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Davis, Global Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Maggie Shum, Global Policy Initiative in the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame Sabrina Jennings, senior director at Strider Technologies, former staff at Congressional-Executive Commission on China See also Diaspora politics in the United States Hong Kong Democratic development in Hong Kong Samuel Chu Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act Hong Kong Autonomy Act Magnitsky Act References External links 501(c)(3) organizations Charities based in Washington, D.C. Foreign policy political advocacy groups in the United States Hong Kong 2014 Hong Kong protests 2019–2020 Hong | by Samuel Chu with the stated mission "to advocate for American leadership and policies that advance human rights and democracy for all Hong Kongers." Chu previously founded Hong Kong Democracy Council in 2019 and played an instrumental role in the passage of the landmark legislations such as Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, PROTECT Hong Kong Act and Hong Kong Autonomy Act, economic sanctions and visa bans on Chinese and Hong Kong officials undermining Hong Kong's autonomy and human rights, and additional legislation in Congress including immigration and refugee protection for Hong Kongers. In response, Hong Kong authorities issued arrest warrants against Chu in July 2020, making him the first foreign citizen to be targeted under the Hong Kong National Security Law. In August 2021, Chu, two Hong Kong Democracy Council board members, Annie Boyajian and Dr. Victoria Tin-bor Hui, |
Hilmar Kaiser is a German historian who has a PhD from | University Institute, Florence, and works at Yerevan State University. Works References German historians Historians of the Armenian genocide |
Largent won reelection to a fourth term in office with 69.3% of the vote. District 2 The 2nd congressional district encompassed most of northeastern Oklahoma with the exception of northern Osage County, Tulsa County, Wagoner County, and Washington County. Outgoing Republican Representative Tom Coburn was replaced by Democrat Brad Carson, who won 54.9% of the vote. District 3 The 3rd congressional district encompassed most of southeastern Oklahoma in addition to a tendril of counties extending from Seminole County to most of Pawnee County. Incumbent Republican Wes Watkins won election to a 13th term in office with 86.6% of the vote. The seat was uncontested by the Democratic Party this cycle. District 4 The 4th congressional district encompassed an area | The 5th congressional district encompassed an area containing the western Canadian County, western, northern, and eastern Oklahoma County, and a line of counties extending from the northern Oklahoma City suburbs to the northern border and from there to Washington County, including Bartlesville. Incumbent Republican Ernest Istook won reelection with 68.4% of the vote, securing a fifth term in office. District 6 The 6th congressional district broadly encompassed most of western Oklahoma in addition to a Democratic-leaning portion of interior Oklahoma County. Incumbent Republican Frank Lucas won reelection with 59.3% of |
of Amazonas from 1983 to 1985 and was Mayor of Manaus from 1986 to 1988. He died on 18 January 2022, at the age of 76. | Ribeiro (15 May 1945 – 18 January 2022) was a Brazilian politician. He served as Deputy Governor of Amazonas from 1983 to 1985 and was |
Jasmine was a participant includes Miss Supranational 2010, Miss Tourism International, Miss Grand (Top 20 Swimsuit), and Miss Globe International (Miss Friendship, 3rd Runner up, Miss photogenic). Modeling career Jasmine was a contestant in Sweden's Top Model (Top Model Sverige) Season 3. | She represented Sweden in Miss Supertalent, Season 7 held in 2016, reaching the top 8. She represented Guinea in Miss Model of the Word, 2011 and was adjudged Best Body, Miss Africa, 2nd runner up. Other pageants in which Jasmine was a participant includes Miss Supranational 2010, Miss Tourism International, Miss Grand (Top 20 Swimsuit), |
event. DeJong and Sandrine Hamel also won the gold medal in the women's team event. She has qualified to compete in snowboarding at the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing, China. Personal life DeJong is married and | qualified to compete in snowboarding at the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing, China. Personal life DeJong is married and has two daughters. References External links Lisa DeJong at World Para Snowboard 1989 births Living people Canadian female snowboarders Sportspeople from Saskatoon |
completed his doctorate in 1904 under Gustav Tammann. He then worked as an assistant before moving to the Metallhüttenmännische Institut at Berlin in 1907. After habilitation in 1908, he spent a year in MIT. During World War I, he continued to work in Berlin and became an associate professor in 1917. In 1933 he became a full professor and in 1936 he moved to the technical school in Dresden. Guertler married Felicitas de la Porte in 1908 | three volume treatise. He was a member of the NSDAP from 1931. Life and work Guertler was born in Hannover to physician Alexander Guertler (1843-1931) and Grace née Sedgewick (1858-1931). He graduated from the Hamelin Gymnasium in 1899 and went to the technical school in Hannover followed by studies at the University of Munich and at the University of Göttingen where he completed his doctorate in 1904 under Gustav Tammann. He then worked as an assistant before moving to the Metallhüttenmännische |
in 2016 by the National Professor Dr. Anisuzzaman who served as the founding president of the board of trustees. Former Chairman of UGC Professor Nazrul Islam and Icon of Tagore songs Rezwana Choudhury Bannya joined his efforts later. Tagore University of Creative Arts was approved on 7 June 2016 by the Ministry of Education of the Government of Bangladesh. At present it is being regulated by a Trustee Board consisting of 14 members. Rabin Khan is its secretary and coordinating Trustee. Retired Professor of University of Dhaka and former Director General of Bangla Academy Dr. | the University is Syed Mohammad Shahed. History Tagore University of Creative Arts was established in 2016 by the National Professor Dr. Anisuzzaman who served as the founding president of the board of trustees. Former Chairman of UGC Professor Nazrul Islam and Icon of Tagore songs Rezwana Choudhury Bannya joined his efforts later. Tagore University of Creative Arts was approved on 7 June 2016 |
the late 70's he left the figurative painting to begin to represent nature and architecture, specializing in a very personal landscape and marked by realism, which in his latest work is leading to a synthesis of it, where fewer and fewer elements appear in his works. In the Spanish municipal elections of 2015 he occupied the last position of the list of the Popular Unity Candidacy in Girona. In the 2015 elections to the Parliament of Catalonia, he was part of the electoral list of the Popular Unity Candidacy. Works Narrative Girona. Matèria i memòria. Barcelona: Empúries, 1989. Gerona. Barcelona: Destino, 1990. Girona: retrat sentimental d'una ciutat. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1998. Poetry La febre freda, dins 5 poetes de Girona. Girona: Carles Pla Dalmau, 1966. Papers privats [pròleg de J. M. Valverde]. Barcelona: Eler, 1969. Amich de plor. [pròleg de Salvador Oliva]. Girona: Impr. Montserrat, 1970. Un passeig pels bulevards ardents. Barcelona: Revista Els Marges, 1974. El verd jardí. Barcelona: Vosgos, 1976. Les ciutats. Barcelona: Vosgos, 1976. Desdesig. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1976. Terra natal. Barcelona: La Gaia Ciència, 1978. Àlbum de família. Barcelona: Quaderns Crema, 1980. (2ª ed., 2001) La llibertat i el terror. Poesia 1970-1980. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1981. Rèquiem. Olot: Aubert impr, 1984. Enigma. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1985. (2ª ed., 2001) En quarantena. Barcelona: Empúries, 1990. Usdefruit. | is rather classical in nature, with a contemplative theme and a certain ironic point of view. As a painter, he understands his work as an extension of poetry. His first works show references to surrealism and pop culture, as well as his master Domènec Fita. In the late 70's he left the figurative painting to begin to represent nature and architecture, specializing in a very personal landscape and marked by realism, which in his latest work is leading to a synthesis of it, where fewer and fewer elements appear in his works. In the Spanish municipal elections of 2015 he occupied the last position of the list of the Popular Unity Candidacy in Girona. In the 2015 elections to the Parliament of Catalonia, he was part of the electoral list of the Popular Unity Candidacy. Works Narrative Girona. Matèria i memòria. Barcelona: Empúries, 1989. Gerona. Barcelona: Destino, 1990. Girona: retrat sentimental d'una ciutat. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1998. Poetry La febre freda, dins 5 poetes de Girona. Girona: Carles Pla Dalmau, 1966. Papers privats [pròleg de J. M. Valverde]. Barcelona: Eler, 1969. Amich de plor. [pròleg de Salvador Oliva]. Girona: Impr. Montserrat, 1970. Un passeig pels bulevards ardents. Barcelona: Revista Els Marges, 1974. El verd jardí. Barcelona: Vosgos, 1976. Les ciutats. Barcelona: Vosgos, 1976. Desdesig. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1976. Terra natal. Barcelona: La Gaia Ciència, 1978. Àlbum de família. Barcelona: |
succeeded_by = Ninth Punjab Legislative Assembly | leader1_type = Speaker | leader1 = Brij Bhushan Mehra | party1 = | leader2 = | leader3_type = Deputy Speaker | leader3 = Guizar Singh | leader4 = | leader5_type = Leader of House(Chief Minister) | leader5 =Darbara Singh | leader6 = | leader7_type = Leader of the Opposition | leader7 = Parkash Singh Badal | leader8 = | committees1 = | committees2 = | joint_committees = | voting_system1 = first-past-the-post | voting_system2 = | last_election1 = 1980 | next_election1 = 1985 | redistricting = | session_room = | session_res = | session_alt = | meeting_place = | members = 117 | structure1 = | structure1_res = | political_groups1 = Government (63) INC (63)Opposition (54) SAD (37) CPI (9) CPIM (5) BJS (1) | = 23 June 1980 | disbanded = 26 June 1985 | suspension = 6 October 1983 | preceded_by = Seventh Punjab Legislative Assembly | succeeded_by = Ninth Punjab Legislative Assembly | leader1_type = Speaker | leader1 = Brij Bhushan Mehra | party1 = | leader2 = | leader3_type = Deputy Speaker | leader3 = Guizar Singh | leader4 = | leader5_type = Leader of House(Chief Minister) | leader5 =Darbara Singh | leader6 = | leader7_type = Leader of the Opposition | leader7 = Parkash Singh Badal | leader8 = | committees1 = | committees2 = | joint_committees = | voting_system1 = first-past-the-post | voting_system2 = | last_election1 = 1980 | next_election1 = 1985 | redistricting = | session_room = | session_res = | session_alt = | meeting_place = | members |
Arenas in southern Chile, and has a small shareholding in Hong Kong bus companies of Citybus and New World First Bus through Bravo Transport. It was founded in 2018 by former Tower Transit CEO Adam Leishman until he and Go Whippet split away from Transit Systems to form Ascendal. Leishman is the son | Adam Leishman until he and Go Whippet split away from Transit Systems to form Ascendal. Leishman is the son of Transit Systems co-founder Graham Leishman and was previously the Business Development Director at Transit Systems. Operations Whippet Whippet, formerly Go Whippet, is a bus operation in Cambridgeshire, England. It was purchased by Transit Systems in November 2014. The bus |
Harman and Ising's Sinkin' in the Bathtub, the First Looney Tune and first Warner Bros. Cartoon overall is released. Bosko's Girlfriend Honey makes her debut. August August 9: Betty Boop makes her debut in the cartoon Dizzy Dishes. August 18: Burt Gillett's Mickey Mouse cartoon The Chain Gang is released. It marks the first appearance of Pluto. Births January January 4: Sorrell Booke, American actor (voice of Boss Hogg in The Dukes, Mayor Fist in The Pound Puppies, Sheriff Rufus and TJ Buzby in Scooby-Doo Meets the Boo Brothers, Big Daddy Boo in Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation, Boss Hoss in Bonkers, Sheriff Hebbs in The New Adventures of Captain Planet, Pinky the Manager in Rock-a-Doodle), (d. 1994). January 6: Vic Tayback, American actor (voice of Carface in All Dogs Go to Heaven), (d. 1990). January 10: Roy E. Disney, American animation director (Walt Disney Company), (d. 2009). January 11: Rod Taylor, American actor (voice of Pongo in 101 Dalmatians), (d. 2015). January 20: Buzz Aldrin, American former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot (voiced himself in The Simpsons episode Deep Space Homer, and the Futurama episode Cold Warriors). February February 10: Robert Wagner, American actor (voice of Mr. Robinson in Everyone's Hero, voiced himself in the Futurama episode Calculon 2.0). February 11: Flaminia Jandolo, Italian voice actress (dub voice of Lady in Lady and the Tramp, Merryweather in Sleeping Beauty and Perdita in One Hundred and One Dalmatians), (d. 2019). February 13: Frank Buxton, American actor (voice of the title character in Batfink), (d. 2018). February 22: Marni Nixon, American actress (sang the title song in Cinderella, the singing flowers in Alice in Wonderland, singing geese in Mary Poppins, singing voice of Grandmother Fa in Mulan), (d. 2016). February 27: Lee Hartman, American novelist and animator (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons), (d. 2012). Rolly Crump, American animator and designer (Walt Disney Company). March March 4: Ron Rodecker, American animator (Dragon Tales), (d. 2021). March 22: Stephen Sondheim, American composer and lyricist (voiced himself in The Simpsons episode Yokel Chords), (d. 2021). March 30: John Astin, American actor (voice of Gomez Addams in The New Scooby-Doo Movies, and The Addams Family, Bull Gator in Taz-Mania, Terry Duke Tetzloff in Duckman, The Mole in Bonkers, Sydney in Aladdin, Mr. Roborson in Quack Pack, Dave Bishop in As Told By Ginger, Santa Claus in Higglytown Heroes, Uncle Dudley in Justice League Action). April April 2: Roddy Maude-Roxby, retired English actor and artist (voice of Edgar in The Aristocats). April 10: Claude Bolling, French composer (composed the soundtrack to the Lucky Luke animated films Daisy Town and The Ballad of the Daltons), (d. 2020). April 18: Clive Revill, New Zealand actor (original voice of Alfred Pennyworth in Batman: The Animated Series, Kickback in The Transformers, and The Transformers: The Movie, King Nod in The Thief and the Cobbler, Narrator in Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas, King Claudius in Pinky and the Brain, Shedlock Jones in DuckTales). April 23: Alan Oppenheimer, American voice actor (voice of Skeletor, Man-at-Arms, Cringer/Battle Cat and Mer-Man in He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Rhinokey in The Wuzzles, Vanity Smurf in The Smurfs, Norman Burg in season 2 of The Big O, Mighty Mouse in The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle, Plato and Aldrin Klordane in Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers, Moss-Man in Masters of the Universe: Revelation). Pino Zac, Italian illustrator, comics artist and animator, (d. 1985). May May 6: Roy Naisbitt, British animator and layout artist (A Christmas Carol, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Balto, Space Jam, The Last Belle), (d. 2021). May 9: Joan Sims, British actress (Mrs. Cratchit in A Christmas Carol, the Witch in The Thief and the Cobbler), (d. 2001). June June 4: Edward Kelsey, British voice actor (voice of Colonel K. and Baron Silas Greenback in Danger Mouse, Mr. Grow bag in Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit), (d. 2019). June 5: Vladimir Popov, Russian animator, animated film director and art director (Three from Prostokvashino), | Movie, King Nod in The Thief and the Cobbler, Narrator in Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas, King Claudius in Pinky and the Brain, Shedlock Jones in DuckTales). April 23: Alan Oppenheimer, American voice actor (voice of Skeletor, Man-at-Arms, Cringer/Battle Cat and Mer-Man in He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Rhinokey in The Wuzzles, Vanity Smurf in The Smurfs, Norman Burg in season 2 of The Big O, Mighty Mouse in The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle, Plato and Aldrin Klordane in Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers, Moss-Man in Masters of the Universe: Revelation). Pino Zac, Italian illustrator, comics artist and animator, (d. 1985). May May 6: Roy Naisbitt, British animator and layout artist (A Christmas Carol, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Balto, Space Jam, The Last Belle), (d. 2021). May 9: Joan Sims, British actress (Mrs. Cratchit in A Christmas Carol, the Witch in The Thief and the Cobbler), (d. 2001). June June 4: Edward Kelsey, British voice actor (voice of Colonel K. and Baron Silas Greenback in Danger Mouse, Mr. Grow bag in Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit), (d. 2019). June 5: Vladimir Popov, Russian animator, animated film director and art director (Three from Prostokvashino), (d. 1987). June 19: Gin, Spanish comics artist, animator and illustrator (Macian Studios), (d. 1996). July July 5: Tommy Cook, American actor (voice of Kid Flash in The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure, Augie Anderson in Funky Phantom, Biff in Jabberjaw). July 13: Rhoda Williams, American actress (voice of Drizella Tremaine in Cinderella), (d. 2006). August August 8: Len Maxwell, American voice actor (voice of Karate in Batfink, the judge in Hugo the Hippo, Nick Diamond in Celebrity Deathmatch), (d. 2008). August 11: Paul Soles, Canadian actor (voice of Hermey in Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Peter Parker / Spider-Man in Spider-Man), (d. 2021). August 25: Sean Connery, Scottish actor (voice of Draco in Dragonheart, Sir Billi in Sir Billi), (d. 2020). August 26: French Tickner, American actor (English voice of Kagome Higurashi's Grandpa in Inuyasha, Watari in Death Note), (d. 2021). Willy Lateste, Belgian animator and comics artist (Belvision), (d. 1967). October October 1: R. O. Blechman, American animator (television commercials for Alka-Seltzer, Great Performances:, The Soldier's Tale;, Christmas Commercials for CBS). October 17: Dai Tielang, Singaporean Chinese animator and animated film director (Black Cat Detective, A Deer of Nine Colors, Where is Mama), (d. 2019). October 24: Jack Angel, American voice actor (Hawkman, The Flash, Samurai in Super Friends, King Zarkon in Voltron: Defender of the Universe, Ramjet, and Astrotrain in The Transformers, and The Transformers: The Movie, The Liquidator in Darkwing Duck), (d. 2021). November November 13: Michel Robin, French actor (voice of Champion in Les Triplettes de Belleville), (d. 2020) from COVID-19. December December 12: Borivoj Dovniković, Croatian film director, animator and caricaturist, (d. 2022). December 17: Bob Guccione, American photographer and publisher (voiced himself in the Duckman episodes Pig Amok and Love! Anger! Kvetching!), (d. 2010). Specific date unknown Cliff Voorhees, American animator and comics artist (The Walt Disney Company, Filmation, Hanna-Barbera, Film Roman, The Simpsons, The Critic, The Angry Beavers, The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy), (d. 2015). Gary Mooney, Canadian-American animator (Walt Disney Company, Hubley Studios, Gene Deitch, Jay Ward Productions, animated sequence in |
American ice hockey defenseman currently playing for the Indy Fuel. He was an All-American for Sacred Heart. Playing career After graduating from high school, Lee joined the Penticton Vees and helped the club win both the league championship and the Western Canada Cup in 2015. He was able to earn a college scholarship to Vermont on the back of his stellar season. With the Catamounts, however, Lee couldn't find his offensive game. Mid-way through his sophomore year, Lee left Vermont and transferred to Sacred Heart, closer to his hometown. Lee debuted for the Pioneers in 2018 and saw | He was able to earn a college scholarship to Vermont on the back of his stellar season. With the Catamounts, however, Lee couldn't find his offensive game. Mid-way through his sophomore year, Lee left Vermont and transferred to Sacred Heart, closer to his hometown. Lee debuted for the Pioneers in 2018 and saw a tremendous increase to his production. His arrival in Bridgeport coincided with Sacred Heart winning 16 games and posting its best season in nine years. Lee performed even better in his senior season and was named an All-American as well as the best defenseman in Atlantic Hockey. The Pioneers finished the regular season with 21 wins, tying the program record. |
30th in 5 km classical race in Swiss Goms in 2018) as well as two U23 World Ski Championships in 2019 and 2020 (with her best personal result being 34th in sprint in Finnish Lahti in 2019). She debuted at World Cup on February 18, 2017, in Estonian Otepää where she finished 65th in freestyle sprint. As of January 2022, Krol's best World Cup individual finish was 43rd in a freestyle sprint event in Dresden, Germany, | 2016 Winter Youth Olympics in Norwegian Lillehammer. She finished 27th in 5 km freestyle race, 15th in sprint, and 28th in cross freestyle. She also took part in three FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships between 2016 and 2018 (with her best personal result being 30th in 5 km classical race in Swiss Goms in 2018) as well as two U23 World Ski Championships in 2019 and 2020 (with her best personal result being 34th in sprint in Finnish Lahti in 2019). She debuted at World Cup on February 18, 2017, in Estonian Otepää where she finished 65th in freestyle sprint. As of January 2022, Krol's best World Cup individual finish was 43rd in a freestyle sprint event in Dresden, Germany, on December 19, 2020, and best World Cup team finish was 24th in |
the best Brazilian football prospects. Early life Born in Brasília, Endrick started playing football at the age of four. His father, Douglas Sousa, published his son's goals on YouTube and looked for interested parties among the big Brazilian clubs. Endrick vowed to become a professional footballer to help his family, after his father was unable to feed him. His father was unemployed before receiving a job as a cleaner by Palmeiras. Club career Youth career After nearly signing for São Paulo FC, he joined Palmeiras youth team at the age of 11. In five years he scored 165 goals in 169 games for Palmeiras youth teams. He participated in the 2022 Copa São Paulo de Futebol | one of the best Brazilian football prospects. Early life Born in Brasília, Endrick started playing football at the age of four. His father, Douglas Sousa, published his son's goals on YouTube and looked for interested parties among the big Brazilian clubs. Endrick vowed to become a professional footballer to help his family, after his father was unable to feed him. His father was unemployed before receiving a job as a cleaner by Palmeiras. Club career Youth career After nearly signing for São Paulo FC, he joined Palmeiras youth team at the age of 11. In five years he scored 165 goals in 169 games for Palmeiras youth teams. He participated in the 2022 Copa São Paulo |
