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1974 and again from 1990 to 1995. He also served in the Venezuelan Chamber of Deputies from 1969 to 1974 and again from 1984 to 1989. He died on 8 February 2022, at the age of 85. References 1936
– 8 February 2022) was a Venezuelan politician. A member of Copei, he served as Governor of Miranda from 1971 to 1974 and again from 1990 to 1995. He also served in the Venezuelan Chamber
Alexander of the English Gardening School in Stoneacre, Kent and for two years in private gardens in France, keeping in touch with Lloyd throughout. The two travelled together through Turkey by car, with Garrett acting as guide and interpreter. Garrett began dating Amanda Ferguson, later to become his wife. At the age of 27 Garrett joined the Great Dixter team and worked closely with owner Christopher Lloyd (1921-2006) from 1992 until his death. Garrett became like a son and heir to the old man. The Dixter gardens had lost a sense of clear direction and Garrett helped bring drive and energy to the planning and planting design. After Lloyd's death he went on to become Chief Executive of the Great Dixter Charitable Trust, Lloyd not wishing the house and gardens to "stagnate" under English Heritage or National Trust ownership. Shortly before his death, Lloyd wrote of Garrett: "Fergus is an amazing proselytiser. He believes in what we are doing and spreads the word... The number of visitors bears witness to his success. He can grip an audience right from the start, but he is totally unselfish. As long as he is at the helm, I have no fears for Dixter. He is an incredibly hard worker." The New York Times noted "Garrett has proven himself a visionary in his own right, with a style more effusive than Lloyd's, but with the same exacting attention to each combination, seeking new sensations of color and texture and -- this is key -- a graceful progression through the seasons." Garrett doesn't favour the use of synthetic chemical interventions in land or plant management. He supports building biodiversity and ecological education. Personal life and honours Garrett and his wife Amanda, a zoologist, have two daughters and live in Hastings Old Town. He is described as a "world famous plantman" and "the Lionel Messi of horticulture", one of the Britain's most influental garden designers. Garrett has received the Royal Horticultural Society Associate of Honour (2008), the Veitch Memorial Medal for outstanding contribution to the practice of horticulture (2015) and the Victoria Medal
spent his formative childhood years. She wished for her two boys to study in England so they returned to live with their grandmother in England. When his mother retired, she came back to England and the two boys moved to live with her. At school in Hove, Garrett's geography teacher encouraged him to pursue land-based studies so he applied to study agriculture at Wye College in Kent. He intensely disliked the principles of modern agriculture and so swapped to study horticulture under lecturer Tom Wright, who had been a student of Christopher Lloyd in the 1950s. Garrett worked for Brighton Parks Department, gaining practical experience, and then completed a BSc back at Wye College. During this period, in 1988, he visited Great Dixter and was invited back, striking up a friendship with owner Christopher Lloyd. On the advice of Lloyd, Garrett worked for Beth Chatto for eight months. He also was based at Rosemary Alexander of the English Gardening School in Stoneacre, Kent and for two years in private gardens in France, keeping in touch with Lloyd throughout. The two travelled together through Turkey by car, with Garrett acting as guide and interpreter. Garrett began dating Amanda Ferguson, later to become his wife. At the age of 27 Garrett joined the Great Dixter team and worked closely with owner Christopher Lloyd (1921-2006) from 1992 until his death. Garrett became like a son and heir to the old man. The Dixter gardens had lost a sense of clear direction and Garrett helped bring drive and energy to the planning and planting design. After Lloyd's death he went on to become Chief Executive of the Great Dixter Charitable Trust, Lloyd not wishing the house and gardens to "stagnate" under English Heritage or National Trust ownership. Shortly before his death, Lloyd wrote of Garrett: "Fergus is an amazing
deaths Soviet politicians Russian politicians Russian people of Ukrainian descent Communist Party of the Soviet Union members Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour Recipients of the Order of Friendship of Peoples People from
8 February 2022) was a Russian politician. He served as Minister of Architecture, Construction, and Housing from 1991 to 1992. He died on 8 February
was a Jutra Award nominee for Best Cinematography at the 11th Jutra Awards. Her other credits have included the films Ice Cream, Chocolate and Other Consolations (Crème glacée, chocolat et autres consolations), Posers, The High Cost of Living,
chocolat et autres consolations), Posers, The High Cost of Living, The Year Dolly Parton Was My Mom, Liverpool, Miraculum, What Are We Doing Here? (Qu’est-ce qu’on fait ici ?), 1:54, 9, Happy Face and Best Sellers. References External links Canadian cinematographers Canadian
the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh
census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh District Christian communities
manager. She grew up in Norwalk, California, and studied sociology at University of California Santa Barbara. Working as a social worker for a year, she began taking temp placements outside of that role, including at Disney. Career Merino began with Disney Animation in the 1990s, expecting to stay for five years. Merino was a software engineer and technology administration manager for Chicken Little (2005), and promotional support for Meet the Robinsons (2007). Having worked up through the technology department to the role of administrative manager, Tangled (2010) producer Roy Conli asked her to manage the editing department, which made her a production manager. She re-enrolled in school, receiving
Roy Conli asked her to manage the editing department, which made her a production manager. She re-enrolled in school, receiving an MBA. She was a production assistant for Wreck-It Ralph (2012). Merino was a production manager and departmental leadership for Big Hero 6 (2014), departmental leadership for Zootopia (2016), production manager for Moana (2016), and studio and creative leadership for Raya and the Last Dragon (2021). Merino joined Encanto two years into development, as it started to transition to production. Merino created an employee resource group at Disney called Voces (Voices). Separately, Encanto had a Familia Group, which would meet monthly for lunch to discuss the concept of family. References External links Living people Year of birth missing (living
In the 2018 Barbadian general election he was elected member of parliament representing Saint Michael South under the Barbados Labour Party defeating Prime Minister Freundel Stuart. He was subsequently appointed Minister of Maritime Affairs and the Blue Economy, in the Mia Mottley Administration. On February 3, 2022, he was appointed Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs by President Dame Sandra Mason. References Living people Barbadian politicians Barbados Labour Party politicians Alumni of the
Developing Countries. He obtained his second degree from Harvard Kennedy School with a focus on "Public Policy and Leadership" and "Leadership and Human Rights". In the 2018 Barbadian general election he was elected member of parliament representing Saint Michael South under the Barbados Labour Party defeating Prime Minister Freundel Stuart. He was subsequently appointed Minister of Maritime Affairs and the Blue Economy, in the Mia Mottley Administration. On February 3, 2022, he was appointed Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs by President Dame
served in the 6th National People's Congress, which lasted from June 1983 to March 1988. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 89. References 1933 births 2022 deaths Members
He served in the 6th National People's Congress, which lasted from June 1983 to March 1988. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 89. References
was tried in July 1872 on charges of "attempt with the aim of changing the form of government, complicity in assassination, illegal arrests with threats of death". The council of war sentenced him to death. After an appeal for review which confirmed the initial judgement, and a further appeal to the Commission for Pardons, the sentence was commuted in January 1873 to forced labour for life in the penal colony of New Caledonia, where he was sent without delay. After the amnesty of 1880 he was repatriated on board the Loire, which reached Brest on 7 June 1881, after which he occupied himself with pedagogical matters. In 1889 he published the Nouvelle méthode d'enseignement de la grammaire française, which was approved by the municipal council of Paris. This work was followed by several handbooks for the use of pupils in primary schools, of which the last appeared in 1906. He was close to the left-wing of the Boulangistes in 1889. He also shared the convictions of Ernest Granger, Ernest Roche and Henri Rochefort and joined the Comité central socialiste révolutionnaire (CCSR). In 1904 he published his memoirs of the events in which he had taken part, while enlarging
was approved by the municipal council of Paris. This work was followed by several handbooks for the use of pupils in primary schools, of which the last appeared in 1906. He was close to the left-wing of the Boulangistes in 1889. He also shared the convictions of Ernest Granger, Ernest Roche and Henri Rochefort and joined the Comité central socialiste révolutionnaire (CCSR). In 1904 he published his memoirs of the events in which he had taken part, while enlarging the viewpoint to the scale of historical analysis. The three volumes of La Commune vécue, 30 years after the facts, provoked many reactions not only from his opponents but also from former communards. He died on 11 December 1909 at Bois-le-Roi. Works Nouvelle méthode d'enseignement de la grammaire française, revised and corrected by Jeannin, Paris, 1894 Mémoires d'un communard: 18 Mars–28 Mai 1871, La Commune vécue (vol. 1 online; vol. 2 online; vol.3 online). Mémoires d'un communard: 18 mars–28 mai 1871, La Commune vécue, Larousse, 2009, 383 pp. — condensed into one volume. References Bibliography La Commune, Éditions Sociales, 1970 External links Maitron.fr: notice DA COSTA Gaston, Pierre, put online 26 July 2009,
International Speedway Corporation. The raceway was originally constructed with a 2.5 mi (4.0 km) road course that ran both inside and outside of the main tri-oval. In 1991 the track was reconfigured with the current 1.51 mi (2.43 km) interior layout. PIR has an estimated grandstand seating capacity of around 67,000. Lights were installed around the track in 2004 following the addition of a second annual NASCAR race weekend. ISM Raceway is home to two annual NASCAR race weekends, one of 13 facilities on the NASCAR schedule to host more than one race weekend a year. The track is both the first and last stop in the western United States, as well as the fourth and penultimate track on the schedule. Entry list Practice First practice The first practice session was held on Friday, November 9, at 8:30 AM MST, and would last for 50 minutes. Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a
also hosted the IndyCar Series, CART, USAC and the Rolex Sports Car Series. The raceway is currently owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation. The raceway was originally constructed with a 2.5 mi (4.0 km) road course that ran both inside and outside of the main tri-oval. In 1991 the track was reconfigured with the current 1.51 mi (2.43 km) interior layout. PIR has an estimated grandstand seating capacity of around 67,000. Lights were installed around the track in 2004 following the addition of a second annual NASCAR race weekend. ISM Raceway is home to two annual NASCAR race weekends, one of 13 facilities on the NASCAR schedule to host more than one race weekend a year. The track is both the first and last stop in the western United States, as well as the fourth and penultimate track on the schedule. Entry list Practice First practice The first practice session was held on Friday, November 9, at 8:30 AM MST, and would last for 50 minutes. Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports would set the fastest time in the session, with a time of 26.583 and an average speed of . Second and final practice The second and final practice session, sometimes referred to as Happy Hour, was held on Friday, November 9, at 10:05 AM MST, and would last for 50 minutes. Harrison Burton of Kyle Busch Motorsports
and Mississippi Army National Guard. Goodin later worked as an administrator in the Perry County School District and was director of the Perry County Vocational Technical Center. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. References Living people 1958 births People from New Orleans People from Perry County, Mississippi Educators from Mississippi Mississippi Republicans Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives
Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. References Living people 1958 births People from New Orleans People from Perry County, Mississippi Educators from Mississippi Mississippi Republicans Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives Mercer County Community College alumni Western Illinois University alumni University of Southern Mississippi alumni
is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics,
Statistics, Daghlah had a population of 410 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox
season against Sichuan Dahe. He suffered tore ligament in 2003, and was excluded from main squad. In 2005, he was loaned to Sichuan First City. In 2006, he returned to Dalian Shide, but did not have much appearances. By the end of the season, he sought for transfer to Wuhan Optics Valley, but the trade was unsuccessful. In 2007, he was loaned to Jiangsu Sainty. In 2008, he left Dalian and trasnferred to Chengdu Blades. In 2012, Zou joined Shenzhen Mingbo. The team was dissolved before the season was finished. In 2013, he moved to Qinghai Senke. In 2014, Zou returned to Dalian
Dalian and joined Dalian Transcendence in the China League Two. Managerial career Zou retired after the 2014 season, and started to work as assistant coach for the team until 2018, when the team got dissolved. In 2020, Zou Peng joined Dalian Pro as youth training coach. Honours Club Dalian Shide Chinese Jia-A League/Chinese Super League: 2000, 2001, 2002 Chinese
in Thaiwoo in the 2016–17 season. He was selected to represent Switzerland at the 2018 Winter Olympics but was forced to withdraw due to injury. He failed to qualify in the first qualifying round but was the final qualifier into the finals of the
the 2014 Junior World Championships in the dual moguls event. He also won a bronze medal in dual moguls at the 2017 World Championships. His career high World Cup placement is second, which he achieved in moguls in Ruka in the 2020–21 season and in dual moguls in Thaiwoo in the 2016–17 season. He was selected to represent Switzerland at the 2018 Winter
of the Katipunan and a close friend of Emilio Aguinaldo. Tirona was born to Don Estanislao Tirona and Juana Mata.
