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Liolaemus silvanae is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is native to Argentina. | silvanae Reptiles described in 1971 Reptiles of Argentina Taxa named |
in 1930. On June 8, 1932, Muskogee moved to Hutchinson, Kansas to become the Hutchinson Wheat Shockers, playing in the Western League. However, the Fort Smith Twins of the Western Association moved to Muskogee on July 1, 1932, to complete their season as the Muskogee Chiefs. The second 1932 Muskogee Chiefs were an affiliate of the St. Louis Browns. Notably, The second 1932 Muskogee Chiefs traded George Hubbell to their old team, the Hutchinson Wheat Shockers, in exchange for four new baseballs. The Davenport Blue Sox replaced Muskogee in the Western Association in 1933. However, the Muskogee Oilers rejoined the Western League when the Wichita Oilers moved to Muskogee on June 6, 1933. Baseball Hall of Fame member Rube Marquard managed and pitched for the 1933 Oilers at age 46. The Muskogee Tigers were affiliates of the New York Giants in 1936. The Muskogee Reds lost in the 1947 Western Association League finals. The Reds were affiliates of the Cincinnati Reds (1937–1939), Chicago Cubs (1941), Detroit Tigers (1946) and St. Louis Browns (1947–1949). The Muskogee Giants were members of the Western Association (1951–1954) and the Sooner State League (1955-1957). They were affiliates of the New York Giants (1951–1957) and lost in the league finals in 1952 and 1955. Muskogee folded when the Sooner State League permanently folded after the 1957 season. The ballparks The earliest Muskogee teams played at Benson Park. Named after two of the three principal investors in Muskogee's streetcar system, Benson Park was located near the end of streetcar line that ran down South 21st Street. Early maps show the exact location as a block bounded by Garrett Street (now 22nd Street) on the east, Virginia Avenue (now Maryland Avenue) on the north, and Border Avenue on the south. In 1908, the Muskogee Redskins began to play most of their schedule at Pioneer Park. Sunday games were still held at Benson Park, which was outside city limits and thus not subject to municipal restrictions on Sunday play. Pioneer Park was located at the intersection of Fourth and Court Streets in downtown Muskogee. Although Pioneer Park's central location was considered a plus, the viability of this arrangement was regularly threatened by ongoing disputes between the team and the ballpark owners. Nonetheless, the Muskogee Navigators continued to play games at Pioneer Park through 1909. In 1910, the continuing difficulties with Pioneer Park's ownership prompted the construction of a new ballpark on the east side of Muskogee. This new facility, called Athletic Park (not to be confused with the latter ballpark of the same name in downtown Muskogee), was located immediately to the east of the car barn for the streetcar system, which maps show to be located where North Street crosses the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway line on the way east toward Green Hill Cemetery. The car barn was immediately adjacent to the Hyde Park streetcar line, providing access for fans attending games there. Athletic Park ultimately was limited to hosting Sunday games after a deal was struck to hold weekday games in 1910 at Pioneer Park. Because of its location outside city limits, Sunday games continued to be held at Athletic Park through at least 1911. Each of these early Muskogee baseball venues had significant drawbacks. Athletic Park “could not be excelled” as a facility, but many felt it was too far from the city center. Benson Park not only had a remote location, but also had taken the name Dean Park after the African-American neighborhood now surrounding it and was by that time used largely by “colored teams.” Pioneer Park had a central location, but after the lease expired the owners sold the land and it was developed for other purposes. Beginning in 1911, therefore, Muskogee teams started playing weekday games at Owen Field, which was located near 5th Street and Boston Street. Owen Field was named after landowner Robert Owen, whose home was on the property that adjoined the ball field. Although the open space at Owen Field had previously been used for other community events, it initially had significant drawbacks as a baseball field, including an alley running through the middle of the field. There was also significant opposition from neighboring residents. Gradually, however, the alley was closed and telephone poles | The ballparks The earliest Muskogee teams played at Benson Park. Named after two of the three principal investors in Muskogee's streetcar system, Benson Park was located near the end of streetcar line that ran down South 21st Street. Early maps show the exact location as a block bounded by Garrett Street (now 22nd Street) on the east, Virginia Avenue (now Maryland Avenue) on the north, and Border Avenue on the south. In 1908, the Muskogee Redskins began to play most of their schedule at Pioneer Park. Sunday games were still held at Benson Park, which was outside city limits and thus not subject to municipal restrictions on Sunday play. Pioneer Park was located at the intersection of Fourth and Court Streets in downtown Muskogee. Although Pioneer Park's central location was considered a plus, the viability of this arrangement was regularly threatened by ongoing disputes between the team and the ballpark owners. Nonetheless, the Muskogee Navigators continued to play games at Pioneer Park through 1909. In 1910, the continuing difficulties with Pioneer Park's ownership prompted the construction of a new ballpark on the east side of Muskogee. This new facility, called Athletic Park (not to be confused with the latter ballpark of the same name in downtown Muskogee), was located immediately to the east of the car barn for the streetcar system, which maps show to be located where North Street crosses the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway line on the way east toward Green Hill Cemetery. The car barn was immediately adjacent to the Hyde Park streetcar line, providing access for fans attending games there. Athletic Park ultimately was limited to hosting Sunday games after a deal was struck to hold weekday games in 1910 at Pioneer Park. Because of its location outside city limits, Sunday games continued to be held at Athletic Park through at least 1911. Each of these early Muskogee baseball venues had significant drawbacks. Athletic Park “could not be excelled” as a facility, but many felt it was too far from the city center. Benson Park not only had a remote location, but also had taken the name Dean Park after the African-American neighborhood now surrounding it and was by that time used largely by “colored teams.” Pioneer Park had |
heath would lay for a long time. After being overworked, Fenja and Menja use the mill to summon an army to free them and kill the king, ending Fróði's Peace. Vellekla In the drápa Vellekla, the skald Einarr Helgason skálaglamm praises the rule Haakon Jarl: Gesta Danorum In Gesta Danorum chapter 5, Saxo Grammaticus describes a Danish king named Frode. After establishing rule of Scandinavia, the British Isles, the Huns and the Slavs he enacts strict penalties for theft and orders for golden rings to be hung up on highways in Jutland, the centre of his realm, as a test of his subjects' honesty. Following this, peace is maintained for thirty years. In accordance with Snorri, | good seasons would be maintained as long as Freyr remained in Sweden, refusing to have his body burned and instead continuing to perform blóts to him so the good period would continue. Regarding this, Rudolf Simek states that "it has been realized for a long time that Fróði and Freyr are identical and even Freyr's affinity to Sweden mentioned by Snorri is beyond doubt, as the cult place names (as much as anything) prove." Prose Edda Snorri Sturluson's prose prologue to Grottasöngr describes that at the time of the birth of Jesus and the Pax Romana, the most powerful king at the time in Northern Europe was the Skjöldung Frodi and the peace was attributed to him. In contrast to this, Snorri then describes |
football. In addition to the domestic league, Paris FC are participating in this season's edition of the Coupe de France. The club was expelled from the domestic cup due to crowd trouble during their round of 64 game against Olympique Lyonnais. Players First-team squad Out on loan | fifth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Paris FC are participating in this season's edition of the Coupe de France. The club was expelled from the domestic cup due to crowd trouble during their round of 64 game against Olympique Lyonnais. |
() and the administrative center of Shchetinsky Selsoviet Rural Settlement, Kursky District, Kursk Oblast, Russia. Population: Geography The village is located on the Tuskar River (a right tributary of the Seym), 97 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, at the northern border of the district center – the town Kursk. Streets There are the following streets in the | the Seym), 97 km from the Russia–Ukraine border, at the northern border of the district center – the town Kursk. Streets There are the following streets in the locality: Energetikov, Lugovaya, Osennyaya, Rechnaya and Rozhdestvenskaya (245 houses). Climate Shchetinka has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification). Transport Shchetinka is located 7 km from the federal route Crimea Highway (a part of the European route ), on the road of regional importance |
since the 2021 German federal election, representing the Düsseldorf II district. Early life and education Nanni holds a master's degree in peace and conflict studies. Political career In parliament, Nanni has been serving on the Defence Committee. She is her parliamentary | (born 1987) is a German politician of the Alliance 90/The Greens who has been serving as a member of the Bundestag since the 2021 German federal election, representing the Düsseldorf II district. Early life and education Nanni holds a master's degree in peace and conflict studies. Political career In |
a village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics | the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to |
Panama national team in a 0-0 friendly tie with Peru on 16 January 2022. Honours Tauro F.C. Liga Panameña de Fútbol: 2016-17 Clausura, 2018-19 Clausura, 2019 Apertura, 2021 Clausura References External links 1998 births Living people Sportspeople | Fútbol: 2016-17 Clausura, 2018-19 Clausura, 2019 Apertura, 2021 Clausura References External links 1998 births Living people Sportspeople from Panama City Panamanian footballers Panama international footballers Panama youth international footballers Association football fullbacks Tauro F.C. players UD Melilla footballers Liga Panameña de |
lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is native to Argentina. References sitesi Reptiles described in 2013 Taxa named | native to Argentina. References sitesi Reptiles described in 2013 Taxa named by Luciano Javier Ávila Taxa named by Mariana Morando |
failure Members of the 2nd Senate of Spain Members of the 3rd Senate of Spain Members of the 4th Senate of Spain Members of the 5th Senate of Spain Members of the 6th Senate of Spain Commanders of the | in Extremadura People from Cáceres, Spain Spanish Socialist Workers' Party politicians Spanish academics Deaths from multiple organ failure Members of the 2nd Senate of Spain Members of the 3rd Senate of Spain Members |
in the halfpipe event as an injury replacement for Derek Livingston. Gill is a part of the Łı́ı́dlı̨ı̨ Kų́ę́ First Nation, and will be the only male First Nations athlete from Canada at the 2022 Winter Olympics. References External links 2003 births Living people Canadian male snowboarders Sportspeople from Calgary Snowboarders at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics Snowboarders at the | three events: slopestyle (11th), halfpipe (13th) and big air (8th). On January 31, 2022, Gill was named to Canada's 2022 Olympic team in the halfpipe event as an injury replacement for Derek Livingston. Gill is a part |
elections, and may run for re-election. There is, in addition, a 50% gender quota for party lists in elections. Its powers and responsibilities are established in the provincial constitution. Unlike most other provincial legislatures in Argentina, the Misiones Chamber of Representatives is not presided by the province's vice governor, but rather counts with its own presiding officer elected from among its members | elected in a single multi-member district through proportional representation every four years. Elections employ the D'Hondt system. Deputies are elected for four-year terms every two years through staggered elections, and may run for re-election. There is, in addition, a 50% gender quota for party lists in |
Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 18. References Populated | village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According |
Meso-Cenozoic sedimentary basin located along the Atlantic | with the Western High Atlas. References Geology |
its population was 340, all Bosniaks. References Populated places in Olovo | is a village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and |
due to the seasonal nature of the film's setting pertaining peach harvest cycles. The cast is formed by non-professional actors from the province of Lleida. Shot in Catalan, the entire cast used the local Western dialect of the Catalan language pertaining to the area. Filming wrapped after 8 weeks of shooting. María Zamora, Stefan Schmitz, Tono Folguera and Sergi Moreno were credited as producers. Release The film screened in the official competition of the 72nd Berlinale on 15 February 2022. The film will also screen at the 25th Málaga Festival in March 2022. Initially announced to run as part of the competitive list of the festival's official selection, the festival and the film producers agreed to screen the film out of competition instead. Co-distributed by Avalon DA and Elastica Films in Spain, the film will be theatrically released on 29 April 2022. Reception Reviewing for The Telegraph, Tim Robey rated the film with 5 out of 5 stars, considering that the film "manages a light, improvisatory mastery, an immaculate hold on tone, and a grave yet sunlit tableau of an ending, with each one of these faces turned in collective mourning, that I'll never forget". Fionnuala Halligan of ScreenDaily wrote that Alcarràs constitutes a "profoundly authentic and moving contemplation of the fragility of family, and, | Set and shot near Alcarràs, Catalonia, featuring non-professional actors speaking Catalan language, the plot concerns a family drama about the disappearance of traditional peach-harvesting activities. It won the Golden Bear at the 72nd Berlinale, becoming the first Catalan-language film to do so. Plot Set in Alcarràs, Catalonia, the plot consists of a family rural drama concerning the disappearance of agricultural activities, revolving around the intention to install solar panels in an agricultural plot hitherto occupied by a peach orchard, bringing the members of the Solé family to a stand off. Cast Production The screenplay was penned by the director Carla Simón alongside Arnau Vilaró. The film was produced by Avalon PC, Elastica Films and Vilaüt Films alongside Kino Produzioni and TV3, with the participation of TVE and Movistar+ and the support of ICAA, , Creative Europe's MEDIA, Eurimages, MIBACT and . Shooting began on 1 June 2021 in the area of Alcarràs, province of Lleida, with the shooting window constrained to Summer |
the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. | Berisalići is a village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia |
in each of these locations helped her to develop a "profound connection to all sides of my ancestors, and each has had an influence on my work." Haozous is from an artistic family and was influenced by her great uncle, Allan Houser, a renowned sculptor. Haozous graduated from New Mexico Highlands University in 2016 with a bachelor's degree in social work. She also studied studio arts at Central New Mexico Community College. Career Lynnette Haozous is an artivist, using art for positive social change to empower and strengthen communities. She works in many mediums including painting, jewelry, screen-printing, writing, and acting, but is most well known for her murals, which use a combination of spray paint and stencils. Haozous has said, "What I like about doing murals is that they speak directly to the community; they're readily available. You can speak directly to the people about these social issues that are impacting them in their own neighborhoods and communities." In 2020 Haozous's mixed media installation, Braiding Reconciliation, was featured in the Reconciliation | Central New Mexico Community College. Career Lynnette Haozous is an artivist, using art for positive social change to empower and strengthen communities. She works in many mediums including painting, jewelry, screen-printing, writing, and acting, but is most well known for her murals, which use a combination of spray paint and stencils. Haozous has said, "What I like about doing murals is that they speak directly to the community; they're readily available. You can speak directly to the people about these social issues that are impacting them in their own neighborhoods and communities." In 2020 Haozous's mixed media installation, Braiding Reconciliation, was featured in the Reconciliation exhibit at the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA). The exhibit was developed by Native American and Indo-Hispano artists and centered truth, racial healing, and transformation—grounded in the promise of reconciliation. The exhibit responded to a decades long journey to end La Entrada, a local annual pageant depicting the 1692 reconquest of New Mexico by |
Boganovići is a village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and | 2013 census, its population was 215. References Populated |
January 2022. Honours Club Tauro F.C. Liga Panameña de Fútbol: 2018-19 Clausura, 2019 Apertura, 2021 Clausura References External links 1997 births Living people Sportspeople from Panama City Panamanian footballers Panama international footballers Association football wingers Tauro F.C. players | F.C. Liga Panameña de Fútbol: 2018-19 Clausura, 2019 Apertura, 2021 Clausura References External links 1997 births Living people Sportspeople from Panama City Panamanian footballers Panama international footballers Association football wingers Tauro F.C. players Liga Panameña |
swimmer Cristian Quintero (footballer) (born 1997), Panamanian | Quintero may refer to: |
Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 | municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According |
Wyndham Standing, Noah Beery, Dorothy Mackaill and Reginald Denny. Selected filmography The Butterfly Girl (1921) Home-Keeping Hearts (1921) They Shall Pay (1921) The Family Closet (1921) Across the Divide (1921) Tropical Love (1921) Anne of Little Smoky (1921) A Pasteboard Crown (1922) Hills of Missing Men (1922) Sunshine Harbor (1922) The Man Who Waited (1922) Lonesome Corners (1922) Face to Face (1922) The Bootlegger's Daughter (1922) The Pauper Millionaire (1922) The Inner Man (1922) The Man She Brought Back (1922) Isle of Doubt (1922) Her Majesty (1922) Counterfeit Love (1923) A Clouded Name (1923) Tipped Off (1923) References | The 1921 film Tropical Love was one of the first to be shot in Puerto Rico. It also released several British films including The Pauper Millionaire. Norma Shearer starred in the 1923 film A Clouded Name while other actors appearing in the company's films include Dolores Cassinelli, Marjorie Daw, Fred Niblo, Lillian Lorraine, Wyndham Standing, Noah Beery, Dorothy Mackaill and Reginald Denny. Selected filmography The Butterfly Girl (1921) Home-Keeping Hearts (1921) They Shall Pay (1921) The Family Closet (1921) Across the Divide (1921) Tropical Love (1921) Anne of Little |
cost about CZK 300,000 in 2016 to construct and was a single seater. Specifications 55 km/h (~34 mph) top speed LiFePO4 batteries with a capacity of 200Ah @ 48V totaling around 9.6 kWh About 200 km (124 miles) per charge Power | from 2016. Origins The 4ekolka was designed by architect Petr Chládek and was intended to be a city car that was small, inexpensive, safe, usable year-round, and for a maximum of two people. The prototype cost about CZK 300,000 in 2016 to construct and was a single seater. Specifications 55 |
Joe Herzenberg, who was elected to the Chapel Hill Town Council. He then decided to start his own political career in the nearby town of Carrboro, and in 1989 he sought election to the town's board of aldermen, losing by 30 votes. In 1990 he participated in local campaign efforts for the Democratic Party and thereafter co-founded North Carolina Pride PAC for Lesbian and Gay Equality, a political action committee which lobbied for the repeal of North Carolina's anti-sodomy law. In 1993 he again sought election to the Carrboro Board of Aldermen and won with backing from the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. During his tenure convinced the board to pass two measures to recognize domestic partnerships, including the offering of health benefits to domestic partners of town employees. In 1995 he sought election as Mayor of Carrboro, downplaying his sexuality and focusing on environmental issues, development, and taxation. He defeated two other candidates in the November election, earning almost 50 percent of the votes. Nelson was seated as Mayor on December 5, 1995. His inauguration made him one of five openly gay mayors in the United States at the time and the first openly gay mayor in North Carolina. In 1997 he and the aldermen agreed to purchase the building of the former Carrboro Baptist Church, which was subsequently turned into town offices and an events center. The following year the town created a Fête de la Musique committee, with Nelson serving as a founding member. Nelson left office in 2005, departing as the longest-serving mayor in Carrboro's history. The following year he was elected to a seat on the Orange | in 1989 he sought election to the town's board of aldermen, losing by 30 votes. In 1990 he participated in local campaign efforts for the Democratic Party and thereafter co-founded North Carolina Pride PAC for Lesbian and Gay Equality, a political action committee which lobbied for the repeal of North Carolina's anti-sodomy law. In 1993 he again sought election to the Carrboro Board of Aldermen and won with backing from the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. During his tenure convinced the board to pass two measures to recognize domestic partnerships, including the offering of health benefits to domestic partners of town employees. In 1995 he sought election as Mayor of Carrboro, downplaying his sexuality and focusing on environmental issues, development, and taxation. He defeated two other candidates in the November election, earning almost 50 percent of the votes. Nelson was seated as Mayor on December 5, 1995. His inauguration made him one of five openly gay mayors in the United States at the time and the first openly gay mayor in North Carolina. In 1997 he and the aldermen agreed to purchase the building of the former Carrboro Baptist Church, which was subsequently turned into town offices and an events center. The following year the town created a Fête de la Musique committee, with Nelson serving as a founding member. Nelson left office |
200 metres freestyle, and consequently did not qualify for the finals. Swimming with Gail Jonson, Melanie Jones, and Kim Dewar in the women's 4×100 metres freestyle relay, she won a bronze medal. She also swam in the women's 4×100 metres medley relay, with Megan Tohill, Kim Dewar, and Ursula Cross, | relay, with Megan Tohill, Kim Dewar, and Ursula Cross, finishing fourth in the final. References Year of birth missing (living people) Living people People from Levin, New Zealand New Zealand female freestyle swimmers New Zealand female butterfly swimmers Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for New Zealand Swimmers at the 1982 Commonwealth Games Commonwealth Games |
its population was 113. References Populated places in Olovo | village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics |
In February 2013, Zhang founded a photo-sharing app called Tuba, which accumulated nearly 500,000 users in its first six months. ByteDance Tuba was acquired by ByteDance in 2014, where Zhang had begun working as a product manager. Zhang was then put in charge of ByteDance's user-generated content business. She has been credited for the success of Douyin, which launched in September 2016, and was named CEO of Douyin in March 2018. During Zhang's tenure as Douyin CEO, she worked to build Douyin's presence in Chinese cities by developing partnerships with international luxury fashion and sports brands. Zhang was also responsible for other ByteDance brands such as Huoshan Video, photo editor Qingyan and video editor Jianying. In March 2020, Zhang became CEO of ByteDance's China business. In January 2021, Zhang was responsible for the rollout of Douyin Pay, a built-in service to allow Douyin users to buy goods and services within the app. Awards and recognition 2020: #62, Forbes list of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women 2020: | with a degree in fine arts. After graduating, Zhang first position was working on product planning and design for three years in Beijing at Digital Red, a mobile game studio. In 2006, Zhang left Digital Red and began working at Qianchi Unlimited, a social media app developer. In February 2013, Zhang founded a photo-sharing app called Tuba, which accumulated nearly 500,000 users in its first six months. ByteDance Tuba was acquired by ByteDance in 2014, where Zhang had begun working as a product manager. Zhang was then put in charge of ByteDance's user-generated content business. She has been credited for the success of Douyin, which launched in September 2016, and was named CEO of Douyin in March 2018. During Zhang's tenure as Douyin CEO, she worked to build Douyin's presence in Chinese cities by developing partnerships with international luxury fashion and sports brands. Zhang was also responsible for other ByteDance brands such as Huoshan Video, photo editor Qingyan and video |
part of their traditional lands. Recognition of this claim was complicated by a frontier conflict in 1884. As reprisal for reportedly spearing and killing four European settlers, the Woolwonga were believed to have been exterminated in a series of massacres, often associated with the town of Burrundie, which was the regional centre for the goldfields at the time. Documents uncovered in the 2010s however indicate that the daughter of a Woolwonga woman and a white settler had survived and was registered in the 1899 census, leading her descendants to assert native title over Burrundie. Mining town Following the discovery of gold at nearby Yam Creek in 1872, a town site was surveyed by South Australian government in 1884 along a corridor reserved for the Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway. It became the second town in the Northern Territory when gazetted on 30 October, with the first of 316 allotments made available by public auction in December of that year. By 1887, a police station and mining warden's office had been relocated to Burrundie from an isolated location in the goldfields, while residents petitioned for the nearest telegraph station to also be relocated to improve the efficiency of services in the town. At its peak during the 1890s the town boasted a railway station, court | and Pine Creek Railway. It became the second town in the Northern Territory when gazetted on 30 October, with the first of 316 allotments made available by public auction in December of that year. By 1887, a police station and mining warden's office had been relocated to Burrundie from an isolated location in the goldfields, while residents petitioned for the nearest telegraph station to also be relocated to improve the efficiency of services in the town. At its peak during the 1890s the town boasted a railway station, court house and a hospital. It was a key location during construction of the railway to Pine Creek with an underground explosives magazine built in 1885. An above ground magazine added in 1896 remained in use until World War II, well after the town's decline. The magazines were added to the Northern Territory Heritage Register in 1995. Burrundie's significance waned in the early 20th the century, evidenced by the closure of the police station in 1906 (was briefly reopened before again closing in 1908), abolition of the local court in 1908 and the relocation of the prefabricated Mining Warden's Office building to Pine Creek in 1913. Burials at Burrundie cemetery lasted from 1893 until 1901. 21st century In September 2014, Woolwonga descendents met at the former Burrundie railway siding for a ceremony to affirm their cultural identity and commemorate the 130th anniversary of a raid by white settlers and police that killed 30 aboriginal men and an unknown number of women and children. During the ceremony, a plaque was unveiled by Senator Nigel Scullion, Minister for Indigenous Affairs commemorating the massacre and |
champion and competed on the professional tour in the 1970s. He was described by The Hindu as a tall, wiry player with a powerful serve and unorthodox, wristy play. In 1973 he won the singles title at the Scottish Championships. Twice qualifying for the | Royappa was a national junior hardcourt champion and competed on the professional tour in the 1970s. He was described by The Hindu as a tall, wiry player with a powerful serve and unorthodox, wristy play. In 1973 he won the singles title at the Scottish Championships. Twice qualifying for the Wimbledon main draw, he won his first round |
Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 30, | of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to |
as Valentina Anthony Skordi as Pinky Leticia LaBelle as Mom Benjamin Hjelm as Cemetery John Production Principal photography on the film began on August 25, 2021. References External links American films American anthology films 2020s English-language films | daughter at a summer camp for the first time, she encourages her reticent child to engage in new experiences. Jane finds herself heeding her own advice. Cast Gillian Jacobs as Jane Emanuela Postacchini as Valentina Anthony Skordi as Pinky Leticia LaBelle as Mom Benjamin Hjelm as Cemetery John Production Principal photography on the film |
a village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According | According to the 2013 census, its population was 463. References |