rejoin higher. On one pathway going up, the pilgrims visit the shrine of Khandoba's minister, Hegadi Pradhan. The other pathway used by devotees going down has the temple of Banai, Khandoba's second wife. This temple looks like a hill fort, and is known as Jejuri gad ( ). The eight-sided, round fort boundary with encloses a cloister courtyard, at the centre of which is the main temple shrine. In the courtyard, there is around brass-coated tortoise, in diameter. The temple is built in Hemadpanthi architecture style, consisting of an outer square hall and an inner sanctum. The sanctum includes a linga (an anionic symbol of Shiva), three pairs of Khandoba with his first wife Mhalsa. The temple also has a murti of Khandoba, mounted on horse in warrior form. Khandoba is worshipped with turmeric, belfruit leaves and by offering naivedhya made from onions and other vegetables. The devotees offer flowers and turmeric to the deity. Devotees throw turmeric in the air as an offering to the god, due to which the steps of the hill temple and premises have a yellow hue. It is from Pune. The temple is a Maharashtra state government protected site. Literature Jejuri (poem) by Arun Kolatkar was based on this village and its deity. Peshwekalin Jejuricha Itihas () a book authored by Raj Memane about history of Jejuri during Peshwa time. In media Some scenes of the 1957 film Naya Daur of Dilip Kumar directed by B. R. Chopra filmed in the premises of Khandoba mandir and around its hill. Jai Malhar, a Marathi mythological TV serial was run on Zee Marathi narrated the legend of this Mandir's deity, Khandoba's character was played by Devdatta Nage. Carry On Maratha film's Malhari Martand song was filmed at this Mandir. See also Shiva, Hindu deity Hindu religion Virbhadra, Avatar of lord Shiva List of State Protected Monuments in Maharashtra References Hindu temples in Maharashtra Shiva temples in Maharashtra Pune district Hinduism | legend, two rakshasa brothers Mani and Malla pleased the god Brahma with their austerities. By Brahma's boon, they became very powerful and started destruction on Earth, harassing the people. God Shiva arrived on earth in the avatar of Khandoba to destroy Mani and Malla. In a fierce battle, Khandoba killed one demon and forgave the other when he promised to serve the common people. Architecture The temple is situated on a hill, at an elevation of . The temple can be approached by three flights of steps - the east, the west and the north. The northern steps lead to the main entrance of the temple. The temple is accessed by climbing nearly 200 steps. The steps have around 18 arches, 350 Deep-stambha (lamp-pillars) and several shrines bordering it. Around a third way up the steps split and rejoin higher. On one pathway going up, the pilgrims visit the shrine of Khandoba's minister, Hegadi Pradhan. The other pathway used by devotees going down has the temple of Banai, Khandoba's second wife. This temple looks like a hill fort, and is known as Jejuri gad ( ). The eight-sided, round fort boundary with encloses a cloister courtyard, at the centre of which is the main temple shrine. In the courtyard, there is around brass-coated tortoise, in diameter. The temple is built |
Northwestern University, U.S.A. In 1970, he was invited by Panjab University, Chandigarh, to join as a Reader in the Department of Physics. He became Professor of Physics in 1977 and remained Professor till 2001.He worked in various capacities as Head of the department of physics, Dean of faculty of science, Dean of university instruction, and thereafter vice-chancellor (2000–06). After his superannuation, he worked as a senior scientist of the Indian National Science Academy and National Academy of Sciences, India for 10 Years. He is a chairman of Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, the ethics committee of biomedical research, drug trials, member of organ transplant committee, and the ethics committee for stem cell research. He has received D.Sc (Honoris Causa) from Desh Bhagat University, Mandi Gobindgarh, Punjab on 14th Feb 2021 for his exceptional contribution in the condensed matter physics. Biography A Biography of Professor K.N. Pathak released on September 2006. The book is written by Subhash Bhasker published by Unistar Books and has been translated in Hindi and English. Jiwani Professor K N Pathak - Book By Subhash Bhasker Academic and research K.N. Pathak has made distinct contributions in our understanding of structure and dynamics of classical & quantum liquids, including electron correlation effects in Coulomb systems. He is known for his contribution nationally and internationally particularly for obtaining several exact results for the dynamical correlation function for the above systems. His theory of phonon-phonon interaction in solids provides for the first time both thermodynamic and dynamic properties in a self-consistent manner. It has been successfully applied to explain various phenomena connected with phonon-phonon interaction. Research Papers published in international journals - 140 and Review Articles - 7. Supervised 13 PhD. Thesis and 6 M.Phil. Thesis. Supervised 5 postdoctoral fellows (Dr D K Chaturvedi, Dr Keya, Dharam Vir, Dr Vinod Ashokan, Dr Rajesh Sharma) | state physics and obtained a PhD degree in 1967. After a brief stint as Lecturer in Physics at IIT Mumbai, for about a year, Pathak worked as Postdoctoral Research Fellow during 1967-70 at National Research Council, Canada and Northwestern University, U.S.A. In 1970, he was invited by Panjab University, Chandigarh, to join as a Reader in the Department of Physics. He became Professor of Physics in 1977 and remained Professor till 2001.He worked in various capacities as Head of the department of physics, Dean of faculty of science, Dean of university instruction, and thereafter vice-chancellor (2000–06). After his superannuation, he worked as a senior scientist of the Indian National Science Academy and National Academy of Sciences, India for 10 Years. He is a chairman of Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, the ethics committee of biomedical research, drug trials, member of organ transplant committee, and the ethics committee for stem cell research. He has received D.Sc (Honoris Causa) from Desh Bhagat University, Mandi Gobindgarh, Punjab on 14th Feb 2021 for his exceptional contribution in the condensed matter physics. Biography A Biography of Professor K.N. Pathak released on September 2006. The book is written by Subhash Bhasker published by Unistar Books and has been translated in Hindi and English. Jiwani Professor K N Pathak - Book By Subhash Bhasker Academic and research K.N. Pathak has made distinct contributions in our understanding of structure and dynamics of classical & quantum liquids, including electron correlation effects in Coulomb systems. He is known for his contribution nationally and internationally particularly for obtaining several exact results |
were the 33th edition of the World Junior Wrestling Championships and were held in Budapest, Hungary between 19 and 25 July | 2010 World Junior Wrestling Championships were the 33th edition of the World Junior Wrestling Championships and were held in Budapest, Hungary between 19 and 25 July 2010. Medal table Medal summary |
lactate is an organic chemical compound, a salt of cadmium and lactic acid with the formula Cd(C3H5O3)2. Synthesis 1. Dissolving of cadmium carbonate in lactic acid. 2. Also by mixing boiling | cadmium and lactic acid with the formula Cd(C3H5O3)2. Synthesis 1. Dissolving of cadmium carbonate in lactic acid. 2. Also by mixing boiling solutions of lactate of lime and cadmium sulphate. Physical |
at least five Division II members regarding possible membership—football-sponsoring Valdosta State, West Florida, and West Georgia and non-football Lincoln Memorial and Queens (NC). Southland Conference With much of the Southland Conference's football membership leaving for the WAC and ASUN, on September 28, the Southland announced that Division II school Texas A&M–Commerce would move up to Division I and join the conference beginning with the 2022–23 season. This leaves the Southland with 8 full members, 6 of which play football. Shortly after A&M–Commerce was announced as an incoming member, the Southland and Ohio Valley Conference, which had lost three football-sponsoring schools in this realignment cycle (and would later lose a fourth), announced a football scheduling alliance for the 2022 and 2023 seasons. Ohio Valley Conference In addition to three Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) football members joining the ASUN, two additional OVC members have announced their intent to leave the conference. On September 28, 2021, non-football member Belmont announced it would join the Missouri Valley Conference for the 2022–23 season. On January 7, 2022, Murray State announced that it too would join the MVC for 2022–23. Though the MVC does not sponsor football, Murray State is attempting to join the Missouri Valley Football Conference (a separate entity from the Missouri Valley Conference) starting with the 2023 season. At the time of this announcement, the expected 2023 departure of Murray State football would have left the Ohio Valley Conference with 5 football members. (Full OVC member Morehead State plays non-scholarship football in the Pioneer Football League.) On December 9, Sun Belt Conference non-football member Little Rock was announced as the newest OVC member starting with the 2022–23 season. Exactly two months later, another new non-football member, Division II upgrader Southern Indiana, was announced as a July 2022 entry, and later in February, Lindenwood, a football-sponsoring D-II school, was also announced as a July 2022 entry. An even larger change to the FCS football landscape was announced on February 22, 2022 (the day before Lindenwood was announced as an incoming OVC member), with the OVC and Big South Conference announcing their plans to merge their respective football leagues effective in 2023. Certain major details of the alliance—specifically, whether it would be operated by the Big South or OVC, or become a completely separate entity—were not revealed at the time. Colonial Athletic Association The departure of James Madison left the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) with 11 football members and 9 all-sports members. On January 18, 2022, NJ.com reported that Monmouth, a full member of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and football-only member of the Big South Conference, would join the CAA for all sports starting in 2022–23. They also reported Big South full member Hampton and America East Conference member Stony Brook would probably join the CAA. Hampton had been working toward an eventual CAA invitation since at least 1995, and Stony Brook had been a football-only CAA member since 2013. On January 25, all three schools were officially announced to join the CAA for 2022-23. On February 18, North Carolina A&T received approval from its board of trustees to move from the Big South to the CAA, and the CAA officially announced A&T's move on February 22. While most sports will join the CAA in time for the 2022-23 season, A&T's football team will wait until the 2023 season to move to the CAA football league (which is technically a separate entity from the all-sports CAA). Big South Conference On January 25, the Colonial Athletic Association announced that Big South Conference full member Hampton and football-only member Monmouth will join the CAA for the 2022-23 season. These departures, along with football-only members Kennesaw State and North Alabama leaving to play in the ASUN Conference, will bring the Big South's football membership down to 5 members, one short of the conference minimum. (Big South full member Presbyterian plays non-scholarship football in the Pioneer Football League.) The departure of North Carolina A&T to the CAA in 2023 will further reduce the Big South's football membership to four; the Big South's full membership will be reduced to 10 starting with the 2022-23 season. As noted previously, the Big South and OVC will merge their football leagues effective in 2023. Big Sky Conference Southern Utah will leave the Big Sky Conference on July 1, 2022. Southern Utah's departure puts the Big Sky at 10 full members, all of whom sponsor football, with Cal Poly and UC Davis as football-only members. Non-football Division I conferences affected America East Conference On May 6, 2021, America East Conference member Hartford's governing board voted to begin the process of transitioning the school's athletic program from Division I to Division III. The plan calls for the following steps: January 2022: Formal request for reclassification with the NCAA. 2022–23: No athletic scholarships will be awarded to incoming students. 2023–24: Become a provisional member in a D-III conference to be determined; transition remaining students off athletic scholarships by the end of that school year. 2024–25: Become a full member of the aforementioned D-III conference. 2025–26: Full D-III membership. On January 25, Stony Brook was announced as a full member of the Colonial Athletic Association starting in 2022-23, bringing the America East's membership down to 8. Atlantic 10 Conference On November 16, 2021, the Atlantic 10 announced that Loyola Chicago would join the conference starting with the 2022–23 season. As the A-10 does not anticipate gaining or losing any further members for the foreseeable future, the conference will have 15 members going forward. Horizon League On January 22, 2022, CBSSports.com reported that UIC would leave the Horizon League for the MVC in July. This report was confirmed on January 26 when UIC was unveiled as a new MVC member, effective that July. The Horizon League will drop down to 11 members going forward. Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Monmouth's departure for the CAA in 2022 will leave the MAAC with 10 members. Missouri Valley Conference Losing Loyola Chicago, whose men's basketball team had made the Final Four in 2018 and Sweet Sixteen in 2021, was a significant athletic blow to the MVC, but was arguably a larger institutional blow. The Chicago area, especially its suburbs, is a major source of students for many MVC members, and Loyola's departure would leave the conference without a significant presence in the city. The basketball issue was addressed with the addition of Belmont and Murray State, both frequent contenders for NCAA men's tournament berths, putting the Missouri Valley Conference at 11 members. The issue of a Chicago presence was addressed by entering into negotiations with the city's largest university, UIC. CBSSports.com reported on January 22, 2022, that UIC had indeed been invited and accepted; this move was made official four days later. The conference reportedly reached out to Kansas City of the Summit League for potential membership before this, in addition to UIC, as well as Sun Belt member UT Arlington (which instead rejoined the WAC). West Coast Conference With Brigham Young University leaving the West Coast Conference for the Big 12 in 2023, the WCC will drop down to 9 members going forward. Membership changes List of confirmed and rumored changes , Membership change statistics | reduced from 10 to 8 teams. On September 10, the Big 12 announced that FBS independent and West Coast Conference non-football member BYU, along with American Athletic Conference (AAC) members Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF would join the conference no later than 2024–25, though they could possibly join for 2023–24. ACC–Big Ten–Pac-12 Alliance There was an announcement of an alliance between the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Big Ten Conference and Pac-12 Conference on August 24, 2021. It consisted of adding games between teams in these three conferences in football, as well as men's and women's college basketball. American Athletic Conference The losses of Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF left the AAC with 8 remaining schools. After invitations to Mountain West Conference members Boise State, Air Force, Colorado State, and San Diego State to join the AAC were all declined, the AAC then pivoted to Conference USA (C-USA) to add 6 of its members on October 21, 2021: Charlotte, Florida Atlantic, UAB, North Texas, Rice, and UTSA. The additions will put the AAC at 14 members for both football and basketball, with Navy being a football-only member and Wichita State being a non-football full member. Sun Belt Conference The departures of the aforementioned 6 schools reduced Conference USA's membership from 14 to 8, and sensing the instability of the conference, the remaining members looked to join other conferences. In late October 2021, C-USA members Southern Miss, Old Dominion and Marshall applied and were accepted to the Sun Belt Conference, to begin play in the 2022–23 season. On November 6, the Sun Belt added James Madison, a Colonial Athletic Association member playing FCS football. Due to the Colonial's policy of prohibiting departing members from participating in conference tournaments, JMU was initially slated to play the 2022–23 football season as an FBS independent with other sports playing as de facto Sun Belt affiliates; full membership would have begun with the 2023–24 season. However, on February 2, 2022, JMU and the Sun Belt announced that JMU would join for all sports sponsored by the conference, including football, on July 1. On February 11, Southern Miss, Old Dominion, and Marshall announced that they too would join the Sun Belt Conference in 2022. However, C-USA had previously indicated on January 20 that it expected all three schools to remain in the league through 2022–23. ESPN journalist Adam Rittenberg cited an unnamed source regarding this development, "It's not going to be an amicable split. It's gotten ugly, and I assume it's going to get uglier." The source's prediction was apparently proven true when Marshall filed suit against C-USA in its local court in an attempt to force a 2022 move. On March 1, the Sun Belt released its 2022 football schedule with Marshall, Old Dominion, and Southern Miss included, making no mention of the ongoing legal dispute or the possibility that the three schools would not become members for the 2022–23 school year. The increase in the Sun Belt's football membership led to reports that the conference's two non-football members, Little Rock and UT Arlington, would leave the conference; this eventually did happen, with Little Rock joining the Ohio Valley Conference and UT Arlington rejoining the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), a league in which it had been a member in the 2012–13 school year. Conference USA Having lost 6 of its 14 members to the AAC and 3 to the Sun Belt, Conference USA was left with 5 remaining members, short of the NCAA minimum of 6 and the FBS minimum of 8. On November 5, 2021, C-USA invited four schools: FBS independents Liberty and New Mexico State, who play non-football sports in the ASUN Conference and Western Athletic Conference respectively, ASUN full member Jacksonville State, and WAC full member Sam Houston State. All four schools will begin C-USA play with the 2023–24 season. Per NCAA rules Jacksonville State and Sam Houston State serve a two-year probationary period. Liberty and New Mexico State are established FBS members and do not have to serve probationary periods. Around the same time, reports surfaced that C-USA members Western Kentucky and Middle Tennessee were poised to join the Mid-American Conference (MAC). However, Middle Tennessee elected to remain in C-USA, and the MAC did not invite Western Kentucky after Middle Tennessee did not join. FCS conferences affected Western Athletic Conference On January 14, 2021, the Western Athletic Conference, which last sponsored football at the FBS level during the 2012 season, announced its intention to reinstate football as a conference-sponsored sport at the FCS level, as well as the addition of five new members to the conference in all sports. The new members announced included four Southland Conference members from Texas in Abilene Christian, Lamar, Sam Houston, and Stephen F. Austin, plus Southern Utah from the Big Sky Conference. Those five schools joined existing WAC members Tarleton and Dixie State (which will be renamed Utah Tech in July 2022) to make up the WAC's initial football membership. The four Southland schools were initially planned to join the WAC for the 2022–23 school year, but the WAC pushed their entry forward to 2021–22 after the Southland expelled all four schools. Southern Utah will join on its originally planned schedule of 2022–23, with SUU and the Big Sky agreeing to honor their scheduling commitments for 2021–22. That same day, WAC non-football member UTRGV announced that it would begin sponsoring football no later than the 2024 season, while the WAC announced that Chicago State, a geographical outlier for much of its time in the WAC, would depart the conference on July 1, 2022. On November 12, the WAC added Southland member Incarnate Word for the 2022–23 season. Though fellow Southland member McNeese was rumored to be joining the WAC along with Incarnate Word, it instead chose to remain in the Southland. On January 21, 2022, the WAC added Sun Belt Conference member UT Arlington, which had joined and left the WAC in the early-2010s realignment cycle, for the 2022–23 season. With the departures of New Mexico State and Sam Houston to Conference USA, the WAC will have 13 members going forward, 8 of which will play football in the conference. ASUN Conference On January 29, 2021, the ASUN Conference (formerly the Atlantic Sun Conference) announced that it too would begin sponsoring football at the FCS level beginning in 2022–23, as well as announcing three new members for the 2021–22 season: Jacksonville State and Eastern Kentucky from the Ohio Valley Conference, and Central Arkansas from the Southland Conference. Those three schools plus existing ASUN members Kennesaw State and North Alabama, which had been playing football in the Big South Conference, would make up the first five ASUN football members, with a requisite sixth member to be announced at a later date. For the 2021 football season, the ASUN and WAC formed a football-only partnership, with the three new ASUN members competing alongside WAC members for an automatic bid to the FCS playoffs. On September 17, that sixth football member was revealed to be Austin Peay, which would join the conference for 2022–23. Though the ASUN will have the requisite 6 football members for the 2022 season, the impending departure of Jacksonville State in 2023 will necessitate a replacement football member to meet the conference minimum. Such a member has not yet been announced. ASUN full member Stetson plays football in the Pioneer Football League, a conference for Division I FCS schools that do not offer football scholarships. Another full member, Bellarmine, will add football in 2022 but will play sprint football, a non-NCAA variant played under standard NCAA rules but with player weights limited to . However, shortly before Peay was announced as an incoming member, media reports indicated that the ASUN had approached at least five Division II members regarding possible membership—football-sponsoring Valdosta State, West Florida, and West Georgia and non-football Lincoln Memorial and Queens (NC). Southland |
