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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon in the fifteenth century vellum MS Longleat 257. # Plot. The majority of the character's names in this medieval romance are taken from Ancient Greece, via the mid-twelfth century Old French "Roman de Thèbes", and the action takes place in southern Italy; once Magna Graecia or Megálē Hellás, "Great Greece". King Melyagere (Meleager) of Sicily has a niece who has assumed power in Calabria at the age of fifteen, and has vowed, to the amused indulgence of her noblemen, to marry a man only if he has proved himself to be the finest knight in the world. Soon, a young man named Ipomadon, who is the son of Ermagynes (Hermogenes), King of Apulia, takes his tutor Talamewe (Ptolomy) with him to the lady's
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon court, having already fallen in love with her from afar. She is known only as 'The Proud' but despite this formidable title, she treats Ipomadon kindly and soon falls in love with him. Ipomadon, however, displays more interest in hunting deer than in warfare and jousting, a fact that is not lost on the other noblemen at her court who begin to make fun of him. She tries to shame him into taking an interest in more manly pursuits, but her rebuke backfires and Ipomadon secretly leaves her court early the next morning with all his baggage. He has been known during his stay simply as the "straunge valete", or the 'strange or unknown young man', and the Proud realises to her horror that she knows
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon nothing about him, neither his name nor where he is from, and so has little hope of ever finding him again. That same day, Ipomadon is told that his mother is dying; he returns to Apulia and learns from her on her deathbed that he has a half-brother. Much later in the tale we learn that the name of this half-brother is Cabanus and there is a grand recognition scene between Ipomadon and his brother at the very end of the story. Cabanus is living at King Meleager's court in Sicily, who, you will remember, is the Proud's uncle, and, following his abrupt departure from this proud teenager's queenly court and a season of jousting in far-flung corners of Christendom, Ipomadon arrives in Sicily and
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon to King Maleager's court, becoming known at once as the queen's favourite, perhaps even her lover. But he again becomes a figure of fun among the other noblemen for his (feigned) dislike of jousting in favour of hunting. Meanwhile, the Proud has fallen into despondency and her noblemen, concerned that she must find a suitable husband, at last persuade her to agree to hold a tournament and to marry the knight who proves himself to be the strongest at the fighting. The tournament is announced, King Meleager's court hears of it and the king and queen of Sicily take Ipomadon with them to Calabria to take part in the jousting. Whilst in Calabria, Ipomadon takes on a number of disguises. As far
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon as the King of Sicily's queen is concerned, her darling, whom she loves, hunts all day and, to the derision of her ladies-in-waiting, brings back nothing more honourable in the evening than venison to give to the king, who is engaged in the tournament. In reality, however, Ipomadon has been fighting at the tournament all day, winning horses for himself, and it is his tutor Ptolomy who has been hunting. Ipomadon fights on the first day in white armour, having changed into it deep in the forest, and wins the acclaim of all. On the second day he fights in red armour and on the third day, in black. Every day he wins the prize and the Proud is devastated when the winning knight does not show up the
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon next morning; particularly so since she learns from her cousin Jason every evening that the victorious knight has been none other than her 'strange or unknown young man'. Ipomadon has been careful to seek out this cousin every evening after the fighting to declare his identity. Well, not quite his complete identity. Having won the fighting on three successive days, Ipomadon leaves secretly again, leaving the Proud once again distraught at his departure. Ipomadon travels the world, fighting in tournaments, becomes King of Apulia following his father's death, and hears one day that the Proud is being besieged in her city by a knight called Lyoline. This ugly knight is threatening to take her
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon away with him to India. Ipomadon makes his way to King Maleager's court once again, just in time to witness the arrival of the Proud's messenger, begging for some assistance for her lady. But curiously, Ipomadon has chosen to arrive at King Maleager's court in such a way that he is not recognised, not even by the queen. He pretends to be a fool, and the reader (or listener) is treated to a comic scene in which the fool Ipomadon is first ridiculed and then accepted by the knights and noblemen, little knowing who he really is. Cabanus is conveniently absent from court on this occasion. The maiden who has been sent as a messenger by the Proud is mightily unimpressed that a fool should wish to take
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon on the challenge, but since nobody else in the court seems at all inclined to offer their services, the king allows Ipomadon the fool to take it up. Ipomadon follows the maiden and her dwarf, with the maiden hurling insults and telling him in no uncertain terms to go away, in much the same way as a maiden representing the imprisoned lady of Synadoun will do to the hero of Thomas Chestre's fourteenth century Middle English Arthurian romance "Libeaus Desconus". At last, having defeated many hostile knights along the way, Ipomadon, the maiden and her dwarf arrive near the city where the Proud is being besieged. Lyoline is on horseback outside the city wall, shouting great boasts. Ipomadon removes
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon himself to a forest nearby, while the maiden enters the city. Ipomadon sends his cousin out to discover what colour armour Lyoline is wearing. He is wearing black armour and is riding a black horse. Ipomadon dons black armour and rides out on a black horse, to challenge Lyoline to single combat for the hand of the Proud. The battle is long and hard, goes on for hundreds of lines, but at last, Ipomadon is victorious. Lyoline lies dead at his feet. But now a very curious thing happens, and one that Hue de Rotelande is happy to remain inexplicable, although the author of this Middle English tail-rhyme romance tries to convince us that it is through a lingering uncertainty on Ipomadon's part, a
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon lack of certainty that he has truly accorded with the Proud's vow. Ipomadon goes to Lyoline's tent, takes up his banner and declares that Lyoline is victorious! Since their horses were slain from under them, we are told, nobody in the city has had any idea which knight is which: It is only with the arrival of Cabanus, who is intent upon rescuing the Proud himself, that Ipomadon is made to abandon this ludicrous disguise, to reveal his true self and to learn to his joy who Cabanus really is—his long lost brother. And on this joyful note, the romance ends with the Proud and her champion Ipomadon, her 'strange young man', at last in one another's arms. # Late-medieval influences upon the Anglo-Norman
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon Ipomedon. Ipomedon was written by Hue de Roteland in around 1180 or 1190. He states that he translated it out of a Latin manuscript, which is generally regarded as a hoax on his part. It was at one point believed to be inspired by a Byzantine source, but now appears to be an invented tale, but one nevertheless showing many motifs common to the romance genre. ## Sir Lancelot. In the 1170s Chretien de Troyes wrote a romance called "The Knight of the Cart" in which an unknown knight, only much later revealed to be Sir Lancelot, travels into a land to which the only access is via a 'Sword Bridge' and an 'Underwater Bridge'. Near the end of this tale, having achieved the release of many people
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon from King Arthur's court who had been held prisoner in this land, including Queen Guinevere, Lancelot attends a tournament in disguise, wearing a red shield. He is invincible but then, following secret instructions from Queen Guinevere, he behaves like an incompetent fool, then he as an invincible knight once again, before leaving the tournament without anybody except the queen knowing who it is. Following his mother's death, Ipomadon travels widely, winning the prize at every tournament. But he wishes not to be known: Men had no choice but to call him 'the worthy knight who has no name', wherever he appeared. Sir Lancelot, in the early-thirteenth century pre-cyclic Old French romance "Lancelot",
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon spends almost the entire length of the romance incognito, taking on a dozen or more knightly disguises before the end of the tale, in an effort not to be recognised. He even arrives at the royal court where his return should be welcomed, disguised as a fool; a court where there is a growing romantic attachment between himself and the queen, although she does not recognise him. In this case, of course, the queen is Guinevere. One noticeable deviation from the courtly love presented in Lancelot's story is that Ipomadon and his beloved are united in marriage and have children, and even described as lovers after their marriage—a deviation from the original formulation of courtly love that grew
