: M. Bellomo (ed.), Scuole, diritto e società nel Mezzogiorno medievale d'Italia,Vol. II, Catania 1987, pp. 169–188. Häring, Nikolaus (1974). "Chartres and Paris Revisited." in: J. R. O'Donnell (ed.), Essays in honor of Anton Charles Pegis (Toronto: Pontifical | the relations between the pope and the emperor deteriorated, the entire papal court became besieged in Verona. Cardinal Laborans subscribed a privilege for the chapter of the cathedral of Pistoria in Verona on 4 April 1185. Lucius died on 25 November 1185, still residing in Verona, while an angry and uncooperative emperor resided at the imperial headquarters in Pavia. The election of his successor, in which Cardinal Laborans took part, was held on the next day. It was brief and unanimous. The successful candidate was Humbertus Crivelli, the Archbishop of Milan and Cardinal of S. Lorenzo in Damaso, " a violent and unyielding spirit, and a strong opponent of Frederick (Barbarossa)," in the words of Ferdinand Gregorovius. He took the name Urban III, and maintained all of the uncompromising policies of Lucius III. He and the papal court continued as virtual prisoners in Verona. Cardinal Laborans subscribed for the new pope on 16 December 1185 at Verona. Escape to Ferrara Urban and the cardinals who were besieged with him were able to escape from Verona in the last weeks of September 1187, taking refuge in Ferrara. Urban died there on 20 October 1187. On the following day thirteen cardinals who had been present in Ferrara, including Laborans, began the proceedings to elect his successor. The cardinals were aware that the papal chancellor, Albert di Morra, was in great favor with the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, because he was a member of the imperial party in the curia, and because he reported to the emperor all the confidential activities of the Roman curia. On 21 October 1187 he was unanimously elected pope and took the name Gregory VIII. Cardinal Laborans signed a bull at Ferrara for Gregory VIII on 31 October 1187. Return to Rome Pope Gregory VIII died at Pisa of a brief illness, on 17 December 1187. He had been pope only one month and twenty-seven days. Two days later the cardinals, including Laborans, assembled in the cathedral of Pisa, and began proceedings to elect his successor. The election was conducted in the presence of the Consul of Rome, Leo de Monumento. The cardinals unanimously elected Cardinal Paolo Scolari, bishop of Palestrina, on 19 December 1187. He took the name Clement III. Immediate arrangements were begun for a return to Rome. While still in Pisa, Cardinal Laborans subscribed a privilege for the new pope on 23 December 1187. The papal court finally reached Rome in the first week of February 1188. On 13 Februiary, Cardinal Laborans was at the Lateran, where he subscribed a bull in favor of S. Maria Grandisgurgis. He subscribed at the Lateran on 2 June 1188, and another on 3 June; one on 8 June, and two on 9 June. He subscribed twice on 21 June. Cardinal Laborans subscribed on 31 March 1189 at the Lateran; again on 15 April; on 20 April; on 12 June; on 26 June. The last reference to Laborans occurs on 6 October 1189, and it is presumed that he died within the next year or two. References Sources Brixius, J. M. (1912). Die Mitglieder des Kardinalkollegiums von 1130-1181 ,Berlin 1912, p. 63 no. 15. Enzensberger, H. (1987). "Cultura giuridica e amministrativa nel Regno normanno-svevo," in: M. Bellomo (ed.), Scuole, diritto e società nel Mezzogiorno medievale d'Italia,Vol. II, Catania 1987, pp. 169–188. Häring, Nikolaus (1974). "Chartres and Paris Revisited." in: J. R. O'Donnell (ed.), Essays in honor of Anton Charles Pegis (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies 1974), pp. 268–329, at p. |
swimming pool, banquet hall, fitness center and a sky lounge on its topmost floor. See also List of tallest buildings in Taiwan List of tallest buildings in Kaohsiung References 2018 establishments in Taiwan Residential skyscrapers in Taiwan Skyscrapers in Kaohsiung Apartment buildings in Taiwan Residential buildings completed in | is a 33-story, tall residential skyscraper located in Gushan District, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Construction of the skyscraper began in 2012 and it was completed in 2018, under strict requirements of preventing |
Mayan, blue is for Popoluca, green is for Totonaca and pink is for Latin. The series first aired in 2018 on the Mexican cultural channel Canal Once. Plot In 1519, Malinche is a slave to the Mayans in Tabasco. When the Mayans lose a battle to the newly arrived Spaniards, they give women to them as a tribute of war. Even though Malinche is not picked as one of these women, she sneaks into the group. She hopes slavery under the Spaniards is better than under the Mayans. During the expedition to Tenochtitlan, Malinche | she sneaks into the group. She hopes slavery under the Spaniards is better than under the Mayans. During the expedition to Tenochtitlan, Malinche notices that the Spaniards are having a tough time communicating with the locals so she offers her services as a translator. She speaks both Nahuatl and Mayan, which completes the language skills of the other translator Jerónimo de Aguilar who speaks Spanish and Mayan. Malinche becomes very important in the negotiations with the different tribes. She tries to use this newly acquired and relative power to negotiate her freedom, so she can finally go |
where she served as a liaison between 11 residents and internship faculty and reported to the director of clinical training. From 1997 to 1998, Hunter was a staff psychologist at the Keesler Medical Center at the Keesler Air Force Base. She provided outpatient adult mental health, clinical health psychology, and couples counseling services. Hunter was promoted to clinical director of inpatient mental health at Keesler from 1998 to 1999. Hunter was the first non-prescribing provider to hold this position and have admitting privileges. From 1999 to 2000, Hunter was chief of the Keesler life skills enhancement center where she led outpatient mental health services. Hunter completed a postdoctoral fellowship in clinical health psychology at Wilford Hall Medical Center from 2000 to 2001. She served as director of clinical programs and research from 2001 to 2002 before being promoted to chief of the clinical health psychology service at Wilford. Hunter served as director of the clinical health psychology research institute at Wilford from 2003 to 2004. From 2004 to 2006, she was chief of Air Force substance abuse program development at the Air Force Medical Support Agency. She oversaw a $15.5 million budget. National Institutes of Health In 2006, she joined the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) where she was the director of behavioral research and managed a behavioral science grants portfolio focused on diabetes and obesity research. She led revision of the NIH Obesity Research Strategic Plan, developed and led the NIDDK Centers for Diabetes Translation Research and led numerous behavioral and social sciences research funding opportunity announcements. In 2017, Hunter was named deputy director of National Institutes of Health's (NIH) Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences | International University in 1992. She earned M.S. (1995) and Ph.D. (1997) in clinical psychology from University of Memphis. Her dissertation was titled Dietary restriction as a predictor of a constellation of problem behaviors in a bi-racial sample of adolescents: a prospective analysis. Sam B. Morgan was chair of her thesis committee along with Thomas Fagan and Leslie A. Robinson. Hunter completed her psychology internship at Wilford Hall Medical Center in 1997. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship in clinical health psychology in 2001 and was board certified in clinical health psychology in 2005 by the American Board of Professional Psychology. Career U.S. Air Force Hunter served on active duty in the U.S. Air Force for ten years in a variety of clinical, management, research, and policy positions. From 1996 to 1997, she was chief resident at Wilford Hall Medical Center where she served as a liaison between 11 residents and internship faculty and reported to the director of clinical training. From 1997 to 1998, Hunter was a staff psychologist at the Keesler Medical Center at the Keesler Air Force Base. She provided outpatient adult mental health, clinical health psychology, and couples counseling services. Hunter was promoted to clinical director of inpatient mental health at Keesler from 1998 to 1999. Hunter was the first non-prescribing provider to hold this position and have admitting privileges. From 1999 to 2000, Hunter was chief of the Keesler life skills enhancement center where she led outpatient mental health services. Hunter completed a postdoctoral fellowship in clinical health psychology at Wilford Hall Medical Center from 2000 to 2001. She served as director of clinical programs and research from 2001 to 2002 before being promoted to chief of the clinical health psychology service at Wilford. Hunter served as director of the clinical health psychology research institute at Wilford from 2003 to 2004. From 2004 to 2006, she was |
Arkansas out of the five he would eventually win in his tenure at Arkansas. Arkansas entered the polls at #20 on December 25, 1978, and would remain ranked the whole season, coming in at #5 in the final AP Poll for the second consecutive year. As the last remaining member of the famed "Triplets" following the departure of All-Americans and NBA Draft picks Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph, Sidney Moncrief was named an All-American for the second consecutive year and was drafted fifth overall by the Milwaukee Bucks in the 1979 NBA Draft, the highest pick in Arkansas history. Senior center Steve Schall was drafted in the fifth round by the San Antonio Spurs. Marvin Delph, a senior on the previous year's team was drafted for a second time by the Boston Celtics in the sixth round. Roster Roster retrieved from HogStats.com. Schedule and Results Schedule retrieved | the Elite Eight came as part of the Razorbacks' seventh appearance in the NCAA Tournament, also making the tournament the previous two seasons. 1979 was Sutton's third conference title with Arkansas out of the five he would eventually win in his tenure at Arkansas. Arkansas entered the polls at #20 on December 25, 1978, and would remain ranked the whole season, coming in at #5 in the final AP Poll for the second consecutive year. As the last remaining member of the famed "Triplets" following the departure of All-Americans and NBA Draft picks Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph, Sidney Moncrief was named an All-American for the second consecutive year and was drafted fifth overall by the Milwaukee |
in Norwalk, standing 14 stories and tall. Renovation When Capital Equities Group acquired the building in 2014, work commenced on modernizing and upgrading the building's interior and exterior. Renovations included a new lobby, fitness center, and a repainting of the exterior facade. The building was generally considered an eyesore by the public, the original facade was a white | modernist style. It is the tallest building in Norwalk, standing 14 stories and tall. Renovation When Capital Equities Group acquired the building in 2014, work commenced on modernizing and upgrading the building's interior and exterior. Renovations included a |
stage of the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup that took place from 20 to 26 February 2022. The group competition consists of China PR, Chinese Taipei, host India, and Iran. The top two teams automatically qualify for the top eight knockout stage, while third place is comparatively evaluated to other third-placed teams based on the football ranking system for the last two berths. The two teams that | The 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup Group A is the first of three sets in the group stage of the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup that took place from 20 to 26 February 2022. The group competition consists of China PR, Chinese Taipei, host India, and Iran. The top two teams automatically qualify for the top eight knockout stage, while third place is comparatively evaluated to other third-placed teams based on the football ranking system for the last two berths. The two teams that advanced are China PR and Chinese Taipei. Although Iran finished third in this set, they |
American record collective Internet Money and American rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again. It was released on January 20, 2022 and is a bonus track from YoungBoy's mixtape Colors (2022). The song was produced by Taz Taylor, Bryceunknwn, JRhitmaker, Its2ezzy | to be taken advantage of and flexing his wealth. Charts References 2022 singles 2022 songs Internet Money songs YoungBoy Never Broke Again songs Song recordings produced by Taz Taylor (record producer) Songs written by YoungBoy Never Broke Again Songs written by Taz Taylor (record producer) |
an annual knockout football competition for Egyptian Premier League | knockout football competition for Egyptian Premier League clubs. Results References Football in |
to tropical parts of Africa. The species was first formally described by the botanist Martin Vahl in 1805. See also List of Cyperus species References pustulatus Taxa named by Martin Vahl Plants described in 1805 Flora of | Flora of Cambodia Flora of Chad Flora of Ethiopia Flora of Gabon Flora of the Gambia Flora of Ghana Flora of Guinea Flora of Ivory Coast Flora of Liberia Flora of Mali Flora of Mozambique Flora of Nigeria Flora of Rwanda Flora of Senegal Flora of |
in the county (14,442 in 1900; 4,981 in 2020). It was built by carpenter Fred M. Agard with assistance of a Mr. Freeman. "Like many one-room schools, it features a front-entry addition and a front-facing gable roof with three double-hung windows on each of the north and south sides." It is located near the intersection of E. Union Rd. and E. 1300 Rd., which is by road from what is now the small city of Kirwin, Kansas, and from Phillipsburg, the county seat. Its listing is consistent | then rural Kirwin Township, one of 25 townships within the county, at approximately the peak of population in the county (14,442 in 1900; 4,981 in 2020). It was built by carpenter Fred M. Agard with assistance of a Mr. Freeman. "Like many one-room schools, it features a front-entry addition and a front-facing gable roof with three double-hung windows on each of the north and south sides." It is located near the intersection of E. Union Rd. and E. 1300 Rd., which is by road from what is now the small city of Kirwin, |