N.O.A. His last major project before retirement was Epiphany Catholic Church in South Miami, which was consecrated in 2002. Miami Marine Stadium Hilario Candela designed his most well-known structure, the Miami Marine Stadium, at the age of 28. Then known as the Commodore Ralph Middleton Monroe Marine Stadium, the building served as a stadium for speedboat racing, a concert venue, and, on occasion, a venue for Easter services. The building had fallen into disrepair by the early 90s. Following the devastation of Hurricane Andrew in 1992, the structure was condemned and closed to the public, though FEMA reports later showed it had not sustained any significant damage from the storm. It has since remained mostly abandoned, becoming a haven for Graffiti writers and skateboarders. Candela later led efforts to preserve the building alongside the "Friends of the Marine Stadium," which he Co-founded in 2008. Through their efforts, the stadium became designated as an historic site by the City of Miami Historic and Environmental Preservation Board in October 2008. It has also been named one of America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Just before his passing, Candela worked closely with Richard Heisenbottle––a former employee of Candela's––on a $45 million restoration project intended to revitalize the beloved stadium. He was unable to see this project break ground as they were expecting to go out for construction bids when he died in January 2022. Personal life Hilario was born on June 4, 1934, in Havana, Cuba to Hilario R. Candela and Carmen Roig Candela. After studying architecture at Georgia Tech, he returned to Havana in 1958 but quickly fled to the United States in 1960 following the Cuban Revolution and Fidel Castro's rise to power. Two years later, Hilario met Eva Hernandez at a New Year's Eve party at the top of the Everglades Hotel. The two began to date shortly thereafter and were married in August 1963. The pair remained married for 58 years until his death in 2022. Together the couple had four | and longest standing architectural firm in the history of Miami-Dade County. Throughout his tenure, the firm's ownership and title evolved several times. It became Pancoast, Ferendino, Grafton, Skeels and Burnham in 1963; Pancoast, Ferendino, Grafton & Skeels in 1965; Pancoast, Ferendino, Grafton in 1966; Ferendino, Grafton, Pancoast in 1969; Ferendino, Grafton, Spillis, Candela in 1971; Spillis, Candela and Partners Inc. in 1983 and Spillis Candela DMJM in 1999. Named a fellow of The American Institute of Architecture, Candela's work has garnered numerous awards and distinctions. His projects can be found in a broad scope of locations, from the United States to Latin America, Europe and The Middle East. His most notable works include the first two campuses of Miami Dade College (North and South), the University of Miami Mailman Center, the James L. Knight Center and adjoining Hyatt Regency Hotel, and the Oceanographic Meteorological Labs for N.O.A. His last major project before retirement was Epiphany Catholic Church in South Miami, which was consecrated in 2002. Miami Marine Stadium Hilario Candela designed his most well-known structure, the Miami Marine Stadium, at the age of 28. Then known as the Commodore Ralph Middleton Monroe Marine Stadium, the building served as a stadium for speedboat racing, a concert venue, and, on occasion, a venue for Easter services. The building had fallen into disrepair by the early 90s. Following the devastation of Hurricane Andrew in 1992, the structure was condemned and closed to the public, though FEMA reports later showed it had not sustained any significant damage from the storm. It has since remained mostly abandoned, becoming a haven for Graffiti writers and skateboarders. Candela later led efforts to preserve the building alongside the "Friends of the Marine Stadium," which he Co-founded in 2008. Through their efforts, the stadium became designated as an historic site by the City of Miami Historic and Environmental Preservation Board in October 2008. It has also been named one of America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Just before his passing, Candela |
Transitional Military Council suspended the Constitution. In its place, it issued a charter, which granted General Mahamat Déby the powers of the Presidency as interim president and named him head of the armed forces. References External links Constitution of Chad Chadian law Constitutions by country | supreme law of Chad. Chad's eighth constitution since independence from France, it was adopted on 4 May 2018. The text establishes the Fourth Republic within the framework of a presidential regime, abolishes the post of Prime Minister. It replaces the 1996 Constitution. 2021 suspension In April |
enemy. Players are also responsible for managing their legion's camp, which can help them have better outcomes during legionary combat. Story-based battles often have objectives outside of defeating all enemies and sometimes can be won without engaging in combat; in one instance, a mission requires the player to quickly steal an Olympic trophy. Plot In Expeditions: Rome, the player controls a legate in the later years of the Roman Republic. Real historical figures like Cicero, Julius Caesar, and Cato appear in the plot, although the game takes historical licenses with these people; the presence of the player character dramatically alters the path of Roman history throughout by his actions (and his existence). After the death of his father from unknown political opponents, the player character flees to the armies of Consul Lucullus during the Third Mithridatic War. Lucullus is a family friend, who helps the player join a legion -- which he then takes command of in campaigns across regions in Asia-Minor, Africa, and Gaul. Development Expeditions: Rome entered pre-production shortly after the release of Expeditions: Viking in 2017. Logic Artists, the developers of the game, presented the game idea to THQ Nordic in 2018, which is when full development began in earnest. Logic Artists previously worked on the on-hold title Divinity: Fallen Heroes, which would have taken place in the same universe as Divinity: Original Sin II; because of this experience, they had experience working with Larian Studios in their CRPG-style. Development was generally not affected by the lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, because Logic Artists was already a development team split between Copenhagen and Istanbul (the latter was where most of the art team was based) and they were able to easily transition to remote work. Concerned about the lack of variety in enemy types sometimes found in historical games, Logic Artists attempted to diversify the enemy character classes in a way that would make the user experience more enjoyable. Logic Artists felt that the historical period had to feel accurate, but that once the player character came into the scene, "all bets were off." NFT concerns Soon after the release of Expeditions: Rome, | Logic Artists previously worked on the on-hold title Divinity: Fallen Heroes, which would have taken place in the same universe as Divinity: Original Sin II; because of this experience, they had experience working with Larian Studios in their CRPG-style. Development was generally not affected by the lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, because Logic Artists was already a development team split between Copenhagen and Istanbul (the latter was where most of the art team was based) and they were able to easily transition to remote work. Concerned about the lack of variety in enemy types sometimes found in historical games, Logic Artists attempted to diversify the enemy character classes in a way that would make the user experience more enjoyable. Logic Artists felt that the historical period had to feel accurate, but that once the player character came into the scene, "all bets were off." NFT concerns Soon after the release of Expeditions: Rome, it was announced that the founders of Logic Artists were creating a new studio dedicated to NFT gaming and were winding down the studio to support this endeavor. After concerns cropped up from players about what this meant for the future of Expeditions: Rome development, publisher THQ Nordic released a statement that there would be at least one DLC pack coming for the game, and that Logic Artists would continue to maintain additional support for any technical issues with the game or its DLC. THQ Nordic also noted in its statement that Expeditions: Rome "does not include any kind of NFT and has no links to the blockchain." Reception Expeditions: Rome received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic and from critics, who praised its overall plot notes and strong tactical role-playing elements, but criticized the legionary battles for being too arbitrary and some other gameplay elements were criticized. Rock Paper Shotgun's Nate Crowley praised the game's attention to historical detail (including accurate Latin pronunciations) and noted that after a mediocre first half hour, the game "let's rip" and was incredibly fun. RPGamer's Alex Fuller called the game an "easy recommendation" and praised the game's flexibility in its difficulty settings for allowing the game to be tailored to what the player wants. IGN's Leana Hafer wished that the legionary combat was "more engrossing", an opinion shared by other critics. PC Gamer's Robert Zak wrote in a mixed review that |
2001 Togliatti Challenger. He has served as non playing captain of the Uzbekistan Davis Cup team. ATP Challenger/ITF Futures finals Doubles: 5 (1–4) References External links 1976 births | in singles and 345 in doubles. He featured in three editions of the President's Cup in Tashkent, including the singles main draw in 1997. As a doubles player he won one ITF Futures title and |
and east sides, with traces of an external ditch, about outside the inner rampart. Excavation There was excavation from 1955 to 1957. Traces of a palisaded enclosure were uncovered, consisting of three concentric palisades of oak. A sample was radio-carbon dated to about 580 BC: the early Iron Age. Similar palisaded hilltop enclosures have been found in north-east England and southern Scotland; they are the earliest type of defended settlement in the area. They indicate that there was much woodland here at that time. The excavation also found that it was probably an iron-working site during the Romano-British period, as iron slag and a probable iron-worker's hearth were found. There were also remains of rectangular buildings, interpreted as dating from the post-Roman period. Finds from the excavation included sherds of Romano-British pottery of the 2nd to 4th century, and sherds dating to the late 5th or early 6th century. Archaeological sites | century AD). It is a scheduled monument. Description The site is on an oval promontory, steep on the north and west sides, above a tributary of the River Wansbeck. There is a low earth and stone bank forming an enclosure, north-east to south-west by north-west to south-east, with an entrance of width on the east side, and slight traces inside of roundhouses and courtyard walls. This is thought to be a re-occupation in the Romano-British period, of an Iron Age defended settlement. The visible remains of the earlier settlement are two ramparts: the outer is wide and high on the south and east sides, with traces of an external ditch, about outside the inner rampart. Excavation There was excavation from 1955 to 1957. Traces of a palisaded enclosure were uncovered, consisting of |
to sing patriotic songs on stage.After that he gradually grew into the best stage speaker of the Congress party and became the Vellore Simmakkuralon Tiyagi VM.Appreciated by the heads of state as Munusamy, he considered the meeting of Mahatma Gandhi with him at the annual function of the Hindu Propaganda Sabha in Chennai and the meeting with Asia's Jyoti Pandit Jawaharlal twice during the Chennai Avadi Congress Conference and Nehru's Vellore tour as memorable events in his life. Quotes At the All India Congress Conference in Bombay on August 9, 1942, Mahatma Gandhi passed the Declaration of "Leave the White Man" and proclaimed the slogan "Fight or die until the whites leave".Accordingly, it was decided to hold a protest in Vellore as well.Knowing this,the British government arrested all the important leaders in Vellore.Our martyr V.M. Munusamy rallied the brave youth and heroes to march in procession from many parts of the country at the same time, raising the slogan 'Leave White on August 13, 1942'.The oppression of the English took place furiously in many places.Our martyr VM led the procession of about two thousand people.Munusamy has come to the Main Bazaar with a heroic walk like a fallen lion from Baburao Street. There he described to me the horrible attack of the English government on the Main Bazaar Road with people who had fallen with bloody wounds and the countless casualties that had fallen on the Main Bazaar Road which he described to me as a river of blood. Bodies will also see people losing limbs and limbs Undaunted, he led the struggle Our martyr The British officers who stopped them in the middle of the procession threatened to disperse and shoot everyone else.Immediately our martyr stood in front of the officer as they shot me first and then frantically tore the zippa he was wearing in two and shot the others.Knowing that he was the leader,all the English guards surrounded him and attacked him severely.Eventually they were thrown into the truck thinking life was gone.The martyrs with him were Mr.Sriramulu, Baburao Street Mr.Ilatsumanan, Mr.Vinayagam, Mr.Shanmugam,Mr.Pachaiyappan.Mr. Mani Iyer,Mr.Ganapathy and Mr.Datsinamoorthy Acharya were taken to court three days later after being left without food and water for three days.They were charged in court with treason.The judge looked at them and asked them how they were responding to the accusation leveled against them.Our martyr is a judge of a slave India.Not ready to answer you.I am ready to accept whatever punishment you give me.He was sentenced to seven months'rigorous imprisonment and sentenced to life imprisonment. Failure to do anything from gardening to gardening in prison will result in severe beatings by prison guards. The | the British and reduced to five fighters with our martyr.After sacrificing many true friends,our martyr decided that the Goddess of Freedom could no longer be achieved by a brutal war and adopted the sacred principle of non-violence of Mahatma Gandhi.He was arrested by his parents for fighting for the country as if his mother had come as a mother to milk the wise man who had lost the support of his father and father.Kodaiyidi Kuppusamy Mudaliar,Janap Upayathulla Sayapu, Thakaralotta Manikka Mudaliar,R.Jeevaratnam,S.Somasundaram Iyer,Jamathakini VM Got the friendship of Ramanujam.He was first used by the Congress party to sing patriotic songs on stage.After that he gradually grew into the best stage speaker of the Congress party and became the Vellore Simmakkuralon Tiyagi VM.Appreciated by the heads of state as Munusamy, he considered the meeting of Mahatma Gandhi with him at the annual function of the Hindu Propaganda Sabha in Chennai and the meeting with Asia's Jyoti Pandit Jawaharlal twice during the Chennai Avadi Congress Conference and Nehru's Vellore tour as memorable events in his life. Quotes At the All India Congress Conference in Bombay on August 9, 1942, Mahatma Gandhi passed the Declaration of "Leave the White Man" and proclaimed the slogan "Fight or die until the whites leave".Accordingly, it was decided to hold a protest in Vellore as well.Knowing this,the British government arrested all the important leaders in Vellore.Our martyr V.M. Munusamy rallied the brave youth and heroes to march in procession from many parts of the country at the same time, raising the slogan 'Leave White on August 13, 1942'.The oppression of the English took place furiously in many places.Our martyr VM led the procession of about two thousand people.Munusamy has come to the Main Bazaar with a heroic walk like a fallen lion |
India. It belongs to Bareilly Division.The Barha Vikram village has population of 1988 of which 1027 | of 1988 of which 1027 are males while 961 are females as per Population(2020). The total geographical area of Barha Vikram village is 225.26 |
Super League 2 club Olympiacos B. References 2003 births Living people | (; born 24 September 2003) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a winger for Super League 2 |
thallium poisoning, which had been mixed in with some wine. It soon became clear that Kucherov had complained of similar symptoms some time before, with another colleague of his, stage engineer Igor Lobanov, having the same issues. In that case, both men were driven to the hospital on a stretcher, as they had trouble walking by themselves. While undergoing treatment, they both reported that they suspected a man by the name of Vladimir Mezentsev, who had brought them a bottle of Sovetskoye Shampanskoye, which they both drank. The very next day, two 26-year-old graduates of the Minsk Civil Engineering Institute, Georgy Laptev and Vladimir Rybakov, were admitted to a hospital in Minsk. When questioned as to what had happened, they claimed that they were celebrating their graduation, and one of the girls at the party invited them to drink some rare Saperavi wine. As it turned out, two bottles of this wine were found by the girl's mother at the door of Mezentsev's apartment. Soon after this, both Laptev and Rybakov succumbed to the poisoning. In early July 1982, three more men (Viktor Babashkin, Igor Zanchuk and Oleg Skripachev) were admitted to the Minsk hospital, suffering from similar symptomps, and on the morning after their admission, all three victims' hair began to fall out. Investigations revealed that they had been poisoned with a bottle of "Duchess" wine given to them by Mezentsev. While all three survived, Skripachev received severe | easily offended individual. On the night of June 26, 1982, 27-year-old Sergey Kucherov, a stage engineer at the Janka Kupala National Theatre, died at the 5th Clinical Hospital. The man's death was considered very odd, as an autopsy proved that he had succumbed to thallium poisoning, which had been mixed in with some wine. It soon became clear that Kucherov had complained of similar symptoms some time before, with another colleague of his, stage engineer Igor Lobanov, having the same issues. In that case, both men were driven to the hospital on a stretcher, as they had trouble walking by themselves. While undergoing treatment, they both reported that they suspected a man by the name of Vladimir Mezentsev, who had brought them a bottle of Sovetskoye Shampanskoye, which they both drank. The very next day, two 26-year-old graduates of the Minsk Civil Engineering Institute, Georgy Laptev and Vladimir Rybakov, were admitted to a hospital in Minsk. When questioned as to what had happened, they claimed that they were celebrating their graduation, and one of the girls at the party invited them to drink some rare Saperavi wine. As it turned out, two bottles of this wine were found by the girl's mother at the door of Mezentsev's apartment. Soon after this, both Laptev and Rybakov succumbed to the poisoning. In early July 1982, three more men (Viktor Babashkin, Igor Zanchuk and Oleg Skripachev) were admitted to the Minsk hospital, suffering from similar symptomps, and on the morning after their admission, all three victims' hair began to fall out. Investigations revealed that they had been poisoned with a bottle of "Duchess" wine given to them by Mezentsev. While all three survived, Skripachev received severe complications from the poisoning and committed suicide a few years later. Due to the mounting suspicions against him, Mezentsev was arrested and brought in for interrogation, but to the surprise of the investigators, he told them that all of the bottles were given |
1929; the new Sadler's Wells Theatre in Clerkenwell (1926–31); and a series of super cinemas, the most notable of which being the State Cinema in Grays, Essex, which opened in 1938. Chancellor retired shortly before 1939 and died at his Buckinghamshire home in 1940. Biography Early years Francis Graham Moon Chancellor was born on 30 September 1869 in Runnymede, Tasmania. He was one of 10 children, and the fourth eldest son, born to Edward Chancellor (1824–1893) and his wife, Elizabeth Morgan. Francis's great uncle was the publisher and former Lord Mayor of London, Francis Moon, making him a first cousin once-removed to the Chelmsford-based architect, Frederic Chancellor. Francis Chancellor was educated at Christ College, Hobart, before commencing training as an architect in Tasmania. Soon after the death of his father in 1893, Chancellor boarded the RMS Oroya from Sydney to London, arriving on 30 May 1894. Works The theatre architect Frank Matcham designed some of London's best known playhouses, including the Hippodrome (1900), Hackney Empire (1901), Coliseum (1903), and the Palladium (1910), retired from theatre building after the completion of the Victoria Palace Theatre in 1911. On 31 January 1913, he handed over his practice, Matcham & Co., in part, to Chancellor. Upon Matcham's death in 1921, Chancellor was entrusted to act as co-executor of Matcham's will, alongside one of Matcham's most | and a series of super cinemas, the most notable of which being the State Cinema in Grays, Essex, which opened in 1938. Chancellor retired shortly before 1939 and died at his Buckinghamshire home in 1940. Biography Early years Francis Graham Moon Chancellor was born on 30 September 1869 in Runnymede, Tasmania. He was one of 10 children, and the fourth eldest son, born to Edward Chancellor (1824–1893) and his wife, Elizabeth Morgan. Francis's great uncle was the publisher and former Lord Mayor of London, Francis Moon, making him a first cousin once-removed to the Chelmsford-based architect, Frederic Chancellor. Francis Chancellor was educated at Christ College, Hobart, before commencing training as an architect in Tasmania. Soon after the death of his father in 1893, Chancellor boarded the RMS Oroya from Sydney to London, arriving on 30 May 1894. Works The theatre architect Frank Matcham designed some of London's best known playhouses, including the Hippodrome (1900), Hackney Empire (1901), Coliseum (1903), and the Palladium (1910), retired from theatre building after the completion of the Victoria Palace Theatre in 1911. On 31 January 1913, he handed over his practice, |