the Katipunan and a close friend of Emilio Aguinaldo. Tirona was born to Don Estanislao Tirona and Juana Mata. His father was a capitan municipal of Cavite Viejo. His
inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church. References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh District Christian
is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Bahzina had a population of 586
2018–19 season was the 115th in the history of Royal Charleroi Sporting Club and the club's seventh consecutive season in the top flight of Belgian football. Players First-team squad Updated 31 January
the top flight of Belgian football. Players First-team squad Updated 31 January 2019. On loan Pre-season and friendlies Competitions Overall record First Division A League table Results summary Results by round Matches
South Korean politician. A member of the Peace Democratic Party, the Democratic Party, and the National Congress for New Politics, he served in the National Assembly from 1988 to 2000. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 92. References
deaths 20th-century South Korean politicians Peace Democratic Party politicians Seoul National University alumni University of Michigan alumni Yonsei University faculty Korea University faculty People from South Jeolla Province
Eric Lohr is the chair of the department of history at
chair of the department of history at American University. Works References Living
received entry from the qualifying draw: Hailey Baptiste Lucia Bronzetti Caroline Dolehide Brenda Fruhvirtová Viktória Kužmová Rebeka Masarova Withdrawals Before the tournament Rebecca Peterson → replaced by Viktoriya Tomova Zheng Saisai → replaced by Zhu Lin Retirements Emma Raducanu (left leg injury) Lesia Tsurenko Anna Kalinskaya (back injury) Doubles main draw entrants Seeds ¹ Rankings are as of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw: Lucia Bronzetti / Sara Errani Laura Pigossi / Renata Zarazúa The following pair received entry as alternates: Wang Xinyu / Zhu Lin Withdrawals
of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: Caty McNally Katie Volynets Renata Zarazúa The following player received entry using a protected ranking into the singles main draw: Daria Saville The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: Hailey Baptiste Lucia Bronzetti Caroline Dolehide Brenda Fruhvirtová Viktória Kužmová Rebeka Masarova Withdrawals Before the tournament Rebecca Peterson → replaced by Viktoriya Tomova Zheng Saisai → replaced by Zhu Lin Retirements Emma Raducanu (left leg injury) Lesia Tsurenko Anna Kalinskaya (back injury) Doubles main draw entrants Seeds ¹ Rankings are as of 14 February 2022. Other entrants The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw: Lucia Bronzetti / Sara Errani Laura Pigossi / Renata Zarazúa The following pair received entry as alternates: Wang Xinyu / Zhu Lin Withdrawals Before
from the 29th district. He assumed office on November 3, 2021. Early life and education Sanders was born in Shaw, Mississippi in 1961. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education from Mississippi Valley State University. Career Sanders served as chief
1961) is an American politician serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from the 29th district. He assumed office on November 3, 2021. Early life and education Sanders was born in Shaw, Mississippi in 1961. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education from Mississippi Valley State University. Career Sanders served
of 349 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church and a Greek Catholic Church. References Bibliography Populated
Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Raheb had a population of
is stored and mixed in a stock tank and then uniformly distributed throughout the irrigation system. Types of injectors Venturi-type Positive displacement Injector Dosatron Injectors Anderson Injector Smith Injector Gewa Injector References Tool stubs Biotechnology stubs Agricultural machinery
water in a tank and then expelled by the injectors onto waiting crops. To avoid overfertilization of plants that would result in the plant's death, the precise ratio of fertilizer to
Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Qurb Ali had a population of 623 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants
located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Qurb
United Liberal Democrats, the Saenuri Party, and later the Future Hope Alliance, he served in the National Assembly from 1996 to 2012. References 1937
Hope Alliance, he served in the National Assembly from 1996 to 2012. References 1937 births Living people 20th-century South Korean politicians 21st-century South Korean politicians United Liberal Democrats politicians Liberty Korea Party politicians Members of the
centre-back for Belgian First Division B club Waasland-Beveren. References 2002 births Living people Belgian footballers Black Belgian sportspeople Association football central defenders RWDM47 players K.V. Mechelen
a centre-back for Belgian First Division B club Waasland-Beveren. References 2002 births Living people Belgian footballers Black Belgian sportspeople Association football central defenders RWDM47 players
in the Mingan Archipelago National Park. The terrain on Île à Bouleaux is flat. The island's highest point is 46 meters above sea-level. It extends 1.6 kilometers from north to south, and 2.0 kilometers
It extends 1.6 kilometers from north to south, and 2.0 kilometers from east to west. The region has a continental climate. The Annual average temperature in the region is 0 °C. The warmest month is August, with an average temperature of 12 °C, and the coldest is February, with −14
the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus Afromorgus. References acinus Beetles
hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus
References acinus Beetles described in 1904
the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus
of hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and subgenus
species of hide beetle in the
2022) was a Brazilian politician. A member of the Democrats, he served in the Chamber of Deputies from 1991 to 2003. He died in João Pessoa on 8 February 2022, at the age of 78. References 1943 births 2022
Brazilian politician. A member of the Democrats, he served in the Chamber of Deputies from 1991 to 2003. He died in João Pessoa on 8 February 2022, at the age of
breaststroke leg and contributed to the final relay time of 1:44.96 to win the bronze medal and set a new Russian record in the event. 2021 2021 Swimming World Cup At the second stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup, held at Danube Arena in Budapest, Hungary in October, Godun won a bronze medal in the 100 metre individual medley with a personal best time of 59.71 seconds on the first day of competition, which was less than one-tenth of a second slower than silver medalist Michelle Coleman of Sweden. The second day of competition, Godun won the gold medal in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:04.71 and finished over six-tenths of a second ahead of the silver medalist in the event, Lydia Jacoby of the United States. On the third and final day of competition at the Budapest stop, she won the gold medal in the 50 metre breaststroke in 29.81 seconds, this time finishing 0.16 seconds ahead of second-place finisher Lydia Jacoby. Godun returned to the World Cup circuit at the fourth and final stop, held at the Palace of Water Sports in Kazan, where she competed in the 50 metre breaststroke and won the gold medal with a time of 29.64 seconds to finish 0.01 seconds ahead of the silver medalist and fellow Russian Yuliya Yefimova. 2021 European Short Course Championships In November 2021, at the 2021 European Short Course Swimming Championships in Kazan, Godun placed fourth in her first event, the 100 metre breaststroke, with a time of 1:04.67 that was less than half a second slower than bronze medalist in the event, Eneli Jefimova of Estonia. For her second event of the Championships, the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun placed tenth in the prelims heats with a 2:23.17 and did not advance to the semifinals stage of competition as she was not one of the two fastest Russians in the event. The same day as the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun split a 29.47 for the breaststroke leg of the 4×50 metre medley relay, contributing to the final time of 1:44.19, which won the relay team the gold medal and set a new Russian record. In her final event of the Championships, the 50 metre breaststroke, she won the bronze medal with a time of 29.80 seconds, finishing less than two-tenths of a second behind the gold and silver medalists in the event, Arianna Castiglioni and Benedetta Pilato, both of Italy. 2021 World Short Course Championships Leading up to the 2021 World Short Course Championships, Godun swam a personal best time of 1:03.77 in the 100 metre breaststroke at the 2021 Russian Short Course Championships and became the second-fastest female Russian swimmer in the event behind Yuliya Yefimova. At the World Championships, held at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates in December, Godun ranked first in the semifinals of the 50 metre breaststroke, following the disqualification of Alia Atkinson of Jamaica, with a personal best time of 29.42 seconds. In the final the following day, Godun placed fifth with a time of 29.79 seconds. Earlier in the same finals session, she helped the 4×50 metre medley relay place sixth in 1:44.51, splitting a 29.56 for the breaststroke leg of the relay. In the final of the 100 metre breaststroke three days later, Godun placed sixth in 1:04.43. For her final event of the Championships, the 4×100 metre medley relay, she split a 1:04.53 for the breaststroke
for the semifinals later in the day. In the semifinals, she qualified for the final with a time of 1:05.20 that ranked her fifth overall in the semifinals. The following day, Godun placed seventh in the final of the 100 metre breaststroke with a time of 1:05.40. On the fifth and final day of competition, Godun helped advance the 4×50 metre medley relay to the final ranking first in the prelims heats with a 1:45.81, splitting a 30.26 for the breaststroke leg of the relay. In the evening final, she split a 30.11 for the breaststroke leg and contributed to the final relay time of 1:44.96 to win the bronze medal and set a new Russian record in the event. 2021 2021 Swimming World Cup At the second stop of the 2021 Swimming World Cup, held at Danube Arena in Budapest, Hungary in October, Godun won a bronze medal in the 100 metre individual medley with a personal best time of 59.71 seconds on the first day of competition, which was less than one-tenth of a second slower than silver medalist Michelle Coleman of Sweden. The second day of competition, Godun won the gold medal in the 100 metre breaststroke with a 1:04.71 and finished over six-tenths of a second ahead of the silver medalist in the event, Lydia Jacoby of the United States. On the third and final day of competition at the Budapest stop, she won the gold medal in the 50 metre breaststroke in 29.81 seconds, this time finishing 0.16 seconds ahead of second-place finisher Lydia Jacoby. Godun returned to the World Cup circuit at the fourth and final stop, held at the Palace of Water Sports in Kazan, where she competed in the 50 metre breaststroke and won the gold medal with a time of 29.64 seconds to finish 0.01 seconds ahead of the silver medalist and fellow Russian Yuliya Yefimova. 2021 European Short Course Championships In November 2021, at the 2021 European Short Course Swimming Championships in Kazan, Godun placed fourth in her first event, the 100 metre breaststroke, with a time of 1:04.67 that was less than half a second slower than bronze medalist in the event, Eneli Jefimova of Estonia. For her second event of the Championships, the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun placed tenth in the prelims heats with a 2:23.17 and did not advance to the semifinals stage of competition as she was not one of the two fastest Russians in the event. The same day as the 200 metre breaststroke, Godun
station during project development. The station is at the intersection of the Shanghai–Wuhan–Chengdu high-speed railway and the Hohhot–Nanning corridor of the National High-Speed Rail Grid. History The station is expected to
intersection of the Shanghai–Wuhan–Chengdu high-speed railway and the Hohhot–Nanning corridor of the National High-Speed Rail Grid. History The station is expected to open with the Zhengzhou–Wanzhou high-speed railway in 2022. The following lines are also expected to serve this
again won gold in the halfpipe event. Winter Youth Olympics Ono represented Japan at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics where she won a gold medal in the girl's halfpipe event with a score of 95.33. Winter Olympics Ono represented Japan at the 2022 Winter Olympics in the women's halfpipe event. References 2004 births Living people
in the halfpipe event. She competed at the 2019 FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships where she again won gold in the halfpipe event. Winter Youth Olympics Ono represented Japan at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics where she won a gold medal in the girl's halfpipe event with a score of 95.33. Winter Olympics Ono represented Japan at the 2022 Winter Olympics in the women's halfpipe event.
baccatus is a species of
hide beetle in the subfamily Omorginae and
Pannella. He served as a municipal councillor in Rome, and as a national deputy from 1986 to 1987. Beyond his political activity, Bandinelli was a columnist for various publications including Il Mondo and Il Foglio, a translator, a poet and a essayist. He died on 6 February 2022, at the age
member of the Radical Party, Bandinelli was one of the closer collaborators of Marco Pannella. He served as a municipal councillor in Rome, and as a national deputy from 1986 to 1987. Beyond his political activity, Bandinelli was a columnist for various publications including Il Mondo and Il Foglio, a translator, a poet and a
competes internationally. He represented his country at the 2022 Winter Olympics. References Living people
2022 Winter Olympics. References Living people 2001 births Lugers at the 2022
blowout loss the previous week to the Syracuse Orangemen, 66–13. The loss denied them their first ever Big East conference championship. The game had previously been scheduled for September 26; however, the threat of Hurricane Georges prompted administrators from both schools to postpone the game. A players’ plan by the Bruins to wear black wristbands against the Hurricanes to protest falling minority enrollment at UC-system schools was the subject of a series of emotional team meetings the week leading up to the game. The wristband issue dominated the team's normal pre-game Friday night meeting. Reflecting on the saga, OT Kris Farris stated “This team had tremendous focus right before games, and when the topic was switched to something that wasn’t about the game, I just felt ‘Wow, this team is not focused.’ Even that that thought entered my mind told me ‘Oh, wow, I’m not sure how focused we are.'” QB Cade McNown also recalled having concerns, stating “It was disappointing to be thinking about anything other than beating Miami. There’s a time and place to make statements that are political or social. A few guys saw that as the time and place.” Aftermath and impact Miami led 21-17 going into halftime. UCLA took over in the 3rd quarter, scoring 3 straight touchdowns to take a 38–21 advantage late in the 3rd quarter. After a late rally by Miami to tighten the score to 45–42, UCLA began driving with hopes of running out the clock, leading to the most pivotal play of the game. With 3:34 remaining in the 4th quarter, UCLA had a 3rd and 8 at their own 44-yard line, UCLA quartedback Cade McNown completed a pass over the middle to WR Brad Melsby, who was eventually tackled at Miami's 26-yard line. As he was tackled, he fumbled the ball and Miami recovered. Replays showed that Melsby was down before the ball came loose, but as instant replay didn't exist in college football back then, nothing could be done to reverse the ruling. Miami made the most of their opportunity, driving for a touchdown to take
football game held between the UCLA Bruins and the Miami Hurricanes at the Orange Bowl, the home stadium of Miami. The game had large implications as UCLA was assured a spot in the Fiesta Bowl with a victory; that season, the Fiesta Bowl served as the site for the BCS National Championship. After trailing 38-21 after three quarters, Miami stormed back to stun the Bruins 49–45. The game remains infamous among UCLA fans, as the Bruins' loss denied them their best shot to date at their first national championship since 1954. The Bruins were coached by Bob Toledo. They came into the game with a 10–0 record and riding a 20-game winning streak dating back to the previous season, having already clinched the Pac-10 championship with an 8–0 record in conference play. The Hurricanes, coached by Butch Davis, went into the game with a 7–3 record including a 5–2 mark in Big East play. Leading up to the game The Bruins were undefeated heading into the game, only needing a win to secure a spot in the National Championship game. Miami was just coming off of a blowout loss the previous week to the Syracuse Orangemen, 66–13. The loss denied them their first ever Big East conference championship. The game had previously been scheduled for September 26; however, the threat of Hurricane Georges prompted administrators from both schools to postpone the game. A players’ plan by the Bruins to wear black wristbands against the Hurricanes to protest falling minority enrollment at UC-system schools was the subject of a series of emotional team meetings the week leading up to the game. The wristband issue dominated the team's normal pre-game Friday night meeting. Reflecting on the saga, OT Kris Farris stated “This team had tremendous focus right before games, and when the topic was switched to something that wasn’t about the game, I just felt ‘Wow, this team is not focused.’ Even that that thought entered my mind told me ‘Oh, wow, I’m not sure how focused we are.'” QB Cade McNown also recalled having concerns, stating “It was disappointing to be thinking about anything other than beating Miami. There’s a time and place to make statements that are political or social. A few guys saw that as the time and place.” Aftermath and impact Miami led 21-17 going into halftime. UCLA took over in the 3rd quarter, scoring 3 straight touchdowns to take a 38–21 advantage late in the 3rd quarter. After a late rally by
Dan Goldie to become the first American tennis singles gold medalist in games history (along with Cecilia Fernandez who won the women's event). Competing briefly in professional tennis, Gallien had a best singles world ranking of 433. He featured in the main draw of the 1983 Pacific Southwest Open and had a win over Ben Testerman, before falling to world number six Gene Mayer. Gallien was head coach of the USC Trojans women's team for 22-years, from 1995 to 2017, during which time he was named Pac-12 Coach of the Year on five occasions. He is a former men's co-head coach of Pepperdine (with Allen Fox from 1988 to 1990) and is now the women's head coach of Cal
Gene Mayer. Gallien was head coach of the USC Trojans women's team for 22-years, from 1995 to 2017, during which time he was named Pac-12 Coach of the Year on five occasions. He is a former men's co-head coach of Pepperdine (with Allen Fox from 1988 to 1990) and is now the women's head coach of Cal State LA. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American male tennis players Pepperdine Waves men's tennis players Pepperdine Waves men's tennis coaches USC Trojans women's tennis coaches California State University, Los Angeles faculty
Swiss psychoanalyst and politician. A member of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, he served in the Cantonal Council of Zürich from 1979 to 1984. He died on 5 February 2022,
from 1979 to 1984. He died on 5 February 2022, at the age of 86. References 1935 births 2022 deaths Swiss psychoanalysts Social Democratic Party of Switzerland politicians
Zest Preparatory Academy Charter School Fayette County Liberty Tech Charter School Fulton County Amana Academy Atlanta Heights Charter School Atlanta SMART Academy Atlanta Unbound Academy Destination Career Academy of Georgia Ethos Classical School Fulton Leadership Academy Genesis Academy (Boys, Girls) Georgia Cyber Academy International Charter School of Atlanta Ivy Preparatory Academy Liberation Academy Resurgence Hall Charter School Savannah Exploratory Academy SLAM Academy of Atlanta Gwinnett County Brookhaven
Ethos Classical School Fulton Leadership Academy Genesis Academy (Boys, Girls) Georgia Cyber Academy International Charter School of Atlanta Ivy Preparatory Academy Liberation Academy Resurgence Hall Charter School Savannah Exploratory Academy SLAM Academy of Atlanta Gwinnett County Brookhaven Innovation Academy Georgia Connections Academy International Charter Academy of Georgia Yi Hwang Academy of Language Excellence Lowndes County Scintilla Charter Academy Mitchell County Baconton Community Charter School Randolph County Southwest Georgia STEM Charter Academy Richmond County Georgia School for Innovation & the Classics Sumter County Furlow Charter School White County Mountain
main game in the series and was released on 4 December 2007. It features head-to-head racing on 3 different locations with a reverse variant that becomes available one the player completes the forward variant. It is one of two games in the series that do not feature weapons. Burnin' Rubber 2 (2008) Burnin' Rubber 2 is the second main game in the series and was released on 7 October 2008. gameplay being similar to the first game. The game also comes with the addition of new vehicles and locations. The vehicle damage system was also added as a new element to the game and what would used in later games. It is one of two games in the series that do not feature weapons. Hidden packages were also introduced for the first time in what would be used in other Xform games. Burnin' Rubber 3 (2009) Burnin' Rubber 3 is the third main game in the series and was released on 7 July 2009. New elements were added to the game which would also be used in later games. A new "World Dominaton" mode was introduced in which the player competes to various events in America, Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia. This was the first game to introduce weapons to the series ranging from caltrop layer, grenade launchers, machine guns, miniguns, rocket launchers, and more. With the addition of weapons, new modes such as Battle Race, Rival Battle, Survivor Customization ranging from body kits, paint, rims, and spoilers were made available for the vehicles. Some custom parts could be unlocked through the daily challenges mode. Burnin' Rubber 3 was nominated for Best Online Game in the 2010 Dutch Game Awards. Burnin' Rubber 4 (2010) Burnin' Rubber 4 is the fourth main game in the series and was released on 10 August 2010. Players collect tickets which gives entry to compete in specific events. This was the first game to introduce an open world map consisting of 4 major areas (The city, Big Rock, Snow Peak, and The Jungle). A new selection of vehicles were added with some only obtainable after completing special missions. It is also the first game to introduce boats and a flyable helicopter in an optional side mission. The game won "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award in 2010. Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition (2011) After Burnin' Rubber 4 received the "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award, Xform released Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition on 12 April 2011. This version was an update to the original game adding new features and fixes. The handling system which was the same as used in Burnin' Rubber 3 was reworked. A new area called The Docks which was an industrial zone was added along with the other 4 major areas.