represented Northeastern University during the 1985–86 college basketball season. Led by head coach Jim Calhoun, serving in his 14th and final season at the school, the Huskies competed in the ECAC North Conference and played their home games at Matthews Arena. They finished the season 22–9 overall with a 16–2 mark in ECAC North play to win the regular season conference title. They followed the regular season by winning the ECAC North Conference Tournament to earn | games at Matthews Arena. They finished the season 22–9 overall with a 16–2 mark in ECAC North play to win the regular season conference title. They followed the regular season by winning the ECAC North Conference Tournament to earn a bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 13 seed in the East region. The Huskies were defeated in the opening |
albums Singles References Discographies of American artists Heavy metal discographies Rock | metal band W.A.S.P. Albums Studio albums Live albums Compilation albums |
bay to create accommodation for a horse-drawn fire engine and the removal of an extra floor on the east side of the building. The assembly room continued to be used as a courthouse, and part of the ground floor continued to be used as a lock-up for the incarceration of petty criminals, until a purpose-built courthouse and police station was erected in Long Street in 1884. A cupola with an ogee-shaped copper roof and a weather vane depicting dolphins was erected on the roof to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1887. The feoffees continued to administer the town from the assembly room until Tetbury Urban District Council was formed in 1894. The assembly room was subsequently used as a classroom for the teaching of technical subjects and ground floor continued to be used as the venue for markets on Wednesdays. The annual Tetbury Food and Drink Festival, held in September each year with a farmers style market in the market hall, was first held in September 2007. The | the first floor was used by the feoffees as a town hall and as a courtroom for the manorial court hearings. In 1817, alterations were carried out to the building: these included the infilling of the south bay to create accommodation for a horse-drawn fire engine and the removal of an extra floor on the east side of the building. The assembly room continued to be used as a courthouse, and part of the ground floor continued to be used as a lock-up for the incarceration of petty criminals, until a purpose-built courthouse and police station was erected in Long Street in 1884. A cupola with an ogee-shaped copper roof and a weather vane depicting dolphins was erected on the roof to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1887. The feoffees continued to administer the town from the assembly room until Tetbury Urban District Council was formed in 1894. The assembly room was subsequently used as a classroom for the teaching of technical subjects and ground floor continued to be used as the venue for markets on Wednesdays. The annual Tetbury Food and Drink Festival, held in September each year with a farmers style market in the market hall, was first held in September 2007. The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall stood outside the market hall to turn on the Christmas lights in December 2012. |
registered the "Anime-PlatinumEnd.com" domain name, and on December 19, 2020, at the Jump Festa '21 online event, it was announced that the series would receive an anime television series adaptation by Signal.MD. Hideya Takahashi directed the "first series", while Kazuchika Kise is directing the "second series", with series composition by Shin'ichi Inozume, and character designs by Kōji Ōdate. Masahiro Tokuda is composing the series' music. The series | series", while Kazuchika Kise is directing the "second series", with series composition by Shin'ichi Inozume, and character designs by Kōji Ōdate. Masahiro Tokuda is composing the series' music. The series is listed for 24 episodes, and it premiered on TBS, BS11, and other channels on October 8, 2021. Band-Maid performed the opening theme "Sense", while Yuu Miyashita performed the first ending theme "Kōfuku-Ron" (Theory of Surrender). Kuhaku Gokko performed the second ending theme "Last Straw." Crunchyroll and Funimation licensed the series |
last two berths. The two teams that advanced are Australia and Philippines. Thailand also made the quarter-finals as they are not comparatively last to the other third-place teams. Teams Standings Matches Australia vs Indonesia Thailand vs Philippines Indonesia vs Thailand Philippines vs Australia Australia vs Thailand Philippines vs Indonesia Discipline Fair play points would have been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records | second of three sets in the group stage of the 2022 AFC Women's Asian Cup that takes place from 21 to 27 February 2022. The group competition consists of Australia, Indonesia, Philippines, and Thailand. The top two teams automatically qualify for the top eight knockout stage, while third place is comparatively evaluated to other third-placed teams based on the football |
its ambiguity comes from interpretation of the qene as a whole, rather than words or sentences. History Origin claims Tradition credits its invention to Tawanay of Gojjam, who is said to have lived in the 14th century and founded the famous Qene school of Gonj. Other tradition claims further back to Yared, a 6th-century Aksumite composer. Earliest documentation The earliest specimens of qene extant date back to the late 15th century to the reign of Emperor Eskender (1478–94). Qene schools Qene has always been associated with Amhara culture and people, although it was originally composed in Ge'ez. The main qene schools have always been located in Amhara areas, such as Gonj and Washara monasteries in Gojjam, at Gondar town in Begemder, Sayint in Wollo and Wadla monastery in Lasta. The rules and style of qene were historically taught as part of religious education in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, in the level of | further back to Yared, a 6th-century Aksumite composer. Earliest documentation The earliest specimens of qene extant date back to the late 15th century to the reign of Emperor Eskender (1478–94). Qene schools Qene has always been associated with Amhara culture and people, although it was originally composed in Ge'ez. The main qene schools have always been located in Amhara areas, such as Gonj and Washara monasteries in Gojjam, at Gondar town in Begemder, Sayint in Wollo and Wadla monastery in Lasta. The rules and style of qene were historically taught as part of religious education in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, in the level of schooling known as qene bet (“house of poetry”). Well-known modern Ethiopian poets include Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, Kebede Michael, and Mengistu Lemma. Themes Sem-ena-werq in religious qene represents the dualism of Miaphysite Christianity, such as that of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. These poems were composed for religious events and church activities. Secular qene was |