in the singles main draw of the 1998 President's Cup and was beaten in the first round by Marat Safin, who was seeded sixth. ITF Futures finals Doubles: 1 (0–1) | and was beaten in the first round by Marat Safin, who was seeded sixth. ITF Futures finals Doubles: 1 (0–1) References External links 1975 births Living people Uzbekistani male |
Venezia and Palermo, as well as transfer consultant and scout at Queens Park Rangers F.C.. Personal life Di Marzio's son, Gianluca, is a renowned Italian football journalist and pundit, working with Sky Italia. Death He died in Padua on 22 January 2022, at the age of 82. References 1940 births 2022 deaths Sportspeople from Naples S.S. Juve Stabia players Italian football managers A.S.G. Nocerina managers S.S. Juve Stabia managers U.S. Catanzaro 1929 managers S.S.C. Napoli managers Genoa C.F.C. managers U.S. Lecce managers Calcio Catania managers | January 2022) was an Italian professional football manager. Career After leaving his footballer career for an injury, he debuted as a manager in 1968 in Serie C. He had his breakout as the coach of Catanzaro, which he led to an unexpected promotion in Serie A in 1976. With Napoli he got a Coppa Italia final in 1978, losing the trophy against Inter Milan. In 1983 he brought Catania in Serie A, and in 1988 Cosenza in Serie B. He |
killing at least one person, with five missing as of 19 January. The construction company HDC Hyundai Development Company is being investigated by the government, and its chairman has resigned. See also 2021 Gwangju building collapse | building under construction collapsed in Gwangju, South Korea during demolition, killing at least one person, with five missing as of 19 January. The construction company HDC Hyundai Development Company is being investigated by the government, and its chairman has resigned. See also |
length; at its southern part, it confluences with the famous Camino de Santiago (Austrian route). There are two campsite resorts. It is allowed to swim and bath. The northern shore consists of bogland since 1883 | Der Wallersee is a lake in the Austrian state of Salzburg northeast of the city oft Salzburg in Salzburg-Umgebung District. Around the lake there is a hiking path of about length; at its southern part, it confluences with |
that Urus had just died (in 1377), Qāghān Beg granted Tokhtamysh lands at the estuary of the Tana (Don). Tokhtamysh attempted to incite Qāghān Beg to a common campaign against Mamai, but after initially inclining to action, Qāghān Beg decided against it. Disappointed by Qāghān Beg, Tokhtamysh left, but not before receiving generous presents and many horses from ʿArab Shāh. Subsequently, assisted by his protector Timur (Tamerlane), Tokhtamysh overthrew Urus Khan's heirs and made himself ruler of the former Ulus of Orda in 1379. He then demanded the submission of Qāghān Beg, who cautiously responded that he had to receive instructions to do so from his overlord, ʿArab Shāh. Tokhtamysh accordingly advanced on Sarai, demanding ʿArab Shāh's submission, which he received. Recognized as khan at Sarai and eliminating Mamai, Tokhtamysh showed generosity to both Qāghān Beg and ʿArab Shāh, rewarding Qāghān Beg with the same lands at the Tana estuary that he had previously given Tokhtamysh, and allowing ʿArab Shāh to rule the Ulus of Shiban. Qāghān Beg died, therefore, some time after 1380. Descendants According to the Tawārīḫ-i guzīdah-i nuṣrat-nāmah, Qāghān Beg had a son, Maḥmūd Khwāja, who later ruled in Sibir and the Golden Horde in 1428–1430. Genealogy Genghis Khan Jochi Shiban Bahadur Jochi-Buqa Bādāqūl Ming-Tīmūr Īl Beg Qāghān Beg See also List of Khans of the Golden Horde References Desmaisons, P. I. (transl.), Histoire des Mongols et des Tatares par Aboul-Ghâzi Béhâdour Khân, St Petersburg, 1871–1874. Gaev, A. G., "Genealogija i hronologija Džučidov," Numizmatičeskij sbornik 3 (2002) 9-55. Howorth, H. H., History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century. Part II.1. London, 1880. Judin, V. P., Utemiš-hadži, Čingiz-name, Alma-Ata, 1992. Počekaev, R. J., Cari ordynskie: Biografii hanov i pravitelej Zolotoj Ordy. Saint Petersburg, | Disappointed by Qāghān Beg, Tokhtamysh left, but not before receiving generous presents and many horses from ʿArab Shāh. Subsequently, assisted by his protector Timur (Tamerlane), Tokhtamysh overthrew Urus Khan's heirs and made himself ruler of the former Ulus of Orda in 1379. He then demanded the submission of Qāghān Beg, who cautiously responded that he had to receive instructions to do so from his overlord, ʿArab Shāh. Tokhtamysh accordingly advanced on Sarai, demanding ʿArab Shāh's submission, which he received. Recognized as khan at Sarai and eliminating Mamai, Tokhtamysh showed generosity to both Qāghān Beg and ʿArab Shāh, rewarding Qāghān Beg with the same lands at the Tana estuary that he had previously given Tokhtamysh, and allowing ʿArab Shāh to rule the Ulus of Shiban. Qāghān Beg died, therefore, some time after 1380. Descendants According to the Tawārīḫ-i guzīdah-i nuṣrat-nāmah, Qāghān Beg had a son, Maḥmūd Khwāja, who later ruled in Sibir and the Golden Horde in 1428–1430. Genealogy Genghis Khan Jochi Shiban Bahadur Jochi-Buqa Bādāqūl Ming-Tīmūr Īl Beg Qāghān Beg See also List of Khans of the Golden Horde References Desmaisons, P. I. (transl.), Histoire des Mongols et des Tatares par Aboul-Ghâzi Béhâdour Khân, St Petersburg, 1871–1874. Gaev, A. G., "Genealogija i hronologija Džučidov," Numizmatičeskij sbornik 3 (2002) 9-55. Howorth, H. H., History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century. Part II.1. London, 1880. Judin, V. P., Utemiš-hadži, Čingiz-name, Alma-Ata, 1992. Počekaev, R. J., Cari ordynskie: Biografii hanov i pravitelej Zolotoj Ordy. Saint Petersburg, 2010a. Počekaev, R. J., Mamaj: Istorija “anti-geroja” v istorii, Sankt-Peterburg, 2010b. Sabitov, Ž. M., Genealogija "Tore", Astana, 2008. Safargaliev, M. G., Raspad Zolotoj Ordy. Saransk, 1960. Sagdeeva, R. Z., Serebrjannye monety hanov Zolotoj Ordy, Moscow, 2005. Seleznëv, J. V., Èlita Zolotoj Ordy, Kazan', 2009. Sidorenko, V. A., "Hronologija pravlenii zolotoordynskih hanov 1357-1380 gg.," Materialov po arheologii, istorii i ètnografii Tavrii 7 (2000) 267–288. Tizengauzen, |
References 2003 births Living people Greek footballers Greece youth international footballers Super League Greece 2 players Olympiacos F.C. players | Super League 2 club Olympiacos B. References 2003 births Living people Greek footballers Greece youth international footballers Super League Greece 2 |
unit must lose strength points equal to what the victorious unit lost or the number of hexes the victorious unit can pursue, whichever is greater. If the victorious unit catches the defending unit, the retreating unit is eliminated. In addition, units that lose too many strength points become offensively ineffective, although they can still fight defensively. Victory conditions The Austrians win by if they are in possession of Verona at the end of the game and the French have not completely surrounded the city. Alternatively the Austrians can win by exiting 10 or more strength points off the south edge of the map. The French win by preventing an Austrian victory. Publication history Arcola was designed by Kevin Zucker as a microgame using the same system as Zucker's previously published full-sized wargame Bonaparte in Italy (1975). The game was packaged in a ziplock bag and published by OSG in 1979. In 1983, Avalon Hill republished Arcola in a small box with a mounted map. The eight pages of the original rule booklet were reprinted on both sides of a single 8.5" x 11 piece of paper; the game mechanics remained unchanged. Reception In Issue 26 of Phoenix, Peter Bolton was not impressed, writing, "The overall impression of Arcola is one of disappointment." Bolton felt the game could have been better, especially the leader-movement rules. On the plus side, he noted that "Certainly the feel that this is warfare Napoleon Bonaparte style is conveyed and to a greater degree that other games of the same period and same level." But he questioned whether playing this game would tempt players to purchase OSG's larger Bonaparte in Italy, saying, "To become more than just another game for the odd hour, more is needed. It is going to require a fair bit of imagination if Arcola is to succeed as a carrot to tempt gamers to go for Bonaparte in Italy." In Issue 52 of Moves, Ian Chadwick found the map area too small, and the rules did not work for a small game. He gave the game grades of B for playability, B for historical accuracy, and A for component quality. David Lent, writing for Centurion's Review, reviewed the Avalon Hill edition and found the original rules reprinted on a single sheet of paper were annoying, noting "Subsequent pages are not next | by Kevin Zucker as a microgame using the same system as Zucker's previously published full-sized wargame Bonaparte in Italy (1975). The game was packaged in a ziplock bag and published by OSG in 1979. In 1983, Avalon Hill republished Arcola in a small box with a mounted map. The eight pages of the original rule booklet were reprinted on both sides of a single 8.5" x 11 piece of paper; the game mechanics remained unchanged. Reception In Issue 26 of Phoenix, Peter Bolton was not impressed, writing, "The overall impression of Arcola is one of disappointment." Bolton felt the game could have been better, especially the leader-movement rules. On the plus side, he noted that "Certainly the feel that this is warfare Napoleon Bonaparte style is conveyed and to a greater degree that other games of the same period and same level." But he questioned whether playing this game would tempt players to purchase OSG's larger Bonaparte in Italy, saying, "To become more than just another game for the odd hour, more is needed. It is going to require a fair bit of imagination if Arcola is to succeed as a carrot to tempt gamers to go for Bonaparte in Italy." In Issue 52 of Moves, Ian Chadwick found the map area too small, and the rules did not work for a small game. He gave the game grades of |
Johor, Sultan Ibrahim Ismail consented to the dissolution of the Johor State Legislative Assembly on 22 January 2022. The state election is the fourth election after the 2018 general election, resulting in the most amount of non-simultaneous elections between federal and state elections in a single 5-year term of parliament in the nation's history. The state election is also the third election after Ismail Sabri Yaakob took over as Prime Minister in August 2021. The state election will also be the first in which 18-20 year olds are eligible to vote after the gazettement of the constitutional amendment on 15 December 2021. Election cycles Johor became the fourth state in Malaysia to not hold its state elections simultaneously with national elections, after Sarawak (since 1979), Sabah (since 2020), and Malacca (since 2021). Kelantan (1978–1982) held its state election in March 1978 following a political crisis the previous year, but national elections were held only 4 months later. Since then election cycles in Kelantan have synchronized with national elections. Electoral system Elections in Malaysia are conducted at the federal and state levels. Federal elections elect members of the Dewan Rakyat, the lower house of Parliament, while state elections in each of the 13 states elect members of their respective state legislative assembly. As Malaysia follows the Westminster system of government, the head of government (Prime Minister at the federal level and the Menteri Besar/Chief Ministers at the state level) is the person who commands the confidence of the majority of members in the respective legislature – this is normally the leader of the party or coalition with the majority of seats in the legislature. The Legislative Assembly consists of 56 members, known as Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs), that are elected for five-year terms. Each MLA is elected from a single-member constituencies using the first-past-the-post voting system; each constituency contains approximately an equal number of voters. If one party obtains a majority of seats, then that party is entitled to form the government, with its leader becoming the Chief Minister. In the event of a hung parliament, where no single party obtains the majority of seats, the government may still form through a coalition or a confidence and supply agreement with other parties. In practice, coalitions and alliances in Malaysia, and by extension, in Johor, generally persist between elections, and member parties do not normally contest for the same seats. Constituencies Composition before dissolution Timeline Events from the Dissolution of the Johor State Legislative Assembly to the Issue of the Writ of Election (22 January to 9 February 2022) Events from the Issue of the Writ of Election to the Nomination Day (10 to 26 February 2022) Events from the Nomination Day to the Early Polling Day for Postal and Advance Voters & Campaigning Period Part 1 (27 February to 8 March 2022) Events from the Early Polling Day for Postal and Advance Voters to the Polling Day & Campaigning Period Part 2 (9 to 12 March 2022) Electoral candidates Results Summary |- ! rowspan=2 colspan=4 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" | Party ! rowspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Candidates ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" | for Postal and Advance Voters to the Polling Day & Campaigning Period Part 2 (9 to 12 March 2022) Electoral candidates Results Summary |- ! rowspan=2 colspan=4 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" | Party ! rowspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Candidates ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Vote ! colspan=3 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Seats |- ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |% ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |Won ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |% ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:center;" |+/– |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2" | Barisan Nasional||BN|| 56|| || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | rowspan=3| | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |United Malays National Organisation||UMNO|| 37 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: " | | style="text-align:left;"|Malaysian Chinese Association||MCA|| 15 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |Malaysian Indian Congress||MIC|| 4 || || || || || |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2" | Perikatan Nasional ||PN|| 56 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | rowspan=3| | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |Malaysian United Indigenous Party||BERSATU|| 33 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |Malaysian Islamic Party||PAS|| 15 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |Malaysian People's Movement Party||GERAKAN|| 8 || || || || || |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2" | Pakatan Harapan ||PH|| 50 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | rowspan=3| | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |People's Justice Party||PKR|| 20 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |National Trust Party||AMANAH|| 16 || || || || || |-style="background:#EFEFEF;" | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" |Democratic Action Party||DAP|| 14 || || || || || |- |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Malaysian United Democratic Alliance||MUDA|| 7 || || || || ||New |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Homeland Fighters' Party||PEJUANG|| 42 || || || || ||New |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Heritage Party||WARISAN|| 6 || || || || ||New |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Malaysian Nation Party||PBM|| 4 || || || || ||New |- | style="background-color:yellow" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Parti Bumiputera Perkasa Malaysia||PUTRA|| 1 || || || || || New |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2"|Socialist Party of Malaysia||PSM|| 1 || || || || ||New |- | style="background-color: ;" | | style="text-align:left;" colspan="2" |Independents||IND|| 16 || || || || || |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="5" |Valid votes|| 0 ||rowspan=2 colspan="4" style="background-color:#dcdcdc"| |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="5" |Invalid/blank votes|| 0 |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="5" |Total votes (voter turnout : %)|| 0 || 100.00 || 56 || 100.00 || 0 |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="5" |Did not vote|| 0 ||rowspan="7" colspan="4" style="background-color:#dcdcdc;"| |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="5" |Registered voters||2,597,742 |- | || style="text-align:left;" colspan="4" |Ordinary voters|| 2,597,742 |- | || style="text-align:left;" colspan="4" |Early voters|| 0 |- | || style="text-align:left;" colspan="4" |Postal voters|| 0 |- | style="text-align:left;" colspan="10" | Source : |} By parliamentary constituency Seats that changed allegiance Election pendulum Departing |
births Living people Greek footballers Super League Greece 2 players | club Olympiacos B. References 2002 births Living people Greek footballers Super League Greece 2 players Olympiacos F.C. players Association |
main blow with the main forces north of Melitopol (4 armies, 2 tank ]]and 2 cavalry corps) - and an secondary one, by the forces of the 28th Army, from the area south of Melitopol, bypassing the city from the south west. The offensive was launched with virtually no operational pause at the request of the Headquarters, in order to prevent the enemy from settling on the defensive line. Without proper preparation and reconnaissance, and because of the fatigue of the troops and the depletion of materiel, the Soviet offensive stalled after 5 days with heavy losses, and an advance of only 2–10 km. From September 30 to October 9, the offensive was temporarily stopped. After a thorough analysis of the situation and finding that Karl-Adolf Hollidt, commander of the German 6th Army was transferring significant forces from his southern flank to the northern, Fyodor Tolbukhin regrouped the main forces in the opposite direction and delivered a massive blow to the weakened enemy grouping. The transfer of troops of the 51st Army, tank and cavalry corps to the zone of the 28th Army made it possible to achieve the greatest success in the southern direction, and two weeks after the resumption of the operation, on October 23, Melitopol was liberated by the 51st Army in cooperation with the troops of the 28th Army. At the same time, the troops advancing north of the city also broke through the defenses and cut the Zaporizhzhia-Melitopol railway line. A mobile cavalry-mechanized group "Storm" was formed to advance through the gap south of Melitopol, as part of the 4th Guards Kuban Cavalry Corps and 19th Tank Corps, supported by aviation. On October 24, all German troops were forced to begin a general retreat. Pursuing the | area south of Melitopol, bypassing the city from the south west. The offensive was launched with virtually no operational pause at the request of the Headquarters, in order to prevent the enemy from settling on the defensive line. Without proper preparation and reconnaissance, and because of the fatigue of the troops and the depletion of materiel, the Soviet offensive stalled after 5 days with heavy losses, and an advance of only 2–10 km. From September 30 to October 9, the offensive was temporarily stopped. After a thorough analysis of the situation and finding that Karl-Adolf Hollidt, commander of the German 6th Army was transferring significant forces from his southern flank to the northern, Fyodor Tolbukhin regrouped the main forces in the opposite direction and delivered a massive blow to the weakened enemy grouping. The transfer of troops of the 51st Army, tank and cavalry corps to the zone of the 28th Army made it possible to achieve the greatest success in the southern direction, and two weeks after the resumption of the operation, on October 23, Melitopol was liberated by the 51st Army in cooperation with the troops of the 28th Army. At the same time, the troops advancing north of the city also broke through the defenses and cut the Zaporizhzhia-Melitopol railway line. A mobile cavalry-mechanized group "Storm" was formed to advance through the gap south of Melitopol, as part of the 4th Guards Kuban Cavalry Corps and 19th Tank Corps, supported by aviation. On October 24, all German troops were forced to begin a general retreat. Pursuing the enemy, on October 30, Soviet troops liberated Henichesk and reached the coast of the Sivash Bay. On November 1, having overcome the Turkish Wall, they gained a foothold in the Perekop Isthmus. By the night of November 5, the troops reached the lower reaches of the Dnieper and captured a bridgehead on the southern bank of the Sivash Bay. |
who plays as a winger for Greek Super League 2 club Olympiacos B. His father is Ariel Ibagaza. References 2003 births Living people | professional footballer who plays as a winger for Greek Super League 2 club Olympiacos B. His father is Ariel Ibagaza. |
of views in a few minutes. A new music video titled Main Chala, starring actors Salman Khan and Pragya Jaiswal, has recently been released online. It also features artists Guru Randhawa and Iulia Vantur. Salman Khan-Pragya Jaiswal looks dreamy in the love song | also features artists Guru Randhawa and Iulia Vantur. Salman Khan-Pragya Jaiswal looks dreamy in the love song of Guru Randhawa-Iulia Vantur. A long-awaited music video featuring Bollywood star Salman Khan and Pragya Jaiswal has been released. |