Odessa Oilers and Wink Spudders in the West Texas-New Mexico League. The Roswell Sunshiners finished 55–62, 2nd in the 1937 West Texas-New Mexico League, as the Odessa and Midland franchises withdrew during the season. In the playoffs, Roswell defeated the Monahans Trojans 3 games to 2. In the Finals, the Wink Spudders swept Roswell in three games. Roswell did not return to the league in 1938. The 1949 Roswell Rockets joined the eight–team Longhorn League, playing with fellow members Ballinger Cats, Big Spring Broncs, Midland Indians, Odessa Oilers, San Angelo Colts, Sweetwater Swatters, and Vernon Dusters. The Roswell Rockets finished last in their first Longhorn League season, placing 8th with a 57–82 record. The Rockets drew 43,584 fans for the season. In 1950, the Roswell Rockets finished 89–62, 2nd in the Longhorn League regular season standings. In the playoffs, the Big Spring Broncs swept Roswell in four games. The Rockets had home a season attendance total of 82,671, an average of 1,095. Roswell advanced to the Longhorn League finals in 1951, as the Longhorn League became a Class C level league. The Rockets finished with a 79–61 record to place 3rd in the 1951 regular season. In the playoffs, Roswell defeated the Big Spring Broncs 4 games to 2. In the finals the Odessa Oilers defeated Roswell 4 games to 2. They drew 65,361. In 1952, Roswell finished 65–75 (6th), followed by 60–70 (5th) in 1953. They missed the playoffs in both seasons. The 1954 Roswell Rockets finished 87–51, placing 2nd in the regular season. In the playoffs, the Carlsbad Potashers defeated Roswell 4 games to 2. They drew 53,280 for the season. Joe Bauman hit 72 home runs for Roswell in 1954, setting a single season minor-league home run record. Bauman also hit .400 with 150 walks, 188 runs and 224 RBI in 1954. Bauman had been acquired from the Artesia Drillers after the 1953 season. Bauman owned and operated a filling station in Roswell in 1954 and resided there the rest of his life. Besides hitting 72 home runs in 1954, Bauman hit four in one game at home on August 31, 1954, in a 15–4 win over the Sweetwater Spudders. The four home runs gave him 68 on the season and came one night after Bauman hit a home run on "Joe Bauman Night" on August 30. Bauman | league in 1938. The 1949 Roswell Rockets joined the eight–team Longhorn League, playing with fellow members Ballinger Cats, Big Spring Broncs, Midland Indians, Odessa Oilers, San Angelo Colts, Sweetwater Swatters, and Vernon Dusters. The Roswell Rockets finished last in their first Longhorn League season, placing 8th with a 57–82 record. The Rockets drew 43,584 fans for the season. In 1950, the Roswell Rockets finished 89–62, 2nd in the Longhorn League regular season standings. In the playoffs, the Big Spring Broncs swept Roswell in four games. The Rockets had home a season attendance total of 82,671, an average of 1,095. Roswell advanced to the Longhorn League finals in 1951, as the Longhorn League became a Class C level league. The Rockets finished with a 79–61 record to place 3rd in the 1951 regular season. In the playoffs, Roswell defeated the Big Spring Broncs 4 games to 2. In the finals the Odessa Oilers defeated Roswell 4 games to 2. They drew 65,361. In 1952, Roswell finished 65–75 (6th), followed by 60–70 (5th) in 1953. They missed the playoffs in both seasons. The 1954 Roswell Rockets finished 87–51, placing 2nd in the regular season. In the playoffs, the Carlsbad Potashers defeated Roswell 4 games to 2. They drew 53,280 for the season. Joe Bauman hit 72 home runs for Roswell in 1954, setting a single season minor-league home run record. Bauman also hit .400 with 150 walks, 188 runs and 224 RBI in 1954. Bauman had been acquired from the Artesia Drillers after the 1953 season. Bauman owned and operated a filling station in Roswell in 1954 and resided there the rest of his life. Besides hitting 72 home runs in 1954, Bauman hit four in one game at home on August 31, 1954, in a 15–4 win over the Sweetwater Spudders. The four home runs gave him 68 on the season and came one night after Bauman hit a home run on "Joe Bauman Night" on August 30. Bauman hit 13 home runs in the last 14 games of the 1954 season to reach 72. As was common in the Longhorn League, fans would push money through the backstop fence to |
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 | Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 156. References Populated |
worship band Hillsong United. It was released as a single on 21 January 2022. The song was written by Benjamin Hastings, and Joel Houston. Michael Guy Chislett and Joel Houston handled the production of the single. "On Repeat" peaked at No. 34 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart. Background Hillsong United released "On Repeat" as a single on 21 January 2022, following the release of the singles "Know You Will" and | 21 January 2022, following the release of the singles "Know You Will" and "Sure Thing" in 2021. Joel Houston of Hillsong United shared the story behind the song, saying: Composition "On Repeat" is composed in the key of C with a tempo of 68 beats per minute and a |
The NSL had hoped to create a two-tiered league with a promotion and relegation format, but the proposal was rejected by the ECPSL ownership. League membership decreased from twelve to eight members with several notable clubs departing. A keynoted departure was charter member Toronto Ulster United, which decided to join the amateur ranks in the Toronto and District Soccer League due to financial difficulties. Oshawa Italia and Oshawa Hungaria also returned to the amateur level and Queen City disbanded their team. Toronto Hakoah, a Jewish-sponsored team was the sole addition to the circuit. Though the season began with eight members Toronto Macedonians withdrew from the competition, due to financial difficulties and the inability to afford quality players to remain | with several notable clubs departing. A keynoted departure was charter member Toronto Ulster United, which decided to join the amateur ranks in the Toronto and District Soccer League due to financial difficulties. Oshawa Italia and Oshawa Hungaria also returned to the amateur level and Queen City disbanded their team. Toronto Hakoah, a Jewish-sponsored team was the sole addition to the circuit. Though the season began with eight members Toronto Macedonians withdrew from the competition, due to financial difficulties and the inability to afford quality players to remain competitive. Several of the top players in the NSL were reported to have been earning $100 a week while in the ECPSL top players were earning about $200 per week. Changes occurred at the administrative side midway through the season as Walter Freer resigned as league president and was succeeded by vice-president Bill Boytchuk. A league scoring record was also recorded by Toronto Ukrainia after defeating Toronto Macedonians by a score of 16-1. |
municipalities of Sokolac (Republika Srpska) and Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the | Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was just 1, a Bosniak |
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 24, | population was 24, with 23 living in the Olovo part and just 1 in the Sokolac part. References |
2013, he defended a doctoral thesis in linguistics at Ghent University titled "Le lingala dans l'enseignement des sciences dans les écoles de Kinshasa". Mongaba's works primarily centered around teaching in African languages as well as lexicography and terminology in Lingala, the language in which he worked and published. He was able to promote literature in Lingala with Mabiki, a publishing house of which he was the founder. He was a member of the association "the Kind of Friends" in Kinshasa. He died in Belgium on 31 January 2022, | Mongaba (28 January 1967 – 31 January 2022) was a Congolese writer. Heavily active in languages of the Congo, he published numerous works in Lingala. Biography Mongaba was born in Léopoldville on 28 January 1967. He earned a degree in chemistry from the University of Kinshasa in 1994 and subsequently a degree in the same subject from the Université libre de Bruxelles in 1998. He worked as a biotechnology researcher until 2003, when he earned an agrégation in natural sciences from the Université catholique de Louvain. He was |
Grand Prix Almada in the -63 kg category. References | the 2022 Judo Grand Prix Almada in the -63 |
Reptiles of Argentina Endemic fauna of Argentina Taxa named by Cristian Simón Abdala Taxa named by Andrés Sebastián Quinteros | is a species of lizard in the family Liolaemidae. It is native to Argentina. References smaug Reptiles described |
municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics | census, its population was 233, all Bosniaks. References Populated places in |
would pass in front of the Sun. The observatory spot was chosen on a hill on the Estate Mafolie due to its elevation, rising above the city of Charlotte Amalie and allowing an uninterrupted view of the sky. Astronomers that took part in the expedition included Antonio Luis von Hoonholtz, Francisco Calhejros da Graca, and Arthur Indio do Brasil. The results of this expedition were published by the Imperial Observatory of Rio do Janeiro in 1887. During World War I, the hill was used as a gun mount, although no trace of this remains today. Later, an obelisk was constructed to commemorate the site's scientific significance. It is | do Janeiro in 1887. During World War I, the hill was used as a gun mount, although no trace of this remains today. Later, an obelisk was constructed to commemorate the site's scientific significance. It is tall and built of masonry. The marble tablet that was used as an instrument station during the transit is now used as a plaque, written in Portuguese. For its notability and contribution to the field of astronomy, the site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. See also National Register of Historic Places listings in the United States Virgin Islands References National Register |
of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 census, its | village in the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. |
to the 2013 census, its population was 129, with 108 people living in the Olovo | in the Olovo part and 21 living in the Sokolac part. References Populated places in Olovo |
commercial photography from the Arts University Bournemouth, and won the British Journal of Photography Breakthrough Award for a single image by an undergraduate in 2015. Career Jalloh's work has been included in exhibitions including "After Hours: Soul of A Nation" (2015) at Tate Modern, London (featuring her commission Familiar Faces); "Celebration of African Female Photographers" (2018) at Nubuke Foundation, Accra, Ghana; | (which exhibited her project "Love Story"); and "Bamako Encounters - African Biennale of Photography" (2019), Mali. From October 2020 to September 2021 the Horniman Museum in London hosted the exhibition "An Ode To Afrosurrealism" comprising photographs by Jalloh and Hamed Maiye. Jalloh has undertaken commissions from publications and organizations including Alexander McQueen. In the area of music she has portrayed artists including Zara McFarlane, Yussef Kamaal, Shabaka Hutchings, Little Simz, Freddie Gibbs, and Mr |
the family Iguanidae or the family Liolaemidae. The species is endemic to Argentina. References | lizard in the family Iguanidae or the family Liolaemidae. The species is endemic to Argentina. References somuncurae Lizards |
married - Steker) (November 15, 1866, Moscow - May 1, 1936, Moscow) - Russian actress. Sister of K. S. Stanislavsky. Early life She was a student and partner of K. S. Stanislavsky in the Alekseevsky circle and the Society of Art and Literature. Career From 1899 to 1903 she | The Death of Ivan the Terrible by A. K. Tolstoy, • Hannu in "Gannel" by Hauptmann, • Elena the Beautiful and Spring (once) in Alexander Ostrovsky's The Snow Maiden and other roles. In the post-revolutionary years she worked in amateur circles in |
Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics According to the 2013 | the municipality of Olovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Demographics |
the story of suspect Harry Peak, who was arrested but ultimately not tried in a criminal trial for arson, due to the weakness of evidence against him. Peak and the City of Los Angeles settled dueling civil suits shortly before Peak’s death from complications of HIV/AIDS in 1993. Reception The Library Book received strongly favorable reviews and was selected as a "PW Pick" by Publishers Weekly. Reviewing the book for The New York Times, Michael Lewis wrote, "Susan Orlean has once again found rich material where no one else has bothered to look for it…Once again, she's demonstrated that the feelings of a writer, if that writer is sufficiently | by Simon & Schuster on October 16, 2018. The first edition was 336 pages. Subject matter The Library Book alternates between a true-crime work on the suspicion of arson in the 1986 fire at the Los Angeles Central Library; and a broader history of that library and Orlean's personal devotion to libraries in general, especially as the site of fond memories she shared with her mother. Regarding the suspected arson, Orlean traces the story of suspect Harry Peak, who was arrested but ultimately not tried in a criminal trial for arson, due to the weakness of evidence against him. Peak and the City of Los Angeles settled dueling civil suits shortly before Peak’s death from complications of HIV/AIDS in 1993. Reception The Library Book received strongly favorable reviews and was selected as a "PW Pick" by Publishers Weekly. Reviewing the book for The New York Times, Michael Lewis wrote, "Susan Orlean has once again found rich material where no one else has bothered to look for it…Once again, she's demonstrated that the feelings of |
a Dutch judoka. She is the bronze medallist of the 2022 Judo Grand Prix | the 2022 Judo Grand Prix Almada in the +78 kg category. References External |
– 31 January 2022) was a Czech literary historian and writer. Life and career Born in Prague, during World War II Pytlík was part of the Czech Resistance and took part in the Prague uprising. In 1952 he graduated in philosophy at the Charles University, and from 1955 he worked at the Institute of | whom he devoted his best known work Toulavé house, Život Jaroslava Haška, autora Osudů dobrého vojáka Švejka ("Wandering House, The Life of Jaroslav Hašek, author of The Fate of the Good Soldier Švejk"), which was translated in a number of foreign languages. His works also include monographies of Franz Kafka, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Bohumil Hrabal. Rudolf died in Prague on 31 January 2022, at the age of 93. He was the father of the singer and actor |
of the Catholic order of the Sisters of the Precious Blood of Hong Kong, and is a professor at Wenzao Ursuline University of Languages. She has previously held posts as a lecturer in Social Sciences at Lingnan University, and at the University of Macau. She studied for her PhD at the London School of Economics. She is widely regarded as an expert on the Catholic Church in China. On the subject of the 2018 proposals that the Vatican and the Catholic Church in China could come to an arrangement over the ordination and approval of bishops, Leung said that she felt that the "Vatican lacked expertise when it came to dealing with China’s government and risked getting “trapped.” She had previously coined the phrase "conflicting authority" to reflect the relationship between the organisations. She has also been outspoken about the role of the Catholic church in Hong Kong as an enabler of colonialism. Reception Historian Ka-Che Yip described Sino-Vatican Relations as "an excellent study [on a] relatively unexplored topic" and "an important contribution to our understanding | and is a professor at Wenzao Ursuline University of Languages. She has previously held posts as a lecturer in Social Sciences at Lingnan University, and at the University of Macau. She studied for her PhD at the London School of Economics. She is widely regarded as an expert on the Catholic Church in China. On the subject of the 2018 proposals that the Vatican and the Catholic Church in China could come to an arrangement over the ordination and approval of bishops, Leung said that she felt that the "Vatican lacked expertise when it came to dealing with China’s government and risked getting “trapped.” She had previously coined the phrase "conflicting authority" to reflect the relationship between the organisations. She has also been outspoken about the role of the Catholic church in Hong Kong as an enabler of colonialism. Reception Historian Ka-Che Yip described Sino-Vatican Relations as "an excellent study [on a] relatively unexplored topic" and "an important contribution to our understanding of ... issues of church and state in China". Sociologist William T Liu described her analysis of the role of the church in Hong Kong on the return of the region to China, as "refreshing" with a particular emphasis on how |
