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of helping underprivileged people and was called to the bar in 1992. He worked as Liberty's legal director and later for Justice from 1997 until 2003 when he resigned in order to practise law. At the time of his death, he was a board member of the Granta Trust. He was made an OBE in 2007 "for services to human rights". The cases he worked on included LGBT people and military service, the treatment of asylum seekers in Greece, and Belarusian pro-democracy activists. In 2018, he campaigned against Brexit by declaring Totnes an independent city-state and distributing mock passports. Cooper died four days before his 59th birthday while walking with his husband in the Scottish Highlands on 18 September 2021. Shortly before his death, Cooper was working with Helena Kennedy on a proposal to ban conversion therapy. He received tributes from Kennedy, Geoffrey Robertson, Peter Tatchell, Jayne Ozanne, Nancy Kelley, Michael Cashman, and Philippe Sands. Works References 1962 births 2021 deaths English human rights activists LGBT lawyers English barristers LGBT rights | 2016. Cooper was openly gay and married to art historian Kevin Childs; they had been together since 1992. Life and career Cooper was born on 22 September 1962 in Salford. His father, Peter, was a lecturer at Manchester University in psychology, while his mother, Jackie, worked in market research. Cooper attended Dartington Hall School then studied psychology at Goldsmiths College, but left without a degree. He later studied history at Kent University. He studied law with the intention of helping underprivileged people and was called to the bar in 1992. He worked as Liberty's legal director and later for Justice from 1997 until 2003 when he resigned in order to practise law. At the time of his death, he was a board member of the Granta |
wife; Mohit's mother; Paakhi and Shanaya’s aunt (2022–present) James Ghadge as Mohit Shrivastava: Paakhi and Shanaya’s cousin (2022–present) Gargi Patel as Neelima Raichand: Agastya's grandmother (2022–present) Ayaz Ahmed as Yug: Agastya's henchman (2022–present) Sagar Parekh as Shubham: Ishaan's brother (2022–present) Shruti Chaudhary as Sanaya (2022–present) Prachi Kadam / Arista Mehta as Naveli (2022–present) Aashish Kaul as Mr. Tandon (2022–present) Rishikesh Ingley as Mr, Khanna: Agastya's Businessman (2022–present) Bhawna Ahuja as Tina: Agastya (2022–present) Krip Suri as Inspector Virat Singh (2022–present) Aakash Talwar as Rajeev (Dead) (2022) Productions Casting Reem Shaikh was roped in to play Paakhi Srivastava. Akshit Sukhija was chosen to play Dr. Ishaan Tondon and Zain Imam to play the main antagonist Agastya Raichand, who is a very rich businessman. Aakash Talwar bagged the series as Rajeev. In February 2022, Ayaz Ahmed and Krip Suri joined the show as Yug and Inspector Virat Singh. In February 2022, Arista Mehta replaced Prachi Kadam as Naveli. Development The show | of her life creating an illusion for her. As the story unfolds, Paakhi falls in love with a young, virtuous oncologist Ishaan and her life takes an interesting turn. Upon knowing this, Agastya, plans and plots to shake every pillar of her existence. As Agastya's affection for Paakhi crosses all bounds, it gives rise to many complexities and a whirlwind of emotions. Cast Main Zain Imam as Agastya Raichand: Paakhi's best friend; Paakhi's obsessive lover (2022–present) Reem Shaikh as Paakhi Srivastava: Agastya's best friend and love interest; Ishaan's ex-fiance/girlfriend (2022–present) Akshit Sukhija as Dr. Ishaan Tandon: Paakhi's ex-fiance/boyfriend (2022–present) Recurring Avinash Sahijwani as Sameer Shrivastava: Anuj's brother; Paakhi and Shanaya’s father (Dead) (2022) Killed by Agastya Mamta Verma: Sameer's widower; Paakhi and Shanaya’s mother (2022–present) Anushka Merchande as Shanaya Shrivastava: Paakhi’s sister (2022–present) Afzaal Khan as Anuj Shrivastava: Sameer's brother Mohit's father; Paakhi and Shanaya’s uncle (2022–present) Swati Tarar as Leela Shrivastav: Anuj's wife; |
Bachelor of Arts in Film Studies in 2003. She then went on to graduate with a Master of Fine Arts from New York University Tisch School of the Arts in 2009. Career Haapasalo first gained prominence through her thesis films, first the comedy short Ilona and later at Tisch the 60-minute long On Thin Ice, which had screenings at the 2009 Helsinki International Film Festival as well as the Brooklyn and Manhattan Film Festivals. In 2015, Haapasalo returned to Finland when she was invited to direct and write the feature Love and Fury (2016). She collaborated with six other Finnish director-writers on the 2019 anthology film Force of Habit. The film was awarded Best Film in the International Competition at the 2020 Durban International Film Festival in South Africa and | In 2015, Haapasalo returned to Finland when she was invited to direct and write the feature Love and Fury (2016). She collaborated with six other Finnish director-writers on the 2019 anthology film Force of Habit. The film was awarded Best Film in the International Competition at the 2020 Durban International Film Festival in South Africa and the Nordisk Film Award at the 2020 Jussi Awards. She also directed the Jarowskij Finland series Nyrkki. Haapasalo directed the coming of age film Girl Picture from a screenplay by Ilona Ahti and Daniela Hakulinen. It premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival in the United States where it received critical acclaim and won the Audience Award in the World Dramatic Competition. It has been chosen for the 72nd Berlin International Film Festival's Generation selection. Personal life Haapasalo lives in the Töölö neighbourhood of Helsinki with her American husband Christian Giordano and their children. They married in 2009, and Haapasalo became |
1968 NCAA University Division football season ). In their third year under head coach Vito Ragazzo, the team | team compiled an overall record of 1–9 with a mark of 1–3 in conference play, placing sixth in the SoCon. Schedule References VMI VMI Keydets football |
degree in 1917 and a master's degree in 1918. She earned a law degree from Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles, and passed the Califorrnia bar in 1926, "one of the first Latina lawyers in the United States." Career After early work as an editor and actress in New York, Bates was a trial lawyer in Los Angeles. She was president of the California Business Women's Council, and also of the Los Angeles Business Women's Council, and active in the Los Angeles Women's Club. She was vice-president of the Los Angeles Lawyers Club and headed the international department of the Women's University Club. "Every woman lawyer who actually earns her living in the practice of law is an exceptional woman," she declared in 1932. "To survive the hard grind of study, and the worst grind | earned a bachelor's degree in 1917 and a master's degree in 1918. She earned a law degree from Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles, and passed the Califorrnia bar in 1926, "one of the first Latina lawyers in the United States." Career After early work as an editor and actress in New York, Bates was a trial lawyer in Los Angeles. She was president of the California Business Women's Council, and also of the Los Angeles Business Women's Council, and active in the Los Angeles Women's Club. She was vice-president of the Los Angeles Lawyers Club and headed the international department of the Women's University Club. "Every woman lawyer who actually earns her living in the practice of law is an exceptional woman," she declared in 1932. "To survive the hard grind of study, and the worst grind of private practice or the demands of public office, requires good health, good brains, and most important, good luck." Bates was an officer of the National Association of Women Lawyers, and organized the group's national gatherings in Los Angeles in 1935 and 1939. In 1944 she was a founder of the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA); in 1949 she was president of FIDA. She edited and wrote essays for The Women Lawyers’ Journal. In 1952, she testified before the President's Commission on Naturalization and Immigration, on the subject of adoption, immigration, and citizenship procedures for Japanese-American "war babies". She ran unsuccessfully for a seat on the Los Angeles Board of Education in 1953. She was |
Cladonia lichexanthonica is a rare species of saxicolous (rock-dwelling) lichen in the family Cladoniaceae. Found in Bahia, Brazil, it was formally described as a new species in 2018 by lichenologists André Aptroot and Marcela Eugenia da Silva Cáceres. The type specimen was collected by the authors from the Morro do Pai Inácio (in Chapada Diamantina National Park) at an altitude between ; here the lichen was found growing on siliceous sandstone rock in a transitional forest. Cladonia lichexanthonica is only known to occur at | siliceous sandstone rock in a transitional forest. Cladonia lichexanthonica is only known to occur at the type locality (part of the Chapada Diamantina mountains), and is only known from the type specimen. The lichen has a squamulose (scaley) thallus measuring up to in diameter; this consists of a thick crust comprising individual crowded squamules, pale-olive green to olive brown, measuring 1–5 mm in size. The specific epithet lichexanthonica |
in 2000. History The area in what is known as Newburg today was first settled in December 1854. It was originally known as South Leon for the southern Leon River. The community's local Baptist church was organized in July 1872. Its membership reached 48 members in 1875, with the first grave being placed in the community's cemetery that year. The congregation moved to another church building near the cemetery shortly after. A post office was established at Newburg in 1883 and remained in operation | still in the community in 1940, along with one business and several scattered houses. Its population remained at 74 until it went down to 35 through 2000. Geography Newburg is located at the intersection of Farm to Market Roads 2561 and 1476 off Texas State Highway 16, some south of Comanche in southern Comanche County. Education A building made of logs was used as the first school in the community in 1896. The local Baptist church met at the schoolhouse each year. The church near the cemetery was also used as a school. It had 101 students and four teachers in 1937 and continued to operate in 1940. It then joined with the Comanche Independent School District in the 1950s. The community continues to be |
Canadian punk rock musician Dušica Žegarac (1944–2019), Serbian | people with the surname include: Dave Zegarac (born 1979), Canadian punk rock musician |
of their "dinner from a ditch". Her mother brings out a picture from her childhood and, for the first time, talks about the famine that her family suffered. Feeling guilty, the girl takes a bite of the watercress. She discovers that she likes the taste and reflects on the new memory she and her family have created. Reception Watercress is a Junior Library Guild book. It was met with critical acclaim, including starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, and Shelf Awareness. Kirkus Reviews called the book "[u]nderstated, deep, and heart-rending." Writing for School Library Journal, Elissa Cooper called Watercress "[a] powerful story sure to awaken empathy and curiosity." Publishers Weekly said it was "[a]n adept gem of a picture book, encompassing both universal intergenerational embarrassment and a specific diasporic | the plants. The watercress is prepared for dinner that night, but the girl initially refuses to eat it because she is ashamed of their "dinner from a ditch". Her mother brings out a picture from her childhood and, for the first time, talks about the famine that her family suffered. Feeling guilty, the girl takes a bite of the watercress. She discovers that she likes the taste and reflects on the new memory she and her family have created. Reception Watercress is a Junior Library Guild book. It was met with critical acclaim, including starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, and Shelf Awareness. Kirkus Reviews called the book "[u]nderstated, deep, and heart-rending." Writing for School Library Journal, Elissa Cooper called Watercress "[a] powerful story sure to awaken empathy and curiosity." Publishers Weekly said it was "[a]n adept gem of a picture book, encompassing both universal intergenerational embarrassment and a specific diasporic shift in |
considered international territory. Regardless of its founding circumstances, all aspirant states claim sovereignty over their claimed territory and seek formal recognition of their statehood in international society. Such an entity is only considered an aspirant state while it formally claims sovereignty but has not achieved international recognition as a sovereign state. Consequently, an aspirant state could be recognized by no | territory and seek formal recognition of their statehood in international society. Such an entity is only considered an aspirant state while it formally claims sovereignty but has not achieved international recognition as a sovereign state. Consequently, an aspirant state could be recognized by no other political entities or many other political |
October 2001, Yahoo! Kimo was launched as the merger of Kimo with . References External links Companies established in 2001 2001 establishments in Taiwan Yahoo! Internet search engines | In February 2001, Yahoo! Inc. acquired , a Taiwanese search engine, and in October 2001, Yahoo! Kimo was launched as the merger of Kimo with . References |
July 13, 1951, and ended on March 28, 1952. Until March 1, 1952, it was sponsored by Ennds chlorophyll tablets, manufactured by Pearson Pharmacal Company, that product's first venture into being a regular sponsor on TV. Episodes were reruns of stories produced by Music Corporation of America, originally shown on Stars Over Hollywood. NBC version On NBC Hollywood Opening Night ran from October 6, 1952, until March 23, 1953. It replaced Lights Out and was replaced by Eye Witness. Besides the change in networks, the content changed from filmed episodes to live broadcasts, and the show began originating from the then-new Burbank studios of NBC. Host Jimmie Fidler introduced each episode from a set that resembled a theater, and he followed each episode with | of NBC. Host Jimmie Fidler introduced each episode from a set that resembled a theater, and he followed each episode with a preview of what was scheduled for the next week. Ethel Barrymore, Dorothy Lamour, and Gloria Swanson made their TV dramatic debuts on the program. Competing shows on other networks included The Big Idea on DuMont, Perspective on ABC, and I Love Lucy on CBS. Pearson again was the sponsor. Fidler blamed the show's demise on its being broadcast at the same time as I Love Lucy, the top-rated TV program at that time. He wrote that he had often asked executives at NBC about moving the show to another night, but they kept it in the same time slot. William Corrigan was the program's producer and director, with Marilyn Evans as associate director. Boris Sagal was |
the organization after three years as he failed to complete one the requirements of his probation. Professional coaching career Upon leaving Red Deer College, Taylor was named head coach and director of hockey operations for the Reading Royals of the ECHL prior to the 2005–06 season. During his first season with the team, Taylor led them to a 42–23–7 regular-season record and was selected as the co-coach for the American Conference at the ECHL's 2006 All-Star game. This marked the organization's second 40-plus win season in team history and third consecutive playoff appearance. In his third season with the team, Taylor amassed a 112–82–22 total record as the Royals lost in the second round of the 2008 Kelly Cup playoffs to the eventual-champion Cincinnati Cyclones. He eventually left the Royals organization in 2008 once they landed an ECHL affiliation with the Los Angeles Kings and became the first head coach of the Ontario Reign. During their inaugural season, Taylor helped lead the team to a 7–4–1–1 record through their first 13 games. Their success continued through the 2008–09 season as he helped them capture the 2009 Pacific Division championship. Taylor remained with the Reign until 2011 when he accepted an assistant coaching position with the Chicago Wolves of the American Hockey League (AHL). He spent the 2011–12 season with the Wolves, where he helped the club post a 42–27–7 record during the regular season to win the Midwest Division title. Following his | to the 1998 CIAU championships. Early life Taylor was born on May 4, 1971, in North Bay, Ontario, Canada. As a teenager, Taylor moved to Barrie, Ontario in order to play with the Barrie Colts of the Southern Ontario Junior "B" Hockey League. Following his first season with the Colts, Taylor was drafted 15th overall by the Windsor Spitfires in the 1988 Ontario Hockey League (OHL) Midget Priority Draft. While with the Spitfires, Taylor was moved from his original position of left wing to defence. He scored eight goals and added 15 assists during the 1988–1989 season before being traded to the London Knights in January 1990. His tenure with the Knights was short-lived however, as he was traded to the North Bay Centennials in November 1990. Collegiate and assistant coaching career Taylor concluded his major junior career in 1991 to play five years with the University of New Brunswick (UNB) men's ice hockey team. He then took a year off from hockey to complete his Master's degree before accepting an assistant coaching position with a Fredericton midget AAA team. Taylor spent one year with the team before returning to UNB as an assistant coach in 1997. During his short tenure with the UNB Reds, Taylor helped lead them to the 1998 CIAU championships. At UNB, Taylor was convinced by head coach Mike Johnson to join the National Coaching Institute (NCI) where he completed his master's degree in Sports Management. Upon returning from the NCI, Taylor became a co-coach late in the season with the Calgary Flames midget AAA team along with Mark Howell. While attending a symposium, he was notified of an opening for a coaching position with the Red Deer College Kings ice hockey team. He eventually accepted the position in May 2000. Prior to his first season in this role, Taylor lost two defencemen and struggled to fill the lineup. He was eventually let go from the organization after three years as he failed to complete one the requirements of his probation. Professional coaching career Upon leaving Red Deer College, Taylor was named head coach and director of hockey operations for the Reading Royals of the ECHL prior to the 2005–06 season. During his first season with the team, Taylor led them to a 42–23–7 regular-season record and was selected as the co-coach for the American Conference at the |
active on tour during the 1970s, reaching a singles world ranking of 397. He featured in the men's | main draw of the 1977 Wimbledon Championships, partnering with Tony Lloyd. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people British male tennis players English male tennis players Tennis people from |
active placebo in early clinical trials of psychedelic drugs but was regarded as having little use otherwise, though more recent research into compounds such as AL-34662 and AAZ-A-154 has shown | little use otherwise, though more recent research into compounds such as AL-34662 and AAZ-A-154 has shown that these kind of non-psychedelic 5-HT2A agonists can have various useful applications. See also 5F-DMT 5F-DET 5F-MET 5F-EPT 6F-AMT 6F-DMT References Psychedelic tryptamines |
Bald Eagle Area Middle and High School and Wingate Elementary School are in Wingate. References Unincorporated communities in Centre County, Pennsylvania Unincorporated communities | the junction of PA 144 and PA 504. Bald Eagle Area Middle and High |
Doctors in Philosophy from reputed educational Institutes and around 7500 mentors are working in top posts of reputed organisations. Mentor Selection and Requirements Following are the requirements of Mentor under this programme: Through an Desh ke Mentor app created by Delhi Technological University team, anyone in the age group of 18 to 35 years can register themselves. Fill the details on date of birth, educational qualification, nature of profession, work experiences in various organisation and sign with undertaking. Students connected with mentors on mutual interest basis. Mentorship includes regular contact over phone for two months to be extended to four months on optional basis. Mentors to complete a brief ‘psychometry test’ on a set of questions. On completion of registration based on mentors gender and interests, set of students are assigned. Each mentor to schedule weekly time of 10 minutes for the students allotted to them. Mentorship programme to run from two to six months. Initial two months are based on compulsory module and remaining four months to be optional. Mentors to be from various professional and academic backgrounds. Each mentor will be allotted 5 to 10 students categorised on gender and skill requirements of students. Concerns Desh Ke Mentor faces following concerns from National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR): Concerns on child abuse and safety after assigning to mentors. Concerns on lack of police verification of mentors. Concerns on Psychometric Test authenticity. Concerns on child abuse through phone. Even after parental consent, child safety is in responsibility of Delhi Government. Safeguards On the suggestions of National Commission for Protection of Child Rights, following protective measures were taken: Respective police stations will do mandatory verification of mentors. Department of Education,Government of Delhi will record the converstion between mentor and student and stored. Offline meeting of mentor | posts of reputed organisations. Mentor Selection and Requirements Following are the requirements of Mentor under this programme: Through an Desh ke Mentor app created by Delhi Technological University team, anyone in the age group of 18 to 35 years can register themselves. Fill the details on date of birth, educational qualification, nature of profession, work experiences in various organisation and sign with undertaking. Students connected with mentors on mutual interest basis. Mentorship includes regular contact over phone for two months to be extended to four months on optional basis. Mentors to complete a brief ‘psychometry test’ on a set of questions. On completion of registration based on mentors gender and interests, set of students are assigned. Each mentor to schedule weekly time of 10 minutes for the students allotted to them. Mentorship programme to run from two to six months. Initial two months are based on compulsory module and remaining four months to be optional. Mentors to be from various professional and academic backgrounds. Each mentor will be allotted 5 to 10 students categorised on gender and skill requirements of students. Concerns Desh Ke Mentor faces following concerns from National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR): Concerns on child abuse and safety after assigning to mentors. Concerns on lack of police verification of mentors. Concerns on Psychometric Test authenticity. Concerns on child abuse through phone. Even after parental consent, child safety is in responsibility of Delhi Government. Safeguards On the suggestions of National Commission for Protection |