in that state were "questionable". In February 1938, the commission suspended the licenses of manager Joe Jacobs and boxer Tony Galento for Galento's failure to fight Harry Thomas. Galento's license was restored within a few months, however the commission refused to license Jacobs for the Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling rematch later that year. In 1939 Brown and Phelan sued boxing promoter James J. Johnston for libel over Johnston's allegations that the two commissioners had a financial interest in the Twentieth Century Sporting Club. The suit ended when Johnston made a statement denying that he had used the word "financial" and added that he never meant to accuse Brown and Phelan of "malfeasance or misfeasance of any kind". In 1940 the commission voted to fine and suspend Al Davis after his disqualification loss to Fritzie Zivic, with Brown stating that although the commission did not have the power to suspend a boxer for life, Davis would be suspended “for the life of the commission”. The commission reinstated Davis the following year for his rematch against Zivic. Brown retired from the commission on January 1, 1943, in order to focus on his farm. He died on September 3, 1943, at his farm in Garrison. He was buried in Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. References 1874 births 1943 deaths American boxing promoters American boxing referees American boxing trainers American wrestling coaches American wrestlers Burials at Gate of Heaven Cemetery (Hawthorne, New York) Farmers from New York (state) Irish emigrants to the United States (before 1923) New York State Athletic Commissioners People from | commissioners John J. Phelan and D. Walker Wear. Baer ended up defeating Carnera by technical knockout. In 1935, Brown and Phelan ordered a reversal of the decision in the Vince Dundee–Eddie Risko fight. The fight was originally declared a victory for Sisko, with Judge Sidney Scharlin and referee Jed Gahan voting in favor of Sisko and the other judge, Jack Britton, voting in favor of Dundee. Phelan, who was sitting at ringside, immediately performed an inspection of the ballots and found that Britton gave seven to Dundee and three to Risko and Scharlin scored five rounds for Dundee with four to Risko. Phelan, Brown, and Scharlin conferred and the decision was reversed in favor of Dundee. Later that year, Brown objected to a proposed fight between Carnera and Ray Impelletiere on the grounds that Impelletiere was not experienced enough to fight Carnera, but was overruled by the other two commissioners. In 1936, Brown and Phelan voted to cancel a bout between Hank Bath and Red Burman after they received a telegram from the secretary of the California State Athletic Commission reporting that two of Bath's fights in that state were "questionable". In February 1938, the commission suspended the licenses of manager Joe Jacobs and boxer Tony Galento for Galento's failure to fight Harry Thomas. Galento's license was restored within a few months, however the |
1918 players S.S. Lazio players ACF Fiorentina players Brescia Calcio players S.P.A.L. players Serie A players Serie B players Association football defenders Italian football managers Empoli F.C. managers Pisa S.C. managers S.S.D. Lucchese 1905 managers A.C. Perugia Calcio managers S.S.D. | — 20 May 2001) was an Italian football defender and later manager. References 1940 births 2001 deaths Sportspeople from Milan Italian footballers U.S. Triestina Calcio 1918 players S.S. Lazio players ACF Fiorentina players Brescia Calcio players S.P.A.L. players Serie A players Serie B players Association football defenders Italian football managers Empoli F.C. managers |
July 2003) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Super League 2 club Panathinaikos B. References | for Super League 2 club Panathinaikos B. References 2003 births Living people Greek footballers Super League Greece 2 players Panathinaikos |
he left Italy, but then returned to the country and was arrested by the Fascist authorities. Early life and education Philipson was born in Florence in 1889. His father, Edoardo Philipson, was an engineer who was one of the most influential members of the Florentine Jewish Community of the nineteenth century. Philipson was the business partner of Ubaldino Peruzzi who served as the minister of public works for two terms. His mother was Sophie Rodrigues Pereire, daughter of Isaac Pereire, who was a French banker. Dino Philipson was raised in Pistoia and obtained a bachelor's degree in law and social sciences in Florence. Following the start of World War I he enlisted in the army and was later promoted to the rank of lieutenant. Career and activities In 1919 Philipson became the president of the Pistoia section of the National Combatants and Veterans Association. The same year he was elected as a deputy from Florence on the list called Liberal Concentration. In the 1921 elections he was also elected to the Parliament from the National Bloc. Later he joined the Liberal Democratic Union. When the Kingdom of Italy totally became under the Fascist rule from 1922 Philipson left the country for Paris, France. There he had | Liberal Party. During the Fascist rule he left Italy, but then returned to the country and was arrested by the Fascist authorities. Early life and education Philipson was born in Florence in 1889. His father, Edoardo Philipson, was an engineer who was one of the most influential members of the Florentine Jewish Community of the nineteenth century. Philipson was the business partner of Ubaldino Peruzzi who served as the minister of public works for two terms. His mother was Sophie Rodrigues Pereire, daughter of Isaac Pereire, who was a French banker. Dino Philipson was raised in Pistoia and obtained a bachelor's degree in law and social sciences |
ACF Fiorentina players S.S.C. Napoli players S.P.A.L. players U.S. Pistoiese 1921 players U.S. Città di Pontedera players Serie A players Association football wingers Italian football managers Cosenza Calcio managers Parma Calcio 1913 managers A.S.D. Sorrento | football managers Cosenza Calcio managers Parma Calcio 1913 managers A.S.D. Sorrento managers U.S. Salernitana 1919 managers Trapani Calcio |
botanist Martin Vahl in 1805. See also List of Cyperus species References sphaerocephalus Taxa named by Martin Vahl Plants described in 1805 Flora of Somalia Flora of South Africa | species of sedge that is native to parts of Africa. The species was first formally described by the botanist Martin Vahl in 1805. See also |
football defender and later manager. References 1935 births 2010 deaths Sportspeople from Brescia Italian footballers A.C. Reggiana 1919 players Palermo F.C. players Calcio Padova | managers Rimini F.C. 1912 managers Calcio Foggia 1920 S.S.D. managers Calcio Padova managers U.S. Salernitana 1919 managers A.C.N. Siena 1904 managers |
Christ of the Latter-day Saints, the Tzu Chi organization, Council member Jose Solorio, and members of the Boys and Girls Club, and counsel members to collect and distribute food to impoverished communities in Orange County, California. References Non-profit | Pura Vida Foundation (EMLMPV) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit headquartered in the Santa Ana, California. According to the Candid organization, the EMLMPV foundation was founded in March 2020 by Julia and Wilbur Salazar, with the aim of providing relief to immigrants struggling with poverty and assimilation through education, food drives, and |
was 29, all Serbs. References Populated places in | in the municipality of Lukavac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 |
is a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority. She also serves as a Criminal Justice Reform activist. Acting and Music Career Meka got her first break in acting when appearing as a featured extra in Kasi Lemmons’ Eve's Bayou which features Samuel L. Jackson, Lynn Whitfield, Lisa Nicole Carson, Jurnee Smollett, Debbi Morgan, Meagan Good, and Diahann Carroll. She went on to work in radio and appear in national TV spots. Meka gained attention in the Hip hop scene when she began showcasing her lyrical delivery of rapping in twist and triple twist patterns. After relocating from New Orleans to Atlanta, Meka first signed to Evander Holyfield’s Real Deal Records and appeared as a guest artist on Cuttboy G-Dinero’s single "Tilt Ya Hat" which also features Pastor Troy. In 2016, she featured on G-Dinero's single "Woedee" with Mike Will Made-It's Ear Drummer Records artist Eearz. She later joined Corey "C-Murder" Miller's TRU Records, appearing as a guest artist on numerous collaborations with Miller, including Ricochet and Boosie Badazz and C-Murder's joint album Penitentiary Chances on the track "Remember Me". In 2002, C-Murder was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of 16-year-old Steve Thomas. Due to controversy surrounding Miller's trial, 2Meka submitted Corey Miller's case to Reasonable Doubt, a true-crime show with the TV network | features Pastor Troy. In 2016, she featured on G-Dinero's single "Woedee" with Mike Will Made-It's Ear Drummer Records artist Eearz. She later joined Corey "C-Murder" Miller's TRU Records, appearing as a guest artist on numerous collaborations with Miller, including Ricochet and Boosie Badazz and C-Murder's joint album Penitentiary Chances on the track "Remember Me". In 2002, C-Murder was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of 16-year-old Steve Thomas. Due to controversy surrounding Miller's trial, 2Meka submitted Corey Miller's case to Reasonable Doubt, a true-crime show with the TV network Investigation Discovery. When investigators on the show examined his case, two key witnesses recanted their statements, claiming they had been pressured into testifying against Miller by authorities. In 2020, Meka released a solo single project "B.M.S" (Bang My Sh**), produced by President of TRU Records Cuttboy G-Dinero. The record was hailed as an original, distinguished banger appearing on national/international video channels and securing the #7 position on the Urban Influencer Rap Mixshow Chart. She also was featured in Billboards 2021 Grammy Preview Issue. In 2021, Meka, C Murder, and Cuttboy G Dinero released a single collaboration titled "Bitch", which rips non-stop, twisted, back-to back split verses between the trio. She recently contributed to C-Murder's 10th studio album Give Me Freedom or Give Me Death in which she performs a self-written monologue entitled "Reflections". Meka also brands her voice with professional voiceovers and voice tags for various clients. References Living people African-American women rappers Hardcore hip hop artists 21st-century American rappers 21st-century American women musicians 21st-century women rappers African-American songwriters Entertainers from Louisiana 21st-century African-American women African-American women singer-songwriters Actresses from New Orleans Singer-songwriters from Louisiana African-American feminists American people |
league appearances and scored 12 goals. On 23 July 1981, he debuted for Laval during a 1-1 draw with Sochaux. On 3 August 1981, Þórðarson scored his first 2 goals for Laval during a 2-0 win over Auxerre. In 1984, he signed for Icelandic club ÍA. References External links Icelandic footballers Expatriate footballers in France Expatriate footballers in Belgium Stade Lavallois players Ligue 1 players R.A.A. Louviéroise players | 2-0 win over Auxerre. In 1984, he signed for Icelandic club ÍA. References External links Icelandic footballers Expatriate footballers in France Expatriate footballers in Belgium Stade Lavallois players Ligue 1 players R.A.A. Louviéroise players 1955 births Íþróttabandalag Akraness players Belgian First Division A players Úrvalsdeild karla (football) players Icelandic expatriate sportspeople in France Living people Iceland international footballers Association football midfielders Icelandic expatriate sportspeople |
appreciation for its music. K. S. Chithra, who sung the song received lots of praise for her work. Critical reviews 123Telugu on reviewing the music of the soundtrack wrote that "A typical ladies number which is filled with festivity all over. Chitra’s melodious singing brings a lot of fun to this song which is ably supported by Sirivennela Seetarama Sastry classy lyrics." IndiaGlitz.com stated that "Mickey completes his album yet again with a traditional song steeped in classical-like music. Gopikamma is sung by Chitra to perfection. Needless to say, Sirivennela's putative lyrical depth comes to the fore yet again, embracing the secular and the divine." Live performances K. | music of the soundtrack wrote that "A typical ladies number which is filled with festivity all over. Chitra’s melodious singing brings a lot of fun to this song which is ably supported by Sirivennela Seetarama Sastry classy lyrics." IndiaGlitz.com stated that "Mickey completes his album yet again with a traditional song steeped in classical-like music. Gopikamma is sung by Chitra to perfection. Needless to say, Sirivennela's putative lyrical depth comes to the fore yet again, embracing the secular and the divine." Live performances K. S. Chithra performed the song at the Swarabhishekam event on 21 January 2018. At the film's audio launch held at Hyderabad on 3 December |
national importance and special interest". The parish contains the villages of Aldercar and Langley Mill and the surrounding area. The oldest building is Codnor Castle, which is listed, together with a nearby farmhouse and farm building. The other listed building in the parish is a | and special interest". The parish contains the villages of Aldercar and Langley Mill and the surrounding area. The oldest building is Codnor Castle, which is listed, together with a nearby farmhouse and farm building. The |
km classical race. After that she participated at three FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships between 2011 and 2013 (with her best personal result being 54th in 10 km skiathlon in Turkish Erzerum in 2012). Olekh also took part in three Universiades (2013, 2015, and 2017), with her best individual finish being 28th in 5 km freestyle pursuit and best team result being 5th in 3x5 km relay (together with Tarasenko and Nasyko) both in 2017. She debuted at World Cup on January 23, 2021, in Finnish Lahti where she finished 49th in skiathlon. As of January 2022, Olekh's best World Cup individual finish was 47th in a 10 km freestyle | Ruka, Finland, on November 28, 2021, and best World Cup team finish was 11th in a 4x5 km relay in Lahti, Finland, on January 24, 2021 (together with Antsybor, Kaminska, and Kovalova). In 2022, Viktoriya Olekh was nominated for her first Winter Games in Beijing. She participated at two FIS Nordic World Ski Championships. As of January 2022, her best individual finish was 46th in 30 km classical race in 2021. Cross-country skiing results All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). Olympic Games World Championships World Cup Season standings References External links 1993 births Living people Ukrainian female cross-country skiers Competitors at the 2013 Winter |
the English provincial of the order, to allow John of St. Giles, "who is coming to England at Michaelmas, to be with him for a year". Under the same dare (1235) Matthew Paris records that John was sent with a message from the Emperor Frederick to Henry III concerning the pregnancy of the Empress Isabella. Perhaps John had been attending the empress professionally. On coming to England John became the head of the Dominican schools at Oxford, and held the position for many years. He formed a close friendship with Grosseteste, who in 1237 begged Friar Jordan, the general of the order, for permission to have John always with him. The Bishop conferred on John the Prebend of Leighton at Lincoln, and in 1239 made him chancellor of his diocese. John was also appointed Archdeacon of Oxford some time between 1236 and 1241. In 1239 he was made one of the royal councillors, and in 1242 he is mentioned as receiving the dying confession of the pirate, William de Marisco or Marsh. John had resigned his archdeaconry before 1244, apparently through bad health. In 1253 Grosseteste sent for John when dying, and in a remarkable conversation with him condemned the friars for their lack of zeal in condoning the faults of the great, and especially in not opposing the improper preferments conferred by the Pope. John attended Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, when ill from poison in 1258: he had once saved Grosseteste's life on a like occasion. This is the last notice we have of John, who must have been of a great age, and probably died not long afterwards. Legacy Matthew Paris says John was an "elegant scholar and teacher, skilled in medicine and theology". Elsewhere he is described as "vir bonus et | the order, for permission to have John always with him. The Bishop conferred on John the Prebend of Leighton at Lincoln, and in 1239 made him chancellor of his diocese. John was also appointed Archdeacon of Oxford some time between 1236 and 1241. In 1239 he was made one of the royal councillors, and in 1242 he is mentioned as receiving the dying confession of the pirate, William de Marisco or Marsh. John had resigned his archdeaconry before 1244, apparently through bad health. In 1253 Grosseteste sent for John when dying, and in a remarkable conversation with him condemned the friars for their lack of zeal in condoning the faults of the great, and especially in not opposing the improper preferments conferred by the Pope. John attended Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, when ill from poison in 1258: he had once saved Grosseteste's life on a like occasion. This is the last notice we have of John, who must have been of a great age, and probably died not long afterwards. Legacy Matthew Paris says John was an "elegant scholar and teacher, skilled in medicine and theology". Elsewhere he is described as "vir bonus et sanctus, cujus facies et vita erat gratiosa". Trivet calls him "suavissimus moralizator", and says his capacity in this respect was clear to any one who had inspected his books "manu propria emendatos". The same writer adds that he was a very skilful physician, and that many wonderful stories were told of his prognostications and cures. The names of a number of treatises ascribed to John have been preserved, but the only one extant is a collection of medical prescriptions styled Experimenta Joannis de S. Ægidio. He is said to have also written De Formatione Corporis, and some other medical works. He must be distinguished from Ægidius Corbeiensis (Gilles de Corbeil), whose Versus de Urinis have been sometimes wrongly assigned to him. Nor is John likely to be the author of the Versus de Lethargia, de Tremore, et de Gutta Oculi, which in one manuscript of the Versus de Urinis are spoken of as "liber de Sancto Ægidio". John is stated to have written commentaries on the sentences of Peter Lombard and on some works of Aristotle, and also homilies and a variety of theological treatises: De Laude Sapientiæ Divinæ, De Mensura Angelorum, De Esse et Essentia, and others. Leland says that he had seen at Oxford theological treatises by one Ægidius which showed much learning, but whether they were by our author he could not say. Probably there has been some confusion with his namesake, Guido de Colonna or Ægidius Romanus, whose treatise on original sin has been sometimes ascribed to John. John is variously referred to as Jonnnes Anglicus, Joannes Ægidius de Sancto Albano, or Joannes de Sancto Ægidio. The last is apparently the more correct. In English he is spoken of as John of St. Giles, John Giles, or John of St. Albans. He has also been called Joannes de St. Quintino; but this and the statement that he was dean of St. Quintin appear to be due to a confusion with Jean de Barastre. Sources M. Paris, Rolls Ser.; Grosseteste, Epistolæ, Rolls Ser.; Monumenta Franciscana, Rolls Ser.; Bale, iii. 84; Tanner's Bibl. Brit-Hib. p. 10. "Ægidius"; Fuller's Worthies. |
municipality of Lukavac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the | the municipality of Lukavac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. |
municipality of Lukavac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 | in the municipality of Lukavac, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the |
November 1939) is an Italian football midfielder and later manager. References 1939 births Living people People from Legnano Italian footballers F.C. Pro Vercelli 1892 players A.C.R. Messina players S.S. | Legnano Italian footballers F.C. Pro Vercelli 1892 players A.C.R. Messina players S.S. Lazio players Atalanta B.C. players Calcio Catania players Palermo F.C. players Ternana Calcio players Piacenza Calcio 1919 players A.S.D. Sorrento players |
8th Russian State Duma References Living people 1972 births People from Voronezh Oblast United Russia politicians Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) 21st-century Russian politicians Voronezh State University | List of members of the 8th Russian State Duma References Living people 1972 births People from Voronezh Oblast United Russia politicians Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) |
participated at the 2017 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival in Erzurum, Turkey where her best individual result was 27th in 7.5 km freestyle race. After that she participated at 2020 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in Oberwiesenthal, Germany (her best individual finish was 62nd in 5 km classical race) and 2021 Nordic U23 World Ski Championships in Vuokatti, Finland (her best individual finish was | Nordic U23 World Ski Championships in Vuokatti, Finland (her best individual finish was 51st in 10 km freestyle race). In 2022, Daria Rublova was nominated for her first Winter Games in Beijing. Cross-country skiing results All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). Olympic Games References External links 2000 births Living people Ukrainian female cross-country skiers Cross-country skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic cross-country skiers of |
the adult of L. excisum in the North Sea is Scomber scombrus; but it also occurs in S. japonicus and there are also records in the literature from a wide | and class Trematoda. The type species of this genus is Lecithocladium excisum. The main host for the adult of L. excisum in the North Sea is Scomber scombrus; but it also occurs in |