the Lydney School of Art. Outside of school he had a keen interest in art and started sketching landscapes of the Forest of Dean. In 1945 he received a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art but was called up for national service in the Fleet Air Arm. After his national service in 1948, he decided not to take up his scholarship and instead enrolled in the Gloucester College of Art studying painting, pottery and graphics and graduating with a National Diploma of Design. He moved to Belfast in 1953, where he took up the post of Head of Painting at the Ulster College of Art. He later moved to Ballywalter, where he established the Irish School of Landscape Painting in 1957. He became known for tutoring notable Irish landscape painters including Cecil Maguire and Basil Blackshaw. In 1962, Webb started painting on the beach, resulting in the Tidewrack series. Ballywalter would remain their home until the political instability of the 1970s, made them decide to return to Gloucestershire. He purchased a derelict cottage in Clifden and converted it into a studio. Over the years he made numerous paintings Connemara landscape, and his wild garden there. Many | career which spans seven decades. He was Head of Painting at the Ulster College of Art (now Belfast School of Art) from 1953 to 1960. Biography Born in London in 1927, he moved to Gloucestershire aged 14 after his home was destroyed by a parachute mine. There he attended Lydney Grammar School, the first co-educational school in the country, and the Lydney School of Art. Outside of school he had a keen interest in art and started sketching landscapes of the Forest of Dean. In 1945 he received a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art but was called up for national service in the Fleet Air Arm. After his national service in 1948, he decided not to take up his scholarship and instead enrolled in the Gloucester College of Art studying painting, pottery and graphics and graduating with a National Diploma of Design. He moved to Belfast in 1953, where he took up the post of Head of |
the press office of CGIL. In 1997, he was elected President of AgenQuadri, a union affiliated with CGIL. In 2001, he became vice-president of Eurocadres and subsequently served as its president from 2005 to 2013. Parietti died in Rome on 22 January 2022. References 1950 births | he was elected secretary-general of the Sindacato Nazionale Ricerca, where he took part in the development and implementation of an agreement for public research. From 1989 to 1994, Parietti directed the press office of CGIL. In 1997, he was elected President of AgenQuadri, a union affiliated with CGIL. In 2001, he became vice-president of Eurocadres and subsequently served as its president from 2005 to 2013. Parietti died in Rome on 22 |
professional footballer who plays for Paris FC. Club career Loup Diwan Gueho made his Ligue 2 debut for | to AJ Auxerre. References External links 2004 births Living people French footballers Association football defenders People from Bourg-la-Reine Paris FC players Ligue |
commits suicide, burglar Bert Manners is panicked and shoots his own reflection in the mirror. Arrested for murder, a schoolgirl friend of the dead man turns detective to prove him innocent of the killing. Cast Marguerite Marsh as Helen Marsley Edna Holman as Grace Weston F.W. Stewart as John W. Weston Coit Albertson as Jack Weston Joe Smith Marba as Martin Hartley Frances | Grossman and starring Marguerite Marsh, Edna Holman and Coit Albertson. It was distributed by the independent company Playgoers Pictures. Synopsis At the same time as John Weston commits suicide, burglar Bert Manners is panicked and shoots his own reflection in the mirror. Arrested for murder, a schoolgirl friend of the dead man turns detective to prove him innocent of the killing. Cast Marguerite Marsh as Helen Marsley Edna Holman as Grace Weston F.W. Stewart as John W. Weston Coit Albertson as Jack Weston Joe Smith Marba as Martin Hartley |
infection rates ranging from 6.4% to 20.1% between 1969 and 2014 along the Irish coast. Biology During its planktonic larval stage, the young B. squillarum attaches to a young P. serratus and settles down in its branchial chamber. As the parasite and the prawn grow up, the parasite creates a bulge in the prawns carapace. The female B. squillarum is much bigger than the male and is the parasite that attaches to the | can be found in marine habitats all along the northeast Atlantic coast as well as the north sea. The number of B. squillarum infections seem to vary over the years, as studies have shown infection rates ranging from 6.4% to 20.1% between 1969 and 2014 along the Irish coast. Biology During its planktonic larval stage, the young B. squillarum attaches to a young P. serratus and settles down in its branchial chamber. As the parasite and the prawn grow up, the parasite creates a bulge in the prawns carapace. The female B. squillarum is much bigger than the male and is the parasite that attaches |
National Register of Historic Places listings in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma on December 10, 2014. History The mansion is located southwest of the commercial core of Okmulgee, which is itself NRHP-listed as the Okmulgee Downtown Historic District. It was constructed for Asa D. Kennedy and Nellie Kennedy; Asa D. Kennedy was a bank founder and real estate investor. The | full-width porch; about one-third of Colonial Revival houses built prior to 1915 were of this sub-type. A two-story clapboard Carriage House, also built around 1904 and located southwest of the main house, is a contributing structure on the property. Also contributing is a one-story shed, built around 1915, which has a set of hinged doors on the side gable elevation and a double hung window in each gable end. The house continues to stand as a private dwelling, and a non-contributing structure, being a garage built circa 2000, is also on the property. References Buildings and structures completed in 1904 1904 establishments in Oklahoma |
membrane, but deep within the plant cell. Haswell has also studied the signal mechanisms plants use to respond to threats. In 2016, she worked at the University of Cambridge as a Visiting Professor in the Sainsbury Laboratory. Haswell is on the editorial board of Science Advances. Alongside her academic research, Haswell has written about research culture, equity and how concepts from sustainable agriculture can be applied to biology faculty members. In 2017, she started The Taproot podcast, an American Society of Plant Biologists program that discusses the stories behind science. The podcast addresses issues | as a Visiting Professor in the Sainsbury Laboratory. Haswell is on the editorial board of Science Advances. Alongside her academic research, Haswell has written about research culture, equity and how concepts from sustainable agriculture can be applied to biology faculty members. In 2017, she started The Taproot podcast, an American Society of Plant Biologists program that discusses the stories behind science. The podcast addresses issues such as work-life balance, gender discrimination and racism. She helped to create the DiversifyPlantSci database, which seeks to create a global plant science community that reflects the diversity of its members. Awards and honors 1999 University of California, San Francisco Chancellor's Award for the Advancement of Women 2000 United States Department of Energy Fellow of the Life Sciences Research Foundation 2016 Elected Howard Hughes Medical Institute Faculty Scholar 2021 Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Selected publications References Living people University of Washington alumni University of California, |
the creators of the ANNOVAR bioinformatics software tool. She is a professor of biostatistics in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Education and career Li studied mathematics at Nankai University, earning a bachelor's degree in 1996 and master's degree in 1999. She earned a second master's degree in 2002 and completed a Ph.D. in biostatistics in 2005 at the University of Michigan, with the dissertation Statistical methods in gene mapping of complex diseases jointly advised by Michael Boehnke and Gonçalo | After postdoctoral research at the University of Michigan, she joined the University of Pennsylvania faculty as an assistant professor of biostatistics in 2006, was tenured as an associate professor in 2012, and was promoted to full professor in 2017. In 2014 she added a secondary appointment in the university's Department of Computer and Information Science. Recognition Li became an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute in 2014 |
a new city, the notable achievements in the prior city remain with that city. Achievements counted are only from the dominant league or leagues in each of the four major North American team sports — football, baseball, basketball, and ice hockey. Football championships include All-America Football Conference (1946-1949), American Football League (1960-1965) and National Football League (1920-1965), and Super Bowl champions. Baseball championships include World Series champions since 1903. Basketball championships include those from the National Basketball Association; its forerunner, the Basketball Association of America; and the American Basketball Association (the one beginning play in 1967). Ice hockey championships include Stanley Cup champions in the NHL era (starting in the 1917–18 season. Football championship appearances include those that played in a game deciding the champion of the All-America Football Conference (, American Football League and National Football League, and Super Bowl. Baseball championship appearances include NL and AL Pennant winners since 1903. Basketball championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the champion of the National Basketball Association, the Basketball Association of America, and the American Basketball Association. Ice hockey championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the winner of the Stanley Cup. Football championship appearances include those that played in a game deciding | those from the National Basketball Association; its forerunner, the Basketball Association of America; and the American Basketball Association (the one beginning play in 1967). Ice hockey championships include Stanley Cup champions in the NHL era (starting in the 1917–18 season. Football championship appearances include those that played in a game deciding the champion of the All-America Football Conference (, American Football League and National Football League, and Super Bowl. Baseball championship appearances include NL and AL Pennant winners since 1903. Basketball championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the champion of the National Basketball Association, the Basketball Association of America, and the American Basketball Association. Ice hockey championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the winner of the Stanley Cup. Football championship appearances include those that played in a game deciding the champion of the All-America Football Conference, American Football League and National Football League, and Super Bowl. Baseball championship appearances include NL and AL Pennant winners since 1903. Basketball championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the champion of the National Basketball Association, the Basketball Association of America, and the American Basketball Association. Ice hockey championship appearances include those that played in a series deciding the winner of the Stanley Cup. Football MVPs include the |
1943 gifted tanks to Turkey to try to get them to join their side. Panzer IV Valentine tank M4 Sherman Light tanks M3 Stuart Armoured cars BA-6 Armoured personnel carriers (apcs) Universal Carrier References World | their side. Panzer IV Valentine tank M4 Sherman Light tanks M3 Stuart Armoured cars BA-6 Armoured personnel carriers (apcs) Universal Carrier References World War II military |
lived at 4 Hereford Gardens, Park Lane West and at Homewood, Whitehaven in Cumberland. In 1911, Lumb and Lord Camoys traveled to New York aboard the Mauretania to be ushers at the wedding of Lumb's brother-in-law, John Beresford, 5th Baron Decies, to the American heiress Helen Vivien Gould. At time, Lumb and Lord Camoys were reported to have "had nothing but flattering things to say of America and American women. Both said they were enthusiastically in favor of woman's suffrage." His wife died on 11 March 1948. References External links Medal card of Lumb, Edward James Machell Corps: County of London Yeomanry at The National Archives Col. Edw. Lumb, Lord Camoys at the Library of Congress 1863 births Year of death missing British Life Guards officers British | rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the 2nd Life Guards under Sir Cecil Edward Bingham. Personal life On 16 September 1902, Lumb was married to the Hon. Catherine Elizabeth Ellen Horsley-Beresford (1870–1948) at the Church of St Michael le Belfrey, York. She was a younger daughter of William Horsley-Beresford, 3rd Baron Decies. They lived at 4 Hereford Gardens, Park Lane West and at Homewood, Whitehaven in Cumberland. In 1911, Lumb and Lord Camoys traveled to New York aboard the Mauretania to be ushers at the wedding of Lumb's brother-in-law, John Beresford, 5th Baron Decies, to the American heiress Helen Vivien Gould. At time, Lumb and Lord Camoys were reported to have "had nothing but flattering things to say of America and American women. Both said they were enthusiastically in favor of woman's suffrage." His wife died on 11 March 1948. References External links Medal card of Lumb, Edward James Machell Corps: County of London Yeomanry at The National Archives Col. Edw. Lumb, Lord Camoys at the Library of Congress 1863 |
are larger than the chromid. Chromids vary considerably in size between organisms. In the bacterial genus Vibrio, the main chromosome varies between 3.0–3.3 Mb whereas the chromid varies between 0.8–2.4 Mb in size. A replicon in a strain of Buchnera, which encodes some core genes, is only 7.8kb. While the presence of core genes may lead to the classification of this replicon as a chromid, this replicon may also be excluded on certain definitions. Some approaches only categorize certain replicons as chromids if they meet a threshold size of 350kb. It has also been observed that chromids tend to have a low copy number in the cell, as with chromosomes and megaplasmids. On average, chromids are twice as large as megaplasmids (and so the emergence of a chromid from a megaplasmid is associated with a sizable gene accumulation in the aftermath of the conversion). One of the largest chromids is the one in Burkholderia pseudomallei, which exceeds 3.1 million nucleotides in size, i.e. 3.1 megabases or 3.1 Mb. Genomic features Chromids more frequently have a lower G + C content compared with the main chromosome, although the strength of this association is not very strong. A chromid will also typically have a G + C content within 1% of that of the main chromosome, reflecting its nearing the base composition equilibrium of the main chromosome after having stably existed within a bacterial lineage for a necessary period of time. Chromids also resemble the main chromosome in their codon usage bias. One analysis found that chromids had a median 0.34% difference in GC content with the main chromosome, compared with values of 1.9% for megaplasmids and 2.8% for plasmids. Chromids have at least one core gene absent from the main chromosome. (Main chromosomes contain the bulk of the core genes of a bacterium, whereas plasmids contain no core genes.) For example, the chromid in Vibrio cholerae contains genes for the ribosomal subunits L20 and L35. While most chromids have a disproportionately smaller number of essential genes compared to the main chromosome, such as rRNA genes or the genes in the rRNA operon, some may have many more essential genes and may even be considered "equal partners" with the chromosome. In general, chromids also see an enrichment of genes involved in the processes of transport, metabolism, transcription, regulatory functions, signal transduction, and motility-related functions. Proteins located on chromids are involved in processes which can interact with proteins encoded on the main chromosome. Chromids also have more transposase genes than chromosomes, but less than