who established a gin there in 1890. The first mail carrier was Ira Harvey, while the first postmaster was Bob Lewis. The community's population was 25 in 1940. A filling station named Lightfoot that opened in 1930 was the only business in Rucker in 1976. It continued to be listed on county maps in 1990. Geography Rucker is located on Texas State Highway 6 on the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, northwest of | population was 25 in 1940. A filling station named Lightfoot that opened in 1930 was the only business in Rucker in 1976. It continued to be listed on county maps in 1990. Geography Rucker is located on Texas State Highway 6 on the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, northwest |
Texas. He majored in communications. In the late winter of 1976, during the middle of his freshman year, he received media attention for the first time as a university student-athlete. In February, he played the Pan American International Tournament in Monterrey, Mexico. At the "elite" event, he finished in fourth place. In March, he received much attention for his performance at the Border Olympics golf competition. Over he first two rounds he shot a 138 to take the individual lead. During the final round, however, he did not play as well. He made a triple bogey on the 3rd hole. He then played the wrong ball on the 7th hole leading to a two-shot penalty. He ultimately shot an 81 to finish in 5th place. Late in the year, he played the Southland Conference tournament. He opened with a 71 to put him in the lead. However, he shot a second round 78 to fall into solo fourth place. Lamar's team was in third place at this point. In the third round he started with outward nine of 39 to remain in fourth place. He remained in contention after the third round and through the front nine of the final round. However, in the final round he double-bogeyed the par-4 14th hole and quadruple-bogeyed on par-5 15th hole "that knocked him back in the pack." Overall, however, Israelson received much praise for his performance over the course of the year. In the middle of the season, his coach, Dan Rogas, stated, "I may be going out on a limb in saying this, but Israelson is the best freshman golfer at this state in his career." He was referred to by The Port Arthur News as the number one player on the team. In the summer, he returned to Minnesota. In July, he began play at the Minnesota State Amateur at the Oak Ridge Country Club. In the first round, Israelson birdied three of the first five holes and made the first 15 greens in regulation. With his 69 (−1), he was tied for the lead. He again shot a 69 in the second round to take the solo lead. However, he opened the final round poorly. Israelson missed a number of short putts early on his way shooting three-over-par on the first five holes. Israelson later stated, "I knew I had to do something right then. I had to do something to take the pressure off." He then made a 10-foot birdie putt at the 6th hole. He played even-par from thereon in and finished the tournament at even-par 210. He won by seven shots. "Heck, he just annihilated the field," said leading competitor Larry Johnson. Israelson had success at a number of other events in Minnesota over the course of the summer. On July 26, he began play at the Birchmont International Golf Tournament. During the first round of qualifying he opened excellently, with six birdies on the front side on the way to a 66 (−6). He led by three. In the second qualifying round he continued with his "torrid" pace, opening with a bogey-free 31 (−4). Overall, he shot a second round 67 (−5) to win medalist honors by eight shots. However, he was again eliminated early from the tournament proper, this time losing in the second round to Rob Dahm. The following week he played the Resorters Golf Tournament in Alexandria, Minnesota. In the first round he easily defeated Jeff Resch 7 & 5. In the second round he again "whipped" an opponent, defeating Bruce Christensen 6 & 4. He advanced to the quarterfinals. In the quarterfinals, he was scheduled to play Dick Blooston. He defeated him. In the semifinals, however, he lost 2 up to Dick Johnson. The following week he played Pine to Palm tournament at Detroit Country Club. He won in the first round 2 up. In the second round he played Dan Croonquist. Israelson had "the day's hottest round" and "crushed" his competitor 6 & 5. Israelson recorded seven birdies in 13 holes. Israelson ultimately reached the finals where he played Mark Rohde. Israelson defeated Rohde to win the event. In April 1977, back at Lamar, he recorded a number of highlights. In the middle of the month he played the three-round Louisiana Tech Invitational. He recorded a 212 total, four-under-par, to win the event. It was "his first collegiate tournament victory." Later in the month, he played the Southland Conference golf tournament. Israelson was one of the opening round "stars" outplaying the "pre-tournament favorites." He recorded an even-par 72 to tie Chris Williams for the lead. Israelson credited his scrambling skills for the low round. Israelson, however, "slumped" with a second round 76 but "made up ground" in the afternoon round, the third round, shooting a 74. He was now in tie for fifth place, three back. Israelson later described the up and down day: "I played pretty sorry for the first 27 holes today. The last nine I hit the ball as well as I can − but still only shot 36." Israelson shot a final round 79 to finish well back in individual honors. Lamar's team finished in third place among the six teams. Overall, however, Israelson remained the number one player on the team over the course of the year. He had the best scoring average on the team during this era. After his sophomore year concluded, he returned to Minnesota. Over the course of the summer he went on a great winning streak. In early June, he played a 7up tournament at Edina Country Club. Israelson won his individual and team match. Roughly a month later he played the Pebble Lake shortstop. He shot an even-par 72 to win the event by three shots. Later in the month, he played in the amateur division of the three-round XX tournament. The event was held at Oxbow Country Club in Fargo, North Dakota. Israelson opened with a 67 which was "believed to be a course record." He finished at 212 (−4) to defeat Rob Dahm, who defeated him at the Birchmont the previous year, by three shots. Later in the month he played the three-round Minnesota Amateur. The first round was bookended by triple-bogeys "yet [he] still managed to shoot a 77." In the second round he shot a 72 to put himself three back, in a tie for third. In the final round he was paired with Rick Benshoof and Norb Anderson in the last group. Israelson birdied the first two holes and then the 4th hole. He later stated, "I got off to that good start and knew I was going to score well." On the 9th hole, however, his primary competitor, Benshoof, "hit into the water" while Israelson two-putted for birdie. He was now tied for the lead. On the 11th hole, Israelson made an 18-foot birdie putt to take the solo lead for the first time. Benshoof then bogeyed the next three holes "to drop back." Israelson subsequently birdied the 15th and 16th holes to assure the win. He won by eight strokes. "He's fantastic," Benshoof stated after the round about Israelson. "He's the best I've seen around here in a long time." It was Israelson's seventh straight victory. The following week he won the Mille Lacs Invitational. It was his "8th straight title." Shortly thereafter, he played the Birchmont International. In the first qualifying round he "soared" to a 75 but "easily" qualified for the second qualifying round. Israelson qualified for the tournament. In the first round "he had to stage a comeback" to defeat his opponent, Steve Herzog, 2 & 1. He also won his second round match over Tuffy Nelson 6 & 5. Israelson was slated to play fellow "collegiate star" Miles Prestemon in a "key match" the following round. Prestimon was a "decisive winner," defeating Israelson 6 & 5. In August he played the Pine to Palms golf tournament. Israelson won his opening round match against Paul Hanson 2 & 1. Israelson advanced to the semifinals, easily defeating his second and third round opponents. In the semifinals Israelson defeated R.J. Smiley 2 & 1. In the finals he played Dan Croonquist. Croonquist birdied the first hole to take the lead. However, Israelson made an 18-foot birdie on the next hole to tie. He won a number of holes shortly thereafter and took a 2 up lead at the turn. He then made a 2 1/2 birdie putt on the 15th hole to take a 3 up lead and won the event on the next hole. The following day he intended to qualify for the U.S. Amateur. The qualifying tournament was at Woodhill Country Club. Israelson finished in third place at the event only behind medalist Croonquist and Jon Chafee. The event proper would be played in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania. It was his first U.S. Amateur. Israelson won his first round match. In the second round he played British golfer Peter McEvoy, the defending British Amateur champion. Israelson did not play particularly well on the outward nine, shooting four-over-par and winning only one hole. McEvoy did not fare much better though and only held a 1 up lead after nine holes. McEvoy, however, "turned on the steam" after the turn, winning four straight holes. He ultimately won it 5 & 4. Israelson attributed his weak performance towards poor iron play. Shortly thereafter, he returned to Lamar. In October, he played the Morton Braswell collegiate golf tournament. The event was held in Huntington Park Golf Course in Shreveport, Louisiana. Israelson shot rounds of 74 and 73 to lead Lamar's team and finish in a tie for fourth overall, only behind Hal Sutton, Bill Pierot, and Mark Powell. The following semester, in April, he received some attention at the All-America Intercollegiate Invitational Golf Tournament. He opened with a 71 to position himself in the top ten. However, he shot significantly over-par in the second round to fall from contention. Later in the semester, he competed in the Sunnehanna Amateur. Playing among a field of 55, he finished in a tie for 13th. Israelson soon returned to Minnesota. In mid-July he played the three-round Minnesota State Amateur. He was attempting to become the first person in 50 years to win the event three times in a row. In the first round he shot a 73 (+1). In the second round, played the same day in the afternoon, he shot 70 (−2), the round of the day. He was one back of leader Chris Perry. In the final round, his main competitor, Perry, played poorly, opening doors to the field. On the 14th hole, Israelson two-putted for birdie "to gain control of the tourney." With his even-par 72, he defeated Perry by three. He became the first person to win the event three times consecutively since Jimmy Johnston in the 1920s. The following day, he began play at the Minnesota State Open. He did not open well and nearly missed the first round cut, making it on the number with a 76 (+4). However, he shot two-under-par over the final two rounds to finish at 218 (+2) overall, in a tie for fourth place. On Monday July 24th, Israelson began the qualifying process for the Birchmont International. He opened with a 65 (−7) to take the lead. In the second round, he shot 68 for a 133 total. He led all qualifiers by eight shots. Israelson won his first two matches of the tournament proper to advance to the quarterfinals. In the quarterfinals, he defeated Bob O'Neill easily, 6 & 5, shooting seven-under-par in 13 holes. In the semifinals, however, he lost to Dave Kluver 3 & 1. In the late summer he played the U.S. Amateur again. However, he lost in the second round once more, this time to Warren Choate of Williamsport, Pennsylvania, 2 & 1. Israelson won 1978 Minnesota Golf Association Player of Year Award. In the fall, Israelson returned to Lamar for his senior year. In October, he played the Braswell intercollegiate. He opened with rounds of 72 and 73 to position himself in a tie for fourth among individuals, only behind, respectively, Hal Sutton, Peter Winkler, Clyde Rego, and Fred Couples. In the spring, he played the three-round Spring Intercollegiate Golf Tournament hosted by North Texas University in Denton, Texas. In the first round Israelson shot an even-par 71 to put him near the lead. In the second round, "despite brisk North winds," Israelson was able to shoot one-under-par to tie Southern Methodist's Payne Stewart for the lead. Playing against "steady rain" in the final round, however, Israelson was unable to match Stewart's 71, shooting a 75 to fall into a tie for second place. Shortly thereafter, he returned to Minnesota. It was noted by The Star Tribune that he was "struggling with his game." Israelson said, "The last few weeks I've been hitting the ball very solidly. But I'm usually hitting the ball to the right on a couple of holes each round and making a big score." In late May, he played 7-Up Cup golf matches in Minnesota. An "erratic driver" led to loses in both the individual and team matches. Israelson did not receive much media attention during the rest of the summer. In late July, he entered the Birchmont International Golf Tournament. Israelson made it to the finals where he played Mark Norman of Edina, Minnesota. Norman eagled the second and third holes to take a quick 2 up lead. However, Israelson managed to close the gap to 1 up at the turn. By the 17th hole the two competitors were tied. Norman made his only bogey of the day on the 18th hole to lose the match. Overall, Israelson shot a 66 (−6) in the round. The following year, Israelson attempted to defend his Birchmont championship. In the first round he defeated Eric Niskanen handily, 5 & 4. Israelson then "survived" his second round match, defeating Brian Byrnes on the 17th hole, 2 & 1. In the quarterfinals he defeated Tom Poehler 4 & 3. In the following round he defeated Jim Strandemo 6 & 4. In the finals, however, he was defeated by Steve Herzog 2 & 1. In mid-August, he played the Pine-to-Palm golf tournament at Detroit Lakes Golf Course in Minnesota. In the two-round qualifier, Israelson opened with a 73. However, he responded with a 64 to tie Detroit Lakes' course record and finish at 137, two back of medalist Tom Lehman. Israelson would go on to win the event proper. Professional career Israelson turned professional in the late summer of 1980. The first professional tournament he played was the 1980 North Dakota Open. In the first round he shot a 69 (−3) to position himself in a tie for sixth. He shot seven-under-par thereafter to win the event with a 206 (−10) total. Israelson earned | holes for a 67 (−4). He finished at 276 and won. The following week he played the Singapore Open. He opened with rounds of 72 and 67 to put himself in a tie for ninth, two back of the lead. In the third round he shot a 69 to move into a tie for fifth with Rodger Davis, four back of leader Tom Sieckmann. In the final round he shot a 68 to finish in a tie for second with Burma's Kyi Hla Han and Australia's Terry Gale, two back of champion Sieckmann. After the round Israelson stated, "I'm satisfied, but will try to do better next time." Shortly thereafter, he returned to the United States. In the spring Israelson started playing on the Tournament Players Series, a satellite tour of the PGA Tour. In early May, he finished in a tie for fifth at the Tallahassee Open. A couple weeks later, in mid-May, Israelson attempted to qualify for the 1984 U.S. Open. He was medalist at local qualifying in Houston, Texas. At the end of the month he returned to the TPS, playing the Charley Pride Golf Fiesta. The event held at the University of New Mexico's South Course. Before the event proper, at the two-round pro-am, Israelson opened with a 65 (−7) to take a three stroke lead. At the tournament proper, he finished in a tie for 13th place, six shots back of champion Darrell Kestner. In June, he played the three-round Minnesota Golf Champions. After two rounds, Israelson was at 140 (−4), two shots back of leader Rick Ehrmanntraut. In the final round, Ehrmanntraut "struggled," opening up doors to the field. However, Israelson's game was, according to him, in "shambles." Nonetheless, he scrambled well to stay close to the lead. "He was chipping and putting like crazy," competitor Dan Croonquist later stated. In the meantime, Croonquist, with whom he was tied with after 11 holes, faltered on the back nine, shooting five-over-par on the final six holes. With a final round 70 (−2), Israelson won by six shots. In July, he played his state open, the three-round National Car Open. He was tied for the lead after two rounds. However, he shot a final round 77 to fall out of contention. In late 1984, Israelson made his fourth attempt to qualify for the PGA Tour. At 1984 PGA Tour Qualifying School, Israelson was unsuccessful by a stroke. In early 1985, Israelson returned to Asia. In was his third tour of the Asia Golf Circuit. In March, he played the Thailand Open. He opened with rounds of 68 (−4) and 67 (−5) to put him in a tie for second, three back of leader Ray Arinno. In the third round, Israelson started poorly, opening with two bogeys. However, he "brilliantly pulled his game back together" with birdies on five of the next seven holes. He ultimately shot a five-under-par 67 to take a four stroke lead over Arinno. He said after the round, "This is the first time I have been in contention in Asia and I hope to keep my head in front in the final round." Compatriot John Jacobs shot a course record 64 (−8) to seriously contend but Israelson "held off" his "challenge." With a final round 71 (−1), Israelson finished at 273 (−15) to defeat Jacobs by one. The following week he played the Rolex Masters in defense of his championship. Israelson opened poorly in the first round with a 75 (+4) but followed it up with a 67 (−4) to move into the top ten. He ultimately finished in a tie for ninth. By the middle of the season, he was ranked in a tie for fourth on the Asian circuit's Order of Merit. By June, had returned to the United States. In late spring, he intended to defend his Minnesota Golf Champions title. He opened with a 74 to put himself well back of leader Rick Ehrmannhaut. However, he ultimately finished in solo third, three out of a playoff between Ehrmannhaut and Jon Chaffee. The following week he played the 1985 U.S. Open at Oakland Hills Country Club. It was his second U.S. Open, his first since the 1982 event. In the first round, Israelson shot an even-par 35. He then opened the back nine with three straight birdies: a 10-foot birdie at the 10th, a holed chip shot at the 11th, and a two-putt birdie at the par-5 12th hole. He was one back of the lead. At the 13th hole he sarcastically noted to the crowd, "Want any quotes before the wheels come off?" On the par-3 hole, Israelson hit his tee shot "too pure" and it buried in a bunker. He hit his bunker shot over the green and made double-bogey. He then missed short par putts on the 14th and 15th to fall to one-over par. He finished with a 71 (+1). Afterwards, he stated, "It was kind of a bittersweet round. If someone had said I would shoot a 71 before I teed off today I would have been very happy. But to shoot a 71 after where I was after 12 holes is kind of disappointing." In the second round, the bogeyed the 14th and 15th holes to fall near the cut line. On the 16th hole he hit his drive in the rough. He had a precarious line to the hole, where he had to hit his 3-iron approach over a tree and a lake to the green. However, he hit to approach to five feet to assure a birdie and a made cut. In the third round he shot a 75 (+5) to fall to 218 (+8) and a tie for 44th place. During the final day, Israelson struggled in the middle of the round again but holed a 40-foot bunker shot on the last for birdie and a 75 (+5). He finished in a tie for 52nd place. After the tournament Israelson stated, "It seemed that each day I had a stretch of three or four of five holes where my game kind of went to sleep and that really hurt me. But I don't feel I have anything to be ashamed of." Israelson soon returned to Minnesota and had some success in local events. In late July, he played his state open, the National Car Open. In the first round he shot a 67 (−5) to put himself two behind leader George Shortridge. Both he and Shortridge shot even-par 72s to remain in first and second place, respectively. In the final round Shortridge struggled, shooting a 75, opening doors, but Israelson also struggled, himself shooting a 75, and finished two out of a playoff, in a tie for third. The following month he played the Manitoba Open. Israelson finished one behind champion Robbie Phillips, winning $4,200. Two weeks later, he recorded a top five at the Western North Dakota Pro-Am Golf Tournament. Later in the fall, he entered 1985 PGA Tour Qualifying School again. It was his fifth attempt at qualifying school. He was successful this time, finishing in a tie for 14th place. Israelson played on the PGA Tour during the 1986 season. Israelson was known for inconsistent play throughout the season. He made the cut in his first three of his first four events on the West Coast swing, including a T-11 at the Shearson Lehman Brothers Andy Williams Open. At this fifth event he played the Los Angeles Open. Israelson shot a second round 68 (−3) to move into a tie for sixth place, four back of the lead. However, he shot significantly over-par on the weekend and finished T-48. Israelson then played the Florida swing. Israelson made the cut in two of three events but did not come close to recording a top 25 finish. His next event was the USF&G Classic. Israelson second a second round 65 (−7) to move into a tie for third, three back of leader Calvin Peete. He closed with rounds of 74 and 69 to finish T-7. He missed his next four cuts, however. Later in the spring, however, he received more media attention. A few days after he missed the cut at the Houston Open he played the Crown Colony Pro-am, held in Lufkin, Texas. He tied for the win with Pat Lindsey. He then made two of the next three cuts. On June 2, he played a U.S. Open sectional qualifier at Aurora Country Club in Aurora, Illinois. Competing against 62 players, Israelson shot five-under-par 139 to win medallist honors. A few days later he began play at the Westchester Classic. In the first round, Israelson hit only five fairways but took only 23 putts. With seven birdies, he shot a 67 (−4). He was in solo third, two back of the lead held by Jay Haas and Tom Sieckmann. According to the The Herald Statesman, it was a surprise that Israelson was so close to the lead as he was "a virtual unknown." He shot over-par for the remainder of the tournament, however, and finished T-41. Around this time, Israelson stated that his goal for the year was to stay inside the top 125 of the money list to assure membership for the following season. At this point, he was ranked #101. The following week he played the 1986 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club. In severely windy conditions, Israelson opened with a 79 (+9). In the second round, Israelson shot two-over-par over the first 10 holes to fall one stroke outside of the cut line. Israelson birdied the 11th and 12th holes, however, to move within the cut line. He bogeyed the 14th hole but made a 60-foot birdie putt on the 15th to return to even-par for the day. He bogeyed the final hole but still managed to make the cut on the number at 150 (+10). He eventually finished in a tie for 55th place. Immediately afterwards, Israelson missed the cut in four of his next five events. In the late summer, he played better, making the cut in three four events with top-25s in all events in which he made the weekend. At this point he was #108 on the money list. However, he missed the cut in six of last eight events, failing to recording anything better than a T-48. He finished #130 on the money list, outside of the top 125 threshold. In 1987, Israelson played intermittently on the PGA Tour. He did not have much success, failing to make the cut in any of the 15 events he played. He lost his tour card at the end of the season. Israelson later stated he had severe troubles with his chipping and putting which hindered his success on tour. In 1988, Israelson returned to Asia. He recorded a tie for 15th at the Singapore Open. Other than that, however, he did not record many other highlights. By the middle of 1988, he was considered a "former tour pro." On August 22, 1988, Israelson attended a golf event at Faribault Golf and Country Club. He later stated he had a minimum of 15 alcoholic drinks at the golf tournament. Israelson then went driving on Interstate 35 on Faribault, Minnesota. He got into a car accident and was charged with a DUI and manslaughter. "According to the criminal complaint," the Associated Press reported, "Israelson was drunk when the car he was driving went off Interstate 35 in a construction zone, flew through the air and sliced off the top of an oncoming car. The driver of the other car, Michelle Malakowsky, 20, of Hartland, died at the scene, the State Patrol reported." On March 6, 1989, Israelson pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter. According to the Associated Press, "The plea bargain also calls for Israelson to spend six months in jail, pay restitution to the Malakowsky family and pay 10 percent of his taxable income in each of the next five years to charitable alcohol-related organizations." On April 26, 1989, Israelson was "sentenced to one year in jail and ordered to give part of his income to charitable, non-alcohol-related organizations." Israelson would begin his jail sentence on May 1, 1989. As of February 1990, Israelson began playing tournament golf again. He played some events on the Asia Golf Circuit. In 1991, he also played in Asia. In the summer of 1991, Israelson had much success in Minnesotan golf tournaments. In June 1991, he entered the Tapemark Charity Pro-Am. Israelson shot three rounds in the 60s to tie David Tentis at the end of regulation. The sudden-death playoff began at the par-3 15th hole. Israelson's tee shot missed the green by a wide margin. However, he "hit a splendid recovery shot" and made par. Tentis, meanwhile, missed his par putt and Israelson won the event. Israelson attributed his win to his short game. Later in the summer, Israelson played the National Car Open, Minnesota's state open. John Snyder held a five stroke lead over Israelson in the final round. However, Israelson "made a charge" in the middle of the back nine, birdieing holes 13–16 to take the lead. Israelson bogeyed the "difficult" par-3 17th, coming back to the field, but Snyder himself double bogeyed the hole to lose strokes to Israelson. Israelson ultimately |