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon common in romances of this era. ## Tristan. Thomas of Britain's twelfth century romance Tristan, reworked into Middle High German by Gottfried von Strassburg, contains a lot of episodes where Tristan assumes a disguise, both before and after Isolde becomes the queen to King Mark of Cornwall, Tristan's uncle. ## Folktale. The tournament where the hero fights in disguise and claims to have been busy is a fairy tale commonplace (such as in "The Golden Crab" or "The Magician's Horse", or in "Little Johnny Sheep-Dung" and "The Hairy Man", where it is actual battle), and from there passed into such romances as "Robert the Devil", "Sir Gowther", and "Lanzelet". The episode is so closely related
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon to the one in "Lanzelet" that it suggests that Hue knew the French original of that romance, but it contains, in addition, that the knight won a bride by this, which suggests familiarity with a folktale with such a motif. # Medieval English derivatives from the tale of Ipomedon. "The three different Middle English versions of the Anglo-Norman "Ipomedon" attest to the popularity of this text in England" and its influence can be seen in other works. ## Thomas Chestre's tale of the Fair Unknown. Thomas Chestre wrote an Arthurian romance Lybeaus Desconus in the late-fourteenth century in which a young man arrives at King Arthur's court not knowing his own name, having been brought up in seclusion
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon in the forest by his mother. Despite his inexperience at fighting, he asks, like the fool Ipomadon, that the first request to the king for a champion be given to him. King Arthur, like King Meleager, complies with this odd request, having named the young man the Fair Unknown. Soon afterwards, a maiden called Ellyne appears asking for a champion to defeat her mistress's enemies. Like Ipomadon, the Fair Unknown reminds the king of his promise, and to the consternation of the damsel and her dwarf, is allowed to set off with her. Only by proving himself in combat during the journey, like Ipomadon when he follows the angry maiden Imayne disguised as a fool, does the Fair Unknown stem the scorn, derision
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon and verbal abuse heaped upon him by a far from happy maiden. Like Imayne too, Ellyne falls in love with her knight as he begins to prove himself in combat. At the end of the journey, of course, they both rescue their respective ladies. ## "Sir Gowther". In an anonymous fifteenth century Middle English romance called "Sir Gowther", the eponymous anti-hero is given a penance by the Pope only to eat food that has been in the mouth of a dog. Sir Gowther eats under the table of a great lord in the guise of 'Hob tho fole' – Hob the fool – but when Saracens attack, the lowly Hob fights in the field on three successive days in black armour, red armour and finally in white armour, all miraculously
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon provided for him. At the end of each day these arms mysteriously vanish away and no one knows who the invincible knight has been. ## "Roswall and Lillian". This Scottish romance, "certainly as early as the sixteenth century and perhaps [belonging] to the fifteenth", is found only in printed editions, the earliest dating to 1663. Unjustly robbed of his princely identity in a foreign land, Roswell becomes very friendly with the daughter of the king of that land. She, believing him to be of humble origins (and receiving not the slightest hint from him to the contrary), urges him to attend a tournament that has been arranged in order to find a suitable husband for her. On each of the three days
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon of this tournament, Roswall, like Ipomadon, goes into the forest to hunt. On each occasion, however, he is approached by a knight in armour who exchanges his gear with the hero, so allowing Roswall to perform magnificently, though anonymously, at each day's jousting; first in white arms on a milk-white horse, then in red arms on a grey horse, and finally in green and red armour. ## Sir Thomas Malory. "The influence of some version of "Ipomadon"" may also be traceable in the tale of Sir Gareth of Orkney, in Sir Thomas Malory's fifteenth century Arthurian epic "Le Morte d'Arthur": # External links. - "Article: Philological Quarterly". - "Ipomadon" from MS Chetham 8009 (Manchester), Modern
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Ipomadon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ipomadon
Ipomadon pomadon, goes into the forest to hunt. On each occasion, however, he is approached by a knight in armour who exchanges his gear with the hero, so allowing Roswall to perform magnificently, though anonymously, at each day's jousting; first in white arms on a milk-white horse, then in red arms on a grey horse, and finally in green and red armour. ## Sir Thomas Malory. "The influence of some version of "Ipomadon"" may also be traceable in the tale of Sir Gareth of Orkney, in Sir Thomas Malory's fifteenth century Arthurian epic "Le Morte d'Arthur": # External links. - "Article: Philological Quarterly". - "Ipomadon" from MS Chetham 8009 (Manchester), Modern English translation and abridgment
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Sulejman Pitarka
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sulejman%20Pitarka
Sulejman Pitarka Sulejman Pitarka Sulejman Pitarka (1924–2007) was an Albanian actor, writer, and playwright, originally from Debar. His family moved to Durrës, Albania when he was 5. He was active in films and in the National Theater of Albania in Tirana. He was awarded the People's Artist of Albania. # Filmography. - "Loin des barbares" - (1994) - "Vdekja e burrit" - (1991) - "Historiani dhe kameleoni" - (1989) - "Nata e parë e lirisë" - (1984) - "Në prag të lirisë" - (1981) - "Shtëpia jonë e përbashkët" - (1981) - "Goditja" (1980) - "Ballë për ballë" - (1979) - "Gjeneral gramafoni" - (1978) - "Pas gjurmëve" - (1978) - "Gunat mbi tela" - (1977) - "Tinguj lufte" - (1976) - "Horizonte të hapura"
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Sulejman Pitarka
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sulejman%20Pitarka
Sulejman Pitarka , and playwright, originally from Debar. His family moved to Durrës, Albania when he was 5. He was active in films and in the National Theater of Albania in Tirana. He was awarded the People's Artist of Albania. # Filmography. - "Loin des barbares" - (1994) - "Vdekja e burrit" - (1991) - "Historiani dhe kameleoni" - (1989) - "Nata e parë e lirisë" - (1984) - "Në prag të lirisë" - (1981) - "Shtëpia jonë e përbashkët" - (1981) - "Goditja" (1980) - "Ballë për ballë" - (1979) - "Gjeneral gramafoni" - (1978) - "Pas gjurmëve" - (1978) - "Gunat mbi tela" - (1977) - "Tinguj lufte" - (1976) - "Horizonte të hapura" - (1968) - "Debatik" - (1961) - "The Great Warrior Skanderbeg" - (1953)
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Silverliner V
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Silverliner%20V
Silverliner V Silverliner V The Silverliner V is an electric railcar designed and built by Hyundai Rotem. It is used by Philadelphia's SEPTA Regional Rail and Denver, Colorado's Regional Transportation District. This is the fifth generation railcar in the Silverliner family of single level EMUs. # SEPTA Regional Rail. The cars feature expanded interiors and windows, additional entrances and screens used to display information about the service. They are all ADA compliant and meet Federal Railroad Administration safety requirements. SEPTA ordered a total of 120 cars at a cost of $274 million; the first cars arrived in the United States on 28 February 2010 from South Korea, where they were manufactured by
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Silverliner V
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Silverliner%20V
Silverliner V Hyundai Rotem. The cars were built in South Korea and final assembly took place in South Philadelphia. The cars entered revenue service on 29 October 2010 and all 120 were to be completed by the end of 2011. However, due to delays that were reportedly to last until mid-2012, SEPTA is owed millions in fines for the overdue equipment. The last of the 120 cars arrived on property for testing in February 2013. Cars 735, 736, 871 and 872 are owned by the state of Delaware. However, they are used systemwide for service, and are not restricted to use on services to Delaware only. On July 2, 2016, SEPTA removed all 120 of its Silverliner V cars – a third of its fleet – from service due to fatigue
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Silverliner V
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Silverliner%20V
Silverliner V cracks in the trucks, leading to reduced service system-wide. On September 1, 2016 four of the cars have been put back into service on the Fox Chase Line. All cars have been put back into service since late 2016. # RTD Commuter Rail. In 2010 Denver's Regional Transportation District selected the Silverliner V for its new commuter rail line. A total of 66 cars were purchased in the married pair configuration for a total of $300 million. The first four cars were delivered to Denver on December 3, 2014 with service to start in 2016. Differences between the RTD and SEPTA cars include support for only 25 kV 60 Hz AC electrification, four high level doors per side, less powerful traction motors,
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Silverliner V
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Silverliner%20V
Silverliner V n the RTD and SEPTA cars include support for only 25 kV 60 Hz AC electrification, four high level doors per side, less powerful traction motors, full-width cabs and bells. # Electromagnetic interference. Some users of audio equipment have found that the presence of tracks carrying Silverliner V cars have introduced detrimental electromagnetic interference to playback and recording of audio. This phenomenon also affects audio and PA electronics inside the cars, although Hyundai Rotem has fitted filters to lessen the effect on internal equipment. # External links. - Silverliner V RFP Technical Specification - SEPTA Silverliner V Page - Image of the operating cab - RTD Variant Fact Sheet
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Sitall
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sitall
