sentence1
stringlengths
1
133k
sentence2
stringlengths
1
131k
1914, daughter Käthe Hanna was also born there, and in 1920 daughter Lotte. On 13 January 1933, Edmund Elend committed suicide, shooting himself in the rooms of his Kaufhaus Tempelhof at the age of only 51. Clara Elend then went to Switzerland, emigrating from Geneva via Trieste to Haifa in the Mandatory Palestine in mid-April 1935. Clara died on 27 October 1949 in Haifa, Israel. Kaufhaus Tempelhof Edmund Elend founded the Kaufhaus Tempelhof GmbH in Berlin in 1907 and it can be proven that he operated his first shop, the Kaufhaus Tempelhof at Berliner Straße 74 in Tempelhof, from 1908. This was located on the ground floor of a residential building on the corner of Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße. In 1913, he had his own department stores' built at Berliner Straße 126 on the corner of Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse. The architect was Siegfried Weile; alterations and a new building on Kaiserin-Augusta-Straße in 1926 were carried out by Adolf Sommerfeld. Siegfried Weile (1885–1942) war der Sohn des Maurermeisters Samuel Weile. Siegfried Weile (1885-1942) was the son of the master mason Samuel Weile. He ran a construction company in Berlin-Charlottenburg as an architect and government builder and fled to Belgium in 1939, from where he was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942; he has since been presumed missing. The Kaufhaus Tempelhof occupied a very prominent position in the district of the same name (at that time a suburb of Berlin until 1920), there was nothing comparable nearby, even though it could of course not be compared with the large Tietz or Wertheim department stores in the centre of Berlin. On 20 April 1930 there was an article in the Vorwärts reporting on the dismissal of employees who wanted to prepare the election of a works council. The dismissals had to be withdrawn. In August 1931 at the latest, the Kaufhaus Tempelhof ran into economic difficulties and had to file for bankruptcy. On 9 October 1931, it was again reported in the Vorwärts that all employees had been dismissed. Whether this bankruptcy had only to do with the economic crisis at the beginning of the 1930s, or also the increasing anti-Semitism due to Nazism and the election successes of the NSDAP, is not known, but very conceivable. Aryanisation After 1933, the Kaufhaus Tempelhof was aryanised. As early as 1934,
only 51. Clara Elend then went to Switzerland, emigrating from Geneva via Trieste to Haifa in the Mandatory Palestine in mid-April 1935. Clara died on 27 October 1949 in Haifa, Israel. Kaufhaus Tempelhof Edmund Elend founded the Kaufhaus Tempelhof GmbH in Berlin in 1907 and it can be proven that he operated his first shop, the Kaufhaus Tempelhof at Berliner Straße 74 in Tempelhof, from 1908. This was located on the ground floor of a residential building on the corner of Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße. In 1913, he had his own department stores' built at Berliner Straße 126 on the corner of Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse. The architect was Siegfried Weile; alterations and a new building on Kaiserin-Augusta-Straße in 1926 were carried out by Adolf Sommerfeld. Siegfried Weile (1885–1942) war der Sohn des Maurermeisters Samuel Weile. Siegfried Weile (1885-1942) was the son of the master mason Samuel Weile. He ran a construction company in Berlin-Charlottenburg as an architect and government builder and fled to Belgium in 1939, from where he was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942; he has since been presumed missing. The Kaufhaus Tempelhof occupied a very prominent position in the district of the same name (at that time a suburb of Berlin until 1920), there was nothing comparable nearby, even though it could of course not be compared with the large Tietz or Wertheim department stores in the centre of Berlin. On 20 April 1930 there was an article in the Vorwärts reporting on the dismissal of employees who wanted to prepare the election of a works council. The dismissals had to be withdrawn. In August 1931
passengers on many parts. The route and the upgrade is sometimes abbreviated to F2N (and also F2MN for Midlands). The railway route includes the Birmingham–Peterborough line for a large part. The line links the Port of Felixstowe in Felixstowe, Suffolk with the Midlands and crosses the East Coast Main Line, the Midland Main Line and the West Coast Main Line. Much infrastructure in the UK is of Victorian origin and thus in need of an upgrade; F2N, being a key route, is no exception. Background Felixstowe is the UK's busiest container port which handles in the region of 40 to 50% of Britain's container traffic trade. In 2017, it was ranked at 43rd busiest container port in the world and 8th in Europe, with an estimated traffic of . In East Anglia the main road from the port is the A14 but this cannot handle all lorry traffic that is required, hence the railway is a vital strategic artery. As of 2022 all the trains are diesel hauled for a substantial part of their journey. In addition, rail freight in general has seen good growth since the lows of the mid 1990s. All these factors have meant that capacity and other enhancements have been discussed for many years. 21st-century developments and constituent projects In response to the trend for intermodal container heights to increase from 8 feet 6 inches to the "high cube" standard of 9 feet 6 inches, the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA) funded gauge clearance work, completed in November 2004, to allow 9'6" (2.9m) high containers to be carried on standard freight wagons on the F2N route and beyond. The work involved lowering track and reconstruction of bridges along the route. The SRA intended to go on to clear the route to W12 gauge to accommodate wider containers on European intermodal units, and to work to increase capacity to 30–40 trains per day in each direction by 2010 to cater for the expected growth in traffic. In 2009 Network Rail published the document 'Network RUS Electrification 2009' which attempted to assign priorities and benefit-cost-ratios for electrification schemes in the United Kingdom. The document had a number of maps and outlined core schemes, including F2N components. The document – although having a map showing F2N as one scheme in Table 6.2, section 5.1 – treated it as a composite of three individual components. However, the three combined schemes were assigned very high priority against a number of factors. A change of government occurred and the document was not taken forward to implementation. It was claimed in 2010 that the upgrade would take 750,000 heavy trucks off the roads by 2030. In September 2012, approval was given to construct a small new section of double track line just north of Ipswich (1.451 kilometres) called the Bacon Factory curve, which would remove the need to reverse freight trains in Ipswich yard. Groundwork started in October 2012. In June 2013 a new rail freight terminal was opened in Felixstowe to provide a doubling of capacity. Upgrade of the section between Ely and Soham was declined in September 2015 because costs had increased due to the complexity of the project. The costing cited was £35million. When asked in parliament via written question on 3 October 2019 what was planned for the F2N corridor, Chris Heaton-Harris the Rail Minister answered that a number of individual enhancement schemes for the route were being looked at in the 2019 to 2024 timeframe. Among these were Syston Junction to Trent Junction enhancements, Haughley Junction redoubling and Ely capacity enhancement. He confirmed the strategic importance of the route. Writing in Modern Railways in March 2018, Julian Worth, former EWS Marketing Director and Transrail Freight Managing Director, said upgrading and electrifying F2N would require 146 miles of electrification and enable 56 trains to convert to electric haulage. Similar points and strategy were pointed out at a Campaign to Electrify Britain's Railways seminar. The Rail Freight Group gave an award in 2019 for expanding capacity on the route from 33 to 47 freight trains per day. The route was mentioned in a submission to the "Trains Fit for the Future" parliamentary enquiry in 2019/20. Felixstowe to Ipswich area improvements and doubling The Ipswich to Felixstowe section of F2N is a bottleneck because there is no alternative route, it is not electrified and it is single track. In addition, before the upgrade freight trains had to travel south at Ipswich through congested railway territory and then through London to go north to the Midlands to avoid having to turn around in the Ipswich station area. It is much shorter to use the F2N cross-country route. For these reasons a new 1 km line/chord in Ipswich was constructed to remove this bottleneck and enhance capacity. Ely to Soham doubling and other improvements Soham railway station closed to passengers in 1965, and reopened in December 2021. This scheme involved doubling a section of line between Ely and Soham. The feasibility study submitted showed it would need additional land purchase and level crossing modifications. This would have required an order under the Transport and Works Act 1992 (TWAO). As there were no funds available the scheme was declined. Werrington Dive Under The work began in March 2020 and involved building a new double track railway that dives under the East Coast Main Line (ECML) at Werrington. A partial closure of the ECML for 9 days in January 2021 was necessary. A curved concrete box tunnel weighing over 11,000 tonnes was then pushed into place under the ECML. This was the first time that a curved concrete box has been installed using this method in the UK. This new line removes constraints caused by slower freight trains from F2N having to cross over the high-speed ECML. The Werrington Dive Under is also referred to by Network Rail as the Werrington Grade Separation. It was officially opened by the Rail Minister Chris Heaton-Harris on 14 December 2021. Although it is
to both a key strategic freight route and one that carries passengers on many parts. The route and the upgrade is sometimes abbreviated to F2N (and also F2MN for Midlands). The railway route includes the Birmingham–Peterborough line for a large part. The line links the Port of Felixstowe in Felixstowe, Suffolk with the Midlands and crosses the East Coast Main Line, the Midland Main Line and the West Coast Main Line. Much infrastructure in the UK is of Victorian origin and thus in need of an upgrade; F2N, being a key route, is no exception. Background Felixstowe is the UK's busiest container port which handles in the region of 40 to 50% of Britain's container traffic trade. In 2017, it was ranked at 43rd busiest container port in the world and 8th in Europe, with an estimated traffic of . In East Anglia the main road from the port is the A14 but this cannot handle all lorry traffic that is required, hence the railway is a vital strategic artery. As of 2022 all the trains are diesel hauled for a substantial part of their journey. In addition, rail freight in general has seen good growth since the lows of the mid 1990s. All these factors have meant that capacity and other enhancements have been discussed for many years. 21st-century developments and constituent projects In response to the trend for intermodal container heights to increase from 8 feet 6 inches to the "high cube" standard of 9 feet 6 inches, the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA) funded gauge clearance work, completed in November 2004, to allow 9'6" (2.9m) high containers to be carried on standard freight wagons on the F2N route and beyond. The work involved lowering track and reconstruction of bridges along the route. The SRA intended to go on to clear the route to W12 gauge to accommodate wider containers on European intermodal units, and to work to increase capacity to 30–40 trains per day in each direction by 2010 to cater for the expected growth in traffic. In 2009 Network Rail published the document 'Network RUS Electrification 2009' which attempted to assign priorities and benefit-cost-ratios for electrification schemes in the United Kingdom. The document had a number of maps and outlined core schemes, including F2N components. The document – although having a map showing F2N as one scheme in Table 6.2, section 5.1 – treated it as a composite of three individual components. However, the three combined schemes were assigned very high priority against a number of factors. A change of government occurred and the document was not taken forward to implementation. It was claimed in 2010 that the upgrade would take 750,000 heavy trucks off the roads by 2030. In September 2012, approval was given to construct a small new section of double track line just north of Ipswich (1.451 kilometres) called the Bacon Factory curve, which would remove the need to reverse freight trains in Ipswich yard. Groundwork started in October 2012. In June 2013 a new rail freight terminal was opened in Felixstowe to provide a doubling of capacity. Upgrade of the section between Ely and Soham was declined in September 2015 because costs had increased due to the complexity of the project. The costing cited was £35million. When asked in parliament via written question on 3 October 2019 what was planned for the F2N corridor, Chris Heaton-Harris the Rail Minister answered that a number of individual enhancement schemes for the route were being looked at in the 2019 to 2024 timeframe. Among these were Syston Junction to Trent Junction enhancements, Haughley Junction redoubling and Ely capacity enhancement. He confirmed the strategic importance of the route. Writing in Modern Railways in March 2018, Julian Worth, former EWS Marketing Director and Transrail Freight Managing Director, said upgrading and electrifying F2N would require 146 miles of electrification and enable 56 trains to convert to electric haulage. Similar points and strategy were pointed out at a Campaign to Electrify Britain's Railways seminar. The Rail Freight Group gave an award in 2019 for expanding capacity on the route from 33 to 47 freight trains per day. The route was mentioned in a submission to the "Trains Fit for the Future" parliamentary enquiry in 2019/20. Felixstowe to Ipswich area improvements and doubling The Ipswich to Felixstowe section of F2N is a bottleneck because there is no alternative route, it is not electrified and it is single track. In addition, before the upgrade freight trains had to travel south at Ipswich through congested railway territory and then through London to go north to the Midlands to avoid having to turn around in the Ipswich station area. It is much shorter to use the F2N cross-country route. For these reasons a new 1 km line/chord in Ipswich was constructed to remove this bottleneck and enhance capacity. Ely to Soham doubling and other improvements Soham railway station closed to passengers in 1965, and reopened in December 2021. This scheme involved doubling a section of line between Ely and Soham. The feasibility study submitted showed it would need additional land purchase and level crossing modifications. This would have required an order under the Transport and Works Act 1992 (TWAO). As there were no funds available the scheme was declined. Werrington Dive Under The work began in March 2020 and involved building a new double track railway that dives under the East Coast Main Line (ECML) at Werrington. A partial closure of the ECML for 9 days in January 2021 was necessary. A curved concrete box tunnel weighing over 11,000 tonnes was then pushed into place under the ECML. This was the first time that a curved concrete box has been installed using this method in the UK. This new line removes constraints caused by slower freight trains from F2N having to cross over the high-speed ECML. The Werrington
|style="background-color:#3A46CE"| |align=left|Aleksandr Minzhurenko |align=left|Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats | |15.48% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Kirilenko |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |10.38% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kravets |align=left|Communist Party | |10.30% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valentin Plotnitsky |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |6.25% |- |style="background-color:#2998D5"| |align=left|Viktor Potapov |align=left|Russian All-People's Movement | |3.54% |- |style="background-color:#F5821F"| |align=left|Yury Chesnokov |align=left|Bloc of Independents | |3.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Vladimir Slobodyan |align=left|Independent | |1.72% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |18.22% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 1999 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Vereteno |align=left|Independent | |29.72% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kravets |align=left|Communist Party | |24.72% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Baburin (incumbent) |align=left|Russian All-People's Union | |12.01% |- |style="background-color:#C21022"| |align=left|Sergey Kiriyenko |align=left|Party of Pensioners | |4.87% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Basov |align=left|Unity | |3.99% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yury Redkin |align=left|Kedr | |2.34% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Grass |align=left|Independent | |1.47% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Yevgeny Muzyka |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |1.26% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Andrey Shepelin |align=left|Independent | |1.13% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Grigory Mokoseyev |align=left|Independent | |0.82% |- |style="background-color:#084284"| |align=left|Vasily Konovalov |align=left|Spiritual Heritage | |0.61% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |15.22% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 2002 The results of the by-election were annulled due to low turnout (11.92%) |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"
|22.50% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 1995 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Baburin (incumbent) |align=left|Power to the People | |27.61% |- |style="background-color:#3A46CE"| |align=left|Aleksandr Minzhurenko |align=left|Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats | |15.48% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Galina Kirilenko |align=left|Our Home – Russia | |10.38% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kravets |align=left|Communist Party | |10.30% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Valentin Plotnitsky |align=left|Liberal Democratic Party | |6.25% |- |style="background-color:#2998D5"| |align=left|Viktor Potapov |align=left|Russian All-People's Movement | |3.54% |- |style="background-color:#F5821F"| |align=left|Yury Chesnokov |align=left|Bloc of Independents | |3.17% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Vladimir Slobodyan |align=left|Independent | |1.72% |- |style="background-color:#000000"| |colspan=2 |against all | |18.22% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="3" style="text-align:left;" | Total | | 100% |- | colspan="5" style="background-color:#E9E9E9;"| |- style="font-weight:bold" | colspan="4" |Source: | |} 1999 |- ! colspan=2 style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Candidate ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:left;vertical-align:top;" |Party ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |Votes ! style="background-color:#E9E9E9;text-align:right;" |% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Vereteno |align=left|Independent | |29.72% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Aleksandr Kravets |align=left|Communist Party | |24.72% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Sergey Baburin (incumbent) |align=left|Russian All-People's Union | |12.01% |- |style="background-color:#C21022"| |align=left|Sergey Kiriyenko |align=left|Party of Pensioners | |4.87% |- |style="background-color:"| |align=left|Igor Basov |align=left|Unity | |3.99%
and Familyhood. Filmography Television series Film References External links 2001 births Living people 21st-century South Korean actresses South Korean television actresses
Mr. Go, Love, Lies and Familyhood. Filmography Television series Film References External links 2001 births Living people 21st-century South Korean actresses
the administrative region of Capitale-Nationale, in Quebec, in Canada. It peaks at . The sector of this mountain is mainly served by the forest road route 381 which passes through the valley along the mountain on the northeast side. Toponymy The mountain is named after the lake that sits on top of it. The mention of "mont du Lac à Moïse" appears for the first time in 1931 in a text by Jacques Rousseau. In 1945, Damase Potvin preferred "montagne à Moïse" (Mountain to Moses) in "Thomas, Le dernier des coureurs de bois" (Thomas, The Last of the Woodrunners). "Montagne du Gros Bras" (Big Arm Mountain) is also a name used. The toponym was formalized on August 8, 1977, by the Commission de toponymie du Québec. Geography The summit of Mont du Lac à Moïse is located at: southwest of route 381; west of the summit of Mont du Lac des Cygnes; north of the summit of Mont du Gros Ruisseau; south of a bend in the rivière du Gouffre; northeast of Malbaie Lake which is crossed by the Malbaie River. Lac à Moïse (length: ; maximum
Cygnes. The cliff on the south side, facing the Rivière du Gouffre, imposes itself with a drop of comparing the summit and the point of the route 381 which enters the park along Le Gros Bras (at the limit of Saint-Urbain). The camping "Le Pied-des-Monts" is located near the entrance to the park, at the foot of Mont du Lac à Moïse. The Mont du Lac à Moïse is drained on the north and west side by Le Gros Bras whose upper course establishes a segment of the eastern limit of the Grands-Jardins National Park. Activities Unlike its neighbor, the mont du Lac des Cygnes, there is no path allowing its ascent. The project to build a trail to the summit of Mont du Lac à Moïse is often relaunched in the region's media.