book "[a]n exquisite tonic for storytellers far and wide, young and old." School Library Journal's Mara Alpert called it "[a] keep-you-up-all-night, compulsively readable science fiction novel that offers much food for thought." Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Megan Cox Gurden said it was "clever and compelling." Previous Newbery winner Tae Keller said The Last Cuentista “certainly veers into the dark end of middle-grade fiction, with brainwashing, ‘purging’, and, yes, the destruction of our entire planet ... but it doesn’t dwell in the darkness, preferring to give its readers healthy doses of hope, | Wall Street Journal, Megan Cox Gurden said it was "clever and compelling." Previous Newbery winner Tae Keller said The Last Cuentista “certainly veers into the dark end of middle-grade fiction, with brainwashing, ‘purging’, and, yes, the destruction of our entire planet ... but it doesn’t dwell in the darkness, preferring to give its readers healthy doses of hope, wonder and page-turning action.” The Last Cuentista was named one of the best children's books of the year by BookPage, The Boston Globe, the Chicago Public Library, Kirkus, the New York Public Library, Publishers Weekly, |
of the six legal deposit libraries in the country. Originally established as Kutuphane-i Umumi-i Osmani on 24 June 1884 by Abdul Hamid II, it consists Ottoman Empire periodicals, newspapers, magazines and other historical records. Its status granted by Ottoman Empire remained unchanged after proclamation of the Republic of Turkey in 1923. It hold a record of archiving 1.2 million of books since its launch. The 7th Council of Higher Education changed its named to Beyazıt State Library in 1961 after the Ottoman Empire was dissolved. Its doors are filled with annals written by Mustafa Naima. Most of its books are either transferred from other libraries or purchased or donated by public or private entities. Some of books are donated by the Bayezid II Mosque, Istanbul. It consists 1.5 million puishing materials 900 thousand registered books, 65,000 postcards, maps, cinema posters, 33,000 types of different magazines consisting of 135,000 volumes and more than 5,000 audio books. The library, which was visited by nearly 140 thousand readers in 2018, received more than 67 thousand readers in the first 6 months of 2019. History Sultan Abdul Hamid II converted some mosque buildings of 16th century into a public library in 1884. Prior to its existence as public library, the building also consisted a soup kitchen for poor people. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk issued an order in 1934 to keep that required a copy of published materials to be stored in the Beyazıt State Library. However, due to lack of accommodation in the building, it was expanded in 1948 and was re-expanded in 1953. Due to its scope within the country, its service areas was also expanded and a building of Faculty of Dentistry, Istanbul University built between 1867 and 1876 was donated to this library. Muzaffer Gökman was the director of Beyazıt State Library at that time. It is considered a pioneer library ever-established in Turkey as it introduced the first-ever bookbinding workshop and children's library and the first modern library cataloging in all library and information academic disciplines in the country. Building Beyazıt State Library was featured in The Daily | Gökman was the director of Beyazıt State Library at that time. It is considered a pioneer library ever-established in Turkey as it introduced the first-ever bookbinding workshop and children's library and the first modern library cataloging in all library and information academic disciplines in the country. Building Beyazıt State Library was featured in The Daily Beast's monthly series titled The World's Most Beautiful Libraries published in 2020. The structure of building was repaired with architectural restoration in 2016 when the government of Turkey commissioned Tabanlıoğlu Architects for reconstruction of the building. The firm started repairing work in 2006. However, the 1999 İzmit earthquake left crackers in building walls and a safe and modern structure was constructed. The borders or corners of the old structure symbolises its historical significance. The construction of the new project took $2 million in seven years. Funds were donated by Aydin Dogan Foundation. Sultan Abdülhamid II hired a carpenter who in collaboration with sultan designed the library's towering dark-wood book cabinet by himself. It covers about 3,000 square meters (0.7 acres) and is frequently visited by 100,000 visitors every year. Cataloging When the library was established, publishing material, including book taken from 500 different libraries were stored in that library. They originally |
to date, Nothing to Gain, was recorded in August 1990 – about a month after the release of Oppressing the Masses – but not released until December 1993. The album received mixed to negative reviews, and unlike their previous two albums (Eternal Nightmare and Oppressing the Masses), the band never toured in support of it. By that point, Vio-lence was at a crossroads, with rhythm guitarist Robb Flynn having left in 1992 in order to focus on then-new band Machine Head, and drummer Perry Strickland would also leave the band about a year later; the duo were replaced by Ray Vegas and Mark Hernandez respectively. After performing a series of shows around the Bay Area with this lineup, as well as several aborted attempts to record a fourth studio album, Vio-lence officially disbanded in 1994, and four-fifths of the band's last lineup at the time continued to collaborate under the name Torque, with guitarist Phil Demmel also taking over on vocals, and they released their only studio album in 1996 as an eponymous. In August 2001, Vio-lence reunited for their first show in eight years at the Thrash of the Titans festival, which was held as a co-benefit for the band's close friends Chuck Billy of Testament and Chuck Schuldiner of Death, who were both battling cancer. This was originally intended as a one-off show, but after its success, Vio-lence decided to resume activity as a band and spent much of 2002 and early 2003 playing shows around the West Coast, in addition to an appearance at the Milwaukee Metalfest in the summer of 2002 with Exodus, who had also reunited for the Thrash of the Titans benefit. The band was also considering recording | which was held as a co-benefit for the band's close friends Chuck Billy of Testament and Chuck Schuldiner of Death, who were both battling cancer. This was originally intended as a one-off show, but after its success, Vio-lence decided to resume activity as a band and spent much of 2002 and early 2003 playing shows around the West Coast, in addition to an appearance at the Milwaukee Metalfest in the summer of 2002 with Exodus, who had also reunited for the Thrash of the Titans benefit. The band was also considering recording new material, but nothing came out of it, and Vio-lence disbanded after playing a farewell show at The Pound in San Francisco on April 19, 2003, after which Demmel reunited with Flynn in Machine Head, where the former would remain until his departure from the band in 2018. A near-reunion of Vio-lence took place at The Midway in San Francisco, California on January 20, 2018, as a benefit concert for frontman Sean Killian, who had recently been diagnosed with stage four liver cirrhosis earlier. The benefit included performances by the members of Vio-Lence and their Bay Area thrash metal peers Testament, Exodus, Death Angel, Forbidden and Mordred. Following Demmel's departure from Machine Head and Killian's recovery from his illness, as well as months of speculation of a potential Vio-lence reunion, the band announced on January 8, 2019, that their first show in over fifteen years would take place on April 13 at the Metro in Oakland, which would see them perform the Eternal Nightmare album in its entirety. Initially planned as a one-off show, it sold out shortly after its announcement, resulting in a matinee appearance at the Metro, which took place on the following day. Vio-lence spent the rest of 2019 playing a series of US shows as well as their first-ever appearance in Europe, where they played the Alcatraz Metal Fest in Belgium. Vio-lence's intention to write a follow-up to Nothing to Gain was revealed in August 2019, when Demmel told Australia's Heavy magazine that, "Sean's itching to write some new music. I'm not itching as hard. I've got a lot on my plate. Vio-lence is definitely a priority, but that's just a step I haven't... It's hard, because you have this comeback, and then you play the songs, and you want to be good. I don't want to put out something that isn't as good as Eternal Nightmare or some of the songs from Oppressing. I want to have something that's quality." In an interview with Exodus frontman Steve "Zetro" Souza on |
of how to cook and look forward to the basic knowledge of what to cook, and why. Following the step by step of simple recipes we will be knitting a story involving our way of eating, social trends and personal habits. A long lasting learning experience with new acknowledgement that can be applied every day introducing new habits that will affect our health in a positive way. Production The series won the Fund for the Promotion of Film by the Audiovisual Direction of Uruguay. It featured the participation of 8 of the most influential chefs in Latin America: renowned Colombian chef Leo Espinosa, Slow Food representative in Uruguay Laura Rosano, chef specializing in Amazonian cuisine Thiago Castanho, Argentine writer Natalia Kiako, Aurelien Bondoux chef of La Bourgogne in Punta del Este, Verá, an indigenous person of Guaraní origin, the Brazilian culinary expert Bela Gil, and Pilar Rodríguez, gastronomic ambassador of Chile. The series was | will be knitting a story involving our way of eating, social trends and personal habits. A long lasting learning experience with new acknowledgement that can be applied every day introducing new habits that will affect our health in a positive way. Production The series won the Fund for the Promotion of Film by the Audiovisual Direction of Uruguay. It featured the participation of 8 of the most influential chefs in Latin America: renowned Colombian chef Leo Espinosa, Slow Food representative in Uruguay Laura Rosano, chef specializing in Amazonian cuisine Thiago Castanho, Argentine writer Natalia Kiako, Aurelien Bondoux chef of La Bourgogne in Punta del Este, Verá, an indigenous person of |
Rayner, a national junior indoor champion from Ilford, made appearances at Wimbledon during the late 1970s and early 1980s. While competing in singles qualifying he had a win over Pakistani Davis Cup player | Wimbledon main draw came in mixed doubles in 1978, partnering Clare Harrison to a second round exit. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people British male tennis |
around the world. It was founded in 2011 by Jonathan Cooper and Tim Otty QC. Cooper led the organization until 2016, and as of 2022 it is led by Téa Braun. References LGBT rights organizations | is a UK-based organization that focuses on strategic litigation challenging the criminalization of homosexuality around the world. It was founded in 2011 by Jonathan Cooper and Tim Otty QC. Cooper led |
Taxa named by Anthony C. Gill Taxa named by Clive D. | subfamily Anthiinae, part of the family Serranidae, the groupers and sea basses. References |
within Canada was transferred to the Canadian government. The network was initially maintained by the Royal Canadian Air Force, and was then transferred to Canadian National Telegraph in 1946. It provided military and commercial telephone and telegraph service along its route, including air traffic control messages. Around 1961, it was supplanted by the Grande Prairie-Yukon-Alaska Microwave Network. Most service in the network was provisioned as party lines. Some numbers were single-subscriber circuits, whereas others served multiple subscribers through selective | Network. Most service in the network was provisioned as party lines. Some numbers were single-subscriber circuits, whereas others served multiple subscribers through selective ringing (suffixes B or F), distinctive ringing (suffixes R1 or R2), or both. Calls were placed through an operator. References |
Shipman is an American voice actress, known for her work in English dubs of Japanese anime series. | games References External links 21st-century American actresses American video game |
the Thai League 1. In addition, he also became the 4th youngest player to play in the Thai League 1. Samut Prakan City In 2021, Chitipat made his debut for Samut Prakan City against Muangthong United in the Thai League 1. International career Chitipat was part of the Thailand U16 squad in the 2018 AFC U-16 Championship. References External links 2002 births Living people Chitipat Kaeoyos Chitipat | youngest player to play for PTT Rayong after making his professional football debut against Chonburi in the Thai League 1. In addition, he also became the 4th youngest player to play in the Thai League 1. Samut Prakan |
first species of ctenophora reported to have giant axons controlling the comb rows. They control the | marine species of ctenophore. It is the first species of ctenophora reported to have giant axons controlling the comb rows. |
Zaman is a Pakistani politician who served as a member of | the 12th National Assembly of Pakistan from 6 November 2002 to 2 October 2007. References Living people Pakistani Islamic |
prints made of his painting in both Finland and Germany. The model for the painting was Emma Kyöstäjä, who was from Alatornio like Isto himself. In autumn 1899 the painting was displayed in secret at a beach villa in Kaivopuisto in Helsinki. The Tilgmann press made at least a couple hundred prints of it. After the gendarmerie learned of the painting Isto escaped to Germany via Sweden with the painting and its prints, where the Berlin press Meissenbach & Rippart had over ten thousand rotogravure photographic reproductions of 48 × 37.5 cm (picture size 30 × 21.5 cm) made of it. At least six editions of postcards were also made of the painting, one even with texts in Russian. Alex | × 21.5 cm) made of it. At least six editions of postcards were also made of the painting, one even with texts in Russian. Alex Federley made a postcard variation of the painting, where the double-headed eagle has given up and left the Finnish Maiden alone with her book of laws. In 1900 Isto took the painting to the Alatornio clergy house, until it had to be taken to Sweden again to be safe. A couple of years later Isto tried to get rid of the painting by selling lottery tickets, but the Helsinki woman who won the painting dared not accept it. So Isto bought the painting back from her and sold it to a Swedish businessman from Luleå, who later gave |
Park, Brooklyn for over fifty years. He was one of the heads of Agudas Chasidei Chabad and served as personal gabbai for Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth Rebbe of Lubavitch, after the latter's arrival in the United States. Rabbi Simpson was born at Babruysk in 1889. He studied at Tomchei Tmimim in Lubavitch for over | 1976, after-which he was succeeded as Rabbi of the Synagogue by his son-in-law, Rabbi Avrohom Rosenfeld. Rabbi Rosenfeld's son is married to the daughter of Aaron Rubashkin. References External links Rabbi Eliyahu Simpson at Geni.com 1889 births 1976 deaths Chabad-Lubavitch rabbis People from |
disco group Dschinghis Khan, released by Jupiter Records/BMG on 26 April 1993. The album compiles the group's singles from 1979 to 1995 and includes the medley "Huh Hah Dschinghis Khan". Track listing References External links | by Jupiter Records/BMG on 26 April 1993. The album compiles the group's singles from 1979 to 1995 and includes the medley "Huh Hah Dschinghis Khan". |
jointly set by Pokeepsie Films and Sony Pictures International Productions in association with Amazon Prime Video, it is loosely based on H. P. Lovecraft's short story "The Dreams in the Witch House". Plot Featuring according to Balagueró "terror, blood, aberrations and terribly bad people", the fiction is based on H. P. Lovecraft's "The Dreams in the Witch House", transferring the story to a "dirty, | the outskirts of Madrid. Cast Production The project was presented at the Sitges Film Festival in October 2021, with the participation of the director Jaume Balagueró, star performer Ester Expósito as well as Álex de la Iglesia, Carolina Bang, Ricardo Cabornero and Iván Losada. The screenplay was penned by Balagueró alongside . Filming began in November 2021 in Madrid. It moved to Toledo afterwards, shooting in the Santa María de Benquerencia neighborhood ("El Polígono"). Filming had already wrapped in February 2022. See also List of Spanish films of 2022 References Upcoming films Horror films Films |
Jambe may | may refer |
discovered 1902 by Austrian mycologist Franz Xaver Rudolf | Anixia genus. It was discovered 1902 by Austrian mycologist Franz Xaver Rudolf von Höhnel. |
was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the halfpipe event. References External links 1997 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers Sportspeople from Calgary Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics | finish first in the overall halfpipe standings. On January 24, 2022, Mackay was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the halfpipe event. References External links 1997 births Living people Canadian male freestyle skiers Sportspeople from Calgary Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics |
Narendra Modi was announced as the Prime Ministerial candidate of the BJP for the 2014 Indian general election, following which Ministers from the BJP were dropped from the cabinet. | the JDU separated from NDA after Narendra Modi was announced as the Prime Ministerial candidate of |
Tomi Tuominen (born 8 November 1971) is a Finnish former rally co-driver. Past drivers include Toni Gardemeister | co-drivers Living people World Rally Championship drivers World Rally Championship co-drivers |
a population of 130 served by five general stores, two hotels, and two combination gin-gristmills. A local newspaper titled the Cyclone was published in 1890. Phone service began in 1909. The Texas Central Railroad built a track from De Leon to Cross Plains in 1911. It's right of way ran through the area north of the community. This spouted the town's growth. It had 500 residents, had a bank, and a newspaper titled the Sipe Springs Record in 1914. When oil was discovered in Sipe Springs in 1918, it caused the community to grow into a large city of about 8,000 people. Its businesses included hotels, rooming houses, drugstores, barbershops, cafes, another bank, a cotton gin, a movie theater and a dance hall. Unfortunately, | 1914. When oil was discovered in Sipe Springs in 1918, it caused the community to grow into a large city of about 8,000 people. Its businesses included hotels, rooming houses, drugstores, barbershops, cafes, another bank, a cotton gin, a movie theater and a dance hall. Unfortunately, the boom looked to be temporary, as the oil deposits in oilfields were shallow. Both banks closed in 1921, and that next year, a fire ravaged the community. Its population plunged to 575, which was higher than the pre-boom figure, in 1924. Its decline continued into the 1930s when the water supply dwindled, hurting local farms. Sipe Springs had 200 residents and 12 businesses in 1940. The population went down to 120 in 1949 and lost ten more residents in 1974. It had a cemetery and several scattered houses in 1987. Its population was 75 from 1988 through 2000. Sipe Springs also had an opera house and its own baseball team. Geography Sipe |
the production of the Buster Bear shorts, except for the fact that John R McRory abused his staff while working on the short. Warner Bros. abandoned McRory in favor of Leon Schlesinger's production offers. Availability Two shorts featuring Buster Bear, namely The Life and Adventures of Buster Bear and The Spring Carnival were released in 1930 as part of Vitaphone Varieties, but no print has confirmed to exist, thus making them lost media. Another short, The Opera | It is notable for being the first cartoon character created for Warner Bros, as well as the only theatrical short series by Warner Bros not to be produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions or Harman-Ising Productions, though very little information can be found about it. Production Not much is known about the production of the Buster Bear shorts, except for the |
It was documented in 2014. References Phallales Fungi of | a species of fungus belonging to the genus Phallus. |
represented Western Illinois University as a member of the Gateway Football Conference during the 1999 NCAA Division I-AA football season. They were led by first-year head coach | football team represented Western Illinois University as a member of the Gateway Football Conference during the 1999 NCAA Division I-AA football season. They were led by first-year head coach Don Patterson and played their |
198 cm player from Bega, Geraghty made his main draw debut at the Australian Championships in 1962 and took Neale Fraser to five sets in a second round loss. He had an upset win over Davis Cup | upset win over Davis Cup player Alan Mills at the 1962 British Hardcourts and also had a win over Roger Taylor during his career. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Australian male tennis players Tennis |