officials wanted to reorganize the gymnasium into a three-year school but it was not done to support Russification efforts. Later years When a number of Jewish students grew, local Jewish communities began petitioning the Office of the Institutions of Empress Maria to allow Judaism classes. The classes, taught in Russian, were allowed in 1870–1871. The classes were supposed to be financed by the parents but they complained of financial difficulties. The classes in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Grodno gymnasiums were made possible by a bequest of 2,400 rubles by Samuel Polyakov. The number of students grew necessitating separation of classes into two groups and rejection of applicants even if they successfully passed entrance exams. The gymnasium had 358 students in 1885 and 452 students in 1896. At the time, Jews were the largest group of students. However, after opening of separate Jewish schools, the number of Jewish students decreased even though the overall number of students continued to grow. In 1873, the Mariinsky Higher Women's School () was opened in Vilnius. It was a seven-year school with eighth year preparing the women for teaching jobs. After the Russian Revolution of 1905, private gymnasiums were allowed. As a result, three new private girls' gymnasiums were established in the Vilna Governorate. Curriculum Initially, compared to boys' gymnasiums, the girls' curriculum did not include Latin or Greek languages, physics or cosmography. Differences in the curriculums decreased in the 1870s. Overall, the curriculum focused on Russian language and literature with less attention devoted to math or sciences. Many teachers initially also taught at other schools, but gradually the gymnasium hired dedicated staff. By 1876, out of 12 teachers eight taught only at this school. Most frequently, it was math and science teachers who taught at multiple schools at once. Electives (such as French, German, Latin, drawing, pedagogics) allowed students to develop skill for the limited professional aspirations available to women at the time as teachers, nurses, or artists. Only Eastern Orthodox women could get teacher's positions in government schools; Roman Catholic women could only work in private schools. During the Russian Revolution of 1905, parents of students at two boys' gymnasiums, girls' gymnasium, real and commerce schools sent a joint petition to the administrator of the . Among other things, the petition asked the schools to admit everyone regardless of religion or nationality. The parents wanted the curriculum to include lessons on Lithuanian, Polish, and Hebrew languages as well as history and geography of these nations | Institutes for Nobles and the curriculum was taken from district schools. The school taught in Russian and thus were not very popular. Despite some concessions (e.g. girls had twice the number of weekly Polish lessons than boys and their governess was a Roman Catholic and not Eastern Orthodox), the school in Vilnius had only 89 students in 1860 and 58 in 1862. Due to disappointing number of students, the Office of the Institutions of Empress Maria wanted to reorganize the gymnasiums into three-year schools. However, Nazimov convinced the authorities to keep them open as they were the only girls' schools that provided Russian education and thus facilitated Russification efforts. After the Uprising of 1863, new Governor-General Mikhail Muravyov-Vilensky decided to reorganize girls' gymnasiums along the same principles as boys' schools and eliminated Polish language as a subject from the curriculum. Due to Russification efforts and unlike elsewhere in the empire, parents and general public could not participate in shaping the curriculum, selecting teachers, or otherwise influencing the academics. Public input was accepted only on administrative and financial matters. In 1867, once again, due to low enrollment, officials wanted to reorganize the gymnasium into a three-year school but it was not done to support Russification efforts. Later years When a number of Jewish students grew, local Jewish communities began petitioning the Office of the Institutions of Empress Maria to allow Judaism classes. The classes, taught in Russian, were allowed in 1870–1871. The classes were supposed to be financed by the parents but they complained of financial difficulties. The classes in Vilnius, Kaunas, and Grodno gymnasiums were made possible by a bequest of 2,400 rubles by Samuel Polyakov. The number of students grew necessitating separation of classes into two groups and rejection of applicants even if they successfully passed entrance exams. The gymnasium had 358 students in 1885 and 452 students in 1896. At the time, Jews were the largest group of students. However, after opening of separate Jewish schools, the number of Jewish students decreased even though the overall number of students continued to grow. In 1873, the Mariinsky Higher Women's School () was opened in Vilnius. It was a seven-year school with eighth year preparing the women for teaching jobs. After the Russian Revolution of 1905, private gymnasiums were allowed. As a result, three new private girls' gymnasiums were established in the Vilna Governorate. Curriculum Initially, compared to boys' gymnasiums, the |
out to the ring and demanded Moose give him a world title match. Moose would appear on the titantron, saying while he was defending the title later that night, it would be against someone who had not been given a world title match in their career, meaning Morrissey would not be in it. Moose's opponent would be Zicky Dice, who Moose beat soundly. After the match, Morrissey would confront Moose and ran him off, stating that it was not over between the two of them. The following week on Impact!, after Morrissey won a handicap match against The Learning Tree (Zicky Dice and VSK), Impact Executive Vice President Scott D'Amore would grant Morrissey an Impact World Championship match against Moose at No Surrender. At Hard To Kill, former Ring of Honor (ROH) stars Matt Taven, Mike Bennett, PCO, and Vincent invaded the event and attacked Eddie Edwards, Rich Swann, Willie Mack, Heath and Rhino, before being joined in the ring by Maria Kanellis. On the January 13 episode of Impact!, they attacked color commentator D'Lo Brown. Later that night, Kanellis confronted Deonna Purrazzo, after the latter had defeated Rok-C in a title vs. title match to win the ROH Women's World Championship and retain her AAA Reina de Reinas Championship. Purrazzo's associate Matthew Rehwoldt would be attacked by Kanellis' associates after he tried to intervene. The following week on Impact!, the group bought tickets to see Jonathan Gresham defend the ROH World Championship against Steve Maclin. However, later that night, they attacked Josh Alexander after a match with Charlie Haas, before being