his telescope and showed the Moon to people in exchange of a SMS that supports Boško financially. This event was all over the news and live TV which helped raising awareness. In March 2021, Amil was stopped by a police officer that "just wanted to check the Tesla", this video went viral
country, he went on the main street of Belgrade, Knez Mihailova, mounted his telescope and showed the Moon to people in exchange of a SMS that supports Boško financially. This event was all over the news and live TV which helped raising awareness. In March 2021, Amil was stopped by a police officer that "just wanted to check the Tesla", this video went viral with millions of views, even newspapers
Maine, and entered general practice. He was an early president of North Yarmouth Academy while Charles Chesley Springer was its principal. The two became close friends, which resulted in their families sharing the same burial plot. He was also a treasurer of Yarmouth Aqueduct Company. Personal life On 25 November 1851, Burbank married Elizabeth Richardson Banks. They had two children: Annie (1852–1901) and Elizabeth (born 1873), who died in infancy. The maternal Elizabeth died in 1869, aged about 45. On 16 December 1871, Burbank married Alice Noyes Thompson, with whom he had three children: Hugh Eleazer, Marjorie and Maurice Augustus. He was a member of Yarmouth's First Parish Congregational Church and, professionally, the Maine Medical Association. Death Burbank died of heart disease on June 27, 1895, aged 72. Three years later, Alice remarried, to Charles Torrey. He died in 1918 while they were living in Plymouth, Massachusetts, after which Alice returned to Yarmouth, where
physician. He was also treasurer of Yarmouth Aqueduct Company and an early president of North Yarmouth Academy. Early life Burbank was born in Poland, Maine, on January 24, 1823, the only son of physician Eleazer and Sophronia (Ricker) Burbank. He graduated from Bowdoin College in 1843 and studied medicine at Harvard University, receiving his MD in 1847. Career Upon graduating, Burbank returned to Yarmouth, Maine, and entered general practice. He was an early president of North Yarmouth Academy while Charles Chesley Springer was its principal. The two became close friends, which resulted in their families sharing the same burial plot. He was also a treasurer of Yarmouth Aqueduct Company. Personal life On 25 November
Indo-Chinese Peninsula. It is cultivated as a houseplant; in commerce it is typically described as Stephania erecta. It was first described by Ludwig Diels in 1910. The root or caudex is used medicinally
to the Indo-Chinese Peninsula. It is cultivated as a houseplant; in commerce it is typically described as Stephania erecta. It was first described by Ludwig Diels in 1910. The root
of the Order of Polish Revival in 2003. Life and work She obtained her master's degree at the University of Warsaw in 1954. She obtained her doctoral degree on 27 November 1962 on the basis of her dissertation entitled The formation of the leftist trend and the split in the PPS (1904–1906), written under the direction of Żanna Kormanowa. Her habilitation was earned in 1973. From 1985 she held the academic title of associate professor, and from 1995 on, she was a full professor and then professor-emeritus at the University of Warsaw. Career Żarnowska worked in the Department of Party History. From 1966, she was chairman of the Women's History Committee at the Polish Committee of Historical Sciences. From 1986, she headed the Group / Department of Social History of Poland in the 19th and 20th centuries on a comparative basis. From 1989, she was head of the research project "Socio-cultural history of women in Poland in the 19th and 20th centuries." One of her most important projects was done with Andrzej Szwarc. Żarnowska was the scientific editor for a series of volumes entitled, A woman and ... Other positions she held were: member of the Scientific Council of the International Conference of Labor and Social History (ITH) in Vienna since 1990 and council vice-president since 1997, and representative of the University of Warsaw at ITH since 1976. In 2003, she was decorated with the Officer's Cross of the Order of Polonia
1989, she was head of the research project "Socio-cultural history of women in Poland in the 19th and 20th centuries." One of her most important projects was done with Andrzej Szwarc. Żarnowska was the scientific editor for a series of volumes entitled, A woman and ... Other positions she held were: member of the Scientific Council of the International Conference of Labor and Social History (ITH) in Vienna since 1990 and council vice-president since 1997, and representative of the University of Warsaw at ITH since 1976. In 2003, she was decorated with the Officer's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta. Personal life Her husband was also a professor of history, Janusz Żarnowski. She was buried on June 15 at the Bródno cemetery in Warsaw (section 20P-5-13). Students Her students included Irena Kępa, Jarosław Paskudzki, Andrzej Stawarz, Andrzej Tusiński, Adrian Zandberg. Selected publications The genesis of the split in the Polish Socialist Party (1904–1906) (1965) The Working Class of the Kingdom of Poland (1870–1914) (1974) Workers of Warsaw at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries (1985) Around the Tradition of Workers' Culture in
with widespread wintry precipitation, spreading from Texas all the way northeast to Maine. Nineteen states in the U.S. received impacts from the system, with more than 90 million people that were in the storm's path. The winter storm was unofficially named Winter Storm Landon by The Weather Channel and was also referred to by other media outlets as the Groundhog Snowstorm, primarily due to the storm impacting on Groundhog Day. Meteorological history Preparations The National Weather Service issued winter storm watches from Wyoming to Maine. Winter Storm Warnings were also issued from New Mexico to Maine, and at least 18 states were under winter storm warnings. In northeastern Ohio, and Buffalo, New York, snow amounts of more than a foot were forecasted. Amtrak cancelled or modified the routes several trains due to the storm. United States Deep South Early on February 3, a tornado watch was issued by the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) for portions of Alabama and Mississippi. Additional flood watches was issued for portions of Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia. The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDot) stated that crews will work on bridges and roads in response to the storm. On February 1, the University of Oklahoma closed campus for February 2–3. Midwest A State of emergency was declared in Missouri, Illinois, and Kentucky, as well as 50 National Guard troops deployed in Indiana to help stranded motorists. The University of Missouri moved to online classes for February 2–3. Many schools closed and moved to online classes in preparation for the storm. More than 3,000 flights were canceled, mainly airlines headed to Midwestern airports, and all airlines headed to St. Louis, Missouri were all canceled. In Michigan,
storm. United States Deep South Early on February 3, a tornado watch was issued by the Storm Prediction Center (SPC) for portions of Alabama and Mississippi. Additional flood watches was issued for portions of Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia. The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDot) stated that crews will work on bridges and roads in response to the storm. On February 1, the University of Oklahoma closed campus for February 2–3. Midwest A State of emergency was declared in Missouri, Illinois, and Kentucky, as well as 50 National Guard troops deployed in Indiana to help stranded motorists. The University of Missouri moved to online classes for February 2–3. Many schools closed and moved to online classes in preparation for the storm. More than 3,000 flights were canceled, mainly airlines headed to Midwestern airports, and all airlines headed to St. Louis, Missouri were all canceled. In Michigan, buses, trains, and flights were all delayed, and some were canceled. Ohio State canceled classes for February 3. In Allen County, Indiana (City of Fort Wayne, Indiana) a snow emergency and travel warning was put in place to keep drivers off the roads. Reports of over an inch an hour were falling at that time, and those same conditions occurred in Indianapolis and Bloomington. Northeast More than 600 flights were canceled to Northeastern U.S. airports on Wednesday in preparation of the winter storm. Roads were closed in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania due to the upcoming Groundhog Day. Cities such as Burlington, Boston, and Providence issued Snow emergencies due to the upcoming winter storm. Mexico Roads in Northern Mexico were closed due to the winter storm. Impact United States Because of the winter storm, 5,600 flights were canceled both on February 2 and February 3. Southwest As high as was reported in Taos Ski Valley, New Mexico. At least 3 people were killed in New Mexico, 1 killed after a weather–related pileup on I-40 in Bernalillo County, New Mexico, and 2 were killed after their car rolled 100 feet down a mountain near Cedar Crest. An additional non–fatal tractor–trailer accident closed I-25 near Santa Fe. Deep South Due to wintry conditions across Dallas, Texas, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was closed on February 3. 1 person was killed in Dallas, primarily when a semi-truck crashed while traveling on I-45 while traveling over I-30, an additional dog died in the crash as well. Three inches of snow were reported in Nashville, Tennessee, as well as 2 additional inches in Little Rock, Arkansas and Mayfield, Kentucky. Over 120,000 people lost power in Shelby County, Tennessee. On I-10 near Kerrville, Texas, several semi-trucks were jackknifed, causing drivers to be stranded on the interstate for hours. A truck driver died on I-35 in Oklahoma after losing control on an icy part of the road. A person in Oklahoma died after crashing
service' of a white man, and if he has no employer he is compelled to find one. It requires only a simple understanding among the employers and the negro is as bound to his 'employer' for better and for worse as when slavery existed in the old form." The Opelousas ordinance was copied by other towns and parishes in the state and elsewhere; 70 years later, W. E. B. Du Bois referred to it as "the celebrated ordinance of Opelousas, Louisiana." State politics In 1865, he was appointed by Governor James Madison Wells as district attorney for St. Landry, Lafayette, Vermilion, and Calcasieu parishes, a position to which he was elected the next year and served until 1868. In 1872 and 1874, he was elected as a Democrat to the Louisiana House of Representatives, where he was generally considered a moderating force, despite what the Opelousas Black Code might lead one to expect. Louisiana's elections in both years were riddled with fraud, but rival Republican and Democratic returning boards each declared Estilette winner of the seat. In 1874, when two rival legislatures were formed by supporters of Democrat John McEnery and Republican William Pitt Kellogg, Estilette first joined the McEnery "People's House" but then switched to the recognized Kellogg House, much to the chagrin of the Democratic press. Still, Estilette was the rare Louisiana politician of the period who won praise from both sides of the aisle, as well as votes from both African Americans and whites. At the end of the first 1874 session of the legislature, the New Orleans Republican said he had "made a record which he can point to with pride...The General Assembly needs more men of his character and talent, no matter what their politics may be, and we hope his constituents will take this into consideration." A few days later, the Democratic The Times-Picayune|Daily Picayune]] wrote that, "without approving the course of those Fusion members of the Legislature who entered the Kellogg body," Estilette had introduced "bills having in view the general interests of the State and less objectionable in character...He has been earnest in the advocacy of what he believed to be right and in opposing what he deemed to be prejudicial to Louisiana. He has not participated in any of the corrupt business of the session, but acted conscientiously and sincerely." Opposition to the White League A few weeks later, back in St. Landry Parish, white Democrats began to form the White League, a paramilitary terror group that overthrew several parish governments and, for several days, Louisiana's state government. Among their proposals was for white business owners to starve African Americans out of the area by eliminating all Black employment, even in the cotton fields: "The negroes must not only be excluded from clerkships in white stores, but they must not be allowed to trade there in any manner — to buy or sell. They must be driven from the cabins and decks of steamers, and from serving in hotels, and from all such employment generally. They must not be allowed to drive drays, wagons, carriages or carts...Above all let negroes be driven out of our fields and the whites driven in." But Estilette resisted the White League's demands. Along with his former law partner John E. King and several prominent planters, he called for a public debate with White League leaders. Their opposition was based on economic, not racial grounds, arguing that the White League "would be in conflict with the public policy of the country, and prejudicial and detrimental to the agricultural interests of the parish of St. Landry." The debate was set for July 4, and Estilette was the first speaker. The local White League paper reported that Estilette had "made a Republican speech throughout, though claiming to be a Democrat." After the debate, the White League lowered their tone and claimed to be a friend to all. The White League's growth continued through the summer and fall, reaching its peak on September 14, with the Battle of Liberty Place, in which 5,000 armed White League troops defeated a smaller force of state militia and New Orleans
House of Representatives, where he was generally considered a moderating force, despite what the Opelousas Black Code might lead one to expect. Louisiana's elections in both years were riddled with fraud, but rival Republican and Democratic returning boards each declared Estilette winner of the seat. In 1874, when two rival legislatures were formed by supporters of Democrat John McEnery and Republican William Pitt Kellogg, Estilette first joined the McEnery "People's House" but then switched to the recognized Kellogg House, much to the chagrin of the Democratic press. Still, Estilette was the rare Louisiana politician of the period who won praise from both sides of the aisle, as well as votes from both African Americans and whites. At the end of the first 1874 session of the legislature, the New Orleans Republican said he had "made a record which he can point to with pride...The General Assembly needs more men of his character and talent, no matter what their politics may be, and we hope his constituents will take this into consideration." A few days later, the Democratic The Times-Picayune|Daily Picayune]] wrote that, "without approving the course of those Fusion members of the Legislature who entered the Kellogg body," Estilette had introduced "bills having in view the general interests of the State and less objectionable in character...He has been earnest in the advocacy of what he believed to be right and in opposing what he deemed to be prejudicial to Louisiana. He has not participated in any of the corrupt business of the session, but acted conscientiously and sincerely." Opposition to the White League A few weeks later, back in St. Landry Parish, white Democrats began to form the White League, a paramilitary terror group that overthrew several parish governments and, for several days, Louisiana's state government. Among their proposals was for white business owners to starve African Americans out of the area by eliminating all Black employment, even in the cotton fields: "The negroes must not only be excluded from clerkships in white stores, but they must not be allowed to trade there in any manner — to buy or sell. They must be driven from the cabins and decks of steamers, and from serving in hotels, and from all such employment generally. They must not be allowed to drive drays, wagons, carriages or carts...Above all let negroes be driven out of our fields and the whites driven in." But Estilette resisted the White League's demands. Along with his former law partner John E. King and several prominent planters, he called for a public debate with White League leaders. Their opposition was based on economic, not racial grounds, arguing that the White League "would be in conflict with the public policy of the country, and prejudicial and detrimental to the agricultural interests of the parish of St. Landry." The debate was set for July 4, and Estilette was the first speaker. The local White League paper reported that Estilette had "made a Republican speech throughout, though claiming to be a Democrat." After the debate, the White League lowered their tone and claimed to be a friend to all. The White League's growth continued through the summer and fall, reaching its peak on September 14, with the Battle of Liberty Place, in which 5,000 armed White League troops defeated a smaller force of state militia and New Orleans Metropolitan Police and overthrew Republican Governor William Pitt Kellogg, installing John McEnery in his place. But the victory was short-lived; President Ulysses S. Grant sent in federal troops to reinstall Kellogg, and the White League retreated after three days. That slowed its momentum, and when the St. Landry Democratic Party met to nominate candidates for the legislature on September 26, the White League was unable to stop Estilette from being renominated. In November, he was reelected to the seat. Of the 15 Democrats who had switched from the McEnery "People's House" to the Kellogg legislature, Estilette was the only one to be reelected. Wheeler Compromise and speakership Louisiana politics were
alongside the governor. The Legislature was established in 1958, when the National Territory of Neuquén became a province of Argentina. The first legislature convened on 1 May 1958. Since the establishment of the province, the regionalist Neuquén People's Movement (MPN) has dominated provincial politics and has been the largest party in the legislature. References External links Constitution of Neuquén Province
legislators, elected in a single multi-member district through proportional representation every four years. Elections employ the D'Hondt system and a 3% electoral threshold. Its powers and responsibilities are established in the provincial constitution. The legislature is presided by the Vice Governor of Neuquén (presently Marcos Koopmann of the Neuquén People's Movement), who is elected alongside the governor.