in what would be used in other Xform games. Burnin' Rubber 3 (2009) Burnin' Rubber 3 is the third main game in the series and was released on 7 July 2009. New elements were added to the game which would also be used in later games. A new "World Dominaton" mode was introduced in which the player competes to various events in America, Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia. This was the first game to introduce weapons to the series ranging from caltrop layer, grenade launchers, machine guns, miniguns, rocket launchers, and more. With the addition of weapons, new modes such as Battle Race, Rival Battle, Survivor Customization ranging from body kits, paint, rims, and spoilers were made available for the vehicles. Some custom parts could be unlocked through the daily challenges mode. Burnin' Rubber 3 was nominated for Best Online Game in the 2010 Dutch Game Awards. Burnin' Rubber 4 (2010) Burnin' Rubber 4 is the fourth main game in the series and was released on 10 August 2010. Players collect tickets which gives entry to compete in specific events. This was the first game to introduce an open world map consisting of 4 major areas (The city, Big Rock, Snow Peak, and The Jungle). A new selection of vehicles were added with some only obtainable after completing special missions. It is also the first game to introduce boats and a flyable helicopter in an optional side mission. The game won "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award in 2010. Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition (2011) After Burnin' Rubber 4 received the "Shockwave.com Online Game Of The Year" award, Xform released Burnin' Rubber 4: Game Of The Year Edition on 12 April 2011. This version was an update to the original game adding new features and fixes. The handling system which was the same as used in Burnin' Rubber 3 was reworked. A new area called The Docks which was an industrial zone was added along with the other 4 major areas. Machine gun and surface-to-air turrets added and placed around the map which fires at the player when the player gets within range. Armored trucks and police cars with mounted guns were added and fire at the player if the player fires their weapon within range of the vehicles. The city's time period has also changed to night. Burnin' Rubber 5 (2013) Burnin' Rubber 5 is the fifth main game in the series and was released on 23 April 2013. The game is also one of the last two games in the series to use Adobe Director for its engine. The game includes different challenges for the player to complete including team race and boss battles. New weapons such as the flak roof turret, railgun, striker launcer, nuclear bomb, and more were added. It is the only game in the series to include an experience point system which rewards players new weapons as they level up. Players could also unlock duplicates of a vehicle upon beating its boss race or daily challenge. The game received an award nomination in the 2013 Dutch Game Awards. Burnin' Rubber 5 HD (2018) Burnin' Rubber 5 HD was released on Steam on 14 February 2018. This was a remastered version of Burnin' Rubber 5 which used Unity instead of Adobe Director like the original version for its engine. Textures were improved and several new cars were added to the game Burnin' Rubber 6 (TBA) Burnin' Rubber 6 is an upcoming game in the series. The game is set to be the first in the series to be available for major consoles. Spin-off games Burnin' Rubber: Crash n' Burn (2013) Burnin' Rubber: Crash n' Burn is the first spin-off game in the series and was released on 4 October 2013. The game serves as a tribute to Burnin' Rubber 4. The gameplay focuses on destruction requiring the
which she won the Jutra Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 11th Jutra Awards in 2009, and her long-running television role in the series Two's a Crowd (Jamais deux sans toi). The daughter of actor Jean Coutu, she graduated from the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal in 1966. Her other credits
her long-running television role in the series Two's a Crowd (Jamais deux sans toi). The daughter of actor Jean Coutu, she graduated from the Conservatoire d'art dramatique de Montréal in 1966. Her other credits have included the films Sex in the Snow, Françoise Durocher, Waitress, O.K. ... Laliberté, In the Shadow of the Wind (Les Fous de Bassan), Deaf to the City (Le Sourd dans la ville), In the Belly of the
in Karata was an Avar poet and author. She graduated from the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute, and was first published in 1948. She authored several compilations
Karata was an Avar poet and author. She graduated from the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute, and was first published in 1948. She authored several compilations of poetry- like
Northeast Party House, Slowly Slowly, Client Liaison and Shouse. Career Malcolm learned piano from a young age and briefly sang for the Australian Boys Choir before quitting music all together, until his late teens where frustrated with the high school orchestral system he formed various punk and metal bands with school friends. After finishing High School Malcolm went on to study for cinema and media in an arts
for cinema and media in an arts degree at La Trobe University, he dropped out mid second year and went on to earn an advanced diploma of Music Production at Box Hill TAFE. Malcolm began working as the in-house assistant at The Base Studios South Melbourne under the producer Forrester Savell Discography References General references https://www.abc.net.au/triplejunearthed/artist/commoner/ https://cityhubsydney.com.au/tag/malcolm-besley/ https://www.thegov.com.au/index.php/gig_guide/gig/e64515 https://themusic.com.au/streams/single-premiere-viera-motel-take-heart/aEhwen18f34/03-07-19/ Living people Date of
He competed in the big air at the 2022 Winter Olympics. References External links 2003 births Living people
Donaggio (born 23 September 2003) is an Italian freestyle skier. He competed in
The name Oddfellows comes from the initial building the playhouse occupied, which was owned by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. In 1996, the playhouse bought and renovated a 10,000 square foot building on Washington Street in Middletown, with extensive help from the City of Middletown. In 2017, ownership of the building the playhouse occupies was transferred to the City of Middletown, who granted Oddfellows Playhouse a 25-year lease at a rate of $1 per year. This was intended to stabilize the playhouse's financial problems as well as expand programing for city youth. Programing Each year, the playhouse puts on two stage plays for each of
In addition to the stage shows, the playhouse also conducts a children's circus camp each summer. The camp lasts five weeks and culminates in a live show with over 120 performers and a live band. Awards Over the course of its 47-year history, Oddfellows Playhouse has been given numerous accolades. They were named "Community Champion" for youth services by Citizens Bank in 2003. CPTV featured the playhouse on a special called "art.culture.life". They were given an "Award of Excellence" in 1998 from The New England Theatre Conference. The NAACP gave the playhouse a "Community Service Award" in 1999. And in 2012, the playhouse was given an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Oddfellows has also been named as one of "Connecticut’s Best Children’s Theaters" by Connecticut Magazine from 2013 to 2019. References Theatres in Connecticut
meets the left bank of the Lena upstream of its mouth in the Laptev Sea. The Lyapiske has its mouth roughly on the opposite side of the Lena. The main tributaries of the Tympylykan are the long Achchygyi-Tympylykan and long Konkyus-Mande from the left, as well as the long Yogdyonyu from the right. See also List of rivers of Russia References
It is a left tributary of the Lena. Its length is and the area of its basin is . The basin of the Tympylykan falls fully within the Central Yakutian Lowland. It flows across the Kobyaysky and Vilyuysky districts. The banks of the river are uninhabited. Geography The Tympylykan originates in an area of swamps and small lakes of the Central Yakutian Lowland. It flows first in
the Russian Indoor Athletic Championship and won the silver medal with a vault of 4.65m. Her best vault of 2021 was 4.65 in Znamenskikh stadium, Moscow. Progression Pole vault outdoor References Russian female pole vaulters 1999 births Living
born on 20 July 1999 in Saint Petersburg, Russia. By profession, she is a Russian pole vaulter and athlete who competes internationally for Russia. In 2020 she participated at the Russian Indoor Athletic Championship and won the silver medal with a
is a Norwegian freestyle skier. He competed in the big air at the 2022
Living people Norwegian male freestyle skiers Freestyle skiers at the 2022 Winter Olympics Olympic freestyle skiers of Norway Freestyle skiers at the 2020 Winter Youth
the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Ghara had a population of 780
census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church. References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh
it was in 1991 re-established in Frankfurt/Oder as European University Viadrina. After being a school principal in the New Town district of Brandenburg an der Havel, Copernicus in 1556 continued law studies at University of Wittenberg until he was appointed professor in Frankfurt/Oder upon the recommendation of Philipp Melanchthon. Being popular among students, they petitioned Joachim II Hector, Elector of Brandenburg (1505-1571) with verses in Latin for a raise of Copernicus' salary. On 21 April 1573, after having been the university's vice rector during the winter semester, he was promoted to Doctor of Law, and also to head of university for the summer semester of 1573, during which he died. His hymns were published posthumously in 1575. Work Hymni Ambrosii, Sedulii, Propertii et aliorum, quator vocum. Poems: Gedichte. In: Petrus Albinus, 1535–1598. Meißnische Land vnd Berg-Chronica. Dresden. 1589 (Commend. poems 448) by Erdmannus Copernicus
Prussia. Similar to the unrelated astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543), his name is documented in several partially Latinized variants: Erdmann/Erdmannus/Ertmannus/Erdmanus Kopernikus/Copernicus. Life He on 4 Mai 1545 joined University of Wittenberg in Saxony as Ertmannus Copernicus Granselensis, and graduated on 25 February 1546 as Magister of philosophy. For winter semester 1546-47 he returned to Brandenburg to continue his studies at the state university in Frankfurt (Oder), named Alma Mater Viadrina after the river Oder. Moved upstream in 1811 and merged with the university in Breslau where WW2 put an end to it in 1945, it was in 1991 re-established in Frankfurt/Oder as European University Viadrina. After being a school principal in the New Town district of Brandenburg an der Havel, Copernicus in 1556 continued law studies at University of Wittenberg until he was appointed professor
April 1986, USS Tuscaloosa (LST-1187) was seen dry docked inside Steadfast at National Steel and Shipbuilding Company. In February 1987, USS Bagley (FF-1069) traveled to Concord Naval Weapons Station where she unloaded ammunition before beginning a restricted availability at San Diego on the 16th. The repair period lasted until early summer and included a seven-week drydocking in Steadfast that occupied most of April and all of May. In January 1992, USS Kinkaid (DD-965) was dry docked inside Steadfast. On 15 March 1994, USS Chandler (DDG-996) began a six-month selected restricted availability at Continental Maritime in San Diego, which lasted from 15 March until 19 May in the floating dry dock Steadfast. On 8 January 1996, Steadfast was dry docked at Long Beach Naval
1992, USS Kinkaid (DD-965) was dry docked inside Steadfast. On 15 March 1994, USS Chandler (DDG-996) began a six-month selected restricted availability at Continental Maritime in San Diego, which lasted from 15 March until 19 May in the floating dry dock Steadfast. On 8 January 1996, Steadfast was dry docked at Long Beach Naval Shipyard. Steadfast was decommissioned in 1998 and sold to BAE Systems Ship Repair San Francisco, renamed Eureka. Struck from the Naval Register on 7
a population of 436 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church. References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh District Christian communities in
west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Ain al-Ajouz had a population of 436 in the 2004
and decorated over the next two centuries with a rich stucco decoration, including statues of saints and beatified members of the Carmelite order. The order was affiliated with a number of churches in Palermo, including the Carmine Maggiore a few blocks away. The exterior of the oratory, as is common, is sober and simple marked by a single portal. The interior has the elaborate stucco work was done mainly by Procopio Serpota.