megaplasmids. Phylogenetic distribution The presence of core genes makes the chromid essential to the survival of the bacterium. The same core genes will be found on the chromids within a genus but not necessarily between genera. All chromids of a genus may additionally share a large number of conserved but non-essential genes which help define the phenotype of the genus (and the emergence of chromids appears to be the primary evolutionary force in the formation of chromid-encoding bacterial genera, as has been suggested in the case of Vibrio). In contrast, bacterial chromosomes may universally or near-universally share hundreds of conserved core genes. Plasmids contain no core genes, and unlike chromids, plasmids of different species within a bacterial genus (or even just different isolates within the same species) share few genes. This is partly due to the common transfer of gain and loss of plasmids and their transfer between bacteria through conjugation (a form of horizontal gene transfer), while chromids are passed on through cell divisions (vertically) with no evidence of chromids moving through horizontal gene transfer. It has been observed that the chromid in at least one bacterial species could be eliminated without making the bacterium inviable, however, the bacterium did become auxotrophic indicating a severe fitness compromise associated with the loss of the chromid. Due to their stable presence within a bacterial genus, chromids also have a feature of being phylogenetically restricted to specific genera. Examples of genera of bacteria with chromids include Deinococcus, Leptospira, Cyanothece (a type of cyanobacteria), and an enrichment of genera of the Proteobacteria. Overall, bacterial genome sequencing indicates that roughly 10% of bacterial species have a chromid. It has also been found that there is a bias towards co-occurrence of a chromid and a megaplasmid in the same organism. Chromids also appear more frequently in phylogenies than do megaplasmids (in approximately twice as many species), despite megaplasmids being the putative evolutionary source for chromids. This may result in the tendency of organisms to lose their megaplasmids over time, compared with the inherently greater evolutionary stability of chromids. Replication Chromids share features of the replication of both chromosomes | now about 10% of bacterial species are known to have large replicons that are separate from the main chromosome. Definition With the onset of these discoveries, several approaches in classifying different components of multipartite genomes were proposed. Various terms have been used to describe large replicons other than the main chromosome, including simply designating them as additional chromosomes, or "minichromosomes", "megaplasmids", or "secondary chromosomes". Criteria used to distinguish between these replicons typically revolve around features such as size and the presence of core genes. In 2010, the classification of these genomic elements as chromids was proposed. Previous terms, such as "secondary chromosome", are considered inadequate upon the observation that these replicons contain the replication systems of plasmids and so are a fundamentally different class of replicons than chromosomes. The original definition of a 'chromid' involves meeting three criteria: While this definition is robust, the authors who proposed it did so with the expectation that some exceptions would be found that would blur the lines between chromids and other replicons. This expectation existed because of the general tendency for evolutionary lineages to produce ambiguous systems, which has resulted in the more well-known issues in formulating a widely-encompassing species definition. Since the classification of chromids, other replicons have been discovered which share some features of chromids but have been categorized separately. One example is the designated "rrn-plasmid" found in a clade within the bacterial genus Aureimonas. The rrn-plasmid contains the rrn (rRNA) operon (hence its name), and the rrn operon cannot be found on the main chromosome. The main chromosome is therefore termed as an "rrn-lacking chromsome" or RLC, and so the clade of bacteria within Aureimonas which posses the rrn-plasmid is also termed the "RLC clade". Members of the RLC clade have nine replicons, of which the main chromosome is the largest and the rrn-plasmid is the smallest at only 9.4kb. The rrn-plasmid also has a high copy number in RLC bacteria. While this very small size and copy number resembles plasmids moreso than it does chromids, the rrn-plasmid still ahs the only copies of the genes in the rrn operon and for tRNA(Ile). This distinctive collection of features led the scientists discovering this replicon to simply classify it as an rrn-plasmid, which is thought of as a separate classification than a "plasmid" or "chromid". Additional proposed classifications Beyond classifying certain replicons as chromids, a number of scientists have proposed further distinguishing between different types of chromids. One classification distinguishes between primary and secondary chromids. Primary chromids are defined as chromids containing core genes that are always essential for the survival of the bacterium under all conditions. Secondary chromids are defined as chromids essential for survival in the native conditions of the bacterium, but may be non-essential in certain "safe" conditions such as a laboratory environment. Secondary chromids may also have more recent evolutionary origins and may retain some more plasmid-like features as compared with primary chromids. An example of a proposed primary chromid is "chromosome II" of Paracoccus denitrificans PD1222. Characteristics Size and copy number In a bacterial genome, the main chromosome will always be the largest replicon, followed by the chromid and then the plasmid. One exception to this trend is known in Deinococcus deserti VCD115, where both plasmids are larger than the chromid. Chromids vary considerably in size between organisms. In the bacterial genus Vibrio, the main chromosome varies between 3.0–3.3 Mb whereas the chromid varies between 0.8–2.4 Mb in size. A replicon in a strain of Buchnera, which encodes some core genes, is only 7.8kb. While the presence of core genes may lead to the classification of this replicon as a chromid, this replicon may also be excluded on certain definitions. Some approaches only categorize certain replicons as chromids if they meet a threshold size of 350kb. It has also been observed that chromids tend to have a low copy number in the cell, as with chromosomes and megaplasmids. On average, chromids are twice as large as megaplasmids (and so the emergence of a chromid from a megaplasmid is associated with a sizable gene accumulation in the aftermath of the conversion). One of the largest chromids is the one in Burkholderia pseudomallei, which exceeds 3.1 million nucleotides in size, i.e. 3.1 megabases or 3.1 Mb. Genomic features Chromids more frequently have a lower G + C content compared with the main chromosome, although the strength of this association is not very strong. A chromid will also typically have a G + C content within 1% of that of the main chromosome, reflecting its nearing the base composition equilibrium of the main chromosome after having stably existed within a bacterial lineage for a necessary period of time. Chromids also resemble the main chromosome in their codon usage bias. One analysis found that chromids had a median 0.34% difference in GC content with the main chromosome, compared with values of 1.9% for megaplasmids and 2.8% for plasmids. Chromids have at least one core gene absent from the main chromosome. (Main chromosomes contain the bulk of the core genes of a bacterium, whereas plasmids contain no core genes.) For example, the chromid in Vibrio cholerae contains genes for the ribosomal subunits L20 and L35. While most chromids have a disproportionately smaller number of essential genes compared to the main chromosome, such as rRNA genes or the genes in the rRNA operon, some may have many more essential genes and may even be considered "equal partners" with the chromosome. In general, chromids also see an enrichment of genes involved in the processes of transport, metabolism, transcription, regulatory functions, signal transduction, and motility-related functions. Proteins located on chromids are involved in processes which can interact with proteins encoded on the main chromosome. Chromids also have more transposase genes than chromosomes, but less than megaplasmids. Phylogenetic distribution The presence of core genes makes the chromid essential to the survival of the bacterium. The same core genes will be found on the chromids within a genus but not necessarily between genera. All chromids of a genus may additionally share a large number of conserved but non-essential genes which help define the phenotype of the genus (and the emergence of chromids appears to be the primary evolutionary force in the formation of chromid-encoding bacterial genera, as has been suggested in the case of Vibrio). In contrast, bacterial chromosomes may universally or near-universally share hundreds of conserved core genes. Plasmids contain no core genes, and unlike chromids, plasmids of different species within a bacterial genus (or even just different isolates within the same species) share few genes. This is partly due to the common transfer of gain and loss of plasmids and their transfer between bacteria through conjugation (a form of horizontal gene transfer), while chromids are passed on through cell divisions (vertically) with no evidence of chromids moving through horizontal gene transfer. It has been observed that the chromid in at least one bacterial species could be eliminated without making the bacterium inviable, however, the bacterium did become auxotrophic indicating a severe fitness compromise associated with the loss of the chromid. Due to their stable presence within a bacterial genus, chromids also have a feature of being phylogenetically restricted to specific genera. Examples of genera of bacteria with chromids include Deinococcus, Leptospira, Cyanothece (a type of cyanobacteria), and an enrichment of genera of the Proteobacteria. Overall, bacterial genome sequencing indicates that roughly 10% of bacterial species have a chromid. It has also been found that there is a bias towards co-occurrence of a chromid and a megaplasmid in the same organism. Chromids also appear more frequently in phylogenies than do megaplasmids (in approximately twice as many species), despite megaplasmids being the putative evolutionary source for chromids. This may result in the tendency of organisms to lose their megaplasmids over time, compared with the inherently greater evolutionary stability of chromids. Replication Chromids share features of the replication of both chromosomes and chromids. For one, chromids use the replication system of plasmids. While plasmids do not replicate in coordination with the main chromosome or the cell cycle, chromids do and only replicate once per cell cycle. In the bacterial genus Vibrio, replication of the main chromosome begins before replication of the chromid. The chromid is smaller than the chromosome, and so takes a shorter amount of time to finish replication. For this reason, replication of the chromid is delayed to coordinate replication termination between the chromosome and chromid. Earlier replication of the chromosome compared with the chromid has also been observed in Ensifer meliloti. Bacteria also rely on different replication factors to start replication between the chromosome and the chromid. Replication of the chromosome is initiated upon stimulation of the expression of the protein DnaA, whereas expression of chromid replication requires DnaA but also depends |
rights of the North Caucasian peoples". Former KAFFED Chairman Yaşar Aslankaya has been banned from entering the Russian Federation. References Secularism Organizations based in Ankara 2003 establishments in Turkey Organizations established in | () is the largest Circassian association in Turkey and is a union of Circassian and other North Caucasian associations from various provinces of Turkey. The Federation describes itself as "criticizing Russia's authoritarian-hegamon attitude that ignores the existence and rights |
include: Amedée Piguet, Swiss wrestler Charles Piguet (1859–1918), Swiss tutor Gabriel Piguet | the surname include: Amedée Piguet, Swiss wrestler Charles Piguet (1859–1918), Swiss |
Conference (SoCon) during the 1971 NCAA University Division football season. In their first year under head coach Bob Thalman, the team compiled an overall record of 1–10 with a | serving as a defensive assistant under Vito Ragazzo for two years, Thalman was promoted to head coach of the Keydets in December 1970. Schedule References VMI VMI Keydets football seasons VMI |
15 at a Zara store, and she started her career after moving to Paris to rejoin her mother and attend university. Rudnicka debuted as a Prada exclusive (both on the runway and in the campaign with an ensemble cast); after doing so, she became one of the "Top 50" models on models.com. In 2014, she appeared in a Vogue editorial which paid homage to a 1948 photo by Cecil Beaton. According to Vogue Poland and Vogue France, she has appeared in every Chanel show since 2014. She is | the runway and in the campaign with an ensemble cast); after doing so, she became one of the "Top 50" models on models.com. In 2014, she appeared in a Vogue editorial which paid homage to a 1948 photo by Cecil Beaton. According to Vogue Poland and Vogue France, she has appeared in every Chanel show since 2014. She is the face of the 2022 pre-collection. Directed by Sofia and Roman Coppola, she appeared alongside models including Gigi Hadid, Rebecca Leigh Longendyke, Anna Ewers, Vittoria Ceretti, and Mona Tougaard in a short film |
23 (May 5), 1872 - June 4, 1934) was Russian and Soviet actress, Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1927). Biography Elizaveta Mikhailovna Sadovskaya was born in Moscow on April 23 (May 5), 1872 in the family of Olga Osipovna and Mikhail Provich Sadovsky. Brother - actor and director Prov Sadovsky Jr., grandfather - Prov Mikhailovich Sadovsky In 1894 she graduated from drama courses at the Moscow Theatre School (teachers O. A. Pravdin and M. P. Sadovsky) and was accepted into the troupe of the Maly Theatre, where she worked until the end of her life. During the life of her mother, Yelizaveta Mikhailovna had the stage name Sadovskaya 2nd. Possessing great stage charm, Yelizaveta Mikhailovna created vivid, memorable images of Russian girls. Yelizaveta Mikhailovna died on June 4, 1934, in Moscow. She was buried at the Pyatnitsky cemetery. Recognition and awards | charm, Yelizaveta Mikhailovna created vivid, memorable images of Russian girls. Yelizaveta Mikhailovna died on June 4, 1934, in Moscow. She was buried at the Pyatnitsky cemetery. Recognition and awards Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1927) Roles in the theatre 1894 - "Vasilisa Melentievna" A. N. Ostrovsky – Anna "Forest" by A. N. Ostrovsky – Aksyusha “Poverty is not a vice” by A. N. Ostrovsky – Gordevna "Wolves and Sheep" by A. N. Ostrovsky – Glafira "The Snow Maiden" by A. N. Ostrovsky - Snow Maiden “Truth is good, but happiness is better” A. N. Ostrovsky – Poliksen "Talents and Admirers" by A. N. Ostrovsky – Negin "Tenement house" A. N. Ostrovsky – Yulinka "Jokers" by A. N. Ostrovsky – Verochka "Thunderstorm" A. N. Ostrovsky – Varvara "Inspector" N. V. Gogol - Marya Antonovna Shakespeare's "The Tempest" – Ariel |
and Zambia. The insect Rastrococcus invadens is a pest to this plant. V. doniana is known as plem in Ethiopia, uchakoro in Nigeria, mfudu and mfuu in Eswatini, mfuu in Tanzania, munyamazi and yuelo in Uganda and kashilumbalu in Zambia. V. doniana is one of the few plants notable for its phytoecdysteroid content, Ochieng et al. 2013 finding it is one of the | insect Rastrococcus invadens is a pest to this plant. V. doniana is known as plem in Ethiopia, uchakoro in Nigeria, mfudu and mfuu in Eswatini, mfuu in Tanzania, munyamazi and yuelo in Uganda and kashilumbalu in Zambia. V. doniana is one of the few plants notable for its phytoecdysteroid content, Ochieng et al. 2013 finding it is one of the few |