set between banded pilasters and topped by rounded blind arches. The ground floor has a distinctly Modernist appearance, with banded aluminum siding framing groups of aluminum-framed glass display windows. There are two recessed entries to the commercial spaces. The Perley Block was built in 1908 for Moses Perley, owner of a local mercantile shop whose premises had been destroyed by fire. It was designed by Burlington architect Charles Crandall, and opened in early 1909, housing Perley's shop, a drugstore, and a men's clothing store. The upper floor of the building housed apartments, offices, and a small performance and meeting space. In 1955, the building was purchased by Pearl's Department Stores, a regional chain which eventually took over the entire ground floor and gave the building its Modernist appearance. Their store was an anchor of the village's retail business until its closure in 1988. See also National Register of Historic Places listings
Perley Block is a historic commercial building at 366 Main Street in the Enosburg Falls village of Enosburgh, Vermont. Built in 1908 in the Renaissance Revival style, its ground-floor facade was given a Modernist update c. 1960. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021 for its architecture. Description and history The Perley Block stands in the village center of Enosburg Falls, on the east side of Main Street (Vermont Route 180N) north of the village square. It is a -story masonry structure, with a steel frame and exterior principally finished in brick. Its main facade exhibits the original Renaissance Revival styling of the building on its second story, with groups of sash windows set between banded pilasters and topped by rounded blind arches. The ground floor has a distinctly Modernist appearance, with banded aluminum siding framing groups of aluminum-framed glass display windows. There are two recessed
25 July 1963) is a Finnish former rally co-driver. Past drivers include Harri Rovanperä and
Kristian Sohlberg. References External links Profile at ewrc-results.com 1963 births Finnish rally co-drivers
Sangith Gundu Karthik Dheena Raja Sangeetha Rajan Nagendran Production In early 2020, director R. Panneerselvam (of Renigunta and Karuppan fame) announced his next project produced by Masterpiece Productions, with his son Arun Panneerselvam debuting in the lead role. The film's title was announced by Lingusamy and the first look was unveiled by Gautham Vasudev Menon in Twitter. Later Vijay Sethupathi released the
Abraham. The film is scheduled to be released in theatres on 11 February 2022. Cast Arun Panneerselvam Vidya Pillai Deivendran Harsh Lalwani G. Sai Sangith Gundu Karthik Dheena Raja Sangeetha Rajan Nagendran Production In early 2020, director R. Panneerselvam (of Renigunta and Karuppan fame) announced his next project produced by Masterpiece Productions, with his son Arun Panneerselvam debuting in the lead role. The film's title was announced by Lingusamy and the first look was unveiled by Gautham Vasudev Menon in Twitter. Later Vijay Sethupathi released the
a C+ rating, criticizing it as a "tired COVID joke", saying "It feels uninspired and just plain odd to see South Park symbolizing pandemic hysteria when the show tackled it in a much more literal fashion less than two months ago." Caffrey also observed that the pajamas in the episode were being used as a metaphor for objections to wearing masks during the COVID pandemic, stating "about halfway through, it becomes clear that the pajamas are a stand-in for masks during COVID-19—a joke that immediately deflates." Charles Bramesco with The Guardian was critical of the episode, stating in his review "Parker and Stone continue to thrive on the non-commentary that their strategy of partial metaphor affords them, hiding behind the joke once it comes time to make a statement beyond the broadly agreeable. The divisiveness of pajama-wearing allows them to get a few good blows in, as in the scene that sees an anti-pajama-er declaring that he'll never be cozy again, a succinct summation of the self-defeating 'own the libs' philosophy currently dominating conservative thought." Liz Shannon Miller with Consequence enjoyed the simplicity of the episode. In her review she commented "What makes this such an effective season opener, though, is the fact that those touches of old-school South Park are accompanied by the usual sorts of evidence that this episode was written extremely recently...Hearts have been broken and lives ruined in the quest to do what's achieved here so easily: A funny story, well told." Justin Epps of Bubbleblabber enjoyed the episode, giving it an 8.0 out of 10 and praising it for a smooth return to the normal episode format after two years of specials. During his review, he writes that "the show was extremely satisfying", and that "With a new crop of episodes and a few more specials heading to Paramount+, South Park fans should hold their head high with confidence that
has decided to be with Rick, but when he sees Butters Stotch is not paying attention to his anecdote, it results in another angry tirade by him and PC Principal. As town-wide conflict and allusions to Nazism continue, however, PC Principal tells Wendy that her class can wear pajamas, and that he will resign. However, when Wendy mentions that they still have Opposite Day to look forward to, this gives PC Principal an idea. He announces to the school that due to a calendar error, it is actually not Pajama Day, but Opposite Day, when students are allowed to wear what they want, which means the fourth graders can wear pajamas. With the conflict resolved, the jailed citizens are released. Ratings The season premiere ranked number one on cable that evening among the 18–to–49 demographic with a 0.44 rating, beating out NBA telecasts on ESPN, All Elite Wrestling on TBS, and a FIFA World Cup qualifying match on Fox Sports 1 featuring the United States men's national soccer team. ViacomCBS' simulcast of the episode across mutiple other ViacomCBS networks added to those figures. Critical reception Don Caffrey with The A.V. Club gave it a C+ rating, criticizing it as a "tired COVID joke", saying "It feels uninspired and just plain odd to see South Park symbolizing pandemic hysteria when the show tackled it in a much more literal fashion less than two months ago." Caffrey also observed that the pajamas in the episode were being used as a metaphor for objections to wearing masks during the COVID pandemic, stating "about halfway through, it becomes clear that the pajamas are a stand-in for masks during COVID-19—a joke that immediately deflates." Charles Bramesco with The Guardian was critical of the episode, stating in his review "Parker and Stone continue to thrive on the non-commentary that their strategy of partial metaphor affords them, hiding behind the joke once it comes time to make a statement beyond the broadly agreeable. The divisiveness of pajama-wearing allows them to get a few good blows in, as in the scene that sees an anti-pajama-er declaring that he'll never be cozy again, a succinct summation of the self-defeating 'own the libs' philosophy currently dominating
national and international speakers and participants. Tucson Modernism Week produces an annual magazine featuring original scholarship and content highlighting the contributions of 20th-century designers, architects, and thought leaders. The events and programming primary focus on Tucson and greater Pima County which is home to a significant collection of mid-twentieth century buildings by noted architects including Judith Chafee, Arthur T. Brown, Bernard J. Friedman, William Kirby Lockard,
is an annual celebration organized by the Tucson Historic Preservation Foundation held in October - November which highlights Southern Arizona's unique and distinct mid-20th century architecture and design heritage. The cultural programming includes tours, lectures, films, publications, and special events. The event draws national and international speakers and participants. Tucson Modernism Week produces an annual magazine featuring original scholarship and content highlighting
resided in the building with her 35-year-old son Johan Peter Linck. The building was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795. The fire came from the east and stopped just a few houses further down the waterfront at Naboløs. The current building on the site was constructed in 1797 by Andreas Hallander for Kathrine Marie Clausen, widow of clockmaker Oluf Lyngager. Her late husband had served as alderman of the Clockmakers' Guild from 15 October 1770 to15 October 1787. 19th century At the time of the 1801 census, No. 15 was home to 44 residents in six households. Johan Henrich Hovitz (1763-1806), a businessman (stadsmægler), resided in the building with his wife Øhlegaard Christiana (née Kreutzfeldt. 1878-), their seven children (aged three to 14), another four-year-old child in his care, an office clerk, a caretaker, a housekeeper and three maids. Ditlevine Feddersen, a poet and translator from Norway, resided in the building with her son Peter Feddersen (1750-1822), a housekeeper, a maid and a male servant. Mads Friderich Huulevad, a bookkeeper, resided in the building with his wife Margrethe Elisabeth Aarestrup, their three children (aged two to nine) and one maid. Søren Nielsen, a workman, resided in the building with his wife Birgitte Christine Nielsdatter, their one-year-old son and one maid. Rasmus Lange, a tailor), resided in the building with his wife Rebecke (née Tommerup), their five children (aged six to 21), four tailor's apprentices (aged 11 to 17 ), one maid and bookkeeper Christian Riissing. Ludvig Brorsen, a clockmaker, resided in the building with his wife Cathrine Ulriche Gold, their son Sigvart Christopher Brorsen and one maid. The property was listed as No. 13 in the new cadastre of 1806. It was at that time owned by merchant (urtekræmmer) Nicolai Jacob Grave, He was also the owner of the nearby property at No. 21 (now Læderstræde 11) and did therefore not himself live in the building. He had prior to purchasing the building in Læderstræde resided at Vandkunsten No. 261 in the city's Eest Quarter (now Løngangsstræde 15). His first wife Dorothea née Buch had died in 1803. He had subsequently married Anna Maria Groth. on 7 August 1804. (1764-1827), a professor of economy, was among the residents of the building in 1819. (1758-1827), a naval officer and the founder of Bombebøssen, was a resident of the building from 1822 to 1825. Giuseppe Siboni (1780-1839), an opera director and choir conductor, was among the residents in 1929–30. At the time of the 1840 census, No. 13 was home to 23 residents in four households. (1792-1853), a court physician and professor, resided on the ground floor with his wife Henriette C. Dreier (née Løffler, 1802–1879), their four children (aged five to 10), his 22-year-old sister Eline S. C. Dreier, three maids and one lodger (instrumentmaker). Andreas Christian Gierlew (1774-1845), a royal consul-general in Norway, was temporarily occupying the first floor apartment with the student Arthur Eugeb Nicolai Gierlew and two servants. Georg Hermann Richter, a high-ranking civil servant, resided on the second floor with his sister Anine Wilhelmine Rimestad, her four children (aged 10 to 24) and one maid. Dorothea Amalia (néeBresløvs), a flour retailer (widow), resided in the basement with her son Wilhelm Sybye/clockmaker). August Bournonville (1805-1879), ballet master at the Royal Danish Ballet, was a resident of the building in 1841. At the time of the 1845 census, No. 13 was home to 20 residents in four households. The Drejer family was still resident on the ground floor of the building. , a captain lieutenant in the Royal Danish Navy, resided on the first floor with his wife Henriette Georgine (née Viborg), their three children (aged five to nine), one male servant two maids. Michael Henriques. a businessman (varermægler) resided on the second floor with his wife Emilie (née von Halle), their two children (aged 14 and 16), a male servant and a maid. Ludevig Ernst Born, a flour merchant, resided in the basement with his wife Marie Elise (née Orthmann), their one-year-old daughter and one maid. At the time of the 1860 census, No. 13 was home to 23 residents in three households in the front wing. Emma Cecilie Marie Tryde (née Strunck), a widow merchant )urtekræmmer), resided on the ground floor with her four children (aged 14 to 28), two floor clerks, a female cook and a maid. Ernst Kolthoff (1809-1890), pastor at the Church of the Holy Ghost, resided on the first floor with his wife Johanne Marie Kolthoff (née Svane, 1816–1885), their five children (aged seven to 17) and two maids. Hans Peter Rothe, a Royal Danish Naby captain and vice director of the Nautical Charts Archives, resided on the second floor with his wife Thora /née Rohte), one male servant, one maid and the lodger Sofus Magdalin Høgsbro. The latter was headmaster of Røddinge Høhskole and a member of the Folketing. Frederik August Vilhelm Leonardt Ludvig, a glass manufacturer,
flour merchant, resided in the basement with his wife Marie Elise (née Orthmann), their one-year-old daughter and one maid. At the time of the 1860 census, No. 13 was home to 23 residents in three households in the front wing. Emma Cecilie Marie Tryde (née Strunck), a widow merchant )urtekræmmer), resided on the ground floor with her four children (aged 14 to 28), two floor clerks, a female cook and a maid. Ernst Kolthoff (1809-1890), pastor at the Church of the Holy Ghost, resided on the first floor with his wife Johanne Marie Kolthoff (née Svane, 1816–1885), their five children (aged seven to 17) and two maids. Hans Peter Rothe, a Royal Danish Naby captain and vice director of the Nautical Charts Archives, resided on the second floor with his wife Thora /née Rohte), one male servant, one maid and the lodger Sofus Magdalin Høgsbro. The latter was headmaster of Røddinge Høhskole and a member of the Folketing. Frederik August Vilhelm Leonardt Ludvig, a glass manufacturer, resided on the ground floor of the rear wing. Mari Christensen, a clothing retailer, was also residing on the ground floor of the rear wing with her nine-year-old daughter. Natalie Zahle, whose girl's school was based at Gammel Strand 48 (from 1967 to 1877), occupied the three upper floors of the rear wing. She lived there with her housekeeper Hanne Christophine Jacobsen, inspector Camilla Augusta Pedersen, teacher Hansine Gerdtzen (1838 - 1910), 12 students (aged 14 to 24) and three maids. Peder Luding Thrane, a wood retailer, resided in the basement of the rear wing with his wife Regine Wilhelmine Thrane (née Olsen), their three children (aged seven to 13) and one maid. (1817-1889), a church historian, resided on the ground floor in the years sround 1875. 20th century A restaurant was around the turn of the century situated on the ground floor of the building. Clara Pontoppidan (1883-1975), an actress, resided in the building from 1 November 1903 until 1 May 1904. Berkel A/S, a subsidiary of a Dutch company, purchased the property in the first half of the century. In 1072, Berkel sold the property to the Danish Union of Journalists for DKK 800,000. The union's journal Journalisten was also based in the building. In 2016, it relocated to new premises at Gammel Strand 34. Architecture Gammel Strand 35 is constructed with three storeys over a walk-out basement. The seven-bays-wide facade is decorated with lesenes between the windows, a belt course above the ground floor and a modillioned cornice.. The lesenes were originally fluted and there were rosettes below the windows but these decorative elements were removed in around 1850. The ground floor of the facade is finished with shadow joints.A gateway is located in the bay furthest to the right. The keystone above the gate features Jacobi's coat of arms and dates from the 1730s. The basement entrance is located in the second bay from the left. The pitched red tile roof features three dormer windows towards thestreet. A side wing extends from the rear side of the building along the western side of a central courtyard. The side wing is at the other end attached to a five-bay former warehouse.The side wing and former warehouse are both topped by monopitched red tile roofs. The facade of the warehouse is crowned by a wall dormer
first time regional champions, and participated in the Divizia A national championship. They were eliminated in the preliminary round when they played with Mihai Viteazul Chișinău. Preliminary Round(Eights of finals) In late 20s, it merged with the other team Hakoah Cernăuți, to form a more competitive team, twice becoming regional champions and participated in the national championship, in the seasons 1930–31 and 1931–32. 1930–31 Semifinals 1931–32 Semifinals Honours Liga I Semifinals(2): 1930–31, 1931–32 References 1909 establishments in Austria-Hungary 1941 disestablishments in Romania Football
1909. During the club's history, it was founded in Austria-Hungarian Empire, then it was transferred to Romania and then to Ukraine, where it would eventually dissolve in 1946. The name "Maccabi Cernăuți" came from the fighters for independence from the Roman rule in ancient times. History During the interwar period participated in regional championships. At the end of the 1926–27 season, they became for the first time regional
Invisible. The award for best picture, presented by Belén Cuesta and Álvaro Morte, was given to Manuel Martín Cuenca's The Daughter, that also clinched another three awards (including Director and Screenplay). Undercover Wedding Crashers won the most awards (6). Winners and nominees The winners and nominees are listed as follows: Honorary Carmen Award In addition to the competitive awards, Antonio Banderas received the honorary career award. References
on 14 December 2021. The statuette was made of polymer resin. Held at the Málaga's Teatro Cervantes on 30 January 2022, he ceremony had support from the Andalusian regional ministry of Culture, Canal Sur Televisión, Ayuntamiento de Málaga, Diputación de Málaga, and SGAE, among others. It was hosted by Adelfa Calvo and Pedro Casablanc and it featured
to hire a midwife while a neighbor stays with her. Dodging a butcher he owes money, Hamouda asks his friend Fahlawi (Mounir al-Fangari) for money at a cafe, not knowing he was about to borrow from Hamouda to pay the cafe's expenses. The neighbor's very young son Adel summons him with news of Sharbat being in poor condition and asks for a doctor, who does it pro bono but is given money by Hamouda as a reward anyway. Hamouda names the newborn Noor el-Ayoun (roughly translated as “apple of my eye”), and she grows up to be a girl who loves dance and becomes the greatest passion of Adel (Karem Mahmoud. Noor (Naima Akef) becomes a beautiful young woman and they fall in love. By coincidence, she goes to the theatre where Hamouda works and sings and dances to fill in for an absentee headliner, earning a standing ovation and a job offer from director Hanafi (Mahmoud el-Meliguy). Adel is disappointed that she has become a nouveau riche, but she stays with him despite gift-laden overtures from Hanafi. Singer Samira (Mona Fouad) tries to steer Hanafi away from
grows up to be a girl who loves dance and becomes the greatest passion of Adel (Karem Mahmoud. Noor (Naima Akef) becomes a beautiful young woman and they fall in love. By coincidence, she goes to the theatre where Hamouda works and sings and dances to fill in for an absentee headliner, earning a standing ovation and a job offer from director Hanafi (Mahmoud el-Meliguy). Adel is disappointed that she has become a nouveau riche, but she stays with him despite gift-laden overtures from Hanafi. Singer Samira (Mona Fouad) tries to steer Hanafi away from the temptation and towards her arms, while Fahlawi, a composer, takes Adel to audition for another composer named Ali (Ezzat al-Jahili, who was one in real life). Adel meets Samira there and she introduces him to Hanafi. When Adel begins singing on Hanafi's stage, his love for Noor becomes entangled with professional rivalry. Samira, now drawn to Adel, changes course and now attempts to split him from Noor by claiming that her career is only a bauble Hanafi is buying her for her love. Adel shoves Samira off a balcony in danger and she falls apparently to her death, whence he and Noor flee to Ali's house, as Hanafi learns when he arrives at Noor's house to have them arrested. Hanafi proposes marriage to her in exchange for a passport and money to help Adel escape trial for the murder, and she sacrifices her love by goading him with a false claim to be Hanafi's mistress as the late Samira had told him. Adel deduces that she is lying, however, and also uncovers that Samira is in fact alive, the passport
Everything goes well until she learns that she'll have to square dance in gym class to earn an A. Reception Lupe Wong Won't Dance is a Junior Library Guild book. It received many positive reviews, including starred reviews from Booklist and Publishers Weekly. Kirkus Reviews applauded the book's diversity in terms of character's interests and
is a Junior Library Guild selection, a Pura Belpré Award honor book, and PNBA Book Award winner. Plot Guadalupe "Lupe" Wong is a half-Chinese, half-Mexican seventh grade student at Issaquah Middle School who dreams of becoming the first female pitcher in Major League Baseball. An opportunity arises for her to meet Fu Li Hernandez, “the first Asian/Latino pitcher in the major leagues,” if she receives
Nueva Ecija, Philippines. It is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Jose in Nueva Ecija and is dedicated to Saint Joseph the Worker. History The first missionaries in what is now the province of Nueva Ecija were the Augustinians who also founded the parishes of Carranglan, Pantabangan and Puncan, of which San Jose was initially part of. San Jose was originally known as Kabaritan which is an Ilocano term for a "place abundant of barit", a kind of rattan plant. It was a barrio of Puncan and then of Lupao, before becoming an independent town in 1894, and was renamed San Jose in honor of its patron saint, Joseph. Until 1928, San Jose was under the jurisdiction of the Nueva Segovia before becoming part of the Diocese of Lingayen, later Lingayen–Dagupan, which was established in the same year. Under Lingayen–Dagupan, the church was administered by the Missionaries
of the Diocese of Lingayen, later Lingayen–Dagupan, which was established in the same year. Under Lingayen–Dagupan, the church was administered by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart after World War II. San Jose was then annexed to the Diocese of Cabanatuan when the diocese, then comprised the whole province of Nueva Ecija, was founded in 1963. Twenty-one years later, in 1984, the church became the cathedral of the Diocese of San Jose whose territory comprises the northern half of the province. In 1997, the remodeling of the old cathedral church