with a number of churches in Palermo, including the Carmine Maggiore a few blocks away. The exterior of the oratory, as is common, is sober and simple marked by a single portal. The interior has the elaborate stucco work was done mainly by Procopio Serpota. The main altar has coat of arms of the Carmelites, held up by putti above the tympanum,
2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christians. The village has a Greek Orthodox Church.
a Greek Orthodox Church. References Bibliography Populated places in Talkalakh District Christian communities in
Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Tallah had a population of 947 in the 2004
is a village in northern Syria located west of Homs in the Homs Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Tallah had a population of 947
located in Municipality Targovishte, 25 kilometers South away from Targovishte. The continental climate makes the area perfect for the main occupation of the local population which is tobacco harvest and animal husbandry. The elevation of the village ranges between 200 and 299 meters with an average elevation of 219 meters above sea level. History The remains of a Neolithic village and fortress were found 2 kilometers south from
back to the 2nd - 4th centuries. In the same area, around the 5th century, a Christian temple had been elevated. According to the archeologists and historians who worked on the site, the temple they found is the only five-nave church in Bulgaria. Buildings and infrastructure The roads leading toward Draganovets village are in poor condition. But there is a functioning school in the village and daily public transport toward Omurtag. Elementary school “Sv.sv Kiril i Metodii”
for a male group at the 2017 Mnet Asian Music Awards and reached number one on the Korea Hot music chart. Due to plagiarism concerns and criticism about the song's similarity to "Something Just Like This", Seventeen gave Coldplay and the Chainsmokers copyright credit, although Pledis Entertainment, Seventeen's record label, maintains the song was "independently created" and the move was to protect the artists from potential legal issues. References 2017 songs 2017 singles K-pop songs South Korean
Cry" was praised by critics as a transition to a more mature sound for the group. It won Best Dance Performance for a male group at the 2017 Mnet Asian Music Awards and reached number one on the Korea Hot music chart. Due to plagiarism concerns and criticism about the song's similarity to "Something Just Like This", Seventeen gave Coldplay and the Chainsmokers copyright credit, although Pledis Entertainment, Seventeen's record label, maintains the song was "independently created" and the move was to protect the artists from potential
defended by politicians such as Arif Mohammad Khan, Aaditya Thackeray and Vishva Hindu Parishad and figures like Taslima Nasrin and Masih Alinejad. Background The education system of Karnataka involves 10 years of school and two years of pre-university college ("PU college"). Using powers conferred under the 'Karnataka Education Act, 1983', Sec. 145(1), the Government of Karnataka empowered recognised educational institutions to decide on uniforms for their students. For school students, uniforms are mandated by the state government and schools can choose the colours. For PU colleges, uniforms were not mandated by the government, but, over time, most college development committees (CDCs) adopted them, according to a PU department official. In 2017, the department issued a direction to all PU colleges saying that PU students should not be asked to wear uniforms. College managements that already had uniforms questioned the direction saying that the students and parents were happy with them. The direction was still found on the PU Education Department website in February 2022, but it does not appear to have been enforced. Muslims constitute 13 per cent of the population of the state of Karnataka. Muslim women in the state are accessing public education in ever-increasing numbers. Data shows that the Gross Attendance Ratio of Muslim women in higher education rose from about 1 per cent in 2007-08 to a high of about 16 per cent in 2017-18. Many Muslim women consider hijab to be a part of the Islamic faith. In India, the public display of religious symbols is common, including the wearing of hijab and burqa. PEW reports that in Karnataka 71% of Muslim women and 42% of Hindu women cover their heads outside the home (in India, 89% of Muslim women and 59% of Hindu women cover their heads outside the home). Several colleges in Karnataka reported that a small number of Muslim students have "always" worn the hijab in classroom. M Raghupathy, who was Karnataka's education minister in a Janata Party government in the 1980s, said that the government's uniform mandates had allowed both the hijab and the Christian nun's habit. He said that the Bharatiya Janata Party had not objected to the hijab back then. According to the BBC, the coastal belt of Karnataka has seen protests over hijab in the past but such issues were often quickly resolved. Not all cases were easy, however. A second-year PU student at Moodabidri was disallowed from attending classes for an entire year in 2011–12 due to her insistence on wearing a hijab. There have also been instances of Hindu students protesting with saffron scarves to oppose Muslim students being allowed with hijab or burqa in classes. The Muslim women were said to have been anxious that their parents would not allow them to go to college without their religious clothing. The coastal districts of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi have seen sectarian polarisation over the decades with the rise of Hindu nationalism, represented by organisations like Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagarana Vedike, Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Akhila Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), and a parallel mobilisation of the Muslim community by the Popular Front of India (PFI) and its affiliates Campus Front of India (CFI) and the Social Democratic Party of India. Since 2019, Karnataka has been governed by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). It has adopted popular Hindu nationalist policies such as banning cow slaughter and passing an "anti-conversion bill" which prohibits conversion from one religion to another by misrepresentation, force, fraud, allurement or marriage. Because the bill prohibits conversion for the sake of marriage, critics fear that the bill makes it difficult for interfaith couples to marry or for individuals to convert to Christianity or Islam. Events Udupi dispute In early January 2022, a dispute over the wearing of the hijab was reported at a government-run Pre-University College for Girls at Udupi that had disallowed the wearing of hijab as being in violation of its uniform policy. Six Muslim female students insisted on wearing hijab to classes on top of their college uniform, arguing that hijab was part of their faith, and their constitutional right. The college said its uniform policy did not allow for the hijab. The girls offered to use the existing uniform's dupatta to cover their head, arguing they didn't need to wear a separate hijab of a different colour or material, but the college refused. The college allowed them to wear the hijab on campus, but did not allow them into classes. They were found sitting in corridors and working with their notebooks. The case was brought to the attention of the media by Ansar Ahmed, the district president of Karnataka Rakshana Vedike, a voluntary organisation. Campus Front of India (CFI), the student wing of the radical Islamic organisation Popular Front of India (PFI), threatened a protest, prompting the college to arrange a police presence. The political wing of the PFI, the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI), is also said to have threatened protests. The college authorities met and talked with the parents but remained firm in their resolution not to allow religious attire. What caused the students' change of mind on the hijab issue is uncertain. They admit to having attended the first year of class as per the college's no-hijab policy. They went to campus in burqas and removed them in a "ladies' room" before going to classes. One of the students also said that the parents were told about this when they joined the college in 2020. Others were doubtful. When the classes moved to online due to Covid, the issue died down. With the on-campus classes resuming in September 2021, some of the students asked for permission to wear the hijab, which was denied on the grounds that everyone must wear a "common uniform". In October 2021, two of them took part in an anti-rape protest and a photograph of the event was circulated. This brought their situation into focus to their parents as well as the CFI. An investigation by the Udupi Police reported that CFI had approached the parents and offered help to challenge the college management. According to one of the students, the agreement "mentioned a compulsory uniform and said nothing about a hijab". So, the six students and their parents decided to insist upon hijab. According to the federated Muslim organisation Muslim Okkoota that is active in the district, PFI and its allied organisations used the students "for their benefit". The students' hijab protest seemed to be a ploy for the political wing (SDPI) to strengthen its support base. Some of the protesting parents and relatives are active members of SDPI and other PFI affiliates. The SDPI had just won six seats in the local body elections, which was termed a major triumph. Muslim Okkoota claims to have tried to resolve the dispute locally by talking to the college authorities, the parents and the CFI, but the CFI chose to publicise the issue by circulating photographs of students stranded outside classes, provoking the college and the BJP leaders to harden their stand. By the end of December, "nobody was in the mood for a compromise". The college development committee, which is responsible for setting the uniform policy, was headed by K. Raghupati Bhat, an MLA belonging to the ruling BJP. Its 21 members did not include any Muslims. After the dispute erupted, Bhat held a meeting with parents of all students on 1 January and declared that the college would continue with its uniform code, which does not allow for hijab. The CFI and SDPI took the position that, since uniforms were not mandated by the government, they could not violate the students' religious rights. Bhat wrote to the Pre-University Education Department of the state government to clarify the matter. Thus, the matter was escalated to the state government level. Saffron protests Soon after the Udupi episode became public, groups of Hindu students started coming to their colleges wearing saffron scarves to protest against Muslim students being allowed with hijabs. A leader of the Hindu Jagarana Vedike, an affiliate of the Sangh Parivar, declared, "if girls are allowed to wear hijab then other students will come with saffron shawls to institutions across Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts." A co-educational first-grade college in Koppa tehsil in the Chikmagalur district, was the first to witness this development when some students wore saffron scarves and demanded that the dress code be enforced. The college asked the Muslim students to remove hijab in classrooms to deflect the crisis. The matter was resolved a few days later at a parent-teacher meeting where it was decided to allow Muslim girls to wear the hijab as long as they didn’t pin the headcover or tie them around their head. The parents of the Hindu students did not support their wards' demand to don saffron scarves. On 6 January, Hindu students at Pompei College in Mangalore wore saffron shawls to protest against the hijab, and were supported by the Hindu nationalist organizations ABVP, VHP and Bajrang Dal. The saffron protests gained momentum in February, being seen at the Governrment PU college in Kundapura (2 February), Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College in the same town (3 February), and Dr BB Hegde College near Udupi (3 February). At the last location, the saffron protesters successfully blocked the hijab-wearing Muslim students from entering the college. Government reaction The ministers of Bharatiya Janata Party-led Karnataka government reacted to the incidents with apparent distaste. The education minister B. C. Nagesh termed it as an "act of indiscipline". The students could not practise their "religion" in public educational institutions, in his view. The uniform had been present for over three decades and there had been no problem with it till this point, he said. He blamed "political leaders", an apparent reference to the PFI, for provoking the students, who were allegedly "playing politics". Home Minister Araga Jnanendra said that there must be a universal feeling in schools and colleges that "we are all Indians", which required that the uniform code set by colleges be followed. On 27 January, the government announced the setting up of an expert committee to study the issue. Until its decision was made, the government urged the students to maintain the "status quo". For the Udupi PU College students, the "status quo" apparently meant that they should "adhere to the uniform rule". The government issued an order to this effect. The CDC chairman Raghupati Bhat called a meeting with parents and told them that the students should remove the hijab in the classroom. On either 3 February or 4 February, the government issued an order stating that the uniforms mandated by the state government, the school managements or college development committees must be worn compulsorily. Students following religious tenents adversely impacted "equality and unity" in colleges, according to the order. The preamble stated that a ban on hijab was not illegal, and cited three court orders from Kerala, Bombay and Madras High Courts. For those colleges where the college development committees did not mandate a uniform, the students must still wear attire that maintains "equality and unity and doesn't hamper public order". The education minister B. C. Nagesh made a statment declaring, "those who want to defy the government's school uniform regulations cannot enter their schools and attend classes". Fallout The impact of the government order was instaneous. Even before the order became public, the knowledge about it reached the coastal districts by 3 February and started getting implemented. Even colleges that had customarily allowed hijab in classes now felt compelled to disallow them. In many cases, Hindu students forced the issue by wearing saffron scarves and insisting that, if hijab was allowed in classes, they should be allowed too. In Kundapura, 28 students wearing hijab were barred from entering the Government PU College premises on 3 February. Hindu students had apparently come in saffron scarves the previous day, and the minister B. C. Nagesh informed the college that students could come to classes in only uniforms and neither hijab nor saffron scarves would be allowed. The students were very anxious because their public exams were just two months away. The Telegraph commented that their "tearful pleas fell on deaf ears". At Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College, a private college in Kundapura, 40 students were barred from entering the premises the following day. The students pointed to the college rulebook, which permitted the wearing of the hijab. Some of the students said their college's treatment was "humiliating". At the Dr BB Hegde College, where the hijab-wearing students were blocked by saffron protesters the previous day, the college administration banned the hijab on 4 February, citing the government order. The students had apparently been wearing hijab for three years at the school without issue. On 8 February, Mahatma Gandhi Memorial College prevented students in hijab from entering, even though multiple students said the college had not objected to her hijab in the past. The dispute then began to spread to other institutions across Karnataka, between Muslim students who wanted to wear hijab and the administrations barring them. The controversy intensified in early February 2022. Between 4 and 7 February, counter-protests led by students who were against allowing students wearing the hijab to enter the college. These students marched to the college wearing saffron shawls. However, authorities stopped them from entering the premises and asked the students to remove the shawls. The students were allowed in only after they complied with the request. On 7 February, some students wore blue shawls and chanted Jai Bhim at a college in Chikmagalur in support of Muslim girls in hijab (as opposed to the saffron shawls that were against the wearing of hijab). On 10 February, a lone Muslim woman, named Muskan Khan, clad in a burqa was heckled on her college grounds in Mandya by a crowd of male Hindu students