Boston Common while authorities were searching for him. He remained in Boston for ten days, then traveled through Massachusetts, West Virginia, New York, and Pennsylvania before heading to Ohio. While in Pennsylvania he took a job selling enlarged photographs—work that he was able to continue doing for his employer as a traveling salesmen when worries about being detected by law enforcement made him eager to leave Pittsburgh—and he briefly stayed in East Liverpool, Ohio, due to interest in a local girl he had encountered on the train. After just a short time in East Liverpool, Nelson was nearly apprehended by a team of Pennsylvania and Ohio detectives, but he managed to escape across the state line into West Virginia where none of the detectives had jurisdiction to make arrests. In August 1921, Nelson learned that Thomas Mott Osborne was touring the region to promote a film Osborne had sponsored, The Right Way, and would be speaking at a Cincinnati movie theatre. During his lecture, Osborne spoke about how the new Secretary of the Navy appointed by President Warren G. Harding had terminated the Mutual Welfare League program for prisoners that Osborne had started at Portsmouth Naval Prison, which was a program that had impressed Nelson deeply. Osborne also bemoaned those prisoners who had given innovative prison reform programs a bad name by failing to live constructively after release from prison. Nelson approached Osborne after the lecture, telling Osborne he felt regret for having been the type of prisoner who undermined public faith in Osborne’s prison reform work. Nelson agreed to leave Cincinnati and return to Osborne’s home in Auburn, New York. Nelson remained in Osborne’s home for a week and then was accompanied by Osborne when he decided to turn himself in to Charleston Prison Warden Elmer E. Shattuck. At Nelson's subsequent resentencing trial, Osborne testified on his behalf and helped to persuade the judge not to add too much time to Nelson's sentence as extra punishment for having escaped, despite the protest of Warden Shattuck and the district attorney. During a 1931 hiatus from incarceration Nelson lived with friends in New York, who expected Nelson would work as a writer. Nelson instead picked up odd jobs around the neighborhood, but "failed to do satisfactory work." Nelson's friends subsequently paid his way to Sweden in hopes of getting him out of the neighborhood setting, but Nelson was sent back to the United States by Swedish relatives after one month and soon recidivated. Throughout his years of incarceration and paroles, Nelson at times struggled with morphia addiction and excessive drinking, and he later published writing giving personal insight into the patterns of drug use and recidivism to which many prisoners fall prey. Nelson's final prison sentence was from 1930 to 1932, after which he paroled under the supervision of Abraham Myerson, though he would have additional encounters with the law in his troubled later years. Writing career and marriage Progressive prison official Thomas Mott Osborne and neurologist Abraham Myerson both recognized Victor Nelson's potential as a writer. Before being reincarcerated in 1924, Nelson had worked for Osborne as a librarian and literary assistant while on parole. In a series of articles entitled "In a Prison Cell I Sat," which Nelson wrote for The Boston Record from December 1932 to January 1933, Nelson credited Osborne for inspiring him to cultivate his intellectual pursuits, stating "...the more I read and studied, the stronger became my desire for the intellectual things in life." Osborne served as an informal academic advisor to Nelson, frequently sending him books and suggestions about courses of study. Nelson found his way to additional books through citations listed in the books Osborne sent him. Nelson also became interested in strengthening his skills in the written form of the Swedish language of his childhood, so he acquired the necessary reference books and practiced by translating Scandinavian stories into English. He sent some of these translations to a friend in New York, who then forwarded the translations to a magazine, which resulted in some of the translations being published. Nelson would later publish a piece in The Boston Record in which he would state: "I had always nursed a strong desire to write, and the translating proved to be the accidental means of making me a writer." Nelson easily learned foreign languages, and Boston news reporter Charles P. Haven once wrote that Nelson could "translate foreign books into sparkling English prose." While incarcerated in the Auburn State Prison in New York, Nelson took Columbia University extension courses in writing and began publishing articles on penology. In 1930 he won a Writers' Club of Columbia University prize for his essay "Is Honesty Abnormal?" In 1929 he published a review on The Mårbacka Edition of the Works of Selma Lagerlöf in The Saturday Review of Literature. Nelson also cultivated skills in art and regularly illustrated criminology articles for local newspapers, including his own articles in The Boston Record. He had musical talent as well and worked as a pianist for the prison orchestra during his time at Charlestown State Prison. During the later years of his incarceration, Nelson taught prison evening school courses. | felt regret for having been the type of prisoner who undermined public faith in Osborne’s prison reform work. Nelson agreed to leave Cincinnati and return to Osborne’s home in Auburn, New York. Nelson remained in Osborne’s home for a week and then was accompanied by Osborne when he decided to turn himself in to Charleston Prison Warden Elmer E. Shattuck. At Nelson's subsequent resentencing trial, Osborne testified on his behalf and helped to persuade the judge not to add too much time to Nelson's sentence as extra punishment for having escaped, despite the protest of Warden Shattuck and the district attorney. During a 1931 hiatus from incarceration Nelson lived with friends in New York, who expected Nelson would work as a writer. Nelson instead picked up odd jobs around the neighborhood, but "failed to do satisfactory work." Nelson's friends subsequently paid his way to Sweden in hopes of getting him out of the neighborhood setting, but Nelson was sent back to the United States by Swedish relatives after one month and soon recidivated. Throughout his years of incarceration and paroles, Nelson at times struggled with morphia addiction and excessive drinking, and he later published writing giving personal insight into the patterns of drug use and recidivism to which many prisoners fall prey. Nelson's final prison sentence was from 1930 to 1932, after which he paroled under the supervision of Abraham Myerson, though he would have additional encounters with the law in his troubled later years. Writing career and marriage Progressive prison official Thomas Mott Osborne and neurologist Abraham Myerson both recognized Victor Nelson's potential as a writer. Before being reincarcerated in 1924, Nelson had worked for Osborne as a librarian and literary assistant while on parole. In a series of articles entitled "In a Prison Cell I Sat," which Nelson wrote for The Boston Record from December 1932 to January 1933, Nelson credited Osborne for inspiring him to cultivate his intellectual pursuits, stating "...the more I read and studied, the stronger became my desire for the intellectual things in life." Osborne served as an informal academic advisor to Nelson, frequently sending him books and suggestions about courses of study. Nelson found his way to additional books through citations listed in the books Osborne sent him. Nelson also became interested in strengthening his skills in the written form of the Swedish language of his childhood, so he acquired the necessary reference books and practiced by translating Scandinavian stories into English. He sent some of these translations to a friend in New York, who then forwarded the translations to a magazine, which resulted in some of the translations being published. Nelson would later publish a piece in The Boston Record in which he would state: "I had always nursed a strong desire to write, and the translating proved to be the accidental means of making me a writer." Nelson easily learned foreign languages, and Boston news reporter Charles P. Haven once wrote that Nelson could "translate foreign books into sparkling English prose." While incarcerated in the Auburn State Prison in New York, Nelson took Columbia University extension courses in writing and began publishing articles on penology. In 1930 he won a Writers' Club of Columbia University prize for his essay "Is Honesty Abnormal?" In 1929 he published a review on The Mårbacka Edition of the Works of Selma Lagerlöf in The Saturday Review of Literature. Nelson also cultivated skills in art and regularly illustrated criminology articles for local newspapers, including his own articles in The Boston Record. He had musical talent as well and worked as a pianist for the prison orchestra during his time at Charlestown State Prison. During the later years of his incarceration, Nelson taught prison evening school courses. In 1932, while Nelson was incarcerated in Dedham, Massachusetts, Abraham Myerson approached him and asked him to write something that would help psychiatrists understand how prisoners perceive those in the psychiatry profession. This piece of writing later became a chapter in Nelson's comprehensive book about prisoners' psychological experiences and prison reform in the United States, the first edition of which was published by Little, Brown, and Company in 1933 under the title Prison Days and Nights. The book was reviewed in newspapers across multiple states. In addition to commenting on the culture and language of prisoners, the book identifies, from the perspective of one who has lived within American prisons, the causes of continually high recidivism rates in a chapter called "Reforming the Criminal": Nelson was paroled in August of 1932 in the midst of the Great Depression. He married a nurse, Pearl Geneva Osborne, daughter of Adeline York and William A. Osborne, on February 27, 1934 in Exeter, New Hampshire, listing his occupation as "writer" on their marriage records. In the years after his release from prison Nelson sometimes wrote and published letters to the editors of various Massachusetts newspapers on the topics of prison policy and broader Great Depression era political issues. Nelson's publications would continue to be cited in 20th and 21st century criminal justice and sociocultural writing and research, though he would never complete the second book he had begun writing, which was on the topic of alcoholism and was to be called Mornings After. Later life and death In 1936 Nelson suffered a broken neck in a car accident. After this injury, which caused him ongoing pain and discouragement, he struggled with depression and began drinking heavily. His wife, Pearl, remained a consistent support to him, despite his growing challenges. However, in August 1936 he was jailed for 30 days on a charge of drunkenness after Pearl filed a domestic violence complaint. In March 1937 he was sentenced by Judge Elmer Briggs of the Boston Plymouth District Court to Bridgewater State Farm (where chronic alcoholics were often sent at the time, and which later became the Bridgewater State Hospital) after assaulting an elderly neighbor while intoxicated. In August 1938 he appeared in Boston municipal court and pleaded not guilty to a charge of defrauding a hotel keeper and in November 1938 was arrested after getting into an automobile accident on Park Drive (parkway) and fined $50 by |
Dschinghis Khan, released by Jupiter Records/BMG on 26 April 1993. The album compiles the group's singles from 1979 to 1995 and includes two medleys titled | April 1993. The album compiles the group's singles from 1979 to 1995 and includes two medleys titled "The History of Dschinghis Khan" and new remixes of "Dschinghis Khan" and "Moskau". Track listing References External links 1999 compilation |
Lake Songmuxi Co. The road originates as an offshoot of China National Highway 219 at 35°38′46.34″N 80°18′33.85″E. History In the 1950s, prior to the Sino-Indian War, India collected salt from this lake and two other lakes in Aksai Chin to study the economic | China National Highway 219 at 35°38′46.34″N 80°18′33.85″E. History In the 1950s, prior to the Sino-Indian War, India collected salt from this lake and two other lakes in Aksai Chin to study the economic feasibility of potential salt mining operations. Only Aksai Chin Lake was deemed economically viable. References Lakes of Ladakh |
/ the Tory Channel it is vulnerable to southerly winds. Naming Miritū is a difficult name to pin down. Separately, the syllables miri and tū have many meanings. Alexander Wyclif Reed rendered speculation on the meaning of Miritū idle due to this range of possible translations. Some potential meanings are "to wound while passing onwards" "to strike an enemy while passing", "a coarse flax mat to stand on", "place to sooth wounds", "a soothing place", or "a twisting wound". Bay of Many Coves is a reference to the many small bays situated within it. A number of these bays, and those throughout the Marlborough Sounds are named after poets and characters from literature. Ironically the Bay of Many Coves only has one of the locality that uses the word cove in its name, and even that was initially called Cockle Bay. Taumoana/Snake Point and Bull Head Taumoana/Snake Point is located on the eastern point at the entrance to Miritū / Bay of Many Coves, while Bull Head is located on the western point. Both points have rocks below them and should be given a wide berth, especially Taumoana / Snake Point, which has a large reef extending out beneath the waves. Taumoana means "a partition of the sea". Archdeacon Grace posited that the name is a misspelling of Te-au-moana, meaning "a current of the sea" referencing strong currents in the area. | Point is likely a reference to the thin, curving land leading to the point. Bull Head was renamed from East Head after an enquiry to districts from the Geographic Board regarding duplicate places by the East Head name. The new name was submitted by the Chief Surveyor in Blenheim in April 1970. Chaucer Bay, Milton Bay and Pope Bay All 3 of these bays are named for famous poets. Chaucer Bay after Geoffrey Chaucer, Milton Bay after John Milton, and Pope Bay after Alexander Pope. Chaucer Bay sits at the back of the bay, with Pope Bay just south east of it, while Milton Bay sits in the far eastern corner. Aratawa Bay Aratawa Bay is situated at the back of the bay, just west of Chaucer Bay. Its name is made of two parts, ara and tawa. Ara can mean "path" or "passageway", while tawa is the Te Reo Māori name for the Beilschmiedia tawa. Arthurs Bay Arthurs Bay has a less obvious origin than its counterparts. It may be named after poet Arthur Rimbaud, the mythical King Arthur, or a previous inhabitant of the cove. The bay is well sheltered, only vulnerable to easterly winds, with a sand and cobble beach. Cockle Cove Cockle Cove was renamed from Cockle Bay after an enquiry to districts from the Geographic Board regarding duplicate places by the Cockle Bay name. The new name was submitted by the Chief Surveyor in Blenheim in April 1970. The name references tuangi/cockles, small mollusks found across the country. References Bays of the Marlborough |
in 1939, and 20 from 1980 through 2000. Geography Vandyke is located on Texas State Highway 16 in north-central Comanche County. Education Van Dyke Frost donated land for a school to be built | the community had a population of 20 in 2000. History The community was named for Van Dyke Frost. A post office was established at Vandyke in 1903 and remained in operation until 1905. The community also had a church in operation. Its population was estimated as 15 in 1933, 30 in 1939, |
(Tommy Boy Records) (1994) MicMac Dance Party Vol 7 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Greatest Groups Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Greatest Groups Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Forever (MicMac Records) (1995) Cold Front - Freestyle Latin Dance Hits - Volume Two (Cold Front Records) (1995) MicMac House Dance Party 4 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1995) ZYX Freestyle (ZYX Records) (1996) MicMac Greatest Freestyle Hits Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (1996) Thump'n Freestyle Quick Mixx (Thump Records) (1996) ZYX Freestyle Vol 2 (ZYX Records) (1996) MicMac House Dance Party Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1996) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1996) This Is Freestyle (Quality Music) (1996) Tim Spinnin' Schommer Freestyle Boom Vol 1 (Tim Schommer) (1997) Cold Front - Freestyle Latin Dance Hits - Volume Three (Cold Front Records) (1997) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1997) ZYX Greatest Freestyle Hits (ZYX Records) (1997) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 8 (Tommy Boy Records) (1997) SPG Music Freestyle Greatest Collection (SPG Records) (1997) ZYX Freestyle Vol 5 (ZYX Records) (1997) The Ballads Of Freestyle (MicMac Records) (1997) ZYX Freestyle Vol 4 (ZYX Records) (1997) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 9 (Tommy Boy Records) (1997) Thump Freestyle Explosion Vol 5 (Thump Records) (1998) ZYX Freestyle HitMix (ZYX Records) (1998) MicMac House Dance Party Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1998) ZYX Freestyle Vol 7 (ZYX Records) (1998) 21st Century Adrenaline Rush (21st Century Records) (1998) Popular Freestyle Frenzy Volume 4 ∙ Anthem After Anthem (Warlock Records) (1999) ZYX Freestyle Highlights Nonstop-Megamix (ZYX Records) (1999) Thump Freestyle Explosion Vol 3 (Thump Records) (2000) ZYX Freestyle Vol 12 (ZYX Records) (2000) Fever - Freestyle Fever's Divas (Fever Records) (2001) What If Productions The Best of Freestyle Megamix (What If Productions (2001) Divas On The Dance Floor – House Music’s Greatest Divas (21st Century Records) (2002) PolySound Freestyle Classic Hits (Poly Sound Records) (2002) ZYX Freestyle Vol 18 (ZYX Records) (2002) Micmac 360 Tour (MicMac Records) (2003) Thump Freestyle Party (Thump Records) (2003) UBL Divas Of Freestyle (UBL Records) (2003) ZYX Freestyle Vol. 22 (ZYX Records) (2004) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (2004) ZYX Freestyle Gold (ZYX Records) (2004) All The Hits and More! Cynthia (MicMac Records) (2005) All The Hits and More! Johnny O (MicMac Records) (2005) DJ Giuseppe D. – Evolution (MicMac Records) (2005) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (2005) Freestyle Hits Party Pack (MicMac Records) (2005) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) Tim Spinnin' Schommer – Bringin' The Freestyle II (Tim Schommer) (2005) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) Benz Street Various – Freestyle (Benz Street Records) (2005) Dance Through The Holidays (MicMac Records) (2005) Coalition - A Common Cause (MicMac Records) (2006) Warlock Freestyle Mega Hits Vol 2 (Warlock Records) (2006) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (2006) Razor & Tie Forever Freestyle 2 (Razor & Tie Records) (2006) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (2006) UBL Fierce Freestyle Classics (The Collection) (UBL Records) (2006) MicMac NOW! The Dance Remixes (MicMac Records) (2007) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (2007) Battle Of The Freestyle DJs (MicMac Records) (2007) Razor & Tie Forever Freestyle 1 (Razor & Tie Records) (2007) MicMac Latin House Party (MicMac Records) (2008) Freestyle Hits Party Pack Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2008) Freestyle Hits Remixed – Giuseppe D. (MicMac Records) (2008) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (2009) ZYX Freestyle Vol 37 (ZYX Records) (2009) Edits Gone Wild by Joey "Danger" Altura (MicMac Records) (2009) Ultimix 151 - Mic & Pep (Ultimix Records) (2009) Warlock Jersey Shore Anthems (Warlock Records) (2010) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 5 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 6 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 7 (MicMac Records) (2011) MicMac Original 12 Inch Club Versions Vol 8 (MicMac Records) (2011) Ultimate Freestyle Dance Remixes by DJ/Producer Giuseppe D. (MicMac Records) (2011) Edits Gone Wild II by Freddy “The Edit” Rivera (MicMac Records) (2012) ZYX Various – Freestyle The Ultimate Collection (ZYX Records) (2013) Club Hits – Mixed by DJ Giuseppe D. (MicMac Records) (2015) Freestyle's Greatest Divas 2 Exciting CDs! | got an attorney to draw up the shareholders agreement and formed the record label MicMac Records, Inc. Garcia and MicMac Records have been featured in Billboard magazine, Spin magazine, DJ Times, The Face magazine, and The Village Voice. Personal life In 1996, Garcia met Norah Alberto at the WPN 9 television station's The Richard Bey Show where she worked as a producer. In 2008, they had a daughter named Isabella Mikaella Alberto Garcia who is an American actress, artist, and musician. Garcia was baptized as one of Jehovah's Witnesses in 2017. Discography Albums produced Source: AllMusic Johnny O (Micmac Records, with Johnny O, 1989) Love Story (Profile Records, with Judy Torres, 1989) Cynthia (Micmac Records, with Cynthia, 1990) Tiana (Micmac Records, with Tiana, 1991) Like a Stranger (Micmac Records, with Johnny O, 1990) Cynthia II (Micmac Records, with Cynthia, 1991) Johnny O (The Remixes) (Micmac Records, with Johnny O, 1993) Cynthia (The Remixes) (Micmac Records, with Cynthia, 1995) Singles produced Selected compilations C-Bank Orchestra - Christmas Is In The House (Next Plateau Records) (1987) The MicMac Concert - Hot 97 (MicMac Records) (1990) The MicMac Concert - Hot 97.7 (MicMac Records) (1990) The MicMac Concert – KTFM (MicMac Records) (1990) The MicMac Concert – Power 96 (MicMac Records) (1990) The MicMac Concert – Power 102 (MicMac Records) (1990) The MicMac Concert – Power 106 (MicMac Records) (1990) MicMac Dance Party Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1991) Turnstyle Records Best Of Freestyle (Turnstyle Records) (1992) MicMac Dance Party Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1992) Turnstyle Records Freestyle Greatest Hits (Turnstyle Records) (1992) MicMac House Dance Party Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1993) MicMac Dance Party Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1993) SPG Freestyle's Greatest Hits Vol 1 (SPG Records) (1993) MicMac Dance Party Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (1993) SPG Freestyle's Greatest Hits Vol 2 (SPG Records) (1994) MicMac Greatest Freestyle Hits Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1994) MicMac Dance Party Vol 5 (MicMac Records) (1994) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 1 (Tommy Boy Records) (1994) MicMac Greatest Freestyle Hits Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1994) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 2 (Tommy Boy Records) (1994) MicMac Dance Party Vol 6 (MicMac Records) (1994) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 4 (Tommy Boy Records) (1994) MicMac Greatest Freestyle Hits Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1994) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 5 (Tommy Boy Records) (1994) MicMac Dance Party Vol 7 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Greatest Groups Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Greatest Groups Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle Forever (MicMac Records) (1995) Cold Front - Freestyle Latin Dance Hits - Volume Two (Cold Front Records) (1995) MicMac House Dance Party 4 (MicMac Records) (1995) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (1995) ZYX Freestyle (ZYX Records) (1996) MicMac Greatest Freestyle Hits Vol 4 (MicMac Records) (1996) Thump'n Freestyle Quick Mixx (Thump Records) (1996) ZYX Freestyle Vol 2 (ZYX Records) (1996) MicMac House Dance Party Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1996) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1996) This Is Freestyle (Quality Music) (1996) Tim Spinnin' Schommer Freestyle Boom Vol 1 (Tim Schommer) (1997) Cold Front - Freestyle Latin Dance Hits - Volume Three (Cold Front Records) (1997) Freestyle's Greatest Divas Vol 3 (MicMac Records) (1997) ZYX Greatest Freestyle Hits (ZYX Records) (1997) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 8 (Tommy Boy Records) (1997) SPG Music Freestyle Greatest Collection (SPG Records) (1997) ZYX Freestyle Vol 5 (ZYX Records) (1997) The Ballads Of Freestyle (MicMac Records) (1997) ZYX Freestyle Vol 4 (ZYX Records) (1997) Tommy Boy Freestyle Greatest Beats Vol 9 (Tommy Boy Records) (1997) Thump Freestyle Explosion Vol 5 (Thump Records) (1998) ZYX Freestyle HitMix (ZYX Records) (1998) MicMac House Dance Party Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (1998) ZYX Freestyle Vol 7 (ZYX Records) (1998) 21st Century Adrenaline Rush (21st Century Records) (1998) Popular Freestyle Frenzy Volume 4 ∙ Anthem After Anthem (Warlock Records) (1999) ZYX Freestyle Highlights Nonstop-Megamix (ZYX Records) (1999) Thump Freestyle Explosion Vol 3 (Thump Records) (2000) ZYX Freestyle Vol 12 (ZYX Records) (2000) Fever - Freestyle Fever's Divas (Fever Records) (2001) What If Productions The Best of Freestyle Megamix (What If Productions (2001) Divas On The Dance Floor – House Music’s Greatest Divas (21st Century Records) (2002) PolySound Freestyle Classic Hits (Poly Sound Records) (2002) ZYX Freestyle Vol 18 (ZYX Records) (2002) Micmac 360 Tour (MicMac Records) (2003) Thump Freestyle Party (Thump Records) (2003) UBL Divas Of Freestyle (UBL Records) (2003) ZYX Freestyle Vol. 22 (ZYX Records) (2004) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (2004) ZYX Freestyle Gold (ZYX Records) (2004) All The Hits and More! Cynthia (MicMac Records) (2005) All The Hits and More! Johnny O (MicMac Records) (2005) DJ Giuseppe D. – Evolution (MicMac Records) (2005) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 1 (MicMac Records) (2005) Freestyle Hits Party Pack (MicMac Records) (2005) 12 Inches of MicMac Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) Tim Spinnin' Schommer – Bringin' The Freestyle II (Tim Schommer) (2005) Bangin' Beats - Then & Now Vol 2 (MicMac Records) (2005) Benz Street Various – Freestyle (Benz Street Records) (2005) Dance Through The |