Sitall Sitall Sitall aka Sitall CO-115M or Astrositall, is a crystalline glass-ceramic with ultra-low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE). It was originally manufactured in the former Soviet Union and was used in the making of primary mirrors for the Russian Maksutov telescopes, but since dissolution has diminished in quality. Sitall has a CTE of only 0 ± 1.5 °C in the temperature range −60 to 60 °C, placing it in a rather small group of transparent materials with low CTE such as Vycor, Zerodur, CerVit and fused quartz. Materials of low coefficient of thermal expansion are critical in the manufacture of optical elements for telescopes. In segmented mirror telescopes, it is desirable to have this
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Sitall
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sitall
Sitall coefficient as near zero as possible, and to have a high degree of homogeneity in the material. The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) selected Sitall for the manufacture of its 91 primary mirror segments by Lytkarino Optical Glass Plant. Using this company was a direct result of increased scientific collaboration between Russia and South Africa since 1994. Sitall was used for the primary and secondary mirrors of the VLT Survey Telescope. Sitall has been ballistically tested by The Pentagon for use as a complex composite armour system, intended to resist chemical and kinetic assault. # External links. - Sitall from pressed and sintered fused basalt powders - Specific features of hydroabrasive
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Sitall
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sitall
Sitall to have a high degree of homogeneity in the material. The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) selected Sitall for the manufacture of its 91 primary mirror segments by Lytkarino Optical Glass Plant. Using this company was a direct result of increased scientific collaboration between Russia and South Africa since 1994. Sitall was used for the primary and secondary mirrors of the VLT Survey Telescope. Sitall has been ballistically tested by The Pentagon for use as a complex composite armour system, intended to resist chemical and kinetic assault. # External links. - Sitall from pressed and sintered fused basalt powders - Specific features of hydroabrasive treatment of sitall components
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel 1997 in Israel Events in the year 1997 in Israel. # Incumbents. - Prime Minister of Israel - Benjamin Netanyahu (Likud) - President of Israel - Ezer Weizman - Chief of General Staff - Amnon Lipkin-Shahak - Government of Israel - 27th Government of Israel # Events. - 4 February - 1997 Israeli helicopter disaster: Two IAF troop-transport CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopters collide in darkness near the remote She'ar Yashuv kibbutz, in northern Israel, killing 77 IDF soldiers. - 13 March - Island of Peace massacre: Seven 11-year-old girls from Beit Shemesh's Feurst School are killed and many other are severely injured by a Jordanian soldier, who opened fire on the schoolchildren while they were
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel on a class trip at the "Island of Peace", a joint Israeli and Jordanian tourist resort, under Jordanian rule. - July - The 1997 Maccabiah Games are held. - 14 July - Maccabiah bridge collapse - A pedestrian bridge collapses over the Yarkon River killing four and injuring 60 Australian athletes who are visiting Israel to participate in the Maccabiah Games. ## Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The most prominent events related to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict which occurred during 1997 include: - 14 January - The government of Israel approves the Hebron Agreement. - 16 January - The Knesset approves the Hebron Agreement. Notable Palestinian militant operations against Israeli targetsbr The
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel most prominent Palestinian militant acts and operations committed against Israeli targets during 1997 include: - 21 March - Café Apropo bombing: A Palestinian Arab suicide bomber kills three and injures 49 in a coffee shop in Tel Aviv. - 30 July - 1997 Mahane Yehuda Market Bombings: 16 Israelis are killed and 178 wounded in two consecutive suicide bombings in the Mahane Yehuda Market in Jerusalem. - 4 September - Ben Yehuda Street Bombing: Three Hamas suicide bombers simultaneously blow themselves up on the Ben Yehuda Street pedestrian mall in Jerusalem, killing five Israelis. The bombing was carried out by Palestinian Arabs from the village of Asira ash-Shamaliya. Notable Israeli military
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel operations against Palestinian militancy targetsbr The most prominent Israeli military counter-terrorism operations (military campaigns and military operations) carried out against Palestinian militants during 1997 include: - 25 September – assassination attempt on Khaled Mashal: Two Mossad agents attempted to assassinate Khaled Mashal, the Hamas' Jordanian branch chief, in Jordan by injecting him a toxin in his ear. The operation failed after the Jordanian authorities managed to apprehend the two Mossad agents and later on, in exchange for their release, an Israeli physician had to fly to Amman and administer an antidote to Mashal. The fall out from the failed assassination eventually led
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel to the release of Sheik Ahmed Yassin, the founder and spiritual leader of the Hamas movement, and scores of Hamas prisoners. # Notable births. - 12 April - Marc Hinawi, swimmer - 12 May - Odeya Rush, actress # Notable deaths. - 4 April – Leo Picard (b. 1900), German-born Israeli geologist and an expert in the field of hydrology. - 12 April – Nechama Leibowitz (b. 1905), Russian (Latvia)-born Israeli Bible scholar. - 17 April – Chaim Herzog (b. 1918), British-born Israeli politician, the sixth president of Israel. - 1 October – Inbal Perlmutter (b. 1971), Israeli musician. - 2 December – Anat Elimelech (b. 1974), Israeli actress and model - 17 December – Uzi Narkiss (b. 1925), distinguished
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1997 in Israel
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1997%20in%20Israel
1997 in Israel sh, actress # Notable deaths. - 4 April – Leo Picard (b. 1900), German-born Israeli geologist and an expert in the field of hydrology. - 12 April – Nechama Leibowitz (b. 1905), Russian (Latvia)-born Israeli Bible scholar. - 17 April – Chaim Herzog (b. 1918), British-born Israeli politician, the sixth president of Israel. - 1 October – Inbal Perlmutter (b. 1971), Israeli musician. - 2 December – Anat Elimelech (b. 1974), Israeli actress and model - 17 December – Uzi Narkiss (b. 1925), distinguished Israeli general. # See also. - 1997 in Israeli film - 1997 in Israeli television - 1997 in Israeli music - 1997 in Israeli sport # External links. - IDF History in 1997 @ dover.idf.il
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Herbert Giersch
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Herbert%20Giersch
Herbert Giersch Herbert Giersch Herbert Giersch (11 May 1921 – 22 July 2010) was a German economist. He was one of the initial members of the German Council of Economic Experts in 1964, serving on the council until 1970, and also was president of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy 1969–1989. Giersch was considered the most influential German economist during the chancellorships of Willy Brandt, Helmut Schmidt, and Helmut Kohl. Born in Reichenbach, Silesia, Giersch attended the University of Breslau and the University of Kiel between 1939 and 1942, until he was drafted to serve in World War II. Returning from war captivity, he earned his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Münster in 1948. Giersch
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Herbert Giersch
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Herbert%20Giersch
Herbert Giersch al German economist during the chancellorships of Willy Brandt, Helmut Schmidt, and Helmut Kohl. Born in Reichenbach, Silesia, Giersch attended the University of Breslau and the University of Kiel between 1939 and 1942, until he was drafted to serve in World War II. Returning from war captivity, he earned his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Münster in 1948. Giersch received a full professorship at the Saarland University in 1955. In 1969, he succeeded at the University of Kiel, and held that chair until 1989. Originally adherent to Keynesian economics in the 1950s and 1960s, he gradually became an advocate of supply-side economics in his later years. # See also. - Eurosclerosis
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Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala, Ezhumanthuruthu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Netaji%20Smaraka%20Gramina%20Grandhasala,%20Ezhumanthuruthu
Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala, Ezhumanthuruthu Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala, Ezhumanthuruthu Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala is a village library and reading room established in 1995 by the young boys of Ezhumanthuruthu, Kerala, India. # Overview. This library is situated in a village called Ezhumanthuruthu in Kaduthuruthy Grama Panchayath of Vaikom Taluk in Kottayam district. Ezhumanthuruthu has a rich cultural heritage and tradition. Although the majority of the population is agri based, literate and educated people are actively participating in the development of the Village. The library has been named after Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. One of the main objectives is to introduce Netaji's contributions to the new generation
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Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala, Ezhumanthuruthu
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Netaji%20Smaraka%20Gramina%20Grandhasala,%20Ezhumanthuruthu