wearing saffron shawls and chanting "Jai Shri Ram". She responded back shouting "Allahu Akbar", while the college staff controlled the crowd and escorted her into the building. A video of the incident went viral. The treatment of Muskan Khan was condemned by many notable figures, including by actors John Cusack, Pooja Bhatt, Fakhre Alam, and footballer Paul Pogba. On 8 February, the Government of Karnataka announced the closure of high schools and colleges for three days, after the controversy over the wearing of hijab by Muslim students intensified. The Bangalore Police prohibited protests and agitations from 9 February until 22 February within the vicinity of any educational institution. Two Muslim men were arrested when they were found carrying lethal weapons during a protest. Three others managed to flee. Petitions in the High Court Several students from the Udupi PU college filed a writ petition in the Karnataka High Court on 31 January. The petition sought the wearing of hijab to be recognised as a fundamental right under Article 14 and Article 25 of the Indian constitution as it is an essential Islamic practice. The Campus Front of India said it provided them legal advice. The petition also argued that singling out the petitioner solely on the basis of wearing hijab is against "constitutional moality". The petition was argued by senior advocate Ravivarma Kumar and other lawyers. A second petition was filed by a student from Kundapura (referred to as "Smt Rasham") around 4 February, seeking a directive to permit Muslim students to wear hijab to classes. The petitioner was represented by senior advocate Davadatt Kamat. Two students from the Bhandarkar's arts and science college in Kundapura also filed a petition, who were represented by senior advocate Yusuf Muchhala. Hearings began on 8 February, with Justice Krishna S. Dixit presiding. After hearing the initial arguments, the judge concluded that the chief issue was whether wearing hijab is an essential religious practice, and, if it is so, why the state should interfere in the matter. The judge decided that, given its public importance, the case should be heard by a "full bench" (consisting of three judges). A full bench consisting of the Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi, Justice Dixit and Justice Khazi Jaibunnisa Mohiuddin was constituted the next day. By this stage, there were said to be five petitions representing 18 students in front of the court. Hearings resumed on 10 February. The three-judge bench passed an interim order on 11 February. It requested the State to re-open the educational institutions and restrained students from wearing any sort of religious clothes in classrooms until the court decided the matter. Religious rights During the hearings on 14–15 February (Days 3 and 4), the
other students will come with saffron shawls to institutions across Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts." A co-educational first-grade college in Koppa tehsil in the Chikmagalur district, was the first to witness this development when some students wore saffron scarves and demanded that the dress code be enforced. The college asked the Muslim students to remove hijab in classrooms to deflect the crisis. The matter was resolved a few days later at a parent-teacher meeting where it was decided to allow Muslim girls to wear the hijab as long as they didn’t pin the headcover or tie them around their head. The parents of the Hindu students did not support their wards' demand to don saffron scarves. On 6 January, Hindu students at Pompei College in Mangalore wore saffron shawls to protest against the hijab, and were supported by the Hindu nationalist organizations ABVP, VHP and Bajrang Dal. The saffron protests gained momentum in February, being seen at the Governrment PU college in Kundapura (2 February), Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College in the same town (3 February), and Dr BB Hegde College near Udupi (3 February). At the last location, the saffron protesters successfully blocked the hijab-wearing Muslim students from entering the college. Government reaction The ministers of Bharatiya Janata Party-led Karnataka government reacted to the incidents with apparent distaste. The education minister B. C. Nagesh termed it as an "act of indiscipline". The students could not practise their "religion" in public educational institutions, in his view. The uniform had been present for over three decades and there had been no problem with it till this point, he said. He blamed "political leaders", an apparent reference to the PFI, for provoking the students, who were allegedly "playing politics". Home Minister Araga Jnanendra said that there must be a universal feeling in schools and colleges that "we are all Indians", which required that the uniform code set by colleges be followed. On 27 January, the government announced the setting up of an expert committee to study the issue. Until its decision was made, the government urged the students to maintain the "status quo". For the Udupi PU College students, the "status quo" apparently meant that they should "adhere to the uniform rule". The government issued an order to this effect. The CDC chairman Raghupati Bhat called a meeting with parents and told them that the students should remove the hijab in the classroom. On either 3 February or 4 February, the government issued an order stating that the uniforms mandated by the state government, the school managements or college development committees must be worn compulsorily. Students following religious tenents adversely impacted "equality and unity" in colleges, according to the order. The preamble stated that a ban on hijab was not illegal, and cited three court orders from Kerala, Bombay and Madras High Courts. For those colleges where the college development committees did not mandate a uniform, the students must still wear attire that maintains "equality and unity and doesn't hamper public order". The education minister B. C. Nagesh made a statment declaring, "those who want to defy the government's school uniform regulations cannot enter their schools and attend classes". Fallout The impact of the government order was instaneous. Even before the order became public, the knowledge about it reached the coastal districts by 3 February and started getting implemented. Even colleges that had customarily allowed hijab in classes now felt compelled to disallow them. In many cases, Hindu students forced the issue by wearing saffron scarves and insisting that, if hijab was allowed in classes, they should be allowed too. In Kundapura, 28 students wearing hijab were barred from entering the Government PU College premises on 3 February. Hindu students had apparently come in saffron scarves the previous day, and the minister B. C. Nagesh informed the college that students could come to classes in only uniforms and neither hijab nor saffron scarves would be allowed. The students were very anxious because their public exams were just two months away. The Telegraph commented that their "tearful pleas fell on deaf ears". At Bhandarkars' Arts & Science College, a private college in Kundapura, 40 students were barred from entering the premises the following day. The students pointed to the college rulebook, which permitted the wearing of the hijab. Some of the students said their college's treatment was "humiliating". At the Dr BB Hegde College, where the hijab-wearing students were blocked by saffron protesters the previous day, the college administration banned the hijab on 4 February, citing the government order. The students had apparently been wearing hijab for three years at the school without issue. On 8 February, Mahatma Gandhi Memorial College prevented students in hijab from entering, even though multiple students said the college had not objected to her hijab in the past. The dispute then began to spread to other institutions across Karnataka, between Muslim students who wanted to wear hijab and the administrations barring them. The controversy intensified in early February 2022. Between 4 and 7 February, counter-protests led by students who were against allowing students wearing the hijab to enter the college. These students marched to the college wearing saffron shawls. However, authorities stopped them from entering the premises and asked the students to remove the shawls. The students were allowed in only after they complied with the request. On 7 February, some students wore blue shawls and chanted Jai Bhim at a college in Chikmagalur in support of Muslim girls in hijab (as opposed to the saffron shawls that were against the wearing of hijab). On 10 February, a lone Muslim woman, named Muskan Khan, clad in a burqa was heckled on her college grounds in Mandya by a crowd of male Hindu students wearing saffron shawls and chanting "Jai Shri Ram". She responded back shouting "Allahu Akbar", while the college staff controlled the crowd and escorted her into the building. A video of the incident went viral. The treatment of Muskan Khan was condemned by many notable figures, including by actors John Cusack, Pooja Bhatt, Fakhre Alam, and footballer Paul Pogba. On 8 February, the Government of Karnataka announced the closure of high schools and colleges for three days, after the controversy over the wearing of hijab by Muslim students intensified. The Bangalore Police prohibited protests and agitations from 9 February until 22 February within the vicinity of any educational institution. Two Muslim men were arrested when they were found carrying lethal weapons during a protest. Three others managed to flee. Petitions in the High Court Several students from the Udupi PU college filed a writ petition in the Karnataka High Court on 31 January. The petition sought the wearing of hijab to be recognised as a fundamental right under Article 14 and Article 25 of the Indian constitution as it is an essential Islamic practice. The Campus Front of India said it provided them legal advice. The petition also argued that singling out the petitioner solely on the basis of wearing hijab is against "constitutional moality". The petition was argued by senior advocate Ravivarma Kumar and other lawyers. A second petition was filed by a student from Kundapura (referred to as "Smt Rasham") around 4 February, seeking a directive to permit Muslim students to wear hijab to classes. The petitioner was represented by senior advocate Davadatt Kamat. Two students from the Bhandarkar's arts and science college in Kundapura also filed a petition, who were represented by senior advocate Yusuf Muchhala. Hearings began on 8 February, with Justice Krishna S. Dixit presiding. After hearing the initial arguments, the judge concluded that the chief issue was whether wearing hijab is an essential religious practice, and, if it is so, why the state should interfere in the matter. The judge decided that, given its public importance, the case should be heard by a "full bench" (consisting of three judges). A full bench consisting of the Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi, Justice Dixit and Justice Khazi Jaibunnisa Mohiuddin was constituted the next day. By this stage, there were said to be five petitions representing 18 students in front of the court. Hearings resumed on 10 February. The three-judge bench passed an interim order on 11 February. It requested the State to re-open the educational institutions and restrained students from wearing any sort of religious clothes in classrooms until the court decided the matter. Religious rights During the hearings on 14–15 February (Days 3 and 4), the students' lawyer, Senior Advocate Devadatt Kamat argued that the Muslim women's right to wear the hijab is protected by the Article 25(1) of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees freedom of conscience and the right to practise one's religion. He asserted that wearing the hijab is an 'essential religious practice' as per Islamic scriptures including the Quran. These rights are subject only to concerns regarding public order, morality and health. He argued that for a practice to violate public order, it must be 'abhorrent by itself' and must cause 'disturbance to society'. Wearing the hijab is neither of such and so does not violate public order. When the bench questioned whether every verse of Quran should be treated as an Essential Religious Practice, Adv. Kamat replied that this isn't the matter in front of the court and hence should not appear for consideration before the court. Senior advocate Ravivarma Kumar also claimed that, by choosing to ban the hijab, the government was selectively targeting Muslim students. This amounted to religious discrimination as per Article 15(1) of the Indian constitution. He argued that the goal of education was to promote plurality, not uniformity, and the classroom should be a reflection of the diversity in society. The Advocate General (AG) of the state, Prabhuling Navadgi, on 21–22 February (Days 8 and 9), challenged the petitioners by stating that only 'essential religious practices' are protected by Article 25. He claimed that the petitioners failed to prove that wearing of hijab is an essential practice. Further, by claiming it to be an essential practice, they were trying to bind every Muslim woman to the dress code consisting of hijab. Citing the Supreme Court decision in the Ismail Farooqui case, the AG asserted that an essential religious practice must be obligatory. Optional practices do not fall under the ambit of essential religious practices and do not merit constitutional protection. The AG asserted that the petitioners' claim to protection under Article 19(1) of the Indian constitution (right to freedom of expression) and the claim under Article 25(1) are "mutually destructive" (contradictory). The AG and other lawyers representing the state, CDC, MLA, teachers etc, backed these assertions by stating that the right to freedom of expression is 'forum internum' and applied to inner convictions and inner thoughts, while the right to practice religion is 'forum externum' and applies to the outwardly expression/manifestation of one's faith or practice. They also stated that these rights are subject to reasonable restrictions. Government order Devadatt Kamat assailed the Government Order of February 2022 during the Day 3 hearing. He stated that the order relied on three former High Court judgements to argue in favour of dress codes, but none of them applied to the present case. Senior Advocate Yusuf Mucchala, appearing on behalf of a Muslim student, stated that the Government Order was "manifestly arbitrary". It violated the Article 14 of the Indian constitution as well as the principle of fairness since the Muslim students were not allowed to be heard. Barring students from wearing hijab due to objections from other students was blatantly partisan. The Advocate General of the state defended the Government Order by stating that it did not in fact ban hijab, it was merely a "suggestion". After the resistance from the Muslim students at the Udupi PU College, its college development committee referred the issue to the states PU Department. The government formed a "high-level committee" to study the issue and issued the order, giving autonomy to college development committees to prescribe uniforms. The order itself did not prescribe uniforms and was, therefore "innocuous". It neither prescribed nor proscribed the hijab. Upon query from the Chief Justice as to why the order mentioned hijab at all, the AG responded that it was merely an "indication" to the college authorities. The CJ probed further by asking the AG whether the government would have any objections to the hijab being worn in classrooms if they are permitted by the college. The AG
Martin Childs) References External links 1936 births Living people People from Bromley English set decorators Best Art Direction Academy Award winners
nominated for one more in the category Best Production Design for the films Shakespeare in Love and Quills. Selected filmography Shakespeare in Love (1998; co-won
time suggested as an indication of the name of the first ship. On 14 June 2021, Royal Caribbean announced the start of construction for Icon of the Seas. Design Icon of the Seas will employ fuel cell technology, to be supplied by ABB Group, and be powered by liquefied natural gas, with a gross tonnage of 200,000 GT. She will contain other alternative energy features, like the use of fuel cells to produce electricity and fresh water. It will have a capacity of 5,600 berths. References 2020s ships Cruise ship classes Proposed
will be the lead ship of the. She is scheduled to enter service in 2023. History On 10 October 2016, Royal Caribbean and Meyer Turku announced an order to build two ships under the project name "Icon". The ships are expected to be delivered in the third quarter of 2023 and 2025. The ships will be classified by DNV GL. Royal Caribbean applied to register a trademark for "Icon of the Seas" in 2016, which was at the time suggested as an indication of the name of the first ship.