run off by various Impact wrestlers to the balcony. In the aftermath, Kanellis formally announced the name of their unit, dubbing themselves "Honor No More". On the January 27 episode of Impact!, Scott D'Amore announced that Team Impact (Chris Sabin, Eddie Edwards, Josh Alexander, Rhino, and Rich Swann) will face Honor No More in a 10-man tag team match, with the stipulation that if Honor No More wins, the group will remain in Impact Wrestling; but if Team Impact wins, Honor No More will be gone. The following week on Impact!, Kenny King was added to the match | World Tag Team Championship. Production Background No Surrender is an annual professional wrestling event produced by Impact Wrestling. It was originally produced by Impact Wrestling (then known as Total Nonstop Action Wrestling), as a pay-per-view (PPV) event. The first one was held in July 2005, but when the PPV names were shuffled for 2006, it was moved to September. In December 2012, TNA announced that the event was canceled. The last event took place in the TNA Impact! Zone in September 2012. It was resumed as a special episode of Impact! between 2013 and 2015 and was then revived as an Impact Plus event in 2019. On December 24, 2021, Impact Wrestling announced that No Surrender would take place at the Alario Center on February 19, 2022, in Westwego, Louisiana. Storylines The event featured several professional wrestling matches, which involve different wrestlers from pre-existing scripted feuds, plots, and storylines. Wrestlers portrayed heroes, villains, or less distinguishable characters in scripted events that build tension and culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches. Storylines were produced on Impact's weekly television program. At Hard To Kill, Moose successfully defended the Impact World Championship against Matt Cardona and W. Morrissey in a three-way match, pinning Cardona to win. On the subsequent episode of Impact!, Morrissey, feeling slighted about how he had Moose pinned for more than a three-count but could not win due to a knocked out official, came out to the ring and demanded Moose give him a world title match. Moose would appear on the titantron, saying while he was defending the title later that night, it would be against someone who had not been given a world title match in their career, meaning Morrissey would not be in it. Moose's opponent would be Zicky Dice, who Moose beat soundly. After the match, Morrissey would confront Moose and ran him off, stating that it was not over between the two of them. The following week on Impact!, after Morrissey won a handicap match against The Learning Tree (Zicky Dice and VSK), Impact Executive Vice President Scott D'Amore would grant Morrissey an Impact World Championship match against Moose at No Surrender. At Hard To Kill, former Ring of Honor (ROH) stars Matt Taven, Mike Bennett, PCO, and Vincent invaded the event and attacked Eddie Edwards, Rich Swann, Willie Mack, Heath and Rhino, before being joined in the ring by Maria Kanellis. On the January 13 episode of Impact!, they attacked color commentator D'Lo Brown. Later that night, Kanellis confronted Deonna Purrazzo, after the latter had defeated Rok-C in a title vs. title match to win the ROH Women's World Championship and retain her AAA Reina de Reinas Championship. Purrazzo's associate Matthew Rehwoldt would be attacked by Kanellis' associates after he tried to intervene. The following week on Impact!, the group bought tickets to see Jonathan Gresham defend the ROH World Championship against Steve Maclin. However, later that night, they attacked Josh Alexander after a match with Charlie Haas, before being run off by various Impact wrestlers to the balcony. In the aftermath, Kanellis formally announced the name of their unit, dubbing themselves "Honor No More". On the January 27 episode of Impact!, Scott D'Amore announced that Team Impact (Chris Sabin, Eddie Edwards, Josh Alexander, Rhino, and Rich Swann) will face Honor No More in a 10-man tag team match, with the stipulation that if Honor No More wins, the group will remain in Impact Wrestling; but if Team Impact wins, Honor No More will be gone. The following week on Impact!, Kenny King was added to the match as a member of Honor No More. On the February 10 episode |
been used as tiebreakers in the group if the overall and head-to-head records of teams were tied, or if teams had the same record in the ranking of third-placed teams. These were calculated based on yellow and red cards received in all group matches as follows: yellow card = 1 point red card as a result of two yellow cards = 3 points direct red card = 3 points yellow card followed by direct red card = | The top two teams automatically qualify for the top eight knockout stage, while third place is comparatively evaluated to other third-placed teams based on the football ranking system for the last two berths. The two teams that advanced are Japan and South Korea. Vietnam also made the quarter-finals as they are not comparatively last to |
Universities and Colleges, the Scottish universities' procurement consortium Acharya Pre University | the Scottish universities' procurement consortium Acharya Pre University College, Bengaluru, India |
Upon a December's translation to the stage, choreographer Sarah Kawahara said, "you enter into a kind of fantasy, magical quality, rather than thinking back on a time of terror...I was able to take [the film's] fantasy elements and make then come true". Noting the suitability of Anastasia for an ice show, she noted, " "Every main character has a song. Plus, there are great pieces written for musical moments that push the story along". The Sun Sentinel deemed it "lavish" While Daily News wrote it a | Fox Animation Studios film Anastasia, that premiered in 1998. It was produced by Feld Entertainment, who had previously worked on Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey and Disney on Ice. Fox obtained a retroactive license for Anastasia on Ice. Speaking of Once Upon a December's translation to the stage, choreographer Sarah Kawahara said, "you enter into a kind of fantasy, magical quality, rather than thinking back on a time of terror...I was able to take [the film's] |
Authority's (PREPA) Yauco Project in 1959 and revitalized for further hydroelectric use in 1991. The lake is named after Antonio S. Luchetti, a Puerto Rican engineer who was vital in the development of the hydroelectrical energy system in Puerto Rico. Luchetti Wildlife Refuge The Luchetti Reservoir Wildlife Refuge (Refugio de Vida Silvestre del Embalse Luchetti) is a wildlife refuge and outdoors recreational area managed by the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources (DRNA). Recreation Luchetti Reservoir Wildlife Refuge offers visitors opportunities for camping (at the Luchetti Camping Grounds) with facilities such as parking, restrooms, showers, gazebos with picnic areas, and ramps for boating. Fishing is permitted in designated areas. In addition to the camping site and lake, the | known as the Vegas Lake (Lago Vegas) after the barrio it is located in. The lake was created at the junction of the Naranjo River and some minor streams with the Yauco River under Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority's (PREPA) Yauco Project in 1959 and revitalized for further hydroelectric use in 1991. The lake is named after Antonio S. Luchetti, a Puerto Rican engineer who was vital in the development of the hydroelectrical energy system |