Netaji Smaraka Gramina Grandhasala, Ezhumanthuruthu ased, literate and educated people are actively participating in the development of the Village. The library has been named after Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. One of the main objectives is to introduce Netaji's contributions to the new generation on India's freedom struggle. # Location. The library is working in its own building with 4500 books including children’s books and reference books at the southern part of Ezhumanthuruthu. It is planned to move to the central junction to boost the function of the library. This place is about five kilometres from Kaduthuruthy central junction and the same distance from the nearby town of Thalayolaparambu. # External links. - http://www.netaji.org/
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei Mansour Leghaei Dr Sheikh Mansour Leghaei (born 1962) is the founder and a director of the Imam Husain Islamic Centre and the School of Islamic Theology in Earlwood, Australia, serving as the imam from 1997–2010. He previously served in Nigeria, where in 1992 he opened an Education Centre called Ahul Bayt. Leghaei is known in Australia and in the international media for his drawn out legal battle, spanning more than a decade, with the Australian Government and its Security Services. Leghaei challenged the government's security assessment of him in his bid to gain permanent residency. The case often draws parallels in the media and by his lawyers as a real life narrative of the novel "The Trial"
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei by Franz Kafka, because the allegations, or the nature of the allegations against him, have never been revealed by the authorities. Leghaei is seen as a prominent member within the interfaith communities and was the chairman of the Marrickville Interfaith Round Table. Leghaei has attended a number of seminars to provide an Islamic perspective, including the Ecumenical Service on the Dead Sea Scrolls held at the Sydney Art Gallery, "Religious Therapy" on the occasion of World Cancer Day at the University of Sydney and "Spirituality of Great Traditions" at St. James' Church. # Early life and education. Leghaei was born in Abadan, Iran, to a religious Shia family. He earned a PhD in Islamic
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei Theosophy from the University of Qom, where he studied under a number of renowned scholars including, the Grand Ayatollah Hossein Vahid Khorasani, Grand Ayatollah Mousa Shubairi Zanjani, Ayatollah Hassan Hasanzadeh Amoli, Ayatollah Abdollah Javadi-Amoli, Ayatollah Mohammad-Taqi Mesbah-Yazdi, Sheik Mohammad Bahjat, and the late Ayatollah Bahrol-Oloom Mirdamadi. # Nigeria. In 1992, Leghaei began his overseas religious services in Kano, Nigeria where a significant Shia minority exists. During this period Leghaei founded an education centre called Ahlul Bayt. Ahlul Bayt is a commonly used Islamic term referring to the "House (family) of the Prophet". However, in 1993, due to increasing violence
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei in Nigeria, Leghaei returned to Iran with his family. # Australia. According to documents rendered to the Federal Court of Australia, Leghaei with his family first arrived in Australia in 1994 under a Short Stay Business Visa and was employed as a Halal meat supervisor. The following year, he applied and successfully received a Religious Worker Visa which allowed him to work as a Muslim leader and travel internationally. In 1996, Leghaei applied for permanent residency for himself and his family, and received bridging visas whilst their applications for residency were being reviewed. These bridging visas did not permit international travel. Supporting his application were character references
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei from two members of parliament, Anthony Albanese and Robert McClelland, who has been the Attorney-General of Australia, but at the time was an opposition backbencher. McClelland, described Leghaei as: "an erudite man, conciliatory in tone and demeanour" who would be an "asset" to both the Muslim and Australian communities. In 1997, Leghaei was refused permanent residency on the grounds that he had been assessed as a “risk to the national security of Australia.” In his appeal, Leghaei obtained a second character reference from McClelland. Despite being aware of the security concerns surrounding Leghaei, McClelland wrote in Leghaei's defence: I was most surprised to learn that Sheik Leghaei's
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei application had been rejected on the failure to satisfy part 4002 of Schedule 4 of the Migration Regulations, that is the public interest criteria. Part 4002 of the regulations requires that an applicant "is not assessed" by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) to be directly or indirectly a risk to security. In the same year, Leghaei established the Imam Husain Islamic Centre with the stated aim of addressing the educational, welfare, and religious needs of the Muslim community. The unveiling of the centre was attended by a number of high-ranking public dignitaries, including the then Attorney-General Philip Ruddock, who provided his blessing by noting: I do note very
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei much the inclusive nature of the centre that you have developed. Between 1997 and 2002, Leghaei pursued review proceedings and a formal assessment was carried out by ASIO. The substance of the assessment was that Leghaei was "directly or indirectly a risk to Australian national security." Between 2002 and 2010, Leghaei appealed and endeavoured to ascertain the reasoning for the adverse security assessment and had hearings and matters before a range of bodies, including the Immigration Review Tribunal, the Federal Court and the High Court of Australia. These appeals failed because as a non-citizen of Australia, Leghaei was not entitled to natural justice or procedural fairness for the reason
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei of national security considerations, and no legal board had the authority to examine the allegations or overrule the ASIO assessment. After the failed appeals, Leghaei's next option was ministerial intervention by the then Immigration Minister, Chris Evans. A number of support rallies were organised for Leghaei, including a rally outside the Parliament House of Australia in Canberra, where more than 1000 supporters attended. However, Evans did not intervene. Prior to the rally, a number of world bodies weighed into the judicial process surrounding Leghaei's case. The United Nations Human Rights Committee advised the Australian Government that "deporting Leghaei would be a possible violation
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei of Dr Leghaei's human rights" and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) also informed the Australian Government that "deporting Dr Leghaei was contrary to the right to a fair hearing". Nevertheless, in mid May 2010, Leghaei's bridging visa was not extended and he was given six weeks to leave Australia. Leghaei complied by leaving on 27 June 2010, along with his wife and youngest child. As of May 2015, Leghaei continues as a director of the Imam Husain Islamic Centre, according to documents lodged with the corporate regulator. In June 2015, the Imam Husain Islamic Centre was to host an overseas speaker, Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who supports the death penalty for homosexuals
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei in certain cases. Sekaleshfar voluntarily left Australia. # Legal fight. Due to the nature of the allegations and the law and rights entitled to individuals of non–permanent residency, ascertaining the particulars of the accusations against Leghaei has been limited to Freedom of Information requests and snippets from restricted government, media, and legal reports. Leghaei's legal challenge of the government security assessment has been limited to a case built by ASIO that centred on the basis that he is "suspected of acts of foreign interference", the details of which have never been disclosed to the public nor to Leghaei, and according to media analysis are "the stuff we are not allowed
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei to know". Leghaei has also received letters from Government officials asking him to answer the allegations against him, when he has no idea what they are and has even been asked to deport himself. A judge presiding over one of the appeals, Rodney Madgwick noted that Leghaei "appears to have performed valuable community services' and his family's deportation "may well cause hardship to utterly blameless Australian citizens", but that he had no jurisdiction to challenge the "merits and validity of ASIO's assessment" and could only decide whether Leghaei had received procedure fairness. He found Leghaei's"procedural fairness is reduced, in practical terms, to nothingness". The integral part of
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei his judgement, dealing with the evidence, was kept secret. Only through appeals did Leghaei get limited understanding of the accusations wielded against him. One accusation was that on his return from a holiday in Iran in 1994, Leghaei carried a text he copied from Tehran University, which the Government translated as promoting "violent Jihad" and "the killing of infidels". However, on appeal it was later proven the translation was "flawed and misleading" and "key words were translated wrongly and entire paragraphs were added by the translator". ASIO ultimately admitted its translation was wrong and was ordered to pay a third of Leghaei's legal costs. Another instance is the accusation that
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei Leghaei was linked to a terrorist group in France called Ahul Bayt, due to the naming of the Islamic Centre he opened in Nigeria. Leghaei later emphasised that he knew no such group and that Ahul Bayt is a commonly used Islamic term. Furthermore, in 2001, through a Freedom of Information request, Leghaei discovered that an anonymous letter, addressed to the then Immigration Minister Philip Ruddock, had alleged that "he was funded by the Iranian government and was a threat to the security of Australia and its Iranian community". These claims and others by Iranian dissidents have never been substantiated. Leghaei’s future return to Australia rested with the appeal by his lawyers to the UN who