fitter from 1940 to 1943. He was then drafted into the Wehrmacht. Hellman voluntarly joined the Kriegsmarine in 1944 as a torpedo mechanic. He was eventually captured by British forces. Hellmann become a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD). He then became a member of the new Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), after the merger between the KPD and the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in 1946 in the Soviet Zone. Hellman worked as a locksmith for the Deutsche Reichsbahn in Karl-Marx-Stadt from 1947 to 1950. He became an instructor for the Free German Youth (FDJ) at the Deutsche Reichsbahn office in Karl-Marx Stadt in 1950. He then became a regional manager () of sports association SV Lokomotiv in Saxony. Hellman was a member of the Volkspolizei and served as the Sector Manager () of the Department of Agitation and Propaganda of the central management of SV Lokomotiv in East Berlin from 1952. He again served as the sector manager of the Department of Agitation at the Sports and Technology Association in 1952–53. Hellmann became an instructor for Youth and Sports of the SED regional district administration in Bezirk Halle in 1954. He then became the head of the working group for Physical Culture and Sport () in the SED Central Committee from 1960. The working group became the Department for Physical Culture and Sport () in 1965. Hellmann would serve as the Head of the Department for Physical Culture and Sport of the SED Central Committee until 1989. Hellmann acted as a sports consultant of Walter Ulbricht, Erich Honecker and Egon Krenz. He | alongside Manfred Ewald and Erich Mielke. Hellmann was born in Chemnitz in Saxony, Germany. He was born as the son to a lathe operator and completed apprenticeship as a machine fitter from 1940 to 1943. He was then drafted into the Wehrmacht. Hellman voluntarly joined the Kriegsmarine in 1944 as a torpedo mechanic. He was eventually captured by British forces. Hellmann become a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD). He then became a member of the new Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), after the merger between the KPD and the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in 1946 in the Soviet Zone. Hellman worked as a locksmith for the Deutsche Reichsbahn in Karl-Marx-Stadt from 1947 to 1950. He became an instructor for the Free German Youth (FDJ) at the Deutsche Reichsbahn office in Karl-Marx Stadt in 1950. He then became a regional manager () of sports association SV Lokomotiv in Saxony. Hellman was a member of the Volkspolizei and served as the Sector |
became a regular contributor to the Daily Telegraph and succeeded to chief political cartoonist in 2021. Painting His work has been selected for exhibitions at the Mall Galleries including the Threadneedle Prize exhibition and The Lynn Painter-Stainers show. His work was also selected for the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in 2021. Personal life Blower is married with three children and lives in London. References Bibliography Dictionary of Twentieth-Century British Cartoonists and Caricaturists, by Mark Bryant (2000) (Ashgate, Aldershot) ISBN 1-84014-286-3 The Cartoon Century, by Timothy S Benson (2000) (Random House) ISBN 978-1905211593 Britain’s best political cartoons, by Tim Benson (2021) (Random House) ISBN 978-1473596535 Britain’s best ever political cartoons, by Tim Benson (2021) (John Murray Press) ISBN 978-1529334395 Cartoons from the Daily Telegraph Best of Blower 2017-21, (2021) (Signature) ISBN | at Farnham Grammar School and University College London where he read English Literature. In 2008 he gained an MA in Art & Space at Kingston University. He is a fluent French speaker. Cartoons and Illustration Soon after university, he took a one-way ticket to California and worked his way to New York where he lived for 18 months. He supported himself with labouring jobs whilst painting and cartooning in his spare time. His first published commission appeared in the East Village Eye. He returned to Britain and began freelancing as an illustrator after joining the govt’s Enterprise Allowance Scheme. His work has appeared in most British newspapers and magazines including The Times, Sunday Times, Mail on Sunday, The Guardian, Daily Express, Private Eye and The Spectator. Blower succeeded JAK as the Evening Standard editorial cartoonist in 1997, remaining there until 2003. Shortly afterwards, he conceived a time-lapse animation technique named Livedraw and went on to produce regular animated cartoons for BBC Newsnight and the BBC 10 O’Clock News in addition to drawing weekly animated political cartoons for The Guardian from 2009-2011. He was filmed by the BBC in 2019 as he drew and |
in a row from 1965 to 1967. The club's tenth and most recent championship win came in 1996. In 2017, the club's centenary year, the club reached its first county final since 1998. Devenish lost the final by seven points to Derrygonnelly. Honours Fermanagh Senior Football Championship (10): 1960*, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1985, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1996 Fermanagh Senior Football League (14): 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1993, 1997, 2008, 2010, 2017 Fermanagh Junior Football Championship (5): 1946, 1960, 1975, | History The club was founded in 1917, but did not affiliate until 25 July 1926. The club won the Fermanagh Senior Football Championship for the first time in 1960 as Devenish/Mulleek, and went on to win the county title four more times in the 1960s, including a three in a row from 1965 to 1967. The club's tenth and most recent championship win came in 1996. In 2017, the club's centenary year, the club reached its first county final since |
39. It lives in Japanese white birch. References Geophilomorpha Animals described in | is a species of soil centipede in the family Geophilidae found in Japan. It grows up |
a Dutch cocaine trafficker of Moroccan origin. A member of the Mocro Mafia, he was forced to leave the Netherlands in 2016 to escape prosecution. Biography Buzhu's father emigrated to the Netherlands from Morocco in the 1950s to work in a Dutch mine. His mother later rejoined his father and the couple settled in Utrecht. His father then opened a butcher shop in Amsterdam and provided financial stability to the family. After his father died, Buzhu fell into criminal activity alongside several other Moroccans who had emigrated to the Netherlands. Lacking a paternal influence, he settled into organized crime for good. In order to hide his illicit wealth, Buzhu pretended his money was earned through real estate investment. In 1990s, however, he was convicted by Dutch police of possession of illegal firearms and participating in torture. However, police were unaware | in Belgium and was a powerful cocaine trafficker in the Netherlands. Further investigations led Buzhu to identify several organized criminals in the Dutch drug trade, with his statements giving rise to the 26Koper investigation. On 17 April 2016, his neighbor, Samir Erraghib, also involved in international cocaine trafficking, was found shot dead a few streets down from Buzhu's childhood home. On 29 May 2016, Bagdad El H. and Ranko Scekic were the victims of an attempted assassination from Taghi's hitmen for their allegiance with Buzhu. However, the assassination was called off due to heavy police presence in the neighborhood. Scekic was killed in Utrecht the following month, and Buzhu testified in the trial against Taghi and Razzouki. He then left the Netherlands for his own safety and settled in Spain. He returned to the Netherlands in December 2021. He rented a car on 10 January 2022, accompanied by a trusted driver, due to his inability to fly following a positive test for COVID-19. On 15 January 2022, Ebrahim Buzhu was shot in the head while driving in Cádiz. He was then put in the trunk |
travelers crossing through their traditional hunting lands, which greatly reducing the population of buffalo and other game. He said, Personal life In 1840, Mitchell married Martha Eliza Berry, daughter of Major Taylor Berry. Around that time, they received the young enslaved Lucy Berry from her sister Mary Berry and brother-in-law Henry Sidney Coxe. The couple suffered from the loss of their two infant children and Henry's alcoholism. Mary filed for divorce in 1845, citing her husband's drinking habit, severe temper, and abusive language. Mary withdrew the suit after Henry enumerated her faults. They agreed to stay married, but lived separately. When Mary died, he had her buried in the grounds his residence so that he could look over her grave. Lucy Ann Delany freedom suit Polly Berry filed a freedom suit on September 8, 1842, as a "next friend" of her daughter Lucy against Mitchell. According to the rule of partus sequitur ventrem, which had been adopted into US slave law, the status of children followed that of the mother. Since Lucy was born to a woman considered free at the time in Illinois, she should also have been free. Lucy was remanded to jail, where she was held for 17 months. Mitchell wanted to ensure that Lucy was kept in St. Louis until the trial. A $2,000 () bond was established by Judge Bryan Mullanphy, should Mitchell try to reclaim Lucy. Both Polly and Lucy were freed as the result of their individual cases. Death Mitchell died of typhoid fever on May 23, 1861, at the Planter's House in St. Louis. He was buried at Calvary Cemetery in the city. His tombstone was demolished in 1951, as were many tombstones. Notes References Bibliography 1806 births 1861 deaths People from Louisa County, Virginia | while he also wanted to ensure that Native Americans received a fair settlement for the travelers crossing through their traditional hunting lands, which greatly reducing the population of buffalo and other game. He said, Personal life In 1840, Mitchell married Martha Eliza Berry, daughter of Major Taylor Berry. Around that time, they received the young enslaved Lucy Berry from her sister Mary Berry and brother-in-law Henry Sidney Coxe. The couple suffered from the loss of their two infant children and Henry's alcoholism. Mary filed for divorce in 1845, citing her husband's drinking habit, severe temper, and abusive language. Mary withdrew the suit after Henry enumerated her faults. They agreed to stay married, but lived separately. When Mary died, he had her buried in the grounds his residence so that he could look over her grave. Lucy Ann Delany freedom suit Polly Berry filed a freedom suit on September 8, 1842, as a "next friend" of her daughter Lucy against Mitchell. According to the rule of partus sequitur ventrem, which had been adopted into US slave law, the status of children followed that of the mother. Since Lucy was born to a woman considered free at the time in Illinois, she should also have been free. Lucy was remanded to jail, where |
of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997. External links 1922 films 1922 Western (genre) films English-language films American films American silent feature films American Western (genre) films Films directed by | Sandy Joe Bonner as Manuel Sánchez Milla Davenport as Madre Sánchez References Bibliography Connelly, Robert B. The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36, Volume 40, Issue 2. December Press, 1998. Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the |
2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup. The following year he was included in the senior Uganda squad for the ICC Trophy in Ireland, during which he made his List A one-day debut against the United States, making an unbeaten 45 runs to guide Uganda to a 6 wicket victory. He made a total of five appearances during the tournament. The following year he once again captained the Uganda Under-19 team in the 2006 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, with Uganda finishing in 14th place. After a gap of five years, Almuzahim was recalled to the | Cricket World Cup. The following year he was included in the senior Uganda squad for the ICC Trophy in Ireland, during which he made his List A one-day debut against the United States, making an unbeaten 45 runs to guide Uganda to a 6 wicket victory. He made a total of five appearances during the tournament. The following year he once again captained the Uganda Under-19 team in the 2006 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, with Uganda finishing in 14th place. After a gap of five years, Almuzahim was recalled to the Ugandan squad for their Intercontinental Shield match against Namibia, in which he made his first-class debut. He also played in a one-day match on the tour, in addition to making his Twenty20. He played in four further one-day matches in 2010, against Kenya. The following year he was selected in the Ugandan squad for the World |
The genus and species were named by Percy M. Butler and Jerry Hooker in 2005. The remains comprise a left upper molar (M2), a lower last premolar, initially considered a left but later considered more likely to be right (p4), and an incomplete non-last upper premolar (P3 | an extinct genus of mammal, known from the Middle Jurassic of England. It is considered to be the most primitive known multituberculate, and is amongst the oldest known members of the group. It combines features of that group with those of euharamyidans. The remains of the only known species, K. multicuspis were collected from Kirtlington Quarry in Oxford, England, by |
the age of 95. Filmography The Taking of Power by Louis XIV (1966) (1972) (1979) La Reine Margot (1994) Villa Amalia (2009) Awards Officer of the Order of the Arts and the Letters (1986) References 1926 births 2022 deaths 20th-century French | film. She was married to painter , with whom she had two daughters: Manuelle and Sarah. Marquais died in Paris on 29 January 2022, at the age of 95. Filmography The Taking of Power by Louis |