porn remain "an emergent proto-genre" of music. Analysis James J. Ward, a professor at Cedar Crest College, suggests that zombie porn's transgressions of the taboos against necrophilia and male viewers' fear of castration may be appealing for some. At the same time, he argues that because zombie sex "raises the likelihood of" participants being literally destroyed, because zombies carry filth and disease, and because the zombie is ontologically blank—they have "no awareness and affect" and are driven by "the most primitive and carnal of all desires" (to eat)—zombie porn remains largely unappealing. He concludes that zombie porn is neither new nor alluring. According to queer studies scholar Jasmine McGowan, Otto and L.A. Zombie are transgressive films because they "invert the homophobic tropes of disease and contagion". McGlotten wrote that LaBruce's films—both about gay zombie sex—evoke thoughts not only of death, but also life, and that they posit a theory that "some kinds of death... may be worse than others, and some are animating or reanimating". They say this contradictory stance is reminiscent of the scholarly work of Leo Bersani, Lee Edelman, and Tim Dean, all of whom "have sought... to recuperate" the associations between gay sexuality and death. They stress, however, that LaBruce's films are more hopeful than theories like Edelman's—theories built out of gay people rejecting social life—because they offer alternatives (such as public sex communities), similar to the queer art of failure, a concept by queer theorist Jack Halberstam. Scholarly analysis of the subgenre is, according to zombie studies scholar Sarah Juliet Lauro, limited because it does not take into consideration the Haitian origins of the figure. She says figures | about gay life. Background Zombies have been part of American popular culture since the early twentieth century, and their early depictions were based on Haitian and African folklore. For the earliest depictions, zombies were not truly undead beings, but living people without consciousness, animated by magic. Modern American zombies are based on Night of the Living Dead (1968), a film by George A. Romero called the "modern zombie ur-text" by porn studies scholar Shaka McGlotten. According to McGlotten, the zombie is associated with Haiti through the Western world's reactions to the Haitian Revolution, where while enslaved people broke free from French rule and challenged the dominant economic system, this was seen "as a matter of bloodshed... and boundless material destruction". Emergence and examples In the 1980s, zombie porn began to emerge during a rise in Italian sexploitation releases, such as in Joe D'Amato's film Erotic Nights of the Living Dead (1980). In the 1990s, a few obscure American zombie porn films were released. The predominant theme of these films was cannibalism, and zombie sexuality was not a primary focus; its instrumental value was instead to further shock the viewer. Bruce LaBruce produced two zombie porn films, Otto; or, Up with Dead People (2008) and L.A. Zombie (2010). Otto |
Chronicle. He was one of the charter members of the Arlington County Bar Association. He was also a director of the Arlington National Bank and the National Mortgage and Investment Company. He was one of the organizers of the Arlington Trust Company and was a member of the Board of Trustees of George Washington University. Personal life Mackey married Mary, and had seven children, including Argyle, Joseph, Darlington, Thomas, Alice and Virginia. Mackey lived on a hill above Rosslyn called "Mackey's Hill". Mackey moved to Alexandria County around 1896. Mackey and his family were in an automobile accident in 1912. Mackey jumped out of his car before it fell over an embankment. He later broke his hip in an automobile accident in 1951. Death Mackey died on March 31, 1957. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Legacy Virginia would later assume statewide control over liquor, a stance that Mackey supported | the raids. The raids caused gambling houses in Rosslyn and Jackson City to shutter, including the poolroom at St. Asaph Racetrack. Mackey was opposed to the county manager style of government that Arlington County imposed in 1930. He later ran for the U.S. Congress in 1930, on a platform of states' rights and calling for the repeal of the 18th Amendment in favor of statewide control of liquor. He lost the Democratic primary to Howard W. Smith. Mackey was an editor and publisher of a newspaper in Arlington called The Chronicle. He was one of the charter members of the Arlington County Bar Association. He was also a director of the Arlington National Bank and the National Mortgage and Investment Company. He was one of the organizers of the Arlington Trust Company and was a member of the Board of Trustees of George Washington University. Personal life Mackey married Mary, and had seven children, including Argyle, Joseph, Darlington, Thomas, Alice and Virginia. Mackey lived on a hill above Rosslyn called "Mackey's Hill". Mackey moved to Alexandria County around 1896. Mackey and his family were in an automobile accident in 1912. Mackey jumped out of his car before it fell over an embankment. He later broke his hip in an automobile accident in 1951. Death Mackey died on March 31, 1957. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Legacy Virginia |
post office at his house in 1880. The community is home to the Madison Square Garden Rodeo stock and also served as the headquarters of the Lightning C ranch. Its population was 75 in 1904 and had several businesses. Wilson declined when the railroad bypassed the community. The post office closed in 1908 and people moved on. There | Garden Rodeo stock and also served as the headquarters of the Lightning C ranch. Its population was 75 in 1904 and had several businesses. Wilson declined when the railroad bypassed the community. The post office closed in 1908 and people moved on. There was no population reported in 1980. Geography Wilson is located in southeastern Comanche County. Education Wilson had its school in 1930 |
the upcoming new Drama Serial. Everyone wants to know about the drama details as the story, and More Details are available in this article. Teri Rah Mein 2022 Pakistani love drama broadcast on Ary Digital starring Zainab Shabbir and Shehroz Sabzwari after starring in the hit drama Nand. However, Shehroz Sabzwari will appear with another interesting character in the series Teri Rah Mein. However, Ary Digital is producing many exciting hit serials. Cast Zainab Shabbir as Emaan Usama Khan as Fakhar Shahroz Sabzwari as Ahmer Shazeal | Ahmed. It stars Usama Khan, Shazeal Shoukat, Shahroz Sabzwari and Zainab Shabbir. It first aired on 3 January 2022 on ARY Digital. Plot Teri Rah Mein is the upcoming new Drama Serial. Everyone wants to know about the drama details as the story, and More Details are available in this article. Teri Rah Mein 2022 Pakistani love drama broadcast on Ary Digital starring Zainab Shabbir and Shehroz Sabzwari after starring in the hit drama Nand. However, Shehroz Sabzwari will appear with another interesting character in the series Teri |
California in 1960. Events preceding murders Busch lived by himself in an apartment in Los Angeles and had no prior criminal record. He worked in a factory and sometimes had coffee before work with a fellow employee, Magdalena Parra. Murders On May 1, 1960, Busch visited the apartment of 74-year-old Elmyra Miller. She had been his friend since he was a child. The two talked for some time and watched television together. As Busch got up to leave, he saw Miller standing with her back to him. Busch felt an urge to kill her and strangled her to death. To avoid drawing suspicion, he pulled Miller's clothing over her hips and tore her underclothing to make the murder appear to be sexually motivated. Miller's body was found by her visiting doctor the next day. On September 4, 1960, Busch went to his adoptive's mother apartment. She was not there, but he saw Shirley Payne, a 72-year-old who lived in the apartment above his adoptive mother's apartment. He invited her to watch Psycho, which had been released months ago at the time, at a local theater. She accepted his officer. After watching the movie, the two went to Busch's apartment and drank beer, and, according to Busch, had sex. When Payne was about to leave, Busch suddenly felt an urge to kill her and strangled her to death. The following day, he bought a sleeping bag, placed Payne's body in it, and tied it shut with a | criminal record. He worked in a factory and sometimes had coffee before work with a fellow employee, Magdalena Parra. Murders On May 1, 1960, Busch visited the apartment of 74-year-old Elmyra Miller. She had been his friend since he was a child. The two talked for some time and watched television together. As Busch got up to leave, he saw Miller standing with her back to him. Busch felt an urge to kill her and strangled her to death. To avoid drawing suspicion, he pulled Miller's clothing over her hips and tore her underclothing to make the murder appear to be sexually motivated. Miller's body was found by her visiting doctor the next day. On September 4, 1960, Busch went to his adoptive's mother apartment. She was not there, but he saw Shirley Payne, a 72-year-old who lived in the apartment above his adoptive mother's apartment. He invited her to watch Psycho, which had been released months ago at the time, at a local theater. She accepted his officer. After watching the movie, the two went to Busch's apartment and drank beer, and, according to Busch, had sex. When Payne was about to leave, Busch suddenly felt an urge to kill her and strangled her to death. The following day, he bought a sleeping bag, placed Payne's body in it, and tied it shut with a rope. He kept the sleeping bag inside his apartment a rope. On September 5, 1960, Busch went to the apartment of 53-year-old Margaret Briggs, a half-sister of his adoptive mother. He took a knife with him. Busch viewed Briggs as an aunt and often sought her advice. He said he'd considered telling her about the killing of Mrs. Payne, but decided not to. The two watch television together for several hours. Afterwards, as Briggs was standing in the room, Busch he grabbed her from behind with his left forearm across her throat and strangled her. Briggs resisted more the others, knocking over furniture. Busch told her he was sorry, but said he |
intention to leave politics and return to the private sector. His assembly seat was filled by Rene Temeharo. In the leadup to the 2013 territorial elections he founded the A Tia Porinetia party. The party came third in the elections, winning 25 percent of the vote. Following the elections he was a candidate for president, but lost to Gaston Flosse. In March 2014 he ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Tahiti. In May 2015 he joined the government of Édouard Fritch as finance minister. In February 2016 he formally merged A Tia Porinetia with Fritch's new Tapura Huiraatira party, becoming deputy leader. In February 2017 he became finance minister again following the resignation of Nuihau Laurey to take up a role in the Senate. He was later appointed vice-president. Following the 2018 elections he retained | Progressives and Independents. Rohfritsch is a former director of Socredo bank. He was first appointed to French Polynesia's Council of Ministers as tourism minister in November 2003. In 2005 he was economics minister. Following the 2008 French Polynesian legislative election he was appointed finance minister. In Oscar Temaru's 2009 administration he was appointed Minister of Maritime Resources. In April 2009 he was suspended from Tahoera'a Huiraatira after refusing to quit Temaru's government. He left the party two days later. In November 2009 he was made Minister of economic restructuring, foreign trade, industry and business in Gaston Tong Sang's cabinet. In March 2011 he was sacked from Tong Sang's government and subsequently announced his intention to leave politics and return to the private sector. His assembly seat was filled by Rene |
He is also a member of the Land and Development Advisory Committee of the Hong Kong Government. He was named the Young Surveyor of the Year by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors at its Hong Kong Awards 2020. Ip graduated from the Chinese University of Hong Kong with first class honours. He then received a Master of Science in economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He joined Our Hong Kong Foundation in January 2017 and is now the Head of Land and Housing Research of the Foundation. Before joining Our Hong Kong Foundation, he was an economist at Hong Kong | Year by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors at its Hong Kong Awards 2020. Ip graduated from the Chinese University of Hong Kong with first class honours. He then received a Master of Science in economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science. He joined Our Hong Kong Foundation in January 2017 and is now the Head of Land and Housing Research of the Foundation. Before joining Our Hong Kong Foundation, he was an economist at Hong Kong Monetary Authority and a property analyst at Jones Lang Lasalle. He is also a member of the Executive Commiitee of the China Real Estate Chamber of Commerce Hong Kong and International Chapters, and the International Advisory Committee of the Research Institute for Land and Space at |
Justin Cobb, he developed the robotic assistant known as 'Acrobot', the first haptic based robot to be used in orthopaedic surgery. In 1999 he co-founded the spinout ‘Acrobot’, which was later acquired by Stanmore Implants. In 2001 he was awarded a DSc. He later developed the robot Sculptor, to assist surgeons in replacing knee joints. Awards In 2015, for his work into robots, he was | and in 1991 it was the first robotic device to operate upon a human being. By 1999, with orthopaedic surgeon Justin Cobb, he developed the robotic assistant known as 'Acrobot', the first haptic based robot to be used in orthopaedic surgery. In 1999 he co-founded the spinout ‘Acrobot’, which was later acquired by Stanmore Implants. In 2001 he was awarded a DSc. He later developed the robot Sculptor, to assist surgeons in replacing knee joints. Awards In 2015, for his work into robots, he was awarded |
E. and Others, decided in 1996, describes the legality of employment bonds in India. It holds that under the Indian Contract Act, 1872, contracts requiring an employee to pay a bond if they prematurely resign their employment are legal and enforceable, at least in cases where employers pay expenses like training for the employee. The case refers to the 1973 Supreme Court of India case Union of India (Uoi) vs. Rampur Distillery and Chemical Co. Ltd., which held that a surety bond in favour of the Government of India securing the delivery of some rum was unenforceable because the government did not show an actual loss, among other cases, to limit the forfeiture of bond to cases where the employer has suffered some cognizable loss. A related case from 1995 in the Madras High Court, P. Nagarajan vs. Southern Structurals Ltd., corroborated the limitation of damages payable to the loss actually suffered even in spite of a liquidated damages stipulation. The employee cannot be ordered by the court to return to service for their previous employer after leaving; they can only be | enforceable, at least in cases where employers pay expenses like training for the employee. The case refers to the 1973 Supreme Court of India case Union of India (Uoi) vs. Rampur Distillery and Chemical Co. Ltd., which held that a surety bond in favour of the Government of India securing the delivery of some rum was unenforceable because the government did not show an actual loss, among other cases, to limit the forfeiture of bond to cases where the employer has suffered some cognizable loss. A related case from 1995 in the Madras High Court, P. Nagarajan vs. Southern Structurals Ltd., corroborated the limitation of damages payable to the loss actually suffered even in spite of a liquidated damages stipulation. The employee cannot be ordered by |
officially established in 1992. Geography The park spans the districts of Samoeng, San Pa Tong, Hang Dong, and Mae Wang. It is adjacent to Doi Suthep–Pui National Park to the east, and Mae Wang National Park and Doi Inthanon National Park to the west. It occupies 302,500 rai or 484 square kilometers. The park headquarters is located in Hang Dong district. Khun Tian () is the highest point at 1,550 metres above sea level. The mountains in the park form part of the Thanon Thong Chai Range. Villages located within | Park (or Ob Khan National Park; ) is a national park in Chiang Mai Province in Thailand. History Op Khan National Park was officially established in 1992. Geography The park spans the districts of Samoeng, San Pa Tong, Hang Dong, and Mae Wang. It is adjacent to Doi Suthep–Pui National Park to the east, and Mae Wang National Park and Doi Inthanon National |
north–south route through the ranges, running from Marokopa, south, via Kiritehere, Moeatoa, rising over the Mangatoa Saddle, Waikawau and a lower saddle to follow the Manganui valley through to Awakino. The road was built about 1935, when the last surfboats plied wool to the Holm & Co vessel, Parera, off the beach at Nukuhakari. Prior to that, even travel on horseback was difficult. Mt Duthie, , gets about of rain a year. It and Mt Brookes were named after the surveyors who mapped them, F Duthie and Edwin Stanley Brookes Jnr. Piritoki Reef Piritoki Reef lies about north of Tirua Point. Its sharp rocks create an area of turbulent sea. They rise to about a metre above sea level. The Northern Steamship Company's 307 ton Kia Ora foundered on the reef in fog on 13 June 1907, with the loss of 3 lives. The Chief Officer was blamed, with a suspicion of being inebriated, but his suspended certificate was returned within a few months. Tirua Point Tirua Point has cliffs on the north side of the Point rising to over . In the 1860s it was thought the country was at its widest between Tolaga Bay and Tirua Point. The 1:50,000 map shows the easting of the northern headland of Ngararahae Bay, just south of Tirua Point as 1742785, and Marau Point, on the north side of Kaiaua Bay, on same latitude on the east coast, as 2068929 the difference being just over . Tirua Point is on Nukuhakari Station, where grazing increased the advance of dunes in both Nukuhakari and Ngararahae Bays. Thousands of spinifex, planted in 2015, 2016 and 2017, have reduced sand movement. Geology Herangi is part of the roughly north - south Kāwhia Syncline, Triassic Newcastle Group form the west side of the range, with sandstones, siltstones and greywacke folded, faulted and covered by Middle Jurassic Rengarenga carbonaceous sandstone and other sedimentary rocks. The main rivers flow across broad alluvial floodplains, from which the hills of Mesozoic rock rise sharply. Steep homoclinal ridges and hogbacks are prominent, with dip slopes often underlain by more resistant sandstone. The coast has near-vertical cliffs, generally behind an ironsand beach. Tracks Currently 4 tracks offer alternative routes to Leitch's Hut, which has 16 bunk beds, heating, mattresses, non-flush toilets, untreated tap water and no booking system. Sam Leitch was awarded the area in a World War I soldiers' land ballot. His home was in the clearing where the hut is and his plantings of macrocapa and eleagnus remain. The tracks are classed as Advanced Tramping tracks, | rest of the range is in Whareorino Conservation Area, of particular importance for its native frogs. A Reims Cessna F152 II crashed into a tree on a ridge between Whareorino () and Mangatoa Saddle on 21 July 2009. The pilot, who died, was inexperienced and had not complied with requirements to calculate a route allowing for the poor weather. Geography The main peaks from north to south are Maungamangero , Te Heruera , Maugatewharau , Te Whakapatiki and Herangi . Mangatoa and Manganui Roads follow a north–south route through the ranges, running from Marokopa, south, via Kiritehere, Moeatoa, rising over the Mangatoa Saddle, Waikawau and a lower saddle to follow the Manganui valley through to Awakino. The road was built about 1935, when the last surfboats plied wool to the Holm & Co vessel, Parera, off the beach at Nukuhakari. Prior to that, even travel on horseback was difficult. Mt Duthie, , gets about of rain a year. It and Mt Brookes were named after the surveyors who mapped them, F Duthie and Edwin Stanley Brookes Jnr. Piritoki Reef Piritoki Reef lies about north of Tirua Point. Its sharp rocks create an area of turbulent sea. They rise to about a metre above sea level. The Northern Steamship Company's 307 ton Kia Ora foundered on the reef in fog on 13 June 1907, with the loss of 3 lives. The Chief Officer was blamed, with a suspicion of being inebriated, but his suspended certificate was returned within a few months. Tirua Point Tirua Point has cliffs on the north side of the Point rising to over . In the 1860s it was thought the country was at its widest between Tolaga Bay and Tirua Point. The 1:50,000 map shows the easting of the northern headland of Ngararahae Bay, just south of Tirua Point as 1742785, and Marau Point, on the north side of Kaiaua Bay, on same latitude on the east coast, as 2068929 the difference being just over . Tirua Point is on Nukuhakari Station, where grazing increased the advance of dunes in both Nukuhakari and Ngararahae Bays. Thousands of spinifex, planted in 2015, 2016 and 2017, have reduced sand movement. Geology Herangi is part of the roughly north - south Kāwhia Syncline, Triassic Newcastle Group form the west side of the range, with sandstones, siltstones and greywacke folded, faulted and covered by Middle Jurassic Rengarenga carbonaceous sandstone and other sedimentary rocks. The main rivers flow across broad alluvial floodplains, from which the hills of Mesozoic rock rise sharply. Steep homoclinal ridges and hogbacks are prominent, with dip slopes often underlain by more resistant sandstone. The coast has near-vertical cliffs, generally behind an ironsand beach. Tracks Currently 4 tracks offer alternative routes to Leitch's Hut, which has |