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei investigated the case further. ## Denmark. In July 2018 he was banned from entering Denmark. # United Nations decision. In March 2015, after almost five years of review, the UN Human Rights Committee concluded Australia violated the human rights of Sheikh Mansour and his family when it expelled him without adequately explaining why ASIO suspected him of being a threat to national security. The UN Human Rights Committee established Australia’s actions constituted an arbitrary interference with Leghaei’s family, in breach of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights ICCPR and summarised in the Committee report, "In light of the 16 years of lawful resident and long-settled
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei family life in Australia and the absence of any explanation from the state party on the reasons to terminate the author’s right to remain, except for the general assertion that it was done for ‘compelling reasons of national security’, the committee finds that the state party’s procedure lacked due process of law.” The report further highlighted further breaches in particular article 17 of the ICCPR, which said Australia was obliged to provide Leghaei “with an effective and appropriate remedy, including a meaningful opportunity to challenge the refusal to grant him a permanent visa; and compensation”. Ben Saul a professor of international law at Sydney University who acted for Leghaei in his
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei UN complaint, noted the findings where "...the most authoritative interpretation of Australia’s binding obligations under the Human Rights treaty. To that extent the expectation of the United Nations is that Australia will comply with these decisions" and recognised Australia's "poor record" of complying with such findings. In response to the findings the Australian Government had 180 days to respond, with a spokeswoman for the Attorney-General George Brandis noting: "The Government will give careful consideration, in good faith, to the views of the committee and respond within 180 days as is required." # Criticisms of Leghai's deportation. As a result of indistinctness surrounding the allegations
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei and the lack of natural justice pertained to Leghaei, a number of Nobel Peace Prize laureates and international human rights activists openly criticised the Australian Government for the vagueness of the accusations and the deficiencies in procedural fairness. These criticisms include - Archbishop Desmond Tutu who said, "In South Africa we used to have detention without trial" and "In Australia you have deportation without trial." - President of the International Progress Organization, Hans Köchler noted, "There can be no fair hearing of the case if the authorities refuse to disclose the allegations against Sheikh Mansour. We appeal to the government of Australia to revoke this decision." -
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei Nobel Peace Prize laureate Máiread Corrigan-Maguire wrote that "the deportation would breach the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Australia is a party" - In a statement, the former Bishop of Jerusalem Riah Hanna Abu El-Assal said "Dr Leghaei is not only not a threat to Australian national security but indeed through his peaceful presence and work both within the Muslim community and with other religious leaders and people, makes a great contribution to Australian society". - Chandra Muzaffar, a Malaysian political scientist, Islamic reformist and activist said "The impending deportation of Sheikh Mansour Leghaei is a travesty of justice. There is no doubt at all
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei that his human rights have been violated." # eHawza. In 2008, Leghaei founded eHawza, an electronic Hawza program (Islamic Seminary) in English, enabling students to study by distance education, for a Diploma in Islamic Theology, and accredited by the al-Mustafa International University, Qom, Iran. It contains over 500 academic lectures presented in English by Leghaei on a wide variety of topics, as well as over 5,000 pages of written resources. # Awards and recognition. Leghaei has received a number of accolades, including a Community Service Award from the Australian MEFF Consortium Inc in 2000. # Personal. Leghaei is the father of four children and is fluent in three languages: Persian,
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Mansour Leghaei
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mansour%20Leghaei
Mansour Leghaei munity Service Award from the Australian MEFF Consortium Inc in 2000. # Personal. Leghaei is the father of four children and is fluent in three languages: Persian, Arabic, and English. # Quotes. - When questioned about his past: "I think my 16 years of peaceful life in Australia is my best evidence." - At Sydney Airport, before departure: "My body will depart Australia but definitely my soul and my spirit will remain here forever." - Asked if he would ever return to Australia: "My family is there; my community is there; my heart is there. I consider myself Australian." # External links. - Imam Husain Islamic Centre - Save Sheikh Mansour from deportation - School of Islamic Theology
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William Hutchins (disambiguation)
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William Hutchins (disambiguation) William Hutchins (disambiguation) William Hutchins (1792–1841) was an English churchman and academic. William Hutchins may also refer to: - William Henry Hutchins (1843–1898), Canadian merchant and political figure - William John Hutchins (born 1939), English linguist and information scientist - William M. Hutchins (born 1944), American translator of modern Arabic literature - Will Hutchins (born 1930), American actor - William J. Hutchins (1813–1884), businessman and mayor of Houston - William James Hutchins, President of Berea College in Kentucky (1920–1939), father of Robert Maynard Hutchins # See also. - William Hutchings (disambiguation)
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Golden Gates School
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Golden%20Gates%20School
Golden Gates School Golden Gates School Golden Gates Matriculation Higher Secondary School is located at Yercaud foothills in Salem, Tamil Nadu, India. # External links. - Golden Gates School facebook page - Golden Gates School entry at India Study Channel - Satellite phot of Golden Gates School at wikimapia.com - Map showing Golden Gates School at startlocal.in
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Aladár Paasonen
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aladár%20Paasonen
Aladár Paasonen Aladár Paasonen Colonel Aladár Antero Zoltán Béla Gyula Árpád Paasonen (December 11, 1898, Budapest, Austria-Hungary – July 6, 1974 Flourtown, Pennsylvania, United States), known as Aladár Paasonen, was a Finnish military officer who served as Chief of Intelligence of the Finnish Defence Forces during the Continuation War, and later in the CIA. Paasonen was born in Budapest, Hungary, son of Finnish Professor of Linguistics Heikki Paasonen, and his Hungarian wife Mariska Paskay de Palásthy. Paasonen participated in the Finnish Civil War on the White side, reaching the rank of sub-lieutenant. In 1920, he was promoted to lieutenant. Between 1921 and 1922 he studied at the École Supérieure de
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Aladár Paasonen
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aladár%20Paasonen
Aladár Paasonen Guerre, where among his classmates was Charles de Gaulle. In 1923, Paasonen was promoted to captain, in 1926 to major and in 1929 to lieutenant colonel. He served as the Finnish military attaché in Moscow in 1931–33 and in Berlin in 1933. In 1937, he was promoted to colonel, and appointed senior adjutant to President Kyösti Kallio. Paasonen was member of the Finnish delegation to Moscow in the negotiations prior to the Winter War. During the Winter War, he was stationed in Paris, France, with a mission to procure weapons and equipment to the Finnish Defence Forces. France awarded him the Légion d'honneur (1939), rank "Officier". During the Continuation War, Paasonen commanded a regiment in
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Aladár Paasonen
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aladár%20Paasonen
Aladár Paasonen the Karelian Isthmus and East Karelia, until he was appointed Chief of Intelligence in 1942. He worked in the Military Headquarters in Mikkeli as one of Marshal Mannerheim's closest aides. After the war, Paasonen, having participated in the Operation Stella Polaris and the Weapons Cache Case, relocated to Sweden, and was recruited by the French intelligence services, and later by the CIA, working for them in Western Europe in the post-war period. In the late 1950s, the Paasonen family lived on Platenstrasse in Frankfurt while Aladar worked in the I.G. Farben building. Between 1948 and 1952, he helped Marshal Mannerheim write his memoirs in Switzerland. He was retired in 1963, living in the
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Aladár Paasonen
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aladár%20Paasonen
Aladár Paasonen Headquarters in Mikkeli as one of Marshal Mannerheim's closest aides. After the war, Paasonen, having participated in the Operation Stella Polaris and the Weapons Cache Case, relocated to Sweden, and was recruited by the French intelligence services, and later by the CIA, working for them in Western Europe in the post-war period. In the late 1950s, the Paasonen family lived on Platenstrasse in Frankfurt while Aladar worked in the I.G. Farben building. Between 1948 and 1952, he helped Marshal Mannerheim write his memoirs in Switzerland. He was retired in 1963, living in the United States until his death in 1974. He was buried in a family grave in the Hietaniemi cemetery in Helsinki, Finland.