Federation of Television and Radio Artists. He was then recommended by Kaltenborn to work for other artists, including Lowell Thomas and movie director Mike Todd in promoting the wide-screen movie format Cinerama. In the 1950s, he co-founded Capital Cities Communications and served as its corporate secretary. The company took over ABC and became Capital Cities/ABC Inc., of which he was a board member. In 1959, he joined what is now the firm of Hall, Dickler, Kent, Friedman & Wood, from which he retired in 1989. Dickler also helped co-found the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, under the will of Lee Krasner, widow of Jackson Pollock, and served as the foundation's chairman from 1985 until his death. Personal life Dicker died on February 13, 1999, at Mount Sinai Medical Center at 86. He was married to Ruth Crohn Dickler, who he married while studying at Columbia's law school. His wife was active in the Citizens Housing and Planning Council of New York City and served as a board member there. | 1928. He graduated from Columbia College in 1931 and obtained his law degree from Columbia Law School in 1933. After graduating from law school, he worked for the law firm of Samuel Rosenman, an advisor to Franklin D. Roosevelt, for two years before starting own practice. Dickler was asked by news broadcaster and commentator H. V. Kaltenborn to help with organizing the first radio workers' union, a forerunner of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. He was then recommended by Kaltenborn to work for other artists, including Lowell Thomas and movie director Mike Todd in promoting the wide-screen movie format Cinerama. In the 1950s, he co-founded Capital Cities Communications and served as its corporate secretary. The company took over ABC and became Capital Cities/ABC Inc., of which he was a board member. In 1959, he joined what is now the firm of Hall, Dickler, Kent, Friedman & Wood, from which he retired in 1989. Dickler also helped |
a professional contract in May 2020. He joined Edinburgh in April 2021, having not made a professional appearance for Bristol, with the intention of playing for Scotland. He made his Edinburgh debut in Round 4 of the 2021–22 EPCR Challenge Cup against , scoring two tries. External links itsrugby Profile References 1997 births Living people Bristol Bears | Edinburgh in the United Rugby Championship. Owsley's primary position is wing or fullback. He is Scottish qualified. Rugby Union career Professional career A former sprinter, who represented Great Britain U20's in the 200m, 400m, and , and was crowned national indoor champion at in the 400m at U20, Owsley was a member of the Bristol Bears academy, signing a professional contract in May 2020. He joined Edinburgh in April 2021, |
Croatia between August 12 - 18, 2013. Medal table Medal summary Men's freestyle Greco-Roman Women's freestyle References World Junior Championships | World Junior Wrestling Championships were the 37th edition of the World Junior Wrestling Championships and were held in Sofia, Croatia between |
Management faculty of the Azerbaijan State University of Economics in 2004. He pursued his education at the SOAS University of London from 2005 to 2006. Naghiyev studied full-time at Business Management faculty of City, University of London (CASS Business School) between 2006 and 2009. Ilham Naghiyev received his master's degree (MBA) from Azerbaijan State University of Economics in the following three years. Currently, he is following education in TRIUM (HEC Paris, London School of Economics, New York University Stern School of Business joint program) Executive MBA. Career Ilham Naghiyev kicked off his career as the CEO of GESCO OJSC in 2010 and had remained at this post by 2013. Simultaneously, he was | CEO of GESCO OJSC in 2010 and had remained at this post by 2013. Simultaneously, he was a shareholder of the company from 2010. Ilham Naghiyev was the Chairman of the supervisory board of GESCO OJSC from 2019 to 2022. From 2013 till 2016, Ilham Naghiyev served as Deputy Head and then Head of the Human Resources Department of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Azerbaijan. In 2016, Ilham Naghiyev was appointed as vice president on Strategic Development at Bina Agro CJSC. He was the head (CEO) and the head of the supervisory board of Bina Agro CJSC between 2017- 2019 and 2019- 2021, respectively. Ilham Naghiyev has so far led the "Odlar Yurdu" Organization (OYO) since |
and is mainly home to shops and cafés. Since April 2006, the Königsbau-Passagen, a 45,000 square meter retail and commercial building, has been attached to the rear of the Königsbau. History The Königsbau was built between 1856 and 1860 by order of King Wilhelm I in late classicist style as a business, concert and ball house. The royal court architect Christian Friedrich von Leins together with architect Johann Michael Knapp were awarded the building contract. After Knapp retired from work in 1857, partly | a 45,000 square meter retail and commercial building, has been attached to the rear of the Königsbau. History The Königsbau was built between 1856 and 1860 by order of King Wilhelm I in late classicist style as a business, concert and ball house. The royal court architect Christian Friedrich von Leins together with architect Johann Michael Knapp were awarded the building contract. After Knapp retired from work in 1857, partly for health reasons, Leins completed the construction. The official inauguration took place in September 1860. Two years earlier, Wilhelm I had already given permission for the project to be called the Königsbau. The monumental building was intended to form a counterpoint to the New Palace and is characterized by a colonnade |
Communist Party of the Russian Federation members Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) People from Altai Krai | 2021. References 1983 births Living people Communist Party of the Russian Federation members Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) People from Altai |
of Yugoslavia. He graduated from Boris Kidrić High Technical School in Kosovska Mitrovica in 1973 and began working in Trepča Mines in the same year, rising to the position of technical director. He was arrested in 1989 against the backdrop of that year's miner's strike, amid the worsening political situation in the province. He returned to Trepča in 2014 and worked as a deputy manager until his retirement. Politician During the 1990s, most members of the Kosovo Albanian community boycotted Serbian state institutions and participated in parallel governing structures. Jonuzi was elected to the "parallel" parliament as a LDK member in the 1992 general election. In February 1998, he was elected to the party's general council. He assisted with | Serbia, Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He graduated from Boris Kidrić High Technical School in Kosovska Mitrovica in 1973 and began working in Trepča Mines in the same year, rising to the position of technical director. He was arrested in 1989 against the backdrop of that year's miner's strike, amid the worsening political situation in the province. He returned to Trepča in 2014 and worked as a deputy manager until his retirement. Politician During the 1990s, most members of the Kosovo Albanian community boycotted Serbian state institutions and participated in parallel governing structures. Jonuzi was elected to the "parallel" parliament as a LDK member in the 1992 general election. In February 1998, he was elected to the party's general council. He assisted with the concerns of internally displaced members of the Albanian community in the Vushtrri area during the early period of the Kosovo War in 1998. Jonuzi appeared in the second position on the LDK's electoral list for Vushtrri in the 2000 Kosovan local elections and was elected when the list won twenty mandates. He served for one term and did not seek re-election in 2002. Parliamentarian (UNMIK mandate) Jonuzi was elected to the Assembly of Kosovo in the 2001 parliamentary election. The LDK won a convincing victory; Jonuzi served as a supporter of |
Prusakova (born 1941), Russian-American pharmacist and widow of Lee Harvey Oswald Mariya Prusakova (born 1989), | Maria Prusakova (born 1983), Russian politician Marina Prusakova (born 1941), Russian-American pharmacist |
was appointed as commissioner in January 2022 succeeding Caro. The PSL aims to garner at least 10 teams for its inaugural season. The league is aimed primarily for players in Mindanao and Visayas like the VisMin Cup. It will have three conferences, one which will allow foreign players or imports. There is also a plan for a under-21 division. Teams The Pilipinas | former officials of another league; the Pilipinas VisMin Super Cup. It was established by former VisMin Cup CEO Rocky Chan and former COO Chelito Caro. Chan assumed the post of PSL President and Caro as the league commissioner. Former professional basketballer Marc Pingris was appointed as commissioner in January 2022 succeeding Caro. The PSL aims to garner at least 10 teams for its inaugural season. The league is aimed primarily for players in Mindanao and Visayas like the VisMin Cup. It will have three conferences, one which |
Kong Yuk-foon (born 1970) is a Hong Kong solicitor and politician. She was elected as a member of Legislative Council for the Election Committee constituency heavily skewed the pro-Beijing camp. Early years Koon, an orphan, was adopted after birth. She managed to study law in the University of Hong Kong despite of the poor family background. After graduated with LL.B. in 1992 and PCLL in 1994, she was called to the bar, focusing on housing issues. Political career During the Umbrella Movement in 2014, Koon organised a silent assembly. Calling | after birth. She managed to study law in the University of Hong Kong despite of the poor family background. After graduated with LL.B. in 1992 and PCLL in 1994, she was called to the bar, focusing on housing issues. Political career During the Umbrella Movement in 2014, Koon organised a silent assembly. Calling the protestors "trampling" rule-of-law", she urged them to obey injunctions by the court and end the occupation. Koon joined the pro-Beijing New People's Party in the same year. She ran in the 2015 local elections, as the party's candidate in Kornhill Garden constituency, but was defeated by the Civic. A year later, she quitted the party and joined the team of Jasper |
manuscript is described. Nazi persecution When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Laske was persecuted because he was Jewish. Laske took his own life in 1936 after his life's work had been destroyed by the National Socialists. His wife Nelly Laske, whose last place of residence was in Berlin's Bleibtreustraße, was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943. The son Ernst Laske was able to emigrate to Israel with some of his father's books and ran an antiquarian bookshop there for many years. Most of the books in Laske's possession were sold by the Berlin antiquarian bookshop Albert Zimmermann (formerly Heinrich Rosenberg and Albert Zimmermann). The two catalogs in which Laske's books are listed were printed in only a few copies and are among the greatest bibliophile rarities. Gotthard Laske was buried in the Jewish cemetery in | He remunerated artists with suits and other garments, which he had custom-made in his company. Laske encouraged the printing of many poems at the Officina Serpentis and paid the production costs. Likewise, he donated many prints to the members of the bibliophile societies to which he belonged. He was particularly interested in collecting books, manuscripts and drawings by Paul Scheerbart. On Laske's fiftieth birthday, the Berlin Fontane Evening had a capriccio printed by Josef Maria Frank about this, in which Laske's hunt for a Scheerbart manuscript is described. Nazi persecution When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Laske was persecuted |
their fighter manoeuvres in the Taiwan Strait, albeit with no real consequences. Thus, it is a common sentiment in Russia that Chinese warnings are merely warnings without consequences. Eventually, "China's Final Warning" became a catchphrase and proverb in Russia as a result. The People's Republic of China released their first warning to the United States for their reconnaissance flights on 7 September, 1958, during the Second Taiwan Strait Crisis. At that time, the United States considered the Republic of China as the sole legitimate representative of China, and conducted reconnaissance flights in waters controlled by the People's Republic of China. The People's Republic of China recorded such incidents, and issued warnings through diplomatic channels for each incident. The precise number of Chinese warnings is difficult to be evaluated, but is considered to have occurred more than 900 times by the end of 1964. Chinese "Final Warnings" were regularly broadcast publicly. | jets regularly patrolled the straits, which led to regular formal protests being lodged by the Chinese Communist Party. In China, they issued over 900 "final warnings" to the United States for their fighter manoeuvres in the Taiwan Strait, albeit with no real consequences. Thus, it is a common sentiment in Russia that Chinese warnings are merely warnings without consequences. Eventually, "China's Final Warning" became a catchphrase and proverb in Russia as a result. The People's Republic of China released their first warning to the United States for their reconnaissance flights on 7 September, 1958, during the Second Taiwan Strait Crisis. At that time, the United States considered the Republic of China as the sole legitimate representative of China, and conducted reconnaissance flights in waters controlled by the People's Republic of China. The People's Republic of China recorded such incidents, and issued |
1884 – 1 January 1967). In 1912, the Hamilton Chamber of Commerce applied for a porter to be employed there, which was approved in 1913, when it became a tablet station and the yard was extended, after a lengthy residents' campaign. A goods shed and electric lighting were added in 1927. The station building burnt down on 11 July 1987, though there is a photograph of the station captioned as 25 June 1988. In 2020, double tracking and potentially reopening the station for events, | station was between Brooklyn Road and Claudelands Road, east of the old Hamilton station (1879–1969) and west of Ruakura (1884–1967). History Claudelands had a railway station from 1884 to 1991, named Hamilton East until 1 March 1899, and then Kirikiriroa until 1 February 1914, when it was changed to Claudelands after a petition. The station was between Brooklyn Road and Claudelands Road, east of the old Hamilton station (1879–1969) and west of Ruakura (1 October 1884 – 1 January 1967). In 1912, the Hamilton Chamber of Commerce applied for a porter to be employed there, which was approved in 1913, when it became a tablet station and the yard was extended, after |
Institute of International Relations. He has served as a managing director of Trans Express Ltd. since the founding of the company in 1991. Chairman of the Board of Bulgarian National Freight Forwarding Association for two terms between 2000 and 2006. Ivan Petrov is Secretary General of the European Association for | forwarding and logistics at the University of Cologne, the University of Vienna, the University of Tennessee and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. He has served as a managing director of Trans Express Ltd. since the founding of the company in 1991. Chairman of the Board of Bulgarian National Freight Forwarding Association for two terms between 2000 and 2006. Ivan Petrov is Secretary General of the European Association for Forwarding, Transport, Logistics and Customs Services and Chairman of the Institute of Railway Transport in this organization. Since November 2021, he has |
Political career He was a United Russia candidate in the 2021 Russian legislative election. He was elected to the State Duma in | in the 2021 Russian legislative election. He was elected to the State Duma in the Altai constituency with 31.99 percent of the |
Ptitsyn Grows Up, 1953 | Soviet film Roman Ptitsyn, Russian politician |
at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2021. He finished 84th in men's sprint, failed to qualify for individual 15 km race and was part of Lithuania's relay and sprint teams. Strolia was selected to represent Lithuania at the 2022 Winter Olympics. Family His father Vytautas Strolia is | father Vytautas Strolia is a former Lithuanian national champion in biathlon. His older brother Mantas Strolia represented Lithuania at the 2010 and 2018 Olympics. References Lithuanian male cross-country skiers 1995 births Living people People from Ignalina Cross-country skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic cross-country |
natural lakes northeasterly of the city of Salzburg in Salzburg-Umgebung District (Region Flachgau) and is part of Salzburg alpine foothills. List of lakes Wallersee Trumer Seen, consisting of Obertrumer See Mattsee (a.k.a. „Niedertrumer See“) and Grabensee Egelseen (3) List of municipalities | District (Region Flachgau) and is part of Salzburg alpine foothills. List of lakes Wallersee Trumer Seen, consisting of Obertrumer See Mattsee (a.k.a. „Niedertrumer See“) and Grabensee Egelseen (3) List of municipalities in this area Berndorf bei Salzburg Henndorf am Wallersee Köstendorf Mattsee Neumarkt am Wallersee Obertrum am See |
election, Felipe Solá and Giannettasio ran in the Justicialist Party ticket for the governorship and vice-governorship of Buenos Aires, respectively. The Solá–Giannettasio ticket won with 43.32% of the vote. She was the second woman to hold the position of Vice Governor in Buenos Aires, after Elva Roulet (1983–1987). In 2004, Giannettasio was briefly in charge of the provincial ministry of security in interim fashion following the resignation of Raúl Rivara. During her tenure, she was a supporter of efforts to include women in high-ranking executive and legislative posts. Giannettasio did not run for a second term as Vice Governor in 2007, and Alberto Balestrini was Solá's running mate in the 2007 provincial election. She ran for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies in that year's legislative election, as the sixth candidate in the Front for Victory list. With 46.02% of the vote, the FPV received more than enough votes for Giannettasio to be elected. She was re-elected in 2011, this time as the 10th candidate in the FPV | resignation of Raúl Rivara. During her tenure, she was a supporter of efforts to include women in high-ranking executive and legislative posts. Giannettasio did not run for a second term as Vice Governor in 2007, and Alberto Balestrini was Solá's running mate in the 2007 provincial election. She ran for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies in that year's legislative election, as the sixth candidate in the Front for Victory list. With 46.02% of the vote, the FPV received more than enough votes for Giannettasio to be elected. She was re-elected in 2011, this time as the 10th candidate in the FPV list. She did not run for a third term in 2015. Personal life Giannettasio is married to businessman and fellow Justicialist Party politician Miguel Saiegh. She resides in Florencio Varela. In 2006, her private residence was subject to burglary while she was abroad. References External links Profile on Graciela Giannettasio (in Spanish) 1950 births Living people Argentine lawyers People from Lanús Partido Justicialist Party politicians Argentine ministers of education Members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies elected in Buenos Aires Province Women members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies Members of the |
Jozefin Singer. He completed his secondary school education in Uzhhorod and his university studies at the Faculty of Law of the University of Pest. Between 1884 and 1891 he was assistant librarian of the House of Representatives. In 1886 he obtained a private teaching qualification at the University of Budapest. From 1891 he was an honorary professor at the University of Budapest, from 1896 he was an extraordinary professor, from 1903 to 1920 he was a full professor in the Department of Law and Political Science. In the early years of the century, he worked together with outstanding colleagues, Oszkár Jászi, Ágost Pulszky, Rusztem Vámbéry in 1900, Somló Bódog, he launched the Huszadik Század',(Twentieth Century) a bourgeois radical social science journal, and a year later the Társadalomtudományad Társaság (Society of Social Sciences) was founded. He was vice-president of the society from 1901 and president from 1906 to 1920. For years he was at war with conservative and clerical tendencies because of his positivist views, and he was attacked for his views even in the House of Representatives. His major work was "On the Origin | one of the most prominent and influential representatives of positivist philosophy of law and state, and was also known abroad. It was under his influence and around his person that the Galileo Circle was founded in Budapest in 1908, which was joined primarily by progressive young intellectual people. Career Child of Lipót Pikler and Jozefin Singer. He completed his secondary school education in Uzhhorod and his university studies at the Faculty of Law of the University of Pest. Between 1884 and 1891 he was assistant librarian of the House of Representatives. In 1886 he obtained a private teaching qualification at the University of Budapest. From 1891 he was an honorary professor at the University of Budapest, from 1896 he was an extraordinary professor, from 1903 to 1920 he was a full professor in the Department of |
January 30 was taken as the main criterion for qualifying for the Copa del Rey, counting only the matches corresponding to the first half of the regular season. Venue On November 11, 2021, ACB selected and announced Granada to host the Copa del Rey in February 2022. The arena, which was opened in 1991, is primarily used for basketball and is the home arena of Fundación CB Granada, since 2015. The arena hosted the 1999 UEFA Futsal Championship and the matches of the Group A in EuroBasket 2007. In 2014, the arena also hosted the matches of the group of Spanish national team in the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup. Draw The draw was held on 31 January 2021 in Granada, Spain. The top four ranking teams act | end of the first half of the regular season and qualification for the Copa del Rey no later than January 30, thus facilitating the recovery of postponed matches and competitive equality between all clubs. Since all the scheduled matches have not been played as of January 30, the win percentage as of January 30 was taken as the main criterion for qualifying for the Copa del Rey, counting only the matches corresponding to the first half of the regular season. Venue On November 11, 2021, ACB selected and announced Granada to host the Copa del Rey in February 2022. The arena, which was opened in 1991, is |