He arranged for nuns to create a new reliquary. The relics survived a fire in 1718 and are now in the church of the Near Caves. Her feast day is 10 October, as one of the seven saints of Volhynia. Life Juliana Olshanskaya was the daughter of Prince Yurii (also Georgy) Dubrovitsky-Olshansky of the Olshanski family who ruled part of modern Ukraine. Her father was a benefactor of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery, and Juliana was said to be highly religious. She died in the summer of her 16th year, as a virgin, and was buried in the caves of the monastery. She is thought to have died circa 1540. Sainthood and relics Juliana's body was discovered during the time of Archimandrite Elisey Pletenetsky (in office 1599–1624), whilst digging a grave for the burial of another virgin. After opening a coffin that lay beneath a stone marked with her name and the Olshanski coat of arms, her body was said to be
as a saint. The early 17th-century Archimandrite Peter Mogila claimed to have had a vision of Saint Juliana in which she reproached him for a lack of respect given to her relics. He arranged for nuns to create a new reliquary. The relics survived a fire in 1718 and are now in the church of the Near Caves. Her feast day is 10 October, as one of the seven saints of Volhynia. Life Juliana Olshanskaya was the daughter of Prince Yurii (also Georgy) Dubrovitsky-Olshansky of the Olshanski family who ruled part of modern Ukraine. Her father was a benefactor of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery, and Juliana was said to be highly religious. She died in the summer of her 16th year, as a virgin, and was buried in the caves of the monastery. She is thought to have died circa 1540. Sainthood and relics Juliana's body was discovered during the time of Archimandrite Elisey Pletenetsky (in office 1599–1624), whilst digging a grave for the burial of another virgin. After opening a coffin that lay beneath a stone marked with her name and the Olshanski coat of arms,
She was unsure if she and the children would be punished or deported because of his activities and was worried that her children might be taken away. Madzimbamuto considered returning to South Africa but quickly rejected the idea. Her work life was very difficult at this time, not just because of the racist attitudes of the government and some of her colleagues, but because her husband was a political prisoner: she was seen as the wife of a "gandanga", meaning terrorist. Neurosurgical nurse (1960–1982) In 1960, Madzimbamuto replaced a British nurse who was serving as a neurosurgical nurse to the British neurosurgeon Laurence Levy, who was the only specialist in that field serving in Africa at that time. Levy trained Madzimbamuto, teaching her how to perform basic neurosurgical nursing duties and perform procedures, such as spinal taps, air encephalograms, and myelograms, which at the time were only done by doctors. She became proficient at the techniques and trained junior doctors being educated at the hospital in how to perform them. She wanted to pass on her skills to help other women and longed for women to earn the recognition due to them; at the time, women were legal minors and typically had to stop working after marriage. Upon his release from prison in 1961, Daniel was sent to the Sikombela Restriction Camp in Mapfungautsi near Gokwe Centre, where he remained until 15 January 1963. When he was released, and despite the fact that Madzimbamuto was expecting her third child, Levy encouraged her to continue her education abroad. Levy arranged for her to study abroad for two years at the Stoke-Mandeville National Spinal Injuries Centre in Buckinghamshire and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in Queen Square, London. Madzimbamuto decided she could only be abroad for a year. Leaving Farai and Chipo with her in-laws in Murehwa and four-month-old Tambudzai in Kenya where her mother and a sister were living, Madzimbamuto went to England in February 1964. Daniel was rearrested on 28 April 1964 and sent to the Gonakudzingwa restriction camp and on 13 August was restricted to the Sengwe Tribal Trust Lands until 13 April 1965, when he was released. That month, Madzimbamuto left England and spent three weeks in Kenya before returning with her daughter to Southern Rhodesia. From 1965, she was in charge of Ward B6, the Spinal and Head Injuries Unit, for the next seventeen years. Madzimbamuto developed a programme to train junior nurses at Harare Hospital, teaching them what she had learned about neurological and spinal injuries. On 19 June 1965, Daniel was rearrested and sent to the Wha Wha detention centre, but was transferred from there back to Gonakudzingwa briefly before being confined in Gwelo Prison on 6 November. Madzimbamuto's passport was taken by the authorities when Daniel was arrested and she was offered it back if the entire family would leave the country, an offer she refused. The family's fourth child, a son, Tafirenyika, was born in 1966. Madzimbamuto mostly raised her children alone because of Daniel's detainments. By 1973, she was earning Rh$327 (£130) per month and paying for Daniel's university studies and books as well as his clothing and toiletries, travel expenses of Rh$13.60 (£25) per month to visit him, and she and her children's monthly expenses. The racist policies of the government prevented her children from further education after they finished primary school, but friends like Guy Clutton-Brock, Didymus Mutasa, and Terence Ranger helped with making arrangements for the children to study abroad. By that time, Farai was studying in Britain, and Chipo was being educated in Botswana. In 1973, she had to obtain a temporary British passport in order to attend the International Congress of the World Federation of Neurosurgical Nurses, which was held in Tokyo. She returned home and again added the information she had learned to her training curricula for nurses. Madzimbamuto v Lardner-Burke (1965–1968) In April 1964, Ian Smith became Prime Minister of Rhodesia, promising to maintain the policy of white rule. Under British common law detention without trial was unlawful and under the 1961 Rhodesian Constitution detention was only permitted if a state of emergency had been legally declared. Under the 1961 Constitution and the Emergency Powers Act 1960, a state of emergency could only remain in force for three months before requiring renewal. An Emergency Maintenance of Law and Order Regulation was issued on 5 November 1965, and expired on 4 February 1966. On 11 November 1965, the government issued a Unilateral Declaration of Independence without agreement by Britain to state succession. Five days later, the British Parliament passed legislation declaring the Rhodesian government to be illegal and invalidating any legislation it passed. When Smith's government passed legislation to extend the detention order, Madzimbamuto filed a lawsuit, Madzimbamuto v Lardner-Burke, to challenge her husband's detention. The basis of her suit was that if the government and its laws were illegal, the detention order under which Daniel was detained was invalid. She and Leo Baron, a lawyer, who was a political detainee like Daniel, filed parallel suits. The General Division of the Rhodesian High Court dismissed the case in 1966, although the justices, Bennie Goldin and J. V. R. Lewis, acknowledged that the government and 1965 constitution were invalid, they noted that the courts and the oaths taken by the justices were under the 1961 valid constitution. As the Smith government was the only existing government in the country, Goldin and Lewis did not invalidate the Emergency Orders or release Daniel and Baron. However, after the hearing, Baron was released and left Rhodesia. The case was sent to the Appellate Division of the Rhodesian High Court, which ruled in January 1968. In a four (Hugh Beadle, Justice Jarvis, Hector Macdonald, and Vincent Quénet) to one (John Fieldsend) decision the government was found to be the legal authority, and while not legally recognised, its operation and legislation were considered to be legal. Though they overturned the 1965 Emergency Order, and admitted that the 1965 regulation was defective, a new Emergency Order had been put in place in 1966 to replace the prior regulation. In May 1968, Madzimbamuto asked the Privy Council of the United Kingdom to hear an appeal, as Daniel continued to be imprisoned. The Privy Council agreed to hear the case and held that the government and all legislation passed in Rhodesia by the government were invalid, including the order to hold Daniel. An Order in Council was issued following the decree, ordering Daniel's release. The Southern Rhodesian justice minister Desmond Lardner-Burke announced on 3 August that Daniel would not be freed and that as the 1965 Constitution negated appeals to the Privy Council, the ruling by the council had no effect in Rhodesia. Daniel was not released until 24 December 1974. While imprisoned he earned a law degree, which Madzimbamuto financed. By the time he gained his freedom, Daniel was involved in another relationship. He moved to Zambia to take part in the independence movement and worked as the external affairs secretariat and on legal affairs for the Zimbabwe African People's Union's Central Committee. Madzimbamuto refused to be part of a polygamous relationship and she and Daniel became estranged. She obtained a legal separation from Daniel in 1981. In 1979,
gave birth to their oldest child, Farai, at the Harare Central Hospital, known at the time as the Gomo Hospital. When she was admitted, she encountered alumni nurses from McCord Zulu Hospital, who urged her to return to nursing because of the severe shortage at that time in Southern Rhodesia, partly because there were no facilities to train nurses. Believing it was impossible to work and care for a baby, Madzimbamuto returned to Murehwa, but the matron, Grace Houston, tracked her down and offered her a post, allowing her to bring the baby to work. Matron Houston also assisted her in obtaining housing in New Highfield, which had only outdoor toilet facilities that doubled as a cold-water shower. When Farai was seven months old, Daniel returned to Southern Rhodesia and became involved in the Black nationalist movement. He became the chairman of the Highfield Branch of the African National Congress and his activism brought him to the attention of the Rhodesian authorities. Their second child, a daughter named Chipo, was born after Daniel's return and was six months old when he was first arrested. He was detained and confined in a detention centre from February 1959 until 8 June 1961. During the period, several times, Daniel was briefly released but after a few days returned to prison. When he was interned, Madzimbamuto had to obtain a permit to visit him. She was unsure if she and the children would be punished or deported because of his activities and was worried that her children might be taken away. Madzimbamuto considered returning to South Africa but quickly rejected the idea. Her work life was very difficult at this time, not just because of the racist attitudes of the government and some of her colleagues, but because her husband was a political prisoner: she was seen as the wife of a "gandanga", meaning terrorist. Neurosurgical nurse (1960–1982) In 1960, Madzimbamuto replaced a British nurse who was serving as a neurosurgical nurse to the British neurosurgeon Laurence Levy, who was the only specialist in that field serving in Africa at that time. Levy trained Madzimbamuto, teaching her how to perform basic neurosurgical nursing duties and perform procedures, such as spinal taps, air encephalograms, and myelograms, which at the time were only done by doctors. She became proficient at the techniques and trained junior doctors being educated at the hospital in how to perform them. She wanted to pass on her skills to help other women and longed for women to earn the recognition due to them; at the time, women were legal minors and typically had to stop working after marriage. Upon his release from prison in 1961, Daniel was sent to the Sikombela Restriction Camp in Mapfungautsi near Gokwe Centre, where he remained until 15 January 1963. When he was released, and despite the fact that Madzimbamuto was expecting her third child, Levy encouraged her to continue her education abroad. Levy arranged for her to study abroad for two years at the Stoke-Mandeville National Spinal Injuries Centre in Buckinghamshire and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in Queen Square, London. Madzimbamuto decided she could only be abroad for a year. Leaving Farai and Chipo with her in-laws in Murehwa and four-month-old Tambudzai in Kenya where her mother and a sister were living, Madzimbamuto went to England in February 1964. Daniel was rearrested on 28 April 1964 and sent to the Gonakudzingwa restriction camp and on 13 August was restricted to the Sengwe Tribal Trust Lands until 13 April 1965, when he was released. That month, Madzimbamuto left England and spent three weeks in Kenya before returning with her daughter to Southern Rhodesia. From 1965, she was in charge of Ward B6, the Spinal and Head Injuries Unit, for the next seventeen years. Madzimbamuto developed a programme to train junior nurses at Harare Hospital, teaching them what she had learned about neurological and spinal injuries. On 19 June 1965, Daniel was rearrested and sent to the Wha Wha detention centre, but was transferred from there back to Gonakudzingwa briefly before being confined in Gwelo Prison on 6 November. Madzimbamuto's passport was taken by the authorities when Daniel was arrested and she was offered it back if the entire family would leave the country, an offer she refused. The family's fourth child, a son, Tafirenyika, was born in 1966. Madzimbamuto mostly raised her children alone because of Daniel's detainments. By 1973, she was earning Rh$327 (£130) per month and paying for Daniel's university studies and books as well as his clothing and toiletries, travel expenses of Rh$13.60 (£25) per month to visit him, and she and her children's monthly expenses. The racist policies of the government prevented her children from further education after they finished primary school, but friends like Guy Clutton-Brock, Didymus Mutasa, and Terence Ranger helped with making arrangements for the children to study abroad. By that time, Farai was studying in Britain, and Chipo was being educated in Botswana. In 1973, she had to obtain a temporary British passport in order to attend the International Congress of the World Federation of Neurosurgical Nurses, which was held in Tokyo. She returned home and again added the information she had learned to her training curricula for nurses. Madzimbamuto v Lardner-Burke (1965–1968) In April 1964, Ian Smith became Prime Minister of Rhodesia, promising to maintain the policy of white rule. Under British common law detention without trial was unlawful and under the 1961 Rhodesian Constitution detention was only permitted if a state of emergency had been legally declared. Under the 1961 Constitution and the Emergency Powers Act 1960, a state of emergency could only remain in force for three months before requiring renewal. An Emergency Maintenance of Law and Order Regulation was issued on 5 November 1965, and expired on 4 February 1966. On 11 November 1965, the government issued a Unilateral Declaration of Independence without agreement by Britain to state succession. Five days later, the British Parliament passed legislation declaring the Rhodesian government to be illegal and invalidating any legislation it passed. When Smith's government passed legislation to extend the detention order, Madzimbamuto filed a lawsuit, Madzimbamuto
the mid-1960s, refrigerated containers were increasingly used to transport banana boxes. Dimensions A banana box usually holds about 18 kg of bananas. The dimensions may vary slightly between different manufacturers, but are approximately 53.5 × 40 × 24.5 cm (width × depth × height), which corresponds to a volume of 52 liters (0.05 m). Thus, 20 banana crates will cover about one cubic meter. A type 1AA ISO container can thus hold 1200 banana cartons. A disadvantage of banana boxes for transport purposes is that they (unlike euro containers) cannot effectively fill a euro pallet (1200 × 800 mm). Europallets can, for reference, also be stacked efficiently in a CEN container. Other uses Banana boxes are popularly reused for storage or transport, for example as moving boxes, for archiving, used book markets, in storage areas or for humanitarian logistics. An important reason for these uses is that banana boxes usually are affordable and easy to obtain, as they are often given away for free from many grocery stores that otherwise would have to throw away the banana boxes. The boxes are relatively robust (for cardboard boxes), and their quasi-standardized shape makes them easy to stack. Some stores charge for banana boxes, and the profit may, for instance, go to charity. A disadvantage of using banana boxes for moving may be the size and that the bottom may not be durable enough. They can also start to smell due to juices that have settled
given away for free from many grocery stores that otherwise would have to throw away the banana boxes. The boxes are relatively robust (for cardboard boxes), and their quasi-standardized shape makes them easy to stack. Some stores charge for banana boxes, and the profit may, for instance, go to charity. A disadvantage of using banana boxes for moving may be the size and that the bottom may not be durable enough. They can also start to smell due to juices that have settled from the bananas during transport. Investigations about toxic substances There have been rumors that banana boxes may contain toxins that make them unsuitable for storing clothes and kitchen utensils. In 2004, the Swedish National Food Administration tested banana boxes, but found no toxins. In 2012, the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation could not give a definite answer, but considered that the risk of high toxin concentrations in the boxes was unlikely. Unwanted insects Some poisonous spiders of the genus Phoneutria (Brazilian wandering spiders) occasionally come to Europe unintentionally with banana boxes via cargo ships. In 2018, the Swedish animal expert Jonas Wahlström stated that there were no very dangerous spiders in banana-producing countries. In the 2010s, however, deadly Brazilian spiders reportedly had been found in banana boxes in the UK and Germany. Like with other paper based products, there may be a risk of gray silverfish and silverfish coming with banana boxes. Possible replacements In 2018, the Netherlands sought to replace corrugated banana boxes with plastic boxes which could be reused. The motivation for this was that it was more environmentally friendly. I 2021, a new ventilated plastic banana box was launched by
(born 1980), Australian politician Lucyna Siejka (born 1962), Polish field hockey player Polish-language surnames
rugby league footballer Jo Siejka (born 1980), Australian politician Lucyna Siejka (born 1962), Polish field
including visuals for both "Still Countin" and the album's intro track "Poppin". Critical reception In a positive review, David Aaron Brake of HipHopDX wrote that "though he didn't expand beyond the sounds of his previous work, Yeat's latest is a master class in precision and knowing what the audience craves. Excellent rap need not always be grand in scope: 2 Alivë proves success can come just as easily through zooming in". In a mixed review, Alphonse Pierre of Pitchfork wrote that "the 21-year-old Portland rapper isn't doing anything all that new, but he has a refreshing album-focused approach, best listened to as one continuous stream, getting lost in
the second studio album by American rapper Yeat. It was released on February 18, 2022, by Geffen Records, Field Trip Records and Twizzy Rich. Serving as Yeat’s major label debut, the album features guest appearances from Young Thug, Gunna, Yung Kayo, Ken Carson, and SeptembersRich. The album was supported by one single, "Still Countin", which was released on February 11, 2022. Release and promotion 2 Alivë serves as the sequel to Yeat's April 2021 album Alivë. It was announced shortly after the release of his September 2021 album Up 2 Më. Yeat initially announced a January 2022 release date but delayed it to wait for an additional feature. On February 13, the release date was announced. Yeat then posted the official track listing on February 16, shortly after the album leaked that same day. Singles The album's lone single, "Still Countin", was released on February 11, 2021, accompanied by a music video posted to the Lyrical Lemonade channel directed by Cole Bennett,
is a song that I find funny", while at the same time drawing criticism towards women's bodies being constantly "in the public eye". Benidorm Fest The song was among the 14 candidates selected by RTVE to represent Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. The song placed 1st in its semi-final, receiving the top votes from both the juries and the public, and placed in an overall 2nd position in the grand final, ultimately losing to Chanel and her song "SloMo". Impact and reception The song was
"I really like writing and for me the lyrics are important. In this case, in addition to talking about the strength of femininity, in this case of mothers, it is a song that I find funny", while at the same time drawing criticism towards women's bodies being constantly "in the public eye". Benidorm Fest The song was among the 14 candidates selected by RTVE to represent Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. The song placed 1st in its semi-final, receiving the top votes from both the juries and the public, and placed in an overall 2nd position in the grand final, ultimately losing to Chanel and her song "SloMo". Impact and reception The song was selected as the main theme for the Telecinco docuseries Montealto: Regreso a la casa. Various politicians – including government ministers – expressed their support for the song, while from the right-side of the political spectrum,
State Athletic Hall of Fame. Many consider her the best point guard in the history of US women's basketball. Heiss began playing basketball in the ninth grade and played for Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda, Maryland. At the University of Maryland, she was the first women's basketball player to score 1000 points. Coach Chris Weller said "She's probably one of the best players I've ever seen, among all players and all programs" Maryland won the first ACC Women's Basketball Tournament in 1978 and Heiss was named Most Valuable Player. In the 1978 AIAW National Large College Basketball Championship, Maryland were contenders for the championship after upsetting favorite Wayland Baptist 90-85 in the final four. During that game Heiss scored 21 points. Wilt Chamberlin watched the game and praised her performance: "That little guard for Maryland (Tara Heiss) was up and down the floor all night long. She never stopped." Maryland lost the championship to UCLA, 90-74. After nearly making the 1976 US Olympic team, she played on the United States women's national basketball team in 1979 and the team won gold at the 1979 FIBA