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Richard Simeon
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Richard%20Simeon
Richard Simeon Richard Simeon Sir Richard Godin Simeon, 2nd Baronet (21 May 1784 – 4 January 1854) was an English Liberal Party politician. Simeon was born in 1784, the son of Sir John Simeon, 1st Baronet and Rebecca Cornwall. Simeon was elected at the 1832 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Isle of Wight, a new constituency which had been created by the Reform Act 1832. He was re-elected in 1835, and stood down from the House of Commons at the 1837 general election. He was appointed as a Deputy Lieutenant of the Isle of Wight 1831, and in 1846. He also served as High Sheriff of Hampshire for 1845. Charles and John Simeon were his sons.
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Pahrump Valley
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pahrump%20Valley
Pahrump Valley Pahrump Valley Pahrump Valley is a Mojave Desert valley west of Las Vegas and the Spring Mountains massif in southern Nye County, Nevada, and eastern San Bernardino County, California. Pahrump, Nevada, is in the valley's center and the Tecopa and Chicago Valleys are immediately to the west. The valley has routes to Death Valley and a route to Las Vegas. Pahrump along with Valley Electric will soon be the first town in Nevada to offer fiber internet to each house within its geographical area. # History. The Pahrump Valley was crossed by the Old Spanish Trail and later the Salt Lake Road. # Geography. The large block of the Spring Mountains borders Pahrump Valley on the northeast and east,
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Pahrump Valley
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pahrump%20Valley
Pahrump Valley with Nevada State Route 160 skirting parts of the mountain's south, and being the only due west route from Las Vegas. Route 160 turns northwest to Pahrump in the valley's center-north then meets U.S. Route 95 at the valley's north perimeter. Carpenter Canyon road starts near Pahrump and runs about 10 miles to Carpenter Canyon. Carpenter Canyon creek is one of the few year round fish creeks in the Spring Mountains. In California, the Nopah Range borders the valley's southwest, with the north of the adjacent Resting Spring Range merging north to form the northwest border of the Pahrump Valley. The mostly east-west Kingston Range is the southern border of the valley. The closest community to
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Pahrump Valley
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pahrump%20Valley
Pahrump Valley arpenter Canyon. Carpenter Canyon creek is one of the few year round fish creeks in the Spring Mountains. In California, the Nopah Range borders the valley's southwest, with the north of the adjacent Resting Spring Range merging north to form the northwest border of the Pahrump Valley. The mostly east-west Kingston Range is the southern border of the valley. The closest community to Pahrump is Shoshone, California, 25 mi southwest, with Ash Meadows Ranch and Death Valley Junction, California slightly farther to the northwest. ## Pahrump Valley Wilderness. The Pahrump Valley Wilderness is in the southern Pahrump Valley, the northern Kingston Range, and the California and Mesquite Valleys.
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All Saints Church, Otterhampton
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All%20Saints%20Church,%20Otterhampton
All Saints Church, Otterhampton All Saints Church, Otterhampton All Saints Church in Otterhampton, Somerset, England, overlooks the River Parrett. The church dates from the 14th century. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building, and is a redundant church in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. It was declared redundant on 1 March 1988, and was vested in the Trust on 2 August 1989. A church was established on the site in the 12th century, was valued at £5 in 1291, although the current building largely dates from the 14th. The Perpendicular west tower was added later and has an Elizabethan bell-frame with 4 bells, one of which dates from the 16th century and
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All Saints Church, Otterhampton
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All%20Saints%20Church,%20Otterhampton
All Saints Church, Otterhampton 1291, although the current building largely dates from the 14th. The Perpendicular west tower was added later and has an Elizabethan bell-frame with 4 bells, one of which dates from the 16th century and two others are dated 1617 and 1737. The original dedication was to Saint Peter, however it was later renamed All Saints. The interior includes a Norman font with a Jacobean cover, a screen from the 16th century, and 17th-century communion rails. It was closed in 1988, and is now in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. # See also. - List of churches preserved by the Churches Conservation Trust in South West England - List of ecclesiastical parishes in the Diocese of Bath and Wells
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Ali Alizoti
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ali%20Alizoti
Ali Alizoti Ali Alizoti ), son of Bey Naim Alizoti, was an Albanian politician of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. He studied in Istanbul and commenced administrative training in Salonica. In 1906 he was appointed Mutasarrıf of Hinis.
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum Allied Museum The Allied Museum () is a museum in Berlin. It documents the political history and the military commitments and roles of the Western Allies (US, France and Britain) in Germany – particularly Berlin – between 1945 and 1994 and their contribution to liberty in Berlin during the Cold War era. ## American Sector. The museum is located on Clayallee, an arterial road named after General Lucius D. Clay (1898–1978), in the Dahlem quarter of the southwestern Steglitz-Zehlendorf borough. Until German reunification in 1990, the area was located in the American sector of postwar West Berlin. The buildings near the US Army headquarters then housed an American movie theater, called "Outpost",
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum and the Nicholson Memorial Library. The museum was inaugurated in 1998, on the fiftieth anniversary of the Berlin airlift, in the presence of Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Entrance is free. Since the closure of Berlin Tempelhof Airport in 2008, the Allied Museum has announced its interest in relocating to the old airport at some point. # The Allies. The museum shows an important part of the military and political scenery of the Cold War in Berlin, from immediately after World War II and the final disengagement of the Allied forces in the 1990s. The early period of partition plans evolved by the European Advisory Commission is documented. When in February 1945, the United States, Great Britain,
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum and the Soviet Union decided to split the former German Reich in occupation zones at the Yalta Conference, including a fourth area assigned to the French, the German capital likewise was divided into four sectors. In late April, Soviet Red Army troops fought their way into the city during the Battle of Berlin and enforced the unconditional surrender by the German Wehrmacht armed forces. In Summer they pulled out from the city's Western sectors according to the agreements concluded. In the beginning East-West conflict, first marked by the withdrawal of the Soviet representatives from the Allied Kommandatura and the following Berlin Blockade in 1948–49, the US, Britain and France formed the Western
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum Allies and came in opposition to the Soviet occupation forces. The increasing tensions culminated in the Berlin Crisis of 1961 and the building of the Berlin Wall. A significant step towards the easing of tensions was made in the 1971 Four Power Agreement on Berlin, until the "Berlin question" was solved after the East German Peaceful Revolution and the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989. # Exhibition. ### From victory to airlift. The former movie theater, a protected monument built in 1953, houses a collection of Berlin maps with planned sectors, pictures of Red Army forces marching into Berlin, uniforms, the first post-war editions of Berlin newspapers, denazification documents,
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum CARE packages. Particular emphasis is on logistics and sacrifices of life by the British-American airlift to West Berlin. Lectures and screenings are held regularly. ### Aircraft and watchtower. Some of the largest objects in the permanent collection are presented in the open-air exhibition space and include a Handley Page Hastings transport plane deployed by the Royal Air Force in the Berlin airlift, a railway carriage from a French military train, the last guard house from the famous Berlin Checkpoint Charlie border crossing, and a rebuilt East German watchtower. ### Privileged position of Berlin. In the former library building, documents are shown concerning every-day life of the Allied
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum garrisons, the political situation under Cold War terms until the fall of the Wall, as well as methods to analyze the measures by the USA, Great Britain and France to guarantee liberty in West Berlin. The collections include the reconstruction of an espionage tunnel built during the Operation Gold conducted by the American and British intelligence services in 1955. Part of the hall is reserved for temporary exhibitions on themes of modern-day relevance. # Organization. The Allied Museum has the legal status of a non-profit association, whose members are the Federal Republic of Germany, the state of Berlin, France, the UK and the US, as well as the Deutsches Historisches Museum, and the Institut
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Allied Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Allied%20Museum
Allied Museum well as the Deutsches Historisches Museum, and the Institut für Zeitgeschichte in Munich. # Sculpture "The Day the Wall Came Down". Near the Allied Museum, in Clayallee, the 1998 sculpture "The Day the Wall Came Down" by Veryl Goodnight remembers the joyous event of November 9, 1989, when the Berlin Wall was effectively neutralized. Five wild horses are shown jumping over actual remains of the wall. A statue of General Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben stands nearby. # See also. - German-Russian Museum - List of museums and galleries in Berlin # Notes. - Durie, W. (2012). The British Garrison Berlin 1945-1994 "No where to go" Berlin: Vergangenheits/Berlin. . # External links. - Website
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Hellnar
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hellnar
Hellnar Hellnar Hellnar () is an ancient fishing village, a cluster of old houses and buildings situated close to Arnarstapi on the westernmost part of the Snæfellsnes peninsula, Iceland. Although Hellnar village used to be a major port of call for fishing vessels and the largest and busiest centre of fishing and fishing vessels in Snæfellsnes, there were also a few farms in and around Hellnar village along with quite a few semi-permanent and short-stay living quarters for seamen and the migrating workforce. Hellnar village can in all probability trace its function as a major port of call back to the Middle Ages, and the oldest written source of it being describes as a fishing port dates back to 1560. In
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Hellnar
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hellnar
Hellnar earlier times, Hellnar would have been in relatively large part fisheries-related farms and buildings, and in the national census of 1703, some 194 individuals were registered as being inhabitants of Hellnar. This same year the buildings and farms of Hellnar are listed as numbering 38 altogether, of which 7 farms are listed as agricultural farms, 11 as having fisheries and fisheries-related functions, and 20 as listed as being semi-permanent or short-stay lodgings for the migrating work force and displaced persons. On the beach some spectacular rock formations are to be seen, one of which is a protruding cliff called Valasnös, which reaches across the ocean front and into the sea. Tunneling
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Hellnar
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hellnar
Hellnar ricultural farms, 11 as having fisheries and fisheries-related functions, and 20 as listed as being semi-permanent or short-stay lodgings for the migrating work force and displaced persons. On the beach some spectacular rock formations are to be seen, one of which is a protruding cliff called Valasnös, which reaches across the ocean front and into the sea. Tunneling into this cliff there is a cave known for colorful changes of lighting and shades that vary in tune with the natural light and the movements of the sea. # References. - Vesturland.is, Afþreying og staðir, 14. júlí 2010] - Þorsteinn Jósepsson | Steindór Steindórsson | Páll Líndal | Landið þitt Ísland, H-K, Örn og Örlygur, 1982
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Lukavec, Croatia
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lukavec,%20Croatia
Lukavec, Croatia Lukavec, Croatia Lukavec is a village in central Croatia, 20 km south of Zagreb. It is administratively part of the city of Velika Gorica, Zagreb County. The population is 1,140 (census 2011). A nearby fortification is well preserved.