This article provides details of international football games played by the Bangladesh women's national football | football team from 2010 to 2019. Results 2019 2018 2017 2016 |
and at that time the lake was renamed to White Bear (Carlyle) Lake. Water levels Beaver are not native to Moose Mountain and in 1923, two breeding pairs from Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan were brought to nearby Kenosee Lake. The beavers flourished and soon dams were blocking not just inflow creeks to Kenosee, but White Bear (Carlyle) Lake as well. According to aerial photographs, the surface of White Bear (Carlyle) Lake in 1928 was 737 metres asl. By 1945, it had dropped to 732 m. In 1954, four beaver dams in area were destroyed, which helped raise lake levels. By the late 1950s, the lake recovered to | first European settlers to the area. In the late 1970s control of the lake was handed over to the White Bear First Nations and at that time the lake was renamed to White Bear (Carlyle) Lake. Water levels Beaver are not native to Moose Mountain and in 1923, two breeding pairs from Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan were brought to nearby Kenosee Lake. The beavers flourished and soon dams were blocking not just inflow creeks to Kenosee, but |
The Trojans, led by third year head coach Ali'i Keohohou, were picked to win the Conference Carolinas title in the coaches preseason poll, and they will host the 2022 Conference Carolinas Men's Volleyball Tournament. Season highlights Will be filled in as the season progresses. Roster Schedule TV/Internet Streaming information: All home games will be streamed on Conference Carolinas DN. Most road games | or streaming service. *-Indicates conference match. Times listed are Eastern Time Zone. Announcers for televised games George Mason: Alex Hayden Queens: Mike Glennon BYU: Spencer Linton, Steve Vail & Kiki Solano BYU: Spencer Linton, Steve Vail, & Kiki Solano North Greenville: Noah Frary Belmont Abbey: Geoffrey Chiles Barton: No commentary King: Aidan Gilbride Lees-McRae: Ruben van der Burg Queens: Tusculum: Erskine: Emmanuel: Belmont Abbey: North Greenville: Barton: Emmanuel: Erskine: Lees-McRae: King: References 2022 in sports in North Carolina 2022 NCAA Division I & II men's volleyball |
football games played by the Bangladesh women's national | 2020 to present. Results 2021 References Football in Bangladesh 2020s |
the time showing those first signs of discontent with the policy of Prince Maurice and the States-General which led, a few years later, to serious internal commotion throughout the Dutch provinces. And one of Ogle s earliest duties was to suppress a conspiracy which had for its object the seizure of himself and the overpowering of his garrison. When Barneveldt, the leader of the party opposed to Prince Maurice, gained a position of influence in Utrecht, Ogle hesitated to take any strong measures against him, because he had been a friend and admirer of Ogle's former chief, Sir Francis Vere. But in 1618, when urged by Barneveldt's supporters to place his soldiers at their disposal, he deliberately refused. His attitude had not, however, been sufficiently decisive, in the earlier stages of the movement, to warrant his continuance in his office, and before the year closed he was succeeded as governor by Sir Horace Vere. Shortly afterwards he finally left the Low Countries. England In consideration of his services abroad, James I made Ogle a grant of arms on 11 January 1614–15. While in Holland he had not wholly neglected affairs at home, and was one of the most enthusiastic members of the Virginia Company. His name appears as one of the promoters in both the second (23 May 1609) and third (March 1612) charters of the company. On his return to England he was readmitted a member, and he joined the council in 1623. In the same year Henry West, 4th Baron de la Warr, transferred to him three shares in the company. In April 1624 Ogle was appointed by James I member of a new and important council of war, which represented all the available military knowledge of the day. The immediate business of the council was to consider England's intervention in the Thirty Years' War, but Ogle was largely occupied in surveying the fortifications on the sea-coast. In 1625 he was present at James I's funeral. Shortly afterwards he undertook, with other speculators, the task of draining the level of Hatfield Chace in Yorkshire. The venture proved unremunerative, and dwellers in the neighbourhood petitioned the council of York in 1634 for the arrest of Ogle and his partners, owing to their failure to complete the operations. At the same time, "with a purpose rather to mend his fortunes than to require his attendance", Ogle received, with the approval of Lord Deputy Wentworth, a captain's commission in the army employed in Ireland. But when he claimed pay, amounting in May 1638 to 1,464l. 11s., for merely nominal services, Wentworth declined to recognise the demand, despite the favour extended by the king to Ogle's petition. Legacy Ogle was buried in Westminster Abbey on 17 March 1639–40. His burial in the abbey is also noted in the parish register of St. Peter-le-Poer, London. His will, dated 6 December 1628, was proved on 15 July 1640. His widow, Elizabeth, daughter of Cornelius de Vries of Dordrecht, was the executrix. On 11 May 1622 a grant of | energy and politic temper were fully recognised by the States-General and the stadtholder, Prince Maurice, who in 1610 nominated him to the responsible office of governor of Utrecht. That city was at the time showing those first signs of discontent with the policy of Prince Maurice and the States-General which led, a few years later, to serious internal commotion throughout the Dutch provinces. And one of Ogle s earliest duties was to suppress a conspiracy which had for its object the seizure of himself and the overpowering of his garrison. When Barneveldt, the leader of the party opposed to Prince Maurice, gained a position of influence in Utrecht, Ogle hesitated to take any strong measures against him, because he had been a friend and admirer of Ogle's former chief, Sir Francis Vere. But in 1618, when urged by Barneveldt's supporters to place his soldiers at their disposal, he deliberately refused. His attitude had not, however, been sufficiently decisive, in the earlier stages of the movement, to warrant his continuance in his office, and before the year closed he was succeeded as governor by Sir Horace Vere. Shortly afterwards he finally left the Low Countries. England In consideration of his services abroad, James I made Ogle a grant of arms on 11 January 1614–15. While in Holland he had not wholly neglected affairs at home, and was one of the most enthusiastic members of the Virginia Company. His name appears as one of the promoters in both the second (23 May 1609) and third (March 1612) charters of the company. On his return to England he was readmitted a member, and he joined the council in 1623. In the same year Henry West, 4th Baron de la Warr, transferred to him three shares in the company. In April 1624 Ogle was appointed by James I member of a new and important council of war, which represented all the available military knowledge of the day. The immediate business of the council was to consider England's intervention in the Thirty Years' War, but Ogle was largely occupied in surveying the fortifications on the sea-coast. In 1625 he was present at James I's funeral. Shortly afterwards he undertook, with other speculators, the task of draining the level of Hatfield Chace in Yorkshire. |
Colony (now the Western Cape province) to an Afrikaner family. Like all Afrikaners, he was of Dutch, French and German descent. His parents were Coenraad Johannes Carolus Gie and Martha Naude. Gie was educated at the Worcester Boys High School and at the Victoria College (now Stellenbosch University) in Stellenbosch. Subsequently, he studied at the University of Amsterdam and at Humboldt University of Berlin, where he received his PhD. Gie's PhD supervisor was Friedrich Meinecke, one of the most famous German historians of his generation. Gie's PhD thesis was Die Kanditatur Ludwigs XIV bei der Kaiserwahl vom Jahre 1658, concerning the candidacy of King Louis XIV of France for the office of Holy Roman Emperor in 1658. Between 1906 and 1909, he worked as a teacher in Cradock and Worcester. In 1910, he was promoted to Inspector of Schools. In 1911, he became the Principal of the Teachers’ Training College in Graaff-Reinett. Gie married Johanna Jordaan and had three sons, namely Coenraad, Johan, and Gert. As an Afrikaner nationalist, he was keen to promote cultural projects that would uphold a sense of Afrikaner identity. In 1915, he was a founding member of the Letterkundige en Toneel Vereniging theater company in Graaff-Reinet. Gie served as both a director and an actor with the Letterkundige en Toneel Vereniging company. In 1918, he became the first ever professor of South African History at Stellenbosch University, rising up to become the Chair of the South African History department at Stellenbosch. The South African historian W.S. Barnard described Gie as "a sophisticated, but ardent Afrikaner nationalist" who successfully championed to have the language of instruction at Stellenbosch changed from Dutch to Afrikaans. Gie became the foremost Afrikaner historian of his generation, one of the first professionally trained Afrikaner historians who set out to give the increasing literate Afrikaners a history that they could be proud of. As the Boers were generally illiterate in the 19th century, writing on South African history tended to be either the work of British historians or Anglos (South African whites of British descent). The dominant historical model for South African history-writing in the early 20th century was to portray South Africa as merely a part of the British empire, albeit an especially important part. Gie ando other Afrikaner historians sought to challenge this model and instead put forward the thesis of the volksgeskiedenis ("people's history") that saw South African history as a subject in its own right and placed the Afrikaners in the center of the story. Gie saw himself as one of the leaders of "scientific-objective" history, stating in a 1920 speech to his students at Stellenbosch that to be a "scientific" historian required a "honest and objective" outlook, which could only be gained via "hard work and experience". Gie become one of the principle promoters of "scientific-objective history", which became the dominant model for history writing in Afrikaans in South Africa until the end of apartheid in 1994. Gie saw history as a social science where historians would work just like scientists in discovering the underlining social forces in their society to offer up "scientific" explanations for historical developments in a purely "objective" and neutral manner. The South African historian Albert Grundlingh wrote this model of "scientific-objective history" that so dominated history writing in South Africa was largely an attempt for South African historians to hide their biases behind a spurious façade of "objectivity" that was said to be grounded in the pure rationality of science itself. Grundlingh noted that despite the claims of "objective-scientific" historians to be offering up "scientific" explanations that such historians in practice tended to avoid analytical writing, instead preferring to give a description of what happened in the past instead of why. Grundlingh also noted in the "scientific-objective history", the focus was on political as opposed to social history, which gave the rather misleading impression that the Boers/Afrikaners were more united than was often the case, promoting an "us vs. them" narrative of the history of the volk as a series of struggles against their enemies. The Kenyan historian Munene Mwaniki noted that the "scientific-objective" history was heavily influenced by the ideals of "scientific" history promoted by Leopold von Ranke that was very popular in Europe, especially in Germany and the Netherlands, as most of the Afrikaner historians such as Gie were educated in either the Netherlands and/or in Germany. Mwaniki noted that in the "scientific-objective" histories the focus tended to be on "national" history with a strong focus on political and military history; that such histories tended to be descriptive rather than analytical; and that blacks only appeared in these histories with regard to military history as the opponents of the Boers and were otherwise absent from South African history. Because of his training in the Netherlands and Germany, Gie had "an almost obsessive Rankian approach" to history and he held to the distinction commonly held in European universities at the time between anthropology and history. For Gie, anthropology was the scientific study of "illiterate and barbarian masses" vs. history which for him was the scientific study of the pasts of "civilized nations". Thus for Gie, South African history was the history of South African whites while the history of black South Africans was anthropology. Gie defined his interests as the study of "civilized" and "white" South Africans as he wrote that the volksgeskiedenis ("people's history") was really the "History of European Civilization in South Africa". The volksgeskiedenis defined the history of the Afrikaners as a story of larger-than-life leaders who heroically led their tough and hardy people deep into the veld to create "civilization". During his time at Stellenbosh, he wrote what became his 1928 book Geskiedenis van Suid-Afrika, of Ons Verlede (History of South Africa, of Our Past), which he later retitled Geskiedenis van Suid-Afrika, 1652–1795 (History of South Africa, 1652–1795). A second volume entitled Geskiedenis van Suid-Afrika, 1795-1918 was later published. Geskiedenis van Suid-Afrika became the favorite history book of the Afrikaner nationalists. In 1940 Geskiedenis van Suid-Afrika became mandatory reading for high school students in South Africa. Most notably, for Gie, South African history began when the first Dutch settlers arrived in 1652 and before 1652 South Africa quite literally had no history. Gie openly admitted that he ignored the history of "the native" because to tell "the Civilized History of South Africa" required taking into account the connection between "the white man and the old cultural circles over the sea". Gie wrote that to own the land required working the land, and as such he argued that the indigenous Khoekhoe nomadic pastoralists whom he called by the very disparaging name "Hottentots" had no right to any land ownership because of their nomadic lifestyle together with what he called their "politics of robbery". Gie wrote: "no individual or nation has absolute rights to the land. If someone wants to remain in possession he must display his right through his use of the land. A nation is obliged to make as much use of his land as is possible for the service of humanity". In this way, Gie argued that the "Hottentots" as he called the Khoekhoe had no right to the land that they were living on. By contrast, he argued that the Dutch settlers, who were joined later on in the 17th century by French Huguenot refugees and German settlers, were the "legitimate" owners of the land because they were the "workers of the land". Gie played an important role in promoting the idea that Jan van Riebeeck who founded the Dutch East India Company's fort at what is now Cape Town was the founder of South Africa. Gie wrote that van Riebeeck was the "founder of our South Africa, the South Africa of the white | Hermann van Broekhuizen, the minister-plenipotentiary in The Hague. The memo is more commonly known as the "te Water Memorandum" as te Water was the best known South African diplomat in the world at the time. The memo warned that South Africa was on the verge of receiving a massive number of European Jews, which the document stated were of "...a type in question that does not inspire confidence. Can South Africa without detriment and even danger to its national interests continue to allow its commerce and related vocations to be fed by recruits of this type from overseas?" The memo ended with the warning that continuing Jewish immigration would affect "the future racial, social and economic structures of White South Africa", and advised ending Jewish immigration at once. In August 1938, Gie reported to Pretoria that Germany only wanted autonomy for the Sudetenland and was not seeking to annex the Sudetenland. Gie stated if the Czechoslovak president Edvard Beneš was willing to accept the "Karlsbad programe" put forward by the Sudeten German leader Konrad Henlein on 24 April 1938 calling for a wide-ranging autonomy for the Sudetenland, the crisis would be settled. Gie stated it was his impression after talking to Hitler-whom he called the "Olympian Jove"-and his entourage that they did not want a war, but "they will, however, not stand for overmuch Czech intransigence. If the Czechs want a war, they'll get it". Only on 12 September 1938 in a speech to the Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg did Hitler call for the Sudetenland to "go home to the Reich". During the height of the Sudetenland crisis in September 1938, Gie depicted Hitler in the words of the Canadian historian Michael Graham Fry as "volatile, oratorically violent, risk acceptant, fanatically determined and difficult to predict". Gie felt that Hitler was only reacting to the system by the Treaty of Versailles, but warned it was quite possible that he would order an invasion of Czechoslovakia at any given moment. After the Munich Agreement of 30 September 1938, Gie believed that there was a real possibility of an Anglo-German understanding that might secure the peace of the world. Like te Water in London, Gie had hopes that Neville Chamberlain's plans for a four power pact consisting of Britain, France, Italy and Germany might be realised with the United Kingdom and the Reich as the senior members. Both Gie and te Water believed that such a four power directory would regulate European and African affairs and kept the dreaded Soviet Union, the nation that South African leaders feared the most, at bay. South African elites in common with elites throughout the Commonwealth had an intense fear of another Anglo-German war, believing that it would so weaken the two leading "white" powers that whoever was victorious would be so weakened as to be unable to resist the Soviet Union. In turn, the dominance of the Soviet Union would allow so-called "inferior races" to take over the world as Sir Nevile Henderson, the British ambassador to Germany, put it. Gie warned of dangerous forces at work in both Britain and Germany, one of them being "the Hitler of Godesburg and his Sportspalast speech". However, Gie wrote with the Munich Agreement ending the Sudetenland crisis there was nothing at present that would justify a war for the next "two years at least". During the Danzig crisis, Gie largely supported the German viewpoint that the Free City of Danzig (modern Gdańsk, Poland) should be allowed to "go home to the Reich". In a dispatch to Herzog on 3 May 1939, Gie wrote that the German claim to Danzig was "just and right", and accused Poland of being the principle danger to the peace of the world. Gie also stated that he believed that Adolf Hitler did not intend to start a war, but that German public opinion might push him into a rash move, especially if the Poles continued to refuse to allow Danzig to rejoin Germany. The British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax who had just read a briefing on the history of Danzig wrote after reading a dispatch from Gie passed on to him by te Water that Gie "should learn some history". Throughout the Danzig crisis, Gie was in close contact with Charles te Water, the South African High Commissioner in London as the two diplomats worked together to ensure South Africa would be neutral if the crisis led to war. Gie was one of the relatively few diplomats in Berlin with whom the British ambassador Sir Nevile Henderson associated with during the Danzig crisis. The other two diplomats whom Henderson often saw were the Belgian minister Vicomte Jacques Davignon and the Italian ambassador Baron Bernardo Attolico. Davignon, Attolico and Gie were all supporters of the line that the Free City of Danzig should be allowed to "go home to the Reich", which was also Henderson's long-standing belief. By contrast, Henderson avoided seeing very much of either the Polish ambassador Józef Lipski or the French ambassador Robert Coulondre, both of whom were stoutly opposed to allowing the Free City to rejoin Germany. Gie very briefly served as the South African minister plenipotentiary to the Netherlands in 1939. From 1939 to 1944, he served as |