the team won gold at the 1979 FIBA World Championship for Women. She postponed professional play after college to maintain amateur status and became a member of the 1980 US Olympic women's basketball team. However, due to the United States boycott of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, American athletes like Heiss were unable to complete. Heiss played for the Allentown Crestettes in the Amateur Athletic Union and the New Jersey Gems in the short-lived Women's Professional Basketball League. Following her playing career, she was an assistant coach at Maryland and Towson University and worked for twenty years for FedEx. Heiss was inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of
and Claudio Oliveira of São Paulo State University and Bruno F. Melo of the American Museum of Natural History. References Loricariidae Fish described in 2016
in Brazil. The species reaches 2.4 cm (0.9 inches) SL and was described in 2016 by Gabriel S. C. Silva, Fábio
between Corte and Ponte Leccia (Morosaglia). Location The Col de San Quilico is a saddle between the mountains that separate Soveria in the north from Tralonca in the south. These municipalities are in the Regional Natural Park of Corsica, in its "territory of life" called Centru di Corsica. Topography The Col de San Quilico is located at an altitude of below the ridge line of a mountain range oriented from west to east, connecting the Pinerole to the west to the Punta di l'Ernella to the east. The ridge runs through via the Lorca territorial forest and may also be crossed by the Bocca d'Ominanda and the Pinzalaccio. A large part of the ridge line defines the border between the municipalities of Soveria and Tralonca. The section of the mountain range holding the San Quilico pass divides the central depression or furrow of the island into two zones: to the north, the Ponte-Leccia basin; to the south, the Cortenais. The Col de San Quilico connects the Golo valley, Bastia and the Balagne
are: to the north, the valley of the Ruisseau de Forcalello (or Ruisseau de Santa Maria, as it is called further downstream), a tributary of the Ruisseau de Sumano, a tributary of the Golo river; to the south, the valley of the Ruisseau de San Quilico (or Ruisseau de Bistuglio), a tributary of the Tavignano river near the town of Corte. On the northern slope, the plant cover is made up of groves of holm oaks and cork oaks, more verdant than on the south side, where only low and sparse maquis grows. History San Quilico is a road pass where the N 193 and D41 roads meet. It owes its name to a sanctuary further north in the town of Soveria. In the 1880s, a railway tunnel 500 meters long was bored at an average altitude of under the pass as part of the new Ajaccio – Bastia line, removing the obstacle of San Quilico. In 1996, the Corte diversion was
Commisionerate The Tambaram police commissionerate will function with two police districts - Tambaram and Pallikaranai comprising 20 police stations. For easy administration, Somangalam and Manimangalam police stations from Kancheepuram district as well as Otteri, Guduvanchery, Maraimalai Nagar, Thalambur and Kelambakkam from Chengalpattu district have been attached to the Tambaram police commissionerate. References
2022. Administration The administration of Tambaram city police is as follows:- Jurisdiction of Tambaram Commisionerate The Tambaram police commissionerate will function with two police districts - Tambaram and Pallikaranai comprising 20 police stations. For easy administration, Somangalam and Manimangalam police stations from Kancheepuram district as well as Otteri, Guduvanchery, Maraimalai Nagar, Thalambur and Kelambakkam from Chengalpattu district have
of the 3rd State Duma. He was deputy chairman of the "People's Deputy" faction. In 1997 and 2001 Bulavinov was nominated for governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, finishing third in both races. On 29 September 2002 Bulavinov was elected mayor of Nizhny Novgorod and joined the United Russia party. On 16 October 2005 he was re-elected for a second term, gaining more than 77.5% of the vote. His term ended in October 2010. According to the new law, the head of the city administration was now to be hired under a contract. Governor Valery Shantsev refused to nominate Bulavinov for now ceremonial post of mayor, saying that he "cannot give an impetus to the dynamic development of the city in the future." On 30 December 2010, three months after Bulavinov's mayoral term expired, he took the seat of the resigned State Duma member Valery Kornilov. In 2011 he was elected to the 6th State Duma, listed second on the United Russia's regional list after Valery Shantsev. In 2016 and 2021 Bulavinov won the Kanavinsky constituency. In January 2013, the Investigative Committee requested the Prosecutor General's Office to send a motion to the lower house to lift Bulavinov's parliamentary immunity for abuse of power during his mayoralty. However, the prosecutor's office ignored investigators' request. On 16 June 2014, Bulavinov was taken to the medical unit of Domodedovo Airport, because he could not leave the plane on his own, which arrived from Alicante, Spain. The media reported that lawmaker was allegedly in a state of intoxication and was removed from the aircraft due
was elected to the 1st State Duma in the Kanavinsky constituency. He was a member of the "Liberal Democratic Union on December 12" and "Stability" factions. From 1995 to 1999 he was a member of the Nizhny Novgorod City Duma, chairing the local self-government committee. In 1996–99 Bulavinov was general director of Seti-NN TV station. In December 1999, he was elected member of the 3rd State Duma. He was deputy chairman of the "People's Deputy" faction. In 1997 and 2001 Bulavinov was nominated for governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, finishing third in both races. On 29 September 2002 Bulavinov was elected mayor of Nizhny Novgorod and joined the United Russia party. On 16 October 2005 he was re-elected for a second term, gaining more than 77.5% of the vote. His term ended in October 2010. According to the new law, the head of the city administration was now to be hired under a contract. Governor Valery Shantsev refused to nominate Bulavinov for now ceremonial post of mayor, saying that he "cannot give an impetus to the dynamic development of the city in the future." On 30 December 2010, three months after Bulavinov's mayoral term expired, he took the seat of
is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a masthead sloop rig; a raked stem; a raised counter, reverse transom, a skeg-mounted rudder controlled by a wheel and a fixed fin keel with a retractable centerboard. It displaces and carries of lead ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water. The boat is fitted with a Westerbeke W-40 FWC diesel engine of for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for eight people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, two straight settee berths and two pilot berths in the main cabin and two aft cabins with single berths. The galley is located on both sides, just forward of the companionway ladder. The galley is equipped with a three-burner stove, an ice box and a double sink. A navigation station is located on
with a retractable centerboard. It displaces and carries of lead ballast. The boat has a draft of with the centerboard extended and with it retracted, allowing operation in shallow water. The boat is fitted with a Westerbeke W-40 FWC diesel engine of for docking and maneuvering. The design has sleeping accommodation for eight people, with a double "V"-berth in the bow cabin, two straight settee berths and two pilot berths in the main cabin and two aft cabins with single berths. The galley is located on both sides, just forward of the companionway ladder. The galley is equipped with a three-burner stove, an ice box and a double
up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, the runner-up was unmasked. Episode 6 (23 October) Each contestant performed a song. Two contestants were saved from elimination by the audience, one contestant was saved by the judges. The remaining two contestants went up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, the runner-up was unmasked. Episode 7 (30 October) Each contestant performed two songs. Two contestants were saved from elimination by the judges, one contestant was saved by the audience. The remaining contestant was unmasked. Episode 8 (6 November) - Finale After each contestant performed two songs, two of them were saved by the audience and the third one was unmasked. The remaining two contestants went up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, after which both the runner-up and the winner were unmasked. Ratings Official ratings are taken from CIM, which includes viewers who watched the programme within 7 days of the original broadcoast. See also The Masked Singer franchise References External links 2020 Belgian television series debuts 2020s music television series Belgian television series based on South Korean television series Masked
from elimination by the judges. The bottom two contestants went up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, the runner-up was unmasked. Episode 6 (23 October) Each contestant performed a song. Two contestants were saved from elimination by the audience, one contestant was saved by the judges. The remaining two contestants went up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, the runner-up was unmasked. Episode 7 (30 October) Each contestant performed two songs. Two contestants were saved from elimination by the judges, one contestant was saved by the audience. The remaining contestant was unmasked. Episode 8 (6 November) - Finale After each contestant performed two songs, two of them were saved by the audience and the third one was unmasked. The remaining two contestants went up against each other in a sing-off. The audience chose the winner, after which both the runner-up and the winner were unmasked. Ratings
In 1934, he was awarded the title of an honorary citizen of Oświęcim. He was active in a number of charity, social and educational organizations, and was also involved in maintaining proper interfaith relations in Oświęcim. In 1929, he became chairman of the committee devoted to building and establishing the first secondary school in the city, which functions to the present day (today, the Stanisław Konarski Secondary School in Oświęcim). World War II During the war, Jan Skarbek worked with the resistance movement at the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was involved in helping escapees from the KL Auschwitz camp, including by issuing false baptism records. On the night of July 1-2, 1942, German policemen arrested the parish priest, treasurer and one of the vicars. The priests were beaten and the presbytery was plundered. The parish priest's housekeeper was also arrested. Skarbek was arrested for "storing excessive amounts of food in the presbytery". He was imprisoned in Oświęcim, Katowice, Mysłowice and Bielsko. After his release, the German authorities did not allow him to return to Oświęcim and he did not return there until 1945; then he continued to act as a parish priest. He died on February 2, 1951 in Oświęcim and was buried in the parish cemetery in Oświęcim. Activities for interfaith relations Jan Skarbek actively built good
Virgin Mary parish in Oświęcim and held this position until his death. Interwar period He came to Oświęcim in 1926. He was a town councilor for many years. In 1934, he was awarded the title of an honorary citizen of Oświęcim. He was active in a number of charity, social and educational organizations, and was also involved in maintaining proper interfaith relations in Oświęcim. In 1929, he became chairman of the committee devoted to building and establishing the first secondary school in the city, which functions to the present day (today, the Stanisław Konarski Secondary School in Oświęcim). World War II During the war, Jan Skarbek worked with the resistance movement at the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was involved in helping escapees from the KL Auschwitz camp, including by issuing false baptism records. On the night of July 1-2, 1942, German policemen arrested the parish priest, treasurer and one of the vicars. The priests were beaten and the presbytery was plundered. The parish priest's housekeeper was also arrested. Skarbek was arrested for "storing excessive amounts of food in the presbytery". He was imprisoned in Oświęcim, Katowice, Mysłowice and Bielsko. After his release, the German authorities did not allow him to return to Oświęcim and he
from Indian Military Academy, Dehradun. He commanded a battalion at Chowkibal during Operation Rakshak, a sector of the Assam Rifles in Manipur during Operation Rhino, and served in Assam as inspector general, Assam Rifles. Among his previous appointments were as an instructor at the Indian Military Academy, directing staff at the higher command wing in the Army War College, military attaché to the government of Seychelles
General Officer-Commanding-in-Chief (GOC-in-C) Northern Command of the Indian Army. He assumed the post upon the superannuation of Lieutenant General Yogesh Kumar Joshi. Previously he served as Deputy Chief of Army Staff and GOC of IX Corps of Indian Army. Career A Sainik School Rewa and National Defence Academy, Khadagwasla alumnus, Dwivedi was commissioned into the 18th battalion of the Jammu and Kashmir Rifles on 15 December
River (a left tributary of the Tuskar in the basin of the Seym), 107 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, 10 km north-east of the district center – the town Kursk, 1 km from the selsoviet center – Nozdrachevo. Climate Shagarovo has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification).
Transport Shagarovo is located 16 km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), 6 km from the road of regional importance (Kursk – Kastornoye), on the road of intermunicipal significance (Nozdrachevo – Shagarovo), 5.5 km from
Baloch Rabia Tabassum Tahir Siddiqui Talha Shehzad References 2021 Pakistani television series debuts Pakistani drama television series Urdu-language television shows 2021 Pakistani television
Ahl-e-Wafa is a Pakistani television series, directed by Jasim Abbas. It features Noor Hassan Rizvi, Areej Mohiuddin, Mizna Waqas and Danial Afzal in lead roles. Cast Noor Hassan Rizvi as Wajdan
with high fines, taping of smartphones and very planned exits for the contestants. Cast Panelists Panel members Julie Van den Steen, Jens Dendoncker and Karen Damen from the first season returned. Andy Peelman, Kevin Janssens and Ruth Beeckmans, who participated at the first season as masked singers, joined the panel. Of this group of 6 judges, a few of them would be selected for each episode. In the second season Bart Kaëll, Élodie Ouédraogo, Ann Tuts & Bart Peeters were guest judges. Contestants The first contestants were introduced on 23 December. Robots were the first time a duo participated in the Belgian series. On 29 December all eight original contestants were introduced. At the same time four symbols alluding to four unseen characters were revealed. Flamme Fatale joined the line-up in the second episode. Scorpion was introduced in the third episode. Two masked singers first appeared during the fourth episode, Rabbit
Lize Feryn & Aster Nzeyimana. Production After the success of the first season, a second season was ordered. The show was filmed during the summer of 2021. The security and confidentiality was even stricter since people knew the show this time with high fines, taping of smartphones and very planned exits for the contestants. Cast Panelists Panel members Julie Van den Steen, Jens Dendoncker and Karen Damen from the first season returned. Andy Peelman, Kevin Janssens and Ruth Beeckmans, who participated at the first season as masked singers, joined the panel. Of this group of 6 judges, a few of them would be selected for each episode. In the second season Bart Kaëll, Élodie Ouédraogo, Ann Tuts & Bart Peeters were guest judges. Contestants The first contestants were introduced on 23 December. Robots were the first time a duo participated in the Belgian series. On 29 December
died on 30 January 2022, at the age of 92. References 1929 births 2022 deaths Social Democratic Party of Germany politicians Bayer people Members of the Bundestag for Lower
at the age of 92. References 1929 births 2022 deaths Social Democratic Party of Germany politicians Bayer people Members of the Bundestag for Lower Saxony Commanders Crosses of the Order of Merit
who served as a Minister in the cabinet of Laurent Gbagbo. He was born in French Ivory Coast, French West Africa, France,
the cabinet of Laurent Gbagbo. He was born in French Ivory Coast, French West Africa, France, in
Catholic church to be built in Teesside since the Reformation. It is located in the town centre, on the corner of Norton Road and Major Road, with the A1305 road to the north of it. It is a Grade II listed building. History Construction In 1790, a Catholic chapel was built in Stockton-on-Tees. From the chapel the local Catholic population was served by a Catholic mission founded by a Fr Joseph Dugdale. With the increasing Catholic population, he decided that a new larger church was needed. He sought Augustus Pugin as architect to build the church. On 7 July 1842, the present church was opened by Bishop Francis Mostyn, the Apostolic Vicariate of the Northern District. In 1866, the north aisle and the lower part of the tower was added. They cost £1,300. In 1870, the south aisle and sanctuary were added. They were designed by George Goldie and cost £4,000. In 1909, the upper part of the tower and the presbytery were added. They were designed by Charles Hadfield, son of Matthew Ellison Hadfield. In 1970, the sanctuary was reordered and the roof was replaced. Developments St Mary's Church was the only Catholic church in Stockton-on-Tees until the 20th century. With the town and local Catholic population increasing, missions were started from St Mary's Church to serve other parts of Stockton-on-Tees. In 1908, a mission was started in the south of Stockton-on-Tees, resulting in a wooden church being built on the corner of Yarm Road and Spring Street. A permanent church was built on the same site, and on 8 July 1958,
Catholic mission founded by a Fr Joseph Dugdale. With the increasing Catholic population, he decided that a new larger church was needed. He sought Augustus Pugin as architect to build the church. On 7 July 1842, the present church was opened by Bishop Francis Mostyn, the Apostolic Vicariate of the Northern District. In 1866, the north aisle and the lower part of the tower was added. They cost £1,300. In 1870, the south aisle and sanctuary were added. They were designed by George Goldie and cost £4,000. In 1909, the upper part of the tower and the presbytery were added. They were designed by Charles Hadfield, son of Matthew Ellison Hadfield. In 1970, the sanctuary was reordered and the roof was replaced. Developments St Mary's Church was the only Catholic church in Stockton-on-Tees until the 20th century. With the town and local Catholic population increasing, missions were started from St Mary's Church to serve other parts of Stockton-on-Tees. In 1908, a mission was started in the south of Stockton-on-Tees, resulting in a wooden church being built on the corner of Yarm Road and Spring Street. A permanent church was built on the same site, and on 8 July 1958, St Cuthbert's Church was opened. Before 1933, the Catholics in Norton went to St Mary's Church for Mass. In the 1920s, plans were made to construct a church there. In 1926, the Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle, Joseph Thorman bought Ragworth Hall and four acres of land from the Ropner family in Norton for the future construction of a church and a school. Mass was first said in Norton in 1933 in the library of Ragworth Hall by a Fr Thornton, the first parish priest. St Joseph’s Church was built on the site of its stables and coach house. In 1933, St Joseph’s Church was opened. In the 1950s, the population and town continued to grow and St Mary's Church
in Ireland, running from Cork to Waterford. She was ordered in 1825 following the selling of the first St. Patrick the previous year. She continued serving the company until 1831, when she grounded with no loss of life. She was launched on 19 August 1825 in Liverpool with a tonnage of 203 or 300 depending on the source (mentioned in infobox). She measured in length by Loss On 24 November 1831, the St. Patrick grounded on a sand bar in thick fog off
voyage. There were no casualties, and she was not commanded by her normal captain on her fateful voyage. An unnamed newspaper said: "Information was received in this city on Monday, of the loss of the St. Patrick steamer (late of Bristol, ) on Friday evening last [24 November 1831], about six o'clock, off the Hook Tower, Waterford, in a dense fog. Her bottom is said to be beat out. The crew and passengers were saved. She was bound from Cork to Waterford, and it was intended to put her on the line
was owned by two generations of the locally prominent Twitchell family, who practiced diversified agriculture, producing hay, maple syrup and maple sugar, cheese, and a variety of produce. They eventually changed to raising sheep and growing hops. In the early 20th century, the property was occupied by Maurice Luce, and it remained in that family until 1995. It was sold to preservationists, who restored many of the buildings, and who maintain the property as a working farm. See also National Register
The property consists of , with a combination of open fields and wood lots, including an sugar bush. The farmstead is located atop a low rise, and includes the farmhouse and numerous agricultural outbuildings. The farmhouse's oldest section, one of its ells, dates to about 1790; the main block was added about 1839. Many of the outbuildings are 19th century in origin, including a corn crib, horse barn, dairy barn, and hops barn. The area that is now the Luce farm was probably first settled about 1789 by Lot Whitcomb, who may have built the farmhouse ell. In the 19th century the property was owned by two generations
serve as managing director in October 2011. Under his leadership, MultiChoice rolled out three channels in three local Nigerian languages on Africa Magic, introduced GOtv, MultiChoice Talent Factory and Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards. John was elected chairman of the Broadcasting Organization of Nigeria in October 2021.