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Scopolia carniolica
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scopolia%20carniolica
Scopolia carniolica Scopolia carniolica Scopolia carniolica, the European scopolia or henbane bell, is a poisonous plant belonging to the family Solanaceae, It has dark violet flowers on long hanging stems. It grows to in height. Its toxicity derives from its high levels of tropane alkaloids, particularly atropine. The concentration of atropine is highest in the roots. "Scopolia carniolica" grows on wet soils in beech forests of southeastern Europe from lowlands to the mountainous zones, being native to a region stretching from the eastern Alps to the eastern Carpathians and also naturalised farther east in southwestern Russia. The rare form "Scopolia carniolica" f. "hladnikiana" (which differs from the common
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Scopolia carniolica
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scopolia%20carniolica
Scopolia carniolica form in having a corolla that is greenish yellow,both inside and out) is native to Slovenia. "Scopolia carniolica" was first described by the botanist Carl Linnaeus and named in honour of the physician Giovanni Antonio Scopoli as "Hyoscyamus scopolia". Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin classified it to the genus "Scopolia". The specific name "carniolica" signifies 'of Carniola', a historical region that comprised parts of modern day Slovenia ( see also Duchy of Carniola and March of Carniola ). "Scopolia carniolica" is the symbol of the Slovene Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine. The plant is a source of scopolamine, which was used as an anesthetic in the past. # Use in folk
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Scopolia carniolica
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Scopolia%20carniolica
Scopolia carniolica rniola', a historical region that comprised parts of modern day Slovenia ( see also Duchy of Carniola and March of Carniola ). "Scopolia carniolica" is the symbol of the Slovene Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine. The plant is a source of scopolamine, which was used as an anesthetic in the past. # Use in folk medicine and criminal poisoning. The plant was used in the late Middle Ages as a narcotic agent and an ingredient in 'love potions' – a practice frequently resulting in fatal cases of poisoning. Furthermore, in its native Carpathians, "Scopolia carniolica" was also used with criminal intent, either to stupefy victims in order to rob them, or to kill them outright.
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Pat Coleman
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pat%20Coleman
Pat Coleman Pat Coleman Patrick Darryl Coleman is a former American football player who played wide receiver for five seasons in the NFL. He played for the New England Patriots and Houston Oilers.
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Rauf Fico
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rauf%20Fico
Rauf Fico Rauf Fico Rauf Fico (March 13, 1881 – 1944) was an Albanian diplomat and politician. # Life. Rauf Fico was born in 1881 to Tahmaz Fico of the Fico family of Gjirokastër and Hava Buzo from Berat. He studied in Vienna and later at the Mekteb-i Mülkiye. In 1912 he joined Vlora's government as a councilor in the Ministry of the Interior. In 1916, during the Austrian military administration, he served as vice-prefect of Tiranë. In that position, he co-founded "Streha Vorfnore", the city's first public orphanage, on November 28, 1917, the date of the fifth anniversary of the Albanian Declaration of Independence. His collaborators that also constituted the board of the orphanage were Zyber Hallulli,
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Rauf Fico
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rauf%20Fico
Rauf Fico Mytesim Këlliçi, Luigj Shala and Xhelal Toptani. Fico was one of the initiators of Congress of Tiranë (19–20 December 1918) together with Abdi Toptani and Ismail Ndroqi, which would lead the path to the Congress of Durrës later that month, establishing the continuity of the newly created Albanian state after World War I; the preparative meetings would take place at his office on December 7, 1918. In 1921 he served as acting Minister of Interior Affairs in Pandeli Evangjeli's cabinet. In the elections of 1923 and 1925 he was elected deputy of Durrës. In the late 1920s he served as an ambassador to Turkey and Bulgaria and in April 1929 was appointed Foreign Minister of Albania. However, due
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Rauf Fico
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rauf%20Fico
Rauf Fico to his opposition to the Italians he was removed from this post in November 1930 and returned to being an ambassador, to Yugoslavia (1933–36), Greece (1937) and Germany (1938-9). After Albania's invasion by the Italian army, he was arrested and interned in Italy. He died in Tirana on January 23, 1944 a few months after he returned from Italy following the country's capitulation. # Orders, decorations, and honours. Throughout his political and diplomatic career Fico had been awarded various orders: - Grand Cordon of Order of Franz Joseph. - Grand Cordon of Order of Leopold. - Grand Cordon of Order of the Crown of Romania. - Grand Cordon of Order of the Crown of Italy. - Grand Cordon of
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Rauf Fico
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rauf%20Fico
Rauf Fico erned in Italy. He died in Tirana on January 23, 1944 a few months after he returned from Italy following the country's capitulation. # Orders, decorations, and honours. Throughout his political and diplomatic career Fico had been awarded various orders: - Grand Cordon of Order of Franz Joseph. - Grand Cordon of Order of Leopold. - Grand Cordon of Order of the Crown of Romania. - Grand Cordon of Order of the Crown of Italy. - Grand Cordon of Order of the Phoenix (Greece). - Grand Cordon of the Luxemburg Crown. - Officer of Order of Skanderbeg - "Officier" of the French Legion of Honor. - Palm of French Academy. - Order of Boris, Bulgaria. - Doctor Honoris Causa of Naples Academy