18 February 2022. The opening match of the series, which was scheduled to be between Ireland and the UAE, was rescheduled after Ireland's luggage did not arrive on time. A man-of-the-match performance from Dipendra Singh Airee sealed victory for Nepal over Oman in a thrilling run chase in the surviving day one fixture. The UAE and Ireland each picked up comfortable wins on the second day of the competition, against Nepal and Oman, respectively. The UAE defeated Ireland in the rearranged fixture on day three, their third T20I win in a row against the Irish, to go into the final day at the top of the table. Oman ended the UAE's winning streak on the final day thanks to a five-wicket haul from Aamir Kaleem and a rapid 84 for Muhammad Waseem, to ensure that the champions would be | the rearranged fixture on day three, their third T20I win in a row against the Irish, to go into the final day at the top of the table. Oman ended the UAE's winning streak on the final day thanks to a five-wicket haul from Aamir Kaleem and a rapid 84 for Muhammad Waseem, to ensure that the champions would be decided in the final game of the tournament. The |
female fencers Hungarian female épée fencers Hungarian female foil fencers Paralympic wheelchair fencers of Hungary Wheelchair fencers at the 1996 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2000 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2004 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2008 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2012 Summer Paralympics Medalists at the 1996 Summer Paralympics Medalists at the 2000 Summer Paralympics Medalists at the | paralysis. She started out wheelchair fencing a year later and entered the 1996 Summer Paralympics as a wildcard. References 1968 births Living people Hungarian female fencers Hungarian female épée fencers Hungarian female foil fencers Paralympic wheelchair fencers of Hungary Wheelchair fencers at the 1996 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2000 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers at the 2004 Summer Paralympics Wheelchair fencers |
an international not-for-profit organization that works towards better healthcare for refugees and also helps the victims of natural disasters in Asia, Africa, and central Europe. The organization was founded in 1984 with doctors constituting from countries including Japan, India, and Thailand. The organization operates with their Asian Multinational Medical Missions (AMMMs) and | has medical staff from different nationalities working together at a refugee camp with the local teams. The organization was founded when in Thailand, at the Cambodia border, mostly western doctors were found to be working with refugees from Cambodia. It was felt that regional Asian doctors should participate in regional relief activities. AMDA is headquartered in Japan and also |
becoming a nun in Rome. She had spent a period of time in hospital recovering from a broken pelvis and various other injuries caused by an earlier beating by her father and other family members. Still fearing her family after her release from the hospital, she approached a powerful Bedouin tribe, which took her under its care. Her father then wept and gave his word that he would not harm her. She returned to him, only to be bludgeoned to death with an iron bar days later. The Palestinian Authority, using a clause in the Jordanian penal code still in effect in the West Bank as of 2011, exempted men from punishment for killing a female relative if she has brought dishonor to the family. The Palestinian Independent Commission for Human Rights has reported 29 women were murdered 2007–2010, whereas 13 women were murdered in 2011 and 12 in the first seven months of 2012. According to a PA Ministry of Women's Affairs report the rate of 'Honor Killings' went up by 100% in 2013, "reporting the number of 'honor killing' victims for 2013 at 27". Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority, issued a decree in May 2014 under which the exemption of men was abolished in cases of honor killings. The death of Israa Ghrayeb took place on 22 August 2019 in the Palestinian city of Bethlehem. Israa Ghrayeb, 21 years old, was reportedly beaten to death by her brother because she posted a selfie with her partner a day before they were supposed to get engaged. Saudi Arabia In 2008 a woman was murdered in Saudi Arabia by her father for "chatting" with a man on Facebook. The murdered became public only when a Saudi cleric referred to the case, to criticize Facebook for the strife it caused. The 1980 film Death of a Princess implies that the execution of Princess Misha'al in 1977 was actually an honor killing, rather than a sentence handed down by a court. Syria Some estimates suggest that more than 200 honor killings occur every year in Syria. The Syrian civil war has been reported as leading to an increase in honor killings in the country, mainly due to the common occurrence of war rape, which led to the stigmatization of victims by their relatives and communities, and in turn to honor killings. Turkey A report compiled by the Council of Europe estimated that over 200 women were murdered in honor killings in Turkey in 2007. A June 2008 report by the Turkish Prime Ministry's Human Rights Directorate said that in Istanbul alone there was one honor killing every week, and reported over 1,000 during the previous five years. It added that metropolitan cities were the location of many of these, due to growing immigration to these cities from the East. The mass migration during the past decades of rural population from Southeastern Turkey to big cities in Western Turkey has resulted in relatively more developed cities such as Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, and Bursa having the highest numbers of reported honor killings. A report by UNFPA identified the following situations as being common triggers for honor killings: a married woman having an extra-marital relationship; a married woman running away with a man; a married woman getting separated or divorced; a divorced woman having a relationship with another man; a young unmarried girl having a relationship; a young unmarried girl running away with a man; a woman (married or unmarried) being kidnapped and/or raped. In Turkey, young boys are often ordered by other family members to commit the honor killing, so that they can get a shorter jail sentence (because they are minors). Forced suicides—where the victim who is deemed to have 'dishonored' the family is ordered to commit suicide in an attempt by the perpetrator to avoid legal consequences—also take place in Turkey, especially in Batman in southeastern Turkey, which has been nicknamed "Suicide City". In 2009 a Turkish news agency reported that a 2-day-old boy who was born out of wedlock had been murdered for honor in Istanbul. The maternal grandmother of the infant, along with six other persons, including a doctor who had reportedly accepted a bribe to not report the birth, were arrested. The grandmother is suspected of fatally suffocating the infant. The child's mother, 25, was also arrested; she stated that her family had decided to kill the child. In 2010 a 16-year-old girl was buried alive by relatives for befriending boys in Southeast Turkey; her corpse was found 40 days after she went missing. Honor killings continue to receive some support in the conservative regions of Turkey. In 2005, a small survey in Diyarbakir in southeastern Turkey found that, when asked the appropriate punishment for a woman who has committed adultery, 37% of respondents said she should be killed, while 21% said her nose or ears should be cut off. A July 2008 Turkish study by a team from Dicle University on honor killings in the Southeastern Anatolia Region, the predominantly Kurdish area of Turkey, has so far shown that little if any social stigma is attached to honor killing. It also comments that the practice is not related to a feudal societal structure, "there are also perpetrators who are well-educated university graduates. Of all those surveyed, 60 percent are either high school or university graduates or at the very least, literate." There are well-documented cases, where Turkish courts have sentenced whole families to life imprisonment for an honor killing. The most recent was on 13 January 2009, where a Turkish court sentenced five members of the same Kurdish family to life imprisonment for the honor killing of Naile Erdas, a 16-year-old girl who got pregnant as a result of rape. Honor killings also affect gay people. In 2008 a man had to flee from Turkey after his Kurdish boyfriend was killed by his own father. Ahmet Yıldız, 26, a Turkish-Kurdish physics student who represented his country at an international gay conference in the United States in 2008, was shot dead leaving a cafe in Istanbul. Yıldız, who came from a deeply religious family was believed to have been the victim of the country's first gay honor killing. Yemen Honor killings are common in Yemen. In some parts of the country, traditional tribal customs forbid contact between men and women before marriage. Yemeni society is strongly male dominated, Yemen being ranked last of 135 countries in the 2012 Global Gender Gap Report. It was estimated that in 1997 about 400 women and girls died in honor killings in Yemen. In 2013, a 15-year-old girl was killed by her father, who burned her to death, because she talked to her fiancé before the wedding. South Asia Afghanistan In 2012, Afghanistan recorded 240 cases of honor killings, but the total number is believed to be much higher. Of the reported honor killings, 21% were committed by the victims' husbands, 7% by their brothers, 4% by their fathers, and the rest by other relatives. In May 2017, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan concluded that the vast majority of cases involving honor killings and murders of women, perpetrators were not punished. Of the 280 recorded cases in the January 2016-December 2017 time span, 50 cases ended in a conviction. UNAMA concluded that the vast majority offences could be committed with impunity. India Honor killings have been reported in northern regions of India, mainly in the Indian states of Punjab, Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and the southern state of Tamil Nadu. The main reason for these crimes is a result of people marrying without their family's acceptance, especially when it is between members of two different castes or religious groups, or, more particular to northwestern India, between members of the same gotra, or exogamous clan. In contrast, honor killings are less prevalent but are not completely non-existent in the western Indian states of Maharashtra and Gujarat. Honor killings are reflected in nationwide data from the National Crime Records Bureau. That data showed 251 honor killings in 2015, though activists considered that a significant undercount. The same records bureau reported only 24 honor killings in 2019. According to a survey by AIDWA, over 30 percent of honor killings in the country take place in Western Uttar Pradesh. In some other parts of India, notably West Bengal, honor killings completely ceased about a century ago, largely due to the activism and influence of reformists such as Vivekananda, Ramakrishna, Vidyasagar and Raja Ram Mohan Roy. Haryana has had many incidences of honor killings, mainly among Meenas, Rajputs and Jats. Role of khap panchayats (caste councils of village elders) has been questioned. Madhu Kishwar, a professor at Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, claims that only 2% to 3% honor killings are related to gotra killings by the khap or caste panchayats, rest are done by the families. "Will you ban families? there are plenty of tyrannical police officials, plenty of incompetent and corrupt judges in India who pass very retrogressive judgments, but no one says ban the police and the law courts. By what right do they demand a ban on khaps, simply because some members have undemocratic views? Educated elite in India don't know anything about the vital role played by these age-old institutions of self-governance." In March 2010, Karnal district court ordered the execution of five perpetrators of an honor killing and imprisoning for life the khap (local caste-based council) chief who ordered the killings of Manoj Banwala (23) and Babli (19), a man and woman of the same gotra who eloped and married in June 2007. Despite having been given police protection on court orders, they were kidnapped; their mutilated bodies were found a week later in an irrigation canal. In 2013, a young couple who were planning to marry were murdered in Garnauthi village, Haryana, due to having a love affair. The woman, Nidhi, was beaten to death and the man, Dharmender, was dismembered alive. People in the village and neighbouring villages approved of the killings. The Indian state of Punjab also has a large number of honor killings. According to data compiled by the Punjab Police, 34 honor killings were reported in the state between 2008 and 2010: 10 in 2008, 20 in 2009, and four in 2010. Bhagalpur in the eastern Indian state of Bihar has also been notorious for honor killings. Jagir Kaur a prominent Sikh leader was also charged with allegation of Honor Killing of her daughter and she was sent to jail . However murder charges were dropped later by court . Recent cases include a 16-year-old girl, Imrana, from Bhojpur who was set on fire inside her house in a case of what the police called 'moral vigilantism'. The victim had screamed for help for about 20 minutes before neighbors arrived, only to find her smoldering body. She was admitted to a local hospital, where she later died from her injuries. In May 2008, Jayvirsingh Bhadodiya shot his daughter Vandana Bhadodiya and struck her on the head with an axe. Honor killings occur even in Delhi. Honor killings take place in Rajasthan, too. In June 2012, a man chopped off his 20-year-old daughter's head with a sword in Rajasthan after learning that she was dating men. According to police officer, "Omkar Singh told the police that his daughter Manju had relations with several men. He had asked her to mend her ways several times in the past. However, she did not pay heed. Out of pure rage, he chopped off her head with the sword". In 1990, the National Commission for Women set up a statutory body to address the issues of honor killings among some ethnic groups in North India. This body reviewed constitutional, legal, and other provisions as well as challenges women face. The NCW's activism has contributed significantly towards the reduction of honor killings in rural areas of North India. According to Pakistani activists Hina Jilani and Eman M Ahmed, Indian women are considerably better protected against honor killings by Indian law and government than Pakistani women, and they have suggested that governments of countries affected by honor killings use Indian law as a model to prevent honor killings in their respective societies. In June 2010, scrutinizing the increasing number of honor killings, the Supreme Court of India demanded responses about honor killing prevention from the federal government and the state governments of Punjab, Haryana, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Himachal Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh. Alarmed by the rise of honor killings, the Government planned to bring a bill in the Monsoon Session of Parliament July 2010 to provide for deterrent punishment for 'honor' killings. In 2000, Jaswinder Kaur Sidhu (nicknamed Jassi), a Canadian Punjabi who married rickshaw driver Sukhwinder Singh Sidhu (nicknamed Mithu) against her family's wishes, was brutally murdered in India following orders from her mother and uncle in Canada so that "the family honor was restored". Her body was found in an irrigation canal. Mithu was kidnapped, beaten and left to die, but survived. Tamil Nadu has had 192 cases of honor killings, most relating to marriages between a woman higher in the caste hierarchy than the man she marries. These marriages in particular are considered "dishonorable" since the women of the caste are responsible for its continuation, by having children. According to Kathir of anti-caste group Evidence, "There is this firm belief that if I get my daughter married to someone of my own caste, I have succeeded in safeguarding it. And if not, one's prestige is challenged, and then there is barbaric anger". In 2016, Chinnaswamy, a member of the Thevar community dominant in the southern part of the state, ordered the killing of his daughter Kausalya and her husband Shankar, belonging to the Dalit Pallar community. The crime, taking place at Udumalaipettai Bus station, was caught on video with Shankar hacked to death in broad daylight, while his wife barely escaped alive. The accused in the case were at first sentenced to death, but later Chinnaswamy was ruled "not guilty" and the other killer's sentences were reduced. Once unheard of in Kerala, honor killings related to inter-caste marriages are becoming more prevalent in the southern state also. Nepal Honor killings have been reported in Nepal, with much of them linked with the caste system that is deeply rooted in Nepalese tradition. Most honor killings are reportedly undetected. Gender-based violence has been the deadliest form of violence in Nepal as of 2017, which includes honor killings and have been rising in the country as of 2012. Pakistan In Pakistan honor killings are known locally as karo-kari. An Amnesty International report noted "the failure of the authorities to prevent these killings by investigating and punishing the perpetrators." Official data put the number of women killed in honor killings in 2015 at nearly 1,100. Recent cases include that of three teenage girls who were buried alive after refusing arranged marriages. Another case was that of Taslim Khatoon Solangi, 17, of Hajna Shah village in Khairpur district, which was widely reported after her father, 57-year-old Gul Sher Solangi, publicized the case. He alleged his eight-months-pregnant daughter was tortured and killed on 7 March on the orders of her father-in-law, who accused her of carrying a child conceived out of wedlock. Statistically, honor killings have a high level of support in Pakistan's rural society, despite widespread condemnation from human rights groups. In 2002 alone over 382 people, about 245 women and 137 men, became victims of honor killings in the Sindh province of Pakistan. Over the course of six years, more than 4,000 women have died as victims of honor killings in Pakistan from 1999 to 2004. In 2005 the average annual number of honor killings for the whole nation was stated to be more than 1,000 per year. A 2009 study by Muazzam | Hamburg. In 2010, Turkish immigrant and devout Muslim Mehmet Özkan murdered his 15-year-old daughter Büsra Özkan because she refused to live an Islamic lifestyle and would chat with a young man she recently met. In 2016 an Arab woman was shot dead at her wedding in Hannover for allegedly refusing to marry her cousin in a forced marriage. In 2021, a 34-year-old Afghan woman and mother of two identified solely as Maryam H., was murdered by her two younger brothers. On 13 July, Sayed, 26, and Seyed, 22, lured their sister to a meeting in Berlin before strangulating her and slitting her throat. They claimed to have killed her for giving up following Islamic practices, which they said harmed their family's honor. Her dismembered body was found in a suitcase dumped in a shallow grave in near their elder brother's residence in Bavaria, and the brothers were arrested on 3 August. Maryam had been forced into marriage at the age of sixteen. She then fled from Afghanistan to Germany and obtained a divorce. The brothers were charged with murder in December. Italy Similar to other Southern/Mediterranean European areas, the honor was traditionally important in Italy. Indeed, until 1981, the Criminal Code provided for mitigating circumstances for such murdering; until 1981 the law read: "Art. 587: He who causes the death of a spouse, daughter, or sister upon discovering her in illegitimate carnal relations and in the heat of passion caused by the offense to his honor or that of his family will be sentenced from three to seven years. The same sentence shall apply to whom, in the above circumstances, causes the death of the person involved in illegitimate carnal relations with his spouse, daughter, or sister." Traditionally, honor crimes used to be more prevalent in Southern Italy. In 1546, Isabella di Morra, a young poet from Valsinni, Matera, was stabbed to death by her brothers for a suspected affair with a married nobleman, whom they also murdered. In 2006, twenty-year-old Hina Saleem, a Pakistani woman who lived in Brescia, Italy, was murdered by her father who claimed he was "saving the family's honor". She had refused an arranged marriage, and was living with her Italian boyfriend. In 2009, in Pordenone, Italy, Sanaa Dafani, an 18-year-old girl of Moroccan origin, was murdered by her father because she had a relationship with an Italian man. In 2011, in Cerignola, Italy, a man stabbed his brother 19 times because his homosexuality was a "dishonor to the family". In 2021 Saman Abbas was murdered by her uncle because she refused her arranged marriage. Norway Anooshe Sediq Ghulam was a 22-year-old Afghan refugee in Norway, who was murdered by her husband in an honor killing in 2002. She had reported her husband to the police for domestic violence and was seeking a divorce. Sweden The Swedish National Police Board and the Swedish Prosecution Authority define honor-related crime as crimes against a relative who, according to the perpetrator and his family's point of view, has dishonored the family. These crimes are intended to prevent the family from honor being damaged or to restore damaged or lost family honor. The most serious honor-related crime is often organized and deliberate and not limited to murdering. Incidents include torture, forced suicides, forced marriages, rapes, kidnapping, assault, mortal threats, extortion, and protecting a criminal. The 26-year-old Turkish woman Fadime Şahindal was murdered by her father in 2002 in Uppsala in Sweden. Kurdish organizations were criticized by prime minister Göran Persson for not doing enough to prevent honor killings. Pela Atroshi was a Kurdish girl who was shot by her uncle in an honor killing in Iraqi Kurdistan. The murder of Pela and Fadime gave rise to the formation of GAPF (the acronym stands for Never Forget Pela and Fadime), a politically and religiously independent and secular nonprofit organization working against honor-related violence and oppression. The organization's name is taken from Pela Atroshi and Fadime Şahindal which are Sweden's best-known and high-profile cases of honor killings. The honor killing of Sara, an Iraqi Kurdish girl, was the first publicized honor killing in Sweden. Sara was murdered by her brother and cousin when she was 15 years old. According to statements by her mother, Sara's brother believed that she "was a whore who slept with Swedish boys", and that even though he himself also slept with Swedish girls that "was different, because he is a male, and he would not even think of sleeping with Iraqi girls, only with Swedish girls, with whores". These three prominent cases brought the notion of