the General Manager of MWEB Nigeria and joined iWayAfrica Nigeria in 2007. He returned to MultiChoice to serve as managing director in October 2011. Under his leadership, MultiChoice rolled out three channels in three local Nigerian languages on Africa Magic, introduced GOtv, MultiChoice Talent Factory and Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards. John was elected chairman of the Broadcasting Organization of Nigeria in October 2021. Awards 2020 - CEO Of The Year (Media
band Fleetwood Mac and Christine Perfect and was released on the Embassy label in the UK and Europe. Side A consists of early tracks by Fleetwood Mac. Side B consists of tracks by Christine Perfect who, by the time of the album's release, was a member of Fleetwood Mac under the name of Christine McVie. Track listing Side 1 – Fleetwood Mac "Albatross" "Rambling Pony" "I Believe
the UK and Europe. Side A consists of early tracks by Fleetwood Mac. Side B consists of tracks by Christine Perfect who, by the time of the album's release, was a member of Fleetwood Mac under the name of Christine McVie. Track listing Side 1 – Fleetwood Mac "Albatross" "Rambling Pony" "I Believe My Time Ain't Long" "Doctor
low current. The species reaches 3.1 cm (1.2 inches) SL. References Loricariidae Fish described in
is a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to Brazil, where it occurs in the headwaters of the Tapajós
surname. Notable people with the name include: Anthony Joshua (born 1989), British professional boxer Bob Joshua (1906–1970), Australian politician Daryne Joshua (born 1992), South African filmmaker Ebenezer
Anthony Joshua (born 1989), British professional boxer Bob Joshua (1906–1970), Australian politician Daryne Joshua (born 1992), South African filmmaker Ebenezer Joshua (1908–1991), Vincentian politician Hirondina Joshua (born 1987), Mozambican poet Ivy Joshua
in 2019. Track listing "Difyrrwch" "Gloria" "Haf" "Kadisha" "Gawain" "Libanus" "Tom Paine's Bones" "These Are the things" "My Love's in Germany" "The Drinkers" "Gloria" was released as a single on 10 October 2018. Personnel Main: Will Addison – bouzouki, accordion, percussion, vocals Robin Jones – mandolin, tenor banjo, vocals Tomos Williams – guitar, bass, vocals Additional Musicians: Stefan Hegerat plays snare drum on "My Love's in Germany". Reviews Bright Young Folk, 2018. "The Trials of Cato have an incredibly rich and mature
eyes. Live, they are full of energy and their first full-length album, Hide And Hair, maintains their energy levels but also showcases just what great writers they are as well." Folk Radio, 8 November 2018. "If there’s a more exciting debut album from a folk band this year, then I haven’t heard it. This is a very special release, and I can only suggest you get on board for hopefully a long and thrilling ride to come.". For Folk's Sake, 10 November 2018. "The Trials of Cato are a band that raises the stakes for what folk music is today. With Hide And Hair, they break free of the genre by applying their own vision to the traditional form. There is no carelessness to their craft, they push the envelope of what folk is, and what it is
the influential monthly magazine Sinsedae, then quickly expanded into short story writing. Her first short story collection, Riragi (梨羅記), was published in 1948. She also continued her work as a journalist in this period, serving as editor in chief of the magazine Hyeseong from 1949 until the start of the Korean War, and shepherding the growth of the magazine Hankuk Munhak, through which she helped offer young writers the chance to be published for the first time. Later in her career, Son primarily focused on writing novels, starting with Taeyangui Gyegok (태양의 계곡, "The Valley of the Sun") in 1959. She also worked as an academic, teaching at Sorabol College, Hongik University, and Chung-Ang University in 1965, 1968, and 1978, respectively. Son is thought to be one of the first Korean writers to focus on women's struggles. Her work frequently incorporated themes of madness and suicide
University, but she dropped out of the program after a short period. She would later study English at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, graduating in 1961. Career Over her 40-year career, Son wrote around 100 short stories and 11 novels. Her career began in 1939, when she was working as a journalist for the in Manchuria, and she began publishing poetry. Her literary efforts grew after returning to Korea following independence in 1945, and she began publishing poetry in the influential monthly magazine Sinsedae, then quickly expanded into short story writing. Her first short story collection, Riragi (梨羅記), was published in 1948. She also continued her work as a journalist in this period, serving as editor in chief of the magazine Hyeseong from 1949 until the start of the Korean War, and shepherding the growth of the magazine Hankuk Munhak, through which she helped offer young writers the chance to be published for the first time. Later in her career, Son primarily focused on writing novels, starting with Taeyangui Gyegok (태양의 계곡, "The Valley of the Sun") in 1959. She also worked as an academic, teaching at Sorabol College, Hongik University, and Chung-Ang University in 1965, 1968, and 1978, respectively. Son is thought to be one of the
as a teacher and served there till his death. He died on 14 July 1949 at Rajkot. Works Since Ramlal Chunilal Modi was a native of Patan, he had a special charm for the local librarians and poets there. He has done important work mainly in the field of Old Gujarati and medieval history of Gujarat. He has published as many as 150 exploratory articles in addition to some texts. In 1909, his first article titled 'Gujarati Shabdkosh' published in the 'Buddhiprakash'. In 1919, he published the classically written character book 'Bhalan' about the medieval Gujarati poet Bhalan. In 1924, he published the book 'Kavi Bhalan krut Be Nalakhyan', for which he was awarded Rs. 101 by the Gujarati Sahitya Parishad. He has made a Gujarati
In 1909, his first article titled 'Gujarati Shabdkosh' published in the 'Buddhiprakash'. In 1919, he published the classically written character book 'Bhalan' about the medieval Gujarati poet Bhalan. In 1924, he published the book 'Kavi Bhalan krut Be Nalakhyan', for which he was awarded Rs. 101 by the Gujarati Sahitya Parishad. He has made a Gujarati translation of the Jadunath Sarkar's Mughal Administration (1920) book under the title 'Mughal Rajyavahivat' (1942). 'Patan-Sidhpurno Pravas' (1919) is his travelogue. 'Karna
of MLB The Show 22. For the second consecutive year, the Xbox versions of the game will be available for Xbox Game Pass subscribers at no additional cost at release. Notes References Upcoming video games scheduled for 2022 22 Multiplayer and single-player video games Nintendo Switch games PlayStation 4 games
Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch, a first for the franchise. The seventeenth entry of the MLB: The Show franchise, it will be released on April 5, 2022. Los Angeles Angels two-way player Shohei Ohtani is featured as the cover star. A special manga style art by Takashi Okazaki of Shohei Ohtani will be the cover art for the collector's edition of MLB The Show 22. For the second consecutive year, the Xbox versions of the game will be available for Xbox Game Pass subscribers at no additional cost at release. Notes References Upcoming video games
Milad Sarlak, Iranian footballer Mohammad Ali Sarlak, Iranian professor Siamak Sarlak, Iranian footballer Vahid Sarlak, Iranian judoka See also Sarlacc, a
a village in Lorestan Province, Iran. Sarlak may also refer to: Other places Sarlak, Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia Sarlak, a district in
in the Madhesh Province during the 2017 elections. References Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Socialist) politicians Living
Socialist). He was the chief ministerial candidate of CPN (UML) in the Madhesh Province
week of December. References 1996 births Living people TRAU FC players Expatriate footballers in India I-League players Association footballers not categorized by position Association football players not categorized
week of December. References 1996 births Living people TRAU FC players Expatriate footballers in India I-League players Association
of the Republic that was elected in the 2022 Portuguese legislative election. List of members References Assembly of the
the meeting of the Assembly of the Republic that was elected in the 2022 Portuguese legislative election. List
Pfeuffer, South African Orthodox Rabbi and Posek Alan J. Pfeuffer, American lawyer
Posek Alan J. Pfeuffer, American lawyer Ludwig Pfeuffer, Yehuda Amichai, (1924 –2000), Israeli
of the crankshaft. During testing there were some frame and crankshaft failures that were attributed to the rocking couple of the 120° crankshaft. The crank was changed to 180° to resolve this. There were concerns over the longevity of the belt, and also the appearance of the belt drive was disliked by marketing. The engine was modified to drive the cams by chain between cylinders 2 and 3 and the head casting simplified to use a single cam-cover. The final prototype was shown at the 1971 Milan Show. This was an all-new bike with a DOHC engine with the camshafts driven by chain and a duplex-cradle frame. Models 1000 Production of the triple started in early 1973 as the Laverda 1000. This model used drum brakes of Laverda's own manufacture, the front being twin leading shoe, and wire wheels with Borrani alloy rims. Soon after introduction the Ceriani forks were upgraded from 35mm to 38mm. 3C The 1,000 was updated in 1974 and designated the 3C. Initially a single Brembo front disc brake was fitted but was soon upgraded to twin front discs. A high-lift cam, designated 4C, and 10:1 pistons were offered as optional extras. Around 2,300 3Cs were produced. 3CL A further update occurred in 1975 with Laverda manufactured cast alloy wheels being fitted and a rear disc brake. The model was now designated 3CL (L standing for lega, Italian for alloy). The iron 'skull' insert that formed the combustion chamber was no longer fitted from 1976, leading to cracking around the valve seats on some machines. It was reintroduced in 1978, but not hardened around the valve seats, leading to valve seat erosion. To reduce engine noise, the inner main bearings were changed from rollers to ball in 1979. This lead to failures and warranty claims and the bearings were changed back to rollers later that year. By 1980 the reliability problems were resolved. Jarama The US version of the 3CL was designated the Jarama and had a left-foot gearchange, reflectors, a quieter exhaust system and a more upright riding position. Sales were poor in the US and some were shipped to the UK where they were sold at a discount. Some of these UK imports were converted to Jota specification and are known in the trade as Jarotas. Jota The UK importers, Slater Brothers, were offering 3Cs fitted with the racing 4C cams, 10:1 pistons, fork yokes from the SFC750 endurance racing twins to give steeper steering and an exhaust system designed in conjunction with Tim Healey, the Ariel Square Four specialist. These bikes were designated 3CE (E for England). The model suffered from vibration at higher revs. Massimo Laverda agreed agree to supply factory-built 3CEs to the UK only In 1976. The model acquired the name Jota and was the first production bike to be timed at more than 140 mph. Jotas won the UK production racing championship in 1976, 78, 79 and 80. The model was imported into the US in 1977. These model were fitted with left-foot gearchange via a crossover linkage. A new frame was fitted in 1978 with the rear shock absorbers more forward leading. This frame was shared with the newly introduced 1,200 models. Marzocchi forks replaced the Ceriani forks previously fitted. A more powerful Nippon Denso alternator was fitted in 1981 which necessitated moving the ignition pick-ups from the right to left end of the crankshaft. The crankcases and primary cover were changed to facilitate a future change to left-hand gearchange and hydraulically operated clutch fitted. The cylinder head was also revised and larger valves fitted. US models were fitted with softer cams and lower compression ratio in this year. Jota 120 The triple was produced with a 180° crankshaft, with the pistons in the outer cylinders rising and falling at the same time. To give the
cams and lower compression ratio in this year. Jota 120 The triple was produced with a 180° crankshaft, with the pistons in the outer cylinders rising and falling at the same time. To give the engine a more even firing cycle and better balance, the crankshaft throws were changed to 120° in 1982, giving rise to the Jota 120. and a hydraulic clutch fitted. The gearchange was now on the left side and close-ratio gears were fitted. RGS By the early 1980s Laverda was in financial trouble with the triples having to compete with cheaper, multi-cylinder machines from Japan. Being a small company unable to compete with the volume manufacturers from Japan, Laverda chose to aim at the high quality market. With this in mind, the triple was evolved into the RGS which was launched in 1982. First shown at the 1981 Milan Show, it powered by the revised 120° engine and had new cycle parts. A new frame was developed and the machine had flowing bodywork finished in red. The petrol filler cap was mounted on the front of the fairing. To protect the rider from vibration, the engine was rubber mounted. RGS Executive An executive variant was offered with 'bat wing' extensions to the fairing to keep the riders hands dry and integrated luggage bags. RGS Corsa Produced at the request of the UK importers, Three Cross Motorcycles, the RGS Corsa was finished in black and was a high performance version of the RGS. Claimed power output was 95 bhp. The engine had higher compression forged pistons, a gas flowed head and larger inlet valves. Braking was updated with Brembo floating discs and goldline callipers. Around 200 examples of the Corsa were produced. RGA The RGA was introduced as a cut down version of the RGS. It had a different seat, tank handlebars and a bikini fairing. RGA Jota The RGA Jota was a sports styled version of the RGA. It was sold mainly in the UK and Germany where the Jota name still had sales value. The machine used the same specification engine as the RGA but an optional 'race kit' was available comprising of Jota 120 camshafts, high compression piston, gas-flowed head, revised airbox and a new exhaust. RGA Jota Special Produced by the UK importers, Three Cross Motorcycles, the model had an RGS Corsa specification engine and a fairing with two round headlights. SFC Introduced in 1985 as a replacement of the RGS, the SFC had revised bodywork finished in red, upgraded brakes and suspension and different instruments. The High performance engine from the Corsa was used. The machine had the frame painted in gold, as were the Marzocchi M1-R air-assist forks. Marzocchi remote-reservoir shocks were fitted on the rear. Oscam three-spoke cast wheels were fitted, also finished in gold. The revised bodywork, alloy swinging arm, wheels and lightweight forks gave a significant weight saving over the Corsa. At the request of the German importers, Moto Witt, some German models were finished in black and had wire wheels. The SFC could be ordered with a race kit fitted, which consisted of a race cam, 36 mm carburettors and a close ratio gearbox. Laverda was taken over by Aprilia and at the 2002 Bologna Motor Show a prototype of a new
the most popular video blogger in the country. From 6-13 of April and from 13 to 20 of April, according to Social Blade, the number of views of videos on the A4 channel surpassed that of Swedish blogger PewDiePie. In addition to his main channel, Vlad created another channel 'Head Rice' on the topic of puzzles in October 2019 and in December 2019 the channel 'A5' was created. According to the analytical company AMDG, he is the second most popular Belarusian blogger on the social network TikTok with 4.7 million followers. According to the SRSLY online publication, Vlad took third place in the ranking of popular bloggers for the first half of 2020, losing to Nastya Ivleeva and Oksana Samoilova. In 2020, Vlad got into the Forbes rating '30 most promising Russians under 30' in the 'New Media' category, but didn't win. In 2020, Vlad's company 'FOUR-FOUR' became a resident of the Hi-Tech Park. The company is developing software for analytics of the state and dynamics of the viewer interest on video platforms such as YouTube. In the fall of 2021, he stopped uploading videos on his account. Vlad's producer Ekaterina Stabrovskaya stated that she could not make any statements on the topic. Controversy In 2021, American blogger MrBeast and JustDustin accused Vlad of plagiarism, and he was copying thumbnails and ideas
to the Belarusian media, Vlad is considered to be the most popular video blogger in the country. From 6-13 of April and from 13 to 20 of April, according to Social Blade, the number of views of videos on the A4 channel surpassed that of Swedish blogger PewDiePie. In addition to his main channel, Vlad created another channel 'Head Rice' on the topic of puzzles in October 2019 and in December 2019 the channel 'A5' was created. According to the analytical company AMDG, he is the second most popular Belarusian blogger on the social network TikTok with 4.7 million followers. According to the SRSLY online publication, Vlad took third place in the ranking of popular bloggers for the first half of 2020, losing to Nastya Ivleeva and Oksana Samoilova. In 2020, Vlad got into the Forbes rating '30 most promising Russians under 30' in the 'New Media' category, but didn't win. In 2020, Vlad's company 'FOUR-FOUR' became a resident of the Hi-Tech
in living cells. The PTRN consisted of seven institutions, eight co-Principal investigators, and six postdoctoral associates. As a result of her research developments, Clark was named President-elect of the Gibbs Society of Biological Thermodynamics. While serving as president of the Gibbs Society, Clark was also elected to the Executive Council of the Protein Society. In 2018, she collaborated with Masaru Kuno to discover the folding mechanisms of autotransporter proteins through a four-year grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation. Later that year, Clark received the 2017-2018 Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Clark spoke about the stress the pandemic is having on women in Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields. In June 2021, Clark was appointed the university's associate vice president for research. During the 2021–22 academic year, Clark became the first researcher in Indiana to receive a Director's Pioneer Award from the National Institutes of Health. She earned the award to help her develop new experimental approaches to measure the sensitivity of proteins to changes in the
Clare Boothe Luce Assistant professor of Biochemistry at the University of Notre Dame. Following her promotion to associate professor, Clark was appointed to a three-year term as a member of the editorial board of the Biophysical Journal in 2009. The following year, she was also appointed the Rev. John Cardinal O’Hara, C.S.C. Associate Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry. In this role, Clark showed that vectorial folding could alter mechanisms for protein folding in the cell. She was subsequently named the recipient of the 2013 Michael and Kate Bárány Award for Young Investigators for her research on the biophysics of protein folding in the cell. Later that year, Clark established the Protein Translation Research Network (PTRN) to study macromolecular interactions in living cells. The PTRN consisted of seven institutions, eight co-Principal investigators, and six postdoctoral associates. As a result of her research developments, Clark was named President-elect of the Gibbs Society of Biological Thermodynamics. While serving as president of the Gibbs Society, Clark was also elected to the Executive Council of the Protein Society. In 2018, she collaborated with Masaru Kuno to discover the folding mechanisms of autotransporter proteins through a four-year
views of Southern California. They also published a set on the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and the Panama–Pacific International Exposition. Many of their cards were printed with the Newman Post Card Co. logo. Newman also published under the name of Oscar Newman Company. There were 132 postcards distributed by the Oscar Newman Company of Los Angeles and San Francisco. The illustrations of eighteen missions and two Capillas were printed in Germany prior to World War I and later in the United States. After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Newman sold a set of Earthquake Post Cards. He did a series of Santa Catalina Island, California post cards from 1907-1911. His wife was his assistant in their business. By 1920, they had moved back to New York. In 1908, photographer and
Card Co. logo. Newman also published under the name of Oscar Newman Company. There were 132 postcards distributed by the Oscar Newman Company of Los Angeles and San Francisco. The illustrations of eighteen missions and two Capillas were printed in Germany prior to World War I and later in the United States. After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Newman sold a set of Earthquake Post Cards. He did a series of Santa Catalina Island, California post cards from 1907-1911. His wife was his assistant in their business. By 1920, they had moved back to New York. In 1908, photographer and publisher Charles Weidner sold his scenic post card business to the Newman Post Card Company of Los Angeles. Newman later moved to a San Francisco sales office on 2nd Street. Newman worked with Edward H. Mitchell for the February 1911, formation of Exposition Publishing Co., which was an organization that captured the souvenir post card business for the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition. Death Newman died on April 19, 1928, in Manhattan, New York City, New York. He was buried at the Mount Lebanon Cemetery in Glendale, Queens County, New York. Gallery The following images are samples of postcards printed by Newman Post Cards Co.