the Vicar Apostolic of Kenya Filippo Perlo carry out the request and inform the sisters. Cecchin oversaw their departure, being the last of the 44 sisters (she left with just one other colleague) to leave on 25 October 1925, despite her seriously ill state. Cecchin died on board the steamship Porto Alessandretta on 13 November 1925 in the Red Sea between Massawa and Suez. Her remains were never interred because, due to hygiene regulations at that time, her remains were wrapped in a simple white sheet and buried at sea after a hasty funeral could be organized. Beatification The beatification process launched on 28 February 2013 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (no objections) decree that permitted the Turin archdiocese to launch the diocesan investigation into her life and holiness once it transferred the beatification forum from the Meru diocese to the Turin archdiocese. The diocesan investigation opened on 24 April 2014 in a Mass that Archbishop Cesare Nosiglia celebrated before the same archbishop presided over the conclusion of the process just a few months later on 7 October. The C.C.S. in Rome issued a decree on 28 May 2015 that validated the process that affirmed that all evidence had been presented to them and that the Turin archdiocese had carried out the process per the regulations that the C.C.S. set. The postulation (the officials that manage the cause) lodged the official "Positio" dossier with the C.C.S. in 2017 to be assessed hence the commencement of the "Roman Phase". Historians assessed and approved the cause on 10 October 2017 before nine theologians likewise issued their approval on 4 February 2020. The cardinal and bishop members of the C.C.S. issued their final approval on 10 November 2020. Pope Francis declared Cecchin to be Venerable on 23 November 2020 after he determined that she had led a model life of heroic virtue according to the cardinal and theological virtues. Francis later approved a 2013 miracle attributed to her intercession in a decree on 13 December 2021 that would enable for Cecchin to be beatified in Turin sometime in 2022. The current postulator for this cause is Sr. Antonietta Bosetti S.S.G.B.C. References External links Hagiography Circle Congregation for the Causes of Saints 1877 births 1925 deaths 19th-century Italian people 19th-century Italian women 19th-century venerated Christians 20th-century Italian educators 20th-century Italian people 20th-century Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns 20th-century Italian women 20th-century venerated Christians Beatifications by Pope Francis Italian beatified people Italian educators Italian expatriates in Kenya Italian Roman Catholic missionaries Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns People from Cittadella Religious leaders from Padua
inform the sisters. Cecchin oversaw their departure, being the last of the 44 sisters (she left with just one other colleague) to leave on 25 October 1925, despite her seriously ill state. Cecchin died on board the steamship Porto Alessandretta on 13 November 1925 in the Red Sea between Massawa and Suez. Her remains were never interred because, due to hygiene regulations at that time, her remains were wrapped in a simple white sheet and buried at sea after a hasty funeral could be organized. Beatification The beatification process launched on 28 February 2013 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (no objections) decree that permitted the Turin archdiocese to launch the diocesan investigation into her life and holiness once it transferred the beatification forum from the Meru diocese to the Turin archdiocese. The diocesan investigation opened on 24 April 2014 in a Mass that Archbishop Cesare Nosiglia celebrated before the same archbishop presided over the conclusion of the process just a few months later on 7 October. The C.C.S. in Rome issued a decree on 28 May 2015 that validated the process that affirmed that all evidence had been presented to them and that the Turin archdiocese had carried out the process per the regulations that the C.C.S. set. The postulation (the officials that manage the cause) lodged the official "Positio" dossier with the C.C.S. in 2017 to be assessed hence the commencement of the "Roman Phase". Historians assessed and approved the cause on 10 October 2017 before nine theologians likewise issued their approval on 4 February 2020. The cardinal and bishop members of the C.C.S. issued their final approval on 10 November 2020. Pope Francis declared Cecchin to be Venerable on 23 November 2020 after he determined that she had led a model life of heroic virtue according to the cardinal and theological virtues. Francis later approved a 2013 miracle attributed to her intercession in a decree on 13 December 2021 that would enable for Cecchin to be beatified in Turin sometime in 2022. The current postulator for this cause is Sr. Antonietta Bosetti S.S.G.B.C. References External links Hagiography Circle Congregation for the Causes of Saints 1877 births 1925 deaths 19th-century Italian people 19th-century Italian women 19th-century venerated Christians 20th-century Italian
Olympics in Beijing. References External links 1997 births Living people Spanish male freestyle skiers
men's big air and slopestyle competitions at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. References External links 1997 births Living people Spanish male freestyle skiers Freestyle
for two years. In 1986 he turned professional. He appeared in the main draw of the 1987 WCT Tournament of Champions and was beaten in the second round by Slobodan Živojinović. Banck starting his coaching career with Jimmy Arias and later coached Aaron Krickstein. On the women's tour he has coached Mary Joe
his coaching career with Jimmy Arias and later coached Aaron Krickstein. On the women's tour he has coached Mary Joe Fernández, Mary Pierce and Monica Seles. In 2006 he was inducted into the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame. References External links 1964 births Living people American male tennis players American tennis coaches Arkansas Razorbacks men's tennis players Tennis people from New York (state)
from his marriage to Marianne Loevi in 1920, including the lawyer and modern art collector Georges or Jorge Helft, who settled in Argentina and Paris, and the expert Leon Helft, who died in the 1980s. Bibliography Jacques Helft, Exhibition of old French gold and silver plate (XVIth to XVIIIth century) in aid of French hospital, New York City, December 1933. Collectif, Orfèvrerie française civile de province du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle. Mars-avril 1936. Musée des arts décoratifs. Palais du Louvre. Pavillon de Marsan., 1936 (Avant-propos de Jacques Helft) Jacques Helft, Vive la chine! Mémoires d'un antiquaire, Éditions du Rocher, 1955 (trad. en anglais : Treasure hunt. Memoirs of an antique dealer, Faber, 1957) Pour s’y connaitre mieux en tasses à vin, in Connaissance des arts, n°124 de juin 1962, p. 60 à 65 Claude Frégnac, Les grands orfèvres de Louis XIII à Charles X, Hachette, 1965 (préface de Jacques Helft) Jacques Helft, Le Poinçon des provinces françaises, F. de Nobele, 1968
brother-in-law. They went into partnership to create a Rosenberg and Helft Gallery in London. The Paris gallery was seized during the Second World War (with the complicity of the antique dealer Bonnefoy), after Jacques Helft and his family left for New York in September 1940. He escaped France along with his family thanks to the intervention of the Portuguese consul Aristides de Sousa Mendes. From 1942 to 1948, he had his gallery on 57th Street. Later, from 1948, he moved to Argentina for several years. He returned to France in 1956 and became Honorary President of the Syndicat des Antiquaires. He was soon led to take an interest in French silverware of the Ancien Régime, a subject that was still very little studied at the time. As little was known about the hallmarks of silverware, pieces of old French silverware were often referred to indiscriminately as objects bearing the hallmarks of the "fermiers généraux". When Jacques Helft became an expert in
36 members of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), 32 members of Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE), 30 members of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), 24 members of The Left (LINKE), 13 members of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), and 12 members of the Free Democratic Party (FDP). The President of the Abgeordnetenhaus is Dennis Buchner (SPD). The Vice Presidents are Bahar Haghanipour (GRÜNE) and Cornelia
of the 19th and current Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin, the state parliament of Berlin. The 19th Bundestag was elected in the 26 September 2021 state election, and was constituted in its first session on 4 November 2021. The 19th Abgeordnetenhaus has 147 members, 17 seats larger than its minimum size of 130. Originally, it comprised 36 members of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), 32 members of Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE), 30 members of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU),
and a menagerie as indicators of Roger's power: Oh, what a garden of victory, that overflows with radiant beauty And its castle, handsome in construction, with its [imposing] appearance and its lofty galleries, With its wild animals and its waters like the finest fountains of paradise Already its gardens have burst into bloom, from amongst them emerge
In his standard fashion, ʿImād al-Dīn cut it short because it was a panegyric for an infidel. It refers to Roger as "king of the Caesars" or "king of imperial kings" (malik al-mulūk al-qayṣarīya). The passage selected by ʿImād al-Dīn describes a palace, gardens and a menagerie as
finally meet with Zhao Min in Dadu, hinting he will be making a follow-up to his 1993, Kung Fu Cult Master which ended in a cliffhanger. Principal photography began for the film began in January 2020 at the Hengdian World Studios. However, production was halted two weeks later due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was resumed in mid-April of the same year. On 7 May 2020, director Wong released stills of the cast in their characters on his Sina Weibo account. On 2 January 2022, Wong announced on his Sina Weibo account that the film has been split into two parts, New Kung Fu Cult Master 1 and New Kung Fu Cult Master 2, both of which will be released during the Chinese New Year period of the year. This later led to speculations that the cast will have disagreements with the production over salary disputes, but cast member Donnie Yen later responded to the issue stating he knew it was going to be a duology from the start. Release New Kung Fu Cult Master 1 premiered with theatrical release in Singapore on 28 January
Man as Chiu Man Yun Qianqian as Siu-chiu Sabrina Qiu as Chow Chi-yeuk Elvis Tsui as Tse Shun Alex Fong as Yeung Chiu Raymond Wong Ho-yin as Wai Yat-siu Jade Leung as Abbess Mit-juet Rebecca Zhu as Yan So-so Lam Chi-chung as Wah Shan Elder Zhang Xuan as Ting Man-kwan Derek Kok as Fan Yiu Tin Kai-man as Wah Shan Elder Yu Kang as Hok Pat-yung Mars as Hung Man Wilfred Lau as Sung Ching-shu Felix Lok as Yan Tin-ching Parkman Wong as Sung Yuen-kiu Asano Nagahide as Yue Lin-chau Dominic Ho as Yan Lei-hang Edward Chui as Cheung Chung-kai Ken Hung as Mok Sing-kuk Jason Wong as Yu Toi-ngam Chang Yuci as Elder sister Seung Lu Yan as Elder sister Luk Ding Yusen as Luk Cheung-hak Xing Yu as Sing Kwan Louis Fan as Dog Hung Yan-yan as Cat Wiyona Yeung as Chow Chi-yeuk's mother Production On 21 December 2019, Wong Jing posted a teaser poster of the film on his Sina Weibo account and stating that Zhang Wuji will finally meet with Zhao Min in Dadu, hinting he will be making a follow-up
ethnonym appears to be a loan translation of the term Swahili, which has a similar meaning. In Kiswahili, Mwani means seaweed. The ethnonym Mwani can also be written as Muane or Mwane. Demography & Distribution In modern times, the Mwani number around 120,000-200,000 people and live mainly in Cabo Delagado Province. They make up 5.2%-8.6% of Cabo Delagado's total population of 2.3 million. In Cabo Delagado, the Mwani mainly live in the coastal districts (Mocímboa da Praia District, Quirimbas Islands, Vamizi Island, Ibo District, Pemba District, etc.). In Cabo Delagado's Mocímboa da Praia town, around 70% of the 40,000 inhabitants is Mwani. Ibo Island is considered by the Mwani to be an important cultural center, however the Mwani do not form a majority of the population there. Instead, the population is diverse and includes ethnic groups like the Makwe, Portuguese, Indian, Makua, Omani, and Mwani. The Mwani form a significant minority of the population of Pemba, which is majority Makonde. Palma, a Mozambican
in the coastal districts (Mocímboa da Praia District, Quirimbas Islands, Vamizi Island, Ibo District, Pemba District, etc.). In Cabo Delagado's Mocímboa da Praia town, around 70% of the 40,000 inhabitants is Mwani. Ibo Island is considered by the Mwani to be an important cultural center, however the Mwani do not form a majority of the population there. Instead, the population is diverse and includes ethnic groups like the Makwe, Portuguese, Indian, Makua, Omani, and Mwani. The Mwani form a significant minority of the population of Pemba, which is majority Makonde. Palma, a Mozambican beach town, has a majority Mwani population. A small number of Mwani also live in Tanzania. Some coastal Mwani villages claim to be of Shirazi lineage. However, it is difficult to ascertain these claims due to intermarriage with other predominantly Muslim groups. Hence, it is possible that these Mwani villages are of Shirazi descent, but they could also have Comorian origins. References Demographics
Episodes of the television series are released on the show's website at the start of the month, up to a month prior to any episode's broadcast date. The Star
TV show Star Gazers starring Trace Dominguez started on January 3, 2022. Episodes of the television series are released on the show's website at the start of the month, up to a month prior to any episode's broadcast date. The
from Wadmalaw Island. She is a contemporary Southern cook. She had been working in social services and auditioned for a pilot on the Food Network but was told to work on her cooking skills. She started the New Gullah Supper Club in 2015, a pop-up traveling supper club featuring traditional Gullah dishes "with a contemporary twist" at events often featuring Gullah singers or storytellers. She was invited by Food network to be on Beat Bobby Flay and to host Cupcake Championship before being offered her own show. Brown signed an exclusive contract with Food Network in 2021 which included her being the host of The Great Soul Food Cook-Off. Delicious Miss Brown is set at
Cupcake Championship before being offered her own show. Brown signed an exclusive contract with Food Network in 2021 which included her being the host of The Great Soul Food Cook-Off. Delicious Miss Brown is set at a home on Edisto Island and focuses on "fresh, seasonal, and very seafood heavy" cooking. Brown's great-great-great grandmother was the last person to own Hutchinson House on Edisto Island; Brown hosted an episode with a fish-fry fundraiser to raise money for the house's restoration in 2021. During that show she discussed the history of slavery and the formerly enslaved people who built Hutchinson House, despite the network's past concerns about discussing similar topics on the network, according to food historian Dan Kohler. References External links Official website Living people Gullah American chefs 21st-century African-American women
Burmese Buddhist title conferred by the government of Myanmar to the Buddhist monks who have passed five years since completing all levels of Tipitakadhara Tipitakakovida Selection Examinations in accordance with the provision No. 37/2010 of the State Peace and Development Council. The awardees are annually announced on the 4th January, the Independence Day of Myanmar. Qualifications According to the section 6 (A) of the Provisions on the Religious Titles promulgated on 17 June 2015, a recipient must meet the following qualifications: Have been conferred the title
promulgated on 17 June 2015, a recipient must meet the following qualifications: Have been conferred the title of Tipitakadhara for his memorization the Tipitaka Have been conferred the title of Tipitakakovida for being able to deal with difficult matters on Tipitaka Five years had passed since the title of Tpitakadhara Tipitakakovida have been conferred Be fully endowed with morality, fairness and wisdom Recipients As of 2022, there are 13 sayadaws
He has been a member of the U.S. Cross Country Ski Team since 2019. Ogden made history in 2018 at the FIS Junior World Ski Championships in Goms, Switzerland, when he and his teammates secured a silver medal in the junior men's relay, which was the first ever medal for the U.S. men at a World Juniors Championship event. Early Life Ogden grew up in Landgrove, VT. He and his older sister, Katherine, who is also a professional skier, were taught to ski by their father. As a young skier, he trained with the West River Nordic Club at the Wild Wings XC Center. Ogden graduated from the Stratton Mountain
schedule allows. He won back-to-back gold medals as a member of the U.S. men’s 4x5 km relay team at the 2019 and 2020 FIS Junior World Ski Championships. At the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, Ogden placed 12th in the freestyle sprint race, which was the best-ever men’s individual sprint finish for the United States. Cross-country skiing results All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). Olympic Games World Championships World Cup Season standings References External links Ben Ogden at U.S. Ski and Snowboard Ben Ogden at International Ski Federation 2000