mixed relay. On January 18, 2022, Brunelle was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team. References 2003 births Living people Canadian female short track speed skaters Sportspeople from Trois-Rivières Short track speed skaters at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics Short track speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic short track speed skaters of Canada | the season at the 2020 World Junior Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Bormio, Italy, Brunelle won two silver medals in the 500 metres and 1500 metres. Senior Brunelle made her senior debut at the 2021 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Dordrecht, Netherlands. Brunelle made her World Cup debut in the 2021-22 season, where she won two silver medals in the women's 3000 m relay and the mixed relay. On January |
Mike Bailey in a four-way match to become the number one contender to the Impact X Division Championship. On February 23, it was announced that Something will challenge the champion Trey Miguel at Sacrifice. At Hard To Kill, PCO, Vincent, and The OGK (Matt Taven, Mike Bennett, and Maria Kanellis-Bennett) - who had been recently been released from their Ring of Honor contracts - appeared from the crowd at the end of a Hardcore War between Eddie Edwards, Rich Swann, Willie Mack, Heath and Rhino; and Impact World Tag Team Champions The Good Brothers (Doc Gallows and Karl Anderson) and Violent By Design (Eric Young, Deaner, and Joe Doering). They would attack the former team, who had won the match. For weeks, the former ROH wrestlers, now known as Honor No More, would run roughshod through Impact, attacking whoever they please. Impact Executive Vice President Scott D'Amore would book a 10-man tag team match between Honor No More and Team Impact (Edwards, Swann, Rhino, Chris Sabin, and Josh Alexander) at No Surrender, where whether or not Honor No More could stay in Impact Wrestling would be decided. Kenny King would soon be added to the match as a part of Honor No More, and due to Alexander's temperament issues, D'Amore suspended Alexander and took him out of No Surrender (a kayfabe reason to conceal Alexander's departure from the company). Jonathan Gresham was selected by Team Impact to replace Alexander, but Gresham was found beaten unconscious backstage, and so Steve Maclin would be the replacement. At No Surrender, Edwards was found to be attacked backstage, and Mack would end up taking his place. During the climax of the match, Edwards ran down to the ring with a kendo stick, but when it seemed like he would allow Rhino to hit The Gore on Kanellis-Bennett, he struck Rhino with the kendo stick. Edwards would continue his assault on Team Impact before letting King pin Rhino, getting the win and Impact contracts for Honor No More. This would be Edwards' first heel turn in his Impact career, and it revealed himself as the leader of Honor No More. On the subsequent episode of Impact!, Edwards would explain his actions, saying that when the "Forbidden Door" to Impact was opened, after Kenny Omega won the Impact World Championship, and while he was waiting for what he thought was a well-deserved title match, he felt that many of his so-called "brothers" who failed to take the title away from Omega had betrayed Impact instead of him. And when Eddie's wife Alisha Edwards, questioned why he turned his back on his family, he claimed Honor No More was his family now. At Sacrifice, D'Amore would schedule a match between Edwards and Rhino, that man who first felt Edwards' betrayal. Meanwhile, Jonah, who had been asking for better competition after his feud with Josh Alexander, would be scheduled for Sacrifice against Honor No | was announced that The IInspiration and The Influence will finally have their title match at Sacrifice. At No Surrender, Jake Something defeated Ace Austin, Chris Bey, and Mike Bailey in a four-way match to become the number one contender to the Impact X Division Championship. On February 23, it was announced that Something will challenge the champion Trey Miguel at Sacrifice. At Hard To Kill, PCO, Vincent, and The OGK (Matt Taven, Mike Bennett, and Maria Kanellis-Bennett) - who had been recently been released from their Ring of Honor contracts - appeared from the crowd at the end of a Hardcore War between Eddie Edwards, Rich Swann, Willie Mack, Heath and Rhino; and Impact World Tag Team Champions The Good Brothers (Doc Gallows and Karl Anderson) and Violent By Design (Eric Young, Deaner, and Joe Doering). They would attack the former team, who had won the match. For weeks, the former ROH wrestlers, now known as Honor No More, would run roughshod through Impact, attacking whoever they please. Impact Executive Vice President Scott D'Amore would book a 10-man tag team match between Honor No More and Team Impact (Edwards, Swann, Rhino, Chris Sabin, and Josh Alexander) at No Surrender, where whether or not Honor No More could stay in Impact Wrestling would be decided. Kenny King would soon be added to the match as a part of Honor No More, and due to Alexander's temperament issues, D'Amore suspended Alexander and took him out of No Surrender (a kayfabe reason to conceal Alexander's departure from the company). Jonathan Gresham was selected by Team Impact to replace Alexander, but Gresham was found beaten unconscious backstage, and so Steve Maclin would be the replacement. At No Surrender, Edwards was found to be attacked backstage, and Mack would end up taking his place. During the climax of the match, Edwards ran down to the ring with a kendo stick, but when it seemed like he would allow Rhino to hit The Gore on Kanellis-Bennett, he struck Rhino with the kendo stick. Edwards would continue his assault on Team Impact before letting King pin Rhino, getting the win and Impact contracts for Honor No More. This would be Edwards' first heel turn in his Impact career, and it revealed himself as the leader of Honor No More. On the subsequent episode of Impact!, Edwards would explain his actions, saying that when the "Forbidden Door" to Impact was opened, after Kenny Omega won the Impact World Championship, and while he was waiting for what he thought was a well-deserved title match, he felt that many of his so-called "brothers" who failed to take the title away from Omega had betrayed Impact instead of him. And when Eddie's wife Alisha Edwards, questioned why he turned his back on his family, he claimed Honor No More was his family now. At Sacrifice, D'Amore would schedule a match between Edwards and Rhino, that man who first felt Edwards' betrayal. Meanwhile, Jonah, who had been asking for better competition after his feud with Josh Alexander, would be scheduled for Sacrifice against Honor No More's PCO. After retaining the Impact World Championship against W. Morrissey at No Surrender, Moose cut a promo on the following episode of Impact! about how people were talking about Eddie |