links Living people 1973 births People from Herdecke 21st-century German politicians 21st-century German women politicians Members of the Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens Members of the Bundestag 2021–2025
a member of the Bundestag in the 2021 German federal election. She is affiliated with the Alliance 90/The Greens party. References External links Living
Al-Sibyani (, born 24 June 2001) is a Saudi Arabian professional footballer who plays as a left back for Pro League side Al-Shabab. Career Al-Sibyani started at Al-Shabab's youth team and was promoted to the first team during the 2021–22 season. On 16 October 2021, Al-Sibyani made his
first team during the 2021–22 season. On 16 October 2021, Al-Sibyani made his professional debut for Al-Shabab against Abha in the Pro League, replacing Hattan Bahebri. On 31 January 2022, Al-Sibyani signed
televised version of the opera made by the DuMont Television Network with Paul Franke as Alfredo. 1950s and 1960s In 1951 Hurley was awarded the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation Award after touring as a lead soprano with the Charles L. Wagner Opera Company. In March 1952 she portrayed Philine in Ambroise Thomas's Mignon at the New Orleans Opera with Blanche Thebom in the title role. She starred as Nina in the operetta A Night in Venice, which utilized the music of Johann Strauss II with an original story and lyrics by Ruth and Thomas Martin, at the Jones Beach Theater in the summer of 1952. On October 25, 1952 Hurley performed the role of Micaëla in Georges Bizet's Carmen for her debut with the New York City Opera (NYCO) at New York City Center. She performed several more roles with the NYCO over the next three years, including Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro (1952), Rosalinda in Die Fledermaus (1953),, Gretel in Hansel and Gretel (1953),, Violetta in La traviata (1954), and Magnolia in Show Boat (1954). She notably performed the role of Clorinda in Rossini's La Cenerentola in 1953 with the NYCO; an opera which had not been heard in New York for 125 years previously. During her time with the NYCO she began performing with the NBC Opera Theatre in televised operas and live concerts. This included live performances of Mozart's Così fan tutte as Fiordiligi (1953), and televised performances as Countess Almaviva in The Marriage of Figaro (1954) and the Queen of the Night to Leontyne Price's Pamina in The Magic Flute (1956). She also portrayed Laurie in Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma! at the Salt Lake City Music Festival on the campus of the University of Utah in the summer of 1954. Hurley performed in several rarely performed operas during her career, including the roles of Helen of Troy in the United States premiere of Christoph Willibald Gluck's Paride ed Elena with the American Chamber Opera Society at The Town Hall on January 15, 1954; and Creuse in the United States premiere of Darius Milhaud's Médée at the Brandeis University Music Festival with Phyllis Curtin in the title role on June 11, 1955. She made her debut with the American Opera Society (AOS) in 1955 as Amina in Bellini's La Sonnambula with Cesare Siepi as Rodolfo; a work which was rarely staged at that time
Opera, and Santa Fe Opera. Her voice is preserved on complete opera recordings made with the Met, including the roles of the Queen of the Night in Mozart's The Magic Flute (recorded 1957; released by RCA Victor in 1960) and Mussetta in La bohème (recorded 1958, released by Sony Classical in 2011). She also made several recordings of complete operas with the American Opera Society (AOS) on disc and the NBC Opera Theatre for television. Early life and education Born in Allentown, Pennsylvania into a Pennsylvania Dutch family, Hurley's mother was a church organist and she received her initial music education from her. She later studied voice at the Hartt College of Music (now the University of Hartford Hartt School) after graduating from William Allen High School. While a student at Hartt College, she performed the role of Norina in Don Pasquale in the school's opera production. Performance career 1940s Hurley made her Broadway debut in 1943 at the age of 16 as Kathie in Sigmund Romberg’s operetta The Student Prince. She continued with that production after it left Broadway to go on tour. In 1947 she portrayed Margot Bonvalet opposite baritone Edward Roecker's Pierre Birabeau in Sigmund Romberg's The Desert Song at the Detroit Opera. In 1948 she starred in a revival of Jerome Kern's 1925 musical Sunny at the St. Louis Municipal Opera with Patricia Bowman and Hal Le Roy. In 1949 she portrayed Violetta in Giuseppe Verdi's La traviata in a televised version of the opera made by the DuMont Television Network with Paul Franke as Alfredo. 1950s and 1960s In 1951 Hurley was awarded the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation Award after touring as a lead soprano with the Charles L. Wagner Opera Company. In March 1952 she portrayed Philine in Ambroise Thomas's Mignon at the New Orleans Opera with Blanche Thebom in the title role. She starred as Nina in the operetta A Night in Venice, which utilized the music of Johann Strauss II with an original story and lyrics by Ruth and Thomas Martin, at the Jones Beach Theater in the summer of 1952. On October 25, 1952 Hurley performed the role of Micaëla in Georges Bizet's Carmen for her debut with the New York City Opera (NYCO) at New York City Center. She performed several more roles with the NYCO over the next three years, including Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro (1952), Rosalinda in Die Fledermaus (1953),, Gretel in Hansel and Gretel (1953),, Violetta in La traviata (1954), and Magnolia in Show Boat (1954). She notably performed the role of Clorinda in Rossini's La Cenerentola in 1953 with the NYCO; an opera which had not been heard in New York for 125 years previously. During her time with the NYCO
in Canberra, Australia. Zalucki attended Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra, Australia, receving his B. Sc. (first class honours) in zoology in 1976. He then attended Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia, earning his Ph.D. in ecology in 1982. Career Zalucki joined the Department of Entomology at the University of Queensland (UQ) with a temporary position in 1981. He reached the rank of full professor in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Queensland in 2001. Research Zalucki is internationally recognized for his work on insect-plant interactions, primarily in members of the order Lepidoptera including monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) and pests such as Helicoverpa armigera in the family Noctuidae, and Diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella). He has also studied fruit flies. His laboratory carries out field research and laboratory experiments to better understand the ecology of insects. As an insect ecologist he uses ecosystem models such as
moth (Plutella xylostella). He has also studied fruit flies. His laboratory carries out field research and laboratory experiments to better understand the ecology of insects. As an insect ecologist he uses ecosystem models such as ecological niche modelling to understand and predict the behavior of insect populations as an ecological system, and the underlying processes that influence them. He often uses Monarch butterflies and milkweed as a model study system. Zalucki explores issues such as the spatial characteristics of milkweed planting and their impact on monarch butterfly movement and egg-laying; the influence of weather patterns on migration; and the impact of spatial-temporal climatic variability. He is known for incorporating movement patterns and behavior into agent-based models. Zalucki has also studied oviposition behaviour and the interactions of oviposition, landscape characteristics, climate, and learning, with caterpillar survival, insect abundance and species distribution. Awards 2018. Fellow of the Entomological Society of America 1996,
the poisoning and imprisonment of Alexei Navalny Navalny (film), a 2022 documentary
opposition leader and lawyer. Navalny may also refer to: Navalny 35, a group of citizens of
a professor from São Paulo State University, Botucatu, São Paulo, after his contributions to the studies of Neotropical freshwater
America, where it occurs in tributaries of the Ivaí River in Brazil. The species reaches 3 cm (1.2 inches) SL and was named for Claudio Oliveira, a professor from São Paulo State University,
face Abraham Montoya on 15 May 2021, on the undercard of the Brandon Figueroa and Luis Nery super bantamweight title unification bout. On 4 May, fight promoters PBC announced that Montoya had withdrawn from the fight, and would be replaced by the two-time WBO super featherweight title challenger Juan Carlos Burgos. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 99–91 in his favor. On 21 December 2021, it was announced that Martinez would face the one-time WBC super featherweight title challenger Robson Conceição in a WBC title eliminator. The fight was scheduled as the main event of an
by unanimous decision, with two judges scoring the fight 114–112 and one judge scoring the fight 115–111 in his favor. Marrero had the most success in the eight round, when he nearly finished Martinez, as he knocked him down twice. Martinez was expected to face Abraham Montoya on 15 May 2021, on the undercard of the Brandon Figueroa and Luis Nery super bantamweight title unification bout. On 4 May, fight promoters PBC announced that Montoya had withdrawn from the fight, and would be replaced by the two-time WBO super featherweight title challenger Juan Carlos Burgos. He won the fight by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring the fight 99–91 in his favor. On 21 December 2021, it was announced that Martinez would face the one-time WBC super featherweight title challenger Robson Conceição in a WBC title eliminator. The fight was scheduled as the main event of an ESPN and ESPN Deportes broadcast card, which took place on 29 January 2022. Martinez lost the fight by unanimous decision, with scores of 98–92, 99–91 and 100–90. His only moments of success came in the third
Grand Prince and All of Us Are Dead. She completed her studies from Shinseo High School. She also appeared in a number of films Detective K: Secret of the Virtuous Widow, Detective K: Secret of the Virtuous Widow, Hot Young Bloods, Detective K:
She is known for her roles in dramas such as One Mom and Three Dads, 100% Era, Grand Prince and All of Us Are Dead. She also appeared in movies Detective K: Secret of the Lost Island, The Mimic, The Last Princess and Steel Rain. Biography and career She was born on August 13, 2004 in South
It is a freshwater species native to South America, where it occurs in small tributaries of the Sepotuba River in Brazil. It
a species of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is a freshwater species native to South America, where
held captive, for ransom, by the natives with whom he had been on good terms for years. He had visited their settlements and traded with their chiefs for animal skins. "He was much esteemed by all the tribes," wrote Charles Banks. In September 1677, a court in Boston found Gendall guilty of treason for his relationship with the Native Americans. In the ensuing three days, Gendall escaped and returned, it is believed, to Scarborough, Massachusetts (now in Maine). A bond was paid by Gendall's friend Nathaniel Fryer as part of an agreement with the court, and the incident came to a conclusion. Peace was reached with the Indians on August 12, 1678, when three English commissioners met chief Squando and two other sagamores to sign a treaty. On July 12, 1681, Gendall founded Casco Mill at the eastern side of the First Falls in Yarmouth, on land formerly occupied by Henry Sayward's mill. Gendall's dwelling was beside the mill. He built a boarding home "of rude construction" for his mill workers on the opposite shore. Three years later, he claimed all of the owned by fellow Englishman, early settler George Felt. He had purchased from Felt a few years prior. Gendall was selected to a committee in charge of laying out the town of North Yarmouth, which was incorporated on September 22, 1680. Also on the committee were Bartholomew Gedney, Joshua Scotton and Silvanus Davis. The town was designed on a location then known as Maine's Point. The committee was superseded by the appointment of Gendall and three others as trustees of the town. Personal life Gendall was married to Joane and had a family, with whom he had lived during his time as a military officer in Scarborough (from around
had lived during his time as a military officer in Scarborough (from around 1661) and Falmouth, Massachusetts (now Portland, Maine). His father-in-law was John Guy, a fisherman in Falmouth. His farm incorporated Duck Cove, beyond Town Landing Road in today's Cumberland Foreside. Death Gendall, "one of the bravest and foremost men of the early days", died on September 19, 1688, shortly after the outbreak of Second Indian War, having been shot by Indians near Callen Point while taking supplies to his troops building a fort on the southern side of the Royal River. He had mistaken the cessation of their gunfire to mean that they were out of ammunition, and he set out to cross the river. He made the journey without incident, but was shot upon reaching the opposite shoreline. His last words were: "I have lost my life in your service." The Indians burned three houses and two barns of Gendall's. Gendall's estate was not probated until 1700, twelve years after his death. A stone marker honoring Gendall stands to the north of 28 Lafayette Street in the area of Yarmouth that came to be known as Grantville. It was installed by Yarmouth’s Village Improvement Society. References 1688 deaths People from Cornwall 17th-century English businesspeople American textile
to fiction and nonfiction "self published books by, for and about people of color living in the margins." The primary audience of the books is generally individuals aged 9-21 who are Black, Indigenous People of
and about people of color living in the margins." The primary audience of the books is generally individuals aged 9-21 who are Black, Indigenous People of Color; "youth from a street culture," "youth in restrictive custody," and/or "youth who are reluctant readers." The In the Margins
February 2000) is an Argentinian field hockey goalkeeper. Hockey career In 2022, Pérez was
the senior national women's team. References Argentine female field hockey
a single appearance in first-class cricket for the East Africa cricket team against the touring Indians at Kampala in 1967. Batting twice in the match, he was run out for 15 runs in the East African first innings, while in
the match, he was run out for 15 runs in the East African first innings, while in their second innings he was dismissed for 39 runs by B. S. Chandrasekhar. References
A complete bibliographic catalog published by the publisher in 1981 listed 800 titles in 60 languages. In 1988, the number of titles published by the 235 employees together with the was 246, including 121 first editions. After the German reunification, the publishing houses and were converted into the on 27 June 1990. At the end of May 1991 it was sold to BIFAB Mannheim, and on 1 November 1991 it was resold to Langenscheidt. References Further reading (Update 2013: , , ; Update 2012:
languages. In 1988, the number of titles published by the 235 employees together with the was 246, including 121 first editions. After the German reunification, the publishing houses and were converted into the on 27 June 1990. At the end of May 1991 it was sold to BIFAB Mannheim, and on 1 November 1991 it was resold to Langenscheidt. References Further reading (Update 2013: , , ; Update 2012: , , ; first edition: / . . . . NB. This work is based on the author's
follow-up, Rayxanber III, was released for the PC Engine Super CD-ROM² in 1992. Gameplay Rayxanber II is a science fiction-themed horizontal-scrolling shooter game reminiscent of R-Type, in which the player takes control of a fighter pilot controlling a space craft to protect Earth against an alien invasion led by the returning Zoul Empire. It retains the same gameplay as its predecessor, as the player controls the ship through six increasingly difficult stages over a constantly scrolling background, populated with an assortment of alien enemy forces and obstacles, and the scenery never stops moving until a boss is reached, which must be fought in order to progress further. There are three types of weapon units in the game the player can acquire by collecting their respective colors when dropped by carriers when shot down and alternate between each one by obtaining another weapon during gameplay, ranging from fire (red), lightning (green), and multi-directional laser (blue). Each weapon can be powered-up before they are maxed out and collecting any weapon unit also equips the ship with a set of two satellite-like options that fire at the specific direction the unit, which is constantly rotating, faces before being obtained. By holding down the attack button, the player can charge the ship's cannon to unleash a more powerful blast against enemies. The ship is also capable of performing a dash maneuver to evade incoming enemy fire or obstacles. As with the original Rayxanber, the title employs a checkpoint system in which a downed player will start off at the beginning of the checkpoint they managed to reach before dying. Getting hit by enemy fire or colliding against solid stage obstacles will result in losing a live, as well as a penalty of decreasing the ship's firepower and loss of the weapon that was currently in use, and the game is over once all lives are lost, though the player has unlimited continues to keep playing. Development and release Rayxanber II was developed by Team 50, a group within Data West, which previously worked on the original Rayxanber (1990) for FM Towns. It was designed by Kazuhide Nakamura and produced by Naokazu Akita, with Fumio Minami and Yoshiyuki Washizu acting as co-programmers. Artist Takeharu Igarashi was responsible for the pixel art. The music was scored by Yasuhito Saito, who composed for the original entry and also worked on titles such as Layla and The 4th Unit series. The game was published in Japan by Data West on June 7, 1991 for the PC Engine CD-ROM². After its release, the title was demonstrated at the 1991 Tokyo Toy Show during summer. In a 2020 interview with Japanese gaming website DenFaminicoGamer, a Data West representative commented that there were no current plans for a digital re-release of the Rayxanber series through their official online store, but would consider it if there is demand. Reception Rayxanber II became an "instant success" when it released in Japan according to Electronic Gaming Monthly, but garnered mixed reception from critics, including French publications reviewing it as an import title. In contrast to the critical response, public reception was positive; readers of PC Engine Fan voted to give the title a 22.21 out of 30 score, ranking at the number 155 spot in a poll, indicating a popular following. Japanese gaming magazine Gekkan PC Engine gave Rayxanber II a positive review, with its five critics giving it a score
longevity, but most noted its difficulty and criticized its presentation. Retrospective commentary have been equally mixed, some of which found it to be an improvement over its predecessor but concurred in regards to its high difficulty nature. A follow-up, Rayxanber III, was released for the PC Engine Super CD-ROM² in 1992. Gameplay Rayxanber II is a science fiction-themed horizontal-scrolling shooter game reminiscent of R-Type, in which the player takes control of a fighter pilot controlling a space craft to protect Earth against an alien invasion led by the returning Zoul Empire. It retains the same gameplay as its predecessor, as the player controls the ship through six increasingly difficult stages over a constantly scrolling background, populated with an assortment of alien enemy forces and obstacles, and the scenery never stops moving until a boss is reached, which must be fought in order to progress further. There are three types of weapon units in the game the player can acquire by collecting their respective colors when dropped by carriers when shot down and alternate between each one by obtaining another weapon during gameplay, ranging from fire (red), lightning (green), and multi-directional laser (blue). Each weapon can be powered-up before they are maxed out and collecting any weapon unit also equips the ship with a set of two satellite-like options that fire at the specific direction the unit, which is constantly rotating, faces before being obtained. By holding down the attack button, the player can charge the ship's cannon to unleash a more powerful blast against enemies. The ship is also capable of performing a dash maneuver to evade incoming enemy fire or obstacles. As with the original Rayxanber, the title employs a checkpoint system in which a downed player will start off at the beginning of the checkpoint they managed to reach before dying. Getting hit by enemy fire or colliding against solid stage obstacles will result in losing a live, as well as a penalty of decreasing the ship's firepower and loss of the weapon that was currently in use, and the game is over once all lives are lost, though the player has unlimited continues to keep playing. Development and release Rayxanber II was developed by Team 50, a group within Data West, which previously worked on the original Rayxanber (1990) for FM Towns. It was designed by Kazuhide Nakamura and produced by Naokazu Akita, with Fumio Minami and Yoshiyuki Washizu acting as co-programmers. Artist Takeharu Igarashi was responsible for the pixel art. The music was scored by Yasuhito Saito, who composed for the original entry and also worked on titles such as Layla and The 4th Unit series. The game was published in Japan by Data West on June 7, 1991 for the PC Engine CD-ROM².