– 23 February 1896) was a Slovenian Roman-catholic mystic, theologian and stigmatic. Life Youth Magdalena was born on 19 July 1835 in the house at 4 Janeži 4, today number 11, to parents Jožef and Ana Gornik. On the same day, she was carried to the local church of Our Lady of the Snows for baptism by the godparents from Petrinci, Mihael Levstek and Marjeta Košir. She was baptised by Matevž Ravnikar (Poženčan), the then chaplain on Gora. She was named Mary Magdalene. She was also called Lenka, Alenčka or Lenčka, but she signed her name as Magdalena. First Holy Communion The chaplain of the mountains, Jožef Žagar, held firm to the old rule that children could only receive their first Holy Communion at the age of twelve. It was not until the decree of St. Pius X on early Holy Communion Quam singulari of 7 August 1910 that it was commanded that children should be admitted to their first Holy Communion already in the "years of discernment", around the age of seven. Magdalena joined her peers in daily spiritual preparation, led by Chaplain Žagar. She carefully stored every word of the priest, especially about the real presence of Jesus under the species of bread and wine. Magdalena quickly grasped the meaning and acquired the necessary knowledge. Chaplain Žagar, who was also her confessor, allowed her to come to the Lord's Table. So, in 1847, in the company of her peers, the twelve-year-old Magdalene received her First Communion. The writer of her youth, Janez Plaper, writes,that the most holy God, at that first entrance into her pure heart, "kindled such a burning love for her that her bodily strength began to fail. She could hardly manage the few steps to her place in the pew. There she fell to her knees and for a quarter of an hour gazed motionless at the image of Our Lady of the Snows above the altar. When she stood up to leave the church after Mass, she heard a voice: 'Tell no one what you have experienced.' Astonished by the voice, she thought that the other girls could hear it too. 'No,' she heard the mysterious voice again, 'they don't hear the voice, you do. I am the one you have just eaten.' A short time later, she left the church with the other girls." Mystic events Ecstasies She is said to have experienced her first ecstasy at the age of 13, on 11 August 1848. From 24 August 1848 until her death on 23 February 1896, she was to have an ecstasy every evening, as well as on Fridays in Holy Week and at every Holy Mass. The offsets followed the ecclesiastical year. In the ecstatic state, her body was insensitive to external stimuli. Later, Magdalena was able to tell everything that had happened in the ecstasy. The shifts were linked to seeing and suffering; it was then that the stigmata would open up to her. Visions Magdalena is said to have had visions throughout her life. The content of Magdalena's visions varied widely. They corresponded to the course of the church year. She is said to have had her first apparition in the spring of 1847 and her last one the day before her death. In her visions, Magdalene is said to have seen and spoken with angels, saints, the Virgin Mary and the Holy Trinity. The angels, she said, instructed her in the adoration of Mary and God and wept over the people's unbelief. The Virgin Mary | stigmata caused her severe pain, but Magdalene did not complain. The wounds were examined by doctors, observed by priests and visitors, but no one found any deception. Xenoglossy In her state of ecstasy, Magdalene is said to understand and speak languages she has never learned or heard spoken. She is said to have mastered Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Chaldean (=Babylonian) and other languages, including non-European languages. Some of the languages she spoke in her stupor were unknown even to the greatest experts. Prophecies Prophecy is the foretelling of future events. On 2 August 1848, she is said to have predicted the flight of Pope Pius IX from Rome. At the beginning of November 1848, Magdalene mentioned this to Jernej Krže from Vinice. In the same month, on 24 November 1848, the Pope had to flee Rome for Gaeta because of the political situation. She also reportedly predicted various plagues, disasters and calamities. Letters There are many written documents about Magdalena. Among them are her handwritten letters, as well as handwritten reports of people who observed her and wrote reports to the diocese or to newspapers. How she was affected by the opposition and with what spirit she accepted it, is shown by this handwritten letter she wrote to the fifty-year-old Franciscan friar Tobija Vernik in 1851: "Oh, I know very well that I have many adversaries. Thanks be to God that for His sake I am despised. It is true that God visits us with much suffering, but let us thank Him well that He visits us here, and let us ask Him to purify us here after His pleasure, and to spare us graciously in the other world." Death and veneration In connection with Magdalena's death, on 23 February 1896, it is remembered that her relatives, all of them poor, were worried about the funeral feast. In vain, the dying woman told them not to worry, because God would see to it that everything would be all right. And indeed, there was so much snow, and the bitter cold pressed down, that only eight mourners gathered at the open |
Jake the Plumber is a 1927 American silent comedy film directed by Edward Ludwig and starring Jesse De Vorska, Sharon Lynn and Rosa Rosanova. Synopsis The film follows the adventures of Jake, a Jewish apprentice to the Irish plumber Fogarty. Jake wants to earn enough money to marry Sarah, a jealous girl, who he is in love with. The chance comes when he has to substitute for a jockey in a big horse race. Cast Jesse De Vorska | to marry Sarah, a jealous girl, who he is in love with. The chance comes when he has to substitute for a jockey in a big horse race. Cast Jesse De Vorska as Jake, the Plumber Sharon Lynn as Sarah Levine Rosa Rosanova as Mrs. Levine Ann Brody as Mrs. |
when produced by C. E. Ryder. Production The design was built by American Boatbuilding, Wickford Shipyard, C. E. Ryder, the Sailstar Boat Company and the Beetle Boat Company in the United States, but it is now out of production. Design The Sea Sprite 23 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a fractional sloop rig; a spooned, raked stem; a raised counter, angled, transom; a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed long keel. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the standard keel. The different builders incorporated different features in the design. Ryder's boats had an outboard motor well under a lazarette hatch cover, while Sailstar's used an open well. Ryder also used encapsulated lead ballast, while earlier builders used external, bolt-on lead ballast. The boat is fitted with an inboard diesel engine of , or a small outboard motor for docking and maneuvering. The inboard version's fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of . The design has a PHRF racing average handicap of 264 and a hull speed of . Variants Sea Sprite 23 Daysailor This model has a smaller cabin with two settee berths, but a longer cockpit. The cockpit has wooden seats and is not self-bailing, but the boat is equipped with a mainsheet traveler and a cabin-top stepped mast, with one set of lower shrouds. Sea Sprite 23 Weekender This model has a self-bailing cockpit, with | sailboat that was designed by Carl Alberg as a daysailer and cruiser and first built in 1958. The design was built in two versions, the Daysailor and the Weekender. It was also called the Alberg 23 in 1970 when produced by C. E. Ryder. Production The design was built by American Boatbuilding, Wickford Shipyard, C. E. Ryder, the Sailstar Boat Company and the Beetle Boat Company in the United States, but it is now out of production. Design The Sea Sprite 23 is a recreational keelboat, built predominantly of fiberglass, with wood trim. It has a fractional sloop rig; a spooned, raked stem; a raised counter, angled, transom; a keel-mounted rudder controlled by a tiller and a fixed long keel. It displaces and carries of ballast. The boat has a draft of with the standard keel. The different builders incorporated different features in the design. Ryder's boats had an outboard motor well under a lazarette hatch cover, while Sailstar's used an open well. Ryder also used encapsulated lead ballast, while earlier builders used external, bolt-on lead ballast. The boat is fitted with an inboard diesel engine of , or a small outboard motor for docking and maneuvering. The inboard version's fuel tank holds and the fresh water tank has a capacity of . The design has a PHRF racing average |
Nimm Warriors is tasked by Udide, a giant talking spider to find and return a ghazal stolen by Chichi's mother or face terrible consequences. Sunny, Orlu, Chichi, and Sasha will have to travel across the wilderness—spirit realm, Nimm village, and a parallel universe of plant-based technology to stop Udide from wreaking havoc on the Nimm women. Reception The book was ranked as one of the most anticipated book of January 2022 by several magazines and literary websites including Polygon, PopSugar, Book riot and Tor.com. It received several positive receptions from reviewers. In | American author Nnedi Okorafor. it is the sequel to Akata Witch and Akata Warrior and the third book in The Nsibidi Script series which debuted on the New York Times best seller list following the release of the novel. Plot Set after the events of the second book, Sunny Nwazue who discovered that she is a member of the all female Nimm Warriors is tasked by Udide, a giant talking spider to find and return a ghazal stolen by Chichi's mother or |
the show. As one review noted: "At Hayward Gallery's group exhibition Mixing it Up: Painting Today—a who's who of Britain's emerging painters—you'd have done well not to be stopped in your tracks by the vibrant, sprawling paintings of Rachel Jones. Her monumental, unstretched canvases comprise layered passages of competing oil stick and oil paint, with a tendency towards bold crimson backgrounds, their surfaces overlaid with scumbled gestural patterns in bright colours. ... she has fast become one of Britain's top younger painters." More recently, her well-received first solo show, held at the Thaddaeus Ropac gallery in London, prompted the Evening Standard to comment: "The 30-year-old Essex-based artist also has a Chisenhale Gallery show coming around the corner and, ahead of that, this exhibition, SMIIILLLLEEEE, in one of Europe’s biggest commercial galleries. And no wonder there's so much excitement about her: Jones is already a distinctive voice, creating ravishingly colourful works with intriguing subject matter.. ... this is hugely impressive stuff." Caroline Douglas of Contemporary Art Society said: "For her latest London exhibition, Rachel Jones brings not just paintings but words and music references to scaffold her work in the here and now. ... The sensual, as well as the symbolic, power of the mouth and teeth have become the way the artist uses to speak about her ethnicity, and her experience of being a Black woman in the world today." Exhibitions 2014: RSA: New Contemporaries 2014, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh 2018: Rachel Jones: Mad Dogs, Jupiter Woods, London 2019: Red Shaped Mouths, Chinati Foundation, Marfa, Texas 2019: New Art Centre, Salisbury, Wiltshire, with Gillian Ayres and Nao Matsunaga 2020: Rachel Jones and Nicholas Pope, The Sunday Painter, London 2020: A Sovereign Mouth, Gallery 12.26, Dallas, Texas 2020: A Focus on Painting, Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2021: Mixing it Up: Painting Today, Hayward Gallery, London 2021: SMIIILLLLEEEE, Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2022: say cheeeeese, Chisenhale Gallery, London References External links Official website "Artist Profile: Rachel Jones", Arts Council Collection, 20 October 2021. Amah-Rose Abrams, "Meet Rachel Jones, an Ascendant Painter Whose Jitteringly Electric Paintings Have Captivated Viewers | show coming around the corner and, ahead of that, this exhibition, SMIIILLLLEEEE, in one of Europe’s biggest commercial galleries. And no wonder there's so much excitement about her: Jones is already a distinctive voice, creating ravishingly colourful works with intriguing subject matter.. ... this is hugely impressive stuff." Caroline Douglas of Contemporary Art Society said: "For her latest London exhibition, Rachel Jones brings not just paintings but words and music references to scaffold her work in the here and now. ... The sensual, as well as the symbolic, power of the mouth and teeth have become the way the artist uses to speak about her ethnicity, and her experience of being a Black woman in the world today." Exhibitions 2014: RSA: New Contemporaries 2014, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh 2018: Rachel Jones: Mad Dogs, Jupiter Woods, London 2019: Red Shaped Mouths, Chinati Foundation, Marfa, Texas 2019: New Art Centre, Salisbury, Wiltshire, with Gillian Ayres and Nao Matsunaga 2020: Rachel Jones and Nicholas Pope, The Sunday Painter, London 2020: A Sovereign Mouth, Gallery 12.26, Dallas, Texas 2020: A Focus on Painting, Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2021: Mixing it Up: Painting Today, Hayward Gallery, London 2021: SMIIILLLLEEEE, Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2022: say cheeeeese, Chisenhale Gallery, London References External links |
1940s and later traded under the name McInerney Properties. The company expanded throughout Clare and Galway building homes and schools. These often included social housing developments throughout the west of Ireland and the midlands. By the early 1950s, McInerney had entered the Dublin market and was building high volume suburban homes on green field sites including 190 houses for Dublin Corporation in Ballyfermot and 340 houses in Milltown. By the mid-1950s, it had expanded into the Greater London market and was soon constructing local authority housing across the South of England. It floated on the Dublin and London Stock Exchanges () in December 1971 and was at that time the largest Irish company to float on the stock exchange. Dan McInerney, one of the senior management figures at the time, was quoted from 1975 as having said, beside being a great social need, housing in Ireland was a leading industry and was like the motor industry in America. The group had an operating profit of €58m in 2007 completing 2,414 units across Ireland, the UK and Spain and was a constituent of the ISEQ 20. The group then swung to an operating loss before tax of €47m in 2008 only completing 1,359 units. The company celebrated its centenary in 2009 and it estimated that at that stage it had built over 90,000 homes in Ireland. In 2010, the company delisted from the stock exchange having entered examinership. It was then involved in a notable court case McInerney Homes Ltd v Cos Acts 1990 following its examinership in 2010, however the British arm of the company was sold off to a competitor while the Irish operation | nearly 90,000 houses in Ireland including nearly 10% of the housing in Irelands' main cities. Following the bursting of the Irish property bubble, an examiner from PricewaterhouseCoopers was appointed to the Irish house-building arm of the company in 2010 and it subsequently delisted from the stock exchange. The scheme to resurrect the company later failed and a Receiver and Liquidator was later appointed over most of the group companies in 2010 and 2011. History McInerney Homes was started by Thomas McInerney when he built his first house for a neighbour in Tulla, County Clare in 1909. Thomas McInerney and Co Ltd was incorporated for the first time in the late 1940s and later traded under the name McInerney Properties. The company expanded throughout Clare and Galway building homes and schools. These often included social housing developments throughout the west of Ireland and the midlands. By the early 1950s, McInerney had entered the Dublin market and was building high volume suburban homes on green field sites including 190 houses for Dublin Corporation in Ballyfermot and 340 houses in Milltown. By the mid-1950s, it had expanded into the Greater London market and was soon constructing local authority housing across the South of England. It floated on the Dublin and London Stock Exchanges () in December 1971 and was at that time the largest Irish company to float on the stock exchange. Dan McInerney, one of the senior management figures at the time, was quoted from 1975 as having said, beside being a great social need, housing in Ireland was a leading industry and was like the motor industry in America. The group had an operating profit of €58m in 2007 completing 2,414 units |