professional and qualified for that year's Lipton Championships, losing in the first round to Shahar Perkiss. He was the interim men's head coach at Pepperdine University in 1997, after the resignation of Glenn Bassett. References External links 1964 births Living people American male tennis players UCLA
championship with the UCLA Bruins in 1984 and played his final two collegiate seasons at the University of Miami. In 1985 he turned professional and qualified for that year's Lipton Championships, losing in the first round to
Winter Olympics. He competed collegiately for the University of Utah. Cross-country skiing results All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). Olympic Games World Championships World Cup Season standings References External links 1993 births Living people American male cross-country skiers Tour
American cross-country skier. He competed in the sprint at the 2022 Winter Olympics. He competed collegiately for the University of Utah. Cross-country skiing results All results are sourced
Jeffrey and Alex Headford. Description The duo is known for their conceptual storytelling through their characters (Jeffery as Dina and Headford as Faro) and their "theatrical" masks seen donned during their live performances and press runs. The group
an English electronic music duo consisting of Diva-Sachy Jeffrey and Alex Headford. Description The duo is known for their conceptual storytelling through their characters (Jeffery as Dina and Headford as Faro) and their "theatrical" masks seen donned during
the busy outdoor Ballarò marketplace. History The monastery was built atop the remains of the ruins of the Carthaginian walls of the ancient town. In 1344, during the Aragonese rule of Sicily, under the patronage of Matteo Sclafani, count of Sclafani e Adernò, a church for Clarissan nuns was built adjacent to their cloistered monastery. The church underwent a major refurbishment in 1678. In 1919, the convent was granted to the Salesian order. The church was heavily damaged during the Allied bombardment of Palermo in 1943. The prior facade was a rich baroque front designed by Paolo Amato and decorated with solomonic columns and a statue of St Clare of Assisi. The present facade utilized the portal of the former church of the Madonna delle Grazie dei Macellai once located on Piazzetta dei
delle Grazie dei Macellai once located on Piazzetta dei Caldomai. The flanking baroque bell-tower did survive the bombardment. Art and Architecture The church has a single nave with shallow side chapels and a semicircular apse. The side chapels have lost some of their past decoration, which can still be seen in the apse. The first chapel on the right, dedicated to St Clare, has an altarpiece (1713) by Olivio Sozzi. It was donated by the nuns from the monastery of Valverde in the 1719. The second chapel on the right, dedicated to the Crucifix, has an Crucifixion with Mary, St John, and Mary Magdalen (1748) painted by Gaspare Serenari. A Pietà painted by Pietro Novelli, was once present here, but now is on display in the Museo Diocesano of Palermo. The partly allegorical frescoes in the apse are attributed to Paolo Martorana, depict Christ granting the keys to St Peter. In the half-dome of the apse, Gaspare Fumagalli
kids ( Tariq St. Patrick, portrayed by Michael Rainey Jr.) but that simply could not stand in the way of the love they shared together. Valdes thought that since it was almost impossible to nail Lobos (Enrique Murciano) for drug trafficking, it would be better to get him through his distributers which Normar identified as Ghost after they made him wear a wire. While Ghost was more fixated on going legitimately and open a new night club in Miami, Egan had other plans since they're business was always by Kanan Stark (Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson) from the inside, Ruiz (Luis Antonio Ramos) was stabbed half to death by Pink Sneakers (portrayed by Leslie Lopez). Pink Sneakers was working for Kanan and her mission was to assassinate Ghost, which she missed at TRUTH and mistakenly shot Holly Weaver (portrayed by Lucy Walters). Normar lost focus of what's important and Ruiz found out about him and her daughter, Ruiz sent Egan after Normar to murder him, Normar tried reaching out Valdes sadly she was preoccupied and Normar met his maker in Queens were he spooked Tommy by calling him Ghost. Normar fed Valdes false information about Ghost and he face identified half of Tommy Egan's face to the sketch artist before his demise. Season 2 Angela and her federal colleagues put had Egan's girlfriend, Holly Weaver in custody to ask her what she knows about Ghost that's when Angela stumbled across a crucial information she couldn't handle which is that her lover James St. Patrick is the real Ghost. Holly sold out James and treated to tell on Angela that she is sleeping with the real Ghost to her federal colleagues but Angela wanted to save her skin and her lover's too. She made a deal with Holly Weaver to bring the murder weapon that was used to kill Roller but she couldn't find it. Ghost was threatened by the presence of Holly as Egan trusted her and let her in on too much information concerning their drug dealing company, Ghost gave Holly a lot of money and fake ID to relocate and never come back. Valdes thought her informant was murdered since she couldn't be found so she confronted James about the situation and he told her the fake name that Holly
night clubs which are legitimately active. Angela continued seeing Ghost even after verifying his identity and everything. Greg also continued stalking Angela and threatened her that she will go down with Ghost. Season 3 Valdes outed federal Intel to Ghost that Lobos was still alive after Ghost attempted murder upon Lobos through Lobos's inmates. Agent Greg Knox continued pursuing Angela and Ghost collecting information trying to connect the dots to prove that James St. Patrick is the real Ghost. However, Angela kept protecting the identity of Ghost in order to herself as she was in a relationship with a notorious drug lord. Angela happened to have a fall out with Ghost concerning their differences of a federal agent seeing a drug distributor, Ghost cut off Angela to sort his problems with Lobos. When Lobos was being transferred to another facility accompanied by Knox, Tommy Egan and Ghost hijacked the transport, shot Greg Knox in the process and helped Lobos escape from the federal agents only to kill him. Greg Knox threatened to apprehend Ruiz if he does not cooperate or rather accept wearing a wire around Egan, Ghost and the other dealers, Ruiz accepted but Egan found out that Ruiz had ulterior motives to kill his connect and for that Egan stabbed Ruiz to death. Ghost broke into Greg's apartment looking for a tape that Greg has given to Ruiz to record Tommy Egan and James St. Patrick to prove the identity of Ghost to be James St. Patrick but he found nothing but he mistakenly left his fingerprints on the window when he was leaving. Greg found a tip that Mike Sandoval (portrayed by David Fumero) was the leak in the investigation of the murder of Filipe Lobos and he was planning to open a case against Mike but Mike had different plans, Mike murdered Greg Knox and planted evidence stating that Greg Knox was the leak. The Lobos case was closed as the leak and suspect were both dead but Angela found the prints on the window and ran them for a match and found out it was Ghost, Angela then went to TRUTH, Ghost was happy to see Angela but unfortunately Angela was there
and distinguished association with the University of Cambridge, dating back to his great-grandfather George Butler. Especially notable were Butler's grand-uncle Henry Montagu Butler (Master of Trinity College and Dean of Gloucester) and Sir Geoffrey G. Butler, a Cambridge historian and Conservative MP for the university, Butler's uncle and a particular early influence on him. Butler's father was a Fellow, and in later life the Master, of Pembroke College. In July 1909, at the age of six, his right arm was broken in three places in a riding accident. The injury was aggravated by a burn from a hot water bottle and an attempt to straighten the arm by hanging weights from it, leaving his hand not fully functional. Butler attended Brockhurst preparatory school but refused to attend Harrow, where many of his family had been educated. He failed to win a scholarship to Eton, and so he attended Marlborough College. He left Marlborough at the end of 1920, a week after his 18th birthday, and spent five months in France with a Protestant pastor in Abbeville. He returned briefly to England to sit the exams for Pembroke College, Cambridge, where in June 1921 he won an exhibition worth £20 per annum (around £1,000 at 2014 prices), then returned to France to be tutor to the son of Robert de Rothschild. His plan at this stage was to enter the Diplomatic Service. As a child of Empire, from his mid-teens onwards, Butler was expected to look after his younger siblings, arranging for them to stay with relatives during school holidays and sending them Christmas presents that he pretended had been sent by their parents. His sister was the writer Iris Mary Butler (1905–2002), who became Iris Portal upon her marriage, and her elder daughter is Jane Williams, Baroness Williams of Elvel, the mother of Justin Welby, the current Archbishop of Canterbury. Butler's younger brother Jock, a Home Office civil servant and Pilot Officer, was killed in a plane crash in January 1943. Cambridge Butler studied at Pembroke College, Cambridge, starting in October 1921, initially reading Medieval and Modern Languages. He soon became active in student politics, being elected to the Committee of the Cambridge Union Society by the end of his first year. At the end of his second year, he was elected Secretary for Michaelmas (autumn term) 1923 at his second attempt, by the narrow margin of 10 votes out of 500. At that time, Secretary was the only office normally contested, putting him on track to be Vice-President for Lent 1924 and President for Easter (summer term) 1924. At the end of his second year (June 1923), he achieved a First in French Part I and was awarded an £80 scholarship to supplement his £300 parental allowance (approximately £4,000 and £15,000 at 2014 prices). Butler suffered a nervous breakdown that summer and had to postpone his plans to study History to a fourth year, taking a less strenuous course in German in the meantime. He spent part of the summer of 1923 abroad learning German, and became unusually fluent in the language, impressing his hosts with his near-native syntax. He also came to feel that the Germans had been harshly treated in the recent Treaty of Versailles. In Michaelmas 1923, as Secretary, he persuaded the Cambridge Union to affiliate to the National Union of Students, of which he became a vice-president. Psychiatric illness was then still little understood. In November 1923 his college put him in the care of a doctor and in December 1923 his uncle Cyril sent him to a specialist in Bristol, after which he made a recovery from his breakdown. On 11 March 1924, after taking office as president of the Cambridge Union, he entertained the Leader of the Opposition, Stanley Baldwin, at the Change of Officers Debate to oppose the motion that "This House has the Highest Regard for Rhetoric". The following morning, Rab had to escort Baldwin back to the railway station, where, according to one version of the story, Baldwin bought him a copy of Something Fresh by P. G. Wodehouse with an admonition not to take life too seriously. At the end of his third year (1924), he received a Second in German. He graduated as a BA in 1924. In the summer of 1924 Butler took part in the ESU USA Tour, a seven-week debating tour of Canada and the United States organised by the English-Speaking Union. They debated two motions: democracy versus personal liberty and closer relations with the Soviet Union. During his fourth year at Cambridge (1924–25), he concentrated on study, reading for Part II in History and International Law. He was able to use notes which his uncle Geoffrey had prepared for a planned book on International Law. He later recorded that in his International Law exam, he had been dissatisfied with his essays, and at half time, tore up his answers and wrote six fresh ones on six sheets of foolscap. In History, he took the Peel special subject, at one point knowing by name which way every Conservative MP voted in the split over the Irish Coercion Bill of 1846. He received one of the highest firsts in the university across all subjects, known at the time as a "I:I". After graduating, Butler was a fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1925 to 1929. He gave lectures on the politics of the French Third
April 1926. She was the daughter of Samuel Courtauld and heiress to part of the Courtauld textile fortune. His father-in-law awarded him a private income of £5,000 a year after tax for life, the equivalent of a Cabinet Minister's salary, and equivalent to almost £260,000 at 2014 prices. The Butlers lived at Stanstead Hall and, in 1938, they moved into 3 Smith Square, which remained Butler's London base throughout his career. During the Second World War, Butler was bombed out of Smith Square and stayed with his Parliamentary Private Secretary Henry "Chips" Channon in Belgrave Square. The Butlers' children were Sir Richard C. Butler (1929–2012), president (1979–86) of the National Farmers' Union of England and Wales; Adam Courtauld Butler (1931–2008), who was also a politician; Samuel James Butler (1936–2015); and Sarah Teresa Butler (born 1944). Following the death of his wife from cancer in 1954, Butler married Mollie Courtauld (née Montgomerie) on 21 October 1959. She had been married to Augustine Courtauld (Sydney's cousin), who had died in March 1959. The Butlers inherited Gatcombe Park from Samuel Courtauld in 1949. In 1976, it was sold to the Queen as a home for Princess Anne, for a sum between £300,000 and £750,000 (Howard gives the figure as "more than £500,000"). He recorded that the Royal Family had driven a hard bargain but joked in public that he was "glad it was going to a good family". Early political career In his autobiography, The Art of the Possible, Butler attributed his political gifts to his grandmother Mary Kendall of Pelyn, Lostwithiel, Cornwall. He wrote a lengthy paragraph on the Kendall family, who had served in Parliament since 1368 and had been active in politics for many generations. It has been remarked of this family that they have perhaps sent more members to the British Parliament than any other in the United Kingdom. In summer 1926 Butler resigned his residential Cambridge fellowship to go on a honeymoon tour of the world, becoming instead a supernumerary fellow. He renewed his contact with Leo Amery, whom he had met in July 1924 at a British Empire Students Conference, and who now put him in touch with contacts in Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Whilst in Vancouver in June 1927, he learned of a vacancy for the safe Conservative seat of Saffron Walden, and returned from Quebec by sea on 31 August 1927; Courtauld connections arranged for him to be selected unopposed as the Conservative candidate on 26 November 1927. Butler toured local villages showing films of his Empire tours. Butler was elected in the 1929 general election, and retained the seat until his retirement in 1965. Footnotes References Sources Primary sources , his autobiography External links Richard Austen Butler – Personal Facts and Details stanford.edu The Master of Trinity at Trinity College, Cambridge Saffron Walden Conservatives R.A. Butler papers in the Conservative Party Archive The Butler Trust – A charity set up, in memory of Butler, to promote and encourage positive regimes in UK prisons. 1902 births 1982 deaths Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge British Secretaries of State for Education British Secretaries of State for Foreign Affairs Chairmen of the Conservative Party (UK) Chancellors of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom Chancellors of the University of Essex Conservative Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies Conservative Party (UK) life peers Deputy Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom English people of Scottish descent First Secretaries of State of the United Kingdom Knights of the Garter Leaders of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom Lords Privy Seal Masters of Trinity College, Cambridge Members of the Order of the Companions of Honour Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom Ministers in the Chamberlain peacetime government, 1937–1939 Ministers in the Chamberlain wartime government, 1939–1940 Ministers in the Churchill caretaker government, 1945 Ministers in the Churchill wartime government, 1940–1945 Ministers in the Eden government, 1955–1957 Ministers in the Macmillan and Douglas-Home governments, 1957–1964 Ministers in the third Churchill government, 1951–1955 People associated with the University of Sheffield People educated at Marlborough College People from Attock District Presidents of the Cambridge Union Presidents of the Royal Society of Literature Rectors of the University of Glasgow Secretaries of State for the Home Department UK MPs 1929–1931 UK MPs 1931–1935 UK MPs 1935–1945 UK MPs 1945–1950