secretary. She was also a member of the executive commission of the central committee of the Union des femmes pour la défense de Paris et les soins aux blessés ("Women's Union for the Defence of Paris and the Care of the Wounded"). She notably participated in the defence of Place Blanche, along with Élisabeth Dmitrieff, Nathalie Lemel, , and . During the Semaine sanglante ("bloody week"), Blanche Lefebvre was killed fighting Versailles troops on 23 May 1871, on the | défense de Paris et les soins aux blessés ("Women's Union for the Defence of Paris and the Care of the Wounded"). She notably participated in the defence of Place Blanche, along with Élisabeth Dmitrieff, Nathalie Lemel, , and . During the Semaine sanglante ("bloody week"), Blanche Lefebvre was killed fighting Versailles troops on 23 May 1871, on the |
MS.: Βησαντίνου Ῥόδιου ὠὸν ἢ Δωσιάδα ὴ̂ Σιμμίου ἀμφότεροι λὰρ Ρόδιοι. Hence we may infer that Besantinus was a fellow Rhodian. An author of this name is repeatedly quoted in the Etymologicum Magnum, whom Fabricius rightly identifies with the Helladius Besantinus of Photius. The name is also spelt Bisantinus (Βισαντῖνος, Bisantînos). Several MSS of the Bucolics of Theocritus attribute to Besantinus a βωμός (bōmós), a pattern poem in the shape of an altar: 26 verses in different metres forming | or Besantinus." The "Egg" of Simmias bears the following title in the Vatican MS.: Βησαντίνου Ῥόδιου ὠὸν ἢ Δωσιάδα ὴ̂ Σιμμίου ἀμφότεροι λὰρ Ρόδιοι. Hence we may infer that Besantinus was a fellow Rhodian. An author of this name is repeatedly quoted in the Etymologicum Magnum, whom Fabricius rightly identifies with the Helladius Besantinus of Photius. The name is also spelt Bisantinus (Βισαντῖνος, Bisantînos). Several MSS of the Bucolics of Theocritus attribute to Besantinus a βωμός (bōmós), a pattern poem in the shape |
held in the men's Freestyle style in Kourtane Finland 4 – 5 Augst 1994; the Greco-Romane style in Istanbul Turkey 27 – | Espoirs Wrestling Championships were held in the men's Freestyle style in Kourtane Finland 4 – 5 Augst 1994; the Greco-Romane style in Istanbul Turkey 27 |
a variant of the Lynx KF41 developed as a joint venture between Raytheon and Rheinmetall, and the Griffin III developed by General Dynamics Land Systems. The Raytheon-Rheinmetall prototype was disqualified after failing to meet a deadline to ship the prototype to Aberdeen Proving Ground by the required date., The sole remaining competitor, GDLS, was also disqualified because its prototype was too heavy to meet requirements that two fit in a single C-17. The aggressive pace and stringent objectives of the program were seen as unrealistic by potential competitors. The program placed much of the cost burden of development on private contractors, causing many major contractors forego participation. Acknowledging this, in February 2020, the Army announced it would restart the program with more responsibility for funding being taken on by the service. Rebooted program In July 2021, the Army awarded contracts to five teams: Point Blank Enterprises, Oshkosh Defense, BAE Systems, General Dynamics Land Systems and American Rheinmetall Vehicles. The total value of the contract was $299.4 million. Teams will develop concept designs during the 15-month long phase. See also Armored Systems Modernization, 1980s–1990s U.S. Army family of combat vehicles concept Ground Combat Vehicle, a U.S. Army infantry fighting vehicle acquisition program canceled in 2014 M1296 Dragoon, an infantry carrier vehicle of the Stryker family Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle, a U.S. Army acquisition program to replace the M113 APC References External links Oshkosh Defense OMFV page Post–Cold War armored fighting vehicles of the | field a family of combat vehicles by 2035. Officials said this strategy was not necessarily going to be centered around an infantry fighting vehicle, but would likely be a family of vehicles that could potentially replace the M1 Abrams, Bradley Fighting Vehicle, Mobile Protected Firepower and even the Stryker. Army official conceded that the program was as yet unfunded. In June 2018, the Army established the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV) program to replace the M2 Bradley. In October 2018, the program was re-designated as the Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle (OMFV). The NGCV program was expanded as a portfolio of next-generation vehicles including tanks and the Bradley-based Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle. In March 2019 the Army issued a request for proposals. By January 2020, the pool of competitors had narrowed down a variant of the Lynx KF41 developed as a joint venture between Raytheon and Rheinmetall, and the Griffin III developed by General Dynamics Land Systems. |
the upcoming TV series about the GameStop short squeeze "To the Moon" (song), a 2021 song by Jnr Choi "To the Moon", a song by Kyle from the 2018 album Light of | Choi "To the Moon", a song by Kyle from the 2018 album Light of Mine See also Moon (disambiguation) Talking |
expected buy was 504 MPF systems. SAIC partnered with ST Kinetics and CMI Defence to offer its Next Generation Armored Fighting Vehicle. BAE Systems offered a vehicle based on the M8 Armored Gun System. General Dynamics Land Systems offered a variant of the Griffin III. In December 2018, the Army downselected BAE and GDLS's proposals to move forward. The Army awarded two Rapid Prototyping contracts for MPF. The two companies awarded contracts were General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS) and BAE Systems Land and Armaments. GDLS delivered its prototypes (based on the Griffin II) in December 2020. BAE faced production difficulties and supplier issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic, which delayed delivery to March 2021. The assessment phase began in January 2021 at Fort Bragg (NC) with testing scheduled to run through June 2021. The Army plans to select a single vendor and transition into production near the end of 2022. Competitors The GDLS light tank incorporates components and systems from the | the EMD phase in early 2019. The expected buy was 504 MPF systems. SAIC partnered with ST Kinetics and CMI Defence to offer its Next Generation Armored Fighting Vehicle. BAE Systems offered a vehicle based on the M8 Armored Gun System. General Dynamics Land Systems offered a variant of the Griffin III. In December 2018, the Army downselected BAE and GDLS's proposals to move forward. The Army awarded two Rapid Prototyping contracts for MPF. The two companies awarded contracts were General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS) and BAE Systems Land and Armaments. GDLS delivered its prototypes (based on the Griffin II) in December 2020. BAE faced production difficulties and supplier issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic, which delayed delivery to March 2021. The assessment phase began in January 2021 at Fort Bragg (NC) with testing scheduled to run through June 2021. The Army plans to select a single vendor and transition into production near the end of 2022. Competitors The GDLS light tank incorporates components and systems from the British Ajax tank (itself based on the Austrian–Spanish |