Alejandro García Padilla and a large scale amusement park under Ricardo Rosselló. Others, such as the filming of productions like Wrecked and Crossbones or Marine Environmental Remediation Group's boat recycling facility were either temporary or short-lived. In its current form, cryptocurrency was introduced as a response to the financial crisis of 2007–2008 and anonymous figure Satoshi Nakamoto is considered its popularizer. Bitcoin, created in 2009, was the first decentralized cryptocurrency. Since then, numerous others have been created. An increase in the value of these cryptocurrencies has made several traders wealthy, with some oscillating between being millionaires and billionaires. Influx of crypto traders, Puertopia On September 20, 2017, hurricane Maria passed over Puerto Rico, creating what is considered the worst natural disaster on record for the archipelago. Only months later, a group of cryptocurrency figures led by Bitcoin Foundation chairman Brock Pierce relocated to Old San Juan, gathering in hotels and purchasing a colonial building that previously housed a children's museum. The new arrivals numbered in the dozens and were mostly composed by executives of firms (such as Michael Terpin founder of BitAngels and Ethereum Blockchain-as-a-Service entrepreneur Andrew Keys), early adopters, nouveau riche men that had benefitted from the early adoption of Bitcoin and its value rising in 2017, traders and investors, among other enthusiasts. According to a New York Times article that quoted Pierce, it was the economic environment that followed which convinced them to choose the ravaged archipelago. In the words of Fifth Avenue Capital's Stephen Morris, "It's only when everything's been swept away that you can make a case for rebuilding from the ground up". The group unveiled plans to build Puertopia or Sol, a city in which all transactions were made via digital currency and contracts codified in the underlying technology of blockchain. Located at in the derelict remains of Roosevelt Roads Naval Base in Ceiba, Puerto Rico, the project would include the first cryptocurrency-exclusive bank in the world and was to be a showcase for the group to promote their vision of "what a crypto future could look like". The group claimed that it would be investing in the local economy, in particular the widespread reconstruction efforts following the hurricane. The Puertopians are part of a larger group of clients that have fueled the creation of local businesses dealing with tax and legal advice for the incoming super rich. A number of foreign-owned banking institutions were created in Puerto Rico, including FV Bank, Mercantile Bank International (SJMX, formerly San Juan Merchantile Exchange) and a new iteration of the historical Medici Bank, all of which welcomed transactions in cryptocurrency. Bitcoin ATMs hosted by Bitstop and Athena began being installed, while Robots Inc. was granted a patent for a similar device. A pattern of decline in the value of digital coins during 2018 directly resulted in the dissolution of the San Juan-based noble bank. As the Puertopians began to lose money, some left Puerto Rico, while others adopted defensive measures while the possibility of a prolonged market crash, known as the "crypto winter", was forthcoming. As traders lost money initiatives involving local non-profits were abandoned, mainly those directed towards aiding the communities that remained affected by the hurricane. The goal to build a crypto city remains unfulfilled, with recent initiatives at Roosevelt Roads focusing on restoring its airport and establishing a spaceport. Pierce, who purchased a colonial building from the Catholic Church in 2020, has claimed that "these were loose ideas, nothing of which was concrete of well thought out". Puertopians themselves broadened their presence in the archipelago, retaining their home base in Old San Juan but acquiring properties in Dorado, Humacao, Rincón and the island municipality of Vieques. During the summer of 2020, Puerto Rican software mogul Orlando Bravo became interested in Bitcoin while vacationing at Dorado, purchasing an undisclosed amount of it and publicly speaking in its favor. By 2021, the influx had increased again, with the relocation of cryptocurrency hedge funds Pantera and Redwood City Ventures as well as the mining operations of CoinMint. Among these was Frances Haugen, who earned notoriety after exposing the inner workings of Facebook and had purchased enough cryptocurrency "at the right time". At the time, retired baseball player Alfredo Escalera publicly lobbied for more public policy, stating that "our governors should educate themselves about the development of the technology, the mining of the coins and the programming of the "blockchains" to attract the thousands of investors that engage in this business worldwide." Shortly after moving to Dorado, influencer Logan Paul became involved into a cryptocurrency named Dink Doink, which has been labelled as a "scam" by Nasdaq. Crypto personality Amanda Cassatt and her husband Samuel relocated, as more individuals arrived from different states. However, this wave also brought individuals that did not receive Act 60 exemptions but also became involved with the community, such as Keiko Yoshino of the Puerto Rico Blockchain Trade Association. Aware that the perception of the group became increasing contentious as property prices in San Juan increased, the Puertopians began to rebrand their efforts as "more inclusive, empowering and communal", individual-owned and linked them to the advent of Web3. As such, weekly events known as CryptoCurious and Crypto Mondays are organized with the general public as their targets. Local crypto entrepreneurs such as Juan Carlos Pedreira began to capitalize. HORPR hearings on regulation In January 2022, Speaker Tatito Hernández of the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), who has argued in favor of employing blockchain for tasks such as fighting public corruption, revealed that the House of Representatives of Puerto Rico was investigating the topic of creating a regulatory frame for cryptocurrency. House Resolution 527 was passed with the expressed intent of studying “the concept of blockchain as a government filing system, as well as the use of digital coins (cryptocurrency) as an accepted form of payment in Puerto Rico”. Jesús Manuel Ortiz of the PPD, chair of the HORPR’s Government Comission and who has publicly endorsed cryptocurrencies as the “scaffold of the worldwide economy in the near future”, was responsible for the investigation. According to a February 2022 report, the Puerto Rico Department of Treasury has established that the acquisition of property and real estate using cryptocurrencies has become widespread in Puerto Rico. All of those involved in the hearings acknowledged that such transactions had become pervasive. In representation of the PRDT, Ángel L. Pantoja recommend following the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidelines on the topic, given the political status of Puerto Rico and a lack of precedent. Natalia Zequeira, Financial Institutions Commissioner, emphasized that the volatility of cryptocurrencies had convinced banks to adopt “conservative positions” and after listing what she perceived as positives and negatives, concluded that once the regulatory framework is in place “Puerto Rico cannot fall behind. The future is all about markets, transactions and digital currency. It is imperative for us to be at the forefront of this technology”. Speaking for the Puerto Rico Bankers Association, Zoimé Álvarez argued that in order to comply with Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation standards regulatory controls were required to prevent illegal activity such as “money laundering [or] terrorism financing”. Afterwards, Ortiz made it clear that he had been satisfied and anticipated that bill will be presented to regulate cryptocurrencies in the jurisdiction. Reception Government and politics The Puerto Rico Department of Treasury declined to comment on the issue, recognizing that they did not have an expert in cryptocurrency at the moment, but noted a future interest in having one. The Puerto Rico Office of the Commissioner of Financial Institutions has seen sufficient legitimacy to approve the existence of "Digital Internacional Bank" licenses, under the interpretation of international banking laws. However, unlike other locations where banks have suppressed the use of cryptocurrency, the Puerto Rico Bankers Association notes through president Zoimé Álvarez that they did not consider themselves "enemies" and that "[cryptocurrency] is here to stay, only being concerned by the irreversible nature of payments. When first interviewed about the topic, governor Ricardo Rosselló of the conservative Partido Nuevo Progresista (PNP) expressed that "there is still a lot of work to be done and giving clarity that this is not used for money laundering or it’s not used for other areas", but favored widely adopting blockchain as a "game changer". Despite being in charge of the conference (named "Puerto Crypto") where | of Individual Investors to Puerto Rico (a.k.a. "Act 22"), which facilitated the export of services and offered significant tax exemptions to wealthy individuals that were willing to relocate to Puerto Rico respectively, were passed with the intention of attracting venture funding. Most of the businessmen that arrived since have focused on the acquisition of real estate and other forms of economic development. In 2019, the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico approved Act 60, which integrated all preexisting laws into a new Incentives Code. Roosevelt Roads Naval Station closed down in 2004, after the United States Navy was ousted from Vieques, Puerto Rico following a wave of civilian protests. Since then, a number of initiatives have been proposed, but the redevelopment of the zone has stalled and only specific facilities have been repurposed. Among the projects that did not made it past the planning stage are the Caribbean Riviera mega-project under Luis Fortuño, the involvement of Clark Realty Capital in housing/commercial projects under Alejandro García Padilla and a large scale amusement park under Ricardo Rosselló. Others, such as the filming of productions like Wrecked and Crossbones or Marine Environmental Remediation Group's boat recycling facility were either temporary or short-lived. In its current form, cryptocurrency was introduced as a response to the financial crisis of 2007–2008 and anonymous figure Satoshi Nakamoto is considered its popularizer. Bitcoin, created in 2009, was the first decentralized cryptocurrency. Since then, numerous others have been created. An increase in the value of these cryptocurrencies has made several traders wealthy, with some oscillating between being millionaires and billionaires. Influx of crypto traders, Puertopia On September 20, 2017, hurricane Maria passed over Puerto Rico, creating what is considered the worst natural disaster on record for the archipelago. Only months later, a group of cryptocurrency figures led by Bitcoin Foundation chairman Brock Pierce relocated to Old San Juan, gathering in hotels and purchasing a colonial building that previously housed a children's museum. The new arrivals numbered in the dozens and were mostly composed by executives of firms (such as Michael Terpin founder of BitAngels and Ethereum Blockchain-as-a-Service entrepreneur Andrew Keys), early adopters, nouveau riche men that had benefitted from the early adoption of Bitcoin and its value rising in 2017, traders and investors, among other enthusiasts. According to a New York Times article that quoted Pierce, it was the economic environment that followed which convinced them to choose the ravaged archipelago. In the words of Fifth Avenue Capital's Stephen Morris, "It's only when everything's been swept away that you can make a case for rebuilding from the ground up". The group unveiled plans to build Puertopia or Sol, a city in which all transactions were made via digital currency and contracts codified in the underlying technology of blockchain. Located at in the derelict remains of Roosevelt Roads Naval Base in Ceiba, Puerto Rico, the project would include the first cryptocurrency-exclusive bank in the world and was to be a showcase for the group to promote their vision of "what a crypto future could look like". The group claimed that it would be investing in the local economy, in particular the widespread reconstruction efforts following the hurricane. The Puertopians are part of a larger group of clients that have fueled the creation of local businesses dealing with tax and legal advice for the incoming super rich. A number of foreign-owned banking institutions were created in Puerto Rico, including FV Bank, Mercantile Bank International (SJMX, formerly San Juan Merchantile Exchange) and a new iteration of the historical Medici Bank, all of which welcomed transactions in cryptocurrency. Bitcoin ATMs hosted by Bitstop and Athena began being installed, while Robots Inc. was granted a patent for a similar device. A pattern of decline in the value of digital coins during 2018 directly resulted in the dissolution of the San Juan-based noble bank. As the Puertopians began to lose money, some left Puerto Rico, while others adopted defensive measures while the possibility of a prolonged market crash, known as the "crypto winter", was forthcoming. As traders lost money initiatives involving local non-profits were abandoned, mainly those directed towards aiding the communities that remained affected by the hurricane. The goal to build a crypto city remains unfulfilled, with recent initiatives at Roosevelt Roads focusing on restoring its airport and establishing a spaceport. Pierce, who purchased a colonial building from the Catholic Church in 2020, has claimed that "these were loose ideas, nothing of which was concrete of well thought out". Puertopians themselves broadened their presence in the archipelago, retaining their home base in Old San Juan but acquiring properties in Dorado, Humacao, Rincón and the island municipality of Vieques. During the summer of 2020, Puerto Rican software mogul Orlando Bravo became interested in Bitcoin while vacationing at Dorado, purchasing an undisclosed amount of it and publicly speaking in its favor. By 2021, the influx had increased again, with the relocation of cryptocurrency hedge funds Pantera and Redwood City Ventures as well as the mining operations of CoinMint. Among these was Frances Haugen, who earned notoriety after exposing the inner workings of Facebook and had purchased enough cryptocurrency "at the right time". At the time, retired baseball player Alfredo Escalera publicly lobbied for more public policy, stating that "our governors should educate themselves about the development of the technology, the mining of the coins and the programming of the "blockchains" to attract the thousands of investors that engage in this business worldwide." Shortly after moving to Dorado, influencer Logan Paul became involved into a cryptocurrency named Dink Doink, which has been labelled as a "scam" by Nasdaq. Crypto personality Amanda |
on various diplomatic missions. On 12 March 1513, he witnessed a comparison between Duke Heinrich I of Brunswick and Lüneburg and Count Johann von Holstein-Schaumburg. On 23 April 1517, Elector Joachim I was asked by a Brandenburg diplomat from Matzan to send Dietrich von Hardenberg to France as ambassador to send. In addition to working for the Elector, he was also on various missions for Bishop John IV of Hildesheim. On December 5, 1518, Bishop John IV enfeoffed him with various goods. In the spring of 1519, Dietrich von Hardenberg served twice as an envoy in the service of Elector Joachim I in Cologne, where he was to sound out the political position of Archbishop Hermann V and win him over for the election of King Franz I as emperor. At the end of 1520, he went to the French court on a diplomatic mission together with the provost of Besskow, Andreas Huth. On April 4, 1521, he arrived in Worms from Paris. On 12 April 1521, the Brandenburg bishop Hieronymus Schulz became the new Bishop of Havelberg, and Dietrich von Hardenberg received the Bishopric of Brandenburg for his services to Elector Joachim I. On 17 May 1521, Pope Leo X transferred the episcopacy to Dietrich von Hardenberg. As bishop he proved himself to be a | I in Cologne, where he was to sound out the political position of Archbishop Hermann V and win him over for the election of King Franz I as emperor. At the end of 1520, he went to the French court on a diplomatic mission together with the provost of Besskow, Andreas Huth. On April 4, 1521, he arrived in Worms from Paris. On 12 April 1521, the Brandenburg bishop Hieronymus Schulz became the new Bishop of Havelberg, and Dietrich von Hardenberg received the Bishopric of Brandenburg for his services to Elector Joachim I. On 17 May 1521, Pope Leo X transferred the episcopacy to Dietrich von Hardenberg. As bishop he proved himself to be a zealous Catholic and an enemy of the Reformation, which, however, gained a lot of ground under his episcopacy as a result of careless measures, especially in the parts of the Brandenburg diocese outside of the Kurmark territory. It is believed that he died on 13 May 1526. He was buried in Brandenburg Cathedral. Literature Gustav Abb, Gottfried Wentz: The Diocese of Brandenburg. First part. (Germania Sacra AF 1st section, 1st vol.) Berlin, Leipzig, 1929 (online). External links Dietrich von Hardenberg in the register of persons in Germania Sacra |
Brazilian Open and featured in qualifying at the 1988 Australian Open. Retiring from full-time tennis in 1990, she achieved a career high singles world ranking of 360. During the 1990s she was the women's tennis head coach at the University of Central Florida and even had a season in charge of the women's basketball team as an acting coach. Falkenberg has continued to compete on and off in ITF tournaments since the 1990s. In 2013, as a 66-year old, she came up against Naomi Osaka in the qualifying draw for the Rock Hill ITF event. Osaka, 50 years her junior, won 6–0, 6–0. She also played a professional match against the world's number one junior Taylor Townsend in 2016, which received considerable media attention. Townsend conceded only 12 points | ITF Women's World Tennis Tour tournaments as recently as 2021, aged 74. Raised in Westfield, New Jersey, Falkenberg attended University of California, Los Angeles in the 1960s, where she played on the basketball, tennis and volleyball varsity teams and earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in filmmaking. After graduation she worked as a documentary filmmaker and didn't join the professional tour until she was 38 years of age. She made her Virginia Slims main draw debut at the 1986 Brazilian Open and featured in qualifying at the 1988 Australian Open. Retiring from full-time tennis in 1990, she achieved a career high singles world ranking of 360. During the 1990s |
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San Salvador, where the Salvadorans defeated the Hondurans by a score of 5–0. The 5-score margin of victory remains the largest margin of victory ever between the two teams, and the feat was repeated in 2000 when Honduras defeated El Salvador 5–0 during the 2002 FIFA World Cup qualifiers. Football War The two teams met during the 1970 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, the first time the two teams ever met in a tournament organized by FIFA. The teams played the first match in Tegucigalpa on 8 June 1969, in which Honduras won 1–0, which led to riots instigated by Salvadoran fans. In the second match in San Salvador on 15 June 1969, El Salvador won by a score of 3–0, and before the match, a rag was flown instead of the flag of Honduras. Honduran player Enrique Cardona stated that the Hondurans were "lucky that we lost" because otherwise "we wouldn't be alive today." The loss led to Hondurans attacking Salvadorans and burning down their homes, forcing many Salvadorans to flee back to El Salvador. As both teams ended on equal points, a third match was played in neutral territory in Mexico | Mexico City. El Salvador eventually won the match 3–2 after extra time. Before the match and because of the attacks against Salvadorans by Hondurans, the Salvadoran government severed diplomatic relations with Honduras on 26 June 1969, and on 14 July 1969, the Armed Forces of El Salvador invaded Honduras, beginning the Football War. After four days of fighting, the Organization of American States (OAS) negotiated a cease fire, ending the war after around 3,000 people, mostly civilians, had died. El Salvador withdrew its soldiers on 2 August 1969. El Salvador qualified for the 1970 FIFA World Cup after defeating Haiti, however, the team would lose all three of its matches against Mexico, the Soviet Union, and Belgium in the group stage, failing to score a single goal. Major tournament matches 1946 CCCF Championship 1953 CCCF Championship 1955 CCCF Championship 1961 CCCF Championship 1963 CONCACAF Championship 1970 FIFA World Cup qualifiers 1981 CONCACAF Championship 1985 CONCACAF Championship |
years at the Kerala Kalamandalam in Cheruthuruthy. In 1961, he joined Kollankode Rajas High School in Palakkad district as a teacher in Kathakali chamayam and later became a descendant of poet P. Kunhiraman Nair, who was a colleague there. Sreedharan started writing poems at the age of fifteen. In 1962, he won the first prize in the Mathrubhumi Weekly poetry competition for students. Subsequently, in 1964, he was awarded the Kerala Sahitya Samithi Poetry Award. He brought together theatre artists from Kollengode and the surrounding areas, and formed a theater troupe in 1975 and performed plays all over Kerala. He was instrumental in establishing the P. Smaraka Kalakendram (P. Memorial Art Center) at Kollengode in In 1981, in memory of the poet P. Kunhiraman Nair. Iyyamcode has been the secretary of the art centre for the last forty years. In 1988, when he was the secretary of the Kerala Kalamandalam, he formed a Kathakali group named Kerala Kalabhavan and wrote three aattakkathas including 'Kinglier', and performed in many stages including in foreign countries. Iyankode Sreedharan, who has been one of the directors of the Kerala Institute of Children's Literature held several other positions icluding member of the Kerala Sahitya Samithi and the Vice President of the Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi. He was a member of the Board of Directors of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi for seven years and was the state secretary of the Purogamana Kala Sahitya Sangh, a group of progressive literary activists. He represented India in World Ramayana Festival. Personal life He and his wife Komalavalli have 3 children. His daughter S. K. Kavitha is a Malayalam language poet. They lives in their house 'Sakalya' in Vattekatte near Kollengode in Palakkad district. Literary works Poetry collection Mulakinkodi Njattu Paattu Perumbara Jaya He Sakshi Mozhi Patiyirangunna Daivam Sangha Ganam Njan Itha Padunnu Veendum Short story collection Thalam Thettiya Kalaasangal Novels Vadamallika Appunni Memoirs Memoirs about V. K. N. Varna Renukkal Mayil Peelikal Ormayile Mandasmeram Ornmayile Madhuryam Essays and studies Kochukochu Varthamanangal Snehadarasamanwitham Dance Dramas Malanadu Kavikal Paadiya Keralam Biographies Biography of Changampuzha Krishna | Kala Sahitya Sangh, a group of progressive literary activists. He represented India in World Ramayana Festival. Personal life He and his wife Komalavalli have 3 children. His daughter S. K. Kavitha is a Malayalam language poet. They lives in their house 'Sakalya' in Vattekatte near Kollengode in Palakkad district. Literary works Poetry collection Mulakinkodi Njattu Paattu Perumbara Jaya He Sakshi Mozhi Patiyirangunna Daivam Sangha Ganam Njan Itha Padunnu Veendum Short story collection Thalam Thettiya Kalaasangal Novels Vadamallika Appunni Memoirs Memoirs about V. K. N. Varna Renukkal Mayil Peelikal Ormayile Mandasmeram Ornmayile Madhuryam Essays and studies Kochukochu Varthamanangal Snehadarasamanwitham Dance Dramas Malanadu Kavikal Paadiya Keralam Biographies Biography of Changampuzha Krishna Pillai Biography of Vallathol Narayana Menon Biography of P. Kunhiraman Nair Biography of Kunchan Nambiar Based on life of Sukumar Azhikode </ref> Based on life of Cherukad Swapnadanam. based on life of P. Kunhiraman Nair Plays Ore vargam Ore margam Ithile Padayottam Aattakkathas Manava Vijayam Sneha Sandesam King lier, adaptation of William Shakespeare's play King Lear Studies and reserch Travelogues King Lierinte Europyan Sanchara Padangal In this book, Ramayana from fourteen countries of the world including Uzbekistan, Philippines and Vietnam are mentioned. Spain Oru Ottapradakshinam Books on him Letters of Mahakavi P. Kunjiraman Nair to Iyyancode Sreedharan Kalppadukal part 2 titled as Puram, S. K. Vasanthan's memoirs of friendships and cordial interactions with notable personalities including Sreedharan Awards and honors Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Overall Contributions 2016. Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award 2008 for his travelogue King Lierinte Europyan Sanchara Padangal Kerala Kalamandalam M. K. K. Nair Award for outstanding contribution in the field of literature. Kerala Kalamandalam 'Mukundaraja Award' for his contributions to Kathakali. Abu Dhabi Shakti Award 1997- for poetry collection Sanghaganam. Arts Service International Book Development |