to achieve diversity. In 2015, she co-curated The Artist Herself: Self-Portraits by historical Canadian women artists (2015) with Alicia Boutilier of the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. This exhibition expanded the genre's definition by using not only the human face but other art forms to explore self-representation. Her 2021 exhibition Tom Thomson: The Art of Authentication co-curated and authored again with Boutilier, established criteria to authenticate a work of art, taking as its focus the work of Tom Thomson and exhibiting possible Thomsons and known fakes to illustrate the help authentication can provide. The exhibition was called a "rewarding experience" as an examination of authentication and forgery in art, using Tom Thomson as case in point. The show was rated one of the best exhibitions of the season by the Art Institute of Canada because it gave insight into the extensive problem-solving that museum professionals undertake in tracing authenticity. Bruce has contributed a chapter to Canada and Impressionism: New Horizons at the National Gallery of Canada (2019) and also has written entries to such exhibitions as Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven, Vancouver Art Gallery (2015) and Uninvited, Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Movement, McMichael Canadian Art Collection (2020). Her lectures on Canadian art include one on "Canadian Art-Making and Making Art Exhibitions" to a panel of Archivists, Librarians and Curators at the Art | co-curated the The French Connection: Canadians at the Paris Salons, 1880–1900. In 2014, after three years of research and two trips to Sweden and France, she curated her major retrospective and co-authored the book Into the Light: The Paintings of William Blair Bruce (1859–1906), to examine the artist from different viewpoints (indigenous included) to achieve diversity. In 2015, she co-curated The Artist Herself: Self-Portraits by historical Canadian women artists (2015) with Alicia Boutilier of the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. This exhibition expanded the genre's definition by using not only the human face but other art forms to explore self-representation. Her 2021 exhibition Tom Thomson: The Art of Authentication co-curated and authored again with Boutilier, established criteria to authenticate a work of art, taking as its focus the work of Tom Thomson and exhibiting possible Thomsons and known fakes to illustrate the help authentication can provide. The exhibition was called a "rewarding experience" as an examination of authentication and forgery in art, using Tom Thomson as case in point. The show was rated one of the best exhibitions of the season by the Art Institute of Canada because it gave insight into the extensive problem-solving that museum professionals undertake in tracing authenticity. Bruce has contributed a chapter to Canada and Impressionism: New Horizons at the National Gallery of Canada (2019) and also has written entries to such exhibitions as Embracing Canada: Landscapes from Krieghoff to the Group of Seven, Vancouver Art Gallery (2015) and Uninvited, Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Movement, McMichael Canadian Art Collection (2020). |
place" – Annushka "The truth is good, but happiness is better" – Polyxena "The Poor Bride" - Marya Andreevna "Yegor Bulychev and others" - Ksenia Bulycheva "Inspector" - Anna Andreevna "Poverty is not a vice" - Pelageya Yegorovna Filmography 1916 Sisters Kedrov 1918 Swamp mirages - Yelena Alekseevna, mother of Rakitin 1918 Maiden Mountains - warrior maiden 1927 Victory of a woman - his wife 1940 Hero's brother - Yevdokia Vlasyevna, teacher Awards two Orders of the Badge | Russian theatre and film actress, Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1937). Biography Born in a family of merchants Reshetnikovs. In 1896 she played her first role in an amateur play. She graduated from the Chernyaev Women's School on the Maiden's Field, where she received the title of a home teacher. In 1902, she played on the stage of the Hunt Club under the pseudonym Tomskaya (Fenya in Shpazhinsky's Mayorsha). In 1905-1907 studied at the drama courses at the Maly Theater. In 1907 she played her first professional role at the Maly Theatre, where she worked until 1942, playing mainly roles in Ostrovsky's plays. In 1934-1936 she worked in the Penza region in the Zemetchinsky branch of the Maly Theater. During the war, she |
was discovered by Joseph Kiwangwa after she impressed at a singing competition in Masaka. Becky started her music career in 2017 coming up with Bankuuza asher first song Discography {| class="wikitable" |+songs !song Title !Year |- |Aliba Ani |2018 |- |Bya Bangi |2018 |- |Kyosaba |2019 |- |Bankuzza |2019 |- |Ebisembayo |2019 |- |Telemundo |2019 |- |Bankuzza |2019 |- |Kansubire |2019 Education Becky was born in Masaka the Central Region of Uganda. She attended several educational institutions, including Masaka S.S.S for O-level and A-level at St Anthony SS Kayunga in 2016. Controversies In November 2021, Chosen | |- |Telemundo |2019 |- |Bankuzza |2019 |- |Kansubire |2019 Education Becky was born in Masaka the Central Region of Uganda. She attended several educational institutions, including Masaka S.S.S for O-level and A-level at St Anthony SS Kayunga in 2016. Controversies In November 2021, Chosen was deported from South Africa where she was meant to perform. References External references Chosen Becky Music, Songs, Videos, Mp3 Downloads and Biography Why Singer Chosen Becky was Deported from South Africa Chosen Becky and Voltage Music express 'Telemundo' love | VIDEO Chosen Becky to Face Court for not Performing |
5, 2017, it was delayed for March 6th, 2018. Reception Bravo Team debuted at number three in the UK sales charts for the week of March 10, 2018. Bravo Team received negative reception from video game critics. Eurogamer's Ian Higton called the game "an astonishingly bad VR shooter from a team that should know better". References 2018 video games PlayStation 4 games PlayStation | was developed by Supermassive Games. It was announced for PlayStation VR along with The Inpatient. Development for the game lasted 13 months. Originally planned for release on December 5, 2017, it was delayed for March 6th, 2018. Reception Bravo Team debuted at number three in the UK sales charts for the week of March 10, |
a producer. Together with his partner and fellow filmmaker Lucy Manning, he founded a media company and started a podcast. Personal life Tabrizi's mother works for | is a British filmmaker, best known for his debut documentary Seaspiracy. Career Tabrizi turned down an offer to study film at university, and taught himself. He made Seaspiracy with Kip Andersen as a producer. Together with his partner |
France-Soir published the photograph in its next daily edition. In July 1977, Apesteguy joined the agency Gamma, with which he worked until December 1997. In May 1978, he was sent to Chad to capture photographs of Opération Tacaud. Upon his arrival, he was arrested and his equipment was confiscated. Suspected of being a Libyan spy, he managed to escape. In 1981, he was one of the main characters in the documentary , directed by Raymond Depardon. In 2014, Apesteguy was one of seven French paparazzi whose photographs appeared in an exhibition at the Centre Pompidou-Metz. In | daily edition. In July 1977, Apesteguy joined the agency Gamma, with which he worked until December 1997. In May 1978, he was sent to Chad to capture photographs of Opération Tacaud. Upon his arrival, he was arrested and his equipment was confiscated. Suspected of being a Libyan spy, he managed to escape. In 1981, he was one of the main characters in the documentary , directed by Raymond Depardon. In 2014, Apesteguy was one of seven French paparazzi whose photographs appeared in an exhibition at the |
recommended to the Bacharach Giants by Julio Rojo in late April 1925. A few weeks later, he was placed on waivers and claimed by the Baltimore Black Sox. By late May, he was acquired by the | later, he was placed on waivers and claimed by the Baltimore Black Sox. By late May, he was acquired by the Wilmington Potomacs and appeared in at least one game against the Black Sox on May 27. He remained with |
in officially sanctioned races, election of officers and commissioning of the fleet. Environmental advocacy When a proposal to build a bridge from Oyster Bay to Rye was proposed and threatened the ecology of Long Island Sound, Sheldrake Yacht Club led by Martin Marcus partnered with American Yacht Club to lead a "boatercade" in protest. References External links Sheldrake Yacht Club – official web site 1909 establishments in New York (state) Sailing in New York (state) Sports clubs | deficit, the club has continued to organize regattas as well as its signature Whalers Race. History The club was formed in 1907 and formally incorporated in 1909; its first officers were Frank P. Coxe and William A. Hanson of White Plains, William Thomson, Arthur Fauser, Paul Wiel, and Edward T. Griffith of Mamaroneck. The name is derived from the Sheldrake River in Mamaroneck. When it began, most of |
was arrested during the movement, later escaped from the SSKM hospital. Mukherjee served as General Secretary of his own CPIML between 1972 and 2009. References 1937 births | party he formed his own fraction. He was arrested during the movement, later escaped from the SSKM hospital. Mukherjee served as General Secretary of his own CPIML between 1972 and 2009. |
Big Chief is an album by American free jazz drummer Sunny Murray. It was recorded in Paris in January, 1969, and was originally released on the Pathé label later that year. In 2008, it was reissued on LP by Eremite Records. On the album, Murray is joined by flutist Becky Friend, saxophonists Ronnie Beer and Kenneth Terroade, trumpeter Bernard Vitet, violinist Alan Silva, pianist François Tusques, and bassist Beb Guérin. In addition, poet H. Le Roy Bibbs joins the group on one track. Reception In a review for All About Jazz, Clifford Allen called the album "a set that traverses the vicious to the romantic to the whimsical," and commented: "The term 'swing' might not obviously apply to dense, go-for-broke collective improvisations without countable beats, but that is not the type of 'swing' rhythm Murray is going for. The emphasis here is on | are all top-notch and play with an extraordinary amount of fire in an engaging post-Albert Ayler/post-John Coltrane milieu. Rather, the sonic waves of the whole experience take one's body and shove it—from the hum of cymbals, low pizzicato tones and roiling ivory quilt to preachy tenor honks and flywheel trumpet, all cast upwards to tremendous effect." Writing for Point of Departure, Stuart Broomer wrote that Murray "achieves striking coherence and intensity with an octet made that includes Americans, French and South Africans... Murray's band concept is very much an ensemble one, and his own cymbals impart a constant shimmer to the sound that's reflected in the continuous strings... That rich texture both exalts and subsumes the individuals, so that it's the sheer sound of the band that you remember, whether jerkily making their way through the angular 'Hilarious |
Henty, Holbrook and Mangoplah-Cookardinia United competed in the first season. In 1958 all remaining clubs from the Albury & District Football League moved across to the Farrer Football League. Former Clubs Albury Catholic Young Men's Club (CYMC): 1934. The club changed its name to St. Patrick's FC in 1935. Albury Rovers: 1930 - 1940, 1946. Joined in 1930, after being runners up to Granya in the 1929 Tallangatta & District Football League. Merged with East Albury in 1947 to form East Albury Rovers. Brocklesby: 1931 - 32, (1933 & 34 - Central Hume Football Association), 1935 - 40. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1931. Joined the Hume Football League in 1945 and played there until 2005. Cookardinia: 1934 - 1940, 1946 - 1954. Mangoplah and Cookardinia football clubs decide to merge prior to the 1955 season. Culcairn: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1991. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. East Albury Rovers:1947. Joined the Hume Football League in 1948. and folded in 1951. Henty: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1979. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. Holbrook: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1980. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. Mangoplah: 1937 - 1940, 1946 - 1954. Mangoplah and Cookardinia football clubs decide to merge prior to the 1955 season. Mangoplah / Cookardinia United: 1955 & 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1981. North Wagga: 1950 - 1957. Joined the Riverina Football League in 1958 after a merger with the North Wagga Stars FC. Rand: 1939 - 1940. Joined the Hume Football League in 1945 and played there until 1983. RAAF 2nds: 1950 - St. Patrick's: 1935 & 1936. Club disbanded in April, 1937. The Rock: 1938 - 1940. (Played in the Milbrulong & District League from 1945 - 1947), 1948 - 1957. Turvey Park 2nds: 1953 & 1954. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1958. Merged with | a Reserve Grade Competition, North Melbourne visited Bolton Park, Wagga in 1952 and defeated a combined Albury & DFL side, with North's Jock Spencer kicking 18 goals. The 1952 A&DFL Reserves competition was divided into two division – North (Wagga) and South (Albury). Culcairn's Henry "Splinter" Liston licked 91 goals in the 1953 home and away series, plus 8 more in the finals, to finish on 99 goals! In June 1954 the Albury & DFL played an inter-league match against the South Western DFL at Wagga, resulting in a win to Albury & DFL, 12.20 - 92 to 10.7 - 67. Culcairn's Henry "Splinter" Liston kicked 102 goals in 1954, which included the finals series. In 1955, Ron Clegg was captain-coach of the North Wagga Football Club in the Albury & DFL, winning the £50 - Border Mail Newspaper / Albury & DFL Footballer of the Year Award, before returning to South Melbourne in 1956. In 1957 the Farrer Football League was first formed as a breakaway from the Albury & District Football League. Culcairn, Henty, Holbrook and Mangoplah-Cookardinia United competed in the first season. In 1958 all remaining clubs from the Albury & District Football League moved across to the Farrer Football League. Former Clubs Albury Catholic Young Men's Club (CYMC): 1934. The club changed its name to St. Patrick's FC in 1935. Albury Rovers: 1930 - 1940, 1946. Joined in 1930, after being runners up to Granya in the 1929 Tallangatta & District Football League. Merged with East Albury in 1947 to form East Albury Rovers. Brocklesby: 1931 - 32, (1933 & 34 - Central Hume Football Association), 1935 - 40. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1931. Joined the Hume Football League in 1945 and played there until 2005. Cookardinia: 1934 - 1940, 1946 - 1954. Mangoplah and Cookardinia football clubs decide to merge prior to the 1955 season. Culcairn: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1991. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. East Albury Rovers:1947. Joined the Hume Football League in 1948. and folded in 1951. Henty: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1979. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. Holbrook: 1930 - 1940, 1946 - 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1980. Initially joined from the Riverina Football Association in 1930. Mangoplah: 1937 - 1940, 1946 - 1954. Mangoplah and Cookardinia football clubs decide to merge prior to the 1955 season. Mangoplah / Cookardinia United: 1955 & 1956. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1957 & played there until 1981. North Wagga: 1950 - 1957. Joined the Riverina Football League in 1958 after a merger with the North Wagga Stars FC. Rand: 1939 - 1940. Joined the Hume Football League in 1945 and played there until 1983. RAAF 2nds: 1950 - St. Patrick's: 1935 & 1936. Club disbanded in April, 1937. The Rock: 1938 - 1940. (Played in the Milbrulong & District League from 1945 - 1947), 1948 - 1957. Turvey Park 2nds: 1953 & 1954. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1958. Merged with Yerong Creek FC in 1962. Wagga: 1949 - 1957. Joined the Farrer Football League in 1958 & played there until 1959. Woomargama / Mullengandra: 1948. The club withdrew in 1949 and went into recess. (Albury & DFL went into recess between 1941 & 1945 due to WW2) Grand Finals Seniors MCU - Mangoplah Cookardinia United FC Cannon |
find himself the exact Doppelgänger of a British aristocrat. Film adaptations In 1920 it was made into an American silent film The Man Who Lost Himself directed by Clarence G. Badger and featuring William Faversham and Hedda Hopper. It was later remade as a 1941 film of the same title directed by Edward Ludwig and starring Brian Aherne and Kay Francis. References Sources Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in | American silent film The Man Who Lost Himself directed by Clarence G. Badger and featuring William Faversham and Hedda Hopper. It was later remade as a 1941 film of the same title directed by Edward Ludwig and starring Brian Aherne and Kay Francis. References Sources Goble, Alan. The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film. Walter de Gruyter, 1999. Loeber, Rolf, Stouthamer-Loeber, Magda & Burnham, Anne Mullin. |
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