the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it
of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it is
Dentist, It's Touching Me! by Sho Yamazaki October 3 — Josou o Yamerarenaku Naru Otokonoko no Hanashi by Kobashiko Webcomics ended Kimi ga Shinu Made Ato Hyaku Nichi by Migihara,
Me Dentist, It's Touching Me! by Sho Yamazaki October 3 — Josou o Yamerarenaku Naru Otokonoko no Hanashi by Kobashiko Webcomics ended Kimi ga Shinu Made Ato Hyaku Nichi by Migihara, 2018–2020 Otokonoko Zuma by Crystal na Yousuke, 2016–2020 References Webcomics by
championship and qualified for the final phase of the Romanian championship where it met the team Oltul Slatina, defeating it 2–0. In the quarterfinals, Fulgerul played with the team Jahn Cernăuți, which they defeated 2–1. At the same time, Oltul Slatina challenged the result of the match with Fulgerul, claiming that Fulgerul CFR Chișinău had players from other teams in the team, consequently Fulgerul CFR was disqualified, and the results were annulled. 1924–25 Divizia A Preliminary round Quarters 1 Fulgerul was disqualified, the result being annulled. In 1925 the "CFR Chisinau Regiment" team
being annulled. In 1925 the "CFR Chisinau Regiment" team was renamed the Fulgerul CFR Chișinău. In the next season(1925–26 Divizia A) the team won the Bessarabia championship again. In the quarterfinals of the Romanian championship, they met Hakoah Chernivtsi, defeating them with the score of 1–0. In the semifinals, Fulgerul dueled with Juventus Bucharest, in the first match there was a tie, 2-2, and in the replay Chisinau lost 4–1. Among the most important players who played for Fulgerul CFR Chișinău are Iozsef Kilianovits and Albert Ströck, both of whom also played for the Romania national football team. References Football clubs
professional footballers and Juan Francisco Viveros. He was international with the Chilean National Team between 1971 and 1973. He played 10 games for the national team, scoring two goals against
footballer and coach who played as a midfielder. He is the uncle of fellow professional footballers and Juan Francisco Viveros. He was international with the Chilean National Team between 1971 and 1973. He played 10 games for the national team, scoring two goals
Peruvian professional footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Peruvian Primera División club Sporting Cristal and the Peru national
Peruvian Primera División club Sporting Cristal and the Peru national team. Honours Sporting Cristal Peruvian Primera División: 2020 Copa Bicentenario: 2021 References 2001 births Living people
Navy rear admiral James Shedden Palmer (1810–1867), U.S. Navy
Henry Palmer (Royal Navy officer, born 1582) (1582–1644), Royal Navy
by reacting a solution of hydrogen cyanide in water with magnesium metal: HCN + Mg → Mg(CN)2 + H2 The instant it was formed, it reacted with water to form magnesium hydroxide. To avoid this problem, instead of using water as the reaction medium, pure ammonia was used at -30 °C. This formed magnesium cyanide ammoniate, which
hydrogen cyanide in water with magnesium metal: HCN + Mg → Mg(CN)2 + H2 The instant it was formed, it reacted with water to form magnesium hydroxide. To avoid this problem, instead of using water as the reaction medium, pure ammonia was used at -30 °C. This formed magnesium cyanide ammoniate, which in turn was heated to 180 °C to produce magnesium cyanide. Then, the ammoniate was then heated to 180 °C which decomposed back to magnesium cyanide. Other methods are possible, such as the decomposition of
column the date the club was dissolved(if it is the case). Alba County Arad County Argeș County Bacău County Bihor County Bistrița-Năsăud County Botoșani County Brașov County Brăila County Bucharest Buzău County Călărași County Caraș-Severin County Cernăuți County Cluj County Constanța County Covasna County Dâmbovița County Dolj County Durostor County Galați County Giurgiu County Gorj County Harghita
the first column the first name as the founding name in Romanian, on the second column the name as it appeared in the documents of the time(if the town did not belong to Romania at the time), on the third column the foundation date, in parenthesis the polisportive club, outside the football section of the club and on fourth column the date the club was dissolved(if it is the case). Alba County Arad County Argeș County Bacău County Bihor County Bistrița-Năsăud County Botoșani County Brașov County
may also refer to: John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset (c. 1371–1410), Admiral of the Irish Fleet Thomas Beaufort, Duke
Earl of Somerset (c. 1371–1410), Admiral of the Irish Fleet Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter
500 metres speed skating competition of the 2016 Winter
Winter Youth Olympics was held at Hamar Olympic Hall on
ABC with Kenny G is created and directed by Shabnam Rezaei and airs on TVOKids, and Knowledge Kids. References External links ABC with Kenny G Official TVOKids website ABC with Kenny G Official Knowledge Kids website 2010s Canadian animated television series 2010s preschool education television series 2018
External links ABC with Kenny G Official TVOKids website ABC with Kenny G Official Knowledge Kids website 2010s Canadian animated television series 2010s preschool education television series 2018 Canadian television series debuts TVOntario
Salerno like other leading socialist politicians of the period. Conte was appointed minister without portfolio for urban problems on 22 July 1989 to the sixth cabinet of Giulio Andreotti. He also held the post in the next cabinet of Giulio Andreotti and in the first cabinet of Giuliano Amato. Conte's term ended on 28 April 1993. Conte has been the author of several books last of which was published in 2019. References External link 20th-century Italian lawyers 1938 births Living people Italian Socialist Party politicians Government ministers of Italy Deputies of Legislature VIII of Italy Deputies of Legislature
urban problems on 22 July 1989 to the sixth cabinet of Giulio Andreotti. He also held the post in the next cabinet of Giulio Andreotti and in the first cabinet of Giuliano Amato. Conte's term ended on 28 April 1993. Conte has been the author of several books last of which was published in 2019. References External link 20th-century Italian lawyers 1938 births Living people Italian Socialist Party politicians Government ministers of Italy Deputies of Legislature VIII of Italy Deputies of Legislature IX of Italy Deputies of Legislature X of Italy Deputies of Legislature XI of Italy People from Salerno
tributary of the Tuskar in the basin of the Seym), 109 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, 12 km north-east of the district center – the town Kursk, 2 km from the selsoviet center – Nozdrachevo. Climate Yeskovo has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Yeskovo is located 18 km from the federal
km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), 5 km from the road of regional importance (Kursk – Kastornoye), on the road of intermunicipal significance (38K-016 – Nozdrachevo – Vinogrobl), 5 km from the nearest railway halt 18 km (railway line Kursk – 146 km). The
for people to buy bagels, and, playing a familiar violin melody, asked Yadov to write lyrics to go along with the tune. According to scholar Patricia Herlihy, the resulting blatnaya pesnya was one of the most popular songs of the NEP era. The song's subversive themes resulted in the government banning it until the late 1980s; despite the ban, it remained popular by being passed down through word of mouth, though this resulted in many different versions of the song. The song proved persistently popular in translation among Yiddish-speaking Jews, though the translation lost the political nature of the original.The American duo the Barry Sisters performed that Yiddish version as late as after World War II. Bandleaders including Benny Goodman recorded English-language versions with the subtitle "The Pretzel Seller's Song." Bublichki was also reworked into a jazz song by Soviet singer and bandleader Leonid Utyosov, who performed it
resulted in many different versions of the song. The song proved persistently popular in translation among Yiddish-speaking Jews, though the translation lost the political nature of the original.The American duo the Barry Sisters performed that Yiddish version as late as after World War II. Bandleaders including Benny Goodman recorded English-language versions with the subtitle "The Pretzel Seller's Song." Bublichki was also reworked into a jazz song by Soviet singer and bandleader Leonid Utyosov, who performed it with his orchestra. Utyosov often performed songs from the blatnaya pesnya genre, including Bublichki and other songs by Yadov. Lyrics As with many underground songs from
species reaches 2.4 cm (0.9 inches) SL. It was described in 2015 by Fábio Fernandes Roxo, Gabriel Souza da Costa e Silva, Luz E.
of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to the Xingu River basin in Brazil. The species reaches 2.4 cm (0.9 inches) SL. It was described in 2015 by Fábio Fernandes
the town of Gulgong. The degree of preservation at this Lagerstätte has been compared to the quality of that found at Crato Formation, Lake Eckfeld, and Libros. Other fossil sites in Australia, such as Riversleigh, Bullock Creek and Alcoota, are rich in the skeletal remains of Miocene fauna, but none provide the diversity of organisms, their interactions, or exquisite detail found at this site. The finely layered fossiliferous strata is associated with permanent water, perhaps an oxbow lake, in a mesic rainforest, habitat that once dominated the continent. At the time of deposition of the fossil strata, from 16 to 11 million years ago, the site was a slow moving or still water body, perhaps a billabong. Along with fish, the
in central New South Wales, specimens at the site are in an exceptional state of preservation, described in paleontology as a Konservat-Lagerstätten, deposited in unusual conditions that record microscopic details of soft tissues and delicate structures. Fossil evidence of animals with soft bodies, unlike the bones of mammals and reptiles, is rare in Australia, and discoveries at McGraths' Flat have revealed unknown species of invertebrates such as insects and spiders. The site, named for its discoverer, John McGrath, occurs on private land near the town of Gulgong. The degree of preservation
de Fundição e Estaleiros da Ponta d'Areia, located in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, and was bought on August 11, 1846, by Irineu Evangelista de Sousa, at the time Baron of Mauá. In 2000, the company entered into a joint-venture with Jurong Shipyard in Singapore, creating the company Mauá
de Sousa, at the time Baron of Mauá. In 2000, the company entered into a joint-venture with Jurong Shipyard in Singapore, creating the company Mauá Jurong S/A (MJ). The new company, in addition to the construction and repair of ships, specializes in the construction of platforms for oil and gas exploration. Recent vessel production A not extensive list of Mauá's production: See also List of ships of the Brazilian Navy Arsenal de Marinha do Rio de Janeiro Ishikawajima do Brasil Estaleiros Further reading References External
of catfish in the family Loricariidae. It is native to South America, where it occurs in the drainage basins of the Das Velhas River and the
SL. The species was described in 2015 by Fábio Fernandes Roxo, Gabriel Souza da Costa e Silva, Luz E. Orrego, and Claudio Oliveira, alongside the description of the genus Curculionichthys
the Harbin–Suifenhe railway. There is one daily morning service from the terminus of the branch, Changtingzhen, to Mudanjiang railway
branch, Changtingzhen, to Mudanjiang railway station and one daily evening service from Mudanjiang to Changtingzhen. The line is
published books on the history of Turkey titled Excluding the Ottoman State (Ankara 1994) and the Ottoman State and Civilization History (I-II, Istanbul 1994, 1998). The organisation conducted several conferences across the world that were subsequently turned into books. The history of Pakistan book titled Islam in South Asia, Islamabad 1995 was also published by the organisation. It has conducted conferences, later turned into books on various countries such as Malaysia and other Muslim countries. The history of Malaysia is covered by a book titled Islamic Civilization in the Malay World, Kuala Lumpur 1997 while the West Africa's civilization is covered by Islamic Civilization in West Africa ​​in Dakar in 1996, Islamic Civilization in the Caucasus published in 1998 and Islamic Civilization in the Balkans published in 2000. Science and Education in the Ottoman World book was published. The research centre has written a bibliography of translations of the Quran which into 65 different languages. Done between 1515 and 1980, all copies of manuscript were published in Istanbul, 2000. Its audio translation has also been distributed into various languages such as Wolof language, Hevsâ, Tamasheq, Songhay, Kanuri and Fula languages. A book titled Calligraphy in the Islamic Cultural Heritage was published in 1992 which was later printed in Turkish, Arabic, Japanese, English, and Malay languages. Islamic Architecture in Bosnia and Herzegovina concerning culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina was published in 1994, The Old Bridge (Stari Most) in Mostar (Istanbul 1995), Studije o Bosni, and Historijski Prilozi iz Osmansko-Turskog Perioda was published in 1994, in addition to publishing books titled Population of Bosnia in the Ottoman Period, 1994. The End of the 19th Century in Bosnia was published in 1996, concerning disestablishments of Ottoman Empire in Bosnia. Headquarters and buildings IRCICA was initially headquartered in Fatih, Istanbul. It served its headquarters from its 1979 until July 2017. The organisation was relocated to Yıldız Palace, Istanbul. The president of Turkey allocated five buildings for the organisation in Istanbul. Yıldız Palace was the last palace of the Ottoman Empire. Other buildings donated by the government of Turkey are; Seyir Pavilion, Çit Qasr, Yaveran Qasr and Silahhane (armoury) Building. Çit Qasr was allotted in 1982 and Yaveran Qasr in 1984. Both Çit Qasr and Yaveran Qasr were either redesigned, restore or reconstructed by the organisation by raising funds contributed by the states and individuals. Silahhane Building has been its library which was restored by funds granted by the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates and Emir of Dubai, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. It was formally inaugurated as a library of the organisation by the president of Turkey, the then prime minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 17 May 2009. Bab-ı Ali Complex, headquarters of the IRCICA was moved from Yıldız Palace to Fatih. As of July 2017, Fatih district serves headquarters of the organisation. The building previously served as a repository of the Ottoman archives until 2014 after the president of Turkey allotted the building to IRCICA. Sublime Porte serves as Directorate General as well as exhibition hall of IRCICA. Other four buildings houses the department of research, library and documentation, department of finance and administration. The main conference hall of Sublime Porte is used by the organisation as its library. Awards establishment The IRCICA has been distributing awards to those who have made significant contribution to the IRCICA cultural heritage and education. Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi was one of the recipients of IRCICA's award. It also conducts the International Calligraphy Competition award ceremony which is awarded to calligraphers who participate in the ceremony. The ninth competition held in 2013 involved in different writing styles such as jaly thuluth, thuluth, and naskh among others. A Turkish calligrapher Seyit Amhet Depeler achieved 1st position, while 2nd was Abdah Muhammad Hasan Al-Camal from Egypt and Ehab Ebraheem Thabet from Palestine was nominated as the 3rd winner. See also Statistical, Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic Countries International Islamic Fiqh Academy Islamic World Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization References Further reading Organisation of Islamic Cooperation subsidiary organs Research institutes in Turkey Islamic
history of Turkey titled Excluding the Ottoman State (Ankara 1994) and the Ottoman State and Civilization History (I-II, Istanbul 1994, 1998). The organisation conducted several conferences across the world that were subsequently turned into books. The history of Pakistan book titled Islam in South Asia, Islamabad 1995 was also published by the organisation. It has conducted conferences, later turned into books on various countries such as Malaysia and other Muslim countries. The history of Malaysia is covered by a book titled Islamic Civilization in the Malay World, Kuala Lumpur 1997 while the West Africa's civilization is covered by Islamic Civilization in West Africa ​​in Dakar in 1996, Islamic Civilization in the Caucasus published in 1998 and Islamic Civilization in the Balkans published in 2000. Science and Education in the Ottoman World book was published. The research centre has written a bibliography of translations of the Quran which into 65 different languages. Done between 1515 and 1980, all copies of manuscript were published in Istanbul, 2000. Its audio translation has also been distributed into various languages such as Wolof language, Hevsâ, Tamasheq, Songhay, Kanuri and Fula languages. A book titled Calligraphy in the Islamic Cultural Heritage was published in 1992 which was later printed in Turkish, Arabic, Japanese, English, and Malay languages. Islamic Architecture in Bosnia and Herzegovina concerning culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina was published in 1994, The Old Bridge (Stari Most) in Mostar (Istanbul 1995), Studije o Bosni, and Historijski Prilozi iz Osmansko-Turskog Perioda was published in 1994, in addition to publishing books titled Population of Bosnia in the Ottoman Period, 1994. The End of the 19th Century in Bosnia was published in 1996, concerning disestablishments of Ottoman Empire in Bosnia. Headquarters and buildings IRCICA was initially headquartered in Fatih, Istanbul. It served its headquarters from its 1979 until July 2017. The organisation was relocated to Yıldız Palace, Istanbul. The president of Turkey allocated five buildings for the organisation in Istanbul. Yıldız Palace was the last palace of the Ottoman Empire. Other buildings donated by the government of Turkey are; Seyir Pavilion, Çit Qasr, Yaveran Qasr and Silahhane (armoury) Building. Çit Qasr was allotted in 1982 and Yaveran Qasr in 1984. Both Çit Qasr and Yaveran Qasr were either redesigned, restore or reconstructed by the organisation by raising funds contributed by the states and individuals. Silahhane Building has been its library which was restored by funds granted by the prime minister of the United Arab Emirates and Emir of Dubai, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. It was formally inaugurated as a library of the organisation by the president of Turkey, the then prime minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on 17 May 2009. Bab-ı Ali Complex, headquarters of the IRCICA was moved from Yıldız Palace to Fatih. As of July 2017, Fatih district serves headquarters of the organisation. The building previously served as a repository of the Ottoman archives until 2014 after the president of Turkey allotted the building to IRCICA. Sublime Porte serves as Directorate General as well as exhibition hall of IRCICA. Other four buildings houses the department of research, library and documentation, department of finance and administration. The main conference hall of Sublime Porte is used by the organisation as its library. Awards establishment The IRCICA has been distributing awards to those who have made significant contribution to the IRCICA cultural heritage and education. Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi was one of the recipients of IRCICA's award. It also conducts the International Calligraphy Competition award ceremony which is awarded to calligraphers who participate in the ceremony. The ninth competition held in 2013 involved in different writing styles such as jaly thuluth, thuluth, and naskh among others. A Turkish calligrapher Seyit Amhet Depeler achieved 1st position, while 2nd was Abdah Muhammad Hasan Al-Camal from Egypt and Ehab Ebraheem Thabet from Palestine was nominated as the 3rd winner. See also Statistical, Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic Countries International Islamic Fiqh Academy Islamic World Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization References Further reading Organisation of Islamic Cooperation subsidiary organs Research institutes in Turkey Islamic culture Islamic architecture History of Islamic science 1979 establishments in Turkey 1979 establishments in Asia 1979 establishments in Europe Cultural centers in
The mission also noted increasing importance of the core Arab-African members with decreasing prominence of the original leaders of the movement such as Indonesia, India and even SFR Yugoslavia. With the strong support by Fidel Castro, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev sent an letter to the Algerian President ahead of the event asking him to try to direct the movement towards the Soviet strategic interests. Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi accused Castro of being the representative of the USSR in the movement, while some expected guests were absent as was the case with the king Hussein of Jordan (due to concerns over disagreements with Palestinian delegation) and Suharto (due to Sihanouk's participation). In this sensitive context Yugoslav delegation, prepared in advance at the meeting in Igalo, carefully drafted the speech for the President of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito in which he decided not to mention a word socialism for a single time. The conference adopted the decision on the mandate and the name of the future Coordinating Bureau which would include 15 countries responsible for
Nations noticed increased coordination among the member states where Sub-Saharan African countries showed unified front on the question of Apartheid regime in South Africa and Arab states on the issue of Palestine. The mission also noted increasing importance of the core Arab-African members with decreasing prominence of the original leaders of the movement such as Indonesia, India and even SFR Yugoslavia. With the strong support by Fidel Castro, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev sent an letter to the Algerian President ahead of the event asking him to try to direct the movement towards the Soviet strategic interests. Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi accused Castro of being the representative of the USSR in the movement, while some expected guests were absent as was the case with the king Hussein of Jordan (due to concerns over disagreements with Palestinian delegation) and Suharto (due to Sihanouk's participation). In this sensitive context Yugoslav delegation, prepared in advance at the meeting in Igalo, carefully drafted the speech for the President of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito in which he decided not
sent as deputy to the Assembly of Jewish Notables convened by Napoleon I at Paris in 1806. Upon his return he was called to the congregation at Cento, where he held the position of rabbi until his death, his pupil Isaac Reggio becoming his successor at Ferrara. Nepi, who lived an ascetic life, was one of the highest religious authorities of his time in Italy. Among his publications were Livyat Ḥen, a collection of the responsa which he sent to different
Among his publications were Livyat Ḥen, a collection of the responsa which he sent to different rabbis, and Derushim, a collection of his sermons. His Zekher tsadikim li-verakhah, consisting of biographical and bibliographical sketches of rabbis and Jewish scholars, was intended to complete Azulai's Shem ha-gedolim but left unfinished. It was completed by M. S. Ghirondi under the title Toledot gedole Yisrael, and published by the latter's son (Triest, 1853). A catalogue of his library was published in Lemberg in 1873. Selected publications References External links Works by Graziadio Nepi at the National Library of Israel 1759 births 1836 deaths 19th-century Italian physicians 19th-century Italian rabbis Jewish physicians Religious