Tour du Gard () was a road cycling stage race that took place between 2 and 6 February 2022 almost entirely within the French department of Gard. The race was rated as a category 2.1 event on the 2022 UCI Europe Tour calendar, and was the 52nd edition of the Étoile de Bessèges. Teams Nine of the 18 UCI WorldTeams, nine UCI ProTeams, and three UCI Continental teams made up the 21 teams that participated in the race. Each team entered a full squad of seven | who started the race, of which 123 finished. UCI WorldTeams UCI ProTeams UCI Continental Teams Route Stages Stage 1 2 February 2022 – Bellegarde to Bellegarde, Stage 2 3 February 2022 – Saint-Christol-lès-Alès to Rousson, Stage 3 4 February 2022 – Bessèges to Bessèges, Stage 4 5 February 2022 – Saint-Hilaire-de-Brethmas to , Stage 5 6 February 2022 – Alès to Alès, , (ITT) Classification leadership table On stage 2, Hugo Hofstetter, who was second in the points classification, wore the yellow jersey, because first-placed Mads Pedersen wore the coral jersey as the leader of the general classification. For the same reason, Mathieu Burgaudeau wore the yellow jersey on stage 3. After stage |
led to the murder of Achille Brembati in 1563 in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Bergamo, resulting in the arrest of her brothers and father, and the exile of her husband to Ferrara, who was considered to be part of the plot. The young woman followed her husband into exile, but he died suddenly in 1564 after falling drunk from a balcony. She returned to Brescia where she died of tuberculosis, like her mother, in 1568. Her sonnets were also appreciated by Girolamo Ruscelli who published two sonnets in his Rime di diversi eccellenti | herself the niece of Abbondio Longhi, secretary to Bartolomeo Colleoni. Lucia married Faustino Avogadro, a member of the Brescian nobility, at the age of sixteen and settled in that city: well versed in letters, she was a member of the Accademia degli Occulti in Brescia and wrote Rime which was published in Venice in 1553. She was involved in a dramatic family feud with the Brembati family, which led to the murder of Achille Brembati in 1563 in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Bergamo, resulting in the arrest of her brothers and father, and the exile of her husband to Ferrara, who |
Marc Badain, Ventrelle played a key role in the Raiders' relocation to Las Vegas and the building of a new stadium. On July 19, 2021, Ventrelle was named the interim president of the Las Vegas Raiders following the resignation of Marc Badain on the same day. Following the conclusion of the 2021 season, Ventrelle was promoted to the permanent role of president. As president, Ventrelle has worked to embed the Raiders organization in the Las Vegas community, championing issues such as the Raiders’ vaccine verification project and bringing the high school state championship football games to Allegiant Stadium. References 1976 births Living | the conclusion of the 2021 season, Ventrelle was promoted to the permanent role of president. As president, Ventrelle has worked to embed the Raiders organization in the Las Vegas community, championing issues such as the Raiders’ vaccine verification project and bringing the high school state championship football games to Allegiant Stadium. References 1976 births Living people Businesspeople from Chicago Las Vegas Raiders executives National Football League team presidents Oakland Raiders executives Sportspeople from Chicago University of Michigan |
Campbell 1997 Adele Bannerman 1996 Stacey Doggett 1995 Alison Wheelhouse 1994 Renee Fowler 1993 Karrie Webb 1992 Rachel Hetherington 1991 Cathy Neilson 1990 Tracie Hale 1989 Liz Cavill 1988 Karen Pearce 1987 Vicki Jellis 1986 Edwina Kennedy 1985 Edwina Kennedy 1984 Edwina Kennedy 1983 Corinne Dibnah 1982 Liz Douglas 1981 Liz Cavill 1980 Heather Bleeck 1979 Edwina Kennedy 1978 Leonie Oxley 1977 Julie Bretherton 1976 Vicki Jellis 1975 Heather Bleeck 1974 Marea Parsons 1973 Isabel Blumberg 1972 Helene Gosse 1971 Gayle Gannon 1970 Anne Kenny 1969 Betty Dalgleish 1968 Elizabeth Blackmore 1967 Elizabeth Blackmore 1966 Marea Hickey 1965 | 1954 Norma Smith 1953 Pat Borthwick 1952 Pat Borthwick 1951 Pat Borthwick 1950 Norma George 1949 Pat Borthwick 1948 Pat Borthwick 1947 Barbara Gowing 1946 Marie Roskin 1939 Margaret Rankin 1938 LW Hore 1937 Phyllis Sydney-Jones 1936 Nin Robinson 1935 Joan Hammond 1934 Joan Hammond 1933 Odette Lefebvre 1932 Joan Hammond 1931 Odette Lefebvre 1930 Leonora Wray 1929 Enid Clements 1928 Frances Slack 1927 Phyllis Sydney-Jones 1926 Marjorie Green 1925 Violet Yuille 1924 Nonie Pennefather 1923 Winifred Triglone 1922 Violet Yuille 1921 Violet Yuille 1920 Mabel Barton 1914 Nancy Parbury 1913 D Boys 1912 Winifred Duret 1911 Nancy Parbury 1910 Nancy Parbury 1909 Nell Caird 1908 Leonora Wray 1907 Leonora Wray 1906 Leonora Wray 1905 R Aitken 1904 Mabel Trevor-Jones 1903 Mabel Trevor-Jones Source: See also New South Wales Amateur Australian Women's Interstate Teams Matches References External links Amateur golf tournaments in Australia Golf in New South Wales Recurring |
Japan. The fish is named in honor of a fisherman of Rausu, Hokkaido, Japan, Shigemi Fujimoto. | found near Hokkaido, Japan. The fish is named in honor of a fisherman |
Wainwright Perkins in 1906. He initially designed the building for Silk merchant Daniel O. Hill. The mansion started to operate as Chicago's Serbian American Museum in the year 1952 under the name Serbian Cultural Club. The Serbian Cultural Club was founded by Dr. Slobodan Draskovic. In 2011, Serbian Cultural Club was renamed as Serbian American Museum St. Sava, "dedicated to protecting and promoting the history and culture of Serbians through a variety of undertakings." Over the time, the museum has exhibited many exclusive exhibitions specifically focusing on | a Chicago based museum which was situated at the historic Daniel O. Hill House at Barry avenue Chicago. The Museum ceased to operate in the year 2016. History The building Daniel O. Hill House was designed by architect Frederick Wainwright Perkins in 1906. He initially designed the building for Silk merchant Daniel O. Hill. The mansion started to operate as Chicago's Serbian American Museum in the year 1952 under the name Serbian Cultural Club. The Serbian Cultural Club was founded by Dr. Slobodan Draskovic. In 2011, Serbian Cultural Club was |
the traditional short beaded skirt of young Swazi maidens during the Umhlanga (Reed Dance). Indlamu (dance) (Zoeloedans), traditional | traditional short beaded skirt of young Swazi maidens during the Umhlanga (Reed Dance). Indlamu (dance) (Zoeloedans), traditional dance |
Trench in the east. The Sulu Trench is not associated with frequent earthquakes, but hosts volcanoes south of the trench such as Mount Malindang. Background The Sulu trench was formed from subduction of the Eurasian Plate underneath the Philippine sea plate which initiated during the Early Miocene (23.03-20.44 Million years ago), The trench was previously the site of a collision zone with the Palawan plate, which formed the Philippine Trench 8–9 million years ago, This trench is located southeast of the Visayan Islands, The rate of subduction in the Sulu Trench is approximately 8 cm/year. Although there are vast areas of subduction | was formed from subduction of the Eurasian Plate underneath the Philippine sea plate which initiated during the Early Miocene (23.03-20.44 Million years ago), The trench was previously the site of a collision zone with the Palawan plate, which formed the Philippine Trench 8–9 million years ago, This trench is located southeast of the Visayan Islands, The rate of subduction in the Sulu Trench is approximately 8 cm/year. Although there are vast areas of subduction zones, some authors have |
The show stars Tejas Gowda, Nayana Shetty as main protagonists and Neeraja and Madhusudhan in pivotal roles. Cast Tejas Gowda as Pratap Reddy Nayana Shetty as Janaki Shilpa Reddy as Kranthi (fake Durga) Aishwarya Addala as Durga Neeraja as Reddamma Madhusudhan as Janaki's Grand father Nirmala as Janaki's Grand mother Selva Raj as Nagi Reddy, Janaki's Uncle Anu Manasa as Kaveri, Janaki's | as Janaki's Grand mother Selva Raj as Nagi Reddy, Janaki's Uncle Anu Manasa as Kaveri, Janaki's Aunt Uma Shankar as Pratap's father Bhavani as Pratap's mother Shirisha as Vasundhara, Janaki's mother Sameer as Janaki's father Anchor Jaanu as Upasana, Pratap's Sister in law Teja Chowdary References Indian television soap operas Telugu-language television shows 2021 Indian |
51 in Germany and No. 71 in the Netherlands. Music video The entire music video was shot in black and white. It features John in various activities he was involved like attending the Watford F.C. games and having fun backstage and various historical events in history. It is also composed of some Elton John music videos from 1978 to 1990 (from how the video started): "Healing Hands" (1989) (some clips repeated) "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That" (1988) "You Gotta Love Someone" (1990) (some clips repeated) "Wrap Her Up" (1985) (some clips repeated) "Paris" (1986) (some clips repeated) "A Word in Spanish" (1988) "Sacrifice" (1989) "I Guess That's | It reached No. 63 in the UK, No. 57 in Australia, No. 59 in Canada, No. 51 in Germany and No. 71 in the Netherlands. Music video The entire music video was shot in black and white. It features John in various activities he was involved like attending the Watford F.C. games and having fun backstage and various historical events in history. It is also composed of some Elton John music videos from 1978 to 1990 (from how the video started): "Healing Hands" (1989) (some clips repeated) "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That" (1988) "You Gotta Love Someone" (1990) (some clips repeated) "Wrap Her Up" (1985) (some clips repeated) "Paris" (1986) (some clips repeated) "A Word in Spanish" (1988) "Sacrifice" (1989) "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues" (1983) "Ego" (1978) Personnel Elton John – vocals and piano Randy Jackson – bass Kenny Aronoff - |
river of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Kendel (surname) See | Kendel may refer to: Kendel (river), river of |
family Muraenidae. The eel is named in honor of Elaine Heemstra of the South African | is a fish in the family Muraenidae. The eel is named in honor of |
(born 1949), British public servant Deirdre Lovejoy (born 1962), American actress Deirdre Madden (born 1960), Irish novelist Deirdre McCloskey (born 1942), American economist and philosopher Deirdre Mullins, 21st-century Irish actress, director and activist Deirdre Sullivan, 21st-century Irish children's writer and poet Deirdre Wilson (born 1941), British linguist and cognitive scientist Fictional characters Deirdre Barlow, in the British soap opera Coronation Street Deirdre Hortense (Dodie) Bishop, in the American animated TV series As Told by Ginger (2000–2004) Deirdre (Halloween), from | Deirdre Bair (1935–2020), American literary scholar and biographer Deirdre Blomfield-Brown (born 1936), American Tibetan Buddhist nun Deirdre Connelly (born 1961), Puerto Rican business executive, particularly with pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline Deirdre English (born 1948), American former editor of Mother Jones and author Deirdre Hargey, Irish Sinn Féin politician, Minister for Communities within the Northern Ireland Executive, and former Lord Mayor of Belfast Deirdre Hutton |
he was a member of the Grand and General Council. At first he was a member of the Sammarinese Christian Democratic Party, later on the Popular Alliance and finally the Future Republic. References 1935 births 2021 deaths | Carlo Franciosi (1 April 1935 – 27 December 2021) was Captain Regent of San Marino from 1 April 1987 to 1 October 1987. A doctor by profession, he was committed to politics as well. Between 1978 and |
to the Hollywood Bowl Jazz Festival. The Festival The Festival will be held on 25 and 26 June 2022. Comedian George Lopez will be hosting the event. The event is organized by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Association, which presents the summer Hollywood Bowl concerts. References Jazz festivals in the United States Music festivals | Hefner as the Playboy Jazz Festival. In November 2022 the festival changed its name to the Hollywood Bowl Jazz Festival. The Festival The Festival will be held on 25 and 26 June 2022. Comedian George Lopez will be hosting the event. The event is |
information", to be used as input to various generic reasoning algorithms: e.g., to determine relevant questions, to compute consequences of new facts, and to explain them. FO(.) extends first-order logic with: types, aggregates, arithmetic, (inductive) definitions, partial functions, and intensional objects. FO-dot is used by these reasoning engines: IDP-Z3 IDP FOLASP Example The following voting laws you must be at least 18 years old to vote; if the law is prescriptive, voting is mandatory. can represented | i.e., definitions of symbols by enumeration. An FO-dot knowledge base cannot be run. It is a "bag of information", to be used as input to various generic reasoning algorithms: e.g., to determine relevant questions, to compute consequences of new facts, and to explain them. FO(.) extends first-order logic with: types, aggregates, arithmetic, (inductive) definitions, partial functions, and intensional objects. FO-dot is used by these reasoning engines: IDP-Z3 IDP FOLASP Example The following voting laws you must be at least 18 years old to vote; if the law is prescriptive, voting is mandatory. can represented in FO(.) as follows: vocabulary V { age: () → ℤ // function declaration prescriptive, vote: () → 𝔹 // predicate declarations } |
Mikhail Filatovich (born 1925) and mother Praskoviya Sergeevna (born 1926). His wife Liubov Yegorivna (1953) has worked as a deputy director for educational work at school No. 2; son Serhiy (born 1976) is a well-known Ukrainian journalist and writer; daughter Natalia (born 1983) is a lawyer. Education He studied Russian Language and Literature at Voroshilovgrad Pedagogical Institute named after T. Shevchenko, Faculty of | and writer; daughter Natalia (born 1983) is a lawyer. Education He studied Russian Language and Literature at Voroshilovgrad Pedagogical Institute named after T. Shevchenko, Faculty of Philology in 1971–1975. In 1995 he finished Ukrainian financial and banking school. During 1997-1999 he studied at Luhansk Institute of Internal Affairs. Politics Ivanov was the People's Deputy of Ukraine of the 5th convocation (from April 2006 to the autumn of 2007) in the Party of Regions fraction. Under the presidents of Kuchma and Yushchenko he worked as deputy head |
He comes from the Sawa community. Biography Childhood Samuel Mbappé Léppé was born on 28 February 1936 in Douala. He was the son of Moumè Mbappé and de Rose Ebelle. Career He played for Oryx Douala in the 1950s and 1960s, winning five Cameroon championship titles (1961, 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1967), three times the Cameroon Cup (1963, 1968 and 1970) and he was the first captain to lift the African Cup of Champions Clubsin the 1964–65 season. Roger Milla describes him as being the greatest. Over the course of his career, he is earned several several transfer deals European clubs offered him a chance to play professional football in Europe but he refused to join them. Nicknamed the “Marshal”. he also served as the | clubs offered him a chance to play professional football in Europe but he refused to join them. Nicknamed the “Marshal”. he also served as the captain of the Cameroon football team at a point in his career. He was part of the Cameroonian squad who were selected to play in the 1970 African Cup of Nations however Cameroon were unfortunately eliminated in the group stage. His brother Ebèllé Moumi Walter was also a footballer. The "Moumi" brothers both played careers with Oryx Douala and the Cameroon national team. Legacy In 1982, the Cameroonian government issued a 125 F stamp bearing the image of Mbappé in honour of him. The Akwa Stadium was renamed after him as the Stade Mbappé Léppé. He was posthumously awarded the "African Legend" trophy by the Confederation of African Football in 2015 |
References Works about the Malayan Emergency History books about Malaysia Books about the Cold War British non-fiction books 1971 | the Communist Guerrillas, 1948-60 is a 1971 non-fiction history book by British |
Tokiharu Abe with the type locality given as off Izu Ocean Park in Sagami Bay in Japan. The specific name argoliba is a compound of argos which means “white” and libos meaning “tear” or “drop”, an allusion to the milky-white teardrop shaped marking underneath its eye. Description Rhinopias argoliba has an overall reddish colour with a white teardrop shaped marking below the eye, extending from the eye to the rear of the upper jaw. There is also a white spot on the upper flank above the posterior margin of the pectoral fin. Compared to its congeners this species has a low dorsal fin and fewer flaps and tentacles on its skin. There are 18 fin rays in the pectoral fins. | tentacles on its skin. There are 18 fin rays in the pectoral fins. This species attains a maximum total length of . Distribution and habitat Rhinopias argoliba has a rather disparate known distribution in the western Pacific. It was originally only recorded from southern Japan, its type locality, but more recently it has been found in the Coral Sea off Australia. This is a demersal species found in rocky habitats. Biology Rhinopias |
خان) is a town of Taluka and District Sangher, Sindh, Pakistan. Located on the bank of Nara Canal, this town is connected to Sangher, Khipro and Khairpur Mirs through roads. It is located at the longitude of 71.6119 and latitude of 29.0475. This town was founded by | the eighteen century. Population of the town is 5,237 (2017). This town is headquarter of Town Committee and Deh Tando Mitha Khan. The town is located 27.8 kilometers (17.3 miles) in the southeast of Sangher City and 28 kilometers in the northwest of Khipro town. |
Production Labyrinth Films signed on director Manoj Beedha (who earlier directed Vanjagar Ulagam) to direct the Tamil remake of 2019 Telugu film Agent Sai Srinivasa Athreya for their production house with Santhanam to portray the leading role. Riya Suman was roped in the film as the female lead opposite to Santhanam. The principal photography for this film kickstarted on 1 February 2021 in Coimbatore with the majority of the portions was shot in Coimbatore, Pollachi and Kerala. After 55 days of shoot, the film's final schedule completed in October 2021. The title and the first look poster of the film were unveiled by director Lokesh Kanagaraj via his Twitter account on 15 October 2021. In January 2022, actors Arya and Jiiva released the teaser of the film on the occasion of Santhanam's birthday. | role. Riya Suman was roped in the film as the female lead opposite to Santhanam. The principal photography for this film kickstarted on 1 February 2021 in Coimbatore with the majority of the portions was shot in Coimbatore, Pollachi and Kerala. After 55 days of shoot, the film's final schedule completed in October 2021. The title and the first look poster of the film were unveiled by director Lokesh Kanagaraj via his Twitter account on 15 October 2021. In January 2022, actors Arya and |
published by Leo Warner and Robert Sharp as a project of 59 Productions. The magazine explored ideas of globalisation and diversity and sought to "provide a defiantly pro-multicultural platform for students" across the UK and beyond. During its publication run, the magazine published interviews with F.W. de Klerk, Hanif Kureishi, Helen Oyeyemi, Ziauddin Sardar, Roger Scruton and the Dalai Lama. Bye-Bye Barbar: The Unstoppable Rise of the Afropolitan As part of the LIP#5 Africa issue, the magazine published the essay 'Bye-Bye Barbar: The Unstoppable Rise of the Afropolitan' | Bye-Bye Barbar: The Unstoppable Rise of the Afropolitan As part of the LIP#5 Africa issue, the magazine published the essay 'Bye-Bye Barbar: The Unstoppable Rise of the Afropolitan' by Taiye Selasi, who was a student at Oxford University at the time. The essay was widely disseminated and reprinted. References External links The LIP |
The Lives of Others may also refer to: The Lives of Others (novel), a 2014 novel by Neel Mukherjee The Lives of | to: The Lives of Others (novel), a 2014 novel by Neel Mukherjee The Lives of |
restaurants, and shopping was built at the northern tip of the Dead Sea near Sweimeh. It is also the site of the King Hussein Bin Talal Convention Center. Sweimeh is commonly identified with the biblical town of Beth-jeshimoth. History During the Iron Age, Sweimeh was the site of an Israelite town known as Beth-jeshimoth (). It is mentioned in four verses of the Hebrew Bible: , , and . According to the Book of Numbers, the Israelites encamped in Beth-jeshimoth during their wilderness journeys. In the Book of Joshua, it is mentioned | During the Iron Age, Sweimeh was the site of an Israelite town known as Beth-jeshimoth (). It is mentioned in four verses of the Hebrew Bible: , , and . According to the Book of Numbers, the Israelites encamped in Beth-jeshimoth during their wilderness journeys. In the Book of Joshua, it is mentioned as part of the land allocated to the Tribe of Reuben. Ezekiel lists it as one of three cities which constitute "the glory of the country" of Moab, in a passage in which God promises to punish Moab. In classical antiquity, Beth-jeshimoth was known under |
manuscripts and support of the Lancastrian faction in the War of the Roses. A qualified physician graduating from Cambridge University, Lewis was in the service of Elizabeth Woodville (the widow of King Edward IV) and Lady Margaret of Richmond (the mother of the future King Henry VII), and is suspected to have carried correspondences between the two political allies. His personal interests in astronomy, particularly in the calculation of eclipses, is of great historical value as some of the last surviving work from the time. Background Originating from the south Wales town of Caerloen, Lewis acquired a Bachelor of Medicine from Cambridge University in 1465-6 and by 1481 obtained medical doctorate degree from an unknown university (speculated to have been Oxford University). Despite his lengthy career as a physician, he produced no extant writing on medical issues instead dedicating time to copying and annotating astronomical texts. In historian and churchman John Bale’s 1557–59 text ‘Scriptorum illustrium majoris Britanniae...Catalogus’ (Catalogue of the Famous Writers of Great Britain), six works by Lewis are referenced. Furthermore, some 17th-century literature has claimed prominent Welsh soldier Rhys ap Thomas to have been a pupil of Lewis. The exact date of Lewis’ birth and death is unknown, with a letter he sent to Thomas Stoke in May 1495 being the last existing evidence of his activity Lewis of Caerleon is also not be to be confused with Lewis de Carleton, Bishop of | astronomical texts. In historian and churchman John Bale’s 1557–59 text ‘Scriptorum illustrium majoris Britanniae...Catalogus’ (Catalogue of the Famous Writers of Great Britain), six works by Lewis are referenced. Furthermore, some 17th-century literature has claimed prominent Welsh soldier Rhys ap Thomas to have been a pupil of Lewis. The exact date of Lewis’ birth and death is unknown, with a letter he sent to Thomas Stoke in May 1495 being the last existing evidence of his activity Lewis of Caerleon is also not be to be confused with Lewis de Carleton, Bishop of Hereford. Political involvement Lewis was a supporter of the Lancastrian faction during the English Civil War and assumed a covert political role. As a physician he served the former Queen Elizabeth Woodville, as well as Lady Margaret and her son Henry Tudor. Due to his privileged access to the Queen, Lewis is suspected to have conveyed secret messages between the women as part of the political conspiracy against King Richard III. Lewis is also considered to have played a role in orchestrating the betrothal of Henry Tutor and Elizabeth Woodville's daughter Elizabeth of York, in an effort to reinforce Henry's claim to the throne. Lewis’ involvement with this oppositional faction is likely the cause of his arrest and imprisonment in the Tower of |
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