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season 1966 TANFL season The 1966 Tasmanian Australian National Football League (TANFL) premiership season was an Australian Rules football competition staged in Hobart, Tasmania over eighteen (18) roster rounds and four (4) finals series matches between 2 April and 17 September 1966. # Participating Clubs. - Clarence District Football Club - Glenorchy District Football Club - Hobart Football Club - New Norfolk District Football Club - North Hobart Football Club - Sandy Bay Football Club ## 1966 TANFL Club Coaches. - Stuart Spencer (Clarence) - Bobby Parsons (Glenorchy) - John Watts (Hobart) - Trevor Leo (New Norfolk) - Dick Grimmond (North Hobart) - Rex Geard (Sandy Bay) ## TANFL Reserves
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season Grand Final. - Clarence 12.13 (85) v Glenorchy 7.8 (50) – North Hobart Oval ## TANFL Under-19's Grand Final. - New Norfolk 12.8 (80) v Nth Hobart 5.9 (39) – North Hobart Oval ## State Preliminary Final. - Hobart: 3.5 (23) | 6.6 (42) | 9.13 (67) | 11.19 (85) - Burnie Tigers: 2.5 (17) | 7.8 (50) | 9.9 (63) | 10.11 (71) - Attendance: 4,040 at West Park Oval ## State Grand Final. - City-South: 1.5 (11) | 5.9 (39) | 8.10 (58) | 10.15 (75) - Hobart: 2.3 (15) | 6.5 (41) | 8.10 (58) | 9.13 (67) - Attendance: 8,652 at York Park ## Intrastate Matches. Jubilee Shield (Saturday, 23 April 1966) - NTFA 20.19 (139) v TANFL 13.10 (88) – Att: 6,877 at York Park Jubilee Shield (Saturday, 21 May
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season 1966) - TANFL 25.13 (163) v NWFU 12.8 (80) – Att: 12,037 at North Hobart Oval Inter-Association Match (Saturday, 21 May 1966) - TANFL 17.17 (119) v Huon FA 16.20 (116) – Att: 12,037 at North Hobart Oval (Intrastate Curtain-Raiser) ## Interstate Matches. See: 1966 Australian National Football Carnival Match Two (Thursday, 9 June 1966) - Victorian FL: 5.6 (36) | 12.13 (85) | 21.21 (147) | 26.24 (180) - Tasmania: 4.1 (25) | 7.2 (44) | 10.4 (64) | 11.13 (79) - Attendance: 20,047 at North Hobart Oval (Double header) Match Four (Saturday, 11 June 1966) - Tasmania: 4.6 (30) | 6.13 (49) | 13.22 (100) | 19.27 (141) - Victorian FA: 3.1 (19) | 4.3 (27) | 5.5 (35) | 7.11 (53) - Attendance:
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season 23,764 at North Hobart Oval (Double header) * Match Seven (Thursday, 16 June 1966) - Western Australia: 3.6 (24) | 8.8 (56) | 15.12 (102) | 17.13 (115) - Tasmania: 5.2 (32) | 11.4 (70) | 13.8 (86) | 16.10 (106) - Attendance: 10,199 at North Hobart Oval (Double header) Match Nine (Saturday, 18 June 1966) (TV highlights: Tasmania v Sth Australia) - South Australia: 3.0 (18) | 7.3 (45) | 11.5 (71) | 14.7 (91) - Tasmania: 1.3 (9) | 2.7 (19) | 4.9 (33) | 9.13 (67) - Attendance: 23,368 at North Hobart Oval (Double header) ### TANFL. - Peter Hudson (New Norfolk) – 103 - John Mills (Clarence) – 81 - Brent Palfreyman (Sandy Bay) – 48 - Jeremy Thiessen (Hobart) – 40 - Darrell West (Glenorchy)
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season – 40 ## Medal Winners. - Burnie Payne (Hobart) – William Leitch Medal - W.Patmore (Nth Hobart) – George Watt Medal (Reserves) - Tony Browning (New Norfolk) – V.A Geard Medal (Under-19's) - Barry Browning (New Norfolk) – Weller Arnold Medal (Best player in Intrastate matches) # 1966 TANFL Ladder. ## Round 1. - Clarence 10.14 (74) v New Norfolk 6.16 (52) – Att: 5,282 at North Hobart Oval - Hobart 14.18 (102) v Nth Hobart 13.17 (95) – Att: 4,132 at TCA Ground - Sandy Bay 10.7 (67) v Glenorchy 6.13 (49) – Att: 4,266 at KGV Park ## Round 2. - Hobart 14.14 (98) v Clarence 11.5 (71) – Att: 6,147 at North Hobart Oval - New Norfolk 12.13 (85) v Sandy Bay 12.12 (84) – Att: 3,187 at Queenborough
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season Oval - Glenorchy 16.16 (112) v Nth Hobart 13.7 (85) – Att: 7,704 at North Hobart Oval (Monday) ## Round 3. - Hobart 12.14 (86) v Glenorchy 12.13 (85) – Att: 6,263 at North Hobart Oval - New Norfolk 19.7 (121) v Nth Hobart 9.9 (63) – Att: 2,928 at Boyer Oval - Sandy Bay 11.9 (75) v Clarence 6.14 (50) – Att: 3,618 at Queenborough Oval ## Round 4. - Sandy Bay 12.12 (84) v Nth Hobart 10.14 (74) – Att: 4,961 at North Hobart Oval - New Norfolk 17.14 (116) v Hobart 12.17 (89) – Att: 2,915 at TCA Ground - Clarence 16.9 (105) v Glenorchy 11.19 (85) – Att: 6,520 at KGV Park (Anzac Day) * ## Round 5. - Hobart 19.22 (136) v Sandy Bay 15.14 (104) – Att: 5,594 at North Hobart Oval - Glenorchy
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season 12.7 (79) v New Norfolk 8.7 (55) – Att: 3,100 at Boyer Oval - Clarence 13.14 (92) v Nth Hobart 8.23 (71) – Att: 2,978 at Bellerive Oval ## Round 6. - Hobart 10.17 (77) v Nth Hobart 9.10 (64) – Att: 4,322 at North Hobart Oval - Glenorchy 11.13 (79) v Sandy Bay 10.12 (72) – Att: 4,134 at Queenborough Oval - New Norfolk 19.11 (125) v Clarence 6.12 (48) – Att: 3,302 at Boyer Oval ## Round 7. - New Norfolk 17.12 (114) v Sandy Bay 7.17 (59) – Att: 6,052 at North Hobart Oval - Clarence 17.17 (119) v Hobart 9.12 (66) – Att: 2,979 at Bellerive Oval - Glenorchy 13.16 (94) v Nth Hobart 3.8 (26) – Att: 3,293 at KGV Park ## Round 8. - New Norfolk 15.14 (104) v Nth Hobart 9.14 (68) – Att: 4,132
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season at North Hobart Oval - Glenorchy 17.10 (112) v Hobart 13.15 (93) – Att: 4,161 at TCA Ground - Sandy Bay 9.10 (64) v Clarence 8.14 (62) – Att: 3,635 at Bellerive Oval ## Round 9. - Glenorchy 13.17 (95) v Clarence 9.11 (65) – Att: 5,989 at North Hobart Oval - Sandy Bay 17.15 (117) v Nth Hobart 14.14 (98) – Att: 2,880 at Queenborough Oval - New Norfolk 16.8 (104) v Hobart 5.16 (46) – Att: 3,279 at Boyer Oval ## Round 10. - Clarence 14.9 (93) v Nth Hobart 11.15 (81) – Att: 2,649 at North Hobart Oval - Hobart 15.17 (107) v Sandy Bay 14.13 (97) – Att: 2,204 at TCA Ground - New Norfolk 11.15 (81) v Glenorchy 10.14 (74) – Att: 4,125 at KGV Park (Monday) ## Round 11. - Glenorchy 12.9 (81)
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1966 TANFL season
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1966%20TANFL%20season
1966 TANFL season v Sandy Bay 9.20 (74) – Att: 4,351 at North Hobart Oval - New Norfolk 12.9 (81) v Clarence 11.12 (78) – Att: 3,247 at Bellerive Oval - Hobart 15.17 (107) v Nth Hobart 9.18 (72) – Att: 1,896 at TCA Ground ## Round 12. - Nth Hobart 14.7 (91) v Glenorchy 10.12 (72) – Att: 3,445 at North Hobart Oval - Hobart 13.19 (97) v Clarence 9.7 (61) – Att: 2,998 at TCA Ground - New Norfolk 15.13 (103) v Sandy Bay 12.17 (89) – Att: 3,282 at Queenborough Oval ## Round 13. - Clarence 12.13 (85) v Sandy Bay 10.10 (70) – Att: 2,996 at North Hobart Oval - New Norfolk 20.14 (134) v Nth Hobart 6.14 (50) – Att: 2,561 at Boyer Oval - Glenorchy 13.14 (92) v Hobart 12.14 (86) – Att: 2,852 at KGV Park ## Round
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