Our Time: The Black Panther Party's Promise to the People is a nonfiction book about the Black Panther Party, written by Kekla Magoon and published November 23, 2021 by Candlewick Press. In 2021, the book was a finalist for the National Book Award for Young People's Literature. | Horn Book, and Booklist, as well as positive reviews from _. Kirkus Reviews and Horn Book named Revolution in Our Time one of the best young adult books of 2021. The audiobook, narrated by Tyla Collier, received a positive review from Lit Hub. References External links Official |
in South Wales, and is owned and managed by six English local authorities: Leicestershire County Council, Lincolnshire County Council, Cambridgeshire County Council, Norfolk County Council, Warwickshire County Council, and Peterborough City Council. ESPO is one of four organisations which serve the local authorities of England and Wales, along with the Yorkshire Purchasing Organisation, North Eastern Purchasing Organisation and the Central Buying Consortium. A fifth consortium, West Mercia Supplies (WMS), now called Consortium Education, was based in the West Midlands but after being purchased by a private sector company it lost its status as a public sector consortium. The five consortia collectively operated under the name Pro5, until WMS ceased to be part of the public sector. "ESPO" is the trading name of a joint committee of these six local authorities established under the Local Government Act 1972 (section 101 (5) and section 102) and section 9EB of the Local Government Act 2000. Initially its purpose was to serve Leicestershire and Lincolnshire as a joint initiative. EN:Procure Ltd. is a consortium consisting of four South Yorkshire Councils – Sheffield City Council, Doncaster Council, Rotherham Council and Barnsley Council, and 4 South Yorkshire ALMOs – Sheffield Homes, Rotherham 2010, Berneslai Homes (Barnsley) and St Leger Homes (Doncaster). In October 2017 Efficiency North Limited changed its name to EN:Procure Limited. EN:Procure's Landsolve framework agreement provides land brokerage and land advice services. Fusion21 Members Consortium, a social enterprise based in Prescot, Merseyside. Grand Union Housing Group The Higher Education Purchasing Consortium, Wales (HEPCW) (), which is supported and funded by the Welsh Higher Education institutions (HEIs). KCS, part of Kent County Council's Commercial Services Group NEPO, the North East Purchasing Organisation, established | transposed into UK legislation in 2015. The EU rules provide that a contracting authority may use the services of a central purchasing body located in another Member State, and should do so in accordance with the national procurement rules which apply where the central purchasing body is located. In the UK, central government organisations are required by HM Treasury guidance to use the Government Procurement Service (Crown Commercial Service) in its capacity as a central purchasing body. Organisations Advanced Procurement for Universities and Colleges (APUC), established in 2007, provides central procurement services and expertise for the universities and colleges of Scotland. APUC is based in Stirling. Crescent Purchasing Consortium (CPC), owned by the UK further education sector, based in Salford, offers framework agreements for the education sector, including colleges, schools and multi-academy trusts. Crown Commercial Service (CCS), part of the Cabinet Office, claims to be "the biggest public procurement organisation in the UK". ESPO, formally the Eastern Shires Purchasing Organisation, is a public sector-owned professional buying organisation established in 1981. It operates from a purpose-built warehouse and head office based in Leicester, England, adjacent to the M1, with a distribution centre in South Wales, and is owned and managed by six English local authorities: Leicestershire County Council, Lincolnshire County Council, Cambridgeshire County Council, Norfolk County Council, Warwickshire County Council, and Peterborough City Council. ESPO is one of four organisations which serve the local authorities of England and Wales, along with the Yorkshire Purchasing Organisation, North Eastern Purchasing Organisation and the Central Buying Consortium. A fifth consortium, West Mercia Supplies (WMS), now called Consortium Education, was based in the West Midlands but after being purchased by a private sector company it lost its status as a public sector consortium. The five consortia collectively operated under the name Pro5, until WMS ceased to be part of the public sector. "ESPO" is the trading name of a joint committee of these six local authorities established under the Local Government Act 1972 (section 101 (5) and section 102) and section 9EB of the Local Government Act 2000. Initially its purpose was to serve Leicestershire and Lincolnshire as a joint initiative. EN:Procure Ltd. is a consortium consisting of four South Yorkshire Councils – Sheffield City Council, Doncaster Council, Rotherham Council and Barnsley Council, and 4 South Yorkshire ALMOs – Sheffield Homes, Rotherham 2010, Berneslai Homes (Barnsley) and St Leger Homes (Doncaster). In October 2017 Efficiency North Limited changed its name to EN:Procure Limited. EN:Procure's Landsolve framework agreement provides land brokerage and land advice services. Fusion21 Members Consortium, a social enterprise based in Prescot, Merseyside. Grand Union Housing Group The Higher Education Purchasing Consortium, Wales (HEPCW) (), which is supported and funded by the Welsh Higher Education institutions (HEIs). KCS, part of Kent County Council's Commercial Services Group NEPO, the North East Purchasing Organisation, established in 1976. NEPO is operated by The Association of North East Councils Ltd. and is based |
an American businessman and art collector. He was the founder, CEO, and chairman of Houston-based Copano Energy. Biography Eckel was born on October 22, 1951, in Houston and graduated from Columbia University in 1973. After graduating, he worked for the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York and Lehman Brothers before joining the energy sector, working for various energy drilling, service and E&P companies. Eckel founded Copano Energy in 1992 and served as its president and CEO until April 2003, when he became chairman and CEO. Under his tenure, the company grew from having a 23-mile pipeline to a publicly trading midstream natural gas company with more than 6,000 miles of pipeline and seven processing plants across four | grew from having a 23-mile pipeline to a publicly trading midstream natural gas company with more than 6,000 miles of pipeline and seven processing plants across four states. He died in 2009 after suffering liver failure. Art collection Eckel is most known for his art collection, which focused on a few American designers and artists, including Paul Evans, Harry Bertoia, Edward Ruscha, and Edward Wormley. After his death, his eponymous foundation has been focusing on supporting art groups and other charities, and his collection went to the Whitney Museum of |
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