2021. Academic contributions Haridy's research primarily focuses on the evolution of bone and other skeletal tissues. She has extensive experience studying the evolution of different forms of dentition and tooth replacement, primarily in extinct and extant reptiles, as well as paleopathologies. Her research methods include bone histology, computed tomography (CT), and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM). Some of her most notable work includes the identification of the earliest occurrence of a viral induced metabolic disease (Paget's disease), the earliest occurrence of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) in an amniote (in the stem turtle Pappochelys), and the morphological characterization of osteocytes in early fish that could be linked to physiological advantages of osteocytes that led to the modern day prevalence of osteocytic bone among vertebrates. Her work has been published in several leading international scientific journals, including Biology Letters, Scientific Reports, Systematic Biology, Science Advances, and JAMA Oncology, with over 140 citations to date, and has received extensive media coverage, including from international outlets such as National Geographic, the New York Times, the Smithsonian Magazine, Science Magazine, the Toronto Star, and Newsweek. Outreach and scientific communication Haridy is an active scientific communicator who engages primarily through Twitter, where she has more than 21,000 followers
Evolutionary Biology from the University of Toronto in 2018, where she studied the evolution of acrodonty in reptiles. She obtained her Ph.D. from Humboldt University of Berlin and the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin under the supervision of Florian Witzmann and Nadia Fröbisch in 2021. Academic contributions Haridy's research primarily focuses on the evolution of bone and other skeletal tissues. She has extensive experience studying the evolution of different forms of dentition and tooth replacement, primarily in extinct and extant reptiles, as well as paleopathologies. Her research methods include bone histology, computed tomography (CT), and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM). Some of her most notable work includes the identification of the earliest occurrence of a viral induced metabolic disease (Paget's disease), the earliest occurrence of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) in an amniote (in the stem turtle Pappochelys), and the morphological characterization of osteocytes in early fish that could be linked to physiological advantages of osteocytes that led to the modern day prevalence of osteocytic bone among vertebrates. Her work has been published in several leading international scientific journals, including Biology Letters, Scientific Reports, Systematic Biology, Science Advances, and JAMA Oncology, with over 140 citations to date, and has received
Balakrishna was approached by Aha for a talk show under the direction of Krish Jagarlamudi. Filming began in Annapurna Studios with Balakrishna being injured during the shoot. The show was formally announced in later October with 4 November 2021 as its premier date. Episodes Season 1 References
on 4 November 2021 on the streaming platform Aha. Production In early October 2021, Nandamuri Balakrishna was approached by Aha for a talk show under the direction of Krish Jagarlamudi. Filming began in Annapurna Studios with Balakrishna being injured during
Parliament of Sri Lanka from Bandarawela representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He was elected to parliament from Bandarawela in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected from
elected to parliament from Bandarawela in the March 1960 general election and was re-elected from July 1960 general election and in the 1965 general election. He lost his seat in 1966. He contest the 1970
she was also known as Queen Daemyeong (대명왕후, 大明王后) while lived in the "Daemyeong Palace" (대명궁, 大明宮). She also bore Hyeonjong a son and two daughters. In 1010, when the Khitans invaded, She and Hyeonjong went to Naju, Jeollanam-do and after retreated, they returned to Gaegyeong. In 1017 (8th year reign of King Hyeonjong), her maternal families was given royal titles and ranks, such as her maternal grandfather, Choe Haeng-eon (최행언) was granted a royal position, Sangseojwabokya (상서좌복야, 尙書右僕射); her maternal grandmother, Lady Gim was given a royal title, "Grand Lady of the Pungsan County" (풍산군대부인, 豊山郡大夫人); while her mother, Lady Yeonchang was honoured as "Grand Lady of the Nakrang County" (낙랑군대부인, 樂浪郡大夫人). Although her death
retreated, they returned to Gaegyeong. In 1017 (8th year reign of King Hyeonjong), her maternal families was given royal titles and ranks, such as her maternal grandfather, Choe Haeng-eon (최행언) was granted a royal position, Sangseojwabokya (상서좌복야, 尙書右僕射); her maternal grandmother, Lady Gim was given a royal title, "Grand Lady of the Pungsan County" (풍산군대부인, 豊山郡大夫人); while her mother, Lady Yeonchang was honoured as "Grand Lady of the Nakrang County" (낙랑군대부인, 樂浪郡大夫人). Although her death date is unknown, but she later
Bay High School, he attended the Mississippi Fire Academy and Mississippi Law Enforcement Officers Training Academy. He also completed a program through the Mississippi State Department of Health. Career Prior to entering politics, Anderson worked for the Waveland Police Department and Bay Saint Louis Fire Department. He has since worked as the public works director,
director, building official, and federal recovery manager for the city of Waveland, Mississippi. Anderson was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. During the 2020–2021 legislative session, Anderson served as vice chair of the House Public Utilities Committee and chair of the House Municipalities Committee. In December 2021, Anderson co-founded the Mississippi Legislative First Responders Caucus. References Living people
Winter Paralympics and took part in the cross-country skiing events. Shyts won three medals at the 2021 World Para Snow Sports Championships held in Lillehammer, Norway. She
Belarusian cross-country skier. She made her Paralympic debut during the 2014 Winter Paralympics and took part in the cross-country skiing events. Shyts won three medals at
1914 Rhinodictya Kirkaldy, 1906 Scenoma Fennah, 1969 Swezeyaria Metcalf, 1946 Thaumantia Melichar, 1914 Thymbra (planthopper) Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus Stål, 1854 Vanua (planthopper) Kirkaldy, 1906 Varma (planthopper) Distant, 1906 Species Fulgoromorpha Lists on the Web includes: Tropiduchus anceps Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus arisba Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus asturco Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus atlas Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus bifasciatus Van Stalle, 1985 Tropiduchus castigator (Melichar, 1914) Tropiduchus castigatoria (Schmidt, 1918) Tropiduchus electra Fennah, 1957 Tropiduchus fuscatus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus ino Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus iphis Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus kupei Van Stalle, 1984 Tropiduchus luridus (Walker, 1857) Tropiduchus marpsias Linnavuori, 1973 Tropiduchus notatus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus obiensis Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus pallidus Van Stalle, 1984 Tropiduchus philippinus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus
Rhinodictya Kirkaldy, 1906 Scenoma Fennah, 1969 Swezeyaria Metcalf, 1946 Thaumantia Melichar, 1914 Thymbra (planthopper) Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus Stål, 1854 Vanua (planthopper) Kirkaldy, 1906 Varma (planthopper) Distant, 1906 Species Fulgoromorpha Lists on the Web includes: Tropiduchus anceps Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus arisba Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus asturco Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus atlas Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus bifasciatus Van Stalle, 1985 Tropiduchus castigator (Melichar, 1914) Tropiduchus castigatoria (Schmidt, 1918) Tropiduchus electra Fennah, 1957 Tropiduchus fuscatus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus ino Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus iphis Fennah, 1958 Tropiduchus kupei Van Stalle, 1984 Tropiduchus luridus (Walker, 1857) Tropiduchus marpsias Linnavuori, 1973 Tropiduchus notatus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus obiensis Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus pallidus Van Stalle, 1984 Tropiduchus philippinus Melichar, 1914 Tropiduchus silvicola Van Stalle, 1984 Tropiduchus sobrinus
Girls of North Malabar region worship Kathivanoor Veeran to get a healthy husband. Myth Mandappan (also spelled as Mannappan) who later became the deity Kathivanoor Veeran was born to Kumarachan of Mangad Methaliyillam house and Chaki Amma of Parakayillam house. It is said that Mandappan, a resident of present-day Mangad in Kannur district was born with the blessings of goddess Chuzali. He was skilled in martial arts, and wanted to become a warrior. Instead of going to work, he hunted deer and quail in the woods with his friends. Although Kumarachan forbids the family from giving rice and milk to his son, who is not working, mother Chaki secretly gave him rice out of love for his son. Kumarachan gets angry when he sees this and he breaks his son Mandappan's bow. Saddened by this, Mandappan leaves home and joins his friends who are going to Kodagu hills for business. They give him alcohol and leave the place without taking him. After waking up from his alcoholism, Mandappan wandered alone and finally reached his uncle's house in Kathivanoor. He starts living there, and over time, he gets half of his uncle's property. On the advice of his aunt, he starts an oil business and in the meantime meets and marries Velarkot Chemmarathi. After starting to live in his wife's house, she used to quarrel with Mandappan, who was often late at home. On an unfortunate
become a warrior. Instead of going to work, he hunted deer and quail in the woods with his friends. Although Kumarachan forbids the family from giving rice and milk to his son, who is not working, mother Chaki secretly gave him rice out of love for his son. Kumarachan gets angry when he sees this and he breaks his son Mandappan's bow. Saddened by this, Mandappan leaves home and joins his friends who are going to Kodagu hills for business. They give him alcohol and leave the place without taking him. After waking up from his alcoholism, Mandappan wandered alone and finally reached his uncle's house in Kathivanoor. He starts living there, and over time, he gets half of his uncle's property. On the advice of his aunt, he starts an oil business and in the meantime meets and marries Velarkot Chemmarathi. After starting to live in his wife's house, she used to quarrel with Mandappan, who was often late at home. On an unfortunate day, his last, he gets into a quarrel with her and she curses him for being late. When Mandappan heard that an army was coming from Kodagu to attack his village, he took up arms, saluted the deities and went to war. There was a fierce battle with the soldiers from Kodagu. Mandappan was won the battle, but on his way back home he realizes that he has lost his pedestal ring and little finger during the battle. Although his friends tried to hold him back, telling him never to go to the battlefield alone, he goes back to recover it. The fighters from Kodagu, who were in a state of defeat, deceitfully kill Mandappan on his return. Chemmarathi waiting for Mandappan saw the pedestal ring and little finger fall on the banana leaf. Chemmarathi commits suicide (see Sati (practice)) by jumping into Mandappan's pyre. When the uncle and son Annukkan return after their funeral, they see Mandappan and Chemmarathi who have become gods. Mandappan's Theyyam is performed for the first time in the presence of his uncle, who names the theyyam as Kathivanoor
John Jay Construction and Jay McKnight Properties. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. References Living people 1974 births People from Gulfport, Mississippi Mississippi Republicans Members of the Mississippi House of Representatives 21st-century
investigator for the Harrison County Sheriff's Office. McKnight is the owner of John Jay Construction and Jay McKnight Properties. He was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in November 2019 and assumed office on January 7, 2020. References Living people 1974 births People from Gulfport, Mississippi Mississippi Republicans Members of the
teams Sarawak FA Teams For 2022 season, a total of 15 clubs compete in league. League table Result table References External links Football Association of Malaysia website Stadium Astro website Liga
the 3rd season of the Malaysia Premier Futsal League. It is the Malaysian professional futsal league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 2004. Selangor are the defending champions. Team changes New teams Kelantan Negeri Sembilan KPM-PST
general election defeating Iriyagolle and was elected to parliament. He lost the 1965 general election to Iriyagolle and defeated Iriyagolle at the 1970 general election and was appointed Deputy Minister of Social Services in the second Bandaranaike administration. He was then defeated in the 1977 general election by Lionel Jayatillake. References 1916 births Sri Lankan politicians Members of the 5th Parliament of Ceylon Members of
July 1960 general election defeating Iriyagolle and was elected to parliament. He lost the 1965 general election to Iriyagolle and defeated Iriyagolle at the 1970 general election and was appointed Deputy Minister of Social Services in the second Bandaranaike administration. He was then defeated in the 1977
within National Taiwan University's Department of Social Welfare. He served for some time as chair of the Department and Graduate Insti­tute of Sociology at NTU. While serving as vice chair of the Council of Labor Affairs, Chan retained his NTU professorship. In 1998, Chan was elevated to CLA chair. During his tenure, agreements were reached with Vietnam and the Philippines on employment for laborers from those countries in Taiwan. Soon after stepping down from the CLA, Chan began working as the convener
During his tenure, agreements were reached with Vietnam and the Philippines on employment for laborers from those countries in Taiwan. Soon after stepping down from the CLA, Chan began working as the convener for social security for the National Policy Foundation. He was also a consultant, and later chair, of the Cross-strait Common Market Foundation. Chan held the chairmanship of the Welfare and Environmental Council as well. He returned to government service as a presidential adviser on national policy
and the Thailand women's national under-20 football team. See also Japan Football Association (JFA) References External links 1978 births Living people Japanese women's footballers Japanese women's football managers Women's association football
a Japanese football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. She is currently the head coach of
probably 'Say'. Every time I do that live people get their phone-lights out, and I see the crowd reacting and then I start reacting, and it just makes a special moment. That song is very fun to sing and to emote to." The song was certified gold in Australia in November 2021. Reception In a review of the EP, Broadway
2019 as the fifth and final single from Ruel's debut extended play, Ready. An acoustic version, featuring Jake Meadows was released on 15 March 2019. In an interview about the EP, Ruel said "The one that I always get really emotional to, is probably 'Say'. Every time I do that live people get their phone-lights out, and I see the crowd reacting and then I start
Kannangara. He was able to win the July 1960 general election defeating Kannangara and was elected to parliament. He lost the 1965 general election to Kannangara and defeated Kannangara at the 1970
Balasuriya (15 September 1907 - 19??) was a Sri Lankan politician. He was a member of Parliament of Sri Lanka from Galigamuwa representing the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. He first contested from Galigamuwa in the March 1960 general election, and lost to
Taiwanese politician. He served as director of Chunghwa Post
of Chunghwa Post and as head of the Council of Labor Affairs. References 1932
Cup win over Iğdır FK on 1 December 2021. He kept another clean sheet in his second game in a dramatic last-minute win (1-0) over Fenerbahçe on 8 February 2022. International career Born in the Netherlands, Bayazit is of Turkish descent. He is a youth international for the Netherlands, having represented the Netherlands U16s and Netherlands U17s.
Cup win over Iğdır FK on 1 December 2021. He kept another clean sheet in his second game in a dramatic last-minute win (1-0) over Fenerbahçe on 8 February 2022. International career Born in the Netherlands, Bayazit is of Turkish descent. He is a youth international for the Netherlands, having represented the Netherlands U16s and Netherlands U17s. References External links Ons Oranje U16 Profile Ons Oranje U17 profile 1999 births Living people Footballers from Amsterdam Dutch footballers Netherlands youth international
in the theatres on 8 July 2022. The principal photography for the same commenced in September 2021. This is the second
Directed by Sameer Pannu, this film has been produced under White Hill Studios and will be released in the theatres on 8 July 2022. The principal photography for
Russell. His brother Greg was an assistant coach at Harvard and another brother Norman played collegiate tennis for Eastern Kentucky University. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Jamaican male tennis players UCLA Bruins men's tennis players
He was a Davis Cup representative for the combined Caribbean team, appearing in 1971, 1972 and 1981. From a tennis family, Russell is a cousin of tennis player Richard Russell. His brother Greg was an assistant coach at Harvard and another
term may also refer to: Address Book (application), a macOS
(application), a macOS program "Address Book", a song by Status Quo on