honor killings into Swedish discourse. In 2016 ten out of the 105 murder cases were honor killings, with 6 females and 4 male victims. The 6 female victims represented a third of the 18 murders of women in Sweden that year. In May 2019 the court of appeals found a man guilty of murdering his wife in front of the Afghan couple's children who were minor at the time. He was sentenced to life in prison, deportation and a lifetime ban against returning to Sweden. In December 2020, a 47-year-old Afghan man and his two sons were found guilty by Gällivare district court of honor killing a 20-year-old man together in Kiruna. They suspected that the victim had a relationship with the man's ex-wife. Switzerland In 2010, a 16-year-old Pakistani girl was murdered near Zürich, Switzerland, by her father who was dissatisfied with both her lifestyle and her Christian boyfriend. In 2014, a forty-two-year-old Syrian Kurd murdered his wife (and cousin) because she had a boyfriend and wanted to live separately. The suspect defended himself by claiming that honor killing is part of Kurdish culture. United Kingdom Every year in the United Kingdom (UK), officials estimates that at least a dozen women are victims of honor killings, almost exclusively within Asian and Middle Eastern families. Often, cases cannot be resolved due to the unwillingness of families, relatives and communities to testify. A 2006 BBC poll for the Asian network in the UK found that one in ten of the 500 young Asians polled said that they could condone the killing of someone who had dishonored their families. In the UK, in December 2005, Nazir Afzal, Director, west London, of Britain's Crown Prosecution Service, stated that the United Kingdom has seen "at least a dozen honour killings" between 2004 and 2005. In 2010, Britain saw a 47% rise in the number of honor-related crimes. Data from police agencies in the UK report 2283 cases in 2010, and an estimated 500 more from jurisdictions that did not provide reports. These "honor-related crimes" also include house arrests and other parental punishments. Most of the attacks were conducted in cities that had high immigrant populations. One of the earliest prosecuted cases in the UK was that of 19-year-old Rukhsana Naz, who was forced to marry her second cousin from Pakistan at age 15. She embarked on an affair with the man she had really wanted to marry, fell pregnant and was murdered by her mother and brother for refusing to terminate her pregnancy and remain in her forced marriage. Banaz Mahmod, a 20-year-old Iraqi Kurdish woman from Mitcham, south London, was murdered in 2006, in a murder orchestrated by her father, uncle and cousins. Her life and murder were presented in a documentary called Banaz: A Love Story, directed and produced by Deeyah Khan. The investigation into her disappearance and murder was dramatised in the 2020, two-part ITV mini-series, Honour, starring Keeley Hawes. Another well-known case was Heshu Yones, stabbed to death by her Kurdish father in London in 2002, because he thought she'd become too "westernized" and was involved in a relationship of which he didn't approve. Other examples include the killing of Tulay Goren, a Kurdish Shia Muslim girl who immigrated with her family from Turkey, and Samaira Nazir (Pakistani Muslim). A highly publicized case was that of Shafilea Iftikhar Ahmed, a 17-year-old British Pakistani girl from Great Sankey, Warrington, Cheshire, who was murdered in 2003 by her parents. However, a lesser-known case is that of Gurmeet Singh Ubhi, a Sikh man who, in February 2011, was found guilty of the murder of his 24-year-old daughter, Amrit Kaur Ubhi in 2010. Ubhi was found to have murdered his daughter because he disapproved of her being "too westernized". Likewise, he also disapproved of the fact that she was dating a non-Sikh man. In 2012, the UK had the first white victim of an honor killing: 17-year-old Laura Wilson was murdered by her Asian boyfriend, Ashtiaq Ashgar, because she revealed details of their relationship to his family, challenging traditional cultural values of the Asian family. Laura Wilson's mother said, "I honestly think it was an honour killing for putting shame on the family. They needed to shut Laura up and they did." Wilson was repeatedly knifed to death as she walked along a canal in Rotherham. In 2013, Mohammed Inayat was jailed for murdering his wife and injuring three daughters by setting his house on fire in Birmingham. Inayat wanted to stop his daughter from flying to Dubai to marry her boyfriend, because he believed the marriage would dishonor his family. In 2013, the husband of Syrian-born 25-year-old Rania Alayed was jailed for her murder. His two brothers were also jailed for perverting the course of justice in relation to the disposal of her body, which has never been found. According to the prosecution, the motive for the murder was that she had become "too westernised" and was "establishing an independent life". Middle East and North Africa Honor killings in Maghreb are not as common as in the Asian countries of the Middle East and South Asia, but they do occur. In Libya, it can also be committed against rape victims. In a poll with respondents across countries in the Arab world such as Algeria (27%), Morocco (25%), Sudan (14%), Jordan (21%), Tunisia (8%), Lebanon (8%), and the Palestinian territory of the West Bank (8%), it was found that honor killings were more acceptable than homosexuality. Egypt Honor killings in Egypt can occur due to reasons such as a woman meeting an unrelated man, even if this is only an allegation; or adultery (real or suspected). The exact number of honor killings is not known, but a report in 1995 estimated about 52 honor killings that year. In 2013, a woman and her two daughters were murdered by 10 male relatives, who strangled and beat them, and then threw their bodies in the Nile. Honor killings are illegal in Egypt and five of the ten men were arrested. Iran In Iran, there have been a number of recorded cases of honor killings that made international headlines. In February 2022 a video circulated in Iran of a man, (Sajjad Heydari), in Ahvaz, Khuzestan in Western Iran, smiling and carrying the severed head of his 17 year old wife (Mona Heydari). The IRNA news agency referred to the incident as the result of an "honor killing." The wife had fled to Turkey but brought back to Iran and killed shortly after. According to human rights lawyer Yonah Diamond, "the Iranian authorities enabled the barbaric beheading of Mona Heydari -- a child bride -- for seeking a divorce from a violently abusive marriage..." Two years earlier another high profile "honor killing" involved a 14-year-old who was allegedly killed with a sickle by her father in northern Iran's Talesh County, after she ran away from her family home with a 29-year-old man. According to the medical journal The Lancet, there were at least 8,000 honor killings in Iran between 2010 and 2014, of which only a few were reported. Article 630 of the Constitution exempts a husband from punishment if he kills if he witnesses adultery. Iran International reports that about 60 women have fallen victim to honor killings from 2020-2021, according to a women’s right NGO in Ahvaz, "including some who were 10 or 15 years old. None of the perpetrators have been brought to justice" and few of the families have even filed a lawsuit. Iraq In 2008, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) has stated that honor killings are a serious concern in Iraq, particularly well documented in Iraqi Kurdistan. There are conflicting estimates on the number of honor killings in Iraqi Kurdistan. The Free Women's Organization of Kurdistan (FWOK) released a statement on International Women's Day 2015 noting that "6,082 women were killed or forced to commit suicide during the past year in Iraqi Kurdistan, which is almost equal to the number of the Peshmerga martyred fighting Islamic State (IS)," and that a large number of women were victims of honor killings or enforced suicide—mostly self-immolation or hanging. According to Zhin Woman magazine, published in December 2015 in Sulaimaniya, from January to August 2015, in the three main Kurdish provinces of Sulaimaniya, Erbil, and Duhok, there were a total of 122 cases of honor killings and 124 women's suicides. According to KRG Ministry of Interior's Directorate-General of Countering Violence Committed Against Women, only 14 women were victims of "so-called" honor killings in 2017. The practice is reportedly declining due to increased numbers of women's rights organizations and government initiatives. About 500 honor killings per year are reported in hospitals in Iraqi Kurdistan, although real numbers are likely higher. It is speculated that alone in Erbil there is one honor killing per day. The UNAMI reported that at least 534 honor killings occurred between January and April 2006 in the Kurdish Governorates. It is claimed that many deaths are reported as "female suicides" in order to conceal honor-related crimes. Aso Kamal of the Doaa Network Against Violence claimed that they have estimated that there were more than 12,000 honor killings in Iraqi Kurdistan from 1991 to 2007. He also said that the government figures are much lower, and show a decline in recent years, and Kurdish law has mandated since 2008 that an honor killing be treated like any other murder. Honor killings and other forms of violence against women have increased since the creation of Iraqi Kurdistan, and "both the KDP and PUK claimed that women's oppression, including 'honor killings', are part of Kurdish 'tribal and Islamic culture'". The honor killing and self-immolation condoned or tolerated by the Kurdish administration in Iraqi Kurdistan has been labeled as "gendercide" by Mojab (2003). As many as 133 women were murdered in the Iraqi city of Basra alone in 2006. Seventy-nine were murdered for violation of "Islamic teachings" and 47 for honor, according to IRIN, the news branch of the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Amnesty International says that armed groups, not the government, also kill politically active women and those who did not follow a strict dress code, as well |
Minhas Community of Suryavanshi Rajputs. According to the historical "text". They came there in late of 17th Century .And start living there till now .Now they are owning | the people's are belongs to Minhas Community of Suryavanshi Rajputs. According to the historical "text". They |
collected 4 goals and 29 points through 53 regular season games, and was later selected in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft in the second-round, 52nd overall, by the Florida Panthers. Prior to the 2019–20 season, he was signed to a three-year, entry-level contract with the Panthers on 13 September 2019. Finishing second in scoring from the blueline in his final junior season, Kolyachonok posted 12 goals and 21 assists for 33 points. With the pandemic delayed the beginning of the season, Kolyachonok opted to remain in Belarus and was loaned by the Panthers to continue his development with HC Dinamo Minsk of the KHL. In making his professional debut, he contributed with 1 goal and 6 points through 46 regular season games before he was reassigned by the Panthers to AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch, registering 2 assists through 10 games. On 26 July 2020, Kolyachonok was traded by the Panthers, along with Anton Strålman and a second-round draft pick in 2024 to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for a seventh-round selection in 2023. In the following season, Koyachonok was initially reassigned by the Coyotes to AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners. Placing third in scoring from the blueline for the Roadrunners through the | loaned by the Panthers to continue his development with HC Dinamo Minsk of the KHL. In making his professional debut, he contributed with 1 goal and 6 points through 46 regular season games before he was reassigned by the Panthers to AHL affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch, registering 2 assists through 10 games. On 26 July 2020, Kolyachonok was traded by the Panthers, along with Anton Strålman and a second-round draft pick in 2024 to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for a seventh-round selection in 2023. In the following season, Koyachonok was initially reassigned by the Coyotes to AHL affiliate, the Tucson Roadrunners. Placing third in scoring from the blueline for the Roadrunners through the early stages of the season, Kolyachonok received his first recall to the NHL on 11 January 2022. The following day on 12 January, he made his NHL debut for the rebuilding Coyotes, in an upset 2–1 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. He appeared in 4 games with the Coyotes, before he was returned to the Tucson Roadrunners. International play Kolyachonok has played internationally at the junior and senior level for the Belarusian national team. He participated at the 2020 IIHF World Championship. Career statistics Regular season and playoffs International Awards and honours References External links 2001 births Living people Arizona Coyotes players Belarusian ice hockey centres HC Dinamo Minsk players Flint Firebirds players Florida Panthers draft picks |
| colspan="4" |Source: | |} 1999 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Vadim Orlov |align=left|Independent | |21.84% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Oleg Kazarov (incumbent) |align=left|Communist Party | |15.89% |- |style="background-color:#3B9EDF"| |align=left|Yury Polyanskov |align=left|Fatherland – All Russia | |13.77% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Stozharov |align=left|Independent | |7.16% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Smolyankina |align=left|Independent | |5.26% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Lyudmila Tikhonova |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |4.52% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Viktor Zharkov |align=left|Independent | |4.36% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Anatoly Nechayev |align=left|Yabloko | |4.23% |- |style="background-color:#FCCA19"| |align=left|Vasily Polishchuk |align=left|Congress of Russian Communities-Yury Boldyrev Movement | |2.66% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valery Kozhevnikov |align=left|Independent | |2.37% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |15.54% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2003 A by-election was scheduled after Against all line received the most votes. |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Fedorova |align=left|Independent | |9.65% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Anatoly Litvinov |align=left|Independent | |9.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kruglikov |align=left|Communist Party | |9.13% |- |style="background-color:#FFD700"| |align=left|Vadim Orlov (incumbent) |align=left|People's Party | |8.97% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Kogan |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |8.16% |- |style="background-color:#00A1FF"| |align=left|Tatyana Sergeyeva |align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life | |7.90% |- |style="background:#1042A5"| |align=left|Sergey Gerasimov |align=left|Union of Right Forces | |5.43% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Polyakov |align=left|Independent | |5.29% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Igin |align=left|Independent | |5.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Nikolay Abramov |align=left|Independent | |3.30% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Ofitserov |align=left|Yabloko | |2.59% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Seryubin |align=left|Independent | |1.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Pimenov |align=left|Independent | |1.12% |- |style="background-color:#164C8C"| |align=left|Aleksandr Zhuravlev |align=left|United Russian Party Rus' | |0.48% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |19.76% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2004 | |13.77% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Stozharov |align=left|Independent | |7.16% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Smolyankina |align=left|Independent | |5.26% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Lyudmila Tikhonova |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |4.52% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Viktor Zharkov |align=left|Independent | |4.36% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Anatoly Nechayev |align=left|Yabloko | |4.23% |- |style="background-color:#FCCA19"| |align=left|Vasily Polishchuk |align=left|Congress of Russian Communities-Yury Boldyrev Movement | |2.66% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valery Kozhevnikov |align=left|Independent | |2.37% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |15.54% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2003 A by-election was scheduled after Against all line received the most votes. |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Fedorova |align=left|Independent | |9.65% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Anatoly Litvinov |align=left|Independent | |9.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kruglikov |align=left|Communist Party | |9.13% |- |style="background-color:#FFD700"| |align=left|Vadim Orlov (incumbent) |align=left|People's Party | |8.97% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Kogan |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |8.16% |- |style="background-color:#00A1FF"| |align=left|Tatyana Sergeyeva |align=left|Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life | |7.90% |- |style="background:#1042A5"| |align=left|Sergey Gerasimov |align=left|Union of Right Forces | |5.43% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Polyakov |align=left|Independent | |5.29% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Igin |align=left|Independent | |5.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Nikolay Abramov |align=left|Independent | |3.30% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Ofitserov |align=left|Yabloko | |2.59% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Seryubin |align=left|Independent | |1.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Pimenov |align=left|Independent | |1.12% |- |style="background-color:#164C8C"| |align=left|Aleksandr Zhuravlev |align=left|United Russian Party Rus' | |0.48% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |19.76% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2004 March Another by-election was scheduled after Against all line received the most votes. |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes |
1997 Russian gubernatorial elections Набрала 18% References Living people 1955 births Third convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Fourth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Fifth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Sixth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian | She has been a member of the State Duma since 1995. She was Secretary of the Kemerovo regional Communist party organization. She was an unsuccessful candidate for governor of Kemerovo Oblast in the 1997 Russian gubernatorial elections Набрала 18% References Living people 1955 births Third convocation members of the State Duma (Russian |
footballers S.S. Lazio players U.S. Siracusa players S.S.C. Napoli players U.S. Viterbese 1908 players A.C.N. Siena 1904 players U.S. Avellino 1912 players | football forward and later manager. References 1920 births 1984 deaths Sportspeople from Rome Italian footballers S.S. Lazio players U.S. Siracusa players S.S.C. Napoli players |
May 1997) is a German tennis player. Fallert has a career high ATP doubles ranking of world | links 1997 births Living people German male tennis players People from Bad Urach Tennis people |
Committee of Common Market Forwarders or Comité de Liaison Européen des Commissionaires et Auxiliaires de Transport du Marché Commun (CLECAT). References 1958 establishments in Belgium International business organizations International transport organizations Freight forwarders associations International organisations based in Belgium | non-governmental organization representing over 19000 European logistics and freight forwarding companies and customs agents. History and organization CLECAT was founded in Brussels, Belgium, in 1958 as the European Liaison |
University of Arkansas. , Farrell and her husband, fellow naval officer Paul Farrell, lived in Charlestown, Boston with their two children aged six and three. US Navy Farrell's first Navy assignment was aboard , first as electrical officer and then as navigator. She was then assigned to Millington, Tennessee before reporting to as weapons officer and then combat systems officer. Following her return to the US Naval Academy as the deputy director for professional development, Farrell was assigned to the Commander, Naval Surface Forces Atlantic as the deputy N3. After a stint as the executive officer | two children aged six and three. US Navy Farrell's first Navy assignment was aboard , first as electrical officer and then as navigator. She was then assigned to Millington, Tennessee before reporting to as weapons officer and then combat systems officer. Following her return to the US Naval Academy as the deputy director for professional development, Farrell was assigned to the Commander, Naval Surface Forces Atlantic as the deputy N3. After a stint as the executive officer of , on 21 January 2022, Commander Farrell was assigned to for a two-year assignment as the first woman commanding officer in the ship's 224-year history. , Farrell had received |
people 1955 births Seventh convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) Eighth convocation members of the State Duma (Russian Federation) | (born 11 December 1955) is a Russian politician. He is the United Russia member of the State Duma for the Slavgorod constituency. References Living people 1955 births |
people in 2020. References Populated places in | people in 2020. References Populated places in Dakahlia |
Beni Ebeid () is a city in the Dakahlia | the Dakahlia Governorate, Egypt. Its population was estimated at about 45,000 people |
career Born in Bologna, Barletta made his debut at very young age for the Saturday insert of the newspaper Gazzetta del Popolo Fuorisacco, and later collaborated with several magazines as an illustrator. In 1968 he created for the magazine Rinascita the comic strip | magazines as an illustrator. In 1968 he created for the magazine Rinascita the comic strip Mr. Manager, but after the refusal of the magazine to publish it as too politicized, the strip landed on the magazines and Eureka, to which |
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